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                  <text>Weather

Now You Know
Peter
Minuit
bought
Manhattan Island from the
wrong Indians. He paid $24 in
trinkets to the Canarsie,
Later he had to make another
payment to Indians actuaUy
occupying Manhattan , the
Weckquaeageeks:.

10 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 10, 19'11

Emmys ,Encourage Original TV Shows

Now's the Time:
'

Buy - a~Home

to~

WASHINGTON (UPI)-The
government's top morbza~•
money man today said now \'!
the time to buy a home, since
interest rates have bottomed
out from thelr record highs of a
year ago and are not likely to
drop further.
Preston Marlin, chairman of
the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board, said "rates don't look
like they'll fall much further."
Marlin, whose agency super·
vises some 4,500 savings and
loan institutions which supply
much of the home mortgage
money for conswners, said a
natlonwjde survey showed
mortgage rates are about 7¥c
per cerit lor a house, varying a
half-point or so on either side
depending on the section of the
counlry.
A year ago, home mortgage
loans carried record interest
rates of 8\1 per cent or more.
Marlin said in an Interview
the Interest rates will remain
at the present level lor awhile.
He withheld a prediction as to
how long.
But he did not think the rates
would rise In the near future
because of the tremendous
inflow of money Into savings
instititutions between January
and March of this year.
During that period, he said,
savings and loans received a
record $7.4 billion gain in thelr
accounta.
"They've got money to lend,"
Martin said. "That's one reason
why we feel rates won't go up."
Martin said many people
have been waiting lor money
costs to drop before buying a
home. He said that period has
SPEAKER NOTED
The Rev. Lawrence Conger,
Jr., will be spesker at revival
services to be held at 7:30
beginning this evening through
&amp;mday. Special singing will be
featured nightly. The public is
Invited.
Veterans Memorisl Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Jellr~y Reuter, • Pomeroy;
Satah Brinker, Mason; Osmer
Frecker, Cheshire; Estella
Smith , Middleport; Tammie
Uevlng, Letart, W. Va.
SATURDAY D~GES
- Bobby Ord, Clarice Bobo,
Denver Persons, Bess Sanborn,
John Chaney, Unda Reed, Alva
Phalln, Delpha Roush, Roger
King, Eber Gillilan, Frank
Lucas, April Hayman.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Robert A. Davis, Pomeroy;
Elizabeth Gilkey, Shade; Mary
McCallum, Minersvllle;
Charles Barnhart, Chester;
Peggy Taylor, Pomeroy;
Danny Shultz, Reedsvllle;
Karen Marcum, Vinton; Robin
Cozee, Columbus; Thomas
Cook, Pomeroy;
Ernest
Christy, Chester; Ralph
Meis~r, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Ralph Roush, Daisy Lawson,
Robert Barrett, Tammy
Ueving.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
May 10·11
RIO LOBO
ITechnicolorl
John Wayne
Jorge Rivero
Color cartoon:
Minnie Ha-Ha
How About That?
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
May 10·11
Double Feature Program
THE BABY MAKER
!Color)
Barbara Hershey

R

- PlusGAILY, GAILY
I c;ator)

Beau Bridges
Brian Keltll

arrived and "now's the time to
buy."
He said the Home Loan Bank
Board intends to keep pwnping
money into savings and loans to
keep money rates low. The~
board makes money availa~le
through various loan meclia·
nisms.

"We'll make sure there's a
hell of a lot of money around,"
Martin said.
Marlin also reported that
small builders, who had been
shying away from the housing
field because of the high
mterest rates, are now return·
ing.

w~~~~.o:t :~·a good mght for

Carl Lynch Is Killed
PT. PLEASANT - Naval
Airman, 2nd Class, petty officer,
Carl Edward Lynch III, 23, of
Lexlng\(ln Park, Md.', son of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl E. Lynch, Jr.,
Camp Conley Road, Point
Pleasant, was killed Saturday
In a light aircrslt plane crash
near Lexington Park. He was
apparently solo flying.
Airman Lynch had been In the
United States Navy two and one
hall years and was stationed at
the Patuxent Naval Air Test
Center, Md.
He was born Nov. 28, 1947 In
Gallipolis. In addition to his
wife, Trudy Dickens Lynch, he
Is survived by two sisters,
Janice Lynch, Pt. Pleasant, and
Mrs. Suzanne Dickens, Oxford,
Mich. Hls mother was the

former Mary Northup.
The young airman was a Pt.
Pleasant High School graduate,
class of 1965, where he was a a
member of the National Honor
Society and the football squad.
He altended Alderson-Broadus
College at Phlllipi three years
and Washington State College
one year. He was a member of
the Heights United Methodist
Church where lor five years he
was its organist. In 1~, he
was vice president of the state
EUB Youth Orgamzation. In a
recent quarter, he was honor
man at the Patuxent Air Naval
Test Center.
Funeral arrangements are
incomplete pending the arrival
of the body to the Crow-Russell
Funeral Home.

Believe

Neighbors Take

(Continued from Page I)

Different Vww

"They're completely over·
whelmed," said a teacher who
accompanied the youngsters to
the bustling San Francisco Bay
area. "It's quite an education."
In Roas River, many of the
children never had seen a
stranger, let aloqe skyscrapers,
!ridges, freeways and big In·
dustrlal planta.
Thelr adventure started with
an airplane trip and they
arrived loaded with gilts of
caribou horns and bear traps
lor their fourth grade "pen
pals" in Walnut Creek's Valle
Verde elementary school.
The chlldren, age 10 and 11,
were guests in the homes of
thelr Walnut Creek counterparja, 11'1th whom they have
been exchanging letters Stnce
September.
The trip was made possible by
a joint effort on the part of both
the Yukon chlldren and the
Walnut Creek youngsters.
The Ross River chlldren
raised $2,000 by selling cooldes,
moose horn pendants, bracelets
and holding ·a "Ross River
rendezvous" featuring races
and contests.
In Walnut Creek, $2,700 was
raised by washing cars, mowing
lawns, having bake sales and
saving allowances.

A&amp;P Named in
Pollution Suit
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Attorney General William J.
Brown today announced his
olllce has filed suit against the
Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea
Co. (A&amp;P) lor vlolallng the
condition of its permit issued by
the Ohio Water Pollution
Control Board.
The suit asks Wood County
Common Pleas Court to stop the
Ann Page division of A&amp;P in
Bloomdale from discharging
tomato processing wastes Into
tributaries of the Portage
Rlver. The attorney general's
office also has requested $5,000
In attorney's lees.

TREWSOWES, England
(UP!) - the neighbors don't
like it but the Rev. Charles
Roach smiles with approval as
men and women frolic In the
nude together in his swimming
pool. Roach, 62, drew the neigh·
bors' ire when he sent out
brochures advertising a pool he
owns in this quiet hamlet in the
south of England as an "en·
closure which affords complete
privacy where bathers may
dispense with therr costwnes
(bathing suits) if they so
desire."
The Anglican clergyman has
been doing a brisk business. "!
have been called a filthy beggar
by one of my neighbors because
of the fact I allow nude bathing
m my pool,'' he said. "The
person must have a warped
mind."
"There is nothing evil about
the naked body - it can be a
very beautiful thing," he said.

Foot Dragging
Charge Revived
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
U. S. CivU Rlghta Commission
today criticized the Nixon
administration lor failing to
make any major improvements
In the eight months since the
commission first accused the
government of inertia and
hostility that threatened to
nullify Civil Rlghta laws.
From the failure of the White
House to set any "goals, time
tables and priorities" on down,
the commission said it found
little change from the dangers it
cited on Oct. 12, 1970, "that the
great effort made by public and
private groups to obtain the
Civil Rlghta laws now will be
nullified through ineffective
enforcement."
It was particularly harsh on
the Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD)
which the commission said,
"appears to have regressed In
the vigor with which it ap·
proaches its fair housing
responslbUities. "
·

MARRIAGE UCENSE
Reaford Prater, 26, Colum·
bus, and Brenda Darlene Boyer,
19, Pomeroy.
PROFESSOR FRAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Police
decided against filing dynamite
ARSON SUSPECTED
possession charges against
MIAMISBURG, Ohio (UPI&gt;- Richard A. Erickson, an Ohio
Fire officials checked lor State University associate
possible arson In a pre-dawn professor, after the lie detector
Saturday explosion which test he voluntarily took in·
caused "substantial damage" dicated he did not know how the
to a building being constructed explosive came to he found in
by Monarch Marking Systems his car. Police believe
Co. here.
somebody wanting to frame
Erickson planted it in the
vehicle.

YOU ARE INVITED •••

REVIVAL
FIRST SOUTHERN
BAPTIST CHAPEL
220 E. MAIN STREET

POMEROY

MAY 10 TO 16
Services Begin At 7:30 p.m.
Ev•ngelltl: JIM GIEEN, ·Sang t.u•r: lob Mills
Nurwr """'ldlcl for1 E...,y Servlct
Alflllallll WHII ....... ll(lttlf ClnVIIIIton.
IVIIYONI II WILCOMI TO ALL IIIVICIS:

'

By RICK D BROW
human, and even likeable.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-"It's ~-111 '!ddition to.being chos_e~ lJl'
just another dumb show," said the academy earlier in the
the hilariously pr~judiced Ar· weekend as video's outstanding
new show, "All In the Family,"
TV. , .in Review which was put on by new CBS.
TV President Bob Wood after
chie
Bunker,
of
television's
"AU
In the Family" series, in a bemg rejected elsewhere for
bnef segment introducing NBC· three_ ye~rs, was also n~ed
TV's Emmy awards program televiSIOns best comedy senes.
Sunday night.
Furthermore, Jean Stapletm;',
"! wonder if Duke Wayne is wbo 1s p~e gold as Arch1e s
1
ff
t t .IJ ght
up for anything," added Archie, ong-su ermg, no· 00 rl
sa yin a: "Probably not, with all but goodhearted w1fe, was
•
selected as the best leading
them leftwmgers runnm' the

FIRE AT BUCHTEL
AKRON (UP!) - A fire ap·
parently starting in a utility
closet swept the 70.year..td
Buchtel Hall, main administra·
tion building of Akron Universl·
ty, Saturday aoo caused an
estimated $700,000 loss. No in·
juries were reported.
WALK. TO KENTUCKY
CINCINNATI (UP!) ..., some '
4,000youU.walltedaround this
city and across the Ohio River

Archie an~.ay, and for " AU In
the Family . as the televiSI~n
academy pomtedly honored this
controverstal mldseason CBS.
TV entry whiCh l&lt;&gt;&lt;:uses uproa·
nously on a middle class
husband-father who IS lull of
opmtons about Liberals, hippies,
Jews , . Catholics, Negroes,
protestmgstudentaandothersand yet IS somehow curiOusly

say, imconsequentiai htUe epi· responSibility by persons acting
sodes of unimportant series.
under orders. The play also got
These faults were glaringly non-eOiiiii\ercialvtaeo's "Holly.
evident again Sunday night, and wood Television Theatre" off to
there were the usual technical a disllnguished start and
mishaps of all television awar~ immediate prominence.
shows. And the news pridls "The Senator," regrettably ·
·
(announce d earrter ) were gtven
cance led , presen ted llal Ho1.
little prominence in this main brook as an idealistic congress·
ceremony. And video didn't man, and was honored as best
even think enough of Its Emmy dramatic series, as well as
presentation to put 11 on live bemg cited lor Ita wrlling,
across the nation (it was seen directing and the performance
on a delayed basis here In the of its star. Holbrook, of course,
West ).
IS known otherwise-lind most
Nevertheless, there were widely-lor his classic one-man

Tohn weatherby Died on Sunday s1gnif1cance
sever~! developmenla of .some
and satisfacbon to

J•

&lt;

John W. (Bill ) Weatherby, 73,
South Second Ave., Middleport,
d1ed Sunday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Weatherby, a member of
the Graham Chapel Christian
Church in Athens County, was
baptized in 1918. He was a
retired carpenter, and a
member of Aerie 2171,
·• Xi
Fraternal Order of Eagles,
-- ~
Pomeroy.
SAlOON
(UPI)
Born Aprll4, 1898, he was the
American troop strength Is son of the late Charles M. and
down to 267,100 In South Harriet Hill Weatherby.
Vietnam, the U. S. command Besides his parents, he was
said today. Fighting resumed preceded m death by a son,
between allied and Com· Hubert, in 1947.
munist forces following
Surviving are his wife, Lelah
weekend cease·flres that V.; a sister, Mrs. Mary HoweU,
were marred by reports of
violations.
The U. S. command said the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
figure of 267,100 troops
ADMITTED
Wayne
reached on May 6 was the Huffman, Glenwood; Basil
lowest since June 18, 1966. Leroy W1iliams, Gallipolis
American troop strength Ferry ; Mrs. Tex Corlee, Leon;
reached 543,400 April, 1969, at Mrs. Cecil Miller, Hartford ;
the peak of the buildup. Mrs. Kenny S1ders, Gallipolis;
President Nixon's plans call Mrs. Mont Hill, Jr., Leon;
lor a reduction to 184,000 by Clance Nutter, Henderson;
Oec. 1.
Fannie Thornton, Point
Pleasant; Steven Holcomb,
Point Pieasan t; Mrs. Stanley
Stevens, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Wanda Smith, Middleport; Mrs.
Miles Gray, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. David Carr, Allen Park,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Md., and Roy D. Thompson,
Saturday, May 8, 1971,
Point Pleasant.
SALES REPORT of
DISCHARGED - Charles
Ohio Valley livestock Co.
Taylor,
Carla Harmon, Dorsell
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 17 to
17.40; 220 to 2SO lbs. 16.85 to McCoy, Jr., Ronial Morrison,
17.10; Ught 14 to 16.25; Fat Mrs. Harlage Lanham, Curtis
Sows 13.50 to 14.25; Boar$ 11.50 Wallace, Mrs. Reta Erwin, Mrs.
to 13.50; Pigs 1 to 12; Shoats 12 otho Neal, William McCoy,
Mrs. Dana B. Bradshaw, Mrs.
to 16.
CATTLE - Steers 26.50 to James Leport, Bobby Mullins,
31.50; Heifers 21 to 28.50; Baby Louise Nichols, Gary Deal,
Beef 30 to 34.60; Fat Cows 14 to John Roush , Mrs . Kenneth
21; Canners 18 to 23.50; Bulls 18 Rollins, Mrs. Kenneth Fleming.
to 28.25; Milk Cows 140 to 255. BIRTHS - May 9, a son to
VEAL CALVES- Tops 39.35; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Miller,
Seconds 35 to 37.50; Mediwn 32 Hartford ; May 9, a daughter to
lo 34.50; Com. &amp;Hvs. 28 to 36.25; Mr. and Mrs. Mont Hill, Leon.
Culls 30 Down.
GRANGE TO MEET
BABY CALVES - 20 to 55.
Ohio Valley Grange 2612 of
Letart Falls will meet at 7:30 p.
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
m. Thursday at the grange hall.
Hogs: 2()1).230, 17.ii0; No. I,
Members are to bnng potluck
17.75; 230.240, 17.25; 240-250,
16.75; 250-260, 16.25; 2611-270, refreshments.

Stewart, OhiO, and two
brothers, Allen and Lester, both
of Athens. Funeral services will
be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
w1th the Rev. Bill Perrin officiating. Burial w1ll be in
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
any time after 10 a.m. Tuesday.

those who would hke to see
v1deo stay at least within
reaching distance of the other
contemporary arts. These deve·
lopments centered chiefly
around the fact that although
"relevance" bombed out as a
new series trend last autumn,
three major award winners
Sunday night - "All In the
Family," "The Andersonville
Tnal" and "The Senator"
segments of "The Bold Ones"were by all means in the
"relevant" category that was
encouraged by the academy
voting.
"The Andersonville Trial,"
chosen as the year's outstand·
mg single program and also
honored for its scnpt, was
about a Civtl War prison camp
commandant accused of mass
deaths among mmates, and, m
clearly contemporary terms,
concerned individual moral

15.ii0; Sows, 13.91).15.75. Boars,
12·14.90; Stock Hogs, 12.50·
15.20; Pigs By The Head, 5.75.
Cattle: Choice Steers, 33.6(1.
34.20; Good, 30.41).33; Holstein,
28.40.29.90; Choice Heifers,
29.70-32.75; Good, 27.75-29; Good
Cows, 22.75-24; utility, 19.50-22;
Canners and Cutters, 17.50
down; Bulls, 28.51).31.70; Heavy
Feeder Steers, 25.90·29.80;
Heavy Calves Steers, 28.5035.00.
Veal Calves: Choice, 50;
Good, 45; Medium, 35; Baby
Calves By The Head, 1~0.
LODGE TO MEET
Special meeting of Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Tuesday at
7:30p.m. F. C. Degree. Robert
King, W.M.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m.
was 60 degrees under sunny
skies.

a level with yourself.
-J. Hawes

·It's* Quick!* Ezy*
DRIVE-IN
BANKING
Fridays Otlly
The Drive-In Window
is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously l
Other Banking Hours 9 to
3 and S to 7 as usual on
Fridays.

POME-ROY, 0~ 10
Member FDIC ,

Devoted To The lntere~t. Of The Meigs·MaMJn Area

6, 9 and 12 foot widths of
Cush1on Vinyl floor covering

by Armstrong and Gold Seal.
A big selection of patterns for
kitchen,

dens ,

porches,

bedrooms and util1ty rooms .
Brmg your measurements.

We'll help you selecl the
pattern and color for your
rooms - cut off what you need

and you can take It with you.
Also Congoleum room size

rugs - ready to lay down In
9xl21oot, l2xl2 foot and l2xl5
foot sizes. Str1art patterns .
fine selection.

You can

also buy Indooroutdoor carpet at
the
warehouse Counter topping ·

Congowall . Chrome and brass
trim for linoleum or carpet
installalion .

There's a good selection of
used TV Sels in black and
while and color models.
Plus

Lawn

mowers

at

Elberfelds warehouse. Select
your favorite lawr'l mower.
You can select a Lawn Boy •

Toro in self propelled, hand
propelled and rider models or you can buy our special
mow~r - 20 Inch site with 3

H.P. Bnggs and Stratton
engine.

GET A NORGE

Theme •• Progress in 71
"Big Bend 1971" 1s the theme
of the 1971 Big Bend Regatta
parade.
The theme was selected
Monday by parade chairman
Jim Mees and ass1stant
cha!Tman Wendell Hoover.
Hoover sa1d:
"W1th the construction taking
place in this area, and the
progress that is taking place,
the theme will he used to depict
life in the Big Bend area this

ELECTRIC DRYIR

I!S!IQIRIGIEI 18 PERMANENT PRESS

DRYER
First dryer specifical ly designed for ~manent pre1s .•.
8 cubic feet, a fu111/3 bigger than any other dryer made,
g1ves better billow-drying . .. automatic cool-down to
pamper perman£lnt ·press .·. blggeat lint screen to collect
more lint wllhout reatrlcling air flow.

SP,RING
GREEN TAG
SALE •••

TOD~Y

The commi !tee also an·
nounced a new category m the
float judgmg of the parade th1s
year, carrying out a "frog
theme." It will comcide with the
frog jumpmg contest and the
frog ball which make up a part
of the B1g Bend Regatta parade.
The regatta IS set down for June
18 through June 20 under
sponsorship of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
The parade, at 6 p.m. Friday,

AND 81!1! THEM

Archers

Athens area to enter a float or
umt m th1sycar's parade. There
will be no letters of invitation
sent to organizations this year.
All groups that wish to take part
are to contact Mees at Radio
StatiOn WMPO, PO Box 71,
Middleport, or Hoover, at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co office in Mid·
dleport. Deadime for entry is
June 10. No entries will be
accepted alter that date.

Kurfess had said Monday he
believes the odds are slightly
better than even there will be a
personal mcome tax of some
sort.
"At th1s point I would guess
the odds are a li tile better than
50-50 there would be some kind
of personal income tax,"
Kurless told newsmen following
a day of negotiating on the
provisions In Gov. John J.
Gilligan's $9.1 b1llion budget.
Kurfess, who said he is
sticking with h1s recom·
mendation for a mandated
county Income tax, said the rate
and point of collection of an
income tax are still under
negohation, to be resolved
"hopefully this week."

NEW DRAPERIES GO UP In the lounge-dining room of the new wing of Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The impressive new wing will be open soon.

r---------------------------i

News ••• in Brie+s
p I Raynes
1
1

THE EI,JROPEAN MONETARY MARKETS calmed down
today and a leading International banker said the monetary criSIS
was over lor the time being. The dollar was steady on most
markets though devaluation dropped it In Austria lo its lowest
value since World War II.
Ezra Zilkla, chairman of the Fidelity International Bank in
New York, one of the world's great private international banking
houses, !old UPI that the emergency measures taken by the
governments of West Germany, Switzerland, Austria and other
naUons had ended the panicky buying of dollars .

New Postal Rates in Sahtrday
BARRING A LAST MINUTE LEGAL DECISION, new postal
increases will become effective in the nation at midnight
Saturday and postal officials have advised Ohioans that new
denominations of stamps are available at most of the state's post
olf1ces. The increased mail rates, effective as of May 16, will
affect all classes of mail except parcel post packages.
Flrst-elass postage will jump from six to eight cents; arr mail
letters will cost 11 cents, up one cent; special delivery letters w1U
jump from 45 to 60 cents per ounce ; and registered mall will go
from 80 lo 95 cents for the first $100 In msurance. The increase for
second-elass mail is based on a complicated scale.

Mail Heavy for School Aid
COLUMBUS - MEMBERS OF THE OHIO House of
Representatives are being Inundated with pleas from their area
residents to support increased aid to local school districts. The
heavy citizen lobbying has increased mail by about ten-fold
during the last week.
"The maills running about 10 tunes as heavy as normal,"
said Luther J. Mitchell, assistant sergeant-at-arms who Monday
set up special tables outside the House mail room for processing
letters.
House Minority Leader A. G. Lancione, D·Bellaire, reported
receiving 5,000 letters In the last week, as well as more than 200
telegrams during his support of the education provisions in Gov.
John J. Gilligan's $9.1 billion budget. "I haven't received this
much mail in 20 years," Lancione said. "It has created a
mechanical problem of how to answer 11 aU."

ALEXANDRIA, VA. -FROM 1964T01968, Maj.Gen. Carl C.
Turner served as Provost Marshal of the Army- the service's
chief law enforcement officer. In 1969, he was appointed Ch1ef U.
S. Marshal. Monday Turner stood before U. S. District Judge
Oren R. Lewis in this Washington suburb .and was sentenced to
three years in federal prison.
Turner, 58, had pleaded guilty April9 to charges he illegally
obtained 136 guns from the Chicago Pollee Department. He ad·
milled obtaining the firearms by telling Chicago police they
would be a gift to the federal goverrunent. He was accused of then
cover ling the guns to his own use. The guns had been confiscated
during riota that followed the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.

McCloskey Gaining Credibility
WASHINGTON- REP. PAUL N; "PETE" McCloskey, R·
Calif., the ex-Marine who says he may run against President
Nixon next year, has opened a campaign office here and is hiring
a coordinator to organize supporters In states with presidential
primaries. Establishment of the national campaign he~dquarters
backs up McCloskey's repeated threat to oppose Nixon In the
primaries unless the President changes his Southeast Asia policy.
The 43-year.Qld congressman, a handsome, square-jawed
Korean War hero, prqbably will not decide whether lo challenge
Nixon until December, and he is ready lo step aside for a man he
considers better qualified - for example, Mayor John V. Undsay
oiNewYork or Sen. Mark 0. Hatfielrl, R.Qre.
WASHINGTON - AN EXECUTIVE OF Nationwide In·
surance Co., headquartered In Columbus, Ohio1 today urged
adoption of a system completely eliminating faull in auto claims
(Continued on page 10)

IDDLEPORT

best theme, best commercial,
best non-commercial, Best
Rehg10us, and best frog. There
Will be one $25 cash pme given
to the best theme float. All other
wmners will rece 1ve ap·
propnate troph1es
There will be judgmg lor the
best marchmg umts, horses and
bicycles.
Mees and Hoover inv1te
orgamzations throughout the
Me1gs , Galha, Mason and

GovernorcOaims
Tax ·Bill Assured

Moscow
To Host

No Fault Coverage Urged Again

INGELS FURNITURE·

June 18, will move non-stop
from Middleport's North
Second Ave., to the old Junior
H1gh School bmldmg 10
Pomeroy. The plan to move the
parade on a non-stop basis will
eliminate the confusion of past
years of loadmg and unloadmg
bands and marchmg umts, the
committee sa1d
Entries for the annual parade
are now bemg accepted
Float categones mcluded are

year."

Army$ Top Cop Gets 3 Years

COME IN

------------------------------~-----

Sworn •in
MASON - Town council in a
regular meeting Monday night
appointed Dayton Raynes,
mayor, to f1ll his own unexpired
term wh1ch he vacated last
June to accept a position on the
Mason County Board of
Educatmn.
Smce that time, Charlotte
Jenks, recorder, has been achng mayor , but following
council's action she ad·
mmistered the oath of office to
Mayor Raynes and will continue
to serve as recorder .
Preparations are being made
lor Mason's b1ennial eledion to
be held June l. All candidates
are reminded that petitions
must be submitted to the
recorder by noon Wednesday .
Council will meet in a spec1al
session Thursday at 7:30p.m. m
town hall to check and certify
petitions.
Town officials are asking
cooperation from citizens m a
clean-up program. Residents
are reminded that Thursday
and Friday have been set aSide
for this purpose. Persons
haVIng trash to be hauled away
are asked to place it at the curb
m containers that may be
handled eas1ly. It was pointed
out however, that pickups will
he limited to trash and that no
garbage is to be with it.
Council reaffirmed its stand
on the 10 p.m. curfew. Persons
18 and under are not to be on the
streets after the s!Ten blows
unless accompanied by a
responsible adult.
Councilmen present were
George Carson, Walter Werry,
James Jarrell.

Senate Filibuster
Could ·E nd Draft
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Eastern Band Boosters
will meet tomght (Tuesday) at
the high school at 7:30 p.m.
Please bring any money or bills
to thiS meeting as this wtll be
the last session of the year.

Economics Assn ., the Amencan
Home Economics Assn., the
Ollv~t Mus1c Educators, Illinois
Mustc Educators and the Music
Educator National Conference.
In the past four years, Miss
King has attended several home
economics conferences in
!lbn01s. She will attend the
(Contmued on page 10)

A fledgling Senate filibuster
against the draft is gaining momentwn despite bitter protests
from Nixon administration supporters.
Sen. Alan Cranston, D.Calll.,
announced Monday he would
join the effort. At least lour
other senators privately have
assured Sen. Mike Gravel, DAlaska, they will stand up with
hun long enough to force an
automatic end lo the draft
when it expires June 30.
And many other senators
from both parties are cooper&amp;!·

Fund Balance's at $169,472

All Mtddleport Village funds
totaled $169,472.10 as of April30
according to the monthly report
of Gene Grate, clerk-treasurer,
Dr. Egeberg Being Eased Out
presented to council Monday
WASHINGTON - THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION w11l
mght.
announce a candidate this week to replace Dr. Roger 0. EgerReceipts and disbursements,
berg, the government's top doctor, a federal health official told
respectively, and the balance in
LOCAL TEMPS
UP! today. The post is subject lo Senate confirmation.
The temperature in downtown each lund as of April30 include:
The nominee is Dr. Merlin K. Duval, dean of the Univers1ty of
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Tuesday general, $10,668.09, $5,213.74;
Arizona Medical School in Tucson, the source said. Egeberg is
was 62 degrees under cloudy cemetery, $448.12, $802.94,
being eased out of the job of Assistant Secretary for Health and
$454.06; parking meter, no
sk1es.
Science of the Health, Education ~nd Welfare Department
(HEW) but will remain with the government.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Dollar Market Calmer Today

FARM~RS BAN.K

and SAVINGS 00.

.,

ByUnttedPressinternauouai

'thought
For Today

you aimed at an object on

NO. 19

1

A

Aim at the sun and you
may not reach It ; but you
will fly tar higher than If

VOL. XXIV

I1

Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street

BOARD TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
Local School district board of
education w!U meet In regular
session at 8 p.m. Thursday at
the high school.
CLUB TO MEET
SYRACUSE- There w!U be a
special meeting of the Third
Wednesday Home Demon·
stration Club at l p.m. Wed·
nesday at the meeting house in
the municipal park . All
members are asked to be
present to discuss the annual
trip.

stage show as Mark Twain ..
George C. Scott, meanwhile,
continued Sunday night his
remarkable dominance of 1971
acting awards. The Motion
Picture Academy recently
chose hun as its top male
Oscar wiuner lor his perfor.
mance in "Patton," despite his
putdown of its awards as a
popularity contest. In the
Emmy ceremony, he was
named best actor in a one-shot
role lor his performance In
Arthur M!Uer's "The Price" on
NBC.TV. Through his stand-in
acceptor, Jack Cassidy, Scott
welcomed this honor, apparently because, In this case, he was
chosen strictly by his peers.
The remarkable Scott, by the
way, also directed "The Ander·
sonville Trial." Early In the
Emmy show, host Johnny
Carson, noting Scott's nominalion, observed: "He asked, if he
wins, that Howard Hughes
accept."

SALES CALLED
RUTLAND _Neighbors and
fnends of the Bert Yost family
are planning a garage and
rummage sale at the Bruce
Davis home on Larkins St. in
Rutland from 9 a.m. to :; p.m.
Friday and Safurday. Several
members of the family died
recently in a fire at Cheshire.
Anyone wishing to donate to the
sale may call 742-3776 or 7423883. Proceeds will go towards
paying the funeral expenses of
the family.
. ._..;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

Market Report

~~~1~1~~~Fed~er~a~l~-~tLIIJ~!II

to
Kentucky
to Northern
ralae funds
In the M

lady in a comedy series, and
anyone who has watched her
perform can only concui.
-·
As for the Emmy shqw,
Archie was right, of course. It
is very dumb every year In
several particular ways : It
g1ves out far to'o many awards,
most of them trivial, so that
hardly any can be remembered
half an hour later. And it either
overlooks truly significant video
achievements or demeans the
ones 11 recog~izes by lumping
them indiscriminately with,

CI•&gt;Udy with showers likely
and possibly a thundershower
toni~ht and W~'tlnesday. Hi~h
today and again Wednesday
from upper 60s to mid 70s. Low
tomght m the 50s.

receipts, $54.30, $6.03; f~re
equipment, no receipts, $276.78,
$63.99; swimmmg pool, no
receipts, $6.50, $566.86; plan.
ning commission, no receipts,
$11.29, $1,599.15.
Street maintenance, $2,043.94,
$2,331.61, $3,741.08; state high.
way, no receipts, no disbursements, $3,298.89; sanitary
sewer, $4,004.42, $5,787.63,

$22,652.60; water, $5,690.11,
$5,653. 73, $23,082.74; water
meter deposit trusts, $200, $118,
$5,186.57; water construction,
no receipts, $4,074.97, $1,789.87;

sewer construction, no receipts,
no disbursements, $54,811.42;
general bond retirement,
$3,821.66, $471.48, $12,768.84.
Receipts for the month total
$26,876.34 compared
to
disbursements of $24,803.10.

Bequest of $500 Made to Pool
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Middleport IS $000 richer as
the result of the provisions of
the will of the late Homer E.
Cook, t! was reported Monday
mght when Middleport Council
met in regular sess10n.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
read a letter from Attorneys
Manmng Webster and Bernard
Fultz that the town is receivmg
the $500 to be used for the
village swimming pool. Another
smaller bequest will be forth·
coming when the !mal set.
tlement of the estate is made.
In other matters, council
came near "hittmg a snag"
when a request was made to
change the zoning of a lot at the
corner of South Third Ave, and
Locust St. from a business
classification to a ·residential
status on a non-eonforming
perm1t basis . The · nonconforming permit must be
renewed each year.
Counc1Iman Dick Vaughan
said that he felt too many
changes had already been made
in zoning regulations in the
commumty.
"We may as well throw {h~

zonmg away," Vaughan
commented.
No motion on changing the
zoning was heard at that point.
However, discussion brought
out that the planning commission had made the
recommendation and that
Harold Chase, maintenance
supervisor, had told the lot
owner, Sonny McClure, two
weeks ago that the lot met
specifiCatiOns. Chase and other
officials had been under the
impression at the time that the
lot in question was already in a
residential status as far . as
zoning is concerned. However,
Grate reported that council had
zoned it to a busmess
classification in September,
1969.
Mrs. Roger Morgan made a
motwn to grant the non·
conforming
pern¥1 , and
Lawrence Stewart made the
second to the motion which then
passed un~nimousiy.
Upon o.he recommendation of
the park commissiOn Mrs.
Ruby Vaugh~n was employed
a&amp; manager of the village park
forth~. summer. Coase reported
I

that the pool is being filled m
preparatmn for the Memonal
Day opening. The comm1ssion
had only one other applicatiOn
on hand for the park manager's
post.
Counc1i approved a routine
ordmance wh1ch Will prov1de lot
numbers for acreage bemg
utilized in lower Middleport by
Jemo, Inc., for the construction
of new homes. The mayor's
report showing $696.55' in fines
and fees collected in April and
$147 10 merchant police
collectmns for a total of $843.o5
was approved.
A letter was read from the
Mullen Insurance Agency of
Pomeroy listing several
recommendations on safety
measures to be taken at the
swimming pool. Two of these
included keeping the fuse box
and pump room locked. Wet
swimmers could be eiec·
lrocuted by either, the letter
stated.
Chaase reported that two
:arge holes In the ground at
the marina must be filled and
some redllehlng done
because the holes are causing

a washout. He w!U handle the
problem. Chase also em·
phaslzed that polltlc,al
placards placed around the
community must be taken
down no later than Thursday.
Council approved action
against candidates who do not
abide by regulations re·
quirlng removal of such
placards.
Mayor C. 0. Fisher reported
that a dwnp at Cool ville had
proven too great a distance lor
local haulers and that a dump in
a nearby county is now being
used instead until a countywide
fac11ity is developed. The Meigs
County Commissioners have
applied for ARC funds to be
used in establishment of a
landfill which would serve the
county.
Atl!!nding the meetmg were
Mayor Fisher, Clerk-Treasurer
Grate; Council members, Mrs.
Morgan, Lawrence Stewart,
Cliff Stumbo, Richard Vaughan
and David Ohimger; Chase and
Allen Lee King, who is an in·
dependent candidate for mayor
of the town in the fall. ·

ing with amendments In many
forms designed to delay .final
action on the administration's
requested tw01fear extension of
the draft. Debate on the exten·
slon Is in Its third day In the
Senate.
Backers of the Selective Serv
Ice extension served notice they
would demand constant attendance In the chamber by the
draft opponenla as the price for
the flllbuster .
"If there's going to be a flll·
buster, then you're going to
work lor It," Sen. Saxbe told
Gravel.
Ssxbe caught the Alaska sen·
a tor absent from the chamber
at lunchtime and promptly
moved to place a strict time
limit on debate. Summoned
from the cloakroom, Gravel
objected.
"It's your filibuster, your
tune, but we don't have to
dance to It," Ssxbe told hlm.
"I'm not here to call the
tune," Gravel said. l'm here
to use my prerogatives under
the Senate rules."
Cranston, in a statement is·
sued later in the day, said the
filibuster was "the only ellec·
tive way that senators can
safeguard Americans against
oppressmn at a time of national
crisis. The continuation of the
VIetnam war has brought us to
such a crisis."
Unlike past filibusters, the
Californian contended, this one
would "end minority oppression
of the vast majority of the
American people who, in poll
alter poll, have demanded that
we end our participation in the
war more rapidly than the ad·
mmistration proposes."
Ssxhe, Sen. John C. Stennis,
11

Meters Produce
$1,184 in April
Parking collections of Mid·
dleport for the month of April
totaled $1,184, according to the
monthly report of Chief of
Pollee J. J. Cremeans.
Arrests lor the month totaled
27 including three for drivmg
while mtoxicated ; two, use of
illegal license tags ; 11, In·
toxicat10n; one each for
following too closely; left of
center; failure to yield the right
of way; illegal muffler; running
red light; dtsturbing the peace ;
profanity; indecent exposure;
failure to pay an old line and
lwn lor mvesligation.

D·Mlss., and other draft advocates contend a sudden end to
Selective Service would endan·
ger not only the war effort but
leave the United States virtual·
ly powerless to check aggres·

s1on overseas.

M.arttn
, IFJ!ll
,.,.. l
Host Parly to

Save-a-Life
A novel "save-a-life" party
will be staged on Sunday, May
23, at 2:30 p.m. at the Marlin
Restaurant in Middleport.
Purpose of the party is to
acquaint women with the help
that is av~iiable through the
Me1gs County Cancer Society,
to distribute literature and to
dispel some fears.
"Half of all cancer can be
omitted by means of com.
munication . We must make the
public aware of means of
prevention and detection,
especially in this case, of cancer
in women," Mrs. Arthur Lund,
executive secretary of the local
society, comments.
A variety of features will be
presented at the party. There
will be a talk by Miss Gertrude
Bhss, public education chairman of the American Cancer
Society's Ohio Division, a style
show by lola's of Pomeroy, a
barbershop quartet with Ar·
mand at the organ and the
presentation of door prizes
contributed by the Martin
Restaurant, Royal Crown Cola
and the Pomeroy Flower Shop.
Tickets are being sold by the
local society's board members
and can also be secured by
calling 992·2688 or 9n-2370.

Alumni to Dine
RUTLAND - The Rutland
High School Alumni Assn. will
hold its 6lst annual banquet at
the Rutland gymnasium at 6:30
p.m. on Saturday, May 29.
There will be round and
square dancing from 9 p.m. to 2
a.m. following the banquet with
mus1c by Tex Harrison and the
Valley Boys. Reservations, coat
$3 a person, may ~ sent to the
Rutland Alullmi Assn., Box 321,
Rutland. Alumni unable to
attend are asked to send duel ot
$1 tu the above address.

�3-The Daily Senllnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , May II, 1971

WOiiien~·alWavs
1

"

Women have "manned" hospitals smce they
first opened thetr doors Bemg a servtce.ortented
lll91llutioo, the hosptlal's primary critenon for
employmenlts a conlrtbution to patten! care, not
one's sex
Perhaps for thts reason, and perhaps sunply
because carmg for the stck has lraditlOnally
been m the woman's prllVlllce, the hospttal offers
myrmd opporturultes for women of all ages,
backgrounds, and JOb mterests
There are even areas of the hosptlal where
women have an edge over men The most obVIOUS of these ts nursmg The nurse sees the
patient most and lB mdtspensabie to hts
recovery Nursmg is popular because tt offers
responstbibty, diverstly, good salary and
benefits, and almost guaranteed employment
Depending upon then- lrainmg, women can
etther be a regtstered nurse, practical nurse or a
nurse's atde
For the woman who lBn'l mleresled m
nursmg, the hospttal offers a wealth of other

,:::.;:e~~~7·,

Manned Hosnitals
r

opportumlies often overlooked by JOb hunters
Hosptlahzed patients eat three nourtshing
meals a day, and many women are employed m
planrung, cookmg, and servmg these meals
From the professtonal dtelltian to the atde who
serves the lray, careers m thts area of patten!
care are rewardmg ones
Most hospttals have phystcal therapy
departments, and for the trammg woman the
areas of phystcal, occupational, and recreatwnal
therapy offer umque rdwards Therapy gtves the
chance to work on a one-to-one basts wtth people
disabled m a vartety of ways, and to play a
stgmftcant role m thetr recovery
Other JOb sources m hospttals are laboratory
and x..-ay departments Both areas requu-e
tecllmctans with varying levels of trammg,
thereby opemng post lions for the woman who ts a
recent high school graduate as well as the one
wtth a poskollege degree
Professwnal jobs m non-medical areas are
also numerous More and more hospitals today

mam tam soc1al workers on their staff Women m
personnel or pubbc relatiOnS work should also
constder hospttal JObs on a full or part-tune
baSIS
For non-professtonal women, hosp1lals offer
equal employment opportumties and equal pay,
m addition to the satisfactton of helpmg people
Patients must recuperate m clean rooms on
clean !mens, and the llousekeepmg and laundry
serv1ces of a hospital are always acllve
Oencal work offers many Jobs essential to
hospital efficiency Admttting recepllontsts,
medical records hbranans, ward clerks,
secretanes, telephone operators, clerk-typists,
and many others keep the admmtstrative wheels
turrung while patients get well Most JObs free
health personnel from paper work so that they
have more time to spend m du-ect patient care
Many hosptlal JObs continue through three
different sh1fts, seven days a week Wh1le the
w1fe whose husband works mghts may prefer
workmg Similar hours, the workmg mother may

clJOose

to work while her children are m school

In a period of health manpower shortage, a
hoSPital may fmd It necessary to arrange
workmg schedules that accommodate ap·
phcants Hospital outpatient facilities offer
many Jobs at 9-5 hours for th011e prefemng a
1raditJon al scbeduIe Par.-•t une work lS a1so
frequentiy available
Women who find that they have some free
lime, should COOSider hospital volunteer work
JustafewboursaweekcanperformajobwhJCh
otherwtse nught not be done or would requll'e
removmg a full-tune employee from her usual
duti
es
Today, more and more men are demanding
equal rights With women in fields such as nursmg, therapy, and social work There lJ certainly
more than enough room for both male and
female m every area of hosptta1 employtl\enlhealth manpower and womanpower is at a great
premtum

Tonnage Cut in DC9 in Dispute
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Robert
Harrts, father of a Marshall
Umvermty football player kill·
td w1th 74 others In a DC9

Funeral Set
On WednesdJJy
MASON - Funeral servtces
for Ernest Huffman, 60 Mason,
who was pronounced dead on
amval at Veterans Memorial
Hospital ln Pomeroy Sunday,
will he held at I 30 p m Wednesday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home
Mr Huffman was born Dec
19, 1910 at Sweetland, W Va He
was a veteran of World War II
Surv1vmg are h1s parents,
, Henry and Tennessee Martin
Huffman, Hamlm, W Va , his
i Wife, Unnie, four daughters,
I Mrs Edna Kenny, Columbus ,
Mrs Sallle Conrad and M1ss
Helen J Huffman, both of
Mason , and Mrs Naom1 Pr1ce,
Poml Pleasant, a son, Everett,
1
'Jr , of Mason, and four grand·
1' Children Also surv1vmg are SIX
• brothers, William Jesse, James
0 , Bobble and Sheriff Troy
Huffman, all of Pomt Pleasant,
, Ray of Hamlin, and Roy of

~.~· Ga , and three sisters,

Mrs Opal Pridemore, Tifton,
~ll}.~yne., Kenlilcky.
and Mrs Callie Plumtey,
" Hamlin
OffJcJabng at the services wlil
be the Rev Eugene M Gar low
Bunal Will be m Kirkland
Memonal Gardens Fnends
may call at the funeral home
from 7 to 9 this evemng

crash last November, sa1d he
understands that only the
team's umforms were transported by truck the day of the
crash, not three tons of eqUipment such as Southern Airways
clauns
Harr1s told UP! Monday mght
the only eqmpment the team
was known to send by truck to
Greenville, N C last Nov 14
would have wetghed about 540
pounds
"I can t conceive of anythmg
the team would have had that
could have we1ghed three tons,"
Hams satd m answer to South
ern's conunent Monday that 1ts
DC9 had no overloadmg problem when it crashed near the
Huntington, W Va Airport durmg a hght rain Harris, who
has produced three letters alludIng to an overweight problem,

seeks the reopemng of hearmgs
mto the crash
A Southeern A1rways vtce
prestdent, RIChard N Harbottle,
sa1d Monday the problem concernmg the DC9 f11ght had been
cleared up by telephone
Accordmgly, it was agreed
the un1vers1ty would reduce the
we1ght by almost three tons,
movmg 11 by surface transporta
lion, Harbottle satd
We knew there had to be
some phone calls after the let
ters,' rephed Hams, but I
don't have any 1dea what eqmp
ment could have we1ghed three
tons I happened to be at the
game when the equipment
arnved and then when 11 left
The only thmg that was
transported was umforms,' he
satd It was a very small
truck "

PhUlip tf'olpert Dies at Age 59
NEW HAYEN - Phllhp J the Techmcal Educahon Sec
Wolpert, formerly of New bon and they moved from
Haven and more recently of 112 Fanwood to H1ll1ard
South Norwich, H1lhard, 0 , While m Mason County he was
d1ed m a Columbus, 0 hospital an active member of the Bend
Sunday evemng after an ex Rotary Club and Hidden Valley
tended Illness
Country Club
Mr Wolpert hved m New In add1tton to h1s w1fe other
Haven for several years and surviVOrs mclude a daughter,
was employed for the Central Mrs Robert (Suzanne) Merk'e
Operallng Company at the of Columbus Oh1o and a
Ph1hp Spornllant .January 15, , gran~d.aughter, Jenn1fer
1964 ..he-was promoted from Merkle The funeral servtces
OperatiOns Supervisor and wtll be held at I p m Wed
lransferred to the Amencan nesday m the Jerry Spears
Electric Power Company m Funeral Home on West Broad
New York City At that ltme Mr Street, Columbus, 0
Wolpert and hts Wife, Vtrgtnla, Fnends may call from 2 unbl
moved to Fanwood, N J , where 4 p m and from 7 until 9 p m
they res1ded until recenUy He today at the funeral home
retired as Semor Engmeer m

r------------------------------------------

1

Voice along Broadway

I

j
.

BY JACK O'BRIAN

The a1rllner crashed and
burned on 1ts return fl1ghl kill·
mg 36 players and all 75 per
sons aboard
Hams has sent the letters he
sa1d show the DC9 was unsafe
for the fhght to the Natwnal
TransportatiOn Safety Board
askmg that the mvesllgahon be
reopened The NLRB sa1d tt
would make an announcement
th1s week
The letters were dated Apr1l
18 and June 18, 1969, and Sept
28 1970, and were apparently
s1gned by Mernll Taylor, dJreclot of charter sales for South
ern, based m Atlanta, and d1
reeled to Charles Kautz asstsl·

ant athlettc director at Mar·
shall
In the letters, Taylor spoke
of the DC9 s phymcal lun1ta·
lions Harbottle, speaking for
the mrhnes, sa1d Monday, however ' the fl1ght was not
agreed to until the wetght on
board was reduced to meet not
only Southern Airways' slrJcl
reqUirements but the reqmre
ments of Huntmgton Airport "
Hams satd from what he has
learned however, the flight was
margmal m every aspect "
The pilot of the plane told
h1s wtfe before he left that If
there was a wet runway, 11
would be very margmal, Har-

ns sa1d "That doesn't appear
to he the greatest of safety
factors "
Harrts sa1d he was at Huntmgton Airport when word came
that a plane had crashed He
sa1d the president of Marshall
was there and felt somewhat
reheved when told that the
crashed au-liner was a DC9
'He sa1d they (the learn)
wouldn't he on a DC9," sa1d
Harrts No one could believe
they were on a DC9 The Wife
of the coach, Mrs (R1ck) Totley when told tl was a DC9,
said 11 couldn't be them Everyone was of the opmton they
weren t on a DC9 '

SF
101 100 OOx- 3 8 3
S1mpson Clonmger 141 Wd
cox 15), Granger 181 and
Bench Mancha! (52) and
GJbJon LP Simpson (I 1l HR
Perez (4th)
OOitiiiiiiPCii::::::::.___ Cho
ooo 001 02&lt;l- 3 9 o
Phil
000 000 ooo-o 4 0
Jenkms{6 21 and D Breeden
By Un1ted Press lnlernat•onal Short Hoerner 18) Brandon (9)
Lead1ng Bailers
and McCarver LP-Short 12 4)
NattonalG League
HR- Hockman 13rdl
AB R H Pet
Garr All
30 125 23 52 416 Hou
010 ooo ooo- 1 4 o
Mlln All
29112 12 44 393 N Y
000 000 20x- 2 6 0
Mays SF
27 93 21 36 387
Blasongame Gladdong (Bland
Davos LA
31 120 17 45 375 Edwards
Gentry McGraw (B)
Grote NY
26 86 15 31 360 and Grote WP Gentry 13 3)
Alou Hou
21 62 6 22 355
Brock Sl L 30 121 23 43 355 LP Blasongame 12 4)
smmns st L 30 102 12 34 333 Sl L
010 002 5DO- B 12 1
Strgll Pot
27 102 19 34 333 Mont
011 001 101- 5 9 1
Torre St L 32 120 19 39 325
Reuss lmzy (9) and Stm
Bckrl Cho
30 120 20 39 325 mons Renko Marshall 171
Amencan League
Reed (7) Stroghmayer (9) and
G AB R H Pet Bateman WP-Reuss (4 3) LP
Oliva Mon 28 118 25 48 401 Renko (3 2) Hrs Hague 2 (2nd
Ro 1as KC
30 116 17 39 336
Kllbrw Mon 28 107 14 36 336 1!. 3rd l
Schaal KC 30 96 17 32 333
Only games scheduled)
Holt Mon
26 69 6 23 333
Mrcr NY
27 100 14 33 330
Nrthrp Del 28 109 21 36 330
Amen can League
Scott Bos 24 93 10 30 323 Kan C1ty 000 010 3DO- 4 11 2
Unser Wash 26 78 7 25 321 Bait
000 000 011)- 1 5 0
Smoth Bos 27 lOB 18 34 315
Dal Canton (3 ll and May ,
Ystrzmsk Bos 27 92 25 315 McNally Richert (9) and
Home Runs
Dalrymple LP McNally 15 2)
NAT tONAL LEAGUE Star Hr Otos 15th)
gell Pitt 13 Aaron All 12
Bench C1n 11 Cepeda All 9 Cal
000 001 001- 2 7 2
Colbert, SO 8
Del
200 012 OOx- 5 6 0
AMERtCANLEAGUE Ol1va
Messersmoth Queen {6) Rey
M1nn 9 Powell Bait 7 Cash nolds 17) and Stephenson
Del and White NY 6 Smith Chance Schermanl5l Timmer
Bos Spen~r Ca I Horton Del man {9) and Freehan WPSando and Jackson Oak and Scherman 11 0) LP-Messer
OtiS KC 5
smoth {2 4) HR5-Mcaulolfe
Runs Batted tn
{4th) Repoz {3rd)
NATIONAL LAGUE Star
gell Pitt 33 Aaron All 28
Cepeda All and Mays SF 23
Colbert SO 22
AMERICAN LEAGUE Kolle WIN AT BRIDGE
brew Mlnn 25 Powell Ball 24

JJ

Yastrzemskl

Bas and North

rup Del 21 Bando Oak 20
Pttchlng
NATIONAL LEAGUE Jen
klns Ch1 6 2 Doerker Hous 5
0 Seaver NY 5 1 Upshaw
All Carlton St L and
Mancha! SF 5 2
Amencan League Blue Oak
B1 Siebert Bos 5 o Palmer
Bait 5 1 McNally Bait Lol lch

fh ree Contenders
ONUCops
Line Up for Joe District

Championship
Bidding
NORTH

.K

Oet Perry M1nn and Hunter

Oak 52

By GARY KALE
UPI SporiS Wrtter
It was unammously agreed
Monday mght that former
champiOns Jtmmy Ell1s and
Erme Terrell have as much
r1ght to a shot at Joe Frazter's
heavyweight title as undefeated
George Foreman
Foreman was the most tmpresstve of the three as he
scored the only knockout m the
lllree-bout mternahonal closed
ctrcutt televtsJon spectacular
held m Oakland Toronto and
Chtcago Eilts and Terrell were
ahead on all offlctal scorecards
m the1r respective I0-1 ound
bouts
The 22-year old Foreman,
who gamed notonety by waVIng
the Amencan flag at the 1968
Olymp1cs whde several US
Athletes were dehvermg 1mproper gestures at medal-wmmng
ceremomes, knocked out
Argenlme champwn Gregorio
Peralta &lt;n the lOth round of a
scheduled 15 cound test at
Oakland, Calif
Ell1s, who lost h1s World
Boxmg Assoctation T1tle to
Fraz1er 15 months ago, spotted
George Chuvalo 17'h pounds
and then rtpped the Canaxdian
champ to Ribbons over the 10round route m Toronto In the
f1rst bout of the TV trlpleheader, Terrell, another former
WBA titleholder, had little
trouble beatmg Braztllan
champ LoUis Pires m Ch1cago

and made the Argentinian h1s
25th knockout VICUm m 28 pro
ftghts when the referee stopped
the1r bout at 2 52 of the lOth
Under Cahforma rules, the fight
goes mto the books as a stra1ght
kayo mstead of a techntcal
knockout
Foreman, we1ghmg 216'h to
196 for the 36-year.old Peralta,
did not appear allXlous for an
Immediate confrontation With
Fraz1er
My manager makes mv
f1ghts, sa1d Foreman 'I'll f1ght
whoever he s1gns me to f1ght "
D1ck Saddler, Foreman's
manager, sa1d "We are m no
hurry for Frazier because we
ftgure he won't f1ght any more
th1s year When he lB ready for
us, we w1ll he ready for him
Our unmediale plans now are to
getasmanyflghtsaswe can the
rest of th1s year and then we'll
see what happens"

I came out fast and my best
punch of the mght was the r1ght
I threw mthe fu-st round when 1t
open a cut over his rtght eye,\!.
sa1d ElliS
Ellis performed surgery three
other Urnes over Chuvalo's left
eye as he kept conlrol of the
fight
' Junmy certainly proved he
didn'thave the glass jaw that he
had m the FraZier f~ght,"
commented Elhs' manager
Angelo Dundee "He fought
beautifully, but George fought
hard too I knew Jimmy would
wm If lje didn't fall m and g1ve
Georgetune to think "
Ellis expects to resume h1s
medl8tely m the hopes of landmg a return bout w1th
Frazier or one wtth former
champ Muhammad Ali
Terrell, starling another
comeback round, lB lookmg for
prep bouts with Floyd Patterson
or Jerry Quarry before attempting a shot at Frazier
Wetghlng 219 pounds to 215 for
Pires, Terrell w011 his fourth
slratght bout smce commg off a
three-year layover last
December
1 won b1g/' Terrell satd,
"but Ptres Ill an awkward and
strong fighter I knew I hurt him
but 11 was hard to know when he

22 Crown
LIMA, Oh10 (UP!) - Ohio
Northern won the NAJA District
22 golf tournament by three
strokes at the Hawthorne Hills
Golf Course here Monday whtle
Defiance College won the Mid·
Qhw Conference title
Northern's Mike Smtth won
mdiVIdual honors 10 sudden
death overttme after flmshing
the '!/holes m a tie w1th Br1an
Hayes of Walsh w1th lOS's
Ohto Northern fmJShed at 448,
followed by Walsh w1th 451,
Bluffton 470, Cedarville 476,
defendmg champion R1o
Grande 477, Fmdlay 480,
Malone 484 and Wilmington 537
In the Mid-OhiO cham-

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West
Pass

North

East

South

1•

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·, See article for further h1d~

4...

dmg

Openmg lead-See art1cle

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here 1s another hand from
our match agamst Braz11 m
the World s championship
The b1ddmg m the box 1s
what took place when Jtm
Jacoby and Bobby Wolff held
the North South cards for
North Amenca
The Braz1han East player
elected to double f1ve clubs
He held two aces and felt
that hts good spades m back
of North s spade smt would
gtve South some trouble He
turned out to be wrong smce
South held Just one spade
and w1th 12 trumps tn the
combmed hands there was
no problem about handlmg
any potenhal losers except
for one heart and one d1a
mond
The btddmg went the same
way at the other table unttl
the five-club b1d c am e
around to Bobby Goldman,
who held the East hand for
North Amenca
Bobby thought about dou
blmg f1ve clubs but came to
the concluston that he
'o\Ouldn't set 1! more than one
tnck and posstbly f1ve clubs
would make In any event
there was a very good
chance that live hearts would
breeze home Therefore
Bobby b1d 1!
South doubled that and as
you readers can see five
hearts would make easily
but at th1s pomt Gabnel
Chagas who played magmh
cently for Braz1J throughout
the entire tournament made
the bnlllant deciSion to ~o to
s1x clubs That deciSion
saved somethmg from the
wreck but we scored 550 at
one table and 100 at the
other for 12 IMPs

created the des1gn wh1ch lransformed the Pierre
P 1o n s h 1P •
PI a Y e d
sunultaneously w1th the NAJA
Ballroom from lls expensively functional
game on the local links, Jim
TO LOVE LUCI IS
monotony mto a dazzhng fantasy of fabnc and
Buzzard took medalist honors m
TO LOVE TV
lights
Dancing under thts sumptuous cellmg
sudden
death overtime after he
NEW YORK - LBJ's son-m~aw Pat were such pretty people as Judy Lew1s, Loretta
and Jun Roach of Bluffton each
Nugent's tycooning 11 just like pop~n-law Filed Young's sparkling daughter, Paulme Tngere,
Peralta, who says Foreman
t1mshed at 111
a Cedar Rapida, Iowa, appllcahon for cable-'IV who rates w1th the top three or four personal
st11l has a lot to learn," was
Defiance flmshed at 458•
Bill Meloney (former husband of "Oaudia" peaks m Amencan couture, lovely Lyn Revson,
bleedmg from the nose and
followed by Bluffton 470,
playwright Rose Franken) died in Connecticut handsome wtfe of Revlon cosmetics kmg Charlie
hopmg for the bell to end the
Cedarville 476, Fmdlay 480,
ABC-TV's man-about-show biz John Revson, and Charhe, of course, Eleanor
lOth round when he was floored
Malone 484 and Wilmington 537
Scbubeck plays post-midnight Playboy-door- Howard, w1fe to pubhsher Jack, D1ana Lyrm
w1th three strrugllt nghts to the
head He took a mandatory
Johnny to a beautiful N Y hutch-bunny
Joe Hall of the flicks and now of SOCiety, Julie Mce1ght-count and when Foreman
Frazler's$2,500,000ftghtfeewasdeservedbutas Connell, who once sang m the tomes! places as
unloaded wtth SIX good combm·
for his rock-act Joe's Lake Tahoe's King's Jube Waterbury , and hundreds of affluents from
at10ns, referee Elmer Costa
Castle showcase seats 750 - and Joe drew 39 the arts, sctences and money
stopped
the slaughter •
customers, Variety reports
Once upon a snob, N y society" wouldn't
was hurt "
Ell1s,
we1ghmg
191
to
218.,.
for
lerrell almost closed Pires' By United Press International
John Ericson of the younger H'wood hamlets rub shoulders or elbows With what was looked
Chuvalt,
clubbed
the
Canadian
left eye In the second round w1th Today lB Tuesday, May II,
jetted all the way to Bdwy to audition for a sub· down on as "The Cloak and Smters, • and an
continuously
and
only
Chuvalo's
a
pile driver blow and cut the the !31st day of 1971
role m Bacall's "Applause," but Keith Charles invasiOn on 7th Ave designers and manufacmtense des1re to retain hiS Brazilian around the mouth in The moon ts between 1ts full
got the part
J Carson's musical WhiZ but turers into expens1ve restaurants and cafes
reputation of never haVIng he en the nmth round Terrell suf· phase and last quarter
sartor1alfreak Doc Severlnsen will doo a quteler meant almost Instant-avoidance by the so-called
Foreman's v1ctory was the knocked off hts feel kept the fered a cut over his right eye In The mormng stars are Venus,
outf1tfor hts daughter Judith's Aug 15 altar dale Uppah Crust of the Social Reg1ster and m-&lt;&gt;ocJety
most 1mpress1ve of the three f1ght from going mto the record the siXth, but 1t didn't hamper Mars, Mercury and Juptter
With Emory Castilnore Jr of Augusta None of columns
book as a knockout for Ell1s
his style
The evemng starts Salltrn
the normal racetrack hysteria touches MonThe old N Y soc1al set urutated Bn!Jsh He heat Peralta 15 months ago
Those born on th1s day are
mouth's Gen'l Mgr Harvey Wardell, a 24-year royalty and nob1hty Folks m "trade" and
under the s~gn of Taurus
racmg veteran ll's all been downhill since especrally m the 'serv1ce" trades such as
American song wr1ter Irvmg
USAF naVIgator Harve spent seven months m a dressmakers, shopkeepers, etc , were to be
erlln was born May II, 1868
Nw prtson.of-war camp
avmded, snubbed was more the case But 7th
On lh1s day m hlsMelba Moore escaped from "Hau-" mto Avenue hung m there doggedly for decades and
ry
"Purlie" to get her f1rst fme serious raves for now (re-named the "Fashwn Set") thetr custom
In 1858 Minnesota entered the
her most entertainmg talents
Melba's a huge lB sought by restaurants, mghtclubs and,
INDIANAPOUS, Ind (UP!) The once exclumve club "170" quickest tour of the lrack w1th a Umon as the 32nd stale
rughklub hit In the hmlerlands as she polishes ultunate trmmph, by the old "society" hostesses - Racmg at 170 m1le5 per hour now has 11 members and all 175 063 Revson's car IS tden- In 1910 Glac1er Nattonal Park
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSH)
mater18l for her Waldorf-Astoria stardom who woo destgners such as Paulme Trigere, Bill m practice for the May 29 In- toured the 2'h mile oval m tical to Donohue's
m Montana was created by an
shorUy
Blass, Oscar de Ia Renta, turner Michael d1anapohs 500-rrule race has excess of the mag1c bamer
Bobby Unser, Albuquerque, Act of Congress
No doubt remains that Boris Aronson ts Forrest, Kenneth J Lane (costume jewelry lost some of 1ts luster smce Monday
N M , the 1968 lnd18118polis In 1928 Station WGY m
The btddmg has been
Bdwy 'sflnest stage designer The proof Is thiS yet'), merchandiser Danny Zarem, shoe Mark Donohue of Media, Pa
Theclubptckedup three new champiOn, was a fraction &amp;henectady, N Y , began the
West North Easl South
sensahonal septuagenarian's scemcs for des1gner David EVIns, Mrs Bernard Lanvln started speedmg shortly after membersandahandfulofother slower than Revson at 1750 ftrst regularly scheduled leleVI·
Pass
"Follies," "Company," "Cabaret," "The (perfumes), Andrew Goodman (Bergdorf's), the lrack opened Mav 1
dr1vers were on the threshold of mph
s1on programs
Pass
1¥
Pass
4¥
Pr1ce " Here's what telephones mean to a top Gordon Franklin (Saks 5th), Bob SkaowJtz
entry
Mar1on Andretti,
Rook1e John Mahler, Betten- In 1903 a truce between Pass
4•
Pass
'
You South hold
Manhaltan restaurant the huge water mam ('l'exas stores) etc, and 80 N y social life has
The Dait. Sentinel Nazareth, Pa , raised hts best dorf, Iowa, and Bud Tlnglestad, Negroes and whiles ended m .K5U
¥K632 .AKQ .74
break on 59th St killed phone service at the ch1c been revitaliZed (the Old Guard still snob down ,
DEVOTE'~ TO THE
average m hts second day of Speedway, Ind., were on the B1rmmgham, ala, w1th the
What do you do now?
Quo Vadis Busmess from palrons who couldn't their pa1rJcl8n schnozzes and bewail this soctal
INTER EST OF
runmng to 174 250 mph m an track for the f1rst lime bombing of the home of the
A-B1d SI:JQ hearts Your partfeel secure enough to gel through wtthout crop rotation, but they never go anywhere, while
CH~~~~sR ~A~~~ ::~,tL
Andy Granatell1 German-built Tlnglestad qwckly recorded a Rev A D Kmg, brother of ner IS trymg for a slam beyond
11ame You have enouch to bid 1t
the ones who chipped off that austere block to
Exec Ed
racer
68 8lap, Showmg indications of Martin Luther King Jr
reservations fell off 50 per cent
TODAY'S QUESTION
The Feather Ball at the Pterre Ballroom jom the more democrahc fun and the Society of
ROBEC~t~ ~~~:rLICH
Johnny Rutherford, Fort workmg up towards the speed
Instead of b1ddmg one hearl
A thought for today BenJa· yout partner has reb1d three
alwaysll!oneoftherarebpghtfmaleventsm the Accomplishment pronounce the change
Pubi&lt;Shed daoly except Worth, Tex, and Loyd Ruby, circle of the qwck 11
min
Franldm sa1d, "Expenence clubs over your one dtamond
long wmter's Beautiful People Season It's delightfully enlertammg)
~~·br,~~~n~Y ~~·m~~·~ YVall~~ WIChita Falls, Tex , also jomed
Two other rookies worked
charity (JllBI One Break, which finda hanCourt
Pomeroy Ohio -the speed Cll'cle Both were through two phases of thetr Ill a dear school, but fools w11l What do you do now?
Now these once stuffy-dreary Grand Balls :&lt;:·•:,_Bu~;~;~;;~,~tl•ce
o Phone WI th ma tICk of the watch of the dr1vers• tests Larry cann on, learn m no other "
dicapped people, Ira'"" and then finds them
uu
have taken on a new Manhattan dunenston
6,
' Phone 992
th
th R b 1
D 11 m nd Dee J
j«&lt;bb) was the creation of theatncal producer
o er WI
u y astest at 170 5 anVI e,
, a
ones,
After all, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor put
second class postage paod at and Rutherford at 170 4
Phoenix, Ariz each have two
Orin Lehman apt! hlJ sister Ellen Lehman their Imprimatur on Kenny J Lane when the Pomeroy Ohio
But Donohue was the speed· plateaus to pass before !mal
u.J"'...&amp;.ey the international designer
N at Ion a I advert's In g
BIDS ACCEPTE
"''""""" •
Duchess ordered a knave's ranaom In Kenny's representatove Botllnelll leader on the busiest day of the certification
KELL SIGNS
D
Orin, ihjured as a bombardier when he unllalion-crownJewelry, and the ex-Brlllllh King ~1a 11~~~·~oi~'c,,~2,_E1 e~'v~2rnko monlll at the track He outraced
Speedway officials said 59 of SAN DIEGO (UP!) -Chip SCHENECTADY, N y
bailed outofhlll Alr Force plane 10 WW ll, wound and his Duchess even urge hostesses to have,
Subsmptoon rotes oe the other 39 drivers taking to the the 77 cars entered for lhe race Kell, a two-year All America (UP!) -Bids for the ftrst
up In Nazi
prilon
hoepJtalJ,
and
he
had
the
f1rst
say,
Oscar
de
Ia
Renta
along
as
weekend
guests,
l•vered
by carroer where oval with an unofficial 177 .nv
•••, were m the garage at the close football player from Tennessee, national collegwte lacrosse
• 0 ..__
available 50 cents per week
noUoooor J B .-.use he understood what war- Simply becapse he ts "charmmg and amusing", By Moto1 Route where carrier more than a half-mile an hour of pracltce Monday '!bey added Monday s1gned a profesatonal champ10nsh1p tournament have
ruined ""'"
l.i.~o~ ... would be up agalmt' ln their
available One
d hts best circuit at 53 of th ose mac hi nes In contract wi th the San Diego been accepted b", Navy, Vtrgino more Debrelt's to pore over to lrv and match servtre
mon tn $l not
75 By mall .n Ohio un er
tltlperate ptlltWit ~erainble for honest work
up a fitting palrJng-off on the Duke's soclallevel, and w
'Jne veor $14 oo 177 901
"Gasoline Alley" had passed Chargers of the National n1a, ICornell, Army and Brown
....... ....... ~La.-~:
.. _.
Dent Leb
She m
h s S1 2s Thru
Pe
R
f
hni I'"~U Flfty-"'«h(
t
'"" _., ..... .,are,
man fact Ill, It's a good thing The Duke's that en- lo~;~t~n~~clcode; Subsc roploon
ter evson o New York tee ca • ..,... on,
~· Football League Kell will try I was announced Monday by
fudlr ipCINGI'Iblp, and lilt linlndal result tertammg personally, else he'd be stuck in the 15
Sunday Times City made 11 a complete drivers alJq had passed phySI- to make the Chargers as a Bruce Alllllon, NCAA rules and
~~~kY~,gMs. __________________L______~·--------_j ~M~c~IB
~r~e~
n !show~~~~~ !_~c~
ab
~~------------~~~----_.________~JI~
our
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tc~ha
~unum
~~-----.--~
11

170 Club Growmg
e

Today'•
Almanac

!"'

·-ace

1.

Marauders Dropped by Athens 7-3
Smith One-Hits
Starr·Wash 9
Btg Dave Snuth's one-h1t
Pitching was the key Monday
mght as the Eastern Eagles
knocked Starr-Washmgton from
secllonal tournament play at
Starr-Washmgton
W1th the score 0-0, Denms
E1chmger led off the second
mnmg w1th a smgle, later
stealmg second Snuth got to
ftrst base on catcher m
lerference, and Alan Duvall's
liner was bobbled, allowmg
E1chmger to score Randy
Young walked, Tom Karr
smgled m Snuth for a 2.0 lead,
and a bases full catcher mterference produced the th1rd
Eagle run of the mmng
This was all Stmth needed, and more - as he blerally
mowed down the enemy bats

men Dave's shutout btd was
spoiled m the stxth as hts only
walk and Eastern's only error
led to a s1xth mnmg run In all,
Smtth's blazing fastball ac
counted for 16 str1ke outs
Losmg Pitcher Randy Smnott
walked only one and allowed the
tough Eagles only four htts
whde fanmng 10
Denms Etchmger had two h1ts
for the Eagles wh1le Karr and
Bormg had one ap1ece Scott
Hardman had S W's only hit, a
double
The Eagles play Glouster m
the second round of sectional
play today
1
sw
000 001 0-:1 1 2
East
030 000 X-4 4 I
Smnott and Hardman Slmth
and Young

A fired up Athens' baseball
team used a three h1t p1tchmg
performance by sophomor~
Steve Inbody to pry a 7-3 victory
from the Marauders at Mid·
dleport Monday The bulldogs
pushed hard all the way to
avenge an earlier 20-6 loss to
Metgs at Athens The IO¥ made
the Marauders 9-4 overall and 3·
3m league actwn, the latter now
ended
Netther team was able to
score m the ftrst stanza a~ both
Inbody and Me1gs' nghthanded
semor Jed W1ll came out
throwmg hard
But
Athens
Mark
Bndgewater opened the second
w1th a walk and Don Wood
advanced tum to second as he
reached first on an error Wtll
fanned M1ke Green and Jun
Swearmgen's ftelders ' chmce
forced wood at second,
Bndgewater movmg to thu-d,
w1th two out Handley drew a
base on balls to load the bases
for Les Horvath who proceeded
to smash a hard grounder
through the shortstop's legs

When the throw 1n from left
held was delayed by ball
handbng m the outfield, the
Bulldogs poured m three runs
Horvath raced home later on
Tom Daft's smgie
Daft had gotten to second on
another error Steve Inbody
lashed a long smgle and Daft
sprmted for home The relay

from shortstop Steve Dunfee
reached catcher Roger D1xon
only seconds before Daft began
hts slide fo!'--home plate, the
ensumg contact lletween Dtxon
and Daft caused the ball to
spurt from Dixon's m1tt and
allow the fifth Athens run of the
mmng Ketth Kelly s mfteld fly
ended the Athens hall of the

mmng, a d1stmct Metgs
dlBaster
Inbody kept hts 5-ll lead until
the fourth when he handed out
successtve walks to D1xon and
Dave Boyd and gave up Stan
Wtlson s long smgle W1lson s
ball was bobbled, and m the
confuswn Dtxon and Boyd
scored Wilson reachmg thtrd

So he called for tune, gathered the Gtants mf1eld and catcher Russ Gibson around h1m at
the mound and they d1scussed
how they should pitch to Perez
th1s time
Everyone agreed w1th me I
should throw h1m screwballs
and breaking pttches low and
away," Mancha! sa1d later
'When you have to face
a tough man like Perez m that
kmd of a s1tuat10n 1t's good for
everyone to know how a pitcher ts gomg to throw to the
man
Talk Doesn't Hurt
That way," Mancha! went
on, 'they become a part of the
pitching pattern and can be
ready for whatever comes to
them It certamly doesn t hurt
to talk thmgs over "
Mar1chal stuck to the team '
plan and fed Perez a screwball

a curve low and away a slider
and then a screwball agam The
fou~th p1tch Perez fouled off
f1rst base and Frank Johnson
hauled 11 m to end the threat
In the mn th Mancha! struck
out both Lee May and Berme
Carbo and rehred Tommy
Heims on a fly to center to
preserve the 3-2 tr1umph It
was Juan s f1fth of the year
compared to two losses and
along the way he p1cked up the
2000th stnkeout of hts career
Manager Charle Fox d1dn't
feel the least b1t slighted when
he 11asn't mcluded m the confer
ence on the mound m the e1ght
"All I ve done from spnng
trammg on,' said Fox 'ts en&amp;
courage them to talk thmgs
over among themselves They II
never hear a word from me on
that score and wh1le we re on
the subJect, I haven t called one

Pirate Thinclads Top Kyger Creek

more games m each of the last
four seasons
It bothers Jenkins that the
Cubs underrate h1m, but the
only thmg he can do IS prove
that they are wrong And, 1f he
keeps gomg the way he has
been over the last three weeks
he may make management see
thmgs h1s way
The l).fool-5, 205-pound righthander recorded hiS f1fth
consecutive complete game
v1ctory Monday mght by
stoppmg the Philadelphia Phillies, 3-ll, on four h1ts while

For

E leg a nee

1n

P1pe

Smoktng Pleasure, Select a
Ptpe that Needs No

Tawney Jewelers
Second Ave
Galhpohs, Ohoo

422

Capturmg e1ght fu-st place
positions, North Galha defeated
Kyger Creek, 65-57' m a track
meet Monday mght on the
Bobcat cmders
Heres Monday's results
120-YARD HIGH HURDLES
- Dotson NG , Collins KC and
Thompson, KC 171
100-YARD DASH - Brown,
NG Taylor,NGandWh1te KC
10 4
MILE RUN - Howard, KC
Hall, NG, and Colhns KC 5 06
881l-RELAY- Won by North

Galha I 38
440. YARD RUN - Thompson,
KC, Howell, NG and Gordon
KC 56 8
180-YARD LOW HURDLESDotson, NG, Dotson NG and
While, KC 23 8
880- YARD RUN - Rumley
KC Rumley, KC, and Radliff,
NG 2 30 2
220-YARD RUN - Brown,
NG, Swisher, KC and Taylor
NG 25
TWO MILE RUN - Hall NG,
Garnes, NG and Rankm, KC

12 14 8
MILE RELAY - Won by KC
4 01 5
FIELD EVENTS
SHOT PUT - Dew11t, NG
Hall, NG and Johnson, KC

sinking out 12 The tr1umph
was h1s s1xth of the season
agamst two losses, making h1m
the first pitcher m the league to
notch that many vJctones thts
season

'I feel I m m a class w1th
G1bson and Mancha!, but the
front offtce doesn't thmk that
way I'd like to show them that
I am If I have one goal this
year 1t s to become a $100,000 a
year p1tcher, ' sa1d Jenkins,
who s1gned for an est~mated
$85,000 th1s year
The Ph1lhes JUSt m1ght be

NG 53

•

38'2

DISCUS - Dewttl, NG
Swisher KC and Lawhon KC
102'3 '
LONG JUMP - Colhns KC
Blankenship KC and Howell
NG 18'9
HIGH JUMP - Johnson KC
Thompson, KC and Robertson

SEE US
FOR THE SUPPLIES
YOU WILL NEED
FOR NEW OR
REMODELING PROJECTS

e INSULATION
e PAINTS
e ANTIQUING KITS
e MARLITE
e MOLDINGS
e FORMICA
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e PANELING
e KITCHEN CARPETING
e ARMSTRONG CEILING TILE
e PLUMBING FIXTURES e PLUMBING SUPPLIES
e CERAMIC WALL AND FLOOR TILE

long way to go and anythmg
can happen '
As of the moment, the G1ants
are fu-st m the N L West With
a 23-9 record, but they are
seven games ahead of the nearest team and that team tsn'l
Cincmnalt The Reds are bogK1lchen Cabmets
Electncal Wtrmg
ged down IO'h games hehmd
and
and ~upphes for
San Franc1sco
Wtlhe Mays drove m the
Those hard to fmd ttems But It In Appliances
"I
don
't
feel
G1ants' first run m Monday's
game w1th a f1rst mmng smgle
so good!"
Metal Shelf Brackets
Alummum Storm
In the lh1rd, the G1ants loaded You II feel much better ol
and Standards For
Doors and Wmdows
the bases on walks and a run you know that you are
That
Walt Arrangement
scored while Ken Henderson adequately 1nsured w1l h a
local lndependenl agenl
was h1tlmg mto a doubleplay such
as the Downmg Childs
wh1ch started wtth a force at Agency We are not em
second and wound up With a ployees of any 1nsurance
Amerock-Cablnet
Foldmg Doors-we represent
lagout at home after a run had company
Hardware
Both Wood &amp; Plasttc
you In getlmg full set
scored
tlement of your loss claims
AI Gallagher doubled leadmg
off the fourth and T1to Fuentes
ALSO MANY
scored htm with a smgle As
IT-YOURSELF H
thmgs turned out, that was the
wmnmg run for Mancha! and
the G1ants
The two teams play agam to
mght w1th J1m Merntt p1tchmg
200 N. 2nd
992-3748
for the Reds and Gaylord PerMIDDLEDnDT
N2
MIDDLE PO
Jenkms N&lt;&gt; 1 supporter H1s ry for the Giants
' - - - - - - · - - . . Uliii,.;;ioili_,lliiilllillilll___________"!
v1ctory over them was h1s 16111 ,
m 21 career dec1s10ns smce
they traded h1m to tile Cubs m
1967 Jenkms reltred 17 batters
m a row after Larry Bowa
opened the th1rd mmng w1th a
smgle and stole second
J1m Htckman provided Jen:;/
kms w1th all the baltmg suppol't
he needed Htckman smgled to
help build a run m the s1xth
and cracked a two run homer m
the e1ghth to lag Chns Short
w1th h1s fourth loss m SIX
dectsJOns
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today•
trymg to score Kev Sheets
smgled, and Chuck Perroud
walked to load the sacks
R1ck Boone fanned for the
second out, then came John
son's game-wmmng blow
It was Gall1a s 12th wm
P1nto
VW113
agamst three setbacks, and 11
was the Blue Devils etghth one
Pinto has the
94 0 .
Wheelbase
95 3'
same
turmng corcle
run triumph of the 1971 camOverall
asVW
paign Wellston dropped to 12-10
Length
163 0"
161 8
overall
Overall
Dave Burnett paced GAHS at
Pmto has a lower
69 4.
W1dth
624
Silhouette
wider stance
the plate w1th three smgles m
50
1
•
and
greater
weight to
Height
591"
four tnps Prose, Sheets and
hold
the
road
better tor
Boone each had two smgies
Front Tread
55 0 '
54 3
example, m a crosswind
Joe Martm was three-forRear Tread
550
53 3
three for Wellston (mcluding a
Curb
Rack &amp; pmlon s1eenngdouble) and Jack Huffman was
We•ght (lb)
2030
1918
the k1nd on expensive
three for four Randy Ratcliff
sports
Imports hke
Steenng
Rack &amp;
Roller
had a triple for the losers
Steenng Jaguar and Porsche
PiniOn

hJl and run play thts year and
I thmk we ve tr1ed that at
least two dozen ltmes "
Maybe Fox wtll get drummed
out of the manager s ' unwn
for not managmg, but who can
argue w111l success'
Still Good Chance
A year ago th1s date the
Reds had a 23 9 won-lost record
and were m first place by four
games m the Nahonal League
West, Manager Sparky Anderson was tellmg anyone who
would hsten that hts team
would wm the flag
H1story and circumstances
made a prophet out of Anderson, but wa1t unltl you hear
what he IS saymg thts year
After the Reds bowed to the
Gtan ts Monday, Anderson sa1d
bravely h1s team "sltll has a
good chance There IS a long,

Jenkins Makes Like Superstar
UPI Sports
Ferguson Jenkins can't seem
to convmce hts owner that he IS
a superstar " but he has no
trouble makmg h1s poml w1th
the rest of the Nallonal League
Jenkms, who feels he should
be m the $100,000 a year
category of other star pitchers
such as Bob Gibson and Juan
Mancha!, hasn't been able to
reach that plateau m hts
negotiations wtth the ChiCago
Cubs' front office despite the
fact that he IS the only pitcher
m baseball to have won 20 or

lnbooly went all tl.e way for
Athens as he struck out f&lt;,ur and
walked fu~r
On May 12 the Marauders are
scheduled at Vmton
Athens
000 002 0-7 7 3
Met~s
000 200 1-3 3 7
Inbody and Kelly Will, (J,PJ,
Demoskey, (6), and DIXon

Brealttng In

Marichal Wins Fifth Contest
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Juan Mar1chal did a funny
thmg Monday enroute to h1s
ftfth ptlchmg VIctory of the
year
The 32-year.old San Francisco
G1ants star nghthander can he
expected to do somethmg he
hasn't done before m any
game At least, nval hitters always are lookmg for somethmg
new
What Mar1chal d1d Monday m
the e1ghth mmng of a game
agamst the Cmcmnati Reds was
call Ume w1th two men on, two
out and the dangerous Tony
Perez coming up
Two mmngs earlier Perez had
h1t a home run off Mar1chal to
get the Reds close at 3-2 Mart·
chal threw h1m what he later
called a "good fast-ball ' ObVIOusly, Juan wasn't about to
throw that same p1tch agam

lnbuoly prt•'&lt;-'Cdt-d t" rctJrc the
ncxllhrcc batters and choke off
the Marauder rally
Athens added two more m the
stxU• to push 1ts lead to 7 2
The Marauders fa1led to
mount any sertous threat m
the1r last two at bats but d1d add
a run on Steve Dunfee's
boommg tr1ple and R1ck Van
Ma tre s round out
Jed Wtll started for Metgs and
was cred1ted w1th the loss
Netther Wtll nor reliever Tim
Demosky gave up an earned
run They combmed to KO five
and walk three
Starter and wmner Steve

Downing •
Childs

Agency, Inc.

Bul'lders

The Ford Country
small car fact-finder

GAHS Outlasts Wellston, 9-8
Mark Johnson's smgle to batter Randy Ratcliff hurled the bottom of the s1xth to take
nghtf1eid with the bases loaded the !mal four and two-th1rds an 11-7 lead Wellston sent the
and two out m the bottom of the mmngs, and was charged w1th game mto extra mmngs w1th a
e1gllth mmng gave Coach Jim the defeat
run m the top of the seventh
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Wellston led 4-1 before the
In the bottom of the e1ghth,
Devils a thnlllng 9-8 Class AA Gallians exploded for siX runs m John Dav1s led off w1th a walk,
Central Secllonai baseball the fourth WHS rallied to knot stole se~ond Tom Prose
tournament v1ctory over the count at 7-7 m the s1xth smgled, but Davis was cut down
Wellston on Memor1al F1eld GAHS came back w1th one m
Monday evemng
Johnson's bmgle, hiS only
base h1t of the day, scored Tom
Prose w1th the wmmng run m
Eost
Amertcan League
W L PCT GB
the extra mmng contest
East
18 9 667
W L PCT GB
Today, the Gallipohtans w11l New York
Potlsburgh
18 11 621 1 Boston
18 9 667
hattie Portsmouth West in the St LOUIS
17 14 548 3 Balt1more
16 12 571 2'12
12 10 545 3'h Detroot
semlfmais of the Central Sec· Montreal
14 14 500 4'12
13 17 433 6112 New York
13 14 481 5
Ilona! Tournament, hegmmng Chicago
Philadelphia 9 18 333 9 Washmgton 13 16 448 6
at 4 p m , on Memonal F1eld
West
Cleveland
9 19 321 9'12
Wednesday, Gall1pohs will
W L PCT GB
West
W L Pet GB
take on the Ironton Tigers at San Francisco 23 9 719
Atlanta
15 15 500 7 Oakland
11 656
Evans F1eld m Rw Grande m a Los Angeles 15 17 469 B Kansas City 21
16 14 533 4
Southern DIVISIOn Houston
14 16 467 8 Caloforn oa ~ 16 16 500 5
CmCJnnatl
11 18 379 101/, Monnesola • "1s 15 500 5
(Southeastern OhiO League)
San Doego
9 20 310 12 112 Milwaukee
12 15 444 6'12
playoff game
Mondays Results
Chocago
10 18 357 9
In a drawmg for the diVISIOn San Fran 3 Cmc 2
Monday's Results
playoffs, the Galbans drew N Y 2 Houst 1
Kansas Coty 4 Balhmore 1
Choc 3 Phil 0
Detroit 5 California 2
Ironton Jackson automatically St
Lou" 8 Mont 5
{Only games scheduled)
rece1ved a bye Wmner of the
{Only games scheduled)
Today s Probable P1!chers
Today s Probable P1lchers
Galhpobs-Ironton contest will
Boston I Peters 3 2) at Mmne
St Louos (Cleveland 2 2) at sola I Hall) 1 2) noght
battle Jackson later th1s week Montreal
I Morton 3 4) noght
New York IStottlemyre 2 1l
for the Southern D1v1sion IItle
Houston ( Doerker 5O) at New at Mol waukee I Lockwood 2 2)
(provldmg the Ironmen beat York IRyan 13 0) night
mghl
Chocago
I
Hands
3
4)
at
Washington ICox 0 2) at
Waverly th1s afternoon m a Phlladetphoa tW1se 1 1l night
Chocago IJohnson 3 3) noght
makeup game)
Clnclnnato {Merrotl 0 3) at Calotornoa (Wright 2 3) at
Wmner of the SEOAL's San Francisco (Perry 3 1 or Detroot JLolich 52) n1ght
1 0) noght
Oakland ISeguo 3 2) at
Southern DiVISIOn will host the Reherger
Atlanta I Nash 2 2) at Los ~loveland I Dunning 2 2) night
Northern D1vts1on champion for Angeles {Osteen 4 2) night
Kansas Clly {Drago 4 1) at
Pltlsburgh IEllis 3 3) al San Baitomore I Dobson 2 2) night
the 1971 overall league chamDiego (Roberts 2 2) night
Wednesday's Games
pionship later th1s month
Wednesday's Games
Boston at Mmnesota {noght)
Thursday's GAHS game at St
at Mont lnoght)
NY at Molwaukee ln•ghtl
Pt Pleasant wtll be postponed If Houston at NY lnoghtl
Washmg at Chocago lnoghtl
Phil (nlghtl
Calif at Detroit (noght)
the Galhans capture back-toCinc:lnm•ti at S F
Oak at Cleveland {night)
hack triumphs today and
L lniaht
K C at Bait {noghtl
,~I nlohtl
Wednesday
Dave
Burnett started
yesterday's game, for GAHS,
hut was yanked in the stxth
m~ng wtth no one out Stan
Perry came m on r~llef, hurled
the fmal three mmngs and
rece1ved credit for the victory
Danny Settles started for
Wellston He was pulled In the
f•&gt;urth mmng after lBSumg five
walks and h!lllna one GAllS

WHERE
YOU SAVE
DOES MAKE 'A

DIFFERENCE

Another fact: Pinto at $1919*now
priced down with the imports
I

We paY you to save
(and the pay 15 good)

Manulacturer a suggaated rata I prlt a While

4%%

si dewall&amp; $29 accent opt on $60 dealer prepare
lio n chargaa If any tranaportallon charges st•te
and local taKes not included

PASSBOOK

RATE

Meigs Co. Branch

The Athens County
Sov1ngs I. Loon Co
l'6 Socond 51

Save in Ford Country~

Pomeroy, Ohto

Keith Goble Ford, lqc., 461 South Third St., Middleport, Ohio

•

�3-The Daily Senllnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , May II, 1971

WOiiien~·alWavs
1

"

Women have "manned" hospitals smce they
first opened thetr doors Bemg a servtce.ortented
lll91llutioo, the hosptlal's primary critenon for
employmenlts a conlrtbution to patten! care, not
one's sex
Perhaps for thts reason, and perhaps sunply
because carmg for the stck has lraditlOnally
been m the woman's prllVlllce, the hospttal offers
myrmd opporturultes for women of all ages,
backgrounds, and JOb mterests
There are even areas of the hosptlal where
women have an edge over men The most obVIOUS of these ts nursmg The nurse sees the
patient most and lB mdtspensabie to hts
recovery Nursmg is popular because tt offers
responstbibty, diverstly, good salary and
benefits, and almost guaranteed employment
Depending upon then- lrainmg, women can
etther be a regtstered nurse, practical nurse or a
nurse's atde
For the woman who lBn'l mleresled m
nursmg, the hospttal offers a wealth of other

,:::.;:e~~~7·,

Manned Hosnitals
r

opportumlies often overlooked by JOb hunters
Hosptlahzed patients eat three nourtshing
meals a day, and many women are employed m
planrung, cookmg, and servmg these meals
From the professtonal dtelltian to the atde who
serves the lray, careers m thts area of patten!
care are rewardmg ones
Most hospttals have phystcal therapy
departments, and for the trammg woman the
areas of phystcal, occupational, and recreatwnal
therapy offer umque rdwards Therapy gtves the
chance to work on a one-to-one basts wtth people
disabled m a vartety of ways, and to play a
stgmftcant role m thetr recovery
Other JOb sources m hospttals are laboratory
and x..-ay departments Both areas requu-e
tecllmctans with varying levels of trammg,
thereby opemng post lions for the woman who ts a
recent high school graduate as well as the one
wtth a poskollege degree
Professwnal jobs m non-medical areas are
also numerous More and more hospitals today

mam tam soc1al workers on their staff Women m
personnel or pubbc relatiOnS work should also
constder hospttal JObs on a full or part-tune
baSIS
For non-professtonal women, hosp1lals offer
equal employment opportumties and equal pay,
m addition to the satisfactton of helpmg people
Patients must recuperate m clean rooms on
clean !mens, and the llousekeepmg and laundry
serv1ces of a hospital are always acllve
Oencal work offers many Jobs essential to
hospital efficiency Admttting recepllontsts,
medical records hbranans, ward clerks,
secretanes, telephone operators, clerk-typists,
and many others keep the admmtstrative wheels
turrung while patients get well Most JObs free
health personnel from paper work so that they
have more time to spend m du-ect patient care
Many hosptlal JObs continue through three
different sh1fts, seven days a week Wh1le the
w1fe whose husband works mghts may prefer
workmg Similar hours, the workmg mother may

clJOose

to work while her children are m school

In a period of health manpower shortage, a
hoSPital may fmd It necessary to arrange
workmg schedules that accommodate ap·
phcants Hospital outpatient facilities offer
many Jobs at 9-5 hours for th011e prefemng a
1raditJon al scbeduIe Par.-•t une work lS a1so
frequentiy available
Women who find that they have some free
lime, should COOSider hospital volunteer work
JustafewboursaweekcanperformajobwhJCh
otherwtse nught not be done or would requll'e
removmg a full-tune employee from her usual
duti
es
Today, more and more men are demanding
equal rights With women in fields such as nursmg, therapy, and social work There lJ certainly
more than enough room for both male and
female m every area of hosptta1 employtl\enlhealth manpower and womanpower is at a great
premtum

Tonnage Cut in DC9 in Dispute
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Robert
Harrts, father of a Marshall
Umvermty football player kill·
td w1th 74 others In a DC9

Funeral Set
On WednesdJJy
MASON - Funeral servtces
for Ernest Huffman, 60 Mason,
who was pronounced dead on
amval at Veterans Memorial
Hospital ln Pomeroy Sunday,
will he held at I 30 p m Wednesday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home
Mr Huffman was born Dec
19, 1910 at Sweetland, W Va He
was a veteran of World War II
Surv1vmg are h1s parents,
, Henry and Tennessee Martin
Huffman, Hamlm, W Va , his
i Wife, Unnie, four daughters,
I Mrs Edna Kenny, Columbus ,
Mrs Sallle Conrad and M1ss
Helen J Huffman, both of
Mason , and Mrs Naom1 Pr1ce,
Poml Pleasant, a son, Everett,
1
'Jr , of Mason, and four grand·
1' Children Also surv1vmg are SIX
• brothers, William Jesse, James
0 , Bobble and Sheriff Troy
Huffman, all of Pomt Pleasant,
, Ray of Hamlin, and Roy of

~.~· Ga , and three sisters,

Mrs Opal Pridemore, Tifton,
~ll}.~yne., Kenlilcky.
and Mrs Callie Plumtey,
" Hamlin
OffJcJabng at the services wlil
be the Rev Eugene M Gar low
Bunal Will be m Kirkland
Memonal Gardens Fnends
may call at the funeral home
from 7 to 9 this evemng

crash last November, sa1d he
understands that only the
team's umforms were transported by truck the day of the
crash, not three tons of eqUipment such as Southern Airways
clauns
Harr1s told UP! Monday mght
the only eqmpment the team
was known to send by truck to
Greenville, N C last Nov 14
would have wetghed about 540
pounds
"I can t conceive of anythmg
the team would have had that
could have we1ghed three tons,"
Hams satd m answer to South
ern's conunent Monday that 1ts
DC9 had no overloadmg problem when it crashed near the
Huntington, W Va Airport durmg a hght rain Harris, who
has produced three letters alludIng to an overweight problem,

seeks the reopemng of hearmgs
mto the crash
A Southeern A1rways vtce
prestdent, RIChard N Harbottle,
sa1d Monday the problem concernmg the DC9 f11ght had been
cleared up by telephone
Accordmgly, it was agreed
the un1vers1ty would reduce the
we1ght by almost three tons,
movmg 11 by surface transporta
lion, Harbottle satd
We knew there had to be
some phone calls after the let
ters,' rephed Hams, but I
don't have any 1dea what eqmp
ment could have we1ghed three
tons I happened to be at the
game when the equipment
arnved and then when 11 left
The only thmg that was
transported was umforms,' he
satd It was a very small
truck "

PhUlip tf'olpert Dies at Age 59
NEW HAYEN - Phllhp J the Techmcal Educahon Sec
Wolpert, formerly of New bon and they moved from
Haven and more recently of 112 Fanwood to H1ll1ard
South Norwich, H1lhard, 0 , While m Mason County he was
d1ed m a Columbus, 0 hospital an active member of the Bend
Sunday evemng after an ex Rotary Club and Hidden Valley
tended Illness
Country Club
Mr Wolpert hved m New In add1tton to h1s w1fe other
Haven for several years and surviVOrs mclude a daughter,
was employed for the Central Mrs Robert (Suzanne) Merk'e
Operallng Company at the of Columbus Oh1o and a
Ph1hp Spornllant .January 15, , gran~d.aughter, Jenn1fer
1964 ..he-was promoted from Merkle The funeral servtces
OperatiOns Supervisor and wtll be held at I p m Wed
lransferred to the Amencan nesday m the Jerry Spears
Electric Power Company m Funeral Home on West Broad
New York City At that ltme Mr Street, Columbus, 0
Wolpert and hts Wife, Vtrgtnla, Fnends may call from 2 unbl
moved to Fanwood, N J , where 4 p m and from 7 until 9 p m
they res1ded until recenUy He today at the funeral home
retired as Semor Engmeer m

r------------------------------------------

1

Voice along Broadway

I

j
.

BY JACK O'BRIAN

The a1rllner crashed and
burned on 1ts return fl1ghl kill·
mg 36 players and all 75 per
sons aboard
Hams has sent the letters he
sa1d show the DC9 was unsafe
for the fhght to the Natwnal
TransportatiOn Safety Board
askmg that the mvesllgahon be
reopened The NLRB sa1d tt
would make an announcement
th1s week
The letters were dated Apr1l
18 and June 18, 1969, and Sept
28 1970, and were apparently
s1gned by Mernll Taylor, dJreclot of charter sales for South
ern, based m Atlanta, and d1
reeled to Charles Kautz asstsl·

ant athlettc director at Mar·
shall
In the letters, Taylor spoke
of the DC9 s phymcal lun1ta·
lions Harbottle, speaking for
the mrhnes, sa1d Monday, however ' the fl1ght was not
agreed to until the wetght on
board was reduced to meet not
only Southern Airways' slrJcl
reqUirements but the reqmre
ments of Huntmgton Airport "
Hams satd from what he has
learned however, the flight was
margmal m every aspect "
The pilot of the plane told
h1s wtfe before he left that If
there was a wet runway, 11
would be very margmal, Har-

ns sa1d "That doesn't appear
to he the greatest of safety
factors "
Harrts sa1d he was at Huntmgton Airport when word came
that a plane had crashed He
sa1d the president of Marshall
was there and felt somewhat
reheved when told that the
crashed au-liner was a DC9
'He sa1d they (the learn)
wouldn't he on a DC9," sa1d
Harrts No one could believe
they were on a DC9 The Wife
of the coach, Mrs (R1ck) Totley when told tl was a DC9,
said 11 couldn't be them Everyone was of the opmton they
weren t on a DC9 '

SF
101 100 OOx- 3 8 3
S1mpson Clonmger 141 Wd
cox 15), Granger 181 and
Bench Mancha! (52) and
GJbJon LP Simpson (I 1l HR
Perez (4th)
OOitiiiiiiPCii::::::::.___ Cho
ooo 001 02&lt;l- 3 9 o
Phil
000 000 ooo-o 4 0
Jenkms{6 21 and D Breeden
By Un1ted Press lnlernat•onal Short Hoerner 18) Brandon (9)
Lead1ng Bailers
and McCarver LP-Short 12 4)
NattonalG League
HR- Hockman 13rdl
AB R H Pet
Garr All
30 125 23 52 416 Hou
010 ooo ooo- 1 4 o
Mlln All
29112 12 44 393 N Y
000 000 20x- 2 6 0
Mays SF
27 93 21 36 387
Blasongame Gladdong (Bland
Davos LA
31 120 17 45 375 Edwards
Gentry McGraw (B)
Grote NY
26 86 15 31 360 and Grote WP Gentry 13 3)
Alou Hou
21 62 6 22 355
Brock Sl L 30 121 23 43 355 LP Blasongame 12 4)
smmns st L 30 102 12 34 333 Sl L
010 002 5DO- B 12 1
Strgll Pot
27 102 19 34 333 Mont
011 001 101- 5 9 1
Torre St L 32 120 19 39 325
Reuss lmzy (9) and Stm
Bckrl Cho
30 120 20 39 325 mons Renko Marshall 171
Amencan League
Reed (7) Stroghmayer (9) and
G AB R H Pet Bateman WP-Reuss (4 3) LP
Oliva Mon 28 118 25 48 401 Renko (3 2) Hrs Hague 2 (2nd
Ro 1as KC
30 116 17 39 336
Kllbrw Mon 28 107 14 36 336 1!. 3rd l
Schaal KC 30 96 17 32 333
Only games scheduled)
Holt Mon
26 69 6 23 333
Mrcr NY
27 100 14 33 330
Nrthrp Del 28 109 21 36 330
Amen can League
Scott Bos 24 93 10 30 323 Kan C1ty 000 010 3DO- 4 11 2
Unser Wash 26 78 7 25 321 Bait
000 000 011)- 1 5 0
Smoth Bos 27 lOB 18 34 315
Dal Canton (3 ll and May ,
Ystrzmsk Bos 27 92 25 315 McNally Richert (9) and
Home Runs
Dalrymple LP McNally 15 2)
NAT tONAL LEAGUE Star Hr Otos 15th)
gell Pitt 13 Aaron All 12
Bench C1n 11 Cepeda All 9 Cal
000 001 001- 2 7 2
Colbert, SO 8
Del
200 012 OOx- 5 6 0
AMERtCANLEAGUE Ol1va
Messersmoth Queen {6) Rey
M1nn 9 Powell Bait 7 Cash nolds 17) and Stephenson
Del and White NY 6 Smith Chance Schermanl5l Timmer
Bos Spen~r Ca I Horton Del man {9) and Freehan WPSando and Jackson Oak and Scherman 11 0) LP-Messer
OtiS KC 5
smoth {2 4) HR5-Mcaulolfe
Runs Batted tn
{4th) Repoz {3rd)
NATIONAL LAGUE Star
gell Pitt 33 Aaron All 28
Cepeda All and Mays SF 23
Colbert SO 22
AMERICAN LEAGUE Kolle WIN AT BRIDGE
brew Mlnn 25 Powell Ball 24

JJ

Yastrzemskl

Bas and North

rup Del 21 Bando Oak 20
Pttchlng
NATIONAL LEAGUE Jen
klns Ch1 6 2 Doerker Hous 5
0 Seaver NY 5 1 Upshaw
All Carlton St L and
Mancha! SF 5 2
Amencan League Blue Oak
B1 Siebert Bos 5 o Palmer
Bait 5 1 McNally Bait Lol lch

fh ree Contenders
ONUCops
Line Up for Joe District

Championship
Bidding
NORTH

.K

Oet Perry M1nn and Hunter

Oak 52

By GARY KALE
UPI SporiS Wrtter
It was unammously agreed
Monday mght that former
champiOns Jtmmy Ell1s and
Erme Terrell have as much
r1ght to a shot at Joe Frazter's
heavyweight title as undefeated
George Foreman
Foreman was the most tmpresstve of the three as he
scored the only knockout m the
lllree-bout mternahonal closed
ctrcutt televtsJon spectacular
held m Oakland Toronto and
Chtcago Eilts and Terrell were
ahead on all offlctal scorecards
m the1r respective I0-1 ound
bouts
The 22-year old Foreman,
who gamed notonety by waVIng
the Amencan flag at the 1968
Olymp1cs whde several US
Athletes were dehvermg 1mproper gestures at medal-wmmng
ceremomes, knocked out
Argenlme champwn Gregorio
Peralta &lt;n the lOth round of a
scheduled 15 cound test at
Oakland, Calif
Ell1s, who lost h1s World
Boxmg Assoctation T1tle to
Fraz1er 15 months ago, spotted
George Chuvalo 17'h pounds
and then rtpped the Canaxdian
champ to Ribbons over the 10round route m Toronto In the
f1rst bout of the TV trlpleheader, Terrell, another former
WBA titleholder, had little
trouble beatmg Braztllan
champ LoUis Pires m Ch1cago

and made the Argentinian h1s
25th knockout VICUm m 28 pro
ftghts when the referee stopped
the1r bout at 2 52 of the lOth
Under Cahforma rules, the fight
goes mto the books as a stra1ght
kayo mstead of a techntcal
knockout
Foreman, we1ghmg 216'h to
196 for the 36-year.old Peralta,
did not appear allXlous for an
Immediate confrontation With
Fraz1er
My manager makes mv
f1ghts, sa1d Foreman 'I'll f1ght
whoever he s1gns me to f1ght "
D1ck Saddler, Foreman's
manager, sa1d "We are m no
hurry for Frazier because we
ftgure he won't f1ght any more
th1s year When he lB ready for
us, we w1ll he ready for him
Our unmediale plans now are to
getasmanyflghtsaswe can the
rest of th1s year and then we'll
see what happens"

I came out fast and my best
punch of the mght was the r1ght
I threw mthe fu-st round when 1t
open a cut over his rtght eye,\!.
sa1d ElliS
Ellis performed surgery three
other Urnes over Chuvalo's left
eye as he kept conlrol of the
fight
' Junmy certainly proved he
didn'thave the glass jaw that he
had m the FraZier f~ght,"
commented Elhs' manager
Angelo Dundee "He fought
beautifully, but George fought
hard too I knew Jimmy would
wm If lje didn't fall m and g1ve
Georgetune to think "
Ellis expects to resume h1s
medl8tely m the hopes of landmg a return bout w1th
Frazier or one wtth former
champ Muhammad Ali
Terrell, starling another
comeback round, lB lookmg for
prep bouts with Floyd Patterson
or Jerry Quarry before attempting a shot at Frazier
Wetghlng 219 pounds to 215 for
Pires, Terrell w011 his fourth
slratght bout smce commg off a
three-year layover last
December
1 won b1g/' Terrell satd,
"but Ptres Ill an awkward and
strong fighter I knew I hurt him
but 11 was hard to know when he

22 Crown
LIMA, Oh10 (UP!) - Ohio
Northern won the NAJA District
22 golf tournament by three
strokes at the Hawthorne Hills
Golf Course here Monday whtle
Defiance College won the Mid·
Qhw Conference title
Northern's Mike Smtth won
mdiVIdual honors 10 sudden
death overttme after flmshing
the '!/holes m a tie w1th Br1an
Hayes of Walsh w1th lOS's
Ohto Northern fmJShed at 448,
followed by Walsh w1th 451,
Bluffton 470, Cedarville 476,
defendmg champion R1o
Grande 477, Fmdlay 480,
Malone 484 and Wilmington 537
In the Mid-OhiO cham-

II

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West
Pass

North

East

South

1•

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·, See article for further h1d~

4...

dmg

Openmg lead-See art1cle

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here 1s another hand from
our match agamst Braz11 m
the World s championship
The b1ddmg m the box 1s
what took place when Jtm
Jacoby and Bobby Wolff held
the North South cards for
North Amenca
The Braz1han East player
elected to double f1ve clubs
He held two aces and felt
that hts good spades m back
of North s spade smt would
gtve South some trouble He
turned out to be wrong smce
South held Just one spade
and w1th 12 trumps tn the
combmed hands there was
no problem about handlmg
any potenhal losers except
for one heart and one d1a
mond
The btddmg went the same
way at the other table unttl
the five-club b1d c am e
around to Bobby Goldman,
who held the East hand for
North Amenca
Bobby thought about dou
blmg f1ve clubs but came to
the concluston that he
'o\Ouldn't set 1! more than one
tnck and posstbly f1ve clubs
would make In any event
there was a very good
chance that live hearts would
breeze home Therefore
Bobby b1d 1!
South doubled that and as
you readers can see five
hearts would make easily
but at th1s pomt Gabnel
Chagas who played magmh
cently for Braz1J throughout
the entire tournament made
the bnlllant deciSion to ~o to
s1x clubs That deciSion
saved somethmg from the
wreck but we scored 550 at
one table and 100 at the
other for 12 IMPs

created the des1gn wh1ch lransformed the Pierre
P 1o n s h 1P •
PI a Y e d
sunultaneously w1th the NAJA
Ballroom from lls expensively functional
game on the local links, Jim
TO LOVE LUCI IS
monotony mto a dazzhng fantasy of fabnc and
Buzzard took medalist honors m
TO LOVE TV
lights
Dancing under thts sumptuous cellmg
sudden
death overtime after he
NEW YORK - LBJ's son-m~aw Pat were such pretty people as Judy Lew1s, Loretta
and Jun Roach of Bluffton each
Nugent's tycooning 11 just like pop~n-law Filed Young's sparkling daughter, Paulme Tngere,
Peralta, who says Foreman
t1mshed at 111
a Cedar Rapida, Iowa, appllcahon for cable-'IV who rates w1th the top three or four personal
st11l has a lot to learn," was
Defiance flmshed at 458•
Bill Meloney (former husband of "Oaudia" peaks m Amencan couture, lovely Lyn Revson,
bleedmg from the nose and
followed by Bluffton 470,
playwright Rose Franken) died in Connecticut handsome wtfe of Revlon cosmetics kmg Charlie
hopmg for the bell to end the
Cedarville 476, Fmdlay 480,
ABC-TV's man-about-show biz John Revson, and Charhe, of course, Eleanor
lOth round when he was floored
Malone 484 and Wilmington 537
Scbubeck plays post-midnight Playboy-door- Howard, w1fe to pubhsher Jack, D1ana Lyrm
w1th three strrugllt nghts to the
head He took a mandatory
Johnny to a beautiful N Y hutch-bunny
Joe Hall of the flicks and now of SOCiety, Julie Mce1ght-count and when Foreman
Frazler's$2,500,000ftghtfeewasdeservedbutas Connell, who once sang m the tomes! places as
unloaded wtth SIX good combm·
for his rock-act Joe's Lake Tahoe's King's Jube Waterbury , and hundreds of affluents from
at10ns, referee Elmer Costa
Castle showcase seats 750 - and Joe drew 39 the arts, sctences and money
stopped
the slaughter •
customers, Variety reports
Once upon a snob, N y society" wouldn't
was hurt "
Ell1s,
we1ghmg
191
to
218.,.
for
lerrell almost closed Pires' By United Press International
John Ericson of the younger H'wood hamlets rub shoulders or elbows With what was looked
Chuvalt,
clubbed
the
Canadian
left eye In the second round w1th Today lB Tuesday, May II,
jetted all the way to Bdwy to audition for a sub· down on as "The Cloak and Smters, • and an
continuously
and
only
Chuvalo's
a
pile driver blow and cut the the !31st day of 1971
role m Bacall's "Applause," but Keith Charles invasiOn on 7th Ave designers and manufacmtense des1re to retain hiS Brazilian around the mouth in The moon ts between 1ts full
got the part
J Carson's musical WhiZ but turers into expens1ve restaurants and cafes
reputation of never haVIng he en the nmth round Terrell suf· phase and last quarter
sartor1alfreak Doc Severlnsen will doo a quteler meant almost Instant-avoidance by the so-called
Foreman's v1ctory was the knocked off hts feel kept the fered a cut over his right eye In The mormng stars are Venus,
outf1tfor hts daughter Judith's Aug 15 altar dale Uppah Crust of the Social Reg1ster and m-&lt;&gt;ocJety
most 1mpress1ve of the three f1ght from going mto the record the siXth, but 1t didn't hamper Mars, Mercury and Juptter
With Emory Castilnore Jr of Augusta None of columns
book as a knockout for Ell1s
his style
The evemng starts Salltrn
the normal racetrack hysteria touches MonThe old N Y soc1al set urutated Bn!Jsh He heat Peralta 15 months ago
Those born on th1s day are
mouth's Gen'l Mgr Harvey Wardell, a 24-year royalty and nob1hty Folks m "trade" and
under the s~gn of Taurus
racmg veteran ll's all been downhill since especrally m the 'serv1ce" trades such as
American song wr1ter Irvmg
USAF naVIgator Harve spent seven months m a dressmakers, shopkeepers, etc , were to be
erlln was born May II, 1868
Nw prtson.of-war camp
avmded, snubbed was more the case But 7th
On lh1s day m hlsMelba Moore escaped from "Hau-" mto Avenue hung m there doggedly for decades and
ry
"Purlie" to get her f1rst fme serious raves for now (re-named the "Fashwn Set") thetr custom
In 1858 Minnesota entered the
her most entertainmg talents
Melba's a huge lB sought by restaurants, mghtclubs and,
INDIANAPOUS, Ind (UP!) The once exclumve club "170" quickest tour of the lrack w1th a Umon as the 32nd stale
rughklub hit In the hmlerlands as she polishes ultunate trmmph, by the old "society" hostesses - Racmg at 170 m1le5 per hour now has 11 members and all 175 063 Revson's car IS tden- In 1910 Glac1er Nattonal Park
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSH)
mater18l for her Waldorf-Astoria stardom who woo destgners such as Paulme Trigere, Bill m practice for the May 29 In- toured the 2'h mile oval m tical to Donohue's
m Montana was created by an
shorUy
Blass, Oscar de Ia Renta, turner Michael d1anapohs 500-rrule race has excess of the mag1c bamer
Bobby Unser, Albuquerque, Act of Congress
No doubt remains that Boris Aronson ts Forrest, Kenneth J Lane (costume jewelry lost some of 1ts luster smce Monday
N M , the 1968 lnd18118polis In 1928 Station WGY m
The btddmg has been
Bdwy 'sflnest stage designer The proof Is thiS yet'), merchandiser Danny Zarem, shoe Mark Donohue of Media, Pa
Theclubptckedup three new champiOn, was a fraction &amp;henectady, N Y , began the
West North Easl South
sensahonal septuagenarian's scemcs for des1gner David EVIns, Mrs Bernard Lanvln started speedmg shortly after membersandahandfulofother slower than Revson at 1750 ftrst regularly scheduled leleVI·
Pass
"Follies," "Company," "Cabaret," "The (perfumes), Andrew Goodman (Bergdorf's), the lrack opened Mav 1
dr1vers were on the threshold of mph
s1on programs
Pass
1¥
Pass
4¥
Pr1ce " Here's what telephones mean to a top Gordon Franklin (Saks 5th), Bob SkaowJtz
entry
Mar1on Andretti,
Rook1e John Mahler, Betten- In 1903 a truce between Pass
4•
Pass
'
You South hold
Manhaltan restaurant the huge water mam ('l'exas stores) etc, and 80 N y social life has
The Dait. Sentinel Nazareth, Pa , raised hts best dorf, Iowa, and Bud Tlnglestad, Negroes and whiles ended m .K5U
¥K632 .AKQ .74
break on 59th St killed phone service at the ch1c been revitaliZed (the Old Guard still snob down ,
DEVOTE'~ TO THE
average m hts second day of Speedway, Ind., were on the B1rmmgham, ala, w1th the
What do you do now?
Quo Vadis Busmess from palrons who couldn't their pa1rJcl8n schnozzes and bewail this soctal
INTER EST OF
runmng to 174 250 mph m an track for the f1rst lime bombing of the home of the
A-B1d SI:JQ hearts Your partfeel secure enough to gel through wtthout crop rotation, but they never go anywhere, while
CH~~~~sR ~A~~~ ::~,tL
Andy Granatell1 German-built Tlnglestad qwckly recorded a Rev A D Kmg, brother of ner IS trymg for a slam beyond
11ame You have enouch to bid 1t
the ones who chipped off that austere block to
Exec Ed
racer
68 8lap, Showmg indications of Martin Luther King Jr
reservations fell off 50 per cent
TODAY'S QUESTION
The Feather Ball at the Pterre Ballroom jom the more democrahc fun and the Society of
ROBEC~t~ ~~~:rLICH
Johnny Rutherford, Fort workmg up towards the speed
Instead of b1ddmg one hearl
A thought for today BenJa· yout partner has reb1d three
alwaysll!oneoftherarebpghtfmaleventsm the Accomplishment pronounce the change
Pubi&lt;Shed daoly except Worth, Tex, and Loyd Ruby, circle of the qwck 11
min
Franldm sa1d, "Expenence clubs over your one dtamond
long wmter's Beautiful People Season It's delightfully enlertammg)
~~·br,~~~n~Y ~~·m~~·~ YVall~~ WIChita Falls, Tex , also jomed
Two other rookies worked
charity (JllBI One Break, which finda hanCourt
Pomeroy Ohio -the speed Cll'cle Both were through two phases of thetr Ill a dear school, but fools w11l What do you do now?
Now these once stuffy-dreary Grand Balls :&lt;:·•:,_Bu~;~;~;;~,~tl•ce
o Phone WI th ma tICk of the watch of the dr1vers• tests Larry cann on, learn m no other "
dicapped people, Ira'"" and then finds them
uu
have taken on a new Manhattan dunenston
6,
' Phone 992
th
th R b 1
D 11 m nd Dee J
j«&lt;bb) was the creation of theatncal producer
o er WI
u y astest at 170 5 anVI e,
, a
ones,
After all, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor put
second class postage paod at and Rutherford at 170 4
Phoenix, Ariz each have two
Orin Lehman apt! hlJ sister Ellen Lehman their Imprimatur on Kenny J Lane when the Pomeroy Ohio
But Donohue was the speed· plateaus to pass before !mal
u.J"'...&amp;.ey the international designer
N at Ion a I advert's In g
BIDS ACCEPTE
"''""""" •
Duchess ordered a knave's ranaom In Kenny's representatove Botllnelll leader on the busiest day of the certification
KELL SIGNS
D
Orin, ihjured as a bombardier when he unllalion-crownJewelry, and the ex-Brlllllh King ~1a 11~~~·~oi~'c,,~2,_E1 e~'v~2rnko monlll at the track He outraced
Speedway officials said 59 of SAN DIEGO (UP!) -Chip SCHENECTADY, N y
bailed outofhlll Alr Force plane 10 WW ll, wound and his Duchess even urge hostesses to have,
Subsmptoon rotes oe the other 39 drivers taking to the the 77 cars entered for lhe race Kell, a two-year All America (UP!) -Bids for the ftrst
up In Nazi
prilon
hoepJtalJ,
and
he
had
the
f1rst
say,
Oscar
de
Ia
Renta
along
as
weekend
guests,
l•vered
by carroer where oval with an unofficial 177 .nv
•••, were m the garage at the close football player from Tennessee, national collegwte lacrosse
• 0 ..__
available 50 cents per week
noUoooor J B .-.use he understood what war- Simply becapse he ts "charmmg and amusing", By Moto1 Route where carrier more than a half-mile an hour of pracltce Monday '!bey added Monday s1gned a profesatonal champ10nsh1p tournament have
ruined ""'"
l.i.~o~ ... would be up agalmt' ln their
available One
d hts best circuit at 53 of th ose mac hi nes In contract wi th the San Diego been accepted b", Navy, Vtrgino more Debrelt's to pore over to lrv and match servtre
mon tn $l not
75 By mall .n Ohio un er
tltlperate ptlltWit ~erainble for honest work
up a fitting palrJng-off on the Duke's soclallevel, and w
'Jne veor $14 oo 177 901
"Gasoline Alley" had passed Chargers of the National n1a, ICornell, Army and Brown
....... ....... ~La.-~:
.. _.
Dent Leb
She m
h s S1 2s Thru
Pe
R
f
hni I'"~U Flfty-"'«h(
t
'"" _., ..... .,are,
man fact Ill, It's a good thing The Duke's that en- lo~;~t~n~~clcode; Subsc roploon
ter evson o New York tee ca • ..,... on,
~· Football League Kell will try I was announced Monday by
fudlr ipCINGI'Iblp, and lilt linlndal result tertammg personally, else he'd be stuck in the 15
Sunday Times City made 11 a complete drivers alJq had passed phySI- to make the Chargers as a Bruce Alllllon, NCAA rules and
~~~kY~,gMs. __________________L______~·--------_j ~M~c~IB
~r~e~
n !show~~~~~ !_~c~
ab
~~------------~~~----_.________~JI~
our
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tc~ha
~unum
~~-----.--~
11

170 Club Growmg
e

Today'•
Almanac

!"'

·-ace

1.

Marauders Dropped by Athens 7-3
Smith One-Hits
Starr·Wash 9
Btg Dave Snuth's one-h1t
Pitching was the key Monday
mght as the Eastern Eagles
knocked Starr-Washmgton from
secllonal tournament play at
Starr-Washmgton
W1th the score 0-0, Denms
E1chmger led off the second
mnmg w1th a smgle, later
stealmg second Snuth got to
ftrst base on catcher m
lerference, and Alan Duvall's
liner was bobbled, allowmg
E1chmger to score Randy
Young walked, Tom Karr
smgled m Snuth for a 2.0 lead,
and a bases full catcher mterference produced the th1rd
Eagle run of the mmng
This was all Stmth needed, and more - as he blerally
mowed down the enemy bats

men Dave's shutout btd was
spoiled m the stxth as hts only
walk and Eastern's only error
led to a s1xth mnmg run In all,
Smtth's blazing fastball ac
counted for 16 str1ke outs
Losmg Pitcher Randy Smnott
walked only one and allowed the
tough Eagles only four htts
whde fanmng 10
Denms Etchmger had two h1ts
for the Eagles wh1le Karr and
Bormg had one ap1ece Scott
Hardman had S W's only hit, a
double
The Eagles play Glouster m
the second round of sectional
play today
1
sw
000 001 0-:1 1 2
East
030 000 X-4 4 I
Smnott and Hardman Slmth
and Young

A fired up Athens' baseball
team used a three h1t p1tchmg
performance by sophomor~
Steve Inbody to pry a 7-3 victory
from the Marauders at Mid·
dleport Monday The bulldogs
pushed hard all the way to
avenge an earlier 20-6 loss to
Metgs at Athens The IO¥ made
the Marauders 9-4 overall and 3·
3m league actwn, the latter now
ended
Netther team was able to
score m the ftrst stanza a~ both
Inbody and Me1gs' nghthanded
semor Jed W1ll came out
throwmg hard
But
Athens
Mark
Bndgewater opened the second
w1th a walk and Don Wood
advanced tum to second as he
reached first on an error Wtll
fanned M1ke Green and Jun
Swearmgen's ftelders ' chmce
forced wood at second,
Bndgewater movmg to thu-d,
w1th two out Handley drew a
base on balls to load the bases
for Les Horvath who proceeded
to smash a hard grounder
through the shortstop's legs

When the throw 1n from left
held was delayed by ball
handbng m the outfield, the
Bulldogs poured m three runs
Horvath raced home later on
Tom Daft's smgie
Daft had gotten to second on
another error Steve Inbody
lashed a long smgle and Daft
sprmted for home The relay

from shortstop Steve Dunfee
reached catcher Roger D1xon
only seconds before Daft began
hts slide fo!'--home plate, the
ensumg contact lletween Dtxon
and Daft caused the ball to
spurt from Dixon's m1tt and
allow the fifth Athens run of the
mmng Ketth Kelly s mfteld fly
ended the Athens hall of the

mmng, a d1stmct Metgs
dlBaster
Inbody kept hts 5-ll lead until
the fourth when he handed out
successtve walks to D1xon and
Dave Boyd and gave up Stan
Wtlson s long smgle W1lson s
ball was bobbled, and m the
confuswn Dtxon and Boyd
scored Wilson reachmg thtrd

So he called for tune, gathered the Gtants mf1eld and catcher Russ Gibson around h1m at
the mound and they d1scussed
how they should pitch to Perez
th1s time
Everyone agreed w1th me I
should throw h1m screwballs
and breaking pttches low and
away," Mancha! sa1d later
'When you have to face
a tough man like Perez m that
kmd of a s1tuat10n 1t's good for
everyone to know how a pitcher ts gomg to throw to the
man
Talk Doesn't Hurt
That way," Mancha! went
on, 'they become a part of the
pitching pattern and can be
ready for whatever comes to
them It certamly doesn t hurt
to talk thmgs over "
Mar1chal stuck to the team '
plan and fed Perez a screwball

a curve low and away a slider
and then a screwball agam The
fou~th p1tch Perez fouled off
f1rst base and Frank Johnson
hauled 11 m to end the threat
In the mn th Mancha! struck
out both Lee May and Berme
Carbo and rehred Tommy
Heims on a fly to center to
preserve the 3-2 tr1umph It
was Juan s f1fth of the year
compared to two losses and
along the way he p1cked up the
2000th stnkeout of hts career
Manager Charle Fox d1dn't
feel the least b1t slighted when
he 11asn't mcluded m the confer
ence on the mound m the e1ght
"All I ve done from spnng
trammg on,' said Fox 'ts en&amp;
courage them to talk thmgs
over among themselves They II
never hear a word from me on
that score and wh1le we re on
the subJect, I haven t called one

Pirate Thinclads Top Kyger Creek

more games m each of the last
four seasons
It bothers Jenkins that the
Cubs underrate h1m, but the
only thmg he can do IS prove
that they are wrong And, 1f he
keeps gomg the way he has
been over the last three weeks
he may make management see
thmgs h1s way
The l).fool-5, 205-pound righthander recorded hiS f1fth
consecutive complete game
v1ctory Monday mght by
stoppmg the Philadelphia Phillies, 3-ll, on four h1ts while

For

E leg a nee

1n

P1pe

Smoktng Pleasure, Select a
Ptpe that Needs No

Tawney Jewelers
Second Ave
Galhpohs, Ohoo

422

Capturmg e1ght fu-st place
positions, North Galha defeated
Kyger Creek, 65-57' m a track
meet Monday mght on the
Bobcat cmders
Heres Monday's results
120-YARD HIGH HURDLES
- Dotson NG , Collins KC and
Thompson, KC 171
100-YARD DASH - Brown,
NG Taylor,NGandWh1te KC
10 4
MILE RUN - Howard, KC
Hall, NG, and Colhns KC 5 06
881l-RELAY- Won by North

Galha I 38
440. YARD RUN - Thompson,
KC, Howell, NG and Gordon
KC 56 8
180-YARD LOW HURDLESDotson, NG, Dotson NG and
While, KC 23 8
880- YARD RUN - Rumley
KC Rumley, KC, and Radliff,
NG 2 30 2
220-YARD RUN - Brown,
NG, Swisher, KC and Taylor
NG 25
TWO MILE RUN - Hall NG,
Garnes, NG and Rankm, KC

12 14 8
MILE RELAY - Won by KC
4 01 5
FIELD EVENTS
SHOT PUT - Dew11t, NG
Hall, NG and Johnson, KC

sinking out 12 The tr1umph
was h1s s1xth of the season
agamst two losses, making h1m
the first pitcher m the league to
notch that many vJctones thts
season

'I feel I m m a class w1th
G1bson and Mancha!, but the
front offtce doesn't thmk that
way I'd like to show them that
I am If I have one goal this
year 1t s to become a $100,000 a
year p1tcher, ' sa1d Jenkins,
who s1gned for an est~mated
$85,000 th1s year
The Ph1lhes JUSt m1ght be

NG 53

•

38'2

DISCUS - Dewttl, NG
Swisher KC and Lawhon KC
102'3 '
LONG JUMP - Colhns KC
Blankenship KC and Howell
NG 18'9
HIGH JUMP - Johnson KC
Thompson, KC and Robertson

SEE US
FOR THE SUPPLIES
YOU WILL NEED
FOR NEW OR
REMODELING PROJECTS

e INSULATION
e PAINTS
e ANTIQUING KITS
e MARLITE
e MOLDINGS
e FORMICA
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e PANELING
e KITCHEN CARPETING
e ARMSTRONG CEILING TILE
e PLUMBING FIXTURES e PLUMBING SUPPLIES
e CERAMIC WALL AND FLOOR TILE

long way to go and anythmg
can happen '
As of the moment, the G1ants
are fu-st m the N L West With
a 23-9 record, but they are
seven games ahead of the nearest team and that team tsn'l
Cincmnalt The Reds are bogK1lchen Cabmets
Electncal Wtrmg
ged down IO'h games hehmd
and
and ~upphes for
San Franc1sco
Wtlhe Mays drove m the
Those hard to fmd ttems But It In Appliances
"I
don
't
feel
G1ants' first run m Monday's
game w1th a f1rst mmng smgle
so good!"
Metal Shelf Brackets
Alummum Storm
In the lh1rd, the G1ants loaded You II feel much better ol
and Standards For
Doors and Wmdows
the bases on walks and a run you know that you are
That
Walt Arrangement
scored while Ken Henderson adequately 1nsured w1l h a
local lndependenl agenl
was h1tlmg mto a doubleplay such
as the Downmg Childs
wh1ch started wtth a force at Agency We are not em
second and wound up With a ployees of any 1nsurance
Amerock-Cablnet
Foldmg Doors-we represent
lagout at home after a run had company
Hardware
Both Wood &amp; Plasttc
you In getlmg full set
scored
tlement of your loss claims
AI Gallagher doubled leadmg
off the fourth and T1to Fuentes
ALSO MANY
scored htm with a smgle As
IT-YOURSELF H
thmgs turned out, that was the
wmnmg run for Mancha! and
the G1ants
The two teams play agam to
mght w1th J1m Merntt p1tchmg
200 N. 2nd
992-3748
for the Reds and Gaylord PerMIDDLEDnDT
N2
MIDDLE PO
Jenkms N&lt;&gt; 1 supporter H1s ry for the Giants
' - - - - - - · - - . . Uliii,.;;ioili_,lliiilllillilll___________"!
v1ctory over them was h1s 16111 ,
m 21 career dec1s10ns smce
they traded h1m to tile Cubs m
1967 Jenkms reltred 17 batters
m a row after Larry Bowa
opened the th1rd mmng w1th a
smgle and stole second
J1m Htckman provided Jen:;/
kms w1th all the baltmg suppol't
he needed Htckman smgled to
help build a run m the s1xth
and cracked a two run homer m
the e1ghth to lag Chns Short
w1th h1s fourth loss m SIX
dectsJOns
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today•
trymg to score Kev Sheets
smgled, and Chuck Perroud
walked to load the sacks
R1ck Boone fanned for the
second out, then came John
son's game-wmmng blow
It was Gall1a s 12th wm
P1nto
VW113
agamst three setbacks, and 11
was the Blue Devils etghth one
Pinto has the
94 0 .
Wheelbase
95 3'
same
turmng corcle
run triumph of the 1971 camOverall
asVW
paign Wellston dropped to 12-10
Length
163 0"
161 8
overall
Overall
Dave Burnett paced GAHS at
Pmto has a lower
69 4.
W1dth
624
Silhouette
wider stance
the plate w1th three smgles m
50
1
•
and
greater
weight to
Height
591"
four tnps Prose, Sheets and
hold
the
road
better tor
Boone each had two smgies
Front Tread
55 0 '
54 3
example, m a crosswind
Joe Martm was three-forRear Tread
550
53 3
three for Wellston (mcluding a
Curb
Rack &amp; pmlon s1eenngdouble) and Jack Huffman was
We•ght (lb)
2030
1918
the k1nd on expensive
three for four Randy Ratcliff
sports
Imports hke
Steenng
Rack &amp;
Roller
had a triple for the losers
Steenng Jaguar and Porsche
PiniOn

hJl and run play thts year and
I thmk we ve tr1ed that at
least two dozen ltmes "
Maybe Fox wtll get drummed
out of the manager s ' unwn
for not managmg, but who can
argue w111l success'
Still Good Chance
A year ago th1s date the
Reds had a 23 9 won-lost record
and were m first place by four
games m the Nahonal League
West, Manager Sparky Anderson was tellmg anyone who
would hsten that hts team
would wm the flag
H1story and circumstances
made a prophet out of Anderson, but wa1t unltl you hear
what he IS saymg thts year
After the Reds bowed to the
Gtan ts Monday, Anderson sa1d
bravely h1s team "sltll has a
good chance There IS a long,

Jenkins Makes Like Superstar
UPI Sports
Ferguson Jenkins can't seem
to convmce hts owner that he IS
a superstar " but he has no
trouble makmg h1s poml w1th
the rest of the Nallonal League
Jenkms, who feels he should
be m the $100,000 a year
category of other star pitchers
such as Bob Gibson and Juan
Mancha!, hasn't been able to
reach that plateau m hts
negotiations wtth the ChiCago
Cubs' front office despite the
fact that he IS the only pitcher
m baseball to have won 20 or

lnbooly went all tl.e way for
Athens as he struck out f&lt;,ur and
walked fu~r
On May 12 the Marauders are
scheduled at Vmton
Athens
000 002 0-7 7 3
Met~s
000 200 1-3 3 7
Inbody and Kelly Will, (J,PJ,
Demoskey, (6), and DIXon

Brealttng In

Marichal Wins Fifth Contest
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Juan Mar1chal did a funny
thmg Monday enroute to h1s
ftfth ptlchmg VIctory of the
year
The 32-year.old San Francisco
G1ants star nghthander can he
expected to do somethmg he
hasn't done before m any
game At least, nval hitters always are lookmg for somethmg
new
What Mar1chal d1d Monday m
the e1ghth mmng of a game
agamst the Cmcmnati Reds was
call Ume w1th two men on, two
out and the dangerous Tony
Perez coming up
Two mmngs earlier Perez had
h1t a home run off Mar1chal to
get the Reds close at 3-2 Mart·
chal threw h1m what he later
called a "good fast-ball ' ObVIOusly, Juan wasn't about to
throw that same p1tch agam

lnbuoly prt•'&lt;-'Cdt-d t" rctJrc the
ncxllhrcc batters and choke off
the Marauder rally
Athens added two more m the
stxU• to push 1ts lead to 7 2
The Marauders fa1led to
mount any sertous threat m
the1r last two at bats but d1d add
a run on Steve Dunfee's
boommg tr1ple and R1ck Van
Ma tre s round out
Jed Wtll started for Metgs and
was cred1ted w1th the loss
Netther Wtll nor reliever Tim
Demosky gave up an earned
run They combmed to KO five
and walk three
Starter and wmner Steve

Downing •
Childs

Agency, Inc.

Bul'lders

The Ford Country
small car fact-finder

GAHS Outlasts Wellston, 9-8
Mark Johnson's smgle to batter Randy Ratcliff hurled the bottom of the s1xth to take
nghtf1eid with the bases loaded the !mal four and two-th1rds an 11-7 lead Wellston sent the
and two out m the bottom of the mmngs, and was charged w1th game mto extra mmngs w1th a
e1gllth mmng gave Coach Jim the defeat
run m the top of the seventh
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Wellston led 4-1 before the
In the bottom of the e1ghth,
Devils a thnlllng 9-8 Class AA Gallians exploded for siX runs m John Dav1s led off w1th a walk,
Central Secllonai baseball the fourth WHS rallied to knot stole se~ond Tom Prose
tournament v1ctory over the count at 7-7 m the s1xth smgled, but Davis was cut down
Wellston on Memor1al F1eld GAHS came back w1th one m
Monday evemng
Johnson's bmgle, hiS only
base h1t of the day, scored Tom
Prose w1th the wmmng run m
Eost
Amertcan League
W L PCT GB
the extra mmng contest
East
18 9 667
W L PCT GB
Today, the Gallipohtans w11l New York
Potlsburgh
18 11 621 1 Boston
18 9 667
hattie Portsmouth West in the St LOUIS
17 14 548 3 Balt1more
16 12 571 2'12
12 10 545 3'h Detroot
semlfmais of the Central Sec· Montreal
14 14 500 4'12
13 17 433 6112 New York
13 14 481 5
Ilona! Tournament, hegmmng Chicago
Philadelphia 9 18 333 9 Washmgton 13 16 448 6
at 4 p m , on Memonal F1eld
West
Cleveland
9 19 321 9'12
Wednesday, Gall1pohs will
W L PCT GB
West
W L Pet GB
take on the Ironton Tigers at San Francisco 23 9 719
Atlanta
15 15 500 7 Oakland
11 656
Evans F1eld m Rw Grande m a Los Angeles 15 17 469 B Kansas City 21
16 14 533 4
Southern DIVISIOn Houston
14 16 467 8 Caloforn oa ~ 16 16 500 5
CmCJnnatl
11 18 379 101/, Monnesola • "1s 15 500 5
(Southeastern OhiO League)
San Doego
9 20 310 12 112 Milwaukee
12 15 444 6'12
playoff game
Mondays Results
Chocago
10 18 357 9
In a drawmg for the diVISIOn San Fran 3 Cmc 2
Monday's Results
playoffs, the Galbans drew N Y 2 Houst 1
Kansas Coty 4 Balhmore 1
Choc 3 Phil 0
Detroit 5 California 2
Ironton Jackson automatically St
Lou" 8 Mont 5
{Only games scheduled)
rece1ved a bye Wmner of the
{Only games scheduled)
Today s Probable P1!chers
Today s Probable P1lchers
Galhpobs-Ironton contest will
Boston I Peters 3 2) at Mmne
St Louos (Cleveland 2 2) at sola I Hall) 1 2) noght
battle Jackson later th1s week Montreal
I Morton 3 4) noght
New York IStottlemyre 2 1l
for the Southern D1v1sion IItle
Houston ( Doerker 5O) at New at Mol waukee I Lockwood 2 2)
(provldmg the Ironmen beat York IRyan 13 0) night
mghl
Chocago
I
Hands
3
4)
at
Washington ICox 0 2) at
Waverly th1s afternoon m a Phlladetphoa tW1se 1 1l night
Chocago IJohnson 3 3) noght
makeup game)
Clnclnnato {Merrotl 0 3) at Calotornoa (Wright 2 3) at
Wmner of the SEOAL's San Francisco (Perry 3 1 or Detroot JLolich 52) n1ght
1 0) noght
Oakland ISeguo 3 2) at
Southern DiVISIOn will host the Reherger
Atlanta I Nash 2 2) at Los ~loveland I Dunning 2 2) night
Northern D1vts1on champion for Angeles {Osteen 4 2) night
Kansas Clly {Drago 4 1) at
Pltlsburgh IEllis 3 3) al San Baitomore I Dobson 2 2) night
the 1971 overall league chamDiego (Roberts 2 2) night
Wednesday's Games
pionship later th1s month
Wednesday's Games
Boston at Mmnesota {noght)
Thursday's GAHS game at St
at Mont lnoght)
NY at Molwaukee ln•ghtl
Pt Pleasant wtll be postponed If Houston at NY lnoghtl
Washmg at Chocago lnoghtl
Phil (nlghtl
Calif at Detroit (noght)
the Galhans capture back-toCinc:lnm•ti at S F
Oak at Cleveland {night)
hack triumphs today and
L lniaht
K C at Bait {noghtl
,~I nlohtl
Wednesday
Dave
Burnett started
yesterday's game, for GAHS,
hut was yanked in the stxth
m~ng wtth no one out Stan
Perry came m on r~llef, hurled
the fmal three mmngs and
rece1ved credit for the victory
Danny Settles started for
Wellston He was pulled In the
f•&gt;urth mmng after lBSumg five
walks and h!lllna one GAllS

WHERE
YOU SAVE
DOES MAKE 'A

DIFFERENCE

Another fact: Pinto at $1919*now
priced down with the imports
I

We paY you to save
(and the pay 15 good)

Manulacturer a suggaated rata I prlt a While

4%%

si dewall&amp; $29 accent opt on $60 dealer prepare
lio n chargaa If any tranaportallon charges st•te
and local taKes not included

PASSBOOK

RATE

Meigs Co. Branch

The Athens County
Sov1ngs I. Loon Co
l'6 Socond 51

Save in Ford Country~

Pomeroy, Ohto

Keith Goble Ford, lqc., 461 South Third St., Middleport, Ohio

•

�•

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May II, 1971
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 11, 1971

"
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
HOSPITAL
.
RACINE .Racine E-R
squad answered a call to the
NEWS
Dia~10nd Lawson residence ,
.
Racme Route 2, at
a.m.
'

.

The

Hard Times .Flak may Hit Connally

10:45

Holzer Medical CenWr, First Monday. Zelia Lawson was
.Ave. and Cedar si. · General taken to Veterans Memorial
,visiting hours M and 7-ll p.m. Hospital where ·she--was adMaternity visiting hours 2:30 to milled for treaiment of an
4:30 p.m. Parents only on illness.
Pediatrics Ward.
Blrtbs
Mr. and Mrs. Terry D. Miller, jlLANKS RELEASED
Patriot, a daughter; Mr. and BOSTON (UPI) -The Boston
Mrs. Gerald E. Haflelt, Patriots of the National FootGallipolis, a daughter; Mr. and hall League announced Monday
Mrs. Michael J . Needham, Oak
Hill, a daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. the release of running back Sid
George L. Valentine, Gallipolis, Blanks a seven-year veteran.
a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Phillips, Pomeroy, a "son; Mr.
and Mrs. Lonnie L. Roe, Pt.
Pleasant, a dsughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold E. Adkins, Oak
Hill, a daughter; and Mr. and
Mrs. Russell H.. Greene, Jr.,
Gallipolis, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Reva Veal, Mrs. Paul
Cherrington, Mrs. Ethel Davis,
Mr~. William E. Jewell, Mrs. ·
Alice Canaday, Mrs. Lola
Lewis, William McCoy, Mrs.
Garland Sharp, Sr., Mrs. Eva
Snyder, and Mrs. David Wiley.

,

Washington White Paper

happier lor the Nixon Administration.
Precisely while the value of the American dollar is under
attack in Europe, the President f111ds himself hetween cross ·
fires here at home. Politically, and.lor the sake of the vast
bulk Of voters who are workers, he simply cannot take further actions to make money tighter and thus increase an
already worrisome degree of unemployment.

A DISC UNT

WITH

every' storm; there Is a

solution
to
every
problem, and the soul's
highest duty is to be of
good cheer.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson

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DRIVE-I_N
BANKING
Fridays Oniy .
The Drive-In Win~ow
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I Continuously i
Other ..nklng Hours 9 to
J lnd S to 7 IS UIUil 011
Fridlf'.

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llld SAVINGS 00.

MILK WHITE

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A regional seminar will he ministerial training program. 121,226,605, resulting into the ·

attended by members Of the
Middleport congregation of
Jehovah's Witnesses and 15
other nearby congregations,
according to Larry D. Car·
nahan , overseer, for three days
. at the Waverlf-High +School,
May 21·23.
"The event is a teaching and

Each Witness is helped in his
home Bible teaching. work. He,
in turn, offers free assistance lo
anyone who wishes to take
advantage of it," Carnahan
said.
· ·
~
Home visits to personally
assist those desiring it, reached

.

now happily inundating John Connally will he welcome in
retrospect to quite other men - the Republicans. In a pinch
they can a)ways point out that it is a Democrat, and not one of
their own, who is sitting now In the Treasury!

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.

MOOSE, Wyo. (UP!) - A
Wyoming conservationist, alarmed about the recent discovery
of 15 dead eagles in rugged and
desolate canyon area near Casper, warned Sunday the nation's
national bird may he extinct by
the end of the century.
''l feel we have a g&lt;M!d chance
of losing the bald eagle," said
John F. Turner of Moose. "We
are losing the young birds and
when the older ones give out,
lhere are none to replace
them.
"And the sad thing is, I don't
see any reversing trend."
Eleven of the 15 eagles found
in Jackson Canyon last week
were bald eagles and the other
four were golden eagles. Both
species are protected by federal
law. Turner said they may have
eaten poisoned haii left by the
sheep ranchers for predators.
Twenty-five golden eagles
were found shot to death 90
miles to the southwest near
Rawlins two months ago and
Turner helieves they may have
been shot down from planes.
The remains of the eagles
found in Jackson Canyon have
heen sent to the federal fish
and wildlife service laboratory
in Laurel, Md., for study.
"! am worried about losing
the eagles to irresponsible peOple, to power lines, to pe$Ucldes
lind other poisons and to loss of
habitat," Turner said. "There
are -not too many places left
where they can nest and reproduce."
Turner, a Wyoming state representative who ls working on
his doctorate in wlldllfe ecology
at the University of Michigan, '
said there were less llian 200
pairs of bald eagles in the
country today.

'f"

5 x_3 x 3 WEBBING- GREEN AND WHITE

CHAISE LOUNGER
$

·

News Notes

''

R

time or clean up- come, see!

For Indoors 0&lt; Outdoors
Waahoblo- Dhhwoshor Solo
Styrene P!ullc - 4 Colora

.

I,

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Color keyed to' match. A vast assortment of
fabrics and colors- she'll need plenty for play

PAINT
ROLLER
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EACH

.LA.

laurel Oiff

SIZE
3 TO 16

STURDY ALUMNINUM - BY 'GAY'

,

FOR HER!

SHORT SETS
7 INCH SIZE

juice glasses, dishes, dozens of items
Values to 25 c.

LAWN CHAIR $

64·

POLO
SHIRTS
$

Day Special! Ashtrays, tumblers,

WE'RE SMALL - BUT WE GIIVE
BiG! BIG
. BUYS!!

SEAMLESS
PANTY HOSE

BOYS STRIPE

HASH
GLASSWARE
~

EA.

Each

WOMEN'S 100% NYLON

PAPER PLATE
HOLDERS

UP

87

Pric e~

COLORFUL WICKER

POLY PLASTIC

Huge Selectionl

Postive Shut Off-

•1liiiii'

Size 2 to 8 - Snelled

fUied wlth flowers-a blg variecy • .all you
do is place In ground. A $1.00 value.

WHILE THEY LAST!

PACKAGE
OF
100

1ST QUALITY

decorator sets, over door
laundry racks,• magnetic
holders, french fry cutters,
broom hanger set, utility
shelf, egg separator- plus
loze1nsof other Items.

Special .PUrchase. Plastic cemetery vase,

RUST PROOF

COFFEE
PERCOLATOR-

Salt and pepper sets, cake

FLOWER FILLED
CEMETERY VASE

No liq_uld Needed!

_ 5 CUP SIZE- ELECTRIC

SUMMER
SANDALS

JUMBO SIZE PACKAGE!

KITCHEN
GADGETS

WHITE OR COLOR

POTTED
·.f .LOWERS

Volh Watt
"Mr. Cheft.ndor"
FCII' Fast c..olting

WOMENS ITALIAN STYLE!

ASAVINGS RIOT!

OPEN TILL 9 P. M.

EA.

PKG.

$ 88
Regular $1.00

MET~~

EA.

ARTIFICAL POLY
PLASTIC!

Womens Aluminum

Spec ial low Pnce !

•

PLAI~S

ABIG VARIETY!
EA.

weekly one-hour sessions of
Bible study to the number of
1,146,378. That "was SliP·
plemented by circulating the
world-known Bible journals .
"Watchtower" arid "Awake"
copies to 204,158,521, in more
than 70 languages.
Sunday will feature the public
lecture by District Minister,
Ted Jaracz, speaking on the
subject, "What is Behind the
Spirit of Rebellion? " to which
the public is invited without
solicitation, free.

Nation's
8 -: ...d.m· ..
ubi
.
·
Tro e' '

91NCH SIZE

6 FLAVORSFQL WRAPPED!

SIZE ll'&gt;" X13
STOCK UP!

Seminar

·Take Part in

Why Pay More 7

EASILY FOLDS AWAY FOR STORAGE

SALE
STARTS
WED
MORN
9:30
A.M.!

to

Many Special Values
For Your
Warm Weather Needs!

INCH FOAM MATTRESS

OLDING BED

PETIY HOWS EDGE
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI) -Richard Petty, who
finished second in Sunday's
Halifax County 100 at South
Boston, Va ., Monday held a
comfortable edge over James
Hylton in the latest NASCAR
Grand National point standings.
Petty had 1,466 points to
Hylton's 1,296.

A Thought
For Todav
The sun shines after

~----~
' SIZE "D"

DEPARTMENT STOllE

News, Event
Relatives from this area
\ncluding Mrs. Glen Turner and
Stanley Folden, along with Mrs.
William Queen, Gallipolis, were
in Holland, Ohio, near Toledo,
recently for the funeral Of Mrs.
Maude Caster, widow Of Wesley
Caster. Mrs. Caster, a former
residen\ of this area, was
preceded in death by both
daughters, Eulah Caster Folden
and Maxine Caster Block.
Several grandchlhlren survive.
Mrs. Edward Jirik, Columbus, and David Dailey; Memphis, Tenn., have heen called
here by the serious illness of
their father, Eldon D:iley, who
is a patient at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Errol Pickett, Hollywood,
Floa., spent the weekend here
with his mother, Laura Krebs,
and other relatives. Mar.k
Markham, Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla., visited Mrs. Krebs
recently,
Mr. and Mrs. Emzie Davis of
Parkersburg were recent
guesU! of her brothers, William
C. and Paul Peck.
Callers at the home of Murl
Galaway were Mrs. Ralph
Miller, Athens, and Eva
McKnight ond sister-in-law,
Columbus . .
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. William Lawson and
family were Mr. and Mrs .
Lavern Jordan and family,
Faye ~ordan, Margie Jeffers
and Joe Nelson.
Mrs. Dwaine Jordsn, Bryan
and Keith, along with her
mother, Mrs. William Culwell,
spent Saturday with relatlves
near Flatwoods, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Tackett,
Mrs. Ed Henson, Flatwoods,
Ky., and Mrs. T. H. Blanton,
Jackson, were guests Of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Culwell and other relatives
here. Mrs. Culwell has not heen
so well recently.

(Continued from Page 4)
satisfactory {usually a clear signal of· a deflationary
economy) at the very time that the inflation picture ( .~sually
a sign of high employment) is unsatisfactory, too.
The. Republican politicians whose fortunes at the polls in
1972 are deeply engaged by unemployment (which is not all
that great but is almost unlverally seen to be) are earnestly
pressing the President to "do something."
The leaders Of the business and industrial community, as
is illustrated by the meetlng in Hot Springs of the highly
prestigious Business Advlsory.Commiltee are also urgently
pressing the President to "do something." The trouble is that
the council wants him to stick at all cost with the austerity
approach so as not to risk further inflation, whereas the

Witnesses

SHOP YOUR NEAREST STORE!
Point Pleasant • Mason · Gallipolis

STARTS TOMORROW 9:30A.M.!

Carpenter

flation were scored in' !he high-interest period are . now .
plainly being compromised in· the current lower-interest
phase. The had news is nowhere so clearly indicated as in the
fact lliat the pace of wholesale price increases - a hallmark
of inflation - rose rather than fell through April.
.
The Democratic (or in fact potentially the exDemocratic) Secretary of the Treasury, John Connally of
Texas, ohserves that we shouldn't "pay too much attention"
to this large and ugly straw in the wind - but this is really
only whistling Dixie.
,
The painful truth is that Mr. Nixon is caught in a bind not
heretofore seen in this country . The job picture is un(Continued on Page 5)

Politically, and for the sake of the vast bulk of voters who
are also consumers, he also cannot fail to clamp down more
on loans. The reason is that easier money contributes to
inflation- and inflation is, at the end, a political danger for
the administration no less severe than is the unemployment
level itself.
Moreover - and here is the real crunch of it all - the
administration is not in fact controlling or even really
arresting inflation, though it has long tried to do so. It has
experienced with higher interest rates to cool the economy; it
has then been compelled by the specter of joblessness to
lower interest rates.
Thus, whatever small and debatable gains against in-

BY WIWAM S. WHITE
~ \Y ASHJNGTON - Vietnam, protestor riots, even the
chronic crisis of the Middle East may come and go, but the
bread-and-butter issue stays on forever- arid it is getting no

Hard Times

politicians would on the whole rather risk the Hobson's
choice of more inflation than more unemployment.
. The President'.s dilemma, too, is made doubly em·
barrassing, not to say almost impossible, by two unrelated
factors.
.
.
The first is that the Republicans have alwars contrasted themselves quite favorably with the Democrats as ·
·m~n who'really know·how to run the economy. The second is
that the President's dove opposition on foreign a.nd.military
policy - both as Ui Vietnam and military preparedness - is
· blaming "military spending" for lnflatial), for unemployment and indeed for everything short of drought, floods
and the common cold.
The fact that this reading of cause and effect is sheer
nonsense (nothing about this whole business is one-tenth so
simple) does not make it any Jess effective as a partisan and
ideological propaganda point.
II thus may turn out that the flood of favorable publicity

}'j?

~ ., .. ,,

,'J&lt;..I* .. n

&lt;.! ..

,,.,,~~·!

BY BERniA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance at
the Free Methodlat Church wu
136. Offering from Sabbath
Schab! and morning service was
$64.30.
Mother's Day was observed
at the local church. Mrs. Cora
Renshaw, the oldest mother,
received a potted plant as did
the youngest mother, Mrs .
Susan Tracy. All other mothers
were given nice bookmerks.
· Mrs. Merle Powers and Mrs.
. Charles Burton, Columbus,
recently called on Mrs. Georgia
Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gordon
and Eddie, Columbus, visited
Sunday with relatives here and
attended morning services at
the Free Methodlat Church.
Mrs. Fran Oine, MiddlepOrt,
visited Saturdsy with her sistar,
Mrs . Harmon Fox.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wlae,
McConnelsvllle, attended
morning services at the local
church and visited Mr. Wise's
parents, Rev. and Mrs. Cecll
Wise, Hysell RWl .
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Ferguson,
son James, Cohunbus, S]ient the
weekend with--Bertha Parker.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas .GeM
Parker, Mrs. Ferguson's son
James and Katy Parker called
on Mr. and Mrs. Walter Walker.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bauer,
Marion, granddaughter KeDl
Sue McCormick·, ColumbUI,
Mis:s Polly Karr, Sandusky,
spent the weekend with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlel
Kar~, Sr.
Mr. Ed Russell, Mrs. Guy
Russell, Bradbury called on
Mrs. Georgia Diehl.
Mrs. Lawrence Eblin wu
hostess Thursday evening to 12
members of the Laurel Cl1lf
Health Oub. A donation 111'11
given to the . Pomeroy
energency squad.
·
Don't forget the date, Ma,y II,
for the dedication or the new
Free Methodist Church at 1:30
p.m.
Mr. Charles Diehl Is a pat1111t
in
University · Hospital, .
Columbus,
Mrs. Roy Howell, Mr. IIIII
Mrs. Harmon Fo1 went lo
Kenton Fridsy evening to - '
Ray Howell who spent 1111
weekend with his .flllllll7,
returning to Wlnois !IIMJ
evening.
Mrs. 1'horn8ll Dllnl or Milia
spent the weekend with w
parents, Mr. and Mrs. ~
Gillmore.
Mr. and Mrr. CllnDce Cllrlll
were dltmtr 11*11 of 111111•
granddsgpter, Mr. IIIII 1111.
WWI~ Pu11lna lid ftml\r.

�•

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May II, 1971
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 11, 1971

"
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
HOSPITAL
.
RACINE .Racine E-R
squad answered a call to the
NEWS
Dia~10nd Lawson residence ,
.
Racme Route 2, at
a.m.
'

.

The

Hard Times .Flak may Hit Connally

10:45

Holzer Medical CenWr, First Monday. Zelia Lawson was
.Ave. and Cedar si. · General taken to Veterans Memorial
,visiting hours M and 7-ll p.m. Hospital where ·she--was adMaternity visiting hours 2:30 to milled for treaiment of an
4:30 p.m. Parents only on illness.
Pediatrics Ward.
Blrtbs
Mr. and Mrs. Terry D. Miller, jlLANKS RELEASED
Patriot, a daughter; Mr. and BOSTON (UPI) -The Boston
Mrs. Gerald E. Haflelt, Patriots of the National FootGallipolis, a daughter; Mr. and hall League announced Monday
Mrs. Michael J . Needham, Oak
Hill, a daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. the release of running back Sid
George L. Valentine, Gallipolis, Blanks a seven-year veteran.
a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Phillips, Pomeroy, a "son; Mr.
and Mrs. Lonnie L. Roe, Pt.
Pleasant, a dsughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold E. Adkins, Oak
Hill, a daughter; and Mr. and
Mrs. Russell H.. Greene, Jr.,
Gallipolis, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Reva Veal, Mrs. Paul
Cherrington, Mrs. Ethel Davis,
Mr~. William E. Jewell, Mrs. ·
Alice Canaday, Mrs. Lola
Lewis, William McCoy, Mrs.
Garland Sharp, Sr., Mrs. Eva
Snyder, and Mrs. David Wiley.

,

Washington White Paper

happier lor the Nixon Administration.
Precisely while the value of the American dollar is under
attack in Europe, the President f111ds himself hetween cross ·
fires here at home. Politically, and.lor the sake of the vast
bulk Of voters who are workers, he simply cannot take further actions to make money tighter and thus increase an
already worrisome degree of unemployment.

A DISC UNT

WITH

every' storm; there Is a

solution
to
every
problem, and the soul's
highest duty is to be of
good cheer.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson

*lfs Quick!
* Easy*
DRIVE-I_N
BANKING
Fridays Oniy .
The Drive-In Win~ow
. is Open
. 9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
I Continuously i
Other ..nklng Hours 9 to
J lnd S to 7 IS UIUil 011
Fridlf'.

FARMERS BANK
llld SAVINGS 00.

MILK WHITE

250 TO PKG.

r-----~
LUDENS 10c

FLASHLIGHT
BATTERIES

BUD
VASE

PAPER
'
NAPKINS

CREME
EGGS

1~

S~INCH

TALL
A 25¢ VALUE!

COM'ARE AT 104
LIMITED QuANTITY

A regional seminar will he ministerial training program. 121,226,605, resulting into the ·

attended by members Of the
Middleport congregation of
Jehovah's Witnesses and 15
other nearby congregations,
according to Larry D. Car·
nahan , overseer, for three days
. at the Waverlf-High +School,
May 21·23.
"The event is a teaching and

Each Witness is helped in his
home Bible teaching. work. He,
in turn, offers free assistance lo
anyone who wishes to take
advantage of it," Carnahan
said.
· ·
~
Home visits to personally
assist those desiring it, reached

.

now happily inundating John Connally will he welcome in
retrospect to quite other men - the Republicans. In a pinch
they can a)ways point out that it is a Democrat, and not one of
their own, who is sitting now In the Treasury!

PAPER

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

24" X 72"
ALUMINUM
TUBULAR FRAME!

ICE CUBE
TRAYS
2 cypes. One has cube ejector

and makes party ice---Other
has plastic dividers to make
large cubes.

SPRAYS or WREATHS

The best you can ouy.
Beautiful poly flowers in
many different colors and
designs. So real looking
yuu can almost smell their

BRUSH
HAIR
ROHERS
ALL SIZES-

fragrance.

Special Low

Compare Our Quality!

Complete With Pins

EA.

PKG.

Choose yours from
:: our. collections of
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· styles. All sizes.

BALLOONS
MANY
TYPES!

24~
.

ELECTRIC
FIRE
STARTER
120
SOD

METAL
HOSE
NOZZLE

FLORAL
CEMETERY
SPRAYS

Adjustoblo Streom-

$

Foam Block Back

OUR REGULAR 12c

ONE SIZE
FITS ALL
BEIGE
OR SUN
TAN

PKG.

GIRLS COTTON

t

Gollon

SCOOTER
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Sl1e

.'
Linear Plastic

FISH
HOOKS
NYLON LEADER

6

FOR

30 Quart

PICNIC
JUG
Rust Proof- Unbreakable

For Dress Or C11u1l

MEN'S MD TEENS'

94

MENS

DRESS
SHIRTS

s

Its a Short- Its a skirt- .thats why
they're called scooters. Very much
in demand by all ages for the seasonable weather.

COOLER
CHEST

SIZE 3
TO 14

SELF INSULATING

s~

Favorite "Mr. Leggs" brand in
a wide selection of fabrics . Solids, stripes, checks- a pant for
every age man. Sizes 28 to 42.

$ 67

FLARE OR STRAIGHT LEG!

87 $ 77

GIRLS 2 PIECE

SHORT SLE~VE
PERMANENT PRESS
WltiTE AND COLORS

TO

$ 94

44

6 X 15 COUNT WEB!

WELL MADEGREEN AND WHIT,E!

•.

WIRE FRAMES! WRAPAROUNDS! ROUND STYLE!

WOMEN'S 2 PIECE

JAMAICA

SUN GLASSES .
For men, women, teens- we
have a pair you'll like! Select
your new glasses from our
wide assortment of styles.

87
.

~

SHORT
SETS

$244

TO

$

SIZES 8 to 18
Terry Cloth, stretch nylon, cottoneasy care sum-

Avacodo or Gold

mer fabrics.

Handy for at home - including ham-

mers. utility vice, 18 pc. comblnatlon
wrench set, plastic electriCal tape,
racket and socket sets, screw driver
sets, 40 sheet pkg. _sa ndpaper. 13 pc.

drill set, nut and bolt assortment.
hacksaw frame with 10 blades, 6 ft.

GIRLS 3 TO 14- ABIG SELECTION!

wrench se!, 2 piece file set and many

Girls Knit Tops

folding rule, 6 pc. nest of saws, ~tapler,
vice wrench, pad lock, 18 pc. Herx key

2roR39~

7j1~·

"LITTLE PRO''

12 QUART SIZE

VINYL
--·BALL
·GLOVES

PLASTIC
DISH

REG. $2.67
FOR BEGt~NERS

REGULAR$4

CHILDS- MISSES- WOMENS

CANVA-S
OXFORDS

4 SECTION

From toddler size thru

SNACK
TRAY

feet quality, of course.

~~:; ~:~ced h:~r o~$
canvas casuals. Per-

ALL REGULAR fOe

57
p

~

:=;::;;;;:;:;::;:;;:;::;;;M;ade:ln:Ame:rl:ca.====R:.

. TABLE Top IRON IN G BOARD
A space saver. Fold$ flat ror home
or travel, Cheerful dailY desillfl on
the foam pa&lt;lled cotton cover. · ....,._.,.

0UR 'LAST
SHIPMENT BEFORE
·
MEMORIAL DAY .
HAS ARRIVED I!

PAN

SIZEH3' X84"
2COLORS

4 COLORS

$ 87

"FAMOUS M~ID"

9 PC GLASS

SET

9 Inch Bowl
6-5 Inch Bowls.
Plastic Fork &amp; Spoon

~EG.
·
$
$2.59

WOMENS
BRASSERIES

METAL
HOSE
HANGER

SALAD
BOWL

&gt;opulor Circle Stitch Pattern
Sl ZES 32 TO 42

·Attoches To ·Wa!IHolds 100 Ft. Of Hose

71
SET

SALE
STARTS
WED
:30 A.M.!

Others $5.22 and $7.22

WITH 3 YEAR GUARANTEE

6 FOOT HIGH

·REDWOOD
.
FAN TRELLIS

'j

STURPY!
EACH

PICNIC
TABLE"
COVER

$ 77

As always-yw won't lind a better selectionanywhere. Far too many kinds to mentionpedal perfect- but hurry •. -Memorial
w·ill soon he here. . ·

YOUR
CHOICE

WIPE CLEAN VINYL!

' '

.

$

FOR YOUR CLIMBERS -

GARDEN HOSE
4~

50 FOOT LENGTH
3/8. INCH SIZE HURRY ·· - THEY
LONG

A OISCO\JNT

I

OtPARTM£NT StOlf.

'POINT PLEASANT - GALLIPOLIS - MASON_ __

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.

MOOSE, Wyo. (UP!) - A
Wyoming conservationist, alarmed about the recent discovery
of 15 dead eagles in rugged and
desolate canyon area near Casper, warned Sunday the nation's
national bird may he extinct by
the end of the century.
''l feel we have a g&lt;M!d chance
of losing the bald eagle," said
John F. Turner of Moose. "We
are losing the young birds and
when the older ones give out,
lhere are none to replace
them.
"And the sad thing is, I don't
see any reversing trend."
Eleven of the 15 eagles found
in Jackson Canyon last week
were bald eagles and the other
four were golden eagles. Both
species are protected by federal
law. Turner said they may have
eaten poisoned haii left by the
sheep ranchers for predators.
Twenty-five golden eagles
were found shot to death 90
miles to the southwest near
Rawlins two months ago and
Turner helieves they may have
been shot down from planes.
The remains of the eagles
found in Jackson Canyon have
heen sent to the federal fish
and wildlife service laboratory
in Laurel, Md., for study.
"! am worried about losing
the eagles to irresponsible peOple, to power lines, to pe$Ucldes
lind other poisons and to loss of
habitat," Turner said. "There
are -not too many places left
where they can nest and reproduce."
Turner, a Wyoming state representative who ls working on
his doctorate in wlldllfe ecology
at the University of Michigan, '
said there were less llian 200
pairs of bald eagles in the
country today.

'f"

5 x_3 x 3 WEBBING- GREEN AND WHITE

CHAISE LOUNGER
$

·

News Notes

''

R

time or clean up- come, see!

For Indoors 0&lt; Outdoors
Waahoblo- Dhhwoshor Solo
Styrene P!ullc - 4 Colora

.

I,

ALUMNINUM

Color keyed to' match. A vast assortment of
fabrics and colors- she'll need plenty for play

PAINT
ROLLER
REFILLS

EACH

.LA.

laurel Oiff

SIZE
3 TO 16

STURDY ALUMNINUM - BY 'GAY'

,

FOR HER!

SHORT SETS
7 INCH SIZE

juice glasses, dishes, dozens of items
Values to 25 c.

LAWN CHAIR $

64·

POLO
SHIRTS
$

Day Special! Ashtrays, tumblers,

WE'RE SMALL - BUT WE GIIVE
BiG! BIG
. BUYS!!

SEAMLESS
PANTY HOSE

BOYS STRIPE

HASH
GLASSWARE
~

EA.

Each

WOMEN'S 100% NYLON

PAPER PLATE
HOLDERS

UP

87

Pric e~

COLORFUL WICKER

POLY PLASTIC

Huge Selectionl

Postive Shut Off-

•1liiiii'

Size 2 to 8 - Snelled

fUied wlth flowers-a blg variecy • .all you
do is place In ground. A $1.00 value.

WHILE THEY LAST!

PACKAGE
OF
100

1ST QUALITY

decorator sets, over door
laundry racks,• magnetic
holders, french fry cutters,
broom hanger set, utility
shelf, egg separator- plus
loze1nsof other Items.

Special .PUrchase. Plastic cemetery vase,

RUST PROOF

COFFEE
PERCOLATOR-

Salt and pepper sets, cake

FLOWER FILLED
CEMETERY VASE

No liq_uld Needed!

_ 5 CUP SIZE- ELECTRIC

SUMMER
SANDALS

JUMBO SIZE PACKAGE!

KITCHEN
GADGETS

WHITE OR COLOR

POTTED
·.f .LOWERS

Volh Watt
"Mr. Cheft.ndor"
FCII' Fast c..olting

WOMENS ITALIAN STYLE!

ASAVINGS RIOT!

OPEN TILL 9 P. M.

EA.

PKG.

$ 88
Regular $1.00

MET~~

EA.

ARTIFICAL POLY
PLASTIC!

Womens Aluminum

Spec ial low Pnce !

•

PLAI~S

ABIG VARIETY!
EA.

weekly one-hour sessions of
Bible study to the number of
1,146,378. That "was SliP·
plemented by circulating the
world-known Bible journals .
"Watchtower" arid "Awake"
copies to 204,158,521, in more
than 70 languages.
Sunday will feature the public
lecture by District Minister,
Ted Jaracz, speaking on the
subject, "What is Behind the
Spirit of Rebellion? " to which
the public is invited without
solicitation, free.

Nation's
8 -: ...d.m· ..
ubi
.
·
Tro e' '

91NCH SIZE

6 FLAVORSFQL WRAPPED!

SIZE ll'&gt;" X13
STOCK UP!

Seminar

·Take Part in

Why Pay More 7

EASILY FOLDS AWAY FOR STORAGE

SALE
STARTS
WED
MORN
9:30
A.M.!

to

Many Special Values
For Your
Warm Weather Needs!

INCH FOAM MATTRESS

OLDING BED

PETIY HOWS EDGE
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI) -Richard Petty, who
finished second in Sunday's
Halifax County 100 at South
Boston, Va ., Monday held a
comfortable edge over James
Hylton in the latest NASCAR
Grand National point standings.
Petty had 1,466 points to
Hylton's 1,296.

A Thought
For Todav
The sun shines after

~----~
' SIZE "D"

DEPARTMENT STOllE

News, Event
Relatives from this area
\ncluding Mrs. Glen Turner and
Stanley Folden, along with Mrs.
William Queen, Gallipolis, were
in Holland, Ohio, near Toledo,
recently for the funeral Of Mrs.
Maude Caster, widow Of Wesley
Caster. Mrs. Caster, a former
residen\ of this area, was
preceded in death by both
daughters, Eulah Caster Folden
and Maxine Caster Block.
Several grandchlhlren survive.
Mrs. Edward Jirik, Columbus, and David Dailey; Memphis, Tenn., have heen called
here by the serious illness of
their father, Eldon D:iley, who
is a patient at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Errol Pickett, Hollywood,
Floa., spent the weekend here
with his mother, Laura Krebs,
and other relatives. Mar.k
Markham, Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla., visited Mrs. Krebs
recently,
Mr. and Mrs. Emzie Davis of
Parkersburg were recent
guesU! of her brothers, William
C. and Paul Peck.
Callers at the home of Murl
Galaway were Mrs. Ralph
Miller, Athens, and Eva
McKnight ond sister-in-law,
Columbus . .
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. William Lawson and
family were Mr. and Mrs .
Lavern Jordan and family,
Faye ~ordan, Margie Jeffers
and Joe Nelson.
Mrs. Dwaine Jordsn, Bryan
and Keith, along with her
mother, Mrs. William Culwell,
spent Saturday with relatlves
near Flatwoods, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Tackett,
Mrs. Ed Henson, Flatwoods,
Ky., and Mrs. T. H. Blanton,
Jackson, were guests Of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Culwell and other relatives
here. Mrs. Culwell has not heen
so well recently.

(Continued from Page 4)
satisfactory {usually a clear signal of· a deflationary
economy) at the very time that the inflation picture ( .~sually
a sign of high employment) is unsatisfactory, too.
The. Republican politicians whose fortunes at the polls in
1972 are deeply engaged by unemployment (which is not all
that great but is almost unlverally seen to be) are earnestly
pressing the President to "do something."
The leaders Of the business and industrial community, as
is illustrated by the meetlng in Hot Springs of the highly
prestigious Business Advlsory.Commiltee are also urgently
pressing the President to "do something." The trouble is that
the council wants him to stick at all cost with the austerity
approach so as not to risk further inflation, whereas the

Witnesses

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Carpenter

flation were scored in' !he high-interest period are . now .
plainly being compromised in· the current lower-interest
phase. The had news is nowhere so clearly indicated as in the
fact lliat the pace of wholesale price increases - a hallmark
of inflation - rose rather than fell through April.
.
The Democratic (or in fact potentially the exDemocratic) Secretary of the Treasury, John Connally of
Texas, ohserves that we shouldn't "pay too much attention"
to this large and ugly straw in the wind - but this is really
only whistling Dixie.
,
The painful truth is that Mr. Nixon is caught in a bind not
heretofore seen in this country . The job picture is un(Continued on Page 5)

Politically, and for the sake of the vast bulk of voters who
are also consumers, he also cannot fail to clamp down more
on loans. The reason is that easier money contributes to
inflation- and inflation is, at the end, a political danger for
the administration no less severe than is the unemployment
level itself.
Moreover - and here is the real crunch of it all - the
administration is not in fact controlling or even really
arresting inflation, though it has long tried to do so. It has
experienced with higher interest rates to cool the economy; it
has then been compelled by the specter of joblessness to
lower interest rates.
Thus, whatever small and debatable gains against in-

BY WIWAM S. WHITE
~ \Y ASHJNGTON - Vietnam, protestor riots, even the
chronic crisis of the Middle East may come and go, but the
bread-and-butter issue stays on forever- arid it is getting no

Hard Times

politicians would on the whole rather risk the Hobson's
choice of more inflation than more unemployment.
. The President'.s dilemma, too, is made doubly em·
barrassing, not to say almost impossible, by two unrelated
factors.
.
.
The first is that the Republicans have alwars contrasted themselves quite favorably with the Democrats as ·
·m~n who'really know·how to run the economy. The second is
that the President's dove opposition on foreign a.nd.military
policy - both as Ui Vietnam and military preparedness - is
· blaming "military spending" for lnflatial), for unemployment and indeed for everything short of drought, floods
and the common cold.
The fact that this reading of cause and effect is sheer
nonsense (nothing about this whole business is one-tenth so
simple) does not make it any Jess effective as a partisan and
ideological propaganda point.
II thus may turn out that the flood of favorable publicity

}'j?

~ ., .. ,,

,'J&lt;..I* .. n

&lt;.! ..

,,.,,~~·!

BY BERniA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance at
the Free Methodlat Church wu
136. Offering from Sabbath
Schab! and morning service was
$64.30.
Mother's Day was observed
at the local church. Mrs. Cora
Renshaw, the oldest mother,
received a potted plant as did
the youngest mother, Mrs .
Susan Tracy. All other mothers
were given nice bookmerks.
· Mrs. Merle Powers and Mrs.
. Charles Burton, Columbus,
recently called on Mrs. Georgia
Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gordon
and Eddie, Columbus, visited
Sunday with relatives here and
attended morning services at
the Free Methodlat Church.
Mrs. Fran Oine, MiddlepOrt,
visited Saturdsy with her sistar,
Mrs . Harmon Fox.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wlae,
McConnelsvllle, attended
morning services at the local
church and visited Mr. Wise's
parents, Rev. and Mrs. Cecll
Wise, Hysell RWl .
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Ferguson,
son James, Cohunbus, S]ient the
weekend with--Bertha Parker.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas .GeM
Parker, Mrs. Ferguson's son
James and Katy Parker called
on Mr. and Mrs. Walter Walker.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bauer,
Marion, granddaughter KeDl
Sue McCormick·, ColumbUI,
Mis:s Polly Karr, Sandusky,
spent the weekend with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlel
Kar~, Sr.
Mr. Ed Russell, Mrs. Guy
Russell, Bradbury called on
Mrs. Georgia Diehl.
Mrs. Lawrence Eblin wu
hostess Thursday evening to 12
members of the Laurel Cl1lf
Health Oub. A donation 111'11
given to the . Pomeroy
energency squad.
·
Don't forget the date, Ma,y II,
for the dedication or the new
Free Methodist Church at 1:30
p.m.
Mr. Charles Diehl Is a pat1111t
in
University · Hospital, .
Columbus,
Mrs. Roy Howell, Mr. IIIII
Mrs. Harmon Fo1 went lo
Kenton Fridsy evening to - '
Ray Howell who spent 1111
weekend with his .flllllll7,
returning to Wlnois !IIMJ
evening.
Mrs. 1'horn8ll Dllnl or Milia
spent the weekend with w
parents, Mr. and Mrs. ~
Gillmore.
Mr. and Mrr. CllnDce Cllrlll
were dltmtr 11*11 of 111111•
granddsgpter, Mr. IIIII 1111.
WWI~ Pu11lna lid ftml\r.

�'

.•

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poineroy, 0 ., May Jl, 1971

Mrs. ·chapman Host
Of Mothers' Tea
Mothers of members of the Mrs. Barbara Fields and Mrs.
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Charles Eskew, Mrs. Vikki
Sigma Phi Sorority were Gloeckner and Mrs. McDaniels,
honored Sunday with a tea at Mrs. Beverly Long and Mrs. Jo
the home of Mrs . Annie Ann White, Mrs. Carol MeChapman, Pomeroy.
Cu llough and Mrs. James
A program of tributes opened Criswell , Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger
with a reading on the origin pf and Mrs: Hazel Wilson, Mrs.
Mother's Day ·by Mrs. Debbie Linda Riffle and Mrs. Lyle
Gerlach. Mrs. Susan Baer, Mrs. Hysell, Mrs. Ruth Riffle and
Judy Werry, Mrs. Gerlach, and Mrs. George Brothers, Mrs.
Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger, sang Carolyn Satterfield and Mrs.
"There is Nothing Like My Lewis Sauer, Miss Lynn Daniels
Mom," and Mrs. Ohlinger read and Mrs. James Daniels, Miss
"What is a Mother? "
Marilyn Swan and Mrs. Marvin
Mrs. Becky Anderson and Swan, Mrs. Jeanette Thomas
Mrs. Linda Riffle presented a and Mrs. Walter Crooks.
style show with garments Mrs. Te~anna Well and Mrs.
ranging from hot pants wmaxi' Charles White, Mrs. Judy
skirts. The show of garments Werry and Mrs . Aileen
from Elberfeld's Department Wehrung, Mrs. Barbara Riggs
Sl&lt;lre was narrated by Mrs. and Mrs. Wayne Swisher, Mrs.
Jennifer Anderson.
Katie Well and Mrs. Lawrence
Each of the mothers there Morarity, Mrs. Debbie .Flnlaw
was presented with a corsage and Mrs. William King, Mrs.
tied in the yellow . and black Susan Baer and Mrs. David
Beta Sigma Phi ribbon . Mrs. Ohlinger, Mrs. Jane Bourne and
. Carolyn Satterfield made. the Mrs. Ed Baer, Mrs. Charlotte
presentations.
. Taunton and Mrs . Wilbur
Hostesses for the affair were Wright, Miss Debbie Gerlach
Mrs. Chapman, Mrs. Carol and Mrs. WilliamGrueser,Mrs.
McCullough, and Mrs. Ruth Edwina Scott and Mrs. Lois
Riffle. The refreslunent table Robinson, Mrs. Martha Mefeatured orchid tapers and lilac Phail and Mrs. R. S. Corson,
arrangements with silver ap· Morgantown, W. Va., and Mrs.
pointments. Mrs. Ohlinger, Carol Jean Ada"'!'I' and Mrs.
retiring president, and Mrs. Virginia Phillips.
Vlkkl Gloeckner, Incoming Other sorority members
president, presided at the silver attending were Mrs. Jennifer
tea and coffee service. Salad Anderson, Mrs. : Charlotte
and cookies were served.
Hanning whose guest was her
Sorority members and their mother-in-law, Mrs. Wilbur
mothers attending were Mrs: Hanning, and Mrs. Iris Payne.
Becky Anderson and Mrs. Mrs. Donna Nease and Miss
Arthur Nease, Mrs. Chapman Marie Bichman, aunt of Mrs.
and Mrs. Delmar Canaday, Chapman, were also guests.
Also present was Mrs. A. R.
Knight, sponsor.

I

Wahama Dance,
Banquet Set

MASON - The annual
banquet and dance of the
Wahama High School Alumni
Assn.hasbeenselforSaturday,
May 29.
The dinner will be served at
6:30 p.m. In the high school
cafeterl~ fo~owed by a dance in
,~·''!dilonlllll: from 9 : ~ p:m.
·iO 12:30 a.m.. Jan Hllddox'
Music Department will provide
music.
Reunion classes include U10se
of 1911, 1921, 1931, 1941, 1951, and
1961.
Reservations must be in by
May 22 and tickets may be
purchased at Miller's Grocery
and the Mason County Bank in
New Haven; Smith's Grocery,
Hartford; B. and B. Market,
Mason; Williams Grocery,
Clifton; Fruth Pharmacy, Point
Pleasant; K. and C. Jewelry,
Pomeroy; Foreman and 'Abbott
in Middleport, and Fowler's
Grocery, West Columbia.

DONATIONS WANTED
Donations are being solicited
for a rummage and garage sale
to be held for the benefit of the
Bert Yost family , Proceeds will
be used to help pay funeral
expenses for several. family
members 'l'_ho died in a home
fire in Cheshire recently. The
sale will be held at the Bruce
Davis home in Rutland from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and
Sat~rday. The home is on
Larkins St. Contributors are
asked to call 742-3776 or 742·
3883 .
FAMILY TOGETHER
A family get-together was
held Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Harold Burnside,
Kingsburg Rd. Present were
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thomas,
Kelly and Suzan, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Thoma, Gall and
Linda, Chesler; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Hager, Debbie and
Rhonda, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Houdashelt and
Audra, Kingsburg Road, and
Tommy Burnside at home.

1.~=j~~::(~~:~~~:=:?}m::::.:::::::::::r~w::::;::%:::::::==~:=::::=:{~ :::::t=:~.::::::::::::·:::::::=~==~=:~::: ;·::::::~:=:::::::::~;::::~::=~:=::??7J~:=:~i:r~:;~:m

l;~ Meigs Social
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
HARRISONVILLE
OES,
regular session, 8 p,m,
Tuesday.
COUNTY Ministerial Assn.,
Tuesday, 10 a.m. at Bethany
United Methodist Church,
Dorcas.
LEWIS MANLEY Post
Auxiliary 263, Tuesday night at
the home of Mrs. Campbell
Harper .
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday
7:30 p.m. Winning works from
County Council and Conference
to be on display and children
recognized. Margaret Burg·
gras, county child psy·
chiatrist, guest speaker.
SOUTHERN . Athletic
Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. al
high school, Racine.
LETART FALLS • Portland
Stitch and Sew· 4-H Club,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. home Ada
Stigleano, Portland.
WOMEN'S GOLF Assn.,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at club
house on Pomeroy Golf Course.
SPECIAL meeting Mid·
dleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM
Tuesday 7:30p.m. F .C. Degree.
Robert King, W.M.
POMEROY Volunteer Fire
Department, 7:30 tonight at
Second War!l Firehouse.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy Methodist Church.
POMER0Y CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, staled
•convocation, 7:30 p.m. Wed·
nesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

Calendar I

SYRA~~~:~~~:D

Wed·
tr lion
nesd ay Horne De mons a
Club' Wednes day, 1 P.m. at
meeting house, Municipal Park.
Annual trip W be discussed.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Cl ub' 2 p.m. Wed ne sday, Mr s.
. har d 0 wen home. Mr s.
RlC
Beulah Strauss w review "The
Kenne dy Women ,, .
THURSDAY
PUBLIC MEETING on drug
abuse, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Amer 1'can Legion, home for
youth and adults. The Rev.
Arthur Lund and James Roach
speakers; films w be shown.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 26 12,
Letart Falls, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at grange hall. Bring
potluck refreshments.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
Methodist Church, family
potluck, 6:30 p.m. Thursday at
the church. Take own table
service.
DISABLED American
Veterans, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
at D.A.V. Hall, Pomeroy.
Refreshments. Jacob Turner,
.
AdJ.
AFTERNOON Circle of the
Heath Methodist Church,
Middleport, 1 p.m. luncheon
Thursday at the church. Each
member to bring a guest, a
covered dish and own table
service.
AFTERNOON CIRCL~,
Heath Umted MethodJsl
Church, coverded dish luncheoo,
I p.m. Thurs ay.
VISITED HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Nelson
and family of Reynoldsburg
spent the weekend in Mid·
dleport with her parents, Mr.
an d Mrs. R. G. Bat'le y.

Fund Projects Planned
Fund raising activities were
planned during a meeting of the
Sew-Rite-Sewing Club held at
the home of Mrs. Flo Strickland
recently.
Mrs. Larry Wehrung presided
at the meeting. A report on
proceeds from a recent rummage sal~ was given by Mrs.
Don McKnight and Mrs . Don
Mullen noted that she will
disb'ibute mother's calendaro
at the next meeting. Also given
out were dish cloths lor the

members to sell. Mrs. Raymond
Baily and Mrs. Elza Gilmore,
Jr. will be hostesses for the next
meeting.

PTA Opposing Sections of H.v B.' 176 . ·
1

·
Petitions and letters
in·
support of .lhe Ohio PTA's op·
position to portions of H.B: H6
11
d' . the Oh'
curren
y
pen
m
1o
Legislature mg regarding
distribution of additional tax
d II
t
. te h 1
o ars o prtva sc oo s were
· ul led M d
· ht t
ctrc t· a f lhon Pay mg PTA
a a
0
mee
mg
e
omeroy
M G
M'tch
'd t·
rsled
. ene 1ti ' pfrethsl ebnl,l
repor
on sec ons o e 1
.10
'ttee - hi h
now commt
w c
provides only a 10 percent in· f d f
bli
crease m un s or pu c
schools but a 150pct.increase in
ta d 11 · f
. te h
• 0 ars or pnva sc 001s.
The Ohio PTA has requested
th t bl'
h
b
a pu lC sc 0018 e more
adequately financed before
more state dollars are given for
the operation of private in·
stilulions. Pomeroy PTA
memhers were asked w get
behind the Ohio PTA by signing
the petitions and letters and
mailing them to their
legislators.
Officers for the 1971-72 year
were installed by Mrs. Leo
Crew in a candlelight
ceremony, Installed were Mrs.
Mitch, president; Mrs. Earl
Thoma, first vice president;
I
d
Mrs. James Warns ey, secon
vice president; Mrs. Arthur
Arnold, secretary ; Mrs.
Thomas Grueser, treasurer;
Mrs .
Robert
Lewis,
corresponding secretary; and
Mrs.
Pearl
Williams,
parhamentar1an.
Delegates to the Meigs
County Co neil are Mrs John
Murphy' ~rs. Louis Osborne,
Mrs. Gene Houdashelt, Mrs.
Maury Miller, and Mrs. Clifford
Kennedy, with Mrs. Richard
~osenbaum , Mrs. Dwight
Cullums, and Mrs. R1chard
Follrod as the alternates. .
Safety patrol boys and grrls

TRAINING COMPLETED
Carroll Richard Stewart, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stewart,
Hobson Road, has completed
six weeks of training at
Lackland Air Force Base,
Texas and has been trunsferred
to Kessler, Miss., for 10 weeks
of additional training . Young
Stewart is a 1970 graduate of
Meigs High School.

Mrs. Strickland and the cohostess, Mrs . Don Collins
served refreshments to those
named and Mrs . Ronald
Browning, Mrs. Charles Hoff.
man, Mrs. George Hoffman,
Mrs. Edward Wells, Mrs .
AT CONVENTION
James Neutzling, and Mrs. Bill Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T.
McDaniel.
Reed, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs.
Thereon Johnson are attending
a bankers' convention this week
in Columbus. Mr. Johnson is
chairman of the agriculture
committee of the Ohio Bankers
Margaret Sauer and the Rev. Association .
Audrey Miller.
Mrs. Miller read an article
MEETING SET
11
Mother Hearted Women"
Due
to
conflicting dates, a
from the WCTU paper. Refresh·
ments were served by the meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary
Baptist Women to those named of Drew Webster Post 39,
and Mrs. Inez Turner, Mrs. American Legion, will be held
Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Isabelle Sunday, May 16, at 3 p.m. at the
Winebrenner, Mrs. Iva Turner, post home. Junior auxlliary
members will hold a workshop
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin.
'
at the same hour.

Dangers of Alcohol Reviewed

Visit in Ironton
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold,
Pomeroy, were Sunday guests
of their daughter and son-in·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Smith
at Ironton .
During their visit the birthday
of Mrs. Smith was observed.
Homemade ice cream was
served with a decorated bir·
thday cake sent by the
honoree's aunt, Mrs. Roy Smith
of Pomeroy. Afternoon callers
were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Armstrong and sons, Chuck and
Jeff, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Schneider and daughters ,
Cathy, Carla and Margie.

· ' recogmzed
·
·
were
and 'presented·
trophies, pins and ,c~rtificates
by Mrs. Pearl Wtlhams and
Robert Morris principal In the
' · Bailey,· Mary
groupwereKeilh
Helen Blaettnar' Bruce
Bumgardner Arthur Brad·
.
'
shaw
Cindy · Campbell
'
Elizabeth
Card Nancy Ebers·•
'
bach . Lori Faulk
Kevin
Field~ Gregory Gl~ze Tom
'
•
Krautter' Beth McKnight,
.
Duane McLaughhn, . Debra
Osborne Crystal Hall Faith
p . ' caplaJ·n M
' ,·chael
errm ,
•
Owens Paul Reed lieutenant
'
'
'
Timony Rawllngs, Trudy
Roach Kimberly Sebo Greg
. '
·
'
Smtih, Ronme Snyder. , Rebec
. ca
Dust s lh R k
Thomas,
Y m1 , 1c y

Seyer,
1

P·arne 1.a
au gh a n. ,
~atncm Vaughan, and Cratg
enoy.
f
The Rev . Hoyt Allen o
p
· 1gave
omeroy Ch urch of Ch rts
devolwns usmg a chalk
drawmg . The treasurer
ted bal
f $4"" 14 .
repor a a nee o ...,, m
· 1ette r from sup t.
the treasury. A
· d
George Hargraves was rea
regarding proposed playground
.
•tmprovemen..,.
.
M
Mitch appomled Mrs
rs.
. .
Charles Evans, W. H. Perno,
and Ken McCullough to the
..
.
aud1tmg commtttee. It was
t d t
·d the PTA
vo e o provt e .
handbook lor offtcers and
members who will take the

_...., ·---- --l
Pomeroy....

study course to begin on June

MEAT

21A report was given on the
r.ecent meeting of the Meigs
County Councilor Parents and
Teachers, and Norris discussed
at length a variety of questions
and complaints from the PTA
d'lSCUSSl·00 box rangt·ng from •-o
'"
h
student
teacher
teach1'ng
muc
to inadequate playground
· ·
superv 18100 .
The sixth grade won the attendanc.e banner. Mrs. Mitch
presented a certificate of award
t h
for 100 percent eac er
enrollment given to the unit at
the District 16 spring conference .

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for a delicious Malt, Coke,
Shake, Sundae and enjoy your fa.vorile Sand·
wl~h and Beverage.

• ••

Others available through our Catalog
Service, 3.49 to 8.98 yard. Wide
selection.

... the
well-timed
Graduation

I

.....

,.

Robinson's Cleaners

·lb.39C
BRAUNSCHWEIGER
HOME MADE

by the BOLT, by the YARD
2.98 to 3.98 yd.

992-2284

SUPERIORS

••

SUPERIORS

Thurschy Only!

CUBE
• STEAK

'

'

lb.

SLIPCOVER &amp; DRAPERY FABRICS

e

SLAB
e ·BACON'

'

.

Back Again
By Popular
Request!

•
•

lb.

..

Valley Mother's Day.

1

-~

gift

visiting the Dairy

Priced Special
Again This Week!

• Smoked Tender
•
• PICNI.C
HAMS
Ground
Chuck •
•• lb.
~

Personal Notes

GUESTS COME
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Zeigler
and Sue Ellen of Morgantown
and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Lilly and
son, C. H., Pineville, W. Va.
were Mother's Day weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Davenport and family, and Mrs.
B. B. Zeigler, in Middleport.

We have a choice
collection of
modestly priced
Bulova watches,
timed for
Graduation.

•••

CHOICE

Away ·
Bottles

Use'Our Free Parking Lot

!

USDA

FABRIC FINDS

115 W. Second

.

~·1

Meaty!

At Your Mark VStore ·

FOR HOME DECORATORS

Home for Mother's Day
weekend with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Gihnore, Jr.
were their sons, Joe of Ohio
University, Rick of Chillicoihe,
and Roger of Ohio Stale
University.
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Nicholson were Mother's Day
guests of their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich and Jayne.
Mrs. Olive Weber was the
recent weekend guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Dean Hill, Williamstown. On Saturday evening
they attended a church supper
at the Second Congregational
Church, Marietta, the one which
they attended as children, and
Sunday drove to Akron for
services at the Cathedral of
Tomorrow.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grif·
filh, Mrs. Anna Ogdin, and Mrs.
Ruth Gosney were in Columbus
Sunday. They went to Ohio State
University for Karen Griffith
and Maureen Kilbane and the
group then visited the Kingwood
Center at Mansfield.
Dr. and Mrs. Everett Tracy of
Columbus spent the weekend
here with his mother, Mrs.
Nellie Tracy.
Liss Linda Reed, first grade
teacher at the Pomeroy
Elemenlary School, underwent
an appendecl&lt;lmy at Veterans .
Memorial Hospital last week ..
She is currently recuperating at
the home of her parents In
Northern Ohio.
Mrs. Jerry Grueser was the
Mother's weekend guest of her
daughters, Marie, a junior at
Ohio University, and Marla, a
freshman there.

OUR PORK VALUES

MARKET,· Open Daily·9 to 10 . SunL 10 to 10
.

We .4rcept Federal FOod Stamps

•

Com• Mill and Secolll Sts.

PHONE: 992·3480

·

,

·

T~ Limit Ouantiti11". MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1•

loaves
. for .

THURSDAY ONIJ Y!

�'

.•

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poineroy, 0 ., May Jl, 1971

Mrs. ·chapman Host
Of Mothers' Tea
Mothers of members of the Mrs. Barbara Fields and Mrs.
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Charles Eskew, Mrs. Vikki
Sigma Phi Sorority were Gloeckner and Mrs. McDaniels,
honored Sunday with a tea at Mrs. Beverly Long and Mrs. Jo
the home of Mrs . Annie Ann White, Mrs. Carol MeChapman, Pomeroy.
Cu llough and Mrs. James
A program of tributes opened Criswell , Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger
with a reading on the origin pf and Mrs: Hazel Wilson, Mrs.
Mother's Day ·by Mrs. Debbie Linda Riffle and Mrs. Lyle
Gerlach. Mrs. Susan Baer, Mrs. Hysell, Mrs. Ruth Riffle and
Judy Werry, Mrs. Gerlach, and Mrs. George Brothers, Mrs.
Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger, sang Carolyn Satterfield and Mrs.
"There is Nothing Like My Lewis Sauer, Miss Lynn Daniels
Mom," and Mrs. Ohlinger read and Mrs. James Daniels, Miss
"What is a Mother? "
Marilyn Swan and Mrs. Marvin
Mrs. Becky Anderson and Swan, Mrs. Jeanette Thomas
Mrs. Linda Riffle presented a and Mrs. Walter Crooks.
style show with garments Mrs. Te~anna Well and Mrs.
ranging from hot pants wmaxi' Charles White, Mrs. Judy
skirts. The show of garments Werry and Mrs . Aileen
from Elberfeld's Department Wehrung, Mrs. Barbara Riggs
Sl&lt;lre was narrated by Mrs. and Mrs. Wayne Swisher, Mrs.
Jennifer Anderson.
Katie Well and Mrs. Lawrence
Each of the mothers there Morarity, Mrs. Debbie .Flnlaw
was presented with a corsage and Mrs. William King, Mrs.
tied in the yellow . and black Susan Baer and Mrs. David
Beta Sigma Phi ribbon . Mrs. Ohlinger, Mrs. Jane Bourne and
. Carolyn Satterfield made. the Mrs. Ed Baer, Mrs. Charlotte
presentations.
. Taunton and Mrs . Wilbur
Hostesses for the affair were Wright, Miss Debbie Gerlach
Mrs. Chapman, Mrs. Carol and Mrs. WilliamGrueser,Mrs.
McCullough, and Mrs. Ruth Edwina Scott and Mrs. Lois
Riffle. The refreslunent table Robinson, Mrs. Martha Mefeatured orchid tapers and lilac Phail and Mrs. R. S. Corson,
arrangements with silver ap· Morgantown, W. Va., and Mrs.
pointments. Mrs. Ohlinger, Carol Jean Ada"'!'I' and Mrs.
retiring president, and Mrs. Virginia Phillips.
Vlkkl Gloeckner, Incoming Other sorority members
president, presided at the silver attending were Mrs. Jennifer
tea and coffee service. Salad Anderson, Mrs. : Charlotte
and cookies were served.
Hanning whose guest was her
Sorority members and their mother-in-law, Mrs. Wilbur
mothers attending were Mrs: Hanning, and Mrs. Iris Payne.
Becky Anderson and Mrs. Mrs. Donna Nease and Miss
Arthur Nease, Mrs. Chapman Marie Bichman, aunt of Mrs.
and Mrs. Delmar Canaday, Chapman, were also guests.
Also present was Mrs. A. R.
Knight, sponsor.

I

Wahama Dance,
Banquet Set

MASON - The annual
banquet and dance of the
Wahama High School Alumni
Assn.hasbeenselforSaturday,
May 29.
The dinner will be served at
6:30 p.m. In the high school
cafeterl~ fo~owed by a dance in
,~·''!dilonlllll: from 9 : ~ p:m.
·iO 12:30 a.m.. Jan Hllddox'
Music Department will provide
music.
Reunion classes include U10se
of 1911, 1921, 1931, 1941, 1951, and
1961.
Reservations must be in by
May 22 and tickets may be
purchased at Miller's Grocery
and the Mason County Bank in
New Haven; Smith's Grocery,
Hartford; B. and B. Market,
Mason; Williams Grocery,
Clifton; Fruth Pharmacy, Point
Pleasant; K. and C. Jewelry,
Pomeroy; Foreman and 'Abbott
in Middleport, and Fowler's
Grocery, West Columbia.

DONATIONS WANTED
Donations are being solicited
for a rummage and garage sale
to be held for the benefit of the
Bert Yost family , Proceeds will
be used to help pay funeral
expenses for several. family
members 'l'_ho died in a home
fire in Cheshire recently. The
sale will be held at the Bruce
Davis home in Rutland from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and
Sat~rday. The home is on
Larkins St. Contributors are
asked to call 742-3776 or 742·
3883 .
FAMILY TOGETHER
A family get-together was
held Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Harold Burnside,
Kingsburg Rd. Present were
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thomas,
Kelly and Suzan, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Thoma, Gall and
Linda, Chesler; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Hager, Debbie and
Rhonda, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Houdashelt and
Audra, Kingsburg Road, and
Tommy Burnside at home.

1.~=j~~::(~~:~~~:=:?}m::::.:::::::::::r~w::::;::%:::::::==~:=::::=:{~ :::::t=:~.::::::::::::·:::::::=~==~=:~::: ;·::::::~:=:::::::::~;::::~::=~:=::??7J~:=:~i:r~:;~:m

l;~ Meigs Social
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
HARRISONVILLE
OES,
regular session, 8 p,m,
Tuesday.
COUNTY Ministerial Assn.,
Tuesday, 10 a.m. at Bethany
United Methodist Church,
Dorcas.
LEWIS MANLEY Post
Auxiliary 263, Tuesday night at
the home of Mrs. Campbell
Harper .
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday
7:30 p.m. Winning works from
County Council and Conference
to be on display and children
recognized. Margaret Burg·
gras, county child psy·
chiatrist, guest speaker.
SOUTHERN . Athletic
Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. al
high school, Racine.
LETART FALLS • Portland
Stitch and Sew· 4-H Club,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. home Ada
Stigleano, Portland.
WOMEN'S GOLF Assn.,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at club
house on Pomeroy Golf Course.
SPECIAL meeting Mid·
dleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM
Tuesday 7:30p.m. F .C. Degree.
Robert King, W.M.
POMEROY Volunteer Fire
Department, 7:30 tonight at
Second War!l Firehouse.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy Methodist Church.
POMER0Y CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, staled
•convocation, 7:30 p.m. Wed·
nesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

Calendar I

SYRA~~~:~~~:D

Wed·
tr lion
nesd ay Horne De mons a
Club' Wednes day, 1 P.m. at
meeting house, Municipal Park.
Annual trip W be discussed.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Cl ub' 2 p.m. Wed ne sday, Mr s.
. har d 0 wen home. Mr s.
RlC
Beulah Strauss w review "The
Kenne dy Women ,, .
THURSDAY
PUBLIC MEETING on drug
abuse, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Amer 1'can Legion, home for
youth and adults. The Rev.
Arthur Lund and James Roach
speakers; films w be shown.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 26 12,
Letart Falls, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at grange hall. Bring
potluck refreshments.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
Methodist Church, family
potluck, 6:30 p.m. Thursday at
the church. Take own table
service.
DISABLED American
Veterans, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
at D.A.V. Hall, Pomeroy.
Refreshments. Jacob Turner,
.
AdJ.
AFTERNOON Circle of the
Heath Methodist Church,
Middleport, 1 p.m. luncheon
Thursday at the church. Each
member to bring a guest, a
covered dish and own table
service.
AFTERNOON CIRCL~,
Heath Umted MethodJsl
Church, coverded dish luncheoo,
I p.m. Thurs ay.
VISITED HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Nelson
and family of Reynoldsburg
spent the weekend in Mid·
dleport with her parents, Mr.
an d Mrs. R. G. Bat'le y.

Fund Projects Planned
Fund raising activities were
planned during a meeting of the
Sew-Rite-Sewing Club held at
the home of Mrs. Flo Strickland
recently.
Mrs. Larry Wehrung presided
at the meeting. A report on
proceeds from a recent rummage sal~ was given by Mrs.
Don McKnight and Mrs . Don
Mullen noted that she will
disb'ibute mother's calendaro
at the next meeting. Also given
out were dish cloths lor the

members to sell. Mrs. Raymond
Baily and Mrs. Elza Gilmore,
Jr. will be hostesses for the next
meeting.

PTA Opposing Sections of H.v B.' 176 . ·
1

·
Petitions and letters
in·
support of .lhe Ohio PTA's op·
position to portions of H.B: H6
11
d' . the Oh'
curren
y
pen
m
1o
Legislature mg regarding
distribution of additional tax
d II
t
. te h 1
o ars o prtva sc oo s were
· ul led M d
· ht t
ctrc t· a f lhon Pay mg PTA
a a
0
mee
mg
e
omeroy
M G
M'tch
'd t·
rsled
. ene 1ti ' pfrethsl ebnl,l
repor
on sec ons o e 1
.10
'ttee - hi h
now commt
w c
provides only a 10 percent in· f d f
bli
crease m un s or pu c
schools but a 150pct.increase in
ta d 11 · f
. te h
• 0 ars or pnva sc 001s.
The Ohio PTA has requested
th t bl'
h
b
a pu lC sc 0018 e more
adequately financed before
more state dollars are given for
the operation of private in·
stilulions. Pomeroy PTA
memhers were asked w get
behind the Ohio PTA by signing
the petitions and letters and
mailing them to their
legislators.
Officers for the 1971-72 year
were installed by Mrs. Leo
Crew in a candlelight
ceremony, Installed were Mrs.
Mitch, president; Mrs. Earl
Thoma, first vice president;
I
d
Mrs. James Warns ey, secon
vice president; Mrs. Arthur
Arnold, secretary ; Mrs.
Thomas Grueser, treasurer;
Mrs .
Robert
Lewis,
corresponding secretary; and
Mrs.
Pearl
Williams,
parhamentar1an.
Delegates to the Meigs
County Co neil are Mrs John
Murphy' ~rs. Louis Osborne,
Mrs. Gene Houdashelt, Mrs.
Maury Miller, and Mrs. Clifford
Kennedy, with Mrs. Richard
~osenbaum , Mrs. Dwight
Cullums, and Mrs. R1chard
Follrod as the alternates. .
Safety patrol boys and grrls

TRAINING COMPLETED
Carroll Richard Stewart, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stewart,
Hobson Road, has completed
six weeks of training at
Lackland Air Force Base,
Texas and has been trunsferred
to Kessler, Miss., for 10 weeks
of additional training . Young
Stewart is a 1970 graduate of
Meigs High School.

Mrs. Strickland and the cohostess, Mrs . Don Collins
served refreshments to those
named and Mrs . Ronald
Browning, Mrs. Charles Hoff.
man, Mrs. George Hoffman,
Mrs. Edward Wells, Mrs .
AT CONVENTION
James Neutzling, and Mrs. Bill Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T.
McDaniel.
Reed, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs.
Thereon Johnson are attending
a bankers' convention this week
in Columbus. Mr. Johnson is
chairman of the agriculture
committee of the Ohio Bankers
Margaret Sauer and the Rev. Association .
Audrey Miller.
Mrs. Miller read an article
MEETING SET
11
Mother Hearted Women"
Due
to
conflicting dates, a
from the WCTU paper. Refresh·
ments were served by the meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary
Baptist Women to those named of Drew Webster Post 39,
and Mrs. Inez Turner, Mrs. American Legion, will be held
Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Isabelle Sunday, May 16, at 3 p.m. at the
Winebrenner, Mrs. Iva Turner, post home. Junior auxlliary
members will hold a workshop
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin.
'
at the same hour.

Dangers of Alcohol Reviewed

Visit in Ironton
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold,
Pomeroy, were Sunday guests
of their daughter and son-in·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Smith
at Ironton .
During their visit the birthday
of Mrs. Smith was observed.
Homemade ice cream was
served with a decorated bir·
thday cake sent by the
honoree's aunt, Mrs. Roy Smith
of Pomeroy. Afternoon callers
were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Armstrong and sons, Chuck and
Jeff, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Schneider and daughters ,
Cathy, Carla and Margie.

· ' recogmzed
·
·
were
and 'presented·
trophies, pins and ,c~rtificates
by Mrs. Pearl Wtlhams and
Robert Morris principal In the
' · Bailey,· Mary
groupwereKeilh
Helen Blaettnar' Bruce
Bumgardner Arthur Brad·
.
'
shaw
Cindy · Campbell
'
Elizabeth
Card Nancy Ebers·•
'
bach . Lori Faulk
Kevin
Field~ Gregory Gl~ze Tom
'
•
Krautter' Beth McKnight,
.
Duane McLaughhn, . Debra
Osborne Crystal Hall Faith
p . ' caplaJ·n M
' ,·chael
errm ,
•
Owens Paul Reed lieutenant
'
'
'
Timony Rawllngs, Trudy
Roach Kimberly Sebo Greg
. '
·
'
Smtih, Ronme Snyder. , Rebec
. ca
Dust s lh R k
Thomas,
Y m1 , 1c y

Seyer,
1

P·arne 1.a
au gh a n. ,
~atncm Vaughan, and Cratg
enoy.
f
The Rev . Hoyt Allen o
p
· 1gave
omeroy Ch urch of Ch rts
devolwns usmg a chalk
drawmg . The treasurer
ted bal
f $4"" 14 .
repor a a nee o ...,, m
· 1ette r from sup t.
the treasury. A
· d
George Hargraves was rea
regarding proposed playground
.
•tmprovemen..,.
.
M
Mitch appomled Mrs
rs.
. .
Charles Evans, W. H. Perno,
and Ken McCullough to the
..
.
aud1tmg commtttee. It was
t d t
·d the PTA
vo e o provt e .
handbook lor offtcers and
members who will take the

_...., ·---- --l
Pomeroy....

study course to begin on June

MEAT

21A report was given on the
r.ecent meeting of the Meigs
County Councilor Parents and
Teachers, and Norris discussed
at length a variety of questions
and complaints from the PTA
d'lSCUSSl·00 box rangt·ng from •-o
'"
h
student
teacher
teach1'ng
muc
to inadequate playground
· ·
superv 18100 .
The sixth grade won the attendanc.e banner. Mrs. Mitch
presented a certificate of award
t h
for 100 percent eac er
enrollment given to the unit at
the District 16 spring conference .

NECK BONES
..

Fresh!

-BEEF-

Ground
Beef

UPHOLSTERY

""·

PORK SAUSAGE

••

Choose your own decorator fabrics from
brocades, florals and several others . Compare
our low, everyday prices . 54" wide .

•
3:

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

.. .,,,

DAIRY VALLEY

·-

992-2$56
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

I,I ·

Electric heating is ba sed on simplicity.
To start yo ur electric heating system selthe thermostal! That's all!
Electric heating creates no smoke, soot
or smudge. Culs down cleaning and
redecoratin ~.
.
Wtth Eleclnc Heatmg. temperatures
are even from Roor to ceiling. ll's a

Illustrated: Two new
l 7 jewel models,
only S35 . .

GOESSIE~

JEWELRY
STORE
.st.

Pomeroy

$
bots.,

gentle warmth.withoul hot bl asts or
sudd en chills. Very quiet, too.
However. if yo u prefer a conservative
hanJ with th e usual number of fingers
count this way : electric heating is . .
clean, convenient, economical and very
qutet. too.
Our special low electric heating rate.
and equal monthly payment plan.
make Electric Healing affordable' Get
all the !'acts ahout 1'he E/ectrit- Climate.

BOLOGNA
lb. 59e
Welker's Fresh Dressed

i

'

•••
I

eLIVER
eCHICKEN
eBEEF

,'.

•

lb.

39$

10 oz.
Jar

•

•

Vanilla
Choc.
Lemon
PINT

~I

SCOT LAD

FRENCH
FRIES
10

DE·BBIE

7 OL

--

boxes

NEW PINK LOTION

I

quarts
for

(\

tA

~ill

.

~r_:.· Conta
9~n.~

~WITH THIS

't,.f'.;_~.'

~

1ner

KING SIZE !32 oz.)

.~:~~

WHIP

COUPON

Limit

,

Redeemable only at

@~1
,,.,

BANANAS

FAVORITE BREAD

6

667·3415'

Coupon King Size,_ _ _ . . .

SA-TURDAY ONLY!

Golden
Ripe

basket

1 Coupon Per Purchase

YOUR MARK V STORE

Expires-5-15-71-Wit~out

l!iu;M&amp;MAWtMii.@Ifff+J~iJ::t:\L!JMEf!XJ.%U$:;; WI : nw!iJ\

31b.

I~

DISHWASHING
LIQUID

l''''"

J,•_:,J_•..•.•.

I.

VALUABL E CO UPON

::;ii:&lt;:

99~

~'* , COOL

DETERGENT

MYRL' COAKLEY ELECTRIC H-EATING &amp; INSUlATION

1.29
with t.oupon

·--

COLUMBUS AND IOUTHr:RIU OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

COOLVIUE, OHIO .

lb.

NESCAFE
OOFfEE

See yo~r "Good Comfort Guy.~;·

I,

ge
.

INSTMT

cans
for

..
.

4·

FRYING
CHICKENS

_.

;; , By Birds Eye ·

'

•

BACON

FROZEN FOOD

FRISKIES
DOG FOOD

'

,

.SUCED

.

for

I

(

•

_u_n_class~_·_fie~"""d_ _.....,.._ _ _ _.....,._._ "~.

'
I

Sure you can! But that ont hand
has to he something el.fe!

Superiors Carnival

'

doz.

Large Size

'

You can count
the benelltiol Electric Heot
ononehond.

DART

'

''

I

lb.

Frichy Only!

49

",

BULOVA

.

Sealtest Mi
Edon Toilet Tissue.l2 mb 1.00
Lux Liquid Detergent.. J~~YI9$
'FGVorite Bread.....::.:~5·= 1"~' 00
Ret•ll
SO-LO BATHROOM 80 cl3 9 ~
•
D1spenser
1 s............~ ...~~.

EG.GS

••

I

Thanks, Mom, for

lb.

$.}·09

'

GEM POP

Pomeroy, 0.

.I

ADOLPH SAYS:

But' hurry
for a delicious Malt, Coke,
Shake, Sundae and enjoy your fa.vorile Sand·
wl~h and Beverage.

• ••

Others available through our Catalog
Service, 3.49 to 8.98 yard. Wide
selection.

... the
well-timed
Graduation

I

.....

,.

Robinson's Cleaners

·lb.39C
BRAUNSCHWEIGER
HOME MADE

by the BOLT, by the YARD
2.98 to 3.98 yd.

992-2284

SUPERIORS

••

SUPERIORS

Thurschy Only!

CUBE
• STEAK

'

'

lb.

SLIPCOVER &amp; DRAPERY FABRICS

e

SLAB
e ·BACON'

'

.

Back Again
By Popular
Request!

•
•

lb.

..

Valley Mother's Day.

1

-~

gift

visiting the Dairy

Priced Special
Again This Week!

• Smoked Tender
•
• PICNI.C
HAMS
Ground
Chuck •
•• lb.
~

Personal Notes

GUESTS COME
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Zeigler
and Sue Ellen of Morgantown
and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Lilly and
son, C. H., Pineville, W. Va.
were Mother's Day weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Davenport and family, and Mrs.
B. B. Zeigler, in Middleport.

We have a choice
collection of
modestly priced
Bulova watches,
timed for
Graduation.

•••

CHOICE

Away ·
Bottles

Use'Our Free Parking Lot

!

USDA

FABRIC FINDS

115 W. Second

.

~·1

Meaty!

At Your Mark VStore ·

FOR HOME DECORATORS

Home for Mother's Day
weekend with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Gihnore, Jr.
were their sons, Joe of Ohio
University, Rick of Chillicoihe,
and Roger of Ohio Stale
University.
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Nicholson were Mother's Day
guests of their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich and Jayne.
Mrs. Olive Weber was the
recent weekend guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Dean Hill, Williamstown. On Saturday evening
they attended a church supper
at the Second Congregational
Church, Marietta, the one which
they attended as children, and
Sunday drove to Akron for
services at the Cathedral of
Tomorrow.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grif·
filh, Mrs. Anna Ogdin, and Mrs.
Ruth Gosney were in Columbus
Sunday. They went to Ohio State
University for Karen Griffith
and Maureen Kilbane and the
group then visited the Kingwood
Center at Mansfield.
Dr. and Mrs. Everett Tracy of
Columbus spent the weekend
here with his mother, Mrs.
Nellie Tracy.
Liss Linda Reed, first grade
teacher at the Pomeroy
Elemenlary School, underwent
an appendecl&lt;lmy at Veterans .
Memorial Hospital last week ..
She is currently recuperating at
the home of her parents In
Northern Ohio.
Mrs. Jerry Grueser was the
Mother's weekend guest of her
daughters, Marie, a junior at
Ohio University, and Marla, a
freshman there.

OUR PORK VALUES

MARKET,· Open Daily·9 to 10 . SunL 10 to 10
.

We .4rcept Federal FOod Stamps

•

Com• Mill and Secolll Sts.

PHONE: 992·3480

·

,

·

T~ Limit Ouantiti11". MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1•

loaves
. for .

THURSDAY ONIJ Y!

�'

;

EEKANDMEEK
. '
·:·.

: :: ·..

TAKE THESE VITAMIN
. PI LLS,COLD TABLETS

Bargains, Bargains,
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day·Belore Publication
Monday Deadllne9a .m.
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OF

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Day of Puqllcation
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reiect any ads
deemed objectiona I.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .

RATES
For Want Ad Ser~ice

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Minimum Charge 75c

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25 Per Cent Discount on paid
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CARD OF THANKS
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Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement. ·
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Dail; .
8:30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .

Pomeroy
Motor

2
QUALITY
1970 CHEVROLET

S:U95

Impala H T Sedan, 400 cu. in. engine, automaiic, power
steer ing &amp; power di sc fr ont brakes, new set w-w belted
tires, r adio, guards . skir1 , bea ut iful white finish wi1h blue
vi nyl roof &amp; matching interior . Factory air conditionecL
new car title &amp; bal. of 5 yr., 50,000 miles.

1970 CHEVROLET
$3895
Carlo Cpe., 400 cu . in. engine, automatic lrans .,
power steering &amp; power disc trent brakes, G-70·15 w·w

Mont~

tires. Rally wheels , tinted glass, factory air conditioned ,

L _ _ __

Dearborn St ., Chicago, lltlnols

60604. Phone : 312·353.5993, Ex .
43.
(5111, 12, 13,3tc

We talk to you

like a person.

sewing

shut.in . Please. Reward .

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

m inistrator of the estate; to
such ot the following as are
residents of the State of Ohio ,
vi z: - the surviving spouse, the
next of kin, the benefic iaries
und er the w ill ; and to the at .
torney
or
attorney s
representing any of the
aforementioned persons :
Mittie M . Nelson, Langsville,
Meigs County , Ohio, No . 20,476.
You are hereby not!fled that
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
pralsement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased , late
of said .County , was filed in th is
Court . Seid Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hear ing before th is Court on ·
·the 21st day of May, 1971. at .
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
Any per~on des iring to file
exceptions thereto must f ile
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, this 30th day
of April 1971 .
F . H. O'Br ien
Judge and ex.off lcio
of sa id Court
By Janet E . Morris
Depu ty Clerk

1514. 11, 2tc

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

!Helen H~lp Us!
I

I

By Helen Bottel

1

JUMPY L.O.L. GIVES
NEIGHBORHOOD KIDS JIITERS
Dear Helen:
,1 ,,
.
. ~·. tour of us guys hang around tog~ther ·after school. We play
sll'eetfoolballand maybe do some godly things, but we don't hurt
anyone.
But every til'fie four guys walk down the sidewalk (we're 15,
but pretty big) SQIIlebody thinks "gang." We've been accused of
every bad happening on the block, which we have nothing to do
with.
The other night we were walking behind a little old uptight
lady neighbor. We didn't intend to scare her, but I guess she
thought we were going to attack her and she screamed
"Mugsersl " and people came running out of their houses and it's
a wonder we didn't end up ln juvenile hall.
Later she brought her 35-year-old son over to yak at us some
more. Helen, we. didn't lay a finger on her or do anything. Just
being four boys in a bunch is enough to turn some people
paranoid, I guess.
It doesn't stop here. My mother got a call yesterday saying if
· our group didn't break up, the cops would be on us. Today at
school someone said, "I hear you got picked up for mugging some
old lady."
What can guys do, Helen, when they 're - GUILTY UNTIL
PROVEN INNOCENT
Dear GUPI :
You hit it right on the nose when you said, "Four boys in a
bunch is enough to turn some people paranoid." Unfortunately
there are L.O.L's (younger ones too) who assume all teenage
males are depraved, and in "gangs, " dangerous.
How to change the image ? If you're really interested (admit
It now - youltind of enjoy being misjudged by the uptights) offer to mow this woman's lawn: free. Talk to her - and to other
adults on the block. You may consider this boring, but you 'might
discover they're more hwnan than you think. -H.
Dear Helen:
I'm thinking of becoming a mortlcian and am wondering what
the chances of marriage might be for a person of that profession.
Are morticians in general more apt to be single or divorced?
Do they get married usually before they set up practice, or after?
The job offers security and a very comfortable living, and
depressions don't bring man'y lay-offs,.but I don't want to be a
bachelor all my life.
Could you ask girls what they think about marrying a mortician ? - CALL ME MORT
Dear Mort:
Sorry, I'm not up on marriage mortality rates among morticians, but I rather imagine that if a girl falls in love with you,
she'll accept your profession.
All I know is, I once lived next door to a happily married
mortician whose wife used embalming bottles (buried, bottoms
up) to make garden paths and borders. She had the "glassiest"
yard in the neighborhood, but breakage was a problem. - H.
Dear Helen :
What do you think of a teacher who:
Makes you walk around with a wad of gum on your nose?
Tells you to write a composition over five times because you
drew flowers on it ?
Always insults you, and says you 're spastic because you can't
draw?
Won't explain anything or let you talk to him? Ju.St puts you
down and gels the other kids laughing at you so you want to go
through the floor? What I can't understand is -a lot of kids aclually UKE him.
Makes you wear your coal all day because you have a seethrough bloU.se on, but when other girls wear them (even without
much on WJdernesth) he thinks they're great?'
Threstenl! to call your parents about your "disrespect," when
you flnallr,blow up and say what you thin~?
.
I get along with other teachers. Is it me - or him ?- HAD IT
Dear ,H~d It:
.... Both, probably.
,
· Pe1'6011allty clashes are hard to explain, but when two people
react on each other like soda or vinegar,
often because both
ire atubbGm, s~:WiJied, and feeling threatened.
'
Dan'Lwute tin\e fighting what you can't cllange. Just stick It
aut
don't dtalV lbi,s teacher next year.

it's

factory

5·11·61c

make

buttonholes,

on buttons,

designs with just the twist of a
single dial. Left In lay.away
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credit
terms available. Phone 992·
5641.
_ __ _ _ __ 5-_1Htc
MALE. contact Pomeroy water ELECTROLUX vacuum
department ai city hall.

5.11.31&lt;
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ :___

cleaner complete with

F . H . O'Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
~41

27 , (5) 4, 11,3fc

STATE OF OHIO
DEPP.RTMENTOF
HIGHWAYS
11

NOTICE OF RECEIPT

QF LOCP.TION AND
DESIGN APP~OVAL"
CONTRACT SALES LEGAL
COPY NO. 7J.3S9
COLUMBUS, OHIO
MAY4,1971

The Me igs County Com ·
m is sioners have received
Locat ion and Design Approval
from the Director of the Ohio
Department of Highways in
Columbus, Ohio for County
Road No . 20 In Meigs County .
The proposed project· begins on
County Roac:t No . 20, 1.5 miles
north of State Route No. U.S . 33
and cDnflnues for a distances of
0.1 mlle.
. Maps or sketches, as well as
all other i nformation con cerning this project, w i ll be
available to the public for
viewing at the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners Off ice ,
Courthouse , Pomeroy , Ohio.

-----Business Opportuni~ies
DISTRIBUTORSHIP

5·9·tfc

without

investment. Deluxe candy

and drug special ties

to

taverns , restaurants, stores,
etc . Dfrect factory connection

earning high dally cash
commissions. Every thing

furnished, but must be bond·
able handling our mer-

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS ·RECEIPTS! ! *

chandise and cash . Part or

full time. Write Chexco, 2910
N. 16th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
19132 .
H ·3fc

-=----=---,---For Rent

UNFURNISHED 4.room house,
bath, utility room, nice yard.
Point Lane, Lincoln Hgts .

Phone 992·3874.

5-9-lfc

- - - - -- -

Arrangements
&amp;
Flowers
Cemetery
Wreaths
Also Arrangements made to

You will have something of value to show for_t he S$$ you

spend when you buy your home - plus •.you gain an In·
come Tax !lfneflt, you build an equity and you are not
bound by the terms of a renial agreement.
Let Us Show You How You can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A.. F.H.A.,

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8 for n .oo

The
Daily
Sentinel
------

.;..••'
'

your specification.

VILLAGE

D()t(r
!lOLl&gt; '

FLOWER SHOP ·

And Conventional Loans.
Come See Us At 97'1&gt; N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992.7129

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

PAPA,Ar
LEAST
Wf. IIJegE

MESO
TIGI-IT,

Open9Ti15
Thurs.- Fri.- Sat.
Or Phone 949-2223

CHAPfg-

()NeDf

$/AAAI&lt;

IT WASSH£Et&lt;:
lbi&lt;!MEI\lT I l
COOLD HEAR EvEef WORD THAT
WAS SAID !lUr 1
CQI.JWt-)•T£EE

RACINE, 0.

Evenings Caii99H5J4, Dale Duflon

T;:u

ME- HoW DID Jatl-l
WAYNE FINALL'( K'NOC.K OFf
,A!.L THE !!AI:&gt; GC!YS ?

A

li{llo.IG I

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOMEJ~UYERS!

.EXPERJENCED
Radiator-Service
'

.40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
!«WINSOR
«BUDDY

.j(CHAMPION
,ir,VAN DYKE

-i!ALSO
DQUBLE-WIDES

WOULt&gt;N'T" WAm" TO

li 16!!-A
Bli FLABBIER

'•.

,JEE TOM CROW, GUY SlfitLER OR BOB CROW

- A BIT

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
From the Largest Truck or·
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~mallesl Heater Core.

, BLAETTNARS

773-5543

i'L oMet&lt;f~, WOJI.i? 1fOU f

15 BY,._, AN'
PANTIN'm

auGS BUNNY

·.

$5.55

NEW&amp;- OLD WORK
2 BEDROOM house, adults
ll1 Court St.
·-GUARANTEEDPomeroy, Ohio
All weather Roofing &amp;
preferred. Phone 992·2619.
Phone 992-2094
Cons1ructlon Co.
5-ll-6tp 1-- - - - - - - -....l HOUSE of Mrs. A. H. Bailey in
DEXTE~, 0 . 45726
Bashan
.
If
interested,
contact
PHONE 742·l945
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto ·
UNFURNISHED 3 · room PLANTS FOR SALE. Home
by leiter at this address : Mrs.
J. PHILLIP RICHLEY
grown Improved Mexican
apartment. Phone 992·2288.
A. H. Bailey, 5455 Urbane St.,
I nsured-Experlenced
DEPARTMENT OF HIGH ·
606 E. Ma1n, Pomeroy, 0.'
Work Guan·n tetd
1·31-tfc tomato plants, large smooth, · No,. St . Petersburg, Florida
WAY S
non·acid. Also, Heinz 1350,
33714.
5·2-30tc •·
15111. ltc 10 X 50, TWO·BEDROOM Yellow Golden Jubilee and
housetrailer . Phone 992-3954. Large Supersonic: They are - -- -- - - - SEWING MACI'jiNES. Repair
5·9·6fC sturdy, well rooted plants .
service, all makes. 992·2284
'
In Memory
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Also, hot peppers, mangos 24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
with
or
without farm
cabbage plants. On Rl.
Authorized Singer Sales and
IN R EMtMBRANCE of Mr. TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33, and
machinery . House with J
124
in
Syracuse,
Ohio,
500
feet
Service. We Shar:pen Scissors.
and Mrs. Leslie Hubbard who
1f2. mile north of new Meigs
bedrooms , dining room, living
3·29·tk
above
the
park
.
Thomas
died In the month of May.
High School. Phone 992-2941. Hayman .
Backhoe And
room . 1112 baths, enclosed
Sadly missed by the children .
3.S.tfc
back porch, wall to wall
End loader Work
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
S-2·30tc
l ·l1 ·1tc - - - - - carpeting . Aluminum siding ,
Complete Serv ice
FURNISHED and unfurnished ELLEN'S Gill Shop, Reedsville,
awning , storm windows and
Phone 949.3821
apartments. Close to school.
storm door s. City water .
Septic Tanks
Racine, Ohio
Ohio,
Memorial
Day
wreaths,
Notice
Phone 992·5434.
Selling
due
lo
ill
health.
Phone
Crill Bradford
baskets.
Ar·
And Leach Beds.
10·18·1fc sprays,
614.985·3938.
GUN SHOOT, Friday, May 14, 7
5.J.tfc
rangements, 69c and up.
4·25·18tp -c-=o-==---p.m. Mile Hili Road, assorted
H8·30tc
TRAILER
LOTS.
Bob's
Mobile
meats. Sponsored by Racine
llliLLDOZER work. Basement,
Court. Rl. 124, Syracuse ,
Fire Oepl.
ponds, landscaping. We do all
BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call 3 BEDROOM brick home .
Ohio. 992·2951 .
kinds of dozer work . Haul fill
Myron
Bailey,
Pl1one
992-5327.
Choice
location
In
Middleport.
4·2-ffc
dirt and top soil. See or call
5-4.3Q
Seen by appolnlmenl only.
Bob Jeffers afler 7 p. 'm.
REGISTERED Tennessee UNFURNISHED 3 room
Phone. 992·3491 after 4 p. m.
COLCJNTAL maple stereo-radio
Phone 992-3525.
walker
stud
service .
EXPERIENCED painter ,
5·7-tfc
apartment.
Inquire
at
combination, Am, Fm radio ,
4·23·301c
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone
exterior end Inferior . Donald
apartment 16, Coats Bidg.,
four speakers, 4 speed In742·5862.
Van Nlofer, 985·3951 .
ROOFING , Spouting and
termixed changer, separate
5·l1-12tp
4-20·301c Middleporl. For Information
phone 992·3641.
Painting. Also, metal slorage
controls. Balance $78.59. Use
- -- - - - 4·27·12fc
build inglOxlO, concrete floor , O'DELL WHEEL alignment
our budget terms. Cali 992·
HOME sewing. Phone 992·5327.
erected,
for $300. Richard
3352.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
H ·JOip
608 EAST MAIN
Wilt, Pllone 992-2889.
Complete front end service,
POMEROY
4-12·301&lt;
tune up and brake service .
ATTENTION Antique Clock
MIDDLE PORT- Custer Street
Wheels
balanced ... elec Dealers! Hayman's Auction
- 1 story, 5 rooms, bath, NEIGLER Construction . For
tronically
.
work
House. Laurel Cliff, Friday,
building or remodeling your guaranteed. All
garden space, fenced. $4,500.
Reasonable
May 14, will otter to lhe
home , Call Guy Nelgler, rates. Phone 992·3213.
hiqhest bidder, one . Seth ·
Racine, Ohio.
RACINE- Rt. 2 - I slory, 6
4·22·30tc
7-31-tfc
rooms,
bath,
2
or
3
bedrooms
,
Thomas wall clock, about 150
1.37 acres . $7,000.
years old, runs good; also,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
RALPH'S
CAR PET
one Polaroid camera M·llO
"Ditching
Electric sewer
Upholstery Cleaning Service. cleanlng.". Reasonable
POMEROY- Wright Slreet ·with leather carrying case,
rates .
Free estimates. Phone 'Phone
2 ni ce building lots, house.
flash, light meter, filters,
John
Russell,
Gallipolis (46-0294.
CLOSE TO SCHOOL. $6.900.
extra lens ; a 9ood one. No
3·12·tfC · Gallipolis 446-4782.
reasonable b•ds will be
MfNERSVILLE .. OV- - - - -===,.,.-4.7-lfc
refused. Sale starts at 7 p.m.
SEPTIC
lanks
cleaned.
Miller
ERLOOKING
THE
RIV5·9-61c
ER - l lf2 story, 7 rooms,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. HARRISON'S TV AND AN=--------662·3035.
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
bath, · 3 bedrooms, NICE .
OVEN FRESH bakery pro·
992·2522.
510,000.
2-12-tlc
ducts. Jimmy's Pastry Shop,
6.1Q.tfc
N. 2nd Ave. , Middleport .
POMEROY
Locust
Street
t
BACKHOE
AND
D&lt;ilE.R
work.
Phone 992·3555.
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
slor·y; · 3 bedrooms, bath,
Septic tanks Installed. George
4-29-3otc
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
LIKE NEW INSIDE. $9,500.
(Bill I Pullins, Phone 992·2478..·
s.9.3tp
Pomeroy.
Phone
992-3891.
4·25·tfC
KOSCOT Kosmellcs, wigs and
4-9-flc
BUSINESS-FARMSaccessories. May and June
HOMES- RENTALS
READY -MIX
COfoiCRETE
special. Kleanslng Kream, For
FOR
REAL
ESTATE
delivered
right
to your
52.25. Distributors, Brown's. . .MODERN walnut stereoCALL
US
pro/ect.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Phone 992-5113.
radio combination,' dual
HENRY
CLELAND
est
mates.
Phone
992.3284.
volume
control
,
4
speakers,
4
4·23·11&lt;
REAL TOR
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co .,
speed changer, separate
Office- 992-2259
Mt.1dleport, Ohio.
•
conirols. Balance $71.43. Use
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
Residence
992·2568
6·30-tfc
USED CARS
our budget terms. Call 992your sick TV lo Chuck's TV
5-9-6tc
Shop, 151 Butlernut Ave.,
3352.
O'BRIEN' ELECTRIC Service.
Pomeroy.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 5:.....·Htc
1h-acre
NEW
BRICK
home
on
Commercial, residential and
4·23·ifC
WIDE
In
Tuppers
Plains.
·
d t 11 11
Ph
lot
BEAUTIFUL selection of
Features built-In kitchen
\~l~.s r a w r ng . one 247·
F.as 4 door sedan. V-8
WILL PICK up merchandise
flowers, baskets , wreaths,
wall
to
wall
carpel,
bath
and
·l
·12.-tk
motor,
auto. trans 1
and take to auction on a
and sprays for Memorial Day.
half , lull basement. Call
percentage basis. Call Jim
Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport.
Insurance
Chester 985-3598.
Adams, auctioneer, Rulland.
4·2J.ffc
1
3
5
0
1
_ _ _ _ __ __:5-:..::..:·::.:.:c:.. AUTOMOBILE insurance been·
Phone 742-4461 .
1220 Wuhintton Blvd.
.
9·23·tfc 1965 FRIGIDAIRE automallc
'
cancelled?
Lost
your
Belpre,Ohlo
operator's license? Call 992·
washer,
$75; 1968
2966.
DR IVERS Needed. We Ira in
wringer washer
with Maytag
rump,
you to:be a semi -driver, local,
$75; 1969 RCA Whlrlpoo chest TOMATO PLANTS, Valiant ,
6-15-ttc
;,You'll Like oUr Quality·
city and dock training now
freezer, 17 cu . ft., $150. Phone Jung's Earliest, Marglobe,
.Way of Doing Business."
available. Earn high wages
992-6416.
· Oxhart, Stump of the World,
Estate
For
GMAC FINANCING
afler short training. For
5-9·31p Rutgers, L•ncoin, Dot's
--·-·· '
FOR SALE - Syracuse, 3 992-5342
'
Pomeroy
application and Interview, - -- - - - - - Excel, Yellow Colossal.
rooms, bath, full basement,
cal l 513·863.6404, or write 2 MARE riding horses, 3 and 4 Burpee' s, Delicious and
Open
Eveninga
'Til6:00
lot, large enough lor trailer.
Broker
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255
TitS p.M. 5at,
years old . See Donald Smith Jubilee. Sturdy transplants.
Pnced to sell. Phone 992·3205.
110
Mechanic
St.
Corw1n Ave., Hamilton, Ohio
at Racine, Ohio, Phone 9-49Dozen for SOc. B. Qvisen·
Pomeroy, Ohio
45015.
--:--:-----....:._
S·_:.:
l1·5tc
27)4.
berry, Syracuse, Ohio. ·
_ _ _ _ _ _ __s_:·I0·2tc
5-9-Jtc
5·2·12tp SYRACUS.E - 8 rooms, 3 or 4
bedrooms, 4 large closets,
RUBBER STAMPS made to YEARLING polled Hereford sow and pigs, - weaned. Pigs
bath. gas forced air furnac.e,
bull , grain fed , ready to and shoats. Phone 742-3880.
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
modern kitchen . $12,000.00.
bulcher or would be nice for
• H ·31c
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
stock , $200. Phone 9~2 · 2630. -~------Ohio.
RUTLAND- 2 bedroom home,
H -6tC
2-12-90tc
bath, utility room, gas heal,
--------SUPER STUFF, sure nuffl
lot . $9,500.00.
·
large
That's
Blue
Lustre
for
iol, $1,500, s.track
RED,UCE sate ond last with 1.72-ACRE
cleaning
carpets.
Rent
tape player and six tapes, $50.
Gobese • tablets and E-Vap
elecfric shampooer, $1. Baker 76 ACRES- 20 tractor tillable,
Phone 142·3656.
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
Well water, 3 bay Implement
·9·2tp Furniture, Middleport. 5·5-61c
4·14-60tp _ _ _ ____,_ _5:.....
shec:l. all minerals, B room
house. Only $13,500.00. ·
PLANTS NOW ready : Single --~--Wanted To Buy
and double petunias, pansies Rea 1E
F'or S 18
MIDDLEPI)RT - 8 rooms,
coleus,
Mexican
tomatoes
and
,
_
S
8
bath, modern kitchen with
TELEPHONt:S , brass beds,
other varieties, peppers, HOUSE, 1640 Llntoln Hfs.,
cook
and bake unlls, gas
clocks, dishes, old. furniture ,
cabbage, 1/ 2 or 1 dozen packs.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-7293.
forced air furnace, 'entral air
e lc. Wrlle .M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Do.n Hubbard, Syracuse,
10·25-flc
conditioning , 2 car garage.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
Oh1o.
Phone
992·5776.
·,----..,-------=..:.....
$14,500.00. . .
H?-11,·
·
4·22-241c FIVE ROOM house; two
bedrooms, balh, basement, LOOK, THINK, AND COMA.N TtQ 'U E S:
Dhhes,
8-MONTH
otd'
loy
Manchester
·wall
lo wall carpet In living
~AAE, BEFORE BUYING.
telephones, tl~,. brass beds,
and
Chih•Johua
pups,
S35
room,
beclrool'l••
and
beth.
THEN CALL m-ms.
tamps, etc. Lee . Rudisill.
each. 3·yeor old rat terrier Gas forced al r furnl.ce.
NUEN
L. TEAFORD
Phont 992·3403.
dog, S10. Pljone 66J.3624.
Middlejo6tt, phone 992-3420.
ASSOCIATE
Arnold Or...
.
1 5-11-3tc ·
""*ftc
5-7·61C

IT M!:ANS YEJ:l. lDN

ON 1&amp;4.SI WI-lEN irl'
&lt;:;&amp;CQNO LIGI41S UP,
A DOOR. Je OPE"' !
iH' TJ.&lt;IRD IS YER
1\JRN .:;;c;.N,AL..!

IH.I NGO!

.-..''.

Mason, W. Va.

WHEN Tf-1' ~11:2.ST
L.l9f.IT FLASHES ON

~00&lt;:: AT n&lt;Ai COSI4SOAJ'!D, F'UDDSYI Tl41&amp;
CAI:2.'S GOT E.~·

~:'
,-

•'

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
· Painting ·

EXPERT
.Wheel Alignment

HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, 2 lots,
located in Syracuse. Call after
3 p.m. weekdays 992·2806.
5·5·61C

WHUT'S 'YORE

•METI10D' MANL'/
STANLEY? WE

LARN!."-

ABC CLEANERS .

742-4902

Dick Vaughan
992-3374
Dale Little
992-6346

OIARMI! 04 STANL£'1!!
COMPARED 10 'fOIJ. NO
MAN', IS MANL'/ !!

All you pay for is cleaning
and pressing. Pay when you
get· them back.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY SERVICE
CALL 773-5543.
Please f No Free Storing on
Bulk (leaning . .

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios .

Ciu:torn meat cutting
Pleasant Ridge Aoad
Pomeroy, 0.

-BUT WITf.\ Tf.\E GAME
OLD DE.\/ASTAilt&gt;.lG

L6AVEi OUR NEiW 1"~Ei6
AT THE 11\Ei~Of OF THIS'

For Your Garments

Complete
Remodeling

THE SHOP

®

FREE STORAGE

JOHNSON MASONRY

Pomeroy

·""· 992-2143

SEEDIER· ··

MEMORIAL BgiDGE' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSB'URG, W. VA.

36" X 23" X .009

Sheets

L()\l,lt;E&lt;~Y

Artificial Flowers
Single Flowers

What Do You Have For The sss y.., Pay In Rent?

For Sale

Aluminum

NUSS ·· FETCH ME
MY COAL Oil
AN' HONEY

' I ,

tachments, cordwlnder and
paint spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan available.
Phone 992·5641.
5-ll-6tc

Employment Wanted

AN' PENNYCILLIN AN'
COME BACK IN THREE

· DAVS,

Business ··s ervices

at-

Case No. 20486 . LADY WANTS woman to live in
Estate of
ARMETT
M.
as companion. Phone 992-7269
SHEETS , Deceased .
any time after 5 p.m .
Notice is hereby given that
H -3tc
Carrie Wears of Rutland, Oh io,
SIX ROOM house, bath, lull
ha s been duly appointed Ad ·
ministralrix of the Estate of
basemen!, 133 Butternut Ave.,
Armett M . Sheets, deceased,
just walking djstance from
lat e of Meigs County, Ohio.
WOMAN wants housework to do down town Pomeroy. Contact
Creditors are required to file
in Pomeroy area . Phone
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wad~worth
their cla ims with sa id fiduc iary
Chesler
985·3900.
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
wi th in four month s.
H ·61c 237-4334, Columbus.
Dated thi s 21 st day of April
197 1

.

1

monograms, and make fancy

3otp
,_OM
=I!R"'O""Y_,~OH
~IO""'--------·_j, _ ______4_.3_0._

LEGAL NOTICE

WMP0/1390

:

L

@)

_

LEGAL NOTICE
INVITATION TO BID for
PAINTING AND FLOOR The State of Ohio, Meigs
REPAIRS, U. S. POST OF . County, Probate Court .
To the Executor or Ad ·
FICE , MIDDLEPORT, OH IO.

from GENERAL SERVICE
ADMINISTRATION , 219 S.

Pri•cts Tbru April
HAND PUSH MOWERS
Low As
63.95
IRIDING MOWERS
Lost
Low As
271.95
ENVELOPE conlaining money
near Racine Bank. ca11 992· ECONOMY TILLERS
Low As
134.95
3517.
H ·3tp
POMEROY .
ANYONE
knowing
the
J.VV. Corsoy,A!gr
Whereabouts of a male .
Phone m-2111
Siamese cat, please call
Middleporl 992·3832. Pet of

this one.

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
P.ND APPRAISEMENT

GS.QSBC ·B960A . Estlmeted cost
IS under S2S ,OOO .OO . Bids
publicly opened at 2:00 P.M .,
local time at the place of bid
opening June 1, 1971 , in Room
1462, Everett McKinley Dirksen
Bldg., 219 s. Dearborn St.,
Chicago, Illinois. Drawings and
specifications Including bidding
documents NOW AVAILABLE

I~

bumper guards, Positraction, radio &amp; R.S. speaker
console with bucket seats, beautiful beige color with blk .
,vinyl roof . New car title &amp; bal. of 5 yr., 50,000 miles. See

~:!~!s. ~~~r Co.

'IEP-- I I;VEN GOT
A LEETLE iETCH
OF IT MVSELF

..·

ALlEY OOP

- - -- - -

GASOilNE ALLE,Y

JOHNSON MASONRY

®

742-4902

- - ---

THE BORN LOSER
P' Pt.£166' L8" IT 6E 11\t;

'

'8.IJaJ1ll!
UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Cleland Realty

------

Sale

• ·· ~

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

12' · W • 24' ·

"

'65 Oldsmobile

a

MIWR

MQBILE HOMES

•---------..1

Virgil B. _
TEAFORD

495.

Karr &amp; Van. lancH ·

Real

Sale

SR.

tat·

I

a

.

Yoolo'*'1'1 ~1&lt;&gt;1 CARE FOR YOUR CLOTHlll8
FROM THE DAY THE TAILOR DELIVIIlRII; CARE IIQR
YOUR HONOR FROM THill DAY YOUR Bl!lARD SPROUTB.

DAIL.¥ CROSSWORD

'

..

WI40'S JONNY
SCORI&lt;I?

10. Picnic spot
11. Witch

mark
(abbr.)

17. canto
18. Lard
21. Cameroons
tribe

23. Instinctual

collection
9. King (Sp.)
11. Jsaueof
38 ACI'OIII

13. - - the
line
17. Book

need
25. -

'•

name

dQzen
27. Lo8B

'

Yulerdar'• A••wer
35. Memorable
batsman

I

J.::

Mill'"·

ot

A lies
Be11.d
26. carte

2~ .

3!. Partota
metrical

toot '

I uttw;

38. Brink
. 37. lllarthen·
ware

~'lUilE

jar

38. Reparteo

01

• 39. "Down

under"
bird

[, ()I

10. Dalley

4.1 . Seek alms

In

New
York
• 29. German
opa
30. Sherman'JJ

"THIS Mi6HT !!IE
CONNECTEt7 WITI1 A
6AME OF C~UET.

r 12

common

28. City

"-

Jac.)

Unocramblt these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

2'· Sign

Adamaon
12 wets.)

S:rndlc~ote,

1lfl~~ rn~ ~ -lk.i :::~: ....J

32. Shrew

by
Joy

PROVI!lRB
(C 11'11 KJn• :t'uturu

~~~~®

(2

wds.) ·
fixture
5. But (Lat.) . 19. "Marta"
6. Rusoian
20. Thrice
city
(mus.)
1. Clothes
22. Girl's
style
1llck8. Anecdote

date
(3 wets.)
!4. Paradtse

-

rience

.,, Pizzeria

wedding

15. Lubricate
16. Punctulition

girlish
'expe·

2. Barter
3. Housewife

12. Set a

- ·RUSSIAN

orable

! . MlBS
:Moorehead

musketeer
6. Bradley

JON NY SCORN?

!&amp;.Mem-

DOWN

ACJROSS
1. Famous

(;11.\0.W

Now trraniJ'! the clreled letten
to form the ourprloe an~wer, u
IU cjeoted by the above &lt;lrloon.

""·--w. I "c l l J 'D' r I I XI J"
' 1'

is

I

hell"
31. Manh
33. Touch

'

(Aatwen lo!Jiorrowj

(comb.

Junohl'" GOING fiNIS KINGLY MOTION

form)

36. Be mistaken

AnnJII'r 1

37. Chicken
gumbo

' 'f&gt;

l 'h(ll
hrt~c drit•rr 1mltl1f'hf'n llu~ ,.Jr,.,J lrim
'"lwlplr,.r t1• (1/ilfl't -NO SMOKING!.

ingredient
38. COnjugal

feUctty

(2wds.)

i2. Reflect
43. Holmes'
"-

Venner''
H . Melody
fG. Boaiil!ul

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's bow to work It:
It A
LO;J!IGFELLOW
.
X 1' D L B·A A X R
One totter llmply •Iandi lor an9ther. In this II8Jilple A to
UJ&lt;d for the throe L'a, X tor the two .O'a, etc. Single Jettors,
apostrophe&amp;, the tenJ(h 1!14 tormatton of the .words are all
hint.. Jllach day the code totten an different.

~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~;
I WONDER W~'l M~EI!AU.

MANfJi,Ef/6 HATE ~~~ ,.

A ilryp&amp;ocram qaotoll••
QMlHA
MU
~OA

OIB

WM!l.H
~M

VXB

iDLLMlV

Jil EHNUUBIBIIIW 'B;

ROIIlPDOPB

- QNRRJii,OY

QBOG
VM

W)(ltPlBTB

FB

RMTB
XBOIH .
1('.

/(

�'

;

EEKANDMEEK
. '
·:·.

: :: ·..

TAKE THESE VITAMIN
. PI LLS,COLD TABLETS

Bargains, Bargains,
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day·Belore Publication
Monday Deadllne9a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections

OF

Will be accepted un1il9 a .m . for

Day of Puqllcation
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reiect any ads
deemed objectiona I.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .

RATES
For Want Ad Ser~ice

5 cents per Word one insertion

Minimum Charge 75c

12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six con .
secutive insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
Sl.SO for 50 word minimum .

Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement. ·
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Dail; .
8:30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .

Pomeroy
Motor

2
QUALITY
1970 CHEVROLET

S:U95

Impala H T Sedan, 400 cu. in. engine, automaiic, power
steer ing &amp; power di sc fr ont brakes, new set w-w belted
tires, r adio, guards . skir1 , bea ut iful white finish wi1h blue
vi nyl roof &amp; matching interior . Factory air conditionecL
new car title &amp; bal. of 5 yr., 50,000 miles.

1970 CHEVROLET
$3895
Carlo Cpe., 400 cu . in. engine, automatic lrans .,
power steering &amp; power disc trent brakes, G-70·15 w·w

Mont~

tires. Rally wheels , tinted glass, factory air conditioned ,

L _ _ __

Dearborn St ., Chicago, lltlnols

60604. Phone : 312·353.5993, Ex .
43.
(5111, 12, 13,3tc

We talk to you

like a person.

sewing

shut.in . Please. Reward .

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

m inistrator of the estate; to
such ot the following as are
residents of the State of Ohio ,
vi z: - the surviving spouse, the
next of kin, the benefic iaries
und er the w ill ; and to the at .
torney
or
attorney s
representing any of the
aforementioned persons :
Mittie M . Nelson, Langsville,
Meigs County , Ohio, No . 20,476.
You are hereby not!fled that
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
pralsement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased , late
of said .County , was filed in th is
Court . Seid Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hear ing before th is Court on ·
·the 21st day of May, 1971. at .
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
Any per~on des iring to file
exceptions thereto must f ile
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, this 30th day
of April 1971 .
F . H. O'Br ien
Judge and ex.off lcio
of sa id Court
By Janet E . Morris
Depu ty Clerk

1514. 11, 2tc

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

!Helen H~lp Us!
I

I

By Helen Bottel

1

JUMPY L.O.L. GIVES
NEIGHBORHOOD KIDS JIITERS
Dear Helen:
,1 ,,
.
. ~·. tour of us guys hang around tog~ther ·after school. We play
sll'eetfoolballand maybe do some godly things, but we don't hurt
anyone.
But every til'fie four guys walk down the sidewalk (we're 15,
but pretty big) SQIIlebody thinks "gang." We've been accused of
every bad happening on the block, which we have nothing to do
with.
The other night we were walking behind a little old uptight
lady neighbor. We didn't intend to scare her, but I guess she
thought we were going to attack her and she screamed
"Mugsersl " and people came running out of their houses and it's
a wonder we didn't end up ln juvenile hall.
Later she brought her 35-year-old son over to yak at us some
more. Helen, we. didn't lay a finger on her or do anything. Just
being four boys in a bunch is enough to turn some people
paranoid, I guess.
It doesn't stop here. My mother got a call yesterday saying if
· our group didn't break up, the cops would be on us. Today at
school someone said, "I hear you got picked up for mugging some
old lady."
What can guys do, Helen, when they 're - GUILTY UNTIL
PROVEN INNOCENT
Dear GUPI :
You hit it right on the nose when you said, "Four boys in a
bunch is enough to turn some people paranoid." Unfortunately
there are L.O.L's (younger ones too) who assume all teenage
males are depraved, and in "gangs, " dangerous.
How to change the image ? If you're really interested (admit
It now - youltind of enjoy being misjudged by the uptights) offer to mow this woman's lawn: free. Talk to her - and to other
adults on the block. You may consider this boring, but you 'might
discover they're more hwnan than you think. -H.
Dear Helen:
I'm thinking of becoming a mortlcian and am wondering what
the chances of marriage might be for a person of that profession.
Are morticians in general more apt to be single or divorced?
Do they get married usually before they set up practice, or after?
The job offers security and a very comfortable living, and
depressions don't bring man'y lay-offs,.but I don't want to be a
bachelor all my life.
Could you ask girls what they think about marrying a mortician ? - CALL ME MORT
Dear Mort:
Sorry, I'm not up on marriage mortality rates among morticians, but I rather imagine that if a girl falls in love with you,
she'll accept your profession.
All I know is, I once lived next door to a happily married
mortician whose wife used embalming bottles (buried, bottoms
up) to make garden paths and borders. She had the "glassiest"
yard in the neighborhood, but breakage was a problem. - H.
Dear Helen :
What do you think of a teacher who:
Makes you walk around with a wad of gum on your nose?
Tells you to write a composition over five times because you
drew flowers on it ?
Always insults you, and says you 're spastic because you can't
draw?
Won't explain anything or let you talk to him? Ju.St puts you
down and gels the other kids laughing at you so you want to go
through the floor? What I can't understand is -a lot of kids aclually UKE him.
Makes you wear your coal all day because you have a seethrough bloU.se on, but when other girls wear them (even without
much on WJdernesth) he thinks they're great?'
Threstenl! to call your parents about your "disrespect," when
you flnallr,blow up and say what you thin~?
.
I get along with other teachers. Is it me - or him ?- HAD IT
Dear ,H~d It:
.... Both, probably.
,
· Pe1'6011allty clashes are hard to explain, but when two people
react on each other like soda or vinegar,
often because both
ire atubbGm, s~:WiJied, and feeling threatened.
'
Dan'Lwute tin\e fighting what you can't cllange. Just stick It
aut
don't dtalV lbi,s teacher next year.

it's

factory

5·11·61c

make

buttonholes,

on buttons,

designs with just the twist of a
single dial. Left In lay.away
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credit
terms available. Phone 992·
5641.
_ __ _ _ __ 5-_1Htc
MALE. contact Pomeroy water ELECTROLUX vacuum
department ai city hall.

5.11.31&lt;
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ :___

cleaner complete with

F . H . O'Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
~41

27 , (5) 4, 11,3fc

STATE OF OHIO
DEPP.RTMENTOF
HIGHWAYS
11

NOTICE OF RECEIPT

QF LOCP.TION AND
DESIGN APP~OVAL"
CONTRACT SALES LEGAL
COPY NO. 7J.3S9
COLUMBUS, OHIO
MAY4,1971

The Me igs County Com ·
m is sioners have received
Locat ion and Design Approval
from the Director of the Ohio
Department of Highways in
Columbus, Ohio for County
Road No . 20 In Meigs County .
The proposed project· begins on
County Roac:t No . 20, 1.5 miles
north of State Route No. U.S . 33
and cDnflnues for a distances of
0.1 mlle.
. Maps or sketches, as well as
all other i nformation con cerning this project, w i ll be
available to the public for
viewing at the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners Off ice ,
Courthouse , Pomeroy , Ohio.

-----Business Opportuni~ies
DISTRIBUTORSHIP

5·9·tfc

without

investment. Deluxe candy

and drug special ties

to

taverns , restaurants, stores,
etc . Dfrect factory connection

earning high dally cash
commissions. Every thing

furnished, but must be bond·
able handling our mer-

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS ·RECEIPTS! ! *

chandise and cash . Part or

full time. Write Chexco, 2910
N. 16th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
19132 .
H ·3fc

-=----=---,---For Rent

UNFURNISHED 4.room house,
bath, utility room, nice yard.
Point Lane, Lincoln Hgts .

Phone 992·3874.

5-9-lfc

- - - - -- -

Arrangements
&amp;
Flowers
Cemetery
Wreaths
Also Arrangements made to

You will have something of value to show for_t he S$$ you

spend when you buy your home - plus •.you gain an In·
come Tax !lfneflt, you build an equity and you are not
bound by the terms of a renial agreement.
Let Us Show You How You can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A.. F.H.A.,

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~
8 for n .oo

The
Daily
Sentinel
------

.;..••'
'

your specification.

VILLAGE

D()t(r
!lOLl&gt; '

FLOWER SHOP ·

And Conventional Loans.
Come See Us At 97'1&gt; N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992.7129

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

PAPA,Ar
LEAST
Wf. IIJegE

MESO
TIGI-IT,

Open9Ti15
Thurs.- Fri.- Sat.
Or Phone 949-2223

CHAPfg-

()NeDf

$/AAAI&lt;

IT WASSH£Et&lt;:
lbi&lt;!MEI\lT I l
COOLD HEAR EvEef WORD THAT
WAS SAID !lUr 1
CQI.JWt-)•T£EE

RACINE, 0.

Evenings Caii99H5J4, Dale Duflon

T;:u

ME- HoW DID Jatl-l
WAYNE FINALL'( K'NOC.K OFf
,A!.L THE !!AI:&gt; GC!YS ?

A

li{llo.IG I

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOMEJ~UYERS!

.EXPERJENCED
Radiator-Service
'

.40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
!«WINSOR
«BUDDY

.j(CHAMPION
,ir,VAN DYKE

-i!ALSO
DQUBLE-WIDES

WOULt&gt;N'T" WAm" TO

li 16!!-A
Bli FLABBIER

'•.

,JEE TOM CROW, GUY SlfitLER OR BOB CROW

- A BIT

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
From the Largest Truck or·
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~mallesl Heater Core.

, BLAETTNARS

773-5543

i'L oMet&lt;f~, WOJI.i? 1fOU f

15 BY,._, AN'
PANTIN'm

auGS BUNNY

·.

$5.55

NEW&amp;- OLD WORK
2 BEDROOM house, adults
ll1 Court St.
·-GUARANTEEDPomeroy, Ohio
All weather Roofing &amp;
preferred. Phone 992·2619.
Phone 992-2094
Cons1ructlon Co.
5-ll-6tp 1-- - - - - - - -....l HOUSE of Mrs. A. H. Bailey in
DEXTE~, 0 . 45726
Bashan
.
If
interested,
contact
PHONE 742·l945
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto ·
UNFURNISHED 3 · room PLANTS FOR SALE. Home
by leiter at this address : Mrs.
J. PHILLIP RICHLEY
grown Improved Mexican
apartment. Phone 992·2288.
A. H. Bailey, 5455 Urbane St.,
I nsured-Experlenced
DEPARTMENT OF HIGH ·
606 E. Ma1n, Pomeroy, 0.'
Work Guan·n tetd
1·31-tfc tomato plants, large smooth, · No,. St . Petersburg, Florida
WAY S
non·acid. Also, Heinz 1350,
33714.
5·2-30tc •·
15111. ltc 10 X 50, TWO·BEDROOM Yellow Golden Jubilee and
housetrailer . Phone 992-3954. Large Supersonic: They are - -- -- - - - SEWING MACI'jiNES. Repair
5·9·6fC sturdy, well rooted plants .
service, all makes. 992·2284
'
In Memory
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Also, hot peppers, mangos 24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
with
or
without farm
cabbage plants. On Rl.
Authorized Singer Sales and
IN R EMtMBRANCE of Mr. TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33, and
machinery . House with J
124
in
Syracuse,
Ohio,
500
feet
Service. We Shar:pen Scissors.
and Mrs. Leslie Hubbard who
1f2. mile north of new Meigs
bedrooms , dining room, living
3·29·tk
above
the
park
.
Thomas
died In the month of May.
High School. Phone 992-2941. Hayman .
Backhoe And
room . 1112 baths, enclosed
Sadly missed by the children .
3.S.tfc
back porch, wall to wall
End loader Work
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
S-2·30tc
l ·l1 ·1tc - - - - - carpeting . Aluminum siding ,
Complete Serv ice
FURNISHED and unfurnished ELLEN'S Gill Shop, Reedsville,
awning , storm windows and
Phone 949.3821
apartments. Close to school.
storm door s. City water .
Septic Tanks
Racine, Ohio
Ohio,
Memorial
Day
wreaths,
Notice
Phone 992·5434.
Selling
due
lo
ill
health.
Phone
Crill Bradford
baskets.
Ar·
And Leach Beds.
10·18·1fc sprays,
614.985·3938.
GUN SHOOT, Friday, May 14, 7
5.J.tfc
rangements, 69c and up.
4·25·18tp -c-=o-==---p.m. Mile Hili Road, assorted
H8·30tc
TRAILER
LOTS.
Bob's
Mobile
meats. Sponsored by Racine
llliLLDOZER work. Basement,
Court. Rl. 124, Syracuse ,
Fire Oepl.
ponds, landscaping. We do all
BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call 3 BEDROOM brick home .
Ohio. 992·2951 .
kinds of dozer work . Haul fill
Myron
Bailey,
Pl1one
992-5327.
Choice
location
In
Middleport.
4·2-ffc
dirt and top soil. See or call
5-4.3Q
Seen by appolnlmenl only.
Bob Jeffers afler 7 p. 'm.
REGISTERED Tennessee UNFURNISHED 3 room
Phone. 992·3491 after 4 p. m.
COLCJNTAL maple stereo-radio
Phone 992-3525.
walker
stud
service .
EXPERIENCED painter ,
5·7-tfc
apartment.
Inquire
at
combination, Am, Fm radio ,
4·23·301c
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone
exterior end Inferior . Donald
apartment 16, Coats Bidg.,
four speakers, 4 speed In742·5862.
Van Nlofer, 985·3951 .
ROOFING , Spouting and
termixed changer, separate
5·l1-12tp
4-20·301c Middleporl. For Information
phone 992·3641.
Painting. Also, metal slorage
controls. Balance $78.59. Use
- -- - - - 4·27·12fc
build inglOxlO, concrete floor , O'DELL WHEEL alignment
our budget terms. Cali 992·
HOME sewing. Phone 992·5327.
erected,
for $300. Richard
3352.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
H ·JOip
608 EAST MAIN
Wilt, Pllone 992-2889.
Complete front end service,
POMEROY
4-12·301&lt;
tune up and brake service .
ATTENTION Antique Clock
MIDDLE PORT- Custer Street
Wheels
balanced ... elec Dealers! Hayman's Auction
- 1 story, 5 rooms, bath, NEIGLER Construction . For
tronically
.
work
House. Laurel Cliff, Friday,
building or remodeling your guaranteed. All
garden space, fenced. $4,500.
Reasonable
May 14, will otter to lhe
home , Call Guy Nelgler, rates. Phone 992·3213.
hiqhest bidder, one . Seth ·
Racine, Ohio.
RACINE- Rt. 2 - I slory, 6
4·22·30tc
7-31-tfc
rooms,
bath,
2
or
3
bedrooms
,
Thomas wall clock, about 150
1.37 acres . $7,000.
years old, runs good; also,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
RALPH'S
CAR PET
one Polaroid camera M·llO
"Ditching
Electric sewer
Upholstery Cleaning Service. cleanlng.". Reasonable
POMEROY- Wright Slreet ·with leather carrying case,
rates .
Free estimates. Phone 'Phone
2 ni ce building lots, house.
flash, light meter, filters,
John
Russell,
Gallipolis (46-0294.
CLOSE TO SCHOOL. $6.900.
extra lens ; a 9ood one. No
3·12·tfC · Gallipolis 446-4782.
reasonable b•ds will be
MfNERSVILLE .. OV- - - - -===,.,.-4.7-lfc
refused. Sale starts at 7 p.m.
SEPTIC
lanks
cleaned.
Miller
ERLOOKING
THE
RIV5·9-61c
ER - l lf2 story, 7 rooms,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. HARRISON'S TV AND AN=--------662·3035.
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
bath, · 3 bedrooms, NICE .
OVEN FRESH bakery pro·
992·2522.
510,000.
2-12-tlc
ducts. Jimmy's Pastry Shop,
6.1Q.tfc
N. 2nd Ave. , Middleport .
POMEROY
Locust
Street
t
BACKHOE
AND
D&lt;ilE.R
work.
Phone 992·3555.
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
slor·y; · 3 bedrooms, bath,
Septic tanks Installed. George
4-29-3otc
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
LIKE NEW INSIDE. $9,500.
(Bill I Pullins, Phone 992·2478..·
s.9.3tp
Pomeroy.
Phone
992-3891.
4·25·tfC
KOSCOT Kosmellcs, wigs and
4-9-flc
BUSINESS-FARMSaccessories. May and June
HOMES- RENTALS
READY -MIX
COfoiCRETE
special. Kleanslng Kream, For
FOR
REAL
ESTATE
delivered
right
to your
52.25. Distributors, Brown's. . .MODERN walnut stereoCALL
US
pro/ect.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Phone 992-5113.
radio combination,' dual
HENRY
CLELAND
est
mates.
Phone
992.3284.
volume
control
,
4
speakers,
4
4·23·11&lt;
REAL TOR
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co .,
speed changer, separate
Office- 992-2259
Mt.1dleport, Ohio.
•
conirols. Balance $71.43. Use
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring
Residence
992·2568
6·30-tfc
USED CARS
our budget terms. Call 992your sick TV lo Chuck's TV
5-9-6tc
Shop, 151 Butlernut Ave.,
3352.
O'BRIEN' ELECTRIC Service.
Pomeroy.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 5:.....·Htc
1h-acre
NEW
BRICK
home
on
Commercial, residential and
4·23·ifC
WIDE
In
Tuppers
Plains.
·
d t 11 11
Ph
lot
BEAUTIFUL selection of
Features built-In kitchen
\~l~.s r a w r ng . one 247·
F.as 4 door sedan. V-8
WILL PICK up merchandise
flowers, baskets , wreaths,
wall
to
wall
carpel,
bath
and
·l
·12.-tk
motor,
auto. trans 1
and take to auction on a
and sprays for Memorial Day.
half , lull basement. Call
percentage basis. Call Jim
Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport.
Insurance
Chester 985-3598.
Adams, auctioneer, Rulland.
4·2J.ffc
1
3
5
0
1
_ _ _ _ __ __:5-:..::..:·::.:.:c:.. AUTOMOBILE insurance been·
Phone 742-4461 .
1220 Wuhintton Blvd.
.
9·23·tfc 1965 FRIGIDAIRE automallc
'
cancelled?
Lost
your
Belpre,Ohlo
operator's license? Call 992·
washer,
$75; 1968
2966.
DR IVERS Needed. We Ira in
wringer washer
with Maytag
rump,
you to:be a semi -driver, local,
$75; 1969 RCA Whlrlpoo chest TOMATO PLANTS, Valiant ,
6-15-ttc
;,You'll Like oUr Quality·
city and dock training now
freezer, 17 cu . ft., $150. Phone Jung's Earliest, Marglobe,
.Way of Doing Business."
available. Earn high wages
992-6416.
· Oxhart, Stump of the World,
Estate
For
GMAC FINANCING
afler short training. For
5-9·31p Rutgers, L•ncoin, Dot's
--·-·· '
FOR SALE - Syracuse, 3 992-5342
'
Pomeroy
application and Interview, - -- - - - - - Excel, Yellow Colossal.
rooms, bath, full basement,
cal l 513·863.6404, or write 2 MARE riding horses, 3 and 4 Burpee' s, Delicious and
Open
Eveninga
'Til6:00
lot, large enough lor trailer.
Broker
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255
TitS p.M. 5at,
years old . See Donald Smith Jubilee. Sturdy transplants.
Pnced to sell. Phone 992·3205.
110
Mechanic
St.
Corw1n Ave., Hamilton, Ohio
at Racine, Ohio, Phone 9-49Dozen for SOc. B. Qvisen·
Pomeroy, Ohio
45015.
--:--:-----....:._
S·_:.:
l1·5tc
27)4.
berry, Syracuse, Ohio. ·
_ _ _ _ _ _ __s_:·I0·2tc
5-9-Jtc
5·2·12tp SYRACUS.E - 8 rooms, 3 or 4
bedrooms, 4 large closets,
RUBBER STAMPS made to YEARLING polled Hereford sow and pigs, - weaned. Pigs
bath. gas forced air furnac.e,
bull , grain fed , ready to and shoats. Phone 742-3880.
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
modern kitchen . $12,000.00.
bulcher or would be nice for
• H ·31c
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
stock , $200. Phone 9~2 · 2630. -~------Ohio.
RUTLAND- 2 bedroom home,
H -6tC
2-12-90tc
bath, utility room, gas heal,
--------SUPER STUFF, sure nuffl
lot . $9,500.00.
·
large
That's
Blue
Lustre
for
iol, $1,500, s.track
RED,UCE sate ond last with 1.72-ACRE
cleaning
carpets.
Rent
tape player and six tapes, $50.
Gobese • tablets and E-Vap
elecfric shampooer, $1. Baker 76 ACRES- 20 tractor tillable,
Phone 142·3656.
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
Well water, 3 bay Implement
·9·2tp Furniture, Middleport. 5·5-61c
4·14-60tp _ _ _ ____,_ _5:.....
shec:l. all minerals, B room
house. Only $13,500.00. ·
PLANTS NOW ready : Single --~--Wanted To Buy
and double petunias, pansies Rea 1E
F'or S 18
MIDDLEPI)RT - 8 rooms,
coleus,
Mexican
tomatoes
and
,
_
S
8
bath, modern kitchen with
TELEPHONt:S , brass beds,
other varieties, peppers, HOUSE, 1640 Llntoln Hfs.,
cook
and bake unlls, gas
clocks, dishes, old. furniture ,
cabbage, 1/ 2 or 1 dozen packs.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-7293.
forced air furnace, 'entral air
e lc. Wrlle .M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Do.n Hubbard, Syracuse,
10·25-flc
conditioning , 2 car garage.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
Oh1o.
Phone
992·5776.
·,----..,-------=..:.....
$14,500.00. . .
H?-11,·
·
4·22-241c FIVE ROOM house; two
bedrooms, balh, basement, LOOK, THINK, AND COMA.N TtQ 'U E S:
Dhhes,
8-MONTH
otd'
loy
Manchester
·wall
lo wall carpet In living
~AAE, BEFORE BUYING.
telephones, tl~,. brass beds,
and
Chih•Johua
pups,
S35
room,
beclrool'l••
and
beth.
THEN CALL m-ms.
tamps, etc. Lee . Rudisill.
each. 3·yeor old rat terrier Gas forced al r furnl.ce.
NUEN
L. TEAFORD
Phont 992·3403.
dog, S10. Pljone 66J.3624.
Middlejo6tt, phone 992-3420.
ASSOCIATE
Arnold Or...
.
1 5-11-3tc ·
""*ftc
5-7·61C

IT M!:ANS YEJ:l. lDN

ON 1&amp;4.SI WI-lEN irl'
&lt;:;&amp;CQNO LIGI41S UP,
A DOOR. Je OPE"' !
iH' TJ.&lt;IRD IS YER
1\JRN .:;;c;.N,AL..!

IH.I NGO!

.-..''.

Mason, W. Va.

WHEN Tf-1' ~11:2.ST
L.l9f.IT FLASHES ON

~00&lt;:: AT n&lt;Ai COSI4SOAJ'!D, F'UDDSYI Tl41&amp;
CAI:2.'S GOT E.~·

~:'
,-

•'

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
· Painting ·

EXPERT
.Wheel Alignment

HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, 2 lots,
located in Syracuse. Call after
3 p.m. weekdays 992·2806.
5·5·61C

WHUT'S 'YORE

•METI10D' MANL'/
STANLEY? WE

LARN!."-

ABC CLEANERS .

742-4902

Dick Vaughan
992-3374
Dale Little
992-6346

OIARMI! 04 STANL£'1!!
COMPARED 10 'fOIJ. NO
MAN', IS MANL'/ !!

All you pay for is cleaning
and pressing. Pay when you
get· them back.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY SERVICE
CALL 773-5543.
Please f No Free Storing on
Bulk (leaning . .

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios .

Ciu:torn meat cutting
Pleasant Ridge Aoad
Pomeroy, 0.

-BUT WITf.\ Tf.\E GAME
OLD DE.\/ASTAilt&gt;.lG

L6AVEi OUR NEiW 1"~Ei6
AT THE 11\Ei~Of OF THIS'

For Your Garments

Complete
Remodeling

THE SHOP

®

FREE STORAGE

JOHNSON MASONRY

Pomeroy

·""· 992-2143

SEEDIER· ··

MEMORIAL BgiDGE' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSB'URG, W. VA.

36" X 23" X .009

Sheets

L()\l,lt;E&lt;~Y

Artificial Flowers
Single Flowers

What Do You Have For The sss y.., Pay In Rent?

For Sale

Aluminum

NUSS ·· FETCH ME
MY COAL Oil
AN' HONEY

' I ,

tachments, cordwlnder and
paint spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan available.
Phone 992·5641.
5-ll-6tc

Employment Wanted

AN' PENNYCILLIN AN'
COME BACK IN THREE

· DAVS,

Business ··s ervices

at-

Case No. 20486 . LADY WANTS woman to live in
Estate of
ARMETT
M.
as companion. Phone 992-7269
SHEETS , Deceased .
any time after 5 p.m .
Notice is hereby given that
H -3tc
Carrie Wears of Rutland, Oh io,
SIX ROOM house, bath, lull
ha s been duly appointed Ad ·
ministralrix of the Estate of
basemen!, 133 Butternut Ave.,
Armett M . Sheets, deceased,
just walking djstance from
lat e of Meigs County, Ohio.
WOMAN wants housework to do down town Pomeroy. Contact
Creditors are required to file
in Pomeroy area . Phone
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wad~worth
their cla ims with sa id fiduc iary
Chesler
985·3900.
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
wi th in four month s.
H ·61c 237-4334, Columbus.
Dated thi s 21 st day of April
197 1

.

1

monograms, and make fancy

3otp
,_OM
=I!R"'O""Y_,~OH
~IO""'--------·_j, _ ______4_.3_0._

LEGAL NOTICE

WMP0/1390

:

L

@)

_

LEGAL NOTICE
INVITATION TO BID for
PAINTING AND FLOOR The State of Ohio, Meigs
REPAIRS, U. S. POST OF . County, Probate Court .
To the Executor or Ad ·
FICE , MIDDLEPORT, OH IO.

from GENERAL SERVICE
ADMINISTRATION , 219 S.

Pri•cts Tbru April
HAND PUSH MOWERS
Low As
63.95
IRIDING MOWERS
Lost
Low As
271.95
ENVELOPE conlaining money
near Racine Bank. ca11 992· ECONOMY TILLERS
Low As
134.95
3517.
H ·3tp
POMEROY .
ANYONE
knowing
the
J.VV. Corsoy,A!gr
Whereabouts of a male .
Phone m-2111
Siamese cat, please call
Middleporl 992·3832. Pet of

this one.

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
P.ND APPRAISEMENT

GS.QSBC ·B960A . Estlmeted cost
IS under S2S ,OOO .OO . Bids
publicly opened at 2:00 P.M .,
local time at the place of bid
opening June 1, 1971 , in Room
1462, Everett McKinley Dirksen
Bldg., 219 s. Dearborn St.,
Chicago, Illinois. Drawings and
specifications Including bidding
documents NOW AVAILABLE

I~

bumper guards, Positraction, radio &amp; R.S. speaker
console with bucket seats, beautiful beige color with blk .
,vinyl roof . New car title &amp; bal. of 5 yr., 50,000 miles. See

~:!~!s. ~~~r Co.

'IEP-- I I;VEN GOT
A LEETLE iETCH
OF IT MVSELF

..·

ALlEY OOP

- - -- - -

GASOilNE ALLE,Y

JOHNSON MASONRY

®

742-4902

- - ---

THE BORN LOSER
P' Pt.£166' L8" IT 6E 11\t;

'

'8.IJaJ1ll!
UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Cleland Realty

------

Sale

• ·· ~

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

12' · W • 24' ·

"

'65 Oldsmobile

a

MIWR

MQBILE HOMES

•---------..1

Virgil B. _
TEAFORD

495.

Karr &amp; Van. lancH ·

Real

Sale

SR.

tat·

I

a

.

Yoolo'*'1'1 ~1&lt;&gt;1 CARE FOR YOUR CLOTHlll8
FROM THE DAY THE TAILOR DELIVIIlRII; CARE IIQR
YOUR HONOR FROM THill DAY YOUR Bl!lARD SPROUTB.

DAIL.¥ CROSSWORD

'

..

WI40'S JONNY
SCORI&lt;I?

10. Picnic spot
11. Witch

mark
(abbr.)

17. canto
18. Lard
21. Cameroons
tribe

23. Instinctual

collection
9. King (Sp.)
11. Jsaueof
38 ACI'OIII

13. - - the
line
17. Book

need
25. -

'•

name

dQzen
27. Lo8B

'

Yulerdar'• A••wer
35. Memorable
batsman

I

J.::

Mill'"·

ot

A lies
Be11.d
26. carte

2~ .

3!. Partota
metrical

toot '

I uttw;

38. Brink
. 37. lllarthen·
ware

~'lUilE

jar

38. Reparteo

01

• 39. "Down

under"
bird

[, ()I

10. Dalley

4.1 . Seek alms

In

New
York
• 29. German
opa
30. Sherman'JJ

"THIS Mi6HT !!IE
CONNECTEt7 WITI1 A
6AME OF C~UET.

r 12

common

28. City

"-

Jac.)

Unocramblt these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

2'· Sign

Adamaon
12 wets.)

S:rndlc~ote,

1lfl~~ rn~ ~ -lk.i :::~: ....J

32. Shrew

by
Joy

PROVI!lRB
(C 11'11 KJn• :t'uturu

~~~~®

(2

wds.) ·
fixture
5. But (Lat.) . 19. "Marta"
6. Rusoian
20. Thrice
city
(mus.)
1. Clothes
22. Girl's
style
1llck8. Anecdote

date
(3 wets.)
!4. Paradtse

-

rience

.,, Pizzeria

wedding

15. Lubricate
16. Punctulition

girlish
'expe·

2. Barter
3. Housewife

12. Set a

- ·RUSSIAN

orable

! . MlBS
:Moorehead

musketeer
6. Bradley

JON NY SCORN?

!&amp;.Mem-

DOWN

ACJROSS
1. Famous

(;11.\0.W

Now trraniJ'! the clreled letten
to form the ourprloe an~wer, u
IU cjeoted by the above &lt;lrloon.

""·--w. I "c l l J 'D' r I I XI J"
' 1'

is

I

hell"
31. Manh
33. Touch

'

(Aatwen lo!Jiorrowj

(comb.

Junohl'" GOING fiNIS KINGLY MOTION

form)

36. Be mistaken

AnnJII'r 1

37. Chicken
gumbo

' 'f&gt;

l 'h(ll
hrt~c drit•rr 1mltl1f'hf'n llu~ ,.Jr,.,J lrim
'"lwlplr,.r t1• (1/ilfl't -NO SMOKING!.

ingredient
38. COnjugal

feUctty

(2wds.)

i2. Reflect
43. Holmes'
"-

Venner''
H . Melody
fG. Boaiil!ul

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's bow to work It:
It A
LO;J!IGFELLOW
.
X 1' D L B·A A X R
One totter llmply •Iandi lor an9ther. In this II8Jilple A to
UJ&lt;d for the throe L'a, X tor the two .O'a, etc. Single Jettors,
apostrophe&amp;, the tenJ(h 1!14 tormatton of the .words are all
hint.. Jllach day the code totten an different.

~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~;
I WONDER W~'l M~EI!AU.

MANfJi,Ef/6 HATE ~~~ ,.

A ilryp&amp;ocram qaotoll••
QMlHA
MU
~OA

OIB

WM!l.H
~M

VXB

iDLLMlV

Jil EHNUUBIBIIIW 'B;

ROIIlPDOPB

- QNRRJii,OY

QBOG
VM

W)(ltPlBTB

FB

RMTB
XBOIH .
1('.

/(

�'.

10 - Til&lt;' Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 11 . ~ : .. .

Gilligan Urges Approval of
Homestead Exemption Plan
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan today urged the
Ohio General ASsembly to adopt
his homestead .Exemption proposals because it would give
$45.1 million in annual property
lax relief to the elderly.
Gilligan, in personal letters to
members ofthe legislature, said
his bill offers $25.1 million in
annual property tax relief to
home owners over.65, and $10.4
million in relief to renters.
"lbelievetheadministration 's
package has been devised to
benefit all senior citizens and
meet the obligations of our state
government to ease the concern
of those voters who last November voted for the constitutional
amendment authorizing home·
stead relief, " said Gilligan .
The governor said his proposals would give senior citizens
up to $150 credit against a proposed slate income tax for any
property tax they pay above

three per cent of their earned
income.
"Since most of our elderly live
on social security or pensions
which do not count as earned income, they wiiPpay no state
income tax," he said. "In addilion, since any property tax
they pay will be more than
three per cent of an earned income of zero, the slate will
send each of these citizens arefund check for the amoun t of
his property tax credit, up to

the maximum $150,"
Gilligan said his proposals
were "far superior" to a1terna·
live legislation.
"Other suggested alternatives
simply do not thoroughly relieve
the burden of those elderly per·
sons living on a fixed income,
let alone the 55,000 elderly Ohioans who do not have even an
adequate income to meet the
minimum requirements to live
a decent life, " said Gilligan .

WASHINGTON - Coog.
Clarence Miller today was
lnfonned by tbe Department
of Health, Education and
Welfare of the· approval of a
$101,403 graat to tbe GaUiaMeigs Commuolly Action
program, based iD Pomeroy.
The . fundS are- Tor the
continuation of the Head Start
programs, and will cover a
12-montb period . The
program serves children in
both Gallia and Meigs
Counties.

Caught in HeavY Bittrages, Death
In the Jungle Was a Close .Thing

Gregory Awarded North (;allia Job
Sharon Gregory, 6 ft.-6"
former Rio Grande College
basketball eager, team regular,
was employed Monday night as
head basketball and assistant
football coach at North Ga!lia
High School.
Gregory won his Bachelor
degree from Rio Grande
College and his Master from
Union College, Union, Ky., in
1970.
Gregory was head basketball
coach at Triad High School near

· Columbus two years prior to his
post graduate work. He served
on the faculty of the Eastland
Vocational School, Columbus,
this past year.
· Gregory has __ a major in
English and a minor in History
and Government. He succeeds
Paul Aikman who was not
rehired last spring. A football
coach is stili to be·employed.
Roy E. Mullins, Gallipolis, a
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and Rio Grande

Finlandization Feared

Army Accused

WASHINGTON (UP!)- U.S. shores, but powerless to check
Sen. William B. Saxbe, R.Ohio, aggression overseas.
warns that a growing anti- "We wouldn't give up our
military attitude in the United prerogatives and our in~tates could lead to the dependence, but we would
" Finlandization of all the adjust our selves in a way that
western world."
would cause them (the Russians
Saxbe, speaking on the floor and Chinese) the least inof the Senate Monday against terference," Saxbe said.
concentrated its investigation discontinuance of the military Saxbe said some young people
By ROBERT RAIMONTO
NEW YORK (UP!) -Viet- on federal officials responsible draft, drew a grim picture of a who had not lived · through
nam veteran Danny S. Notley for developing U.S. policies in postwar United States with a World War II believed freedom
believes all the Army cares Southeast Asia.
garrison army defending its could be had "without the
al)out in atrocity cases is "to
have a scapegoat like Lt.
PLI!ASANT VALLEY
Calley."
ADMISSIONS - James
"They (the army) want to
Kirker, Leon; Ronnie Deweese, nail somebody to a cross like
Leon; Ralph Davis, Point Pontius Pilate and wash their
Pleasant; Latrenda Leach, hands of everything," said the
WASHINGTON l UP!) - Six
Henderson; Mrs. Dewey Former sergeant, who claims
years after his famous clash
Adkins, Robertsburg; Mrs. his unit massacred 30 to 60
with General Motors, Ralph
William Jones, Point Pleasant; unresisting South Vietnam villaNader is back at the same old
Rebecca Shaw, Point Pleasant; gers in April, 1969.
stand. But now it is an angry
Nora Whittington, Buffalo ; Backed by the National
Nader, ready to charge the auto
Helen Barker, Clifton..
Committee for a Citizens
.industry with "massive
DISCHARGES - Thomas Commission of Inquiry on U.S.
thievery" and to shout down a
Harris, Mrs. William Zuspan; War Crirrles in Vietnam, Notley
senator who disagrees.
Mary June Smith, Monica told a news conference Monday
Nader's charges provoked
Ridenour, Nancy Casto,
he wanted President Nixon to
Sen. Theodore Stevens, RBIRTHS . - May 10, a establish a panel to investigate
Aiaska, into desk-pounding
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. David alleged atrocities committed by .
Carr, Allen Park, Mich.
U.S. servicemen in Indochina.
Damage Was Light
The committee issued a
statement urging the adminisLight damages we1·e reported
. tratlon to create something
in a one car accident Monday at
"comparable to the Warren
6:52
p.m. on County Road 82.
Tonight, May 11
Commission." They said it was
Sheriff Richard Hartenbach's
RIO LOBO
a "perversion of justice" for
department
said Richard D.
(Technicolor)
the military "to establish
Blessing, 20, Pomeroy , Rt. 3,
John Wayne
tactical field policies · which
traveling north, hit a rough spot
Jorge Rivero
predetermine the slaughter of
in the road which threw his car
Colorcartoon:
Vietnamese men women and
Minnie Ha-Ha
to the right into loose gravel,
children
and then arbitrarily
How About That?
then off the road into a ditch.
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
select low-ranking Gls for ·
There were no injuries or
criminal prosecution in carrycitation issued.
Wedn..day &amp; Thursday
ing out such policies."
May 12·13
The committee said it had
NOT OPEN
SUIT FILED
been holding its own regional
A suit for partition of real
hearings during the past 16
MOTHER AND DAUGHTER both happen . to be just
wlld about horses. Queen Elizabeth, a leading stable
estate in Lebanon Twp. hss
moni!J,s and had . collected
owner In Britain, congratulates Princess Anne who
been filed in Meigs County
"hl!!iareds or transcripts" decame
in
flfth
on
her
eight-year-old
"Doublet"
In
recent
M'~AS' ON
scribing atrocities which it said
Common Pleas Court by Mack
'
. '
horse trials, a good enough showing to merit considera' ' '
Taggart, Tavares, Fla., and
It would turn over to a
tion for Britain's team In European championships this
Tonight, May 11
, presidential commission.
Robert W. Sayre, Kenova , W.
summer.
Va ., against Betty J. Shires, Fl.
Notley, 23, of St. Paul, Minn. ,
DOuble Feature Program
THE BABY MAKE'R
International Ltague Standings Lauderdale and Howard Frank,
said he would be willing to
INSTALLATION SET
(Color)
assist a presidential panel if it
Xi Gamma Mu chapter of By United Press International · Meigs County Treasurer. The
Barbara Hershey
W L Pet. GB property is located in Lebanon
would permit him to make a
R
Syracuse
15 ~ .789 . . . T
h'
"full
statement"
on
the
conduct
Beta
Sigma
Phi
will
hold
its
- PlusCharleston
13 7 .650 2'12 owns 1Pof servicemen in Vietnam and regular meeting and in- Loulsville
GAILY, GAILY
11
9 .550 4lf:.~
stallation of new ! officers Richmond
I Color)
10 11 .476 6
CONCLAVE CALLED
Thursday at 8 p.m. Ann Rupe Winnipeg
Beau Bridges
8 10 .444 6'12
Brian Keith
A
special conclave of Ohio
10 13 .435 7
will be in charge of the social Tidewater
Toledo
7
13
.350
so;,
Veterans Memorial Hospital hour which will be held at the
Valley Commandery 24,
Rochester
5 12 .294 9
ADMITTED - Blanche new Meigs Inn.
Knights Templar, will be held at
Monday's Results
Wed., Thu. &amp; Fri.
Casto,
Mason;
Ross
Morris,
7
p.m. Thursday at the temple
Charleston
4
Louisville
1
May 12-13-14 ,
Syracuse
9
Rochester
3
New
Haven;
Zellah
Lawson,
with work in the temple degree .
Double Feature Program
Racine;
Larry
Smith,
THE AOVENTURERS
KILLED BY TRAIN
~~lenw~ter 8 Richmond 6, 11 All sir knights are urged to
I Color)
Young,
Pomeroy; Ollie
IRONTON, Ohio (UPI) - Tote~o at Winnipeg, ppd, wet attend.
Charles Aznavour
Pomeroy;
Wanda
Cardillo,
John H. Ernst, 72, St. Bernard, grounds
Alan Badel
Langsville; One ita Cole, and his wife, Irene, 74, were
Candice Bergen
Tuppers Plains; Gladys Taylor, killed Monday in a ·car-train
R
And
Middleport.
crash here. Officials said Ernst
NEW TRIAL ORDERED
THE LAWYER
DISCHARGED
Rosalie
drove onto a closed road. He LANCASTER, Ohio (UPI) (Color!
Clark, William Russell, Robert was attempting to back over the A motion for a new trial in the
Barry Newman
Davis, Minnie Johnson, Danny tracks after finding the road case of Gerrard Harvey, 21, of
Ha rot d Gould
R
Schultz .
blocked when his car was struck Cincinnati, convicted of
by a Norfolk &amp; Western · shooting with intent to kill a
Railroad train traveling 52 Cincin?a~i policeman, was filed
miles an hour.
m Fa1rf1eld County Common
Pleas Court here Monday.

of ·Scapegoatitis

responsibility
and
unpleasantness of fighting for it:"
"Once we give up our position
in this world ," he said, "liberty
and freedom have lost their best
ally."
Saxbe has opposed the war in
Indochina and frequently
criticized
military
expenditures, but recently supported President Nixon's
phased withdrawal of troops
after a trip to Southeast Asia.

College, was employed as high
school math instructor. Mullins
holds a Bachelor degree in
Mathematics
and Comprehensive Science.
Resignations accepted were
those of Noel Heister,
elementary instructor and
assistant football and baskethall coach, and Homer Kemper,
veteran elementary teacher.
Heister is accepting a position
with the Greyhound Co. Kemper

is retiring after 45 years of
teaching.
In other matters, Martin Ford
was awarded a contract to
furnish two 6G-passenger school
bus cha.ssis at a total cost of
$9,371.68 . . Superior was the
apparent low bidder for the
bodies at $3,558 each. James
Oiler was hired as a substitute
bus driver and the 1971
graduation list containing 49
students was approved.

Judy King

BEWARE, OWNERS
RACINE - Racine· residents
are asked by the council to tie
·their dogs on their own
properties. Council policy, a
statement said, is that owners
of dogs that are running loose
will be fined if apprehended.
Dogs without tags will be picked
up by th~ county dog warden
and taken to the pound.
NO CHANGE
No errors that changed aily
outcome were found in the official count of the May primary
Saturday conducted by the
Meigs County Board of Elections.

(Continued from page 1)
American Home Economics
Conference at Denver, Colo., in
June. Last fall she was chairman of the homecoming style
show and was selected to
captain a spiritual outreach
team which visited Meigs
County twice.
A 1967 graduate of Pomeroy
High School, Miss King is a
member of the Carleton
Church. Her student teaching
was done in Illinois in the areas
of home economics and adult
education.

Uolied Press International
we stood in the dusk, an odd We were lucky. We made it.
(Had .it .not been for Toshiichi lilUe group of six, turning to Twenty-three days after those
Suzuki of Nihon Denpa News,
one of my cocapuves, thts story
0 -t
would be like a silent movie.
'I
"Sza-kee," as the Vietnamese
pronounced his name, had spent
r
two and one-half years in Hanoi
as a correspondent and speaks
r~
Vietnamese. well. For his wave goodbye to. the soldiers first shots rang out on Highway
courage, diplomacy and untlr- who had come to watch us 4.
ing translation efforts, ( am leave on our walk back to April 7 was a quiet, hot day.
forever in debt. There will freedom. "Tell the truth about The only photographs I had
remain a bond between us, · us," they said.
gotten were of Cambodian
more real than the ropes that
"If we make it back," I paratroopers swarming over a
at times bound us together.)
thought, "if we make it back." water truck. The road was so

on the other side

the Canture,
by Kate Webb, Corresnnndent

Nader Angrier

MEIGS THEATRE

DRIVE-IN

SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

News ... in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
settlements which is "designed to make the injured party whole
by taking care of his economic losses." Richard G. Chilcott, a
Nationwide vice president, said in remarks prepared for the
Senate Commerce Committee, such a system is "the best solution
to current auto insurance problems -and their causes."
Key features of the Nationwide plan include : Payment of all
medical expenses for as long as necessary ; reimbursement of
victims for wage losses at tbe rate of 85 per cent of their regular
earnings; reimbursement of victims for all economic loss;
payment of all rehabilitation costs; payment of up to $30,000 in
survivor benefits; payment of properly damage.

MODELING attractive
casual wear at the spring
style show at Eastern High
School Monday night, above,
were,l-r, Robyn Wills, Peggy
Chaney, Martha Myers and
Cathy Coates. See Page 2 for
more pictures of style show.
At right, Debbie Woods
models tbe attractive "monk

Thankful, But. . .
"We are thankful for tbe
donations received so far to our
uniform fund but we need
more ," an officer of the
Syracuse Fire Department said
today.
Over 300 letters have gone
from the department asking
contributions to the fund which
will provide raincoats, boots,
hats and smoke masks, About 40
persons have responded.

5.00 ~0 6.00

»ac\
c\\a\t .

in an excellent
assortment of
styles, colors
and widths.
Pictured are some
of the styles
you'll find in the
mens and boys
department at
. Elberfeld$.

1

BAKER

MIDDLEPORT,

o,

·'
'

'

'

Elbenelds In Pomeroy
.
.

Debbie Wood

Because of the high costs
involved, all bids on air conditioning the inner core of the
new Meigs High School were
rejected Tuesday night by the
Meigs Local School District
Board of Education.
Bids by four companies on the
project included those of Geiler
Heating, Piping and Ventilating
Co., $61,920; A. J. Stockmeister,
Inc ., $58,203; Nick Blau
Heating, Inc., $52,444; and
Arthur Milem, Inc., $49,847.
The board employed five new
teachers who include Mrs. Jean
Kuhn, elementary teacher;
Miss Carol Waltz, a 1971 Ohio
Univers ity graduate,
elementary ; Miss Robin W.
Schmidt, 1971 Ohio University

EHS to Graduate 49

Graduation .Gifts
and -Fathe~s
Day giving. • .

( Uniini•~·d)

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member c:"CCecJI Depdsit Insurance Corl'r·~•ion

The fastest rapids ever
navigated are the Lava Falls on
the Colorado River through tbe
Grand Canyon. At times of flood
the rapids have been measured
at 30 miles per hour with waves
12-15 feet high.

Fashion dress
and sport beHs
perfect for

\N IH N i' 0 U V I &lt;, I T P A R K FR Ef

'

Now You Know

BELTS

DEPOSITS 1NS.UREOTOS20,000.00

·.

PHONE 992·2156

for baccalaureate will be by 'the
Meigs High School Chorale
while the band will provide
music for commencement.
Both exercises will be condueled in the high school
auditorium beginning at 8 p.m.
Tuesday night the Meigs
Local School District Board of
Education approved the list of
1971 graduates. Included are:
Roger A. Abbott, Sandra
Aleshire, Don M. Anderson,
Thomas F. Anderson, Gene
Arms, Martha E. Baker, Robert
C. Baker, Larry W. Banks,
Donna J . Barnett, Denise Lynn
Barnhart, Wayne I. Barnhart,

Randy B. Becker, Dennis C.
Boggs, David L. Boyd, Mary E.
Bradbury, Carolyn S. Brickles,
Mary K. Brickles, Mark A.
Brogan, Edward E. Brown,
. Cathy A. Bunce, Robert S.
Burson, Ronald D. Butcher,
Alice J. Capehart, Paul
Card, Richard 0. Friend.
· Anita M. Fultz, Lyla P.
Garnes, Jane A. ·Gilkey, Frank
P. Girolami,.Sharon K. Glaze,
Jennifer K. Goble, Diana P.
Good, Gene Goodwin, Michael
L. Grate, James R. Grimm,
Templeton Grueser, David R.
Haggerty, Alex Halley, Charles
V. Hannahs, Dorothy D. Har-

TEN CENTS

brecht, Carol M. Hargraves,
Bill E. Harless, William W.
Hawk, George L. Hawley, Don
L. Hayes, Bernadette Hennessy, William A. Hensler,
Deborah Hinkle, Stephen R.
Hoffman , Terry McGuire ,
Judity A. McKnight, ~nda S.
Midkiff, Davey J. Miller, Vickie
S. Miller.
Sherman Mills, Kathy J .
Moore, Penny S. Moot·e, Roland
D. Morris, Mark S. Moyer,
Patrick W. Mullen, Paula R.
Mullen, Terry D. Napper ,
Marian A. Neece, Eddie Nelson,
Larry E. Nelson, Sherry
(Continued on Page 6)

2 Women Injured

Miss Harrie M. Smith, 72, drivers also were injured but
Middleport, is listed in good were not .hospitalized. Mrs.
condition at the Holzer Medical Roedel was charged with
Center where she was admitted failure to yield the right of way.
Tuesday afternoon following a A second Meigs County
two vehicle accident on Rt. 7, , mishap occurred at 4:40p.m. on
one and one tenth miles south of county road 16, six tenths of a
Rt. 124.
mile north of Rt. 124. The patrol
According to the Gallipolis said Alice Marie Priddy, 57, Rt.
Post State Higtway Patrol, I, Rutland, lost control of her
Miss Smith, former county car, ran .off the right side of the
welfare director, now retired, roadway into a creek. There
was a passenger in a car was moderate damage to her
operated by Wilhelmina Roedel, car. No one was injured or
80, Pomeroy. Officers said the cited.
Roedel car failed to stojl for a A Gallia County collision was
stop sign and entered the high- Investigated at 3:40p.m. on Rt.
way in front of a car driven by 218, six tenths miles north of Rt,
Carl R. Janes, 48, Penn.Ville, 553 where cars driven by
Ohio.
William! E. Montgomery, 47,
Miss
Smith
was
thrown
from
Scottown
and Aubra White, 301
also enclosed with service bills
the car onto the pav~menl , She Rt.l., Crovill City, llljl!l&amp;Wijle(l oil ·
this month.
Miss Anna Grace Torchiano, sustained a fractured left ankle a curve. There was moderate ~~~·)}
home economist of Ohio Power, ani! lacerations of the fa~. Bolh • damage to both vehicles.
and Miss Joanna Distler of
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. will supervise the
local contest.
The rules specify ths t cakes
and pies must be personally
brought to the Ohio Power Co.
between 10 a .m. and 11 am. on
the contest date. Two copies of
A franchise agreement for a the board.
the recipe must accompany
non-exclusive
right to establish The conunissioners agreed to
each entry.
Winners will be announced at a garbage pickup service accept sealed bids for pipe for
1 p.m. on June 3 and the entries outside of municipa:lltles in the Meigs County Highway
are to he picked up between I Meigs County was granted to Department until 10 a.m. on
p.m. and 2 p.m. In addition to Arlie Collins, Reedsville, and June!.
the $50 awarded to first place Carl Stoops, Coolville, by the Attending were Charles R.
winners, they will receive $25 Meigs County Commissioners Karr, Sr. , Bob Clark and
expense money for the trip to Tuesday.
Warden Ours, commissioners
Collins and Stoops, doing and Martha Chambers, clerk.' ·
the State Bake-Off.
'
Every one - any age - who business as Meigs Disposal
is a resident of Meigs County Company, won the franchise for
may enter the local contest a one-year period. At the end of
except employes and household the year, the county has the
SG-CENT SALE
members of immediate familles right to enter into direct The Kingsbury Missionary
of the sponsoring Electric competition with Collins and group of the Carleton Church '
powel' companies.
Also Stoops if the county establis~es will hold a rummage sale from 9
ine!iglble are practicing home a landfill.
a.m . to 5 p.m. Friday and
In other business, Arthur J . Saturday at the Boothe Building
(Continued on Page 6)
Leuterman, U. S. Army Corps on Pomeroy's West Main St.
of Engineers, Huntington Beginning at noon Saturday, a
Weather
district, was granted right of SO.Cent sale will be held when
entry on county road 28, Letart customers may fill a large sack
Partial clearing late tonight
and cooler, Lows from mid 30s Township, to install a well point for that figure .
piezometer to make a study of
to the mid 40s. Partly cloudy
and cool Thursday. Highs in the the water table in connection
with the Racine Locks and
iills.
Dam.
COLLECTION NOTED
Arequest for local funding for HARTFORD - A total of
Mental Retardation Board 648 $52.71 was collected in Hartford
LOCAL TEMPS
which includes Meigs, Jackson during the recent door to door
Temperature in downtown and Gallia counties in the canvass for the Mason County
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m. amount of $1,250 was approved. Cancer Fund. Workers were
was 61 degrees under cloudy The request was made by Judge Betty Kelly, Esther MacKnight .
Frank W. Porter, a member of and Mrs. Ray Fields.
skies.

,,

TUPPERS PLAINS- Fortynine students will graduate
from Eastern High School when
annua.l Commencement
exercises are held Sunday, May
23 at 8. p.m.
Dr. Alphs R. Christensen,
president of Rio Grande
College, will be the Commencement speaker. Dr.
Christensen will use as his topic
"We have met the enemy and
they are us."
Baccalaureate services win
.be at 2 p.m. with the Rev.
Freeland Norris, pastor of the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church, as guest speaker.
Members of the senior class
are,
Howard N. Bahr, Eleanor D.
Bailey, Robert A. Bailey, Jean
. Baker, Ruby D. Barber; Nancy
K. Baum, Jacquellne A. Bise,
Larry M. Bissell, Gregory H:
Boatright, Robert P. Boggs,
Brenda K. Boring, Michael G.
Boring, Dale A. l!oston,
Richard P. Buckley, Howarrlll.

represent the extension office,
one will be a borne economics
teacher, and another a
homemaker.
First 'place winners in the pie
division and cake division each
will receive $50 in cash and
qualify for tbe Ohio State semifinal Bake-Off at the Ohio State
Fair in Columbus.
Second place winners in both
categories will receive a por-

table electric appliance, and
third place winners will be
presented cookbooks.
To enter the contest Meigs
County residents are to flU out
the entry blank provided in the
All Ohio Bake-A-Rama rules
booklet which is available at
either the Ohio Power Co. In
Pomeroy or the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. in
Middleport. Entry forms were

Collection Firm
Has Year Rights

Bids to Air Condition
High School Rejected

cape".

Paris

'

WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1971

Meigs County's best amateur
pie and cake makers will be
, selected Thursday, June 3, at
the Ohio Power Co. in Pomeroy.
Winners that day wiU have
overcome the first obstacle to
claiming statewide honors in
the 1971 Ali-Ohio Electric BakeA-Rama Pie and Cake Baking
contest later this year.
One judge on June 3 will

WRAPPED UP ln wrapping up their work, welders
keep umbrellas at the ready to counter drizzly weather
in completing a vital gas pipeline transiting western
·Czechoslovakla, near vlllage of Banovce at this point.

WANT NIXON
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Membership of a national
volunteer campaign
organization, "Citizens to Reelect Nixon" will be announced
today at a news conference,
said committee chairman
Francis L. Daie, publisher of
the Cincinnati E;Jquirer.

FURNITURE

OBSERVE SOIL STEWARDSffiP WEEK- The Rev.
Charles Simons, seated, president of the Meigs Ministerial
Association, and the Rev. Audry Miller, secretary and
treasurer review material to be inserted in church bulletins
throughout the county during Soil Stewardship Week, May 1623, a nationwide observance emphasizing man's obligations
to God as stewards of the soil, water, and related sesources.
Thereon Johnson, chairman of the Meigs Soil and Water
Conserva lion District, said, "The world and they that dwell
therein" is the theme of this year's observance. The local
SWCD and 3,000 companion districts in the nation, and State
and National Associations are sponsoring the week the 17th
consecutive year. other members of the Meigs SoU and
Water Conservation Board of Supervisors are Thereon
Johnson, chairman, Rex Shenefield, vice chairman, Roy
Miller, secretary-treasurer, Harold Carnahan and David
Koblentz.
·

Pie, Cake Contest June 3

Laadet

.PIT

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Baccalaureate will be held
Sunday, May 23, and commencement on Tuesday, May
25, for 184 Meigs High School
seniors, James Diehl, principal,
said today.
Delivering the baccalaureate
address will be the Rev. R.
Eugene Gill, pastor of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, with the Rev. Charles
Sim.ons and the Rev. Cecil Cox
also taking part in the service.
Commencement speaker will
be Dr. James Rodger of the
college of education at Ohio
University. The Rev. Robert
Kuhn will offer prayer. Music

.Anofher (}ooJ Buy
/rom Baker '.1 •••

Why not put away a portion of your
paycheck each month? It not only
adds up pretty fast, but gives you a
feeling of security. Earn while you
save.

(Continued on Page G) '!

ra uate 184

Elbetfelds In Pomeroy 'Headquarters For

DRAFT NEEDED
CLEVELAND (UPI)- U. S.
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.Ohio,
said Monday night the military
draft has been "unfair, arbitrary, coercive and unpredictable ," but should be kept
until a volunteer system is
proved workable and the
reserves strengthened.

01

Devoted To The lnlereJII Of The Meigl- Ma&amp;On Area

NO. XXIV NO. 20

Monday and that in turn caused
Nader to aba ndon the
statistical, legalistic reasoning
with which he customarily
seeks to shape legislation.
"You look for the worst in
people and not at what's good
that's happening in this country, " Stevens, slapping his
desk, told Nader . "You're not
giving credit to American industry ... "
"Do you give credit to a
burglar because he doesn't
burglarize 99 per cent of the
time'" Nader shot back. "What
kind of nonsense is this: we're
talking about criminal fraud!"
Their argument at a hearing
of the Senate Commerce
Committee was over a bill by
Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich.,
designed to force Detroit into
making cars which are less
easi ly damag ~ d and more
easily repaired.
Stevens was aro used by
Nader 's charge that the auto
industry is guilty of "criminal
fraud or criminal negligence"
in building unsafe cars and that
the Commerce Committee was
"groveling" before the Senate
Appropriations Committee by
not specifying in its bill how
much money it wanted appropriated for enforcement.
Without such funds, the bill,
even if enacted , would be
toothless.
Stevens said Nader should
present his evidence - if he had
any - to a grand jury. "Get the
indictment!" he said. " If you
can, take it to a grand jury!:'
Nader said he knew he could
not find a district attorney
"with the guts" to take on a
corporate giant like General
Motors.

the War:

Sarath. My foot was cut. I
stwnbled, slipped on the blood
and my sandal came off.
Sarath threw it forward to me,
"Miss Kate f Miss Mate! No,
no" The face of a Cambodian
freelance photographer appeared in front of me. "VC,
VC, chirran-na" (many).
Radio, no radio here, we
mus.t move to radio," Sarath
said.
Then we realized what had
happened . They were hitting

hot the drops of water sizzled the crash of mortars, hammer
as they splashed on the asphalt. of automatic weapons-and the
"To heck with this," I · sudden screams of wounded.
We were in a ditch,
thought as Chhim Sarath, the
UPI driver, and I plodded down scrambling. A paratrooper in
Highway 4. "The story's in front of me trailed his leg, the
Pakistan today anyway."
green and brown of his
I knotted my handkerchief camouflage uniform drenched
around my neck as a sweat- red. He moved forward down
catcher. Sweat was running into the ditch and stained the Grass.
my eyes, down my arms and Crack! Blood blossomed from
onto my camera. It was about 1 the paratrooper's shoulder.
The Way Blocked
p.m. at kilometer 93.5.
Then without warning the
"The other way! The other
world exploded into the crack way! Back to the C.P.
and whisfie of small arms fire, (command post)" I gasped at

Caldwell, Martha K. W. Camp,
Roger L. Carpenter, Sr., VicIoria s. Cole, Kimberly L. Fick,
Debra A. Fitch, Charlene
Frederick, Carolyn K. Griffin,
Randy Hall, Randy Hand, Patti
Holsinger.
Gordon Holter, Thomas W.
Karr, Mary J. Kautz, Richsrd
Liter, Steven 0. Mays, Robyn
M. Mills, Daryl W. Pooler,
Mary U. Robinson, Julie A.
Rose, Cathy S. Smith, David G.
Smith, Timmy L. Smith,

Charles J. Stearns, Belinda G.
Steele, Rebecca J . Steele, Terry
M. Stethem, Margaret S.
Teaford, Ruthie M. Walker,
Paula E. Watkins, Ray Watson,
Frances M. Wells, Jean D.
Whitehead, Deborah K. Wood
and James R. Young.

graduate, elementary; Richard
Roger Sweet, 1971 Rio Grande
College graduate, elementary,
and James Sheets, a graduate
of Rutland High School, Rio
Grande College and graduate
work at Xavier University,
physical science teacher,
Resignations accepted include those of James Wickline,
Mrs. Dolores Wolfe, and Mrs.
Bobby Ord, all going to the
Southern Local District, and
that of Ed Bartels as head
baseball coach.
The staff for the Title I
swnmer school program was
named and includes teachers
Helen Dais, Grace Hawley,
Linda McManus, Jennifer
Butcher, Dorothy Chaney,
Marjorie Goett, Margaret
Lewis, Anna Turner, Katherine

Jacobs, Marjorie Gibbs, John
Lisle, Bonnie Fisher, Robert
Wilson, Don Stivers, Eric Hart,
Robert Meier, Helen Williams,
Gregory McCall, Ed Bartels,
Martha
Husted, James
Brewington, Leo Kennedy, Jr.,
and William Coffman with
payment to be $1,000.
·Others employed include
Martha Vennari, counselor,
$1,000; Robert Morris, director,
$1,200; Terry Ohlinger, coordinator, $716.66; Lela Curtis,
secretary, $2 hourly; Ernest
Wood, Ralph Macomber,
Marvin Wilson, bus drivers, $8a
day; L. W. McComas, clerk,
$175; Donald Wolfe, records,
$175, and two custodians at $1.75
hourly.
Mrs. Carol Wolfe was named
(Continued on page 6)

'

18 at Council

RUTLAND - Town council district and Commonwealth
was involved in a warm Systems to discuss the matter.
.
discussion Tuesday night when
Attending were Thompson,
approximately 18 persons of council members Bill Brown,
Rutland village asked council Robert Snowden, William
The new Laurel Cliff Free paigns throughout the United dedicaUon.
why a street in lower Rutland Gaddis, Ernest Nicholson and Methodist Church, under States, Canada and foreign
was not being paved in a Harvey Erlewine, and Clerk -construction for over the past countries. He served for 20
current project.
Vernon Weber.
year, will be dedicated at 2:30 years, 1945-1~ as the director
Mayor Glenn E. Thompson
p.m. Sunday with Bishop Myron and speaker of the "Light and
CONCERT SET
said there is a question as to
BONDS FORFEITED
. F.1 Boyd of Winona Lake, Ind., Life Hour", world-wide radio
The . Eastern High School whether the street in question Is
Three defendants forfeited·' as dedication speaker.
broadcast of the Free Methodist
band, directed by Frank a village street or a public right bonds and three others were
The pew brick church is Church.
.
Wooters, wlil present a spring of way.
fined Tuesday night in the court located on the Route 7 by-pass, Dr. Boyd Is president of the
concert at 7:30 p.m. ThurSday
Council will determine which of Middl¢port Mayor c. o. one mile . west of the Melg~ National Hollne~s Assn. and
in the school auditorium . it is and decide what can be Fisher . .Forfeiting bonds were ~unty Fairgrounds. ~e pastor first v1ce pres1dent of the
ENROLLMENT SET
Friday evening a band party. done in. a special session next Marvin Moore, Middleport, IS the Rev. Eugene Glll.
Nahonal Assn. of Eva.ngelicals.
Tuesday at 7 p.m.
$200 driving while intoxicated.
Dr. Boyd was elected to the He has also held Important
Enrollment for first grade will be held at the school.
students who have not attended
A representative of the Le~nd C Saxton 64 Pomeroy' of(ice of bishop of the Free. posts of leadership in the
kindergarten in the Southern
Commonwealth Systems, and John. B. Art;ip,' 64, Thorn:, Meth?dist Church of North National Religious BroadLocal Schoof District 1will he Vetei'a11,11 Memorial Hospital · ~ngineering firm, also mel with ville, $30 each; intoxication. Amenca by the General Con- casters: and the_· Radio. and
IJi,ld Friday from 9 a.m. to 3, 30 ·ADMITTED _ William c. council to discuss the feasibility Fined were WiUlam Reeves ference m June, 1964, and was Telev1s10n Comm1ss1on of the
p.m. Friday at the Letart, Fields, Pomeroy;
Clara · of purchasing water for tbe Pomeroy $15 and cost~· reelected in June, 1969. Bishop National Assn. of Evangelical•.
and
Racine · Murray, Middleport.
village of RuUand from tbe profanity.' Lewis E ours
Boyd is widely known . He is president of the board ot
Syracuse
Elementary Sc!JOols with
DISCHARGED _ Jeffrey Leading Creek Conservancy Racine $5 and
fail~e t~ throughout the denomination administration and chairman ol
children to enroll at the school Reuter, Betty Pooler, Margaret District. Council will meet In yield
right of
and Jeff and Interdenominational clr- the comrtlission on missions of
which they will attend in the 'Seidenabel, Sandra Yates, special sessior. next Wednesday Rose / Middleport $1~ and costS, cles: .\{e 'has condllcted many the Fr,ee Methodist Church. The
district:
Robin Kozee.
' at 7 p.m . wilh m~~- ~ the ' dish:irbin~ the ~~~c~:.:'
,c,it~-'wi.~e ·~van~.~ ~~~!i&lt; ' e~m- , _p,~b~i~ ' i.• ·' i~v:!~d ' to I the'; 1

New Church to be Dedicated
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