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'

Henry
Oterrington
is
Dead
News .•. in Briefs
the draft.
'"That way, I could at least be assured·of a vote on ltby June
30, lhe day the pre$ent draft law expires," McGovern said In
remarks at Ohio State University Sunday night, (Early
account of McGovern on Pg. 4.) "

Sadat Fires Red Collaborator

Atty. Henry W. Chertlngton,
85, "Mr. Republican of Gallla
County," c!ied at 9 p.m.,_S!Jnday
in the Holzer Medical Center on
·First Ave. He bad. been in

Harrisonville
Society News

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Sch. lJ:

Disrupters

Four Ordered

Market Report

To Pay Fines

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Alfred
Social Notes

."'Congoleumil

:MEIGS THfATRE.
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Tot~lgbl&amp; Tutldllr

Only '2~
per 1q. yd. '

INGILS.
fURNITURE
. Mr~:=T
l'tl,

Tilt Allltns County

MOvE

S.vlntll LMn Co.

ITtcllnlc.olorl

Pomeroy, Olllo\

Paula PreMiss
.

~IK.,dSI.

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"'..!~

Elliot Gould
.

LODGE TO~
Chester todge 323, Daughten
of Amerlc•, ~?!ill meet 'fueldl1
at I p.m. 'lbe good ollbe fll'der
committee will bold a 11lenh

"President Nixon said he would not be · "Nolhlng is more Important thar) ~n end
influenced by demonstrations," Gregory wthe war in Indochina," ~m said, "His
said. " But President Nixon wjll hear tlie (Nixon's)·response lias been to sponsor an
chairman of llie board of General Motors invasion of :Laos and to continue the·
knoeklng at his door;"
.
slaughter.
He said a student boycott o! the city of
Kent would lllrn it into a "ghost town.' 1
''Aura Of Repression"
A person In the audience Interrupted the
"We find that the administration has
speech once to ask: "Csn't you say just created an aura of repression so pervasive
one good thing about America today?"
that not only young people, but also our
Gregory replied, "That's like if I came congressional leaders, feel that their
to you with a brain tumor and you told me privacy is being invaded, their telephone
how how good my teeth and eyes were." conversations monitored and their daily
Ahern, speaking to au audience of only activities recorded," he said. ,
800, said he worries that "what happened
Polley To Delude
here and at Jackson State can happen
The administration, he charged, "has
again" since the President has failed to espoused a policy of doublespeak intended
heed the commission's conclusions about to delude the American public."
campus unrest.
The killing of the students a year ago
l 'I

PERFECT
SLEEPER"
mattress and
box spring set

Mostly clear and not as cold
tonight. Lows in the upper 30s ·
and low 40s. Increasing
cloudiness and warmer Wednesday . with a chance ' of
showers, spreading eastward ;
over the state.

Rioters
Fizzle

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Register Now During Our Spring FumHure Sale. • .

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Register now in our Third Floor Furniture Department for the

1

KROEHLER LIVING ROOM SUITE

1

No purchase necessary - You need not be present to win .

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ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF LAWN BOY MOWERS JUST
RECEIVED AT OUR WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

SUNDAY, MAY 9th
REGISTER
in the Furniture Depart-

ment on Third Floor for
lhe Kroehler Living Room

Suire.

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No purchase necessary and
nof be present lo
win.

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With

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off·th e ·sh~ l der

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With V·nedli ne
and lace trim . P·S·M $10.

sleeves. S·M·l $9.

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Qtve
youJt u\Aothen

With U·rteckllne
and lace trim , P-S-M·t $9.

.a

With simple lace
pointod col lar. S - M·~ l7.

gecond
tJJotteywooneft
by-tt'onm6tt CRogeM!
You'll never nnd.onything more nouering
than these four nylon tricols.

oncf they dry tpemselves glomovrous Qs new.
' '

!Your mother ,opprcciotb:; facts like th is.) .

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In colors to sel her all aglow.

Shop W..,S 9:30 to 5 P.M. - OPeri
.

EliiiFILDS

Fridaf and.Saturdaf 9:30 fD 9 P.M.
~ 1

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Rt. 33

Mayor Charles Legar
disclosed Monday night to
Pomeroy council that the town
is responsible for moving a
walermainalongU. S. 33ivhere
the interchange and approaches
to it will be constructed at Rock
Springs according to the state
department of highways.
. Legar said the Meigs Water
Company had been informed by
.,
the state department of highways of the arrangement.
IN BUNCHES- A set of twins and a set of triplets, children of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
However, when the town purHayman, Long Bottom Route 1, Increased the~schoot · census of Chester Elemerltary School
chased
the ·water company
Monday, On tile first row are Tammy 1111d Denny, twlna, and triplets, frOI!l the left, are Perry ,
several years ago, the buyer
Terri and Kerry. The family has moved here from Mesa, Ariz. Mr. Hayman is formerly from
was not aware · of the
Meigs County. The twins are third graders and the triplets; believed-to be the only ones living in
agreement.
Meigs County, are fourth graders.
According to Legar, the state
estimates a cost of approximately $24,000 to relay the
line which runs from Ute bottom
of the tim at Salisbury school to
·
·
the Jack Robson proper{y,
Legar and Wllllam Baronlck of
In observance of National song of Life and If With All posed of Will, Richard Dean the board of public affairs will
Music Week, May 2-9, the Meigs Your Hearts from Elijah by Carol Hargraves and AnJU: • survey the area to see if the line
Chorale, directed by Mrs. Duane Will, tenor, accompanied Fultz wiU sin~ If 1 Loved You. ~=~so::!bl~~:ted at a more
Christine Guthrie, , and a by Glenna Sprague, will round The chorale w1ll be featured on 01 .
B th
d
1
10 .
00 e
clarinetchoir.wlU be presented out the first part of the vocal What the World Needs Now,
pr~sen e
In concert at 2:30 p.m. Sunday program. Will won a superior We've Ol)ly Just Begun, Where blueprmts of a, 60 unit htgh rise
at the Meigs High School 'rating for this selection at the Do 1 Begin?" and Jean from ap~rtment bulldmg for senior.
auditorium.
District XV solo and ensemble The Prime of Miss Brodie.
citizens he hopes to construct at
The chorale wiD present, A contest held Feb. 27 at Ohio
The ·boys' chorus will sing acostof$3.5mllllon. The sevenChoral Prayer from . the VI University.
Battle of Jericho.and Soldiers of story struclllre has FHA apCentury Gregorian; Choral Lewis Shields, assistant bsnd the Captain. The chorale will do
Salutation, God Made Our director, will direct the clarinet School Days from Goodbye, Mr.
Hands, High Upon the Moun- choir through Schumann Suite, Chips : and Gee, I'm Looking
lain, 0 Sacred Head, Now Cortege from Petit Suite and Forward to the Future. The
Wounded, and The Heavens Are Play Ground. Making up Ute American Scene will be the
Telling from The Creation choir are Annie Ohlinger, Jo finale along with the Meigs
during the opening segment. Ellen Diehl, Lynne Baker, High Alma Mater, Maroon and
The national anthem by the · Marla Neutzling, Sherrie Gold.
chorale and the audience wil1 Turner, Stella Neutzllng, Irene
Members of the chorale are
open _the program,
Barnes, Rosemary Rice, Mllisa Iris Aris, Brenda Barton, Karla
The girls' chorus singing A Rizer, Debbie Harbrecht Ellen Beal, Opal Berry, Jan Bel:!lng,
Joyful AUeluia . and A Little Rice, Marge Riggs and 'Becky MaryBradbury,Mary Bricklea,
·
Houdashelt.
i ·
Cathy Bunce, Suzy Card, Jennie
( - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , The chorale quartet com. . (Continued on page 10)

c0 n cert Coming Stlllday

proval, according to Boothe. Pomeroy Chamber of ComThe elevator-type building merce for permission to block
would be located between Third off the upper parking Jot during
and Fourth Sts. facing But- the three-day event, June 111-19·
ternut Ave. in Pomeroy.
20.
Legar and council members
Mees noted the area would be
agreed they would give aU used for exhibitors to display
assistance possible to Boothe. · products such as boata and
Jim Mees, parade chairman mobile homes. Councll apof the Big Bend Regatta, asked proved the request.
council on behalf of the
Council also authorized Chief

I

IN POMIROY

of Pollee Jed Webster to send
Wayne Payne, meterman, to
meter maintenance school In
Pittsburgh two days.
Webster said between six and
seven meters on the parking Jot .
were damaged over th.e
weekend. Several parts were
found In the river, Webster said:
The mayor disclosed pollee
(Continued on page 10)

Canvass Assigned
.

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Assignments for a partial
house-to-house canvass to be
conducted across Meigs County
next week were made by the
~oject Freedom group lri a
meeting at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy Monday night.
Purpose of the canvassing is
to secure. signatures of
residents on petitions to be sent
to Han~!' requesting me=~
humane
treatment
for
American · prisoners , of war
there. All canvassing will be
done next week in observance of
Prisoner of War - Missing In
Action Week as proclaimed by
Gov. John Gllllgan . .

Assigned as chairman In next
week's campaign were . Joe
Struble, Pomeroy area;' Youth
Fellowship of the Rutland
MethodiSt Church', llll!land
area; Mildred Karr and Jim
Roach, Middleport atea; YoiJth
Fellowship of the Roc;k Springs
Methodist Church, Rock
Springs area; Paul Kloes,
Mlnersvllle area; Mrs. Eugene
Johnston, Langsvlllearea; Mrs.
Bernice Garnes, Dexter; Mrs.
Mjlry Arney, Ewlngton; and the
Rilv. John Curry, Danvllle area·.
Area a of the county not
represented Monday night were
Syracuse, Racine, Cheater,
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PARIS (UPI )- Members Of
the U.S. table tennis team who
recently visited Communitt
China arrived Monday to play
a serl~s of matche.! against .a · •
French learn,
RARE rosrtiMING- Here's aaampJI~~g o l - rltheUIIIIIUIII Cllllumlngfeatured in the
At a news conference, U.S.
"Be a-Clown" minstrel of the Salisbury Elementary School at 7:32 p;m. Friday and Salurday.
team captain Jack How~
The graup Includes Bruce Brlcklea aa a flsll; Steve ()hllnger and David Kennedy, as the mule,
said the Chinese bad IIJide ·•
and Brian King as the pig. The "animals" are from a production number to "Swingln' on a
distinction between the Amet'i·
Star."
can people and the U.~ goveriJ..
ment,
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"The overtures' we recelvQd
were cleariy for the people ;(
the United States," said HO\Y- :
ard.
, ~
He said he was surprised bY.
the founding Croaker of the . years of age and from Meigs wishing to participate in the Hoover is cGoChalrman.
the effect their tour bad lA. ·
Ohio Society for the Promotion County.
·
Flea Mart are asked to contact Bill Grueser, president, noted America.
of Bu11 Frogs (OSPBF), a Jack Kerr, owner of WMPO, Kerr at P. 0. Box 71, Mid· that a baton contest, under the "It was only upon our relw"n
possibly startling new kind of suggested:
dleport.
direction of Mrs. Judy Riggs, to the United States that we
bull frog bred to 'challenge for · - Queens from the three high Mrs . Ohlinger and Mrs. will be held at Meigs Jilnior knew our tour was big nen.
the national jumping cham- schools in the county could be Werry will attend the next High School in Middleport The Impression it made wu, ill
pioriships.
.
· · candida_tes and ride on the meeting of the chitmber to give beginning Saturday morning. the overwhelrnlng number at
Beyond veiled hints of such a Queen · float in the Friday the group's decision on whether Grueser said local residents cases, favorable,
,
development, Crow would say evenin~ _parade.
·the sorority will participate in who own outboard motor ~ts
"But there were ex,ceptiOII!I,
bo ts
· 'ted tn and one of our team, JollD
nothing more than that a 'Frog - Candidates' pictures could the queen contest.
or
run-a u are 1nv1
, Tannehill, of whom the - ·
Jnstitoot is near completion be pl~ced In the former
bale Warner disclosed that participate .In the boat races.
...-,
here utilizing a fenced-in, man- Pomeroy Junior High School Frog Jump entry forms are Grueser noted that dropping the reported, wrongly, that hi,
made pond and running water, building lind patrons would vote ready. The jwnps will be at the hydroplane boats would be an wanted to stay and live II
The new facility is the first of Its their choice for queen.
Meigs Football Stadium in improvement since the boats Chinll, was received polson 1.:
kino, Crow was certain.
- That the Ohio Eta Phi could Pomeroy beginning at 5 p.m . did make quite a Jot of noise and letters," said Howard.
I .,
He said Tannehill, 19, MlddlltMrs. Terry Ohlinger and Mrs. conduct the queen contest as Crow said bicycle and tricycle were annoying to the public.
Tom Werry, of the Ohio Eta Phi well as take charge of the Flea races, a fat lady race and a frog AIIIoc~l buslnesamen wishing ,port, Ohio, merely wenled k
Chapter of the Beta Sigma Phi, ·Mart; he said interest in the flea on Ia bicycle race will liven up to place an ad in the Regatta . return to China and live In I
discussed ways of ch001lng a mart . is growing, AP- the frog show .
program are asked to contact commune lor \WO weeb Ill&amp;\
Grueser,
The noon luncheon cover hqw It
Regatta Queen. II was decided proximately 135 spaces will be . Earl Ingells is In charge of the
that girls participating In the available for those wishing to Frog Ball and Jim Mees is nlee Ung was held at Bowers • Th4l first .rnatell
t·
Queen contest must be 18 to 21 partlripate In it. Those persons parade chairman and Wendall " Drive-In Resta!ll'lll!l.
France wu lO bit planclloilliJ.

Regatta Attractions Revised

Crowning of a regatta queen,
the . traditional frog jump, the
second annual Frog Ball, a new
. "fiea mart'' and a revamped
boat racing program will
a Ba. J~e
feature the annual Big Bend
p,ove,.,y trlears
wI
"8'
Regatta June 111-19-20.
· wASHINGTON·...:. THE SENATE Hunger COmmittee was told
Members of the Pomeroy
Mooday that Indian school children in Oklahoma are dunned in Chamber of Commerce,
frmt of1Uteir claasmates for money to pay for their federally sponsoring group, decided
subsldizt!d school lunches.
Monday to take some of the
, Children elsewhere, according to the testimony, are denied noise out of the re'gatta by
repll't card! or refused promotion until their lunch bills are paid. substituting pleasure boat races
Those charges came from Barbara Bode, program director ofthe . in which more hometown
nonprofit, privately' supported Children's Found&amp;tion, which famiUes may participate for
mooltors the federal program. ·
noisy hydroplane races which In
former regattas have. been
UPI Wins Pulmer Award
staged by the Midwfs t OutNEW YORit-AtlNITEiil'lur.ss lnlerllational series on the board Racine Assn.
Ufe ol a revolutlmary and the Winston-Salem (N.C.) Journal and · .A]so new are p)ans to crown a
.regatta queen, a fiea mart, and
(Continued 01) page 10)
according to Atty. Fred Crow,

.

Tuppers Plains, Letart, Long
Bottom al)d .Reedsvllle: Persons
are needed ~esperately to
cha~n these areas. Persons
wil1lng to belp are. u1ced 14
contact the Rev. Blll .Perrin or
Mrs. Ben Neutzling ln Pomeroy
at once.
Canvassers may pick up the
petition forms at 1!Je Trinity
Church. When the fonns have
been signed, they are to be
returned to the church where
they wlll be compiled and sent
to Columbus.
It was reported Monday night
that of tile 71 church
congregations contacted In tha
county, approximately eight
have responded with gifts or·
financial asslstance and signed:
petition forms. Hope was ex•
pressed that other con,
gregatlona will assist In the
project aimed toward humanetreatment and eventual releaae:
of American servicemen held
prisoners In jungle can\ps ·of
North Vielnam.
·:

Team in
Paris for
TI Play

WASHINGTON(UPI)- Mllk which began April I.
prices
at the . farm level this
In operating the revised
Ray Becomes a Loser
year probably will average 4 to suppqrt program, officials have
PETROS, TENN.- JAMES EARL RAY, with 98 years of 5 per ~nt over 1970, and gross reducM price props for .butter
prison leisure on his hands, couldn't WJiit a few more weeks on a income for dairy farmers by two cents a pound but have
surefire escape plan. His Impatience put him back among the probably will go up at least 5per hiked cheese and nonfat dry
losers Mmday. The slayer of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, tried to cent, Agriculture Department milk prices enough to produce
nee the Brushy Mountain State PJU~on, but was caught In the economists said today.
· an overaU price increase for
prison yar~ about 20 minutes after he broke out of his cell.
The predicted jump in gross ·dairy products.
His catefuUy-planned escape route was to be through a huge income was attributed to a The department did not
concrete steal)l tunnel that runs about 100yards outside the prison continuing
increase
in discuss how much, If any, of the
walla. Bu~ the 400-degree beat In the tunnel drove Ray back and he production coupled with a boost Increased
. ' income would be
was captured while trying to find some other route of escape. Ray in government price support for erased by higher prices of what
apparently had been working on the escape for months, with his milk In the marketing year . farmers buy.
cellma le, a Iller named Roy Morelock_.
WASHINGTON - ·rwo KEY CRITICS of the Nixon Ad·
ministration say they have lost hope for a Soviet-American
agr~ment to limit nuclear weapons. Sen. Stuart Symington, [)..
Mo., said the administration was "planning deliberately .not to
have any anns control agreement at all" at the Strategic Arms
Umltation Talks \SALT·). Sen. J. Wllllam Fulbright, D-Ark:, said
In an Interview he was so discouraged by the Vienna talks that he
no longer reads news accounts about them.

for a trousseau night dress, o rea lly gorgeous one.

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) ' -A
threatened second efforti by
antiwar demonstrators to tie up
Washington's morning rush
hour tralfic fizzled out today.
Several thousand police and
troops guarded key traffic
points but hardly any protesters
showed up.
No major attempt was made
to duplicate Monday's massive
effort to snarl traffic and the
city's thousands of government
workers were at their desks
without difficulty by 9 o'clock.
In contrast to Monday when
7,000 .demonstrators were arrested, pollee made only a
handful of arrests this morning.
The police and federal troops
were positioned along major
streets, bridges and at traffic
circles at dawn arfd piacidly
walchlng traffic now by at its '
normal place.
However, the May Day tribe
leaders say a mass march to
lite Justice Department woul~
take place later. The building
on Pennsylvania Avenue which
also holl!eS the FBI was ringed
by pollee well In advance.
Failure of a large«ale effort
to tie up Washington traffic
Monday apprently discouraged
the militant participants from
pursuing the strategy today.
In the Monday confrontation,
they were outmaneuvered by
police, tear gassed and maced,
and most were arrested.
Among them were Rennie
Davis, one of the convicted
Chicago Seven; Yippie leader
Abby Hoffman and Dr. Benjamin Spock, noted baby doctor
and antiwar advocate.
The leaders of the protest
had declared they Intended to
make the city's nwnerous
traffic circles thelf targets for
disruption today.
(Continued on page 10)

No Hope, Apparently, at SALT

May 9rh is Ihe right time

TEN CENTS .

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ater Main .

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TUESDAY. MAY 4. 1971

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Devoted To The Intereall Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXIV NO. 14

•

during anti-war disorders thllt followed thli ,_•:'
invasioo of J.a.os by Anierlean f.orces •iii &lt;·
"se~less, needless and stupid," he Sllid," ;'
, "When did we start lo value human life, -:• ,
• so cheaply?" he, asketl. "When dld ~ , .
begin to deny the humanity of olheri;:'. /
determining the death of hwnan beings 111 1
. the basis of akl color or ideo!Dgy or uri,; •'
J&gt;9Pular behavior?"
·
:·
Some classes have been spanely a.. . •
tended although none has been cance~ . f
for· the program except for noon tOclax: '.
Workshops ~eduled as part rl the fruj &gt;".
days also bllve drawn few and -universitY _
officials said many students apparentlY ' ,
left the campus befilre the start of lhii .
anniversary observance, many of wboni ·
were thought to bllve joined anti-wli,F
demonstrators in Washington.
'

More li)..gallon hats are exported from Wyoming than are
worn there by residents.

Jusl a Oip through fhe suds

OES TO MEET
. Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order
of Eastern Stars will meet
Tuesday' at 7:30 p.m. at the .
masonic temple.

throughout. The campus rumor 'control
center said it senses a kind o(
"sophistication" on the campus.
"Maybe we are all a little more
mature," a. staff member noted. "Maybe
nothing can panic us any more." .
·
Abem And Gregory
Diminishing
numbers of students
Jnl(ochina.
Plastic cones and cards with Monday listened to speeches by comedian
the · letters A, B, C and D were and civil rights activist Dick Gregory and
positioned at lhe four sites at 10 p.m. James F. Ahern, former member of the
Monday following a brief program by 2,000 )'resident's Commission on Campus
students and faculty that included a Unrest.
Gregory urged about 5,500 students In a
prayer and folk songs.
Then the quiet students moved to their two~hour 'ijleech to organize economic
posts and the vigil began in the near boycotts as a means to persuade President
Nixon to end the Indochina War. Ahern,
freezing weaUter.
fo,·mer
police chief of New Haven, Conn.,
The four days of observance of the anniversary of the student deaths be• an scolded the President for not listening to
Saturday and have been peaceful the commission's recommendations.

Yale President Kingman Brewster was
to speak toc!aY and the Kent State victory
. bell was to be rung once fot each kjlled
~tudent, again for ~ch of the two ~tudents
shot and killed by police at Jackson
State (Miss.) College last year and once
more In memory of the soldiers who died in

Now You Know

Atld remember, they never need pressing.

MayJ-4
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ELBERFELDS FOR MOTHER'S DAY GIFTS

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Mei&amp;s Co. Branch

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Teachers Wiu'l
R evzew
• M.

Rogers Sees West Bank

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KENT, Ohio (UP!)- Silent Kent Stale
University studt~~la holding small gas
lanterns began .late Monday a 28-hour
watch over the spots where four died a
year ago today when Ohio · Natlolllil
~- . Guardsmen. opened fire With their rifles.
As the vigil began, between 1,500 and
2,000 students, none ~g above a
whisper, marched four abreast from the
Commons, off the campus, made a loop
down Main St. and returned. .
·
"There was no noise," a newsman said.
"It was eerie."
The vigil was to continue throughout
today and tonight, ending at midnight,
with at least Qne student marking each of
the four sites on a grassy hillside and
paved area, while rilen\otial services at
noon capped a four~y observance of last
year's tragedy.

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failin~ health since Sept. 4, 1969.-i the local Masonic bodle~, Elks
The promiment attorney ·Lodge, Knights of Pyth1as, an
practiced law In Gallla Co..J111ty ardent golf~r and hunte:r·- ~:O:T- II­
more than 60 years, and for was a charter member
more than 50 years, was a organizer of the Gallipolis Golf
leader in many community Club of which he . setved as
affairs.
pr~sident.
. •,
Atty . Cherrington, who Funeral services will be held
resided at 639 Second Ave., was 2 p.m., Wednesday at the
a member of the American Bar Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Association, Ohio State Bar Home with Father A. H.
Association and Gallia County MacKenzie officiating. Burial
Bar Association. He graduated will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
from Gallia Academy High Friends may call at the
School, attended Marietta funeral home between 7-9 p.m.,
College, and studied law under Tuesday. In lieu of flowers, the
the late Atty. Hollis C. Johnson, family requests contributions to
Gallipolis, and Judge Hunter, the Holzer Hospital Foundation
Colwnbus. He passed the bar landscaping fund.
and began practice in Gallipolis Pallbearers will be Arthur
in 1908.
Darnbrough,
Alva
G.
HeisaformerGalliaCounty Sho e maker , . Lawrence
prosecuting attorney (1914), Bastiani", R. D. While, RobertL.
common pleas judge 1920, city Evans, and Dr. Charles E.
solicitor ' and waa the oldesUHolzer, Jr.
surviving membe.r of the i .Honorary pallbearers will be
Gallipolis City Charter Com- liilembera of th~ local bar
mission . He was considered :association.
"the boss" of Republican ·.
'
politics in Gallla County'
He waa president of the board
of trustees of the . Holzer
Hospital Foundation and
BSOR
president of the Commercial
and Savings Bank.
· .
Ally. Cherrington was botn :
00 SSiteS
March 12, 1886, In Galllpolis, son
of the late Samuel Maxon and PT. PLEASANT - A special
Rowena Putnam Cooke meeting of the Mason County
Cherrington.
' · Education Assn. has been called
He married Vivian Ayres on for Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
April 7, 1911. She preceded hirri . Point Pleasant Junior High
in death on June 15, 1959.
School by the County Education
Two children survive, Atty. Association Executive ComWilliam P. Cherrington, mittee.
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Harmon Kenneth Long, executive
(Henrietta) O'Brien, Syracuse, -director of Professional and
Ohio; three grandchildren, Governmental Relations of the
Suzanne Moulton , Henrietta West Virginia Education Assn.;'
Evans and Lisbeth CIJerrington. will discuss areas of concern
Two great-grandchildren abo'ut the WVEA's role in the '
survive, Thomas S. Moulton, school situation in Mason
Jr., and William C. Evans.
COunty.
One brother survives, Edwin , All members are urged to
Nash Cherrington, Easton, Md. attend and to bring a young
One brother, William P .. _teacher wllo may not be a
Cherrington, preceded him in ·inemher of the organization.
death.
Mason County School Service
He was a member of St. Personnel Assn. members are
Peter's ·Episcopal Church, all invited.

CADI.O - · PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT bas summarily
Mr. Guy Bolin was taken by
fired Vice President Ali Sabry, once considered the most likely the emergency :rescue squad to
successor to the late President Gamal Abdel, Nasser. The Veterans Memorial Hospital
semiofficial Middle East News Agency reported the dismissal - Thursday. It was ieared he was
' Sunday in a oneiJilragraph announcement that said "~sident bordering on a stroke.
Anwar Sadat has issued a decree dismissing Vice President Ali
Mrs. Weltha Clark was taken
Sabry from his post."
'
to·an Athens hospital last week
No reason was given for the unexpected firing, which came by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark,
just hours before Secretary of State WUllam P. Rogers waa due to She is reported suffering from
arrlv_e in Cairo on his tour of Middle East capitals to promp1e_an heart ailment and nerves.
Arab-Israeli peace settlem-ent. Sabry was known for his\ close
Mrs. John ·Meeks (Thelma
connections with the Soviet Union.
French) and daughter ,
·
Florence, called on her aunt,
Tam Won't Form Government
Ava Gilkey, Saturday. Mrs.
PHNOM PENH - AN ATTEMFI' to form a new Cambodian Willard Faudre, local , al~o
government collapsed today when the Nljtl~l Asaembly called on Mrs. Gilkey, ~ lllr­
President, Gen. In Tam, refused to become prerruer, Outgomg day·
Prmie Minister Lon Nol offered a compromise Solution that would
Miss Kathy Gilkey of Albany
visited her grandmothers, Mrs,
permit himself to stay In offlee, but delegate authority.
Lincoln Russell and Ava Gilkey,
The formula proposed tO settle the 15-day-old crisis was this : Friday.
Lon Nol would remain ·as premier but delegate power to Gen .
Pallbearers for Mrs. Wilson's
Sisowath Sirik Matak, his deputy dremler. Sirik Malak has been funeral were Russell Mason,
running lhe government since LOlli Nol 3uffered a stroke Feb. 8. Bob Alkire, Mike Epple, Dana
1
Welsh, Lester Howell and Dale
Williams.
Mrs. Howard Hull Jr. is
.
reported in a serious condition
·
• 1
at her home in Waldo.
AMMAN (UPI)-Secretary of followed by another car carry- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goodwin
State William P. Rogers took a ing Crown Prince Hassan and spent Sunday evening with Mr.
helicopter tour of Jordan today, U. S. Undersecretary 'of State and Mrs. M. A. Epp1e.
including a close look at some for Near Eastern Affairs Joseph Mrs. Susie Heitger is helping
Israeli-held territory.
J. Sisco, they toured a number care for Mrs. Clarence EastRogers' trip Included a look of areas that had been cleared man who is recovering slowly.
at the West Bank of the Jordan of guerrillas.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Payne
and the Syrian Golan HeightsToday's helicopter trip grew have the foundation laid for a
both held by Israel since the out of a conversation between new home.
1967 war. It fpllowed an Rogers and Hussein at an
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Foil Jr.
unescorted tour with King official dinner Sunday night. and family of Columbus spent
Husaein Sunday night through The secretary of state said he the weekend with Minnie Foil.
parts . of Amman that only would like to see more of the Mr. and Mrs. Otis McGrath
weeks ago were strongholds of country, so Hussein arranged and s9n of Albany visited the
Palestlnlan guerrillas.
Earl McGratha Friday evening.
the helicopter tour.
Driving In the king's auto and Rogers, In official talks today Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
before departing for Cairo on were Sunday supper guests of
the next leg of his trip, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
reassured HUSsein ihe United Jewell of ilownington.
States wants an overall settle·
Mr. and Mra. Kenneth Welsh
ment In the Middle East and visited over the weekend with
(Continued from Page 1)
not just the reopening of the Mr. and Mrs. Theo Hinds of
Georgetown sector. Tear gas Suez Canal.
Newark.
was used and bottles and bricks
' new from the ranks of longhaired street people. Commuters in several places were
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
painfully afflicted by the gas.
Saturday,
May 1, 1971
The Pentagon announced lhat
SALESREPORT of
it !\ad committed 4,000 federal
F,our
defendants
were
fined
ObloValleyUvestockCo.
The women's Society of
troops to what it described as
and
another
forfeited
his
bond
HOGS
-175
to
220
lbs.
15.85
to
Christian
Service held its
"Task Force Potomac," and of
10,000 brought in for possible In Pomeroy Mayor Charles 16; 220 to 250 lbs. 15.50 to 15.85; regular meeting at the llome of .
Leger's court Saturday night. Light 14.25 Down; Fat Sows 12 Osie Follrod on Tuesday
use in the disorders.
Fined
were· Charles to 13.50; Boars 11 to 12.20; -Pigs evening, April 20, with an atThey were under the comtendance of 12 members and
mand of Lt. Gen. John H. Hay Meadows, 20, Mason, $100 and 4 to 12.50. Shoats 12 to 19.
costa,
plus
three
days
In
jail,
for
CATTLE- Steers 27 to 31.50; two visitors. The meeting, in
Jr., normally commander of the
driving
while
Intoxicated,
$50
Heifers
18 to 25; Baby Beef29'to charge of Nellie Parker,
18th Airborne Corps at Ft.
·Bragg, N. C. A Marine con- for resisting arrest, $SO for 35; Fat Cows ·l8 to 20.60; Can- president, opened with the
tingent was dispatched to the larceny, and $15 f&lt;lr littering th" ners 16 .to 23.40; Bulls 22 to hymn, "Jesus Is All the World .
to Me." Prayer was by June ·
Justice Department where highway; Larry Ray Graham, 26.50; Milk Cows 175 to 285.
VEAL
CALVES
-No
tops;
·Stearns.
.
Attorney General John N. no address, $10 and costs, in·
Mitchell kept a close watch on toxicatlon, and $SO for larceny; Seconds 36 to 37.85; Medium 30 Roll call was given and eleven
Harry Allan Swartz, 55, to 32.50; ·com. &amp; Hvs. 28 to 30; sick and shut-in calls reported.
the turbulent events.
New evaluation report blanks
There were other pollee- Coolville·, and Gary Lee Culls 28 Down.
Michael,
23,
Minersville,
$5
and
BABY
CALVES
20
to
53.
have
been received and will be
protester clashes at DuPont
filled out at the May meeting.
Circle, another Washington costs each, failure to yield right
SCIOTO
LIVESTOCK
of
way.
The nominating committee
hippie haven, and at Mount
May
1,1971
Benny
Stafford,
34,
New
consisting
of Nina Robinson,
Vernon Square. Both are feeder
Hogs,
200.230,
16.25;
No.
1,
chairma'n; Isola Taylor and
points bringing drivers in from Haven, forfeited his fl8.70 bond
posted
for
speeding,
16.50;
$240,
16;
240-250,
15.50;
Florenqe Spencer, reported the
the Maryland suburbs.
260-280, 14.75; 280-300, 13.50. following names for new ofSows. 13.10.14; boars, 13.70.14; ficers: President, Nellie
stock hogs, 10-14.10; pigs' BH, Parker; Vice President, June
5.25-11.25.
NOVELLA"
Stearns; secretary, Helen
Cattle,
choice
steers,
33-34.10;
RUMMAGE SALE SET
Woode; treasurer, Nina
The Enterprise United good, 29.9().32; Holstein, 27.50- Robinson; secretary of
Metllodlst Youth Fellowship 30.40; choice heifers, 30.90- missions , Eleanor Boyles;
will sponsor a rup1m~ge sale on 32.10; good, 26.80-28.50; good secretary of literature and
Friday and Saturday from 9 a. cows, 22.75-24.25; utility, 19- publications, Thelma Henm. to 4 p. m. at the Smith 21.50; canner and cutter, 18 derson ; secretary of mem·
building, East Second St., down ; bulls, 21.35-27.85; heavy bership and cultivation, Osie
Pomeroy. After 11 a. m. on feeder steers, 26.85-33.35; Mae Follrod ; secretary oi
Saturday Bag Day will be lleld heifers, 25-27.25; stock calves spiritual life, Alma Swartz;
with customers receiving all ·steers, 30.50-35.
nominating committee, IsOla
Veal calves, choice, 50-52; Taylor, chairman; Floren~e .
they can get in a paper bag_for
50 cents .. Anyone having good, 40; medium, 35; baby Spencer and Grace SwarJz. '
donations for the sale can have calves BH, 32-62.
Eleanor Boyles gave a
them picked up by calling Mrs. Ewes and lambs BH, 22-25. missions report on Missionary
William Airson, 992-3317, or
Yotith Convention In Illinois, the ·
Mrs.
Marjorie
Bo\ven
at
992VeleriDs Memorial Hospital largest in history, and youth
\
5441.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS - work In India.
'
The
program,
A
.World
Minnie Johnson, Athens;
Wllli81JI ·Barrett, LangsvUie; Without Work- Reality In the
John Weatherby, Middleport. RoUgh, was led by Helen Woode
SATURDAY DISCHARGES with all members and guesta.
- Eleanor Enloldsen, Addie taking part. Plays, The Case of;
Barton, Rev. Audry Miller, the Welfare Fraud, How Far~
YOU SAVE
Edwin Cross, Avanell Bass, Should the Church Go, and
Perfect for smKrt dinini·Uvina:
Unemployment Among the
Steven Burson.
DOES MAKE A·
rooms, active kitchen·family
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Young was given and the son~
rooms or busy entries and hall·
i
Billy Jones, Racine: Betty Open My Eyes That I May See '•
waya. Novell&amp; ... a hand some
I
reproduction of a wood and teX•
Pooler, Middleport; Ralph and the closing prayer by Isola ·
1
We
·pay
you
to
save
tured tile p~ rqu et Uoor.
Roush, New Haven; Sandra Taylor~
the
pay
is
goodl
.
(and
Herdman; Middleport; Frank The president has received a
No vella is a Vinyl Cuah ionrtor
product created especia lly !or
Lane, Reedsville; F. 0. Boyd, new shipment of gelatin. The
do·it-yours elfers. Simply cut 1t
Racine; Leonard Lunsford, hostess, asSisted by her
t o size and lay it ~ o wn.
daughter, Kathy, and several
Pomeroy.
Like all Vinyl Cushion fl ora by
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - others, served a delicious lunch.
•·Congoleum, Nove lla has a 9linyl ,
Tony Hutton, Melissa Riggs, The next meeting will be held
. Vlnyllinish. It needs no waxinK.
Arthur Sylvester, Helen Bar- May 1&amp; at 8 p. m. at the home of
~nd r ealats fl pills and scuffs.
tels, Granville Wamsley, Btuy Helen Woode with Eleanor
RATI.
Come iii and see Novella todayl
Boyles as program leader.
Jones.
·

,·•r !

Lantern Lit Watch Kept over Places o Death

.a.,.: The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 3, 1971

(Continued
from Page 1)
I

•

1

-w.

I ,

••b

·,

�l-'nleDallySenilnel.~J,O.,May4,1971

Family Night Held
Ajlpi'Oiimately IOo persons .BlaetU..r, Michael Smith, Mark
attended a family nJght ob- Mitch, !Sherrie Mitch, Fae
aervance Sunda)' eveninll at Reibel, Usa Thonias, · BeCky
~ty Ci)urch. . · : .
Tbolllas,Cathy131aetU..r,Mary
A covered· d1sh .dmner Helen Blaettnllr, Faith Perrin
preceded a program planned by and Beth Perrin.
·
·
RDy Mayer, Sunday School . In a candlelight prooessioJllll ·
superintendent. Prayer was by to conclude tile program were
· the Rev. W. H. Petrin, pastor, . Faith and Beth Perrin, Usa arid
· :.and Mrs. Donald Mayer sang, Becky Thomas, · Kathy and
·.:. ~ow Great Thou Art with the Mary Helen Blaetlnar, Fae
.'· ,congregatl~n joining in the Reibel, and Sherrie Mitch. They
· ~. Jamce Holter read, The sang "Where He Leads Me I
,Old Fashioned Mother.
, Will Follow" and carried
• Taking roles in ;a playlet lighted candles. Ingrid Hawley
l"'litle&lt;j; Be Our Guest, with a was the narrator. Miss Nancy
'diningrOOiilscene.as the setting Jo Mayer was pianist for the
. were Roy Mayer as the father ; program. Benediction was by
Mary Skinner, the mother; the pastor.
!)avid Harris, Tom Hawley,
Rick Blaettnar, Faith Perrin
and Lisa Thomas as theii
children, and Mark Mitch as the
oi'phan boy. Mrs. Ben Neutzllng
·l!a&amp; the voice for the presentation.
· ; Ulider the direction of Mrs.
Holzer Medical center, First
Don Thomas a spiritual was Ave. and Cedar St. General
S!Jllg by Danny Thomas, Rick· visiting hours ~ and 7-11 p.m.
Maternity vlaiting hours 2:30 to
4:30. p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Dencil E.
Reynolds, Pt . Pleasant, a
Mn.HerllertRouab
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
. Molly, Larry and Amy Fisher W. Young, Wellston, a
oJ Racine spent the · weekend daughter; Mr. and Mrs, Fred
with their grandparents, Mr. Hill, Gallipolis, a daughter; Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Shields, while and Mrs. Thomas E. Bratcher,
their mother, Mrs. Marlene New Haven, a son; and Mr. and
Fiaher and Lucille Swackhamer Mrs. Russell E. Olexa, Pt.
attended an Alpha Delta Kappa Pieassnt, a daughter.
convention at Cleveland.
Discharges
Mrs. Ruby R. Brogan, Mrs.
Mr. and Mn. Ralpb Ours and Gerald W. Dennison, Mrs .
son, Howard, of New Brighton, Terry Dickerson, Mrs. Jesse
Pa., spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Donohew and James Frazier, Jeffrey Wayne
Miss Loretta Ours at Mid- Haner, Mrs. George C. Hen·
jlleporl. ·On Sunday afternoon derson, Mrs. Myrtle . F.
Holcomb, Betty C. Knapp,
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ours, Mr. N
GR
M Fia E
lind Mrs. Roy Donohew, Mrs.
orman . ose, rs.
vy .
Wiley Ours, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sigman, Mrs. James M. Smith,
Ours and Howard and Miss Mrs. Donald Lee Stanley and
Sandy Greathouse attended a son, Mrs. John E. Thornton.

HOSPITAL
, NEWS

~pple Grove

.
N
. ews, EVents

IEM:;;;;t s;;~w,·c;;]'
;;d;'''Jit
'*
·
TUESDAY
REGUL,o\R MEETING,
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p,m. Tuesday, at temple.
CHESTER •LODGE · 323
Daughters of America, Tuesda;
8 p.m. Good of lhe Order
committee will hold silent
auction.
POMEROY Chapter '186,
OES Tuesday' 7:30
Mas~nic Temple.
p.m .

Mrs. GilkeyGiven Shower

Lesson Was .on 'Giving

BIRm ANNOUNCED

WEDNESDAY
. A lesson on giving was in- Mr~. Margaret Seidenabel is a
SYRACUSE - Mr. and'
MIDDLEPORT Firem~n's eluded in the teacher's thought patient at Veterans Memorial Mrs.
Harold
Burke,
·
· ·
Syratuse, are IJ!IIOI!JICID&amp; lhe
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. Wed- . at the Thursday night. meeting H&lt;X.pital.
nesday, firehail.
. . of ~e One-won.Qne Class of !be The Rb. Robert Kuhn gave birth of lbelr lint cbUd, 1108•
. muRSDAY
Pomeroy First Baptist Church. devotions using ·sCripture from aamed Mlcbael Dimon. 'l)e
EVANGELINE Chapter 172, ~e ~e story pertained to an st. John 1~ and Pfayer. Mrl!. infant wa.·boi'D oa May I at
OES, 7:30 Thursday, Masonic lndum g1rl who had given away Audrey Young prealt;led at the the Holzer Medical Ceater.
Temple. Past matrons and past a vase which was returned to meeting. Mrs..Harry Bailey an!! He weighed eight pounds, IO
patrons to be honored. ·
her when ail other possessions. Mrs. L. P. Sterrett were named ·OUIIces.
CATHOLIC Women's Club 8 were destroyed by fire, pointing as hostesses for the May · Grandpareala are Mr. aDd
p.m. Thursday, Sacred
up the moral, "what I kept I meeting with Mr. and Mrs. ·· Mrs. Bert Bodlmer of MidChurch following Mass and lost, and what I gave away I Willlarn Watlon to have lhe dleport and Mn. Clyde
Rosar/at 7:15p.m. Program on have."
devotions. Mrs. Burton Smith Clooch of Columbus. Mr. aDd
drug abuse by the Rev. Arthur Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cook and Mrs Ellen Couch served a Mrs. Cballie Greer of
Lwld Hostesses Mrs. David thanked the class for remem- salad c~se. Also attending Syracase and Verne Blazer of'
Ohlinger Mrs. George Miller brances on their. golden wed- was Mrs.·Geol'ge Skinner.
Gallipolis
are
great·
Helen W~ddell, Mabel Waddell: ding anniversary. Thank you
grandparents.
and Anna McGee.
cards were read from Mrs. ·
.

He~rt

Shower Given.
Mrs. Leach

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May~. 1971

7,30 p.m. Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Repdr'•
"""nn fund drive
and armual meeting.
POMEROY El
ta ""'A
emen ry r •
executive board, 1 p.m.
Thursdayatschool,newandoid
officers to attend.
PHILATHEA Societ 7,30
·
· y,l
p.m . Thursday Mldd,eport
Church of Chnst, Mothers ~Y
program with Mrs. Don Erwm
Mrs. Donna Williamson. Cake, In harg
mints and punch were served.
c
e.
Attending were Mrs. Jean
Will, Mrs. Carla Werry, Mrs.
CHOIR TO MEET
Lydia Gilkey, Mrs . Clara
The girls' choir of the Sacred
Gilkey, Mrs. Linda Laudermilt, Heart Catholic Church is to
and those who won prizes. meet at the church at 6 p.m.
Others presenting gifta to Mrs. Wednesday. At 7 p.m. those in
Gilkey were Mrs. Roseanne grades one through eight who
Sebo, Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs. will be participating in the .May
Katie Evans, Mrs. Ruth Ann crowning procession will meet,
Mulford, Mrs. Shirley Wolfe, along with th6se who are
Mrs. Mary Gilkey, Mrs. Mary preparing for their first Holy
Romine, Mrs. Blanche Ed· Communion. At the same hour,
wards, Mrs. Marie Van Cooney, the Rev. Fr. Bernard Krajcovic
and Mrs. Joe Schuler.
will meet with aU high school
students at the church.

mother. It was reported that
.

Eag1es Class Meets

l\T.

,

11Bmpa IS

Dead

Mrs.

Mrs. Th
, omas Wilson, "", of
••
Nampa, Idaho, the former
dOut ti~f the!t D_epthsused" wbasMrthe Wilda Stacey of Middleport,
evo ona optc
. Y s. died Sunday . night during
Helen Teaford at a meeting of childbirth at a Nampa hospital.
the Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Church
The Infant daughter survives
Thursday night at the home of along with her husband, a son,
Mr
d M Ca II N .
E~an Thomas, ~·· her father,
· an
rs. rro 0!'1'18 • Bill Stacey of New Haven W
Groue singing of, ,Blessed v.a., several brothers 'and·
Assurance, a poem, My Hand In
te
d h
dm th
God's, and prayer by Miss SIS rs,. an . er gran
er,
Marcia Karr opened the Mrs. Vlctorlll Stacey· of Midmeeting conducted by :Miss dieport. Her mother preceded
Eleanor Robson.
her ~ death. .
10
A rununage sale was ten- While .living
Middleport,
tatively set for June 4 and 5. Mrs. Wilson· was an active
Refreshments were served to member of the Middleport
those named and Mrs. Irene Church of the Naza~ene..
Hoback, Charles Hoback, Mrs.
Mr. Stacey and his wife left
Mary Lisle, Mrs. Vera Van Monday by plane for N~pa
Meter, Millard VanMeter, Tony where funeral ·services will be
Van Meter, Debra Norris, Mrs. held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Opal Kloes, and the Rev. Shepherd F?f1eral _Home. The
Forrest Donley.
Wilson family resl~es at 411
E~ghth Ave. South 10 Nampa.
SYRACUSE _ "Taken From

°

Art

Johnson

was

honored with a layette shower
recently at the horne of Mrs.

Paul Hu~on, Pomeroy. Cohostesses for the 'shower were
Mrs. Doris Woodyard, Mrs.
Pauline Greathouse, and Mrs.
Rita McDaniel.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Wilma
Tillis,
Mrs. Pull
Mona
Miss Freda
Cake and
and
1'ns. Neal,
punch were served. Others
attending were Mrs. Betty Van
Meter, Miss Janet Neal, and
Mrs. Marjorie .Grogan.
Also presenting gifts to Mrs.
Johnson were Mrs. Mabie
Tracy, Mrs. Jean Taylor, Mrs.
Jean Wright, Mrs. Maxine
Moore, Mrs. Emma Adams,
Mrs. Linda Patterson, Mrs.
Selma Call, Mrs. Sally Sauvage,
Mrs . Barbara Barr, Mrs.
Frances Hewetson, Miss Enna
Smith and Miss Mary Artis.
'

Stone Paces Utah -Triumph

SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)By Unifed"Pres~ lntarn~tional . Baltimore
Utah
Stars fans now ~now why
13 9 .591 1
National League
.Washington _ 12 12· .500 3
Utah Coach Bill Sharman calls
·
East
10 I i ..476 31/ 2
New York
_ _ _ _ _ ) ~George, Stone the . hottest
10 12 .455 • 4
Detroii
New York . ~- LS ~~~ GB Cleveland
feserve i·n the. American
8 15 .348 61f2
Pittsburgh
14 10 .583 i"
West
Basketball Association.
w. L. Pet. GB
Major LeagueLeaders
Montreal
9 7 .563 '2
Stone came off the Stars
Oakland
18 10 .643 ...
By United Press International
St . Lou is
14 12 .538 2
bench l&lt;jle in the first quarter
California
14 11 .560 2lf2
Leading Batters
Chicago
10 14 .4l7 5
12 12 .500 4
Nationa-11 League
Kansas City
PhiladeiP.hia 8 14 .364 6
Monday night to ignite a rally
Chicago
10 13 .435 S'h
GAB R. H. Pet. that carried Utah past the
West
10 14 .417 6
Garr, All
23 95 17 38 .400
W. L Pet. GB Minnesota
the
Milwaukee
9 13 .409 6
Mays, SF
22 76 17 28 .368 Kentucky Colonels in
San Francisco 19 '" 6 .760
· Monda·y•s Results
Millan, All 23 94 9 34 .362 opening game of the ABA
Atlanta
12 11 .522 6
{No gamesscheduled 1
Staub, Mont 17 64 12 23 .359
Los Angeles 13 13 .500 6'12
....Houston·.. -· 12 --~ 13 . . 480 7
TodaVTPfifbable Pitchers - .6r.ock ,SI.L 25 99 20 35 .354 championship playoffs, 136-117.
New York {Kli ne · 3·11 at Stargll, Pitt 22 82 16 29 .354
Ci!lcinnatl
9 13 .409 81!:2
Minnesota {Hall 0-2), night.
Alou, Hou
16 48 6 17 .354
San Diego
5 18 .217 13
Washington 1Bosman 2-1) at · Bonds, SF
21 88 22 31 .352
Monday 's Results
Phila 3 St. Lou is 2 {night)
NY 3 Chi 2 Ill innings-night)
IOo)ly games scheduled)
Oakland {Fingers 1·31 at
GAB R. H. Pet.
·
Today's Probable Pitchers
Oliva,Minn 22 92 19 36 .391
Chicago I Pappas 3-2) at New Detroit (Coleman J.OL night .
Kansas City {Dal Canton 1·ll Murcer, NY 21 78 11 28 .359
York IRyan 2·0), night.
St. Louis {Reuss 2-3) at at Cleveland {Hargan 0-41. Schaal. KC 24 78 16 27 .346 Coach Nolan P . SwackYstzk, Bos 22 76 22 26 .342 hamer's Meigs MaraudPhiladelphia {Short 2·21. night. night .
California
{Murphy
1-21
at
Kllbw, Minn 24 91 9 31 .341 ers defeated Ironton , GalHouston I Blasingame 2-2) at
Montreal {Stoneman 2·11. night. Baltimore I Palmer 4-0), night. Norlhp, Det
lipolis and Logan in a quad· Wednesday's Games
22 85 17 29 .341
Cincinnati !McGlothlin l ·ll at
28
.337
rangular golf match on the
Los Angeles !Downing 2-ll, New York ~~ Minnesota, night Jhnsn, Ball 21 83 12
19
.333
Washington
at
Milwaukee,
night
·
Unser.
Wash
21
57
6
night.
·
Pomeroy Golf Course Monday
MCrw, Wsh 19 45 13 15 .333 evening.
Atlanta {Jarvis 0-21 at San Boston at C~icago, ni9ht
Oakland at Detroit, noghl
Rojas, KC
24 94 14 31 .130
Diego {Phoebus 2-3), night.' :
The host Marauders totaled
1
Home Runs ·
Pittsburgh I Blass 3· 0) at Sa n Kansas Cily at Cleveland, night
California
at
Baltimore,
night
National
leagi.Je:
Aaron
,
At
I
Francisco ISlone 2·01. night.
208, Ironton, finished with 213,
and S.targell. Pitt 11 ; Bench,
Wedn~day's Gam.es
SE;OAL
champion Gallipolis
ABA Playoff Standings
Con 9: Cepeda, All and Bonds.
Chicago at !'lew York , night
had 215 and Logan 220.
SF 7.
St. Louis at Philadelphia. night By United Press International
I
Final
RoundBest
of
1)
American
.
League
:
Oliva
.
Houston at Montreat, night
W. L. Minn 7; Powell, Halt 6; Horton ,
• Cincinnati at Los·Angeles, night
1 0 Del, White, NY and Bando, Oak
Atlanta at San Diego 2 twilight Utah
0
1 5.
Kentucky
Pittsburgh at San Francisco
Runs Batted In
Monda
American League
.National
League: Starge ll ,
Utah
136
East
Poll
28; Aaron, All 23; Mays,
w.
SF 19 ; &lt;;epeda, All and Colbert..
14
SF 18.
American League: Killebrew,
Minn 23; Powell , Bait, Ya s- By United Press International
Time does not seem to be on
trzemski, Bas and Northrup,
Del 20; Bando, Oak 18 .
the side ·of the Chicago Cubs.
Pitching
The Cubs were the victims of
National League; Carlton , St.
a
nin th inning call by umpire
L 51; Upshaw ; All 5-2;
Dierker. Hou 4-0; Seaver, NY .4 - Mel Steiner that prevented
1; Jen k ins, Chi 4-2.
Chicago from going ahead in a
American League: Blue, Oak
6-1; Palmer, Bait and Siebert, 2·2 contest against the New
Bos 4-0 ; McNa lly , Ball and York Mets Monday night.
· FOR THE SUPPLIES
Fisher. Cal 4·1; Lolich . Del,
The Cubs, runners-up in the
Perry, Minn and Hunter , Oak dYOU WILL NEED
National
League East the past
2.
FOR NEW OR
two seasons, have continually

\}tah dropped behind . 32-19 reserves dropped in 37 points;
22 for Sione and Boone ha~ 15,
t.p_,. give \he Stars a .J6 point
halftime edge. "'
Kentucky, led by Daniel
carrier ,with 36 points; rallied
to close the gap to six points
with just under a minute to
play in the third quarter, but
Glen Combs, Zelmo Beaty and
Red Robbins ail connected with
six points each to shoot the
Stars out of reach .

with 3:04 remaining ·in the first
period as Klmiucky's AII-ABA·
rookie center Dan ISsei- paced
the Colonels with 17 points in
the first 12 minutes. ·
As the Colonels closed up the
center lane, · Sharman sent in
Stone, and later Ron Boone, for
additional out.side shooting
strength.
In the last 15 minutes of the
first half, the two stellar

Beaty and Stone. he~ded the
SU.rs' scoring with 26 points
apiece, followed liy Boone with
24, Willie Wis~ with J8 .and
Mcrv Jackson ·added 15: Beaty
topped all, ~ebounders with 16.
After carrier's 36 points
output, including six threepointers, Kentucky's next best
scorer was Issei with 'll, and
Walt Simon dropped in 11.
The Stars' torrid second
quarter set a ABA playoff

record for most points scored ·· ·
in a single period. Utah tied IIH!.:· · ~
old record of 48 points set by ' ··
Pittsburgh in 1968 when, Stone ''.i .
sank a ju111per with 51·seconds :-l '
remaining. Then Robbins set :·. ·
the record with a lay-in with .:
only five seconds on the clock. "•
Both learns take a breather ·:
today before returning to action ·,
in Salt Lake's Salt Palace·;
poliseum Wednesd~y night.
~·

~B~~~~~~e{N:;~i;~fr~i3 ~h~~~~· g~~ti~:~~er}JJL~~eii : ~:: Marauders Top Champs In 4-Way Match

Koenig, Kay Sharp, Paity
Capehart and
Jeff
. d Tammy,
· Bernice
ers, Cin y Workman, and
Kay Morris and Billy. Also
presenting gifts to Mrs. Leach
were Mrs. Stella Darnell, Mrs.
Mary Walburn, Mrs: Frieda
Mossman, Mrs. Beatrice
Rairden and Mr Ke1'th W""•·
'
s.
""""·
KNIGHTS ARE HOME ·
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight,
Middleport, have returned from
a week's visit in scenic
Williamsburg,,Va. They visited
Mrs. Knight's niece who is in
college there.

·

medalist honors Friday,
finished with 40 yesterday. E.
Skagstad and Mike Hurley each
fired a 41, Jeff Click 42 and Rick
Anderson 49.
. For GAHS, Steve Gardner
was low man with 39. John
Cunningham had a 40, Mike
Shaver 43, Dow Saunders 46 and
Nike Noe 47.
Bill Henderson was lo~ man

Bill Hensler, who had a bad
day at Ironton Friday in the 12th
annual SEO match, came back
with a tw&lt;HJver-par 37 to pace
the Marauders
Monday
evening .
Bob Merry had 40, Steve Story
41, Chuck Hannah ~2 and Frank
Giroiarni 48.
For the runnerup Tigers, Bob
Anderson, who captured loop

•

for Loga n with 40. Chuck Helber
bad a 41, Jay Boeuger 44, Bruce
Goldsbury 47 and Jeff Cole 48.
Pt. Pleasant is at Gallipolis
today (the match was originally
scheduled at Pt. Pleasant) and
Huntington High is at Gallipolis
Friday .
The Blue Devils are now 21-3
on the season.

COME FROM MARION
Mr. and Mrs. Wliliam Houck
and daughters, Carol, Beth·and
Lynn of Marion were weekend
guests of their parents, Mr:and
Mrs. Perry Mitch, Middleport,
and Mr. ahd Mrs. Robert
Houck, Gallipolis.

SEE US

e PAINTS
e MARLITE
e FORMICA
e PANELING

e INSULATION
e ANTIQUING KITS
e MOLDINGS
e S.S. MOLDINGS
e KITCHEN CARPETING

• ARMSTRONG CEILING TILE
e PLUMBING FIXTURES e PLUMBING SUPPLIES
e CERAMIC WALL AND FLOOR
I

Electrical Wiring
and
for

E

T~ose

Kitchen Cabinets
and
Buill-In Applian;;es

Meta i!Shelf Bnickels
and Standards For
That Wait Arrangement

Aluminum Storm
Doors and Windows

'
Amerock. tabinet
Hardware

Folding DoorsBoth Wood &amp; Plastic

ALSO MANY TOOLS F'OR THE DOIT· YOURSELF HANDY MAN.

King Builders
992·3748

. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

N. 2ND AVE.

Lonborg
Wins 4th

check insurance on boats,

been criticized as a bail club
that has grown old collectively.
The average age of Monday
night's starting lineup for
Chicago, led by the ageless
wonder Ernie Banks, was 32 despite an attempt during the
off.season to start a youth
movement.
Ten players who survived the
final spring cuts were not on the
25-man opening day roster one
year ago. However, time once
again was the critical factor in
deciding Monday night's ball
game.
With a 1-1 count on Ron Santo
International League Standings
By United Press International and the score tied, relief pitcher
W L Pel. GB

camping and sports
equipment - also family .
accident and liability

10

4

singled home Jerry Grote with
two out to give the Mets a 3-2
win and their sixth straight
extra inning triumph.
In the only other Na tional
League game played, the
Philadelphia Philiies edged the
St. Louis Cardinals, 3-2. There
were no games scheduled in the
American League.

Tug McGraw committed a balk,
according to third base umpire
Stan Landres . As opposing
pitcher Ken Holtzman came
trotting home with the go-ahead
run, home plate umpire Steiner
waved
Holtzman
back,
signaling that time had been
called before McGraw had
taken his foot off the pitching
rubber .
McGraw went on to strike out
Santo and go I John Callison on a
grounder to end the threat.
. In the lith inning, Tommie
Agee, who did not start the
game because of a bruised rib,

Standings

Syracuse

game.
Lonborg gave up a clean single to Russ Nageison in the
first inning, then allowed only
three more base runners in
stretching his string of scoreless innings to 23. He struck
out eight and walked two in
hurling his fourth complete
game.
The Colonels scored once in
the sixth and four times in the
eighlll as they climbed into a
tie for second place with the
rain-idled Charleston Charlies
'
one-and-a·half games behind

the league-leading Syracuse
Chiefs. .
'
Rick Miller tripled and came
home on Jose Calero's single
for Louisville's first run. Christ
Coletta singled home two runs
and John Mason doubled in two
more in the eighth inning, in
which the Colonels routed Tole·
do starting pitcher Bill Gilbreth.
Gilbreth fanned 10 batters before he weakened in the eighth.
Two other scheduled lL
games, Winnipeg at Charleston
and Syracuse at Tidewater,
were both rained out.

- . : __

: : __ _: : : __ _

Downing -Chi lds

Downing· ·

Childs
Agency, Inc.
200 N. 2nd
Ml

$5000

.

'

Dodge. Dart has the highest resale value in its field.

For Elegance in Pipe

CUI1'1PI ca$h

Smoking Pleasure, Select a

Pipe that Needs
Breaking ln .

No

T
el
awney JeW ers

THE CITY LOAN COMPANY
125 E. MAl N

422 Second Ave. .

« "'' "''~~

992-2171

PPM ER~Y, 0 . ., ,

/fS Che M)le M:J'Ithe t:ak}e ~
a~e ~hg fhit bAll7

'

AUTOMOBILE LOANS

CI1Y.

.

"· '"'

01m

In Ohio, all roads lead to Ford Country

HITCH
PIN

'
• Belt mouldin~
• Remote-control outside
mirror, left side
• Convenience ll&amp;ht package
• Body side mouldlnp
(with vinyl inserts).

BDYB
.Dodge
AUTHORIZED DEALERS

PINn» t1919*

Jlay let tin at our everydq low prlee ud get 30%
elf oa the 2nd tire, plu taxes ud m:h•ap tln!e,

R. H•. RAWLINGS SONS CO•
&amp;Second sne;, Middleport, o.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•acteral Deposit lnturtace eor,...·~+Jon

'

.

Lowest lrequency-oHepair rate of
any American car, according 1o an
independent survey. Lowest insurance,

too. And now tha "simple machine"
offers two new choices : a 4·door for
family convenience . .. America's

.•. strong, machined

lowest-priced V-8.

Zinc: platwd, ~~~ pin
with 4W' useable

length •

·ONLY

03.99-529.1

MORE PEOPLE DRIVE DODGE DART
E TODAY
THAN ANY OTHER COMPACT IN THE U.S.

''

d,tlvlng) , oll, service, Insurance, too.

•••on famous 23' Field &amp; Boad ™Rears

YOU lET
01 THIS SPECIALLY EQIIPPED HARDTOP:
• 3·speed automatic transmission
(no charge)
·• VInyl roof
• 6.95 x 14 white sidewall tires
• Deluxe wheel covers
• "Rlm Blow" deluxe steering wheel
• ~umper guards (front and rear)

INSURED TOno;ooo.oo

America's hotlast•selllng, lillie
money-saver ... on gas (25 mpg
proved In simulated city/suburban

HERE'S ~ WHIT

Isn't it about t_ime you traded in your
old car for a new one? Keep the cost of
a new car down by using a bank
finance plan. Apply for a loan today.
DE~SITS

America's ~ CQmpact Deal

..

FAMOUS FIELD &amp; ROADThe original23° bar angle
at prices that can't be beat.
•Ford't suggested rttaU price excluding dealer preparation charges (If any) , transportation charges state and
local laKes. Cara are illustrated w1th wl\itewal!s ($29), and eKterlor decor ootlon (Pmto S60, Mav8rlck $52j.
'

, ,,, . .

~~::":::::::=::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gallipolis, Ohio

OFF

TilE

·.

call for

,··~; Roush.

2nd

Agency.

We have loans up to

Straight

1

coverage. Be sure of
proper . insur~nce with a
fr ee
sur vey
by
the

·NEED MORETHAN THIS?

.714 -

Charleston
9 6 .600 1v,
Louisville
9 6 .600 1'1, EXE· M~ GOLFERS
Richmond ·
8 6 .57 1 2
r •
Winnipeg
6 8 .429 4
NEW YORK (UPI)- Three
Toledo
6 10 .375 5
f · I golf
JCS d
By United Press International Tidewater
6 10 .375 5
pro
esswna
ers,
· · nea •
Tom Shaw and Dave EichelberR
h
Unbeaten Jim Lonborg, eager oc ester
4 8 .333 5
to return to the Boston Red
Monday's Results
ger Monday won exemption
Sox, won his fourth straight ~~~i~~~e ~t T~~~~l~ston, ppd, from qualifying fo~ the 1971
game for . the Louisville rain
United States Open Champion·
Colonels Monday night as he Syracuse at Tidewater, ppd, ship at Merion Golf Club,
. ·~~~~he~:~. Uhe ..Toleojo Mud rain
Ardmore, Pa . Eichelberger won
.!'
with 'ljiline-hit,~O shutou( _ _ __:&gt;'_.._··:...
f _ _ ___,~.exemp!)Pn •~local stl\g~.
in an
League

Inlernatidrl,~l

"Vacation's
almost here!"
Yes. and a good time to

Cubs Drop 3i2 Tilt To Mets

REMODELING PROJECTS

.

·,·

\

·Mrs.. Mamie Snider, Mrs.
Barbara Colmer and Mrs.
Frieda Henderson entertained
recenUy with a layelle shower
honoring Mrs. Paulette. Leach
at the Henderson home.
A blue and pink color scheme
was carried out in the · '
decorations. Cake, ice cream, '
mints, nutS and coffee were
served. Games · were 'played
with prizes going to Betty
WhiUatcb, Eunice Eblin, and
.J:Iyil~ .!!:~lin, wi\11..9Idia ~Bing
winnmg the ctoor pnze.
···
Others attending the shower

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Norris
of Kingston, Ohio announce the
birth of a daughter, Eugenia
Raye at Berger Hospital at
Circlevllle. They also have a son
Jody. Grandparents are Mrs.
Alvill Norris, Pomeroy, and Mr.
tland ~choir cimceri at Kyger ho
~reek High School. Miss . : ·· and Mrs. Paul Bostick and Mrs. Herschel Crider, LitUe
L.oretta Ours was a director.
Hocking .
' Miss Sandy Greathouse of and family of Dwlbar were
New Brighton, Pa,. arrived weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
·Saturday for a week's visit with Robert Wood and Debbie, and
TWQ-DAY SALE
Miss Loretta Ours at Mid- Waid Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Evangeline Chapter, O.E.S.
dleport
Milford Frederick and family of will · hold a rummage sale
: Mr. 'Robert McKelvey, a Dorcas spent Sunday afternoon Friday .and Saturday in the
Middleport Masonic Temple
~er resident, ls a surgical In the Woods ~orne. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Whittington basement beginning at 9 a.m.
l'lltient at st. Joseph H&lt;X.pital.
(:ards would be appreciated·.
of St. Albans, W. Va., Orvllle each morning. All items are to
Jarrell and daughter, Kim, be taken to the temple ThurI Mr . and Mrs. Don Stevensof AI St
M
Zih
oden, W. Va., were dinner
an
over' . rs. e p a sday. For pickup residents may
eats of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Boggess and Wayne Roseberry telephone Mrs. John Lyons, 992..
andc ailedonMr andMr spent~aywithMr.andMrs. 3700 or Mrs. Harry Cheshire,
·
s. Jess Anderson
992-J!!!m.
St.
Clair Hill and Mr. and Mrs.
J fl Mille ·
t
s
d
11arry Hill.
e
r spen a un ay
Sf. Clair Hill and Harry Hili with Roger Roush.
IN HOSPITAL
have returned home after being Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Miller
Mrs. Caddie Wickham of
surgical patients at Holzer were visitors at Zanesville
Pomeroy
was admitted to
Medical Center and University Sunday· .
.
HcX.pital in Columbus, Both are Edward Miller was shoppmg Holzer Medical Center Monday
after fracturing her left hip In a
improving satisfactorily.
In Pomeroy Saturday.
fall
at ber Union Avenue home.
Marvin Hili of Columbus Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gasllili
spent a weekend ith hi of Wellston spent a weekend' at
w
s their cottage.
SALE PLANNED
grandmother, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe. Mr
. and .... Le te M
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hill and
.
uus. s r anue1
A rummage sale will be held
Dolly and Mrs. Sua&amp;nn Wolfe of and daughter of Logan were by the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
Cheshire were dinner guests recent guests of Mr. and Mrs; Tuesday and Wednesday In the
Paul Manuel.
Smith building, Second St.,
Sunday of Mrs. Wolfe.
Roger Roush completed his
Pomeroy.
Danny Hill. of Moore Haven, student teaching at Letart Falls
F1a., baa· amved to spend the Elem ta Sch001 last
k
en ry
wee ·
sununer with his uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill. On Friday Mrs. Roy Buck and
· , · Th nam of Mr
d ·Mr the fifth grade held a surprise Racine spent Thursday evening
·, ·
e
es
· an
s. party for him. They presented with Mrs. Iva Orr .
'It
d
ed
. . Robert Smith were unin- him ith
Mrs . Irma Wilson, Mrs.
· · tenUoaaily omitted from the
w
a g1 an serv
;: . list of those · attending the refrosh.ments of. cupcakes and Herbert Roush and Mrs. Doris
Sayre called' on Mrs. Bertha
· · · Grange and wiener roast at the Kooi-Aid.
· ' home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Mrs. Leonard Siders ,of Robinson Thursday evening.
Sayre recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Early Roush,
local, Mrs. Gladys Jones of
Porner9y were Sunday dinner
· · '. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jim

' ·' , Mr. Hoyt Webb of Newlon
·:.. .Falls, Mr. and . Mrs.
Burton
I ' '
•
' : Webb of Mansfield were called
· ·'' borne due to the serious illness
· 'of lheir father, Mr. L. D. Webb
· who is a patient at Veterans
Memorial H&lt;X.pital.
. : Raymond Bell of Oak Grove
was a Sunday guest of his son,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and
Loran. Mr. and Mrs. Paul,.
Erwin of Racine Route spent
·Sunday afternoon with the
Bells.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
Sr. were shopping at HecklJ 'tn
Point Pleuant •Sunday and
called on Mrs. Virgie Stewart
at West Columbia enroute

·''
:·'

.

.

,!!~~~ i!A~!:Th~sd~; ~=~~::uawi~=~~m a~~r ~:; Mrs. Wdson of ~~~:;; :;'sh:;; :+ ;:;~~~:~~r~u~~~. B~!~

Pink and blue streamers
decorated a bassinet· for a·
Iaye tte shower honormg Mrs.
Linda Gilkey at the home of
Mr s. Herschel Gilkey with Mrs.
Linda Rathburn as the hostess.
Games were played with the
door prize being won by Mrs.
Kay Laudermilt. Games prizes
were won by Mrs . Eileen
Martin, Mrs. Delma Karr, and

,,,
•,

i

I

I

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I .

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·

�l-'nleDallySenilnel.~J,O.,May4,1971

Family Night Held
Ajlpi'Oiimately IOo persons .BlaetU..r, Michael Smith, Mark
attended a family nJght ob- Mitch, !Sherrie Mitch, Fae
aervance Sunda)' eveninll at Reibel, Usa Thonias, · BeCky
~ty Ci)urch. . · : .
Tbolllas,Cathy131aetU..r,Mary
A covered· d1sh .dmner Helen Blaettnllr, Faith Perrin
preceded a program planned by and Beth Perrin.
·
·
RDy Mayer, Sunday School . In a candlelight prooessioJllll ·
superintendent. Prayer was by to conclude tile program were
· the Rev. W. H. Petrin, pastor, . Faith and Beth Perrin, Usa arid
· :.and Mrs. Donald Mayer sang, Becky Thomas, · Kathy and
·.:. ~ow Great Thou Art with the Mary Helen Blaetlnar, Fae
.'· ,congregatl~n joining in the Reibel, and Sherrie Mitch. They
· ~. Jamce Holter read, The sang "Where He Leads Me I
,Old Fashioned Mother.
, Will Follow" and carried
• Taking roles in ;a playlet lighted candles. Ingrid Hawley
l"'litle&lt;j; Be Our Guest, with a was the narrator. Miss Nancy
'diningrOOiilscene.as the setting Jo Mayer was pianist for the
. were Roy Mayer as the father ; program. Benediction was by
Mary Skinner, the mother; the pastor.
!)avid Harris, Tom Hawley,
Rick Blaettnar, Faith Perrin
and Lisa Thomas as theii
children, and Mark Mitch as the
oi'phan boy. Mrs. Ben Neutzllng
·l!a&amp; the voice for the presentation.
· ; Ulider the direction of Mrs.
Holzer Medical center, First
Don Thomas a spiritual was Ave. and Cedar St. General
S!Jllg by Danny Thomas, Rick· visiting hours ~ and 7-11 p.m.
Maternity vlaiting hours 2:30 to
4:30. p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Dencil E.
Reynolds, Pt . Pleasant, a
Mn.HerllertRouab
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
. Molly, Larry and Amy Fisher W. Young, Wellston, a
oJ Racine spent the · weekend daughter; Mr. and Mrs, Fred
with their grandparents, Mr. Hill, Gallipolis, a daughter; Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Shields, while and Mrs. Thomas E. Bratcher,
their mother, Mrs. Marlene New Haven, a son; and Mr. and
Fiaher and Lucille Swackhamer Mrs. Russell E. Olexa, Pt.
attended an Alpha Delta Kappa Pieassnt, a daughter.
convention at Cleveland.
Discharges
Mrs. Ruby R. Brogan, Mrs.
Mr. and Mn. Ralpb Ours and Gerald W. Dennison, Mrs .
son, Howard, of New Brighton, Terry Dickerson, Mrs. Jesse
Pa., spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Donohew and James Frazier, Jeffrey Wayne
Miss Loretta Ours at Mid- Haner, Mrs. George C. Hen·
jlleporl. ·On Sunday afternoon derson, Mrs. Myrtle . F.
Holcomb, Betty C. Knapp,
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ours, Mr. N
GR
M Fia E
lind Mrs. Roy Donohew, Mrs.
orman . ose, rs.
vy .
Wiley Ours, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sigman, Mrs. James M. Smith,
Ours and Howard and Miss Mrs. Donald Lee Stanley and
Sandy Greathouse attended a son, Mrs. John E. Thornton.

HOSPITAL
, NEWS

~pple Grove

.
N
. ews, EVents

IEM:;;;;t s;;~w,·c;;]'
;;d;'''Jit
'*
·
TUESDAY
REGUL,o\R MEETING,
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p,m. Tuesday, at temple.
CHESTER •LODGE · 323
Daughters of America, Tuesda;
8 p.m. Good of lhe Order
committee will hold silent
auction.
POMEROY Chapter '186,
OES Tuesday' 7:30
Mas~nic Temple.
p.m .

Mrs. GilkeyGiven Shower

Lesson Was .on 'Giving

BIRm ANNOUNCED

WEDNESDAY
. A lesson on giving was in- Mr~. Margaret Seidenabel is a
SYRACUSE - Mr. and'
MIDDLEPORT Firem~n's eluded in the teacher's thought patient at Veterans Memorial Mrs.
Harold
Burke,
·
· ·
Syratuse, are IJ!IIOI!JICID&amp; lhe
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. Wed- . at the Thursday night. meeting H&lt;X.pital.
nesday, firehail.
. . of ~e One-won.Qne Class of !be The Rb. Robert Kuhn gave birth of lbelr lint cbUd, 1108•
. muRSDAY
Pomeroy First Baptist Church. devotions using ·sCripture from aamed Mlcbael Dimon. 'l)e
EVANGELINE Chapter 172, ~e ~e story pertained to an st. John 1~ and Pfayer. Mrl!. infant wa.·boi'D oa May I at
OES, 7:30 Thursday, Masonic lndum g1rl who had given away Audrey Young prealt;led at the the Holzer Medical Ceater.
Temple. Past matrons and past a vase which was returned to meeting. Mrs..Harry Bailey an!! He weighed eight pounds, IO
patrons to be honored. ·
her when ail other possessions. Mrs. L. P. Sterrett were named ·OUIIces.
CATHOLIC Women's Club 8 were destroyed by fire, pointing as hostesses for the May · Grandpareala are Mr. aDd
p.m. Thursday, Sacred
up the moral, "what I kept I meeting with Mr. and Mrs. ·· Mrs. Bert Bodlmer of MidChurch following Mass and lost, and what I gave away I Willlarn Watlon to have lhe dleport and Mn. Clyde
Rosar/at 7:15p.m. Program on have."
devotions. Mrs. Burton Smith Clooch of Columbus. Mr. aDd
drug abuse by the Rev. Arthur Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cook and Mrs Ellen Couch served a Mrs. Cballie Greer of
Lwld Hostesses Mrs. David thanked the class for remem- salad c~se. Also attending Syracase and Verne Blazer of'
Ohlinger Mrs. George Miller brances on their. golden wed- was Mrs.·Geol'ge Skinner.
Gallipolis
are
great·
Helen W~ddell, Mabel Waddell: ding anniversary. Thank you
grandparents.
and Anna McGee.
cards were read from Mrs. ·
.

He~rt

Shower Given.
Mrs. Leach

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May~. 1971

7,30 p.m. Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Repdr'•
"""nn fund drive
and armual meeting.
POMEROY El
ta ""'A
emen ry r •
executive board, 1 p.m.
Thursdayatschool,newandoid
officers to attend.
PHILATHEA Societ 7,30
·
· y,l
p.m . Thursday Mldd,eport
Church of Chnst, Mothers ~Y
program with Mrs. Don Erwm
Mrs. Donna Williamson. Cake, In harg
mints and punch were served.
c
e.
Attending were Mrs. Jean
Will, Mrs. Carla Werry, Mrs.
CHOIR TO MEET
Lydia Gilkey, Mrs . Clara
The girls' choir of the Sacred
Gilkey, Mrs. Linda Laudermilt, Heart Catholic Church is to
and those who won prizes. meet at the church at 6 p.m.
Others presenting gifta to Mrs. Wednesday. At 7 p.m. those in
Gilkey were Mrs. Roseanne grades one through eight who
Sebo, Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs. will be participating in the .May
Katie Evans, Mrs. Ruth Ann crowning procession will meet,
Mulford, Mrs. Shirley Wolfe, along with th6se who are
Mrs. Mary Gilkey, Mrs. Mary preparing for their first Holy
Romine, Mrs. Blanche Ed· Communion. At the same hour,
wards, Mrs. Marie Van Cooney, the Rev. Fr. Bernard Krajcovic
and Mrs. Joe Schuler.
will meet with aU high school
students at the church.

mother. It was reported that
.

Eag1es Class Meets

l\T.

,

11Bmpa IS

Dead

Mrs.

Mrs. Th
, omas Wilson, "", of
••
Nampa, Idaho, the former
dOut ti~f the!t D_epthsused" wbasMrthe Wilda Stacey of Middleport,
evo ona optc
. Y s. died Sunday . night during
Helen Teaford at a meeting of childbirth at a Nampa hospital.
the Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Church
The Infant daughter survives
Thursday night at the home of along with her husband, a son,
Mr
d M Ca II N .
E~an Thomas, ~·· her father,
· an
rs. rro 0!'1'18 • Bill Stacey of New Haven W
Groue singing of, ,Blessed v.a., several brothers 'and·
Assurance, a poem, My Hand In
te
d h
dm th
God's, and prayer by Miss SIS rs,. an . er gran
er,
Marcia Karr opened the Mrs. Vlctorlll Stacey· of Midmeeting conducted by :Miss dieport. Her mother preceded
Eleanor Robson.
her ~ death. .
10
A rununage sale was ten- While .living
Middleport,
tatively set for June 4 and 5. Mrs. Wilson· was an active
Refreshments were served to member of the Middleport
those named and Mrs. Irene Church of the Naza~ene..
Hoback, Charles Hoback, Mrs.
Mr. Stacey and his wife left
Mary Lisle, Mrs. Vera Van Monday by plane for N~pa
Meter, Millard VanMeter, Tony where funeral ·services will be
Van Meter, Debra Norris, Mrs. held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Opal Kloes, and the Rev. Shepherd F?f1eral _Home. The
Forrest Donley.
Wilson family resl~es at 411
E~ghth Ave. South 10 Nampa.
SYRACUSE _ "Taken From

°

Art

Johnson

was

honored with a layette shower
recently at the horne of Mrs.

Paul Hu~on, Pomeroy. Cohostesses for the 'shower were
Mrs. Doris Woodyard, Mrs.
Pauline Greathouse, and Mrs.
Rita McDaniel.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Wilma
Tillis,
Mrs. Pull
Mona
Miss Freda
Cake and
and
1'ns. Neal,
punch were served. Others
attending were Mrs. Betty Van
Meter, Miss Janet Neal, and
Mrs. Marjorie .Grogan.
Also presenting gifts to Mrs.
Johnson were Mrs. Mabie
Tracy, Mrs. Jean Taylor, Mrs.
Jean Wright, Mrs. Maxine
Moore, Mrs. Emma Adams,
Mrs. Linda Patterson, Mrs.
Selma Call, Mrs. Sally Sauvage,
Mrs . Barbara Barr, Mrs.
Frances Hewetson, Miss Enna
Smith and Miss Mary Artis.
'

Stone Paces Utah -Triumph

SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)By Unifed"Pres~ lntarn~tional . Baltimore
Utah
Stars fans now ~now why
13 9 .591 1
National League
.Washington _ 12 12· .500 3
Utah Coach Bill Sharman calls
·
East
10 I i ..476 31/ 2
New York
_ _ _ _ _ ) ~George, Stone the . hottest
10 12 .455 • 4
Detroii
New York . ~- LS ~~~ GB Cleveland
feserve i·n the. American
8 15 .348 61f2
Pittsburgh
14 10 .583 i"
West
Basketball Association.
w. L. Pet. GB
Major LeagueLeaders
Montreal
9 7 .563 '2
Stone came off the Stars
Oakland
18 10 .643 ...
By United Press International
St . Lou is
14 12 .538 2
bench l&lt;jle in the first quarter
California
14 11 .560 2lf2
Leading Batters
Chicago
10 14 .4l7 5
12 12 .500 4
Nationa-11 League
Kansas City
PhiladeiP.hia 8 14 .364 6
Monday night to ignite a rally
Chicago
10 13 .435 S'h
GAB R. H. Pet. that carried Utah past the
West
10 14 .417 6
Garr, All
23 95 17 38 .400
W. L Pet. GB Minnesota
the
Milwaukee
9 13 .409 6
Mays, SF
22 76 17 28 .368 Kentucky Colonels in
San Francisco 19 '" 6 .760
· Monda·y•s Results
Millan, All 23 94 9 34 .362 opening game of the ABA
Atlanta
12 11 .522 6
{No gamesscheduled 1
Staub, Mont 17 64 12 23 .359
Los Angeles 13 13 .500 6'12
....Houston·.. -· 12 --~ 13 . . 480 7
TodaVTPfifbable Pitchers - .6r.ock ,SI.L 25 99 20 35 .354 championship playoffs, 136-117.
New York {Kli ne · 3·11 at Stargll, Pitt 22 82 16 29 .354
Ci!lcinnatl
9 13 .409 81!:2
Minnesota {Hall 0-2), night.
Alou, Hou
16 48 6 17 .354
San Diego
5 18 .217 13
Washington 1Bosman 2-1) at · Bonds, SF
21 88 22 31 .352
Monday 's Results
Phila 3 St. Lou is 2 {night)
NY 3 Chi 2 Ill innings-night)
IOo)ly games scheduled)
Oakland {Fingers 1·31 at
GAB R. H. Pet.
·
Today's Probable Pitchers
Oliva,Minn 22 92 19 36 .391
Chicago I Pappas 3-2) at New Detroit (Coleman J.OL night .
Kansas City {Dal Canton 1·ll Murcer, NY 21 78 11 28 .359
York IRyan 2·0), night.
St. Louis {Reuss 2-3) at at Cleveland {Hargan 0-41. Schaal. KC 24 78 16 27 .346 Coach Nolan P . SwackYstzk, Bos 22 76 22 26 .342 hamer's Meigs MaraudPhiladelphia {Short 2·21. night. night .
California
{Murphy
1-21
at
Kllbw, Minn 24 91 9 31 .341 ers defeated Ironton , GalHouston I Blasingame 2-2) at
Montreal {Stoneman 2·11. night. Baltimore I Palmer 4-0), night. Norlhp, Det
lipolis and Logan in a quad· Wednesday's Games
22 85 17 29 .341
Cincinnati !McGlothlin l ·ll at
28
.337
rangular golf match on the
Los Angeles !Downing 2-ll, New York ~~ Minnesota, night Jhnsn, Ball 21 83 12
19
.333
Washington
at
Milwaukee,
night
·
Unser.
Wash
21
57
6
night.
·
Pomeroy Golf Course Monday
MCrw, Wsh 19 45 13 15 .333 evening.
Atlanta {Jarvis 0-21 at San Boston at C~icago, ni9ht
Oakland at Detroit, noghl
Rojas, KC
24 94 14 31 .130
Diego {Phoebus 2-3), night.' :
The host Marauders totaled
1
Home Runs ·
Pittsburgh I Blass 3· 0) at Sa n Kansas Cily at Cleveland, night
California
at
Baltimore,
night
National
leagi.Je:
Aaron
,
At
I
Francisco ISlone 2·01. night.
208, Ironton, finished with 213,
and S.targell. Pitt 11 ; Bench,
Wedn~day's Gam.es
SE;OAL
champion Gallipolis
ABA Playoff Standings
Con 9: Cepeda, All and Bonds.
Chicago at !'lew York , night
had 215 and Logan 220.
SF 7.
St. Louis at Philadelphia. night By United Press International
I
Final
RoundBest
of
1)
American
.
League
:
Oliva
.
Houston at Montreat, night
W. L. Minn 7; Powell, Halt 6; Horton ,
• Cincinnati at Los·Angeles, night
1 0 Del, White, NY and Bando, Oak
Atlanta at San Diego 2 twilight Utah
0
1 5.
Kentucky
Pittsburgh at San Francisco
Runs Batted In
Monda
American League
.National
League: Starge ll ,
Utah
136
East
Poll
28; Aaron, All 23; Mays,
w.
SF 19 ; &lt;;epeda, All and Colbert..
14
SF 18.
American League: Killebrew,
Minn 23; Powell , Bait, Ya s- By United Press International
Time does not seem to be on
trzemski, Bas and Northrup,
Del 20; Bando, Oak 18 .
the side ·of the Chicago Cubs.
Pitching
The Cubs were the victims of
National League; Carlton , St.
a
nin th inning call by umpire
L 51; Upshaw ; All 5-2;
Dierker. Hou 4-0; Seaver, NY .4 - Mel Steiner that prevented
1; Jen k ins, Chi 4-2.
Chicago from going ahead in a
American League: Blue, Oak
6-1; Palmer, Bait and Siebert, 2·2 contest against the New
Bos 4-0 ; McNa lly , Ball and York Mets Monday night.
· FOR THE SUPPLIES
Fisher. Cal 4·1; Lolich . Del,
The Cubs, runners-up in the
Perry, Minn and Hunter , Oak dYOU WILL NEED
National
League East the past
2.
FOR NEW OR
two seasons, have continually

\}tah dropped behind . 32-19 reserves dropped in 37 points;
22 for Sione and Boone ha~ 15,
t.p_,. give \he Stars a .J6 point
halftime edge. "'
Kentucky, led by Daniel
carrier ,with 36 points; rallied
to close the gap to six points
with just under a minute to
play in the third quarter, but
Glen Combs, Zelmo Beaty and
Red Robbins ail connected with
six points each to shoot the
Stars out of reach .

with 3:04 remaining ·in the first
period as Klmiucky's AII-ABA·
rookie center Dan ISsei- paced
the Colonels with 17 points in
the first 12 minutes. ·
As the Colonels closed up the
center lane, · Sharman sent in
Stone, and later Ron Boone, for
additional out.side shooting
strength.
In the last 15 minutes of the
first half, the two stellar

Beaty and Stone. he~ded the
SU.rs' scoring with 26 points
apiece, followed liy Boone with
24, Willie Wis~ with J8 .and
Mcrv Jackson ·added 15: Beaty
topped all, ~ebounders with 16.
After carrier's 36 points
output, including six threepointers, Kentucky's next best
scorer was Issei with 'll, and
Walt Simon dropped in 11.
The Stars' torrid second
quarter set a ABA playoff

record for most points scored ·· ·
in a single period. Utah tied IIH!.:· · ~
old record of 48 points set by ' ··
Pittsburgh in 1968 when, Stone ''.i .
sank a ju111per with 51·seconds :-l '
remaining. Then Robbins set :·. ·
the record with a lay-in with .:
only five seconds on the clock. "•
Both learns take a breather ·:
today before returning to action ·,
in Salt Lake's Salt Palace·;
poliseum Wednesd~y night.
~·

~B~~~~~~e{N:;~i;~fr~i3 ~h~~~~· g~~ti~:~~er}JJL~~eii : ~:: Marauders Top Champs In 4-Way Match

Koenig, Kay Sharp, Paity
Capehart and
Jeff
. d Tammy,
· Bernice
ers, Cin y Workman, and
Kay Morris and Billy. Also
presenting gifts to Mrs. Leach
were Mrs. Stella Darnell, Mrs.
Mary Walburn, Mrs: Frieda
Mossman, Mrs. Beatrice
Rairden and Mr Ke1'th W""•·
'
s.
""""·
KNIGHTS ARE HOME ·
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight,
Middleport, have returned from
a week's visit in scenic
Williamsburg,,Va. They visited
Mrs. Knight's niece who is in
college there.

·

medalist honors Friday,
finished with 40 yesterday. E.
Skagstad and Mike Hurley each
fired a 41, Jeff Click 42 and Rick
Anderson 49.
. For GAHS, Steve Gardner
was low man with 39. John
Cunningham had a 40, Mike
Shaver 43, Dow Saunders 46 and
Nike Noe 47.
Bill Henderson was lo~ man

Bill Hensler, who had a bad
day at Ironton Friday in the 12th
annual SEO match, came back
with a tw&lt;HJver-par 37 to pace
the Marauders
Monday
evening .
Bob Merry had 40, Steve Story
41, Chuck Hannah ~2 and Frank
Giroiarni 48.
For the runnerup Tigers, Bob
Anderson, who captured loop

•

for Loga n with 40. Chuck Helber
bad a 41, Jay Boeuger 44, Bruce
Goldsbury 47 and Jeff Cole 48.
Pt. Pleasant is at Gallipolis
today (the match was originally
scheduled at Pt. Pleasant) and
Huntington High is at Gallipolis
Friday .
The Blue Devils are now 21-3
on the season.

COME FROM MARION
Mr. and Mrs. Wliliam Houck
and daughters, Carol, Beth·and
Lynn of Marion were weekend
guests of their parents, Mr:and
Mrs. Perry Mitch, Middleport,
and Mr. ahd Mrs. Robert
Houck, Gallipolis.

SEE US

e PAINTS
e MARLITE
e FORMICA
e PANELING

e INSULATION
e ANTIQUING KITS
e MOLDINGS
e S.S. MOLDINGS
e KITCHEN CARPETING

• ARMSTRONG CEILING TILE
e PLUMBING FIXTURES e PLUMBING SUPPLIES
e CERAMIC WALL AND FLOOR
I

Electrical Wiring
and
for

E

T~ose

Kitchen Cabinets
and
Buill-In Applian;;es

Meta i!Shelf Bnickels
and Standards For
That Wait Arrangement

Aluminum Storm
Doors and Windows

'
Amerock. tabinet
Hardware

Folding DoorsBoth Wood &amp; Plastic

ALSO MANY TOOLS F'OR THE DOIT· YOURSELF HANDY MAN.

King Builders
992·3748

. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

N. 2ND AVE.

Lonborg
Wins 4th

check insurance on boats,

been criticized as a bail club
that has grown old collectively.
The average age of Monday
night's starting lineup for
Chicago, led by the ageless
wonder Ernie Banks, was 32 despite an attempt during the
off.season to start a youth
movement.
Ten players who survived the
final spring cuts were not on the
25-man opening day roster one
year ago. However, time once
again was the critical factor in
deciding Monday night's ball
game.
With a 1-1 count on Ron Santo
International League Standings
By United Press International and the score tied, relief pitcher
W L Pel. GB

camping and sports
equipment - also family .
accident and liability

10

4

singled home Jerry Grote with
two out to give the Mets a 3-2
win and their sixth straight
extra inning triumph.
In the only other Na tional
League game played, the
Philadelphia Philiies edged the
St. Louis Cardinals, 3-2. There
were no games scheduled in the
American League.

Tug McGraw committed a balk,
according to third base umpire
Stan Landres . As opposing
pitcher Ken Holtzman came
trotting home with the go-ahead
run, home plate umpire Steiner
waved
Holtzman
back,
signaling that time had been
called before McGraw had
taken his foot off the pitching
rubber .
McGraw went on to strike out
Santo and go I John Callison on a
grounder to end the threat.
. In the lith inning, Tommie
Agee, who did not start the
game because of a bruised rib,

Standings

Syracuse

game.
Lonborg gave up a clean single to Russ Nageison in the
first inning, then allowed only
three more base runners in
stretching his string of scoreless innings to 23. He struck
out eight and walked two in
hurling his fourth complete
game.
The Colonels scored once in
the sixth and four times in the
eighlll as they climbed into a
tie for second place with the
rain-idled Charleston Charlies
'
one-and-a·half games behind

the league-leading Syracuse
Chiefs. .
'
Rick Miller tripled and came
home on Jose Calero's single
for Louisville's first run. Christ
Coletta singled home two runs
and John Mason doubled in two
more in the eighth inning, in
which the Colonels routed Tole·
do starting pitcher Bill Gilbreth.
Gilbreth fanned 10 batters before he weakened in the eighth.
Two other scheduled lL
games, Winnipeg at Charleston
and Syracuse at Tidewater,
were both rained out.

- . : __

: : __ _: : : __ _

Downing -Chi lds

Downing· ·

Childs
Agency, Inc.
200 N. 2nd
Ml

$5000

.

'

Dodge. Dart has the highest resale value in its field.

For Elegance in Pipe

CUI1'1PI ca$h

Smoking Pleasure, Select a

Pipe that Needs
Breaking ln .

No

T
el
awney JeW ers

THE CITY LOAN COMPANY
125 E. MAl N

422 Second Ave. .

« "'' "''~~

992-2171

PPM ER~Y, 0 . ., ,

/fS Che M)le M:J'Ithe t:ak}e ~
a~e ~hg fhit bAll7

'

AUTOMOBILE LOANS

CI1Y.

.

"· '"'

01m

In Ohio, all roads lead to Ford Country

HITCH
PIN

'
• Belt mouldin~
• Remote-control outside
mirror, left side
• Convenience ll&amp;ht package
• Body side mouldlnp
(with vinyl inserts).

BDYB
.Dodge
AUTHORIZED DEALERS

PINn» t1919*

Jlay let tin at our everydq low prlee ud get 30%
elf oa the 2nd tire, plu taxes ud m:h•ap tln!e,

R. H•. RAWLINGS SONS CO•
&amp;Second sne;, Middleport, o.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•acteral Deposit lnturtace eor,...·~+Jon

'

.

Lowest lrequency-oHepair rate of
any American car, according 1o an
independent survey. Lowest insurance,

too. And now tha "simple machine"
offers two new choices : a 4·door for
family convenience . .. America's

.•. strong, machined

lowest-priced V-8.

Zinc: platwd, ~~~ pin
with 4W' useable

length •

·ONLY

03.99-529.1

MORE PEOPLE DRIVE DODGE DART
E TODAY
THAN ANY OTHER COMPACT IN THE U.S.

''

d,tlvlng) , oll, service, Insurance, too.

•••on famous 23' Field &amp; Boad ™Rears

YOU lET
01 THIS SPECIALLY EQIIPPED HARDTOP:
• 3·speed automatic transmission
(no charge)
·• VInyl roof
• 6.95 x 14 white sidewall tires
• Deluxe wheel covers
• "Rlm Blow" deluxe steering wheel
• ~umper guards (front and rear)

INSURED TOno;ooo.oo

America's hotlast•selllng, lillie
money-saver ... on gas (25 mpg
proved In simulated city/suburban

HERE'S ~ WHIT

Isn't it about t_ime you traded in your
old car for a new one? Keep the cost of
a new car down by using a bank
finance plan. Apply for a loan today.
DE~SITS

America's ~ CQmpact Deal

..

FAMOUS FIELD &amp; ROADThe original23° bar angle
at prices that can't be beat.
•Ford't suggested rttaU price excluding dealer preparation charges (If any) , transportation charges state and
local laKes. Cara are illustrated w1th wl\itewal!s ($29), and eKterlor decor ootlon (Pmto S60, Mav8rlck $52j.
'

, ,,, . .

~~::":::::::=::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gallipolis, Ohio

OFF

TilE

·.

call for

,··~; Roush.

2nd

Agency.

We have loans up to

Straight

1

coverage. Be sure of
proper . insur~nce with a
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sur vey
by
the

·NEED MORETHAN THIS?

.714 -

Charleston
9 6 .600 1v,
Louisville
9 6 .600 1'1, EXE· M~ GOLFERS
Richmond ·
8 6 .57 1 2
r •
Winnipeg
6 8 .429 4
NEW YORK (UPI)- Three
Toledo
6 10 .375 5
f · I golf
JCS d
By United Press International Tidewater
6 10 .375 5
pro
esswna
ers,
· · nea •
Tom Shaw and Dave EichelberR
h
Unbeaten Jim Lonborg, eager oc ester
4 8 .333 5
to return to the Boston Red
Monday's Results
ger Monday won exemption
Sox, won his fourth straight ~~~i~~~e ~t T~~~~l~ston, ppd, from qualifying fo~ the 1971
game for . the Louisville rain
United States Open Champion·
Colonels Monday night as he Syracuse at Tidewater, ppd, ship at Merion Golf Club,
. ·~~~~he~:~. Uhe ..Toleojo Mud rain
Ardmore, Pa . Eichelberger won
.!'
with 'ljiline-hit,~O shutou( _ _ __:&gt;'_.._··:...
f _ _ ___,~.exemp!)Pn •~local stl\g~.
in an
League

Inlernatidrl,~l

"Vacation's
almost here!"
Yes. and a good time to

Cubs Drop 3i2 Tilt To Mets

REMODELING PROJECTS

.

·,·

\

·Mrs.. Mamie Snider, Mrs.
Barbara Colmer and Mrs.
Frieda Henderson entertained
recenUy with a layelle shower
honoring Mrs. Paulette. Leach
at the Henderson home.
A blue and pink color scheme
was carried out in the · '
decorations. Cake, ice cream, '
mints, nutS and coffee were
served. Games · were 'played
with prizes going to Betty
WhiUatcb, Eunice Eblin, and
.J:Iyil~ .!!:~lin, wi\11..9Idia ~Bing
winnmg the ctoor pnze.
···
Others attending the shower

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Norris
of Kingston, Ohio announce the
birth of a daughter, Eugenia
Raye at Berger Hospital at
Circlevllle. They also have a son
Jody. Grandparents are Mrs.
Alvill Norris, Pomeroy, and Mr.
tland ~choir cimceri at Kyger ho
~reek High School. Miss . : ·· and Mrs. Paul Bostick and Mrs. Herschel Crider, LitUe
L.oretta Ours was a director.
Hocking .
' Miss Sandy Greathouse of and family of Dwlbar were
New Brighton, Pa,. arrived weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
·Saturday for a week's visit with Robert Wood and Debbie, and
TWQ-DAY SALE
Miss Loretta Ours at Mid- Waid Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Evangeline Chapter, O.E.S.
dleport
Milford Frederick and family of will · hold a rummage sale
: Mr. 'Robert McKelvey, a Dorcas spent Sunday afternoon Friday .and Saturday in the
Middleport Masonic Temple
~er resident, ls a surgical In the Woods ~orne. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Whittington basement beginning at 9 a.m.
l'lltient at st. Joseph H&lt;X.pital.
(:ards would be appreciated·.
of St. Albans, W. Va., Orvllle each morning. All items are to
Jarrell and daughter, Kim, be taken to the temple ThurI Mr . and Mrs. Don Stevensof AI St
M
Zih
oden, W. Va., were dinner
an
over' . rs. e p a sday. For pickup residents may
eats of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Boggess and Wayne Roseberry telephone Mrs. John Lyons, 992..
andc ailedonMr andMr spent~aywithMr.andMrs. 3700 or Mrs. Harry Cheshire,
·
s. Jess Anderson
992-J!!!m.
St.
Clair Hill and Mr. and Mrs.
J fl Mille ·
t
s
d
11arry Hill.
e
r spen a un ay
Sf. Clair Hill and Harry Hili with Roger Roush.
IN HOSPITAL
have returned home after being Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Miller
Mrs. Caddie Wickham of
surgical patients at Holzer were visitors at Zanesville
Pomeroy
was admitted to
Medical Center and University Sunday· .
.
HcX.pital in Columbus, Both are Edward Miller was shoppmg Holzer Medical Center Monday
after fracturing her left hip In a
improving satisfactorily.
In Pomeroy Saturday.
fall
at ber Union Avenue home.
Marvin Hili of Columbus Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gasllili
spent a weekend ith hi of Wellston spent a weekend' at
w
s their cottage.
SALE PLANNED
grandmother, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe. Mr
. and .... Le te M
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hill and
.
uus. s r anue1
A rummage sale will be held
Dolly and Mrs. Sua&amp;nn Wolfe of and daughter of Logan were by the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
Cheshire were dinner guests recent guests of Mr. and Mrs; Tuesday and Wednesday In the
Paul Manuel.
Smith building, Second St.,
Sunday of Mrs. Wolfe.
Roger Roush completed his
Pomeroy.
Danny Hill. of Moore Haven, student teaching at Letart Falls
F1a., baa· amved to spend the Elem ta Sch001 last
k
en ry
wee ·
sununer with his uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill. On Friday Mrs. Roy Buck and
· , · Th nam of Mr
d ·Mr the fifth grade held a surprise Racine spent Thursday evening
·, ·
e
es
· an
s. party for him. They presented with Mrs. Iva Orr .
'It
d
ed
. . Robert Smith were unin- him ith
Mrs . Irma Wilson, Mrs.
· · tenUoaaily omitted from the
w
a g1 an serv
;: . list of those · attending the refrosh.ments of. cupcakes and Herbert Roush and Mrs. Doris
Sayre called' on Mrs. Bertha
· · · Grange and wiener roast at the Kooi-Aid.
· ' home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Mrs. Leonard Siders ,of Robinson Thursday evening.
Sayre recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Early Roush,
local, Mrs. Gladys Jones of
Porner9y were Sunday dinner
· · '. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jim

' ·' , Mr. Hoyt Webb of Newlon
·:.. .Falls, Mr. and . Mrs.
Burton
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' : Webb of Mansfield were called
· ·'' borne due to the serious illness
· 'of lheir father, Mr. L. D. Webb
· who is a patient at Veterans
Memorial H&lt;X.pital.
. : Raymond Bell of Oak Grove
was a Sunday guest of his son,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and
Loran. Mr. and Mrs. Paul,.
Erwin of Racine Route spent
·Sunday afternoon with the
Bells.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
Sr. were shopping at HecklJ 'tn
Point Pleuant •Sunday and
called on Mrs. Virgie Stewart
at West Columbia enroute

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,!!~~~ i!A~!:Th~sd~; ~=~~::uawi~=~~m a~~r ~:; Mrs. Wdson of ~~~:;; :;'sh:;; :+ ;:;~~~:~~r~u~~~. B~!~

Pink and blue streamers
decorated a bassinet· for a·
Iaye tte shower honormg Mrs.
Linda Gilkey at the home of
Mr s. Herschel Gilkey with Mrs.
Linda Rathburn as the hostess.
Games were played with the
door prize being won by Mrs.
Kay Laudermilt. Games prizes
were won by Mrs . Eileen
Martin, Mrs. Delma Karr, and

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. 4- The Dally Sen~rnel,l&gt;liddl.ewrt-Pc::;:or~~

Syraeuse .
News, Society .

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Fairview News Notes
.By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Marr of
Racine spent Sunday evening
with Mr, and Mrs. Herbert
&amp;lyre.
Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
Philip Radford and Stephanie,
Pomeroy, Mrs. Jack Sargent of
Racine, Larry. Molly and Amy
Fisher of Racine were dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Shields on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Elwood
Bachus and two , children of

Clifton spent Sunday with Mr ·
and Mrs. Russell Roush and
a birthday party for Donnila family. Mr.· and ·Mrs. Ga~y ·
Manuel at the home o( Mr. and Wilford of Racme and Ronme
Mrs. Don Manuel at Racine. .1Russell of Pomeroy spent
Miss Evelyn Lawson of Sunday afternoon at the Roush
Mansfield spent Thursday home.
through Sunday . with her Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles David arid Edward, spent
Lawson and family .
Thursday eve~mg }l'tth Mrs.
Hope Bird of Antiquity spent Gladys Shields and \'drs. Edna
Friday night with Cindy Roush at Racine. ,
Lawson. Cindy accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Owen An,d~rson
Hope home Saturday and spent are moving to the . v.!lma
the night.
Quillen residence at 'Sinngbu,rg.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of Mr. and Mrs.
Parsons

•- The DIUy Senllnel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., May 4, 197!

spent the w~kend with Mr. and
Mrs . Marlin Matteson at
Poland, Ohio. Mrs. Matteson
remains seriously ilL
'
Mrs. Ruth ParS&lt;J!IS is visiting
her granddaughter, the former
Lena Ruth Parsons, . in
Missouri.
Mr. and Mrs . Clarence
Wickline Of Tanners Run spent
Sunday afternoon with Herbert
Sayre.
Brice Sayre of Columbus and
Lou Ann Sayre of Kanauga were
dinner guests Sunday df Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Sayre and Dagid.

By ADA.SLACK
Mrs . Vera Tannehill of
,J'arma spent a week with her
pan!llls, Mr. and Mrs. c. H.
Williams and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jenks
II. Louisa, Ky., spent a weekend
. '·.with her parents, 1\fr, and Mrs.
William Brown.
.
. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hysell
· •'·. · spent from Thursday until
Sunday with ·lheir daughter and
t.:mcmnati spent a weekend with
' son-ill-law, Mr ~ and Mrs, Max
Mr .-and Mrs. Howard Donohue
Folmer, Cincinnati.
and
Mrs. Rose Bachus.
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells,
Guinther and children and Mr.
Mandy
and Amy, of Syracuse
and Mrs. Frank Hendrix and
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Barbara, visited recently with
Mrs. Don Hupp and sons.
Mrs . Elmo Johnson and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
lrother, Kermit Williams, at
and Bobby of Long Bottom were
Charleston. They also .attended
Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
the r.jerle Haggard show at the
Joe Manuel and sons.
Charleston Civic Center.
Mrs. Joe Manuel was a guest
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Slack,
Thursday
of her mother, Mrs.
Suzanne and Philip, have
Katie Young, Minersville.
moved into the Jacob Turner
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rowe
hoture.on Wa~ St.
and son, David, of New
Mr. Vernon Bartels and
Brighton; Pa., are visiting Mrs.
father, · Enunett Bartels, of
Kate Rowe and Ada. David
Cincinnati, aixl Mr. and Mrs.
Rowe has just returned home
William Bartels, of Benton
MASON
COUNTY
WINNERS
Elementary
students
of
Mason
County
recently
parfrom
Korea.
Harbor, Mich~. spent the
Uclpated in the annual bottle cap drive for the American Cancer Society in Mason County.
Mr . and Mrs. Steve Cleland
weekend here to villi! with their
molhei-, Mrs. Emmett Barlllls, Wlmers of the event and Mrs. William Rardin, Jr., who has served as chairman of the and sons of Columbus, Mrs.
American Cancer Society in Mason County for the past ten years, villi led the Royal Crown
Anna Wines, Karen and Jackie,
who is a patient .at Veterans
Bottling Company in Middleport Monday where they turned in their bottle caps and were
Sandra Wolfe of Racine were
Memorial H~Mpital. Mr. Bartels
presented
with
a
check
for
over
$770
from
Ferman
Moore,
owner.
Left
to
right,
Mr.
Moore
guests
Sunday of Mrs. Kate
is with hia son ·during Mrs.
Bartels' hospltallzation.
presents the check toOrlsZirkleofHartfordElementarywhowas top winner with9,!00caps,
Rowe and Ada .
Carol Humphreys of New Haven Elementary, second place winner with 5,639, Mrs. Hardin and
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Sid
.
Mrs. Donald Cottrill, Sharon,
Sherry Young of Mason Elementary, third place winner with 5,435 caps. The money was
and Tim, Max Manuel Sr., Mr.
MIDDLEPORT, 0,
Craig and Bruce, spent Sunday
with her brother and sisler·indonated to the cancer fund .
,----------~a:nd~M~rs~.~E:rn~e~st~B~u~sh~at~te~n~d:ed~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
law, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
~ick, of Columbus.
and Mr . and Mrs. Harley
Mr. and Mrs. James TanJohnson .
. nehiU and family of Parma
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
villited here with his grand·
were Sunday before noon
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. HerWilliams, and mother. Mrs.
man Will of Peach Fork.
Vera .Tannehill, and other
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene H.aning
relatives.
.
were
Sunday afternoon callers
Spending Salurday night and
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles·, Jr., of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Will.
Sul)day with Mr. and Mrs. Cecil and Frankl\n. were
Eugene Slack were her sister weekend visitors of his sister, Mr . Haning was helping with
and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rhoton and backhoe work for Mr. WilL
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
Mrs . Richard Dunlap and family of Dayton .
were
Sunday evening visitors of
Patrick of Sandyville.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles and Mr. and Mrs. John Murphy and
Jean Hall, Margaret Cottrill family visited with Mrs. Giles'
and Ada Slack a !tended the family , Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hart family.
Daughters of America Lodge Jr. and family, and Mr. ·and
rally practice at Chester
Mrs. Roger Hart of St. Paris.
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Glfes Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker and family visited with Mr . and
and Mrs. Edna Summerfield ·Mrs. Bernard and family and
attended funeral services for R. Mf. Sam Hart, all of Springfield
Brooks Lamb in· Columbus and also viSited with Mrs.
recently.
.Clifton Hidd and family of near
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Sci!.
Butcher and her mother, Mrs.
Mrg:"Jll!e' ~ou811 ; RUdney"and''' Your regular payday
Augusta Will, spent several Sher)oli 'lif 'LdgBn were Sunday saviri'!i'S ptos our .high
'"
' l.
days with relatives in Medina. visitors of Mrs. Helen Johnson
rate of return will
"
Sunday evening guests of and other relatives.
make your savings
Mrs. Ada Slack and Mr. and
Mrs. Nora Johnson returned
grow quickly ....
Mrs. Eugene Slack were Mr. to her home in Columbus after
and Mrs. Harley Johnson and spending two weeks with Mrs.
children of Wolf Pen Road.
Helen Johnson and other
Mrs. Mary Jane Gibbs and relatives here.
sons, Doyle and Jl,andy,
Mrs. Harley Johsnon was a
Parkersburg, were here for a Tuesday afternoon visitor of
few days with her parents, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Uncoln Russell.
and Mrs. William Eichinger.
Mr . and Mrs. BoY,ce of
They were joined for the Columbus was weekend visitor MEIGS CO. BRANCH
weekend by another daughter of Mrs. Boyce and Mr. and Mrs.
and son-in·law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Russell. Also visiting
· Freddie BOyd, and daughter, were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mandy, also of Parkersburg. Russell and Mr. and Mrs.
Spending Thursday evening Donald RusselL
Meigs Coonty Branch of The
with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Mrs . Helen Johnson was Athens County Savings &amp;
Parker were Mr. and Mrs. Sunday night and Monday
Loan. Co.
Wilbur Parker of Alfred. ·
296 Second St.
visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Johnson and family.
Mrs. Larry Barr, David ao•
Michelle , of Rutland w••
'.
Otto Marcinko ill spending a Tuesday visiliors of Mrs.
leave from the armed service Howard Thoma, and Patricia
with his mother and sister, Mrs.
Otto Marcinko.
Mrs. Opal Harris visited
recently with Mrs. C. A. Barnett
and Mrs: Curt Miller, both of
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mrs. Harold Boston and son
spent an evening tecenUy with
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Win Blake of Tuppers Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Barr of
. .
Pittsburgh, Pa., visited during
the weekend with his brother,
Dale and family, and his sister,
Opal.
.
Dinner guests of Opal Harris
were Mr. and Mrs. Horace
Barr, Pittsburgh, and Mr. And
Mrs. Charles Barr of Belpre.
Afternoon visitors were Mr. and
With a few belts u ~der his belt, he's a very
Mrs. Sonny Harris and family,
Face it
.
Larry Jiarris,. Mr. and Mrs.
funny guy. Life of the party .. Only trouble
Dale Bardnd son and Mr. ·and
If anything is going to be done about drunk
with good time Charley is, when he's in this
Mrs. Herman Grossnickle and
driving, it'll have to· be done by you.
shape, he insists on driving himself home. At
family, all local.
this point the life of the party becomes death
Mr."and Mrs. Ray Dillon and
Good old lnnoceni Victim You .
family and Roy Dillon o(
on the highway.
,
Columbus spent a week end .
So Shout Out! If you're fed up to here with
Now-if
you
think
this
problem
hasn't
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
I
457/ 574
dru11k drivers on Ohio Highways, write DOWN
Pearl Dillon.
·
Get the Fashion Mate•
rea ched epidem ic proportions yet, think
Get the St~lisl' zig·zag
zig·zag portable sewing
WITH ,DRUNKS, Box '2626, Columbus, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Masser
about this next time you're behind the wheel. ·
portable
sewing
machine
machine
by
~g!!f'
in
We'll see that the right people know how you
and family visited recently with
by
Sing§!''
in
its
own
carryhandy
carrying
case.
$ews
Chances are 1 in 80 that you'll be injured or
Mr. and Mrs. Sonny Harris and
f.eel. And in the meantime support your poing
case.
Makes
button·
zig-zag
on
all
weights
of
iamily.
killed
i~
a
traffic
accident
with
a
drunk
driver
liCe and law enforcement officials. They're
holes and embroiders. So
fabrics! so c6mpact il
Mrs. Ruth Barton and Mr.
-this year . And there isn't a drunk driver \ trying to do a good job and they need your
handy to use, then out
stores anywhere!
and Mrs. Robert Barton of
among 'em who will do anything about drunk
away!
I
.
help.
Coolville were in Georgia
driving.
recently to visit Mr. and Mrs.
We have a·credit plan
1
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.
.
Larance Barton.
to
fit
ygur
budget.
design8d
l'flrs. Loren Benedum and
60 INSURANCE COMPANIES AND AGENT GROUPS CONCERNED ABOUT YOU AND THE OTHER GUY
family visited Sunday with her
parenb, Mr. and MrJ. Roy
.Rollins and sister, Rena Sun·
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Taylor
, . 620 East J;lroad Street
• Columbus,. Ohio 43215
II. Fostoria spent a weekend
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SINGER SALES &amp; SERVI't E
'
111111 hlr paten II, Mr. ~nd Mn.
McCA~L'S&amp; SIMI!LICITY PATTERNS
.Dill a.rr ud Gll'y.

3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

$11 9· 00

AS SHOWN
ONLY"''"'",,,,,,,.,,.,............

BAKER fURN IJU RE

'\Volfpen

News, Notes

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EARN

MORE NOW

Joppa News

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Don't expect a:,d runk
to do.anything abOut
drunk driving.

Carry off

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a zig-zag
sewing machine
t;&gt;Y Singer.

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$12995

$7995

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Mr. MN. Scullln.a et
i'M'IIInlu'll villted recen~
Willi 1111'1. LaiTy ~rris llld

115 W. Setond

992-2284

Pomeroy,

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Kurfess,

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G~lligan

COLUMB~ (UPI) - House · ready . certified by· county

Martin Osborne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Osborne of Long
Bottom,is a mem~r of the 1971 Ohi~t University Symphonic Band
which will be .t~ing .the Virginia-Washington, D. C. area May s9. The band wtll be domg a concert at 10 a.nl. W~dno\sday at Meigs
Higjl School for the s\udent body enroute.
Martin, a 1970 graduate of Eastern High School, is majoring
in instrumental music education with the baritone horn ·as his
principal instrument and will be playing that horn during this
· week's tour. ~e is~ member. of Ohio University's 1\farching Men
of Ohio and the Ohio University Chorus. Martin was named \0 the ·
!resh!J!endean'sUstforthefallandwinterquarters.
· ··

Speaker Chafies F. Kurfess has
questioned whether it is too late
for the state th.implement property tax rollbacks in 1971, but
the administration of Gov. John
J. Gilligan has indicated it cari
he accomplished through legislation now in the General Assembly.
Kurfess said Monday it ill too
late far Gilligan's proposed rollbacks to take effect this year
because local tax rates were al-

budget commissions last Soptemher.
·
"The rollback, therefore, is
nothing more than an iUusion, " ·
the Republican leader said. "As
the bill is written, tllere is no
way property taxpayers could
ever receive property tax relief. ·
Sinae the governor's properly
tax rollback proposal is a one·
time shot, t~e language of his
tax bill would preclude any tax
relief at all."
·

Disagreeing

The bill referred to by Kur·
less is the Democratic adminfstra~on proposal t~ grant $110
million'' worth of property tax
rollbacks through state Jaw.
A spokesman for slate Fi-

Long Bottom
Social Notes
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DON'T LOOK NOW but it's prom time.
This Friday, the annual affair for Meigs High School juniors
and. seniors and their guests will he held at the Jl,utlsnd gymnasium. Following the dance, there will be bowling and a mid,
night show with breakfast to be served about 2:30 a.m. at the
Meigs High School, Rock Springs.
THE POMEROY lJTTLE League is selling boxes of candy
~d capdy bars to raise funds for the ~er program. Residents
wiShing to make purchases can contact Kermit Walton or Jim
Souls by. The only other money raising activity, hopefully, will he
a tag day in the near future.
THE HELPING HAND Missionary Circle of the Bradford
Cht)l'Ch of Christ is seeking the names of servicemen overseas
whom the circle would like to remember with treat boxes.
If you have someone in the armed forces 9Verseas that you'd
like to have remembered just call Mrs. Frances Hysell at 9926932.

THE 1971 EDmON of the Meigs County Fair will undoubtedly go on in August as it has for many, many years but it
will be without tlle services of the late Charles Radford, Jr. and
Fred Leifheit who is very ill. Both men have spent uncountable
hours in planning and staging the annual fairs.

Frank Beach is Buried FridJJy
Funeral services for Frank
Beech, Middleport, were held
Friday afternoon at the
Rawlin~s.Coats Funeral Home.
Attending from out of town
were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Taylor,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Taylor,
Pennie Taylor, Terry Taylor,
Mrs. Don Osborn, ·Mrs. Terry
Collins and son, Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Leonard, Clair Leonard,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack . Kel\Qedy,
Jackie Kennedy, Mrs. Ethel

Kennedy, Mrs. Ethel Essman,
Mrs. James Simpson, Sr., Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer Beach, Mrs.
Glenna Grass, Mrs . Ruth
Carsey, George Beach, Tom E.
Beach, Mrs. Roher! Slinger,
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Leonard and
Jean Quattrociocche.
Pallbearers were Joe Taylor,
Dana Leonard, Clair Leonard,
Waid Leonard, Jack Kennedy
and Robert Hartenbach.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Four-Card Spade Openings
diamond, the bidding devel·
ops logically to a filtal con·
tract of two hearts. East and
West can't get into the bid·
ding and South will surely
rna ke two hearts.
Now let's see what hap·
pens if North opens one
spade. South may raise to
two spades. In that case,
North will play the hand
there and be set one or pos·
sibly two tricks.
Suppose South tries one
no·trump. North will prob·
ably pass. West will open
the five .of clubs and South
will have a great . deal of
trouble co 11 e c tin g more
than five tricks. Or North
'd t t
d'
d
may re b t o wo Iamon s.
This will lead to the same
unsuccessful' two.sparle con.
tract. The players who open
with one spade wind up
minus ; those who open one
diamond wind up plus.

4

NORm (D)

.AJ73
.J95
t AQ106
&lt;ftQ4
EAST

WEST
.Q105

• K82

.K7

• A63

.AI0853

.J72

·~72

t K543

soum
• 964
• QI0842
• J8
.K96
Both vulnerable
Wo•t North East
It
Pass
1•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass

South
I'll'
I N.T.
Pass

Opening lead-+ 2

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
One argument in favor of
indiscriminate opening of
(NEWSPAPER EHTIRPmE ASSN.J
four-card major suits and
particularly the spade suit
lies in the pre·emptive value.
When you open with one
The bidding has been1
spade, your opponent can West North
t:ast South
·only overcall at the two
1t
lofo
Pass
level.
2N.T.
Pa,;
2+
Pass
?
3+
Pass
There is no question about Pass
this pre·emptive value, but
You, South, hold:
we have found that for the .K543 .8632 tAKQ .74
one time when it ore·empts
What do you do now?
your opponents there are
A-rass. Things have taken a
several occasions when it nasty turn. Quit before you get
pre·empts your p a r t n e r. in n1ore troub)e.
Therefore, in JABOBY
TODAY'S QUESTION
MODERN we never open a
Instead of raising you to two
four·card spade suit in first
diamonds
your partner has bid
or second seat when we have
one
heart
over your one diaa r 'easona ble minor suit
mond.
What
do you do now?
opening at our disposal.
After North opens one

Registration Day Anrunced
Registration for kindergarten
and first grade registration for
all students In the . Eastern
Local Si:bool District who will
be attending kindergarten next
fall will be conducted Wednesday at Chester Elementary
between 9 a.m. and 3:30p.m. A
chUd must be five years old on
or before Sept. 30 to enter
kindergarten In the fail. The
parent must bring a birth
certificate and health records to
Mrs. Baum who will tie in
charge of the kindergarten.
Registration for first graders,
who have not been enrolled in a
.. kindergarten class, will be
conducted in each of the
elementary · llibools at the
fOllowing Umes Wedneaday:
Oleater, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Riverview, t a.m. to 11:30

a.m.
Tuppers Plains, 9:30 a.m. to
noon.
Any child who has been atlllnding kindergarten at Chester.
will not .need to register since
their records have been
presented to Mrs . Baum and
wiU be given to the school where
the child will be attending this
fall. A thild must be six on or
before September 30th to enter
\he first grade In the fall. The
parents mQStpresent the child's
birth certificate and health
records to the first · grade
teachers in their respective
buildings. •

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A thought for the day: Law\'
writer . Publilius Syrus said,
receive advice, few
prnfit it."'

lllelen Help Us!

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By Helen Bottel

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YOIITH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young people. their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us!, it weleomes laughs but won't·dodge a serious question with a
lrush.off.
Send your. teenage questions Ia YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
caare of Helen Help lis! this newspaper.
MALE CONSCIENCE TURNS HIM OFF
Dear Helen:
This was our first lime dating as Tim and I aren't quite 16f We
liked each other a lot, or so I thought. He had "ideas" sometilnes,
but I could control ·them.
, .
. Well, one night he called and said his parents wanted io meet
me. I asked, "This isn't a trick?" because he knew how I felt . So
we were on our way, but he acted ashamed to walk next to me and
didn't even hold my hand going to his house, which is abOut six
blocks from mine.
Then he said, "My parents aren't home," and I answered,
"Then forgetit," but he promised he'd be good.
When we got there he sneaked me in quick "so the neighbors ,
won't see us." Everything seemed all right and we were just
watching TV, and then he turned off the lights and well ....
Somehow his getting fresh didn't seem wrong at the time, but
afterwards I felt so guilty and rotten - like a bum. I didn't stay
very long, but it was too long, anyway.
When I got home I had ·to make up a story about what Tim's
paren Is looked like to my mother, and that made me feel rottener.
The next day at school Tim wou1dn'l even talk to me and he
hasn'taskedme out since. !asked my girlfriend to find out why he
was avoiding me and he told her I was "too friendly."
Helen, it'~ bad enoUgh having this bad conscience, but does he
have to hate me for something he planned? It's been four months
and I've got over the puppy love part, but why does he treat me
like the enemy? Why can !I we be "j~st friends?" - AVOIDED
Dear Avoided :
Boys have consciences, too, and I im'agine Tim's gave him fits
after his little plan worked. This especially if some of his buddies
put him up to it (they do, you know), then expected a locker room
report.
So .... to make HIM feel less guilty, he says YOU are "too
friendly." What we have here ls a war between an inexperienced
hoy's ideals and his urges, with you the loser because he ignores
what he'd rather not face . Let him know you don't think he's a
louse, and! think you'llsoon·befriends - just friends -again .:..

Mrs. H&gt;l'lel Wyncoop of
Johnstown, Mrs. Jack Stalzer
,
.
and son of Columbus and Mrs.
!'&lt;lith Sisson and family visited
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter.
Mrs. Barbara Fitzpatrick and
. Mrs. ·connie Walls of Lancaster
were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Hayman.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The campus last May and added, Terry Stethem, Mike Bissell
father of a Kent State "The defendants know tbere and David Smith are among ihe
University student shot to death was insufficient c~use to send .Eastern seniors who toured
by . National Guard troops last armed troops," and also knew Washington, D. C. and New
May 4 Monday flied a'. $23.8 "that the presence of such York City this week.
million damage .suit again:lt troops created imminent Jr. Hauber, New Matamoras,
former governor James A. danger of death or injury to all was a dinner guest of Mr. and
..
Rhodes and National Guard students on campus."
Mrs. Fred Larkins.
Natural gas rates will be
officials.
The suit also alleged the Donna, Debbie and Linda
increased
only to Pomeroy, noi
The suit was filed in troops were not properly Sisson of Vienna, W. Va., were
to Pomeroy and Middleport
Cuyahoga County Common trained in the' use of loaded visiting Serena Sisson and Mr.
residents,
as
re ported
Pleas Court by attorney Steven weapons and not prepared to and Mrs. Joe Bissell.
erroneously
last
Friday.
Sindell who represents ArthUr face such a situation as ' OC· Bernice Prince · and Pearl
The increase reflects in·
Krause, Pittsburgh, the father curred at Kent State.
Sanderlin were in Parkersburg
creases in the cost of gas from
of Allison Krause, 19.
Defendants besides Rhodes visiting recently.
suppliers
which
were
The suit charged the troops were former Adjutant General Recent weekend visitors ,of authorized by the
FPC and are
were wrongfully sent to the S. T. Del Corso, Brig. Gen. Mary Pierce were Mr. and Mrs.
passed on through a clause in
Robert Canterbury who com- Denver Curtis and family of
Pomeroy's contract with the
mended the troops on the Kent Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Campus and the approximately Newell and Shiela and Elmer of gas company.
Amount of the increase is four
200 National Guardsmen who Chesler and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
and seventy-eight hundredths
were on the campus.
Curtis and family ..
Plaintiffs also included Dean Larry Aulherton has returned cents per thousand cubic fee t.
By Evelyn Brickles
The new rate becomes effective
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tarr of Kahler, Canton, and Joseph home from St. Joseph Hospilal May 16. II will result in an
·
Salem spent a couple of days Lewis, Ma.Sillon, two students in Parkersburg.
who
were
wounded.
Mr.andMrs.
Elsworth
Dill
of average increase of 72 cents per
here with her aunt, Mr. and
month per customer.
Pomeroy visited Connie Con·
H.
Mrs. John Arbaugh.
nally and Freda Larkins.
Dear Hdlen:
Mrs. Roland Torrence spent
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hank
Holter
and
I'm going on 141&gt; and the girls have given me a nicknlli'I~
saturday with her mother, Mrs.
family
and
Mrs.
David
Smith
which I hate because It's true: Flatsy. How can I stop this?Harry Allison of Racine.
and Dee Dee were visiting Mr.
CLOTHESHANGER '
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tuttle and
and
Mrs.
Loyd
McPeek
of
family of Fairborn spent a
eWS 0 S
Dear C.H.:
Belleville,
W.
Va.
Wear a slightly padded bra, tell 'em "Better Flalsy than
weekend here with his parents, Attendance. at Nazarene
The Eighth Grade Class of
Mr. and Mrs. Veri Tuttle.
Church Sunday School on April
By MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS F1opsy ,"and cheer up : At 14\it there's still room for growth. - H.
Riverview School spent WedMr. and Mrs. David Davis 25 was 43. Offering was $7 .93.
Members of the Happy Dear Helen:
and son of Vienna, W. Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Caruthers nesday ,at Columbus.
My parents don't like each other very welL I guess !bey used
-Violet Smith Hustlers Sunday School Class of
Mr. and Mrs. Derrel Wells of and daughter, Penny, and son,
the Methodist Church assem- to, because there are 10 kids, but now Mom is about 30 pounds
Cherry Ridge were Sunday Terry, and Donna Radebaugh of
bled in the social rooms for a six overweight and Dad runs around. He accuses Mom of stepping
guests of their parents, Mr. and Louisville, Mrs. Bessie Larkins
o'clock dinner Friday evening, out, but how could shewithseveralchlldren underfoot?
Mrs. J. S. Davis.
. of Reedsville, and Mr. and Mrs.
We love them both In spite of the fighting and wish they'd get
April23. Following the dinner a
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Davis Ronald Chardas and son, Ricky
program was presented after together again, Their 20th anniversary is coming up. Do you think
returned home after spending of Canton and Bert Scriinsher of
which a business session was if we gave them a big party, they might see how dumb it is to
the winter in Florida.
conducted by Mrs. Owen argue and accuse each other all the time? - THE OLDER KIDS
Keno spent. Sunday with Mrs.
Mrs. Mildred Caldwen and Doris Marks and Beckie
Watson, president.
Dear Kids:
son, Kenneth, and Sue Hayes of Caruthers.
• Kent Wolfe Is confined to his
One party won't slop chronic fighting, but lf yoitr parents see
Chester spent Easter weekend Mr. and Mrs. Shartiger spent Mr. and Mrs. Russell Harris home with chicken pox. Several
with her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. the weekend with their'\ and family of Xenia, Ohio, Mrs. other first graders are also howmuch.youc,are,ltlll!~h\.beastart. . , ~;·, .,, ,.,. ,,, 11, ia.hlull
But. ... Don tmake i\'~ }!W"pfise patity1.- 1Jr. .,~ 1, 11, t- .... ,~, 11 ,\
Jerry Carter and sons of Rocky daughter in West Virginia. Robert Harden and family of absent from school. ·
Mount, North Carolina.
Their grandson, · Nathan Morning Star spent Sunday with
Rev. and Mrs. Paul Sellers
Mrs . .Edna Summerfield Boatrite accompanied them. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle, and Mr. and Mrs.·Otis Knopp
attended the funeral of her Mr.andMrs. Earl Thoma and Verna and Wavie Circle.
attended a. singing convention
brother, Dr. Lam at Columbus family of Pomeroy spent Mr. and Mrs. George Circle Saturday night at •Fisher Neigler and also visited Mrs. A.
SERVICE HELD
recently.
Sunday evening with his and daughter, James Circle, all Memorial Chur~h in Kema, W. B. Cross and other relatives.
Funeral services for Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Fon Holsey mQ.Iher, Mrs. Georgia Thoma. of New Haven, spent Sunday Va.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Albert
Hill
have
I
Martin (Myrtle) Matteson, Sr.,
received word of the birth of a
Rev. Brown has been filling with Mrs. Mary Circle.
Sunday afternoon guests of been guests of Mr. and Mrs. were held Thursday at tbe King
great-grandson born to their the pulpit for Rev. Grate who Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Mrs. Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Waid Foster and family ln Funeral Home at the Southside
granddaughter, Mr. and Mrs. has been hospitalized.
Johnson and Patrick spent Ada Bays were Mr. and Mrs. Columbus.
Chapel In Youngstown. AI·
Gary Barnheart of South
Mr . and Mrs . Price en- Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Stanford Stockton and Donna of
Miss June Neigler of tending the service from here
Carolina. The couple have a tertained some of their children Douglas Johnson of Racine.
Hemlock Grove and Mrs. Columbus· spent a couple of were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Parsons,
daughter, Jamie, age 2.
and her brother from West W. T. Carleto~f Racine Clarence Sargent, local.
days with her parents, Mr. and Kelly and Billy; Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker Virginia.
called on Enie Brinker on
Mr . and · Mrs. · Merle' Mrs. George Nelgler.
Dora Parsons, Mrs. Frances
received word of the death of his
Mrs. Edith King spent Sunday.
Schroeder, Ron and Mae Fern,
Parsons, Shelly Chevalier, Mrs.
aunt, Mrs. Pruna .. Huber of Monday with Freda Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bickers and of Columbus spent Sunday with
In 1970 four students at Kent Gerald Wells, Mrs. Don Hupp,
Georgia. The body will be taken in the afternoon they called on daughter of Bashan spent Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris. Stale University were killed Mrs. Carroll White, Mrs. Irene
to Dayton for funeral Mrs. Virgie Wolfe.
Sunday with Mr. and 111rs .
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross and when National Guardsmen on Rhodes, Preston Parsons, Mrs.
arrangements there. Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Vergil Price left Douglas Circle and grand- Ray of Columbus spent the duty during demonstrations Edria Parsons and Mark and
Mrs. Walker will attend the Monday for a few days stay in daughter, Kim Folirod .
weekend with Mrs. Frankie opened fire .
Mrs. Paul Wolfe.
funeral.
West Virginia with their Larry Circle and Charlie
children. She will go to the Matthews spent the weekend
Major League Results ·
r--------------------------------------~--By United Press International Cleveland Clinic on May 6 and with friends at Joliet, lli.
National League
Florence Circle called on Mr.
st. Louis 001 ooo 001- 2 7 o then on to Florida.
Phila
ooo 100 02x- 3 11 1 Mrs. Viola Moon and . Freda and Mrs. Garrett Circle of
Zachary, Shaw (81 and Miller called on Mr. and Mrs. Racine recently.
I
'
·
I
Simmons; Lersch, Brandon 19), Elber Riebel Monday evening.
'
tjoerner 19) and McCarver. WP
Alfred
BY JACK O'BRIAN
quiz winner got teddibly hysterical with a net- Lersch 12·0 . LP- Zachary ID·
NOT HERSELF; NOW ·
work-TV exec smoking a stogie on a United
0·
VISITS DAUGHTER
LANA'S BESIDE HERSELF
Airlines L.A.·Io-N.Y. .flight, berated him,"and
Note.~
Ill innings)
Mrs. Bernard Schram
NEW
YORK
Lana
Turner
swears
her
before
he debarked, hit him with an air-sickness
~~
: : ~~ ~ ~ : ~ _.r~~ned hom.e Friday after
Sunday afternoon guests at $21111,1100 "gift" to ex-hubby Ron Dahle was made bag. Empty, we trust .... Our durable vision of
Holtzman ID-4) and Breeden; VISiting here with her daughter,
Genlry, McGraw 19) and Grote. Mrs. John Lyons and family, the Follrod·Roblnson home when she wasn't herself .... Barblifa· Anderson's said qulzling sUII remains : that $64,000show had
were Mr. and Mrs. 'Robert quitting TV's "Ironside" ov~ money (of cour- guys puffing cigars who didn't bother her. Cash
WP....McGraw 13·11. HR-WII· Middleport.
Iiams 16th!.
Robinson and family of Belpre. se); its only really irreplaceable star ill R. Burr in a great filter .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. .. .. Ni%on's man-about.giris Henry Kissinger
NBC's Kyle Rote has a fat Florida-TV offer
Woode · were Stinday afternoon (who's kissinger now) dates hi&amp; classiest gUt- .... Lou Holtz, on Merv Griffin's "ethnicguests of Mr. and Mrs. John tergal so far: Joanna Barnes, so elegant, and comedy" episodes, regularly is the hllariOUB
Hayes
near Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Durgess Texas.
wotta dolty book shesmutted!·.... JackleOnassls class of that spiced-hammery .. .. Holtz a~
Mrs.
Vlna
Woode,
a
former
o! Middleport have purchased A cookout on the lawn at the resident of this locality and still and RubY Kee 1er ch atted on 3rd Ave. between l)ickie Dawson are its real stars .... Serft•o
"'
and moved into one of the Ar- home of Mr. and Mrs. Guy A. a member of the local church, showings.
Franchi's doing rr.ulto bene biz i at llle
chie Lee homes in the Rustic Guinther was enjoyed Sunday observed her _96th birthday on
Johnny Carson dated some purty NBC tour Americana's Royal Box and would do 'better If
Hills addition.
evening by Mr. and Mrs. Willie May 1. Friends . wishing to guides; so handy .... Oscar-type Sarah Miles was they could stretcl\ the ~aUs .... The Stage Deily
Mr. and Mrs . Lewis Guinther of GalllpoUs, Mr. and remember her may send mail asked what she thought of the reluctant George · proves it cuts the mustard: Celebrates its 35th
Icenhower and daughter of East Mrs . . Malcolm Guinther and care of Albany Rest Home.
C. Scott and. replied, "George C, Who?" .... TV birthday this·month ·(mazeltov).
Liverpool, Bertha Tipton and children,
Mrs .
Eloise Mrs. Grace Kelly was slightly paneUst Bill Cullen's in Beth Israel Hospital,
Jacques Bergerac•s ex Gloria and Chicago
daughter and Margaret' Stan. Willbarger and boys and Donald injured in a fall atthe Elmwood abaft Louis Armstrong .... Guess which star Ava exec Ed Hoban may wed any lively deadUne .... '
ford of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Guinther, local.
Nursing Home and would ao- , Gardner caUs "Mr. Nothing." You're right.
Ghoul-star VIncent Price isn't certain "Dr.
John Jeffers of Rising Sun were Mr. and Mrs. James R. White predate mail sent in care of the
Friends say Ethel Kennedy is radiant, for Phlbes" is his !DOth or !Olst tllm; he's afraid to
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert and Mary Beth of Dunbar, W. nursing home.
thefirsttimesince .... Age of Vulgarity: The San check .... Marvelous French director Claude
Jeffers while here to attend the Va., visited her mother, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Henderson Francisco Sexual Freedom League plans an Lelouch ("A Man and a Woman") and wife
funeral o( r,lr. Jeffers' father, ·Rose Schwarz in Mason and his who have spent the winter in .. "Orgy Ship Trip" to next fall's Erotic film ended their lcwe story.
Mr. James Jeffers.
mother, Mrs. Agnes White ,,and Florida have left there and are Festival in Holland; going Dutch, f'cawss .... Not
Nat'lAss'n of Gagwritera May 18 will hold a
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Smith uncle, Richard Duckworth. making a few stops among . much doing in H'wood so the swruner theaters ''Wake for Ed &amp;tllivan Impressions" .... But
and daughter of Elkhart, Ind., They were accompanied home relatives on their way back will be peopled by Gig Young, Shirley Booth, Ed'll be back, you clowns ' ... Ulick O'Connor's
villiled Mr. an.d Mrs. Malcolm by Mrs. White and Mr. Duck· h
h
Guinther arid family .
worth and while there they all orne ere.
Lana Turner, Dan Dailey, Gene Barry, Howard "Brendan," biography of Brendan Behan, sillies
Miss Glenna Soulsby spent. attended a birthday dinner at
Keels, Sally Ann Howes, Paul Lynde, Jim hispatrioliclrishguerrlllaflghtingwasspurlous ·
Easter with Mr. and Mrs. the home of Mr. and Mrs. NAME VEEP
Nabors, Mickey Rooney, etc.
and that Breixlan was queer .... Also that his
William Nease and' ,family of Millard Duckworth In Hun· MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)'"/ane Fonda's so angrily overjoyed with Alan fa'lher was a "spoiled priest" and his grand·
Racine.
tirlgton, in honor of Mr . White · Fonner University of Wisconsin Myerson, who created her slanllld antiwar revue mother a bomber, jailed at 77; Behan Jived to the
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Holter of and the latter Mr. Duckworth, Basketball Coach John Erick· (which can't get booked), she's hired him to ripe old age of 41 '.... Our old friend M.rl
Akron spent the Easter Also attending were Mr. carl . son, who also served a~ general direct her "Steelyard Blues" movie .... Famous ·Hellinger drank a quart or more of lranctr a daJ
weekend at their home here. Duckworth of Pickerington. In manager of the Milwaukee gent who died a few days ago was about to and lived to the ripe·old age of 44.
Myla Hudson and son, Dencil, Huntington they also visited Bucks Monday was na~ed vice divorce and ~ his three-year roinance; also,
Bing's wife, Kathryn Crosby, and their 1011 ·
visited her sister and bro\her- their aunt, Mrs. Sidney Bar!l!ls president of an agncultural no one can find his bank vaults rumored jammed Harry are a new TV·talk show team. 'nte 1111
in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde and daughters.
firm.
with millions,.... "Gay 91)1" founder Bill Hardy, sings, plays &amp;uttar. and his pop's criticism: "He
Gerlach of Letart, w. Va.
Mrs. Daisy RotiSh returned to
77, just married again .... Zlegfeldoll Irene hils a big chance" .... N.Y. bus and subway·
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Shane and her home here Saturday after ·NEW PARK
' Hayes, 75, just 747ed to Madrid for the summer. staffers notoriously are sullen when they're .._t
children, Kenneth and Denita, visi~ng with rela\ives in Rill- TRENTON; N.J. (UPI)-A
Hildegarde, 65,lookedhalf her age dining In insolent; therefore an encouragU. word for the
of Dallas, Texas, are villiting his man for two weeks .. Bringing bill to set up a sports complex Louise's E. 58th St. celebrity- neighborhood spot F:E·train conductor fnm ~~~~ to Times
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan her hOme were her sons, i•l the Hackensack, N.J. mea- .... Rrreally-big trawl at the Royal Box. Flung- Squm:e who ehirps, ''Good 1110l'11in8.11ave a n1et
Shane. They were accompanied William and Charles Duck· 'dow Ianda was approved Mon- tables'n'everything .... Two~ llnks in a luxury- trlp," and to departing sulllllayflrwa, "l'lllle
home by, his brother, Danny worth, who returned to Rittman day, 23-2,, by the N'ew Jersey . restaurant chain are set ·to fold .... Sinatra'~ check your valuables and haw a aood .., .•
Shane, who ha~ visited in on Sunday.
Senate.
·
·
.
llulldlng a Sutton Pl. mansion .... Famous $&amp;1,000 Watdi the cloaiJI&amp; dtiCII'II pleue." Rue.

$23.8 Million Damages

CONGRATULATIONS TO Mrs. Mittie Nelson who recently
observed her 90th birthday.
Her grandson and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Nelson entertained
with a surprise birthday party in her honor at their Fistwoods
home, Approxlma!llly 50 persons were on hand to help celebrate
tbe occasion. Mrs. Nelson has a trailer home close to her grandson's residence.

nance Director Harold · A.
Hovey said if the governor's
plan is agreed to by · the Re·
publican-controlled legislature,
amendments could take care of
the local cer\ifications.
· Although the spokesman conceded he did not know whether
the rollbacks could be achieved
in practice. this year, he disagreed with Kurfess' contention
they would be good for only
one year.
"We only have to roil it
back once and it's in effect
from then on," the spokesman
said. "Mr. Kurfess .ought to
know about rollbacks. They
were originally his idea and we
lifted some of the language di·
recUy from his bill of last
year."

r---·----------:..: ------.- ------,

Asked in Kent Incident

New Gas Rate

Effeetive in

Pomeroy Only

Tuppers Plains
Society News

Chester East
N
N te

Racine
Social Events

Carmel News,

By the Day

1

Social

Syra~use

---~

News, Society

Voice along Broad~ay

l

�,'

. 4- The Dally Sen~rnel,l&gt;liddl.ewrt-Pc::;:or~~

Syraeuse .
News, Society .

'

::!:'!!.

Fairview News Notes
.By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Marr of
Racine spent Sunday evening
with Mr, and Mrs. Herbert
&amp;lyre.
Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
Philip Radford and Stephanie,
Pomeroy, Mrs. Jack Sargent of
Racine, Larry. Molly and Amy
Fisher of Racine were dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Shields on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Elwood
Bachus and two , children of

Clifton spent Sunday with Mr ·
and Mrs. Russell Roush and
a birthday party for Donnila family. Mr.· and ·Mrs. Ga~y ·
Manuel at the home o( Mr. and Wilford of Racme and Ronme
Mrs. Don Manuel at Racine. .1Russell of Pomeroy spent
Miss Evelyn Lawson of Sunday afternoon at the Roush
Mansfield spent Thursday home.
through Sunday . with her Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles David arid Edward, spent
Lawson and family .
Thursday eve~mg }l'tth Mrs.
Hope Bird of Antiquity spent Gladys Shields and \'drs. Edna
Friday night with Cindy Roush at Racine. ,
Lawson. Cindy accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Owen An,d~rson
Hope home Saturday and spent are moving to the . v.!lma
the night.
Quillen residence at 'Sinngbu,rg.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of Mr. and Mrs.
Parsons

•- The DIUy Senllnel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., May 4, 197!

spent the w~kend with Mr. and
Mrs . Marlin Matteson at
Poland, Ohio. Mrs. Matteson
remains seriously ilL
'
Mrs. Ruth ParS&lt;J!IS is visiting
her granddaughter, the former
Lena Ruth Parsons, . in
Missouri.
Mr. and Mrs . Clarence
Wickline Of Tanners Run spent
Sunday afternoon with Herbert
Sayre.
Brice Sayre of Columbus and
Lou Ann Sayre of Kanauga were
dinner guests Sunday df Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Sayre and Dagid.

By ADA.SLACK
Mrs . Vera Tannehill of
,J'arma spent a week with her
pan!llls, Mr. and Mrs. c. H.
Williams and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jenks
II. Louisa, Ky., spent a weekend
. '·.with her parents, 1\fr, and Mrs.
William Brown.
.
. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hysell
· •'·. · spent from Thursday until
Sunday with ·lheir daughter and
t.:mcmnati spent a weekend with
' son-ill-law, Mr ~ and Mrs, Max
Mr .-and Mrs. Howard Donohue
Folmer, Cincinnati.
and
Mrs. Rose Bachus.
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells,
Guinther and children and Mr.
Mandy
and Amy, of Syracuse
and Mrs. Frank Hendrix and
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Barbara, visited recently with
Mrs. Don Hupp and sons.
Mrs . Elmo Johnson and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
lrother, Kermit Williams, at
and Bobby of Long Bottom were
Charleston. They also .attended
Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
the r.jerle Haggard show at the
Joe Manuel and sons.
Charleston Civic Center.
Mrs. Joe Manuel was a guest
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Slack,
Thursday
of her mother, Mrs.
Suzanne and Philip, have
Katie Young, Minersville.
moved into the Jacob Turner
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rowe
hoture.on Wa~ St.
and son, David, of New
Mr. Vernon Bartels and
Brighton; Pa., are visiting Mrs.
father, · Enunett Bartels, of
Kate Rowe and Ada. David
Cincinnati, aixl Mr. and Mrs.
Rowe has just returned home
William Bartels, of Benton
MASON
COUNTY
WINNERS
Elementary
students
of
Mason
County
recently
parfrom
Korea.
Harbor, Mich~. spent the
Uclpated in the annual bottle cap drive for the American Cancer Society in Mason County.
Mr . and Mrs. Steve Cleland
weekend here to villi! with their
molhei-, Mrs. Emmett Barlllls, Wlmers of the event and Mrs. William Rardin, Jr., who has served as chairman of the and sons of Columbus, Mrs.
American Cancer Society in Mason County for the past ten years, villi led the Royal Crown
Anna Wines, Karen and Jackie,
who is a patient .at Veterans
Bottling Company in Middleport Monday where they turned in their bottle caps and were
Sandra Wolfe of Racine were
Memorial H~Mpital. Mr. Bartels
presented
with
a
check
for
over
$770
from
Ferman
Moore,
owner.
Left
to
right,
Mr.
Moore
guests
Sunday of Mrs. Kate
is with hia son ·during Mrs.
Bartels' hospltallzation.
presents the check toOrlsZirkleofHartfordElementarywhowas top winner with9,!00caps,
Rowe and Ada .
Carol Humphreys of New Haven Elementary, second place winner with 5,639, Mrs. Hardin and
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Sid
.
Mrs. Donald Cottrill, Sharon,
Sherry Young of Mason Elementary, third place winner with 5,435 caps. The money was
and Tim, Max Manuel Sr., Mr.
MIDDLEPORT, 0,
Craig and Bruce, spent Sunday
with her brother and sisler·indonated to the cancer fund .
,----------~a:nd~M~rs~.~E:rn~e~st~B~u~sh~at~te~n~d:ed~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
law, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
~ick, of Columbus.
and Mr . and Mrs. Harley
Mr. and Mrs. James TanJohnson .
. nehiU and family of Parma
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
villited here with his grand·
were Sunday before noon
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. HerWilliams, and mother. Mrs.
man Will of Peach Fork.
Vera .Tannehill, and other
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene H.aning
relatives.
.
were
Sunday afternoon callers
Spending Salurday night and
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles·, Jr., of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Will.
Sul)day with Mr. and Mrs. Cecil and Frankl\n. were
Eugene Slack were her sister weekend visitors of his sister, Mr . Haning was helping with
and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rhoton and backhoe work for Mr. WilL
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
Mrs . Richard Dunlap and family of Dayton .
were
Sunday evening visitors of
Patrick of Sandyville.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles and Mr. and Mrs. John Murphy and
Jean Hall, Margaret Cottrill family visited with Mrs. Giles'
and Ada Slack a !tended the family , Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hart family.
Daughters of America Lodge Jr. and family, and Mr. ·and
rally practice at Chester
Mrs. Roger Hart of St. Paris.
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Glfes Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker and family visited with Mr . and
and Mrs. Edna Summerfield ·Mrs. Bernard and family and
attended funeral services for R. Mf. Sam Hart, all of Springfield
Brooks Lamb in· Columbus and also viSited with Mrs.
recently.
.Clifton Hidd and family of near
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Sci!.
Butcher and her mother, Mrs.
Mrg:"Jll!e' ~ou811 ; RUdney"and''' Your regular payday
Augusta Will, spent several Sher)oli 'lif 'LdgBn were Sunday saviri'!i'S ptos our .high
'"
' l.
days with relatives in Medina. visitors of Mrs. Helen Johnson
rate of return will
"
Sunday evening guests of and other relatives.
make your savings
Mrs. Ada Slack and Mr. and
Mrs. Nora Johnson returned
grow quickly ....
Mrs. Eugene Slack were Mr. to her home in Columbus after
and Mrs. Harley Johnson and spending two weeks with Mrs.
children of Wolf Pen Road.
Helen Johnson and other
Mrs. Mary Jane Gibbs and relatives here.
sons, Doyle and Jl,andy,
Mrs. Harley Johsnon was a
Parkersburg, were here for a Tuesday afternoon visitor of
few days with her parents, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Uncoln Russell.
and Mrs. William Eichinger.
Mr . and Mrs. BoY,ce of
They were joined for the Columbus was weekend visitor MEIGS CO. BRANCH
weekend by another daughter of Mrs. Boyce and Mr. and Mrs.
and son-in·law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Russell. Also visiting
· Freddie BOyd, and daughter, were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mandy, also of Parkersburg. Russell and Mr. and Mrs.
Spending Thursday evening Donald RusselL
Meigs Coonty Branch of The
with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Mrs . Helen Johnson was Athens County Savings &amp;
Parker were Mr. and Mrs. Sunday night and Monday
Loan. Co.
Wilbur Parker of Alfred. ·
296 Second St.
visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Johnson and family.
Mrs. Larry Barr, David ao•
Michelle , of Rutland w••
'.
Otto Marcinko ill spending a Tuesday visiliors of Mrs.
leave from the armed service Howard Thoma, and Patricia
with his mother and sister, Mrs.
Otto Marcinko.
Mrs. Opal Harris visited
recently with Mrs. C. A. Barnett
and Mrs: Curt Miller, both of
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mrs. Harold Boston and son
spent an evening tecenUy with
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Win Blake of Tuppers Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Barr of
. .
Pittsburgh, Pa., visited during
the weekend with his brother,
Dale and family, and his sister,
Opal.
.
Dinner guests of Opal Harris
were Mr. and Mrs. Horace
Barr, Pittsburgh, and Mr. And
Mrs. Charles Barr of Belpre.
Afternoon visitors were Mr. and
With a few belts u ~der his belt, he's a very
Mrs. Sonny Harris and family,
Face it
.
Larry Jiarris,. Mr. and Mrs.
funny guy. Life of the party .. Only trouble
Dale Bardnd son and Mr. ·and
If anything is going to be done about drunk
with good time Charley is, when he's in this
Mrs. Herman Grossnickle and
driving, it'll have to· be done by you.
shape, he insists on driving himself home. At
family, all local.
this point the life of the party becomes death
Mr."and Mrs. Ray Dillon and
Good old lnnoceni Victim You .
family and Roy Dillon o(
on the highway.
,
Columbus spent a week end .
So Shout Out! If you're fed up to here with
Now-if
you
think
this
problem
hasn't
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
I
457/ 574
dru11k drivers on Ohio Highways, write DOWN
Pearl Dillon.
·
Get the Fashion Mate•
rea ched epidem ic proportions yet, think
Get the St~lisl' zig·zag
zig·zag portable sewing
WITH ,DRUNKS, Box '2626, Columbus, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Masser
about this next time you're behind the wheel. ·
portable
sewing
machine
machine
by
~g!!f'
in
We'll see that the right people know how you
and family visited recently with
by
Sing§!''
in
its
own
carryhandy
carrying
case.
$ews
Chances are 1 in 80 that you'll be injured or
Mr. and Mrs. Sonny Harris and
f.eel. And in the meantime support your poing
case.
Makes
button·
zig-zag
on
all
weights
of
iamily.
killed
i~
a
traffic
accident
with
a
drunk
driver
liCe and law enforcement officials. They're
holes and embroiders. So
fabrics! so c6mpact il
Mrs. Ruth Barton and Mr.
-this year . And there isn't a drunk driver \ trying to do a good job and they need your
handy to use, then out
stores anywhere!
and Mrs. Robert Barton of
among 'em who will do anything about drunk
away!
I
.
help.
Coolville were in Georgia
driving.
recently to visit Mr. and Mrs.
We have a·credit plan
1
.
.
.
Larance Barton.
to
fit
ygur
budget.
design8d
l'flrs. Loren Benedum and
60 INSURANCE COMPANIES AND AGENT GROUPS CONCERNED ABOUT YOU AND THE OTHER GUY
family visited Sunday with her
parenb, Mr. and MrJ. Roy
.Rollins and sister, Rena Sun·
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Taylor
, . 620 East J;lroad Street
• Columbus,. Ohio 43215
II. Fostoria spent a weekend
' ' .1
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SINGER SALES &amp; SERVI't E
'
111111 hlr paten II, Mr. ~nd Mn.
McCA~L'S&amp; SIMI!LICITY PATTERNS
.Dill a.rr ud Gll'y.

3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

$11 9· 00

AS SHOWN
ONLY"''"'",,,,,,,.,,.,............

BAKER fURN IJU RE

'\Volfpen

News, Notes

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EARN

MORE NOW

Joppa News

•

Don't expect a:,d runk
to do.anything abOut
drunk driving.

Carry off

..

a zig-zag
sewing machine
t;&gt;Y Singer.

.

$12995

$7995

.

Mr. MN. Scullln.a et
i'M'IIInlu'll villted recen~
Willi 1111'1. LaiTy ~rris llld

115 W. Setond

992-2284

Pomeroy,

o.

...

,!

.,

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Beat....

Kurfess,

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! Of the Bend

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I By Bob Hoeflich

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G~lligan

COLUMB~ (UPI) - House · ready . certified by· county

Martin Osborne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Osborne of Long
Bottom,is a mem~r of the 1971 Ohi~t University Symphonic Band
which will be .t~ing .the Virginia-Washington, D. C. area May s9. The band wtll be domg a concert at 10 a.nl. W~dno\sday at Meigs
Higjl School for the s\udent body enroute.
Martin, a 1970 graduate of Eastern High School, is majoring
in instrumental music education with the baritone horn ·as his
principal instrument and will be playing that horn during this
· week's tour. ~e is~ member. of Ohio University's 1\farching Men
of Ohio and the Ohio University Chorus. Martin was named \0 the ·
!resh!J!endean'sUstforthefallandwinterquarters.
· ··

Speaker Chafies F. Kurfess has
questioned whether it is too late
for the state th.implement property tax rollbacks in 1971, but
the administration of Gov. John
J. Gilligan has indicated it cari
he accomplished through legislation now in the General Assembly.
Kurfess said Monday it ill too
late far Gilligan's proposed rollbacks to take effect this year
because local tax rates were al-

budget commissions last Soptemher.
·
"The rollback, therefore, is
nothing more than an iUusion, " ·
the Republican leader said. "As
the bill is written, tllere is no
way property taxpayers could
ever receive property tax relief. ·
Sinae the governor's properly
tax rollback proposal is a one·
time shot, t~e language of his
tax bill would preclude any tax
relief at all."
·

Disagreeing

The bill referred to by Kur·
less is the Democratic adminfstra~on proposal t~ grant $110
million'' worth of property tax
rollbacks through state Jaw.
A spokesman for slate Fi-

Long Bottom
Social Notes
I.

1

DON'T LOOK NOW but it's prom time.
This Friday, the annual affair for Meigs High School juniors
and. seniors and their guests will he held at the Jl,utlsnd gymnasium. Following the dance, there will be bowling and a mid,
night show with breakfast to be served about 2:30 a.m. at the
Meigs High School, Rock Springs.
THE POMEROY lJTTLE League is selling boxes of candy
~d capdy bars to raise funds for the ~er program. Residents
wiShing to make purchases can contact Kermit Walton or Jim
Souls by. The only other money raising activity, hopefully, will he
a tag day in the near future.
THE HELPING HAND Missionary Circle of the Bradford
Cht)l'Ch of Christ is seeking the names of servicemen overseas
whom the circle would like to remember with treat boxes.
If you have someone in the armed forces 9Verseas that you'd
like to have remembered just call Mrs. Frances Hysell at 9926932.

THE 1971 EDmON of the Meigs County Fair will undoubtedly go on in August as it has for many, many years but it
will be without tlle services of the late Charles Radford, Jr. and
Fred Leifheit who is very ill. Both men have spent uncountable
hours in planning and staging the annual fairs.

Frank Beach is Buried FridJJy
Funeral services for Frank
Beech, Middleport, were held
Friday afternoon at the
Rawlin~s.Coats Funeral Home.
Attending from out of town
were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Taylor,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Taylor,
Pennie Taylor, Terry Taylor,
Mrs. Don Osborn, ·Mrs. Terry
Collins and son, Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Leonard, Clair Leonard,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack . Kel\Qedy,
Jackie Kennedy, Mrs. Ethel

Kennedy, Mrs. Ethel Essman,
Mrs. James Simpson, Sr., Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer Beach, Mrs.
Glenna Grass, Mrs . Ruth
Carsey, George Beach, Tom E.
Beach, Mrs. Roher! Slinger,
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Leonard and
Jean Quattrociocche.
Pallbearers were Joe Taylor,
Dana Leonard, Clair Leonard,
Waid Leonard, Jack Kennedy
and Robert Hartenbach.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Four-Card Spade Openings
diamond, the bidding devel·
ops logically to a filtal con·
tract of two hearts. East and
West can't get into the bid·
ding and South will surely
rna ke two hearts.
Now let's see what hap·
pens if North opens one
spade. South may raise to
two spades. In that case,
North will play the hand
there and be set one or pos·
sibly two tricks.
Suppose South tries one
no·trump. North will prob·
ably pass. West will open
the five .of clubs and South
will have a great . deal of
trouble co 11 e c tin g more
than five tricks. Or North
'd t t
d'
d
may re b t o wo Iamon s.
This will lead to the same
unsuccessful' two.sparle con.
tract. The players who open
with one spade wind up
minus ; those who open one
diamond wind up plus.

4

NORm (D)

.AJ73
.J95
t AQ106
&lt;ftQ4
EAST

WEST
.Q105

• K82

.K7

• A63

.AI0853

.J72

·~72

t K543

soum
• 964
• QI0842
• J8
.K96
Both vulnerable
Wo•t North East
It
Pass
1•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass

South
I'll'
I N.T.
Pass

Opening lead-+ 2

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
One argument in favor of
indiscriminate opening of
(NEWSPAPER EHTIRPmE ASSN.J
four-card major suits and
particularly the spade suit
lies in the pre·emptive value.
When you open with one
The bidding has been1
spade, your opponent can West North
t:ast South
·only overcall at the two
1t
lofo
Pass
level.
2N.T.
Pa,;
2+
Pass
?
3+
Pass
There is no question about Pass
this pre·emptive value, but
You, South, hold:
we have found that for the .K543 .8632 tAKQ .74
one time when it ore·empts
What do you do now?
your opponents there are
A-rass. Things have taken a
several occasions when it nasty turn. Quit before you get
pre·empts your p a r t n e r. in n1ore troub)e.
Therefore, in JABOBY
TODAY'S QUESTION
MODERN we never open a
Instead of raising you to two
four·card spade suit in first
diamonds
your partner has bid
or second seat when we have
one
heart
over your one diaa r 'easona ble minor suit
mond.
What
do you do now?
opening at our disposal.
After North opens one

Registration Day Anrunced
Registration for kindergarten
and first grade registration for
all students In the . Eastern
Local Si:bool District who will
be attending kindergarten next
fall will be conducted Wednesday at Chester Elementary
between 9 a.m. and 3:30p.m. A
chUd must be five years old on
or before Sept. 30 to enter
kindergarten In the fail. The
parent must bring a birth
certificate and health records to
Mrs. Baum who will tie in
charge of the kindergarten.
Registration for first graders,
who have not been enrolled in a
.. kindergarten class, will be
conducted in each of the
elementary · llibools at the
fOllowing Umes Wedneaday:
Oleater, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Riverview, t a.m. to 11:30

a.m.
Tuppers Plains, 9:30 a.m. to
noon.
Any child who has been atlllnding kindergarten at Chester.
will not .need to register since
their records have been
presented to Mrs . Baum and
wiU be given to the school where
the child will be attending this
fall. A thild must be six on or
before September 30th to enter
\he first grade In the fall. The
parents mQStpresent the child's
birth certificate and health
records to the first · grade
teachers in their respective
buildings. •

1

A thought for the day: Law\'
writer . Publilius Syrus said,
receive advice, few
prnfit it."'

lllelen Help Us!

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By Helen Bottel

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YOIITH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young people. their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us!, it weleomes laughs but won't·dodge a serious question with a
lrush.off.
Send your. teenage questions Ia YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
caare of Helen Help lis! this newspaper.
MALE CONSCIENCE TURNS HIM OFF
Dear Helen:
This was our first lime dating as Tim and I aren't quite 16f We
liked each other a lot, or so I thought. He had "ideas" sometilnes,
but I could control ·them.
, .
. Well, one night he called and said his parents wanted io meet
me. I asked, "This isn't a trick?" because he knew how I felt . So
we were on our way, but he acted ashamed to walk next to me and
didn't even hold my hand going to his house, which is abOut six
blocks from mine.
Then he said, "My parents aren't home," and I answered,
"Then forgetit," but he promised he'd be good.
When we got there he sneaked me in quick "so the neighbors ,
won't see us." Everything seemed all right and we were just
watching TV, and then he turned off the lights and well ....
Somehow his getting fresh didn't seem wrong at the time, but
afterwards I felt so guilty and rotten - like a bum. I didn't stay
very long, but it was too long, anyway.
When I got home I had ·to make up a story about what Tim's
paren Is looked like to my mother, and that made me feel rottener.
The next day at school Tim wou1dn'l even talk to me and he
hasn'taskedme out since. !asked my girlfriend to find out why he
was avoiding me and he told her I was "too friendly."
Helen, it'~ bad enoUgh having this bad conscience, but does he
have to hate me for something he planned? It's been four months
and I've got over the puppy love part, but why does he treat me
like the enemy? Why can !I we be "j~st friends?" - AVOIDED
Dear Avoided :
Boys have consciences, too, and I im'agine Tim's gave him fits
after his little plan worked. This especially if some of his buddies
put him up to it (they do, you know), then expected a locker room
report.
So .... to make HIM feel less guilty, he says YOU are "too
friendly." What we have here ls a war between an inexperienced
hoy's ideals and his urges, with you the loser because he ignores
what he'd rather not face . Let him know you don't think he's a
louse, and! think you'llsoon·befriends - just friends -again .:..

Mrs. H&gt;l'lel Wyncoop of
Johnstown, Mrs. Jack Stalzer
,
.
and son of Columbus and Mrs.
!'&lt;lith Sisson and family visited
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter.
Mrs. Barbara Fitzpatrick and
. Mrs. ·connie Walls of Lancaster
were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Hayman.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The campus last May and added, Terry Stethem, Mike Bissell
father of a Kent State "The defendants know tbere and David Smith are among ihe
University student shot to death was insufficient c~use to send .Eastern seniors who toured
by . National Guard troops last armed troops," and also knew Washington, D. C. and New
May 4 Monday flied a'. $23.8 "that the presence of such York City this week.
million damage .suit again:lt troops created imminent Jr. Hauber, New Matamoras,
former governor James A. danger of death or injury to all was a dinner guest of Mr. and
..
Rhodes and National Guard students on campus."
Mrs. Fred Larkins.
Natural gas rates will be
officials.
The suit also alleged the Donna, Debbie and Linda
increased
only to Pomeroy, noi
The suit was filed in troops were not properly Sisson of Vienna, W. Va., were
to Pomeroy and Middleport
Cuyahoga County Common trained in the' use of loaded visiting Serena Sisson and Mr.
residents,
as
re ported
Pleas Court by attorney Steven weapons and not prepared to and Mrs. Joe Bissell.
erroneously
last
Friday.
Sindell who represents ArthUr face such a situation as ' OC· Bernice Prince · and Pearl
The increase reflects in·
Krause, Pittsburgh, the father curred at Kent State.
Sanderlin were in Parkersburg
creases in the cost of gas from
of Allison Krause, 19.
Defendants besides Rhodes visiting recently.
suppliers
which
were
The suit charged the troops were former Adjutant General Recent weekend visitors ,of authorized by the
FPC and are
were wrongfully sent to the S. T. Del Corso, Brig. Gen. Mary Pierce were Mr. and Mrs.
passed on through a clause in
Robert Canterbury who com- Denver Curtis and family of
Pomeroy's contract with the
mended the troops on the Kent Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Campus and the approximately Newell and Shiela and Elmer of gas company.
Amount of the increase is four
200 National Guardsmen who Chesler and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
and seventy-eight hundredths
were on the campus.
Curtis and family ..
Plaintiffs also included Dean Larry Aulherton has returned cents per thousand cubic fee t.
By Evelyn Brickles
The new rate becomes effective
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tarr of Kahler, Canton, and Joseph home from St. Joseph Hospilal May 16. II will result in an
·
Salem spent a couple of days Lewis, Ma.Sillon, two students in Parkersburg.
who
were
wounded.
Mr.andMrs.
Elsworth
Dill
of average increase of 72 cents per
here with her aunt, Mr. and
month per customer.
Pomeroy visited Connie Con·
H.
Mrs. John Arbaugh.
nally and Freda Larkins.
Dear Hdlen:
Mrs. Roland Torrence spent
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hank
Holter
and
I'm going on 141&gt; and the girls have given me a nicknlli'I~
saturday with her mother, Mrs.
family
and
Mrs.
David
Smith
which I hate because It's true: Flatsy. How can I stop this?Harry Allison of Racine.
and Dee Dee were visiting Mr.
CLOTHESHANGER '
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tuttle and
and
Mrs.
Loyd
McPeek
of
family of Fairborn spent a
eWS 0 S
Dear C.H.:
Belleville,
W.
Va.
Wear a slightly padded bra, tell 'em "Better Flalsy than
weekend here with his parents, Attendance. at Nazarene
The Eighth Grade Class of
Mr. and Mrs. Veri Tuttle.
Church Sunday School on April
By MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS F1opsy ,"and cheer up : At 14\it there's still room for growth. - H.
Riverview School spent WedMr. and Mrs. David Davis 25 was 43. Offering was $7 .93.
Members of the Happy Dear Helen:
and son of Vienna, W. Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Caruthers nesday ,at Columbus.
My parents don't like each other very welL I guess !bey used
-Violet Smith Hustlers Sunday School Class of
Mr. and Mrs. Derrel Wells of and daughter, Penny, and son,
the Methodist Church assem- to, because there are 10 kids, but now Mom is about 30 pounds
Cherry Ridge were Sunday Terry, and Donna Radebaugh of
bled in the social rooms for a six overweight and Dad runs around. He accuses Mom of stepping
guests of their parents, Mr. and Louisville, Mrs. Bessie Larkins
o'clock dinner Friday evening, out, but how could shewithseveralchlldren underfoot?
Mrs. J. S. Davis.
. of Reedsville, and Mr. and Mrs.
We love them both In spite of the fighting and wish they'd get
April23. Following the dinner a
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Davis Ronald Chardas and son, Ricky
program was presented after together again, Their 20th anniversary is coming up. Do you think
returned home after spending of Canton and Bert Scriinsher of
which a business session was if we gave them a big party, they might see how dumb it is to
the winter in Florida.
conducted by Mrs. Owen argue and accuse each other all the time? - THE OLDER KIDS
Keno spent. Sunday with Mrs.
Mrs. Mildred Caldwen and Doris Marks and Beckie
Watson, president.
Dear Kids:
son, Kenneth, and Sue Hayes of Caruthers.
• Kent Wolfe Is confined to his
One party won't slop chronic fighting, but lf yoitr parents see
Chester spent Easter weekend Mr. and Mrs. Shartiger spent Mr. and Mrs. Russell Harris home with chicken pox. Several
with her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. the weekend with their'\ and family of Xenia, Ohio, Mrs. other first graders are also howmuch.youc,are,ltlll!~h\.beastart. . , ~;·, .,, ,.,. ,,, 11, ia.hlull
But. ... Don tmake i\'~ }!W"pfise patity1.- 1Jr. .,~ 1, 11, t- .... ,~, 11 ,\
Jerry Carter and sons of Rocky daughter in West Virginia. Robert Harden and family of absent from school. ·
Mount, North Carolina.
Their grandson, · Nathan Morning Star spent Sunday with
Rev. and Mrs. Paul Sellers
Mrs . .Edna Summerfield Boatrite accompanied them. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle, and Mr. and Mrs.·Otis Knopp
attended the funeral of her Mr.andMrs. Earl Thoma and Verna and Wavie Circle.
attended a. singing convention
brother, Dr. Lam at Columbus family of Pomeroy spent Mr. and Mrs. George Circle Saturday night at •Fisher Neigler and also visited Mrs. A.
SERVICE HELD
recently.
Sunday evening with his and daughter, James Circle, all Memorial Chur~h in Kema, W. B. Cross and other relatives.
Funeral services for Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Fon Holsey mQ.Iher, Mrs. Georgia Thoma. of New Haven, spent Sunday Va.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Albert
Hill
have
I
Martin (Myrtle) Matteson, Sr.,
received word of the birth of a
Rev. Brown has been filling with Mrs. Mary Circle.
Sunday afternoon guests of been guests of Mr. and Mrs. were held Thursday at tbe King
great-grandson born to their the pulpit for Rev. Grate who Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Mrs. Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Waid Foster and family ln Funeral Home at the Southside
granddaughter, Mr. and Mrs. has been hospitalized.
Johnson and Patrick spent Ada Bays were Mr. and Mrs. Columbus.
Chapel In Youngstown. AI·
Gary Barnheart of South
Mr . and Mrs . Price en- Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Stanford Stockton and Donna of
Miss June Neigler of tending the service from here
Carolina. The couple have a tertained some of their children Douglas Johnson of Racine.
Hemlock Grove and Mrs. Columbus· spent a couple of were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Parsons,
daughter, Jamie, age 2.
and her brother from West W. T. Carleto~f Racine Clarence Sargent, local.
days with her parents, Mr. and Kelly and Billy; Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker Virginia.
called on Enie Brinker on
Mr . and · Mrs. · Merle' Mrs. George Nelgler.
Dora Parsons, Mrs. Frances
received word of the death of his
Mrs. Edith King spent Sunday.
Schroeder, Ron and Mae Fern,
Parsons, Shelly Chevalier, Mrs.
aunt, Mrs. Pruna .. Huber of Monday with Freda Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bickers and of Columbus spent Sunday with
In 1970 four students at Kent Gerald Wells, Mrs. Don Hupp,
Georgia. The body will be taken in the afternoon they called on daughter of Bashan spent Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris. Stale University were killed Mrs. Carroll White, Mrs. Irene
to Dayton for funeral Mrs. Virgie Wolfe.
Sunday with Mr. and 111rs .
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross and when National Guardsmen on Rhodes, Preston Parsons, Mrs.
arrangements there. Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Vergil Price left Douglas Circle and grand- Ray of Columbus spent the duty during demonstrations Edria Parsons and Mark and
Mrs. Walker will attend the Monday for a few days stay in daughter, Kim Folirod .
weekend with Mrs. Frankie opened fire .
Mrs. Paul Wolfe.
funeral.
West Virginia with their Larry Circle and Charlie
children. She will go to the Matthews spent the weekend
Major League Results ·
r--------------------------------------~--By United Press International Cleveland Clinic on May 6 and with friends at Joliet, lli.
National League
Florence Circle called on Mr.
st. Louis 001 ooo 001- 2 7 o then on to Florida.
Phila
ooo 100 02x- 3 11 1 Mrs. Viola Moon and . Freda and Mrs. Garrett Circle of
Zachary, Shaw (81 and Miller called on Mr. and Mrs. Racine recently.
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Simmons; Lersch, Brandon 19), Elber Riebel Monday evening.
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tjoerner 19) and McCarver. WP
Alfred
BY JACK O'BRIAN
quiz winner got teddibly hysterical with a net- Lersch 12·0 . LP- Zachary ID·
NOT HERSELF; NOW ·
work-TV exec smoking a stogie on a United
0·
VISITS DAUGHTER
LANA'S BESIDE HERSELF
Airlines L.A.·Io-N.Y. .flight, berated him,"and
Note.~
Ill innings)
Mrs. Bernard Schram
NEW
YORK
Lana
Turner
swears
her
before
he debarked, hit him with an air-sickness
~~
: : ~~ ~ ~ : ~ _.r~~ned hom.e Friday after
Sunday afternoon guests at $21111,1100 "gift" to ex-hubby Ron Dahle was made bag. Empty, we trust .... Our durable vision of
Holtzman ID-4) and Breeden; VISiting here with her daughter,
Genlry, McGraw 19) and Grote. Mrs. John Lyons and family, the Follrod·Roblnson home when she wasn't herself .... Barblifa· Anderson's said qulzling sUII remains : that $64,000show had
were Mr. and Mrs. 'Robert quitting TV's "Ironside" ov~ money (of cour- guys puffing cigars who didn't bother her. Cash
WP....McGraw 13·11. HR-WII· Middleport.
Iiams 16th!.
Robinson and family of Belpre. se); its only really irreplaceable star ill R. Burr in a great filter .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. .. .. Ni%on's man-about.giris Henry Kissinger
NBC's Kyle Rote has a fat Florida-TV offer
Woode · were Stinday afternoon (who's kissinger now) dates hi&amp; classiest gUt- .... Lou Holtz, on Merv Griffin's "ethnicguests of Mr. and Mrs. John tergal so far: Joanna Barnes, so elegant, and comedy" episodes, regularly is the hllariOUB
Hayes
near Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Durgess Texas.
wotta dolty book shesmutted!·.... JackleOnassls class of that spiced-hammery .. .. Holtz a~
Mrs.
Vlna
Woode,
a
former
o! Middleport have purchased A cookout on the lawn at the resident of this locality and still and RubY Kee 1er ch atted on 3rd Ave. between l)ickie Dawson are its real stars .... Serft•o
"'
and moved into one of the Ar- home of Mr. and Mrs. Guy A. a member of the local church, showings.
Franchi's doing rr.ulto bene biz i at llle
chie Lee homes in the Rustic Guinther was enjoyed Sunday observed her _96th birthday on
Johnny Carson dated some purty NBC tour Americana's Royal Box and would do 'better If
Hills addition.
evening by Mr. and Mrs. Willie May 1. Friends . wishing to guides; so handy .... Oscar-type Sarah Miles was they could stretcl\ the ~aUs .... The Stage Deily
Mr. and Mrs . Lewis Guinther of GalllpoUs, Mr. and remember her may send mail asked what she thought of the reluctant George · proves it cuts the mustard: Celebrates its 35th
Icenhower and daughter of East Mrs . . Malcolm Guinther and care of Albany Rest Home.
C. Scott and. replied, "George C, Who?" .... TV birthday this·month ·(mazeltov).
Liverpool, Bertha Tipton and children,
Mrs .
Eloise Mrs. Grace Kelly was slightly paneUst Bill Cullen's in Beth Israel Hospital,
Jacques Bergerac•s ex Gloria and Chicago
daughter and Margaret' Stan. Willbarger and boys and Donald injured in a fall atthe Elmwood abaft Louis Armstrong .... Guess which star Ava exec Ed Hoban may wed any lively deadUne .... '
ford of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Guinther, local.
Nursing Home and would ao- , Gardner caUs "Mr. Nothing." You're right.
Ghoul-star VIncent Price isn't certain "Dr.
John Jeffers of Rising Sun were Mr. and Mrs. James R. White predate mail sent in care of the
Friends say Ethel Kennedy is radiant, for Phlbes" is his !DOth or !Olst tllm; he's afraid to
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert and Mary Beth of Dunbar, W. nursing home.
thefirsttimesince .... Age of Vulgarity: The San check .... Marvelous French director Claude
Jeffers while here to attend the Va., visited her mother, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Henderson Francisco Sexual Freedom League plans an Lelouch ("A Man and a Woman") and wife
funeral o( r,lr. Jeffers' father, ·Rose Schwarz in Mason and his who have spent the winter in .. "Orgy Ship Trip" to next fall's Erotic film ended their lcwe story.
Mr. James Jeffers.
mother, Mrs. Agnes White ,,and Florida have left there and are Festival in Holland; going Dutch, f'cawss .... Not
Nat'lAss'n of Gagwritera May 18 will hold a
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Smith uncle, Richard Duckworth. making a few stops among . much doing in H'wood so the swruner theaters ''Wake for Ed &amp;tllivan Impressions" .... But
and daughter of Elkhart, Ind., They were accompanied home relatives on their way back will be peopled by Gig Young, Shirley Booth, Ed'll be back, you clowns ' ... Ulick O'Connor's
villiled Mr. an.d Mrs. Malcolm by Mrs. White and Mr. Duck· h
h
Guinther arid family .
worth and while there they all orne ere.
Lana Turner, Dan Dailey, Gene Barry, Howard "Brendan," biography of Brendan Behan, sillies
Miss Glenna Soulsby spent. attended a birthday dinner at
Keels, Sally Ann Howes, Paul Lynde, Jim hispatrioliclrishguerrlllaflghtingwasspurlous ·
Easter with Mr. and Mrs. the home of Mr. and Mrs. NAME VEEP
Nabors, Mickey Rooney, etc.
and that Breixlan was queer .... Also that his
William Nease and' ,family of Millard Duckworth In Hun· MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)'"/ane Fonda's so angrily overjoyed with Alan fa'lher was a "spoiled priest" and his grand·
Racine.
tirlgton, in honor of Mr . White · Fonner University of Wisconsin Myerson, who created her slanllld antiwar revue mother a bomber, jailed at 77; Behan Jived to the
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Holter of and the latter Mr. Duckworth, Basketball Coach John Erick· (which can't get booked), she's hired him to ripe old age of 41 '.... Our old friend M.rl
Akron spent the Easter Also attending were Mr. carl . son, who also served a~ general direct her "Steelyard Blues" movie .... Famous ·Hellinger drank a quart or more of lranctr a daJ
weekend at their home here. Duckworth of Pickerington. In manager of the Milwaukee gent who died a few days ago was about to and lived to the ripe·old age of 44.
Myla Hudson and son, Dencil, Huntington they also visited Bucks Monday was na~ed vice divorce and ~ his three-year roinance; also,
Bing's wife, Kathryn Crosby, and their 1011 ·
visited her sister and bro\her- their aunt, Mrs. Sidney Bar!l!ls president of an agncultural no one can find his bank vaults rumored jammed Harry are a new TV·talk show team. 'nte 1111
in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde and daughters.
firm.
with millions,.... "Gay 91)1" founder Bill Hardy, sings, plays &amp;uttar. and his pop's criticism: "He
Gerlach of Letart, w. Va.
Mrs. Daisy RotiSh returned to
77, just married again .... Zlegfeldoll Irene hils a big chance" .... N.Y. bus and subway·
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Shane and her home here Saturday after ·NEW PARK
' Hayes, 75, just 747ed to Madrid for the summer. staffers notoriously are sullen when they're .._t
children, Kenneth and Denita, visi~ng with rela\ives in Rill- TRENTON; N.J. (UPI)-A
Hildegarde, 65,lookedhalf her age dining In insolent; therefore an encouragU. word for the
of Dallas, Texas, are villiting his man for two weeks .. Bringing bill to set up a sports complex Louise's E. 58th St. celebrity- neighborhood spot F:E·train conductor fnm ~~~~ to Times
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan her hOme were her sons, i•l the Hackensack, N.J. mea- .... Rrreally-big trawl at the Royal Box. Flung- Squm:e who ehirps, ''Good 1110l'11in8.11ave a n1et
Shane. They were accompanied William and Charles Duck· 'dow Ianda was approved Mon- tables'n'everything .... Two~ llnks in a luxury- trlp," and to departing sulllllayflrwa, "l'lllle
home by, his brother, Danny worth, who returned to Rittman day, 23-2,, by the N'ew Jersey . restaurant chain are set ·to fold .... Sinatra'~ check your valuables and haw a aood .., .•
Shane, who ha~ visited in on Sunday.
Senate.
·
·
.
llulldlng a Sutton Pl. mansion .... Famous $&amp;1,000 Watdi the cloaiJI&amp; dtiCII'II pleue." Rue.

$23.8 Million Damages

CONGRATULATIONS TO Mrs. Mittie Nelson who recently
observed her 90th birthday.
Her grandson and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Nelson entertained
with a surprise birthday party in her honor at their Fistwoods
home, Approxlma!llly 50 persons were on hand to help celebrate
tbe occasion. Mrs. Nelson has a trailer home close to her grandson's residence.

nance Director Harold · A.
Hovey said if the governor's
plan is agreed to by · the Re·
publican-controlled legislature,
amendments could take care of
the local cer\ifications.
· Although the spokesman conceded he did not know whether
the rollbacks could be achieved
in practice. this year, he disagreed with Kurfess' contention
they would be good for only
one year.
"We only have to roil it
back once and it's in effect
from then on," the spokesman
said. "Mr. Kurfess .ought to
know about rollbacks. They
were originally his idea and we
lifted some of the language di·
recUy from his bill of last
year."

r---·----------:..: ------.- ------,

Asked in Kent Incident

New Gas Rate

Effeetive in

Pomeroy Only

Tuppers Plains
Society News

Chester East
N
N te

Racine
Social Events

Carmel News,

By the Day

1

Social

Syra~use

---~

News, Society

Voice along Broad~ay

l

�'

....' .

L,

'
,

mented on the hospital motto,
"None who can pay, may enter."
'
A hisklry of the Meigs Salon
since its organization, on Aug·.
10, 1965 was giv~n by L'ArchivisteMaryMartin.Thesalun
was chartered with 10 partners
. and two transfers with lhe
member~ hip now at 20 partners.
She further noted that during
that time over $9 000 has been
spent in cystic 'fibrosis and
tuberculosis report.
Special recognition was given
Mrs. Sonnanstine of Orrville, 96
years old, who was Departemental Chapeau at the age o(

.,'
.,'

'

I
I'

passe pin· was also presented to · .secrelair~-caissiere; Mary
Mrs. Iva Powell:
Martin, !'avocate; and Eunie
During the meeting presided Brinker, puuvoir member.
over by Mrs. Euni~ Brinker,
The annual children and
chapeau of . the . Meigs youth report was given· by
Salon, nommat10ns for ·1971-72 Marie Boyd who noted that over
were presented a~ follows: $800 has been spent and 485
Catherme
Welsh,
pellt hours donated during the past
chapeau; Rhoda Hackett, · le years.' She reported on the
demi chapeau premi~re; Ferne cystic fibrQsis drive held this
Cheesebrew, le de~1 chapeau year, noting that Meigs High
deux1 eme ;
Edith
Fox, School from the combined
I'a uriJO~ier ; Mary Roush • charity drive gave $161.50.
l'archlvlste; Veda Davts, Ia
From tlle M~igs Salon gifts of
concierge; Juha Hysell, le check book purses were given to

the departemcntal officers, of Richland County_ Salon on
jewelry to th~ departemental May if;, at Mansfield .
chapeaux passe, and to the (letit
Mrs. Eileen Searles antl Mrs.
chapeaux atlhe observance.
Julia Hysell were chairmen lor
At lhe conclusion of the a tea following the · initiatory
meeting, initiatory work was work.
presented. Ail invitation was Thedinnerwasserve(!by the ·
· extended · to the, Meigs Salon Philathea Society· o£ 'the Mid- '
..m;
. e;m;b;•t;s~to~th~e~a~nn~u~al~d~i.nn~.e•r•d;le~p~·oriit.iCilhiiurl!lc•h•of•C•h•n•·stl!l._ _
·

1

'

-.-

.

'

---- --·---.

( ( J/j} ( '

.

______ ::.,:___

-·

·-·- .

II\ ('Ill

The Electric Climate
It \ IH·&lt;~flflit•J

84.
A gift was presented to Mrs.

Edgar, organizer of the Meigs
Salon, duri~g the meeting,
along with a chapeau passe pin.
Mrs. Martin, 1a secretaire·
caissiere at the time Mrs.
Edgar was chapea u, made the
presentation. A petit chapeau

HONORED GUESTS AT THE Sixth Annual Dinner of Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, were front row, seated, left wright, Mrs. Jessie Hiel, Portsmouth, departemental k
secretaire-caissiere; Mrs. Eunie Brinker, petit chapeau of Meigs County Salon 710; Mrs. Hazd
Elliott, Portsmouth, departemental chapeau; and back row, standing, left to right, Mrs. Mary
Martin, Pomeroy, departemental le demi chapeau premiere; Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Racine,
petit le secretaire-caissiere, Meigs Salon; Mrs. Violet Aichholz, New Washington, third
member, National finance committee; Mrs. Evalina Berkley, Nevada, le demi chapea·u
deuxieme; Mrs. Ethele Van Fossan, Jackson, departementall'avocate.

ORKNECKBONES

.

___________

COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ElECTRIC COMPANY I
---~-----------~--- ·····-- ..
--------·- -----··
/

..___

SUPERIORS
CARNIVAL BRAND

SUPERIORS

BOILED
HAM

Bologna

'.

BY
THE
PIECE

..

Meigs Salon Gives Dinner

I.

fieallh Center, and her
representative, Vida Davis of
Pomeroy, hospital deputy; Mrs.
Ben Neutzling, Eighth District
president, American Legion
Auxiliary, and Mrs. Virgil
Walker , district community
service cha irman. All brought
greetings.
Mrs. Elliott congratulated the
Meigs Salon for work in cystic
fibrosis and tuberculosis in
children. She reported that she,
Mrs. Hell and other partners
!rom Ohio will go to Denver,
Colo. to present the $1,000 check
for endowment of one child's
bed for a year at the National
Jewish Hospital. She com-

WHOLE
·HALF
PIECE

Low, Low Price

Bernice Christensen, Esther C.
Edgar, all departemental
chapeauxe passe.
Other distinguished guests
attending the observance were
departemental chairmen and
committee members, Mabel
Brown and Reva Cihla, constitution and by-laws; Audrey
Glaub, nurses scholarship;
Pearl Knapp and Golda
Mourning, resolution com.
mittee; and Edna Smeltz,
partnership.
Introduced were Mary Martin
of the Meigs Salon, departemental chapeau premiere and
American Legion Auxiliary
representative to the Athens

Extension ist
CIUb SPea ker
Ec.ology was the emphasis of
-11n open meeting of the Bend 0 '
the River Garden Club Thursday night at the 'pomeroy
United Melhodist Church.
Guest speaker was C. E.
Blakeslee, Meigs County extension agent, who talked on
Insecticides and pesticides and
the effect they have on our
environment.
At the ·meeting were Mrs.
John Reese, Region II direcklr,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, and members o£ the
Winding Trail Garden Club, the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
the Rose Garden Club of Tuppers Plains, and the French
City Garden Club of Gallipolis.
In his tslk, Blakesslee
stressed the seriousness of
Insect damage and also the
seriousness and danger of
· 1'

he advised.
Following his talk, there was
a question and answer period on
insecticides and pesticides, and
Blakeslee
offered · his
assistance to club members
with garden problems. On
behalf of the club, Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, president, presented
. . ..
..
a gilt to him.
dlffetentsprays, He sa1d one of , Devotions were by Mrs. Bert
Amou:ica's biggest problems ·Grimm and Mrs. Robert Kuhn.
today is "wh~,ther w spray _or "The Beauty of the Earth," an
n?t to spray. He Cited an m- organ solo by Mrs. Kuhn,
c1dence m New Jersey where opened the meeting with Mrs.
growers were told n~t to spray Grimm
reading
" The
and then had . entire crops Creation." Background music
destroyed by d1sease and m- by Mrs. Kuhn was "How Great
sects.
Thou Art," and she concluded
.
with "My God and I."
.Blakeslee sa1d that before During the business meeting
~mg a b"jray deter~me ~hat it was noted that several more
e pro ._ems are, msec or contributions have come in for
d1sease, 1denltfy the problem the club project of beautifying
and then use the recommended the entrance to the Letart Falls
remedy for control. Too often Ce te
d
b th r t
me May
ry. 20 meeting ·was
gar_enersgra
e trs. can an d The
begm to spray, he said. Read announced and will be held at
dlrecttons carefully ,. he the home of Mrs . Maxine
cautioned, and be sure 1f the w· g tt
crop is_t~ be ~aten that the ~ s~ring floral arrangetpent
spray
When
of ye 11 ow an d wh'te
daffod'l
. . 1sn t pOisonous.
th
1
1s
.
1
miXIng use e propor tons n k d b
.
11ow tapers m
d
th
Ia'
an
e
y
ye
d
recommen e on e con mer' crystal holders centered the

LB.

WHITE
BIBLE

YOU
YtOULD
EXPECT
TO
PAY $19.95

$

!

A layette shower was planned served at noon. Attending
for Mrs. Charles Russell lor besides those named were Mrs.
May 14 when the Helping Hands Frances Hysell, Mrs. Madeline
SUNDAY. MAY 9
Missionary Circle met recently Painter, Stephanie Hazelton,
al the Bradford Church of Mrs. Eleanor Hoover, Mrs.
Christ.
Ruby Rife and Becky, Mrs.
Sponsor of the shower will be Bonnie Pickens and · Scottie,
the Circle along with the Adult Mrs. Ruby Hysell, Mrs. Verna
and the Young Adult Sunday Hysell, Mrs. Mildred ·Sisson,
school classes. Bible school was Mrs. Nancy Morris, Mrs.
discussed but no date was set. Hildred Clark, Mrs. Norma
Members were reminded to get Russell, Mrs. Evelyn Wood, and
together things for the boxes Guy Hv&lt;ell.
which will go w overseas ser.
vice men and to the Indian ,J(I'lfolfo•
Mission.
• .
A THOUGHT :
Thank you letter was read
i&lt;
from the Meigs County InFOR TODAY i&lt;
firmary in appreciation for
.
patient remembrances. It was -It A merry heart doeth good
noted that missionary packets t-It ltke a medicine.
hav~ been requested from
·
Wayne Clark in Hawaii.
- Prov. 17:22
Tressie Hendricks presided at ~
:
the meeting which opened with
1f. .. . 1f. ·
devotions by Mrs. Vada
:
Hazelton. Her topic was "Hate
It'S Quick! Easy -It
Evil and Love Good." Scripture :
-It
was taken !roin Amos 5 and she -It
~
read The Wqrld's Growing -It
i&lt;
.Colder, What ,is Home, and :
.
~
h!Carved"~
OZark Bible College.
-It
Fridays Only
-It
DIAMOND RINGS
· A potluck luncheon was -It The. Drive-1~- Window
artisan• of Art¢ acved
is ()pen
-It lm•1de It a practice to bring
~
9 A.M. lo7 P.M.
-It
every. woman'• eng·a11ementl

if

.r•••••---·
2-HOUR t
..
CLEAN lNG

for that
morable

••••••••••¥:·

t

(c r

I )

on muous y

+::
dream. See our completcl
il . IAt,tCarved oelectlon soon.

Jf

Oth. er B•nktna Hours 9 to
~ and .S to 1 as usual ••ij
-It Fridays. '
.
i&lt;

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S

A- LAUREATE. lrom sl5o.
B- DESIREE , from st5o.

i·,and-FARMERS
BANK !
SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY. OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve srstem

-tt
-It

I

-tr ·
-It
-It

.................,..
'

REGULARLY 69c , ·

ITALIAN
SANDALS

MELAMINE
DINNERWARE

BOXED
Stationery

Brass trimmed sanda ls in tan,

$10.95 Value! 34 piece set.

Brown, Cordovan etc. -- Sizes
5 to 10.
Sever~l Styles.

MOMS
DAY
IS THIS
SUNDAY- MAY 9TH

.' . .

GOESSLER
I

JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

pastel colors,
vivid shades. 32
16 envelopes, a
gift--&lt;lr gift yoursell.

Break resistant, dishwasher
safe, 3 designs. See these
for Mothers Gilt!

22

ERAG
SET

ounce beverage
tumblers and 1.64 ounce

)itcl,er.. Gold or Avacodo---Made in W. Va.
Reg. $1.98. Gt!t Boxed.

BACON ENDS
AND PIECES

GROUNr
BEEF

$32~0$722

$ 33
SET

10 INCH

FRY
PAN

NO STICK COOKING

New summer pastel colors that Mother will llke.
Select from fabrics of n,ylon, acetate or cotton.
Printed designs or solld colors. Waltz length gown
or baby doll pajamas. · Regular and X-Lg Sizes.

LARGE UNClASSIFIED

$}44

•o,.,.,,

CHUCK

MOM LOVES THESE!!

94.........

WOMENS NEWEST

JAMAICA

$ 94-$ 94

.

•

"nte !abncs are right. the
colors new and exciting. All
regular sizes plus X-Large
sizes now In swck.
•

94

lb.

39'

doz. for

can on~

.

···········~·························
BILTMORE CANNED .
·
12 oz. can
32

bol

REEN POLE BEAN

'

SOLO BATHROOM

FAVORITE BREAD
•

DISPENSER

1oe

lb.

Rome Beauty Apples........ 4

large

lb..
bag

sr

. Yellow O~ions ................ 3 ~~g 29'
Golden Carrots....... ·....... 2 bchs. 29$

loaves

ONLY

1.00

lbs.

GOLDEN BANANAS

SATURDAY ONLY!

WITH 25 FREE CUPS

for ·

GIFT .MOTHER WITH
A NEW BAG

WYLER'S DRINKS

$}~~D$ 87
I

BATH TOWELS.

LIMON, GRAPE, ROOT ROOT BEER, ORANGE
AND CHERRY
WITH SUGAR
.ADDED

SOLIDS- BLAZER STYLES.,. .JACQUARDS
, The large size 22 x 44, thick terry
towels that we sell every day for
• 94c. They all go--will make lovely,
useful gifts.

EACH

THURS. THRU SUNDAY

KITCHE" AIDS FOR MOM!!

P.,"
"&amp;

0
1

FOLGE_R•s

~

.,

MARS
CANDY BARS
3 MUSKETEERS, MILKY WAYS AND
SNICKERS

INSTANT
COFFEE

GE BER'S
BABY PANTS

'BARS

·''

Choc.
Twirl

pans

&amp;

Neopolitan

SCOT LAD

Vz -gaL

CANNED POP ICE CREAM

.2.00

10 oz.

.. '

•

. FAYGO
CASE,

10' SIZE

'

CAN

10
·

~

jar

.HUGE SE~ECTION OF ALUMNIUM WARE
MANY GLASSWARE ITEMS!

SHORTS

39'

lb.

FRIDAY ONLY!

RC COLA

ON SALE- OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF "CANNON"

TAN'K TOPS .
or SHELLS

•BorJded

7

,. FRYERS

1 lb. bxs.

THURS. ONLY!

_ _..._;,6.....

Womens Sleeveless

•Twill.
•Nylon a

g~

lb.

4

She never has enough handbags-so
choose )ler new one from our amaz.
' ing s~lection. Come, shop, compare!

REG. $2.23-

STRIPES-$
PRINTSI
SOLIDS-

liAN

"h gal. carton

'

.

A. Large

).

CHICKEN LEGS &amp;
BREAST QUARTERS

Fresh Dressed

A·GIFT MOM WILL USEII!

DUPONT
TEFLON

4 SIZES6 COLORS -

(Any Amount)

69
,

GRADE A HOMOGENIZED

STRAWS- WHITE PATENTS- BLACK- REO- NAVY

FURNITURE
THROWS

LB.

•1
·
k
Seal test MI ......................................... 53e
'La rge ·Eggs ...........................:.... 3
1.00
Scot Lad Crackers............. 3
1.00
1
5e
Hot Chili lea ns
2'
9
·
.
Luncheon· M ea t......•..............~................ e
•
.
•d
D
t
t
oz.
69e
Joy .L1qu 1 e erg en ...................... .

AND

FOAM BACK

=~:RE

Ita

KING sizE

DREAMY
SLEEPWEAR

7 PIECE

FROM USDA BEEF FRESH

'

SET

PR.

SUPERIORS .

BROQK'S BRAND

AVARI·ETY OF GIFTS FOR MOTHER

"Hazelware" R~flection Pattern

DRJVE-IN
BANKING

t
..

SERVICE FOR 8

$

THINK MOM

f

WOMENS VINYL

Large 81h " X ll'h " .
Deluxe
Edition in rQd letter, King James
Version. 98 pages of color, maps,
photographs, family register. Large
easy to read zype. A beautiful
gift to cherish.

LB.

• MASON

WONDERFUL GIFT
FOR ANY MOTHER!

refreshments table. Mrs. W. 0.
Barnitz presided at the coffee
service.

Plans Made for Shower
••

SHOP IN . PT.

'

Top Quality -

LB~

A DISC:OU NT .
DOAATMf.NT STOltE

ALL STORES OPEN
EVERY NIGHT
UNTIL 9 P. M. !

SLAB
BAC:ON

'

'

Mrs. Hazel Ellio\1 of Portsmouth, Eight and Forty
Departemental Chapeau, and
Mrs. Jessie Heil, Oepartemental LaSecretaireCasstere, were honored guests
.at the sixth annual dinner party
of Meigs County Salon 710
staged Monday night at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Distinguished guests present
for the affair were Violet
Aichholz, thirc!_ , member
National Finance committee;
Evalina Berkley, departemental chapeau deuxieme;
Ethel Van Fossan, departmental L'Avocate; Mary
Weisand, Susie Sonnanstine,

.

. CANNISTER SETS- FONDUE DISHES ~ TURNTAQLES!'
Shoppers Mart carries maey items that Mother needs and uses
daily. Perhaps there ~re some she dOes not have--but desires,
Come ShOP our selection- -You'll find many practieaJ
.

.F "' '

DISCOUNT
PRICED! ~
t-.. . ~.~ ,J
.

1 .'

)

.

DRIVE
DnERGENT

WITH ··
GIANT
COUPON
.SIZE
'
Good At: Mark V Store
'

EXPIRES: MAY 8, 1971

'

.

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Siln. 10 to 10
We .Accept Federal FOOll St(lmp.~

C9rner Mill arid Second Sts.

PHONE: 992·3480
"We Reserve Tho Right To lionit Ouonlities"

MIDDLEPORT, Q.'

�'

....' .

L,

'
,

mented on the hospital motto,
"None who can pay, may enter."
'
A hisklry of the Meigs Salon
since its organization, on Aug·.
10, 1965 was giv~n by L'ArchivisteMaryMartin.Thesalun
was chartered with 10 partners
. and two transfers with lhe
member~ hip now at 20 partners.
She further noted that during
that time over $9 000 has been
spent in cystic 'fibrosis and
tuberculosis report.
Special recognition was given
Mrs. Sonnanstine of Orrville, 96
years old, who was Departemental Chapeau at the age o(

.,'
.,'

'

I
I'

passe pin· was also presented to · .secrelair~-caissiere; Mary
Mrs. Iva Powell:
Martin, !'avocate; and Eunie
During the meeting presided Brinker, puuvoir member.
over by Mrs. Euni~ Brinker,
The annual children and
chapeau of . the . Meigs youth report was given· by
Salon, nommat10ns for ·1971-72 Marie Boyd who noted that over
were presented a~ follows: $800 has been spent and 485
Catherme
Welsh,
pellt hours donated during the past
chapeau; Rhoda Hackett, · le years.' She reported on the
demi chapeau premi~re; Ferne cystic fibrQsis drive held this
Cheesebrew, le de~1 chapeau year, noting that Meigs High
deux1 eme ;
Edith
Fox, School from the combined
I'a uriJO~ier ; Mary Roush • charity drive gave $161.50.
l'archlvlste; Veda Davts, Ia
From tlle M~igs Salon gifts of
concierge; Juha Hysell, le check book purses were given to

the departemcntal officers, of Richland County_ Salon on
jewelry to th~ departemental May if;, at Mansfield .
chapeaux passe, and to the (letit
Mrs. Eileen Searles antl Mrs.
chapeaux atlhe observance.
Julia Hysell were chairmen lor
At lhe conclusion of the a tea following the · initiatory
meeting, initiatory work was work.
presented. Ail invitation was Thedinnerwasserve(!by the ·
· extended · to the, Meigs Salon Philathea Society· o£ 'the Mid- '
..m;
. e;m;b;•t;s~to~th~e~a~nn~u~al~d~i.nn~.e•r•d;le~p~·oriit.iCilhiiurl!lc•h•of•C•h•n•·stl!l._ _
·

1

'

-.-

.

'

---- --·---.

( ( J/j} ( '

.

______ ::.,:___

-·

·-·- .

II\ ('Ill

The Electric Climate
It \ IH·&lt;~flflit•J

84.
A gift was presented to Mrs.

Edgar, organizer of the Meigs
Salon, duri~g the meeting,
along with a chapeau passe pin.
Mrs. Martin, 1a secretaire·
caissiere at the time Mrs.
Edgar was chapea u, made the
presentation. A petit chapeau

HONORED GUESTS AT THE Sixth Annual Dinner of Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, were front row, seated, left wright, Mrs. Jessie Hiel, Portsmouth, departemental k
secretaire-caissiere; Mrs. Eunie Brinker, petit chapeau of Meigs County Salon 710; Mrs. Hazd
Elliott, Portsmouth, departemental chapeau; and back row, standing, left to right, Mrs. Mary
Martin, Pomeroy, departemental le demi chapeau premiere; Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Racine,
petit le secretaire-caissiere, Meigs Salon; Mrs. Violet Aichholz, New Washington, third
member, National finance committee; Mrs. Evalina Berkley, Nevada, le demi chapea·u
deuxieme; Mrs. Ethele Van Fossan, Jackson, departementall'avocate.

ORKNECKBONES

.

___________

COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ElECTRIC COMPANY I
---~-----------~--- ·····-- ..
--------·- -----··
/

..___

SUPERIORS
CARNIVAL BRAND

SUPERIORS

BOILED
HAM

Bologna

'.

BY
THE
PIECE

..

Meigs Salon Gives Dinner

I.

fieallh Center, and her
representative, Vida Davis of
Pomeroy, hospital deputy; Mrs.
Ben Neutzling, Eighth District
president, American Legion
Auxiliary, and Mrs. Virgil
Walker , district community
service cha irman. All brought
greetings.
Mrs. Elliott congratulated the
Meigs Salon for work in cystic
fibrosis and tuberculosis in
children. She reported that she,
Mrs. Hell and other partners
!rom Ohio will go to Denver,
Colo. to present the $1,000 check
for endowment of one child's
bed for a year at the National
Jewish Hospital. She com-

WHOLE
·HALF
PIECE

Low, Low Price

Bernice Christensen, Esther C.
Edgar, all departemental
chapeauxe passe.
Other distinguished guests
attending the observance were
departemental chairmen and
committee members, Mabel
Brown and Reva Cihla, constitution and by-laws; Audrey
Glaub, nurses scholarship;
Pearl Knapp and Golda
Mourning, resolution com.
mittee; and Edna Smeltz,
partnership.
Introduced were Mary Martin
of the Meigs Salon, departemental chapeau premiere and
American Legion Auxiliary
representative to the Athens

Extension ist
CIUb SPea ker
Ec.ology was the emphasis of
-11n open meeting of the Bend 0 '
the River Garden Club Thursday night at the 'pomeroy
United Melhodist Church.
Guest speaker was C. E.
Blakeslee, Meigs County extension agent, who talked on
Insecticides and pesticides and
the effect they have on our
environment.
At the ·meeting were Mrs.
John Reese, Region II direcklr,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, and members o£ the
Winding Trail Garden Club, the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
the Rose Garden Club of Tuppers Plains, and the French
City Garden Club of Gallipolis.
In his tslk, Blakesslee
stressed the seriousness of
Insect damage and also the
seriousness and danger of
· 1'

he advised.
Following his talk, there was
a question and answer period on
insecticides and pesticides, and
Blakeslee
offered · his
assistance to club members
with garden problems. On
behalf of the club, Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, president, presented
. . ..
..
a gilt to him.
dlffetentsprays, He sa1d one of , Devotions were by Mrs. Bert
Amou:ica's biggest problems ·Grimm and Mrs. Robert Kuhn.
today is "wh~,ther w spray _or "The Beauty of the Earth," an
n?t to spray. He Cited an m- organ solo by Mrs. Kuhn,
c1dence m New Jersey where opened the meeting with Mrs.
growers were told n~t to spray Grimm
reading
" The
and then had . entire crops Creation." Background music
destroyed by d1sease and m- by Mrs. Kuhn was "How Great
sects.
Thou Art," and she concluded
.
with "My God and I."
.Blakeslee sa1d that before During the business meeting
~mg a b"jray deter~me ~hat it was noted that several more
e pro ._ems are, msec or contributions have come in for
d1sease, 1denltfy the problem the club project of beautifying
and then use the recommended the entrance to the Letart Falls
remedy for control. Too often Ce te
d
b th r t
me May
ry. 20 meeting ·was
gar_enersgra
e trs. can an d The
begm to spray, he said. Read announced and will be held at
dlrecttons carefully ,. he the home of Mrs . Maxine
cautioned, and be sure 1f the w· g tt
crop is_t~ be ~aten that the ~ s~ring floral arrangetpent
spray
When
of ye 11 ow an d wh'te
daffod'l
. . 1sn t pOisonous.
th
1
1s
.
1
miXIng use e propor tons n k d b
.
11ow tapers m
d
th
Ia'
an
e
y
ye
d
recommen e on e con mer' crystal holders centered the

LB.

WHITE
BIBLE

YOU
YtOULD
EXPECT
TO
PAY $19.95

$

!

A layette shower was planned served at noon. Attending
for Mrs. Charles Russell lor besides those named were Mrs.
May 14 when the Helping Hands Frances Hysell, Mrs. Madeline
SUNDAY. MAY 9
Missionary Circle met recently Painter, Stephanie Hazelton,
al the Bradford Church of Mrs. Eleanor Hoover, Mrs.
Christ.
Ruby Rife and Becky, Mrs.
Sponsor of the shower will be Bonnie Pickens and · Scottie,
the Circle along with the Adult Mrs. Ruby Hysell, Mrs. Verna
and the Young Adult Sunday Hysell, Mrs. Mildred ·Sisson,
school classes. Bible school was Mrs. Nancy Morris, Mrs.
discussed but no date was set. Hildred Clark, Mrs. Norma
Members were reminded to get Russell, Mrs. Evelyn Wood, and
together things for the boxes Guy Hv&lt;ell.
which will go w overseas ser.
vice men and to the Indian ,J(I'lfolfo•
Mission.
• .
A THOUGHT :
Thank you letter was read
i&lt;
from the Meigs County InFOR TODAY i&lt;
firmary in appreciation for
.
patient remembrances. It was -It A merry heart doeth good
noted that missionary packets t-It ltke a medicine.
hav~ been requested from
·
Wayne Clark in Hawaii.
- Prov. 17:22
Tressie Hendricks presided at ~
:
the meeting which opened with
1f. .. . 1f. ·
devotions by Mrs. Vada
:
Hazelton. Her topic was "Hate
It'S Quick! Easy -It
Evil and Love Good." Scripture :
-It
was taken !roin Amos 5 and she -It
~
read The Wqrld's Growing -It
i&lt;
.Colder, What ,is Home, and :
.
~
h!Carved"~
OZark Bible College.
-It
Fridays Only
-It
DIAMOND RINGS
· A potluck luncheon was -It The. Drive-1~- Window
artisan• of Art¢ acved
is ()pen
-It lm•1de It a practice to bring
~
9 A.M. lo7 P.M.
-It
every. woman'• eng·a11ementl

if

.r•••••---·
2-HOUR t
..
CLEAN lNG

for that
morable

••••••••••¥:·

t

(c r

I )

on muous y

+::
dream. See our completcl
il . IAt,tCarved oelectlon soon.

Jf

Oth. er B•nktna Hours 9 to
~ and .S to 1 as usual ••ij
-It Fridays. '
.
i&lt;

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S

A- LAUREATE. lrom sl5o.
B- DESIREE , from st5o.

i·,and-FARMERS
BANK !
SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY. OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve srstem

-tt
-It

I

-tr ·
-It
-It

.................,..
'

REGULARLY 69c , ·

ITALIAN
SANDALS

MELAMINE
DINNERWARE

BOXED
Stationery

Brass trimmed sanda ls in tan,

$10.95 Value! 34 piece set.

Brown, Cordovan etc. -- Sizes
5 to 10.
Sever~l Styles.

MOMS
DAY
IS THIS
SUNDAY- MAY 9TH

.' . .

GOESSLER
I

JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

pastel colors,
vivid shades. 32
16 envelopes, a
gift--&lt;lr gift yoursell.

Break resistant, dishwasher
safe, 3 designs. See these
for Mothers Gilt!

22

ERAG
SET

ounce beverage
tumblers and 1.64 ounce

)itcl,er.. Gold or Avacodo---Made in W. Va.
Reg. $1.98. Gt!t Boxed.

BACON ENDS
AND PIECES

GROUNr
BEEF

$32~0$722

$ 33
SET

10 INCH

FRY
PAN

NO STICK COOKING

New summer pastel colors that Mother will llke.
Select from fabrics of n,ylon, acetate or cotton.
Printed designs or solld colors. Waltz length gown
or baby doll pajamas. · Regular and X-Lg Sizes.

LARGE UNClASSIFIED

$}44

•o,.,.,,

CHUCK

MOM LOVES THESE!!

94.........

WOMENS NEWEST

JAMAICA

$ 94-$ 94

.

•

"nte !abncs are right. the
colors new and exciting. All
regular sizes plus X-Large
sizes now In swck.
•

94

lb.

39'

doz. for

can on~

.

···········~·························
BILTMORE CANNED .
·
12 oz. can
32

bol

REEN POLE BEAN

'

SOLO BATHROOM

FAVORITE BREAD
•

DISPENSER

1oe

lb.

Rome Beauty Apples........ 4

large

lb..
bag

sr

. Yellow O~ions ................ 3 ~~g 29'
Golden Carrots....... ·....... 2 bchs. 29$

loaves

ONLY

1.00

lbs.

GOLDEN BANANAS

SATURDAY ONLY!

WITH 25 FREE CUPS

for ·

GIFT .MOTHER WITH
A NEW BAG

WYLER'S DRINKS

$}~~D$ 87
I

BATH TOWELS.

LIMON, GRAPE, ROOT ROOT BEER, ORANGE
AND CHERRY
WITH SUGAR
.ADDED

SOLIDS- BLAZER STYLES.,. .JACQUARDS
, The large size 22 x 44, thick terry
towels that we sell every day for
• 94c. They all go--will make lovely,
useful gifts.

EACH

THURS. THRU SUNDAY

KITCHE" AIDS FOR MOM!!

P.,"
"&amp;

0
1

FOLGE_R•s

~

.,

MARS
CANDY BARS
3 MUSKETEERS, MILKY WAYS AND
SNICKERS

INSTANT
COFFEE

GE BER'S
BABY PANTS

'BARS

·''

Choc.
Twirl

pans

&amp;

Neopolitan

SCOT LAD

Vz -gaL

CANNED POP ICE CREAM

.2.00

10 oz.

.. '

•

. FAYGO
CASE,

10' SIZE

'

CAN

10
·

~

jar

.HUGE SE~ECTION OF ALUMNIUM WARE
MANY GLASSWARE ITEMS!

SHORTS

39'

lb.

FRIDAY ONLY!

RC COLA

ON SALE- OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF "CANNON"

TAN'K TOPS .
or SHELLS

•BorJded

7

,. FRYERS

1 lb. bxs.

THURS. ONLY!

_ _..._;,6.....

Womens Sleeveless

•Twill.
•Nylon a

g~

lb.

4

She never has enough handbags-so
choose )ler new one from our amaz.
' ing s~lection. Come, shop, compare!

REG. $2.23-

STRIPES-$
PRINTSI
SOLIDS-

liAN

"h gal. carton

'

.

A. Large

).

CHICKEN LEGS &amp;
BREAST QUARTERS

Fresh Dressed

A·GIFT MOM WILL USEII!

DUPONT
TEFLON

4 SIZES6 COLORS -

(Any Amount)

69
,

GRADE A HOMOGENIZED

STRAWS- WHITE PATENTS- BLACK- REO- NAVY

FURNITURE
THROWS

LB.

•1
·
k
Seal test MI ......................................... 53e
'La rge ·Eggs ...........................:.... 3
1.00
Scot Lad Crackers............. 3
1.00
1
5e
Hot Chili lea ns
2'
9
·
.
Luncheon· M ea t......•..............~................ e
•
.
•d
D
t
t
oz.
69e
Joy .L1qu 1 e erg en ...................... .

AND

FOAM BACK

=~:RE

Ita

KING sizE

DREAMY
SLEEPWEAR

7 PIECE

FROM USDA BEEF FRESH

'

SET

PR.

SUPERIORS .

BROQK'S BRAND

AVARI·ETY OF GIFTS FOR MOTHER

"Hazelware" R~flection Pattern

DRJVE-IN
BANKING

t
..

SERVICE FOR 8

$

THINK MOM

f

WOMENS VINYL

Large 81h " X ll'h " .
Deluxe
Edition in rQd letter, King James
Version. 98 pages of color, maps,
photographs, family register. Large
easy to read zype. A beautiful
gift to cherish.

LB.

• MASON

WONDERFUL GIFT
FOR ANY MOTHER!

refreshments table. Mrs. W. 0.
Barnitz presided at the coffee
service.

Plans Made for Shower
••

SHOP IN . PT.

'

Top Quality -

LB~

A DISC:OU NT .
DOAATMf.NT STOltE

ALL STORES OPEN
EVERY NIGHT
UNTIL 9 P. M. !

SLAB
BAC:ON

'

'

Mrs. Hazel Ellio\1 of Portsmouth, Eight and Forty
Departemental Chapeau, and
Mrs. Jessie Heil, Oepartemental LaSecretaireCasstere, were honored guests
.at the sixth annual dinner party
of Meigs County Salon 710
staged Monday night at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Distinguished guests present
for the affair were Violet
Aichholz, thirc!_ , member
National Finance committee;
Evalina Berkley, departemental chapeau deuxieme;
Ethel Van Fossan, departmental L'Avocate; Mary
Weisand, Susie Sonnanstine,

.

. CANNISTER SETS- FONDUE DISHES ~ TURNTAQLES!'
Shoppers Mart carries maey items that Mother needs and uses
daily. Perhaps there ~re some she dOes not have--but desires,
Come ShOP our selection- -You'll find many practieaJ
.

.F "' '

DISCOUNT
PRICED! ~
t-.. . ~.~ ,J
.

1 .'

)

.

DRIVE
DnERGENT

WITH ··
GIANT
COUPON
.SIZE
'
Good At: Mark V Store
'

EXPIRES: MAY 8, 1971

'

.

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Siln. 10 to 10
We .Accept Federal FOOll St(lmp.~

C9rner Mill arid Second Sts.

PHONE: 992·3480
"We Reserve Tho Right To lionit Ouonlities"

MIDDLEPORT, Q.'

�.'

:;.:; ;-: ~r;&gt; . ·: :.·

::~ :; .;! . ~~

WANT AD
Auction
INFORMATION
.
AUCTION
DEADLINES
•
SATURDAY, May__l!, al12 noon
5.P.M. Day B~fpre PJ!b!ication
Monday Deadline9a.m.
· at the · Clv~e Headley fa~m
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
just off Rt. 71n Tuppers, Ohio
WUI be.accepted until9a .m . for
(follow signs from Rt. 7) , will
Day of Publication
sell the following : Household :
REGULATIONS
2· Piece Living room suite
The Publisher reserves the
(plastic), 2· Piece Living room
right )o edit or reject any ads
suite, 2 Bedroom suites, J
deemed ob iectional. The
TVs, Odd bed and bedding,
publisher will not b~ responsible
Metal wardrobe, 7·plece
for more than one incorrect
Dinette Set, Coffee and end
insertion.
tables ,
Base
cabinet.
RATES
Automatic Washer, Record
For Want Ad Service
player, dresser, Odd chairs
5 cents per Word one Insertion
and lamps, Rugs, 2 Punch
Minimum Charge 75c
bowls. Antiques: Library
12 cents per word three
Table, Dresser 4 rocking
consecutive insertions.
Chairs, Dishes, Shoe last,
18 cents per word six conQuilting frames, Trunk.
secutive insertions.
Cedar -lined buffet -mirror
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Wire top jars, Meat grinder,
ad s and ads paid within 10 days.
Cherry seeder, Apple peeler,
CARD OF THANKS
Cane rocker, 20 gal. Stone
&amp;OBITUARY
Jar. Misc. Items: Mllk ·cooler,
Sl .SO for SO word minimum .
40 gal. Elec. water heater,
Each additional word 2c.
Wash vats, Garden Tractor, 2
BLIND ADS
Power hand saws, I 0 ft.
Addltlqnal 25c Charge per
Plywood txiat, Lumber , 2
Advertisement.
Lawn Mowers, Grass se11&lt;1er,
OFFICE HOURS
Carpenter
tools,
Porch
8:.30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
columns~ Roofing. Lunch
8: 30 a .m . to 12:00 Noon
served. Not resr.onslble _for
Saturday.
accidents. Mam e Headley :
Owner. 1. 0 . ''Mac" McCoy:
Auctioneer.
S·2-Jtc
THE FAMILY of Mr. and Mrs.
Berl Yost wishes to thank the
Middleporl Fire Department,
the doctors and nursing staff
of Holzer Medical Center, LASSIE : what Is tru,e? by
Johnny Cash. P.S. I'm not one
Waugh .Halley.Wood Funeral
of
your puppies.
,
Home, all fhe pallbearers,
4-29-6fc
Rev . Worley Haley, Rev . 0 .
H. Cart, the bus drivers, and
all our friends and neighbors OVEN FRESH bakery produc1s. Jimmy's Pastry Shop,
and relatives who helped In
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport.
any way during the loos of
Phone 992-3555. '
our family . Your klndn,ss
4·29-JOtc
was deeply appreciated by
all . The Yost family .
5-4-llc GUNSHOOT, Friday, May 7, 7
p.m. , Mile Hill Road. Hams,
WISH t0 express our sin.
bacons, half hogs. ' sronsored
cere thanks for the kindness
by Racine Fire Dep .
and sympathy showh us
S-4-41c
during the llln~ss and death of
our dear husband and father, SKATE -A-WAY
announces
Carl J . Hellman . Special
Mother' s Day Special Wed·
thanks to the doctors, nurses
nesday night, May 5. Mother
and nurses aides at Veterans
receives free pass when
Memorial
1-tospltal, the
accompanied by children .
Ewing Funeral Home, the
Open Wednesday, Friday and
pallbearers, the Rev. Wald
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. to 10:30
Radford for his consoling
p.m. Private parties, phone
words, our friends and neigh·
985·3929 or 985-3585.
bors for the food and beautiful
5-2· 31c
flowers. May God bless each
and every one.
HAYMAN' S Auction House,
Wife, Mrs. Lena Heilman ,
Laurel Cliff, Rt. 7 Pomeroy·
daughter,
Mrs .
Evelyn
Middleport
Bypass. Auction
Midkiff, and son , Mr. Cecil
Friday
night,
7 p.m. This
each
Heitman.
week,
May
7,
one
truckload
of
5-4-ltp
general merchandise~ one
large lot of assorted tools ~
THE FAMILY of Frank Beach
fealurlng
one rug 1oom.
wishes to thank Dr. Simon, all
5·2-61C'
doctors, nurses. nurses aides
of Holzer •Hospital, and all
who helped In any way during KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, wigs and
accessories. · May and June
his stay at the hospital.
special. Kli!anslng Kream,
Special thanks to Rev . Moyer,
S2.25. Distributors, Brown's.
Rev. Carter, Rev . Russell,
Phone 992-5113.
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral
4·23-tfc
Home, pallbearers, neighbors
and friends who sent cards,
the..-, ·Home Builders -Chlss,· SAVIif G!i to. one holt. Bring
yo!lr • slck TV to Chuck's TV
Loyal Women's Class, Church
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave .,
of Christ. all who sent flowers,
Pomeroy .
neighbors who sent food, and
4-23·1fc
all who helped In any way to
lighten our burden and
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
sorrow.
Chester, Ohio. Flowers for
The Frank Beach Family.
Mother' s Day and Memorial
5-4-llc
Day . $.88 and up. Phone
Chester 985·3537.
,
4-23-12tc
Rent

Card of Thanks

Notice

---=----we

----~--

------

For

2

Pomeroy s~:~~a~:L
Motor Co. ·
.

1968CHEVELLE
$1495
4 Poor Sedan, locally owned, 6 cyl. , Powerglide, blatk
finish. spotless clean Inferior, radio, like new white-wall
tires ,
1969CHEVELLE
52150
Malibu 4 Dr. hardtop, V-8 engine, automatic trans., power
steering, radio. Like new white-wall tires, viny l roof &amp;
green finish.
·
1967 FORD
51765
4 Door sedan LT. D., power steering, power brakes, air
conditioning . Vinyl interior , bik. vinyl roof/ maroon finish,
radio. new w-w Ures.

Pomeroy -.,,, Co.

loiiiiiiiiiiiii------•
For

-------

Auto Salas

1967 BARRACUDA convertible,
v.8, automatic transmission .
Power steering, St.050. Phone
992·6005.
4-28-61c
1969 BUIC-K LeSabre, 2-dr .
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, alr, 18,000
miles. Excellent condition.
· Phone 992·2288.
ll ·IO·IfC
1967 OL'DSMOBILE 442, Cragar
SS wheels , automatic tran smission, 4-speaker stereo,
power steering and brakes.
... !Con·l att Jim- Crowr~hone 992-·
2441 after 5 p.m . '
5-4-61c

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

ror
r1 Sale
36" X 23 11 X .009

Aluminum
Sheets
USEOOFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20e
Bfor St.OO

The
Daily Sentinel

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-lfc

111 Court St.
Pomeroy/ Ohio
STEREO. Walnut solid state
stereo/ 4 speed changer •. 4
speaker sound system. Pay
balance $68.10 cash or easy
terms . Call '192·3352.
4-29-6tc

For

-------

FARMALL IAl Tractor with
mower and ·other equipment; 1966 HONDA, cream, good
condition . Phone 949-4843.
1961 Chevrolet •;,.ton pickup,
4-29-61c
overloads and 6·ply rear
tires ; ~so McCulloch c~aln
saw wifh new chain. Phone GENTLE Buckskin riding pony,
53 Inch, $60. · Saddle with
Ches ter 985·3920.
padded seating, like new, $65 .
5-2-3tc
Phone 992 -3980.
5·2-61c
1.72 ACRE LOT. $1,500. Also, 8track tape player and 6 tapes, ~~=----700Xl8 TRUCK tires, small
$50. Phone 742.3656.
Ford tractor, small manure5-2-2tp
spreader. Pet lamb. Call 949P
-A-I~NT
_
D_A_M_A..,.G""E- 19-7l" "'Zig3073.
Zag Sewing Machines. Still In
5-2-6tc
original carlons. No at tachments needed, as our
controls are built-ln . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
monDS~rams, and blind hem
slitch . Full cash price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
H -61c

- -- - --

The stote ot Ohio , Me igs
Help Wanted
County, Probate Court.
To the Executor or Ad - EARN AT home . addressing
mlh lstrator of the estate; to
envelopes. Rush stamped -E-L:-E:-C-T::R-:
0-L-U::,X-:---:V:-a-c-u u m
such of the .following as are·
seff.addressed envelope to the
residents of th .e State of OhiO,
Cleaner complete with at.
Ambrose Company, 4325
viz : - the surviving spouse, the
tachments, cordwlnder and
Lakeborn, Davisburg,
nex t of kin, the beneficiaries
spray. Us'1&lt;1 bul In like
paint
Michigan, 48019.
under the will ; and to the at new
condlllon.
Pay 537.45
torney
or
atlorneys
4·30-30tp
cash
or . credit
terms
represent i ng any of the
aforementioned persons:
available. Phone '192-5641.
Mittie M. Nelson, Langsville,
5-4-6tc
.,
Meigs Co unty, Ohio, No. 20,476.
You are hereby notified that TELEPHONJ:S, brass beds,
the
Inventory
and
Ap c locks, dishes, old furniture, BUILDING lots. ·Also, Bolen
praisement of the estate of the
etc . Write M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,
tractor
and
roto-tiller,
aforementioned, deceased, late
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
mower, snowblower, like
of said County , was filed in this
new. one new hassock fan,
4·27·1fC
Court. Sa id l rivenlory and
fwo
lawn mowers. Albert Hill.
Appraisemen t will be tOr
phone
949-2261.
i hear ing before this Court on · ANTIQUES :
DIShes ,
the 21st day of May, 1971. at .
telephones , tin, brass beds,
10 :00 o'clock A.M.
lamps, etc . Lee Rudisill,
Any person desir ing to file · Phone 992·3403.
ELLEN'S Gift Shop, Reedsville,
exceptio·ns thereto must file
~-2J.Jotp
Ohio, Memorial Day wreaths,
them at least flvi: days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Arsprays,
beskets.
rangemenll, 69c and up.
Given un.der my hand and
seal of sold Court, this 30th day
Of 8
4·28·:Wtc
· of April 1971.
,
2 BEDROOM mobile home.
F. H. 0 Brien . Ad 11
I Pho
59
Jud9e and ex ·Offlcio
u s on Y·
ne 992· 5 2. BEST-LINE PRODtiCTS. call
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
otsaid Court
5-2-tfc
5·4-30
ey Janet E . Morris 4 ROOM~. bath, unfurnished
3 · PIECE antique 'bedroom
Deputy Clerk
apartment Also, 4 rooms,
!514,
11,
21c
suite. Bendix Ironer, 2 small
____,_
bath, furnished apartment.
Radiant gas heaters. P~ne
Trailer s.pace, with patio .
992-1066
.
1
.
Expehs on snowshoos can Albert Hln, phone 949·2261.
: '•·29-6tc
4-J0.7tc
walk for ~purs at the rate
uf five or six miles an hour,
UNFURNISH!OD 3 . room COAL, limestone. Exctletor'
and many can l·un on' them
apartment. Phone 992·2288. . Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomerov. Pl1ont 992-3191.
in a sort uf dogti'Ot
10
1-Jt .lfc

Wanted To Buy

F

___ ___

RESTAURANT and equipment
with ga~e room , Mason. w.
Va . Phone Rutland 742-5265.
4-30·61p

- - - - - --

24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
wi lh or
without
farm
mach i nery . Hou se with 3
bedrooms, dining room, living
r oom, 1112 baths, enclosed
back por ch, wall to w~ll
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
awning, storm windows and
stor m do ors. City water.
Selling due to ill hea llh. Phone
61 4-985·3938.
4-25 -18tp

~

EXPERT
:Wheel ·Alignment

THINK .ABOUT ITI
WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

YOU'LL Jusr AAI/E

THE· $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

$5.55
- GUARANTEEI)-o
Phone 99M09il

Tell Me... W~AT'$

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS!

ves...

'

romeroy Home &amp; Auto
606
. E. Main, Pomeroy, o.·.

You wi ll have something of value to show tor the $S$ you
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Ta x benefit, you build an equity and yau are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.

r-----------~

Let Us Show You.~_You can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home1 V.A., F. H.A.,
And Conventional Loans.

JOHNSON MASONRY
Complete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

742-4902

\iM! 10 lA~ A .
51/0.VER (

•

AUTOM&gt;\TIO!ol AN~ WWA'T'S
ECOLOGY~

Come See Us At 97'h N. Second St., Middleport.

reen· Hill Homes Inc.
992-7129
Evenings Call : 992-2534
992~ 3433
Dale
Larry
Dutton
Spencer

l TI-IINK

MetiER
SE6 APOE,\\
AS LO'Ifl..'11
ASA 1tff.

Crow
'

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBI~E HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Yo'l.r Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
iif:WINSOR
_.BUDDY

'*CHAMPION
-li_VAN DYKE

L.!.......:lo...C-- _

DQUBLE~WIDES

WE CAN CUT IT AWAY

Pleasant Ridge Road
Pomeroy,O.

Dick Vaughan
992-3374
Dale Little
992-6346

oi

For

at

'

JOHNSON MASONRY

80NNAZ

~

. BLAElTNARS
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

Backhoe And
End loader Work

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
WD111

Spouting, Roof

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

Paintini"

GASOLINE ALLE;.Y

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

742-4902

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.
OEXTE R, 0 . 45726
·~IPHONE

742·3945

tnsurect-e xperienced
Work Gu~ranteed

FREE STORAGE .

Sale

THE BORN LOSER
liE li
'OJRSELF!

Virgil B•.

IT WOUlD lAKE A MIT~ION m!1
'Jl1 'll!e re;}~ 10 c;rF PIIST A
COO!'LE 0
fliPS OF MINE!

ABC CLEANERS

TEAFORD
-.
SR.

WE'RE PRACT'L'f THE
SliME ~z~ .... 'CEPT

t!

MY Df!E5SES DON'

SEEM

T~E

KIND 0'

ClOTHES '@!:f! BE
CIIUG"l DEAD IN!

r--..

-...., .r---

elm~"""

BUT, GRANOPA,
I'M VOUR

CiET
OUT,

.,-----4

:12. Fit

to WI

Pana.'a
bealt, e.r .

nationality
U. Attired
15. Spread for
drying

opoktll

5. More
lmponr.

23. cune
:U. lf&amp;riDe

lahed

11111

6. See eye
toeye

mom

T. -

.21. Spurd\)Uih'l

find
22. Oavelta go

-

(2
Wdl.)

Magnon
8. Memorable
pbraae
Hamlet

llelnl .
JM, Ed Norton's

25. Bul·
wark .

27, Col-

lep

,in

from

23.Ungorle

low&amp;

........,...-.. I Kl,c:n;

...

. 29. Bta.te-

ment
ot

bolltf

3B.Regton
3i. Encircle

86.0ld
campall"••

I

·. ) I I

BB.Oarmen

article

liWl..'BE

"

23.Rages

Yale men

I () I I I I

Hia\V&amp;th&amp;'l

trana·

TRH;EJV

1..-t~~uuaa~~niiN

so. Book·

keeper's

entry

·-·-• ' I

"You'll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'TII6:00
Till p.M. Slit.

(abbr.)
31. Necktie
fabric

Ye.terd•y••

89, Veered

DOWN

·l . Requlre

DAILY OBD'IOQUO'.Dl-Here't bow to work It:
. AXYDLBAAXB
II

LONGI'IILLOW

'One letter limplY ~laDdl for anotber. In thiJ wnple A II
tiled for tile !hiM llo, X for tile two O'•, etc. SlnfiO letten,
apoatropbu, the leftgth an4 formation of the word• ore all
hlnta. Each cia)' the code lettere are different.

A Crrptopm Qaotatloll
NGLK

WB

IIUSXHM

ZBW

WMS

QBH:WUOZB BT WKS OKZBOVS SXLS ,
OPW

(II:X:JUII]

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

THAT 1/i.AAo WE RIDE ABOOr
THOUSAND MILES OW A 611§.
WC AL~ GET 5/CK ..

tl. Brief
at'(Uinent
t2~ Halloween
choice

0

,_1111....,..... -··

rh.,.. "'"' rhlo- A KNOCK OUT THill

40.Inaurgent

I

Now .,....... the clrcltdleUtn
to
u
IUI(Itted bT the abom ean-.

· Antw•rt Tlr·~· optm.ed ilae bo.dlw art!nft ph H~nu••

311, Overhead
37. Venerate

-·

HOW 'TO· &amp;INS A
CON iO 5LE!!I?. -

JambJo., COCOA KNILL JACKIT UNIIAT

32. Appendage

CAPI'AIN EASY

'-

form four otdlnary "ords.

ba!Uwlck

$1795
Karr &amp;Van1 landt ·
•

fle.l

t. Bancho

Red's

J'10tur01 Syadlc:ate, Ioo.)

~ \!!) ~~~ '*11-5·
Unteramble these foUr Jumbles.
one letter to eaeh ~quln!, to

20. Falll·

(3 wdl.)

1B.Bewronr
19. Slur over

Burgundy fin. · with black
vinyl top and black cloth ·
Int., full power, new W·S· W
tires ~ air.

"

QUIXote" '

13. Eric the

Xln~

rt!l~~rnit ~-l.4i.I,~;X;!...Je

. 10. Repa·
ration
11. Pecullar

,

from
"Don

16.Bunny's

67 CHEV. 2DR. HT.

,. '

Uno

(0 11'11

~ghly

8. Memorable

Maltr.at
fw;;:;:rn:;:;:iiiWi;:vioeiiOE;'Itt.
TWIT NEW
12. Picnic
HAllE BEeN ORDERED
setting
US ON StG!olTt

alder
too

bultrument

of Andros"
6. Theeplan

USED CARS

- ·

Miller's

r., TJi. Lot. ILL N.CI.

T-r&lt;l&amp;J'• cJp..quolo: BA.CHICLORS SHOULD JIIIIIIIIAV·
lLl'l'AXED: lT IS NOT II'.AIR THAT SOMIC MliiN IBOUU:
Bill HAPPilllR THAN QTHIIIRB.--OSCAR WlLDII

9. Con·

2. Mitch

AOII08S
1. WUder's
"The-

.

. ._,.He

t

BUILDING/

R nt

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

•

l WO'JPIOI!t II=-

~ Wl-lt&gt;.T VA

ro \OJ

---

mllas •n hour.

!'

COMII\G OJT OF THE

WINKl.E!

From the Largest Truck
Bulld~zer Radiator to the
_~mallest Healer Core.

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .· HARRISON'S TV AND AN Septic lank s in stalled . George
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
I Bill) Pullins , Phone 992 -2478.
992-2522.
4-25-tfc
6-lO·Ifc
Real Estate

i

KNONI..CANDY AVON

8ETTER1 MISS

I

MEMORIAL BRIDGI! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSB'URG, W.VA.

Custom meat cutting

WEll, WHAT

AND SHAPE IT

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

lHE SHOP

__,_J

j

. BUGS BillfflY

-tlALSO

iEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

1have togo

P'CN'T 't'l)tJ KNOW .._f'tll60f'T;

Qui.'T' ...,....., AIOIJT fiN'i ~IHIH,

S~ALL

'192-2580
Tom

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
HOUSE of Mrs . A. H. Solley In NICE BRICK veneer house. 3
For Vour Garments
Authoriz~d Singer Sales and
Bashan. If Interested, contact
bedrooms, living roOf"!'' . TV
Service.
We
Sha•pen
Scissors.
room, kitchen, bath and half,
All you pay for is cleaning
by letter at this address : Mrs.
3·29-tfc
storage, utility room, garage.
A. H. Bailey, 5455 Urbane St ..
and pressing. Pay when you
.
No., St. Petersburg , Florida
New Haven . Phone New get them back.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
33714.
Haven 882-2037.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
5-4-61c " Ditching . Electric sewer
5-2-JOfc
DELIVERY
SERVICE
,cleaning ." Reasonable rates.
CALL 773-5543.
John
Russell,
Phone
Please! No Free Storing on
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Bulk Cleaning.
4-7-tfc
POMEROY
Mulberry
;;
B;-;
U;L ;L-:D;:O
;;:Z;:E:;R:;::.=w=or=:=k=.;;:
Ba=s=em
:::-en t;
Avenue, 2 story frame~ 4
ponds, landscaping . We do all
bedrooms , 11h baths , full
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
773-5543
Mason, W.Va.
'
.
basement,
garage with
dirt and top soli . See or call
remodeled rooms over, LOTS
Bob Jeffer.s after 7 p. m.
INSIDE AND outside palnllng:
OF ROOM FOR LARGE
Broker
992
-3525
.
Phone
Call '192-2368, Pomeroy, Ohio.
FAMILY. $18,500.
110 Mechanic St.
4-23-301c
4-28-6tc
Pqmeroy, Ohio
POMEROY- 3 bedroom home
EXPERT lawn mower ' and ROSEBERRY Furnace In ·
with apartment, GARDEN BELOW MIDDLEPORT - 3
tiller repair. Free pickup and
stallalion . Free estimates on
SPACE, 2 baths , garage,
bedrooms, bath, gas floor
delivery . Warren 's Mower
new furnaces, oil or gas.
storage build ing , GOOD
furnace, well. Garage, and
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
Service work. Call Cecil
CONDITION. $10,000.
outcellar . Small garden .
'192-7357.
Roseberry , Racine, Ohio.
Asking $7,000.00.
4·28-6tc
Phone 614-843·2274.
MIDDLEPORT LARGE
4-28-6tc
YARO FOR CHILDREN- 2 MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
ROOFING,
Spouting
and - - - - - - - - ,
story frame, 3 bedrooms,
bath, large living, side porch
Painting
.
Also,
metal
storage
O'DELL
WHEEL
alignment
bath, CLOSE TO SHOPPING,
and garage. Want 510,500.00.
building lOx 10, concrete floor,
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
full basement. 59,500.
•
erected, for $300. Richard
Com-plete front end service,
PROPERTIES ARE SELLING NEW LIMA ROAD- 4 large
Witt , Phone '192-2889.
tune up and brake service.
bedrooms, bath, nice modern
4. 12 . 301 c
LIST WITH USTODAY
W~eels
balanced
elec kitchen, gas log fireplace, full
HENRY CLELAND
tronically .
All
work
basemen!, 200,000'bfu natural
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
guaranteed.
Reasonable
REALTOR
gas forced air furnace .
Complete
Service
rates
.
Phone
'192-3213.
Office 992-2259
Beautiful large (rontlawn and
Phone 949-3821
~
4·22·301c
5-Htc
porch . 15
acres . Only
Racine, Ohio
$22.000.00.
• Crltt Bradford
FOR SALE
s.J.tfc
DELILAH Mays real estate, 2 YEARS OLD- 3 bedrooms =:-c:=--=,.,.....=~
with large closets, 11/, SEPTIC -tanks cleaned. Miller
46.67 acres in Olive Township,
Ceramic tile baths. gas furMeigs County will be sold to
Sanitalion. Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
,.
nace and central air con highest bidder for not less
662-3035.
ditioning. Garage. A-1 conthan appraised price of
2-J2.tfc
dition . $26,500.00.
$1,200.00, Saturday, May 8,
1971 at 10:00 a .m. al the office
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
of J. B. O'Brien, attorney, NEES HOMES FROMS8,500.00
delivered
right
to .your·
TO $12,500.00. CALL 992-3325.
100'1' Court Str~eet, Pomeroy,
project.
Fast
and
easy.
Frl!l!
HELEN L, TEAFORD.
for further information call
estimates.
Phone
992.3284.,
Associate
992-2720 . .
Goeglein Ready·Mix Co., j
4-30·61c
5·2-6tc
Middleport, Ohio.
•
~
6·30-tfc

Cleland Realty

,

1

~

-------

w.

. AS:r GO

Business
Services
·~===~~=:===~;::::==============~===--

BEAUTIFUL se lection ·Of
flowers , baskets, wreaths,
and spray s for Memorial Day.
Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport.
4-21 -ffc •

L

NO, THANKV··
THIS IS FAR

'

PLANT S NOW ready : Single
and double petunias, pansieS,
coleus, Mexican tomatoes 11nd
other varieties, peppers,
ca bbage, 112 or 1 d.ozen packs.
Don Hubbard, Syracuse, ·
Ohio. Phone 992 -5776.
4·22·241c

For

iO

OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

Gal. upholstery'
She used Blue
LustreRent
rug
and
cleaner.
electric shampooer, $1. Baker
Furniture, M•ddleport.
4-28-6tc

SOUTHER N plants: tomato,
oabbage, peppers. sweet
potatoes and onlon, May 1.
Order now, Charles R. Harris,
Sale
Portland, Ohio. Phone 843Rent
2693.
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile · BREEDING rablills: five does,
4-20-12tc
two bucks. Randall Roberts.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
5-2-6tc
Ohio. '192·2951.
4-2·1fc
HAVE NINE Yorkshire pigs.
------~
Males have been gelded .
UNFURNISHED
3
room ·
Phone 949-2726 on old Porapartment .
Inquire
at
tland Road. E. D. Johnson.
apartment 16, Coals Bldg.,
5-4-Jip
At Landmark, Everyone
Middleport . For information
can!
phone '192-3641 .
AUTOMATIC water softener
HAND PUSH MOWERS
4·27·12tc
and cold water tank, like new.
As Low As
63.95
Lowell Bing. Phone Chester
RIDING
MOWER.S
985-3816.
GOOD 6·room, bath, 3 bedroom
5+3tp
As Low As
271.95
home/ gas heat, basement/
ECONOMY TILLERS
garage. Well located. Write, - - - - - - - As Low As
134.95
giving references, to Box 729- ORGAN - Baldwin home organ
. L, C·O The Dally Sentinel, • with rhythm, to be picked up
· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
in this area . Pay remaining
POMEROY ,
5-4-6tc
balance or
take
over
,
J.
CarHy, Mgr ~
payments . May be seen
:
l'tlont 99:t·tlf1
I oca II y .
Write
credit
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
manager, Graves Piano and
1h-mlle north of new Meigs
Organ Company, 383 E. Broad
High School. Phone '192-2941 .
Real Estate
Sale
St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.
3-5-lfc
5-4-Jtc HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts ..
=-:-::-::---=-::---Pomeroy . Phone '192·2293.
FURNISHED and unfurnished
10.25-ltc
PIAt-10
Spinet
piano,
walnut
apartments. Close to school.
finish,
Baldwin,
will
be
picked
Phone '192-5434.
up In this area . Assume FIVE ROOM house, two
10-18-tfc
payments or refinance. May
bedrooms, bath, basement,
be
seen locally. Write, Credit
wall to wall carpet in living
TRAIL·ER, Brown 's Traile r
Maoager, Graves Piano and
r oom, bedroom s, and bath .
Park . Phone 992-3324.
Organ Company, 383 E. Broad ' Gas. forced air furnace .
4-29-6tc
St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Middleport, phone 99i.J420.
5-4-Jtc
4-25-lfc ·

For

COME ON IN TH'
HOUSE AN' LETS PLAV
A GAME OF

a Merry'

"''MEROY, OHIO

Help Wanted

Lost

now

is

ANT IQUES, Phone 992-5327.
4-6-30ic

_OP.EN EVE$.'1:00 P.lot.

For

GALA AUCTION opening NOTICE OF
Friday, May 7 at 7 p.m.
APPOINTMENT
Kuhl's Auction Barn 1 every
cas, No. 20416
Friday,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
Es tate
of
ARMETT
M.
at caution light on Rt. 7.
SHE ETS.fDeceased .
Notice 1s !lereby given that
5-2-61c
Cartie Wears of Rutland , Ohlo,
has been duly appointed Ad ·
ministratrix of the Estate of
Armett M. Sheets, deceased,
late of Meigs County, OhiO .
ANYONE
knowing
the
Credltors are required to file
whereabouts of a male
their claims with said f iduc iary
Siamese cat, please call
within four months.
Middleport '192-3832. Pet of
Dated this 21st day of April
shuf. ln. Please. Reward .
. 1971'
~·28·61c
F . H. O'Brien
Probate Judge
ofsaldCovnty
· .
{4) 27, { 51~ . t 1. 3tc · MEIGS boy's gold class nng
with blue set, 1971, Initials
G.L. Call 992-2766 If found .
NOTICE ON FILING
'
5-4-3tc

BARLOW!

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

BEDROOM mobile home . WILL PICK up merchandiS'e
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
Sale
and 'take to auction on a
5·3-71c
percentage basis. Call Jim SEARS
portable
sewing
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland .
machine caplnet with storage ------,,---,-- Phone 742 -4461.
and drawers. See Robert MAPLE
• STEREO-RADIO
9.2J-tfc
Wood, Chester, Ohio. Phone
combination. This stereo
HELP
WANTED:
Living
985·3978 after 5 p.m .
equipped with AM-FM radio,
companion for elderly lady. "'R-U"'
a a"'E"'R
,...-,S:::T-:A-M-::
P-::5 _ m_a_de
:5·2-Jtc
.4 speakers, 4 speed changer .
Light housework and cooking.
order. 2~ hour service. Dwaln
Pay balance Sllt.JO, cash or
Generous salarv, Including
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
room and board. can 992·5397
terms . Call '192 -3352.
PLANTS
FOR
SALE
.
Home
Ohio.
4-29-6tc
or' '192-3507.
grown Improved Mexican
2-IMOtc
5·3-3tc
• tomato plants, large smooth,
non.acld. Also, Heinz 1350,
REGISTER-ED Tennessee
TOMATO PLANTS , Valiant,
Yellow Golden Jubilee and
walker
stud
service.
Jung's Earliest, Marglobe,
Sale
Large Supersonic. They are
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone
Oxhart, Stump of the World,
sturdy, well rooted plants.
742·5862.
Rutg ers, Lincoln,
Oat's
700X18 TRUCK ·fires . Small
Also ,. hot peppers, mangos
Excel. Yellow Colossal.
4-20-JOtc
farm tractor, small manure.
and cabbage plants. On Rt .
Burpee's, Delicious and
spreader. pet lamb. can 9491241n Syracuse. Ohio, 500 teet
Jubilee. Sturdy transplants .
REDUCE safe and fast with
3073. .
above the park. Thoma s
Dozen for SOc . B. Quisen5-J.61c
Gobese tablets and E-Vop
Hayman.
berry, Syracuse, Ohio.
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
5·2-JOtc
5-2-121p
4-lol-601p

LEGAL NOTICE

...

ore Bargains

Bargains, Bargains,

•

•

WKS

LWUIIPBPL

QBHWUOZB

'11'-T

WM:S

VGTII.-WKSBQBUS

UBBLS:RBVW

'

•

�.'

:;.:; ;-: ~r;&gt; . ·: :.·

::~ :; .;! . ~~

WANT AD
Auction
INFORMATION
.
AUCTION
DEADLINES
•
SATURDAY, May__l!, al12 noon
5.P.M. Day B~fpre PJ!b!ication
Monday Deadline9a.m.
· at the · Clv~e Headley fa~m
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
just off Rt. 71n Tuppers, Ohio
WUI be.accepted until9a .m . for
(follow signs from Rt. 7) , will
Day of Publication
sell the following : Household :
REGULATIONS
2· Piece Living room suite
The Publisher reserves the
(plastic), 2· Piece Living room
right )o edit or reject any ads
suite, 2 Bedroom suites, J
deemed ob iectional. The
TVs, Odd bed and bedding,
publisher will not b~ responsible
Metal wardrobe, 7·plece
for more than one incorrect
Dinette Set, Coffee and end
insertion.
tables ,
Base
cabinet.
RATES
Automatic Washer, Record
For Want Ad Service
player, dresser, Odd chairs
5 cents per Word one Insertion
and lamps, Rugs, 2 Punch
Minimum Charge 75c
bowls. Antiques: Library
12 cents per word three
Table, Dresser 4 rocking
consecutive insertions.
Chairs, Dishes, Shoe last,
18 cents per word six conQuilting frames, Trunk.
secutive insertions.
Cedar -lined buffet -mirror
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Wire top jars, Meat grinder,
ad s and ads paid within 10 days.
Cherry seeder, Apple peeler,
CARD OF THANKS
Cane rocker, 20 gal. Stone
&amp;OBITUARY
Jar. Misc. Items: Mllk ·cooler,
Sl .SO for SO word minimum .
40 gal. Elec. water heater,
Each additional word 2c.
Wash vats, Garden Tractor, 2
BLIND ADS
Power hand saws, I 0 ft.
Addltlqnal 25c Charge per
Plywood txiat, Lumber , 2
Advertisement.
Lawn Mowers, Grass se11&lt;1er,
OFFICE HOURS
Carpenter
tools,
Porch
8:.30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
columns~ Roofing. Lunch
8: 30 a .m . to 12:00 Noon
served. Not resr.onslble _for
Saturday.
accidents. Mam e Headley :
Owner. 1. 0 . ''Mac" McCoy:
Auctioneer.
S·2-Jtc
THE FAMILY of Mr. and Mrs.
Berl Yost wishes to thank the
Middleporl Fire Department,
the doctors and nursing staff
of Holzer Medical Center, LASSIE : what Is tru,e? by
Johnny Cash. P.S. I'm not one
Waugh .Halley.Wood Funeral
of
your puppies.
,
Home, all fhe pallbearers,
4-29-6fc
Rev . Worley Haley, Rev . 0 .
H. Cart, the bus drivers, and
all our friends and neighbors OVEN FRESH bakery produc1s. Jimmy's Pastry Shop,
and relatives who helped In
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport.
any way during the loos of
Phone 992-3555. '
our family . Your klndn,ss
4·29-JOtc
was deeply appreciated by
all . The Yost family .
5-4-llc GUNSHOOT, Friday, May 7, 7
p.m. , Mile Hill Road. Hams,
WISH t0 express our sin.
bacons, half hogs. ' sronsored
cere thanks for the kindness
by Racine Fire Dep .
and sympathy showh us
S-4-41c
during the llln~ss and death of
our dear husband and father, SKATE -A-WAY
announces
Carl J . Hellman . Special
Mother' s Day Special Wed·
thanks to the doctors, nurses
nesday night, May 5. Mother
and nurses aides at Veterans
receives free pass when
Memorial
1-tospltal, the
accompanied by children .
Ewing Funeral Home, the
Open Wednesday, Friday and
pallbearers, the Rev. Wald
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. to 10:30
Radford for his consoling
p.m. Private parties, phone
words, our friends and neigh·
985·3929 or 985-3585.
bors for the food and beautiful
5-2· 31c
flowers. May God bless each
and every one.
HAYMAN' S Auction House,
Wife, Mrs. Lena Heilman ,
Laurel Cliff, Rt. 7 Pomeroy·
daughter,
Mrs .
Evelyn
Middleport
Bypass. Auction
Midkiff, and son , Mr. Cecil
Friday
night,
7 p.m. This
each
Heitman.
week,
May
7,
one
truckload
of
5-4-ltp
general merchandise~ one
large lot of assorted tools ~
THE FAMILY of Frank Beach
fealurlng
one rug 1oom.
wishes to thank Dr. Simon, all
5·2-61C'
doctors, nurses. nurses aides
of Holzer •Hospital, and all
who helped In any way during KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, wigs and
accessories. · May and June
his stay at the hospital.
special. Kli!anslng Kream,
Special thanks to Rev . Moyer,
S2.25. Distributors, Brown's.
Rev. Carter, Rev . Russell,
Phone 992-5113.
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral
4·23-tfc
Home, pallbearers, neighbors
and friends who sent cards,
the..-, ·Home Builders -Chlss,· SAVIif G!i to. one holt. Bring
yo!lr • slck TV to Chuck's TV
Loyal Women's Class, Church
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave .,
of Christ. all who sent flowers,
Pomeroy .
neighbors who sent food, and
4-23·1fc
all who helped In any way to
lighten our burden and
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
sorrow.
Chester, Ohio. Flowers for
The Frank Beach Family.
Mother' s Day and Memorial
5-4-llc
Day . $.88 and up. Phone
Chester 985·3537.
,
4-23-12tc
Rent

Card of Thanks

Notice

---=----we

----~--

------

For

2

Pomeroy s~:~~a~:L
Motor Co. ·
.

1968CHEVELLE
$1495
4 Poor Sedan, locally owned, 6 cyl. , Powerglide, blatk
finish. spotless clean Inferior, radio, like new white-wall
tires ,
1969CHEVELLE
52150
Malibu 4 Dr. hardtop, V-8 engine, automatic trans., power
steering, radio. Like new white-wall tires, viny l roof &amp;
green finish.
·
1967 FORD
51765
4 Door sedan LT. D., power steering, power brakes, air
conditioning . Vinyl interior , bik. vinyl roof/ maroon finish,
radio. new w-w Ures.

Pomeroy -.,,, Co.

loiiiiiiiiiiiii------•
For

-------

Auto Salas

1967 BARRACUDA convertible,
v.8, automatic transmission .
Power steering, St.050. Phone
992·6005.
4-28-61c
1969 BUIC-K LeSabre, 2-dr .
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, alr, 18,000
miles. Excellent condition.
· Phone 992·2288.
ll ·IO·IfC
1967 OL'DSMOBILE 442, Cragar
SS wheels , automatic tran smission, 4-speaker stereo,
power steering and brakes.
... !Con·l att Jim- Crowr~hone 992-·
2441 after 5 p.m . '
5-4-61c

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

ror
r1 Sale
36" X 23 11 X .009

Aluminum
Sheets
USEOOFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20e
Bfor St.OO

The
Daily Sentinel

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-lfc

111 Court St.
Pomeroy/ Ohio
STEREO. Walnut solid state
stereo/ 4 speed changer •. 4
speaker sound system. Pay
balance $68.10 cash or easy
terms . Call '192·3352.
4-29-6tc

For

-------

FARMALL IAl Tractor with
mower and ·other equipment; 1966 HONDA, cream, good
condition . Phone 949-4843.
1961 Chevrolet •;,.ton pickup,
4-29-61c
overloads and 6·ply rear
tires ; ~so McCulloch c~aln
saw wifh new chain. Phone GENTLE Buckskin riding pony,
53 Inch, $60. · Saddle with
Ches ter 985·3920.
padded seating, like new, $65 .
5-2-3tc
Phone 992 -3980.
5·2-61c
1.72 ACRE LOT. $1,500. Also, 8track tape player and 6 tapes, ~~=----700Xl8 TRUCK tires, small
$50. Phone 742.3656.
Ford tractor, small manure5-2-2tp
spreader. Pet lamb. Call 949P
-A-I~NT
_
D_A_M_A..,.G""E- 19-7l" "'Zig3073.
Zag Sewing Machines. Still In
5-2-6tc
original carlons. No at tachments needed, as our
controls are built-ln . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
monDS~rams, and blind hem
slitch . Full cash price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
H -61c

- -- - --

The stote ot Ohio , Me igs
Help Wanted
County, Probate Court.
To the Executor or Ad - EARN AT home . addressing
mlh lstrator of the estate; to
envelopes. Rush stamped -E-L:-E:-C-T::R-:
0-L-U::,X-:---:V:-a-c-u u m
such of the .following as are·
seff.addressed envelope to the
residents of th .e State of OhiO,
Cleaner complete with at.
Ambrose Company, 4325
viz : - the surviving spouse, the
tachments, cordwlnder and
Lakeborn, Davisburg,
nex t of kin, the beneficiaries
spray. Us'1&lt;1 bul In like
paint
Michigan, 48019.
under the will ; and to the at new
condlllon.
Pay 537.45
torney
or
atlorneys
4·30-30tp
cash
or . credit
terms
represent i ng any of the
aforementioned persons:
available. Phone '192-5641.
Mittie M. Nelson, Langsville,
5-4-6tc
.,
Meigs Co unty, Ohio, No. 20,476.
You are hereby notified that TELEPHONJ:S, brass beds,
the
Inventory
and
Ap c locks, dishes, old furniture, BUILDING lots. ·Also, Bolen
praisement of the estate of the
etc . Write M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,
tractor
and
roto-tiller,
aforementioned, deceased, late
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
mower, snowblower, like
of said County , was filed in this
new. one new hassock fan,
4·27·1fC
Court. Sa id l rivenlory and
fwo
lawn mowers. Albert Hill.
Appraisemen t will be tOr
phone
949-2261.
i hear ing before this Court on · ANTIQUES :
DIShes ,
the 21st day of May, 1971. at .
telephones , tin, brass beds,
10 :00 o'clock A.M.
lamps, etc . Lee Rudisill,
Any person desir ing to file · Phone 992·3403.
ELLEN'S Gift Shop, Reedsville,
exceptio·ns thereto must file
~-2J.Jotp
Ohio, Memorial Day wreaths,
them at least flvi: days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Arsprays,
beskets.
rangemenll, 69c and up.
Given un.der my hand and
seal of sold Court, this 30th day
Of 8
4·28·:Wtc
· of April 1971.
,
2 BEDROOM mobile home.
F. H. 0 Brien . Ad 11
I Pho
59
Jud9e and ex ·Offlcio
u s on Y·
ne 992· 5 2. BEST-LINE PRODtiCTS. call
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
otsaid Court
5-2-tfc
5·4-30
ey Janet E . Morris 4 ROOM~. bath, unfurnished
3 · PIECE antique 'bedroom
Deputy Clerk
apartment Also, 4 rooms,
!514,
11,
21c
suite. Bendix Ironer, 2 small
____,_
bath, furnished apartment.
Radiant gas heaters. P~ne
Trailer s.pace, with patio .
992-1066
.
1
.
Expehs on snowshoos can Albert Hln, phone 949·2261.
: '•·29-6tc
4-J0.7tc
walk for ~purs at the rate
uf five or six miles an hour,
UNFURNISH!OD 3 . room COAL, limestone. Exctletor'
and many can l·un on' them
apartment. Phone 992·2288. . Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomerov. Pl1ont 992-3191.
in a sort uf dogti'Ot
10
1-Jt .lfc

Wanted To Buy

F

___ ___

RESTAURANT and equipment
with ga~e room , Mason. w.
Va . Phone Rutland 742-5265.
4-30·61p

- - - - - --

24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
wi lh or
without
farm
mach i nery . Hou se with 3
bedrooms, dining room, living
r oom, 1112 baths, enclosed
back por ch, wall to w~ll
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
awning, storm windows and
stor m do ors. City water.
Selling due to ill hea llh. Phone
61 4-985·3938.
4-25 -18tp

~

EXPERT
:Wheel ·Alignment

THINK .ABOUT ITI
WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

YOU'LL Jusr AAI/E

THE· $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

$5.55
- GUARANTEEI)-o
Phone 99M09il

Tell Me... W~AT'$

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS!

ves...

'

romeroy Home &amp; Auto
606
. E. Main, Pomeroy, o.·.

You wi ll have something of value to show tor the $S$ you
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Ta x benefit, you build an equity and yau are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.

r-----------~

Let Us Show You.~_You can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home1 V.A., F. H.A.,
And Conventional Loans.

JOHNSON MASONRY
Complete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

742-4902

\iM! 10 lA~ A .
51/0.VER (

•

AUTOM&gt;\TIO!ol AN~ WWA'T'S
ECOLOGY~

Come See Us At 97'h N. Second St., Middleport.

reen· Hill Homes Inc.
992-7129
Evenings Call : 992-2534
992~ 3433
Dale
Larry
Dutton
Spencer

l TI-IINK

MetiER
SE6 APOE,\\
AS LO'Ifl..'11
ASA 1tff.

Crow
'

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBI~E HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Yo'l.r Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
iif:WINSOR
_.BUDDY

'*CHAMPION
-li_VAN DYKE

L.!.......:lo...C-- _

DQUBLE~WIDES

WE CAN CUT IT AWAY

Pleasant Ridge Road
Pomeroy,O.

Dick Vaughan
992-3374
Dale Little
992-6346

oi

For

at

'

JOHNSON MASONRY

80NNAZ

~

. BLAElTNARS
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

Backhoe And
End loader Work

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
WD111

Spouting, Roof

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

Paintini"

GASOLINE ALLE;.Y

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

742-4902

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.
OEXTE R, 0 . 45726
·~IPHONE

742·3945

tnsurect-e xperienced
Work Gu~ranteed

FREE STORAGE .

Sale

THE BORN LOSER
liE li
'OJRSELF!

Virgil B•.

IT WOUlD lAKE A MIT~ION m!1
'Jl1 'll!e re;}~ 10 c;rF PIIST A
COO!'LE 0
fliPS OF MINE!

ABC CLEANERS

TEAFORD
-.
SR.

WE'RE PRACT'L'f THE
SliME ~z~ .... 'CEPT

t!

MY Df!E5SES DON'

SEEM

T~E

KIND 0'

ClOTHES '@!:f! BE
CIIUG"l DEAD IN!

r--..

-...., .r---

elm~"""

BUT, GRANOPA,
I'M VOUR

CiET
OUT,

.,-----4

:12. Fit

to WI

Pana.'a
bealt, e.r .

nationality
U. Attired
15. Spread for
drying

opoktll

5. More
lmponr.

23. cune
:U. lf&amp;riDe

lahed

11111

6. See eye
toeye

mom

T. -

.21. Spurd\)Uih'l

find
22. Oavelta go

-

(2
Wdl.)

Magnon
8. Memorable
pbraae
Hamlet

llelnl .
JM, Ed Norton's

25. Bul·
wark .

27, Col-

lep

,in

from

23.Ungorle

low&amp;

........,...-.. I Kl,c:n;

...

. 29. Bta.te-

ment
ot

bolltf

3B.Regton
3i. Encircle

86.0ld
campall"••

I

·. ) I I

BB.Oarmen

article

liWl..'BE

"

23.Rages

Yale men

I () I I I I

Hia\V&amp;th&amp;'l

trana·

TRH;EJV

1..-t~~uuaa~~niiN

so. Book·

keeper's

entry

·-·-• ' I

"You'll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'TII6:00
Till p.M. Slit.

(abbr.)
31. Necktie
fabric

Ye.terd•y••

89, Veered

DOWN

·l . Requlre

DAILY OBD'IOQUO'.Dl-Here't bow to work It:
. AXYDLBAAXB
II

LONGI'IILLOW

'One letter limplY ~laDdl for anotber. In thiJ wnple A II
tiled for tile !hiM llo, X for tile two O'•, etc. SlnfiO letten,
apoatropbu, the leftgth an4 formation of the word• ore all
hlnta. Each cia)' the code lettere are different.

A Crrptopm Qaotatloll
NGLK

WB

IIUSXHM

ZBW

WMS

QBH:WUOZB BT WKS OKZBOVS SXLS ,
OPW

(II:X:JUII]

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

THAT 1/i.AAo WE RIDE ABOOr
THOUSAND MILES OW A 611§.
WC AL~ GET 5/CK ..

tl. Brief
at'(Uinent
t2~ Halloween
choice

0

,_1111....,..... -··

rh.,.. "'"' rhlo- A KNOCK OUT THill

40.Inaurgent

I

Now .,....... the clrcltdleUtn
to
u
IUI(Itted bT the abom ean-.

· Antw•rt Tlr·~· optm.ed ilae bo.dlw art!nft ph H~nu••

311, Overhead
37. Venerate

-·

HOW 'TO· &amp;INS A
CON iO 5LE!!I?. -

JambJo., COCOA KNILL JACKIT UNIIAT

32. Appendage

CAPI'AIN EASY

'-

form four otdlnary "ords.

ba!Uwlck

$1795
Karr &amp;Van1 landt ·
•

fle.l

t. Bancho

Red's

J'10tur01 Syadlc:ate, Ioo.)

~ \!!) ~~~ '*11-5·
Unteramble these foUr Jumbles.
one letter to eaeh ~quln!, to

20. Falll·

(3 wdl.)

1B.Bewronr
19. Slur over

Burgundy fin. · with black
vinyl top and black cloth ·
Int., full power, new W·S· W
tires ~ air.

"

QUIXote" '

13. Eric the

Xln~

rt!l~~rnit ~-l.4i.I,~;X;!...Je

. 10. Repa·
ration
11. Pecullar

,

from
"Don

16.Bunny's

67 CHEV. 2DR. HT.

,. '

Uno

(0 11'11

~ghly

8. Memorable

Maltr.at
fw;;:;:rn:;:;:iiiWi;:vioeiiOE;'Itt.
TWIT NEW
12. Picnic
HAllE BEeN ORDERED
setting
US ON StG!olTt

alder
too

bultrument

of Andros"
6. Theeplan

USED CARS

- ·

Miller's

r., TJi. Lot. ILL N.CI.

T-r&lt;l&amp;J'• cJp..quolo: BA.CHICLORS SHOULD JIIIIIIIIAV·
lLl'l'AXED: lT IS NOT II'.AIR THAT SOMIC MliiN IBOUU:
Bill HAPPilllR THAN QTHIIIRB.--OSCAR WlLDII

9. Con·

2. Mitch

AOII08S
1. WUder's
"The-

.

. ._,.He

t

BUILDING/

R nt

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

•

l WO'JPIOI!t II=-

~ Wl-lt&gt;.T VA

ro \OJ

---

mllas •n hour.

!'

COMII\G OJT OF THE

WINKl.E!

From the Largest Truck
Bulld~zer Radiator to the
_~mallest Healer Core.

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .· HARRISON'S TV AND AN Septic lank s in stalled . George
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
I Bill) Pullins , Phone 992 -2478.
992-2522.
4-25-tfc
6-lO·Ifc
Real Estate

i

KNONI..CANDY AVON

8ETTER1 MISS

I

MEMORIAL BRIDGI! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSB'URG, W.VA.

Custom meat cutting

WEll, WHAT

AND SHAPE IT

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

lHE SHOP

__,_J

j

. BUGS BillfflY

-tlALSO

iEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

1have togo

P'CN'T 't'l)tJ KNOW .._f'tll60f'T;

Qui.'T' ...,....., AIOIJT fiN'i ~IHIH,

S~ALL

'192-2580
Tom

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
HOUSE of Mrs . A. H. Solley In NICE BRICK veneer house. 3
For Vour Garments
Authoriz~d Singer Sales and
Bashan. If Interested, contact
bedrooms, living roOf"!'' . TV
Service.
We
Sha•pen
Scissors.
room, kitchen, bath and half,
All you pay for is cleaning
by letter at this address : Mrs.
3·29-tfc
storage, utility room, garage.
A. H. Bailey, 5455 Urbane St ..
and pressing. Pay when you
.
No., St. Petersburg , Florida
New Haven . Phone New get them back.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
33714.
Haven 882-2037.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
5-4-61c " Ditching . Electric sewer
5-2-JOfc
DELIVERY
SERVICE
,cleaning ." Reasonable rates.
CALL 773-5543.
John
Russell,
Phone
Please! No Free Storing on
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Bulk Cleaning.
4-7-tfc
POMEROY
Mulberry
;;
B;-;
U;L ;L-:D;:O
;;:Z;:E:;R:;::.=w=or=:=k=.;;:
Ba=s=em
:::-en t;
Avenue, 2 story frame~ 4
ponds, landscaping . We do all
bedrooms , 11h baths , full
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
773-5543
Mason, W.Va.
'
.
basement,
garage with
dirt and top soli . See or call
remodeled rooms over, LOTS
Bob Jeffer.s after 7 p. m.
INSIDE AND outside palnllng:
OF ROOM FOR LARGE
Broker
992
-3525
.
Phone
Call '192-2368, Pomeroy, Ohio.
FAMILY. $18,500.
110 Mechanic St.
4-23-301c
4-28-6tc
Pqmeroy, Ohio
POMEROY- 3 bedroom home
EXPERT lawn mower ' and ROSEBERRY Furnace In ·
with apartment, GARDEN BELOW MIDDLEPORT - 3
tiller repair. Free pickup and
stallalion . Free estimates on
SPACE, 2 baths , garage,
bedrooms, bath, gas floor
delivery . Warren 's Mower
new furnaces, oil or gas.
storage build ing , GOOD
furnace, well. Garage, and
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
Service work. Call Cecil
CONDITION. $10,000.
outcellar . Small garden .
'192-7357.
Roseberry , Racine, Ohio.
Asking $7,000.00.
4·28-6tc
Phone 614-843·2274.
MIDDLEPORT LARGE
4-28-6tc
YARO FOR CHILDREN- 2 MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
ROOFING,
Spouting
and - - - - - - - - ,
story frame, 3 bedrooms,
bath, large living, side porch
Painting
.
Also,
metal
storage
O'DELL
WHEEL
alignment
bath, CLOSE TO SHOPPING,
and garage. Want 510,500.00.
building lOx 10, concrete floor,
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
full basement. 59,500.
•
erected, for $300. Richard
Com-plete front end service,
PROPERTIES ARE SELLING NEW LIMA ROAD- 4 large
Witt , Phone '192-2889.
tune up and brake service.
bedrooms, bath, nice modern
4. 12 . 301 c
LIST WITH USTODAY
W~eels
balanced
elec kitchen, gas log fireplace, full
HENRY CLELAND
tronically .
All
work
basemen!, 200,000'bfu natural
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
guaranteed.
Reasonable
REALTOR
gas forced air furnace .
Complete
Service
rates
.
Phone
'192-3213.
Office 992-2259
Beautiful large (rontlawn and
Phone 949-3821
~
4·22·301c
5-Htc
porch . 15
acres . Only
Racine, Ohio
$22.000.00.
• Crltt Bradford
FOR SALE
s.J.tfc
DELILAH Mays real estate, 2 YEARS OLD- 3 bedrooms =:-c:=--=,.,.....=~
with large closets, 11/, SEPTIC -tanks cleaned. Miller
46.67 acres in Olive Township,
Ceramic tile baths. gas furMeigs County will be sold to
Sanitalion. Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
,.
nace and central air con highest bidder for not less
662-3035.
ditioning. Garage. A-1 conthan appraised price of
2-J2.tfc
dition . $26,500.00.
$1,200.00, Saturday, May 8,
1971 at 10:00 a .m. al the office
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
of J. B. O'Brien, attorney, NEES HOMES FROMS8,500.00
delivered
right
to .your·
TO $12,500.00. CALL 992-3325.
100'1' Court Str~eet, Pomeroy,
project.
Fast
and
easy.
Frl!l!
HELEN L, TEAFORD.
for further information call
estimates.
Phone
992.3284.,
Associate
992-2720 . .
Goeglein Ready·Mix Co., j
4-30·61c
5·2-6tc
Middleport, Ohio.
•
~
6·30-tfc

Cleland Realty

,

1

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w.

. AS:r GO

Business
Services
·~===~~=:===~;::::==============~===--

BEAUTIFUL se lection ·Of
flowers , baskets, wreaths,
and spray s for Memorial Day.
Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport.
4-21 -ffc •

L

NO, THANKV··
THIS IS FAR

'

PLANT S NOW ready : Single
and double petunias, pansieS,
coleus, Mexican tomatoes 11nd
other varieties, peppers,
ca bbage, 112 or 1 d.ozen packs.
Don Hubbard, Syracuse, ·
Ohio. Phone 992 -5776.
4·22·241c

For

iO

OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

Gal. upholstery'
She used Blue
LustreRent
rug
and
cleaner.
electric shampooer, $1. Baker
Furniture, M•ddleport.
4-28-6tc

SOUTHER N plants: tomato,
oabbage, peppers. sweet
potatoes and onlon, May 1.
Order now, Charles R. Harris,
Sale
Portland, Ohio. Phone 843Rent
2693.
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile · BREEDING rablills: five does,
4-20-12tc
two bucks. Randall Roberts.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
5-2-6tc
Ohio. '192·2951.
4-2·1fc
HAVE NINE Yorkshire pigs.
------~
Males have been gelded .
UNFURNISHED
3
room ·
Phone 949-2726 on old Porapartment .
Inquire
at
tland Road. E. D. Johnson.
apartment 16, Coals Bldg.,
5-4-Jip
At Landmark, Everyone
Middleport . For information
can!
phone '192-3641 .
AUTOMATIC water softener
HAND PUSH MOWERS
4·27·12tc
and cold water tank, like new.
As Low As
63.95
Lowell Bing. Phone Chester
RIDING
MOWER.S
985-3816.
GOOD 6·room, bath, 3 bedroom
5+3tp
As Low As
271.95
home/ gas heat, basement/
ECONOMY TILLERS
garage. Well located. Write, - - - - - - - As Low As
134.95
giving references, to Box 729- ORGAN - Baldwin home organ
. L, C·O The Dally Sentinel, • with rhythm, to be picked up
· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
in this area . Pay remaining
POMEROY ,
5-4-6tc
balance or
take
over
,
J.
CarHy, Mgr ~
payments . May be seen
:
l'tlont 99:t·tlf1
I oca II y .
Write
credit
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
manager, Graves Piano and
1h-mlle north of new Meigs
Organ Company, 383 E. Broad
High School. Phone '192-2941 .
Real Estate
Sale
St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.
3-5-lfc
5-4-Jtc HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts ..
=-:-::-::---=-::---Pomeroy . Phone '192·2293.
FURNISHED and unfurnished
10.25-ltc
PIAt-10
Spinet
piano,
walnut
apartments. Close to school.
finish,
Baldwin,
will
be
picked
Phone '192-5434.
up In this area . Assume FIVE ROOM house, two
10-18-tfc
payments or refinance. May
bedrooms, bath, basement,
be
seen locally. Write, Credit
wall to wall carpet in living
TRAIL·ER, Brown 's Traile r
Maoager, Graves Piano and
r oom, bedroom s, and bath .
Park . Phone 992-3324.
Organ Company, 383 E. Broad ' Gas. forced air furnace .
4-29-6tc
St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Middleport, phone 99i.J420.
5-4-Jtc
4-25-lfc ·

For

COME ON IN TH'
HOUSE AN' LETS PLAV
A GAME OF

a Merry'

"''MEROY, OHIO

Help Wanted

Lost

now

is

ANT IQUES, Phone 992-5327.
4-6-30ic

_OP.EN EVE$.'1:00 P.lot.

For

GALA AUCTION opening NOTICE OF
Friday, May 7 at 7 p.m.
APPOINTMENT
Kuhl's Auction Barn 1 every
cas, No. 20416
Friday,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
Es tate
of
ARMETT
M.
at caution light on Rt. 7.
SHE ETS.fDeceased .
Notice 1s !lereby given that
5-2-61c
Cartie Wears of Rutland , Ohlo,
has been duly appointed Ad ·
ministratrix of the Estate of
Armett M. Sheets, deceased,
late of Meigs County, OhiO .
ANYONE
knowing
the
Credltors are required to file
whereabouts of a male
their claims with said f iduc iary
Siamese cat, please call
within four months.
Middleport '192-3832. Pet of
Dated this 21st day of April
shuf. ln. Please. Reward .
. 1971'
~·28·61c
F . H. O'Brien
Probate Judge
ofsaldCovnty
· .
{4) 27, { 51~ . t 1. 3tc · MEIGS boy's gold class nng
with blue set, 1971, Initials
G.L. Call 992-2766 If found .
NOTICE ON FILING
'
5-4-3tc

BARLOW!

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

BEDROOM mobile home . WILL PICK up merchandiS'e
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
Sale
and 'take to auction on a
5·3-71c
percentage basis. Call Jim SEARS
portable
sewing
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland .
machine caplnet with storage ------,,---,-- Phone 742 -4461.
and drawers. See Robert MAPLE
• STEREO-RADIO
9.2J-tfc
Wood, Chester, Ohio. Phone
combination. This stereo
HELP
WANTED:
Living
985·3978 after 5 p.m .
equipped with AM-FM radio,
companion for elderly lady. "'R-U"'
a a"'E"'R
,...-,S:::T-:A-M-::
P-::5 _ m_a_de
:5·2-Jtc
.4 speakers, 4 speed changer .
Light housework and cooking.
order. 2~ hour service. Dwaln
Pay balance Sllt.JO, cash or
Generous salarv, Including
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
room and board. can 992·5397
terms . Call '192 -3352.
PLANTS
FOR
SALE
.
Home
Ohio.
4-29-6tc
or' '192-3507.
grown Improved Mexican
2-IMOtc
5·3-3tc
• tomato plants, large smooth,
non.acld. Also, Heinz 1350,
REGISTER-ED Tennessee
TOMATO PLANTS , Valiant,
Yellow Golden Jubilee and
walker
stud
service.
Jung's Earliest, Marglobe,
Sale
Large Supersonic. They are
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone
Oxhart, Stump of the World,
sturdy, well rooted plants.
742·5862.
Rutg ers, Lincoln,
Oat's
700X18 TRUCK ·fires . Small
Also ,. hot peppers, mangos
Excel. Yellow Colossal.
4-20-JOtc
farm tractor, small manure.
and cabbage plants. On Rt .
Burpee's, Delicious and
spreader. pet lamb. can 9491241n Syracuse. Ohio, 500 teet
Jubilee. Sturdy transplants .
REDUCE safe and fast with
3073. .
above the park. Thoma s
Dozen for SOc . B. Quisen5-J.61c
Gobese tablets and E-Vop
Hayman.
berry, Syracuse, Ohio.
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
5·2-JOtc
5-2-121p
4-lol-601p

LEGAL NOTICE

...

ore Bargains

Bargains, Bargains,

•

•

WKS

LWUIIPBPL

QBHWUOZB

'11'-T

WM:S

VGTII.-WKSBQBUS

UBBLS:RBVW

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10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport·P!Illeroy, 0 ., May 4,19'71

New ·R estaurant
CHESHIRE - A permit to
construct a new building that
wiU be a restaurant ·was approved Monday night by the
Cheshire Village Council.
Harry Laughin, Athens, an
associate of Laughin Vending
and Music Co., will construct a
new'24x55 foot siructure on the
former Sarah Cain property.
Laughin bas a lease-purcba!M)
agreement with Mrs. Cain for
the site on which a nine-room
home wail destroyed by fire last
December.
Cheshire's new restaurant
will offer both regular and quick
service.
·
Councilmen Monday also
moved to annex approximately
32 mostly new, modern homes
to the north of Cheshire along
Rt. 7 to Roush Rd.
Plans were "initiated for annexation by means of a petition
of property owners wishing to
be annexed which will be
submitted to the Gallla County
Commission.
R.
William
Jenkins,
Gallipolis, village solicitor ,
the
various
explained
procedures involved in annexation.
According to Mayor Scotty
Lucas, inquiries have been
received froljl some Of the
residents indicating their wish
to become a part of the village.
Annexation, Lucas said,
would benefit both parUes, the
town aod the homeowners to be
annexed. Cheshire would have
more space for expansion, a
larger tax base and a better
chance to obtain pending
federal aid to build a sewerage'
system.
' ·
Homeowners, on the other
hand, would benefit from pollee

and fire protection (with lower
ill$urance rates as a result) and
sewer service when it is obtained. Streets. and lighls would
be maintained by the
municipality.
It was reported that annexation would cost the
property owners one-tenth of ·a
mill, or 40 cents for every
$10,000 wQrth of evaluation.
Mayor Lucas also explained
the stepS taken to ann~ the
former Lora Swisher property,
south of the village, which Is
'now a part of Ohio Power's new
Gavin Plant. Lucas has been·
working ·with Bob Walters of
Ohio Power to see if an
adequate boundary can be
agreed upon. The former
village property ended south of
the Ohio ·River Collieries haul
road.
Council entered into a former
agreement with John P. Hill,
engineering consultant,
Commonwealth Systems Corp.,
Greenwood,
Inc.,
for
engineering services on the
proposed 'village sewerage
system submitted to the Farmer's Home Administration
four years ago.
Cheshire may have a better
chance obtaining its sewerage
now that the· Gallla County
Rural Water System is under
construction in the village.
In other business, council
vote(it to join the Southeastern
Ohio Council of Governments;
approved a contract with the
Gallia County H~alth Department for mosquito control
during 1971 and accept the
resignation of councilwoman,
Mrs. EUlabeth Mulford Bailey.
No replacement has been
named.

Henry Null .Dies
Henry Wallace Null, Jr., 49, associated
with
public
principal of the Crooksville education many years. He was
High School and a former a veteran of :World War II and
teacher In the Rutland and belonged to the Rutland United
Middleport schools of Meigs Methodist Church. He was a
County, died unexpectedly member of the Ohio Education
Monday morning. ·
Assn. and the Ohio Association
, Mr. Null was driving to of Secondary School Principals.
Zanesville on Route 93 near Born Feb. 26, 1922 at
Avondale where his car went Haywood, W. Va., he was the
out of control and crashed Into a .son of Henry and Ada Cutlip
fence. Death was, however, Null1of Haywood, who survive,
caused by a heart attack, the along ·with the widow and a
coroner said.
sister, Mrs. Jarjorie Leullette of
Mr. Null had been principal of Bridgeport, W. Va.
the Crooksville lilgh School Funeral arrangements are
since 196S. He and Mrs. Null, the being completed at the
former Jean Clark of Mid· Crooksville Chapel of the
dleport, vis! ted in Meigs County Cannon and Cannon Funeral
frequently. They were at the Home In Crooksville. The body
home of Dr, and Mrs. J. J. is expected to be brought, here
Davis the past Saturday night. for graveside services. The

sc~~~~vte:re~ro~c~::~o~
State College at Fairmont, w.

ttnie will be announced.
l#:*J.
11 •

G
Va., and his master's degree in lr~lSS
""'""
administration from Ohio 1 &amp; ,
C'L
University, Mr. Null was ~n .

lJSS

nOir

KENNETII WORKMAN
RUTLAND - Airman
Kemleth R. Workman, son of
Mr. and Mrs. ,'~:heron K.
Workman of , Rt. I has
received his first U. S. Air
Force duty assignment alter
completing basic training at
Lacldaod AFB, Tex., to a unit
of the Strategic Air Command
at Grand Forks AFB, N. D.,
for training and duty as a food
services specialist. Wor!Qnan
attended Meigs High School.

Students ~I the Tuppers
Plains elementary school wUl
present a musical program at
8 p.m. Friday evening at the
school.
Under the dtrecllon of Mrs.
,Maxine Whitehead, the
program will feature songs
and dances from dHfereot
secllons of the country with
the second grade making up a
" train" wblch wUl take the
audience on an lmaglnery
trip across the United States.
Children to all eight grades
will participate' In the
' program. Class r oom
teachers are asslsllng Mrs.
head
with
the
. pr ,s ntallon. The public Is
I ed. A small donation will
eo at the door.

~

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:· :::;:::::~:::::~:::::::

ConJ~rt

This Once, No Fun in Winning
I've ever done in my life," he money, first by betting on long commode," he ,said. ''I got rid
said Monday night. "There is shols at the horse races and, of about $3,000 but then I got
no sane, logic~! explanation for then th~t became too profitable, scared that it woUld stop up the
it."
1
·
by flushing the bills down the lines, so I quit."
Kronin was arrested Saturday' . toilel.
'
Ifronin spent several more
in Columbus, Ohio. He finally
Shaking Scared
' days at the Hot Springs belling
gave·himself away ~y using his
"I got . shaking scared," windows. But his luck was not
own credit card to pay a motel , Ktonin said. '.'That moqey isn't getting any worse so he took
bill. He said he used the card to mine, I thought. So I decided to his original $11,000 and left for
draw attention to himself get rid of it the fast way-at Columbus hoping for a change
because he wanted to be the horse races."
of fortune-to bad. As luck'
arrested. He was returned to
Kronin flew from Houston to would have it, he lost the
Houston Yjhere he was jailed on Memphis, Tenn. , to Hot money in three weeks.
$20,000 -baiL
Springs, Ark., where he bet
Last Bet
,2,000 on a long shot. 'l'he horse "I remember the last bet I
He said he has been trying to won and Kronin picked up made," he said. "I only had
$300 left and I put it all down
give himself away ever since $20,000.
the swindle. When that didn 't · "(really got .scared pwn.:•he . o~ a horse ~t lost. His name
work he tried getting rid of the said. "I had money stuffed in all was Tragedy. I swear that was
my pockets and hanging out his name."
everywhere. I couldn't even Penniless1 Kronin bad to use
hold a cup of coffee and 1 was so his credit card in Columbus and
scared. "
within hours of when he first
He spent the rest of that day displayed it, Houston pollee
betting wildly but still left the arrived in Ohio to take him into
(Continued from page I)
.
Sentinel's coverage of environmental problems in North carolina track with $23,000 in his custody.
"Forgive me, but I have to
were named winners Monday of 1971 Pulitzer Prizes. The pockets.
"When
I
got
back
to
the
laugh
about this, or so. help me
Polutzer Committee at Columbia University Monday ani10unced
winners in 17 journalism, letters and music categories. The award motel, I started tearing it up I'll break down and cry Uke a
and flushing it · down the baby," he said.
carries a $1,000 prize and a citation.
Thomas Powers and Lucinda Franks of UP! won the award
for national reporting for their five.part series titled "The Story of
Diana: The Making of a·Terrorist.•: The Winston.SSlem Journal &amp;
Sentinel won the Pulitzer Prize for public service for its coverage
of such environmental Issues as strip mining and · strea!'l
pollution.

Rioters

HOUSTON (UPI)-For threeweeks Patrick Ed.ward Kronin
couldn't lose no ' matter how
l]ard he tried, The more he
. wasted the $11,000, the more
money he made. The harder he
'
tried to advertise the embezzlement, the richer he became.
Kronin is in jail today. And to
hear him..tell it, he finally may
ha ve found some peace.
Kronin was the fhiance
director for the city of Deer
Park, an· industrial suburb of
Houston. About a month and a
half ago Kronin wrote a check
out for himself for $11,000 and
skipped town. '
" It was the first wrong thing

BERLIN - THE RETIREMENT OF Walter · ffibricht as
Communist party chief unlikely will produce much change in
East German policy. The successor to the man who built the
Berlin wall is just as hardline a Stalinist as Ulbricht is.
ffibricht, 77, resigned as party first secretary Monday
because of age aod ill-health. But he retained the powerful job of
chief of state and was named to a new and apparently honorary
post of Communist party chairman. His hand-picked successor
58-year-old Pilitburo member ' Erich Honecker, made it clea;
there would be little change in East Germany's hard-line politics.
DAMAGE MODERATE
Moderate damage was
reported to two ~ars in an accident on North Second Ave., at
2:10p.m. Monday, Middleport
police said. A northbound car
driven by Celia Hite, Mid·
dleport, was crowded by southbound traffic into ,a parked car
owned by Paul Gleason, Middleport. Damage to the Hite car
was estimated at $200, that of
the Gleason car at $100. There
were no injuries and no arrest.

Water Main
(CoQtinued from page I)
know who is responsible for the
damage and that those found
guilty will suffer the fullest
extenL of the law.
Webste,r also informed
council that the meters on the
parking lois had not been
changed due to the shortage of
80 parts. The parts have been
ordered.
Council re-appoin ted the
members of the Pomeroy
Planning Commission who are
E. F. Robinson , Theodore Reed,
Franklin Rizer, Richard
Follrod and Legar.
Legar staled he had received
a letter from Mrs. Norman
Kloes who lives at the bottom of
Breezy Heighls asking for a
guard rail in front of her home.
Several accidents have occurred there.
Council agreed to have the
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car:

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VOL XXIV

NO. 15

Middleport Republicans
nominated iwo veteran village
officials, at tl!e polls Tuesday.
The Middleport vote was light
but the vote ln Pomeroy, where
Republicans also had
primary , ~as " extremely
light."
Voters in Middleport apparently
were Interested in a
•
crossfire of public letters
printed in this newspaper the
past two weeks extolling the
virtues or the sins - depending
on which side one was on - of
the C. 0. Fisher a&lt;jministration.
The vote shaped up as a choice
in the mayor's ~ace between
council president John Zerkle
and newcomer-teacher Kim
Neal, son of retired Middleport
police officer Ike Neal.
A total of S90 Republicans

a

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PLAN FLYOVE;R - Paul Boaz, pilot, right, explain$ to Jack Crisp, center, and
~meraman Weldon Carlin lite map coordinates he would follow Tuesday afternoon in flying
over Meigs County for Carlin to photograph the topography that will become the basis for finaL
detailed plans from which the Leading O'eek Conservancy District and Watershed M.sn. water
system will be built. Boazand Carlin left Columbus, Ind. at 7 a.m. flying the Cesna 170 directly
to the Gallia-Meigs Airport near Gallipolis where they met Crisp, president of the conservancy
district. Boaz and Carlin are employed by the Acu-Air Survey Jnc., of Columbus, Indiana,
under contract to the Commonwealth Systems Inc., Greenwood, Ind., consulting engineering
firm for the new $2,300,000 water system. BidS for the construction will be advertised soon,
Crisp has reported.

I

:

7\.j';

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By United Press International

CAPE KENNEDY - THE ADl FORCE launched the second
in a new ~ries of large early warning spy satellites today to give
the United States more time to retaliate against a missile attack
from Ru~la or Red China.
The secret I,IJOO.pound spacecraft was designed to soar into a
stationar)' orbit blgh over M.ia and replace the Initial satellite
that was 'stranded In the wrong orbit last November by rocket
failure. In addition to providing an almost instantaneous alert of a
missile attack, sources close to the program said the spy satellite
was expected to be able In monitor tests of the Intercontinental
Ballistic Missile (ICBM) under development ln Communist
China.

This straight line Modern bedroom has
symmetrical proponions with a shadow-bole
frame surrounding the exclusive antique

Vete.rans Jobless Rate Up

smoked pev..tter hardware. The vertical fluted
panels on the doors of the dresser, chest, bed
and mirrors are of genuine Brazilian Rosewood
veneers and add interesting relief to the Walnut

tops, ends and drawer fronts.
Special recetSed bases accented in black, 18t off
the Modern case designs. One outstanding
feature of the group is the armoire type c:helt
with its trays and three divider MCtionL
The Walnut finish in a wll'm brown popular

color on Walnut veneers and selected
hardJM)Ods compltmenu tht black basts, tho
rosewood panels, and pewter har~e. the top
coats are of DuPont OuluKCI finish and the

mlr.rors are of genuine plate glaiL

)

WASHINGTON -UNEMPLOYMENT among discharged
servicemen continues to climb and stay well above the jobless
rates for other workers. But a turnaround may be developing, or
at least so hope officials directing President Nixon's jobs for
veterans program. The jobs program is a promotion effort
launched in November to encourage employers to hire young
veterans getting out of service.
The unemployment rate for veterans 20 to 29 years of age rose
to 10.8 per cent during the first tbree months of 1971, with 372,000
vels out of work. This compared with 10.2 per cent during the
three-montli period ending Fe~. 28 and only 7.9 per cent during the
last three months of 1970. The jobless rate for nonveterans of the
same age during the first quarter of 1971 was only 8.4 per cent.

StJ'atoforts Active Again
SAIGON - U. S. B52 STRATOFORTRESSES b~ed in
Thailand returned to the attack today In Laos, Carrtbodia and
northern South Vietnam while ground fighting eased off, Only two
Americans have been reported killed in combat in the past four
days. At the same time, the U. S. Army's SSS-man lsi Battalion,
83rd Fleid Artillery, b~gan deactivation procedures today under
President Nixon's troop withdrawal program.
The B52's kept up the pressure in the fourth week of Operation
Lam Son 720, as the South Vietnamese have code.named the allied
campaign against Communist forces in and around the A Shau
(Continued on page 10)

Bassett'
REGISTER NOW

During Our Spring Furniture Sale
Register now in our Third Floor Furniture Department for the
KROEHLER LIVING ROOM SUITE

No purchase necessary. You need not be present to win.

Democrats in Field Day

Many Nationally Advertised Furniture

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FLIGHT EXPLAINED - Paul Boaz, right, piloted a Cesna 170 ov.er Meigs County Tuesday
following coordinates of li USGS map scaled one inch to 2,000 ft. In his plane, he tells, Jack
Crisp, center,and Chester Tannehill, a cameraman will be shooting film scales to footage with
the map and the altitude of the plane (3,SOO ft.). O'isp Is president of the Leading Creek Conservancy District. Tannehill is editor d the Pomeroy Daily Sentinel.

CHICOUTIMY, Que. (UPI)An earth cave in at nearby St.
Jean Vianney buried about 30
homes late Tuesday night In a
huge hole which at some place
reached depths of 150 feet.
Police .said at least 12 ~rsoris
had been injured and feared
that there would be several
deaths.
A Quebec provincial police
spokesman in Chicoutimy said
it would he difficult to tell the
exact extent of the tragedy
before daylight. He said,
however, lt could be very
possible· that · several persons
were dead, but emphasized this
could not he confirmed.
The cave in happened at
aboutll :30 p.m. EDT,' leaving

a hole that police said was
from 80 to 150 feet deep. Air
Force personnel were called in
early today from' nearby
, Bagotville to help in rescue
operations and an emergency
power system was airlifted by
helicopter from Quebec City,
227 miles to the southeast.
St. Jean Vianney is located on
the Sagueny River, just across
from Chjcoutlmy. 1be cave In
apparently resulted from the
spring thaw, but there waa no
official confirmation of this.
The area is a major center
for hydro electric power for
aluminum prpductiori. Both .st.
Jean Vlanney and Chlcoutlmy
are industrial towns.

I

Second Early Warning Spy in Sky

ZAI

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

Pomeroy had only one race in
Tuesday's Republican primary
- a three-way race for two
nominations to run for council.
Winners were James Mees with
126 votes and Franklin Rizer,
incumbent, with 104 votes. The
third candidate, Mrs. Ber.tha
Canaday, received 101 votes.
The nominees will be opposed in
the fall by Democrat candidate
William Snouffer, with two to be
seated. Rober t Hysell, who did
not file for reelection, already ,
has :esigned from council to
·serve on the board of public
affairs.
Mrs. Jane Walton, Incumbent
clerk of Pomeroy and unop·
posed yesterday, received IS2
votes and E. F. Robinson, in·
cumhent and also unopposed,
received 166 votes for the board
of public affairs. Robinson is a
former mayor of Pomeroy.

New Evidence in
B
.
t.f.
of
Chou
POW
Issue
Cited
1 ~ews ... zn
rze1 s : Zoo Asks Giant Panda.
'
·

'

Brands On. Sale During Our Spring
Sale o o o
KrO.hler, 'Heywood
Wakefield, Thomasville, Berkllne,
. Lloyd Telescope and many others.

County Board of Elections.
As norqinees, Walters and
Hoffman will face Democrat
candidates Il&lt;mald H. Pearch,
Jr.; and Mary E. Searles in
November.
Middleport mayo r C. 0 .
Fisher did not run fo r
nomination nor did LawrE\Ilce
Stewart whose term of office as
a councilman expires this year.
The second vacancy on council
will be the seat to he given up by
Mrs. Roger Morgan who is
filling the unexpired term of
Charles Byer.
.
In Middleport, Jack Hawley
received 376 votes for reelection
to the board of public affairs
and Raymond Baker, a Write-in
candidate, received 32. A
Democrat, Richard P. Gress,
will be seeking one of the two
seals on the board in the fall . He
is currently serving on the
board.

r--------------- ~ -----------~

Haadquartan For Bassett Furniture

·.·:

approved by voters Tuesday
was Gene (;rate, incumbent
clerk-treasurer, who was op·
posed by Patricia Kennedy
Groves. Grate received 310
votes to Mrs. Groves' 254. Grate
is assured of election since
there is no Democrat candidate
in the fall.
Two mor e newcomers to
Middleport's political picture
were given the Republican nod
to run for council in the fall. Out
of five candidates running for
the two nominatings, William
(Bucky ) Walters led the way
with ' 295. Second was Fred
Hoffman, who received 238.
Defeated were Donald E. Kelly,
20S; Jacob Turner, 137, and Carl
H. Platter, 137 according to the
unofficial fig ures rele ased
Tuesday night by the Meigs

I

Elberfelds 3rd Floor Furniture Departmen.t

:.!:

cast ballols in Middleport. In
Pomeroy only 212 votes were
recorded.
Zerkle easily won the nod to
run as his party candidate for
mayor of Middleport in the fall.
A long-time councilman and
Middleport businessman ,
Zerkle received 338 votes to 24S
votes given Neal. With
Republicans in a near 3-1
majority in most wards, the
vote in Middleport makes it an
odds-on-bet that Zerkle will
continue administration
policies.
M. winner of the primary,
Zerkle w;_n face youthful
Democrat candidate Paul
Gerard and an independent
candidate, Allen Lee King, in
the fall.
The other veteran official

Homes .Covered

·'·

'

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1971

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GOP's Zerkle, Grate, Walters and Hoffman Win

MEETING CALLED
PT. PLEASANT...,Ameeling .
has been called for Thursday
afternoon at 2 at the Senior
Community Center, 812 Viand
Street, Point Pleasant. Persons
interested In the Center's activities are being urged to attend.

Mrs. Matthews
Died Monday

.

lo

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'!':.

Variable cloudiness and ••uld
through Thursday wit~ a
chance of showers today and
showers or thundershowers ·
likely to11igh t and Thursday.
Highs both 1ays in the !IDS and
low 70s, Lows tonigh,t upper 40s
to mid 50s.

·'

POINT PLEASANT ,- Sgt . . home; two sisters, Mrs. Larry
First Class James E. Duncan, Jordan and Mrs . Douglas
30, of Point Pleasant, has been Arrington of Fairborn, Ohio;
killed in action, the Defense five brothers, Dale E. Duncan
Department announced Moo- d Charleston, Lake Richard
da
~
and Jackie David Duncan of
ihe career Army n died in ~oint Pleasant; Donald Ray
fighting in the ceo I highlands Duncan d South Side; andRe~
in Vietnam March 3. He was Lee Duncan of Dayton, Ohio.
serving with the JOist Airborne
Division.
.
•
MAKE TOUR
Born in Point Pleasant June SYRACUSE - The Third
II, 1940, he was a son of Mrs. Wednesday Homemaker's Club
Delphia Viers Duncan and the toured Best Photo, Inc. at
late Dale Duncan, Sr. He at. Coolville Wednesday, April 21
tended Point Pleasant High where they were treated to noon
School and enlisted In the army luncheon in the plant cafeteria.
in l9S6, his senior year.
· From there ·they went to the
He was on his fourth tour of Dudley Florists warehouse In
duty in Vietnam at the time of Parkersburg, and shopped
his death, and was the holder of downtown.
the Silver Star, Bronze Star and Making the trip were Mrs.
Purple Heart.
.
Margaret Bailey, Mrs. Ann
Additional survivors include sauvage, Mrs. Betty Hayes,
the widow, Mrs. Janice Lee Mrs. Margaret Cottrill, . Mrs.
Duncan of Point Pleasant; two Virginia Salser, Mrs. · Irene
daughters, Stacy Lynn and Parker, Mrs. Unda Ferrell, and
ramela June Duncan, all at Mrs. Margaret Eichinger.

street department measure the
area to see how many posts are
needed.
Attending were Legar,
councilmen Franklin Rizer,
Ralph Werry, and Don Collins;
councilwoman Elms Russell,
clerk ' Jane Walton, and
treasurer Phyllis Hennessy.

Wemher

Devoted.T,.·'rloe Intereslll Of The Meigs~Mwon ArP~J

Veteran Sergeant
Dies in Vietnam

Little Changf! in the East

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Linda Reed,
Pomeroy; Everett Bobo,
Athens; Dennis Persons,
Syracuse; Lucille Shook,
Pomeroy; Robert Barre tt,
Middleport; Golda Henderson,
Pomeroy ~ Tony Amburgey,
LOCAL TEMPS
LODGE TO MEET
Syracuse;
Edna
Hart,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, Temperature in downtown Pomeroy.
will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wed- Pomeroy Tuesday at II a.m. DISCHARGED - William
nesday at the temple. Fifty year was SO degrees under sunny Reed, Dr. Randall Taylor, Mary
pins will be presented.
skjes.
Barber.

The Ohio State University, 1:':
College of the Arts, School of ·:
Music, presented the university
brass choir and the university
chorus tn concert at Mershon
Mrs. Thomas (Berta) Mat- Auditorium Sunday afternoon.
thews, 62, died Monday_ af. Of 23 members composing the
ternoon at her residence on brass choir, five of whom are
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. She girls, Karen Griffith · of
had been in failing health a Pomeroy is the only girl In the
number of Y.ears.
trumpet section of six.
Besides her parents, Charles Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grlffilli
and Emma Kinnan Brown, Mrs. and Mrs, Anna Ogdin attended
Matthews was preceded In the concert from Meigs County.
death by her husband, Thomas Karen'sauntanduncle,Mr. and
J. Matthews in January, 1968, Mrs. Herbert Jones and their
and a brother Forrest Brown tn children of Dpblin, also at1953.
'
tended.
·
Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Divorces Granted .
Esther B. Gross of Pomeroy; a Two divorces were gr nted
br?ther, No~h T.. Brown of andtwootheractionsh~veabeen
Tnmble; a ?tece , tWo neph~. dismissed In Meigs County
four great-meces and two great- common Pleas Court. Daniel
nephews .
Hayman, defendant, on a cross
A gr~duate ,of Athens High petition, was granted a divorce
School rn 1927, Mrs. Matthews from Jean Hayman on charges
made her h~me with her sister of gross 'neglect of duty and
and brother-m-law, Mrs. Esther extreme cruelty. The plaintiff
Gross ~nd the late Ernest was awarded custody of three
Gross, m 1918. She was a minor children.
member of the United Esther Lynn Stump was
Methodist Chu~ch in Pomeroy. granted a divorce from William ·:
Funeral servtces wtll be h~ld A. Stump II on charges of gros8 ..
at I p.m. Thursday at the Ewmg neglect. Dismissed were Village
Funeral Home wtth the Rev. of Syracuse vs Mark Anthony
Robert Ca_rd officiating. Bu~iai Yoacham and Pearl S. Howery
wtll be 10 the Crooksville versus Eddie Lou Howery.
Cemetery at 4 p.m. Thursday .
Frlenda may can at the funeral
TOO MUCH BACKING
horne anytime . .
The .Meigs County Sheriff's :;
Dept, reported a minor accident ::
Monday at 4:4S p.m. on Wolfpen ·
Road, fOIII' miles ,north of the
Wolfpen communitY. Thomas L.
Tonight, May 4
'
Shaffer, l9, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, was :;:
backing when he got too close to
MOVE
'
ITedtnlcotorl
the embankment, went over it
Elliot Gould
'and hit a tree. There were no
Paula Prentiss "R" Injuries or arrest and medium
damage to the
Coto•CIIrtMnl:
WlloH Utlto Haney
3 SALE DAYS SET
Willi's So Fun111?
The Philathea Society of the
f\41ny, M111r A10Dna
~iddleport Church of Chrillt
SHOW ITARTS 7 P.M.,
will1p001or a l'lllllll188,e sale ill
the Fry Bulldln8, MID St.,
, Middleport, 'l'hunday, Friday .
llld Saturday beginnina at t
J.m. each day. ,

MEIGS JJIATR£

An albatross shot on tlie coast
of Chile in 1847 carried a vial in
., which there was a note showing . 1
' the bird had traveled 3,150 mites
in 12 days according tO the
Encyclopedia Britannica.

News ... in BriefS

(Continued from page I)
Caruthers, Twila Clatworlhy ,
Debbie Crow, DeLene De Legal,
J o Ellen Diehl, Brenda
Donohue, Mary Ferrell, Lu Ann
French, Kathryn Fridley, Anita
Fultz, Venida Gibbs, Patty
Glaze, Nancy Greenlee,
Melanie Hackett, Karen Hale,
(Continued from page I)
Carol Hargraves, Denise
The largest group arresls Hendricks, Anita Herrmann,
during the rush hours occurred Sherry Icenhower, Patti Jefat DuPont Circle, a hippie fers, Sheryl Johnson , Geneva
hangout. Several dozen were King, Mary Lou King, Karia
arrested there on charges of Kuhn, Nancy Large, Kristy
jaywalking,
demonstrating Matson, Debbie McDaniel,
without a permit and disorderly Diana Milliron, Jody Mohler,
conduct. They were loaded into Teresa Nicinsky,
Vicki
two police buses, protesting Oberholzer, Jeanette Phillips,
that they had not blocked · Connie Radford, Ellen Rice,
tra'ffic .
Bridget Ross, Debra Schaefer,
Debbie Schuck, Glenna
TWO KILLED
Sprague, Linda Sprouse, Peggy
SAIGON (UP!) - Communist Story, Janet Stivers, Karen
troops made three sharp at- Sutherland, Sh ~ rrie Turner,
tacks on U. S. forces guarding Donna Weber, Sharon Wilson,
the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) Jan e Wise , Roger Abbott ,
Monday and killed at least two Randy Bec ker, James BirAmericans, the U. S. command chfield , Robert Blackston, Fred
in Saigon announced today.
Burney, Paul Card, Thomas
Cassell, Larry Coleman, Robert
COURT TO CLOSE
Couch, Victor Counls, Mark
The offices of the Meigs Dailey , Richard Dean, Charles
County Probate Court will be Diehl, Gary Ellis, Ray Ellis,
closed Wednesday from noon Frank Girolami, Jeff Grate,
for the remainder of the day due Greg Hayes, Ronnie Hoffman,
to the death . of Henry John Kauff, Sherman Mills,
Cherrington, Gallipolis, father David Miller, Edward Mitchell,
of Mrs. F. H. O'Brien.
John Moore, Steve Pow ell ,
Rodney Pullins, Robert
Ramsburg , Fred Rayburn,
CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy E·R unit an- Darryl Schwartz, Kenneth
swered a call at 10:06 p.n1. Searles, Robert Vance, Gordon
Monday to 226 Union Ave. Edna Warner, Dallas Weber, Wayne
Hart, who was ill, was taken to Well, Mark Werry, Danny
Veterans Memorial Hospital White, Duane Win and Mike
where she was admitted for Williams.
treatment.

.·
·i' ,·
. .'i....
.

•

·Now You Know

CINCINNATI (UPI) - John
Tannehill, a member of the U.
S: table tennis team which
visited Red China last month,
has asked Premier Chou En-Lai
to send the Cincinnati Zoo a
giant panda as a move to
establish "even closer ties
between the United States and
China.
Tannehill, 19, of Middleport,

Ohio, appeared with zoo of·
ficials· Tuesday to announce
that letters had been sent to
Chinese leaders making the
request. If granted, it.would be
the first giant panda in the U. S.
since 1953. Only four live oulside
Communist China now.
"The idea seems to us an
extremely attractive one
because it would dramatize
better than anything else the

"

was his idea to seek the panda.
The bear-lik~ animal is in·
digenous to a small mountainoqs area of western China.
The only four outside of China
include two in North Korea, one
In London and one In Moscow.
The last giant panda in the U. S.
died in 1953 in the Chicago Zoo.
Gale said he offered China an
animal of ils choosing In ex·
change.

Harris Will

Emcee MHS
Banquet
Gordon Harris of Columbus,
Class of '31, will be toasimaster
for the banquet at the annual
Middleport High School Alumni
Association reunion to be held
May 29 in the cafeteria of Meigs
Junior High School.
Dancing to the music of the
Glemi Glaze orehestra will
begin at 9 a.m. The dinner to be
prepared by Mrs. Iva Stewart,
will be served at 6:30p.m. Mrs.
Carol Scott Bachtel will play for
group singing and Mary
Wilmetta Skinner will lead in
singing.
Classes to have reunions this
year are 1961, lOth; 1956, 15th;
1951, 20th; 1946, 25th; 1941, 30th;
1936, 35th; 1931, 40th; 1926, 45th;
and 1921, SOth.
Ascholarship will be awarded
from the·Susan Park Fund to a
. Meigs High School graudating
senior from Middleport. Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis, president
of the Alumni Association,
poinls out that the fund remains
the custody of the Alumni
·Association and does not
become part of lite awards
program of the consolidated
high schools. The scholarship is
IT!aintained by 50 l:~nts from the
$1 dues paid by alumni.
The $4 cl!arge covers the
banquet, dance and dues for
each aliunnus and $3 is the
charge for dinner and the dance
for guests.
Reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Ed Baer, Middleport
: Alumni Association , P. o. Box
148, Middleport, by May 22.

WASHINGTON (UPI) '-At
his news conference Thurllday
President Nixon said a total
U.S. wLthdrawal from Vietnam
would not come Until the
Communlsls make a conunit·
ment lo release the prisoners.not merely a promise to discuss
the POW situation.
Tuesday, a congressman who
talked to North Vielnamese and
Viet Cong representatives at
the Paris talks brought back
what may be evidence Hanoi is
willing to make such a
commitment.
Rep. Seymour Halpern, R·
N.Y., ~ dovish member of the
House Foreign' Affairs Commit·

tee, said he spent eight hours
talking with Communist' repre·
sentatives last Wednesday. He
released a transcript of part of
his discussions, an account
which he said bad been
submitted to and approved by
those with whom he talked.
In the transcript, llalpen told
North VIetnamese spokesman
Nguyen Thanh Le that he
wanted to doublecheck what the
VietCong had told him earlier.
"They (the VC) told me they
will discuss the release of all
prisoners of ' war once an
appropriate date is set. They
explained that when they say.
(Continued on page 10)

l)elegates ·Named
To Conventions

FIRST RANK- The State Highway Department in Meigs CQunty ranked first in Division
10, composed of nine counties, in the spring inspection of mowers. The department was the only
one to receive no demerilsamong the nine c~nty departments inspected. The county has rated
first in the last two fall snow preparation inspections and last spring's mower inspection .
Pictured with the equipment, combination tractor-mowers, are from the left, Bill Cleland , Bill
Davis, Rollin Radford, all mecbanics, and James Bailey, superintendent of the department in
Meigs County.

SACRAMENTO, Calif: (UP!) California family of four on a
_ Gov. Ronald Reagon, a fiscal similar salary would have paid
conservative who believes $2,704 in state income tax after
"taxes should hurt," has nor!llal deductions.
disclosed he paid no state in· Democrats had a field day.
come tax for 1970 because of "It's very easy to say 'taxes
.
investment losses. A state tax should hurt' when you're not
The speech of Carol
official
says
Reagon paying your fair share,"
l:largraves, Meigs High School
"probably" did not pay any declared
State
S~nate
Senior,
was judged first in this
federal inc~e tax eith~r . But : Democratic Floor · Leader
spring's historical speech and
the governors offtce declined to Georg~ Moscone of San
essay contest conducted· by the
comment on that.
Franctsco: a l~kely ' 1974
Meigs County Pioneer and
Reagon, a miiU~naire former gubernatortal candtdate.
Historical Society.
movie star, receivetl a $44,100
salary Jaat year as ;governor. "It's a classic example of the
Miss Hargraves ' talk
Hi~ dependen\S Include "a wife men who says 'do as I say, not
LOCAL TEMPS ,
' revolved around tbe history of
· and two 'children. His losing as · i do,' " responded Se~.
Temperature in downtown the Sacred ,Heart Church in
investments were not discloSed. Alfred E. Alquist, the Pomeroy Wednesd,!IY at II a.m . . Pomeroy.. Using several
A government tax expert Democratic candidate for was 58 degrees unde&lt; sunny sketches of the church aiKJ pipe
estimated · an
average li~1ltenant governor last year . skies.
',
organ, Miss Hargraves told her
'

new spirit of friendship that you
have done so much to create,"
Zoological Society President
Oliver Gale said in his letter to
Chou.
'
''The pands would quickly win
a place deep in the hearts of our
people because of its charm as
well as ils rarity. Our' gratitude
would be beyond measure."
Tannehill, a student at the
University of Cincinnati, said it

Delegates and alternates to
district and state conventions
were named Tuesday night by
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion.
Delegates to the district
meeting on June 6 at Wilkesville
and the department convention
In Cleveland In July will be Paul
Casci, Frank Vaughan and
Kenneth Harris. Alternates are
Leonard Jewell, Charles
Swatzel and James Guinore.
Commander Jewell announced a special meeting at
7:30 p.m . Friday~~~post
home when final ~~the ,
observance of Memorial Day
will be completed.
The hospitalization of World
War !veteran Churles H, Frank
was reported. Frank has used
considerable blood, and post
members are asked to visit the
next bloodmobile in June to
replace it.
,,

Jewell also reported a
chicken barbecue held on the
parking lot Swtday with the
Pomeroy Fire Dept. was suc·
cessful. The two groups will
sponsor one barbecue a month
throughout the spring and
summer.
American Legion Family Day
was pnnounced for June '1:1 at
Geauga Lake Park. Everyone '
wishing to attend ·should notify ,
the commander or Kenneth
Harris. Changes In how to be
admitted to a veterans ad·
ministration hospital were
outlined by the commander.
Everyone with questions should
see the local veterans service
officer. Paul Casci explained to
new members aspects of obtaining grave markers . and
grave flags for Memorial Day.
Casci and Roy Reuter served
refreshments.
\

Jerimiah's ·Story of a Pom.e roy Church
I

I can remember, even though
story as "Jerimiah," the church
I was very young at the time,
mouse :
listening to my great.
grandmother tell of the early
By Carol .Hargraves
My name is Jerimiah. M. you days of the church and the
can see, I am a mouse. Not just original struciure ; my greatany run-of-the-mill-type mouse grandmother's fir~ ! home .
mind you, but a full-fledged, In 'i649, Heverehd Theophile
Jen.gtll~ration church . mouse. ·Kraft supervised the building of
For over II' century, my family the first sacred Heart. Under
has Inhabited the Sacred Heart his capable guidance, the neighCatholic Church ' of Pomeroy, borh01od rrien felled trees and
sawed .boards from which the
filhio.

church, large eQough to •c·
commodate llteir rlumbers, was
built. A frame church, it was
en)arged in 1865, by the building
of an additional room or
vestibule on the front. Beij,g a
cozy and quaintli.ttle church, it
was loved by all and served the
·needs of th• parish for over'fifty
years.
,
Great.Oranny loved her first
home; it wits so quiet and
~aL"efui. Still, I'm sure my

present residence is quite
superior and I have Father Jolin
Schnieder to thank for it. Yaa
see, in 1896, he first impruu d
ou the parishioners the cryllll
need for a new church. MM7
sites on the river front available, but the threat of hlah
waler. in the , spring Wllll teo.,
prevalent. The land on whlc:ll•
old orphanage had been filii: '

\Contlnu,·d om

pa~ IS~

·'

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