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••

Now You Know
Although the word beldame,
taken from the French,literally
means "beautiful woman" 'It
his come to mean in English a
grandmother, or more particularlY an old woman or ugly
hag,

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_.,,__.,

VOL XXIII

••

Weather
Cloudy and windy toni~ht and ·
Tuesday· with chance of snow
changing to rain late tonight
and Tuesday. Low tonight in the
20s and lower 30s. High Tuesday
upper 30s and 40s.'

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-MtUOn Area

MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 248

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CEN~S :
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zrearm

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WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court today upheald
the 1968 firearms registration
law against Claims that it was
an unconstitutional form of selfincrimination.
The decision was unanimous,

Base 6

,,

•.. IT'S A MIAAC't£ 10 H@D ..·.
Of.£ DAY WHEIJ YOO ':cJikJ · ·
· REALLY FeEL H~Pf'Y ! . . : ·.

I'M REALL'(
t-IA.PPY!

I'M .1-\1\PPY
TODAY!

Goes on

•

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KING AND QUEEN - Crowned king and queen at the Beaux Arts Ball Saturday night at
Southern High School wer~ Debbie Norris and Keith Ashley. Debbie is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll Norris, Syracuse; Keith is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ashley, Letart Falls.
The French Club, sponsoring group, carried out the theme, April in Paris. Freshman attendant
Pam Davis was escorted by Ken Shuler, sophomore attendant Jan-Reese by Rodney Holman,
and junior attendant Renee Burke by.Bernard Lavalley. Rhonda Ervin, escorted by Steve
Darley, crowned Queen Debbie.

,,.o.. ,,
Y"

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Emmet Shuler is Dead

•

Emmet William Shuler, 62,
Page · St., Middleport, widely
known businessman and
a form er manager of the Ohio
Fuel Gas Co. in Middleport,
died unexpectedly Sunday
evening.
Mr. Shuler became ill at his
residence about 5:50 p. m. and
the Middleport emergency
squad was called to administer
oxygen. At 6:19p.m. the squad,
called again to the residence,
removed Mr. Shuler to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. He was
pronounced dead upon arrival.
Born l\prill3 in Cheshire, the
son of the late Howard and
Lilith Thompson Shuler, Mr.
Shuler was an employe and
manager of what is the
Columbia Gas Co. for 27 years.
The past 25 years he was owner
and operator of the Shuler
Construction Co.
He was a past president and.
a member of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club, and
belonged to the Middleport
emergency squad and fire
department, Feeney-Bennett

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f.JELLO, HENI&lt;Y, L
JU5f MRIVcD IN.

ToWN ! Tr11S' IS
WILFRED/

WILFRED

•

Wl10
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Post 128, American Legion in
Middleport, the 'board of the
Meigs County American Red
Cross, and the Middl eport
Planning Commission.
He was a trustee on the
building comm ittee for
Veteran s Memorial Hospital
and was a past president and a
member of the Civil Air Patrol.
Mr . Shuler was a member of the
Old Kyger Free Will Baptist
Church. He was a veteran of the
Sec ond World War, having
served with Co. A of the 806th
Engineering Battalion .
Surviving are his wife,
Barbara Stout Shuler; a
brother, Doyle, Cheshire; three
sisters, Mrs . Hortie (Doris)
Roush and Mrs. Edward
(Helen ) Spears, both of
Cheshire,. and Mrs. John
'(Hilah) Herrmann of Belpre,
and several nieces and
nephews. Besides his parents,
he was preceded in death by
three brothers and a sister.
Funeral services wiU be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home

, I'Yt(' \

EMMET SHULER

with the Rev. Stanley Plattenburg officiating. Friends
may eall at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to 9
p. rri. Tuesday. In lieu of
flowers, friends are asked to
co ntribute to th e George
Thompson Kidney Fund. Burial
[ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery

.

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! News ... in Briefs !

at Cheshire .

Tree Struck by
Bv United Press International

Offer Pondered Long Time

PROSPECTiNG fOR A K'IC~ DIAMOND
M INE~-·-AND l VOVJEDNOTToCOM~
I'AGK li LL-l .FOVND O~E ore:: I WENT

. BLJSfw!

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ST.A Y RIGHf Wf-(E~E YOU ARE"

TENNANT, CALIF, - ROBERT BARTER is blessingJJis big
feetwhil~ waiting forfinal word that he's an Army reject because
it would cost too much to keep him in GI boots. A few weeks ago
Barter, 23, was in Ft. Jackson, S.C., prepared to begin active duty
service with the National Guard.
Then the Army discovered Barter, who is six-foot-six had size
1ifeet. Regulation boots only go as high as 14'/z. The Army asked
Barter if he wantect to be discharged and sa,ve the government the
expense of making htm special boots. "I pondered the offer a long
time - about four seconds - and accepted,'"he said.
-

~YlHE' WAY.

OLD FT&lt;IEND,1iLLlCOMEAND

Can't Look Sin in the Face

HOvJ'S Tf-ie DIAMONDMNE:

PICK You UP!.~'

C,at\IN6?

.

SPRINGFIELD, OHIO - COMEDIAN DICK Gregory said
Sunday night the biggest problem facing America was that "she
cannot face reality and cannot admit she has been wrong ."
Gregory, closing speaker at Wittenberg University's five-day .
culture-poverty program also said man could solve the problems
· (Continued on Page 8I

I
DIDN'1
fli'-JD ONf!
1WEt-Jf

131JSTED!

Truck Saturday
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a single
.truck accident Saturday at 5
p.m. on count}:road 25.
Jacob A. Winland; 59,
Parkersburg, was traveling
west in a Ford truck when he hit
a rough spot which caused an
object in the cab to tip over.
Winland took his eyes off the
road and the truck went off the
highway on the righ,t and struck
a tree.
Winland sustained an
abrasion to his head. He was not
immediately treated, however:
The truck was demolished. No
citation was issued.

SAIGON (UPI)-Communist
mortar crews shelled Fire
Support Base No. 6 near the
Laos-Cambodian border today,
the --sixth day of fighting for
possession of the strategic
hilltop spot. Heavy fighting was
reported only three miles away
late in the day .
UP! Correspondent Robert
·sullivan, aboard a helicopter
landing South Vietnamese reinforcements at the base that
already has changed hands
twice, said fighting broke out
several hours before dusk.
There were no immediate
reports of casualties.
During the morning, Sullivan
said, a number of 82 mm
mortar shells fell in and around
Base 6, over-run by the
Communists Wednesday mornIng and reoccupied by the South
Vietnamese Thursday night.
Fighting also was reported
Sunday and in Saigon the South
Vietnamese claimed they had
killed 309 Communists near the
base that day, 287 in a
battalion-size attack on the
base itself. Bodies of another 26
North Vietnamese were found
nearby .
.
Military sources said the
"localized offensive" around
Fire Base 6 is the largest
'Communist operation in Vietnam in a year. Maj . Gen. Ngo
Dzu, commander of South
Vietnam's 11 Militar~ Region,
estimated Saturday 4,500 to
5,000 Communists were in the
area.
South Vietnamese statistics
pegged Communist losses in the
operation at more than onethird their estjmated streng!h
in the six days of fighting.
So far, the South Vietnamese
claim they have killed 1,817
North Vietnamese troops in the
fight for Fire Support Base 6
while losing only 69 dead and
101 injured. They said one
South Vietnamese solqier was
killed in Sunday's fighting .
The U.S . command reported
fresh fighting about 60 miles
east of Fire Base 6, where
American paratroopers for the
third day were attacked by
Communist forces. North Vietnamese commandos fought
their way into a base of the
173rd Airborne Brigade near An
Khe , 240 miles northeast of
Saigon, killing two U.S. soldiers
and wounding two . No Commu(Continued on Page 8)

Cycle Rider

In Hospital
Larry R. ·cochran ; 20, Pt.
Pleasant, is listed in fair condition at the Holzer Medical
Center where he was aW:nitted
at 2 p.m. Saturday with a
fractured leg and possible internal injuries suffered 'in a
traffic ac'cident at 9:30a.m. ln
Pt. Pleasant.
According to the report,
Cochran was a passenger on a
motorcycle which struck an
· auto'mobile on Sand· Hill Rd.
Marion Lee Kirtley, 18,
Jackson, ·was admitted for ·
observation , after suffering a
gunshot wound of the leg . 'He
susi!Iined the · in jury while attempting to draw a .22 caliber
pistol from a holster . He is
llsted in good condition.

WJ.IAT

IT WOP.Ksf//l'VE=PROIJEN M
Y1MEOR.:t!

THEO!&lt;.'r'

A BABY A
'WLL.ABY IT PAV(;
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aw
transfer unregistered hand
grenades.
The district court held the
law to be self-incriminatory , as ·
the Supreme Com·t had done in
connection with -another Jaw .
The lower court also said the
indictment was faulty for
absence of knowledge by the

defendants tha t the grenades
were unregistered.
As to the second point,
Douglas said , "this is a
regulatory measure in the
interest of the public safety ,
which may well be premised on
the theory that one would
hardly be surprised to learn

that possession of hand gre- '
nades is not an innocent act," '
As for self-incrimination,
Douglas pointed out that the
transferer, not the recipient,
was required to do the
registering, pay the transfer
ta x and receive a stamp
(Continued on Page 8)

Battle

.,

.,I.'

with Justice William o·. Douglas
speaking for the court.
The government had appealed a federal court decision
in Los Angeles dismissing an
indictment against Donald
Freed and Shirley Jean
Sutherland on charges of
conspiring to possess and

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TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Racine emergency squad
'transported 'Lillihn Tucker, 25,
Racine !U. 2, w~o was having
.difficulty breathing, to·
Vet~rans · Memorial Hospital
Friday at 8:30 p.nt .

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Teacher Asks
$4 2 Jll'[['
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1Ul.

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In Wellston

'

Two ·v olunteer

Time to Clean Up
•
A "Clean Up the Town"
program got underway ,today
In Racine to extend through
Aprll 15.
Residents are asked to
clean around their homes and
place all trash at the curb for
easy pickup by the vlllage.
Pickup service wlll be every
other day.
People with old cars which
they wish hauled away are to
s~nd a written notice to Mae
Cleland, village clerk, and the
vehicles will be removed at
village expense during the
cleanup period.

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Ralph
Crabtree, a teacher in the
Wellston School District of
Jackson County,has filed a $4.2
million suit in U. S. District
Court here against Wellston
Board of Education and several
teachers in the district.
Crabtree's wife, Ida, is also a
teacher in the school district.
Crabtree, in his suit, said the
Wellston Board of Education
violated certain sections of the
profession 's code of ethics.
Crabtree's teaching contract Resolution Asks
•
was not renewed.
The suit said the board filed a
complaint against them with Calley's Freedom
the Ohio Education Association, Racine Village c~.uncil has
liut that "the allegations were
passed a resolution asking for
false ."
the release and pardon of Lt.
William
Calley. The flag of the
CLOSING HOU,u&gt; SET
The Farmers Barrk and town also Will be flown at half
Savings Co. and the Pomeroy mast until he is set free, ofNational Bank will be closed ficials said. A paper urging the
Friday.f[Om noon to 1:30 p.m. release of Lt. Calley will be
for Good Friday services being circulated through the town for
held from noon until 3 p.m. at signatures.
.
Mrs. Mae Cleland, village
the Trinity Church.
clerk, also announced a meeting
wiii _be held by the councils of
. STOR~ TO CLOSE
The Shoe Box in Middleport Racine and Syracuse to hear
·will be closed all afternoon Pomeroy attorney Frank W.
Wednesday beginning at 12 noon Porte~ discuss the proposed
due to the death of Emmet c9mbmed sewage system m the
next tl"o weeks. . - .
Shuler.

·Jn·d ians .Want

TOUR DISCUSSED -Members of the South Central Ohio Preservation Society, Inc. had
· numerous architectural gems to discuss when they. visited Pomeroy Saturday. Abo~. Laszlo ·
G. Koe-Krtnqpecher, SCOPS president; Mrs. 'J0seph Van Meter, Piketon, coordinat~r of
SCOPS, and C. E. Blakeslee, right, president of the Meigs County l?ionejlr and Historical
Society; review significant points of a tour Satur¢Iyafternoon,
. " · · .·
·

department in return for a small donation. The firemen are
presently seeking donations for the building fund and the
purchase of a new flre truck.

PRACTICE RUN - Syracuse volunteer firemen held a
practice run Sunday when they burned down an old building
in Syracuse Village. This is one of the services offered by the

Uni~s

are Busy

The Middleport emergency
unit answered six calls Sunday
and Monday morning .
At 6:58 a. m. Sunday the
squad went to the home of Alma
Freeman near Cheshire. She
was taken to thl!"Jiolzer Medical
Center. At 12:27p. m. the squad
went to the Sidney Wells
residence near Rutland where
Mr. Wells was dead upon the
squad's arrival. At 5:58 p, m.
the squad went to the Emmet
Shuler residence on Page St.
where oxygen was ad LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomerof ..MOnday at II a. m.
was 46 degrees under sunny
skies.
BONDS FORFEITED
Forfeiting bonds of $25 each in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Charles Legar Saturday night
were Edward Sigler, Columbus,
posted on charges of squealing
•tires· Delores Reynolds,
. Pom~roy , posted on intoxication charges; Bill Adams,
Pomeroy, posted on charges of
disturbing the peace and
Harold Darst, Pomeroy, ~osted
on a ch'arge of leaving.ihe scene
of an accident.

ministered to Mr. Shuler, then
made a return trip to the Shuler
residence at 6:19 p. m. to
re move him to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where l_le
was pronounced , dead on
arrival.
At 12:29 a.m. the squad took
Vanessa Pettit to Veterans
Memorial Hospi\al after she
became ill at home and at 12:54
a. m. went to the home of Mrs.
Linley Roush, Jr., in Rutland,
who was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.
IN POMEROY
Four calls were answered
Saturday night by the Pomeroy
Fire Dept. and E-R squad.
At 5 p. m. firemen extinguished a brush fire near the
Nitz home on State St. and were
called at 5:40p.m. to put out a
brush fire near the Richard
Mees property in Darwin.
At 9:51 p. m. the squad went
to New Haven where Harrison
Robinson, Sr., was ill at horne.
He was taken to Veterans
Memqrial Hospital where he
was admitted .
At 11:10p. m., the squad went
to the residence of Sheila
Reeves, Brick St, who also was
taken to Veterans r.r.'morial
Hospital. She was treated fQr
over medication and released.

to-Destroy Dams;:,

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The series of attempts by the
Pit River Indians toda'y asked .Indians .to regain control of a
the federai government to allow Connecticut-sized parcel of land
them to tear down the dams they claim ~&gt;as taken illegally
and power stations which they from their tribe during the gold
·
S;ly have transformed thei~ rush .
sacred river in northern Cali'
fornia into "a series of The Indians contend in the
stagnant, polluted artificial petition that PG&amp;E has "transformed a once wild, and freereservoirs.''
Attorneys !or the tribe flowing stream into a series of
petitioned the Federal Power stagnant, polluted, overheated,
Com.mission to refuse renewal silting, artificial reservoirs and
of Pacific Gas &amp; Elec.tric scarred the length of the· river.
.company's licenses 'to operate with the heavy hand of
.
·
its dams and related power 'progress'."
. facilities along .the Pit River While earlier, &lt;unsuccessful
·vhich winds through the tribe's legal actions by the tribe have
ancestral · lands in Shasta sought til regain title to som~ 3
County.
. _ . . , millio~ acres of ancestral lands,
The petition. is the latest ln a ihe petiti~n submitted todoy

asks only_that the Indians be
allowed · "to protect the land
and the rivers ... the fish and
the wildlife ... for the benefit of
all the people."
However, the Indians' attorney, Aubrey Grossman of San
Francisco, called the petition
"ail attempted breakthrough to
get a court to ·order the return
to .the Indians of.. land which
was lldmitt~dly taken without
the · Indians' consent or payment."
U.S. District Judge Robert
Peckham disl)llssed .a suit in
October which · sought the
return of all ancestral lands to
the ·Pit River tribe. ·
'The Indians still have pending
a civil l'ights suit a~a inst

'

Sheriff John Balma and other
Shasta County autl)orities for
alleged mistreatment of.Indians
f?.rcibly evicted1from ancestral
lands owned by PG&amp;E whjch
the Indians had attempted to
'••occupy.';
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The Indians also filed a , •
million damage suit agalnat
PG&amp;E for "raping and pilla~
the sacred Mother Earth."; :
The . petition ' to the ~Pc
ronterids the Pit River Indijina
are "uniquely, quallfled ;.Jo
protect the public interes(4. jD
the ;•esthetic,' conserva!iopal,
recreatioiuil and cnvironme~
aspects- of ·lhe1. lir· ;: 1
proceedings.' , '
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�2- The Daily Senhnei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Apnl5 1971

The Almanac
By United Press lolenlalional
Today ts Monday, Aprtl 5, the
95th day of 1971
The moon ts between tis ftrst
quarter and full pbase
The mormng"tlll; are Venus,
Mars and Juptter
The evemng star&amp;are Mercury and Saturn
Those born on thts day are
under the stgn of Artes
Amertcan Negro educator
Booker T Washmgton was born
Aprtl 5, 1856
On thts day m htstory
1614 Pocahontas, daughter
of fndtan Chtef Powhatan, was
mamed to English colomst
John Rolfe m Vtrgtma
In 1951 Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg of New York City
were sentenced to death as
atom sptes" for Russ1a
In 1964 Gen Douglas MacArthur dted at the age of 84
In 1968 maJor Arnertcan ctltes
were htt by vtolent nots m the
aftermath of the assassination
of Negro leader Marlin Luther
King Jr

EDITORIAL

Eddying Effects
Of Pakistan War
The ctvtl sh tfe winch threatens the survtval of Pakt
stan as tl has extsted m the almost quarter century smce
Bntam ltqmdated tis lndtan emptre understandably ma~
seem far away confusmg and of ~lf'real tmport to most
Amencans
If anythmg reachon may be of some rehef that het e
for a ,hange ts an Astan cnsts m whtch our own vttai
mterest and posstbly resources and manpower are not
automatically mvolved
It was not always so !n the ea rl y warm days of the
Co ld War Paktslan was the cht~f U S ally m Asta and
the link between the Mtddle East and Southeast Asta
Treaty Orgamzation alltances fo rged by Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles to contam the Sovtel Umon
and Red Chma Paktstan was a leadmg rectptent of
Amencan a1d parhcuiarly m1htary and 1ts armed forces
were among the best eqUipped m the world outs1de the
maJor powers One result of the spec1al Amencan Pak1
slam relationship was to stram US relat1ons Wtlh India
wh1ch at that time was makmg constderable efforts to
ward fnendshtp w1th Chma and saw tlself as a more
ltkely target of Paktstam weapons than etlher of the
Commumst g1ants
But times power balances and dtplomats change Over
the years the anh Commumst alliances have become
monbund lndta has found Red Chma a dangerous ne1gh
bor and established a workmg tf not always comfortable
relabonshtp w1th the Umted States and Paktslan has
looked around for other fnends notably Red Chma
The surpnse m Paktstan s present crtsts ts that tl dtd
not come much earlier Paktstan ts to a great extent an
arhftctal state, the product of an mtense naltonahsm
fanned among lndta s mmonty Moslems by one man,
Mohammed Ah Jmnah durmg the last years of Bnhsh
rule Unfortunately Indta s Moslems were not loca t~ d m
one area but at opPosite ends of Bnttsh lndta clumped
around the Punjab m the West and m Bengal m the East
When the nation came mto extslence m 1947, 1t was
umted by a common re1tg10n but separated by nearly
everythmg else-geography (1 OO() rntles of lndtan ter
ntory) language (Bengali m the East and Urdu m the
Westl, culture (West looks to Iran and the Mtdeast East
to Southeast Asta ) and even dtel (wheat and meat m the
West rtce m the Eastl
Although smaller m area, the East has more peoplesome 70 m1lhon as agamst 55 mtllton But Westerners
have always dommated the government and the econ
amy Although the East s jute and other agncultural
exports earned the maJor share of fore1gn exchange the
proftts, tl ts charged went mostly to mdustnaltze the
West The results have been mcreasmgly stndent East
ern demands for autonomy tf not full mdependence and
the eventual crackdown by the army
Allah m thts case would certamly appear to be on the
stde of the btggest battalions Tbe Paktstam army drawn
largely from the Punjab and now equtpped With a me
lange of Amencan Brtltsh West German and Red Ch1
nese weapons sltll rates htgh m that part of the world
Guerrilla warfare m the humid nver deltas of the East
might, however be a much different matter
Whatever the outcome of the ctvtl conflict, tl would
appear to mean problems not ltmtted to Paktstan alone
Ne1ther an Eastern breakaway state whtch would be po
llttcally and eCOJIOmtcally shaky nor umty mamtamed
by a bloody Western mthlary occupalton of the East
could contnbute anythmg to stabthty m Southern Asm
The Umted States may be umnvolved therefo~e but
tl can scarcely be dtsmterested

'

, WIN AT BRIDGE

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one sure trtck tn spades and
tl08 76
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ex treme case If the spade
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(NEWSPAPER ENTEitPRISE ASSN )
•'• the West hand South has
•
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• the Lawrence Welk btddtng t::wu:J~XtflMI!l
•
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The btddmg has been
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•• beat the contract The gen Pass
5•
Pass
6t
Pass
• era! rule IS to attack one of Pass
'
' the maJor smts and you hold You South hold
'I four cards m each Whtch .A2 .AJI t63 .KQJ7 53
What do you do now'
1 smt should you ptck' '
A-B1d seven clubs Your
Oswald
Thts
ttme
the
•• wmnmg lead ts the four of partner Is showtng very good
hearts You htl your partner thamonds and 1mphes so me
•' 1\llh the ace and wmd up weakness an hcart.'i
w1th three heart tncks and
• 'our two stde aces '
Jtm It ts also the best
•• 'ead 1 r o m a percentage The Greek name Evange
standpomt In general yo u hne means " brmgmg good
want to play a sutt m whtch news' '
NORTH

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32
.6"'
4

•

•
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rn

A thought for today Booker
T Washmgton satd, "No race
shall prosper llll 1t learns that
there IS as nlUCh digmly 10
tillmg a held as m wrttmg a
poem''

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
America's Sturdy Staff of Life

U.S. Bread: A Lot Gaing lor It
By Lawrence Lamb M D
Dear Dr Lam b- 1 was
surpn sed recently to have
yo u recom mend the purchase
of bread as the only satts
factory bakery product on
the market today Yet the
enclosed arhc ie says the nu
tnltve value of bread and
other bakery p r o d u c t s ts
pt acttcally ml What can we
do to get better flour' I bake
my own br ead but am
obitged to use the avatlable
flour " h 1 c h ts poor Any
tdeas'
Dear Readet - 1 read yo w
enclos ure mcludmg the un
derlmed quote from Pres•
dent Ntxon s French born
nutntwn advtser Dr Jean
Mayer t h 1n k s that. Amen
can's whtle bleached do ugh
products would not even be
called bread m hts native
land 'fhetr food value ts al
most zero Whtte fl our ts pre
ferred by food tndustry ex

- Robert E Netzley a mem
ber of the Ohw Legzsla
ture to a colleague's sug
gestwn that the term
'welfare be done away
With

Its JUSt a lot of talk about
takmg extstmg funds and
redtstrtbutmg them m a dtf
ferent manner
- Rep Bella Abzug D N Y
on President NIXon's reve
nue sharmg proposal

A Nuttonal Dcclmc
D ea t h ~ from cancc1 of t he

ul ctus have dcclmcd about 50
pel l-ent 111 a gen e1 ltJOn Th1s IS
d 11 C 111 huge pa1l to cmly dctcc

lion hy th e P \P test md pwmpt
s tys the Amet Jctn

f1e tlm ent

f.an cc1 Soe~ et y

C lll CC JS of SIX S!I CS- h1cast,
eulnn JCctum lun ~ oral c,\VJiy
skm md ul ct us-offCI the ~1 c tt
est c1ppo1tun 11 1cs f01 sav1n g hves
Ptevcntnl act ion c ulvd1 agnn
sts nnd ptompt t teatment nre

Ihe hfe '"""g keys says the
Amen c m CL~n ccr Soctet&gt;

Canada ts second m stze
only to the Sov1et Umon

0'1E W&gt;DNT~ L.ATER T~E PROBL.EI&lt;\
15 5TIL.L I.JNRESOL.VED HERE WE
GO AGI&gt;.IN

~-----HELLO IM
TRYINIS TO GET
M1'55 ~EI'ILINE
SHE 5 F'AMIL.IAA
WITJ.I MY CASE!

?ft.s,,,acus "Tr•PO
t:1~1.

7

f!08 STEINER.
TI~DIN

COU'l.T

~I VJ~'!I:lN,

"'.:l

I

r

•

,.,.

By Helen Bottel

1
•

IS IT TRUE WHAT THEY SAY '
Dear Helen
On a TV talk show I heard a well-known bachelor brag that
"dating," 1e, shelling out for dinners, shows, or whatever, IS
pssse He says he just asks, "Do you want to go to to my place'"
and if she says, "Not" they're through
Have you ever heard of anything cheaper' - FOR WINING
AND DINING FIRST
Dear For
Yes How about the fella who suggests staymg at HER place,
to guzzle HF;R booze, or whate~er• - H
Dear Helen
There's a bill before Congress that might help control mternationaltllegal drug traffic Into the Umted States The bill H R 3831 -would penalize, by restrtctmg trade, countries that
tgnore the smuggling of dope mto America
Agreed, drug smuggling must be curtailed, but is restricting
trade lite answer• lns't this punishing a whole country for the SUIS
of a few' - DARIN
Dear Darm
Why don't we all show our concern by writing to our
congressmen' If this billlSD't the answer, then surely another will
soon be hammered out if there is "a clear mandate from the
people" - H
Dear Helen
You've had several letters about policemen, but I'd like to add
a wife's verston of
WHAT IS A COP?
Apoliceman 1s a husband, father or son, complete with pnde,
love, patience and any of the many other qualities that make up a
man But to some he's a Pig wtth a big head because he represents
authority
~o those who really know him He's the one who makes calls
to the little old lady's home and, upon arrtval, finds her call to the
dispatcher for help IS some funny little made-up story -because
she's lonely and needs someone to talk to
A policeman IS the one who comforts a young gtrl hurt m a
sertous car accident
He's the one who IS called m to curb rtols and then fmds
himself charged with police brutality
He belongs to an orgaruzation made up of good men, and some
of what you'd call bad ones, but then what orgaruzalton doesn't
have tis good and bad•
He's the one who gets the calls for a drunk disturbing with a
knife, burglars m action, ahootings, a young boy stealing hubcaps,
family disturbances
But, thank God, he's the one who comes horne to be a
husband, father, son, and an off-duty pollee officer wtth Prtde,
Integrtty and Guts - JUS!' A WIFE

lth:-8~~~-De-;kl
I
I

by Chet Tannehill

..-..-...-......- .._...._..._..._ - __ ._..._....-., -·---- ._..,.._ ____ J

,

RAY CROMLEY

Israeli Indecision
Barrier to Peace

I

•

Camp-

I

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The offtetals had thetr turn Saturday mght at the Legion hall
In Athens It was the occaswn of the Southeastern Ohto Offtctals
Assoctation, Athens Chapter
Believe 1t or not, Me1gs County had the largest delegalton
present for dinner, presentation of cerllftcates for long servtce,
and a talk by Ohio Umvers1ty assiStant basketball coach Dale
Bandy The local group was headed by basketball-football offtetal
Ron Smith, of Pomeroy, vtce prestdent of the basketball sechon
After Smith were basketball offtctals Rtchard Swackhamer,
Chuck Dowrue, Dtck Vaughan, and Nolan Swackhamer (rettred
as an offtctal), baseball umptres George Nesselroad, Jr , Dr
Clyde Ingels and Homer Smtih, and gomg along for Ute dinner and
laughs the Refs tell on themselves, were Jlffi Diehl, Bob Roberts,
Don Dtxon, and yours truly
One of the heartiests laughs came when Horner Smtih was
mtroduced Homer was too much for toaslrnaster Nolan Mace
Homer' Wow' What a name for a referee'" he howled
When tt came time to hand out the mentortous awards for 15,
20 and 25 years - a new recogOjlton sponsored by the Ohto Htgh
School Athletic Assn - there was some doubt about Nolan
Swackhamer's claun to one of them Nolan, who coached two
state champion basketball teams at Glenford early m h1s career,
later a state champton baseball team at Middleport (1957), and
sandwtched m a multitude of years as a basketball referee, had
heen omttted from the 'offtctal" list recetvmg the awards But tl
was generally agreed that Nolan had one commg, a matter that
will be venfted later Nolan hunself wasn't sure how many years
he was m the strtped shirts
Swack," as he ts known everywhere, still has a hand m
coachmg Now 1t's golf for Metgs High School
They had a lot of fun ktdding Bob Wren, OU's very successful
baseball coach Saturday afternoon Wren s Bobcats had taken a
doubleheader from West Vtrgmta Wesleyan,~ and 2().1 "What
was the matter wtth your defense?" somebody asked
Ralph Nuzum, the 6-5 and at least 240 lb one-tune Athens
High (1952) and OU baseball pttcher wtth the btg curve, and now
one of our fmer offtetals, was the butt of a senes of Jokes Coach
Wren clauned he once had a hot prospect for third base on one of
his teams who, when he learned Nuzum was gomg to be a starter
m the upcommg season, purposely slid mto home plate so as to
mJure himself thus guaranteemg he wouldn't have to man the
barrtcade at the "hot corner" on defense
Maybe the college boys hit Nuzum's curve, but 1t was a most
effective weapon m htgh school Hobart Wilson Jr of Gallipolis
recalls dtstinctly gomg to bat agamst Nuzum at least 12 tunes m
Utetr high school games and gettmg not so much as a foulllp
Bandy came to OU to play basketball out of Portsmouth, and
after a couple seasons at Portsmouth Clay, returned to hts alma
mater as Jun Snyder's asststant Ahard man on referees hunself,
he nevertheless had the highest prmse for the dedicatton to sports
shown by the Athens chapter members
For as retirmg secretary Darrell West (Albany) pomted out,
the state athletic assoc1a1ton requtres 1ts chapters to hold a
mimmum of four meetings each season (four m football, four m
basketball, elc ) the Athens chapter holds nme m each sport
These meetmgs are directed to self-unprovement through
discusston and study leading to a deeper knowledge of the sport
they're workmg
It was generally agreed, and this I'm certam we as fans
should remember, that no offtctal ever got rtch from refereemg
The pay IS very modest, ftgurmg travel expenses and tune con
swned Most offtetals submtt themselves to abuse of fans and
coaches (generally the losers ) mamly because they are mcurably
attached to athletics as a proper acllvtty of young male Amenca
For the record, offtcers of Athens Chapter are (football )
MBI Schwarze!, president, Dr Burton DeVeau, vtce prestdent
(basketball) Don Eskey, prestdent, Ron Smtih, vtce prestdent
and secretary (retirmg) servmg both dtvtstons, Darrell West
Dtck Lawson was promoted to West's post
Let's gtve all of them three cheers'
Uh, that ts, until the next time a flag IS thrown for roughness
on nothmg more than an exuberant gndiron play, or the whtstle
blown for chargmg on a plamly legal drtve for the basket, or a
strike on a pttch that clearly ts a full foot outs1de the strike zone 1

Squires, Utah,
Colonels Triumph
By United Press International
Charhe Scott and ZehnoBeaty are leavmg some lastmg
unpresstons m thetr ftrst
Arnencan Baksetball Assocta
bon playoffs
Scott, a 6 foot-6 rookte guard,
scored 29 pomts and dazzled the
New York Nets wtth some
fancy drtbblmg Sunday to spark
the Vtrgmta SqUires to a 114-108
v1ctory m the second game of

B~RRl'S WORLD

~~~---------H~a-t~lo-,s-T=h-e~y'~ll~~~~lt~E~v-e-ry-=T~im-e---------,

ON THE PI-lONE TO UNDERSTAND
MIS PROBl-EM •

r

I

Helen Help Us!

the calctum by usmg larger
amounts of nonfat dry mtlk
Caktum ts very Important
to help prevent decalctficalton of the spme that occurs
so often after the meno
pause
If you want to be a real
health faddtsl you mtght go
to a health food store and
buy some nat u r a I mtlled
flour Just as nature mtended
tt to be ground husk and all,
but tl may not contam as
many v 1 tam 1 n s as your
wh1te bread
I do recommend you make
WASHINGTON (NEA)
your own rolls and btscu1ts
smce most commerctal prod
The maJor 1mmed1ate obstacle to a M1deast settlement
ucts contam too much satu- ts the mab11Ity of the Israeli government to agree w1thm
It seems to be popular to rated fat
tlself on what tt would settle for
{t-IEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
knock a n y t h 1 n g that 1s
And unttl the Israelis do reach some consensus on
Amencan, from bread to
bastes,
there can be no meanmgful peace talks w1lh
Please send your quest1ons gnrJ
wme but netther need take
Egypt
commenh to Lawrence E Lamb,
a back seat
Thts IS how the problem ts v1ewed by men at the htghMD, m care ol th1s pgper While
est
levels m Washmgton
You should use ennched Dr Lamb cannot answer mr/IVIrluaJ
flour tf you do your own bak /etten, he w11J answer letters ol
These U S ofltcfals believe the Israeli have become so
mg And you can mcrease qenerol ~rdere.st 1n luture columns mured to Arab hard lme extremtsm that when Egypt's
Anwar Sadat came up w1th extremely reasonable proposals, the Israeli found they had no contmgency plans
~------------------ ------- ----------------- for such a s1tuat10n
The hawks and doves m the Israeli cabmet are now so
dtvtded tt ts tmposstble for our top men to get a reasonable ftx from the Israeli government, even m conftdence,
on what tt wants or for what tt would consider settlmg
I
, Htgh
Israel! offtctals, who have m the past talked very
tertalnments at the DeWttt Nursmg Home frankly mdeed to thetr Amencan counterparts m pnvate,
BY JACK O'BRIAN
erupt.a from great vaudeville star mossom now talk m evastve nddles
But the hme to act 1s now Factors m the Arab world
Seeley, a patient there
Jolmny Mercer gets whtch
TOM JONES HAS THEM
have been adverse to a dectston for years, now
deserved raves for his songs and his favorite seem to be under control, at least temporanly
MOONING IN MIAMI BEACH
NEW YORK - The ArUrur "Street Singer" compliment may have come from the late Cole
• Sadat has wtde backmg among Egypttan mtelTracys split, made up and are in splttsville agam Porter "The song I would most Uke to have lectuals, government offiCials, busmessmen, students
and even m the mtlttary, m h1s moves for peace
While House correspondent Merrtman wr1tten IS Jolmny Mercer's 'Laura' "
Smith's wtdow, Gailey, wed Bng Gen Herbert DeservE¥!, but David Raksm composed the eerie- The Egyphans m almost all cucles are bred of lhts
McChrystal (a wtdower wtth stx children) m lovely music Mercer is unique -often writes war and want peace so that they can go about thetr
busmess They see little value m prolongmg a confltct
Williamsburg, Va , recently
Tom Jones' TV words (as to "Laura") to music already com- wt1h
Israel whtch threatens to go on endlessly to no purflop had folks suspecting he was slippmg, but his posed- and captures mood aud the flavor of the pose and wh1ch would, m any event, brmg them little,
Mtarru Beach Deauville April engagement IS a film Raksin seems to have wr~tten few songs per even tf Egypt won
sellout already at $10 cover and $12 50 rrururnum se m his fllm«anng years, but his background
• Sadat tf sources close to the Whtle House are cor
mUSic
for
"The
Bad
and
the
BeauUful"
film
is
rect,
badly wants to resume dtplomaltc relabons wtth
The Waldorf and other elegant spots are
the
Umted
States and to budd up a close fnendly re
crymg paruc wtth a $10 muwnum, but the Copa IS never bad, always beautiful, the only place we
laltonsh1p
domg sellout trade wtth oo rrururnum and can- know you can hear 1t "live" IS in the Blue Bar of
• Sadat, htrnself, htgh U S offtctals say, ts a reasonmer booking of acts
Joan Bennett doesn't the HOlltaria dell' Orso In Rome, where pianist able,
mteliigent and mgemous man who means busmess
have to work, just wants to - she'll star at the Romeo plays tt nightly and well
(He ts, of course pnmanly concerned for the mterests
The new lipstick "Hot Ups" is a reminder of of h1s own country and not adverse, m his country s
Meadowbrook Dmner Theater, startmg April14
old Whiteman star Henry Busse, whose theme mterest, to playmg the Sovtet Umon and the Umted
m "The Boy Frtend "
Diana Rigg is a fine and classy States off agamst each other )
The latest edition of the Rmgllng Bros , and that was
But hrne will not watt
Barnwn &amp; Bailey Ctrcus IS the best we've ever actress, so ber nervOllS gum-chewmg on the
Sadat does not have Abdel Nasser's powerful gnp on
seen as tl starts the 101sl year of Indeed the Tony telecast seemed below her image, but she
the
government and the army He has powerful detrac
Greatest Show on Earth
ThiS year's ex- was up for a best«tress award arxl1t was easier
tors m the milttary-men not sahsfted w1th moderate
travaganza, to use a modest word, has a lad the than fainting Erie Stanley Gardner's ranch Is solutwns These officers are lymg low now But unless
ladtes swear has brought sex to the circus- just for sale at one millloo no takers in the recessive Sadat ts able to show results m a reasonable hme, the
by domg h1s assorted anunal-tramer acts more month of March
extrtmtsts could take over It can be satd there IS some
consternatton at the White 'House that now, when It me
superbly than any we've ever seen, plus his
Ann Willlarns (Mrs Bob Welch) left her role ts of the essence, the Israeli turn mdectstve
dashmg blond good looks Gunther GebelWtlliams IS his name and elephants • and - tigers in "Applause" to aw8lt the baby, who arrived in
IS his game
He performs the most darmg Mt. Kisco, 8'9-lb boy She'll return not to Bdwy.
feats with vtciously snarling Bengal tigers but to ber running role In the TV soap "Searcb
without gtln or chair, truXes elephants and tigers, for Tomorrow "
Right in the mldat of the Gray Flannel
at one point directs what seems to be the whole
Madison Square Garden -full of pach~derms just Jungle (Madison Ave In the 5Q!) a sandwlcb
man paraded this urgent message. "I Need a
with hiS unampllfted and most-virile vo1ce
The Flying Gaonas from Mexico elevate the Job 1" ... Wealthy parents of an ambitious young
aenal trapeze to even htgher exciting sights and singer who hasn't made any career traction
thrills and there's a juggler naJoed Plcaso, who's changed their expensive ~oitation of the lad
so brilliant, CBS should renew the Ed &amp;tlllvan They're shipping him to Englarxl and then will
Show just to g1ve hlffi the proper spoWght on TV, try later tolrnporthlmasa "new find"
Architect Edward Durell Stone's latest
he manipulates unexpected Items, none more
amazmgly than what seem tiny oranges he bulldup Is to convince his ex, Marla, into
juggles not wttl\ hands, feet or head - but into remarriage, Maria says they'll remain "just
"Ryan's Daughter" director
and out of his mouth, five or six In the air at ll good frtends"
time as if his tonsils contamed some mystery David Lean's taking a whole year off. He just got
word from India he can shoot his Mahatma
mini~not firmg them - all quite fantastic
The show has color, excitement, thrills, GIIJ)dhl P'\1nieJbes'e, Jiut be m117Jilllllt In SptUn
clowns, everything you would expect, plus at • Zachariah Blackistone of the FTD qulcltleast half a dozen acts that SW'pllS8 everything flower-dellvery service still runs a chain of
heretofore in thetr very speC181 field, a truly fiorist shops - and just iifeliraied his tOOth
birthday (plays golf - and breaks his age
magnificent show
'
regillarly)
,
We aU took our youngsters, cr1tics and p~~bllc
The 1972 book market will be flooded with
alike Stage-ecreen-TV star Robert Morse
Presidential-bopeful
autobiogs (Muskle,
seemed even more delightedly juvellile than his
two exetted youn~ters
Six circus per- McGovern, Humphrey, etc), but Teddy Kenformances already have had to be cancelled to nedy will skip such peraonal remlnlacerice and
make room for the N Y Knlcks arid N Y let some other author write a flattering tome
1')7 1 t.~ ,N (A In~ ~~
Rangers basketball - hockey playoffs, of course 'l'he flop of "Look Where riD At," a new mualcal,
"You know, Doctor, 1t's l1ke bemg watched by hundreds
Madison Square Garden owns the Knicks &amp; was 811 ill wind that blew good for Sherr!
Spillane,
author
Mickey's
wife
Playboy
ol Sp1ro Agnews 1"
Rangers, not the circus
):liggest applause for ex-vaudeville star Hal recruited her lor a Cenlerfold-of-Ule·Month If
t
LeRoy's. unpubhcized and refused-fee en- that's good
ecullves because tl keeps on
the shelf I o n g e 1 than the
more nutrthous whole wheat
bread and beca use msects
avotd tt- tt doe s n t have
enough food value to keep
them ahve
That ts a pretty harsh m
dtclment of om bt ead and
I d ltk e to say a few good
thmgs about tl Most whtle
bread ts low m fat and manv
bakenes now use nonfat mtlk
sohds Many other bakery
pt oducts contam lard satu
rated fats coconut ml egg
l olks and thmgs that should
be 1 estncted tn amo unt tn a
dtet to p r e v e n t heart and
artery dtsease You can also
buy bread ennched wtth but
ter, egg yolks and tlems that
~o u should try to avmd
I have read a lot of com
ments a b o u t h ow p o o 1
Amertcan bread ts Well
there are vet y lew food
products that provtde a bal
anced dtet by themselves

!Voice along Broadway

You can call tt by any oth
er name you want You can
call tt Chane! No 5 or My
Sm. but underneath the per
fume tt s sltll welfare

•

~CSOREt..Y FINALLY GOr SOMEBODY

Bread certamly has ca1ortes
and the enrtched whtle bread
ts loadeli wtlh Vttamm B
complex Accordmg to the
U S Agn culture Department,
Amencan whtte bread has
Just as many of these ele
ments as that n o s t a I g 1c
French Bread
Our en
nched Amertcan wh1te bread
has up to twtce as much cal
ctum and c on t a 1 n s more
phosphorus and tron It also
has about the same food
value as whole wheat bread
Those rna am are the facts
Some people may prefer the
taste of French bread and
that ts thetr prtvtlege but
facts are facts

r----- --,-----------------~-1

1

•

'
3- '!'he Dally Sentmel
Muldleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Apnl5 1971

Your
Agent

Dale Warner

UNDERINSURED
a horrtbl e com
btnat1on of words Let
us take away those
f1rst ft ve l ett ers
Insure - be sure 1

Consult Us !loon

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992 2966
Court 51 ,

thetr best-of seven playoff se
nes
The former North Carolina
star was at hts best m the
clutch as he scored etght pomts
m the last two and one-half
mmutes to sew up the Squtres'
second stratght vtctory over the
Nets
Beaty a 6-foot 9 center who
jumped to the ABA lhts season
from the NBA, scored 32 pomts
and grabbed 15 rebounds to
pace the Utah Stars to a 113-101
trtumph over the Texas Chapparals It was Utah's thtrd
vtctory m a row over Texas
Wtth Beaty controllmg the
boards and successfully htttmg
from oulstde wtth hts Jump
shot, the Stars Jumped to an
early lead and held tt all the
way Texas battled to wtthm a
pomt wtth 8 06 left m the game,
but the Stars connected on
etght consecultve free throws to
lock up the contest
In other,playoff ~ton, LoUie
Dampter scored 28 pomts to
pace the Kentucky Colonels to a
121}.110 vtctory over the Flortdtans Kentucky now leads 2-0
m the best-of seven series
Dampter sank the Flondtans
wtlh hts long range shootin~.
connectmg on four three-pomt
fteld goal attempts Teammate
Dan Issei ch1pped m wtth 26
potnls as the duo offset a 35pomt effor t by the Flortdtans'
Mack Calvm

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cmcmnall Reds, the defendmg
champtons of the National
League, opened thetr season
today already cnppled by mJurles
Three starters from the 1970
team w1ll mtss from a few
weeks to several months of the
ftrst of the season because of
wmter and sprmg wounds
Bobby Tolan wtll be on the
dtsabled hst until late May or
June because of a ruptured
a~htlles tendon suffered durmg
a basketball game
Dave Concepcton, a shortstop ,
wtll m1ss the fn st two weeks
at least because of a dtslocated
!hum b And Lee May, the ptg
hard.swmgmg ftrst baseman,
wtll be out the !trst two weeks
w1th a steamed knee hgament
He was tnJured as the spnng

Foyt Takes
Atlanta 500
HAMPTON, Ga ('UPI)-It's
no wonder that A J Foyt
thmks he mtght let somebody
else drtve at lndtanapoits"
whtle he focuses hts attentton
on the Southern Stock Car
Racmg Ctrcwt
Foyt, a vtsttor from the U S
Auto Club, won the Atlanta 500
Sunday, beatmg Southern super
star Rtchard Petty by I 8
seconds
that wm delivered $19 200 to
Foyt, and bnngs to $86,350 the
amount he has won m the four
Nascar races he's entered lhts
season
Foyt sa1d hts 1969 Mercury,
prepared by the Woods Brothers of Stuart, Va , 'ran
beaultful all day And my p1t
crew dtd one hell of a JOb
But 1! was hts p1l crew that
nearly got htm mto trouble
There were less than 30 m1les
left m the 500-mtle race and
Foyt had about a two-second
lead over Petty drt vmg a 1971
Plymouth, one of only two
factory backed cars m the race
Foyt made a ptl stop that
lasted 11 seconds Petty stayed
only 8 7 seconds, gtvmg theRandleman, N C rawr. a slight
lead
The two were neck-and neck
unttl Foyt passed Petty m a
turn on the 313th lap of the 328lap race
Both cars were runmng
qutle fast ' Foyt satd ' It
seemed like Rtchard could get
mto the corners a blUe better
than I could and I could get off
a little faster It s Just kmda
one of them gambles When I
dtd get by htm , I got m the
corner very hard I ahnost spun
out ~ couple of ttmes f thmk at
one time or another Rtchard
shpped JUSt alittle btl, too
Anyltme you can wm w1th
these Southern boys, you ve
beaten the best m the world
They'll really lean on you
they'll race you wheel to
wheel "

Local Bowling
POMEROY
BOWLING LANES
Marr.h 29
The Lamplighters
Team

Pomts

H
69
Unl ou cha~ l es
54
Brr le Lr tes
51
L&amp;N
U
Tagalongs
26
Tea m Hrgh Serres - Us &amp;Co ,
US&amp; Co
Lucky Slrrkes

2177

Team Hrgh Game - L &amp; N
747
Hrgh lnd Serres - Harry
Thomas 578 Mary Voss 603
Second Hrgh lnd Senes Larry Dugan 570 Pandora
Colhns 503
Hrgh lnd Game - Harry
Thomas 237 Mary Voss 214
Second Hrgh lnd Game Harold Lohsr 224 Mary Voss
203

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Edt tor
Publtshed da r ly except
Satu rda y by Th e Oh ro Valley
P ub l rsh ng Company
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2157

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representatrve
Botttnellt
Ga ll ag her In c 12 East 42nO
St New York Ctty New York
Subs c: r rptton ra t es
De
lrvered by car rr er where
ava11able 50 cen t s per week
By Motor Route where ci.'lrrrer
servr c e not avat lab le One
mqnth Sl 75 By mad In Ohro
and W Va One year Sl4 00
S1.11 months $7 25
Three
months S4 50 Subscript ron
prrce 1ncludes Sundav T mes
Sent rne l
..,...

N. W. COMPTON. 0~ D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFF ICE HOURS 9 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS) - EAST COURT ST,
POMER Y

tra mmg season was closmg
A sellout crowd of 51,726 was
assured for the opemng game
today at Rtverfront Stadtwn
agamst the Atlanta Braves, who
were mvtted-back desptte the1r
wm that spoiled lh" Reds open
er last year Standmg room
ltckets went on sale thts morn
mg for the game
Gov John J Gtll1gan was
asked to throw out the first
ball, but was unable to attend
and m Ins place a Congresston
a! Medal of Honor wmner from
Ohto agreed to open the season
Got don Roberts of Lebanon
Ohto wtll do the honors
Gary Nolan , who had an 18-7
season m 1970 was ptlled
agamst Phil Ntekro, 12-18, on
the mound
Manager Sparky Anderson
had two lime batltng champton

Pete Rose m nght(teld Berme
Carbo m leftfteld, lf&lt;il McRae m
centerfield, Tony Perez at !trst,
Tommy Heims at second,
Woody Woodward at thtrd,
Frank Duffy at shortstop, and
Johnny Bench catchmg
Atlanta planned to have Son
ny Jackson m centerfield
Ralph Garr m leftfteld, Hank
Aaron m nghtfleld, Orlando
Cepeda at first Hal Kmg
catchmg Fehx Mtllan at sec
ond Clete Boyer at thtrd, and
Marty Perez at shortstop
Few observers have ptcked
the Reds to repeat as league
champtons, but Anderson ts op
ltmts!tc
"I d be a liar 1f I Satd our
IOJUrtes dtdn t concern me, he
admttled but we ve got a lot
gomg for us too
We 're commg off a great

year We worked harder and
are m better physiCal condtlton
than last year We're versaltle,
so many players can play dtf
fere nt postltons And there s a
lot of prtde on lhts club "
The Reds won thetr last two
exhtbt!ton games 2-0 over the
Detrmt Ttgers m Loutsvtlle, Ky
on Sa lurday and 5 2 over De
trot! m Cmcmnalt on Sunday
In the Saturday game Ross
Gnmsley Don Gullett and Cia)
Carroll combmed to ptlch a two
htt shutout
Rose Heims and Perez sm
gled m the Reds first 1 un m
the ftrst mnmg and a Dell ott
ptl.cher walked Carbo wtth the
bases loaded tn the etghth for
the second one
On Sunday Carbo homered
and Perez doubled to lead the
Reds

Vietnam Veteran
Subs For Nixon
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wrtter
The maJOr league baseball
season opens today wtth a 4().
year old veteran of Vtelnam
ftlhng m for Prestdent N1xon m
Washmgton, D C and three
spare parts subbmg for key
regulars of the Nattonal League
ChampiOn Reds m Cmcmnalt
Master Sgt Dame! L P-itzer,
a for mer prtsoner m Vtetnam,
wtll represent Prestdent Ntxon
m the tradtttonal prestdenttal
opener between the Oakland
Athleltcs and Washmgton Senators Defense Secretar~ Melvm
R Latrd and the chtldren DJ
ftve Amertcans shll held
pnsoner m V1etnam also wtll be
m the prestdenttal box
The Reds, hostmg the Atlanta
Braves m the Natwnal Leagues
tradttlonal 'advance opener 'm
Cmcmnalt, wtll be wtlhout
cegulars Lee May, Bob Tolan
and Dave ConcepciOn all of
whom are stdeiined wtth
lllJurtes The Reds also have
swttched Tony Perez from thtrd

to ftrst base m an effort to
pack the1r lineup w1th as much
power as posstble
The Los Angeles Dodgers,
ptcked by many to wm the
Natwnal League"s Western
Dtvtston litle o~e n ed agamst the
Houston Astros m Houston m a
mght game that rounds out the
ftrst day's schedule
A sellout crowd of more than
42,000 ts expected at Washmg
ton when Vtda Blue a 21-year
old left hander w1th blazmg
speed, fa ces Dtck Bosman, a 16
game wmner for the Senators
last season Blue was brought
up late last season and p1tched
a no httler and a one htller m
September
The Athletics are rated
behmd the Mmnesota Twtns
and Caiiforma Angels as
contenders m the AL West The
Senators who acqutred Denny
McLam and Curt Flood m
wmter trades are constdered a
mystery club, m the AL East
whtch, of course, IS ruled by
the world champton Balltmore

•
Onoles
Gary Nolan 18 7 tn 1970 has
been selected to ptlch the Reds
opener agamst Phtl Ntekro, who
had a 23-13 record m 1969 and a
12-18 mark m 1970 for the
Braves Perez ts subbmg for
May at ftrst Hal McRae for
1alan m center rookte Frank
Duffy for ConcepciOn at shm t
and Woody Woodward for Pet ez
at lhtrd
A crowd of 51 726 largest
ever to attend a baseball game
111 Cmcmnatt
wtll see the
opener m Cmcmnah 's Rtver
ft ont Stadmm
• Btll Smger who comptled an
8-5 record mcludmg a no h1tter
after recove rmg from hepaltltts
last season, wtll be on the
mound for the Dodgers agatnst
Larry Dterker who was 16 12
last season afier bemg a 20game wmner tn 1969 The
Dodgers are favored to wm the
NL s Western Dtvtston Tttle th1s
year prtmartly because of the
acqu1stlton of slugger Rtchte
Allen from the St Louts
Cardmals

Bulls Have Chance To

Opening Day Pitchers
(By Umted Press lnternaUonall
(Last Year's Woo-Lost Reoords)
(Monday)
(1Amertcan League)
Oakland (Blue 2-0) at Washington (Bosman 16-12)
10nly game scheduled)
(National League)
Allanla iNtekro 12-18) at Cmcmnatt (Nolan 18-7)
Los Angeles (Singer 8-5) at Houston (Dierker 16-12),
mght
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday
(American League 1
Kansas Ctty (Drago 9-15) at Califorma (Wrtght 22·12),
mght
Milwaukee (Pattin 14-12) at Minnesota (Perry 24-12)
Cleveland (Hargan 113) at Detroit (Lollch 14-19)
New Yock (Bahasen 14 11) at Boston (Culp 17 14)
(Only garues scheduled )
(National League 1
Montreal (Morton 18-11) at New York (Seaver 18-12)
Phtladelphia (Short 9-16) at Pittsburgh (Ellis 13-10)
St Louts (Gtbson 23-7) at Chtcago (Jenkins 22-26)
San ~'ranc t sco (Marichal l2-10) at San Diego (Phoebus 56) , night
Los Angeles (Osteen lfH4) at Houston (Wilson 111),
mght
(Only games scheduled 1

NBA

Playoff Standtngs

By Unt1ed Press ln1ernahonal
Semtflna ls- Best of seven

East

Senes A

W L p,t

4

x New York

Allan Ia

I

By Umted Press lnternattonal
The Milwaukee Bucks and the
Baltunore Bullets JOmed the
New York Kmckerbockers m
the semtfmals of the Nattonal
Basketball Assoctatton s cham
ptonshtp playoffs Sunday and
Coach Dtck Motta of the
Chtcago Bulls mststs hts team
wtll be the fourth membet of
'
the group
The Bucks overpowered San
Franctsco, 131H16, to wm thetr
ftrst round playoff senes four
games to one, and Balttmore
defeated Phtladelphta 128-120,
to take the1r senes four games
to three
Chtcago evened tis senes
wtlh Los Angeles at three
games aptece by defeatmg the
!..akers, 113-99 The two teams
wtll meet m Los Angeles
Tuesday mght to dectde the
senes

Bal!tmore wtll hegm semtfmal play Tuesday mght agamst
New York, whtch last week
downed Atlanta four games to
one to wm tis opemng round
senes Mtlwaukee wtll play the
wmner of the Chtcago-Los
Angeles sen es
Motta, whose team has
battled back from a 2-0 deftctt
m the senes, satd after
Sunday's vtctory that hts
players )Vere so charged up
emottonally that he could not
envtston them losmg the
seventh game
Our players are so ftred up
now, tf they're dented, I'll be
surpnsed," satd Motta ' Our
club has a great deal of prtde
and they want thts very badly '
The Bulls had to come from

behmd agam Sunday to force a
seventh game They traded by
11 pomts early m the game but
turned the contest m thetr
favor m the thtrd penod by
outsconng the Lakers 21-4
durmg one stretch
Ch1cago placed all ftve
starters tn double ftgures, wtth
Bob Wetss leadmg the way wtth
25 pmnts Jerry Sloan chtpped
m wtth 23 'pomts and Bob Love
had 21 Gatl Goodrtch led Los
Angeles wtth 25 pomts
Milwaukee had hardly any
trouble at all m whtppmg the
Warnors The Bucks btl on 59
per cent of the1r shots m the
ftrst half and Jed, 69 35, at the
SLALOM WINNERS
MT HOOD MEADOWS, Ore
(UPI)- Ertc Poulsen of Squaw
Valley, Calif and Undy Cochran of Rtchmond, VI won the
mens and women 's lttles m the
Far West Kandahar Slalom
over the weekend
CEVERT TAKES LEAD
HOCKENHEIM
Germany
(UP!) - Franco1s Cevert of
France has taken the lead m
the European Formula Two
champwnshtp , wmmng the
openmg Jtm Clark Memortal
race at Hockenhetm over
Graham Htll of England
Cevert, m a Tee no took the
ftrst heat m 43 29 0 mmutes for
the 20 laps on the 4 2-mtle
course and was lhtrd m the
second heat Htll was third m
the ftrst heat and won the
second heat m 43 39 9 m hts
Lotus Cevert won the overall
tttle on the basts of qu1cker
limes

800
4 200
I

Triumph

Senes B

W L p,f

x Ba l! tmore

4 J

Ph rl ade ph a

571

3 4 429
West

x Mrl waukee
Sa n Fr a nc sco

W L Pr.t
4 1 800
I 4 200

5-4 1-0

'

Coach Burt Brunner's Rio
Senes B
W L Pr.f Grande College Redmen evened

Los Angeles

500 thetr season record at 4-4
500 Saturday wtth a doubleheader
vtclory over Berea College, 5-4
Sunday s Res ults
Mt l 136 San Fran 86
and 1-0
Chr cago 113 LA 99
Tom Sunms was the winning
Ba ll 126 Phrl 120
hurler m the opener Tom
I Only gam es scheduled)
Monday s Games
Flatter bred a tw&lt;Hlitter m tbe
I No games scheduled)
rughtcap McConnell, the lOlling
pitcher,
hurled a one-hitter
ABA Playolf Standings
By Untied Press lnlrnaftonal Ray Jordon collected Rto's only
Semr Fonals Best Of Seven
safety, a smgle
East
Rio will play West Vtrglnia
Ser1es ' A"
W L State and P1kevllle before
• 02 02 rei,!JrnWfl 1J!c!nle I.P\ tJ Mt.
~~~~l)!~rk
Vernon on April h
Senes B •
3 3
3 3

Chu:ag o
x clmched sert es

lne,

W L

Kentu cky

2 0

Florrd ans

0 2

West
Sen es

Reward

C"

W L
lnd ana
M emph rs

Gain NBA 's Semifinals

Redmen

Pro Standings

2 0
0 2

Senes 0'
W L

Ulah

3 0
0 3

Texas

Sunday s Results
Ky 120 Florrdrans 110
mtermtsston Jon McGlocklin Va 114 New York 108
Texas 101
paced the Bucks wtth 28 pomts Ulah 113
Monday s GAmes
and Lew Alcmdor had 23 Ron lndrana at MemphiS
Wtlbams led San Franctsco
F1nal NHL Standmgs
wtlh 13 pomts
By
Untied
Press lnternaltonal
The Bullets broke thetr game
East
open m the second quarter
W L T Pis
57 14 7 121
when they outscored the 76ers, Boston
49 18 II 109
New York
43 22 Earl Monroe and Fred M
42 23 13 97
on lreal
Cat ter each scored 10 pomts m Toronto
3733 882
24 39 15 63
the second quarter for the Buffalo
2446856
Vancouver
Bullets, but tt was the shootmg De!rolf
22 45 II 55
of Jack Mann that was most
West
W L T Pis
responstble for the Baltunore
Chcago
49
20 9 107
lrtwnph Mann scored a career St Lours
34 25 19 87
h1gh 33 pomts to pace the Phtladelphla
28 33 17 73
Minnesota
26 34 16 72
Bullets' balanced attack
Los
Angeles
25 40 13 63
Archte Clark scored 37 pomts Plltsburgh
, 21 37 20 62
and Btlly Cunnmgham added 30 Cal•lornla
20 53 5 45
to spark the 76ers, but
Sunday's Results
Phtladelphta got very little help Boslon 7 Montreal 2
New York 6 Detroit 0
from tis bench
L A 4 Vancouver 2
Toronto 3 Ch rcago 2
Ph1l 3 Buff 3 (fie)
Fmal AHL Sfandmgs
P11ts 1 St Louts I (t1e)
By Umfed Press lnternaltonal
(Only games scheduled)
WLTPfs
Provtdence
28 31 13 69
Montreal
27 31 14 68
Springfield
29 35 8 66
Quebec
25 31 16 66
West
WLTPfs
Balltmore
40 23 9 89
Cleveland
39 26 7 85
Hershey
31 31 10 72
Rochester
25 36 11 61
'Sunday s Resu lts
Cleveland 9 Prov 7
Quebec 5 Roch 4
Spnng 2 Balf 0

Your older years by savmg

In your younger days Start
now' Start at the Meigs Co
Branch of the Athens Co
Savmgs &amp; Loan A fnendly
place to do bustness

4%%
PASSBOOK

RATE

Metgs County Branch of The
Athens County Savmgs &amp;
Loa n Co

296 Second St
Po meroy Ohto

FAST ONE-DAY SERVICE
6n loans up to

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE
5349.95

Reduce monthly payments with . ..

cash

$JS 00 Down-

Balance On
ConveAient
Terms.

MASON ·
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

ALSO OTHER
C l CO LOAN$ OF

$ 5000

AND MORE

9922171

~E Mam

~Pomeroy,

0

�2- The Daily Senhnei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Apnl5 1971

The Almanac
By United Press lolenlalional
Today ts Monday, Aprtl 5, the
95th day of 1971
The moon ts between tis ftrst
quarter and full pbase
The mormng"tlll; are Venus,
Mars and Juptter
The evemng star&amp;are Mercury and Saturn
Those born on thts day are
under the stgn of Artes
Amertcan Negro educator
Booker T Washmgton was born
Aprtl 5, 1856
On thts day m htstory
1614 Pocahontas, daughter
of fndtan Chtef Powhatan, was
mamed to English colomst
John Rolfe m Vtrgtma
In 1951 Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg of New York City
were sentenced to death as
atom sptes" for Russ1a
In 1964 Gen Douglas MacArthur dted at the age of 84
In 1968 maJor Arnertcan ctltes
were htt by vtolent nots m the
aftermath of the assassination
of Negro leader Marlin Luther
King Jr

EDITORIAL

Eddying Effects
Of Pakistan War
The ctvtl sh tfe winch threatens the survtval of Pakt
stan as tl has extsted m the almost quarter century smce
Bntam ltqmdated tis lndtan emptre understandably ma~
seem far away confusmg and of ~lf'real tmport to most
Amencans
If anythmg reachon may be of some rehef that het e
for a ,hange ts an Astan cnsts m whtch our own vttai
mterest and posstbly resources and manpower are not
automatically mvolved
It was not always so !n the ea rl y warm days of the
Co ld War Paktslan was the cht~f U S ally m Asta and
the link between the Mtddle East and Southeast Asta
Treaty Orgamzation alltances fo rged by Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles to contam the Sovtel Umon
and Red Chma Paktstan was a leadmg rectptent of
Amencan a1d parhcuiarly m1htary and 1ts armed forces
were among the best eqUipped m the world outs1de the
maJor powers One result of the spec1al Amencan Pak1
slam relationship was to stram US relat1ons Wtlh India
wh1ch at that time was makmg constderable efforts to
ward fnendshtp w1th Chma and saw tlself as a more
ltkely target of Paktstam weapons than etlher of the
Commumst g1ants
But times power balances and dtplomats change Over
the years the anh Commumst alliances have become
monbund lndta has found Red Chma a dangerous ne1gh
bor and established a workmg tf not always comfortable
relabonshtp w1th the Umted States and Paktslan has
looked around for other fnends notably Red Chma
The surpnse m Paktstan s present crtsts ts that tl dtd
not come much earlier Paktstan ts to a great extent an
arhftctal state, the product of an mtense naltonahsm
fanned among lndta s mmonty Moslems by one man,
Mohammed Ah Jmnah durmg the last years of Bnhsh
rule Unfortunately Indta s Moslems were not loca t~ d m
one area but at opPosite ends of Bnttsh lndta clumped
around the Punjab m the West and m Bengal m the East
When the nation came mto extslence m 1947, 1t was
umted by a common re1tg10n but separated by nearly
everythmg else-geography (1 OO() rntles of lndtan ter
ntory) language (Bengali m the East and Urdu m the
Westl, culture (West looks to Iran and the Mtdeast East
to Southeast Asta ) and even dtel (wheat and meat m the
West rtce m the Eastl
Although smaller m area, the East has more peoplesome 70 m1lhon as agamst 55 mtllton But Westerners
have always dommated the government and the econ
amy Although the East s jute and other agncultural
exports earned the maJor share of fore1gn exchange the
proftts, tl ts charged went mostly to mdustnaltze the
West The results have been mcreasmgly stndent East
ern demands for autonomy tf not full mdependence and
the eventual crackdown by the army
Allah m thts case would certamly appear to be on the
stde of the btggest battalions Tbe Paktstam army drawn
largely from the Punjab and now equtpped With a me
lange of Amencan Brtltsh West German and Red Ch1
nese weapons sltll rates htgh m that part of the world
Guerrilla warfare m the humid nver deltas of the East
might, however be a much different matter
Whatever the outcome of the ctvtl conflict, tl would
appear to mean problems not ltmtted to Paktstan alone
Ne1ther an Eastern breakaway state whtch would be po
llttcally and eCOJIOmtcally shaky nor umty mamtamed
by a bloody Western mthlary occupalton of the East
could contnbute anythmg to stabthty m Southern Asm
The Umted States may be umnvolved therefo~e but
tl can scarcely be dtsmterested

'

, WIN AT BRIDGE

', , Selecting Proper NT Lead
...,-----------, 'ou can establish the great

•

est number of tncks '
5
•
I
.Q8 2
Oswald
You start wtth
.10 3
one sure trtck tn spades and
tl08 76
no sure lrtcks m hearts So
'•
;
.AQ!04
yotr can establish one more
• ' WI!ST
EAST
tnck m hearts than you can
•I .A954
.J!07 3
m spades
; .Q9 54
.A8 72
Jtm ' Of course the heart
•• t A3
t 92
i e a d won t be the wmner
•
.96 2
.8 53
every ttme It ts posstble to
•
SOUTH (D)
set up hands where the heart
••
• K6
lead wtll gtve South hts con
• KJ6
!'
tract and the spade lead wtll
•
tKQJ 54
defeat declarer Howevet
'•
.KJ7
we can assm e yo u that year
•
Both vulnerable
m and yea r out the heart
• We•t North East South lead
wtll work out better
'
Thts t1me ts of course, an
IN'!:.
I
P... 2 NT
Pa&lt;S JNT.
ex treme case If the spade
'
Pass
Pass
ts opened South wtll make
••' Pass
Openmg
lead•
4
at
least four no trump and
•
may even ltmp home wt •h
•
•
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ftve tl the defense lets an
'' Oswald Take a look at ace go to sleep
(NEWSPAPER ENTEitPRISE ASSN )
•'• the West hand South has
•
• 1eached three no trump alter
• the Lawrence Welk btddtng t::wu:J~XtflMI!l
•
sequence of a one a two a
The btddmg has been
•' three
W
est
North F.ast South
Jtm You have to make
!'
I•
Pass
3•
Pass
• a bbnd lead You feel tf you Pa ~s
•• find the nght one you wtll Pass 4 ¥
Pass
•• beat the contract The gen Pass
5•
Pass
6t
Pass
• era! rule IS to attack one of Pass
'
' the maJor smts and you hold You South hold
'I four cards m each Whtch .A2 .AJI t63 .KQJ7 53
What do you do now'
1 smt should you ptck' '
A-B1d seven clubs Your
Oswald
Thts
ttme
the
•• wmnmg lead ts the four of partner Is showtng very good
hearts You htl your partner thamonds and 1mphes so me
•' 1\llh the ace and wmd up weakness an hcart.'i
w1th three heart tncks and
• 'our two stde aces '
Jtm It ts also the best
•• 'ead 1 r o m a percentage The Greek name Evange
standpomt In general yo u hne means " brmgmg good
want to play a sutt m whtch news' '
NORTH

.

..
32
.6"'
4

•

•
-

•

rn

A thought for today Booker
T Washmgton satd, "No race
shall prosper llll 1t learns that
there IS as nlUCh digmly 10
tillmg a held as m wrttmg a
poem''

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
America's Sturdy Staff of Life

U.S. Bread: A Lot Gaing lor It
By Lawrence Lamb M D
Dear Dr Lam b- 1 was
surpn sed recently to have
yo u recom mend the purchase
of bread as the only satts
factory bakery product on
the market today Yet the
enclosed arhc ie says the nu
tnltve value of bread and
other bakery p r o d u c t s ts
pt acttcally ml What can we
do to get better flour' I bake
my own br ead but am
obitged to use the avatlable
flour " h 1 c h ts poor Any
tdeas'
Dear Readet - 1 read yo w
enclos ure mcludmg the un
derlmed quote from Pres•
dent Ntxon s French born
nutntwn advtser Dr Jean
Mayer t h 1n k s that. Amen
can's whtle bleached do ugh
products would not even be
called bread m hts native
land 'fhetr food value ts al
most zero Whtte fl our ts pre
ferred by food tndustry ex

- Robert E Netzley a mem
ber of the Ohw Legzsla
ture to a colleague's sug
gestwn that the term
'welfare be done away
With

Its JUSt a lot of talk about
takmg extstmg funds and
redtstrtbutmg them m a dtf
ferent manner
- Rep Bella Abzug D N Y
on President NIXon's reve
nue sharmg proposal

A Nuttonal Dcclmc
D ea t h ~ from cancc1 of t he

ul ctus have dcclmcd about 50
pel l-ent 111 a gen e1 ltJOn Th1s IS
d 11 C 111 huge pa1l to cmly dctcc

lion hy th e P \P test md pwmpt
s tys the Amet Jctn

f1e tlm ent

f.an cc1 Soe~ et y

C lll CC JS of SIX S!I CS- h1cast,
eulnn JCctum lun ~ oral c,\VJiy
skm md ul ct us-offCI the ~1 c tt
est c1ppo1tun 11 1cs f01 sav1n g hves
Ptevcntnl act ion c ulvd1 agnn
sts nnd ptompt t teatment nre

Ihe hfe '"""g keys says the
Amen c m CL~n ccr Soctet&gt;

Canada ts second m stze
only to the Sov1et Umon

0'1E W&gt;DNT~ L.ATER T~E PROBL.EI&lt;\
15 5TIL.L I.JNRESOL.VED HERE WE
GO AGI&gt;.IN

~-----HELLO IM
TRYINIS TO GET
M1'55 ~EI'ILINE
SHE 5 F'AMIL.IAA
WITJ.I MY CASE!

?ft.s,,,acus "Tr•PO
t:1~1.

7

f!08 STEINER.
TI~DIN

COU'l.T

~I VJ~'!I:lN,

"'.:l

I

r

•

,.,.

By Helen Bottel

1
•

IS IT TRUE WHAT THEY SAY '
Dear Helen
On a TV talk show I heard a well-known bachelor brag that
"dating," 1e, shelling out for dinners, shows, or whatever, IS
pssse He says he just asks, "Do you want to go to to my place'"
and if she says, "Not" they're through
Have you ever heard of anything cheaper' - FOR WINING
AND DINING FIRST
Dear For
Yes How about the fella who suggests staymg at HER place,
to guzzle HF;R booze, or whate~er• - H
Dear Helen
There's a bill before Congress that might help control mternationaltllegal drug traffic Into the Umted States The bill H R 3831 -would penalize, by restrtctmg trade, countries that
tgnore the smuggling of dope mto America
Agreed, drug smuggling must be curtailed, but is restricting
trade lite answer• lns't this punishing a whole country for the SUIS
of a few' - DARIN
Dear Darm
Why don't we all show our concern by writing to our
congressmen' If this billlSD't the answer, then surely another will
soon be hammered out if there is "a clear mandate from the
people" - H
Dear Helen
You've had several letters about policemen, but I'd like to add
a wife's verston of
WHAT IS A COP?
Apoliceman 1s a husband, father or son, complete with pnde,
love, patience and any of the many other qualities that make up a
man But to some he's a Pig wtth a big head because he represents
authority
~o those who really know him He's the one who makes calls
to the little old lady's home and, upon arrtval, finds her call to the
dispatcher for help IS some funny little made-up story -because
she's lonely and needs someone to talk to
A policeman IS the one who comforts a young gtrl hurt m a
sertous car accident
He's the one who IS called m to curb rtols and then fmds
himself charged with police brutality
He belongs to an orgaruzation made up of good men, and some
of what you'd call bad ones, but then what orgaruzalton doesn't
have tis good and bad•
He's the one who gets the calls for a drunk disturbing with a
knife, burglars m action, ahootings, a young boy stealing hubcaps,
family disturbances
But, thank God, he's the one who comes horne to be a
husband, father, son, and an off-duty pollee officer wtth Prtde,
Integrtty and Guts - JUS!' A WIFE

lth:-8~~~-De-;kl
I
I

by Chet Tannehill

..-..-...-......- .._...._..._..._ - __ ._..._....-., -·---- ._..,.._ ____ J

,

RAY CROMLEY

Israeli Indecision
Barrier to Peace

I

•

Camp-

I

-

The offtetals had thetr turn Saturday mght at the Legion hall
In Athens It was the occaswn of the Southeastern Ohto Offtctals
Assoctation, Athens Chapter
Believe 1t or not, Me1gs County had the largest delegalton
present for dinner, presentation of cerllftcates for long servtce,
and a talk by Ohio Umvers1ty assiStant basketball coach Dale
Bandy The local group was headed by basketball-football offtetal
Ron Smith, of Pomeroy, vtce prestdent of the basketball sechon
After Smith were basketball offtctals Rtchard Swackhamer,
Chuck Dowrue, Dtck Vaughan, and Nolan Swackhamer (rettred
as an offtctal), baseball umptres George Nesselroad, Jr , Dr
Clyde Ingels and Homer Smtih, and gomg along for Ute dinner and
laughs the Refs tell on themselves, were Jlffi Diehl, Bob Roberts,
Don Dtxon, and yours truly
One of the heartiests laughs came when Horner Smtih was
mtroduced Homer was too much for toaslrnaster Nolan Mace
Homer' Wow' What a name for a referee'" he howled
When tt came time to hand out the mentortous awards for 15,
20 and 25 years - a new recogOjlton sponsored by the Ohto Htgh
School Athletic Assn - there was some doubt about Nolan
Swackhamer's claun to one of them Nolan, who coached two
state champion basketball teams at Glenford early m h1s career,
later a state champton baseball team at Middleport (1957), and
sandwtched m a multitude of years as a basketball referee, had
heen omttted from the 'offtctal" list recetvmg the awards But tl
was generally agreed that Nolan had one commg, a matter that
will be venfted later Nolan hunself wasn't sure how many years
he was m the strtped shirts
Swack," as he ts known everywhere, still has a hand m
coachmg Now 1t's golf for Metgs High School
They had a lot of fun ktdding Bob Wren, OU's very successful
baseball coach Saturday afternoon Wren s Bobcats had taken a
doubleheader from West Vtrgmta Wesleyan,~ and 2().1 "What
was the matter wtth your defense?" somebody asked
Ralph Nuzum, the 6-5 and at least 240 lb one-tune Athens
High (1952) and OU baseball pttcher wtth the btg curve, and now
one of our fmer offtetals, was the butt of a senes of Jokes Coach
Wren clauned he once had a hot prospect for third base on one of
his teams who, when he learned Nuzum was gomg to be a starter
m the upcommg season, purposely slid mto home plate so as to
mJure himself thus guaranteemg he wouldn't have to man the
barrtcade at the "hot corner" on defense
Maybe the college boys hit Nuzum's curve, but 1t was a most
effective weapon m htgh school Hobart Wilson Jr of Gallipolis
recalls dtstinctly gomg to bat agamst Nuzum at least 12 tunes m
Utetr high school games and gettmg not so much as a foulllp
Bandy came to OU to play basketball out of Portsmouth, and
after a couple seasons at Portsmouth Clay, returned to hts alma
mater as Jun Snyder's asststant Ahard man on referees hunself,
he nevertheless had the highest prmse for the dedicatton to sports
shown by the Athens chapter members
For as retirmg secretary Darrell West (Albany) pomted out,
the state athletic assoc1a1ton requtres 1ts chapters to hold a
mimmum of four meetings each season (four m football, four m
basketball, elc ) the Athens chapter holds nme m each sport
These meetmgs are directed to self-unprovement through
discusston and study leading to a deeper knowledge of the sport
they're workmg
It was generally agreed, and this I'm certam we as fans
should remember, that no offtctal ever got rtch from refereemg
The pay IS very modest, ftgurmg travel expenses and tune con
swned Most offtetals submtt themselves to abuse of fans and
coaches (generally the losers ) mamly because they are mcurably
attached to athletics as a proper acllvtty of young male Amenca
For the record, offtcers of Athens Chapter are (football )
MBI Schwarze!, president, Dr Burton DeVeau, vtce prestdent
(basketball) Don Eskey, prestdent, Ron Smtih, vtce prestdent
and secretary (retirmg) servmg both dtvtstons, Darrell West
Dtck Lawson was promoted to West's post
Let's gtve all of them three cheers'
Uh, that ts, until the next time a flag IS thrown for roughness
on nothmg more than an exuberant gndiron play, or the whtstle
blown for chargmg on a plamly legal drtve for the basket, or a
strike on a pttch that clearly ts a full foot outs1de the strike zone 1

Squires, Utah,
Colonels Triumph
By United Press International
Charhe Scott and ZehnoBeaty are leavmg some lastmg
unpresstons m thetr ftrst
Arnencan Baksetball Assocta
bon playoffs
Scott, a 6 foot-6 rookte guard,
scored 29 pomts and dazzled the
New York Nets wtth some
fancy drtbblmg Sunday to spark
the Vtrgmta SqUires to a 114-108
v1ctory m the second game of

B~RRl'S WORLD

~~~---------H~a-t~lo-,s-T=h-e~y'~ll~~~~lt~E~v-e-ry-=T~im-e---------,

ON THE PI-lONE TO UNDERSTAND
MIS PROBl-EM •

r

I

Helen Help Us!

the calctum by usmg larger
amounts of nonfat dry mtlk
Caktum ts very Important
to help prevent decalctficalton of the spme that occurs
so often after the meno
pause
If you want to be a real
health faddtsl you mtght go
to a health food store and
buy some nat u r a I mtlled
flour Just as nature mtended
tt to be ground husk and all,
but tl may not contam as
many v 1 tam 1 n s as your
wh1te bread
I do recommend you make
WASHINGTON (NEA)
your own rolls and btscu1ts
smce most commerctal prod
The maJor 1mmed1ate obstacle to a M1deast settlement
ucts contam too much satu- ts the mab11Ity of the Israeli government to agree w1thm
It seems to be popular to rated fat
tlself on what tt would settle for
{t-IEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
knock a n y t h 1 n g that 1s
And unttl the Israelis do reach some consensus on
Amencan, from bread to
bastes,
there can be no meanmgful peace talks w1lh
Please send your quest1ons gnrJ
wme but netther need take
Egypt
commenh to Lawrence E Lamb,
a back seat
Thts IS how the problem ts v1ewed by men at the htghMD, m care ol th1s pgper While
est
levels m Washmgton
You should use ennched Dr Lamb cannot answer mr/IVIrluaJ
flour tf you do your own bak /etten, he w11J answer letters ol
These U S ofltcfals believe the Israeli have become so
mg And you can mcrease qenerol ~rdere.st 1n luture columns mured to Arab hard lme extremtsm that when Egypt's
Anwar Sadat came up w1th extremely reasonable proposals, the Israeli found they had no contmgency plans
~------------------ ------- ----------------- for such a s1tuat10n
The hawks and doves m the Israeli cabmet are now so
dtvtded tt ts tmposstble for our top men to get a reasonable ftx from the Israeli government, even m conftdence,
on what tt wants or for what tt would consider settlmg
I
, Htgh
Israel! offtctals, who have m the past talked very
tertalnments at the DeWttt Nursmg Home frankly mdeed to thetr Amencan counterparts m pnvate,
BY JACK O'BRIAN
erupt.a from great vaudeville star mossom now talk m evastve nddles
But the hme to act 1s now Factors m the Arab world
Seeley, a patient there
Jolmny Mercer gets whtch
TOM JONES HAS THEM
have been adverse to a dectston for years, now
deserved raves for his songs and his favorite seem to be under control, at least temporanly
MOONING IN MIAMI BEACH
NEW YORK - The ArUrur "Street Singer" compliment may have come from the late Cole
• Sadat has wtde backmg among Egypttan mtelTracys split, made up and are in splttsville agam Porter "The song I would most Uke to have lectuals, government offiCials, busmessmen, students
and even m the mtlttary, m h1s moves for peace
While House correspondent Merrtman wr1tten IS Jolmny Mercer's 'Laura' "
Smith's wtdow, Gailey, wed Bng Gen Herbert DeservE¥!, but David Raksm composed the eerie- The Egyphans m almost all cucles are bred of lhts
McChrystal (a wtdower wtth stx children) m lovely music Mercer is unique -often writes war and want peace so that they can go about thetr
busmess They see little value m prolongmg a confltct
Williamsburg, Va , recently
Tom Jones' TV words (as to "Laura") to music already com- wt1h
Israel whtch threatens to go on endlessly to no purflop had folks suspecting he was slippmg, but his posed- and captures mood aud the flavor of the pose and wh1ch would, m any event, brmg them little,
Mtarru Beach Deauville April engagement IS a film Raksin seems to have wr~tten few songs per even tf Egypt won
sellout already at $10 cover and $12 50 rrururnum se m his fllm«anng years, but his background
• Sadat tf sources close to the Whtle House are cor
mUSic
for
"The
Bad
and
the
BeauUful"
film
is
rect,
badly wants to resume dtplomaltc relabons wtth
The Waldorf and other elegant spots are
the
Umted
States and to budd up a close fnendly re
crymg paruc wtth a $10 muwnum, but the Copa IS never bad, always beautiful, the only place we
laltonsh1p
domg sellout trade wtth oo rrururnum and can- know you can hear 1t "live" IS in the Blue Bar of
• Sadat, htrnself, htgh U S offtctals say, ts a reasonmer booking of acts
Joan Bennett doesn't the HOlltaria dell' Orso In Rome, where pianist able,
mteliigent and mgemous man who means busmess
have to work, just wants to - she'll star at the Romeo plays tt nightly and well
(He ts, of course pnmanly concerned for the mterests
The new lipstick "Hot Ups" is a reminder of of h1s own country and not adverse, m his country s
Meadowbrook Dmner Theater, startmg April14
old Whiteman star Henry Busse, whose theme mterest, to playmg the Sovtet Umon and the Umted
m "The Boy Frtend "
Diana Rigg is a fine and classy States off agamst each other )
The latest edition of the Rmgllng Bros , and that was
But hrne will not watt
Barnwn &amp; Bailey Ctrcus IS the best we've ever actress, so ber nervOllS gum-chewmg on the
Sadat does not have Abdel Nasser's powerful gnp on
seen as tl starts the 101sl year of Indeed the Tony telecast seemed below her image, but she
the
government and the army He has powerful detrac
Greatest Show on Earth
ThiS year's ex- was up for a best«tress award arxl1t was easier
tors m the milttary-men not sahsfted w1th moderate
travaganza, to use a modest word, has a lad the than fainting Erie Stanley Gardner's ranch Is solutwns These officers are lymg low now But unless
ladtes swear has brought sex to the circus- just for sale at one millloo no takers in the recessive Sadat ts able to show results m a reasonable hme, the
by domg h1s assorted anunal-tramer acts more month of March
extrtmtsts could take over It can be satd there IS some
consternatton at the White 'House that now, when It me
superbly than any we've ever seen, plus his
Ann Willlarns (Mrs Bob Welch) left her role ts of the essence, the Israeli turn mdectstve
dashmg blond good looks Gunther GebelWtlliams IS his name and elephants • and - tigers in "Applause" to aw8lt the baby, who arrived in
IS his game
He performs the most darmg Mt. Kisco, 8'9-lb boy She'll return not to Bdwy.
feats with vtciously snarling Bengal tigers but to ber running role In the TV soap "Searcb
without gtln or chair, truXes elephants and tigers, for Tomorrow "
Right in the mldat of the Gray Flannel
at one point directs what seems to be the whole
Madison Square Garden -full of pach~derms just Jungle (Madison Ave In the 5Q!) a sandwlcb
man paraded this urgent message. "I Need a
with hiS unampllfted and most-virile vo1ce
The Flying Gaonas from Mexico elevate the Job 1" ... Wealthy parents of an ambitious young
aenal trapeze to even htgher exciting sights and singer who hasn't made any career traction
thrills and there's a juggler naJoed Plcaso, who's changed their expensive ~oitation of the lad
so brilliant, CBS should renew the Ed &amp;tlllvan They're shipping him to Englarxl and then will
Show just to g1ve hlffi the proper spoWght on TV, try later tolrnporthlmasa "new find"
Architect Edward Durell Stone's latest
he manipulates unexpected Items, none more
amazmgly than what seem tiny oranges he bulldup Is to convince his ex, Marla, into
juggles not wttl\ hands, feet or head - but into remarriage, Maria says they'll remain "just
"Ryan's Daughter" director
and out of his mouth, five or six In the air at ll good frtends"
time as if his tonsils contamed some mystery David Lean's taking a whole year off. He just got
word from India he can shoot his Mahatma
mini~not firmg them - all quite fantastic
The show has color, excitement, thrills, GIIJ)dhl P'\1nieJbes'e, Jiut be m117Jilllllt In SptUn
clowns, everything you would expect, plus at • Zachariah Blackistone of the FTD qulcltleast half a dozen acts that SW'pllS8 everything flower-dellvery service still runs a chain of
heretofore in thetr very speC181 field, a truly fiorist shops - and just iifeliraied his tOOth
birthday (plays golf - and breaks his age
magnificent show
'
regillarly)
,
We aU took our youngsters, cr1tics and p~~bllc
The 1972 book market will be flooded with
alike Stage-ecreen-TV star Robert Morse
Presidential-bopeful
autobiogs (Muskle,
seemed even more delightedly juvellile than his
two exetted youn~ters
Six circus per- McGovern, Humphrey, etc), but Teddy Kenformances already have had to be cancelled to nedy will skip such peraonal remlnlacerice and
make room for the N Y Knlcks arid N Y let some other author write a flattering tome
1')7 1 t.~ ,N (A In~ ~~
Rangers basketball - hockey playoffs, of course 'l'he flop of "Look Where riD At," a new mualcal,
"You know, Doctor, 1t's l1ke bemg watched by hundreds
Madison Square Garden owns the Knicks &amp; was 811 ill wind that blew good for Sherr!
Spillane,
author
Mickey's
wife
Playboy
ol Sp1ro Agnews 1"
Rangers, not the circus
):liggest applause for ex-vaudeville star Hal recruited her lor a Cenlerfold-of-Ule·Month If
t
LeRoy's. unpubhcized and refused-fee en- that's good
ecullves because tl keeps on
the shelf I o n g e 1 than the
more nutrthous whole wheat
bread and beca use msects
avotd tt- tt doe s n t have
enough food value to keep
them ahve
That ts a pretty harsh m
dtclment of om bt ead and
I d ltk e to say a few good
thmgs about tl Most whtle
bread ts low m fat and manv
bakenes now use nonfat mtlk
sohds Many other bakery
pt oducts contam lard satu
rated fats coconut ml egg
l olks and thmgs that should
be 1 estncted tn amo unt tn a
dtet to p r e v e n t heart and
artery dtsease You can also
buy bread ennched wtth but
ter, egg yolks and tlems that
~o u should try to avmd
I have read a lot of com
ments a b o u t h ow p o o 1
Amertcan bread ts Well
there are vet y lew food
products that provtde a bal
anced dtet by themselves

!Voice along Broadway

You can call tt by any oth
er name you want You can
call tt Chane! No 5 or My
Sm. but underneath the per
fume tt s sltll welfare

•

~CSOREt..Y FINALLY GOr SOMEBODY

Bread certamly has ca1ortes
and the enrtched whtle bread
ts loadeli wtlh Vttamm B
complex Accordmg to the
U S Agn culture Department,
Amencan whtte bread has
Just as many of these ele
ments as that n o s t a I g 1c
French Bread
Our en
nched Amertcan wh1te bread
has up to twtce as much cal
ctum and c on t a 1 n s more
phosphorus and tron It also
has about the same food
value as whole wheat bread
Those rna am are the facts
Some people may prefer the
taste of French bread and
that ts thetr prtvtlege but
facts are facts

r----- --,-----------------~-1

1

•

'
3- '!'he Dally Sentmel
Muldleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Apnl5 1971

Your
Agent

Dale Warner

UNDERINSURED
a horrtbl e com
btnat1on of words Let
us take away those
f1rst ft ve l ett ers
Insure - be sure 1

Consult Us !loon

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992 2966
Court 51 ,

thetr best-of seven playoff se
nes
The former North Carolina
star was at hts best m the
clutch as he scored etght pomts
m the last two and one-half
mmutes to sew up the Squtres'
second stratght vtctory over the
Nets
Beaty a 6-foot 9 center who
jumped to the ABA lhts season
from the NBA, scored 32 pomts
and grabbed 15 rebounds to
pace the Utah Stars to a 113-101
trtumph over the Texas Chapparals It was Utah's thtrd
vtctory m a row over Texas
Wtth Beaty controllmg the
boards and successfully htttmg
from oulstde wtth hts Jump
shot, the Stars Jumped to an
early lead and held tt all the
way Texas battled to wtthm a
pomt wtth 8 06 left m the game,
but the Stars connected on
etght consecultve free throws to
lock up the contest
In other,playoff ~ton, LoUie
Dampter scored 28 pomts to
pace the Kentucky Colonels to a
121}.110 vtctory over the Flortdtans Kentucky now leads 2-0
m the best-of seven series
Dampter sank the Flondtans
wtlh hts long range shootin~.
connectmg on four three-pomt
fteld goal attempts Teammate
Dan Issei ch1pped m wtth 26
potnls as the duo offset a 35pomt effor t by the Flortdtans'
Mack Calvm

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cmcmnall Reds, the defendmg
champtons of the National
League, opened thetr season
today already cnppled by mJurles
Three starters from the 1970
team w1ll mtss from a few
weeks to several months of the
ftrst of the season because of
wmter and sprmg wounds
Bobby Tolan wtll be on the
dtsabled hst until late May or
June because of a ruptured
a~htlles tendon suffered durmg
a basketball game
Dave Concepcton, a shortstop ,
wtll m1ss the fn st two weeks
at least because of a dtslocated
!hum b And Lee May, the ptg
hard.swmgmg ftrst baseman,
wtll be out the !trst two weeks
w1th a steamed knee hgament
He was tnJured as the spnng

Foyt Takes
Atlanta 500
HAMPTON, Ga ('UPI)-It's
no wonder that A J Foyt
thmks he mtght let somebody
else drtve at lndtanapoits"
whtle he focuses hts attentton
on the Southern Stock Car
Racmg Ctrcwt
Foyt, a vtsttor from the U S
Auto Club, won the Atlanta 500
Sunday, beatmg Southern super
star Rtchard Petty by I 8
seconds
that wm delivered $19 200 to
Foyt, and bnngs to $86,350 the
amount he has won m the four
Nascar races he's entered lhts
season
Foyt sa1d hts 1969 Mercury,
prepared by the Woods Brothers of Stuart, Va , 'ran
beaultful all day And my p1t
crew dtd one hell of a JOb
But 1! was hts p1l crew that
nearly got htm mto trouble
There were less than 30 m1les
left m the 500-mtle race and
Foyt had about a two-second
lead over Petty drt vmg a 1971
Plymouth, one of only two
factory backed cars m the race
Foyt made a ptl stop that
lasted 11 seconds Petty stayed
only 8 7 seconds, gtvmg theRandleman, N C rawr. a slight
lead
The two were neck-and neck
unttl Foyt passed Petty m a
turn on the 313th lap of the 328lap race
Both cars were runmng
qutle fast ' Foyt satd ' It
seemed like Rtchard could get
mto the corners a blUe better
than I could and I could get off
a little faster It s Just kmda
one of them gambles When I
dtd get by htm , I got m the
corner very hard I ahnost spun
out ~ couple of ttmes f thmk at
one time or another Rtchard
shpped JUSt alittle btl, too
Anyltme you can wm w1th
these Southern boys, you ve
beaten the best m the world
They'll really lean on you
they'll race you wheel to
wheel "

Local Bowling
POMEROY
BOWLING LANES
Marr.h 29
The Lamplighters
Team

Pomts

H
69
Unl ou cha~ l es
54
Brr le Lr tes
51
L&amp;N
U
Tagalongs
26
Tea m Hrgh Serres - Us &amp;Co ,
US&amp; Co
Lucky Slrrkes

2177

Team Hrgh Game - L &amp; N
747
Hrgh lnd Serres - Harry
Thomas 578 Mary Voss 603
Second Hrgh lnd Senes Larry Dugan 570 Pandora
Colhns 503
Hrgh lnd Game - Harry
Thomas 237 Mary Voss 214
Second Hrgh lnd Game Harold Lohsr 224 Mary Voss
203

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed

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De
lrvered by car rr er where
ava11able 50 cen t s per week
By Motor Route where ci.'lrrrer
servr c e not avat lab le One
mqnth Sl 75 By mad In Ohro
and W Va One year Sl4 00
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Three
months S4 50 Subscript ron
prrce 1ncludes Sundav T mes
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N. W. COMPTON. 0~ D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFF ICE HOURS 9 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS) - EAST COURT ST,
POMER Y

tra mmg season was closmg
A sellout crowd of 51,726 was
assured for the opemng game
today at Rtverfront Stadtwn
agamst the Atlanta Braves, who
were mvtted-back desptte the1r
wm that spoiled lh" Reds open
er last year Standmg room
ltckets went on sale thts morn
mg for the game
Gov John J Gtll1gan was
asked to throw out the first
ball, but was unable to attend
and m Ins place a Congresston
a! Medal of Honor wmner from
Ohto agreed to open the season
Got don Roberts of Lebanon
Ohto wtll do the honors
Gary Nolan , who had an 18-7
season m 1970 was ptlled
agamst Phil Ntekro, 12-18, on
the mound
Manager Sparky Anderson
had two lime batltng champton

Pete Rose m nght(teld Berme
Carbo m leftfteld, lf&lt;il McRae m
centerfield, Tony Perez at !trst,
Tommy Heims at second,
Woody Woodward at thtrd,
Frank Duffy at shortstop, and
Johnny Bench catchmg
Atlanta planned to have Son
ny Jackson m centerfield
Ralph Garr m leftfteld, Hank
Aaron m nghtfleld, Orlando
Cepeda at first Hal Kmg
catchmg Fehx Mtllan at sec
ond Clete Boyer at thtrd, and
Marty Perez at shortstop
Few observers have ptcked
the Reds to repeat as league
champtons, but Anderson ts op
ltmts!tc
"I d be a liar 1f I Satd our
IOJUrtes dtdn t concern me, he
admttled but we ve got a lot
gomg for us too
We 're commg off a great

year We worked harder and
are m better physiCal condtlton
than last year We're versaltle,
so many players can play dtf
fere nt postltons And there s a
lot of prtde on lhts club "
The Reds won thetr last two
exhtbt!ton games 2-0 over the
Detrmt Ttgers m Loutsvtlle, Ky
on Sa lurday and 5 2 over De
trot! m Cmcmnalt on Sunday
In the Saturday game Ross
Gnmsley Don Gullett and Cia)
Carroll combmed to ptlch a two
htt shutout
Rose Heims and Perez sm
gled m the Reds first 1 un m
the ftrst mnmg and a Dell ott
ptl.cher walked Carbo wtth the
bases loaded tn the etghth for
the second one
On Sunday Carbo homered
and Perez doubled to lead the
Reds

Vietnam Veteran
Subs For Nixon
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wrtter
The maJOr league baseball
season opens today wtth a 4().
year old veteran of Vtelnam
ftlhng m for Prestdent N1xon m
Washmgton, D C and three
spare parts subbmg for key
regulars of the Nattonal League
ChampiOn Reds m Cmcmnalt
Master Sgt Dame! L P-itzer,
a for mer prtsoner m Vtetnam,
wtll represent Prestdent Ntxon
m the tradtttonal prestdenttal
opener between the Oakland
Athleltcs and Washmgton Senators Defense Secretar~ Melvm
R Latrd and the chtldren DJ
ftve Amertcans shll held
pnsoner m V1etnam also wtll be
m the prestdenttal box
The Reds, hostmg the Atlanta
Braves m the Natwnal Leagues
tradttlonal 'advance opener 'm
Cmcmnalt, wtll be wtlhout
cegulars Lee May, Bob Tolan
and Dave ConcepciOn all of
whom are stdeiined wtth
lllJurtes The Reds also have
swttched Tony Perez from thtrd

to ftrst base m an effort to
pack the1r lineup w1th as much
power as posstble
The Los Angeles Dodgers,
ptcked by many to wm the
Natwnal League"s Western
Dtvtston litle o~e n ed agamst the
Houston Astros m Houston m a
mght game that rounds out the
ftrst day's schedule
A sellout crowd of more than
42,000 ts expected at Washmg
ton when Vtda Blue a 21-year
old left hander w1th blazmg
speed, fa ces Dtck Bosman, a 16
game wmner for the Senators
last season Blue was brought
up late last season and p1tched
a no httler and a one htller m
September
The Athletics are rated
behmd the Mmnesota Twtns
and Caiiforma Angels as
contenders m the AL West The
Senators who acqutred Denny
McLam and Curt Flood m
wmter trades are constdered a
mystery club, m the AL East
whtch, of course, IS ruled by
the world champton Balltmore

•
Onoles
Gary Nolan 18 7 tn 1970 has
been selected to ptlch the Reds
opener agamst Phtl Ntekro, who
had a 23-13 record m 1969 and a
12-18 mark m 1970 for the
Braves Perez ts subbmg for
May at ftrst Hal McRae for
1alan m center rookte Frank
Duffy for ConcepciOn at shm t
and Woody Woodward for Pet ez
at lhtrd
A crowd of 51 726 largest
ever to attend a baseball game
111 Cmcmnatt
wtll see the
opener m Cmcmnah 's Rtver
ft ont Stadmm
• Btll Smger who comptled an
8-5 record mcludmg a no h1tter
after recove rmg from hepaltltts
last season, wtll be on the
mound for the Dodgers agatnst
Larry Dterker who was 16 12
last season afier bemg a 20game wmner tn 1969 The
Dodgers are favored to wm the
NL s Western Dtvtston Tttle th1s
year prtmartly because of the
acqu1stlton of slugger Rtchte
Allen from the St Louts
Cardmals

Bulls Have Chance To

Opening Day Pitchers
(By Umted Press lnternaUonall
(Last Year's Woo-Lost Reoords)
(Monday)
(1Amertcan League)
Oakland (Blue 2-0) at Washington (Bosman 16-12)
10nly game scheduled)
(National League)
Allanla iNtekro 12-18) at Cmcmnatt (Nolan 18-7)
Los Angeles (Singer 8-5) at Houston (Dierker 16-12),
mght
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday
(American League 1
Kansas Ctty (Drago 9-15) at Califorma (Wrtght 22·12),
mght
Milwaukee (Pattin 14-12) at Minnesota (Perry 24-12)
Cleveland (Hargan 113) at Detroit (Lollch 14-19)
New Yock (Bahasen 14 11) at Boston (Culp 17 14)
(Only garues scheduled )
(National League 1
Montreal (Morton 18-11) at New York (Seaver 18-12)
Phtladelphia (Short 9-16) at Pittsburgh (Ellis 13-10)
St Louts (Gtbson 23-7) at Chtcago (Jenkins 22-26)
San ~'ranc t sco (Marichal l2-10) at San Diego (Phoebus 56) , night
Los Angeles (Osteen lfH4) at Houston (Wilson 111),
mght
(Only games scheduled 1

NBA

Playoff Standtngs

By Unt1ed Press ln1ernahonal
Semtflna ls- Best of seven

East

Senes A

W L p,t

4

x New York

Allan Ia

I

By Umted Press lnternattonal
The Milwaukee Bucks and the
Baltunore Bullets JOmed the
New York Kmckerbockers m
the semtfmals of the Nattonal
Basketball Assoctatton s cham
ptonshtp playoffs Sunday and
Coach Dtck Motta of the
Chtcago Bulls mststs hts team
wtll be the fourth membet of
'
the group
The Bucks overpowered San
Franctsco, 131H16, to wm thetr
ftrst round playoff senes four
games to one, and Balttmore
defeated Phtladelphta 128-120,
to take the1r senes four games
to three
Chtcago evened tis senes
wtlh Los Angeles at three
games aptece by defeatmg the
!..akers, 113-99 The two teams
wtll meet m Los Angeles
Tuesday mght to dectde the
senes

Bal!tmore wtll hegm semtfmal play Tuesday mght agamst
New York, whtch last week
downed Atlanta four games to
one to wm tis opemng round
senes Mtlwaukee wtll play the
wmner of the Chtcago-Los
Angeles sen es
Motta, whose team has
battled back from a 2-0 deftctt
m the senes, satd after
Sunday's vtctory that hts
players )Vere so charged up
emottonally that he could not
envtston them losmg the
seventh game
Our players are so ftred up
now, tf they're dented, I'll be
surpnsed," satd Motta ' Our
club has a great deal of prtde
and they want thts very badly '
The Bulls had to come from

behmd agam Sunday to force a
seventh game They traded by
11 pomts early m the game but
turned the contest m thetr
favor m the thtrd penod by
outsconng the Lakers 21-4
durmg one stretch
Ch1cago placed all ftve
starters tn double ftgures, wtth
Bob Wetss leadmg the way wtth
25 pmnts Jerry Sloan chtpped
m wtth 23 'pomts and Bob Love
had 21 Gatl Goodrtch led Los
Angeles wtth 25 pomts
Milwaukee had hardly any
trouble at all m whtppmg the
Warnors The Bucks btl on 59
per cent of the1r shots m the
ftrst half and Jed, 69 35, at the
SLALOM WINNERS
MT HOOD MEADOWS, Ore
(UPI)- Ertc Poulsen of Squaw
Valley, Calif and Undy Cochran of Rtchmond, VI won the
mens and women 's lttles m the
Far West Kandahar Slalom
over the weekend
CEVERT TAKES LEAD
HOCKENHEIM
Germany
(UP!) - Franco1s Cevert of
France has taken the lead m
the European Formula Two
champwnshtp , wmmng the
openmg Jtm Clark Memortal
race at Hockenhetm over
Graham Htll of England
Cevert, m a Tee no took the
ftrst heat m 43 29 0 mmutes for
the 20 laps on the 4 2-mtle
course and was lhtrd m the
second heat Htll was third m
the ftrst heat and won the
second heat m 43 39 9 m hts
Lotus Cevert won the overall
tttle on the basts of qu1cker
limes

800
4 200
I

Triumph

Senes B

W L p,f

x Ba l! tmore

4 J

Ph rl ade ph a

571

3 4 429
West

x Mrl waukee
Sa n Fr a nc sco

W L Pr.t
4 1 800
I 4 200

5-4 1-0

'

Coach Burt Brunner's Rio
Senes B
W L Pr.f Grande College Redmen evened

Los Angeles

500 thetr season record at 4-4
500 Saturday wtth a doubleheader
vtclory over Berea College, 5-4
Sunday s Res ults
Mt l 136 San Fran 86
and 1-0
Chr cago 113 LA 99
Tom Sunms was the winning
Ba ll 126 Phrl 120
hurler m the opener Tom
I Only gam es scheduled)
Monday s Games
Flatter bred a tw&lt;Hlitter m tbe
I No games scheduled)
rughtcap McConnell, the lOlling
pitcher,
hurled a one-hitter
ABA Playolf Standings
By Untied Press lnlrnaftonal Ray Jordon collected Rto's only
Semr Fonals Best Of Seven
safety, a smgle
East
Rio will play West Vtrglnia
Ser1es ' A"
W L State and P1kevllle before
• 02 02 rei,!JrnWfl 1J!c!nle I.P\ tJ Mt.
~~~~l)!~rk
Vernon on April h
Senes B •
3 3
3 3

Chu:ag o
x clmched sert es

lne,

W L

Kentu cky

2 0

Florrd ans

0 2

West
Sen es

Reward

C"

W L
lnd ana
M emph rs

Gain NBA 's Semifinals

Redmen

Pro Standings

2 0
0 2

Senes 0'
W L

Ulah

3 0
0 3

Texas

Sunday s Results
Ky 120 Florrdrans 110
mtermtsston Jon McGlocklin Va 114 New York 108
Texas 101
paced the Bucks wtth 28 pomts Ulah 113
Monday s GAmes
and Lew Alcmdor had 23 Ron lndrana at MemphiS
Wtlbams led San Franctsco
F1nal NHL Standmgs
wtlh 13 pomts
By
Untied
Press lnternaltonal
The Bullets broke thetr game
East
open m the second quarter
W L T Pis
57 14 7 121
when they outscored the 76ers, Boston
49 18 II 109
New York
43 22 Earl Monroe and Fred M
42 23 13 97
on lreal
Cat ter each scored 10 pomts m Toronto
3733 882
24 39 15 63
the second quarter for the Buffalo
2446856
Vancouver
Bullets, but tt was the shootmg De!rolf
22 45 II 55
of Jack Mann that was most
West
W L T Pis
responstble for the Baltunore
Chcago
49
20 9 107
lrtwnph Mann scored a career St Lours
34 25 19 87
h1gh 33 pomts to pace the Phtladelphla
28 33 17 73
Minnesota
26 34 16 72
Bullets' balanced attack
Los
Angeles
25 40 13 63
Archte Clark scored 37 pomts Plltsburgh
, 21 37 20 62
and Btlly Cunnmgham added 30 Cal•lornla
20 53 5 45
to spark the 76ers, but
Sunday's Results
Phtladelphta got very little help Boslon 7 Montreal 2
New York 6 Detroit 0
from tis bench
L A 4 Vancouver 2
Toronto 3 Ch rcago 2
Ph1l 3 Buff 3 (fie)
Fmal AHL Sfandmgs
P11ts 1 St Louts I (t1e)
By Umfed Press lnternaltonal
(Only games scheduled)
WLTPfs
Provtdence
28 31 13 69
Montreal
27 31 14 68
Springfield
29 35 8 66
Quebec
25 31 16 66
West
WLTPfs
Balltmore
40 23 9 89
Cleveland
39 26 7 85
Hershey
31 31 10 72
Rochester
25 36 11 61
'Sunday s Resu lts
Cleveland 9 Prov 7
Quebec 5 Roch 4
Spnng 2 Balf 0

Your older years by savmg

In your younger days Start
now' Start at the Meigs Co
Branch of the Athens Co
Savmgs &amp; Loan A fnendly
place to do bustness

4%%
PASSBOOK

RATE

Metgs County Branch of The
Athens County Savmgs &amp;
Loa n Co

296 Second St
Po meroy Ohto

FAST ONE-DAY SERVICE
6n loans up to

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE
5349.95

Reduce monthly payments with . ..

cash

$JS 00 Down-

Balance On
ConveAient
Terms.

MASON ·
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

ALSO OTHER
C l CO LOAN$ OF

$ 5000

AND MORE

9922171

~E Mam

~Pomeroy,

0

�•

•
~-

The Daily Sentmel, Mtdl!lepbrt.Pomeroy, 0 ApnU, 1971

Meat Copy Rules Coming
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Food and Drug Admtmstralton
(FDA) began composmg ground
rules today for a new generation of vegetable protem
products destgned to look, feel,
smell, taste and nour1sh hke
meal- but cost tess

The FDA's deadlme for pubhc
co!nmenls on the proposed
standards for the meat tmttaltons expired at mtdmght
Sunday Before 1t exptred, a
standards proposal was submtlted by a food mdustry coaht1on
headed by General Mtlls, Inc ,

Mmreapobs Mmn , and Archer reqmre them to be tdenlllle.d
Damels Mtdland Co , Decatur, on food labels as "textured
~rotem producls
Ill
A hamburger tm1tahon !01
example,
could be labeled
It would set nummum
protem, vttamm and mmeral ' textured protem product w1th
content for such products and a hamburger-like flavor "
Dr Ogden C Johnson FDA
nutntlon lhrector, md1cated
., however he \\as far from
sahsfted w1th the proposed
standards for protem and other
nutrients
'If these products are less
concrete proposals through expenstve than meat, there Will
dtplomatlc channels-Oestgned be a tendency for people to use
to put teeth mto Brezhnev's them as a maJor source of
suggestions for general and nutnbon," Johnson satd m an
nuclear disarmament
mterv1ew "So the questiOn IS
Some analysis regarded h1s whether they should not be
state of the umon comments on reqmred to be absolutely
these subjects as hollow propa eqwvalent to meat m nutmnts
ganda, but the sources sa1d
'If so, that means we're
Sovtet dtplomats would plump gomg to have to shoot for a
for them m sptle of the odds much h1gher standard," he
agamst any sweepmg disar- satd
mamentconferences
A lew products such as
fhey sa1d the SoVIet would lffiltatwn bacon b1ts already are
propose conferences on
available m supermarkets
- Worldwtde disarmament of Food mdustry leaders satd
convenltonal forces
Widespread marketing of
- Nuclear dtsarmament by entrees made from vegetable
the Sovtel Umon, the Umted meat subslltutes was at least
States, Commumst Chma , two years away, wtth processed
France and Bntam
of the ttems such as Stroganoff and
-Genral repud1atwn
' chtcken" A La Kmg first m
use of force
hne
- DissolutiOn of the North The meat lmttahons are
Atlantic Treaty ' Orgamzatwn made largely from soybean
(NATO) and the Warsaw Pact denvallves fortified w1th nuarmtes
trients and colored and flavored
-Jomt measures on envtron-

Brezhnev Scoring Well
MOSCOW (UP! )-Ftve thousand hands wavmg bnght red
Communtst party cards stgnals
the halfway mark for the 24th
Sovtet Party Congress The
Kremhn gathermg can then
turn from pohcy to economics
The Congress reconvened m
the Palace of Congresses today
for the tradillonal ntual of
approvmg the' pohctes of the
currentleadershtp The ceremony changes little from congress
to congress - the supreme
party rally held every four or
five years
The party leader, m lhts case
Leomd I Brezhnev, makes hts
bnef summahon speech

SPECIAL SERVICE - In special memorial and dedicallon servtce at tpe Fll"st Umted
Presbyterian Church m Mtddleport Sunday, par aments m memory of the late Rev Howard
Ruppelt and Btbles mmemory of the late Mrs Jeannette B Waddell were dedtcated Mrs Tom
Rue dtsplays one of the paraments that covers the commumon table

Suez Opening Rejected
By Umted Press International
Israel reJected Sunday an
Egypttan plan to reopen the
, Suez Canal, mststmg 11 was a
part of an attempt to tmpose an
"Egypllan-S&lt;lVlet polllical settlement m the Mtddle East
Israeli Prtme Mmtster Golda
Metr, m an address to the
opemng sesswn of her Labor
Party Conference, satd Israelts
Willing to contmue dtscusswns
However, she added, 'anyone
who proposes Israeli agreement
to the opemng of the Canal as a
lever to obtam total Israeli
withdrawal from Smat and
Gaza wtll certamly not be

Old Town
Flats News
By May Johnston
Mrs Mae Van Meter and
daughter, Ruby, vtstted Mr and
Mrs Charhe Carroll and
family
Mr and Mrs Gary Van Meter
and !amtly from Long Bottom,
Mr and Mrs Lee Layne and
Kenneth v1s1ted Mr and Mr~
Lawrence Johnston and famtly
Mrs May Johnston called on
Mrs Mary Ours
Mr and Mrs Bobby Joe
Wolfe and famtly, Racme
Route, and Mr Danny Hames,
local, called on Mr and Mrs
Maywood Johnston
Mr and Mrs Hayward Nutter
of near Tuppers Plams, Mr and
Mrs Clifford Icehhower,
Pomeroy Route, and Mr and
Mrs J Pauley, local, vtstted
Mr
and Mrs
Homer
Icenhower
Mr and Mrs Dana Wolle,
East Liverpool, vtstted Mr and
Mrs Cectl Roseberry and
!am1ly and Mr and Mrs Edd
Bush
Mrs Helen Jeffers, Syracuse,
VISited her parents, Mr and
Mrs Homer Icenhower

Increase

By 200,000

.'

.

East Chester
News Notes

Attendance at the Nazarene
Sunday School March 28 was 64
Collectwn was $13 03
Mrs Earl Dean and Mrs
Davtd Koblentz enterta10eo
thetr parents wtth a dmner
Sunday m honor of thetr 45th
weddmg anmversary, Mr and
M1 s George Genhe1mer
GuyThoma and famtly of
Flatwoods Rd called on hts
mother, Mrs Georgte Thoma
Monday evemng
Mr and Mrs Don Betzmg of
Hemlock Grove called gn hts
s1sters, Freda Miller and
Lenore Betz10g Saturday
evemng
Btl! Cogar aod fam1ly of
Mmersvtlle called on Erma
H1elman Sunday afternoon
Mrs Moon, Mr and Mrs
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The Clayton Schartiger called on
• number of poverty-stncken Mr and Mrs Vergtl PriCe
Amertcans beyond the age of 65 Sunday afternoon
swelled by 200,000 last year, Mr and Mrs George
despite a 15 per cent boost m Genheuner spent Wednesday
Soctal Secunty benefits, the w1th her brother and stster-mSenate's Spec1al Committee on law, Norman Rose of Pine
Ag10g satd today
Grove Thetr \on, Roger, was
"Older people conllnued to leavmg Thursday mormng lor
fight a losmg battle wtth V1etnam
mflated pnces," the report Mr and Mrs Herbie Sm1th
sa1d It called 1970 a "year of and famtly of Columbus spent
frustralwn" for the elderly, one Sunday wtth the Rtchard Barton
m four of whom hve m poverty lamtjy H\~ mother, Mrs Jane
The Republicans on the Sm1t~ of Silver Rtdge, returned
committee submtlted an add1 to the Barton home
ttonal report, saymg that the Several from here attended
mcomes of the elderly no the Bonme Ftck funeral at
longer can be ratsed only by Pomeroy
Soctal Seciu-tty beneftts because Dan Bnckles and famtly of
younger workers are at the Gold Rtdge called on Freda
pom t of r~belhng agamst the Miller and Lenore Betzlng
· steadily r1smg Soctal Secunty Friday evemng
payroll tax
Earl Thoma and !amtly of '
The GOP members threw Pomeroy called on hts mother,
thetr supvort behmd a dtrect Mrs George Thoma Sunday
government substdy for the evemng
elderly to gtve them a Mrs Moon returned Saturday
guaranteed mmtmum annual evemng from a ten day VISit
mcome Such a proposal backed w1th fnends and relattves She
for several years 'by Sen VISited former netghbors,
Wmston L Prouty, R-Vt, would Goldte Warren, Mr and Mrs
provtde enough of a substdy to Howard Butler and Mrs Ray
ratse the mcome of a Single Ktmball, also her mece, Jen
elderly poor person to $1,800 a Ann Rose and got to see the new
year, $2,400 for a couple, tf baby boy, who makes her
thelt mcome sources lltd not brother and w1!e grandparents
bnng ln that much
for the !trslllme Then she went
Legtslallve prospects for the on W v1stt ~r and Mrs Earl
substdY proposal dtd not appear Stout at Broadway for several
bn11ht
davs

Aged Poor

'

surpnsed by Israel s outnght
rejecbon of thts plan "
She sa1d "thts plan would be
seen as a move to orgamze
pressure on Israel to agree to
the opemng of the Canal m the
framework of the unpos1t10n on
us of an Egppban.Sovtet
pohllcal settlement"
Mrs Metr sa1d "we don't
want a new war, but tf there IS
one we can say we have no fear
of tis outcome
Egypt had proposed reopenmg the Canal, wtth the Israeli
pullback as part of the
condttwns
Sen J Wtlham Fulbnght, DArk , chatrman of the Senate
Fn· etgn Relatwns Committee,
satd m a speech m New Haven,
Conn , Sunday Israel ts resortmg to "Commumst-ba1tmg
humbubbery" m an attempt to
mampulate Amencan fore1gn
policy
"It ts a fme thmg to respect
a small country s mdependence
and to abstam from mterference m 1ts mternal affatrs,' he
satd "It IS qwte another
matter when m the name of
these worthy prmctples- but
r~lly because of our continwng
obsessiOn wtth Commumsmwe perm1t chen! states hke
Israel and South Vtetnam to
mampulate Amencan pohcy

'

5- The Daily Sentinel, P.jiddleport·Pomeroy, 0, AprilS, 1971

toward purposes contrary to
our mterests, and probably to
thetrs as well," he added
In Jordan, Palestiman guernlla leaders and government
offtctals met today to plan the
evacuatiOn from the capttal of
Amman
The guernllas
promtsed they would move
commandos and heavy weapons
out of Amman 10 hne wtth
prevwus agreements
There has been 10 days of
renewed ftghtmg between the
guernilas and government, the
worst smce the CIVll War m
September

Fairview
By Mrs Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Clarence Roush,
Tom and Toney, of Wmfleld, W
Va , spent Saturday With Mrs
Russell Roush and famtly and
also other relat1ves
Mrs Lawrence Bush held a
Tupperware party at her home
Thursday evemng
Mr and Mrs Harold Lawson
and Charles of Letart, W, Va ,
and Mr and Mrs Robert
Lawson and !am1ly were
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs
Charles Lawson and family
Mrs Joe Manuel, Tun and
Std, spent Saturday wtth Mrs
Katie Young at Mmersv1lle Rt
Mrs Gary Wtlford of Racme,
Mrs Joe Manuel, Tim and Std,
spent Sunday afternoon w1th
Mr and Mrs Max Manuel Jr ,
and family
Mrs Anna Wmes, Karen and
Jack1e, of Racme, spent Sunday
afternoon w1th Mrs Kate Rowe
and Ada
Fnends were sorry to lose a
neighbor, Hme Donohue, by
death Saturday evemng at hts
home
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Skinner of Columbus, Mtss
Elotse Adams of Pomeroy,
Charles Ntce and Mtke Munsey,
of Newark, spent Saturday
evemng wtth Mr and Mrs Loyd
N1ce
Mrs Marlene F1sher, Molly,
Larry and Amy , of Racme,
called on Mr and Mrs Hwe
Donohue Saturday afternoon
Mr and Mrs Paul North and
granddaughter, Shelly of
Galbpohs, Mr and Mrs Kelly
Sayre and son of Patalaska
were Sunday guests of Mr and
Mrs Herbert Sayre Mrs
Dorothy Glenn of Anhqwty
called on the Sayres Sunday
Paul Sayre or Columbus and
Brooks Sayre of Syracuse and
Mr and Mrs Pete Sh1elds were
Saturday mght guests of the
Sayres
Mrs Herbert Sheilds and
Mrs Herbert Sayr~ were
shopp10g m Parkersburg
Thursday
Mrs Bertha Robmson spent
Wednesday and Thursday wtth
her son, Mr and Mrs Btll
Robmson at Racme

Langsville
Mrs Clair Parkerson IS til at
her home WIth flu
Mrs Don Gorby, who has
been a surgiCal pahent at
Veterans Memortal Hospital, IS
recuperatmg at home
Mr and Mrs Robert Bobo
were called to Dunbar, W Va
by the death of hts brother's,
Frank Bobo, grandchild
Mrs Nora Bobo IS m Holzer
Hosp1tal as a medtcal pahent
Mrs Dorothy Wnght 1sn't so
well agam She has had another
cold on her lungs
Mr and Mrs Stanley Phtlllps
of Logan, OhiO, spent Sunday
w1th her stster, Mr and Mrs
Alpha Barr and son, Mtke
Mtke Barr, Jane Johnson,
Kathy Abbott and Ceceha
McCoy of Glenville College
spent the weekend wtth thetr
parents
Mr and Mrs Jerry Jacks are
announcmg the btrth of a son at
Holzer Medtcal Center on
March 24 The baby wetghed 7
pound, 7112 ounces and has been
named Charles Verlm Grandmothers are Mrs Bertha
Dutton and Mrs Dessa Roush
Mrs Lynn Benscother and
chtldren of Toledo spent the
weekend with her mother, Mrs
lola Bartrum and the J T
Ledhe !amtly
Mrs Bertha Hall of Chi!, Ky ,
and Flonda Smtih of Morrow,
Ark, spent a few days helpmg
care for Mrs Don Gorby after
her return home from Veterans
Memonal HOSp1lal Her son,
Randolph Hall of Westland,
Mtch, spent a few days here
With hts mother also

someone proposes full approval
of the pohc1es outlmed by the
chtef, and the delegates leap to
thetr feet lor the card-wavmg
'aye" vote
The vote Y(aS expected etther
late today or Tuesday The
spotlight then shifts to Prem1er
Alexei N Kosygm and hts
report on the new consumeronented economtc plan for 197175
Moscow dtplomats satd they
thought Brezhnev, the general
secretary of the party smce
N1k1ta S Khrushchev's ouster
m 1964, had gamed pohllcal
stature at the congress
He opened the congress last
Tuesday wtth a natiOnally-teleVISed state of the umon speech
that lasted stx hours Smce
then , speaker after speaker 10
the debate ' on hts pohcy
speech has lauded htm as a
great leader
In addlllon, dtplomat•c sources S3ld they expected the
Sovtet Foretgn Office soon ment conservation and coopera
would start takmg acllon- twn m space

Juror Appealing
To Split Nation
FT BENNING, Ga (UPI )One of the SIX 1urors who
convicted Lt Wtlham L Calley
Jr of murder m the My Lat
massacre appealed to the
Amencan pubhc Sunday to
"stop and take stock of the

Amencan pubhc dtsapproved of
the Calley convtctton and 81 per
cent thmks the hfe sentence ts
too harsh
Brown, m an mtervtew m the
Columbus (Ga ) Ledger-Enqwrer, satd support for Calley, 27,
s1tuabon "
of Mtamt, appears to have
'We must not let our umfted m many sections of the
emotions rule our mmds," sBid country
Maj Harvey G Brown, who
called upon poht1C1ans to try "It's good to have a cause to
to calm the $1tuallon and let brmg us together,' he satd
reason take over "
' But let's constder what the
The convtctwn and hfe cause ts I don't want to see
sentence last week of Calley for somethmg like thts tear our
murdermg 22 men, women and country apart "
children at the South V1etna- Brown s wtfe satd the fanumese vtllage of My Lat m 1968 hes of the JUrors "have been
touched off angry reacllon threatened, harassed and persearound the nallon A spectal cuted " And she asked the
Gallup Poll mdtcated that pubhc "Is th1s what you
almost 80 per cent of the want?"

Greim Thumb

arllflctally Although unknown
to many consumers, they
already have been approved for
the Federal School Lunch
Program and are bemg sold to
restaurants, hospttals and other
mstltutwns
"TheY.'II vehemently deny 1!,
but a fatr number of people m
the hamburger patty bustness
are usmg tl now," Johnson
satd
The agnculture department
ruled that meatloaf, hamburger
and stmtlar products m school
lunches can contam up to 30
per cent of the vegetable
products The unttatwns are
stmtlarly sold to restaurants for
mtxmg wtth meat
Worth10gton Foods, Inc
Worthmgton, Ohw, a substdtary
of Mtles U.boratones Inc
began producmg vegetable base'
meat substitutes 31 years ago
for Seventh Day Adventists
who are advtsed by thetr
church to avmd meat m favor
of vegetables
BIRTHDAY s&amp;\!N
Mrs Charles (Ki~ Allen)
Skeels, formerly n! Letart
Falls, wtll celebrat her 82nd
b1rthday Wednesda) Fttends
suggest she be remembered
wtth a btrlhday greeting card
Mrs Skeels who suffered mJUltes from a fallts con!med to
her home at 2675 Summtt St,
Columbus, Ohw

.Anolker ·(}ooJ Bu'l
/rom Baker '.i •••

SHE'S IMPROVING OAILY,
\JUDGE PARKER.

ALWAYS CONIRI&amp;IJTt

Notes . ...
A weekly fe~ture of Metgs
County Garden Club members

Flowers of the Holy land
A!. we approach Easter tune let us pause to think of the words

Thtrleen members of Metgs
County Salon 710 Etght and
Forty, were guesls Thursday
mght at the 16th annual dmner
of Gall1a County Salon 12
Gomg from the Salon here
were Mrs Mary Martm, fll"sl
demt chapeau premtere and a
charter partner of the Galha
Salon , Mrs Eunte Brmker,
Mrs Myrtle Walker, Mrs
Marte Boyd, Mrs Julta Hysell,
Mrs Rhoda Hackett, Mrs
Pearl Knapp, Mrs Ferne
Cheesebrew, Mrs Veda Davts,
Mrs Ruth H Thornton, and
Mrs Catherme Welsh
Mrs Brinker IS chapeau of
Salon 710, and Mrs Walker ts
the etghth distrtct communtly
serviCe cha1rman of the
Amencan Legwn Auxiliary
Departemental Chapeau
Hazel Elliott, the honored guest,
reported durmg the meetmg
that Ohto IS now over the top on
the $1,000 needed to endow a bed
at the National Jewtsh Hospttal
m Denver, Colo and has the
$100 tn for the plaque She also
reported that $385 has been
contrtbuted toward the nurses
scholarship lund, and that
Departemental ts wtlhm 77 of
the partnership goal of the
stage

ta£VI
fURN\1UR£

FRIENDLY Netghbors Club
VISit County Inf1rmary Monday
6 30 p m Easter baskets wtll be
taken
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay, 7 30 p m Monday at
Middleport Masomc Temple
Counctl meetmg at 7
SALEM CENTER PTA
Monday, 7 30 pm Mu&amp;c by
band students under direction of
Lewts Shetlds "The Tra1tor
Wtthm," cancer !tim wtll be
shown by Mrs Theodore Reed

lhe Rev Orlando L Tibbetts'
book, ' Reconc1hng Commumty ' was rev•ewed by Mrs
Joseph Cook at the Thursday
mght meetmg of the MissiOnary
Soc1~ty of the Pomeroy F1rst
Baphst Church
Mrs Cook prefaced her
revtew wtth a comentary on the
hie and educahon of the author
and scnptures from Psalms 24
and Ephesians 5 She descnbed
the book as a plea for change,
effectively executed "
In her revtew, Mrs Cook satd
that the Rev Mr Tibbetts says
we are hvmg m the dawmng
hours of the 21st ~ntury and
must face the awesome truth of
fnghtemng change He tells of
the effects of super h1ghways ,
changed skylines, mulhple
suburban developments, and of
televtswn wtth vtews of scenes
around the world and even on
the moon
Mrs Cook sa1d that the author
ptclures the average man as
'caught between the centur1es,
a baffled child m transtbon, not

Attendance in
Fourth Place

0

Kingsbury

•595

News, Notes

Social Notes

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

--------.&lt;--------_:_-:----~---=-=-=-=
--:......_____________~

I

completely leavmg the old and
not qutte graspmg the new '
Turmng to the church, Mrs
Cook reported the author
descnbes the church as be10g m
a time or transt\100 where
Chnstians are challenged to
carry out a redempllve task so
great that the average church
member recmls from facmg 1t
a task wh1ch reqmres an exodus
from the old land 10\o a
promtsed land rad1cally d!f

leo ent from the fam•har
She concluded by saymg that
the world IS wa1t1ng for the
Chnst1an church to combme •Is
great h1stoncal and tradttlonal
forces w1th the ms1ght of the
contemporary work 10 order
that Chnstlan concepls m1ght
have meamng for the age m
wh1ch we hve
A discussion penod on the
book \\as held at the conclusron
of Mrs Cook s rev1ew She also

Society News

o£fu.:ers ag1 eed tu ;;;erve ror

another yea r on the request of
Mrs Cook
Plans were made fo r the

annual moth er daught er
banquet to be beld m May Mrs
Robert Kuhn w1ll be assiSted
wtth the p1 ogram by Mrs Ivan
Walker aRd Mr s Wilham
Barnhart Hostesses w1ll be
Mr s George Skmner Mrs
H,u 1) Baile), Mrs f.llen ~
Couch Mrs W1lham Watson
read an a1 tiel ~ on seculansm and Mrs Albert Sm1th Mrs
wntten by the Rev Billy Couch had the Jove g1ft
Go a ham It was noted that a ded•cat10 n
Gt &lt;~ham film F01 Pete s Sake
be sho\\n at the Colony Refr es hments Vi C! e served by
1 heall e m (,alhpohs Apnl 15- M1 s Walker and Mrs Bailey to
Ihose named and fvh s J E
21
G1 oup smgmg Must Jesus Foste1 Mrs Ohve1 M1chaet anr,
Bew the Cross Alone opened tilt the Rev Robel t Kuhn Ihe
Holy Week servtces m t&gt;lld meetmg Mrs I I Shelton \\as Easter theme 11 as ca1r1ed out 1n
dteport begm tomght undet &lt;II the ptan o Mrs Cook , the ref res hment tab le de (
sponsorship of the Middleport president gave praye• Pt esent 01 all ons
Mmtslenai Assocmtwn
Servtces wtll be held at the
Middleport Mount Monah
Baphst Church Monday
Tuesday , Wednesday and
frtday mghts at 7 30 p m No
umon serviCe w11i be held on
II conlltbuhon to the pnsoner )Carbook was g1veo and f01
Thursday to permtt IOdlvtdual of war Project Freedom devotwns Mrs LoUI S 11e1bet
churches to have communiOn movement was made by the used Rest as her theme w1th
Happy Harvesters Class of the scnptUI e f•om M,u k 6 and
servtces
Speakers w1ll be the Rev 1i 1mty Church at a meetmg poet•y Mrs fJladys Cuckle•
1ead ,, poem eul1tled I Am
Henry Key of the host chmch, Fnday mght at the church
Monday , the Rev Audrey
D111 mg the meetmg 1\ was Fme
Games p11zes po OHded bv the
Miller, Church of tl1e Nazarene, 1eported that the new tables
Tuesday, the Rev Max Don- have amved The class also hostesses we• e ~;on by M1 s
ahue, Heath Umted Meth- app1 oved
payment
for Duffy M• s Ethel W1lhamson
odiSt, Wednesday , and the 1epa1nn g and cleamng the M1 s Gem gw Wtlharnson , and
Rev Russell Lester, Pres- cha n s m tl1e soc1al JOOm, and Mt s Gmther The group sang
byterian Church, Frtday
agreed to take care or flowers "Happy Bu thday to Mrs Karr
Mus1c Will be provtded on for deceased members of the and Mrs Dale Sm1th Daffodils
!tanked by yellow tapers
Monday by the Heath Umted church
Methodtst chmr, on Tuesday by
M1ss Erma Smtih and Mrs decorated the dmmg table
Attendmg wet e Mrs Re1bel
the Presbytenan Church , on F1 eda Duffy were welcomed
Wednesday by the Mount mto the class membership Mrs Lillie Houck Mrs Ruv
Monah Choir, and on Fnday by Plans we1 e made for a dmner to Seyfned Mrs Ethel Wilthe Nazarene Church
be served by the group on Apnl liamson, Mrs Karr, Mt s
The Rev Charles S1mons wtll 17 Mrs Ons Gmthe•, chair- W1lhamsun Mt s Kan Mrs
be song leader for the services man wtll be ass1sted b) Mrs Ste lla Kl oes Mrs Phd
The Holy Week serv1ces replace Cla1 a Ka1 r M1 s Homer Holter Memh&lt;11 t, M1ss Smtih Mo s
Mrs
Ca111e
the annual Week of Prayer M1 s Fred Dessauer Mrs Dale Des sa ue1
observance of the Mmtslenal Sm1 th , and Mrs ·Lawrence Memhat t, Mrs Dalley Mrs
Erb, Mrs Sm1 th , Mrs Holter,
Assoctatwn
Lanmng
A coveted d1sh dmnet Mrs Gmther Mrs Duffy, and
p1 eceded
the
meehng MISS Sybil Ebersbach
HOSPITAL NEWS Hostesses
prov1dmg the dessert
were
Mrs
Ben Neutzhng, Mrs
Holzer Medtcal Center, F1rst
Ave and Cedar St General Eve rett Dalley, and Mrs
v1s1 ling hours 2-4 and 7-8 p m G1 over Erb 1\ prayer from the
Matermty VISlhng hours 2 30 to
$396 COLLECTED
4 30 p m Parents only on
A
total
of $395 65 was
Ped1alrtcs Ward
collected for the George
BIRTHS
Mr and Mrs Paul D Thompson Ktdney Fund m a
Bradbury, Galhpohs, a house to house canvi!Ss condaughter, Mr and Mrs ducted by the Amencan Legwn
M1chael G McBrtde, Btdwell, a Auxiliary Mrs Ben Neutzllng,
son, Mr and Mrs Don R Hill, E1ghth Dtsll•ct prestdent,
Rac10e, a daughter, Mr and repo1ts
Mrs Donald E Johnson,
Columbus, a son, Mr and Mrs
WERE REGISTRARS
Clarence F Greenlee, Pt
Mrs Campbell Harper was
Pleasant, a son, Mr and Mrs regtstrar and Mrs Ernest
Davtd A Reed, Wellston, a son, Bowles asststant regtstrar for
Mr and Mrs Mtcahel D Davts, the recent d1stnct School of
Pt Pleasant, a daughter, and Rehgwn held at the Mount
Mr and Mrs Carl G Sauvage, Monah Baphst Church ttl
Pomeroy, a son
Mtddleport
DISCHARGES
Mrs Elmer H Belue, Mrs
Phone 992 2318
BAPTIZED IN POND
Wtllard L Coy, Mrs Wilham E
Curfman, Mrs Calvm Ray A baptismal servtce was held
AUTO
Sunday
by
the
Mtddleport
Dowell and daughter, Howard
FIRE - LIFE
Church of the Nazarene at the
A Feustel, Denver Ketth
HEALTH
French, Herschel Gtlbert, Watd Scott farm pond near Pomeroy
MUTUAL FUNDS
B Hayman, James W Herald, Baptized by the 'Rev Audrey
Russ.ell V Holland, Cheryl Ann Mtller were Ricky Mendehall,
NATIONWIDE
Howe, Mrs Edtth M Keaton , Paul Mtller, Chrtstme Miller,
and
Danny
Miller
Three
more
Arthur R Petrte, Mrs Emerson
p
Provens, Edward J Qmck, cand1dates'\Ytll be baptized at a
Robert P Rice, Mrs Paul A later lime

of our Lord as recordedm St Matthew "Consider the lilies of the
field, how they grow, they loti not, netther do they spm And yet I
say unto you, that even Solomon m all hls glory was not arrayed
like one of these "
What are those lilies of the field• Tourists of many lands
Journey to the Holy Land, walk up the path past the Garden of
Gethsemane They will see the Btblical "lilies of the ftelds" but
probably will not assoctate them With the lilies we grow m our
gardens Some of them look more like small gladtolus or IriS
(often called "flags" m olden days)
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
OUr well-known white Easter illy IS not from the Holy Land,
Daughters of Amenca, IOOF
but from Japan orlglJlally, and 11 IS now grown m Bermuda and
hall, 7 30 Monday mght Shower
the Gulf States It ls of course forced m the greenhouse to produce
to be held honormg Mtss Donna
Its fragrant white bloom at Easter It can later be planted m the
Ret bel
garden, often to bloom agam thiS season and m succeedmg years
TUESDAY
The scarlet anemone IS abundant m Palestme, and the
MIDDLEPORT
Lodge 363,
hillBides may be ablaze wtth 1ts beautiful red color It resembles a
F&amp;AM, regular sessiOn, 7 30
nurualllre ortental poppy and grows abOut a foot htgh
p m Tuesday, at temple
There are many other flowers m the Holy Land which resemble
POMEROY Chapter 186 OES
those mour own gatdens For example, there are the cornflowers,
meeting
Tuesday 7 30 p m
yeiiO)V buttercups, bluelupmes, small yellow chrysanthemums
Masomc Temple
that bloom m March, and early red tulips as well as the yellow
MEIGS TEMPLE, Pythtan
wild mustard Pmk flax blooms m March and April throughout
Ststers,
Tuesday evemng, 7 30
Palestine, also datslesand pinks of many spectes Egypllan •s the
at the hall InstallatiOn of of- The Middleport Church of the
most common
MOTHER HONORED
Nazarene IS m fourth place m a
Let us alSo remember the anctent, twiSted olive trees of
Mr and Mrs Thomas Bowen fleers and practice for m- Sunday school attendance
Gethsemane, sa1d to be the same as when ChriSt came there to entertamed Sunday evenmg specbon All members asked to contest on percentage of gam
pray - Ruby Dtehl, Star Garden Club, Dexter
w1 th a dmner hononng her attend
RIVERVIEW PTA wtll meet sponsored by the-Dentral OhiO
mother, Mrs Clara Karr, on her
D1stnct Churches of the
80th btrlhday anmversary A Tuesday,Aprtl6,at7 30p mat Nazarene
cake was served With the din- the school
The contest whtch has 148
WEDNESDAY
ner Guests were Mrs Gladys
churches m the dtslrtcl parEASTER Cantata WedCuckler, Mrs Ethel Stewart,
llclpatmg, w1ll conclude on
nesday, 7 30 p m Asbury Easter Sunday The Pomt Rock
Mrs
Phtl
Williamson,
and
Mrs
Morns
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Umted Methodtst Church , Church of the Nazarene near
Mr and Mrs Howard Ervm Eldon Weeks
The Happy Hustlers Sunday
Syracuse Pubhc 1s mvtted
Albany ts m second place, and
School Class of the Umted spent ten days on a vacation m
the Pomeroy Church has been
MethodiSt Church enjoyed an Flonda vtsttlng places of mBEGIN
AT
SIX
10
the top 10 at least tw1ce
Easter party at the church w1th terest
Easter
serviCes
at
the
EnMr Larry W1ley of Laura
durmg the contest
a stx o'clock dmner, at whtch
terpme
Umted
Methodtst
Pr1zes wtll be awarded to the
lime they surprtsed Mrs came for the weekend and was
Church
wtll
begm
wtth
a
sunnse
three
churches show10g the
Lav101a Stmpson wtth a accompamed home by hts wtfe, serviCe at 6 a m by the youth
htghest numencal gam and
decorated cake for her bll"th- who had spent a week wtth her fellowship followed by a breakthree churches showmg the
day Also a floral bouquet of parents, Mr and Mrs Oils fast m the church basement
h1ghest percentage gam
roses was presented from her McClintock
The
church
servtce
wtll
be
at
Mr and Mrs CurtiS Johnson
Howard Melvm, son of Mr
daughter,
Mrs
Manan
30
a
m
,
Sunday
school
at
9
Kmghtstep of Columbus The and Mrs Roy Spencer were 10 30 a m wtth an Easter egg and Mrs Howard Lawrence,
table decorahons were m Sunday VISItors of Mr and Mrs hunt for the youth and children was chriStened at the Umted
Methodist Church Sunday,
keepmg of Easter Followmg Roy Johnson and famtly at
of
the
church
to
follow
March 28 God-parents are Mr
the dmner a busmess sessiOn Carrollton
Mrs
Don
Nease
and
Mtss
and Mrs Clarence Lawrence,
was held and a program of
Edtth
Hayman
VISited
Mr
and
Portland
Attendmg the
readmgs and mustc by the
chr1stemng were Brenda, Bnan
members, presented by Mrs Mrs Henry Euler at Hemlock
Grove
•
and
James Ray Lawrence, Ruth
Bertha Spencer
Alfred
Mrs Edward Howell of
Thornton, maternal grandMr and Mrs Ralph Webb,
The Carleton Sunday School
Pomeroy
spent
a
day
vlSltmg
mother and Patty Lawrence
Mr and Mrs Wtlham Stewart,
Several attended the weddmg had an attendance of 70 Sunday
Mrs L1lhan Weese, Mrs relatives
Mrs Charles Noms and
of Kathy Tuttle and Ray mormng Followmg Sunday
Phyllis Kmghtmg, Mrs Chlorus
Johnson at the Methodtst School there was an electwn of
Grtmm, Mrs Isabel Simpson, daughter spent the weekend m
officers Supt Ralph Carl,
Sunday School attendance on Church Saturday evemng
Mrs Gretta Sunpson, Mr Ben Columbus wtth her mother
Dale Hamson,
Substitute
M1ss June Netgler of March 28 was 65, the offermg Nellie Cozart has returned
Phtlson attended the reception
Secreatary, Elizabeth Murray,
for Wtlma Styers, Deputy Columbus was a recent over- $23 96 Worshtp services were home from Holzer Hospttal
Carl,
Mr and Mrs Harold Newlun Subshtute, Sadte
Grand Matron Dts\rtel 25 mght guest of her parents, Mr held at 11 o'clock wtth the Rev
Treasurer
V1rgmta
Dean,
Lavender speaking from John and Sandy spent the weekend
0 E S Saturday at Ml Mortah and Mrs George Netgler
11 47-57, to an attendance of 32 w1th Mr and Mrs Roome Subslltute, Janeth Beal,
Chapter, Beverly, Ohto
Piamst, Unda Beal, Subslltute
Thts bemg PassiOn Sunday, Whtte, Chtlhcothe, 0
Saturday evemng dmner
Holy Communton serviCes were Mr and Mrs Howard Larkms Mary Lou King, Correspondent,
guests of Mrs Ethel Wheeler Tuppers Plains
admmtstered by the Rev and famtly, Portland, and Mr Mary Lou Houdashelt, Suband Mrs Ada 'Bays were Mrs
Wtlham Smtth, chalrl1lan of the and Mrs Fred Larkms were stitute, Yvonne Young, BirthThorn Cottrill of Logan, Mrs
Treasurer,
Marlene
Department of Rehg10n at VISiting Mr and Mrs Jumor day
Joe Thoren, Sr of Nease Set.
Martella College, asststed by Hauber and !am 1ly, New Hamson, Substulltue, Yvonne
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
tlement and Mr Harold Hamm
Young, Cradle Roll Teacher,
Matamoras, 0
Mr and Mrs James Daniels the Rev Lavender
of Ptttsburgh, Pa
LoUise
Hamson, Sunbeam
Easter Sunme servtces will Fred Newlun bas returned
Mr Russell Radchffe of of Middleport were Sunday
Beaver Falls, Pa and Mtss guests of Mr and Mrs R K be held on Aprtl 11, at 6 a m , home from Camden Clark Class, Delores King, Busy Bee
followed by breakfast m the Hosp1tal, Parkersburg, W Va Class, Coelle Hudson, Young
Frances Foster, local, spent Rowan
Sunday wtth Mrs. Hazel Car- The WS C S or the Umted church basement Sunday Vts1tmg Mr and Mrs Garth Adults, Floyd Ross, Standard
MethodiSt Church met at the School wtll be held at 9 45 and Smith, recently were Jesste Bearers, Janeth Beal, Helpmg
nahan
MISS Frances Foster and Mrs home of Mrs Dana Hoffman worship servtces at 11, as usual, _ Dodderer, Tuppers Plams, Hands, Olen Hamson
on that day
• Edt th Osborn, Keno , Ray Recent VISitors of Mr and
Hazel Carnahan called on Mrs Wednesday
Sunday dmner guests of Clara Riggs, Chester, Vtrgte Mora Mrs Nev Whtte and sons were
Mrs Myrtle Boggess was a
Lottte Wtlcoxen at Elmwood
Nursmg Home, Coolvtlle, Sunday dmner guest of Mrs Follrod and Nma Robmson and Olhe Young, Pomeroy, 0 Mr and Mrs Roger Toney and Rickard, Norman S Sprouse,
Sheha of Chester
were Mr and Mrs Robert and Emma Powell
NeiSCI Weathermi)Jl
recenUy
Mrs James H Staley, Rev
Mtss Ethel Koemg spent Robmson and family of Belpre, Mr and Mrs Howard Mr and Mrs Ralph Carl and Dame! A Thomas, Mrs John
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Blythe
and daughter, Betsy of Spen- Saturday here With Mr and and Mr and Mrs Btll Follrod Lawrence and Howie were Rodney vlstted With Mrs Carl's M Williams and son, Mrs
and Sue Ann of Athens Last vtsttm~ James Lawrence, parenls, Mr and Mrs Clyde M10me M Kmg, Paul D
cerville, Oh10, enroute from Mrs Wayne Brtckles
Hamson of Middleport
Mr and Mra Wilson Gtlbert Sunday dmner guests were Mr Dew1tts Run
Flortda, were overnight guests
McGwre, and Mrs Wtllard G
Saturday of Mr and Mrs Ralph of Athens were Saturday guests and Mrs. Clatr Follrod, Stevte Mr and Mrs Jun Walls and Recent VISitors of Mr and Sheets
son, Canal Wmchester, were Mrs Olen Harrison were Mr
here of her aunt, Mr and Mrs and Kathy, local
Webb
Marlene Wmebrenner spent a overmght guests of Mr and and Mrs Robert Rted and
Mr and Mrs Ralph Webb Fon Halsey
Mrs Guy Hayman
callers one evemng were Mrs
spent a recent weekend m Mr and Mrs Ted SedgewlCk week's vacation m Flortda
Mrs
Mtldred
Story
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Martm
Faye Pratt and Bermce Rtffle
Columbus wtlh thetr son and Jr , of Akron spent the weekend
family, Dr and Mrs J W here with hts parents, Mr and Columbus spent the weekend Nesselroad were vtstbng Mr and Mrs Ernest Carr of
wtth
her
stsler·m-law, relatives at Ravenswood, W Pomeroy VISited recently wtth
Webb They went especially to Mrs Ted Sedgewlck, Sr
Va
Mrs CoHoe Hudson
Mr and Mrs Wayne Brtckles Genevieve Guthrie
help celebrate thetr grandson's
Gregory Wmebrenner had as Mrs Donna Hauber and Mr ' and Mrs Wtlltam King
spent Sunday wtth her brother
fifth btrthday
Cheryl Btggs and her
Sunday afternoon callers of and &amp;ster-m-law, Mr and Mrs hts guest, hts half-brother Kelly family, New Matamoras, spent v1s1ted one day recently wtlh passenger, Florence Btggs,
Wmebrenner of Syracuse, 0, a recent weekend wtth Mr and Mrs Della Rtffle
Mrs Ada Bays and Mrs Ethel Charles Spencer of Belpre
Recent VISitors of Mr and suffered abraswns of thetr
Mrs Fred Larkins
Oscar Babcock returned thts weekend
Wheeler were Mr and Mrs
Sunday dmrer guests of Mr
Vlstting Mr. and Mrs Hank Mrs John Dean, John and foreheads Saturday at 10 58 a
home several days ago from
Frank Kercel of Coolville.
m m a one-ear accident on
Martha Yost and frtend, Camden Clark Hospital where and Mrs Glen Robmson were Holter were Mr and Mrs Joe Richard, were Mr and Mrs County Road 163: three-tenths of
Beverly Barber, students at he was a medtcal patient He ts her brother, Mr arid Mrs. Carl Btssell and famtly, Mason, W Paul Paynter of Carpenter, Mr a mtle east of old US Rt 33
Watson and son of Dayton, 0 , va ; Tom Drake, Columbus; and Mrs Gerald Gilkey and
Ohw Valley College, Parkers- recovering sat1sfactonly
and
her lnother, Effte Watson, Nancy Baum, Chester, Mr and daughters of Athens, Mr and Shenlf Robert C Harburg, spent the weekend wtth Mrs Effie Watson returned
tenbach's department satd
Mr and Mrs Gen~ Yost and home after a week's vtsit with who had been vtstllng at Mrs Joe Bissell, Sr and Mr Mrs Robert Rted, Bruce, Cheryl B1ggs, Rt 3, Pomeroy,
Dayton A Sunday evemng and Mrs DaVId Smith and Vtrgtma, Rodney and Davtd of
her children at Dayton
family
Pataskala, Mr and Mrs dnv10g east, got off on berm to
Mr and Mrs Pete Gould of Mr and Mrs George Hensley vtstlor was her Sister, Mrs fam 1ly
Mr and Mrs Lewts Cozart Kenneth Markms of Racme and the right of the road, swerved
Manetta spent Sunday wtth her and !amtly have returned home Wilma Gumther of Chester
across the h1ghw@y and off tl,
Servtces will be held at the and fal!Uly , Loram, o, were Pam Garren of Columbus
parents, Mr and Mrs Francts from a vacation m Flonda
Mrs
Wmme Whtte and striking a tree Both mjured
Mr and Mrs Marvm Walker Orange Chrtsltan Church here VISttmg Nellie CO'Uirt
Jo Ann Lawrence and Ruth Sherman and Mrs Delores King were treated and released at
and daughter Ruth spent the on Thursday, Fnday and
weekend wtth her brother, Mr Saturday evening, at 7 30 wtth Thorton were at Galhpohs accompamed the Gospel Teens Veterans Memortal Hospital
recently
to sing at A!.hton, W Va , last
and Mrs Robert Howard and Charles Domtgan, pastor
Westernmost pomt 1n the
Several local people vtstted
Jesste Dodderer, Tuppers Sunday mght
family of Lucasville •
Umted
States IS Cape Wran·
Mr and Mrs C. W Morton of Whtle 's Funeral Home on Plains, and Audrey Smtth were Mrs Elizabeth Murray and gell, Attu Island Aleubans
Dayton spent Saturday With her Sunday and attended servtces vlStlmg Mr and Mrs Emmett Mrs CoHoe Hudson VISited Mrs Alaska
Rtchardson and
parenls, Mr and Mrs Clarence lor "Turner" Newland, there on Stethem and Emma and Pearl Robert
WED. &amp; THURS.
Monday evemng.
Powell
daughter at Mtddleporl and
Nichols
Satlll'itay
evening
and
Sunday
Pat
Smtih
has
returned
APRIL 7-8
attended
serv1ces at the Baptist
Ruth and Betty Bailey attended the funeral of thetr guests of Mr and Mrs Clarence to Columbus after spendmg her Church Thursday mght
9 'TIL 8
uncle, Herbert Bailey, at Heilderson were her &amp;ster, Mrs sprmg break from 0 S U wtth Mrs Hazel Arnold spent
E 2nd St
Pomeroy, 0
Bertha Wright and daughter, Mr and Mrs Davtd Smtth and Sunday aftemoon with Mr and
Monica, Penn Sunday
Next to Post Office
Jenmfer of Zanesvtlle, 0
family
Mrs Charles Arnold and
SAME DAY
ONLY •15.50
Pearl Koehler or Columbus,
Mr and Mrs Joe BISSell were daughter, Martha
SERVICE
0 , IS on leave !rom the VISiting Mr and Mrs Wayne Mrs Jenme Hollte IS spendmg
100 pe~cent Kanekalon
In AI9-0ut At 5
stretch wigs Just wash &amp;
1110 )nng cancel death rate Universtty
Hospttal
m Prmce and Pearl Sandelm
some tune w1th her daughter,
wear
a mung men mc1 cased 15 fold Columbus and he and hts son,
Use Our Free Parking Lot
Nancy Baum, Chester, and
and Mrs
Robert
INo Obligations)
tn35 yc.us oml the r.otc ts gnmg Randy, of Tupp~rs Plams, David Smtth, Jr , were tourmg Mr
Swearmgton and son at Dayton
np mnon~ women Lung cnncc{
vtslted
hts
daughter,
Mrs
the
campus
of
Manetta
College,
Mr and Mrs Joe Hall and son I
Is l.q~cly p•cvmlnhlc, s.ty~ tltc
W1lber
Robmson
and
famtly
Manetta,
0
Monday
VISited
one evemng recently
!.,
Amellc.u• C.mccr Soucty-JIISt
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
'I ...._ .. stup smokn1g
Sunday
-Violet Smith wtth Mr and Mrs John Dean

Social Notes

ottl1

BAKER

MONDAY
POMEROY Garden Club, 7
p m Monday mght, Pomeroy
Umted MethodtstChurch, soctal
room Guest mght to be observed

Nation in Era of Rapid Change

long Bottom

3 ROOMS Of Ml

CONCORDE TEST
LONDON (UPI)-The Bnltshassembled supersomc atrlmer
prototype Concorde 002 IS back
m the atr after bemg grounded
lor two months
The atrcraft, piloted by
Bntish Aircraft Corp Chief
Test Pilot Bnan Trubshaw,
made a two-hour !bght over the
North Sei!Sllturday, reachmg a
maxunum altttude of 48,000
feet
For 44 mmutes the all"craft
was flown at supersomc speed,
more than 1,120 mtles per hour
It was the start or a new senes
of fhghts auned at structural
testmg and checkmg the a1r
mtake system

THAT~ WHYI

'

Social
Calendar

Racine Social Events

MOODY BEATS YASUDA
HONG KONG (UPI)--Orvtlle
Moody of Harker Hetghts, Tex ,
shot a two-under par 68 Sunday
to wm the Hong Kong Open
Golf Tournament by two
strokes over Haruo Yasuda of
Japan Moody fm1shed with a
266, 14 under par, for the 72hole tournament for the vtctory
desptte a fmal round of 63 by
Yasuda

lo'IAR&amp;O'S TH~RAPISTS SAY

GaiHa Salon
~osts Meigs

Holy Week to

"'II

Begin Tonight

Contribution Made
Q

P. J. Pauley

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY

n
~~

'J!~~f ~~~~~~

Two Injured in
Auto Accident

CORDAWAY

~CORD

~RUL

1

./\-EAS11R

....
...
~

Fred is going slo~~ today.
•

Every year thousands of Freds take th1s l.nal dnve
Because they drove too last
And they take thousands of .nnocent v•ct1ms w1th
them Dnvmg too fast caused more than 18 000
deaths last year That s nearly one third of the nation s
tralf1c tatalit1es
Speed.ng, lor any reason whatsoever Is courtmg
death It just 1sn t worth ot

Because we sell new cars W£1 re espec1ally con
cerned w1th safe dnvmg W~ want you

.

4~··~~

.

to use your car sens1bly And dt1ve at /.-~
~~
' ·.

reasonable speeds always

Auto~

m9b1tes last longer that way
More importantly

so dO people

!
1 :
~·
:
•''•u,. •
1 ' •/

Nattonal Automobrle Dealers Assocratton

Ont on aserles presented by N A D A, The Dally Sentlftel, and the new~;ar dealers ofthe Tr1 County AutoOealeiS Assoc

•

•

EASTER
WIG SHOW AND
SALE

Automaucetly

i

ou1

reels cord In
••

you

need It No
tanglln&amp;!
0
D

The rugged all steel canmster that cleans rugs •
furniture • drapes - everrthmg - deep down •
Eureka dependability hlet•me lubncated motor.
for years of supenor serv1ce Beautifully styled
M1s1y Gold metatl•c fm1sh

SHIRT
FINISHING

FEMIN'NE
My$ UE

(

REG 49 95 VALUE
Modal738 A

INGELS 'FURNITURE
OpenJ=t:i...&amp; Silt. N1ghts

Robinson's Cleaners

MIDDLEPORT

'

�•

•
~-

The Daily Sentmel, Mtdl!lepbrt.Pomeroy, 0 ApnU, 1971

Meat Copy Rules Coming
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Food and Drug Admtmstralton
(FDA) began composmg ground
rules today for a new generation of vegetable protem
products destgned to look, feel,
smell, taste and nour1sh hke
meal- but cost tess

The FDA's deadlme for pubhc
co!nmenls on the proposed
standards for the meat tmttaltons expired at mtdmght
Sunday Before 1t exptred, a
standards proposal was submtlted by a food mdustry coaht1on
headed by General Mtlls, Inc ,

Mmreapobs Mmn , and Archer reqmre them to be tdenlllle.d
Damels Mtdland Co , Decatur, on food labels as "textured
~rotem producls
Ill
A hamburger tm1tahon !01
example,
could be labeled
It would set nummum
protem, vttamm and mmeral ' textured protem product w1th
content for such products and a hamburger-like flavor "
Dr Ogden C Johnson FDA
nutntlon lhrector, md1cated
., however he \\as far from
sahsfted w1th the proposed
standards for protem and other
nutrients
'If these products are less
concrete proposals through expenstve than meat, there Will
dtplomatlc channels-Oestgned be a tendency for people to use
to put teeth mto Brezhnev's them as a maJor source of
suggestions for general and nutnbon," Johnson satd m an
nuclear disarmament
mterv1ew "So the questiOn IS
Some analysis regarded h1s whether they should not be
state of the umon comments on reqmred to be absolutely
these subjects as hollow propa eqwvalent to meat m nutmnts
ganda, but the sources sa1d
'If so, that means we're
Sovtet dtplomats would plump gomg to have to shoot for a
for them m sptle of the odds much h1gher standard," he
agamst any sweepmg disar- satd
mamentconferences
A lew products such as
fhey sa1d the SoVIet would lffiltatwn bacon b1ts already are
propose conferences on
available m supermarkets
- Worldwtde disarmament of Food mdustry leaders satd
convenltonal forces
Widespread marketing of
- Nuclear dtsarmament by entrees made from vegetable
the Sovtel Umon, the Umted meat subslltutes was at least
States, Commumst Chma , two years away, wtth processed
France and Bntam
of the ttems such as Stroganoff and
-Genral repud1atwn
' chtcken" A La Kmg first m
use of force
hne
- DissolutiOn of the North The meat lmttahons are
Atlantic Treaty ' Orgamzatwn made largely from soybean
(NATO) and the Warsaw Pact denvallves fortified w1th nuarmtes
trients and colored and flavored
-Jomt measures on envtron-

Brezhnev Scoring Well
MOSCOW (UP! )-Ftve thousand hands wavmg bnght red
Communtst party cards stgnals
the halfway mark for the 24th
Sovtet Party Congress The
Kremhn gathermg can then
turn from pohcy to economics
The Congress reconvened m
the Palace of Congresses today
for the tradillonal ntual of
approvmg the' pohctes of the
currentleadershtp The ceremony changes little from congress
to congress - the supreme
party rally held every four or
five years
The party leader, m lhts case
Leomd I Brezhnev, makes hts
bnef summahon speech

SPECIAL SERVICE - In special memorial and dedicallon servtce at tpe Fll"st Umted
Presbyterian Church m Mtddleport Sunday, par aments m memory of the late Rev Howard
Ruppelt and Btbles mmemory of the late Mrs Jeannette B Waddell were dedtcated Mrs Tom
Rue dtsplays one of the paraments that covers the commumon table

Suez Opening Rejected
By Umted Press International
Israel reJected Sunday an
Egypttan plan to reopen the
, Suez Canal, mststmg 11 was a
part of an attempt to tmpose an
"Egypllan-S&lt;lVlet polllical settlement m the Mtddle East
Israeli Prtme Mmtster Golda
Metr, m an address to the
opemng sesswn of her Labor
Party Conference, satd Israelts
Willing to contmue dtscusswns
However, she added, 'anyone
who proposes Israeli agreement
to the opemng of the Canal as a
lever to obtam total Israeli
withdrawal from Smat and
Gaza wtll certamly not be

Old Town
Flats News
By May Johnston
Mrs Mae Van Meter and
daughter, Ruby, vtstted Mr and
Mrs Charhe Carroll and
family
Mr and Mrs Gary Van Meter
and !amtly from Long Bottom,
Mr and Mrs Lee Layne and
Kenneth v1s1ted Mr and Mr~
Lawrence Johnston and famtly
Mrs May Johnston called on
Mrs Mary Ours
Mr and Mrs Bobby Joe
Wolfe and famtly, Racme
Route, and Mr Danny Hames,
local, called on Mr and Mrs
Maywood Johnston
Mr and Mrs Hayward Nutter
of near Tuppers Plams, Mr and
Mrs Clifford Icehhower,
Pomeroy Route, and Mr and
Mrs J Pauley, local, vtstted
Mr
and Mrs
Homer
Icenhower
Mr and Mrs Dana Wolle,
East Liverpool, vtstted Mr and
Mrs Cectl Roseberry and
!am1ly and Mr and Mrs Edd
Bush
Mrs Helen Jeffers, Syracuse,
VISited her parents, Mr and
Mrs Homer Icenhower

Increase

By 200,000

.'

.

East Chester
News Notes

Attendance at the Nazarene
Sunday School March 28 was 64
Collectwn was $13 03
Mrs Earl Dean and Mrs
Davtd Koblentz enterta10eo
thetr parents wtth a dmner
Sunday m honor of thetr 45th
weddmg anmversary, Mr and
M1 s George Genhe1mer
GuyThoma and famtly of
Flatwoods Rd called on hts
mother, Mrs Georgte Thoma
Monday evemng
Mr and Mrs Don Betzmg of
Hemlock Grove called gn hts
s1sters, Freda Miller and
Lenore Betz10g Saturday
evemng
Btl! Cogar aod fam1ly of
Mmersvtlle called on Erma
H1elman Sunday afternoon
Mrs Moon, Mr and Mrs
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The Clayton Schartiger called on
• number of poverty-stncken Mr and Mrs Vergtl PriCe
Amertcans beyond the age of 65 Sunday afternoon
swelled by 200,000 last year, Mr and Mrs George
despite a 15 per cent boost m Genheuner spent Wednesday
Soctal Secunty benefits, the w1th her brother and stster-mSenate's Spec1al Committee on law, Norman Rose of Pine
Ag10g satd today
Grove Thetr \on, Roger, was
"Older people conllnued to leavmg Thursday mormng lor
fight a losmg battle wtth V1etnam
mflated pnces," the report Mr and Mrs Herbie Sm1th
sa1d It called 1970 a "year of and famtly of Columbus spent
frustralwn" for the elderly, one Sunday wtth the Rtchard Barton
m four of whom hve m poverty lamtjy H\~ mother, Mrs Jane
The Republicans on the Sm1t~ of Silver Rtdge, returned
committee submtlted an add1 to the Barton home
ttonal report, saymg that the Several from here attended
mcomes of the elderly no the Bonme Ftck funeral at
longer can be ratsed only by Pomeroy
Soctal Seciu-tty beneftts because Dan Bnckles and famtly of
younger workers are at the Gold Rtdge called on Freda
pom t of r~belhng agamst the Miller and Lenore Betzlng
· steadily r1smg Soctal Secunty Friday evemng
payroll tax
Earl Thoma and !amtly of '
The GOP members threw Pomeroy called on hts mother,
thetr supvort behmd a dtrect Mrs George Thoma Sunday
government substdy for the evemng
elderly to gtve them a Mrs Moon returned Saturday
guaranteed mmtmum annual evemng from a ten day VISit
mcome Such a proposal backed w1th fnends and relattves She
for several years 'by Sen VISited former netghbors,
Wmston L Prouty, R-Vt, would Goldte Warren, Mr and Mrs
provtde enough of a substdy to Howard Butler and Mrs Ray
ratse the mcome of a Single Ktmball, also her mece, Jen
elderly poor person to $1,800 a Ann Rose and got to see the new
year, $2,400 for a couple, tf baby boy, who makes her
thelt mcome sources lltd not brother and w1!e grandparents
bnng ln that much
for the !trslllme Then she went
Legtslallve prospects for the on W v1stt ~r and Mrs Earl
substdY proposal dtd not appear Stout at Broadway for several
bn11ht
davs

Aged Poor

'

surpnsed by Israel s outnght
rejecbon of thts plan "
She sa1d "thts plan would be
seen as a move to orgamze
pressure on Israel to agree to
the opemng of the Canal m the
framework of the unpos1t10n on
us of an Egppban.Sovtet
pohllcal settlement"
Mrs Metr sa1d "we don't
want a new war, but tf there IS
one we can say we have no fear
of tis outcome
Egypt had proposed reopenmg the Canal, wtth the Israeli
pullback as part of the
condttwns
Sen J Wtlham Fulbnght, DArk , chatrman of the Senate
Fn· etgn Relatwns Committee,
satd m a speech m New Haven,
Conn , Sunday Israel ts resortmg to "Commumst-ba1tmg
humbubbery" m an attempt to
mampulate Amencan fore1gn
policy
"It ts a fme thmg to respect
a small country s mdependence
and to abstam from mterference m 1ts mternal affatrs,' he
satd "It IS qwte another
matter when m the name of
these worthy prmctples- but
r~lly because of our continwng
obsessiOn wtth Commumsmwe perm1t chen! states hke
Israel and South Vtetnam to
mampulate Amencan pohcy

'

5- The Daily Sentinel, P.jiddleport·Pomeroy, 0, AprilS, 1971

toward purposes contrary to
our mterests, and probably to
thetrs as well," he added
In Jordan, Palestiman guernlla leaders and government
offtctals met today to plan the
evacuatiOn from the capttal of
Amman
The guernllas
promtsed they would move
commandos and heavy weapons
out of Amman 10 hne wtth
prevwus agreements
There has been 10 days of
renewed ftghtmg between the
guernilas and government, the
worst smce the CIVll War m
September

Fairview
By Mrs Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Clarence Roush,
Tom and Toney, of Wmfleld, W
Va , spent Saturday With Mrs
Russell Roush and famtly and
also other relat1ves
Mrs Lawrence Bush held a
Tupperware party at her home
Thursday evemng
Mr and Mrs Harold Lawson
and Charles of Letart, W, Va ,
and Mr and Mrs Robert
Lawson and !am1ly were
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs
Charles Lawson and family
Mrs Joe Manuel, Tun and
Std, spent Saturday wtth Mrs
Katie Young at Mmersv1lle Rt
Mrs Gary Wtlford of Racme,
Mrs Joe Manuel, Tim and Std,
spent Sunday afternoon w1th
Mr and Mrs Max Manuel Jr ,
and family
Mrs Anna Wmes, Karen and
Jack1e, of Racme, spent Sunday
afternoon w1th Mrs Kate Rowe
and Ada
Fnends were sorry to lose a
neighbor, Hme Donohue, by
death Saturday evemng at hts
home
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Skinner of Columbus, Mtss
Elotse Adams of Pomeroy,
Charles Ntce and Mtke Munsey,
of Newark, spent Saturday
evemng wtth Mr and Mrs Loyd
N1ce
Mrs Marlene F1sher, Molly,
Larry and Amy , of Racme,
called on Mr and Mrs Hwe
Donohue Saturday afternoon
Mr and Mrs Paul North and
granddaughter, Shelly of
Galbpohs, Mr and Mrs Kelly
Sayre and son of Patalaska
were Sunday guests of Mr and
Mrs Herbert Sayre Mrs
Dorothy Glenn of Anhqwty
called on the Sayres Sunday
Paul Sayre or Columbus and
Brooks Sayre of Syracuse and
Mr and Mrs Pete Sh1elds were
Saturday mght guests of the
Sayres
Mrs Herbert Sheilds and
Mrs Herbert Sayr~ were
shopp10g m Parkersburg
Thursday
Mrs Bertha Robmson spent
Wednesday and Thursday wtth
her son, Mr and Mrs Btll
Robmson at Racme

Langsville
Mrs Clair Parkerson IS til at
her home WIth flu
Mrs Don Gorby, who has
been a surgiCal pahent at
Veterans Memortal Hospital, IS
recuperatmg at home
Mr and Mrs Robert Bobo
were called to Dunbar, W Va
by the death of hts brother's,
Frank Bobo, grandchild
Mrs Nora Bobo IS m Holzer
Hosp1tal as a medtcal pahent
Mrs Dorothy Wnght 1sn't so
well agam She has had another
cold on her lungs
Mr and Mrs Stanley Phtlllps
of Logan, OhiO, spent Sunday
w1th her stster, Mr and Mrs
Alpha Barr and son, Mtke
Mtke Barr, Jane Johnson,
Kathy Abbott and Ceceha
McCoy of Glenville College
spent the weekend wtth thetr
parents
Mr and Mrs Jerry Jacks are
announcmg the btrth of a son at
Holzer Medtcal Center on
March 24 The baby wetghed 7
pound, 7112 ounces and has been
named Charles Verlm Grandmothers are Mrs Bertha
Dutton and Mrs Dessa Roush
Mrs Lynn Benscother and
chtldren of Toledo spent the
weekend with her mother, Mrs
lola Bartrum and the J T
Ledhe !amtly
Mrs Bertha Hall of Chi!, Ky ,
and Flonda Smtih of Morrow,
Ark, spent a few days helpmg
care for Mrs Don Gorby after
her return home from Veterans
Memonal HOSp1lal Her son,
Randolph Hall of Westland,
Mtch, spent a few days here
With hts mother also

someone proposes full approval
of the pohc1es outlmed by the
chtef, and the delegates leap to
thetr feet lor the card-wavmg
'aye" vote
The vote Y(aS expected etther
late today or Tuesday The
spotlight then shifts to Prem1er
Alexei N Kosygm and hts
report on the new consumeronented economtc plan for 197175
Moscow dtplomats satd they
thought Brezhnev, the general
secretary of the party smce
N1k1ta S Khrushchev's ouster
m 1964, had gamed pohllcal
stature at the congress
He opened the congress last
Tuesday wtth a natiOnally-teleVISed state of the umon speech
that lasted stx hours Smce
then , speaker after speaker 10
the debate ' on hts pohcy
speech has lauded htm as a
great leader
In addlllon, dtplomat•c sources S3ld they expected the
Sovtet Foretgn Office soon ment conservation and coopera
would start takmg acllon- twn m space

Juror Appealing
To Split Nation
FT BENNING, Ga (UPI )One of the SIX 1urors who
convicted Lt Wtlham L Calley
Jr of murder m the My Lat
massacre appealed to the
Amencan pubhc Sunday to
"stop and take stock of the

Amencan pubhc dtsapproved of
the Calley convtctton and 81 per
cent thmks the hfe sentence ts
too harsh
Brown, m an mtervtew m the
Columbus (Ga ) Ledger-Enqwrer, satd support for Calley, 27,
s1tuabon "
of Mtamt, appears to have
'We must not let our umfted m many sections of the
emotions rule our mmds," sBid country
Maj Harvey G Brown, who
called upon poht1C1ans to try "It's good to have a cause to
to calm the $1tuallon and let brmg us together,' he satd
reason take over "
' But let's constder what the
The convtctwn and hfe cause ts I don't want to see
sentence last week of Calley for somethmg like thts tear our
murdermg 22 men, women and country apart "
children at the South V1etna- Brown s wtfe satd the fanumese vtllage of My Lat m 1968 hes of the JUrors "have been
touched off angry reacllon threatened, harassed and persearound the nallon A spectal cuted " And she asked the
Gallup Poll mdtcated that pubhc "Is th1s what you
almost 80 per cent of the want?"

Greim Thumb

arllflctally Although unknown
to many consumers, they
already have been approved for
the Federal School Lunch
Program and are bemg sold to
restaurants, hospttals and other
mstltutwns
"TheY.'II vehemently deny 1!,
but a fatr number of people m
the hamburger patty bustness
are usmg tl now," Johnson
satd
The agnculture department
ruled that meatloaf, hamburger
and stmtlar products m school
lunches can contam up to 30
per cent of the vegetable
products The unttatwns are
stmtlarly sold to restaurants for
mtxmg wtth meat
Worth10gton Foods, Inc
Worthmgton, Ohw, a substdtary
of Mtles U.boratones Inc
began producmg vegetable base'
meat substitutes 31 years ago
for Seventh Day Adventists
who are advtsed by thetr
church to avmd meat m favor
of vegetables
BIRTHDAY s&amp;\!N
Mrs Charles (Ki~ Allen)
Skeels, formerly n! Letart
Falls, wtll celebrat her 82nd
b1rthday Wednesda) Fttends
suggest she be remembered
wtth a btrlhday greeting card
Mrs Skeels who suffered mJUltes from a fallts con!med to
her home at 2675 Summtt St,
Columbus, Ohw

.Anolker ·(}ooJ Bu'l
/rom Baker '.i •••

SHE'S IMPROVING OAILY,
\JUDGE PARKER.

ALWAYS CONIRI&amp;IJTt

Notes . ...
A weekly fe~ture of Metgs
County Garden Club members

Flowers of the Holy land
A!. we approach Easter tune let us pause to think of the words

Thtrleen members of Metgs
County Salon 710 Etght and
Forty, were guesls Thursday
mght at the 16th annual dmner
of Gall1a County Salon 12
Gomg from the Salon here
were Mrs Mary Martm, fll"sl
demt chapeau premtere and a
charter partner of the Galha
Salon , Mrs Eunte Brmker,
Mrs Myrtle Walker, Mrs
Marte Boyd, Mrs Julta Hysell,
Mrs Rhoda Hackett, Mrs
Pearl Knapp, Mrs Ferne
Cheesebrew, Mrs Veda Davts,
Mrs Ruth H Thornton, and
Mrs Catherme Welsh
Mrs Brinker IS chapeau of
Salon 710, and Mrs Walker ts
the etghth distrtct communtly
serviCe cha1rman of the
Amencan Legwn Auxiliary
Departemental Chapeau
Hazel Elliott, the honored guest,
reported durmg the meetmg
that Ohto IS now over the top on
the $1,000 needed to endow a bed
at the National Jewtsh Hospttal
m Denver, Colo and has the
$100 tn for the plaque She also
reported that $385 has been
contrtbuted toward the nurses
scholarship lund, and that
Departemental ts wtlhm 77 of
the partnership goal of the
stage

ta£VI
fURN\1UR£

FRIENDLY Netghbors Club
VISit County Inf1rmary Monday
6 30 p m Easter baskets wtll be
taken
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay, 7 30 p m Monday at
Middleport Masomc Temple
Counctl meetmg at 7
SALEM CENTER PTA
Monday, 7 30 pm Mu&amp;c by
band students under direction of
Lewts Shetlds "The Tra1tor
Wtthm," cancer !tim wtll be
shown by Mrs Theodore Reed

lhe Rev Orlando L Tibbetts'
book, ' Reconc1hng Commumty ' was rev•ewed by Mrs
Joseph Cook at the Thursday
mght meetmg of the MissiOnary
Soc1~ty of the Pomeroy F1rst
Baphst Church
Mrs Cook prefaced her
revtew wtth a comentary on the
hie and educahon of the author
and scnptures from Psalms 24
and Ephesians 5 She descnbed
the book as a plea for change,
effectively executed "
In her revtew, Mrs Cook satd
that the Rev Mr Tibbetts says
we are hvmg m the dawmng
hours of the 21st ~ntury and
must face the awesome truth of
fnghtemng change He tells of
the effects of super h1ghways ,
changed skylines, mulhple
suburban developments, and of
televtswn wtth vtews of scenes
around the world and even on
the moon
Mrs Cook sa1d that the author
ptclures the average man as
'caught between the centur1es,
a baffled child m transtbon, not

Attendance in
Fourth Place

0

Kingsbury

•595

News, Notes

Social Notes

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

--------.&lt;--------_:_-:----~---=-=-=-=
--:......_____________~

I

completely leavmg the old and
not qutte graspmg the new '
Turmng to the church, Mrs
Cook reported the author
descnbes the church as be10g m
a time or transt\100 where
Chnstians are challenged to
carry out a redempllve task so
great that the average church
member recmls from facmg 1t
a task wh1ch reqmres an exodus
from the old land 10\o a
promtsed land rad1cally d!f

leo ent from the fam•har
She concluded by saymg that
the world IS wa1t1ng for the
Chnst1an church to combme •Is
great h1stoncal and tradttlonal
forces w1th the ms1ght of the
contemporary work 10 order
that Chnstlan concepls m1ght
have meamng for the age m
wh1ch we hve
A discussion penod on the
book \\as held at the conclusron
of Mrs Cook s rev1ew She also

Society News

o£fu.:ers ag1 eed tu ;;;erve ror

another yea r on the request of
Mrs Cook
Plans were made fo r the

annual moth er daught er
banquet to be beld m May Mrs
Robert Kuhn w1ll be assiSted
wtth the p1 ogram by Mrs Ivan
Walker aRd Mr s Wilham
Barnhart Hostesses w1ll be
Mr s George Skmner Mrs
H,u 1) Baile), Mrs f.llen ~
Couch Mrs W1lham Watson
read an a1 tiel ~ on seculansm and Mrs Albert Sm1th Mrs
wntten by the Rev Billy Couch had the Jove g1ft
Go a ham It was noted that a ded•cat10 n
Gt &lt;~ham film F01 Pete s Sake
be sho\\n at the Colony Refr es hments Vi C! e served by
1 heall e m (,alhpohs Apnl 15- M1 s Walker and Mrs Bailey to
Ihose named and fvh s J E
21
G1 oup smgmg Must Jesus Foste1 Mrs Ohve1 M1chaet anr,
Bew the Cross Alone opened tilt the Rev Robel t Kuhn Ihe
Holy Week servtces m t&gt;lld meetmg Mrs I I Shelton \\as Easter theme 11 as ca1r1ed out 1n
dteport begm tomght undet &lt;II the ptan o Mrs Cook , the ref res hment tab le de (
sponsorship of the Middleport president gave praye• Pt esent 01 all ons
Mmtslenai Assocmtwn
Servtces wtll be held at the
Middleport Mount Monah
Baphst Church Monday
Tuesday , Wednesday and
frtday mghts at 7 30 p m No
umon serviCe w11i be held on
II conlltbuhon to the pnsoner )Carbook was g1veo and f01
Thursday to permtt IOdlvtdual of war Project Freedom devotwns Mrs LoUI S 11e1bet
churches to have communiOn movement was made by the used Rest as her theme w1th
Happy Harvesters Class of the scnptUI e f•om M,u k 6 and
servtces
Speakers w1ll be the Rev 1i 1mty Church at a meetmg poet•y Mrs fJladys Cuckle•
1ead ,, poem eul1tled I Am
Henry Key of the host chmch, Fnday mght at the church
Monday , the Rev Audrey
D111 mg the meetmg 1\ was Fme
Games p11zes po OHded bv the
Miller, Church of tl1e Nazarene, 1eported that the new tables
Tuesday, the Rev Max Don- have amved The class also hostesses we• e ~;on by M1 s
ahue, Heath Umted Meth- app1 oved
payment
for Duffy M• s Ethel W1lhamson
odiSt, Wednesday , and the 1epa1nn g and cleamng the M1 s Gem gw Wtlharnson , and
Rev Russell Lester, Pres- cha n s m tl1e soc1al JOOm, and Mt s Gmther The group sang
byterian Church, Frtday
agreed to take care or flowers "Happy Bu thday to Mrs Karr
Mus1c Will be provtded on for deceased members of the and Mrs Dale Sm1th Daffodils
!tanked by yellow tapers
Monday by the Heath Umted church
Methodtst chmr, on Tuesday by
M1ss Erma Smtih and Mrs decorated the dmmg table
Attendmg wet e Mrs Re1bel
the Presbytenan Church , on F1 eda Duffy were welcomed
Wednesday by the Mount mto the class membership Mrs Lillie Houck Mrs Ruv
Monah Choir, and on Fnday by Plans we1 e made for a dmner to Seyfned Mrs Ethel Wilthe Nazarene Church
be served by the group on Apnl liamson, Mrs Karr, Mt s
The Rev Charles S1mons wtll 17 Mrs Ons Gmthe•, chair- W1lhamsun Mt s Kan Mrs
be song leader for the services man wtll be ass1sted b) Mrs Ste lla Kl oes Mrs Phd
The Holy Week serv1ces replace Cla1 a Ka1 r M1 s Homer Holter Memh&lt;11 t, M1ss Smtih Mo s
Mrs
Ca111e
the annual Week of Prayer M1 s Fred Dessauer Mrs Dale Des sa ue1
observance of the Mmtslenal Sm1 th , and Mrs ·Lawrence Memhat t, Mrs Dalley Mrs
Erb, Mrs Sm1 th , Mrs Holter,
Assoctatwn
Lanmng
A coveted d1sh dmnet Mrs Gmther Mrs Duffy, and
p1 eceded
the
meehng MISS Sybil Ebersbach
HOSPITAL NEWS Hostesses
prov1dmg the dessert
were
Mrs
Ben Neutzhng, Mrs
Holzer Medtcal Center, F1rst
Ave and Cedar St General Eve rett Dalley, and Mrs
v1s1 ling hours 2-4 and 7-8 p m G1 over Erb 1\ prayer from the
Matermty VISlhng hours 2 30 to
$396 COLLECTED
4 30 p m Parents only on
A
total
of $395 65 was
Ped1alrtcs Ward
collected for the George
BIRTHS
Mr and Mrs Paul D Thompson Ktdney Fund m a
Bradbury, Galhpohs, a house to house canvi!Ss condaughter, Mr and Mrs ducted by the Amencan Legwn
M1chael G McBrtde, Btdwell, a Auxiliary Mrs Ben Neutzllng,
son, Mr and Mrs Don R Hill, E1ghth Dtsll•ct prestdent,
Rac10e, a daughter, Mr and repo1ts
Mrs Donald E Johnson,
Columbus, a son, Mr and Mrs
WERE REGISTRARS
Clarence F Greenlee, Pt
Mrs Campbell Harper was
Pleasant, a son, Mr and Mrs regtstrar and Mrs Ernest
Davtd A Reed, Wellston, a son, Bowles asststant regtstrar for
Mr and Mrs Mtcahel D Davts, the recent d1stnct School of
Pt Pleasant, a daughter, and Rehgwn held at the Mount
Mr and Mrs Carl G Sauvage, Monah Baphst Church ttl
Pomeroy, a son
Mtddleport
DISCHARGES
Mrs Elmer H Belue, Mrs
Phone 992 2318
BAPTIZED IN POND
Wtllard L Coy, Mrs Wilham E
Curfman, Mrs Calvm Ray A baptismal servtce was held
AUTO
Sunday
by
the
Mtddleport
Dowell and daughter, Howard
FIRE - LIFE
Church of the Nazarene at the
A Feustel, Denver Ketth
HEALTH
French, Herschel Gtlbert, Watd Scott farm pond near Pomeroy
MUTUAL FUNDS
B Hayman, James W Herald, Baptized by the 'Rev Audrey
Russ.ell V Holland, Cheryl Ann Mtller were Ricky Mendehall,
NATIONWIDE
Howe, Mrs Edtth M Keaton , Paul Mtller, Chrtstme Miller,
and
Danny
Miller
Three
more
Arthur R Petrte, Mrs Emerson
p
Provens, Edward J Qmck, cand1dates'\Ytll be baptized at a
Robert P Rice, Mrs Paul A later lime

of our Lord as recordedm St Matthew "Consider the lilies of the
field, how they grow, they loti not, netther do they spm And yet I
say unto you, that even Solomon m all hls glory was not arrayed
like one of these "
What are those lilies of the field• Tourists of many lands
Journey to the Holy Land, walk up the path past the Garden of
Gethsemane They will see the Btblical "lilies of the ftelds" but
probably will not assoctate them With the lilies we grow m our
gardens Some of them look more like small gladtolus or IriS
(often called "flags" m olden days)
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
OUr well-known white Easter illy IS not from the Holy Land,
Daughters of Amenca, IOOF
but from Japan orlglJlally, and 11 IS now grown m Bermuda and
hall, 7 30 Monday mght Shower
the Gulf States It ls of course forced m the greenhouse to produce
to be held honormg Mtss Donna
Its fragrant white bloom at Easter It can later be planted m the
Ret bel
garden, often to bloom agam thiS season and m succeedmg years
TUESDAY
The scarlet anemone IS abundant m Palestme, and the
MIDDLEPORT
Lodge 363,
hillBides may be ablaze wtth 1ts beautiful red color It resembles a
F&amp;AM, regular sessiOn, 7 30
nurualllre ortental poppy and grows abOut a foot htgh
p m Tuesday, at temple
There are many other flowers m the Holy Land which resemble
POMEROY Chapter 186 OES
those mour own gatdens For example, there are the cornflowers,
meeting
Tuesday 7 30 p m
yeiiO)V buttercups, bluelupmes, small yellow chrysanthemums
Masomc Temple
that bloom m March, and early red tulips as well as the yellow
MEIGS TEMPLE, Pythtan
wild mustard Pmk flax blooms m March and April throughout
Ststers,
Tuesday evemng, 7 30
Palestine, also datslesand pinks of many spectes Egypllan •s the
at the hall InstallatiOn of of- The Middleport Church of the
most common
MOTHER HONORED
Nazarene IS m fourth place m a
Let us alSo remember the anctent, twiSted olive trees of
Mr and Mrs Thomas Bowen fleers and practice for m- Sunday school attendance
Gethsemane, sa1d to be the same as when ChriSt came there to entertamed Sunday evenmg specbon All members asked to contest on percentage of gam
pray - Ruby Dtehl, Star Garden Club, Dexter
w1 th a dmner hononng her attend
RIVERVIEW PTA wtll meet sponsored by the-Dentral OhiO
mother, Mrs Clara Karr, on her
D1stnct Churches of the
80th btrlhday anmversary A Tuesday,Aprtl6,at7 30p mat Nazarene
cake was served With the din- the school
The contest whtch has 148
WEDNESDAY
ner Guests were Mrs Gladys
churches m the dtslrtcl parEASTER Cantata WedCuckler, Mrs Ethel Stewart,
llclpatmg, w1ll conclude on
nesday, 7 30 p m Asbury Easter Sunday The Pomt Rock
Mrs
Phtl
Williamson,
and
Mrs
Morns
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Umted Methodtst Church , Church of the Nazarene near
Mr and Mrs Howard Ervm Eldon Weeks
The Happy Hustlers Sunday
Syracuse Pubhc 1s mvtted
Albany ts m second place, and
School Class of the Umted spent ten days on a vacation m
the Pomeroy Church has been
MethodiSt Church enjoyed an Flonda vtsttlng places of mBEGIN
AT
SIX
10
the top 10 at least tw1ce
Easter party at the church w1th terest
Easter
serviCes
at
the
EnMr Larry W1ley of Laura
durmg the contest
a stx o'clock dmner, at whtch
terpme
Umted
Methodtst
Pr1zes wtll be awarded to the
lime they surprtsed Mrs came for the weekend and was
Church
wtll
begm
wtth
a
sunnse
three
churches show10g the
Lav101a Stmpson wtth a accompamed home by hts wtfe, serviCe at 6 a m by the youth
htghest numencal gam and
decorated cake for her bll"th- who had spent a week wtth her fellowship followed by a breakthree churches showmg the
day Also a floral bouquet of parents, Mr and Mrs Oils fast m the church basement
h1ghest percentage gam
roses was presented from her McClintock
The
church
servtce
wtll
be
at
Mr and Mrs CurtiS Johnson
Howard Melvm, son of Mr
daughter,
Mrs
Manan
30
a
m
,
Sunday
school
at
9
Kmghtstep of Columbus The and Mrs Roy Spencer were 10 30 a m wtth an Easter egg and Mrs Howard Lawrence,
table decorahons were m Sunday VISItors of Mr and Mrs hunt for the youth and children was chriStened at the Umted
Methodist Church Sunday,
keepmg of Easter Followmg Roy Johnson and famtly at
of
the
church
to
follow
March 28 God-parents are Mr
the dmner a busmess sessiOn Carrollton
Mrs
Don
Nease
and
Mtss
and Mrs Clarence Lawrence,
was held and a program of
Edtth
Hayman
VISited
Mr
and
Portland
Attendmg the
readmgs and mustc by the
chr1stemng were Brenda, Bnan
members, presented by Mrs Mrs Henry Euler at Hemlock
Grove
•
and
James Ray Lawrence, Ruth
Bertha Spencer
Alfred
Mrs Edward Howell of
Thornton, maternal grandMr and Mrs Ralph Webb,
The Carleton Sunday School
Pomeroy
spent
a
day
vlSltmg
mother and Patty Lawrence
Mr and Mrs Wtlham Stewart,
Several attended the weddmg had an attendance of 70 Sunday
Mrs L1lhan Weese, Mrs relatives
Mrs Charles Noms and
of Kathy Tuttle and Ray mormng Followmg Sunday
Phyllis Kmghtmg, Mrs Chlorus
Johnson at the Methodtst School there was an electwn of
Grtmm, Mrs Isabel Simpson, daughter spent the weekend m
officers Supt Ralph Carl,
Sunday School attendance on Church Saturday evemng
Mrs Gretta Sunpson, Mr Ben Columbus wtth her mother
Dale Hamson,
Substitute
M1ss June Netgler of March 28 was 65, the offermg Nellie Cozart has returned
Phtlson attended the reception
Secreatary, Elizabeth Murray,
for Wtlma Styers, Deputy Columbus was a recent over- $23 96 Worshtp services were home from Holzer Hospttal
Carl,
Mr and Mrs Harold Newlun Subshtute, Sadte
Grand Matron Dts\rtel 25 mght guest of her parents, Mr held at 11 o'clock wtth the Rev
Treasurer
V1rgmta
Dean,
Lavender speaking from John and Sandy spent the weekend
0 E S Saturday at Ml Mortah and Mrs George Netgler
11 47-57, to an attendance of 32 w1th Mr and Mrs Roome Subslltute, Janeth Beal,
Chapter, Beverly, Ohto
Piamst, Unda Beal, Subslltute
Thts bemg PassiOn Sunday, Whtte, Chtlhcothe, 0
Saturday evemng dmner
Holy Communton serviCes were Mr and Mrs Howard Larkms Mary Lou King, Correspondent,
guests of Mrs Ethel Wheeler Tuppers Plains
admmtstered by the Rev and famtly, Portland, and Mr Mary Lou Houdashelt, Suband Mrs Ada 'Bays were Mrs
Wtlham Smtth, chalrl1lan of the and Mrs Fred Larkms were stitute, Yvonne Young, BirthThorn Cottrill of Logan, Mrs
Treasurer,
Marlene
Department of Rehg10n at VISiting Mr and Mrs Jumor day
Joe Thoren, Sr of Nease Set.
Martella College, asststed by Hauber and !am 1ly, New Hamson, Substulltue, Yvonne
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
tlement and Mr Harold Hamm
Young, Cradle Roll Teacher,
Matamoras, 0
Mr and Mrs James Daniels the Rev Lavender
of Ptttsburgh, Pa
LoUise
Hamson, Sunbeam
Easter Sunme servtces will Fred Newlun bas returned
Mr Russell Radchffe of of Middleport were Sunday
Beaver Falls, Pa and Mtss guests of Mr and Mrs R K be held on Aprtl 11, at 6 a m , home from Camden Clark Class, Delores King, Busy Bee
followed by breakfast m the Hosp1tal, Parkersburg, W Va Class, Coelle Hudson, Young
Frances Foster, local, spent Rowan
Sunday wtth Mrs. Hazel Car- The WS C S or the Umted church basement Sunday Vts1tmg Mr and Mrs Garth Adults, Floyd Ross, Standard
MethodiSt Church met at the School wtll be held at 9 45 and Smith, recently were Jesste Bearers, Janeth Beal, Helpmg
nahan
MISS Frances Foster and Mrs home of Mrs Dana Hoffman worship servtces at 11, as usual, _ Dodderer, Tuppers Plams, Hands, Olen Hamson
on that day
• Edt th Osborn, Keno , Ray Recent VISitors of Mr and
Hazel Carnahan called on Mrs Wednesday
Sunday dmner guests of Clara Riggs, Chester, Vtrgte Mora Mrs Nev Whtte and sons were
Mrs Myrtle Boggess was a
Lottte Wtlcoxen at Elmwood
Nursmg Home, Coolvtlle, Sunday dmner guest of Mrs Follrod and Nma Robmson and Olhe Young, Pomeroy, 0 Mr and Mrs Roger Toney and Rickard, Norman S Sprouse,
Sheha of Chester
were Mr and Mrs Robert and Emma Powell
NeiSCI Weathermi)Jl
recenUy
Mrs James H Staley, Rev
Mtss Ethel Koemg spent Robmson and family of Belpre, Mr and Mrs Howard Mr and Mrs Ralph Carl and Dame! A Thomas, Mrs John
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Blythe
and daughter, Betsy of Spen- Saturday here With Mr and and Mr and Mrs Btll Follrod Lawrence and Howie were Rodney vlstted With Mrs Carl's M Williams and son, Mrs
and Sue Ann of Athens Last vtsttm~ James Lawrence, parenls, Mr and Mrs Clyde M10me M Kmg, Paul D
cerville, Oh10, enroute from Mrs Wayne Brtckles
Hamson of Middleport
Mr and Mra Wilson Gtlbert Sunday dmner guests were Mr Dew1tts Run
Flortda, were overnight guests
McGwre, and Mrs Wtllard G
Saturday of Mr and Mrs Ralph of Athens were Saturday guests and Mrs. Clatr Follrod, Stevte Mr and Mrs Jun Walls and Recent VISitors of Mr and Sheets
son, Canal Wmchester, were Mrs Olen Harrison were Mr
here of her aunt, Mr and Mrs and Kathy, local
Webb
Marlene Wmebrenner spent a overmght guests of Mr and and Mrs Robert Rted and
Mr and Mrs Ralph Webb Fon Halsey
Mrs Guy Hayman
callers one evemng were Mrs
spent a recent weekend m Mr and Mrs Ted SedgewlCk week's vacation m Flortda
Mrs
Mtldred
Story
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Martm
Faye Pratt and Bermce Rtffle
Columbus wtlh thetr son and Jr , of Akron spent the weekend
family, Dr and Mrs J W here with hts parents, Mr and Columbus spent the weekend Nesselroad were vtstbng Mr and Mrs Ernest Carr of
wtth
her
stsler·m-law, relatives at Ravenswood, W Pomeroy VISited recently wtth
Webb They went especially to Mrs Ted Sedgewlck, Sr
Va
Mrs CoHoe Hudson
Mr and Mrs Wayne Brtckles Genevieve Guthrie
help celebrate thetr grandson's
Gregory Wmebrenner had as Mrs Donna Hauber and Mr ' and Mrs Wtlltam King
spent Sunday wtth her brother
fifth btrthday
Cheryl Btggs and her
Sunday afternoon callers of and &amp;ster-m-law, Mr and Mrs hts guest, hts half-brother Kelly family, New Matamoras, spent v1s1ted one day recently wtlh passenger, Florence Btggs,
Wmebrenner of Syracuse, 0, a recent weekend wtth Mr and Mrs Della Rtffle
Mrs Ada Bays and Mrs Ethel Charles Spencer of Belpre
Recent VISitors of Mr and suffered abraswns of thetr
Mrs Fred Larkins
Oscar Babcock returned thts weekend
Wheeler were Mr and Mrs
Sunday dmrer guests of Mr
Vlstting Mr. and Mrs Hank Mrs John Dean, John and foreheads Saturday at 10 58 a
home several days ago from
Frank Kercel of Coolville.
m m a one-ear accident on
Martha Yost and frtend, Camden Clark Hospital where and Mrs Glen Robmson were Holter were Mr and Mrs Joe Richard, were Mr and Mrs County Road 163: three-tenths of
Beverly Barber, students at he was a medtcal patient He ts her brother, Mr arid Mrs. Carl Btssell and famtly, Mason, W Paul Paynter of Carpenter, Mr a mtle east of old US Rt 33
Watson and son of Dayton, 0 , va ; Tom Drake, Columbus; and Mrs Gerald Gilkey and
Ohw Valley College, Parkers- recovering sat1sfactonly
and
her lnother, Effte Watson, Nancy Baum, Chester, Mr and daughters of Athens, Mr and Shenlf Robert C Harburg, spent the weekend wtth Mrs Effie Watson returned
tenbach's department satd
Mr and Mrs Gen~ Yost and home after a week's vtsit with who had been vtstllng at Mrs Joe Bissell, Sr and Mr Mrs Robert Rted, Bruce, Cheryl B1ggs, Rt 3, Pomeroy,
Dayton A Sunday evemng and Mrs DaVId Smith and Vtrgtma, Rodney and Davtd of
her children at Dayton
family
Pataskala, Mr and Mrs dnv10g east, got off on berm to
Mr and Mrs Pete Gould of Mr and Mrs George Hensley vtstlor was her Sister, Mrs fam 1ly
Mr and Mrs Lewts Cozart Kenneth Markms of Racme and the right of the road, swerved
Manetta spent Sunday wtth her and !amtly have returned home Wilma Gumther of Chester
across the h1ghw@y and off tl,
Servtces will be held at the and fal!Uly , Loram, o, were Pam Garren of Columbus
parents, Mr and Mrs Francts from a vacation m Flonda
Mrs
Wmme Whtte and striking a tree Both mjured
Mr and Mrs Marvm Walker Orange Chrtsltan Church here VISttmg Nellie CO'Uirt
Jo Ann Lawrence and Ruth Sherman and Mrs Delores King were treated and released at
and daughter Ruth spent the on Thursday, Fnday and
weekend wtth her brother, Mr Saturday evening, at 7 30 wtth Thorton were at Galhpohs accompamed the Gospel Teens Veterans Memortal Hospital
recently
to sing at A!.hton, W Va , last
and Mrs Robert Howard and Charles Domtgan, pastor
Westernmost pomt 1n the
Several local people vtstted
Jesste Dodderer, Tuppers Sunday mght
family of Lucasville •
Umted
States IS Cape Wran·
Mr and Mrs C. W Morton of Whtle 's Funeral Home on Plains, and Audrey Smtth were Mrs Elizabeth Murray and gell, Attu Island Aleubans
Dayton spent Saturday With her Sunday and attended servtces vlStlmg Mr and Mrs Emmett Mrs CoHoe Hudson VISited Mrs Alaska
Rtchardson and
parenls, Mr and Mrs Clarence lor "Turner" Newland, there on Stethem and Emma and Pearl Robert
WED. &amp; THURS.
Monday evemng.
Powell
daughter at Mtddleporl and
Nichols
Satlll'itay
evening
and
Sunday
Pat
Smtih
has
returned
APRIL 7-8
attended
serv1ces at the Baptist
Ruth and Betty Bailey attended the funeral of thetr guests of Mr and Mrs Clarence to Columbus after spendmg her Church Thursday mght
9 'TIL 8
uncle, Herbert Bailey, at Heilderson were her &amp;ster, Mrs sprmg break from 0 S U wtth Mrs Hazel Arnold spent
E 2nd St
Pomeroy, 0
Bertha Wright and daughter, Mr and Mrs Davtd Smtth and Sunday aftemoon with Mr and
Monica, Penn Sunday
Next to Post Office
Jenmfer of Zanesvtlle, 0
family
Mrs Charles Arnold and
SAME DAY
ONLY •15.50
Pearl Koehler or Columbus,
Mr and Mrs Joe BISSell were daughter, Martha
SERVICE
0 , IS on leave !rom the VISiting Mr and Mrs Wayne Mrs Jenme Hollte IS spendmg
100 pe~cent Kanekalon
In AI9-0ut At 5
stretch wigs Just wash &amp;
1110 )nng cancel death rate Universtty
Hospttal
m Prmce and Pearl Sandelm
some tune w1th her daughter,
wear
a mung men mc1 cased 15 fold Columbus and he and hts son,
Use Our Free Parking Lot
Nancy Baum, Chester, and
and Mrs
Robert
INo Obligations)
tn35 yc.us oml the r.otc ts gnmg Randy, of Tupp~rs Plams, David Smtth, Jr , were tourmg Mr
Swearmgton and son at Dayton
np mnon~ women Lung cnncc{
vtslted
hts
daughter,
Mrs
the
campus
of
Manetta
College,
Mr and Mrs Joe Hall and son I
Is l.q~cly p•cvmlnhlc, s.ty~ tltc
W1lber
Robmson
and
famtly
Manetta,
0
Monday
VISited
one evemng recently
!.,
Amellc.u• C.mccr Soucty-JIISt
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
'I ...._ .. stup smokn1g
Sunday
-Violet Smith wtth Mr and Mrs John Dean

Social Notes

ottl1

BAKER

MONDAY
POMEROY Garden Club, 7
p m Monday mght, Pomeroy
Umted MethodtstChurch, soctal
room Guest mght to be observed

Nation in Era of Rapid Change

long Bottom

3 ROOMS Of Ml

CONCORDE TEST
LONDON (UPI)-The Bnltshassembled supersomc atrlmer
prototype Concorde 002 IS back
m the atr after bemg grounded
lor two months
The atrcraft, piloted by
Bntish Aircraft Corp Chief
Test Pilot Bnan Trubshaw,
made a two-hour !bght over the
North Sei!Sllturday, reachmg a
maxunum altttude of 48,000
feet
For 44 mmutes the all"craft
was flown at supersomc speed,
more than 1,120 mtles per hour
It was the start or a new senes
of fhghts auned at structural
testmg and checkmg the a1r
mtake system

THAT~ WHYI

'

Social
Calendar

Racine Social Events

MOODY BEATS YASUDA
HONG KONG (UPI)--Orvtlle
Moody of Harker Hetghts, Tex ,
shot a two-under par 68 Sunday
to wm the Hong Kong Open
Golf Tournament by two
strokes over Haruo Yasuda of
Japan Moody fm1shed with a
266, 14 under par, for the 72hole tournament for the vtctory
desptte a fmal round of 63 by
Yasuda

lo'IAR&amp;O'S TH~RAPISTS SAY

GaiHa Salon
~osts Meigs

Holy Week to

"'II

Begin Tonight

Contribution Made
Q

P. J. Pauley

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY

n
~~

'J!~~f ~~~~~~

Two Injured in
Auto Accident

CORDAWAY

~CORD

~RUL

1

./\-EAS11R

....
...
~

Fred is going slo~~ today.
•

Every year thousands of Freds take th1s l.nal dnve
Because they drove too last
And they take thousands of .nnocent v•ct1ms w1th
them Dnvmg too fast caused more than 18 000
deaths last year That s nearly one third of the nation s
tralf1c tatalit1es
Speed.ng, lor any reason whatsoever Is courtmg
death It just 1sn t worth ot

Because we sell new cars W£1 re espec1ally con
cerned w1th safe dnvmg W~ want you

.

4~··~~

.

to use your car sens1bly And dt1ve at /.-~
~~
' ·.

reasonable speeds always

Auto~

m9b1tes last longer that way
More importantly

so dO people

!
1 :
~·
:
•''•u,. •
1 ' •/

Nattonal Automobrle Dealers Assocratton

Ont on aserles presented by N A D A, The Dally Sentlftel, and the new~;ar dealers ofthe Tr1 County AutoOealeiS Assoc

•

•

EASTER
WIG SHOW AND
SALE

Automaucetly

i

ou1

reels cord In
••

you

need It No
tanglln&amp;!
0
D

The rugged all steel canmster that cleans rugs •
furniture • drapes - everrthmg - deep down •
Eureka dependability hlet•me lubncated motor.
for years of supenor serv1ce Beautifully styled
M1s1y Gold metatl•c fm1sh

SHIRT
FINISHING

FEMIN'NE
My$ UE

(

REG 49 95 VALUE
Modal738 A

INGELS 'FURNITURE
OpenJ=t:i...&amp; Silt. N1ghts

Robinson's Cleaners

MIDDLEPORT

'

�-.

•

••

.
.

.

~-

·B argains, Bargains, arid More Bargains· In Sentinel Clas~fteds
.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., AprilS, 1971
.

I'IANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES .

Carpenter

. 5 P.M . Day Before Publicat ion
.Yw&gt;nda)' Deadline 9 a.m . ·
Cancellat iOn &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for .
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

News, Event
Mr . an.d Mrs. Harold Gillogly,

Vicky and Bruce, were weekend
guests of his si ster, Mrs. Bernice McKnight and family in

The lio'ublisher reserves the
r ight to ed it or reject any ads
d~emed
objectional.
The
publisher wil l not be respons ~ble
for more than one incorrect
Insertion .

.

~TES

ant Ad Service
er Word one inser tion
.9\mu •• um Lnargll 1 ~c
Columbus.
l &lt;~ '· cents per word threl
consecutive insertions.
Mr. and ·Mrs. Lavern .Jordan · 18 cents per word slx con
and Jane, Mrs. Faye Jordan secutlve inser t ions.
.
and Mrs . Ida DennJ·son VI.SJ.ted ads25 and
Perads
cent
Discouht
on
paic
pa id within 10 days

Mrs. Faye Jordan's son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. -~~d Mrs.

Fo

~- tcents

CARD OF THAN·K5
&amp; OBITUARY

Of
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1968 CADILL-AC BRDUGHAM4 DR.

$3995

Full power equipment including 6-way seat &amp; windows,
Climate C~mtrol air co nditioning, tilt steering wheel, AM FM radio, medium green fJni sh with white vinyl roof . Has
all of Cadillac's fine features &amp; equipment.

1969 CHEVROLET CAPRICE 4 DOOR

$3295

Local owner with less than 15,000 miles, Com fortran air
condit ion ing, power steering, automatic trans., Astra
front seat, black nylon interior. Beautiful green fini sh
with black viriyl roof. Radio &amp; all· other popular accessories, outstanding car with fine features .

MeAdditional 25c
and Advert isement .

Charge per

WALNUT

•

EXPERT

.
4·1-61c

-------

BEAUT! F UL Colonial maple
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
speakers, 4 speed automa"tiC:
changer, separat.e controls.
Balance $80.99. Use our time

paymenl plan. Call 992-3352.
4-1-6tc
...:.._

______
LIVE

'··

Wheel Alignment

Pierce, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , 2.1

miles out Rt . 143 from bypass.
4-4-6tp

- - -- - -

Rober! Hill home at the
junction of SR 124 and 338.
4-4-Jtc

OFFICE HOURS
OPEH EVES. 8:00 P.M.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred 8:30a.m. to s :oo p m.' Daily.
POMEROY. OHIO
Wilson and children, Chelsea, S:30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
- - - -- Saturday .
AKRON Tennis shoes, all sizes.
Mich.
Ladies' black or white.
Mrs. Virginia Townsend and
Children's Easter shoes, red
In Memory
or white. One lady's all
daughter, Susie, Columbus, was
Notice
Help Wanted
leather
purse.
Edna's
an overnight guest at the home IN LOVING memory
Dachshund.
our LONG-HAl RED
Grocery,
Portland.
,
of her uncles, Paul and William
darling mother, Garnet , Will give away to a good · WOMAN lo do housework .
4-4-31p
Phone Chesler 985·3900.
home. Phone Chester 985 Avanell Jacks, who left us two
'
-C. Peck.
4-4-6tc
4226.
years ago April 5, 1969.
BLACK Diamond lin imenl. Call
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey Dearest
Mother, il's lonesome _ _ _ _ _ __ _4...:
·4-61p
or write F. M . Guthrie, 33
attended the ll)onthly meetings
BARMAID and part time
here without you,
Townsend Place, Alhens.
WILL DO up holsler ing . Phone wa itr ess . Phone 992:9943.
of insurance directors in We miss you more each day
Ohio. Phone 592-2158. ·
992.2524.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 4_ J.61c
life doesn'l seem lhe
4-4-3tp
Columbus on Friday and Somehow
same
4·Hic
-Saturday, On Saturday evening Since God ca ll ed you away.
NEW 26-INCH Airway luggage.
Auto Sales
they were guests of his nephew God saw you getting weary
WILL DO tai l oring and
Blue. $20. Phone Chesler 985He
did
whal
He
lhoughl
was
upholstery.
Phone
992-3561.
1967
FORD
'
Ranger
pickup
.
3900.
and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
besl,
3-31 -301c
Phone 247·2161.
4-4-3tp
Jewell, Columbus, who en- He put His arms around you,
tertained with a birthday Then took you home to rest.
STRAWBERRY PLANTS. Big
PALM·
S.a dly missed by Children MADAM MARY supper honoring Mrs. Jessie
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr . Boy tomatoes, cabbage,
ISTRY
.
Reader
and
and Gr and chi ldren.
hardtop. power steering,
cauliflower, broccoli, head
advisor . Tell s past, present
Jewell. Another brother and .
4
5
power brakes , air, 18,900 lettuce, Brussel sprouts. Also,
and future . I will tell you just
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon _ _ _ _ _ _ ____:· ·llp
miles. Excellent conditton.
pansy, snapdragon, marigold,
whal you want to know about
Starkey, Sugar Grove, were
Phone 992-2288.
fr iends and enemies. I give
delphinium
and others .
11 -10-IIS: Midway Market, W. Main 51.,
present along with several Notice
never failing advice on al l
Pomeroy. Phone-992-2582.
matters of
life.
707'h 1965 SPORTS Fury. 383 cu in .• 4FRESH
bakery
members of the Jewell family. OVEN
Washinglon Blvd., Belpre,
4-4-3tc
products. Jimmy's Pastry
barrel, dual exhaust, 4 speed ,
Miss Anna Parker of
Oh io. Look for sign. For
Shop. N. .2nd Ave.. Mid-black inside and out. Rear
Cleveland along with friends
appoinlmenl call 423-9153.
dleporl. Phone 9n3555.
seat reverberalor . $950 . 1971 DIAL . &amp; SEW Zig -Zag
3-24-101c
3-2notc
from Strasburg visited with her
Sew ing Machine lef t in
Original owner . Call 992-6977
layaway. Beaulitul pas lei
after 6 p.m .
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
HOME sewing . Phone 992-5327 . WILL PICK up merchandise _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _4_-H ip
color, full size model. All
Ney Carpenter and aunt, Mrs.
and take to auction on a
built -in bu1tonho l e~ overcast
3-J0-30ic
Martha Mays on Saturday and
percentage basis. Call Jim
and laney sli lch. Pay jusl
Adams, auctioneer, Rutl~nd. 1962 FALCON, 4·door, 6$48.75
cash
or
terms
Sunday. Robert Parker and ATTENTION ladies! Would you
cylinder. $195. Phone 992-6793. available. Trade -ins acPhone 742-4461.
like to lry a wig on in the
sons, Middleport, were callers
4-4-lfc cepled. Phone 992-5641.
9-23-lfc
privacy o.f your own home?
on Sunday afternoon at the
You can. Jus I call us. We also - - - - - 3-30-6tc
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics, AUCTION - WHEN? Each 1968 CAMARO 327, 3-speed . ·
Carpen ter home.
Phone Ma son 773-5 178 or see VACUUM Cleaner brand new
Friday nighl. 7 p.m . Where?
Koscot,
of
CO IJr se.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lich have
John
Grueser.
Hayman's Auction House,
Distributors, Brown's. Phone
1970 model . Complele with all
moved to the manager's
Laurel criff on new Rt. 7 - - - - - - - - 4 - -Hip
Middleporl 992-5 113.
cleaning tools. Small paint
Pomeroy
Middleporl By12-31 ·1fc
damage in shipping. Will take
residence at the Southeastern
1966 GMC •;,. ton pickup, 23,000
pass.
$27 cash or budge! plan
Ohio Experiment Farm .
2-7-lfc m i les, new tires, ca mper top,
available. Phone 992-5641.
good condi lion. Phone 992Sunday evening guests of Mr.
- - -- ..
3-30-6fc
and Mrs . Gene Jeffers included Card of Thanks
SKATE A-WAY Easier parly, 2805, Eldon Vlalburn . 3-28-lfc
Friday, April9 . Races , prizes,
Dr. and Mrs. Irwin Unger and WE WANT lo express · our
----balloons.
Open Wednesday. heartfeld
thanks
to
fr
iends,
family, Dr. and Mrs. Luis Lugo
1964
CHEVELLE conver lible .
Friday and Salurday, 7:30 to Good
neighbors and relatives for
condi lion, 8-cylinder, Real Estate For Sale
and children, Athens, Mr. and
10:30 p.m. Available for automatic
their many expressions of
transmission .
privale parties, Monday. Phone '92-3917.
Mrs. Carlos Silvia and family,
sympalhy at the time of lhe
Tuesday, Thursday nighlo
dea.th of our beloved mother,
Amesville, and Mr. and Mrs.
and Salurday and Sunday _________3-~28-61p
Mrs
.
Doris
Jewell.
Tlujd Dye and Michael Lawson,
p.m. Phone Chester 985·3929 ~
._,
The spacious home of the
·,
The Family.
1965
INTERNATIONAL
!ruck.
local.
or
985-3585.
late
Mrs . Bessie M . Pickens,
4-5-llc
1800
series,
good
condition
.
4·Hiv
on approxi mately
situated
The Women's Group of the
Henry Bahr . Phone Chester
~--------six acres In Racine. Ohio.
Dyesville Church met at the
985·3988.
RUBBER STAMPS made to
For
Sale
Hot water heat by free gas.
ch urch . President Maxine
3·_
31-61p Interest in producing gas
order. 24 hour service. Dwain _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Haning opened the meeting with 1965 HONDA 250. Call 742-5042
well.
,
after 4: 15 p.m .
Ohio.
1964 FALCON 2door. 6 cylinder.
k a poem, Time to Pray. Grace
4-5-31c
2-12-901c
automatic transmission, nice
Turner was special projects - - - - - clean car, good condition.
leader and showed ceramic
Phone 992-3820. Millon Hood .
Exec. of Estate
Wanted
Call afler 6 p.m.
pieces and demonstrated how
Reedsville. Ohio
4-2·31c
A COUPLE of ambulalory
they were made. Plans were
378-6289
patients. Phone Mason 773- - - - - -- made for a supper at the church
1966 TORONADO, al l power,
5712.
on April 24.
3 - 31 ~6tc
$1500. Phone 742-4885.
4-1-6tc HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier,
BY ADA SLACK
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
Gallipolis, and daughter, Susan
10-25-tfc
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Wanted To Buy
Frazier, Columbus, visited Mrs. James Connally , of Letart
KEROSENE LAMPS, all lypes Pets For Sale
Goldie Gillogly and the group Falls, recenti'y purchased and
and descriptions . Phone 992· REGISTERED black male loy 6· ROOM house in Monkey Run .
Larg e -lawn with space for
called on Mr. and Mrs. Paul have moved into their new
6978.
poodle. House broken. Call
trailer.
Immediate
0 -31c
Gaston in Albany. Susan , a home in the Rustic Hill Ad·
992-3591.
possession.
Phone
992-2619.
- - - -- 3-29-61c
3-30-61p
student nurse at Ohio Slate dition. These homes are built by
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
University was on spring Mr. Archie Lee.
beds. elc. Wrile M. D. Miller,
vacation from duties there.
Mr. and Mrs. William Brown
RL 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call For Sale
Guesls of Mr. and Mrs. Alva spent several days with
992-6271.
9-1-llc
Rupe were Mr. and Mrs. David relatives in Middletown.
IT'S
FOR
Neutzling and family, Athens,
Mr . and Mrs . Gordon VIILL PAY top price for night
George Hobstetter. Jr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Harris, Winebrenner, children , Paula,
craw lers and earth worms .
Real Estate Broker
Fife's, 711 So. 3rd Ave.,
Columbus.
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman,
Mary Ann and Becky, and his
HAND PUSH MOWERS
Middleport. Phone 992-5457.
Phone 949-3211
Mrs. Paul Shell, Linda, Greg mother, Mrs. Roy Winebrenner
As Low As
63.95
4-1-6tc
RACINE
- 1 lot, .87 acre. price
and Rolland, Steubenville, were and Elizabeth Merritt, visited - - - - -$450.00
RIDING MOVIERS
overnight guests of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Philip Kinzel of
As Low As - - - - 271.95 POMEROY - 2 apartments
Mrs . Mendal Jordan and MI. Alto, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. Help Wanted
renled for $95.00· month . A
Walter. Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Fred Brinker and Mrs. Joe r-----.-~-ECONOMY TILLERS
very
good
investment
Jordan , Bryan and Keith, also Rollins of Letart, W. Va.
As
Low
As
.134.95
proper
ty
.
Priced
.lo sell
WANTED
$7,500.00
spent Sunday with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hall
POMEROY
MIDDLE PORT -2 story frame
and recent callers at the Jordan and family of Trimble spent a
J , W. Carsey, Mgr.
house, 7 rooms, good location,
home included Mrs. Kenneth recent Sunday with Mr. and
Phone.992-2181
front and back porch. 2 car
Crabtree, McArthur, and Mr. Mrs. Clifford Hall and Mrs.
garage, new construction.
Price 513,500.00
, and Mrs. Clay Jordan, Dale and Hattie Armes.
Nolice of Sale
THE UNDERSIGNEO will sell
Barbara.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hayman
- ····at pu'bl ic auction for cash only PORTLAND - 7 room frame
Mr. and Mrs. David Wiseman and son of Dayton spent the
house, 96 acres land, free gas,
on April 12, 1971 al 10 a.m. at
well on place, plenty ol
gas
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Lee weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Wes t Virginia-Ohio Motors
limber.
Localed on good
Sales Inc., 1922-Garfield Ave.,
Wood, Rutland, and Mrs. Roy Robert Hysell.
gravel
road.
Price $12.500.00
Parkersburg , W. Va., one 1965
Wiseman, Harrisonville, visited
Miss Anita Watkins of Chester
Ford lractor Modef T-850,
Mr. and MI'S. Earl Starkey on and friend, Terry Carson, of
serial number TB5QU578156. RACINE - 1'12" slorm frame
VIR~INIA
house, 2 lots, located close lo
The undersigned reserves the
Monday evening.
Tuppers Plains visited her
church,
one block lo school,
right lo bid .
Mrs. Gene Jeffers and Mrs. grandmother, Mrs. Ada Slack,
·
one
block
to slore, very good
Associates
Serv l.ces
Rex Cheadle entertai ned and uncle and aunt, Mr. and 2 WOMEN or man and wife. Company. Inc., 1911 E. 71h Sl., buy. $5,500.00
Call In person al MIDWAY
4-4-Jic
Parkersburg, W. Va ., P. 0.
friends with a products party at Mrs. Eugene Slack, Saturday
MARKET or phone 992-2565 or
Box 1745.
the Jeffers home. Those present evening.
992-2582. - 4-5- llc
4-4-3tc
were Katherine and Cher)\1 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
Lawson, Janie Jeffers, Yvette and Debbie spent a weekend in
COAL, limest·one . Excelsio:
Cranston, Mae and Barbara Marion with their son and · For Rent
Sail Works·, E. Main Sl.,
6011 East Main Streel
Jordan, Anna Lich, Carolyn daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. 2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
Pomeroy. Phone 992-311'11".
POMEROY
Fraley, Bonnie Fraley, Pansy Robert A. Harden and son, Eric.
His., Pomeroy. Phone 992·4-9-lfc MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms, 3
5127 afler 4 p.m.
'::=::::.:::
_-_ --+--:-::--=---·bedrooms, bath, porches,
and Virginia Jordan, Grace They were joined there by their
basement, GARDEN AND
3-2-tfc
ALUMINUM
car
top
boats,
10Wilson , Jean and Barbara other son and datJghter-in-law,
TRAILER
SPACE. $9,500.
----~
12-13 foot. Lorenzo D. Davis,
Brookhart, Opal Young, Mr. and Mrs. James Harden, of
Kingsbury
Road.
TRAILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
Roberta Hamon, Vivian Gaston
3-24-JOtc MIDDLEPORT - 1 story
.
Courl, Rl. 124, Syracuse.
London .
frame, 2 bedrooms, bath,
Linda Dye, Betty and Patricia Weekend guests of Mr. and
Ohio . 992-2951.
4-2-llc TWO GOODYEAR wrinkled- glassed porch, front por-ch,
Walsh , Geraldine Fauber, Mrs. George Schneider and her
GARDEN SPACE, YARD
wall drag slicks, 900x"l4, 7Wanetta Radekin, Kathy rnother, Mrs. Daisy Roush,.and - - -- - FENCED $4,500.
inches wide ; . S60 or trade.
UNFURNISHED 3
room
Cheadle, Margie Jeffers and the
Phone 992-5663.
aparlment. Phone. 992-22118.
Mr .. and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey
·3-30,4tc MIDDLEPORT- II rooms. 4
hostess. Demonstrators were
1-31-lfc
bedrooms, 2 baths, porches,
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Mr. and Mrs . Joseph LibJllan of
garage, NEW SIGING, NICE
Duckworth, Mrs . La Donna TWO OR lhree bedroom Hon\e, SET OF one-row cullivators for - LOCATION. $7,950.
.
Athens.
Lewis and daughter Roberta
Collage Road, Syracuse.
Ford lraclor, just like new.
of Rittman.
'.
'
Adulls only. Phone 992-5133.
Also, Remlnglon chain saw in · • PROPERTY IS SELLING
LIKE MAD ~ LET US
Sunday afternoon callers of
3-2-lfc good shape. Phone 742-3633.
3·31
-5tc
SELL
YOURS TODAY
I
Mrs. Don Cottrill and family TR~ILER SPACE on old Rt. 33. - - - , - - - HENRY CLELAND
were Mrs. Laura Sayre, Mrs.
'12-mile norlh of new Meigs KILL TERMITES and yard
REALTOR
Tom Hill. He
Clarence
Wickline,
of
Racine
High
School.
Phone
992-2941.
OFFICE-992-2259
insecls with ARI\B "You-Do-Sweat &amp; Tears
RESIDENCE - 992-2561
RD, and Duncan ·Mahonney, ol . ::::----~---.::..:
3·5-lfc 11." King Builders Supply
Cass. But he
4-4-6tc
Company,
Mlddleporl.
.
light $e~enade
Connecticut.
FURNISHED and unfurnished .
2-21
·601c
'
Williams too. Varietv
Mr. and Mr~. D. 0. 'Blake of
aparlmenls . Close to school.
CONVENIENT bul secluded
Phone 992-5434.
·
the spice of our music.
Hoc k.mgp_ort cal)ed on his sistei,
BESTLINE
PRODUCTS.
Call
building lots on T79 al Rock
·
: 10-18-lfc
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
Spri?gs. Wllhin wa lking
Mrs. Ad a Slack, Sunday ,af4-4-30tc
distance of ¥eigs High
1
3 · ROOM, bath, furnished or --'--~-~
ternoon .
•
School, a 5 minute drive from
semi -furnished
apartnlent.
· Mr . Glen Hudson left Monday
SOUP'S
ON,
the
rug
thai
iS,
Pnmeroy. Call or see BUI
Also. 1room , balh. furnished
clean
wilh
BlUe
Luslre.
Renl
·
Wille
weekends, or afler 5
evening for Detroit to r.eswne .. oparlment. Mulberry Ave .,
o.m . weekdavs. Phone 992-· P.lmor ·l'\" '
O ... J ..... ,. .. ,.,.,., . electric shamDooer; $1. Baker

. $5.55
Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Au10 .·

FOR SALE

Warren Pickens

Syracuse

HOBSlEIIER
REAL ESTATE

Mowers &amp;Tillers

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR

HARTFORD,
WEST

~-----

- - -- - -

Cleland Realty ·.-

.

...

-----

DID 'lOLl cse.rT/1AT

Pr1ErT'1' HAirl ,T!-1AICUTE NOSE
AND T!-10SE BEA1.5rii'OL EYES?

N t S~ R.EA!&gt;tNG

AcL T~llo
QUEsflotiS!

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

-GUARANTEED--

Wi-lE~E

I ~tDN'T 6:VEN

THE$$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

You will ,have something..of value to show for the $$$ you
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Tax benefit, you build an equity and you are not
bound by fhe terms of a rental agreement.

- 606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner -

EXPERIENCED

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F.H.A.,

Radiator Service

Come See Us AI 97'12 N. Second Sf., Middleport.

And Conventional Loans.

! PUT A PENNY IN,
!I'UT Nl'-1 CAR!7

ol

--------=

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

1•·

Easter bunnies. Paul

4 -S

THINK ABOUT ITI

bedroom trailer. See Chester · ---'---------~
Rose in Racine, behind the , -

TIME

ABOUT? _ , _,

STEREO -Radio

com bination . Four . speed
intermixed changer . Four
speak·er sound sr.stem, dual
vo lum e contra . Balance
$67.40. Use our budget terms .

12X52 FOOT 1970 Hillcresl 2-

Pomeroy Motor Co.

WHAT ON AIRTH
ARE 'IE WHININ'

For Sale

Call 992-3352.

51.50 tOr 50 word·' minimum .

Max McCallie and Judy, Ann Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS

Arbor , Mich ., and the
Callies'
son-in-law

2 SIGNS

CALEB!!

reen Hill Homes Inc.
992-7129
Evenings Call: 992-2534 992-3433

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
$mallest Heater Core.

Dutton

BLAETINARS
Ph. 992.-2143

t71!7N'T COMff. OUT!

ri-IESE PICTuRES OF
•MR. PERFECT': ARE
WILD:.'

992-2580
Crow

Spencer

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

Pomeroy

---

Time You Ever Spent.

TELEVISIOf~

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

REPAIR
All Makes &amp; Models
Also
Stereos &amp; Tapes
67 5-3482 or 773-5196

.;: ALSO
DOUBLE-VIIDE5

-i!CHAMPION
-jtrVAN DYKE

-fcWINSOR
«BUDDY

HON 1/!x:H lDN6ER

TI-l l&amp; llASIC DEf&gt;IGN HA&amp;
SO 1M~ ?05516LE

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

VAR IATION~

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

J. Durbin- C. Inscore

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.

Service Personnel

"Ditching. Electric sewer
.cleaning ." Reasonable rates .

WAITIN6 ..ORLD?

IT

5TA66ER91HE

IMASINA110N .

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

UNTIL

WE CAN UNVE!L YOUR
CREATION 10 A

Roofing &amp; Carpenter ·
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

Phone
John
Russell.
Galli polis 446-4782.
4-7-lfc

BACK HOE and end-loader
work . Septic lanks Installed.
George (Billl Pullins. Phone - - - - - - READY -MIX
CONCRETE
992-2478.
delivered
right
to your
11 ·29-lfc
prolect. Fast and easy. Fre~
eslimales . Phone 992-3284.
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
Goeglein Ready·Mix Co.,
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
Middleporl, Ohio.
992-2522.
6·30-lfc
6-10·1fc

NEVI

&amp;

ALLEY OOP

OLD WORK

tnOU REALLY EXPECT
US l'BEUEVE THIS

BUSINESS ABOUT G~
BIRDS, CO!liURAL?

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

DEXTER , O. 45126
PHONE 142-1945

------''---

Insured-Experienced
NEIGLER Construction. For O'BRI.EN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial, residential and
Work Guaranteed
building or remodeling your
industrial wiring. Phone 247 home, Call Guy Neigler ,
2113.
Racine, Ohio.
J-12-lfc
7-31 -tfc
Insurance
O'DELL
WHEEL
alignment
RALPH'S
CARPET
located a! Crossroads, Rt . 124. AUTOMOBILE insura nce been
Upholslery Cleaning Service.
Free

estimates .

Gallipolis 446-0294.

Phone

·
3-12-tfc

-----TREE - TRIMMING

Complete front end servic~, ..
tune up and brake service.

cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license ? Call 992 -

Wheels balan ced
Iro nically .
All

2966.

guaranteed .

and

removal. Fully insured . Free
es fimates . Ca I after 5 p.m ., " •

rates. 992-3213.

elec work ·

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.
Broker

2 LOTS - Double garage, 3
bedrooms, nice bath, living 23
X 12 with fireplace . Large
dinina, modern kitchen with
electric stove and re lrlgerator . Gas · forced air
lurnace. $21,000.00.
POMEROY - 3 nice bedrooms
wllh lar.ge closels, modern
balh, new kitchen wilh
eleclrlc range, double sink.
Gas furnace . Full basemen!.
Only $12,000.00

COUNTRY LIVING 3
· bedrooms, balh, gas furnace.
Well waler . Garage. $7,000.00
NEW LISTING- 4 bedrooms,
balh, furnace, basement.
Several oulbulldings. All
water

available. 22 ACRES. Only
$6,000.00
MIDDLEPORT - 5 rooms,
bath, furnace . Two bedrooms.
Level lot. Only $4.000.00

1971.

room, kitchen, living room ,

1'12 baths, enclosed back
porch, walllo walt· carpeting,
aluminum siding, awning,

storm windows and slorm
doors, city water . Selling due
to Ill health : Phone 614-985·
]938.
•J-26-121p
•
1
HOUSE , . . ......
6 rooms
... and ballr.

tEl 8ltlOHES BE 11'1tiOHES
AHO SHARE THE WEALTH OF

fL OORAOO EQUALLY!

R6CO~llollo

·

I.

Israeli

style

6. Final word
10. German

-4. Roulette

river
11. They
"like
It hot"
12. April9
12 wdo. 1
14. Diving

5. Fido's bark

6. Stagd
rema.rk

7. Fashion
8. Enaue

9. French
mal'llhal
13. BUJy

16. Disfeature

places
arOund

19. Fatima's

Easter

17. What

husband

22. Skllt
23. Agitate
24. March28
to AprilS

some do

on April 9

fly
24. Famed
feath'e rwelght
25. Devoured

Ynterdar'• A•swer
~

26. Glut
27. Final

35. Unke111pt
chap
37. Watched
38. utensil

32. Enticed

39. One, tn

:n. Pace

33. Expunge

.-,..~

iURN!:D ~EALJTY
.JUC'6E LIKED iO DO.
"·

a

'Al.WU: '
'i
.A ·
l~o~~.=t.,2 1.(

Tllf COUP 0' El,l(t'

31. Fonner

WOULI'II'T It '"
TO Sf'f!it&gt; AVACATipN
HE~E 50/o\ETIME!

WHA'T THE RECKLESS

,

D~!VER

30. Unpopular
pupil
Giants'
quarter-

V "l

h .A

I II )oN THE ( I

Jumh1••• GAWKY

S•••td•r'• \ AMWP.rt

(2wda.)

THE LATtlh\MERICAN

38. Before
38. Apri14
(2 wds.t
41. On

AN AIRtiHfl! IIOUNP
FOR WASHINGTON,
WITlt A 5101' Al A
CARI~IEAN l!f50RT
!SLANt&gt;,

·

42. Snare
43. Moses'

'

I

J

DOWN
1. Heroic

narrative

CAPI' AIN EASY
,S. FiP6Y PR!PARISO,
TO ~1\SHT THE OIL~UPD

DAILY ORYP'IOQUOTE-Hert'l'l bow to work It:
.
lo

BeACON, Q\\AI&lt;.

!&gt;CAW,; THE ~LANP

AXYDLBAAXR
tONGFELLOW

One letter simply stand11 for a.nother. In this l!l&amp;mple'" A

FOR 51- OF THEil&lt;.

apostrophes, the length a.nd formation of 'the words
hints. Ea.ch day the code letters are dlfferent.
~

...

OF'

JEMO ASSOCIATES .
Can cure your Uls! Contacl him .
foday at .. ,
Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.

Middleoort, Ohio
992·7034·or
1-~61•1110
.
.

t•

used tor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stnrte letters,

M'll'TI!RIOIJ!O ISNEMV.. ,

..
I.

a.t"e

lfhAI the bore

'

rII I]

(Aatwe" to•• oow)

ENTIRE SUIULY

IUtNr

K!~n.t without-SAYING

-

f&lt;E'S·0011"!6 IT! f&lt;ts DOIN6 IT!

(I ~·
~

death

HITCH

.

1'1\"1"

mountain
H . Had

~UI!'

Now orranr• the cln:led letton
to form the ourprioo oNWer, u
aurre•ted by the above cartoon:.

,

hoW!

AND TERRY LEAVE

'

\

back

34. So that's .

1101.0RE5 17EEP'S IX

..
DR.

"I l .,1'£''
r., , 1_

Italy
40. Today

(2 wdo.)

L

srmu

r1 L1·I

29. Tunneric

TERRY

.,_u 1 ~ , _

as
a

28. State (Fr.)
~

-+ ~ •

l OI ... Ul Pll Qlf.

Unscramble these four Jumble&amp;,
one ·letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary words.

20. Fish
storr
21. Annoy
23. Quash,

(2 wda.)

'

don't ci~n your
lot ..

·color'

15. Elysium

I!EPUBLIC 11801\RP

Down ~~ent too high,
· Month~ payments too high

British

seabird

THE COLlAPSE OF

BECAUSE:

Native-

bom

13122.29 w s, 3tc

NEW HOME

2. In run voice 18. Jackie's
ma.te
3. Fellow,

ADROSS

~'-".1• ,

J}ll)JWJ]3~;11MJ

DAilY CROSSWORD

Case No. 20471

Bought A

C11&amp;\M

IS B::~Nt.lt~ 1D

&lt;, 1111 ...

Estate of Everette Shoemaker
Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Geraldine Grueser of Pomeroy,
Ohio, has been duly appo inted
Administratr ix of the Estate of
Everette Shoemaker , deceased,
late of Pomeroy , Meigs County,
Ohio .
Cred itors are required to file
the ir claims with Said fiduciary
within four months .
·
Dated this 17th day .of
March 1971.
JOhn C. Bacon
Acting Pr.obate Judge
of said County

If You Haven't

.

COtJFOIJN!::€0,
$TO I/€!

TERI&lt;i, ro'S LO._,VE;;';;,t;!AJNi7\

__ _____

24 ACRE farm al Long 'Botlom,
house with 3 bedrooms. dining

IT AAM!EO HIM TO H~AR OIP'H
AHAB'S SUGGfSTIOH THAT WE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

PUT IT ALL
TOGETHER FOR YOU!

WE

1WflltA
REAl. BEAlJT,
SAl&lt;"€! SEND
cAL.LAI-1AN
N&lt;QoND WITH
THEO cAA!

John C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said County
13 ) 22, 2914 ) S, Jlc

13) 22.29.1415. 31c

IT'S TIME TO BUY .
.CALL m-3325 .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
-ASSOCIATE
4-2-6tc
.....,.

~ ·---

ase No.10469
Estate of Sadie W t Decea sed.
Notice is hereb given that
Frank Gilkey Sr . of RD 4,
Jackson , has been duly ap pointed Executor of ' the Estate
of Sadie Wolfe, deceased, late of
Middleport, Meigs County ,
Oh io.
Cred itors are required to file
their cla i ms with said fiduciary
with in four months.
Dated this 17th day of March

Estate of Lewis E . Triplett
Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Franklin Triplett of Middleport
ha s
been duly appointed
Executor of the Estate of Lew is
E. Triplett, deceased , late of
Middleport , Me igs County,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to tile
their claimr with said· fiduciary
within four months .
Dated this 18th day ot Mar ch
197l.

MIDDLEPORT - Lol for
mobile home. All ulllltles
. available. Only $650.00

minerals . · Chester

NOTICE OF

APPOIN~NT

John C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said County

110 Mechanic St.
Pqmeroy, Ohio

'l1iE BORN LOSER

LEGAL NOTICE

3-17-30ic

collecl
Dick
Hayman ,
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
hold -up. Soulheaslern
Hayman, Chesler 985-3509.
Security Systems. Call Ray
3-28-JOip
Adams 247-2055 -· Mike
O'Brien 247-2113.
PAPER -HANGING, painling,
3.17-lfc
plaslering , dry wall. . Arthur
-----Musser . Phone 992-3630.
3-28-301p SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanilalion. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
2·12-lfc
Phone 949-3821
- -- -- Racine, Ohio
PAl NTI NG , roofing and
Crill Bradford
spouting 'service. Richard
5-1-lfc
Will , phone 992-2889.
----3-11 -JOtc
SE\VING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284
LEGAL NOTICE
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
NOTiaE OF
APPOINTMENT
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Case No. 20473
3-29-lfc

-----Real Estate For Sale

6-15-tlc

--------~

Reasonable

all

.
(

\

�-.

•

••

.
.

.

~-

·B argains, Bargains, arid More Bargains· In Sentinel Clas~fteds
.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., AprilS, 1971
.

I'IANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES .

Carpenter

. 5 P.M . Day Before Publicat ion
.Yw&gt;nda)' Deadline 9 a.m . ·
Cancellat iOn &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for .
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

News, Event
Mr . an.d Mrs. Harold Gillogly,

Vicky and Bruce, were weekend
guests of his si ster, Mrs. Bernice McKnight and family in

The lio'ublisher reserves the
r ight to ed it or reject any ads
d~emed
objectional.
The
publisher wil l not be respons ~ble
for more than one incorrect
Insertion .

.

~TES

ant Ad Service
er Word one inser tion
.9\mu •• um Lnargll 1 ~c
Columbus.
l &lt;~ '· cents per word threl
consecutive insertions.
Mr. and ·Mrs. Lavern .Jordan · 18 cents per word slx con
and Jane, Mrs. Faye Jordan secutlve inser t ions.
.
and Mrs . Ida DennJ·son VI.SJ.ted ads25 and
Perads
cent
Discouht
on
paic
pa id within 10 days

Mrs. Faye Jordan's son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. -~~d Mrs.

Fo

~- tcents

CARD OF THAN·K5
&amp; OBITUARY

Of
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1968 CADILL-AC BRDUGHAM4 DR.

$3995

Full power equipment including 6-way seat &amp; windows,
Climate C~mtrol air co nditioning, tilt steering wheel, AM FM radio, medium green fJni sh with white vinyl roof . Has
all of Cadillac's fine features &amp; equipment.

1969 CHEVROLET CAPRICE 4 DOOR

$3295

Local owner with less than 15,000 miles, Com fortran air
condit ion ing, power steering, automatic trans., Astra
front seat, black nylon interior. Beautiful green fini sh
with black viriyl roof. Radio &amp; all· other popular accessories, outstanding car with fine features .

MeAdditional 25c
and Advert isement .

Charge per

WALNUT

•

EXPERT

.
4·1-61c

-------

BEAUT! F UL Colonial maple
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
speakers, 4 speed automa"tiC:
changer, separat.e controls.
Balance $80.99. Use our time

paymenl plan. Call 992-3352.
4-1-6tc
...:.._

______
LIVE

'··

Wheel Alignment

Pierce, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , 2.1

miles out Rt . 143 from bypass.
4-4-6tp

- - -- - -

Rober! Hill home at the
junction of SR 124 and 338.
4-4-Jtc

OFFICE HOURS
OPEH EVES. 8:00 P.M.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred 8:30a.m. to s :oo p m.' Daily.
POMEROY. OHIO
Wilson and children, Chelsea, S:30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
- - - -- Saturday .
AKRON Tennis shoes, all sizes.
Mich.
Ladies' black or white.
Mrs. Virginia Townsend and
Children's Easter shoes, red
In Memory
or white. One lady's all
daughter, Susie, Columbus, was
Notice
Help Wanted
leather
purse.
Edna's
an overnight guest at the home IN LOVING memory
Dachshund.
our LONG-HAl RED
Grocery,
Portland.
,
of her uncles, Paul and William
darling mother, Garnet , Will give away to a good · WOMAN lo do housework .
4-4-31p
Phone Chesler 985·3900.
home. Phone Chester 985 Avanell Jacks, who left us two
'
-C. Peck.
4-4-6tc
4226.
years ago April 5, 1969.
BLACK Diamond lin imenl. Call
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey Dearest
Mother, il's lonesome _ _ _ _ _ __ _4...:
·4-61p
or write F. M . Guthrie, 33
attended the ll)onthly meetings
BARMAID and part time
here without you,
Townsend Place, Alhens.
WILL DO up holsler ing . Phone wa itr ess . Phone 992:9943.
of insurance directors in We miss you more each day
Ohio. Phone 592-2158. ·
992.2524.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 4_ J.61c
life doesn'l seem lhe
4-4-3tp
Columbus on Friday and Somehow
same
4·Hic
-Saturday, On Saturday evening Since God ca ll ed you away.
NEW 26-INCH Airway luggage.
Auto Sales
they were guests of his nephew God saw you getting weary
WILL DO tai l oring and
Blue. $20. Phone Chesler 985He
did
whal
He
lhoughl
was
upholstery.
Phone
992-3561.
1967
FORD
'
Ranger
pickup
.
3900.
and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
besl,
3-31 -301c
Phone 247·2161.
4-4-3tp
Jewell, Columbus, who en- He put His arms around you,
tertained with a birthday Then took you home to rest.
STRAWBERRY PLANTS. Big
PALM·
S.a dly missed by Children MADAM MARY supper honoring Mrs. Jessie
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr . Boy tomatoes, cabbage,
ISTRY
.
Reader
and
and Gr and chi ldren.
hardtop. power steering,
cauliflower, broccoli, head
advisor . Tell s past, present
Jewell. Another brother and .
4
5
power brakes , air, 18,900 lettuce, Brussel sprouts. Also,
and future . I will tell you just
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon _ _ _ _ _ _ ____:· ·llp
miles. Excellent conditton.
pansy, snapdragon, marigold,
whal you want to know about
Starkey, Sugar Grove, were
Phone 992-2288.
fr iends and enemies. I give
delphinium
and others .
11 -10-IIS: Midway Market, W. Main 51.,
present along with several Notice
never failing advice on al l
Pomeroy. Phone-992-2582.
matters of
life.
707'h 1965 SPORTS Fury. 383 cu in .• 4FRESH
bakery
members of the Jewell family. OVEN
Washinglon Blvd., Belpre,
4-4-3tc
products. Jimmy's Pastry
barrel, dual exhaust, 4 speed ,
Miss Anna Parker of
Oh io. Look for sign. For
Shop. N. .2nd Ave.. Mid-black inside and out. Rear
Cleveland along with friends
appoinlmenl call 423-9153.
dleporl. Phone 9n3555.
seat reverberalor . $950 . 1971 DIAL . &amp; SEW Zig -Zag
3-24-101c
3-2notc
from Strasburg visited with her
Sew ing Machine lef t in
Original owner . Call 992-6977
layaway. Beaulitul pas lei
after 6 p.m .
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
HOME sewing . Phone 992-5327 . WILL PICK up merchandise _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _4_-H ip
color, full size model. All
Ney Carpenter and aunt, Mrs.
and take to auction on a
built -in bu1tonho l e~ overcast
3-J0-30ic
Martha Mays on Saturday and
percentage basis. Call Jim
and laney sli lch. Pay jusl
Adams, auctioneer, Rutl~nd. 1962 FALCON, 4·door, 6$48.75
cash
or
terms
Sunday. Robert Parker and ATTENTION ladies! Would you
cylinder. $195. Phone 992-6793. available. Trade -ins acPhone 742-4461.
like to lry a wig on in the
sons, Middleport, were callers
4-4-lfc cepled. Phone 992-5641.
9-23-lfc
privacy o.f your own home?
on Sunday afternoon at the
You can. Jus I call us. We also - - - - - 3-30-6tc
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics, AUCTION - WHEN? Each 1968 CAMARO 327, 3-speed . ·
Carpen ter home.
Phone Ma son 773-5 178 or see VACUUM Cleaner brand new
Friday nighl. 7 p.m . Where?
Koscot,
of
CO IJr se.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lich have
John
Grueser.
Hayman's Auction House,
Distributors, Brown's. Phone
1970 model . Complele with all
moved to the manager's
Laurel criff on new Rt. 7 - - - - - - - - 4 - -Hip
Middleporl 992-5 113.
cleaning tools. Small paint
Pomeroy
Middleporl By12-31 ·1fc
damage in shipping. Will take
residence at the Southeastern
1966 GMC •;,. ton pickup, 23,000
pass.
$27 cash or budge! plan
Ohio Experiment Farm .
2-7-lfc m i les, new tires, ca mper top,
available. Phone 992-5641.
good condi lion. Phone 992Sunday evening guests of Mr.
- - -- ..
3-30-6fc
and Mrs . Gene Jeffers included Card of Thanks
SKATE A-WAY Easier parly, 2805, Eldon Vlalburn . 3-28-lfc
Friday, April9 . Races , prizes,
Dr. and Mrs. Irwin Unger and WE WANT lo express · our
----balloons.
Open Wednesday. heartfeld
thanks
to
fr
iends,
family, Dr. and Mrs. Luis Lugo
1964
CHEVELLE conver lible .
Friday and Salurday, 7:30 to Good
neighbors and relatives for
condi lion, 8-cylinder, Real Estate For Sale
and children, Athens, Mr. and
10:30 p.m. Available for automatic
their many expressions of
transmission .
privale parties, Monday. Phone '92-3917.
Mrs. Carlos Silvia and family,
sympalhy at the time of lhe
Tuesday, Thursday nighlo
dea.th of our beloved mother,
Amesville, and Mr. and Mrs.
and Salurday and Sunday _________3-~28-61p
Mrs
.
Doris
Jewell.
Tlujd Dye and Michael Lawson,
p.m. Phone Chester 985·3929 ~
._,
The spacious home of the
·,
The Family.
1965
INTERNATIONAL
!ruck.
local.
or
985-3585.
late
Mrs . Bessie M . Pickens,
4-5-llc
1800
series,
good
condition
.
4·Hiv
on approxi mately
situated
The Women's Group of the
Henry Bahr . Phone Chester
~--------six acres In Racine. Ohio.
Dyesville Church met at the
985·3988.
RUBBER STAMPS made to
For
Sale
Hot water heat by free gas.
ch urch . President Maxine
3·_
31-61p Interest in producing gas
order. 24 hour service. Dwain _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Haning opened the meeting with 1965 HONDA 250. Call 742-5042
well.
,
after 4: 15 p.m .
Ohio.
1964 FALCON 2door. 6 cylinder.
k a poem, Time to Pray. Grace
4-5-31c
2-12-901c
automatic transmission, nice
Turner was special projects - - - - - clean car, good condition.
leader and showed ceramic
Phone 992-3820. Millon Hood .
Exec. of Estate
Wanted
Call afler 6 p.m.
pieces and demonstrated how
Reedsville. Ohio
4-2·31c
A COUPLE of ambulalory
they were made. Plans were
378-6289
patients. Phone Mason 773- - - - - -- made for a supper at the church
1966 TORONADO, al l power,
5712.
on April 24.
3 - 31 ~6tc
$1500. Phone 742-4885.
4-1-6tc HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier,
BY ADA SLACK
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
Gallipolis, and daughter, Susan
10-25-tfc
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Wanted To Buy
Frazier, Columbus, visited Mrs. James Connally , of Letart
KEROSENE LAMPS, all lypes Pets For Sale
Goldie Gillogly and the group Falls, recenti'y purchased and
and descriptions . Phone 992· REGISTERED black male loy 6· ROOM house in Monkey Run .
Larg e -lawn with space for
called on Mr. and Mrs. Paul have moved into their new
6978.
poodle. House broken. Call
trailer.
Immediate
0 -31c
Gaston in Albany. Susan , a home in the Rustic Hill Ad·
992-3591.
possession.
Phone
992-2619.
- - - -- 3-29-61c
3-30-61p
student nurse at Ohio Slate dition. These homes are built by
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
University was on spring Mr. Archie Lee.
beds. elc. Wrile M. D. Miller,
vacation from duties there.
Mr. and Mrs. William Brown
RL 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call For Sale
Guesls of Mr. and Mrs. Alva spent several days with
992-6271.
9-1-llc
Rupe were Mr. and Mrs. David relatives in Middletown.
IT'S
FOR
Neutzling and family, Athens,
Mr . and Mrs . Gordon VIILL PAY top price for night
George Hobstetter. Jr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Harris, Winebrenner, children , Paula,
craw lers and earth worms .
Real Estate Broker
Fife's, 711 So. 3rd Ave.,
Columbus.
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman,
Mary Ann and Becky, and his
HAND PUSH MOWERS
Middleport. Phone 992-5457.
Phone 949-3211
Mrs. Paul Shell, Linda, Greg mother, Mrs. Roy Winebrenner
As Low As
63.95
4-1-6tc
RACINE
- 1 lot, .87 acre. price
and Rolland, Steubenville, were and Elizabeth Merritt, visited - - - - -$450.00
RIDING MOVIERS
overnight guests of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Philip Kinzel of
As Low As - - - - 271.95 POMEROY - 2 apartments
Mrs . Mendal Jordan and MI. Alto, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. Help Wanted
renled for $95.00· month . A
Walter. Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Fred Brinker and Mrs. Joe r-----.-~-ECONOMY TILLERS
very
good
investment
Jordan , Bryan and Keith, also Rollins of Letart, W. Va.
As
Low
As
.134.95
proper
ty
.
Priced
.lo sell
WANTED
$7,500.00
spent Sunday with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hall
POMEROY
MIDDLE PORT -2 story frame
and recent callers at the Jordan and family of Trimble spent a
J , W. Carsey, Mgr.
house, 7 rooms, good location,
home included Mrs. Kenneth recent Sunday with Mr. and
Phone.992-2181
front and back porch. 2 car
Crabtree, McArthur, and Mr. Mrs. Clifford Hall and Mrs.
garage, new construction.
Price 513,500.00
, and Mrs. Clay Jordan, Dale and Hattie Armes.
Nolice of Sale
THE UNDERSIGNEO will sell
Barbara.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hayman
- ····at pu'bl ic auction for cash only PORTLAND - 7 room frame
Mr. and Mrs. David Wiseman and son of Dayton spent the
house, 96 acres land, free gas,
on April 12, 1971 al 10 a.m. at
well on place, plenty ol
gas
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Lee weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Wes t Virginia-Ohio Motors
limber.
Localed on good
Sales Inc., 1922-Garfield Ave.,
Wood, Rutland, and Mrs. Roy Robert Hysell.
gravel
road.
Price $12.500.00
Parkersburg , W. Va., one 1965
Wiseman, Harrisonville, visited
Miss Anita Watkins of Chester
Ford lractor Modef T-850,
Mr. and MI'S. Earl Starkey on and friend, Terry Carson, of
serial number TB5QU578156. RACINE - 1'12" slorm frame
VIR~INIA
house, 2 lots, located close lo
The undersigned reserves the
Monday evening.
Tuppers Plains visited her
church,
one block lo school,
right lo bid .
Mrs. Gene Jeffers and Mrs. grandmother, Mrs. Ada Slack,
·
one
block
to slore, very good
Associates
Serv l.ces
Rex Cheadle entertai ned and uncle and aunt, Mr. and 2 WOMEN or man and wife. Company. Inc., 1911 E. 71h Sl., buy. $5,500.00
Call In person al MIDWAY
4-4-Jic
Parkersburg, W. Va ., P. 0.
friends with a products party at Mrs. Eugene Slack, Saturday
MARKET or phone 992-2565 or
Box 1745.
the Jeffers home. Those present evening.
992-2582. - 4-5- llc
4-4-3tc
were Katherine and Cher)\1 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
Lawson, Janie Jeffers, Yvette and Debbie spent a weekend in
COAL, limest·one . Excelsio:
Cranston, Mae and Barbara Marion with their son and · For Rent
Sail Works·, E. Main Sl.,
6011 East Main Streel
Jordan, Anna Lich, Carolyn daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. 2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
Pomeroy. Phone 992-311'11".
POMEROY
Fraley, Bonnie Fraley, Pansy Robert A. Harden and son, Eric.
His., Pomeroy. Phone 992·4-9-lfc MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms, 3
5127 afler 4 p.m.
'::=::::.:::
_-_ --+--:-::--=---·bedrooms, bath, porches,
and Virginia Jordan, Grace They were joined there by their
basement, GARDEN AND
3-2-tfc
ALUMINUM
car
top
boats,
10Wilson , Jean and Barbara other son and datJghter-in-law,
TRAILER
SPACE. $9,500.
----~
12-13 foot. Lorenzo D. Davis,
Brookhart, Opal Young, Mr. and Mrs. James Harden, of
Kingsbury
Road.
TRAILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
Roberta Hamon, Vivian Gaston
3-24-JOtc MIDDLEPORT - 1 story
.
Courl, Rl. 124, Syracuse.
London .
frame, 2 bedrooms, bath,
Linda Dye, Betty and Patricia Weekend guests of Mr. and
Ohio . 992-2951.
4-2-llc TWO GOODYEAR wrinkled- glassed porch, front por-ch,
Walsh , Geraldine Fauber, Mrs. George Schneider and her
GARDEN SPACE, YARD
wall drag slicks, 900x"l4, 7Wanetta Radekin, Kathy rnother, Mrs. Daisy Roush,.and - - -- - FENCED $4,500.
inches wide ; . S60 or trade.
UNFURNISHED 3
room
Cheadle, Margie Jeffers and the
Phone 992-5663.
aparlment. Phone. 992-22118.
Mr .. and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey
·3-30,4tc MIDDLEPORT- II rooms. 4
hostess. Demonstrators were
1-31-lfc
bedrooms, 2 baths, porches,
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Mr. and Mrs . Joseph LibJllan of
garage, NEW SIGING, NICE
Duckworth, Mrs . La Donna TWO OR lhree bedroom Hon\e, SET OF one-row cullivators for - LOCATION. $7,950.
.
Athens.
Lewis and daughter Roberta
Collage Road, Syracuse.
Ford lraclor, just like new.
of Rittman.
'.
'
Adulls only. Phone 992-5133.
Also, Remlnglon chain saw in · • PROPERTY IS SELLING
LIKE MAD ~ LET US
Sunday afternoon callers of
3-2-lfc good shape. Phone 742-3633.
3·31
-5tc
SELL
YOURS TODAY
I
Mrs. Don Cottrill and family TR~ILER SPACE on old Rt. 33. - - - , - - - HENRY CLELAND
were Mrs. Laura Sayre, Mrs.
'12-mile norlh of new Meigs KILL TERMITES and yard
REALTOR
Tom Hill. He
Clarence
Wickline,
of
Racine
High
School.
Phone
992-2941.
OFFICE-992-2259
insecls with ARI\B "You-Do-Sweat &amp; Tears
RESIDENCE - 992-2561
RD, and Duncan ·Mahonney, ol . ::::----~---.::..:
3·5-lfc 11." King Builders Supply
Cass. But he
4-4-6tc
Company,
Mlddleporl.
.
light $e~enade
Connecticut.
FURNISHED and unfurnished .
2-21
·601c
'
Williams too. Varietv
Mr. and Mr~. D. 0. 'Blake of
aparlmenls . Close to school.
CONVENIENT bul secluded
Phone 992-5434.
·
the spice of our music.
Hoc k.mgp_ort cal)ed on his sistei,
BESTLINE
PRODUCTS.
Call
building lots on T79 al Rock
·
: 10-18-lfc
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
Spri?gs. Wllhin wa lking
Mrs. Ad a Slack, Sunday ,af4-4-30tc
distance of ¥eigs High
1
3 · ROOM, bath, furnished or --'--~-~
ternoon .
•
School, a 5 minute drive from
semi -furnished
apartnlent.
· Mr . Glen Hudson left Monday
SOUP'S
ON,
the
rug
thai
iS,
Pnmeroy. Call or see BUI
Also. 1room , balh. furnished
clean
wilh
BlUe
Luslre.
Renl
·
Wille
weekends, or afler 5
evening for Detroit to r.eswne .. oparlment. Mulberry Ave .,
o.m . weekdavs. Phone 992-· P.lmor ·l'\" '
O ... J ..... ,. .. ,.,.,., . electric shamDooer; $1. Baker

. $5.55
Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Au10 .·

FOR SALE

Warren Pickens

Syracuse

HOBSlEIIER
REAL ESTATE

Mowers &amp;Tillers

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR

HARTFORD,
WEST

~-----

- - -- - -

Cleland Realty ·.-

.

...

-----

DID 'lOLl cse.rT/1AT

Pr1ErT'1' HAirl ,T!-1AICUTE NOSE
AND T!-10SE BEA1.5rii'OL EYES?

N t S~ R.EA!&gt;tNG

AcL T~llo
QUEsflotiS!

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

-GUARANTEED--

Wi-lE~E

I ~tDN'T 6:VEN

THE$$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

You will ,have something..of value to show for the $$$ you
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Tax benefit, you build an equity and you are not
bound by fhe terms of a rental agreement.

- 606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner -

EXPERIENCED

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A., F.H.A.,

Radiator Service

Come See Us AI 97'12 N. Second Sf., Middleport.

And Conventional Loans.

! PUT A PENNY IN,
!I'UT Nl'-1 CAR!7

ol

--------=

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

1•·

Easter bunnies. Paul

4 -S

THINK ABOUT ITI

bedroom trailer. See Chester · ---'---------~
Rose in Racine, behind the , -

TIME

ABOUT? _ , _,

STEREO -Radio

com bination . Four . speed
intermixed changer . Four
speak·er sound sr.stem, dual
vo lum e contra . Balance
$67.40. Use our budget terms .

12X52 FOOT 1970 Hillcresl 2-

Pomeroy Motor Co.

WHAT ON AIRTH
ARE 'IE WHININ'

For Sale

Call 992-3352.

51.50 tOr 50 word·' minimum .

Max McCallie and Judy, Ann Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS

Arbor , Mich ., and the
Callies'
son-in-law

2 SIGNS

CALEB!!

reen Hill Homes Inc.
992-7129
Evenings Call: 992-2534 992-3433

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
$mallest Heater Core.

Dutton

BLAETINARS
Ph. 992.-2143

t71!7N'T COMff. OUT!

ri-IESE PICTuRES OF
•MR. PERFECT': ARE
WILD:.'

992-2580
Crow

Spencer

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

Pomeroy

---

Time You Ever Spent.

TELEVISIOf~

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

REPAIR
All Makes &amp; Models
Also
Stereos &amp; Tapes
67 5-3482 or 773-5196

.;: ALSO
DOUBLE-VIIDE5

-i!CHAMPION
-jtrVAN DYKE

-fcWINSOR
«BUDDY

HON 1/!x:H lDN6ER

TI-l l&amp; llASIC DEf&gt;IGN HA&amp;
SO 1M~ ?05516LE

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

VAR IATION~

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

J. Durbin- C. Inscore

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.

Service Personnel

"Ditching. Electric sewer
.cleaning ." Reasonable rates .

WAITIN6 ..ORLD?

IT

5TA66ER91HE

IMASINA110N .

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

UNTIL

WE CAN UNVE!L YOUR
CREATION 10 A

Roofing &amp; Carpenter ·
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

Phone
John
Russell.
Galli polis 446-4782.
4-7-lfc

BACK HOE and end-loader
work . Septic lanks Installed.
George (Billl Pullins. Phone - - - - - - READY -MIX
CONCRETE
992-2478.
delivered
right
to your
11 ·29-lfc
prolect. Fast and easy. Fre~
eslimales . Phone 992-3284.
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
Goeglein Ready·Mix Co.,
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
Middleporl, Ohio.
992-2522.
6·30-lfc
6-10·1fc

NEVI

&amp;

ALLEY OOP

OLD WORK

tnOU REALLY EXPECT
US l'BEUEVE THIS

BUSINESS ABOUT G~
BIRDS, CO!liURAL?

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

DEXTER , O. 45126
PHONE 142-1945

------''---

Insured-Experienced
NEIGLER Construction. For O'BRI.EN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial, residential and
Work Guaranteed
building or remodeling your
industrial wiring. Phone 247 home, Call Guy Neigler ,
2113.
Racine, Ohio.
J-12-lfc
7-31 -tfc
Insurance
O'DELL
WHEEL
alignment
RALPH'S
CARPET
located a! Crossroads, Rt . 124. AUTOMOBILE insura nce been
Upholslery Cleaning Service.
Free

estimates .

Gallipolis 446-0294.

Phone

·
3-12-tfc

-----TREE - TRIMMING

Complete front end servic~, ..
tune up and brake service.

cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license ? Call 992 -

Wheels balan ced
Iro nically .
All

2966.

guaranteed .

and

removal. Fully insured . Free
es fimates . Ca I after 5 p.m ., " •

rates. 992-3213.

elec work ·

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.
Broker

2 LOTS - Double garage, 3
bedrooms, nice bath, living 23
X 12 with fireplace . Large
dinina, modern kitchen with
electric stove and re lrlgerator . Gas · forced air
lurnace. $21,000.00.
POMEROY - 3 nice bedrooms
wllh lar.ge closels, modern
balh, new kitchen wilh
eleclrlc range, double sink.
Gas furnace . Full basemen!.
Only $12,000.00

COUNTRY LIVING 3
· bedrooms, balh, gas furnace.
Well waler . Garage. $7,000.00
NEW LISTING- 4 bedrooms,
balh, furnace, basement.
Several oulbulldings. All
water

available. 22 ACRES. Only
$6,000.00
MIDDLEPORT - 5 rooms,
bath, furnace . Two bedrooms.
Level lot. Only $4.000.00

1971.

room, kitchen, living room ,

1'12 baths, enclosed back
porch, walllo walt· carpeting,
aluminum siding, awning,

storm windows and slorm
doors, city water . Selling due
to Ill health : Phone 614-985·
]938.
•J-26-121p
•
1
HOUSE , . . ......
6 rooms
... and ballr.

tEl 8ltlOHES BE 11'1tiOHES
AHO SHARE THE WEALTH OF

fL OORAOO EQUALLY!

R6CO~llollo

·

I.

Israeli

style

6. Final word
10. German

-4. Roulette

river
11. They
"like
It hot"
12. April9
12 wdo. 1
14. Diving

5. Fido's bark

6. Stagd
rema.rk

7. Fashion
8. Enaue

9. French
mal'llhal
13. BUJy

16. Disfeature

places
arOund

19. Fatima's

Easter

17. What

husband

22. Skllt
23. Agitate
24. March28
to AprilS

some do

on April 9

fly
24. Famed
feath'e rwelght
25. Devoured

Ynterdar'• A•swer
~

26. Glut
27. Final

35. Unke111pt
chap
37. Watched
38. utensil

32. Enticed

39. One, tn

:n. Pace

33. Expunge

.-,..~

iURN!:D ~EALJTY
.JUC'6E LIKED iO DO.
"·

a

'Al.WU: '
'i
.A ·
l~o~~.=t.,2 1.(

Tllf COUP 0' El,l(t'

31. Fonner

WOULI'II'T It '"
TO Sf'f!it&gt; AVACATipN
HE~E 50/o\ETIME!

WHA'T THE RECKLESS

,

D~!VER

30. Unpopular
pupil
Giants'
quarter-

V "l

h .A

I II )oN THE ( I

Jumh1••• GAWKY

S•••td•r'• \ AMWP.rt

(2wda.)

THE LATtlh\MERICAN

38. Before
38. Apri14
(2 wds.t
41. On

AN AIRtiHfl! IIOUNP
FOR WASHINGTON,
WITlt A 5101' Al A
CARI~IEAN l!f50RT
!SLANt&gt;,

·

42. Snare
43. Moses'

'

I

J

DOWN
1. Heroic

narrative

CAPI' AIN EASY
,S. FiP6Y PR!PARISO,
TO ~1\SHT THE OIL~UPD

DAILY ORYP'IOQUOTE-Hert'l'l bow to work It:
.
lo

BeACON, Q\\AI&lt;.

!&gt;CAW,; THE ~LANP

AXYDLBAAXR
tONGFELLOW

One letter simply stand11 for a.nother. In this l!l&amp;mple'" A

FOR 51- OF THEil&lt;.

apostrophes, the length a.nd formation of 'the words
hints. Ea.ch day the code letters are dlfferent.
~

...

OF'

JEMO ASSOCIATES .
Can cure your Uls! Contacl him .
foday at .. ,
Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.

Middleoort, Ohio
992·7034·or
1-~61•1110
.
.

t•

used tor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stnrte letters,

M'll'TI!RIOIJ!O ISNEMV.. ,

..
I.

a.t"e

lfhAI the bore

'

rII I]

(Aatwe" to•• oow)

ENTIRE SUIULY

IUtNr

K!~n.t without-SAYING

-

f&lt;E'S·0011"!6 IT! f&lt;ts DOIN6 IT!

(I ~·
~

death

HITCH

.

1'1\"1"

mountain
H . Had

~UI!'

Now orranr• the cln:led letton
to form the ourprioo oNWer, u
aurre•ted by the above cartoon:.

,

hoW!

AND TERRY LEAVE

'

\

back

34. So that's .

1101.0RE5 17EEP'S IX

..
DR.

"I l .,1'£''
r., , 1_

Italy
40. Today

(2 wdo.)

L

srmu

r1 L1·I

29. Tunneric

TERRY

.,_u 1 ~ , _

as
a

28. State (Fr.)
~

-+ ~ •

l OI ... Ul Pll Qlf.

Unscramble these four Jumble&amp;,
one ·letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary words.

20. Fish
storr
21. Annoy
23. Quash,

(2 wda.)

'

don't ci~n your
lot ..

·color'

15. Elysium

I!EPUBLIC 11801\RP

Down ~~ent too high,
· Month~ payments too high

British

seabird

THE COLlAPSE OF

BECAUSE:

Native-

bom

13122.29 w s, 3tc

NEW HOME

2. In run voice 18. Jackie's
ma.te
3. Fellow,

ADROSS

~'-".1• ,

J}ll)JWJ]3~;11MJ

DAilY CROSSWORD

Case No. 20471

Bought A

C11&amp;\M

IS B::~Nt.lt~ 1D

&lt;, 1111 ...

Estate of Everette Shoemaker
Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Geraldine Grueser of Pomeroy,
Ohio, has been duly appo inted
Administratr ix of the Estate of
Everette Shoemaker , deceased,
late of Pomeroy , Meigs County,
Ohio .
Cred itors are required to file
the ir claims with Said fiduciary
within four months .
·
Dated this 17th day .of
March 1971.
JOhn C. Bacon
Acting Pr.obate Judge
of said County

If You Haven't

.

COtJFOIJN!::€0,
$TO I/€!

TERI&lt;i, ro'S LO._,VE;;';;,t;!AJNi7\

__ _____

24 ACRE farm al Long 'Botlom,
house with 3 bedrooms. dining

IT AAM!EO HIM TO H~AR OIP'H
AHAB'S SUGGfSTIOH THAT WE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

PUT IT ALL
TOGETHER FOR YOU!

WE

1WflltA
REAl. BEAlJT,
SAl&lt;"€! SEND
cAL.LAI-1AN
N&lt;QoND WITH
THEO cAA!

John C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said County
13 ) 22, 2914 ) S, Jlc

13) 22.29.1415. 31c

IT'S TIME TO BUY .
.CALL m-3325 .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
-ASSOCIATE
4-2-6tc
.....,.

~ ·---

ase No.10469
Estate of Sadie W t Decea sed.
Notice is hereb given that
Frank Gilkey Sr . of RD 4,
Jackson , has been duly ap pointed Executor of ' the Estate
of Sadie Wolfe, deceased, late of
Middleport, Meigs County ,
Oh io.
Cred itors are required to file
their cla i ms with said fiduciary
with in four months.
Dated this 17th day of March

Estate of Lewis E . Triplett
Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Franklin Triplett of Middleport
ha s
been duly appointed
Executor of the Estate of Lew is
E. Triplett, deceased , late of
Middleport , Me igs County,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to tile
their claimr with said· fiduciary
within four months .
Dated this 18th day ot Mar ch
197l.

MIDDLEPORT - Lol for
mobile home. All ulllltles
. available. Only $650.00

minerals . · Chester

NOTICE OF

APPOIN~NT

John C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said County

110 Mechanic St.
Pqmeroy, Ohio

'l1iE BORN LOSER

LEGAL NOTICE

3-17-30ic

collecl
Dick
Hayman ,
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
hold -up. Soulheaslern
Hayman, Chesler 985-3509.
Security Systems. Call Ray
3-28-JOip
Adams 247-2055 -· Mike
O'Brien 247-2113.
PAPER -HANGING, painling,
3.17-lfc
plaslering , dry wall. . Arthur
-----Musser . Phone 992-3630.
3-28-301p SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanilalion. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
2·12-lfc
Phone 949-3821
- -- -- Racine, Ohio
PAl NTI NG , roofing and
Crill Bradford
spouting 'service. Richard
5-1-lfc
Will , phone 992-2889.
----3-11 -JOtc
SE\VING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284
LEGAL NOTICE
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
NOTiaE OF
APPOINTMENT
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Case No. 20473
3-29-lfc

-----Real Estate For Sale

6-15-tlc

--------~

Reasonable

all

.
(

\

�.
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0., AprilS 111'71

Miller
Will Make

Tuesday

'

By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UP! )- If you
bad to choose one eve~mg thts
televtston season to watch the
home screen, Tuesday mtght

Rounds
WASHINGTON - Mamtainmg a busy schedule during
the Congressional Easter
Recess, Congressman Clarence
E. Wiler
returns
to
Southeastern Ohio this Friday
for a sertes of CIVIC and public
service activities.
On Saturday morning, April
loth, the Congressman will be in
McArthur for an Open Door
Session at the Vmton County
Court House from 10 to 11 a. m.
From McArthur, the Tenth
District lawmaker will travel to
Jackson County, where he will
hold a similar session m the
Civil Service Room at the
Jackson Post Office from I to 2
p. m. The Congressman con·
eludes his Saturday schedule
with an Open Door Session for
Gallia County reSidents in the
Councy Comm1ssioner's Room
at the Gallia County Court
House m Gallipolis from 4 to 5 p.
m.

On Monday, April 12th,
Congressman Miller w11l be m
Athens, where he will address
the noon luncheon meeting of
the Athens Rotary Club.
Tuesday, April 13th, the
Congressman will be in
Cleveland to keynote the
Cleveland Electromc Con·
ference which gets underway
with a luncheon meeting. Later
that afternoon, Miller will meet
with representatives of the Ohio
Chapter of the Nation&amp;;~ League
of Families of Amencan
Prisoners and Mtssing in
Southeast Asia in Cleveland.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Janet Jeffers, Pomeroy;
Milford Wolfe, Racme; Wllda
Brogan, Rutland; James Mays,
Lung Bottom; Kate Loudm,
Cheshire; Elm a Norvell,
Portland; Etotlla Cassell,
Middleport; Lydia Ebersbach,
Pomeroy; Christme Freeman,
Pomeroy; Shawnee Salser,
Pomeroy; Margaret Sauer,
Middleport; Harrison Robmson, Clifton.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Kenneth Hanning, Thomas
Lutheran, Hattie Powell,
Dewey Beegle, Glenora
Swatzel, Elmer Burns, John
Hanning, Milford Mitch, Conme
Roush.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Zueha Smith, Pomeroy;
Kenneth Snider, Pomeroy;
Golda Graham, Rutland; Helen
Bartles, ··syracuse; Danen
Philhps, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Carmel Jewett, Kenneth Hayes,
Edity McCoy, Tony Imboden,
Ralph Smder, Dewey Bentley,
John Ebhn.

TV• . .in Review
'

PIPE ARRIVES - Huge stacks of pipe have become a
typical scene in the Cheshire area smce the announcement
last month 9ll the construction of Ohio Power's $488 million

· New~... in

plant. This p1pe is located just off Rt. 7 near the entrance
to the village.

Briefo

(Contmued from Page I)
overntghl
Amenca has been wrong in the way "she treated the Indtan "'
the poor folks ... the black folks ... and women," he satd, "and
there have been more wrongs m this country tban there bave been
nghts."
"We have to realize that every major problem has been
created by man and 1f we want to solve these problems, man can
do it overnight," he sa1d, "tf he uses ethical statesmanship and
not degenerate pohbcal muscle." Gregory srud the problems
would have to be solved within 25 years to preserve the country.

Nader Attacks Nixon Tax Break
WASHINGTON -RALPH NADER HAS opened a new attack
on a $36.8 billion depreciation tax break for business, wtth support
from two university scholars who allege President Nixon acted
both illegally and decettfully in proposing it. Nixon said m an·
,nouncing the plan Jan. 11 that it wnuld stimulate the
lagging economy, produce new jobs and ultimately generate new
tax revenue as a result of a more vigorous busmess clunate.
Boris I. Bittker, a professor at the Yale Umversity Law
School, satd Nixon acted illegally by ordermg the regulallons
through executive procedm;es. He satd only Congress has
authortty to enact new tax rules. Robert Eisner, a Northwestern
Universtly economics professor, said the admmistrallon
distributed false information about the plan. He srud it wtll reduce
Treasury collections too much for the httle good 11 can be expected to do.

IN BIG CAST - Two Rutland young women, Sheryl
Wolfe, left, and Darlene Kreuzer, were members of the cast
of 300 that presented the nallonally famous Vaud-Villilles in
Columbus' Veterans Memonal Audttonum March 24-25-2&amp;'ll. Center 1s Bob Evans of Gallla County, prestdent of Bob
Evans Farms, lnc., who attended the show with his family
and personally greeted the girls from Me1gs County.

Daley Seems Sure Winner
CHICAGO - RICHARD J. DALEY begins hts last day of
campaigning today m hts bid for an unprecedented ftfth term as
mayor of Chicago with the only real question mark being JUst how
big his victory margin will be.
Daley's opponent, Richard E. Friedman, a Democrat turned
mdependent who 1s running as a Repubhcan, bas clauned
throughout the race that he can unseat the mcumbent, but most
political analysts think the big question is whether Daley can
match his 1967 plurality of 500,000-plus votes.

Overnight Wire

Stab Victim
Questioned

Annett Sheets

Dies Saturday

.

Harry Kimes

Died Sundily

Sidney Wells

Dies Sunday

! A Thought !

!

well be your best chmce.
For on Tuesday, video
watchers w1ll be offered two
ongmal works of surpassmg
10telbgence and audience appeal that would do honor to any
theatncal medium.
One
ts
non-commerctal
televlSlon 's
twohour play by Anthony Terptloff, " Poet Game," presented by the "Hollywood
Televiswn Theatre /' and con-

By United Press lntcmallonal
ROXBURY, CONN. -F'UNERAL servtces for author
Manfred B. Lee, who was half of the team that wrote under the
name "Ellery Queen," will be held here Tuesay,
Lee, 65, dted Friday mght. Lee and hts cousm, Fredenc
Dannay , who hves m Marchmont, N Y , created the mystery
senes more than 40 years ago. They wrote 33 novels under the
WEATHER: EXTENDED _Ellery Queen pseudonym and four under the name Bornaby Ross.
Ohio Extended Weather
SANTIAGO - MARXIST PRESIDENT Salvador Allende 's
Oullook Wednesday Through government coalltion narrowly led oppos1t1on parttes today m
Friday:
nationwtde muntcipal electiOns that apparently gave him a
A chance of snow flurries
personal and pobllcal VIctory in the ftrsl popularity test of hts
The Metgs County Sheriff's
northwest Wednesday and a
radtcal reform pohctes.
Dept. learned Sunday at 11 :43
chance of showers north on
With complete returns from all but SIX of Chtle's 25 provmces
a.m. by phone that a stabbing
Friday. Rather cold Wed·
offictally tabulated before dawn today Allende's five ~toverrunent
had occurred Friday night at
nesday with highs In the 40s
Tuppers Plams and the alleged
and lows In the 20s followed parties held 49.6 per cent of the vote to-48 per cent for the opvichm, Paul Walktns, 52,
by a warming trend. High by position The remainder was accounted for by independent
Coolville, Rt. 2, had been taken
Friday In the 60s and lows In candtdates and void ballots
WASHINGTON - CHRISTINA ANN SCHULER ·of
to St. Joseph Hospttal, the 30s.
Bellefontaine, Ohto, wore a $100,000 pearl studded crown and a
Parkersburg, by Whtle's amrobe ptcked out by Mrs . Theodore Roosevelt, the tradillonal
bulance.
The department nohfted
ratment of the 1971 queen of the Cherry Blossom Festival
Parkersburg pollee and a
The 19-year-old brunette, a radio and televtsion major at
detective from that department
Stephens College m Columbta, Mo , won the honor on the spm of a
Pleasant Valley Hospital
went to the hospital to quesllon
wheel prtor to the weekend fesliVIhes She said she had "really.
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Davtd Watkms.
enjoyed" her week m the nation's cap•lol, topped off by prestding
Workman, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. The stabbmg is reported to
over the tradihonal event.
Bernard Jordan, Gallipohs have happened at the Roland
WASHINGTON - A GROUP OF physicrans and lawyers,
\
Ferry; Davtd Russell, Mason; Dodderer residence in Tuppers
PT PLEASANT - Armett M concerned over the growmg number of malprachce smts, has
Mrs. Frank•e Thornton, Pt Pjams. No charges are to be Sheets, 84, Rutland, formerly of
decrded to draw up gUidelines to cover what doctors must tell
Pleasant; Mrs. William filed, 1t was reported.
Mason County, dted Saturday 10
thetr patients about how they plan to treat them. This decisiOn, 11
Yeager, Mrs. Wilham Chapan Athens, Ohto hospital
was learned today, was the outgrowth of a meetmg last month
man, Apple Grove; Mrs. Claude
followmg a lingenng illness.
attended
by representatives of the American Trial Lawyers
Sines, Pt. Pleasant; Lester
Funeral servtce wtll be conYoung, I'{est Columbia; John
dueled 2:30p.m. Tuesday at Mt. Association and the medical professiOn. The Health, EducatiOn
Bryant, Gallipolis; Mrs John
Umon United MethodiSt and Welfare Departm~nt helped brmg the two groups together.
The 214,QOO.rnember Amencan Medical Associatwn, which 10
Kauff, Clarence Scherman, Pt.
Church, at Pliny, W Va, under
Pleasant; George Wamsley,
direction of the L. G. Mohr the past has Criticized any government mterference m doctorpatient relationships, dtd not attend lh.e meellug and declmed
Henderson; Erlinda Obregon, Harry H. Kimes, 63, Coolvllle Funeral Service.
Pt. Pleasant; Mrs . Nancy Route 2, dted early Sunday at
The Rev . Eugene Underwood comment on it. Dr. Mark Gorney, a plasllc surgeon from San
Woodard, Gallipohs Ferry.
the Selby General Hospttal )II will ofhctale. Burtal m Mt. Francisco who chatred the meeting, satd 17 persons were mDISCHARGES - John Neal, Marietta followmg an extended Umon cemetery.
volved. Medtcal spec1allles represented included anesthesiOlogy,
George Reynolds, Kindall illness.
Mr Sheets was a retired neuro-surgery, ortheopedtcs, obstetricS and gynecology, in adClendemn, Jack Smtth, Mrs. B. Mr Ktmes was born at farmer and a member of the ditwn to general practice.
B Wayan!, Fred Waugh, Mrs. Chester, the son of the late Church of Chrtsl. He was born
Larry Smtih and son and Mrs David and Deha Kidder Kimes. Oct. 1, 1896, m Gallia County
Clarence Barnett.
He was a farmer and a guar- Hts Wife, the forrher Ora
drail construction worker the Ntchols, dted m 1960. Survivors
(Contmued from Page I)
•••••••••••••••• greaterpartofhtshfe.Hewasa are one son, Edward, Nttro;
veteran of World War II, having , three daughters, Mrs. Dale Lee,
it:
11 served in the Army.
Gay, W Va.; Mrs. Herschel Stdney Wells, 72, dted Sunday denotmg payment.
The law requires registratiOn
Precedtng him in death Wears, Rutland, ana Mrs . at his Rutland Route I
of firearms and transfers wJth
i&lt;
Or 0
besides hts parents was a son, Wallace Stahl, Columbus, Ohio; restdence . The Mtddleport
the Treasury secretary. Only a
it: It s not your poSition that it: Chfford, m 1965.
11 grandc~tldren and 15 great- emergency umt '1/)Swered a call
possessor who lawfully makes,
; makes you happy or it: Surviving are hts wife, Mrs. gran,dchlldren.
to the reSidence at 12:27 p.m. manufactures or import;; them
.,. unhappy - 1l' s your 11 ReUia Buchanan Kimes ; two
Friends may · call at the Sunday, but Mr Wells was dead
can and must regts~er.
dosposo t,on
: · sons, Clayton, of Reedsville, Chapman Mortuary, Pt. upon the squad's amval.
- Anonymous +: and Carroll, Long Bottom; two Pleasant, any time.
11
Mr. Wells had worked at the He Idenllfles htmself, deParkersburg Rig and Reel 10 SCribes the firearm and gtves
11
i&lt; daughters, Mrs. Mildred
LODGE TO MEET
11
Yeater, Coolvllle, and Mrs.
Pomeroy unlllit closed several the name and address of the
Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, years ago.
it: Mildred Cox of Little Hocking;
rectpient, whose appllcation
11
i&lt; a stster, Mrs. Els1e Deem .of wtll meet in regular session at SurvlVlng are his wife, Clatr ; must be supported by fmger'Nelsonville, and 11 grand- 7:30p.m. Wednesday. Work wtll a son, Donald, of Reynoldsburg; pnnts and a photograph, plus a
be in the Fellowcraft degree. All two ststers, Mrs. Marwn
-tl
children.
law enforcement official's certiit:
11 Funeral services wtll be held Masons are invtled.
Strickler, Washmgton, and Mrs. ftcale Identifying the material
+:
Fri_d ays On!y
at 2 p.m. 'fitesday at ~e White
Ethel Colhns, Albany; three and statmg that the weapon is
The Dnve-ln Wmdow it: Funeral Home In Coolvill~ with
DINNER AT 6:30
grandchildren, and one great- intended for lawful purposes.
.,.
is Open
it: the Rev Roy Deeter offtciating.
A regular meeting of Mejgs grandchild.
,Only, after the transferer's
-fl
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
-fl Burial wtll be m the Stewart Chapter 53, Disabled American
Funeral servtces will be held receipt of ~he approved apphca:
-(Continuously)
Cemetery near Hockmgport. Veterans wtll be ,held at 6:30 at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the tion form may the transfer be
•
•
: Other Banking Hours 9 to +: Friends may call at the funeral p.m. Thursday at the ball on Martin Funeral Home ui legally made.
Butternut Ave. Dmner will be Rutland with the Rev. Rtchard No information furmshed
+: J and s to 7 as usual on ~ home any time.
+: Fridays.
it:
,
served at 6:30.
Pumphrey offictatmg. Burtal under the act may be used as
wtll be in the Wnght Cemetery. evtdence against a registrant or
Frtends may call at the funeral apphcant in a criminal proceedDOFATOMEET
home any lime after Tuesday ing 10 connection Wlth the
Lodge 323, Daughters
co~
Tonig~:r~~2!uesday . ofChester
afternoon.
records, which are not, as a
Amenca, will meet at 8 p.m.
-,.
_..
WOODSTOCK
mallet·
of adm10istra1ton, avaiTuesdayatthehall.Thecharter
Th e '" C '" m.de ca ncc 1
POMEROY, OHIO
:; ,
"!Technicolor)
+:
Member FDIC
1! Running Time 3 Hrs 10 wtll be draped• and members de,,tlos "duc,l.11gcly In the 1ap- lable to other federal, state or
11
Member Federal
are asked to wear white. Games u1ly 1HC1l\ tsmg 1.1tc or hmg c.m- local agencies, the couvt noted.
11 [n!nutes
:
ReserveSyste~
i!
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
wtll be conducted after the l'' '" Dwp tho '"'~·lf&lt;'ltc hnh•t . But possession of an unregis•
• 111 gcs tlw Am erh\ ln Cam·ct tered firearm is Illegal.
.................... 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~ meeting.
.S&lt;&gt;ucly.

• F

~ight

Firearms

Tube

one another
Telev1suln's drama awards
thts season w11l surely, one
hopes, find no aoh1evemcn'-'
more worthy of hononng than
Mr Terpdoff's ,wnbng, the
act10g of Mr. Hopk10s and M1ss
Wh1telaw, and the drrecttng of
Silvto Nanxzano (" Georgy
Gr~l' ' ). In addition, Tuesday
mghl, there are excellent
supportmg performances tn
"Poet Game" by Susan Clark
as Hopkms' Amertcan mtstress,
Cynl Cusack as his father and
Paul Hennen as h1s son.
If viewers of "Poet Gamen

Better

remember nothing else

season from vtdeo, they
remember, and chertsh,
exqUlstle scene in which
boy, unhappy and yet somehow
qwetly understandmg and
ing hts father, listens as
Hopkins tells him of
youthful dreams, and
happened to them . In
the father is asking the son
to leave home for a
longer, and there is
enormous dtgmty, wtsdom and
honesty m his pleading for the
boy to stay that one cannot fail
to be moved utterly.

Bucks Riddled
By Graduation

cermng a hard-drmkmg, hardhvmg Irish poet who tr~es to
come to terms w1th himself-lis
well as h1s wtfe, mistress, son
and father-lis he stumbles
through an American lecture
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
tour
State football coach Woody
The othe1 is CBS-TV's "A Hayes, who lost 15 senior
conversallon with Lord North," starters last season, opened the
an unscnpted, 1mprov1sed one- team's spring practice today
hour "mtervtew" m which Enc aware of the many gaps to be
Sevareid, as a. " newsman in plugged before the Btg Ten
modern dress, questions the champion Buckeyes begm
costumed Peter Ustmov as the defense of their title.
extraordmanly gtfted actor Twenty practice sessions are
portrays the Br11lsh Pnme sc~eduled, with the traditional
M101ster durmg the Amencan mira-squad game May 8
Revolutl(in, Frederick Lord climaxing the spring workout.
North. Sevarmd and Usl10ov The Bucks open their 1971
simply steeped themselves 10 season the earliest ever, Sept.
the relevant material of the 11 against Iowa here at Ohio
Revolullonary penod, and then Stadium.
went at each other 10 thts first
Co-captain Tom Deleone, a
production of . an occastonal center and John Htcks a
CBS-TV senes, "The American tackle: are the only offen~ive
RevolutiOn: 1770-1783." They ' regulars returning. On defense,
are both splendtd.
· there are five returnees: end
"Poet Game" 1s a play not t6""\
be mtssed. As a dramatic work,
11 1s on a level superwr to
anythmg seen on commercial Harrisonville
televiston this season. In fact,
nothmg nearly as good m vtdeo Society News
drama has been seen smce
Mr and Mrs. Dana Hamng
"The Andersonville Ttial,"
and
Mrs Allee DaviS of
produced by the same "HollyPomeroy were v1si tors of the M
wood Television Theatre "
Done m conJunction wtth the A Epples Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. H D. Gilkey of
Bntlsh Broadcastmg Corp.,
"Poet Game" IS a beautiful Columbus spent Sunday with
play, constructed wtlhout a the Ztba M1dk1ffs and visited
false note, and blessed wtth the Mrs Bertha Hellman at
backbone of a writer's passwn, Veterans Memonal Hospttal.
Mrs Jane Gtlkey of Midconviction and fur~ous talent. In
dleport
spent the weekend with
the tortured poet's dtlemma of
how to set hts hfe m order and her stster-in-law, Ava Gdkey.
Mrs Guy Bohn called on Ava
revtlaltze hts creative JUICes,
Gilkey
recently.
we are earned along wtth h1m
Mrs May Mason and son
m h1s roanng JOurney toward
hberatwn-llnd,remarkably, we visitoo the Johnny Morrises on
too are hberated because of the Sunday to see thetr new
charged honesty of the scnpt lrader
Mrs Nancy Wh1te and son
that streaks along from anger
called
on Mrs John Stout
to compasSIOf\ to black humor
Sunday
and w•l
Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire
Complementmg the scnpt are
spent
Sunday 10 Columbus wtth
two bravura performances 10
the leadmg roles- by Anthony the Robert Gtbsons and the F.
Hopkms as the poet, and Btlhe 0. Whaleys Mrs. Alkire and
Whitelaw as h1s wife. And the Mr Whaley celebrated thetr
marvel of the1r performances IS b~rthdays.
Mrs. Charles Allure , IS ·a
In thetr reahzatwn of the fact
that even though these two patten! at Methodist Hospttal m
people are on the verge of Columbus for a gall bladder
teanng each other to pteces, operatwn .
there 1s absolutely no other Mrs. Bertha Heitman Is m
place they belong except wtlh Veterans Memor~al Hospttal
She has pneumoma
Mrs. Lola Cam IS still confined to Veterans Memortal
RUSSIANS DIE
MOSCOW (UPI )- Two mem- Hosptlal. Members of her
bers of the Sovtet Umon canoe famlly stay wtth her
The M."A Epples are pamtmg
and khayak teams and their
coach d1ed March 31, 11 was and papenng thetr home.
Mr. and Mrs Wtll Clonch
reported Sunday by Sovtetsky
Sport Newspaper. The athletes have moved to thetr home on
were internatiOnal competitors Horner Htll
Mr. and Mrs Clmton Gtlkey
Alexei Gorbachov and Vtklor
Sustretov, and the coach was of Albany VISited the L10coln
Russells and Ava Gilkey
Vlad101rr Lukoyanov.
No details. of thetr deaths Monday evemng Mrs. Russell
IS not so well.
were revealed

Ken Luttner, tackles George
Hassenohrl and Shad
'
linebacker Stan White and
captain Harry Howard
halfback
Hayes IS calling his fre:shm1an~
class the best since 1968
some wtth high potential
elude Elmer Lippert trnm _.
Sandusky, Morris Bradshaw, an
Dlinots all-stater; Je£1 Davis of
Pennsylvania, Rick Gales ' of
Niles, Pat Eggers of Toledo and
Randy Keith of Cincinnati.
Other leading freshmen are .
Dan Scott of Amityville, N.Y.,
Jim Kregel of Toledo, Chuck
Baxter of Painesville, Jobn
Husband. of Elyria and Randy ·
Gradtshe"r of Warren.
Rocco Rtch of Canton, con-:
side red a likely replacement for :
All-American Jim Stillwagon at
middle guard, will miss at least:
part of spring practice. He is ,
recovering from knee surgery."
Hayes is expected to give:
frosh Greg Middleton of tbe ·
state of Delaware a try at tight :
end.

6

Base
(Contmued from Page I)
mst casualties were reported.
Commumst gunners also
downed two U.S. helicopters,
one near Hue 390 miles
northeast of Satgon and the
other near the Mekong Delta
provinctal capttal of Phu Vinh.
One Amertcan was mjured in
the ftrst crash and all four U.S.
crewmen and mne South
Vtelnamese soldiers were killed
in the second
In Cambodia, the high
command satd Commumst
troops htt four government
troop positions Sunday and one
-at Kompong Russey 60 miles
northeast of Phnom Penh-was
abandoned. One of the Commumst attacks was 14 nules from
the capital.
SERVICES SET
Revtval servtces will be held
at the Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church Fnday, Saturday and
Sunday wtlh the Rev. Robert
Stewart, evangelist from Mt.
Vernon, - guest speaker.
Resurrecllon servtces w1ll be
held at 6 a.m. Easter mormng.
Everyone IS welcome.
RAT INVASION
MULHOUSE, France (UPl)A roadstde fire between Metz
and Sarrebourg drove hundJ:eds
of rat;; onto the highway
Sunday. Motonsts on Easter
hobdays complained they could
barely see the road because of
smoke and scurrying rats.

Select ·Your New Lawn Mow·er
At Elberfelds

T da

•
Y :

* * *

!

·! ' It's Quick! Easy
! DRIVE•IN !

BANKING' •

t

!

t

f FARMERS BANK t

! and SAVINGS
•

t

I

Eyebar Failure Caused Fall o Silver Bridge
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A crack m a metal bar so tmy 1!
could not be see_n by the ,eye -and w maccessible that 11 m1ght ,
have def1ed x-ray detectiOn - triggered the collapse of a br!dge
~ver l~e Ohio River wh1ch killed 46 persons, government safety
mvesllgators said today.
In its report on the collapse of the Silver Bridge at Point
Pleasant, W. Va:, on Dec. 15, 1967, the National Transportation
Safety Board said the crack led to the breakmg of a crucial steel
eyebar. When the eyebar broke, the 1,753-foot suspension bndge
plunged mto the river, killing occupants of cars which were lmed
bumper-to-bumper across the span.

The board srud its tests pinpointed the break at the "First
jomt in the north eyebar cbam on the west side of the Ohio tower"
.of the bridge. The eyebars fonned a chain for the brtdge similar to
the more common woven wire cables USed on other suspension
brtdges.

and

Toros.

MEIGS THEATRE .

-·

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

The board sa•d 11 also found "deep rustmg" on some other
parts of the br~dge, but 11 srud ther~ was no indtcation that any of
main br~dge supports had deteriOrated to a pomt where they
would be "madequate to carry" thetr load. But it urged the
government to study the load' capacity of bridges and their life
expectancy
The.board satd the Transportation Department also should
set up a research program to devise techmques to reparr brtdges
damaged by internal flaws, and to identify br~dge matertal that
may be suscepltble to "slow flaws "

Weather

Now You Know

Ram and snow hkely ·today
and tomght south and southeast, chance of snow Wednesda y southeast. Low tomght
25 to 30 north and west and
lower 30s southeast

Metal coms were first used as
legal tender in anctent Asta
Mmor and 10 Ind•a in the later
part of the 7th century, B.C.

Devoted To T1w Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXIII NO. 24q

TEN CENTS

· PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

witches Seats

yse
•

Pomeroy counctlman Hob
Hysell resigned his aeat Mon- Gmdo Girolam1, owner of the
day mght when council met in land, s81d the telephone comregular session, to accept pany had agreed to 1mprove and
another on the board of pubhc mamtam the lot A fence wtll be
affa~rs . Hysell's councll term placed .around the area and a
dusk to dawn hght wtll be mexp1res Dec. 31 of thts year
Counctl has 30 days to name a stalled The telephone compl!ny
replacement for Hysell, or agreed to move from the area if
accept an appointment by the council felt it should.
Counctl agreed the ulllity
mayor Hysell replaces James
could
operate the storage site as
Stevenson, who restgned March
8, on the board of pubhc affatrs long as 11 maintamed 11
~
Also meeting wtth council
wh1ch manages the water works
were Ralph Graves and Dan
and sewerage affairs
,,
In other business, council set Whtte in regard to the slreet on
June I as the deadline for local Lmcoln Terrace.
owners of busmess estabhsh- Counctl agreed that the
ment;; m the downtown area to roadway must be Improved;
'
' have 10 process the connectiOn however, 11 1s at a loss how to
~
of 10d1vidual sewers mto the tmprove conditions. The mayor
agreed to mspect the road and
main sewer lme.
I
\
In order for the board of try to secure help to remedy the
CO-WINNERs - Howie Caldwell, left, and Dennie Eichinger, right, shared the Most
public affairs to absorb part of S liU~IlOn .
PAYNE EMPLOYED
Valuable Player award Monday night at the Spring Sports Banquet at Eastern High School.
the cost of the work involved,
Center lS head basketball Coach Bill Phillips
, counctl was forced to set a In other busmess counctl
deadline, Payment will be made htred Wayne Payne, as
Pomeroy's new meterman.
on a percentage bas1s.
Some counctl members felt 11 Payne has been employed m the
was unfatr to set a deadline due Middleport pohce department
to the work mvolve&lt;t and and has completed his police
avallabtlily of sktlled workmen trammg. He w1ll begin work
Payne
replaces
BY KATIE CROW
A petitiOn was read by Mayor today.
Athletics is the only place
Charles Legar from residents of metermatd Diana King who
where prejudtce doesn't exist,
Butternut Ave., and Sugar Run resigned several weeks ago.
accordmg
to
Vmcent
areas m regard to the storage , Council was asked to sell the
Chlckerelli , head basketball
yard of the General Telephone village owned lot located above
coach at Capital Umverstty,
Company on Butternut Ave. The the bookmobile on East Mam St.
who spoke to 200 persons at the
pelltion charged the area is a Council agreed to sell the lot
annual Sprmg Sports Banquet
pubhc nmsance as well as and voted to accept sealed bids
which w1ll be opened May 15 at
at Eastern Htgh School Monday
unstghtly.
mght.
Council members said, noon
"Gtve all the LSD you can,"
however, the area had been Councll asked Pollee Chtef
Chtckerelh said, and explamed,
checked and they dtd not feel Jed Webster to change the
"Love, secunty and dtscipline"
telephone poles stored there meters next to the ratlroad
tracks on the nverfront parking
go together. " Nothmg can
posed a hazard.
happen wtlh.out disCipline," he
satd. Other pmnt;; he stressed
were:
"We must teach people how to
hve together in a chnsllan
soctety. Youngsters must have
· COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. Ohto's natural resources belong
a good chnstian foundation.
John J. Gilligan today proposed to all the people - and that
"If you haven't done the best
a 5 per cent severance tax on therefore those who remove
rrunerals whtch would bring 10 those resources ought to pay at
you are capable of doing, you
are not successful. All talent is
an estunated $23 million a year least part of the cost of
wtth the funds going to better repainng any damage they may
God given; be humble, fame is
do to the land 1tself," satd
man given, be thankful "
llle state's environment.
Garry Parsons, master of
Gtlligan satd the tax would be G•lhgan.
5 per cent on the gross markel Gtlligan satd the tdea of a
ceremomes, introduced the
coaches, Dave Chadwell, who
value of all resources except severance tax 1s not new and is
mtroducbd the 1un1or high
timber. He esllmated the tax currently used in 28 states.
would produce revenue of $23
basketball squad; Larry
mtlhon a year wtth $10.6 mtllion
Hemes, freshman basketball
SPECIAL AWARDS - Given special recognition
from coal, $2.4 million from 01!
squad; Bob Ord, reserve
Monday night at th~ spring sports banquet at Eastern High
and gas and $9.9 mtllion from
basketball squad, and Bill
Phtllips the vars1ty
School were, front,! tor, Tom Karr, best defensive player,
other mmerals.
"'rhe use of these funds for
The track team was mand Bob Caldwell, most improved player, and back row,
Ken Insani, head oasketball
troduced by Phtllips and the
Dave smith, four sport letterman; Coach Bill Phillips, and
environme ntal
purposes coach at Lugan Htgh School for
baseball team by Hmes.
Mike Boring, the scholastic award.
recogmzes the basic belief that the past four years, submitted
The best foul shooter and best
his resignation
the Logan
rebounder award went to
Denms
Eichmger,
best T
tBoard of Education Monday
defenstve player to Tom Karr,
wo
eep
me
a n a g e m e n mght. The ~esignation will
scholashc award to Mtke
become effechve at the end of
Bormg, most tmproved player
the present school term . The

"

t

):

Athlet~s 'Unprejudiced

lot;; Counc1l earhcr changed
street meters from five cents an
hour to ten cenls an hour \
A letter was read from Mrs.
Aaron Kelton askmg counctl to
dtrect properly owners to clean
and repatr houses located on
property on Welchtown H1ll m
Mmersvtlle
Council asked the ordmance
commtttee to prepat·e wa1·rant.s
based on the fire ordmance for
Issuance to owners whose
property may pose danger or
ftre hazard m the vtllage .
Second and lhtrd reqUired
readmgs of an ordmance whwh
provides for collecllon and
disposal of garbage and trash
by license, hcensee fee and
penallles for •'-' vtolallon were
approved.
Counctl also gave three
requtred readmgs to an ordtnance which grants permtsston to the state h1ghway
department to spot pamt the
Pomeroy-Mason Br~dge , at no
cost to the vtllage.
Also brought to the attentiOn
of council is the burnmg of
garbage 10 trash cans by
restdents. Counctl warned that

a

Logan Mentor
Resigns Post

D

i:~!~~~~d:!~~n~:n~o~~ria:~

Smith
Tb.e )Ilost val4~ble basketball
player, the -Eagle Award, was
shared by Denms EIC hinger and
Howle Caldwell.
John D, Riebel, Sr.,
supenntendent, introduced the
cheerleaders.
The dmner was prepared and
served by the members of the
band boosters. Decoratwns
were by the cheerleaders and
dmner music was provided by
Jean Whttehead . The Rev. John
Wyatt gave the mvocat10n and
benedtchon.

Positions
NEW YORK - In a move
designed to help expand and
enhance its coa l mwing
operatwns, the Amen can
Electnc Power System (AEP)
has established two new
management postlions m- the
area of coal supply
Arthur E. Belton, of Fair·
mont, W Va., has been named
ass•stant IJI!Olng manager in
AEP's newly expanded Coal
Supply Department, and
Charles E. Sowards, of Clarwn,
Pa , has been appomted minmg
· safety engmeer tn the com-

Roundtables Thursday
' to tram
Two monthly M-G-M Scout urged to attend m order
Dislrict round tables will be Cubs and Boy Scouts.
held Aprll 8 at Kyger Creek ~ Leaders should be well inHtgh School.
formed so thay can pass thetr
The Cub round tab)e wtll deal boysm advancement, and teach
with the commg reqUirement;; them the skills they need to
for all Cub Scouts. The Boy know 10 Scoutmg.
Sc~ut round table should prove
1
to be valuable All ,scout
"We will be looking for all of
leaders, mcludm ~ den mothers, you Scout leaders at the mooden leader coaches, scout- thly round table," said Garland
masters, asststant;;, Cl•mmittee E. Parsons, M-G·M Admembers and cubmasters are vHntement chall"man.
I
t

M'

M

by AEP

m

~r:..;:~~01E~~~a::c::d

Absentee Voting_Unden.vay
Absentee, disabled and servtcemen's votmg Is now
underway at the Meigs County Board of Elecltons
office m the Masomc Temple building at Pomeroy.
The offtce 1s open from I to 4 p m., Monday through
F'rtday, for the convenience of voters who wtll not be
able to vote at their polling places on Tuesday, May 4,
when Republican pr1manes wtll be held m both
Pomeroy and Middleport
The board also announced that 4 p.m., April 13, lS
the deadline for candtdates to declare thetr intent now reqUired by law - to be write-in candidates in
either community
viOlators w1ll be prosecuted It
was also noted that burmng
perm•'-' must be obtamed to
burn trash
Counctl agreed to have Cal
Lane , street supermtendent,
mspect and fix, If posstble, the
area 1n front of Mrs. Dean
Barmtz' home where water
runs from the street mto her
basement
Council gave a flat ''no" to a
request by Don Covert to place
a pop cooler on the stdewalk on
Court St. next to the cab office

owned and operated by Covert.
In other busmess, $1,433 26
11as transferr ed from the
parktng meter fund to the
general and spectal street
•epatr funds The mayor's
1eport was accepted showing
rcce•p'-' of $1 ,178.90 m March.
Attendtng were ·Legar ,
counctlmen Ralph Werry ,
Franklin Rtzer, Lucien Poulin,
Don Collms, and councilwoman,
Elm a Russell; Clerk Jane
Walton, and treasurer Phylhs
Hennessy.

I '

J

Severance Tax Asked

See the Big

Selectioo of
Lawn-Boys

An eyebar is a long metal beam rounded at each end and
containmg a hole or "eye" at both ends. The chains made out of
these bars were stretched across the two main towers of the
bndge and the roadbed .and metal superstructure of the brtdge
were hung beneath the ·eyebeam chains.

ACcording to the report, the crack apparently developed over
the 40-year-life of the bridge, fmally reaching a pomt where 11
became"critical as a result of both stress and fatlgue .
But the board said the .crack was "inaccessible to VISual mspection" and could not have been detected by any inspechon
method known in the state of the art today without disassemblmg
the eyebar joint - a practical unposstbility."
The board .said research was needed to develop "new
generation br~dge inspection techniques and equipment"
designed to detect the type of hidden crack whtch caused the
collapse of the Silver Bridge.

GEORGE THOMPSON and his sister, Louella Thompson Roush, give the victory sign from
a hospital room at the Cleveland Clinic following surgery there last week. George had both
kidneys removed earlier and Monday recetved a kidney transplant from his sister, Mrs. Roush .
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson of Pomeroy A fund dnve on behalf of
George now underway in Meigs County has gone very well, with over $6,000 raiSed. Contributions are to be sent to the Pomeroy Postmaster and checks are to be made out to the
George Thompson Kidney Fund.

Barnard Cole Has
2nd Transplant
Bernard Cole, Dayton, son of
Pearl and Ruby Cole of Tuppers
Pla10s, recently underwent
surgery at Cmcinnati General
Hosp1 tal for a second kidney
transplant.
The vtchm of nephrtlis, Cole
had both ktdneys removed on
July I, 1969. On May 11, 1970, the
first transplant was made;
however, hts body rejected it,
and on July 31, 1970, the Iran.
splant was removed.
A second transplant was
ma~e on March 25. Cole Is
reported to be 10 satisfactory
condthon. Cole IS mamed and
has two sons. He is a half.
brother of H A. Cole of Tuppers
Plams and nephew of Gordon
Caldwell, Metgs County auditor.

Added
::
pany's Personnel Department. sa(ety re~ulahons .
Logan was 31-4 1 dur~ng regular
Inhts new assignment, Belton Accordwg to Geo~ge V season play. In tournament
w1ll be large responstble• for the Patterson, AEP execuhve
vtce
.
d , ac ti on, h"lS te ams won one an d
recrUitmg of mme engmeermg presidentoperatlons, Sowar s 1os 1 1our. 1nside th e South .
and productwn sf&lt;Iffs for future posttion has been estabhshed eastern Ohio League, lnsam's
deep-mtne operations by "because of the increasing Chieftams posted a 24-32 mark.
vartous AEP System com- scope of our coal mining Coach Insani served as
panics, includmg a new mme operations ~nd in recogmtion of reserve coach two years before
near Salem Center , Meigs the present and continu10g need tak10g over the head job. A
County, Ohto; whtch will supply for close attentwn to safety in health mstructor, lnsam also
the new Gavm power plant at connection with working con- coached tennis at LHS.
Cheshire
dttions and practices m the Applications are now bemg
Belton, a native of West mmes."
accepted by George M.
Vtrgima's McDowell County,
Sowards has been a mme Sanbalas, Superintendent, Supervisors a~­
recetved a degree in mmmg foreman 10 Virginia and Ken- Logan Ctly Schools, 50 North Two-Day Meeting
engineering from West Virginia lucky and held engineermg and St., Logan, Ohio, 43138.
Mrs. Gretts Suttle and Mrs,
Umverstty in 1943 and lS a execullve posttions in the Mme
Nelhe Vale," Metgs County
hcensed professional .e.ogmeer. D1vis10n of United States Steel
DEER KILLED
He has held professional and Corporallii'n. Since 1959, he bas A deer was struck and ktlled school superVIsors, were ·in
managenal positions wtth the been. a consultant to the coal 10 an accident at 7,45 a.m . Columbus Thursday and Friday
to attend a superv~sors meeting
Mounf&lt;Imeer Coal Company, · mmmg Industry .
Monday on Rt. 7, one and two
at Scot's Inn.
1m penal Coal Company, and
Consolidation Coal Company Veterans Memorial Hospital tenths miles south of Rt 124. Among the speakers were
and is a member of the
ADMITTED - Vanessa - Ohio _State Patrol ofllcers satd Charles Kurfess, speaker, Ohto
American Institute of Mining Pettit,
Pomeroy ;
John the ~nimal ran into ~e path of a House of Repr£sentatlves;
Englneers and the West Weatherby, Middleport· Robert vehtcle operated by Raymond Wtlliam Oertel, executive
'
Virginia Coal Mimng Institute.
_Reeves, p omeroy; 'J
. ames E. Borth, 52, New Martinsville, director of the Ohto Newspaper
Sowards a cerhlled mining Moms, Pomeroy; Wliham H. W. Va . There was moderate Assn.; Chet Long, WBNS-TV,
Columbus; Donald Fr-eeman,
engiQeer, ' IS an engineermg Lynch, Cheshire·, Kaye Howell, damage to his car.
dtrector, League Park Cen)er,
graduate qf the Universtty of Pomeroy; V:anessa Folmer,
LOCAL TEMPS
Cleveland, and Mlidred My&lt;l'rs,
Kentucky . He w1ll bo. concerned Pomeroy; John Willbargen,
w1th coorchnatmg mine- safety Syracuse; Bess Sanborn, The temperatures in down- ·domeshc relations and 1uvemle
town Pomeroy at 11 a .m judge in Ashland County. Mrs.
prachces with AEP mme Middleport.
Tuesday
was 47 degrees, under . Vale 1s treasurer of the state
uperattons, and wtth · conDfSCHA!lGED - Gerald
cloudy skies.
supefy tsors' assoctatio~.
rurmance to Federal mine Sexton.
•

HONEST LADY- Mrs. Lee Bing, Laurel Cliff, returned
$1,200 she found on Pomeroy's West Main Street to its owner
Monday afternoon. Mrs. Bing found the bills, held together
by' a paper clip, in front of Simon's Pick A Pair Shoe Store.
Mrs. Bmg went to the Sheriff's ofllce to report her find. Mrs.
Betty Thei~s. sheriff's deputy, theoriZing the money might
belong to Paul Simon, since It was found in front of his store,
· called Simon. When asked if he had lost any money, Simon
answered, "I don't know. Let me check my vault." Simon
soon came back to the phone to say, "Yes, $1,200." He ex:
plained that he had just returned from the bank with the
money in a large envelope and hadn't rea li~ that 1t had
fallen out. Mrs. Bing was presented a check by Simon as a
reward.

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