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I

Weather

Now You Know
More than 200,000 tons of
abraded
rubber
from
automobile tires are left on
American highways every year.

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·DepotedTo The lntereal3 Ojfh(! Meigs-MiJM!n Area

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WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
nation's railroads were shut
down today by a strike of the
13,000-member Brotherhood of
Railway Signalmen. It was the
second nationwide rail strike in
six months.
Some 600,000 other union rail
workers honored picket lines
set up at 6:01 a.m. local time
by the signalmen, who are
demanding a pay increase
almost double that accepted by
other rail unions.
Labor Secretary James D.
Hodgson said at a pre-dawn
news conference he was "bitterly disappointed" with the
union and said the Nixon
administration.would ask Con·
gress today to pass emergency
NEW UNIFORM
legislation to stop the strike.
Eastern High ~chool's new
"The nation cannot tolerate a
band unHorm ls modeled by
nationwide railroad shutdown,"
Jean Whitehead who was
Hodgson said.
selected as outstanding In·
Senate Democratic Leader
strumental senior award Mike Mansfield said thla
winner this year. Tbe at· morning the Senate was ready
tractive new green and while to consider any legislation the
uniforms were purchased by administration submitted.
the band boosters and were
Transportation
Secretary
worn the first lime Thursday John A. Volpe described a
at the spring concert. nationwide rail strike was a
Overlays used by the march· • "catastrophe" for the country,
ing band have nol arrived.
and he assumed emergency

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By United Press International

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Sadat Takes Hold of Police

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lJ.:!ATCltARt&gt;Nee SALE" . v-----..._,

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·f:IOM!fl?oMTI-IE.OFf,'ICE?

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PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT TOOK OVER as head of
Egypt's police force today, apparenUy consolidating his control of
, the nation. Wldl!o{'llnging purges were Wlder-Waywllh hundreds of
arrests reported. In Jerusalem, political sources said Israel will
delay further efforts ·to reach agreement with Egypt on reopening
theSuezCanalunlil the sltuation in Cairo is stabilized .
Sadat carried out a major purge Thursday, firing six cabinet
ministers and three other top political leaders. In addition, nearly
·300 other officials either have been arre9\ed or relieved from
government posts. The semiofficial Cairo newspaper AI Abram
said today 110 persons bave been arrested and referred to courts
for trial. II, said ''their actions indicated they were working
agalnsl the interests and security of the masses."

Liberal GOP'ites if' Session
WASHINGTON -LIBERAL Republicans forming a fledgling
"Dump Nixon" movement still hope to force a change In the
Presldent's policies, but they will not hesitate to campaign
against him in '72 If he does not. Nineteen Republicans from
across the country held their first meeting Sunday - a six and
one~alf~our session at a private home in Washington. The
meeting was called by former Sen. Charles F. GoodeD of New
York and by Reps. Donald W. Riegle of Michigan and Paul N.
McCloskey Jr. of California.
''The views expressed were pretty unanimous that
preparations should be made now in the event we have to oppose
Nixon in the primaries," said Goodell, who himself was dumped
by President Nixon when the administration refused to support
him in the last election in a dispute over war policy.
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TALKeD.ME' r~TO
Bll'l'IN6 T~EM ' !

Lilo'l 'fOU .·H~VEN'i
GOf
AtL'YOl11Z'·~tAi;?r7ii· F'·~
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Sounding to be Made in Moscow
WASHINGTON- WITH SENATE DEMOCRATS trying. to
force the issue, the Nixon administration has decided to sound out
Moscow on discussing U. S.-Soviet troops withdrawal from
Europe.
~cretary of State William P. Rogers revealed the move
Sunday as the Senate drew closer to a vote on Democrat)c Leader
Mike Mansfield'sproposal that the United•Slales cut its European
troop strengtnln half.- from :Dl,OOO to 150,000 - regardless of
what Moscow does.

Bur A.CLE.RK

f'OP, THOSE.TI-!IN6S ·MAKE"""'''

Died in Camper in Motion
F1NDLAY, OHio-THOMAS DUNCAN,10, of MI. Clemens,
Mich. died of apparent asphyxiation late Sunday night when
propane gas fumes spread through a family camper vehicle on
Interstate 75 near here.
The Ohio Hi~hway Patrol said it was believed the boy died
before a fife broke out in Ule vehicle, resulting from the leaking
fumes igniting.

powers .to dictate what type of
freight would move first by
other means of trlll!sportation.
As the strike occurred, the
Of(ice of Emergency Prepared,
ness issued a list of priority

materials to be moved by
trucks, barges, air and other
fileans during the strike.
Heading the list was food and
animal feed, fuels for electric
power and hospital supplies.

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Four other unions wenl on
strike last Dec. 10 and stopped
all trains. This was stopped
after 18 hours by congressional
and court action:
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Hodgson ruled out any court

action in the signalmen's strike, Negotiations· between the though they comprise only ·
conceding that the administra- carriers and the union...&lt;Jne of about 2 per cent of 600,000 rail
tion had exhausted ali legal the smallest of the railroad workers (there once were
remedies to get the men to brotherhoods-bro~e down sev- possibly three times that many)
- have become . increasingly
work:~~ railroads also said era! hours before dawn .
Talking with reporters, a important in recent years as
they ~-ed no court action.
management spokesman, with railroads went to more comunion officials standing along- puterization and automation.
side, accused the labor negolia- The signalmen are in charge
tors of adopting a ·"beUigerent of installing and maintaining a
and adamant attitude". The wide variety of railroad electri·
union insisted "we have been . cal equipment, from crossing
very patient".
.. "s ignals to train dispatching
The jobs of signalmen-even
(Continued on Page 8)

Ohio Picket
Lines Hold
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SENIORS HONORED - Among Ule seniors of Ule Meigs
High School band attending Saturday night's banquet were
seated, from the left, Bernadette Hennessy, Twila Clat- ·

worthy, Nancy J&lt;l'l Mayer, Ellen Rice, Jennifer Goble, Stella
Neul2ling, and standing from the left, Becky Triplett, Becky ,
Houdashelt, Duane Will, Donna Weber, Nancy Thompson
and Brenda Edwards.

Band Given Banquet, Awards
Awards were presented .
Saturday night when the annual
Meigs High School band
banquet- was jleld at.the- hlgh ··-.. ..,.,,......
school cafeteria .
Presenting the · awards
following dimer prepared and
served by band boosters were
David Bowen, director, assisted
by Lewis Shields, assistant
director, and Bob Bailey,
manager.
Fourth year students
received trophies; third year
students received tie lacks and
charms; second yesr students
received letters and first year
students received chenille lyres
lrinuned with an "M." Members of the basketball pep band
received pins. All of the awards
were provided by the band
boosters.
SteDa Neutzling, Ellen Rice
and Nancy Jo Mayer on behalf
of the students presented gifts
to Bowen, Shields and Bailey.
Mrs . . Roy Mayer, booster
president, introduced guests
BAND AWARDS- Presenting numerous awards at the amual Meigs High School band
and prayer was by Supt. George
banquet Saturday nightfrom the left were Bob Bailey, manager ; David Bowen, director, and
Hargraves.
Lewis Shields, assistant director.
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Following the ·presentation of
awards, a dance was held with
"The Great Divide" of
Parkersbw-g providing music.
Asa Bradbury, son of Mr. and He and his wife, the former Mrs . Robert Reibel , Mor(Continued on Page 4)
Mrs. Charles A. Bradbury, Jane Wright, will move to Meigs ristown, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Middleport, received · ,his County some time during the Wright, Terry, Jeannie, Connie
and Teresa, and Mr. and Mrs.
bachelor of arts degree in summer months. ·
SUSPECT TAKEN
Emerson Wright, Circleville;
commencement exercises
Meigs Deputy Sheriff Dave Sunday at Marietta College.
At Marietta for his graduation Mr. and Mrs. James Butcher,
Sheets picked up Arthur Koenig Bradbury bas been employed
were his parents and sisters, and Mr . and Mrs. John Stewart,
of Tuppers Plains in Wayne
Columbus. The group had a
to leach biology, physical
County, W, Va., SWiday on a education, and coach basketball Mrs. Carl Wolfe and Mary p1cmc
following
comBradbury, Mr. and Mrs. C. P.
non-supporl charge,
at Southern Local High School. Bradbury, Middleport; Mr. and mencement.

Bradbury Has Degree from Marietta Col.

Virginia Chapman, 34, Rt. 2,
Crown City, pleaded innocent
this morning in Gallipolis
Municipal Court to a warrant
charging that she intentionally,
without malice, pointed and
discharged ·a shotaun.
She waived a preliminary
hearing and hond was set at
$500.

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!'.Irs. Chapman was held in the
,vuddleoort may have produced today the only commodity in
Ohiothathasn'traisedinpricefromlastyear.
f
h
h
b
d
ti
shoo ng o
er us an ,
Richard Chapman, 23, Rt. 2,
lt1s 'the season Swimming ticket at Municipal Park for
qrywn City, to climax a quarrel families as well as the daily generaladmission charge.
' earl~ Sunday morning. Ac·
Family passes will be sold again for $15 with $2 added for each
cordmg to the GaD1a ColllliY child of school ag~. Season single adult passes ate $8 each. These
sheriff's depart~en~, Mr. m~y be purchased at the pool this week, according to Mrs. Ruby
Chapman slapped h1s Wife, who Vaughan, park and pool director.
apparently grabbed a .20 gauge
Single dally admission to the pool, without a season ticket,
shotgun and fired as her remains al 50 cents.
husband ran off the porch. The
Mrs. Vaughan and the Middleport Recreation Commission
pellets struck Chapman in his stressed !hat the holding of the line on prices this year will depend
posterior. He ran to the home of on continued cooperation of pool patrons ' of all ages. Property
LAD IN HOSPITAL
Cecil Phillips who brought him damage, even through normal usage, and employment of
Ablow in the eye by a plastic · to the HoIzer Medical Center lifeguard personnel to enforce necessary rules in the swimming
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ba seball while playing with a where he ·Is recovermg.
area mi!St be held to a minimum for the pr_esent ra, Les to be conyoung friend , hospitalized for
observation eight-year old
LOC~L TEMPS
tinued.
Anthony Scott, son of \'&gt;II'. and The temperature in downtown
In order to facilitate pool mansgement, followhig opening day
Mrs. Charles F. Scott, 441 Beech Pome~oy at 11 a.m. Monday bn Memorial Da~, May 30, season licke,ts will not be 59ld during
,St., Middleport, Sunday was 64 ,degrees, ,und~r SIJ!Iny . s_wimming hours, Mrs . Vaughan said. Such tickets may be
. evening.
skies.
purchased before and after swimming hours following Ma~ 30.

By United Press International were ordered. President Nixon
Ohio's 42,000 railroad workers was to ask Congress today for
honored picket lines set up emergency legislation ordering
early today by the Signalmen's the str &lt;~ers back to work.
Union, threatening to disrupt Officials at the Westinghouse
the slate's economy.
Corp. appliance plant In ColumRailroad officials at major bus said no problems were exyards in Cleveland, Columbus peeled for at least one week,
and Cincinnati said all opera· but if Congress failed to order
lions had been halted as nearly a return to work, plant officials
all union members , along with wouldimmedialelybegintoanaclerical workers, refused to lyze possible alternative methcross picket lines. Only super· ods of transportlrig products.
visory personnel and executives ·General Motors Corp. officials
were on duty .
sald work would continue on a
As soon as the strike began, normal. basla tod•y; but If the
officials at the Chrysler Corp. strike continued into Tuesday it
stampingplantin Twlnsburgord~ was possible more than 10,000
ered the firsl two slllfts of the · GM workers in Ohio would be
day eut to tour boun. 'l'IMif-.-4 ~~~·
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all of the plant's 4,000 workers Postal officials said Uley anwould be laid off if the slri]le tlclpated an embargo on aU ?lid,
continued longer than 24 ~ours. ird and 4th class mail would
Most Ohio industry spokesmen be qrdered. Most of those types
however, indicated they_were o( mail 'are transported via the
waiting to see what action Con- railroads.
gress would take toward halting Ohio has about a $1.15 million
the strike before any taroffs daily railroad payroll.

Driver Killed
PT. PLEASANT - Mason
County's.weekend was marred
by a rash of roadway ml8haps,
the worst causing one death and
another serious injury to a
youth riding a motorcycle.
Paul Hurt Marron, 61, of 203
Fellers Street, Princeton, was
killed in a head-on collision
Sunday morning on U. S. 35 near
the U. S. Coast Guard Station,
according to state police.
Marion, en route to Jackson,
Ohio ·to meet his mother, was
driver of a Volkswagen that
collided with a vehicle being
driven by George Lewis, 71, St.
Petersburg, Fla. Lewis, on his
way to St. Albans to visit
relatives, was treated at
Pleasant Valley Hospital for a
laceration under the chin.
Details of the 11:30 a.m .
mishap were not learned, but a
Wilcoxen ambulance attendant;
one of the first to arrive at the
scene, said Marion was thrown
out and his vehicle overturned.
Marion 's death pushed Mason
County 's highway fatality toll so

TW0 BondS
Forfeited

Gun Ends Quarrel

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TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

MONDAY, MAY 17, 1971

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POM.EROY-M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Clear tonight. Low 45 to 50
extreme north and in the 50s
elsewhere . Tuesday partly
cloudy and warmer with chance
of afternoon showers north and
west. High in the lowers 80s.

Topside rules for swimming will be posted - and published
later - and will be enforced strictly, Mrs. Vaughan said. There
will be no relaxa lion of enforcement of all rules. Children's safety
makes .this policy mandatory.
·
Mrs. Vaughan also amounced that on five dates, May 17, 18,
20and May 25 and 27, softball league games will begin at 6.p, m.
Little league practice sessions are to be completed, and the
diamonds clea'red by that time, she said.
After the little league season begins, softbaU games will be
, scheduled so as not to interfere with the youngst~rs' play.
Tennis and basketball schedules will be announced later.
Basketball, in particular, is expected to offer an interesting
activity this summer in the county.
Meigs Head Coach Carl Wolfe and Dollie Walters (Meigs,
\970) have about completed arrangements for a six team summer
lqague to play eviming games at Middleport Park's concrete slab.
Team players and sponsors are being signed. High School
boys with eligibility remaining, under specific Ohio High School
, Ath)etic Assn. rules, will.be permitted to play ln Ulf league.
· This sort of thing basketball here has needed for .a long time.
I'd like loseeilgetofftoagoodstar,t. '
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far this year to seven.
Hunter Brown, 16, of Apple ·
Grove was seriously injured in a
car-motorcycle ·accident at 2
a.m. Sunday on Stale Route 2
aboull3 miles south of here. He
was admitted to St. Mary's
Hospital where he is listed in
satisfactory condition in the
intensive care unit today
following amputation of his left
leg.
Deputy Sheriff Bob Uhl said
Brown 's motorcycle coUided
with a convertible driven by
(Continued on Page 8)

Allies Push
Into A Shan
. SAIGON ( UPI ) - South
Vietnamese battalions opened a
long-delayed allied drive into
the A Shau Valley today,
marching down from · the
mountains at the southeast edge
of the Communist bastion, field
spokesmen said.
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U. s. helicopters new the
several thousand South Vietnamese infantrymen to
positions in the mountains
Sunday. Tbe ~licopters ran
into heavy Communist ground
fire and had to land the soldiers
at a point a mile av/ay from the
planned landing zone.
Elite Hac Bao (Bla~k

Joseph Paugh , 35 • New
Haven, forfeited bonds totaling
$75 when he failed to appear in
Pomeroy Mayor Charles
Legar's court Saturday night.
Paugh was arrested earl)'
Saturday after an altercation at Panther) long • range reconCrow 's Steak House in naissance troopers preceded
the infantrymen mto the vaUey
Pomeroy· Paugh and two other . with the mission of knocking out
Mason county men ~retreated
··
ti ir It
for wollnds suffered Ill the fight . Com~unlst an a era . guns,
Paugh allegedly used 8 pocket the f1eld spokesman sa1d.
knifelodefendhimselfwhenthe
ON PANEL ·
fight was continued inside the George Hargraves, Supt. of
restaurant..
the Meigs Local School District,
Arrested following the fight, was on a panel composed of
Paugh posted bonds Salurda~ members of the Bnckeyt
afternoon of $25 for intoxication Association of School Ad·
and $50 for distw·bing the peace. ministrators which l!lllde up a.
Forfeiting an $18.70 bond .in part of the program Friday at
the same court Saturday night the 31st annual conference of
was Sleven K. Lillie of Mid· the Ohio Assn. o! Public School
dleport, charged with speeding. Employes in Cleveland .

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2 -11~ Datly Sentmel Mtddlepo:l't Pomeroy 0 May 17 1971

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!I Helen Help Us !
fiet Cong's Guerrilla Style o
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Living Weakened Frightened G·~o up ~
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EDITORS In three previous
dispatches, Kate Webb UPI
bureau manager In Phnom
Pedb lold of her capture and
her life as a capllve of tbe VIet
Cong In Cambodia In the
following dispatch, the last of
four she tells of ber release
By KATE WEBB
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United Press International
Copyright 1971
( Uvmg guernlla style was
weakemng us espectally me
datly Our captors seemed
unaffected by the tough regt
rn•n Our release was hinted at
but never promtsed I began to
be racked by fevers Then
suddenly we crossed from one
world to another, a world of
shadow m the mght to the
unaccustomed glare of hght
speed and notse Syrnbohcally
11 was at dawn when we made
' the crossmg to freedom a
lonely hesitant and frightened
group wavmg a whtte flag on
Highway 4 I remembered what
I had written at the time of a
pr1soner of war release mSouth
Vietnam 111 1968 Thetr eyes
look bke those of sleepwalkers
but their feet tell you 11 was
real )
An entry In my scrap paper
JOurnal • Monday April 26
Ache all over cold With fever
Sl!ll no cigarettes Fever cold
as cold Wrapped m mme and
Suz mosquito nets UPI over
funk radio says PP rocketed
Helos over again Spend 30
mins trencher Gap Tooth says
release ID three days but
secret I figure that a
deliberate leak to get some

The other side of the War:
The Release from Capture,
by Kate Webb, Correspondent
thmg out of us Eyes burniDg
wtth fever
That evenmg we sat m a
circle m the dark hstenmg to
Radio HanOI news Several of
the offiCers carne down to ask
how I felt shlnmg the1r
flashlights at me The doctor
had given me a l!ffomycm
tablet after Toshuchi Suzuki
had called him
The IDierpreter I called Mr
liberation squatted beside me
m the dark You must do your
\;lest to keep your health he
said I nodded thmklng of the
malaria case I had seen
passmg on one of the marches
deliriOUS screams commg from
a poncho hiler It was
becommg more difficult to
force my mmd mto reality
Tea Kim Heang the free
lance photographer whom we
called Moonface moved beside
me guessmg my state of
depressiOn Bai tanga1 he
whispered (Cambodian for
three days ) He put h1s
fmger to his hps and jerked his
head at the guard we called
Gap Tooth He fingered a
bracelet 1 had woven out of
vmes and from a peas
ant scarf they had given
me and pulled more vmes from
the trees around us to make me

a necklace
The followmg day April 27
Dad the man ass1gned to
answer mme and Suzuki s
questiOns said we would be
released We had been talking
of Sihanouk all rnormng
hunched over the bamboo table
in our shelter Bunker and
ky two of the camp dogs
dozed under our hammocks My
fever was down But I was still
wrapped m rnosqwto nets and
Suzuki s shirt which he had
diSCarded because of the heat
To Be Released
You will be "':fleased at
Trapeang Kra!lang on Highway
4
Dad told us
The
liberation Front Will assure
your safety You w11l have two
sets of ciothmg and 300 reUs
(between $~ and $6) each for
transport If that Is not enough
you must not be afraid to tep
us Your personal possessiOns
will be returned but according
to the rules your cameras will
be taken
Suzuki and I were stlent Dad
dtd not seem puzzled or
surprtsed Our release had been
hmted at earber but rtot
mentiOned agam
Are you
satisfied' Have you anythiDg to
say' He asked
We simply nodded
Cam

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Voice along Broadway

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BY JACK O'BRIAN

column exposmg that tail wagged RoJan horse
Jolmny Carson s anxiously burned JOke
ROCKPAYSUPSERV.ICE
JOltmg delivery on tile Emmys made tile
TO A MOUSTACHE AND
overlappmg applause and laughter seem canned
~ PRICE ON ART
, " 1 I , , Cii!:IIJ&gt;II s lli!'\'11\Y e(tectlxe_\I!Dln&amp; IJ;!J_Il!l!led
NEW YORK- What do !1Im stars talk about off almost clear througjlthe overlong two hOurs
over dinner' At Mykonos Rock Hudson told he ultimately made certam II'• knew he resented
Vincent Price about moustache care and Price
His material had less sock than buskm more
filled In Rock on fraudulent art
Persuasive abusive content that tile much preferred
pitchman Price has d'one so well as an art Whee I'' of true wit
salesman for Sears he's now addmg mattresses
The Mary Tyler Moore Show won a fiDe four
to his sales JOb
Emmys but deserved to take the 5th for the
Rate Promises Promises star Jerry marvelous clowning of the lady of the title
Orbach either selfless or myopic He snooted the Neat onward-and-upward touch Valerie Harper
co-6tar role In Mortadella oppOSite Sophia accepting her Emmy from Lucille Ball and
Loren ( 1) for the hot spot In The Gang That reffilnding Lucy she was m the chorus &lt;Jf Lucy s
Couldn t Shoot Straight fllck
Robert Alda s Bdwy musical Wildcat
DaVId Burns
beautiful wife s sudden emphysema attack widow accepting the late Davey sEmmywas the
caused Bob unrnediately to put his Bdwy
most graciously ladylike VISitor of the Emmy
H wood careers behind for the clean-811' suburbs cast
of Rome Very healthy Irving Berlin is havmg
The Emmy Show virtually screamed for an
a very happy 73rd b1rlhday
Alexander Cohen (producer of the Tony
The Simone Signore!-Yves Montand till1s on telecasts) to turn Its customary shambles mto a
again
Top newshawks Clayton Knowles and tidier telecast Film clips of nornmees were
Charlie Grutzner are qu1ttmg the Thnes N J conSIStently Ill timed, c&amp;ntused even Irrelevant
Superior Court Judge Robert Macaleavey IS a
Champ Joe Louis alone rated a standing
Dem but be unpressed Repub Gov Csh11l oval!on
Fhp Wilson's packet of Emmys
enough to be reappointed to another full term were popular chotces on both ends of the tube
g1ves Bob life tenure
but Flip's moustache managed to make hun
Wm Brown Meloney who died last week seem older too mature for the youthful mood of
quit his rich llterary.,screen-and.,stage d~rectmg his marvelous TV merrymaking
career several years ago to raiSe Morgan horses
Johnny Carson s script had hun proclaunmg
His will stated no funeral no semce no TV mus1c compares favorably w1th stage and
speeches-Justthalhewishedtobebunedmthe screen composmg, and then the boy and g1rl
littlehorsecemeleryinKent Conn located next s1ngers proceeded to prove hun wrong with a
the log cabin of his lifelong frleods Ed and slew of shallow show themes which were almost
Pegeen Fitzgerald -and that s where Bill now all functionally Irritating with just a few
rests
melodies (from many years ago) that could be
The two-hour long Emmy Awards ran a called attractive
brief film (a couple of minutes) supposedly
Henry Mancini's "Mr Lucky theme, which
covering 23 years of the TV Academy s extstence has outlasted that series by more than a decade
More than that might ve been needed to tell Richard Rodgers Do I Love You' from
how this columniSt got the title The National Rodgers &amp; Hammerstem's Cinderella both
Academy of Television Arts &amp; Sctences a way were splendid but Isola ted and retroactiVe ex
from a brace of promoters who d tried to ceUence among tile ' 77 Sunset Str1p, Mickey
copynght that title as the persuader to sell ad Mouse themes Milton Berle i Texaco jungle
vertismg m a magazme of the same name We the MISS America ' monotony, Dinah Shores
swung It back to the TV Industry with JUSt one old Chevy ex1ttheme complete with MMMMM
wah'
®
DUROCHER Wf&gt;S A NII'TY DRESSER,
BuT' COMR'-R.ED 10 D&gt;.N HE D I..OOK
A Fl".LLBEARER'

on we satd (Vtelnamese for
thank you )
I wondered If the cameras
were bemg giVen to the Khmer
Rouge as a ransom for our
safety I thought 1\ probable
-tiut said nothiDg
Another JOurne) entry Wed
26th Wrapped up wtlh burnmg
head and shivers all day
Camdodians say bath means
release Doctor giVes me four
pills and head rub Scolds me
for taking bath Try to force
food Must eat Gettmg too
weak can t even walk to John
without floating heaq Long
slow day Dad goes thru hst of
possessiOns but says no more
Suzul{lts bettmg on May I We
discuss northerners and south
erners
A day seemed hke weeks
before nQw It seems hke
years 1 Saralh satd He was
nght
Official Date
But although we were to walk
two more days our official
release came the next (Thurs
day) mornmg
The guards woke us before 5
o clock earlier than usual Mr
Lib arnved and said put on
your new clothes The officer of
the high command Is up here
I emerged from the bath
house m a new green uniform
they had g1ven me and Sarath
said pack miss everythmg
Each of us was gtven a small
green cloth bag and I packed
everylhmg -the torn shirt
and Jeans I had been captured
m the necklace Moonface had
made for me my black
pajamas toothbrush and tooth
paste Hammock and rnosqwlo
net too Mr lib ordered
We stared at each other Was
11 release or )Ust another long
At 9 o clock we were
photographed mdlVldually and
m a group by a man Mr lib
confided was a very h1gh
rankiDg off1cer Mr lib was
flustered and nervous although
11 IS not Communist habit to
salute or s\low deference to
officers We discussed the value
of a camera lens with the
officer as he squatted beside
us Mr Lib was mlStranslatmg
m hts nervousness
Taken to Shelter
We then were taken to the
tree hidden sheller where we
had been Interrogated Wooden
benches were arranged m a
semi-circle before a table
covered with the tradiiional
green and whtle checkered
cloth
The squat old mtl!tary man
who had been m the back
ground durmg our mterrogat10n
presided Before hun lay a
sheaf of documents- the Off!
c1al orders from the Southwest
Command for the release of
four JOurnahsts and two driVer
mterpreters accordmg to the
humane prmctples of the
liberatiOn Armed Forces
We felt awkward m our new
clothes The high command
representallve cleared hts
throat put on hts spectacles
and looked up He seemed
weary and read the order
slowly
TranslatiOns were read to us
and when the sechons abouf the
humane policies were read
we were signalled to applaud
We did
More group photographs fol
lowed before we returned for
our personal possessiOns I was

By Helen Bottel

NQT.g().HAPPY ENDING
Dear Helen
ThiS ..s • Joan Remember me' I m Ted s wife who is still m
love with Junmy Seven months ago you prmled my letter and
asked your readers to be the advice columniSts A November
column carried sample replies You reported the vote was I~ to
one AGAINST romance and m favor of reality duty paren
thood mamage vows, security - aU those things we re told
moderns foreswear
1was amazed at how many people responded, but shocked at
how unsympathetic most of them were They assumed Junmy
was the v!llam Ted the hero but ID reality though Jim and I were
crazy 10 love our mutual agreement was to waltfor marriage
It was Ted who (after the stupid ftght I had with Jun) got me
pregnant so that we rushed IDto mamage Of course 11 wasn t
entirely h1s fault - I could have stopped hun the one and only
time 11 happened but Ted unlike Junrny WAS an expen&lt;!llced
romancer And he was so determmed to have me for hiS wife that
1 couldn t run out even though r1ght up to the wedding - af
terwards too- I knew Jun was the one
Your readers seemed to thmk that given a good, true and
Jovmg husband (which Ted IS) I d come to my senses You
don t know how I ve tried Helen' I m completely true I told Jun
my responsibilities are with my husband and baby and he agrees
Ted and I fiDally talked 11 all out We re actually becommg
friends but the romance Is fadmg even on hiS part He knows
were staymg together mostly for our baby Its possible Q()W that
we understand each other we Ureally fall in love but how, when
Jimmy IS always there in my rrund' And I know he d be there m
person If I SOld the word
Helen your advtce, seven months ago, was When In doubt
wrut a while and see
sometimes true love ISO t where one
tlllnksshe hasfowod 11 Well I vewruted and my problem is st11i
the same I m marned to a wonderful man I can I love, and m
love With a wonderful man I can t marry They both want me
I have to add this Ted IS possesstve emotional doesn t want
to let me out of hiS Sight Duty pity, fnendsh1p are the cor
nerslones of my marriage And regret IS the biggest stumbling
block
Under thesecll'CUI1lStances can It last' -JOAN GAIN
Dear Joan
Fr1endsh1p' can scarcely become love when IllS smothered
by duly p1ty and regret Nor IS this kmd of mamage fair to Ted
or to your son He needs parents who love each other as well as
him
And that s where my advice ends for only you can make
the fmal deciSion It might be easter if you d try a temporary
separation - perhaps a vacat1on back home, to gel your thoughts
together - H
Dear Helen
My daughter, ID her mid twenties has been goiDg with a man
for three years He IS now almost 30 He tells her he doesn t
believe In sexual relations before marfl8ge, and that he has never
had even a small affair With a gil'! No engagements no en
counters, nothmg (No mamage talk either )
You d think a normal, healthy male would at least try Do you
think there's a future for her with him' - DOUBTFUL
Dear Doubtful
Afuture With thiS unfiappable fellow might be as unexciting
as the past- with or without marnage She should concede her
romance has come to a dead end and look elsewhere, nght'- H

handed back my purse watch
Weat Barefoot
a Chmese charm I wear around Dad seemed to have diff1cul
my neck my Mg, asp11'111, ty too, walfmg In the shower
wallet and 1d cards Nothing shoes They slither, mud sucks
was m1ssmg I signed for them, them off, and brambles tear
and for the 300 reils they- gave them askew He dec1ded to
each of us for transportation
CBITY them and walked bareSays Thank You"
foot It was past ffi!dnight and
You now have the opportunl we were exhausted when he
ty to say thank you,' Mr handed Suzuki and me lumps of
liberation Informed us produc· fudge-like sugar A thick patch
IDg his tape recorder
of Jungle was our camp The
Suzuki took the rrucrophone Teacher had strung my ham
and thanked them In English mock and l fell mto 11
Moonface followed m Carnbo- It ramed that day and we
dian then me and Charoon We amateurishly strung ponchos
shook hands all around, the over our hammocks Moonface
officers mcluded and plates of caught an mch long thorn In his
bananas and candy and tea heel and 'lfent straight to Dad
were placed on the table We With a confidence that amused
also were given a full package me Dad dug It out for him
of ctgarettes each
We were scared Even the
We asked about other journa guard! seemed nervous There
hsts (there are 17) missing m was fighting about 300 yards
Cambodia The command re away near the end of the
presentallve looked almost em march with flares and the
barrassed I thought
crash of mortars "\'e skirted
The LiberatiOn Forces could villages and the guards held
not be held responstble for long consultations at each stop
JOurnalists who followed the Dad kept droppmg out of line
Lon No! troops, he S81d It He had the stomach upset
sounded hke a warnmg Suzuki known to American Gls m
and I pressed the question He Vltnam as Ho Chi Minh s
repeated that 1t was the policy Revenge
of the liberation Front never to We stopped at a place lit by
kill prtsoners but said that m the moon and flares where
the southwest regiOn he had no straw had been stacked under a
knowledge of other captive spreading tree We were told to
JOurnalists
sleep but I didn t The guards
I' felt a sense of failure
went off ID groups and seemed
It was at 5 40 p.m that to be argwng over their plans
evenmg under a sickle moon Gold Tooth appeared out of
that we moved out on the first nowhere bringing news, and by
leg of the last lap to freedom the light of the flares over the
The entire camp turned out to battle on the road I could see
shake hands and say goodbye him draWing maps In the dust
We were photographed together for the others
w1tp the officers then moved
Off Agala
off IDio the dusk, turmng to
It IS time to move,' Mr Lib
wave From 20 yards away, the said We scrambled up and m
camp looked hke just another mmutes were movmg off agam
clump of trees
I lit my next to last cigarette
No Bonds
It was sometime after 3 a.m
We were not tied The men We did not use flashlights
carried rice m scarves slung We stopped suddenly on what
around their necks and also I thought was a new trail The
their release bags There Teacher was whispering in
were as usual stx guards- Cambodian, we were shaking
Dad Dave Gold Tooth, Mr bands, wishing good luck to
Lib. The Teacher and OPe of M~~ Otl!~
1 t. J
the members of the ne'!jl' party ;J'!1en,lll~ SIX Ji IIi. were alone WIN AT BRIDGE
that had arrtVed m camp The In the dai'k
lr7
Cambodians were told that if
'Where are we' I asked
we walked fast 1\ would take Sarath
one mght mstead of two to "Highway 4, but not at
reach Highway 4
Trapeang Krallang Quick, we By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
I was told I was walking ll}ust move from this place
0 s w a I d The Chmese
very well and that I must 'n1e soldiers say we must
keep doiDg my best My head move
littered with spent shell cas
was sWirnrnmg my ha1r and Still we stood The Teacher mgs
I
new smt drenched With sweat appeared from somewhere be· Shaltily I picked up my little
At the next rest stop we sunply hind us 'Move, ' he whispered bag Moonface, clad only In his
leaned agamst one anothers then disappeared
torn trousers-now too large for
backs too tired to Sit
We moved about 500 yards him--raised the white para
We saw what looked like a our shower shoes making aloud chute silk flag The two of us
town wtth scores of bright fiappmg sound on the road I stepped out onto the h1ghway
hghts but 1t was villagers walked In front because you the others shuffling behmd
fishmg for crabs and frogs 1n have a white face, • as agreed There was the familiar flap of
the flooded but shallow paddy beforehand
shower shoes m the unfamiliar
fields by the hght of 011 flares
We argued about moving to a naked light of day
Gold Tooth and Dad joked With nearby abandoned house with
Troops appeared on the crest
them and bought four Uve old foxholes around lt The of a hill shead of us We
frogs which croaked behind me guards had said to wait until stopped and Moonface s face
the rest of the march (They after the government annored feU, as did the flag he was
ate them for breakfast the next road-clearingpatrolhadpassed carrymg We qmckly shoved It
mormng roasted over a fire on We had said we would take up agam snapping at hun
a bamboo skewer\
clvllian transportation back nervously
I feU at least three times to Phnom Penh But we knew Government or Khmer
despite Dad s flashligHt Final- we were not In a town, but Rouge' The drag column
ly he stopped and gave me his territory controlled by the moved slowly down the hill
Ho Chi Minh sandals put them Khmer Rouge
toward us 'Lon No! Sarath
on my feet and took my
Tied Up Flag
and Moonface sa1d slmul
shower shoes The Ho sandals Moonface won out He took a taneously The approachmg
had curved rubber sticking out piece of white parachute silk I troops stopped, starmg We
m front to protect the toes and 1had and tied it to a stick We continued walking, alowly
were much more comfortable, stripped off our gift clothing
I could see the1r uniforms
aSide from protecting one from and drewd in the dai'k In what now and for the first tune m 24
thorns scorptons and bamboo we had left of our clvllian days my nerves relaxed I had
spikes Greater love hath no clothes The ~Ink grey dawn to blink to hold back the tears
man I thought
came slowly, Illuminating an A first lieutenant was standing
empty stretch of highway m the middle of the road
Journalists we said lame
iy, still waviDg our flag high
The offtcer pomted at me
Miss Webb, ' he said
You re supposed to be dead

•
Spasms Can Cause Nec k PaIn

Bv Lawrence Lamb M D

•

Rrecision Club Confuses All

DR. LAWRENCE f.1AM8
Tension May 8$ A factor

Dear Dr Lamb-What
causes me to have lightness
arld soreness m the back of
my neck at the base of my
head At limes I give a
qmck ]erk with my head anu
11 makes a poppmg notse
and It relieves the pressure
a short while I am ID
l,clined to be very nervous It
comes on me more If I am
upset over anythmg When I
was 20 I recetved a hard
blow on my chm and the
trouble came on shortly aft
erwa1 ds I am 48 now and
wonder If that could have
been the start Could' you
~tell me what I should do to
-".'f C ~\&lt;.
1 e II e v e the condition and
1&gt;- tri'P;,p;l-~
what doctor I should see fm
....~~..p&gt;~ fP'
some help• At my age 11 wtll
g~·'"'~ll:
,~o
be bothermg me more
\)Y'
••0'(\
ifY
~ v-~"'
llear lt~ader-t-~ you de
f t-&gt;'':..1 ..,p'lscnbe your pam 11 IS prob
&lt;(ltll,~~.cJII,~
ably due to muscle spasm
~ ~...::;--...J The muscles In the neck con

L.

1

tract and cause hmitahon of
motion and giVe riSe to pam
When you move your head
and stretch the muscle suffl
ciently the spasm or cramp
IS relieved and the pain may
disappear ThiS Is similar to
stretchmg the calf muscle If
) ou have a cramp in the leg
It Is true that Individuals
with repeated eptsodes of
muscle spasms are more apt
to have them when they are
expenencmg tension There
are a lot of thmgs however
which can contribute to the
problem and apparently you
have been having difficulties
for almost 28 years
Posture can be a contnbutiDg factor 1f you have one
leg w h 1c h Is considerably
shorter than the other the
entire skeleton w11l be out of
!me and will chapge the pull
on the vartous muscles along
the spme all the way up to
!he neck

Such an underlymg pos
!ural defect can constantly
Irritate the m u s c I e s and
make them more susceptible
tospasms or cramping Dis
orders of this sort can be
corrected, or helped with a
heel lift 1a pad under the
heel or lncreasillg-the thick
ness of the heel of the shoe)
m many cases
Ydu shoqld see a spectahst
In physical medlcme Your
famUy doctor county or
state medical society can
give you tl)e name of a
reputable specialist in phys
leal medicine nea~ your
home Underlying disorders
like postural defects usually
can be correcte!l
In the meantime fot re
current episodes you may
soak tbe neck muscles with
a hot towel until the mu~~;le~
are warmed and then try to
move and rotate the head as
much as pc~Jsible the Ieby

In DebUt

~ I

f

1

3- The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy 0 May 17,I971

relieving muscle s p a s m s
That IS about as far as you
should go Without haviDg an
exammation
Asplrm which is remark
ably good at relieving pam
is sometimes helpful ID mak
mg &gt;these conditions toler
able
Avoid anyone who Wishes
to marllpuiate your head
Sudden sharp twists and
turns of the head have been
known to cause dtslocation of
the cerv1cal (neck) spme
causing severe IDJUnes and
even death Be certam that
you see a reputable phys 1
clan for this type or pt ~b
Iem
(NEWSPAPER r'HTERPRISE ASSN )

team had flmshed second to
Italy m 1969 and we were
not surpnsed to fmd them
opposmg us m the 1970 fmals
They play a systetn called
The Prectsion Club It IS a
good system )Jut enormous
ly comphcated
Jim It IS far too comph
cated for ordmary players
and may be too complicated
even for the Chmese Bobby
Wolff and I reached SIX clubs
on today s hand The b1ddmg
m the box shows how the
Chmese got to seven
Oswald The f 1 r s t two
bids look normal but the
opemng b1d was arhficial
and merely showed at least
16 high card pomts The one

r - - - - - - - - - - - ,.("'
NORTH
48
'1'9764
t AKJB
"'AQ52
WEST

4K76432
"1052
• Q7
""7 6

EAST
• QJ 109
"Q 3

tl096532
"" 10

SOUTH (D)
4A5
'I'AKJB

••

"'KJ9843
None vulnerable
\1 est
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

North

East South
Pass
Pass

Pass

1"'

2"'

~·
Pass

Opentng lead- (1 4

d1amond response was also
artlfictal and was suppose to
. show ~ poiDts or less Two
clubs showed the suit and
four spades was the 1mpos
Sible negative that said he
really had a very good hand
With a smgleton s p a d e
South s five spade call was
due to his havmg m1scon
strued their conventiOn He
thought that North had a
good hand With a very long
spade suit North jumped to
seven clubs to make sure his
partner wouldn t try any
thing hke seven spades
Jtm Seven clubs was a
laydown smce there were 12
top t r 1c k s an4 both red
queens are doubleton m front
ol the ace kmg Jack Ta1 of
Chma drew trumps and
c a s h e d hts ace kmg of
hearts to see tf the queen
wou d dtop It dtd and he
datrned

Forty Da~s o! I..eJt
Lent really lasts o er Six
weeks The 40 day• ref~rs
to the faot days SUIIdays are
The front leg• of a gira!fe fast dav• •rakm~ out the six
ate powerful enough to kick Sundays ln IA)n\ there 81 e
the he~d off a lion
40 days of l.rntt n observ
nnl"
.-.

By United Prns 1nternationa I
Nal!onol League
Eost
W L Pet GB
New York
21 11 656
Pittsburgh
20 14 588 2
St Louis
20 15 571 2'12
Chicago
18 17 514 4'12
Montreal
13 13 500 5
Philadelphia 10 22 313 11
West
W L Pet GB

American League
By Un ted Press lnternal!onal
East
W L Pet GB
20 11 645
Boston
19 13 594 1'12
Baltimore
16 17 485 5
Detro1t
New York
15 16 484 5
Washington 15 19 441 6
12 20 375 8112
Cleveland
West
W L Pet GB
San Franc1sco
Oakland
25 14 649
27 10 730
Minnesota
18 17 514 5
Allanta
17 18 486 9 tjlltfQrn a
18 19 486 6
Los Angeles 18 19 486 9 Kansas C1ty 18 19 486 6
Houslon
16 19 457 10 Milwaukee 14 18 4JS 7112
Clnc1nnat
13 21 382 12'12 Ch cago
13 20 394 9
San D1ego
10 24 294 15 1&gt;
Sunday s Results
Sunday s Results
Miwaukee 6 California 2
Pittsburgh 4 New York 2
Oakland 4 Kansas C1ty 2 (1sf)
Chicago 9 Sn Dgo 8 1fst 10 ms) Kansas City 10 Oaklnd 4 l2nd)
x Ch1cago 6 San Dego 3
Minnesota 6 Chicago 2
Philadelphia 4 Atianla 3
Delro•f 5 Washmgton 4
Montreal 9 C n&lt;1nnat1 3
Cievl at N Y 12) ppd rain
Houston 12 Sf Lou s 4
Ball1more at Boston ppd rain
Los Angeles 9 San Fran 6
x 2nd game suspended alter 6
Todav s Probabk! Potchers
Innings darkne.,)
Minnesota (Bivleven 3 4) at
Callforn•a (Wright 3 3) night
Today s Probable Pitchers
Cleveland IDunning 12 2) at
Montreal !Morton 3 4) Pitts Washington (Bosman 2 4)
burqh !Walker 1 4) nlQbt
mghl
New York (Seaver 52) at Balt1more (Dobson 2 2) at
Atlanta (Nash 2 3) night
New York lStottlemyre 3 2)
Ph1ladelph a I Bunning 1 6) at n1ghl
Cine nnatl IMemtt 0 41. mght
Detro1t (Chance 0 5) al
San Diego (Roberts 3 2) at Boston 1Peters 4 2) night
Houslon (Wilson 3 2) n ght
(Only games scheduled
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday s Games
Tuesday s Games
MllwaukeeatOakland nlght
Montreal at P1ttsburgh n ght
Minnesota at California n1ght
New York al Atlanta mght
Ch cago al Kansas C1ty night
Philadelphia at Clncl night
Cleveland al Washtn night
San Diego at Houston night
Baltimore al New York mghl
San Francisco at Ch cago
Detroit at Boston n ght
Los Angeles at St Louis mght
Saturday s Results
Chicago 6 San D1ego 4
San FranCISco 1 Los Ang 0
New York 9 Plttsbur9h 5
Atlanta 6 Ph1ladelph1a 2
Cincinnati 6 Montreal 1
SI Louis 6 Houston 5

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ross
Grunsley sa1d he did everything
r1ght
Everythmg, that IS, until I
got to the mound ' added the
Cincmnat1 Reds rookie left
bander
Grunsley was recalled last
Thursday from Indianapolis aft
er compiling a ~ record for
the Reds Arnencan Assoctabon
farm club
The 21 year old lefthander,
making hts major league debut
Sunday failed to survive the
second mmng as the Montreal
Expos salvaged the fmale of a
three-game series by grab~ing a
9-3 VICtory

Liquori
Outduels
fun Ryun
PffiLADELPHIA (UP!) Marty Iiquori kept waiting for
the famous Jun Ryun kick, but
he s just as glad It d1dn t
materialize
I expected him to come at
me on the last turn Iiquori
sa1d after outduellng Ryun In
the showdown of super milers
m the Martm Luther King
International Freedom Games
Sunday at Franklm Fteld
Liquori who took the lead
from Ryun just before the
three quarter mark and
matched the world record
holder s kick down the stretch
posted a tune of 3 54 6-the
fastest ever on the Eastern
Seaboard
I was waiting for him on the
fiDal stretch ' Uquon said
But I was glad to be ahead
just wattmg for his move '
As the two approached the
fmal 440 yards Iiquori frequently would glance over his
shoulder at Ryun who was right
at his heels
I wanted him on my
shoulder Iiquori satd I had
to run the race that waydiscouragmg him every time he
trted to go by me
It was at first thought that
the weather mtght throw a
damper on the super mile as a
steady mornmg rain and a
chilly temperature left the aU
weather track with mterffilttent
puddles
The time was the fastest ever
for Iiquori who previously had
never come w1thm five seconds
of Ryun s world mark of 3 511

NEW

FURNRURE
'349.95
$35 oo DownBalance On

Conve11tent
Terms

MASON
FURNITUR(

for ftve hits and four runs be
fore he gave way to Tony
Clomnger with two out m the
second 1nnmg
The Expos added two more
runs off Clonmger m the third
and wound up their scoriDg
when John Bateman htt a
th1 ee-run homer ID the eighth
mmng off Wayne Granger
Steve Renko a &amp;-foot~ 225pound righthander notched his
fourth vtctory m stx declSlons
this season and hiS fourth
stratght over a three year span
agamst the Reds Sunday
But the former Umvers1ty of
Kansas quarterback needed a
helpmg hand from relief pitcher

Mtke Marshall m the etghth
mmng when Tony Perez horn
ered and Lee May siDgied with
one out
The homer was the fifth of
the season and one of three
htts durmg the afternoon for
Perez who went IDto the
game with a 221 batiiDg mark
Everyone knows Perez IS
gomg to h1t said Anderson
Wtth hun 11 s JUSt a matter of
time
Phils In Tomght
The Reds open a two-game
senes with the Phtladelphta
Ph1ls tomght and will send
Jun Merntt to the mound Don
Gullett the 20-year-&lt;ild lefty

wtll pttch the Tuesday game
agamst the Phtlhes
The Pittsburgh Pirates wtll
follow the Ph!lhe• mto town
for a two game sertes whtch
concludes the Reds current
homestand
Anderson did get some good
news Sunday when he learned
that outfielder Hal McRae may
be stdelmed for only a week
McRae was earned from the
field Saturday mght when he
pulled a muscle 1r • os n ght
thigh whtle attemptmg to hold
up after roundmg third base
It was believed at first he
would be out a mmunum of
two weeks

Sunday the Expos Ron Fair
ly was earned from the field
on a stretcher when struck on
the nght cheek by a pitch
thrown by Tony Clomnger m
the third mnmg
Fortunately Fairly suffered
no fracture But the swellmg m
the nghl cheek of the f1rst
baseman made 11 look as If he
had swallowed a baseball
GOSLIN FUNERAL RITES
SALEM N J ( UPI )- Funeral
servtces for baseball Hall.{)f
Famer Goose Goshn wtll be
held here 1 uefday at 2 p rn
Goslin d1ed Saturday

Giusti Gets 8th Save For Pirates

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates gave
the New York Mets a first-hand
demonstration Sunday that they
could have the Case Ace m
the National League East
Division race agam this year
He s rehever Dave G1usti and
he proved to be the deciSIVe
factor last year m the Pirates
Saturday's Results
victory over the Mets and
Chicago 8 Minnesola 2
Chicago Cubs ID the NL's East
Cleveland 4 New York 2
race A journeyman With a subKansas City 5 Oakland 4
Baltimore 7 Boston 4
500-record until last season
Washtn 4 Detroit 3 li5 Inns)
when he had a 9-3 record and
Cal lorn a 4 Milwaukee 1
26 saves Glusl! started the 1971
season With nvals demanding
to know Can he do It agam or
was he a one-year wonder''
The answer seems to be that
G1usl! can do 11 agam because
he came out of the bullpen
Sunday to cut off the Mets
nmth mnln$ rally and complete
a 4-2 victory for Dock Ellis and
Richard was asked If he the Pirates The save was his
thought hiS remarks calling e1ghth of the season and at
MacNeil mcompetent and the
worst coach he ever played
under helped Montreal Win
Sunday s game
I don t want to make any
more statements I just hope
the whole thiDg will die down
But I know we ll wm the
Stanley Cup
Richard an
swered
]\lacNml plaY-ed a maJOr part BA!,.p~Qj:l.F,;, r.id Un'l)m a noiher drama connected Canonero 11 sold for $1,200 as a
With the game Sunday after his crooked legged yearliDg and
life was threatened by anony shipped off to Venezuela to
mous callers and he was apparent obscurity cannot be
assigned pollee protection Mac purchased for any pr1ce today
Net! said however he wasn t folloWing the colt's record
breaking victory Saturday In
womed about the threats
As far as I was concerned, the Preakness Stakes that gave
my only thoughts were wlnnmg hun two thtrds of the Triple
that game And I knew that the Crown
We already have had an
situation was lD good bands
when the team provided me offer of $4 million for him,
wtth protectiOn MacNeil said sa1d Victory Sclalom a spokes
Six , plamclothes detectives man for owner Edgar Ca1bett
surrounded MacNeil as he stood and his wife who received the
behmd the Montreal bench and colt as a wedding present from
coached his team to victory m Pedro Baptista hiS father-mthe SIXth game Now 1t s back law
We turned the offer down
to Chicago, said MacNeil
After 78 regular games and 19 All the money ID the world
playoff games It s all down to couldn t buy thiS horse No I
one smgle contest But I know am not at liberty to reveal the
that even though we haven t person who made 11, he added
won yet m Chicago ID this Canonero s victory In the
sertes we have the talent to do
the JOb
The Mahovllch brothers
Frank and Pete, led Montreal
to their comeback win Frank
scored one goal to set an all
time National Hockey League
playoff record of 14 goals and 1 l ~
added two assiSts to equal the
playoff total pomts record of 27
Both records were held by Phil INDIANAPOUS Ind (UPI)
Esposito who set them With the - It took hun two years but
Boston BruiDs m the 1969-70 handsome Pete Revson New
Yorks gift to auto racing,
playoffs
gamed a big measure of
revenge today over fellow Ivy
NHL Playoff Standings
By Un1ted Press lnlernal!onal Leaguer Mark Donohue as the
I Fmals- Best of Seven)
fastest pole-sitter m Ind1anapo
W L GF GA
Chicago
3 3 16 17 lis 500 history
In 1969, when both were
Montreal
3 3 17 16
Sunday s Result
newcomers to the famed
Montreal 4 Chicago 3
Memorial Day race Revson
Tu&amp;sday s Game
placed fifth and Donohue
Montreal al Ch1cago
seventh but the coveted
Rookie of the Year honor
went to Donohue
DRAGO INJURED
Saturday 11 was Revson, 32,
KANSAS GITY Mo ( UPI)Dick Drago, leadmg the Kansas the former Cornell collegtan
City Royals p!tchmg staff with who turned the tables, upsetting
a 4-1 record, suffered a pulled
hamstring muscle Sunday In
The Daily Sentinel
the fiTs! game of a doublehead·
DEVOTED TO THE
er w1th the oakland Athletics
INTERE5T OF
ME lOS MASON AREA
Drago wtll be s1delmed fo~ an
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Euc Ed
mdefmite peri&lt;&gt;&lt;!.
ROIIERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Published datly except
5a!urday by The Oh1o Valley
PubliShing Company 111

Canadiens Force
Playoffs To Limit
MONTREAL (UP!)- Cons
diens center Henri Richard
admtts he talked out of turn
when he blasted Montreal
Coach AI MacNeil after Thurs
day night s loss to the Chicago
Black Hawks m the Stanley Cup
Finals
But maybe Its all the
canadlens needed to spur them
on as they fought off a one-goal
def1c1t Sunday afternoon to Win
&lt;1-3 and force a seventh and
deciding game m Chicago
Tuesday mght

Maybe I was a httle nerv
ous,' sa1d Ross
If he wasn t offered Reds
Manager Sparky AnderSjlll he
would be the first rookie
I didn t have any trouble at
aU sleepmg last night sa1d
Grunsley 'I ate a good break
fast
like I said he repeated
I did everythmg aU rtghl unbl
I got to the mound
Raps Five Hits
I wasn t disappomted m the
way Ross threw said Ander
son He got behiDd the hitters
too much and when he got his
pitches up he got h1t
The Expos rapped Grunsley

that rate he might set a maJOr
league mark by the end of the
season
The vtctory enabled the
Pirates to salvage the last
game of the three-game series
and cut the Mets f~rsti&gt;lace
lead to two games Gmsb s
closeout performance was espe
c1ally significant because Met
rehever Tug McGraw was
touched for two runs m th•
bottom of the eighth enabiiDg
the Pirates to take a 4 I lead
mto the nmth
The Pirates chnched the
vtctory when smgies by Rtchte
Hebner and AI Ohver, Bob
Robertson s double and a wtld
pitch produced the two eighth
mnlng runs off McGraw Nolan
Ryan suffered his first loss
agamst f1ve VICtofles while
Ellis won his fifth game agamst
three defeats
The Philadelphia Phil11es beat
the Atlanta Braves 4-3 the
Montreal Expos downed the

Cmcmnat1 Reds 9-3 the Los has happened to Phtladelph!a
Angeles Dodgers topped the San SIDCe the mckle beer
Francisco Giants 9-6 the
Ron Hunt had three hils and
Houston Astros walloped the St John Bateman htt a three run
Lows Cardmals 12-4 and the homer for the Expos who
Chicago Cubs beat the San routed Red rookte Ross Gnm
Diego Padres 9-8 m 10 mmngs sley m I 2-3 mnings Clyde
and led 6-3 when their second Mashore and Coco Laboy had
game was suspended after stx two hits each lor the Expos
mmngs because of darkness m • while Tony Perez homered for
other NL ~ames
the Reds Steve Renko went 7 I
In the Amencn League 1t 3 mmngs to I RISe hiS Iecofd to
was Detroit ~ WashiDgton 4 4 2
Mmnesota 6 Chtcago 2 Kansas
Wes Parker s two run homer
Ctty over Oakland 10-4 after a ID the eighth lied the soore and
4-2 loss and Milwaukee 6 Tom Haller s th1rd hit of the
Cahforma 2 Cleveland at New game drove ID the wiDnmg run
York and Baltunore at Boston
were ramed out
Rookie W1lhe Montanez ac
counted for all the Phtlhes
runs with two homers and a
double as Rtck Wtse won hts
second game and Pat Jarvis
lost his 5th straight Montanez
now h1ttmg 324 was described
by Phtls Manager Frank
Lucchesi as the !Jest thmg that
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Alex Johnson s lone wolf
an lies may have been !me when
he won the Arnencan League
battmg title last season but
they don t seem to carry too
much water thiS year
Johnson a loner and a man
of
few words established a self
Fann s Eastern Fleet for the unposed
barrier of silence
lead He caught his rival on the
first turn and the two colts around hunself last year and 11
was tolerated as he h1t 329 and
raced stride for strtde nose
and nose mto the homestretch won AL battmg honors But
Johnson s average plungerl to
Then with only an eighth of a
mile to go ID the 1 3-16 mile 239 Sunday as he fatled ID a
pmch-luttmg role m a 6-lloss to
race Canonero mched ahead to
WID by a length and one-hall the Milwaukee Brewers and
Cabforma Manager Lefty Phll·
and smash the track record of hps apparently has had II With
I 54 3-5 set by Nashua m 1955
the controversial outfteider
w1th a I 54 flat clockmg
Tommy Harper who entered
The complete change ID
tactics amazed everyone and the game with a 162 battiDg
horsemen wondered what to average collected four hits and
expect on June 5 when Ellie Rodriguez and Ted Kubiak
h1t their first homers of the
Canonero will try to complete
h1s sweep of the Triple Crown season as the Brewers beat the
Angeles for the fourth time ID
m the Belmont Stakes Only
five
games this season
eight horses have done so but
Elsewhere ID the AL Kansas
none in almost a quarter of a
century Ctta!Ion last pulled off City beat Oakland 10-4 after
losmg the first game of a
the Trtple m 1946
Only four no more than doubleheader 4-2 Mmnesota
downed Chicago 6-2 and Detrmt
four w1U run agamst hun
edged
Washmgton 5-4 A
predtcted Sctalom while Jose V
Cleveland New York double
Almenar another member of
the Venezuelan contingent who header and the Baltimore
Boston game were ramed out
acted as an mterpreter s1ghed
In the Natwnal League,
Mementos mementos that
Pittsburgh beat New York 4 2
IS ali wmnmg ttckets will be
worth he wtll pay so httle ID Philadelphia edged Atlanta 4-3,
Montreal npped CIDcmnatl 9-3
the Belmont Stakes
canonero paid $19 40 m Los Angeles stopped San
Franctsco 9-ll Houston clubbed
wmnmg tile Kentucky Derby
St
Lou1s 12-4 and Chicago
and $8 80 m wmnmg the
mpped San Otego 9-8 ID the first
Preakness He was co-favonte
With Jun French who had game of a scheduled double
header The second game was
f1mshed second m the Kentucky
Derby and lh1rd m the suspended after SIX IDmngs with
the Cubs leading 6-3
Preakness behmd Canonero and
Pmch hitter Bobby Knoop s
Eastern Fleet
two run siDgle and a run
producmg double by Fred
SENATORS RELEASE%
WASHINGTON(UPI)- Wash Patek highlighted a four-run
mgton Sjlnators Manager Ted seventh mmng that led Kansas
City past Oakland m the second
game Run-scoriDg smgles by
outfielder Rich Schemblum had Bert Campaner1s and Reggie
been giVen their outnght
releases Brought up from
TOKYO (UP!) - Australia s
Denver to replace them were David Graham sank a two foot
Larry Bittner a 24-year-&lt;ild btrdte putt on the thtrd sudden
outfielder hitting 356 an death playoff hole Sunday to
nghthander Mike Thompson a wm the first Japan Airlm~•
21 year-&lt;ild with a 4 I record InternatiOnal Golf Tour
and a 3 29 ERA
namenl

was as startling as
hts Kentucky Derby VIctory two
weeks a~o was surpnsmg
There have been Count Fleets
who have burled rivals m their
dust wtth speed There have
been Wh1rlaways who crushed
opposii!on wtth devastatmg
stretch runs To everyone s
amazement, Canonero proved
he can do either 10 wmmng the
second jewel m the Trtple
Crown
The South Amencan mvader
came from 20 lengths back to
wm the Kentucky Derby He
was expected to try the same
tliiDg m the Preakness
Instead jockey Gustavo Avila
sent Canonero to the front at
the start and the crowd of
47 211 the biggest ID Maryland
racing history roared m
disbelief
canonero challenged Calumet

Pete Revson Sets
1\TeW
Mark At Indy

Court St
Pomeroy Ohio
45769 Bu' ness Off tee Phone

992 2156 Ed tori aI Phone 992
2157
Second class pos!age paid a!
Pomeroy Ohio

National advertising
representattve
Botflnellt

Gallagher Inc 12 East ~2nd
SI New York City New York

Subscrtptlon rates
De
livered by cerrltT where
avellable 50 cents per week
By Motor Route where carrter

service not ava lablt

One

monlh $1 75 By mall In Ohio
and W Va One year $14 00
Six months $7 2S Throe

months s• SO Subscrlptton
pnce Includes Sundey Ttmes
SenJmel

the highly favored Donohue for
the pole spot that went to the
fastest f1rst-day qualifier for
the $1 mtlhon holiday chase
May 29
W1th a record shattermg
burst of speed from an engme
he wasn t sure would produce
Revson blazed around the
ancient 2~-mile oval at an
average speed of 178 696 miles
per hour and with a best lap of
179 354---aiso the fastest ever at
the Speedway
Donohue Media Pa who
experienced some handbng
difficulty with his machine had
to settle for runnerup honors at
177 087 m a bascially Identical
Bnllsh built McLaren machme
Twenty three cars made sue
cessful !O-m1le trial runs
Saturday before a huge throng
estimated at 250 000 Three
more qualified Sunday leaving
only seven spots to be filled
next weekend for the 33-car
field
The three year-old one and
four lap records by Joe Leonard
m a turbme-powered car took a
pastmg His one lap mark of
171 953 was shattered 37 tunes
by II drivers and the same 11
smashed his four-lap standard
of 171 M9 all Saturday But
nobody came close to Leonard's
1968 records Sunday
The field now averages
171 4~8 mph and the fmal
lineup IS sure to beat last
year s 167 139 by about two
mlieB'-perhaps more

the WIDner and Don McMahon
the loser m a game marked by
mght errors four by each stde
and six stolen bases Bobby
Bonds homered for the Gtants
Doug Rader who started the
game htttmg 164 htt a grand
slam homer m the first mnmg
and a two run double m the
thtrd to lead a 17 htt Houston
attack that brought Larry
Dterker his sixth WID against
one loss Roger Metzger and

111

A ngels lr.lanager,

Hague homered and Juhan
Javter had three hits for the
Cardmals
Jim Htckman htt a two run
homer w1th none out m the lOth
to g1ve the Cubs the victory
after they tratled 7.1 Hick
man s blow carne off Al
Santonn1 after Billy W1ll!ams
walked to lead off the mmng
and went to second on a passed
ball Ron Santo also homered
for the Cubs while Larry Stahl
connected for the Padres It
was the stxth vtctory m a row
for the Cubs The second game
WllibecompietedonAug 4

Johnson At

$4 Million Offer For
Canonero Is Rejected
Preaknes~

m the mnth as the Dodgers Jack Htatt had three hits each
braked the runa"ay Gtants m for the Astros who dealt Jerry
the NL West Jim Brewer was Reuss his fourth loss Joe

Jack, on ID the seventh IDntng of
the first game helped the
Athlel!cs beat the Royals
Cesar Tovar scored the tie
breaking run m a three run
sixth mmng on a balk by
reliever VIcente Romo as the
Twms beat Chtcago George
Mttlerwald and Chuck Manuel
doubled for one run and Tover '
rea~h~ safely wnen his sacrl
flee was bobbled by pitcher
Tom Bradley Rich Reese
Singled m Manuel with Tovar
taking thtrd and Tovar scored
when Romo s spikes caught
durmg hts ptlchmg motiOn
Leo Cardenas added a homer
m the seventh for the Twms
Mickey Stanley hit two
homers and Norm Cash belted
h1s 300th m a Detroit uniform
as the Tigers edged Washmg
ton Stanley s second homer
snapped a 4-4 tie ID the etghth
mnlng to help Joe Coleman beat
hts former teammates m hts
first start agamst them and run
his record to 4-0
~ ~'*

I

Your
lnsur.ance
,t;I.gent ,
le Warner

HOW MANY
POLICIES
does 1t take to msure
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one plan - 1ust one
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Davis-Warner !ns.
114

Phone 992 2966
Court 51
Pomeroy

:.-

~&gt; ;.;,;;"'''''''~::•:•l•:•:•:&gt;.:,:•:•:•::•:•:•:•::&gt;.••:''''"'''"'' :,
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�r

2 -11~ Datly Sentmel Mtddlepo:l't Pomeroy 0 May 17 1971

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

!I Helen Help Us !
fiet Cong's Guerrilla Style o
I
Living Weakened Frightened G·~o up ~
•

EDITORS In three previous
dispatches, Kate Webb UPI
bureau manager In Phnom
Pedb lold of her capture and
her life as a capllve of tbe VIet
Cong In Cambodia In the
following dispatch, the last of
four she tells of ber release
By KATE WEBB
•
United Press International
Copyright 1971
( Uvmg guernlla style was
weakemng us espectally me
datly Our captors seemed
unaffected by the tough regt
rn•n Our release was hinted at
but never promtsed I began to
be racked by fevers Then
suddenly we crossed from one
world to another, a world of
shadow m the mght to the
unaccustomed glare of hght
speed and notse Syrnbohcally
11 was at dawn when we made
' the crossmg to freedom a
lonely hesitant and frightened
group wavmg a whtte flag on
Highway 4 I remembered what
I had written at the time of a
pr1soner of war release mSouth
Vietnam 111 1968 Thetr eyes
look bke those of sleepwalkers
but their feet tell you 11 was
real )
An entry In my scrap paper
JOurnal • Monday April 26
Ache all over cold With fever
Sl!ll no cigarettes Fever cold
as cold Wrapped m mme and
Suz mosquito nets UPI over
funk radio says PP rocketed
Helos over again Spend 30
mins trencher Gap Tooth says
release ID three days but
secret I figure that a
deliberate leak to get some

The other side of the War:
The Release from Capture,
by Kate Webb, Correspondent
thmg out of us Eyes burniDg
wtth fever
That evenmg we sat m a
circle m the dark hstenmg to
Radio HanOI news Several of
the offiCers carne down to ask
how I felt shlnmg the1r
flashlights at me The doctor
had given me a l!ffomycm
tablet after Toshuchi Suzuki
had called him
The IDierpreter I called Mr
liberation squatted beside me
m the dark You must do your
\;lest to keep your health he
said I nodded thmklng of the
malaria case I had seen
passmg on one of the marches
deliriOUS screams commg from
a poncho hiler It was
becommg more difficult to
force my mmd mto reality
Tea Kim Heang the free
lance photographer whom we
called Moonface moved beside
me guessmg my state of
depressiOn Bai tanga1 he
whispered (Cambodian for
three days ) He put h1s
fmger to his hps and jerked his
head at the guard we called
Gap Tooth He fingered a
bracelet 1 had woven out of
vmes and from a peas
ant scarf they had given
me and pulled more vmes from
the trees around us to make me

a necklace
The followmg day April 27
Dad the man ass1gned to
answer mme and Suzuki s
questiOns said we would be
released We had been talking
of Sihanouk all rnormng
hunched over the bamboo table
in our shelter Bunker and
ky two of the camp dogs
dozed under our hammocks My
fever was down But I was still
wrapped m rnosqwto nets and
Suzuki s shirt which he had
diSCarded because of the heat
To Be Released
You will be "':fleased at
Trapeang Kra!lang on Highway
4
Dad told us
The
liberation Front Will assure
your safety You w11l have two
sets of ciothmg and 300 reUs
(between $~ and $6) each for
transport If that Is not enough
you must not be afraid to tep
us Your personal possessiOns
will be returned but according
to the rules your cameras will
be taken
Suzuki and I were stlent Dad
dtd not seem puzzled or
surprtsed Our release had been
hmted at earber but rtot
mentiOned agam
Are you
satisfied' Have you anythiDg to
say' He asked
We simply nodded
Cam

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

Voice along Broadway

I

march?

j
I

BY JACK O'BRIAN

column exposmg that tail wagged RoJan horse
Jolmny Carson s anxiously burned JOke
ROCKPAYSUPSERV.ICE
JOltmg delivery on tile Emmys made tile
TO A MOUSTACHE AND
overlappmg applause and laughter seem canned
~ PRICE ON ART
, " 1 I , , Cii!:IIJ&gt;II s lli!'\'11\Y e(tectlxe_\I!Dln&amp; IJ;!J_Il!l!led
NEW YORK- What do !1Im stars talk about off almost clear througjlthe overlong two hOurs
over dinner' At Mykonos Rock Hudson told he ultimately made certam II'• knew he resented
Vincent Price about moustache care and Price
His material had less sock than buskm more
filled In Rock on fraudulent art
Persuasive abusive content that tile much preferred
pitchman Price has d'one so well as an art Whee I'' of true wit
salesman for Sears he's now addmg mattresses
The Mary Tyler Moore Show won a fiDe four
to his sales JOb
Emmys but deserved to take the 5th for the
Rate Promises Promises star Jerry marvelous clowning of the lady of the title
Orbach either selfless or myopic He snooted the Neat onward-and-upward touch Valerie Harper
co-6tar role In Mortadella oppOSite Sophia accepting her Emmy from Lucille Ball and
Loren ( 1) for the hot spot In The Gang That reffilnding Lucy she was m the chorus &lt;Jf Lucy s
Couldn t Shoot Straight fllck
Robert Alda s Bdwy musical Wildcat
DaVId Burns
beautiful wife s sudden emphysema attack widow accepting the late Davey sEmmywas the
caused Bob unrnediately to put his Bdwy
most graciously ladylike VISitor of the Emmy
H wood careers behind for the clean-811' suburbs cast
of Rome Very healthy Irving Berlin is havmg
The Emmy Show virtually screamed for an
a very happy 73rd b1rlhday
Alexander Cohen (producer of the Tony
The Simone Signore!-Yves Montand till1s on telecasts) to turn Its customary shambles mto a
again
Top newshawks Clayton Knowles and tidier telecast Film clips of nornmees were
Charlie Grutzner are qu1ttmg the Thnes N J conSIStently Ill timed, c&amp;ntused even Irrelevant
Superior Court Judge Robert Macaleavey IS a
Champ Joe Louis alone rated a standing
Dem but be unpressed Repub Gov Csh11l oval!on
Fhp Wilson's packet of Emmys
enough to be reappointed to another full term were popular chotces on both ends of the tube
g1ves Bob life tenure
but Flip's moustache managed to make hun
Wm Brown Meloney who died last week seem older too mature for the youthful mood of
quit his rich llterary.,screen-and.,stage d~rectmg his marvelous TV merrymaking
career several years ago to raiSe Morgan horses
Johnny Carson s script had hun proclaunmg
His will stated no funeral no semce no TV mus1c compares favorably w1th stage and
speeches-Justthalhewishedtobebunedmthe screen composmg, and then the boy and g1rl
littlehorsecemeleryinKent Conn located next s1ngers proceeded to prove hun wrong with a
the log cabin of his lifelong frleods Ed and slew of shallow show themes which were almost
Pegeen Fitzgerald -and that s where Bill now all functionally Irritating with just a few
rests
melodies (from many years ago) that could be
The two-hour long Emmy Awards ran a called attractive
brief film (a couple of minutes) supposedly
Henry Mancini's "Mr Lucky theme, which
covering 23 years of the TV Academy s extstence has outlasted that series by more than a decade
More than that might ve been needed to tell Richard Rodgers Do I Love You' from
how this columniSt got the title The National Rodgers &amp; Hammerstem's Cinderella both
Academy of Television Arts &amp; Sctences a way were splendid but Isola ted and retroactiVe ex
from a brace of promoters who d tried to ceUence among tile ' 77 Sunset Str1p, Mickey
copynght that title as the persuader to sell ad Mouse themes Milton Berle i Texaco jungle
vertismg m a magazme of the same name We the MISS America ' monotony, Dinah Shores
swung It back to the TV Industry with JUSt one old Chevy ex1ttheme complete with MMMMM
wah'
®
DUROCHER Wf&gt;S A NII'TY DRESSER,
BuT' COMR'-R.ED 10 D&gt;.N HE D I..OOK
A Fl".LLBEARER'

on we satd (Vtelnamese for
thank you )
I wondered If the cameras
were bemg giVen to the Khmer
Rouge as a ransom for our
safety I thought 1\ probable
-tiut said nothiDg
Another JOurne) entry Wed
26th Wrapped up wtlh burnmg
head and shivers all day
Camdodians say bath means
release Doctor giVes me four
pills and head rub Scolds me
for taking bath Try to force
food Must eat Gettmg too
weak can t even walk to John
without floating heaq Long
slow day Dad goes thru hst of
possessiOns but says no more
Suzul{lts bettmg on May I We
discuss northerners and south
erners
A day seemed hke weeks
before nQw It seems hke
years 1 Saralh satd He was
nght
Official Date
But although we were to walk
two more days our official
release came the next (Thurs
day) mornmg
The guards woke us before 5
o clock earlier than usual Mr
Lib arnved and said put on
your new clothes The officer of
the high command Is up here
I emerged from the bath
house m a new green uniform
they had g1ven me and Sarath
said pack miss everythmg
Each of us was gtven a small
green cloth bag and I packed
everylhmg -the torn shirt
and Jeans I had been captured
m the necklace Moonface had
made for me my black
pajamas toothbrush and tooth
paste Hammock and rnosqwlo
net too Mr lib ordered
We stared at each other Was
11 release or )Ust another long
At 9 o clock we were
photographed mdlVldually and
m a group by a man Mr lib
confided was a very h1gh
rankiDg off1cer Mr lib was
flustered and nervous although
11 IS not Communist habit to
salute or s\low deference to
officers We discussed the value
of a camera lens with the
officer as he squatted beside
us Mr Lib was mlStranslatmg
m hts nervousness
Taken to Shelter
We then were taken to the
tree hidden sheller where we
had been Interrogated Wooden
benches were arranged m a
semi-circle before a table
covered with the tradiiional
green and whtle checkered
cloth
The squat old mtl!tary man
who had been m the back
ground durmg our mterrogat10n
presided Before hun lay a
sheaf of documents- the Off!
c1al orders from the Southwest
Command for the release of
four JOurnahsts and two driVer
mterpreters accordmg to the
humane prmctples of the
liberatiOn Armed Forces
We felt awkward m our new
clothes The high command
representallve cleared hts
throat put on hts spectacles
and looked up He seemed
weary and read the order
slowly
TranslatiOns were read to us
and when the sechons abouf the
humane policies were read
we were signalled to applaud
We did
More group photographs fol
lowed before we returned for
our personal possessiOns I was

By Helen Bottel

NQT.g().HAPPY ENDING
Dear Helen
ThiS ..s • Joan Remember me' I m Ted s wife who is still m
love with Junmy Seven months ago you prmled my letter and
asked your readers to be the advice columniSts A November
column carried sample replies You reported the vote was I~ to
one AGAINST romance and m favor of reality duty paren
thood mamage vows, security - aU those things we re told
moderns foreswear
1was amazed at how many people responded, but shocked at
how unsympathetic most of them were They assumed Junmy
was the v!llam Ted the hero but ID reality though Jim and I were
crazy 10 love our mutual agreement was to waltfor marriage
It was Ted who (after the stupid ftght I had with Jun) got me
pregnant so that we rushed IDto mamage Of course 11 wasn t
entirely h1s fault - I could have stopped hun the one and only
time 11 happened but Ted unlike Junrny WAS an expen&lt;!llced
romancer And he was so determmed to have me for hiS wife that
1 couldn t run out even though r1ght up to the wedding - af
terwards too- I knew Jun was the one
Your readers seemed to thmk that given a good, true and
Jovmg husband (which Ted IS) I d come to my senses You
don t know how I ve tried Helen' I m completely true I told Jun
my responsibilities are with my husband and baby and he agrees
Ted and I fiDally talked 11 all out We re actually becommg
friends but the romance Is fadmg even on hiS part He knows
were staymg together mostly for our baby Its possible Q()W that
we understand each other we Ureally fall in love but how, when
Jimmy IS always there in my rrund' And I know he d be there m
person If I SOld the word
Helen your advtce, seven months ago, was When In doubt
wrut a while and see
sometimes true love ISO t where one
tlllnksshe hasfowod 11 Well I vewruted and my problem is st11i
the same I m marned to a wonderful man I can I love, and m
love With a wonderful man I can t marry They both want me
I have to add this Ted IS possesstve emotional doesn t want
to let me out of hiS Sight Duty pity, fnendsh1p are the cor
nerslones of my marriage And regret IS the biggest stumbling
block
Under thesecll'CUI1lStances can It last' -JOAN GAIN
Dear Joan
Fr1endsh1p' can scarcely become love when IllS smothered
by duly p1ty and regret Nor IS this kmd of mamage fair to Ted
or to your son He needs parents who love each other as well as
him
And that s where my advice ends for only you can make
the fmal deciSion It might be easter if you d try a temporary
separation - perhaps a vacat1on back home, to gel your thoughts
together - H
Dear Helen
My daughter, ID her mid twenties has been goiDg with a man
for three years He IS now almost 30 He tells her he doesn t
believe In sexual relations before marfl8ge, and that he has never
had even a small affair With a gil'! No engagements no en
counters, nothmg (No mamage talk either )
You d think a normal, healthy male would at least try Do you
think there's a future for her with him' - DOUBTFUL
Dear Doubtful
Afuture With thiS unfiappable fellow might be as unexciting
as the past- with or without marnage She should concede her
romance has come to a dead end and look elsewhere, nght'- H

handed back my purse watch
Weat Barefoot
a Chmese charm I wear around Dad seemed to have diff1cul
my neck my Mg, asp11'111, ty too, walfmg In the shower
wallet and 1d cards Nothing shoes They slither, mud sucks
was m1ssmg I signed for them, them off, and brambles tear
and for the 300 reils they- gave them askew He dec1ded to
each of us for transportation
CBITY them and walked bareSays Thank You"
foot It was past ffi!dnight and
You now have the opportunl we were exhausted when he
ty to say thank you,' Mr handed Suzuki and me lumps of
liberation Informed us produc· fudge-like sugar A thick patch
IDg his tape recorder
of Jungle was our camp The
Suzuki took the rrucrophone Teacher had strung my ham
and thanked them In English mock and l fell mto 11
Moonface followed m Carnbo- It ramed that day and we
dian then me and Charoon We amateurishly strung ponchos
shook hands all around, the over our hammocks Moonface
officers mcluded and plates of caught an mch long thorn In his
bananas and candy and tea heel and 'lfent straight to Dad
were placed on the table We With a confidence that amused
also were given a full package me Dad dug It out for him
of ctgarettes each
We were scared Even the
We asked about other journa guard! seemed nervous There
hsts (there are 17) missing m was fighting about 300 yards
Cambodia The command re away near the end of the
presentallve looked almost em march with flares and the
barrassed I thought
crash of mortars "\'e skirted
The LiberatiOn Forces could villages and the guards held
not be held responstble for long consultations at each stop
JOurnalists who followed the Dad kept droppmg out of line
Lon No! troops, he S81d It He had the stomach upset
sounded hke a warnmg Suzuki known to American Gls m
and I pressed the question He Vltnam as Ho Chi Minh s
repeated that 1t was the policy Revenge
of the liberation Front never to We stopped at a place lit by
kill prtsoners but said that m the moon and flares where
the southwest regiOn he had no straw had been stacked under a
knowledge of other captive spreading tree We were told to
JOurnalists
sleep but I didn t The guards
I' felt a sense of failure
went off ID groups and seemed
It was at 5 40 p.m that to be argwng over their plans
evenmg under a sickle moon Gold Tooth appeared out of
that we moved out on the first nowhere bringing news, and by
leg of the last lap to freedom the light of the flares over the
The entire camp turned out to battle on the road I could see
shake hands and say goodbye him draWing maps In the dust
We were photographed together for the others
w1tp the officers then moved
Off Agala
off IDio the dusk, turmng to
It IS time to move,' Mr Lib
wave From 20 yards away, the said We scrambled up and m
camp looked hke just another mmutes were movmg off agam
clump of trees
I lit my next to last cigarette
No Bonds
It was sometime after 3 a.m
We were not tied The men We did not use flashlights
carried rice m scarves slung We stopped suddenly on what
around their necks and also I thought was a new trail The
their release bags There Teacher was whispering in
were as usual stx guards- Cambodian, we were shaking
Dad Dave Gold Tooth, Mr bands, wishing good luck to
Lib. The Teacher and OPe of M~~ Otl!~
1 t. J
the members of the ne'!jl' party ;J'!1en,lll~ SIX Ji IIi. were alone WIN AT BRIDGE
that had arrtVed m camp The In the dai'k
lr7
Cambodians were told that if
'Where are we' I asked
we walked fast 1\ would take Sarath
one mght mstead of two to "Highway 4, but not at
reach Highway 4
Trapeang Krallang Quick, we By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
I was told I was walking ll}ust move from this place
0 s w a I d The Chmese
very well and that I must 'n1e soldiers say we must
keep doiDg my best My head move
littered with spent shell cas
was sWirnrnmg my ha1r and Still we stood The Teacher mgs
I
new smt drenched With sweat appeared from somewhere be· Shaltily I picked up my little
At the next rest stop we sunply hind us 'Move, ' he whispered bag Moonface, clad only In his
leaned agamst one anothers then disappeared
torn trousers-now too large for
backs too tired to Sit
We moved about 500 yards him--raised the white para
We saw what looked like a our shower shoes making aloud chute silk flag The two of us
town wtth scores of bright fiappmg sound on the road I stepped out onto the h1ghway
hghts but 1t was villagers walked In front because you the others shuffling behmd
fishmg for crabs and frogs 1n have a white face, • as agreed There was the familiar flap of
the flooded but shallow paddy beforehand
shower shoes m the unfamiliar
fields by the hght of 011 flares
We argued about moving to a naked light of day
Gold Tooth and Dad joked With nearby abandoned house with
Troops appeared on the crest
them and bought four Uve old foxholes around lt The of a hill shead of us We
frogs which croaked behind me guards had said to wait until stopped and Moonface s face
the rest of the march (They after the government annored feU, as did the flag he was
ate them for breakfast the next road-clearingpatrolhadpassed carrymg We qmckly shoved It
mormng roasted over a fire on We had said we would take up agam snapping at hun
a bamboo skewer\
clvllian transportation back nervously
I feU at least three times to Phnom Penh But we knew Government or Khmer
despite Dad s flashligHt Final- we were not In a town, but Rouge' The drag column
ly he stopped and gave me his territory controlled by the moved slowly down the hill
Ho Chi Minh sandals put them Khmer Rouge
toward us 'Lon No! Sarath
on my feet and took my
Tied Up Flag
and Moonface sa1d slmul
shower shoes The Ho sandals Moonface won out He took a taneously The approachmg
had curved rubber sticking out piece of white parachute silk I troops stopped, starmg We
m front to protect the toes and 1had and tied it to a stick We continued walking, alowly
were much more comfortable, stripped off our gift clothing
I could see the1r uniforms
aSide from protecting one from and drewd in the dai'k In what now and for the first tune m 24
thorns scorptons and bamboo we had left of our clvllian days my nerves relaxed I had
spikes Greater love hath no clothes The ~Ink grey dawn to blink to hold back the tears
man I thought
came slowly, Illuminating an A first lieutenant was standing
empty stretch of highway m the middle of the road
Journalists we said lame
iy, still waviDg our flag high
The offtcer pomted at me
Miss Webb, ' he said
You re supposed to be dead

•
Spasms Can Cause Nec k PaIn

Bv Lawrence Lamb M D

•

Rrecision Club Confuses All

DR. LAWRENCE f.1AM8
Tension May 8$ A factor

Dear Dr Lamb-What
causes me to have lightness
arld soreness m the back of
my neck at the base of my
head At limes I give a
qmck ]erk with my head anu
11 makes a poppmg notse
and It relieves the pressure
a short while I am ID
l,clined to be very nervous It
comes on me more If I am
upset over anythmg When I
was 20 I recetved a hard
blow on my chm and the
trouble came on shortly aft
erwa1 ds I am 48 now and
wonder If that could have
been the start Could' you
~tell me what I should do to
-".'f C ~\&lt;.
1 e II e v e the condition and
1&gt;- tri'P;,p;l-~
what doctor I should see fm
....~~..p&gt;~ fP'
some help• At my age 11 wtll
g~·'"'~ll:
,~o
be bothermg me more
\)Y'
••0'(\
ifY
~ v-~"'
llear lt~ader-t-~ you de
f t-&gt;'':..1 ..,p'lscnbe your pam 11 IS prob
&lt;(ltll,~~.cJII,~
ably due to muscle spasm
~ ~...::;--...J The muscles In the neck con

L.

1

tract and cause hmitahon of
motion and giVe riSe to pam
When you move your head
and stretch the muscle suffl
ciently the spasm or cramp
IS relieved and the pain may
disappear ThiS Is similar to
stretchmg the calf muscle If
) ou have a cramp in the leg
It Is true that Individuals
with repeated eptsodes of
muscle spasms are more apt
to have them when they are
expenencmg tension There
are a lot of thmgs however
which can contribute to the
problem and apparently you
have been having difficulties
for almost 28 years
Posture can be a contnbutiDg factor 1f you have one
leg w h 1c h Is considerably
shorter than the other the
entire skeleton w11l be out of
!me and will chapge the pull
on the vartous muscles along
the spme all the way up to
!he neck

Such an underlymg pos
!ural defect can constantly
Irritate the m u s c I e s and
make them more susceptible
tospasms or cramping Dis
orders of this sort can be
corrected, or helped with a
heel lift 1a pad under the
heel or lncreasillg-the thick
ness of the heel of the shoe)
m many cases
Ydu shoqld see a spectahst
In physical medlcme Your
famUy doctor county or
state medical society can
give you tl)e name of a
reputable specialist in phys
leal medicine nea~ your
home Underlying disorders
like postural defects usually
can be correcte!l
In the meantime fot re
current episodes you may
soak tbe neck muscles with
a hot towel until the mu~~;le~
are warmed and then try to
move and rotate the head as
much as pc~Jsible the Ieby

In DebUt

~ I

f

1

3- The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy 0 May 17,I971

relieving muscle s p a s m s
That IS about as far as you
should go Without haviDg an
exammation
Asplrm which is remark
ably good at relieving pam
is sometimes helpful ID mak
mg &gt;these conditions toler
able
Avoid anyone who Wishes
to marllpuiate your head
Sudden sharp twists and
turns of the head have been
known to cause dtslocation of
the cerv1cal (neck) spme
causing severe IDJUnes and
even death Be certam that
you see a reputable phys 1
clan for this type or pt ~b
Iem
(NEWSPAPER r'HTERPRISE ASSN )

team had flmshed second to
Italy m 1969 and we were
not surpnsed to fmd them
opposmg us m the 1970 fmals
They play a systetn called
The Prectsion Club It IS a
good system )Jut enormous
ly comphcated
Jim It IS far too comph
cated for ordmary players
and may be too complicated
even for the Chmese Bobby
Wolff and I reached SIX clubs
on today s hand The b1ddmg
m the box shows how the
Chmese got to seven
Oswald The f 1 r s t two
bids look normal but the
opemng b1d was arhficial
and merely showed at least
16 high card pomts The one

r - - - - - - - - - - - ,.("'
NORTH
48
'1'9764
t AKJB
"'AQ52
WEST

4K76432
"1052
• Q7
""7 6

EAST
• QJ 109
"Q 3

tl096532
"" 10

SOUTH (D)
4A5
'I'AKJB

••

"'KJ9843
None vulnerable
\1 est
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

North

East South
Pass
Pass

Pass

1"'

2"'

~·
Pass

Opentng lead- (1 4

d1amond response was also
artlfictal and was suppose to
. show ~ poiDts or less Two
clubs showed the suit and
four spades was the 1mpos
Sible negative that said he
really had a very good hand
With a smgleton s p a d e
South s five spade call was
due to his havmg m1scon
strued their conventiOn He
thought that North had a
good hand With a very long
spade suit North jumped to
seven clubs to make sure his
partner wouldn t try any
thing hke seven spades
Jtm Seven clubs was a
laydown smce there were 12
top t r 1c k s an4 both red
queens are doubleton m front
ol the ace kmg Jack Ta1 of
Chma drew trumps and
c a s h e d hts ace kmg of
hearts to see tf the queen
wou d dtop It dtd and he
datrned

Forty Da~s o! I..eJt
Lent really lasts o er Six
weeks The 40 day• ref~rs
to the faot days SUIIdays are
The front leg• of a gira!fe fast dav• •rakm~ out the six
ate powerful enough to kick Sundays ln IA)n\ there 81 e
the he~d off a lion
40 days of l.rntt n observ
nnl"
.-.

By United Prns 1nternationa I
Nal!onol League
Eost
W L Pet GB
New York
21 11 656
Pittsburgh
20 14 588 2
St Louis
20 15 571 2'12
Chicago
18 17 514 4'12
Montreal
13 13 500 5
Philadelphia 10 22 313 11
West
W L Pet GB

American League
By Un ted Press lnternal!onal
East
W L Pet GB
20 11 645
Boston
19 13 594 1'12
Baltimore
16 17 485 5
Detro1t
New York
15 16 484 5
Washington 15 19 441 6
12 20 375 8112
Cleveland
West
W L Pet GB
San Franc1sco
Oakland
25 14 649
27 10 730
Minnesota
18 17 514 5
Allanta
17 18 486 9 tjlltfQrn a
18 19 486 6
Los Angeles 18 19 486 9 Kansas C1ty 18 19 486 6
Houslon
16 19 457 10 Milwaukee 14 18 4JS 7112
Clnc1nnat
13 21 382 12'12 Ch cago
13 20 394 9
San D1ego
10 24 294 15 1&gt;
Sunday s Results
Sunday s Results
Miwaukee 6 California 2
Pittsburgh 4 New York 2
Oakland 4 Kansas C1ty 2 (1sf)
Chicago 9 Sn Dgo 8 1fst 10 ms) Kansas City 10 Oaklnd 4 l2nd)
x Ch1cago 6 San Dego 3
Minnesota 6 Chicago 2
Philadelphia 4 Atianla 3
Delro•f 5 Washmgton 4
Montreal 9 C n&lt;1nnat1 3
Cievl at N Y 12) ppd rain
Houston 12 Sf Lou s 4
Ball1more at Boston ppd rain
Los Angeles 9 San Fran 6
x 2nd game suspended alter 6
Todav s Probabk! Potchers
Innings darkne.,)
Minnesota (Bivleven 3 4) at
Callforn•a (Wright 3 3) night
Today s Probable Pitchers
Cleveland IDunning 12 2) at
Montreal !Morton 3 4) Pitts Washington (Bosman 2 4)
burqh !Walker 1 4) nlQbt
mghl
New York (Seaver 52) at Balt1more (Dobson 2 2) at
Atlanta (Nash 2 3) night
New York lStottlemyre 3 2)
Ph1ladelph a I Bunning 1 6) at n1ghl
Cine nnatl IMemtt 0 41. mght
Detro1t (Chance 0 5) al
San Diego (Roberts 3 2) at Boston 1Peters 4 2) night
Houslon (Wilson 3 2) n ght
(Only games scheduled
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday s Games
Tuesday s Games
MllwaukeeatOakland nlght
Montreal at P1ttsburgh n ght
Minnesota at California n1ght
New York al Atlanta mght
Ch cago al Kansas C1ty night
Philadelphia at Clncl night
Cleveland al Washtn night
San Diego at Houston night
Baltimore al New York mghl
San Francisco at Ch cago
Detroit at Boston n ght
Los Angeles at St Louis mght
Saturday s Results
Chicago 6 San D1ego 4
San FranCISco 1 Los Ang 0
New York 9 Plttsbur9h 5
Atlanta 6 Ph1ladelph1a 2
Cincinnati 6 Montreal 1
SI Louis 6 Houston 5

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ross
Grunsley sa1d he did everything
r1ght
Everythmg, that IS, until I
got to the mound ' added the
Cincmnat1 Reds rookie left
bander
Grunsley was recalled last
Thursday from Indianapolis aft
er compiling a ~ record for
the Reds Arnencan Assoctabon
farm club
The 21 year old lefthander,
making hts major league debut
Sunday failed to survive the
second mmng as the Montreal
Expos salvaged the fmale of a
three-game series by grab~ing a
9-3 VICtory

Liquori
Outduels
fun Ryun
PffiLADELPHIA (UP!) Marty Iiquori kept waiting for
the famous Jun Ryun kick, but
he s just as glad It d1dn t
materialize
I expected him to come at
me on the last turn Iiquori
sa1d after outduellng Ryun In
the showdown of super milers
m the Martm Luther King
International Freedom Games
Sunday at Franklm Fteld
Liquori who took the lead
from Ryun just before the
three quarter mark and
matched the world record
holder s kick down the stretch
posted a tune of 3 54 6-the
fastest ever on the Eastern
Seaboard
I was waiting for him on the
fiDal stretch ' Uquon said
But I was glad to be ahead
just wattmg for his move '
As the two approached the
fmal 440 yards Iiquori frequently would glance over his
shoulder at Ryun who was right
at his heels
I wanted him on my
shoulder Iiquori satd I had
to run the race that waydiscouragmg him every time he
trted to go by me
It was at first thought that
the weather mtght throw a
damper on the super mile as a
steady mornmg rain and a
chilly temperature left the aU
weather track with mterffilttent
puddles
The time was the fastest ever
for Iiquori who previously had
never come w1thm five seconds
of Ryun s world mark of 3 511

NEW

FURNRURE
'349.95
$35 oo DownBalance On

Conve11tent
Terms

MASON
FURNITUR(

for ftve hits and four runs be
fore he gave way to Tony
Clomnger with two out m the
second 1nnmg
The Expos added two more
runs off Clonmger m the third
and wound up their scoriDg
when John Bateman htt a
th1 ee-run homer ID the eighth
mmng off Wayne Granger
Steve Renko a &amp;-foot~ 225pound righthander notched his
fourth vtctory m stx declSlons
this season and hiS fourth
stratght over a three year span
agamst the Reds Sunday
But the former Umvers1ty of
Kansas quarterback needed a
helpmg hand from relief pitcher

Mtke Marshall m the etghth
mmng when Tony Perez horn
ered and Lee May siDgied with
one out
The homer was the fifth of
the season and one of three
htts durmg the afternoon for
Perez who went IDto the
game with a 221 batiiDg mark
Everyone knows Perez IS
gomg to h1t said Anderson
Wtth hun 11 s JUSt a matter of
time
Phils In Tomght
The Reds open a two-game
senes with the Phtladelphta
Ph1ls tomght and will send
Jun Merntt to the mound Don
Gullett the 20-year-&lt;ild lefty

wtll pttch the Tuesday game
agamst the Phtlhes
The Pittsburgh Pirates wtll
follow the Ph!lhe• mto town
for a two game sertes whtch
concludes the Reds current
homestand
Anderson did get some good
news Sunday when he learned
that outfielder Hal McRae may
be stdelmed for only a week
McRae was earned from the
field Saturday mght when he
pulled a muscle 1r • os n ght
thigh whtle attemptmg to hold
up after roundmg third base
It was believed at first he
would be out a mmunum of
two weeks

Sunday the Expos Ron Fair
ly was earned from the field
on a stretcher when struck on
the nght cheek by a pitch
thrown by Tony Clomnger m
the third mnmg
Fortunately Fairly suffered
no fracture But the swellmg m
the nghl cheek of the f1rst
baseman made 11 look as If he
had swallowed a baseball
GOSLIN FUNERAL RITES
SALEM N J ( UPI )- Funeral
servtces for baseball Hall.{)f
Famer Goose Goshn wtll be
held here 1 uefday at 2 p rn
Goslin d1ed Saturday

Giusti Gets 8th Save For Pirates

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates gave
the New York Mets a first-hand
demonstration Sunday that they
could have the Case Ace m
the National League East
Division race agam this year
He s rehever Dave G1usti and
he proved to be the deciSIVe
factor last year m the Pirates
Saturday's Results
victory over the Mets and
Chicago 8 Minnesola 2
Chicago Cubs ID the NL's East
Cleveland 4 New York 2
race A journeyman With a subKansas City 5 Oakland 4
Baltimore 7 Boston 4
500-record until last season
Washtn 4 Detroit 3 li5 Inns)
when he had a 9-3 record and
Cal lorn a 4 Milwaukee 1
26 saves Glusl! started the 1971
season With nvals demanding
to know Can he do It agam or
was he a one-year wonder''
The answer seems to be that
G1usl! can do 11 agam because
he came out of the bullpen
Sunday to cut off the Mets
nmth mnln$ rally and complete
a 4-2 victory for Dock Ellis and
Richard was asked If he the Pirates The save was his
thought hiS remarks calling e1ghth of the season and at
MacNeil mcompetent and the
worst coach he ever played
under helped Montreal Win
Sunday s game
I don t want to make any
more statements I just hope
the whole thiDg will die down
But I know we ll wm the
Stanley Cup
Richard an
swered
]\lacNml plaY-ed a maJOr part BA!,.p~Qj:l.F,;, r.id Un'l)m a noiher drama connected Canonero 11 sold for $1,200 as a
With the game Sunday after his crooked legged yearliDg and
life was threatened by anony shipped off to Venezuela to
mous callers and he was apparent obscurity cannot be
assigned pollee protection Mac purchased for any pr1ce today
Net! said however he wasn t folloWing the colt's record
breaking victory Saturday In
womed about the threats
As far as I was concerned, the Preakness Stakes that gave
my only thoughts were wlnnmg hun two thtrds of the Triple
that game And I knew that the Crown
We already have had an
situation was lD good bands
when the team provided me offer of $4 million for him,
wtth protectiOn MacNeil said sa1d Victory Sclalom a spokes
Six , plamclothes detectives man for owner Edgar Ca1bett
surrounded MacNeil as he stood and his wife who received the
behmd the Montreal bench and colt as a wedding present from
coached his team to victory m Pedro Baptista hiS father-mthe SIXth game Now 1t s back law
We turned the offer down
to Chicago, said MacNeil
After 78 regular games and 19 All the money ID the world
playoff games It s all down to couldn t buy thiS horse No I
one smgle contest But I know am not at liberty to reveal the
that even though we haven t person who made 11, he added
won yet m Chicago ID this Canonero s victory In the
sertes we have the talent to do
the JOb
The Mahovllch brothers
Frank and Pete, led Montreal
to their comeback win Frank
scored one goal to set an all
time National Hockey League
playoff record of 14 goals and 1 l ~
added two assiSts to equal the
playoff total pomts record of 27
Both records were held by Phil INDIANAPOUS Ind (UPI)
Esposito who set them With the - It took hun two years but
Boston BruiDs m the 1969-70 handsome Pete Revson New
Yorks gift to auto racing,
playoffs
gamed a big measure of
revenge today over fellow Ivy
NHL Playoff Standings
By Un1ted Press lnlernal!onal Leaguer Mark Donohue as the
I Fmals- Best of Seven)
fastest pole-sitter m Ind1anapo
W L GF GA
Chicago
3 3 16 17 lis 500 history
In 1969, when both were
Montreal
3 3 17 16
Sunday s Result
newcomers to the famed
Montreal 4 Chicago 3
Memorial Day race Revson
Tu&amp;sday s Game
placed fifth and Donohue
Montreal al Ch1cago
seventh but the coveted
Rookie of the Year honor
went to Donohue
DRAGO INJURED
Saturday 11 was Revson, 32,
KANSAS GITY Mo ( UPI)Dick Drago, leadmg the Kansas the former Cornell collegtan
City Royals p!tchmg staff with who turned the tables, upsetting
a 4-1 record, suffered a pulled
hamstring muscle Sunday In
The Daily Sentinel
the fiTs! game of a doublehead·
DEVOTED TO THE
er w1th the oakland Athletics
INTERE5T OF
ME lOS MASON AREA
Drago wtll be s1delmed fo~ an
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Euc Ed
mdefmite peri&lt;&gt;&lt;!.
ROIIERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Published datly except
5a!urday by The Oh1o Valley
PubliShing Company 111

Canadiens Force
Playoffs To Limit
MONTREAL (UP!)- Cons
diens center Henri Richard
admtts he talked out of turn
when he blasted Montreal
Coach AI MacNeil after Thurs
day night s loss to the Chicago
Black Hawks m the Stanley Cup
Finals
But maybe Its all the
canadlens needed to spur them
on as they fought off a one-goal
def1c1t Sunday afternoon to Win
&lt;1-3 and force a seventh and
deciding game m Chicago
Tuesday mght

Maybe I was a httle nerv
ous,' sa1d Ross
If he wasn t offered Reds
Manager Sparky AnderSjlll he
would be the first rookie
I didn t have any trouble at
aU sleepmg last night sa1d
Grunsley 'I ate a good break
fast
like I said he repeated
I did everythmg aU rtghl unbl
I got to the mound
Raps Five Hits
I wasn t disappomted m the
way Ross threw said Ander
son He got behiDd the hitters
too much and when he got his
pitches up he got h1t
The Expos rapped Grunsley

that rate he might set a maJOr
league mark by the end of the
season
The vtctory enabled the
Pirates to salvage the last
game of the three-game series
and cut the Mets f~rsti&gt;lace
lead to two games Gmsb s
closeout performance was espe
c1ally significant because Met
rehever Tug McGraw was
touched for two runs m th•
bottom of the eighth enabiiDg
the Pirates to take a 4 I lead
mto the nmth
The Pirates chnched the
vtctory when smgies by Rtchte
Hebner and AI Ohver, Bob
Robertson s double and a wtld
pitch produced the two eighth
mnlng runs off McGraw Nolan
Ryan suffered his first loss
agamst f1ve VICtofles while
Ellis won his fifth game agamst
three defeats
The Philadelphia Phil11es beat
the Atlanta Braves 4-3 the
Montreal Expos downed the

Cmcmnat1 Reds 9-3 the Los has happened to Phtladelph!a
Angeles Dodgers topped the San SIDCe the mckle beer
Francisco Giants 9-6 the
Ron Hunt had three hils and
Houston Astros walloped the St John Bateman htt a three run
Lows Cardmals 12-4 and the homer for the Expos who
Chicago Cubs beat the San routed Red rookte Ross Gnm
Diego Padres 9-8 m 10 mmngs sley m I 2-3 mnings Clyde
and led 6-3 when their second Mashore and Coco Laboy had
game was suspended after stx two hits each lor the Expos
mmngs because of darkness m • while Tony Perez homered for
other NL ~ames
the Reds Steve Renko went 7 I
In the Amencn League 1t 3 mmngs to I RISe hiS Iecofd to
was Detroit ~ WashiDgton 4 4 2
Mmnesota 6 Chtcago 2 Kansas
Wes Parker s two run homer
Ctty over Oakland 10-4 after a ID the eighth lied the soore and
4-2 loss and Milwaukee 6 Tom Haller s th1rd hit of the
Cahforma 2 Cleveland at New game drove ID the wiDnmg run
York and Baltunore at Boston
were ramed out
Rookie W1lhe Montanez ac
counted for all the Phtlhes
runs with two homers and a
double as Rtck Wtse won hts
second game and Pat Jarvis
lost his 5th straight Montanez
now h1ttmg 324 was described
by Phtls Manager Frank
Lucchesi as the !Jest thmg that
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Alex Johnson s lone wolf
an lies may have been !me when
he won the Arnencan League
battmg title last season but
they don t seem to carry too
much water thiS year
Johnson a loner and a man
of
few words established a self
Fann s Eastern Fleet for the unposed
barrier of silence
lead He caught his rival on the
first turn and the two colts around hunself last year and 11
was tolerated as he h1t 329 and
raced stride for strtde nose
and nose mto the homestretch won AL battmg honors But
Johnson s average plungerl to
Then with only an eighth of a
mile to go ID the 1 3-16 mile 239 Sunday as he fatled ID a
pmch-luttmg role m a 6-lloss to
race Canonero mched ahead to
WID by a length and one-hall the Milwaukee Brewers and
Cabforma Manager Lefty Phll·
and smash the track record of hps apparently has had II With
I 54 3-5 set by Nashua m 1955
the controversial outfteider
w1th a I 54 flat clockmg
Tommy Harper who entered
The complete change ID
tactics amazed everyone and the game with a 162 battiDg
horsemen wondered what to average collected four hits and
expect on June 5 when Ellie Rodriguez and Ted Kubiak
h1t their first homers of the
Canonero will try to complete
h1s sweep of the Triple Crown season as the Brewers beat the
Angeles for the fourth time ID
m the Belmont Stakes Only
five
games this season
eight horses have done so but
Elsewhere ID the AL Kansas
none in almost a quarter of a
century Ctta!Ion last pulled off City beat Oakland 10-4 after
losmg the first game of a
the Trtple m 1946
Only four no more than doubleheader 4-2 Mmnesota
downed Chicago 6-2 and Detrmt
four w1U run agamst hun
edged
Washmgton 5-4 A
predtcted Sctalom while Jose V
Cleveland New York double
Almenar another member of
the Venezuelan contingent who header and the Baltimore
Boston game were ramed out
acted as an mterpreter s1ghed
In the Natwnal League,
Mementos mementos that
Pittsburgh beat New York 4 2
IS ali wmnmg ttckets will be
worth he wtll pay so httle ID Philadelphia edged Atlanta 4-3,
Montreal npped CIDcmnatl 9-3
the Belmont Stakes
canonero paid $19 40 m Los Angeles stopped San
Franctsco 9-ll Houston clubbed
wmnmg tile Kentucky Derby
St
Lou1s 12-4 and Chicago
and $8 80 m wmnmg the
mpped San Otego 9-8 ID the first
Preakness He was co-favonte
With Jun French who had game of a scheduled double
header The second game was
f1mshed second m the Kentucky
Derby and lh1rd m the suspended after SIX IDmngs with
the Cubs leading 6-3
Preakness behmd Canonero and
Pmch hitter Bobby Knoop s
Eastern Fleet
two run siDgle and a run
producmg double by Fred
SENATORS RELEASE%
WASHINGTON(UPI)- Wash Patek highlighted a four-run
mgton Sjlnators Manager Ted seventh mmng that led Kansas
City past Oakland m the second
game Run-scoriDg smgles by
outfielder Rich Schemblum had Bert Campaner1s and Reggie
been giVen their outnght
releases Brought up from
TOKYO (UP!) - Australia s
Denver to replace them were David Graham sank a two foot
Larry Bittner a 24-year-&lt;ild btrdte putt on the thtrd sudden
outfielder hitting 356 an death playoff hole Sunday to
nghthander Mike Thompson a wm the first Japan Airlm~•
21 year-&lt;ild with a 4 I record InternatiOnal Golf Tour
and a 3 29 ERA
namenl

was as startling as
hts Kentucky Derby VIctory two
weeks a~o was surpnsmg
There have been Count Fleets
who have burled rivals m their
dust wtth speed There have
been Wh1rlaways who crushed
opposii!on wtth devastatmg
stretch runs To everyone s
amazement, Canonero proved
he can do either 10 wmmng the
second jewel m the Trtple
Crown
The South Amencan mvader
came from 20 lengths back to
wm the Kentucky Derby He
was expected to try the same
tliiDg m the Preakness
Instead jockey Gustavo Avila
sent Canonero to the front at
the start and the crowd of
47 211 the biggest ID Maryland
racing history roared m
disbelief
canonero challenged Calumet

Pete Revson Sets
1\TeW
Mark At Indy

Court St
Pomeroy Ohio
45769 Bu' ness Off tee Phone

992 2156 Ed tori aI Phone 992
2157
Second class pos!age paid a!
Pomeroy Ohio

National advertising
representattve
Botflnellt

Gallagher Inc 12 East ~2nd
SI New York City New York

Subscrtptlon rates
De
livered by cerrltT where
avellable 50 cents per week
By Motor Route where carrter

service not ava lablt

One

monlh $1 75 By mall In Ohio
and W Va One year $14 00
Six months $7 2S Throe

months s• SO Subscrlptton
pnce Includes Sundey Ttmes
SenJmel

the highly favored Donohue for
the pole spot that went to the
fastest f1rst-day qualifier for
the $1 mtlhon holiday chase
May 29
W1th a record shattermg
burst of speed from an engme
he wasn t sure would produce
Revson blazed around the
ancient 2~-mile oval at an
average speed of 178 696 miles
per hour and with a best lap of
179 354---aiso the fastest ever at
the Speedway
Donohue Media Pa who
experienced some handbng
difficulty with his machine had
to settle for runnerup honors at
177 087 m a bascially Identical
Bnllsh built McLaren machme
Twenty three cars made sue
cessful !O-m1le trial runs
Saturday before a huge throng
estimated at 250 000 Three
more qualified Sunday leaving
only seven spots to be filled
next weekend for the 33-car
field
The three year-old one and
four lap records by Joe Leonard
m a turbme-powered car took a
pastmg His one lap mark of
171 953 was shattered 37 tunes
by II drivers and the same 11
smashed his four-lap standard
of 171 M9 all Saturday But
nobody came close to Leonard's
1968 records Sunday
The field now averages
171 4~8 mph and the fmal
lineup IS sure to beat last
year s 167 139 by about two
mlieB'-perhaps more

the WIDner and Don McMahon
the loser m a game marked by
mght errors four by each stde
and six stolen bases Bobby
Bonds homered for the Gtants
Doug Rader who started the
game htttmg 164 htt a grand
slam homer m the first mnmg
and a two run double m the
thtrd to lead a 17 htt Houston
attack that brought Larry
Dterker his sixth WID against
one loss Roger Metzger and

111

A ngels lr.lanager,

Hague homered and Juhan
Javter had three hits for the
Cardmals
Jim Htckman htt a two run
homer w1th none out m the lOth
to g1ve the Cubs the victory
after they tratled 7.1 Hick
man s blow carne off Al
Santonn1 after Billy W1ll!ams
walked to lead off the mmng
and went to second on a passed
ball Ron Santo also homered
for the Cubs while Larry Stahl
connected for the Padres It
was the stxth vtctory m a row
for the Cubs The second game
WllibecompietedonAug 4

Johnson At

$4 Million Offer For
Canonero Is Rejected
Preaknes~

m the mnth as the Dodgers Jack Htatt had three hits each
braked the runa"ay Gtants m for the Astros who dealt Jerry
the NL West Jim Brewer was Reuss his fourth loss Joe

Jack, on ID the seventh IDntng of
the first game helped the
Athlel!cs beat the Royals
Cesar Tovar scored the tie
breaking run m a three run
sixth mmng on a balk by
reliever VIcente Romo as the
Twms beat Chtcago George
Mttlerwald and Chuck Manuel
doubled for one run and Tover '
rea~h~ safely wnen his sacrl
flee was bobbled by pitcher
Tom Bradley Rich Reese
Singled m Manuel with Tovar
taking thtrd and Tovar scored
when Romo s spikes caught
durmg hts ptlchmg motiOn
Leo Cardenas added a homer
m the seventh for the Twms
Mickey Stanley hit two
homers and Norm Cash belted
h1s 300th m a Detroit uniform
as the Tigers edged Washmg
ton Stanley s second homer
snapped a 4-4 tie ID the etghth
mnlng to help Joe Coleman beat
hts former teammates m hts
first start agamst them and run
his record to 4-0
~ ~'*

I

Your
lnsur.ance
,t;I.gent ,
le Warner

HOW MANY
POLICIES
does 1t take to msure
your farm? Under
one plan - 1ust one
poltcy
one
low
premtum paym ~ nt
one place to pay

Davis-Warner !ns.
114

Phone 992 2966
Court 51
Pomeroy

:.-

~&gt; ;.;,;;"'''''''~::•:•l•:•:•:&gt;.:,:•:•:•::•:•:•:•::&gt;.••:''''"'''"'' :,
,,,$•:··~-~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,:::m
-,

H's more than atree.
H's anti-pollution.
A tree absorbs sound

Its leaves trap particles
m the a1r V1sot a
tree 1t s cleaner
and QUieter
Only you can
prevent forest
fires

ei!

~~~::ch::"J'c~en~:~~~

Convenient

NOfE LOANS
on just your

Pubhshed as a pllDI c serv ce m cooperahon wllh The

125 E MAIN

992 2171

POMEROY 0

Advert ~

nR Counc I lbt Stat•

and U S forest Services and lhe lntetnal onal New$paper Advert s n~ (J.ecuuws

�'

·'

/

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 17,

I

197l

••

• - Ttv.IJailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., May 17, 1971

Green Thumb
Notes.

•••

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

Interesting Facts about Trees

The Philathea Society
meeting Thursday night at the
Middleport Church of Christ
voted to pay $300 on th~ building
debt, and continue monthly gifts
to the Meigs Coilnty Community
Class for Re\arded · Childr~n.
and Wayne Clark, a missionary
in Hawaii.
It was reported that $114 was

cleared on the Eight and Forty
dinner servft\ 'by the society,
and $180 on th~ rummage sale.
Enough was added .from the
treasury to make up the $300
given-on the church debt.

e uce

e

Bui tng

r

Society, contributions to fund
drives which are .contributed to
by the individuals making up
the group.

New program books were
distributed by Mrs. Norman
During the meeting con- Yeauger. Making up the
ducted by Mrs. Grace Pratt, it program committee were Mrs.
was decided to discontinue Don Erwin, Miss Frances

Roush, Mrs." Reva Beach, Mrs.
Pratt, Mrs. Denver Rice. Mrs.
Pratt thanked Mrs. Rice for her
work on the flower committee
during the past year and appointed Mrs. Erwin and Mrs.
Oscar Roush as new chairmen .
Reported ill were Homer
Rice, Mrs. Beach, Mrs. Clara
Murray, now in a nursing home

Garden Club Elects New Officers

MISS GLENNA SPRAGUE, long-time plano student of Mrs. Patrick Lochary,
played the selections which gained her acceptance at Capital University, Colwnbus, at
the SUnday recital. She displayed good technique, precision, and musical feeling to the
receptive audience.
,

Mrs. Patrick Lochary
presented her 17 piano pupils in
a recital Sunday afternoon in
the Bethany Chapel of tbe
Trinity Church.
Preceding the recital, a
rosebud corsage and a gift of
jewelry were presented to Mrs.
Lochary by her students.
Boys and girls taking part •nd
the selections they played were
Deanna Blackwood, The
Crusader's Hymn, a Silesian
melody and Chaminade's &amp;arf
Dance; Mary Helen Blaettnar,
A Sonatina by Llchner ; Jayne
Hoeflich , Sunshine and

Unescores
By United Press International
National League
(1st, 10 Innings)
Sn ~o 104 IQO 000 ,1-:- 8 15 1
Chi 11, 010 ·t03··101 "l- 9 14 4
C@nbs, Sevennseii ~6l. Mil ·
ler (6). La xton ( 10), Sanforini
I101 , and Cannizzaro, Barton
(81 ; Hands, Colborn (4).
Newman (5). Tompkins (7),
Regan (8). Stephenson (10 and
D. Breeden, Martin (8) . WPStephenson (1 -0). LP-Sanforini
I0-1). HRs-Santo (8lhl. Stahl
(3rdl , Hickman 14th).
12nd game)
(Game called after 6 innings)
San Dleg o
000 03Q-- 3 5 3
Chicago
210 03Q-- 6 6 1
Kirby, Severlnsen (S) and
Barton; Holtzman and Martin.
-

!

Shadows, The Spinning Song,
and Raindrops by Thompson;
Cathy Blaettnar, On Yonder
Rock Reclining by Auber and a
minuet by Bach.
Marcia Marie Dillard,
Eckstein's At the Junior Prom,
and Beethoven's Contra-Dance ;
Nancy Stanley, Moths by
Thompson ; Charles Follrod,
Minuet in G by Mozart ; Kim
Jones, Jodard's Berceuse from
Jocelyn; Peggy Glrolami,
Theme from Llebestraum 3 by
Lietz; Betsy Arnsbary, The Bee
and the Clover by Adam Geibel.
Jenny Chapman, Theme from
Concerto No. I by Tschaikowsky , and Massenet 's
Theme from Aragonaise ;
Cheryl Huber Barcarollo from
Tales of Hoffman; Melinda

Amsbary,
Sonatina
by
Clementi; Stephen Stanley,
&amp;herzo in B Flat by Schubert:
Hey Jude by The Beatles, Proud
Mary, Credence Clearwater
Revival.
Jo Ellen Diehl played May
Night by Palmgren; Elizabeth
Blaettnar presented Rhondo
from Sonata in E Major, Opus
14 No. I, with her own Improvisation on theme from Love
Story; and the concluding
numbers of the recital were by
Glenna Sprague whq presented
Bach's Two-Part Invention No.
8, Sonata by Haydn, and
Arabesque No. 2 by Debussy.

John Hoffman

Dies Sunday

.6. ""'
d John Wesley , tjoffman,
TT,~ Chester ;died Sunday·evening at
Band''· -~
·
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
93,

(Contin~ed from page:! )

Guests joined the bandsmen for
the dance.
Receiving awards were :
Basketball band: Beth Fultz,
Duane Will, Donna Francis,
Lori Seth, Edie Mees, Debbie
Hawley, Marcy Owens, Stella
Neutzling, Debbie Garnes,
Ellen Rice , Sherrie Turner,
Nathan Robinette, Donna
Weber, Sandy Taylor, Connie
Grueser, Connie Radford ,
.
Ca rsey, Be cky Smith,
Dtans
Sandy Rusche!, Fred Rayburn,
Fred
Rusche!,
Frank Jones,
Girolami,Susie
Denni~ Glaze

Mr. Hoffman, a member of
the Chester Methodist Church,
was owner of the lvylyn Skating
Rink which he operated in
Tuppers Plains seven years.
Surviving are his wife, Mary
C. Thayer Hoffman ; a son,
John, Mason, W.Va.; a granddaughter, Mrs. Marjorie A.
Goett, Pomeroy ; two sisters,
Mrs. Mary Bailey of Zanesfield,
andMrs. EdithKingofChester ;
a brother, Walter, of Chester,
·
an d severa 1 meces
an d
nephews.
deathSophia
were
hisPreceding
parents, him
Johnin and

St. Louis 011 001 IOQ- 4 16 2
Houston 403 410 OOx-12 17 0
Reuss, Zachary (2) , Drabow·
sky (4), Hrabosky (6), Linzy
(8) and Simmons; Dierker, Ray
(7) and Hiatt. WP-Dierker (61). LP-Reuss (4-4). HRs-Rader
(2nd). Hague (41h).
and Phil Moon.
Sponagel Hoffman, three
Los Ang 010 101 033- 9 12 4 FIRST YEAR _ Steve An· brothers, a sister, and a halfSan Fran 000 203 001- 6 8 4 derson , Barbara Anthony brother.
Osleen, Brewer (7). Mik · Christine Bailey, Karen Baity; Funeral services will be held
kelsen (8 ), O'Brien (9), Moeller Morton
Donna Blevins ,
(9) and Haller; Perry, McMa - Melanie Barnes,
Burt, Diana Carsey at 3 p. m. Wednesday at the
hon (7) , Johnson 18) , Hamlllon Vicky Clelland, Frank Cowell ' Ewing Funeral ijome with the
(8). Robertson (9), Reberger Cindy Craig, Melinda Custer' Rev . Roy Deeter. officiating.
(9) and Dietz. WP-Brewer (2-0.). Cindy
Dom lgan , Sandr~
LP-McMahon 12·2). HRs-Bonds Floccarl. Greg France, Connie Burtal will be tn Chester
(9th ). Parker (3rd) .
Garnes, Bridget Goble, Denise Cemetery. Friends may call at
Hawley, lnj.rld Hawley, Peggy the funeral home anytime.
New York 000 000 011- 2 8 1 Imboden, usle Jeffers, Mary
Pitts
000 011 02x- 4 6 0 Krawsczyn, Mike May, Janel
Ryan , McGraw (8) and Morri
s, Tina . Nleri, Diana
Grote ; Elli s. Gi usti (9 ) and Ridgway , Sandy Rusche! , Lori
REVIVAL NOTED
Sangulllen. WP-EII is 15·3). LP· Seth, Rebecca Sm lfh, Brenda
A
revival
will be held at the
Ryan 14-1) .
Vanmeter, Don Vaughan
Me Ia nie Wa Iter s' Kare~ Carle ton Church on Kingsb~y
Phila
001 100 201- 4 11 1 Wheeler, Penny Wolfe, Peggy Roa~ at 7:30p.m. each evemng
Atlanta
001 000 002- 3 9 0
Brien,Patterson,
Sonya Steve
Ohlinger
Wednesday and runWise, Fryman 191 and O'
Roxana
Price,, starttng
.
McCarver; Jarvis, Herbel (8), Debra Pierce, Kafhv Ravburn . ntng through Sunday, May 22.
Bar ber (9 ), Priddy ( 9) and Cherie Reuter , Cindy Van Wtlliam Uber will be the
Didier. WP.Wise 12-2). LP· Meter, Mark Morris .
evangelist. The Rev. Jay Stiles,
Jarvis (0-S). Hrs-Monfanez 2 SECOND YEAR - Barbara pastor invites the public
(7th &amp; 8th).
Archer
Lynne Baker,
Jyl
'
·
Beaver,, Elizabeth
Blaettnar
Mon treal 222 000 03Q-- 9 12 1 Debbie Call. Rita Case!, Jenny
Cinci
000 101 OlD- J 6 I Ferguson. Leta Floyd, Donna I
CLUB TO MEET
Ranko, Mars hall (8) and Francis, Beth Fultz , Debi
Bateman; Grimsley, Cloninger Gallagher, Phill ip Gaul. Terry
The annual Miss Springtime
(2), Wilcox (4). Carroll (6) and George, Dennis Glaze, Amy Contest will be held at 8 p m
Bench. WP-Renko (4-2). LP-· Hamm , Gre~ Hayes, Jul ·a
· ·
1
Grimsley 10·1) . HRs- Bateman Hutchison, De ble Jewett, Jan Tu esday when th e Tops Club
Kennedy, Kathy King, Debbie meets at the Meigs County
(2nd). Perez (5th).
Maples,
Sheila McKnight, Edith Infirmary.
American League
ees,.
Phill
ip Moon, Paula
M
Cleve at N. Y. 2, ppd, rain
M
oms,
Linda
Rupe. Dorothy
Ball al Boston, ppd, rain
Seth, Brenda Taylor,
Debbie
Triple
it,
Scott
VanVranken
,
llsl game)
Oakland
100 100 2oo- 4 8 2 Paiti Well. Sharon Wilson ,
Kan City
010 001 000-- 2 6 2 Diana
Young. Mindy Young.
lr~,
.L u.
Dobson, Locker (7), and THIRD YEAR - Irene
Dunegan; Drago, Rooker 13) Barnes, Bob Blackston, JoE lien
York (8) and May. WP- Dobso~ DiehL Debbie Garnes, Pat 11'"/.
12-0) LP·Rooker 10-S). HRs.
Hopkins (2nd) , Otis (6th) ,
Ha wley, Debbie Oh llng Mllw
110 030 too- 6 12 1 er, Marcy Owens, Ric - Almost nine years to the day
Cal iforni a 020 000 000-- 2 6 0 ky Pier ce, Be cky Scaggs, after his first tournament_ in
lockwood. Sanders 181 and Jill Harris, Pal Harris, ~red which he lost his first match_
RodriguezI Allen, Reynolds (4). ~ann~~;,. s~:me ~i: ti.~f:: John Tanneblll, 19, Middleport,
Laroche (71. Maloney (8) and
Stephenson . WP-Lockwood (3· Neut zling , Marla Neutzllng, wo~ the !Jieh's singles trophy
3) . LP-AIIen 10-1) . HRs-Rodr i- Ann Ohlinger, Karen Price, and cash'Sunday in fhe Midwest
guez (lsi) , Kubiak (1st) .
Connie
Radford,
Rayburn,
Rosemary
Rice, Fred
Marge
Riggs, Regional table tennis tour'
Chicago . 010 001 000-- 2 6 J Mlllsa Rizer, Nathan Roblnetle nament at Beatty Recreation
Mlnn
000 003 12x- 6 9 0 Susie Rusche!. leanne Sebo: Center In Columbus.
Bradley, Romo (6). Forster Caralynn Tracv. Maralynn
At'lbe age of 11 TaMellilllost
(6), Kealey (7), Eddy 181, Tracy,
Be&lt;:ky·
Wright,
Cathy
to DaMY Ybema, then 10, of
Horlen (8), and Herrmann ; Yales.
FOURTH YEAR - Brenda G d Rapids Mlc'"n 10
· the
Hamm. Corbin (71 and Miller·
ran tournament.
'
•.,.an
Sunday_ he
weld. WP-Hamm (1 .0). LP· Ed war ds, Jenn ifer Goble, same
Bradley (H) . HR-Cardenas worlhy,
Eddie Brown,
Twlla Frank
Claf. defeated Tim O'yrosky of
Gary Ellis,
(:lrdl :
I
Girol.iml , Debbie Harbrecht, Dayton 21-16, 21-19, 19-21, 21-i7
~! 1~ : Ber~le Hennessy, Becky in finals of the men's singles
H:,~~:~~~;!~r , Debbie
Laney, event, and wltl)' Bert Jacob! of
and Free/ten, til
Stella Neutzllng,
(4), Rlddlt·
Glenna Sprague, Cincinnati, also won men's
Taul~, Nancy Thomp. d bl
1 1"-~-~l!fel!~llrg)~~
-:
0·
i ..:U!!rl~~~;i~L~2~~~~:Triplett,
Webersherr·Je
and .u:aMehill Ia ~
at

Jllidwest ,.,;*le

~~~~s~,~o;~~~.;F~r~~;.~g~:: won at

~

Bea

tty

BY MRS. PEARL MORA
Chester Garden Club
All trees are interesting and beautiful. Whether they are
evergreen, delighting us with fresh green branches during the
donated by Mrs. G. B. Stout was
bleak days of winter or the hardwoods, in the fresh green of early
Officers were elected at tbe regional meeting held at Welcomed into membership awarded to Mrs. Minor and
spring, or in the flaming colors of autwnn, trees are a joy to recent meeting of the Star Rutland and that contributions of the club were Mrs. Henry
behold. Even the' stark, bare branches of winter delight the eye. Garden Club at the home of were made to the·~Je table by Turner. The' regional Lour to be Miss Henson won the door prize .
held Thursday at Old Man's Members responded to roll call
the club.
And what is more appealing than the fruit trees, a bower of MI'S. Seth Nicholson.
Mrs. Gerald Minor and Mrs. Cave was announced. Members with a comment on new flowers
Elected were Mrs. James
blossoms each spring ?
are to meet at the sheloor bouse ln their gardens.
Perhaps we think of trees in terms of shade or shelter' or of Nicholson,_ president; Miss Neal Jeffers noted that they had
with a sack .lunch. A donation Mrs. Will have an article on
the•fruils and other products. In literature they are often used . Hazel Henson, first vice planted a flowering crab, white
clematis and a lilac at Forest was made to the cancer fund . how to tell what ails sick
' f ·'
'
president;
Mi«s
Ruby
Diehl,
symbolically.
We
associate
the
oak
with
strength,
the
pine
with
,.I
Arrangements using net, houseplants . An auc.tion of
second vice president; and Mrs. Acres Park as a civic project.
dignity, and the p8lm tree illustrates a godly person.
ribbon and flowers were plantS;bulbs and seeds was held
In each tree we see, there lies a message, a parable, if we P. H. Nelson, secretary- Mrs. Norman Will and Miss exhlbiood by Mrs. Minor, Mrs. at the conclusion of the meeting .
Connie Gilland, Angelia Sayre, Becky Gilmore, Kay Hoffman and Fue
Diehl
have
provided
SENIORS HONORED - Presentation of pina to the 14 Wahama High
have eyes to see. Agnarled oak stands on the rocky New England treasurer.
The.June meeting will be at the
McDaniel. Standing, Band Director Gerald Simmons, Gary Tedesco, G~ry
It was reported that seven arrangements for their chur- James Nicholson and Mrs. C. E.
&amp;boot band seniors was among the highlights of the WHS Band Banquet
shore.Itisadwarf,its branches have been twisted, but It clings to
Slout. The travelin~ prize home of Mrs. Neal Jeffers.
ches.
Blackhurst, Brent Clark, David Russell, Jim Ar_!!s, Ralph Sayre and Lee
held Saturday night. They are seated, from left, Cozy Cook, Harriet Layne,
the cliff and wins life's battles by hanging on. It seems to be members had a !tended the
Bonecutf&amp;r.
'
repeating the words of the Master : "In the world ye shall have
tribulations, but be of good cheer, for I have overcome the worl(i."
CAVE TOUR SET
A tall pine becomes uprooted by a storm. Its upturned roots
ARegion 11, Ohio Association
reveal how shallow tbe earth beneath It bad been. In pleasant
of Garden Clubs, garden club
weather that had been sufficient, but when the rains fell and the
tour will be conducted Thursday
students, were presented tokens
MASON - The awaited time Jackie Roush, Carol Circle,
the
eccentric
writer
:
and
winds
blew,
it
fell.
Dig
deep
roots
for
your
lives
or
you
will
find
A
three-act
mystery
comedy,
to Old Man's Cave, Mrs. C. E.
of appreciation.
came and it was a stispenseful Carla Haggerty, Brian Johnson,
that the storms of trouble and hardship and pain uproot you and Washington Never Slept Here Charlie Tabor as N. W. White Stout, regional conservation
Students had their turn,
moment when it was announced Patty Clark, Gary Bwngarner,
by Le Roma Greth, will be from Washington, D. C.
bring you to ruin. So speaks the tall but fallen pine tree.
and wildlife chairman, reports. '
presenting gifts to Phillips and
Taking the role of White's Guy L. Denny, naturalist from
that Kay Hoffman was the Steve Carpenter, Lou Ellen
HAVE YOU EVER walked through a pine forest with the soft presented Wednesday by the
Simmons. Also remembered
Arion Award winner during the Roush.
carpet of needles beneath and the towering trunks lifting their Kyger Creek High School wife is Julie Esheunaur, the Ohio Departrilent of Natural .
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dreama Rankin is cast as Miss Resources, will meet with the
annual Wahama Band Banquet A new type of award was
Gilmbre, who for the past five
branches skyward? Was not the message written all over the speech class.
Saturday evening in the school given to students in the All State
Snider, Carolyn Hughes as a group at 10:30 a.m. at the
years have been responsible for
landscape? "Peace be still ... "
cafeteria.
Band, small emblems shaped
hauling of the band instrwnents
The plot concerns a ghost who television producer, and Bill shelter house. Those attending
Trees are natural landmarks and memorials. Because they
Quickel as the ghost. Minor are to bring a sack lunch.
This is copsidered the top like the state of West Virginia
on the many various Lccasions.
have more than the allotted life span of man,-they carry their is seen only by the curator of the
award, presented to the student inscribed, "West Virginia All
museum, and the complic'ations roles are taken by Kathy Darst,
On behalf of the Band
assodations
through
generation
after
generation.
contributing the most to the State Band." Receiving these
carol McDougle, and Jackie
Boosters, Mrs. James Hart
THERE ARE TREES STILL living that were planted by the enusing from its a clivi ties. Bias as tourists; Jackie CorDUA~AtnON r.':!o.
3/8" VARIABLE
band. Gerald Simmons, were Kay Hoffman, Connie
presented Simmons a gift. In
Taking
the
role
of
the
cur
a
tor
is
SANDER~
SPEED
DRILL
first president of the United Sl;lles. Two pecan trees on the lawn
nelius
and
Debbie
Henson
as
director, made the presen- Gilland, Harriet Layne, Sue
turn , the Harts were also given
near the mansion at Mt. Vernon, grown from nuts given to Larry Tate, with Emily Grose reporters, and Mark Darst,
SURGERY, SCHEDULED
tation.
McDaniel, Becky Gilmore,
as his wife, and Dennis Van
a gift of appreciation for conWashington
by
Thomas
Jefferson
in
1775,
are
said
to
be
the
oldest
George
Curry,
Orland William Fred Smith, Sr., of
David Phillips, student Diana Harris, Anitra Wriston,
C/H
Sickle, Loralee Tucker, and Cremeans, and Jimmy Bias as Rt. I, Middleport, entered
tributions to the band. Mr. Hart
Tttgger locks In a t se lected
Eo')'
c.onvtrllon
from
1lralghl
line
trees
now
standing
on
the
estate.
Washington
and
Jefferson
were
director from Marshall Janet Sayre, Debbie Rickard,
Mary Stwnp as their children. the boyfriends.
spnds from 0 to I000 RPM. C/ H
is Booster president.
to orbital ocllon sondiAQ.
Holzer Hospital today. He will
kindred spiri Ui in their love of trees.
University, assisted Simmons Carolyn Barnett, Angela Sayre,
Jane Darst plays one of the
It
was
announced
that
Albert
The six tall hickory trees flanking the tomb of Andrew
Janette Polcyn is the student undergo surgery Wednesday
2 SPEED
in other presentations:
7- lW CtflCUIAR
Vivian Woodrum, Rickey
daughter's best friends,
Durose,
principal,
has
purJIG
SAW
SAW
Letters for full concert band Connon. Jlmmv Artis, Gary
Jackson and his wife Rachael at the Hermitage near Nashville, Charlotte Queen portrays the director with Teresa Thompson •morning.
chased 100 new chairs for
'
participation, Debbie Fields, Blackhurst, J&lt;lb.n ~trris . and
Tennessee, and the Lincoln Oak at Lincoln's birthplace · at maid, Douglas Johnson and and Julie Eshenaur handling
Wahama's
new
band
room.
II LACK &amp; DECKER
Linda VanMeter, Sharon Debra Gilland.
Hodgenville, Kentucky are two more examples .of trees Joyce Swisher are cast as makeup. Mrs. Harold Sauer is
Funds
for
this
were
realized
C/H
Rottgen, Vivian Woodrum,
Seniors presented plaques for
associated with presidents of our nation.
Drills all ma terials last. Boll ooCEod,
friends; Teresa Thompson as teacher of the class.
from
concessions
sold
at
the
low speed lor meto l1; hlgh for
Be,.el and rip adi'"'""'""·
comfortab le grip. 1/ 7 H.P.
Cheryl Thompson, Sue Fox, the all state band honor were
The lovely Charter Oak, in Hartford, Connecticut, was a
REVIVAL SET
7·1/ 4" blodetncluaed.
wood. filling shoe. 1/7 H.P.
school.
2250
RPM.
•1000
Barbara Clark, Rex Howard, Harriet Layne, four years; Sue
Revival services will be held
famous historical shrine. The Charter of the CoMecticut Colony,
McDaniel, four years; Kay
granted by King Charles II in 1662, was .supposed to have been
7/8 H.P. HEAVY-DUTY
COMPACT
May24-30at8p.m.attheAlfred
--~--Hoffman, three years; Angela
Methodtst Church wtth the Rev.
hidden in the oak by a patriot when King James II commanded its
ROUTER
ARM SAW
Sayre, two years; Becky
surrender In !687. That charter served Connecticut as a con"Retirement: Boon or Bore," cast as Mrs . Averageman ; 'eort Davis, organist of radio
Gilmore, four years; Jimmy
stitution from 1662 to 1816. When the tree blew down in 1856, pieces was the topic used by Mrs. Bernice Bailey, Mrs. Girl and . t~levisi~n pron,tinence,
Artis, one year; Connie Gilland,
AWARD WINNER- Kay Hoffman, a senior, Is shown
of the wood were made into gavels, picture frames and chairs; Roscoe Hollon and Mrs. Fred Friday; Mrs. Mildred Frank, provtdmgmustceachmght. ~he
.,
two years, and Gary
receiving the ,N}on Award from Band Director Gerald
one ,pf the chair~ stands in the senate chamber of the State Rice whep tll!i ;"',Wf'l'll'~ Spciety,,_ Mrs. Loner; .. ancLMrs... :Aiillrla".:~v Randy l-'\Yf'l~ wtll,g1v.e
Blackhurst, three years.
. Siffinions durl~ '.tiul' Wahama High &amp;hool Band Banquet
of Christian ~~ervice me! Karr, Mrs. Elder, A prayer !lrt~f mess'ageU 1tie pilfilic, ts
CapitoL
Special recognition was given
Saturday nigfit. The Arion Award is considered the top
A NUMBER OF INDIAN trails may still be found at various recently at the Chester United entitled "The Older People" in mvtted.
C/ H
to two of the band leaders.
presentation ·of the aMual band banquet.
IIL\CK &amp;OECIU
places in the Mississippi Valley. The trees were bent over when Methodist Church.
unison closed the program.
IILACK&amp; DECKER
MONDAY
Becky
Gilmore ,
head
small saplings to mark the Indian trail, and often have several
The group sang, He Leadeth
CHESTER PTA , 8 p.m. majorette, and Jimmy Artis, 1
Ma kes a\1 cuts w':'lth~e-ooiiiOii
, A&lt;~cvo.:Jie
Perform• all boslc cull In wood-working! 8ev_-l
•7701
upright branches growing from the horizontal trunk. A good Me to 6pen the meeting with Due to vacation Bible school,
Monday, installation of officers. drwn major, were presented Seniors receiving pins in· bus drivers, Russell Capehart, 2)6 E. 2nd
calibra tion . 7/8 H.P. , 7620
and
mitre acalts . 2·7/8" maximum depth cut.
C/lt
Pomeroy
example of an Indian trail tree has been preserved and marked by Mrs. Rice reading scriptw:e the next meetiug of the Society
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 mementos for their con- eluded :
Kay
Hoffman , Woody King and Carson Rousl),
from Psalm 16, and Mrs. Hollon was set for June 10 with Mrs.
the D.A.R. in Evanston, Illinois.
p.m. Monday, Linda Kurtz of l•'outions in these categories: treasurer ;
Cozy
Cook, held in high esteem by the
A tree in Wise County, Virginia was made famous by John presented a poem. For the Betty Roush and Mrs. Mabel
Colwnbus to present slides on
president ; Connie Gilland,
If you're sick
Fox, Jr. in his novel "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine." The . program Mrs. Rice took the role Van Meter to present the
the Wonderful World of Ohio.
Q- How far back does the Harriet Layne, Sue McDaniel,
PARKER '
or
hurt?
Evangeline Oak at St. Martinsville, Louisiana marks the place of a social worker interviewing program. A picnic will he held
Miss Kurtz is ·associated with written h; s t 0 r y of China Becky Gilmore, Angela Sayre,
where the Arcadians, driven from Nova Scotia, landed in 1758. It Mrs . Ruth Erwin as Joe in July. Twenty-four sick calls
Colwnbia Gas.
date?
Jimmy Artis , Brent Clark,
NATIONW IDE insurance does Averageman, Gladys Spencer were reported.
RACINE PTA 7:30 p.m.
A-The Shang Dynasty, Ralphie Sayre, Gary Tedesco,
was Immortalized by Longfellow's famous poem.
with the Hospital Plan that lets
you choose the protection you
Monday, Racine Grade &amp;hool. which reigned from 1500 to David Russell, Gary Blackhurst
The Japanese Cherry trees in Washington, D. C. and the awewant.
New officers installed by Mrs. 1027 B.C., was the first dy- and Lee Bwngarner.
inspiring coastal redwoods and the giant sequoias of the had established themselves in Pennsylvania because of the
Ruby Vaughan,
nasty
in
the
recorded
his• Choose coverage for yourself,
county tory of China.
Students weren't the only
California Sierras are trees of I!PI!Cial interest. Another in- seemingly inexhaustible foresUI of hemlock, whose bark yielded
REG .
spouse, children. '
president, and program by fifth
ones given recognition. Three
2.29
teresting facet of trees is the identification made by the states tannin with which to make leather tough for shoe soles. And so
• Choose an amount to cover
hospital room and board, and
and
sixth grade
band.Pomeroy "-~~w:;*H':'"''':':::::"····
,.,.:;:._.,............,..
with particular trees that were characteristic of the area .
PeMsylvania named the easterri hemlock as her state tree.
SPECIAL
meetings,
•...w. ' : ....... ' · ,.,.,:,.,;,.,,
,,_,:,.,;,:,;:,:,,,:,:,•.•,,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;::::::~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;;;~;:;:;;;:;::~:::::;
other in -hosp ital expenses,
Contains 6 precision ground hl·tpeed
up to uny reasonable amount
MAINE WAS EARLY called tbe Pine Tree State. It could
The tw_o tallest trees in America grow on the Pacific Coasl
.teal blades that fit mo•l jig saws.
, Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
Marks to Shoot at in Meigs
you think you'll need.
have been none other than the eastern white pine, whose clean, and were chosen by California, Coast redwood, giant sequoia and
Call me today for details.
Monday and Tuesday. Work in
straight boles had early been selected by the King's men to serve Oregon, the Douglas fir . Many of these state trees played ImANGELS CAMP, CaiU. (UPI) - A leggy lass named
Master Mason Degree. All
as masts and spars for the British Navy. Some species of portant roles in the building of' America. That this country has
Susie Q ls lite crown princess of frogdom.
Master Masons invited.
Susie Q, raised on a diet of Illes, hamburger and bread
evergreen was also chosen by eighteen other states.
more than a thousand other tree species from which choices
MEIGS CHAPTER Order of
Burns up to 15 hot~ra .
Massachusetts chose the American ehn, recalling the Gothic might have been made indicates the wealth of our forest heritage.
crumbs, leaped a whopping 17 feet 9 %. Inches to capture the
DeMolay Monday 7:30 p.m.
ADDITIONAL OR
arch under which General George Washington reviewed the
Kenlllcky Derby of the frog set Sunday.
Still to be mentioned are those trees for which each of us has a
WffNOUT COUPON
Middleport Mason1·c Temple.
The leap at the annual Calavera!l Coonty Jumping Frog
colonial troops at Cambridge. The white oak (Charter Oak) was particular affection, although they have no connection with
C:OUPON
Inspection to be held. RefreshJubilee
fa
tteued
wiUt
$300 lhe wallet of her owner, Bill Moniz,
Connecticut's
choice.
Some
species
of
oak
was
the
choice
of
six
Presidents or history. They are the trees in our own yards. For us
ments. Paul Darnell Jr
a
Gustine,
Calli.,
dairy
engineer.
they hold, perhaps, tender, personal memories, and they are
Macter Councilor. ' '
.,
other states.
Asweet tooth and pride 'in the special quality of a product for reminders of how close trees are to our lives.
The cootes~ which drew %,000 entries from arouod the
TUESDAY
REG, 1.59
world, was made famous by Mark Twain In his short story
which Vermont has long laid claim made the sugar maple her · These words appear on a sign at the entrance to a public park
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club
"The Celebrated Jwnplng Fr.;g of Calaveras County,"
choice . New York and Wisconsin also chose the sugar maple. The in Portugal:
7p.m. Tuesday home of Car· '
lnclt~d u91ong and 9 short arm
SUPUIOR
wreo.ches, s~zes . ,050 to 3/8".
Meinhart Locu's1 St Porn rte
hard firm, white wood, whose uses range from shoe trees to
"Y~ who would pass by and raise your hand against me,
•
eroy
SALISBURy
p . A. ' 7:3
::~=::::::;::::m:::::=:--::::::::~":::':'llJ:':l'::::~:~:;r.:~m;-:m..--:;;.~::::'»'*=&lt;=::::::::::::&gt;';'l-":::::'
flooring, and also the beauty and brilliance of the autumn foliage harken ere you harm me . I am the heat of your hearth on the cold
307 Spring Ave.
Tuesday night. PTA film "Who
may have been a deciding factor here. West Virginia changed winter night; the friendly shade screening you from the summer
Pomeroy, Ohio
Says We Can't". Installation of
from the burr oak to sugar maple also. The Rhode Island state sun; and my fruiUI are refreshing draughts, quenching your thirst
The man from Nutionwide is ('I n Y""' &lt;ido I
officers and refreshments
tree Is the red maple.
· as you journey on.l am the beam that holds your house, the board
TEACHERS
·
The straight-grained, lightweight, easily cleaved and durable of your table, the bed on which you lie, and the timber that builds
Chester co AN_D helpers_ of
Arrangements to provide using "Just One Person" as. her
eastern red cedar was cut and splil into rails and posts for many your boat. I am the handle of your hoe, the door of your
mmuruty vacatton cookies and Kool-Aidfor the two meditation. Scripture was from
Block jorged heod, hickory
southern pioneer fences. These first three qualities later singled homestead, the wood of your cradle and the shell of your coffin. I
church
school
meet
at
J p.m.
hondla.
Nalmnwalt Mutual Insurance ('o.
T d
Ch
week Bible_yhool beginning Luke 5, and Mrs. Hubbard read
Home Office : Columbus, Ohio
out
the
wood
as
peculiarly
adapted
for
the
wooden
casings
of
2' •4'
am the gift of God and friend of man."
Muethsoday '
ester United June 7 were made at Tuesday a poem "Count Your Gains, Not
M.d OHitl
12'
APE
RULE
pencils,
and
the
spicy
odor
added
to
its
d7sirability.
But
with
these
mght's
meeting
of
the
HearthYour
Losses."
e 1st Church.
.
SALE
STEEL TOOt BOX
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
qualities recognized it was the durablhty of the wood that perroiCE
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Golf and stone Class of the Middleport
The Rev. Charles Simons
Heavy gouge 11111. LJ!t oullole troy.
lEG. 319
mitted
pencil
makers
to
use
fence
rails
that
had
stood
in
place
for
3.99
Cap end con11rucllon. 18" !ong. 9"
tr k t
First Baptist Church at the reviewed a portion of the study
' Church."'
high. 8" deep.
•
ac earn members will be home of Mr. and Mrs. Allen book, "The Emergmg
LIMIU Ptl
a generation or more.
·
.
Reg . 9.49
guests.
CUSTOMU
AT 11115 PlfCE
As a result, many a Tennessee hill farmer paid off the mort- u
·- J
WEDNESDAY
Hughes.
Refreshments were served by
Sr.t.NlEY
gage on his farm with the cedar rails his father had cut. small 110norw
BOSWORTH Council 46 ,
Milton Hood conducted the the hosUI to Mr. and Mrs. Willis
s_tated assembly , Pomeroy meeting during which time Anthony, Mr. and Mrs. Milton
wonder, then, that Tennessee citizens voted to make the eastern
pta
d
f
Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m.
ns were rna e or a poUuck Hood, Mr . and Mrs. Harold
red cedar their state tree. Recently the tulip poplar replaced the
BACKBOARD ROOF.
Wednesday.
dinner in June at the cottage Of Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. 'Smart,
red cedar as Tennessee's state tree.
J'
~+ o •
..,
BRACKET
EGG NEST
'" MOUNTING
THURSDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. John Werner
INDIANA AND KENTUCKY early chose the glossy-leafed
no.ua
lPOLE
·
·
lEG. IUS
AND
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30 Haro·ldH ubba rd gave devottons
Edison Baker and the Rev. Mr.'
giant known variously as yellow-poplar and white wood, for its
Mothers were honored at a
)
soft, even .grained wood, a lumber sought by cabinet makers and recent meeting of Bethel 62,
BUTTER
Thursday night at the Shrine
Simons.
carpenters. The large orange and yellow blossoms are an extra International Order of Job's
KEEPER
bonus.
Daughters at the Pomeroy
Child eon- .
36 r 48 x 1/2" edarlor lr•ated
Long before the movement!or state trees, Ohio was known as Masonic Temple. ·
servation League 7 30 Thurs
'.J'
hardboard. Hordwote i.ncluded.
' :
•
·
·
the Buckeye state, but not all of her present citizens ha~ ever
Twila Clatworthy, honored
day, home of Mrs. Kenneth
Plans for inspection Ill be held drive.
queen, extended a welcome to
ILVINHAYIS BASKETBALL MOUNTING BRACKET
Harris. Devotions, Mrs. Louis Thursday night were made
Theme for the month was
FIAtlll
seenMississippi
it.
·
·
·
th
·
t
1
30
'he
chose
the
southern
magnolia,
whose
lumber
is
e
approxtma
e
Y
mo•
rs
Osborne. Roll can, hair when Harrlsonvllle Chapter, spring and the worthy J}atron,
2-ntllo n, 1511. •1•.1
lEG. ua
even.graned, easily worked, hardwood. But the white blossoms attending with Diana Carsey
lEG. 9.60
coloring. Program by Mrs. Order of the Eastern Star, met Fred George, read a poem.
pipe wlih aluminum finagainst the. shiny green leaves are ~ l~s~lng mem~ry to all who giving a prayer. Several songs
Eugene Gberke, ''Wigs and recently at the temple.
Tulip pln-pns were used. GetIsh. Plostk t opped for
e
enjoyed
life
in
the
South.,
Vtrgwa
and
Mt~url
chose
were
presented
by
the
girls,
and
protection. Hardware
Things".
P
t
t
d
HARRISONVILLE
as rna rons an. past well cards were sent to ·several
hav
th edbud
d Dela
th Leann Sebo read a poem, "A
inch.lded.
O.E.S., patrons were presented and members who are ill, and tbe·
flowering dogwood ; Oklahoma, e r
; an
ware, e Smile Says A Lot."
-lliltooSP.t.lDING
annual inspection, 8 p.m. welcomed to the East for a group honored those with birthFRABill
American
Holly
·
Potted
petunias
were
given
to
Thursday. All members asked welcome. Mrs. Fred George, days . Refreshments were
Tough ny·weove Inner construe·
Fo'r pole or woll m~IIJnl . U·OOlb in·
WYOMING AND KANSAS chose the cottonwood. There was a each mother and Becky
lion.
Offlc!ol
•J:e
ond
wel
ghl
.
cludadl..,r
J.'l.ll emovnl.
to a!lend·
th
tr
tha
wor Y rna on,
nked those served by Mr&amp;. Bernice Nelson,
ck
of
a
wide
cbolct
of
native
trees
in
Kansas.
They
picked
the
H
d
h
lt
d
d
th
1
Ia ttonwood the •- which early settl~rs cut for wood for their ou as e · cone u e
M.EIGS COUNTY Tuber- who participated in the eandy Mrs. Bernice Winn, Mrs. Hazel
co
,
~ ~~
tributes with prayer. Kenneth~
RTA •
culosls and Health Assn . sale . Th e cba pter voted to Thomson, and Mrs. Midge
1232A
homes and rue! for their fires and the one they planted to give Wilcox and Tom Edwards ,
mee ting, 7' 30 p.m. Thursday, con tribute
. to "·
w"' cancer fund Abbott.
solace to their souls.
' council members, were
home of new president, Mrs. r--::--:'!~~~~~~~~111!!!-~---·
Texas cnose the pecan; whose nut crop fattens hogs and helps recognized. Plans were made
The Department Store
.Glenn 0111, Syracuse. Olllcers
fill the candY bars of the nation and whose lumber is increasingly for attending church Sunday .at
FURNITURE
01 Building Since 1915
and board
, members requested
·
1
1
1
i
o
chosen fodurnlture, flooring and a host of ~s for which a hard Heath United Methodist in a
,
. MIDDLEPORT, 0.
to be present.
'; I . ·,
OPTOMETRIST
· .
.
.
,
and resilient wood is needed.
group. A decorated cake in1
HARRISON¥
OFFICE HOURS 9
..
.
HISTORY RECORDS Utal the Southern soldiers were in- ' scribed "we Love You
:30
TO
12,
2
TO
5
(CLOSE
nuericed ln their campaign against Gett~sburg by the hope they Mothers" was served with
~~:~al iiii!PI!Ctlon~ ~p.m. AT NOON ON. THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
t:l&amp;\&amp;&gt;l~?@i~~~@:\1\t:rt&gt;:t~g\\};W}:B't~C.l//l:;~):::i~~r~Y: .:?:~:~::.f::r·~. 't:)·~·:7 .:.;:_::_:::-~;~r··. f~l:1~)F~~~ml1~~F~11?~
--~~.-. .~LI~99~2:·2:6J:s~~~~~n~F~r~i-~&amp;~~~·:·N~·~ht~1·----~~~dd~~~~~rt
~_jl_~--...N.Id.Jtet shO!:S in that area . Few realized that the shoemakers punch.

Waham.a Band Members Honored

17 Give Recital

FOR YOU!

in Wellston, Mrs. Marie Mills,
Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Grace When you open a
Hawley, Mrs. Mary Woods, Savings Account here
Miss Hulda Klein, Miss Harrie with $25.00 ...
Marie Smith, Miss Sandi Yates,
We Will Give You
APlace Se«ing of Dishes ·
Leo Childs, and Mrs. Minerva
Or
Childers.
A
Set
Of 4 Glasses.
Mrs. Erwin was chairman of
a program in tribute to When you open an
mothers. The historical account account with $500 of the beginning of Mother 's
We Will Give You A
Place
Se«lng Of Dishes
4
Day was given by Mrs .
Raymond Stewart and Mrs. and all this lor just lefti"9 us
Clyda Allensworth read about pay you 4'1• per cent on your
the origin of the carnation savings.
legend, a poem on Mother's
Day, and a third grader's essay,
Atfiens Co.
:'What Is A Grandmother ."
Branch
Mrs. Harold Lohse presented
devotions using an article from Meigs County Branch of The
the PTA magazine entitled Athens County Sa&lt;ings &amp;
"Take Time_,,
Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Asalad course was served by
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Mrs. Lohse and Migs Mildred
Hawley with Leota Hawley,
Mrs. Roush , Mrs. Grace
Hawley and Mrs. Franklin
T'ripplett as contributing
hostesses.
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

Ghostlike Comedy

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24~~10

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Rettrement as a oon

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Social
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C_LEANERS

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Whotlays

(Hwa.:leijijf~
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P. J. PAULEY

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Class to Help Bible School

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(HWI•:IeZ:,
PERFORATED
HARDBOARD

ationwide
.

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Mothers

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P~~o~~~RT

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Inspection Will Be Held Thursda11

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5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 17,

I

197l

••

• - Ttv.IJailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., May 17, 1971

Green Thumb
Notes.

•••

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

Interesting Facts about Trees

The Philathea Society
meeting Thursday night at the
Middleport Church of Christ
voted to pay $300 on th~ building
debt, and continue monthly gifts
to the Meigs Coilnty Community
Class for Re\arded · Childr~n.
and Wayne Clark, a missionary
in Hawaii.
It was reported that $114 was

cleared on the Eight and Forty
dinner servft\ 'by the society,
and $180 on th~ rummage sale.
Enough was added .from the
treasury to make up the $300
given-on the church debt.

e uce

e

Bui tng

r

Society, contributions to fund
drives which are .contributed to
by the individuals making up
the group.

New program books were
distributed by Mrs. Norman
During the meeting con- Yeauger. Making up the
ducted by Mrs. Grace Pratt, it program committee were Mrs.
was decided to discontinue Don Erwin, Miss Frances

Roush, Mrs." Reva Beach, Mrs.
Pratt, Mrs. Denver Rice. Mrs.
Pratt thanked Mrs. Rice for her
work on the flower committee
during the past year and appointed Mrs. Erwin and Mrs.
Oscar Roush as new chairmen .
Reported ill were Homer
Rice, Mrs. Beach, Mrs. Clara
Murray, now in a nursing home

Garden Club Elects New Officers

MISS GLENNA SPRAGUE, long-time plano student of Mrs. Patrick Lochary,
played the selections which gained her acceptance at Capital University, Colwnbus, at
the SUnday recital. She displayed good technique, precision, and musical feeling to the
receptive audience.
,

Mrs. Patrick Lochary
presented her 17 piano pupils in
a recital Sunday afternoon in
the Bethany Chapel of tbe
Trinity Church.
Preceding the recital, a
rosebud corsage and a gift of
jewelry were presented to Mrs.
Lochary by her students.
Boys and girls taking part •nd
the selections they played were
Deanna Blackwood, The
Crusader's Hymn, a Silesian
melody and Chaminade's &amp;arf
Dance; Mary Helen Blaettnar,
A Sonatina by Llchner ; Jayne
Hoeflich , Sunshine and

Unescores
By United Press International
National League
(1st, 10 Innings)
Sn ~o 104 IQO 000 ,1-:- 8 15 1
Chi 11, 010 ·t03··101 "l- 9 14 4
C@nbs, Sevennseii ~6l. Mil ·
ler (6). La xton ( 10), Sanforini
I101 , and Cannizzaro, Barton
(81 ; Hands, Colborn (4).
Newman (5). Tompkins (7),
Regan (8). Stephenson (10 and
D. Breeden, Martin (8) . WPStephenson (1 -0). LP-Sanforini
I0-1). HRs-Santo (8lhl. Stahl
(3rdl , Hickman 14th).
12nd game)
(Game called after 6 innings)
San Dleg o
000 03Q-- 3 5 3
Chicago
210 03Q-- 6 6 1
Kirby, Severlnsen (S) and
Barton; Holtzman and Martin.
-

!

Shadows, The Spinning Song,
and Raindrops by Thompson;
Cathy Blaettnar, On Yonder
Rock Reclining by Auber and a
minuet by Bach.
Marcia Marie Dillard,
Eckstein's At the Junior Prom,
and Beethoven's Contra-Dance ;
Nancy Stanley, Moths by
Thompson ; Charles Follrod,
Minuet in G by Mozart ; Kim
Jones, Jodard's Berceuse from
Jocelyn; Peggy Glrolami,
Theme from Llebestraum 3 by
Lietz; Betsy Arnsbary, The Bee
and the Clover by Adam Geibel.
Jenny Chapman, Theme from
Concerto No. I by Tschaikowsky , and Massenet 's
Theme from Aragonaise ;
Cheryl Huber Barcarollo from
Tales of Hoffman; Melinda

Amsbary,
Sonatina
by
Clementi; Stephen Stanley,
&amp;herzo in B Flat by Schubert:
Hey Jude by The Beatles, Proud
Mary, Credence Clearwater
Revival.
Jo Ellen Diehl played May
Night by Palmgren; Elizabeth
Blaettnar presented Rhondo
from Sonata in E Major, Opus
14 No. I, with her own Improvisation on theme from Love
Story; and the concluding
numbers of the recital were by
Glenna Sprague whq presented
Bach's Two-Part Invention No.
8, Sonata by Haydn, and
Arabesque No. 2 by Debussy.

John Hoffman

Dies Sunday

.6. ""'
d John Wesley , tjoffman,
TT,~ Chester ;died Sunday·evening at
Band''· -~
·
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
93,

(Contin~ed from page:! )

Guests joined the bandsmen for
the dance.
Receiving awards were :
Basketball band: Beth Fultz,
Duane Will, Donna Francis,
Lori Seth, Edie Mees, Debbie
Hawley, Marcy Owens, Stella
Neutzling, Debbie Garnes,
Ellen Rice , Sherrie Turner,
Nathan Robinette, Donna
Weber, Sandy Taylor, Connie
Grueser, Connie Radford ,
.
Ca rsey, Be cky Smith,
Dtans
Sandy Rusche!, Fred Rayburn,
Fred
Rusche!,
Frank Jones,
Girolami,Susie
Denni~ Glaze

Mr. Hoffman, a member of
the Chester Methodist Church,
was owner of the lvylyn Skating
Rink which he operated in
Tuppers Plains seven years.
Surviving are his wife, Mary
C. Thayer Hoffman ; a son,
John, Mason, W.Va.; a granddaughter, Mrs. Marjorie A.
Goett, Pomeroy ; two sisters,
Mrs. Mary Bailey of Zanesfield,
andMrs. EdithKingofChester ;
a brother, Walter, of Chester,
·
an d severa 1 meces
an d
nephews.
deathSophia
were
hisPreceding
parents, him
Johnin and

St. Louis 011 001 IOQ- 4 16 2
Houston 403 410 OOx-12 17 0
Reuss, Zachary (2) , Drabow·
sky (4), Hrabosky (6), Linzy
(8) and Simmons; Dierker, Ray
(7) and Hiatt. WP-Dierker (61). LP-Reuss (4-4). HRs-Rader
(2nd). Hague (41h).
and Phil Moon.
Sponagel Hoffman, three
Los Ang 010 101 033- 9 12 4 FIRST YEAR _ Steve An· brothers, a sister, and a halfSan Fran 000 203 001- 6 8 4 derson , Barbara Anthony brother.
Osleen, Brewer (7). Mik · Christine Bailey, Karen Baity; Funeral services will be held
kelsen (8 ), O'Brien (9), Moeller Morton
Donna Blevins ,
(9) and Haller; Perry, McMa - Melanie Barnes,
Burt, Diana Carsey at 3 p. m. Wednesday at the
hon (7) , Johnson 18) , Hamlllon Vicky Clelland, Frank Cowell ' Ewing Funeral ijome with the
(8). Robertson (9), Reberger Cindy Craig, Melinda Custer' Rev . Roy Deeter. officiating.
(9) and Dietz. WP-Brewer (2-0.). Cindy
Dom lgan , Sandr~
LP-McMahon 12·2). HRs-Bonds Floccarl. Greg France, Connie Burtal will be tn Chester
(9th ). Parker (3rd) .
Garnes, Bridget Goble, Denise Cemetery. Friends may call at
Hawley, lnj.rld Hawley, Peggy the funeral home anytime.
New York 000 000 011- 2 8 1 Imboden, usle Jeffers, Mary
Pitts
000 011 02x- 4 6 0 Krawsczyn, Mike May, Janel
Ryan , McGraw (8) and Morri
s, Tina . Nleri, Diana
Grote ; Elli s. Gi usti (9 ) and Ridgway , Sandy Rusche! , Lori
REVIVAL NOTED
Sangulllen. WP-EII is 15·3). LP· Seth, Rebecca Sm lfh, Brenda
A
revival
will be held at the
Ryan 14-1) .
Vanmeter, Don Vaughan
Me Ia nie Wa Iter s' Kare~ Carle ton Church on Kingsb~y
Phila
001 100 201- 4 11 1 Wheeler, Penny Wolfe, Peggy Roa~ at 7:30p.m. each evemng
Atlanta
001 000 002- 3 9 0
Brien,Patterson,
Sonya Steve
Ohlinger
Wednesday and runWise, Fryman 191 and O'
Roxana
Price,, starttng
.
McCarver; Jarvis, Herbel (8), Debra Pierce, Kafhv Ravburn . ntng through Sunday, May 22.
Bar ber (9 ), Priddy ( 9) and Cherie Reuter , Cindy Van Wtlliam Uber will be the
Didier. WP.Wise 12-2). LP· Meter, Mark Morris .
evangelist. The Rev. Jay Stiles,
Jarvis (0-S). Hrs-Monfanez 2 SECOND YEAR - Barbara pastor invites the public
(7th &amp; 8th).
Archer
Lynne Baker,
Jyl
'
·
Beaver,, Elizabeth
Blaettnar
Mon treal 222 000 03Q-- 9 12 1 Debbie Call. Rita Case!, Jenny
Cinci
000 101 OlD- J 6 I Ferguson. Leta Floyd, Donna I
CLUB TO MEET
Ranko, Mars hall (8) and Francis, Beth Fultz , Debi
Bateman; Grimsley, Cloninger Gallagher, Phill ip Gaul. Terry
The annual Miss Springtime
(2), Wilcox (4). Carroll (6) and George, Dennis Glaze, Amy Contest will be held at 8 p m
Bench. WP-Renko (4-2). LP-· Hamm , Gre~ Hayes, Jul ·a
· ·
1
Grimsley 10·1) . HRs- Bateman Hutchison, De ble Jewett, Jan Tu esday when th e Tops Club
Kennedy, Kathy King, Debbie meets at the Meigs County
(2nd). Perez (5th).
Maples,
Sheila McKnight, Edith Infirmary.
American League
ees,.
Phill
ip Moon, Paula
M
Cleve at N. Y. 2, ppd, rain
M
oms,
Linda
Rupe. Dorothy
Ball al Boston, ppd, rain
Seth, Brenda Taylor,
Debbie
Triple
it,
Scott
VanVranken
,
llsl game)
Oakland
100 100 2oo- 4 8 2 Paiti Well. Sharon Wilson ,
Kan City
010 001 000-- 2 6 2 Diana
Young. Mindy Young.
lr~,
.L u.
Dobson, Locker (7), and THIRD YEAR - Irene
Dunegan; Drago, Rooker 13) Barnes, Bob Blackston, JoE lien
York (8) and May. WP- Dobso~ DiehL Debbie Garnes, Pat 11'"/.
12-0) LP·Rooker 10-S). HRs.
Hopkins (2nd) , Otis (6th) ,
Ha wley, Debbie Oh llng Mllw
110 030 too- 6 12 1 er, Marcy Owens, Ric - Almost nine years to the day
Cal iforni a 020 000 000-- 2 6 0 ky Pier ce, Be cky Scaggs, after his first tournament_ in
lockwood. Sanders 181 and Jill Harris, Pal Harris, ~red which he lost his first match_
RodriguezI Allen, Reynolds (4). ~ann~~;,. s~:me ~i: ti.~f:: John Tanneblll, 19, Middleport,
Laroche (71. Maloney (8) and
Stephenson . WP-Lockwood (3· Neut zling , Marla Neutzllng, wo~ the !Jieh's singles trophy
3) . LP-AIIen 10-1) . HRs-Rodr i- Ann Ohlinger, Karen Price, and cash'Sunday in fhe Midwest
guez (lsi) , Kubiak (1st) .
Connie
Radford,
Rayburn,
Rosemary
Rice, Fred
Marge
Riggs, Regional table tennis tour'
Chicago . 010 001 000-- 2 6 J Mlllsa Rizer, Nathan Roblnetle nament at Beatty Recreation
Mlnn
000 003 12x- 6 9 0 Susie Rusche!. leanne Sebo: Center In Columbus.
Bradley, Romo (6). Forster Caralynn Tracv. Maralynn
At'lbe age of 11 TaMellilllost
(6), Kealey (7), Eddy 181, Tracy,
Be&lt;:ky·
Wright,
Cathy
to DaMY Ybema, then 10, of
Horlen (8), and Herrmann ; Yales.
FOURTH YEAR - Brenda G d Rapids Mlc'"n 10
· the
Hamm. Corbin (71 and Miller·
ran tournament.
'
•.,.an
Sunday_ he
weld. WP-Hamm (1 .0). LP· Ed war ds, Jenn ifer Goble, same
Bradley (H) . HR-Cardenas worlhy,
Eddie Brown,
Twlla Frank
Claf. defeated Tim O'yrosky of
Gary Ellis,
(:lrdl :
I
Girol.iml , Debbie Harbrecht, Dayton 21-16, 21-19, 19-21, 21-i7
~! 1~ : Ber~le Hennessy, Becky in finals of the men's singles
H:,~~:~~~;!~r , Debbie
Laney, event, and wltl)' Bert Jacob! of
and Free/ten, til
Stella Neutzllng,
(4), Rlddlt·
Glenna Sprague, Cincinnati, also won men's
Taul~, Nancy Thomp. d bl
1 1"-~-~l!fel!~llrg)~~
-:
0·
i ..:U!!rl~~~;i~L~2~~~~:Triplett,
Webersherr·Je
and .u:aMehill Ia ~
at

Jllidwest ,.,;*le

~~~~s~,~o;~~~.;F~r~~;.~g~:: won at

~

Bea

tty

BY MRS. PEARL MORA
Chester Garden Club
All trees are interesting and beautiful. Whether they are
evergreen, delighting us with fresh green branches during the
donated by Mrs. G. B. Stout was
bleak days of winter or the hardwoods, in the fresh green of early
Officers were elected at tbe regional meeting held at Welcomed into membership awarded to Mrs. Minor and
spring, or in the flaming colors of autwnn, trees are a joy to recent meeting of the Star Rutland and that contributions of the club were Mrs. Henry
behold. Even the' stark, bare branches of winter delight the eye. Garden Club at the home of were made to the·~Je table by Turner. The' regional Lour to be Miss Henson won the door prize .
held Thursday at Old Man's Members responded to roll call
the club.
And what is more appealing than the fruit trees, a bower of MI'S. Seth Nicholson.
Mrs. Gerald Minor and Mrs. Cave was announced. Members with a comment on new flowers
Elected were Mrs. James
blossoms each spring ?
are to meet at the sheloor bouse ln their gardens.
Perhaps we think of trees in terms of shade or shelter' or of Nicholson,_ president; Miss Neal Jeffers noted that they had
with a sack .lunch. A donation Mrs. Will have an article on
the•fruils and other products. In literature they are often used . Hazel Henson, first vice planted a flowering crab, white
clematis and a lilac at Forest was made to the cancer fund . how to tell what ails sick
' f ·'
'
president;
Mi«s
Ruby
Diehl,
symbolically.
We
associate
the
oak
with
strength,
the
pine
with
,.I
Arrangements using net, houseplants . An auc.tion of
second vice president; and Mrs. Acres Park as a civic project.
dignity, and the p8lm tree illustrates a godly person.
ribbon and flowers were plantS;bulbs and seeds was held
In each tree we see, there lies a message, a parable, if we P. H. Nelson, secretary- Mrs. Norman Will and Miss exhlbiood by Mrs. Minor, Mrs. at the conclusion of the meeting .
Connie Gilland, Angelia Sayre, Becky Gilmore, Kay Hoffman and Fue
Diehl
have
provided
SENIORS HONORED - Presentation of pina to the 14 Wahama High
have eyes to see. Agnarled oak stands on the rocky New England treasurer.
The.June meeting will be at the
McDaniel. Standing, Band Director Gerald Simmons, Gary Tedesco, G~ry
It was reported that seven arrangements for their chur- James Nicholson and Mrs. C. E.
&amp;boot band seniors was among the highlights of the WHS Band Banquet
shore.Itisadwarf,its branches have been twisted, but It clings to
Slout. The travelin~ prize home of Mrs. Neal Jeffers.
ches.
Blackhurst, Brent Clark, David Russell, Jim Ar_!!s, Ralph Sayre and Lee
held Saturday night. They are seated, from left, Cozy Cook, Harriet Layne,
the cliff and wins life's battles by hanging on. It seems to be members had a !tended the
Bonecutf&amp;r.
'
repeating the words of the Master : "In the world ye shall have
tribulations, but be of good cheer, for I have overcome the worl(i."
CAVE TOUR SET
A tall pine becomes uprooted by a storm. Its upturned roots
ARegion 11, Ohio Association
reveal how shallow tbe earth beneath It bad been. In pleasant
of Garden Clubs, garden club
weather that had been sufficient, but when the rains fell and the
tour will be conducted Thursday
students, were presented tokens
MASON - The awaited time Jackie Roush, Carol Circle,
the
eccentric
writer
:
and
winds
blew,
it
fell.
Dig
deep
roots
for
your
lives
or
you
will
find
A
three-act
mystery
comedy,
to Old Man's Cave, Mrs. C. E.
of appreciation.
came and it was a stispenseful Carla Haggerty, Brian Johnson,
that the storms of trouble and hardship and pain uproot you and Washington Never Slept Here Charlie Tabor as N. W. White Stout, regional conservation
Students had their turn,
moment when it was announced Patty Clark, Gary Bwngarner,
by Le Roma Greth, will be from Washington, D. C.
bring you to ruin. So speaks the tall but fallen pine tree.
and wildlife chairman, reports. '
presenting gifts to Phillips and
Taking the role of White's Guy L. Denny, naturalist from
that Kay Hoffman was the Steve Carpenter, Lou Ellen
HAVE YOU EVER walked through a pine forest with the soft presented Wednesday by the
Simmons. Also remembered
Arion Award winner during the Roush.
carpet of needles beneath and the towering trunks lifting their Kyger Creek High School wife is Julie Esheunaur, the Ohio Departrilent of Natural .
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dreama Rankin is cast as Miss Resources, will meet with the
annual Wahama Band Banquet A new type of award was
Gilmbre, who for the past five
branches skyward? Was not the message written all over the speech class.
Saturday evening in the school given to students in the All State
Snider, Carolyn Hughes as a group at 10:30 a.m. at the
years have been responsible for
landscape? "Peace be still ... "
cafeteria.
Band, small emblems shaped
hauling of the band instrwnents
The plot concerns a ghost who television producer, and Bill shelter house. Those attending
Trees are natural landmarks and memorials. Because they
Quickel as the ghost. Minor are to bring a sack lunch.
This is copsidered the top like the state of West Virginia
on the many various Lccasions.
have more than the allotted life span of man,-they carry their is seen only by the curator of the
award, presented to the student inscribed, "West Virginia All
museum, and the complic'ations roles are taken by Kathy Darst,
On behalf of the Band
assodations
through
generation
after
generation.
contributing the most to the State Band." Receiving these
carol McDougle, and Jackie
Boosters, Mrs. James Hart
THERE ARE TREES STILL living that were planted by the enusing from its a clivi ties. Bias as tourists; Jackie CorDUA~AtnON r.':!o.
3/8" VARIABLE
band. Gerald Simmons, were Kay Hoffman, Connie
presented Simmons a gift. In
Taking
the
role
of
the
cur
a
tor
is
SANDER~
SPEED
DRILL
first president of the United Sl;lles. Two pecan trees on the lawn
nelius
and
Debbie
Henson
as
director, made the presen- Gilland, Harriet Layne, Sue
turn , the Harts were also given
near the mansion at Mt. Vernon, grown from nuts given to Larry Tate, with Emily Grose reporters, and Mark Darst,
SURGERY, SCHEDULED
tation.
McDaniel, Becky Gilmore,
as his wife, and Dennis Van
a gift of appreciation for conWashington
by
Thomas
Jefferson
in
1775,
are
said
to
be
the
oldest
George
Curry,
Orland William Fred Smith, Sr., of
David Phillips, student Diana Harris, Anitra Wriston,
C/H
Sickle, Loralee Tucker, and Cremeans, and Jimmy Bias as Rt. I, Middleport, entered
tributions to the band. Mr. Hart
Tttgger locks In a t se lected
Eo')'
c.onvtrllon
from
1lralghl
line
trees
now
standing
on
the
estate.
Washington
and
Jefferson
were
director from Marshall Janet Sayre, Debbie Rickard,
Mary Stwnp as their children. the boyfriends.
spnds from 0 to I000 RPM. C/ H
is Booster president.
to orbital ocllon sondiAQ.
Holzer Hospital today. He will
kindred spiri Ui in their love of trees.
University, assisted Simmons Carolyn Barnett, Angela Sayre,
Jane Darst plays one of the
It
was
announced
that
Albert
The six tall hickory trees flanking the tomb of Andrew
Janette Polcyn is the student undergo surgery Wednesday
2 SPEED
in other presentations:
7- lW CtflCUIAR
Vivian Woodrum, Rickey
daughter's best friends,
Durose,
principal,
has
purJIG
SAW
SAW
Letters for full concert band Connon. Jlmmv Artis, Gary
Jackson and his wife Rachael at the Hermitage near Nashville, Charlotte Queen portrays the director with Teresa Thompson •morning.
chased 100 new chairs for
'
participation, Debbie Fields, Blackhurst, J&lt;lb.n ~trris . and
Tennessee, and the Lincoln Oak at Lincoln's birthplace · at maid, Douglas Johnson and and Julie Eshenaur handling
Wahama's
new
band
room.
II LACK &amp; DECKER
Linda VanMeter, Sharon Debra Gilland.
Hodgenville, Kentucky are two more examples .of trees Joyce Swisher are cast as makeup. Mrs. Harold Sauer is
Funds
for
this
were
realized
C/H
Rottgen, Vivian Woodrum,
Seniors presented plaques for
associated with presidents of our nation.
Drills all ma terials last. Boll ooCEod,
friends; Teresa Thompson as teacher of the class.
from
concessions
sold
at
the
low speed lor meto l1; hlgh for
Be,.el and rip adi'"'""'""·
comfortab le grip. 1/ 7 H.P.
Cheryl Thompson, Sue Fox, the all state band honor were
The lovely Charter Oak, in Hartford, Connecticut, was a
REVIVAL SET
7·1/ 4" blodetncluaed.
wood. filling shoe. 1/7 H.P.
school.
2250
RPM.
•1000
Barbara Clark, Rex Howard, Harriet Layne, four years; Sue
Revival services will be held
famous historical shrine. The Charter of the CoMecticut Colony,
McDaniel, four years; Kay
granted by King Charles II in 1662, was .supposed to have been
7/8 H.P. HEAVY-DUTY
COMPACT
May24-30at8p.m.attheAlfred
--~--Hoffman, three years; Angela
Methodtst Church wtth the Rev.
hidden in the oak by a patriot when King James II commanded its
ROUTER
ARM SAW
Sayre, two years; Becky
surrender In !687. That charter served Connecticut as a con"Retirement: Boon or Bore," cast as Mrs . Averageman ; 'eort Davis, organist of radio
Gilmore, four years; Jimmy
stitution from 1662 to 1816. When the tree blew down in 1856, pieces was the topic used by Mrs. Bernice Bailey, Mrs. Girl and . t~levisi~n pron,tinence,
Artis, one year; Connie Gilland,
AWARD WINNER- Kay Hoffman, a senior, Is shown
of the wood were made into gavels, picture frames and chairs; Roscoe Hollon and Mrs. Fred Friday; Mrs. Mildred Frank, provtdmgmustceachmght. ~he
.,
two years, and Gary
receiving the ,N}on Award from Band Director Gerald
one ,pf the chair~ stands in the senate chamber of the State Rice whep tll!i ;"',Wf'l'll'~ Spciety,,_ Mrs. Loner; .. ancLMrs... :Aiillrla".:~v Randy l-'\Yf'l~ wtll,g1v.e
Blackhurst, three years.
. Siffinions durl~ '.tiul' Wahama High &amp;hool Band Banquet
of Christian ~~ervice me! Karr, Mrs. Elder, A prayer !lrt~f mess'ageU 1tie pilfilic, ts
CapitoL
Special recognition was given
Saturday nigfit. The Arion Award is considered the top
A NUMBER OF INDIAN trails may still be found at various recently at the Chester United entitled "The Older People" in mvtted.
C/ H
to two of the band leaders.
presentation ·of the aMual band banquet.
IIL\CK &amp;OECIU
places in the Mississippi Valley. The trees were bent over when Methodist Church.
unison closed the program.
IILACK&amp; DECKER
MONDAY
Becky
Gilmore ,
head
small saplings to mark the Indian trail, and often have several
The group sang, He Leadeth
CHESTER PTA , 8 p.m. majorette, and Jimmy Artis, 1
Ma kes a\1 cuts w':'lth~e-ooiiiOii
, A&lt;~cvo.:Jie
Perform• all boslc cull In wood-working! 8ev_-l
•7701
upright branches growing from the horizontal trunk. A good Me to 6pen the meeting with Due to vacation Bible school,
Monday, installation of officers. drwn major, were presented Seniors receiving pins in· bus drivers, Russell Capehart, 2)6 E. 2nd
calibra tion . 7/8 H.P. , 7620
and
mitre acalts . 2·7/8" maximum depth cut.
C/lt
Pomeroy
example of an Indian trail tree has been preserved and marked by Mrs. Rice reading scriptw:e the next meetiug of the Society
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 mementos for their con- eluded :
Kay
Hoffman , Woody King and Carson Rousl),
from Psalm 16, and Mrs. Hollon was set for June 10 with Mrs.
the D.A.R. in Evanston, Illinois.
p.m. Monday, Linda Kurtz of l•'outions in these categories: treasurer ;
Cozy
Cook, held in high esteem by the
A tree in Wise County, Virginia was made famous by John presented a poem. For the Betty Roush and Mrs. Mabel
Colwnbus to present slides on
president ; Connie Gilland,
If you're sick
Fox, Jr. in his novel "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine." The . program Mrs. Rice took the role Van Meter to present the
the Wonderful World of Ohio.
Q- How far back does the Harriet Layne, Sue McDaniel,
PARKER '
or
hurt?
Evangeline Oak at St. Martinsville, Louisiana marks the place of a social worker interviewing program. A picnic will he held
Miss Kurtz is ·associated with written h; s t 0 r y of China Becky Gilmore, Angela Sayre,
where the Arcadians, driven from Nova Scotia, landed in 1758. It Mrs . Ruth Erwin as Joe in July. Twenty-four sick calls
Colwnbia Gas.
date?
Jimmy Artis , Brent Clark,
NATIONW IDE insurance does Averageman, Gladys Spencer were reported.
RACINE PTA 7:30 p.m.
A-The Shang Dynasty, Ralphie Sayre, Gary Tedesco,
was Immortalized by Longfellow's famous poem.
with the Hospital Plan that lets
you choose the protection you
Monday, Racine Grade &amp;hool. which reigned from 1500 to David Russell, Gary Blackhurst
The Japanese Cherry trees in Washington, D. C. and the awewant.
New officers installed by Mrs. 1027 B.C., was the first dy- and Lee Bwngarner.
inspiring coastal redwoods and the giant sequoias of the had established themselves in Pennsylvania because of the
Ruby Vaughan,
nasty
in
the
recorded
his• Choose coverage for yourself,
county tory of China.
Students weren't the only
California Sierras are trees of I!PI!Cial interest. Another in- seemingly inexhaustible foresUI of hemlock, whose bark yielded
REG .
spouse, children. '
president, and program by fifth
ones given recognition. Three
2.29
teresting facet of trees is the identification made by the states tannin with which to make leather tough for shoe soles. And so
• Choose an amount to cover
hospital room and board, and
and
sixth grade
band.Pomeroy "-~~w:;*H':'"''':':::::"····
,.,.:;:._.,............,..
with particular trees that were characteristic of the area .
PeMsylvania named the easterri hemlock as her state tree.
SPECIAL
meetings,
•...w. ' : ....... ' · ,.,.,:,.,;,.,,
,,_,:,.,;,:,;:,:,,,:,:,•.•,,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;::::::~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;;;~;:;:;;;:;::~:::::;
other in -hosp ital expenses,
Contains 6 precision ground hl·tpeed
up to uny reasonable amount
MAINE WAS EARLY called tbe Pine Tree State. It could
The tw_o tallest trees in America grow on the Pacific Coasl
.teal blades that fit mo•l jig saws.
, Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
Marks to Shoot at in Meigs
you think you'll need.
have been none other than the eastern white pine, whose clean, and were chosen by California, Coast redwood, giant sequoia and
Call me today for details.
Monday and Tuesday. Work in
straight boles had early been selected by the King's men to serve Oregon, the Douglas fir . Many of these state trees played ImANGELS CAMP, CaiU. (UPI) - A leggy lass named
Master Mason Degree. All
as masts and spars for the British Navy. Some species of portant roles in the building of' America. That this country has
Susie Q ls lite crown princess of frogdom.
Master Masons invited.
Susie Q, raised on a diet of Illes, hamburger and bread
evergreen was also chosen by eighteen other states.
more than a thousand other tree species from which choices
MEIGS CHAPTER Order of
Burns up to 15 hot~ra .
Massachusetts chose the American ehn, recalling the Gothic might have been made indicates the wealth of our forest heritage.
crumbs, leaped a whopping 17 feet 9 %. Inches to capture the
DeMolay Monday 7:30 p.m.
ADDITIONAL OR
arch under which General George Washington reviewed the
Kenlllcky Derby of the frog set Sunday.
Still to be mentioned are those trees for which each of us has a
WffNOUT COUPON
Middleport Mason1·c Temple.
The leap at the annual Calavera!l Coonty Jumping Frog
colonial troops at Cambridge. The white oak (Charter Oak) was particular affection, although they have no connection with
C:OUPON
Inspection to be held. RefreshJubilee
fa
tteued
wiUt
$300 lhe wallet of her owner, Bill Moniz,
Connecticut's
choice.
Some
species
of
oak
was
the
choice
of
six
Presidents or history. They are the trees in our own yards. For us
ments. Paul Darnell Jr
a
Gustine,
Calli.,
dairy
engineer.
they hold, perhaps, tender, personal memories, and they are
Macter Councilor. ' '
.,
other states.
Asweet tooth and pride 'in the special quality of a product for reminders of how close trees are to our lives.
The cootes~ which drew %,000 entries from arouod the
TUESDAY
REG, 1.59
world, was made famous by Mark Twain In his short story
which Vermont has long laid claim made the sugar maple her · These words appear on a sign at the entrance to a public park
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club
"The Celebrated Jwnplng Fr.;g of Calaveras County,"
choice . New York and Wisconsin also chose the sugar maple. The in Portugal:
7p.m. Tuesday home of Car· '
lnclt~d u91ong and 9 short arm
SUPUIOR
wreo.ches, s~zes . ,050 to 3/8".
Meinhart Locu's1 St Porn rte
hard firm, white wood, whose uses range from shoe trees to
"Y~ who would pass by and raise your hand against me,
•
eroy
SALISBURy
p . A. ' 7:3
::~=::::::;::::m:::::=:--::::::::~":::':'llJ:':l'::::~:~:;r.:~m;-:m..--:;;.~::::'»'*=&lt;=::::::::::::&gt;';'l-":::::'
flooring, and also the beauty and brilliance of the autumn foliage harken ere you harm me . I am the heat of your hearth on the cold
307 Spring Ave.
Tuesday night. PTA film "Who
may have been a deciding factor here. West Virginia changed winter night; the friendly shade screening you from the summer
Pomeroy, Ohio
Says We Can't". Installation of
from the burr oak to sugar maple also. The Rhode Island state sun; and my fruiUI are refreshing draughts, quenching your thirst
The man from Nutionwide is ('I n Y""' &lt;ido I
officers and refreshments
tree Is the red maple.
· as you journey on.l am the beam that holds your house, the board
TEACHERS
·
The straight-grained, lightweight, easily cleaved and durable of your table, the bed on which you lie, and the timber that builds
Chester co AN_D helpers_ of
Arrangements to provide using "Just One Person" as. her
eastern red cedar was cut and splil into rails and posts for many your boat. I am the handle of your hoe, the door of your
mmuruty vacatton cookies and Kool-Aidfor the two meditation. Scripture was from
Block jorged heod, hickory
southern pioneer fences. These first three qualities later singled homestead, the wood of your cradle and the shell of your coffin. I
church
school
meet
at
J p.m.
hondla.
Nalmnwalt Mutual Insurance ('o.
T d
Ch
week Bible_yhool beginning Luke 5, and Mrs. Hubbard read
Home Office : Columbus, Ohio
out
the
wood
as
peculiarly
adapted
for
the
wooden
casings
of
2' •4'
am the gift of God and friend of man."
Muethsoday '
ester United June 7 were made at Tuesday a poem "Count Your Gains, Not
M.d OHitl
12'
APE
RULE
pencils,
and
the
spicy
odor
added
to
its
d7sirability.
But
with
these
mght's
meeting
of
the
HearthYour
Losses."
e 1st Church.
.
SALE
STEEL TOOt BOX
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
qualities recognized it was the durablhty of the wood that perroiCE
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Golf and stone Class of the Middleport
The Rev. Charles Simons
Heavy gouge 11111. LJ!t oullole troy.
lEG. 319
mitted
pencil
makers
to
use
fence
rails
that
had
stood
in
place
for
3.99
Cap end con11rucllon. 18" !ong. 9"
tr k t
First Baptist Church at the reviewed a portion of the study
' Church."'
high. 8" deep.
•
ac earn members will be home of Mr. and Mrs. Allen book, "The Emergmg
LIMIU Ptl
a generation or more.
·
.
Reg . 9.49
guests.
CUSTOMU
AT 11115 PlfCE
As a result, many a Tennessee hill farmer paid off the mort- u
·- J
WEDNESDAY
Hughes.
Refreshments were served by
Sr.t.NlEY
gage on his farm with the cedar rails his father had cut. small 110norw
BOSWORTH Council 46 ,
Milton Hood conducted the the hosUI to Mr. and Mrs. Willis
s_tated assembly , Pomeroy meeting during which time Anthony, Mr. and Mrs. Milton
wonder, then, that Tennessee citizens voted to make the eastern
pta
d
f
Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m.
ns were rna e or a poUuck Hood, Mr . and Mrs. Harold
red cedar their state tree. Recently the tulip poplar replaced the
BACKBOARD ROOF.
Wednesday.
dinner in June at the cottage Of Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. 'Smart,
red cedar as Tennessee's state tree.
J'
~+ o •
..,
BRACKET
EGG NEST
'" MOUNTING
THURSDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. John Werner
INDIANA AND KENTUCKY early chose the glossy-leafed
no.ua
lPOLE
·
·
lEG. IUS
AND
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30 Haro·ldH ubba rd gave devottons
Edison Baker and the Rev. Mr.'
giant known variously as yellow-poplar and white wood, for its
Mothers were honored at a
)
soft, even .grained wood, a lumber sought by cabinet makers and recent meeting of Bethel 62,
BUTTER
Thursday night at the Shrine
Simons.
carpenters. The large orange and yellow blossoms are an extra International Order of Job's
KEEPER
bonus.
Daughters at the Pomeroy
Child eon- .
36 r 48 x 1/2" edarlor lr•ated
Long before the movement!or state trees, Ohio was known as Masonic Temple. ·
servation League 7 30 Thurs
'.J'
hardboard. Hordwote i.ncluded.
' :
•
·
·
the Buckeye state, but not all of her present citizens ha~ ever
Twila Clatworthy, honored
day, home of Mrs. Kenneth
Plans for inspection Ill be held drive.
queen, extended a welcome to
ILVINHAYIS BASKETBALL MOUNTING BRACKET
Harris. Devotions, Mrs. Louis Thursday night were made
Theme for the month was
FIAtlll
seenMississippi
it.
·
·
·
th
·
t
1
30
'he
chose
the
southern
magnolia,
whose
lumber
is
e
approxtma
e
Y
mo•
rs
Osborne. Roll can, hair when Harrlsonvllle Chapter, spring and the worthy J}atron,
2-ntllo n, 1511. •1•.1
lEG. ua
even.graned, easily worked, hardwood. But the white blossoms attending with Diana Carsey
lEG. 9.60
coloring. Program by Mrs. Order of the Eastern Star, met Fred George, read a poem.
pipe wlih aluminum finagainst the. shiny green leaves are ~ l~s~lng mem~ry to all who giving a prayer. Several songs
Eugene Gberke, ''Wigs and recently at the temple.
Tulip pln-pns were used. GetIsh. Plostk t opped for
e
enjoyed
life
in
the
South.,
Vtrgwa
and
Mt~url
chose
were
presented
by
the
girls,
and
protection. Hardware
Things".
P
t
t
d
HARRISONVILLE
as rna rons an. past well cards were sent to ·several
hav
th edbud
d Dela
th Leann Sebo read a poem, "A
inch.lded.
O.E.S., patrons were presented and members who are ill, and tbe·
flowering dogwood ; Oklahoma, e r
; an
ware, e Smile Says A Lot."
-lliltooSP.t.lDING
annual inspection, 8 p.m. welcomed to the East for a group honored those with birthFRABill
American
Holly
·
Potted
petunias
were
given
to
Thursday. All members asked welcome. Mrs. Fred George, days . Refreshments were
Tough ny·weove Inner construe·
Fo'r pole or woll m~IIJnl . U·OOlb in·
WYOMING AND KANSAS chose the cottonwood. There was a each mother and Becky
lion.
Offlc!ol
•J:e
ond
wel
ghl
.
cludadl..,r
J.'l.ll emovnl.
to a!lend·
th
tr
tha
wor Y rna on,
nked those served by Mr&amp;. Bernice Nelson,
ck
of
a
wide
cbolct
of
native
trees
in
Kansas.
They
picked
the
H
d
h
lt
d
d
th
1
Ia ttonwood the •- which early settl~rs cut for wood for their ou as e · cone u e
M.EIGS COUNTY Tuber- who participated in the eandy Mrs. Bernice Winn, Mrs. Hazel
co
,
~ ~~
tributes with prayer. Kenneth~
RTA •
culosls and Health Assn . sale . Th e cba pter voted to Thomson, and Mrs. Midge
1232A
homes and rue! for their fires and the one they planted to give Wilcox and Tom Edwards ,
mee ting, 7' 30 p.m. Thursday, con tribute
. to "·
w"' cancer fund Abbott.
solace to their souls.
' council members, were
home of new president, Mrs. r--::--:'!~~~~~~~~111!!!-~---·
Texas cnose the pecan; whose nut crop fattens hogs and helps recognized. Plans were made
The Department Store
.Glenn 0111, Syracuse. Olllcers
fill the candY bars of the nation and whose lumber is increasingly for attending church Sunday .at
FURNITURE
01 Building Since 1915
and board
, members requested
·
1
1
1
i
o
chosen fodurnlture, flooring and a host of ~s for which a hard Heath United Methodist in a
,
. MIDDLEPORT, 0.
to be present.
'; I . ·,
OPTOMETRIST
· .
.
.
,
and resilient wood is needed.
group. A decorated cake in1
HARRISON¥
OFFICE HOURS 9
..
.
HISTORY RECORDS Utal the Southern soldiers were in- ' scribed "we Love You
:30
TO
12,
2
TO
5
(CLOSE
nuericed ln their campaign against Gett~sburg by the hope they Mothers" was served with
~~:~al iiii!PI!Ctlon~ ~p.m. AT NOON ON. THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
t:l&amp;\&amp;&gt;l~?@i~~~@:\1\t:rt&gt;:t~g\\};W}:B't~C.l//l:;~):::i~~r~Y: .:?:~:~::.f::r·~. 't:)·~·:7 .:.;:_::_:::-~;~r··. f~l:1~)F~~~ml1~~F~11?~
--~~.-. .~LI~99~2:·2:6J:s~~~~~n~F~r~i-~&amp;~~~·:·N~·~ht~1·----~~~dd~~~~~rt
~_jl_~--...N.Id.Jtet shO!:S in that area . Few realized that the shoemakers punch.

Waham.a Band Members Honored

17 Give Recital

FOR YOU!

in Wellston, Mrs. Marie Mills,
Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Grace When you open a
Hawley, Mrs. Mary Woods, Savings Account here
Miss Hulda Klein, Miss Harrie with $25.00 ...
Marie Smith, Miss Sandi Yates,
We Will Give You
APlace Se«ing of Dishes ·
Leo Childs, and Mrs. Minerva
Or
Childers.
A
Set
Of 4 Glasses.
Mrs. Erwin was chairman of
a program in tribute to When you open an
mothers. The historical account account with $500 of the beginning of Mother 's
We Will Give You A
Place
Se«lng Of Dishes
4
Day was given by Mrs .
Raymond Stewart and Mrs. and all this lor just lefti"9 us
Clyda Allensworth read about pay you 4'1• per cent on your
the origin of the carnation savings.
legend, a poem on Mother's
Day, and a third grader's essay,
Atfiens Co.
:'What Is A Grandmother ."
Branch
Mrs. Harold Lohse presented
devotions using an article from Meigs County Branch of The
the PTA magazine entitled Athens County Sa&lt;ings &amp;
"Take Time_,,
Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Asalad course was served by
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Mrs. Lohse and Migs Mildred
Hawley with Leota Hawley,
Mrs. Roush , Mrs. Grace
Hawley and Mrs. Franklin
T'ripplett as contributing
hostesses.
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

Ghostlike Comedy

'"" 1999

24~~10

aaa

....

•
B
Rettrement as a oon

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Social
caIen dar

2999

8"

4995

(Upon-Request)

,gg95,

e

ROBINSON'S
C_LEANERS

e

Whotlays

(Hwa.:leijijf~
HEX KEY
WRENCH SET

P. J. PAULEY

T.

99~

992-2318

0

Class to Help Bible School

---

......

~tk:Jifirrfll

(HWI•:IeZ:,
PERFORATED
HARDBOARD

ationwide
.

47~

Mothers

B

!JI

To,b'S JJ"ruahter.·r

P~~o~~~RT

·

Inspection Will Be Held Thursda11

248.8

688

N wCOM

~~o~u;es~.~~~;~tJ~;::~II:.I:.E:Chap
tte:r~, ~,

1

Pomeroy Cement Block ~

' Q .D

BAKER

INGELS FURNITURE .

.

'

'

�BARNEY

'

PAW !! 'IONDER

.. :. : ;~ ~: . :..

Bargains, Bargains,
LEGAL NOTICE
2 SIGNS
Po11.eroy
OF
QUALITY

NOTICE OF SALE
OF BONDS

Sealecl bids tor the purchase
ot 575,000 bonds of the Village of
Pomeroy (herein referred to as
the Issuer) in the Coun ty of

Meigs , Ohio , will be recei ... ed by
the undersigned off icer at her
office in the VIllage Hall, East
Second Street, Pomeroy , Ohio
&lt;i5769, until 1 00 o ' clock , p m ,
Eastern Standard Time . Ohio
(fast Time) on the 26th day of
May , 1971, at which time the
bids wilt be opened and read
publicly . Bids for the bonds,
which were authorized by
legislation passed Apr . 23, 1971 ,
shall be sealed and endorsed
" Bid for Sewer Improvement
Bonds," and each btd shall be
made only for all or none of such
bonds
It Is contemplated the!

"-tQr Co.

112 Ton 8' Pi ckup. good tires,

v.a engine,

custom cab,

radio.

$595

1965 CHEVROLET

Ton 8' Pickup, V 8 eng me. Deluxe cab. Runs out real
good.
~

112

.1963 CHEVROLET
$695
2 Ton Cab-Chassis, extra good 825·tires, 292 cu. ln., 6 ,.¥1.
engine, solid cab, 102" cab to axle.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Instruction

Help Wanted

Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

The bids will promplly be

bidder .

In the event that , prior to
their delivery , the interest on
the bonds should by act of
Congress or olherwlse become
subject to Federal income
taxes , or any act of Congress
should provide that the interesl
Income on the bonds shell be
taxable at a future date tor
Fede ral income lax purposes,
whether directly or directly, the
successful bidder mav refuse to
accept del i\lery and in such

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
F·479·ll01

Sealed proposals wilt be
rece\veli at' tb• ~tflce of the
State Hlghwlly"l51ftCtor of Ohio,
Columbus, Ohio, until 10 .00
A.M , Eastern Daylight Saving
Time, Tuesday , June 8, 197 1, for
Improvements In :
Meigs County, Oh to, on
Section MEG .J.6.15, State Route
No . 7 In Salisbury Townsh ip, by
grading, drain ing and paving
with plain Portland cement
concrete on a cement stabilized
base, and b)' constructing :

Bridge No. MEG .7.0713 Lett and

Right , dual concrete decks on
continuous steel beams with
concrete substructures (each :
spans 6~ feet - 82 feet - 82 feet
- 6~ feet , roadway 40 feet
between deflector parap ets ),
over State Route 124 ; Br idge
No . MEG -7-0762 left and Right,
dual concrete decks on con·
tlnuous steel beams with con .
crete sub!tructures (each .
spans 36 teet - 45 teet J6feet, roadway 40 teet between
deflector parapets). over
County Road 77 ; ond Bridge No.

MEG .JJ.0955 Left and Right,

dual concrete docks on con tinuous steel beams with con .
crete substructures (each :
spans 46 feet - 65 feet - 65 feet
- 46 feet , roadway 40 feet
between deflector parapets ).
over State Route 7
Pavement Width - 2 at 2.4
feet .

Project Length feel or 2.714 m lies.

14,650.52

Work Length - 2J,2A8 .94 feet
or 4 .403 m il es
" Minimum wage rates for
this
project
have
been
predeterm ined as required by
law and are set forth In the bid
event his bid security shall be proposal."
returned . without In terest.
" The date set for completion
The bonds shall be delivered of this work shall be set forth In
for pavment wllhln the State of the bidding proposal."
Ohio to the successful bidder or
Elich bidder shall be required

to a bank designated by the
successful bidder without to tile with his bid a cert ified

charge , If delivered at a place
outside the State of Ohio, the
successful b idder shall pay the
expense of del1very a! that
place. The expense ,of deliver:y
with In th e Sta te of Ohio sh~tll not
be considered In determ lnlng

the highest bidder

Before making tend er of the
bonds at the pla ce of delivery ,
the Issuer shalt give written
notice to the successful bidder
not tater than the fifth business
day before the proposed tender ,
of the fact that the bonds,
transcript , no-litigation cer tificate and approv ing opin ion
will be available for delivery
and giving the date and hour tor
the tender at the place ot
delivery, provided , however,
that nothmg herein con tain ed
shall preven t the making of a
mutually
agreeable
arrangement tor I he delivery of
the bonds eltber at the pl~ce
fixed tor delivery or elsewhere.
If such notice has not been
given by the Issuer or waived by,
the auccessful bidder and the
bonds, transcript, no-litigation
certificate and approving
opinion are not available torn .
delivery to the successful
bidder at such place of del ivery
on or before 12 :00 o'clock noon
of the 30th calendar dav after

the doy fixed for the receipt of

1

•

bids. and the successful bidder
shall not be In default Of any of
his obligations, he shall have
the rlgl'lt thereafter , and so long
as no such tend.er bv the Jssuer
shall vet have been made, to
cancel the contr1ct of purchase .
Any such right shall be exer .
clstd by delivering written
notice of such uncellation to
the undersigned or to the office
of the uncterslgned during
business hours. Such bidder

oholl thtreupqn bt entitled to
tht return of the depolit which

occomRl!1_i!d his bid ond It shall

be

returned

mediately

to

him

.

lm ·

The rlgh't I&amp; resehed to reject

bidS .

VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO
.
Jane watton, Clerk

!AI 26 !51 J,

check for an amount equal to

fi•• permore
cent than
of hi ten
bid, thousand
but in ~0
event
I

dollars. or e~ bond for ten per

cent of his bid, payable to the
Director.

Bidders must apply, on the
proper forms , for qualification

at least ten days prior to the

date set tor open ing bids in
accordance with Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and specifications are
on file In the Department of
Highways and the Office of the
Division Deputy Director .
The Director reserves the
r ig ht to reject any and all bids.

'

J PHILLIP RICHLEY
DIRECTOR
15117,24, 2tc

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Proba1e Court .
To the Executor of the estate ;
to such of the following as are
residents of the State of Ohio,
vis : - the surviving spouse, the
next of kin , the benef iciaries
under the will ; and to the at .
tornev
or
attorneys
representing any ot the
aforementioned persons :
Willia m
A.
Carman ,
Deceased , No . 20460, Pomeroy
Ohio, R. D. Salisbury Township .
You are hereby notified that
lnventorv
and
Ap .
the
pralsement of the estate of t.he
aforementioned, deceased , late
of sale County, was flied in this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hearing before this Court on the
Jrd day of June, 1971, at 10:00
o'c lock A.M .
Any person desiring to tile
exceptions thertto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Giv~n under my hand and
seal of said Court, this 14th day

of May 1971 .

F. H. O'Brien
Judge and ex ·Officio
Clerk of said Court
By Ann 8 . Watson
Clerk

Ill 17. 2~. 2tc

AN YON E

knowing

whereabouts

of

the

a

male

Siamese cat, please call
Middlepor1 992·3832. Pef of
shut-in. Please. Reward .

$745

bond Issuing authoritv will meet
at ao'c lock p.m .• on the 26th day
of May, 1971, to consider the
· bids and make an award.
OPE~ EvES. 8:00 P.M.
The bonds will be dated the
first day of June, 1971, will be in
POMEROY, OHIO
th~ den om ina tlon of $5,000 each,
shall draw interest payable
semi-annually on the first days
of March and September of
WANT AD
et~ch year, beginning March 1,
INFORMATION
1972 at the rate of five and oneDEADLINES
half per centum (51J2 per cent)
INSTRUCTIONAL
per annum. Anyone ,desiring to DRIVERS NEEDED. We train
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
do so may present a bid tor said
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
you to be a semi driver, local .
bond, based upon their bearing
Cancellation
&amp; Corrections
clfy, and dock training now
a different single rate of in Will
be
accepted
untll9 a .m. for
available. Earn high wages
terest, but not In excess of 8 per
Day
of
Publication
after
short
trainlng
.
For
cent, prov ided that where a
REGULATIONS
fractional Interest rate Is bid,
application and Interview call
The
Publ
isher reserves the
such fraction shall be one513·863·6404, or write Sheridan
right
to
edit
or reject any· ads
eighth of one per cent or a
Truck Lines. 1255 Corwin
multiple thereof. Split rate bids
deemed objectional. The
Avenue
.
Hamilton,
Ohio
with supplemental coupons will
publisher will not be responsible
45015.
not be considered .
for
more than one Incorrect
5·17-21c
The bonds matur e as follows :
insertion
.
$5,000 on September\1 in each of
RATES
the years from 197'Q. to 1986,
For Want Ad Service
Inclusive .
INSTRUCTIONAL
scents per Word one insertion
The bonds are Issued tor the LOCAL MEN . Train now to
purpose of paying part ot the
Minimum Charge 75c
drive semi tractor trailers.
cost of Improving the mun icipa l
12 cents per word three
You
~an
earn
high
wages
sewerage system by con after short training. For consecutive insertions.
structing a sewerage treatment
18 cents per word six conapplication and Interview ,
plant, sanitary sewers , In
secutive
Insertions.
terceptlng sewers and pump ing
call 512·244·3071, or wrlle
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
stations, together with all
School Safely Division, Adads paid within 10 days.
necessary appurtenan ces
vance Systems, Inc.. 1100 ads and
CARD
OF THANKS
thereto .
Enoch Drive, Middletown ,
The bonds ere payable ,
&amp;OBITUARY
Ohio 45042.
without deduction for the ser $1.50 for SO word minimum .
5-17-2fc
vices of the Issuer's pay ing
Each
additional word 2c .
agent, at The Pomeroy National
BLIND ADS
Bank, Pomeroy, Ohio, and are
Additional 25c Charge per
supported by lim ited texes .
Advertisement.
Tl'le proceedings for this lsso.~e
OFFICE HOURS
have been taken under the EARN AT home addressing
supervision of Squire, Senders
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
envelopes. Rush stamped
&amp; Dempsey, Bond Attornt:ts,
self·addressed envelope to the 8· 30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
Cleveland, Ohio whose ap .
Ambrose Company, 4325 Saturday.
proving opinion will be fur .
Lakeborn , Davisburg,
nlshed to the successful bidder
Michigan,
48019.
at the bidder's upense and will
4·30·30fp
be printed on the bonds as part
of the cost of bond pr inting . The
HOME sewing. Ph'one 992·5327.
cost of printing of the bonds
5·9·301p
shall be paid for by the Issuer . A
complete
transcript
of
KOSCOT Kosmellcs, wigs and
proceedings will be furnished
by the Issuer, together with e
accessories. May and June
certificate showing no litigation
special. Kleansing Kream,
NOTICE TO
pending or threatened at the
CONTRACTORS
$2.25. Distributors, Brown's.
time of the delivery to enjoin
STATE OF OHIO
Phone 992·5113.
delivery or to contest the
DEPARTMENT OF
4-23-tfc
validity ot the bonds or the
ltiGHWAYS
-~----:­
power to Issue them or the levy
Columbus. Ohio, May 7, 1971
'SAVE UP to one half. Bring
or collection of taxes tor their
con1r1ct Sates Legal
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
pavment.
Copy No. 7f .J03
considered, and the bonds will
be sold to the highest bidder
offering the·40Wf&amp;l interest rete
at not·l.ess than ·par end accrued
Interest . The lowest Interest
rate w ill be determ !ned by
calculating the total Interest to
stated maturity at the rate bid
end deducting therefrom any
premium bid . If each of two or
more bids Is the highest bid
offering the lowest Interest rate,
· the bonds will be awarded on
such one of the highest bids as Is
chosen by lot All bids must be
accompanied by cash, bank
cashier's or official 's check or
certified check payable to the
Issuer, or any combination
thereof , aggregating one per
cent of the per amount of the
bonds , upon the condition that,
If the bid Is accepted. the bidder
will receive and pay for the
bonds In accordance with the
terms and provisions of this
notice . No bank bidding for the
bonds shall file Its own cashier's
or official's check, and a check
certified by 11. Such security
shall be held by the Issuer
unused pending del ivery ot the
bonds and forfeited as full
liquidated damages In the event
of default by the successful

For Sale

Lost

5.f1 .6fc

1964 FORD

th~

COMES 0~ DOC
PRITCHART

NEW 1971

zig -zag

sewing

machine In original factory

FREE STORAGE

carton. Zig .zag to make

For Your Garments

buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
desiqns with lust the twist of a

Wanted To Buy
TELEPHONES, brass beds,
clocks, dishes , old furnitur e,

etc. Wrlfe M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 991·6271 .
4·27·tfC

, - - - , - - - --

single dial. Left in lay-away
and never been used. Wll I sell
for only S47 cash, or credit

terms available. Phone 992·
5641 .
• 5·1f.6tc

ANTIQUES :
Di s hes , ELECTROLUX vacuum
telephones. lin, brass beds.
cleaner complete with atlamps, etc . Lee Rudisill,
tachmenls, cordwi nder and
Phone 992-3403.
paint spray. Used but in like
4-23-30fp
new condition . Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan available.
Phone 992.5641.
For Rent
5-11 -6tc
10 X 50, TWO-BEDROOM
housetrailer. Phone 992·3954. PLANTS FOR SALE . Home
5-16-6fc
grown improved Mexican
UNFURNISHED o - room
apartment. Phone 992·2288.
1-31 -ffc

non -acid. Also, Heinz 1350,
Yellow Golden Jubilee and
Large Supersonic. They are
sturdy, well rooted plants.
Also, hot peppers, mangos
and cabbage plants. On Rt.
124 in Syracuse, Ohio, 500 feet

MODEL

trailer,

v,.. mile

2·bedroom
west

of

Darwin on Rt. ·681, with or
without utilities paid. Phone
992-6628.
S.I6·61C

tipout
extension.
One
bedroom, air conditioner.

Phone 992·6452.

s.16-flc

2 BEDROOM trailer . Utilities
paid . Phone 992-7384 or 992·
7133.
5·16-3tc
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
o;,.mlle north of new Meigs
High School. Phone .992·2941.
3-5·tfc

TRAILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
Courl, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Ohio. 992·2951 .
4-2-flc
2· BEDROOM

trailer ,

36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
i!CHAMPION
.. VAN DYKE

changer , separate controls .

Balance $88.42. Use our
budget term s Ca ll 992-7085.
5-13-6tc
BEAUTIFUL se lect ion of
flowers, baskets, wreaths,
and sprays for Memorial Day .

POMEROY

Inspection and
Re-Charge

6.98 ~~ur~s
Blaettnar's

742-4902

MILLER

Clelaod Realty

------

- -----

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

. 21r
The
Daily·.Sentinel

f·/1

VA COM&amp; IN HEJ2&amp;,

HAVE ')bU L05r \O:.IR.

EA'T MY CA'TSUP ON
MY C:fVICI(&amp;ftS, AN'

MIND, WINNIE?
THAT~

A ~LANK

From the L.argMt Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~·If est Heater Core.

Ph. 991-2143

Pomeroy,

NI!!WR. ~D
A DIME I

PAD!

~7He

KYVCHI!7TA
9TME~
W!NN~

SMAO&lt; IN

TilE FACE.

cemetery
Flowers
&amp;
Wreaths
Also Arrangements made to
your specification.

VILLAGE

HUH? SOUNDS
UKE AX&gt;ISI tiPS!

THE SHOP

FLOWER SHOP
Open 9 Til 5

You

Cilsllom meet cutting
Pleasant Ridge Aoad
Pomeroy,O,
Dick Vaughan ·

Thurs.. Fri. . Sat.
Or Phone 949·2123

RACINE, 0:

never

faint-

in m'

arms
b'fo',

992·3374

SEWING MACHINES . Repair
service,
oil Shop,
makes.Pomeroy.
992·2284
The Fabric
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Shar:pen Scissors.

3·19·1fc
BULLDOZER work. Basement.
ponds. la ndscaping. We do all
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
dirl and top soil. See or call
Bob Jeffers afler 7 p. m.
Phone 992-3525.
4·23·30fc
EXPERIENCED

painter,

exterior and Interior. Donald

Van Meter. 985·3951.
5·11·12tp

guaranteed.

Reasonable

rafes . Phone 992·3213.
4-22-JOic
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446·4782
Gallipolis. John Russell ,
ONner &amp; Operator .

5·13·flc
- -- -- - -

i'liGS

Dale little

~====9=92=·=6=34::6===~

.E:Ival

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

THE BORN WSER

Limestone Driveways

Septic Tanks and Leach
Beds

•.
,
.•

FrH Estimates

CALL GEORGE 985-3837
OR DON 992-6883

O'DELL WHEEL alignment ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
located at Crossr&lt;&gt;ads, Rt. •124.
Complete front end service, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
tune up and brake service .
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Wh eels balanced elec·
662·3035.
tronlcaily .
All
work
2·12-tlc

MOBILE HOMES

Livestock For

.,.,..............,........., ,,
,,. ~

, BLAETTNARS

Artificial Flowers
Single Flowers
Arrangements

742-4902

12' · 14' · 24' ·

EXPERIJN(ID
Radiator Service

~ETCH

PHONE 992-214J

SR.

------

DEXTER, O. 45716
PHONE 742·3945

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

s::cial

..
Virifl B.
TEAFORD

e

NEW &amp; OL-D WORK

Backhoe And
Endloader Work

Kitchens. Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

•

5'-17

lnsured-E xperienced
work Gu•ranteed

JOHNSON MASONRY

Complete
Remodeling

J

FAAK!NtJ ~1Mf1"

ON TillS SI.OCK 4

construction Co.

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

JOHNSON MASONRY

J. W. C.roey, Mgr

... WHiN TII&amp;RE'S A

HA~F·~R.

TORTURE HIS "METHOD" OUTA
HIM, AN'-PANT!-'Vfl..Ool-!!- GIT DATES
AT LAST. WIF AL~ THESE GALS
WHAT'S REFOOZED US!!

All weather Rooting &amp;

Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport.
4·21 ·flc

At Landmark, Everyone
· Can I
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As
63.95
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As
211 .95
ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As
134.95

HOW CAN ~OV ~~~~V
EXPECT US TO TAKE. A
TWO• HOUR f.XAM ..•

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

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

Phone 992·6329.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave .• _ _ _ _ _ ___5_.
f4.3tc loiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio-Ph•on•e'!'m..,-~;;.''.1..,1
Pomeroy.
Rea I Estate For Sale
4-23·tfc
PLANTS
NOW
ready
:
Single
-....;,...-'---or·Sa I
and double petunias, pansies.
WILL PICK up merchandise ,.
coleus, Mexica n tomatoes and
and take to auct ion on a 3 BEDROOM frailer, phone
Mason 773-5688 after 4 p.m . other var i eties, peppers ,
percentage basis. Call Jim
5·16·31p ca bbage , 1!:2 or 1 dozen packs.
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland .
Don Hubbard, Syr acuse,
Phone 7~2-4461.
Ohio
Phone 992·5776.
9·23·tfC NICE ROUND tub Maytag
4-22-24fc
wringer washer for SJS .
Phone 992-5960.
REDUCE sate and fast with
Broker
5-14-3tp COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Gobese tablets and E- Vap
110 Mechanic St.
---,-Salt
Work5.
E.
Main
St
.•
water pills. Nelson D.rugs.
Pome•oy, Ohio
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
4·14·60fp JEAN 'S · VARIETY Slore
located between Cheshire and
4.9-tfc
2 COUNTRY HOMES - one 4
Middleport.
Clothing,
shoes.
years old. 5 rooms, bath, gas
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
groceries, priced to fit your
Chester, Ohio, has flowers for
furnace , garage, 2 bedroom s
budget. Blouses and skirts,
Memorial Day, 88c and up.
with closets $6,500. Second
SOc, dresses and shoes SOc,
Also nice baskets.
house,
6 rooms, bath, gas
toasters and Irons. $1.25.
heat, drilled well , large acre.
5-12-121c
5·14-3tp
$4,500.
-----,--YARD SALE, 12 Park St., 1964 JOHN Deere dozer, winch
50 ACRE PLUS - of hill land.
Mlddleporl. Friday and
and blade, 1964 Chevrolet live
good 4 bedroom hom e,
Salurday, May 20 and 21.
tandem. Phone Chesler 985modern bath and k1tchen, gas
5·16·6tc
WIDE
4132.
forced air furnace, small barn
5·1Hfp
and
outcellar. Only $10,000.
BEACON SERVICE Station,
TODAY.
Nye Ave .• Pomeroy, Ohio will 1967 HONDA 160 Scrambler.
Phone 992·6021.
close May 17 tor remodeling
POMEROY - Charming little 2
5·14·3fc
and re-open May 21 under new
bedroom well cared for home.
management. All old and new c" :E:-:c
1220 Washington Blvd.
M
c::
E
c::
T
c::
E
c::
R
c::
Y
-:-c::
,
o
c
::
t
s
a
c::
t:
Bu
r
·
Nice bath. gas for ced air
customers will be ap .
Belpre, Ohio
furnace , basement with
$25
each
.
Phon~
!Ingham.
preclated.
shower, washer, and dryer
Guy l.ee at 992·6349 or
5· 14·31p
hook ups. Attached garage.
William Hart at 992·6848.
Only
$8,900.
Sale
5-14-3fc
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
service; $50 registered
POLLED Hereford cattle, 25
INVEST NOW AND
mares, any breed ; $40 grade 1950 CHEVROLET, $50. Home
cows to freshen, 6 cows with
SAVE AT992·3l25
mares . Francis Benedum .
built tractor, $35. Ray Young,
calves , lS yearlings 112 and 3/-4
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Phone Coolville 667·3856.
Success Road , Reedsville ,
sisters. One herd bull . Two 2·
ASSOCIATE
5-16·30tp
phone 667·3462.
year old bulls. Cali Byron
5·14·llc
5·16.3tc
Miller. phone 614-992-663'1 or
REGISTERED Tennessee
614-985·3341. Royal Oak FIVE ROOM house , two
Farm. Pomeroy, Ohio.
walker
stud
service. FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
bedrooms. bath, basemenl,
- won't rust, rot, or leak. Cali
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone
5·14-ltc
wall
to wall carpet in living '
992-6256 after 5 p.m. Also,
742·5862.
room,
bedrooms, and bath.
4·20·30fc fiberglass 15 foot canoes.
SIX GRADE Angus heifers, 350
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...::.::
Gas
forced
air furnace .
5·16-30fc
to 500 pounds. Thomas Sayre,
Middleport,
phone
992-3420.
ov· EN FRESH bakery ~ro ·
Ohio.
Phone
843·
Porlland,
4·25-ffc
2436.
ducts. Jimmy's Pastry S op, 1.72-ACRE lot, $1.500. S-track
CK
tape
player
and
six
tapes,
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport .
5-16·3tc
S50. Phone 742·3656.
Phone 992·3555.
5· 16·2tp
4·29·30!c
'
Pets For Sale
• 1970 HONDA 350. candy red.
POMEROY - Wright Street Good
condition
.
Owner
has
Female Help Wanted
NICE 1 story frame, 2
gone In service. Phone New REGISTERED one·year old
WE NEED a woman who Is
bath ,
full
bedrooms,
male
beagle.
Fully
trained.
Haven 882·2529.
home most of the time to do
basement with garage, wall to
Phone
;992·3589.
5· 16·3fp
work In her home. Prefer
wall carpet , afr conditioner,
5· 16·3fc
someone with phone. Write
range and refrigerator,
Mrs. Johnson. 1860 Lock· PLASTIC flowers tor Memorial
recently remodeled $10,900.
REGISTERED
beagle
pups,
bourne Rd., Columbus, Ohio
Day .
Mabel
Pickens,
black and tan with little
43207.
Syracuse. Ohio. Phone 992·
1
12·weeks old: S25 for TUPPERS PLAINS white,
7203.
5·14·31c
LEVEL
ACRE,
2
story
frame,
male, $30 female. County
.
5·16.6tp
balh, 4 bedrooms, garage. IN
Road 9, one mile east Dexter.
GOOD CONDITION, A NICE
Help Wanted
Clair F. Shenefield. Rt. 1.
EVERY MAKE electric carpet
PLACE TO LIVE. $9,308.
Langsv ille, Ohio.
EXPERIENCED man to work
shampooer does a better job
5.14.31p
on dairy. House furnished .
with famous Blue Lustre. - - - - - - LOCAL
DRIVE - IN
Arvll Holter, Bashan. Phone
Baker Furniture, Middleport .
RESTAURANT good
949·3833.
5· 12.6tc
locallon, In small community
Auto Sales
S.12-6tp
and on a state route, IN·
CLUDES BUILDING AND
BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2·dr .
ALL
EQUIPMENT, PRICE
Myron Bailey, Phone 992.5327.
hardtop , power steering,
QUOTED
TO INTERESTED
S·4·3Q
power brakes. air. ·18,000
PARTIES
ONLY. Has a nice
miles. Excellent condition.
business,
SHOWN BY AP·
. SiX ROOM house, bath, full
Phone 992-2288.
POINTMENT.
basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
11 ·10·11C
, . 36" X23" X.009
just walking distance from
WHY OVERBUY? DON'T
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
RUIN YOUR CREDIT. We
Ed Hedrick. 2137 Wadsworth
Real
Estate
For
Sale
have
all priced prop&lt;!rtles.
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
ALL
TYPES
FINANCING
237·4334, Columbus.
AVAILABLE.
5·9·1fc 3 BEDROOM brick house.
HENRY CLELAND
corn·er lot. Good iocallon In
USED OFFSET PLATES
Middleport. Phone 992.3892.
REALTOR
HAVE
Office 992·2259
ELLEN'S Gilt Shop, Rtedsvllle.
5·12-6tc
MANY USES
Residence 992·2561
Ohio, Memorial Day wreaft1s,
5· 16·6tc
sprays,
baskets.
Ar· HOUSE, story and half, 6
rangements. 69c and up.
rooms. bath, Rutland. Phone
4·211-JOtc
742·5613.
'HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln ' Hts . .'
lfor 11.00
5·12·tfC
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293 .
TOMATO PLANTS, Valiant,
10-25-tlc
Jung's Earllnt, Marglobe, 2 BEDROOM house. excellent .~-'---~-~.
. Oxharl, Stump of ,the World,
condition . Phone 992·2619. •
Rutgers, Lincoln, Dol's
5·12·6fp HOUSE of Mrs. A. H. Bailey In
Bashan . If Interested, contact
, Excel. Yellow Coloual. ' - - - - - - , . - - by letter al this address: /Ws.
Burpee's, Delicious . and
A. H. Bailey, 54S5 Urbane St.,
JubiiH. Sturdy transplants. 6 ROOMS, bath, 2 lots, .garden.
fruit tren. Phohe 992·3394,
111 Court 51.
No., St. Petersburg. Florida
Doltn for SOc. B. ~IHn ·
Pomeroy, Olllo
33714. •
..
berry, Syracust, Ohio.
· MOnkey Run.
.
5·14-ltc
5-2·301C
' 5·2-12tp

'IIi

... ALSO
DQUBLE - WIDES

!lEE TOM CROW, GUY StruLER OR BOB CROW

Air Conditioning

air

co nditioning. Racine area.

MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.

payment plan. Call 992-7085
5-13-6fc

1

Evenings Caii992-25J4, Dale Dutton

Mason, W. Va.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE

}

• (

'- .... j

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

ABC CLEANERS

Have Your Seasonal

----FURNISHED and unfurnished

apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992.5434.
10-18-tfc

Please! No · Free Storing on

•.j!WINSOR
«BUDDY

f

..

bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner
F H AWe Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A.. . . ·•
And Conventional Loans.
.
Come See Us At 97'12 N. Second St., M;ddlepor1.
PH. 992-7129

Bulk Cleaning.

Walnut stereo-radio com
binat ion, 4 speakers, 4 speed
changer, separate controls .
Balance $61.14 . Use our time

COLONIAL MAPLE stereoradio combtnation, AM-FM
NICE 8X35 TRAILER with
radio, four speakers. 4 speed

You will ha ve something of value to show tor th~ $$$ y,ou

spend when you buy your home - P1us' you gam an n-t
come Tax benefit, you build an equity and you are no

get them back.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY
SERVICE
CALL 77J.SS43.

Drive

BILL
COL LECTIN'

'

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS!.! *

and pressing. Pay when you

773.5543

.

WHAT'S HE 001(1)'
OUT IN THIS NECK
OF TH' WOODS?

What Do You Have For Tile$$$ You .Pay In Rent?

All you pav for is cleaning

tomato plants, large smooth,

FURNISHED apartment, 5
rooms. bath, one child ac.
cepted. no drunks. Also, 2·
bedroom mobile home, one
above the park . Th omas
child accepted, No drunks. M
Hayman .
and G Food Market, 3 miles
5·2·301c
south of Middleport on State
Rt. 7.
5.f6.3tc WALNUT STEREO. Modern
LATE

Business Services

8X48 NATIONAL housetraller,
2-bedroom. wail to wall
carpeling . Call ,992-5756.
5-12-6tp

EEKM:OMEEK

I

1

'M'I'STERI008
'li'ID:

I'

llR. IlO·HO.
fRIEHD OF
PFF!CTOR

•i
•

~-----,,--

c. BRADFORD, Auctiooeer

.-

Complete Service
Phone 949.3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford

DAILY CROSSWORD
8. Rich mining 24. Niger·
1. Vanished
:ftnd
.tan
r;. Damson, e,g. 7,Secondhand
city
9. Embank ..
8.Ch018
26. Perfo·
ment
rate
pieces
11. Big game
10. :Make safe
28. Ooll
12. - - tlu
11. Principal
In·

5·1·tfc
-.::-:
ln-:;
s_,ui,....an-ce---~

BACKHOE AND DOZER work : AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Seplic tanks Installed . George
cancelled?
Lost
your
( Bi II I Pull ins, Phone 992·2478.
operator's license? Call. 992.
2946.
4·25·ffC
6·15-lfc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN.
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
992·2522.
NOTICE OF
6· lO.tfc
APPOINT/&gt;IENT
---------:..:::..::..:
cio,. No.l0491
READY ·MIX
CONCRETE Estate of DON C. GORBY,
'
delivered right to your Deceased .
Notice
is
hereby
given
that
project. Fast and easy. Free
Gorby, of R. D 1,
estimates . Phone 992·3284 . -coosie
Lang511·111e , Ohio, has been duly
G?eglein Ready-Mix Co., appomted Executrix of the
Moddleport, Ohio.
.
Estate of Don C. Gorby ,
6·30·1fc deceased, late of Meigs County ,

Upholstery Cleaning Service.
Free estimates . Phone
Gallipolis 446·0294.
3·12-ffc

-----Real Estate For Sale

forest
U . Qualified

storm doors . City water.

Selling due lo Ill health. Phone
614-985-3938.
4·25·18tp
l

BEDROOM brick home .
Choice location in Middleflbrt.
Seen by appointment only.
Phone. 992-3491 after 4 p. m.
5-7' tfc

------

NEW BRICK home on 'h·acre
lot In Tuppers Plains
Features bullt'· in kitchen:
wall to wall carpet, bath and a
half,. full basement. , Cali
Chnter 985-3598. ,
I
. S.5·30tc

18. Samuel's

16. Forearm

teacher
19. The piper's

bone
17. Withdraw
21. Ignoble

son
20.Begln

25. Exclusively
26. Woolen

22. Swlss river

23. KnfghUy
ttUe

Iabrie

LET'S /lOT GET OFF ON THE Wli«»&gt;G

FOOJ; ro&lt;:TOR. MY GOOD F~END
I?EI'I1E5ENTATIVE f)fff'SIX'5
PlANE 15 ABOUT TO TAKE Off 1
WAS JUST SAYING G•OCIV- BY~
TO HER.

15110,17, 2~. Jtc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No . 20,415
Estate of Charles Earle
Humphrey Deceased .
Notice Is herebv given that
May Hunter Humphrey of
Reedsville, Meigs county, dhlo,
has been duly appointed
Executrix of the E&amp;tate of
Charles Earle Humphrey ,
dec.eased, late of Reedsville ,
Me1gs County, Ohio
Creditors are reqUired to tile
their. claims with said tiduclarv
wlthm four months.

24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
with or without farm
machinery. House with 3
this 4th day of May
bedrooms, dining room, living 197Dated
t.
room, 1'/, baths. enclosed
John C. Bacon
back porch, wall to wall
Acting Fl'robate Judge
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
of said County
10 ,
awning, slorm windows and 151
17,
u, ltc

tree
17. Crash Into

Like It"

Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
O' BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial. residential and their claims with said
Industrial wiring . Phone 247· fidudicary within tour months .
Dated this 5th d~y of Mav
2113.
1971 .
-3.12·1fc
F H. O'Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
NEIGLER Construction . For

-- -RALPH'S
CARPET

15. Mexican

13. " As You

------

building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Nelgler.
Racine, Ohio .
7·31-ffc

~WJW[3~®u..J 41lta.,&amp;/J IIIM4 ,_.. •

. AOBOSS

-

HUH! SO YOU'RE THAT HACK POliTICIAN ! WH'I

AREN'T VOO IN .:006~055, DOING 50METH IN6
·ABOUT THE 0UTRA6EO!IS TAXfS 1 PAY, I &gt;STEAD
OF DOWN HE~E

WITH A TIN

SOI. DIEI~? )

Unscramble !hue four Jumbles, Wow I Thoo·o hlo
one letter to each square, to oh&gt;rd 300 gomot
form four ordinary words.

lb1J.C•

tor
30. Con·
teder-

ate
YelitNar•• Aa1wer
31. Scholarly
34. Athirst
book
32. Excessively 35. Be&amp; barrier
dry
36. Livellneaa
37. Rotating
33. part
nostrum

21. "LaBoheme"
heroine
28. South
Dakota's
capital
29. Biblical
woed
31. Like some
11111.1
87. Deep pink
38. Quibble
39. Frlendlllip
40. VIolinist,
- - :Morini
41. Ancient
· Pel'lfan
42. Paradise

rJ

I

WHAi iHS: HANDSOME
!10\Vl..ER eowLe:D.

I I I
m:NVC'Y1

Now arranre the cln:led lttlen
to form the ourpriH an.ower, u
ounnted by the above cartoon.

~Prittl=llte:;SMGE~ANSWll~..
~l .[ I X] r I I !)I

(Anewl"rl IOnlorro-.)

)11mhle" TWIIT COUGH GIMLET FESTAL
W'lw11 ltn ""' ouljit 11u lmtl[l•r Jil lwr. :clu• rn•nr

OOWN

,,, rlu•

1. 1mper·
tectton

Jl''"'

lwl•iu~r Ji~r ,,,;~~- TO

.I

majeoty

EVER'!'ONE
NeEDS TO

3. Iniquity

4. Transactlon

HAVE HOPE.

:S. IJke some

radios

.

DAILY CRYPTOQlJOTE-Here'1 how to work It:
CAPI'AIN EASY

.1•

AXl'DLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

~Me]ME5 11'5 ONL\' A LITTLE

THIN61J.IAT GiVES VS HOPE ...
A ~MILE FROM A FRiEND, OR A
~6, OR 11-lE 5i6HT OF ABIRO
5QARIN6 HIGH A&amp;:riflliE T~EES••

..

One ietter simply standi tor another. In thle 11.111ple A II

uoed for the three L'o, X for the two o•a: etc. stnrte Jettero,
apoatrophos, the lenrth and fonnatlon of the wordl are all
hints. Eaeh doy the code letten tre dltlertnt.

We talk to JOU

A Cryptope QaolaUoa

Q II' C· c A K

UX K

AWEK

JVUJ

JWLKO

WB

U

VWO

WO
QUB

U

JWQlt

EWYOJ

PB
BP·

:MWEK . - YWLVUYC

UYQPGY

WMP0/1390

COME OUT FIT

2. -

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

like a persoo.

I I

1!&amp;-J'O Cryptoquot~: FIND A :MAN WITH BOTH. FEET,
FIRMLY ON THE GROUND AND YOU'VE P'OUND A MAN
ABOU'l' TO :MAKE A DIFFICULT PU'l'l'.
)"LLIn'CHER
KNDBL
tO lr71

~la1

reiturel l)·rodkate, lnr.)

•

•

'•

.

'

,,

�BARNEY

'

PAW !! 'IONDER

.. :. : ;~ ~: . :..

Bargains, Bargains,
LEGAL NOTICE
2 SIGNS
Po11.eroy
OF
QUALITY

NOTICE OF SALE
OF BONDS

Sealecl bids tor the purchase
ot 575,000 bonds of the Village of
Pomeroy (herein referred to as
the Issuer) in the Coun ty of

Meigs , Ohio , will be recei ... ed by
the undersigned off icer at her
office in the VIllage Hall, East
Second Street, Pomeroy , Ohio
&lt;i5769, until 1 00 o ' clock , p m ,
Eastern Standard Time . Ohio
(fast Time) on the 26th day of
May , 1971, at which time the
bids wilt be opened and read
publicly . Bids for the bonds,
which were authorized by
legislation passed Apr . 23, 1971 ,
shall be sealed and endorsed
" Bid for Sewer Improvement
Bonds," and each btd shall be
made only for all or none of such
bonds
It Is contemplated the!

"-tQr Co.

112 Ton 8' Pi ckup. good tires,

v.a engine,

custom cab,

radio.

$595

1965 CHEVROLET

Ton 8' Pickup, V 8 eng me. Deluxe cab. Runs out real
good.
~

112

.1963 CHEVROLET
$695
2 Ton Cab-Chassis, extra good 825·tires, 292 cu. ln., 6 ,.¥1.
engine, solid cab, 102" cab to axle.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Instruction

Help Wanted

Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

The bids will promplly be

bidder .

In the event that , prior to
their delivery , the interest on
the bonds should by act of
Congress or olherwlse become
subject to Federal income
taxes , or any act of Congress
should provide that the interesl
Income on the bonds shell be
taxable at a future date tor
Fede ral income lax purposes,
whether directly or directly, the
successful bidder mav refuse to
accept del i\lery and in such

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
F·479·ll01

Sealed proposals wilt be
rece\veli at' tb• ~tflce of the
State Hlghwlly"l51ftCtor of Ohio,
Columbus, Ohio, until 10 .00
A.M , Eastern Daylight Saving
Time, Tuesday , June 8, 197 1, for
Improvements In :
Meigs County, Oh to, on
Section MEG .J.6.15, State Route
No . 7 In Salisbury Townsh ip, by
grading, drain ing and paving
with plain Portland cement
concrete on a cement stabilized
base, and b)' constructing :

Bridge No. MEG .7.0713 Lett and

Right , dual concrete decks on
continuous steel beams with
concrete substructures (each :
spans 6~ feet - 82 feet - 82 feet
- 6~ feet , roadway 40 feet
between deflector parap ets ),
over State Route 124 ; Br idge
No . MEG -7-0762 left and Right,
dual concrete decks on con·
tlnuous steel beams with con .
crete sub!tructures (each .
spans 36 teet - 45 teet J6feet, roadway 40 teet between
deflector parapets). over
County Road 77 ; ond Bridge No.

MEG .JJ.0955 Left and Right,

dual concrete docks on con tinuous steel beams with con .
crete substructures (each :
spans 46 feet - 65 feet - 65 feet
- 46 feet , roadway 40 feet
between deflector parapets ).
over State Route 7
Pavement Width - 2 at 2.4
feet .

Project Length feel or 2.714 m lies.

14,650.52

Work Length - 2J,2A8 .94 feet
or 4 .403 m il es
" Minimum wage rates for
this
project
have
been
predeterm ined as required by
law and are set forth In the bid
event his bid security shall be proposal."
returned . without In terest.
" The date set for completion
The bonds shall be delivered of this work shall be set forth In
for pavment wllhln the State of the bidding proposal."
Ohio to the successful bidder or
Elich bidder shall be required

to a bank designated by the
successful bidder without to tile with his bid a cert ified

charge , If delivered at a place
outside the State of Ohio, the
successful b idder shall pay the
expense of del1very a! that
place. The expense ,of deliver:y
with In th e Sta te of Ohio sh~tll not
be considered In determ lnlng

the highest bidder

Before making tend er of the
bonds at the pla ce of delivery ,
the Issuer shalt give written
notice to the successful bidder
not tater than the fifth business
day before the proposed tender ,
of the fact that the bonds,
transcript , no-litigation cer tificate and approv ing opin ion
will be available for delivery
and giving the date and hour tor
the tender at the place ot
delivery, provided , however,
that nothmg herein con tain ed
shall preven t the making of a
mutually
agreeable
arrangement tor I he delivery of
the bonds eltber at the pl~ce
fixed tor delivery or elsewhere.
If such notice has not been
given by the Issuer or waived by,
the auccessful bidder and the
bonds, transcript, no-litigation
certificate and approving
opinion are not available torn .
delivery to the successful
bidder at such place of del ivery
on or before 12 :00 o'clock noon
of the 30th calendar dav after

the doy fixed for the receipt of

1

•

bids. and the successful bidder
shall not be In default Of any of
his obligations, he shall have
the rlgl'lt thereafter , and so long
as no such tend.er bv the Jssuer
shall vet have been made, to
cancel the contr1ct of purchase .
Any such right shall be exer .
clstd by delivering written
notice of such uncellation to
the undersigned or to the office
of the uncterslgned during
business hours. Such bidder

oholl thtreupqn bt entitled to
tht return of the depolit which

occomRl!1_i!d his bid ond It shall

be

returned

mediately

to

him

.

lm ·

The rlgh't I&amp; resehed to reject

bidS .

VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO
.
Jane watton, Clerk

!AI 26 !51 J,

check for an amount equal to

fi•• permore
cent than
of hi ten
bid, thousand
but in ~0
event
I

dollars. or e~ bond for ten per

cent of his bid, payable to the
Director.

Bidders must apply, on the
proper forms , for qualification

at least ten days prior to the

date set tor open ing bids in
accordance with Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and specifications are
on file In the Department of
Highways and the Office of the
Division Deputy Director .
The Director reserves the
r ig ht to reject any and all bids.

'

J PHILLIP RICHLEY
DIRECTOR
15117,24, 2tc

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Proba1e Court .
To the Executor of the estate ;
to such of the following as are
residents of the State of Ohio,
vis : - the surviving spouse, the
next of kin , the benef iciaries
under the will ; and to the at .
tornev
or
attorneys
representing any ot the
aforementioned persons :
Willia m
A.
Carman ,
Deceased , No . 20460, Pomeroy
Ohio, R. D. Salisbury Township .
You are hereby notified that
lnventorv
and
Ap .
the
pralsement of the estate of t.he
aforementioned, deceased , late
of sale County, was flied in this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hearing before this Court on the
Jrd day of June, 1971, at 10:00
o'c lock A.M .
Any person desiring to tile
exceptions thertto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Giv~n under my hand and
seal of said Court, this 14th day

of May 1971 .

F. H. O'Brien
Judge and ex ·Officio
Clerk of said Court
By Ann 8 . Watson
Clerk

Ill 17. 2~. 2tc

AN YON E

knowing

whereabouts

of

the

a

male

Siamese cat, please call
Middlepor1 992·3832. Pef of
shut-in. Please. Reward .

$745

bond Issuing authoritv will meet
at ao'c lock p.m .• on the 26th day
of May, 1971, to consider the
· bids and make an award.
OPE~ EvES. 8:00 P.M.
The bonds will be dated the
first day of June, 1971, will be in
POMEROY, OHIO
th~ den om ina tlon of $5,000 each,
shall draw interest payable
semi-annually on the first days
of March and September of
WANT AD
et~ch year, beginning March 1,
INFORMATION
1972 at the rate of five and oneDEADLINES
half per centum (51J2 per cent)
INSTRUCTIONAL
per annum. Anyone ,desiring to DRIVERS NEEDED. We train
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
do so may present a bid tor said
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
you to be a semi driver, local .
bond, based upon their bearing
Cancellation
&amp; Corrections
clfy, and dock training now
a different single rate of in Will
be
accepted
untll9 a .m. for
available. Earn high wages
terest, but not In excess of 8 per
Day
of
Publication
after
short
trainlng
.
For
cent, prov ided that where a
REGULATIONS
fractional Interest rate Is bid,
application and Interview call
The
Publ
isher reserves the
such fraction shall be one513·863·6404, or write Sheridan
right
to
edit
or reject any· ads
eighth of one per cent or a
Truck Lines. 1255 Corwin
multiple thereof. Split rate bids
deemed objectional. The
Avenue
.
Hamilton,
Ohio
with supplemental coupons will
publisher will not be responsible
45015.
not be considered .
for
more than one Incorrect
5·17-21c
The bonds matur e as follows :
insertion
.
$5,000 on September\1 in each of
RATES
the years from 197'Q. to 1986,
For Want Ad Service
Inclusive .
INSTRUCTIONAL
scents per Word one insertion
The bonds are Issued tor the LOCAL MEN . Train now to
purpose of paying part ot the
Minimum Charge 75c
drive semi tractor trailers.
cost of Improving the mun icipa l
12 cents per word three
You
~an
earn
high
wages
sewerage system by con after short training. For consecutive insertions.
structing a sewerage treatment
18 cents per word six conapplication and Interview ,
plant, sanitary sewers , In
secutive
Insertions.
terceptlng sewers and pump ing
call 512·244·3071, or wrlle
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
stations, together with all
School Safely Division, Adads paid within 10 days.
necessary appurtenan ces
vance Systems, Inc.. 1100 ads and
CARD
OF THANKS
thereto .
Enoch Drive, Middletown ,
The bonds ere payable ,
&amp;OBITUARY
Ohio 45042.
without deduction for the ser $1.50 for SO word minimum .
5-17-2fc
vices of the Issuer's pay ing
Each
additional word 2c .
agent, at The Pomeroy National
BLIND ADS
Bank, Pomeroy, Ohio, and are
Additional 25c Charge per
supported by lim ited texes .
Advertisement.
Tl'le proceedings for this lsso.~e
OFFICE HOURS
have been taken under the EARN AT home addressing
supervision of Squire, Senders
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
envelopes. Rush stamped
&amp; Dempsey, Bond Attornt:ts,
self·addressed envelope to the 8· 30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
Cleveland, Ohio whose ap .
Ambrose Company, 4325 Saturday.
proving opinion will be fur .
Lakeborn , Davisburg,
nlshed to the successful bidder
Michigan,
48019.
at the bidder's upense and will
4·30·30fp
be printed on the bonds as part
of the cost of bond pr inting . The
HOME sewing. Ph'one 992·5327.
cost of printing of the bonds
5·9·301p
shall be paid for by the Issuer . A
complete
transcript
of
KOSCOT Kosmellcs, wigs and
proceedings will be furnished
by the Issuer, together with e
accessories. May and June
certificate showing no litigation
special. Kleansing Kream,
NOTICE TO
pending or threatened at the
CONTRACTORS
$2.25. Distributors, Brown's.
time of the delivery to enjoin
STATE OF OHIO
Phone 992·5113.
delivery or to contest the
DEPARTMENT OF
4-23-tfc
validity ot the bonds or the
ltiGHWAYS
-~----:­
power to Issue them or the levy
Columbus. Ohio, May 7, 1971
'SAVE UP to one half. Bring
or collection of taxes tor their
con1r1ct Sates Legal
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
pavment.
Copy No. 7f .J03
considered, and the bonds will
be sold to the highest bidder
offering the·40Wf&amp;l interest rete
at not·l.ess than ·par end accrued
Interest . The lowest Interest
rate w ill be determ !ned by
calculating the total Interest to
stated maturity at the rate bid
end deducting therefrom any
premium bid . If each of two or
more bids Is the highest bid
offering the lowest Interest rate,
· the bonds will be awarded on
such one of the highest bids as Is
chosen by lot All bids must be
accompanied by cash, bank
cashier's or official 's check or
certified check payable to the
Issuer, or any combination
thereof , aggregating one per
cent of the per amount of the
bonds , upon the condition that,
If the bid Is accepted. the bidder
will receive and pay for the
bonds In accordance with the
terms and provisions of this
notice . No bank bidding for the
bonds shall file Its own cashier's
or official's check, and a check
certified by 11. Such security
shall be held by the Issuer
unused pending del ivery ot the
bonds and forfeited as full
liquidated damages In the event
of default by the successful

For Sale

Lost

5.f1 .6fc

1964 FORD

th~

COMES 0~ DOC
PRITCHART

NEW 1971

zig -zag

sewing

machine In original factory

FREE STORAGE

carton. Zig .zag to make

For Your Garments

buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
desiqns with lust the twist of a

Wanted To Buy
TELEPHONES, brass beds,
clocks, dishes , old furnitur e,

etc. Wrlfe M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 991·6271 .
4·27·tfC

, - - - , - - - --

single dial. Left in lay-away
and never been used. Wll I sell
for only S47 cash, or credit

terms available. Phone 992·
5641 .
• 5·1f.6tc

ANTIQUES :
Di s hes , ELECTROLUX vacuum
telephones. lin, brass beds.
cleaner complete with atlamps, etc . Lee Rudisill,
tachmenls, cordwi nder and
Phone 992-3403.
paint spray. Used but in like
4-23-30fp
new condition . Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan available.
Phone 992.5641.
For Rent
5-11 -6tc
10 X 50, TWO-BEDROOM
housetrailer. Phone 992·3954. PLANTS FOR SALE . Home
5-16-6fc
grown improved Mexican
UNFURNISHED o - room
apartment. Phone 992·2288.
1-31 -ffc

non -acid. Also, Heinz 1350,
Yellow Golden Jubilee and
Large Supersonic. They are
sturdy, well rooted plants.
Also, hot peppers, mangos
and cabbage plants. On Rt.
124 in Syracuse, Ohio, 500 feet

MODEL

trailer,

v,.. mile

2·bedroom
west

of

Darwin on Rt. ·681, with or
without utilities paid. Phone
992-6628.
S.I6·61C

tipout
extension.
One
bedroom, air conditioner.

Phone 992·6452.

s.16-flc

2 BEDROOM trailer . Utilities
paid . Phone 992-7384 or 992·
7133.
5·16-3tc
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
o;,.mlle north of new Meigs
High School. Phone .992·2941.
3-5·tfc

TRAILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
Courl, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Ohio. 992·2951 .
4-2-flc
2· BEDROOM

trailer ,

36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
i!CHAMPION
.. VAN DYKE

changer , separate controls .

Balance $88.42. Use our
budget term s Ca ll 992-7085.
5-13-6tc
BEAUTIFUL se lect ion of
flowers, baskets, wreaths,
and sprays for Memorial Day .

POMEROY

Inspection and
Re-Charge

6.98 ~~ur~s
Blaettnar's

742-4902

MILLER

Clelaod Realty

------

- -----

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

. 21r
The
Daily·.Sentinel

f·/1

VA COM&amp; IN HEJ2&amp;,

HAVE ')bU L05r \O:.IR.

EA'T MY CA'TSUP ON
MY C:fVICI(&amp;ftS, AN'

MIND, WINNIE?
THAT~

A ~LANK

From the L.argMt Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~·If est Heater Core.

Ph. 991-2143

Pomeroy,

NI!!WR. ~D
A DIME I

PAD!

~7He

KYVCHI!7TA
9TME~
W!NN~

SMAO&lt; IN

TilE FACE.

cemetery
Flowers
&amp;
Wreaths
Also Arrangements made to
your specification.

VILLAGE

HUH? SOUNDS
UKE AX&gt;ISI tiPS!

THE SHOP

FLOWER SHOP
Open 9 Til 5

You

Cilsllom meet cutting
Pleasant Ridge Aoad
Pomeroy,O,
Dick Vaughan ·

Thurs.. Fri. . Sat.
Or Phone 949·2123

RACINE, 0:

never

faint-

in m'

arms
b'fo',

992·3374

SEWING MACHINES . Repair
service,
oil Shop,
makes.Pomeroy.
992·2284
The Fabric
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Shar:pen Scissors.

3·19·1fc
BULLDOZER work. Basement.
ponds. la ndscaping. We do all
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
dirl and top soil. See or call
Bob Jeffers afler 7 p. m.
Phone 992-3525.
4·23·30fc
EXPERIENCED

painter,

exterior and Interior. Donald

Van Meter. 985·3951.
5·11·12tp

guaranteed.

Reasonable

rafes . Phone 992·3213.
4-22-JOic
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446·4782
Gallipolis. John Russell ,
ONner &amp; Operator .

5·13·flc
- -- -- - -

i'liGS

Dale little

~====9=92=·=6=34::6===~

.E:Ival

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

THE BORN WSER

Limestone Driveways

Septic Tanks and Leach
Beds

•.
,
.•

FrH Estimates

CALL GEORGE 985-3837
OR DON 992-6883

O'DELL WHEEL alignment ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
located at Crossr&lt;&gt;ads, Rt. •124.
Complete front end service, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
tune up and brake service .
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Wh eels balanced elec·
662·3035.
tronlcaily .
All
work
2·12-tlc

MOBILE HOMES

Livestock For

.,.,..............,........., ,,
,,. ~

, BLAETTNARS

Artificial Flowers
Single Flowers
Arrangements

742-4902

12' · 14' · 24' ·

EXPERIJN(ID
Radiator Service

~ETCH

PHONE 992-214J

SR.

------

DEXTER, O. 45716
PHONE 742·3945

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

s::cial

..
Virifl B.
TEAFORD

e

NEW &amp; OL-D WORK

Backhoe And
Endloader Work

Kitchens. Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

•

5'-17

lnsured-E xperienced
work Gu•ranteed

JOHNSON MASONRY

Complete
Remodeling

J

FAAK!NtJ ~1Mf1"

ON TillS SI.OCK 4

construction Co.

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

JOHNSON MASONRY

J. W. C.roey, Mgr

... WHiN TII&amp;RE'S A

HA~F·~R.

TORTURE HIS "METHOD" OUTA
HIM, AN'-PANT!-'Vfl..Ool-!!- GIT DATES
AT LAST. WIF AL~ THESE GALS
WHAT'S REFOOZED US!!

All weather Rooting &amp;

Cliff Shoe Repair, Middleport.
4·21 ·flc

At Landmark, Everyone
· Can I
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As
63.95
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As
211 .95
ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As
134.95

HOW CAN ~OV ~~~~V
EXPECT US TO TAKE. A
TWO• HOUR f.XAM ..•

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

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

Phone 992·6329.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave .• _ _ _ _ _ ___5_.
f4.3tc loiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio-Ph•on•e'!'m..,-~;;.''.1..,1
Pomeroy.
Rea I Estate For Sale
4-23·tfc
PLANTS
NOW
ready
:
Single
-....;,...-'---or·Sa I
and double petunias, pansies.
WILL PICK up merchandise ,.
coleus, Mexica n tomatoes and
and take to auct ion on a 3 BEDROOM frailer, phone
Mason 773-5688 after 4 p.m . other var i eties, peppers ,
percentage basis. Call Jim
5·16·31p ca bbage , 1!:2 or 1 dozen packs.
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland .
Don Hubbard, Syr acuse,
Phone 7~2-4461.
Ohio
Phone 992·5776.
9·23·tfC NICE ROUND tub Maytag
4-22-24fc
wringer washer for SJS .
Phone 992-5960.
REDUCE sate and fast with
Broker
5-14-3tp COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Gobese tablets and E- Vap
110 Mechanic St.
---,-Salt
Work5.
E.
Main
St
.•
water pills. Nelson D.rugs.
Pome•oy, Ohio
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
4·14·60fp JEAN 'S · VARIETY Slore
located between Cheshire and
4.9-tfc
2 COUNTRY HOMES - one 4
Middleport.
Clothing,
shoes.
years old. 5 rooms, bath, gas
SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
groceries, priced to fit your
Chester, Ohio, has flowers for
furnace , garage, 2 bedroom s
budget. Blouses and skirts,
Memorial Day, 88c and up.
with closets $6,500. Second
SOc, dresses and shoes SOc,
Also nice baskets.
house,
6 rooms, bath, gas
toasters and Irons. $1.25.
heat, drilled well , large acre.
5-12-121c
5·14-3tp
$4,500.
-----,--YARD SALE, 12 Park St., 1964 JOHN Deere dozer, winch
50 ACRE PLUS - of hill land.
Mlddleporl. Friday and
and blade, 1964 Chevrolet live
good 4 bedroom hom e,
Salurday, May 20 and 21.
tandem. Phone Chesler 985modern bath and k1tchen, gas
5·16·6tc
WIDE
4132.
forced air furnace, small barn
5·1Hfp
and
outcellar. Only $10,000.
BEACON SERVICE Station,
TODAY.
Nye Ave .• Pomeroy, Ohio will 1967 HONDA 160 Scrambler.
Phone 992·6021.
close May 17 tor remodeling
POMEROY - Charming little 2
5·14·3fc
and re-open May 21 under new
bedroom well cared for home.
management. All old and new c" :E:-:c
1220 Washington Blvd.
M
c::
E
c::
T
c::
E
c::
R
c::
Y
-:-c::
,
o
c
::
t
s
a
c::
t:
Bu
r
·
Nice bath. gas for ced air
customers will be ap .
Belpre, Ohio
furnace , basement with
$25
each
.
Phon~
!Ingham.
preclated.
shower, washer, and dryer
Guy l.ee at 992·6349 or
5· 14·31p
hook ups. Attached garage.
William Hart at 992·6848.
Only
$8,900.
Sale
5-14-3fc
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
service; $50 registered
POLLED Hereford cattle, 25
INVEST NOW AND
mares, any breed ; $40 grade 1950 CHEVROLET, $50. Home
cows to freshen, 6 cows with
SAVE AT992·3l25
mares . Francis Benedum .
built tractor, $35. Ray Young,
calves , lS yearlings 112 and 3/-4
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Phone Coolville 667·3856.
Success Road , Reedsville ,
sisters. One herd bull . Two 2·
ASSOCIATE
5-16·30tp
phone 667·3462.
year old bulls. Cali Byron
5·14·llc
5·16.3tc
Miller. phone 614-992-663'1 or
REGISTERED Tennessee
614-985·3341. Royal Oak FIVE ROOM house , two
Farm. Pomeroy, Ohio.
walker
stud
service. FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
bedrooms. bath, basemenl,
- won't rust, rot, or leak. Cali
Harrisonville, Ohio. Phone
5·14-ltc
wall
to wall carpet in living '
992-6256 after 5 p.m. Also,
742·5862.
room,
bedrooms, and bath.
4·20·30fc fiberglass 15 foot canoes.
SIX GRADE Angus heifers, 350
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...::.::
Gas
forced
air furnace .
5·16-30fc
to 500 pounds. Thomas Sayre,
Middleport,
phone
992-3420.
ov· EN FRESH bakery ~ro ·
Ohio.
Phone
843·
Porlland,
4·25-ffc
2436.
ducts. Jimmy's Pastry S op, 1.72-ACRE lot, $1.500. S-track
CK
tape
player
and
six
tapes,
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport .
5-16·3tc
S50. Phone 742·3656.
Phone 992·3555.
5· 16·2tp
4·29·30!c
'
Pets For Sale
• 1970 HONDA 350. candy red.
POMEROY - Wright Street Good
condition
.
Owner
has
Female Help Wanted
NICE 1 story frame, 2
gone In service. Phone New REGISTERED one·year old
WE NEED a woman who Is
bath ,
full
bedrooms,
male
beagle.
Fully
trained.
Haven 882·2529.
home most of the time to do
basement with garage, wall to
Phone
;992·3589.
5· 16·3fp
work In her home. Prefer
wall carpet , afr conditioner,
5· 16·3fc
someone with phone. Write
range and refrigerator,
Mrs. Johnson. 1860 Lock· PLASTIC flowers tor Memorial
recently remodeled $10,900.
REGISTERED
beagle
pups,
bourne Rd., Columbus, Ohio
Day .
Mabel
Pickens,
black and tan with little
43207.
Syracuse. Ohio. Phone 992·
1
12·weeks old: S25 for TUPPERS PLAINS white,
7203.
5·14·31c
LEVEL
ACRE,
2
story
frame,
male, $30 female. County
.
5·16.6tp
balh, 4 bedrooms, garage. IN
Road 9, one mile east Dexter.
GOOD CONDITION, A NICE
Help Wanted
Clair F. Shenefield. Rt. 1.
EVERY MAKE electric carpet
PLACE TO LIVE. $9,308.
Langsv ille, Ohio.
EXPERIENCED man to work
shampooer does a better job
5.14.31p
on dairy. House furnished .
with famous Blue Lustre. - - - - - - LOCAL
DRIVE - IN
Arvll Holter, Bashan. Phone
Baker Furniture, Middleport .
RESTAURANT good
949·3833.
5· 12.6tc
locallon, In small community
Auto Sales
S.12-6tp
and on a state route, IN·
CLUDES BUILDING AND
BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2·dr .
ALL
EQUIPMENT, PRICE
Myron Bailey, Phone 992.5327.
hardtop , power steering,
QUOTED
TO INTERESTED
S·4·3Q
power brakes. air. ·18,000
PARTIES
ONLY. Has a nice
miles. Excellent condition.
business,
SHOWN BY AP·
. SiX ROOM house, bath, full
Phone 992-2288.
POINTMENT.
basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
11 ·10·11C
, . 36" X23" X.009
just walking distance from
WHY OVERBUY? DON'T
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
RUIN YOUR CREDIT. We
Ed Hedrick. 2137 Wadsworth
Real
Estate
For
Sale
have
all priced prop&lt;!rtles.
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
ALL
TYPES
FINANCING
237·4334, Columbus.
AVAILABLE.
5·9·1fc 3 BEDROOM brick house.
HENRY CLELAND
corn·er lot. Good iocallon In
USED OFFSET PLATES
Middleport. Phone 992.3892.
REALTOR
HAVE
Office 992·2259
ELLEN'S Gilt Shop, Rtedsvllle.
5·12-6tc
MANY USES
Residence 992·2561
Ohio, Memorial Day wreaft1s,
5· 16·6tc
sprays,
baskets.
Ar· HOUSE, story and half, 6
rangements. 69c and up.
rooms. bath, Rutland. Phone
4·211-JOtc
742·5613.
'HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln ' Hts . .'
lfor 11.00
5·12·tfC
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293 .
TOMATO PLANTS, Valiant,
10-25-tlc
Jung's Earllnt, Marglobe, 2 BEDROOM house. excellent .~-'---~-~.
. Oxharl, Stump of ,the World,
condition . Phone 992·2619. •
Rutgers, Lincoln, Dol's
5·12·6fp HOUSE of Mrs. A. H. Bailey In
Bashan . If Interested, contact
, Excel. Yellow Coloual. ' - - - - - - , . - - by letter al this address: /Ws.
Burpee's, Delicious . and
A. H. Bailey, 54S5 Urbane St.,
JubiiH. Sturdy transplants. 6 ROOMS, bath, 2 lots, .garden.
fruit tren. Phohe 992·3394,
111 Court 51.
No., St. Petersburg. Florida
Doltn for SOc. B. ~IHn ·
Pomeroy, Olllo
33714. •
..
berry, Syracust, Ohio.
· MOnkey Run.
.
5·14-ltc
5-2·301C
' 5·2-12tp

'IIi

... ALSO
DQUBLE - WIDES

!lEE TOM CROW, GUY StruLER OR BOB CROW

Air Conditioning

air

co nditioning. Racine area.

MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.

payment plan. Call 992-7085
5-13-6fc

1

Evenings Caii992-25J4, Dale Dutton

Mason, W. Va.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE

}

• (

'- .... j

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

ABC CLEANERS

Have Your Seasonal

----FURNISHED and unfurnished

apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992.5434.
10-18-tfc

Please! No · Free Storing on

•.j!WINSOR
«BUDDY

f

..

bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner
F H AWe Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A.. . . ·•
And Conventional Loans.
.
Come See Us At 97'12 N. Second St., M;ddlepor1.
PH. 992-7129

Bulk Cleaning.

Walnut stereo-radio com
binat ion, 4 speakers, 4 speed
changer, separate controls .
Balance $61.14 . Use our time

COLONIAL MAPLE stereoradio combtnation, AM-FM
NICE 8X35 TRAILER with
radio, four speakers. 4 speed

You will ha ve something of value to show tor th~ $$$ y,ou

spend when you buy your home - P1us' you gam an n-t
come Tax benefit, you build an equity and you are no

get them back.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY
SERVICE
CALL 77J.SS43.

Drive

BILL
COL LECTIN'

'

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS!.! *

and pressing. Pay when you

773.5543

.

WHAT'S HE 001(1)'
OUT IN THIS NECK
OF TH' WOODS?

What Do You Have For Tile$$$ You .Pay In Rent?

All you pav for is cleaning

tomato plants, large smooth,

FURNISHED apartment, 5
rooms. bath, one child ac.
cepted. no drunks. Also, 2·
bedroom mobile home, one
above the park . Th omas
child accepted, No drunks. M
Hayman .
and G Food Market, 3 miles
5·2·301c
south of Middleport on State
Rt. 7.
5.f6.3tc WALNUT STEREO. Modern
LATE

Business Services

8X48 NATIONAL housetraller,
2-bedroom. wail to wall
carpeling . Call ,992-5756.
5-12-6tp

EEKM:OMEEK

I

1

'M'I'STERI008
'li'ID:

I'

llR. IlO·HO.
fRIEHD OF
PFF!CTOR

•i
•

~-----,,--

c. BRADFORD, Auctiooeer

.-

Complete Service
Phone 949.3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford

DAILY CROSSWORD
8. Rich mining 24. Niger·
1. Vanished
:ftnd
.tan
r;. Damson, e,g. 7,Secondhand
city
9. Embank ..
8.Ch018
26. Perfo·
ment
rate
pieces
11. Big game
10. :Make safe
28. Ooll
12. - - tlu
11. Principal
In·

5·1·tfc
-.::-:
ln-:;
s_,ui,....an-ce---~

BACKHOE AND DOZER work : AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Seplic tanks Installed . George
cancelled?
Lost
your
( Bi II I Pull ins, Phone 992·2478.
operator's license? Call. 992.
2946.
4·25·ffC
6·15-lfc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN.
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
992·2522.
NOTICE OF
6· lO.tfc
APPOINT/&gt;IENT
---------:..:::..::..:
cio,. No.l0491
READY ·MIX
CONCRETE Estate of DON C. GORBY,
'
delivered right to your Deceased .
Notice
is
hereby
given
that
project. Fast and easy. Free
Gorby, of R. D 1,
estimates . Phone 992·3284 . -coosie
Lang511·111e , Ohio, has been duly
G?eglein Ready-Mix Co., appomted Executrix of the
Moddleport, Ohio.
.
Estate of Don C. Gorby ,
6·30·1fc deceased, late of Meigs County ,

Upholstery Cleaning Service.
Free estimates . Phone
Gallipolis 446·0294.
3·12-ffc

-----Real Estate For Sale

forest
U . Qualified

storm doors . City water.

Selling due lo Ill health. Phone
614-985-3938.
4·25·18tp
l

BEDROOM brick home .
Choice location in Middleflbrt.
Seen by appointment only.
Phone. 992-3491 after 4 p. m.
5-7' tfc

------

NEW BRICK home on 'h·acre
lot In Tuppers Plains
Features bullt'· in kitchen:
wall to wall carpet, bath and a
half,. full basement. , Cali
Chnter 985-3598. ,
I
. S.5·30tc

18. Samuel's

16. Forearm

teacher
19. The piper's

bone
17. Withdraw
21. Ignoble

son
20.Begln

25. Exclusively
26. Woolen

22. Swlss river

23. KnfghUy
ttUe

Iabrie

LET'S /lOT GET OFF ON THE Wli«»&gt;G

FOOJ; ro&lt;:TOR. MY GOOD F~END
I?EI'I1E5ENTATIVE f)fff'SIX'5
PlANE 15 ABOUT TO TAKE Off 1
WAS JUST SAYING G•OCIV- BY~
TO HER.

15110,17, 2~. Jtc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No . 20,415
Estate of Charles Earle
Humphrey Deceased .
Notice Is herebv given that
May Hunter Humphrey of
Reedsville, Meigs county, dhlo,
has been duly appointed
Executrix of the E&amp;tate of
Charles Earle Humphrey ,
dec.eased, late of Reedsville ,
Me1gs County, Ohio
Creditors are reqUired to tile
their. claims with said tiduclarv
wlthm four months.

24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
with or without farm
machinery. House with 3
this 4th day of May
bedrooms, dining room, living 197Dated
t.
room, 1'/, baths. enclosed
John C. Bacon
back porch, wall to wall
Acting Fl'robate Judge
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
of said County
10 ,
awning, slorm windows and 151
17,
u, ltc

tree
17. Crash Into

Like It"

Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
O' BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial. residential and their claims with said
Industrial wiring . Phone 247· fidudicary within tour months .
Dated this 5th d~y of Mav
2113.
1971 .
-3.12·1fc
F H. O'Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
NEIGLER Construction . For

-- -RALPH'S
CARPET

15. Mexican

13. " As You

------

building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Nelgler.
Racine, Ohio .
7·31-ffc

~WJW[3~®u..J 41lta.,&amp;/J IIIM4 ,_.. •

. AOBOSS

-

HUH! SO YOU'RE THAT HACK POliTICIAN ! WH'I

AREN'T VOO IN .:006~055, DOING 50METH IN6
·ABOUT THE 0UTRA6EO!IS TAXfS 1 PAY, I &gt;STEAD
OF DOWN HE~E

WITH A TIN

SOI. DIEI~? )

Unscramble !hue four Jumbles, Wow I Thoo·o hlo
one letter to each square, to oh&gt;rd 300 gomot
form four ordinary words.

lb1J.C•

tor
30. Con·
teder-

ate
YelitNar•• Aa1wer
31. Scholarly
34. Athirst
book
32. Excessively 35. Be&amp; barrier
dry
36. Livellneaa
37. Rotating
33. part
nostrum

21. "LaBoheme"
heroine
28. South
Dakota's
capital
29. Biblical
woed
31. Like some
11111.1
87. Deep pink
38. Quibble
39. Frlendlllip
40. VIolinist,
- - :Morini
41. Ancient
· Pel'lfan
42. Paradise

rJ

I

WHAi iHS: HANDSOME
!10\Vl..ER eowLe:D.

I I I
m:NVC'Y1

Now arranre the cln:led lttlen
to form the ourpriH an.ower, u
ounnted by the above cartoon.

~Prittl=llte:;SMGE~ANSWll~..
~l .[ I X] r I I !)I

(Anewl"rl IOnlorro-.)

)11mhle" TWIIT COUGH GIMLET FESTAL
W'lw11 ltn ""' ouljit 11u lmtl[l•r Jil lwr. :clu• rn•nr

OOWN

,,, rlu•

1. 1mper·
tectton

Jl''"'

lwl•iu~r Ji~r ,,,;~~- TO

.I

majeoty

EVER'!'ONE
NeEDS TO

3. Iniquity

4. Transactlon

HAVE HOPE.

:S. IJke some

radios

.

DAILY CRYPTOQlJOTE-Here'1 how to work It:
CAPI'AIN EASY

.1•

AXl'DLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

~Me]ME5 11'5 ONL\' A LITTLE

THIN61J.IAT GiVES VS HOPE ...
A ~MILE FROM A FRiEND, OR A
~6, OR 11-lE 5i6HT OF ABIRO
5QARIN6 HIGH A&amp;:riflliE T~EES••

..

One ietter simply standi tor another. In thle 11.111ple A II

uoed for the three L'o, X for the two o•a: etc. stnrte Jettero,
apoatrophos, the lenrth and fonnatlon of the wordl are all
hints. Eaeh doy the code letten tre dltlertnt.

We talk to JOU

A Cryptope QaolaUoa

Q II' C· c A K

UX K

AWEK

JVUJ

JWLKO

WB

U

VWO

WO
QUB

U

JWQlt

EWYOJ

PB
BP·

:MWEK . - YWLVUYC

UYQPGY

WMP0/1390

COME OUT FIT

2. -

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

like a persoo.

I I

1!&amp;-J'O Cryptoquot~: FIND A :MAN WITH BOTH. FEET,
FIRMLY ON THE GROUND AND YOU'VE P'OUND A MAN
ABOU'l' TO :MAKE A DIFFICULT PU'l'l'.
)"LLIn'CHER
KNDBL
tO lr71

~la1

reiturel l)·rodkate, lnr.)

•

•

'•

.

'

,,

�••

I ,

. '

Now You Know
The largest species of
'jellyfish has tentacles that hang
&amp;s long as 120 feet.

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 17, 1971

r--------------------------- Mrs. Wilhelm Dies
1
HOSPITAL NEWS 1

201 Largest Rio Cla,ss

'

Holzer Medical Center, First
Avenue a~ Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Wards.
BIRTHS
Mr. and · Mrs. LUther M.
Young, Ashton, W. Va ., a son ;
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Jayjohn ,
Hamden, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence B. Bales, Gallipolis, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. John P.
Hood, Middleport, a son ; Mr.
and Mrs. Monty J. Leonard,
Oak Hill, a daughter.
DJSCJJARGES
Mrs. Earl F. Bailey, Mrs.
Blanche Baird, Mrs. Beatrice
Bloss, William. T. Buchanan,
Mrs. Gary G. Faulkner, Mrs.
·Grover C. Gillum and infant
son, Mrs. Norma E. Halley,
Mrs. Kenneth E. Henderson,
Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson and
infant daughter, Mrs. Everett
Keels, L. Paul Martin, Mrs.
Virgil H. Massie, Ira F. Me·
Clure, Richard E. Pickens,
Clyde G. Porter, Homer Rice,
Mrs. Lennie Lee Roe and infant
daughter, Leo R. Roush, Jr.,
Lawrence M. Strausbaugh,
Mrs. Orval Lee Sword and in·
!ant son, L. Wayne Thompson,
Miss Hazel Wooten, Mrs .

Tonight &amp;Tuesday
May 17-18

:

Double Feature
DEVILAnd
RIDERS
THE GYPSY MOTHS
Burl Lancaster
Deborah Kerr

::::'C:o:lo:r)::::~

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp;Tuesday
Mn 17-18
LITTLE FAUSS
AND BIG HALSY
ITechnicolor)
Robert Redford
Michael J. Pollard

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs. llue promlnent,and respected ladies,
Heslop Wilhebn, one of the passed away at 3 p.m. Sunday
Charles G. Quillen, Jodie Me· Point Pleasant area's most at the Holzer Medical Center in
Millin, Marlin R. Gobi~, Mrs.
Gallipolis.
Harley Bonecutter, Mrs. Frank
The wife of the late S.
Barges and Mrs. Dwaine
Chandler Wilhelm, who for
Alexander .
many years was the secretary
(Continued from Page I)
and purchasing agent of the
William M. Coble, 31, of 426 Marietta Manufacturing
Veterans Memorial Hospital Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Company, she was a lifelong
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS The
motorcycle
was resident of Point Pleasant; the
Fr~nk Untalan, West Colum·
demolished and damage to car daughter •of the late John W. C.
bia; Harry Rochhold, Reeds·
Heslop and Aurilla Jarrell
ville ; Henry Johnson, New was estimated at $500. Coble Heslop . She was a devoted ' ·
was cited for being left of
Haven .
member of Christ Episcopal ""
center .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
One person was injured in a Church, serving for many yean
-Louise Rhodes, Mary Cowan, two-vehicle collision at 7 p.m. as president of -the Service
Estella Smith, Gladys Taylor, Sunday on State Route 2 at the Guild and chairman of the
MRS. SUE WILHELM
Charles Barnhart, Elizabeth Olm Rice driveway seven miles United Thank Offering.
Thomas.
Mrs. Wilhelm was a member
north of Point Pleasant.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS of
the board of directors of the also survived by 10 grand·
Ch1ef deputy sherilf Millard
John Romine, Middleport ;
Col. Charles Lewis lllapter, children and 6 great·
Harry Clark, Pomeroy; John Halstead identified Ray Em· Daughters of The American grandchildren.
mons Eads, 16, of Route 2, Point
Teaford, Pomeroy; William
Pleasant, as the driver of a Revolution, a charter member Friends will be received at
Gibbs, Mason.
motorcycle and the other driver of the Order of Eastern Star, her home• at 1902 Jefferson
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - as Max W. Jarrell, 55, Route 2, and a past president of the Point Blvd. on Tuesday afternoon
Hazel McCallum, Frank Un· Bidwell, 0. Eads apparently Pleasant Womtu\'s Club.
from 2 to 4 p.m. and on Tuesday
talan, Cheryl Coe, Ross Morris,
She
will
no
doubt
he
best
evening from 7 to 9 p.m.
was going south and slowed to
Robert Bissell, Blanche Casto, turn left into a driveway when remembered and most dearly The funeral service will be at
Gladys Spencer.
the two collided. Damages were missed for her goodness of Christ E;piscopal Church on
nature and love of both family Wednesday May 19 at 2 p.m.
estimated at $50.
with the Rev. Clifford E.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
One person was injured in a and friends.
Mrs.
Wilhelm
is
survived
by
·
Schane,
rector , officiating.
ADMISSIONS
Mrs. two-vehicle accident at 12:15
Clarence Emerick, Point a.m. SWl!laY resulting in $2,500 two daughters, Mrs. E. Bartow Burial will be in Lone Oak
Pleasant; Mrs. Charles damages, Polnt Pleasant city Jones of Point Pleass9t and Cemetery.
Tolliver, Ashton; Roger Pack, pollee report.
Mrs. Charles E. Holzer, Jr., of
Mrs. Chester Jeffers, David Glen M. Sayre, 51, 'JfJlO Mount Gallipolis; one sister, Mrs.
Gainer, Southside; Mrs. David vernon Ave., was taken to Milton L. Miller and one
Childers, Ripley; Mrs. Audrey Pleasant Valley Hospital where brother, Mr. J. William Heslop,
(Continued from Page I)
Campbell, Galllpolis Ferry ; he was treated. Police said he both of Point Pleasant. She is
signals.
Daniel Click, MI. Alto; Mrs. lost control of his vehicle at 14th
The s1gnalmen are demandEmil Martin, Point Pleasant; and Viand Sts. and hit a utility
OPEN DOOR NOTED
mg
a pay increase that
Continuing the supplements
Dorothy Boston: New Haven; pole.
Mrs. Charl_es Ohver, Galltpohs . An Ohio Trailways Inc., bus to the periodic open door amoWJts to 66 per cent over 36
Ferry; Ltlah Powell, New and a car were involved in a sessions held by lOth District months when compounded. Oth·
Haven; Mrs. Ru.ssell Wood, collision Saturday morning at Rep. Clarence E. Miller, Wayne er unions have accepted a 42
1
p omt Peasan
J
t·. 11:15 on Jackson Avenue. City
CharesYoWJg,
Todd, the congressman's per cent increase over 42
~ISCHARGES
Mrs. police said Dane T. Slaughter, district representative, has months.
The signalmen's demands
Wtllard Martm and daughter; 52, of Route 1. Shoals, W. Va. annoWJced a representative will
Leroy Williams, Mrs. Kenny was driver of the bus which be at the courthouse In Pomeroy would work out to a 22 per cent
per year increase compared to
Siders! Mrs. Tex Corfee, Virgil collided with a car being driven from 9 to II a. m. Tuesday and a 12 per cent hike by other
Scantlm, Mrs. Robert Strange, by Melvin Halstead, 1408 Lewis from 2 to 4 p. m. Tuesday at the
Latenda Leach, Mrs. Darrell Street.
courthouse in Gallipolis . WJion members.
The signalmen WJions pres·
Buck and son; Mrs. Paul Kent
Damages were set at $300 to Anyone wishing assistance on
a?d S?"• John Bryant, C. each vehicle. Slaughter was matters relating to the federal ident, C. J. Chamberlain, said
Stmpkms and Mrs . N. P. cited for failure to have his government is invited to visit the increase was waiTanted
because his workers-who now
Sturgeon .
vehicle Wider control.
either of the two locations.
average $3.78 an hour-are paid
far below men who do
comparable work in other
industry.

Killed

Railroads

Capt. Russell Stone Dies

"R"

THE McMASTERS
(Technicolorl
PT. PLEASANT - Capt. R.
Burllves, Jack Palance
Russell Stone, 88, of 801 Viand
Nancy Kwan
St., well known river captain
...,s,;,;H,;,DWioi.iSoiiTAiiiR,;,;T.;,S,;.7iiP.iiMiio.-1 throughout areas of the Ohio,
Kanawha Rivers and down to
the MissiSSippi areas, died this
morning in Pleasant Valley
Hospital after a brief illness.
Captain Stone was a patient at
the hospital for a foot disorder
and died Wlexpectedly from an
The most utterly los! of
all days, is that In which f: apparent heart attack.
you have not once +: Capt. Stone, a retired marine
laughed.
f: engineer, was a member of
Cha;rt : Minturn Lodge No. 19, AF&amp;AM,

......................
t A ThotJght t
l

it

For Today

t
!

t '* -S;.
! It's Quick! Easy i
t.,. BANKING
DRIVE•I.N t

:
:
f:
Fridays Only
f:
: The Drive- In Window:
t:
is Open
i&lt;
f:
9 A.M.to7 P.M.
f:
f:
!Continuously)
f:
f:
: Other Banking Hours 9 to ~
:It 3 and s to 7 as usual on it
+: Fridays.
i&lt;

t

:

t

i&lt;

f

MooRES VIsiTED
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry S. Moore, Sr. were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
Jr. of Ashland, Ky. On Sunday,
Mr. a~d ~rs . Moore ac·
compal)led Mtss Kathryn Hysell
toPortsmouthwhereshevisited
bermother,Mrs. LeeHysell,at
the Ebnwood Village Nursing
Home.
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED

fARMERS BANK ~ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duck·
. : worth ent~rtained Thu~sday
and SAVINGS CO
• it evenmg wtth a dtnner m ob·
POMEROY, OHIO
MemberFDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

iJf¥¥¥¥¥••••••••
1

i&lt; servance of tbe eighth birthday
: oftheirson,Bobby.Guestswere
f: his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
it William Fred Smith, Sr. ,
i&lt; Bradbury.

USE ROBINSON'S

f.REE STORAGE!
It's time to

and was a Mason 62 years. He
belonged to the Royal Arch
Masons and Franklin Com·
mandery Knights Templars,
and to the Sons and Daughters
of Pioneer River men baaed in
Marlette.
He was a member and older
emeritus of Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church where
fWJeral services will be con·
dueled at 3:30p.m. Wednesday
with the Rev. Rufus A.
Cromarsie officiating. In·
tennent will be in the Suncrest
Cemetery. Graveside rites will

Seven District
Troops at Ona
PT. PLEASANT -Seven M·
G·M District units were
represented at the weekend
Spring Camporee at Camp
Arrowbead in Ona.
M.(l-M District Chairman Bill
Knight said units participated
in Pioneer Day, readying Camp
Arrowhead for Summer Camp,
conservation, fellowship,
fishing and worked on in·
dividual advancement.
Troops represented were
Point Pleasant Troop 259, John
Hilbert, scoutmaster; Point
Pleasant Troop 2S7, Harlin
Newsome, scoutmaster; Point
Plessant Troop 261, Darrell
Ross, scoutmaster; Rio Grande
Troop 230, Robert Mossman,
scoubnaster; Middleport Troop
245, ,Larry Spencer, seoul·
master; Syracuse Troop 242,
George Homan and Point
Pleasant Post 'JfJ7 wilh Dan
Heslop serving as junior staff.

be conducted by the Minturn
Lodge No. !9.
Friends will be received at
the Chapman Mortuary after 4
p.m. Tuesday and the services
will be WJder the direction of the
L. G. Mohr FWleral Service.
Capt. Stone was born in
Wheeling July 22, 1882, a son of
the late John and Harriet
Thornburgh Stone. His wife,
Irene Schlouw Stone, preceded
him in death.
He is survived by one sister,
Mrs. Sallie Stone Donham,
Polnt Pleasant; a nephew,
William Gygax, Point Pleasant,
and a niece, Mrs. Pauline
Gygax Dye, of Belle.

SALES
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITY ·
'

Have your
apparel cleaned and
stored 'til Fall. Pay cleaning charges
ONLY when you receive your gar·
ments. Let us clean and store yours
NOW!
·

ROBINSON'S.
Offer does
not apply
t~ clea.n
only or
Coin-Op
orders.

Clean·ers
216 E. SECOND .

Are you Really attempting to find a ,
Genuine Opportunity for exceptional· earnings
($8,000 to ????? per year)?
An exceptional and unlimited future in
management .awaits you with a young.
aggressive, well managed, soundly financed,
multi-million dollar Ohio corporation.
We have an opportunity in Meigs &amp;'Gallia Co.'s for an
aggressive, married man 25 or older. We want •uccessful
men with confidence in their own ability- men who are
financially sound - men who are determintd to rise to the
upper 1per cent of their businns community quickly and
are willing to make sacrifices to achieve this goal. To
those who qualifY and are selected, we .will offer this
honest opportunity,
Addlional benefits are: paid femi!Y hospitalization,
paid lift .insurance. paid conventiOns, paid retirement

pJan, Iplus exceptional income).

PH. 992·5428
POMEROY, 0~10

If you are iolerested call 614-446-9445 .
.for M.r. Brown
'Tues., Wed., .or Thurs., 10.12 l M.' or 1 • 3 P.M.
I

·.

Dr . A. R. Christensen,
president of Rio Grande
College, conferred degrees on
201 men and women during the
95th annual Rio Grande College
Commencement exercises
Sunday afternoon on the
campus green .
The 1971 class was the largest
ever to graduate in the htstory
of the college.
In addition to the 201 Wl·
dergraduate degrees presented,
three honorary degrees were
also awarded . Dr. Preston
VaHen, associawn cornmissioner for higher education,
received a Doctor of Laws
degree; Gong . Clarence E.
Miller received a Doctor of
Public Service degree and the
Rev. George Sagen received a
Doctor of Divinity degree.
Dr. Valien, a memeber of the
U. S. Office Education since
1965, delivered the com·
mencement address. He said
that, "in the more serene times
of an earlier generation, a
commencement speaker would
say that the '· world is your
oyster, that opportWJities are

Hazel Wooten
Of Albany Dies

Miss Hazel Wooten, 60,
Albany, Rt. 3, died Saturday at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Miss Wooten was born May
17, 1910 in Kentucky, the
daughter of the late Isaac and
Elizabeth Vanlhorn Wooten .
She was employed with the
nursing staff of the Athens State
Hospital.
Surviving are three brothers,
Anderson and Clifford, of
Albany Rt. 3, and Donald of
Pomeroy, and a s1ster, Mrs.
Lucille Jordan, Huntington, W.
Va .
FWJeral service~ will be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Strong
and Son Funeral Home with the
Rev. Ollin Harvey officiating .
Bunal will be in the Ogdin
Cemetery. Friends may call at
The most immediate impact lhe fWJeral home in Wilkesville
of the strike was on some any time .
·ooo,ooo rail commuters, who
were forced to find alternate
means of getting to work. Most
of these are people who work in
New York, Philadelphia and
Chicago.
In one of the few exceptions,
the Ringling Brothers and
Barnum and Bailey Circus train
was briefly sidetracked by the
strike in New Haven, Conn. But .
WJion crews decided it was a
special case and agreed to man
the train after the strike
deadline into Boston, where the
LINGERIE DEPARTMENT
circus had an engagement
scheduled for Tuesday.
FIRST FLOOR

around if you only apply
yourself.
"I would rather say the future
is here," Valien stated, and he,
went on to point ouf
technolo~ical advances that
have made this generation so
different than preceding ones.
"Our technological strides,"
Valien said "have been great,
but the tbn~ has come to narrow
the gap between our social and
technological progress.
"We look to higher education
as our best hope for naiTowing
this gap, but· our systerm of
higher education has been
WJder attack for some time.

Lorenzo Sc,ott
Died Sunday

"The attack centers aroWJd
the notion thaf our traditional
systerm of higher education is
outmoded~ that tl does not serve
the ~s~ mter_ests of students,
that 11 ts avatlable to too fe:"
students, and to only a certam
category of st~dents . "
Vahen satd that these
criticisms have led to recorn.
mendations for new priorities in
higher ed.ucalion and pointed
out the dtverse nature of the
sources of these recom.
mendations.
In closing, Dr. Valien said
"The new priorities in higher
~ducation which I have been
talking about today represent
efforts to improve the system
and to bring it up to our
aspirations."

.'

VOL. XXIV NO. 24

1

A Big Bend Regatta Queen
will be chosen durin~ the Sig
Bend Regatta Weekenil JWJe 18,
19, 21, tt was annoWJced when
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce met Monday at
Bowers' Drive In.
Mrs. Vikki Gloeckner,
president of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of the Beta Sigma Phi;
Mrs. Judy Werry, vice
president, and Mrs. Rita Lewis
met with the chamber to
arrange for the selection of the
Regatta Queen and the Flea
Mart.
Mrs. Gloeckner said seven
candidates for queen have been
chosen with a possibility of
another entry. Candidates are
Sandy Sayre and Renee Burke
of Southern, Bev Thompson,
Jennifer Goble, Lou Ann French
and Peggy Story of Meigs, and
Rhea Mora of Eastern.
Queen candidates will ride on
the queen's float. Votes for the
candidates will be cast in the
auditorium of the former
Pomeroy JWJior High School.
There will be a queen and first
and second runners-up chosen.
Each of the three winners will
receive a trophy and gifts.
The Beta Sigma Phi will be in
charge of the Queen contest and
the Flea Mart. Everyone
wishing to participate in the
Mart is asked to notify Mrs.
Lewis at 992-2314.
Jack Kerr asked that the
chamber appropriate $20 for
advertising of the Flea Mart in
a Washin~ton C. H. newspaper
and the Tri-State Trade
Collectors Newspaper. A Flea
Mart will be held at Washington
C. H. soon and Mrs. Lewis will
ilfstrib.ute flyers there - ad·
vertising the local,event.
The chamber approved the
request made by Kerr and also
approved a budget of $IS for the
purchase of badges for Flea
Mart exhibitors.
Kerr ssid Flea Mart exhibits
could be placed on the
sidewalks on Pomeroy's East

SHRINE TO MEET
The Rev. Arthur LWld, pastor
of St. Paul Lutheran Church in
Pomeroy, will speak on
alchollsm wben the Twin City
Sbrine Club meets at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the club house in
Racine. All shriners, shrlnetlts
and shriners' wives and guests
are invited. Refreshnnents will
be served.

Lorenzo Dow (Pa) Scott, 85,
died SWlday morning at his
home on Locust St. in Mid·
dleport ending a lingering
illness.
Mr. Scott was born Sept. 7,
1887 in Vinton, the son of John
and Ida HWJI Scott. Besides hs
parents, he was preceded in
death by three brothers and a
sister. He was a retired conductor of the New York Central
GROUP TO MEET
Railroad where he had been Group Two of the First United
employed 46 years.
Presbyterian Church, Mid·
Surviving are his wife, Maude dleport, will meet Tuesday at
Price Scott; two daughters, 7:30p.m. at lliehome of Mrs. C.
Mrs. James (Esther Bonn) R. Karr, Jr., with Mrs. Karl
Simpson and Mrs. Maurice Owens in charge of devotions
(Dorothy Jean) Walker, both of
and Mrs. William Morris the
Middleport; two sisters, Mrs.
Ina Rife and Mrs. Ada Pierce, program chairman.
both of Gallipolis; two brothers,
Henry of Cheshire and Michael
TO PRACTICE
of Lufkin, Texas, and a grand·
daughter, Mrs. Harry (Sandra The Pomeroy Pee Wee
Jean) Roush.
Redl~gs will hold their first
FWleral services will be at 2 pracbce Thursday at 6 p. m.
p. m. Wednesday at the behind the former Pomeroy
Rawlings-Coats FWJeral Home .Junior High School.
with the Rev. Max Donahue Team members are Steve
officiating. Burial will be in the Diener, Clifford Kennedy, Chris
Gravel Hill Cemetery at Taylor, Steve Ohlinger, Tony
Cheshire. Friends may call at Jewell, Mark Casto, Todd
the fWJeral home from 7 to 9 Norton, Ed Blevins, Bllly
tonight,from2to4andfrom 7to Smith, Charles McKinney, Jbn
9 Tuesday evening and on Norton, and Don Icenhower.
Wednesday until time of ser· Bill Ohlinger, manager, asks
vices.
that aU be present.

n

.... :.

.:

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL,
The Pomeroy E·R Unit an·
swered a call to the Ernest
Keeler
residence 1 ' at
Harrisonville at 3:36 a. m.

· ~~~~a~:~::=t:s~~ta~

Monday. Keeter was taken to
medical paUent.

r---------------------------,
! News ••• in Briefs l
SST Looks Like a Dead Duck
WAsHINGTON - THE ONCE·DEAD Supersonic Transport
(SST), revived in the House last week, seems doomed to sink a
third time at the hands of a still-hostile U.S. Senate.
A UP! check Monday showed SST foes in the Senate should
have an eight or nine-vote margin when the vote comes late
Wednesday on whether to join the House in rescuing the conlroversial project.

Pincers Opened into A .Shau
SAIGON - SOUTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS along tbe
sununlt of mile-high peaks at both ends of the A Shau Valley
started moving down into the valley today in a pincers movement
against Communist forces on the valley Door. As they started
down in multi..Jlattallon force they encou,ntered only sporadic
contact with the CommWJists, military sources said.
But heavy fighting was expected in tbe five-week~ld
()peralion Lam Son 720, which is aimed at breaking Communist
conlrol of the 35-mlle long valley 375 miles north of Saigon. U. s.
forces six miles east of the valley's northern end, ·supported by
852 bombardments, began blowing up a vast six-mile square
Communist base area so well built it even has running water, field
spokesmen said.

Six More Cables Cut
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO -SIX MORE telephone cables to the
west and east of bere were severed early today, disrupting toll
calls and communications signals and bringing to 19 the number
of such cuttings in tbe last two days.
The latest acts of vandalism, apparently done with a power
saw as were the earlier ones, cut all toll calls from Youngstown to
points east. The toll lines were owned by AT&amp;T. The others,
owned by Ohio Bell Telephone Co., carried television service,
teletype lines and radio network service from Pennsylvania. It
was also reported that Mahoning County residents were unable to
reach numbers within this city.

These are
The Rich Peasants
by Formfit Rogers

Drugs Pouring in Anyway

Shop Weekdays

The bright embroideries are
right out of a foreign
adventure story. And all
these sleek nylon tricots pack
innothing'flat and anivc
fresh and chenful. For staying
home? Of course. Nothing nice1·
than feeling adventurous insirle

9:30.to 5 p.m.
Open Both

yout· own four walls. Comt\ SPe

Friday and Saturday
... .

the colors for )'OU!'self- \I'O I'ds
can't rlescribe tlwm.

.9:30 io.9 p:m.

..... ...

~--~-~---~o~-~--~--.;;;;;;;;:~-.__,.._;.;.;111!

.;.~

EIb" ~rfeIds In p~omerov
'·
r

1

•

.

•

-'

Main St. if permission is
granted.
The cost to exhibtlors for the
Flea Mart is $5 for one day and
$10 for the three days.
Kerr also noted that he had
been asked by Jim Carnahan to
hold an auction on the last day
of the nea mart using items
being displayed by exhibitors if
they so desired. Kerr is to
contact Carnahan to make
additional arrangements.
Jim Mees, parade chairman,
said II bands have bee!\. contacted with eight of the II
agreeing to -take part in the
parade whlch will be held on
Friday evening. The parade will
leave from South Second Ave.,
Middleport at 6 p.m. and
proceed non-slop to the
Pomeroy JWJior Hlgh School.
Mees also noted that business
!inns have expressed Interest In
displaying mobile homes and
boats on the upper parking lot
during the three day event.
Pomeroy coWJcil earlier had
granted permission for the use
of the parking lot to the
chamber.
Bill Grueser, president, ob..
served that members of the
Alpha Delta Epsilon Fraternity
of Rio Grande C9llege will pull a
li,ve frog on a wagon from Rio
Grande to Pomeroy to take part
m the activities.
.Charles
E. Blakeslee
presented an opinion poll ,for
people who will be attending the
Regatta furnished by the Ohio
Festival Association . The
questionnaires will he handled
by WMPO Radio at their booth
in front of. Elberfelds Depart.
rnent Store.
Blakeslee also announced
that Pomeroy firemen and
members of Drew Webster
Post, American Legion, will
serve barbecue chicken on the
upper parking lot Saturday
from II a.m. to 7 p.m. and on
SWJday from II a.m. to S p.m.
The Regatta program also was
announced.

By United PressiDternaUODal

sion, in its hearings starting
today, does not act by July I,
when the Postal Service formal·
ly takes over the mail system,
rates will fall back to what they
were Saturday.
The rate commission was
expected to approve the in·
CJ;eases. The hearings could last
for weeks, however, §ince the
rate controllers probably will
attempt to dispel any idea that
their function is an automatic
one.
As the hearing opened, postal
offices across the coWJtry
began selling more than 5
billion new stamps. First class
jumped from six to eight cents
- the first two-cent hike in the
history of that postal classwhile air mail went from 10 to
11 cents. Post cards went from
five to six cents; second class
mail was increased from 20 to
30 per cent; and third . class
mail was hiked 33 per cent.

'

I

J

TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1971

'

'

WASHINGTON - U. S. CUSTOMS Commissioner Myles J.
Ambrose said today marijuana and hashisl continue to be
smuggled into the UnitedStatesatan Wlprecedented rate, despite ·
intensified surveillance. Customs agents are employing dogs,
composite profiles of potential smugglers and the latest electronic
devices, Ambrose told the National Commission on Marijuana
and Drug Abuse, but "we realize ... there Is no simple solution to
the complex problem of marijuana and hashish abuse."
For one thing, he said, more pel/Pie than the entire population
o1 the United States - 225.6 million - passed through customs
Into the country last year alone and "each one of these persons is
a potential smuggler."

Gearing up for Gearing Down
OHIO INDUSTRIES BEGAN gearing themselves for possible
layoffs Monday as the state's 42,000 railroad workers honored
· (Continued on Page 8) · ·

PHONE 992-2156

•

-

uncz

Jim Mees was named to filltts
vacancy by Pomeroy CoWJcil
Monday night by a vote of 3·2
which may, or may not, stand a
legal test.
Mees would fill the post
vacated by Robert Hysell, who
resigned to accept a seat on the
board of public affatrs. Mees
- June 18-19-20, 1971
recently was nominated on the
Republican ticket to run for
Pomeroy-Middleport,
council as was incumbent
Rizer. Two council
on the Big Bend of the Ohio River Franklin
members are to be elected this
fall in the general election .
FRIDAY, JUNE 18
William Snouffer is rWlning
12 noon-9 p.m. Flea Market, Junior High School
on the Democrat ticket.
12 noon- 11 p.m. Carnival Rides
Rizer, Don Collins and Ebna
·6 p.m. Parade moves from Middleport
Russell voted yes on the motion
S: 15 p.m. Gospel Singers (free will offering)
made by Mrs. Russell to appoint
Pomeroy Stadium
Mees, with _Ralph Werry and
9:30 p.m. Street Dance
Lucten Poulin voting no.
II a.m. to 7 p.m., Chicken Barbecue
Mayor Charles Legar
questioned
whether a 3·2 vote
SATURDAY, JUNE 19
9 a.m. National Baton Twirling Contest, Jr. High would carry, as he felt that
possibly the motion needed a 4-1
Auditorium, Middleport
vote.
Legar will venfy that
10 a.m.-5 p.m. Flea Market
point.
10 a.m. Garden Tractor Pulling Contest
In other business, sohc1tor
to a.m.· II p.m. Carnival Rides
Fred Crow recommended
II a.m.-5 p.m., Chicken Barbecue
council consider an entrance
12 noon·8 p.m. Art Show-Pomeroy and Middlepolj and exit to the lot across from
12 noon-5 p.m. Ceramics Display-Old Senior High • , the Dairy Isle, on West Main at
the bridge. Crow suggested one·
Pomeroy
5·9 p.m. Frog' Jump, Football Stadium, Jr." and Sr. way traffic be used with the
entrance at the upper end of the
division, Bicycle Races • Tricycle Race • Frog on lot and exit at the lower.
Bicycle Race • Ladies Backwards Race
Crow noted that if the owners
9:30p.m. Frog Ball
and operators of the Dairy Isle
9:30p.m. Street Dance
are not granted this request, the
matter will be taken to court.
SUNDAY, JUNE 20
Council agreed not to change
&amp;:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m. Church Services
an earlier decision of one en·
11:30 a.m.-5:30p.m. Carnival Rides
trance. Mayor Legar observed
12 noon-8 p.m. Art Show, Pomeroy and Middleport that the village has been
12 noon·5 p.m. Ceramics Display, Old Senior High, notified it will be sued if council
Pomeroy
fails to approve the recomI p.m. Boat Races, Outboards, Runabouts
mendation.
Legar dtsclosed that a water
12 noon-5 p.m. Flea Market

Regatta ueen to Reign

At Elberfelds

~b~r:w·~·-··~
~
~·o·'U

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIQ

on

Graduation
Gift Time

Ohio Extended Weather
Outlook
Wednesday
through Friday:
Warm Wednesday, turning
a little cooler Thursday and
Friday. Chance of showers
Wednesday and in eastern
sections Thursday. Highs in
the 80s Wednesday, dropping
to the 7Us by Friday. Lows In
the 60s early Wednesday and
the 50s Wednesday and
Thursday ulght.

Devowd To The lnwrem Of The Meigs-Mason Area

\

Hearings Begin
WASHINGTON (UPI) -\'lith
Americans already paying
more for postage stamps, the
new Postal Rate Commission
today opened hearings to decide
whether the $1.41 billion tern·
porary rate hike should be
permanent.
The U.S. Postal Service and
its 1:1-man board of governors
put the higher rates into effect
at midnight SWJday because the
five-member rate commission
did not act, as · lhe law
provides, within 100 days after
the mcreases were proposed.
The law which created the
new postal set-up also created
the rate c~mmission to act as
final authority on rate changes
proposed by the Postal Service
-a power held Wltil now by
Congress. And if the commis·

w~ther

7th Armual Big Bend Regatta

SOuthern High Graduation
·E xercises Are~- Next Sunday
RACINE - Sixty-five seniors
will graduate Sunday from
Southern High School here.
Baccalaureate and com·
mencement exercises will be
conducted Sunday, May 23,
baccalaureate at 1:30 p.m. and
commencement at 8 p.m. in the
high school.
The Rev. Forrest Donley will
speak on the topic, What Is That
in Your Hand? and will be in·
troduced by a member of the
class, Tom Hamm. Another
member of the class, Denise
Snodgrass, will play the
processional and a senior,
Sandy Sayre, wlll give the
benediction. The high school
choir will sing, Preserve My
Soul, 0 God and Battle Hymn of
the Republic.
KEITH ASHLEY, son of
Charles Pyles, president of
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert D.
the board of education, will
present diplop1as to seniors at Ashley, Racine Route 2,
commencement which w1ll valedictorian, has an ac·
cumulative average of 96.4 in
begin at 8 p.m.
Speaker for commencement four years' work.
will be State Senator Oakley
Collins of Ironton. The band will .
present two selections, and the Harris, Barry Hart, Gary Hart,
valedictory address will be Art Hill, Pat Hill, Linda Hollon,
given by Keith Ashley and the Jim Hudson, Frank Ihle, Patti
salutatory address by Karen Ihle, Jim Johnson , Bernard La
Sayre. Pam ' Buck and Patti Valley, Garcia McGraw,
Ihle, class members, will give Debbie Mtller, Jeffrey MiJ!er,
the invocation and benediction. Cary Morris, Dan Nease, Roger
Seniors are Victoria Ables Nease, Kenny Neigler, Debbie
Gloria Adams, Robin Allen ' Norris, Roy Pierce, Ruth
.
' .
Keith Ashley, Bill Beegle, Susie P1erce, Cheryl Powell, G&lt;lrdon
Biggs, Debbie Boso, Barbara Proffitt, Mary Proffitt, Peggy
Brown, Pam Buck, Carroll
Cleland, Pam Codner, Shirley
Congo, Craig Cottrill, Deborah
Cross, Sharon Ervin, Steve
Grady, Dave Grindstaff, Torn
Hamm, Jeffrey Harris, Sherry
An IS.year-old Long Bottom
youth is reported recovering
today at Veterans Memorial
Hospital from an accidental
Mail Restricted
gunshot wound in the left side of
Due to the railroad strike, • his head near the left ear.
an embargo has been placed
Jim Soulsby, investigating
on second, third and fourth officer of the Meigs County
class mail, Pomeroy Post· Sheriff's Dept. ~ aid Tommy H.
master James Soulsby said McGrath was shot by Charlotte
today.
Marcinko, 19, who fired the gun
Second, third and fourth thinking she was triggering one
class mall going beyond a 350. designed to fire only blanks.
mile distance cannot be
McGrath, Charlotte's cousin,
accepted by local post offices. was on a couch watching TV. He
First clan mall'and air mail said he !Ieard the gun click two
will be accepted and will go times, then the explosion when
any distance.· Parcel }191lt the gun Went off.
packages accepted during the ' McGrath was wounded by a
embargo cannot be more than .22 calibre bullet which nicked
60 inches in length and girth the top of his left ear, hit the
and cannot weigh over 40 temple of the glasses he was
pounds.
wearing, split, and lodged under
his skin againsl.his skull. The

well drilled in Syracuse is
believed to be "a good one." He
said Syracuse officials ordered
pumping of the present
Syracuse well, near the new
Pomeroy well, Monday at 9
a.m. until 9 a.m. today to
determine what effect, 1f any,
the new well may have on
Syracuse's well .
The new well IS ap·
proximately 100 to 150 feet
upnver fr om the present
Syracuse welL
If the weW'proves satisfac·
tory, or as good as anticipated,
application wtll be made im·
mediately for a $170,000 federal
grant to finance a new water
supply for Pomeroy whtch
would cost approximately
$200,000, Legar noted.
The new water system would
eliminate the present water
treatment plant m Pomeroy.
Pomeroy 's present system
supplies 400 gallons a minute
and the Syracuse system pumps
only 100 gallons a minute.
Middleport village has three
water wells of its own that it is
(Continued on page 2)

Proffitt, Charles Pyles, Bar·
bara Richard, Diana Rose, Jo
Ann Roush, Linda Roush, Paul
Johnson, Becky Salser, Rita
Salser, Karen Sayre, Oliver
Sayre, Sandra Sayre, Robert
Shain, Jane Shuler, Don Smith,
Gary Smith, Mary Smith,
Denise Snodgrass, Larry
Weddle, Randy Wendorf, Ruth
Winebrenner and Deborah
Wolfe.

.I

ote
Angels Camp Would Give
Mark Twain Back to Frogs
ANGELS CAMP , CalH. (UP I )-Many residents of
Ill is Sierra community In Calaveras County wish Mark
Twain's story never made their annual frog jumping
coolest a famous internaUonal jubilee. About 70,000
people jammed the old Gold Rash town for the
weekend event. One person was killed, at least 141
injured and 60 arrested on various charges in the
resulting mayhem.
"And that's probably about! per ceofbf the ones
lllat should have been arresled," said Sbertff Russell
Leach.
Leach said fences were cut and a barn burned near
llle county fairgrounda, where 2,000 frogs leaped for
prizes in the coolest held annually since 198%.
The 15,000 ciUzens of Calaveras County "are pretty
upset," with tbe coolest," said Leach. "Very, very few
of our own people even go there any more."
Dennis Page, 18, of Modesto, CalH., was fonnd
dead In a sleepiDg bag. He was one of several persons
run over by vehicles as they lay sleeping. "You name it
and we had l~" said Leach. "And a lot of II a good
respectable buzzard wouldn't have anything to do
wtth.''

Robbers Hit
ProgramSetV•IDt 0 n Bank.

The newly formed Youth
Agamst Cancer group headed
by Marty Vaughan will have a
role in a novel "save-a-hfe"
party to be held at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday at th e Martin
Restaurant in Middleport.
Features of the party being
sponsored by the Meigs County
Chapter of the American
Cancer Society will include
entertainment by a barbershop
quartet, a style show by.Jola's of
Pomeroy, a talk by Miss Ger·
trude Bliss, public education·
chairman of the American
Cancer Society's Ohio Division,
and awarding of door prizes.
Purpose of the party is to
make the public aware of
means of p:evention and
detection especially of cancer in
women.
Tickets for the party, $1 each,
are being sold by local board
members or may be secured by
phoning 992-2688 or 992-2370.

Minor damage was reported
following a two-car accident
Monday at 7:25p.m. on SR 248.
The Sheriff's Dept. said
Harry Osborne, Jr., 47, Long
Bottom, pulled from a curb into
the path of a car traveling east
driven by Sarah Etta Spencer,
42, Winfield, W. Va. Osborne
stated he looked back before he
pulled out but failed to see the
approaching car. There were no
injuries or arrest.

FOUR MORE
CHARl;ESTON, W. · Va . He• k's, 'the Charleston-based
d1.scount store chain, has announced plans for four more
sfores this year, President Fred
Haddad announced Monday .
The stores would be located in
Charleston, Fairmont, Alliance,
Ohio and Newark, Ohio.

Youth Takes Shot
gWJ was a nine-shot short
barrel revolver.
In the room of the Neva
Marcinko home, one mile west
of Chester or! county road 35 at
the time of the accident were

TEN CENTS

Save-a-Life

Damage Minor
in 2-Car Accident

KAREN SAYRE, dangbter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert K.
Sayre, Racine, salutatorian,
has an accumulative average
of 95.84 in four years' work.

Partly cloudy and warm,
today through Wednesday with . ·.
a chahce of 'scattered thun·
dershowers tonight and Wed·
nesday beginning in west ·;
portion this afternoon or '
evening. Highs both days in the .
mid to Qppe~ 80s. Lows tonight
in the 60s.

Chuck and Charmine Marcinko
and Mrs. Marcinko, who stated
that the revolver never was
, completely loaded.
Soulsby satd it is difficult to
tell a blank gun from an actual
revolver, the only difference
being that the blank gun is
approximately one-half inch
Driver Jailed
shorter than the revolver.
An automobile was a total loss
Charlotte Marcinko was
and Its driver was charged with about ' I~ feet from McGrath
driving while intoxicated at
when the acctdent happened.
!2:30a.m. Tues~ay in Pome~oy.
McGrath Wlderwent surgery
Police said the car driven by this morning. No charge will be
John V. Martin, Pomeroy ,
filed, 11 was reported.
owned by ·Dana Covert,
Pomeroy, went out of control
near Shammy's Drive·l'ri and
'struck a utility pole. Martin ,
, LOCAL TEMPS
who was uninjured, was Temperature in downtown
removed to the county jail. The Pomeroy Tuesday at II a.m.
Pomeroy E·R unit was at" the was 70 degrees under sunny
scene
skies.

Roadblocks were set up
throughout the Tri..CoWJty area
early th1s morning by law en·
forcement authorities in an
effort to capture three suspects
who robbed the VInton Bank of
an undisclosed" sum of money
between 9:30 and 10 a.m.
It was the second time in less
than four years the VInton Bank
was hit by robbers and it was
Gallia's third bank to~ in 37
years.
According to Dale Rothgeb,
reporter for the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. , who was on the
scene at 11:30a.m., details were
sketchy, and officials proved
reluctant to release in·
formation.
It was learned that two un.
masked men, dressed casually,
entered the bank ~round 9:30
a.m. One other customer, who

'

..........·.·.·:·.-:···:..:-:·:·.·:······ oo

Scipio Alumni to
·Reunite May 29th
HARRISONVILLE - The
annual alumni reunion of old
Scipio Hlgti School will be
held at 7 p.m. Saturday, May
29, here at the school.
Speaker for the banquet will
be Tom Campbell, television
sports commentator of
Columbus. A round and
square dance will follow.
Reservations may be made
by contacting Mrs. Willie
Collins, 74Z·5434, Rutland
Route I, or Mrs. Larry Clark,
HaiTlsonvllle, 742·3889. Fee
for the banquet and dance is
$3 per person.

officials refused to identify, was
in the bank at the time, along
with Dewey Walker, bank
director and Mrs. Ruth Casto,
cashier.
The two strangers walked up
to the teller's .window, each
pulling a goo, and demanded
Walker fill up cotton type bags
with money. Walker thouglltthe
men were jokina, and that the

il\U!IIYertllot.reaLBut.altil'-lie . .
was threateried by one of the •
gunmen, an Wldisclbsed amoUIII
of cash was handed over.
An order by Gallia CoWlty
Prosecuting Atty. Hamlin C.
King, the description of the
robbers were not revealed to
newsmen.
The two gunmen upon
leaving the bank climbed into a
1963 red Chevrolet automobile
parked outside with a get-away
driver
inside . Officials
disclosed that the get-away car
had West Virginia license plates
(2C!291). The auto was found
later destroyed by fire on the.
Coal Valley Road northwest of
Vinton.
The robbers obviously had
another vehicle ready to use.
Lawmen set up roadblocks to
all exits from Gallia CoWJty,
including one at the new
Memorial Silver Bridge. West
Vir~inia lawmen also set up
roadblocks throughout Mason
County.
.
Officials in Meigs, ,Jackson
and Vinton Counties, along with
the FBI, sheriff's departmenll
(Continued on Page 8)

Suits Filed

~·g.@~:&gt;-~=1-::::.::::::::::!!..-!!!:!:!~~::::~~::::::::

SCS Will
Honor TWO
C 1 BTka
.
ar .11 m, diStrict con.
servali~mst, and Paul_ Evans,
techmctan, Gallla·Metgs Sot!
and Water CD, will he hono:·ed
whe~ the U.S. S~il Conservation
Servtce. holds tis first annual
statewide honor awards
ceremony May
24.
Rober 1 .E· . Quill'tam, state
cqnservahomst, satd the
ceremony ~ill hOnor them and
47 otber Oh10 SCS employees for
spect~l achievement, out·
standmg performance , and
other accompbshments.
"The awards will acknowledge. our people who
have conhnuously extended
themselves, utilizing much of
thetr off 1uty lime, to promote
conservatwn .of our natt:ral
,resources and mterest other~ m
w;rks of ~nvl~on~ntal tm·
p ovement, sa1d Qudham.
Cash awa~ds, cerlifiCates or
lapel pins wtll be presented to
the employee~ at the ceremony
m Columbus in token of thelr
various exemplary activities.

For Money
A suit for divorce and two
suils for money have been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Bonnie M. Gordon, ReedJ..
ville, filing suit for divorce
against Gary C. Gordon, Reed,s..
ville charging gross neglect of
duty: seeks custody of one
minor child.
Blaine and Ruby Carter
Middleport , Rl . I, filed sut't for'
$3,400 against United Roofing
and Construction co Alben::
pleading they enter~ into ~
contract for installation of
sidmg on lheir home which the
defendants have failed to fulfW
according to the terms of the
contract.
The Atlas Subsidiaries of Ohio
Inc Montgomeryl'ille In·
dustrial · Park,
Mont.
gomeryville, Panna., filed suit
for $!,39&amp;.40, the amoWJt alleged
due on a promissory note by
fV!ymond H. and Louvenia V.
Coles, Jndianaplis, Inc.:
Charles Jones, Middleport,
administrator of the estate al
the late Sadie M. Jones, 11111
Howard E : Fronk Melfll
County 'l'f,easurer. '

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