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I, •

.-: .. ',.;. -:-:-.-:·.·:·:· .;.·-:·.·:·: :·:·:·.·.·:·: .-.-:·.·:·:-·..;-:.:

-Little Girls Found Dead ·

Candystriper

AKRON Ohio (UPI) - Lori
Crowe and' Lorna Ritz, two nineyear-&lt;&gt;ld friends, took the litter
bags that were passed out in
school and joined a neighborhood cleanup project.
- 1'hey failed to return home
Monday night. Tuesday their
f d
fully-clothed bodies were OWl
in a ditch. They apparently had
been Sta bbed to death and
tossed from a car.

New Officers
Are Installed

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MEMBERS OF TilE MEIGS COUNTY American Cancer Society Chapter are busy this
week ·preparing for a "save-a-life" party to be held at 2:30 p.m. Swtday at the Marlin
Restaurant in Middleport. Working Tuesday afternoon on the project were from the left, front,
Mrs. W. P. Lochary, Mrs. Arthur Lund, executive director; Atmand, who will be featured at
the organ during the party; Mrs. James Brewington; at the rear are Lloyd Blackwood and
Mrs. George Morris. The party, designed to provide information on detection and prevention of
cancer, will feature a sty,le show by lola's, a talk by a state cancer official, and music by a
men's quartet and Armand.
·

Steel Strike Expected
WASHINGTON (UP!)-Pros-- can catch and pass the cost of
peels appeared slim today for living .
averting a strike in August by But the steel firms, plagued
450,000 steel workers that could by falling profits and increased
peril President Nixon's hopes competition from foreign produfor a pre-election economic cers, were braced to resist the
recovery.
union demands, which are
Steel negotiators were open- expected to exceed the 9 per
ing contract talks today amid a cent annual pay raises the
backdrop of workers' demands union won earlier this year
for substantial wage increases from the can making industry.
and plummeting industry pro- Nixon's Council of Economic
fits.
Advisers has warned that a
United Steel Workers Pres- costly settlement by the steel
ident I.W. Abel has made it industry could launch another
clear he wants a "substantial" round of inflation and create
wage increase so his members, more wtemployment. But Abel
pinched during the present countered that the steel workcontract period by the worst ers "have no intentions of
Inflation since the Korean War, acquiescing voluntarily In any

I
effort that would deny them an
equitable settlement."

This sets the stage for a
classic labor-~anageme~t
struggle and showdown this
summer that mos~ observers
say pr~bably will wmd up With
a str1ke when the present
contracts expire July 31.
The industry and union
negotiators plan to spend today
and Thursday making opening
presentations, then will engage
in local bargaining through the
rest of May and June before
returning here after the July
4th weekend to get down to
serious national bargaining.

Contest for A Shau Op~ns
SAIGON (UPI)-Thousands
of South Vietnamese troops
driving into the A Shau Valley
fought a six-hour battle today
with large Communist forces
entrenched there, UPI front
dispatches reported. It was the
first major battle of the three-

weekend campaign.
UP! correspondent Stewart
Kellerman, reporting from one
of the allied fire bases
surrowtding the 35-mile-long
valley In the northern part of
South 'Vietnam, said no details
of casualties on either side
were given in initial reports
:..,,... ¥¥-¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥-J received at the. fire base.
Kellerman sa1d elements of
five Communist regiments were
involved in the battle, but exact
0
size of the force was not
known. A North Vietnamese
,Little minds are lamed
regiment totals 2 900 men and
and
subdued
by
'
•
misfortune , but great -11
-11 minds rise above II
-II
- Washington Irving :

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A Thought
.. For T day

JUDIOr
• High

t

:t *It's Quick!
* Easy* :t •'-AJDCe
.,11&lt;.
rt Set
-11
~

...

-II

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DRIVE·I.N t
NG ...
BANK I
:
Fridays Only
-II
The Drive-In Window:
is Open
il
•9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

!

Aspring vocal concert will be
presented Thursday evening by
the seventh and eighth grade
classes of Southern Junior High
School.
The first hall of the program
will feature the girls glee club;
the second half the boys choir
joining the girls in several
popular numbers.
Accompanying the girl and
boys chorus will be guitarists
Dennis Satterfield, Terry
Norris and Steve Hupp, Solos,
duets and ensembles will also

.£.

t-II

other Bankong Hours ' to
J and S to 7 as usual on -II
~ Fridays.
-11
:;:
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it
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FARMERS BANK
t and SAVINGS CO. t beT~:~~e~·wm be given in the

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POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

the number was somewhere
lower than 14,500 Commwtists.
Size of the government force
was not disclosed for security
reasons but "several battalions" of marines and infantrymen were involved. A government battalion at full strength
is 665 men.

The troops involved were part
of the lsi South Vietnamese
Infantry Division which began
pushing into the valley from the
northeast end Sunday while
another large force drove in
from the west. They were
supported by U.S. helicopter
gunships and jet fighterbombers.
Officers told Kellerman allied
aircraft backing the growtd
troops were receiving heavy
growtd fire despite advance
strikes by B52 bombers and
that heavier fighting was
expected "in the next few
days."

B52s today bombarded a
suspected Communist troop
conctntration six miles south of
the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
in a I continuing campaign to
prevent North Vietnamese reinforcements from reaching the
valley. The AShau runs east to
west across Vietnam below the
DMZ.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
:f junior high auditorium under answered
at 8:21 a.m.
l( the direction of Mrs. Lee Lee. Wednesdaya call
to the Emel
Curtain time is 8 p.m. The
Al~shire residence at Laurel
it public is invited.
Chff. . M_rs, Sally B1as, Mrs.
Aleshlfe s mother, who was 111,
was taken _to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

t

:t ................. ..

ANOTHER GOOD BUY
FROM BAKER'S

CONGREGATION TO MEET
There will be a meeting of the
congregation of the Pomeroy
Church of Christ following the
morning worship service
Sunday.
FIRE PUT OUT
At 1:19 p.m. Tuesday the
Pomeroy Fire Dept. was called
to Laurel Cliff to extinguish a
brush fire near the former coal
mine of Pearl Jacobs.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
May 19-20
NOT OPEN

BAKER
FURNITURE.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Friday &amp; Saturday
May 11·22
THE
OUT-OF.TOWNERS
&lt;Technicolorl
Jack' Lemmon
Sandy Dennis
If is FUNNY.
TARZAN'S
JUNGLE REl!ELLION
(Technocolorl
Ron Ely, as Tarzan
Sam Jaffe
SHOW STARTS 7 P..M.
'

Miss Mary Ardis, assistant
sponsor, installed new officers
when the Candystripers of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
met recently in the hospital
cafeteria.
Miss Ardis presented red
carnation corsages to the new
officers who are Becky Wright,
president; Connie Grueser, vice
president; Debbie Lavalley,
secretary; Beth Theiss,
treasurer, and Connie Lanning,
publicity chairman.
Mrs. Donald Diener, Candystriper sponsor, welcomed
new members and presented
charms to the Seniors. A tour of
the new wing was made and
refreshments were served.
Debby Fitch, outgoing president, presided.

Robbery
(Continued from page I)
Prix was ~potted by Agent
Herman Henry, Bureau of
Criminal Investigation, London,
who was enroute from Jackson,
to assist in the investigation.
Agent Henry immediately
gave chase while alerting other
lawmen's agencies. Henry was
later joined by Lt. Dave Meder! Boland and Ptl.
Terry Boland of the
Athens Post state Highway
Patrol The FBI and deputies
. Kenn/ Deckard,' Gary Wallace
and Wayne Davis of ,the Gallia
Cowtty Sheriff's Department.
During the high speed chase,
officers said their cars were
traveling over 100 m.p.h. They
were also aided in their chore
by a highway patrol plane.
According
to
Deputy
Deckard, the men turned off the
main highway onto the county
roads 5-30. They were then
spotted traveling along County
Rd. 5 near old Rt. 50 in the
Albany area.
With Ptl. Boland and Deputies
Deckard, Wallace and Davis in
hot pursuit, the suspected bank
robbers failed to negotiate a
curve at a T-intersection connectmg County Rd. 5 and 30.
Their car went over a 51).75
foot embankment and stopped
among several trees and
stumps. They were quickly
surrounded by the lawmen who
summoned a Wrightsel ambulance from McArthur.
After it was determined that
they were not seriously injured,
the men were rushed to the
Holzer Medical Center by a loud
police escort.
Both cars used in the apparent robbery have been
impounded at the Gallia County
Jail.
It was learned late Tuesday
that the 1971 Po,ntiac had been
purchased from Bomershine
Pontiac, Inc., Atlanta, Ga . It
has not yet been determined
whether or not the Chevrolet
was stolen.
The Vinton Bank was robbed
of $2,341 on Dec. 5, 1967, by
Thomas Starr. Starr was later
apprehended walking along Rt.
160 in the Radcliff area, about 15
miles north of Vinton. Two men
attempted to rob the bank in
1938. They too were later apprehended and convicted.
Other lawmen assisting were
from Jackson, Vinton, Meigs,
and Mason Counties.

Spencer Hears
Larry Spencer of Middleport
was in Athens Tuesday night
where he ·attended a banquet
observing the 50th anniversary
of the Kiwanis Club held at
Baker Center .
The district governor and Lt.
governor of Kiwanis were on
hand to hear the speaker, Wes
Fesler, former Ohio State
University football coach, who
spoke on the topic, Youth and
Attitudes, stressing the changes
in attitudes over a lifetime.
Fesler is employed with Investors Diversified Service with
which Spencer is also
associated.

MASON
.
·.~. ~

DRIVE·IH
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Tonight, Thur. &amp; Fri.
May IM0'2t
Double Feature Program
THEY CALL ME
MISTER Tl BBSI
(Color).
Sidney Pol tier
GP
-PlusPUSSYCAT
PUSSYCAT
I LOVE YOU
(Color)
Dian McShane
Severn Arden
GP

Miss Hennessy, Wayne Well Outstanding. MHS seniors

Akron detectives said late
Tuesday it appeared a "sharp
knife" was used to .kill the little
girls, but th~t nothmg.would be
certain unbl autopSies were .
J)l!rformed on their bOdies.
'
"We've got no leads, no
suspects, no nothing," a
sheriff's deputy said. "We don't I
even know exactly how they ,

)

Bernadette Hennessy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Hennessy, I&gt;,omeroy •.
and Wayne Well, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Well, Pomeroy
Route 3, were~ named- the· outstanding girl and boy of the
senior class Wednesday by a
faculty committee at the annual
Meigs High School awards
as§embly.
·Copies ofjthe Danforth book, I
Dare You 1were presented to
Miss Hennessy and Well.
John Bentley presented track
awards to Mickey Ash, Larry
Goleman, Chuck Faulk, Gene

died."

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

TilE HOME LAUNDRY- One ol Middleport's oldest
businesses with an over 70 year record- will close its doors

June 15, Charles Strauss, operator for the past eight years,
said today. High cost of labor makes closing necessary,
Strauss said. The lawtdry, which used "We wash everything
but the baby" for Its motto was operated over 60 years by J.
P. Joachim.

·Liquor Stocks
Reduced 22¥2%
COLUMBUS (UPI)- TheOhio
Department of Liquor Control is
reducing the number of items
for sale in its 397 stores and
agencies across the state by
22% per cent, director Richard
E. Guggenheim announced today.
Guggenheim said cutting 234
of the 995 items now carried
was "purely a normal merchandising step."
"The items we are cutting
represented only 3.2 per cent of
our total business volume," he
said. "It is just good business
practice to get rid of marginal
items. "

"We have had by far the
largest number of items for sale
of any liquor control state in
the nation," Guggenheim said.
An assistant to the director said
Ohio would now rank second to
Pennsylvania in numer of items
offered. Sixteen other states
have liquor control laws similar
to Ohio's.
The 234 items will not be reordered after Jwte I, but will
be available to the public until
they are sold out.
The cuts include various sizes
and packagings of 52 brand
names.
"This is the first major cut
in the department in some
time," Guggenheim said.

11

We

will re-examined our listings
every three or four months to
consider cuts and additions."
"If we find out that we made

Rails
(Continued from page I)
traffic in major cities and
brought an economic squeeze
by stopping shipment of vital
goods. Thousands of • auto
workers were laid off or put on
half days Tuesday.
Labor secretary James Hodgson said he expected partial
train service to be restored this
morning and full service later
in the day. Commuter railroads
in the New York metropolitan
area said they expected full
service for this morning's rush
hour. Commuter lines in other
urban areas promised at least
partial service.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - James
Chandler, Southside; Mrs. B. F.
Turner, Middleport; Mrs. Lewis
Faudree, Henderson; Mrs.
Charles Meadows, Ashton;
Belville Johnson, Mason; John
Little, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Herbert Condee, Henderson;
Raymond Wray, Shelley
Pauley, Apple Grove.
DISCHARGES - Leroy
Durst, Mrs. Charles Zimmerman, Roger Pack, Mrs.
James Kirker .
BIRTH-May 18,a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Terrance Blankenship, Letart.
WORKSHOP SET
Episcopal Church women of
Grace Church in Pomeroy will
cond.uct . a workshop on commu~ucat10n Thursday at the
parish house from 10 a.m. to
2: 3() P:m. Mr&amp;. Keith Rainey of .
the Diocesan Board of Church
Women Will be the leader·

errors and the public wants
something we cut out, we will
put it back in our inventory,"
he added. "We want to increase
sales, not decrease them.
"The Ohio State University
School of Administration is making a full-scale study of marketing for us, including talking to
customers about their prefer·
ences. We will react according
to their findings.
"Every supplier that had
brands cut had an interview
with our staff and I made a
final review myself," Guggenheim said. "1'hey hate to lose
sales but realize it is only good
business practice.''

Guggenheim said beginning
next month the department
would cut the cost of case purchases by 10 per cent in a
"two month trial."
"If the price cut justifies itself, we will continue it," he
said.
The director also said an experimental delivery service will
begin next month in the five
cities where the department has
warehouses- Cincinnati, Columbus, Toledo, Cleveland and
Massillon.
"Payments must be in advance and there will be a delivery charge- probably about
$3 per case," Guggenheim said.
"I think there are many people, for instance housewives
planning parties, who would
rather have a case of liquor delivered to their homes than go
out and buy it," he said.
Guggenheim said his department was attempting to
strengthenenforcementofliquor
laws by conducting seminars
for local police officials.

Budget
(Continued from page I)
While the budget-maklng mechanics were in progress, Rep.
Norll)an A. Murdock, R-Cincinnati, chairman of the Education
Committee, and John A. Hall,
chief lobbyist for the Ohio Edcation, swapped conflicting
conflicting views, on the education cuts.
,
Murdock said fiscal responsibili ty lind "prudent management" of money by local school
districts would help solve problems as much as massive
doses of money.
Hall warned this attitude
could lead to ."disaster" in the
form of school closings.
Rep. John A. Galbraight, RMaumee, chairman of an education section of the Finance
Committee, reported his unit
has cuts $25 miUion from the
governor's budget for higher edu,cation and plans to require full
professors to devote at least 12
hours a week to classroom work
at state institutions.
Increase Cut In Hall
.As predicted by House Speaker Charles F, Kurfess last week
the .GOP knocked $58 million
out•of a proposed '118 million
pay increase forstateemployo.s.
The general section of the Finance Committee cut $24 million out of the Department of
Taxation's budget, but Republicans said this was "no Indication" they Are abandoning the
idea of a personal Income tax
audits incr~ased cost of collec-

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Wednesday
under sunny skies was 70
degrees.
tion.

·-

Visit the busy Housewari!Js Department on the
Main Floor. Complete selection of Dinnerware, Glassware, Cutlery, Electrical
Appliances, Clothes Hampers, Paints, brushes
and rollers, Rubbermaid Housewares,
Cooking Utensi Is, Pyrex Ware, Novelty
Candles, Chrome Serving Aids, Artificial
Flowers, Garment Bags, Skirt Racks, Shoe
Racks, Cold Pack Canners, Freezer Bags,
paper and tape, Ice Cream Freezers,
Bathroom Scales, Westmoreland milk glass,
Imperial Glassware, Barbecue Grills and
Fold-away Carts, Brooms, Mops, Waxes,
Polishes. a II kinds of cleaning helps, lrof'!ing
Boards, Wall clocks - Alarm Clocks. Gift items
and many more.

PAINT
SALE I
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Spred Satin Latex Wall Paint
Spred Latex Semi Gloss Enamel
Spred Lustre Semi Gloss Enamel
Spred Gloss All Purpose Enamel
Spred Urethane Florenamel
Spred Acrylic Latex House Paint
Endurance House Paint
Craftsman House Paint
Housewares Dept. lsi floor

Sale! GARBAGE CANS
20 GALLON SIZE
All weather container with snap lock lid .·
Noiselwss - Seamless - Easy to Clean - Can't
rust or batter out of shape like metal cans. An
8.95 value.

3.00

This Weekend

20 inch General Electric

WINDOW FANS
OUR REGULAR 29.95

21.00
See The Complete Line of G.E. Portable Fans

CORNING WARE COOKWARE
Bake · Cook - Serve. AI I in one pish. Corning
Ware Cookware is made of Pyr&lt;iceram brand
glass ceramic. Smooth, shiny white surface
with blue cornflower design is easy to keep
like new. Withstands temperature extremes,
even going from freezer to direct heat.

ANOTHER SHIPMENT!

Corella• Livingware:
Lightweight, durable,
everyday dishes that
cost only $19.95 for a
20-piece service for four!
A brana·11ew choice called Corella
Llvingware. It's the first daily dinnerware to combine beauty, practicality,
and low price.
.It has the look, feel and "ring" of
china.
It's translucent, yet strong. Guaranteed to ·be · replaced if It breaks,
chips, crazes or stains.
It's safe In the dishwasher and oven.
Snowflake Blue
Butterfly Gold

1-------------------Be ThriftJ! Saw All of Your Saleslips from
-

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Elberfelds·In Pomeroy
.._-~----~-------'-

Roger Abbott, Stan Wilson, Jed
Will, Rick Ash, Roger Dixon ,
Ron Clonch, Gene. Powell, Tim
Demosky, Bill Vaughan, David
Boyd, Steve DWlfee and Paul
Cunningham, - ~
,The mathematics award
presented by Earl Young went
to Robert Couch and Ebbie
Harbrecht received the Drew
Webster ·Post 39, knerican
Legion Auxiliary scholarship.
Carol Hargraves received the
national high school poetry
cerllficate from Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee.
Diehl presented valediCtory

trophies to Debbie Crow and
Glenna Keyes, the salutatory
trophy to Gloria Jean Oiler, and
the honorarian awards· to
Glenna Sprague, Mary Brickles
and Franklin Rizer.
Presented chorale keys by
Mrs. Christine Guthrie were
Glenna Sprague, pianist, cited
for superior accompanyist at
the performances at the district
solo and ensemble competition ,
and Duane Will, tenor, who
received a superior ratmg in
that event.
Rece1v1ng certificates . of
awards in recog nition for

participating in the Meigs .
Chorale were seniors Mary ,
Bradbury, Mary Bricldes,.
Cathy Bunce, Twila aatworthy, . )
Debbie Crow, Mary Ferrell, Lu
Ann French, Anita_Fultz, Carol
Hargraves, Mary Lou King,
Teresa Nicinsky, Jeanette
Phillips, EUen Rice, Glenna
Sprague, Peggy Story, Sherrie
Turner, Donna Weber, Jane
Wise, Randy Becker, Paul
Card, Robert Couch, Richard
Dean, Gary Ellis, Sherman
Mills, Fred Rayburn, Wayne
, (Continued on page 2)

COLUMBUS (UPll - In what is called the "largest single effort" by a state Project Freedom group, 11 relatives of Ohio servicemen missing or held captive in North Vietnam plan to fly to
Geneva, Switzerland, to attend the Geneva Convention May 24.
"This Ohio delegation is the largest single effort undertaken by
any state Project Freedom office on behalf of the prisoners and
missing men," Richard Shoemaker, state organizer, said Wednesday,
The 11 will carry with them petitions "expressing the concern of
Ohioans and bearing millions of signatures" which they intend to
turn over to North Vietnamese representatives at Geneva,
Shoemaker said.
The 11 Ohioans planning to make the trip included:
-Mrs. Eileen Beck, North Canton, whose son Edward has been
missing since Aug. 9, 1969.
-Mrs. Catherine Osborne, Gahanna, whose husband, Edwin,
has been missing since Oct. 2, 1968. Her daughter, Janelle, 14, will
accompany her.
-Mrs. Joann Shaw, Chillicothe, and Mrs. Jane Blazer,
Massillon, whose brother, James Reed, is missing in action.
-Mrs. Gerrie Arledge, Columbus, whose son Robert has been
missing since July 2, 1966.
-Miss Susan Sifritt, Shaker Heights, whose brother-in-law Glen
Nix has been a prisoner since Oct. I, 1966.
-Mrs. Suzanne Wideman, Lakewood, whose son Robert has
been a prisoner since May 1967,
-Mrs. Phyllis Farrow, Chagrin Falls, whose cousin, Wade
Groth, has been missing since Feb. 12, 1968.
-Mrs, Sue Busch, Galion, husband, Jon, has been missing since
June 8, 1967.
' -Dick !Randolph, Toledo, whose brother-in-law, Ted Kopfman,
has been a prisoner since 1966.

Oasses
Begin
August
30th
,---------------------------i
1\.T
•
B
.
,.f.
: 1'ews••• zn rze1 s :
·

I

By United Press International

Last Rites being 4dministered
WASHINGTON -FOR TilE U. S. entry in the supersonic
transport race, it was all over today but tbe burial ceremony. The
House, which only a week ago tried to breatbe new life into the
stricken SST, was administering the last rites this afternoon.
House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan reluctantly
concurred, "The Senate has acted understandably, if not ~Yisely ."
The Senate finished off the faint hopes of SST supporters in a
!~our session that lasted until nearly midnight Wednesday .
When the votes were cast, the SST had gone down for the third
time this year in the Senate. On a roll call of 58 to 37, the Senate
approved a motion by Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., to delete a
$85.3 million for SST development from a supplemental appropriation bill. And so it died.

The Meigs Cowtty Board of
Education today announced the
calendar for the 1971-72 school
year which has been approved
by the three local school district
boards of education. aasses
begin Aug. 30, 1971 and end May
26, 1972, offering 180 days of
teaching and providing for two
teacher meetings.
THE CALENDAR
Friday, Aug. 27, Teachers'
Meeting.
Monday, Aug. 30, first day of
schooL
Monday, Sept. 6, no schooL
Friday, Oct. 8, end of first six
weeks.
Monday, Oct. 11, begin second

six weeks.
Friday, Oct. 15, no school
(MCEA).
Friday, Oct. 29, no school
(SEOTA).
Wednesday, Nov . 24, end of
second six weeks.
Monday, Nov . 29, begin third
six weeks.
Wednesday,
Dec . 22,
Christmas vacation (end of
day) .
Monday , Jan . 3, classes
resume.
Friday, Jan . 21, end of fourth
six weeks.
Monday, Jan . 24, begin fourth
six weeks.
Friday, March 3, end of fourth

six weeks.
Monday, March 6, begin fifth
six weeks.
Thursday. March 30, begin
Easter vacation (end of day).
Tuesday, April 4, classes
resume .
Friday, April 14, end of fifth
six weeks.
Monday, Aprill7, begin sixth
six weeks.
Thursday, May 25, last day of
schooL
1
Friday, May 26, records and
reports.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Senate Republican Leader Hugh
Scott, R-Pa ., gave a strong endorsement today to efforts to
circumvent a possible veto action by President Nixon which
could kill the Appalachian Regional Commission .
The 13-state commission, designed to develop povertystricken Appalachia , will expire
June 30 wtless its authorization
IS extended .
Both chambers of Congress
have passed bills continuing the
ARC for four more years, but
the House attached 11 to a
measure to continue the accelerated . public works program, whiCh may face a veto

atTt:: :a:~r ~:u::~rently before a JOint House-Senate conference committee, with only
41 days remaining until the
June 30 deadline .
"Separate approval must be
granted for the Appalachia
bill," Scott said today in letters to Sen. Jennings Randolph, D-W.Va., and Rep. John
Blatnik, D-Minn., chairman of
the respective Senate and
House Public Works Committees.
"It would be a shame to see
this program fall by the wayside if the House-Senate con-

OPELIKA, ALA. -THE DEEP SOUTH'S first black sheriff
since reconstruction says his faith in American justice was
reaffirmed in an Alabama courtroom. Sheriff Lucius Amerson of
Tuskeg~e and his chief deputy, Richard Coleman Jr., also black,
were cleared by an all-white federal jury Wednesday of charges
they violated the civil rights of a Negro prisoner by beating him In
jail. Their defense counsel included Alabama's white attorney
general, William J. Baxley.
Amerson, 37, said the seven-man, five-woman jury, which
deliberated an hour and five minutes, consisted of "12 unbiased
people." They would have acquitted a while sheriff under similar
circumstances, he said.

Soviets Get Jump ott Mars Probe
CAPE KENNEDY -THE SOVIET UNION got the jump on
the United States In sending a probe toward Mars this month. U.
s. planetary Scientists now are trying to figure out when It will get
there and what it will do :
'
Some American specialists are guessing that the wtusually
heavy, five-ton spacecraft lawtched Wednesday will attempt to
orbit the Red Planet next November. That also is the goal of
America's one reml!ining Mariner Mars explorer. The first
spacecraft to achieve the feat will establish a space '1irst." Earth
is the only planet sa far to have man made satellites.

18-Year Old Vote Measure Liked
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO HOUSE has overwhe~ingly
i&gt;assed and returned to the Senate a proposed amendment to the
Ohio constitution' to lower the minimum voting age t~ 18 for all
elections. At the same ttme, House Democrats have initiated a
move to force action on ratification of a similar amendment to the
u:.s. Cqnstitution.
The r_esolutlon on the Ohio Constitution, cleared 9().3 Wedne!day, UBi be sent back to the Se~a te for concurrence in an
arne
t prohibiting It from appearing on the November ballot
if ,f ral amendment Is ratified by 38 state legislatures by
Aug. I

Head Start to Open
The Meigs Cowtty's Summer
Head Start Program which will
begin Jwte 14, and end Aug. 6, is
a program designed to assist
low-income
families .in
preparing their children for
schooL
To be eligible to attend, the
children of low-income families
should be five or six years old
and should not have previously
attended public schools.
aasses wlll be held In the
Middleport, Salisbury, Rutland,
Harrisonville and Salem Center
Elementary Schools during
morning hours only.
Head Start registration
blanks have been placed with
all elementary principals of the
cowtly so that they may be
readily obtained by interested
families. Also, these forms may
be obtained by contacting
Fenton Taylor, program
director, in the Middleport
Jwtior High building.
Registrations will be ac. cepted until classes are fill~d on
a first come, first served basis.
Parents are reminded that

C OF C TO MEET
There will be a meeting of the
Middleport Chamber of ComAs Al~ays, Crops are Gambles
merce Friday evening at 7:30 at
COLUMBUS - OHIO FARMERS HAVE just finished the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric meeting rooms.
&lt;(Continued on J)llge 10)
'

registration does not imply
enrollment as pupils will be
enrolled upon the basis of
eligibility · reflected
in
registration information.
Head Start is a federally
funded program of the Office of
Economic Opportwtily and the
Gallia-Meigs Community Action Program in cooperation
with the Meigs Local School
District.

Perrin Will
Give Bibles

The 13 states comprising ARC
are Pennsylvania, New York,
Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia,
Maryland, \!illginla, Tennessee,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi.
•
On Wednesday, Donald w·.
Whitehead, federal co-chairman
of ARC, gave representatives of
the various states a bleak pic,
ture at its monthly meeting. ·
"We have every indication to
believe that, regardless of de-·
lay, the House conferees will·
·ms1st
· on T'111e ~ (the public
· ),' Whitehead
wor ks secllon
·
said.
"What the President will do
with that J don't know," he
added.
.

No one was hurt in a two-car
accident at 7:50a.m. today on
SR 124 in Syracuse acce&gt;rdlng to
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach.
Acar driven west by Betty L.
Curfman, 46, Racine, RD, was
struck by one driven by Robert
E·. Hudson, Hartford, W. Va .,
who pulled from Second St., into
the path of Betty Curfman.
There was medium damage to
the Curfman car, none to
Hudson's. Hudson was cited to
County Court for failure to yield

right of way.

No OneI_ lnJ. ur.le'd·:
_ Wedne~d~y at 5:25 p. m. 011
township road 46, about 1.3 of a
mile north of Langsville.
Carroll E. Smith, 42, Rutland,
traveling north in a Ford truck
met another truck coming south
driven by Sammy L. Darst, 21,
Albany, Rt. 3,atanarrowptace
in the road . Smith applied his
brakes and went into a ditch.
There were no injuries or
arrests.

SouthemHigh Outstanding
Boy, Girl Awards are Made
Keith Ashley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. • Robert D. Ashley, and
Pam Buck, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Buck, both of Racine
Route 2, were named the out-

standing senior boy and girl of
the Southern High School
graduating class Wednesday
afternoon at the annual awards
assembly.

'

,
I

I

The Rev. W. H. (Bill) Perrin,
who has served as Meigs County
Chairman of the Project
Freedom movement, will be in
Columbus Friday where he wW
present Bibles to members of
prisoner of war families who
will board a plane bound for
Geneva, Switzerland.
Members of the families will
be delivering petitions 1bearing
thousands of signatures to
North Vietnamese delegates.
These signatures secured
during Project Freedom Week
ask more humane treatment of
prisoners of war in Vieinam. If
the petitions are refused, they
will be given ·to a neutral
delegation.

'

ference committee doesn't act
soon in order for the bill to be
signed into law before the Jile
of the commission ends next
month," Scott added.
"Consider, now, the plight of
our Appalachian citizens who
are virtually held in hostage
because of the controversial
public works bill to which their
Appalachian development legislation is attached," Scott reminded Randolph and Blatnik.
The four-year extension also
faces possible disfavor because
II1e N1xon administration hoped
1o end it after one more year,
and then to include it as part
of the rural development portion of the special revenuesharing program.

Faith in Justice Reaffirmed

I

TEtfCENTS

.

was delayed. He is reported in
good condition at Holzer
recovering from a fractured
jaw and brain concussion
suffered in the same crash. A
nephew of the elder Sherlock, he
will be arrainged as soon as his
condition permits.
The FBI, meanwhile, continued today to investigate the
robbery. Officials have not
disclosed the exact amowtt of
money that was taken or the
total amowtl recovered.
The susp~cted robbers
allegedly fled with the money
but were captured two hours
later after their second getaway
car plunged over a 50-75 foot
embankment during a highspeed chase on County Roads 530 in Vinton Cowtly.
Their first getaway car, a 1963
Chevrolet, apparently was
deliberately abandoned and
burned on Shiloh Rd., in Huntington Twp.

I

PHONE 992·2156

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

Ohio's Project Freedom Delegation
To Geneva
Largest Single Effort
'

Bonds .Set
At $50,000
Federal Magistrate Val B.
Mowery of Chillicothe Wednesday set bonds at $50,000 each
for three offour North Augusta,
S. C., men charged in the
robbery of the Vinton Bank
Tuesday morning.
Mowery conducted
arraignments for Michael D.
Sherlock, 19; John Carroll, 22,
and Sherlock's father, John I.
Sherlock, 43.
The yowtger Sherlock and
Carroll were arraigned in the
Gallia County Courthouse. John
I. Sherlock's arraignment was
conducted In the Holzer Medical
Center where he Is recovering
from injuries suffered in an
auto accident that ended a wild
high-speed chase with the
pollce.
No pleas were entered by the
trio, and no hearing dates were
set.
Arraignment for a fourth
suspect, Patrick Sherlock, 23,

THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1971

•

High velocity 5-element blade - Strong,
lightweight, easy-to-clean. Powerful 3 speed,
permanently lubricated GE motor. Grills
easily removed for blade cleaning. Retractable contour-grip vinyl handle. Cools up to 5
rooms in minutes.

Winter Frost Whitt ·
Spring Blossom Green

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. XXIV NO. 26

Glidden

Now On

Soulsby, Mary Midkiff, Melanie
Hackett and Jo Ellen Diehl,
varsity.
Miss Hennessy received the
outstanding senior girl athlete '
award-and Girls --Athletic Assn.
leadership camp awards went
to Melanie Hackett, Pat Harris
and Leanne Sebo.
Nolan Swackhamer presented
golf team awards to Bill Hensler, Bob Werry , Frank
Girolami , Chuck Hannahs and
Steve Story with baseball
awards, presented by James
Diehl, going to Rick Van Meter,
Eddie Young', Tom Cooke ,

Devoted To 1'he lntere~ll Of The Meig&amp;-Ma&amp;On Area

OUTSTANDING - Wayne Well, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Well, Pomeroy, Route 3, and Bernadette Hennessy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hennessy, Pomeroy, were
named the outstanding senior boy and girl of the Meigs High
School graduating class Wednesday.

Special Sale
Prices

Davis, Bob Grimm, John
Lehew, Tom Lowery, Steve
Stanley, Joe Rosenbaum, John
Thomas, Bill .Slack, Keith
Vaninwagen, Dallas Weber,
Wayne Well and Roger Pearch.
Cheerleader awards,
presented ·by Joy Bentley, went
to Brenda Barton, Diana
Ridgway, Shelly Mankin, Tina
Nieri, Debbie Powell and Donna
Powell) ninth grade; Lynne
Baker, Liz Blaettnar, Janelle
Kuhn, Patti Well , Debi
Gallagher, jwtior varsity; Mary
Bradbury, Debbie Crow, Becky
Swindell, Joyce Riley, Susie

As'the outstanding senior boy
and girl, Ashley, who is also
valedictorian of this year's
class, and Miss Buck are the
Danforth Foundation Award
winners. James Adams,
principal, made the presentations.
Keys presented to seniors
during
the
Wednesday
assembly for outstanding ac·
complishments in their special
areas of study included Tom
Hamm , agriculture. with an
officer award going to Buddy
Pyles, presentation by Clayton
Coffey; Keith Ashley, social
studies key ; Patti Jhle and
Steve Grady, dramatics keys,
with Carl Weese making the
presentation; Peggy Proffitt,
Home Economics, presented by
Mrs. Dale McClurg; Roger
Nease, science, by (}ayle Priee;
Karen Sayre, commercial;
Barbara Brown, typing; Cheryl
Powell W09d, shorthand, all
presented by Mrs. Vinas Lee;
Cary Morris, English; Sharon
Ervin, Mathematics; Roger
Nease, Mathematics scholastic
award, presentations by Robert
Oliver; Bill Beegle, band, and
Robin Allen, John Phillip siluaa
award, presented by M.'a.'
Connie Romine.
Cheryl Powell Wood, Activities key; Tom Hamm, Dani
Nease and · Sandy Sayre,
citizenship; Keith AshleJ,
valedictorian award; Kara
Sayre, salutatorian key, d
pres•nted by Adams.

VARSITY CHEERLEADERS at Meigs High School for the 1971-72 school year are, front
row, 1-r, Lynne Baker, Liz Blaettnar, Melanie Hackett, co-captain; hack row, Mary Midkiff, cocaptain, Jo Diehl, Debi Gallagher, Karla Kuhn and Susie Soulsby.

Awards of distinction fdr
meeting high scholaallc
requirements set by the II*
went to Dan Nease and Kalil
Ashley, and Ashley received*
Readers Digest Award. 'lilt
DAR Good Citizenship 1~
(Continued on page 2)

I

-.

�•

J

3- The Dailr sentinel, Middleport!Pomeroy, 0., May 20, 1971

LA Obtains Rentzel

Blue Hurls 5th
Shutout Of Year
I'

REFURBISHING PLANNED - 1be apartments heavily damaged by fire last winter on
Middleport's Ntlrth Second Ave. are being tom out. Known as the McMaster apartments in
Middleport, the property was sold recenUy by M. L. French, Middleport, to Robert McCartney,
Sllade, Route 1. It Is expected that new, modem apartments will be constructed over the first
floor businesS building. ·

~GBC Summer

Dates Announced

1 The 1971 Summer Quarter advantage of their GI Bill
Will begin on June 15 at benefits.

•;Gallipolis Business College. All Classes are conducted daily,
iJl'oapective students, who have Monday through Friday, from
•npt already enrolled, are urged 8:30 a.m. ·to 2 p.m. Credits
~ lA&gt; contact the business college earned at GBC are transferable
'• office now for information and w several four-year colleges.
~registration forms . The Business College is ap/Enrollrnents will be accepted In proved of by tbe State Board of
~the order received unW all School and College Regis~classes are filled.
tration .
~ Gallipolis Business College,
,~located at 36 Locust Street,
~Gallipolis, offers one and two ·
'{year courses In general office,
C OF C TO MEE'J'
·
tin
There
will be a meeting of !be
,;secre ta r tal , J uruor accoun g,
'•business administration and Middleport Chamber of Corn.Pexeculive secretarial. All merce Friday evening at 7:30at
~courses are approved for the Columbus and Southern
::Wterans who want to take Ohio Electric meeting rooms.

·!

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

~~Helen Help Us!
~

~~

I

By Helen Bottel

1

THE GARDEN GIRLS in Friday night's operetta at Syracuse Grade School are,l~, Candy
Riffle, Connie Patterson, Lori Guinther , and Darlene Duncan; back row, Bobbie K. Chapman,
Sharon Baker, Kimberly Grueser, and Carolyn Cluirles. Pink Bread will be presented by
students of !be third, fourth, fifth and sixth grades. Curtain time is 8p.m.

MHS Awards Made
(Continued from Page I )
Well, Duane 'W!U and Mike
Williams.
Awards won by senior s
previously presented were the
DAR Good Citizenship, by Mary
Brickles; !be Betty Crocker
Homemaker of Tomorrow ,
Bernadette Hennessy, and a
letter of commendation from
the National Merit Scholarship
test, to Franklin Rizer. .

Radford, Mili sa Rizer , Beck y

Scagg s. Stevo C Stanley, Mike
Struble. Rebecca Will.
Sen1ors -

Don Ander son,

Mar y Bradbury. Mary Brickles.
Alice Jane Capehart, Twila Sue
Clatworth y, Debbie Crow .
David Haggerty, Bernadette
Henn essy St eph en Hoffman,

Rebecca Houd as helt , Kaye
Anne Howell. Glenna Keys.
Mary

Lou

King , Marianne

Kl oes, Nancy Jo Mayer, Kath y

Moor e, linda Sue M idk iff ,
Sharr y Nelson, Glor ia Jean

Oiler, Ell en Rr ce, Franklin
Academic ach i evement Rizer, Paula Mu llen. Cathy
awards given for first sem ester Searles, John Sebo, Glenna
grades of at least three "A" Sprague,
Cath y Stone, Rebecca
gr,ades and no grade lower than Swindell, Sandra Ka y Taylor,
a " B" went to: Freshmen - Joycellme Waggoner, Donn a
Thomas Clelland, James Couch, Weber, Donna Wil son, Carol

Melv in Cremeans, Joyce Davis, Hargraves.
David Grant, Ingrid Hawley.
ci pa l
Ear l
Yaung
James H/11, Ezra Kiser. Mary prPrin
esented
ce rt if ica t es
to

Krawsc zyn , Tina Nleri, Gary students with perfect a tO' Dell. Rp xanna Patterson , tendan
ce for the year Included
Debbie Schuck, Gail Sizemore, in fhe awar
ds was one going to
Albert Smith, Jill Smith, Randy Wa yne Well
, the Danforth
Snider.
selectee, who hold s a J2.year
Sophomores

Linda record of pe r fect sc,hoal at ·
fendan ce
Rece iving th e awa rds wer e
Fultz, Dave Gerard, Karen
Haze l Erl ew in e,
Ka t hr y n
Hale, Randy Haynes. Edith Fridl ey, Debbi e Ca r son,
Tom
Mees, Roger Pearch, Jam es Cassell. Bill Chaney, Rosemar y
Schmoll. William S. Stanley, Rice, Ray mond Roach, Roger
Richard Vaughan.
Dixon, Adel Davidson, Har vey
Juniors Irene Barn es.

Atkinson , Lynne Ba ker. Jell
Darst, Donna Francis, Beth

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L.
Wickline, Galiipolis, a son; and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Grimes,
Jackson, a son .
Discharges
Mrs. Lewis Baker, Mrs.
Margaret Beem, Barry Call,
Florence
Circle ,
Earl
Cremeens, Aaron Daugherty,
Mack Elkins, Roy Floyd, Mrs.
Wesley Fulk, Mrs . Donald
Hammond, Sidney Huddleston,
Sr., Thomas Johnson, Mrs.
Harry Maggied, Leo Marshall,
Brian McHugh, Mrs. Gertie
McManis , Loui s McMurray,
Mrs. Cecil Miles, Mrs. E. John
Morgan, Mrs. Ellen Moss,
George Nutter, Leslie Slleline,
Danny Woolcock, Mrs . Jesse
Brothers, and Michael Valler .

Daris Sam:pson
Died

¥.-

"BE A crJ.oWN" - PCI'tniylng elown roles In Friday
night's operetta at Syracuse Grade School are, front row, I~,
Keith Hendricks, Eddie Duffy, and Eric Pipscomb; back
row, Jimmy Slleets, Earl Pickens, and Tony Salser. Going to
the F.air will be presented by members of the first and second
grades. The program is under the direction of Mrs. Lee Lee
and Mrs. Ruth Stearns.
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Project No . 3
BOARD OF COUNTY COM·
MISSIONERS, OWNER
(Continued from page I )
Separate sealed bids tor the
went to Karen Sayre. Shirley construct ion of a new All Weld e d Steel Truss Br idge
Congo was given a cosmetology lo cated on Township Highway
No. l1n Columbia Township will
scholarship award.
be re cetved by t he Board of
Mrs. Romine presented other County Commission ers of Me igs
band awards to Linda Hollon, Coun t y, Oh io, at its offi ce in the
Courthou se, Pomero y, Ohio
Patti Ihle, Pam Buck, Garcia unti
llO : OO A M . on Jun e 8, 1971 ,
McGraw, Barbara Richard, and t hen at sa id off ice publicly
ed and rea d aloud
Debra Cross, Bill Beegle, Cary open
Th e Infor mation for Bidders ,
Morris, Pam Codner, Sharon For m of Bid , For m of Contr ac t ,1
, Specifica t io ns and
Ervin, Keith Ashley, Ollie Plans
For ms of Perfor man ce and
Sayre, Sandy Sayre , Susie Pa yme nt Bond an d other
contra ct docu ments ma y be
Biggs, Mary Smith and Robin ex
am ined at th e fo llowing :
Boar d
of
Cou nt y
Com Allen.
mi ssioner s Off ice , Courth ouse,
Keys were given as honor Pom ero y, Ohro .4 57 69
awards for students who missed Cop ies may be obtaine d a t the
ice of the Cou nty Enginee r
less than 4\ll days a semester off
lo cat ed
at
Courthouse ,
and were on each six weeks Pomero y, Oh i o 45 769 up on
payment of $5 .00 for eac h set .
honor roll.
An y unsuccess ful bidcl er, upon
These were Pam Buck, r etu r ning such set pro mptly and
in good condit ion , w 11 1 be
Debbie Cross, Sharon Ervin, refunded
hrs paymen t an d an y
Dan - Nease, Roger Nease, non bidder upon so r eturni ng
h a se t will rece ive no
Karen Sayre and Debbie Norris. rsuc
efund
Vocal
music
awards Th e own er r ese r W"es the r rgh t
wa iW" e any formal ities or to
presented by Mrs. Lee Lee went rtoejec
t any ~ nd all bi dS .
No bidder may withdraw hrs
to Robin Allen, Keith Ashley,
rd within 10 da ys alter th e
Bill Beegle, Debbie Boso, Pam bactual
date of th e op enin g
Buck, Sharon Ervin, Pat Hill, ther eof.
~ O A RD OF CO UNT Y
Patti Ihle, Garcia McGraw,
COMMI SS IONERS
Debbie Norris, Buddy Pyles,
Meig s Cbunty, Oh iO
C.ha rl es R. Karr, Sr .
Rita Salser, Ollie Sayre, Sandra
Robert Cl ark
Sayre, Karen Sayre and Cary
Ra lph W Our s
{51 20, 27, 21c
Morris.
NOTICE OF
Four year perfect attendance ·
APPOINTMENT
certificates went to Susie Biggs,
Case No . 2049S
Estate
of
Da
is
y
Kno x Proffi tt
Debbie Cross, Sharon Ervin,
Deceased
Peggy Profitt, and Gary Smith. Notice is her eby gi ve n th at

The death of Daria D. Sampson, 36, who died unexpectedly
at his Reedaville, Rt. I home
Wednesday afternoon , was
attri~uted to a heart attack.
Born In West Virginia, Mr.
Sampson was preceded in death
by his parents, Hurdle D. and
Estel Groggs Sampson, and a
brother, David, who was killed
in an auto accident when he was
seven years old.
Mr. Sampson, a Marine Corps
veteran of the Korean Conflict,
belonged to the Disabled
American Veterans (DAV) in
Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife,
Beverly Unthicum Sampson;
three daughters, Shelia, Brenda
and Lena, all nt home; five
sisters, Mrs. Glady Barton,
Coolville, Rt. 2; Mrs. Margie
Benedum, Reedsville, Rt. 1;
Mfs. Anna Weekley, Guysville
Rl. I; Mrs. Ida Mae Spradlin,
Prestonburg, Ky., and Mrs.
Carolyn Smith, Mansfield ,
Ohio; a brother, Rick Sampson,
Coolville Rt. 2, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the
White Funeral Home In
Coolville with the Rev. Arlie
Marks officiating. Burial will be
in !be Eden Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after noon Friday.

Southern

':YOUTH ASKED FOR IT
ew ine. Edwa rd Ab bott.
:.l This column Is for young people, their problems and Doris Barnhart, Opal Berry, Erl
Richa
rd Ba il ey. E Ii zabeth
PLEASANT VALLEY
•!pleasures, their troubles and fun . A3 with the rest of Helen Help Pamela .,Burson, Karen Cadle, Bla ettnar . Sa ra h Boyles ,
Andrea
Dewhurst,
Jo
Ell
en
Fred
\;us !,it welcomes•laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a Diehl, Roger Dixon, Debbie Flaran ell Burn ey , M ic ha el ADMISSIONS
Struble,
N
ancy
Greenlee.
VanMatre,
Newark;
Bruce
1-brush-off.
Garnes, Vicki Grate, Nan cy Wayne Well 112 yrs ), JoyceGreenlee,
Conni e Gru eser .
~ Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care Melanie Hackett,
Waggon er , John Sebo, Weikle, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Fred Jones, line
Thomas Crum , Glenwood ;
Rice.
ien He!p Us ! this newspaper.
,
Diana King, Kent Kloes,. David Ellen
Marcey
ONens,
Kim
Klawsczyn, Connie' t~nnlhg, P1 er ce. Becky Will, Ca r olyn William P. Stewart, Point
~GAINST MARRIAGE
Pamela Manley, Debbie May,
ar Helen:
, Joe Welker. Eddi e Pleasa nt ; Hattie Radcliff,
Mary Midkiff, Darla Neutzling, Wood
Leon ; Mrs. Melvin Wears, W.
f• I'm another "Remaining Single."
Marla
Neufzl l no.
Connie Young, Terr y Metheny. Paula
Morr 1s, Joyce Dav is, Ray Columbia , and Mrs. Lora
:; I agree with the girl and Steve who say marriage is not for
Darst, Vi cky Clelland, Melv in
Cremea ns, Becky Card, Steve Brown, Letart.
•:them. Most of the marriages I've seen are failures. The nlan gets
The Dai~ Sentinel Burt on, Fred Burney , Ron DISCHARGES - Mrs. Homer
drunk with the boys (or !be girls), and the woman stays home
DEVOTED TO THE
Couch. Gene va Ki ng, Richard Austin , Mrs. Homer Wears,
INTEREST OF
with the kids .
Ash, Tom Bai L Opal Berry, Daniel 0 . Click, Cloyd Barnett.
MEIGS-MASON AREA
No matter how much they seem to love each other at first,
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL, Ka ren Cadle, John Kauff .
Sherry Lambert, Robert Couch.
Exec . Ed.
Anna M . Ryth er of P. 0 . Box
they end up nagging and fighting, and it's mainly the man's fault.
George Hawley, Penny Moore,
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
130, Pomeroy, Oh io, has been
Not all of us girls want to become men's play-toys or baby
City Editor
Randy Snider, Sherman White,
duly appo inted Ad minrstratr ix
Pub li she d dai ly exce pt Rodney Pullrns, Cheryl Reuter,
~-------------- - --------------------------- of th e Estate of Da isy Knox
m~chines. They have their fun, then they leave, either before Saturda
y by Th e Ohio Vall ey Robert
Bir
chf
ie
ld
,
Dav
id
Proffitt, decea sed , lat e of M eig s
marriage or afterwards. They basically don't like women except Publi shrng Com pany , 111 Barnhart, Sheryl Ann Johnson .
Count y, Ohio .
Ct&gt;urt St , Pom eroy , Ohro ,
s ar e requ ir ed to file
Sherr y Ki ng, Debra Joe Ma y, 1
"in their place."
j therCrreditor
45769 Bu siness Office Phon e
cla ims with said f rducia r y
Kenneth
Harri
s,
Ka
r
en
Hale,
It makes me mad to think that I'll be considered a ''failure" if 992 ·2156, Ed itor ial Ph one 992 · William M yer s. Mark Morr is,
with in four month s.
2157
I
I
Da ted this 8th · day or May
I don't get married, no matter how BUccessful I am, or !bat
Second class pos tage pa id at Ma r-k Oiler. Carl Hendr icks,
1971.
Pomeroy , Ohro
Marsha Thor nton . Mind y
there'll be whispers about me being strange.
F H. O'Br ren
BY JACK O'BRIAN
4th St .... Opera is sung, and it's open from 6:15
Nat i ona l a d\l e r tisi ng Young, Chris Bailey, and Jill
Pro
ba
te
Ju
dg
e
ot
said Coun ty
I'm not saying I will never marry, but I DO resent feeling !bat r eprese nt ati\le Bottin ellt - Harrlr."p.m. to 2 a.m. (3 a.m. Fri.-Sat.). Veteran press
{51 13, 20, 27, Jlc
Gallagh
er,
Inc.,
12
East
42n
d
it's expected of me. From what I've obaerved,ln my own family St , New Yor k Ci ty, New Yor k.
Mrs Mary Powell presented
HOT PANTS CAN BE DEFLATED
agentWarrenPincusisdoubtingasastandbyfor
LEGAL NOTICE
Subscr ipt ion rat es : De- awards of th e Vocat ion a l Inand elsewhere, a woman is a fool to scrap a career for four walls,
NEW
YORK
The
kids
are
bealing
the
stillthe
"Walling
for
Godot"
hit
revival.
He's
played
dustrial
Clubs
of
America
to
er ed by carri er wh er e
a bunch of squalling kids and a man who isn't as smart as she is. ltv
aW"a il abl e SO cents per w eek , ou ts t a nding
voc ati o nal b&gt;o-high hotpants prices : They buy cheap denim Estragon several times already, and this Is his
N~V~'l,l~ uv:ANfEODR 5
Up with women's liberation! - TIRED OF MALE Bv Motor Route wh er e carrrer students. Winning these wer e pants and slice them off at hot-length .... Ken- flrstpubllclty . Anotheractorgotevenandtoldus
METAL PIPE
serW" rce not aW" ai lable One Ron Harr ison , weld ing ; Fred
WEAKLINGS AND BULLIES, AGE 16.
' relative Sargent Sllrlver •s th e b&gt;p can- .... The olf-Bdwy. "Long Days Journey Into of Intheacrevised
cordanc e with Sec . 307.86
month , 1.75 By mar l in Oh io Jon es. draft ing . and Stella nedy
code, sealed bids
W Va , One yea r $14.00.
P.S. Don't get me wrong. I like guys. I just wouldn't want to and
cosmetolog
y.
Becky
N
eutzling,
dldate
for
a
big
film
job
....
The
Uvlng
Room
Night"
at
the
Promenade
Theater
started
with
will
be
rece
•ved
by lhe Board of
51)( m onths S7 . 2S. Thr ee
County Comm rssion ers of M eigs
marry one.
month s $4 .50 Su bscr ipt ion Will and Steve Stanley won the nightclub's changing hancls again; real juggling no advance sale, now has $75,000 in the till, C
ounty in their offrce In th e
Nationa l Council of Teachers'
pri ce in cl ud es Sund ay Times .
Dear 16:
Courthou se, Pomeroy , Oh io
Sentinel
English awards presented by actover theyears .... TheHoteiFourteen,above smash-Qshforsuchoff.StemstuH ....
45769, un ti l 10 : 00 A .M on Jun e 1,
By the time you change your mind (if you do) a great many
Mrs. Jea nn e Bowen.
the Copacabana, will be renovated into an office
Pearl Bailey gets one of David Frost's full- 1971 At whic h. time and pla ce
more men will be considering WO!Jlen as equals, not ''play-toys. "
building exceptfor one sulteofllvingspace - for show (90 minutes) ga!Hn-depth appearances .... ;~~o~?nsg wiii1b~f 0 ~~n."t~d10 ~ 1 ~~~
Any girl who thinks she must "give up a career for four walls, a WIN AT BRIDGE
whatever Copa headliner stars there .... Jackle Hallmark Cards dld It again: Took home eight gal vanized corrugaled metal
bunch of squalllng kids and a basic woman hater" has studied a
Vernon's nursing ulcers, lots of physical Emmysfor its Hall of Fame TV shows; this ftnn p l ~~d~n~o c~'r'~~~i~l~nd~.a r ked
species of married life that won't be around much longer. Why
miseries, and too much suet, and the docs tell consistenUyhassponsoredqualityshows,alaits " Bid tor C.M.P ." on the fron t
Si de of enW" elope.
don't you Interview young, happUy married career girls and get a
I it off ore lse •
him to met
own merchandise.
Mal erial to meet the
different slant? - H.
. dtcated. He and A had been
MaeWest'sfortunenowisestlmatedatupto
Lauren Bacall wasn't roo choked up about requ.remenls Of the Slate of
NORTH
20
Oh io Depar t ment of High w ays
Dear Helen :
working
on
sui
t
preference
$25
million;
half
at
least
in
real
estate
....
"The
her
Sunday
supplement color photo In the paper ; specification
707.01.
. AKQ854
I'm a 19-year-old stable young man. l've been going with Ibis
signals so B led the deuce Philanthropist" closed and It's sad; it wasn't a but the photographer wasn't a plastic surgeon .... ff.J ?~nLgl~s .ot 15 in . 16 Ga In 20
• J82
of spades. A ruffed and re1 b 11 uffl ed
1 did hi 1
girl for two years and Intended to marry her, but she has been
• 62
turned his fourth best club great Pay, ut s c as asp en ve c e If lmtuck exits 20th-Fox (which he created)
no L F. of 18 in. 16 Go In 20
tfo8
3
playing me for a fool.
.
to
B's
king.
B
gave
his
partfor
a
star,
and
Alec
Mt;Gowen
gave
it
great
inWarner
Bros.
may
get
him
....
More
!Urns
are
ff
3 \~nc.'~ so f 18 i~ . 16 Go in 16
WEST
EAST (D)
I keep finding her with other guys, and I know she wa~ts to
ner a n o t h e r spade ruff dlvidual distinction .... The late Sir Cedric being ahot inN. Y. right now than In H'wood; of ff lengths
1097 2
• Void
break up with me but, like a dummy, I keep begging her to come
L F.s of 24 in . 14 Ga in 20
where upon A led his queen Hard wicke, in one of our midnigh t klatches in course TV films make up the slack .... But N. Y. n 300
lenglh
¥Q 96 54
¥ AK!07
back. She does, probably out of-pity.
• Q93
of trumps.
Sardi's, once bemoaned critlcalinslstence on all casting director Marion Dougherty (casting
2oo L.F , of JOin 14 Ga . in 20
• J7
11
You'd think l 'dhave more pride, but! can't lose her.
"' AQ I062
tTo KJ
Afte r this start there was plays being impeccably wrought: He cited "The George c. Scott's "Hospital" and "The Gang
2b~"c'~ s of 36 in. 12 Ga in 20
0
0
Maybe you can teil me, Helen, how to fall out of love. SOUTH
~craKuf ~l~ ~; ~ tk~ Barretts of Wimpo1e St." as a ''flawed" drama That Couldn't Shoot Stra(ght") continually is 11 ~~nC'~s · 42 in 12 Ga . in 20
. 63
CAN'T HACK IT
wound up losing two spade which superbly fit stage queen Katharine Cornell being offered coast-based stars delighted wwork 11 length s.
¥3
Dear C.H.I.:
160 L. F. of 48 in 12 Ga . in 20
·
ruffs
, four clubs and a heart .... McCowen,hailedlnLondonandhereasoneof bere. Or anywhere.
t AK I0 854
fl . len9,ths.
Make a date with a cute girl who has just been dumped bjr a
"' 9754
for minus 700 ~nd a bottom the finest s!ars In stage decades, cites a surThe late Ken Kling's "Joe &amp; Asbestos"
40L.F . of60in . 1DGo . in 20 n.
two-timing boy friend . Spend no more than ten minutes each
Eas t ~ West vulnet able
score . The best East and pr~lng brace of actors as Influencing his work: racetrack touk:artoon is being revived for !be le~g~•F. of n;n' 10 Ga In 20 ff
downgrading your "ex" and then get on with the new. It won't West North East South
West could do as decla rer Marlon Brando and Jack Benny; we can't new New York Mirror .... KenKling'ssonWoody lenglhs .
·
would be to p ic k up 650
Coupling Bands·
happen like that, but you'd be surprised how fast you can fall out
Pass
points.
identify either in McCowen's powerfuUy wide- penned "Three Goats and a Blanket," which
6 - 1s in.
2¥
2.
3¥ 4.
of love when there's a place to land. - H.
" Yo u boys st1li defend bet- ranging style.
Mickey Rooney hopes oo bring to Bdwy.
! 2--2 ~ 8 i~n
Dble Pass
Pass Pas.r;
Dear Helen :
'
ter tha n anyone." said Z.
Two priests at the Inimaculate Conception sometime .... Now Its cabdrivers having it so bad
4 - JO in .
Opening lead ¥ 5
My mother is pretty far out, a lot better than most parents,
"I was afraid to double Church, TomklnsCove,N. Y.,areFatherJohnny (since the disgraceful slly-lllgh fare boost) they
: ~~ :~ :
exej'pt when it comes to this 17-year-old boy I want to date. He
yo u," remarked
A.
"
I've
Ca
dF
th
Robert
E
Lee
Would
!akin
d
obs
Henny
•
4
f
rson an a er
.
....
yoo are
g secon J ....
Youngman s
- 48 ·•n.
1
00
wants me to go to his prom with hlril, which is up on the moun- Hy Oswald &amp;·James Jacoby seen you per orm
1 6 ,inn ._
1 72
you believe we know a Father 'shapiro and a Father jokes now are In 150,000venA~1nn
.. machines - 200
miracles . T h i s timemany
tains. His Mom will even come down to get me and bring me
A letter from Philadelphia couldn 't do anv
. thing because Jacobs? Yep. Converts.
jokes to a machine, aU different Henny swears
_100 - 7-16 ln . by 4 ln . bolls
d ·
t
•
wrth nuts
home, but 'No !'"
·
rea s m par : "I remember yo ur opponents wouldn 't let
Once In Nassau, the Bahamas, our friend on a stack of Joe Miller's .... If you remember
200 - 7-16 in . by 6 In bol ts
Mom says she trusts me but doesn't trust him, mainly A. B, Y and Z before their you in the lead."
Harry Miller, a Jewish owner of a large hotel, Joe Miller's joke books, you're old! And if you with nuts
p I a c e S in c olumn s w er e
'
The County Comm lssloners
because she thinks he does dope. He really doesn't, but even great taken
by North. South. East
{N!W &gt;PA PER ENTER PR ISE ASS N I
toured the Island's sights .... Wbicb included the remember "Madison's Budget," you're older ! reserve the rrght to rel ect any
parents get paranoid if you mention grass, and she read one of his and West. In the old days z
local Monastery whose boss was a Father
While midtown spots are ,foldlng right and or all bids.
Board of County
letters that asked me what I'd think if be started. I told him I'd didn 't make every hand,
Ephraim .... Harry u!tered a Ylddlahism at one left, Hllly Kristal's downlown'fisychology seems
.
com miss loners
break up with hlni, but she won't believe he Isn't like "tile rest of ~J:Ys~~\.he. ever get set nowThe bidding ha's been,
· point, and Father Ephraim replied In the same working: he OW1111 one spot on the Bowery, one In
Marlha Cho~f,e{ ~-i~:'{t~
those wUd boys in his town."
.
. 1
Sctutf&gt;' patois, and Harry learned delightedly that the '•Greenwich VIllage and next opelll/ in ChlnaloW!l
NOTte E OF
Z decided that h1's r 0 u r W••t N,,., h P
~•
I've liked him for seven months, How can I make Mom see
Pass
1¥
Jl'iest had been a Jew who had converted to (lock &amp;loll?.) .... Alltlme best«&lt;ler that never
APPOINTMENT
he's just a normal kid - no angel, but not a devil either? - IS IT clubs made an unusual no- Pass
2t
Pa~&lt;
,•
· Catholicism and then become _a prieet .... Hu'ry gels on the printed' lists: "Infant Care," 15 Estale
C••• No. 20~"
01 Edword s. Mills,
4mp undesirable. 11 he bid · You, South , hold:
HATE ?
lJ·
conversed
in
Yiddish
and
learned
the~·"'-·
mllllon
soltlsince
!914bythe
U.S.
Gov't
Printing
.
Deceased.
1
1. Y would become declaret· •54 2 YK J 8 7 tQ 3 H tToH also conlained a c-"'...rable ve-tabie--=e:, Ofllce
.
_ Notice Is hereby olven that
Dear 1.1 .H.:
and Z did not relish the prosWhat do you do now'
'"""""
••
.-u
·
Paul L. Patterson, of Rul/and
Yoo make a scary boy and a suspicloua parent compatible the· pect. So he passed after ~
A-Bid three diamond&gt;. ·A which sold to local mtauranlll and hotela ....
St:lltlaofeagerla~altlngareconvinced . Ohio, has been duly appoinled
111111e way yoo "CGIIditlon' children to overcome their fear of upedned W!lh one spade. The rmrsc h,v Jhc openinK bl~dcr Harty exclaimed, "Father,l'm 1olna to buy aD MayCI' Undsay won't run fCI' I'Hlectlon, and ~~~!~~~-a,!,)'f ~: ;::.;.~13,tfa~:
11
anlmala: a little at a time. ·
b1d rn g progressed as one is a one round lurcc. Yuu must' my vegetables from yoo, and I'll pay the same they'requletiypolnting their hopes and speeches ot Meigs County., Oh io. ·
•
I . I' be
lng In Miami'" F !her
,....Nl•
Sanford . Credllors are required 10 file
casuaUy mention hll achievements in school and elsewhere mtght expect And Z wountJ rcspc"C:t il.
up as declat·er at fo ul· dial'ODAY'S QUEST!tl!'i
' Jl'lce ve en pay
.
a
Gracie Mansion-,-; Carter Burden,
- lhelr·ciatms wilh said fiduciary
- or have an older friend do it. Get his relatives and yours
d
d
bl
d
Ephraim
smiled
"Mr
Miller
I
hadn't
planned
GareUk
Cong
John
Murphy
Percy
&amp;ltton
legal
with
in four months.
s ou e .
YQU do btd thrt.! l' diumond~
.
,
'
,
,
•
'
I
Dattd 'this 8th day of May
JGcetller (not bard Ia 1 Dl!ll tOwn). Ask permlaslon for him to l!lOn
B won the fir s! tnck w1th and , yo u1 partnm· ~ ids three charging you a pemy.leiB." '
.
boolde Bowie-the-Hone Samuela, BID vanden 1971.
.
_Nit and brl.nt )'011' mathlr into the conversation. ·Explain his llle king of Hea1·ts and sa w spade,, Wba1 do you do now'' 1 If you're weary of rock music In every bar Heuvel, Ed Koch, are only a few. There,'ll be
Probote Judge ~ ~~ (!0~:~~~~
atdtude on grass. If hl'ulraillht, she'll thaw. Good luck! - H.
lllat a spade l_ead was mand cafe, try Bianchi- Marguerlta's at 188 ~- more.
&lt;5&gt; 11. 20. 27, Jlc
I

l

By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
Vida Blue put a new twist
into his pitching Wednesday
night but the result was the
same-another shutout.
Blue, a hard-throwing lefthander, blended in his curve
more than usual and finished
with a three-hitter as the
Oakland Athletics beat !be
Milwaukee Brewers 3-0. The
victory boosted his record to 9-1
-best in the major leaguesand market Blue's fifth shutout
this season .
"I tried to finesse a little in
the early innings," said the 21year-old Blue. "For the first
time this year, 1 threw ~bout 50
per cent curves and 50 per cent
fastballs. I'm pitching and
learning as 1 go along . You
don't have to- overpower for
nine innings. If you do, you'll
hurt your arm ."
Rick Monday hit a home run
and Reggie Jackson added a
two-run shot in !be sixth inning
after Joe Rudl Singled to
account for all the Oakland
scoring.
Blue, the major leagues'
pitching sensation, now has
allowed only 11 earned runs.
Blue has struck out 86 men in
86 2-3 innings.
Elsewhere in !be American
League, Minnespta ripped California !2-6, Boston downed New
York 7-2, Detroit clobbered
Cleveland -12-1, Baltimore beat
Washington 4-1 and Kansas City
blanked Chicago 2-0.
In !be National League,
Chicago defeated San Francisco
9-5, Pittsburgh down&lt;"l Cincinnati 6-1, Philadelphia topped
New York 4-1, San Diego Edged
Houston 2-1, Los Angeles nipped
St. Louis 1).5 and Atlanta
crushed Montreal 10-t
Harmon Killebrew's basesloaded single in the fifth inning
ignited a three-run rally as the
Twins beat California. Rookie
Jim Strickland, making his
major league debut, gained

daY

IFI-..J_;
W ~t.es

Previoi.ls
Division
Champions
SEO DIVISION CHAMPION~
SOUTH
~
YEAR
CHAMPION
1950
Middleport
1951
Middleport
1952
Middleport
1953
Middleport
1954
Gallipoli s
1955
Gallipolis
1956
Gallipolis
1957
Middleport
1958
Gallipolis
1959
Gallipolis
1960
Pomeroy
1961
Pomeroy
1%2
Pomeroy
1963
Pomeroy
1964
Gallipolis
1965
Jackson
1966
Middleport
1967
Gallipolis
1968
Ironton
1969
Gallipolis
1970
lronlon
1971
Ironton

Voice along Broadway

Old Man Z Finally Gets His

YEAR
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1%7"
1968
1969
1970
1971

.J

01

1

1.

=

3

0 1

NORTHERN
CHAMPION
Athens
Athens
Alhens
Alhens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Wellston
Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Logan
Logan
Athens
Alhens
Athens
Alhens
Logan
Athens

i'

I

Ironton and Athens captured
post-season playoff triumphs in
!be Southern and Northern
Divisions of ihe Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League Wednesday afternoon , and those two
teams will meet for the overall
league championship at Ironton
sometime next week.
Ironton captured its third
Southern Division title in four
years · by eliminating Jackson
from the title picture, 7-3.
The defending c~ampion
Tigers, down 3-1 going tnto
the sixth inning, scored six
big runs to retain their
division title. The victory left
Ironton with a 24~ season
record. Inside the SEOAL,

the Tigers are 6-2. Jackson
bowed out with a 13-5 season
mark. The lronmen tied
GAllS for second place tn the
SO race with a 4-3 record.
Steve Inbody, sophomore
iefthander for Coach Ed
Rannow 's Athens Bulidogs,
stopped Logan 6-0 on a onehitter, thus eliminating the
defendin g Northern Division
champs of Coach Keiley Stilwell
from this year's title picture.
Inbody walked only one,
fanned six, aliowed only three
baserunners , and only one
Chieftain got as far as second
base.
Athens scored twice in 11\e
third, three in the fifth, and

three times in the sixth. The
Bulldogs collected 10 hits off
losing hurler Mark Shaw, who
had defeated !be Bulldogs on
two other occasions this spring.
Randy Norris relieved Sllaw in
!be seventh.
Steve Brown 's seventh Inning
single was !be only hit off In·
body, whose'father wUI be the
1971 AHS football coach.
For Athens, Inbody and Tom
Daft each had three singles.
Clark Bridgewater had two
singles.
Athens is now 13-8 overall,
and 5-2 in !be conference. Logan
finished 13-7 overali, and 4-3 in
conference play.
Earlier In the week, Ironton

Colonial -National Play Underway
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI)- the key "~v~ in ills' wt~g said. " If I c'otild have two-putted
The way Homero Biancas and drive here a year ago and those holes, I would have been
Lee Trevino have been playing which had put him in contention fo ur-under instead of one-under
lately, the Colonial National at Dallas and Houston, seemed for the 72 holes."
Invitation Golf Tournament to desert him on the final 18 He didn't say so, but a fouropening today might again live each of the last two SWJdays. under would have tied him with
"! took three 6's in Dallas, Houston winner Hubert Green
up to the "Mexican Open"
nickname tagged to it by including a bogey on a par~ and Don January , whom Green
hole tbal I had birdied, and beat in a sudden death playoff.
Trevino last year .
The two Latin Americans that killed me," Blancas said. He wound up tied for seventh
He shot a closing 73, his only and won $3,600.
waged a final day duel with
Gene Littler for !be $25,000 first over-par round, and woWJd up Trevino, incidentally, who had
prize a year ago with Blancas seven shots off !be pace and finished five shots off the pace
at Dalias to win $4,542, was just
taking the title by a stJ:oke with picked up but $2,482.
Then, at Houston, he was one shot back at Houston and
a three-under-par tour of the
7,142-yard, par 35-35--70 Colo- knocking up among the leaders won more than $7,200.
The two Latins, Billy Casper,
going into the final round.
nial Country Club layout.
Gary
Player and Littler- who
Trevino and littler shot 69
"I three-putted three times
and 67, respectively , and tied on the first nine holes," he has won more money here than
1
for second at 274.
Going into Ibis year 's 26th
Colonial, Trevino ranks sixth
among the tour's money
winners with $78,835 to indicate
how well his game is clicking.
Same Class
Blancas, on the surface , isn't
moving in that same class since
he ranks 36th with $26,103
pocketed.
But, the past two weeks
Blancas has been right in
contention going into the finaL Shorts tell it like it is for Sum·
mer. That's because they come
roWJds at !be Byron Nelson
Classic in Dallas and the
on • strong with cool comfort·
Houston Champions.
power. We've got all the styles,
His putter, which had been

422~econdAvo.

Go Ill 1/a, Ohio

Ram

executive J ack Teele said.
"We know we're giving up one
of the top flankers m the league
in Rentzel," said DaUas coach
Tom Landry. "But I thought he
would be better off in another
city where he had the same
opportunity to play regularly."

and all th is fo r just letting ~s
pay yo u 4:V4 per cent on your
sav mgs.

Meigs Co.
Branch
Me1gs County Bra nch of The
At hens County Savings &amp;
Loan Ca .
296 Second 51.
Po meroy, Ohio

C onve nr ent 2-spe ed , 3·
po sll ro n ro ta ry 5witc h .

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quiet, efficient pe r·
tormance.
'

anyone else by finishing in the
money all 17 times he's played
--rule as !be top contenders
since Jack Nicklaus and Arnold
Palmer chose to bypass !be
Colonial in favor of ~ vacation.

OOR·Ers IN POM·ERO
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS TIL 8

THE HUOlPOHl BR EWING COMPANY Of ( IN CINNATI , O.

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SWIMWEAR
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'

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large In mens. Holidays on the
way, buy now.

For - Eiegonce in Pipe
Smoking Pleasure, Select a
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tawney Jewelers

conduct 1 "

Whe n you open a
Savings Account here
with $25.00 ...
we W&amp;/1-Give Yoll .
A Place Selling of Dishes
Or
A Set Of 4 Glasses.
When you open an
a ccount with 5500
We Will Give You A
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20-INCH FAN

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aREEZEMAKER 2-SPEED

dumped Gautpolls !1).3 In a
post-season playoff game in
tbe Southern Division. This
was the first time three teams
ever flnsihed In a lie for first
place tn regular season play.
It was Athens' 18th Northern
Division championship since
!be SEOAL adopted divisional
play in 1950.
Ironton shared the championship with Athens in 1968
after !be playoff game was
cancelled by a flood late in May.
· TheTigers won all !be marbles
in 1970 with a perfect 7-0 mark.
Athens haswpn 11 conference
titles, 1946, 1949 (with GAHS) ;
1950, 1952, 1953, 1956, 1956, 1961,
1963,1966, and 1968 with Ironton .·

Men's and boys' swim trunks

. 1

ti trust suit against the NFL and
ail of its 26 warns.
· •
La ter Atworth and the
Chargers settled their difficulties and the former Arkansas '
star was given a contract
through 1974 for dropping his
legal actions.
"When you think about it,:•
Rentzei said, "I think this is the
best thing for all parties.
"Certainly, I'm sorry to be
leaving the tea m a nd the
orgamzation which stood behind
me. When you gel loyally like
that, you want to repay 1t. ~
Rentzel was give n a probated
senwnce. His probationary status included the understanding
he would recetve regular
medical and psychiatric care.
"We're not worrted about ht!j,

Ironton, Athens Triumph, 'fill
Collide For 1971 SEOAL Crown

lnfernattonal League Standings
By United Press International
W L Pel. GB
Syracuse
21 8 .724 Richmond
17 13 .567 4'12
Charleston
16 13 .552 5
Rochester,
13 12 .520 6
Louisville
14 15 .483 7
Tidewaler
15 17 .469 7'12
Winnipeg
10 18 .357 10'12
Toledo
10 20 .333 11 '1•
Wednesday's Results
Louisville 7 Tidewater 3
Syracuse 6 Winnipeg 5
·We have quality auto fires to
Rochester 8 Toledo 4
crow about that will give you
Richmond 6 Charleston 5
safe !ravel durl ng the
vacation trips ahead. Let us
at Rizer's safely check your
tires. See John. Charles or
Franklin.

=°

1"'

I

American League
By United Press International
East
National League
W. L. Pel. GB
East
23 11 .676
W. L. Pet GB Boston
21 14 .600 1
Baltimore
Pittsburgh
23 14 .639
17 19 .472 '
Detroit
NO'(/ York
21 14 .600 I
16 18 .471 7
Sf. Louis
21 16 .568 2 New York
Chicago
19 18 .514 4 Washington 15 22 .405 91/2
14 21 .400 91!2
13 16 .448 6 Cleveland
credit for the victory after eighth inning with his fifth Montreal
West
Philadelphia
12 23 .343 10
W. L. Pet.
Twins' starter Jim Perry was homer of the yearc
v
Wes.t
GB
.
Oakland
27
I
~ .659
Kaline,
who
had
three
hits,
W. L. Pel.
raked for six runs in 2 2·3
Minnesota
20
18
.526 5'12
San
Francisco
28
II
.718
homered in the third and fifth
innings.
112
Kansas City 19 19 .500 61/2
Atlanta
20
18
.526
7
Sonny Siebert won his seventh innings.
19 21 .475 7'12
Los Angeles
19 20 .487 9 California
Milwaukee
14 20 .41 2 9'1'
Baltimore,
taking
advantage
18 20 .474 9'12
Houston
straight game, singled and
Chicago
13 21 .382 10112
Cincinnati
14
23
.361
13
scored the tie-breaking run on of rookie )11ike Thompson's San Diego
Wednesday's Results
II 26 .297 16
Reggie Smith's iwo-run homer jitters, scored two runs in the
Boston 7 New York. 2, night
Wednesday's Results
Baltimore 4 Washngln I , night
inning
without
and
hit
and
first
Chicago 9 San Franci sco 5
in the seventh inning as the
Kansas City 2 Chicago 0, night
Atlanta
10
Montreal
4,
night
Red Sox beat New York. went on to defeat the Senators Pittsburgh 6 Cine. I night
Oakland 3 Milwaukee 0, night
Siebert, now 7-0, gave up eight behind Jim Paimer 's five-hitter. L. A. 6 Sf. Louis 5, night
Minnesota 12 California 6, night
Thompson,
making
his
major
Today's Probable Pitchers
S.D. 2 Houston I. 10 inn, night
hits in eight innings before
Milwaukee
I Krausse 1-4) at
league debut, walked the first Phlia. 4 N.Y. I , night
giving way to Sparky Lyle.
Oakland !Fingers 1-4) , night .
Today's
Probable
Pitchers
Billy Conigliaro also homered three batters and U11leashed a
Minnesota !Hamm 1-0) at
Montreal I Renko 4-2) at
IVild
pitch
to
let
one
run
in
and
Cal
ifornia (Wright 3-3) , night.
Atlanta (Niekro 3-3). Night.
for Boston and Smith collected
Detroit
I Coleman 4-0) at
~os An~l es (Singer 2-7! at
another scored on a throwing
three hits.
Sf. Louis (Carlton 6-2). Night. Cleveland ( Foster 3-2), night .
Dick McAuliffe doubled and ! error·
.
.
Baltimore (McNally 6-2) at
Pittsburgh (Blass 3-1} at
Washington
(Janesk /1 -2). night .
homered to drive in four runs--r . Paul Schaal t~rpled to drrve Cincinnati (Grimsley 0 - 1).
New
York
(Bahnsen 1-5) at
and AI Kaline collected a pair m a run I~ the stxth mnmg and Night.
Boston (Lee 3-1), night.
San
Francisco
I
Marichal
6·21
of homers to lead Detroit past Amos Oils hrs seventh homer at Chi cago (Hands 4-4)
Friday's Games
Cleveland. McAuliffe, who en- an inning later as Kansas City
San Di ego I Kirby 1-3) at Minnesota af Oakland, night
at California, night
tered the game batting .190, edged Chicago . Mike Hedlund Houston I Blasingame 2 · 4). Chicago
Milwakee at Kansas City, night
Night.
doubled home two runs in the went 8 2-3 innings to gain credit
New York (Gentry 3-3) at New York af Cleveland. night
fourth and triggered a five-run for the victory.
Philadelphia Wise. 2-2, Night . Boston af Baltimore, night

LOS ANGELES (UPI)- ln a
blockbuster trade involving
three teams and seven p!ayers,
the Los Angeles Rams landed
Lance Rentzel from Dailas
Wednesday and the San Diego
Chargers gave up -Lance
Alworth to the Cowboys.
To get Rentzel, the Ra ms sent
tight end BiU Traux and wide
receiver Wendeil Tucker to the
Cowboys.
For Alworth , Dallas shipped
three playes to the Chargersdefensive tackle Ron East, tight
end Pettis Norman and offensive tackle Tony Liscio.
The trading off of Rentzei and
Alworth, two of the Na tional
Football League's premier wide
receivers, was no surprise.
Rentzel, 28, was charged with
indescent exposure before a Jl).
year-&lt;&gt;ld girl last season and
pleaded guilty to the charge .
Atworth , a nine-year pro
veteran who has had financial
problems, sued the Chargers
last December for $5.6 miliion ,
alleging breach of contract, and
followed that up with an an-

· NEW YORK

CLOTHING HOUSE
'

'

"The New Look Store'·'

'Pomeroy, Ohio

T~·ere's. a gold rush on for the pure grain beer t~~Y ~II Hudepohl Gold.
.

It gives you the most rewarding taste m beer-today.

,

�•

J

3- The Dailr sentinel, Middleport!Pomeroy, 0., May 20, 1971

LA Obtains Rentzel

Blue Hurls 5th
Shutout Of Year
I'

REFURBISHING PLANNED - 1be apartments heavily damaged by fire last winter on
Middleport's Ntlrth Second Ave. are being tom out. Known as the McMaster apartments in
Middleport, the property was sold recenUy by M. L. French, Middleport, to Robert McCartney,
Sllade, Route 1. It Is expected that new, modem apartments will be constructed over the first
floor businesS building. ·

~GBC Summer

Dates Announced

1 The 1971 Summer Quarter advantage of their GI Bill
Will begin on June 15 at benefits.

•;Gallipolis Business College. All Classes are conducted daily,
iJl'oapective students, who have Monday through Friday, from
•npt already enrolled, are urged 8:30 a.m. ·to 2 p.m. Credits
~ lA&gt; contact the business college earned at GBC are transferable
'• office now for information and w several four-year colleges.
~registration forms . The Business College is ap/Enrollrnents will be accepted In proved of by tbe State Board of
~the order received unW all School and College Regis~classes are filled.
tration .
~ Gallipolis Business College,
,~located at 36 Locust Street,
~Gallipolis, offers one and two ·
'{year courses In general office,
C OF C TO MEE'J'
·
tin
There
will be a meeting of !be
,;secre ta r tal , J uruor accoun g,
'•business administration and Middleport Chamber of Corn.Pexeculive secretarial. All merce Friday evening at 7:30at
~courses are approved for the Columbus and Southern
::Wterans who want to take Ohio Electric meeting rooms.

·!

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

~~Helen Help Us!
~

~~

I

By Helen Bottel

1

THE GARDEN GIRLS in Friday night's operetta at Syracuse Grade School are,l~, Candy
Riffle, Connie Patterson, Lori Guinther , and Darlene Duncan; back row, Bobbie K. Chapman,
Sharon Baker, Kimberly Grueser, and Carolyn Cluirles. Pink Bread will be presented by
students of !be third, fourth, fifth and sixth grades. Curtain time is 8p.m.

MHS Awards Made
(Continued from Page I )
Well, Duane 'W!U and Mike
Williams.
Awards won by senior s
previously presented were the
DAR Good Citizenship, by Mary
Brickles; !be Betty Crocker
Homemaker of Tomorrow ,
Bernadette Hennessy, and a
letter of commendation from
the National Merit Scholarship
test, to Franklin Rizer. .

Radford, Mili sa Rizer , Beck y

Scagg s. Stevo C Stanley, Mike
Struble. Rebecca Will.
Sen1ors -

Don Ander son,

Mar y Bradbury. Mary Brickles.
Alice Jane Capehart, Twila Sue
Clatworth y, Debbie Crow .
David Haggerty, Bernadette
Henn essy St eph en Hoffman,

Rebecca Houd as helt , Kaye
Anne Howell. Glenna Keys.
Mary

Lou

King , Marianne

Kl oes, Nancy Jo Mayer, Kath y

Moor e, linda Sue M idk iff ,
Sharr y Nelson, Glor ia Jean

Oiler, Ell en Rr ce, Franklin
Academic ach i evement Rizer, Paula Mu llen. Cathy
awards given for first sem ester Searles, John Sebo, Glenna
grades of at least three "A" Sprague,
Cath y Stone, Rebecca
gr,ades and no grade lower than Swindell, Sandra Ka y Taylor,
a " B" went to: Freshmen - Joycellme Waggoner, Donn a
Thomas Clelland, James Couch, Weber, Donna Wil son, Carol

Melv in Cremeans, Joyce Davis, Hargraves.
David Grant, Ingrid Hawley.
ci pa l
Ear l
Yaung
James H/11, Ezra Kiser. Mary prPrin
esented
ce rt if ica t es
to

Krawsc zyn , Tina Nleri, Gary students with perfect a tO' Dell. Rp xanna Patterson , tendan
ce for the year Included
Debbie Schuck, Gail Sizemore, in fhe awar
ds was one going to
Albert Smith, Jill Smith, Randy Wa yne Well
, the Danforth
Snider.
selectee, who hold s a J2.year
Sophomores

Linda record of pe r fect sc,hoal at ·
fendan ce
Rece iving th e awa rds wer e
Fultz, Dave Gerard, Karen
Haze l Erl ew in e,
Ka t hr y n
Hale, Randy Haynes. Edith Fridl ey, Debbi e Ca r son,
Tom
Mees, Roger Pearch, Jam es Cassell. Bill Chaney, Rosemar y
Schmoll. William S. Stanley, Rice, Ray mond Roach, Roger
Richard Vaughan.
Dixon, Adel Davidson, Har vey
Juniors Irene Barn es.

Atkinson , Lynne Ba ker. Jell
Darst, Donna Francis, Beth

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L.
Wickline, Galiipolis, a son; and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Grimes,
Jackson, a son .
Discharges
Mrs. Lewis Baker, Mrs.
Margaret Beem, Barry Call,
Florence
Circle ,
Earl
Cremeens, Aaron Daugherty,
Mack Elkins, Roy Floyd, Mrs.
Wesley Fulk, Mrs . Donald
Hammond, Sidney Huddleston,
Sr., Thomas Johnson, Mrs.
Harry Maggied, Leo Marshall,
Brian McHugh, Mrs. Gertie
McManis , Loui s McMurray,
Mrs. Cecil Miles, Mrs. E. John
Morgan, Mrs. Ellen Moss,
George Nutter, Leslie Slleline,
Danny Woolcock, Mrs . Jesse
Brothers, and Michael Valler .

Daris Sam:pson
Died

¥.-

"BE A crJ.oWN" - PCI'tniylng elown roles In Friday
night's operetta at Syracuse Grade School are, front row, I~,
Keith Hendricks, Eddie Duffy, and Eric Pipscomb; back
row, Jimmy Slleets, Earl Pickens, and Tony Salser. Going to
the F.air will be presented by members of the first and second
grades. The program is under the direction of Mrs. Lee Lee
and Mrs. Ruth Stearns.
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Project No . 3
BOARD OF COUNTY COM·
MISSIONERS, OWNER
(Continued from page I )
Separate sealed bids tor the
went to Karen Sayre. Shirley construct ion of a new All Weld e d Steel Truss Br idge
Congo was given a cosmetology lo cated on Township Highway
No. l1n Columbia Township will
scholarship award.
be re cetved by t he Board of
Mrs. Romine presented other County Commission ers of Me igs
band awards to Linda Hollon, Coun t y, Oh io, at its offi ce in the
Courthou se, Pomero y, Ohio
Patti Ihle, Pam Buck, Garcia unti
llO : OO A M . on Jun e 8, 1971 ,
McGraw, Barbara Richard, and t hen at sa id off ice publicly
ed and rea d aloud
Debra Cross, Bill Beegle, Cary open
Th e Infor mation for Bidders ,
Morris, Pam Codner, Sharon For m of Bid , For m of Contr ac t ,1
, Specifica t io ns and
Ervin, Keith Ashley, Ollie Plans
For ms of Perfor man ce and
Sayre, Sandy Sayre , Susie Pa yme nt Bond an d other
contra ct docu ments ma y be
Biggs, Mary Smith and Robin ex
am ined at th e fo llowing :
Boar d
of
Cou nt y
Com Allen.
mi ssioner s Off ice , Courth ouse,
Keys were given as honor Pom ero y, Ohro .4 57 69
awards for students who missed Cop ies may be obtaine d a t the
ice of the Cou nty Enginee r
less than 4\ll days a semester off
lo cat ed
at
Courthouse ,
and were on each six weeks Pomero y, Oh i o 45 769 up on
payment of $5 .00 for eac h set .
honor roll.
An y unsuccess ful bidcl er, upon
These were Pam Buck, r etu r ning such set pro mptly and
in good condit ion , w 11 1 be
Debbie Cross, Sharon Ervin, refunded
hrs paymen t an d an y
Dan - Nease, Roger Nease, non bidder upon so r eturni ng
h a se t will rece ive no
Karen Sayre and Debbie Norris. rsuc
efund
Vocal
music
awards Th e own er r ese r W"es the r rgh t
wa iW" e any formal ities or to
presented by Mrs. Lee Lee went rtoejec
t any ~ nd all bi dS .
No bidder may withdraw hrs
to Robin Allen, Keith Ashley,
rd within 10 da ys alter th e
Bill Beegle, Debbie Boso, Pam bactual
date of th e op enin g
Buck, Sharon Ervin, Pat Hill, ther eof.
~ O A RD OF CO UNT Y
Patti Ihle, Garcia McGraw,
COMMI SS IONERS
Debbie Norris, Buddy Pyles,
Meig s Cbunty, Oh iO
C.ha rl es R. Karr, Sr .
Rita Salser, Ollie Sayre, Sandra
Robert Cl ark
Sayre, Karen Sayre and Cary
Ra lph W Our s
{51 20, 27, 21c
Morris.
NOTICE OF
Four year perfect attendance ·
APPOINTMENT
certificates went to Susie Biggs,
Case No . 2049S
Estate
of
Da
is
y
Kno x Proffi tt
Debbie Cross, Sharon Ervin,
Deceased
Peggy Profitt, and Gary Smith. Notice is her eby gi ve n th at

The death of Daria D. Sampson, 36, who died unexpectedly
at his Reedaville, Rt. I home
Wednesday afternoon , was
attri~uted to a heart attack.
Born In West Virginia, Mr.
Sampson was preceded in death
by his parents, Hurdle D. and
Estel Groggs Sampson, and a
brother, David, who was killed
in an auto accident when he was
seven years old.
Mr. Sampson, a Marine Corps
veteran of the Korean Conflict,
belonged to the Disabled
American Veterans (DAV) in
Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife,
Beverly Unthicum Sampson;
three daughters, Shelia, Brenda
and Lena, all nt home; five
sisters, Mrs. Glady Barton,
Coolville, Rt. 2; Mrs. Margie
Benedum, Reedsville, Rt. 1;
Mfs. Anna Weekley, Guysville
Rl. I; Mrs. Ida Mae Spradlin,
Prestonburg, Ky., and Mrs.
Carolyn Smith, Mansfield ,
Ohio; a brother, Rick Sampson,
Coolville Rt. 2, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the
White Funeral Home In
Coolville with the Rev. Arlie
Marks officiating. Burial will be
in !be Eden Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after noon Friday.

Southern

':YOUTH ASKED FOR IT
ew ine. Edwa rd Ab bott.
:.l This column Is for young people, their problems and Doris Barnhart, Opal Berry, Erl
Richa
rd Ba il ey. E Ii zabeth
PLEASANT VALLEY
•!pleasures, their troubles and fun . A3 with the rest of Helen Help Pamela .,Burson, Karen Cadle, Bla ettnar . Sa ra h Boyles ,
Andrea
Dewhurst,
Jo
Ell
en
Fred
\;us !,it welcomes•laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a Diehl, Roger Dixon, Debbie Flaran ell Burn ey , M ic ha el ADMISSIONS
Struble,
N
ancy
Greenlee.
VanMatre,
Newark;
Bruce
1-brush-off.
Garnes, Vicki Grate, Nan cy Wayne Well 112 yrs ), JoyceGreenlee,
Conni e Gru eser .
~ Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care Melanie Hackett,
Waggon er , John Sebo, Weikle, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Fred Jones, line
Thomas Crum , Glenwood ;
Rice.
ien He!p Us ! this newspaper.
,
Diana King, Kent Kloes,. David Ellen
Marcey
ONens,
Kim
Klawsczyn, Connie' t~nnlhg, P1 er ce. Becky Will, Ca r olyn William P. Stewart, Point
~GAINST MARRIAGE
Pamela Manley, Debbie May,
ar Helen:
, Joe Welker. Eddi e Pleasa nt ; Hattie Radcliff,
Mary Midkiff, Darla Neutzling, Wood
Leon ; Mrs. Melvin Wears, W.
f• I'm another "Remaining Single."
Marla
Neufzl l no.
Connie Young, Terr y Metheny. Paula
Morr 1s, Joyce Dav is, Ray Columbia , and Mrs. Lora
:; I agree with the girl and Steve who say marriage is not for
Darst, Vi cky Clelland, Melv in
Cremea ns, Becky Card, Steve Brown, Letart.
•:them. Most of the marriages I've seen are failures. The nlan gets
The Dai~ Sentinel Burt on, Fred Burney , Ron DISCHARGES - Mrs. Homer
drunk with the boys (or !be girls), and the woman stays home
DEVOTED TO THE
Couch. Gene va Ki ng, Richard Austin , Mrs. Homer Wears,
INTEREST OF
with the kids .
Ash, Tom Bai L Opal Berry, Daniel 0 . Click, Cloyd Barnett.
MEIGS-MASON AREA
No matter how much they seem to love each other at first,
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL, Ka ren Cadle, John Kauff .
Sherry Lambert, Robert Couch.
Exec . Ed.
Anna M . Ryth er of P. 0 . Box
they end up nagging and fighting, and it's mainly the man's fault.
George Hawley, Penny Moore,
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
130, Pomeroy, Oh io, has been
Not all of us girls want to become men's play-toys or baby
City Editor
Randy Snider, Sherman White,
duly appo inted Ad minrstratr ix
Pub li she d dai ly exce pt Rodney Pullrns, Cheryl Reuter,
~-------------- - --------------------------- of th e Estate of Da isy Knox
m~chines. They have their fun, then they leave, either before Saturda
y by Th e Ohio Vall ey Robert
Bir
chf
ie
ld
,
Dav
id
Proffitt, decea sed , lat e of M eig s
marriage or afterwards. They basically don't like women except Publi shrng Com pany , 111 Barnhart, Sheryl Ann Johnson .
Count y, Ohio .
Ct&gt;urt St , Pom eroy , Ohro ,
s ar e requ ir ed to file
Sherr y Ki ng, Debra Joe Ma y, 1
"in their place."
j therCrreditor
45769 Bu siness Office Phon e
cla ims with said f rducia r y
Kenneth
Harri
s,
Ka
r
en
Hale,
It makes me mad to think that I'll be considered a ''failure" if 992 ·2156, Ed itor ial Ph one 992 · William M yer s. Mark Morr is,
with in four month s.
2157
I
I
Da ted this 8th · day or May
I don't get married, no matter how BUccessful I am, or !bat
Second class pos tage pa id at Ma r-k Oiler. Carl Hendr icks,
1971.
Pomeroy , Ohro
Marsha Thor nton . Mind y
there'll be whispers about me being strange.
F H. O'Br ren
BY JACK O'BRIAN
4th St .... Opera is sung, and it's open from 6:15
Nat i ona l a d\l e r tisi ng Young, Chris Bailey, and Jill
Pro
ba
te
Ju
dg
e
ot
said Coun ty
I'm not saying I will never marry, but I DO resent feeling !bat r eprese nt ati\le Bottin ellt - Harrlr."p.m. to 2 a.m. (3 a.m. Fri.-Sat.). Veteran press
{51 13, 20, 27, Jlc
Gallagh
er,
Inc.,
12
East
42n
d
it's expected of me. From what I've obaerved,ln my own family St , New Yor k Ci ty, New Yor k.
Mrs Mary Powell presented
HOT PANTS CAN BE DEFLATED
agentWarrenPincusisdoubtingasastandbyfor
LEGAL NOTICE
Subscr ipt ion rat es : De- awards of th e Vocat ion a l Inand elsewhere, a woman is a fool to scrap a career for four walls,
NEW
YORK
The
kids
are
bealing
the
stillthe
"Walling
for
Godot"
hit
revival.
He's
played
dustrial
Clubs
of
America
to
er ed by carri er wh er e
a bunch of squalling kids and a man who isn't as smart as she is. ltv
aW"a il abl e SO cents per w eek , ou ts t a nding
voc ati o nal b&gt;o-high hotpants prices : They buy cheap denim Estragon several times already, and this Is his
N~V~'l,l~ uv:ANfEODR 5
Up with women's liberation! - TIRED OF MALE Bv Motor Route wh er e carrrer students. Winning these wer e pants and slice them off at hot-length .... Ken- flrstpubllclty . Anotheractorgotevenandtoldus
METAL PIPE
serW" rce not aW" ai lable One Ron Harr ison , weld ing ; Fred
WEAKLINGS AND BULLIES, AGE 16.
' relative Sargent Sllrlver •s th e b&gt;p can- .... The olf-Bdwy. "Long Days Journey Into of Intheacrevised
cordanc e with Sec . 307.86
month , 1.75 By mar l in Oh io Jon es. draft ing . and Stella nedy
code, sealed bids
W Va , One yea r $14.00.
P.S. Don't get me wrong. I like guys. I just wouldn't want to and
cosmetolog
y.
Becky
N
eutzling,
dldate
for
a
big
film
job
....
The
Uvlng
Room
Night"
at
the
Promenade
Theater
started
with
will
be
rece
•ved
by lhe Board of
51)( m onths S7 . 2S. Thr ee
County Comm rssion ers of M eigs
marry one.
month s $4 .50 Su bscr ipt ion Will and Steve Stanley won the nightclub's changing hancls again; real juggling no advance sale, now has $75,000 in the till, C
ounty in their offrce In th e
Nationa l Council of Teachers'
pri ce in cl ud es Sund ay Times .
Dear 16:
Courthou se, Pomeroy , Oh io
Sentinel
English awards presented by actover theyears .... TheHoteiFourteen,above smash-Qshforsuchoff.StemstuH ....
45769, un ti l 10 : 00 A .M on Jun e 1,
By the time you change your mind (if you do) a great many
Mrs. Jea nn e Bowen.
the Copacabana, will be renovated into an office
Pearl Bailey gets one of David Frost's full- 1971 At whic h. time and pla ce
more men will be considering WO!Jlen as equals, not ''play-toys. "
building exceptfor one sulteofllvingspace - for show (90 minutes) ga!Hn-depth appearances .... ;~~o~?nsg wiii1b~f 0 ~~n."t~d10 ~ 1 ~~~
Any girl who thinks she must "give up a career for four walls, a WIN AT BRIDGE
whatever Copa headliner stars there .... Jackle Hallmark Cards dld It again: Took home eight gal vanized corrugaled metal
bunch of squalllng kids and a basic woman hater" has studied a
Vernon's nursing ulcers, lots of physical Emmysfor its Hall of Fame TV shows; this ftnn p l ~~d~n~o c~'r'~~~i~l~nd~.a r ked
species of married life that won't be around much longer. Why
miseries, and too much suet, and the docs tell consistenUyhassponsoredqualityshows,alaits " Bid tor C.M.P ." on the fron t
Si de of enW" elope.
don't you Interview young, happUy married career girls and get a
I it off ore lse •
him to met
own merchandise.
Mal erial to meet the
different slant? - H.
. dtcated. He and A had been
MaeWest'sfortunenowisestlmatedatupto
Lauren Bacall wasn't roo choked up about requ.remenls Of the Slate of
NORTH
20
Oh io Depar t ment of High w ays
Dear Helen :
working
on
sui
t
preference
$25
million;
half
at
least
in
real
estate
....
"The
her
Sunday
supplement color photo In the paper ; specification
707.01.
. AKQ854
I'm a 19-year-old stable young man. l've been going with Ibis
signals so B led the deuce Philanthropist" closed and It's sad; it wasn't a but the photographer wasn't a plastic surgeon .... ff.J ?~nLgl~s .ot 15 in . 16 Ga In 20
• J82
of spades. A ruffed and re1 b 11 uffl ed
1 did hi 1
girl for two years and Intended to marry her, but she has been
• 62
turned his fourth best club great Pay, ut s c as asp en ve c e If lmtuck exits 20th-Fox (which he created)
no L F. of 18 in. 16 Go In 20
tfo8
3
playing me for a fool.
.
to
B's
king.
B
gave
his
partfor
a
star,
and
Alec
Mt;Gowen
gave
it
great
inWarner
Bros.
may
get
him
....
More
!Urns
are
ff
3 \~nc.'~ so f 18 i~ . 16 Go in 16
WEST
EAST (D)
I keep finding her with other guys, and I know she wa~ts to
ner a n o t h e r spade ruff dlvidual distinction .... The late Sir Cedric being ahot inN. Y. right now than In H'wood; of ff lengths
1097 2
• Void
break up with me but, like a dummy, I keep begging her to come
L F.s of 24 in . 14 Ga in 20
where upon A led his queen Hard wicke, in one of our midnigh t klatches in course TV films make up the slack .... But N. Y. n 300
lenglh
¥Q 96 54
¥ AK!07
back. She does, probably out of-pity.
• Q93
of trumps.
Sardi's, once bemoaned critlcalinslstence on all casting director Marion Dougherty (casting
2oo L.F , of JOin 14 Ga . in 20
• J7
11
You'd think l 'dhave more pride, but! can't lose her.
"' AQ I062
tTo KJ
Afte r this start there was plays being impeccably wrought: He cited "The George c. Scott's "Hospital" and "The Gang
2b~"c'~ s of 36 in. 12 Ga in 20
0
0
Maybe you can teil me, Helen, how to fall out of love. SOUTH
~craKuf ~l~ ~; ~ tk~ Barretts of Wimpo1e St." as a ''flawed" drama That Couldn't Shoot Stra(ght") continually is 11 ~~nC'~s · 42 in 12 Ga . in 20
. 63
CAN'T HACK IT
wound up losing two spade which superbly fit stage queen Katharine Cornell being offered coast-based stars delighted wwork 11 length s.
¥3
Dear C.H.I.:
160 L. F. of 48 in 12 Ga . in 20
·
ruffs
, four clubs and a heart .... McCowen,hailedlnLondonandhereasoneof bere. Or anywhere.
t AK I0 854
fl . len9,ths.
Make a date with a cute girl who has just been dumped bjr a
"' 9754
for minus 700 ~nd a bottom the finest s!ars In stage decades, cites a surThe late Ken Kling's "Joe &amp; Asbestos"
40L.F . of60in . 1DGo . in 20 n.
two-timing boy friend . Spend no more than ten minutes each
Eas t ~ West vulnet able
score . The best East and pr~lng brace of actors as Influencing his work: racetrack touk:artoon is being revived for !be le~g~•F. of n;n' 10 Ga In 20 ff
downgrading your "ex" and then get on with the new. It won't West North East South
West could do as decla rer Marlon Brando and Jack Benny; we can't new New York Mirror .... KenKling'ssonWoody lenglhs .
·
would be to p ic k up 650
Coupling Bands·
happen like that, but you'd be surprised how fast you can fall out
Pass
points.
identify either in McCowen's powerfuUy wide- penned "Three Goats and a Blanket," which
6 - 1s in.
2¥
2.
3¥ 4.
of love when there's a place to land. - H.
" Yo u boys st1li defend bet- ranging style.
Mickey Rooney hopes oo bring to Bdwy.
! 2--2 ~ 8 i~n
Dble Pass
Pass Pas.r;
Dear Helen :
'
ter tha n anyone." said Z.
Two priests at the Inimaculate Conception sometime .... Now Its cabdrivers having it so bad
4 - JO in .
Opening lead ¥ 5
My mother is pretty far out, a lot better than most parents,
"I was afraid to double Church, TomklnsCove,N. Y.,areFatherJohnny (since the disgraceful slly-lllgh fare boost) they
: ~~ :~ :
exej'pt when it comes to this 17-year-old boy I want to date. He
yo u," remarked
A.
"
I've
Ca
dF
th
Robert
E
Lee
Would
!akin
d
obs
Henny
•
4
f
rson an a er
.
....
yoo are
g secon J ....
Youngman s
- 48 ·•n.
1
00
wants me to go to his prom with hlril, which is up on the moun- Hy Oswald &amp;·James Jacoby seen you per orm
1 6 ,inn ._
1 72
you believe we know a Father 'shapiro and a Father jokes now are In 150,000venA~1nn
.. machines - 200
miracles . T h i s timemany
tains. His Mom will even come down to get me and bring me
A letter from Philadelphia couldn 't do anv
. thing because Jacobs? Yep. Converts.
jokes to a machine, aU different Henny swears
_100 - 7-16 ln . by 4 ln . bolls
d ·
t
•
wrth nuts
home, but 'No !'"
·
rea s m par : "I remember yo ur opponents wouldn 't let
Once In Nassau, the Bahamas, our friend on a stack of Joe Miller's .... If you remember
200 - 7-16 in . by 6 In bol ts
Mom says she trusts me but doesn't trust him, mainly A. B, Y and Z before their you in the lead."
Harry Miller, a Jewish owner of a large hotel, Joe Miller's joke books, you're old! And if you with nuts
p I a c e S in c olumn s w er e
'
The County Comm lssloners
because she thinks he does dope. He really doesn't, but even great taken
by North. South. East
{N!W &gt;PA PER ENTER PR ISE ASS N I
toured the Island's sights .... Wbicb included the remember "Madison's Budget," you're older ! reserve the rrght to rel ect any
parents get paranoid if you mention grass, and she read one of his and West. In the old days z
local Monastery whose boss was a Father
While midtown spots are ,foldlng right and or all bids.
Board of County
letters that asked me what I'd think if be started. I told him I'd didn 't make every hand,
Ephraim .... Harry u!tered a Ylddlahism at one left, Hllly Kristal's downlown'fisychology seems
.
com miss loners
break up with hlni, but she won't believe he Isn't like "tile rest of ~J:Ys~~\.he. ever get set nowThe bidding ha's been,
· point, and Father Ephraim replied In the same working: he OW1111 one spot on the Bowery, one In
Marlha Cho~f,e{ ~-i~:'{t~
those wUd boys in his town."
.
. 1
Sctutf&gt;' patois, and Harry learned delightedly that the '•Greenwich VIllage and next opelll/ in ChlnaloW!l
NOTte E OF
Z decided that h1's r 0 u r W••t N,,., h P
~•
I've liked him for seven months, How can I make Mom see
Pass
1¥
Jl'iest had been a Jew who had converted to (lock &amp;loll?.) .... Alltlme best«&lt;ler that never
APPOINTMENT
he's just a normal kid - no angel, but not a devil either? - IS IT clubs made an unusual no- Pass
2t
Pa~&lt;
,•
· Catholicism and then become _a prieet .... Hu'ry gels on the printed' lists: "Infant Care," 15 Estale
C••• No. 20~"
01 Edword s. Mills,
4mp undesirable. 11 he bid · You, South , hold:
HATE ?
lJ·
conversed
in
Yiddish
and
learned
the~·"'-·
mllllon
soltlsince
!914bythe
U.S.
Gov't
Printing
.
Deceased.
1
1. Y would become declaret· •54 2 YK J 8 7 tQ 3 H tToH also conlained a c-"'...rable ve-tabie--=e:, Ofllce
.
_ Notice Is hereby olven that
Dear 1.1 .H.:
and Z did not relish the prosWhat do you do now'
'"""""
••
.-u
·
Paul L. Patterson, of Rul/and
Yoo make a scary boy and a suspicloua parent compatible the· pect. So he passed after ~
A-Bid three diamond&gt;. ·A which sold to local mtauranlll and hotela ....
St:lltlaofeagerla~altlngareconvinced . Ohio, has been duly appoinled
111111e way yoo "CGIIditlon' children to overcome their fear of upedned W!lh one spade. The rmrsc h,v Jhc openinK bl~dcr Harty exclaimed, "Father,l'm 1olna to buy aD MayCI' Undsay won't run fCI' I'Hlectlon, and ~~~!~~~-a,!,)'f ~: ;::.;.~13,tfa~:
11
anlmala: a little at a time. ·
b1d rn g progressed as one is a one round lurcc. Yuu must' my vegetables from yoo, and I'll pay the same they'requletiypolnting their hopes and speeches ot Meigs County., Oh io. ·
•
I . I' be
lng In Miami'" F !her
,....Nl•
Sanford . Credllors are required 10 file
casuaUy mention hll achievements in school and elsewhere mtght expect And Z wountJ rcspc"C:t il.
up as declat·er at fo ul· dial'ODAY'S QUEST!tl!'i
' Jl'lce ve en pay
.
a
Gracie Mansion-,-; Carter Burden,
- lhelr·ciatms wilh said fiduciary
- or have an older friend do it. Get his relatives and yours
d
d
bl
d
Ephraim
smiled
"Mr
Miller
I
hadn't
planned
GareUk
Cong
John
Murphy
Percy
&amp;ltton
legal
with
in four months.
s ou e .
YQU do btd thrt.! l' diumond~
.
,
'
,
,
•
'
I
Dattd 'this 8th day of May
JGcetller (not bard Ia 1 Dl!ll tOwn). Ask permlaslon for him to l!lOn
B won the fir s! tnck w1th and , yo u1 partnm· ~ ids three charging you a pemy.leiB." '
.
boolde Bowie-the-Hone Samuela, BID vanden 1971.
.
_Nit and brl.nt )'011' mathlr into the conversation. ·Explain his llle king of Hea1·ts and sa w spade,, Wba1 do you do now'' 1 If you're weary of rock music In every bar Heuvel, Ed Koch, are only a few. There,'ll be
Probote Judge ~ ~~ (!0~:~~~~
atdtude on grass. If hl'ulraillht, she'll thaw. Good luck! - H.
lllat a spade l_ead was mand cafe, try Bianchi- Marguerlta's at 188 ~- more.
&lt;5&gt; 11. 20. 27, Jlc
I

l

By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
Vida Blue put a new twist
into his pitching Wednesday
night but the result was the
same-another shutout.
Blue, a hard-throwing lefthander, blended in his curve
more than usual and finished
with a three-hitter as the
Oakland Athletics beat !be
Milwaukee Brewers 3-0. The
victory boosted his record to 9-1
-best in the major leaguesand market Blue's fifth shutout
this season .
"I tried to finesse a little in
the early innings," said the 21year-old Blue. "For the first
time this year, 1 threw ~bout 50
per cent curves and 50 per cent
fastballs. I'm pitching and
learning as 1 go along . You
don't have to- overpower for
nine innings. If you do, you'll
hurt your arm ."
Rick Monday hit a home run
and Reggie Jackson added a
two-run shot in !be sixth inning
after Joe Rudl Singled to
account for all the Oakland
scoring.
Blue, the major leagues'
pitching sensation, now has
allowed only 11 earned runs.
Blue has struck out 86 men in
86 2-3 innings.
Elsewhere in !be American
League, Minnespta ripped California !2-6, Boston downed New
York 7-2, Detroit clobbered
Cleveland -12-1, Baltimore beat
Washington 4-1 and Kansas City
blanked Chicago 2-0.
In !be National League,
Chicago defeated San Francisco
9-5, Pittsburgh down&lt;"l Cincinnati 6-1, Philadelphia topped
New York 4-1, San Diego Edged
Houston 2-1, Los Angeles nipped
St. Louis 1).5 and Atlanta
crushed Montreal 10-t
Harmon Killebrew's basesloaded single in the fifth inning
ignited a three-run rally as the
Twins beat California. Rookie
Jim Strickland, making his
major league debut, gained

daY

IFI-..J_;
W ~t.es

Previoi.ls
Division
Champions
SEO DIVISION CHAMPION~
SOUTH
~
YEAR
CHAMPION
1950
Middleport
1951
Middleport
1952
Middleport
1953
Middleport
1954
Gallipoli s
1955
Gallipolis
1956
Gallipolis
1957
Middleport
1958
Gallipolis
1959
Gallipolis
1960
Pomeroy
1961
Pomeroy
1%2
Pomeroy
1963
Pomeroy
1964
Gallipolis
1965
Jackson
1966
Middleport
1967
Gallipolis
1968
Ironton
1969
Gallipolis
1970
lronlon
1971
Ironton

Voice along Broadway

Old Man Z Finally Gets His

YEAR
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1%7"
1968
1969
1970
1971

.J

01

1

1.

=

3

0 1

NORTHERN
CHAMPION
Athens
Athens
Alhens
Alhens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Wellston
Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Logan
Logan
Athens
Alhens
Athens
Alhens
Logan
Athens

i'

I

Ironton and Athens captured
post-season playoff triumphs in
!be Southern and Northern
Divisions of ihe Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League Wednesday afternoon , and those two
teams will meet for the overall
league championship at Ironton
sometime next week.
Ironton captured its third
Southern Division title in four
years · by eliminating Jackson
from the title picture, 7-3.
The defending c~ampion
Tigers, down 3-1 going tnto
the sixth inning, scored six
big runs to retain their
division title. The victory left
Ironton with a 24~ season
record. Inside the SEOAL,

the Tigers are 6-2. Jackson
bowed out with a 13-5 season
mark. The lronmen tied
GAllS for second place tn the
SO race with a 4-3 record.
Steve Inbody, sophomore
iefthander for Coach Ed
Rannow 's Athens Bulidogs,
stopped Logan 6-0 on a onehitter, thus eliminating the
defendin g Northern Division
champs of Coach Keiley Stilwell
from this year's title picture.
Inbody walked only one,
fanned six, aliowed only three
baserunners , and only one
Chieftain got as far as second
base.
Athens scored twice in 11\e
third, three in the fifth, and

three times in the sixth. The
Bulldogs collected 10 hits off
losing hurler Mark Shaw, who
had defeated !be Bulldogs on
two other occasions this spring.
Randy Norris relieved Sllaw in
!be seventh.
Steve Brown 's seventh Inning
single was !be only hit off In·
body, whose'father wUI be the
1971 AHS football coach.
For Athens, Inbody and Tom
Daft each had three singles.
Clark Bridgewater had two
singles.
Athens is now 13-8 overall,
and 5-2 in !be conference. Logan
finished 13-7 overali, and 4-3 in
conference play.
Earlier In the week, Ironton

Colonial -National Play Underway
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI)- the key "~v~ in ills' wt~g said. " If I c'otild have two-putted
The way Homero Biancas and drive here a year ago and those holes, I would have been
Lee Trevino have been playing which had put him in contention fo ur-under instead of one-under
lately, the Colonial National at Dallas and Houston, seemed for the 72 holes."
Invitation Golf Tournament to desert him on the final 18 He didn't say so, but a fouropening today might again live each of the last two SWJdays. under would have tied him with
"! took three 6's in Dallas, Houston winner Hubert Green
up to the "Mexican Open"
nickname tagged to it by including a bogey on a par~ and Don January , whom Green
hole tbal I had birdied, and beat in a sudden death playoff.
Trevino last year .
The two Latin Americans that killed me," Blancas said. He wound up tied for seventh
He shot a closing 73, his only and won $3,600.
waged a final day duel with
Gene Littler for !be $25,000 first over-par round, and woWJd up Trevino, incidentally, who had
prize a year ago with Blancas seven shots off !be pace and finished five shots off the pace
at Dalias to win $4,542, was just
taking the title by a stJ:oke with picked up but $2,482.
Then, at Houston, he was one shot back at Houston and
a three-under-par tour of the
7,142-yard, par 35-35--70 Colo- knocking up among the leaders won more than $7,200.
The two Latins, Billy Casper,
going into the final round.
nial Country Club layout.
Gary
Player and Littler- who
Trevino and littler shot 69
"I three-putted three times
and 67, respectively , and tied on the first nine holes," he has won more money here than
1
for second at 274.
Going into Ibis year 's 26th
Colonial, Trevino ranks sixth
among the tour's money
winners with $78,835 to indicate
how well his game is clicking.
Same Class
Blancas, on the surface , isn't
moving in that same class since
he ranks 36th with $26,103
pocketed.
But, the past two weeks
Blancas has been right in
contention going into the finaL Shorts tell it like it is for Sum·
mer. That's because they come
roWJds at !be Byron Nelson
Classic in Dallas and the
on • strong with cool comfort·
Houston Champions.
power. We've got all the styles,
His putter, which had been

422~econdAvo.

Go Ill 1/a, Ohio

Ram

executive J ack Teele said.
"We know we're giving up one
of the top flankers m the league
in Rentzel," said DaUas coach
Tom Landry. "But I thought he
would be better off in another
city where he had the same
opportunity to play regularly."

and all th is fo r just letting ~s
pay yo u 4:V4 per cent on your
sav mgs.

Meigs Co.
Branch
Me1gs County Bra nch of The
At hens County Savings &amp;
Loan Ca .
296 Second 51.
Po meroy, Ohio

C onve nr ent 2-spe ed , 3·
po sll ro n ro ta ry 5witc h .

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thermal plasti c fon
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bolance assures smooth,
quiet, efficient pe r·
tormance.
'

anyone else by finishing in the
money all 17 times he's played
--rule as !be top contenders
since Jack Nicklaus and Arnold
Palmer chose to bypass !be
Colonial in favor of ~ vacation.

OOR·Ers IN POM·ERO
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS TIL 8

THE HUOlPOHl BR EWING COMPANY Of ( IN CINNATI , O.

I Itt

come on strong

all the colors you wantl

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SWIMWEAR
Making big waves for
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swimwear. New styles,

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bright colors put you

••

into the swim of thingsl

'

2.98 to\6.98
for the beer they call
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large In mens. Holidays on the
way, buy now.

For - Eiegonce in Pipe
Smoking Pleasure, Select a
Pipe that . Needs No
Breaking ln.

tawney Jewelers

conduct 1 "

Whe n you open a
Savings Account here
with $25.00 ...
we W&amp;/1-Give Yoll .
A Place Selling of Dishes
Or
A Set Of 4 Glasses.
When you open an
a ccount with 5500
We Will Give You A
4 Place Selling of Oishes

20-INCH FAN

1

in sizes small boys fa extra

'

future

FOR YOU!

aREEZEMAKER 2-SPEED

dumped Gautpolls !1).3 In a
post-season playoff game in
tbe Southern Division. This
was the first time three teams
ever flnsihed In a lie for first
place tn regular season play.
It was Athens' 18th Northern
Division championship since
!be SEOAL adopted divisional
play in 1950.
Ironton shared the championship with Athens in 1968
after !be playoff game was
cancelled by a flood late in May.
· TheTigers won all !be marbles
in 1970 with a perfect 7-0 mark.
Athens haswpn 11 conference
titles, 1946, 1949 (with GAHS) ;
1950, 1952, 1953, 1956, 1956, 1961,
1963,1966, and 1968 with Ironton .·

Men's and boys' swim trunks

. 1

ti trust suit against the NFL and
ail of its 26 warns.
· •
La ter Atworth and the
Chargers settled their difficulties and the former Arkansas '
star was given a contract
through 1974 for dropping his
legal actions.
"When you think about it,:•
Rentzei said, "I think this is the
best thing for all parties.
"Certainly, I'm sorry to be
leaving the tea m a nd the
orgamzation which stood behind
me. When you gel loyally like
that, you want to repay 1t. ~
Rentzel was give n a probated
senwnce. His probationary status included the understanding
he would recetve regular
medical and psychiatric care.
"We're not worrted about ht!j,

Ironton, Athens Triumph, 'fill
Collide For 1971 SEOAL Crown

lnfernattonal League Standings
By United Press International
W L Pel. GB
Syracuse
21 8 .724 Richmond
17 13 .567 4'12
Charleston
16 13 .552 5
Rochester,
13 12 .520 6
Louisville
14 15 .483 7
Tidewaler
15 17 .469 7'12
Winnipeg
10 18 .357 10'12
Toledo
10 20 .333 11 '1•
Wednesday's Results
Louisville 7 Tidewater 3
Syracuse 6 Winnipeg 5
·We have quality auto fires to
Rochester 8 Toledo 4
crow about that will give you
Richmond 6 Charleston 5
safe !ravel durl ng the
vacation trips ahead. Let us
at Rizer's safely check your
tires. See John. Charles or
Franklin.

=°

1"'

I

American League
By United Press International
East
National League
W. L. Pel. GB
East
23 11 .676
W. L. Pet GB Boston
21 14 .600 1
Baltimore
Pittsburgh
23 14 .639
17 19 .472 '
Detroit
NO'(/ York
21 14 .600 I
16 18 .471 7
Sf. Louis
21 16 .568 2 New York
Chicago
19 18 .514 4 Washington 15 22 .405 91/2
14 21 .400 91!2
13 16 .448 6 Cleveland
credit for the victory after eighth inning with his fifth Montreal
West
Philadelphia
12 23 .343 10
W. L. Pet.
Twins' starter Jim Perry was homer of the yearc
v
Wes.t
GB
.
Oakland
27
I
~ .659
Kaline,
who
had
three
hits,
W. L. Pel.
raked for six runs in 2 2·3
Minnesota
20
18
.526 5'12
San
Francisco
28
II
.718
homered in the third and fifth
innings.
112
Kansas City 19 19 .500 61/2
Atlanta
20
18
.526
7
Sonny Siebert won his seventh innings.
19 21 .475 7'12
Los Angeles
19 20 .487 9 California
Milwaukee
14 20 .41 2 9'1'
Baltimore,
taking
advantage
18 20 .474 9'12
Houston
straight game, singled and
Chicago
13 21 .382 10112
Cincinnati
14
23
.361
13
scored the tie-breaking run on of rookie )11ike Thompson's San Diego
Wednesday's Results
II 26 .297 16
Reggie Smith's iwo-run homer jitters, scored two runs in the
Boston 7 New York. 2, night
Wednesday's Results
Baltimore 4 Washngln I , night
inning
without
and
hit
and
first
Chicago 9 San Franci sco 5
in the seventh inning as the
Kansas City 2 Chicago 0, night
Atlanta
10
Montreal
4,
night
Red Sox beat New York. went on to defeat the Senators Pittsburgh 6 Cine. I night
Oakland 3 Milwaukee 0, night
Siebert, now 7-0, gave up eight behind Jim Paimer 's five-hitter. L. A. 6 Sf. Louis 5, night
Minnesota 12 California 6, night
Thompson,
making
his
major
Today's Probable Pitchers
S.D. 2 Houston I. 10 inn, night
hits in eight innings before
Milwaukee
I Krausse 1-4) at
league debut, walked the first Phlia. 4 N.Y. I , night
giving way to Sparky Lyle.
Oakland !Fingers 1-4) , night .
Today's
Probable
Pitchers
Billy Conigliaro also homered three batters and U11leashed a
Minnesota !Hamm 1-0) at
Montreal I Renko 4-2) at
IVild
pitch
to
let
one
run
in
and
Cal
ifornia (Wright 3-3) , night.
Atlanta (Niekro 3-3). Night.
for Boston and Smith collected
Detroit
I Coleman 4-0) at
~os An~l es (Singer 2-7! at
another scored on a throwing
three hits.
Sf. Louis (Carlton 6-2). Night. Cleveland ( Foster 3-2), night .
Dick McAuliffe doubled and ! error·
.
.
Baltimore (McNally 6-2) at
Pittsburgh (Blass 3-1} at
Washington
(Janesk /1 -2). night .
homered to drive in four runs--r . Paul Schaal t~rpled to drrve Cincinnati (Grimsley 0 - 1).
New
York
(Bahnsen 1-5) at
and AI Kaline collected a pair m a run I~ the stxth mnmg and Night.
Boston (Lee 3-1), night.
San
Francisco
I
Marichal
6·21
of homers to lead Detroit past Amos Oils hrs seventh homer at Chi cago (Hands 4-4)
Friday's Games
Cleveland. McAuliffe, who en- an inning later as Kansas City
San Di ego I Kirby 1-3) at Minnesota af Oakland, night
at California, night
tered the game batting .190, edged Chicago . Mike Hedlund Houston I Blasingame 2 · 4). Chicago
Milwakee at Kansas City, night
Night.
doubled home two runs in the went 8 2-3 innings to gain credit
New York (Gentry 3-3) at New York af Cleveland. night
fourth and triggered a five-run for the victory.
Philadelphia Wise. 2-2, Night . Boston af Baltimore, night

LOS ANGELES (UPI)- ln a
blockbuster trade involving
three teams and seven p!ayers,
the Los Angeles Rams landed
Lance Rentzel from Dailas
Wednesday and the San Diego
Chargers gave up -Lance
Alworth to the Cowboys.
To get Rentzel, the Ra ms sent
tight end BiU Traux and wide
receiver Wendeil Tucker to the
Cowboys.
For Alworth , Dallas shipped
three playes to the Chargersdefensive tackle Ron East, tight
end Pettis Norman and offensive tackle Tony Liscio.
The trading off of Rentzei and
Alworth, two of the Na tional
Football League's premier wide
receivers, was no surprise.
Rentzel, 28, was charged with
indescent exposure before a Jl).
year-&lt;&gt;ld girl last season and
pleaded guilty to the charge .
Atworth , a nine-year pro
veteran who has had financial
problems, sued the Chargers
last December for $5.6 miliion ,
alleging breach of contract, and
followed that up with an an-

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I

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 20, 1971

5- The DaiJl Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pcmeroy; 0., MI!Y 20, 1971

Springtime! 'See it .Everywhere

Sparky Still Same Guy Despite Losing Season
PI'ITSBURGH (UP!)
sp;irky Anderson may be
having his problems with the
Cincinnati Reds these days, but
you can be sure of one thing .
He's the same guy struggling
near the bottom of the National
l.e~gUe that he was in the
World Series.
Anderson who took the Red~
to a pennant ln his first season
as a major league manager,
has no illusions about .where he
eventually will wind up .
"Everybody's gonna get fired

one of these days, and I'm
included like everyone else," he
observed one day this spring
when everything still was rosy
at the Reds' training camp.
Even at that time, Sparky
had his problems.
He knew ·he would be"without
Bobby Tolan when the season
started, and he knew a lot of
people already were saying the
Reds would not repeat as
champions. But no one, after
all, figures them to be this far
behind this early.

"You've got to win when you
won the year before," Anderspo
says. "It's that simple. People
expect it of you."
Anderson came up the tough
way, through years in the low
minors after undistinguished
playing career that reached the
majors for just one season.
Along the way, he made plenty
of friends.
Archie Moore, the baseball
coach at nearby Indiana
University of Pennsylvania who
played under Anderson , Johnny

an

Keane and Yogi Berra in a
brief professional car~r, saYs
he learned more from Anderson
than anyone else.
"I think he has some novel
approaches," Moore says. ~~ae
was brought up in the St. Louis
organization and they're a fine
teaching organization.
"For instance, if you're going
to consult (chew out) with a
player, the best thing is to talk
to him in the dugout or call him
into your office. You can get
across what you want to say to

him and that way you don't
embarrass him, .and allow the
man to maintain hill dignity.
"Sparky came up the hard
way and he knows what it is to:
be struggling. He. was always
the first man at the ballpark
and always the last man to
leave," Moore recalled·: uHe
dedicated himself to baseball
and you can't help but respect
a man like that."
Moore played for Anderson in
1968 at Asheville, N.C., and the
U!am won a pennant.

· Pirates Top Reds, Take Division Lead
'•

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Willie
Stargell says he's going to start
lh\'Owing during batting· grac·
lice.
"I'm gonna hit someone so I
CE&lt;n get back into the lineup,"
· cracked the Pittsburgh Pirates'
,.
slugger who's on the sidelines
I
a sprained right thumb.
'' nursing
Stargell"'s
comment came
;
Wednesday night after the Pirates moved intO first place in
the National League's Eastern

.'

Division by knocking off the
Cincinnati Reds 6-1 in the opener of a two-game series that
ends with today's 12:30 p.m.
businessman's special.
"When Willie's ready, he'll
be back in the lineup," said
Pirate Manager Danny Mur·
laugh. "And you can bet your
sweet lips on that."
Guys with Stargell 's record13 homers, a .321 batting mark
and 31 RBI's - just don't sit

Memorial Day Classic
INDIAN APOUS, Ind. (UP!)
-The Beven remaining SP.Ots In
the starting lineup for the
Indianapolis 500-mlle auto race
probilbly will be filled Saturday,
with Sunday, the last day ol
·qualifications, devoted to the
traditional "bumping" process.
Observers figure there are
eight or nine unqualified cars
with a "good" chance of
making the lineup, and a half
dozen other machines with a

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fair chance.
And if this weekend follows
last year's final round of time
trials, most of the activity will
come Saturday. The extended
weather forecast includes a
chance of rain by Sunday,
which is all the more incentive
to be ready for qualifying runs
Saturday.
However, the forecast was
favorable for today and Friday,
the last two full days of
practice as the unqualified cars
and drivers sought enough
speed to make the 33-car
lineup, and those already
"1" d worked on per fec ti ng
qua1lie
race day performances.
Only 20 cars made practice
ruris Wednesday at the Indianapolis motor speedway, and it
was the drivers in cars already
qualified for the May 29 race
who set .l!le speed .pace.
Bobby Unser, Albuquerque,
N.M., the 1968 Indianapolis
champ, had the day's quickest
lap at 172.977 miles per hour in
the car he put on the outside of
the· front row.
·

out games without good reason . Until recently the Pirates,
However, the Pirates aren't like the Reds, weren't hitting
missing Stargell's hat too much up to their full poU!ntial.
these days the way Roberto
"Disappointed? "Yes, I was,"
Clemente's batting.
· said Mur~iugh. "But I wasn't
Clemente, a four-time batting worried. I'm in bad shape
champion, rapped.out four hits, .when I have to worry about
including a triple and an in· this club hitting."
side-the-park home run, and
The Pirates rapped Nolan for
drove home three runs as the 10 hits and four runs before he
Pirates handed Gary Noll~" his departed with one out in the
third loss against a like number fifth inning. They added their
of victories.
final two runs off Wayne
The four hits gave Clemente · Granger in the ninth inning.
21 in his last 42 at-bat's, a .500 Dave Giusti blanked the Reds
average.
the final 2 2-3 innings to pick
"I've finally got going," said up his ninth save of the season
Roberto, "but before I was hav- and preserve Pirates' starter
ing my !roubles like anyone Bob Moose's third victory in
else ."
four decisions.

Moose limited the Reds to
one run and six hits before giv·
ing way to Giusti in the sev·
enth inning.
The chunky Pirate righthand·
er was making his first start
since April 20.
"It seems like every lime it
has been my turn to pitch I've
had to go on military duty,"
said Moose.
Twice Nelson Briles has filled
in as the starter for Moose and
twice Briles has wound up with
the victory.
"I can't complain," said
Moose, "because Briles is my
roorrunate. We've got to work
together."

Braves Clobber·Expos;
Giants Thumped, 9-5
By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Atlanta Stadium seems to
make a slugger out of
everybody.
With its pleasing background,
moderate distances and light
air density, the stadium that
houses the Atlanta Braves is
fast becoming a modern day
Ebbets Field and a torture
chamber for pitchers.
For the third successive
game Wednesday night there
were six home runs hit ~t
AUanta Stadium, bringing the
l9tal fo~ the year to 58 in 20
games. That's a better ratio
than last year when 211 )\omers
were hit there in 81 games, a
major league leading total.
Clete Boyer and Mike Lum
each hit two for the Braves
Wednesday ' night as they led
their team to a 1().4 victory
over the Montreal Expos. Boyer
and Lum certainly do not fall
into the category as home run
hitters, yet Boyer has hit four
a.t Atlanta in the last three
games and other non-power

hitters such as Ralph Garr of
the Braves and Bob Aspro·
monte of the Mets each hit two
in one game this week.
The Expos got homers from
Rusty Staub and pinch-hitter
Clyde Mashore, Wednesday
night but couldn't offset the
heroics of Boyer and Lum.
In other NL games, Chicago
walloped San Francisco, !J.5;
Pittsburgh took over first place
in the East Division by
defeating Cincinnati, 6-1, Phi·
!adelphia beat the New York
Mets, 4·1; Los Angeles edged
St. Louis, 6-5; and San Diego
downed Houston, 6-5, in 10 ·
innings.
In the American League it
was Baltimore 4 Washington 1,
Boston 1 New York 2, Detroit
12 Cleveland I, Kansas City 2
Chicago 0, Oakland 3 Milwauk·
ee 0 and Minnesota 12
California 6.
Next to Atlanljl Stadium the
park the hitters favor most is
Wrigley Field in Chicago, and
the Giants and Cubs proved it
by smacking six homes in their

game ahead of the Mets, who
suffered their fourth straight
loss.
Chris Short scattered seven
hits in going the distance to
defeat the Mets. Terry Harmon's bases-loaded double in
the seventh drove in three runs

"We won it going away,"
Moote said. "I don't think it
wmiid liave been that easy with
another manager . He did a
great job."
For now, no one is calling
Anderson a genius even though
he's the same manager he was
in 1970. Last year the Reds
didn't lose their 22nd game
until June 30, by which time
they were more than 30 games

over .50(1. Thi~ year, they lost P'"---~----.,
No. 22 on May 17 and were well
-under .500.
·
Anderson knows where it all
will lead eventually, but he's
not worried about it. He knows
CERTIFIED WELDER _
he can handle failure, and last·
year he proved he could handle · .Portable Equipment
success, too.
Shop or Field
· "I never knew how I would
Ph. 992-2511
·act if anything like that ever
happened to me," he says. "I
know now that I didn't

Chase Hardware

Hensler Leads ch:an:ge~
. ----~;;:;;;;;:;;
Golfers in Win
The Meigs lligh School golf
team defeato:d Wabama 213 to
231 Monday at tabama. The
top five players and their op- ~..,_...,...,_"!-'_.,..
ponents were Bill, Hensler (M) r
'fl, and Jason Ingles (W) 43;
Frank Girolaml (M) 43, and
Ralph Sayre· (W) 44; Steve
Story (M) 39 and Mike Athey
(W) 51; Gary Grinstead (W) 46
arid Bob Werry (M) 48; Marty
Vaughan (M) 46 and Guy Gibbs
(W) 47, and Jon Buck (M) 46
and Randy Roush (W) 47.
CANTON, Ohlb (UPI) Blonde blue-eyed Cynthia Sle
Vesely was chosen Wed·
nesday night as queen lor the
third annual Pro Football
Hall of Fame game to be
played here July 31 between
lhe Houston oners and Los
Angeles Rams.
Miss Vesely, 18, a senior at
Canton Oakwood Hlgb School ·
won over a field of 15 con:l
testants, The 128-pound 5foot-8 blonde measures 35-24·
35.

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Holter, all of Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. RoyVanM~ter, Becky and
Melanie of Racine Route I;
Rev. Freeland Norris, Mr. and
Mrs. Rod Grimm, Racine; Mrs.
Herbert Roush, Mrs. Iva Orr,
Mrs. Marshall Adams, Mrs.
Larry O'Brien, Linda and Carol
Ann; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Norris, Mrs. Eula Wolfe and
Asron, Mr. and Mrs. Early
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Norris, Eddie Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Erwin Gloecj(ner, all of
Racine R. D.; ·Mrs. Edith
Teaford,
Miss
Eleanor
Robinson, Minersville ; Opal
Kloos, Jackie Zerkle, Syracuse;
Mrs .
Eulah
Bracken,
Darlington, Pa.; Mary Janet
McDermitt, Letart, W. Va.;
Margaret Rizer, Hartford; Mrs.
Nancy Chapman, Albany, Ohio;
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Thompson,
Mrs. J. J. Reed, Mr. and Mrs.
John Ord, Letart, W. Va. R.D,

Looking
Lovely
Is Easy

• -

·

"Summertime
means
play~ime for your little ones .
That means they'll need tops.
short&amp;.o swimsuits and more,
We've got 'em!

5~h ~iversary

SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Norris of Syracuse
celebrated tbeir 50th .wedding
anniversary Sunday, May 16,
with open house at their home
from 2 to 4 p. m.
The bride's table was
decorated with a white lace
cloth over gold .with a tiered
wedding cake decorato:d with
white and gold, topped with a
miniaturebrideandgroom. The
bride was dressed in gold, with
vases of gold flowers on either
side.
The couple received many
- - - - - - - -.. contest. The Cubs' Billy Wil·
Iiams led the way with a pair lovely gifts. Refreshments of
'
of homers and a triple as he cake, punch, coffee, mints and
helped Ferguson Jenkins gain nuts were served. The afternoon
his eighth victory of the year. was spent socially and taking
J.C. Martin also homered for pictures.
the Cubs while Hal Lanker, · All of the Norris' five children
Bobby Bonds and Dick Dietz were present, being, Mrs.
LAUNDRY
homered for the Giants.
Margaret Weaver and Mrs,
CALL 992-2057
Roberto Clemente collected Opal Zerkle of Syracuse, Mrs.
Pickup &amp; Delivery
four hits, including a triple and Eleanor Sayre of Letart, W.
an inside-the-park homer, to Va., R. D.; Carroll Norris1
drive in three runs in the Syracuse, and Virgil Norris of
2nd Ave.
Middleport Pirates' victory. The triumph Butler, Ohio.
Guests attending were
~:::::::::::::!~m:ov:ed!.!th:e~Pirates one lull William
Zerkle, Syracuse;
Mary Zerkle, Hartford, W. Va.;
Rita Syare, Herbert Sayre,
Thomas Sayre, Angele Sayre,
Paule Sayre, and Janet Sayre,
all 9f Letart, W. Va.; Mrs.
Virgil Norris, children, Becky
and Wayne, Butler; Deana
Clark, Fredericktown, Ohio;
Richard Weaver, children,
Philip and Susie; Mrs. Carroll
Norris and Debbie, Mrs. Lynn
· Shuler and baby, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Chapman and C. T.,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Weaver,
AND SA_V~ _ '100 OR MORE
Mr. and Mrs. Olarl.es Blake,
Termite Control Concentrate. Add an ArabliOSe-end
Mrs . Lillian Duffy, all of
spray Applicator and you're ready to completely termll•Syracuse; Mr, and Mrs. Mel
proof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves you over $100
Van Meter, Tonny Van Meter,
"compared to the cost of calling In a professional ex·
Rev. and Mrs, Robert Shook,
terminator. Buy Arab and do both you and your home a
· Lucille, Gerry, and Cindy; Mr.
favor . Price may vary slightly.
and Mrs. John Bailey, Mrs.
JohnG.Balley,Mr, andMrs. W.
R. , Carpenter, Mrs, W. 0 ,
992-2709
MIDDLEPORT .
Barnltz, Mr, and Mrs. David

environment! Ask · yourself,
' 'How goes my path of life?" Do
you have attainable day to day
goals as well as ~ke lime goals?
Probably one of the most
important things in a married
woman'slifeisherfamily. Like
all important and worthwhile
things in life, you have to work
hard to · have them· mean
something and this is especially
true for good family relation·
ships.
Communication plays an
important part in good family
relationships. How well do you
communicate with the members of your family?
-Do you talk at, to, or with
your husband? Husband·wife
communication requires
listening to, talking with and
acknowledging what your
spouse says.
- Does your child's communicatlon frustrate you?
Remember, children are just
learning how to carmnunicate.
As a parent you must be patient,
understanding and helpful. A
child will learn both your good
and bad commimication habits.
For example -if you interrupt
him, he will learn to interrupt
you also.
-The thought of communicatlng with teenagers
makes some parents shudder.
..
.
~temember, they will respect
your ideas if you respect theirs.
. , I said respect - not necessarily
agree with.
-Finally, the whole family
needs to communicate with
(~pon
each other together. This may
be an informal discussion
around the kitchen table or a
called family council; whatever
the situation, let everyone have
216 E. 2nd
PomerQy his say.
Think for a moment, are you
· Phone 992-5428 ··- •
• !

PHARMACY

Couple Observes

'
.
By Deborah M. Conldln
. Est. Agent; Home Econ.
It's spring!
There's no need to tell you
this. You can feel It in your
bones. You can tell it on your
husband's face. And last of all,
you can tell it when the children
come in from playing.
Spring is a time for many
things, new . friendships·,
renewing old friendships after
the long cold winter months: it
is lime for going on picnics and
hikes and enjoying your family.
It is the time of year when it is
just great to be alive and en·
joying mother nature in all of
her splendor. Along with spring
come certain seasonal jobs and
tasks which demand our at·
tentlon.
Sunlight shining through the
window reveals the' &amp;easonal
dust and cobwebs from the long
winter months. The yard
beckons us and we realize that
once again we must till the
garden lor planting.
Just as li is necessary to till
the garden ~nd sweep the
cobwebs from the corners, it is
also necessary tp clean out,
replenish, and rejuvenate
ourselves.
Now is the time to evaluate
yourself, your family and your

.

SWISHER
.&amp; LOHSE

and tagged Jerry Koosman with
his second loss against three
victories. Mike Ryan had a
homer for Philadelphia.

.

satisfied with your family's
communication? .
Spring seems to be an appropriate lime to take a fresh
look at family activities. For
example, evaluate the family
spending plan to see if it will
mjlet · general financial llmlll
within these areas : allowances,
vacation •spending, summer
activities, ,etc. Take lime to go
on family outings such as hikes
and picnics to the State Parks of
Ohio and go on bike rides with
your chlldren.
Take the whole family to the
library and choose books which
everyone can read, discuss and
learn something from. Sit down
with your child and read one of
his favorite
magazines
with him.
...:Mom and Dad, find time in
each day. when you can in·
dividually spend some time
alone with each child.
Mom - you are special - to
·many people. You are a lover, a
wife, a mother, all rolled into
one. '(our family needs you,
though they may not say it as
often as you would like to hear
it. Even so, you are loved and
needed by all of your family. As
an individual you are entitled to
free time, mad money, sur·
prises, and an occasional
splurge cif your heart's desire.

I

L. R. Wiley presento:d the
program when the Loyal
Bereans Class met Tuesday
night at the Middleport Church
of Christ.
He read scripture from Psalm
96 and several stories including
"Niagara Falls", a fractured
version of "Little Red Riding
Hood," "Mama's Complete
Outfit," and "The Teache'."
Reporto:d ill were Homer Rice
and Marvin Kelly. It was voted
to purchase a gift for a graduate
and to join the. Loyal Women's
Class in fund raising projects
for the building debt.
Mrs. Mary Meinhart had
charge of the meeting and Mrs.

.Social
Cafendar
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..•

..

Community Club

Fischer-Gtueser Vows to be Taken
Miss Sharon Fischer and
Robert Grueser will exchange
wedding vows . at 11:30 a.m.
Saturday at the First Baptist
· ChurchoiWilliamstown, W.Va.
The Rev . Gary Boil nell will
officiate at the open church
ceremony.
Miss Fischer is the daughter
,.

TUPPERS PLAINS Construcllon of a community
building ~II be discussed ala
special meeting of the Trippers Plain~ Community Club
and the building trustees set
for May 28 at 8 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Norman Weber.
During a recent meeting oi
the club at the home of Mrs.
Merle Griffith, the group
arranged to serve the alumni
banquet on May 29 at the
Tuppers Plains school. Club
members will also serve ·
refreshments at a horse show
In June. Next meeting was set
for 10 a.m. on June 9 at the
home of Mrs. Onelta Cole.
Refreshments were served.

,,•

~

ON OKINA~A

of .Mr .. and l'l!rs. Henry D,
Fischer, Jr. of Williamstown ,
and Mr . and Mrs. Karl Grueser
of Minersville are the parents of
the prospective bridegroom.

. Marine Staff Sergeant Phillip
W..WolfP, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson M. Wolfe of Route 2,
husband of the former Miss
Anna M. TuckerofRoute 1, both
of
Racine, has reporto:d for duty
Q-With respect to horses,
with First Battalion, Fourth
wlwt does piebald denot.e?
A- A piebald horse has a Marine Regiment, Third
black coat with white spo&lt;~. Marine Division on Okinawa.

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

SWIM 1SUITS

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BOYS

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MEN

Culminating an ecology unit
in science, 32 fifth grade
students of Mrs. Victor Hysell
were taken on a field trip to the
Hysell farm, Route 1, Miners·
ville, Tuesday.
The students studied trees
and plants and animals as they
toured the farm fields and
.woods. The boys and girls had a
sack lunch by a creek, were
taken on a hayride and later
played ball games in the
meadow. Accompanying the
young people were Mrs. Eugbne
McKinney, Mrs . George
Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Wyatt, Miss. Grace Hysell, and
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hysell.
.J

•

¥

LADIES

Unit Completed

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FOR

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collection of now swimwear! We ' ve all
the styles ... tank sui ts. bikini s, more ...
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Boys' and Men's ·

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2.50 to 3.98
. 2.98 to 4.95

LADIES'
HALTERS
New shipment just in! Assorted colors

Edith Spencer gave prayer.
Mrs. Garnet Ashley was added
ON DEAN'S LIST
to the hostess group for June.
Grace Hysell, daughter of Mr.
Refreshments were served by
and
Mrs. Victor Hysell, was on
Mrs. Ed Haggerty, Mrs. Edith
Spencer and Mrs. Essie the Ohio University dean's list
for the winter quarter. Miss
Spencer.
Hysell, a sophomore in the
College of Education with a
_,.....,.._, "\
major in special education on
the elementary level, achieved
a 3. 7 grade average for the
quarter.

featuring the Ring
Peasant Halter.

Halter and the

GinS
FOR GRADS

1.00 to 2.98

New

.----Pomeroy....

Store Hours

Mondaythru
Friday
91115
{tY!I/

I

/,

Saturday

I

9 1119

Personal Notes
Karen Griffith and an Ohio
State University classmate,
"Maureen Kilbane of Parma,
were weekend guests of Karen's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Griffith.
Mrs. Ella Mae West and
daughter, Delores, Parkersburg, W. Va., and Mr. an~ Mrs.
Marvin'· McKelvey, Syracuse,
were weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. William A. McKelvey
and Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson,
Portland.
Mrs. Dixie Smith and son,
Roy Ralph, spent a recent
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Walters and sons of Veto.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Ebershach were
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebersbach
and son, Syracuse.
Dr. Christa Bausch, Stuttgart, Germany, professor of
anthropology at Ohio University
and Mr. and Mrs. John Hysell of
Ann Arbor, Michigan .were
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Victor Hysell, Minersville
Route 1. Other callers were Mr.
and Mrs . Harry Wyatt,
Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Shuler, Brian and
Alan, of Pandora, and Mrs.
Giles Hysell, Pomeroy.

Readings, Poems
WSCS l"rn,rT'I:

Galva-Guard Roof Paint

Galva-Guard Red

I

FRIDAY'
BIBLE Study Friday, 8 p. m.
at Mt. Hermon U. B. Church,
located 2\2 miles northeast of
Five Points. Film strips from
the visualized Bible study series
shown by Marvin White ,
Pomeroy Route 3. Public in·
vited.
SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party,
Saturday, 6:30-11 :30 p.m.,
Meigs Junior High School,
Middleport, Jays emceeing.
School sponsored.

HOME LAUNDRY

·way I

At the same time, you as a
female, will experience more
type of emotions than the male,
or even the women of a
generation ago.
Spring is a good lime of year
to do some future planning;
take lime from your busy ~ay
and ask yourself, "What would I
like to do in 10 years?"
Spring is a wonderful time of
year to be alive, so make the
most of it.

Wiley Gives Class P~'OI6U~'(Jm

eShorts, Shirts, Sets, Sunsuits
· ·by Health·Te~ and Carter's ·

•

I)EBBIE CONKLIN

*'· . .

'

Meditations and poetry .were
on the program at the meeting
Monday night o!-.the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the
Minersville
United
Methodist Church.
Mrs . Brooks Sayre was
program leader with Mrs. LilHe
Starcher giving the prayer.
Mrs. Sayre read scripture from.
Psalm p1. and . readings and
poems included Mrs. Mary
Russell, How Large Are Your
Hands; Mrs. Karl Grueser,
Rest, Fable of the Fleas, !llld
Lead Me There; Mrs. Emma
Hines, You Have Not Failed;
Mrs. Elsie Forbes, Who Is to
Blame, and Mrs. Sayre, Ma and
Pa.
Plans for a rummage sale on
June 4 and 5 were discussed.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Ruby Grueser.

'

TO
FOR

FQr All The Beauty Items You Want
For ·Memorial Day, For Grad Gifts,
For All Summer Long • . .
.Special

ORGANIST COMING
The Rev. Curt Davis, organist
of radio and televlaion fame,
wm present music nightly at the
Alfred Methodist Church in
revival services, May 24-30 at 6
· · p,m, The Rev. Randy Lavender
wlU be the speaker. The public
Is invited; •

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AMBUSH·TABU
20 CARATS

Helena Rubinstein's
APPLE BLOSSOM
and

WHITE MAGNOLIA
Like An Armful Of
Fresh Fragrant Flowers

I

CLASS PLANNED
A confirmation class will be
organized at a meeting ·to be
held at 10 li.D). Saturday at the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy. All
c.hildren, 12 and over, who
previously
enrolled are
requested to be present.

Dutton Drug

4.50 Value .
Now On~

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They care for your underarm skin as they solve your Individual
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FREE with your purchase Heaven Scent Eau De Parium. $peclai 1 01,
size. "The Heavenly FriArlnce that Clings".

Date Mates Cosmetic Sale!
SELECT
ANY TWO
..
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FOR 1.00
Brush-on lllusher
Compact Makeup
Liquid Makeup •
~ipstick

Eye Shociow
Mascara
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�-....
*

.

I

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 20, 1971

5- The DaiJl Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pcmeroy; 0., MI!Y 20, 1971

Springtime! 'See it .Everywhere

Sparky Still Same Guy Despite Losing Season
PI'ITSBURGH (UP!)
sp;irky Anderson may be
having his problems with the
Cincinnati Reds these days, but
you can be sure of one thing .
He's the same guy struggling
near the bottom of the National
l.e~gUe that he was in the
World Series.
Anderson who took the Red~
to a pennant ln his first season
as a major league manager,
has no illusions about .where he
eventually will wind up .
"Everybody's gonna get fired

one of these days, and I'm
included like everyone else," he
observed one day this spring
when everything still was rosy
at the Reds' training camp.
Even at that time, Sparky
had his problems.
He knew ·he would be"without
Bobby Tolan when the season
started, and he knew a lot of
people already were saying the
Reds would not repeat as
champions. But no one, after
all, figures them to be this far
behind this early.

"You've got to win when you
won the year before," Anderspo
says. "It's that simple. People
expect it of you."
Anderson came up the tough
way, through years in the low
minors after undistinguished
playing career that reached the
majors for just one season.
Along the way, he made plenty
of friends.
Archie Moore, the baseball
coach at nearby Indiana
University of Pennsylvania who
played under Anderson , Johnny

an

Keane and Yogi Berra in a
brief professional car~r, saYs
he learned more from Anderson
than anyone else.
"I think he has some novel
approaches," Moore says. ~~ae
was brought up in the St. Louis
organization and they're a fine
teaching organization.
"For instance, if you're going
to consult (chew out) with a
player, the best thing is to talk
to him in the dugout or call him
into your office. You can get
across what you want to say to

him and that way you don't
embarrass him, .and allow the
man to maintain hill dignity.
"Sparky came up the hard
way and he knows what it is to:
be struggling. He. was always
the first man at the ballpark
and always the last man to
leave," Moore recalled·: uHe
dedicated himself to baseball
and you can't help but respect
a man like that."
Moore played for Anderson in
1968 at Asheville, N.C., and the
U!am won a pennant.

· Pirates Top Reds, Take Division Lead
'•

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Willie
Stargell says he's going to start
lh\'Owing during batting· grac·
lice.
"I'm gonna hit someone so I
CE&lt;n get back into the lineup,"
· cracked the Pittsburgh Pirates'
,.
slugger who's on the sidelines
I
a sprained right thumb.
'' nursing
Stargell"'s
comment came
;
Wednesday night after the Pirates moved intO first place in
the National League's Eastern

.'

Division by knocking off the
Cincinnati Reds 6-1 in the opener of a two-game series that
ends with today's 12:30 p.m.
businessman's special.
"When Willie's ready, he'll
be back in the lineup," said
Pirate Manager Danny Mur·
laugh. "And you can bet your
sweet lips on that."
Guys with Stargell 's record13 homers, a .321 batting mark
and 31 RBI's - just don't sit

Memorial Day Classic
INDIAN APOUS, Ind. (UP!)
-The Beven remaining SP.Ots In
the starting lineup for the
Indianapolis 500-mlle auto race
probilbly will be filled Saturday,
with Sunday, the last day ol
·qualifications, devoted to the
traditional "bumping" process.
Observers figure there are
eight or nine unqualified cars
with a "good" chance of
making the lineup, and a half
dozen other machines with a

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MONADEX costs $3.00 for a 20
dily supply. Lose ugly fat or
your money will be refunded
with no questions asked.
MONADEX Is sold with this
guarantee by:
Swfslltr &amp; Lohse • Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Stor~ · Middleport,
~Mill Orders Foiled.

fair chance.
And if this weekend follows
last year's final round of time
trials, most of the activity will
come Saturday. The extended
weather forecast includes a
chance of rain by Sunday,
which is all the more incentive
to be ready for qualifying runs
Saturday.
However, the forecast was
favorable for today and Friday,
the last two full days of
practice as the unqualified cars
and drivers sought enough
speed to make the 33-car
lineup, and those already
"1" d worked on per fec ti ng
qua1lie
race day performances.
Only 20 cars made practice
ruris Wednesday at the Indianapolis motor speedway, and it
was the drivers in cars already
qualified for the May 29 race
who set .l!le speed .pace.
Bobby Unser, Albuquerque,
N.M., the 1968 Indianapolis
champ, had the day's quickest
lap at 172.977 miles per hour in
the car he put on the outside of
the· front row.
·

out games without good reason . Until recently the Pirates,
However, the Pirates aren't like the Reds, weren't hitting
missing Stargell's hat too much up to their full poU!ntial.
these days the way Roberto
"Disappointed? "Yes, I was,"
Clemente's batting.
· said Mur~iugh. "But I wasn't
Clemente, a four-time batting worried. I'm in bad shape
champion, rapped.out four hits, .when I have to worry about
including a triple and an in· this club hitting."
side-the-park home run, and
The Pirates rapped Nolan for
drove home three runs as the 10 hits and four runs before he
Pirates handed Gary Noll~" his departed with one out in the
third loss against a like number fifth inning. They added their
of victories.
final two runs off Wayne
The four hits gave Clemente · Granger in the ninth inning.
21 in his last 42 at-bat's, a .500 Dave Giusti blanked the Reds
average.
the final 2 2-3 innings to pick
"I've finally got going," said up his ninth save of the season
Roberto, "but before I was hav- and preserve Pirates' starter
ing my !roubles like anyone Bob Moose's third victory in
else ."
four decisions.

Moose limited the Reds to
one run and six hits before giv·
ing way to Giusti in the sev·
enth inning.
The chunky Pirate righthand·
er was making his first start
since April 20.
"It seems like every lime it
has been my turn to pitch I've
had to go on military duty,"
said Moose.
Twice Nelson Briles has filled
in as the starter for Moose and
twice Briles has wound up with
the victory.
"I can't complain," said
Moose, "because Briles is my
roorrunate. We've got to work
together."

Braves Clobber·Expos;
Giants Thumped, 9-5
By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Atlanta Stadium seems to
make a slugger out of
everybody.
With its pleasing background,
moderate distances and light
air density, the stadium that
houses the Atlanta Braves is
fast becoming a modern day
Ebbets Field and a torture
chamber for pitchers.
For the third successive
game Wednesday night there
were six home runs hit ~t
AUanta Stadium, bringing the
l9tal fo~ the year to 58 in 20
games. That's a better ratio
than last year when 211 )\omers
were hit there in 81 games, a
major league leading total.
Clete Boyer and Mike Lum
each hit two for the Braves
Wednesday ' night as they led
their team to a 1().4 victory
over the Montreal Expos. Boyer
and Lum certainly do not fall
into the category as home run
hitters, yet Boyer has hit four
a.t Atlanta in the last three
games and other non-power

hitters such as Ralph Garr of
the Braves and Bob Aspro·
monte of the Mets each hit two
in one game this week.
The Expos got homers from
Rusty Staub and pinch-hitter
Clyde Mashore, Wednesday
night but couldn't offset the
heroics of Boyer and Lum.
In other NL games, Chicago
walloped San Francisco, !J.5;
Pittsburgh took over first place
in the East Division by
defeating Cincinnati, 6-1, Phi·
!adelphia beat the New York
Mets, 4·1; Los Angeles edged
St. Louis, 6-5; and San Diego
downed Houston, 6-5, in 10 ·
innings.
In the American League it
was Baltimore 4 Washington 1,
Boston 1 New York 2, Detroit
12 Cleveland I, Kansas City 2
Chicago 0, Oakland 3 Milwauk·
ee 0 and Minnesota 12
California 6.
Next to Atlanljl Stadium the
park the hitters favor most is
Wrigley Field in Chicago, and
the Giants and Cubs proved it
by smacking six homes in their

game ahead of the Mets, who
suffered their fourth straight
loss.
Chris Short scattered seven
hits in going the distance to
defeat the Mets. Terry Harmon's bases-loaded double in
the seventh drove in three runs

"We won it going away,"
Moote said. "I don't think it
wmiid liave been that easy with
another manager . He did a
great job."
For now, no one is calling
Anderson a genius even though
he's the same manager he was
in 1970. Last year the Reds
didn't lose their 22nd game
until June 30, by which time
they were more than 30 games

over .50(1. Thi~ year, they lost P'"---~----.,
No. 22 on May 17 and were well
-under .500.
·
Anderson knows where it all
will lead eventually, but he's
not worried about it. He knows
CERTIFIED WELDER _
he can handle failure, and last·
year he proved he could handle · .Portable Equipment
success, too.
Shop or Field
· "I never knew how I would
Ph. 992-2511
·act if anything like that ever
happened to me," he says. "I
know now that I didn't

Chase Hardware

Hensler Leads ch:an:ge~
. ----~;;:;;;;;:;;
Golfers in Win
The Meigs lligh School golf
team defeato:d Wabama 213 to
231 Monday at tabama. The
top five players and their op- ~..,_...,...,_"!-'_.,..
ponents were Bill, Hensler (M) r
'fl, and Jason Ingles (W) 43;
Frank Girolaml (M) 43, and
Ralph Sayre· (W) 44; Steve
Story (M) 39 and Mike Athey
(W) 51; Gary Grinstead (W) 46
arid Bob Werry (M) 48; Marty
Vaughan (M) 46 and Guy Gibbs
(W) 47, and Jon Buck (M) 46
and Randy Roush (W) 47.
CANTON, Ohlb (UPI) Blonde blue-eyed Cynthia Sle
Vesely was chosen Wed·
nesday night as queen lor the
third annual Pro Football
Hall of Fame game to be
played here July 31 between
lhe Houston oners and Los
Angeles Rams.
Miss Vesely, 18, a senior at
Canton Oakwood Hlgb School ·
won over a field of 15 con:l
testants, The 128-pound 5foot-8 blonde measures 35-24·
35.

tg

__,___....,..,..,_..___,.
o·PEN DAILY
d:OO AM to 111:00

1

Sunday 10:30 AM
to 12:30 PM and
S:OOto 9:00PM

Wayne Swisher, Harold Lohse, Kenneth
McCullough, and Charles Riffle are your
friendly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
· Rexall Drugs . They
have low prescription
prices and prompt
service and discount
drug prices seven days
DEDICATED
a week. Let us serve you
TO SERVING
for all your prescription
GOOD
and drug needs.
HEALTH

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Request)
/~O_BINSON'S

.·.llEAitERS .·

BOYS' SUMMER
INFANT THRU
SIZE 12

.forYourflru§!leeds

Holter, all of Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. RoyVanM~ter, Becky and
Melanie of Racine Route I;
Rev. Freeland Norris, Mr. and
Mrs. Rod Grimm, Racine; Mrs.
Herbert Roush, Mrs. Iva Orr,
Mrs. Marshall Adams, Mrs.
Larry O'Brien, Linda and Carol
Ann; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Norris, Mrs. Eula Wolfe and
Asron, Mr. and Mrs. Early
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Norris, Eddie Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Erwin Gloecj(ner, all of
Racine R. D.; ·Mrs. Edith
Teaford,
Miss
Eleanor
Robinson, Minersville ; Opal
Kloos, Jackie Zerkle, Syracuse;
Mrs .
Eulah
Bracken,
Darlington, Pa.; Mary Janet
McDermitt, Letart, W. Va.;
Margaret Rizer, Hartford; Mrs.
Nancy Chapman, Albany, Ohio;
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Thompson,
Mrs. J. J. Reed, Mr. and Mrs.
John Ord, Letart, W. Va. R.D,

Looking
Lovely
Is Easy

• -

·

"Summertime
means
play~ime for your little ones .
That means they'll need tops.
short&amp;.o swimsuits and more,
We've got 'em!

5~h ~iversary

SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Norris of Syracuse
celebrated tbeir 50th .wedding
anniversary Sunday, May 16,
with open house at their home
from 2 to 4 p. m.
The bride's table was
decorated with a white lace
cloth over gold .with a tiered
wedding cake decorato:d with
white and gold, topped with a
miniaturebrideandgroom. The
bride was dressed in gold, with
vases of gold flowers on either
side.
The couple received many
- - - - - - - -.. contest. The Cubs' Billy Wil·
Iiams led the way with a pair lovely gifts. Refreshments of
'
of homers and a triple as he cake, punch, coffee, mints and
helped Ferguson Jenkins gain nuts were served. The afternoon
his eighth victory of the year. was spent socially and taking
J.C. Martin also homered for pictures.
the Cubs while Hal Lanker, · All of the Norris' five children
Bobby Bonds and Dick Dietz were present, being, Mrs.
LAUNDRY
homered for the Giants.
Margaret Weaver and Mrs,
CALL 992-2057
Roberto Clemente collected Opal Zerkle of Syracuse, Mrs.
Pickup &amp; Delivery
four hits, including a triple and Eleanor Sayre of Letart, W.
an inside-the-park homer, to Va., R. D.; Carroll Norris1
drive in three runs in the Syracuse, and Virgil Norris of
2nd Ave.
Middleport Pirates' victory. The triumph Butler, Ohio.
Guests attending were
~:::::::::::::!~m:ov:ed!.!th:e~Pirates one lull William
Zerkle, Syracuse;
Mary Zerkle, Hartford, W. Va.;
Rita Syare, Herbert Sayre,
Thomas Sayre, Angele Sayre,
Paule Sayre, and Janet Sayre,
all 9f Letart, W. Va.; Mrs.
Virgil Norris, children, Becky
and Wayne, Butler; Deana
Clark, Fredericktown, Ohio;
Richard Weaver, children,
Philip and Susie; Mrs. Carroll
Norris and Debbie, Mrs. Lynn
· Shuler and baby, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Chapman and C. T.,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Weaver,
AND SA_V~ _ '100 OR MORE
Mr. and Mrs. Olarl.es Blake,
Termite Control Concentrate. Add an ArabliOSe-end
Mrs . Lillian Duffy, all of
spray Applicator and you're ready to completely termll•Syracuse; Mr, and Mrs. Mel
proof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves you over $100
Van Meter, Tonny Van Meter,
"compared to the cost of calling In a professional ex·
Rev. and Mrs, Robert Shook,
terminator. Buy Arab and do both you and your home a
· Lucille, Gerry, and Cindy; Mr.
favor . Price may vary slightly.
and Mrs. John Bailey, Mrs.
JohnG.Balley,Mr, andMrs. W.
R. , Carpenter, Mrs, W. 0 ,
992-2709
MIDDLEPORT .
Barnltz, Mr, and Mrs. David

environment! Ask · yourself,
' 'How goes my path of life?" Do
you have attainable day to day
goals as well as ~ke lime goals?
Probably one of the most
important things in a married
woman'slifeisherfamily. Like
all important and worthwhile
things in life, you have to work
hard to · have them· mean
something and this is especially
true for good family relation·
ships.
Communication plays an
important part in good family
relationships. How well do you
communicate with the members of your family?
-Do you talk at, to, or with
your husband? Husband·wife
communication requires
listening to, talking with and
acknowledging what your
spouse says.
- Does your child's communicatlon frustrate you?
Remember, children are just
learning how to carmnunicate.
As a parent you must be patient,
understanding and helpful. A
child will learn both your good
and bad commimication habits.
For example -if you interrupt
him, he will learn to interrupt
you also.
-The thought of communicatlng with teenagers
makes some parents shudder.
..
.
~temember, they will respect
your ideas if you respect theirs.
. , I said respect - not necessarily
agree with.
-Finally, the whole family
needs to communicate with
(~pon
each other together. This may
be an informal discussion
around the kitchen table or a
called family council; whatever
the situation, let everyone have
216 E. 2nd
PomerQy his say.
Think for a moment, are you
· Phone 992-5428 ··- •
• !

PHARMACY

Couple Observes

'
.
By Deborah M. Conldln
. Est. Agent; Home Econ.
It's spring!
There's no need to tell you
this. You can feel It in your
bones. You can tell it on your
husband's face. And last of all,
you can tell it when the children
come in from playing.
Spring is a time for many
things, new . friendships·,
renewing old friendships after
the long cold winter months: it
is lime for going on picnics and
hikes and enjoying your family.
It is the time of year when it is
just great to be alive and en·
joying mother nature in all of
her splendor. Along with spring
come certain seasonal jobs and
tasks which demand our at·
tentlon.
Sunlight shining through the
window reveals the' &amp;easonal
dust and cobwebs from the long
winter months. The yard
beckons us and we realize that
once again we must till the
garden lor planting.
Just as li is necessary to till
the garden ~nd sweep the
cobwebs from the corners, it is
also necessary tp clean out,
replenish, and rejuvenate
ourselves.
Now is the time to evaluate
yourself, your family and your

.

SWISHER
.&amp; LOHSE

and tagged Jerry Koosman with
his second loss against three
victories. Mike Ryan had a
homer for Philadelphia.

.

satisfied with your family's
communication? .
Spring seems to be an appropriate lime to take a fresh
look at family activities. For
example, evaluate the family
spending plan to see if it will
mjlet · general financial llmlll
within these areas : allowances,
vacation •spending, summer
activities, ,etc. Take lime to go
on family outings such as hikes
and picnics to the State Parks of
Ohio and go on bike rides with
your chlldren.
Take the whole family to the
library and choose books which
everyone can read, discuss and
learn something from. Sit down
with your child and read one of
his favorite
magazines
with him.
...:Mom and Dad, find time in
each day. when you can in·
dividually spend some time
alone with each child.
Mom - you are special - to
·many people. You are a lover, a
wife, a mother, all rolled into
one. '(our family needs you,
though they may not say it as
often as you would like to hear
it. Even so, you are loved and
needed by all of your family. As
an individual you are entitled to
free time, mad money, sur·
prises, and an occasional
splurge cif your heart's desire.

I

L. R. Wiley presento:d the
program when the Loyal
Bereans Class met Tuesday
night at the Middleport Church
of Christ.
He read scripture from Psalm
96 and several stories including
"Niagara Falls", a fractured
version of "Little Red Riding
Hood," "Mama's Complete
Outfit," and "The Teache'."
Reporto:d ill were Homer Rice
and Marvin Kelly. It was voted
to purchase a gift for a graduate
and to join the. Loyal Women's
Class in fund raising projects
for the building debt.
Mrs. Mary Meinhart had
charge of the meeting and Mrs.

.Social
Cafendar
'" '~ •o\-.

.camping Shorts .... 2.75
eCamping Jeans ..... 3.25
Sizes 2-7
eBilly the Kid Shorts
eRob Roy Shirts &amp; Trunks

The right shade of powder, eye make·
up that suits you , , , all those little

eBilly the Kid White Flare
leg Jeans .......... 5.50

beauty tricks that count. They're
waiting for you here, in our complete

The Kiddie Shoppe

line of beauty aids,

ON THE 'T' IN MIDDLEPORT

I

•

An11111 cleYeloped

remote system uses your pres·

ent furnace and duct work to cool the rooms
you now heat.
TlkH 01111 5 parts to cool your whole house.

· 1.

VAilfY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.

Set the Amana cooling coil

FAMILY

Pernlanent Color - Won't Fade!

on your furnace.
1

2.

PARK RESERVED

Set the condenser ,coil out·

side your house.
I
.

SATURDA-Y • MAY 22nd
UNTIL 5 PM

3. Quick-connect the two with

prHhlrl"'! tubing.

·

4. ConiiiCt

to your control
Clllllr thermostat.

UFAMILY OUTING"
Of
RESEARCH&amp; DEVELOPMENT DEPT.
And
SERVICES DEPARTMENT
Of
UNION 'CARBIDE TECH. CEN:rER

5. ConiiiCt to 230 volt ~r.
... .c:eOI the Aml111 way.

'

R is 'the quality
I

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way.
.
'

FOREMAN&amp; ABBOTT
'

.

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-----~------·--------------

CAMDEN PARK
b t - Huntintlfln

Keds
'FOR ALL THE

.GAL

7.20

IN

5 GAL.
LOTS

Galva-Guard Green
GAL 7.35 !~AL. ,
LOTS
Per Gallon-7.50

Per Gallon-7.35

It pays to buy our best Galva-Guard by Vang·uard . Goes farth
l~ger. Permane·nt color, won't fade. For metal roofs, wood r·~asts
buildings, shutte_~s, lawn furniture and masonry surfaces. ·
etal

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HARDWARE'~

MAIN ST.

•

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. 1

Tennis Casuals, Surfers
Boat Shoes
You'll love the casual comfort and
better quality of genuine Keds .
Come, choose for holiday coming up.
for summer.

•

Check Our
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CANVAS SPECIAU

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"Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced"

E_
b ersbach Hardware
POMEROY

It

I

TheSHOE BOX
MIDDUPORT

Clean-~p ~ Paint Up - Fix-Up Now

...

PAIR

:0._-,...""'-'X•~·Q·o··•;:.,;o~... ' '.'.'' '.'.'.'-''..V.'."-'.
,,,,.,~~~-, ,,.,.,_~ "":···«·.w,,_,,~.,.

..•

..

Community Club

Fischer-Gtueser Vows to be Taken
Miss Sharon Fischer and
Robert Grueser will exchange
wedding vows . at 11:30 a.m.
Saturday at the First Baptist
· ChurchoiWilliamstown, W.Va.
The Rev . Gary Boil nell will
officiate at the open church
ceremony.
Miss Fischer is the daughter
,.

TUPPERS PLAINS Construcllon of a community
building ~II be discussed ala
special meeting of the Trippers Plain~ Community Club
and the building trustees set
for May 28 at 8 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Norman Weber.
During a recent meeting oi
the club at the home of Mrs.
Merle Griffith, the group
arranged to serve the alumni
banquet on May 29 at the
Tuppers Plains school. Club
members will also serve ·
refreshments at a horse show
In June. Next meeting was set
for 10 a.m. on June 9 at the
home of Mrs. Onelta Cole.
Refreshments were served.

,,•

~

ON OKINA~A

of .Mr .. and l'l!rs. Henry D,
Fischer, Jr. of Williamstown ,
and Mr . and Mrs. Karl Grueser
of Minersville are the parents of
the prospective bridegroom.

. Marine Staff Sergeant Phillip
W..WolfP, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson M. Wolfe of Route 2,
husband of the former Miss
Anna M. TuckerofRoute 1, both
of
Racine, has reporto:d for duty
Q-With respect to horses,
with First Battalion, Fourth
wlwt does piebald denot.e?
A- A piebald horse has a Marine Regiment, Third
black coat with white spo&lt;~. Marine Division on Okinawa.

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

SWIM 1SUITS

..
"'
::
•
•.
•
:
~

...-•w•

w,

-..·--.-.
-~

GIRLS

-"
--.•.
~

•

BOYS

~

MEN

Culminating an ecology unit
in science, 32 fifth grade
students of Mrs. Victor Hysell
were taken on a field trip to the
Hysell farm, Route 1, Miners·
ville, Tuesday.
The students studied trees
and plants and animals as they
toured the farm fields and
.woods. The boys and girls had a
sack lunch by a creek, were
taken on a hayride and later
played ball games in the
meadow. Accompanying the
young people were Mrs. Eugbne
McKinney, Mrs . George
Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Wyatt, Miss. Grace Hysell, and
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hysell.
.J

•

¥

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Unit Completed

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~

FOR

~

•
•

In gear for swimming action ... our
collection of now swimwear! We ' ve all
the styles ... tank sui ts. bikini s, more ...
and all the accessories. too .
I_

Ladies' sizes 30 to 44 in
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Girls' sizes 3 to 14 ·
Boys' and Men's ·

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2.50 to 3.98
. 2.98 to 4.95

LADIES'
HALTERS
New shipment just in! Assorted colors

Edith Spencer gave prayer.
Mrs. Garnet Ashley was added
ON DEAN'S LIST
to the hostess group for June.
Grace Hysell, daughter of Mr.
Refreshments were served by
and
Mrs. Victor Hysell, was on
Mrs. Ed Haggerty, Mrs. Edith
Spencer and Mrs. Essie the Ohio University dean's list
for the winter quarter. Miss
Spencer.
Hysell, a sophomore in the
College of Education with a
_,.....,.._, "\
major in special education on
the elementary level, achieved
a 3. 7 grade average for the
quarter.

featuring the Ring
Peasant Halter.

Halter and the

GinS
FOR GRADS

1.00 to 2.98

New

.----Pomeroy....

Store Hours

Mondaythru
Friday
91115
{tY!I/

I

/,

Saturday

I

9 1119

Personal Notes
Karen Griffith and an Ohio
State University classmate,
"Maureen Kilbane of Parma,
were weekend guests of Karen's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Griffith.
Mrs. Ella Mae West and
daughter, Delores, Parkersburg, W. Va., and Mr. an~ Mrs.
Marvin'· McKelvey, Syracuse,
were weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. William A. McKelvey
and Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson,
Portland.
Mrs. Dixie Smith and son,
Roy Ralph, spent a recent
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Walters and sons of Veto.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Ebershach were
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebersbach
and son, Syracuse.
Dr. Christa Bausch, Stuttgart, Germany, professor of
anthropology at Ohio University
and Mr. and Mrs. John Hysell of
Ann Arbor, Michigan .were
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Victor Hysell, Minersville
Route 1. Other callers were Mr.
and Mrs . Harry Wyatt,
Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Shuler, Brian and
Alan, of Pandora, and Mrs.
Giles Hysell, Pomeroy.

Readings, Poems
WSCS l"rn,rT'I:

Galva-Guard Roof Paint

Galva-Guard Red

I

FRIDAY'
BIBLE Study Friday, 8 p. m.
at Mt. Hermon U. B. Church,
located 2\2 miles northeast of
Five Points. Film strips from
the visualized Bible study series
shown by Marvin White ,
Pomeroy Route 3. Public in·
vited.
SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party,
Saturday, 6:30-11 :30 p.m.,
Meigs Junior High School,
Middleport, Jays emceeing.
School sponsored.

HOME LAUNDRY

·way I

At the same time, you as a
female, will experience more
type of emotions than the male,
or even the women of a
generation ago.
Spring is a good lime of year
to do some future planning;
take lime from your busy ~ay
and ask yourself, "What would I
like to do in 10 years?"
Spring is a wonderful time of
year to be alive, so make the
most of it.

Wiley Gives Class P~'OI6U~'(Jm

eShorts, Shirts, Sets, Sunsuits
· ·by Health·Te~ and Carter's ·

•

I)EBBIE CONKLIN

*'· . .

'

Meditations and poetry .were
on the program at the meeting
Monday night o!-.the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the
Minersville
United
Methodist Church.
Mrs . Brooks Sayre was
program leader with Mrs. LilHe
Starcher giving the prayer.
Mrs. Sayre read scripture from.
Psalm p1. and . readings and
poems included Mrs. Mary
Russell, How Large Are Your
Hands; Mrs. Karl Grueser,
Rest, Fable of the Fleas, !llld
Lead Me There; Mrs. Emma
Hines, You Have Not Failed;
Mrs. Elsie Forbes, Who Is to
Blame, and Mrs. Sayre, Ma and
Pa.
Plans for a rummage sale on
June 4 and 5 were discussed.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Ruby Grueser.

'

TO
FOR

FQr All The Beauty Items You Want
For ·Memorial Day, For Grad Gifts,
For All Summer Long • . .
.Special

ORGANIST COMING
The Rev. Curt Davis, organist
of radio and televlaion fame,
wm present music nightly at the
Alfred Methodist Church in
revival services, May 24-30 at 6
· · p,m, The Rev. Randy Lavender
wlU be the speaker. The public
Is invited; •

1.00

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Sea &amp; Ski- Lot ion, Oi I. Butter

AMBUSH·TABU
20 CARATS

Helena Rubinstein's
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and

WHITE MAGNOLIA
Like An Armful Of
Fresh Fragrant Flowers

I

CLASS PLANNED
A confirmation class will be
organized at a meeting ·to be
held at 10 li.D). Saturday at the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy. All
c.hildren, 12 and over, who
previously
enrolled are
requested to be present.

Dutton Drug

4.50 Value .
Now On~

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They care for your underarm skin as they solve your Individual
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FREE with your purchase Heaven Scent Eau De Parium. $peclai 1 01,
size. "The Heavenly FriArlnce that Clings".

Date Mates Cosmetic Sale!
SELECT
ANY TWO
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FOR 1.00
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Compact Makeup
Liquid Makeup •
~ipstick

Eye Shociow
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�I

'.,
t

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 20, 1971

'

Officers were elected and
projects selected when the three
circles of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church met Tuesday night.
The circle meetings were held
at the homes of the new
chaintlen, Mrs. Dale Walburn
of the Love Joy Circle, Mrs.
Richard Owen of the Dorcas,
and Mrs. Tony Fowler of the
EJecta.
The June Sanborn Society
meeting was announced along
with the Women's Conference to
he held at Otterpein College,
June 29-30 and JJ/ly I.
All three circles were given
the names of servicemen and
shutins to be remembered on
special occasions during the
year . Ascholarship student will

Home. Bottle raps and stamps
will be collected by the group.
Programs for the year were
discussed by the 15 members
present. Mrs. Fowler gave
devotions and served refreshmenU!.
DORCAS CIRCLE
During the Dorcas Circle
meeting at the Owen home,
arrangements were made to
remember Mrs. Laura Seines
and Miss Emma Matthews on
their birthday anniversaries.
Officers elected were Mrs.
Willis Anthony, vice chairman
and program chairman; Mrs.
John Fultz, devotional leader;
Mrs. Fred Hoffman, treasurer;
Mrs . Millon Hood, secretary;
Mrs . Charles Searles, love gift
chairman; Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin, white cross chairman.
All members of the circle will
work on projects.
Six shutins, the scholarship
student and special interest
missionary , and one ser~
vice man will be remembered on
special occasions by the circle
who also took on the Syracuse
Nursing Home as a special
cheer project . Needy families
will also be assisted during the
year.
It was decided to save cancelled stamps. A practice was
held for a playlet entitled "Be
Our Guest," to be presented at
the June Sanborn Society
meeting . Mrs . Searles had
charge of the love gift
dedication and Mrs. Fultz gave
devotions using "God's People
In Missions" as her topic.
Mrs. Owen served refreshments to Mrs. Anthony, Mrs.
Bert Bodiner , Mrs. David
Darst, Mrs . Fult·z, Mrs .
Fielding Hawkins, Mrs. Kenneth Imboden, Mrs. Searles,
Mrs. Jacob Turner.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Projects of the Love Joy
Circle will emphasize the Meigs
Coun ly Infirmary, needy
children of the community and

be assigned at the Women 's
Conference.
ELECT ACIRCLE
Officers elected by the Electa
Circle were Mrs. Beulah White,
vice chairman and progress
ehairman ; Miss Jerry Pullen,
secretary;
Mrs . Robert
Richardson, treasW'er; Miss
Rhoda Hall, devotional
chairman;
Mrs.
Haru
Houda:shelt, white cross
chair"]an, and Mrs. William
Davis, love gift chairman ..
Mrs. Richardson will also
serve as project chairman with
Mrs. Fran Parker and Mrs.
Fred Lewis on her committee.
In addition to servicemen and
shutins, the group plans to
assist needy families, provide
milk money for school children,
and to visit the Elmwqod Rest

PTA Will Press
For Board Action

,.
'

Social
Calendar

~cers .I~~~

Circles
Elect
0
. .
.

riI

.

A delegation from the Mrs. John Teaford, and Mrs.
Salisbury Elementary School Dale Harrison .
PTA will _meet with the Meigs Membership, Mrs. Lloyd
Local School District Board of Haggy, Mrs. William Pullins,
Education June a to reques~ Mrs. Uoyd King and Mrs. Will;
again action to relieve the Hospitality, John Usle, Miss
problem of water standing on Story, Mrs. Ned Swindell, Mrs.
the playground.
Rowland Dais, and Mrs .
The object of the PTA is to Kenneth Chaney; Spiritual,
have the problem corrected Mrs. Virgil King, the Rev.
before school opens in the fall. A William Airson, the Rev .
new drainage system was Donald Brickles, Mrs. Wendell
considered when a complaint Hoover, and Herschel McClure;
was lodged with the school Program, Mrs. Edward Kenboard a few months ago.
nedy, Mrs . Swindell, Mrs .
Plans were made for a field McClure, Mrs. Welker, and Mr.
day andpicnicto be held Friday and Mrs. Ronald Browning.
at the Route 33 park. The picnic Dining Room, Mrs. Kennedy,
dinner will be served at 11 a.m. Mrs. Swindell, Mrs. Morris,
with the field day activities to Mrs . Rodney Quivey, Miss
begin at 12:30. Three events will Story , Mrs. Virgil King, Mrs .
be featured for each grade and · Jeff Wilson, Mrs. Philip Radrlbpons will be awarded to the ford, Mrs. Kenneth Sinclair,
winners of all events. John Mrs. Welker, Mrs. Gene
Arnott and Rosalie Story will . Whaley, Mrs. Fred Burson,
. direct the activities with Mr. Mrs. David Slater, Mrs. Ronald
and Mrs. Herschel McClure, Browning, Mrs. McClure and
Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs . Mrs. Uoyd King; Kitchen , Mrs.
William Airson, Mrs . Ned Will, Mrs. William Ohlinger,
Swindell, Mrs. · Jack Welker, Mrs. Frances Carleton, Mrs.
Mr.li'Jd.Mrs. Ronald Browning, Phil Ohlinger, Mrs. Bill Pullins,
j a~!vlr. ;and Mrs. Edward Mrs. Hoover, Mrs. Airson, Mrs.
Kennedy to assist. Mrs. Arnott George Sisson, Mrs. Teaford,
is in charge of ribbons for the Mrs. Paul Simpson, Mrs. Betty
field day program.
Folmer, Mrs. Vernal Well, Mrs.
· Miss Story noted that there Roy Smith, Mrs . Floyd
will he a full day of school on Brickles, Mrs'. Charles Williams SYRACUSE - A chicken
plate dinner on June 5 was
May 27 and that the children and Mrs. Richard Friend.
planned by the Ladies Auxiliary
will return on Friday to get
their report cards. She also Mrs. William Ohlinger, Mrs. of the volunteer firemen at their
announced a summer project of Frances Carleton, and Mrs. headquarters the evening of
painting the school furnishings Phil Ohlinger were appointed to May 10.
Apotluck dinner preceded the
to be carried out by the teachers audit the books.
with other volunteers.
Mrs. Morris and Mrs. Welk~r , 7:30 meeting called to order
A gift was presented to Miss ways and means chairmen, with prayer. Romans 13:1-llwas
Story, who has resigned as asked that each PTA family read by Ada Slack for
p"rincipal, in appreciation for give a book of trading stamps devotions . Seven members
her "splendid " service to the toward prizes for the fall answered roll call with a witty
school.
festival to eliminate soliciting saying. Reports were read and
Mrs. James Will conducted an gifts from the merchants . They accepted. ,
The dinner on June 5 will offer
impressive installation service asked that the books be turned
for the new officers using in at the October PTA meeting. baked chicken, noodles, mashed
candles and
a
floral They also announced an ice potatoes, baked beans, cole
arrangement provided by Mrs. cream social for July 24 at the slaw, hot rolls, coffee, tea, and
pie.
Freda Mossman. Installed were school.
At the May 24 meeting each is
Mrs. Ed Kennedy, president; The Rev. Mr. Brickles gave
to
bring a homemade article, to
Mrs . Ned Swindell, vice devotions to open the meeting
president ; Mrs . Herschel conducted by Mrs. Kennedy. A be kept for the bazaar table at
McClure, treasurer ; and Mrs. film "Who Says You Can 't" was the fall festival. Games will be
Wendell Hoover, secretary . shown . The attendance banner played and each is to bring
Committees for the 1971-72 was won by Mrs . Dais' second prizes. Several cards were sent.
At!Rnding were Jean Hall,
school year were named and grade.
included the following:
Refreshments were, served by president ; Mary Pickens,
Publicity, Mrs. Phil Ohlinger; Mrs. Charles Williams, Mrs. Mildred Pierce, Agnes White,
Health, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Swindell, Mrs. Fred Burson, Ele1loor Bohram , Elva Dailey
Scites; Safety, Ed Kennedy, Mrs. Kenneth Sinclair, Mrs. and Ada Slack.
William Ohlinger, and John Charles Marshall, Mrs. Rnhert 1!!~!~ii
Arnott; Ways and Means, Mrs. Hawk , Mrs. James Robsoo,
Jack Welker and Mrs. Walter Mrs . Welker , Mrs . Glenn
Morris, co-chairmen, Mrs. Tenney, Mrs . Rodney Quivey,
Rodney Quivey, Mrs. William Mrs. Gary Basham and Boll!.
Witte, Mrs. William Ohlinger, Chaney.

Auxiliary Plans

Chicken Plate

Dinner june 5th

the school milk program.
Meeting at lhe Walburn home
the group accepted four shutins
and two servicemen, Dallas
Blevins, Jr . and David Sigman,
to be remembered during the
year .
Officers elected were · Mrs.
Manning Kloes, vice chairman ;
Mrs . Isabelle Winebrenner ~
IJ'easurer; Mrs. Leora Sigman,
secretary; Mrs. Paul Smart,
love gift chairman; Golda
Mourning and Mrs. Lillian
McGhee , white cross chairmen.
Devotions were by Mrs. Dana
Hamm who commented on
definitions of time. The group
sang "Take Time to be Holy",
and while the love gift and the
offering were being taken, Mrs.
Walburn, chairman , read a
missionary story entitled
"Today", and a poem "At Day's
End ."
Cake, punch, nuts and coffee
were served. Jill Walburn, Wes
and Carol Simon were guests.
Members attending were Mrs.
Hamm, Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner, Mrs . Mourning , Mrs.
Smart, Mrs. Winebrenner, Mrs.
Charles Simons, Mrs. John
Werner, Mrs. Sigman, Mrs.
Kloes, Mrs. McGhee and Mrs .
Walburn .

Pie or Cake Could Mean $1,000
No, Virginia, everybody can't
be a winner ~ but ·somebody
will be, and it might be you.
Yout . best home'!lade pie or
cake could be worth over $1,000.
The first step towards the big
cash will be taken in Meigs
County on June 3 at the third
annual All.Ohio Electric Pie
and Cake Baking Contest
sponsored by the · investorowned electri c utility companies in Ohio.
Housewives, husbands, girls
and boys can compete for the
county championship and official entry forms are available
from the Ohio Power Co.,
Pomeroy, the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport, or the Monongahel;i
Power Co.
The county pie and cake
champion will be sele~ted bY a
]Udgmg panel cons1shng of a
housewife, an extension agent
and a home economics teacher.
The contest will be held at the
Ohio Power Co., JIO Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy at 10 a.m. and

THURSDAy
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
Thursday night at the Shrine
Park, Racine.
MIDDLEPORT Child conservation League, . 7:30 Thursday, home of Mrs. Kenneth
Harris . Devotions, Mrs. 'Louis
Osborne. Roll call, hair
coloring. Program by Mrs.
Eugene Gherke " Wigs and
Things".
'
.
HARRISONVILLE O.E.S.,
annual inspection , a p.m.
ll'hursday. All members asked
to attend .
MEIGS COUNTY Tuberculosis and Health Assn.
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
home of new president, Mrs.
Glenn Dill, Syracuse. Officers
and board members requested
to be present.
FRIENDLy NEIGHBORS
Club, 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Emerson Well .
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, special meeting, 7:30
False words are not only
p.m. Thursday at hall in
evil
in themselves but they
Chester. Work in EA Degree.
inject the soul with eviLAll Master Masons invited.
Socrates.
HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
OES, annual inspection, a p.m.
Thursday.
·
POMEROY Pee Wee Redlegs
practice Thursday 6 p.m .
behind Pomeroy Junior High.
Bill Ohlinger, Mgr., asks all
members be present.
RACINE PEE WEE League
organizational meeting and
practice Thursday 5:30
p.m. at Racine diamond. All
members to attend, rain or
shine. Insurance of $2 can be
paid at this time. Coach Larry
Wolfe needs three volunteer
men to assist him with the 35
boys.

the wi"ner will be announced at
l p.m.
The county champions in both
contests will be awarded $50
and an additional $25 for their
trip to Columbus to compete in
the semi-finals. Second place
winners Will receive ~;m ap·

SECOND BIG WEEK

pliance, and third place winners
will bo given cookbooks.
" The state semi-finals will be
held at the Ohio State Fair, Aug.
26 to Sept. 5 with daily winners
to receive $100. The state
champion in both categories
will win the $1,000.

ME'-$0N'S

••
r· n•v
. .

·

f V•

Mrs.
Kenneth
Harris
presented the program on,
Priscilla , a Servant of the
Church , from the study book on
Women of the Bible to the
Friendly Circle Tuesday night
at Trinity Church.
It was noted that Priscilla's
story is not told in great detail in
the Bible, but that it covered a ·
wide range of activities for
Christ in three countries,
Florence, Ephesus, and Rome.
She and her husband, Aquila,
were friends of the Apostle Paul
and often shared their home
with him. Their home was also
used by Christians as a meeting
place.
Paul's writings, Mrs. Harris
pointed out, often men tion
Priscilla and her husband. Her
prominence was due not only
her religious and scholarly
endowment but also to her
sacrificial nature. She lived in a
time when Christians, facing
persecution, were unpopular
wherever they went, but her
home and her heart always
were open · to the church. A
' general discussion on the
program was followed by
prayer by Mrs. Harris.
Miss Elizabeth Fick presided
when plans were made for the
annual potluck picnic to be held
at the left roadside park on
Route 33, 6 p.m. June 15.
Mrs. Albert Woodard will
present a vesper service
following the meal. Mrs.
Thomas Young reported on
members of the church
remembered in recent weeks.
Reports were also given on
other activities of the group.
Mrs. Carl Bilikam and Mrs.
Leonard Jewell served a
dessert course. A milk glass
compote of red and white
flowers complimented the
patriotic theme of the refreshment table .

fresh

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'

1.09 SIZE

REGUlAR 1.00
12 oz.

Fami~

. .. .' . '

..
.

•

Toothpaste

'

•

.

.

,

With
Hot
Wheels
Reg .
1.09

Prell Concentrate

Tube with Hot Wheels

30J.

.

-

Site

Reg. 1.09

· Prell Uquid

1oz. Reg. 1.15 withfre~ Hot Wheels Reg. 1.15

REG.
39'

Your Choice

77~

IMPERIAL SIZE
.
.
16 OZ. - REG. 2.15

I·

COOLiR CHEST

cOlD PACK .

·CARE.
........,....

, CARE
REG. 2.00

1.19
HAIR
SPRAY
REG.• 991

53~

13 Ol.

PROTEIN SHAMPOO
PROTEIN
.CREME RINSE
REG. 99'
16 oz.
EACH

Bonnie Bell
PINT SPECIAL .mL"f:
'

~J11Urpn­

REG.

Helene Curtis

SECRET

SPRAY NET

5.50

For$22.95

ideas in every department

r-;;;;:ti:~-1 ~---ruNnME-~-1
SPECIALS
Toy Sand Pails
Garden
lawn Mowers

Sets

I

. . __________ .J

I

Afghan Kits. Including Daisy Pattern

~~~jjtF~~~:~.~N~
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY i. SATURDAY Nl~ijTSl;IL 9

Give Her Diamonds
Caravelle®by Bulova.

Diamonds are a girl's best lrlend, befriend her. ~nd keep
her timely, too. For a mere $22.95. Give her a pretUiy sculptured , precision-made, 17 Jewel watch, hlghllgHied wllh
lwln diamonds. The Sweet Briar "G". Caravello by Bulova.
If

An expensive· watch at an Inexpensive price .

Goessl~r's

Jewelry Store
'\

Court St.

Pomeroy

Gas air conditioning-

Reg 1.19
6 Ounce

SHOULDERS
.
SHAMPOQ
. .

for people•who need
,a better
I'C3S0fi . Maybe cool comforl ,throughout your home,
I
(
rl
throughout the lohg hot sDmmer, is all the reason
1th an JUSt coo COIThO •
you, need for
whole- house ai r conditioning . If so. you
:
·
can stop here.
·

'

gas

'
'1

But if you need something more convincing, consider
lhis: with gas whole · house air conditioning, you ca n keep
doors and windows closed all summer, keeping ou1 dirt
no1se and pollen. So you enjoy cleaner, quieter, healthie;
living. You feel more relaxed, and sleep better with fil(ered.'
refres hing gas air conditioning.
And, of course, gas air conditioning lasts· longer. and
requires less servicing over the llf.e of Ihe.s~ste.m : . ,
Yes there's a lot more to gas air cond1t10n1ng than cool
' '
~
'
J.
comfort. If yo" need more.
Call your gas air conditioning · dealer ...
or the Gas Company .

·~

'990

cOLD PACK - NO. P-32-6

LIGHTER
IMPORTE~
REG. 98'

66~

ENERGINE

12 OUNCE

CUcoll ~- Fluid

;:· 39~

..

--

REG.
l-,6_ 0

SCOPE
SUPER SIZE

~

FAMILY LOTION
FAMILY nJBE
YOUR. atoiCE

BY POLDSON

2.39

"

FAMILY
.
. JAR
-'

thermous JUGS
REG.
3.69

TUSSY

SHAMPCio

._ONE GAllON

billfolds, candy and many

p;ou r:11an.

119

g~

iff

..

~

REG. 2.25'
4 oz.
•
BRECK TEXTURIZING

.REG. 1.59

.1\":~o.- ~35-4

Graduation cards, hose,
s lips, gowns , hankies ,

3.95

Tu.y Dtodorlnt , ••

BRECK BASIC

Unscented

REG,

NOW 71t

1110Wi

Re,gular, Hard
to Hold, and

PRELL LIQUID SHAMPOO

•

LOViNG

MISS BRECK

SUAVE

Gleem II

ICE BUCKET

~

Shampoo Plus Lemon

'

39°

~~

Clairol .
LOVING

~

Helene Curtis

3~

BOWL CLEANER

LUU

OR MINT
FAMILY

70Z.

ILYSOL

'

59-o

120Z.

liiort
·.

June 5

ha1r
Shampoo

~ BABY POWDER

.SCHICK

REVIVAL 7:30 each evening
through Sunday at Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road,
William Uber speaking. Public
invited by the Rev . Jay Stiles,
pastor.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at clubhouse,
Racine, with the Rev. Arthur
Lund speaking on alcoholism .
Shriners, Shrinettes, Shriners'
wives and guests invited.
Refreshments.
LOYAL WOMEN'S Class
covered dish dinner Thursday, 6
p.m., at Middleport Church of
Christ.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, a
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
CUB SCOUT Pack 245,
committee meeting, 7:30
Thursday night, home of Selwyn
Smith, Middleport. Committee
members, leaders and assistant
leaders to attend.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Thursday home of Mrs. Louis
Grueser. Election of officers;
members to bring a dress in a .
sealed package.
FRIDAY
DANCE, 8:30-11 :30 p.m.
Friday, Southern Junior High
School sponsored by sophomore
class. Music by Willie. Public
welcome.

Sal•
Thru

Instant

1.00. '

Gifls For Grads

l .

BRECK"

On Coptact
• Remdves Dirt
• Kills Germs

' REG~

Buy Now . . . Artificial Flowers,
Cemetery Decorations, Flags. We
have flowering bulbs and seeds for
spring planting.

ffl-3491

,'7Jix,.,,ifoNir.iA.

Pain

NO. 264

FLOWERS &amp; WREATHS

·----~-~-----J

NEW!

Medicated first Aid Pads
~ . Stops

Values That Will Amaze
.and Astound You!

REG. 1.00

™

RAZOR

DAY

II
I knitting and crocheting I
~ usy for anyone.
1 I
1 VIsit our Arl Goods I I
1Department.
I 1

·• clean 'n tteat

SCHICK
'
INJECTOR .

I

I K· rei knitter kits makes

•

•

Priscilla
As Se ~Y-1 'antfirst
.

a ues

REG.

2.05
'

sa~

�I

'.,
t

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 20, 1971

'

Officers were elected and
projects selected when the three
circles of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church met Tuesday night.
The circle meetings were held
at the homes of the new
chaintlen, Mrs. Dale Walburn
of the Love Joy Circle, Mrs.
Richard Owen of the Dorcas,
and Mrs. Tony Fowler of the
EJecta.
The June Sanborn Society
meeting was announced along
with the Women's Conference to
he held at Otterpein College,
June 29-30 and JJ/ly I.
All three circles were given
the names of servicemen and
shutins to be remembered on
special occasions during the
year . Ascholarship student will

Home. Bottle raps and stamps
will be collected by the group.
Programs for the year were
discussed by the 15 members
present. Mrs. Fowler gave
devotions and served refreshmenU!.
DORCAS CIRCLE
During the Dorcas Circle
meeting at the Owen home,
arrangements were made to
remember Mrs. Laura Seines
and Miss Emma Matthews on
their birthday anniversaries.
Officers elected were Mrs.
Willis Anthony, vice chairman
and program chairman; Mrs.
John Fultz, devotional leader;
Mrs. Fred Hoffman, treasurer;
Mrs . Millon Hood, secretary;
Mrs . Charles Searles, love gift
chairman; Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin, white cross chairman.
All members of the circle will
work on projects.
Six shutins, the scholarship
student and special interest
missionary , and one ser~
vice man will be remembered on
special occasions by the circle
who also took on the Syracuse
Nursing Home as a special
cheer project . Needy families
will also be assisted during the
year.
It was decided to save cancelled stamps. A practice was
held for a playlet entitled "Be
Our Guest," to be presented at
the June Sanborn Society
meeting . Mrs . Searles had
charge of the love gift
dedication and Mrs. Fultz gave
devotions using "God's People
In Missions" as her topic.
Mrs. Owen served refreshments to Mrs. Anthony, Mrs.
Bert Bodiner , Mrs. David
Darst, Mrs . Fult·z, Mrs .
Fielding Hawkins, Mrs. Kenneth Imboden, Mrs. Searles,
Mrs. Jacob Turner.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Projects of the Love Joy
Circle will emphasize the Meigs
Coun ly Infirmary, needy
children of the community and

be assigned at the Women 's
Conference.
ELECT ACIRCLE
Officers elected by the Electa
Circle were Mrs. Beulah White,
vice chairman and progress
ehairman ; Miss Jerry Pullen,
secretary;
Mrs . Robert
Richardson, treasW'er; Miss
Rhoda Hall, devotional
chairman;
Mrs.
Haru
Houda:shelt, white cross
chair"]an, and Mrs. William
Davis, love gift chairman ..
Mrs. Richardson will also
serve as project chairman with
Mrs. Fran Parker and Mrs.
Fred Lewis on her committee.
In addition to servicemen and
shutins, the group plans to
assist needy families, provide
milk money for school children,
and to visit the Elmwqod Rest

PTA Will Press
For Board Action

,.
'

Social
Calendar

~cers .I~~~

Circles
Elect
0
. .
.

riI

.

A delegation from the Mrs. John Teaford, and Mrs.
Salisbury Elementary School Dale Harrison .
PTA will _meet with the Meigs Membership, Mrs. Lloyd
Local School District Board of Haggy, Mrs. William Pullins,
Education June a to reques~ Mrs. Uoyd King and Mrs. Will;
again action to relieve the Hospitality, John Usle, Miss
problem of water standing on Story, Mrs. Ned Swindell, Mrs.
the playground.
Rowland Dais, and Mrs .
The object of the PTA is to Kenneth Chaney; Spiritual,
have the problem corrected Mrs. Virgil King, the Rev.
before school opens in the fall. A William Airson, the Rev .
new drainage system was Donald Brickles, Mrs. Wendell
considered when a complaint Hoover, and Herschel McClure;
was lodged with the school Program, Mrs. Edward Kenboard a few months ago.
nedy, Mrs . Swindell, Mrs .
Plans were made for a field McClure, Mrs. Welker, and Mr.
day andpicnicto be held Friday and Mrs. Ronald Browning.
at the Route 33 park. The picnic Dining Room, Mrs. Kennedy,
dinner will be served at 11 a.m. Mrs. Swindell, Mrs. Morris,
with the field day activities to Mrs . Rodney Quivey, Miss
begin at 12:30. Three events will Story , Mrs. Virgil King, Mrs .
be featured for each grade and · Jeff Wilson, Mrs. Philip Radrlbpons will be awarded to the ford, Mrs. Kenneth Sinclair,
winners of all events. John Mrs. Welker, Mrs. Gene
Arnott and Rosalie Story will . Whaley, Mrs. Fred Burson,
. direct the activities with Mr. Mrs. David Slater, Mrs. Ronald
and Mrs. Herschel McClure, Browning, Mrs. McClure and
Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs . Mrs. Uoyd King; Kitchen , Mrs.
William Airson, Mrs . Ned Will, Mrs. William Ohlinger,
Swindell, Mrs. · Jack Welker, Mrs. Frances Carleton, Mrs.
Mr.li'Jd.Mrs. Ronald Browning, Phil Ohlinger, Mrs. Bill Pullins,
j a~!vlr. ;and Mrs. Edward Mrs. Hoover, Mrs. Airson, Mrs.
Kennedy to assist. Mrs. Arnott George Sisson, Mrs. Teaford,
is in charge of ribbons for the Mrs. Paul Simpson, Mrs. Betty
field day program.
Folmer, Mrs. Vernal Well, Mrs.
· Miss Story noted that there Roy Smith, Mrs . Floyd
will he a full day of school on Brickles, Mrs'. Charles Williams SYRACUSE - A chicken
plate dinner on June 5 was
May 27 and that the children and Mrs. Richard Friend.
planned by the Ladies Auxiliary
will return on Friday to get
their report cards. She also Mrs. William Ohlinger, Mrs. of the volunteer firemen at their
announced a summer project of Frances Carleton, and Mrs. headquarters the evening of
painting the school furnishings Phil Ohlinger were appointed to May 10.
Apotluck dinner preceded the
to be carried out by the teachers audit the books.
with other volunteers.
Mrs. Morris and Mrs. Welk~r , 7:30 meeting called to order
A gift was presented to Miss ways and means chairmen, with prayer. Romans 13:1-llwas
Story, who has resigned as asked that each PTA family read by Ada Slack for
p"rincipal, in appreciation for give a book of trading stamps devotions . Seven members
her "splendid " service to the toward prizes for the fall answered roll call with a witty
school.
festival to eliminate soliciting saying. Reports were read and
Mrs. James Will conducted an gifts from the merchants . They accepted. ,
The dinner on June 5 will offer
impressive installation service asked that the books be turned
for the new officers using in at the October PTA meeting. baked chicken, noodles, mashed
candles and
a
floral They also announced an ice potatoes, baked beans, cole
arrangement provided by Mrs. cream social for July 24 at the slaw, hot rolls, coffee, tea, and
pie.
Freda Mossman. Installed were school.
At the May 24 meeting each is
Mrs. Ed Kennedy, president; The Rev. Mr. Brickles gave
to
bring a homemade article, to
Mrs . Ned Swindell, vice devotions to open the meeting
president ; Mrs . Herschel conducted by Mrs. Kennedy. A be kept for the bazaar table at
McClure, treasurer ; and Mrs. film "Who Says You Can 't" was the fall festival. Games will be
Wendell Hoover, secretary . shown . The attendance banner played and each is to bring
Committees for the 1971-72 was won by Mrs . Dais' second prizes. Several cards were sent.
At!Rnding were Jean Hall,
school year were named and grade.
included the following:
Refreshments were, served by president ; Mary Pickens,
Publicity, Mrs. Phil Ohlinger; Mrs. Charles Williams, Mrs. Mildred Pierce, Agnes White,
Health, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Swindell, Mrs. Fred Burson, Ele1loor Bohram , Elva Dailey
Scites; Safety, Ed Kennedy, Mrs. Kenneth Sinclair, Mrs. and Ada Slack.
William Ohlinger, and John Charles Marshall, Mrs. Rnhert 1!!~!~ii
Arnott; Ways and Means, Mrs. Hawk , Mrs. James Robsoo,
Jack Welker and Mrs. Walter Mrs . Welker , Mrs . Glenn
Morris, co-chairmen, Mrs. Tenney, Mrs . Rodney Quivey,
Rodney Quivey, Mrs. William Mrs. Gary Basham and Boll!.
Witte, Mrs. William Ohlinger, Chaney.

Auxiliary Plans

Chicken Plate

Dinner june 5th

the school milk program.
Meeting at lhe Walburn home
the group accepted four shutins
and two servicemen, Dallas
Blevins, Jr . and David Sigman,
to be remembered during the
year .
Officers elected were · Mrs.
Manning Kloes, vice chairman ;
Mrs . Isabelle Winebrenner ~
IJ'easurer; Mrs. Leora Sigman,
secretary; Mrs. Paul Smart,
love gift chairman; Golda
Mourning and Mrs. Lillian
McGhee , white cross chairmen.
Devotions were by Mrs. Dana
Hamm who commented on
definitions of time. The group
sang "Take Time to be Holy",
and while the love gift and the
offering were being taken, Mrs.
Walburn, chairman , read a
missionary story entitled
"Today", and a poem "At Day's
End ."
Cake, punch, nuts and coffee
were served. Jill Walburn, Wes
and Carol Simon were guests.
Members attending were Mrs.
Hamm, Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner, Mrs . Mourning , Mrs.
Smart, Mrs. Winebrenner, Mrs.
Charles Simons, Mrs. John
Werner, Mrs. Sigman, Mrs.
Kloes, Mrs. McGhee and Mrs .
Walburn .

Pie or Cake Could Mean $1,000
No, Virginia, everybody can't
be a winner ~ but ·somebody
will be, and it might be you.
Yout . best home'!lade pie or
cake could be worth over $1,000.
The first step towards the big
cash will be taken in Meigs
County on June 3 at the third
annual All.Ohio Electric Pie
and Cake Baking Contest
sponsored by the · investorowned electri c utility companies in Ohio.
Housewives, husbands, girls
and boys can compete for the
county championship and official entry forms are available
from the Ohio Power Co.,
Pomeroy, the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport, or the Monongahel;i
Power Co.
The county pie and cake
champion will be sele~ted bY a
]Udgmg panel cons1shng of a
housewife, an extension agent
and a home economics teacher.
The contest will be held at the
Ohio Power Co., JIO Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy at 10 a.m. and

THURSDAy
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
Thursday night at the Shrine
Park, Racine.
MIDDLEPORT Child conservation League, . 7:30 Thursday, home of Mrs. Kenneth
Harris . Devotions, Mrs. 'Louis
Osborne. Roll call, hair
coloring. Program by Mrs.
Eugene Gherke " Wigs and
Things".
'
.
HARRISONVILLE O.E.S.,
annual inspection , a p.m.
ll'hursday. All members asked
to attend .
MEIGS COUNTY Tuberculosis and Health Assn.
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
home of new president, Mrs.
Glenn Dill, Syracuse. Officers
and board members requested
to be present.
FRIENDLy NEIGHBORS
Club, 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Emerson Well .
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, special meeting, 7:30
False words are not only
p.m. Thursday at hall in
evil
in themselves but they
Chester. Work in EA Degree.
inject the soul with eviLAll Master Masons invited.
Socrates.
HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
OES, annual inspection, a p.m.
Thursday.
·
POMEROY Pee Wee Redlegs
practice Thursday 6 p.m .
behind Pomeroy Junior High.
Bill Ohlinger, Mgr., asks all
members be present.
RACINE PEE WEE League
organizational meeting and
practice Thursday 5:30
p.m. at Racine diamond. All
members to attend, rain or
shine. Insurance of $2 can be
paid at this time. Coach Larry
Wolfe needs three volunteer
men to assist him with the 35
boys.

the wi"ner will be announced at
l p.m.
The county champions in both
contests will be awarded $50
and an additional $25 for their
trip to Columbus to compete in
the semi-finals. Second place
winners Will receive ~;m ap·

SECOND BIG WEEK

pliance, and third place winners
will bo given cookbooks.
" The state semi-finals will be
held at the Ohio State Fair, Aug.
26 to Sept. 5 with daily winners
to receive $100. The state
champion in both categories
will win the $1,000.

ME'-$0N'S

••
r· n•v
. .

·

f V•

Mrs.
Kenneth
Harris
presented the program on,
Priscilla , a Servant of the
Church , from the study book on
Women of the Bible to the
Friendly Circle Tuesday night
at Trinity Church.
It was noted that Priscilla's
story is not told in great detail in
the Bible, but that it covered a ·
wide range of activities for
Christ in three countries,
Florence, Ephesus, and Rome.
She and her husband, Aquila,
were friends of the Apostle Paul
and often shared their home
with him. Their home was also
used by Christians as a meeting
place.
Paul's writings, Mrs. Harris
pointed out, often men tion
Priscilla and her husband. Her
prominence was due not only
her religious and scholarly
endowment but also to her
sacrificial nature. She lived in a
time when Christians, facing
persecution, were unpopular
wherever they went, but her
home and her heart always
were open · to the church. A
' general discussion on the
program was followed by
prayer by Mrs. Harris.
Miss Elizabeth Fick presided
when plans were made for the
annual potluck picnic to be held
at the left roadside park on
Route 33, 6 p.m. June 15.
Mrs. Albert Woodard will
present a vesper service
following the meal. Mrs.
Thomas Young reported on
members of the church
remembered in recent weeks.
Reports were also given on
other activities of the group.
Mrs. Carl Bilikam and Mrs.
Leonard Jewell served a
dessert course. A milk glass
compote of red and white
flowers complimented the
patriotic theme of the refreshment table .

fresh

BRECK
FRESH HAIR

~ UBABY YOURSELF"

·
9
.
9
.
*
oz.
REG. 1•95

· · ~ With the World's
~ .Finest Powder! 2~

•.

REG.
1.75 .

,

PLATINUM PWS

LILT

BLADES

SPECIAL

·No. 804 - Reg. 89'

REG.

5's

1.89

TAMP AX

Helene
Curtis
. .
CREME RINSE PLUS

'.

Reg. or Super 40's

..

_, ,..,

L

...

W

· .1'v~ · ouNCE

SIZE

~

1.29

Reg.
1.93

lfGULAR 1.29
'

REG. 1.00
12 Ol

1

CAROID and

Helene Curtis

BILE SALTS TABS
.REGUlAR 1.79 ..

100'5 :~·

)PLEDGE

REGULAR

OR

99
0
'
d

.

•

SHAMPOO PLUS
REGUlAR 1.00
•

CREST TOOTHPASTE
sr
'

1.09 SIZE

REGUlAR 1.00
12 oz.

Fami~

. .. .' . '

..
.

•

Toothpaste

'

•

.

.

,

With
Hot
Wheels
Reg .
1.09

Prell Concentrate

Tube with Hot Wheels

30J.

.

-

Site

Reg. 1.09

· Prell Uquid

1oz. Reg. 1.15 withfre~ Hot Wheels Reg. 1.15

REG.
39'

Your Choice

77~

IMPERIAL SIZE
.
.
16 OZ. - REG. 2.15

I·

COOLiR CHEST

cOlD PACK .

·CARE.
........,....

, CARE
REG. 2.00

1.19
HAIR
SPRAY
REG.• 991

53~

13 Ol.

PROTEIN SHAMPOO
PROTEIN
.CREME RINSE
REG. 99'
16 oz.
EACH

Bonnie Bell
PINT SPECIAL .mL"f:
'

~J11Urpn­

REG.

Helene Curtis

SECRET

SPRAY NET

5.50

For$22.95

ideas in every department

r-;;;;:ti:~-1 ~---ruNnME-~-1
SPECIALS
Toy Sand Pails
Garden
lawn Mowers

Sets

I

. . __________ .J

I

Afghan Kits. Including Daisy Pattern

~~~jjtF~~~:~.~N~
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY i. SATURDAY Nl~ijTSl;IL 9

Give Her Diamonds
Caravelle®by Bulova.

Diamonds are a girl's best lrlend, befriend her. ~nd keep
her timely, too. For a mere $22.95. Give her a pretUiy sculptured , precision-made, 17 Jewel watch, hlghllgHied wllh
lwln diamonds. The Sweet Briar "G". Caravello by Bulova.
If

An expensive· watch at an Inexpensive price .

Goessl~r's

Jewelry Store
'\

Court St.

Pomeroy

Gas air conditioning-

Reg 1.19
6 Ounce

SHOULDERS
.
SHAMPOQ
. .

for people•who need
,a better
I'C3S0fi . Maybe cool comforl ,throughout your home,
I
(
rl
throughout the lohg hot sDmmer, is all the reason
1th an JUSt coo COIThO •
you, need for
whole- house ai r conditioning . If so. you
:
·
can stop here.
·

'

gas

'
'1

But if you need something more convincing, consider
lhis: with gas whole · house air conditioning, you ca n keep
doors and windows closed all summer, keeping ou1 dirt
no1se and pollen. So you enjoy cleaner, quieter, healthie;
living. You feel more relaxed, and sleep better with fil(ered.'
refres hing gas air conditioning.
And, of course, gas air conditioning lasts· longer. and
requires less servicing over the llf.e of Ihe.s~ste.m : . ,
Yes there's a lot more to gas air cond1t10n1ng than cool
' '
~
'
J.
comfort. If yo" need more.
Call your gas air conditioning · dealer ...
or the Gas Company .

·~

'990

cOLD PACK - NO. P-32-6

LIGHTER
IMPORTE~
REG. 98'

66~

ENERGINE

12 OUNCE

CUcoll ~- Fluid

;:· 39~

..

--

REG.
l-,6_ 0

SCOPE
SUPER SIZE

~

FAMILY LOTION
FAMILY nJBE
YOUR. atoiCE

BY POLDSON

2.39

"

FAMILY
.
. JAR
-'

thermous JUGS
REG.
3.69

TUSSY

SHAMPCio

._ONE GAllON

billfolds, candy and many

p;ou r:11an.

119

g~

iff

..

~

REG. 2.25'
4 oz.
•
BRECK TEXTURIZING

.REG. 1.59

.1\":~o.- ~35-4

Graduation cards, hose,
s lips, gowns , hankies ,

3.95

Tu.y Dtodorlnt , ••

BRECK BASIC

Unscented

REG,

NOW 71t

1110Wi

Re,gular, Hard
to Hold, and

PRELL LIQUID SHAMPOO

•

LOViNG

MISS BRECK

SUAVE

Gleem II

ICE BUCKET

~

Shampoo Plus Lemon

'

39°

~~

Clairol .
LOVING

~

Helene Curtis

3~

BOWL CLEANER

LUU

OR MINT
FAMILY

70Z.

ILYSOL

'

59-o

120Z.

liiort
·.

June 5

ha1r
Shampoo

~ BABY POWDER

.SCHICK

REVIVAL 7:30 each evening
through Sunday at Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road,
William Uber speaking. Public
invited by the Rev . Jay Stiles,
pastor.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at clubhouse,
Racine, with the Rev. Arthur
Lund speaking on alcoholism .
Shriners, Shrinettes, Shriners'
wives and guests invited.
Refreshments.
LOYAL WOMEN'S Class
covered dish dinner Thursday, 6
p.m., at Middleport Church of
Christ.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, a
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
CUB SCOUT Pack 245,
committee meeting, 7:30
Thursday night, home of Selwyn
Smith, Middleport. Committee
members, leaders and assistant
leaders to attend.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Thursday home of Mrs. Louis
Grueser. Election of officers;
members to bring a dress in a .
sealed package.
FRIDAY
DANCE, 8:30-11 :30 p.m.
Friday, Southern Junior High
School sponsored by sophomore
class. Music by Willie. Public
welcome.

Sal•
Thru

Instant

1.00. '

Gifls For Grads

l .

BRECK"

On Coptact
• Remdves Dirt
• Kills Germs

' REG~

Buy Now . . . Artificial Flowers,
Cemetery Decorations, Flags. We
have flowering bulbs and seeds for
spring planting.

ffl-3491

,'7Jix,.,,ifoNir.iA.

Pain

NO. 264

FLOWERS &amp; WREATHS

·----~-~-----J

NEW!

Medicated first Aid Pads
~ . Stops

Values That Will Amaze
.and Astound You!

REG. 1.00

™

RAZOR

DAY

II
I knitting and crocheting I
~ usy for anyone.
1 I
1 VIsit our Arl Goods I I
1Department.
I 1

·• clean 'n tteat

SCHICK
'
INJECTOR .

I

I K· rei knitter kits makes

•

•

Priscilla
As Se ~Y-1 'antfirst
.

a ues

REG.

2.05
'

sa~

�.. ,

..

I'M FIXIN' TO GO

Real Estate For Sale
For Sale
WANT AD
Notice
INFORMATION
REGISTERED Arabian PLANTS FOR SALE. Home 3 BEDROOM bric~ home .
DEADLIN.ES
Choice location in Middleport.
grown Improved Mexic-an
standing to· approved mares,
·5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Seen by appointment only .
tomato.
plant!,
large
smooth,
Kiraff 050481 . Rich Rallies
Monday Deadllne9a .m.
non.acid.
Also,
Heinz
1350,
Phone. 992·3491 after 4 p. m.
blood lines, fee $50. Eskey
Ca~~llaflon &amp; Corrections
5-7-tfc
Yellow
Golden
Jubilee
and
Hill,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Large Supersonic. They are c-:-=-=-=---5·20·31c
Day of Publication
_:,__
st urdy •. well roo)ed pla"ts. 24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
REGULATIONS
with
or
without
farm
Also, hot peppers, mangos
The Publisher reserve s the GUN SHOOT every Salurday
machinery
.
House
with
3
and cabbage plants. On Rt.
night at 6 p.m . near Racine
right to edit or reject any 'ads
bedrooms , dining room, living
1241n
Syracuse,
Ohio,
500
feet
Planing Mill. Assorted meats.
deemed objectional. The
room , l'h baths, enclosed
above the park . Thomas
Sponsored by Syracuse Fire
publisher Will not be responsible
back porcn. wall to wall
Hayman
.
Department .
for more than one inco rrect
carpeting.
Aluminum siding,
5-2·301C
5·19·31c
Insertion .
awning, sform windows and
RATES
.
~~---­
storm doors . City water .
REYNOLDS' Flower Shop,
For Want Ad Service
Selling due lo ill hea l!~. Phone
Mason, W. Va. has baskets,
5 cents per Word one inser tion
614·985·3938.
wreaths, crosses and Bibles.
Minimum Charge 75c
5·18-30tp
Emblems wilh each pur 12 cents per word three
chase, Mom, Pop, etc. - A lo
consecutive insert ions.
Z; 25-year and so.year an 18 cents per word six con ·

____
...

niversary pins. All size pots

secutive insertions.

wi th flowers . All beautifully

25 Per Cent Discount on paid

han d arranged, right here in
, shop. Our flowers can be used
year after year . Five
chrysa nthemum s
or
12
tomato plants with each SIO

ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
1
&amp;OBITUARY

$1.50 for

so

word min imum.

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE.

MILLER

.Cleland Realty

basement with garage, wall to
wall carpet, air conditioner,
range and refrigerator,

r.~. WE \U ~

L

Virgil B...

Signed: Delores Frank

5-20-llp

TWIN

Auto Sales
excellent condition Inside and

out. Phone 949-2173.

Middleport
lool 'Room

5·20·31c

walnut stand. All features

price

or

terms

Lost
by Osby Martin
GUN SHOOT, Fork,ed Run
. Sportsman Club, Sunday,
May 23, 12 noon.
5·19·31c

FEMALE German shepherd, 2years old, black and brown, 70
pounds. Chain collar. Vicini1y
of Point Rock, Meigs Coun ty,
on May 8. Reward. Call
Albany 698·4803 alter 6 p.m. or
Athens 594·6918 days. Ask tor
Bill Morgan .
5·18·61c

GUN SHOOT, Friday, May 21, 7
p.m., Mile Hill Road . - - - - - Assorted meats. Sponsored by
Situation Wanted
Racine Fire Dept.
5-19·31c WILL DO babysitting in my
home. Contact Janet McCHICKEN barbecue, Sunday,
Daniel. 368 E. Main St..
May 30 at Racine Fire
Pomeroy , Ohio.
Station . Homemade Ice
5· 18·61C
cream and baked goods. - - - - - Serving from 12 noon on .

5-19·91c

Help Wanted

HOME sewing. Phone 992·5327.
5·9·30tp
KOSCOT Kosmetic.s, wigs and
accessories. May and June

special. Kleansing Kream ,
$2.25 . Distributors, Brown 's.
Phone 992·5113.
4-23·1fc

ha s all cleaning attachments

1970 DODGE; Advenlure pickup,
10,000 miles. Phone 742·5840.
5·20·31c

$4,500.

EXPERT , lawn mower and

You will have something of value to show tor the SS$ you

spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an In·
• come Tax benefit, you build an equity and you are not
bound by the term s of a re ntal agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner-

Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
992·7357 .
5·18-lfc

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

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph. 446·4782
Ga llipoli s. John Russell.
ONner &amp; Operator .

5·1J.tfc

pentry, roofing , paintinQ, etc .
Phone 992-7729 between 6 p.

_

-

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting ·

BACKHOE AND DOZER work
Septic tanks install ed. George

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992·2478
4·25-tfc

-------

All Weather Roofing &amp;

HARRISON'S TV AND AN
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6·10· tic

Insured-Experienced
Work Guaranteed

.
JOHNSON MASONRY
Backhoe And
End loader Work

Commercial, residential and
industrial wiring. Phone 247 -

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

3·12·1fc

~==--~

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your

home, Call Guy Neigler,

RALPH'S

742-4902

7.31.tfc

CARPET

Gallipolis 446·0294.

Have Your Seasonal

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE, story an d half, 6
5·12·1fC

3

6.98

PHONE 992-2143
EXPERT TREE service. Call
co llect after 5 p.m. , Richard

bedrooms, closets, buill -in

Hayman, Reedsville 667·3041.
cupboards. S.D. Buskirk, 961
5·19·301p
South 2nd Ave ., Middleport·.
5·20·31p SEPTIC tanks~cleaned . Miller

COMES TO- AN'

-WE.KI NGIT
TH' OlliE
THING OUR
LONELY LI'L

property

belonging to the Estate of
William
A.
Carman,
deceased, will be sold by the
undersigned at public auction
at the re sidence of said

de cedent located on Stale
Route 124, Laurel Clitf,
Pomeroy, Ohio, R. D., on
Sa turday, the 5th day of June,
1.971, beginning at 11 o'clock
A.M.

BUT ~IF VORE.

TH' '
WORLD IS

"METHOD;'

I

WIF OUR.
METHOD -

SHUDDER

OUR'N!!

TO

THINK

"METHOD"··

~FIT!!

JOHNSON MASONRY

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

Complete
R emotleling

Limestone' Driveways

Septic Tanks and Leach
Beds
Free Estimates

CAU GEORGE 985-3837
OR DON 992-6883

Flowers

BUGS BUNNY
WHAT AR&amp;
WE OOtNG TO
DOAilOUT
IT1 r..IERRY!'

742-4902

'!HERr$ NOT MUCH Wf;
CAN DO, WINNIE .
LEGALLY WE'D HAVE
DIFFICUIJY PRCMNG
ANYTHING ...

FLOO~.

PLEASE!
LET'S
GO!

FREE STORAGE

Artificia I Flowers

Ceme,erv
Wreaths

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

&amp;

Open HilS
Thurs.- Fri.· Sat.
Or Phone 949·2223

RACINE, 0•
BULLDOZER work .. Basemen! ,
ponds, landscaping. We do all
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
dirl and top soil. See or call
Bob Jeffers after 7 p. m.
Phone 992-3525.
4·23-30tc

For Your Garments
All you pay for Is cleaning
and pressing. Pay when you
get them back.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY SERVICE
CALL 773-5543.
Please! No Free Storing on
Bulk Cleaning.

ABC CLEANERS
773-5543

I, don't 6tanct there
runnll'

Mason, W. Va, ·

Get on! It'!&gt; mn•vin'

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop,., Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We Shar.pen Scissors.
•
3-29-tfc

•

p,

Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .

modern bath and kitchen, gas
for ced air furnace, small barn

p.m. or write La'lern Jordan,

and oulcellar . Only $10,000.
TODAY.

5·18-61c

662·3035.

Phone Albany 669-4851 after 3 EXPERIENCED

/

painter,

exterior and interior . Donald

Rl. 3, Albany, Ohio.

Van Meier, 985·3951.

5-11-12tp

POMEROY - Charming little 2 ,----~---------------~

PUBLIC SALE

WI" WASGiTTIN'
DtSCOUAAGE:D

f!"LLS US 'lORE

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

FLOWER SHOP ·

Parts

0-lC£ '/0'

,.
PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

VILLAGE

Plus

i(ALSO
DQUBLE-WIDES •

.~EE TOM CROW, GUY S!f(JLER OR BOB CROW

Inspection and

Blaettnar's

i n~ulated,

bath,

... CHAMPION
DYKE

,-fr VAN

Also Arrangements made to
your specification .

s:~cial

3 BEDROOM home, Syracuse.
Hardwood floors. 14x24

house,

!«WINSOR
'«BUDDY

Air Conditioning
Re-Charge

rooms , bath, Rutland . Phon e

well

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

Arrangements

3·12·11c
___:__

742·5613 .

.)

Single Flowers

Upholstery Cleaning Service .
Free
est imates.
Phone

____

Time You Ever Spent.

Construction Co.

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC' Service.

- - - - --

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minufes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

DEXTER , 0 . 45726
PHONE 742-3945

CONCRETE

Racine, Ohio.

?

Evenings Call992·2534, Dale Dutton

Pomeroy

.Ph. 992-2143
. ..

4·21-30tc

estimates. Phone 992 ·3284 .
Goeglein Ready·Mix Co.,
Middlepor t, Ohio.
•
' 6·30-tlc

MINUTES! MAKE SIJRE

TO HOOilWtNK A
STUPIPLY TRUSTU'Il

MR.
WARBUCK'il~i:ORIIlifllec~!
llf&amp;Ti~G «

Tlte AMER!Cf\NS .

f SHAll Be TlffRE rt 'rut

bedroom well cared for Mome.
Nice bath, gas forced air
furna ce, basement with
showe r , washer , and dryer
hook ups. Attached garage.

f'oPULATicrt Lll(f;

19 9tMPfE, SAFf.;..

!lJ:!P ECQ!!QMICAL!

On Iy $6,900.

INil EST NOW AND
SAVE AT992-332l
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE

Said
personal rroperty
consists in r.art a electric
washer,
e ectric dryer,
electric refrlgerafor, Admiral

Rush st amped

Belgian
rtver

5-0Q

Part o!etc.·
~~~~~~~ 15. Italy,
a min.

~

For Sale

------~

Aluminum

Sheets

5.

20
The
.Daily Sentinel
'

•·

.

111 Court St.
Pomtroy,Ohio

18. Wager
17. Immovable

HELP • • •

18. Diminish
Threefold

&lt;comb.
form)
21. "Kitty
Foyle"

We n~ed some room for more trades, so we're
cleanng these cars off at $100.00 each ••.
hurry for your choice •. , selection as
available.
COOT, ' DOCTOR? THt:

.1961 CHRYSL£R

Pioneer 4 door sedan,
steering .

SEEMS ll,.-f QUITE A MAt(

V-8, Torqueflite, p .

II

1961 DODGE

"lri' f~ ~F0~REl~ED~ 1,HAil5 RUlE
CCJ(JNTRY
OF
WITHOUT

i,

BLOOI'SHEP, KEPT Hl5

DU~E ON, 1 00N T
LEE, tM DOING THESE
IT SIWOLP j KNOW IF MY ORC&gt;f'RS P.AG ·TAG ABORIGINES
AYEll&gt;' 61G fAVOR-. I
GO THIS FAR, BUT,
TRUST IT WQN 1T SE
WELL, THESE PEOPLE
MIGHT· f:'E TOUCHY
NECESSARY TO RE·
1

1'-,.;;.0::: EXlREi&lt;IISTS IN

I

III

WHAT YOu 'M)ULI7N'T
EXPECT 10 FIND'
ON HOT CAKES.

. _ I_

Now uranp tho cl'i"led lotten
to fom1 tho aurpriM aNwer, u

abo•• eanoon.

=
..=lLL:..:II&amp;::.:ANSWIII==-=-~____]1 ( I I I I J
the

_:.:Pril=:.'

1&amp;11011

·

$100

automatic, p. st., p .

1963 DODGE
Polar a 4. door sedan,

. XJ

I

30.Altar
oonotel•

as.=n
at.Chtnt~t

$100
v:s,

I
. I I· (J
KJIIC(;

IDRU(;JT (
I
I
J
I
r===~~~~~~~~;·•~r~r~··~tod~by

Allghlert
26.I.O.U.
27. Attired
28. Wrath
:Ill. Ivory

Comet 4 door wagon, 6 cyl., automatic trans.

' Catalina 2 door h. top,
br .

form four ordinary words.

25. -

MIND THEM Of THAT

I!

Unscramble these four Jumble11,
one letter to each square, to

winner
23. Frost
2•. Eschew

V-8, Torqueflite, p .

1963 MERCURY
1963 PONTIAC

l l u &gt;&lt;III OIII

16.Poet

Oscar

CliiEF OF 5TATE OF Sfi?E'NDIP

Windsor 4 Door h-top,
'steering.

~~MIDM;::t..:::t::!..-~c

ru..n·

gaged

Dick Butkus, 21. Shine
etc. (2 wdo.)
brf&amp;'htly
•.Two 22. Tram· l'et&amp;eNar'• .&amp;atwer
29. In that
Tony
ple
vlcllllty
Galento
under5. Bedcllng
root
33.Senolble
6. Terre - , 23. Long·
34. Water
pitcher
Ind.
eared
7. munder
mam·36. Fun
10. Bobby Orr,
mal
won!
Phil
25. Daybreak
fora ..
Esposito,
27. Chin
toupee .
etc. t2 wda.) · adornment 37.Eialne -

""':::J~ H . Spain,
a way
1..
France,

Insurance

12.

l. Dick
19. "Tracy's
ever
ao
wlfe
2. Yearn
hum3. Gal~ Sayers,
ble ... "

ALL Tl-115 llr()ULD BE UNIMPORTANT, MOLE,
E)(.CEPT TI-IAT SO FAR THIS VEAR, 3 MURDERS
HAVE BEEN COMMITED IN
-~ DIAMOND ROBBERIES!

------

· 2 BEDROOM mobile home air
conditioning , Racine area. .
5·20·31p
Phone 992-6329.
· STUri pQ11y . Phone 742-4691.
5·18·61c
5·19-6tc

1

DOWN

EDISON HOBSTETTER, as
Executor of the Estate of
William
A.
Carman,

- -- - - -- -

11. ~...

41. Franeo-

stove, beds, springs, stands,
two old chests, chairs, pic tures, dressers, and other
miscellaneous property .

deceased .
sell·addressed envelope to th e
5·20-3tc
Ambrose Company, 4325
Lakeborn, Davisburg ,
MUST SELL. House lull of
Michigan, 48019.
4·30.30tp
furni1ure . Reasonable. Call
after 12 noon. Phone 992.3117.
.QUALIFIED llleguard for
5·20-31p
Maplewood Lake. Phone 949· - - - - - - - - 4074.
BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
5·18·41c Myron Bailey, Phone 992·5327

THose

DAYS

. BLAETTNARS

Complete front end service '
tune up and brake ser vice
Wheels
balanced
etec
tronically.
All
work
· guaranteed .
Reasonable
• rates . Phone 992-32 13 .

deliver ed right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free

Il-l

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer R•dlator to the
~mallest Heater ·Core.

GENERAL remodeling, car·

2113.

ELECT~IOlY .

Come See Us At97'12 N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129 ~

---'----,--

READY · MIX

DID !HEY HAV!f

And Conventional Loans.

acres , plenty of water,
Alexander school dis t r ict.

4 bedroom

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

Ra~iator Service

tiller r epair. Free pickup and
delivery . Warren 's Mower

home .

good

.

What Do You Have For The $$1 You llav In Rent?

.EXPERIENCED .

MODERN cou ntry home, 6.2

c
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring ·
your sick TV to Chuck's TV For Rent
1964 JOHN Deere dozer, winch AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
Shop, 151 Bulternut Ave., 10 X so, TWO· BEDROOM
and blad•, 1964 Chevrolet live
operator's
license?
Call
992Pomeroy.
house trailer . Phone 992·3954.
tandem . Phone Chester 985
2966.
4132 .
5.16.6tc
= = - - - - - - - 4-23·1fc
6·15-lfc
5·14-61p
REDUCE safe and fast with UNFURNISHED 3 . room
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
apartment. Phone 992·2288. FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
water pills. Nelson Drugs .
- won't rust , rot, or leak . Call
1·31 .1fc
4-14-60tp
992-6256 after s p.m. Also.. For Sale
-----fiberglass 15 foot ca noes.
MODEL 2·bedroom
5·16-30tc OLD TWO-seated buggy with
SMALLEY 'S
Gift
Shop , LATE
trailer , v.. . ml le west of
top . See Don Cremeans,
Chesler, Ohio, has flowers for
Darwin on Rt. 681 , with or HOLSTEIN heifer, fresh. Also,
Nelson Rd. , Rutland .
Memorial Day, 88c and up.
without utilities paid. Phone
riding
Also nice baskets.
cultivator,
high
5·19·31p
992-6628.
.
5·12·12tc
wheeled
wagon
.
John
5·16-61c
Houdashell ,
Min ersvi lle , FOR BETTER cleaning, to
keep colors gleaming, use
Ohio.
TWO FURNISHED apart ·
For Sale
5·18·31c
Blue Lustre carpet cleaner.
Renl , electrlc shampooer, ~1.
1963 VB Falcon, 1199. Call 992- ments, newly decorated , - - - -- - - - Baker Furniture, Middleport.
2926 or see at Lou's Ashland. private entrance . Traile-r 50X10 RICHARDSON mobile
space,
large
patio.
Albert
home,
2
bedroom,
with
air
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _5..:...·
19·61c
5-19·31c
Hill, Racine, Phone 949·2261.
conditioning. Call 992·5867.
England's Emblem
5-20·31c
s.18-61c
• The rose has been !he .NI CE riX35 .TRAILER with PLASTIC flowers for Memorial
flower · emblem of England tipout
exlension .
one
Day .
Mabel
Pickens ,
smce the War of the Roses bedroom, a ir condilloner .
, . 36" X 23" X .009
Syracuse, Ohio. Phone 99211455·1485) . The war ended
Phone 992-6452.
7203.
5·16-61p
with the establishment of the
. 5·16·1fc
..--'-',----~House of Tudor on the Eng· TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
ELLEN'S Gift Shop, Reedsville,
liBh throne. ·
'h·mlle north of new Meigs
Ohio, Memorl•l Day wreaths,
High School. Phone 992-2941 .
sprays,
baskets.
ArUSED OFFSET PLATES
.1
rangements, 69c and up.
-:::--:--:-----_:3·5-tfc
HAVE
•
4·28-30tc
TEM: Tom Hill. He plays
MANY USES
FURNISHED and unfurnished
aparlments. Close to school.
, Sweot &amp; Tears ind
Phone 992-5434.
m• tau. But he · ploys
4
10·1B·Ifc For Sale or Trade
•
onllght Seren•de 1ft
1967
CAMARO,
6
•
cyl.,
stan
·
8for
$1.00
y WIINIMI lao. )/erie
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
dar d. Good economy car. Will
tlie spfce of our music.
&lt;;:ourl , Rt. 124, Syracuse, 1 co nsider older car or
Ohio. 992·2951.
, .motorcycle as trade·in, or
4-2·1fC
11.275 cash. Call 985·3503 after
.c....,-_ _ _ __

WMP0/1390

5-1-tfc

, - - - - - --

2 COUNTRY- HOMES- one 4 5 ROOM
years old, 5 rooms, bath , gas
furnace . garage, 2 bedrooms
with · closets. $6 ,500. · second
house, 6 rooms, bath, gas
heat, drilled well, large acre .

~

CHAWED IT UP
AN' SWALLERED
IT

Racine, Ohio

Crill Bradford

garage,

50 ACRE PLUS - of hill land,

personal

Phone 949-3821

carport . Lol 48 x 152. Phone
992·5765.
5·18·61p

plus ·the new Electro Suds for
sham pooing carpel . Only
$27.50 cash price or lerms
available . Phone 992·5641.
5·1Hic

The

Complete Service

. '·

l

Business ·Services

C, BRADFORD, Auctioneer

6UT·· UH ··

r------------,--....;..---~ EEK ~-~~~r.... u ... oo.

television and stand, electric

REGISTERED quarter s1ud LIC,ENSED pract ica l nurse,
Syracuse Nursing Home .
service, Hanks Rock 209498.
Apply In person .
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3,
5·1Hic
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992-6880.
5-20·31c EARN AT home addressing
enve lop es.

SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

availabt~.

HORSES . Over 100 head V,ACUUM CLEANER, Electro
registered and grade. All 1 Hygiene New D~rl'lonstrator
Stables, 10 miles north of
Athens. State Rt. 13 at
Mllllleld. Phone 725-2330.
5·20-121c
---------

.

blind hems, etc. $43.35 cash
_.:._

sl2.es, all prices. Circle M

TEAFORD

buill in to make fancy
designs. Also buttonhOles,

_Phone
_ 992·5641.
___5·18-61c

Livestock For Sale

Under new
management

,,

Sewing

Machine 1971 Model in new

1964 CHEVY II auto., P.S. 1/.8,

Notice

NEEDLE

Business Services

m. and 9 p. m.
5-lHtc
POMEROY - Wright Street NICE 1 slory frame, 2 O' DELL WHEEL alignment
bedrooms.
bath,
full
loca t ed at Crossroads , Rl . 124.

Each additional word 2c. ·
purchase . Near 'Drive - In
BLIND ADS
Theater, Mason. Phone 773Additional 25c Charge per
recently remodeled $10,900.
5147.
Advertisement.
1220 Washington Blvd.
5·18.4tc
OFFICE HOURS
Belpre, Ohio
TUPPERS PLAINS 1
. 8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
LEI/
EL
ACRE,
2
story
fr~me,
30
a
.m.
to
12
:
00
Noon
8:
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud SIX ROOM house· bath, full
bath, 4 bedrooms, 'garage, IN
Saturday.
se rvice;
$50 registere.d
basement.
133
Butternut
Ave.,
I:;OOD CONDITION, A NICE
mares, any breed; $40 grade
just walking distance Jrom
PLACE TO LIVE. $9,308.
mares•. Francis Benedum .
In Memory
downtown Pomeroy . Coratact
Phone Coolville 667-3856.
Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadswor th LO. C ·AL
DRIVE-IN
5·16·30tp
IN MEMORY of Lois McCain, a
Drive, Columbus, Ohio. phone
RESTAURANT good
good friend, on her birthday,
237·4334,
Columbus,
loca
tion,
In
small
community
May 20, 1971.
REG'ISTERED Tenn essee
5-9~ tfc
and on a state route, IN .
walker
stud
serv1ce .
CLUDES BUILDING AND
Within my book of memories
Harrisonv ille, Ohio. Phone
ALL
EQUIPMENT, PRICE
Are special thoughts of you
742·5862.
QUOTED
TO INTERESTED
And all the many nice things
=
=
=
4.::.:·
20·30tc
PARTIES
ONLY. Has a nice
You so often would say and do .
SHOWN BY APbusiness,
And as I turn the pages
OVEN FRESH bakery pro'
POINTMENT.
And recall each single thought
ducts . Jimmy's Pastry Shop, At Landmark, Everyone
I realize .the happiness
N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport.
Can!
WHY OVERBUY? DON' T
That knowing you has brought!
Phone 992·3555.
HAND PUSH MOWERS
RUIN YOUR CREDIT. We
There are memories of the
09·301&lt; ASLowAs
63.95
have all priced properties .
times we've shared
RIDING MOWERS
ALL TYPES FINANCING
Both bright and gloomy
YARD SALE, 12 Par·k St.,
As Low As
271.95
AVAIL-!IBLE.
days ......
Middleport. Friday and
HENRY CLELAND
There are memories of your
ECONOMY TILLERS
Saturday, May 20 and 21.
REALTOR
kindness
As Low As
134.95
5·16-6tc
Office 992-22591 .
And your friendly, thoughtful
Residence 992-2568
ways .
.
POMEROY
5 16-6tc
,
J. W. C.rsey, Mtr
There are memories of your Wanted To Buy
:
Phone 992·~1
laughter
ONE BOTTLED gas healer,
24 .ACRE FARM, Long Bottom ,
And gay and cheery smile
with
or
without
farm
50,000 to 60.000 btu, with
That added a bright note to each
thermosta t and blower . BEAUTIFUL selection of
machinery . Hou se w it h 3
.f lowers, baskets, wreaths.
day
Phone 992-6147 alter 5: 30 p.m .
bedrooms, dining.room. living
and sprays for Memorial Day.
And made life more worth
5·18·31c
room, 11!2 baths , enclosed
Clltf Shoe Repair, Middleport.
while,
back porch, wall to wall
4·21 -llc
There are memories of the ANTIQUES :
carpeting. Aluminum siding·,
Dishe s,
things we planned,
awning, storm windows and
telephone•, tin, brass beds,
Each friendly little chat
sto rm doors . City water.
lamps , etc. Lee Rudisill, 19606·CYLINDER Dodge. Good
When we would get together
tires, lair shape. Call 992·6073
Selling due to ill heallh . Phone
· Phone 992-3403.
And just talk of this and that.. ....
after 5 p.m.
4·23-30tp
61 4-985·3938.
And when I recall these
5·19·31c
5·18-301p
memories
-TELEPHON~S.
brass
beds,
As l.go along life's way,
clocks, dishes, old furniture, COAL , limestone . Excelsior
I lind they grow more precious
Sa lt Works, E. Main St .,
etc. Wri te M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
still
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
With every passing day!
4·9·1fC
4-27-lfc

MOBIL£ HOMES

PLA'( CARDS NOW,
MAW- WHAR'S THAT
FOUR-LEAF CLOVER

I HATETO
TELL 'IE
THIS, PAW,

r/,.....-:-.T--AT--ER---,

IF 'IOU

NOVEL

structure
37. Cr.t't cry
38. Guarantee

39. lllngllah
queen
40.Comman&lt;l
tollhorte

DAIIjY ORYPlOQUOTE-IImJ't·llow

V-8, T-flite, p. st.

$100

1962 RAMBLER
Classic 4 door sedan, 6 cyl., automatic.

MANY OTHE~ CARS AT REDUCED
PRICES. WE WILL ENTERTAIN ANY
REASONABLE OFFER ON OUR USED
CARS DURING THIS "CLEARANCE FOR
ROOM" SALE. ·

R. H. Rawlings Sons .Co.
'

MIDDLEPORT
Pearl~ Emerson, Wallace, Hilton, Dick.
'I

----"··----------~--~~------~--~~----------~~!--~--~------~--~--~~~----~--~----------~--~~iL~--~--------~~~----~·~·------~--

to work 11:

.&amp; X Y D LB.&amp;.&amp; X .B
Ia LONGJ'II:LLOW ·
One letter limP,IY o!IDdt for 1110t11er. Ill tiWr 10111plo A ta

uood for tile thNO L't, X for 11ur two O'o, etc.
apoo~ tile l..,..U. Ul4 formation of tile
llllltl. Eacll day the cocle !etten are dlftenat.
A £'a) .......

RZFJM

XU

C

I!IJIIIo

lettan,

wo~

aN all

liARD

q•t"a

OZFGJBLNV

GJB

C

JIIBXKJ

LZB

PQXFW

XP.-CVJACF·

IVZ.KQ

,.......,.. Ottr'

r "' :oo

NOr PB.U"

"THAT
MIGHT Be

KIND OF

lNP XP XU llZUUXIVJ PZ llCM PZZ
QXWQ

WH~

~LL I{OUR

NOT 1'R'{ A
6JOO!tAM? PICK M ~E
PERSON '100 LIKE AND I®TE
HI~ LIFE ~TORI/ ...

M. CUtle

l

CAifr

a .,.,.,

JIQUAL 'l'O 'JOUA IOWW. l'IU.Y :rca lOW&amp; IIQO'AL
'l'O YOUR TAID...-1". :aaooD ·

1

�.. ,

..

I'M FIXIN' TO GO

Real Estate For Sale
For Sale
WANT AD
Notice
INFORMATION
REGISTERED Arabian PLANTS FOR SALE. Home 3 BEDROOM bric~ home .
DEADLIN.ES
Choice location in Middleport.
grown Improved Mexic-an
standing to· approved mares,
·5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Seen by appointment only .
tomato.
plant!,
large
smooth,
Kiraff 050481 . Rich Rallies
Monday Deadllne9a .m.
non.acid.
Also,
Heinz
1350,
Phone. 992·3491 after 4 p. m.
blood lines, fee $50. Eskey
Ca~~llaflon &amp; Corrections
5-7-tfc
Yellow
Golden
Jubilee
and
Hill,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Large Supersonic. They are c-:-=-=-=---5·20·31c
Day of Publication
_:,__
st urdy •. well roo)ed pla"ts. 24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom,
REGULATIONS
with
or
without
farm
Also, hot peppers, mangos
The Publisher reserve s the GUN SHOOT every Salurday
machinery
.
House
with
3
and cabbage plants. On Rt.
night at 6 p.m . near Racine
right to edit or reject any 'ads
bedrooms , dining room, living
1241n
Syracuse,
Ohio,
500
feet
Planing Mill. Assorted meats.
deemed objectional. The
room , l'h baths, enclosed
above the park . Thomas
Sponsored by Syracuse Fire
publisher Will not be responsible
back porcn. wall to wall
Hayman
.
Department .
for more than one inco rrect
carpeting.
Aluminum siding,
5-2·301C
5·19·31c
Insertion .
awning, sform windows and
RATES
.
~~---­
storm doors . City water .
REYNOLDS' Flower Shop,
For Want Ad Service
Selling due lo ill hea l!~. Phone
Mason, W. Va. has baskets,
5 cents per Word one inser tion
614·985·3938.
wreaths, crosses and Bibles.
Minimum Charge 75c
5·18-30tp
Emblems wilh each pur 12 cents per word three
chase, Mom, Pop, etc. - A lo
consecutive insert ions.
Z; 25-year and so.year an 18 cents per word six con ·

____
...

niversary pins. All size pots

secutive insertions.

wi th flowers . All beautifully

25 Per Cent Discount on paid

han d arranged, right here in
, shop. Our flowers can be used
year after year . Five
chrysa nthemum s
or
12
tomato plants with each SIO

ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
1
&amp;OBITUARY

$1.50 for

so

word min imum.

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE.

MILLER

.Cleland Realty

basement with garage, wall to
wall carpet, air conditioner,
range and refrigerator,

r.~. WE \U ~

L

Virgil B...

Signed: Delores Frank

5-20-llp

TWIN

Auto Sales
excellent condition Inside and

out. Phone 949-2173.

Middleport
lool 'Room

5·20·31c

walnut stand. All features

price

or

terms

Lost
by Osby Martin
GUN SHOOT, Fork,ed Run
. Sportsman Club, Sunday,
May 23, 12 noon.
5·19·31c

FEMALE German shepherd, 2years old, black and brown, 70
pounds. Chain collar. Vicini1y
of Point Rock, Meigs Coun ty,
on May 8. Reward. Call
Albany 698·4803 alter 6 p.m. or
Athens 594·6918 days. Ask tor
Bill Morgan .
5·18·61c

GUN SHOOT, Friday, May 21, 7
p.m., Mile Hill Road . - - - - - Assorted meats. Sponsored by
Situation Wanted
Racine Fire Dept.
5-19·31c WILL DO babysitting in my
home. Contact Janet McCHICKEN barbecue, Sunday,
Daniel. 368 E. Main St..
May 30 at Racine Fire
Pomeroy , Ohio.
Station . Homemade Ice
5· 18·61C
cream and baked goods. - - - - - Serving from 12 noon on .

5-19·91c

Help Wanted

HOME sewing. Phone 992·5327.
5·9·30tp
KOSCOT Kosmetic.s, wigs and
accessories. May and June

special. Kleansing Kream ,
$2.25 . Distributors, Brown 's.
Phone 992·5113.
4-23·1fc

ha s all cleaning attachments

1970 DODGE; Advenlure pickup,
10,000 miles. Phone 742·5840.
5·20·31c

$4,500.

EXPERT , lawn mower and

You will have something of value to show tor the SS$ you

spend when you buy your home - plus, you gain an In·
• come Tax benefit, you build an equity and you are not
bound by the term s of a re ntal agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner-

Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
992·7357 .
5·18-lfc

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

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph. 446·4782
Ga llipoli s. John Russell.
ONner &amp; Operator .

5·1J.tfc

pentry, roofing , paintinQ, etc .
Phone 992-7729 between 6 p.

_

-

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting ·

BACKHOE AND DOZER work
Septic tanks install ed. George

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992·2478
4·25-tfc

-------

All Weather Roofing &amp;

HARRISON'S TV AND AN
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6·10· tic

Insured-Experienced
Work Guaranteed

.
JOHNSON MASONRY
Backhoe And
End loader Work

Commercial, residential and
industrial wiring. Phone 247 -

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

3·12·1fc

~==--~

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your

home, Call Guy Neigler,

RALPH'S

742-4902

7.31.tfc

CARPET

Gallipolis 446·0294.

Have Your Seasonal

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE, story an d half, 6
5·12·1fC

3

6.98

PHONE 992-2143
EXPERT TREE service. Call
co llect after 5 p.m. , Richard

bedrooms, closets, buill -in

Hayman, Reedsville 667·3041.
cupboards. S.D. Buskirk, 961
5·19·301p
South 2nd Ave ., Middleport·.
5·20·31p SEPTIC tanks~cleaned . Miller

COMES TO- AN'

-WE.KI NGIT
TH' OlliE
THING OUR
LONELY LI'L

property

belonging to the Estate of
William
A.
Carman,
deceased, will be sold by the
undersigned at public auction
at the re sidence of said

de cedent located on Stale
Route 124, Laurel Clitf,
Pomeroy, Ohio, R. D., on
Sa turday, the 5th day of June,
1.971, beginning at 11 o'clock
A.M.

BUT ~IF VORE.

TH' '
WORLD IS

"METHOD;'

I

WIF OUR.
METHOD -

SHUDDER

OUR'N!!

TO

THINK

"METHOD"··

~FIT!!

JOHNSON MASONRY

Backhoe Service
and Hauling

Complete
R emotleling

Limestone' Driveways

Septic Tanks and Leach
Beds
Free Estimates

CAU GEORGE 985-3837
OR DON 992-6883

Flowers

BUGS BUNNY
WHAT AR&amp;
WE OOtNG TO
DOAilOUT
IT1 r..IERRY!'

742-4902

'!HERr$ NOT MUCH Wf;
CAN DO, WINNIE .
LEGALLY WE'D HAVE
DIFFICUIJY PRCMNG
ANYTHING ...

FLOO~.

PLEASE!
LET'S
GO!

FREE STORAGE

Artificia I Flowers

Ceme,erv
Wreaths

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

&amp;

Open HilS
Thurs.- Fri.· Sat.
Or Phone 949·2223

RACINE, 0•
BULLDOZER work .. Basemen! ,
ponds, landscaping. We do all
kinds of dozer work. Haul fill
dirl and top soil. See or call
Bob Jeffers after 7 p. m.
Phone 992-3525.
4·23-30tc

For Your Garments
All you pay for Is cleaning
and pressing. Pay when you
get them back.
FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
DELIVERY SERVICE
CALL 773-5543.
Please! No Free Storing on
Bulk Cleaning.

ABC CLEANERS
773-5543

I, don't 6tanct there
runnll'

Mason, W. Va, ·

Get on! It'!&gt; mn•vin'

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop,., Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We Shar.pen Scissors.
•
3-29-tfc

•

p,

Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .

modern bath and kitchen, gas
for ced air furnace, small barn

p.m. or write La'lern Jordan,

and oulcellar . Only $10,000.
TODAY.

5·18-61c

662·3035.

Phone Albany 669-4851 after 3 EXPERIENCED

/

painter,

exterior and interior . Donald

Rl. 3, Albany, Ohio.

Van Meier, 985·3951.

5-11-12tp

POMEROY - Charming little 2 ,----~---------------~

PUBLIC SALE

WI" WASGiTTIN'
DtSCOUAAGE:D

f!"LLS US 'lORE

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

FLOWER SHOP ·

Parts

0-lC£ '/0'

,.
PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

VILLAGE

Plus

i(ALSO
DQUBLE-WIDES •

.~EE TOM CROW, GUY S!f(JLER OR BOB CROW

Inspection and

Blaettnar's

i n~ulated,

bath,

... CHAMPION
DYKE

,-fr VAN

Also Arrangements made to
your specification .

s:~cial

3 BEDROOM home, Syracuse.
Hardwood floors. 14x24

house,

!«WINSOR
'«BUDDY

Air Conditioning
Re-Charge

rooms , bath, Rutland . Phon e

well

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

Arrangements

3·12·11c
___:__

742·5613 .

.)

Single Flowers

Upholstery Cleaning Service .
Free
est imates.
Phone

____

Time You Ever Spent.

Construction Co.

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC' Service.

- - - - --

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minufes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

DEXTER , 0 . 45726
PHONE 742-3945

CONCRETE

Racine, Ohio.

?

Evenings Call992·2534, Dale Dutton

Pomeroy

.Ph. 992-2143
. ..

4·21-30tc

estimates. Phone 992 ·3284 .
Goeglein Ready·Mix Co.,
Middlepor t, Ohio.
•
' 6·30-tlc

MINUTES! MAKE SIJRE

TO HOOilWtNK A
STUPIPLY TRUSTU'Il

MR.
WARBUCK'il~i:ORIIlifllec~!
llf&amp;Ti~G «

Tlte AMER!Cf\NS .

f SHAll Be TlffRE rt 'rut

bedroom well cared for Mome.
Nice bath, gas forced air
furna ce, basement with
showe r , washer , and dryer
hook ups. Attached garage.

f'oPULATicrt Lll(f;

19 9tMPfE, SAFf.;..

!lJ:!P ECQ!!QMICAL!

On Iy $6,900.

INil EST NOW AND
SAVE AT992-332l
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE

Said
personal rroperty
consists in r.art a electric
washer,
e ectric dryer,
electric refrlgerafor, Admiral

Rush st amped

Belgian
rtver

5-0Q

Part o!etc.·
~~~~~~~ 15. Italy,
a min.

~

For Sale

------~

Aluminum

Sheets

5.

20
The
.Daily Sentinel
'

•·

.

111 Court St.
Pomtroy,Ohio

18. Wager
17. Immovable

HELP • • •

18. Diminish
Threefold

&lt;comb.
form)
21. "Kitty
Foyle"

We n~ed some room for more trades, so we're
cleanng these cars off at $100.00 each ••.
hurry for your choice •. , selection as
available.
COOT, ' DOCTOR? THt:

.1961 CHRYSL£R

Pioneer 4 door sedan,
steering .

SEEMS ll,.-f QUITE A MAt(

V-8, Torqueflite, p .

II

1961 DODGE

"lri' f~ ~F0~REl~ED~ 1,HAil5 RUlE
CCJ(JNTRY
OF
WITHOUT

i,

BLOOI'SHEP, KEPT Hl5

DU~E ON, 1 00N T
LEE, tM DOING THESE
IT SIWOLP j KNOW IF MY ORC&gt;f'RS P.AG ·TAG ABORIGINES
AYEll&gt;' 61G fAVOR-. I
GO THIS FAR, BUT,
TRUST IT WQN 1T SE
WELL, THESE PEOPLE
MIGHT· f:'E TOUCHY
NECESSARY TO RE·
1

1'-,.;;.0::: EXlREi&lt;IISTS IN

I

III

WHAT YOu 'M)ULI7N'T
EXPECT 10 FIND'
ON HOT CAKES.

. _ I_

Now uranp tho cl'i"led lotten
to fom1 tho aurpriM aNwer, u

abo•• eanoon.

=
..=lLL:..:II&amp;::.:ANSWIII==-=-~____]1 ( I I I I J
the

_:.:Pril=:.'

1&amp;11011

·

$100

automatic, p. st., p .

1963 DODGE
Polar a 4. door sedan,

. XJ

I

30.Altar
oonotel•

as.=n
at.Chtnt~t

$100
v:s,

I
. I I· (J
KJIIC(;

IDRU(;JT (
I
I
J
I
r===~~~~~~~~;·•~r~r~··~tod~by

Allghlert
26.I.O.U.
27. Attired
28. Wrath
:Ill. Ivory

Comet 4 door wagon, 6 cyl., automatic trans.

' Catalina 2 door h. top,
br .

form four ordinary words.

25. -

MIND THEM Of THAT

I!

Unscramble these four Jumble11,
one letter to each square, to

winner
23. Frost
2•. Eschew

V-8, Torqueflite, p .

1963 MERCURY
1963 PONTIAC

l l u &gt;&lt;III OIII

16.Poet

Oscar

CliiEF OF 5TATE OF Sfi?E'NDIP

Windsor 4 Door h-top,
'steering.

~~MIDM;::t..:::t::!..-~c

ru..n·

gaged

Dick Butkus, 21. Shine
etc. (2 wdo.)
brf&amp;'htly
•.Two 22. Tram· l'et&amp;eNar'• .&amp;atwer
29. In that
Tony
ple
vlcllllty
Galento
under5. Bedcllng
root
33.Senolble
6. Terre - , 23. Long·
34. Water
pitcher
Ind.
eared
7. munder
mam·36. Fun
10. Bobby Orr,
mal
won!
Phil
25. Daybreak
fora ..
Esposito,
27. Chin
toupee .
etc. t2 wda.) · adornment 37.Eialne -

""':::J~ H . Spain,
a way
1..
France,

Insurance

12.

l. Dick
19. "Tracy's
ever
ao
wlfe
2. Yearn
hum3. Gal~ Sayers,
ble ... "

ALL Tl-115 llr()ULD BE UNIMPORTANT, MOLE,
E)(.CEPT TI-IAT SO FAR THIS VEAR, 3 MURDERS
HAVE BEEN COMMITED IN
-~ DIAMOND ROBBERIES!

------

· 2 BEDROOM mobile home air
conditioning , Racine area. .
5·20·31p
Phone 992-6329.
· STUri pQ11y . Phone 742-4691.
5·18·61c
5·19-6tc

1

DOWN

EDISON HOBSTETTER, as
Executor of the Estate of
William
A.
Carman,

- -- - - -- -

11. ~...

41. Franeo-

stove, beds, springs, stands,
two old chests, chairs, pic tures, dressers, and other
miscellaneous property .

deceased .
sell·addressed envelope to th e
5·20-3tc
Ambrose Company, 4325
Lakeborn, Davisburg ,
MUST SELL. House lull of
Michigan, 48019.
4·30.30tp
furni1ure . Reasonable. Call
after 12 noon. Phone 992.3117.
.QUALIFIED llleguard for
5·20-31p
Maplewood Lake. Phone 949· - - - - - - - - 4074.
BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
5·18·41c Myron Bailey, Phone 992·5327

THose

DAYS

. BLAETTNARS

Complete front end service '
tune up and brake ser vice
Wheels
balanced
etec
tronically.
All
work
· guaranteed .
Reasonable
• rates . Phone 992-32 13 .

deliver ed right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free

Il-l

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer R•dlator to the
~mallest Heater ·Core.

GENERAL remodeling, car·

2113.

ELECT~IOlY .

Come See Us At97'12 N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129 ~

---'----,--

READY · MIX

DID !HEY HAV!f

And Conventional Loans.

acres , plenty of water,
Alexander school dis t r ict.

4 bedroom

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

Ra~iator Service

tiller r epair. Free pickup and
delivery . Warren 's Mower

home .

good

.

What Do You Have For The $$1 You llav In Rent?

.EXPERIENCED .

MODERN cou ntry home, 6.2

c
SAVE UP to one hall. Bring ·
your sick TV to Chuck's TV For Rent
1964 JOHN Deere dozer, winch AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
Shop, 151 Bulternut Ave., 10 X so, TWO· BEDROOM
and blad•, 1964 Chevrolet live
operator's
license?
Call
992Pomeroy.
house trailer . Phone 992·3954.
tandem . Phone Chester 985
2966.
4132 .
5.16.6tc
= = - - - - - - - 4-23·1fc
6·15-lfc
5·14-61p
REDUCE safe and fast with UNFURNISHED 3 . room
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
apartment. Phone 992·2288. FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
water pills. Nelson Drugs .
- won't rust , rot, or leak . Call
1·31 .1fc
4-14-60tp
992-6256 after s p.m. Also.. For Sale
-----fiberglass 15 foot ca noes.
MODEL 2·bedroom
5·16-30tc OLD TWO-seated buggy with
SMALLEY 'S
Gift
Shop , LATE
trailer , v.. . ml le west of
top . See Don Cremeans,
Chesler, Ohio, has flowers for
Darwin on Rt. 681 , with or HOLSTEIN heifer, fresh. Also,
Nelson Rd. , Rutland .
Memorial Day, 88c and up.
without utilities paid. Phone
riding
Also nice baskets.
cultivator,
high
5·19·31p
992-6628.
.
5·12·12tc
wheeled
wagon
.
John
5·16-61c
Houdashell ,
Min ersvi lle , FOR BETTER cleaning, to
keep colors gleaming, use
Ohio.
TWO FURNISHED apart ·
For Sale
5·18·31c
Blue Lustre carpet cleaner.
Renl , electrlc shampooer, ~1.
1963 VB Falcon, 1199. Call 992- ments, newly decorated , - - - -- - - - Baker Furniture, Middleport.
2926 or see at Lou's Ashland. private entrance . Traile-r 50X10 RICHARDSON mobile
space,
large
patio.
Albert
home,
2
bedroom,
with
air
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _5..:...·
19·61c
5-19·31c
Hill, Racine, Phone 949·2261.
conditioning. Call 992·5867.
England's Emblem
5-20·31c
s.18-61c
• The rose has been !he .NI CE riX35 .TRAILER with PLASTIC flowers for Memorial
flower · emblem of England tipout
exlension .
one
Day .
Mabel
Pickens ,
smce the War of the Roses bedroom, a ir condilloner .
, . 36" X 23" X .009
Syracuse, Ohio. Phone 99211455·1485) . The war ended
Phone 992-6452.
7203.
5·16-61p
with the establishment of the
. 5·16·1fc
..--'-',----~House of Tudor on the Eng· TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
ELLEN'S Gift Shop, Reedsville,
liBh throne. ·
'h·mlle north of new Meigs
Ohio, Memorl•l Day wreaths,
High School. Phone 992-2941 .
sprays,
baskets.
ArUSED OFFSET PLATES
.1
rangements, 69c and up.
-:::--:--:-----_:3·5-tfc
HAVE
•
4·28-30tc
TEM: Tom Hill. He plays
MANY USES
FURNISHED and unfurnished
aparlments. Close to school.
, Sweot &amp; Tears ind
Phone 992-5434.
m• tau. But he · ploys
4
10·1B·Ifc For Sale or Trade
•
onllght Seren•de 1ft
1967
CAMARO,
6
•
cyl.,
stan
·
8for
$1.00
y WIINIMI lao. )/erie
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
dar d. Good economy car. Will
tlie spfce of our music.
&lt;;:ourl , Rt. 124, Syracuse, 1 co nsider older car or
Ohio. 992·2951.
, .motorcycle as trade·in, or
4-2·1fC
11.275 cash. Call 985·3503 after
.c....,-_ _ _ __

WMP0/1390

5-1-tfc

, - - - - - --

2 COUNTRY- HOMES- one 4 5 ROOM
years old, 5 rooms, bath , gas
furnace . garage, 2 bedrooms
with · closets. $6 ,500. · second
house, 6 rooms, bath, gas
heat, drilled well, large acre .

~

CHAWED IT UP
AN' SWALLERED
IT

Racine, Ohio

Crill Bradford

garage,

50 ACRE PLUS - of hill land,

personal

Phone 949-3821

carport . Lol 48 x 152. Phone
992·5765.
5·18·61p

plus ·the new Electro Suds for
sham pooing carpel . Only
$27.50 cash price or lerms
available . Phone 992·5641.
5·1Hic

The

Complete Service

. '·

l

Business ·Services

C, BRADFORD, Auctioneer

6UT·· UH ··

r------------,--....;..---~ EEK ~-~~~r.... u ... oo.

television and stand, electric

REGISTERED quarter s1ud LIC,ENSED pract ica l nurse,
Syracuse Nursing Home .
service, Hanks Rock 209498.
Apply In person .
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3,
5·1Hic
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992-6880.
5-20·31c EARN AT home addressing
enve lop es.

SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

availabt~.

HORSES . Over 100 head V,ACUUM CLEANER, Electro
registered and grade. All 1 Hygiene New D~rl'lonstrator
Stables, 10 miles north of
Athens. State Rt. 13 at
Mllllleld. Phone 725-2330.
5·20-121c
---------

.

blind hems, etc. $43.35 cash
_.:._

sl2.es, all prices. Circle M

TEAFORD

buill in to make fancy
designs. Also buttonhOles,

_Phone
_ 992·5641.
___5·18-61c

Livestock For Sale

Under new
management

,,

Sewing

Machine 1971 Model in new

1964 CHEVY II auto., P.S. 1/.8,

Notice

NEEDLE

Business Services

m. and 9 p. m.
5-lHtc
POMEROY - Wright Street NICE 1 slory frame, 2 O' DELL WHEEL alignment
bedrooms.
bath,
full
loca t ed at Crossroads , Rl . 124.

Each additional word 2c. ·
purchase . Near 'Drive - In
BLIND ADS
Theater, Mason. Phone 773Additional 25c Charge per
recently remodeled $10,900.
5147.
Advertisement.
1220 Washington Blvd.
5·18.4tc
OFFICE HOURS
Belpre, Ohio
TUPPERS PLAINS 1
. 8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
LEI/
EL
ACRE,
2
story
fr~me,
30
a
.m.
to
12
:
00
Noon
8:
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud SIX ROOM house· bath, full
bath, 4 bedrooms, 'garage, IN
Saturday.
se rvice;
$50 registere.d
basement.
133
Butternut
Ave.,
I:;OOD CONDITION, A NICE
mares, any breed; $40 grade
just walking distance Jrom
PLACE TO LIVE. $9,308.
mares•. Francis Benedum .
In Memory
downtown Pomeroy . Coratact
Phone Coolville 667-3856.
Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadswor th LO. C ·AL
DRIVE-IN
5·16·30tp
IN MEMORY of Lois McCain, a
Drive, Columbus, Ohio. phone
RESTAURANT good
good friend, on her birthday,
237·4334,
Columbus,
loca
tion,
In
small
community
May 20, 1971.
REG'ISTERED Tenn essee
5-9~ tfc
and on a state route, IN .
walker
stud
serv1ce .
CLUDES BUILDING AND
Within my book of memories
Harrisonv ille, Ohio. Phone
ALL
EQUIPMENT, PRICE
Are special thoughts of you
742·5862.
QUOTED
TO INTERESTED
And all the many nice things
=
=
=
4.::.:·
20·30tc
PARTIES
ONLY. Has a nice
You so often would say and do .
SHOWN BY APbusiness,
And as I turn the pages
OVEN FRESH bakery pro'
POINTMENT.
And recall each single thought
ducts . Jimmy's Pastry Shop, At Landmark, Everyone
I realize .the happiness
N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport.
Can!
WHY OVERBUY? DON' T
That knowing you has brought!
Phone 992·3555.
HAND PUSH MOWERS
RUIN YOUR CREDIT. We
There are memories of the
09·301&lt; ASLowAs
63.95
have all priced properties .
times we've shared
RIDING MOWERS
ALL TYPES FINANCING
Both bright and gloomy
YARD SALE, 12 Par·k St.,
As Low As
271.95
AVAIL-!IBLE.
days ......
Middleport. Friday and
HENRY CLELAND
There are memories of your
ECONOMY TILLERS
Saturday, May 20 and 21.
REALTOR
kindness
As Low As
134.95
5·16-6tc
Office 992-22591 .
And your friendly, thoughtful
Residence 992-2568
ways .
.
POMEROY
5 16-6tc
,
J. W. C.rsey, Mtr
There are memories of your Wanted To Buy
:
Phone 992·~1
laughter
ONE BOTTLED gas healer,
24 .ACRE FARM, Long Bottom ,
And gay and cheery smile
with
or
without
farm
50,000 to 60.000 btu, with
That added a bright note to each
thermosta t and blower . BEAUTIFUL selection of
machinery . Hou se w it h 3
.f lowers, baskets, wreaths.
day
Phone 992-6147 alter 5: 30 p.m .
bedrooms, dining.room. living
and sprays for Memorial Day.
And made life more worth
5·18·31c
room, 11!2 baths , enclosed
Clltf Shoe Repair, Middleport.
while,
back porch, wall to wall
4·21 -llc
There are memories of the ANTIQUES :
carpeting. Aluminum siding·,
Dishe s,
things we planned,
awning, storm windows and
telephone•, tin, brass beds,
Each friendly little chat
sto rm doors . City water.
lamps , etc. Lee Rudisill, 19606·CYLINDER Dodge. Good
When we would get together
tires, lair shape. Call 992·6073
Selling due to ill heallh . Phone
· Phone 992-3403.
And just talk of this and that.. ....
after 5 p.m.
4·23-30tp
61 4-985·3938.
And when I recall these
5·19·31c
5·18-301p
memories
-TELEPHON~S.
brass
beds,
As l.go along life's way,
clocks, dishes, old furniture, COAL , limestone . Excelsior
I lind they grow more precious
Sa lt Works, E. Main St .,
etc. Wri te M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
still
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
With every passing day!
4·9·1fC
4-27-lfc

MOBIL£ HOMES

PLA'( CARDS NOW,
MAW- WHAR'S THAT
FOUR-LEAF CLOVER

I HATETO
TELL 'IE
THIS, PAW,

r/,.....-:-.T--AT--ER---,

IF 'IOU

NOVEL

structure
37. Cr.t't cry
38. Guarantee

39. lllngllah
queen
40.Comman&lt;l
tollhorte

DAIIjY ORYPlOQUOTE-IImJ't·llow

V-8, T-flite, p. st.

$100

1962 RAMBLER
Classic 4 door sedan, 6 cyl., automatic.

MANY OTHE~ CARS AT REDUCED
PRICES. WE WILL ENTERTAIN ANY
REASONABLE OFFER ON OUR USED
CARS DURING THIS "CLEARANCE FOR
ROOM" SALE. ·

R. H. Rawlings Sons .Co.
'

MIDDLEPORT
Pearl~ Emerson, Wallace, Hilton, Dick.
'I

----"··----------~--~~------~--~~----------~~!--~--~------~--~--~~~----~--~----------~--~~iL~--~--------~~~----~·~·------~--

to work 11:

.&amp; X Y D LB.&amp;.&amp; X .B
Ia LONGJ'II:LLOW ·
One letter limP,IY o!IDdt for 1110t11er. Ill tiWr 10111plo A ta

uood for tile thNO L't, X for 11ur two O'o, etc.
apoo~ tile l..,..U. Ul4 formation of tile
llllltl. Eacll day the cocle !etten are dlftenat.
A £'a) .......

RZFJM

XU

C

I!IJIIIo

lettan,

wo~

aN all

liARD

q•t"a

OZFGJBLNV

GJB

C

JIIBXKJ

LZB

PQXFW

XP.-CVJACF·

IVZ.KQ

,.......,.. Ottr'

r "' :oo

NOr PB.U"

"THAT
MIGHT Be

KIND OF

lNP XP XU llZUUXIVJ PZ llCM PZZ
QXWQ

WH~

~LL I{OUR

NOT 1'R'{ A
6JOO!tAM? PICK M ~E
PERSON '100 LIKE AND I®TE
HI~ LIFE ~TORI/ ...

M. CUtle

l

CAifr

a .,.,.,

JIQUAL 'l'O 'JOUA IOWW. l'IU.Y :rca lOW&amp; IIQO'AL
'l'O YOUR TAID...-1". :aaooD ·

1

�10- The !)ally Sentinel, Middleporf..Pmneroy, 0., May :!IJ; 1971

News ... in Briefs '"'::~::::~~~=~Democracy ·Claimed Lacking in Mideast·
•

(Continued from page I)
.
planting a record 3,2115,000 acres iii com despite last Y.ear's corn
. blight and are gambUng the diSease will not strike again, an
agriculture econmililt at Ohio State Ulllversity said today. "The
record com crop is being planted because each prod!Jcer is
gambling that the dreaded com leaf blight willoot hit him too
hard," Wallace Ban: ~id.
Experts In com-growing areas are stU! finding little or no
evidence of spread of Southern com leaf blight, the Agriculture
Department reported In Washington. "Reports show only a minor
increase' In a few isolated Southern areas during the last two
weeks," the department's Corn Blight Information Center said
Wednesday In ita third weekly report of the 1971 season.

Positions Open
For Head Start

~:::::.-o:::~:m:::~'&lt;W~~:ws&lt;H~ WA-":1:':1:'

BALTIMORE (UPI)-Ogden
Nash, who commented on the Fenton Taylor, director, has
I . foibles and frustrations of 20th until June 1 to complete the
century life in hundreds of staff for the Head Start
· improbably rhymed verses, program to be held eight weeks
died Wednesday. He was 68.
this summer in the Meigs Local
Nash died In Johns Hopkins · School District.
Hospital after complications Those wishing to apply for
arising from surgery to combat positions are to write Fenton
kidney failure. He had been Taylor, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
hospitalized March 13 and was Needed on the staff are 10
kept alive more than a month teachers, 10 teacher ~ides, one
by an artificial kidney machine. social worker, a social worker
Cause of death was listed as aide, one nurse, one speech
kidney failure.
therapist, one secretary, one
bookkeeper, six cooks and six
~-:.::x.:.. :f\.'C::"M'~LJLJ
"*'~ custodians.

Ohio extended weather
outlook cSaturday through
Monday:
Mostly clear and mild
becoming' cloudy with
showers late Sunday and
Moaiday. Highs In the 60s to
the lower 70. south portion.
Night time lows In the 10s and
lower 50s.

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Dtimocracy is not a realisticranswer
to the troubles of the Mideast,
' University of Cincinnati professor told a visiting group of
Venezuelans Wednesday, because uyou cannot impose a
new system ... on anyone."
Dr. Jaime Lusinchi, a .South
American congressman, had
proposed the best way to solve
the Mideast problems would be
for all countires concerned to
form democratic governments.
The idea, Dr. Waslf Abboushi
of
the UC political science dePomeroy High School alwnni
are reminded they have until
Saturday, May 22, to purchase
tickets for the annual banquet
and reunion.
The banquet will be held at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School, Mulberry Ave., at 6:30
p.m. with the dance to be held at
9 p.m. at the Junior High
auditorium. Tickets can be ABOARD THE COAST
purchased at the New York GUARD CUTTER DUANE
Clothing House in Pomeroy or (UPI)- An American deepsea
by writing Mrs. Bessie Hays, lobster boat reported Russian
PO Box 202, Pomeroy.
trawlers ran through her gear
All alumni are requested to early today, 24 hours after
meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the Russian and American officials
junior high schooli!Jiditoriwn to held an at.,sea conference
decorate for the •dance.
designed to halt such harassment.
The Pat San Marie, a lobster
boat owned by Prelude Corp. of
Tourwestport, Mass., reported to
the Coast Guard that about 16
Thirty pupils of the sixth •small trawlers swept through
grade of the Rutland ' her gear about 5:45 a.m. EDT
Elementary School went on 20 miles south of Nantucket
their annual trip Wednesday. light ship.
The youngsters toured the
The Coast Guard said the Pat
Fenton Glass plant at San Marie "gave descriptions
Williamstown, W. Va., visited of two of the trawlers" and
the W. P. Snyder Boat, the said they saw their names ,
Campus Martius Museum in Curvz and Aeiv.
Marietta, and enjoyed lunch at
the Marietta park on the Meigs Educators
Muskingum river bank.
On Panel at Inn
Accompanying the students
were Eric Hart, teacher, who
Taking part in a panel
provided refreshments enroute discussion at Ohio University
home; Vernon Weber, bus Inn in Athens Tuesday night as
driver; Mrs. WendeD Grate, a part of a visit by Ohio school
Mrs. Bud Vining and Mrs. Milo administrator to Meigs and
Hutchison ..
Vinton Counties were Dean
Gilford Crowell , college of
education, Ohio University ;
No swimming will be Nellie Vale, Meigs County
permitted in the Middleport supervisor ; Ke nneth
mulllcipal pool uotll the of- Christopher, Vinton County
ficial opelllng on Memorial superintendent ; Larry Morris,
Meigs
Local
Day weekend, Mro. Ruby assistant
superintendent;
John
Palmer,
Vaughan, park manager,
director of eight county special
warned today.
There Is a safety hazard education projects, and Phyllis
Involved In swimming In the Hackett, assistant principal of
pool unless life guards ar~ on the Bradbury Fifth and Sixth
duty, Mrs. Vaughan said. Grade School. Moderator was
There have been some Meigs Local Supt. George
violations, which .wiD not be Hargraves.
toleraled, she said.

Alumni Close
To Deadline

wbster Nets ·
Ripped Again

By Muscovites

Rutland Pupils
On Annual

GEORGE HALL
Playing At

DOd

The Meigs Inn
Mill

LOUNGE
CrHE OLD MARTIN HOTEL
IN· POMEROY)

9:oa to 2:30
FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHTS
Stop in and enjoy your favorite beverage at
the beautiful new Meigs Inn Lounge in
Pomeroy.

partment said was "not being.
realistic."
"You cannot impose a new
system such as democracy on
anyone," Abbouski said. "each
culture must handle its own
problems."
ne said the imposition of
democracy on "the Arab coun-

Mansfield Not Quitting ·
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Sen- "The vote doesn't represent
ate Leader Mike Mansfield, the concern and uneasiness of a
beaten decisively in his bid to sizeable majority of the Sencut the U.S. military contingent ate," the Montana Democrat
in Europe by 50 per cent, has said.
pledged to continue his fight to Speaking to packed galleries,
stop the drain of American Mansfield said the issue of
resources in maintaining the keeping a large American force
300,000-man force .
in Europe a quarter century
After a long day of debate, after the end of World War II
the Senate Wednesday night "will not be hidden under a
defeated the Mansfield proposal shroud forever , not from this
61-36. It was a victory for week on ."
President Nixon, who received
the support of former Democratic Presidents, Lyndon B.
Johnson and Harry S Truman,
ON HONOR ROLL
in opposing the move.
Joe Stephenson, son of Mr.
Mansfield said after the vote and Mrs. William R.
he had "no regrets, no Stephenson, Sr., Middleport,
apologies, no alibis." He said he has been named to the honor
felt he had achieved a victory roll of Mount Vernon Nazarene
by bringing the issue to the College for the winter term.
Senate floor and that he would . Students must have a grade
raise the matter again once the point average from 3 to 3.3 to be
impact of the debate sinks in. listed.

::::~::m'&lt;W~8::;s:::::x::~:::-.--o:::::&lt;:::::::~:::;~ Auto Turns Over

Alumni to Phone
Mrs. Bob Craig

'

''

Would you believe

',,

' ' ,,
'

he's doing --o~
his Banking?

In Lakin Field

A Middleport man suffered
Reservations for the Mid- only minor injuries Wednesday
dleport High School Alumni afternoon when his vehicle went
Reunion may be made by ,out of control and turned over
telephoning l\1rs. Roher! Craig, near the Clements Tree Nur992-3278.
sery on State Route 62 at Lakin.
The annual event has been set State police said Frank A.
for Saturday, May 29, with a Taylor, 21, 782 South Second
dinner at 6:30 p.m. at the high Street, lost. conlrol in passing
school cafeteria, now the Meigs another veh~cle, ran off the road
Junior High School. A dance on the left stde, and overturned
will follow in the auditorium in a field . Taylor was charged ·
with music by the Glenn Glaze with improper passing.
combo . The Susan Park Damage was estimated at $800.
Scholarship will be presented a
1971 Meigs High School
PROBINGB&amp;E
graduate who resides in Mid- Meigs County Sheriff Robert
dleport.
C. Hartenbach is investigating a
breaking and entering of the
SUIT FILED
A suit to quiet title has been Ridgeview Carryout on SR 681
filed in Meigs County Common at the Meigs-Athens line. The
Pleas Court by Clarence and breaking and entering occurred
Myrtle Proffitt, Portland, between 11 p. m. Wednesday
against Laura Vanaman , and 8:30 a. m. today, it was
Vienna , W. Va. , elal. The reported . An undetermined
property is located in Lebanon amount of liquor was stolen.
Township.
THREE JAILED
PT. PLEASANT - Three
persons have been lodged in the
Mason County jail charged with
intoxication. A sheriff's deputy
arrested Henry Owen Summers, 37, Gallipolis and.Delores
Landers, 27, of 126 Laurel st.,
Pomeroy, and city police
arrested Donald E. Stanley, 39,
of 261S Lincoln Ave., Point
Pleasant.

Many people get extra time for pleasHre,
or business, by mailing their defJOSits to
us. We invite you, too, to BaTik by Mail.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
POMEROY, 0.

Tonight&amp; Friday
May 20·21
Doub!e Feature Program
THEY CALL ME
MISTER TIBBS!
(Color)
Sidney Pollier
- PlusPUSSYCAT
PUSSYCAT
I LOVE YOU
(Color)
Dian McShane
Severn Arden

Member Federal Reserve System

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Contin
.

WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
COME IN,AND SEE USI

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Sally Bias,
Pomeroy; Gretta Wines,
Cheshire ; Michael Brickey,
Cyprus; Ryan Cole, Pomeroy ;
Paul Lukens, Parkersburg ;
Kenneth Lulkart, Mason.
DISCHARGED - Mary
Eblin, Elizabeth Gilkey,
Mildred Turner, Paul Evans.

GP

MEIGS THEATRE
.Tonight, May 20
' NOT OPEN,

NEWOOMERS TO
·OUR COMMUNITY

GP

•

CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy E-R unit answered a call to the Jacob
Schuler residence on Locust St.
at 5:33 a. m. Thursday. Mr .•
Schuler was dead upon the
squad's arrival.

Friday &amp; Saturdoy
May 21·22
THE
OUT-OF-TOWNERS
!Technicolorl
Jack Lemmon
Sandy Dennis
If Is FUNNY.
TARZAN'S .
JUNGLE REBELLION
(Technlcolor)
Ron Ely, as Tarzan
· Sam Jaffe
SHOW STARTS7P.M.

DEMS TO MEET
..PT. PLEASANT - The
Mason
County . Young ·
DemofralS--will meet at the
Court House tonight at 8 p.m.
for a regular meeting.
)

tires or anyone else" by Western powers could not be a .factor in trying to keep peace in
the Mideast.
The Venezuelans are attending a one • week seminar here
sponsored by the North American Association of Venezuela to
learn more about American life

styles and business.
Dr. Regula Pachano, yice
rector of Zulia University; in
Maracaibo, proposed that the
major )lOwers, such as Russia
and the U. S., "l;ly aside their
ideological di.fferences" so the
countries of the Mideast can
solve their own problems.
Dr. Arnot Schrier, UC professor of history, said it was
obvious none of the major powers would he willing to leave
the Mideast to any of their
counterparts._
The Venezuelans also talked
with John Tannehill, the UC
freshman from Middleport,
Ohio, who spent two. weeks in
Red China with the U. S. table
tennis team recently.
Tannehill told the visitors he

Catholics to
Build Church'

./

fooind a "great friendlli)ess on
the part of the. Chinese people''
during his stay there, as well
as a great curiosity about the ·
West.
·
·
He 8aid he hoped to see 11
"growing number .~f contacts
between China and the West"
and concluded that the U. S.
has nothing to fear from aiina.
The Venezuelans toured the
UC College of Medicine at General Hospital and saw a demonstration of the equipment in
the laser laboratory.
Dr. Leon Goldman pierced a
number of coins with a laser
beam, including a Venezuelan
bolivar, to the fascination of the
guests. He also explained the
techniques used in laser surgery.

A new catholic church •""'
repll\cing Our Lady of Loretta
Church at Long Bottom - is
UJide.r. construction at Tuppers
Plains.
.
Groundbreaking ceremonies
for the new church were held
Sunday. Church officials report
that "it was with great difficulty and long suffering that
the new church will he buill in
Tuppers Plains. The reason for
this is thatfor over 60 years the
people have faithfully attended
the old church in Long Bottoro
at the junction of State Route
248 and County Road 46.
·
Only because of the increased
importance of the new location
in reference to the little village
of Tuppers Plains, situated on
.the very important and weD
traveled Stale Route 7, it was
decided by Bishop John King
Mussio, the pastor, the Rev.
Father Frank Patala and
parishioners to move the new
church to Tuppers Plains."
This will affor.d closer
proximity to Coolville and make
the church more centrally
located. Furthermore, the old
location was sometimes more
difficult to reach because of the
steep and curving road approaching the old church from
County Road 46, which almost
everyone from Tuppers Plains
was forced to use, church officials said.
The new church wlll measure
114 feet long and 40 feet wide. It
will be faced with buff brick on

Jacob Schuler Died Thursday
Jacob Leo Schuler, 81, died
early this morning at his home
at 106 Locust St. in Pomeroy.
Mr. Schuler was a retired
employe of the New York
Central Railroad. He belonged
to the Sacred Heart Church and
was a member of the carnian's
Union.
Surviving are his wife, Daisy
Mulford Schuler; two sons,
Anthony, of Columbus, and
Paul, of Portland; two gr!llld-

children and a sister, Mrs.
Christina O'Donnell, Pomeroy,
Funeral services will be at 10
a.m. Saturday at the Sacred
Heart Church with the Rev.
Father Bernard Krojcovic
officiating. Rosary services will
be at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the
Ewing Funeral Home where
friends may call anytinie.
Burial will be in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire.

Elherfelds In Pomeroy are open both Friday and Saturday
nights until 9. Shop in comfort on :all 3 floors. Furniture
and carpet for your home and wearing apparel for your

1 50
•
a pair
--

25 MEN'S SPORT COATS
WHILE ~EY LAST 10.00

2.00

RECORDS

WORK SHIRTS

New Wipe-Clean

music,

VINYL ROLL-UP BLINDS
'

Permanent press · all cotton · soil release finish .
Red, white and blue bandana design .

3.99
4.99
6.99
7.99

52"x52" Square
52t'x70" Oblong - 52"x88" Oblong - 60" Fringed Round
Hog Mitts to Match
Aprons to Match - -

- - 99c
- - 2.29

Just Received I
: Another Big Shipment

WEST BEND
COOKWARE
Housewares fashions

A big selection of 8 track

tape in rock , popular ,
vocal, instrumental and
caun1ry western .

designed for good
taste . Colorful exteriors
scratch
resistant
no-stick

5.68

Automatic cord lock blind - vinyl slats - woven with
vlnylon lhreads - complete with vlnylon cords. All roll-up
blinds are easily cut narrower If needed.
Size 4'x6'--.;.--4.95
Size S'x6'----- 5.95
Size 6'x6' -----6.95

45" Prints and Solids
Mostly machine washable and perma. press.
Included in this group are:
-Polyester-Cotton prints and solids
·-Polyester-cotton voile prints
·
-Polyester-cotton solid Broadcloth Sportswear
,_ Polyester-cotton printed and flocked novelties
-Plllyester-Rayon Flax in checks and plaids
-· Nylon Chiffon Prints
Truly A Good Value

89~

It's Porch Rug Time Again!

RICE STRAW RUGS
At1rac1i ve Floral pa!terns with green, blue or brown trim.
79c

8x10

-

9x12

•• • •

-

•

1.49

.' .

3.69
4.95
6.95
7.95

• =-

• .

2.49

.

.

9.95

.

'

.

Size 7'x6'----- 8.95
Size 8'x6'----·10.95
·Size 10'x6:..-- -12.95

Spring and Summer Dress Fabric

1--------------.----~·~i~n~te~~~~~- ·-·-·

2x4 (24x48)
3x5 (36x60)
4x6 (41x72)
5x8 (6Dx96)
6x9 (72x108)
6x12
• • • •

.

Handsome new roll -up blinds In FrultwOQd color

PICNIC TABLE COVERS

Weekend Sale

-lOO.Per cent Soft Foam Filled
--2 Pc. Chal.se Cushions
-3 Pc. Gilder Cushions
-2 Pc. Chair Cushions
~ Pc. Gilder Cushions
-Gilder Pad-equare and round back chair pad, ut!Uty
cushioos, pillow arm cush10111.

department on the 2nd
floor .

li stening

Sale 1.89

Stereo 8 Track Tape

Summer Foam Replacement Cushions

marches and children ' s
album s. Come in and
browse in the music

eas y

2.00

fiNIST

Protect Outdoor Furniture fr!lm Dust and
Showers. We have Chaise Storm Covers. Glider
Storm Covers and Chair Storm Covers . Olive
green vinyl
handsomely styled and quality
constr.ucted
Easy to wipe clean and very
durable .

A large selection ot Albums
in country western, gospel,

Sizes 14 to 18
The most popular
color . While they last

AMIIICA'S

Fresh Fiorals that renew your outdoor Furniture
with color and comfort .
,

23 PAIRS MEN'S 5.95 to 7.50 SlACKS
150 Mens 4.95
Permanent Press

Upholstery
Fabric
54" Width
Good selection patterns and colors.

3.89 yd.

yard
. "Dixie" 3 Pc.

Tank Sets
IOO.Per cenl Rayon Tufted
wllh fringe (Tank Top .
Tank Cover . Lid Covers).
Preshrunk . Machine
Washable. Fits all tanks.
B1g selection colors.

3.29

New Shipment!

Another Shipment

ROADMASTER BICYCLES
BOYS AND GIRLS MODELS

UPHOLSTERY SQUARES
Ideal for small upholstery j.obs • cushions _
purses etc.
.·

See these new Roadmaster Bicycles on sale at
·
Elberfelds.

Be Thrifty! S. all of JOUr saleslips from

Elberfeldl. l'n Pomeroy
to

Devoted To The lnlerab Of The Meigl-Mown .Area

NO. XXIV NO. 27

FRIDAY. MAY 21, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

·-

Blaine J. Turner, 25, Albany
Route 3, near Carpenter, was
killed some time before noon
Thursday when he was run over
by a tractor on the Raymond
Nelson farm .
Meigs County Coroner Dr. R.
R. Pickens said Turner died of a
crushed chest and injuries to his
internal organs .
Investigation showed that
Turner had gone to an area on
tile Nelson farm located in the
Carpenter community driving
the Nelson's tractor to plow a
garden plot for himself. When
he did not return home for his
lunch, his wife became worried
jlnd a search was begun .
Turner was found dead ,

.

And don't forget vi8it 'ihe WarehouSe on Mechanic Street for
floor covering• and lawn moUlers.
.

preference" for a mandated county income tax ove~ a state income tax to finance their proposed tw~ryear budget estimated at
$7.9 billion. ·
House Speaker Charles F. Kurfess, R - Bowling Green,
acting as a spokesman for the 54-member group, said a straw vote
was taken following discussion of the possibillty of a personal snd
corporate income tax collected and used at the county level at a
flat rate in the area of I or 2per cent.

THE INSTITOOT - Mrs. VIlma Plkkoja presents Fred Crow, past grand croaker of the
Ohio Society for the Promotion of BuJllrogs a sign for tile new Frog lnslitootlocated on the
Harold Blackston farm . The Institoot was officially christened during ceremonies Thursday
night.

Withdrawal Plan Produced
LONDON- WFSI'~ POWERS have come up with a fourpoint plan for a blanced East-West troop withdrawal from NATO
and Warsaw Pack nations in Central Europe, diplomatic sources
said ~ . Tbe plan could form the baala lot exploratory talks
with the SOYiet Uni«&lt; if the Kremlin Ill serious in ita pronouncement$ about reducing Ita forces In Europe, they said. Both
Soviet Community Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev and Premier
Alexe N. Kosygln have called for troop withdrawals, but have not
ouWned Specific Ideas. .

Thaw may Require Four Months
WASHINGTON - WHITE HOUSE officials said today the
breakthrough in Ute Soviet-American attempt to agree on limiling
nuclear weapons should produce speeded-up arms talks in about
four months -if Moscow is sincere. If all goes well, they add, if
may be possible for the Strategic Arms Limitation (SALT) talks
to reach - by. the end of this year - one agreement limiting
defensive Antiballistic Missile (ABM) systems in both COIUltries,
and another agreement limiting some of each nation's offensive,
or attack, weapons.
President Nixon, in a three-mjnute television broadcast
Thursday, said the White House and the Kremlin had reached a
major agreement on the talks which could break a deadlock that
has existed during the last year.

Draft Extension Faces Filibuster
WASHINQTON -PLEDGING TO TIE up the Senate "if it
takes 10 weeks, IS weeks or 20 weeks," a fresiunan senator from
Alaska today prepared for another round in his effort to kill the
military draft.
Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Aiaska, and his small band of supporters
turned back three attempts by Senate leaders Thursday to set a
date for voting on some of the dozens of amendments to a bill that
would extend the draft for two years. The Selective Service law
will expire June 30 if Congress does not act, and Gravel and his
allies hope to prevent action unW that dale, forcing the military
service to fiU their ranks with volunteers.

60 Arrested on Kent's Campus
KENT, OHIO- POLICE IN RIOf gear arrested at least 60
persons early today as they ·swept a large crowd of youths from
Ute downtown area back to the Kent State University campus for
the third straight night. Police began their move at Water and
Main streets after reading the riot act to the several hundred
students.
About 20 persons were arrested on the university Commons,
inclnding Kent State student body president Craig Morgan of
Upper Arlington. Two members of the Chosen Few motorcycle
gang were also arrested when they joined the disturbance after a
student was injured when struck by a motorcyc1ist who ran into
the crowd.

----

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Tractor Kills
Blaine Turner

behind closed doors Thursday night and showed a "clear
'

·'·

·-

COLUMBUS -HOUSE REPUBLICANS met for S'h hours

Babcock-Phillips

.'

.'.

GOP Prefers County Income Tax

210 Pairs Boys' Trousers

NOT ALL SIZES. WHILE THEY LAST

Uulted Press InlerllaUonal

'

·•'.
•

! News .•. in Briefs !
By

.

•
Marcinko; Ronnie, carol, Robert Barnette ; James and Mary LaComb and Martin and
Margaret Nesselroad. The newchurch will replace Our Lady of Loretto near Long Bottom .

GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONIES for a new Catholic church at "Tuppers Plains were
held Sunday. From left to right are Herbert Sudlow, contractor ; Harry, Kevin, Jeff, Rober(,
Tom, Winifred Marcinko; Nita and James Conde, Teresa, Rita, Roxie, Marie , Rose and Bob

r---------------------------•

family.
Sizes lv\ostly6to 14
Our Regular 3.95 Trousers
While they _last Friday and Saturday

the front, will be .all 9n one
level, and will feature a com- ·
bination nave and social hall in
the same area, much like the
present churches of St. John
GuysvilJe and St. Jude
Chauncey, which are also
presently administered by Rev.
Frank Patala.
The money will be obtained
for the new church by loans
from the local banks amounting
to $30,000. The Diocese of
Steubenville will obtain for the
church another $15,000' Joan to
be given without interest, but to
be repaid some time in the
future.
In addition to this, it is hoped
that the Catholic Church Extension Society of the United
Sta.tes of America will obtain a
donation of at least $10,000 to be
given without interest charge or
without obligation of any kind.
Since the total cost will he
$55,000, the remaining amount
($10,000) wiD have to he obtained by the parish. At the
present time, since only about
12 families attend the church, it
will he necessary to raise
money by socials, games, etc.
The people themselves have
pledged about $8,000. Completion dale of· the church has
been set by the contractor,
Herbert Sudlow of Logan, for
Christmas of this year. Sunday
Masses in the old chur.ch are at
11:30 a.m. There will be living
quarters in the new church for a
resident priest.

Camp_bell Coming
To ~Scipio Event
Thorn Campbell, sports
director
of
WTVN-TV,
Columbus, will be speaker at
the annual reunion of the Scipio
High School Alumni Association
to be held on Saturday, May 29,
at the Harrisonville School.
Seen daily on the news
evening and night reports,
Campbell, 27, is a native of
Zanesville. He was reared in
Delaware, Ohio, where he af..
tended Willis High School and
Ohio Wesleyan University.
From 1964 to 1967 he was in
the U. S. Army where he was
introduced to broadcasting
through the Armed Force~
·Radio and Television Service.
He spent 19 months in Korea
working in the American
Forces Korea Network.
Following discharge he
returned to Columbus and attended Ohio State University .
He has worked at WTVN-TV for
three and a half years in the
news and sports departments.
Campbell is the son of the
Rev. and Mrs . Louis E. Campbell of Delaware where his
father is pastor of a
Presbyterian Church. His
mother is the former Coelle
Alkire of Harrisonville.
The banquet will be served at
7 p.m. and will be followed by a
round and square dance.

Bypass Bid Opening Set
Bids for construction of 2.8 structures to carry the
miles ·of Ohio Route 7 to be relocation over Ohio I:M and
relocated in Salisbury Township twin thr~an structures over
wlll be opened on June 8 by the Naylor's Run road, county road
Ohio Deparlment of Highways 77. Twin four-i!pan structures
ln eotombus.
will carry US 33 over tbe
ed
estimate
relocation at the interchange
Total Programm
·
for the Improvement project, site. Estimated completion date
including not only construction Is July 31, 1973.
•
1.
but also for the right of way and
engineering cost is $5.2 million.
. CAR WASH SET
The four-lane reloc;ation with
Senior Girl Scout Troop 198
5().{oot median will extend will hold a car wash Saturday
8
from southwest of Hiland Road, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
county road 75, to existing Ashland Gas Station on Locust
township road 79 just east of an St. in Middleport. Those wishing •
interc~nge with US 33 near the to have cars pirk&amp;9 up may call
exl.sting US33-0hlo 124 junction. · 992-7260 between 10 a.m. and 2
Plans call for twin fouro6Paq p,m.

, , , , ,,,;; ;, ,,~, , ,,l,, , ,,,~~'l'' ' ~'l'l''~~ =:r.m;;,~
WASHINGTON (UPI) The federal govemment will
construct an auto test facdlty
adjacent to the Ohio Transportation Research Center at
East Liberty, Ohio, lhe
Department of Transportation announced today.

pinned under the tractor.
It was theorized that he had
been standing in front of the
tractor, it moved, pinned him,
and ra n over him.
Blaine Turner, a construction
worker, resided in property
owned by the Nelsons.
A 1963 graduate of Rutland
High School, Mr. Turner served
in the U. S. Air Force and was
discharged in 1966. He was a
member of the Rutland
Methodist Church and the
Brotherhood of Laborers 1103 at
Chillicothe.
Surviving are his wife, Carol;
two sons, James and Lance
Morgan, both at home ; his
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Wayne

WASH~GTON (UP!)

- The in January, It was well below food item

cost of livm~ to Amer~cans rose
0.3 per cent in April, equaling
the sharpest one-month advance this year, the Labor
Department reported today.
·Higher prtces for food and
clothmgwere largely blamed.
While th~ rise in the
consume~ pnce. index ."'as the
btggest smce a sunilar mcrease

the pace of 1970. when the
nation was in the grips of the·
worst inflation since the Korean
War .
Food prices increased by 0.9
per cent last month. If the
advance continued at that rate
for a full year. the annual food
mcrease wo~Jd he almost 12 per
cent, meamng that a typical

Are Announced

Reservations may be made by
contacting Mrs. Willie Collins,
Rutland Route 1, 742-5434, or
Mrs. Larry Clark, Harrisonville, 742-3889.

Weather
Mostly sunny today and
Saturday. Fair tonight. Continued cool. . High today in the
mid 60s to lower 70s. Low
tonight in the 40s . High
Saturday in the upper 60s to mid
70s.

Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Harten bach was at the scene
assisting in the investigation,

Brea d and .Beans up 3%.

Poll Officials

THOM CAMPBEU

'

Turner of Rutland ; three
sisters, Miss Marilyn Turner of
Milan, Italy; Mrs. Osa Duff,,'
Colwnbus, and a . twin, Mlsi
Brenda J. Turner of Rutland: ·
and his maternal grandmother,
Mrs. Nannie Radcliff, Rutland,:
Funeral services will be held·
at 2.p.m. Sunday at the Rutlan((
Methodist Church with the Rev~
Cecil Cox officiating. Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery. Friendli'"
may call at the Martin Funeraf'
Home after 2 p.m. Saturday ·
until one hour preceding the·
funeral services.

MASON - Mason's town
council has approved election
officials in the community 's
biennial election on June I.
Only one loca.tion will be used
as the polling place in this
election, at the city building,
which wiD open at 6:30a.m. and
close at 7:30p.m.
Voters will elect a mayor,
recorder and five councilmen,
from two tickets. Absentee
ballots will be available
beginning Saturday at the city
building. Persons voting absentee ballots must sign affidavits certifying to their
reason for so voting.
Election officials are Verlie
Workman, Gladys Stewart,
Eleanor Ewing , Dorothy
Cartwright, Charlotte Yonker,
Claire Smith, Pat Wiispn,
Eunice Hart and Marga~el
Pickens.

PAMELA BUCK

umt ASHLEY

PAMELA BUCK, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck,
Racine Hoole 2, and Keith Ashley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert D. Ashley, Racine Route 2, have been named outstanding girl and boy of this spring's graduating class of
Southern High School, Racine. They are the Danforth
Foundation winners. Ashley Is also valedictorian of the class.

coStlrilU~IIJI9II!Iii

would cost ,I.U by p~t ~iP&amp; ;
The cost of clothing tncreaseil '
0.4 pel" c~nt last month, led by
a jump of 0.8 per cenl in men's
and boys ' apparel. Women's
and girls' clothing increased o.:i
per cent.
The government ·~ gauge of
consumer prices stooq in April
at 120.2 per cent of the 1967
average, up from 119.8 per cent.
in March. That meant it cost
$12.02 to buy the same goods
and services that $10 bought in
1967.
The April index was 4,3 per
cent above April, 1970, representing the smallest over-theyear chance since the August,
1967, to August, 1968.
Last year, monthly lncrea~
averaged close to 0.5 per cent.
The increases in food Bl)d'
clothing. prices were partially.
offset by declines in home
mortgage interest rates and the
price of gasoline. New car
prices declined- normal for this
time of the year- but used car
prices increased.
The average purchasing power uf workers increased slightly
as a result of a 2 per cent
increase in average hourly
earnings.
LOCAL TEMPS
Tempera lure in· downtown.
Pomeroy Friday at II a.m. was
64 d•grees, under cloudy skies.

Educators Getting to Know the Other Fellows
By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Superlntendenl
Meigs Local School District
The Buckeye Association of School Administrators (BASA)
the state organization of school superintendents is engaged in an
effort to "get to know the other fellow, his district, and his
problems." The first step in this project was made late in March
when about 20 school administrators gathered in Cleveland to
learn more .about big city problems. I had the opportunity to be
among this group and I wrote a lengthy colwnn about the visit
shortly after my return.
The second step of the project was made this past Tuesday
and Wednesday when about two dozen school people from all over

Speaking of Schools-No. 189
Ohio came to visit Southeastern Ohio. Meigs Local was privileged
to serve as the host district. The cooperation of many Meigs
County school men. and women helped to make t11is visit a
mealllngful experience. I want to use this column tonight to give
you a report on this meeting.
The following is a listing of who came, from where they came ,
and what their responsibilities are :
Papl Briggs, Superintendent, Cleveland; James Tanner,
Assistant Superintendent, Cleveland; Connella Brownd, Assistant
Superintendent, Cleveland ;· Carl Long·, Business Manager,
Cleveland; James Misch,. Director of Secondary Schools,
Clev:eland; Frank Dick, Superintendent, Toledo; Flute Rice,.High

•

School Principal, Toledo; Robert Roman, Administrative Staff,
Toledo; Emory Leverette, Assistant Superintendent, Toledo;
Paul Miller, Superintendent, Cincinnati; David Moberly,
Snperintendent, Warren; Paul Taylor, Superintendent, Strasburg-Franklin; Frank Mayer, Superintendent, Berea; Jannes
Jarvis, High School Principal, Youngstown ; George Kessner,
Supervisor, Youngstown; James Matusik, Supervisor, ·
Muskingum County; Orin Smith, Superintendent, Warren
County; George Crawford, Graduate Student, Ohio State; John
Simon, Assistant Executive Director, Ohio School Board
Association; Harold Sebold, Executive Director, BASA; H. Don
Scott, Superintendent, Maple Heights; Lawrence Cranner,
Assistant Superintendent, Greenhills-Forest Par~; Ross Flemming, Executive Director, Ohio Association of Secondary School
Principals. Mr. Lee W. McComas joined us ..for a short tlme to
meet some old friends among this group. John Riebel, Superintendent, Eastern Loeal, attended and conducled ·a tour of Chester
Elementary during the afternoon. We were sorry that illness kept
Southern Local Sulierintendent; Ralph Sayre from attending.
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m: we had a p&amp;f\el presentation
in the vocal room at Meigs High. County Superintendent Robert
Bowen gave a fine background description of Meigs County and
its school districts. Elementary Principal Robert Morris contributed information on our elementary program in Meigs Local.
High School Principal James Diehl intrOduced the visitors to
Meigs Hig~ and lis program. I h~d the opporlun[ty to discuss the
.

l

J

".

' •'
history and development of Meigs Local as a consolidation nolf

five and one-half years old.
· ' ·,'
From 11 to 12 we toured the building in three groups led by
Assistant Superintendent Larry Morrison, Mr. Diehl and myself.
Guests asked questions, talked with students and gained a fairly
clea~ picture of Ute building and ita program.
During the period of 12 to 12:45 we had lunch in the cafetertac'
not as a group, but .mingling among the students in the d~
area. All had the same lunch as Ute students. BASA picked up tht·
check.
.,
·.:
At 12:45, wiUt the sun high in 'the sky and the temperaturl!
rising, we boarded a bus driven by Dwight Carl. By the way,·,
BASA will reimburse Meigs Local for the cost of the bus trtP·
From 12:4sto 4:15, three and one-half hours, we rode a school bat'c
through all three districts in the county.
·.
· ' ·•;;.
We drove through Royal Qak Park; stopped and visited
Chester Elementary; drove past.Riverview Ele111J!nlary ;.stoppt.l ·
to chat and pump a drink of cool water at Forked Run Part itro*''
down Rt: 124 past Portland School; saw the mighty Ohio,lolnl@
fields being staked, cabhag~ a bright green in the sun, Antiqul~; • •
I.Rtart School, Kaiser Aluminum over Ute Ohio; drove pUt·
Racine Eleme11lary and Southern High School; saw Sporn ~ .
the Ohio; then through Syracuse into Pomeroy and MiddleJICifl'•
viewing schools as we drove; up over the hill we went p;io. •
Br~db\u'y, on to Happy Hollow, Rutland, 8ail~y's R~n w Rt.
(Continued on psge 14)
· ·
&lt;·'

al't

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'•
., ..
"

'

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• ••
•

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