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8 _ The Daily S.mtiriel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April6, 1971

Market Report

Raid Base ·in Laos

GALLIPOLIS, OJIIO,
Saturday, April3,1971
SALES jtEPORT of
Ohio Valley Livestock On. ··
· ·HOGS__:l75-to 22Mhs, l6.50 to· ·
17 ; 220 to 250 lbs. 16 to 16.40;
Ught 12 to 13.75; Boars 10 to
12.50; Pigs 4 to 9; Shoats 10 to
15.
CATfLE- Steers 27 to 31.40;
Heifers 22 to 27; Baby Beef 30 to
36.75; Fat Cows 18 to 21; Canners 19 to 23.10; Bulls 21 to
27.75; Milk Cows 150 to 285.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 10,
46.90; Seconds 42 to 44 ; Medium
37 to 40; Com. &amp; Hvs. 32 to 40 ;
Culls 40 Down .
SHEEP - Baby Calves 40 to
60;
LAMBS - Tops 26.50;
Seconds 23 to 24.25.

The operation into-Laos today
followed a 24-hour commando
strike last Wednesday and
Thursday which President
Nguyen Van Thieu personally
.armounced.• It came a week
after the last of the 24,000-man
South Vietnamese task force
which participated in the main
campaign withdrew from Laos.

SAIGON (UP! )-South Viet- communique said the South said there were no reports of
namese . Black Panther com- Vietnamese raiders killed 15 any American helicop·ters lost
in the operation. No U.S.
mandos raided a North Vietna- North Vietnamese.
U.S. headquarters in Saigon casualties were announcid.
mese supply area inside Laos
today and a Saigon commu- ·
·
-.
nique said the troops destroyed
a Communist command post in
sharp llghtmg . It was the
second such foray since the big
·
offensive into Laos in Febru- . . The Wahama White Falcons under new head cooch_ Larry
ary.
.
,
Morgan outslugged visiting Federal Hocking for a G-1 wm MooElsewhere m the lndochtna d
This was Wahama's first game of the new 1971 season.
theater, South VIetnamese de- ay. The F~lcons opened up the scoring in the first inning, when
fenders fought off an attack ."Y after two were out, Chester ltoush drew a wal~ Tim lltmard
1,000 North VJelnamese at 1an promptly smashed the next pitch into right ccnterfteld lor a douCanh on the Central Highlands blc, with Housh scoril1( on a miscue on the relay. Handy Clark
and held reportS sa1d 53 followed by sending a single to center and. scoring Howard.
CommumslS were slam tn a
In the third inning Mike White singled to nght and proce~­
three,-hour battle. Officers at · d 1 steal second. Two outs later Randy Clark slammed hts
the scene said .three . South :eco~ hit of the ballgame to centerfield, scoring White, Cla.'k
Vietnamese were slam by took second base on the play at the pllite and then Randy Smtth
enemy forces . who broke followed with a single to left that scored Clark.
,
through barbed w1re barncades
In the fourth inning, after back to back singles by Ketth
and charged within hand Sayre and Brent Clark. Tim Howard lined a hard triple over the
grenade range of ,the central centerfielder's head for two more runs.
.
command post.
This was Howard's second extra-base smash of the ballJ'learby on the highlands, game.
, .
Communist forces early today - Howard did the round chores for the F~lcons p1tch1ng the first
attacked Fire Base 6 near the five innings and giving up only one hit and no runs, ~ndy S~ith
Laos border in the !Olh such followed up by pitching the last two innings and allowtng no htts.
raid in five days. Eleven
Federal Hocking scored its only run ofthegame on an error
Communists were reported after two were out in the last inning,
slain.
Wahama will travel to Buffalo of Putnam County Thursday,
The new South Vietnamese ._tth game time at 4:3p.
foray · into Laos came as
Alnerican and South Vietnamese forces abandoned Khe ~---··-~~--------·~~~---~·-·-~-·--·:-·l
Sanh, the base in South
Vietnam's northwest corner
which had served as the
forward support base for the
big push into Laos which ended
by Chet Tannehill ·
late last month.
Saigon reportS claimed great
..-~._..._:._,,_...._..._..,_,..___,._....- .._.J
..---··-··-·.._..
success for the 45-day drive
Monday afternoon in Cincinnati it was proved once again that
against the Communist military
·supply line known as the Ho Chi even the best pros may play like little leaguers. Six errors! And
Minh Trail but commanders Atlanta wins 7-4 to dampen the Reds' opening in their campaign to
had warned that smaller scale defend their National League pennant.
forays would be made to keep
Fair weather fans already will have written off the Reds in 1971
the North Vietnamese off · (believe it or not, "Reds' Haters" do e~ctly that: with 161 games
balance and prevent new left they're out of i\!).
·
stockpiles of war material from
Speaking of specific haters: One often gets the same sort of
building.
foul wind sitting in the big horseshoe off Olentangy Road m
U.S. Army helicopters carried Columbus when Woody Hayes' Bucks play footbalL If a play goes
the elite Hac Bao (Black wrong - "The burns! That knucklehead Hayes can't do anything
Panther ) commandos of South right!" - is the oft-repeated refrain.
.
.
Vietnam's lsllnfantry Division
Yes athletics is great entertairunent, builder of character m
into Laos today, landing them the you~g, a necessary outlet for young energies that perhaps in
at a North Vietnamese supply earlier eras escaped less wholesomely. But what Is competlllve
base area known as 'j61f. " A
athletics doing to the fans (or the converse)? Obviously there
remains in us today much of the same lust that kept Rome's
Coliseum packed for the gladlators.

Falcons w m
•·

WIN AT BRIDGE

.

Smart Law
Breakers Win
o!oKlll 5
W~S'l'

....

¥Ar.
• 9fl2

WOODSTOCK
(Technicolor)

Running Ti.me : 3 Hrs. 10
minutes.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
April7-8
NOT OPEN

PROVIDES A
BETTER BUDGET

ti07H

'

ol-9842

SU,U'fll ([))

o4o K87H
• J 75
t AK4
oloAQfo
Both vul1wra b!e
West Not·th Easl Soulh
1 N.T.

P ass
Pass
Pass

2olo
:! N.T.

Openin~

l

ROGER ABBOTr, the Marauders' big, powerful second
baseman done in Point Pleasant Monday evening in the home
half of th~ last inning at Middleport with one swing of his bat. ,
With Rick Van Maire on third base with one out, Coach Eddie
Bartels gave the sign for the suicide squeeze. B~t Abbott's bunt
try on a low outside curve was fouled off, and R1ck went back to
third base. With the sign apparently off, Abbott looked at one,
· then another, then got what he wanted, a waist-high fast ball.
The crack of the bat the soaring drive way, way out and over
the fence still is one of the beautiful things in sports, especwlly
when It wins the game 5--4.

GOOD BANKING

¥98:12

"'J7 :!

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight April6

t:AST
o4o '95

o4oAQJ4:&lt;

· the Sports Desk !

~L

r.

NOR'fll
o4ol02
¥ K Q JO4
tQJ S:l

INFANT ILL
The Pomeroy E-R sqyad
answered a call at 11 :34 a.m.
Monday to the Richard Jeffers
home on Willow Creek Road
where an infant, Sean Jeffers,
had become ill. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and then transferred to an
ambulance and taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.

Pass
POI~S

2o4o
Pass

lead- ;. :1

By' Oswald &amp; .lames Jacoby
Pick up " Win at Bridge
with JACOBY MODERN" or
any other book that covers
the play of the cards and
)'OU will find a table that
shows which card to lead
fro m various hi gh-card combmations.
These tables aren't exactly
the same , but they do agree
that the proper lead against
no-trump from a suit headed
by ace-queen-jack is !he
queen.
On m o s t · occasions you
want to knock out the adverse king and set up the
rest of the suit while retaining cont rol. Like all rules at
contract they apply in general. The winning player
should learn to break t hem
at the proper time .

North's two-club bid was
Stayman and South's twospade call showed four cards
in that suit.
When this hand was played
at New York's Regency
Whist Club, Tim Holland,
sitting West, had to lead
against the no-trump game.
Tim, one of our best amateur golfers and perhaps the
'World's best backgammon
player, is also pretty good
at b1·idge. Tim led the three
of spades . He didn't mind
fooling his partner. ll was
apparent that East wasn't
gomg to be t a king any
tricks .
S o u t h reached over to
dummy and p l a y e d the
deuce. He didn 't think of
playing the 10 and w h e n
East played the nine declarer was dead . It didn't matter
whether he played the king
or ducked . Tim was sure of
four spades, the ace of
hearts and a profit.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . f

MEETS THURSDAY
A regular meeting of Shade
Riv~r Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will be
held at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
, INJURED IN FALL .
the hall in Chester. All master - Miss Bess Sanborn, Mlds are invited .
'dleport, was taken to VeJerans
mason
Memorial Hospital and admitted at 5:02 p.m. Sunday by
the Middleport E-R squad after
BOTH TO CLOSE
Both the Farmers Bank and suffering leg injury in a fall
Savings Co. and the Pomeroy near the corner of South·second
National Bank will close from 12 Ave. and Main St. Miss Sanborn
noon to 1:30 p.m. Friday for was walking home from the
Pomeroy Community Good business section when she felL
F'riday services to be held from
12 noon to 3 p.m . at Trinity
PLEASANT VALLEY
Church.
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Lora
LaRue, Charleston; Marvin
Miller , Tracy Wolfinbarger,
Rhonda and Diane Burgess,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Johnny
. ·- .
Donohue, Letart.
DISCHARGES
Lima
Gillispie, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
James Oldaker, Mrs. Chester
Jeffers, Lelah Powell, . Mrs.
Franklin Thornton, Orlan
Burns, Mrs . Lewis Roush ,
Lewis Markham and Mrs .
Hawthorne and
216 E. 2nd
Pomeroy Darrell
daughter.
Phone 992-5428
'

a

Wise

where

to bank. Our bank provides you with
all banking facilities plus you get top

2-HOUR
·CLEANING .

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
,ClEAN.ERS

saving interest on your saving dollar.
Plan for that rainy day now.

.

PLAY SAFE ..: BANK WITH US
'

WHfN YOU Vl'iiT . PARK FRH

PITTSBURGH

Love To Eat?
Like Quality,
Fast Service?.
JOIN US FOR GREAT
EATING, AND MODEST PRICES.

DA·IRY VAlLEY ·

'

' MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member ~='"CCeral Deposit lnsur,nce Corpor,tlon

992-2556
At The
End
Of Pomeroy Bridge
'
-

THE AMBASSADO~ QUARTETIE from th~ Circleville Bible College will he at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church at 7:30p.m. Wednesday. The Rev. Eugene Gill is pastor. The
public is invited. ·

i ______ _: ______ ~-- -:----;------1

Meigs Third in

! News ... rn Brrefs :

.
.
'fhree"'Way Meet

1h

By Uuited Press International

I

More War Temper Rising
NEW DELHI _ PRESIDENT AGHA Mohammed Yahya
Khan of Pakistan today accll!!ed India of moving troops up to the
frontier in what he termed a direct threat to Pakistan's security.
f
Yahya warned he will not permit any foreign power to inter ere in
the revolt by theeastwingofthedividednation.
The government-controlled Radio Pakistan, in a news
broadcast monitored in neighboring India today, quoted Yahya as
having said India sent the equivalent of six army divisions, or
about 60,()00 men, into West Bengal state on the border w1th East
Pakistan.

18-Year Old Vote a Shoo-in
WASHINGTON - STATE LEGISLATURES are moving
swiftly to ratify the constitutional amendment to give 18-year-olds
the right to vo,te in ali elections. Final action in time for the 1972
elections appears certain . Debates now underway m ftve key
state legislatures - Kansas, Missouri, Ohio, Oregon and Ve~monl
- will determine whether the amendment w11l be rat1f1ed m
record time. If all five fall into line behind the amendment, it will
have the necessary approvals to become the 26th amendment to
the Constitution sometime during this summer.

PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.
Saturday, Apri13,1971
HOGS - 175 to 220 15.50 to
16.75; Heavies 14 to 16; Lights 11
to 14; Fat Sows 13 to 15.20;
Boars 11 to 13; Pigs 4 to 10;
Stock Shoats By Hd. 12 to 18.
CATTLE.:_ Steers 24 to 29.50;
Heifers 23 to 28.75; Fat Cows 20
to 23· Canners 15 to 18 ; Bulls 23
to 2G:5o; SJ:ock Cows and Calves
165 to 278; Stock Steers 23.25 to
28.35; Stock Heifers 21.40 to
24.1Hl; Stock Steer Calves 28 to
J5; Stock Heifer Calves 24 to
28.75.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 46.50;
Seconds 43.85; Medium 34 to
, J7.85; Common &amp; Heavies 32 to
42.75.

Logan High School won a
three-way track meet at Logan
Monday, taking 83 points to
Wellston's 39 and Meigs' 18.
Meigs Coach John Bentley
said today the Meigs squad "is
lean and lacks talent due to
inexperience.''
Chuck Faulk placed fourth in
the broad jump, Wayne Well
was second in the high and low
hurdles, Bob Grimm was third
in 100-yard dash and fourth in
the 220, and Steve Stanley
finished third in the mile. Meigs
was last in the 880 relay. John
Thomas was third in low hurdles and Keith Vanlnwagen
third in pole vault.
Meigs will have its next meet
at Middleport with Jackson the
opposition, when the track gets
in condition.

••

Now You, Know

at

The banana "tree," actually a
gigantic herb growing to , If
height of up to 20 feet, withers
once it has produc~ its fruit.

VOL XXIII NO. 250

POME~OY-MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

BY BOB HOEFLICH
members that the situation had reached a point where the dump
The Middleport dump is no more and Middleport residents would have to he operated in accordance with state regulations or
apparently are left without any place to dispose of solid waste.
be closed.
'Renewal of a permit' for Middleport Village to operate Its
Middleport Village was cited to the hearing before the health
dump, off the Route 7 bypass in Salisbury Townahip, was denied board yesterday to show why the permit should be renewed. The
uaanimously by the _Meigs County Board of Health Tuesday board had stated that burning at the dump, lack _of fire protection
evening.
and failure to keep waste covered were reasons for citing the
Refusal of the board to renew the permit followed a hearing at village.
,
·
Trinity Chureh in Pomeroy. The village has been operatiJ't!l the
Middleport Couacil President John Zerkle, speaking at
dump without a permit since January of this year.
yesterday's .hearing, said that Middleport had made plans to
Complaints against the dump had become renewed from obtain a packer truck and begin a village operated garbage
residents of the Leading Creek and Bradbury sectors in late pickup service. Through use of the packer truck, the village could
-March when a fire developed at the dump and burned for several control dumping and the waste could be kept covered, Zerkle said.
days.
He said that Middleport would be glad to use a county landfill
Dale Dutton, president of the health board, met with council facility when one got started.
on two occasionS in Middleport and had uaofficially advised
·Middleport Couacil, meanwhile, already had approved. the

COLUMBUS - A six-month
research study indicates that
heated water discharged from
electric power generating
stations on th.o-Ohio River has
no discernible, harmful effect
on the aquatic life of the river or
the river ecology generally, it
was announced today.
The findings were contained
in the report of a study covering
the period from July through
December, 1970, based on actual field investigations con·
dueled for len electric utility
companies in Ohio, Kentucky
and West Virginia, · including
Ohio Power Co. The study is

PRESS

8 Magistrates Are Appointed
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Eight
ff' · 11
magistrates have o ICia y
been appointed by !ederal
judges of the Southern District
.of Ohio. Two fulllime and six
part-lime appointments were
made · for the new positions,
which combine the duties Of
commissioners and other work
in assisting federal judges.
Mark Abel, 26, Columbus, and
Burton Perlman of Cincinnati

KC School
Insurance
Increased

were named magistrates for
their respective cities, in eight·
year terms at an annual salary
of $22,500.
The six others, who will serve
four years, are Roger Makley of
Dayton, Joseph Freedman of
Steubenville, Harry T. Herdman of Portsmouth, Robert E.
Brown of Springfield, 'l'hoinas
R. Bopley of Zanesville and
Valla B. Mowrey of Chillicothe.

Stop in the busy Mens and Boys department lsi floor . Select a pair or two. Be sure to see
the fine group of boys shirts in stripes and
solids to match or cotJtrast these flare slacks.
Also Boys sizes and Prep sizes in Wembley
Ties .
I
.

Elberfelds In Pomer9Y

.

The new world of

Cou11terspace Cool{i11g by Corning
Corning has ~evelopeu the tirst lruly revol utionary advance in cooking in many years.
There are no coils, burners or grease traps. The
tough Pyroceram ~ glass-ceramic cooktop is
smooth and beautiful. Wilh no paris to remove, '
just imagine how easy it is to keep clean, This

Kyger Creelr's --Board of
Education Monday night approved the payment of $8,504.03
to Downing-Childs Insurance,
Middleport, for insurance on the
is Counterspace'~'M Cooking.
district's three buildlngs.
Four invisible electric elements provide pre~
-According
to
Local
cise, thermostatic control. As the surface 'ht!ats
Superintendent Comer Brad·
up, the individual sunbursts lllrn yellow to inbury, the rate
nearly
dicate which cooking areu is on. The rest of the
quadrupled over that paid In
top stays cool so you C(ln use it as extra coun~
1970. The hike was due to ~n
terspace. Both The Counlcr That Cooks""
Increase fn evaluation caused
cooktop and the Counterangen• unit come
by construction of a five-room · with a set of Cookmntes1·:-•-cook.ware ~pc·
wing 'at Addaville Elementary
cially designed for Counlerspace Cooking. And
and two unit addition at'the high
be sure to ask us about two other exciting
school-plus the .lncreas~ riots
kitchen innovations from Corning-the
and vandalism in the big city
Counter·Saver and t~c Focd Warmer. Come in
schools.
,today and.take home the kitchen of tomorrow.
The
board authorized
Bradbury to purchase a diving
board for the swimming pool ,
and granted Gary Minton, high
s.chool guidance counselor,
permission to attend a training
worl&lt;shop on the general ap·
titude testing program.
A request to purchase
. equipment for·use in. vocational
agriculture classes on a matching basis wlUt the Federal
Goverll!JW~t was tabled for
fur~ consideration. ·
F11d Wumer. Infrared
The board also denied a
hntlnR U!lit that kups
food the way you cockecllt
request by head baseball ·coaeh
unlil you're ready 10 serve.
Jolin sang 'for fuads to pay an
assistant coach.
Aspecial nie~ting
be held
'
later this month for the purpose'
of hiring teachin'g ' and nonleaching personnel.

wlll

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"

- - - ·----- --- ~-:cc
. · ---{;O (I~i 'l~ plus

Counttranlt. All the advanlllfl:l!! of Cn11r.1e rsr; ac€

• self·cleanlng oven. Available i~ whr tr, ;~voudo,
end h1rvest gold,

p ~· rr • ·n • l ol
t, II.ITI IN ii : C~ .

cor~~ IWnc

Co&gt;~nt t·), ~·,1. 1.1

KING .BUilDERS SUPPLY CO.
.

MIDDLEPORT: 0.

first reading of an ordinance providing the public service and
Mayor Fisher charged that the Middleport site "is the wrong
setting the rates. In this connection, Zerkle said he had not sup- place for dump ... The mayor said that there is not enough dirt at
ported the stipulation in the ordinance that required a mandatory . the location to use for covering and remarked also that Midminimum payment of $2.50 a month for all residents.
dleport does not ha ve the money needed to purchase another piece
·
Mayor C. 0. -Fisher of Middleport testified that the establish- of land .
ment of a landfill for the entire county is up to the county comOn the other hand, Zerkle said that there is enough fill dirt at
.missioners who, he said, "have dodged the issue."
the dump site for about a year if the village could operate the
Dutton, who presided at the hearing, stated that a county dump using the packer truck and doing it In accordance with slate
landfill would be the eventual solution but pointed out that the regulations.
Middleport dump has created a nuisance which must be corrected
It also was brought out at the hearing that the county comimmediately.
missioners have made application for federal funds whieh would
Zerkle pointed out that the Village could secure a packer be used to establish a county landfill. However, it was admitted
within a short time and would clean up all of the debrj,i..al the that such money, if granted, would be through the Ohio Valley
present dump site. However, he said, Middleport could not go into Health Services, and not available until July or even later ,
the expense of securing a packer truck until officials knew the
Mrs. Ben Rife and Mrs. Clair Might represented residents of
decision of the health board on the matter of a permit.
(Continued on page 10)

a

believed to be the first of its
kind ever made on the Ohio.
The study was made by
WAPORA, Inc., a Washington
research and consulting firm .
The utility companies have
contracted to spend $180,000 to
finance the study over a fifteenmonth period ending next
September in order to study
river conditions during all
seasonal periods.
The consulting firm is headed
by Dr . Jacob I. Bregman,
former deputy assistant
director of the Interior for
water quality and research . The

Ohio River study is being
carried out by a research team
under the direction of Dr.
Gerald Lauer , ' assistant
director of the Institute of
Environmenl.al Medicine, New
York University Medical
Center. The WAPORA research
work involved a thorough
population analysi s of the
aquatic &lt;!food chain " at various
points along the river. During
the study, the Walet' Quality
Office of the U. S. Environmental Protection
Agency, which has been conducting fish population studies
in the Ohio River since 1957.

cooperated with WAPORA.
Research involved detailed
samplin g and analysis at
various sites above and below
intake and discharge points of
four power plants on the river.
Sammis Station of Ohio Edison
Co., at Stratton, 0., Beckjord
Station of The Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co., near New Richmond, 0., Kyger Creek Station
of the Ohio Valley Electric
Corp., near Gallipolis, 0., and
Cane Run Station of the
Louisville Gas and Electric Co.,
Inc ., near Louisville, Ky.
Population counts of aquatic
(Continued on page 2)

Self-Service Kidney Perfected

SLACKS
Wrangler brand in
regulars and slims.
Solid colors - bold
stripes - novelties .
Si-zes a to 18.

TEN CENTS

River Ecology Unharmed
By Stealn Power Plants

FLARE

NEW YORK - IGOR STRAVINSKY, the Russian-born
composer who fathered modern classical music, died early today
at the age of 88 in his New York apartment. He had been ill for
some time with a heart ailment.
"The Firebird" and "Le Sacre du Printemps" (Rite Of
Sj_Jring) were among the best known of Stravinsky's 35 major
works although both were written before the 1920s when he was
credited with inventing the neoclassic style.

PHONE 992-2156

-e
0s

·&lt;,

Stravinsky Dead at 88

. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1971

•
l

MEE:riNG POSTPONED
A meeting of Ohio Valley
Grange 2612 scheduled Thursday, AprilS, has been postponed
to Thursday, April 15, due to
Holy Week activities. H. E.
Shields is master.

~ERMANENT

Clear and not as cold toni~~
Low upper 20s and lower - ,
Mostly sunny ana warmer
Thursday. High in the 50s and
low to mid 60s.

',

Another Big Shipment
BOYS

Weather

Devoted To The lnteruts Of The Meig!-Mason Area

Dayan Says His Men Won't Lose
ISRAELI DEFENSE MINISTER Moshe Dayan has vowed
his army "will not be defeated" in case new fighting with Egypt
breaks out in the Middle East. Dayan also expressed hope the
Soviets would counsel restraint in Cairo. As Israeli officials talked
of the possibility of new warfare, Palestinian guerrillas reported
"dllch to ditch" fighting with King Hussein's forces in Jordan .
The commandos called for Arab intervention to end the bloodshed.
"Egypt has prepared intensively to renew the war," Dayan
told nearly 4,000 persons at the Labor Party convention in Tel
Aviv Monday night. Both Dayan and Foreign Minister Abba S.
Eban took the podium amid the red flags of socialism and blue
and white Star of David banners to implore the E;gyplians to come
to direct peace talks with IsraeL

:•

' ON TO PEKING- Dal Joon Lee, right, Clevelalld, 8lld JOilll Tannehill, of Middleport, are
the 1·2ranked members of tile United States Table Tennis team competing In Nagoya, Japan in
the 31st World Table Tennis championships. They and the U. S. team have been invited to
Peking, Red China, by the Chinese delegation at Nagoya. The picture above was taken in
Mi~port in 1969 when Lee, U. S. champion, and Tannehill, No. 2 rl!flked, gave an exhibition.
Tarmehill is a freshman at the University of Cincinnati.

TT Team to Breach Bamboo Curtain
NAGOYA, Japan (UP!) ·_
Communist China issued an
Invitation today to U. S. ll!ble
tennis plliyers to visit Peking
and the Americans accepted.

The trip will be the first visit
by an organized group of
Americans since the Communists took over China in 1949,
although there have been visits

CAREFREE, Ariz. (UP!)Dr. Belding H. Scribner, the
medical scientist who created
an efficient artificial kidney
and with it an enormous moral
problem, has now created a
simple, self-service apparatus
which he calls the "artificial
gut."
Like the artificial kidney, it
can prolong many lives but it
can do it without the kick-back
of a moral dilemma. Unlike the
artificial kidney, it should be
within the financial reach of all
persons who face a slow death
from malnutrition due to end·
stage bowel diseases, including

cancers.
At1fie annual science writers'
seminar of the American
Cancer Society Tuesday, Scrib·
ner spoke bitterly of society
which permits people to d_ie of
end-stage kidney disease because they cannot afford to
have their blood cleaned at
least once a week by the
artificial kidney.
On the basis of his own
experience with such tragedies,
he gave this warning to cancer
.scientistS: "If you develop an
effective treatment for cancer
which is unavoidably expensive,
you're in for a long, hard and

by individuals.
Rufford
Harrison,
an
American Table Tennis
Federation official, received
the invitation from Sung Chung,
secretary general of the
Communist Chinese delegation
to the 31st World Table Tennis
I
7\T
•
1 Cly!mpionships, which have
: 1
been underway in this Japanese
I
.
I city 182 miles southwest of ·
Tokyo. Harrison accepted the Four area jaiz bands will 86 Proof, Fifth Street Band, and
By United Press Internatlonal
Invitation later in the day.
compete in a "Battle of the the T. and T. (formerly the Blue
Harrison said the team Bands" at 8:30 p.m. Thursday 'Rose Cathedral of Point
President Speaks Tonight
tentatively is set to leave Japan at the Pomeroy Juaior High Pleasant), and the Foxx Band
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON will go on national for Peking April 15.
School under the sponsorship of. (formerly known as Gordon
television tonight to announ~ what is expected to be a speedup in
the Meigs. High School Chapter Foxx).
the withdrawal of U. S. soldlers from Vietnam -an increase
of . the Vocational Industrial
sufficient to drop troop levels to.50,000 men or less by a ye,ai- from'
Clubs of America.
Judges will be Janet Korn,
this summer. AS Nixon worked over the 15-minute speeeh, for
First,prize in the contest will w·JEH radio ; Jack Kane,
delivery at9p.m. EST, word came from U.S. mill~ sources in
he $100, with trophies going to WMPO radio; and Joseph
VIetnam that the number of American soldiers .in the war zone
Two defendants forfeited the second and third place Wblte, Jr., of Minersville. the
has fallen ~elow 300,0oo for the first time in more than l'h years. bonds and three others wet:_e winners. Bands taki~g part are event is open to the public.
This would seem to indicate the Presi&lt;!ent is on the way to fined in the court of Middleport
meeting a goa! he set In his last troop withdrawal announcell)ent, Mayor C. 0. Fisher Tuesday
on Apri120, 1970. At that time he ordered a 150,000-man reduction night.
·
design to bring the level to 284,000 by this May 1. ·
Forfeiting $25 bonds were
·Henry Wilkes, 45, Huatington,
Extension of ARC Probable
posted on a charge of driving
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE R~ Committee has with expired license tags, and
cleared for floor action legislation to extend the life of the Ap· Raymond F. 'Jonker, Gahanna,
palaehian Regional Commission (ARC) and five smaller com· for indecent exposure.
Fined were Derrall R.
missions. Under the terms of the bill, expected to. see action
shortly after the Easter rec~ss. the 13-state ARC would be given Johnson, 19, Crown City, $30 ant:,___
four more years of life, until June 30, 1975, contrary to the Nixon costs, attempted theft; William
G. Beat, 78, Pomeroy, $5 and
administration's revenue-sharing plan.
intoxication, and
The administration wants to scrap the commission after one costs,
more year, .then 'Jlut its money toward the rural development Raymond G. Pendergast, 45,
section of the [ll'ogram. Strong support, bowever, has been heard Leonore, N. C., intoxication, $5
from congressmen and governors for a· continuance of the ARC. and costs.

r---------------------------,
B . ,.f.

Two.Forfeit
Court Bond

'

'

.

.. WASHINGTON - OHIO WOULD RECEIVE ABOUT $427
million during fiSCal year 1972 if Congress enacted into law the
revenue-eharing proposal of President Nix9n. Figures for' the
state under seven categories of the plan; as reported Tuesday.
would include: Educatiop '101.8 mllllon; law enforcement $21.9
mllliQII; manpoWer training· $77.7 million; urba!J community
development $89.4. million; rural community development $35.6
million; general transportation $15.1 million and urban mass
transit $25.3 million·.
.
.
The education apportionment marks an increas~ from '100:1.
million and oruy Ohio and Cal!fornia aniong the 50 states would
gain revenue In that category.
.
.

· · Unuin-Carbide ~vels 'Off
MARIE'lTA, omo - .THE MANAGER of the Union Carbide
cO. works here sal~ today Ute finn will [l!'Obably not have to

curtall production to meet' .federal anti-pollution standards as

til

originally e~ted. The finn announced earlier this f~ar at if it
(Continued on page 10)

MRS. EDWARDS

$6,000
Given to
Hospital

sa rily from kiatley failure.
The "artificial gut" has a
simple pump and a. stand on
which to hang a bottle of·
nutrientS. From it runs a tube
to an artery-vein shunt permanenlly installed in a patienl's arm . He can attach the
tube himself.

Donald H. Diener, Administrator of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, annouaced
today receipt of a gift of $6,000
made by Esther Bradbury
Edwards of Miami Beach,
Florida, and New York City.
This is the second gift made to
the hospital by Mrs. Edwards.
Earlier she gave the hospital
While he sleeps in his own funds to install much needed air
bed through the night the conditioning for the emergency
nutrients transfuse his blood room and laboratory.
stream. If anything goes wrong
The most recent gift is to he
a hell goes off, awakening him used for equipment in conand he sets matters right. By nection with the expansion of
day he lives a normal life.
the hospital, which is expected
to be completed in May. Diener
.
....
stated
that an appropriate
• '·'·'·'·"'o!·'•:O'·'·'·'.v·:.·..o..:..,.......-.:-.•,•o•;:h..;o;.;:;·x.-.·,·.~u.....u~:-::::::::-.,::~~-.;.::::=?.:.;·~:......•.:."tL·, ·
i.;~······-•.• ..•..•.·.w~ -=-,~~.c·..-....&lt; -·-•-'&lt;•'•'-'"
•
.. • ·.. .. .. -1~ plaque is helng ordered to be

·Four Combos in Battle : 1 G
Mad e Of , 14' 040 $ill recognition
placed in the hospital in
'iii
rant
of the gift.
:::l
Mrs. Edwards' mother, Mrs.

'ews .•• zn rre1 s :

Ohio Would Draw-$427 Million

disilusioning struggle."'
By his estimate only one in
every five such patients are
maintained and the others die.
To maintain one patient until
he can gel a transplanted
kidney (itself an e.pensive and
uncertain procedure ) for one
year costs $5,000. Scribner's
further estimate was that 50,000
lives could be prolonged every
year, That makes the cost of an
annual national artificial kidney
maintainence program for all
who must have it to live, $250
million . By his estimates 10,000
persons each year die unneces.

l

· A $14,040 grant has . been
approved for ·an expanswn of
the Out.()f.SChool Neighborhood
Youth Corps Program, Richard
Sayre, Executive Director of
the Meigs-Gallia Community
Action , disclosed today.
Sayre's announce~ent came
at the monthly meetmg of the
of
organization 's board
directors Tuesday in Pomeroy.
The program will be expanded

WAGGONER

ColUm b llJ
•.
'

ELICK

Best Bidder

LEE ·

The bid of the Tri-Couaty
Asphalt Co:/ Galllpolia Route I,
_to resurface aU RuUami'streets
was·accepted Tuesday night by
council in~ regular session. The
company will begin im·
mediately on the project.
The bid of the Gallia firm was
$22,438.50. Other bidders on the
resurfacing were York Con·
struction, Nelsonville; Shelly
-Co., Thornyille, and the F. H.
Brewer Co. of Lancaster.
Funds for the street improvement program will be
provided from a five mill tax .
levy approved last faU by the
voters of vi)lage,' and otlier
SARGENT
available village funds.
Bills were approved for
payment witli . Mayor Gene
Thompson, councilmen William
Gaddis, _Harvey 'Erlewine,
Robert Snowden and Ernest
service.
Nicholson; • Clerk Vernon
More than 800 employees Weber, and Treasurer. George
hav~been with Ohio Fuel or itS
White present.
·
associate Ohio companies Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., and
the Ohio Valley Gns Co. - 25 ·
LOCAL TEMPS
years or longer . · Dinners The temperature- in·downtown
· honoring ' all these employees Pomeroy at II a.m. WedOesctay, ·
are he!~ annually - at \'arious unde1· sunny : skies, w&amp;s 42
degrees.·
· ,
localiohs in Ohio.

Gas to Honor Long Service of Four
...

Laura Bradbury, has been a
patient in Veterans Memorial
for some time. Mrs. Edwards in
making the gift expressed her
praise and gratitude for work of
the hospital.
Mrs. Edwards is the daughter
of the late Asa Bradbliry and
Laura Bradbury. Her sister
Mrs. Ruih Arnold an1 he;
broth~r Cecil Bradbury reside
in Middleport.
'

Gallia Finn

Therapist
Employed

Miss . Marjorie Hudak,
Youngstown; speech therapist,
a recent graduate of Ohio
University, was awarded a one
year contract by . the Meigs
CoUnty Board of . Education
.1'\iesday mght. M1ss Hudak
replaces · Mrs.
~athy
Natemeyer who has res1gned.
In other business the board
issued. a continui~g contract to
Otis Knopp, attendance officel".
Attending were Robert Bowen,.
· county superintendent, · and
· board members George Perry,
Harold Lohse, Gordon Collins,
Harold Roush and Virgil Atkins.

·&gt;:·

from 18 to 30 enrollees.
Sayre also reported that an
application has been filed for
extension in Project Assist.
In other matters , the
resignation of Mrs. Sandra
Henderson , an aide, was accepted. Reports ~ere presented
on current proJects mcludmg
the Medical Clinic at Cheshire,
Operation Mainstream, and the
Out of School NYC Program.

\

Four Meigs County residenls, A. Clare Waggoner, Route 2, Thirty-year awards will be
inclutling one from Pomeroy, Rutland, will 00 presented a ·received by Carl E. Lee, Long
will · r~c~ive special' awards ~old watch by the ga~ company Bottom, and Doyle W. Sargent,
recogmzmg them .for long as he is 4n!lucted into the club Route 2, Pomeroy.
service at the Columbia Gas \lpon completion •of 25 years of
The Southern Quar.ter CenSystem Southern Quarter · service.
Century Club banquet Wedtury Club has a membership of
nesday, April 21, · at the . A 40.year service award .will 318 ·active · and retired · em·
American Legion Hall, · Lan- be presented Walter Elick, ployees of the Ohio Fuei Gas.co.
caster.
·
Route
I; Rushville. ·
. All have 25 or IJlore years of
I

�I

•

,

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

!Helen Help Us!

Riggs Twirlers Win Big
Students of Mrs Judy Riggs majorettes who won three ftrst
at baton lw1rl10g compeltlions places m team competilton.
Those wmning the 37 trophies
10 Charleston and Parkersburg
over the past two weekends at Charleston mclude D1ana
brqught home ~ total of 131 Guthne, grand champtonshtp
trophies and two grand and mne trophtes; Debbte Ford,
champiOnships
seven; Debbte Burkhammer,
· Ninety-four of the trophies stx, Louann Newell, five,
were won at Parkersburg Glona Barber, f1ve; Lisa Kuhn,
Sunday in compelitton with three and Cmdy Patterson, two.
approximately 300 twirlers The Riggs Royal Kad-eltes won
!rom as far away as South ftrst place in the JuniOr corps
Bend, Ind.
divisiOn at Parkersburg.
Trophies won by the gtrls at
These twirlers will be m
Parkersburg 10clude Tern act10n agam on Apnl 25 m
Vannoy, grand champiOnship
plus seven trophtes; Diana
Guthrie, mne trophieS ; Debbie
THE HARO SELL
Ford, nine ; Debbie BurkCOLUMBUS (UPI ) - Stale
hammer , 10 ; Ltbby Ann Liquor Director Richard
Watkins, four ; Debbte England, Guggenhaun satd his departfour; Karen Strausbaugh , mentIS consldermg the sale of
ei.ght ; Conme Rector, seven; · liquor by the case, an mcreased
_Lisa Kuhn, one; Misty Russell, allowance of br10gmg out-of: three ; Carla Matlack, one; state liquor back to Oh1o, and
IJouann Newell, four; Cmdy the sale of liquor m two-ounce
Patterson, four ; Sherr a Dawn bottles as possible ways to boost
Russell, three; Suzy Goebel, sales
three, Glona Barber, three;
·
Becky Windon, one ; Marcta
Carr, two; Jerrt England, one;
Debbte Scott, one ; Daleleen
Scott, two; Cheryl Kuhn, one; Wtlliam McKmley was the
Dtane Hall, one, and the f1rs t U S prestdent to nde
Federal Hockmg High School 10 an a utomob1le, m 1899.

compelitwn w1lh lwrrlers from
a three state area mcludmg
Ohio, West Vtrgtma and Kentucky at Eastern H1gh School
when the Eastern Band
Boosters wtll sponsor the official Mtss Trt.Siale Majorette
Queen Pageant Wmners will
advance to the Drum
Majorettes
of
America
naltonals m Charlotte, N. C, 111
August when the selection of the
new Majorette Queen of
Amenca wtll be selected.

TiiESE STUDENTS of Mrs. Judy Riggs returned home with approximately 130 trophies
and two grand champiOnshipS following baton twirling compelltion events in Charleston and
Parkersburg over the past two weekends Pictured with the numerous trophies they won are
Iron! row, from lbe left, Misty Russell, Daleleen Scott, Libby Ann Walkins, Carla Matlack,
Debbie England, Lisa Kuhn; second row, from the left, Becky Windon, Debbte Scott, Louann
Newell, Karen Strausbaugh, Cindy Patterson, Sherra Dawn Russell; back row, from the left,
Tem Vannoy, Conme Rector, Debbte Ford, Debbie Burkhammer, Gloria Barber and Dmna
Gulhrte.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Three Basic
Bridge Rules
NORTH
"'Q7
¥K6 5
+ A872
oloQI0 93

WEST
.J854 3
¥7 3

Veteraus Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Louise
Farley, Long Bottom; Lucille
Harrison, Middleport; George
Roush, New Haven ; Helen
Harris, Mason ; George Taylor,
Minersville
DISCHARGED - Kenneth
Snider , Etta Custer, Alva Reed,
Robert Stelle, John Wtllbarger,
Estella Smith.

7

EAST
.K96
¥J l042

+QJ0 6

+J94

.8 54

oloA76

soum &lt;D&gt;

FOUR HONORED- Left to right, Harriett Layne, valedictorian of Wahama High School;

Coze tte Cooke, salutatorian; Cecrba Smith and Kathy Foglesong, honor students,

oloA102

¥ AQ98

+ K5 3

oloKJ2
Both vulnerable

River Ecology

West

North

East South

Pass

3 NT

Pas&lt;;

I NT.
Pass

Miss. Layne Valedictorian
Of 1971 Class at Wahama

(Continued from Page I )
turbtdily, probably due to
P OS$
life ranged from smgle celled scouring of the nver bottom by
Openmg lead - • 4
plants (phytoplankton ), tmy barge traffic, and few smtable
floating
ammal
life nestmg areas
Harnett Layne has been
The r eport by WAPORA By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby named valediclonan, Cozetle
(zooplankton ), river bottom
species (bcnthtc orgamsms pointed out that further mToday's hand IS t a k e n Cooke salutalonan, and Cec1ba
includmg worms, larvae, vesbgat10n of fish spawnmg, from the sectwn of "Wm at Smtih and Kathy Foglesong
clams, crayfish, etc .), all a part benthic populatiOn of the nver Bridge with .JACOBY MOD· honor students of the 1971
of the food cham for the fish and photosynthebc productiVIty ERN" that dea ls w1th the graduatmg class at Wahama
populatton, to various types of of algae ts proceedmg m order play of the ca1ds
West opens the foUl of H1gh School.
fish . These counts were to reach more def1mte conMiss Layne, the daughter of
spades and the fu·st 1ule of
correlated w1lh physiCal and elusiOns For example, a play the hand Illustrates 1s Mr. and Mrs Robert Layne of
chemtcal
., conditiOns 10 the number of tests showed the old one of second hand New Haven had a 4 0 average
nver
populatton mcreases of bottom low The seven ; hould be Her aciiviiies mclude, Nalwnal
Intenm conclustons of the orgamsms below power plant pl ayed hom dummy Th1s Honor Society, Wh1te Falcon
WAPORA study mdiCale that· discharges. Smce the OhiO play tnsures two spade tncks Band, and All-Stale Band, week
I. Fish populabon of the Ohio River has an extremely low for declm e1 1ega1 dless of m Washington wmner, member
Rtver has not changed bottom populalton, an mcrease how the spade Slllt Is di- of Who's Whom Amencan Htgh
Slgmftcantly between 1957 and 10 this unporlant source of food VIded
Aile! Wllllllllg the l I I S t
1970 even though the power for game fish would be tuck S o u t h Is lookmg at
capac1ty has mcreased greatly. favorabl e. However , much flu ee hem t tucks and two
The low ratto of game fish to more fteld research is reqUired diamond t 1 1c k s but they
"rough" fish (scavenger types, to delermme possible bene· a1en't g01 ng to gel a w a y
such as carp; buffalo and fiCtal effects of healed dis- from him Instead . South
should work on the sUit 111
has
remamed charges
suckers)
essenllally constant durmg this
The power compames, m wh1ch he can develop tr1cks
mterval
sponsormg continued studies by That IS clubs and he simply Paul Gulhne, on leave from
2. Tests conducted above and WAPORA m this increasingly plays clubs unlll East takes college 10 Searcy, Ark., spent a
hts ace r!e Will wmd up
below each plant did not show a unportant f1eld of river ecology, making at least 10 tncks few days w1th bts parents, Mr.
shift from the desirable diatom hope that results will not only after this s1mple start
and Mrs Gerald Gulhne and
type of algae to the less throw more light on the
This hand 1s simple m- Dtana
desirable green or blue-green relahonship
of
he ated · deed Now, change South's Helen Follrod came Saturday
groups associated wtth thermal discharges and aquatic btology, spade holdmg to ace-three· to spend three monthS with her
pollution. The zooplankton but may reveal the posstbilities two. With this holdmg he s1sler, Nma Robinson and
popul~llon was similar m of positive programs which may should forget about second stster-m-law, Clara Follrod
quanhty and quality above and have broad pubhc servtce hand low and play dummy's Several local people have
below discharge points.
Implicaltons m management of queen of spades smce thai been suffering from colds and
IS the only way to get some flu
3 Dissolved oxygen m the the environment
·
good out of that card under
rtver was generally higher
Ass1shng Dr. Lauer m the these circumstances
Mr and Mrs. Charles D.
below power pomls than above research project are A.
Woode attended funeral serEast wtll cover with the vices for Charles Hudnall at the
... a benefiCial effect attributed Chmtopher Gross, research
kmg and now South must
to turbulence created by coolmg ecologist, WAPORA's project follow another basic prmci· Ftrst Apostohc Church at
water dtscharges While the leader, and Davtd B. Boies, ple of play to make the con· Albany last Tuesday. Tbey also
temperature was shg)Ily htgher WAPORA 's director
of tract. He must hold back hts VIsited his ststers, Carrie
at the surface near the research
ace ol spades until the third Burson, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
discharge pomts, there· was no
The companies sponsoring lead. Then he goes about the Roscoe Orr, The Plains, briefly,
indtcallon of excessive heat or the research are the eight busmess of knockmg out the and called on his aunt, Vina
" thermal blockage " whtch mel"ber companies of The Ohio ace of clubs and 'when East Woode, In the -O'Bleness
~ets in he won't have a
could affect migration of fish . Electric Ullllly Institute and spade to lead to hts partner Memorial Hospital (who will be
From the standpoint of sp..-ts lwo Kentucky companies. The
96 on May 1).
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l
f1shmg,) t is desl!'able to bave as sponsormg companies are : The
Clara Follrod and Nma
h1gh a propiB'tiOn of game to Ctncinnalt Gas &amp; Electric Co.,
Robinson visited Mr. and Mrs,
Electric
''rough" ftsh as possible. Some The Cleveland
Otto Swartz at .Shade, 0., last
The bJddmg has b..,n
of the factors influencing the llluminatmg Co., Columbus and
Tuesday afternoon.
North
East
South
prevalence of game fish . in- Southern Ohto Electric Co , The West
Mr and Mrs . Clarence
1¥
Pass
2 olo ,
elude: a he~lthy population of Dayton Po.wer 'and Light Co., Pass
Henderson bad word from !heir
?
3•
. Pass
bottom organtsms and an OhiO Edison Co, Ohto Power
son-m-law and daughter and
You, South, huld
adequate number of shallow, Co., The Toledo Edison Co., .AZ ¥AJ4 t63 ,foK 1QJ753 grandson, Sgt. and Mrs. David
What dQ you do r.otv '
qu1el areas lor spawning and Monongahela Power Co .,
WIIhams and Aaron, stationed
A-Bid
three
spades.
You
are
flCsting. The WAPORA studies Kentucky Ubhttes Co., and in'tcreHled" In !il&amp;m hut don't 10 Guam, tl)atlhey had recently
md1ca\ed a very luw bottom. Louisville Gas and Electnc Co., want to t1 y four no·lrvmp be.- ~ made a VISit to the Phtlippine
fh1m lhu•1 nruu m ~m cmml .. h1u.h lnr•
·.....,.., •• ··' .,............... . u • ._ .....o~..
Islands

A(j'red
Socia1 Notes

-

1

.

OYC POST FILLED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
superintendent of the Fall'fleld
School for Boys at Lancaster,
Wtlliam M. BalsoJI, was named
Tuesday the assistant dtrector
of the Ohto Youth Cornmission.

PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - Wesley
Jones , Henderson ; James
O'Neil, Point Pleasant; Steve
Porter, Gallipolis; Mrs Jack
Randolph, Kenneth -Pridemore,
Poml Pleasant, IV.rs. Genevieve
Taylor, Columbus ; Mrs Lewis
Peters, Jr ., Clifton; Mrs
Charles Meadows, Mason; Mrs
Danny Adkins, Glenwood.
DISCHARGES Isaak
Wallis, Mrs. Claude Smes,
Leroy Hill, Paul Akers, Mrs.
Bernard Jordan, Mrs. James
Johnson, Mrs Clifford Cornell,
Mrs. Paul Buck, Diane and
Rhonda Burgess
Mrs. Lilah Powell, of New

~;~~il~o~~i~!~~:n~~~~ ~~~~::~~~~:~~;~~~:~
r------------------------------------------

School Honor Sociehes, DAR
Good C11Izen Award, glee club,
drama club, Thesptans, juniOr 1
class play, member of St. Paul's
Lutheran Church, active in the I
Luther League, choir and
• BY JACK O'BRIAN
aSSistant orgamsl.
WHAT'S IN NAME? ASK
Cozette Cooke, wtth a 3 9687
LINDSAY AND ROCKEFELLER
average, was named saNEW YORK - N. Y. Sen. Basil Paterson
lutatonan. Miss Cooks is the (the only black politician who refused) told us
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil John Undsay personally tried to gel him to back
Smtih of Mason.
hizzoner in his mayoral campaign ll'ith an offer
Her activtlies are National of "name your job." .... He refused them
· · ·a11 ....
Honor Society, member of Further blandishments led the fine public serWho's Who m American High vant to test Jawn's promises: he'd take the
School Honor i Socieltes,
delegate to Girls' State, student police comrnissionel'ship, Paterson suggested ...
council, While Falcon Band, "Welllll ..."Lindsay welled," ... you'll be con·
band president, majorette, sidered." .... Gov. Nelson Rockefeller tried to
Jumor class officer, pep club, enlist Harlem's Mr. Integrity AFTER Basil had
G.A.A
I b
. J . Dr amacu,so
flball lost the lieut.gov election, but Rockefeller was
team, junior class play. 4-H refused too .... Quite a man, Basll Paterson.
member, member of the Umted
Rocky Graziano tries to turn handsome
Methodist Church and Youth touches f..- his flstic frtends who haven't become
Fellowshtp.'
millionaires as The Rock has: He talked an ad
Honor students, Cecilia Smith agency into hiring Sugar Ray Robinson to~ his
with a 3.9 average, is the ethnic opposite parbler in a beer commercial
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil (Hamm's) with $5,0011 "m front" .... They shot
Smith of Mason and • Kathy the first half of the TV pitch - at which point
Foglesong is the daughter of Sugar Ray demanded his 5,0011 then and
Donald F91!lesong of Mason and there .... The agency had to SCI'ounge through
the late Ellen Foglesong. She closed offices for the cbeck Sugar would
bad a 3.91 average.
have received the next day, Rocky told
Miss Smith's activities in- us .... This lime Graziano's similar beneficence
elude, National Honor Society, bas reached out to Dick Tiger, erstwhile chamJI
delegate to Camp Horseshoe, who lost everything in Blafra 1a theater, several
F .H.A. officer• Journalism club, apartment houses, a home and assorted business
Junior Mason County Fair interests) in the Nigerian War -Sir RockweU
Board Member •bowling league, chose Tiger for his next commercial partner ....
4-H club, natlonlli award for
style review in 4-H sewing, Dick Tiger's now working at the Museum of
~ember ,Mason
United Natural History for $98 a week - while wailing
Methodist Church, Youth for his next fight.
Feilowshtp, choir and pianist.
Omar Sharif's girls, horses and cards got him
Miss Foglesong is a member the nickname "Three Bs" - broads; banglalls
of the Nalij)nal Honor Society, and bridge .... No booze ... George C. Scott Is a
delegate to GirL,• State, student male chauvinist ham: Wouldn't let wife Colleen
counctl, listed in Who's Who in Delvhurst even try on a pair of hot pants at the
American High · Schools, St. Laurent Rive 'Gauche on Madison Ave ....
Thespians, G.A.A.R., bowling ~nght her a demure blouse and along pleated
league, member Mason skirt .... Probably off to Reisenweber's. for a
M~lhodist Church, Youth sarsaparilla and a float,
Fellowship, 4-H, club, Riverview
Opening night at the Ringling Circus In
Saddle Club, Ohio Valley Horse ·Madison Square Garden, a 3C).foot stlltwalker
Show. ,
~the Big Top has only two - married Shelljl and
One hundred and one studenla Barry Sloan) feU headlong and lay Inert 20
will graduate Tuesday, June' I. minutes until the ambulance came : II was
Baccalaureate services will be Sheila, we learned later; she sustained a broken

Voice along Broadway

!;!,,..,,1-.,

· · - ·· !!lA

-· 6 -

-

!
'

Tim De1 oskey, stylish left·
bander, c-hilled Wellston
Tuesday f a 6-0 whitewash as
the Me1g Marauders made
their sea record 2-1 pverall
and 1·1 1 Southeastern Ohto
League b seball action Demos y, a se~io r , gave up
a smgle the opemng frame,
then proreded to strike out 13
and ISSIIj only th ree passes He
never "f-S m trouble
The Narauders bunched five
hils m ~o mnmgs. In the sixth,
I
semor pecond baseman Roger
Abbott/ doubled, Roger Dixon
smgle~ and Ch1p Haggerty
doubl scormg Abbott and
DIXO
In /le seventh, Gene Powell
walkjd. Dave Boyd got on by
suc~ss1ve errors , Wllson
wal!Cd and Haggerty was safe
on ~ error Three runs scored
Ir the sixth mm ng, Abbott
als! scored on 0Lxon )s smgle
Ppbott and Haggerty each
hal a double and smgle, and

•

Texas Five
Eliminated

and JarvLs

Lakers Top
Bulls, Face
Milwaukee
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP! )Will Chamberlain, tbe aging
. Io ge t a crac k a I .
giant, IS gomg
young Lew Alcmdor.
The man who once scored 100
pomls m a pro baskethall game
collected 25, pulled down 19
rebounds and assisted on nine
· ht a
other ba skeIs Tues da Y mg s
the Los Angeles Lakers beat the
Chtcago Bulls 109-98.
That put the Lakers squarely
m the path of Alcmdor and the
MilwaukeeBucksfortheNBA's
Western Conference title.
"I don't want to think ahout
Milwaukee right now," a tired
Chamberlam said. "Just gtve
me 24 hours to thmk about this
wm.''
The Lakers, who lost Jerry
West m the last month of the
regular season with a knee
lll]ury, won their best-of.,seven
game quarterback play off
senes from Chtcago 4-3.
All four of their VIctones
came here. In fact, Los Angeles
took e1ght m a row from the
Bulls at the forum this season.
Grul Goodrich, the Lakers'
replacement for the mjured
West, pumped m 29 points and
Happy Hal!'ston added 22. The 6foot-1 Goodrich averagoo 31.4 m
the Chicago series, 14 more tban
his regular season average.
LoS Angeles lost ftve of six
meetings to Milwaukee this
season with west in the lineup
and Alcmdor outplayed by the
34-year-old Cbamberlam. Bulls'
coach DICk Motta thinks the
Lakers could win, however
"If Wtlt plays agamst Lew as
well as he did against us, they
(the Lakers) bave an excellent
chance ," Motta sa1d. ~'He in·
timidated us somethmg awful."
The Bulls, who never have
won a play,off senes m four tries
m their five-year exiStence,
were ahead 85-83 with eight
mmules to go. Jim Mcmillmn, a
rookie who took West's place m
the Lakers lmeup, then sank a
25-fooler to tie the score and
Keith Enckson then made a
field goal with 7:24 remainmg to
put the Lakers shead to stay.
Leadmg the way for Chtcago
were Jerry Sloan and Bob Love
w1th 24 pomts apiece.

Fnday Saturday Sunday

Certified
Gas Stations
538 W Ma m

Pomeroy ,0 .

!We honor BankAmencjrd
and Master Charge)
I

By

By United Press International

FREE BABY DiiCK
Apnl 9, 10, 11, 1971
lwlth 8 gals gas)

e-H'itter Shuts Out Wellston 6~0
Mays Belts 629th Homer

DIXOn With a smgle, Abbott ----------~--~------~----------------------------~---con1Inu10g h1s tornd early
season hitlmg pace.
Meigs
000 003 3-6 5 0
Wellston
000 000 0-0 I 4
Demosky and Dixon. Ratcliff

By United Press 1nlernatlonal
Th~ New York Nets and the
f londtans are back m the
runnmg m the Amencan
Basketball AssocJallon's playoffs But for the Texas Chaps
It's wa1l hll next year
The Chaps were ehmmated m
four stratght games when they
bo&gt;ed to the Utah Stars 128-107
Tuosday mght. The Stars now
w1U face e1ther Indiana or
Menph1s m the Western
Corference fmals The Pacers
leal thetr senes 3.0 and can
I
wrf 11 up tomght with a
VIC ry at Memphis
1 e Nets beat the Vrigm1a
Sq res 135-131 for their first
v 1c~r y agamsllwo losses whtle
the1Flondians also cut thetr
defb t to 2-1 by tnppmg the
Ke1lucky Colonels 120-102 The
Ne' meet the SqUires agam
Ionghi while the FlondiansCohnels next game IS set for
Th&lt;fsday mght
Uah placed mg ht men m
do!j&gt;le figures m oustmg Texas
II o* the playoffs Ron Boone
led the way wtlh 23 pomls and
Milt Butler had 20 Levern
Tan topped the Chaps wtth 31
pmrts
' Trn Nets trailed 99-91 gmng
mto t111 fmal quarter but rallted
behmd the shoot10g of Rtck
Barry, who flmshed wtlh 43
pmnts. Mike Barrett and
Charlie Scott paced V1rgmta's
attack with 27 pomts each.
Little Mack Calvm powered
the Flmdtans' attack wtth 24
pomts and stx of Calvm's
teammates h1 t double figures m
the vrtory over Kentucky
- Forme1 Flond1an Les Hunter OLYMPIC APPOINTMENT
NEW YORK (UPI)- Col F
• led the Colonels with 21 pomts
Don
Mtller, USA (Ret.) has
wh1le ~ t gh-scormg Dan Issei
been appomted asststant execuwa&amp; held to 17.
tive director of the Umted
States Olympic Commll!ee, 11
was announced Tuesday by
Easter Weekend President
Clifford H. Buck of
Denver

greatest of all Greatest Shows on Earth.
Ava Gardner says she's disenchanted with
men; what the bay, Sinatra also retired ....
Marty "Hello Dere" Allen makes his moolah m
the lop saloons, such as the Copa, but he never
drinks no matter how he looks .... One credit
card's so slow-pay, restaurants ask clients to use
another, aity olher .... Toots Shor's elosed, as
expected for about a year.
Foley Square rwnor says the boom's falling
toward one judge; we won't say which pr where
.... Bristol Cathedral in England just hired the
Reverend Charles Shells as canon; he'll do a
bang-up job, like a shot, hot as a pistol, eh,
BenneiiCerf? .... Andy Warhol says he dldn.'l use
very good painton his famed tomalo-&lt;)an, big .fee
(we'll never figure why) daubs .... Paramount's
Doug Cramer tried to pacify a dogfight in his
yard and was bitten in the fracas; !bat's just
south of the lumbar .... Oh.
David Frost's Westinghouse pact was ex·
tended to July '72 .... !Wlls-Royce named its
engines after English rivers: the Dart, Spey,
Conway, Tyne; the Alle snuck in without corporate okay .... Shortage of patrons has Eastside •
pubs laying on less expensive drinks and endless ·
widely assorted hors d'oeuvres : Tbal's Uptown
for the "lree lunch" we used to wolf down at
Centre Markel Place in our pollee-reporting
days ... Rocky of the Benibana restaurant chain,
· the amazing lad who won his flyweight wrestling
medals on TV during the '60 Rome Olympics,
gets onto the tube again with Dinah Shore ....
This shrewdly ambitious lad now has 16
restaurants - one of the few chaina wherein the
food's fine every time. Few N.Y. neighborhood
theaters bother with uShj!I'S, hardly any use I
usherettes, and managers carrying guna Ia the

Nahonat League
East
W. L

Pdlsburgh
Ch1cago

I
1
New York
1
0
St Lours
Philadelph•a 0
Montreal
0
West

Pd. GB

01000
01000
01000
1 000
1 000
I 000

L. Pel GB
1 0 I 000

W

Atlanta

San Franc1sco 1

0 1.000

Hooslon
1 1 .500 112
Los Angeles
1 1 .500 '12
San
D1ego
0
Cln"nnail
o 11 .000
.000 11
Tuesday's Results
Ch•cago 2 St LoulS 1, 10 mn
N Y 4 Mont 2, 4'h mn., raln
P1lfs burgh 4 Philadelph•a 2
Los Angeles 2 Houston 0
San Franc!Sco 4 San D1ego 0
(Only games schedule~)
Today's Probable P1tr.hers
1All T1mes EST)
(1970 Pilchmg Records)
Sl LoulS (Carlton 10 191 al
Ch&lt;cago !Hands 18 15), 2 30
pm
Montreal !Renko 1311) at
New York (Gentry 9·9) , 2 p m
Los Angeles (Sulton 15 131 al
Houston !Blasingame 3·3), 8 30
pm
Allanta IReed 7·10) at
Cmcmnail IMcGlo!hiln 14·101. 8
pm
San FranclSco I Perry 23·13)
at San D1ego (K~rby 10-161.
10 30 p.m
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Ch1cago at Houston, mght

Mon!real at New YO!'k
Ph1la al P1tlsburgh, mghl
San Fran at San D1ego, n1gh

(Only games scheduled)

Amerdr.an League

East
W. L. Pr.t.
Wash1ngton
I 0 1.000 GB
I 0 1.000
Boston
I
01000
Detroit
0 0 000 1
Baltim ore
0 1 000 1' '
New York
0 1 .000 1
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pd.
Milwaukee
1 0 1 000 GB
Kansas C1ly
1 0 1 000
Ch!cago
o 0 000 '12
Caldorn1a
0 1 000
M.nnesota
0 1 000 :
Oakland
0 1 000 1
Tuesday's Results

Boston 3 New York 1

Milwaukee 7 Mmnesota 2

Delro1l8 Cleveland 2

Kansas City 4 Callfornr a 1

(On ly games scheduled)

VITO STELLINO

UP! Sports Writer

_
Willie Mays, 39 years young,
couldn't have picked a better
way to start the 1971 baseball
season
Mays, who'll be 40 on May 6,
stepped into the batter's box
for h1s first turn of the season
Tuesday mght w1th two out and
none on He promptly slammed
Tom Phoebus' first pitch mto
the lower deck of the ieflfield
seals
II was homer No 629 for
Mays That's JUSt 110 homers
away from Babe Ruth's h1slon c
714 mark
Mays' homer was all that
Juan Mancha! needed to beat
the San D1ego Padres 4.0 on a
five-hitter II was the 47th
shutout of Manchal's career
and was a good omen for the
pitcher, who was atllng much of

Todanf'(obable Pitr.hers
(All l'lmes EST)
(1970 P1lr.hing Rer.ords)
Ch1cago (John 12 17 and
Johnson 4 7) at Oakland (Fm
gers 7 9 and Hmler 18 14), 2
games begin 4 30 p.m
Milwaukee (Krausse 13181 at ~
Mmneso!a ( Blyleven 10 9), 2 15
pm
Washmgton

(Cox

8 12)

at

National League

Philadelph•a
000 010 001- 2 8 4
P1llsburgh
020 010 Olx- 4 7 0
Short, Brandon (7) Hoerner
(7) and McCarver , Ellis 11 ·0)
and Sa nguillen LP Shari 10 1)
{41/z

mmngS, ra1n)

Monlreal
002 oo- 2 4 1
New York
120 lx- 4 7 0
Morton 10 1) and Bateman ,
Seaver (1 .0) and Grole
(10 mnmgsl

St

LOUI S

000 000 100 o-- 1

3 0

Ch1cago

200 000&gt;-- 2 6 o
Houslon 000 000 0110- 0 • 0
Osteen (1 0) and • . ••
W•lson, Ray IS) and Edwards.
Lp Wil son (0 I) HR Buckner
I lsi)
000

San Franc1sco

110 001 001- 4 9 0
San D•ego 000 000 0110- 0 5 2
Man cha! (1 O) and D1etz,
Phoe bus, Ross (7), Sevennsen
19) and Canmzzaro LP Phoe
bus (0 1) HR Mays (lsi)

MINOR SURGERY
LEXINGTON, Ky (UP!) Veteran basketball coach
Adolph Rupp of Kentucky was
scheduled to undergo rumor
surgery on an atlmg foot at the
umvers1ly's medical center
here
A umvers1ty spokesman satd
Rupp would be hospitalized
about two months while he
recuperates from the operation.
' Rupp, 69, entered the hospital
Monday.

SOUTH AFRICAN TENNIS
JOHANNESBURG (UP! )
Top-seeded Ken Rosewall eas1ly
defeated Julie Mayers Tuesday,
6-1 , 6-1, 6-4, to move into the THE ORIGINAL MARATHON
ATHENS, Greece (UPI)third round of the South Afncan
Open lawn tenms champiOn- Aklo Usamt of Japan led 30
distance runners !rom 16
ships
countries and 40 Greek track
men to the f1msh line TueSday
as he won the mnth classtcal
marathon in' the time of 2 hours
19 :25 . Australian John Farrmgton was second in 2:21:56
and New Zealander Jack Foster
fmished thtrd m 2.22 .29.

(7):

Pro Standings

Wrap~araund

tread for stable

cornering control
• Track lP-slcd up to 100 MPH

• Smnnth no·lh\lmp ride

While Walls
S25x14
Tubeless
plus 52 36
Fed Ex. Tax
&amp; old lll'e

IN A
GUARANTEED
.
USED CA.R

The f i r s t public·fmanced
employment offiCe was estabhsiled m New Y o r k in
1834, accordmg to Encyclopaedia Br1tanmca

AT. • • •

M7~00~E~·~::~~~~~9~9-2-.2i•O•Ii.l
-'I
-------

992-3422
Locust St.

EJCec . Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Ed11or
Publi shed da lly exce pt
Sat urday by The Ohio Valley
Pub lis htng Company , 111
Court St , Pom e roy , Oh io,
45769 Bu s.ness Off ic e Phone
99:l 2156, Edi torial Ph one 992

2157

.

Secon d cla ss pos tag e patd at
representative

USED CAR LOT
, 0. .

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

Pom ero y, Oh•O
Nat i onal adver1ts1 ng

KEITH GOBLE FORD
..

2 and Kansas City topped
Califorma 4-1
Mays 2-for-5
Besides the homer; Mays also
doubled m the sixth mnmg and
scored on Ken Henderson's
smgle to f1msh the game w1th a
2-for-5 mark Mancha! allowed
the Padres only fo ur stngles
and a double and d1dn't allow a
runner past second
The Jenkms-G1bson duel delighted the capacity crowd of
41 ,121 m Clucago J~nkms only
gave up three h1ts- mcludmg
.Joe Torre's homer m the
seventh - wh1le Gibson was
touched for seven. Johnny
Calhson doubled 111 the Cubs'
f1rst run off Gibson m the
fo,urlh
An Osteen Shutout
Walt Alston rested Riehle
Allen m the second game of the
season but the Dodgers d1dn 't

'

2, Chicago edged St Lows 2-1 m
10 mnmgs, Los Angeles blanked
Houston 2-0, San Franctsco shut
out San Diego 4-0 and New York
downed Montreal 4-2 m a game
called after 4'1.! mmngs because
of ram.
Ray Culp pttched a threehitter and drove in what proved
to be the wmmng run w1th an
Infield out m the seventh as the
Red Sox won !hell' opener
before a crowd of 34,517 at
Boston. A 17-game winner 10
1970, Culp carried a one-h1l
shutout mto the etghth, when
the Yankees scored lhetr run on
three smgles and an error.
Andy Kosco drove m four runs
with a homer, a fielder's chotce
and a two-run double to lead
J11 tlwaukee's 12-hit attack,
which tagged Jim Perry, a 24game wmner and AL Cy Young
Award winner m 1970, with the
defeat. Berme Smith drove 10
two runs for the Brewers with a
bases-filled double. Marty
Pattin, 14-12 m 1970, went the
distance for the Brewers.
Lou P!niella 'singled ~nd
doubled, scored two runs and
DICk Drago threw a six-hitter
for Kansas Ctty in Its victory
over Galiforma. Cookie Rojas
drove home Pmtella both times,
first on a forceout and then on a
sacrifice fly. Clyde Wright, a 22game wmner for the Angels last
season, took the. loss.

m1ss h1s bat (he was 0-for-4 m
the first game) because rookie
Btll Buckner btl a two-run
homer , hts ftrst m the majors.
That was all that Claude Osteen
needed needed to blank the
Astros on four ht ts. Don Wtlson
suffered the loss.
Dock Elhs pitched an eighthttter to give the Pirates the
victory over the Phiis Elhs
also climaxed the lwo-run
second inmng by squeezmg m a
run w1th a bunt back to pitcher
Chns Short The Ph1ls made
fo ur errors and only one of the
three runs off Short was
earned
It was almosl Imposstble to
play baseball m the ra m and
sleet at Shea Stadium but the
Mets and Expos tned anyway
They got m the 4''2 mmngs that
were needed to make II official
before the ump1res fmally
called II Tom Seaver wound up
w1th a four-hit victory despite a
two-run smgle by Ron Fairly tn
the fourth mmng Two of the
Mets' four runs off Carl Morton
were unearned because of a
thro"mg errol by Bobby Wme
Donn Clendenon and Jerry
Grote each had a double and a
s10gle off Morton

YOUR
MONEY
here and watch it
" bloom"!. Earn at our
currenl annual rate of

4~%

or 5%

on 6-month savmgs
ce rtificates.

MeiiiS Co. Branch

,,
Mergs County Branch of The•
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co

296 Second 51.
Pomeroy, Oh1o

H&amp;R FIRES.TONE'S

RANGE SPECIAL
Budget
Priced!
• Lighted cooktop
and oven.
• Removable picturewindow door.
• Convenience outlet.

ONLY

$25

00

H&amp;R Firestone
Ill. 2nd Ave.

992-2238

Middleport, 0.

GOBLE

"' The Dai~ sentinel

1

The Boston Red Sox defeated
the New York Yankees 3-1, the,
Milwaukee Brewers bea I the
Minnesota Twins 7-2 and the
Kansas City Royals topped the
California Angels 4-1, m other
AL openers.
In the Nattonal League,
Pittsburgh beat Phtladelphia 4-

Ka n Ci ty 020 101 1100- 4 9
Cai•IO!'n•a 000 010 ooo-- 1 6 1
Gailla Academy High School ptlches. Waverly committed
Dargo (I 0) and Marllnez
Wn ghl, Allen (6), FiSher
stole 10 bases, got another seven costly errors
La Roche (9) and Moses LP- superb pitching performance
Burnett and Chuck Perroud ,
Wnghl (0 1)
from senior lefty Dave Burnett, sophomore catcher, paced the
cracked out seven hils and look Galhans offenstve attack w1th
advantage of a leaky Waverly two hils each. John Davts,
defense to chalk up a 7.0 victory juniOr thtrd baseman, had a
ABA Playoff Standings
By Umted Press lnternahonal over the Tigers at Waverly lhtrd mnmg double for GAHS.
(DIVISIOn Semlflnotls)
Tuesday evemng .
Kev Sheets, sophomore right
IBest of Seven)
It was the Gallians' thtrd fielder, doubled m the sixth.
East
stra1ght
diamond vtctory
In the frrsl, with two out,
Senes 'A'
W. L Pr.l. agamst no setbacks. Inside the Bw:nett was safe on an error.
V1rgm1a
2 1 667 Southeastern Ohto League's The GAHS semor stole second.
New York
1 2 333 Southern DIVISIOn, the charges Tom Prose walked Burnett
Seru~§ '8'
W. L. Pel. of Coach Jim Osborne upped broke the scoring tee when
Kentucky
2 1 677 their mark to 2-o, and moved Waverly 's second baseman
Flond1ans
l 2 .333 1010 undisputed first place. booted John Davis' grounder.
West
Ironton's game with Jackson GAHS added two more m the
Senes 'C'
W. L. Pr.l. Tuesday was postponed by ram. fourth on a single by Perroud,
lnd1ana
3 0 1.000 Waverly IS 0-1 m conference sacrtftce by Sheets, a walk to
Memphr s
0 3 .000
play
RICk Boone, a stolen base and
Series'D'
W. L. Pr.l.
Burnell, m trouble only once an error by the Waverly third
x Ulah
4 0 1.000 durmg the abrev1ated (six 111 - baseman.
Texas
0 4 000 mngs) contest, allowed cmly two
Burnett singled lo open the
x-CIIm:hed senes
htls. He struck out nme and fifth. Prose was safe on a
Tuesday's Results
New York 135 V1rgm1a 131
walked one. It was Burnett's fielder's choice, slole second
Flond1ans 120 Kentucky 102
second, mound triumph in two and third, and scored on Gary
Ulah 128 Texas 107
starts.
Ballard's single.
Wednesday's Games
V1rgm1a at New York
Tom Varney, losing pitThe Gallians wrapped 11 up
Indiana a1 Memph1s
cher, opened the fourlh inning with three more m the sixth on a
with a triple, but died on third double by Sheets, walks to Mark
base. Larry Overman's single Johnson and Stan Pert1, and a
N BA Playoff Standings
By United Press International
leading off the fUth Inning stngle by Burnett. The Gallians
Eastern Conference
"as the Tigers' only other were aided by two Waverly
(Division Final Playoff)
safety.
· errors and three stolen bases 111
(Best of Seven)
W. L. Pr.t.
Varney hurled all six innings that uprismg.
New York
1 0 1000
Balt1more
0 1 000 for the losers He gave up seven The Blue Devils will play at
htts, fanned four and walked Fairland m a non-league game
Western Conference
ft ve Varney uncorked two wild today.
( DviSlon Semifinall
(Best of Seven)
W. L. Pd. San Franc1sco
4
200
SERVICE SUNDAY
x-MIIwaukee
4 1 .BOO
Easler
Sunnse service at the
W L. Pd.
x Los Angeles
4 3
571 Bcadford Church of Christ wtll
Ch•cago
3
4
429 be held at 6 a m Sunday The
'
x.Cimched D1 v sem1fmal
public 1s mvited.
Tuesday's Results
New York 112 Balilmore 111
Los Angeles 109 •Chlcago 98
No Games Today

P 'N' SAV
"CUSTOM
POWER CUSHIO.N"

games behmd the Ba ltimore
Ortoles
Lolich, who was supposed to
replace Denny McLam as the
Tigers' No. I starter m 1970 but
had a 14-19 record, Pitched a sixhitter and smgled home a run.
Northrup, who had a 262
average with 24 homers and 60
RB!s m 1970, delivered a tworun triple and scored two runs
to lead the Tigers' mne-h1l
attack

Burnett Blanks
o Waverly 7 to 0

000 100 000 1- 2 7 0
G1bson 10 1) and Simmons .
Jenkms (1 0) and Rudolph. Hr
Torre (l sll. Williams (lsi)
Hargan
Los Anqeles

last season and struggled to a
12-10 record.
Pitching ouel
The Mays-Manchal combo-a
famihar one for th e~ Giantsstole the spotlight from' a dandy
p1tchmg duel betw&lt;;en two of
the NL's fmesl pitchers,
Ferguson Jenkins of. Chica&amp;o
and Bob Gtbson of st Loms
Jenkms won II 2-1 m the lOth
when Billy Williams homered
off Gibson
In the other two openers,
Pittsburgh topped Philadelphia
4-2 and New York edged
Montreal 4-2 111 a game called
after 41&gt; mnmgs because of
ram In the second game for
both clubs, Los Angeles blanked
Houston 2.0
In the Amencan League,
Boston beat New York 3-1,
Milwaukee routed Mmnesota 72, Delrml battered Cleveland 8-

Tigers. Thump Indians, 8-2

Ball1more (McNally 24 9), 2
pm
Kansas C•ly !Bunker 2·111 at
Caldorn1a !Murphy 16 13), 11 By FRED DOWN
pm
UP! Sporls Writer
!Only games scheduled!
Billy Marlin's regime as
manager of the Detrott Tigers is
Thursday's Games
Kansas C1ty at Calif. nighl
off to a successful start thanks
M1nnesota at Chicago
to a pair of Motor City World
Bosfon at Cleveland
Series heroes n~med Mickey
(Only games scheduled)
Lolich and Jim Northrup.
Marlin made his debut as the
Tigers' manager Tuesday before a crowd of 54,089, largest
Ameru:an league
ever to see a Detroit opener,
NY
OOOOOOOlQ--1 50 and hardly bad to lift a finger in
Boston
000100 1\x-3 111
Bahn sen, Aker (8) and an 8-2 victory over the
Munson . Culp ( 1 0) and Cleveland lndtans.
Josephson LP- Bahnsen (O I)
The real heroec, h~wever,
were
Loltch and Northrup,
Milwaukee
000 122 02Q-- 7 12 0 Tiger standouts m the 1968
Minnesota 000 001 01o-- 2 9 1 World Series victory over the
Pa!l•n 11 0) and Roof, Perry,
Camplsl (5), Kaat (6) , Williams St. Louis Cardinals but btg
161. Corbm (8) and Milterwald disapointrnents in 1970 when
LP- Perry (0 1) HR- Kosco Detroit limped home fourth m
(lsi 1
the Amertcan League East, 2!1
Cleveland 000 110 ooo- 2 6 0
Detrod
022 300 Olx- 8 9 1
Hargan, M'IFhemehl (3), Dun
nong (41. Pascual (51, Lamb
18), Auslm 181 and Fosse;
'
Lol1ch I 1 O) and Free han LP-

Tuesday's Linescores

SAVE WITH

nonn.
The beautiful revolving dance floor at the
Rainbow Room wiU be sp!!n aga!!) J.llrling April
15 after 25 years aince It alopped lllort, never
again, it had been presumed, to whirl .... It'dor
the "British Fortnight" aerie. ot food "o:perlences" and Tony Cabot's bind Will bOUJICe
for dancing .... Some great Jlylt.h banda appea~ at the Rainbow Room In lht old days:
Ray Noble opened It; Johnny Green (Body &amp;
Soul) formed a great band to foliO!' the very tony
Noble, whose music waaas Sweet1nd Lovely as
that P!elty theme song. Remember ~e

.~ ·
0

·n moskey's

H.

TiiE RIGGS ROYAL Kad-ettes won first place m the jumor corps diviSIOn at a lw1rlmg
contest held Sunday at Parkersburg. Taught by Mrs. Judy Riggs the corps mclude: front row,
!rom the left, Cindy Rilchte, Karen Ftck, Cheryl Kuhn, Nanc¥ Bailey, Brenda Boyles, Vtda
Weber; second row, !rom the left, Sandy Curt1s, Joann Fick, Suzy Goebel, Debbte Wmdon,
Janet Ambrose, Barbara Douglas, Kathy Newell; lhird row, from the left, SonJa Adams,
Rhonda Sovel , Nancy Ridenour, Rachel Hunter, Mandie Rose, )'am Kautz and Trudy Roach

"

3- Tbe Dail Sent10el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apri17, 1971

I
I
I
I
By Helen Bottel
I
I
IT'S STILL THE BESf GAME IN TOWN
Dear Helen:
With all the divorces, separations and batefullivmg togelber
these days why is mamage still so darn popular? I'd guess 95 per
cent of the 'adult population ts either marrted or actively hunting
for a mate . Ask tbe average teenage gn'i what she wants most in
life. Nola career. That comes second, If at all She's after a m~n!
Seems to me that young girls are more hellbent on mamage
now tban they were back when I was young. And men have never
been very good resiSters.
Is thiS because weddmg vows aren't "forever" any more?
People, perhaps, are eager to take ~ change when they know
divorce is an easy solution ? - T. G.
Dear T.:
Perhaps, though dtvorce has never been an "easy solution."
Even California's no-adversary "diSSolutions" brmg miSery,
because a break-up proves failure somewhere along the hne.
Marr13ge remams popular because it's sbllthe best game m
town. II offers the security of love and !ll'Pend to l,pneliness. And tf
the hazards are many, well, so are the benefits, should you win.Dear Helen :
You said, "Marriage tsn'l for everyone " II cerlamly Isn't for
my husband'
·
I'm called attractive. I'm loving, a good housekeeper, and I
don't put our children frrsl. I was brought up to think a woman
should do everything possible to keep her man happy. I don't even
nag.
Yet three nights a week my husband goes to school and the
other four he's working on race cars or drinking and playmg pool.
I only see him at bedtime. We never go out, or even talk.
He thinks he's got the perfect marriage· Freedom plus a liveJn,love-m maid. And I love him, so I take II!
Is this all marnage is? - Sl'ITING HOME AN~AITING
Dear S.H. and W.:
When you've got a Marrted Bachelor on your hands, what you
lake Is what you get. Re-educate him by being "out" when he
comes home - occasionally - and never, NEVER let him know
you only saw a movie with another waiting wife. - H.
Dear Helen:
')
The more I read, the more frightened I become of marriage.
According to certain magazines and books (by anonymous
authors), a woman bas to be the greatest sexual athlete smce
Mala Hari to keep one man from roaming, Never mind beauty, or
being an interesting conversationalist or a good person, tl's
performance in bed that counts!
I'm appalled and also womed. While !think I'm as sexy as
most, some of what these writers insist mamage demands, is not
for me. If men read - and expect - then a lot of us gals just
aren'tgoing to qualify. And we aren'lcold etlher'
Why doesn't someone come out with a sane hook on
marriage? Or wouldn't it sell•- SCARED
Dear Scared :
There ARE sane books on marrl8ge, but you're nght. They
don'tsell nearly as well as the kinky ones.
A good rule : Whatever is MUTUALLY enJoyed, done 111 the
context of loving and sharing, is right for your marnage Then
''pertormance" takes care of itself - H

J

Middleport, 0.

Boltmelli

NEW Deh:.a. TIRES !•••

DELTA BELTED
70 Series Super Wide Tread
Featuring

RAISED WHITE LmERING
For

Th~t Distinctive Appearance

Here's a distinctive tire in every direction .
from its smart raised solid white letters to
its totally new level of performance. The
combination of 2 Fiber Glass Belts over a
body of 2 bias plies of tough Dynacor high
tensile rayon 1 reduces tread .distortion and
increases tread life.

Gallagher, In c , 12 East 42n d
St, New York C1ty, New York
Sub scr• ption rates
De
li ve red by carr1~r where
available SO cents per week,
By Motor Route wh ere ca rr1er
serv ice not available
One

•

GENERAL TIRE SALES

month Sl 75 By mall tn Oh1o
and W Va, One year $14 00
S1x month s S7 25
Thr ee
mon t h s $4 SO Su bs cr1 p ft on
prtce In Cludes Sunday T1m es
Sent mel

SeE. THEM HERE•••

992-7161

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�I

•

,

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

!Helen Help Us!

Riggs Twirlers Win Big
Students of Mrs Judy Riggs majorettes who won three ftrst
at baton lw1rl10g compeltlions places m team competilton.
Those wmning the 37 trophies
10 Charleston and Parkersburg
over the past two weekends at Charleston mclude D1ana
brqught home ~ total of 131 Guthne, grand champtonshtp
trophies and two grand and mne trophtes; Debbte Ford,
champiOnships
seven; Debbte Burkhammer,
· Ninety-four of the trophies stx, Louann Newell, five,
were won at Parkersburg Glona Barber, f1ve; Lisa Kuhn,
Sunday in compelitton with three and Cmdy Patterson, two.
approximately 300 twirlers The Riggs Royal Kad-eltes won
!rom as far away as South ftrst place in the JuniOr corps
Bend, Ind.
divisiOn at Parkersburg.
Trophies won by the gtrls at
These twirlers will be m
Parkersburg 10clude Tern act10n agam on Apnl 25 m
Vannoy, grand champiOnship
plus seven trophtes; Diana
Guthrie, mne trophieS ; Debbie
THE HARO SELL
Ford, nine ; Debbie BurkCOLUMBUS (UPI ) - Stale
hammer , 10 ; Ltbby Ann Liquor Director Richard
Watkins, four ; Debbte England, Guggenhaun satd his departfour; Karen Strausbaugh , mentIS consldermg the sale of
ei.ght ; Conme Rector, seven; · liquor by the case, an mcreased
_Lisa Kuhn, one; Misty Russell, allowance of br10gmg out-of: three ; Carla Matlack, one; state liquor back to Oh1o, and
IJouann Newell, four; Cmdy the sale of liquor m two-ounce
Patterson, four ; Sherr a Dawn bottles as possible ways to boost
Russell, three; Suzy Goebel, sales
three, Glona Barber, three;
·
Becky Windon, one ; Marcta
Carr, two; Jerrt England, one;
Debbte Scott, one ; Daleleen
Scott, two; Cheryl Kuhn, one; Wtlliam McKmley was the
Dtane Hall, one, and the f1rs t U S prestdent to nde
Federal Hockmg High School 10 an a utomob1le, m 1899.

compelitwn w1lh lwrrlers from
a three state area mcludmg
Ohio, West Vtrgtma and Kentucky at Eastern H1gh School
when the Eastern Band
Boosters wtll sponsor the official Mtss Trt.Siale Majorette
Queen Pageant Wmners will
advance to the Drum
Majorettes
of
America
naltonals m Charlotte, N. C, 111
August when the selection of the
new Majorette Queen of
Amenca wtll be selected.

TiiESE STUDENTS of Mrs. Judy Riggs returned home with approximately 130 trophies
and two grand champiOnshipS following baton twirling compelltion events in Charleston and
Parkersburg over the past two weekends Pictured with the numerous trophies they won are
Iron! row, from lbe left, Misty Russell, Daleleen Scott, Libby Ann Walkins, Carla Matlack,
Debbie England, Lisa Kuhn; second row, from the left, Becky Windon, Debbte Scott, Louann
Newell, Karen Strausbaugh, Cindy Patterson, Sherra Dawn Russell; back row, from the left,
Tem Vannoy, Conme Rector, Debbte Ford, Debbie Burkhammer, Gloria Barber and Dmna
Gulhrte.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Three Basic
Bridge Rules
NORTH
"'Q7
¥K6 5
+ A872
oloQI0 93

WEST
.J854 3
¥7 3

Veteraus Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Louise
Farley, Long Bottom; Lucille
Harrison, Middleport; George
Roush, New Haven ; Helen
Harris, Mason ; George Taylor,
Minersville
DISCHARGED - Kenneth
Snider , Etta Custer, Alva Reed,
Robert Stelle, John Wtllbarger,
Estella Smith.

7

EAST
.K96
¥J l042

+QJ0 6

+J94

.8 54

oloA76

soum &lt;D&gt;

FOUR HONORED- Left to right, Harriett Layne, valedictorian of Wahama High School;

Coze tte Cooke, salutatorian; Cecrba Smith and Kathy Foglesong, honor students,

oloA102

¥ AQ98

+ K5 3

oloKJ2
Both vulnerable

River Ecology

West

North

East South

Pass

3 NT

Pas&lt;;

I NT.
Pass

Miss. Layne Valedictorian
Of 1971 Class at Wahama

(Continued from Page I )
turbtdily, probably due to
P OS$
life ranged from smgle celled scouring of the nver bottom by
Openmg lead - • 4
plants (phytoplankton ), tmy barge traffic, and few smtable
floating
ammal
life nestmg areas
Harnett Layne has been
The r eport by WAPORA By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby named valediclonan, Cozetle
(zooplankton ), river bottom
species (bcnthtc orgamsms pointed out that further mToday's hand IS t a k e n Cooke salutalonan, and Cec1ba
includmg worms, larvae, vesbgat10n of fish spawnmg, from the sectwn of "Wm at Smtih and Kathy Foglesong
clams, crayfish, etc .), all a part benthic populatiOn of the nver Bridge with .JACOBY MOD· honor students of the 1971
of the food cham for the fish and photosynthebc productiVIty ERN" that dea ls w1th the graduatmg class at Wahama
populatton, to various types of of algae ts proceedmg m order play of the ca1ds
West opens the foUl of H1gh School.
fish . These counts were to reach more def1mte conMiss Layne, the daughter of
spades and the fu·st 1ule of
correlated w1lh physiCal and elusiOns For example, a play the hand Illustrates 1s Mr. and Mrs Robert Layne of
chemtcal
., conditiOns 10 the number of tests showed the old one of second hand New Haven had a 4 0 average
nver
populatton mcreases of bottom low The seven ; hould be Her aciiviiies mclude, Nalwnal
Intenm conclustons of the orgamsms below power plant pl ayed hom dummy Th1s Honor Society, Wh1te Falcon
WAPORA study mdiCale that· discharges. Smce the OhiO play tnsures two spade tncks Band, and All-Stale Band, week
I. Fish populabon of the Ohio River has an extremely low for declm e1 1ega1 dless of m Washington wmner, member
Rtver has not changed bottom populalton, an mcrease how the spade Slllt Is di- of Who's Whom Amencan Htgh
Slgmftcantly between 1957 and 10 this unporlant source of food VIded
Aile! Wllllllllg the l I I S t
1970 even though the power for game fish would be tuck S o u t h Is lookmg at
capac1ty has mcreased greatly. favorabl e. However , much flu ee hem t tucks and two
The low ratto of game fish to more fteld research is reqUired diamond t 1 1c k s but they
"rough" fish (scavenger types, to delermme possible bene· a1en't g01 ng to gel a w a y
such as carp; buffalo and fiCtal effects of healed dis- from him Instead . South
should work on the sUit 111
has
remamed charges
suckers)
essenllally constant durmg this
The power compames, m wh1ch he can develop tr1cks
mterval
sponsormg continued studies by That IS clubs and he simply Paul Gulhne, on leave from
2. Tests conducted above and WAPORA m this increasingly plays clubs unlll East takes college 10 Searcy, Ark., spent a
hts ace r!e Will wmd up
below each plant did not show a unportant f1eld of river ecology, making at least 10 tncks few days w1th bts parents, Mr.
shift from the desirable diatom hope that results will not only after this s1mple start
and Mrs Gerald Gulhne and
type of algae to the less throw more light on the
This hand 1s simple m- Dtana
desirable green or blue-green relahonship
of
he ated · deed Now, change South's Helen Follrod came Saturday
groups associated wtth thermal discharges and aquatic btology, spade holdmg to ace-three· to spend three monthS with her
pollution. The zooplankton but may reveal the posstbilities two. With this holdmg he s1sler, Nma Robinson and
popul~llon was similar m of positive programs which may should forget about second stster-m-law, Clara Follrod
quanhty and quality above and have broad pubhc servtce hand low and play dummy's Several local people have
below discharge points.
Implicaltons m management of queen of spades smce thai been suffering from colds and
IS the only way to get some flu
3 Dissolved oxygen m the the environment
·
good out of that card under
rtver was generally higher
Ass1shng Dr. Lauer m the these circumstances
Mr and Mrs. Charles D.
below power pomls than above research project are A.
Woode attended funeral serEast wtll cover with the vices for Charles Hudnall at the
... a benefiCial effect attributed Chmtopher Gross, research
kmg and now South must
to turbulence created by coolmg ecologist, WAPORA's project follow another basic prmci· Ftrst Apostohc Church at
water dtscharges While the leader, and Davtd B. Boies, ple of play to make the con· Albany last Tuesday. Tbey also
temperature was shg)Ily htgher WAPORA 's director
of tract. He must hold back hts VIsited his ststers, Carrie
at the surface near the research
ace ol spades until the third Burson, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
discharge pomts, there· was no
The companies sponsoring lead. Then he goes about the Roscoe Orr, The Plains, briefly,
indtcallon of excessive heat or the research are the eight busmess of knockmg out the and called on his aunt, Vina
" thermal blockage " whtch mel"ber companies of The Ohio ace of clubs and 'when East Woode, In the -O'Bleness
~ets in he won't have a
could affect migration of fish . Electric Ullllly Institute and spade to lead to hts partner Memorial Hospital (who will be
From the standpoint of sp..-ts lwo Kentucky companies. The
96 on May 1).
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l
f1shmg,) t is desl!'able to bave as sponsormg companies are : The
Clara Follrod and Nma
h1gh a propiB'tiOn of game to Ctncinnalt Gas &amp; Electric Co.,
Robinson visited Mr. and Mrs,
Electric
''rough" ftsh as possible. Some The Cleveland
Otto Swartz at .Shade, 0., last
The bJddmg has b..,n
of the factors influencing the llluminatmg Co., Columbus and
Tuesday afternoon.
North
East
South
prevalence of game fish . in- Southern Ohto Electric Co , The West
Mr and Mrs . Clarence
1¥
Pass
2 olo ,
elude: a he~lthy population of Dayton Po.wer 'and Light Co., Pass
Henderson bad word from !heir
?
3•
. Pass
bottom organtsms and an OhiO Edison Co, Ohto Power
son-m-law and daughter and
You, South, huld
adequate number of shallow, Co., The Toledo Edison Co., .AZ ¥AJ4 t63 ,foK 1QJ753 grandson, Sgt. and Mrs. David
What dQ you do r.otv '
qu1el areas lor spawning and Monongahela Power Co .,
WIIhams and Aaron, stationed
A-Bid
three
spades.
You
are
flCsting. The WAPORA studies Kentucky Ubhttes Co., and in'tcreHled" In !il&amp;m hut don't 10 Guam, tl)atlhey had recently
md1ca\ed a very luw bottom. Louisville Gas and Electnc Co., want to t1 y four no·lrvmp be.- ~ made a VISit to the Phtlippine
fh1m lhu•1 nruu m ~m cmml .. h1u.h lnr•
·.....,.., •• ··' .,............... . u • ._ .....o~..
Islands

A(j'red
Socia1 Notes

-

1

.

OYC POST FILLED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
superintendent of the Fall'fleld
School for Boys at Lancaster,
Wtlliam M. BalsoJI, was named
Tuesday the assistant dtrector
of the Ohto Youth Cornmission.

PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - Wesley
Jones , Henderson ; James
O'Neil, Point Pleasant; Steve
Porter, Gallipolis; Mrs Jack
Randolph, Kenneth -Pridemore,
Poml Pleasant, IV.rs. Genevieve
Taylor, Columbus ; Mrs Lewis
Peters, Jr ., Clifton; Mrs
Charles Meadows, Mason; Mrs
Danny Adkins, Glenwood.
DISCHARGES Isaak
Wallis, Mrs. Claude Smes,
Leroy Hill, Paul Akers, Mrs.
Bernard Jordan, Mrs. James
Johnson, Mrs Clifford Cornell,
Mrs. Paul Buck, Diane and
Rhonda Burgess
Mrs. Lilah Powell, of New

~;~~il~o~~i~!~~:n~~~~ ~~~~::~~~~:~~;~~~:~
r------------------------------------------

School Honor Sociehes, DAR
Good C11Izen Award, glee club,
drama club, Thesptans, juniOr 1
class play, member of St. Paul's
Lutheran Church, active in the I
Luther League, choir and
• BY JACK O'BRIAN
aSSistant orgamsl.
WHAT'S IN NAME? ASK
Cozette Cooke, wtth a 3 9687
LINDSAY AND ROCKEFELLER
average, was named saNEW YORK - N. Y. Sen. Basil Paterson
lutatonan. Miss Cooks is the (the only black politician who refused) told us
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil John Undsay personally tried to gel him to back
Smtih of Mason.
hizzoner in his mayoral campaign ll'ith an offer
Her activtlies are National of "name your job." .... He refused them
· · ·a11 ....
Honor Society, member of Further blandishments led the fine public serWho's Who m American High vant to test Jawn's promises: he'd take the
School Honor i Socieltes,
delegate to Girls' State, student police comrnissionel'ship, Paterson suggested ...
council, While Falcon Band, "Welllll ..."Lindsay welled," ... you'll be con·
band president, majorette, sidered." .... Gov. Nelson Rockefeller tried to
Jumor class officer, pep club, enlist Harlem's Mr. Integrity AFTER Basil had
G.A.A
I b
. J . Dr amacu,so
flball lost the lieut.gov election, but Rockefeller was
team, junior class play. 4-H refused too .... Quite a man, Basll Paterson.
member, member of the Umted
Rocky Graziano tries to turn handsome
Methodist Church and Youth touches f..- his flstic frtends who haven't become
Fellowshtp.'
millionaires as The Rock has: He talked an ad
Honor students, Cecilia Smith agency into hiring Sugar Ray Robinson to~ his
with a 3.9 average, is the ethnic opposite parbler in a beer commercial
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil (Hamm's) with $5,0011 "m front" .... They shot
Smith of Mason and • Kathy the first half of the TV pitch - at which point
Foglesong is the daughter of Sugar Ray demanded his 5,0011 then and
Donald F91!lesong of Mason and there .... The agency had to SCI'ounge through
the late Ellen Foglesong. She closed offices for the cbeck Sugar would
bad a 3.91 average.
have received the next day, Rocky told
Miss Smith's activities in- us .... This lime Graziano's similar beneficence
elude, National Honor Society, bas reached out to Dick Tiger, erstwhile chamJI
delegate to Camp Horseshoe, who lost everything in Blafra 1a theater, several
F .H.A. officer• Journalism club, apartment houses, a home and assorted business
Junior Mason County Fair interests) in the Nigerian War -Sir RockweU
Board Member •bowling league, chose Tiger for his next commercial partner ....
4-H club, natlonlli award for
style review in 4-H sewing, Dick Tiger's now working at the Museum of
~ember ,Mason
United Natural History for $98 a week - while wailing
Methodist Church, Youth for his next fight.
Feilowshtp, choir and pianist.
Omar Sharif's girls, horses and cards got him
Miss Foglesong is a member the nickname "Three Bs" - broads; banglalls
of the Nalij)nal Honor Society, and bridge .... No booze ... George C. Scott Is a
delegate to GirL,• State, student male chauvinist ham: Wouldn't let wife Colleen
counctl, listed in Who's Who in Delvhurst even try on a pair of hot pants at the
American High · Schools, St. Laurent Rive 'Gauche on Madison Ave ....
Thespians, G.A.A.R., bowling ~nght her a demure blouse and along pleated
league, member Mason skirt .... Probably off to Reisenweber's. for a
M~lhodist Church, Youth sarsaparilla and a float,
Fellowship, 4-H, club, Riverview
Opening night at the Ringling Circus In
Saddle Club, Ohio Valley Horse ·Madison Square Garden, a 3C).foot stlltwalker
Show. ,
~the Big Top has only two - married Shelljl and
One hundred and one studenla Barry Sloan) feU headlong and lay Inert 20
will graduate Tuesday, June' I. minutes until the ambulance came : II was
Baccalaureate services will be Sheila, we learned later; she sustained a broken

Voice along Broadway

!;!,,..,,1-.,

· · - ·· !!lA

-· 6 -

-

!
'

Tim De1 oskey, stylish left·
bander, c-hilled Wellston
Tuesday f a 6-0 whitewash as
the Me1g Marauders made
their sea record 2-1 pverall
and 1·1 1 Southeastern Ohto
League b seball action Demos y, a se~io r , gave up
a smgle the opemng frame,
then proreded to strike out 13
and ISSIIj only th ree passes He
never "f-S m trouble
The Narauders bunched five
hils m ~o mnmgs. In the sixth,
I
semor pecond baseman Roger
Abbott/ doubled, Roger Dixon
smgle~ and Ch1p Haggerty
doubl scormg Abbott and
DIXO
In /le seventh, Gene Powell
walkjd. Dave Boyd got on by
suc~ss1ve errors , Wllson
wal!Cd and Haggerty was safe
on ~ error Three runs scored
Ir the sixth mm ng, Abbott
als! scored on 0Lxon )s smgle
Ppbott and Haggerty each
hal a double and smgle, and

•

Texas Five
Eliminated

and JarvLs

Lakers Top
Bulls, Face
Milwaukee
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP! )Will Chamberlain, tbe aging
. Io ge t a crac k a I .
giant, IS gomg
young Lew Alcmdor.
The man who once scored 100
pomls m a pro baskethall game
collected 25, pulled down 19
rebounds and assisted on nine
· ht a
other ba skeIs Tues da Y mg s
the Los Angeles Lakers beat the
Chtcago Bulls 109-98.
That put the Lakers squarely
m the path of Alcmdor and the
MilwaukeeBucksfortheNBA's
Western Conference title.
"I don't want to think ahout
Milwaukee right now," a tired
Chamberlam said. "Just gtve
me 24 hours to thmk about this
wm.''
The Lakers, who lost Jerry
West m the last month of the
regular season with a knee
lll]ury, won their best-of.,seven
game quarterback play off
senes from Chtcago 4-3.
All four of their VIctones
came here. In fact, Los Angeles
took e1ght m a row from the
Bulls at the forum this season.
Grul Goodrich, the Lakers'
replacement for the mjured
West, pumped m 29 points and
Happy Hal!'ston added 22. The 6foot-1 Goodrich averagoo 31.4 m
the Chicago series, 14 more tban
his regular season average.
LoS Angeles lost ftve of six
meetings to Milwaukee this
season with west in the lineup
and Alcmdor outplayed by the
34-year-old Cbamberlam. Bulls'
coach DICk Motta thinks the
Lakers could win, however
"If Wtlt plays agamst Lew as
well as he did against us, they
(the Lakers) bave an excellent
chance ," Motta sa1d. ~'He in·
timidated us somethmg awful."
The Bulls, who never have
won a play,off senes m four tries
m their five-year exiStence,
were ahead 85-83 with eight
mmules to go. Jim Mcmillmn, a
rookie who took West's place m
the Lakers lmeup, then sank a
25-fooler to tie the score and
Keith Enckson then made a
field goal with 7:24 remainmg to
put the Lakers shead to stay.
Leadmg the way for Chtcago
were Jerry Sloan and Bob Love
w1th 24 pomts apiece.

Fnday Saturday Sunday

Certified
Gas Stations
538 W Ma m

Pomeroy ,0 .

!We honor BankAmencjrd
and Master Charge)
I

By

By United Press International

FREE BABY DiiCK
Apnl 9, 10, 11, 1971
lwlth 8 gals gas)

e-H'itter Shuts Out Wellston 6~0
Mays Belts 629th Homer

DIXOn With a smgle, Abbott ----------~--~------~----------------------------~---con1Inu10g h1s tornd early
season hitlmg pace.
Meigs
000 003 3-6 5 0
Wellston
000 000 0-0 I 4
Demosky and Dixon. Ratcliff

By United Press 1nlernatlonal
Th~ New York Nets and the
f londtans are back m the
runnmg m the Amencan
Basketball AssocJallon's playoffs But for the Texas Chaps
It's wa1l hll next year
The Chaps were ehmmated m
four stratght games when they
bo&gt;ed to the Utah Stars 128-107
Tuosday mght. The Stars now
w1U face e1ther Indiana or
Menph1s m the Western
Corference fmals The Pacers
leal thetr senes 3.0 and can
I
wrf 11 up tomght with a
VIC ry at Memphis
1 e Nets beat the Vrigm1a
Sq res 135-131 for their first
v 1c~r y agamsllwo losses whtle
the1Flondians also cut thetr
defb t to 2-1 by tnppmg the
Ke1lucky Colonels 120-102 The
Ne' meet the SqUires agam
Ionghi while the FlondiansCohnels next game IS set for
Th&lt;fsday mght
Uah placed mg ht men m
do!j&gt;le figures m oustmg Texas
II o* the playoffs Ron Boone
led the way wtlh 23 pomls and
Milt Butler had 20 Levern
Tan topped the Chaps wtth 31
pmrts
' Trn Nets trailed 99-91 gmng
mto t111 fmal quarter but rallted
behmd the shoot10g of Rtck
Barry, who flmshed wtlh 43
pmnts. Mike Barrett and
Charlie Scott paced V1rgmta's
attack with 27 pomts each.
Little Mack Calvm powered
the Flmdtans' attack wtth 24
pomts and stx of Calvm's
teammates h1 t double figures m
the vrtory over Kentucky
- Forme1 Flond1an Les Hunter OLYMPIC APPOINTMENT
NEW YORK (UPI)- Col F
• led the Colonels with 21 pomts
Don
Mtller, USA (Ret.) has
wh1le ~ t gh-scormg Dan Issei
been appomted asststant execuwa&amp; held to 17.
tive director of the Umted
States Olympic Commll!ee, 11
was announced Tuesday by
Easter Weekend President
Clifford H. Buck of
Denver

greatest of all Greatest Shows on Earth.
Ava Gardner says she's disenchanted with
men; what the bay, Sinatra also retired ....
Marty "Hello Dere" Allen makes his moolah m
the lop saloons, such as the Copa, but he never
drinks no matter how he looks .... One credit
card's so slow-pay, restaurants ask clients to use
another, aity olher .... Toots Shor's elosed, as
expected for about a year.
Foley Square rwnor says the boom's falling
toward one judge; we won't say which pr where
.... Bristol Cathedral in England just hired the
Reverend Charles Shells as canon; he'll do a
bang-up job, like a shot, hot as a pistol, eh,
BenneiiCerf? .... Andy Warhol says he dldn.'l use
very good painton his famed tomalo-&lt;)an, big .fee
(we'll never figure why) daubs .... Paramount's
Doug Cramer tried to pacify a dogfight in his
yard and was bitten in the fracas; !bat's just
south of the lumbar .... Oh.
David Frost's Westinghouse pact was ex·
tended to July '72 .... !Wlls-Royce named its
engines after English rivers: the Dart, Spey,
Conway, Tyne; the Alle snuck in without corporate okay .... Shortage of patrons has Eastside •
pubs laying on less expensive drinks and endless ·
widely assorted hors d'oeuvres : Tbal's Uptown
for the "lree lunch" we used to wolf down at
Centre Markel Place in our pollee-reporting
days ... Rocky of the Benibana restaurant chain,
· the amazing lad who won his flyweight wrestling
medals on TV during the '60 Rome Olympics,
gets onto the tube again with Dinah Shore ....
This shrewdly ambitious lad now has 16
restaurants - one of the few chaina wherein the
food's fine every time. Few N.Y. neighborhood
theaters bother with uShj!I'S, hardly any use I
usherettes, and managers carrying guna Ia the

Nahonat League
East
W. L

Pdlsburgh
Ch1cago

I
1
New York
1
0
St Lours
Philadelph•a 0
Montreal
0
West

Pd. GB

01000
01000
01000
1 000
1 000
I 000

L. Pel GB
1 0 I 000

W

Atlanta

San Franc1sco 1

0 1.000

Hooslon
1 1 .500 112
Los Angeles
1 1 .500 '12
San
D1ego
0
Cln"nnail
o 11 .000
.000 11
Tuesday's Results
Ch•cago 2 St LoulS 1, 10 mn
N Y 4 Mont 2, 4'h mn., raln
P1lfs burgh 4 Philadelph•a 2
Los Angeles 2 Houston 0
San Franc!Sco 4 San D1ego 0
(Only games schedule~)
Today's Probable P1tr.hers
1All T1mes EST)
(1970 Pilchmg Records)
Sl LoulS (Carlton 10 191 al
Ch&lt;cago !Hands 18 15), 2 30
pm
Montreal !Renko 1311) at
New York (Gentry 9·9) , 2 p m
Los Angeles (Sulton 15 131 al
Houston !Blasingame 3·3), 8 30
pm
Allanta IReed 7·10) at
Cmcmnail IMcGlo!hiln 14·101. 8
pm
San FranclSco I Perry 23·13)
at San D1ego (K~rby 10-161.
10 30 p.m
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Ch1cago at Houston, mght

Mon!real at New YO!'k
Ph1la al P1tlsburgh, mghl
San Fran at San D1ego, n1gh

(Only games scheduled)

Amerdr.an League

East
W. L. Pr.t.
Wash1ngton
I 0 1.000 GB
I 0 1.000
Boston
I
01000
Detroit
0 0 000 1
Baltim ore
0 1 000 1' '
New York
0 1 .000 1
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pd.
Milwaukee
1 0 1 000 GB
Kansas C1ly
1 0 1 000
Ch!cago
o 0 000 '12
Caldorn1a
0 1 000
M.nnesota
0 1 000 :
Oakland
0 1 000 1
Tuesday's Results

Boston 3 New York 1

Milwaukee 7 Mmnesota 2

Delro1l8 Cleveland 2

Kansas City 4 Callfornr a 1

(On ly games scheduled)

VITO STELLINO

UP! Sports Writer

_
Willie Mays, 39 years young,
couldn't have picked a better
way to start the 1971 baseball
season
Mays, who'll be 40 on May 6,
stepped into the batter's box
for h1s first turn of the season
Tuesday mght w1th two out and
none on He promptly slammed
Tom Phoebus' first pitch mto
the lower deck of the ieflfield
seals
II was homer No 629 for
Mays That's JUSt 110 homers
away from Babe Ruth's h1slon c
714 mark
Mays' homer was all that
Juan Mancha! needed to beat
the San D1ego Padres 4.0 on a
five-hitter II was the 47th
shutout of Manchal's career
and was a good omen for the
pitcher, who was atllng much of

Todanf'(obable Pitr.hers
(All l'lmes EST)
(1970 P1lr.hing Rer.ords)
Ch1cago (John 12 17 and
Johnson 4 7) at Oakland (Fm
gers 7 9 and Hmler 18 14), 2
games begin 4 30 p.m
Milwaukee (Krausse 13181 at ~
Mmneso!a ( Blyleven 10 9), 2 15
pm
Washmgton

(Cox

8 12)

at

National League

Philadelph•a
000 010 001- 2 8 4
P1llsburgh
020 010 Olx- 4 7 0
Short, Brandon (7) Hoerner
(7) and McCarver , Ellis 11 ·0)
and Sa nguillen LP Shari 10 1)
{41/z

mmngS, ra1n)

Monlreal
002 oo- 2 4 1
New York
120 lx- 4 7 0
Morton 10 1) and Bateman ,
Seaver (1 .0) and Grole
(10 mnmgsl

St

LOUI S

000 000 100 o-- 1

3 0

Ch1cago

200 000&gt;-- 2 6 o
Houslon 000 000 0110- 0 • 0
Osteen (1 0) and • . ••
W•lson, Ray IS) and Edwards.
Lp Wil son (0 I) HR Buckner
I lsi)
000

San Franc1sco

110 001 001- 4 9 0
San D•ego 000 000 0110- 0 5 2
Man cha! (1 O) and D1etz,
Phoe bus, Ross (7), Sevennsen
19) and Canmzzaro LP Phoe
bus (0 1) HR Mays (lsi)

MINOR SURGERY
LEXINGTON, Ky (UP!) Veteran basketball coach
Adolph Rupp of Kentucky was
scheduled to undergo rumor
surgery on an atlmg foot at the
umvers1ly's medical center
here
A umvers1ty spokesman satd
Rupp would be hospitalized
about two months while he
recuperates from the operation.
' Rupp, 69, entered the hospital
Monday.

SOUTH AFRICAN TENNIS
JOHANNESBURG (UP! )
Top-seeded Ken Rosewall eas1ly
defeated Julie Mayers Tuesday,
6-1 , 6-1, 6-4, to move into the THE ORIGINAL MARATHON
ATHENS, Greece (UPI)third round of the South Afncan
Open lawn tenms champiOn- Aklo Usamt of Japan led 30
distance runners !rom 16
ships
countries and 40 Greek track
men to the f1msh line TueSday
as he won the mnth classtcal
marathon in' the time of 2 hours
19 :25 . Australian John Farrmgton was second in 2:21:56
and New Zealander Jack Foster
fmished thtrd m 2.22 .29.

(7):

Pro Standings

Wrap~araund

tread for stable

cornering control
• Track lP-slcd up to 100 MPH

• Smnnth no·lh\lmp ride

While Walls
S25x14
Tubeless
plus 52 36
Fed Ex. Tax
&amp; old lll'e

IN A
GUARANTEED
.
USED CA.R

The f i r s t public·fmanced
employment offiCe was estabhsiled m New Y o r k in
1834, accordmg to Encyclopaedia Br1tanmca

AT. • • •

M7~00~E~·~::~~~~~9~9-2-.2i•O•Ii.l
-'I
-------

992-3422
Locust St.

EJCec . Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Ed11or
Publi shed da lly exce pt
Sat urday by The Ohio Valley
Pub lis htng Company , 111
Court St , Pom e roy , Oh io,
45769 Bu s.ness Off ic e Phone
99:l 2156, Edi torial Ph one 992

2157

.

Secon d cla ss pos tag e patd at
representative

USED CAR LOT
, 0. .

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

Pom ero y, Oh•O
Nat i onal adver1ts1 ng

KEITH GOBLE FORD
..

2 and Kansas City topped
Califorma 4-1
Mays 2-for-5
Besides the homer; Mays also
doubled m the sixth mnmg and
scored on Ken Henderson's
smgle to f1msh the game w1th a
2-for-5 mark Mancha! allowed
the Padres only fo ur stngles
and a double and d1dn't allow a
runner past second
The Jenkms-G1bson duel delighted the capacity crowd of
41 ,121 m Clucago J~nkms only
gave up three h1ts- mcludmg
.Joe Torre's homer m the
seventh - wh1le Gibson was
touched for seven. Johnny
Calhson doubled 111 the Cubs'
f1rst run off Gibson m the
fo,urlh
An Osteen Shutout
Walt Alston rested Riehle
Allen m the second game of the
season but the Dodgers d1dn 't

'

2, Chicago edged St Lows 2-1 m
10 mnmgs, Los Angeles blanked
Houston 2-0, San Franctsco shut
out San Diego 4-0 and New York
downed Montreal 4-2 m a game
called after 4'1.! mmngs because
of ram.
Ray Culp pttched a threehitter and drove in what proved
to be the wmmng run w1th an
Infield out m the seventh as the
Red Sox won !hell' opener
before a crowd of 34,517 at
Boston. A 17-game winner 10
1970, Culp carried a one-h1l
shutout mto the etghth, when
the Yankees scored lhetr run on
three smgles and an error.
Andy Kosco drove m four runs
with a homer, a fielder's chotce
and a two-run double to lead
J11 tlwaukee's 12-hit attack,
which tagged Jim Perry, a 24game wmner and AL Cy Young
Award winner m 1970, with the
defeat. Berme Smith drove 10
two runs for the Brewers with a
bases-filled double. Marty
Pattin, 14-12 m 1970, went the
distance for the Brewers.
Lou P!niella 'singled ~nd
doubled, scored two runs and
DICk Drago threw a six-hitter
for Kansas Ctty in Its victory
over Galiforma. Cookie Rojas
drove home Pmtella both times,
first on a forceout and then on a
sacrifice fly. Clyde Wright, a 22game wmner for the Angels last
season, took the. loss.

m1ss h1s bat (he was 0-for-4 m
the first game) because rookie
Btll Buckner btl a two-run
homer , hts ftrst m the majors.
That was all that Claude Osteen
needed needed to blank the
Astros on four ht ts. Don Wtlson
suffered the loss.
Dock Elhs pitched an eighthttter to give the Pirates the
victory over the Phiis Elhs
also climaxed the lwo-run
second inmng by squeezmg m a
run w1th a bunt back to pitcher
Chns Short The Ph1ls made
fo ur errors and only one of the
three runs off Short was
earned
It was almosl Imposstble to
play baseball m the ra m and
sleet at Shea Stadium but the
Mets and Expos tned anyway
They got m the 4''2 mmngs that
were needed to make II official
before the ump1res fmally
called II Tom Seaver wound up
w1th a four-hit victory despite a
two-run smgle by Ron Fairly tn
the fourth mmng Two of the
Mets' four runs off Carl Morton
were unearned because of a
thro"mg errol by Bobby Wme
Donn Clendenon and Jerry
Grote each had a double and a
s10gle off Morton

YOUR
MONEY
here and watch it
" bloom"!. Earn at our
currenl annual rate of

4~%

or 5%

on 6-month savmgs
ce rtificates.

MeiiiS Co. Branch

,,
Mergs County Branch of The•
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co

296 Second 51.
Pomeroy, Oh1o

H&amp;R FIRES.TONE'S

RANGE SPECIAL
Budget
Priced!
• Lighted cooktop
and oven.
• Removable picturewindow door.
• Convenience outlet.

ONLY

$25

00

H&amp;R Firestone
Ill. 2nd Ave.

992-2238

Middleport, 0.

GOBLE

"' The Dai~ sentinel

1

The Boston Red Sox defeated
the New York Yankees 3-1, the,
Milwaukee Brewers bea I the
Minnesota Twins 7-2 and the
Kansas City Royals topped the
California Angels 4-1, m other
AL openers.
In the Nattonal League,
Pittsburgh beat Phtladelphia 4-

Ka n Ci ty 020 101 1100- 4 9
Cai•IO!'n•a 000 010 ooo-- 1 6 1
Gailla Academy High School ptlches. Waverly committed
Dargo (I 0) and Marllnez
Wn ghl, Allen (6), FiSher
stole 10 bases, got another seven costly errors
La Roche (9) and Moses LP- superb pitching performance
Burnett and Chuck Perroud ,
Wnghl (0 1)
from senior lefty Dave Burnett, sophomore catcher, paced the
cracked out seven hils and look Galhans offenstve attack w1th
advantage of a leaky Waverly two hils each. John Davts,
defense to chalk up a 7.0 victory juniOr thtrd baseman, had a
ABA Playoff Standings
By Umted Press lnternahonal over the Tigers at Waverly lhtrd mnmg double for GAHS.
(DIVISIOn Semlflnotls)
Tuesday evemng .
Kev Sheets, sophomore right
IBest of Seven)
It was the Gallians' thtrd fielder, doubled m the sixth.
East
stra1ght
diamond vtctory
In the frrsl, with two out,
Senes 'A'
W. L Pr.l. agamst no setbacks. Inside the Bw:nett was safe on an error.
V1rgm1a
2 1 667 Southeastern Ohto League's The GAHS semor stole second.
New York
1 2 333 Southern DIVISIOn, the charges Tom Prose walked Burnett
Seru~§ '8'
W. L. Pel. of Coach Jim Osborne upped broke the scoring tee when
Kentucky
2 1 677 their mark to 2-o, and moved Waverly 's second baseman
Flond1ans
l 2 .333 1010 undisputed first place. booted John Davis' grounder.
West
Ironton's game with Jackson GAHS added two more m the
Senes 'C'
W. L. Pr.l. Tuesday was postponed by ram. fourth on a single by Perroud,
lnd1ana
3 0 1.000 Waverly IS 0-1 m conference sacrtftce by Sheets, a walk to
Memphr s
0 3 .000
play
RICk Boone, a stolen base and
Series'D'
W. L. Pr.l.
Burnell, m trouble only once an error by the Waverly third
x Ulah
4 0 1.000 durmg the abrev1ated (six 111 - baseman.
Texas
0 4 000 mngs) contest, allowed cmly two
Burnett singled lo open the
x-CIIm:hed senes
htls. He struck out nme and fifth. Prose was safe on a
Tuesday's Results
New York 135 V1rgm1a 131
walked one. It was Burnett's fielder's choice, slole second
Flond1ans 120 Kentucky 102
second, mound triumph in two and third, and scored on Gary
Ulah 128 Texas 107
starts.
Ballard's single.
Wednesday's Games
V1rgm1a at New York
Tom Varney, losing pitThe Gallians wrapped 11 up
Indiana a1 Memph1s
cher, opened the fourlh inning with three more m the sixth on a
with a triple, but died on third double by Sheets, walks to Mark
base. Larry Overman's single Johnson and Stan Pert1, and a
N BA Playoff Standings
By United Press International
leading off the fUth Inning stngle by Burnett. The Gallians
Eastern Conference
"as the Tigers' only other were aided by two Waverly
(Division Final Playoff)
safety.
· errors and three stolen bases 111
(Best of Seven)
W. L. Pr.t.
Varney hurled all six innings that uprismg.
New York
1 0 1000
Balt1more
0 1 000 for the losers He gave up seven The Blue Devils will play at
htts, fanned four and walked Fairland m a non-league game
Western Conference
ft ve Varney uncorked two wild today.
( DviSlon Semifinall
(Best of Seven)
W. L. Pd. San Franc1sco
4
200
SERVICE SUNDAY
x-MIIwaukee
4 1 .BOO
Easler
Sunnse service at the
W L. Pd.
x Los Angeles
4 3
571 Bcadford Church of Christ wtll
Ch•cago
3
4
429 be held at 6 a m Sunday The
'
x.Cimched D1 v sem1fmal
public 1s mvited.
Tuesday's Results
New York 112 Balilmore 111
Los Angeles 109 •Chlcago 98
No Games Today

P 'N' SAV
"CUSTOM
POWER CUSHIO.N"

games behmd the Ba ltimore
Ortoles
Lolich, who was supposed to
replace Denny McLam as the
Tigers' No. I starter m 1970 but
had a 14-19 record, Pitched a sixhitter and smgled home a run.
Northrup, who had a 262
average with 24 homers and 60
RB!s m 1970, delivered a tworun triple and scored two runs
to lead the Tigers' mne-h1l
attack

Burnett Blanks
o Waverly 7 to 0

000 100 000 1- 2 7 0
G1bson 10 1) and Simmons .
Jenkms (1 0) and Rudolph. Hr
Torre (l sll. Williams (lsi)
Hargan
Los Anqeles

last season and struggled to a
12-10 record.
Pitching ouel
The Mays-Manchal combo-a
famihar one for th e~ Giantsstole the spotlight from' a dandy
p1tchmg duel betw&lt;;en two of
the NL's fmesl pitchers,
Ferguson Jenkins of. Chica&amp;o
and Bob Gtbson of st Loms
Jenkms won II 2-1 m the lOth
when Billy Williams homered
off Gibson
In the other two openers,
Pittsburgh topped Philadelphia
4-2 and New York edged
Montreal 4-2 111 a game called
after 41&gt; mnmgs because of
ram In the second game for
both clubs, Los Angeles blanked
Houston 2.0
In the Amencan League,
Boston beat New York 3-1,
Milwaukee routed Mmnesota 72, Delrml battered Cleveland 8-

Tigers. Thump Indians, 8-2

Ball1more (McNally 24 9), 2
pm
Kansas C•ly !Bunker 2·111 at
Caldorn1a !Murphy 16 13), 11 By FRED DOWN
pm
UP! Sporls Writer
!Only games scheduled!
Billy Marlin's regime as
manager of the Detrott Tigers is
Thursday's Games
Kansas C1ty at Calif. nighl
off to a successful start thanks
M1nnesota at Chicago
to a pair of Motor City World
Bosfon at Cleveland
Series heroes n~med Mickey
(Only games scheduled)
Lolich and Jim Northrup.
Marlin made his debut as the
Tigers' manager Tuesday before a crowd of 54,089, largest
Ameru:an league
ever to see a Detroit opener,
NY
OOOOOOOlQ--1 50 and hardly bad to lift a finger in
Boston
000100 1\x-3 111
Bahn sen, Aker (8) and an 8-2 victory over the
Munson . Culp ( 1 0) and Cleveland lndtans.
Josephson LP- Bahnsen (O I)
The real heroec, h~wever,
were
Loltch and Northrup,
Milwaukee
000 122 02Q-- 7 12 0 Tiger standouts m the 1968
Minnesota 000 001 01o-- 2 9 1 World Series victory over the
Pa!l•n 11 0) and Roof, Perry,
Camplsl (5), Kaat (6) , Williams St. Louis Cardinals but btg
161. Corbm (8) and Milterwald disapointrnents in 1970 when
LP- Perry (0 1) HR- Kosco Detroit limped home fourth m
(lsi 1
the Amertcan League East, 2!1
Cleveland 000 110 ooo- 2 6 0
Detrod
022 300 Olx- 8 9 1
Hargan, M'IFhemehl (3), Dun
nong (41. Pascual (51, Lamb
18), Auslm 181 and Fosse;
'
Lol1ch I 1 O) and Free han LP-

Tuesday's Linescores

SAVE WITH

nonn.
The beautiful revolving dance floor at the
Rainbow Room wiU be sp!!n aga!!) J.llrling April
15 after 25 years aince It alopped lllort, never
again, it had been presumed, to whirl .... It'dor
the "British Fortnight" aerie. ot food "o:perlences" and Tony Cabot's bind Will bOUJICe
for dancing .... Some great Jlylt.h banda appea~ at the Rainbow Room In lht old days:
Ray Noble opened It; Johnny Green (Body &amp;
Soul) formed a great band to foliO!' the very tony
Noble, whose music waaas Sweet1nd Lovely as
that P!elty theme song. Remember ~e

.~ ·
0

·n moskey's

H.

TiiE RIGGS ROYAL Kad-ettes won first place m the jumor corps diviSIOn at a lw1rlmg
contest held Sunday at Parkersburg. Taught by Mrs. Judy Riggs the corps mclude: front row,
!rom the left, Cindy Rilchte, Karen Ftck, Cheryl Kuhn, Nanc¥ Bailey, Brenda Boyles, Vtda
Weber; second row, !rom the left, Sandy Curt1s, Joann Fick, Suzy Goebel, Debbte Wmdon,
Janet Ambrose, Barbara Douglas, Kathy Newell; lhird row, from the left, SonJa Adams,
Rhonda Sovel , Nancy Ridenour, Rachel Hunter, Mandie Rose, )'am Kautz and Trudy Roach

"

3- Tbe Dail Sent10el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apri17, 1971

I
I
I
I
By Helen Bottel
I
I
IT'S STILL THE BESf GAME IN TOWN
Dear Helen:
With all the divorces, separations and batefullivmg togelber
these days why is mamage still so darn popular? I'd guess 95 per
cent of the 'adult population ts either marrted or actively hunting
for a mate . Ask tbe average teenage gn'i what she wants most in
life. Nola career. That comes second, If at all She's after a m~n!
Seems to me that young girls are more hellbent on mamage
now tban they were back when I was young. And men have never
been very good resiSters.
Is thiS because weddmg vows aren't "forever" any more?
People, perhaps, are eager to take ~ change when they know
divorce is an easy solution ? - T. G.
Dear T.:
Perhaps, though dtvorce has never been an "easy solution."
Even California's no-adversary "diSSolutions" brmg miSery,
because a break-up proves failure somewhere along the hne.
Marr13ge remams popular because it's sbllthe best game m
town. II offers the security of love and !ll'Pend to l,pneliness. And tf
the hazards are many, well, so are the benefits, should you win.Dear Helen :
You said, "Marriage tsn'l for everyone " II cerlamly Isn't for
my husband'
·
I'm called attractive. I'm loving, a good housekeeper, and I
don't put our children frrsl. I was brought up to think a woman
should do everything possible to keep her man happy. I don't even
nag.
Yet three nights a week my husband goes to school and the
other four he's working on race cars or drinking and playmg pool.
I only see him at bedtime. We never go out, or even talk.
He thinks he's got the perfect marriage· Freedom plus a liveJn,love-m maid. And I love him, so I take II!
Is this all marnage is? - Sl'ITING HOME AN~AITING
Dear S.H. and W.:
When you've got a Marrted Bachelor on your hands, what you
lake Is what you get. Re-educate him by being "out" when he
comes home - occasionally - and never, NEVER let him know
you only saw a movie with another waiting wife. - H.
Dear Helen:
')
The more I read, the more frightened I become of marriage.
According to certain magazines and books (by anonymous
authors), a woman bas to be the greatest sexual athlete smce
Mala Hari to keep one man from roaming, Never mind beauty, or
being an interesting conversationalist or a good person, tl's
performance in bed that counts!
I'm appalled and also womed. While !think I'm as sexy as
most, some of what these writers insist mamage demands, is not
for me. If men read - and expect - then a lot of us gals just
aren'tgoing to qualify. And we aren'lcold etlher'
Why doesn't someone come out with a sane hook on
marriage? Or wouldn't it sell•- SCARED
Dear Scared :
There ARE sane books on marrl8ge, but you're nght. They
don'tsell nearly as well as the kinky ones.
A good rule : Whatever is MUTUALLY enJoyed, done 111 the
context of loving and sharing, is right for your marnage Then
''pertormance" takes care of itself - H

J

Middleport, 0.

Boltmelli

NEW Deh:.a. TIRES !•••

DELTA BELTED
70 Series Super Wide Tread
Featuring

RAISED WHITE LmERING
For

Th~t Distinctive Appearance

Here's a distinctive tire in every direction .
from its smart raised solid white letters to
its totally new level of performance. The
combination of 2 Fiber Glass Belts over a
body of 2 bias plies of tough Dynacor high
tensile rayon 1 reduces tread .distortion and
increases tread life.

Gallagher, In c , 12 East 42n d
St, New York C1ty, New York
Sub scr• ption rates
De
li ve red by carr1~r where
available SO cents per week,
By Motor Route wh ere ca rr1er
serv ice not available
One

•

GENERAL TIRE SALES

month Sl 75 By mall tn Oh1o
and W Va, One year $14 00
S1x month s S7 25
Thr ee
mon t h s $4 SO Su bs cr1 p ft on
prtce In Cludes Sunday T1m es
Sent mel

SeE. THEM HERE•••

992-7161

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�..
-.-

4- The Daily Sentine, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., April7, 197.1

lr~asters
'J,f'

\
Young Piano Duo Here in Season Finale
TALENTED DUO - Talented young duo-pianists Hodgens and Howard, the concert
season's final offering of the Trt.County Commumty Concert Association, have a wide and
impressive repertory reflecting great versatility and mterest in classical, romantic and
contemporary music. The artists will present a concert at 8 p.m . Monday at the Gallia
Academy High School in Gallipolis.
Hodgens and Howard, who hold up Brahms as their favorite composer, will make Brahms'
Variations on a Theme by Haydn one of the feature selections here.
Other selections on the program will include "Concerto per due pianoforb soh" by Igor
Stravinsky, "Sonata in G Major" by Johann Christian Bach, "The Blue Danube Waltzes" by
Strauss, two Gershwin " Preludes" and "Concerto Path~hque" by Franz Liszt.
Hodgens and Howard are obviously duo-pianists whose knowledge of program planning
equals their actual concert performance. Their appearance here promises to be one of the most
stimulatmg and satisfying events in recent seasons.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
v1siting hours 2-4 and i.s p.m.
Maternity vis1ting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Calvm R.
Waugh, Crown City, a
da ughter; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
W. Jones, Cheshire, a son; Mr
and Mrs. James L. Shaver, Rt.
1, Gallipolis, a daughter; Mr.
and Mrs. George H. Zuspan,
Mason, a daughter and Mr. and
Mrs. Foster L. Strickland, Oak
Hill, a son
Discharges
Mrs. James A. Addis and son,
Mrs. Marga ret Argabr ight,
Debra Kay Ball, Emmanuel
B1agtan, Mrs. Nora Bobo, Mrs.
Willard F. Boyer, Lou Burke,
Kimberly D. Crreel, Mrs.
Marvin E. Gardner, Mrs .
Robert Kincaid and son, W

Richard Lewis, Edward H.
Lynch, Mrs. Irene E. Reed,
Lora Ann R1ley, Van B. Robbms, Mrs Bernard L. Rossiter
and da ughter, Earl &amp;lyre, Mrs
Herbert Skatts and son, Mrs.
David Summers and daughter,
Joe E. Thomas, James Walker,
Mrs . Rex Fulkerson, Carea
Km g, Mrs. Charles Harmon ,
and James Thompson

r:.~~~:nt D~n e~uckague

ICC

At 1 1f 8 d
It
eas tve un ay a ernoon
games will be televised during
the playoff, Ruck said The
schedule of TV ga mes will be
d te
d
h
k
th
e rmme
eac
wee
as
e
1 ff
P ayo s progress
The moon has no water
and no food.

L

D f t

1--

-

~7·I OJ, 0 ., ....
, ..,.

Athens, :J-2

ogan Northern
e ~a SDivisiOn
Defend1~g

Gallipolis beat 1\;vertv 1~ m League ohamp1on Logan the So uthern· Di\isior The
slipped by Athens 3-2 at Logan Jackson-Ironton
Tuesday evening to take over postponed.
undisputed first place .
v.,a-----P---~The Ch1eftams, now 2~ m loop
play ' scored all their runs Ill the
bottom of the first on four hits
Athens came back with two '
runs on a home run by Mark
Bridgewater.
After !he first frame, Athens
hurlers held Logan scoreless
and hitless the rema 1nder of the
game Athens is 1-1m loop play
In ·other actiOn Tuesday,
Me 1gs blanked Wellston 6.{). The
Marauders are 1-l and WHS ().2
m league
'

·I

y

ng

OHIO

POMiROY
STEP OUT IN STYLE THI S
E~STER- ----

IMPORTED FROM ITALY .
LADIES' FINE LEATHER

DRESSES

For
SPRING and EASTER

·.

l\1akt• vnur &lt;.' hO!ce riow from a w1de
st'leetto'n of b&lt;'aullful new Spring styles m
11 great \Urlety of fabrics and colors m
.Jumors. M1sses. and Womens stzes

:::

Mr . and Mrs. Pat Tracy a&lt;~d
Suz1 met Mrs . Susan Johnston,
Tracy and son, Stl!ven, at the
Columbus Airport Frtday. Mr .
and Mrs. J. R. Tracy have been
in Germany for the past two
years Mr . Tracy IS with the
U.S. Army . Mr. Tracy w1ll
retu rn to the slates at a later
date .
Mrs. James Gilmore fell in

49¢

plaon s. co loanrs,d
floral
geometnc palterns 36 mches
Y.otde
Frned Dotted Sw1ss
Pt (' \I\ I loc k do t

: dott\· d "\'t "s
:(: laht t&lt; " Ill .t dor.t•n
sp11 11 g
' t olots

$

.... P"''''

LADl-ES'
NEW SPRING

99

PANT SUlTS

Pl.11n ( olors .tnd
:;:,. l.tiH\ plt ll \s Ill
lnw qu.tl tl \ sport

.1ll thr

·: ·

------"!"". .
~

Easter Weekend

FREE BABY QiiCK

No You don t ltve

IH

one room.

.

Yes You probably live w1th one pho~e
Thai means you're runnong to answ~r'a lol of ca lls
And miss1ng many And also m1SS1ng the prrvacy a
bedroom or den extensron g1ves (there's little prrvate
conversat1on poss1ble 111 the one·phone home)
Why put up wtth these inconveniences any lon~?

Fnday. saturday . Sunda~

Apnl 9, 10, 11 , 1971

{woth 8 gals. gas)

Certified
Gas Stations

you get w1th an extenSIOn

· "..,_ ~

('h nose a new handb ag now to ma tch
\O Ur Eyster costum e They come tn
" \\ td (' ' anety of shapes. stzes,
t olors and matenals

Twtce th e conventence
~
But not tw1ce th e cost
, ,~~ , ~~
(On ly a li ttl e more I han the cost of your frrst

phone )
And you can have your extensoon 111 a
cho1ce of colors and decorator styles to
match any of the rooms 111 you r house.

FOR SPRING WE AR
SKI RTS·SHO RTS·BLOUSES·
SHELLS1PANTS· TOP S

llt'\.\

I \ ll tilt• popu lar ne\~ looks m lllll'
qu.tlt!\ :-; p orts~\ ('8 1 lr olll !htt'l'
!.t~hton makt•r s Nt'\\f'st Sprtng
"!llt·s lor ~o un);( .1nd tiH' \ Ollllg .11
ltt·, trt

Pomeroy, 0 .
I We honor BankAmericard
and Master Charge)

home.

Easter Menu-Making ·Buys.

CASUAL AND DRESS STYLES

l 1t t·lt ~ p&lt;•rk~ u e~ Spnng ~ly les
lol ~ 11 \s BPc~ulllu l pnn ls .md
"n\ &lt;'11 \,tl u ll s 111 t·a~\ rare lnu sh
St/(''- I In f1 X iltld i il) ll

ll an d ~om t • nt'\\

st rap 11e.
lo.I! Pr and hoot sl\oles for
Spn n ~ .m lmc icxt ur ed
h\o lhers by Sa nd1 MtGce.

EASTER VA LUES!
LADIES' FINE
NEW SPRING

FROM

$399

AND

::~:~:~:~;~:~:~:)~:)~{:~:t~:}~::::.:):~:~:~:~

T/t-~
FINE- SEAMLESS NYLON

Lt·dd tht• 1-~aster Parade tn one of
thl'st• fmr coa ts Nrw fcm mmc
la s hmn ~ .1:-; hnght as sprmg
ltmP- 111 .1 fla~h of t nlor for

CHILDRENS ' EASTER

For Easter
Morn Breakfast

CINNAMON

•

can

ROLLS

Dad Would love Our USDA

Our Exclusive Recipe
HOMEMADE
.

H M SALAD

lb.

89~

French City Quality
I ·SLICED

BOLOGNA

Hb. pkg.

INSTANT

•'

'
••
'

'

•
•'

TftwAI~.--1.~~~ srzE

. 3iumbo ror~•1·

Rt~ht

With AHeart;
WE LIKE"
to limit quantities

Apr. 7-13

Prices

10 oz. jar

1.49·

Satiud~

CLOSIED~U NDAYS

Jl.l lt l'l

ns m

turtlt• '&gt; !dmg Stzrs S-l\1 1: -

CREAM
CHEESE

8 oz.
\
pkg.

2

PRS .
FOR

One Big Group
Children's

SHOES

SHOES
Values 2.99 to 3.99

l

$400P

r.

Assorted styles

&amp;

Only

heels.

$188
Pr.

·: See these and save btg.
::

Each

29~

·4'
oz.$1
, · cans
'

T~ED RUGS

BANANAS

5lfz

'

H.t~ mt -1\\ Ion
lilOI \l

lb.l o~

loop rugs 111
K 1 _·x ll \~

S IZl'S

$

99,.

A~sor1t•II1\U't'd llillll'lllS .md
rolul ~ .

Each

Latt•x ha rk .
'

SNEAKERS

:

\1 1;11ldo•d , ,.(,., \\llh ,.11 ,t111111 ,.d
ltll\1'1

::.:

:· :,.

l ol.t \ ~

.. nit·:-.

Ill \\I III L' . hiUl' pr
Ill S,l\ &lt;' 1111

"'11.1'" ) to

ttMl • \\!', ''

, ,,

srllllt·r ·~

Cit .tl I 'o~t llp U~ \,II UPS

$ 99
TO

&lt;·:

:~:~:j{:~:~:~~~~~rr~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:::j:~:~~}:~~:~:~:::;.:.:: : ::::::~:;:;:~:::~:~:l:;{:n:~:::;:~ ~::: :;:&gt;: : ..~ : ~ ·~ ~::}t~: ~

BOYS' PERMAN.ENT PRESS
SHORT SLEEVE STYLE

SPORT SHIRTS
$199
~ lt t pt '"

pl .ud~o,
llll

pl .t lll ' tO[\ll"
\1111 .... 11

t: .. , , 1111•

1\11\"

d"ll,d

,111d

·

•

$299

,(,,~,

dq ·...... . . r\l t " sl"'" F

ro m

Pair

,

'•

MEN'S FINE COTTON ·SHORT SLEEV-E

SWEAT SHIRTS
$ 99
Each

\l.tkl' IIH' &lt; htld rt&gt;n lwp fl~ .11
l .o~ .. l t•t I IIl ii' \\llh a ~ tll ol o ttl'
11\ t ill '"~' 1 .1tH h I tiled E.tslt'l'

"··

I

~. ~~~ II·

·ASSORTED COLORS

Fme cotton sweat sh1rts m short sleeve
styles for Sprmg wear. Whote and
colors . SJZes S-M-L·XL
'

$299

:/-/ .

PLUSH CUDDLY

~OV ABL E

EASTER BUNNIES
'

Patr

haml!-iott u•

Il l

BASKETS

79

$

"il l'lj)(' S.

p \,ttll I.J "i h10n tolol s
\\ (• lt. tl( ' tlwnt .til 111 tlww

1!1111

TREAT THE CHILDREN
AT EASTER TIMEt
C'ANDY FILLED
DECORATED EASTER

.

LATEX BACK

hold

Jll.t tlb

SLACKS

t"' . '\ .~TO
'1

WITH FOAM

SHIRTS

" 1/t' " 1, t ll ( H

1', ... kl't..

8YI'x ll VI'' ROOM SIZE LOOP

Golden Ripe

$100

\t '\\

t'.oys N ew-Sprrng Style

¢

ARMOUR'S
' --

POTTED
MEAT

One Big Group Ladies
Spring &amp; Summer

Values
to 8.99

Buys!

l\ 1o p.111" 111 it p,t('k.lg&lt;'

99

CLOSEOUT PRICES!

m•ck and tn&lt;X'k

t'f('\\

f!·:

.

-

Populi.! I' rW\\ ~ hrll s and tank tops for
Spnn ~ \\('&lt;11' SlriJX'S snhds. f an &lt;.'~

9 to 9 .

\11\Ptlcan Wu\ · 100 pe 1ct;n1
"ttdch m \on p,mt y host• m \hi'
" "·'"'~11" lwsl ~ h.tdt' s F1rst qw.tl!ty

TOTS SIZES $299
3 TO 8

SHELLS

9 to 7

11&lt;'\\

·$

AN EXCITING EASTER VALUE!
LADIES' NYLON
TANK TOPS AND

We Gladly Acc.,t Fe4. Food Stamps

Philadelphia

I

$100 TO $299

BOY'S BULKY KNIT 100% ORLON

DRESS SOCKS
•

Lung weari ng orion stretch sox· for·
lxoys Sizes 7 to s• , and 9to 11 Assorted
fa shion colors Spec ial Value

$ 00

2 PRS. FOR

SMUCKER'S. SWEtT

01.

' I

¢

R~CINE

(

59~

White Eggs . ......~~~~~ ....................... 3 dOl. •1
St
.
b
'
p
KRAFT 18 01.49
. raw ~rry .reserves ...........~!.. ~
Furn••t ure
. Wax...............................
HAGGERTY
14 99 e
can
.
.
..
h'
II.
B
.
STOKELY'S
4'
303
S e 18 eaDS·.................................. .·cans '1
LIBBY'S 7 J4
.
B
B
.
.
D
-'-eep
. r~wn eans·............. . cans .•1
Spagh.e tti.·Dinner :::~TARDE£.· ~t 49e
I

I

COFFEE

1~.

01.

;;

STS.,

NESCAFE

Choice Tender
T·BONE

STEAK

39

s tru p s l v l ('~ 1n
\\htlt' .mrl hl;n·k pa ten t l or
~ ~~ Is :\t'\\ l.!t'(' and stra p
slt pon:-; !nr bm ~ Stl.C'!i f\1 ~ to ·~

l't t'll\

Holsum Regular 45'

5lb.

PETITE, MEDIUM , TALL
BEST SPRING SHADES

FOOTWEAR
.
STYLES FOR BOYS &amp; GIRLS:(

•

Delicious
Dubuque Brand
Save!

PANTY HOSE ,

EASTER VALUES!

E.ls\l'f .

Serve Canned Ham For East-e r

.' , ,

EASTER VALUES'

JUNIORS· MI SSES· WOMEN S

Phebe
Says:

EASTER VALU ES!
MEN 'S PERM PR ESS
'CAMPUS

$299

COATS

••

I

DRESSES

- FOR MEN

/

SLACKS

$ 00

GIRLS,. PRETTY NEW
SPRING AND EASTER

OXFORDS,
LO.AFERS

Exl l"!munn

•
aaa a:: aa.a :::c::::a::aa:o:a:a:a::::::a=a::::oa::a:aoaaa:::caaa:::::aaaaaaaaa:oa:a:::aaoa:a::::::a:o::::c::::o:a:c::a:a=::::aoa:::::aoa::a:a::acu:::c:caaocoaac :::::cccaoo:o:c:: ::a: 1

SPRING and EASTER VA LUES
MENS ' PER MANENT PRESS

!ton ol nwns rtt H mn s l.tt ks in
;tsu,d d iU[ dH•ss styles You 11 fmd JU st \11(&gt;
s t\ lP .mil co lm \ ou \\ant S1ws 29 to -12

TO SAVE YOU A WEE BIT!

liji#l
GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

SJB W. Mam

PRICED
FROM

$'1 Q99 ,. .

SANDY MEGEE
11

hill"

,\ J.'. l t'dl ~ I' ll'&lt;

mAke a h1u11e

the rooms

4-ln -H ANDS- REDDITIES
1\.ut d ...otiH' Ill '\\ IW{'k \1 es fm ~p n t tg
.ttH I I· ,~ ..,(t' l lli '.trmg St!'lpl''
.til
•1\i'l ' dltd p\,1111 tn lol s Nt&gt;\\ IIHh•

l

phone"

Assum 1ng of course, you have

NECK TIES

Sportswear

:·

HAN.DBA""-

, '/
EASTER VALUES'
HANDSOME NEW SPR ING

RUSS TOGS

,md l.! ~ lli O II l'\llnt':-1 Ill ll('\\
,tnd rc~su&lt;:~l 1\ prs
~ I Z\'S -) to 10 - AA - B

~.

$,199
E-ach

FAMOU S BRANDSBOBBIE BROOKS

rht• s"

Cons1der how much more

.11nl S \1 i\ l,

Yd.

'&gt; I\ It'" \\ llllf' p.tl&lt;'nt. hnm•

TO

!'Lull p&lt;~ :o.( t • l .md l,l..,htnn &lt;-Oint's 111
tlllttnn !,dlltl" Stl'&lt;'" 11 1 to \h

$12

Footwear
111

NEVER NEED IRONING
PASfELS. FASHO N COLORS

Perm Press Sport Demms

I't m• budJ,!,&lt;'1 pl H.: ed Easter

.

1'

STEP ~!:.!

loo l\\l'ill

SHIRTS

Yd.

dt'llllll "

GREAT BUDGET VALUES
HI BROW - CHARM

EASTER VA LUES!'
MENS SHORT SLEEVE

Yard

FOR EASTER

It's gal JUCt one room So. naturally 1t needs JUSt one
phone
Is that how ,o u love' The answe r IS probab ly no and
yes.

9

PRINTS

Pone quality
colton pruits m

NEWEST STYLES
SIZES 5 TO 10

The ideal one-phone home.

FRIDAY MD SATURDAY

36·1NCH-80 SQUARE
COURTESY DRESS

lwl'l heoghl hs Cool and
lmt .ohle fQ I' Sprong and Surnm'""

EASTER VA LUES
LADIES' NEW SPRING
AND EASTER

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY'-...../
9-.30 AM to 5 PM

FABRICS

:~: Ftm• qu c1 ltt y leat her sa ndal s
·:: mad&lt;• 111 ll aly Whitl' and popular
; tan shades Flal and medoum

PETITE S· JUNIORS·MISSES·V2 SIZES

-- STORE HOURS --

IT'S SP RING SEW ING TIME
SAVE ON FINE

SANDALS

:::
. ·:·

0

p.1n1suo1 . maybe two- ready for the Easter
jl.l t'ad(' S&lt;-'e the trun looks of the pantsuit
no ~' m our Spnng-Bn ght selcclmn

the bath tub injurmg her leg
very badly.
Eight members of a prayer
cJrcle met Wednesday with
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball Run.
Mr and Mrs. William Davis,
Columbus , visited Saturday
with Mrs. Davis' parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
met Thursday evening with
Mrs. Clarence Curtis and Mrs.
Ruby
Fnck,
cohostess.
Donations were given to the
George Thompson Fund and to
the Easter Fund. Prizes were
won by Georgia Diehl and Jean
Wr1ght. The May meeting w1ll
be with Mrs. Lawrence Eblin.

·.··:

'

1\:-; surt• us tt 's Sprmg. you 'It wan! a new

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
March 4 at the Free MethodiSt
Church was 1~4,ffenng $34.69.
Good Frtd service w1ll be
7.30 p.m. Rev. Dav1d WISeman
w1ll deliver the sermon . There
w1ll be communion serv1ce
following the sermon . Sunrise
Serv1ce Easter morning will be
6:30, Sabbath School at 9:30 . .

SLIDES SCHEDULED
Shdes were shown at the
Reorganized Church
Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day.Saints on
Rac me-Portland road on
Sunday, Apnl 4 at 7 p.m and
will continue five weeks on the
subJect, "Where is 1t?"- The
Church of Jesus Chnst - How
shall I find 1t?" The public IS
cord1ally invited .

ON TV
NEW
YORK
(UP!)game
- The
Stanley Cup playoff
at
Philadelphia between the
F'lyer. and. Chicago Black
Hawks on Sunday will be
televised live on the Columbia
Broadcastmg System (CBS) , it
was announced ·Tuesday by
N· t' 1 H k Le
v

II, .. .._r NW"I I

IN A GREAT VARIETY OF STYLES

News Notes

a.m.

"of

Action 1S 17\Tlear

·
'
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI)- The
"I don' t thmk you ca~. ever
Augusta Nattonal will ire ptan on any golf course, sa1d
slightly below 1ts usually lush Nicklaus, who hopes to pick up
form when the .35th Masters hiS 12th maJor Iitle ~ere this
tournament begms· Thursday' week and close to WJthm one of
but the golfers generally agree all tune leader Bobby Jones.
that it's how you play and not "So much de!"'nds upon the
where you play that makes the weather. That s why I always
difference
- hke to come m here a week
..
.·
· ..
There s no doubt that the early, to see how the gr~ ss 15 · •
better you ·know a golf cours~:
Nicklaus, who shot a tour·
the better you should do on 1t, nament record 17-under-par 271
· Ar nold here ·m 1965 • then became the
sa1'd four-t'1me champwn
Palmer, "but it really isn't as only man to win two straight
unportant as 11 seems Even Masters when he tnumphed
newcomers who have never agam m 1966, sa1d he hoped the
played here before should know greens would remam fast .
this course pretty well alter
playing it all week."
Palmer, coming into hiS 17th
conseculive Masters as this
year's leadmg money winner,
noted that the fairways along
the 6,801}-yard, tree and shrub
linetl course "are certainly in
Ule worst cond1tion we've seen
in many years."
Weather Key Factor
But the 41-year.old star, who
hasn't won here since 1964, sa1d
"that's the fault of the
unseasonable cold weather and
not the people here at Augusta
National. The grass just hasn't
grown like 11 was expected to ."
Jack Nicklaus, three-tUD~.
Masters champ, re1gmng British Open ana PGA king and
rated the favorite here th1s
year, was even more emphatic
than Palmer.

Laurel ffifi

HOSPI"TAL NEWS

' &amp;-. '1'111""'"-3
~

..

PICKLE 16 oz.
CHIPS Jar

39~

~acl\1
. MAINE NO. 1
'

POTATOES

FAMOUS .BRANDS

BUDGET

Bobbie Brooks, Uwable, .Pepperell, Cannon,
Fruit of the LOOm,
Hi. Brows, 0111111
Step, Daniel Green, Wrangler, Morgan-Jones, Springmaid,
.
...
'

'

'

tim, Campus, Walker, ~istler, Levi's, Mattell, Playtex, Russ Togs, Sandy McGee, AnChor Hocking, Bust~ Brown, Big Ya~k, Coming w.e,
.
n:....:_ ,.__.,. &amp;
Milton
General
ur....""" "'J~t~~~

�..
-.-

4- The Daily Sentine, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., April7, 197.1

lr~asters
'J,f'

\
Young Piano Duo Here in Season Finale
TALENTED DUO - Talented young duo-pianists Hodgens and Howard, the concert
season's final offering of the Trt.County Commumty Concert Association, have a wide and
impressive repertory reflecting great versatility and mterest in classical, romantic and
contemporary music. The artists will present a concert at 8 p.m . Monday at the Gallia
Academy High School in Gallipolis.
Hodgens and Howard, who hold up Brahms as their favorite composer, will make Brahms'
Variations on a Theme by Haydn one of the feature selections here.
Other selections on the program will include "Concerto per due pianoforb soh" by Igor
Stravinsky, "Sonata in G Major" by Johann Christian Bach, "The Blue Danube Waltzes" by
Strauss, two Gershwin " Preludes" and "Concerto Path~hque" by Franz Liszt.
Hodgens and Howard are obviously duo-pianists whose knowledge of program planning
equals their actual concert performance. Their appearance here promises to be one of the most
stimulatmg and satisfying events in recent seasons.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
v1siting hours 2-4 and i.s p.m.
Maternity vis1ting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Calvm R.
Waugh, Crown City, a
da ughter; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
W. Jones, Cheshire, a son; Mr
and Mrs. James L. Shaver, Rt.
1, Gallipolis, a daughter; Mr.
and Mrs. George H. Zuspan,
Mason, a daughter and Mr. and
Mrs. Foster L. Strickland, Oak
Hill, a son
Discharges
Mrs. James A. Addis and son,
Mrs. Marga ret Argabr ight,
Debra Kay Ball, Emmanuel
B1agtan, Mrs. Nora Bobo, Mrs.
Willard F. Boyer, Lou Burke,
Kimberly D. Crreel, Mrs.
Marvin E. Gardner, Mrs .
Robert Kincaid and son, W

Richard Lewis, Edward H.
Lynch, Mrs. Irene E. Reed,
Lora Ann R1ley, Van B. Robbms, Mrs Bernard L. Rossiter
and da ughter, Earl &amp;lyre, Mrs
Herbert Skatts and son, Mrs.
David Summers and daughter,
Joe E. Thomas, James Walker,
Mrs . Rex Fulkerson, Carea
Km g, Mrs. Charles Harmon ,
and James Thompson

r:.~~~:nt D~n e~uckague

ICC

At 1 1f 8 d
It
eas tve un ay a ernoon
games will be televised during
the playoff, Ruck said The
schedule of TV ga mes will be
d te
d
h
k
th
e rmme
eac
wee
as
e
1 ff
P ayo s progress
The moon has no water
and no food.

L

D f t

1--

-

~7·I OJ, 0 ., ....
, ..,.

Athens, :J-2

ogan Northern
e ~a SDivisiOn
Defend1~g

Gallipolis beat 1\;vertv 1~ m League ohamp1on Logan the So uthern· Di\isior The
slipped by Athens 3-2 at Logan Jackson-Ironton
Tuesday evening to take over postponed.
undisputed first place .
v.,a-----P---~The Ch1eftams, now 2~ m loop
play ' scored all their runs Ill the
bottom of the first on four hits
Athens came back with two '
runs on a home run by Mark
Bridgewater.
After !he first frame, Athens
hurlers held Logan scoreless
and hitless the rema 1nder of the
game Athens is 1-1m loop play
In ·other actiOn Tuesday,
Me 1gs blanked Wellston 6.{). The
Marauders are 1-l and WHS ().2
m league
'

·I

y

ng

OHIO

POMiROY
STEP OUT IN STYLE THI S
E~STER- ----

IMPORTED FROM ITALY .
LADIES' FINE LEATHER

DRESSES

For
SPRING and EASTER

·.

l\1akt• vnur &lt;.' hO!ce riow from a w1de
st'leetto'n of b&lt;'aullful new Spring styles m
11 great \Urlety of fabrics and colors m
.Jumors. M1sses. and Womens stzes

:::

Mr . and Mrs. Pat Tracy a&lt;~d
Suz1 met Mrs . Susan Johnston,
Tracy and son, Stl!ven, at the
Columbus Airport Frtday. Mr .
and Mrs. J. R. Tracy have been
in Germany for the past two
years Mr . Tracy IS with the
U.S. Army . Mr. Tracy w1ll
retu rn to the slates at a later
date .
Mrs. James Gilmore fell in

49¢

plaon s. co loanrs,d
floral
geometnc palterns 36 mches
Y.otde
Frned Dotted Sw1ss
Pt (' \I\ I loc k do t

: dott\· d "\'t "s
:(: laht t&lt; " Ill .t dor.t•n
sp11 11 g
' t olots

$

.... P"''''

LADl-ES'
NEW SPRING

99

PANT SUlTS

Pl.11n ( olors .tnd
:;:,. l.tiH\ plt ll \s Ill
lnw qu.tl tl \ sport

.1ll thr

·: ·

------"!"". .
~

Easter Weekend

FREE BABY QiiCK

No You don t ltve

IH

one room.

.

Yes You probably live w1th one pho~e
Thai means you're runnong to answ~r'a lol of ca lls
And miss1ng many And also m1SS1ng the prrvacy a
bedroom or den extensron g1ves (there's little prrvate
conversat1on poss1ble 111 the one·phone home)
Why put up wtth these inconveniences any lon~?

Fnday. saturday . Sunda~

Apnl 9, 10, 11 , 1971

{woth 8 gals. gas)

Certified
Gas Stations

you get w1th an extenSIOn

· "..,_ ~

('h nose a new handb ag now to ma tch
\O Ur Eyster costum e They come tn
" \\ td (' ' anety of shapes. stzes,
t olors and matenals

Twtce th e conventence
~
But not tw1ce th e cost
, ,~~ , ~~
(On ly a li ttl e more I han the cost of your frrst

phone )
And you can have your extensoon 111 a
cho1ce of colors and decorator styles to
match any of the rooms 111 you r house.

FOR SPRING WE AR
SKI RTS·SHO RTS·BLOUSES·
SHELLS1PANTS· TOP S

llt'\.\

I \ ll tilt• popu lar ne\~ looks m lllll'
qu.tlt!\ :-; p orts~\ ('8 1 lr olll !htt'l'
!.t~hton makt•r s Nt'\\f'st Sprtng
"!llt·s lor ~o un);( .1nd tiH' \ Ollllg .11
ltt·, trt

Pomeroy, 0 .
I We honor BankAmericard
and Master Charge)

home.

Easter Menu-Making ·Buys.

CASUAL AND DRESS STYLES

l 1t t·lt ~ p&lt;•rk~ u e~ Spnng ~ly les
lol ~ 11 \s BPc~ulllu l pnn ls .md
"n\ &lt;'11 \,tl u ll s 111 t·a~\ rare lnu sh
St/(''- I In f1 X iltld i il) ll

ll an d ~om t • nt'\\

st rap 11e.
lo.I! Pr and hoot sl\oles for
Spn n ~ .m lmc icxt ur ed
h\o lhers by Sa nd1 MtGce.

EASTER VA LUES!
LADIES' FINE
NEW SPRING

FROM

$399

AND

::~:~:~:~;~:~:~:)~:)~{:~:t~:}~::::.:):~:~:~:~

T/t-~
FINE- SEAMLESS NYLON

Lt·dd tht• 1-~aster Parade tn one of
thl'st• fmr coa ts Nrw fcm mmc
la s hmn ~ .1:-; hnght as sprmg
ltmP- 111 .1 fla~h of t nlor for

CHILDRENS ' EASTER

For Easter
Morn Breakfast

CINNAMON

•

can

ROLLS

Dad Would love Our USDA

Our Exclusive Recipe
HOMEMADE
.

H M SALAD

lb.

89~

French City Quality
I ·SLICED

BOLOGNA

Hb. pkg.

INSTANT

•'

'
••
'

'

•
•'

TftwAI~.--1.~~~ srzE

. 3iumbo ror~•1·

Rt~ht

With AHeart;
WE LIKE"
to limit quantities

Apr. 7-13

Prices

10 oz. jar

1.49·

Satiud~

CLOSIED~U NDAYS

Jl.l lt l'l

ns m

turtlt• '&gt; !dmg Stzrs S-l\1 1: -

CREAM
CHEESE

8 oz.
\
pkg.

2

PRS .
FOR

One Big Group
Children's

SHOES

SHOES
Values 2.99 to 3.99

l

$400P

r.

Assorted styles

&amp;

Only

heels.

$188
Pr.

·: See these and save btg.
::

Each

29~

·4'
oz.$1
, · cans
'

T~ED RUGS

BANANAS

5lfz

'

H.t~ mt -1\\ Ion
lilOI \l

lb.l o~

loop rugs 111
K 1 _·x ll \~

S IZl'S

$

99,.

A~sor1t•II1\U't'd llillll'lllS .md
rolul ~ .

Each

Latt•x ha rk .
'

SNEAKERS

:

\1 1;11ldo•d , ,.(,., \\llh ,.11 ,t111111 ,.d
ltll\1'1

::.:

:· :,.

l ol.t \ ~

.. nit·:-.

Ill \\I III L' . hiUl' pr
Ill S,l\ &lt;' 1111

"'11.1'" ) to

ttMl • \\!', ''

, ,,

srllllt·r ·~

Cit .tl I 'o~t llp U~ \,II UPS

$ 99
TO

&lt;·:

:~:~:j{:~:~:~~~~~rr~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:::j:~:~~}:~~:~:~:::;.:.:: : ::::::~:;:;:~:::~:~:l:;{:n:~:::;:~ ~::: :;:&gt;: : ..~ : ~ ·~ ~::}t~: ~

BOYS' PERMAN.ENT PRESS
SHORT SLEEVE STYLE

SPORT SHIRTS
$199
~ lt t pt '"

pl .ud~o,
llll

pl .t lll ' tO[\ll"
\1111 .... 11

t: .. , , 1111•

1\11\"

d"ll,d

,111d

·

•

$299

,(,,~,

dq ·...... . . r\l t " sl"'" F

ro m

Pair

,

'•

MEN'S FINE COTTON ·SHORT SLEEV-E

SWEAT SHIRTS
$ 99
Each

\l.tkl' IIH' &lt; htld rt&gt;n lwp fl~ .11
l .o~ .. l t•t I IIl ii' \\llh a ~ tll ol o ttl'
11\ t ill '"~' 1 .1tH h I tiled E.tslt'l'

"··

I

~. ~~~ II·

·ASSORTED COLORS

Fme cotton sweat sh1rts m short sleeve
styles for Sprmg wear. Whote and
colors . SJZes S-M-L·XL
'

$299

:/-/ .

PLUSH CUDDLY

~OV ABL E

EASTER BUNNIES
'

Patr

haml!-iott u•

Il l

BASKETS

79

$

"il l'lj)(' S.

p \,ttll I.J "i h10n tolol s
\\ (• lt. tl( ' tlwnt .til 111 tlww

1!1111

TREAT THE CHILDREN
AT EASTER TIMEt
C'ANDY FILLED
DECORATED EASTER

.

LATEX BACK

hold

Jll.t tlb

SLACKS

t"' . '\ .~TO
'1

WITH FOAM

SHIRTS

" 1/t' " 1, t ll ( H

1', ... kl't..

8YI'x ll VI'' ROOM SIZE LOOP

Golden Ripe

$100

\t '\\

t'.oys N ew-Sprrng Style

¢

ARMOUR'S
' --

POTTED
MEAT

One Big Group Ladies
Spring &amp; Summer

Values
to 8.99

Buys!

l\ 1o p.111" 111 it p,t('k.lg&lt;'

99

CLOSEOUT PRICES!

m•ck and tn&lt;X'k

t'f('\\

f!·:

.

-

Populi.! I' rW\\ ~ hrll s and tank tops for
Spnn ~ \\('&lt;11' SlriJX'S snhds. f an &lt;.'~

9 to 9 .

\11\Ptlcan Wu\ · 100 pe 1ct;n1
"ttdch m \on p,mt y host• m \hi'
" "·'"'~11" lwsl ~ h.tdt' s F1rst qw.tl!ty

TOTS SIZES $299
3 TO 8

SHELLS

9 to 7

11&lt;'\\

·$

AN EXCITING EASTER VALUE!
LADIES' NYLON
TANK TOPS AND

We Gladly Acc.,t Fe4. Food Stamps

Philadelphia

I

$100 TO $299

BOY'S BULKY KNIT 100% ORLON

DRESS SOCKS
•

Lung weari ng orion stretch sox· for·
lxoys Sizes 7 to s• , and 9to 11 Assorted
fa shion colors Spec ial Value

$ 00

2 PRS. FOR

SMUCKER'S. SWEtT

01.

' I

¢

R~CINE

(

59~

White Eggs . ......~~~~~ ....................... 3 dOl. •1
St
.
b
'
p
KRAFT 18 01.49
. raw ~rry .reserves ...........~!.. ~
Furn••t ure
. Wax...............................
HAGGERTY
14 99 e
can
.
.
..
h'
II.
B
.
STOKELY'S
4'
303
S e 18 eaDS·.................................. .·cans '1
LIBBY'S 7 J4
.
B
B
.
.
D
-'-eep
. r~wn eans·............. . cans .•1
Spagh.e tti.·Dinner :::~TARDE£.· ~t 49e
I

I

COFFEE

1~.

01.

;;

STS.,

NESCAFE

Choice Tender
T·BONE

STEAK

39

s tru p s l v l ('~ 1n
\\htlt' .mrl hl;n·k pa ten t l or
~ ~~ Is :\t'\\ l.!t'(' and stra p
slt pon:-; !nr bm ~ Stl.C'!i f\1 ~ to ·~

l't t'll\

Holsum Regular 45'

5lb.

PETITE, MEDIUM , TALL
BEST SPRING SHADES

FOOTWEAR
.
STYLES FOR BOYS &amp; GIRLS:(

•

Delicious
Dubuque Brand
Save!

PANTY HOSE ,

EASTER VALUES!

E.ls\l'f .

Serve Canned Ham For East-e r

.' , ,

EASTER VALUES'

JUNIORS· MI SSES· WOMEN S

Phebe
Says:

EASTER VALU ES!
MEN 'S PERM PR ESS
'CAMPUS

$299

COATS

••

I

DRESSES

- FOR MEN

/

SLACKS

$ 00

GIRLS,. PRETTY NEW
SPRING AND EASTER

OXFORDS,
LO.AFERS

Exl l"!munn

•
aaa a:: aa.a :::c::::a::aa:o:a:a:a::::::a=a::::oa::a:aoaaa:::caaa:::::aaaaaaaaa:oa:a:::aaoa:a::::::a:o::::c::::o:a:c::a:a=::::aoa:::::aoa::a:a::acu:::c:caaocoaac :::::cccaoo:o:c:: ::a: 1

SPRING and EASTER VA LUES
MENS ' PER MANENT PRESS

!ton ol nwns rtt H mn s l.tt ks in
;tsu,d d iU[ dH•ss styles You 11 fmd JU st \11(&gt;
s t\ lP .mil co lm \ ou \\ant S1ws 29 to -12

TO SAVE YOU A WEE BIT!

liji#l
GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

SJB W. Mam

PRICED
FROM

$'1 Q99 ,. .

SANDY MEGEE
11

hill"

,\ J.'. l t'dl ~ I' ll'&lt;

mAke a h1u11e

the rooms

4-ln -H ANDS- REDDITIES
1\.ut d ...otiH' Ill '\\ IW{'k \1 es fm ~p n t tg
.ttH I I· ,~ ..,(t' l lli '.trmg St!'lpl''
.til
•1\i'l ' dltd p\,1111 tn lol s Nt&gt;\\ IIHh•

l

phone"

Assum 1ng of course, you have

NECK TIES

Sportswear

:·

HAN.DBA""-

, '/
EASTER VALUES'
HANDSOME NEW SPR ING

RUSS TOGS

,md l.! ~ lli O II l'\llnt':-1 Ill ll('\\
,tnd rc~su&lt;:~l 1\ prs
~ I Z\'S -) to 10 - AA - B

~.

$,199
E-ach

FAMOU S BRANDSBOBBIE BROOKS

rht• s"

Cons1der how much more

.11nl S \1 i\ l,

Yd.

'&gt; I\ It'" \\ llllf' p.tl&lt;'nt. hnm•

TO

!'Lull p&lt;~ :o.( t • l .md l,l..,htnn &lt;-Oint's 111
tlllttnn !,dlltl" Stl'&lt;'" 11 1 to \h

$12

Footwear
111

NEVER NEED IRONING
PASfELS. FASHO N COLORS

Perm Press Sport Demms

I't m• budJ,!,&lt;'1 pl H.: ed Easter

.

1'

STEP ~!:.!

loo l\\l'ill

SHIRTS

Yd.

dt'llllll "

GREAT BUDGET VALUES
HI BROW - CHARM

EASTER VA LUES!'
MENS SHORT SLEEVE

Yard

FOR EASTER

It's gal JUCt one room So. naturally 1t needs JUSt one
phone
Is that how ,o u love' The answe r IS probab ly no and
yes.

9

PRINTS

Pone quality
colton pruits m

NEWEST STYLES
SIZES 5 TO 10

The ideal one-phone home.

FRIDAY MD SATURDAY

36·1NCH-80 SQUARE
COURTESY DRESS

lwl'l heoghl hs Cool and
lmt .ohle fQ I' Sprong and Surnm'""

EASTER VA LUES
LADIES' NEW SPRING
AND EASTER

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY'-...../
9-.30 AM to 5 PM

FABRICS

:~: Ftm• qu c1 ltt y leat her sa ndal s
·:: mad&lt;• 111 ll aly Whitl' and popular
; tan shades Flal and medoum

PETITE S· JUNIORS·MISSES·V2 SIZES

-- STORE HOURS --

IT'S SP RING SEW ING TIME
SAVE ON FINE

SANDALS

:::
. ·:·

0

p.1n1suo1 . maybe two- ready for the Easter
jl.l t'ad(' S&lt;-'e the trun looks of the pantsuit
no ~' m our Spnng-Bn ght selcclmn

the bath tub injurmg her leg
very badly.
Eight members of a prayer
cJrcle met Wednesday with
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball Run.
Mr and Mrs. William Davis,
Columbus , visited Saturday
with Mrs. Davis' parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
met Thursday evening with
Mrs. Clarence Curtis and Mrs.
Ruby
Fnck,
cohostess.
Donations were given to the
George Thompson Fund and to
the Easter Fund. Prizes were
won by Georgia Diehl and Jean
Wr1ght. The May meeting w1ll
be with Mrs. Lawrence Eblin.

·.··:

'

1\:-; surt• us tt 's Sprmg. you 'It wan! a new

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
March 4 at the Free MethodiSt
Church was 1~4,ffenng $34.69.
Good Frtd service w1ll be
7.30 p.m. Rev. Dav1d WISeman
w1ll deliver the sermon . There
w1ll be communion serv1ce
following the sermon . Sunrise
Serv1ce Easter morning will be
6:30, Sabbath School at 9:30 . .

SLIDES SCHEDULED
Shdes were shown at the
Reorganized Church
Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day.Saints on
Rac me-Portland road on
Sunday, Apnl 4 at 7 p.m and
will continue five weeks on the
subJect, "Where is 1t?"- The
Church of Jesus Chnst - How
shall I find 1t?" The public IS
cord1ally invited .

ON TV
NEW
YORK
(UP!)game
- The
Stanley Cup playoff
at
Philadelphia between the
F'lyer. and. Chicago Black
Hawks on Sunday will be
televised live on the Columbia
Broadcastmg System (CBS) , it
was announced ·Tuesday by
N· t' 1 H k Le
v

II, .. .._r NW"I I

IN A GREAT VARIETY OF STYLES

News Notes

a.m.

"of

Action 1S 17\Tlear

·
'
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI)- The
"I don' t thmk you ca~. ever
Augusta Nattonal will ire ptan on any golf course, sa1d
slightly below 1ts usually lush Nicklaus, who hopes to pick up
form when the .35th Masters hiS 12th maJor Iitle ~ere this
tournament begms· Thursday' week and close to WJthm one of
but the golfers generally agree all tune leader Bobby Jones.
that it's how you play and not "So much de!"'nds upon the
where you play that makes the weather. That s why I always
difference
- hke to come m here a week
..
.·
· ..
There s no doubt that the early, to see how the gr~ ss 15 · •
better you ·know a golf cours~:
Nicklaus, who shot a tour·
the better you should do on 1t, nament record 17-under-par 271
· Ar nold here ·m 1965 • then became the
sa1'd four-t'1me champwn
Palmer, "but it really isn't as only man to win two straight
unportant as 11 seems Even Masters when he tnumphed
newcomers who have never agam m 1966, sa1d he hoped the
played here before should know greens would remam fast .
this course pretty well alter
playing it all week."
Palmer, coming into hiS 17th
conseculive Masters as this
year's leadmg money winner,
noted that the fairways along
the 6,801}-yard, tree and shrub
linetl course "are certainly in
Ule worst cond1tion we've seen
in many years."
Weather Key Factor
But the 41-year.old star, who
hasn't won here since 1964, sa1d
"that's the fault of the
unseasonable cold weather and
not the people here at Augusta
National. The grass just hasn't
grown like 11 was expected to ."
Jack Nicklaus, three-tUD~.
Masters champ, re1gmng British Open ana PGA king and
rated the favorite here th1s
year, was even more emphatic
than Palmer.

Laurel ffifi

HOSPI"TAL NEWS

' &amp;-. '1'111""'"-3
~

..

PICKLE 16 oz.
CHIPS Jar

39~

~acl\1
. MAINE NO. 1
'

POTATOES

FAMOUS .BRANDS

BUDGET

Bobbie Brooks, Uwable, .Pepperell, Cannon,
Fruit of the LOOm,
Hi. Brows, 0111111
Step, Daniel Green, Wrangler, Morgan-Jones, Springmaid,
.
...
'

'

'

tim, Campus, Walker, ~istler, Levi's, Mattell, Playtex, Russ Togs, Sandy McGee, AnChor Hocking, Bust~ Brown, Big Ya~k, Coming w.e,
.
n:....:_ ,.__.,. &amp;
Milton
General
ur....""" "'J~t~~~

�..
'

.

.

6- The Daily Sentipel, Middlepo,·t-Pomeroy, 0., April7, 1971

.:~:=:~::::::~:::::::;;.:::::::.::::::;x::::~:::::::::o;::::~-:::::::::::~: ,

Rehearsar-Dinner Given .Friday

•'

"

7.- .The Dally Sentb)el, Mlddlepor\-funeroy, 0., April7, lfll

.. lofr. and Mrs. Heniian Caudill of Middleport are convinced

Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Painter of
Lima entertai ned Friday
evening at the Martin
Restaurant with a dinner
preceding rehearsal for the
wedding of their son, Ralph, and
Miss Carole Anderson.
The table centerpiece was of
blu~ and yellow baby mums
with a ceramic bride and

I

groom .
Guests were the honored
couple , Mr . and Mrs. Emerson
Heighton, Tom Allderson, Miss
Marilyn sw·an, Mr . and Mrs.
Francis Anderson, Middleport;
Danny Painter, Miss Coleen
Steele, Miss Nancy Painter,
Miss Jan Painter, lima; Mrs.
·Ben Neutzling, Pomeroy; Miss
Valerie Swisher, Mr . and Mrs.
Michael Krutulis, Mr. and Mrs.
James Baell, Columbus; and
Gary Miller.

Luncheon Given

Service Held Here

that persons calling fire departments should be extremely careful
in giving instructions on how to get to the fire.
·
Saturday night; Mr. and Mrs. Caudill were enroute from
Portsmouth to their home and were approaching Oak Hill . They
came upon a small house burning and a frantic couple standing in
front. They stopped and helped the young man whose home was
Holy communion around
burning move his car across the street and away from the flames . · candlelighted tables will be held
The. home was practically demolished but the Caudills told .the at Trinity Church in the Sunday
school room at 7:30 Thursday
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
couple they w'ould advise the fire department at Oak Hill.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
Arriving in Oak Hill, they found the Oak Hill fire department night. For the observance the
an
d M r s . · Ra 1ph Keller, :;o:::::::~:i8~:~::~:?.:8~:::8&gt;~&amp;:::~::::::::::::::::~:~::::::::
choir
will
sing
"Fling
Wide
the
had already been advised but they also noticed that the fire truck
turned the wrong direction towards centerville, about 12 miles Gates," with Mrs. Marvin Burt Pomeroy, Route 3, were Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Keller, Randy,
SPEAKER NOTED
away. The Caudills chased tlle fire truck attempting to attract as soloist.
The
sunrise
service
at
Trinity
Rodn~y
and
Russell,
Pomeroy
;
Denver
Hill of Foster, W. Va.
attention and get it turned around and headed in the other
direction. Some three other vehicles were following and the · Church will he at 6:30a .m. and Mr . and Mrs. Paul Orr and Mr . . will he the speaker at weekend
Caudills realized. these were otller firemen following. Attempts to the Easter worship service at and Mrs . Floyd Weber, Long services at the Red Brush
10:30 a.m. The choral selection Bottom; Mrs. Thelma Ash- Ch urch. The Saturd3y and
get these firemen stopped were also futile.
Finally, everyone arrived in Centervllle and, of course, there for the early service will he, worth, Pomeroy and Ernest Sunday night services will begin
was no fire. So, firemen turned around and started the trek back Early in the Morning, and for Weber,Pomeroy, Route 3. The ·,at 7:30p.m. The Sunday mor·
the worship service, Open the 82nd birthday anmversary of ning service will he at 10 a.m.
to Oak Hill and then on to the blaze.
Gates of the Temple.
Ernest Weber was observed. The public' is invited . ·
The home, of course, was already destroyed ; but if proper
' directions are given firemen would be able to reach the scene of
the fire in time to do a great deal of good.

Communion Planned

..

JAY LOZIER, son of. Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Lozier ' the former
Rhea Gears of Pomeroy, a straight A student at the Princeton, N.
J. high school, _has been selected a~ one of a group of students
going to Italy for 10 days, April 8 through April lB. He will travel
with members·of the Foreign Study League. The trip, sponsored
by tlle Classics League, is especially for Latin students. The group
will visit Rome, Capri, Pompeii and will climb on MI. Vesuvius.
Jay is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton, former
residents now living in Aberdeen, Ohio.

,Johnson, Delaware.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mr . and Mrs. George 1,.
Creasap, Sr.; Columbus.
For her wedding, the. bride
selected Mrs. Pat Saunders as
her matron of honor,' and her
sister,Miss Susan Kavanaugh,
as the bridesmaid. Mr. James
Alexander served as best man

The April 2 marriage of Mary
Louise Kavanaugh and George
Lewis Creasap, Jr. was per·
formed by the Rev. Darrell
Hook at the home of the bride's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred

Mr. and Mrs. .Wtlllam
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson Heighton, and Miss
Seren Lewis hosted a buffet
luncheon Saturday at the
Lewis home for out-of-town
guests here for the wedding of
Miss Carole Anderson to Mr.
.Ralph Painter.
Attending the 'luncheon
were Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Painler, Miss Jan Painter,
Miss Nancy Painter, Miss
Coleen Steele, Lima ; Miss
Valerie Swisher, Mrs.
Michael Krutulls, Mrs.
James Baetl, and Miss An·
derson.

Projects ·Selected

Marriage Performed April 2 in Delaware at Bride's Home
fo r the groom.
The new ' Mrs. Creasap attended the Middleport schools .
She is the granddaughter of
Mrs. Minnie Jackson, Pearl St. ,
Middleport.

Easter Weekend

FREE BABY CHICK

b

Funeral services for Albert H.
Massar, 84, of Aliquippa, Pa., a
former Pomeroy resident, were
conducted at 2 p.m. Monday at
the Ewing Funeral Home with
interment in the Beech Grove
Cemetery . .
Mrs. Albert H. Massar was
!'ccompanied to Pomeroy by
Mr. and Mrs. James McClasky,
Midland, Pa. Others here for
the services were Mr. and Mrs:
Samuel Hughes, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Reinacher, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Havel!ta, Wellsburg,
W. Va ., and Mr. and Mrs.
George G.. Massar, Columbus.

Purchasing new song~ks
for the Bradbury Church of
Christ has been taken on as a
special project of the Martha
Bible Class.
Meeting Monday night at tlle
church, the class took on the
project ,of securing ' new
songbooks along with making
new robes for the live nativity at
Christmas.
Persons de~irlng ro purchase
a songbook, in their own name
or in memory of a loved one, are
asked to contact Mr . Bill
Carter, pasror, by April 19.
Names of donors. will he placed
in the front of books.
Mrs. Paul Winn and Mrs. Bill
Carter reported on the robe
project. They suggested
chenille as the material to he
used and asked for contributions on the cost.
A donation was made ro the
George Thompson Kidney
Fund. lilies will be placed in
the church by the class for
Easter services.
New cupboards ior the church
kitchen was discussed.
Mrs. Dale Barnhart presided
at the meeting which opened
willi the class song, "If You

Friday-Saturday-Sunday
April 9, tO, 11 , 1971

!with 8 gals. ga s )

EARLY SERVICES
Easter sunrise services will
be held at 6:30p.m. Sunday at
st. Paul's United Methodist
Church, Tuppers Plains, with
the ~ev. Randy Lavender,
pastor, in charge. The public is
invited.

Certified
Gas Stations
538 W. Main

Pomeroy , 0 .

(We hollor BankAmericard
and .Ma ster Charge) ·

Australia, in its winter,
has many more square 111iles
of snow than Switzerland.

Think Your Church is Best."
Mrs. Thurman Carsey gave
devotions using the first Psalm.
A program on Easter was
presented by Mrs. Oleva Cot.terill. Walter Bunce gave an
Easter meditation and Mrs.
Winn and Mrs. Cotte~ill gave
"Poetry Belongs to All of Us."
Cards were signed for several
ill members of the class in·
eluding Mrs. E. c·. Bryan, Mrs.
Haz.el -Russell, Mrs. Carl
Ehersbach, and Mrs. Earl
Werner.
·
Mrs. Cotterill .asked each
member to take a ba~y pi,cture
to the May meeting to ·be used
for the program.
A P'ltluck dinner preceding
the meeting was attended by
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Winn, Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn EVBJIS, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Barnhart, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Bunce, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Murray, Mrs.
Jessie Sisson, .Mrs. Cotterill,
Mrs. Thurman Carsey, David,
Ruth and Jay, l){r. and Mrs. Bill
Carter, Brett and Rick. Joining
the group for the business
meeting and program were
.Earl Werner and Mrs. Max
Davis.

Three Attend Erie Salon 613 Dinner

Social ·
Calendar

----.......

. .WEDNESDA V.
POMEROY LODGE · 164,
F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Work in Fellowcraft degree. All
Master Masons invited.
' EASTER Cantata 'Wed·
nesday, · 7:30 p.m. Asbury
United Methodist Church,
Syracuse. Public is invited.
'

Mrs. Mary Marti\!,.first demi
chapeau premiere, Mrs. Eunie
Brinker, ~rs. Catherine Welsh
and Mrs. Myrtle -Walker, of .the..
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, attended the 16th
annual, dinner J14onday night of
Erie County Salon 613.
The dinner honored Mrs .
Hazel ·Elliott, . departemental
chapeau and her le secretaire,

'

This Price Is 6e A

VETERAN PERFORMER on Meigs County stages, Evelyn
Cleland Young is heading a talent show to be held at the Racine
High School Saturday night, April 17. Evelyn needs a few more
acts to round out her presentation which offers some worthwhile
cash prizes. Anyone interested Is asked ro contact Evelyn at 9493741.

Po~nd

Two new projects, remembering overseas servicemen of
the community and sending
clothing
and
Christian
literature ro an Indian Mission,
were planned during a meeting
of the Helping Hands
Missionary Circle of the
Bradford Church of Christ
Tuesday.
The group decided ro prepare
boxes for several servicemen at
a later meeting .this spring. A
letter from an Indian Mission
was read telling of the need
there and plans were made to
begin work on the clothing
project at a later time.
Flowers for shut-ins were
completed during the meeting
along with floral pieces for the
pulpit. The dally vacation Bible
school was discussed and it was
noted that a date will he set for a
meeting o£ teachers and
helpers.
Part of the members worked
on church cleanup during the
day while others quilted. A
potluck dinner was served at
noon .
' Mrs . Tressie Hendricks
presided at the meeting which
opened with devotions by Mrs.
Mildred Sisson. Her scripture
was taken from I Cor. 15, W-28
for her ropic "All Shall be Made
Alive." A poem entitled "An

Less Than A Year Ago!

Priee1 Good Thru Saturday, April I0

Holiday Store Hours
Wednesday thru Sat•Jrday
9 a.m. to 9 p.m

PAUL BURNS, Pomeroy, injured in a fall on a construction
job In Montgomery, W.Va., on March 24, has been moved to the
Charlesron General Hospital and underwent brain surgery there
Monday.
His family reported Tuesday that he appeared ro he
responding well following the operation. Twelve of the 14 Burns
children have been home or are at home due to their father 's
accident. Incidentally, his room number is 12, Fourth Floor, for
those wishing ro send cards.

c

FULL
SHANK
HALF
•

CLOSEll
EASTER DAY

lb.

SUNDAY, APRIL lift

--J

Save

Wib These
Co11pons

AT THE CLEVEW:• 1 Clinic, George Thompson has been
~inoved ro room 700 to recover and for observance following his
;;lddney transplant on March 30. Incidentally, his sister, Mrs.
Wayne - Louella- Roush who gave the kidney for the transplant
lie OFF kL
WITH THIS
is due ro he released from the Cleveland Clinic any moment now
LAIEL
pkr.
7 COUPON
and wlll be returning to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
10 In All
Robert Thompson, in Pomeroy.
Mrs. Robert Lewis, chairman of a fund 'drive now underway
for !8-year-old George, reports that donations continue to pour in. :::::VALUABLE COUPON IEIII:KK:III;il
A new fund drive total will be available any time now.

4f:k

Spry Shortening

7e OFF

.._

78C,

WITH THIS

HAD YOU NOTICED? The cross on the property of Mrs.
.,
LAIEL
cu.
COUPC'•N
;: Nolan Shuster on lincoln Hill is lighted every evening this week
Good Thru Sot., April 10 In All Cols.
:: due to the significance of the season.
Div. A&amp;P's- OniCeiiPceiirF:i'iii:miila~::~~=-::111
The cross has been there for many years, thanks to the
::
:: contributions of the Trinity Church, formerly the Federated P:II::IIEIICIVALUABLE COUPON c:Ka:!l1:31~
' Church, which put up a temporary cross in 1940, just before
·:
: ~ Christmas . The church assumed the full responsibility for the
bo10f $1 00 WITH THIS
IGO
COUPON
· maintenance of the cross ' in 1942.
·•
Good Thru Sot., April 10 In All Cob.
::
Although the cross was meant only to be temporary, it was so
Div. A&amp;P's - One Per Fomily
:•favorably received In Pomeroy and attracted so much
..... .. ......
:•• widespread attention that it was retained. Alter 10 years the
:: original cross was no longer safe. The Federated Circle took on
:: the project of a new cross and a new steel structure was placed on
:; the Shuster property on May 10, 1950.
2e OFF
WITH THIS
LAIEL
COUPON
::
The new cross was dedicated on May 28, 1950. 11 stands 36 feet
Good Thru Sol.,
10 I I Cols.
;: high and is 14 feet across and acquires its luster from 250 lights.
::
The cross for years has assured the people of the Bend Area
:: each weekend and on special religious occasions, a brilliantly p:IIEIICIIIII!;• VALUABLE COUPON -=!11:31::11::111!1
:: lighted symbol, visible for miles around, a reminder of their
:: dependence upon God.
·
lkOFF
...... .
WITH TH IS
;.
LAIEL S.lb. kll.
COUPON

-

THURSDAY
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Thursday, · 8 p.!lJ. home. pf
· An inspiralional program placing of Christian symbols "A Kiss From Judas"
Margar~t Follrod. "
preceding the placing of the
· MEiGS DAV Chapter 53, depicting the life of Christ from around the picture. Mrs. Wolf praying hands symbol.
Thursday, 6:30 hall on But- Palm Sunday to Easter was gave the scriptures with Mrs.
For the gavel, scripture was
ternut Ave., Pomeroy. Dinner, presenle&lt;j.by Mrs. George Wolf Mays presenting the readings. from Matt. 26:66 with the
all v~terans welcome, district and Mrs. James Mays at a A palm branch was placed on reading "Guilty "; for the cross,
officers present for district recent meeting of the Women's the table following the reading scripture was Mark 15: 12·13 ;
Society of Christian Service of of John 12, verse 13 and "Here
meeting.
with the reading "What To Do
AFTERNOON Circle, WSCS the Chester United Methodist Comes the King ." The reading With Jesus"; for the · crown
ofl Cor . ll:2 and "An Old Feast
Heath United Methodist Church.
The
worshi(rcenter
featured
a
and a New Supper," was used scripture was John 3: 16 and a
Church, Middleport, 2 p.m.
reading " God's Great Gift. "
Thursday at the church. Mrs. picture of Jesus with scriptures for bread and wine; and
Silent p1·ayer and the Lord's
Crary Davis ro give devotions; and readings prefacing the scripture from Luke 24:48 and Prayer in unison concluded the
Mrs. M. L. French, the lesson,
and Mrs. Freda Mitch will be
hostess.
CATHOUC Women's Club, 7
p.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart
A surprise dinner party was
Church preceding Holy Thurs...
held recently in observance of
day services at 8 p.m.
Officers elected at a recent Mae Cozart, white · cross the 79th birthda y anniversary of
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453, meeting of the Ruth Missionary chairman, and Mrs. Coralee Mrs. Blanche Tucker. Mr . and
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at Circle of the Racine Baptist Cummins, love gift chairman. Mrs. Howard Van Matre hosted
hall. All Master Masons invited. Church at the home of Mrs. Installation of the new of- the affair.
FRIDAY
Eber Pickens were Mrs. Helen ficers will take place at the May
Guests were Mr . and Mrs.
POMEROY
Community
Good
Pickens, president; · Mrs . meeting of the Circle.
George R. Van Matre, Kevin
Easter Meditation" was read
Friday
services,
12
noon
to
3
Margie
Wolfe,
vice
president;
Get-well
cards
were
signed
and Melinda , Mason; Mr . and
and prayer by Mrs. Sisson
Church,
held
by
p.m.,
Trinity
Mrs.
Marjorie
Grimm,
for
Mrs.
Jean
Alkire
and
Mrs.
Mrs. Ross Roush , Mason ; Mr.
concluded the devotional serPomeroy
Ministerial
secretary;
Mrs.
Martha
Lou
Chris
Pickens.
The
birthday
of
and Mrs . George Hoffman and
vic.e.
,
Association.
Beegle,
treasurer;
Mrs.
Ollie
Mrs.
Mary
Kay
Yost
was
obLisa, Gallipolis ; Mr . and Mrs.
Attending besides M~s.
WEEKEND
REVIVAL
at
served.
John
(Wanda ) Dickson ,
Hendricks and Mrs.,Sisson were
Rutland
Freewill
Baptist
Mrs
.
Yost
presented
the
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs :
Mrs . Verna Hysell, Mrs.
Church,
Friday,
Saturday
and
program.
It
was
decided
to
William
(Nina)
Stump,
Madeline Painter and Victor;
BAPTISMAL RITE HELD
Sunday,
7:30p.m.
Rev.
Robert
Mrs. · Eleanor Hoover, Mrs.
Elizabeth Ahn Ewing, change the regular meeting Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Stewart
of
Mt.
Vernon
Frances Hysell, Mrs .. Mary
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benny date to the second Thursday of Tucker , Terry, Timmy, Todd
Gilkey, Mrs. Clara Gilkey, Mrs. evangelist. Resurrection Ewing, was baptized at the each month. At the meeting and Troy, Mr . and Mrs. Ray
Bonnie Pickens and Scotty, Service at 6 a.m. Sunday. Palm Sunday service of Trinity besides those named were Tucker, Ray Allen, Jerry, and
Mrs. Nora Cambron, and Bud Everyone welcome.
Church. The Rev. W. H. Perrin Sandra Boothe, Mrs. Erma Kristina , Mr . and Mrs. John
SATURDAY
Mrs .
Marjorie
ofiiciated. Mr. and Mrs. Don NOl'fis, Mrs. Nondus Hendricks, Bocock,
Bartrum.
COMMUNITY EGG Hunt Spires were the sponsors. At- Mrs. Phyllis Bailey, and Mrs. Bumatow and Sandi, Cheshire;
Saturday at 1:30 p.m. old tending were Mr. and Mrs. Naomi Stobart. Mrs. Marjorie and Mr. and Mrs. !(o bert
SERVICE SET
Chester Courthouse. Bring own Garland Caldwell of Alfred, the Grimm will be hostess for the Bocock, Robin and Kelly,
There will be a sunrise ser- colored eggs. Prizes. Sponsored maternal grandparents; Mrs. May meeting.
Huntington , W. Va.
vice at the ·Long Bottom by Chester Girl Scout Troop 204 Henry Ewing , Pomeroy,
Methodist Church Sunday at and Modern Woodmen of paternal grandmother; and
5:30a.m. AChristian fellowship Am~rica . Everyone welcom'e. Mrs. Emma Findling, maternal
breakfast will be served .
SUNDAY
great-grandmother.
;'---------------------~-:--,
following the service. Pastor is I SUNRISE SERVICE Sunday
the Rev. Freeland Norris .! Hemlock Grove Christian
SundaySchoolwillbeheldatlOIChurch 5:30a.m . Worship
SON BORN MAR. 28
a.m. and worship service at 11. · service and Sunday School at
Mr. and Mrs. Terry M. Henry,
The public is invited to attend. regular time.
Mason,
are announcing the
.
. SUNRISE SERVICE Lelart
Falls u. B. Church Sunda 6 a.m. birth of a son, March 28, at the
Breakfast will he served at Holzer Medical Center. The . $35.00 DownALUMNI TO MEET
Balance cOn
The
Pomeroy
Alumni home of ~Mfofilnd ~s.d!l~yd , ~ven pound, two ounce infant
Norris.
has been named Jeffrey Paul. Convenient
Association will meet at 7:30
Mr. and Mrs. Henry have
Terr:ns .
p.m. Monday at the council
another son, Terry Michael, 20
MEETING
DELAYED
chambers in Pomeroy City
months. Grandparents are Mr.
Hall. All alumni members are The Middleport Alumni Assn. and Mrs. Oscar Henry, Clifron,
invited to attend the meeting at meeting scheduled for this W. Va . and Mrs. James
which time plans wlll be made evening has been postponed McKirgan, Mason.
until Wednesday, April It
for the annual reunion .
Mason, W. Va.

2~v~z. •

Cooked Ham ,J~T16N • , • ,•.• .;· Cornish Hens
• tb.59c
•
Cooked Ham •rw:~t.. • , lb.ac Easter KeUbassi • • • • lb. 79c
Ham Roast c~uYfR • • • • lb. $109 Beef Rib Riast ·:~ ~·~~t . '"· Sl09
Semi-Boneless Hams ~HH~~F • ,•. &amp;Be Swiss Steaks R~~~L~~~E • • 4b.99c
Sam•I·Bone Iass Hams llANo • ,•. 99c Beef Rib Steals • • • • '"· Spt
Virginia Farm Hams • • ,.. 95c Ground Chuck F~~~ • • • • ••.age
QUARTERED LOIN
Smoked Picnics • • • • lb.Qc Port Chops CENTER
lb. &amp;Be
CHOPS INCLUDED
Canned Hams Go~~~~~~A~ • 3~~5479 Pork BuH Steaks • • • ••. 69c
Canned H• HoN::~LAZEo. 4!nS569 WI'&amp;IIAfS SWIFTS PRE/oiiUM
::: 75c
IEEF
I

W. VA.

VIIV

4

ALL

1

I

I

Oscar Mayer Wieners

Sk .1111ass w·1eners "SUPER
RIGHT': •
ALL .
Sf •ICed· B'aeon sooD
•

Braunschweiger ~~m6r

aa..l Ba
Sf •IWU
con

SWIFT'S
PRE.., IUJ.&lt;

•

•

• •
I

•

79c
pke .
•·•b.. 75c
ptq
~~b.

*',•.g45cc
•·••· 79c
pkg .

711..
r

Bob Evans Sausage •
12 oz. lBc
Eckrich Bologna 0:1:!-T • • pkg
.
Sultana Dinners E~~ , • each45c
Dressed W11iting • • • 5~~~ Sl69
l ·lb.

•

roU

..3 ROOMS ·

NEW

FURNITURE
'349.95

CUT
FROM
CHUCK

89c

Quick
Kick
Drink
s::eE
•
3 ":: s1oo Bush's Shelly Beans •
.
"neapp·le
Pl
3
I=
89c
Ham
Glaze
s~~~E
•
• • • .... 39
Punch Detergent
Cranberry Sauce a::~o • • '!: 27c Sweet Potatoes s~!~o . •
58c.
A&amp;P
:::::Di~·-~A:&amp;~P~'s:O~~~·=P:•:rF:o~m:il·,:::! Apple .Sauce
• • 5 ~ s1oo Bruce's Cut Yams . •
lko.

•

·~
25C.
.-r.

HAMS
Whole or
HaH

WITH THIS
COUPON

3

VALUABLE COUPON~KI-=:.1:111

A&amp;P Vacuum Coffee

...·~

ALL
GRINDS

-~

,.

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j

;

'lb. ·

"""

$159
.

WITH THIS
COUPON

p~~··S 100

~==:D;i:•·;A:&amp;~p~·s:O~.n~e~P:er:F:o~m=il===~

fJ

aa':~:LeC:~:ut
~
..,.,

59c.

Good Thru Sat., ApriiiO In A.i Cols.
Div. A&amp;P's- One Per Fer1il

....
,..

VALUABLE COUPON
1\c With This Coupon On
V- Your Purdlooo Of IO.oz. Jar

.,.
.....
...··i'........,...,

Save 3

:JM•

.~·

Maxwell House lnstan* Coffee
Good Thru S.t., ApriiiO In }.11Cols.
Div. ~&amp;P's- Ont Per Family

•,•

.....••"'"

VALUABLE COUPON
c With This Coupon On
Yout Purch~s• Of 6-01. Jar

Save 15

......

-

Maxwell House htstant Cofftt
Good Thru Sot., April 11i In AI Cols.
Piv. A&amp;P's- One Per Fomily '

t~.

MRS. FILBERT'S -FAMILY SIZE

Soft Mar{arine •

'

'

'

'

VALUAQ~E

.

1111\. -'!

' '

FLORIDA. VALENCIA

ORANGES

-

Cauliflower • • .-39c
Pascal Celery •
'~
Fresh ·Asparqus .•
SGuthern Yuts .
led Beets •••

·wre -'MW'

• Rolk

lb.4t

COUPON

·Free -.,.."'P-300 Soap
When You Buy One Bar

1111rlv

Jelly Ecgs :~ • • • · ~ 35c
....
ggc
Easter Oakes • • • •
Jelly Eep ~1'tE , , • '~49c
JANE PARKER
'Marshmallow Eggs :~ ';;.: 29c:
Twin Rolls • • • •
Leaf Maltllllllk Egp · ."~45c
'JANE PARKER
Danish Carousel
• • • each89c: ·Chocolate Ecgs 'Ns~{to6 E !~~ 89c
JANE PARKER
Chocolate RaW.it t1'tE • :.: 69c
,.u;.
Potato Chips
• • ...... 59c 'Marshmallow Pee,.~~~ 2~25c .
STRAWBERRY
. MARSHMALLOW
Manhmallo.w Ew ~~~. :t.:39c
Marvel Ice Cream • •

-~

~
,.,
,..~ ·
:: .,;WHY, 1943,
GRIINDMA! He~'s o pic(ure ol you taken in
and you're wearing HOT PANTS!" -- '

•

Fmlt•t (

J

Dudley's Florist
' S9 N. 2na

·

992-5561)1

Middleport,

·~..-t:·

Good Thru Sot., April 10 In AR'tok.
Oiv, AaP's-Ono Per Fomi

' .

• 3:,t: 89c

• •

A&amp;P FROZEN

Handi·Wip

SAVE

~XCEL

Cashews •
MELLOW Mood

Panty.. Hose ·
LIBERTY RED

• •

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1

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llrischi• Cnrri11

I

IN

•

DAIRY DEPARTMENT
'

'

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'

%gal ·6·9$

ICE MILK.............. ..
COTTAGE CHEESE

Shop for Cifts
iu the Plait/
Stttnlp Cataloq!

·35$

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS . , . ,.,

!: ,.

·KRAn ·

10$·
'

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ALCOA ALUM.

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to~

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MASON

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AT

':'

AID ClOSS SONS \
~~:::::::::::···:·.,:~::: ·:::::·::::::: &gt;-:=:=: ~~~ : ::::~:::::::::~:::::::;:::::::::x:=:~:::r.~:::::::::::::: :.:,

,.,

AT TUPPERS PLAINS

::

L-~~!~~~,, ~~~~~! J.
' AT IIUJLANO

SHOP
I

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&gt;\

'

l./J:/ 1//11/./

::

Rl1ht
ReseiVetl
To
Limit
Quantities

RUTLAND
DEPT., STORE
We

Ac~pt

Federal FOOd Stamps

49 ~

~:::. . . . ..3 N~:s%

WITH 510.00 ORDER OR
MORE
,

MUSTARD
6 oz. iar

&lt;"~·

JACK·O LANTERN

~~s~ ............49c

75 FEET
\

Creamo golli design. Ideal for
bathroom and
kitchen walls.
Mouldir.gs and adhesives available.

~.PICKLEs ................. ..

HOLSUM

• • •

SHEET

GOLDEN ISLE .
SWEn

Bakery Special

•

95

FOOD

A&amp;P FROZEN

Broccoli Spean

4x8

FROZEN

lb. • 59 ~

A&amp;P FROZEN , .

Strawbe.,_

49~ QUART

SUPERIOR VAC PACK

cans

JANE PARKER

wiTH n11s
COUPON

COOL WHIP

'
STRAWBERRIES
4 ~~::: ~1.00

SLICED BACON

6 16·01~1 ~0

160

Good Thru Sot., April 10 In All Cols.

''

•.•

2

lb. 63

Potatoes ..........10 lb. 69'
Frosty Acres Sliced

Dessert Topping

·~

Idaho Baking

19e

~irds Eye

CENTER PORTION

Good Thru Sat., April I0 In All Cols.
Div, A&amp;P's- One Per Family

,,..~ Bf~AfS WORlD

Jumbo
Bunch

FULLY COOKED

Sunnyfield Com flakes

.~

·~

&amp;•

•

CELERY

SEMI-BONELESS

c.

VALUABLE COUPOfi.C...CEIEJII

.--

,

PACIFIC iSLE
3 VARIETIES •

Red
Radishes ....... 2 pkgs. 15'

Aorida New Crop

BRAND •

...~· -----------------------------------------

'J• .

¥

STYLE BOARD

Prices
Effective
Thru
lAWES III Tuesday,April 13

THESE LOW, LOW PRICES

lb.

Good Thru Sot., April 10 In All r.ols.

...-

program .
·During the meeting communications were read concerning mission giving and the
district meeting t0 be held on
April 14 at Logan (, A report of
the officers for tHe ·new year
was given by Mrs. Mildr&amp;d
!'rank. The Society voted to
purchase a· lily for the church
altar on Easter. .
.
Dunng the prevwus meetmg
a $25 contribution was made to
the George Thompson Kidney
l'und . Thirteen sick calls were
reported during the past month
and cards were sent to the sick
and shut~ins.

MASON
FURNITURE

lks.1 oC·

.

79th Celebrated

Circle Elects Officers

Scotties Facial Tissues

;:
SALE, BAZAAR SET
and bazaar Saturday at the
:; The Rutland Firemen 's Rutland Department Store
:: Auxiliary will hold a bake sale beginning at 8:30a.m.
,•·

goat.
Speaker was Edward · McClain, Cleveland Cystic Fibrtisis
Chapter chairman, who showed
the film, ''The Song of the
N!ghllark " aod spoke on
treatment and research in the
no centers of.the United States.
Those attending from Meigs
County ~ere Monday overnight
guests of Mrs. Betty Fellows at
Shelby.

Inspirational Program Given WSCS

-----·- --

....

for hed maintenance. The Meigs
County Salon contributed $56.50
toward the bed endowment
fund .
Mrs. Elliott also ·noted that
$477 ·has been given for cystic
fibrosis research and of that
amount the Meigs County Salon
has given $320. Twenty-three
salons are now have a mem·
bership of 1,666, 95.6 per cent of

Two Projects Planned

FRANK WOOTERS, new Eastern High School band director,
has taken over production of the school's annual minstrel show.
The show is set for late April and will feature the dance band
accompanying many numbers. Wooters has some excellent ideas
for the upcoming show.

..

Tanner, rurses scholarsh ip ;
Edna Smeltz, second member
of partnership.
Mrs. Elliott in her comments
on accomplishments noted th~t
\he Denver Na tional , Jewish
Hospital bed endowment of
$1,000 has bee'n raised along
with the $100 for a plaque.
Excess in the fund will be used

Mrs. Jesse Hell . .Other
departemefltal officers
presented were Mrs. Evaline
Berkley, ~econd demi •chapeau
deuxieme; Violet Aichholz,
national third member finance
committee; Reva Cihlo, second
member constitution and bylaws; Joy Bowman, children
and youth chairman ; Wanda

"

KRAFT OIL
32

'

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Bottle

Philadelphia

KRAFT
MARSHMALLOW CREAM

2· 7 oz. iars
SUDDEN BEAUTY

CREAM CHEESE HAIR SPRAY
8

.

QZ.

TEEN QUEEN
CUTGREEN

ot.PKG. 39$

16.2 oz.

79$

6
BEANS ....
99
·~ ·

SAVE
ON 10 OZ. SIZE

NESCAfE·.

303

cans

UlllT
t PEll 'AMILY

. 10 oz. Jar

1.29

With Covlk'll
Eiph•

. 4-13-71

�..
'

.

.

6- The Daily Sentipel, Middlepo,·t-Pomeroy, 0., April7, 1971

.:~:=:~::::::~:::::::;;.:::::::.::::::;x::::~:::::::::o;::::~-:::::::::::~: ,

Rehearsar-Dinner Given .Friday

•'

"

7.- .The Dally Sentb)el, Mlddlepor\-funeroy, 0., April7, lfll

.. lofr. and Mrs. Heniian Caudill of Middleport are convinced

Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Painter of
Lima entertai ned Friday
evening at the Martin
Restaurant with a dinner
preceding rehearsal for the
wedding of their son, Ralph, and
Miss Carole Anderson.
The table centerpiece was of
blu~ and yellow baby mums
with a ceramic bride and

I

groom .
Guests were the honored
couple , Mr . and Mrs. Emerson
Heighton, Tom Allderson, Miss
Marilyn sw·an, Mr . and Mrs.
Francis Anderson, Middleport;
Danny Painter, Miss Coleen
Steele, Miss Nancy Painter,
Miss Jan Painter, lima; Mrs.
·Ben Neutzling, Pomeroy; Miss
Valerie Swisher, Mr . and Mrs.
Michael Krutulis, Mr. and Mrs.
James Baell, Columbus; and
Gary Miller.

Luncheon Given

Service Held Here

that persons calling fire departments should be extremely careful
in giving instructions on how to get to the fire.
·
Saturday night; Mr. and Mrs. Caudill were enroute from
Portsmouth to their home and were approaching Oak Hill . They
came upon a small house burning and a frantic couple standing in
front. They stopped and helped the young man whose home was
Holy communion around
burning move his car across the street and away from the flames . · candlelighted tables will be held
The. home was practically demolished but the Caudills told .the at Trinity Church in the Sunday
school room at 7:30 Thursday
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
couple they w'ould advise the fire department at Oak Hill.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
Arriving in Oak Hill, they found the Oak Hill fire department night. For the observance the
an
d M r s . · Ra 1ph Keller, :;o:::::::~:i8~:~::~:?.:8~:::8&gt;~&amp;:::~::::::::::::::::~:~::::::::
choir
will
sing
"Fling
Wide
the
had already been advised but they also noticed that the fire truck
turned the wrong direction towards centerville, about 12 miles Gates," with Mrs. Marvin Burt Pomeroy, Route 3, were Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Keller, Randy,
SPEAKER NOTED
away. The Caudills chased tlle fire truck attempting to attract as soloist.
The
sunrise
service
at
Trinity
Rodn~y
and
Russell,
Pomeroy
;
Denver
Hill of Foster, W. Va.
attention and get it turned around and headed in the other
direction. Some three other vehicles were following and the · Church will he at 6:30a .m. and Mr . and Mrs. Paul Orr and Mr . . will he the speaker at weekend
Caudills realized. these were otller firemen following. Attempts to the Easter worship service at and Mrs . Floyd Weber, Long services at the Red Brush
10:30 a.m. The choral selection Bottom; Mrs. Thelma Ash- Ch urch. The Saturd3y and
get these firemen stopped were also futile.
Finally, everyone arrived in Centervllle and, of course, there for the early service will he, worth, Pomeroy and Ernest Sunday night services will begin
was no fire. So, firemen turned around and started the trek back Early in the Morning, and for Weber,Pomeroy, Route 3. The ·,at 7:30p.m. The Sunday mor·
the worship service, Open the 82nd birthday anmversary of ning service will he at 10 a.m.
to Oak Hill and then on to the blaze.
Gates of the Temple.
Ernest Weber was observed. The public' is invited . ·
The home, of course, was already destroyed ; but if proper
' directions are given firemen would be able to reach the scene of
the fire in time to do a great deal of good.

Communion Planned

..

JAY LOZIER, son of. Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Lozier ' the former
Rhea Gears of Pomeroy, a straight A student at the Princeton, N.
J. high school, _has been selected a~ one of a group of students
going to Italy for 10 days, April 8 through April lB. He will travel
with members·of the Foreign Study League. The trip, sponsored
by tlle Classics League, is especially for Latin students. The group
will visit Rome, Capri, Pompeii and will climb on MI. Vesuvius.
Jay is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton, former
residents now living in Aberdeen, Ohio.

,Johnson, Delaware.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mr . and Mrs. George 1,.
Creasap, Sr.; Columbus.
For her wedding, the. bride
selected Mrs. Pat Saunders as
her matron of honor,' and her
sister,Miss Susan Kavanaugh,
as the bridesmaid. Mr. James
Alexander served as best man

The April 2 marriage of Mary
Louise Kavanaugh and George
Lewis Creasap, Jr. was per·
formed by the Rev. Darrell
Hook at the home of the bride's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred

Mr. and Mrs. .Wtlllam
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson Heighton, and Miss
Seren Lewis hosted a buffet
luncheon Saturday at the
Lewis home for out-of-town
guests here for the wedding of
Miss Carole Anderson to Mr.
.Ralph Painter.
Attending the 'luncheon
were Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Painler, Miss Jan Painter,
Miss Nancy Painter, Miss
Coleen Steele, Lima ; Miss
Valerie Swisher, Mrs.
Michael Krutulls, Mrs.
James Baetl, and Miss An·
derson.

Projects ·Selected

Marriage Performed April 2 in Delaware at Bride's Home
fo r the groom.
The new ' Mrs. Creasap attended the Middleport schools .
She is the granddaughter of
Mrs. Minnie Jackson, Pearl St. ,
Middleport.

Easter Weekend

FREE BABY CHICK

b

Funeral services for Albert H.
Massar, 84, of Aliquippa, Pa., a
former Pomeroy resident, were
conducted at 2 p.m. Monday at
the Ewing Funeral Home with
interment in the Beech Grove
Cemetery . .
Mrs. Albert H. Massar was
!'ccompanied to Pomeroy by
Mr. and Mrs. James McClasky,
Midland, Pa. Others here for
the services were Mr. and Mrs:
Samuel Hughes, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Reinacher, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Havel!ta, Wellsburg,
W. Va ., and Mr. and Mrs.
George G.. Massar, Columbus.

Purchasing new song~ks
for the Bradbury Church of
Christ has been taken on as a
special project of the Martha
Bible Class.
Meeting Monday night at tlle
church, the class took on the
project ,of securing ' new
songbooks along with making
new robes for the live nativity at
Christmas.
Persons de~irlng ro purchase
a songbook, in their own name
or in memory of a loved one, are
asked to contact Mr . Bill
Carter, pasror, by April 19.
Names of donors. will he placed
in the front of books.
Mrs. Paul Winn and Mrs. Bill
Carter reported on the robe
project. They suggested
chenille as the material to he
used and asked for contributions on the cost.
A donation was made ro the
George Thompson Kidney
Fund. lilies will be placed in
the church by the class for
Easter services.
New cupboards ior the church
kitchen was discussed.
Mrs. Dale Barnhart presided
at the meeting which opened
willi the class song, "If You

Friday-Saturday-Sunday
April 9, tO, 11 , 1971

!with 8 gals. ga s )

EARLY SERVICES
Easter sunrise services will
be held at 6:30p.m. Sunday at
st. Paul's United Methodist
Church, Tuppers Plains, with
the ~ev. Randy Lavender,
pastor, in charge. The public is
invited.

Certified
Gas Stations
538 W. Main

Pomeroy , 0 .

(We hollor BankAmericard
and .Ma ster Charge) ·

Australia, in its winter,
has many more square 111iles
of snow than Switzerland.

Think Your Church is Best."
Mrs. Thurman Carsey gave
devotions using the first Psalm.
A program on Easter was
presented by Mrs. Oleva Cot.terill. Walter Bunce gave an
Easter meditation and Mrs.
Winn and Mrs. Cotte~ill gave
"Poetry Belongs to All of Us."
Cards were signed for several
ill members of the class in·
eluding Mrs. E. c·. Bryan, Mrs.
Haz.el -Russell, Mrs. Carl
Ehersbach, and Mrs. Earl
Werner.
·
Mrs. Cotterill .asked each
member to take a ba~y pi,cture
to the May meeting to ·be used
for the program.
A P'ltluck dinner preceding
the meeting was attended by
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Winn, Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn EVBJIS, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Barnhart, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Bunce, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Murray, Mrs.
Jessie Sisson, .Mrs. Cotterill,
Mrs. Thurman Carsey, David,
Ruth and Jay, l){r. and Mrs. Bill
Carter, Brett and Rick. Joining
the group for the business
meeting and program were
.Earl Werner and Mrs. Max
Davis.

Three Attend Erie Salon 613 Dinner

Social ·
Calendar

----.......

. .WEDNESDA V.
POMEROY LODGE · 164,
F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Work in Fellowcraft degree. All
Master Masons invited.
' EASTER Cantata 'Wed·
nesday, · 7:30 p.m. Asbury
United Methodist Church,
Syracuse. Public is invited.
'

Mrs. Mary Marti\!,.first demi
chapeau premiere, Mrs. Eunie
Brinker, ~rs. Catherine Welsh
and Mrs. Myrtle -Walker, of .the..
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, attended the 16th
annual, dinner J14onday night of
Erie County Salon 613.
The dinner honored Mrs .
Hazel ·Elliott, . departemental
chapeau and her le secretaire,

'

This Price Is 6e A

VETERAN PERFORMER on Meigs County stages, Evelyn
Cleland Young is heading a talent show to be held at the Racine
High School Saturday night, April 17. Evelyn needs a few more
acts to round out her presentation which offers some worthwhile
cash prizes. Anyone interested Is asked ro contact Evelyn at 9493741.

Po~nd

Two new projects, remembering overseas servicemen of
the community and sending
clothing
and
Christian
literature ro an Indian Mission,
were planned during a meeting
of the Helping Hands
Missionary Circle of the
Bradford Church of Christ
Tuesday.
The group decided ro prepare
boxes for several servicemen at
a later meeting .this spring. A
letter from an Indian Mission
was read telling of the need
there and plans were made to
begin work on the clothing
project at a later time.
Flowers for shut-ins were
completed during the meeting
along with floral pieces for the
pulpit. The dally vacation Bible
school was discussed and it was
noted that a date will he set for a
meeting o£ teachers and
helpers.
Part of the members worked
on church cleanup during the
day while others quilted. A
potluck dinner was served at
noon .
' Mrs . Tressie Hendricks
presided at the meeting which
opened with devotions by Mrs.
Mildred Sisson. Her scripture
was taken from I Cor. 15, W-28
for her ropic "All Shall be Made
Alive." A poem entitled "An

Less Than A Year Ago!

Priee1 Good Thru Saturday, April I0

Holiday Store Hours
Wednesday thru Sat•Jrday
9 a.m. to 9 p.m

PAUL BURNS, Pomeroy, injured in a fall on a construction
job In Montgomery, W.Va., on March 24, has been moved to the
Charlesron General Hospital and underwent brain surgery there
Monday.
His family reported Tuesday that he appeared ro he
responding well following the operation. Twelve of the 14 Burns
children have been home or are at home due to their father 's
accident. Incidentally, his room number is 12, Fourth Floor, for
those wishing ro send cards.

c

FULL
SHANK
HALF
•

CLOSEll
EASTER DAY

lb.

SUNDAY, APRIL lift

--J

Save

Wib These
Co11pons

AT THE CLEVEW:• 1 Clinic, George Thompson has been
~inoved ro room 700 to recover and for observance following his
;;lddney transplant on March 30. Incidentally, his sister, Mrs.
Wayne - Louella- Roush who gave the kidney for the transplant
lie OFF kL
WITH THIS
is due ro he released from the Cleveland Clinic any moment now
LAIEL
pkr.
7 COUPON
and wlll be returning to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
10 In All
Robert Thompson, in Pomeroy.
Mrs. Robert Lewis, chairman of a fund 'drive now underway
for !8-year-old George, reports that donations continue to pour in. :::::VALUABLE COUPON IEIII:KK:III;il
A new fund drive total will be available any time now.

4f:k

Spry Shortening

7e OFF

.._

78C,

WITH THIS

HAD YOU NOTICED? The cross on the property of Mrs.
.,
LAIEL
cu.
COUPC'•N
;: Nolan Shuster on lincoln Hill is lighted every evening this week
Good Thru Sot., April 10 In All Cols.
:: due to the significance of the season.
Div. A&amp;P's- OniCeiiPceiirF:i'iii:miila~::~~=-::111
The cross has been there for many years, thanks to the
::
:: contributions of the Trinity Church, formerly the Federated P:II::IIEIICIVALUABLE COUPON c:Ka:!l1:31~
' Church, which put up a temporary cross in 1940, just before
·:
: ~ Christmas . The church assumed the full responsibility for the
bo10f $1 00 WITH THIS
IGO
COUPON
· maintenance of the cross ' in 1942.
·•
Good Thru Sot., April 10 In All Cob.
::
Although the cross was meant only to be temporary, it was so
Div. A&amp;P's - One Per Fomily
:•favorably received In Pomeroy and attracted so much
..... .. ......
:•• widespread attention that it was retained. Alter 10 years the
:: original cross was no longer safe. The Federated Circle took on
:: the project of a new cross and a new steel structure was placed on
:; the Shuster property on May 10, 1950.
2e OFF
WITH THIS
LAIEL
COUPON
::
The new cross was dedicated on May 28, 1950. 11 stands 36 feet
Good Thru Sol.,
10 I I Cols.
;: high and is 14 feet across and acquires its luster from 250 lights.
::
The cross for years has assured the people of the Bend Area
:: each weekend and on special religious occasions, a brilliantly p:IIEIICIIIII!;• VALUABLE COUPON -=!11:31::11::111!1
:: lighted symbol, visible for miles around, a reminder of their
:: dependence upon God.
·
lkOFF
...... .
WITH TH IS
;.
LAIEL S.lb. kll.
COUPON

-

THURSDAY
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Thursday, · 8 p.!lJ. home. pf
· An inspiralional program placing of Christian symbols "A Kiss From Judas"
Margar~t Follrod. "
preceding the placing of the
· MEiGS DAV Chapter 53, depicting the life of Christ from around the picture. Mrs. Wolf praying hands symbol.
Thursday, 6:30 hall on But- Palm Sunday to Easter was gave the scriptures with Mrs.
For the gavel, scripture was
ternut Ave., Pomeroy. Dinner, presenle&lt;j.by Mrs. George Wolf Mays presenting the readings. from Matt. 26:66 with the
all v~terans welcome, district and Mrs. James Mays at a A palm branch was placed on reading "Guilty "; for the cross,
officers present for district recent meeting of the Women's the table following the reading scripture was Mark 15: 12·13 ;
Society of Christian Service of of John 12, verse 13 and "Here
meeting.
with the reading "What To Do
AFTERNOON Circle, WSCS the Chester United Methodist Comes the King ." The reading With Jesus"; for the · crown
ofl Cor . ll:2 and "An Old Feast
Heath United Methodist Church.
The
worshi(rcenter
featured
a
and a New Supper," was used scripture was John 3: 16 and a
Church, Middleport, 2 p.m.
reading " God's Great Gift. "
Thursday at the church. Mrs. picture of Jesus with scriptures for bread and wine; and
Silent p1·ayer and the Lord's
Crary Davis ro give devotions; and readings prefacing the scripture from Luke 24:48 and Prayer in unison concluded the
Mrs. M. L. French, the lesson,
and Mrs. Freda Mitch will be
hostess.
CATHOUC Women's Club, 7
p.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart
A surprise dinner party was
Church preceding Holy Thurs...
held recently in observance of
day services at 8 p.m.
Officers elected at a recent Mae Cozart, white · cross the 79th birthda y anniversary of
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453, meeting of the Ruth Missionary chairman, and Mrs. Coralee Mrs. Blanche Tucker. Mr . and
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at Circle of the Racine Baptist Cummins, love gift chairman. Mrs. Howard Van Matre hosted
hall. All Master Masons invited. Church at the home of Mrs. Installation of the new of- the affair.
FRIDAY
Eber Pickens were Mrs. Helen ficers will take place at the May
Guests were Mr . and Mrs.
POMEROY
Community
Good
Pickens, president; · Mrs . meeting of the Circle.
George R. Van Matre, Kevin
Easter Meditation" was read
Friday
services,
12
noon
to
3
Margie
Wolfe,
vice
president;
Get-well
cards
were
signed
and Melinda , Mason; Mr . and
and prayer by Mrs. Sisson
Church,
held
by
p.m.,
Trinity
Mrs.
Marjorie
Grimm,
for
Mrs.
Jean
Alkire
and
Mrs.
Mrs. Ross Roush , Mason ; Mr.
concluded the devotional serPomeroy
Ministerial
secretary;
Mrs.
Martha
Lou
Chris
Pickens.
The
birthday
of
and Mrs . George Hoffman and
vic.e.
,
Association.
Beegle,
treasurer;
Mrs.
Ollie
Mrs.
Mary
Kay
Yost
was
obLisa, Gallipolis ; Mr . and Mrs.
Attending besides M~s.
WEEKEND
REVIVAL
at
served.
John
(Wanda ) Dickson ,
Hendricks and Mrs.,Sisson were
Rutland
Freewill
Baptist
Mrs
.
Yost
presented
the
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs :
Mrs . Verna Hysell, Mrs.
Church,
Friday,
Saturday
and
program.
It
was
decided
to
William
(Nina)
Stump,
Madeline Painter and Victor;
BAPTISMAL RITE HELD
Sunday,
7:30p.m.
Rev.
Robert
Mrs. · Eleanor Hoover, Mrs.
Elizabeth Ahn Ewing, change the regular meeting Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Stewart
of
Mt.
Vernon
Frances Hysell, Mrs .. Mary
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benny date to the second Thursday of Tucker , Terry, Timmy, Todd
Gilkey, Mrs. Clara Gilkey, Mrs. evangelist. Resurrection Ewing, was baptized at the each month. At the meeting and Troy, Mr . and Mrs. Ray
Bonnie Pickens and Scotty, Service at 6 a.m. Sunday. Palm Sunday service of Trinity besides those named were Tucker, Ray Allen, Jerry, and
Mrs. Nora Cambron, and Bud Everyone welcome.
Church. The Rev. W. H. Perrin Sandra Boothe, Mrs. Erma Kristina , Mr . and Mrs. John
SATURDAY
Mrs .
Marjorie
ofiiciated. Mr. and Mrs. Don NOl'fis, Mrs. Nondus Hendricks, Bocock,
Bartrum.
COMMUNITY EGG Hunt Spires were the sponsors. At- Mrs. Phyllis Bailey, and Mrs. Bumatow and Sandi, Cheshire;
Saturday at 1:30 p.m. old tending were Mr. and Mrs. Naomi Stobart. Mrs. Marjorie and Mr. and Mrs. !(o bert
SERVICE SET
Chester Courthouse. Bring own Garland Caldwell of Alfred, the Grimm will be hostess for the Bocock, Robin and Kelly,
There will be a sunrise ser- colored eggs. Prizes. Sponsored maternal grandparents; Mrs. May meeting.
Huntington , W. Va.
vice at the ·Long Bottom by Chester Girl Scout Troop 204 Henry Ewing , Pomeroy,
Methodist Church Sunday at and Modern Woodmen of paternal grandmother; and
5:30a.m. AChristian fellowship Am~rica . Everyone welcom'e. Mrs. Emma Findling, maternal
breakfast will be served .
SUNDAY
great-grandmother.
;'---------------------~-:--,
following the service. Pastor is I SUNRISE SERVICE Sunday
the Rev. Freeland Norris .! Hemlock Grove Christian
SundaySchoolwillbeheldatlOIChurch 5:30a.m . Worship
SON BORN MAR. 28
a.m. and worship service at 11. · service and Sunday School at
Mr. and Mrs. Terry M. Henry,
The public is invited to attend. regular time.
Mason,
are announcing the
.
. SUNRISE SERVICE Lelart
Falls u. B. Church Sunda 6 a.m. birth of a son, March 28, at the
Breakfast will he served at Holzer Medical Center. The . $35.00 DownALUMNI TO MEET
Balance cOn
The
Pomeroy
Alumni home of ~Mfofilnd ~s.d!l~yd , ~ven pound, two ounce infant
Norris.
has been named Jeffrey Paul. Convenient
Association will meet at 7:30
Mr. and Mrs. Henry have
Terr:ns .
p.m. Monday at the council
another son, Terry Michael, 20
MEETING
DELAYED
chambers in Pomeroy City
months. Grandparents are Mr.
Hall. All alumni members are The Middleport Alumni Assn. and Mrs. Oscar Henry, Clifron,
invited to attend the meeting at meeting scheduled for this W. Va . and Mrs. James
which time plans wlll be made evening has been postponed McKirgan, Mason.
until Wednesday, April It
for the annual reunion .
Mason, W. Va.

2~v~z. •

Cooked Ham ,J~T16N • , • ,•.• .;· Cornish Hens
• tb.59c
•
Cooked Ham •rw:~t.. • , lb.ac Easter KeUbassi • • • • lb. 79c
Ham Roast c~uYfR • • • • lb. $109 Beef Rib Riast ·:~ ~·~~t . '"· Sl09
Semi-Boneless Hams ~HH~~F • ,•. &amp;Be Swiss Steaks R~~~L~~~E • • 4b.99c
Sam•I·Bone Iass Hams llANo • ,•. 99c Beef Rib Steals • • • • '"· Spt
Virginia Farm Hams • • ,.. 95c Ground Chuck F~~~ • • • • ••.age
QUARTERED LOIN
Smoked Picnics • • • • lb.Qc Port Chops CENTER
lb. &amp;Be
CHOPS INCLUDED
Canned Hams Go~~~~~~A~ • 3~~5479 Pork BuH Steaks • • • ••. 69c
Canned H• HoN::~LAZEo. 4!nS569 WI'&amp;IIAfS SWIFTS PRE/oiiUM
::: 75c
IEEF
I

W. VA.

VIIV

4

ALL

1

I

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Oscar Mayer Wieners

Sk .1111ass w·1eners "SUPER
RIGHT': •
ALL .
Sf •ICed· B'aeon sooD
•

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aa..l Ba
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con

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PRE.., IUJ.&lt;

•

•

• •
I

•

79c
pke .
•·•b.. 75c
ptq
~~b.

*',•.g45cc
•·••· 79c
pkg .

711..
r

Bob Evans Sausage •
12 oz. lBc
Eckrich Bologna 0:1:!-T • • pkg
.
Sultana Dinners E~~ , • each45c
Dressed W11iting • • • 5~~~ Sl69
l ·lb.

•

roU

..3 ROOMS ·

NEW

FURNITURE
'349.95

CUT
FROM
CHUCK

89c

Quick
Kick
Drink
s::eE
•
3 ":: s1oo Bush's Shelly Beans •
.
"neapp·le
Pl
3
I=
89c
Ham
Glaze
s~~~E
•
• • • .... 39
Punch Detergent
Cranberry Sauce a::~o • • '!: 27c Sweet Potatoes s~!~o . •
58c.
A&amp;P
:::::Di~·-~A:&amp;~P~'s:O~~~·=P:•:rF:o~m:il·,:::! Apple .Sauce
• • 5 ~ s1oo Bruce's Cut Yams . •
lko.

•

·~
25C.
.-r.

HAMS
Whole or
HaH

WITH THIS
COUPON

3

VALUABLE COUPON~KI-=:.1:111

A&amp;P Vacuum Coffee

...·~

ALL
GRINDS

-~

,.

I

,..·=

::
.'I",.
',.
·I"

I

..-••..... .

j

;

'lb. ·

"""

$159
.

WITH THIS
COUPON

p~~··S 100

~==:D;i:•·;A:&amp;~p~·s:O~.n~e~P:er:F:o~m=il===~

fJ

aa':~:LeC:~:ut
~
..,.,

59c.

Good Thru Sat., ApriiiO In A.i Cols.
Div. A&amp;P's- One Per Fer1il

....
,..

VALUABLE COUPON
1\c With This Coupon On
V- Your Purdlooo Of IO.oz. Jar

.,.
.....
...··i'........,...,

Save 3

:JM•

.~·

Maxwell House lnstan* Coffee
Good Thru S.t., ApriiiO In }.11Cols.
Div. ~&amp;P's- Ont Per Family

•,•

.....••"'"

VALUABLE COUPON
c With This Coupon On
Yout Purch~s• Of 6-01. Jar

Save 15

......

-

Maxwell House htstant Cofftt
Good Thru Sot., April 11i In AI Cols.
Piv. A&amp;P's- One Per Fomily '

t~.

MRS. FILBERT'S -FAMILY SIZE

Soft Mar{arine •

'

'

'

'

VALUAQ~E

.

1111\. -'!

' '

FLORIDA. VALENCIA

ORANGES

-

Cauliflower • • .-39c
Pascal Celery •
'~
Fresh ·Asparqus .•
SGuthern Yuts .
led Beets •••

·wre -'MW'

• Rolk

lb.4t

COUPON

·Free -.,.."'P-300 Soap
When You Buy One Bar

1111rlv

Jelly Ecgs :~ • • • · ~ 35c
....
ggc
Easter Oakes • • • •
Jelly Eep ~1'tE , , • '~49c
JANE PARKER
'Marshmallow Eggs :~ ';;.: 29c:
Twin Rolls • • • •
Leaf Maltllllllk Egp · ."~45c
'JANE PARKER
Danish Carousel
• • • each89c: ·Chocolate Ecgs 'Ns~{to6 E !~~ 89c
JANE PARKER
Chocolate RaW.it t1'tE • :.: 69c
,.u;.
Potato Chips
• • ...... 59c 'Marshmallow Pee,.~~~ 2~25c .
STRAWBERRY
. MARSHMALLOW
Manhmallo.w Ew ~~~. :t.:39c
Marvel Ice Cream • •

-~

~
,.,
,..~ ·
:: .,;WHY, 1943,
GRIINDMA! He~'s o pic(ure ol you taken in
and you're wearing HOT PANTS!" -- '

•

Fmlt•t (

J

Dudley's Florist
' S9 N. 2na

·

992-5561)1

Middleport,

·~..-t:·

Good Thru Sot., April 10 In AR'tok.
Oiv, AaP's-Ono Per Fomi

' .

• 3:,t: 89c

• •

A&amp;P FROZEN

Handi·Wip

SAVE

~XCEL

Cashews •
MELLOW Mood

Panty.. Hose ·
LIBERTY RED

• •

' ·

..•
1

'

llrischi• Cnrri11

I

IN

•

DAIRY DEPARTMENT
'

'

. .··.'

'

%gal ·6·9$

ICE MILK.............. ..
COTTAGE CHEESE

Shop for Cifts
iu the Plait/
Stttnlp Cataloq!

·35$

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS . , . ,.,

!: ,.

·KRAn ·

10$·
'

on~

ALCOA ALUM.

rFOIL

J

I

i 11 ''

!)

l'l P.] 1'*)'/0

to~

1 .. ,"~

MASON

We DeiMir

773-5554

AT

':'

AID ClOSS SONS \
~~:::::::::::···:·.,:~::: ·:::::·::::::: &gt;-:=:=: ~~~ : ::::~:::::::::~:::::::;:::::::::x:=:~:::r.~:::::::::::::: :.:,

,.,

AT TUPPERS PLAINS

::

L-~~!~~~,, ~~~~~! J.
' AT IIUJLANO

SHOP
I

I

&gt;\

'

l./J:/ 1//11/./

::

Rl1ht
ReseiVetl
To
Limit
Quantities

RUTLAND
DEPT., STORE
We

Ac~pt

Federal FOOd Stamps

49 ~

~:::. . . . ..3 N~:s%

WITH 510.00 ORDER OR
MORE
,

MUSTARD
6 oz. iar

&lt;"~·

JACK·O LANTERN

~~s~ ............49c

75 FEET
\

Creamo golli design. Ideal for
bathroom and
kitchen walls.
Mouldir.gs and adhesives available.

~.PICKLEs ................. ..

HOLSUM

• • •

SHEET

GOLDEN ISLE .
SWEn

Bakery Special

•

95

FOOD

A&amp;P FROZEN

Broccoli Spean

4x8

FROZEN

lb. • 59 ~

A&amp;P FROZEN , .

Strawbe.,_

49~ QUART

SUPERIOR VAC PACK

cans

JANE PARKER

wiTH n11s
COUPON

COOL WHIP

'
STRAWBERRIES
4 ~~::: ~1.00

SLICED BACON

6 16·01~1 ~0

160

Good Thru Sot., April 10 In All Cols.

''

•.•

2

lb. 63

Potatoes ..........10 lb. 69'
Frosty Acres Sliced

Dessert Topping

·~

Idaho Baking

19e

~irds Eye

CENTER PORTION

Good Thru Sat., April I0 In All Cols.
Div, A&amp;P's- One Per Family

,,..~ Bf~AfS WORlD

Jumbo
Bunch

FULLY COOKED

Sunnyfield Com flakes

.~

·~

&amp;•

•

CELERY

SEMI-BONELESS

c.

VALUABLE COUPOfi.C...CEIEJII

.--

,

PACIFIC iSLE
3 VARIETIES •

Red
Radishes ....... 2 pkgs. 15'

Aorida New Crop

BRAND •

...~· -----------------------------------------

'J• .

¥

STYLE BOARD

Prices
Effective
Thru
lAWES III Tuesday,April 13

THESE LOW, LOW PRICES

lb.

Good Thru Sot., April 10 In All r.ols.

...-

program .
·During the meeting communications were read concerning mission giving and the
district meeting t0 be held on
April 14 at Logan (, A report of
the officers for tHe ·new year
was given by Mrs. Mildr&amp;d
!'rank. The Society voted to
purchase a· lily for the church
altar on Easter. .
.
Dunng the prevwus meetmg
a $25 contribution was made to
the George Thompson Kidney
l'und . Thirteen sick calls were
reported during the past month
and cards were sent to the sick
and shut~ins.

MASON
FURNITURE

lks.1 oC·

.

79th Celebrated

Circle Elects Officers

Scotties Facial Tissues

;:
SALE, BAZAAR SET
and bazaar Saturday at the
:; The Rutland Firemen 's Rutland Department Store
:: Auxiliary will hold a bake sale beginning at 8:30a.m.
,•·

goat.
Speaker was Edward · McClain, Cleveland Cystic Fibrtisis
Chapter chairman, who showed
the film, ''The Song of the
N!ghllark " aod spoke on
treatment and research in the
no centers of.the United States.
Those attending from Meigs
County ~ere Monday overnight
guests of Mrs. Betty Fellows at
Shelby.

Inspirational Program Given WSCS

-----·- --

....

for hed maintenance. The Meigs
County Salon contributed $56.50
toward the bed endowment
fund .
Mrs. Elliott also ·noted that
$477 ·has been given for cystic
fibrosis research and of that
amount the Meigs County Salon
has given $320. Twenty-three
salons are now have a mem·
bership of 1,666, 95.6 per cent of

Two Projects Planned

FRANK WOOTERS, new Eastern High School band director,
has taken over production of the school's annual minstrel show.
The show is set for late April and will feature the dance band
accompanying many numbers. Wooters has some excellent ideas
for the upcoming show.

..

Tanner, rurses scholarsh ip ;
Edna Smeltz, second member
of partnership.
Mrs. Elliott in her comments
on accomplishments noted th~t
\he Denver Na tional , Jewish
Hospital bed endowment of
$1,000 has bee'n raised along
with the $100 for a plaque.
Excess in the fund will be used

Mrs. Jesse Hell . .Other
departemefltal officers
presented were Mrs. Evaline
Berkley, ~econd demi •chapeau
deuxieme; Violet Aichholz,
national third member finance
committee; Reva Cihlo, second
member constitution and bylaws; Joy Bowman, children
and youth chairman ; Wanda

"

KRAFT OIL
32

'

'

Bottle

Philadelphia

KRAFT
MARSHMALLOW CREAM

2· 7 oz. iars
SUDDEN BEAUTY

CREAM CHEESE HAIR SPRAY
8

.

QZ.

TEEN QUEEN
CUTGREEN

ot.PKG. 39$

16.2 oz.

79$

6
BEANS ....
99
·~ ·

SAVE
ON 10 OZ. SIZE

NESCAfE·.

303

cans

UlllT
t PEll 'AMILY

. 10 oz. Jar

1.29

With Covlk'll
Eiph•

. 4-13-71

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April'/, 1971

· Bargains, Qargains, and More•
•

music.

Billy F. King, Mr. and Mrs. W.
B. Jividen, all of Leon; Mrs. R.
W. Armstrong and Mrs. Louie
Cooke, both of Bassett, Va .; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Grant ,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Foster
Mays of Ravenswood; Don
Hayman, Syracuse, 0 .
ATTEND INSTITUTE
Mike Howard, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Billie Joe Howard, New
Haven , and David Morgan , son
of Mr . and - MrS.- E: John
Morgan, New Haven, attended
the World Affairs Institute on
April 2nd and 3rd at Morgantown, W. Va.
The stud ents represented
Wahama High School and were
.s ponsor ed · by New Haven
Rotary Club.
They were accompanied
h
there by Mr. and Mrs. E· J 0 n
Morgan. Two other students
'th th M
going Wt
e organs were
Jane Haymaker and Bruce
Adams. They allen ded a th ree
day Junior Leadership Cont W t v· · ·
f .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

New Haven Social Events
NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Women's Club annual
dinner meeting will be held'this
- year · at the Uptowner Inn in
Parkersburg on Tuesday, May
25, aL 5:30 p.m. according to
Mrs . Donna
Thompson ,
ch~'lman. She repo,rts that the
cor is $4.10 and includes tax
and tip . Reservations are to be
made with her no later than
April 27.
Mrs.
Perdue,
District
president, will install the
Women's Clu b officers at the
meeting in Parkersburg, May
25. The New H~veri Women will
hold an election of officers at
the next scheduled meeting,
Tuesday, April 27, al 8 p.m.
Mrs. Charles Smith, president
of the New Haven Women's
club, has announced othe t'
dates to remembe r. The 15th
Annual Educational Institute
will be held at Marshall July 2123. Costs are a pproximately $15,
which includes room. Meals are
extra.
Mini College will be held at
Morganlown, June 14 through
June 17. Costs are approximately $50 and includes
ro om and boa rd. Complete
co urse de!&lt;iils and rtg istration
forms will be mailed at a later
date. If inlerested contact
Shirley Campb~ ll , Room 1134,
Agricultural Sciences Building,
W. Va. University, Morga ntown, 26506.
WED MARCH 19
Miss
Jeanne
Morgan,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.
John ·Morgan, Haven Heights,
was united in marriage on
March 19 to Lesley Shockey,
Ravenswood, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Harley Shockey, ·sandyville, W. Va .
The Rev . Parker Hinzman
performed the double ring
ceremony in the Mason United
Methodist Church. Mrs. R. W.
Armstrong, organist of Bassett,
Va. provided th e weddin g

-

..

'

QUALITY
1962 THUNDERBIRD H. T. CPE.

$495

Li te blue finish, good tires, clean vinyl Inferior, auto.

trans .. power steering and brakes, radio, heafer.

1966 IMPALA H.T. SEDAN

$1395

Local 1 owner ca r, blk. finish &amp; red cloth Interior, good

tires, v .a engine, automatic trans .• &amp; p. steering ,
Ni ce family car .

1967 CHEVROLETl TON. CAB-CHASSIS

~adio.

$2395

102" Cab to Axle, new 825x2 0 tires, 2-speed axle, clean cab,
292 cu. in. 6 cy l. eng.

Bargains~· In·
· Auto Sales

'

miles, new tires, camper top,

good condition. Phone 992·
2805, Eldon Walburn.
3·28-lfc

--,--,:-:-:-'="-'---

EXPERT

1965 SPORTS Fury. 383 cu in., 4barrel, dual exhaust, .4 speed,
black Inside and out. Rear
reverberator .

:Wheel Alignment

$950.

Original .owner. Call 992-6977
after 6 p.m.
4-4-6fp

------For Sale

SUPER Targetspot 20X target
scope. $135. new. Call 9925072.
4-6-3tp

- - - - -- -

.

Business /Services

1968 GMC '12-lon pickup, 23,000

seat

$5.55
I

- GUARAfHEEDPhone 992-2094

l'omeroy Home &amp; Aut~!

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.'
FORD pickup. Lime
spreader. Double-barrel 12 , 1- ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
gauge. 1890 Winchester pump.

1961

'Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

Hopkins and Aliens ·single ·

shot. Phone 247-2161.

4-6-Stc

assifieds

Sentinel

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

SPRING sale is on . Living
L --------------------'-l'' :JUR
room suites - 2 piece, $89.95 ·
and up. Bedroom suites WANT AD
$119.95 and up. Mallress and
Notice
INFORMATION
NERVOUS? Can' t sleep? Try box springs that were $119.95
DEADLINES
a set, this week 575 per sel.
1 P.M. Oay Before Publication
"Sleepers."
Satisfaction
We will trade for your old
MDnday Deadllne9a.m.
guaranteed or money back .
~ Cancellation 8r Corrections
Only 98 cents, Nelson Drugs. furniture . Parsons Furniture
. Will be accepted untrl9 a.m..tor.
4-7-ltp and Appliance Store, 2 miles
Day of Publicat ion
north of Silver Bridge on Rt.
-----REGULATIONS '
The Publisher reserves the REDUCE excess fluids with (Jl
From lhe Largest Truck orH -3fc
right to edit ol relect any ado
FLUIDEX $1.69 . LOSE
Bulldozer Radlalor to the
deemed oblectlonal.
The
WEIGHT safely with Dex-Aere nee a
es
trgmta publisher will not be respons ible
·
~mallesl
Healer Core.
Diet, 98 cents. at Nelson 1965 HONDA 250. Call 742·5042
University. These two students for · mare than one Incorrect
after 4: 15 p.m .
Drugs.
were sponsored by Wahama insertion . RATES
.4-7-ltp
- - - , - - -- , - Student Council.
For Want Ad Service
Pomeroy
P.tl. 991-2143
GUN s·HOOT every Saturday
5
cents
per
Word
one
lnsertlnn
SER VICES SET
BESTLINE
PRODUCTS.
Call
- --- 'YIInlmUm Cliargel.,
night at 6 p.m. near Racine
The New Haven Church of
12 cents per word threL
Planing Mill. Assorted meats. Myron Bailey. Phone 992-5327.
4·4-30tc
God announces services for consecutlva . lnsertrans.
. Spon.sored by Syracuse Fire
18 cents per word sJx conDepartment.
Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Holy Week and Easter. Rev. secullve Insertions. .
.
KI·LL TERMITES and yard
4-7-ltp
· th · · te
25 Per cent Discount on paid·
Dav1'd FieIds , J r.IS
insects wilh ARAB "You-Do-e mmts r ods and ads paid within 10 days. - - -- - Work
11." King Builders Supply
of the church. Services will be
CARD OF THANKS
GUN SHOOT. Forked Run
Company, Middleport.
')
t
&amp; OBITUARY
Spouting, R~
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
held Ort Thursday, Apn 8, a
suo tor so word' minimum
2-21-601c
April
11,
12
noon
.
7:30; and on Sunday, Aprilll, at Each additional word 2c.
Painting
4-7-3tc
ALUMINUM car top boats, 10·
6 a.m. with breakfast following.
Add ; llo~a~tN2 ~, Ag~arge pe1
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
12-13 foot. Loren1o D. Davis,
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. Advertisement.
·
Wanted
Kingsbury Road.
and evening worship service at
OFFICE HOURS
All Weather Roofing &amp;
3-24-30tc
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally , . LADY- to live in with elderly
Construction Co.
10
12
00
•
~~l~rd:~~ ·
:
Noon
lady . Call 949-4904 or 667-3319.
7:30 p.m.
DEXTER , 0. 45716
St. Paul Lutheran Church in
4·6·31c COAL, limestone. Excelslo:
PH ONE 742·3945
Sail Works, E. Malt:! , St.,
New Haven, announces Holy
Insured- Experienced
In Memory
PATIENTS to care for in my · Pomeroy. Phone 992-381tfc;·
work Guaranteed
Week and Easter services, Rev.
4-9-tfc
home . Phone Mason 773-5712.
I
ill MEMORY of Irene Hudson
James Yee Kin Moy, pastor of
4-6-12tc
who passed awav 2 years aqo
the church. Maundy Thursday,
today, April 7, 1967.
PAl NT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig.Zag
Sadly missed by husband,
April 8, Holy Communion will
sewing machines. Still _i n Real Estate For Sale
Hudson, Son, Larry Wanted To Buy
original cartons. No at be administered at 7:30 p.m. Walter
Hudson ahd family .
tachments needed, · as our HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His.,·
Eas ter Sunday, April 11,
4-7-ltc OLD furniture, dishes, brass controls are built in. Sews
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293 .
beds, etc. Wri.le M.D. Miller, with 1 or 2 needles, makes
Sunrise service at 6:30 a.m.
10·25-tfc
RI. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
buttonholes,
sew
on
bu1tons,
with the youth of the church in Card of Thanks
992-6271.
monograms, and blind hem
cha rge, followed by a breakfast. THE FAMILY of Wayne A.
9-1-tfc
stitch.
Full cash price, $38.50
Sunday School School at 9:30 Zurcher
Sr .
wish
to - - - - - - or budget plan available.
acknow ledge and gratefully WILL PAY lop price for night
a.m . and worship service at
Phone 992-5641.
crawlers and earth worms.
thank
the
many
friends
who·
4·6-61c
10:45.
File's, 711 So. 3rd Ave.,
608 East Main Street
helped us in so many ways
Middleport. Phone 992-5457. ELECTROLUX Vacuum
POMEROY '
during this most distresslng
A Protestant Community
4·1-61c
MIDDLEPORT
- 6 rooms, 3
lime .
Cleaner complete with at.
bedrooms
,
bath,
porches,
Church service on Good Friday,
4-7-ltc
tachments, cordwinder and
basement.
GARDEN
AND
paint spray. Used but in like
April 9, will be held at St. Paul
TRAILER
SPACE.
$9,500.
Help
Wanted
new condition. Pay $37.45
Lutheran· Church in New Notice
ca s h or ere dll Ierms MIDDLEPORT - 1 slory
Haven. The sermon will be LONG.HAIRED
Dachshund .
available. Phone 99n641 .
frame, 2 bedr,pQ_ms. bath,
Will give away to a good
4-6-61c
delivered :;.,~,." ~ev. Wil~a'"\
...!if'....
-.
ANTED
glassed
porch,'; front porch,
home. Phone Chester -985. .·. ''i'
DeMoss,J ~ of New Haven
GARDEN SP:A-CE, YARD
4226.
1964 TRIUMPH motorcycle,
United Methodist Church ; Rev .
FENCED. 54,500.
4-4-61p
~ood condition, .5200. Harry
Davie Fields, Jr. of New Haven
rown, phone 985-3833. . . MIDDLEPORT - 8 rooms, 4
First Church of God and Rev. WILL DO upholstering. Phone
4-6·51p
bedrooms, 2 baths, porches,
992-2524.
James Y. K. Moy, pastor of St.
garage, NEW SIGING, NICE
4·2·61c
MIRACLE Water Softener, one
LOCATION. 57,950.
Paul Lutheran, will also take
unil oulfit with 170 pounds of
part in the service. A special WILL DO tailoring and
salt. Phone 985-3536.
PROPERTY IS SELLING
upholstery. Phone 992·3561 .
4-.6-31p
choir with members from the
LIKE MAD- LET US
3-31 -30tc
SELL YOURS TODAY
three churches will present
HENRY CLELAND
special music.
REV. ROBERT Stewart, MI.
IrS
TIME
FOR
REALTOR
Vernon, Ohio evangelist, will
The New Haven Church of
OFFICE-992-2259
hold weekend revival at
RESIDENCE- 992·2568.
God will begin revival services
Ru tla nd Freewill Baptist
4-4-6tc
HAND
PUSH
MOWERS
on April lB. Rev. Robert Carter
Church on Apri I 9, 10 and 11 at
- - - ,_,...2
WOMEN
or
man
and
wife.
•
As
Low
As
7: 30
each
evening.
63.95
of Anderson , Indiana will be the
Call in ~erson at Ml DWAY
at
6
Resurrection
services
eva ngelist. Services will begin
MAR KE or phone 992-2565 or RIDING MOWERS
a.m . Sunday
morning.
992-2582.
each evening at 7:30 p.m.
Ev eryone welcome.
271.95
' ..
4-4-3lc As Low As
4-6-41c

BLAETTNARS

Cleland Realty

l
l

'

.

,...

EEKAND MEEK

MY COOSIN LORNA BELLE
GITS TRADIN' STAMPS
WHEN SHE GOES TO
Tft' STORE 1 SILAS

WAAL·: I GIVE
MY. CUSTOMERS
~O METHIN' THEM
fLATLAND smRES
DON'T, LOWEEZ'(

l'O UI::E "TO ~ •100.
LUHAT 1&gt;-n '1tllJR 11'AA'IS .?

DAD BURN
CREDIT!!

AN' WHI'\T'5 THAT,
I'D · LIKE TO
KNOW?

... I t..J 'TEJV. M()JTHLY
I'I';YMEIVTS cF $10
A MOI.m-l !

-~

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE ·
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
.
40 Minutes of Your Tlmetari Well-Be the Most Profll•ble
Time You Ever Spenl.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle! .
*CHAMPION
ojrVAN DYKE
~EE

i!ALSD
DOUBLE-WI DES

LE'I'S BE PRE'PI'-RED,
WHAT MAY !

TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.
'

'

THINK ABOUT ITI
WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR
THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *
You will have something of value lo show for the$$$ you
spend when you buy your own home- plus, you gain an

OH,HAS
Alo\ GOTA

Income Tax benefll. you build an eqully and you ••• '101
bound by lhe terms of a rental agreement.

W0t71t71'A, ~ORI!

HE'S 50 REPUl-SIVE: TH' UGLIEST
GALS ON E'.ARTH WOULD G IT SICK
ATTH'StGHTO'HIM.'.'" r-----::

ANt' I. KNOW

:J'~T

THE PRO:J'!&lt;C.T TO
'i7TAI&lt;T ON

!

GUARD

F0''/0'!!

Lei Us Show You How You !:an Become A Homeowner -

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

And Convenlional Loans.
Come See Us At 97'12 N. Second St., Middleport.

· caa.. C~

ireen Hill Homes, Inc. r-

;

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning. '' Reasonable rates.

'Phone
John
Russell ,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4·7-tfc

."". .....''"'""''........,. .
~

'"'

WJNNIE WINKLE

'
992-7129
Evenings Call : 992-2534 992·3433 992-2580
Crow
Dullon
Spencer

A~D

I 'TitOOGHT.
I WA5 iHE ONLY

ONE Y\ORKIN B
LATE .

vERRY.•.ER ...MR .
viN6LE 15 STILL
HERf . l WAS
1\1.'\111"1:3 ID ...

HMM ... HOPE uERRY
KEEPS Ht5 MOUTH 61-11/T

A601JT 'THAT DESIGN
J!M '&lt;\ORKIN6 ON !

ER ... LEAVE
WI'TH HIM!

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-lfc
-----~

READY -MIX
CONCRj:TE SEWING MACHINES. Repair
delivered right to your
service, all makes. 992·228o4
project. Fasl and easy. Free
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Authorized Singer 5ales and
Goegleln Ready ·Mix Co.,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Middleport, Ohio.
3·29-lfc
6-30-lfc
- - - - : --:-:--:-BACK HOE and end-loarler
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
work . Septic tanks Installed.
Commercial , residen1ial and
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
industrial wiring. Phone 247·
992-2478.
2113.
11-29-lfc
3-12-tfc
HARRISON'S TV AND ANO'DELL WHEEL alignmenl
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. 992-2527'.
6·10-tfc
Complete front end service,

The bride given in marriage
; by her father, wore a floor
: length gown of silk organza with
= bishop sleeves. Venice lace
applique adorned the front of
the gown, sleeves and neckline.
e v,e nj~e, lace also bordered
tune up and brake ""Service.
1
~~ ~~~!Jle . chapel train.
Wheels balanced elec·, NEIGLER Construction. For
rl:..ltolitdli't&lt;leilgth veil was
__ Iron ically .
All
work
building or remodeling your
aped from Dior bow headguaranleed.
Reason·able
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
rates. 992·3213.
Racine, Ohio.
;l,piece accented with pearls. She
3-17-30fc
7-31-tfc
carried a colonial bouquet of
white mums and baby breath
CARPET
TREE -TRIMMING
and RALPH 'S
eentered with pink roses.
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
removal. Fully Insured. Free
estimates . Call after 5 p.m.,
Free estimates . Phone
Mrs . Kerry Slinde, Pt .
coll ect
Dick
Hayman,
Gallipolis
446-0294.
Pleasant, matron of honor and
3-12-1fc
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
bridesmaids, Mrs . Billy J o
Hayman, Chester 985-3509.
3-2B-301p PAl NTI NG,
Barton, Pt. Pleasant, Miss·
roofing anq
spout1n9
service.
Richard'
Stella King, Letart, all wore
PAPER-HANGING, painting,
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
floor-length gowns of nylon
plastering , dry wall. Arlhur
3·11-30tc
Musser. Phone 992-3630.
dotted swiss over satin with
3-28-JOtp
bishop sleeves. Their shoulder
- Insurance
leng th headpieces were draped
EXPERT lawn mower and
from Dior bow headpieces. Mrs.
Iiiier repair. Free pickup and AUTOMOSI LE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
~r{
delivery. Warren 's Mower
Slinde's dress was pink dotted
.operalor's license? Call
.
Shop,
248
Condor
St.
Phone
swiss over pink satin and Mrs.
2966.
RUMMAGE sale, April? and 10 BARMAID and part time ECONOMY TILLERS
992-7357.
As Low As
134.95
6-15-tfc·
Barton 'sand Miss King's gowns
at Coats Building , Mid - wailress . Phone 992-9943.
4-6-61c
dleport. Sponsored by Beta
4·1·6tc
were gree n dotted swiss over
Broker
POMEROY .
Sigma Phi Sorority.
ALARMS! Burglar, fire and·
green sa tin. Each carried a
J.
W.
C.rsey,
Mgr.
110
Mechanic
St.
H-3tc WOMAN lo do housework .
hold - up . Soulheastern
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Phone
992-2181
Phone Chester 985-3900.
bouquet of tinted mums to
Security Syslems. Call Ray
I
ITEM: Jack Kane.
HOLY WEEK SERVICES
4-4-6tc
correspond with color of gown.
2 LOTS - Double Qarage, 3 Adams 247-2055 - Mike
TONIGHT,
CHURCH
OF
You somehow get the
bedrooms, nice balh, living 23 O' Brien 247-2113.
Miss Keri Lynn Slinde, attired
WALNUT STEREO-Radio
CHRIST, FIFTH AND MAIN,
X
12
with
fireplace.
Large
3-17-tfc
For
Rent
eling he has thought
comblnallon . Four speed
in pink dotted swiss, carried a
MIDDLEPORT. 7:30P.M.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Wise
dinina,
modern
kitchen
with
intermixed
changer.
Fou·r
4-6-4tc 3 ROOM downstairs furnished
white basket filled with pink and son, Brian of Columbus
bout
what
he's
electric stove and respeaker sound sr.sfem, dual
SEPTIC
tanks
cleaned.
Miller
apartment.
Phone
742-5032.
frlgeralor . Gas forced air
rose petals.
haring with you. Your
volume contra . Balance
visited hirparents, Mr. and GET YOUR Eas ter bunnies ·
Sanltallon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
4-6-31c 167.40.
furnace
.
$21
,000.00.
Mat·ty Liev ing served as Mrs. James Wise in New Haven
Use our budget lerms.
eling is right.
now. Randall Roberts, Letart
662-3035.
.
ca11 992·3352.
t•ingbearer. David Shockey, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. . Falls. Ohio .
2-12-tfc
4-6-Mc ANTIQUES, Phone 992·5327.
4·1-6tc POMEROY- 3 nice bedrooms
Sandyville , W. Va. , served as Alvin Hall at Logan, W. Va .
with large closets, modern
ccc-,...,.---::-=,...,.----,4·6·3Dtc - - - - ' -- bath , new kitchen with FOR experl electrical work call
bes t man and ushers were Jerry
BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel WILL PICK up merchandise
electric
range. double sink. 992-5179. .
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
Morgan and David Morgan, and three children of Jenkinand take to auction on a TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
,
Gas
furnace.
Full basemen!.
speakers, 4 speed automatic
4.6-Wp
percentage basis. Call Jim
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
both of New Haven .
town, Pa., are visiting his
changer.
se!larale
controls.
Adams, auclioneer, Rulland.
Ohio. 992-2951.
Mrs. E. John Morgan wore a . parepts, Mr. and Mrs. C,:urtis
Balance $80.99. Use our time
Phone 742-4461.
4-2-lfc
Only $12,000.00 - ·Lot for
payment plan. Call 992-3352. MIDDLEPORT
two· piece gold colored dress McDaniel, Sr. in ·Mason, and
9·23-tfc.
mobile home. All utllllles
4·1·61c
- - - - - - UNFURNISHED 3 room .,
with navy accessories for her other relatives.
Only $650.00
available.
AUCTION - . WHEN? ·Each
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
daughter's wedding. The
Friday night, 7 p.m . Where?
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Mc· 1·31-lfc
PUT IT AU
3
groom's mother was atlired in Daniel, Sr., Mason, Mr. and
Hayman's Auction House.
LIVE Easler bunnies. Paul COUNTRY LIVING bedrooms,
bath,
gas
fur~ace.
Laurel Clifl on new Rt. 7 TWO OR three bedroom home,
Pierce, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, 2.1
an orchid two piece dress with Mrs . ·c urtis McDaniel, Jr .
TOGETHER FOR .YOU!
Well water . Garage. $7,000.00
Pomeroy
Middleport
By·
miles
out Rf. 143 from bypass.
Collage Road , Syracuse.
beige accessories. Both wore visited over the weekend in
pass.
4-4-61P.
Adults only . Phone 992-5133.
NEW LISTING - 4 bedrooms,
corsages of pink roses.
2.7-tfc
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
3-2-lfc
bath , furnace , basement .
Grandmothers aitending the James Loyd and family, Mr.
ANTIQUES, phone 992;5327. ·
Several oulbuildings. All
4-7-JOtc
wedding were Mrs. Warren and Mrs. Stanley Saunders arid SKATE A-WAY Easter party, TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
minerals. Chesler water
Friday, Aprll9. Races, prizes,
•12-mlle north of new Meigs
available.
22 ACRES. Only
Stewart, Leon, W. Va ., and Mrs. family.
balloons. Open Wednesday,
High School. Phone 992-2941. TRACTOR, FlO Farmall on
$6,000.00
Friday and Saturday, 7:30 to
Louie Cooke, Bassett, Va.
3·5-ttc
rubber, runs good $300.00.
Tod Hetzer of Parkersburg
10:30 p.m. Available for - - - - -- Phone 992·6048.
A reception was held in the spent the weekend with his
MIDDLEPORT - 5 rooms •.
private ·parlles, Monday, FURNISHE.D and unfurnished
4-7-3tp
social room of the Mason United grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
bath. fur.nace. Two bedrooms.
Tuesday, Thursday nights
apartmenls. Close to school.
Level lot. Only $4,000.00
Metllo.dist Church with a color Harold Schwarz.
and Saturday and Sunday
Phone 992-5434.
1968
BULTACO
100
c.c.
Lobllo.
p.m. Phone Chesler 985-3929
scheme of pink and green used
, 10·18,tfc
IT'S TIME TO BUY
New rain!' and cables, exor 985-3585.
·
on the bride's table. The wedCALL 992-3325
4-4-61v 3 ROOM, bath. furnished or cellen condition. Asking $325
HELEN
L. TEAFORD
or
besl
offer.
Must
sell
.
Phone
ding cake was decorated in the
semi -furnished
apartment.
- ASSOCIATE
Syrac
use,
Ohio
992-7173
RUBBER
STAMPS
made
to
same coJ'or,scheme . Assisting at
Also, 2 room , balh, furnished evening only.
4-2-6tc
order . 24 hour Service. Dwain
MORNING GLORIES
apartment.
Mulberry Ave .,
the reception were Mrs. Gene
4-7-6tc
or Wilma Caslo, Portland,
March 30, 1971
Pomeroy .
References - - - - - Ohio.
Shockey, Mrs. David Shockey, ,
Slandings
· 2A ACRE farm al Long Bottom,
· Qown payment too
required.
Phone
992-6698 .
1967 KAWASAKI 100 c.c. Trail
Points
2-17-?0tc
house wllh 3 bedrooms, dining
both of Sandyville, and Mrs. Tea m
'
3-23-lfc
Boss. $350. Larry Hill ,
144
Newell Sunoca
room. kitchen, living room,
Billy F. King, Leon, W.Va.
Fra ley &amp; Schilling
Chester, Ohio, pl\orie 985·4105.
121 RUMMAGE Sale in rry
paY,ments too
l'h balhs, enclosed back
4-7-3tc
For her wedding trip to Ohio Gibbs Grocery
117
Building , Middlepo-rt ,
porch, wall to wall carpellng,
Thursday , Friday and AUto Salas
99
=--=-~-­
the bride chose a rose knit dress Domigan Soh to
aluminum siding, awning,
~r
97
Saturday . Proceeds for 1966 TORONADO, all power, TESTED and approved by
storm windows and storm
with matching coat',and brown Lou's Ashland ·
millions
of
homemakers.
Blue
94
building of the Freewill
Bailey's Sunoco
doors, city waler. Selllpg due ·
$1500. Phone 742-4885.
Luslre carpet cleaner Is tops.
accessories were .used. Her
High Team 3 games
Baptist Church.
to .ill health . Phone 614-985·
. 4·1-61c
Baker Furniture, Mtddleporl.
4-6·3tc
corsa ~e was the pink roses from Bailey's Sunoco 2286; Domlgan
3938.
'
4-7-71
her bridal bouquet.
. .
Sohio 2226; Gib~s Grocery 2217 .
3·26-121p
.High Team game - Newe/t
·
'62
CHEVROLI;T
2
ton
,
16
ft
.
The bride graduated from Sunoco 799; Batley's Sunoco OVE ill
FRESH
,bakery
bed, VB - 4 speed, 2 speed, Real Estate For Sale
Wahama High School class of 796 ; Bailey's Sunoco 792.
· pr oduc ts. Jimmy ' s Paslry
new
rubber, $S00.001 K-5 - ln·
1 ed b th Oh'o
High . Ind . 3 games
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., Mid·
·ternatlonal1112 tono runs good, HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, 2 lois
'68an d IS emp oy
y e I Margarel Fullrod 473; Vicky
dleport . Phone 992-3555.
&gt;8
x
12
flal,
$125.00.
Phone
992·
. toea led In Syracuse. Call after
Valley Industries.
Gillilan 445; Margaret Wyalt
'
' 3- 28-30tc
DR. MOODY OF
6048. '
4. 7.31 p 3 p.m. weekdays, phone 992·
George S. Hobsltller,·Jr.
· The groom graduated from 439.
2806.
_ _ _.:._____
•.
Broker .
Ravenswood High School and Gi~J?:n 1'~f; ~;~~ret F~t't~'Z HOME sewing. Phone r;.~~·
6
H · lc
Phont915-4116
.1969 BUICK LeSa~(t, 2·dr.
Clemson University, Clemson, 168 ; ·Barbara Riggs 166. ·
.... ... ,
--... Hllto~ Wolle, Saltsman.
har df op, power seer
Can cure your Ills! Coniact him··
Ing, CONVENIENT
t
secluded
Phone949-3211
S, C.
,
.
ATTENTION ladles! Would you · pe&gt;wer brakes, air , 18,000 building lpts onbut
~oday at . . . .
·
.·
T79 at Rock CALLUSforallyourrealestale
The new .Mr. an.d . Mrs. NOTI CE
·
. like to try a wig on In lhe
miles.
Excellent
condition.
.
.Springs.
'
Within
walkTng
needs.
Inquire
Of
our
Us
lings
· Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.
privacy pf yoi.Jrt- own home?
Sh oc k ey · Wl 11 "es1d.e a t ' GOOD FRIDAY servtcesatthe
dlslance of Melg,s High
before you buy ,
Youcan . .Juslcafl .tJs. We alSo ' Phone 992-2288.
'Middleport, Ohio
, ·
' ··
4·6·61c
Ravenswood, W. Va .
MI. Hermon U. B. Church
ha.ve1he 'Mink 011 Kosrnetlcs, --,--,--'7--......:--::!1.!:1.~10~-I!!IS:~' · School, a 5 mlnule drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see BUt , · -'---~-_,-.....;.....
· Out-of-town guests attending
with lhc R.ev. Roberl Saun ·
Koscol, ,
of
course. 1968 · CAMARO 32 7, 3..5ft....o,
'.9 92·7034
·1·268o1110
,..._
WItte weekends, or after 5
.
ders . Spec&gt;al smg1ng . Time
"DI 1 lb t
8
' Ph e
Ph
Ma
.one . s,on 773·5178 or see p.m. w"kdays. Phone 992. HOUSE, . 6 rooms and, bath,
the weddm• were Mr. and Mrs.
7: 30. Everyone welcome.
s r u ors, •own s. . on
•
Middleport 992-5113.
John Grueier.
.
phone. 742·5613,'
.J
6887 .
.Warren Stewart, Mr. and Mrs.
'
•
H .41c
12:31-lfc
4-4-6tp
''
.,
il-30-12tp
....

"'i

-

' '

~

~

''''··'VI
~ ..

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

Mowers &amp; Tillers

__

1:.. .

Mason Area

,

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

DCN ' NoeoDY ~0
AS LAYA

MU~

FINGER ON TNAT

!ACi(,,. 11'''6- .
SR.IMMtN' OVER
¥111'H GoOLD AN'
IT'S @. r.t!NE!

SR.

e

News, Notes

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1, Adhesive

substance
6. Gabfest

9. Dude ter·
ritory
10. Cardinal's
(2 wds. )
13. Bring to

bay

;::::::::=~-~====:::::::

H . Salad
greon
15. In
Ute

past

WE

16. Intonna l
tennof
add~s

17. Fraulein's

"never"
18. Commlsslon per ~

- - - - --

~-..,--..,---­

If You Haven't
Bought A

Local Bowling

WHA1'5 GOING OH

24. -

TERMINAL

RESORT

&amp;f~

ISLAN~ OF

'TWELVE OAR

mally
16. Medi-

2. Extelll!live

tate
22. Nogof

3.Showgood

old

judgment
(3 wds.)

23. Hellos

Unstramble th... foor Jumble1,
one letter to ea&lt;h square, to
form four -JIJ'dinary wordo.

I 1'1/YFE

Norfolk

ol.usummer"

24.c~ant

31. DlBen·

LnNantes
5. Wrinkle
6. Therefore
7. Dosums
8. Optimist's
slogan
(2 wds.l

20. Curse

tangle
32. Corundum
37. Grapallke

26. Intended

fruit

27. Farce

-n-

38. " -

29. Goods
for

II

kavaller''

sale

~xn

SHUBIL

I

AL.WAY5 L.ATE AT
THe JOt!&gt;.

I

I
I I I ()
QUETEA

of ·

Now ......,.. the circled totten

I :::;::te!l':;::'.::;n~~

;::--1-1-l l

-+-+-1

eAY, ' DOLORfS

21. !?reserve~

SHOPS A'T A

28. Japanese

IIN!·---·1 THE (till) (I I I I)
(btwen l'i'mon"'")\

v•.aerday••

statesman

29. Gained

J•mbl&lt;oo PATII

100TH LIQUID ORIGIN

Ane.. en JF'hnt he hod lloped fo,. K"IIPII hf' trf'nf fo

30. Wrath

lite dorlor- tO II

33. Bovine

"'und

CAN 'fi.IINKING
&amp;AD THOIJ61iT5.

34. Wooden

core
35. Highland
;•

....,.. , ,

LINV!&gt; lOOK THE LA&gt;T roi6HNUT
lt'I)RNIN6, AND I ~ELLED AT
f.\IM, AND NOW IT'5 CLOUDING UP.

SO I IUA,S JUir WIJNDEi:ING...

. 36. WithBtan4
38. Plunre

CAPI'AIN EASY
'

CAUSE IT· TO
RAIN?

headgear

-

' DAU..Y CRYPTOQUOTE-:H~re's how to work "'
AXYJ) 'J.,BAAXB
J.,ON 'GFEloloOW
One letter simply stands for ~other. In thia sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a., etc. Slqle letters,
"poatrophps, the length and formation' of. tl!e wOrds a~ all
. hints. Each~ay . the code letters are different.

lo

REAL ESTATE

JEMO ASSOCIATES

PLA1t'

BALL ~

A Cryptogram Quotatlo•
PK

OCV

EMHGGO

AHJf

I)C

GCBM

, AMP.WTD , DTMEM HEM CJGO DTEMM

.

or

.

DOWN

- 'sWar

HOBSIEIIER

'

infor-

42.'l'ruat

Man
25. Support
26. Queen

ON THE CARI5 ·

high,

-------itiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ

12. Tiny,

21. Alleviate
23. Agile

AT THE AI~

don1 own

'----~~~~~~-

Jf!YM@~;tt,:;:f!:!..Jc

birds

n. Fa.clle

Salina Is
(abbr.)

high,

Monthly

the

20. Where

WAIT UNTI~ SHE GETS 10
SENSE ~ HAVING

BECAUSE:

inlonnaUon
&lt;O.Always

centage
.. 19. Function

TERRY

NEW HOME

11. Place
for

39.Dugfor

1. Lay hands
OJ) (2 wds. )

symbol

WMP0/1390

--------,--

l'..torday'o Cryploquoto: WOMEN DRESS ALIKE ALL
OVER THE WORLD : THEY DRESS TO BE ANNOYING TO
OTHER WOMEN.- ELSA SCHIAPARELLI
&lt;CJ 1971 Kin( Features Synd lca.te. Inc.)

I

DTPJWB

.,
\

ocv

SEMHXKHBD,
... W,HEO

8.

ZVBD
.GVJLT

WPYM
HJ. N

.V.F:

NPJJME .

/I:EPWTD
.

'

'

•

I

'

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April'/, 1971

· Bargains, Qargains, and More•
•

music.

Billy F. King, Mr. and Mrs. W.
B. Jividen, all of Leon; Mrs. R.
W. Armstrong and Mrs. Louie
Cooke, both of Bassett, Va .; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Grant ,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Foster
Mays of Ravenswood; Don
Hayman, Syracuse, 0 .
ATTEND INSTITUTE
Mike Howard, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Billie Joe Howard, New
Haven , and David Morgan , son
of Mr . and - MrS.- E: John
Morgan, New Haven, attended
the World Affairs Institute on
April 2nd and 3rd at Morgantown, W. Va.
The stud ents represented
Wahama High School and were
.s ponsor ed · by New Haven
Rotary Club.
They were accompanied
h
there by Mr. and Mrs. E· J 0 n
Morgan. Two other students
'th th M
going Wt
e organs were
Jane Haymaker and Bruce
Adams. They allen ded a th ree
day Junior Leadership Cont W t v· · ·
f .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

New Haven Social Events
NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Women's Club annual
dinner meeting will be held'this
- year · at the Uptowner Inn in
Parkersburg on Tuesday, May
25, aL 5:30 p.m. according to
Mrs . Donna
Thompson ,
ch~'lman. She repo,rts that the
cor is $4.10 and includes tax
and tip . Reservations are to be
made with her no later than
April 27.
Mrs.
Perdue,
District
president, will install the
Women's Clu b officers at the
meeting in Parkersburg, May
25. The New H~veri Women will
hold an election of officers at
the next scheduled meeting,
Tuesday, April 27, al 8 p.m.
Mrs. Charles Smith, president
of the New Haven Women's
club, has announced othe t'
dates to remembe r. The 15th
Annual Educational Institute
will be held at Marshall July 2123. Costs are a pproximately $15,
which includes room. Meals are
extra.
Mini College will be held at
Morganlown, June 14 through
June 17. Costs are approximately $50 and includes
ro om and boa rd. Complete
co urse de!&lt;iils and rtg istration
forms will be mailed at a later
date. If inlerested contact
Shirley Campb~ ll , Room 1134,
Agricultural Sciences Building,
W. Va. University, Morga ntown, 26506.
WED MARCH 19
Miss
Jeanne
Morgan,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.
John ·Morgan, Haven Heights,
was united in marriage on
March 19 to Lesley Shockey,
Ravenswood, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Harley Shockey, ·sandyville, W. Va .
The Rev . Parker Hinzman
performed the double ring
ceremony in the Mason United
Methodist Church. Mrs. R. W.
Armstrong, organist of Bassett,
Va. provided th e weddin g

-

..

'

QUALITY
1962 THUNDERBIRD H. T. CPE.

$495

Li te blue finish, good tires, clean vinyl Inferior, auto.

trans .. power steering and brakes, radio, heafer.

1966 IMPALA H.T. SEDAN

$1395

Local 1 owner ca r, blk. finish &amp; red cloth Interior, good

tires, v .a engine, automatic trans .• &amp; p. steering ,
Ni ce family car .

1967 CHEVROLETl TON. CAB-CHASSIS

~adio.

$2395

102" Cab to Axle, new 825x2 0 tires, 2-speed axle, clean cab,
292 cu. in. 6 cy l. eng.

Bargains~· In·
· Auto Sales

'

miles, new tires, camper top,

good condition. Phone 992·
2805, Eldon Walburn.
3·28-lfc

--,--,:-:-:-'="-'---

EXPERT

1965 SPORTS Fury. 383 cu in., 4barrel, dual exhaust, .4 speed,
black Inside and out. Rear
reverberator .

:Wheel Alignment

$950.

Original .owner. Call 992-6977
after 6 p.m.
4-4-6fp

------For Sale

SUPER Targetspot 20X target
scope. $135. new. Call 9925072.
4-6-3tp

- - - - -- -

.

Business /Services

1968 GMC '12-lon pickup, 23,000

seat

$5.55
I

- GUARAfHEEDPhone 992-2094

l'omeroy Home &amp; Aut~!

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.'
FORD pickup. Lime
spreader. Double-barrel 12 , 1- ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
gauge. 1890 Winchester pump.

1961

'Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

Hopkins and Aliens ·single ·

shot. Phone 247-2161.

4-6-Stc

assifieds

Sentinel

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

SPRING sale is on . Living
L --------------------'-l'' :JUR
room suites - 2 piece, $89.95 ·
and up. Bedroom suites WANT AD
$119.95 and up. Mallress and
Notice
INFORMATION
NERVOUS? Can' t sleep? Try box springs that were $119.95
DEADLINES
a set, this week 575 per sel.
1 P.M. Oay Before Publication
"Sleepers."
Satisfaction
We will trade for your old
MDnday Deadllne9a.m.
guaranteed or money back .
~ Cancellation 8r Corrections
Only 98 cents, Nelson Drugs. furniture . Parsons Furniture
. Will be accepted untrl9 a.m..tor.
4-7-ltp and Appliance Store, 2 miles
Day of Publicat ion
north of Silver Bridge on Rt.
-----REGULATIONS '
The Publisher reserves the REDUCE excess fluids with (Jl
From lhe Largest Truck orH -3fc
right to edit ol relect any ado
FLUIDEX $1.69 . LOSE
Bulldozer Radlalor to the
deemed oblectlonal.
The
WEIGHT safely with Dex-Aere nee a
es
trgmta publisher will not be respons ible
·
~mallesl
Healer Core.
Diet, 98 cents. at Nelson 1965 HONDA 250. Call 742·5042
University. These two students for · mare than one Incorrect
after 4: 15 p.m .
Drugs.
were sponsored by Wahama insertion . RATES
.4-7-ltp
- - - , - - -- , - Student Council.
For Want Ad Service
Pomeroy
P.tl. 991-2143
GUN s·HOOT every Saturday
5
cents
per
Word
one
lnsertlnn
SER VICES SET
BESTLINE
PRODUCTS.
Call
- --- 'YIInlmUm Cliargel.,
night at 6 p.m. near Racine
The New Haven Church of
12 cents per word threL
Planing Mill. Assorted meats. Myron Bailey. Phone 992-5327.
4·4-30tc
God announces services for consecutlva . lnsertrans.
. Spon.sored by Syracuse Fire
18 cents per word sJx conDepartment.
Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Holy Week and Easter. Rev. secullve Insertions. .
.
KI·LL TERMITES and yard
4-7-ltp
· th · · te
25 Per cent Discount on paid·
Dav1'd FieIds , J r.IS
insects wilh ARAB "You-Do-e mmts r ods and ads paid within 10 days. - - -- - Work
11." King Builders Supply
of the church. Services will be
CARD OF THANKS
GUN SHOOT. Forked Run
Company, Middleport.
')
t
&amp; OBITUARY
Spouting, R~
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
held Ort Thursday, Apn 8, a
suo tor so word' minimum
2-21-601c
April
11,
12
noon
.
7:30; and on Sunday, Aprilll, at Each additional word 2c.
Painting
4-7-3tc
ALUMINUM car top boats, 10·
6 a.m. with breakfast following.
Add ; llo~a~tN2 ~, Ag~arge pe1
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
12-13 foot. Loren1o D. Davis,
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. Advertisement.
·
Wanted
Kingsbury Road.
and evening worship service at
OFFICE HOURS
All Weather Roofing &amp;
3-24-30tc
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally , . LADY- to live in with elderly
Construction Co.
10
12
00
•
~~l~rd:~~ ·
:
Noon
lady . Call 949-4904 or 667-3319.
7:30 p.m.
DEXTER , 0. 45716
St. Paul Lutheran Church in
4·6·31c COAL, limestone. Excelslo:
PH ONE 742·3945
Sail Works, E. Malt:! , St.,
New Haven, announces Holy
Insured- Experienced
In Memory
PATIENTS to care for in my · Pomeroy. Phone 992-381tfc;·
work Guaranteed
Week and Easter services, Rev.
4-9-tfc
home . Phone Mason 773-5712.
I
ill MEMORY of Irene Hudson
James Yee Kin Moy, pastor of
4-6-12tc
who passed awav 2 years aqo
the church. Maundy Thursday,
today, April 7, 1967.
PAl NT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig.Zag
Sadly missed by husband,
April 8, Holy Communion will
sewing machines. Still _i n Real Estate For Sale
Hudson, Son, Larry Wanted To Buy
original cartons. No at be administered at 7:30 p.m. Walter
Hudson ahd family .
tachments needed, · as our HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His.,·
Eas ter Sunday, April 11,
4-7-ltc OLD furniture, dishes, brass controls are built in. Sews
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293 .
beds, etc. Wri.le M.D. Miller, with 1 or 2 needles, makes
Sunrise service at 6:30 a.m.
10·25-tfc
RI. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
buttonholes,
sew
on
bu1tons,
with the youth of the church in Card of Thanks
992-6271.
monograms, and blind hem
cha rge, followed by a breakfast. THE FAMILY of Wayne A.
9-1-tfc
stitch.
Full cash price, $38.50
Sunday School School at 9:30 Zurcher
Sr .
wish
to - - - - - - or budget plan available.
acknow ledge and gratefully WILL PAY lop price for night
a.m . and worship service at
Phone 992-5641.
crawlers and earth worms.
thank
the
many
friends
who·
4·6-61c
10:45.
File's, 711 So. 3rd Ave.,
608 East Main Street
helped us in so many ways
Middleport. Phone 992-5457. ELECTROLUX Vacuum
POMEROY '
during this most distresslng
A Protestant Community
4·1-61c
MIDDLEPORT
- 6 rooms, 3
lime .
Cleaner complete with at.
bedrooms
,
bath,
porches,
Church service on Good Friday,
4-7-ltc
tachments, cordwinder and
basement.
GARDEN
AND
paint spray. Used but in like
April 9, will be held at St. Paul
TRAILER
SPACE.
$9,500.
Help
Wanted
new condition. Pay $37.45
Lutheran· Church in New Notice
ca s h or ere dll Ierms MIDDLEPORT - 1 slory
Haven. The sermon will be LONG.HAIRED
Dachshund .
available. Phone 99n641 .
frame, 2 bedr,pQ_ms. bath,
Will give away to a good
4-6-61c
delivered :;.,~,." ~ev. Wil~a'"\
...!if'....
-.
ANTED
glassed
porch,'; front porch,
home. Phone Chester -985. .·. ''i'
DeMoss,J ~ of New Haven
GARDEN SP:A-CE, YARD
4226.
1964 TRIUMPH motorcycle,
United Methodist Church ; Rev .
FENCED. 54,500.
4-4-61p
~ood condition, .5200. Harry
Davie Fields, Jr. of New Haven
rown, phone 985-3833. . . MIDDLEPORT - 8 rooms, 4
First Church of God and Rev. WILL DO upholstering. Phone
4-6·51p
bedrooms, 2 baths, porches,
992-2524.
James Y. K. Moy, pastor of St.
garage, NEW SIGING, NICE
4·2·61c
MIRACLE Water Softener, one
LOCATION. 57,950.
Paul Lutheran, will also take
unil oulfit with 170 pounds of
part in the service. A special WILL DO tailoring and
salt. Phone 985-3536.
PROPERTY IS SELLING
upholstery. Phone 992·3561 .
4-.6-31p
choir with members from the
LIKE MAD- LET US
3-31 -30tc
SELL YOURS TODAY
three churches will present
HENRY CLELAND
special music.
REV. ROBERT Stewart, MI.
IrS
TIME
FOR
REALTOR
Vernon, Ohio evangelist, will
The New Haven Church of
OFFICE-992-2259
hold weekend revival at
RESIDENCE- 992·2568.
God will begin revival services
Ru tla nd Freewill Baptist
4-4-6tc
HAND
PUSH
MOWERS
on April lB. Rev. Robert Carter
Church on Apri I 9, 10 and 11 at
- - - ,_,...2
WOMEN
or
man
and
wife.
•
As
Low
As
7: 30
each
evening.
63.95
of Anderson , Indiana will be the
Call in ~erson at Ml DWAY
at
6
Resurrection
services
eva ngelist. Services will begin
MAR KE or phone 992-2565 or RIDING MOWERS
a.m . Sunday
morning.
992-2582.
each evening at 7:30 p.m.
Ev eryone welcome.
271.95
' ..
4-4-3lc As Low As
4-6-41c

BLAETTNARS

Cleland Realty

l
l

'

.

,...

EEKAND MEEK

MY COOSIN LORNA BELLE
GITS TRADIN' STAMPS
WHEN SHE GOES TO
Tft' STORE 1 SILAS

WAAL·: I GIVE
MY. CUSTOMERS
~O METHIN' THEM
fLATLAND smRES
DON'T, LOWEEZ'(

l'O UI::E "TO ~ •100.
LUHAT 1&gt;-n '1tllJR 11'AA'IS .?

DAD BURN
CREDIT!!

AN' WHI'\T'5 THAT,
I'D · LIKE TO
KNOW?

... I t..J 'TEJV. M()JTHLY
I'I';YMEIVTS cF $10
A MOI.m-l !

-~

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE ·
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
.
40 Minutes of Your Tlmetari Well-Be the Most Profll•ble
Time You Ever Spenl.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle! .
*CHAMPION
ojrVAN DYKE
~EE

i!ALSD
DOUBLE-WI DES

LE'I'S BE PRE'PI'-RED,
WHAT MAY !

TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.
'

'

THINK ABOUT ITI
WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR
THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *
You will have something of value lo show for the$$$ you
spend when you buy your own home- plus, you gain an

OH,HAS
Alo\ GOTA

Income Tax benefll. you build an eqully and you ••• '101
bound by lhe terms of a rental agreement.

W0t71t71'A, ~ORI!

HE'S 50 REPUl-SIVE: TH' UGLIEST
GALS ON E'.ARTH WOULD G IT SICK
ATTH'StGHTO'HIM.'.'" r-----::

ANt' I. KNOW

:J'~T

THE PRO:J'!&lt;C.T TO
'i7TAI&lt;T ON

!

GUARD

F0''/0'!!

Lei Us Show You How You !:an Become A Homeowner -

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

And Convenlional Loans.
Come See Us At 97'12 N. Second St., Middleport.

· caa.. C~

ireen Hill Homes, Inc. r-

;

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning. '' Reasonable rates.

'Phone
John
Russell ,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4·7-tfc

."". .....''"'""''........,. .
~

'"'

WJNNIE WINKLE

'
992-7129
Evenings Call : 992-2534 992·3433 992-2580
Crow
Dullon
Spencer

A~D

I 'TitOOGHT.
I WA5 iHE ONLY

ONE Y\ORKIN B
LATE .

vERRY.•.ER ...MR .
viN6LE 15 STILL
HERf . l WAS
1\1.'\111"1:3 ID ...

HMM ... HOPE uERRY
KEEPS Ht5 MOUTH 61-11/T

A601JT 'THAT DESIGN
J!M '&lt;\ORKIN6 ON !

ER ... LEAVE
WI'TH HIM!

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-lfc
-----~

READY -MIX
CONCRj:TE SEWING MACHINES. Repair
delivered right to your
service, all makes. 992·228o4
project. Fasl and easy. Free
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Authorized Singer 5ales and
Goegleln Ready ·Mix Co.,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Middleport, Ohio.
3·29-lfc
6-30-lfc
- - - - : --:-:--:-BACK HOE and end-loarler
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
work . Septic tanks Installed.
Commercial , residen1ial and
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
industrial wiring. Phone 247·
992-2478.
2113.
11-29-lfc
3-12-tfc
HARRISON'S TV AND ANO'DELL WHEEL alignmenl
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. 992-2527'.
6·10-tfc
Complete front end service,

The bride given in marriage
; by her father, wore a floor
: length gown of silk organza with
= bishop sleeves. Venice lace
applique adorned the front of
the gown, sleeves and neckline.
e v,e nj~e, lace also bordered
tune up and brake ""Service.
1
~~ ~~~!Jle . chapel train.
Wheels balanced elec·, NEIGLER Construction. For
rl:..ltolitdli't&lt;leilgth veil was
__ Iron ically .
All
work
building or remodeling your
aped from Dior bow headguaranleed.
Reason·able
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
rates. 992·3213.
Racine, Ohio.
;l,piece accented with pearls. She
3-17-30fc
7-31-tfc
carried a colonial bouquet of
white mums and baby breath
CARPET
TREE -TRIMMING
and RALPH 'S
eentered with pink roses.
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
removal. Fully Insured. Free
estimates . Call after 5 p.m.,
Free estimates . Phone
Mrs . Kerry Slinde, Pt .
coll ect
Dick
Hayman,
Gallipolis
446-0294.
Pleasant, matron of honor and
3-12-1fc
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
bridesmaids, Mrs . Billy J o
Hayman, Chester 985-3509.
3-2B-301p PAl NTI NG,
Barton, Pt. Pleasant, Miss·
roofing anq
spout1n9
service.
Richard'
Stella King, Letart, all wore
PAPER-HANGING, painting,
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
floor-length gowns of nylon
plastering , dry wall. Arlhur
3·11-30tc
Musser. Phone 992-3630.
dotted swiss over satin with
3-28-JOtp
bishop sleeves. Their shoulder
- Insurance
leng th headpieces were draped
EXPERT lawn mower and
from Dior bow headpieces. Mrs.
Iiiier repair. Free pickup and AUTOMOSI LE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
~r{
delivery. Warren 's Mower
Slinde's dress was pink dotted
.operalor's license? Call
.
Shop,
248
Condor
St.
Phone
swiss over pink satin and Mrs.
2966.
RUMMAGE sale, April? and 10 BARMAID and part time ECONOMY TILLERS
992-7357.
As Low As
134.95
6-15-tfc·
Barton 'sand Miss King's gowns
at Coats Building , Mid - wailress . Phone 992-9943.
4-6-61c
dleport. Sponsored by Beta
4·1·6tc
were gree n dotted swiss over
Broker
POMEROY .
Sigma Phi Sorority.
ALARMS! Burglar, fire and·
green sa tin. Each carried a
J.
W.
C.rsey,
Mgr.
110
Mechanic
St.
H-3tc WOMAN lo do housework .
hold - up . Soulheastern
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Phone
992-2181
Phone Chester 985-3900.
bouquet of tinted mums to
Security Syslems. Call Ray
I
ITEM: Jack Kane.
HOLY WEEK SERVICES
4-4-6tc
correspond with color of gown.
2 LOTS - Double Qarage, 3 Adams 247-2055 - Mike
TONIGHT,
CHURCH
OF
You somehow get the
bedrooms, nice balh, living 23 O' Brien 247-2113.
Miss Keri Lynn Slinde, attired
WALNUT STEREO-Radio
CHRIST, FIFTH AND MAIN,
X
12
with
fireplace.
Large
3-17-tfc
For
Rent
eling he has thought
comblnallon . Four speed
in pink dotted swiss, carried a
MIDDLEPORT. 7:30P.M.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Wise
dinina,
modern
kitchen
with
intermixed
changer.
Fou·r
4-6-4tc 3 ROOM downstairs furnished
white basket filled with pink and son, Brian of Columbus
bout
what
he's
electric stove and respeaker sound sr.sfem, dual
SEPTIC
tanks
cleaned.
Miller
apartment.
Phone
742-5032.
frlgeralor . Gas forced air
rose petals.
haring with you. Your
volume contra . Balance
visited hirparents, Mr. and GET YOUR Eas ter bunnies ·
Sanltallon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
4-6-31c 167.40.
furnace
.
$21
,000.00.
Mat·ty Liev ing served as Mrs. James Wise in New Haven
Use our budget lerms.
eling is right.
now. Randall Roberts, Letart
662-3035.
.
ca11 992·3352.
t•ingbearer. David Shockey, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. . Falls. Ohio .
2-12-tfc
4-6-Mc ANTIQUES, Phone 992·5327.
4·1-6tc POMEROY- 3 nice bedrooms
Sandyville , W. Va. , served as Alvin Hall at Logan, W. Va .
with large closets, modern
ccc-,...,.---::-=,...,.----,4·6·3Dtc - - - - ' -- bath , new kitchen with FOR experl electrical work call
bes t man and ushers were Jerry
BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel WILL PICK up merchandise
electric
range. double sink. 992-5179. .
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
Morgan and David Morgan, and three children of Jenkinand take to auction on a TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
,
Gas
furnace.
Full basemen!.
speakers, 4 speed automatic
4.6-Wp
percentage basis. Call Jim
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
both of New Haven .
town, Pa., are visiting his
changer.
se!larale
controls.
Adams, auclioneer, Rulland.
Ohio. 992-2951.
Mrs. E. John Morgan wore a . parepts, Mr. and Mrs. C,:urtis
Balance $80.99. Use our time
Phone 742-4461.
4-2-lfc
Only $12,000.00 - ·Lot for
payment plan. Call 992-3352. MIDDLEPORT
two· piece gold colored dress McDaniel, Sr. in ·Mason, and
9·23-tfc.
mobile home. All utllllles
4·1·61c
- - - - - - UNFURNISHED 3 room .,
with navy accessories for her other relatives.
Only $650.00
available.
AUCTION - . WHEN? ·Each
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
daughter's wedding. The
Friday night, 7 p.m . Where?
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Mc· 1·31-lfc
PUT IT AU
3
groom's mother was atlired in Daniel, Sr., Mason, Mr. and
Hayman's Auction House.
LIVE Easler bunnies. Paul COUNTRY LIVING bedrooms,
bath,
gas
fur~ace.
Laurel Clifl on new Rt. 7 TWO OR three bedroom home,
Pierce, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, 2.1
an orchid two piece dress with Mrs . ·c urtis McDaniel, Jr .
TOGETHER FOR .YOU!
Well water . Garage. $7,000.00
Pomeroy
Middleport
By·
miles
out Rf. 143 from bypass.
Collage Road , Syracuse.
beige accessories. Both wore visited over the weekend in
pass.
4-4-61P.
Adults only . Phone 992-5133.
NEW LISTING - 4 bedrooms,
corsages of pink roses.
2.7-tfc
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
3-2-lfc
bath , furnace , basement .
Grandmothers aitending the James Loyd and family, Mr.
ANTIQUES, phone 992;5327. ·
Several oulbuildings. All
4-7-JOtc
wedding were Mrs. Warren and Mrs. Stanley Saunders arid SKATE A-WAY Easter party, TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
minerals. Chesler water
Friday, Aprll9. Races, prizes,
•12-mlle north of new Meigs
available.
22 ACRES. Only
Stewart, Leon, W. Va ., and Mrs. family.
balloons. Open Wednesday,
High School. Phone 992-2941. TRACTOR, FlO Farmall on
$6,000.00
Friday and Saturday, 7:30 to
Louie Cooke, Bassett, Va.
3·5-ttc
rubber, runs good $300.00.
Tod Hetzer of Parkersburg
10:30 p.m. Available for - - - - -- Phone 992·6048.
A reception was held in the spent the weekend with his
MIDDLEPORT - 5 rooms •.
private ·parlles, Monday, FURNISHE.D and unfurnished
4-7-3tp
social room of the Mason United grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
bath. fur.nace. Two bedrooms.
Tuesday, Thursday nights
apartmenls. Close to school.
Level lot. Only $4,000.00
Metllo.dist Church with a color Harold Schwarz.
and Saturday and Sunday
Phone 992-5434.
1968
BULTACO
100
c.c.
Lobllo.
p.m. Phone Chesler 985-3929
scheme of pink and green used
, 10·18,tfc
IT'S TIME TO BUY
New rain!' and cables, exor 985-3585.
·
on the bride's table. The wedCALL 992-3325
4-4-61v 3 ROOM, bath. furnished or cellen condition. Asking $325
HELEN
L. TEAFORD
or
besl
offer.
Must
sell
.
Phone
ding cake was decorated in the
semi -furnished
apartment.
- ASSOCIATE
Syrac
use,
Ohio
992-7173
RUBBER
STAMPS
made
to
same coJ'or,scheme . Assisting at
Also, 2 room , balh, furnished evening only.
4-2-6tc
order . 24 hour Service. Dwain
MORNING GLORIES
apartment.
Mulberry Ave .,
the reception were Mrs. Gene
4-7-6tc
or Wilma Caslo, Portland,
March 30, 1971
Pomeroy .
References - - - - - Ohio.
Shockey, Mrs. David Shockey, ,
Slandings
· 2A ACRE farm al Long Bottom,
· Qown payment too
required.
Phone
992-6698 .
1967 KAWASAKI 100 c.c. Trail
Points
2-17-?0tc
house wllh 3 bedrooms, dining
both of Sandyville, and Mrs. Tea m
'
3-23-lfc
Boss. $350. Larry Hill ,
144
Newell Sunoca
room. kitchen, living room,
Billy F. King, Leon, W.Va.
Fra ley &amp; Schilling
Chester, Ohio, pl\orie 985·4105.
121 RUMMAGE Sale in rry
paY,ments too
l'h balhs, enclosed back
4-7-3tc
For her wedding trip to Ohio Gibbs Grocery
117
Building , Middlepo-rt ,
porch, wall to wall carpellng,
Thursday , Friday and AUto Salas
99
=--=-~-­
the bride chose a rose knit dress Domigan Soh to
aluminum siding, awning,
~r
97
Saturday . Proceeds for 1966 TORONADO, all power, TESTED and approved by
storm windows and storm
with matching coat',and brown Lou's Ashland ·
millions
of
homemakers.
Blue
94
building of the Freewill
Bailey's Sunoco
doors, city waler. Selllpg due ·
$1500. Phone 742-4885.
Luslre carpet cleaner Is tops.
accessories were .used. Her
High Team 3 games
Baptist Church.
to .ill health . Phone 614-985·
. 4·1-61c
Baker Furniture, Mtddleporl.
4-6·3tc
corsa ~e was the pink roses from Bailey's Sunoco 2286; Domlgan
3938.
'
4-7-71
her bridal bouquet.
. .
Sohio 2226; Gib~s Grocery 2217 .
3·26-121p
.High Team game - Newe/t
·
'62
CHEVROLI;T
2
ton
,
16
ft
.
The bride graduated from Sunoco 799; Batley's Sunoco OVE ill
FRESH
,bakery
bed, VB - 4 speed, 2 speed, Real Estate For Sale
Wahama High School class of 796 ; Bailey's Sunoco 792.
· pr oduc ts. Jimmy ' s Paslry
new
rubber, $S00.001 K-5 - ln·
1 ed b th Oh'o
High . Ind . 3 games
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., Mid·
·ternatlonal1112 tono runs good, HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, 2 lois
'68an d IS emp oy
y e I Margarel Fullrod 473; Vicky
dleport . Phone 992-3555.
&gt;8
x
12
flal,
$125.00.
Phone
992·
. toea led In Syracuse. Call after
Valley Industries.
Gillilan 445; Margaret Wyalt
'
' 3- 28-30tc
DR. MOODY OF
6048. '
4. 7.31 p 3 p.m. weekdays, phone 992·
George S. Hobsltller,·Jr.
· The groom graduated from 439.
2806.
_ _ _.:._____
•.
Broker .
Ravenswood High School and Gi~J?:n 1'~f; ~;~~ret F~t't~'Z HOME sewing. Phone r;.~~·
6
H · lc
Phont915-4116
.1969 BUICK LeSa~(t, 2·dr.
Clemson University, Clemson, 168 ; ·Barbara Riggs 166. ·
.... ... ,
--... Hllto~ Wolle, Saltsman.
har df op, power seer
Can cure your Ills! Coniact him··
Ing, CONVENIENT
t
secluded
Phone949-3211
S, C.
,
.
ATTENTION ladles! Would you · pe&gt;wer brakes, air , 18,000 building lpts onbut
~oday at . . . .
·
.·
T79 at Rock CALLUSforallyourrealestale
The new .Mr. an.d . Mrs. NOTI CE
·
. like to try a wig on In lhe
miles.
Excellent
condition.
.
.Springs.
'
Within
walkTng
needs.
Inquire
Of
our
Us
lings
· Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.
privacy pf yoi.Jrt- own home?
Sh oc k ey · Wl 11 "es1d.e a t ' GOOD FRIDAY servtcesatthe
dlslance of Melg,s High
before you buy ,
Youcan . .Juslcafl .tJs. We alSo ' Phone 992-2288.
'Middleport, Ohio
, ·
' ··
4·6·61c
Ravenswood, W. Va .
MI. Hermon U. B. Church
ha.ve1he 'Mink 011 Kosrnetlcs, --,--,--'7--......:--::!1.!:1.~10~-I!!IS:~' · School, a 5 mlnule drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see BUt , · -'---~-_,-.....;.....
· Out-of-town guests attending
with lhc R.ev. Roberl Saun ·
Koscol, ,
of
course. 1968 · CAMARO 32 7, 3..5ft....o,
'.9 92·7034
·1·268o1110
,..._
WItte weekends, or after 5
.
ders . Spec&gt;al smg1ng . Time
"DI 1 lb t
8
' Ph e
Ph
Ma
.one . s,on 773·5178 or see p.m. w"kdays. Phone 992. HOUSE, . 6 rooms and, bath,
the weddm• were Mr. and Mrs.
7: 30. Everyone welcome.
s r u ors, •own s. . on
•
Middleport 992-5113.
John Grueier.
.
phone. 742·5613,'
.J
6887 .
.Warren Stewart, Mr. and Mrs.
'
•
H .41c
12:31-lfc
4-4-6tp
''
.,
il-30-12tp
....

"'i

-

' '

~

~

''''··'VI
~ ..

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

Mowers &amp; Tillers

__

1:.. .

Mason Area

,

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

DCN ' NoeoDY ~0
AS LAYA

MU~

FINGER ON TNAT

!ACi(,,. 11'''6- .
SR.IMMtN' OVER
¥111'H GoOLD AN'
IT'S @. r.t!NE!

SR.

e

News, Notes

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1, Adhesive

substance
6. Gabfest

9. Dude ter·
ritory
10. Cardinal's
(2 wds. )
13. Bring to

bay

;::::::::=~-~====:::::::

H . Salad
greon
15. In
Ute

past

WE

16. Intonna l
tennof
add~s

17. Fraulein's

"never"
18. Commlsslon per ~

- - - - --

~-..,--..,---­

If You Haven't
Bought A

Local Bowling

WHA1'5 GOING OH

24. -

TERMINAL

RESORT

&amp;f~

ISLAN~ OF

'TWELVE OAR

mally
16. Medi-

2. Extelll!live

tate
22. Nogof

3.Showgood

old

judgment
(3 wds.)

23. Hellos

Unstramble th... foor Jumble1,
one letter to ea&lt;h square, to
form four -JIJ'dinary wordo.

I 1'1/YFE

Norfolk

ol.usummer"

24.c~ant

31. DlBen·

LnNantes
5. Wrinkle
6. Therefore
7. Dosums
8. Optimist's
slogan
(2 wds.l

20. Curse

tangle
32. Corundum
37. Grapallke

26. Intended

fruit

27. Farce

-n-

38. " -

29. Goods
for

II

kavaller''

sale

~xn

SHUBIL

I

AL.WAY5 L.ATE AT
THe JOt!&gt;.

I

I
I I I ()
QUETEA

of ·

Now ......,.. the circled totten

I :::;::te!l':;::'.::;n~~

;::--1-1-l l

-+-+-1

eAY, ' DOLORfS

21. !?reserve~

SHOPS A'T A

28. Japanese

IIN!·---·1 THE (till) (I I I I)
(btwen l'i'mon"'")\

v•.aerday••

statesman

29. Gained

J•mbl&lt;oo PATII

100TH LIQUID ORIGIN

Ane.. en JF'hnt he hod lloped fo,. K"IIPII hf' trf'nf fo

30. Wrath

lite dorlor- tO II

33. Bovine

"'und

CAN 'fi.IINKING
&amp;AD THOIJ61iT5.

34. Wooden

core
35. Highland
;•

....,.. , ,

LINV!&gt; lOOK THE LA&gt;T roi6HNUT
lt'I)RNIN6, AND I ~ELLED AT
f.\IM, AND NOW IT'5 CLOUDING UP.

SO I IUA,S JUir WIJNDEi:ING...

. 36. WithBtan4
38. Plunre

CAPI'AIN EASY
'

CAUSE IT· TO
RAIN?

headgear

-

' DAU..Y CRYPTOQUOTE-:H~re's how to work "'
AXYJ) 'J.,BAAXB
J.,ON 'GFEloloOW
One letter simply stands for ~other. In thia sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a., etc. Slqle letters,
"poatrophps, the length and formation' of. tl!e wOrds a~ all
. hints. Each~ay . the code letters are different.

lo

REAL ESTATE

JEMO ASSOCIATES

PLA1t'

BALL ~

A Cryptogram Quotatlo•
PK

OCV

EMHGGO

AHJf

I)C

GCBM

, AMP.WTD , DTMEM HEM CJGO DTEMM

.

or

.

DOWN

- 'sWar

HOBSIEIIER

'

infor-

42.'l'ruat

Man
25. Support
26. Queen

ON THE CARI5 ·

high,

-------itiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ

12. Tiny,

21. Alleviate
23. Agile

AT THE AI~

don1 own

'----~~~~~~-

Jf!YM@~;tt,:;:f!:!..Jc

birds

n. Fa.clle

Salina Is
(abbr.)

high,

Monthly

the

20. Where

WAIT UNTI~ SHE GETS 10
SENSE ~ HAVING

BECAUSE:

inlonnaUon
&lt;O.Always

centage
.. 19. Function

TERRY

NEW HOME

11. Place
for

39.Dugfor

1. Lay hands
OJ) (2 wds. )

symbol

WMP0/1390

--------,--

l'..torday'o Cryploquoto: WOMEN DRESS ALIKE ALL
OVER THE WORLD : THEY DRESS TO BE ANNOYING TO
OTHER WOMEN.- ELSA SCHIAPARELLI
&lt;CJ 1971 Kin( Features Synd lca.te. Inc.)

I

DTPJWB

.,
\

ocv

SEMHXKHBD,
... W,HEO

8.

ZVBD
.GVJLT

WPYM
HJ. N

.V.F:

NPJJME .

/I:EPWTD
.

'

'

•

I

'

�.-

I
•

11 - The Daily Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , April7, 1971

•

State Stores
To Stay Open-·

Middleport
Dump
Overnil(ht Wirif ··.

'

t£.or&gt;tinued from page ) )

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
liquor stores will be open on
Good Friday this week for the
first time tn 20 years, it was
reported !&lt;&gt;day .
"I don't know of any reaoon
why llquor stores were ever
closed on Good Friday," said
Deputy Director Htram R.
Cannon . "I never m my lifetime
closed any business on Good
Fnday."
Cannon , a former vice
prestdent of a Cincinnati
department store, satd the
dectsion to have stores opened
was predetermined. ~~we are
required to treat all persons and
all faiths altke," said Cannon .
"Legally we can't do anything
else. If we close on one holy day
we must close on all of them,"

By United Press lnternaUonal
COLUMBUS- THE OHIO HIGHWAYS Department Tuesday
opened btds on 12 highway improvement projects wtth a total cost
of $2.2 mtlhon, including constr'uction of 2.9 miles of an access
road to Salt Fork State Park.
!.ow btdder on the Salt Fork State Park project was Shelly &amp;
S&lt;mds Inc., Zanesville, with a quotation of $997,914.62. The state
estuna te was $L2 million. State projects by county include: ·
Vm ton Replace Ohio 56 over Brushy Fork west of Ohi&lt;&gt; 93 in Swan
Twp ~Jav t s Excavatmg Co. Inc., Dublin, $173,956.57; estimate
$186,000
BERKELEY, CALIF. - A RADICAL ATTEMPT to split
Berkeley's police department into three separate forces along
racwl lmes was soundly defeated Tuesday night by the city's
,·otors. Wtlh 40 per cent of the votes counted, the ballOt measure
backed by the Black Panthers and other radical and activist
groups was trailing b) more thana 2-1 margin .
However, radtcals apparently ,l,ere goin~ to win two, and
posstbly three, of four holly contested seats on the seven-member
ct ly coun ctl
pn·rsBURGH - THREE STEEL COMPANIES and a
chemtcal ftrm have been charged with polluting the Ohio and
Monongahelil rivers in the Pittsburgh area. Tbe U. S. Justice
Department Tuesday filed separate criminal information,
chargmg a total of 73 vwla tions of the 1899 Refuse Act, m U. S.
Dts~ tel Court.
Charged are U. S Steel Corp., 35 viqlations ; Jones &amp;
Laughhn, 21 vtolations; Wheeltng - Pittsburgh Steel Corp., 30
vwlaltons . and Pennsylvama Industrial Chemical Corp., four
vtolatwns. The maxtmum total penalty amounts to $182,500 in

the Leading Creek area who have looged numerous complaints
agatnsl the Middleport dump. Mrs. Rife told not only ~f trash
being blown over Ute area, and Ute smoke from a number of fires
entering Ute homes, but also charged that rats are entering holT' 'S
near the dump.
The question of the commissioners establishing a county
landfill arose several times during Ute meeting. Dutton pointed
out that law provides thitt the conunissioners "may" establish a
landfill but does not place final responsibility upon the commissioners.
Lawrence (Lighbting) Boyd, one of three haulers affected by
the dump problems of Middleport, pointed out that already
restdents are throwing garbage in many places. He srud that he
would operate the packer truck for Middleport and would help see
that the dump would be operated in accordance with state
regulations.
· At least two members of the health boord said they felt the
board had gone as far as it could in attempting to work with
Middleport on the problem. Zerkle commented that "everyone
had leaned over backward."
At one point in the meeting it appeared that some compromise might be achieved. The impression arose that Middleport could obtain a packer truck within seven days. It was
suggested that Middleport might use a "temporary site" for
dumping refuse for that seven days and the debris be cleaned up
during that time at the present site and Uten the village could
attempt to operate in accordance with requirements at the
present location.
However, that apparently fell through when both Boyd and
Zerkle said that they did not know of a temporary location whtch
could be used in the seven day perioo.
The possibility of getting Earl Griffin of Hockmgport to come
into the town for pickup service - the service now used by
Pomeroy - was discussed. Zerkle said that he had discussed
Middleport's problem with Griffin but' that no plan had been
worked out because at that point Middleport had begun steps to
operate its own system.
Mrs. Rife said that people of the Leadlng Creek area had waited
two years for corrections to be made at the Middleport dump and
fha t Ute people there would not walt any longer.
When Zerkle, Mayor Fisher and Boyd left the meeting Zerkle
said that Middleport will go along with any decision of the board .
Afew minutes later Bob Beegle , health board member, "with
· great reluctance" made the motion that the Middleport permit
not be renewed. The second was by Virgil Atkins and the vote was
unarumous against renewing the permit.
Dutton explained to the two Leading Creek representatives
that the action means that there is to he no more dumping at the
Middleport site and that the contour of the land is to be restored so
that there will be no fllfther nuisance.
The board made plans for notifying not only Middleport
Village officials of its decision but also Prosecutor Bernard Fultz.
Health board members present were Dutton, Beegle, Atkins,
Dr . John Ridgway, Dr. Selim Blazewicz, health commissioner,
and Mrs. Beulah Strauss, administrative officer.
Contacted following the decision last night, Zerkle said that
Middleport would attempt to abide by the board's decision but
what steps could be taken to provide garbage pickup service for
·residents were indefinite.
"

Trucker Charged

Ohio Highway Patrol officers
have charged Harry E. Knaus,
47, Rt. 3, Geneva, Ohio, with
vehtcular homicide in the
f1nes
traffic death at ~ : 45 p.m.
ISRAEL'S RULING LABOR party today hacked Prune
Tuesday of Ray Calvin Rife, 46,
Mnustet· Golda Meir's Middle East peace stance, including
Rl. 1, Cheshire.
refusal to wtthdraw to boundaries that existed before the 1967
Dr. Donald R. Warehime,
AI·ab-!St·aeli war . The 3,000 delegates to a party conference voted
Gallia County Coroner, said
thetr approval m settmg their platform for national elections Mrs.
Rife was dead on arrival at the
~:etr must c&lt;;ill before 1972. The Labor party, led by Mrs. Meir,
Holzer Medical Center as a
has an overwhelimng maJority m the current coalition governresult of internal hemorrhaging
me nt
from injuries suffered when his
Israeli policy as outlined by Mrs. Meir to the conference
1969 pick-up truck slammed into
Sunday, also ru led oul mternational guarantees as a subStitute for
the rear of Knaus' tractor truck.
bcrders Israel can defend . Mrs. Metr said Israel will not withdraw
According to investigating
from the Gaw Strip, the Golan Hetghts in Syria, the old section of
officers, the accident occurred
Jerusalem or Sharm el Shetkh on the tip of the Sinai peninsula, all
on Rt. 7, one and one half miles
ta ken m the 1967 conflict.
north of the old Silver Bridge,
CHICAGO - RICHARD J. DALEY rolled to a record fifth
across from the Tri-County
term as mayo r of Chicago wtth such a display of political power
Asphalt Pavmg Co.
even hiS own orgaruzation was caught by surprise. Daley's final,
The investigation showed that
unofhctal margin over Richard E. Friedman was 417,728 votes,
Knaus apparently pulled from
just short of 70 per cent of the total_ He lost only two of the city's 50
the driveway of the pavmg firm
m a southerly direction into the
wards 111 Tuesday's volmg, and those by narrow margins.
path of Rtfe's pickup truck.
With all precincts counted, Daley had a margin of 735,787 to
Knaus
was treated for a minor
31R,059. The black wards went for Daley despite the endorsement
head injury. He posted $1,000
of hiS opponent by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, head of Operation
bond for his appearance in
Breadbasket. Two heavtly Republican wards went for Daley
Galltpolis
Muntcipal Court.
while they were electmg Republicans to the city council.
It was Gallta's second traffic
fatality in 1971.
Mr . Rife, a veteran of World
War II, was employed at Kaiser
· narold Oscar Ro ush, 59, !land ; Robert, of Racme, and
Alummum Company. A native
Mtd land, Pa , a former Metgs Don, Woodridge, Va . ; fiv e
of Gallia County, he is survived
County resident, dted Monday sisters, Kathryn Price, Johnby hts parentS, Raymond and
evemng Mr Roush was a ston; Maxie Deem, Belpre;
Vergie Rife, Rt. 1, Gallipolis;
veteran of World War 11 and Irene Atkinson, Millersport ;
his wtfe, Helen Spencer Rife; a
\~ ~) ! k~'t l on grave l boats as a Htlda Davis, Racine , and
daughter, Joy Ray Rife, Rt. 1,
(Continued from page 1)
wcldet . He was pt·eceded tn Audrey Williams, Munhall, Pa. , .
Cheshire; one step-&lt;laughter,
dea th by hiS fat her, Byron and one granddaughter, Lisa . had to meet an October deadline calling for a 40 per cent reduction Mrs .
Carolyn
Taylor ,
Roush. one brother , Neal, and a
in sulphur oxide emissions, proouctlon would have to be trimmed
D OF A TO MEET
St ste r, Naomt Teaford.
Funera l services will be held as many as 150 to 600 workers could be laid off.
Past councilors of Theooorus
He ts " " vtved by his mother, Thursday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
"It looks pretty good now because a supply of low coal ash has Council, Daughters of America,
F.s tH Rous h Porlland; two Chapel with the Rev . Freeland been obtained," said Fred Charles. But Charles said this was
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday
sons, Mclviu and Dav1d, Po r ~ Norris offlctating. Burial will be
possible because of the coal market and how long it will last is not at the home of Miss Erna Jesse
ll and; ltve br others, Bert, 111 Letart Cemetery. Friends known .
in Pomeroy.
Barboursvtlle, W. Va.; Ivan, may call at the funeral home
Ga lhpoltS ; Wtlltam. of Por- after 4 p.m. today

Harold Roush Dies Mo,tt.tay

News ... in BriefS

1

Lorena Sloter Died Monday
Keyes, Hebron , and Harley
Keyes of Palaski, Ohto; a sister,
Mrs. Naomi Autherson, Portland ; ntne grandchildren,
severa l great-grandchildren
and three great - great grandchtldren .
•
Preceding her m death were
her husband, Marion, and two
sons, Chfford and Kenneth.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Friday at the Long Bottom
Methodist Church wtth the Rev .
Robert Smtih officiating. Burtal
will be in the Sand Hill
Tontghl &amp; Thu rsday
Cemetery. Friends may call at
A~ni7 - B
the White Funeral Home in
NOT OPE N
Coolvtlle any time after noon
- - - - ---1 Thursday.

Mrs "''' ena Sloter, 79, forll tl' rl y of Long Bottom, dted
Tuesday at Hebron fo llowmg a
brtef tlltwss She was born at
Bald Kn ob m Meigs County, the
daugh ter of the late Wtlliam and
Myr tle t.m ue Keyes
St!l v1vm g a1 c twu daughters,
Mrs Ne' a .Johnson , Hebron,
an d Mrs. Erm a Co nnolly,
lkedsvtlle; two brothers, Eurl

MEIGS THEATRE

Fnday &amp; Saturday
Apn l9 10

TOO LAT E •
THE HERO
M1chae l Ca me

.....( ltff Robet tson
( G PI

Colorrartoo n
It 's Fo r The Btrds

'

SHOW START57 P.M

Legion Asks
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, went ori
record as favoring the release
of Lt. William Calley at a
regular meeting Tuesday night
at the post home.
Petitions were on hand for
signature~ of members to be
sent to President Nixon urging
the release of Lt. Calley and the
restoration of his · rank .
Petitions were also on hand for
HER TWIN SISTER
Lelah Jane Powell , New
Haven, W. Va. , was reported
discharged from Pleasant
Valley Hospttal in Tuesday's
Daily Sentinel. Discharged
instead was her twin sister,
Lilah Powell. Lelah Jane
Powell
has
not
been
]]ospitalized .

SHULER SERVICE
Members of the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club met
bnefly at Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home Tuesday evening
m respect to the late Emmet
Shuler, a member of the club
SERVICES AT SUTTON
many yeats, who died Sunday. Easter Sunrise services will
The Rev. Robert Kuhn gave a be held at the Sutton United
prayer .
Methoois: Church at 7a.m. with

, . . - - - - •- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . vices.
a breakfast
follow the
Sundayto School
will serbe
held al9: 1~ followed by an egg
hunt.

ARMAND'S

FINED, SENTENCED
Steve Dailey, Racine, was
fined $100 and costs and sentenced to three days in jail
Tuesday night by Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar on conviction of driving while intoxicated.

The Martin Restaurant
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

ACTION DISMISSED
An action for damages filed
by the Indiana Insurance
Company against Iris Rose
Boatrite , et al, has been
dismissed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

r•••.!lll•llll•--•
2-HOUR.-

Easter Sunday
Buffet with Chotce of a Hot Entree -Ham, Roast Beef, Fried Chicken.

$325 Adu Its
·

spt

Baked

~

CLEANING

Child
Under 12

lUoon Reauest)

11:00 AM· 5:00PM
In addii!On to regular menu.

·"Enterlainment Nightly"
r---~------·--------------·
In preparation for Grand Opening, we will I

1
1

be clos,ed Sunday, April 4.

·

I

~- - ------- --- ----~--------J

ROBINSON~s .

.CLEANERS

2)6 E. 2nd

- Fomtroy

_. Phon•U'l-Sa'JI

·

Calley~s

forwarding to Hanoi asking
better treatment of American
Prisoners of War in Viebtam.
The post voted to sponsor
attendance of underprivileged
children to, the American
.::::!:-:-::::~~:::::::::::.~::!£.:~:~:~:!!:=::::~

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Army officer who prosecuted
Lt. William L. Calley Jr. has
charged President Nixon weakened the judicial system and
helped make a hero out of a
convicted murderer when he
responded to a public outcry by
intervening in the case.
Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel IJJ
also told Nixon in a letter it
would he a tragedy if "political
expediency" dictated a compromise of a "fundamental
moral principle" involved in the
slaying of Vietnamese civilians
at My Lai in 19611.
DAMAGE MINOR
Minor damages were incurred to two cars in an accident on West Main St. at 9:35
p.m. Tuesday, Pomeroy police
said. According to police a car
driven by Harold Ash, 47,
Pomeroy, struck the rear of
another driven by Robert
Williams, 23, Pomeroy, who
was in a left turn . Williams did
not have a turn signal in
operati&lt;&gt;n police said. There
were no injuries and no arrest.
SERVICE SET
Sunrise services will be held
at6 :3oa·.m. Sunday at the Rock
Springs Methooist Church lvith
the Youth Fellowship in charge
of the service. There will be
Sunday &amp;hqol and worship ·
service at 9:30 and an egg hunt
following Sunday &amp;hool.
AUTO HITS TREE
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a single car
accident Tuesday a\ .7:41 p.m.
on County Road 3, seven miles
east of RuUand. William Wise,
no address, was traveling north
when his car went off the road
on the right, .came back across
Ute highway and hit a tree. The
car was demolished. Wise was

Release

Heritage Camp this year and a
donation was given to the
George Thompson Kidney
Fund. Paul Casci reported on
the Eighth District convention
Sunday in Athens. Post
"ever las ling services" were
announced for May.
Don Hunnel reported on a
recent executive committee
meeting when several repairs
and improvements to the post
home and lot were planned. The
first 'quarter financial report
was given by Charles Swatzel.
World War II veteran Guy
Reuter was reported confined to
Veterans Memorial ' Hospital,
and the death of a member, C.
E. Humphrey, ·Reedsville, a ·
World War I veteran, was
reported. Vietnam veterans
attending were Hank Cleland,
Robert Arms, Donald Brown
and Donald Whaley. Bill Owens
was a guest. ltefreshments
were served by Casci, assisted
by Roy Reuter.

Alexandria, Ohio; a step-son,
Ballard Lee Howell, Gallipolis;
six step-grandchildren; four
ststers, Mrs. John (Mary)
Steinbeck, Gallipolis Mrs.
Roland (Faye) Spencer,
Columbus; Mrs. Leroy (Eileen) Elliott, Newcomerstown, Ohio, and Mrs. Sarah
Summers, Rt. 1, GaUipolis; four
brothers, Herbert and Roger
Rife, Columbus, and Merch and
Francis Rife, both of Rt. I,
Galltpohs.
He was a member of the
Bulaville Christian Church,
Cheshire Masonic Lodge,

The battle was going on more
than six hours later and a
South Vietnamese spokesman
described \he fighting as
11 heavy." There was no inune·
diate word on casualties on
either side.
Another battle was going oit
70 miles south of Base No. 6 in
Pleiku province, where South
Vtetnamese troops have been
fighting the Communists lor a
week near Phu Nhoo, military
sources said .
Some Burled Alive
A Communist defector from a
unit which attacked Fire
Supp&lt;&gt;rt base 6 early Tuesday
told UPI Correspondent Robert
E. Sullivan the North Vietnamese there were running short
of food but have plenty of
ammunition and artillery shells.
Military sources said the
bodies of civilians slain in the
1968 Tel offensive were uncovered 10 miles north of Hue. The
defector said there were at
least another 40 to 50 persons
buried in the area. It appeared
a hamlet chief and several
others had been stabbed and
possibly buried alive.
After the Tel offensive three
years ago, more than 5,000
South Vietnamese civilians
were listed as missing. Since
then more than 3,000 bodies
have been found in mass
graves, mostly around Hue.

Sauer's comments:)

MANY OF THE LARGE
Foundations are of the opimon
tha t the American Public
&amp;hool System is not fulftlling
tis purpose and Will probably
have to be radtcally altered to
meet present day needs. As a
teacher wtth 28 years of
teac hing experience in the
public schools, l agree
wholeheartMly.
Well, fools rush in where
angels fear to tread. Please
accept my thoughts for what
they are worth . My defense is
that I'm deeply concerned and
have sludiM the educational
dtlemma for a long time. These
are the conclusiOns at which I
have arrived .
FIRST - That which must be
done wtll have to be ac' .
comphshed
at the' lop. The state
legislat ure must accept
responstbtlity. We on the local
level can only urge the
legislators to be t·ealis!tc
SECOND - Our concept of a
welfare state must be abandoned beca use hts!Or) has
proven tl unworkable. It
destroys
tniltaltve
and
character. At present it has
destroyed student mottvatwn
and created the fa lse nolwn that
1t IS gove rnm ent's respon stbtltly to support them (and to
support them handsomely) .
THIRD - We must return to
the tenent that every person
should ha ve the God-gtven nght
to make hts own mtstakes. We
must stop lelltng a student that
he must go to school until he is

Cheshire Eastern Star, Aladdin
Temple Shrine, Columbus, and
the Gallipolis Shrine Club.
Last rites will be held at 2
p.m. Friday from the Waugh .
Halley - Wo&lt;&gt;d Funeral Home
with burial following in Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Rev.
Andrew Parsons will officiate.
Masonic services will be held
at the funeral home at 7:30p.m.
Thursday. Calling hours will be
held from 2-4 and 7-9 Thursday.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contributions to the
Shrine Club's Crippled Children Leo, a Latin name, means
Hospital and Burns Institute . " hon."

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Select Your Easter Outfit From Elberfelds 2nd Floor
Ready-To:wear Department

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Romantic liHie peasant
Away to the Balkans! Vicky Vaughn 1 s in a peasant mood

with bodice and billowy sleeves blazed with folk art
embroidery, gypsy sashing, dirndl skirt Polyester double-·
knit maChine washes and dries. Super for summer galas

Tremendous
Selection of
Apparel for
Women and
Girls in all
regular and
hard-to-fit sizes.
Add gloves,
belt, jewelry,
hosiery and·
handbag from

By Alma Marshall
Mrs. Judy 'Turner Persinger ,
formerly of Mason, and now of
Columbus, was the first woman
elected to an offtce m the
Central Ohto Manageme nt since
tts foundmg 31 years ago. She
was elected treasurer on April
L

The association is made up of
businessmen and managers and
represent such compames as

~ur Jlst

Flo1r
Accessories
Department

in white with lilac, green or pink. 5-15.

............... ' ....... ............. .

ELBERF~LDS IN ~MEROY
FC?.I Y_OUI SHOPPING

•

®

"

. · inbbd
ready to hJoom
For Easter gifting . . . the most
delicalely fragrant and roman tically beautiful flowers! Each
potful is a short, bushy plant, loaded
with buds and at least 2 buds are big
and tal and
to bu•~t Into

89~
and up

Our ~aster selectio.ns are complete.
Greetmg Cards, Toys, Novelties
Filled_ Bask_ hs a_nd all fill1'ng'
matena I. Gtfts. Fme Selection of
Easter Candy of All Kinds. Gifts for

All.

4" pot size.
' All are the
Veitchll variety.

.l•llllillliii.••••••••••..••~w~:
BEN,FRA-N , . UN'
PHONE
202 E11t Mlin St.
992-3498
Pome~oy, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY N
TIL 9

FOURTH - We ourselves
must accept responsibility to ·
stand up and be accounted as
adults . We tell the children!
They do not dtctate to us!
Chtldren expect !au-play and
JUSltce, but they also expect us
to dtclate, to assume leadership
as thetr superiors. They do not
respect authority that wavers
under their demands.
Observe ! The independent
schools , where t~e administration stood firm and
said, "We foot the bills, if you do
not hke the way we do, then go,"
have not been troubled with
campus rto!s and far out
behavior tn dress and morals.
We need only to return to the
values and standards that made
Amertca strong. The success
and fatlure of past generations
should show us the road which
we must take to survtve . Our
adva nced technology does not
alter the need to obey and
pracltce the laws of the
umverse as set down by God for
man to follow . Let's not delude
ourselves by saying, "Times
have changed, and we need a
new set of laws." NO man
changes the laws of the
Umverse. • ,
FIFTH - If 18-year olds are

Mason County

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18 years old. At most, after
etghl years of compulsory
education, the responsibility
should be that of the student and
hts parents.
The greatest motivator m the
world is awareness of -personal
need. Let the.student learn the
value of an education through
the need of tl. Let the parent
for
learn
respo nsibility
educating hts chtldren by
having them to cope with and
not ease his conscience by
saymg, I feed them, clothe
them, and send them to school.

News Notes

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OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY THIS WEE~

J)~ -

1Nole: Harold Sauer, a
teacher lor 28 years and
guidance counselor at the
Meigs High School, has
composed nine "conclusions'"
relating to problems in
education . Following are

Beautiful Artificial Flo.wers for spring ' inclucll~g
Eas)er · Lilies, Daffodils, Narcissus. 10c up. Also
crosses, sprays, wreaths, cemetery vases, etc., for
decorations.
•

,.,,u.,··

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Porcelain Steel Butlding
Company, Western Electric,
Columbus a nd Southern Ohio
Electric Co., and Crane Plasltcs
Co etc.
Ray Knig ht, of Vroys
Brothers was last year 's fi rst
vice president and wtll assume
the preSidenc y; Robert F .
Nthart, Jr. , Porcelatn Steel
Bldg. Co., was elected ftrst vtce
president; Ralph E. Brown ,
Western Electric, was elected
second vice president; Stephen
T. Wal ker, Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co., was
elected secretary and Judy
Persin ger of R. G. Barry
Corporation, treasurer.
Central Oht o Man agement
Association (COMA ) is offering
two scholarships for $250 each
thts year to two high school
semors at the May 6 dinner
meeting. ·
Mrs. Persinger has be~ n a
member of COMA since 1969,
and served on the Booster
Committee 1969-70; chatrwoman, Ways and Means
Commttlee, 1969-70; Las Vegas
Chau-woman, 2 terms ; Ways
and Means committee, 1970-71;
Course Coordina tor, 1970;
active member of the Board of
Dtrectors, 1969-70; Hostess,
OSU Management Conference,
1971.
AWARDS PRESENTED
Awards were presented
recently when the Mason Cub
Pack 253 held its March
meeting m the Mason United
Methodist Churcl;. Following
the Flag Ceremony, Jack
Smith, Cubmaster, presented
awards as follows: Billy Gibbs,
Wolf Patch; Fred Smith, Gold '
Arrow, and 2 silver arrows;
Jack Smith, Bear Patch, Gold
Arrow and Silver Arrow; Bobby
VanMete r, 2 sliver arrows ;
Kevin Roush, 3rd year pin;
Jack Smith, 2nd year pin;
Churck Stanley, 2 year pin;
F;ed Smtih, 1 year pin .
Jack Smith, Bobby VanMeter
and Tommy Roush of the Cbb
Scouts were welcomed into the
Webelos by Charles Stanley,
Webelos leader and _by Jack
Smtth, Cup &amp;out master.
Den lll presented a skit using
Cowboys and Jndtans as their
thell)e.
Webelos provtded the refreshmen ts and were served to the
following: Jimmy Smtih, John

VanMeter, Freddie Smitli,
Bobby VanMeter, f\1tke Sayre,
Kelley Sayre, Jackie Smith,
Risa Sayre, David Fo'Yler,
Charles Stanley, Harry Gibbs,
Billy Gibbs, Cmdy Stanley.
Thomas Roush, Bodte Davts,
Chns Allen Davis, Scott
Chapman, Lori Cha pman ,
Kevin Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Smith, Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Sayre, Mrs. Richard
Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Stanley, Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
Roush, Mrs. Stanley Gibbs, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert J. Roush, Mrs.
Wtlltam DaviS, Jr . and Mrs.
Jack Chapman .
Boys interested m scoutmg
are asked to contact Cubmaster, Jack Smith. Any boy
gmng on eight years old or will
be in the third grade next year
are eligible to apply.
ATTEND CANTATA
Mr . and Mrs. Reuben
Stewart, Mason, Mrs. Mary
Aumiller. Hartford, Mr . and
Mrs. Jack Fowler, Tammy and
Tony of Pl. Pleasant, attended a
Cantate entitled, " Easter
Song," at the Presbyterian
Church in Pt. Pleasant on
Sunda y morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart's son,
Gary, dtrected the Cantata.
After the Easter program Mr.
and Mrs. Gary ·stewart and
Missie, Pt. Pleasant ; Mr. and
Mrs. Reuben Stewart, Mrs .
Mary Aumiller went to the
Fowler home for dinner.

to be gtven the n~ht to vote then
they must ac hieve selfand personal
discipline
responsibility at a much earlier
age than at present tf this nation
ts not to he voted out of
existence. I'm for letting them
vote -but I'm also for letting
them make tlteir own mistakes.
They make their mistakes and
they pay the penalty for them
personally . Let their experience
moltvate them into wanting an
education. Pain and growth are
inseparable . ·
We as adults have the
responsibility to provide the
opportunity for an education.
But we certamly need not toy
any longer with the idea that we
force an education on people .
True learning is only achteved
when sought after. And only a
sense of self-need motivates all
people to seek.
"Survtval of the Fittest" is
sltll a law of the universe. Pain
ts a fact of hfe. It is the greatest
of motivators? The big people of
the world have all known pain.
Why should we try to hide this
fact from our youth or try to
mtnirntze its unportance ' Are
our youth suffering from overprotection? Soft livmg (our
gtvmg it to them ) wtll never
solve the problems. They must
want an education, need it, be
wtlhng to work for it or suffer
the consequences. Har sh?
Cruel'!
No 1
Practical?
Realisltc? Yes ' Jesus Chnst ts
still a hard Man.
SIXTH - Our best teachers,
the bulk of our educational
dollars should be used in the
ftrst eight grades. Cut the frills
and the coddling, make sure
that the basic tools (the three
R's) are taught and taught
effectively. If after eight years
of compulsory education the
student is unable to read and to
work simple mathematics, he
needs training other than htgh
school.
The student who has learned
the basic skills can if necessary
educate himself. If it is desire
(motivation ) that ts lacking,
then he should be free to make
hts own mtstakes. However, if
the student ts motivated to
further his educalton, then we
should provtde the opportunity
for htm . This is our only
responsibility as adults.
SEVENTH - The schools,
like our government, has taken
the responsibility to do things
that they were never intended I&lt;&gt;
do or have the ability to do.
&amp;hools, nor any institution, can
fulfill the responstbtlities of
parents and the home. Nor can
they force s people to learn
against their will. All this talk
about motivating students
through offering . the proper ·
currtculum and allowing the
student to choose his own
subjects and to work at his own
pace is unreahstic? What experience has the student had
that would give him the
judgement to make the proper
choices to become an engineer,
a lawyer, a (loctor, or an
automobile mechanic, etc.?
The methods that have been
proven successful through
centuries of educational experience s~ ould not be
discounted. We know without ~
doubt, that the one great
motivator is the real need in a

.

ants Return to Three. R·s

Guidance Counselor.

Calm Broken
SAIGON (UPI)- Heavy fight- tr; to recapture a se.,fn-mile
mg flared anew today outside segment of Highway 4 seized by
Fire Support Base No. 6 near the Communists two weeks ago.
the Laotian border following 24 The road links Phnorp Pen)l
hours of calm, military sources · and Cambodia's only deepwater
said. Another battle was port.
reported 70 miles south of the
Casualties Unreported
embattled outpost.
Military sources said new
At Hue, a Viet Cong defector fighting broke out around noon
led South Viebtamese authori- tooay a mile north of Base No.
ties to graves of 18 persons 6, which is six miles from the
slam by the Communists during Cambodian border and 12 miles
the 1968 Tel offensive. Their from the southeastern tip of
hands were lied behind them Laos. It is 270 miles northwest
with wire. A search was on for of Saigon.
up to ~0 other victims.
Fire Base No. 6 was overrun
Communiques from Phnom March 31 by North Viebtamese
Penh told of a new eight troops and retaken by the SouUt
battalion government drive to Viebtamese April I.

.

.

person's life for a thing. We
may mspire a person to
achievement but hastcal)y weare holding out to htm
something of value to hun
personally.
EIGHTH - We need to take a
look at our T&amp;l Programs. [ was
told in two different summer
vocalwnal workshops that if the
vocahonal courses were to
succeed, very careful selection
of the students entermg the
cow·ses must be pracltced. To
succeed, the student must ftrst
have a strong mterest in, and an
aplttude for the course.
Secondly, he must have a good
knowledge of baste Engltsh and
mathematics and be able to
read comprehensively. He need
not be a gentus, but he must be
average or bette r in in•
telltgence.
This point was emphatically
emphasized: Any remedial
work m Math, and Engltsh, or
learning to read must be done
ahead of lime and not made a
part of the T&amp;l Program .
Otherwise, specifically related
theory work was impossible.
Interest was lost in the course
and dtscipline problems
developed.
Teachers , recrutled from
mdustry to teach these T&amp;l
Programs are not oriented to
present day students and thetr
behavioral altitudes. They wtll
return to mdustry rather than
try to cope wtth the disciplme
problems. No doubt, school
adminiStrators understand the
problem but have their hands
lied by unrealistic laws. There
is a real need in our economy
for vocal!onally trained people
but again the person himself
must want the trainmg and
have the ability to be tramed.
NINTH - Teachers as a
professtonal group have been
steadily losing public respect
for a number of years. And l
personally ask the question,

Why ' Is tt because teachers,
ad mtntstrators, and school
beards have gradually lowered
teaching standards to remain
popular wtlh t he electorate'
Truthfully, I believe that the
majortly of the electorate want
a school that is well disctplined,
a school that they fee! IS doing a
good job 9f educattng the
students! They are turning
thumbs down on us because we
are not domg a professiOnal JOb.
We often hear the remark
"students are smarter toda~
than yesteryear ." Students are
better mformed because of
radi o and televtston , and
because they have traveled
more , but a large maJOrity of
them are lacking in the baste
sktlls whtch are vitally
necessary m gammg vocattonal
competence. They can not read
compre henstvely, spell accurately, write legibly , or use
decimals and fracltons. Ye t,
!.hetr self-coricep!ts one of bemg
a whtle collared person.
The question ts always there ,
Are we domg more harm than
good m forcmg students to go to
high ~c h ool' If they are in
school agamst their wtll , they
learn to loaf, to day dream, to
cheat, to he, and to expect
grades, bcoks, lunches, etc. to
be given to them wtth no effort
on theu· pat·!. All of thts, " It is
o"ed to me" attitude, IS earned
over mto adult life, along wtlh
the false tdeas of honesty and
truthfulness. Is t! any wonder
that the old fashioned vtrtues
are bemg lost?
When teachers stop bemg
afraid oUosmg their jobs and
become sktlled educators they
wtll regain uw respect that
teachers once held in Amen can
society. Teachers , as a
professional group must fmd a
way to say to the public, remove
the dead wood from the
classroom or we refuse to teach.
Give us the respect and

authority necessary tomatntam
scholasltc standards and a
salary commensurate with our
trammg and res~onsibtlily .
Placing the compulsory age
ltmtt at 14 year~ will give the
school admimstralton the whip
so badly needed. They ma y say
to the student either live up to
our standards or go do your
lh tng elsewhere . Then the
teacher may devote his ttme,
talent, and tratm ng to educatmg
rather than babysitting and
servmg as a policeman.
School attendance probably
would drop radically the ftrsl
year but very shortly the need
for an educalton would fill the
classrooms aga m; lh tS tune

because they wanted an tha n before, Cerlatnly, the
educalton .
quality of education would rtse
And , the taxpayer would and the Amencan character
recetve full value for his dollar. would be strengthened, if once
Those students who dtd not agam we have \he right to make
return would be no worse off our own mtstakes.
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~ A Thought :-lC

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: For Today :

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- Humboldt

it:

tt BANKING
DRIVE-IN

~

-lC selves

N

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:: *It's Quick!
* Easy* !~
t

-lC

Fridays Only
-lC
~ The Driv e-In Window~
-lC
is Open
-lC
-lC
9A.M.to7P. M.
-lC
(Continuou s ly)
:
Other Bankmg Hours 9 to il

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-tr.

-lC Frtdays
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Th e rugged, all steel can ntster that cleans rugs •

lurnttu re • drapes- everythmg- &lt;leep do wn •
Eureka depe ndabthly, lifettme lubrtcated motor,
for yea rs of supertor servtce Beaut tfull y styled
" Mt sty Gold" metal ltc fmi sh
-

FARMERS BANK t
: and SAVINGS CO. :

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POMEROY, OH 10

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-.-

MemberFD IC
Mem ber Federal
Reserve 5yslem

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-lC
-lC

!

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REG. 49 .95 VALUE
Model738 A

INGELS FURNITURE
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
MIDDLEPORT

BIG EASTER V LUESII
GIRLS'
EASTER
DRESSES

HAND FILLED
eNOV~LTIES

oSMARnl STYLED
oSIZES 10 11 ~
oEASTER COLORS

\

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~~

eSIZES 9 MOS.-14 YRS.
eCOMPARE AT '199
eEASY CARE FABRIC

•CANDY
•BEAUTIFUL WRAP.

·()4 88ro 9 99
ASSORTED
COLORS
·EASTER
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Friday-Saturday-Sunday
Apnl 9, 10, 11, 1971
(wtth 8 gals. gas)

Certified

REG. 30' EA.

10" SIZE

EVERREADY
'D' CELL
BATTERIES
2

INFLATABLE

PLAY
BALLS

Gas Stations
538 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .
{We honor BankAmericard

and Master Charge)

SIZES 4-6·8
~ BOYS'
BROADCLOTH

LADIES'

LADIES'
NEW
SPRING
PURSES

Terry
House

FRONT
BRIEFS

Slippers

-99
EACH ·

·;t!MEN'S

T.V. SERVICE CO.
r..;~.-;~•·•

•s•• ,,.. •an:.

~ NAME .

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- ~ADDRESS
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~ On servtce"_call.
~Expires 4-14 -71 . To

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be re-

PLUSH EASlER'

~'"

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ta nglmg'

EASTER EASTER BASKETS
. DRESSES

MASON COUNTY

Jim Durbin

ne ed

DISCOUNT SAVINGS

LADIES' NEW

.

Kepairmen

out, as Y 0 ~

.

Happtnes s or unhap :
:
pt ness depend s far m ore +:
ic: on th e way we meet -tc:
-fC: eve nts, than on the nature +:
...;: of those events them ..;:

.

FREE BABY CHICK

Point Pleasant and Meigs Mason Area

773·5196

j\u t ornatl ca1l'l
reels co rd 1n.

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Serving
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Of ·

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129 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT
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Easter Weekend

............. - CO_LOR
TELEVISION
REPAIR I

Ph. 675-3482

~~~~AY

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".! 1urned with service' order. ~

'&gt;.'!.M.:.!.A.~~~~~"iiK,.,~~

BUNNIES·

SPRING
SPORT
SHIRTS
· eSh«t sliM sl)te
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2

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Easter Colots

eSoft and

Cudd~

elust in Time iOr Easter

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eAI!Grtod Pattems
tSizos 5-M~

44

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2

EACH
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99

EACH

MEN'S ..
READY-TIED

TIES
·
eNO-TIE

eASSORliD PAmRHS &amp; Qli.ORS
eQ.IP-ON TYPE

TO

·EACH
'

•

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11 - The Daily Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , April7, 1971

•

State Stores
To Stay Open-·

Middleport
Dump
Overnil(ht Wirif ··.

'

t£.or&gt;tinued from page ) )

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
liquor stores will be open on
Good Friday this week for the
first time tn 20 years, it was
reported !&lt;&gt;day .
"I don't know of any reaoon
why llquor stores were ever
closed on Good Friday," said
Deputy Director Htram R.
Cannon . "I never m my lifetime
closed any business on Good
Fnday."
Cannon , a former vice
prestdent of a Cincinnati
department store, satd the
dectsion to have stores opened
was predetermined. ~~we are
required to treat all persons and
all faiths altke," said Cannon .
"Legally we can't do anything
else. If we close on one holy day
we must close on all of them,"

By United Press lnternaUonal
COLUMBUS- THE OHIO HIGHWAYS Department Tuesday
opened btds on 12 highway improvement projects wtth a total cost
of $2.2 mtlhon, including constr'uction of 2.9 miles of an access
road to Salt Fork State Park.
!.ow btdder on the Salt Fork State Park project was Shelly &amp;
S&lt;mds Inc., Zanesville, with a quotation of $997,914.62. The state
estuna te was $L2 million. State projects by county include: ·
Vm ton Replace Ohio 56 over Brushy Fork west of Ohi&lt;&gt; 93 in Swan
Twp ~Jav t s Excavatmg Co. Inc., Dublin, $173,956.57; estimate
$186,000
BERKELEY, CALIF. - A RADICAL ATTEMPT to split
Berkeley's police department into three separate forces along
racwl lmes was soundly defeated Tuesday night by the city's
,·otors. Wtlh 40 per cent of the votes counted, the ballOt measure
backed by the Black Panthers and other radical and activist
groups was trailing b) more thana 2-1 margin .
However, radtcals apparently ,l,ere goin~ to win two, and
posstbly three, of four holly contested seats on the seven-member
ct ly coun ctl
pn·rsBURGH - THREE STEEL COMPANIES and a
chemtcal ftrm have been charged with polluting the Ohio and
Monongahelil rivers in the Pittsburgh area. Tbe U. S. Justice
Department Tuesday filed separate criminal information,
chargmg a total of 73 vwla tions of the 1899 Refuse Act, m U. S.
Dts~ tel Court.
Charged are U. S Steel Corp., 35 viqlations ; Jones &amp;
Laughhn, 21 vtolations; Wheeltng - Pittsburgh Steel Corp., 30
vwlaltons . and Pennsylvama Industrial Chemical Corp., four
vtolatwns. The maxtmum total penalty amounts to $182,500 in

the Leading Creek area who have looged numerous complaints
agatnsl the Middleport dump. Mrs. Rife told not only ~f trash
being blown over Ute area, and Ute smoke from a number of fires
entering Ute homes, but also charged that rats are entering holT' 'S
near the dump.
The question of the commissioners establishing a county
landfill arose several times during Ute meeting. Dutton pointed
out that law provides thitt the conunissioners "may" establish a
landfill but does not place final responsibility upon the commissioners.
Lawrence (Lighbting) Boyd, one of three haulers affected by
the dump problems of Middleport, pointed out that already
restdents are throwing garbage in many places. He srud that he
would operate the packer truck for Middleport and would help see
that the dump would be operated in accordance with state
regulations.
· At least two members of the health boord said they felt the
board had gone as far as it could in attempting to work with
Middleport on the problem. Zerkle commented that "everyone
had leaned over backward."
At one point in the meeting it appeared that some compromise might be achieved. The impression arose that Middleport could obtain a packer truck within seven days. It was
suggested that Middleport might use a "temporary site" for
dumping refuse for that seven days and the debris be cleaned up
during that time at the present site and Uten the village could
attempt to operate in accordance with requirements at the
present location.
However, that apparently fell through when both Boyd and
Zerkle said that they did not know of a temporary location whtch
could be used in the seven day perioo.
The possibility of getting Earl Griffin of Hockmgport to come
into the town for pickup service - the service now used by
Pomeroy - was discussed. Zerkle said that he had discussed
Middleport's problem with Griffin but' that no plan had been
worked out because at that point Middleport had begun steps to
operate its own system.
Mrs. Rife said that people of the Leadlng Creek area had waited
two years for corrections to be made at the Middleport dump and
fha t Ute people there would not walt any longer.
When Zerkle, Mayor Fisher and Boyd left the meeting Zerkle
said that Middleport will go along with any decision of the board .
Afew minutes later Bob Beegle , health board member, "with
· great reluctance" made the motion that the Middleport permit
not be renewed. The second was by Virgil Atkins and the vote was
unarumous against renewing the permit.
Dutton explained to the two Leading Creek representatives
that the action means that there is to he no more dumping at the
Middleport site and that the contour of the land is to be restored so
that there will be no fllfther nuisance.
The board made plans for notifying not only Middleport
Village officials of its decision but also Prosecutor Bernard Fultz.
Health board members present were Dutton, Beegle, Atkins,
Dr . John Ridgway, Dr. Selim Blazewicz, health commissioner,
and Mrs. Beulah Strauss, administrative officer.
Contacted following the decision last night, Zerkle said that
Middleport would attempt to abide by the board's decision but
what steps could be taken to provide garbage pickup service for
·residents were indefinite.
"

Trucker Charged

Ohio Highway Patrol officers
have charged Harry E. Knaus,
47, Rt. 3, Geneva, Ohio, with
vehtcular homicide in the
f1nes
traffic death at ~ : 45 p.m.
ISRAEL'S RULING LABOR party today hacked Prune
Tuesday of Ray Calvin Rife, 46,
Mnustet· Golda Meir's Middle East peace stance, including
Rl. 1, Cheshire.
refusal to wtthdraw to boundaries that existed before the 1967
Dr. Donald R. Warehime,
AI·ab-!St·aeli war . The 3,000 delegates to a party conference voted
Gallia County Coroner, said
thetr approval m settmg their platform for national elections Mrs.
Rife was dead on arrival at the
~:etr must c&lt;;ill before 1972. The Labor party, led by Mrs. Meir,
Holzer Medical Center as a
has an overwhelimng maJority m the current coalition governresult of internal hemorrhaging
me nt
from injuries suffered when his
Israeli policy as outlined by Mrs. Meir to the conference
1969 pick-up truck slammed into
Sunday, also ru led oul mternational guarantees as a subStitute for
the rear of Knaus' tractor truck.
bcrders Israel can defend . Mrs. Metr said Israel will not withdraw
According to investigating
from the Gaw Strip, the Golan Hetghts in Syria, the old section of
officers, the accident occurred
Jerusalem or Sharm el Shetkh on the tip of the Sinai peninsula, all
on Rt. 7, one and one half miles
ta ken m the 1967 conflict.
north of the old Silver Bridge,
CHICAGO - RICHARD J. DALEY rolled to a record fifth
across from the Tri-County
term as mayo r of Chicago wtth such a display of political power
Asphalt Pavmg Co.
even hiS own orgaruzation was caught by surprise. Daley's final,
The investigation showed that
unofhctal margin over Richard E. Friedman was 417,728 votes,
Knaus apparently pulled from
just short of 70 per cent of the total_ He lost only two of the city's 50
the driveway of the pavmg firm
m a southerly direction into the
wards 111 Tuesday's volmg, and those by narrow margins.
path of Rtfe's pickup truck.
With all precincts counted, Daley had a margin of 735,787 to
Knaus
was treated for a minor
31R,059. The black wards went for Daley despite the endorsement
head injury. He posted $1,000
of hiS opponent by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, head of Operation
bond for his appearance in
Breadbasket. Two heavtly Republican wards went for Daley
Galltpolis
Muntcipal Court.
while they were electmg Republicans to the city council.
It was Gallta's second traffic
fatality in 1971.
Mr . Rife, a veteran of World
War II, was employed at Kaiser
· narold Oscar Ro ush, 59, !land ; Robert, of Racme, and
Alummum Company. A native
Mtd land, Pa , a former Metgs Don, Woodridge, Va . ; fiv e
of Gallia County, he is survived
County resident, dted Monday sisters, Kathryn Price, Johnby hts parentS, Raymond and
evemng Mr Roush was a ston; Maxie Deem, Belpre;
Vergie Rife, Rt. 1, Gallipolis;
veteran of World War 11 and Irene Atkinson, Millersport ;
his wtfe, Helen Spencer Rife; a
\~ ~) ! k~'t l on grave l boats as a Htlda Davis, Racine , and
daughter, Joy Ray Rife, Rt. 1,
(Continued from page 1)
wcldet . He was pt·eceded tn Audrey Williams, Munhall, Pa. , .
Cheshire; one step-&lt;laughter,
dea th by hiS fat her, Byron and one granddaughter, Lisa . had to meet an October deadline calling for a 40 per cent reduction Mrs .
Carolyn
Taylor ,
Roush. one brother , Neal, and a
in sulphur oxide emissions, proouctlon would have to be trimmed
D OF A TO MEET
St ste r, Naomt Teaford.
Funera l services will be held as many as 150 to 600 workers could be laid off.
Past councilors of Theooorus
He ts " " vtved by his mother, Thursday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
"It looks pretty good now because a supply of low coal ash has Council, Daughters of America,
F.s tH Rous h Porlland; two Chapel with the Rev . Freeland been obtained," said Fred Charles. But Charles said this was
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday
sons, Mclviu and Dav1d, Po r ~ Norris offlctating. Burial will be
possible because of the coal market and how long it will last is not at the home of Miss Erna Jesse
ll and; ltve br others, Bert, 111 Letart Cemetery. Friends known .
in Pomeroy.
Barboursvtlle, W. Va.; Ivan, may call at the funeral home
Ga lhpoltS ; Wtlltam. of Por- after 4 p.m. today

Harold Roush Dies Mo,tt.tay

News ... in BriefS

1

Lorena Sloter Died Monday
Keyes, Hebron , and Harley
Keyes of Palaski, Ohto; a sister,
Mrs. Naomi Autherson, Portland ; ntne grandchildren,
severa l great-grandchildren
and three great - great grandchtldren .
•
Preceding her m death were
her husband, Marion, and two
sons, Chfford and Kenneth.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Friday at the Long Bottom
Methodist Church wtth the Rev .
Robert Smtih officiating. Burtal
will be in the Sand Hill
Tontghl &amp; Thu rsday
Cemetery. Friends may call at
A~ni7 - B
the White Funeral Home in
NOT OPE N
Coolvtlle any time after noon
- - - - ---1 Thursday.

Mrs "''' ena Sloter, 79, forll tl' rl y of Long Bottom, dted
Tuesday at Hebron fo llowmg a
brtef tlltwss She was born at
Bald Kn ob m Meigs County, the
daugh ter of the late Wtlliam and
Myr tle t.m ue Keyes
St!l v1vm g a1 c twu daughters,
Mrs Ne' a .Johnson , Hebron,
an d Mrs. Erm a Co nnolly,
lkedsvtlle; two brothers, Eurl

MEIGS THEATRE

Fnday &amp; Saturday
Apn l9 10

TOO LAT E •
THE HERO
M1chae l Ca me

.....( ltff Robet tson
( G PI

Colorrartoo n
It 's Fo r The Btrds

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SHOW START57 P.M

Legion Asks
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, went ori
record as favoring the release
of Lt. William Calley at a
regular meeting Tuesday night
at the post home.
Petitions were on hand for
signature~ of members to be
sent to President Nixon urging
the release of Lt. Calley and the
restoration of his · rank .
Petitions were also on hand for
HER TWIN SISTER
Lelah Jane Powell , New
Haven, W. Va. , was reported
discharged from Pleasant
Valley Hospttal in Tuesday's
Daily Sentinel. Discharged
instead was her twin sister,
Lilah Powell. Lelah Jane
Powell
has
not
been
]]ospitalized .

SHULER SERVICE
Members of the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club met
bnefly at Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home Tuesday evening
m respect to the late Emmet
Shuler, a member of the club
SERVICES AT SUTTON
many yeats, who died Sunday. Easter Sunrise services will
The Rev. Robert Kuhn gave a be held at the Sutton United
prayer .
Methoois: Church at 7a.m. with

, . . - - - - •- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . vices.
a breakfast
follow the
Sundayto School
will serbe
held al9: 1~ followed by an egg
hunt.

ARMAND'S

FINED, SENTENCED
Steve Dailey, Racine, was
fined $100 and costs and sentenced to three days in jail
Tuesday night by Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar on conviction of driving while intoxicated.

The Martin Restaurant
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

ACTION DISMISSED
An action for damages filed
by the Indiana Insurance
Company against Iris Rose
Boatrite , et al, has been
dismissed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

r•••.!lll•llll•--•
2-HOUR.-

Easter Sunday
Buffet with Chotce of a Hot Entree -Ham, Roast Beef, Fried Chicken.

$325 Adu Its
·

spt

Baked

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CLEANING

Child
Under 12

lUoon Reauest)

11:00 AM· 5:00PM
In addii!On to regular menu.

·"Enterlainment Nightly"
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In preparation for Grand Opening, we will I

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1

be clos,ed Sunday, April 4.

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ROBINSON~s .

.CLEANERS

2)6 E. 2nd

- Fomtroy

_. Phon•U'l-Sa'JI

·

Calley~s

forwarding to Hanoi asking
better treatment of American
Prisoners of War in Viebtam.
The post voted to sponsor
attendance of underprivileged
children to, the American
.::::!:-:-::::~~:::::::::::.~::!£.:~:~:~:!!:=::::~

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Army officer who prosecuted
Lt. William L. Calley Jr. has
charged President Nixon weakened the judicial system and
helped make a hero out of a
convicted murderer when he
responded to a public outcry by
intervening in the case.
Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel IJJ
also told Nixon in a letter it
would he a tragedy if "political
expediency" dictated a compromise of a "fundamental
moral principle" involved in the
slaying of Vietnamese civilians
at My Lai in 19611.
DAMAGE MINOR
Minor damages were incurred to two cars in an accident on West Main St. at 9:35
p.m. Tuesday, Pomeroy police
said. According to police a car
driven by Harold Ash, 47,
Pomeroy, struck the rear of
another driven by Robert
Williams, 23, Pomeroy, who
was in a left turn . Williams did
not have a turn signal in
operati&lt;&gt;n police said. There
were no injuries and no arrest.
SERVICE SET
Sunrise services will be held
at6 :3oa·.m. Sunday at the Rock
Springs Methooist Church lvith
the Youth Fellowship in charge
of the service. There will be
Sunday &amp;hqol and worship ·
service at 9:30 and an egg hunt
following Sunday &amp;hool.
AUTO HITS TREE
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a single car
accident Tuesday a\ .7:41 p.m.
on County Road 3, seven miles
east of RuUand. William Wise,
no address, was traveling north
when his car went off the road
on the right, .came back across
Ute highway and hit a tree. The
car was demolished. Wise was

Release

Heritage Camp this year and a
donation was given to the
George Thompson Kidney
Fund. Paul Casci reported on
the Eighth District convention
Sunday in Athens. Post
"ever las ling services" were
announced for May.
Don Hunnel reported on a
recent executive committee
meeting when several repairs
and improvements to the post
home and lot were planned. The
first 'quarter financial report
was given by Charles Swatzel.
World War II veteran Guy
Reuter was reported confined to
Veterans Memorial ' Hospital,
and the death of a member, C.
E. Humphrey, ·Reedsville, a ·
World War I veteran, was
reported. Vietnam veterans
attending were Hank Cleland,
Robert Arms, Donald Brown
and Donald Whaley. Bill Owens
was a guest. ltefreshments
were served by Casci, assisted
by Roy Reuter.

Alexandria, Ohio; a step-son,
Ballard Lee Howell, Gallipolis;
six step-grandchildren; four
ststers, Mrs. John (Mary)
Steinbeck, Gallipolis Mrs.
Roland (Faye) Spencer,
Columbus; Mrs. Leroy (Eileen) Elliott, Newcomerstown, Ohio, and Mrs. Sarah
Summers, Rt. 1, GaUipolis; four
brothers, Herbert and Roger
Rife, Columbus, and Merch and
Francis Rife, both of Rt. I,
Galltpohs.
He was a member of the
Bulaville Christian Church,
Cheshire Masonic Lodge,

The battle was going on more
than six hours later and a
South Vietnamese spokesman
described \he fighting as
11 heavy." There was no inune·
diate word on casualties on
either side.
Another battle was going oit
70 miles south of Base No. 6 in
Pleiku province, where South
Vtetnamese troops have been
fighting the Communists lor a
week near Phu Nhoo, military
sources said .
Some Burled Alive
A Communist defector from a
unit which attacked Fire
Supp&lt;&gt;rt base 6 early Tuesday
told UPI Correspondent Robert
E. Sullivan the North Vietnamese there were running short
of food but have plenty of
ammunition and artillery shells.
Military sources said the
bodies of civilians slain in the
1968 Tel offensive were uncovered 10 miles north of Hue. The
defector said there were at
least another 40 to 50 persons
buried in the area. It appeared
a hamlet chief and several
others had been stabbed and
possibly buried alive.
After the Tel offensive three
years ago, more than 5,000
South Vietnamese civilians
were listed as missing. Since
then more than 3,000 bodies
have been found in mass
graves, mostly around Hue.

Sauer's comments:)

MANY OF THE LARGE
Foundations are of the opimon
tha t the American Public
&amp;hool System is not fulftlling
tis purpose and Will probably
have to be radtcally altered to
meet present day needs. As a
teacher wtth 28 years of
teac hing experience in the
public schools, l agree
wholeheartMly.
Well, fools rush in where
angels fear to tread. Please
accept my thoughts for what
they are worth . My defense is
that I'm deeply concerned and
have sludiM the educational
dtlemma for a long time. These
are the conclusiOns at which I
have arrived .
FIRST - That which must be
done wtll have to be ac' .
comphshed
at the' lop. The state
legislat ure must accept
responstbtlity. We on the local
level can only urge the
legislators to be t·ealis!tc
SECOND - Our concept of a
welfare state must be abandoned beca use hts!Or) has
proven tl unworkable. It
destroys
tniltaltve
and
character. At present it has
destroyed student mottvatwn
and created the fa lse nolwn that
1t IS gove rnm ent's respon stbtltly to support them (and to
support them handsomely) .
THIRD - We must return to
the tenent that every person
should ha ve the God-gtven nght
to make hts own mtstakes. We
must stop lelltng a student that
he must go to school until he is

Cheshire Eastern Star, Aladdin
Temple Shrine, Columbus, and
the Gallipolis Shrine Club.
Last rites will be held at 2
p.m. Friday from the Waugh .
Halley - Wo&lt;&gt;d Funeral Home
with burial following in Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Rev.
Andrew Parsons will officiate.
Masonic services will be held
at the funeral home at 7:30p.m.
Thursday. Calling hours will be
held from 2-4 and 7-9 Thursday.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contributions to the
Shrine Club's Crippled Children Leo, a Latin name, means
Hospital and Burns Institute . " hon."

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Select Your Easter Outfit From Elberfelds 2nd Floor
Ready-To:wear Department

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Romantic liHie peasant
Away to the Balkans! Vicky Vaughn 1 s in a peasant mood

with bodice and billowy sleeves blazed with folk art
embroidery, gypsy sashing, dirndl skirt Polyester double-·
knit maChine washes and dries. Super for summer galas

Tremendous
Selection of
Apparel for
Women and
Girls in all
regular and
hard-to-fit sizes.
Add gloves,
belt, jewelry,
hosiery and·
handbag from

By Alma Marshall
Mrs. Judy 'Turner Persinger ,
formerly of Mason, and now of
Columbus, was the first woman
elected to an offtce m the
Central Ohto Manageme nt since
tts foundmg 31 years ago. She
was elected treasurer on April
L

The association is made up of
businessmen and managers and
represent such compames as

~ur Jlst

Flo1r
Accessories
Department

in white with lilac, green or pink. 5-15.

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ELBERF~LDS IN ~MEROY
FC?.I Y_OUI SHOPPING

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. · inbbd
ready to hJoom
For Easter gifting . . . the most
delicalely fragrant and roman tically beautiful flowers! Each
potful is a short, bushy plant, loaded
with buds and at least 2 buds are big
and tal and
to bu•~t Into

89~
and up

Our ~aster selectio.ns are complete.
Greetmg Cards, Toys, Novelties
Filled_ Bask_ hs a_nd all fill1'ng'
matena I. Gtfts. Fme Selection of
Easter Candy of All Kinds. Gifts for

All.

4" pot size.
' All are the
Veitchll variety.

.l•llllillliii.••••••••••..••~w~:
BEN,FRA-N , . UN'
PHONE
202 E11t Mlin St.
992-3498
Pome~oy, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY N
TIL 9

FOURTH - We ourselves
must accept responsibility to ·
stand up and be accounted as
adults . We tell the children!
They do not dtctate to us!
Chtldren expect !au-play and
JUSltce, but they also expect us
to dtclate, to assume leadership
as thetr superiors. They do not
respect authority that wavers
under their demands.
Observe ! The independent
schools , where t~e administration stood firm and
said, "We foot the bills, if you do
not hke the way we do, then go,"
have not been troubled with
campus rto!s and far out
behavior tn dress and morals.
We need only to return to the
values and standards that made
Amertca strong. The success
and fatlure of past generations
should show us the road which
we must take to survtve . Our
adva nced technology does not
alter the need to obey and
pracltce the laws of the
umverse as set down by God for
man to follow . Let's not delude
ourselves by saying, "Times
have changed, and we need a
new set of laws." NO man
changes the laws of the
Umverse. • ,
FIFTH - If 18-year olds are

Mason County

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18 years old. At most, after
etghl years of compulsory
education, the responsibility
should be that of the student and
hts parents.
The greatest motivator m the
world is awareness of -personal
need. Let the.student learn the
value of an education through
the need of tl. Let the parent
for
learn
respo nsibility
educating hts chtldren by
having them to cope with and
not ease his conscience by
saymg, I feed them, clothe
them, and send them to school.

News Notes

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OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY THIS WEE~

J)~ -

1Nole: Harold Sauer, a
teacher lor 28 years and
guidance counselor at the
Meigs High School, has
composed nine "conclusions'"
relating to problems in
education . Following are

Beautiful Artificial Flo.wers for spring ' inclucll~g
Eas)er · Lilies, Daffodils, Narcissus. 10c up. Also
crosses, sprays, wreaths, cemetery vases, etc., for
decorations.
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,.,,u.,··

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Porcelain Steel Butlding
Company, Western Electric,
Columbus a nd Southern Ohio
Electric Co., and Crane Plasltcs
Co etc.
Ray Knig ht, of Vroys
Brothers was last year 's fi rst
vice president and wtll assume
the preSidenc y; Robert F .
Nthart, Jr. , Porcelatn Steel
Bldg. Co., was elected ftrst vtce
president; Ralph E. Brown ,
Western Electric, was elected
second vice president; Stephen
T. Wal ker, Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co., was
elected secretary and Judy
Persin ger of R. G. Barry
Corporation, treasurer.
Central Oht o Man agement
Association (COMA ) is offering
two scholarships for $250 each
thts year to two high school
semors at the May 6 dinner
meeting. ·
Mrs. Persinger has be~ n a
member of COMA since 1969,
and served on the Booster
Committee 1969-70; chatrwoman, Ways and Means
Commttlee, 1969-70; Las Vegas
Chau-woman, 2 terms ; Ways
and Means committee, 1970-71;
Course Coordina tor, 1970;
active member of the Board of
Dtrectors, 1969-70; Hostess,
OSU Management Conference,
1971.
AWARDS PRESENTED
Awards were presented
recently when the Mason Cub
Pack 253 held its March
meeting m the Mason United
Methodist Churcl;. Following
the Flag Ceremony, Jack
Smith, Cubmaster, presented
awards as follows: Billy Gibbs,
Wolf Patch; Fred Smith, Gold '
Arrow, and 2 silver arrows;
Jack Smith, Bear Patch, Gold
Arrow and Silver Arrow; Bobby
VanMete r, 2 sliver arrows ;
Kevin Roush, 3rd year pin;
Jack Smith, 2nd year pin;
Churck Stanley, 2 year pin;
F;ed Smtih, 1 year pin .
Jack Smith, Bobby VanMeter
and Tommy Roush of the Cbb
Scouts were welcomed into the
Webelos by Charles Stanley,
Webelos leader and _by Jack
Smtth, Cup &amp;out master.
Den lll presented a skit using
Cowboys and Jndtans as their
thell)e.
Webelos provtded the refreshmen ts and were served to the
following: Jimmy Smtih, John

VanMeter, Freddie Smitli,
Bobby VanMeter, f\1tke Sayre,
Kelley Sayre, Jackie Smith,
Risa Sayre, David Fo'Yler,
Charles Stanley, Harry Gibbs,
Billy Gibbs, Cmdy Stanley.
Thomas Roush, Bodte Davts,
Chns Allen Davis, Scott
Chapman, Lori Cha pman ,
Kevin Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Smith, Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Sayre, Mrs. Richard
Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Stanley, Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
Roush, Mrs. Stanley Gibbs, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert J. Roush, Mrs.
Wtlltam DaviS, Jr . and Mrs.
Jack Chapman .
Boys interested m scoutmg
are asked to contact Cubmaster, Jack Smith. Any boy
gmng on eight years old or will
be in the third grade next year
are eligible to apply.
ATTEND CANTATA
Mr . and Mrs. Reuben
Stewart, Mason, Mrs. Mary
Aumiller. Hartford, Mr . and
Mrs. Jack Fowler, Tammy and
Tony of Pl. Pleasant, attended a
Cantate entitled, " Easter
Song," at the Presbyterian
Church in Pt. Pleasant on
Sunda y morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart's son,
Gary, dtrected the Cantata.
After the Easter program Mr.
and Mrs. Gary ·stewart and
Missie, Pt. Pleasant ; Mr. and
Mrs. Reuben Stewart, Mrs .
Mary Aumiller went to the
Fowler home for dinner.

to be gtven the n~ht to vote then
they must ac hieve selfand personal
discipline
responsibility at a much earlier
age than at present tf this nation
ts not to he voted out of
existence. I'm for letting them
vote -but I'm also for letting
them make tlteir own mistakes.
They make their mistakes and
they pay the penalty for them
personally . Let their experience
moltvate them into wanting an
education. Pain and growth are
inseparable . ·
We as adults have the
responsibility to provide the
opportunity for an education.
But we certamly need not toy
any longer with the idea that we
force an education on people .
True learning is only achteved
when sought after. And only a
sense of self-need motivates all
people to seek.
"Survtval of the Fittest" is
sltll a law of the universe. Pain
ts a fact of hfe. It is the greatest
of motivators? The big people of
the world have all known pain.
Why should we try to hide this
fact from our youth or try to
mtnirntze its unportance ' Are
our youth suffering from overprotection? Soft livmg (our
gtvmg it to them ) wtll never
solve the problems. They must
want an education, need it, be
wtlhng to work for it or suffer
the consequences. Har sh?
Cruel'!
No 1
Practical?
Realisltc? Yes ' Jesus Chnst ts
still a hard Man.
SIXTH - Our best teachers,
the bulk of our educational
dollars should be used in the
ftrst eight grades. Cut the frills
and the coddling, make sure
that the basic tools (the three
R's) are taught and taught
effectively. If after eight years
of compulsory education the
student is unable to read and to
work simple mathematics, he
needs training other than htgh
school.
The student who has learned
the basic skills can if necessary
educate himself. If it is desire
(motivation ) that ts lacking,
then he should be free to make
hts own mtstakes. However, if
the student ts motivated to
further his educalton, then we
should provtde the opportunity
for htm . This is our only
responsibility as adults.
SEVENTH - The schools,
like our government, has taken
the responsibility to do things
that they were never intended I&lt;&gt;
do or have the ability to do.
&amp;hools, nor any institution, can
fulfill the responstbtlities of
parents and the home. Nor can
they force s people to learn
against their will. All this talk
about motivating students
through offering . the proper ·
currtculum and allowing the
student to choose his own
subjects and to work at his own
pace is unreahstic? What experience has the student had
that would give him the
judgement to make the proper
choices to become an engineer,
a lawyer, a (loctor, or an
automobile mechanic, etc.?
The methods that have been
proven successful through
centuries of educational experience s~ ould not be
discounted. We know without ~
doubt, that the one great
motivator is the real need in a

.

ants Return to Three. R·s

Guidance Counselor.

Calm Broken
SAIGON (UPI)- Heavy fight- tr; to recapture a se.,fn-mile
mg flared anew today outside segment of Highway 4 seized by
Fire Support Base No. 6 near the Communists two weeks ago.
the Laotian border following 24 The road links Phnorp Pen)l
hours of calm, military sources · and Cambodia's only deepwater
said. Another battle was port.
reported 70 miles south of the
Casualties Unreported
embattled outpost.
Military sources said new
At Hue, a Viet Cong defector fighting broke out around noon
led South Viebtamese authori- tooay a mile north of Base No.
ties to graves of 18 persons 6, which is six miles from the
slam by the Communists during Cambodian border and 12 miles
the 1968 Tel offensive. Their from the southeastern tip of
hands were lied behind them Laos. It is 270 miles northwest
with wire. A search was on for of Saigon.
up to ~0 other victims.
Fire Base No. 6 was overrun
Communiques from Phnom March 31 by North Viebtamese
Penh told of a new eight troops and retaken by the SouUt
battalion government drive to Viebtamese April I.

.

.

person's life for a thing. We
may mspire a person to
achievement but hastcal)y weare holding out to htm
something of value to hun
personally.
EIGHTH - We need to take a
look at our T&amp;l Programs. [ was
told in two different summer
vocalwnal workshops that if the
vocahonal courses were to
succeed, very careful selection
of the students entermg the
cow·ses must be pracltced. To
succeed, the student must ftrst
have a strong mterest in, and an
aplttude for the course.
Secondly, he must have a good
knowledge of baste Engltsh and
mathematics and be able to
read comprehensively. He need
not be a gentus, but he must be
average or bette r in in•
telltgence.
This point was emphatically
emphasized: Any remedial
work m Math, and Engltsh, or
learning to read must be done
ahead of lime and not made a
part of the T&amp;l Program .
Otherwise, specifically related
theory work was impossible.
Interest was lost in the course
and dtscipline problems
developed.
Teachers , recrutled from
mdustry to teach these T&amp;l
Programs are not oriented to
present day students and thetr
behavioral altitudes. They wtll
return to mdustry rather than
try to cope wtth the disciplme
problems. No doubt, school
adminiStrators understand the
problem but have their hands
lied by unrealistic laws. There
is a real need in our economy
for vocal!onally trained people
but again the person himself
must want the trainmg and
have the ability to be tramed.
NINTH - Teachers as a
professtonal group have been
steadily losing public respect
for a number of years. And l
personally ask the question,

Why ' Is tt because teachers,
ad mtntstrators, and school
beards have gradually lowered
teaching standards to remain
popular wtlh t he electorate'
Truthfully, I believe that the
majortly of the electorate want
a school that is well disctplined,
a school that they fee! IS doing a
good job 9f educattng the
students! They are turning
thumbs down on us because we
are not domg a professiOnal JOb.
We often hear the remark
"students are smarter toda~
than yesteryear ." Students are
better mformed because of
radi o and televtston , and
because they have traveled
more , but a large maJOrity of
them are lacking in the baste
sktlls whtch are vitally
necessary m gammg vocattonal
competence. They can not read
compre henstvely, spell accurately, write legibly , or use
decimals and fracltons. Ye t,
!.hetr self-coricep!ts one of bemg
a whtle collared person.
The question ts always there ,
Are we domg more harm than
good m forcmg students to go to
high ~c h ool' If they are in
school agamst their wtll , they
learn to loaf, to day dream, to
cheat, to he, and to expect
grades, bcoks, lunches, etc. to
be given to them wtth no effort
on theu· pat·!. All of thts, " It is
o"ed to me" attitude, IS earned
over mto adult life, along wtlh
the false tdeas of honesty and
truthfulness. Is t! any wonder
that the old fashioned vtrtues
are bemg lost?
When teachers stop bemg
afraid oUosmg their jobs and
become sktlled educators they
wtll regain uw respect that
teachers once held in Amen can
society. Teachers , as a
professional group must fmd a
way to say to the public, remove
the dead wood from the
classroom or we refuse to teach.
Give us the respect and

authority necessary tomatntam
scholasltc standards and a
salary commensurate with our
trammg and res~onsibtlily .
Placing the compulsory age
ltmtt at 14 year~ will give the
school admimstralton the whip
so badly needed. They ma y say
to the student either live up to
our standards or go do your
lh tng elsewhere . Then the
teacher may devote his ttme,
talent, and tratm ng to educatmg
rather than babysitting and
servmg as a policeman.
School attendance probably
would drop radically the ftrsl
year but very shortly the need
for an educalton would fill the
classrooms aga m; lh tS tune

because they wanted an tha n before, Cerlatnly, the
educalton .
quality of education would rtse
And , the taxpayer would and the Amencan character
recetve full value for his dollar. would be strengthened, if once
Those students who dtd not agam we have \he right to make
return would be no worse off our own mtstakes.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;._ _•

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

~ A Thought :-lC

;
.

: For Today :

~

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tt BANKING
DRIVE-IN

~

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:: *It's Quick!
* Easy* !~
t

-lC

Fridays Only
-lC
~ The Driv e-In Window~
-lC
is Open
-lC
-lC
9A.M.to7P. M.
-lC
(Continuou s ly)
:
Other Bankmg Hours 9 to il

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..;: 3 and 5 to 7 as usual on

-tr.

-lC Frtdays
-lC

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Th e rugged, all steel can ntster that cleans rugs •

lurnttu re • drapes- everythmg- &lt;leep do wn •
Eureka depe ndabthly, lifettme lubrtcated motor,
for yea rs of supertor servtce Beaut tfull y styled
" Mt sty Gold" metal ltc fmi sh
-

FARMERS BANK t
: and SAVINGS CO. :

~
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POMEROY, OH 10

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-.-

MemberFD IC
Mem ber Federal
Reserve 5yslem

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-lC
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REG. 49 .95 VALUE
Model738 A

INGELS FURNITURE
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
MIDDLEPORT

BIG EASTER V LUESII
GIRLS'
EASTER
DRESSES

HAND FILLED
eNOV~LTIES

oSMARnl STYLED
oSIZES 10 11 ~
oEASTER COLORS

\

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eSIZES 9 MOS.-14 YRS.
eCOMPARE AT '199
eEASY CARE FABRIC

•CANDY
•BEAUTIFUL WRAP.

·()4 88ro 9 99
ASSORTED
COLORS
·EASTER
, GRASS

Friday-Saturday-Sunday
Apnl 9, 10, 11, 1971
(wtth 8 gals. gas)

Certified

REG. 30' EA.

10" SIZE

EVERREADY
'D' CELL
BATTERIES
2

INFLATABLE

PLAY
BALLS

Gas Stations
538 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .
{We honor BankAmericard

and Master Charge)

SIZES 4-6·8
~ BOYS'
BROADCLOTH

LADIES'

LADIES'
NEW
SPRING
PURSES

Terry
House

FRONT
BRIEFS

Slippers

-99
EACH ·

·;t!MEN'S

T.V. SERVICE CO.
r..;~.-;~•·•

•s•• ,,.. •an:.

~ NAME .

"-...;..,~

- ~ADDRESS
~

. SAVE 12.00

~ On servtce"_call.
~Expires 4-14 -71 . To

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be re-

PLUSH EASlER'

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EASTER EASTER BASKETS
. DRESSES

MASON COUNTY

Jim Durbin

ne ed

DISCOUNT SAVINGS

LADIES' NEW

.

Kepairmen

out, as Y 0 ~

.

Happtnes s or unhap :
:
pt ness depend s far m ore +:
ic: on th e way we meet -tc:
-fC: eve nts, than on the nature +:
...;: of those events them ..;:

.

FREE BABY CHICK

Point Pleasant and Meigs Mason Area

773·5196

j\u t ornatl ca1l'l
reels co rd 1n.

1C:

Serving
,

Of ·

~ REEl

-lC

129 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT
.
.

Easter Weekend

............. - CO_LOR
TELEVISION
REPAIR I

Ph. 675-3482

~~~~AY

~
~

~
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".! 1urned with service' order. ~

'&gt;.'!.M.:.!.A.~~~~~"iiK,.,~~

BUNNIES·

SPRING
SPORT
SHIRTS
· eSh«t sliM sl)te
,.

2

•

Easter Colots

eSoft and

Cudd~

elust in Time iOr Easter

99e

eAI!Grtod Pattems
tSizos 5-M~

44

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2

EACH
•

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EACH

MEN'S ..
READY-TIED

TIES
·
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eASSORliD PAmRHS &amp; Qli.ORS
eQ.IP-ON TYPE

TO

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12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April7, 1971

.

.· Extra

--

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.
.
· ~Special Everything lOur Family Needs to Wi!lOOme ·. ·
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EXTRA
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SPECIAL

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EASTER
LILIES.
YOUR CHOICE

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WESSON

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24 oz~ Bottle

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STAR-KIST

CHUNK

.

DEL MONTE

FRUIT
COCKT-AIL

~CAN

.

RS. MORNING

HUNT'S
TOMATO
CATSUP

303
can

20 oz.
bottle

1f2 can

·TUN'A

SEMI-BONE·LESS

•

GOLD·SEAL

WHOLE OR PORTIONS

SWEEr:~ P: ICKLES

·

32 oz.
Jar

KRAFT'S ·
RED .~ ; ..- r1llfiJ~ T . · .
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LB.

FOR

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101/z oz.
bag
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hicken

-

16 BEST PIECES
•

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4 DRUMSTICKS
4 THIGHS
·4 WINGS
. ·4 BR.EASTS

Florida Oranges
LB. BAG

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DEL MON·TE ·.
Golden Yams

Sliced · -~ -Crus"ed · ~Chunks- ·Tidbits .
· · No. 2 Can

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·. ·PHILADELPHIA CREAM
MA BROWN
~ ~ PICKLED sEErs .
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a-:- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April7, 1971 ·

1

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•.• ?Jtt. ~= -,;. ; .-

1

He is Alive
We live in a world where discoveries are made constantly and
none more . so than· this 20th century which abounds with
lremendous advance in scientific and technical developments·.
Each of us has shared many things in the passage of the years
though we know not when we first began our earthly existence.
What is the greatest discovery a mortal can make? ·The
discovery that Jesus Christ is alive! This really is the most
amazing discovery possible to man and has the most astounding
consequences for the individual.
He is alive! In USA In 1971! He that died and rose again is
alive forevermore, reigning triumphantly over sin, death, the
grave and hell. What a difference this discovery made to His own
followers! Aller the crucifixion they were defeated, discouraged,
disillusioned and broken; nothing could have got them on their
feet again except the one thing that happened: Christ arose and
appeared to them personally, proving who He was and what He
was.
No man or woman will ever-accomplish anything for Christ
until they have met Him personally and have a uniquely individual experience of his saving grace.
Imagine Mary Magdalene as she waited brokenheartedly at
the tomb in early dawn, that she and her companions may embalm the body of Her Lord. She wondered, Who will move the
stone' Her grief is increased fourfold when she finds the tomb
open and His body gone. Then she saw the figure of a 111an looming
ahead in the early mist, Would He tell' "Oh, they have taken
away my Lord. Tell me where they have laid Him."
Then she heard the one word spoken, "Mary." It was her
m&lt;ornent of revelation! Christ was alive·! Death could not keep its
prey!
Two of His followers made their way to Emmaus, there were
joined by another traveler. They !l'ere amazed at the knowledge
He had of the Old Testament. He showed from the writings of
Moses and the prophets that these things must be. They had never
known such leaching.
Horne was reached and they urged the Stranger to stay over
night, but first to share their evening meal. They knew Him not
until He 1broke the bread and gave thanks; then with open eyes,
they knew. He was Alive !
Does the resurrection mean anything to you? Is it just a fact
of past history? Lopkat Saul of Tarsus. Wha\ transformed him ? It
was the living Christ.
Paul, writing to the Galatians (2:20): "I am crucified with
Christ, nevertheless I live: yet not I, but Christ liveth in me."
This is setting forth the personal experience of Easter.
Christ liveth in me ! This is the keystone of all Christian experience. The Christian life really is a life, not just a book of rules
or code of ethics to live by , a lis~! do's and don't's. All this is
included in our living as christians, but we have life in Christ. He
carne to bring life, abundant life, eternal life, life that absorbs,
thrills and satisfies. He gave to His own eternal life and they shall
never perish ; He assures them wherever they go with His gospel
He will always be with them right on to journey's end and beyond.
More than anything else today, Chcistians need to rediscover
tlui wonder, joy and thrill of the resurrection. He is alive!
What does it all mean to you? Are you defeated and disappointed? All that you will ever need God has given in Christ, He
has promised He will bleS$ us. Ephesians I :3. "He hath blessed us
now with all tbe spiritual blessings in Christ Jesus."
Live up to your privileges in Christ. The living Christ is the
only answer to your needy heart and life: Can you really sing, "I
serve a risen Saviour, He's in the world today? "
He is, you know!
May this chorus be your blessed experience always:
He lives, He lives, Christ Jesus lives today,He walks-with me, He
talks with me, along life's narrow way
He lives, He lives, Salvation to impart!
You ask me how I know He lives, He lives within my heart."
Ferne B. Hayman, Rt. 2, Racine, 0.

Be ThBnkful to our Posml Folks
Portland, Ohio
Dear Sir:
Recently I was reminded of what an old blessing is our mail
system, even with telephones, radio, T.V., etc.
When we sometimes complain about our mail do we ever
think of folk who keep it going, the millions of pieces delivered
with haste , on time, and in good condition, and say a kind word or
a little prayer for those who keep it coming and going?
What if, like·the "Pony Express" of 1860, we had to wait for 75
ponies in 101'.! days to make one trip to the West Coast? Charge
then was $5 each half ounce. Fastest trip was made in 7 days, 17

Spring and

EMffft

I·

i

i

OUR NEW

JEWELRY
•

Never has our spring co ll ection
been more varied in new pieces
and colors . See the new fish,
butterfly and oth er new pieces.
Ju~t about everything in a quality
· shfJwing is · r ea dy for your
choosing. Drop iA and take a peek.

.1.,_

and up

Clinic·Aclministrator
The Holzer Clinic announced
today that Robert E. Daniel of
Steubenville will assume the
position of clinic administrator,
effective Aprill9. Currently an
Ohiol!~ti---Telephone Co. commercial manager , Daniel will
replace Irvin Barick, who'
resigned recently.
A native of You ngstown,
Daniel
graduated
from
Woodrow Wilson High School in
1958 and from Washington &amp;
Jefferson College in 1962. He
has also done adva nced work at
Case-Wester n Reserve

solidate more than 30 federal
aid to education programs into
a $3 billion revenue sharing
package. He said that would
allow local authorities to "make
the hard decisions about the
best ways to educate their

University and at the University of Dayton.
Daniel started his telephone
career in 1962 as a management
trainee in Cleveland. Two years
tater he was promoted to in·
formation assistant in public
relations. In 1966 he was
elevated to unit commercial
manager in Dayton before
moving to Steubenville.
Daniel, hiw wife, Jane and
three children, Sarah, Robbie,
and Emily Kale, and his father,
Edward, will be moving to the
Gallipolis area in the near
future .

f.--~---------------.,

children."

The proposal, last of six
speclal presidential reveque
sharing measures forming what
he calls a "new American
federalism," would 'combine
$2.8 billion worth of existing.
federal programs and $200

R. E. DANIEL

HULME TO COMPETE
!NDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
- Denis Hulme of New Zealand
will compete in the 5a!h
Indianapolis 500-rnile auto race
May 29. Hulme will drive a car
entered by E. E. Meyer of
McLaren Cars Ltd.

hours, the 1,400 miles delivery of President Lincoln's inaugural
address.
I
. . Some of these thoughts I would share with you carne from
Amanda Taylor in California, in a pamphlet "Food for Thought."
Did you ever think of what is in a. mail sack? - that there are
THE EASTER
messages of happiness, sorrow, despaif, hope, love, hate,
MORNING
friendship, cheer, comfort, good news, bad news, successes,
PATENT
fa ilures, worthless junk, and missives more precious than gold.
There are magazines, papers and books with food for the
Shine on, Miss Robin, in
mind and.soul and knowledge from many times and countless
Winners of the Buckeye Rural .
your genu ine patent.
places. Pleas and thank yous, gifts and greeting cards, bills and Elec tric Cooperative, Inc. ,
With flared strap,
benefits, etc., etc.
·
scholarship contest are Tanya
slanted toe and heel
So here's to our Mail System employees, male of she-male, B. Jones, daughter of Mr. and
and especially to my two friends and neighbors at the Portland Mrs. Bobbie J. Jones, Eureka
'and elastic insert for
PostOffice, Iva Lawrence, Postmistress, and Grace Allen, our R. Star Route, Gallipolis, and
perfect fit.
R. mail carrier. Many thanks to them for favors to me above and Roger Riley , son of Mrs.
Pauline Riley, Route I, South
beyond their duty.
Point.
Miss Jones will be a
When I leave Meigs County they sort and save my mail and
hold magazines, catalogs, etc. until I return and forward letters ·gradua ~ of Gallia Academy
and bills to me; remind me of commemorative stamps which I and Mr. Riley is from South
Point High School.
collect for my grandson.
Alternates chosen are Mary
Also , Joe Stobart, Posbnaster at Racine, we depend on him to
Brickles,
daughter of Mr . and
help us send out packages and boxes for servicemen or family
gifts to children away at school. He sees that they are secure and Mrs. Floyd Brickles-of Route 1,
Shade, and Charles David
sent on their way; he's a grand guy. We really appreciate him.
In Miss Taylor's paper, too, to this Inscription on the Post Saunders, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oharles Saunders, Willow
Office Bldg., in Washington, D. C.:
Wood. Miss Brickles ' attends
Carrier of news and knowledge,
Meigs High School and Mr.
lnslrument of trade and industry,
Saunders is from Symmes
Promoter of mutual acquaintance,
Valley High School.
Of peace and good will
The award is for $250 to each
Among men and nations.
winner and each may enter the
AND what is a greeting card? It's a distinctive method of Ohio
Rural
Electric
communication, a warm friendly handsl)ake across many miles; Cooperatives Association
an interpreter of sentiment, an outlet of human emotions, a statewide contest in early May
messenger of love, sympathy, and thoughtfulness and un- for a scholarship worth up to
derstanding, speaking a universal language that all mankind $2,550.
Whi te
· Judges were J . ShP.rrnan
understands.
and
No road is too long, no journey too arduous for the Greeting 'porter, Jr ., Assistant Professor
Black
Card which often says important things we want to say, better of Political Science at Rio
Patent
than we can ourselves.
Grande College, Rio Grande; E.· ("-----'\,;:__,..,
I have received a letter from Myrtle Mink from Northup, Ohio E. Davis of Davis Fire Brick
and one from Hilda Washburn Welch of Claremont, New Hamp- Company, Oak Hill; and Gary
One Group Of
shire, who sawmy Holzer Hospital Days memories in the Sunday Short, Manager of Haller
Division, Federal Mogul CorTimes-Sentinel
·
The Times-Sentinel really gets around! Who knows the far- poration, Gallipolis.
thest away' Probabl¥ to a serviceman.
·
-Ferne B. Hayman
- - - - - -- ----" BOUT RESCHEDULED
is spending a few days with COPENHAGEN (UP!) -The
Ill-round middleweight bout
Mrs. Bess Larkins.
------------·~
between
Torn Bogs of Denmark
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber
I
visited with Mrs. Oscar Weber and veteran Art Hernandez of
who is a patient at St. Joseph Omaha, Neb., was rescheduled
~,
Hospital in Parkersburg. · Monday for April 22. Hernandez
By Mrs. tyle Balderson
The C. B. C.'s met with the had requested the postponeMr. and Mrs. Frank Bise and
Pomeroy
Main St.
Jackie spent a weekend with Ernest Whitehead family for ment because of an ankle
injury
.
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Smith th e March meeting . One
and daughters of Rome, N. Y. committee report was given by
Mrs. Grant Boring has Mrs. Margaret Brown. Refreshreturned home after being a ments were served to the
surgical patient at the St. Dohrman Reeds, the Denver
Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, Webers, Mrs . Brown aHd David
and the Warren Pickens'.
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
visited with Mr. and Mrs. PETTY NAMED
Junior Congrove and daughter
NEW YORK (UPI)- Richard
of Zanesville, Saturday.
Petty, winner of this yea r's 500Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Ran- mile stock car races at
dolph have returned horne after Daytona Beach and Rockingsp.ending the winter in Florida. ham, N.C., was named top
Pal Smith, student of O~io performer Monday in the first
State University, and Dee Dee phase of the Martini and Rossi
Smith of Long Bottom were American Driver of the Year
recent visitors of Anderson B. Award balloting. Three more
Kibble .
voting sessions will be conduct-.
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Wilson ed by a panel of automotive
visited with Mont ·· Smith of sports writers before the end of
Adelphia, Sunday.
the season. The winner receives
Mr . and Mrs. Randy Coulson $7,500 and a trophy.
of Torch ··are parents · of a ·...- - - - - - - - - .
daughter, Kay Sue, born March
28. They have another daughter, ·
Joy Ann. Maternal grand- Order EBrly For
parents are Mr . and Mrs. Ben
Best Selection
Buckley·
Delivered Around
Mrs. R. E. Williams, Mrs.
The Corner
Lyle Balderson and Kay visited
Delivered Around
with Mrs. Savilla Barnett of
The World
Parkersburg recently. Also
visiting Mrs. Barnett was her
59 N. Ser.ond St.
daughter, Mrs. Roy Fick, of
992-5560
Columbus.
Middleport, Ohio
Becky Carruthers of Che~ter
'

Scholarship
Winners Are
Announced

CHILDREN'S
SHOES
lf2 PRICE

Reedsville

n'

. News, Notes

,SHOES

ALL HECK'S STORES
CL~QSED

ACRYLIC KNIT

DRESS SHIRTS

I

Make ievercl of these warm·
weathr garmen ts a 1landard
in your Spring wardrobe .
Choose from ossorted stripe s
and ~olids in popol or colo r ~.
Siw: S-M·L·X L

2 FOR

REG. $3.44

'$

HECK'S
REG, TO 13.44

ClOTHING DEPT.

A EASTER GREETINGS BOX • ..
B FRUIT AND NUT EGG • . ..
E PURPLE FOIL

• 75e

LADIES'

EASTER BASKET . • • . . • • $1.50

COTTON

BOYS'

DRESS JEANS
Flore leg, perma ne nt
pres s iea ns for boy~ .

Sizes, '6-18.

HECK'S

2 for

REG.

TO $2.99

ssoo

KNIT PANTS
With rhe pul l· on tlos ri t ...-o ,, r, &gt;!it ch
&lt;l~O&gt;e on d •lroiqhllog•, lhP•e &lt;o t. o n
~~·t fXInls em~ho.;!e comfcr1 and style.
N 11!uro l SprinQ colors inc lu d e · M&gt;y ,
ca mel , white, ~nd 1•1 &lt;&gt;&lt;. S i r ~• · 10-71)

$2.99 EACH

HECK'S REG.$7.94

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

C"THING DEPT.

.

are avai lable for you and your
wardrobe. We offer a wide se lec·
tion of stripes and solid co lors.
Sizes; 14 !12· 17.

HOSE
One size fit s all in
th ese nylon ho se .
Ava il able in beige
and cinnamon . Sizes;
A-B-C.

'I

I

orr

MEN'S

TIES
Solids, st ripes .. .
fancies .. . YOUR
CHOICE.
ALSO
Available in Redi
Ties.

. THISWEEK

ClOTHING
DEPT•.

LUGGA

ClOTHING DEPT.

24( .

TODDLERS' .
2-PIECE ..

PAIR

PACKED TWO
PAIR IN PKG.
48 1 PACKAGE

'

PAJAMAS

Comfortable 2-piece pajamas. Ccm ~
plete with gripper waist. Choose from
assorted prints. SIZES&lt; 1 TO 4.
•

HECK'S REG. 771 PKG.

ClOTHINGDEPT.

------$
ESPECIAL
'

44

\

HECK'S

REG.
$1.99
ClOTHING

. 'I

l\
.. $

I)IPT~

'
'
..
HECK'SR,G, TO $10.94

CliJTHIIIG /JIPT.

.

·.0••'

B~~edby

•'

•'

...

·,

..
·.·.

SET

HECK'S REG.
$3 .99

Eader fashion at its
height. Avai la ble in 2
or 3 piece stvle.

$J88&amp;$488

$228

~~~h~~~h ~~~ties $299

PANT SUITS

COtton house dresses
in_assorted styles and
color s.

SHIFTS

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS

GIRLS' DRESSY

HOUSE DRESSES

CULOTTE

HECK'S REG. $2.99

HECK'S REG.
TO $5.99

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

$2.28

NYLO~MESH

!I

GIRLS'

You ho~• o great 11ltction of
p11n11 . !.Oiid1, and ch•&lt;k• in the ..
~• o m anftflt pr~" Culo"e' Chacoe
fro !'I 5 dltarte&lt;l 11yle1 in Iilii • 7-1~

LADIES'

..

ssoo

LADIES'

Beautiful waltz length tri·
cot gowns with lace o nd
ernbro id &amp;ry tri m Soft pastel co lon in b lue, p in k,
mint, 8. moin . Sizes 5-M- l.

·Handsome, sturd't luggage in big selec~
tion of co lors o r plaid patterns. Avai la·
ble In ha rdside, dome or so ft side styles.
Sizes include : 18", 21", 24", 26" and
tra in case.

.

SJ99

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

.

I"

2 FOR

HECK'S
REG.
TO
$3,66 EACH

Shirt and tie ~ombinot1on~ for th e
· li.Uie man . A Iorge assortment ol
fash ion shade ~. Sile5; 6-16.

GOWNS

2 FOR ·$500 ·$599

VERY SPECIAL

..

Comfort and slyle ~ ~ l~e big leafvre in lhese fashiono·
ble sport shirts. Mode of permo nent pr~m fabric. Sizes; S·M·l·Xl.

LADIES'
SLEEP

$1.55

lib. box $1.95, 2 lb. box $3.85

C~OCOLATES

SPORT SHIRTS

BOYS' DRESS
SHIRTS &amp; TIE
SETS

$1.60

c CHOCOLATE CREAM EGG · • • • . • .
Q ASSORTED

MEN'S

STORE WI,LL OPEN MONDAY
MORNING AT 10 A.M.
AS USUAL

Choose from a wide sele cti~n of
fashion shades in these permanent
preu shirts for men. Sizes; 14 \".!.
17.

soo
__..___
H~CK~S

.,

!

.

MEN'S

SHIRTS

..,
I'

EASTER
SUNDAY
APRIL 11

MEN 1S

Dudley's Florist

l.,
.:• .•:
See the New
Red, White. Blue
Jewelry

WASHINGTON . ( UP!) :___ million in new money•. Nixon year would go to provld;ng
President
Nixon
asked said more than half of the total compensato~ ~~~catwn or
Congress Tuesday to con- $3 billion proppsed for the first disadva ntage c 1 ren ·

Easter Ulies

i

Fashion Firsts

Nrxon Would Package Federal Aid Programs ..

R. E. Daniel Named

Cooutructi.vr tellers of Oplnloo, In good taste, are
welci&gt;med. The editor reser.ves the right to shorten letters.
All !ellen must be signed, with a full address, although
Initials may be U.ed upon request.

·.
.
·.
.
15-'-' The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April7, 1971

LADIES''NYLON

PANTYHOSE
On11 ~be fits all in th ese 1$t
qua li ty, American made
panty hose. A11a ilable i'n
colorJ/ beige, cin nam on
taupe, brown ~nd sm~ke.'

$688 ..
HECil'S REG. TO

18.99 .

j

ClOTHING DEPT.
LADIES'

'

BIKINI PANTIES.
So lid pa ttern panties with lace trim.
A-~a il able in white, pink, mint and blue.
Sizes; 5-6·7.

2
$

66~
HECK'S
Reg.

FOR

HECK'S
REG.
T078 1
EACH

$1.18

ClOTHING
DEPT.

ClOTHING
DEPT.
GIRLS'

INFANTS'

NYLON PANTIES

SLEEPEIJS

• ACE! ATE FABRIC
0 DOUBLE CROTCH
e COlORS, WHITE,
PINK, BLUE , f./r.AIZE

100% cotton sleepers with feet.

e SIZES: 4, 1-4

29&lt;

HECK'S REG.
38'

ClOTNINC
, DEPT.

ALSO
6T024MOS.

SLEEPERS
$144

�I .

.

•I

a-:- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April7, 1971 ·

1

·. ,.e~../. 7=6.

•.• ?Jtt. ~= -,;. ; .-

1

He is Alive
We live in a world where discoveries are made constantly and
none more . so than· this 20th century which abounds with
lremendous advance in scientific and technical developments·.
Each of us has shared many things in the passage of the years
though we know not when we first began our earthly existence.
What is the greatest discovery a mortal can make? ·The
discovery that Jesus Christ is alive! This really is the most
amazing discovery possible to man and has the most astounding
consequences for the individual.
He is alive! In USA In 1971! He that died and rose again is
alive forevermore, reigning triumphantly over sin, death, the
grave and hell. What a difference this discovery made to His own
followers! Aller the crucifixion they were defeated, discouraged,
disillusioned and broken; nothing could have got them on their
feet again except the one thing that happened: Christ arose and
appeared to them personally, proving who He was and what He
was.
No man or woman will ever-accomplish anything for Christ
until they have met Him personally and have a uniquely individual experience of his saving grace.
Imagine Mary Magdalene as she waited brokenheartedly at
the tomb in early dawn, that she and her companions may embalm the body of Her Lord. She wondered, Who will move the
stone' Her grief is increased fourfold when she finds the tomb
open and His body gone. Then she saw the figure of a 111an looming
ahead in the early mist, Would He tell' "Oh, they have taken
away my Lord. Tell me where they have laid Him."
Then she heard the one word spoken, "Mary." It was her
m&lt;ornent of revelation! Christ was alive·! Death could not keep its
prey!
Two of His followers made their way to Emmaus, there were
joined by another traveler. They !l'ere amazed at the knowledge
He had of the Old Testament. He showed from the writings of
Moses and the prophets that these things must be. They had never
known such leaching.
Horne was reached and they urged the Stranger to stay over
night, but first to share their evening meal. They knew Him not
until He 1broke the bread and gave thanks; then with open eyes,
they knew. He was Alive !
Does the resurrection mean anything to you? Is it just a fact
of past history? Lopkat Saul of Tarsus. Wha\ transformed him ? It
was the living Christ.
Paul, writing to the Galatians (2:20): "I am crucified with
Christ, nevertheless I live: yet not I, but Christ liveth in me."
This is setting forth the personal experience of Easter.
Christ liveth in me ! This is the keystone of all Christian experience. The Christian life really is a life, not just a book of rules
or code of ethics to live by , a lis~! do's and don't's. All this is
included in our living as christians, but we have life in Christ. He
carne to bring life, abundant life, eternal life, life that absorbs,
thrills and satisfies. He gave to His own eternal life and they shall
never perish ; He assures them wherever they go with His gospel
He will always be with them right on to journey's end and beyond.
More than anything else today, Chcistians need to rediscover
tlui wonder, joy and thrill of the resurrection. He is alive!
What does it all mean to you? Are you defeated and disappointed? All that you will ever need God has given in Christ, He
has promised He will bleS$ us. Ephesians I :3. "He hath blessed us
now with all tbe spiritual blessings in Christ Jesus."
Live up to your privileges in Christ. The living Christ is the
only answer to your needy heart and life: Can you really sing, "I
serve a risen Saviour, He's in the world today? "
He is, you know!
May this chorus be your blessed experience always:
He lives, He lives, Christ Jesus lives today,He walks-with me, He
talks with me, along life's narrow way
He lives, He lives, Salvation to impart!
You ask me how I know He lives, He lives within my heart."
Ferne B. Hayman, Rt. 2, Racine, 0.

Be ThBnkful to our Posml Folks
Portland, Ohio
Dear Sir:
Recently I was reminded of what an old blessing is our mail
system, even with telephones, radio, T.V., etc.
When we sometimes complain about our mail do we ever
think of folk who keep it going, the millions of pieces delivered
with haste , on time, and in good condition, and say a kind word or
a little prayer for those who keep it coming and going?
What if, like·the "Pony Express" of 1860, we had to wait for 75
ponies in 101'.! days to make one trip to the West Coast? Charge
then was $5 each half ounce. Fastest trip was made in 7 days, 17

Spring and

EMffft

I·

i

i

OUR NEW

JEWELRY
•

Never has our spring co ll ection
been more varied in new pieces
and colors . See the new fish,
butterfly and oth er new pieces.
Ju~t about everything in a quality
· shfJwing is · r ea dy for your
choosing. Drop iA and take a peek.

.1.,_

and up

Clinic·Aclministrator
The Holzer Clinic announced
today that Robert E. Daniel of
Steubenville will assume the
position of clinic administrator,
effective Aprill9. Currently an
Ohiol!~ti---Telephone Co. commercial manager , Daniel will
replace Irvin Barick, who'
resigned recently.
A native of You ngstown,
Daniel
graduated
from
Woodrow Wilson High School in
1958 and from Washington &amp;
Jefferson College in 1962. He
has also done adva nced work at
Case-Wester n Reserve

solidate more than 30 federal
aid to education programs into
a $3 billion revenue sharing
package. He said that would
allow local authorities to "make
the hard decisions about the
best ways to educate their

University and at the University of Dayton.
Daniel started his telephone
career in 1962 as a management
trainee in Cleveland. Two years
tater he was promoted to in·
formation assistant in public
relations. In 1966 he was
elevated to unit commercial
manager in Dayton before
moving to Steubenville.
Daniel, hiw wife, Jane and
three children, Sarah, Robbie,
and Emily Kale, and his father,
Edward, will be moving to the
Gallipolis area in the near
future .

f.--~---------------.,

children."

The proposal, last of six
speclal presidential reveque
sharing measures forming what
he calls a "new American
federalism," would 'combine
$2.8 billion worth of existing.
federal programs and $200

R. E. DANIEL

HULME TO COMPETE
!NDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
- Denis Hulme of New Zealand
will compete in the 5a!h
Indianapolis 500-rnile auto race
May 29. Hulme will drive a car
entered by E. E. Meyer of
McLaren Cars Ltd.

hours, the 1,400 miles delivery of President Lincoln's inaugural
address.
I
. . Some of these thoughts I would share with you carne from
Amanda Taylor in California, in a pamphlet "Food for Thought."
Did you ever think of what is in a. mail sack? - that there are
THE EASTER
messages of happiness, sorrow, despaif, hope, love, hate,
MORNING
friendship, cheer, comfort, good news, bad news, successes,
PATENT
fa ilures, worthless junk, and missives more precious than gold.
There are magazines, papers and books with food for the
Shine on, Miss Robin, in
mind and.soul and knowledge from many times and countless
Winners of the Buckeye Rural .
your genu ine patent.
places. Pleas and thank yous, gifts and greeting cards, bills and Elec tric Cooperative, Inc. ,
With flared strap,
benefits, etc., etc.
·
scholarship contest are Tanya
slanted toe and heel
So here's to our Mail System employees, male of she-male, B. Jones, daughter of Mr. and
and especially to my two friends and neighbors at the Portland Mrs. Bobbie J. Jones, Eureka
'and elastic insert for
PostOffice, Iva Lawrence, Postmistress, and Grace Allen, our R. Star Route, Gallipolis, and
perfect fit.
R. mail carrier. Many thanks to them for favors to me above and Roger Riley , son of Mrs.
Pauline Riley, Route I, South
beyond their duty.
Point.
Miss Jones will be a
When I leave Meigs County they sort and save my mail and
hold magazines, catalogs, etc. until I return and forward letters ·gradua ~ of Gallia Academy
and bills to me; remind me of commemorative stamps which I and Mr. Riley is from South
Point High School.
collect for my grandson.
Alternates chosen are Mary
Also , Joe Stobart, Posbnaster at Racine, we depend on him to
Brickles,
daughter of Mr . and
help us send out packages and boxes for servicemen or family
gifts to children away at school. He sees that they are secure and Mrs. Floyd Brickles-of Route 1,
Shade, and Charles David
sent on their way; he's a grand guy. We really appreciate him.
In Miss Taylor's paper, too, to this Inscription on the Post Saunders, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oharles Saunders, Willow
Office Bldg., in Washington, D. C.:
Wood. Miss Brickles ' attends
Carrier of news and knowledge,
Meigs High School and Mr.
lnslrument of trade and industry,
Saunders is from Symmes
Promoter of mutual acquaintance,
Valley High School.
Of peace and good will
The award is for $250 to each
Among men and nations.
winner and each may enter the
AND what is a greeting card? It's a distinctive method of Ohio
Rural
Electric
communication, a warm friendly handsl)ake across many miles; Cooperatives Association
an interpreter of sentiment, an outlet of human emotions, a statewide contest in early May
messenger of love, sympathy, and thoughtfulness and un- for a scholarship worth up to
derstanding, speaking a universal language that all mankind $2,550.
Whi te
· Judges were J . ShP.rrnan
understands.
and
No road is too long, no journey too arduous for the Greeting 'porter, Jr ., Assistant Professor
Black
Card which often says important things we want to say, better of Political Science at Rio
Patent
than we can ourselves.
Grande College, Rio Grande; E.· ("-----'\,;:__,..,
I have received a letter from Myrtle Mink from Northup, Ohio E. Davis of Davis Fire Brick
and one from Hilda Washburn Welch of Claremont, New Hamp- Company, Oak Hill; and Gary
One Group Of
shire, who sawmy Holzer Hospital Days memories in the Sunday Short, Manager of Haller
Division, Federal Mogul CorTimes-Sentinel
·
The Times-Sentinel really gets around! Who knows the far- poration, Gallipolis.
thest away' Probabl¥ to a serviceman.
·
-Ferne B. Hayman
- - - - - -- ----" BOUT RESCHEDULED
is spending a few days with COPENHAGEN (UP!) -The
Ill-round middleweight bout
Mrs. Bess Larkins.
------------·~
between
Torn Bogs of Denmark
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber
I
visited with Mrs. Oscar Weber and veteran Art Hernandez of
who is a patient at St. Joseph Omaha, Neb., was rescheduled
~,
Hospital in Parkersburg. · Monday for April 22. Hernandez
By Mrs. tyle Balderson
The C. B. C.'s met with the had requested the postponeMr. and Mrs. Frank Bise and
Pomeroy
Main St.
Jackie spent a weekend with Ernest Whitehead family for ment because of an ankle
injury
.
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Smith th e March meeting . One
and daughters of Rome, N. Y. committee report was given by
Mrs. Grant Boring has Mrs. Margaret Brown. Refreshreturned home after being a ments were served to the
surgical patient at the St. Dohrman Reeds, the Denver
Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, Webers, Mrs . Brown aHd David
and the Warren Pickens'.
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
visited with Mr. and Mrs. PETTY NAMED
Junior Congrove and daughter
NEW YORK (UPI)- Richard
of Zanesville, Saturday.
Petty, winner of this yea r's 500Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Ran- mile stock car races at
dolph have returned horne after Daytona Beach and Rockingsp.ending the winter in Florida. ham, N.C., was named top
Pal Smith, student of O~io performer Monday in the first
State University, and Dee Dee phase of the Martini and Rossi
Smith of Long Bottom were American Driver of the Year
recent visitors of Anderson B. Award balloting. Three more
Kibble .
voting sessions will be conduct-.
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Wilson ed by a panel of automotive
visited with Mont ·· Smith of sports writers before the end of
Adelphia, Sunday.
the season. The winner receives
Mr . and Mrs. Randy Coulson $7,500 and a trophy.
of Torch ··are parents · of a ·...- - - - - - - - - .
daughter, Kay Sue, born March
28. They have another daughter, ·
Joy Ann. Maternal grand- Order EBrly For
parents are Mr . and Mrs. Ben
Best Selection
Buckley·
Delivered Around
Mrs. R. E. Williams, Mrs.
The Corner
Lyle Balderson and Kay visited
Delivered Around
with Mrs. Savilla Barnett of
The World
Parkersburg recently. Also
visiting Mrs. Barnett was her
59 N. Ser.ond St.
daughter, Mrs. Roy Fick, of
992-5560
Columbus.
Middleport, Ohio
Becky Carruthers of Che~ter
'

Scholarship
Winners Are
Announced

CHILDREN'S
SHOES
lf2 PRICE

Reedsville

n'

. News, Notes

,SHOES

ALL HECK'S STORES
CL~QSED

ACRYLIC KNIT

DRESS SHIRTS

I

Make ievercl of these warm·
weathr garmen ts a 1landard
in your Spring wardrobe .
Choose from ossorted stripe s
and ~olids in popol or colo r ~.
Siw: S-M·L·X L

2 FOR

REG. $3.44

'$

HECK'S
REG, TO 13.44

ClOTHING DEPT.

A EASTER GREETINGS BOX • ..
B FRUIT AND NUT EGG • . ..
E PURPLE FOIL

• 75e

LADIES'

EASTER BASKET . • • . . • • $1.50

COTTON

BOYS'

DRESS JEANS
Flore leg, perma ne nt
pres s iea ns for boy~ .

Sizes, '6-18.

HECK'S

2 for

REG.

TO $2.99

ssoo

KNIT PANTS
With rhe pul l· on tlos ri t ...-o ,, r, &gt;!it ch
&lt;l~O&gt;e on d •lroiqhllog•, lhP•e &lt;o t. o n
~~·t fXInls em~ho.;!e comfcr1 and style.
N 11!uro l SprinQ colors inc lu d e · M&gt;y ,
ca mel , white, ~nd 1•1 &lt;&gt;&lt;. S i r ~• · 10-71)

$2.99 EACH

HECK'S REG.$7.94

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

C"THING DEPT.

.

are avai lable for you and your
wardrobe. We offer a wide se lec·
tion of stripes and solid co lors.
Sizes; 14 !12· 17.

HOSE
One size fit s all in
th ese nylon ho se .
Ava il able in beige
and cinnamon . Sizes;
A-B-C.

'I

I

orr

MEN'S

TIES
Solids, st ripes .. .
fancies .. . YOUR
CHOICE.
ALSO
Available in Redi
Ties.

. THISWEEK

ClOTHING
DEPT•.

LUGGA

ClOTHING DEPT.

24( .

TODDLERS' .
2-PIECE ..

PAIR

PACKED TWO
PAIR IN PKG.
48 1 PACKAGE

'

PAJAMAS

Comfortable 2-piece pajamas. Ccm ~
plete with gripper waist. Choose from
assorted prints. SIZES&lt; 1 TO 4.
•

HECK'S REG. 771 PKG.

ClOTHINGDEPT.

------$
ESPECIAL
'

44

\

HECK'S

REG.
$1.99
ClOTHING

. 'I

l\
.. $

I)IPT~

'
'
..
HECK'SR,G, TO $10.94

CliJTHIIIG /JIPT.

.

·.0••'

B~~edby

•'

•'

...

·,

..
·.·.

SET

HECK'S REG.
$3 .99

Eader fashion at its
height. Avai la ble in 2
or 3 piece stvle.

$J88&amp;$488

$228

~~~h~~~h ~~~ties $299

PANT SUITS

COtton house dresses
in_assorted styles and
color s.

SHIFTS

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS

GIRLS' DRESSY

HOUSE DRESSES

CULOTTE

HECK'S REG. $2.99

HECK'S REG.
TO $5.99

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

$2.28

NYLO~MESH

!I

GIRLS'

You ho~• o great 11ltction of
p11n11 . !.Oiid1, and ch•&lt;k• in the ..
~• o m anftflt pr~" Culo"e' Chacoe
fro !'I 5 dltarte&lt;l 11yle1 in Iilii • 7-1~

LADIES'

..

ssoo

LADIES'

Beautiful waltz length tri·
cot gowns with lace o nd
ernbro id &amp;ry tri m Soft pastel co lon in b lue, p in k,
mint, 8. moin . Sizes 5-M- l.

·Handsome, sturd't luggage in big selec~
tion of co lors o r plaid patterns. Avai la·
ble In ha rdside, dome or so ft side styles.
Sizes include : 18", 21", 24", 26" and
tra in case.

.

SJ99

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

.

I"

2 FOR

HECK'S
REG.
TO
$3,66 EACH

Shirt and tie ~ombinot1on~ for th e
· li.Uie man . A Iorge assortment ol
fash ion shade ~. Sile5; 6-16.

GOWNS

2 FOR ·$500 ·$599

VERY SPECIAL

..

Comfort and slyle ~ ~ l~e big leafvre in lhese fashiono·
ble sport shirts. Mode of permo nent pr~m fabric. Sizes; S·M·l·Xl.

LADIES'
SLEEP

$1.55

lib. box $1.95, 2 lb. box $3.85

C~OCOLATES

SPORT SHIRTS

BOYS' DRESS
SHIRTS &amp; TIE
SETS

$1.60

c CHOCOLATE CREAM EGG · • • • . • .
Q ASSORTED

MEN'S

STORE WI,LL OPEN MONDAY
MORNING AT 10 A.M.
AS USUAL

Choose from a wide sele cti~n of
fashion shades in these permanent
preu shirts for men. Sizes; 14 \".!.
17.

soo
__..___
H~CK~S

.,

!

.

MEN'S

SHIRTS

..,
I'

EASTER
SUNDAY
APRIL 11

MEN 1S

Dudley's Florist

l.,
.:• .•:
See the New
Red, White. Blue
Jewelry

WASHINGTON . ( UP!) :___ million in new money•. Nixon year would go to provld;ng
President
Nixon
asked said more than half of the total compensato~ ~~~catwn or
Congress Tuesday to con- $3 billion proppsed for the first disadva ntage c 1 ren ·

Easter Ulies

i

Fashion Firsts

Nrxon Would Package Federal Aid Programs ..

R. E. Daniel Named

Cooutructi.vr tellers of Oplnloo, In good taste, are
welci&gt;med. The editor reser.ves the right to shorten letters.
All !ellen must be signed, with a full address, although
Initials may be U.ed upon request.

·.
.
·.
.
15-'-' The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April7, 1971

LADIES''NYLON

PANTYHOSE
On11 ~be fits all in th ese 1$t
qua li ty, American made
panty hose. A11a ilable i'n
colorJ/ beige, cin nam on
taupe, brown ~nd sm~ke.'

$688 ..
HECil'S REG. TO

18.99 .

j

ClOTHING DEPT.
LADIES'

'

BIKINI PANTIES.
So lid pa ttern panties with lace trim.
A-~a il able in white, pink, mint and blue.
Sizes; 5-6·7.

2
$

66~
HECK'S
Reg.

FOR

HECK'S
REG.
T078 1
EACH

$1.18

ClOTHING
DEPT.

ClOTHING
DEPT.
GIRLS'

INFANTS'

NYLON PANTIES

SLEEPEIJS

• ACE! ATE FABRIC
0 DOUBLE CROTCH
e COlORS, WHITE,
PINK, BLUE , f./r.AIZE

100% cotton sleepers with feet.

e SIZES: 4, 1-4

29&lt;

HECK'S REG.
38'

ClOTNINC
, DEPT.

ALSO
6T024MOS.

SLEEPERS
$144

�.'
•

'

'

'

'

''

OP£NDAILY
lOTO 9

OPEN DAILY

I

tOTO 9

REMINGTON

BLACK

26" HUFFY
&gt;

&amp;

&gt;

RIDEMMOWER

·DECKER

• 5 H.P. Briggs &amp; Stratton 4-cycle engine •
On dash lever controls choke, speed ond stop
• Forward· neutral·reverse • Stick shift •
Pedal control • One·pi!!ce austemered steel
blade.

Sewn-in floor, large nyl on screen door. Awning lets

e 1 HP motor gi'lft all the power
needed to handle toughest jobs. I
Safety-approved for 714 " and
s·
6Y.!" blades. Smaller blade is safe·
ly .:avt~red by extra-wide guord. •

99

Knps sawdust a way from cuHing

line for bttter visibil ity. I Ac:c;eph
optional U· I9J.C Ri'p Fence . •
Be vel and depth ad justments
qu ickly and easily made. • 7 14"
combination blade is standard
tquipmtnl.

HECK'S REG. $339.88

down to become storm d oor. last nylon screen rear
window ha s outside roll ~p storm flop s. Comp lete

wi1h aluminum frame ro pes a nd steel stokes.

88

$

HECK'S
REG.

The most reliable chain saw in ih •
weight and power cla n, the Sl-9
il a favorite wi th homeowf'lers ,
formers , ond ~porhmen . The Sl-9
has these odded foatures : A one·
way fuel ta~k ven t, a second air
fil ter (Both in crease eng ine li le )
and bigger Mgine disp lotement
(2.8 cu. in .) Weight, 91bs. plu s bar
and chain . The 15 ih . guide bar
cub up to 30 in . trees. An econom·
kol first saw lor the CO$tJOI uutr

-=t

$

$29.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

CHAIN SAW

7'x7' UMBRELLA TENT

... POWERSAW ·

HECK'S REG. $167.•88

SPORTS DEPT.

. HARDWARE DEPT.

-

ALUMINUM

'

RACQUET
REEL
• Sta inless steel spinnerhead ,' nitrate hardened
• Thumb control button

ZEBCO
CARDINAL.4

$ 22

SPINNING REEL
·• Fa1t 5:1gear ratio · ·
I Soltwater·redstant construction
I Rear mounted powei' drag
• Foolproof bail with 2 spring•
I Smooth, rugged precision geon
I Spool capacity: 200 yds. of 8-lb, test line
• Extr:a spool, lubri«Jnt, tokedowntool

HECK'S REG • .

HECK'S REG. PRICE
•·· .-:;

SPOITSDEPT. $3 ' 88

&gt;.

COT

SJ599
HECK'S REG.

.. SPORTS DEH.

Sets up in seconds with new design, has hE~.Q vy
green duck cover- spring steel legs-fold s to
compact 25"x8 Y, "x2", perfect for camping,
patio etc.

$ 77

H~CK'S

REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT•

BALL GLOVES

SPORTS
DEPT.

STP
KEEP-KOOL

RADIATOR
TREATMENT .

Batter up! It's tnat time of year again.
A great price aod a great buv on this
ball glove.

Selected smooth grain cowhide
uppers with full grain elk leather
tips. long tongues. Full length
soles with steel cleats.

HIBACHI

77
HECK'S REG.
$9.99 To $11 ,99

HECK'S REG. $7.99 .

SPORTS DIPT.

•

e LADIES EASTER DRESSES
.
e GIRLS 'EASTER DRESSES
e BOYS SPORT COATS
eBOYS SUITS
e ~og~~~R..aovsEASTER·COATS

•

•

1.

~

'

.

AYAIU.,U PotMoti POPULU: CAU,

HEc;;:~;-···m··~s·w···
· HECK'S REG.
991

HECK'S REG.
3 FOR$1.47

$2.99'

0 . ' )• .."

•••

'

-: ..

:·.-.·.&lt;'·

OIL
FILTER

1000 ONLY PER STORE

&gt;

&gt; ,. ~.·-· ·

•

WRENCH••

LIMiT FIVE

~

I• •

LEE

10W40.

-

SPORTS DEPT.

AUTOifOTIVE DEPT.

MOTOR .OIL

.,

66
'

TO

VALVOLINE

A great item for handling your personal busi·
ness. Keep your checks on record in a v~ ry
organized manner.

'

$ 00

TUNE-UP SET

·cHECK FILE

\

3FOR

CASCO IGNITION

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

(

RATCHET

JACK
$

..

-~

HECK'S REG. $2.36

HECK'S REG. 59 1

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

H~IIWAN DEPT.

.

'

GOLF BALLS

wil~ ....EiliiO$£

HARDWARE·.
DEPT.

&gt;

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HAIDWAIE DEPT.

SPOUT.
.
.

$2.36

.

$2.09

$10.88

· SATELLITE

HECK'S
REG.

e GIRLS HATS &amp; BAG SETS
.
e EASlER BASKETS
e EAS'TER PLUSH 'RABBITS

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

FUNNEL

$ 11.

•

Cast iron Hibachi has
· wooden handles attached
to dual grills. Adjustable 3
position grills. Mounted on
.. bose. Toke apart far easy
cleaning.

41/,"

PERS.ONAL.
FIL'E
&gt;

HIIJ' tOlM: COOt.INO IYITIM IUN

'COOL II AND CLU.NIR ALL YIAI

10"x20"

BASEBALL
.SPIKES

99

$

HECK'S REG. $27.88

$8.99

$18.88

• Stainless steel rivets • No weld$ to cau M
possib le metal failure and breaka ge • Per·
monent metal grammeh for longer string Ufe
• Increased power with leu effort-contour
designe d by aeron a utica l engineer to cut
th rough the air with. minimu m drog • Extrusion internally designed for lotol ball control
with just the right fee l.

HECK'S REG. 99 1·
.

I

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT. .

HICK'S REG. $4.99

AUTOMOTIVEDEPT.

. I

•

I

.

'·
,:

~

.

I

.,

J
I

&gt;'

'
'

I

.

�.'
•

'

'

'

'

''

OP£NDAILY
lOTO 9

OPEN DAILY

I

tOTO 9

REMINGTON

BLACK

26" HUFFY
&gt;

&amp;

&gt;

RIDEMMOWER

·DECKER

• 5 H.P. Briggs &amp; Stratton 4-cycle engine •
On dash lever controls choke, speed ond stop
• Forward· neutral·reverse • Stick shift •
Pedal control • One·pi!!ce austemered steel
blade.

Sewn-in floor, large nyl on screen door. Awning lets

e 1 HP motor gi'lft all the power
needed to handle toughest jobs. I
Safety-approved for 714 " and
s·
6Y.!" blades. Smaller blade is safe·
ly .:avt~red by extra-wide guord. •

99

Knps sawdust a way from cuHing

line for bttter visibil ity. I Ac:c;eph
optional U· I9J.C Ri'p Fence . •
Be vel and depth ad justments
qu ickly and easily made. • 7 14"
combination blade is standard
tquipmtnl.

HECK'S REG. $339.88

down to become storm d oor. last nylon screen rear
window ha s outside roll ~p storm flop s. Comp lete

wi1h aluminum frame ro pes a nd steel stokes.

88

$

HECK'S
REG.

The most reliable chain saw in ih •
weight and power cla n, the Sl-9
il a favorite wi th homeowf'lers ,
formers , ond ~porhmen . The Sl-9
has these odded foatures : A one·
way fuel ta~k ven t, a second air
fil ter (Both in crease eng ine li le )
and bigger Mgine disp lotement
(2.8 cu. in .) Weight, 91bs. plu s bar
and chain . The 15 ih . guide bar
cub up to 30 in . trees. An econom·
kol first saw lor the CO$tJOI uutr

-=t

$

$29.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

CHAIN SAW

7'x7' UMBRELLA TENT

... POWERSAW ·

HECK'S REG. $167.•88

SPORTS DEPT.

. HARDWARE DEPT.

-

ALUMINUM

'

RACQUET
REEL
• Sta inless steel spinnerhead ,' nitrate hardened
• Thumb control button

ZEBCO
CARDINAL.4

$ 22

SPINNING REEL
·• Fa1t 5:1gear ratio · ·
I Soltwater·redstant construction
I Rear mounted powei' drag
• Foolproof bail with 2 spring•
I Smooth, rugged precision geon
I Spool capacity: 200 yds. of 8-lb, test line
• Extr:a spool, lubri«Jnt, tokedowntool

HECK'S REG • .

HECK'S REG. PRICE
•·· .-:;

SPOITSDEPT. $3 ' 88

&gt;.

COT

SJ599
HECK'S REG.

.. SPORTS DEH.

Sets up in seconds with new design, has hE~.Q vy
green duck cover- spring steel legs-fold s to
compact 25"x8 Y, "x2", perfect for camping,
patio etc.

$ 77

H~CK'S

REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT•

BALL GLOVES

SPORTS
DEPT.

STP
KEEP-KOOL

RADIATOR
TREATMENT .

Batter up! It's tnat time of year again.
A great price aod a great buv on this
ball glove.

Selected smooth grain cowhide
uppers with full grain elk leather
tips. long tongues. Full length
soles with steel cleats.

HIBACHI

77
HECK'S REG.
$9.99 To $11 ,99

HECK'S REG. $7.99 .

SPORTS DIPT.

•

e LADIES EASTER DRESSES
.
e GIRLS 'EASTER DRESSES
e BOYS SPORT COATS
eBOYS SUITS
e ~og~~~R..aovsEASTER·COATS

•

•

1.

~

'

.

AYAIU.,U PotMoti POPULU: CAU,

HEc;;:~;-···m··~s·w···
· HECK'S REG.
991

HECK'S REG.
3 FOR$1.47

$2.99'

0 . ' )• .."

•••

'

-: ..

:·.-.·.&lt;'·

OIL
FILTER

1000 ONLY PER STORE

&gt;

&gt; ,. ~.·-· ·

•

WRENCH••

LIMiT FIVE

~

I• •

LEE

10W40.

-

SPORTS DEPT.

AUTOifOTIVE DEPT.

MOTOR .OIL

.,

66
'

TO

VALVOLINE

A great item for handling your personal busi·
ness. Keep your checks on record in a v~ ry
organized manner.

'

$ 00

TUNE-UP SET

·cHECK FILE

\

3FOR

CASCO IGNITION

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

(

RATCHET

JACK
$

..

-~

HECK'S REG. $2.36

HECK'S REG. 59 1

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

H~IIWAN DEPT.

.

'

GOLF BALLS

wil~ ....EiliiO$£

HARDWARE·.
DEPT.

&gt;

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HAIDWAIE DEPT.

SPOUT.
.
.

$2.36

.

$2.09

$10.88

· SATELLITE

HECK'S
REG.

e GIRLS HATS &amp; BAG SETS
.
e EASlER BASKETS
e EAS'TER PLUSH 'RABBITS

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

FUNNEL

$ 11.

•

Cast iron Hibachi has
· wooden handles attached
to dual grills. Adjustable 3
position grills. Mounted on
.. bose. Toke apart far easy
cleaning.

41/,"

PERS.ONAL.
FIL'E
&gt;

HIIJ' tOlM: COOt.INO IYITIM IUN

'COOL II AND CLU.NIR ALL YIAI

10"x20"

BASEBALL
.SPIKES

99

$

HECK'S REG. $27.88

$8.99

$18.88

• Stainless steel rivets • No weld$ to cau M
possib le metal failure and breaka ge • Per·
monent metal grammeh for longer string Ufe
• Increased power with leu effort-contour
designe d by aeron a utica l engineer to cut
th rough the air with. minimu m drog • Extrusion internally designed for lotol ball control
with just the right fee l.

HECK'S REG. 99 1·
.

I

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT. .

HICK'S REG. $4.99

AUTOMOTIVEDEPT.

. I

•

I

.

'·
,:

~

.

I

.,

J
I

&gt;'

'
'

I

.

�'

''

•

Weather
Mostly clear·and not as cool :
tonight. Lows generallv in the;:
41ls. Partly cioudy 'and 'wanner ·
with a chance of ·showers ·
Friday. Highs from mid 60s to .
mid 70s.

The Ten Cominandments
and the Sermon on the Mount
are still our IJest guides.

OPEN DAILY
lOTO 9

.OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9 ·

'

Devoted To 11uJ lntere.t. Of'I1u! Meigs-Mown Area

'

POME~OY·MIDDlEPORT,

VOL XXIII NO. ?51

MOVIE
CAMERA

..

Eledronic Shutter and electric eye automatically set"
correct exposure, make flash pictures as ·perfectly as
pictures in daylight. Dual imoge, non -folding coupled
ronoe and ¥iewfinder. Big 3 Y.. "x4 Y• " pictures.

BOLD DETERGENT
$ 99

• Extro·fost f/1 .8 lens
e No settings
' A4tomatic exposure
• CdS electric eye ·

$4677

HECK'S REG.
$137~96

It lCipphin - plar• all roo.or fttor&lt;h~ •'-"" and moowv•ol-

16. 331'1. "'and 78 rpm . SOLID STATE: T&lt;a n li lto r~nd ,;, .
cvitrr lor in110 n1 ploy ~o~ ntn
turn 1"- owikh, No warmup
""dtcL TWO DYNACOU511C S,EAURSr IJ" ~~ ~~ - ~
,!,or, r ic~ ..:o~nd . lluv""d "SLIMliNE" Sf!' liNG· ft;gh-imfMI&lt;I

Y"'"

polrotyrtnt , ., .. io 01 p•o•titml '" it io b.ouliful. THREE_AU ·
. 010 CO NTROlS. •i9ht &lt;olumt. lth Wllum ~. ond •Q "oblt

'" ~ ''. ltl,. lo belo nct bon ond h ot.!..

$3.19

HECK'S REG.

SYLVANIA
SUPER 8

MOVIE LIGHT

Sun Gun Mo~iel.igltt otta chu ea•ily to top of any camer a . l ight
weight, compa ct, easy to IJ$11 and co ny . Correctly potiliont type A
filter, outomoticolly converting cameros for indoor pictures . Make

indoor movie nioking easier.

s•• • •

M-26

P-2840

G.E. HAT BOX

HAIR DRYER
• Ronnel , hose and attached li k- foot
cord U~l are conYeniently $IOred inside
the ur~it for complete portability •

.Colgate~~!~
6.75 OUNCE

•29

HD·20

JUST WONDERFUL
HAIR SPRAY

TWICE AS NICE

tDSMU/t IJEPT.

COSMETIC IJEPT.
IIi

•

'

• Choose from gold &amp; green .

$147

METAL FL

JERGENS DEODORANT

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Pres·
ident Nixon, declaring his goal
is "total withdrawal from
Vietnam," pledged Wednesday
night to accelerate the Ameri·
can troop pull.out, removing
100,000 men from the war zone
' during a seven·month period
starting May I.
In a 2().minu4' televised
address, Nixon said the addi·
tiona! U.S. servicemen would
leave Vietnam by Dec. I,
cutting American troop
strength ·to 184,000. But he
rejected demands of his critics
that he set a definite date for
an end to American involve·
ment in the war, saying he
intended to end the conflict "in

12", 13", 14", 15" Deep &amp; Tall drum shodes.

12 BARS

$100
BATH
SIZE

HECK'S
REG.
TO $2.55

8 BARS

HECK'S REG.
T0$1.59

$1.44

$100

NDUSEWAREIJEPT.

NDUSEWAII DEPT.

ARVIN

NDIISIWAII DEPT.

TEFLON

IRONING BOARD
T·leg design, non·slip rubber·lip leg.

IRONING BOARD

e

PAD&amp;COVER

FULL TOP ZIPPER

$299

HECK~S

·
HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. 97

$4.99

1

REG • .

ll~~I.IUIE

Set Con111t1 eft

e 10 IN. GOURMET PAN

e 8 ~ IN. GOURMET PAN
e STURDY STEEl SPATUlA

HARDWARE DEPT.

8

3-PIECE GOURMET SET

S]99

ClOTNII«
lllf'T.

..•.

14" CIRCUS

PUNCH BALLS

&lt; ..

,ews... zn rze1 s :

PLASTIC TRUCKS
5 STYLES

Indian Invasion Fenred
PLASTIC

GIANT PIGGY BANK
HECK'S REG. 49'

HECK'S REG.

961

c

HECK'S
REG.

96'

TDYDfPT.

TOY DEPT.

TDYIII'T.

CHILDREN~S

HAT BOX UMBRELLA
HECKiS
REG.

$11.7

$1.77

royilf,.
I

I

NEW DEIJII - PAKISl'AN'S GOVERNMENT said today
India may be preparing to invade East Pakistan, where Bengali
separatists have been waging civil war against the federal
goyertll)lent for two weeks. The broadcast froll) Lahore, West
Pakistan, monitored here, said there were reports that the two
battalions of the Indian border security force bad been moved to
points along. the frontier used by other lndiar. troops for in,flllration'into East Pakistan. The radio also said the Indian air
force bases· to the w.St and north of East Pakistan has been
placed in the·highest state of combat readiness.

Belpre Man
Arrested

Sky Spies to Seek Out Blight
· WASHINGTON -THE GOVERNMENT THIS swruner will
use "spy in . the. sky" techniques developed to watch foreign
military movements to keep track of a microscopic domestic.
menace ~ the southern com leaf blight.
The blight severely damaged the'com crop in several of the
nation's prime corn producing states last year. Fearing it may
strike again, the Agriculture D~partrnent and the National
Aeronautics and·Space Administration (N,..SA) have announced
joint program to trace infestationS of .the disease by usl!lg highaltltuile photOgr~phy. ·
. .
· Every two l'eeks, from Jime.to September. high-flying photo :
reclinnalssance planes wiU take pictures of 45,000 square miles Of
,! Continued on page 10)

a.

·-

into Laos. Kennedy said he also ~
~
was "shocked the Prestdent did
not-devote "one word" to the
Middleport, with the Mid·
''violence that this war bas dleport·Pomeroy Rotary Club
visi/6'd upon the civilians of as host.&lt;;, will be the scene.again
Southeast Asia."
Sunday of tpe traditional Easter
But Sen. Robert Dole of Egg Hunt for toddlers through
Kansas, the Republican national age 12:
chairman, said the President's · Leap·of! time is 2 p.m. at the
announcement meant 365,000 m(Ruti~t'pal park off Locust St.
Americans will have come
home from Vietnam by Dec. 1. Chairman Cash Bahr said 410
"I don't know of a single prizes are being offered again
critic who could have done this year by business and
better," Dole said.
professional places of Mid·
Nixon said the 1970 allied dleport arid Pomeroy. The club
campaign into Cambodia and provides one "golden" .egg
this year's drive into southern worth $10 and a "silver" egg
Laos had made accelerated worth $5.
troop withdrawals possible.
Members of the Rotary Club,
"The day the South Vietna· assisted by the Middleport
mese can take over their own volunteer fire company, hide
defense is in sight,". he said. the eggs and manage the
"Our goal is a total American awarding of prizes afte':"ard.
withdrawal fronfvietnam. we Ma~or · C.
0.
Ftsher
can and we will reach that goal tradtbonally offers a welcome
through our program of Vietna. to Mifldlep~rt. Children of the
mization "
county are mvited.
Nixon . called again upon
A separate "hunt" is con·
North Vietnam to engage in ducted for pre-schoolers.
serious negotiations to speed
LOCAL TEMPS
the end of .the war.
.
Temp'e rature in downtown
Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a. m.
was 50 degrees under ' sunny
skies.

1

Smith Under New Fire

,.$444

NDIISIWAII IIPT.

NDUSIWAII DEPT.

victory to the Communists."
Nixon said his program of
Vietnamization --Strengthening
South Vietnamese forces to
assume the burden of fighting
the war - "has succeeded."
American forces in Vietnam
will be reduced to 284,000 by
May 1. The rate of withdrawal
since pullouts started July s,
1969, has averaged·l2,500 men a
month. The rate between May 1
and Dec. I will be slightly more
than 14,200 monthly.
'

Critics Were Unhappy
• Potential Democratic pres·
idential candidates criticized
Nixon's speech. Sen. EdmundS.
Muskie, considered the frontrunner for the nomination, said
he was "very disappointed"
I
7\T '
•
1 Nixon did not set a date to end
U.S. involve111ent.
1
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy also
I
.
I
1
expressed disappointment in
Nixon's failure to set a definite
By United PresslnteraoUooal
date. He said Nixon's "grudging
and slight" increase in the
Snoopers to Draw Snooping
' WASHINGTON - MOMENTUM IS building for an ex· troop withdrawal rate could not
lraordinary congressional in.vestigation into the wiretapping cancel the failure of the recent
campaign
.
ojierations.of uie FBI. The Hou'se ol Representatives, meantime, American.supported.
has decided to hire experts to make sure its telephones aren't
bugged.
Calls for the investigation of the FBI came from both friends
and critics of Director J. Edgar Hoover in the trail of chP.rges by
House Democratic Leader Hale Boggs that House anrt Senate
Another attempt to ·oust I.
members have been telephone-tapped and spied on by the FBI.
Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., chairman of the House .Judiciary Brooks Smith as Mason County
Committee, said he would discuss an investigation of the growing Superintendent of Schools is in
the making. This became
controversy with members of his panel.
e.vident
when a citizens
Deputy Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst. who has
delegation submitted 10 charges
joined other adminlsti'ation·offlcials and Hoover in denying ~at
against Supt. Smith at a special
wlretapa were used on congresaional offices, said there should be meeting of the Board of
an investigation to "clear the air" of snooping charges.

1

GRAIN VINYL

$158

\

a way that will redeem the
sacrifices that bave been
made" by U.S. forces tn more
than 10 years of fighting.
"The issue very simply is
this : Shall we leave Vietnam in
a way that - by our own
actions ~onsciously turns the
country over to the Commu·
nists? Or shall we leave in a
way that gives the South
Vietnamese a rea·sonable
chance to survive as a: free
people? "
'VIetnamizatlonHas Succeeded'
"My plan will end American
involvement in a way that
would provide that chance,"
Nixon said. "The other would
end it precipitately and give

r---------------------------,
B . ,+,

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BAG
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16" BAG

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Education Wednesday night.
Edward Grimes, spokesman,
urged the board "to process and
expedite the charges as.quickly
as possible. "
By a vote of 4·1, with Harry
Siders dissenting, the board
agreed tq "consider, study and
decideata later date whether to
continue the charges as
requested by the citizens, or to
drop them."

In addition to constructing
di tches for the drainage pipe,
Memo is also preparing land for
a large packing lot.
Supt. Leach indicated that it
will be two or three weeks
before excavation begins for the
plant.
,
This is Leach's third major
project for the Blazer Con·
struction Company sin'c e
graduating
from
Ohio
University 's
College
of
Engineering last spring. A
former all·league grldder and
eager al Kyger Creek High
School, Leach served as project
superintendent on 1·2'15 job near
Cincinnati and the Rt. 23 By·
Pass at Chillicothe.
Fred Carman, former
resident of the Addison Com·
munity, is American Electric

Dump St111'
·

,

•

I.

t•
UD IS~' l

~:"@:"$:~~~:~:-;::::..~:=~=~"$:!&lt;;.:),)..'*".}..~&gt;:f,

:~~

SOAP
HE(K'S
REG.

Annexation, Lucas said,

drainage project.
Memo Construction, a sub·
contractor hireil by Blazer, will
install large drainage pipes
under the highway and across
the field to the plant site. Ap·
·proximately 12 men have been
hired by Memo.
Leach, a Cheshire native with
an engineering degree, reported
his work force is mostly local
residents, members of Labor
Local 83, Portsmouth ; LocallB
Operating Engineers and the
teamsters union in Huntington .
Blazer Construction Co. is
expected to bring ap·
proximately $3 million worth of
equipment into the area in its.
operations. Construction ofrices
have been set-up on the Paul
Martin
Service
Station
property .

.

Goal: Total Withdrawal ~ Sundayi.

LAMP SHADES-

REGULAR SIZE

BOXES

received from some of the
residents indicating their wish
to become a part of. the vlllage.
Lucas said the viUage solicitor,
R. William Jenkins, Gallipolis,
has been asked to explain the
legal steps leading to such
annexation . ·

ij

JEWELRY DEPT.

....;..,·

'

.,

Cheshire, about to lose 15
families south of it due to the
'construction of Ohio Power's
$488 million Gavin Power Plant,
may annex approximately 32
mostly new, modern homes to
the north of if along State Route
7 to Roush Road.
According to Mayor Scotty
Lucas , inquiries have been

~~H

HECk'S REG.
$1.28
tDSMUIC DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 79!

By Jlale Rothgeb, Jr.
· Dirt is flying at the con·
struction site of Ohio Power's
$488 million Gavin Plant at
Cheshire.
. Huge earth·mov.ing equip·
ment owned by J. J . Blazer
Construction Co ., Wheeler·
sburg, and Memo Construction
Coi., Inc ., 'Belpre, is in
operation around the clock,
near the plant site and across
Rt. 7 froin it to the bank of the
Ohio River.
Blazer Construction is
responsible for removal of one
million cubic yards of earth. It
will carry out general plant
grading, excavation and
placement of compacted back·
fill for the plant foundation, as
well as the construction of dikes
and road bases. Contract for the
fabrication and erection of the
main excavation contractor. The scene is located opposite
Gavin Plant's structural steel
the plant site near the Ohio River. Huge 48 inch pipe will be
was announced last August.
installed under Rt. 7and across the field to the plant site.
This work, involving an
estimated 35,000 tons of
structural. steel, will be per.'
formed by Bristol Steel and Iron
Works, Inc., of Bristol, Va.
Over 60 men have been em·
played by J. J. Blazer, ex·
and
fire
protection
(with
lower
cavating contracto.r, since
would benefit both parties, the
town and the homeowners to be insurance rates a result) , and Monday. According to Charles
annexed. Cheshire would have sewer service when it is ob- (Chuck) Leach, Blazer's con·
more space for expansion, a tained. Streets and lights would struction superintendent, three
larger · tax base, and more be maintained by the shifts have been employed, 6
a.m. to 2:30p.m.; 2:30 to 10:30
wallop in it.&lt;; penoing request for municipality.
John
P.
Hill,
engineering
p.m. and 10:30 p.m. to 6 a.m.
federal aid to build a sewerage .'
consultant, Commonwealth
Blazer expects to employ at
least 120men in this phase of the
Homeowners, on the other
(Continued
on
page
4)
hand, would benefit from police

Cheshire Considers Annexation

FLASHBULBS

Normol,
Dry &amp; Oily.

1

subcontractor, has charge of installing the drainage pipe for
the new $488 million John Gavin Plant at Cheslilre. Ex·
cavating work began at the site Monday. J. J. Blazer is the

SYLVANIA

SHAMPOO

. REGULAR &amp;
HARD· TO· HOLD

PIPELINE DITCH- Memo Construction Co., Belpre, a

JEWElRY DEPT.

70UNCE

HECK'S REG. 87

HECK'S REG.
$1.79

88

16 OUNCE

COLGATE TOOTHPASTE

CHIP &amp; DIP SET

35mm SLIDE FILM

Electric or Battery
Heck's Reg. $3196

\·

$13.96

JEWELIY DEPT.

K 135-20 .•• KX 135-lO

PORTABLE RADIO

Slim, tlylish handbag design in choice
of beige or blue .

JEWELRY
DEPT.

KODAK

G.E.
MULTI-BAND

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S
REG.
$12.88

JEWELRY DEPT.

NDIISIWAII DEPT.

JEWiliiY IJIPT.

$1177

• •

$44~96

V931

"

TEN CENlS

Earth Movers At
It Around Clock

&lt;I ·S,UO AUIOMATIC " DROP· DO"\• N1" CHANGE. P~t i ·

$54.96

HWEURY
DEPT.

'

ti .. ·Sirt :S.~I lndiclllor ~~ l l •, 10· ~n d 7 ~n&lt;~ r• t ordt.
Choroo;~tt con ,.,.at piny knt rtca~d 0&lt; 1hu1 o il autom&lt;&gt;lical ·
ly, STEREO,HONIC Cn STA.l CUIRICGE . tlo1 duol1ynthlt ·

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

PHONE 992·2156

THURSDAY, APRil 8, 1971

OHIO

STER
PHONOGRAPH

KODAK SUPER 8

350 COLOR CAMERA

'

,·

Now Ydu Know

OlD

.

The Middleport dump which was in effect closed by
the Meigs County Health Board
Tuesday evening - was still
operating today.
Middleport officials said the
notice from the health depart.
ment had not arrived in ·Thurs.
day morning's mail. As a result,
the dump was still being
operated:
Tuesday evening, the health
board voted unanimously
against renewing tl)e permit of
the Middleport dump located off
the Route 7 bypass in the
Leading Creek area of Salis·
bury Township.
Explaining the significance of
the board's failure to renew the
permit, Dale Dutton, health
board chairman, said that the
action meant that the dump
would be closed and the land
where dumping has gone on
over the past two years would

bb
Ro .e ry

en
Fisher placed the blame for the
lack of dumping facilities with
the county commissioners and
opined that the present Mid,
dleport dump is not suitable to.
operate according to state
regulations now imposed for the
disposition of solid wasteo.
On the other hand, Zerkle told
the health board Middleport
was making plans to secure a
packer truck and begin a
garbage pickup service. Zerkle
said that the dump could bti
operated in accordance wltli
stale requirements if the board
would issue the . permit and
allow.Middleport to attempt the
ser'vice plan.
Howevre, at the conclusion of
the hearing - during which two
Leading Creek area residents
again renewed complaints
against the dump operations the renewal was denied.

Suspects Held

Three subjects wanted for
questioning in connection with
the alleged armed robbery of a
Columbus, Ohio, man Wed·
nesday afternoon in Gallia

County, were apptehended
early today at a roadblock near
Hanover, W. Va.
Taken into custody were
David Shanks, 30, his wife,
t&gt;.•~:•:•;;:&lt;;o;;~:;;~•:•;;:::&gt;:~•;;m.~:&gt;i:ll=w.-o.: Bunny Shanks, 20, and David
·Hatfield,
19,
addresses
HELP SEARCH
unknown, by W. Va. state
Meigs County Sheriff police.
,
Robert Hartenbach and
They were jailed at Pineville,
Deputy Dave Sheets assisted
W. Va. According to Gallia
In a search Wednesday af·
County Prosecutor Hamlin C.
ternooo for sus~ts wanted ·
King, all three match the
In the :armed robbery of
descriptions given to local law
Robert Stewart, · 43, Colum·
enforcement officers following
bus, Ohio. Stewart was
Wednesday's robbery.
robbed at gunpoint, lwocked
According to the Logan
unconscious and left In a ditch
Detachment, W. Va. Slate
on Thompson Rd. In Gallla
Police, the trio was driving a
~ounty .. T.he subjects ,Wefe
1970 Gold Ford Galaxie, taken
apprehended In Stewart's
· from · Robert· Stewart, 43,
1970 auto this morning In
Blacklick, Ohio, Franklin
Hanover, w. Va . .
County, who was kidnaped and
~«.~S!:ii~
.. ~:.~
•.:.~~:;;m.~&amp;~ml:!l~:;;m:llll!litlii'0!'tli!i8'11l!. robbed at gunpoint Wednesday

afternoon in northeast GaUia
County.
Stewart told officials at the
Gallipolis Post State Highway
Patrol that three persons, two
men and a woman, entered his
car at the junction of Rt. 23 and
270. Stewart, a service engineer
for a New York finn, was
enroute to Gallipolis on a ser·
vice call. After entering Gallia
County, the trio pulled a gun
and forced Stewart to drive
from U.S. 35 to a secluded area
on Thompson Rd.
Stewart was robbed of his
money and personal belongings
and was struck on the head and
thrown in a ditch. Officers said
Stewart was knocked· unconscious.' When he regained ·
consciousness, he .walked to a
nearby ··;farmhouse and sum·
(Continued on page 10)

REAP.· More Ecology .· Oriented
Anti·pollution and other
environmental benefits have
been emphasized In . the
development of the Meigs
County Rural Environmental
Assistance Progral!l (REAP)
for 1971, according to Wayne
Chase, chairman of the Meigs
Col!llty ASC Committee.
REAP formerly was ACP,
the Agricultural COnservation
Program, which has been
operating in Meigs County
many years. The name change

is the key to the program
change, Chase said.
Long range preservation ·of
the environment and moce
public benefits are being em·
phasized. Lower priority Is
being placed on conservation
practices which are production.
oriented, or which provide only
. temporary benefits.
In considering applications
by farmers, as individuals or in
groups, the county ASC com·
mittee will give first priority to

The new list of 10 charges
were generally contained in a
.list of 22 filed earlier which
A !lelpre man was .charged were dropped before a hearing
with driving while intoxicated on them was completed.·
following a tw~ar accident
Wednesday at 10:30 p.m. on SR
124 in Minersville, the Meigs
M~de Wednesday!~~w;;r&amp;'=*'~*~~~r~w
County Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Martin Moor.e, 55, Belpre, was
Three calls were answered · had become ill. He was taken to
Car Wash Day ·
headed east without lights when Wednesday night by the Veterans Memorial Hospital for
struck in the tear by a car Pomeroy E·R unit. At 4 p.m. the treaiment and was· dismissed.
A car wash will be held .at
At 9:55p.m. the squad went to Lou's Ashland Service, West
driven by Gregory b. Goodnite, squad was called to East Main
20, Minister, Ohio. Witness said St. near Spencer 's Market Foglesong Road in Mason, W. Malo St., Pomeroy, Saturday
the Moore vehicle. was stopped where Rome Ha~k, Pomeroy, Va ., for Mary Jane Smith who by the Pomeroy .Safety
~:::;,;z-.:::~~::SO:~ffli':..~W had become ill. She. was take? to Patrol. Fathe,rs of the patrol
on the highway· ·
.,
Veterans Memonal Hospital boys and girls will have
Moore sustained a laceration
of the head and Jim JohnSon,.a
Partly cloudy Saturday 81UI where she was admitted for
passenger in the Goodnite car, it · generally falr. Sunday and ireatment. At 10:42 p.m. the charge of the car wash which
bump on his head. They were Monday. Temperature• near squad went io the scene of an wlll begin at 9:30 a.m. Pick·
.ta~en to ' Vete~ans .Memorial the ' seasonal nonnals wltb auto accident in Minersville. up and delivery service wlll
Hospital by The Pomeroy I::·R · daytime highs mostly tn '!be· Martin Moore ·of .Belpre was be prov.lded. Tfhe number to
call If yo~ want your car .
squad, · treated . and released, ·50s north and In the upper 50s takeri to Veterans , Memorial
washed Is 992·3535.
Moore Is . lodged in M.eigs and low 60s south. Ovemight Hospital where he was admit\ed
County Jail.' There was medium lows Jn ihe 30s and lower 408. for treatment · of a head
~:::::!~'t!~~t'!t.;:;..~~-.;.;::o;~, ' : ; . ,
damage to both vehicle~.
:·wM!WMIII111111MRf'P""P'P
lacerll!ion. ·

Three ER R.uns

'I

be cleaned up by the village so
that it would no longer be a
nuisance to residents of Leading
Creek and Bradbury.
Middleport officials said they
have developed no alternative
for Middleport residents to use
as a dump faclllty, or for a
garbage pickup service.
It was indicated that the
dump will continue to be open
until the official notice of the
health department's action is
received.
The dump has been operating
since January I this year
without a pennlt and the permit
was denied Tuesday when
Middleport offlciala were cited
to appear before tM board of
health to show why the dump
should be permitted to continue
to operate.
Mayor C. 0. Fisher and
Council President John Zerkle
appeared at the hearing. Mayor

Power Compan y's resident
engineer oh the project. Car·
man was employed in the same
position during the construction
of the Kyger Creek Plant bet·
ween 1952 and 1955.
other plant officials ar~i
Donald V. Moore,..Chief of Civil
Construction; D. E. Enevold·
sen, Chief of Electrical Con·
struction ; T. R. Adams, Chief of
Mechanical Construction, and
E. R. Turner, Construction
Office Manager . The main
engineering headquarters is
located in the old Sham~lin
property, situated between the
Pilot Wheel and . the fanner
Merry ·GO·Round Tavern
building . .The Ohio Power
Survey Office has been set up on
the old John Houck property
near the new plant site.

'

.

I

those which will best improve
the community environment
and provide the most public
bel\efits. ·
. Encouragement will be given
·to such conservation measures
as dams and ponds,, pennanent
grass cover,, sod waterways,
buffer strips, and tree plant.
ings. All these help retain and
slow doWn water runoff, and
reduce siltation as water moves
downstream. I
·
Practices which help reduce

pollution from animal wastes,
fertilizers and pes.ticides will
also be encouraged.
REAP will continue to be
administered by the Meigs
County Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation
(ASC) Committee.
Chase is chainnan ·or the
fanner-elected ASC committee.
Earl Dean is vice-chairman and
Orion Roush is a member.
Most cost sharing is'on a ~
(Continued on page 2)

No Pay, No .Mow
No paying - no mowing.
It was also agreed that in ute
That Is the decree of the future only one basket of live or
Middleport cemetery board of ariificial flowers will be per.
trustees which met Wednesday ·. mitted on a grave three days
night.
after a funeral. All but one will
The, board agreed thai lots be removed . . It was report.d
owned by persons who do not also that the one basket
pay the lut care fee of $5 per ~egulation will pertain to ·all '
year Will not be mowed in the graves.
future. Owriers of the lots are Members of the trustee board
billed each spring with the · are James Simpson, chairmaft;
exception of those under a Rodney Downing · and Harry
perpetual cafe plan . .Bllls are Roush. Mrs. Leora. Sigman ja
now almost ready to go into the d erk.
·
.,
mail.
•

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