<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2666" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/2666?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T19:22:32+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="12572">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/2082de68f83c4fdaf88c69d8a8bbe9b5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>dc44b5d3d8483adbbc7d00c56edeed52</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9468">
                  <text>'

••

Now You Know
20 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April28, 1971

Gilligan Asks $1.9 Million
•

News.-.in Briefs
c

For Northern Ohio Service
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
administration of Gov . John J .
' Gilligan has introduced legisla·
lion in the Se.1ale providing for
a $1.9 million appropriatwn to
guarantee rail passenger service for Cleveland and Toledo
during the next two years.
The bill, sponsored Tuesday
by four Cleveland area senators,
would authorize the administra·
lion to contract for services
not provided by the National
' Railroad Passenger Service
Corp ., which left the tw9 cities
off its Amtrak plan for rail
services.
The four sponsors are Senate

High Roll
Announced

Minority Leader Anthony 0 .
Cahibrese, !).Cleveland; Sen.
AnthonyF.Novak,D.Cleveland ;
Sen Ronald M. Mottl, D-Parma,
and Sen. Wilham w. Taft, R·
Cleveland.
" ll would be a·grave injustice
to the people of this state, and
particularly to the citizens of
Cleveland and Toledo areas, not
to provide rail passenger service to these two large metropolitan areas," Calabrese said.
The Senate Tuesday passed,
32-0, and sent to the House
heavily-sponsored bipartisan
legislation representing the
first major overhaul of Ohio's
taws on credit unions in 40
years.
The omnibus bill, authored by
Sen. RalphS. Regula, R-Navar·
re, is designed to codify regula·
tions for the unions and to man·
datemoreefficientand business·
like procedures among them.
credit unions are cooperative
organizations serving as common depositories for groupa of
employes interested in saving
money and earning interest.
The bill sets incorporation re·
quirements for credit unions;
establishes requirements lor
members and officials; sets
procedural , reporting and rec·
ord-keeping requirements, and
establishes security and loan
requirements.
Increase Powers
Regula said the measure
would bring state-charted credit
unions into conformity with
federally-chartered institutions
and would increase the powers
of the Department of Com·
merce's division of securities in
regulating the unions.

RACINE
Forty-five
students of Southern High
School in Racine were named to
the honor roll at the dose of the
fifth six weeks grading period.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were :(Those
in capitallet(frs made all A's).
SENIORS - Robin Allan,
Keith Ashley , Pam Buck,
DEBORAH CROSS, SHARON
.ERVIN, Tom Hamm, PATTI
IHLE, CARY MORRIS, Dan
Nease , ROGER NEASE,
DEBBIE MORRIS, RITA
SALSER, KAREN SAYRE,
SANDRA SAYRE, JANE
SHULER , Df;NISE
SNODGRASS,
Ruth
Winebrenner.
JUNIORS - Joe Johnson,
Melanie Allan , Stanley Kiser,
Debbie LeValley, Loretta
Middleswart, Melissa Proffitt,
Teresa Gooch,
CANDY • COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
HOBACK, Bill Wheeler, Jackie "corn blight watch" program
Wines, Charles Yost, Tim lhle. for corn growers in 30 Ohio
SOPHOMORES - Lorna counties has been planned this
Bell, Denise Cross , Sharon year as a watchdog monitoring
Drake, Mike Nease, Diana system to help stem the growth
Norris, Janie Rees , JUDY of the1•deadly-corn disease and
ROBERTS, PATSY SAYRE, help farmers prod'uce diseaseBob Sayre, David Theiss, Mary free corn.
Walker.
Dr. Lansing Williams,
FRESHMEN - Tom Durst, virologist and associate
Dennis Hawk, Vicky Johnston , chairman of plant pathology
Roma Nease, VERN ORD.
department at the Ohio State
University, will coordinate
Ohio's efforts as part of the
nationwide effort' sponsored by
the federal government.
"This program will he the
largest cooperative effort at
information gathering on a
~ No man ever yel became ~ single agricultural problem
il greal by imitation .
~ undertaken by
land-grant
universities and state and
-:uel J:son: federal agencies in many

The senator said more than·
one million Ohioans are mem·
bers of credit unions. He said
there are 1,477 active credit
unions in Ohio with assets total·
ing $800 million.
"Th1s bill will make Ohio's
credit union law one of the
finest in the nation," Regula
said .
The Senate also passed, 28-3,
a bill giving deputy and district
h1ghway directors a greater opportunity to increase their re·
tirement benefits if they' retire
and then return to service.
Calabrese, the chief sponsor,
said the bill would reduce the
amount of time lost in retire·
ment for the deputies and place
them on a par with higher of.
ficials who retire and return to
service.
''This would be good for the
people of Ohio," Calabrese said.
But Senate President Pro
Tempore Theodore M. Gray, RPiqua, voted against the bill on
grounds it would affect only a
special group of employes.
Another dissenter, Sen. Robin
T. Turner, R-Marion, noted the
bill applied only to employes in
a salary range of $18,000 to
$21,000 a year . "I don't know
how we can do this when some
retired state employes are only
getting a pens19n of $100 a
month, " Turner said.
The House unanimously passed and sent to the Senate a bi·
partisan bill requiring the state
to be.ar all costs of ma~tam·
.mg, hghting and deamng mter·
state highways wlthm city lim·
its.
Both chambers were to return
at 1:30 p.m. today .

Blight Watch in
30 Ohio Counties

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

i A Thought i
~ For Today

i*
~

i&lt;

~

+.
+.
:

+.
:
_..

•
i&lt;

t

It's Quick! EI$Y ·86 Earned Honors
DRIVE-I_N ~ Eighty-six students of the Roberta Lee, Debbie

t BANKING
+.

i

years," said D. R. Roy M.
Kottman, director of the Ohio
Agricultural Research and
Development Center. " The
techniques developed in thi•
corn disease emergency
situation may prove extremely
valuable in gathering useful
information about many phases
of agricultural and environmental research and
reporting .''
Ohio counties to be included in
the corn blight watch are:
Belmont, Butler, Carroll,
Cuyahoga, Darke, Delaw.@re,
Fairfield, Franklin, Guertuiel,
Harrison , Marion, Mef'cer,
Monroe, Ottawa, Paulding,
Pickaway, Pike, Preble, Ross,
Sandusky, Scioto, Seneca,
Stark, Suffimit, Tuscarawas,
Union, Van Wert, Washington,
Williams and Wyandotte.

~
.
On' I
il
Frt.days
.Y
il
The Dr~ ve-In Wmdow il
IS Open
~
9 A. M.to 1 P. M).
-1r
(Contmuously
il
il
Olher Banking Hours 9to il
J and 5 to 7 as usual on i&lt;
Fndays.
-fl
il

t_.. fARMERS BANK

~

co .,

-fl
il
, il
:
POMEROY OHIO
il
i&lt;
Member FDIC
+'
i&lt;
Member Federal
+i&lt;
i&lt;
i&lt;
Reserve System
il
.., ••••••••••••..,.•"'

" and SAVINGS

Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport have been named .to
the honor roll at the close of the
fifth six weeks grading period.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Eighth Grade: Terry Barrett,
Tim Colburn, Charles Conger,
Rick Couch, Sandra Curtis,
Chipper
Dailey,
Cindy
Demoskey , Larry Fridley,
Belinda Friend, Barbara Fultz,
Gary Grueser, Robert Haley,
Maureen Hennessy, David
Herdman, Ephrim Herdman,
Joyce Htltchinson, Don Hysell,
Vickie Kelly, Debbie Kennedy,
Anita King, Sonia Kiser,

McLaughlin, Ralph McMillan,
Cynthia Manley, James Mash,
Ricky Matheney, Jerry Miller,
Roger Nelson, Debbie Priddy,
William Richie, Vickie Russell,
Cindy Schneider, Brenda
Stanley, Tom Sievers, John R.
Thomas, Greg Walburn, Steve
Walburn, Mary Weyersmiller,
Jerry While, Joy While, Pam
Wilson.
Seventh Grade : Robert Ball,
Albert Banks, Brenda Bolin,
Sandy Carleton, George Carper,
Jackie Carsey, Karen Coleman,
Ginger Cullums, Elaine Fish,
Cherie Frx, Marc Fultz, Ci-ystal
Glaze, William Gloyd, Dar1a
Harper, Taml Hoffman, An·
drew Hoover, Debra Jamey,
Joe J us t'1ce, Mona K'mg,
Sandra
Landaker,
Jeff
McKinney,
Mike
Mag·
notta, Charles . Marshall,
Tammy Mowery, Kris Morris,
Dana Nelson, Kim Ohlinger,
Bruce Reed, Darlene Roush,
Rebecca Roush, Kathy Rupe,
Mary Rusche!, Autumn Sayre,
Christine Schuler, Angela
Sisson, Judy Smith, Tammy
Snider, Tamara Stanley,
George Stewart, Mike Swick,
Melissa
Thomas, Mary
Tiemeyer, Tammy Tyree and
Greg Van Meter.

MEIGS THEATRE.
Tonight&amp; Thursdly
Apri121·29
NOT OPEN

Frld1y I .Siturdly
Aprli30-MI y 1
SHALAKO

( Ttchnicolor l

opened an inv.Stiga'Uon into his charges.

mbricht's Future in Doubt
LONDON- WALTER ULBRICHT MAY step down as East
Germany's party chief this swruner because of falling health and
discreet Soviet pressure, according to diplomatic reports reaching here today, The 77-year-&lt;~ld party chief - the topghest of
surviving hai'dllners in the east bloc - would retain tbe position of
chairman of the council, equivalent to the presidency.
The move is expected to coincide with the party congress in
June, the reports said. The post of party chief would go to
tnbricht's deputy, Erich Honecker, himself a hardliner, tough,
younger an&lt;fpossJbJy a: little more flexible, the reports said.

New Law Tough on Scalpers
COLUMBUS - ROBERT REIS, athletic ticket director at
Ohio State University, told a legislative panel today the only
recourse law enforcement agents now have against ticket
scalpers is to discourage them and to chase them away.
Reis testified before the House Judiciary Committee which is
considering legislation to set penalties for scalping tickets to
athletic events or any other entertairunent in Ohio. The bill,
sponsored by House Speaker Pro Tern Charles E. Fry, R·
Springfield, would set a $10 to $100 fine for ticket sealping.
eurrenctly, there is no law forbidding scalping.

Amtrak Would be Fair-Hodgson
WASHINGTON- LABOR SECRETARY James D. Hodgson
said today railroad workers displaced by Amtrak system would
receive "fair and equitable" treatment under his order requiring
up to six yearsofjobsecurltyfor them.
Hodgson's testimony before a House Commerce SUb·
Committee came the day after a railroad union leader called the
labor secreb)ry's order ''unfair and inequitable" and a "complete
appeasement of railroad management."

'

fUINnuRE

MIDDLIPORT, O.

Devoted To The lnterellt&amp; Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXIV NO. 11

Welker

HOSPITAL
NEWS Holzer

(Continued from page l)
Rep. Richard F. Celeste, D·
Cleveland, asked if Welker
BffiTHS
thought his bill would require
(Monday)- Mrs. Wendell w.
operators to do more thorough Bar ker, New Ha ven,· w. va.,
reclamation work than under son, 3:30 a.m.; Mr s. Rona ld K.
Hester, Mason, daughter, 3:30
current law.
"I would think it would re~ p.m.; Mrs. Bert W. Caron,
quire them to do a job as good Jac kson, daug hler, 5:10 p.m.
as any of them are doing npw,"
(Tuesday) - Mrs. Zane F.
Welker answered.
Chandler, Wellston, son, 11 :49
Cost Questioned
p.m.; Mrs. Fcrest L. HaIte rA!Jked if the $500 per • acre man, Wellston, daughter, 4:22
bond requirement for operators p.m.; Mrs. La rry J . Ba rre tt ,
might be too low, Welker re- La ngsv1'IIe, son, 11 : 16 a.m.;
sponded this would be "close to Mrs. Raymond M. Spires
the cost" of reclamatibn.
Jackson, daughter , 3:21 p.m.:
Sepck noted the cost of · Mrs. Randy Randolph Leon
reclamation has been estimated daughter, 8:20 a.m. a~d Mrs:
at up to $1,000 per acre and John Davis Oak Hill daughter
suggested the current bond re- 5:05 a.m. '
'
'
quirement of $300 per acre is
DISCHARGES
fllr too low.
.
Mrs. Dana H. Bailey, Mrs.
Rep. John A. Bechtold, R-Cin· Thomas E. Bratcher Arnold R.
cinnati, a co-sponsor or Welker's Childers, Mrs. G~orgia E .
bill· assured th~ committee Diehl Mrs. Jack Hall Kristin
miners whose permits have ex· Hasti~gs, Edwin C. 'Jeffers,
pired would not be allowed to Mrs. Elizabeth B. Jolly, Mrs.
strip coal during an appeal per· Wayne E. Kincaid, Jr., and son;
1od.
Gary L. Kinnison, Thomas A.
Be~htold also defended a Layne, Isaac E. Oiler, Jasper
prov1s1on allowing an operator Oliver Mrs Marion Patriek
to request an inspection of his Euiah' B ·Persinger Mrs'
reclamation, maintaining the Dordthy
See, Mrs. 'Georg~
miner would have to. forefeit w. stover, Mrs. Roger w.
his bond if no inspection was Taylor and son.
made by the state.
Speck was not questioned ex·
PLEASANT VALLEY
lensively about his bill, regard·
OMISSIONS _
M
ed as the most w1de • rangmg A .
.
.
rs .
strip mine proposals and rated Wilham Doolittle , Pomt
b orne as the most likely to Pleasant; Mrs . Charles
Ys d
Jenkins, Oak Hill; Frank
succee
.
Th
He said there are too few re- omas, Ga11'lpOrIS Ferry;
quirements for planning of min· Nancy Ma~ty n ' Glenwood;
ing and reclamation and that Helen
Wilhams,
Pomt
the current two • year period Pleasant; Mrs. James Th~ma~,
allowed for reclamation is too Leon; VIckie Duncan, Gallipolis
long.
Ferry.
. .
"It's like a woman in distress DISCHARGES - Wilham
calling the police to save her, Eshenaur, Mrs . Joh~ A.
and they say 'We will come Russell~ Mrs. Charie~ Bissell,
and save you . tomorrow,"' Frankhn Blankenship, Mr~ .
s k ·d
Herman Warner, Mrs. Melvm
pee sal ·
Bush, Darrell Herdman, Sr.,
and Darrell Herdman, Jr.

M.

DEADLINE SET
The deadline for signup and
insurance fees for the Racine
baseball program is May 12.
Therostermustbesenttothe
Ohio Valley Little League at
Vinton
beforecannot
May 20.
BoysAlso,
not
on
the roster
play.
those taking part must be
covered by team insurance
even if they are covered by
another policy. The cost is $2
per boy. Those wishing to sign
to ll
up
are
Mrs. Evelyn
Yo . 94• ,~a
741
ung, ...., ·

RAILING HIT
Medium damage was
reported to a pickup truck
driven by George G. Hart, 34,
Pomeroy, at 12:40 a.m. Wed·
nesday when it struck guard
railing on county road 20 east of
Route 33. The department of
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach said
a tire ~arne off a rim on the
truck, causing Hart to lose
control. Hart was not injured,
and no charges were filed.

ASKED TO ATTEND
UNEMPLOYMENT COUNT
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Alll97~7l and 1971•72 Racln~ ' Ohio Bureau of Employment
PTA officers, county council Services reported today there
delegates and alternates ~re were 92,809 persons unemasked ·to attend the · sprmg played one week 'or more during
conference Saturday at the the fourth week of April comPomeroy El~mentary Sch~l. pared with 72,262 such persons
Anyone needmg transportation during the same period last
IS asked to call 949-3701 or 949- year. Unemployment claims for
3794.
the fourth week of April were
down nearly 6,000 from the
previous· week.
'
'
NAME OMITfED
Unintentionally omitted from
the survivors of Carl J. flellman
in Tuesday's tcullon of The
NIXON ON TUBE
Sentinel wu hil widow, Lena E.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Heilman. The Rev. 1Waid Pres,ldent Nixon plans to hold a
Radford will officiate 11t funeral nationally broadcast news
aervicea 'to be held at 10 a.m. conference Thursday at 9 p.m.
Thursday at the Ewinc Ftilleral EST, be!or leaving Friday
Home.
' ·
morning to spend the weekend
in California.

THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1971

The $2,300,000 water system
of the Leading creek Conservancy District and the
Leading Creek Watershed
Association apparently will be
advertised for bids soon.
Jack W. Crisp, president of
the Leading creek Conservancy
District, said today the conservancy district's board of
directors ·and the executiveboard or. the Leading Creek
Watershed A!Jsn . in a formal
session Tuesday with the
project engineers, John Hill and
Claude Quillen of Commonwealth Systems, Greenwood, Ind., authorized Commonwealth Systems to begin
preparation of the final design
of the water system. The work
will include hydrology studies

· Students are demanding that
12 teachers in the school be
removed for alleged racism.
They also want a black prin·
cipal and vice-principal. Harper
said no personnel changes can
be made until June and he has
no power to place teachers .

officiating. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery ,
Pomeroy. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time.

$84 Rocking
.
0

and other work important to the
design.
According to the preliminary
figures, the total estimated cost
of the project is $2,300,000. The
system will serve western
Meigs County and eastern
Vinton County.
Water service will be
provided to approximately six
schools and II commercial
businesses, in addition to two
mines in . the proposed Ohio
Power Co. operation presently
planned in Meigs County.
Rutland, Wilkesville,
Harrisonville, Danville, Langs·
ville, Salem Center, Bradbury,
Ratcliff and other communities
will be served by approximately
80 miles of water lines which
will make up the system.

At the meeting it was
diSClosed that on April 23 at a
meeting in Huntington, W. Va.,
it was reported officially that
the Economic Development
Administration, (EDA) had
accepted the project, which will
notify the board in writing of its
decision .
Crisp extended thanks today
to residents of the area who
signed for taps and have waited
for three years for the system to
go through the planning stages.
He also staled that on behalf of
the conservancy district and its
residents he wishes to thank
officials of the Farm Home
Administration and the EDA for
their "sincere interest and
devotion to the people of South.
eastern Ohio." He expressed

Two outstanding Meigs High
School juniors from Middleport
has been selected delegates to
Buckeye
Boys
State
representing Middleport's
Feeney-Bennett Post 126,
American Legion.
They are David W.
Krawsczyn, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Krawsczyn, 300 Broadway
St., and Steve H. Dunfee, son of
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dunfee, 979
Hysell St.
'
David is a football player and
a member of the Varsity M Club
~~ Meigs High. He has been a
Latin CluJ&gt; mem~ and ill a
member of the Heath Methodist

Approved
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Senate Commerce and Labor
Committee
Tuesday
unanimously approved a
compromise bill increasing
unemployment compensation
benefi Is· and extending them
during periods of high unemployment.
The bill, drafted by a subcommittee, is a compromise
between the administration of
Gov. John J. Qilligan and li
group of Senate Republicans
headed by Sen. Howard C. Cook,
of Toledo.
The measure increases
maximum benefits for unemployed workers with four
dependents from $66 a week to
$84. Gilligan had asked for a
maximum of $99, while Cook
wanted the maximum figure
held to $80.
The measure contains a
provision which would make
Ohio the first state in the nation
to gear its benefits to the cost of
living, a provision sponsored by
the Democrats. The proposal
now goes to the Senate Rules
Committee which will decide
'whether it is to be seheduled for
a vote on the floor .

Church in Middleport. He is a
member of the National Honor
Society.
Steven will be captain of the
Meigs High School basketball
learn next year. He is a member
also of the baseball team and is
an honor student. His favorite
subject is psychology.
Boys State this year will be
held June 1~18 a~ Ashland
College in Ashland, Ohio. It is a
school in government through
which young men learn the
operation of the American form
of government and good
citizenship through pracllcat.
experience.

DAVID IRA~

1
I

1

,ews••. zn rze1 s
.
By UDited Press Interuallooal

1
I

Labor Fashions Tax Coup
COLUMBUS- ORGANIZED LABOR has succeeded in a 512
month drive to place a $505 mUlion tax package before the
General Assembly with or without a legislative sponsor.
Secretary of State Ted W. Brown Wednesday notified House and
Senate leaders that the Tax Reform Action Committee (TRAC), a
coalition of the Ohio AFLCIO successfully competed a unique
lnltiatiw procedure to place the plan before either the House or
Senate in bllllorm.
· House Clerk Thomas R. White said the mechanics have not
yet been worked out on fonnal introduction of Uie bill. Majority
consent is now required to introduce a bill in the House, but this
could be clrclUllvented by placing It In the Senate. The tax
package Is keyed to elimination of $200 million worth of loopholes
in the state sales tax and a $250mUlioncorporateprofits tax.

-

Elberfelds Spring .Furniture Sale

Ohio Losses at 2,810 Men
COLUMBUS - OHIO HAS LOST %,810 MEN in Indoohina in
the decade from Ja~ . I, 1961 to Dec. .31, 1970, the Ohio Adjutant
General's office reported Wednesday. Cuyahoga County has lost
lite most men wlllt 382 followed by Franklin County with 237. The
report does not include deaths which may have occured in
hospitals after men left Vietnam.
Deaths by SE Ohio counties were: Athens, 25; Fairfield, 22;
Gallia, 7; Hocking 8; Lawrence, 15; Meigs, 6; Vinton, 10; and
Washington, 24.

Visit the Jrd Floor now during our Spring Furnture ~ale. Best
time to buy Living Room· Dining Room •. Bedroom. Kitchen .
Lawn and Porch Furniture.
Dependable well-known makes now at sale prices on the Jrd
floor. Also a 'good time to be selecting new carpet for your
home (on the 3rd floor).

Rubin to Fill Judgeship
WASIUNGTON, - CARL B. RUBIN of Cincinnati was
selected Wednesday by President Nixon to be U. S. District Court
judge for the southern District of Ohio. If confirmed by the U. S.
Senate, Rubin will fill a new position created by Congress last
year. His salary will be $40,1100 a year.

Sh·op~in co'mfort on all 3 floors.

Linoleums and vinyl floor coverings at the Warehouse on
Mechanic Street.
See the big selection of well-known makes of Lawn Mowers at
the Warehouse on Mechanic Street. Prompt delivery • contmuous service · sensible credit.

.STEVE DUNFEE

Kindergarteners
To-be To Signup
Registration of kindergarten
ch1ldren for the 1971-72 school
term will be held at Rutland and
Middlep'ort Monday, Mrs .
Jeanette Crooks , teacher,
announces.
Children who will be attending the Rutland kin·
dergarten are to register be·
tween 8:30 and II a.m. and'
children to attend the Mid·
dleport school are to be
registered between I and 3~ 30 p,
m. Birth certificates and immunization charts are [o be
presented al the time of
registration . To enter kln·
dergarlen in the fall , children
must be five by Sept. 30.

The Meigs High School
Symphonic Band, composed of
the better instrumental
students, will be presented in
concert at 8 p. m. Friday in the
school auditoriunn.
The varied concert to be
directed by David Bowen will
include, First Suite in E-Flat for
Military Band, Pageantry
Overture, Grandioso, Symphonic Chorale, Tunes of Glory,
a concert march; The House of
th~ Rising Sun, Charles
Minelli's Sunset Glow and
California Dreamin '.

·Womens Uniforms
Several,hundred womens uniforms selected from our reaulor stock- All well-known
brand nomos. Many styles fo choose from In shorlsleeves ond '14 length sleeves- All
easy core fabrics- junior, misses and hail slits.

Regular 57.91 to 525.00 Uniforms
.. i
'

"

' .

improving the drive site on"the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Tom Cassell, president, announced that club members will
meet at 7 p.m. Monday at !hi!
fairgrounds to survey' the site
and'plan for necessary changes.
Proceeds from IN! hole-in-one
contest are used for the club's
sightconservalioh progran\. Six
residents h•ve ·recel~ed eye
'glasses through the club's ef·
forts litis year.
·

PARIS (UPI )- The United
States and Saigon asked the
Communists today to name a
third party organization or
country to handle the welfare
and repatriation of prisoners of
war in Vietnam. Stockholm
reports indicated Sweden was
willing if asked.
Instead of an immediate
reply the VietCong renewed its
appeal to American soldiers to
desert and promised a cease·
fire ' against ." Gis who refrain

~~~ h~s;~~~e:~ts ;~~insk:~::

ilelega le directed his .fire
against a Southeast Asia Treaty
Organisation (SEATO) communique blaming tile Comm1mists
for staUing the Paris talks.
There was no immediate explanation lf the offer of Mme.
Nguyen Thi Binh, the Viet Cong
chief delegate, to stop shooting

'

CUATICI'f or 'IBIR OWN cherry blllllom feat! val Ia
.ooly one of \he 'interesting avenues in the actlviUes of the new
fiflh and siXth grade school at Baradbury: Here James Sayre
and Cindy Triplett ot Middleport add bl0110~ to cherry
.'

at non-hostile Gls In fact
constituted an offer of a
general cease-fire in Vietnam.
She made the statement In the
context of a Vlet . Cong
announcement that the Communists would not attack U.S.
troops "opposed to the war and
who abstain from hostile
actions."
The prisoner of war proposal
was put forward by U.S.
Ambassador David K.E. Bruce,
. "
' .

fresh from talks in London with
Secretary of State William P.
Rogers, and by Saigon's chief
negotiator, Pham Dang Lao.
The proposals coincided with
Stockholm reports that Sweden
already had held informal talks
with the Unl\fd States concern·
lng possible repatriation of
prisoners and had discussed the
question In Informal , contacts
with Hanoi diplomats.
·' 'l"&lt;l"

Fund.;,. a·t $8 061
.

The George Thompson kidney
fund has reached $8,061.25, Mrs.
Robert Lewis, general chair·
man· of the drive, said today.
The drive was started several
,weeks ago by the Winding Trail
Garden Club to aid George
Thompson, 16, Meigs High
School student, who had both
kidneys removed and• underwent a kidney tra118plant on
March 30. He Is home from the
Cleveland Clinic where the
surgery was performed. George
is the son of Mr. and Mrs ,
Robart Thompson.
Latest contributors to the
fund are Mr. and Mrs. John
Goett, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John
Caldwell and Mrs, · Grace
Caldwell, Vinton, G. and J.
employes, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
crow, Jr., Boy Scout Troop 239
of Langsville, the Langsville

·, .

Christian Church, Rose Garden
Club, Mr. and Mrs. An\011
Leonard, the children of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred crow, Jr., the
Chester and Tuppers Plains
Modern Homemakers Club,
Laurel CUff Health Club, Mr.
and Mrs. G: S. Michael, EJecta
Circle Missionary Society or
Middleport, First Baptist
Church, St. Paul Lutheran
Church Women, Mrs. Marie
Sh~ets, Gallipolis; a special
collection taken at Bowers'
Restaurant in Pomeroy, the
English class and home room
200 of Mrs. Clatide ·Husted,
Meigs High School; ,Folt's
Grocery, an anonymous con·
tribution, and a contribution
from Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., made in memory of
the late Emmet Shuler.

Saxophone - Julia Hutchison,
Deborah Laney, Edith Mces,
Ricky Pierce, Glenna Sprague.
Tenor Saxophone - · Terry
George, Sherry King, Nancy
Thompson; Baritone Saxophone
- Deborah Hawley, Marcy
Owens.; French Horn - Jennifer• Goble, Melanie Hackett,
Sandra Taylor, Donna Weber.
Trumpet - Connie Grueser,
Greg Hayes, Debra May, Nancy
Mayer , Connie Radford, Fred
Rayburn, Debbie Triplett, Patti
Well, Sharon Wilson ; Trombone
- Fred Jones, Susan Rusche!,
' Rep. of medical manpower because'
Caralynn Tracy, Maralynn
WASHINGTON ('!JPI)Tracy; Baritone Horn -Robert Clarence E. Miller, R.()hlo, has "rural areas are facing a Vfi'Y
Blackston, Edward Brown, given his support to legislation real and critical health crisis."
F'rank Girolami, Patrick Gress ; encouraging the redistribution
Miller said he has given his
Basses - Nathan Robinette,
support to a measure which
Duane Will; Bells - Brenda
would authorize the secretary
Edwards; Percussion - Philip
of health, education and welfare
Gaul , Dennis Glaze and Phil
to repay outstanding educationMoon.
al loans incurred by a physi·
.cian, dentist or optomitrist dur·
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State ing his professional training If
Attorney General William he agrees to practice for three
Brown said today he would ask years In an area designated as
the Ohio General assembly. to having a medical manpower
redefine who is "criminally shortage.
insane" because too many· "When the only physician in
innocent persons have been sent Vinton t:~unty , Ohio, recenUy
to the Lima State Hospital ' for relocated, the county joined the
the Criminally Insane.
ranks of 135 other counUes
' It was revealed last Friday thoughout the nation which have
that five Inmate~ . who had no physician," Miller said In
spent a total of 153 y::..rs in lite his newsletter.
hospital, would be released "Rural areas are facing a
because they were not very real and critical health
criminally Insane as defined by crisis and l feel that meulll'tl
Ohio law . They would be which will help provide a better
ll;ansferred to other hospitals redistribution· of our medical
and probably some w9uld manpower through realia~c in·
eventually be returned to centives is needed," he added.
society.
The congressman ,also Ill·
"I thin,k we should get these nounced his signing o1 a dfa.
type of people out of there, charge petition to push a bill
especially the ones that have allowing prayer i!lpubliciiChoola
been in there for 30or 40years," out of committee W place It on
he said. "They don't belong the floor for a vote.
there.''
"Something has to be done,"
-. FIRE DOOSED '
he said. ''We are going to have
trees to create a dlmenalonal effect. An approximate 30 foot
to redefine who is criminally Pomeroy firemen were called
IOIIg walFjiilinting of trees has been prepared by students and
insa~e. "We have got to start at II p. m. Wednea!IQ 10 tl•
g1vmg various tesls before tinguish a brUsh fll'e ._ \be
placed along a hallway. In theft spare time students pasle
committing
someone,to a place Nurman Shaffer reeldenct at
clietry blossoms, made of tissue paper, onto the trees to
liile lhut."
La lire I Cliff'
provide an attractive eff~t.
'

Fultz, Debbie Hinkle, Kathy
King, Debbie Maples; Obeo Elizabeth Blaettnar , Twlla
Clatworthy, Leanne Sebo.
Bassoon - Debbie Garnes,
Patty Harris, Bernadette
Hennessy ; E Flat Clarinet,
Annie Ohlinger; B Flat
Clarinett, Lynne Baker, Irene
Barnes, Jo Ellen Diehl, Gary
Ellis, Leta Floyd, Sheila
Folmer, Jill Harris, Pamela
Manley, DarlaNeutzling,Marla
Neutzling , Stella Neutzling ,
Debbie Ohlinger, Karen Price,
Ellen Rice, Rosemary Rice,
Milisa Rizer, Becky Scaggs,
Joining Bowen in the direc- Becky Triplett, Sherrie Turner,
tion will be Lewis Shields, Cathy Yates.
assistant director, and student
teachers of Ohio University, AI to Clarinet - Dorothy
Doug Day and Dan Williams. Harbrecht; Bass Clarinet Debbie Jewett, Margare t
Band personnel are :
Piccolo - Becky Wright; Riggs ; Contra Bass Clarinet Flute, Donna Francis, Beth Becky Houdashelt; Alto

Miller to Chair Lions' Contest

Wednesday "custuners" ponder over !IOllle of the Items
being offered for sale in lite country store. From left to right
are David Miller, Mark Davis, CathY Meadows, Trlna Gibbs,
Tim Ebershach and Marr. Boggs. See more pictures on Page
8.

Sweden May Help

lJand Concert Friday Night

WASHINGTON- SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN, D.·IW.,
called his Senate Hilnger Conunlttee into sessl011 today to hear .
testimony that new Agriculture Department regulations will cu( '
(Continued on page 12)

Bob Miller was named to
· again serve as chairman of the
club's annual hole-In-one
contest when the Pomeroy·
Middleport Lions Club met for a
luncheon Wednesday at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
Turning In an outstanding job
last year as chainnan of the
money-making h~nt; Miller
will serve 11111in u chairman.
'l11ll llrDIIP made . plans for

MRS. WHITCOMB'S COUNTRY STORE is the setting
for an operetta "Mulligan's Magic" to be presented this
evening and Saturday at 7:30p.m. at the Bradbury Fifth and
Sixth Grade School. In a scene during final rehearsals

WASHINGTON , D. C. Saying that he is strongly Op·
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
posed to any cutbacks which president of the Ohio Hospital
would terminate existing or Association issued a call
planned library services in Wednesday for support of
Southeastern Ohio, lOth District Gov. John J. Gilligan's
program
for medical
Representative Clarence E. assistance . Donald R.
Miller voted to approve ap·
Newkirk said the governor's
propriations which would keep budget would bring In $1 28
the popular bookmobiles in million in federal funds for
operation.
Medicaid.
The House Appropriations
"This is an issue that
Committee recenUy reported
the fiscal year '72 funds for the crosses political and self·
Office of Education. The bill interest considerations,"
Newkirk said. "Our concern
earmarked $40 million for 1 d
b f h
d
library services, which is ~ual s an. must ,," or t e nee y
to the amount fundedAast y,f;ar. :sick '" Ohlo.
l'he ..EducatiOII ·AppNpriations·· '.. ;ao~t ri~R~'~ . ~~t
Biil has been approved by the A rainbow trout derby will be
House of Representatives and is held at Forest Acres Lake· on
now pending action in the the New Lima Road, near
Senate.
Rutland, from 5:30 a.m. to 6
The Administration 's F.Y. '72 p.m., Saturday and Sunday
budget request originally called under the sponsorship of the
lor a 24 percent decrease in Leading Creek Consetvancy
appropriations for state and District. Only artificial ball can
local libraries. "The services be used on Saturday. On Sunday
provided by the libraries of all bait except minnows can be
(Continued on page 12)
used.

Not-eo-poor,to Pay More

Thursday, Friday ·and Saturday Sale

'

0

Speaking on behalf of the
. board, Crisp also extended
appreciation to Attorney Frank
W. Porter, Jr., for his "close
cooperation, advice and time
put into the project." He further
stated that appreciation goes to
the Ohio Power Co. and the
American Electric Power Co.
for assistance and cooperation.
The announcement of the
mining operations in the
western part of the county
played a major role in the approval of the project by the
EDA, Cnsp disclosed .

WASHINGTON- SEN. GAYLORD NELSON, D·WIS., in·
trodut;ed a b!ll in the Senate today to bar use of draftees In combat
roles in Southeast Asia. Nelson's bill would amend the Military
Selective Service Act rJ. 1967 to bar such combat roles after Dec.
31 unless lite draftee volunteers for such assignment or has re·
enlisted.
"There is no moral justification for continuing to compel
combat service in a war that has been rejected by the nation while
the politicians flllllnder around seeking a face-llllving pretext to
get out," Nelson said.

Don't forget to register now in our Jrd floor
furniture department for the Kroehler
Living · Room Suite to be given away. No
purchase is necessary. You need not be
present to win.

''

TEN CENTS

appreciation to Cong. Clarence
E. Miller, lOth District, "for his
devotion and for many hours of
work that he has put into this
project."

He'd Bar Draftees in Combat

..' '

..

ater Project lS

, . '.

r---------------------------i
I
7\T
•
B . .+. I

..

'

\

•

Miller Likes
Bookmobile

Delegat.es Named
For Boy's State

Otair Pay

·•3" to •1210

PHONE 992-2156

Final Design of Second Huge Rurru
Water System in County Authorized

Principal Robert Harper ended
the meeting.
"We haven't solved a thing,"
he said. A decision was to be
inade today about when the
school will reopen.

Smith

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

reek

Frank R Beach Died Tuesday

Sean Connery

Brlglt!e Bardo!

timidated by the kind of danger
this type ol activity holds for
our country. "
- A group of homosexuals
representing
the
Gay
Liberation F~ont invaded the
office of Sen. Edward J. Gurney, R-Fla ., demanding equal
rights. "It's not every day when
you have men kissing each
other in the Senate hail way,"
Gurney said. "The Vietnam
veterans who protested last
week were a responsible group,
but this bunch of protesters now
in Washington is a disgrace to
America."

2 Schools Can't Open

• •ary
Auxili

Partly cloudy to clear and
cooler tonight. Lows in the mid
to upper 30s. MosUy sunny and
litlle temperature chanRe
Friday. Highs from the low or
mid 50s north to the low or mid
60s south.
• ,

Makers and c.ollectors of
walking . sticks are called
rhabdophilists.

Protesters Roiling Capital
WASHINGTON-Scores of war ' miles fro111 Washin~ton , at the
protesters spent a chilly night reque~l of the Justice Departsitting in front of Selective ment, 11 was learned. Next week
Service headquarters, singing has been b1lled as a more.
songs by the flickering light of m1l1tant phase of the protests.
hand-held candles
The
- Sen. Barry M. Goldwa!er,
demonstrators vow~d \hey R-Ariz., closed his offices in·
would block employes from definitely . after a . group . of
entering the building this protesters mvaded h1s r~aeption
morning. Washington Police room and threw red pamt o~er
Chief Jerry V. Wilson said they carpets, books and a copymg
would be arrested if they 'did. machme. Goldwater Said he
But the day's main target in was not afraid of the protesters
the second week of a spring but "I am intimidated by mantiwar offensive was the In· cidents which endanger the
lerna! Revenue Service where young men and women who
members of the Peoples work for me and I am inCoalition for Peace and Justice
planned to concentrate today's
nonviolent lobbying activity.
A1J th~ protest forces con·
"tmued to pop up at vario~ COLUMBUS (UPI)
places in the nation 's capital, Mohawk Junior and Senior High
there were these other School remained .closed today
developments:
for the third straight day after a
- The District of Columbia mass meeting
of adNational Guard ordered its 1,400 ministrators, parents and
men on training duty next week students ended without any
at Ft. Meade, Md., about 25 solutions to the school's racial
problems.
Some 300 parents and
students attended a special
.
meeting at the school Tuesday
(Continued from page I)
night to discuss the disorders
organization it is today," Roach that first shut down classes
said. "No one can predict w~en Monday but after two hours
disaster will strike some section
'
of the state .. The patrol f~els
that through 1ts well orgamzed
'
auxihary, the greatest amount
Frank R. Beach, 75, Maple
of protection and aid possible is
St., Middleport, died Tuesday
available to the citizens of Ohio, night at the Holzer Medical
no matter how serious the
Center. Born June 28, 1895 in
situatiOn," Roach added.
Plans are being made by the Meigs County, he was the son of
auxiliary to hold a picnic for the the late Jessie and Nellie
auxiliary, regular patrol and Shoemaker Beach. He was a
other police officers and their retired foreman of the Ohio
families in the near future. State Highway Department in
Named to serve on the planning Meigs County and was a
committee were John Will, Paul member of Aerie 2171,
Haptonstall and Richard Fraternal Order of Eagles.
Surviving are his wife, Reva
Vaughan.
Gosney
Beach; a step-daughter,
The pledge of allegiance by
Capt. Roach and prayer by Paul Mrs. Dorothy Yeauger, Mid·
Haptonstall opened the dleport; two sisters, Mrs. Ethel
meetmg . Instructor for the Essman, Columbus, and Mrs.
Monday night session was Mary Horian, Pearl Beach,
Patrolman Hyden . Prayer Mich. ; a niece, Mrs. Jack
closed the meeting and refresh· (Imogene) Kennedy, Columbus ; three great-nieces and two
ments were served.
great-nephews. Besides his
parents, he was preceded in
death by a brother.
Warden Needed
Funeral services will be held
Appointment of a new dog at 2 p.m. Friday at the
warden to re.place George Rawlings-Coats Ftilleral Home
Logan is .expected to be made with the Rev. Raullin Moyer
later this week by the Meigs
County commissioners. The
commissioners have several
apphcations for the post, but
made no decision at a meeting
held Tuesday. Logan is ill and
(Continued from page I)
will not be able to continue as determination of charge~ filed
dog warden .
against him.
Routine business was acted
Board member Ray Fields
on, Martha Chambers, clerk, moved that Mr. Whalen lle
said. Commissioners Charles employed at a salary of $14,500
Karr, Sr., Robert Clark and per year until the board apWarden Ours attended.
points a superintendent or
reinstates
Mr. Smith.
COUNCIL CHANGE
Due to conflicting em- Board members approving
ployment . hours of council the action were Mr. Fields,
members, the May meeting of Charles Eschenaur and Bill
the Rutland Council will be held Withers, president pro-tem in
at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May the absence of president
11, rather than on the first Theodore Stevens. Harry Siders
Tuesday of the month, May 4. voted against the action.

Weather

Health in Crisis
Insanity to
Be Defined

I

.

�'

..

2- The Daily senUnel, Middleport.Pcmeroy, 0., April29, 19'11

Meigs Wins 2-1

WIN AT BRIDGE

Cat Nipped While

.
~
Patriots
Will
March
May
8
Grmnmg
,
.

.

3- Tile Dell)' Sentlllel, Mt4dlepnri-t -oy, 0 ., Al!ril21; lf11

Perez Big Hero In Reds Triumph

••
.,.,
••

~

Duchess on her nglol was COLUMBUS - Patriots Patrtots' March could he the orgamzahons, patroot clubs,
NORTH
dedicated to victory in Vietnam last chance for Patrtots to take hard hats , churches, and
almost asleep
.AK 3
" If the club lmesse 1s on wtD march In Waahlngton, D. C. a stand for VICtory and to let the refugee groups w1ll be
; The Wahama 1\'hite ra"ioon;"'suigles, struck out twoand walkWahama plated the•rlonetali.Y
• AK52
or spades break 3·3 I have 011 Saturday, May a at iioon. world know that the forces "for streanung into Washington on
, suffered their fourth season loss ed (our.
in the llt'th when Randy Clark
• 96
13 tr1cks, but that cat looks They will come from all , iiO America" are greater than the May 8 carrymg banners, flags,
olo6 54 2
of the season at the hands of Meigs scored their llrst run led oCf with one of the Falcons
too happy He must h o I d
forces "fill' surrender" which and Bibles Floats, bands, baby
EAST
the Meigs Marauders Wednes- in the fourth &amp;arne when a Mau· two sl..:les. With one out, Wili WEST
lour spades and the king of states, assemble on !he Mall,
demonstratmg
m cart'lages, and trumPets will he
• 97
clubs If be has f1ve hearts west of 4th St., at 11 a.m. and are
dllJ' att..rnoon. The Falcons were rader walked, stole second, ad• walked the next three batters .Jl08 2
.Q
76
also I may spoil hts fun "
proceed to match to the Washington at the present time. mcluded m the Patrwts' March •
downed by a 2-1 margin makllli vanced to third on an error, forcill8 In Clark with the run. .Jl0 983
•
54
2
• 73
At tnck two she carefully Washington Monument where He says that for the stlent "Each Ohto commumty has
all four of their losses by 1 run and scored on a two-out Falcon An unsuccessful squeeze at· . K8
oloJ l0973
tuffed a low heart Then she ceremonles,wllltakeplacefrom majority to remain silent today been asked to arrange 1ts own
margins.
miscue In the inlleld.
tem,pt and a poJH41 ended the
SOUTH (D)
started to run trumps. The 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
m the face of hwmliation and transportallon to the March and
Jeb Will pitched for visiU!ll The winnlfll run wao scored Falcon threat. Mike Whlte got
• Q654
tw
cat followed to the ftrst o This will he the third march 1n defeat 1s sin and that 1t is never to gather under the Ohoo ban·
" lg
h
only tw in the sixth when the Maura the other Falcon hlt w•th a
..e • •• e gave '\'
0
•
nnl
• th
lxth
and
had no problem discard- Washington to he 1ed by the too late for vtctory, "so long as ner. The emphasis woll be
+ AKQJI08
ders lined three singles in the Sl•.,.e m e 8 •
.
tng
the
eoght of clubs and a
inning.
Wahama, now 9-4, is schedulr • AQ
heart on the next two leads Rev Dr . Carl Mcintire, there ts an almighty God m placed on going m after the
Both vulnerable
Tim Howardhadledthemound ed to host Williamstown today
The grm dtsappeared en· Pres1dent of the International whom we can put our trust " prisoners of war fll'st and the
and host Poult Pleasant Fnday West North East South
Patriots, Chrtstlans, Vtetnam batl.l'e cry wtll be, Vtclory by the
llrely when Alice played her Council Jf Christian Churches
chores lor the Falcons as he
I+
last trump The cat fumed, and Director of the 20th Century veterans, wives, and children, 4th of July," satd Sylvta Reed,
• By Unoted Press lntertoatoonal struck out seven, walked three afternoon.
Pass
1•
Pass
[umbled and lmally dropped ReformaUon Hour Broadcalit. prisoner of war wives, mothers, Chairman, Ohio March for
National League
and gave .., only five hits. HowPass
2 N T Pass 4+
Montreal 101 000 ooo- 2 5 1
BOX SCORE:
his kmg of clubs He knew Mcintire has called for these and
children,
veterans Vtctory Committee
Pass
4 N T Pass
: Chicago 020 000 001- 3 8 2 ard gave 141 only one earned
a
heart
or
spade
doscard
.
Pass
5 NT
Pass 7+
: Morton (2.3) and Bateman. run in the outing.
would gtve Allee her 13th marcbes to gtve Amencans the
WAHAMA I
Pass
Pass
Pass
• Hands (2 31 and Rudolph HRtnck
opportunity to stand for Victory
: Hickman (1st)
Openmg
lead¥
J
AB R H RBJ L__ _ _ _ _ _ __.
Allee showed her h a n d In V1etnam as the only I
1
•; Los Ang 000 104 ooo- 5 11 2 (7) , Rlddleberger (7) , Grzenda PLAYER
The cat paused long enough honorable and the quickest way 11
1
(8) and Casanova WPto say, " She's too good for to end the war and win the 1
I
• Plttsrgh 000 230 20x- 7 11 0 Grzenda
3
o
o
o
By
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
(2-0) LP- Perranoskl B. Clark
; Sulton, O'Brien 15) and Sims.
'
I
(0-2)
.
3 0 1 0 Those of yo u who remem us and then followed hiS grm peace
•. Blass, Giusti (8) and Sangull
Wh1te
Dr. Mcintire says that the
I
2 o o o ber Allee m Wonderland wtll mto obliviOn
: ian. WP-Biass {3 0) LP- I 10 onnongsl
Ch. Roush
{NEws"m
ENm•m•
•ssN
1
By
Helen
Bottel
1
: O'Brien 10-11 HRs-Sims {1st) , Detroit 000 000 010 1- 2 8 0
3 o o o recall the grmnmg Cheshtre
Howatd
• Crawford (lsi).
3 1 1 0 cat In the story we fmd the
Kan Cty 000 000 010 ()-- 1 10 0 R. Clark
-cat dtsappearmg and the
Lollch (4 2) and Free han.
3 0 0 0 grm remammg
- New York 211 100 301- 9 12 0 Drago,
YOU'l'H ASKED FOR lT!
Lambert
Abernathy
(9)
and
; St. Louis 000 000 01()-- 1 7 1 Kirkpatrick LP-Abernathy (O Sayre
The boddmg has been South..----.:___-----=--,.
0
0
2
0
This column Is for young people, their problems and
Todaf'imds Altce playmg West North Eul
• Gantry (2-3) and Grote,
Cu. Roush
; Torrez, Brunet (4), Taylor (4), 1)
2 0 0 0 a seve n-&lt;ltamond contract
I
+
The
Daily
pleasures,
!heir troubles and fun. As wtlh the rest of Helen Help
lolo
Pass
~ Orabciwsky (7), Linzy (9) and
Gardner
0
0
0
1
wtth
the
Cheshtre
cat
sittong
•
DEVOTED TO THE
Usl,ltwelcomeslaughsbutwon'tdodgeaseriousquesllonwiiha
Pass
lolo
Pass
Baltimore 001 030 ooo- 4 6 1
~ Simmons LP- Torrez (1 21 HR
- - - - - - - West and the Duchess East
Oakland
100
020
1015
11
2
You,
South,
hold
INTERESTOF
lrush-df,
"
~ -Lee (lstl.
Cuellar. Jackson {7), Hall (91
Totals
21 1 2 1 Allee had hoped to fmd a .7543 .8632 +AKQ .74
MEIGS·MASDNAREA
Se-'
tee
ti
•
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
,.,.your nageques OnstoYOUTHASKEDFORlT ,care
Hendricks, Hunter (3 21
What do you do now?
MEIGS 2
better dummy After all her
! san Diego 101 100 002- 5 10 2 and
EMOc. Ed
ol Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
Duncan LP- Hall (2 2)
A-B1d two spades. This is
partner had JUmped to two
)•' Cincinnati 200 020 011- 6 11 1 and
HR-Rudi
(4th)9
ROBERT
HOEFLICH,
lT ISN"" THE SAME
: Coombs, Severlnsan (51, Lax·
AB R H RBI no-trump and t h e n used samdar to the d1rect raise from
City Editor
•
PLAYER
one to two and does not show
'• tOn (7), Kelley 191 and Barton. Cleve
Publ.shed
d111y
excep•
Dear
Helen:
Blackwood
100 001 001- 3 7 2
Saturday bV The 01:110 V•lley
: McGlothlin. Carroll (9) and Calli
002
000 ooo- 2 8 3
"Curoouser and cunouser" much strength.
Publishing company 1 111
I've been going wtlh tills boy for' two weeks and he gave up
'• Bench WP-Carroll (l.J) LP0
3
0
0
TODAY'S QUESTION
McOowell, Pascual (8), Mln Dunfee
she mused ' Everyone bods
Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio, c1g tte j tbeca
' : Kelley (0 1) HRs-Banch (7th), gorl
are s us
use I asked him to . He hasn•t smoked m two
Fosse. Wright, VanMetre
3 0 0 0 too much here " She looked
Your partner contmues to 45769 Business Office Phone
: Barton (111), Gaston (2nd), Queen(9)(91.andLaRoche
(9) and
,
three spades What do you do 992 2156, Editorial Phone 992 days!
I I I 0 al her opponents The Ches
(• May (ist) .
2157
nl
Moses, Torborg (9) . WP- Powell
second class postage paid at
Last ght he said he's proved how much be loves me (by
3 0 1 0 bore eat's gun see me d now'
!•'•: san Fran 202 001 ooo- 5 9 1 Pascual 12-2) LP- Queen {O 1 Abbott
Pomeroy . 0111o
quitting cigarettes), so It's my turn. I S81d I wasn't ready and he
0 b1 oader than evet whole the
~ 0 I
Boyd
''; Atlanta
001 100 lOG- 3 6 0
Nat1onal adverfls•no
d
Dixon
I I I I
representat•ve 8ottlnelll got rna •
.;. Slone, McMahon (7) and
Gallagher, Jnc. 12 Easl 42nd
Today I was showmg off my new driver's license at lunch
'.; Dietz; Nash, McQueen (4),
Wiken
3 0 I ~
St New York c.ty, N!W York
• Barber (81, Herbel (8) and
Subscnptlon rates oe bout. He came up and looked over my shoulder, pointed to where
Haggerty
3 0 0
·: King. WP-Sione (2 01 LP!overed by corrler where ltsays,"Sex:F,"andsald,soeveryonecouldhear: "Nolle! She
Will
3 0 0 0
;. Nash (1.2). HRs-Bond (6th),
refusong to boost milk pr1ce available 50 cents per week ,
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
The
·: Foster (3rdl
&amp;v Motor Route where carrier
SW"e f1wlks that one!"
23 2 5 1 cbst of the government's daory supports, backed down under service not ovollable one
Later, he wrote me a note, asking if I'd changed my mmd, or
Totals
month Sl 75 By mall In Ohio
:: 00 Innings)
proce support program rose farmer pressure and raised the and
va , One year su oo should be signed himself "Smoky"?
:- Phlla
101 000 001 o- 3 10 1 Sabbath School attendance on
support rate from $4.66 per SDc w
BY
INNINGS:
sharply
last
year,
•nd
offtcoals
months
S7 25
Three
;: Houston 110 010 000 1- 4 11 0 A 1 25 t 1h F
M !hod
I'm sorta attracted to him. What should I say? - OON'T
•: Lersch, Fryman (7). Selma pn
a e ree e
lSI _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ conceded pnvately Wednesday hundred-we1ght to $4.93 a months $4 50 Subscnpllon
pnce Includes Sunday Times REALLY WANT TO
:· (81. Hoerner (9), Brandon (10) Church was 117. Offering was WAHAMA Sent mel
000 010 o • 1 they expect another JUIDP thos hundredwetght on Apr1l 1
OearDRWT:
•: and McCarver; Wilson. Lemast- $61.27, Last Sunday of the
000 101 0 • 2 year lollowmg a recent boost m
:• er (9), Culver (9), Ray (101 and month offering )8 added to the MEIGS
Say: "NO!" -Signed, FLUNKY" -H.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ milk support levels
•: Edwards WP...:.Ray (l . J) LP- b ldln f d
Dear Helan:
Ul g un .
;. Brandon (1.1)
Glac1ers occupy 10 per
Dally support costs jumped
I am almost 14. Sometimes I think things are gt'l!at and It's
•:
Amorlcan League
Rev Eguene Goll was in cent of the earth's land sur· from $227 million m the 1969-70
:; Chicago at New York, ppd rain Columbus
Saturday
on face, an area nearly as large dally marketmg year to $380
good to he alive. That's when I'm away from home. It's awful
when
I'm with my parents because they're always fighting. It
as
South
America
,
accord:: Mllwkee 010 002 'ooo- 3 9 3 business.
11oon m the 1970.71 year whtch
lng
to
Encyclopaedia
Bnlannu
:· Boston
310 105 oox-10 15 1 Mark Stahl, Portsmouth, nlca
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Da!non ~·t take much to start them off -the weather, !he way! tie
ended last March 31, offtcoals
By ADA SLACK
•: Parsons, Gelnar (5). Bear visited recenUy with Mr. and
my shoes. They don't just yell at each other. Everything I do ts
estimated
SYRACUSE - Refreshments Ferrell.
:• narth (6) and Rodriguez, M N
""h 1
Mr and Mfs. llewilt Soulsby wrong, too ... mainly so they can blame each other for !be way I
:: Siebert' Tatum (6) and Pavle
rs orman "" ae er
Most experts currently expect of tee cream and cake were
•I tlch WP- Siebert LP-Par
Paul Archer, Columbus, was Club recenlly
of
St. Albans, W. Va., recently was raised.
that costs for the 1971-72 season served when Mrs. Eloise
;, sons HRs-R Smith (2nd), called here by the Illness of his
Mrs Thomas Darst and whoch started Aprol 1 will nse Wollbarger entertamed with a vtstted his aunt, Glenna
To he honest, I cause my share o1 arguments. It's catching,
Siebert (2nd)
mother, Mrs. Georgia Diehl, ch1ldren of Milan spent a
another $70 milhon to $100 party honormg the 7th birthday Soul~by ·
see. But I can't take much more. I start getting tense when I'm
:•
who underwent surgery at weekend wolh her parents, Mr mtllton, a source satd
Easter
weeiend
guests
of
MJ:.
of her son, A J Guests were and Mrs. Orville Crooks were two blocks fr om horne, 'cause I know what's waiting.
:: Mlnn
000 000 300-J 10 2 Holzer Medtcal Center m and Mrs James Gilmore
The mcrease was expected Mrs MalcOlm Gwnther and
My girl friend and I are planning to run away, but New York•l Wash
100 000 03x- 4 6 1 Gallipolis
The Laurel Cliff Health Club because the N1xon ad· chtldren and Mrs. Jtmmy theor son and daughter-In-law
;1 Hall, Williams (8), PerronosMr
and
Mrs
John
crooks'
Ia
too
dangerous and California too far. I don't really want to go,
.. "' kl (81 and Ratlltt Mltterwald Mrs. Ronald Brownmg was w!ll meet with Mrs. Laurence mmtstrahon, after Jntlially Hemsley and children.
•' (71 , Cox. Knowles (7), Pine hostess to the Sew Rite Sewmg Ebhn on May 6
da~ghters Bu:bara and but If the screaming gets too much, where's the safest 'jilace for
•.
Mrs Gary Fo!ey vtstted
~
relattves m MilwauJt:ee, lW~1 , lialri.Cia of''Colilmbul!r· ' ., ', 't ~~~~r~ybus?t:r'~~~RATE BUT
''speiij!ing Easter with Mrs uear u
A:
""
recently
Ada Slack were her son and
There's NO 38-fe place for I :I-year-old runaways! Don't take
Mr and Mrs Larry Dilcher
and chtldren of Detrott were daughter-m-law, Mr. and Mrs. that route or you may mess up for good.
Perhaps ftgblll mlghtlessen if you'd stop contributing to them
Easter weekend guests of Mr. John Slack, Johnny, Donald and
;.
Linda,
of
Sandyville.
and
calmly suggest that your parents either see a counselor or put
and Mrs . Pearl Secoy and
Mr. Richard Wmebrenner has you in a !01ter home
Grace and Mr and Mrs. Denctl
(Thtrd m a Senes. )
undergone
surgery
in
Constant battlers sometimes get so accustomed to the notse
v1rus
that
causes
the
ACS
semmar
that
he
has
s1mplex
But m cancer research
Hudson and famtly
found
some
parhcles
m
hucold
sores
around
the
mouth
meager evidence is better
Hospital
In that they don't realize It can drive !heir children frantic. If lhts ts
By DAVID HENDIN
The Rev. Ralph Hudson of Unoverslty
man
breast
mtlk
whose
comthan no evidence at all And
Columbus.
the case, a quiet ul11m&amp;tum from you will be heard much louder
Type 2 herpes causes stmtPortsmouth spent Frtday mght
,•
NEA Science Editor
plex
structures
are
tdentical
m
at
least
three
types
of
hu·
lar sores on the gemtal or• CAREFREE, AriZ. Mr. Wtlliam buckworth and than screaming. - H.
tnan cancer--cancer of the gans Most women, however, to particles responstble for and Saturday wolh his molher,
(NEAJ-What amounts to a breast and cervix, and leu· contract "silent" mfechons tra nsm1ttmg breast cancer Myla Hudson, and brother, Mr. William Duckworth Jr. and Dear Helen:
My broth.- and I used to fight a lot- until one day Mom tape·• grand jury of emment scten- kemta-evldence 1s mountmg wtthout symptoms, but eas- m some strams of mtce
Denctl and famtly AC· daughter, Denise, of RiUIJlan
' • lists Is now In sessiOn In doz- against the tiny particles
were
weekend
guesla
of
Mr.
and
recorded
a typical brawl, and played It back to us next morrung
These so-called " B" parh- compamed by his mother they
tly detected by Pap tests
•. ens of private and uruversity
cles cannot scienhftcally be
Mrs. George Schneider 8lld Mr. when we were half-way peaceful.
Current theones state that
There Is now no known called vtruses at thts time vtstted Mr and Mrs. Donald
•. laboratories around the
Helen, It was the funniest lhlng we ever heard. Or shoUld I say
Invade living cells way of treating a gemtal
Goodmght of Hart(ord.
, and Mrs. Marvin Mc~elvey.
. world. The august group Is viruses
Dr Moore descrtbes them as
and
leave
behind
a
genetic
Mrs
.
Laura
Letflielt
has
silliest.
·' amassing all available evl· matertal, called the genome herpes mfechon, but cancer the "package" m whtch a Mrs Helen Wetzel of
I can't say we've stopped fighting completely, but half the
:: dence-h owe ve r slight 1! This matenal d i r e c t s the of the cervix os almost 100 true mfective vnus usually Columbus viSited here with her returned to her ~orne on Cherry
per cent curable when de- comes
,• may be-to support their
stster, Mrs Mayme Holmes and St after spending the winter time now wH.lll up laughing because we know bow rldiculOUB we
:' case-the case for viruses as cell's workings and geneh· tected early Nevertheless,
The particles are called Mr and Mrs. Robert Crow and wtth her daughters in Colwn- must IIOUlld. Maybe all families shoii!d tape-record !heir kids'
transforms the healthy the Amencan Cancer Soc1etr
causative agents In some or c~lly
bus.
battlee. - SIS
cell mto a tumor cell. Since (ACSJ eshmates that cervt- viriOns and Dr Moore has lamoly
all forms of human cancer
ondtrect
evodence
that
theor
Mr
and
Mrs
George
only
the
genome-and
not
·':: Viruses are tmy particles,
Dear Sla: ... And that includes the figlitmg elders too.
cal cancer will strike. 42,000
the vtrus ttself- r em a1 n s, American women thos year, behaviOr IS simtlar to VI- Schne1der, her mother, Mrs.
(DESPERATE BUT AFRAID: Take note!) - H
•; vlstble only under the elec· tracing It Is difficult
ruses, but the research falls Daosy Roush, and Mr. and Mrs.
killing
13,000
of
them
:; tron mtscroscope, that tread
short of provmg a VII' US transDifficult, but not 1m~os
Marvm McKelvey, spent a
'
:: the fme line between living slble
Dr
N
a
h
m
1 a s speculates mtts human breast cancer
Dr Andre Nahmias,
~-----------------------------------------weekend woth relatives m
·- creatures and complicated vtrologist, epodemiOiogJSt that the v;rus m1ght remain
"The extstence of a human
;: organic chemicals
dormant
for
years
Eventubreast cancer vtrus has been Rttlman.
and pedtatrlctan at Atlanta's
;: Smce the 1908 dtscovery Emory Umverslty, reports ally 11 could become acto- indicated ," but not proven Mrs Wanda Gumther and
, that a vorus could transmit a rapidly mounting evidence
to exist, m several expert- chtldren , Mrs
Malcolm
•
; form of leukemia m chtck· that cervical cancer 1s a vemental procedures, he saod Gutnther and children and 1
• ens, more than 100 VII'Uses nereal disease caused by a
Bdwy. Ol'lglglnal's producer -composer, Richard
He added that "the num- Barbara Hendnx, VISited with
: have 'been found to cause a common virus transmitted
BY JACK O'BRIAN
ber of parltcles m human Mrs George Staats of Chester
Rodgers ... First Bdwy. musical in 30 years WJ!h
: varoety of cancers In am· through sexual Intercourse
milk
IS
extremely
low
comR
D
as Iowa top Ucketas $5is the "Frank Merriwell"
:: mals, but no type of cancer The dtsease Is rare m v1rgms
ROCK SINGER IS BOUND
pared woth t h o s e m hogh Mr and Mrs Robert Harden
•: In man has yet b2en proved and most common m ptosh·
nostalgla-muatcal.
TO MAD A ltOL1.
breast-cancer s t r a on s of local, and Mr. and Mrs. Verno~
:: to he of v1ral ortgm
lutes and promIscuou s
Sid Garfield, who shares our fond memories
mtee where s e 1e c t 1 v e m- Donahue of East Letart FaDs
:: There are several human women
breedmg has resulted m a
.
NEW YORft - Now lhere's a rock Binger ol Frank Merriwell books (and of Frank's gal
i• cancers that are under sushogh tumor mctdence
were m Maroon where !hell' tagged "Doris Dub" .... Arl Onal8is is bavlng Jnza Burrage, !he dark brooding Bart Hodge, the
One In four women of low
•: plclon of bemg caused by vi- soclo-economtc
..
grandson, Ertc Harden, son of li
•-•~groups
who
ruses, and these are pow un·
Present
resulls
represent
Mr
and
Mrs
Robert
A
Harden
g
emergency
""""'with IU bankers .... Luigi latter's gal Elsie Bellwood etc.), asked if we
have
been
infected
by
the
der mtense mvestigation
only a begmnmg lo the effort
·
·
Barzlnl (hla "From the Caeaan to !he Mafia" is remembered Merrlwell's "Fardlle Academy"
vorus--called type 2 herpes
to establish the extstence of of Maroon underwent leg a belt-.lzzler) Ia the most urbane, mtelligent, baseball teams' lineup; we hadn't; Sid says It
"Twenty·fiVe years ago 1t or genital virus-go on to de·
a human mammary cancer surgery at Manon General
was as difficult to provtde velop a precancerous condivorus," he satd, adding opto Hospital
articulate, charming TV vlaltor here since early Included Bruce Browning on 1st, Harry Rattleton
vatedperhaps
wtth
the
aid
evtdence of vtruses m am· tion or cancer of the cervtx
Mr and Mrs. Melvin Grlllllll Alistair Cooke .... Truly IIGilhiatlcated gen. on 2nd, Jack Diamond on 3rd, Hans Dunnerworst
of chemtcals - and produce mtsltcally
mal cancers as 1t Is today Nahmtas reports
the ftrst cancer cells
"Eventual ~revenlton of have returned home after lleman,debooalr, taateful, able to talk about any at short, Ephrabn Gallup, Barney Malloy and
for human cancers," said
"
Gemtal
herpes
os
prob"???" outfielders, Bart Hodge as catcher, and
Columbia Umverstty's Dr ably the second most com .
The search for a viral on- the dtsease by ommumzahon, spending two weeks wtlh theirs thing with delicacy (such ., hla det!Crlptl0118 of
Sol S\)tegelman at a recent
gm of another cancer of or control by antovtral drugs, sons and famUtes m Columbus. Italian adultery and olh.- normally barred TV the pitcher, of course, was Merriwell with his
American C an c e i Soctety mon venereal dtsease (after women- breast cancer- has 1s no longer just a hope\1-for Mrs Myrtle Durst of topics),
unbeatable In-and-out curve .. But whos upgonorrhea) m the U n 1ted
semmar m Carefree, Am
Pomeroy spent a day recently
All Out ol Step but Jawn: Some 2,000 ported Frank at Yale? Did he go up to the major
States, England and Sweden also turned up some prom- possiblltty "
The evidence lor viruses m where It has been recently ISing clues
{NEWSPAPiR ENTERPRISE ASSN I With Mrs DatsyRoushandMrs, lleWIJIIper publlahei1ilhowed U~~ in black-!Je )eagues• The Yankees? Or was the "Ba:seball
human cancer is "extremely studted," he said
Dr Dan Moore, of the In·
George Schnetder.
evenq dre11 for their 11101111 convention )Iinne;
Joe"?
me.ager," Dr Spiegelman
The type 2 herpes vtrus os st1tute lor Medocal Research, (NEXT Treating Cancer
Mr
and
Mrs.
Bruce
Teaford
bull
but
Mayll'
Undlay
made
It
10
work
Edward Albee's "All Over" will live its
saod
a close relative of the herpes Can:den, N J , reported at
W1th Chemu:als J
have m9ved from Middleport dotbes .... Tile 11ft Uberty Mag revival has an Iitle's death phrase, May 1 .... Multi-billionaire
' mto !he Custer trailer 'on Third edge other publlcaU0111 Cllily dream about: The Jean Paul Getty sold only the opera tim of his N.
Sl
)liggeetaak~:G.B.~w,freud,FDR,
Y. Hotel Pierre - but kept !he ground It's on,
Marketta Burge of Millwood, RoberUienchley (he'll be In mry lallue) smart man .... D. K. Ludwig, probably richer
'
'
W. Va., wa~ ' a Sunday night Jlimply
UIMrty Included 1111 future rigbti than Getty, toot the latter's Acapulco 11r1nkery,
wolh her cousin Darlene Dun· to lllll!lllon' JII'Ojlii llellli tile original Alee, Pierre Marques, off Jean Paul's dlatant banda·
SOUTH
can She was accompanied
J111e Fonda IIJd Jolla Wayne !lever agreed Ludwig's "Acapulco Princess," opening in
home by her aunts Mrs. 011 anytldnc, but tile l'layllo)' Wayne interview October, will he the moat lavish resort hotel In
AFRICA
U.S.S.R.
Malcolm
Gu!Dther and Mrs. &lt;!n which be defelllhd attlcb Clll frontier In- lhe hlatory of ~UNITED STATES GREAT
(Blacks In ( Kazakh·
'
Frank Hendrox.
dlana)buJule -~~~ llllllpDute .... How to
When jazz pl$llst Patti Wlcka at the
(Whites)
FRANCE HUNGARY Tranakel)
BRITAifl
stan)
JAPAN
I
Mr and Mrs. Eugene Slack, IIICCIIdlnllllowbii:Pullface&amp;othla ..l'beMe Apartment cl01e1 her eyes whlle playing, we
Suzanne and Philip, spent Nobody ltnRI" lin( ll' bHa be'
barn can't ever teD If !he's beinR IOIIIful Ill' sleeping
xxxx
XX
xxxx
XX
xxxx
xxxx
' XX
Easter weekend with her llldltr tbe IIDII
(Artie)
IIJDe
XXX
, XXX
The lifted kid worb daylimel in an ofllce, tolla
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Plllllp .....,111 L-L
ScaffIde of Freeport,
....,. (r.n. W..C) U Ill IDilllcal director, Bob betimes on her qane!cal doctorata thelia (!he bas
xxxxx
XXX
XX
xxxxxx
x~xxx
XXX
xxxx .
I· .XXXXXX
her Dlllter'a.alrady) anCI jUIIID8y be napping
.
Mr. Carl DuckWorth, Mr .IIICI Uyi..MIIia,
Mrs. James Gillnsler 111..8~._
Larll ~-Oiitltr wl,ll alfl'lte tile Bible iniiiOOQ'delpaaUon .... DlalocuelnCinerama's
xxxxxx . xxxx
xxxxxx . xxxxxxx . XX XXX
XXX~
XX .
Kitty, o1 Plcierln8ion,-.;;. IIi' 'l.'V tsrerd ~. Ylli Glll't CGPJrilbla Ulle, ''Dir!IJ" dOCUIDIIIItary Ia IY.. earthier (that
Barbara Dalrs and dauaJtter, bat Alii R
'Ill fl ~ to lbe ''J'olliel" IIIIIM dirtier) lban you'd bell' while watdlq
I . XXXXXXX
XXXXX
XX
XXX
xxxxx
~XXXIX
xxxxxxx Demse
Michelle, o1 Lanc:ut.r -•••ttllllltladlrti'I'IDPIDAIIeJ'poolto the Roller Dlrby It deplcbt from 1 front pew;
'
spent Euler wilb Mrs. ApN 4 t.Uce.. lbeiiiii..,_IIIIIIIIOOII -GfblriiNIIold llllke that pbew! .... Tile aaraantua n 1111rilla
.
xxxx
X
X
x? I . X'
I
X
W'llte and brother, Rtc:bliod ljt, ''Rille lit Boor .... Pt 11 11 lllll'rlllce lilllrlat with the Rl ..'iql llrol. On:lll II loll
'Duckworlb.
liMb IliFf
,lti'aaftltiiDIID 111ft tile ilriW O.lhe Bill Tep'l all!t'af tltit Dlllll:
XXX
XX
xxxx
x?'
XX

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Tony "It's sure been a long time
Perez ftgures h1s luck is hegm- since I had that many m one
mng to change for !he better. game."
''There was the news last
Perez Was Fooled
mght from Preston Gomez," The gam.,.wmnlng hit off
Perez sa1d " You know, about Dick Kelley was a pop fly sm·
maybe gomg back to Cuba."
gle to nght lteld. It was anGomez, manager of the San · other reason why Perez ftgures
Diego Padres, doscitssed his his luck 1s changmg
plan to take a group of major
"Kelley fooled me on the
leaguers to Cuba next wmter pllch," admttted Tony "I was
for a senes of exhibition games looking for a fast ball He
11 the State Depariment allows. threw me a slider .. "
The count was two balls and
Thell talk took place Tuesday
mght as Perez, a Cuba native, one stnke on Perez when he
sat on the bench With a swollen delovered !he game-wmnong
nght hand. Then Wednesday blow
mght he returned to the lineup
"That's why 1 was looking
and hot a bases-loaded smgle lor a fast ball, " he explamed,
wtlh two out m the mnlh nnmg "I knew he dodn't want to
that gave the CmcmnatJ Reds walk me and 1 didn't thonk he
a 6-5 won over the Iladres.
would take a chance wtth a
Perez' btl was one of three breaking ptlch "
for the slump-!'ldden Red who
Sometimes tt can be costly of
entered the game w11h a .179 a guy !honks too much when
batbng average
he's at the plate So says Tom"Three hits," mused Tony

~

''
;..

,,

By Unoted Pron International
Natoonal Leaoue
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Montrea l
8 5 615
New York
10 7 • .588
Pittsburgh
11
9 550 •;,
St LOUIS
12 10 545 'h
Chicago
8 11 421 3
Pholadelphoa 6 12 333 4'12
West
W. L. Pet. GB
San Francisco 16 5 762
Los Angeles 12 10 545 41;,

'·

Houston

.4

Linesrores

I.s•

us

,----------------------------1

HeIen HeIp

,·

"'

..

Sentinel

Laurel &lt;lifT

Dairy Support Costs to Go Up

"
•· ~
. ..

••

.. .

..
,.
:.••

I

•

News Notes

.

...
c

AVWP , . •,

rEvidence on

Viruses Mounts

! VoiCe along Broadway

,,

.

THE GEOGRAPHY OF CANCER

.
Esophagus

Breast
Lung
Stontach

:.a

::In ::

1...

.

· c~ XIlX
ti!OM lnold••• e1

.

"

'

!

.•

· -·

' J ,../ ,...

'
"'
• ~.
•• I
"'1'•
·' '
' ' '
··• '
"'

,• .
, ,,;,;

t ..

...,.,

.•

'
,. ·

XXII

•nw

MtNalllli(ll)to VW'Y higll (IIIXXXXX) ~~ow&lt;o:

lrithlo - . • - •

c-otl

MlaS Terri Ferrell atteof111 IIIII &lt;' 'Ill • • IIIL
. .
Ohio State UnlvenltJ Jp111t tbe
'1'111 W'tl t.ii "'l'wt llf TWo" Mil'.._
Euter weekend willa her a.e.r•wllllltfll 1•11' 1 1 UfiiM

"; ,,

. ,.
·' •
• ·•, ,

'Dill bli IPt'l a. llrl•t mourWn aar1111 In '" .,'
blptl'liiJ (W.II'Ilbe. .! AIIJwbwelle -~~ " 'h I
IDl l .... 1111 blllm~ wal.

my Helms, whose smgle to cen·
ter, hts lhtrd htt of the mght,
touched off the Reds' wmmng
rally
Ftve games ago, Helms, alter
enJoyong the best spnng of hts
career, was struggling along
wtlh a 159 battmg mark
"I was lhmkong too much up
thereattheplate," saod llelms
"I was putting too much pres·
sure on myself "
In the last lour games, he
has rapped out mne ho ts on 14
at-bats to boost his average to
267
"I thmk Tommy believes on
Tommy Helms now," satd Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson
Just Made Sure
" I know I'm not a 237 httter ," said Helms, gnmacmg at
the memory of hos last year
batting average
Smtlmg, he added, "At least
that's why I came to sprtng

Stargell wtth two out imd a
runner on second wtth the score
of the Pittsburgh-Los Angeles
game toed at 5-5 Clemente ts
hitting .274 w1lh four RBis
whole Stargellts hitting 373 and
ts the maJor league leader m
homers and RB!s woth 11 and

trawtng ea rly I wanted to
m'ake sure l wasn't "
The hots of Helms and Perez
were sox of 11 the Reds collect·
ed of! Padre polchong
Johnny Bench knocked a tworun homer, hts seventh or the
season Lee May's fllst homer
of the season on the etghlh onnong gave Jtm McGlothlon a 5-3
lead
However, woth two on and
two out on the lop of the mnth ,
McGlothhn was replaced by
Clay Carroll, who was greeted
by a two-run double by AI
Ferrara that lled the score and
set the stage lor Perez' heroocs
on the mnth
The loss was the Padres' 11th
on thell last 13 games They
wtnd up thetr three-game ,;ones
fhere today wtth a 12 30 p m
bustnessman 's spec oal The
Reds host the San Francosco
Goanls Frtday through Sunday

By Untted Press International

I Best of 7-Dovosoon Finals)

East

26
Alston dectded to have the
left-handed O'Bnen tntentional·
ly walk the nght-handed
Clemente to pttch to the lefthanded Stargell Wlule promptly blasted a 400.loot shot off
the centerlteld fence to dnve m

·Bucks Sting Bullets, 107-99

0uU

' WINNE\~ · ~;b*.~ JUs~.turn~ ~Oa;ound lo ;,;t,J ·~ 3

The Southern High Tornados
broke up a close baseball game
by scormg nme runs In the third
mmng and gomg on to hwmliate
Starr-Washmgton 28-6 Wednesday at
the Logan
laorgrounds . Southern got
plenty of help from !he opposition as Slarr-Washmgton
polchers gave up 14 walks and
1ts loelders booted seven
chances The 18 hits collected
by Tornados helped make the
basepaths resemble a relay
race. The !mal whtstle was
blown after s1x turns, by mutual
agreement
Wtth the score tied one to one
gomg mto the top of the third,
the Tornados came alive Pat
Arnold, Bret Hart and Jun
Hubbard walked to open the
onmng, Bruce Hart doubled to
brmg all three home, Mike

FIRST IN LINE
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI)
- Larry Blscaglla, 73, became
ltrsl m line Wednesday for the
Indtanapolts 500 auto race for
the 23rd straight year. Bisca·
gila drove his camper truck up
to the entrance of the Speedway
gates and began hla wall until
the race begins May 21.

Monroe satd for the Bullets to
won they had to have a "supershooting" mght from the
oulsode
"Wtth Alcondor on there,
nobody os gomg to get the easy
shot under the basket agamst
thts team;'' he sa1d "We're
JUst goong to have to hoi from
the outstde "
Both teams now travel to
Baltomore for a Froday mght
game tn the CIVIC Center If the
Bucks wm, they wtll be the
champoons of the NBA The
Bullets, on the other hand,
would have to wm four on a row
to take the tttle

Sz..lent

Nease and Rod Holman were
passed to load the bases, and
Bruce Hart scored on a wild
ptlch
Gary Hart brought m another
woth a sacriftce, Barry Hart
walked, and Arnold, up for the
second time on the mnmg,
smgled m the sixth run of the
frame An SW error let tn the
seventh and Jllll Hubbard's
long smgle brought m the eighth
and nonth
In the next three iijnmgs
Southern added 18 more
Gary Hart went all the way,
govmg up sev~n h1ts, four walks
and strikmg out II to get the
voctory. Randy Sinnott was the
loser, as he and reliever Rod
Harden tssued 14 free passes
and fanned two.
Southern
109 558-28 18 2
Starr-Wash
103 002- 6 7 7

Gary Hart and Barry Hart.
Smnott (LP), Harden (4) aijd
Hardman .
SOUTHERN
AB R H
Brei Hart
4 4 2
Jim Hubbard
55 22 32
Bruce Hart
Steve Jenkins
5 2 1
Mike Nease
4 4 2
Holman
3 3 1
Stan Kiser
2 1 2
Gary Hart
3 2 2
Barry Hart
4 3 2
Pat Arnold
2 4 1
Alan Pugh
0 1 0
TOTALS
35 21 18
STARR·WA5HINGTON
McDaniel
~B: ~
Sinnott
3 2 2
Harden
3 1 1

~ftrn

~ ~ ~

Hardman
Bumgardner
Beck

3 1 1
2 o o
1 o o

~~~~~

~ ~ ~

TOTA~S

24 6 7

and m came another run and
Bob caldwell grounded out to
add another run .
Rick Sanders then boomed a
long stngle that put the Eagles
ahead to stay at 10 to 9. Duvall
and Eichmger, up the second
lime, put on the frosting as they
doubled and singled to add the
~st two runs.
Eichinger started on the
mound for the Eagles and went

f1ve tnnings before being
relteved by Duvall, who polched
two strong mmngs to get the
wm
For Kyger, Curry started and
was relieved by Ball'd 4t the
fifth, Baird finished up and
was credited with the loss
Etchlnger, Duvall (6) (WP)
and Young Curry, Baor (LP)
(5) and Bias.

Major League Leaders
By United Preis International
Leadong Batters
Natoonal Ltatuo
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Garr. All
19 80 15 34 .•25
TQfre, St L 22 88 13 34 .386
Staub. Mont 13 50 11 , 19 .~
Strgeii,Pitt 18 67 16 25 .373
Cash. Pitt
16 66 12 24 364
Hrnndz, SD 10 36 2 13 361
Bonds. SF
17 70 20 25 .357
Millan, All 19 76 4 27 355
D•vls, LA 21 83 13 29 3•9
Mays. SF
18 63 12 22 349
Mota, LA
15 43 5 15 3ol9
Amtncan Ltague
'
G. AB R. H. Pd.
McCrw, Wh 14 35 12 14 400
Oliva, Mlnn lB •73 15 29 397
Murcer, NV 17 66 11 25 379

Bird, Ball
14 55 17 20 364
Yslzsk, Bos 18 65 19 23 354
Jhnson. Ball 17 68 11 24 353
Schaal, KC 21 68 12 .~3 338
Wash
17 42 s 14 333
McKny, ChllS 36 1 12 333
Frhn, Del
18 64 8 21 • 328
Home Jluns
National Logue: Stargell,
Pill 11, Aaron, All 8, Bench,
Cln 7, Cepeda, All, Colbert, SD
and Bonds, SF 6
American LNIIUt: Oliva,
Mlnn 7' While, NY and Bando,
Orik 5, seven tied with 4.
Jluns Balled In
Natoonal League · Stargell,
Pill 26 , Aaron, A,ll and Mays,
SF 18, Torre. St L 17; Ollberl,
SD 16
.
~-\·----

L.

West

L.

lndtana

o
3

3 Milwaukee at Balttmore
4

4
3

x Utah

X-Chnched senes

HAWKS' GUARD DRAFrED
ATLANTA (UP!) - Herb
Whtte, a reserve guard for the
Atlanta Hawks of the Natoonal
Basketball Assoctatoon, has
been drafted onto the Army, the
club learned Wednesday

Wednesday's Result
Utah 100 lnd•ana 101
Saturday's Game

Kentucky at Ulah

lnterna hona ILeague Sta ndmg s
Bv Un1ted Press lnternc honal
W L Pet GB
Syra cuse

8 2

800 -

Rtchmond
Charleston

6

3
6 5
5 5

667 l ln
545 21f2
500 3

LOUISVIlle
Toledo

5 5
5 6
3 5

Wtnntpeg
Rochest er
T tdewater

2 9

500 3

455 3lf?
375
182

4
6112

Wednesday 's Results
Syra cuse 6 Rtchmond 3
T•dewi'ter al Rochester (ppd
ratn)

For Elegance tn Ptpe
Smoktng Pleasure, Select a

Pope
,

In

Needs

No

Tawney Jewelers
422 Second Ave

cold wea ther)

the dectdong run and lead
Ptltsburgh to a 7-5 troumph
In the other Natoonal League
games, New Yoo k routed St
Louts 9-1, Ctneonnato edged San
Otego li-5, San Franetsco beat
Atlanta 5-3, Hous ton outlasted
Phtladelphoa 4-3 on lO onmngs
and Chocago beat Montreal 3-2
In the Amerocan League ,
Boston oouted Molwaukee 10-3,
Washongton edged Mmnesota 43, Delroot mpped Kansas Ctty 21 tn 10 mnongs, Cleveland beat
Cahforma 3·2 and Oakland
topped Ballomoo e 5-4 The
Chocago at New York game
was ratned out
Ed Kranepool, who seemed a
conch to be traded after he
blasted Manageo Gol Hodges
lhts sprong, con ltnued hts
hollmg spo·ee as he drove m
three runs wtth two songles and
a double as the Mels be"t the
Cards Kranepool, sent to the
mtnors lor p"rt of last season,
now has seven hots 111 Ius last
two stlll'ts
Cesar Gerommo, an eoghthmmng defenstve replacement,
htl a run-scormg tnple on the
lOth to hand Houston tis vtctory
over Phtladelphoa The Phols
had tied the game tn the mnth
on doubles by Roger Freed and
Ron Stone
Rookte George Foster collected lour htts "nd drove m three
runs to lead San Franctsco past
Atlanta Another rookoe, Steve
Stone, polched sox mmngs to
gaon the vtctory

th ai

Breakmg In

Ga llipolis, Ohoo

There's a gold rush on for the pure grain beer
they call Hudepohl Gold. It gives you the
most rewarding taste on beer today

ABA Fm'als

Eagles Defeat'Kyger 12·10
Larry Heines' Eastern Eagles
came from way behind Tuesday
afternoon to hand Kyger Creek
a 12-10 loss at Kyger. Down nme
to lour, the Eagles paraded 13
men to the plate to score eight
last Inning runs and bring home
the win.
Alan Duvall led off the big
seventh for the Eagles by
reachmg base on' an error.
Denms E1chmger was safe on a
ltelder's chotce, Randy Young
drove m one run with a smgle,
Btll Osborne added another on
hts songle, and Walker was
walked to load the bases Alan
Holter was btl by the pitcber

w.

Molwaukee
3
4 2 Baltomore
0
2 4
Wednesday's Result
Milwaukee 107 Baltomore 99
w. L
Sunday's Game

x Ken1ucky
Virgmte

reasons for 1umpmg the Wash·
ong ton Sena1ors
Flood spent Wednesday mght
m a Madnd hotel after fiymg
here from Ltsbon but he
refused to elaborate on hos
The cerebellum , a part of
decos10n Tuesday to quit
the
bram , regulates posture,
baseball for a second tlllle.
balance and movement
Reg1stermg at the hotel, the
outfoelder told the hotel oflocoals
that he was bookong lor one
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind (UP!) mght but he mtght prolong hos
-Coach Btll Sharman told hos vtsot unttl Thursday
Utah Stars at hall lime to be When Flood was phoned by a
patient even though they were UP! newsman, he would only
tratling
say, "I'm sorry but I cannot
The Stars didn't have to test make any comment to newsthetr paiJence long as they men " He also refused to
came out and scored 41 pomts answer hts door
th the thtrd period en route to a Flood shocked the Senators
108-101 vtctory over lndtana m Tuesday when he sent them a .
the seventh and dectdmg game telegram from Kennedy Airport
lor the ABA Western Dtvtston m New York announcmg that
playoff IItle
he was leavmg the team. He
Utah advances to the !mal took a fitght headed for
round agaonst Kentucky, whtch Barcelona but he got off at the
tentabvely opens Saturday at ftrst stop at Lisbon before
Salt Lake Ctty.
fiymg here
"We were dow~ by seven at Flood spent most of hts
the half and I told them to summer m Copenhagen after he
work for good shots and be quit baseball at the end of the
patoent," Sharman saod "They 1969 season and !tied a suot on
dtdn't lose thetr potse "
Federal Court to overturn the
"When you have two teams reserve clause Flood took thos
as evenly malched as Indllllla action after he was traded by
and Utah, tt's the team wtth the St. Louos Cardonals to the
the hot hand that's gomg to Philadelphia Phtls
wm," Sharman saod "We shot
71 per cent m the third penod
and I feel that deflnttely out
shooting m the thtrd penod was
the decodmg factor "
Whtle champagne flowed tn
IN COOL COMFORT
the stars' dressmg room alter t
the game, the Pacer locker
~oom was gloomy and coach
Bob Leonard declmed to
NEW
IMPROVED
VANYL I TE - an
out
talk to newsmen.
stand •ng latex pa• nl The Pacers were led by Btlly
made w1th a new Acrylic
Vinyl Latex
Po l yme r
Keller's 33 pomts Utah's Red
ADAPlV.BLE - lor all
Robms fmtshed wtth 25 pomts,
types ot mtenor walls and
cell1ngsECONOM I CA L
followed by Zelmo Beaty wtth
Sum mer Leagues
- one coat covers most
17 and Glen Combs wtth 15.
surfaces, use tap water for

u&amp; _

w

Louo sv•lleal Toledo (ppd, ra on l
Charleston at Wonmpeg (ppd ,

T

MILWAUKEE, W1s (UP!)- needless to say-not as cheer·
The Baltimore Bullets and the ful
Milwaukee Bucks came up wtlh Earl Monroe, who InJured hos
different reasons for the grom muscle m the game, was
Bullets' 107·99 loss to the Bucks perplexed by the Bullets' bad
Wednesday mght
performance.
Last year, the Galhans
For the Bucks, who now lead 'Not Emotionally Involved'
defeated runnerup Ironton 22 the best-of-seven National Bas- "I JUSt wasn't ass&lt;&gt;&lt;aated wolh
strokes (304-326) for the league ketball Assocoa!ton champiOn- the game," Monroe satd "I
champiOnship Athens was thtrd smp serteS 3-0, almost every- mean my attitude I can't get
(328), Logan fourth (329), body talked about Oscar up lor these games I don't
Jackson ltfth (333), Metgs stxlh Robertson
know why , I'm JUSt not
(342), Wellston seventh (361)
In the lhtrd penod the Bullets emotoonally mvolved The se·
and Nelsonvolle-York last( 404) . cut a 16-point Bucks' lead to nes wtlh the Knocks dramed us
Friday's meet will begiD at JUst two pomts-wtth Robertson physically and emottonally
9 a. m. Par on !be Ironton on the bench He came back m That would have been the
course Is 35. It will be an 18- and got a three-potnt play and champoonshtp, but here we
hole affair.
got the Bucks back on the are "
Here's previOus wmners of wmrung track
the SEOAL golf tournament :
Praise From Teammales
YEAR
' •
I·
..
1960
Athens for us," Lew Alctfidor , saod. 'i' :f!~· tl
1961
Athens "Bobby Dandridge and I were · ·
·
1962
Gallipolis at mtdcourt when he got that
MADRID (UPI)-Curt Fl 0od
1963
Logan
three.nomter
and
I
satd
to
hllll
iilll
Y
ts refusong to say anythmg
1964
GG llipollslis that 'When. we need tl, Oscar more m Spam than he dod on
1965
a po
does ot "'
the Uno ted States about hts
Galli
lis
1966
po
Dandndge satd, "W11h Oscar
1967
Gallipolis on there things run smooth and
11966
Gallipolis thongs open up."
Lall
1969
Gallipol~
Over m the Baltimore dress1970
Gallipolis lng room, the mood was-

NBA Playoll Standongs
By Unoted Press lnternatiOflal
I Fonals- Besl of 7)

IIBA Playoff Standongs

Giants Continue Winning Ways

Starr·Wash Clobbered

"

beef•••

.

500 Slh

Host Ironton ts a slight
lavonte to capture the 12th
annual Southeastern Ohto
League golf tournament
Fnday.
The Tigers, second m last
year's meet at Gallipolts, along
with delendmg champton
Galhpohs, Athens, Logan and
Metgs all have the potential to
come up wtlh all the marbles
lhos spnng All ftve squads have
scored some lmpresstve
troumphs dunng the 1971
campatgn. Jackson could be a
darkhorse, along WJih Waverly.
Wellston has taken several
beatmgs from SEOAL clubs
durmg regular season play
GAHS will defend Its
championship for lbe eighth
straight year. The Blue
Oevtls have captured lbe
SEOAL meet seven years In a
row, and eight Urnes 111 lbe
past nine years.

;!

.

11

Ironton Favored

.,,•

Syracuse News, Society

.

11

Atlanta
9 10 474 6
Cincinnati
7 11 389 7'12
San Diego
5 14 263 10
Wednesday's Results
Chicago 3 Monlreal2
Pittsburgh 7 Los Ang 5, night
San Fran S Atlanta 3, night
Clnclnnall 6 San Diego 5, night
Hslon 4 Phlla J, (10 Inn nlghll
New York 9 St Louis 1, night
Today's Probable Pitchers
Montreal (Renko 3 0) at
Chicago (Holtzman 0-3)
New York (Ryan 1 0) at Sl
Louis I Reuss 2·21. night
San Dl.ego (Phoebus 2 2) at
Clnclnnali (Sompson 0-0), night
Los Angeles {Singer 2 4) at
Pittsburgh (Walker 1 21. night
San Francisco (Bryant 2 0) of
Atlanta (Jarvis 0 21. night
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
san Diego at Pittsburgh, night
Philadelphia at Chicago
Montreal at Sf Louis, night
Los Angeles at Atlanta, night
San Fran at Cincinnati, night
New York at H_o~ston, night

American League .
East
W. L. Pet. GB
11 7 611
Baltimore
11 7 611
Boston
Washington 12 8 600
9 10 474 2'12
Detroit
7 10 412 3'12
New York
) 12 333 5'12
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pet GB
Oakland
16 7 696
California
11 10 524 4
Kansas City 10 11 476 5
Minnesota
9 11 450 5'h
Molwaukee
8 10 445 51h
Chicago
4 13 316 s
Wednesday's Results
Bosfon 10 Milwaukee 3
Chocago at New York, ppd rain
Washington 4 Mlnn 3, night
Dirt 2 Kan Cty 1. 10 Inn night
Oakland 5 Baltimore 4 night
Cleveland 3 Calif 2, night
Today's Probable Potchers
Baltimore (Palmer 3 01 at
Oakland (Fingers 1-2)
Cleveland (Foster 1 1) at
California (Murphy 1 21. night
Chicago (Bradley 2 O) at
Washington &lt;Bosman 2- 1),
night
Minnesota (Kaat 2 0) at
Boston (Nagy 10), night
By VITO STEIJ..INO
(Only games scheduled)
UP! Sports Writer
Froday's Games
Wtlhe Stargell foiled Walt
Cleveland at Oakland, night
Detroit at California, night
Alston's strategy Wednesday
Baltimore at Kansas City, night mght-and then endorsed it.
Chicago at Washington, night
Alston had to dectde whether
Milwaukee at New York, night
Minnesota at Boston, night
he wanted reliever Bob O'Broen
to p1tch to Roberto Clemente or

-

.Playoff Standings

OHIO

7" Pan -&amp; Roller Set
)'/HEN YOU PURCHASE

2 Gal. or More of Our•••

r---------.
BOWL

VAN YL-I T.E LATE X' INT ERI0R
PAI.NT
GALLON

85

AT

MASON BOWLING
CENTER

CARDS PERSONNEL SWAP
ST LOUIS (UP!)-Pilcher
Fred Norman has been optwned
by the St Louos Cardmals to
their Tulsa farm team and
ptlcher Don Shaw has been
recalled from the same club,
general manager Bmg Devme
announced \Vednesday.
Amerocan Le~gue: Killebrew,
Mlnn 20 , Yastrzemskl , Bos 19,
Northrup, Del 18 Johnson. Ball
and Bando. Oak 17
Potchong
Natoonal League: Upshaw,
All S I, Seaver, NV 4 0,
Carlton, St L-t 1, none toed with
3

Begin 2nd Week

th1nn1ng EASY TO
APPLY - by brush, roll er,

or

in May and
Bowl 12 Weeks. .

....;.._

DRIES
-

10

m inut es leav1ng
pl easant odor EAS ILY -

wash

t h 1rty

no un
CLEA N
equiP.

SHOP OUR COMPLETE
PAINT DEPARTMENT

ment 1n warm, soapy wa ter

SUPERIOR
WA SHABiLIT.Y- dirt and

Mon. Note-Ladies
Tues .
AfternoonLadies
Tues. Note- Men's
Wed. Ntte-Moxed
Thurs. N1te 3 Man Scratch
(Jack Pot League)

f 1nger pr•nts wash off
easily because th e new
vany l 1te has unsurpassed
'\Yater res istance

\

1'EVERYTHING

For Information Call

I

OFFER GOOD ~PR. 29 • MAY 15

Ebersbach -Hardware

Alnerocan League' Blue, Oak
51. McNall.,., Bolt and Soebert,
773-5791
8os '4 O; Lollch, Del 4 2. nine .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
lied with 3.
•

__ ..

sp r ay

RAP I DLY

'

110 W. MAIN

IN HARDWARE"

�'

..

2- The Daily senUnel, Middleport.Pcmeroy, 0., April29, 19'11

Meigs Wins 2-1

WIN AT BRIDGE

Cat Nipped While

.
~
Patriots
Will
March
May
8
Grmnmg
,
.

.

3- Tile Dell)' Sentlllel, Mt4dlepnri-t -oy, 0 ., Al!ril21; lf11

Perez Big Hero In Reds Triumph

••
.,.,
••

~

Duchess on her nglol was COLUMBUS - Patriots Patrtots' March could he the orgamzahons, patroot clubs,
NORTH
dedicated to victory in Vietnam last chance for Patrtots to take hard hats , churches, and
almost asleep
.AK 3
" If the club lmesse 1s on wtD march In Waahlngton, D. C. a stand for VICtory and to let the refugee groups w1ll be
; The Wahama 1\'hite ra"ioon;"'suigles, struck out twoand walkWahama plated the•rlonetali.Y
• AK52
or spades break 3·3 I have 011 Saturday, May a at iioon. world know that the forces "for streanung into Washington on
, suffered their fourth season loss ed (our.
in the llt'th when Randy Clark
• 96
13 tr1cks, but that cat looks They will come from all , iiO America" are greater than the May 8 carrymg banners, flags,
olo6 54 2
of the season at the hands of Meigs scored their llrst run led oCf with one of the Falcons
too happy He must h o I d
forces "fill' surrender" which and Bibles Floats, bands, baby
EAST
the Meigs Marauders Wednes- in the fourth &amp;arne when a Mau· two sl..:les. With one out, Wili WEST
lour spades and the king of states, assemble on !he Mall,
demonstratmg
m cart'lages, and trumPets will he
• 97
clubs If be has f1ve hearts west of 4th St., at 11 a.m. and are
dllJ' att..rnoon. The Falcons were rader walked, stole second, ad• walked the next three batters .Jl08 2
.Q
76
also I may spoil hts fun "
proceed to match to the Washington at the present time. mcluded m the Patrwts' March •
downed by a 2-1 margin makllli vanced to third on an error, forcill8 In Clark with the run. .Jl0 983
•
54
2
• 73
At tnck two she carefully Washington Monument where He says that for the stlent "Each Ohto commumty has
all four of their losses by 1 run and scored on a two-out Falcon An unsuccessful squeeze at· . K8
oloJ l0973
tuffed a low heart Then she ceremonles,wllltakeplacefrom majority to remain silent today been asked to arrange 1ts own
margins.
miscue In the inlleld.
tem,pt and a poJH41 ended the
SOUTH (D)
started to run trumps. The 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
m the face of hwmliation and transportallon to the March and
Jeb Will pitched for visiU!ll The winnlfll run wao scored Falcon threat. Mike Whlte got
• Q654
tw
cat followed to the ftrst o This will he the third march 1n defeat 1s sin and that 1t is never to gather under the Ohoo ban·
" lg
h
only tw in the sixth when the Maura the other Falcon hlt w•th a
..e • •• e gave '\'
0
•
nnl
• th
lxth
and
had no problem discard- Washington to he 1ed by the too late for vtctory, "so long as ner. The emphasis woll be
+ AKQJI08
ders lined three singles in the Sl•.,.e m e 8 •
.
tng
the
eoght of clubs and a
inning.
Wahama, now 9-4, is schedulr • AQ
heart on the next two leads Rev Dr . Carl Mcintire, there ts an almighty God m placed on going m after the
Both vulnerable
Tim Howardhadledthemound ed to host Williamstown today
The grm dtsappeared en· Pres1dent of the International whom we can put our trust " prisoners of war fll'st and the
and host Poult Pleasant Fnday West North East South
Patriots, Chrtstlans, Vtetnam batl.l'e cry wtll be, Vtclory by the
llrely when Alice played her Council Jf Christian Churches
chores lor the Falcons as he
I+
last trump The cat fumed, and Director of the 20th Century veterans, wives, and children, 4th of July," satd Sylvta Reed,
• By Unoted Press lntertoatoonal struck out seven, walked three afternoon.
Pass
1•
Pass
[umbled and lmally dropped ReformaUon Hour Broadcalit. prisoner of war wives, mothers, Chairman, Ohio March for
National League
and gave .., only five hits. HowPass
2 N T Pass 4+
Montreal 101 000 ooo- 2 5 1
BOX SCORE:
his kmg of clubs He knew Mcintire has called for these and
children,
veterans Vtctory Committee
Pass
4 N T Pass
: Chicago 020 000 001- 3 8 2 ard gave 141 only one earned
a
heart
or
spade
doscard
.
Pass
5 NT
Pass 7+
: Morton (2.3) and Bateman. run in the outing.
would gtve Allee her 13th marcbes to gtve Amencans the
WAHAMA I
Pass
Pass
Pass
• Hands (2 31 and Rudolph HRtnck
opportunity to stand for Victory
: Hickman (1st)
Openmg
lead¥
J
AB R H RBJ L__ _ _ _ _ _ __.
Allee showed her h a n d In V1etnam as the only I
1
•; Los Ang 000 104 ooo- 5 11 2 (7) , Rlddleberger (7) , Grzenda PLAYER
The cat paused long enough honorable and the quickest way 11
1
(8) and Casanova WPto say, " She's too good for to end the war and win the 1
I
• Plttsrgh 000 230 20x- 7 11 0 Grzenda
3
o
o
o
By
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
(2-0) LP- Perranoskl B. Clark
; Sulton, O'Brien 15) and Sims.
'
I
(0-2)
.
3 0 1 0 Those of yo u who remem us and then followed hiS grm peace
•. Blass, Giusti (8) and Sangull
Wh1te
Dr. Mcintire says that the
I
2 o o o ber Allee m Wonderland wtll mto obliviOn
: ian. WP-Biass {3 0) LP- I 10 onnongsl
Ch. Roush
{NEws"m
ENm•m•
•ssN
1
By
Helen
Bottel
1
: O'Brien 10-11 HRs-Sims {1st) , Detroit 000 000 010 1- 2 8 0
3 o o o recall the grmnmg Cheshtre
Howatd
• Crawford (lsi).
3 1 1 0 cat In the story we fmd the
Kan Cty 000 000 010 ()-- 1 10 0 R. Clark
-cat dtsappearmg and the
Lollch (4 2) and Free han.
3 0 0 0 grm remammg
- New York 211 100 301- 9 12 0 Drago,
YOU'l'H ASKED FOR lT!
Lambert
Abernathy
(9)
and
; St. Louis 000 000 01()-- 1 7 1 Kirkpatrick LP-Abernathy (O Sayre
The boddmg has been South..----.:___-----=--,.
0
0
2
0
This column Is for young people, their problems and
Todaf'imds Altce playmg West North Eul
• Gantry (2-3) and Grote,
Cu. Roush
; Torrez, Brunet (4), Taylor (4), 1)
2 0 0 0 a seve n-&lt;ltamond contract
I
+
The
Daily
pleasures,
!heir troubles and fun. As wtlh the rest of Helen Help
lolo
Pass
~ Orabciwsky (7), Linzy (9) and
Gardner
0
0
0
1
wtth
the
Cheshtre
cat
sittong
•
DEVOTED TO THE
Usl,ltwelcomeslaughsbutwon'tdodgeaseriousquesllonwiiha
Pass
lolo
Pass
Baltimore 001 030 ooo- 4 6 1
~ Simmons LP- Torrez (1 21 HR
- - - - - - - West and the Duchess East
Oakland
100
020
1015
11
2
You,
South,
hold
INTERESTOF
lrush-df,
"
~ -Lee (lstl.
Cuellar. Jackson {7), Hall (91
Totals
21 1 2 1 Allee had hoped to fmd a .7543 .8632 +AKQ .74
MEIGS·MASDNAREA
Se-'
tee
ti
•
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
,.,.your nageques OnstoYOUTHASKEDFORlT ,care
Hendricks, Hunter (3 21
What do you do now?
MEIGS 2
better dummy After all her
! san Diego 101 100 002- 5 10 2 and
EMOc. Ed
ol Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
Duncan LP- Hall (2 2)
A-B1d two spades. This is
partner had JUmped to two
)•' Cincinnati 200 020 011- 6 11 1 and
HR-Rudi
(4th)9
ROBERT
HOEFLICH,
lT ISN"" THE SAME
: Coombs, Severlnsan (51, Lax·
AB R H RBI no-trump and t h e n used samdar to the d1rect raise from
City Editor
•
PLAYER
one to two and does not show
'• tOn (7), Kelley 191 and Barton. Cleve
Publ.shed
d111y
excep•
Dear
Helen:
Blackwood
100 001 001- 3 7 2
Saturday bV The 01:110 V•lley
: McGlothlin. Carroll (9) and Calli
002
000 ooo- 2 8 3
"Curoouser and cunouser" much strength.
Publishing company 1 111
I've been going wtlh tills boy for' two weeks and he gave up
'• Bench WP-Carroll (l.J) LP0
3
0
0
TODAY'S QUESTION
McOowell, Pascual (8), Mln Dunfee
she mused ' Everyone bods
Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio, c1g tte j tbeca
' : Kelley (0 1) HRs-Banch (7th), gorl
are s us
use I asked him to . He hasn•t smoked m two
Fosse. Wright, VanMetre
3 0 0 0 too much here " She looked
Your partner contmues to 45769 Business Office Phone
: Barton (111), Gaston (2nd), Queen(9)(91.andLaRoche
(9) and
,
three spades What do you do 992 2156, Editorial Phone 992 days!
I I I 0 al her opponents The Ches
(• May (ist) .
2157
nl
Moses, Torborg (9) . WP- Powell
second class postage paid at
Last ght he said he's proved how much be loves me (by
3 0 1 0 bore eat's gun see me d now'
!•'•: san Fran 202 001 ooo- 5 9 1 Pascual 12-2) LP- Queen {O 1 Abbott
Pomeroy . 0111o
quitting cigarettes), so It's my turn. I S81d I wasn't ready and he
0 b1 oader than evet whole the
~ 0 I
Boyd
''; Atlanta
001 100 lOG- 3 6 0
Nat1onal adverfls•no
d
Dixon
I I I I
representat•ve 8ottlnelll got rna •
.;. Slone, McMahon (7) and
Gallagher, Jnc. 12 Easl 42nd
Today I was showmg off my new driver's license at lunch
'.; Dietz; Nash, McQueen (4),
Wiken
3 0 I ~
St New York c.ty, N!W York
• Barber (81, Herbel (8) and
Subscnptlon rates oe bout. He came up and looked over my shoulder, pointed to where
Haggerty
3 0 0
·: King. WP-Sione (2 01 LP!overed by corrler where ltsays,"Sex:F,"andsald,soeveryonecouldhear: "Nolle! She
Will
3 0 0 0
;. Nash (1.2). HRs-Bond (6th),
refusong to boost milk pr1ce available 50 cents per week ,
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
The
·: Foster (3rdl
&amp;v Motor Route where carrier
SW"e f1wlks that one!"
23 2 5 1 cbst of the government's daory supports, backed down under service not ovollable one
Later, he wrote me a note, asking if I'd changed my mmd, or
Totals
month Sl 75 By mall In Ohio
:: 00 Innings)
proce support program rose farmer pressure and raised the and
va , One year su oo should be signed himself "Smoky"?
:- Phlla
101 000 001 o- 3 10 1 Sabbath School attendance on
support rate from $4.66 per SDc w
BY
INNINGS:
sharply
last
year,
•nd
offtcoals
months
S7 25
Three
;: Houston 110 010 000 1- 4 11 0 A 1 25 t 1h F
M !hod
I'm sorta attracted to him. What should I say? - OON'T
•: Lersch, Fryman (7). Selma pn
a e ree e
lSI _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ conceded pnvately Wednesday hundred-we1ght to $4.93 a months $4 50 Subscnpllon
pnce Includes Sunday Times REALLY WANT TO
:· (81. Hoerner (9), Brandon (10) Church was 117. Offering was WAHAMA Sent mel
000 010 o • 1 they expect another JUIDP thos hundredwetght on Apr1l 1
OearDRWT:
•: and McCarver; Wilson. Lemast- $61.27, Last Sunday of the
000 101 0 • 2 year lollowmg a recent boost m
:• er (9), Culver (9), Ray (101 and month offering )8 added to the MEIGS
Say: "NO!" -Signed, FLUNKY" -H.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ milk support levels
•: Edwards WP...:.Ray (l . J) LP- b ldln f d
Dear Helan:
Ul g un .
;. Brandon (1.1)
Glac1ers occupy 10 per
Dally support costs jumped
I am almost 14. Sometimes I think things are gt'l!at and It's
•:
Amorlcan League
Rev Eguene Goll was in cent of the earth's land sur· from $227 million m the 1969-70
:; Chicago at New York, ppd rain Columbus
Saturday
on face, an area nearly as large dally marketmg year to $380
good to he alive. That's when I'm away from home. It's awful
when
I'm with my parents because they're always fighting. It
as
South
America
,
accord:: Mllwkee 010 002 'ooo- 3 9 3 business.
11oon m the 1970.71 year whtch
lng
to
Encyclopaedia
Bnlannu
:· Boston
310 105 oox-10 15 1 Mark Stahl, Portsmouth, nlca
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Da!non ~·t take much to start them off -the weather, !he way! tie
ended last March 31, offtcoals
By ADA SLACK
•: Parsons, Gelnar (5). Bear visited recenUy with Mr. and
my shoes. They don't just yell at each other. Everything I do ts
estimated
SYRACUSE - Refreshments Ferrell.
:• narth (6) and Rodriguez, M N
""h 1
Mr and Mfs. llewilt Soulsby wrong, too ... mainly so they can blame each other for !be way I
:: Siebert' Tatum (6) and Pavle
rs orman "" ae er
Most experts currently expect of tee cream and cake were
•I tlch WP- Siebert LP-Par
Paul Archer, Columbus, was Club recenlly
of
St. Albans, W. Va., recently was raised.
that costs for the 1971-72 season served when Mrs. Eloise
;, sons HRs-R Smith (2nd), called here by the Illness of his
Mrs Thomas Darst and whoch started Aprol 1 will nse Wollbarger entertamed with a vtstted his aunt, Glenna
To he honest, I cause my share o1 arguments. It's catching,
Siebert (2nd)
mother, Mrs. Georgia Diehl, ch1ldren of Milan spent a
another $70 milhon to $100 party honormg the 7th birthday Soul~by ·
see. But I can't take much more. I start getting tense when I'm
:•
who underwent surgery at weekend wolh her parents, Mr mtllton, a source satd
Easter
weeiend
guests
of
MJ:.
of her son, A J Guests were and Mrs. Orville Crooks were two blocks fr om horne, 'cause I know what's waiting.
:: Mlnn
000 000 300-J 10 2 Holzer Medtcal Center m and Mrs James Gilmore
The mcrease was expected Mrs MalcOlm Gwnther and
My girl friend and I are planning to run away, but New York•l Wash
100 000 03x- 4 6 1 Gallipolis
The Laurel Cliff Health Club because the N1xon ad· chtldren and Mrs. Jtmmy theor son and daughter-In-law
;1 Hall, Williams (8), PerronosMr
and
Mrs
John
crooks'
Ia
too
dangerous and California too far. I don't really want to go,
.. "' kl (81 and Ratlltt Mltterwald Mrs. Ronald Brownmg was w!ll meet with Mrs. Laurence mmtstrahon, after Jntlially Hemsley and children.
•' (71 , Cox. Knowles (7), Pine hostess to the Sew Rite Sewmg Ebhn on May 6
da~ghters Bu:bara and but If the screaming gets too much, where's the safest 'jilace for
•.
Mrs Gary Fo!ey vtstted
~
relattves m MilwauJt:ee, lW~1 , lialri.Cia of''Colilmbul!r· ' ., ', 't ~~~~r~ybus?t:r'~~~RATE BUT
''speiij!ing Easter with Mrs uear u
A:
""
recently
Ada Slack were her son and
There's NO 38-fe place for I :I-year-old runaways! Don't take
Mr and Mrs Larry Dilcher
and chtldren of Detrott were daughter-m-law, Mr. and Mrs. that route or you may mess up for good.
Perhaps ftgblll mlghtlessen if you'd stop contributing to them
Easter weekend guests of Mr. John Slack, Johnny, Donald and
;.
Linda,
of
Sandyville.
and
calmly suggest that your parents either see a counselor or put
and Mrs . Pearl Secoy and
Mr. Richard Wmebrenner has you in a !01ter home
Grace and Mr and Mrs. Denctl
(Thtrd m a Senes. )
undergone
surgery
in
Constant battlers sometimes get so accustomed to the notse
v1rus
that
causes
the
ACS
semmar
that
he
has
s1mplex
But m cancer research
Hudson and famtly
found
some
parhcles
m
hucold
sores
around
the
mouth
meager evidence is better
Hospital
In that they don't realize It can drive !heir children frantic. If lhts ts
By DAVID HENDIN
The Rev. Ralph Hudson of Unoverslty
man
breast
mtlk
whose
comthan no evidence at all And
Columbus.
the case, a quiet ul11m&amp;tum from you will be heard much louder
Type 2 herpes causes stmtPortsmouth spent Frtday mght
,•
NEA Science Editor
plex
structures
are
tdentical
m
at
least
three
types
of
hu·
lar sores on the gemtal or• CAREFREE, AriZ. Mr. Wtlliam buckworth and than screaming. - H.
tnan cancer--cancer of the gans Most women, however, to particles responstble for and Saturday wolh his molher,
(NEAJ-What amounts to a breast and cervix, and leu· contract "silent" mfechons tra nsm1ttmg breast cancer Myla Hudson, and brother, Mr. William Duckworth Jr. and Dear Helen:
My broth.- and I used to fight a lot- until one day Mom tape·• grand jury of emment scten- kemta-evldence 1s mountmg wtthout symptoms, but eas- m some strams of mtce
Denctl and famtly AC· daughter, Denise, of RiUIJlan
' • lists Is now In sessiOn In doz- against the tiny particles
were
weekend
guesla
of
Mr.
and
recorded
a typical brawl, and played It back to us next morrung
These so-called " B" parh- compamed by his mother they
tly detected by Pap tests
•. ens of private and uruversity
cles cannot scienhftcally be
Mrs. George Schneider 8lld Mr. when we were half-way peaceful.
Current theones state that
There Is now no known called vtruses at thts time vtstted Mr and Mrs. Donald
•. laboratories around the
Helen, It was the funniest lhlng we ever heard. Or shoUld I say
Invade living cells way of treating a gemtal
Goodmght of Hart(ord.
, and Mrs. Marvin Mc~elvey.
. world. The august group Is viruses
Dr Moore descrtbes them as
and
leave
behind
a
genetic
Mrs
.
Laura
Letflielt
has
silliest.
·' amassing all available evl· matertal, called the genome herpes mfechon, but cancer the "package" m whtch a Mrs Helen Wetzel of
I can't say we've stopped fighting completely, but half the
:: dence-h owe ve r slight 1! This matenal d i r e c t s the of the cervix os almost 100 true mfective vnus usually Columbus viSited here with her returned to her ~orne on Cherry
per cent curable when de- comes
,• may be-to support their
stster, Mrs Mayme Holmes and St after spending the winter time now wH.lll up laughing because we know bow rldiculOUB we
:' case-the case for viruses as cell's workings and geneh· tected early Nevertheless,
The particles are called Mr and Mrs. Robert Crow and wtth her daughters in Colwn- must IIOUlld. Maybe all families shoii!d tape-record !heir kids'
transforms the healthy the Amencan Cancer Soc1etr
causative agents In some or c~lly
bus.
battlee. - SIS
cell mto a tumor cell. Since (ACSJ eshmates that cervt- viriOns and Dr Moore has lamoly
all forms of human cancer
ondtrect
evodence
that
theor
Mr
and
Mrs
George
only
the
genome-and
not
·':: Viruses are tmy particles,
Dear Sla: ... And that includes the figlitmg elders too.
cal cancer will strike. 42,000
the vtrus ttself- r em a1 n s, American women thos year, behaviOr IS simtlar to VI- Schne1der, her mother, Mrs.
(DESPERATE BUT AFRAID: Take note!) - H
•; vlstble only under the elec· tracing It Is difficult
ruses, but the research falls Daosy Roush, and Mr. and Mrs.
killing
13,000
of
them
:; tron mtscroscope, that tread
short of provmg a VII' US transDifficult, but not 1m~os
Marvm McKelvey, spent a
'
:: the fme line between living slble
Dr
N
a
h
m
1 a s speculates mtts human breast cancer
Dr Andre Nahmias,
~-----------------------------------------weekend woth relatives m
·- creatures and complicated vtrologist, epodemiOiogJSt that the v;rus m1ght remain
"The extstence of a human
;: organic chemicals
dormant
for
years
Eventubreast cancer vtrus has been Rttlman.
and pedtatrlctan at Atlanta's
;: Smce the 1908 dtscovery Emory Umverslty, reports ally 11 could become acto- indicated ," but not proven Mrs Wanda Gumther and
, that a vorus could transmit a rapidly mounting evidence
to exist, m several expert- chtldren , Mrs
Malcolm
•
; form of leukemia m chtck· that cervical cancer 1s a vemental procedures, he saod Gutnther and children and 1
• ens, more than 100 VII'Uses nereal disease caused by a
Bdwy. Ol'lglglnal's producer -composer, Richard
He added that "the num- Barbara Hendnx, VISited with
: have 'been found to cause a common virus transmitted
BY JACK O'BRIAN
ber of parltcles m human Mrs George Staats of Chester
Rodgers ... First Bdwy. musical in 30 years WJ!h
: varoety of cancers In am· through sexual Intercourse
milk
IS
extremely
low
comR
D
as Iowa top Ucketas $5is the "Frank Merriwell"
:: mals, but no type of cancer The dtsease Is rare m v1rgms
ROCK SINGER IS BOUND
pared woth t h o s e m hogh Mr and Mrs Robert Harden
•: In man has yet b2en proved and most common m ptosh·
nostalgla-muatcal.
TO MAD A ltOL1.
breast-cancer s t r a on s of local, and Mr. and Mrs. Verno~
:: to he of v1ral ortgm
lutes and promIscuou s
Sid Garfield, who shares our fond memories
mtee where s e 1e c t 1 v e m- Donahue of East Letart FaDs
:: There are several human women
breedmg has resulted m a
.
NEW YORft - Now lhere's a rock Binger ol Frank Merriwell books (and of Frank's gal
i• cancers that are under sushogh tumor mctdence
were m Maroon where !hell' tagged "Doris Dub" .... Arl Onal8is is bavlng Jnza Burrage, !he dark brooding Bart Hodge, the
One In four women of low
•: plclon of bemg caused by vi- soclo-economtc
..
grandson, Ertc Harden, son of li
•-•~groups
who
ruses, and these are pow un·
Present
resulls
represent
Mr
and
Mrs
Robert
A
Harden
g
emergency
""""'with IU bankers .... Luigi latter's gal Elsie Bellwood etc.), asked if we
have
been
infected
by
the
der mtense mvestigation
only a begmnmg lo the effort
·
·
Barzlnl (hla "From the Caeaan to !he Mafia" is remembered Merrlwell's "Fardlle Academy"
vorus--called type 2 herpes
to establish the extstence of of Maroon underwent leg a belt-.lzzler) Ia the most urbane, mtelligent, baseball teams' lineup; we hadn't; Sid says It
"Twenty·fiVe years ago 1t or genital virus-go on to de·
a human mammary cancer surgery at Manon General
was as difficult to provtde velop a precancerous condivorus," he satd, adding opto Hospital
articulate, charming TV vlaltor here since early Included Bruce Browning on 1st, Harry Rattleton
vatedperhaps
wtth
the
aid
evtdence of vtruses m am· tion or cancer of the cervtx
Mr and Mrs. Melvin Grlllllll Alistair Cooke .... Truly IIGilhiatlcated gen. on 2nd, Jack Diamond on 3rd, Hans Dunnerworst
of chemtcals - and produce mtsltcally
mal cancers as 1t Is today Nahmtas reports
the ftrst cancer cells
"Eventual ~revenlton of have returned home after lleman,debooalr, taateful, able to talk about any at short, Ephrabn Gallup, Barney Malloy and
for human cancers," said
"
Gemtal
herpes
os
prob"???" outfielders, Bart Hodge as catcher, and
Columbia Umverstty's Dr ably the second most com .
The search for a viral on- the dtsease by ommumzahon, spending two weeks wtlh theirs thing with delicacy (such ., hla det!Crlptl0118 of
Sol S\)tegelman at a recent
gm of another cancer of or control by antovtral drugs, sons and famUtes m Columbus. Italian adultery and olh.- normally barred TV the pitcher, of course, was Merriwell with his
American C an c e i Soctety mon venereal dtsease (after women- breast cancer- has 1s no longer just a hope\1-for Mrs Myrtle Durst of topics),
unbeatable In-and-out curve .. But whos upgonorrhea) m the U n 1ted
semmar m Carefree, Am
Pomeroy spent a day recently
All Out ol Step but Jawn: Some 2,000 ported Frank at Yale? Did he go up to the major
States, England and Sweden also turned up some prom- possiblltty "
The evidence lor viruses m where It has been recently ISing clues
{NEWSPAPiR ENTERPRISE ASSN I With Mrs DatsyRoushandMrs, lleWIJIIper publlahei1ilhowed U~~ in black-!Je )eagues• The Yankees? Or was the "Ba:seball
human cancer is "extremely studted," he said
Dr Dan Moore, of the In·
George Schnetder.
evenq dre11 for their 11101111 convention )Iinne;
Joe"?
me.ager," Dr Spiegelman
The type 2 herpes vtrus os st1tute lor Medocal Research, (NEXT Treating Cancer
Mr
and
Mrs.
Bruce
Teaford
bull
but
Mayll'
Undlay
made
It
10
work
Edward Albee's "All Over" will live its
saod
a close relative of the herpes Can:den, N J , reported at
W1th Chemu:als J
have m9ved from Middleport dotbes .... Tile 11ft Uberty Mag revival has an Iitle's death phrase, May 1 .... Multi-billionaire
' mto !he Custer trailer 'on Third edge other publlcaU0111 Cllily dream about: The Jean Paul Getty sold only the opera tim of his N.
Sl
)liggeetaak~:G.B.~w,freud,FDR,
Y. Hotel Pierre - but kept !he ground It's on,
Marketta Burge of Millwood, RoberUienchley (he'll be In mry lallue) smart man .... D. K. Ludwig, probably richer
'
'
W. Va., wa~ ' a Sunday night Jlimply
UIMrty Included 1111 future rigbti than Getty, toot the latter's Acapulco 11r1nkery,
wolh her cousin Darlene Dun· to lllll!lllon' JII'Ojlii llellli tile original Alee, Pierre Marques, off Jean Paul's dlatant banda·
SOUTH
can She was accompanied
J111e Fonda IIJd Jolla Wayne !lever agreed Ludwig's "Acapulco Princess," opening in
home by her aunts Mrs. 011 anytldnc, but tile l'layllo)' Wayne interview October, will he the moat lavish resort hotel In
AFRICA
U.S.S.R.
Malcolm
Gu!Dther and Mrs. &lt;!n which be defelllhd attlcb Clll frontier In- lhe hlatory of ~UNITED STATES GREAT
(Blacks In ( Kazakh·
'
Frank Hendrox.
dlana)buJule -~~~ llllllpDute .... How to
When jazz pl$llst Patti Wlcka at the
(Whites)
FRANCE HUNGARY Tranakel)
BRITAifl
stan)
JAPAN
I
Mr and Mrs. Eugene Slack, IIICCIIdlnllllowbii:Pullface&amp;othla ..l'beMe Apartment cl01e1 her eyes whlle playing, we
Suzanne and Philip, spent Nobody ltnRI" lin( ll' bHa be'
barn can't ever teD If !he's beinR IOIIIful Ill' sleeping
xxxx
XX
xxxx
XX
xxxx
xxxx
' XX
Easter weekend with her llldltr tbe IIDII
(Artie)
IIJDe
XXX
, XXX
The lifted kid worb daylimel in an ofllce, tolla
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Plllllp .....,111 L-L
ScaffIde of Freeport,
....,. (r.n. W..C) U Ill IDilllcal director, Bob betimes on her qane!cal doctorata thelia (!he bas
xxxxx
XXX
XX
xxxxxx
x~xxx
XXX
xxxx .
I· .XXXXXX
her Dlllter'a.alrady) anCI jUIIID8y be napping
.
Mr. Carl DuckWorth, Mr .IIICI Uyi..MIIia,
Mrs. James Gillnsler 111..8~._
Larll ~-Oiitltr wl,ll alfl'lte tile Bible iniiiOOQ'delpaaUon .... DlalocuelnCinerama's
xxxxxx . xxxx
xxxxxx . xxxxxxx . XX XXX
XXX~
XX .
Kitty, o1 Plcierln8ion,-.;;. IIi' 'l.'V tsrerd ~. Ylli Glll't CGPJrilbla Ulle, ''Dir!IJ" dOCUIDIIIItary Ia IY.. earthier (that
Barbara Dalrs and dauaJtter, bat Alii R
'Ill fl ~ to lbe ''J'olliel" IIIIIM dirtier) lban you'd bell' while watdlq
I . XXXXXXX
XXXXX
XX
XXX
xxxxx
~XXXIX
xxxxxxx Demse
Michelle, o1 Lanc:ut.r -•••ttllllltladlrti'I'IDPIDAIIeJ'poolto the Roller Dlrby It deplcbt from 1 front pew;
'
spent Euler wilb Mrs. ApN 4 t.Uce.. lbeiiiii..,_IIIIIIIIOOII -GfblriiNIIold llllke that pbew! .... Tile aaraantua n 1111rilla
.
xxxx
X
X
x? I . X'
I
X
W'llte and brother, Rtc:bliod ljt, ''Rille lit Boor .... Pt 11 11 lllll'rlllce lilllrlat with the Rl ..'iql llrol. On:lll II loll
'Duckworlb.
liMb IliFf
,lti'aaftltiiDIID 111ft tile ilriW O.lhe Bill Tep'l all!t'af tltit Dlllll:
XXX
XX
xxxx
x?'
XX

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Tony "It's sure been a long time
Perez ftgures h1s luck is hegm- since I had that many m one
mng to change for !he better. game."
''There was the news last
Perez Was Fooled
mght from Preston Gomez," The gam.,.wmnlng hit off
Perez sa1d " You know, about Dick Kelley was a pop fly sm·
maybe gomg back to Cuba."
gle to nght lteld. It was anGomez, manager of the San · other reason why Perez ftgures
Diego Padres, doscitssed his his luck 1s changmg
plan to take a group of major
"Kelley fooled me on the
leaguers to Cuba next wmter pllch," admttted Tony "I was
for a senes of exhibition games looking for a fast ball He
11 the State Depariment allows. threw me a slider .. "
The count was two balls and
Thell talk took place Tuesday
mght as Perez, a Cuba native, one stnke on Perez when he
sat on the bench With a swollen delovered !he game-wmnong
nght hand. Then Wednesday blow
mght he returned to the lineup
"That's why 1 was looking
and hot a bases-loaded smgle lor a fast ball, " he explamed,
wtlh two out m the mnlh nnmg "I knew he dodn't want to
that gave the CmcmnatJ Reds walk me and 1 didn't thonk he
a 6-5 won over the Iladres.
would take a chance wtth a
Perez' btl was one of three breaking ptlch "
for the slump-!'ldden Red who
Sometimes tt can be costly of
entered the game w11h a .179 a guy !honks too much when
batbng average
he's at the plate So says Tom"Three hits," mused Tony

~

''
;..

,,

By Unoted Pron International
Natoonal Leaoue
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Montrea l
8 5 615
New York
10 7 • .588
Pittsburgh
11
9 550 •;,
St LOUIS
12 10 545 'h
Chicago
8 11 421 3
Pholadelphoa 6 12 333 4'12
West
W. L. Pet. GB
San Francisco 16 5 762
Los Angeles 12 10 545 41;,

'·

Houston

.4

Linesrores

I.s•

us

,----------------------------1

HeIen HeIp

,·

"'

..

Sentinel

Laurel &lt;lifT

Dairy Support Costs to Go Up

"
•· ~
. ..

••

.. .

..
,.
:.••

I

•

News Notes

.

...
c

AVWP , . •,

rEvidence on

Viruses Mounts

! VoiCe along Broadway

,,

.

THE GEOGRAPHY OF CANCER

.
Esophagus

Breast
Lung
Stontach

:.a

::In ::

1...

.

· c~ XIlX
ti!OM lnold••• e1

.

"

'

!

.•

· -·

' J ,../ ,...

'
"'
• ~.
•• I
"'1'•
·' '
' ' '
··• '
"'

,• .
, ,,;,;

t ..

...,.,

.•

'
,. ·

XXII

•nw

MtNalllli(ll)to VW'Y higll (IIIXXXXX) ~~ow&lt;o:

lrithlo - . • - •

c-otl

MlaS Terri Ferrell atteof111 IIIII &lt;' 'Ill • • IIIL
. .
Ohio State UnlvenltJ Jp111t tbe
'1'111 W'tl t.ii "'l'wt llf TWo" Mil'.._
Euter weekend willa her a.e.r•wllllltfll 1•11' 1 1 UfiiM

"; ,,

. ,.
·' •
• ·•, ,

'Dill bli IPt'l a. llrl•t mourWn aar1111 In '" .,'
blptl'liiJ (W.II'Ilbe. .! AIIJwbwelle -~~ " 'h I
IDl l .... 1111 blllm~ wal.

my Helms, whose smgle to cen·
ter, hts lhtrd htt of the mght,
touched off the Reds' wmmng
rally
Ftve games ago, Helms, alter
enJoyong the best spnng of hts
career, was struggling along
wtlh a 159 battmg mark
"I was lhmkong too much up
thereattheplate," saod llelms
"I was putting too much pres·
sure on myself "
In the last lour games, he
has rapped out mne ho ts on 14
at-bats to boost his average to
267
"I thmk Tommy believes on
Tommy Helms now," satd Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson
Just Made Sure
" I know I'm not a 237 httter ," said Helms, gnmacmg at
the memory of hos last year
batting average
Smtlmg, he added, "At least
that's why I came to sprtng

Stargell wtth two out imd a
runner on second wtth the score
of the Pittsburgh-Los Angeles
game toed at 5-5 Clemente ts
hitting .274 w1lh four RBis
whole Stargellts hitting 373 and
ts the maJor league leader m
homers and RB!s woth 11 and

trawtng ea rly I wanted to
m'ake sure l wasn't "
The hots of Helms and Perez
were sox of 11 the Reds collect·
ed of! Padre polchong
Johnny Bench knocked a tworun homer, hts seventh or the
season Lee May's fllst homer
of the season on the etghlh onnong gave Jtm McGlothlon a 5-3
lead
However, woth two on and
two out on the lop of the mnth ,
McGlothhn was replaced by
Clay Carroll, who was greeted
by a two-run double by AI
Ferrara that lled the score and
set the stage lor Perez' heroocs
on the mnth
The loss was the Padres' 11th
on thell last 13 games They
wtnd up thetr three-game ,;ones
fhere today wtth a 12 30 p m
bustnessman 's spec oal The
Reds host the San Francosco
Goanls Frtday through Sunday

By Untted Press International

I Best of 7-Dovosoon Finals)

East

26
Alston dectded to have the
left-handed O'Bnen tntentional·
ly walk the nght-handed
Clemente to pttch to the lefthanded Stargell Wlule promptly blasted a 400.loot shot off
the centerlteld fence to dnve m

·Bucks Sting Bullets, 107-99

0uU

' WINNE\~ · ~;b*.~ JUs~.turn~ ~Oa;ound lo ;,;t,J ·~ 3

The Southern High Tornados
broke up a close baseball game
by scormg nme runs In the third
mmng and gomg on to hwmliate
Starr-Washmgton 28-6 Wednesday at
the Logan
laorgrounds . Southern got
plenty of help from !he opposition as Slarr-Washmgton
polchers gave up 14 walks and
1ts loelders booted seven
chances The 18 hits collected
by Tornados helped make the
basepaths resemble a relay
race. The !mal whtstle was
blown after s1x turns, by mutual
agreement
Wtth the score tied one to one
gomg mto the top of the third,
the Tornados came alive Pat
Arnold, Bret Hart and Jun
Hubbard walked to open the
onmng, Bruce Hart doubled to
brmg all three home, Mike

FIRST IN LINE
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI)
- Larry Blscaglla, 73, became
ltrsl m line Wednesday for the
Indtanapolts 500 auto race for
the 23rd straight year. Bisca·
gila drove his camper truck up
to the entrance of the Speedway
gates and began hla wall until
the race begins May 21.

Monroe satd for the Bullets to
won they had to have a "supershooting" mght from the
oulsode
"Wtth Alcondor on there,
nobody os gomg to get the easy
shot under the basket agamst
thts team;'' he sa1d "We're
JUst goong to have to hoi from
the outstde "
Both teams now travel to
Baltomore for a Froday mght
game tn the CIVIC Center If the
Bucks wm, they wtll be the
champoons of the NBA The
Bullets, on the other hand,
would have to wm four on a row
to take the tttle

Sz..lent

Nease and Rod Holman were
passed to load the bases, and
Bruce Hart scored on a wild
ptlch
Gary Hart brought m another
woth a sacriftce, Barry Hart
walked, and Arnold, up for the
second time on the mnmg,
smgled m the sixth run of the
frame An SW error let tn the
seventh and Jllll Hubbard's
long smgle brought m the eighth
and nonth
In the next three iijnmgs
Southern added 18 more
Gary Hart went all the way,
govmg up sev~n h1ts, four walks
and strikmg out II to get the
voctory. Randy Sinnott was the
loser, as he and reliever Rod
Harden tssued 14 free passes
and fanned two.
Southern
109 558-28 18 2
Starr-Wash
103 002- 6 7 7

Gary Hart and Barry Hart.
Smnott (LP), Harden (4) aijd
Hardman .
SOUTHERN
AB R H
Brei Hart
4 4 2
Jim Hubbard
55 22 32
Bruce Hart
Steve Jenkins
5 2 1
Mike Nease
4 4 2
Holman
3 3 1
Stan Kiser
2 1 2
Gary Hart
3 2 2
Barry Hart
4 3 2
Pat Arnold
2 4 1
Alan Pugh
0 1 0
TOTALS
35 21 18
STARR·WA5HINGTON
McDaniel
~B: ~
Sinnott
3 2 2
Harden
3 1 1

~ftrn

~ ~ ~

Hardman
Bumgardner
Beck

3 1 1
2 o o
1 o o

~~~~~

~ ~ ~

TOTA~S

24 6 7

and m came another run and
Bob caldwell grounded out to
add another run .
Rick Sanders then boomed a
long stngle that put the Eagles
ahead to stay at 10 to 9. Duvall
and Eichmger, up the second
lime, put on the frosting as they
doubled and singled to add the
~st two runs.
Eichinger started on the
mound for the Eagles and went

f1ve tnnings before being
relteved by Duvall, who polched
two strong mmngs to get the
wm
For Kyger, Curry started and
was relieved by Ball'd 4t the
fifth, Baird finished up and
was credited with the loss
Etchlnger, Duvall (6) (WP)
and Young Curry, Baor (LP)
(5) and Bias.

Major League Leaders
By United Preis International
Leadong Batters
Natoonal Ltatuo
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Garr. All
19 80 15 34 .•25
TQfre, St L 22 88 13 34 .386
Staub. Mont 13 50 11 , 19 .~
Strgeii,Pitt 18 67 16 25 .373
Cash. Pitt
16 66 12 24 364
Hrnndz, SD 10 36 2 13 361
Bonds. SF
17 70 20 25 .357
Millan, All 19 76 4 27 355
D•vls, LA 21 83 13 29 3•9
Mays. SF
18 63 12 22 349
Mota, LA
15 43 5 15 3ol9
Amtncan Ltague
'
G. AB R. H. Pd.
McCrw, Wh 14 35 12 14 400
Oliva, Mlnn lB •73 15 29 397
Murcer, NV 17 66 11 25 379

Bird, Ball
14 55 17 20 364
Yslzsk, Bos 18 65 19 23 354
Jhnson. Ball 17 68 11 24 353
Schaal, KC 21 68 12 .~3 338
Wash
17 42 s 14 333
McKny, ChllS 36 1 12 333
Frhn, Del
18 64 8 21 • 328
Home Jluns
National Logue: Stargell,
Pill 11, Aaron, All 8, Bench,
Cln 7, Cepeda, All, Colbert, SD
and Bonds, SF 6
American LNIIUt: Oliva,
Mlnn 7' While, NY and Bando,
Orik 5, seven tied with 4.
Jluns Balled In
Natoonal League · Stargell,
Pill 26 , Aaron, A,ll and Mays,
SF 18, Torre. St L 17; Ollberl,
SD 16
.
~-\·----

L.

West

L.

lndtana

o
3

3 Milwaukee at Balttmore
4

4
3

x Utah

X-Chnched senes

HAWKS' GUARD DRAFrED
ATLANTA (UP!) - Herb
Whtte, a reserve guard for the
Atlanta Hawks of the Natoonal
Basketball Assoctatoon, has
been drafted onto the Army, the
club learned Wednesday

Wednesday's Result
Utah 100 lnd•ana 101
Saturday's Game

Kentucky at Ulah

lnterna hona ILeague Sta ndmg s
Bv Un1ted Press lnternc honal
W L Pet GB
Syra cuse

8 2

800 -

Rtchmond
Charleston

6

3
6 5
5 5

667 l ln
545 21f2
500 3

LOUISVIlle
Toledo

5 5
5 6
3 5

Wtnntpeg
Rochest er
T tdewater

2 9

500 3

455 3lf?
375
182

4
6112

Wednesday 's Results
Syra cuse 6 Rtchmond 3
T•dewi'ter al Rochester (ppd
ratn)

For Elegance tn Ptpe
Smoktng Pleasure, Select a

Pope
,

In

Needs

No

Tawney Jewelers
422 Second Ave

cold wea ther)

the dectdong run and lead
Ptltsburgh to a 7-5 troumph
In the other Natoonal League
games, New Yoo k routed St
Louts 9-1, Ctneonnato edged San
Otego li-5, San Franetsco beat
Atlanta 5-3, Hous ton outlasted
Phtladelphoa 4-3 on lO onmngs
and Chocago beat Montreal 3-2
In the Amerocan League ,
Boston oouted Molwaukee 10-3,
Washongton edged Mmnesota 43, Delroot mpped Kansas Ctty 21 tn 10 mnongs, Cleveland beat
Cahforma 3·2 and Oakland
topped Ballomoo e 5-4 The
Chocago at New York game
was ratned out
Ed Kranepool, who seemed a
conch to be traded after he
blasted Manageo Gol Hodges
lhts sprong, con ltnued hts
hollmg spo·ee as he drove m
three runs wtth two songles and
a double as the Mels be"t the
Cards Kranepool, sent to the
mtnors lor p"rt of last season,
now has seven hots 111 Ius last
two stlll'ts
Cesar Gerommo, an eoghthmmng defenstve replacement,
htl a run-scormg tnple on the
lOth to hand Houston tis vtctory
over Phtladelphoa The Phols
had tied the game tn the mnth
on doubles by Roger Freed and
Ron Stone
Rookte George Foster collected lour htts "nd drove m three
runs to lead San Franctsco past
Atlanta Another rookoe, Steve
Stone, polched sox mmngs to
gaon the vtctory

th ai

Breakmg In

Ga llipolis, Ohoo

There's a gold rush on for the pure grain beer
they call Hudepohl Gold. It gives you the
most rewarding taste on beer today

ABA Fm'als

Eagles Defeat'Kyger 12·10
Larry Heines' Eastern Eagles
came from way behind Tuesday
afternoon to hand Kyger Creek
a 12-10 loss at Kyger. Down nme
to lour, the Eagles paraded 13
men to the plate to score eight
last Inning runs and bring home
the win.
Alan Duvall led off the big
seventh for the Eagles by
reachmg base on' an error.
Denms E1chmger was safe on a
ltelder's chotce, Randy Young
drove m one run with a smgle,
Btll Osborne added another on
hts songle, and Walker was
walked to load the bases Alan
Holter was btl by the pitcber

w.

Molwaukee
3
4 2 Baltomore
0
2 4
Wednesday's Result
Milwaukee 107 Baltomore 99
w. L
Sunday's Game

x Ken1ucky
Virgmte

reasons for 1umpmg the Wash·
ong ton Sena1ors
Flood spent Wednesday mght
m a Madnd hotel after fiymg
here from Ltsbon but he
refused to elaborate on hos
The cerebellum , a part of
decos10n Tuesday to quit
the
bram , regulates posture,
baseball for a second tlllle.
balance and movement
Reg1stermg at the hotel, the
outfoelder told the hotel oflocoals
that he was bookong lor one
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind (UP!) mght but he mtght prolong hos
-Coach Btll Sharman told hos vtsot unttl Thursday
Utah Stars at hall lime to be When Flood was phoned by a
patient even though they were UP! newsman, he would only
tratling
say, "I'm sorry but I cannot
The Stars didn't have to test make any comment to newsthetr paiJence long as they men " He also refused to
came out and scored 41 pomts answer hts door
th the thtrd period en route to a Flood shocked the Senators
108-101 vtctory over lndtana m Tuesday when he sent them a .
the seventh and dectdmg game telegram from Kennedy Airport
lor the ABA Western Dtvtston m New York announcmg that
playoff IItle
he was leavmg the team. He
Utah advances to the !mal took a fitght headed for
round agaonst Kentucky, whtch Barcelona but he got off at the
tentabvely opens Saturday at ftrst stop at Lisbon before
Salt Lake Ctty.
fiymg here
"We were dow~ by seven at Flood spent most of hts
the half and I told them to summer m Copenhagen after he
work for good shots and be quit baseball at the end of the
patoent," Sharman saod "They 1969 season and !tied a suot on
dtdn't lose thetr potse "
Federal Court to overturn the
"When you have two teams reserve clause Flood took thos
as evenly malched as Indllllla action after he was traded by
and Utah, tt's the team wtth the St. Louos Cardonals to the
the hot hand that's gomg to Philadelphia Phtls
wm," Sharman saod "We shot
71 per cent m the third penod
and I feel that deflnttely out
shooting m the thtrd penod was
the decodmg factor "
Whtle champagne flowed tn
IN COOL COMFORT
the stars' dressmg room alter t
the game, the Pacer locker
~oom was gloomy and coach
Bob Leonard declmed to
NEW
IMPROVED
VANYL I TE - an
out
talk to newsmen.
stand •ng latex pa• nl The Pacers were led by Btlly
made w1th a new Acrylic
Vinyl Latex
Po l yme r
Keller's 33 pomts Utah's Red
ADAPlV.BLE - lor all
Robms fmtshed wtth 25 pomts,
types ot mtenor walls and
cell1ngsECONOM I CA L
followed by Zelmo Beaty wtth
Sum mer Leagues
- one coat covers most
17 and Glen Combs wtth 15.
surfaces, use tap water for

u&amp; _

w

Louo sv•lleal Toledo (ppd, ra on l
Charleston at Wonmpeg (ppd ,

T

MILWAUKEE, W1s (UP!)- needless to say-not as cheer·
The Baltimore Bullets and the ful
Milwaukee Bucks came up wtlh Earl Monroe, who InJured hos
different reasons for the grom muscle m the game, was
Bullets' 107·99 loss to the Bucks perplexed by the Bullets' bad
Wednesday mght
performance.
Last year, the Galhans
For the Bucks, who now lead 'Not Emotionally Involved'
defeated runnerup Ironton 22 the best-of-seven National Bas- "I JUSt wasn't ass&lt;&gt;&lt;aated wolh
strokes (304-326) for the league ketball Assocoa!ton champiOn- the game," Monroe satd "I
champiOnship Athens was thtrd smp serteS 3-0, almost every- mean my attitude I can't get
(328), Logan fourth (329), body talked about Oscar up lor these games I don't
Jackson ltfth (333), Metgs stxlh Robertson
know why , I'm JUSt not
(342), Wellston seventh (361)
In the lhtrd penod the Bullets emotoonally mvolved The se·
and Nelsonvolle-York last( 404) . cut a 16-point Bucks' lead to nes wtlh the Knocks dramed us
Friday's meet will begiD at JUst two pomts-wtth Robertson physically and emottonally
9 a. m. Par on !be Ironton on the bench He came back m That would have been the
course Is 35. It will be an 18- and got a three-potnt play and champoonshtp, but here we
hole affair.
got the Bucks back on the are "
Here's previOus wmners of wmrung track
the SEOAL golf tournament :
Praise From Teammales
YEAR
' •
I·
..
1960
Athens for us," Lew Alctfidor , saod. 'i' :f!~· tl
1961
Athens "Bobby Dandridge and I were · ·
·
1962
Gallipolis at mtdcourt when he got that
MADRID (UPI)-Curt Fl 0od
1963
Logan
three.nomter
and
I
satd
to
hllll
iilll
Y
ts refusong to say anythmg
1964
GG llipollslis that 'When. we need tl, Oscar more m Spam than he dod on
1965
a po
does ot "'
the Uno ted States about hts
Galli
lis
1966
po
Dandndge satd, "W11h Oscar
1967
Gallipolis on there things run smooth and
11966
Gallipolis thongs open up."
Lall
1969
Gallipol~
Over m the Baltimore dress1970
Gallipolis lng room, the mood was-

NBA Playoll Standongs
By Unoted Press lnternatiOflal
I Fonals- Besl of 7)

IIBA Playoff Standongs

Giants Continue Winning Ways

Starr·Wash Clobbered

"

beef•••

.

500 Slh

Host Ironton ts a slight
lavonte to capture the 12th
annual Southeastern Ohto
League golf tournament
Fnday.
The Tigers, second m last
year's meet at Gallipolts, along
with delendmg champton
Galhpohs, Athens, Logan and
Metgs all have the potential to
come up wtlh all the marbles
lhos spnng All ftve squads have
scored some lmpresstve
troumphs dunng the 1971
campatgn. Jackson could be a
darkhorse, along WJih Waverly.
Wellston has taken several
beatmgs from SEOAL clubs
durmg regular season play
GAHS will defend Its
championship for lbe eighth
straight year. The Blue
Oevtls have captured lbe
SEOAL meet seven years In a
row, and eight Urnes 111 lbe
past nine years.

;!

.

11

Ironton Favored

.,,•

Syracuse News, Society

.

11

Atlanta
9 10 474 6
Cincinnati
7 11 389 7'12
San Diego
5 14 263 10
Wednesday's Results
Chicago 3 Monlreal2
Pittsburgh 7 Los Ang 5, night
San Fran S Atlanta 3, night
Clnclnnall 6 San Diego 5, night
Hslon 4 Phlla J, (10 Inn nlghll
New York 9 St Louis 1, night
Today's Probable Pitchers
Montreal (Renko 3 0) at
Chicago (Holtzman 0-3)
New York (Ryan 1 0) at Sl
Louis I Reuss 2·21. night
San Dl.ego (Phoebus 2 2) at
Clnclnnali (Sompson 0-0), night
Los Angeles {Singer 2 4) at
Pittsburgh (Walker 1 21. night
San Francisco (Bryant 2 0) of
Atlanta (Jarvis 0 21. night
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
san Diego at Pittsburgh, night
Philadelphia at Chicago
Montreal at Sf Louis, night
Los Angeles at Atlanta, night
San Fran at Cincinnati, night
New York at H_o~ston, night

American League .
East
W. L. Pet. GB
11 7 611
Baltimore
11 7 611
Boston
Washington 12 8 600
9 10 474 2'12
Detroit
7 10 412 3'12
New York
) 12 333 5'12
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pet GB
Oakland
16 7 696
California
11 10 524 4
Kansas City 10 11 476 5
Minnesota
9 11 450 5'h
Molwaukee
8 10 445 51h
Chicago
4 13 316 s
Wednesday's Results
Bosfon 10 Milwaukee 3
Chocago at New York, ppd rain
Washington 4 Mlnn 3, night
Dirt 2 Kan Cty 1. 10 Inn night
Oakland 5 Baltimore 4 night
Cleveland 3 Calif 2, night
Today's Probable Potchers
Baltimore (Palmer 3 01 at
Oakland (Fingers 1-2)
Cleveland (Foster 1 1) at
California (Murphy 1 21. night
Chicago (Bradley 2 O) at
Washington &lt;Bosman 2- 1),
night
Minnesota (Kaat 2 0) at
Boston (Nagy 10), night
By VITO STEIJ..INO
(Only games scheduled)
UP! Sports Writer
Froday's Games
Wtlhe Stargell foiled Walt
Cleveland at Oakland, night
Detroit at California, night
Alston's strategy Wednesday
Baltimore at Kansas City, night mght-and then endorsed it.
Chicago at Washington, night
Alston had to dectde whether
Milwaukee at New York, night
Minnesota at Boston, night
he wanted reliever Bob O'Broen
to p1tch to Roberto Clemente or

-

.Playoff Standings

OHIO

7" Pan -&amp; Roller Set
)'/HEN YOU PURCHASE

2 Gal. or More of Our•••

r---------.
BOWL

VAN YL-I T.E LATE X' INT ERI0R
PAI.NT
GALLON

85

AT

MASON BOWLING
CENTER

CARDS PERSONNEL SWAP
ST LOUIS (UP!)-Pilcher
Fred Norman has been optwned
by the St Louos Cardmals to
their Tulsa farm team and
ptlcher Don Shaw has been
recalled from the same club,
general manager Bmg Devme
announced \Vednesday.
Amerocan Le~gue: Killebrew,
Mlnn 20 , Yastrzemskl , Bos 19,
Northrup, Del 18 Johnson. Ball
and Bando. Oak 17
Potchong
Natoonal League: Upshaw,
All S I, Seaver, NV 4 0,
Carlton, St L-t 1, none toed with
3

Begin 2nd Week

th1nn1ng EASY TO
APPLY - by brush, roll er,

or

in May and
Bowl 12 Weeks. .

....;.._

DRIES
-

10

m inut es leav1ng
pl easant odor EAS ILY -

wash

t h 1rty

no un
CLEA N
equiP.

SHOP OUR COMPLETE
PAINT DEPARTMENT

ment 1n warm, soapy wa ter

SUPERIOR
WA SHABiLIT.Y- dirt and

Mon. Note-Ladies
Tues .
AfternoonLadies
Tues. Note- Men's
Wed. Ntte-Moxed
Thurs. N1te 3 Man Scratch
(Jack Pot League)

f 1nger pr•nts wash off
easily because th e new
vany l 1te has unsurpassed
'\Yater res istance

\

1'EVERYTHING

For Information Call

I

OFFER GOOD ~PR. 29 • MAY 15

Ebersbach -Hardware

Alnerocan League' Blue, Oak
51. McNall.,., Bolt and Soebert,
773-5791
8os '4 O; Lollch, Del 4 2. nine .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
lied with 3.
•

__ ..

sp r ay

RAP I DLY

'

110 W. MAIN

IN HARDWARE"

�•

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April 29, 1971

97th Derby Richest Classic ·

Greenhouse Vegetables Coming

LOUISVILLE, Ky (UPI)Horsemen flocked to the racing
secretary's office. in d~oves
. Wednesday to enter 21 .horses
for Sat~~rday's running of the
Kentucky Derby and everyone
of them thought he had a
chance to win ' racing's mOst
. coveted prize. ·
The probable starters ranged
from Impetuosity, winner of the
Blue Grass Stakes, to Fourullah, who hasn'i won at all.
A record list of 220 nominations, an increase in the entry
fee from $500 to $1,000 and a
near record field, topped only

as one year ago, he. said.
packed jn "tubes" of three or
· SELECTION IMPORTANT four . They are usually sold by
In addiUon to gree.nhouse count rather than weight. ·
tomatoes, shoppers will find . Greenhouse tomatoes are
tomatoes from Florida, Mexico- picked at the turning or pink
a,nd olher ar.eas available from stage. They are generlllly ad·
now through early June. These vertised · as "hot house "
are classified as "vine-ripe" or tomatoes and can be identified
" lube" tomatoes. Both are by the calyx or green ste~
grown in warmer climates.
which is left on the tomato.
Vine-ripe tomatoes are picked
Besi Eatiug Quality
at the turning stage and will Ripe tomatoes should be
have the familiar red color upon ·stored at temperatures above 45
arrival at the market.
degree F., rather than in the
refrigerator. Tomatoes may be
"Tube" tomatoes are usually chilled just before serving.
picked in the green stage about Unripe tomatoes should be
DEBBIE CONKLIN
two weeks before they are ripe. stored at room temperature
They are then ripened ar· away from sunlight.
tificially by means of temperature control and are often
WAGNER RE-ENLISTS
RACINE -Sergeant Stephen
E. Wagner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J . Wagner of Rt. I has
re-enlisted in the U. S. Air Force
after being selected for career
status. Sergeant Wagner is an
. NEW HAVEN - National been 1,036 hard cover books and Immortality, Alson Smith; administrative specialist at
Library Week was observed last between 400 and 500 paperback Calico Palace·, Gwen Brlston; Torrejon AB, Spain. He is a 1965
week at the New Haven Library books atlded.
OBVll, Sean Uris; Pat and graduate of Southern High The Meigs Marauder golf
from April 18-24 using the
A new Merit Encyclopedia Ronald, Barry Ferrell; Venture School.
team won at home Tuesday
theme, You Have A Right to have been added, a Random Inward , Coyce; Stations in
·against Wahama and split a
Read, Don't Blow lt.
House Dictionary and also a Space, David Cox; The Walter
triangular meet with host
Mrs. Paul Powell, librarian, new ' Webster Dictionary Syndrome, Richard Neely; A If we will be just a little
Jackson and Wellston Wedasked the New Haven Grade (unabridged).
Gift Bear for the. King, J. F.; rea listic~ we must recognize nesday. ·
School children to make posters
Mrs. Powell extends ap- Australia, Harris; A Tree that there is no revenue to
Nolan
Swackhamer ' s
in a contest in observance of preciation and thanks to the Grows In Brooklyn, Smith; Mrs. share. The only thing the
Marauders
gave
an excellent
National Library Week . business places in New Haven, Beneker, Weingarten; The Cal federal government has to
share today is debt.
showing against the White
Congratulations wer~ extended the ladies of the New Haven in the Hat, Dr . Seuss; The - Rep. John W. Byrnes, R·
Falcons defeating them
to the following winners : first Women's Club who helped in the Sound of Summer Voices,
Wis.
soundly, 204-225 as Bill Hensler
place, Belinda Zirkle; second library drive, the elementary Tucker; The Portuguese
place, Ricky Buzzard; third school principsls and teachers Escape, Ann Bridge; Inter, Dr.
place, Kimberly Capehart; for the success and many ac- X, Fiction; . Charm of the EarlL. Riley, son of Mr. and Bethel Vance, Mr. and Mrs.
honorable mention, Diana Abel, complis hme~ts of the library. Shadows, Susanne; Uttle Black Mrs. Earl W. Riley of Mason,, David Roush and sons, Murl
AI Sprouse, Lesa Gilland, Chuck
Persons having contributions Pony, Walter Farley; Best Book was honored Saturday evening McGee, Mrs. Frank Spradling,
Petrey, from the 5th grade. to give to the library are asked of Animal Stories, Pauline with a miscellaneous shower in Mrs. James MacKnight, ·Mrs.
Their teachers are Lenny to call Mrs. Powell or bring the Evans; Pasenger to Frankfurt, the social room of the St. Paul Stanley Staats, Faye Hoffman,
· Mazzie and David Hershner.
contribution to the library.
Agatha Christie; The Devil's Lutheran Church, New Haven. Mr. and Mrs. James Hart and
Winners in Mrs. Amy
Books or records that persons Ueutenant, Fagyas; A History Hostesses were Mrs. Kenneth family .
· CLUB MEETS
Hwnphr.ey's and Mrs. Carolyn wish to donate to the library will of Education in W. Va., Ambler; Thompson, Miss Judy Goheen
The T.W.O.S. (Take Weight
Hesson's third grade were: first be accepted, according to the Ufe in Alaska, Stuart Tom- and Mrs. Roger Fink.
The
color
scheme
used
was
Off
Sensibly) Club met on
place, Mike Grimm; second librarian.
pkins; Ali the Best People,
place, Connie Bird and third
Latest books added to the Wilson, The Crystal Cave, Mary pink and white. A small white Tuesday morning at St. Paul
umbrella decorated with pink Lutheran Church Social Room.
place, Tioy Hesilon.
library are Love Story, Segal; Stewart.
flowers
was suspended from the Vicki Keefer, Mason County
Mrs . William Parrish's fourth
ceiling above the table holding Home Demonstration Agent,
grade : first place winner, Lisa
the gifta. The refreshr...,nt table was the guest speaker. She
Davis ; second place, Joni
was
arranged ina V-shape, with spoke to the group on nutrition,
Clarke .and third place, Kisa
a lovely arrangement of pink diets and recipes for low calorie
Brown. All winners were
and white flowers placed in the dishes. She also distributed
presented book .
The April meeting of the William DeMoss, Harry Miller, center of the table, which was pamphlets concerning these
DRIVE MADE
Flesher,
Rome covered with a ~ilk, lace-edged topics.
A door-to=ctoor'drive for funds Esther Circle of the' United Jack
on behall of the · library was Lutheran Church Women of St. Williamson, Russell Capehart cloth . Crystal candelabras Future plans for the club
holding pink tapers were also include bowling, on May 4at low
made, a total of $269.44 being Paul Lutheran Church was ~eld and Donald Foglesong. ·
used as appointments. Refresh· calorie luncheon skating parcollected by school children and Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
SEWING CLUB MEETS
menta
of punch, coffee, cake, ties, hair styles, manicures,
adults. Of this swn, $46.27 was David Roush . Mrs. Harry Mrs . Howard Wagenhals
Layne was in charge of the entertained the members of tl)e nuta and mints were served by make.up, etc. The meetings are
collected by the children.
held each Tuesday at 10:30 a.m.
The fifth grade of Lenny program and discussed the Julia T. Bryant Sewing Club the hostesses.
Gam~s were played during at the Lutheran Church in New
Mazzie and David Hershner chapter in the study book Tuesday afternoon. Members
collected, the largest swn. As a dealing with the Christian present were Mrs. J,ohn C. Fry, the evening and prizes awar- Haven.
ded. Mrs. William Powell won
result, this class will be gue!ts Science Belief.
Mrs. N. 0 . Wein, Mrs. J. W. the door prize.
PERSONALS
at a party oh May 6 at the Several announcements were McMurray, Mrs. F. A. Batey,
Miss Bumgardner received Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence
library, of the New Haven made during the business Mrs. Ottie Roush, Mrs. James
many
lovely gifta. Tbe guest list . Lieving of Winfield were holidjy
session . One was the District MacKnight, Mrs. Donald Smith,
Women's Club.
Adult workers soliciting funds meeting which was held at St. Miss Lelah Jane Powell, Mrs. included Delma Javins, Mrs. weekend guests of Mrs. Thelma
according to Mrs. Paul Powell, Albans Saturday, April 24. All Uoyd Roush and the hostess. William McFarland, Mrs. Clyde Capehart.
Moore, Mrs. John C. Fry, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gerlach
chairman, and Mrs. Phyllis members were urged to attend.
The next meeting will be held Lloyd Roush, Mathew and Gabe and children of Cuyahoga Falls,
Scott, co-ehairman, were Judy A discussion was also held at the home of Mrs. N. 0 . Wein
Thompson , Mrs . Carroll Ohio and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hesson, Hazel Smith, Hilda concerning a progressive in Hartford.
Adams, Jr., Mrs. James Moy, Ridao and family of Indiana
Smith, Marian Batey, Mary Lou dinner to be sponsored by both
GARDEN CLUB MEETS
Miss Becky Burris, Mrs . were Easter weekend guesta of
Edwards, Patty and Susan Circles.
Mrs. Patrick Riley.and Mrs. William Powell, Mrs. Otto Mr. and Mrs. 'William Dye.
Wade, Ethel Terry, Carol Refreshmenta were served to Ray Proffitt were hostesses at
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Vance and
Roush, Judy Roach, Pal Em- Mrs. John Thorne, Mrs. John F. the Thursday evening meeting Grimm.
Mary .Jane Scites, Mrs. family of Salt Point, N. Y. were
bleton, Ann Bird, Brenda Roush, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs. of the New Haven Garden Club,
William
Powell !If, Mrs . guestalast week of the former.'s
Merriit, Jennie Dodd, Alberta J. V. McGrew, Mrs. Uoyd which was held at the Quillin
Wiles, Mildred King , lona Roush, Mrs. Melvin Knapp and Memorial Building. Mrs. Lee Bernard Lleving, Mrs. Paul psrents, Mr. and Mrs. Bethel
Hesson, Mrs. Harold Zerkle, Vance.
Zerkle, Sally Smith, Wilma Hill the hostess .
Gibbs presided at the meeting Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Karr
ROTARY CLUB MEETS
and Mrs. Scott.
which opened with the club
Mrs. Powell, librarian, The regular dinner-meeting song, flag salute, and collect. Vicki and Unda Bumgardner, and daughters of Owensboro,
reported that there has been of the New Haven Rotary Club Members answered roll call by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Layne, Ky. were Easler weekend
1,393 borro~,ers of books, an was held Thursday evening, naming their favorite spring Mrs. Melvin Knapp, Pauletta guesta of Mr. and Mrs. Otto
King.
Grimm. Mr. Karr returned
increase from last year of 523. Members attending the dinner flower.
Mrs. Donald Goheen, Brent, home on Sunday, but Mrs. Karr
During the past 10 months, and business meeting were Karl
During the business meeting Brad, Beth and Kristin Layne, and daughters remained for a
13,091 books have been checked Wiles, Dick Ord, James N. an election of officers was held.
out, which does not include Roush, Herman Layne, Donald Those elected for the new term Mr. and Mrs. Herman Layne, longer visit and returned to
reference books. There have F. Roush, Uoyd Roush, Rev. of two years were Lelah PoweU, Mrs. Harry Staats and Bernita, Owensboro on Friday.
president; Mrs. &amp;ty Fox, vice- Mrs. Charles Smith, Jackie
president; Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Ridgeway, Mr. and Mrs. James . .- -. .
treasurer; Mrs. Howard Burris, Layne, Mrs. Thomas Grinstead,
Mrs. Charles Dodd, Mrs. Robert
recording secretary, and Mrs.
Gurlis, Mrs. Bill Williams and
Lloyd Roush, corresponding
Judy, Mrs. George ·Bumgard·
secretary.
ner.
CERTIFIED WELDER
Mrs. Gibbs gave a report on
Mrs. Earl W. Riley, Mrs.
her recent trip to the State
Velma Roush, Mrs. John .Portab~ ~_11uipment
AT
Convention which was held at
Morgan, Mrs. Freda Hart,
Shop or Field
Whi te Sulphur Springs. She was
Keith Goheen, Mrs. Warren
Ph. 992-2511
accompanied by Mrs. Donald F.
..
. ..
Stewart, 1\fr. and Mrs. Roy
Roush. Mrs. Gibbs showed the
Hoffman, Kay, Jan and Joyce
members some pictures of the
Riley, Mrs. Harold Rose, Mrs.
flower arrangements which had
been made by one of the guest
speakers at the meeting.
A Beautiful S"x7" Color
The members again decided
Portrait of Your Child.
to take as a project the care of
planters at Wahama High
For
School , New Haven Super
Only
Markel and the Miller Market.
Those appointed to take care of
the Wahama Planter were Mrs.
Taken r:..... 1 Patrick
Riley, Mrs. Lloyd
Roush and Mrs. &amp;ty Fox. Those
...... ,,,_}. '% 99c Per Person
who are to take care of the two
NO AGE LIMIT
in New Haven are Mrs. Ottle ·
Roush and Miss Lelah Powell.
LIMIT ONE
The program fru: the evening
PER CHILO
was presented by Mrs. Howard
TWO PER FAMILY Burris. She gave a v,ery interesting report on "Poisonous
Plants,"
ONE DAY ONLY
..
During the social hour
refreshments were served to
Mrs. Howard Burrls, Mrs. Lee
• Gibbs, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs .
Photographer's Hours: 10:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
Herman Layne, Mrs. J. V.
McGrew, Lelah Powell, Mrs.
Donald F. Roush, Mrs. Velma
Tell Your Friends
They'll Be Glad You
Roush, Mrs. ,Uoyd Roush, Mrs.
Did!
Ottie. Roush, Mrs. Patrick
Riley, Mrs. Howard Wagenhals
' and the hostesses.
SHOWER HELD
Miss l;:heryl Bumgarner,
dapghler ol Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Bumgarner, of New'
Haven, and bride-elect of Mr.
By DEBORAH M; CONKLIN. · temperature, humidity and soil
fertility, are brought to market
Ext. Agent, Home Econ.
Spring has finally come to us, in a slate of near perfection.
and wl th it, greenhouse Two crops of tomatoes are
vegetable
titne.
Ohio produced ~ach year in most
greenhouse
growers
in greenhouses, one in the spring
Cleveland, Toledo, Cincinnati and one in the fall . The spring
and Columbus, with the largest crop is marketed from late
vegetable acreage under g·las8 March until about the middle of
in the .Uniter. States, are now Aug ust. The .fall crop beg,ins to
sending their vegetables to move to market in late OCtober
market. Although the crop is a and ends in early January.
little later than usual, supplies Quality of tomatoes currently
should reach a peak around the on the market is better than last
year but. the price is a little
third wee)l in May.
Greenhouse growers produce higher , according to M. E.
both red and pink skinned Cravens, of the Ohio State
tomatOes, leaf and Bibb lettuce, University's Agricultural
cucumers and watercress . Economics Department .
These vegetables, produced Supplies in May will be better
under controlled conditions of than at present, but not as good

\.,.,.

Golfers Split ,on

Library Week Observed

by the 22 that started in 1928,
made the 97th running of the
turf .classic the richest. If all 21
horses start,:· the race will ~
worth a total of $189,000 with
$146,500 going to the winner,
The others expected to be
named for the mile and a
quarter classic were Twist the
Axe, who will run coupled with
Impetuosity, the entry of
Eastern Fleet and Bcld and
Able, a third entry of Royal
Leverage and On the Money,
Jim French, Unconscious, Ust,
Bold Reason, gole Mio, Vegas
Vic, Going Straight, Hello Rise,
Knight Coun ter, Barbizon
Streak, Tribal Line, Saigon
Warrior, Jrs' Arrowhead and
Canonero II.
Two factors accounted for the
large field . There isn't an

a

and Steve Story swept medalist
honors by shooting a pair of 38s.
Scores for Meigs were Hensler
38, Frank Girolami 42, Bob
Werry 45, Chuck Hannahs 41,
and Story 36.
Wahama's scores were Ralph
Sayre 45, James Ingles 43, Mike
Athey 44, Greg Gibbs 46, and
Randy Grindstead, 47.
In Wednesday's match,
Jackson finished first, Meigs
second and Wellston last as the
lronmen
captured
both
Jlledaiist and game honors in
scoring a 220. Meigs . led by
.Hannahs had a 238, and
Wellston rounded out the
scoring with a 281.
Jackson's Mike McPeak and
Dave Mitchell each shot a 41 to
top the field.
For Meigs, Hensler had a 48,
Story 49,..Girolami 49; Hannahs
43, and Werry 49. In the
Wahama match Sherman Mills
carded a 46 and Story a 47.
Brian Russell had a 52 and
Randy Roush a 56, although
they did not count in the official

:~·

.' .. ,

'

i'i'

f

•

'. .

LAUNDRY
CALL 992-2057
Pickup &amp; Delivery

HOME' lAUNDRY

'.

Middleport

. .'
..

'l q' tl~

-- ~

'THE CREATOR OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES'

BAKER

'FURNITURE
Midllellcrt, 0..

f

,

'

. 'l1fllliS.IM.Y
George Thompson Kidney
WOMEN'S ASSN.·'lbursda
. y, ·F un d.
7 : 30 p.m. Middleport First RACINE CHAPTER IH,
United . Presbyterian ChW.ch. OES, special meeting, Friday, 8
Book Study by Mrs. Carl Horky, p.m. ,at temple. Initiation to be
Devotions by Mrs , R. M. held, all officers wear formals.
Sherman ; · hostesses, Mrs.
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
Lewis Sauer, Mrs. Paul Hap- River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
tonslaU, Mrs. Freda Smith Chester, 7:30p.m. Friday. Work
Mrs. Vincent Oabo.
' in Master Mason degree. All
BEND 0' THE RIVER Master Masons invited.
Glirden Club, open meeting,
SCIPIO ALUMNI Assn .
7:30 Thursday night at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Friday, 8 p.m, at Presbyterian
Church. C. E. Blakeslee to Church , Harrisonville.
speak on the use of insecUcides. President Dale Whaley asks 'all
Devotions by Mrs. Bert Grimm alumni to attend.
and Mrs. Robert Kuhn.
PAST
MATRONS,
INSPECTION Thursday
Pomeroy Chapter 1116 OES 7:30 Evangeline Chapter OES,
p.m. at Masonic Hall. Deputy Friday, 7:30p.m. at Middleport ·
Grand Matron Wilma Styer Temple; Beulah Hayes and
-Inspecting officer. All Eastern Helen Reynolds, hostesses.
Stars are invited.
SATURDAY
SALVATION ARMY free
DANCE, Meigs Junior High
clothing day, 10 a.m. to 12 noon
School,
Middleport, Saturday,
Thursday . Anyone needing
clothing report to army quar- 8:30-11 :30 p. m., the Jays emters, Butternut Ave._, Pomeroy. ceeing.
SADIE HAWKINS dance,
HOLIDAY CRAFTS Club,
Thursday, 10 a.m., bookmobile Saturqay, Eastern High School
headquarters. Take own lunch. gym, Jl.ll p. m~ with music by D.
Mrs. Stanley Plattenburg will J . Casual hillbilly dress
demonstrate making Christmas recommended. Sponsored by
FHA.
tapestry.
BASHAN FIRE Deparlment
SUNDAY
Auxiliary Stanley party, 7:30
UNITED
FAITH Nonp.m. Thursday at firehouse.
Denominational Church,
Public invited.
located
on the Pomeroy- .
FRIDAY
· WEEKEND revival, Mt . Middleport by-pass, hymn sing,
Olive Church, Friday through 2 p. m.; revival services for a
Sunday, 7:30 p.m., Emmett week beginning 7:30 Sunday
Ralston speaking. Public in· night. fu!v. Dennis Weaver,
evangelist. Singers welcome.
vited.
SPRING FLING, former
Pomeroy Junior High School, 9
MONDAY
pm. Friday to I a.m., Gary
THEODORl)S
COUNCIL,
Phillips Trio, Portsmouth,
providing music for dancing. Daughters of America, 7:30
Auction of fun articles· at in· Monday night at the IOOF hall.
tervals. Sponsored by Meigs Important business to be
County Jaycees, proceeds to transacted.

•'

INGELS .fURNITURE
Rugged, smart Early American

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

Authentically.sty/eel in Appalachian Hardwoods
Open Stock Ma le Group
'

SPRING
SALE!

Full size Cannonball slyie bed

COMPLETE BUNK BED OUTFIT
includes two beds (that can be separated as twins),
plus guardrail and sturdy ladder, plus two bunkie
sets (polyfoam matt ress with supporting platform )

MaHress and Box Spring

' .. "

-.~

~ : · -~

I

~

• ·

,,_ , _, ,

~1,,-

..,

0

w
MOTORIZED GR.ILL
Chrome plated grid with side
handles . .. :·perma·lilt" grid .
positioner ... tubular steel legs
with plastic caps .. . snop·on
hoqd . :. removable spit.

$'

BUY IT, NOW- USE

T

CHARCOAL

LIGHTER

~E~~!~· 37~
PORTABLE GRILL
Heovy

~feel grill. 18'' diameter chrome

plated grid adjusts to 3 positions .

$2 ·7·7

.

.. : : . .

SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE
REG. $3.69
OF C)UTDOOR COOKING ACCESSORIES

N POPPER,
CORN ON

THE GRILL, IN
THE FIREPLACE,
ETC.

Tonko Tooster PIE

IRON

CAST ALUMINUM
I '14" HANDlES

S2J7

PICNIC
BASKET
REG. 199
LARGE
SIZE .

$293

METAL HANDLES

MOORE'S IN POMEROY
PH. 992·2141

There were 200 students of the Thompson, Robert Titus, Joe
Meigs High School named to the Welker, Danny White, Cathy
honor roil ,t the close of the fifth Wildermuth, Rebecca Will ;
Clarence Williams, Earle Wood,
sill weeks grading period.
Makin a grade o( "B" or Brenda · Woods, Rebecca
~bove in all their ~ubJI\Cts. to be Wright, Randy Michael.
SOPHOMORES - · Diane
"t.f•"'., listed-on the roll were:
SENIO~ - Sandy Aleshire, Aleshire, Shirley Alkire, Unda
c
Don Anderson, Randy Becker, Atkinson, Lynne Baker, James
Mary Bradbury, Edward Boggs, Jon Bunce, Jan Burns,
Brown, Cathy Bunce, Cindy Wanda Cardillo, Steven Cot·
.,.~··· Carder,
Alice Jane Capehart, terili, Gene Davis, Beth Fultz,
,•
Mary Carleton, Twila Clat. Patty Glaze, Karen Hale,
worthy, Debbie Crow, Dottie Randy Haynes, Diana Holstein,
Davis, Mary Ferren, Sharon Jean Hooper, Julie Hutchison,
Lambert, Steve
Glaze, Diana Good, Michael Sherry
McGuffin,
Edith
Mees, Desiree
Grate, David Haggerty, Charles
' '
Hannahs, William Hawk, Don Pike, Christine Robinson, Linda
Hayes, Bernadette Hennessy, Rupe, James Schmoll, Everett
Steve Hoffman, Thomas Hoff. Schuler, Paul Smith, Stephen
ner, Rebecca Houdashelt, Kaye Stanley, Bill Vaughan, Patti
Well.
Howell, Glenna Keys.
FRESHMEN - Steve An·
Marianne Kloes, Judith
McKnight, Nancy Jo Mayer, derson, David Barnhart,
Linda Midkiff, Kathy Moore, Brenda Bartoq, Regina Bing,
Penny Moore, Mark Moyer, Richie Blwnenauer, Rick Bolin,
Kayle Mullen, Terry Napper, Donna Marie Boyd , Mary
Stella Neutzllng, Gloria Oiler, Bradshaw, Ronald Couch,
Eric Pearch, Jeanette Phillips, Melvin Cremeans, Joyce Davis,
Gene Powell, Rose Ratliff, Mary Janey, David Grant,
Ellen Rice , Joyce Riley, Thurman Haning , Ingrid
t'
•
Franklin Rizer, Cathy Searles, Hawley, Randy Hill, Geneva
''
John Sebo, Donald Shultz, Gary King, Mark Morris, Tina Nieri,
Simpson, Nancy Snider, Glenna Roxanna Patterson, Randy
Sprague, Peggy Staats, Sherry Snyder, Rick Stobart, Wayne
Nelson, Cathy Stone, Becky Pullins, Robert Qualls, Joe
Swindell, Sandy Taylor, Steve Rosenbawn, Gail Sizemore, Jill
Taylor , Marsha Thornton, Smith.
Joyceline Waggoner, Donna
Weber, Wayne Well, Jed Will,
Donna Wilson, Mary Brickles .
JUNIORS - Joyce Arney,
MORNING GLORIES
April20, 1971
John Anderson, Susan Andrews,
Standings
Richard Ash, Irene Barnes, TEAM
POINTS
Wayne Barnett, Doris Barn- Newell Sunoco
162
Fraley
&amp;
Schilling
131
hart, William Barnhart, Opal
Gibbs
Grocery
129
Berry, Jim Betz, Resa Boothe, Domlgan Sohlo
115
Bessie Bradshaw, Pamela Lou's Ashland
109
98
Burson, Karen Cadle, Debbie Bailey's Sunoco
High
Team
3-games
Newell
Carder, ·William D. Clark, Svnoco 2254; Lou's · Ashland
Robert Collins, Janelle Cum· 2245; Fraley &amp; Schilling 2178.
·mings, Andrea Dewhurst, Jo High Team Game - Newell
795; Lou's Ashland 772 ;
, Ellen Diehl, Paul Dill, •Nancy Sunoco
Newell Sunoco 760.
"
Dixon, Roger Dixon, Kathy High Ind. 3-games - Jackie
"
Durst, James Estep, Harvey Gulnlher 435; Margaret Wyat1
Susie Knight 432.
Erlewine, Debbie Garnes, 433;
High Ind. game - Susie
Crystal Faulkner, Sherry Knight 169; Marie Domiga~
Gloyd, Vicki Grate, Nancy 163; Jan Jenkins 157.
Greenlee, Connie Grueser,
Melanie Hackett, Ronald
Friday Mixed League
Hanson, Vickie Harrison, Ted
Aprll23,.191.1
Pfs.
}{ayes.
RaCine Home Nat' I Bank
14
Jane
Hazelton,
Patty TeamS
14
Crossan, Roger Hendrix, Frank Evelyn's Grocery
8
6
Hoffman, · John Hunnell, Team4
Mark
V
4
Deborah Johnson, ,Fred Jones, Team3
2
Cindy Jordan, Diana King, Ken
High Ind. Game - Charles·
Kloes , · David Krawsczyn, Aelker 218, Delores Tyree 183;
Connie Lanning, Pamela Cly~ Sayre 199, Carol ' Sayre
143.
'
Manley, Richard Martin, Debta
High Series - Clyde Sayre
May, Daniel McCloud, Gary 560, Carol Syare, &lt;130.
High Series - Evelyn
Michael, Daniel Midkiff, Mary Grocery
1926.
,
Midkiff, Mark MiUer, Vicki
Teem High Game - Racine
Miller, Darla Neutzllng, Marla Home National Bank 708. &lt;
High Series - Racine Home
Neutzling , Kenneth Norrla, Ann National
Bank 2066.
· Ohlinger, Edward Parker ,
Connie Radford, Rosemary
Rice, Margaret Riggs, MlliBB fii!DIANS ]t'()R SALE
.
RiUr, Rayniond R*h,llrenda CLEVELAND(UPI)- A,price
Russell, Rebecca Scaggs, of $9 million hils been placed on.
J:Jebqfilh Sebo, Alvin Smith, the Cleveland Indians by owner
Rebecca Smith, SteUa Smith, Vernon Stouffer. Stouffer BBid
~~-

*
**
*

BEMCO

. ,."'... 208 on MHS Roll
.
Of Honor Pupils
'·IN 'POMEROY

How practical! Heavy, solid mountain hardwoods that will dely the
roughest treatment by any youngster. How IOOd·laokinl! The
honest, warm Colonial style that
has stood . the test of centuries.
Never a worry that this bedroom
furniture will become out-of-date.
How lhri!IJ! Never before have we
been able to offer such a saving on .
fine furniture.

w Av~ilablel The Buy of The Year!

......

.

.

.

Roomy 4 drawer
Colonial .chest
with autbeotic
dnwer pulls

,

.'

124 W. MAIN

o'

....

N

SATURDAY, MAY 1·

'

' ti_JJi'
I

lor Yo!!!_ Drug Neetls ·

•

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

HONEY PORTRAITS··

~~~~

'S 34'H

Chase Hardware

BAKER'S

'

score.

Shoppers Mart

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

271 N. Second Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio

PHOTO SPECIAL!

MASON, W. VA.

.'

PHONE 992-5759

.

.

' ..

i nd Ave.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~ Meigs
Social Calendar 1·
.

JUlngr
·Jqnrmnry

--11111!1•1!111..

Hey, Mom--

BELPRE, OHIO

outstanding_ horse, for the J.
yeaHids have been beating
each other all season. And none
of the ll!arters ·ever has been
tested at the Kentucky Derby
distance except Canonero who
won a mile an~ a quarter race
in Venezuela.

Jackson Course

New Haven Social Events

gge

~ :: ~ .~Y Sent!'_lei,Middleport.PIIIlerOy, 0., April29,1971

~;'•~''''"''''@'!.%tWmm:\:••;;;;:;:••::•;•;':"''''''''''':•:;•;:;.,,,,,,_,,,,;;,;:;•;:;t:;•;•::•::;•:•:;:•••\::\''&lt;':'•:::::r;m::;•:4:

,.,~.~

$

...... ,

..

'•

I

GREEN TAG SALE!

110h

Compare 'lUI

PICNIC
SET

•4

4 PLATES

ALL 23 PIECES
REG. 2.99

•

Reg. 2.29'

1.59

LIMITED
'

pleoe

FORKS
e4 KNIVES
e4 SPOONS

11 CAKE KNIFE

e1 BUTTER KNIFE

Certified Value Studio c·ouch
two comfortably!

1·99
.1

Green Tag Sale!

DECORATOR

~ ~

Duk lowers to tu er

PO~&gt;!i Q II
lt n d~d .·

wlfh I! U

tl •

lllc" m han

~ ~~n

I~

bt &lt;ls .

d r n~

LAMPS
CERAMIC and
WALNUT BASE

·

'""U tw rn

:.: 3.99

SPRING
SALE PRICED

Green Tag Sale!

'1 09!!1etel
Re1. '129.95

BOSTON
ROCKER
Mahogany · Maple

Reg.

;Oii&gt;tlo-"l • Full innerspring seat cushion
• Full innerspring coil base
-11----~V~-==~· Two full size polyurethane foam bolsters
• Handsome print or tweed cover

29.95

Decorative Steel Storage Units Provide Great Utility For The Home ...

s

p
E

c
I

A
L.

.31" Wardrobe;·
• Hat shell • Door
mlrroreTie Bar•
Center bar con-1

struclion • Magnetic door catches

s
Sale

Kitchen
· China

\
66" Deluxe Sink 66 " x Z5 " X 36" H.
Five drawers and one shelf on nylon

30"

White. Coppertone , Avocado

sal~39

95

slide 5 1

Doors and drawer fronts double walled and in·
sulated . Heavy concea led slraphinges . Black toe
base. Sinks manufactured from heavy gauge ,
.steel. White potcelain sink lop. Chrome plated
deck lype faucet, and crum cup strainer. Cullery
dividers In drawer .
I

I

·

..

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

'

14 CUPS

GARDEN HOSE
INGELS'
SPRING SALE!

95

GREEN TAG SALE!
liCE CHEST
23 p(.

75 FT.PlASTIC

.

. :

FRESHERIZ.LD cotton cushioning stays
clean and fr esh.
.

*
.......______
.______.,.....

Loeal Bowling

be ' was

MULTI-COIL innerspring unit .

i'l

.

t:t::_::.~=~jJIJiel SU~VWS,l
BU-W!!!ed!!!..l!fll!lday

SLEEP-ENGINEERED resilient.

Smart floral COVER.

..

..

PILLOW-PUFF QUILTED for surface comfort.

38" Ditidtd Top Raace
Over-sized ZO" oven with cabinet storage
comp&gt;rtmenl on left . AGA approved, automatic ignition for all burners . Universal
valves for natural or LPN ~as. lull glass
illuminate&lt;i bOCkguard with electric clock an&lt;i
4 huur interval timer .
Lift top and lilt
.oft oven d~or for . ~
easy cl~am n g . ·

$

�•

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April 29, 1971

97th Derby Richest Classic ·

Greenhouse Vegetables Coming

LOUISVILLE, Ky (UPI)Horsemen flocked to the racing
secretary's office. in d~oves
. Wednesday to enter 21 .horses
for Sat~~rday's running of the
Kentucky Derby and everyone
of them thought he had a
chance to win ' racing's mOst
. coveted prize. ·
The probable starters ranged
from Impetuosity, winner of the
Blue Grass Stakes, to Fourullah, who hasn'i won at all.
A record list of 220 nominations, an increase in the entry
fee from $500 to $1,000 and a
near record field, topped only

as one year ago, he. said.
packed jn "tubes" of three or
· SELECTION IMPORTANT four . They are usually sold by
In addiUon to gree.nhouse count rather than weight. ·
tomatoes, shoppers will find . Greenhouse tomatoes are
tomatoes from Florida, Mexico- picked at the turning or pink
a,nd olher ar.eas available from stage. They are generlllly ad·
now through early June. These vertised · as "hot house "
are classified as "vine-ripe" or tomatoes and can be identified
" lube" tomatoes. Both are by the calyx or green ste~
grown in warmer climates.
which is left on the tomato.
Vine-ripe tomatoes are picked
Besi Eatiug Quality
at the turning stage and will Ripe tomatoes should be
have the familiar red color upon ·stored at temperatures above 45
arrival at the market.
degree F., rather than in the
refrigerator. Tomatoes may be
"Tube" tomatoes are usually chilled just before serving.
picked in the green stage about Unripe tomatoes should be
DEBBIE CONKLIN
two weeks before they are ripe. stored at room temperature
They are then ripened ar· away from sunlight.
tificially by means of temperature control and are often
WAGNER RE-ENLISTS
RACINE -Sergeant Stephen
E. Wagner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J . Wagner of Rt. I has
re-enlisted in the U. S. Air Force
after being selected for career
status. Sergeant Wagner is an
. NEW HAVEN - National been 1,036 hard cover books and Immortality, Alson Smith; administrative specialist at
Library Week was observed last between 400 and 500 paperback Calico Palace·, Gwen Brlston; Torrejon AB, Spain. He is a 1965
week at the New Haven Library books atlded.
OBVll, Sean Uris; Pat and graduate of Southern High The Meigs Marauder golf
from April 18-24 using the
A new Merit Encyclopedia Ronald, Barry Ferrell; Venture School.
team won at home Tuesday
theme, You Have A Right to have been added, a Random Inward , Coyce; Stations in
·against Wahama and split a
Read, Don't Blow lt.
House Dictionary and also a Space, David Cox; The Walter
triangular meet with host
Mrs. Paul Powell, librarian, new ' Webster Dictionary Syndrome, Richard Neely; A If we will be just a little
Jackson and Wellston Wedasked the New Haven Grade (unabridged).
Gift Bear for the. King, J. F.; rea listic~ we must recognize nesday. ·
School children to make posters
Mrs. Powell extends ap- Australia, Harris; A Tree that there is no revenue to
Nolan
Swackhamer ' s
in a contest in observance of preciation and thanks to the Grows In Brooklyn, Smith; Mrs. share. The only thing the
Marauders
gave
an excellent
National Library Week . business places in New Haven, Beneker, Weingarten; The Cal federal government has to
share today is debt.
showing against the White
Congratulations wer~ extended the ladies of the New Haven in the Hat, Dr . Seuss; The - Rep. John W. Byrnes, R·
Falcons defeating them
to the following winners : first Women's Club who helped in the Sound of Summer Voices,
Wis.
soundly, 204-225 as Bill Hensler
place, Belinda Zirkle; second library drive, the elementary Tucker; The Portuguese
place, Ricky Buzzard; third school principsls and teachers Escape, Ann Bridge; Inter, Dr.
place, Kimberly Capehart; for the success and many ac- X, Fiction; . Charm of the EarlL. Riley, son of Mr. and Bethel Vance, Mr. and Mrs.
honorable mention, Diana Abel, complis hme~ts of the library. Shadows, Susanne; Uttle Black Mrs. Earl W. Riley of Mason,, David Roush and sons, Murl
AI Sprouse, Lesa Gilland, Chuck
Persons having contributions Pony, Walter Farley; Best Book was honored Saturday evening McGee, Mrs. Frank Spradling,
Petrey, from the 5th grade. to give to the library are asked of Animal Stories, Pauline with a miscellaneous shower in Mrs. James MacKnight, ·Mrs.
Their teachers are Lenny to call Mrs. Powell or bring the Evans; Pasenger to Frankfurt, the social room of the St. Paul Stanley Staats, Faye Hoffman,
· Mazzie and David Hershner.
contribution to the library.
Agatha Christie; The Devil's Lutheran Church, New Haven. Mr. and Mrs. James Hart and
Winners in Mrs. Amy
Books or records that persons Ueutenant, Fagyas; A History Hostesses were Mrs. Kenneth family .
· CLUB MEETS
Hwnphr.ey's and Mrs. Carolyn wish to donate to the library will of Education in W. Va., Ambler; Thompson, Miss Judy Goheen
The T.W.O.S. (Take Weight
Hesson's third grade were: first be accepted, according to the Ufe in Alaska, Stuart Tom- and Mrs. Roger Fink.
The
color
scheme
used
was
Off
Sensibly) Club met on
place, Mike Grimm; second librarian.
pkins; Ali the Best People,
place, Connie Bird and third
Latest books added to the Wilson, The Crystal Cave, Mary pink and white. A small white Tuesday morning at St. Paul
umbrella decorated with pink Lutheran Church Social Room.
place, Tioy Hesilon.
library are Love Story, Segal; Stewart.
flowers
was suspended from the Vicki Keefer, Mason County
Mrs . William Parrish's fourth
ceiling above the table holding Home Demonstration Agent,
grade : first place winner, Lisa
the gifta. The refreshr...,nt table was the guest speaker. She
Davis ; second place, Joni
was
arranged ina V-shape, with spoke to the group on nutrition,
Clarke .and third place, Kisa
a lovely arrangement of pink diets and recipes for low calorie
Brown. All winners were
and white flowers placed in the dishes. She also distributed
presented book .
The April meeting of the William DeMoss, Harry Miller, center of the table, which was pamphlets concerning these
DRIVE MADE
Flesher,
Rome covered with a ~ilk, lace-edged topics.
A door-to=ctoor'drive for funds Esther Circle of the' United Jack
on behall of the · library was Lutheran Church Women of St. Williamson, Russell Capehart cloth . Crystal candelabras Future plans for the club
holding pink tapers were also include bowling, on May 4at low
made, a total of $269.44 being Paul Lutheran Church was ~eld and Donald Foglesong. ·
used as appointments. Refresh· calorie luncheon skating parcollected by school children and Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
SEWING CLUB MEETS
menta
of punch, coffee, cake, ties, hair styles, manicures,
adults. Of this swn, $46.27 was David Roush . Mrs. Harry Mrs . Howard Wagenhals
Layne was in charge of the entertained the members of tl)e nuta and mints were served by make.up, etc. The meetings are
collected by the children.
held each Tuesday at 10:30 a.m.
The fifth grade of Lenny program and discussed the Julia T. Bryant Sewing Club the hostesses.
Gam~s were played during at the Lutheran Church in New
Mazzie and David Hershner chapter in the study book Tuesday afternoon. Members
collected, the largest swn. As a dealing with the Christian present were Mrs. J,ohn C. Fry, the evening and prizes awar- Haven.
ded. Mrs. William Powell won
result, this class will be gue!ts Science Belief.
Mrs. N. 0 . Wein, Mrs. J. W. the door prize.
PERSONALS
at a party oh May 6 at the Several announcements were McMurray, Mrs. F. A. Batey,
Miss Bumgardner received Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence
library, of the New Haven made during the business Mrs. Ottie Roush, Mrs. James
many
lovely gifta. Tbe guest list . Lieving of Winfield were holidjy
session . One was the District MacKnight, Mrs. Donald Smith,
Women's Club.
Adult workers soliciting funds meeting which was held at St. Miss Lelah Jane Powell, Mrs. included Delma Javins, Mrs. weekend guests of Mrs. Thelma
according to Mrs. Paul Powell, Albans Saturday, April 24. All Uoyd Roush and the hostess. William McFarland, Mrs. Clyde Capehart.
Moore, Mrs. John C. Fry, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gerlach
chairman, and Mrs. Phyllis members were urged to attend.
The next meeting will be held Lloyd Roush, Mathew and Gabe and children of Cuyahoga Falls,
Scott, co-ehairman, were Judy A discussion was also held at the home of Mrs. N. 0 . Wein
Thompson , Mrs . Carroll Ohio and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hesson, Hazel Smith, Hilda concerning a progressive in Hartford.
Adams, Jr., Mrs. James Moy, Ridao and family of Indiana
Smith, Marian Batey, Mary Lou dinner to be sponsored by both
GARDEN CLUB MEETS
Miss Becky Burris, Mrs . were Easter weekend guesta of
Edwards, Patty and Susan Circles.
Mrs. Patrick Riley.and Mrs. William Powell, Mrs. Otto Mr. and Mrs. 'William Dye.
Wade, Ethel Terry, Carol Refreshmenta were served to Ray Proffitt were hostesses at
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Vance and
Roush, Judy Roach, Pal Em- Mrs. John Thorne, Mrs. John F. the Thursday evening meeting Grimm.
Mary .Jane Scites, Mrs. family of Salt Point, N. Y. were
bleton, Ann Bird, Brenda Roush, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs. of the New Haven Garden Club,
William
Powell !If, Mrs . guestalast week of the former.'s
Merriit, Jennie Dodd, Alberta J. V. McGrew, Mrs. Uoyd which was held at the Quillin
Wiles, Mildred King , lona Roush, Mrs. Melvin Knapp and Memorial Building. Mrs. Lee Bernard Lleving, Mrs. Paul psrents, Mr. and Mrs. Bethel
Hesson, Mrs. Harold Zerkle, Vance.
Zerkle, Sally Smith, Wilma Hill the hostess .
Gibbs presided at the meeting Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Karr
ROTARY CLUB MEETS
and Mrs. Scott.
which opened with the club
Mrs. Powell, librarian, The regular dinner-meeting song, flag salute, and collect. Vicki and Unda Bumgardner, and daughters of Owensboro,
reported that there has been of the New Haven Rotary Club Members answered roll call by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Layne, Ky. were Easler weekend
1,393 borro~,ers of books, an was held Thursday evening, naming their favorite spring Mrs. Melvin Knapp, Pauletta guesta of Mr. and Mrs. Otto
King.
Grimm. Mr. Karr returned
increase from last year of 523. Members attending the dinner flower.
Mrs. Donald Goheen, Brent, home on Sunday, but Mrs. Karr
During the past 10 months, and business meeting were Karl
During the business meeting Brad, Beth and Kristin Layne, and daughters remained for a
13,091 books have been checked Wiles, Dick Ord, James N. an election of officers was held.
out, which does not include Roush, Herman Layne, Donald Those elected for the new term Mr. and Mrs. Herman Layne, longer visit and returned to
reference books. There have F. Roush, Uoyd Roush, Rev. of two years were Lelah PoweU, Mrs. Harry Staats and Bernita, Owensboro on Friday.
president; Mrs. &amp;ty Fox, vice- Mrs. Charles Smith, Jackie
president; Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Ridgeway, Mr. and Mrs. James . .- -. .
treasurer; Mrs. Howard Burris, Layne, Mrs. Thomas Grinstead,
Mrs. Charles Dodd, Mrs. Robert
recording secretary, and Mrs.
Gurlis, Mrs. Bill Williams and
Lloyd Roush, corresponding
Judy, Mrs. George ·Bumgard·
secretary.
ner.
CERTIFIED WELDER
Mrs. Gibbs gave a report on
Mrs. Earl W. Riley, Mrs.
her recent trip to the State
Velma Roush, Mrs. John .Portab~ ~_11uipment
AT
Convention which was held at
Morgan, Mrs. Freda Hart,
Shop or Field
Whi te Sulphur Springs. She was
Keith Goheen, Mrs. Warren
Ph. 992-2511
accompanied by Mrs. Donald F.
..
. ..
Stewart, 1\fr. and Mrs. Roy
Roush. Mrs. Gibbs showed the
Hoffman, Kay, Jan and Joyce
members some pictures of the
Riley, Mrs. Harold Rose, Mrs.
flower arrangements which had
been made by one of the guest
speakers at the meeting.
A Beautiful S"x7" Color
The members again decided
Portrait of Your Child.
to take as a project the care of
planters at Wahama High
For
School , New Haven Super
Only
Markel and the Miller Market.
Those appointed to take care of
the Wahama Planter were Mrs.
Taken r:..... 1 Patrick
Riley, Mrs. Lloyd
Roush and Mrs. &amp;ty Fox. Those
...... ,,,_}. '% 99c Per Person
who are to take care of the two
NO AGE LIMIT
in New Haven are Mrs. Ottle ·
Roush and Miss Lelah Powell.
LIMIT ONE
The program fru: the evening
PER CHILO
was presented by Mrs. Howard
TWO PER FAMILY Burris. She gave a v,ery interesting report on "Poisonous
Plants,"
ONE DAY ONLY
..
During the social hour
refreshments were served to
Mrs. Howard Burrls, Mrs. Lee
• Gibbs, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs .
Photographer's Hours: 10:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
Herman Layne, Mrs. J. V.
McGrew, Lelah Powell, Mrs.
Donald F. Roush, Mrs. Velma
Tell Your Friends
They'll Be Glad You
Roush, Mrs. ,Uoyd Roush, Mrs.
Did!
Ottie. Roush, Mrs. Patrick
Riley, Mrs. Howard Wagenhals
' and the hostesses.
SHOWER HELD
Miss l;:heryl Bumgarner,
dapghler ol Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Bumgarner, of New'
Haven, and bride-elect of Mr.
By DEBORAH M; CONKLIN. · temperature, humidity and soil
fertility, are brought to market
Ext. Agent, Home Econ.
Spring has finally come to us, in a slate of near perfection.
and wl th it, greenhouse Two crops of tomatoes are
vegetable
titne.
Ohio produced ~ach year in most
greenhouse
growers
in greenhouses, one in the spring
Cleveland, Toledo, Cincinnati and one in the fall . The spring
and Columbus, with the largest crop is marketed from late
vegetable acreage under g·las8 March until about the middle of
in the .Uniter. States, are now Aug ust. The .fall crop beg,ins to
sending their vegetables to move to market in late OCtober
market. Although the crop is a and ends in early January.
little later than usual, supplies Quality of tomatoes currently
should reach a peak around the on the market is better than last
year but. the price is a little
third wee)l in May.
Greenhouse growers produce higher , according to M. E.
both red and pink skinned Cravens, of the Ohio State
tomatOes, leaf and Bibb lettuce, University's Agricultural
cucumers and watercress . Economics Department .
These vegetables, produced Supplies in May will be better
under controlled conditions of than at present, but not as good

\.,.,.

Golfers Split ,on

Library Week Observed

by the 22 that started in 1928,
made the 97th running of the
turf .classic the richest. If all 21
horses start,:· the race will ~
worth a total of $189,000 with
$146,500 going to the winner,
The others expected to be
named for the mile and a
quarter classic were Twist the
Axe, who will run coupled with
Impetuosity, the entry of
Eastern Fleet and Bcld and
Able, a third entry of Royal
Leverage and On the Money,
Jim French, Unconscious, Ust,
Bold Reason, gole Mio, Vegas
Vic, Going Straight, Hello Rise,
Knight Coun ter, Barbizon
Streak, Tribal Line, Saigon
Warrior, Jrs' Arrowhead and
Canonero II.
Two factors accounted for the
large field . There isn't an

a

and Steve Story swept medalist
honors by shooting a pair of 38s.
Scores for Meigs were Hensler
38, Frank Girolami 42, Bob
Werry 45, Chuck Hannahs 41,
and Story 36.
Wahama's scores were Ralph
Sayre 45, James Ingles 43, Mike
Athey 44, Greg Gibbs 46, and
Randy Grindstead, 47.
In Wednesday's match,
Jackson finished first, Meigs
second and Wellston last as the
lronmen
captured
both
Jlledaiist and game honors in
scoring a 220. Meigs . led by
.Hannahs had a 238, and
Wellston rounded out the
scoring with a 281.
Jackson's Mike McPeak and
Dave Mitchell each shot a 41 to
top the field.
For Meigs, Hensler had a 48,
Story 49,..Girolami 49; Hannahs
43, and Werry 49. In the
Wahama match Sherman Mills
carded a 46 and Story a 47.
Brian Russell had a 52 and
Randy Roush a 56, although
they did not count in the official

:~·

.' .. ,

'

i'i'

f

•

'. .

LAUNDRY
CALL 992-2057
Pickup &amp; Delivery

HOME' lAUNDRY

'.

Middleport

. .'
..

'l q' tl~

-- ~

'THE CREATOR OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES'

BAKER

'FURNITURE
Midllellcrt, 0..

f

,

'

. 'l1fllliS.IM.Y
George Thompson Kidney
WOMEN'S ASSN.·'lbursda
. y, ·F un d.
7 : 30 p.m. Middleport First RACINE CHAPTER IH,
United . Presbyterian ChW.ch. OES, special meeting, Friday, 8
Book Study by Mrs. Carl Horky, p.m. ,at temple. Initiation to be
Devotions by Mrs , R. M. held, all officers wear formals.
Sherman ; · hostesses, Mrs.
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
Lewis Sauer, Mrs. Paul Hap- River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
tonslaU, Mrs. Freda Smith Chester, 7:30p.m. Friday. Work
Mrs. Vincent Oabo.
' in Master Mason degree. All
BEND 0' THE RIVER Master Masons invited.
Glirden Club, open meeting,
SCIPIO ALUMNI Assn .
7:30 Thursday night at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Friday, 8 p.m, at Presbyterian
Church. C. E. Blakeslee to Church , Harrisonville.
speak on the use of insecUcides. President Dale Whaley asks 'all
Devotions by Mrs. Bert Grimm alumni to attend.
and Mrs. Robert Kuhn.
PAST
MATRONS,
INSPECTION Thursday
Pomeroy Chapter 1116 OES 7:30 Evangeline Chapter OES,
p.m. at Masonic Hall. Deputy Friday, 7:30p.m. at Middleport ·
Grand Matron Wilma Styer Temple; Beulah Hayes and
-Inspecting officer. All Eastern Helen Reynolds, hostesses.
Stars are invited.
SATURDAY
SALVATION ARMY free
DANCE, Meigs Junior High
clothing day, 10 a.m. to 12 noon
School,
Middleport, Saturday,
Thursday . Anyone needing
clothing report to army quar- 8:30-11 :30 p. m., the Jays emters, Butternut Ave._, Pomeroy. ceeing.
SADIE HAWKINS dance,
HOLIDAY CRAFTS Club,
Thursday, 10 a.m., bookmobile Saturqay, Eastern High School
headquarters. Take own lunch. gym, Jl.ll p. m~ with music by D.
Mrs. Stanley Plattenburg will J . Casual hillbilly dress
demonstrate making Christmas recommended. Sponsored by
FHA.
tapestry.
BASHAN FIRE Deparlment
SUNDAY
Auxiliary Stanley party, 7:30
UNITED
FAITH Nonp.m. Thursday at firehouse.
Denominational Church,
Public invited.
located
on the Pomeroy- .
FRIDAY
· WEEKEND revival, Mt . Middleport by-pass, hymn sing,
Olive Church, Friday through 2 p. m.; revival services for a
Sunday, 7:30 p.m., Emmett week beginning 7:30 Sunday
Ralston speaking. Public in· night. fu!v. Dennis Weaver,
evangelist. Singers welcome.
vited.
SPRING FLING, former
Pomeroy Junior High School, 9
MONDAY
pm. Friday to I a.m., Gary
THEODORl)S
COUNCIL,
Phillips Trio, Portsmouth,
providing music for dancing. Daughters of America, 7:30
Auction of fun articles· at in· Monday night at the IOOF hall.
tervals. Sponsored by Meigs Important business to be
County Jaycees, proceeds to transacted.

•'

INGELS .fURNITURE
Rugged, smart Early American

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

Authentically.sty/eel in Appalachian Hardwoods
Open Stock Ma le Group
'

SPRING
SALE!

Full size Cannonball slyie bed

COMPLETE BUNK BED OUTFIT
includes two beds (that can be separated as twins),
plus guardrail and sturdy ladder, plus two bunkie
sets (polyfoam matt ress with supporting platform )

MaHress and Box Spring

' .. "

-.~

~ : · -~

I

~

• ·

,,_ , _, ,

~1,,-

..,

0

w
MOTORIZED GR.ILL
Chrome plated grid with side
handles . .. :·perma·lilt" grid .
positioner ... tubular steel legs
with plastic caps .. . snop·on
hoqd . :. removable spit.

$'

BUY IT, NOW- USE

T

CHARCOAL

LIGHTER

~E~~!~· 37~
PORTABLE GRILL
Heovy

~feel grill. 18'' diameter chrome

plated grid adjusts to 3 positions .

$2 ·7·7

.

.. : : . .

SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE
REG. $3.69
OF C)UTDOOR COOKING ACCESSORIES

N POPPER,
CORN ON

THE GRILL, IN
THE FIREPLACE,
ETC.

Tonko Tooster PIE

IRON

CAST ALUMINUM
I '14" HANDlES

S2J7

PICNIC
BASKET
REG. 199
LARGE
SIZE .

$293

METAL HANDLES

MOORE'S IN POMEROY
PH. 992·2141

There were 200 students of the Thompson, Robert Titus, Joe
Meigs High School named to the Welker, Danny White, Cathy
honor roil ,t the close of the fifth Wildermuth, Rebecca Will ;
Clarence Williams, Earle Wood,
sill weeks grading period.
Makin a grade o( "B" or Brenda · Woods, Rebecca
~bove in all their ~ubJI\Cts. to be Wright, Randy Michael.
SOPHOMORES - · Diane
"t.f•"'., listed-on the roll were:
SENIO~ - Sandy Aleshire, Aleshire, Shirley Alkire, Unda
c
Don Anderson, Randy Becker, Atkinson, Lynne Baker, James
Mary Bradbury, Edward Boggs, Jon Bunce, Jan Burns,
Brown, Cathy Bunce, Cindy Wanda Cardillo, Steven Cot·
.,.~··· Carder,
Alice Jane Capehart, terili, Gene Davis, Beth Fultz,
,•
Mary Carleton, Twila Clat. Patty Glaze, Karen Hale,
worthy, Debbie Crow, Dottie Randy Haynes, Diana Holstein,
Davis, Mary Ferren, Sharon Jean Hooper, Julie Hutchison,
Lambert, Steve
Glaze, Diana Good, Michael Sherry
McGuffin,
Edith
Mees, Desiree
Grate, David Haggerty, Charles
' '
Hannahs, William Hawk, Don Pike, Christine Robinson, Linda
Hayes, Bernadette Hennessy, Rupe, James Schmoll, Everett
Steve Hoffman, Thomas Hoff. Schuler, Paul Smith, Stephen
ner, Rebecca Houdashelt, Kaye Stanley, Bill Vaughan, Patti
Well.
Howell, Glenna Keys.
FRESHMEN - Steve An·
Marianne Kloes, Judith
McKnight, Nancy Jo Mayer, derson, David Barnhart,
Linda Midkiff, Kathy Moore, Brenda Bartoq, Regina Bing,
Penny Moore, Mark Moyer, Richie Blwnenauer, Rick Bolin,
Kayle Mullen, Terry Napper, Donna Marie Boyd , Mary
Stella Neutzllng, Gloria Oiler, Bradshaw, Ronald Couch,
Eric Pearch, Jeanette Phillips, Melvin Cremeans, Joyce Davis,
Gene Powell, Rose Ratliff, Mary Janey, David Grant,
Ellen Rice , Joyce Riley, Thurman Haning , Ingrid
t'
•
Franklin Rizer, Cathy Searles, Hawley, Randy Hill, Geneva
''
John Sebo, Donald Shultz, Gary King, Mark Morris, Tina Nieri,
Simpson, Nancy Snider, Glenna Roxanna Patterson, Randy
Sprague, Peggy Staats, Sherry Snyder, Rick Stobart, Wayne
Nelson, Cathy Stone, Becky Pullins, Robert Qualls, Joe
Swindell, Sandy Taylor, Steve Rosenbawn, Gail Sizemore, Jill
Taylor , Marsha Thornton, Smith.
Joyceline Waggoner, Donna
Weber, Wayne Well, Jed Will,
Donna Wilson, Mary Brickles .
JUNIORS - Joyce Arney,
MORNING GLORIES
April20, 1971
John Anderson, Susan Andrews,
Standings
Richard Ash, Irene Barnes, TEAM
POINTS
Wayne Barnett, Doris Barn- Newell Sunoco
162
Fraley
&amp;
Schilling
131
hart, William Barnhart, Opal
Gibbs
Grocery
129
Berry, Jim Betz, Resa Boothe, Domlgan Sohlo
115
Bessie Bradshaw, Pamela Lou's Ashland
109
98
Burson, Karen Cadle, Debbie Bailey's Sunoco
High
Team
3-games
Newell
Carder, ·William D. Clark, Svnoco 2254; Lou's · Ashland
Robert Collins, Janelle Cum· 2245; Fraley &amp; Schilling 2178.
·mings, Andrea Dewhurst, Jo High Team Game - Newell
795; Lou's Ashland 772 ;
, Ellen Diehl, Paul Dill, •Nancy Sunoco
Newell Sunoco 760.
"
Dixon, Roger Dixon, Kathy High Ind. 3-games - Jackie
"
Durst, James Estep, Harvey Gulnlher 435; Margaret Wyat1
Susie Knight 432.
Erlewine, Debbie Garnes, 433;
High Ind. game - Susie
Crystal Faulkner, Sherry Knight 169; Marie Domiga~
Gloyd, Vicki Grate, Nancy 163; Jan Jenkins 157.
Greenlee, Connie Grueser,
Melanie Hackett, Ronald
Friday Mixed League
Hanson, Vickie Harrison, Ted
Aprll23,.191.1
Pfs.
}{ayes.
RaCine Home Nat' I Bank
14
Jane
Hazelton,
Patty TeamS
14
Crossan, Roger Hendrix, Frank Evelyn's Grocery
8
6
Hoffman, · John Hunnell, Team4
Mark
V
4
Deborah Johnson, ,Fred Jones, Team3
2
Cindy Jordan, Diana King, Ken
High Ind. Game - Charles·
Kloes , · David Krawsczyn, Aelker 218, Delores Tyree 183;
Connie Lanning, Pamela Cly~ Sayre 199, Carol ' Sayre
143.
'
Manley, Richard Martin, Debta
High Series - Clyde Sayre
May, Daniel McCloud, Gary 560, Carol Syare, &lt;130.
High Series - Evelyn
Michael, Daniel Midkiff, Mary Grocery
1926.
,
Midkiff, Mark MiUer, Vicki
Teem High Game - Racine
Miller, Darla Neutzllng, Marla Home National Bank 708. &lt;
High Series - Racine Home
Neutzling , Kenneth Norrla, Ann National
Bank 2066.
· Ohlinger, Edward Parker ,
Connie Radford, Rosemary
Rice, Margaret Riggs, MlliBB fii!DIANS ]t'()R SALE
.
RiUr, Rayniond R*h,llrenda CLEVELAND(UPI)- A,price
Russell, Rebecca Scaggs, of $9 million hils been placed on.
J:Jebqfilh Sebo, Alvin Smith, the Cleveland Indians by owner
Rebecca Smith, SteUa Smith, Vernon Stouffer. Stouffer BBid
~~-

*
**
*

BEMCO

. ,."'... 208 on MHS Roll
.
Of Honor Pupils
'·IN 'POMEROY

How practical! Heavy, solid mountain hardwoods that will dely the
roughest treatment by any youngster. How IOOd·laokinl! The
honest, warm Colonial style that
has stood . the test of centuries.
Never a worry that this bedroom
furniture will become out-of-date.
How lhri!IJ! Never before have we
been able to offer such a saving on .
fine furniture.

w Av~ilablel The Buy of The Year!

......

.

.

.

Roomy 4 drawer
Colonial .chest
with autbeotic
dnwer pulls

,

.'

124 W. MAIN

o'

....

N

SATURDAY, MAY 1·

'

' ti_JJi'
I

lor Yo!!!_ Drug Neetls ·

•

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

HONEY PORTRAITS··

~~~~

'S 34'H

Chase Hardware

BAKER'S

'

score.

Shoppers Mart

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

271 N. Second Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio

PHOTO SPECIAL!

MASON, W. VA.

.'

PHONE 992-5759

.

.

' ..

i nd Ave.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~ Meigs
Social Calendar 1·
.

JUlngr
·Jqnrmnry

--11111!1•1!111..

Hey, Mom--

BELPRE, OHIO

outstanding_ horse, for the J.
yeaHids have been beating
each other all season. And none
of the ll!arters ·ever has been
tested at the Kentucky Derby
distance except Canonero who
won a mile an~ a quarter race
in Venezuela.

Jackson Course

New Haven Social Events

gge

~ :: ~ .~Y Sent!'_lei,Middleport.PIIIlerOy, 0., April29,1971

~;'•~''''"''''@'!.%tWmm:\:••;;;;:;:••::•;•;':"''''''''''':•:;•;:;.,,,,,,_,,,,;;,;:;•;:;t:;•;•::•::;•:•:;:•••\::\''&lt;':'•:::::r;m::;•:4:

,.,~.~

$

...... ,

..

'•

I

GREEN TAG SALE!

110h

Compare 'lUI

PICNIC
SET

•4

4 PLATES

ALL 23 PIECES
REG. 2.99

•

Reg. 2.29'

1.59

LIMITED
'

pleoe

FORKS
e4 KNIVES
e4 SPOONS

11 CAKE KNIFE

e1 BUTTER KNIFE

Certified Value Studio c·ouch
two comfortably!

1·99
.1

Green Tag Sale!

DECORATOR

~ ~

Duk lowers to tu er

PO~&gt;!i Q II
lt n d~d .·

wlfh I! U

tl •

lllc" m han

~ ~~n

I~

bt &lt;ls .

d r n~

LAMPS
CERAMIC and
WALNUT BASE

·

'""U tw rn

:.: 3.99

SPRING
SALE PRICED

Green Tag Sale!

'1 09!!1etel
Re1. '129.95

BOSTON
ROCKER
Mahogany · Maple

Reg.

;Oii&gt;tlo-"l • Full innerspring seat cushion
• Full innerspring coil base
-11----~V~-==~· Two full size polyurethane foam bolsters
• Handsome print or tweed cover

29.95

Decorative Steel Storage Units Provide Great Utility For The Home ...

s

p
E

c
I

A
L.

.31" Wardrobe;·
• Hat shell • Door
mlrroreTie Bar•
Center bar con-1

struclion • Magnetic door catches

s
Sale

Kitchen
· China

\
66" Deluxe Sink 66 " x Z5 " X 36" H.
Five drawers and one shelf on nylon

30"

White. Coppertone , Avocado

sal~39

95

slide 5 1

Doors and drawer fronts double walled and in·
sulated . Heavy concea led slraphinges . Black toe
base. Sinks manufactured from heavy gauge ,
.steel. White potcelain sink lop. Chrome plated
deck lype faucet, and crum cup strainer. Cullery
dividers In drawer .
I

I

·

..

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

'

14 CUPS

GARDEN HOSE
INGELS'
SPRING SALE!

95

GREEN TAG SALE!
liCE CHEST
23 p(.

75 FT.PlASTIC

.

. :

FRESHERIZ.LD cotton cushioning stays
clean and fr esh.
.

*
.......______
.______.,.....

Loeal Bowling

be ' was

MULTI-COIL innerspring unit .

i'l

.

t:t::_::.~=~jJIJiel SU~VWS,l
BU-W!!!ed!!!..l!fll!lday

SLEEP-ENGINEERED resilient.

Smart floral COVER.

..

..

PILLOW-PUFF QUILTED for surface comfort.

38" Ditidtd Top Raace
Over-sized ZO" oven with cabinet storage
comp&gt;rtmenl on left . AGA approved, automatic ignition for all burners . Universal
valves for natural or LPN ~as. lull glass
illuminate&lt;i bOCkguard with electric clock an&lt;i
4 huur interval timer .
Lift top and lilt
.oft oven d~or for . ~
easy cl~am n g . ·

$

�'
1- 'nleDeily Setltine., Middleport-P()IIleroy, 0., April29, um

Professors ·to
Judge Exhibits

·.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., April29, 1971

JJ{XE!MinlW$JJlWitB%
1MFMi7EW\:'U MNJ'm!W!:#ifiB~iif:

:~~

''}~

~-'-•.~,-~-·.
:'"..-.

~ill

WSCS
of
Racine
F.·un .w1'-th Foods
@',
. . a Elects Officers
by Charlene Hoeflich
j\'1
' •'·'N&gt;

I

Bible School Theme Announced

,,

YOUR
MONEY CAN'T

'•'.'·::·:

T~~;&gt;:tt.t:mJt?~if#}~~(#;~W:Zi@fXWFM~%/%WWJ.~%JWJt1ifi~~WJHBW~i

New officers were ~lecied at
Monday night's meeting uf the
Women's Society of ·Chri&amp;tian
Service of . the Racine United
Methodist Church.
Elected were Mrs. Eileen
Rees, president ; Mrs. Ubby
Willford, first vi~ president;
Mrs. Etta Mae Hill, secretary ;
and Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent,
treasurer. Cha1rmen elected
were Mrs. Roy S~encer ,
,

spiritual growth; ~s. Ruth
Wolfe, local and church affairs;
Mrs. Lavinia Simpson, mem.hership ; Mrs. Margaret West,
program chairman ; Mrs.
Frances Roberts, ministry on
campus; Mrs. Ora Hill,
Christian social concerns, and
Wilma McGraw, missions.
Installation of the new of.
fleers will take place on May 16
at tile morning worship service.
A bake sale was planned for
May 8 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon in
front of the . Racine Home
National Bank. A thank-you
card was read from tile James
Simpson family.
Mrs .. McGraw and Mrs. Etta
Mae Hill presented the program
opening with group singing of
"I'll Go Where You Want Me to
Go" . Mrs. Mattie Circle had a
poem, and there was a skit
entitled, "Mrs. Sick Christian
Goes to the Doctor" with Mrs.
McGraw, Mrs. Etta Mae Hill,
Mrs. ·Ruth Hill, Mrs. West, Mrs.
Rees, Mrs. Alice Wolfe, and ·
Mrs. Willford taking the roles.
Prayer was by Mrs. Ora Hill.
Mrs. Rees presided at the
meeting with members giving
religious quotations.
Homemade ice cream and
cakes were served by Mrs. Ora
Hill and Mrs. Ruth Hill.

From Ohio, West Virginia, and lnqi~ have come
"favorites '' in recipes galore (bless you, dear readers).
•
•
Today we devote our column to lbe Miracle Whip Cake, or
Ohio University associate but in music, poetry , and Mayonnaise Cake, or Legendary Cake, or Speedy Cake, or Salad
· professors of l\rt education will essays. Evidence Of creativity Dressing Cake, or Waldorf Million DoUar Cake, .or whatever
judge entries :n the cultural arts and talent is considered in the name you'd like to call it, but, nevertheless, a cake using
mayonnaise instead of shortening, and good frostings _ all "tried
e~hibit at the District. IS spring judging along with orginality,
conference, Ohio Congress of imagination and perceptiVity. and true" recipes from readers.
There are variations in all. the recipes, but the basic
First, seconcf and third place
· Parents and Teachers, to be
staged Saturday at the ribbons wlll ~Lawarded to the ingredients remairi the same. Some recommend the use of cold
PomeroY Elementary School. winners. Participant ribbons waler,SQ!Ilewarmwater,andsomehotwater ; cocoavariesfrom
Winning e~lbits . in the 53 will be given to all other entries. 2 tablespoons to ~ cup, so if you like a light cake use the lesser
All or any sessions of the amoung. Most of the recipescallfor4 tablespoons, however.
schools in · District 16 where
.
Saturday
conference are open
· PTA units are active will he on
One suggests heating by hand instead of p.n ele&lt;;trlc mixer,
·
.exhibit in the foyer and lower to PTA members or other in- another says adding 'I• teaspoon of red foot coforing wlll enhance
hall of the school for · public teresred individuals without a
the appearance .
viewing throughout the con- registration fee.
Mrs. Earl B. Morris of Racine relates a legend surrounding ,
ference ,which convenes at 10 Theme of the conference is the recipe which she tells like this: "A woman tourist enchanted
.I
'
"PTA
Puts
It
All
Together"
a.m. and adjourns at 3 p.m.
by
a
chocolare
cake
she
tested
in
a
posh
New
York
r!!5taurant,
Mary Kay Leonard, associate with featured . speakers being wrote to the chef asking for lbe recipe. He sent her Ibis one and a
professor of art education in Dr. Robert E. Lucas of Cin- few days Jarer she received a bill. She was trapped, her lawyer .
charge of art In the College of cinnati, superintendent of. the '
Education L!lboratory School at Princeton City School District, said, so she paid, but in revenge she gave the secret of this Memorial services for Mrs.
Sadie Wolfe and Mrs. Minnie
Ohio University, and RobertO. and · Dr. Wllllam Cooper, delicious cake to everyone who wanted it." True, or not, it makes
Holman were conducted during
Borchard, · associate professor Department of Elementary a good story .
a
recent meeting of the
From Mrs. Laura Hoffman of Columbus came the cake recipe
of art educalion and teacher of Education, Ohio University,
Audliary of the Disabled
art for elementary students and who will speak on the Right to with this note : "Glad to help the old hometown. Have lots of
relatives and friends in the Bend." Mrs. Hoffman lives at 243 American Veterans, Chapter 53.
. for art students majbring in the Read Program.
Mrs . Edith Spencer, unit
A panel discussion will be South Gift St. in Columbus.
teaching of art, will judge the
Mrs. Lawrence T. Norris, also a former Meigs Countian and a commander , conducted the
entries In the siX categories of held at II a.m . on "PTA Is",
followin,g Dr . Lucas ' 10:30 subscriber to The Dally Sentinel, sent the recipe from Rome City, meeting during which time
art.
Winning entries from the comments on the conference Ind. Mrs. Harold Roush of Box 487, Eleanor, W. Va., also sent it plans were made for a rummage sale, May 12-14, in the Fry
Cooper speaks at 1 along to us.
district will he entered in the theme.
Locally the recipe came in from Lettie Spencer and Sara building · at Middleport. ·For
siate cultural arts exhibit at the p.m., officers conferences are
Ohio PTA conference in october at 1:45 p.m., awards and cer- Roush, Syracuse; Becky Tatu1ehill, Phyllis Miller, Barbara pickup of items, residents my
Member Federal Reserve ~ystem
and the state contest winners tificates will be presented at Murray, Lemma Lighter, Bette Biggs, Mrs. Harold Chase, Marie telephone Mrs. Spencer at 99;!2750
or
Mrs.
Golda
Mourning,
·will go to the National PTA 2:30 p.m. and adjournment is Van Cooney, Lennie Haptonstali, Mrs. Robert Pooler, Carrie
992-3523. A new member was
On Fridays Our Drive· in Window
scheduled for 3 p.m.
conference.
Kennedy .and Bessie Darst, Middleport; Mrs. Wanda Wolf, accepted into the unit.
is Open 9 a·"!· to 7 p.m., {ConRegistration is from 9:15 to 10 Chester; Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman, East Letart; Mrs. Frances
Goal of the cultural arts
A
potluck
dinner
was
served
tinuously).
·
program of the PTA is to en- a.m . A luncheon by reservation Alkire, HarrisonVille; Mrs. Delores Frank, Long Bottom; Mrs.
the
concluSion
of
the
meeting.
at
You can start losing weight
courage youth to express ar- will be served at noon. Mrs. Lola Bright, Langsville.
~~ f I II . ''i l J,'. r,-... ., .
,;
,,
Present
to
speak
were
several
today.
MONADEX Is a tiny
Harold
Lohse
of
Pomeroy
is
the
tistically their feelings and
Mrs. Fatu1ie Bigley and Thelma Smith of ReedsVille ; Mrs. district officers on legislation as tablet and easy to take.
Ideas In not only works of art, District 16 director.
Nina Macomber, Dexter; Mrs. Irene Kennedy, RqUand; and Mrs. it relates to veterans' affairs. MONAD EX will help curb your
desire for excess food. Eat less .
Lee Rudisill, Linda Mayer, Grace Abbott, and Dean Barnitz,
weigh less . Contains no
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Charles Beegle, Racine.
sending in the
d~ngerous drugs and will not
recipe were Ann Hemsley, Hilda Yeauger, Mrs. William Reibel
make
you
nervous.
No
.
and Mrs. James Folmer.
strenuous
exercise.
Change
PTA TO MEET
A final roundup of Betty hunt at Easter. Final plans
your life ... start today.
· Our thanks to each of you for sharing your recipes.
Mrs.
Harold Lohse, district MONAD EX costs $3.00 for a 20
Crocker coupons to be used were made for the Mother's
And now for the recipes :
president, will install officers at day supply. Lose ugly fat or
toward a kidney machine ·for Day observance at the home of
Mm.ACLE WHIP CAKE
a
meeting of the Salem Center your money will be refunded
the Holzer Medical Center lji Mrs. Annie Chapman on May 9.
2 cups flour, 1 cup sugar, 2 teaspoons soda, 4 tablespoons PTA to be held at 7:30 p.m. with no questions asked .
being made by the Ohio Eta Phi Mrs . Coleen Ohlinger had cocoa, pinch of salt ; sift ingredients.
·
Monday. There will be MONADEX is sold with this
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi charge of lhe meeting. "Tools of
Add I cup cold water, I cup Miracle Whip, and 1 teaspoon recognition of grandparents and guarantee by: Swisher &amp; Lohse
WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
Life - Action" was the cultural vaniUa.
Soririty.
.
Pomeroy
&amp; Dutton Drug Store
a recital by piano students of · Middleport - Mail Orders
COME IN AND SEE USI
Meeting Tuesday night at the program .topic.
Mix thoroughly. Bake at350degrees about 35 minutes.
Mrs. Gladys Major.
Filled.
Columbus and Southern Ohio Mrs. Ruth Riffle and Mrs.
PUDDING ICING0
Electric Co., the members were Unda Riffle served refresh(Recipe from Mrs. Robert Pooler, Middleport)
asked to turn coupons into Mrs. ments. .
I box pudding . (any flavor desired), I cup milk, 1 cup
Charlotte Hanning by the end of
LODGE TO MEET
granulated sugar, 'h cup oleo, 'h_cup Crisco, I teaspoon van!Ua.
the month.
A regular meeting of MidCook pudding and milk until thick. Cool. Combine sugar,
A thank-you note wa.s read dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will
from the Meigs Community he held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at Crisco, oleo, and vanlUa. Beat until creamy, Slowly add cooled
Class for the baskets and egg the temple. ';J nK:-!J . ;i; :",,. , pudding to the mixture. Beat until creamy.
RICHMOND CHOCOUTE FROSTING
(Recipe from Sara Roush, Mlllersvlllt)
~ cup sugar, I'h tablespoons cornstarch, 2 tablespoons cocoa,
dash salt, ~ cup boiling water, I tablespoon butter, 'h teaspoon
vanilla.
Mix cornstarch, sugar, cocoa and salt, add water, cook until
Kermit has the welcome mat out this
thick. Add vanilla and butter. Spread on cake while hot.
CHOCOLATE FUDGE FROSTING
weekend and is celebrating his . .•
(Recipe from Mrs. Charles Beegle, Raclae)
In a saucepan melt 'I• cup butter with 2 squares unsweetened
chocolate, stirring constantly. Add dash of salt, five (5)
tablespoons cream and stir until the mixture boils, Remove from
OPEN DAILY
\S:OQAMto 111:00 _PM heat and stir in 2'h to 3 cups confectlonary sugar, 1 teaspoon
vanilla, and stir until right for spreading. Nuts may be added.
NO COOK FROSTING
Sunday 10:30 AM
(Recipe frorn Mrs. Frances Alkire, Harrlsouvllle)
2eggwhlte, v, cup sugar,% cup Karo,plnchofsalt.
to 12:30 PM and
Beateggwhites stiff, gradually add sugar and sslt. Add syrup
5:00 to 9:00PM
slowly, fold in 1 teaspoon vanilla, heat one minute and spread on
cooled cake.
And Is giving .a discount of•••
Wayne Swisher, Harold Lohse, Kenneth
McCullough, and Charles Riffle are your
MRS. ELIZABETH CLAY of Route 1, Long Bottom has asked
friendly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
for a recipe for a boiling water pie crust. Seems she had this and
10111
it. If you have this recipe, perhaps you'd like to send it either
Rexall Drugs. They
to "Fun With Foods" or Mrs. Clay.
have low prescription
Mrs. carrie· KeMedy Is using a trial and error method to
prices and prompt
come up with a good old fashioned sugar pie. Anyone wiui a
service and discount
recipe they'd like to share?
drug prices seven days
DIDICAT£0
a week. Let us·serve you
CLUB TO MEET
TO SERVING
for all your prescription
The Pomeroy Garden Club
GOOD
and drug needs.
will meet at I p.m. Monday at
HWTH
(EXCEPT FAIR TRADE ITEMS)
the home of Mrs. Guy Guinther.
Miss Lydia Ebersbach is
assisting
hostess.
SAME DAY
SERVICE
REQUEST MADE
In At ,_:.Out At s
The family of the late Frank
Use'Our Free Parking Lot
Beach, Middleport, asks that
contributions to the cancer
society be made in lieu of
flowers .
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Memonal

Serv·lces
Con dUCted

Dr:

"Jesil.s Speaks to Our WQrld"
will he the theme of the daily
vacation Bible Schoolto he held
June 7 through II at the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ.
Mrs. Runell Moyer and Mrs .
Dorothy Roach will serve as
directors Of the school with the
Rev. Raullin Moyer as the
coordinator. Missionary story
teller will be Mrs. Sabra

The Farmers Bank
and Sa~i~gs ·CO.
POMEROY, 0.

·church Class Contributes $50

-

NEWCOMERS TO
OUR COMMUNilY

j

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE

'I
.I

First Aid

Should
Be Fast
It helps to foil infection , . • keeps
small fUts, bums and scratches under
control. Your pharmacist has all the
first aid needs you need to stock your
medicine cabinet.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

JOHN
ZERKLE
FOR MAYOR
MIDDLEPORT
Will make Middleport a good

Coffee and Donuts Served!

Ma~r.

'

Vote May 4, 1971.
.

New York Clothing House
Kermit celebrates hil Big 14th

'

-Pd. Pol. Adv.

0

•••••••••••••••
••
•••
See our New and Old .
••
•
•
Look All Over The Store! • •
•• •
•
NOTE TO GRADS!
Buy ·Your Prom ·s..lt and Save A Big ;4%.

PoMEIOY,

THE SHOE BOX

•·---------------------------

HOW MANY
MOTHERS
DO YOU I&lt;NOW?

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

i

A WHOLE NEW LOOK!
WE'RE COMPLETELY
. REMODELED!
YOU'LL BE SURPRISED!

See Our Windows!

'l'he'Wonl
fiotAround

Space Admzral

KIDDIE
SHOPPE

---~~N~l~~l~~~.!:!~~~~---J ' Homemakers
REMEMBERSpring
Mason
County
Luncheon

l

.

Vote May 4th

Four on Journey
Thru W. Virginia

GIRLS:

~~···················~·····························'

Robinson's Cleaners

Registering Day

SWIM SUITS

.

~ FRIDAY and SATURDAY

HAII'I'~'OtiiJ ..:... Somewhere Circle ol Blue, ·piano and Bernita Staats.
As a token of appreciation the
Over the Rainbow was the them· od~a n, Cheryl Roush; organ
of a recital given on Aprill7 by selections, Yellow T~tips was students presented Mrs. Powell
a group of' music students of played by Misty Ward; Yellow a corsage and a dish garden of
Mrs. Paul B. Powell's at the Ribbon, Susie Biggs.; Deep fh,wers. ,
Hartford Baptist Church. Pur ple,, Jennifer Patterson ; She in turn expressed apDuring the prQgram; awards Green, Jane Haymaker ; Yellow preci ation to the Hartford
were presented by Mrs. Powell Rose of Texas, organ and pi.no, Baptist Church members for
to several.
·
Lesa Scott and Donald the use ol the building, to the
Kenny Music Co. of Huntington
In keeping with the theme, the Gabritsch. ..
stage depicted a rainbow in Awards were presnted by fur the use of its plano, and to
several colors as a pot of gold Mrs. Powell to Eric Embleton parents of the students for their
and flowers was used. The and Susan Wade, four and five cooperation.
Other participants in helping
colors used in the decorations years old; perfect attendance
were brought out by pianists, award ,Susie Biggs, Mary Biggs to make the recital a success
organists and chorus In the and Bernita Staats; highest were Phyllis Scott, stage
selections played and sung.
score in theory, Jennifer Pat- manager; register, Jeanne
Rick Powell served as master terson : memorizing contest, Miller; programs, Patty
of ce~emonies . At the opening, Lora Smith: outstanding Powell ; ushers, Tony Thompthe chorus sang, Somewhere achievement on instrument, son and Robert Blackston, and
Over the Rainbow. This vocal Fo1-rest Fow ler , and out- prompters, G r~ce Sayre and
group was composed of Martha standing award for the year, Patty Grimm.
Krawsczyn, Sheryl Roush, Toni """__________________.,.
Stuart, Kelly Stuart, Lesa Scott, 1
Jacque Gabritsch, Bernita
Staats, Donald Gabritsch and
Kevin Scott. Other selections
sung by this group at intervals
were Yello~ Bird, Red Sails in
the Sunset, Green Door, Mood
Indigo, Red Roses for a Blue
Lady and A Rainbow.
Others participating and
piano selections played were:
Rain, Susan Waid; Rain on the
Roof, Eric Embleton ; The
Orange March, · Charlene
Weaver ; Orange Colored 'Sky,
Bernita Staats; Uttle Yellow
Buttercup , Alicia Fowler ;
Purple Polka, Forest Fowler ;
Purple
Sunset,
Donald
Gabrltsch ; My Red car, Jeffrey
Arnold ; Green Chan leon,
Cheryl Circle; Indigo Sea, ·
Pamela Workman ; Lavender
Blue, Betty Wolfe; Blue Tail
Fly, Debra Bumgarner ;
Cherokee Blue, Mary Biggs;
Thine Eyes So Blue, Mary
Krawsczyn; Alice Blue Gown,
Lesa Scott; Blue Champagne,
P~tty Eblin.

a:~~~~~~~ ~a~a~n~:u~~ ~~~~; ~~~S:0~ H,.~~~h Sc~~ Shephard First

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

PHARMACY

for~urDru§/leeds

.

ON EVERY ITEM IN THE STORE

RT
FINISHING

Mason County

Election, Judging Held

LOSE UGLY FAT

Roundup of Coupons Launched

Personal ·Notes

Music Students .in Recital

MQrrison, Patty Glaze will be . Mrs. Runell Moyer, Mrs. Katie
Juniors : Mrs. Dolly Mowrey,
pianist,· a.nd Sharon Wilson will Welis,.Mrs. Mar tha Nash , M
·
Mrs.
Ruth Moyer, Mrs. Ida Ma.e
. rs.
Mrs. Raymond Butcher and
he the song leader.
. Jane Hess and .Debbie Triplett. Marlin and Mrs. Maxine Dorst.
Other officers will, be Jyl Primary: Mrs. carol Wolfe,
Youth: Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger, Mrs. Augusta Will of Syracuse
Beaver, daily ,secretary; Miss Mrs. Kathy Erwin, Mrs . Mrs. Delores Long, Mrs. Unda have returned from a ·weekend
Mildred Halwey, school Lucretia Stobart and Mrs. Boyles alld Mrs. Donna Gl111e . visit with Mrs. Butcher's son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
secretary ; and Mrs . Ruth Dorothy Baker.
.l)!rs.
Terry Nichols and David,
Powers, kitchen · chairman. A
Medina. Other guests of the
picnic for the children will be ,...._""C'~·~·-·-~---~
Nichols family were Mr. and
held on the last day of school
Mrs. Bill Nichols and sons,
and on June 13 at 7:30p. m.. a
Michael and Totnmy of Detroit,
program will be presented. All
Mich.
children of the community_are
· Mr. and Mrs . R. K. Rowan of
invited to attend.
.
ELECTION PLANNED
Tuppers Plains left Monday
The teachjng staff Is:
Election of officers will be
night
from the Wood County
held when the Meigs Chaprer, . Nursery :'Jeannie Stanley and
By
Alma
Marshall
Airport for Trumansburg, N. Y.
Order of DeMolay meets at 7:30 Kim Bowrey.
to be with 'Mrs. Rowan's son,
Pre-School: Beverly Long,
p.m. Monday at the Middleport
,
William
H: Johnson, Jr., who is
Masonic Temple. The council Betty McKinley, carol Baker,
seriously ill, Mr. and Mrs.
. and Freda Spears.
will meet at 7 p.m.
Rowan were taken to the
Kindergarten - Grade I :
Mason's 115th birthday will he at ·southside, W. Va. Parkersburg airport by Mrs.
observed on June 15 of this year. Registration starts at 9 a.m. Edna Reibel and Mi-s. Nettie
What better way to observe this Randall Garland will speak on Hayes.
than by beautifying our rura.l health. ·He is the son of Mrs. Boney Mitchell and Mrs.
property? Why not plant laurel, Capt. ~nd . Mrs . Howard Ralph Hayman of Dayton have
ElectiQn of officers and floral arrangem~mts award!Qg West Virginia's State (lower? Garland, Gallipolis Ferry. An re\Urned after a conducted tour
judging of arrangements ribbons to Mrs. Barnhill, first; Sometimes we do not have any- added attraction this year will of the South which included Hot
carrying out an Easter theme ;Mrs. Jim Stout, second, and luck with azaleas, laurel and the .he a display of antiques brought Springs, Arkansas, Dallas,
highlighted a recent meeting of Mrs. R. V. Weatherman, third. cause is usually not enbugh acid to
the
luncheon
by Houston and Galveston, Texas;
the Rose Garden Club held at
A donation was made to the in the soil. You can have your homemakers.
New Orleans, Mobile and the
the home of Mrs. Carl aarnhill . George Thompson Kidney soil tested at the County Ex·
The spring luncheon ·com- Bellingrath Gardens, Alabama.
Fund.
Mrs.
Leota
Massar
gave
tension
Office,
Courthouse
mittee
is composed of Mrs. Mrs. H. E. Betz of st . J oseph,
'
Eleeted were. Mrs. Barnhill, . the program on "Growing Annex, Pt. Pleassnt for a small Donald Henderson , chairman, Mich., left Monday for her home
president; Mrs. Charles Carr, Dahlias." Mrs. Jim Stout gave a fee. There is also a plant food Mrs. Dave O'Neal and Mrs. after spending two weeks with
vice, president ; Mrs. Fred reading "Let's Go Shopping available in most stores for William Voight.
her mo th er, Mrs. B. A. Dodson.
Goebel, secretary; 'Mrs. Glen ·Today" and also presented azaleas , camellias and
ALSO REMEMBER the Mrs. Betz during her visit,
Stout, treasilrer, and Mrs. Jim devotions following the Lord's rhododrendrons. It's good for Mason County Homemakers sprained her ankle and at the
Stout, news reportec
Prayer in unison,
shrubs requiring acid soil.
Quilt Show on April 28th and time of her departure was still
Mrs. J. S. Davis and Mrs. ·A silent.auction was held at By the way - I'm no 29th at the Courthouse Annex, incapacitated.
Clarence HEadley judged the the conclusion of the meeting. authority on the subject - know Pt. Pleasant. The exhibit of Mr. and Mrs. George Odister
only what I read, and from homemade quilts by club and children, Ronald, Sheila,
· experience.
members and others will be on Kenny and Kimberlin, and
Have been babying a exhibit both days from 9 to 12 granddaughter, Rhonda
rhododendron for three years, it noon ; 1 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to 9 Feenerman of Dayton were
did not grow an inch and would p.m.
visitors this week of Mr .
A $50 contribution · toward Baker was co-hostess for the not produce a bloom. Last year MRS . BEULAH Rickard , Odister's aunt, Mrs. zuelelia
painting the sanctuary of the meeting. The opening prayer I. started nourishing the shrub formerly of Oak Grove Com- Smith.
Middleport Church of Christ was given by Mrs. Carl Roach. with rhododendron plant food munity near New Haven, is a:·
was made by the Homebuilders and Lawrence Stewart presided and believe it looks better, and patient at Charleston General
::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Class meeting Tuesday night at at .the business session. The now if it will only bloom.
Hospital. She reporredly sufthe home of the Rev. and Mrs. group sang "Happy Birthday" ·Lastyear, andtheyearhefore fered a heart attack. She
'Rsullin Moyer.
to ·Mrs. Stewart.
last, and the year before that I resides with her sister, Frankie
Areport on the carpet project Refreshments were served to was tempted to thr-ow away a Chandler, Stewart Rd.,
Registration day for
was given by Herman Kincaid Mr. and Mrs. Stewart, Mr, and night blooming cereus (noc- Charleston.
children entering the first
and Mrs . Denver Rice was Mrs. Herman Kincaid, Mrs. turnal cactuses ) but somehow I MRS. DARWYN Enevoldsen, grade next fall wUl he held
reported ill. Plans were made Leonard Van Meter , Mrs. just couldn't do it - so I Letart, W. Va., a new resident Monday at the Salem Center
for the annual wiener roast to be· Kenneth McElhinny, Mrs. proceeded to carry it back to the of our area is a patient at School.
Mr · and Mrs. John Dean of
held for members and their Milton Houdashelt and Mrs. basement each fall and won- Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Children are to . come to Pomeroy accompanied Mr. and
families May 18..Mrs. Raymond Roach.
dered why.
.
She was hospital!'zed on Wed- school on the bus and remain Mrs. Kenneth
Markins of
·
Keds made the Mainsail because men wanted a
last year it bloomed, nesday . Mr . and Mrs. all day. Parents are asked to Racine
a trip
v·1rgmta
· · onover
th through
k West
.!"""--------------~~--.., andWell,
believe me all the work and Enevoldsen
and
three come between
· 1 and 2:30 p.
e wee end.
boat shoe that was good looking as well as a great
patience was worth the daughters and two sons moved m. with a birth certificate and
They visited scenic places
performer. And Mainsail grabbed 'em. Trouble is,
Immunization chart to including several of the state's
beautifulsight - itopenedupat here from New Concord, o.
we found girls liked Mainsails just as much as men.
night with · the white bloom MRS. NELLIE Schwarz,
historical parks and attended
present to the teacher. th "" F t"' h
So we've had to make Mainsails for the girls, too.
about the size of a saucer, the Mason, wiil he 93 years old on Refreshments wlll be served
e 1,. I eas "' t e Rsmson at
most magnificent sight - it is May 1. She has four Jiving sons b th PTA
Richwood where they were
Same quick-drying ~ppers, same zig-zag soles.
hard to describe - and it had
d t 0 •
ht
M
y~ e
·
•greeted by the mayor and his
' YoU'll find them at ·"I ,
·
an
!1. "~ug ers, rs. r,
r :' ::J;r: : &gt;?Rile\'Followii\ 'llie'dlilner the
two blooms.
,
Raymotra Grinstead, Mrs. :::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::!::::::::::::::::::. visited Cogar gCenter and th!
1
1
· FOR BABY WEEK
Mountaineer Hall of Fame to
planting campaign. Trees and warz, Mason; Earl Schwarz,
•
view the rare collection
Where Shoesare Sensibly Priced .
shrub$ give off oxygen and are Florida and Henry Schwarz,
depicting the early life of West
MIDQLEPORT, 0.
one of . our best sources. What White Sulphur Springs, w. va.
Virginia. A visit was also made
better way to help nature build THE SUNSHINE Class of the WASHINGTON (iJPI) _ The to the West Virginia hometown
our depleted oxygen supply?
Mason United Methodist Navy· announced Wednesday of Mrs. Markin• .
YESTERDAY MY husband Church met recently at the the selection of astronaut Alan
1 Pc. Suits. Shifts to match .
and I took a stroll in nearby home of Mrs. Mu~l Megee with B. Shephard Jr. for promotion
And 2 Pc. Suits by Carters
woods. There were all klnds of Mrs. W1ll1am Fry as co-hostess. to admiral. It also announced
SIZE -12 To 24 foro.
wild flowers in bloom, yellow Mrs. George Carson, Mason, promotion of the first Negro to
poppies , sweet williams, presented the devotionals.
flag rank. Shepard is the first
red and white trillums, Attending were Miss Mary Navy astronaut to win star rank
SIZE 12 · 14
yellow and. white vio- Dudding, Mrs. Eber Roush, from among a large group who
1 Pc. And 2 Pc . Swim Suits
lets, lady 's slippers and Mrs: Lester Zerkle, Mrs. T. R. were or are Air Force or Navy
dutchman's breeches , DaviS, Mrs. George Carson, officers.
Bikinis, Terry Ponch~s . ~Hat Set, Terry
bloodroot, and spring beauties. Mrs. Parker Hinzman, Misses He was the first American to
Cover· Ups.
.
\.____.My first urge was to pick some Hilda and Lorena Weiss, Mrs. he shot into space and was
BOYS: CARTERS: 12 To 24 f.NJ. - but then I thought, why pick Joseph Jones, Mrs. E. A. commander of the most recent
Trunk &amp; Shirt Sets Boxer &amp; Nylon Stretch them. i.eave them for others Schaekel, Mrs. Rsy PrOffitt and lunar-landing mission.
to enjoy.
hostesses, Mrs. Megee and Mrs. The first Negro to he selected
Trunk ond Jacket Set TrunksSize2to12
Size 2·4
After:wardS,
with
the Fry.
for admiral - the Army and Air
assistance of an authority on MRS. ELIZABETH Jeffers, Force have had generals _ is
greens, we picked some, cooked Mason, visited over the Capt. Samuel L. Gravely.
them and ate them for an weekend at Beckley, W. Va.
evening meal. They were good with her niece, Mrs. Isabel
-and I might add - feel better calwelland at Wide Oak, W. Va.
ROACH IN BASIC
Quite a few, we'll bet-and a couple you never even thought about
than before I ate them. J·had a with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Whitretired nurse tell me about a tington. Mrs. calwell, Mrs. Tom Roach, son of Mr. and
before. There's somethlne for every one of them In our Hallmark
seasoning that I would like to Jeffers also visited the latter's Mrs. Carl Roach, Pomeroy, is in
collection of greetings and gifts. Stop in today and on Sunday May 9
rell you about. We first talked niece and her husband, At- basic training at Fort Knox, Ky.
send your "very best" to all the mothera In your life.
'
'
He enlisted for three years. His
about seasonings, fats - she torney and Mrs. Tommy Miles dd
. Pvt Th
R
said eliminate butter, use lem9n at Fayettsville.
a ress IS
·
omas ·
0 Niece
0 Sister-ln·law
0 Religious
pepper, it is good - well, I tried MRS .. PATRICK Ryan of Roach, 299522692; Co. D. 19th
0 Aunt
0 Daughter-in-law
0 Rosary
it and it is - for those who have Roanoke, Va. visited recently Bn. 5th BDE; 4th Pit. U.S.A.
to cut down on fats and are with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ARMC, Fort Knox, Ky., 40121.
0 Grandmother
0 From Mother
0 To Anyone
weight conscious, try lemon John Brabham, New Haven,
0 Grandma
0 Mother from
Q-Other Mother
pepper !
and with her mother and father- will undergo minor surgery.

News Notes

when you give it .
air-tight protection in a
Savings Account at

Others

..

Pomeroy....

Just Arrived
••

••
••
•
•
•

••

in·law,
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Ryan, Mason.
on Tuesday, May 4, at 4-H Camp MRS, ANNA Avis, also of
Roanoke, accompanied Mrs.
Ryan here. Mrs. Avis visited
her sister, Mrs. Emma Ryan.
MR. AND MRS. BILL Honer
of Dayton visited Mrs. Emma
Ran, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Ryan
on Sunday. The above named
were dinner guests of Mrs.
Emma Ryan and ·visited with
Miss Elizabeth Ryan at · the
·Dodson Re8t Home.
MI.!S. JACK Grueser, Mason,
entered ll:le Holzer Medical
center on Monday where she

LADY
. WRANGLERS
FOR SUMME~ FUN

eSKIRTS
·eBLO.USES
eVEST
eJEANS
• TANK TOPS .eKNIT
KNEE PANTS

MR . Pt.
ANDPleasant,
MRS . are
ALAN
Coates,
an.
nouncing the birth of their first
child, Stacie Lynn, on April!~ at
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed 6 pounds and 14
ounces. The mother is the
former Rita Brabham.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . John Brabham , New
Haven ; Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Coates, Parrish Ave ., Pt.
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Watts, Huntington; Mrs. Ethel
Coates, Huntington; Mr. and
Mrs. Burl Fluharty, Liverpool,
w. Va.
·

0 Nana

0 Granddaughter
0 From Daughter
0 Great Grandmother
0 From Son
0 Sister
C Uaughter

tlair t:IJ~ .........:..:..............s~.()()
Flat ToPs and
·
speeial Ha'1r' Cu~.~..........
., $'l,~5
I

MOndoythru
Frldoy
9tiU
Saturday

Meip

Blrber's

0

0
0
0

0 Nice Mot~er

0 Like a Mother .
0 G6dmother
0 New Mother
0 Mother of

0

So me.one Dear
Mother-to·Be

o Thoughtfulness

0 Playing Cards
Albums
0 Editions
0 Keepsake Albums 0 Party Accessories
0 Photo Albums

[J Gift Wrap

0 Stationery
0 Notes
0 Candles

SPECIAL TITLES

Effective May 3, :1971 _

Ntw
S~re '11011 rs

0

0 D~ar Mother

GIFT SUGGESTIONS

NOTICE!

eBERMUDAS

0

Teen·ager
To the one I [r· e
Mother
Mom ·
Mom·Mom
Mommy
Wife

0 To our Mother

b Bill Holder
0 Birthday
I
0 Secret Pal
0

0
0
0
0

Gilt Enclosure
From All of Us
From Both of Us
From Family

0 Acfoss the Miles
0 Appreciation
0 Cheer
0 Friend

•'
•

.,

'•

·'
·'
,•

'

.·'

,

•
'

'

·'''
.,•

.

'

'
'•

•
•'
•
•
'•'
•'
''

~~
•

..
'

'

'

''
'

.

'

••
•
''

�'
1- 'nleDeily Setltine., Middleport-P()IIleroy, 0., April29, um

Professors ·to
Judge Exhibits

·.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., April29, 1971

JJ{XE!MinlW$JJlWitB%
1MFMi7EW\:'U MNJ'm!W!:#ifiB~iif:

:~~

''}~

~-'-•.~,-~-·.
:'"..-.

~ill

WSCS
of
Racine
F.·un .w1'-th Foods
@',
. . a Elects Officers
by Charlene Hoeflich
j\'1
' •'·'N&gt;

I

Bible School Theme Announced

,,

YOUR
MONEY CAN'T

'•'.'·::·:

T~~;&gt;:tt.t:mJt?~if#}~~(#;~W:Zi@fXWFM~%/%WWJ.~%JWJt1ifi~~WJHBW~i

New officers were ~lecied at
Monday night's meeting uf the
Women's Society of ·Chri&amp;tian
Service of . the Racine United
Methodist Church.
Elected were Mrs. Eileen
Rees, president ; Mrs. Ubby
Willford, first vi~ president;
Mrs. Etta Mae Hill, secretary ;
and Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent,
treasurer. Cha1rmen elected
were Mrs. Roy S~encer ,
,

spiritual growth; ~s. Ruth
Wolfe, local and church affairs;
Mrs. Lavinia Simpson, mem.hership ; Mrs. Margaret West,
program chairman ; Mrs.
Frances Roberts, ministry on
campus; Mrs. Ora Hill,
Christian social concerns, and
Wilma McGraw, missions.
Installation of the new of.
fleers will take place on May 16
at tile morning worship service.
A bake sale was planned for
May 8 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon in
front of the . Racine Home
National Bank. A thank-you
card was read from tile James
Simpson family.
Mrs .. McGraw and Mrs. Etta
Mae Hill presented the program
opening with group singing of
"I'll Go Where You Want Me to
Go" . Mrs. Mattie Circle had a
poem, and there was a skit
entitled, "Mrs. Sick Christian
Goes to the Doctor" with Mrs.
McGraw, Mrs. Etta Mae Hill,
Mrs. ·Ruth Hill, Mrs. West, Mrs.
Rees, Mrs. Alice Wolfe, and ·
Mrs. Willford taking the roles.
Prayer was by Mrs. Ora Hill.
Mrs. Rees presided at the
meeting with members giving
religious quotations.
Homemade ice cream and
cakes were served by Mrs. Ora
Hill and Mrs. Ruth Hill.

From Ohio, West Virginia, and lnqi~ have come
"favorites '' in recipes galore (bless you, dear readers).
•
•
Today we devote our column to lbe Miracle Whip Cake, or
Ohio University associate but in music, poetry , and Mayonnaise Cake, or Legendary Cake, or Speedy Cake, or Salad
· professors of l\rt education will essays. Evidence Of creativity Dressing Cake, or Waldorf Million DoUar Cake, .or whatever
judge entries :n the cultural arts and talent is considered in the name you'd like to call it, but, nevertheless, a cake using
mayonnaise instead of shortening, and good frostings _ all "tried
e~hibit at the District. IS spring judging along with orginality,
conference, Ohio Congress of imagination and perceptiVity. and true" recipes from readers.
There are variations in all. the recipes, but the basic
First, seconcf and third place
· Parents and Teachers, to be
staged Saturday at the ribbons wlll ~Lawarded to the ingredients remairi the same. Some recommend the use of cold
PomeroY Elementary School. winners. Participant ribbons waler,SQ!Ilewarmwater,andsomehotwater ; cocoavariesfrom
Winning e~lbits . in the 53 will be given to all other entries. 2 tablespoons to ~ cup, so if you like a light cake use the lesser
All or any sessions of the amoung. Most of the recipescallfor4 tablespoons, however.
schools in · District 16 where
.
Saturday
conference are open
· PTA units are active will he on
One suggests heating by hand instead of p.n ele&lt;;trlc mixer,
·
.exhibit in the foyer and lower to PTA members or other in- another says adding 'I• teaspoon of red foot coforing wlll enhance
hall of the school for · public teresred individuals without a
the appearance .
viewing throughout the con- registration fee.
Mrs. Earl B. Morris of Racine relates a legend surrounding ,
ference ,which convenes at 10 Theme of the conference is the recipe which she tells like this: "A woman tourist enchanted
.I
'
"PTA
Puts
It
All
Together"
a.m. and adjourns at 3 p.m.
by
a
chocolare
cake
she
tested
in
a
posh
New
York
r!!5taurant,
Mary Kay Leonard, associate with featured . speakers being wrote to the chef asking for lbe recipe. He sent her Ibis one and a
professor of art education in Dr. Robert E. Lucas of Cin- few days Jarer she received a bill. She was trapped, her lawyer .
charge of art In the College of cinnati, superintendent of. the '
Education L!lboratory School at Princeton City School District, said, so she paid, but in revenge she gave the secret of this Memorial services for Mrs.
Sadie Wolfe and Mrs. Minnie
Ohio University, and RobertO. and · Dr. Wllllam Cooper, delicious cake to everyone who wanted it." True, or not, it makes
Holman were conducted during
Borchard, · associate professor Department of Elementary a good story .
a
recent meeting of the
From Mrs. Laura Hoffman of Columbus came the cake recipe
of art educalion and teacher of Education, Ohio University,
Audliary of the Disabled
art for elementary students and who will speak on the Right to with this note : "Glad to help the old hometown. Have lots of
relatives and friends in the Bend." Mrs. Hoffman lives at 243 American Veterans, Chapter 53.
. for art students majbring in the Read Program.
Mrs . Edith Spencer, unit
A panel discussion will be South Gift St. in Columbus.
teaching of art, will judge the
Mrs. Lawrence T. Norris, also a former Meigs Countian and a commander , conducted the
entries In the siX categories of held at II a.m . on "PTA Is",
followin,g Dr . Lucas ' 10:30 subscriber to The Dally Sentinel, sent the recipe from Rome City, meeting during which time
art.
Winning entries from the comments on the conference Ind. Mrs. Harold Roush of Box 487, Eleanor, W. Va., also sent it plans were made for a rummage sale, May 12-14, in the Fry
Cooper speaks at 1 along to us.
district will he entered in the theme.
Locally the recipe came in from Lettie Spencer and Sara building · at Middleport. ·For
siate cultural arts exhibit at the p.m., officers conferences are
Ohio PTA conference in october at 1:45 p.m., awards and cer- Roush, Syracuse; Becky Tatu1ehill, Phyllis Miller, Barbara pickup of items, residents my
Member Federal Reserve ~ystem
and the state contest winners tificates will be presented at Murray, Lemma Lighter, Bette Biggs, Mrs. Harold Chase, Marie telephone Mrs. Spencer at 99;!2750
or
Mrs.
Golda
Mourning,
·will go to the National PTA 2:30 p.m. and adjournment is Van Cooney, Lennie Haptonstali, Mrs. Robert Pooler, Carrie
992-3523. A new member was
On Fridays Our Drive· in Window
scheduled for 3 p.m.
conference.
Kennedy .and Bessie Darst, Middleport; Mrs. Wanda Wolf, accepted into the unit.
is Open 9 a·"!· to 7 p.m., {ConRegistration is from 9:15 to 10 Chester; Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman, East Letart; Mrs. Frances
Goal of the cultural arts
A
potluck
dinner
was
served
tinuously).
·
program of the PTA is to en- a.m . A luncheon by reservation Alkire, HarrisonVille; Mrs. Delores Frank, Long Bottom; Mrs.
the
concluSion
of
the
meeting.
at
You can start losing weight
courage youth to express ar- will be served at noon. Mrs. Lola Bright, Langsville.
~~ f I II . ''i l J,'. r,-... ., .
,;
,,
Present
to
speak
were
several
today.
MONADEX Is a tiny
Harold
Lohse
of
Pomeroy
is
the
tistically their feelings and
Mrs. Fatu1ie Bigley and Thelma Smith of ReedsVille ; Mrs. district officers on legislation as tablet and easy to take.
Ideas In not only works of art, District 16 director.
Nina Macomber, Dexter; Mrs. Irene Kennedy, RqUand; and Mrs. it relates to veterans' affairs. MONAD EX will help curb your
desire for excess food. Eat less .
Lee Rudisill, Linda Mayer, Grace Abbott, and Dean Barnitz,
weigh less . Contains no
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Charles Beegle, Racine.
sending in the
d~ngerous drugs and will not
recipe were Ann Hemsley, Hilda Yeauger, Mrs. William Reibel
make
you
nervous.
No
.
and Mrs. James Folmer.
strenuous
exercise.
Change
PTA TO MEET
A final roundup of Betty hunt at Easter. Final plans
your life ... start today.
· Our thanks to each of you for sharing your recipes.
Mrs.
Harold Lohse, district MONAD EX costs $3.00 for a 20
Crocker coupons to be used were made for the Mother's
And now for the recipes :
president, will install officers at day supply. Lose ugly fat or
toward a kidney machine ·for Day observance at the home of
Mm.ACLE WHIP CAKE
a
meeting of the Salem Center your money will be refunded
the Holzer Medical Center lji Mrs. Annie Chapman on May 9.
2 cups flour, 1 cup sugar, 2 teaspoons soda, 4 tablespoons PTA to be held at 7:30 p.m. with no questions asked .
being made by the Ohio Eta Phi Mrs . Coleen Ohlinger had cocoa, pinch of salt ; sift ingredients.
·
Monday. There will be MONADEX is sold with this
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi charge of lhe meeting. "Tools of
Add I cup cold water, I cup Miracle Whip, and 1 teaspoon recognition of grandparents and guarantee by: Swisher &amp; Lohse
WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
Life - Action" was the cultural vaniUa.
Soririty.
.
Pomeroy
&amp; Dutton Drug Store
a recital by piano students of · Middleport - Mail Orders
COME IN AND SEE USI
Meeting Tuesday night at the program .topic.
Mix thoroughly. Bake at350degrees about 35 minutes.
Mrs. Gladys Major.
Filled.
Columbus and Southern Ohio Mrs. Ruth Riffle and Mrs.
PUDDING ICING0
Electric Co., the members were Unda Riffle served refresh(Recipe from Mrs. Robert Pooler, Middleport)
asked to turn coupons into Mrs. ments. .
I box pudding . (any flavor desired), I cup milk, 1 cup
Charlotte Hanning by the end of
LODGE TO MEET
granulated sugar, 'h cup oleo, 'h_cup Crisco, I teaspoon van!Ua.
the month.
A regular meeting of MidCook pudding and milk until thick. Cool. Combine sugar,
A thank-you note wa.s read dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will
from the Meigs Community he held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at Crisco, oleo, and vanlUa. Beat until creamy, Slowly add cooled
Class for the baskets and egg the temple. ';J nK:-!J . ;i; :",,. , pudding to the mixture. Beat until creamy.
RICHMOND CHOCOUTE FROSTING
(Recipe from Sara Roush, Mlllersvlllt)
~ cup sugar, I'h tablespoons cornstarch, 2 tablespoons cocoa,
dash salt, ~ cup boiling water, I tablespoon butter, 'h teaspoon
vanilla.
Mix cornstarch, sugar, cocoa and salt, add water, cook until
Kermit has the welcome mat out this
thick. Add vanilla and butter. Spread on cake while hot.
CHOCOLATE FUDGE FROSTING
weekend and is celebrating his . .•
(Recipe from Mrs. Charles Beegle, Raclae)
In a saucepan melt 'I• cup butter with 2 squares unsweetened
chocolate, stirring constantly. Add dash of salt, five (5)
tablespoons cream and stir until the mixture boils, Remove from
OPEN DAILY
\S:OQAMto 111:00 _PM heat and stir in 2'h to 3 cups confectlonary sugar, 1 teaspoon
vanilla, and stir until right for spreading. Nuts may be added.
NO COOK FROSTING
Sunday 10:30 AM
(Recipe frorn Mrs. Frances Alkire, Harrlsouvllle)
2eggwhlte, v, cup sugar,% cup Karo,plnchofsalt.
to 12:30 PM and
Beateggwhites stiff, gradually add sugar and sslt. Add syrup
5:00 to 9:00PM
slowly, fold in 1 teaspoon vanilla, heat one minute and spread on
cooled cake.
And Is giving .a discount of•••
Wayne Swisher, Harold Lohse, Kenneth
McCullough, and Charles Riffle are your
MRS. ELIZABETH CLAY of Route 1, Long Bottom has asked
friendly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
for a recipe for a boiling water pie crust. Seems she had this and
10111
it. If you have this recipe, perhaps you'd like to send it either
Rexall Drugs. They
to "Fun With Foods" or Mrs. Clay.
have low prescription
Mrs. carrie· KeMedy Is using a trial and error method to
prices and prompt
come up with a good old fashioned sugar pie. Anyone wiui a
service and discount
recipe they'd like to share?
drug prices seven days
DIDICAT£0
a week. Let us·serve you
CLUB TO MEET
TO SERVING
for all your prescription
The Pomeroy Garden Club
GOOD
and drug needs.
will meet at I p.m. Monday at
HWTH
(EXCEPT FAIR TRADE ITEMS)
the home of Mrs. Guy Guinther.
Miss Lydia Ebersbach is
assisting
hostess.
SAME DAY
SERVICE
REQUEST MADE
In At ,_:.Out At s
The family of the late Frank
Use'Our Free Parking Lot
Beach, Middleport, asks that
contributions to the cancer
society be made in lieu of
flowers .
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Memonal

Serv·lces
Con dUCted

Dr:

"Jesil.s Speaks to Our WQrld"
will he the theme of the daily
vacation Bible Schoolto he held
June 7 through II at the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ.
Mrs. Runell Moyer and Mrs .
Dorothy Roach will serve as
directors Of the school with the
Rev. Raullin Moyer as the
coordinator. Missionary story
teller will be Mrs. Sabra

The Farmers Bank
and Sa~i~gs ·CO.
POMEROY, 0.

·church Class Contributes $50

-

NEWCOMERS TO
OUR COMMUNilY

j

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE

'I
.I

First Aid

Should
Be Fast
It helps to foil infection , . • keeps
small fUts, bums and scratches under
control. Your pharmacist has all the
first aid needs you need to stock your
medicine cabinet.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

JOHN
ZERKLE
FOR MAYOR
MIDDLEPORT
Will make Middleport a good

Coffee and Donuts Served!

Ma~r.

'

Vote May 4, 1971.
.

New York Clothing House
Kermit celebrates hil Big 14th

'

-Pd. Pol. Adv.

0

•••••••••••••••
••
•••
See our New and Old .
••
•
•
Look All Over The Store! • •
•• •
•
NOTE TO GRADS!
Buy ·Your Prom ·s..lt and Save A Big ;4%.

PoMEIOY,

THE SHOE BOX

•·---------------------------

HOW MANY
MOTHERS
DO YOU I&lt;NOW?

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

i

A WHOLE NEW LOOK!
WE'RE COMPLETELY
. REMODELED!
YOU'LL BE SURPRISED!

See Our Windows!

'l'he'Wonl
fiotAround

Space Admzral

KIDDIE
SHOPPE

---~~N~l~~l~~~.!:!~~~~---J ' Homemakers
REMEMBERSpring
Mason
County
Luncheon

l

.

Vote May 4th

Four on Journey
Thru W. Virginia

GIRLS:

~~···················~·····························'

Robinson's Cleaners

Registering Day

SWIM SUITS

.

~ FRIDAY and SATURDAY

HAII'I'~'OtiiJ ..:... Somewhere Circle ol Blue, ·piano and Bernita Staats.
As a token of appreciation the
Over the Rainbow was the them· od~a n, Cheryl Roush; organ
of a recital given on Aprill7 by selections, Yellow T~tips was students presented Mrs. Powell
a group of' music students of played by Misty Ward; Yellow a corsage and a dish garden of
Mrs. Paul B. Powell's at the Ribbon, Susie Biggs.; Deep fh,wers. ,
Hartford Baptist Church. Pur ple,, Jennifer Patterson ; She in turn expressed apDuring the prQgram; awards Green, Jane Haymaker ; Yellow preci ation to the Hartford
were presented by Mrs. Powell Rose of Texas, organ and pi.no, Baptist Church members for
to several.
·
Lesa Scott and Donald the use ol the building, to the
Kenny Music Co. of Huntington
In keeping with the theme, the Gabritsch. ..
stage depicted a rainbow in Awards were presnted by fur the use of its plano, and to
several colors as a pot of gold Mrs. Powell to Eric Embleton parents of the students for their
and flowers was used. The and Susan Wade, four and five cooperation.
Other participants in helping
colors used in the decorations years old; perfect attendance
were brought out by pianists, award ,Susie Biggs, Mary Biggs to make the recital a success
organists and chorus In the and Bernita Staats; highest were Phyllis Scott, stage
selections played and sung.
score in theory, Jennifer Pat- manager; register, Jeanne
Rick Powell served as master terson : memorizing contest, Miller; programs, Patty
of ce~emonies . At the opening, Lora Smith: outstanding Powell ; ushers, Tony Thompthe chorus sang, Somewhere achievement on instrument, son and Robert Blackston, and
Over the Rainbow. This vocal Fo1-rest Fow ler , and out- prompters, G r~ce Sayre and
group was composed of Martha standing award for the year, Patty Grimm.
Krawsczyn, Sheryl Roush, Toni """__________________.,.
Stuart, Kelly Stuart, Lesa Scott, 1
Jacque Gabritsch, Bernita
Staats, Donald Gabritsch and
Kevin Scott. Other selections
sung by this group at intervals
were Yello~ Bird, Red Sails in
the Sunset, Green Door, Mood
Indigo, Red Roses for a Blue
Lady and A Rainbow.
Others participating and
piano selections played were:
Rain, Susan Waid; Rain on the
Roof, Eric Embleton ; The
Orange March, · Charlene
Weaver ; Orange Colored 'Sky,
Bernita Staats; Uttle Yellow
Buttercup , Alicia Fowler ;
Purple Polka, Forest Fowler ;
Purple
Sunset,
Donald
Gabrltsch ; My Red car, Jeffrey
Arnold ; Green Chan leon,
Cheryl Circle; Indigo Sea, ·
Pamela Workman ; Lavender
Blue, Betty Wolfe; Blue Tail
Fly, Debra Bumgarner ;
Cherokee Blue, Mary Biggs;
Thine Eyes So Blue, Mary
Krawsczyn; Alice Blue Gown,
Lesa Scott; Blue Champagne,
P~tty Eblin.

a:~~~~~~~ ~a~a~n~:u~~ ~~~~; ~~~S:0~ H,.~~~h Sc~~ Shephard First

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

PHARMACY

for~urDru§/leeds

.

ON EVERY ITEM IN THE STORE

RT
FINISHING

Mason County

Election, Judging Held

LOSE UGLY FAT

Roundup of Coupons Launched

Personal ·Notes

Music Students .in Recital

MQrrison, Patty Glaze will be . Mrs. Runell Moyer, Mrs. Katie
Juniors : Mrs. Dolly Mowrey,
pianist,· a.nd Sharon Wilson will Welis,.Mrs. Mar tha Nash , M
·
Mrs.
Ruth Moyer, Mrs. Ida Ma.e
. rs.
Mrs. Raymond Butcher and
he the song leader.
. Jane Hess and .Debbie Triplett. Marlin and Mrs. Maxine Dorst.
Other officers will, be Jyl Primary: Mrs. carol Wolfe,
Youth: Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger, Mrs. Augusta Will of Syracuse
Beaver, daily ,secretary; Miss Mrs. Kathy Erwin, Mrs . Mrs. Delores Long, Mrs. Unda have returned from a ·weekend
Mildred Halwey, school Lucretia Stobart and Mrs. Boyles alld Mrs. Donna Gl111e . visit with Mrs. Butcher's son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
secretary ; and Mrs . Ruth Dorothy Baker.
.l)!rs.
Terry Nichols and David,
Powers, kitchen · chairman. A
Medina. Other guests of the
picnic for the children will be ,...._""C'~·~·-·-~---~
Nichols family were Mr. and
held on the last day of school
Mrs. Bill Nichols and sons,
and on June 13 at 7:30p. m.. a
Michael and Totnmy of Detroit,
program will be presented. All
Mich.
children of the community_are
· Mr. and Mrs . R. K. Rowan of
invited to attend.
.
ELECTION PLANNED
Tuppers Plains left Monday
The teachjng staff Is:
Election of officers will be
night
from the Wood County
held when the Meigs Chaprer, . Nursery :'Jeannie Stanley and
By
Alma
Marshall
Airport for Trumansburg, N. Y.
Order of DeMolay meets at 7:30 Kim Bowrey.
to be with 'Mrs. Rowan's son,
Pre-School: Beverly Long,
p.m. Monday at the Middleport
,
William
H: Johnson, Jr., who is
Masonic Temple. The council Betty McKinley, carol Baker,
seriously ill, Mr. and Mrs.
. and Freda Spears.
will meet at 7 p.m.
Rowan were taken to the
Kindergarten - Grade I :
Mason's 115th birthday will he at ·southside, W. Va. Parkersburg airport by Mrs.
observed on June 15 of this year. Registration starts at 9 a.m. Edna Reibel and Mi-s. Nettie
What better way to observe this Randall Garland will speak on Hayes.
than by beautifying our rura.l health. ·He is the son of Mrs. Boney Mitchell and Mrs.
property? Why not plant laurel, Capt. ~nd . Mrs . Howard Ralph Hayman of Dayton have
ElectiQn of officers and floral arrangem~mts award!Qg West Virginia's State (lower? Garland, Gallipolis Ferry. An re\Urned after a conducted tour
judging of arrangements ribbons to Mrs. Barnhill, first; Sometimes we do not have any- added attraction this year will of the South which included Hot
carrying out an Easter theme ;Mrs. Jim Stout, second, and luck with azaleas, laurel and the .he a display of antiques brought Springs, Arkansas, Dallas,
highlighted a recent meeting of Mrs. R. V. Weatherman, third. cause is usually not enbugh acid to
the
luncheon
by Houston and Galveston, Texas;
the Rose Garden Club held at
A donation was made to the in the soil. You can have your homemakers.
New Orleans, Mobile and the
the home of Mrs. Carl aarnhill . George Thompson Kidney soil tested at the County Ex·
The spring luncheon ·com- Bellingrath Gardens, Alabama.
Fund.
Mrs.
Leota
Massar
gave
tension
Office,
Courthouse
mittee
is composed of Mrs. Mrs. H. E. Betz of st . J oseph,
'
Eleeted were. Mrs. Barnhill, . the program on "Growing Annex, Pt. Pleassnt for a small Donald Henderson , chairman, Mich., left Monday for her home
president; Mrs. Charles Carr, Dahlias." Mrs. Jim Stout gave a fee. There is also a plant food Mrs. Dave O'Neal and Mrs. after spending two weeks with
vice, president ; Mrs. Fred reading "Let's Go Shopping available in most stores for William Voight.
her mo th er, Mrs. B. A. Dodson.
Goebel, secretary; 'Mrs. Glen ·Today" and also presented azaleas , camellias and
ALSO REMEMBER the Mrs. Betz during her visit,
Stout, treasilrer, and Mrs. Jim devotions following the Lord's rhododrendrons. It's good for Mason County Homemakers sprained her ankle and at the
Stout, news reportec
Prayer in unison,
shrubs requiring acid soil.
Quilt Show on April 28th and time of her departure was still
Mrs. J. S. Davis and Mrs. ·A silent.auction was held at By the way - I'm no 29th at the Courthouse Annex, incapacitated.
Clarence HEadley judged the the conclusion of the meeting. authority on the subject - know Pt. Pleasant. The exhibit of Mr. and Mrs. George Odister
only what I read, and from homemade quilts by club and children, Ronald, Sheila,
· experience.
members and others will be on Kenny and Kimberlin, and
Have been babying a exhibit both days from 9 to 12 granddaughter, Rhonda
rhododendron for three years, it noon ; 1 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to 9 Feenerman of Dayton were
did not grow an inch and would p.m.
visitors this week of Mr .
A $50 contribution · toward Baker was co-hostess for the not produce a bloom. Last year MRS . BEULAH Rickard , Odister's aunt, Mrs. zuelelia
painting the sanctuary of the meeting. The opening prayer I. started nourishing the shrub formerly of Oak Grove Com- Smith.
Middleport Church of Christ was given by Mrs. Carl Roach. with rhododendron plant food munity near New Haven, is a:·
was made by the Homebuilders and Lawrence Stewart presided and believe it looks better, and patient at Charleston General
::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Class meeting Tuesday night at at .the business session. The now if it will only bloom.
Hospital. She reporredly sufthe home of the Rev. and Mrs. group sang "Happy Birthday" ·Lastyear, andtheyearhefore fered a heart attack. She
'Rsullin Moyer.
to ·Mrs. Stewart.
last, and the year before that I resides with her sister, Frankie
Areport on the carpet project Refreshments were served to was tempted to thr-ow away a Chandler, Stewart Rd.,
Registration day for
was given by Herman Kincaid Mr. and Mrs. Stewart, Mr, and night blooming cereus (noc- Charleston.
children entering the first
and Mrs . Denver Rice was Mrs. Herman Kincaid, Mrs. turnal cactuses ) but somehow I MRS. DARWYN Enevoldsen, grade next fall wUl he held
reported ill. Plans were made Leonard Van Meter , Mrs. just couldn't do it - so I Letart, W. Va., a new resident Monday at the Salem Center
for the annual wiener roast to be· Kenneth McElhinny, Mrs. proceeded to carry it back to the of our area is a patient at School.
Mr · and Mrs. John Dean of
held for members and their Milton Houdashelt and Mrs. basement each fall and won- Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Children are to . come to Pomeroy accompanied Mr. and
families May 18..Mrs. Raymond Roach.
dered why.
.
She was hospital!'zed on Wed- school on the bus and remain Mrs. Kenneth
Markins of
·
Keds made the Mainsail because men wanted a
last year it bloomed, nesday . Mr . and Mrs. all day. Parents are asked to Racine
a trip
v·1rgmta
· · onover
th through
k West
.!"""--------------~~--.., andWell,
believe me all the work and Enevoldsen
and
three come between
· 1 and 2:30 p.
e wee end.
boat shoe that was good looking as well as a great
patience was worth the daughters and two sons moved m. with a birth certificate and
They visited scenic places
performer. And Mainsail grabbed 'em. Trouble is,
Immunization chart to including several of the state's
beautifulsight - itopenedupat here from New Concord, o.
we found girls liked Mainsails just as much as men.
night with · the white bloom MRS. NELLIE Schwarz,
historical parks and attended
present to the teacher. th "" F t"' h
So we've had to make Mainsails for the girls, too.
about the size of a saucer, the Mason, wiil he 93 years old on Refreshments wlll be served
e 1,. I eas "' t e Rsmson at
most magnificent sight - it is May 1. She has four Jiving sons b th PTA
Richwood where they were
Same quick-drying ~ppers, same zig-zag soles.
hard to describe - and it had
d t 0 •
ht
M
y~ e
·
•greeted by the mayor and his
' YoU'll find them at ·"I ,
·
an
!1. "~ug ers, rs. r,
r :' ::J;r: : &gt;?Rile\'Followii\ 'llie'dlilner the
two blooms.
,
Raymotra Grinstead, Mrs. :::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::!::::::::::::::::::. visited Cogar gCenter and th!
1
1
· FOR BABY WEEK
Mountaineer Hall of Fame to
planting campaign. Trees and warz, Mason; Earl Schwarz,
•
view the rare collection
Where Shoesare Sensibly Priced .
shrub$ give off oxygen and are Florida and Henry Schwarz,
depicting the early life of West
MIDQLEPORT, 0.
one of . our best sources. What White Sulphur Springs, w. va.
Virginia. A visit was also made
better way to help nature build THE SUNSHINE Class of the WASHINGTON (iJPI) _ The to the West Virginia hometown
our depleted oxygen supply?
Mason United Methodist Navy· announced Wednesday of Mrs. Markin• .
YESTERDAY MY husband Church met recently at the the selection of astronaut Alan
1 Pc. Suits. Shifts to match .
and I took a stroll in nearby home of Mrs. Mu~l Megee with B. Shephard Jr. for promotion
And 2 Pc. Suits by Carters
woods. There were all klnds of Mrs. W1ll1am Fry as co-hostess. to admiral. It also announced
SIZE -12 To 24 foro.
wild flowers in bloom, yellow Mrs. George Carson, Mason, promotion of the first Negro to
poppies , sweet williams, presented the devotionals.
flag rank. Shepard is the first
red and white trillums, Attending were Miss Mary Navy astronaut to win star rank
SIZE 12 · 14
yellow and. white vio- Dudding, Mrs. Eber Roush, from among a large group who
1 Pc. And 2 Pc . Swim Suits
lets, lady 's slippers and Mrs: Lester Zerkle, Mrs. T. R. were or are Air Force or Navy
dutchman's breeches , DaviS, Mrs. George Carson, officers.
Bikinis, Terry Ponch~s . ~Hat Set, Terry
bloodroot, and spring beauties. Mrs. Parker Hinzman, Misses He was the first American to
Cover· Ups.
.
\.____.My first urge was to pick some Hilda and Lorena Weiss, Mrs. he shot into space and was
BOYS: CARTERS: 12 To 24 f.NJ. - but then I thought, why pick Joseph Jones, Mrs. E. A. commander of the most recent
Trunk &amp; Shirt Sets Boxer &amp; Nylon Stretch them. i.eave them for others Schaekel, Mrs. Rsy PrOffitt and lunar-landing mission.
to enjoy.
hostesses, Mrs. Megee and Mrs. The first Negro to he selected
Trunk ond Jacket Set TrunksSize2to12
Size 2·4
After:wardS,
with
the Fry.
for admiral - the Army and Air
assistance of an authority on MRS. ELIZABETH Jeffers, Force have had generals _ is
greens, we picked some, cooked Mason, visited over the Capt. Samuel L. Gravely.
them and ate them for an weekend at Beckley, W. Va.
evening meal. They were good with her niece, Mrs. Isabel
-and I might add - feel better calwelland at Wide Oak, W. Va.
ROACH IN BASIC
Quite a few, we'll bet-and a couple you never even thought about
than before I ate them. J·had a with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Whitretired nurse tell me about a tington. Mrs. calwell, Mrs. Tom Roach, son of Mr. and
before. There's somethlne for every one of them In our Hallmark
seasoning that I would like to Jeffers also visited the latter's Mrs. Carl Roach, Pomeroy, is in
collection of greetings and gifts. Stop in today and on Sunday May 9
rell you about. We first talked niece and her husband, At- basic training at Fort Knox, Ky.
send your "very best" to all the mothera In your life.
'
'
He enlisted for three years. His
about seasonings, fats - she torney and Mrs. Tommy Miles dd
. Pvt Th
R
said eliminate butter, use lem9n at Fayettsville.
a ress IS
·
omas ·
0 Niece
0 Sister-ln·law
0 Religious
pepper, it is good - well, I tried MRS .. PATRICK Ryan of Roach, 299522692; Co. D. 19th
0 Aunt
0 Daughter-in-law
0 Rosary
it and it is - for those who have Roanoke, Va. visited recently Bn. 5th BDE; 4th Pit. U.S.A.
to cut down on fats and are with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ARMC, Fort Knox, Ky., 40121.
0 Grandmother
0 From Mother
0 To Anyone
weight conscious, try lemon John Brabham, New Haven,
0 Grandma
0 Mother from
Q-Other Mother
pepper !
and with her mother and father- will undergo minor surgery.

News Notes

when you give it .
air-tight protection in a
Savings Account at

Others

..

Pomeroy....

Just Arrived
••

••
••
•
•
•

••

in·law,
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Ryan, Mason.
on Tuesday, May 4, at 4-H Camp MRS, ANNA Avis, also of
Roanoke, accompanied Mrs.
Ryan here. Mrs. Avis visited
her sister, Mrs. Emma Ryan.
MR. AND MRS. BILL Honer
of Dayton visited Mrs. Emma
Ran, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Ryan
on Sunday. The above named
were dinner guests of Mrs.
Emma Ryan and ·visited with
Miss Elizabeth Ryan at · the
·Dodson Re8t Home.
MI.!S. JACK Grueser, Mason,
entered ll:le Holzer Medical
center on Monday where she

LADY
. WRANGLERS
FOR SUMME~ FUN

eSKIRTS
·eBLO.USES
eVEST
eJEANS
• TANK TOPS .eKNIT
KNEE PANTS

MR . Pt.
ANDPleasant,
MRS . are
ALAN
Coates,
an.
nouncing the birth of their first
child, Stacie Lynn, on April!~ at
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed 6 pounds and 14
ounces. The mother is the
former Rita Brabham.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . John Brabham , New
Haven ; Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Coates, Parrish Ave ., Pt.
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Watts, Huntington; Mrs. Ethel
Coates, Huntington; Mr. and
Mrs. Burl Fluharty, Liverpool,
w. Va.
·

0 Nana

0 Granddaughter
0 From Daughter
0 Great Grandmother
0 From Son
0 Sister
C Uaughter

tlair t:IJ~ .........:..:..............s~.()()
Flat ToPs and
·
speeial Ha'1r' Cu~.~..........
., $'l,~5
I

MOndoythru
Frldoy
9tiU
Saturday

Meip

Blrber's

0

0
0
0

0 Nice Mot~er

0 Like a Mother .
0 G6dmother
0 New Mother
0 Mother of

0

So me.one Dear
Mother-to·Be

o Thoughtfulness

0 Playing Cards
Albums
0 Editions
0 Keepsake Albums 0 Party Accessories
0 Photo Albums

[J Gift Wrap

0 Stationery
0 Notes
0 Candles

SPECIAL TITLES

Effective May 3, :1971 _

Ntw
S~re '11011 rs

0

0 D~ar Mother

GIFT SUGGESTIONS

NOTICE!

eBERMUDAS

0

Teen·ager
To the one I [r· e
Mother
Mom ·
Mom·Mom
Mommy
Wife

0 To our Mother

b Bill Holder
0 Birthday
I
0 Secret Pal
0

0
0
0
0

Gilt Enclosure
From All of Us
From Both of Us
From Family

0 Acfoss the Miles
0 Appreciation
0 Cheer
0 Friend

•'
•

.,

'•

·'
·'
,•

'

.·'

,

•
'

'

·'''
.,•

.

'

'
'•

•
•'
•
•
'•'
•'
''

~~
•

..
'

'

'

''
'

.

'

••
•
''

�I

t-Tbe DaUy Sent!nel,~y. o:,APril29,lfll
' .

o-1lle lJIIUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April29, 1971

Gilligan
Irritated

Notice

Lost

GUN SHOOT every Saturday IN WOLF PEN vicinity , 10night at 6 p.m. near Racine monlh old bird dog , while
Planing Mill. Assorted meats. wi lh bla tk ·eye . Contact Guy
Sponsored by Syracuse Fire Sargent, phone 992 -6432 .
Reward .
Department,
4-27-31p
4-28-31c
LASSIE : what is true? by ANYONE
~
.
knowing ·~ the
•
Johnny Cash . P.S. I'm not one whereabouts of a male
of your pupoles.
Siamese -;::at. pl ease call
4-29-6tc
Middleport 992-3832. Pet of
shut
-in . Please.
OVEN FRESH bakery pro- ·
4-2B-61c
ducts. Jimmy's Pastry Shop,
'
N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport.
Phone -992-3555.
4-29-30tc Wanted To Buy
TELEP HON£S, brass beds, ·
GUN SHOOT, Friday evening, 7 clocks, dishes., old furni tu re.
p.m. at Mile Hill Road. Hams, etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
bacons and half hog s, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
Sponsored by Racine . Fire
4-27-tfc
Department.
--------~ - 2B-3tc AN T I Q U E S :
Dishe s,
:-:Y-:-A-::R-::D:-S:-A:-L:-::E-.-::-F~
r i~d-:-a-r - a nd
telephones, ti ,-. brass beds.
lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,
Saturday . Some an f·ques .
Phone 992-3403.
Dora Carpenter residence,
4-23-30tp
Larkin St., Rutland. Ohio.
4-28-3tp
GUN SHOOT, 12-16·20 gauge, For Rent
Sunday, May 2. Assorted TRAILER , Brow-n's Trailer
meats . Free eats. Racine. Gun
Park . Phone 9n3324.
Club.
4-29-6tc
4-28-4tp
FOOT MOTOR home, plus
" GUN SHOOT, Sunday, May 2, 17'12
travel trailers, 13 and 16 fool.
Also, sa les and supplies.
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Phone Chester 985-3832. Gaul
12 noon.
Trailer Sales, Inc., Rt. 3,
4-28-3tc
Pomeroy, Ohio.
.....
r:"'~(
4-18-121c
GUN SHOOT. Sunday, May 2,
Rutland American Legion
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
Farm, 1 p.m.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
4-28-4tp
Ohio. 992-2951.
4-2-lfc
MEETING OF Meigs County
Fish and Game Assn. Friday,
. April lO, 7:30 p.m. Coon 2 BEDROOM trailer. No
children or pets. Call alter 5
Hunters
Club
House,
p.m . 992-2885.
Snowball Hill.
4-28-31c
4-28-3tc

At Carping
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Gov :
John J. Gilligan Wednesday
said Ohio's mayors should "stop
carping" about his proposed
budget because it gives "more
help for urban communities
than any budget in the history of
this state."
Gilligan said he would go
· before the General Assembly
with the mayors to ask for increased taxes, but he would not
change his budget to reduce the
amount earmarked for other
needs to give to the cities.
" If they are asking me to take
money away from the children
in our schools, in our mental
institutions, or from a family
struggling to feed its children,
then I can tell them right now
the answer is no," Gilligan said

-

......
..

...

~.

0

. . . . . ....

.

THESE ARE JUST FOUR OF some 30 fifth and sixth
grade girls who will appear in old-fashioned costumes - or
are they modern prairie dresses - in a segment of
"Mulligan's Magic" being presented by the Bradbury School
tonight and Saturday. From the left are Pam Powers, Janie
Miller, Patty Boyles and Jennifer Wise . Direction is by Mrs.
Phyllis Hackett, faculty member, who is also accompanist.
See more pictures on Page 8.

BRETT CARTER, standing on tbe box, is "Mulligan"
the medicine man, ill "Mulligan's Magic" which opens a
two-night run at 7:30 'this evening at the Bradbury School.
Other principals in the scene with Mulligan are, from the left,
Danny Haggy, Brett Carter, Teresa Ellis and Pam North.

.

~ -~

KOSCOT Kosmetlcs. wig.s and 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
accessories. May and Jun e
Raci ne area . Phone 992-6329.
special. Kleansing Kream,
4-25-6tc
$1.25. Distributors, Brown's.
Phone 992-5113.
UNFURNI SHED 3 room
4-23-lfc apa r tment.
Inquire
at
apartme nl 16, Coats Bldg.,
SAVE UP to one half. Bring Middleport. For informalion
your sick TV to Chuck's TV phone 992-3641.
,•
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave ..
4-27-12tc
Pomeroy_.
4-23-lfc
'
3 - room
' ANTIQUES , glassware, UNFURNISHED
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
Depression glass, love seat.
1-31-tlc
Hayman's Auction, Friday
night.
5 ROOM house. bath, uti lity
4-27-4tc room , 2-car garage, large
garden. Phone 949-217S.
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
4-27-31c
Chesler, Ohio. Flowers for
Mother's Day and Memorial HOUSE . 1637 Lincoln Hts.,
Day. S.88 and up. Phone
Pomeroy, 4 rooms, beth, attic
Ches
fer
985-3537.
for
storage, full basement,
.._,
4-23-12tc
nice
yard 1
dri veway.
..,....
Ava
liable
May
1.
Phone 992WILL DO tailoring and 2780 or 992-3432.
upholstery. Phone 992-3561.
4-21-tfc
3-31-30tc
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327 . . H~AILtiHPACE on old Rt . 33,
3-30-30tc
'/,,mile north of new Meigs
High School . Phone 992-2941.
y~;:. . REDUCE safe and fast with
3-5-lfc
" ....
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
!:j'., . ' Wffer pllls.: Nelson "Drugs,
FU!l.Nl'S HED ·and · unfurnished
..o. , ·
4-14-60tp · api'tments. Close to school.
'"'' '
Phone 992-5434.
WILL PICK up merchand""
10-18-tfc
and take to auction on a
· .... ,
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, ,Rutland .
'
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tlc
:'
NOTICE OF

PT. PLEASANT - Jack L.
Smith, manager of the Point
Pleasant Local Office of the
West Virginia Department of
Employment Security, said
Wednesday an all-out effort to
recruit male and female youth
who are out of school and cannot
find work is being made.
Job Corps may be the answer

.......
....

:~:i~~:. w~h~ckS~a:~ill :~~

I

.
.

'•'

·-

i •• •

!~l ~

.. .
...... ..

I ,.

-.. t/ 1

.,,

REGISTERED Tennessee
walker

s fud

SALE OF BONDS

Sea l ed bids will be received

service . by the und er signed , the fiscal

Harrisonville. Ohio. Phone
742-5862.

off icer of the Village of Rutla nd,
her eina ft er referred to as
-4 20 Jotc muni ci pal ity , In th e Coun ty of
Meig s, Oh io, at his office in th e

====-===-..,·-,·
RUBBER: STAMPS made to

OTHER PRINCIPAL CHARACfERS in the operetta being presented by Bradbury School
fifth and sixth graders tonight and Saturday at 7:30 p; m., from the left, seated, are Clinton
Napper and Becky Fultz; standing from the left are Cindy Hindy, Marilee Cassell, Robert
DeLong and Greg Shee~.

Free eats. Music by Gall and Apri l 7, 1971 . Bids shalt be
the T. C. Playmates, 8:30 to sealed and endorsed " Bids for

•

·-

......

--•

JOHNSON &amp;JOHNSON - REG. 23'

: : Mother's Day, Sun., May 9

I

:II
'·

~-matte
FOR

BABY -GIFT BOX
' GIFT FOR BABY''

1976, inclusive .
Said bonds are iss ued for the

of
co ns tru c t ing,
t2:30 . Friday , April 30.
Stre et Improv ement Bonds." purpo se
Sa id bon ds will be da t ed the reco nstru c t ing, re surfaci ng and
-4·29-2tc lsi day of JUne , 1971, will be in repair ing stree ts within the

Duodenal ulcers occur five
to 10 times more frequently
than gastric ulcers and are
more common in men than
in women, according to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Reward

Vi ll age of Rufland .
Said bond s are payable at the
deposi t ory of said Village which
at the prese nt lime is Pomeroy
Your old er years by sav ing
Nat io nal
Bank,
Ru t land
in
your younger days. St art
Bran ch, Rutland , Ohio, and are
NOTICE ON FILING
now ! Start at the Meigs Co.
supported by a five (5) mill le vy
OF IN VENTORY
pa ssed by the Vi llage of Rutland
Bra nch of the Athens Co . .
AND APPRA ISEMENT
on the Jrd day of November,
Savings
&amp; Loan . A friendly
1970.
. The Sta t e of Ohio , Meigs
place
to
do bus!ness.
Countv
.
Probat
e
Court.
Said bonds are iss ued subie ct
To the Executor of Ad to ca ll .
minis tr-ator of the estate; to
II is contemplated that the
legis l ative authority of the such of th e following as are
municipality will meet at 7: 30 p. re si dents of th e State of Ohio,
viz : - the surviving spouse, the
m . on the 18th day of May, 1971.
to consider said bids and make next of kin, the beneficiaries
und er the will ; and to the at an award .
torney
or
attorneys
The bond s will be deliv e r ~d at
of
the
the office of the unders igned . repr ese nting any
afor em en tloned persons :
The r ight is reserved to reject
bids.
Elizabe th Marie Lawrence,
Portland , Me igs Co unty , Ohio,
VILLAGE OF RUTLAND
No . 20,470.
By Vernon L. Weber, Clerk
You are hereby not if ied that
1~1
a, 15, 22. 29 , &lt;tc
the
Inv en tory
and
Ap praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned. decea sed, late
of said Coun ty , was file d in this
LEGAL NOTICE
Bids will be received in the Cour t. Sai d Inventory and ·
Commiss ioners Office for a 1971 n Appraisement will be for
Sheriff's ca r until 9 : 00 a.m. hearing before this Court on the
o'clock on May 4, 1971. 10th day of May , 1971, at 10 :00
Speci fications are as follows : o'cl ock. A .M .
Any person desir ing to f il e
Color - (two ton e color "''~19:~ """'''"lY oranch of rhe
wh ite to belt li ne - black bot - exceptions thereto must f ile
Athens County Savings &amp;
tom) .
them at least fiv e days pr ior to
Loan Co.
Oil Filler
~
th e date set for hearing.
296 Second St.
Given under my hand and seal
Heavy Duty Air Cleaner
Pomeroy, Ohio
Windsh ield Washers and Var. Of said Cou r t. this 20th day of
Apri l 1971.
Speed Electric Wipers
Back up ligh ts
F . H . O'Brien
Heavy duty Alternator
Judge and ex -officio
Heater and Defroster
Cl erk of said Cour t
H . D. Battery
Undercoa ting
By Jane t E. Morris
VInyl Uphol st ery
(blac ·k
Deputy Clerk'
preferred')
(~122, 29, 2tc
350
Cu .
In :
Engi ne
{Min imum)
Power D isc Brakes
Pcwer Steering
Non Slip Differ ential
55 Amp He!vy Duty Alter nator with 70 Amp . Battery
Hea vy Duty Hydramatic
Automatic Transmission
Air Foam Sea ts
An tifreeze
Seat bel l s 1ron t and rear .
tregu talloh)
1 Motorola 100 Watt Police
Rad io, equipped and ins talled .
I Outside Speaker, ins talled ,
1 Public Address System
installed .
'
1 Electronic Siren , inst alled
M inimum Wheel base 120", o~
full siZe ca r
Spotlight, re1f'"i)linker
Stan dard Poli ce package
which includes ·tn addit ion to
aboy~ ~ ~
·
, H~!JVY Duty 5 blade fan,
1gnlt1on Su$penslon equipment,
$19.95 buys 1 ga110n ot Arab Tt!rmhe Luntrol U&gt;ncentrate.
heevy •prlrgs and shocks,
· Add an Arab ~ose-end spray Applicator and you're ready
heaVy · duty front seat. an
to completely termite-proof the average 3-bedroom home!
· heavv dyty. floor mats .

th e denomination of $2,600.00
FOR YOUR entertainment and each , wi ll draw ir\terest on th e
dancing pleasure, visit the 1st day of Decembe r and June
Bar G Ranch Club, -Hartford, of each year, beginn ing
va., Saturday, May 1, 9 December 1, 1971 , at the ra te of
six per ce nt per an nu m . Anyone
p.m. to 1:30a .m. All members des1r
ing t o do so may present a
and
guests
welcome . bid fQr
bonds based upon
Featuring Gall and the T. C. but not insaid
excess of six per cent
Playmates.
provid ing tha t where a frac 4-29-2tc tiOnal Interest rate is bid such

w.

Succotash
Succotash is the way the
early Pilgrim settlers approximated the Narragan-.
sett Indian work " misickquatash." It originall y meant
"ear of corn" but in time
came to mean the dishcorn and beans cooked together- that we know today.

*l '

I

II
····

'

~

~;;

;!}
:~

::!::

1

~j ·
,.,
;,;
I:;,:.
':-:
:.,i.J

1

Ring Sty '

~"

Set with radiant birth,
::•cnt

:~~:;t:~• :~;

PtAmx

:~
:::.
::::
!11
..

Court St.

Ill'

r.

FLASHLIGHT

BATTERY

~,.

(\ ........

"Window Unit"

2

.~

.,'

:~

...

'

5000 BTU • Plugs In like a lamp,
2 ipeed fan

Easy moun'tlng
Easy Installation
HJeh and Night Cool,
),

ONlY

.

'119

95

...
AND SAVE '100 OR MORE

8-25

X

15 fou r pfy Hres .

• door
·, Tht Cofrlmlsslone, ·s reserve

H1e rig ht

lltds.

I~

reject ony or ali

Saves yoo over $100 compared to !he cost of calling In a

professl~nai exterml~ator. Buy Arab and do both you and
vour home a favor. ·Price may vary ~flghtly. .
. '

VAll FY
..

WMBER I &amp;SUPPLY 00.

FOR

REG•.
99~

29~

REG. 1.15
LARGE
SIZE
1

INTENSIVE 1

15 OZ.
.31. #

•

99
.,

•

~

I
I
I

For A
1 Fresh Mouth

.;

REG.
11.59

28 oz.

_______ _

Reg. $1.89
72's

'1.29

_._,... ---~---..·~'""(•,. i

~

Glade

~

70l.

53~

REG. 69'

ANACI

Req . $1.7S

SYRUP
PEPSIN

~~IRRA

REG. 79'
5 oz.

(9~ ~~

.

·~
c....
,. •••
'

40Z.

$1.

Reg. '2.25
-

-·

·-

•
I

-

llw

33- .

VESPRE
'SPRAY MIST
DEODORANT

49~

REG. s1.49
2~

CASHMERE
BOUQUO

BODY
POWDER

oz.

MICRIN
32

• clean mouth
• clean breath

Reg. '$1.98
4

oz.

Reg. $2.29

Nelson 's'Beauty Department

SAY "HELLO" TO
SUMMER

8ATH BEADS·
• w;ter softening
• Sl&lt;in smoo1~ng
• Body reh11ing

Reg.

REG. 79'

· 7 DAYS AWEEK
'
9 AM TO 10 PM

"FROST &amp; GLOW"
MISTAKE-PROOF FROSTING .
OR TIPPING KIL ___________ ONLY 15.50

.

66~
•

KIJ
, ..... , . . -

PHILLIPS'
MILK OF MAGNESIA
(LIQUID)

~0.

BLUE LADY CLAIROL

LIGHTENER

. Reg_. ill.49
2112 oz.

TANNING LOTION

Reg. $2.25

/lUI.

$1 •19· $1.19 $.1•33
$}

. DR. CALDWELL

OPEN

Family Laxative.

I80's

CLAIROL VALUES

44~

REG. 98'
12 oz.

77e

1 oz.

*

. 49~

36's

Reg. s1.49

Save!

REG. 1.29

Reg. $1.75

REG. 1.19

'

24~

69~

5

. 59~·

REG.
' 43'

won't IRRITATE eyes

Reg. $1.50
3 oz.

(IN FOIL)

~

77~

ASPIRIN

DEODORANT

ALKA SELTZER

FAMILY
. . SIZE -·
REG. '1.09

ONLY

babv shampoo

CHILDREN'S

V05 (REGULAR OR DRY)
SHAMPOO

;

for
WHITER TEETH I

7JC

REG.·7f1

3* oz.

, I

9 oz.

THE NEW
FEMNNE
HYGIENE

GLADE
AIR FRESHENER

99~ .

77 e

REG. 11.29

99c

'

8's 39~

!

__,

I

Reg.

I

Reg. '1.69

49~

Regular or. Super.

BRANO

for dry hands
and skin

CASE

.

Vaseline 1I
CARE•

Reg. 1.95
24 oz.

LIQUID SHAMPOO

*
•••••••
I

· NEW.'

.

SUAVE
HAIR SPRAY

-

'

.

'"•.

REGULAR
30*
·•

·.~t.l,

GAS IQJ~@~O@

-,. w~

, ~ .:..-.~

SIZED

RATE

AIR CONDITIONER

-"""

For Teething Pain
Reg. $1.00

... .........
.. .,,..-·

·Ray-0-Vac
BATTERIES

_::.:

.

ONLY

ORA-JEL

QT. SIZE

,__

88

I

In precious lOki. yellow
or white gold.

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

---·...

DISPOSABLE ·BOITLES
REG. 11.19
~

~·

birthstones.

$3.00 Additional For Each l'lirthstone

FORMULA

!SJMILAf
.,.,.,. IMI

REG. 49'

SWABS

us

14 hour protection

INFANTS

'--..

~

Reg.

SIMI LAC

!!!'""
...

:;:;:

11

with the World's
Finest Powder!

Reg. 1.39

»

400

. ~ BABY POWDER

tangles

1

.

Home is
contentment.
.
It's a perfect meal
that comes with a smile that speaks for itsel£
Prepared with affection
on a modern gas range that cleans for itself.
Gas is right. Gas ls there. A
Gas is right there.
©\JW[M]riD~ I

f#J

more

llouble tipped
swabs

2 4 •1.09
"BABY YOURSELF

PASSBOOK

Meigs Co. Branch

.29

~· ~BS

OIL

Reg. B9c

no

»

·4%%

•

~

.

LOTION

--""

REG. '2.35

~BABY

29~

!

baby-soft, smooth skin

first
creme rinse
for
children!

MQTHER I_;,

I~-=.:

2 FOR

BABY SOAP

munici pal ity, the address ot

====="""'=-:-:::-:::-.

-

,

,...--:-~\1

order 24 hour service. Owaln which is Rutland , Ohio, until
'
C
p tl d 10 :00 A. M. on the 18th day of
or Wilma
asto,
or an ' May, 1971. at which time the !raction shall be one -eighfh of
Ohio.
bids wi ll be publ ic l y opened and one percen t or a multiple
2-12-90tc read , tor the purchase of bond s rtl ereot.
Said bonds mature as fol lows :
of I he m un i c i p a I it y i n I he
SPRING HOP. Kirk's Friendly aggregate amount ot 513,000.00, S2,i.OO .OO on ,the lsi day or June
Tavern, HarHord, W. Va . authorized by ordi nance pa ssed in each of the years fr om 1972 to

..

""

~~~fg~;. ::; w~:::r: ll:l ~~~~:~:: b~om::•fo::

LEGAL NOTICE

.

:;:t:::::~:::::~::;;:::~;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::!:::::::::?.::::::::~::::::::~:::::::::::::::'

8

tween the ages of 16 and 21 who
are United States citizens, out of
school, and want to upgrade
themselves, may apply. Any
resident of Cabell , · Wayne,
Lin~o!nl• pn~ ,r.tason counties
can•Nppfy for adinission to Job
Corps. Parents are urged to
inquire about this drive.
Individuals may call Point
Pleasant,
675-2770.
A
representative will be available
to give personal help to any
interested youth. If an applicant

'·

in prepared remarks to the .
Cuyahoga
County
Bar
Association.
"These children and all of the
people - city residents or not who are served ty state
programs, are my responsibility as chief executive," he
added. "The schools and the
mental institutions have
likes, he can write to the Local nowhere to go now but to the
Office at 225 Sixth Street, Point state government for help, and I
Pleasant, West Virginia, 25550, do not propose to deny it to
them.
for additional information.

ployment Service will have a
Job Corps Drive May 3 through :.l.:
May 14. Applicants may want to

-..-.

.. .

.HOLZER HOSPIT AI.
(Dischargtd I
Mrs. Mary Barber, Michael
Branham, Mrs . Millard · L.
Brown, Mrs. Avonelle Cobb, ·
Mrs. Carl Francis, Miss Lena
&lt;:;u\h, Mrs, Larry Hali, Victor
Halley, Wendy Ully, Stanley
Martin, Mrs. James F. Mullens
Jr., and infant daughter; Mrs.
Charles Myers and infant son;
Robert Roush, Mrs. Merrett
Sanders, Mrs. Albert Shiffelt,
Cash Wyant, Charles Veley,
Miss Kathryn Werner, Unda
Marr, Paul Sheets, Kathleen
Gillman, Mrs. Hazel Sexton,
Lyle Mc€ormick an d Mrs.
Edith Keaton.

»

Job Corps
Drive Set '

National Baby ·week Sale!

HOSPITAL NEWS

rJI)C. OOVERED

QtERRIES
ONLY

39c

"

BOX

AMBUSH SPRAY .DEO.DORANJ.: _______ 1iOO

�I

t-Tbe DaUy Sent!nel,~y. o:,APril29,lfll
' .

o-1lle lJIIUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April29, 1971

Gilligan
Irritated

Notice

Lost

GUN SHOOT every Saturday IN WOLF PEN vicinity , 10night at 6 p.m. near Racine monlh old bird dog , while
Planing Mill. Assorted meats. wi lh bla tk ·eye . Contact Guy
Sponsored by Syracuse Fire Sargent, phone 992 -6432 .
Reward .
Department,
4-27-31p
4-28-31c
LASSIE : what is true? by ANYONE
~
.
knowing ·~ the
•
Johnny Cash . P.S. I'm not one whereabouts of a male
of your pupoles.
Siamese -;::at. pl ease call
4-29-6tc
Middleport 992-3832. Pet of
shut
-in . Please.
OVEN FRESH bakery pro- ·
4-2B-61c
ducts. Jimmy's Pastry Shop,
'
N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport.
Phone -992-3555.
4-29-30tc Wanted To Buy
TELEP HON£S, brass beds, ·
GUN SHOOT, Friday evening, 7 clocks, dishes., old furni tu re.
p.m. at Mile Hill Road. Hams, etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
bacons and half hog s, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
Sponsored by Racine . Fire
4-27-tfc
Department.
--------~ - 2B-3tc AN T I Q U E S :
Dishe s,
:-:Y-:-A-::R-::D:-S:-A:-L:-::E-.-::-F~
r i~d-:-a-r - a nd
telephones, ti ,-. brass beds.
lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,
Saturday . Some an f·ques .
Phone 992-3403.
Dora Carpenter residence,
4-23-30tp
Larkin St., Rutland. Ohio.
4-28-3tp
GUN SHOOT, 12-16·20 gauge, For Rent
Sunday, May 2. Assorted TRAILER , Brow-n's Trailer
meats . Free eats. Racine. Gun
Park . Phone 9n3324.
Club.
4-29-6tc
4-28-4tp
FOOT MOTOR home, plus
" GUN SHOOT, Sunday, May 2, 17'12
travel trailers, 13 and 16 fool.
Also, sa les and supplies.
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Phone Chester 985-3832. Gaul
12 noon.
Trailer Sales, Inc., Rt. 3,
4-28-3tc
Pomeroy, Ohio.
.....
r:"'~(
4-18-121c
GUN SHOOT. Sunday, May 2,
Rutland American Legion
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
Farm, 1 p.m.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
4-28-4tp
Ohio. 992-2951.
4-2-lfc
MEETING OF Meigs County
Fish and Game Assn. Friday,
. April lO, 7:30 p.m. Coon 2 BEDROOM trailer. No
children or pets. Call alter 5
Hunters
Club
House,
p.m . 992-2885.
Snowball Hill.
4-28-31c
4-28-3tc

At Carping
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Gov :
John J. Gilligan Wednesday
said Ohio's mayors should "stop
carping" about his proposed
budget because it gives "more
help for urban communities
than any budget in the history of
this state."
Gilligan said he would go
· before the General Assembly
with the mayors to ask for increased taxes, but he would not
change his budget to reduce the
amount earmarked for other
needs to give to the cities.
" If they are asking me to take
money away from the children
in our schools, in our mental
institutions, or from a family
struggling to feed its children,
then I can tell them right now
the answer is no," Gilligan said

-

......
..

...

~.

0

. . . . . ....

.

THESE ARE JUST FOUR OF some 30 fifth and sixth
grade girls who will appear in old-fashioned costumes - or
are they modern prairie dresses - in a segment of
"Mulligan's Magic" being presented by the Bradbury School
tonight and Saturday. From the left are Pam Powers, Janie
Miller, Patty Boyles and Jennifer Wise . Direction is by Mrs.
Phyllis Hackett, faculty member, who is also accompanist.
See more pictures on Page 8.

BRETT CARTER, standing on tbe box, is "Mulligan"
the medicine man, ill "Mulligan's Magic" which opens a
two-night run at 7:30 'this evening at the Bradbury School.
Other principals in the scene with Mulligan are, from the left,
Danny Haggy, Brett Carter, Teresa Ellis and Pam North.

.

~ -~

KOSCOT Kosmetlcs. wig.s and 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
accessories. May and Jun e
Raci ne area . Phone 992-6329.
special. Kleansing Kream,
4-25-6tc
$1.25. Distributors, Brown's.
Phone 992-5113.
UNFURNI SHED 3 room
4-23-lfc apa r tment.
Inquire
at
apartme nl 16, Coats Bldg.,
SAVE UP to one half. Bring Middleport. For informalion
your sick TV to Chuck's TV phone 992-3641.
,•
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave ..
4-27-12tc
Pomeroy_.
4-23-lfc
'
3 - room
' ANTIQUES , glassware, UNFURNISHED
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
Depression glass, love seat.
1-31-tlc
Hayman's Auction, Friday
night.
5 ROOM house. bath, uti lity
4-27-4tc room , 2-car garage, large
garden. Phone 949-217S.
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
4-27-31c
Chesler, Ohio. Flowers for
Mother's Day and Memorial HOUSE . 1637 Lincoln Hts.,
Day. S.88 and up. Phone
Pomeroy, 4 rooms, beth, attic
Ches
fer
985-3537.
for
storage, full basement,
.._,
4-23-12tc
nice
yard 1
dri veway.
..,....
Ava
liable
May
1.
Phone 992WILL DO tailoring and 2780 or 992-3432.
upholstery. Phone 992-3561.
4-21-tfc
3-31-30tc
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327 . . H~AILtiHPACE on old Rt . 33,
3-30-30tc
'/,,mile north of new Meigs
High School . Phone 992-2941.
y~;:. . REDUCE safe and fast with
3-5-lfc
" ....
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
!:j'., . ' Wffer pllls.: Nelson "Drugs,
FU!l.Nl'S HED ·and · unfurnished
..o. , ·
4-14-60tp · api'tments. Close to school.
'"'' '
Phone 992-5434.
WILL PICK up merchand""
10-18-tfc
and take to auction on a
· .... ,
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, ,Rutland .
'
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tlc
:'
NOTICE OF

PT. PLEASANT - Jack L.
Smith, manager of the Point
Pleasant Local Office of the
West Virginia Department of
Employment Security, said
Wednesday an all-out effort to
recruit male and female youth
who are out of school and cannot
find work is being made.
Job Corps may be the answer

.......
....

:~:i~~:. w~h~ckS~a:~ill :~~

I

.
.

'•'

·-

i •• •

!~l ~

.. .
...... ..

I ,.

-.. t/ 1

.,,

REGISTERED Tennessee
walker

s fud

SALE OF BONDS

Sea l ed bids will be received

service . by the und er signed , the fiscal

Harrisonville. Ohio. Phone
742-5862.

off icer of the Village of Rutla nd,
her eina ft er referred to as
-4 20 Jotc muni ci pal ity , In th e Coun ty of
Meig s, Oh io, at his office in th e

====-===-..,·-,·
RUBBER: STAMPS made to

OTHER PRINCIPAL CHARACfERS in the operetta being presented by Bradbury School
fifth and sixth graders tonight and Saturday at 7:30 p; m., from the left, seated, are Clinton
Napper and Becky Fultz; standing from the left are Cindy Hindy, Marilee Cassell, Robert
DeLong and Greg Shee~.

Free eats. Music by Gall and Apri l 7, 1971 . Bids shalt be
the T. C. Playmates, 8:30 to sealed and endorsed " Bids for

•

·-

......

--•

JOHNSON &amp;JOHNSON - REG. 23'

: : Mother's Day, Sun., May 9

I

:II
'·

~-matte
FOR

BABY -GIFT BOX
' GIFT FOR BABY''

1976, inclusive .
Said bonds are iss ued for the

of
co ns tru c t ing,
t2:30 . Friday , April 30.
Stre et Improv ement Bonds." purpo se
Sa id bon ds will be da t ed the reco nstru c t ing, re surfaci ng and
-4·29-2tc lsi day of JUne , 1971, will be in repair ing stree ts within the

Duodenal ulcers occur five
to 10 times more frequently
than gastric ulcers and are
more common in men than
in women, according to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Reward

Vi ll age of Rufland .
Said bond s are payable at the
deposi t ory of said Village which
at the prese nt lime is Pomeroy
Your old er years by sav ing
Nat io nal
Bank,
Ru t land
in
your younger days. St art
Bran ch, Rutland , Ohio, and are
NOTICE ON FILING
now ! Start at the Meigs Co.
supported by a five (5) mill le vy
OF IN VENTORY
pa ssed by the Vi llage of Rutland
Bra nch of the Athens Co . .
AND APPRA ISEMENT
on the Jrd day of November,
Savings
&amp; Loan . A friendly
1970.
. The Sta t e of Ohio , Meigs
place
to
do bus!ness.
Countv
.
Probat
e
Court.
Said bonds are iss ued subie ct
To the Executor of Ad to ca ll .
minis tr-ator of the estate; to
II is contemplated that the
legis l ative authority of the such of th e following as are
municipality will meet at 7: 30 p. re si dents of th e State of Ohio,
viz : - the surviving spouse, the
m . on the 18th day of May, 1971.
to consider said bids and make next of kin, the beneficiaries
und er the will ; and to the at an award .
torney
or
attorneys
The bond s will be deliv e r ~d at
of
the
the office of the unders igned . repr ese nting any
afor em en tloned persons :
The r ight is reserved to reject
bids.
Elizabe th Marie Lawrence,
Portland , Me igs Co unty , Ohio,
VILLAGE OF RUTLAND
No . 20,470.
By Vernon L. Weber, Clerk
You are hereby not if ied that
1~1
a, 15, 22. 29 , &lt;tc
the
Inv en tory
and
Ap praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned. decea sed, late
of said Coun ty , was file d in this
LEGAL NOTICE
Bids will be received in the Cour t. Sai d Inventory and ·
Commiss ioners Office for a 1971 n Appraisement will be for
Sheriff's ca r until 9 : 00 a.m. hearing before this Court on the
o'clock on May 4, 1971. 10th day of May , 1971, at 10 :00
Speci fications are as follows : o'cl ock. A .M .
Any person desir ing to f il e
Color - (two ton e color "''~19:~ """'''"lY oranch of rhe
wh ite to belt li ne - black bot - exceptions thereto must f ile
Athens County Savings &amp;
tom) .
them at least fiv e days pr ior to
Loan Co.
Oil Filler
~
th e date set for hearing.
296 Second St.
Given under my hand and seal
Heavy Duty Air Cleaner
Pomeroy, Ohio
Windsh ield Washers and Var. Of said Cou r t. this 20th day of
Apri l 1971.
Speed Electric Wipers
Back up ligh ts
F . H . O'Brien
Heavy duty Alternator
Judge and ex -officio
Heater and Defroster
Cl erk of said Cour t
H . D. Battery
Undercoa ting
By Jane t E. Morris
VInyl Uphol st ery
(blac ·k
Deputy Clerk'
preferred')
(~122, 29, 2tc
350
Cu .
In :
Engi ne
{Min imum)
Power D isc Brakes
Pcwer Steering
Non Slip Differ ential
55 Amp He!vy Duty Alter nator with 70 Amp . Battery
Hea vy Duty Hydramatic
Automatic Transmission
Air Foam Sea ts
An tifreeze
Seat bel l s 1ron t and rear .
tregu talloh)
1 Motorola 100 Watt Police
Rad io, equipped and ins talled .
I Outside Speaker, ins talled ,
1 Public Address System
installed .
'
1 Electronic Siren , inst alled
M inimum Wheel base 120", o~
full siZe ca r
Spotlight, re1f'"i)linker
Stan dard Poli ce package
which includes ·tn addit ion to
aboy~ ~ ~
·
, H~!JVY Duty 5 blade fan,
1gnlt1on Su$penslon equipment,
$19.95 buys 1 ga110n ot Arab Tt!rmhe Luntrol U&gt;ncentrate.
heevy •prlrgs and shocks,
· Add an Arab ~ose-end spray Applicator and you're ready
heaVy · duty front seat. an
to completely termite-proof the average 3-bedroom home!
· heavv dyty. floor mats .

th e denomination of $2,600.00
FOR YOUR entertainment and each , wi ll draw ir\terest on th e
dancing pleasure, visit the 1st day of Decembe r and June
Bar G Ranch Club, -Hartford, of each year, beginn ing
va., Saturday, May 1, 9 December 1, 1971 , at the ra te of
six per ce nt per an nu m . Anyone
p.m. to 1:30a .m. All members des1r
ing t o do so may present a
and
guests
welcome . bid fQr
bonds based upon
Featuring Gall and the T. C. but not insaid
excess of six per cent
Playmates.
provid ing tha t where a frac 4-29-2tc tiOnal Interest rate is bid such

w.

Succotash
Succotash is the way the
early Pilgrim settlers approximated the Narragan-.
sett Indian work " misickquatash." It originall y meant
"ear of corn" but in time
came to mean the dishcorn and beans cooked together- that we know today.

*l '

I

II
····

'

~

~;;

;!}
:~

::!::

1

~j ·
,.,
;,;
I:;,:.
':-:
:.,i.J

1

Ring Sty '

~"

Set with radiant birth,
::•cnt

:~~:;t:~• :~;

PtAmx

:~
:::.
::::
!11
..

Court St.

Ill'

r.

FLASHLIGHT

BATTERY

~,.

(\ ........

"Window Unit"

2

.~

.,'

:~

...

'

5000 BTU • Plugs In like a lamp,
2 ipeed fan

Easy moun'tlng
Easy Installation
HJeh and Night Cool,
),

ONlY

.

'119

95

...
AND SAVE '100 OR MORE

8-25

X

15 fou r pfy Hres .

• door
·, Tht Cofrlmlsslone, ·s reserve

H1e rig ht

lltds.

I~

reject ony or ali

Saves yoo over $100 compared to !he cost of calling In a

professl~nai exterml~ator. Buy Arab and do both you and
vour home a favor. ·Price may vary ~flghtly. .
. '

VAll FY
..

WMBER I &amp;SUPPLY 00.

FOR

REG•.
99~

29~

REG. 1.15
LARGE
SIZE
1

INTENSIVE 1

15 OZ.
.31. #

•

99
.,

•

~

I
I
I

For A
1 Fresh Mouth

.;

REG.
11.59

28 oz.

_______ _

Reg. $1.89
72's

'1.29

_._,... ---~---..·~'""(•,. i

~

Glade

~

70l.

53~

REG. 69'

ANACI

Req . $1.7S

SYRUP
PEPSIN

~~IRRA

REG. 79'
5 oz.

(9~ ~~

.

·~
c....
,. •••
'

40Z.

$1.

Reg. '2.25
-

-·

·-

•
I

-

llw

33- .

VESPRE
'SPRAY MIST
DEODORANT

49~

REG. s1.49
2~

CASHMERE
BOUQUO

BODY
POWDER

oz.

MICRIN
32

• clean mouth
• clean breath

Reg. '$1.98
4

oz.

Reg. $2.29

Nelson 's'Beauty Department

SAY "HELLO" TO
SUMMER

8ATH BEADS·
• w;ter softening
• Sl&lt;in smoo1~ng
• Body reh11ing

Reg.

REG. 79'

· 7 DAYS AWEEK
'
9 AM TO 10 PM

"FROST &amp; GLOW"
MISTAKE-PROOF FROSTING .
OR TIPPING KIL ___________ ONLY 15.50

.

66~
•

KIJ
, ..... , . . -

PHILLIPS'
MILK OF MAGNESIA
(LIQUID)

~0.

BLUE LADY CLAIROL

LIGHTENER

. Reg_. ill.49
2112 oz.

TANNING LOTION

Reg. $2.25

/lUI.

$1 •19· $1.19 $.1•33
$}

. DR. CALDWELL

OPEN

Family Laxative.

I80's

CLAIROL VALUES

44~

REG. 98'
12 oz.

77e

1 oz.

*

. 49~

36's

Reg. s1.49

Save!

REG. 1.29

Reg. $1.75

REG. 1.19

'

24~

69~

5

. 59~·

REG.
' 43'

won't IRRITATE eyes

Reg. $1.50
3 oz.

(IN FOIL)

~

77~

ASPIRIN

DEODORANT

ALKA SELTZER

FAMILY
. . SIZE -·
REG. '1.09

ONLY

babv shampoo

CHILDREN'S

V05 (REGULAR OR DRY)
SHAMPOO

;

for
WHITER TEETH I

7JC

REG.·7f1

3* oz.

, I

9 oz.

THE NEW
FEMNNE
HYGIENE

GLADE
AIR FRESHENER

99~ .

77 e

REG. 11.29

99c

'

8's 39~

!

__,

I

Reg.

I

Reg. '1.69

49~

Regular or. Super.

BRANO

for dry hands
and skin

CASE

.

Vaseline 1I
CARE•

Reg. 1.95
24 oz.

LIQUID SHAMPOO

*
•••••••
I

· NEW.'

.

SUAVE
HAIR SPRAY

-

'

.

'"•.

REGULAR
30*
·•

·.~t.l,

GAS IQJ~@~O@

-,. w~

, ~ .:..-.~

SIZED

RATE

AIR CONDITIONER

-"""

For Teething Pain
Reg. $1.00

... .........
.. .,,..-·

·Ray-0-Vac
BATTERIES

_::.:

.

ONLY

ORA-JEL

QT. SIZE

,__

88

I

In precious lOki. yellow
or white gold.

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

---·...

DISPOSABLE ·BOITLES
REG. 11.19
~

~·

birthstones.

$3.00 Additional For Each l'lirthstone

FORMULA

!SJMILAf
.,.,.,. IMI

REG. 49'

SWABS

us

14 hour protection

INFANTS

'--..

~

Reg.

SIMI LAC

!!!'""
...

:;:;:

11

with the World's
Finest Powder!

Reg. 1.39

»

400

. ~ BABY POWDER

tangles

1

.

Home is
contentment.
.
It's a perfect meal
that comes with a smile that speaks for itsel£
Prepared with affection
on a modern gas range that cleans for itself.
Gas is right. Gas ls there. A
Gas is right there.
©\JW[M]riD~ I

f#J

more

llouble tipped
swabs

2 4 •1.09
"BABY YOURSELF

PASSBOOK

Meigs Co. Branch

.29

~· ~BS

OIL

Reg. B9c

no

»

·4%%

•

~

.

LOTION

--""

REG. '2.35

~BABY

29~

!

baby-soft, smooth skin

first
creme rinse
for
children!

MQTHER I_;,

I~-=.:

2 FOR

BABY SOAP

munici pal ity, the address ot

====="""'=-:-:::-:::-.

-

,

,...--:-~\1

order 24 hour service. Owaln which is Rutland , Ohio, until
'
C
p tl d 10 :00 A. M. on the 18th day of
or Wilma
asto,
or an ' May, 1971. at which time the !raction shall be one -eighfh of
Ohio.
bids wi ll be publ ic l y opened and one percen t or a multiple
2-12-90tc read , tor the purchase of bond s rtl ereot.
Said bonds mature as fol lows :
of I he m un i c i p a I it y i n I he
SPRING HOP. Kirk's Friendly aggregate amount ot 513,000.00, S2,i.OO .OO on ,the lsi day or June
Tavern, HarHord, W. Va . authorized by ordi nance pa ssed in each of the years fr om 1972 to

..

""

~~~fg~;. ::; w~:::r: ll:l ~~~~:~:: b~om::•fo::

LEGAL NOTICE

.

:;:t:::::~:::::~::;;:::~;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::!:::::::::?.::::::::~::::::::~:::::::::::::::'

8

tween the ages of 16 and 21 who
are United States citizens, out of
school, and want to upgrade
themselves, may apply. Any
resident of Cabell , · Wayne,
Lin~o!nl• pn~ ,r.tason counties
can•Nppfy for adinission to Job
Corps. Parents are urged to
inquire about this drive.
Individuals may call Point
Pleasant,
675-2770.
A
representative will be available
to give personal help to any
interested youth. If an applicant

'·

in prepared remarks to the .
Cuyahoga
County
Bar
Association.
"These children and all of the
people - city residents or not who are served ty state
programs, are my responsibility as chief executive," he
added. "The schools and the
mental institutions have
likes, he can write to the Local nowhere to go now but to the
Office at 225 Sixth Street, Point state government for help, and I
Pleasant, West Virginia, 25550, do not propose to deny it to
them.
for additional information.

ployment Service will have a
Job Corps Drive May 3 through :.l.:
May 14. Applicants may want to

-..-.

.. .

.HOLZER HOSPIT AI.
(Dischargtd I
Mrs. Mary Barber, Michael
Branham, Mrs . Millard · L.
Brown, Mrs. Avonelle Cobb, ·
Mrs. Carl Francis, Miss Lena
&lt;:;u\h, Mrs, Larry Hali, Victor
Halley, Wendy Ully, Stanley
Martin, Mrs. James F. Mullens
Jr., and infant daughter; Mrs.
Charles Myers and infant son;
Robert Roush, Mrs. Merrett
Sanders, Mrs. Albert Shiffelt,
Cash Wyant, Charles Veley,
Miss Kathryn Werner, Unda
Marr, Paul Sheets, Kathleen
Gillman, Mrs. Hazel Sexton,
Lyle Mc€ormick an d Mrs.
Edith Keaton.

»

Job Corps
Drive Set '

National Baby ·week Sale!

HOSPITAL NEWS

rJI)C. OOVERED

QtERRIES
ONLY

39c

"

BOX

AMBUSH SPRAY .DEO.DORANJ.: _______ 1iOO

�' .

•

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April29, 1971

Bargains, Bargains,
WANT AD
INFORMATION
.
DIOADLINES
.
5 P.M. Da y Before Publication
Monday Deadlin e 9a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections

Will be accepted unti\ 9 ~ · "" for
Day of Publ ication

REGULATIONS
Th.e Pu blisher r ese r ves t he

righ t to edit or reject an y ads
dee med

obj ectiona l.

Th e

publ isher w il l not be res pon sible

for more than one incorrect
inser t ion .

RATES

For Want Ad Ser vice

5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Cha r ge 75c
12 cents per Word three
cons ec ut ive insert i.ons.
18 cents per word six con.
secutlve insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

ads and ads paid within 10 day s.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word m in'imum.
Each additional word 2c .

1

BLIND ADS
Add itional 25c Charg e pe r
Adverti se ment.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a. m. to 5:00p.m. Dail y,
8: 30a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday.

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of
Raymond (June ) Fitch, Jr.,
who passed away April 29,
19~.

We think of him as one who

sleeps.
Ali tree from grief and pain,
And know the happy day will
come ,
When we shall meet again.
He wouldn't want to see us 'cry ,

His heart was tender rich with

·Get· Ready For Summer
.

Susiness Services

f

For Your Garments
All you pay for is cleaning

and pressing. Pay when you
get them back.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY SERVICE
CALL 77J·5S43.
Please! No Free Storing on
ijulk Cleaning.

..WINSOR
icCHA.MPION
-tiBUDDY . -j(VAN DYKE

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
•

' Mason, W. Va.

know

Sadly

smilirrg

missed by

up

Mother,

Father , si x Sisters, and their
fam ilies.

4-29-llc

Card of Thanks

JOHNSON MASONRY
Backhoe And
End loader Work

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR
THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *
You will have something of value to show for the $$S you

own

home -

plus. you gain an

Income Tax benefit, you build an eqully and you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Bec.ome A Homeowner-

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home. V.A.. i=.H.A.,
And Conventional Loans.
Come See Us At 97'1' N. Second St., Mlddlepor1.

way during the long Illness
and death of my husband,
Lawrence Francis.

Wife. Ruth, and children,
George. Mary and Donna .
4-29-llp

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds. ·

742-4902
EXPERIENCED
Radiator Semce

reen Hill Homes Inc.
992·1129
Evenings Call : 992·2534 992-3433
Dale
Larry
D.utton
Spencer

~92-2580

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

10m

Crow

BI.AEITNARS

WE APPREC lATE very much
your kind ex pressions of

sympathy at the passing of
our hu sband,

father

and

brother , William . Henry
Landers. Your flowers, neigh·
borly gilts. cards and Crow's
Specialty were very welcome .

JOHNSON MASONRY
Complete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

742-4902

1968 Dodtte Coronet _; ________ l1995

-- -- ===!.. "11l. . Y&amp;t.t.
'TtMBER.• AT
EVEit'f WUtl&gt;t.E

Roofing &amp; carpenter
Wor11
Spouting, RCIOf
Painting

4 Door sedan,

v.s, automatic,

1964 Ford Thunderbird----:---- 11095
2 Dr . HT .• V-8, automatic, p. steering. p. windows. p.
brakes, buckets, console, air..

1964 Mercury Monterey ______ ,..._ '695
4 Door Sedan,

v.s, automatic,

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
~

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

p. steering, air.

DEXTER , 0 . 45726
PHONE 742-3945
1nsured-

E xperienced
work Guaranteed

finish with black vinyl root. Radio

&amp;

all

, 15 TZIMPL,E..HARPOON MAP;f..f!

~J~~~~-H~~~~

$5.55

or

.

-.

1

1970 GMC Pickup ·---------- 2695

THE~th

WILL
ITT IT···

1957

•

«Thai',-rightl

Chevrolet ______ 1295

Belair 2 door h.-top. V-8 engine, p. steering, Turbogllde!
instruction book still in glove box.

·R. H. Rawlings Sons
992-2151

992-2152 .
MIDDLEPORT,

0.

Door, locally owned &amp; a
spotless car Inside &amp; out.
White vinyl roof with med.
green finish, full power
equipment Inc . 6-way seat,
wll1dows,

vents

&amp;

door

locks, Climate Control air
condilioning. Looking tor a
fine car •. see this one.

1968 Olds

1895

5

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan. V-8,
engine, automatic trans .,
p. steering &amp; brakes, vinyl
interior, radio, white over

turq. finish, good fires.
Local 1 owner car.

For Sale

4-4-30tc
3 ·PIECE antique bedroom
suite. Bendix ironing, 2 small
Radiant . gas healers. Phone
992-7066.
4-29-6tc
ANNOUNCING THE AP·
POINTMENT OF GEORGE
S. HOBSTETTER JR., REAL 1966 HONDA. cream, good
condition . Phone 949-4843.
ESTATE BROKER AND
4-29-6lc
HILTON
WOLFE · SR .,
SALESMAN, AS THE EX·
CLUSIVE REAL ESTATE TWO HORNED Hereford bulls,
pure bred . One 2-year old and
AGENCY TO SELL FOR:
one yearling . Ernest Wingett,
THE GREEN HILL
HOMES, INC.
Racine. Ohio. Phone 949-2441.
SEE one of us today for com·
4-29-3tc
plete informatioq on the type
·at home, locallll!r.-and abdut SOUTHERN plants: "tomato.
the long time· financing
cabbage, peppers, sweet
available - Buy a new home
polatoes and onion. May 1.
Iike paying rent in a beautiful
Order now. Charles R. Harris,
country sett ing with all
Portland. Ohio. Phone 843·
ut ilities available, and iust off
2693.
State Route 7, near Pomeroy,
4-20-121c
Ohio.
Georges. Hobstener Jr.
16FT. WEAVER skill with good
BROKER, PHONE 985-4186
trailer . 3'h -hp . outboard
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio
motor,
pair of oars, anchor,
HILTON WOLFE SR.,
two
life
jackets, 5200. Phone
SALESMAN, PHONE 949-3211
Mason
773-5147.
Recine, Ohio
4·14-tfc
4-23·6tc

HOBSTtiii:R
REAL ESTA
. TE

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

1968 Chevy II 51595
Nova . 2 Dr., 1 owner car,
clean Interior, like new W· W
tires. while finish, 6 cyl.
engine. ciutom'atic trans .

Radio. See. II today.
Several
Low Mileage

4 Door Sedan. locally
owned, 6 cyl., Powergtlde,
black finish, spolless clean
Interior, radio, like new
white-wall tires.

.

The
Daily Sentinel

Virgil B••
TEAFORD

.

'

--

\["""

Chevrolet
Company
'. OffiCials taJS

~ ~ .,

IT COME&amp; T '

Malibu 4 Dr . hardtop, V-8
engine, automatic trans .•
power sleering, radio. Like
new white-wall fires, vinyl
roof &amp; green· flnish.

1967 Ford

IJCAcrt.Y $226.251

TELL HIM tM Ol!T•...

TEl.L HIM r!M &amp;ICK
TEl.L HIM ANYTHING
••.&amp;IT GET RIP OF
HIM!

1765

1

4 Door sedan L. T. D., power
steering, power brakes, air
conditioning. Vinyl Interior, blk . vinyl root,
maroon finish, radio, new
W· W

tires.

1967
Belvedere 2 dr. hardtop, v.
8 motor, power steering,

sld. 3-speed trans., blk . top.
cream body, radio.

1967 Ford

..

$1495

•

1965 .Colvair '695
~

TIIS... tS~~.. ~...
~NW! ... (.IVE,,. '«XJR ..,
EMPLO'iEES... A. ... BI~ ...
sua:... Cf..:n£... PIE:!

1964 Pontiac '495

I RAH lfNNIY AF111~
I FtriiSIIEO t¥1NCIHQ
'"AND I WAQ
CONRJSE0-\1/IeHIN!l
_ _..,_
O!tLY TO FLEE·' ·
'--,-~'"'
AND ll1EN I SAW

IIIE'LL TALK
FIR&amp;T AND
THE!I DECIDE
WHAT TO DO!

llltS!'AR··· THE
LARQEI&gt;T ()lie

Pomeroy Motor Co.

8.Jnnnlle ·

.&amp;OROSS
1.Uiy
II. Mound
lO.Muacat

DICK TRACY
"'ARTIFICIAL.. GRASS, TOO,
5UT T~EV OVERLOOICEO
ONE POINT-WII..O PLUM
BUSHES DON'T ST/!o.V GFIEEN
ALL WINTEFI,•

'

6.A.n4not
7.Burden

Ancient
~~L.OOg~t&lt;~WWOO~~:r~~~~~~ 11. capital
region of
010 WITJ.l TI.JE

8. RDw

P. Body of
water
A81a Minor
13, Cowboy's
12.Groggy
charges
(compound·
16.Compute
wd.)
aotro14.Tumedto
Jo(lcally
the right
:IIi. Underotand 17.South

TOP.

'

MOBILE HOMES

plant
18. Bull
"poilu·
tlon"

(Lat.)

Ht..;.-11"-

&lt;il

22. City In

tbne

Unoenmble thne l'our Jumble1,

. (8

one letter. to oath oquare,

wda.)

to

forrn four ordinary word1.

23.Raco
track

I FEMAL

nrure

.:U.Earth•

tl

it llart•

)

:.:::.ae.t=J-

enware

2~.

jar.
Eie-

pnt

27.Beaeh

area·

.African

l8.Bovlne
19. River (Sp.)
21. Others

JJWJlOOJ]3)lJ!;:Z:.:::!!:!..,,.

aeUy

(2wdJ.)\
4. Fonnerly
15. Tyke.a

Its

on

20.lllx·

rumble

II

____

MILLER

OSSWORD

DAILY

30.Br&amp;wl
3~.11luro­

pean

river

FROM NON ON, ti':O

'.l'exa.o

Ffi:O'r\ HERE.

lle.C&amp;roll

.28. J'llched
2t.Tteup,ar
._-~-...J

TERRY

TJ1ICI( Oil( TWO

native
38.Coupd1-

3i.Fnneh

AIKltiT

(U.W.. U

Ill and
37. Erelong

IN• Fi6HTING IN
W'\5HINGTON ...

Clelan d ReaIty

a hone

31. Wahble's
clance
32.Bangkok

I 5\ieAR, Trrlfi.Y! HOOt&gt;!;
l(()()t(lf 11100 "' GffitNG
TO Mf. I'Vf LEAfi.NEI7 A

Evervone Cant

L

"'\

ME.!!

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

SR.

Pharmacist

G UI-JG G AT

FIANCEE..'".'

1969 Chevelle

1970

20~

-----

- -- - - -

I"NOUGH TO MARR'I

Iii\£, VOUP. LO'{AL

1968
Cadillac 53795 1968 CheveJie51495
Fleetwood Brougham 4

For

------

YOU- SOB!· BADDE R
G AT IT FASTOP. THE C RAB

WHICH WILL .MAKi:.
l:llllf\ HEALTH'{

Custom cab, V-8, p. steering, 3 speed, rear step bumper.
Wes1 Coast mirrors, sharp as a tack, 25,000 miles.

IU."a;~n:;r;n;;;-

Pleasant Ridge Road
Pomeroy,O.
Dick Vaughan

0

Local owner with less than 15,000 miles,
Comfortron air condl1ionlng , power
steering, automatic trans ., Astra front
seat, black nylon· interior. ·Beautiful green

with fine features .

HOUSE ;-1'640 Lincoln HIS:, BESTLINE PRODUCTS c II
Pomeroy. Phone m-7793.
.
· a
10.25-tfc Myron Ba1iey. Phone 992-5327.

~'""'..c,,to•m meat culling

CAPRICE 4 DOOR

other popular accessories, outstanding car

SPECIALS

Real~~-~tate For Sale __

THE SHOP

CHEVROLET

p. steering, air.

Ph. m-2143_ __Pomeroy
--=.,J

Wheel Alignment

WANTED

...

1969

Thanks .also to Rev. Knittle
992-3374
Mustang, 6 cyl., auto .
and Shirley and for many FOR expert electrical work call INSIDE AND oulslde .palnting .
Call 997-2368, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Dale Little
trans. , console , maroon
prayers,
to
Veterans
992-5179.
4·28·61c
finish, all good W· W tires,
992-6346
Memorial Hospital and
4·6·24tp
Hol1er HosQilal. '
radio. Real Nice.
"R~O~S~E~B~E~R~R~Y~F~u-r-n-ac_e_ in · - ~::================~
Mrs. Evel yn Landers and
SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller · stallation . Free estimates on
Famil y.
new furnate:Sr(•.011 ,. 9r gas.
Stewart . Ohio. Ph .
...... " . ,,
4-29; ltp . "6Sanitatlon1
.·1 .EXP~T ·
Servlte ' W~tk';:~-tli t·i ,Cecil
62-3035.
500 2 Dr., local low mileage
Roseberry , Ra cfne, . Ohio .
2-12-tfc
car, Interior extra clean,
Employment Wanted
~,.--,---__:_-___....,
Phone 614-843-2274.
medium green finish, all
All
equipped
with
air
4-28-6tc
WOULD LIKE to have job HARRISON 'S TV AND -·AN·
good
W · W tires, radio.
conditioning.
New
car
TENNA SERVICE . Phone - - - - - house cleaning, baby sitting.
Plentyy
of go In the. snow.
titles
and
balance
of
TREE -TRIMMI.NG
and
Will do Ironing In my home.
992·2522.
Just
nicer
than the average
removal
.
Fully
insured
.
Free
factory
warranty.
See
us
See at 729 Beech St., Apt. 7,
6-10-tfc
estimates . Call after 5 p.m .,
car.
Middleport. Call 992·2437 .
today!
MEIGS
County
coll ec t
Dick
Hayman ,
-GUARANTEED4-29-3tc NOTICE!
dairymen! Therf is no need to
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
Phone 992-2094
use less than the best.
Hayman, Chester 985·3509.
For Sale
Trade
H.T. Sed., spotless Interior,
3-28-30ip
C.O. B.A. select sires ar e
"We Service Well
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
available. Ali 2nd, and 3rd
good tires, radio, heater,
1965 CORVAIR Mon za 2 door
services are free, including PAPER-HANGING, painting,
The Cars We Sell"
automatic &amp; p. steering .
hardtop, 4 speed trans.
606 E. Maln, Pomeroy, 0.
our finest proven sires. Your
plastering, dry wall. Arthur
mission, qood 'tires, runs
Priced to move.
C.O.BA technician is Archie
Musser. Phone 992-3630.
good. Phone 742-5042.
3-28-30tp
Meadows. For servi·ce , phone
COAL, limestone . Excelsior
4-29-41c
For Sale
Real Estate
Sale
Middleport 992·7260 before II
Salt Works, E. Main St .•
Spouting and TWO BEDROOM house. ex- BULLDOZER.
a.m .; for Information phone ROOFING,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
TD9
In ·
Business Opportunities
4·9-tfc
Painting . Also, metal storage cellent condition, immediate
Mr . Mei\&lt;Jows by 9 a.m. at
ternalionat. 10-ft . angle blade
building 10x10, concrete floor ,
Gallipolis, Ohio, phone 256·
possession. Phone 992·2619.
and winch . Phone 992-3525
erected. for $300. Richard
6089. All informallon calls will
4-25-6tc
alter 7 p. m.
PART TIME
Wilt, Phone 992-2889.
be accepted collect. For In·
--4·23·61c
4·12·301C FIVE ROOM house. two
formation about Inseminating
BUSINESS
your own cows and our
36 11 )( 23" )( ,009
bedrooms, ba th, basement, 1968 BUICK, 26,000 actual
complete " On the Farm NEIGLER Construction . For
miles, 51 ,900 . Cushman ·
wall Ia wall carpet in living
NO.SELLING
Your t:hevy Dealer
building or remodeling your
Training " course write or
Trailster motorbike, $250.
room , bedrooms, and bath .
Easy pleasant work near
home
.
Call
Guy
Neigler
,
phon e Harold Bennett,
Phone Chester 985-3924.
Ga s ..f or ced air furna ce.
home restocking
C.O.B.A. District Manager. at
Racine, Ohio.
Open Eves. Til8
4-2J.6tp
Middleport. phone 992·3420.
992-2126
Pomeroy
7·31 -tfc
GENERAL FOOD
Gallipolis, Ohio, Rl. 2, phone
4-25-tfc
446-1535 or 446-4416 . Call
PRODUCTS
1971. PIAL &amp; SEW Zig-Zag
USED OFFSET PLATES
collect.
RALPH'S
CARPET
NESTLES. PLANTERS
Sewing Ma'c hine left in
24
ACRE
FARM,
Long
Bot!
om,
HAVE
Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
4-27·31p
AND .NABISCO
layaway . Beautiful pastel
with
or without
(arm
Auto Sales
MANY
USES
Free estimates·. Phone
color , full size model. Ail
ma chin ery . House with 3
Requires 8 to 10 hours SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Gall ipol is 446-0294.
buil t-in to buttonhole, over bedroom s, dining r oom , living
3-12-tfc
serv ice, all makes. 992·2284
per week . e arn $600.00
cast and fancy slltch. Pay just
1970 MAVERICK, 14,000 miles,
room , 1'12 baths, enclosed
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
$48 .75 ca sh or terms
$800 .00 and up
back porch, wall to wall
$1 ,495. Phone 949-3025.
Author ized Singer Sales and
8
for
51.00
a v ailable . Trade -ins ac ·
carpeting
.
Aluminum
siding
,
___:
4·25-6tc
monthly income .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. Real Estate FOI' Sale
cepled. Phone 992-5641.
awning, storm windows and
3·29-llc 3 BED ROOM brick house.
·Investment
secured
4-27-6tc
stor.m doors . City water .
1962 CORVETTE , 397, hard top.
In
Middleport.
ch9ice
location
Seiling
due
lo
ill
health
.
Phone
100 percent by in · EXPERT lawn mower and
$1,700. Phone 992-7270.
~·
Seen by appointment. Phone 614-985-3938.
VACUUM Cleaner brand new
12'
14'
•
24'
WIDE
4-28-Jtc
till er repair. Free pickup and
ventory.
992-3491 after 4 p.m.
4-25-18tp
1971 model. Complete with all
deliv ery. Warren 's Mower _ _ __ _ ____
Give your phone number and
4·_27-61c - -- - - - - - cleaning tools. Small paint
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
write Box 729· C, c-o The
1957 CHEVY, 36,000 miles. Call
damage in shipping. Will take
7 ROOMS, bath, on 'h-acre lot in
992-7357.
111
Court
St.
Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy,
992-3273.
Harrisonville. Call evenings
$27 cash or budget plan
4-28·6tc
Pomeroy,
Ohio
4·27-6tp
Ohio.
between 4 and 6. Phone 747.
available. Phone 992-5641.
4838,
Thor
Carsey.
4-27-6tc
- --··-·-"
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
1220 Washington Blvd.
1967 BARRACUDA convertible,
4-29·31p ,- - - -- - - - 16'1&gt; FOOT Shasta camper.
Complete Service
Belpre.
Ohio
V-8, automatic transmlsslon.
---------NEED a pony? ANYsizefor4-H sleeps 6. self-contained.
Insurance
Phone 949-3821
Power steering, SI ,OSO. Phone
project or other use. Special
Stove, oven. refrigerator,
Racine, Ohio
CONVENIENT but secluded
992·6005.
terms
for
4·H
project.
Eskey
pressurized water system. All
CriIt Br,adford
AUTOMOBILE insu ran ce been
building lois on T79 at Rock
Hill,
Flalwoods
Rd. ,
the extras. Prices for quick
Auto Sales
4·28-6tc
5-l•tfC
can ce ll ed?
Los t
yo ur
Springs . Within walking
Braker
Pomeroy , Ohio.
sale.
Phone
949·3913.
operator 's l icense? Ca!l 992·
diStance of Meigs High
110 Mechanic St.
4-25-6tc 1964 CHEVY pickup , ufll ity bed, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.,.
4-29-Jtc
BULLDOZER work. Basement.
School, a 5 minute drive from
2966.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
low mileage. Priced to sell.
ponds. landscaping . We do. all
6-15-lfc
Pomeroy. Call or see Biji - - Walnut
--STEREO.
solid-state -~~~~
fill!
Roger Bahr. Chester, Ohio.
kinds of dozer work . Haul till FOR SALE or RENT
A Wille weekends, or after 5
stereo,
4
speed
changer,
4
OU
CAN
BUY
AT
LANDMARK
Phone 985-3958.
ITEM: Morning. A
dir t an d lop soil . See or call
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
bedrooms. bath , nice kitchen
speaker
sound
system
.
Pay
•
"
4·22-6tc
Bob Jeflers after 7 p. m.
Help Wanted .
wilh cook units . . Full 6887.
zestful time for some
bata~ce $68.1o cash or easy
- - - -- Phone 992- 35~5.
7 -~ · IIC .
basement.
Forced
air
fur
terms.
Call
992-3352.
T
·
1967 CHEVROLET '!..ton, people. Double dismal
4-23-30tc
WAITR ESS . Apply 1n person.
nace. Carport. Asking only
4-29-6tc • Sale Pricei Thrll April
heavy duly , dual whe&amp;is, for' others. Jim Mees
. Crow's Steak House.
$8,300.00
utility boxes. Cali 992-6~52.
4-27-6tc O: DELL WHEEL alignment
HAND PUSH MOWERS
MAPLE
STEREO-RADIO As Low As
4-29-2tc somehow gets us all
63.95
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. POMEROY- Ni c-e 3 bedrooms,
This
stereo
comblnallon
.
together every day. .
BEA UTI CIAN wan ted . Write,
Complete front end serv ice,
ba th, large living and dining . 5'1• ACRE FARM - ALMOST equipped with AM-FM radio, . RIDING MOWERS
.
1969
BUICK
LeSabre
,
2-dr:1 tl ng ex per ience to Box 729·
tune· up and brake service.
Modern kitchen with stove
IN POMEROY- nice I story 4 speakers. 4 speed chahger. As Low As
l71 .9S
hardtop , power steering,
The Daily Sentinel ,
1home, 3 · bedrocms.
Wheel s balanced elec·
and refrigerator . Large
frame
Pay
balance
$81.30.
·cash
or
power brakes. ·air, 18,000
,..;eroy.
·,
ECONOMY
TiLLERS
tron l~ally .
All
work
porch. Gas forced air furnace.
bal h, 2 porches, floor terms. Call 992-3352.
miles.
Excellent condition .
4-27·31c
As
Low
As
134.9S
guaranteed.
Reason~ b le
2 lots. Double garage.
covering, barn . ALL IN
4;29,6tc
Phone
992-2288.
rates. Phone 992·3213 .
521 ,000.00
GOOD CONDITION S6,500. - - -- - - - ll ·IO·tfc
4·22-30tc
POMEROY .
POMEROY - 3 bedroom POMEROY- 2 EXCELLENT ELLEN'S Gif1Shop, Reedsville,
J. W. C.ru,y, Mgr
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
BUILDING LOTS-lots close
Ohio, Memorial Day wreaths.
pane le d hom e with large
• Phont '192·2111
" Ditching . Elec"tric sewer
by sold for $4,000.00, ALSO sprays..
baskets.
Ar·
close ts . Modern kitchen,
cl eaning." Reasonable rates.
HAS AN OLDER HOUSE, rangements, 69c and up.
stove, double sink . Forced air
4 . ··~·JUIC
·Phon e
John
Russell. , furnace. Full basement. Only
could be remodejed, needs
•
· PLANTS NOW
d
Si I
bath. FINE LOCATION.
.
rea y:
nge
Gall ipolis 446-4782.
512,000.00
. SORRY SAL Is now• a Merry
and doui;lie petunias, pansi.es.
4-7-tlc
mps .
$7,5,00.
Gal. She used Blue Lustre rug
coleus, Mexican tomatoes and
20 ACRES - All minerals. i
water
and upholstery cleaner. Rent
other variette·s. peppers,
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
room house. bath, furnace. ABOUT 10.000 SQ. FT. OF
control.
Lint
BUILDING
SPACE,
below
eleclrlc
shampooer,
$1.
Baker
cabbage,.';, or I dozen packs.
del ivered right to your
Chester wato!t . Several
Filter
or
Power
Furniture, Middleport.
• Don Hubbard , Syracuse ,
Fin Agitator.
pro/ect. Fast and easy. Free
outbuildings. $6,500.00
Pomeroy Mason bridge,
. ~. 28.61c
Ohio. Phone 992-5776.
Ptrm•·Prtn ·
est males . Phone 997-3784.
JUST OFF OF MAIN
4·22-121c
Contact
MIYIII
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co. , POMEROY- 6 room frame. 2 STREE"J;, EXCELLENT
Hotool
Htol.
4
hp
Sears
mini-bike.
$$0.
Phone
Middleport,
Ohio.
nice lots for mobile homes.
Mr. Leo Mossman
1962 CHEVY, SlOO. 1962 Ford,
LOCATION, hos house an .II.
Drrers
6-30-tlc
742-3223.
Asking $4,000.00
$3,500.
H8-3tc
$125. Also, beauiltul German
Surround clothe•
Director Of
with Otnllo, tvtn
--'-'
Shepherd
puppies
.
Ready
Pharmacy '
O"BRIEN ELECTRIC Service. NEW LISTING- RACINE-7 RUTLAND-2 ACRES,.cement SIX DUCKS, one mole pony,
· htlf. No hot IPOtl,
May 2, 520 each . Phone
no overdrylng .
~omm~rcia~: residential and 1 rooms, 3 bedro.oms, large
block house, 3 bedrooms,
will trade fOI" female ponY..
Coolville 667-3512.
Fino Mtah Lint
mdustnal wtrlng . Phone 247·
living and dining rooms . ' bath , nice kitchen, front
One
ptg.
Retriever
and
i;)eag
e
4·25-6tp
Filter.
2113,
Bath . basement. new gas
Porch , living room 27xl3
Wo SptCIIIiltln
-,--,--..,-...,-.-:--='--:--·:;.
3·.:;
12-tfc
forced air furnace. 3 porches, ALMOST NEW. $$.900.
' puppies. Phone m.62 ~i 8.3 tc BEAUTIFUL • selection ol
MAY TAG
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
garage and carport. Nice lot. PROPERTIES ARE SELLING - - - - - ----'••~ Corpot
flowers. baskets, "irealhs,
......c.
'
5eptic )anki 11\slalleq. George
Asking $12,500.00
1 HAVE Ranch Gerslenftld
an~spraysfOI"Memol'lal Day.
.
l~twithustodlly.
IBill l Pullins, Phone 992-2411.
IF YOU WANT TO
mink $tole, SIOO cash or will . Cliff S~Repalr, Middleport.
.Gallipolis, Ohio
SELL OR BUY
HENRY CLELAND•
4.2s.lfc
.
. 4-21 -tfc
take so books of trading
REALTOR
- - " -- -- - CALL;ft2.3J2S
stamps, TV, S&amp;H, or plaid.
•
HELEII L. TUFORD,
Offkt 'lt2·HS9
Call 992-2324.
'
ANTIQUES. Phone 992-5327.
742-421.1
Arnold Gr1te
Rutl1nd, 0.
ASSOCIATE
Rnldtftct 'lt2-2stl
4-6-:JOtc
4-28·4tc
:l-23-61c
~-25-6fc

to·

liMe iS .IN'/OLVED,WE 00
NO!' t:&gt;EFM (f WISE l'b
liE" LOcr!ICAL Ill

t
1-

1967 Rebel 770 ------------'1595

oJe~­

\IIHI:IZE OOUBLE

...nl; NOT NECESSAA'r'

500 4 Door, T-FIIte, V-8, p. steering, ai r.

See the "good guys" from Rawlings- Wallace
.1\mberger, Emerson Jones. Hilton Wolfe, Bob
Bratton, Dick Rawlings, and our latest. addition, Pearl Ash I we're happy to have him
and you will be too).

I WOULD like to thank all my
friends and neighbors and
.ever yone who helped in any

4 Door Sedan. T-Fiite, V-8, p. steering, a ir.

1965 Ambassadof ------------.'895

lov'ei
We hold our tears because we
We' ll meet him
abov e.

1969 Dodge Polara---------- 12495

4 Door Sedan, V-8, automatic, p. Steering, air.

MEMORIAL BRIDGE! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

THINK ABOUT ITI

spend when you buy your

Here are six air-conditioned specials from
Rawlings to ease the summer heat.

~EE TOM CROW. GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

.ABC CLEANERS
773-5543

4'ALSO
DOUBLE-WIDES · •

I

.

.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes ol Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.
·
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

FREE STORAGE

I

Jumbk" Lilli

39.Popular

· Yf! ..entay'•

phruefrom
''Laurh~In''

f~OUT

HAMPII

PIOftT

Ant wrtl A deJtaruntmt uor~ l'lttMior m4f'it

YOII thilllr of rhiiJ- A "II" Of

.u. BtiCfered'
44.Really!
(2wd.o.)

·wMP0/1390

4~. Bwt.u

river

46. Withered
DOWN
l . Soak

2. Jl.uatrallan
bird

CAP!'AIN EASY

DAILY CBY.t".l''QUOTE-Here's how to work It:
•.&amp;Xl'DLBAAXR
.
,' It LONGFELLOW
One letter lfllnply •.lando for another. In tht• .oamplo .A Is
uaed for the Ulree L'o, :x; for the two O'•. etc. Bingle Jettero,

-----HOLZER
MEDICAL CENTER

apootrophel, t» length ·and formation of the words are all
htnto. Each dag the cOde letters ore different.

A CryploJram quotation

--------

QWI VIKAQ
X It Y Q·K 0 ]I I
1

HOllER

K

QR

KVV

U.A RG

0 K QS Y I .

UF·
QW I

•

lOQUYI

MEDICAL
. . CENTER

FRTIF~OQ

RBIKO

U.A

KGGIBQIJ

Dll

'

XII&gt;DVI.--DVKUAI. XK.A.:BJCV

"l'oeliRfqol CIGJhpalet ',1'1111 WJ,'VICIISII II :roLL 01'
lU.OIOAL Dlll(dl W.ll'l'INO J'OB. OUR WITII ?.'0 OBOWi
~Jm!lif'Otft
'
I

I

'

.'

mak,.

uml"

'

rew)

�' .

•

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April29, 1971

Bargains, Bargains,
WANT AD
INFORMATION
.
DIOADLINES
.
5 P.M. Da y Before Publication
Monday Deadlin e 9a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections

Will be accepted unti\ 9 ~ · "" for
Day of Publ ication

REGULATIONS
Th.e Pu blisher r ese r ves t he

righ t to edit or reject an y ads
dee med

obj ectiona l.

Th e

publ isher w il l not be res pon sible

for more than one incorrect
inser t ion .

RATES

For Want Ad Ser vice

5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Cha r ge 75c
12 cents per Word three
cons ec ut ive insert i.ons.
18 cents per word six con.
secutlve insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

ads and ads paid within 10 day s.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word m in'imum.
Each additional word 2c .

1

BLIND ADS
Add itional 25c Charg e pe r
Adverti se ment.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a. m. to 5:00p.m. Dail y,
8: 30a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday.

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of
Raymond (June ) Fitch, Jr.,
who passed away April 29,
19~.

We think of him as one who

sleeps.
Ali tree from grief and pain,
And know the happy day will
come ,
When we shall meet again.
He wouldn't want to see us 'cry ,

His heart was tender rich with

·Get· Ready For Summer
.

Susiness Services

f

For Your Garments
All you pay for is cleaning

and pressing. Pay when you
get them back.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY SERVICE
CALL 77J·5S43.
Please! No Free Storing on
ijulk Cleaning.

..WINSOR
icCHA.MPION
-tiBUDDY . -j(VAN DYKE

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
•

' Mason, W. Va.

know

Sadly

smilirrg

missed by

up

Mother,

Father , si x Sisters, and their
fam ilies.

4-29-llc

Card of Thanks

JOHNSON MASONRY
Backhoe And
End loader Work

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR
THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *
You will have something of value to show for the $$S you

own

home -

plus. you gain an

Income Tax benefit, you build an eqully and you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Bec.ome A Homeowner-

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home. V.A.. i=.H.A.,
And Conventional Loans.
Come See Us At 97'1' N. Second St., Mlddlepor1.

way during the long Illness
and death of my husband,
Lawrence Francis.

Wife. Ruth, and children,
George. Mary and Donna .
4-29-llp

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds. ·

742-4902
EXPERIENCED
Radiator Semce

reen Hill Homes Inc.
992·1129
Evenings Call : 992·2534 992-3433
Dale
Larry
D.utton
Spencer

~92-2580

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

10m

Crow

BI.AEITNARS

WE APPREC lATE very much
your kind ex pressions of

sympathy at the passing of
our hu sband,

father

and

brother , William . Henry
Landers. Your flowers, neigh·
borly gilts. cards and Crow's
Specialty were very welcome .

JOHNSON MASONRY
Complete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

742-4902

1968 Dodtte Coronet _; ________ l1995

-- -- ===!.. "11l. . Y&amp;t.t.
'TtMBER.• AT
EVEit'f WUtl&gt;t.E

Roofing &amp; carpenter
Wor11
Spouting, RCIOf
Painting

4 Door sedan,

v.s, automatic,

1964 Ford Thunderbird----:---- 11095
2 Dr . HT .• V-8, automatic, p. steering. p. windows. p.
brakes, buckets, console, air..

1964 Mercury Monterey ______ ,..._ '695
4 Door Sedan,

v.s, automatic,

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
~

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

p. steering, air.

DEXTER , 0 . 45726
PHONE 742-3945
1nsured-

E xperienced
work Guaranteed

finish with black vinyl root. Radio

&amp;

all

, 15 TZIMPL,E..HARPOON MAP;f..f!

~J~~~~-H~~~~

$5.55

or

.

-.

1

1970 GMC Pickup ·---------- 2695

THE~th

WILL
ITT IT···

1957

•

«Thai',-rightl

Chevrolet ______ 1295

Belair 2 door h.-top. V-8 engine, p. steering, Turbogllde!
instruction book still in glove box.

·R. H. Rawlings Sons
992-2151

992-2152 .
MIDDLEPORT,

0.

Door, locally owned &amp; a
spotless car Inside &amp; out.
White vinyl roof with med.
green finish, full power
equipment Inc . 6-way seat,
wll1dows,

vents

&amp;

door

locks, Climate Control air
condilioning. Looking tor a
fine car •. see this one.

1968 Olds

1895

5

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan. V-8,
engine, automatic trans .,
p. steering &amp; brakes, vinyl
interior, radio, white over

turq. finish, good fires.
Local 1 owner car.

For Sale

4-4-30tc
3 ·PIECE antique bedroom
suite. Bendix ironing, 2 small
Radiant . gas healers. Phone
992-7066.
4-29-6tc
ANNOUNCING THE AP·
POINTMENT OF GEORGE
S. HOBSTETTER JR., REAL 1966 HONDA. cream, good
condition . Phone 949-4843.
ESTATE BROKER AND
4-29-6lc
HILTON
WOLFE · SR .,
SALESMAN, AS THE EX·
CLUSIVE REAL ESTATE TWO HORNED Hereford bulls,
pure bred . One 2-year old and
AGENCY TO SELL FOR:
one yearling . Ernest Wingett,
THE GREEN HILL
HOMES, INC.
Racine. Ohio. Phone 949-2441.
SEE one of us today for com·
4-29-3tc
plete informatioq on the type
·at home, locallll!r.-and abdut SOUTHERN plants: "tomato.
the long time· financing
cabbage, peppers, sweet
available - Buy a new home
polatoes and onion. May 1.
Iike paying rent in a beautiful
Order now. Charles R. Harris,
country sett ing with all
Portland. Ohio. Phone 843·
ut ilities available, and iust off
2693.
State Route 7, near Pomeroy,
4-20-121c
Ohio.
Georges. Hobstener Jr.
16FT. WEAVER skill with good
BROKER, PHONE 985-4186
trailer . 3'h -hp . outboard
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio
motor,
pair of oars, anchor,
HILTON WOLFE SR.,
two
life
jackets, 5200. Phone
SALESMAN, PHONE 949-3211
Mason
773-5147.
Recine, Ohio
4·14-tfc
4-23·6tc

HOBSTtiii:R
REAL ESTA
. TE

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

1968 Chevy II 51595
Nova . 2 Dr., 1 owner car,
clean Interior, like new W· W
tires. while finish, 6 cyl.
engine. ciutom'atic trans .

Radio. See. II today.
Several
Low Mileage

4 Door Sedan. locally
owned, 6 cyl., Powergtlde,
black finish, spolless clean
Interior, radio, like new
white-wall tires.

.

The
Daily Sentinel

Virgil B••
TEAFORD

.

'

--

\["""

Chevrolet
Company
'. OffiCials taJS

~ ~ .,

IT COME&amp; T '

Malibu 4 Dr . hardtop, V-8
engine, automatic trans .•
power sleering, radio. Like
new white-wall fires, vinyl
roof &amp; green· flnish.

1967 Ford

IJCAcrt.Y $226.251

TELL HIM tM Ol!T•...

TEl.L HIM r!M &amp;ICK
TEl.L HIM ANYTHING
••.&amp;IT GET RIP OF
HIM!

1765

1

4 Door sedan L. T. D., power
steering, power brakes, air
conditioning. Vinyl Interior, blk . vinyl root,
maroon finish, radio, new
W· W

tires.

1967
Belvedere 2 dr. hardtop, v.
8 motor, power steering,

sld. 3-speed trans., blk . top.
cream body, radio.

1967 Ford

..

$1495

•

1965 .Colvair '695
~

TIIS... tS~~.. ~...
~NW! ... (.IVE,,. '«XJR ..,
EMPLO'iEES... A. ... BI~ ...
sua:... Cf..:n£... PIE:!

1964 Pontiac '495

I RAH lfNNIY AF111~
I FtriiSIIEO t¥1NCIHQ
'"AND I WAQ
CONRJSE0-\1/IeHIN!l
_ _..,_
O!tLY TO FLEE·' ·
'--,-~'"'
AND ll1EN I SAW

IIIE'LL TALK
FIR&amp;T AND
THE!I DECIDE
WHAT TO DO!

llltS!'AR··· THE
LARQEI&gt;T ()lie

Pomeroy Motor Co.

8.Jnnnlle ·

.&amp;OROSS
1.Uiy
II. Mound
lO.Muacat

DICK TRACY
"'ARTIFICIAL.. GRASS, TOO,
5UT T~EV OVERLOOICEO
ONE POINT-WII..O PLUM
BUSHES DON'T ST/!o.V GFIEEN
ALL WINTEFI,•

'

6.A.n4not
7.Burden

Ancient
~~L.OOg~t&lt;~WWOO~~:r~~~~~~ 11. capital
region of
010 WITJ.l TI.JE

8. RDw

P. Body of
water
A81a Minor
13, Cowboy's
12.Groggy
charges
(compound·
16.Compute
wd.)
aotro14.Tumedto
Jo(lcally
the right
:IIi. Underotand 17.South

TOP.

'

MOBILE HOMES

plant
18. Bull
"poilu·
tlon"

(Lat.)

Ht..;.-11"-

&lt;il

22. City In

tbne

Unoenmble thne l'our Jumble1,

. (8

one letter. to oath oquare,

wda.)

to

forrn four ordinary word1.

23.Raco
track

I FEMAL

nrure

.:U.Earth•

tl

it llart•

)

:.:::.ae.t=J-

enware

2~.

jar.
Eie-

pnt

27.Beaeh

area·

.African

l8.Bovlne
19. River (Sp.)
21. Others

JJWJlOOJ]3)lJ!;:Z:.:::!!:!..,,.

aeUy

(2wdJ.)\
4. Fonnerly
15. Tyke.a

Its

on

20.lllx·

rumble

II

____

MILLER

OSSWORD

DAILY

30.Br&amp;wl
3~.11luro­

pean

river

FROM NON ON, ti':O

'.l'exa.o

Ffi:O'r\ HERE.

lle.C&amp;roll

.28. J'llched
2t.Tteup,ar
._-~-...J

TERRY

TJ1ICI( Oil( TWO

native
38.Coupd1-

3i.Fnneh

AIKltiT

(U.W.. U

Ill and
37. Erelong

IN• Fi6HTING IN
W'\5HINGTON ...

Clelan d ReaIty

a hone

31. Wahble's
clance
32.Bangkok

I 5\ieAR, Trrlfi.Y! HOOt&gt;!;
l(()()t(lf 11100 "' GffitNG
TO Mf. I'Vf LEAfi.NEI7 A

Evervone Cant

L

"'\

ME.!!

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

SR.

Pharmacist

G UI-JG G AT

FIANCEE..'".'

1969 Chevelle

1970

20~

-----

- -- - - -

I"NOUGH TO MARR'I

Iii\£, VOUP. LO'{AL

1968
Cadillac 53795 1968 CheveJie51495
Fleetwood Brougham 4

For

------

YOU- SOB!· BADDE R
G AT IT FASTOP. THE C RAB

WHICH WILL .MAKi:.
l:llllf\ HEALTH'{

Custom cab, V-8, p. steering, 3 speed, rear step bumper.
Wes1 Coast mirrors, sharp as a tack, 25,000 miles.

IU."a;~n:;r;n;;;-

Pleasant Ridge Road
Pomeroy,O.
Dick Vaughan

0

Local owner with less than 15,000 miles,
Comfortron air condl1ionlng , power
steering, automatic trans ., Astra front
seat, black nylon· interior. ·Beautiful green

with fine features .

HOUSE ;-1'640 Lincoln HIS:, BESTLINE PRODUCTS c II
Pomeroy. Phone m-7793.
.
· a
10.25-tfc Myron Ba1iey. Phone 992-5327.

~'""'..c,,to•m meat culling

CAPRICE 4 DOOR

other popular accessories, outstanding car

SPECIALS

Real~~-~tate For Sale __

THE SHOP

CHEVROLET

p. steering, air.

Ph. m-2143_ __Pomeroy
--=.,J

Wheel Alignment

WANTED

...

1969

Thanks .also to Rev. Knittle
992-3374
Mustang, 6 cyl., auto .
and Shirley and for many FOR expert electrical work call INSIDE AND oulslde .palnting .
Call 997-2368, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Dale Little
trans. , console , maroon
prayers,
to
Veterans
992-5179.
4·28·61c
finish, all good W· W tires,
992-6346
Memorial Hospital and
4·6·24tp
Hol1er HosQilal. '
radio. Real Nice.
"R~O~S~E~B~E~R~R~Y~F~u-r-n-ac_e_ in · - ~::================~
Mrs. Evel yn Landers and
SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller · stallation . Free estimates on
Famil y.
new furnate:Sr(•.011 ,. 9r gas.
Stewart . Ohio. Ph .
...... " . ,,
4-29; ltp . "6Sanitatlon1
.·1 .EXP~T ·
Servlte ' W~tk';:~-tli t·i ,Cecil
62-3035.
500 2 Dr., local low mileage
Roseberry , Ra cfne, . Ohio .
2-12-tfc
car, Interior extra clean,
Employment Wanted
~,.--,---__:_-___....,
Phone 614-843-2274.
medium green finish, all
All
equipped
with
air
4-28-6tc
WOULD LIKE to have job HARRISON 'S TV AND -·AN·
good
W · W tires, radio.
conditioning.
New
car
TENNA SERVICE . Phone - - - - - house cleaning, baby sitting.
Plentyy
of go In the. snow.
titles
and
balance
of
TREE -TRIMMI.NG
and
Will do Ironing In my home.
992·2522.
Just
nicer
than the average
removal
.
Fully
insured
.
Free
factory
warranty.
See
us
See at 729 Beech St., Apt. 7,
6-10-tfc
estimates . Call after 5 p.m .,
car.
Middleport. Call 992·2437 .
today!
MEIGS
County
coll ec t
Dick
Hayman ,
-GUARANTEED4-29-3tc NOTICE!
dairymen! Therf is no need to
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
Phone 992-2094
use less than the best.
Hayman, Chester 985·3509.
For Sale
Trade
H.T. Sed., spotless Interior,
3-28-30ip
C.O. B.A. select sires ar e
"We Service Well
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
available. Ali 2nd, and 3rd
good tires, radio, heater,
1965 CORVAIR Mon za 2 door
services are free, including PAPER-HANGING, painting,
The Cars We Sell"
automatic &amp; p. steering .
hardtop, 4 speed trans.
606 E. Maln, Pomeroy, 0.
our finest proven sires. Your
plastering, dry wall. Arthur
mission, qood 'tires, runs
Priced to move.
C.O.BA technician is Archie
Musser. Phone 992-3630.
good. Phone 742-5042.
3-28-30tp
Meadows. For servi·ce , phone
COAL, limestone . Excelsior
4-29-41c
For Sale
Real Estate
Sale
Middleport 992·7260 before II
Salt Works, E. Main St .•
Spouting and TWO BEDROOM house. ex- BULLDOZER.
a.m .; for Information phone ROOFING,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
TD9
In ·
Business Opportunities
4·9-tfc
Painting . Also, metal storage cellent condition, immediate
Mr . Mei\&lt;Jows by 9 a.m. at
ternalionat. 10-ft . angle blade
building 10x10, concrete floor ,
Gallipolis, Ohio, phone 256·
possession. Phone 992·2619.
and winch . Phone 992-3525
erected. for $300. Richard
6089. All informallon calls will
4-25-6tc
alter 7 p. m.
PART TIME
Wilt, Phone 992-2889.
be accepted collect. For In·
--4·23·61c
4·12·301C FIVE ROOM house. two
formation about Inseminating
BUSINESS
your own cows and our
36 11 )( 23" )( ,009
bedrooms, ba th, basement, 1968 BUICK, 26,000 actual
complete " On the Farm NEIGLER Construction . For
miles, 51 ,900 . Cushman ·
wall Ia wall carpet in living
NO.SELLING
Your t:hevy Dealer
building or remodeling your
Training " course write or
Trailster motorbike, $250.
room , bedrooms, and bath .
Easy pleasant work near
home
.
Call
Guy
Neigler
,
phon e Harold Bennett,
Phone Chester 985-3924.
Ga s ..f or ced air furna ce.
home restocking
C.O.B.A. District Manager. at
Racine, Ohio.
Open Eves. Til8
4-2J.6tp
Middleport. phone 992·3420.
992-2126
Pomeroy
7·31 -tfc
GENERAL FOOD
Gallipolis, Ohio, Rl. 2, phone
4-25-tfc
446-1535 or 446-4416 . Call
PRODUCTS
1971. PIAL &amp; SEW Zig-Zag
USED OFFSET PLATES
collect.
RALPH'S
CARPET
NESTLES. PLANTERS
Sewing Ma'c hine left in
24
ACRE
FARM,
Long
Bot!
om,
HAVE
Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
4-27·31p
AND .NABISCO
layaway . Beautiful pastel
with
or without
(arm
Auto Sales
MANY
USES
Free estimates·. Phone
color , full size model. Ail
ma chin ery . House with 3
Requires 8 to 10 hours SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Gall ipol is 446-0294.
buil t-in to buttonhole, over bedroom s, dining r oom , living
3-12-tfc
serv ice, all makes. 992·2284
per week . e arn $600.00
cast and fancy slltch. Pay just
1970 MAVERICK, 14,000 miles,
room , 1'12 baths, enclosed
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
$48 .75 ca sh or terms
$800 .00 and up
back porch, wall to wall
$1 ,495. Phone 949-3025.
Author ized Singer Sales and
8
for
51.00
a v ailable . Trade -ins ac ·
carpeting
.
Aluminum
siding
,
___:
4·25-6tc
monthly income .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. Real Estate FOI' Sale
cepled. Phone 992-5641.
awning, storm windows and
3·29-llc 3 BED ROOM brick house.
·Investment
secured
4-27-6tc
stor.m doors . City water .
1962 CORVETTE , 397, hard top.
In
Middleport.
ch9ice
location
Seiling
due
lo
ill
health
.
Phone
100 percent by in · EXPERT lawn mower and
$1,700. Phone 992-7270.
~·
Seen by appointment. Phone 614-985-3938.
VACUUM Cleaner brand new
12'
14'
•
24'
WIDE
4-28-Jtc
till er repair. Free pickup and
ventory.
992-3491 after 4 p.m.
4-25-18tp
1971 model. Complete with all
deliv ery. Warren 's Mower _ _ __ _ ____
Give your phone number and
4·_27-61c - -- - - - - - cleaning tools. Small paint
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
write Box 729· C, c-o The
1957 CHEVY, 36,000 miles. Call
damage in shipping. Will take
7 ROOMS, bath, on 'h-acre lot in
992-7357.
111
Court
St.
Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy,
992-3273.
Harrisonville. Call evenings
$27 cash or budget plan
4-28·6tc
Pomeroy,
Ohio
4·27-6tp
Ohio.
between 4 and 6. Phone 747.
available. Phone 992-5641.
4838,
Thor
Carsey.
4-27-6tc
- --··-·-"
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
1220 Washington Blvd.
1967 BARRACUDA convertible,
4-29·31p ,- - - -- - - - 16'1&gt; FOOT Shasta camper.
Complete Service
Belpre.
Ohio
V-8, automatic transmlsslon.
---------NEED a pony? ANYsizefor4-H sleeps 6. self-contained.
Insurance
Phone 949-3821
Power steering, SI ,OSO. Phone
project or other use. Special
Stove, oven. refrigerator,
Racine, Ohio
CONVENIENT but secluded
992·6005.
terms
for
4·H
project.
Eskey
pressurized water system. All
CriIt Br,adford
AUTOMOBILE insu ran ce been
building lois on T79 at Rock
Hill,
Flalwoods
Rd. ,
the extras. Prices for quick
Auto Sales
4·28-6tc
5-l•tfC
can ce ll ed?
Los t
yo ur
Springs . Within walking
Braker
Pomeroy , Ohio.
sale.
Phone
949·3913.
operator 's l icense? Ca!l 992·
diStance of Meigs High
110 Mechanic St.
4-25-6tc 1964 CHEVY pickup , ufll ity bed, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.,.
4-29-Jtc
BULLDOZER work. Basement.
School, a 5 minute drive from
2966.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
low mileage. Priced to sell.
ponds. landscaping . We do. all
6-15-lfc
Pomeroy. Call or see Biji - - Walnut
--STEREO.
solid-state -~~~~
fill!
Roger Bahr. Chester, Ohio.
kinds of dozer work . Haul till FOR SALE or RENT
A Wille weekends, or after 5
stereo,
4
speed
changer,
4
OU
CAN
BUY
AT
LANDMARK
Phone 985-3958.
ITEM: Morning. A
dir t an d lop soil . See or call
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
bedrooms. bath , nice kitchen
speaker
sound
system
.
Pay
•
"
4·22-6tc
Bob Jeflers after 7 p. m.
Help Wanted .
wilh cook units . . Full 6887.
zestful time for some
bata~ce $68.1o cash or easy
- - - -- Phone 992- 35~5.
7 -~ · IIC .
basement.
Forced
air
fur
terms.
Call
992-3352.
T
·
1967 CHEVROLET '!..ton, people. Double dismal
4-23-30tc
WAITR ESS . Apply 1n person.
nace. Carport. Asking only
4-29-6tc • Sale Pricei Thrll April
heavy duly , dual whe&amp;is, for' others. Jim Mees
. Crow's Steak House.
$8,300.00
utility boxes. Cali 992-6~52.
4-27-6tc O: DELL WHEEL alignment
HAND PUSH MOWERS
MAPLE
STEREO-RADIO As Low As
4-29-2tc somehow gets us all
63.95
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. POMEROY- Ni c-e 3 bedrooms,
This
stereo
comblnallon
.
together every day. .
BEA UTI CIAN wan ted . Write,
Complete front end serv ice,
ba th, large living and dining . 5'1• ACRE FARM - ALMOST equipped with AM-FM radio, . RIDING MOWERS
.
1969
BUICK
LeSabre
,
2-dr:1 tl ng ex per ience to Box 729·
tune· up and brake service.
Modern kitchen with stove
IN POMEROY- nice I story 4 speakers. 4 speed chahger. As Low As
l71 .9S
hardtop , power steering,
The Daily Sentinel ,
1home, 3 · bedrocms.
Wheel s balanced elec·
and refrigerator . Large
frame
Pay
balance
$81.30.
·cash
or
power brakes. ·air, 18,000
,..;eroy.
·,
ECONOMY
TiLLERS
tron l~ally .
All
work
porch. Gas forced air furnace.
bal h, 2 porches, floor terms. Call 992-3352.
miles.
Excellent condition .
4-27·31c
As
Low
As
134.9S
guaranteed.
Reason~ b le
2 lots. Double garage.
covering, barn . ALL IN
4;29,6tc
Phone
992-2288.
rates. Phone 992·3213 .
521 ,000.00
GOOD CONDITION S6,500. - - -- - - - ll ·IO·tfc
4·22-30tc
POMEROY .
POMEROY - 3 bedroom POMEROY- 2 EXCELLENT ELLEN'S Gif1Shop, Reedsville,
J. W. C.ru,y, Mgr
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
BUILDING LOTS-lots close
Ohio, Memorial Day wreaths.
pane le d hom e with large
• Phont '192·2111
" Ditching . Elec"tric sewer
by sold for $4,000.00, ALSO sprays..
baskets.
Ar·
close ts . Modern kitchen,
cl eaning." Reasonable rates.
HAS AN OLDER HOUSE, rangements, 69c and up.
stove, double sink . Forced air
4 . ··~·JUIC
·Phon e
John
Russell. , furnace. Full basement. Only
could be remodejed, needs
•
· PLANTS NOW
d
Si I
bath. FINE LOCATION.
.
rea y:
nge
Gall ipolis 446-4782.
512,000.00
. SORRY SAL Is now• a Merry
and doui;lie petunias, pansi.es.
4-7-tlc
mps .
$7,5,00.
Gal. She used Blue Lustre rug
coleus, Mexican tomatoes and
20 ACRES - All minerals. i
water
and upholstery cleaner. Rent
other variette·s. peppers,
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
room house. bath, furnace. ABOUT 10.000 SQ. FT. OF
control.
Lint
BUILDING
SPACE,
below
eleclrlc
shampooer,
$1.
Baker
cabbage,.';, or I dozen packs.
del ivered right to your
Chester wato!t . Several
Filter
or
Power
Furniture, Middleport.
• Don Hubbard , Syracuse ,
Fin Agitator.
pro/ect. Fast and easy. Free
outbuildings. $6,500.00
Pomeroy Mason bridge,
. ~. 28.61c
Ohio. Phone 992-5776.
Ptrm•·Prtn ·
est males . Phone 997-3784.
JUST OFF OF MAIN
4·22-121c
Contact
MIYIII
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co. , POMEROY- 6 room frame. 2 STREE"J;, EXCELLENT
Hotool
Htol.
4
hp
Sears
mini-bike.
$$0.
Phone
Middleport,
Ohio.
nice lots for mobile homes.
Mr. Leo Mossman
1962 CHEVY, SlOO. 1962 Ford,
LOCATION, hos house an .II.
Drrers
6-30-tlc
742-3223.
Asking $4,000.00
$3,500.
H8-3tc
$125. Also, beauiltul German
Surround clothe•
Director Of
with Otnllo, tvtn
--'-'
Shepherd
puppies
.
Ready
Pharmacy '
O"BRIEN ELECTRIC Service. NEW LISTING- RACINE-7 RUTLAND-2 ACRES,.cement SIX DUCKS, one mole pony,
· htlf. No hot IPOtl,
May 2, 520 each . Phone
no overdrylng .
~omm~rcia~: residential and 1 rooms, 3 bedro.oms, large
block house, 3 bedrooms,
will trade fOI" female ponY..
Coolville 667-3512.
Fino Mtah Lint
mdustnal wtrlng . Phone 247·
living and dining rooms . ' bath , nice kitchen, front
One
ptg.
Retriever
and
i;)eag
e
4·25-6tp
Filter.
2113,
Bath . basement. new gas
Porch , living room 27xl3
Wo SptCIIIiltln
-,--,--..,-...,-.-:--='--:--·:;.
3·.:;
12-tfc
forced air furnace. 3 porches, ALMOST NEW. $$.900.
' puppies. Phone m.62 ~i 8.3 tc BEAUTIFUL • selection ol
MAY TAG
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
garage and carport. Nice lot. PROPERTIES ARE SELLING - - - - - ----'••~ Corpot
flowers. baskets, "irealhs,
......c.
'
5eptic )anki 11\slalleq. George
Asking $12,500.00
1 HAVE Ranch Gerslenftld
an~spraysfOI"Memol'lal Day.
.
l~twithustodlly.
IBill l Pullins, Phone 992-2411.
IF YOU WANT TO
mink $tole, SIOO cash or will . Cliff S~Repalr, Middleport.
.Gallipolis, Ohio
SELL OR BUY
HENRY CLELAND•
4.2s.lfc
.
. 4-21 -tfc
take so books of trading
REALTOR
- - " -- -- - CALL;ft2.3J2S
stamps, TV, S&amp;H, or plaid.
•
HELEII L. TUFORD,
Offkt 'lt2·HS9
Call 992-2324.
'
ANTIQUES. Phone 992-5327.
742-421.1
Arnold Gr1te
Rutl1nd, 0.
ASSOCIATE
Rnldtftct 'lt2-2stl
4-6-:JOtc
4-28·4tc
:l-23-61c
~-25-6fc

to·

liMe iS .IN'/OLVED,WE 00
NO!' t:&gt;EFM (f WISE l'b
liE" LOcr!ICAL Ill

t
1-

1967 Rebel 770 ------------'1595

oJe~­

\IIHI:IZE OOUBLE

...nl; NOT NECESSAA'r'

500 4 Door, T-FIIte, V-8, p. steering, ai r.

See the "good guys" from Rawlings- Wallace
.1\mberger, Emerson Jones. Hilton Wolfe, Bob
Bratton, Dick Rawlings, and our latest. addition, Pearl Ash I we're happy to have him
and you will be too).

I WOULD like to thank all my
friends and neighbors and
.ever yone who helped in any

4 Door Sedan. T-Fiite, V-8, p. steering, a ir.

1965 Ambassadof ------------.'895

lov'ei
We hold our tears because we
We' ll meet him
abov e.

1969 Dodge Polara---------- 12495

4 Door Sedan, V-8, automatic, p. Steering, air.

MEMORIAL BRIDGE! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

THINK ABOUT ITI

spend when you buy your

Here are six air-conditioned specials from
Rawlings to ease the summer heat.

~EE TOM CROW. GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

.ABC CLEANERS
773-5543

4'ALSO
DOUBLE-WIDES · •

I

.

.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes ol Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.
·
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

FREE STORAGE

I

Jumbk" Lilli

39.Popular

· Yf! ..entay'•

phruefrom
''Laurh~In''

f~OUT

HAMPII

PIOftT

Ant wrtl A deJtaruntmt uor~ l'lttMior m4f'it

YOII thilllr of rhiiJ- A "II" Of

.u. BtiCfered'
44.Really!
(2wd.o.)

·wMP0/1390

4~. Bwt.u

river

46. Withered
DOWN
l . Soak

2. Jl.uatrallan
bird

CAP!'AIN EASY

DAILY CBY.t".l''QUOTE-Here's how to work It:
•.&amp;Xl'DLBAAXR
.
,' It LONGFELLOW
One letter lfllnply •.lando for another. In tht• .oamplo .A Is
uaed for the Ulree L'o, :x; for the two O'•. etc. Bingle Jettero,

-----HOLZER
MEDICAL CENTER

apootrophel, t» length ·and formation of the words are all
htnto. Each dag the cOde letters ore different.

A CryploJram quotation

--------

QWI VIKAQ
X It Y Q·K 0 ]I I
1

HOllER

K

QR

KVV

U.A RG

0 K QS Y I .

UF·
QW I

•

lOQUYI

MEDICAL
. . CENTER

FRTIF~OQ

RBIKO

U.A

KGGIBQIJ

Dll

'

XII&gt;DVI.--DVKUAI. XK.A.:BJCV

"l'oeliRfqol CIGJhpalet ',1'1111 WJ,'VICIISII II :roLL 01'
lU.OIOAL Dlll(dl W.ll'l'INO J'OB. OUR WITII ?.'0 OBOWi
~Jm!lif'Otft
'
I

I

'

.'

mak,.

uml"

'

rew)

�\ \ I I I

, \\1'1

•

'

•

•

-

Now You Know
1~- Tho OaUy Sent~ddlerv&gt;rf .Pnmorov .

0 .. Anril29.1971

·News.. ~in Briefs
. (COntinued from page I)
back food stamp aid for up to 3million poor Americans.
The ·
,proposed reg~tiom, expected to go Into effect thiS summer,
· would make stamps more readily available for the poorest of the
poor- but alUte expense of those poor J!e9Ple who are somewhat
better off.

America, and another mine

official must ;esign as trustees
of the UMWA Welfare and
Retirement Fund by june 3~.
District Judge Gerhard A.

Don C. Gorby
Died WedneSda

.

SHOP aOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

Judge Rules Boyle Quit
WASHINGTON (UPI l - A
federal judge has ruled W. A.
"Tony" Boyle, presid~rt of the
United Mine Workers of

·IJevoled To 1Jae Intera" Of 'l7le )fe;g.-MOMHI Area

Yollr Headquarters For Mother's Day Shopping

Gessen· also ruled Wednesday
that the fund must divest itself
of all business with the National
Bank of Washington , an Institution whose stock ·is con- ·
trolled by the union .
Gessell made the decisions at
the end of a law suit brought by
a group of miners challenging
operations of the fund including
the alleged placing of $80
million in non-interest bearing
deposits in the bank.

Mower Special

WOMEN'S
WASH
DRESSES

58.00

wash dresses . excellent
values . many styles

fabrics and colors to choose
from . Regular, half sizes
and super sizes.

Appeal Denied

Sale!
A Group of

WOMEN'S
DRESSES.

Sale 7.00
higher priced dresses and
all

JOANNA WESTERN WINDOW SHADES
In the Drapery Dept.- Elberlelds' Second Floor. Shades to
fit windows 36" to 54" wide-6' and 7' lengths.

-Sunchex . VInyl Coaled Cloth- Washable
- Siesta . Supported Plastic . Washable
-Kordovin . Medium Weight Plastic - Corded embus~lng .
washable.
-Vynocel . Supported Plastic . Washable.
Colors Available - While, Ivory, Green, Ton
Shades cut to size at no extra charge.
We can also furnish custom made shades made to measurein a big choice of colors and sixes. Big choice of hem treat·
ments . scalloped and fringed or plain hem styles. Any shade
can be special ordered to your custom color specification,
and width.

We carry the complete line of
Kirsch Drapery Hardware -

new

styles to choose from. Coat
dresses . shifts - skimmers
ln.solids and prints, Misses
sizes and half sizes.

selected from . our regular

stock. Not all sizes In every
style- hundreds to choose
from, lai lored by the best
known brand of womens
uniforms.

\~

Elberfelds Is Headquarters
For Womens and Girls
Wrangler Jeans - just
received a shipment of the
new popular bold stripe
jeans In all sizes. Streich
denims and the popular
colton twill - tailored for
perfect Ill · llare leg and
tapered legs. Sizes 6 to 20

Driver Cited

TO ELECT OFFICERS
The Meigs COunty Pleasure
lNG TRICOT NIGHT THINGS WITH A LITTLE LACE AND LOTS OF
One driver was cited to court Riders 4-H Club will elect of.
and two vehicles had medium fleers at 8 p. m. Monday at the
Shop Elberfelds First Floor
damage in an accident at the hOI)le of Mr. and Mrs. A. R.
Lingerie Department for a
BY
Intersection of Route 124 am\ Knight in Pomeroy.
complete selection of fine
County Road 5 at 8:15 p. m.
Form·Fit Rogers Sleepwear,
Wednesday night.
ISrlaptJY happy and the colors ar~ wonderf~l..
Loungewear, Slips and Panties.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's
BUS OFFERED
help but feel as fresh as tomorrow
All ideal for Mother's Day
department said a car driven by
Bus routes for the Sunday
the prettiest shift, gown, pajama and robe.
Gifting .
Charles C. Russell, Middleport, School of the Bible Baptist
turning south onto county road Temple in Minersville will be
five, was struck by a pickup startin8 this week. Those
truck driven north on county needed free rides may call 992road five by Larry W. Jones, 3324. Sunday School starts at 1~
HOT PANTS - JAMAl CAS - SLACKS - TOPS .
Pomeroy. There were no in- a. m. The pastor, Guy W.
Anew \ hipmenl of sla~ks. 100 per cent Dupont nylon. Double
juries. Jones' was cited to Lowther, will speak at 11 a.m.
knit slacks - Colors: Red, Taupe, Purple, Turquoise, Navy,
COunty Court on a charge of and 7:30p.m.
Black and While. Sizes 8 to 18.
failing to yield right of way.
Hot Pants and Jamalcas In sizes 8to 18. Colors: navy, purple,
Sizes small (14·14'12 ),
brown. turquoise, black and white. Made of 100 percent
TAKEN TO HOLZER
medtum (15·151h l. large
Dupont nylon.
Clarence
King,
53,
Mid·
116-16'12). extra large (17Tank lops and sleeveless shells In multi .colors to match
Veterans Memorial Hospital
17'h
), or neck sizes U lf2 to
dleport, was admitted to Holzer
slacks, Hot Pants and Jamaicas. Smail, medium and large
ADMITIED - Nancy White,
17.
sizes.
Pomeroy; Audry Miller, Medical Center at 2: IS p.m.
Beautiful range of soliq
colors:· Plenty of stripes
Middleport; Mary Barber, Wednesday for treatment of a
New Selection
and plaids. Taper and nonReedsville; Melissa Riggs, hand injury suffered at his
employment
at
Foote
Mineral
taper styles.. Choice of
Langsville; Tony Holter,
Co., Graham Station, W.Va. His
collar
styles.
Langsville; Homer · Gilkey,
Middleport; Freda Gibson, hand was caught between a
carbon chrome cast and a
Pomeroy; Pamela Theiss, chain.
Including the popular polka dot cap in red, green
Racine.
or blue for $1.00, a new washable baseball style
DISCHARGES - Pauline
ONE'S ENOUGH
work cap for $1.00, lighter weight golf - fishing
Hysell, Patrick Owens, Oscar
PARIS (UP!) - Comedian
and
general wear sport caps for $1 .49 and $2 .19.
Henry, Charles Reed, Margaret Jerry Lewis said today he is
Come in - try on the one you like best and buy
Sauer, Charles Stobart, Miles considering moving to Switnow.
•
Cain.
zerland so five of .his six sons
would not have to serve in the
.Vietnam war. "One of my boys
Mens Sizes . Boys Sizes
already is there," Lewis said.
"!think that's enough."
Tonight, April29
NOT OPEN .

gormfi(kcers

WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR

and extra sizes. Many solid

colors and the popular
navy blue denim.

h~dware

Ia make them look their loveliest. Bring

your w)ridow wishes in to us.

BARRY KUSH-ONS
See the complete selocllon of Chair Pads, for Dinelle, Dining
Room, Desk and Captain's Chairs.
·
Reversible and washable 2 pc . cushion sets tor rockers and
high back chairs.
- Reversible and Washable Round Cushions.
- Reversible and Washable Bench Pads.
All Filled with 100 percent Urethane Foam
Brilliant Decorator Colors- In Velveteen, Corduroy, Colton
Print.

1...,_____________.._.,...__..;...-,...t

EASY-CARE THROWS
Foam Bock- Completely machine washable- Never need
ironing - Decorative fringe all around - Brown . Gold .
Green . Melon . Blue.
Size 60x72
Size 72x90

4.95
5.95

Size 72x108
Size 72x126

7.95
8.95

SALE! MEN'S 3.95

'

18" -------- 991
24" ________ 1.19

30"--------1.39

Matching Window Awnings
2'6:' Awning ..• , 4.95
3' Awning ••. • • s.9s
Complete with Hardware

1

·Men's Work·and Sport Caps

WALK SHORTS

Sean Connery

GP

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at II a. m. Thursday
The Fleets Out
under cloudy skies was 47
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
!!!!!!!!~~~ degrees.

.

.

Prt., Sit. ·&amp; Sun. April 30-Miy 2
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

Now ready for your ~election Including
conservative styles for the older meo .
slim cuts for the younger men and boys
- Plus a big selection of novelty styles
and patterns you'll like. Stock up now for
hot summer days to come.
Big Selection

BOYS WRANGLER FLARES
3.95

Also 9x12, 12x12 and 12x15 fool room size Armstrong lino.leum
rugs- Congowall, wall border and rubber runner. Slop ln.
Seethe big selection- buy what you want.
See the new line of

WEBER
BAR-B-Q
GRILLS
In The Housewares

Department
The "secret" . of the Weber
Bar· B·Q grill Is In the cover
and dampers. Food comes out
more juicy and tender with a
sealed flavor that cannot be
duplicated ·on ordinary bar·
becue grills without a cover.
Completely weatherproof. II

Toro
Takes Care
·_a good thing for you that we do
When it. comes t~ lawnmowers, either the kind you walk bthlnd
or the kmd you nda, you get exactly what you pay tor.
Any kind of blade, under any kind of engine will spin around

and. kn_ock down ~rass. But there's a lot more thin that to
desrgmng and bu~kling a quality lawnmower. For example:·

can remain oUtdoors the year

The GUARDIAN'Mower
Key atart (optiontl). rear safety

thield, blade guard, deflector bar
and l'!fetv 1top awitch. The
· · c~raf"l MQ.Wer·· lor the careful
buy«

ALSO

Slim and regular sizes 6 to lB ..Colorful
s~ripes, solid colors and neat patterns.
Zipper and button fly fronts. Excellent
styles for dress and school wear.

1111 Ult."!l':C.

MEN'·S COVERALLS
Sizes 36 to SO in grey ht:rrlngbone stripe . blue
denim or green herringbone. Made with double
action Bi·Swing back for extra fullness and
freedom of movement. Plenty of useful pockets.
-

Armstrong VInyl cushion and Congoleum Vinyl cushion
linoleum by the yard - Lays perfectly flat . needs no trim·
ming · will not stretch - never needs waxing . A fine new
selection of pallerns In your favorite color - In six fool, ni~e
fool and twelve fool widths.

'round with no damage to the
beautiful genuine porcelain
enamel finish permanently
fused Into the metal.

EXCITING. SPECTACUlAR. TOTALLY

t ... ""'""~ Ill U..llidwc ~ ... ,O.In

At our Warehouse on ·Mechanic Street

Sale! 2 for 7.00

MEIGS THEATRE

Brigitte Bardo!

Supreme . Court decision that
busing and other means would
be used to eliminate segrega·
lion' in Southern schools·.
- Asked if he would think
·about naming a court of inquiry
to see who got the United
Slates into the Indochina war,
said he was "not going to cast
the blame for Ute war in
Vietnam on either of my
predecessors."
-Said the possibility at this
time of new operatiorts In
Indochina comparable to the
invasions of Cai,Illlodia and
Laos was "quite remote" and
that'when the U.S. troop level
reaches 184,000
I it wpuld
be "completely remote ."

nee.

•I :
•

Board-Moves ·to

mE OFFICE BUILDING of tbe V. D. Edwards In·
surance Agency of P~oy's East Second St: is getting a
face lifting this week. Workers are shown putting a new brick
veneer exterior on the front of Ute s!tucture owned by Wayne
Swisher.

Easy-pleating tape and hooks, Pin-on heading hooks .
all sizes, Weights . Cafe Rings . Holdbacks.

Add beauty to porch or patio - Permakoted porch valance.
Green-White stripe, Green solid, Green, White, Red stripe.

Dress Shirts

I

keep a residual force in
Vietnam "no maiter'how long 'it
takes:" He · r~peated that the
otjler condition for a total U.S.
withdrawal is the ability of the
South Vietnamese regime to
defend itself.
Nixon also:
-Said he intervened in the
case of Lt. William L. Calley
because there was "great
concern" across the country.
He said his action announcing
he would have the final review
of the officer's conviction of
murdering civilians at My Lai
had "cooled down" the public
outcry. ·
- Promised his administralion would comply with the

eKirsc:h Accessories and Sewing Aids

CENTURY PORQI VALANCE

Sport and

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Herbert Nelson Elliott, 23,
Point Pleasant, W. Va., and
Marcia Faith Stewart, 18,
Rutland.

Nixon repeated that he would
not set a defini~ date for the
withdrawal of all American
forces from South Vietnam. He
said it would have the effect of
saying to Ute North Vletnamese, "We quit, regardless of
what you do."
The setting of a definite date,
.Nixon said, .would destroy any
Incentive the other side might
have to negotiate and would
destroy the American bargain·
ing position of prisoners of war.
"Therefore, the setting of a
date is not something that's in
our Interest; it's only in the
enemy's i~terest,:.:, Nixon said.
To get its POWs back, Nixon
said , the United States will

I '-:'

Conventional draw drapery rods . Decorative- brus
traverse rods · Cafe rods in all siies and lengths .
Curtain rods in single and double styles. Combination
rod sets.

Kirsch
Don't forget lo take ad. vantage of the sale prices
on
Womens
While
Uniforms - a group

FOLD 'n' ROLl
BAR·BQ ,CARTS ·
Regularly 19.95

For porch. patio or lawn. So
easy to use • so many ways!

COlors: Avocado, Flame and
Harvest gold. For year 'round
use - Indoors and outdoors.
Folds 11~1 when not In use.

· Sale .15.88

AI Elberfelds warehouse on MechAnic Street you'll find tho
complete line of Toro Mowers lncludlnll 21 ln~h. 19 Inch all
propelled or hand propelled ond Toro Riding Mowers. So loci
the Toro Mower lhot suits you best.
·

At Our Wa.rehouse On Mechanic Street
Used Televis'ion Stts in black and white
or color. A· fine selection right now. ·

Short~ • R~gulars . Long

BE SURE TO REGISTER IN THE THIRD ~~ FURNITURE DEPARTMENT FOR THE KROEHLER

7.98·

LIVING ROOM SUITE. NO PURcHAsE NEcESSARY. - -YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT 'TO WIN.

PUll -

.

' .

.

WHIRLPOOL. DEHUMIDIFIERS
.
.

Another shipment of these popular Whirlpool De
Humidifiers.
the big selection of Whirlpool
Appliances. Washers· Dryers· Refrigerators. Ill
the Spr.lng Furniture Sale on the 3rd floor.

see

TEN CENTS ·-'

c'a re

No maHer what size or shape your window we can furnish the

Miller

Friday &amp; Saturday
April JO.May I
SHALAKO
(Technicolor)

on't
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres· with Communist China, saying China Illustrated by the recent
identNixonsald Thursday night "! hope and .I expec! to · visit visit of a U.S. table tennis team
he would not be "intimidi!ted" malnland China ...at some time to the mainland. " What we've
by .antiwar demonstrators In in my life, in some capacity." done is broken the ice. Now we
Washington but would sUck to He said he would in a matter have to test the water to see
his policy of attempting to win of weeks announce a list of · how deep it is."
a lasting peace In Indochina.
nonstrategic goods the United.
When he said lie would like to
In a televised news confer- States would he willing to trade ·travel to China, Nixon said, he
ence, the President said a more with China, but he cautioned it was '.'referring only to a hope,
rapid withdrawal from Vietnam was "premature" to speculate an expectation."
advocated by his critics would about whether the United States
"The 'congress is not intimallead to ;i "very dangerous would support Peking's entry . ed," Nixon said. "The Pressituation In the Pacific and into the United Nations. He said ident is not intimidated. This
WOuld increase the dangers of ' he had not made ~decision on government is going to go
war in the future." He 'said Ibis issue.
forward."
demonalrators wlio break the
"I would just 5ummarlze it
But he said he did "not want
law will be prosecuted.
Ibis way," Nixon said of the to leave the impre5sion that
Nixon also bid to further linprovement of contact be· those who came to demonstrate
improve American relations tween the United Stalel and wll!'e not listened to."

• Kirsch Rods for any Window Treatment

A special group of womens
culo1te dresses -

89t

I

Save this weekend on
womens higher priced

LANGSVILLE - Don C.
Gorby, 78, Langsville Route 1,
CINCINNATI IUPI)- The
died Wednesday at Veterans
Memorial HospifJll. Mr . Gorby U. S. Sixth Circuli Court of
was a retired · farmer in this Appeals today rejected an
area and a retired school bus appeal by James Earl Ray,
driver. He belonged to the the convicted killer of Martin
Langsville Christian ChUrch. Luther King, lbal bls two
Surviving are his wife, attorneys "comsplred to
Coosie; a son, Carl, Langsville violate his right to a fair
Route I; a stepdaughter, Mrs. lrisl."
Ray flied suit against atOpal Kriger, St. Joe, Calif.; a
stepson , Randolph Hall, torneys Arthur J. Hanes and
Westland, Mich ., and one Percy Foreman and author
grandchild . His first wife, William Bradford Hule
asking thai contracts for a
Florence, died in 1959.
Funeral services will be at 2 book about the killing .be
.p. m. Friday at the Martin nullified.
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Robert Musser and the Rev. Jay
PERRIN ON TV
Stiles officiating. Burial will be
The Rev. W. H. Perrin, author
in Miles Cemtery. Friends may of the just released book, Look
call at the funeral borne Who's Killing God, is in
anytime,
Steubenville where he will
make several TV appearances
today and Friday on WSTV-TV
thete. Friday he will be in the
Hub
Department
Store
(Continued from paRe I) ·
Southeastern Ohio have greaUy autographing copies of his book. ·
expanded educational op· The home town of Rev. Perrin,
portunities," Miller said. "We who formerly taught In
cannot underestimate their Steubenville, is Wellsburg, W.
Va., near Steubenville.
value."

washable and penoa. 1risa
. Polyesler blends-10 Voiles
Broadcloths, Printed and
Flocked Novelties, Flax In
checks and plaids, Nylon
Chiffon Prints.
4S"Width

.

· PHONE
992-2156. .
.

,·

re.s 1 ent

An excellent groilp of Prlnls
and Solids-MOIIUY machine

'

FRIDAY, APRIL ~0.. 197l

•

DRESS FABRIC .

20 inch with Briggs
and Stratton 3 Hor·
sepower easy·to-start
engine.
Adjustable
height cut .
At our Warehouse on
Mechanic Street.

Sale 4.00

y : : :~·;: : :~: : :·: : : : : : : : : : :.:· : : : :.: : : %;:;.: ;: : : :~: : : : : : : : : : ;·: :

Special Pure
Spring and Summer

Intreasing cloudiness with a ·
chance of showers late. tonight ·· ·
and Salurqay. Lows tonight :
from upper 130s to the mid 4bs • •

•

I

. PO~_EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIV NO. 12

Sale!

P~rtly sunny and cool today. '·.
Highs from the 50s north and '
central to the low 00s south. · ·

at

."The Rolling Stone" is the
title of an 1887 story by Anton
Olekhov.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Weather

u
t
en

.·

Fields then gave the second
adding, " If this is the advice of motion, which passed.
~
the attorney."
Before the board went any
Stevens, Withers, Fields and further with official business,
Charles Eshenaur voted in Whalen asked permission to
favor of obtaining the court read a letter aloud from the
~
order. Siders voted against it. Ministerial Association, which KENT, Ohio (UPI)- A Kent the funeral "was the most trau·
The personnel list submitted. apparenlly bore the names of 14 Slate University stl!dent who malic experience of my life.
by Smith once more came under ministers, calling for an end to was crippled for life by a bill· "!just' couldn't handle it," he. ·
fire as Withers and Fields "nit picking." ·
M· fired by an Olilo National said .
contended this should not be
Tlie acting superintendent, GuardSman last !\lay said "That summer I worked In a
mentioned in the minutes of reiterating a statement he Thursday, the KSU; academic steel mill and there all kinda ·
April 20 since the board did not made earlier this week, said, "I community seems ~etermlned of people saying, 'they should ·
act, because in their words, "it am not a vindictive or a not to have a repeat of May have shot them all' . Things.
was a statutory meeting ." malicious person. I believe 4, 1970.
like that," he said.
ARBOR DAY PLANTING - Several seedlings were planted at the entrance of Beech
AssisfJlnt Supt. Gary Conley you'll find very little change. " It seems like the, kids are "I don't want to be polar· .
Grove Cemetery Thursday a!terr10011 by Pomeroy cub scouts and tbeir leaders, Mrs. Robert
implied that the members had . They were done in the interest a little more concerned about !zed. I really don't," he saidr,
Lewis and Mrs. Don Thomas. Making tile Arbor Day planting" were David Lewis, Gregg
taken the lists prepared on of the school system."
keeping things going this year," "But they're drawing the lines.
Smith's recommendation, when
Whalen stated that he read said Dean Kahler; 21, Ji:ast What can I do? The kids don't
Th001111 and Danny Thomas, front, left to right, and Mark Casto, Tom Haw!~, Keith Krautter,
he
said,
"the
.
lists
disapthe
letter
because he ap· Canton, who was ' pa~~yze~ want to hate. I don't want tQ ,
!\lark Norton and Tedd Norton, back row.
peared."
predated it a~d said "They from the waist,dnwn when shoi hate. But they keep drawing ,
------:--------------. .-------.,
•
,
W~thers followed. this with a want the 'nit.jllcking' stpPped in the spine. "There's a deter· the lines."
)
mot1on foor t"e mmute·• a• a •nd I w'Qle""'·r'-''y concur minatlon noL to. let last year Arvin l. Lulietklil, chief ""Y·
~,
p;l~cipal':"' Charl;;'''wiih!':~. statutory ·~e~ti1g' by deieU~g
th;;;':.-'""' ,..,.. .
happen ag&amp;in:
.
chologlttf!l,L~ Wl~VM~d
f ~re-w's···
4l
In oth~r "actl~n" 'ihe'"board
"And the professor&amp; seem to direc~Uribt'tM"t'ouri$ehng and
Sunnyside principal ; Roy the personnel list, but did not
1
1
By United Preis lnlernaUoaal
'
Lloyd, teaching principal at heed Smith's advice, "Gen- agreed to table s;veral Items be IJ:iking more Interest In the Group Resources Center, said
.Hannan Elementary; Virgil tlemen, you better take a close
(Contlnued on .Page 10)
students," said Kahler. "Every- . "some of the emotional sc~s
SERS Loans Blocked by Suit
Burris as assistant principal at
·
thing seems mQre personal. It's from last year are just begmCOLUMBUS -STATE ATTORNEY GENERAl, William J.
Point Pleasant ~unior High;
really good."
ning to show." ,
BrownhaafUedasuittostop$4.4 million~out«o61ateloansfrom
CHICAGO(UPI)-Dairymen employmentofGrantBarnette
Four students were shot to "I would say about 10 to 15
the School Emplnves Retirement System (SERS
. ) and said he will face serious trouble if they as Hannan principal and Jack
death and nine wounded when per cent of the students have
.
.,
respond to a recent price sup. er k
Tr
tatl
d
Nat1'onal Guardsm· en fired into some kind of emotional scars
would request an Investigation of the SERS board. Brown said he
an as anspor on an
would ask state Auditor Joseph T. FergiiS\)n to conduct a port boost with a splurge of Attendance Director.
a group of students during a ; left from the shootings," he
surplus
production,
a
Nixon
ad·
Ted
ste
·
n
had
no
mo
th
·said · "Some
of the proble-·
"thorough Investigation" Into the operations of SERS.
ve s
re an SAIGON (UPI)-Waves of Infantry Division conduct!Qg ca mpus demonstration ·
·
··~
ministration farm official said open.ed the meeting when Harry
b be
k
·
his
I
have been pretty well repress.
tod
BS2 orq rs struc near the the sweep, said today at
The victims were Allison ed.
Government not Intimidated
ay.
Siders asked Whalen if he had borders of Lao~ today to Lang Vang headquarters his
"If dairymen adJ'ust realistic· bee
· d
th
t'
Krause,.19, Pittsburgh, Sandra "Within the last week I have
· w•aHINGTON
_ "'"
'"""I·WAR --ERSthreatenlng
to ilily to market conditions llt&lt;Y
n recogmze
·· e acboth
mg prevent the North Vt'etnamese troops may cross Into Laos Scheuer, 19, Youngstown; Jef· seen four students in a state of
""
ri&gt;Vatuu
· t d t as ·n
shut dlllrll tile govenunent focused 111 the Justice Department
superm en en • Sl ce
from attacking the rear of the again -"if I think It advisable."
·
can ~njoy relative prosperity. Whalen and Smith were slow-moving South Vietnamese
Exact location of the ARVN fery Miller, 20, Plain City, N.Y. anxiety which has just come to
today. Pfllsiden~Nixon and congreulonal'leaders indlcated they If they overproduce, depressed present. Whalen explained that
and William Schroeder, 20, La· the surface," he said. "It
would not be ''lntlinldated." Spokeswoman Carol Evans of the · pric~~ wi~ be the ~evilable re- he had attempted to see the ~:ri~~s:\~ s:uci':~~~i ~~~~i~: ;~~=~;nl~u~~c~ rain. ,
,l
seems like the approach of this
People's Coalition for Peace and Justice said, "About 30 to 00 suit, ~IStantAgnculture.Se~· · ·sfJJte superintendent ol schools Highlands '&lt;. and ranged IRto they killed 12 Communists with Ellis Berns, 21, Akron, ·,who . spring has brought these feel·
retary Richard E. Lyng sa1d m and was advised ·t.a·•onsult with
was With MiSS; Sc~er when lngs tji the surface."
persons are conlmltted .to action,"
""
nunltte
tin
'th
th
"
~ainbodia and over the Ho Chi no losses they were reported sh
~"'
ld(..
.
The Senate Republican Pvucy CO
e was mee g w1
a speech prepared for eArner· the prosecuting attorney. Minh Trail.
only a few miles from the e was ..Wed, sa "~r death F.our days of observances
Senate Sergeant-At-Arms R~rt Dunphy and police officials to ican Dry Milk Institute.
Whalen proceeded to read a . The U.S. command said the border. 11 was In this area that was a great lbss. · ', ' ·
have been planned to commemwork out plana for protection of Capitol employes during
Administration officials ear- 'letter from Shaw and concluded 8528 had dropped more than the heaviest Ba2 raids struck, "H has · affected me but I morale the slayings.
demonstrationa 11ext week. Nixon in a nationally televised news tier this year decided against that in his opinion he had done 3,400 tons of bombs in the A following a pattern In which the really don't know how," he Speakers Include Georgia
conference Thursday night said, ''The congress is not in· boosting government milk sup- everything legal.
Shau area since Aprill4 both in ARVN moves Into the target said. "I can't seem to lind the Legislator Julian Bond; Corned·
limidated. The President is not lntiinldated. 'Ibis government is ports for 19?1 because dairy
Stevens -related that he also direct support Of the A Shau areas after the strikes.
right words.
ian and Civil Rights activist
going forward."
surpluses-andfederalspending had contacted. Shaw and was operation koown as Lam son
"Right afterwards there was Dick Gregory; James Ahern, .
S d
to lake them off the market- advised that " it would be 720 and against Communist In fighting in Cambodia near this unification," he said. "The former police chief of New
No Softening 0 tan
rose last year and threatened to Whalen."
positions near the Laos border I.Qe border town of Snoul the students were really together. Haven, Conn., and a member
AHIGH GOVERNMENT omCIAL SAID today Israel will go up again Ibis year. Under Whalen disclosed Shaw said if behind the operation.
South Vietnamese backed by Right now I don't see that unl· of Ute Scranton Commission
not soften 1111 condition for peace In the Ml~dle East despite U. S. heavy pressure from d~iry Smith were going to sfJly in his The South Vietnamese so Ear U.S. airpower said they killed flcation. "
which investigated campus Wl•
urging that It be more flexible.In Its demands. Minister without groups and their congressional office to seek an \"Junction, as have moved along the northern 23 Communists along Highway Gene Pekarik, 22, {.Drain, rest and Kingman Brewster,
allies, however, theadministra· that th
ed
· f'
· ded
who was with Schroeder when President of Yale University
1osmg
e
PFOC
ure
necessary·
fringes
of
the
valley
which
is
a
7,
1ve
men
woun
.
portfolio Israel Galill, a close aide of Prime Mlnis\er Golda Meir, . lion later backed down •nd
•
Wh ' l
'd lth hM Sm'th
he was shot and , killed, said and Rod 1\lcKuen, poe\.
said in an Interview witb the newspaper Yedloth Ahatonoth tbe
a en sat a Qug r. I dense jungle nestled between i BS2s struck Communist sup!sraell position ~Ill be presented to u. s. Secretary of State granted a support hike for the had been there with him, he had IO,OOIJ.!oot mountain peaks. ply routes In this area as well
. Ml dl East In
marketing year which began been cooperative.
Maj. Gen. Phan Van Phu, asln support of the. A Shau
Wlll.lmil P. Rogers during his d""""'unity
e
~ur.
B'll
to Ok· IIIIlied'1ate commander of the ARVN 1st Valley forces.
1 w·th
to
Jain to the April I.
I ers
''The visit will give us an o,.,.. •
exp
Supports for manufacturing steps io eject Smith by moving
0
American secretary of state Ute problem8 of the existence of our grade milk were bOOsted to for the court order.
state,"Gallllsald. "IbelievethatMr.RogerswiUfindinlsraela
$4.93 a hundredweight, an in· RayFieldsaskediiSmithwere
"·j ti of I'· de
ds"
'
·
.
.. LANCASTER, Ohio - The has already exceeded his
ln
united nation,, strong wro us ce "' man ·
(
crease of 27 cents.
· ter fenng.
·
"''
·
nl th ers sa1'd ,
'tenth Congressional District budget. Local mayors are
m
,
Lyng noted thai similar price "Wh~ther he Is Interfering or Residents of Pomeroy and · Power Commission. They are J:\epublic~n committee Wed· unhappy because lbey can't ge~ .,
4 MiHion Bengali may Starve
support boosts in the early not, we can't have someone Middleport
wlli
begin passe~ on to customers throug,h nesday evening here heard one · enough money for their city.
NEW DEUII - ABOUT.4 MILUON perSOIUi In the area of 1950's and early 1960's brought loafing in the office an · day." paying four and seventy • prov1s1ons .of -the community s ~k~r criilci&gt;ze Gov. Gilligan
In a question and answer', .
eight hundredths cents more contract w1th the gas company; , and the new stale .Director of peri a~. Brown answered .
East Paldstan ravagell by a cyclone and Udal wave· last on heavy surplus production,
November (ace starvation ~ause ~ civil war .lu!s halted and supports later had to be 'j,,\,i:i;;;;:::;:;::::::'::::::;::i'!' ' ' {' ' :' ''''''' ' ''''''''''''':;&gt;:&gt; :&gt;: per thousand cubic feet for These mc~eases In suppliers Fi!lance,.Col. Curtis'Andrews of qu~stions about economy
emergency too1fdistribution, of(lcials from the area said today. cut back.
· Show
Tonight natural gas on May 16, it was rates were necessary to offset Lancaster ,discuss future plans problems. He said that Gllllgafl .,
In Paris, where representatives of II nations lnvolvellln the
announced today by COlumbia increased operating . costs for the ' Ohio. Republican has fancy ta~ programs, but !Ill :
reliefoperaticinsweremeetlng,itwasestimatedthatasmanyas ·
CALL ANSWERED
T~e second showing of aD Gas of Ohio, Inc. ·
caused. by the continumg m. Finance Committee.
matter what he calls ~m tbit
30 million to 60 inllllon of East Paldaljln's 74 million Inhabitants · The Pomeroy emergency unit opereJta "Mulligan's Magic"
The increase will 11mount to flation'ary trend- such as .in: . Guest speaker for the evening money is still com!Dg out of tilt '
could starve.
answered a caU at a:55 a.m. at 11te Bradbury Fifth and about 72 cents a month for the creases m the costs m obtammg was Lt. Governor John Brown taxpayer's pocket. Accordinlto '
friday to the Har.old King Sixth Grade School wiD be average customer :who heats his capital for construction an~ In who said that the Gilligan ad- Browll, the governor has hlnlil'
Veterans Memorial Hospital residence on Route 33. Mrs. , held at 7:30 Ibis evening at home with natural gas.
the costs . of labor, supplies, .ministration Is a dllf~rerit kind ot•t of state people to !ill~ '
Wylli8 Hill House · ADMITIED - Alva Phalin, ,Rena Ughtf.ool~ who had fallen the school rather than on The adjustment refiects in· construchon ~nd other of a ball game for him. He finds positions in his admlnlatratlaa. • ,
Pomeroy; Elizabeth Hysell, there was ~en to veterana Saturday night as reported creases In .the cost of gas from opera hans, the util1ly sa.id. . Gilligan trying to be the Mid· "We have -the people rltl¥
Destroyed F,riday Rutland; John Thomas, Ripley, Mem~ial HoSpital where she earlier.
suppliers,
which
were
The ~ate change.~lll apply m w~stern Bobby J{e'nnedy .
here In ohio, who are qlllllfll!il I
r .W. Na.; Elizabeth .Thomas, was admitted for treatment.
·;:'''&gt;:'%ii::::;;~!ii:'::' %t:;::,,:·,:· :it&gt;&lt;:·, .. &lt;:. authorized by the Federal 269 Ohw Commun1t1es.
•• Brown also said the governor to do the job without hirii1g ott '
of slate 'personnel," Brown ~
Aframe home owned by Mrs. Ripley' W. . Va .; . Arthur
Hulda Pannell on Wyllis Hill in . Sylvester, Syracuse,: Dosha
Pomeroy was destrOyed by fire H!III, Syracuse; Edwm Cross,
f
this morning.
Racme.
requirements and re1~
Fire Chief Henry Werry 'said DISCH~J.l:GED Allen
furnishlnas 'belonging to the Sayre, Jr., Joann Clarjl, Owen By George Harlfllves, Supt. ' : &gt;:::::&gt;!i;&gt;:&gt;:,:::o:;'''"''''''': : : m:'~'' ' ' : ;:.,:M:::::',''i'''''''' "''''''::''!:' ' 'M@;!&gt;::W:'i:':!?i'''':l::':'!!'''''l~&lt;:i&lt;'\i*i&gt;&gt;:&lt;\';\: _ Friday, May 7 and .that we have mentioned many, portionment in the House
Orland Laudermllt family and HawJey, Vera Beegle, Laveda
Meiga!MaiScboo!Diat.
,,t C! ...
J\T
Saturday, May 8 bring the .many times here. On that. day Senate.
:;
In tonight's column I would @ .JJefJ Ul{f OJ ~ .
. -nO. .
\\]. special program· at Salisbury. yuushouldreglste~yourchlld If Lt. Governor)lrown bell"'f
Mrs. Panrielnre.loat. Cause of . Flynn, Nl!qllli.Weatherby, Mary
the blaze . Ia sliD under In· Ford, llo!'~thy Snyder.
like to discuss ~veral items ·School year. The deadline for , - Tonight we will have the - Sunday, May 9, we will ·he or ,she will enter kin· th:it the public should be JIIGIOt
briefly. .
.
applications was today, April Symphonib Band Cqncert at the have the high school .chOir dergarten or grade one next informed
alloul
tallt~
vestigalion, Chief Werry said.
CLYDJ
DIF.S
concert and art show ai 21n the year. You should ~ring t~ birth . education and other gova'lt
The monetary lou had not IJeen ·clyde _Frazier, \Middleport - As you will recall, 0\11' :10, but it now has been extended high school beginning at 8.
cerhflcate .and lmmumzai!On ment activities so that tile)'~
determined late lld.s morning. Route I, ilied Friday morning at board presid~nt, Frank W. two weeks to May 14 in order to - Next T!tesday the Ohio afternoon al the high schooL
. aware ol what is goinR ·•
Chief Werry said he has Qked the Holzer Medical Center In Porter has sought to encourage encourage greater par· University COncert Band will - Things are really gett1ng record With you.
clean-up
or
bea~tificatlon
iicipation.
·
'
·
'
p
·esent
a
concert
for
a
student
busy.
W
e
also
have
the
DistriCt
We
alrtally
have,
and·
will
·around them.
·
1
. Mrs. Pannell, who is residing In Gallipolis. The body is at the
PTA meeting tomorrow at have mor~ people.who ~ill be
Ralph . Triplett, dlatr~
GalllpOIIa '!'lib a daughter, to Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home projects by providing the funds _Tonight· will be th~ second assembly at the high ,school.
10
· come to Pomeroy to~ ~t the where funeral arraqgements . for prizes. The110 projecls must ant} final performance of the -Friday, May 7, brings the . Pul!Jeroy Eleme~tary School. workmg on Ule plant or the cHairman, presided. All 1~
be completed by the end of~ special program al Bradbury. Junior-Seilior Prom.
- Monday , May 3, IS the date
1Continued on Page ·2)
counties were represented. •;
flpre.
are being compleled.
'

llj

-·,··n·- -·
•••

Br·...e&gt;f.s''
I
,;urymen
D
J
warned

PT. PLEASANT - Mason
County's Board of Education in
a reguiar meeting Thursday
night acted to remove Supt. I.
Brooks Smith through court
procedures and . recessed its
meeting until this evening to
co~sider changes in the personnel to administer the
county's schools next fall.
The board, recognizing
Michael Whalen as acting
superintendent, in a 4-1 vote
authorized Prosecuting AI·
torney Michael Shaw to draw up
the
proper
injunction
procedures against Smith.
Major changes to be considered this evening on the
personnel lists, according to
·whalen's recommendations,
will be the. appointment of
C'••les C"-mbers •• W-'·-a

t
a

;itil

Lao' s LI.ne HeIt

f

I
· S

Gill.I·g·.an Rak
' ed

Natur·a} Gas Rate' RaJSed.

is

'B
. usy' 'Sch'ool Days, and .NI.·ghts Upon u ·s . ::~::. :~r~~:~:e~:;~ .
?.S

'FRAZIER

k' ·

hools

lB6 %

llif

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="75">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1733">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="9470">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="9469">
              <text>April 29, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1170">
      <name>gorby</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
