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                  <text>Biennium Budget Up $2. 9 Billion

•

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. John J. Gilligan has offered the
General Assembly a record $9.1 billion two-year budget which he
said would bring Ohio up to 30th in the nation in state spending and
taxing.
The 1972-73 budget, presented to a joint session Monday night,
represented an increase of $2.9 billion over the current biennium
and would require an additional burden of $1.6 billion to the
taxpayers of Ohio over the next two years.
The $1.3 billion gap would be closed by additional federal funds
and projected increases in existing tax collections, the governor
explained.
To finance his programs, Gilligan recommended enactment of
Ohio's first personal income tax, and closing a loophole for
business in the state sales tax.
As expected, Democrats in the legislature praised the governor's farreaching spending plan, while Republicans were
critical of the massive tax program.
Under Gilligan's blueprint, additional spending of $557 million
for the first year would go toward basic education, Medicaid and
welfare.
_ Tax Relief Proposed
The tax increases would provide $1.1 billion in the first year, but
the governor accompanied this new revenue request with a
proposal for $414 million worth of tax relief, including property
tax rollbacks, real estate tax credits for the poor and elderly and
repeal of Ohio's taxes on corporation franchises and stocks and
bonds.
"This is the greatest tax reform package ever produced in this
state and maybe in any state," Gilligan said.
The governor said he made heavy cuts in departmental requests, which he noted would have doubled the state budget.
"If the budget presented to you tonight is approved as I have
submitted it," he said, "Ohio will be neither a hightax nor a bigspending state. We will rank 30th among our sister states in the
union both in state revenues and in state expenditures - below
average, but no longer at the bottom of the list.
"This budget is, then, not the end, but the beginning of our efforts- not to spend ourselves weary, or tax ourselves dry- but to
buildanewlifehereinOhio,"thegovernorsaid.
"With this budget, I believe, Ohio will turn to face the future

•

•
TWO-YEAR.OLD JAY ANTHONY NEUTZLING, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neutzling of Pomeroy, gave the first
contribution to the 1971 Easter Seal fund drive to Jack Welsh,
treasurer, Monday. Over 5,000 envelopes containing Easter
seals were received by residents across Meigs County
Monday. The fund drive is conducted for the Meigs Society
for Crippled Children and Adults by the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club. Jay wears leg braces to correct a
problem and is being aided py the Ohio Bureau of Crippled
Children which does work in cooperation with the Easter Seal
group.

rather than dream of the past."
~(/~:;i·;.~:--~ .
·
: . · . ·
For the first year, Gilligan said $826.5 million in new state
·· ·
resources would be required, including:
Proposed Graduated Income Tax
- $412.3 million for elementary and secondary education.
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The graduated personal income
- $164.8 million for Medicaid and welfare payments.
tax proposed by Gov. John J. Gilligan would range from 1 to 8
- $34 million for higher education.
per cent according to adjusted gross income as reported on
- $30.4 million for mental hygiene and correction.
the standard federal income tax return:
-$55.3 million for pay increases and fringe benefits for state
Firsl$3,000 -1 per cent; next $3,000-2.5; next $4,000, 2;
employes.
next $5,000, 3; next $5,000, 4; next $5,000, 5; next $10,000, 6;
- $85.9 million for other programs.
nexL$15,000, 7, and $50,000and over, 8 per cent.
Under the proposed scale, a family of four would be
- $79.8 million to make up for waht the governor said was an
overestimation of revenue receipts by the Rhodes administration.
taxed $105 if its adjusted gross income was $7,500. A $10
The total-year budget, counting federal money, calls for
credit would be allowed per exemption, however, to reduce
spending increases of $1.1 billion for education and $1 billion for
the family's tax burden by $40 to $65.
welfare, the two biggest items in the budget.
If the family owned a home and was being taxed at a rate
Gilligan said the personal income tax would provide $665
of more than 25 mills, it would receive a further reduction.
million for the first year, the corporate income tax, $330 million
For instance, if the family owned a house valued at
and closing sales tax loopholes, $120 million.
$20,000 (assessed at $8,000) which had been taxed at 29 mills,
Adjustable To Income
a reduction of $32 would be taken from the $65 tax burden.
This, he said, would be coupled with property tax rollbacks
The family would then owe the state government $33- which
totaling $123.2million for the first year, real estate tax credits for
would be approximately 63 cents a week.
the elderly and poor totaling $100 million, corporate property tax
credits totaling $40 million, and losses of $30 million and $121.5
million from repeal of the taxes on stocks and bonds and corporation franchises, respectively.
1
The proposed personal income tax would be based on income as
reported on a taxpayer's federal return. The first $3,000 of adjusted gross income would be subject to a 1 per cent tax, and any
amount over $50,000 a year would draw an 8 per cent tax.
A $10 credit would be allowed for each exemption claimed by
the taxpayer, who also could deduct the state levy on his federal'
income tax.
The corporate net income tax would be levied at 4 per cent on
the firs t $10,000 of corporate income. Gilligan said this would
apply to half the businesses in Ohio. Income over $10,000 would be
taxed at 8 per cent.
The closing of the sales tax loophole for businesses would allow
the state to tax machinery used in producing a finished product or
service, provided it did not become a component part of the
product.

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The lntere&amp;b Of Tlu? Meigs-MlUOn Area

•

VlJL XXIII

NO. 234

TEN CENTS

TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Porter Proposals Supported

•

Meigs County's needs, in view
of the recent announcement by
the Ohio Power Co., of its plans
to build a 2.6 million kilowatt,
coal-burning power plant on the
Ohio River at Ch
at an
es
ted cost
wer
diSCUSS
Porn ro)' Chacr
merce member
Bower's Drive-Ir.
Avlilability of h using and
what can be done to improve the
situation in the county had
special attention
Bill Grueser, president,
referring to Frank W. Porter's
letter to the Editor appearing in

the Sunday Times-Sentinel,
observed that thought should be
given to what Porter pointed
out. The extent people can go in
the way of repair and rebuilding
was also discussed.
One of the immediate needs
menboned was the availability
trailer space. Scott Lucas
reported that one investor is
seeking approximately 50 acres
of land on which to develop a
trailer park. It was reported by
Dale Warner that Burl Walker
is developing a trailer park at
Darwin that will serve 30 to 40
trailers.
Fred Crow noted that he and

. Garbage
•

Pomeroy Council Monday
night approved the first of three
required readings of an ordinance providing for the
collection and disposal of
garbage and trash by license,
licensee fee and penalties for its
violation.
The ordinance states that
those wishing to obtain a license
for garbage pickup must make
application to Pomeroy Council
on a one year basis at a cost of
$50 a year. Those hauling
garbage must have a packer
truck or truck covered in such a
manner not to spill on village
streets.
The
ordinance
further
stipulates that every owner,
tenant, agent, lessee or occupant in charge of a building
provide covered receptacles. It
will be unlawful for any person
to dump garbage or refuse on
any street, alley, river bank or
on any real property except at a
sanitary landfill.
The ordinance also stipulates
that it is not unlawful for an
individual to take trash to any
state approved sanitary landfill. Violators will be fined not
less than $5 or more than $50 for
the first offense and for such
subsequent offense not less than
$50 or more than $100. The
licensee may choose any dump

Three Autos Are
Heavily Damaged

....

'

Three cars were heavily
damaged in an accident at the
East Main St. and Nye Ave.
intersection at 4: 51 p.m .
Monday .
Pomeroy police said one car
driven by Kearns Roush,
Minersville, struck the rear of a
vehicle driven by Ralph
Stewart, Middleport, which had
stopped for the traffic light. The
Roush vehicle then drifted
backward to strike the front of a
third car driven by Ronald
Russell, Pomeroy. There were
no injuries. Roush is being
charged with dnvtng wh1le
intoxicated, police said.

Porter have approximately 15
acres near Veterans Memorial
Hospital, but it posed a problem
as far as development, as no
road into the site is available.
Crow noted, however, thlit the
commissioners would view the
area Tuesday to see if a road
could be built. The property
could be divided in lots, Crow
noted, with approximately 40
lots available at the site.
Earl Ingels observed that
Meigs County had goods to
offer, however, financing would
pose a problem. Ingels
suggested that perhaps a service guide be drawn up and

made available to people
coming into the area.
Bob Jacobs said Breezy
Heights had possibilities if a
good road were made available.
Crow also not~ tbat th&lt;&gt;re is a
tremendous demand for farm
land. He said the only way to
develop a housing project is for
indivduals to invest money and
form a corporation, referring to
the Hotel Martin development.
Grueser observed that Porter
will attend the next meeting of
the Chamber to offer any
assistance he can in promoting
development of Meigs County.
Dale Warner and Fred Crow

reported on their trip to Ann
Arbor, Michigan, where they
met with Dr. George Nace,
professor of Zoology at the
University of Michigan. They
viewPtl the laboratory here
there were 5,000 frogs. The
frogs are used in the study of
medicine. They also visited a
cricket farm. The crickets are
raised to feed the frogs. Warner
said 25 million crickets are sold
annually.
A gift from Dr. Nace, two
frogs from Korea, were on
display at the meeting. Warner
and Crow stated that those
persons at the University were

Collection Ordinance Started
unless Meigs County establishes
a landfill.
Council earlier agreed to give
Earl Griffin of Hockingport an

SERVICE CHANGED
The weekly Pomeroy
community Lenten service
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday has been changed
from the United Methodist
Church to the St. Paul
Lutheran Church, 231 E.
Second St. The Rev. Stanley
Plattenburg will be speaker.

18-month contract to service
Pomeroy residents who had
been serviced by Walter Bentz
and Lee Drenner. Griffin who
owns and operates a sanitary
landfill in Washington County
began collections last week.
In other business Mayor
Charles Legar read a letter
from Frank W. Porter. The
letter asked that council submit
a resolution to the county
commissioners indicating that
Pomeroy village be part of a
sanitary landfill district.
Council noted that it had
made such a stipulation when
the problem of establishing a
sanitary landfill was discussed

sometime ago.
Legar also read a letter from
the Pomeroy police department
and police dispatchers asking
for an increase in pay and
allowances for uniforms. The
letter was referred to the safety
committee.
Council woman Elma Russell
brought up the situation of old
cars abandoned on lots in the
village. Legar noted that this
problem has been referred to
the police department.
Council also noted that applications are being taken for a
meterman , or metermaid.
Those wishing to apply have
until March 31 to submit ap-

plications to the council.
A letter was read by Jane
Walton, clerk, from Mrs. Dean
Barnitz asking council to do
something about surface water
in front of her home that runs
into her basement. Council took
no action on the matter. Legar
agreed the problem did exist;
however, he knew of no solution.
The mayor's report showing
recei ts of $828.04 for the month
of M rch was accepted. Attendi~g were Legar, councilme Franklin Rizer, Lucien
Poulin, and Ralph Werry;
counqilwoman Mrs. Russell,
Mrs. Walton, clerk, and Phyllis
Hennessy, treasurer.

as much interested in the Ohio
Association of Bullfrogs activities as they were their own.
Crow noted that the association
hopes to raise 1,000 tadpoles.
The only problem in this is their
feeding, Crow noted.
In other business the
Chamber urged all busmess
men to contribute to the George
Thompson kidney fund.
Attending were Grueser,
Crow, Warner, Ingels, Jack
Carsey, Richard Chambers,
Donald Diener, Tom Cassell,
Jacobs, Lucas, and Kermit
Walton .

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Thursday Through Saturday
Fair Thursday and Friday
and a chance of showers on
Saturday. Low in the 20s
early Thursday, warming to
the 30s by Saturday. Highs
upper 40s north to 50s south
Thursday through Saturday.

Weather
Low tonight in the 20s. Continued cold Wednesday with
variable cloudiness northeast
and partly sunny southwest.
High Wednesday mid 30s to
near 40.

DORA ANN WYA'IT, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Wyatt and a fifth grader in the class of Don Stivers at
the Pomeroy Elementary School, has been named a winner
in a natwnal contest conducted by "Weekly Reader" on air
pollution. A reproduction of Miss Wyatt's poster on the
subject appeared in last week's "Weekly Reader." She will
receive a certificate of achievement. With Miss Wvatt JS Mrs.
Mar By · a t ;:.h at t Pvr. ; .,....1 b:!Ilf.a· c-.,..1- 1
who conducts the art class in which Miss Wyatt prepa ed the
poster.

Disaster a
Wilkesvi......
WILKESVILLE - Five area
fire departments battled,
almost hopelessly, a fire that
destroyed the northern business
block in Wilkesville early today.
Firemen, still on the scene at
11 a.m., could make no estimate
of the losses which were expected to run into the hundreds
of thousands of dollars.
Only the residence of the
Raymond Long family was
saved. The Longs operate the
Long and Sons General Store
next door. The store, as were
two homes, another small store,
;md the K of P hall were burned
to the ground.
The fire started, firemen
determined, in the George Riley

Legion to
Sponsor 2
Sponsorship of two boys to
Buckeye Boys State at Ashland,
Ohio, and one to the seminar on
alcoholism and drug abuse at
Wittenberg College has been
approved by Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion.
Meeting recently at the hall,
the Post also agreed to again
this year co-sponsor the
American Legion baseball
team. Work on repairing the
structures at the American
Legion Memorial Park and
adding new facilities was
planned.
Welcomed into membership
were Walter Roush, Ted Riley,
Jr., Herschel Gilkey, and
Richard Turner.
Plans were completed for the
annual birthday party to be held
at 6 p.m. Thursday night at the
hall. Ben Franklin of Point
Pleasant will present a
magrc1an's
s how.
Essay
winners of Meigs and Eastern
High Schools will be· announced
:md citations will be given the
charter members.
Preparations for the meal will
be made a t 7 p.m . Wednesday at
the hall, and legionnaires and
auxili&lt;.~ry members on the work
detail are asked to report at that
tnne .

home about 5:30 a.m., at the
north end of this small village
just across the Meigs-Vinton
County line, in Vinton County.
The elderly Riley couple
escaped in ample time. Mrs.
Leanna Hartley, who occupied
the next house, got out only in
her night clothing. Nothing was
saved from either house.
Nothing was saved from the K
of P hall which was next in line
to the Hartley residence which
had a small storage room; nor
from the Long and Sons General
Store, an old building literally
crammed full of merchandise.
The enbre block was in
flames, at one time, which were
out of control before effective
fire fighting forces could be
mobilized.
Fire Departments from
Pomeroy, Middleport, Rutland,
Hamden, Wellston and Vinton
were on the scene but were able
to save only the Long family
residence.
The Riley residence, where
the fire started, was the home of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Frank and
Flora Wood.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
AD:viiTTED
Bertha
Heilman, Coolville;
Ken
Hayman, Middleport; Suzanne
Mulford, Cheshire; Timothy
Ohlinger, Rutland; Kevin Lute,
Long Bottom; Sharon Taylor,
Gallipolis; Ron Beal, Pomercy.
DISCHARGED Patncia
Powell, Selwyn Smith, Edith
McCoy, Krista "White.

PLANNING MEETING
for a
Distnct 16 spring eonference of
The Oh10 PTA will br hrld at 1
p.m . Wednesday at the
Pomeroy elementar)' school.
Mrs . Leo Crew, Pomero} ,
general chmrman of the confert:&gt;nce, requests all local unit
pr·esidt-nts, C'ultural arts
chmrrm n, and committee
chairmen to etttl'nd.
A planning session

-WILKESVILLE FIRE - The building at left, in the dist-'\nce, is the
residence of the Raymond Long family which operates Long &amp; Sons General
Store next door, destroyed by fire early today as were two homes, the K of P

hall, and a small store building. The disaster came almost 24 yean, and two
months after another fire - on Jan. 31, 1947 - that destroyed the busines~
block south of the scene above. Five fire departments were able to save the
Long residence.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16,1971

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

Wedding Date Set
Plans have been completed
for the wedding of Miss Tamara
Jean Finlaw, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Finlaw of
Pomeroy, to Captain George
Donald Wight, son of Mrs.
William W. Wight of Milford,
Conn. and the late Mr. Wight.
The wedding will be an event
of 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 3
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church. The Rev. Robert Kuhn
will officiate and a reception
honorin~ the couple will be held

Voice along Broadway

at the home of the bride's
parents.
Miss Finlaw is a graduate of
Pomeroy High School and Ohio
University and is a teacher at
the Goodman School in Cincinnati.
Captain Wight, a graduate of
the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, is stationed with
the U. S. Air Force at the
General Electric Co. in Cincinnati.

·---------------------------,

!Helen Help Us!
I

:

I

By Helen Bottel

II

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT
This column is for young people, their problems and pleasures,
their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help US!, it
welcomes laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a brushoff.
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help US! this newspaper.
TilE NEW FREEDOM .... ?
Dear Helen:
"What is a Pregnant School Girl?" really hit home. But
th:re's so~ething worse, and I know because I am one. I thought
bemg marned at 17 would be the greatest thing in the world. Now
all I can think of is "How do I get out?"
I only wish I'd read this piece sooner.
LAMENT OF A TEENAGE BRIDE
The new morality ... and freedom
From classes (what a drag);
From mom and dad (always arguing);
From homework (senseless hours);
From discipline (useless);
From church (a bore) ;
From conformity (a hangup).

I'm my own woman now.
Made so by one decision ...

..

One hour of love and pleasure and self-gratification.
Free to look at my cheer-leading sweater hanging in the closet,
My books and basketball schedule resting on the shelf.
My material for a prom formal forlorn amid the remnants of
material for maternity tops.
My medals from band and choir forsaken in the clutter of a
jewelry box
My friends passing by my window
Laughing over the gossip column in the school paper
And giggling over who will be the next to experience
The new morality ... and freedom
For cleaning (what a drag);
For him (always arguing);
For ironing (senseless work);
For dishes (useless) ·
F cookmg (a
For x 1a hal!
Oh God, 1f you
Please let some
ccymg baby off my hands,
I am so old ... and I was never young!
(By Nancy Curtis, reprinted with permlSston of THE
MESSENGER, and copyrighted by that magazine.)
Dear Helen:
I'd like to travel in Europe this summer and support myself
while doing it. Is there a chance? - HOPEFUL STUDENT
Dear Student:
Send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to JOBS EUROPE,
13355 Cantara Street, Panorama City, California, 91402- that is,
if you are between the ages of 18 and 26 and don't mind doing
general help in first class hotels. An inquiry will bring you
detailed information. - H.
Harvard and B.U. Named
BOSTON (UPI) - Harvard
and Boston University were
named Sunday as the Eastern
representatives in the NCAA
Hockey Tournament, scheduled
for later this week in Syracuse,
N.Y.

THE DAI~Y SENTINEL

DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily e"l&lt;cept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Business Office Phon~
992 -2156, Editorial Phone 992 , 2157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertising
representative
Bottinelli •.
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
SAME DAY
St., New York City, New York .
SERVICE
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rates:
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In At 9- 0ut At 5
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Use'Our Free Parking Lot
service JIOt available : One
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. .- - - - - - - - - - · · S e n t i n e·

SHIRT
FINISHING

46 Listed on Southern's Honor Rolls

BY JACK O'BRIAN
A SHOT IN THE ARM
OR A KICK IN THE HEAD?
NEW YORK -Hollywood's "Oscars" are
considered in some corners to be jinxes. It's the
contention of the current Tony Awards staff, due
to decorate Bdwy. actors and creators with the
annual Antoinette Perry Awards, the OscarsEmmys of the Bdwy. legitimate stage -they'll
be handed out Sun., Mar. 28, ABC-TV. 9 to 11 p.m.
- that Tony isn't so severe a threat to a
recipient's career as the allegedly deadly Oscar.
So let's see: Luise Rainer won back-to-back
Oscars in 1936 and 1937 for "The Great Ziegfeld"
and "The Good Earth" and slid into veritable
oblivion; but it wasn't actually cruel who did her
in .... Miss Rainer's superstar-size temperament
made her a difficult performer; but it's true that
Oscar seems to have rained on Miss Rainer's
parade .... Gale Sondergaard, Katina Paxinou,
George Chakiris and Gloria Grahame collected
the movie doorstops and bumped into careertrouble . . .. Miss Sondergaard never was a
glamor item, character actors and actresses
seldom become superstars, and her politics were
unpopular and that's that; the others were not
able, simply, to meet the demands of their
unexpected awards.
It's now the claim of the Tony boys that the
stage awards have not interrupted the haul of
fame of its winners .... They cite James Earl
Jones and Jane Alexander, who won 1968
Tonys for "Shot in the Dark," on to glory with
another Tony in 1965 for "The Odd Couple"; then
an Oscar for "Fortune Cookie" in 1966, followed
by a string of major roles in "Cactus Flower,"
"Hello, Dolly!" and "A New Leaf"; fine; any
Tony jinx passed up Matthau.
Tony loyalists list Leonard Bernstein's 1953
"Wonderful Town" score (a good one) as boding
good, but Dear Lennie has retired from the N. Y.
Philharmonic, and his recent bout with cynical
headlines over the "radical chic" Park Ave.
party he tossed too, too terribly grandly for the
Black Panthers gave him his worst publicity
ever .... The Tony boys cite Mike Nichols' three
directorial Tonys for Bdwy. successes, starting
with Neil Simon's "Barefoot in the Park"; but
Mike's hardly a permanently happy post-Tony
type: his latest, "Catch-22," is a financial and
critical disaster; Tony loses that one.
Again the Tonyphiles claim Patricia Neal as
a Tony-primed ongoing star-success .... Pat won
~-----

............~

Pomeroy....

\

Personal Notes
Lori Ann Pullins, 10 year old
daughter of Mr. and Mr:,.
William Pullins, was admitted
Sunday night to the Holzer
Medical
Center
with
pneumonia.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pullins,
Scott and L1sa, were weekend
guests of the Rev. and Mrs.
Menzil Smith and family of
Wilshire. The Rev. Mr. Smith is
a former pastor of the Enterprise Church.
Mr _and Mrs. Earl Kesterson
and son, Kevin, of Wilmington
spent the weekend here visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Kesterson. Other visitors of the
Kestersons on Sunday were Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Ebersbach, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Kesterson,
Cottageville, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Lafe Cogar, Mrs. Beatrice
Buck, Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mrs. William Cogar, Sherry and
Kim, Minersville.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spencer
are in Dayton visiting Mr _ and
Mrs. Edward Mcintosh.
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick
Goeglein and family of Circleville were weekend visitors
of their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Goeglein, Rock Springs,
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Wagner, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Darst and
daughters have returned to
their home in Columbus after
visiting over the weekend with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore.

a Tony in 1947, most deservedly, for her bnlhant
"Another Part of the Forest" role; but she
suffered family tragedies and a massive stroke
subsequently. Most happily she managed to
return to screen roles after winning an Oscar for
"Hud"; but her post-Tony times have not been
happy; gallant, indeed, but the Tony jinx may
have solid claim to existence here.
Shirley Booth won three Tonys, her first in
1949, but her indisputable skills haven't been
seen with conspicuous success lately, except in
the raucous-voiced. old TV series, "HazeL"
Maureen Stapleton's 1951 Tony for "Rose
Tattoo" is claimed; fine, rack Maureen up in the
no-jinx slot .... Julie Harris' three Tonys since "I
Am a Camera" clicked for her in 1952 and
decorate a good career, if not of superstar
stature; no jinx here, either .... Gwen Verdon has
had four fine Tonys come to heel and toe, but
Gwen's been a sick lass too often since .... David
Wayne was a first-year Tony winner in '47 and
he's a fine performer but hasn't ascended to
permanent stellar orbit everyone, we included,
prophesied 24 years ago - and we'll never understand why.
Nanette Fabray won in '49 for "High Button
Shoes," had a TV career which has faded now
like an old dancing soldier-&lt;loll .... Alfred Drake,
great in "Kismet,'.' won a '54 Tony, and his
Kismet fated other than skywards .... Vivian
Blaine likewise was champ in '51 for "Guys &amp;
Dolls" and has lost the fight since.
Robert Morse was a blithe delight in "How to
Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," but
his Tony for that marked his last stage or screen,
even TV highspot .... Carol Channing took home
the 1964 Tony for "Hello, Dolly!" but her current
disaster, "Four on a Garden," might be
analyzed as jinxish .... Tom Bosley's Tony
popped from his magnum opus in the title role of
"Fiorello" in 1960; his magnums have shrunk to
pints or less since.
Rex Harrison's "My Fair Lady" Tony was a
highspot, and he hasn't been jinxed since, except
by Cupid a few times .... Robert Preston's
"Music Man" Tony was Bob's best-ever and if he
hasn't been jinxed, he also hasn't had a role since
to compare .... Robert Goulet's "The Happy
Time" Tony is his last career peak; Angela
Lansbury's great "Marne" Tony has been
followed successively by jinxed roles.
And so it goes. Jinx? They'll all try again for
a Tony, and the jinx won't deter anyone. Ham is
the great antidote for any jinx.

RACINE
Forty-six
students of the Southern High
School, Racine, have been
named to the honor roll at the
close of the fourth six weeks
grading period.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
listed on the roll were: (names
in capital letters are all A's)
SENIORS - Victoria Able,
Hobin Allen, KEITH ASHLEY,
Barbara Brown, Pam Buck,
Pam .Codner, Deborah Cross,
Sharo-n Ervin, Tom Hamm,
Jeffrly···Harris, Patti Ihle,
CARY MORRIS, Dan Nease,
Hoger
Nease,
DEBBIE
NORRIS, KAREN SAYRE,
SANDRA SAYRE, Sam Shain,
21ST CELEBRATED
The 21st birthday anniversary
of Jim Anderson was celebrated
Sunday with a dinner party at
the Lincoln Hill home of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Morris. Other guests were Mrs.
Jim Anderson, Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Anderson, Kristin,
Billy and Erin, Don Anderson,
and Alfred Elberfeld.

Today's
Almanac

said, "There is the national
flag. He must be cold, indeed,
who can look upon its folds
By United Press International rippling in the breeze without
Today is Tuesday, March 16, pride of country. If in a foreign
land, the flag is compamonship,
the 75th day of 1971.
The moon is between its full and country itself, with all its
endearments.''
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
M8rs and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this day
under the s1gn of Pisces.
On this day in his tory:
In 1802 Congress authorized
the establishment of the U.S.
Military Academy at West
Point.
In 1830 only 31 shares were
traded on the New York Stock
Exchange, the slowest day in
the history of exchange.
In 1966 American astronauts
Neal Armstrong and David
Scott docked their Gemini 8
space vehicle with an agena
craft, a first in orbital history.
In 1969 a Venezuelan airliner
plunged into a suburb of
Maracaibo, killing 150 persons.

DENISE SNODGRASS, Ruth I\'ease, Diana Norris, JUDY
ROBERTS, PATSY SAYR~
Winebrenner.
Connie
Smith, Bonnie Smith,
JUNIORS
Ed Cross,
Wilcoxen,
Sandra
Teresa Gooch, Bruce Hart, Larry
Winebrenner.
Candy Hoback, Tim Ihle,
FRESHMEN - Cindy Gooch,
Stanley Kiser, Loretta Middleswart, Melissa Proffitt, Dennis Hawk, VERNE ORO,
Bob Sayre, David Theiss.
Charles Yost.
SOPHOMORES - Barbara
Fisher, Charles Manuel, Tim
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Manuel, Randy Moore, Mike
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Findley
of Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, ar~
announcing the birth of a sorl"!"'
DETAIL, ATTENTION!
Mrs. Charles Kessinger, Bryan Edward, 6 lb., 3 oz.,
president of the American Friday at the Holzer Medical
Legion Auxiliary, Feeney- Center. The Rev. and Mrs.
Bennett Post 128, requests that Audrey Miller of Middleport
the work detail for the annual and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Legion birthday party report to Findley of Letart Falls are the
the hall at 7 p.m. Wednesday grandparents. Mrs. Estella
night to prepare for a Thursday Casterline, New Philadelphia,
is a great-grandmother.
evening event.

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Meigs Co. Branch

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~tO..,,

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Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;
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296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

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At 4%%
992-3748

290 North Second Avenue

Middleport, Ohio

A thought for today: American statesman Charles Sumner
CELEBRATE BIRTHDAYS
The birthdays of Jesse
Maynard and his daughter,
Mrs. Ann Zirkle, were observed
recently with a dinner party
served by Mrs. May~ard. Gifts
were presented to the honored
guests. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Maynar , Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Mayna d, Point
Pleasant; Mr. and rs. David
Zirkle and daughters Terri and
Debbie.

(MARCH 21-APRil 20)

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�3- The Daily Sentinel, MHlOH~oort-l~orrlerc&gt;v

Cards Post Seventh Spring Win

Girls in
• Top F ornt ..., ".__..
Belpre and Athens High
School athletes staged a spirited
exhibition of "girls' basketball"
in the champion game of Girls
Invitational Tournament at
Meigs High School Monday
night.
~
At the end of the first quarter
Athens led by one, then sagged
to trail at the end of the third
period by 8. It seemed that the
Belpre girls had the game in
their handbags but suddenly
Athens couldn't m'iss in the
fourth period and at the end of
regular time it was 37 all.
Jo Wood of Athens could not
be stopped in the three minute
overtime as she threw in three
field goals and it ended Athens
43, Belpre 37.
Miss Wood, big gun for the
winners, chipped in 25 points.
Hunsicker had 6, Reed and
Rosenberg 4 each and Kempton
3. For Belpre, Vaughn had 17,
Toni Jones 10, Scritchfield 6, S.
Moore and J. Moore 2 each.
In the consolation game
~ Kyger Creek downed Gallipolis
34 to 24.
Kyger Creek took an early
lead of four points. At the end of
the third period Kyger led by 2
and slowly edged away in the
fourth period. For Kyger,
Cornelius had 18, C. Hall 9, S.
Hall 4 and Gardner 3. For·
Gallipolis, Swain had 11, Folden
7, King 4 and Akers 2.

By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
Joe Torre 's hitting and Steve
Carl ton's comeback pitching
could make 1971 a penna nt year
for the St. Louis Ca rdinals.
Torre banged out two homers
Monday and Ca rlton, who lost
19 games in 1970 after holding
out for most of that year's
training period, sca ttered five
hits in six innings as the Cards
edged Detroit, 4-3, for their
seventh win in 10 exhibition

•

•

NEW YORK IUPI )-The
Kentucky Sta te basketball
team, passed up by the
National Invitation Tournament
despite itS 31-2 mark, feels
some of the nation's major
college powers may have been
afraid to play them.
CHAMPS - Athens won over Belpre in a three minute overtime Monday night to beat
Belpre 43 to 37 in Meigs Girls Invitational Tournament. Athens squad, front row, 1-r, Resa
Rosenberg, Jane Clark, Joan Kempton, Margy Baird; second row, Debbie Anderson, Linda
Hunsicker, Jo Wood, SUe Reed, Teresa Merriman and Judy Zipfel, coach.

SIG!IoiS WITH BENGALS
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) Tight end Cookie Brinkman, a 6foot-2 215-pound tight end from
the University of Louisville, has
signed as a free agent with the
Cincinnati Bengals.

" I think there was some
pressure not to pick a small
college," Coach Lucias Mitchell
said Monday after the NIT
completed its 16-team field and
passed up the NAIA champions,
who beat Eastern Michigan 10282 last Saturday for its second

Reds Drop 9-8
Tilt To Astros
COCOA, Fla. (UPI)-A steady
260-pound rookie pitcher made
the Cincinnati Reds a little
skittish.
Big Buddy Harris retired two
Reds batters with the bases
loaded in the ninth inning Monday to preserve a 9-8 Houston
victory over the Reds.
The righthander was the

Kowall, Vance
Head Dream T eam

DISPLAY TROPHY -Athens in a three minute overtime took the Championship in the
Me1gs Girls Invitational Tournament Monday night at Me1gs High School with a 43 to 37 win
over Belpre. Left to right are Mrs. Joy Bentley, physical education instructor and coach at
Meigs High, and tournament director, Jo Wood who tossed in three field goals to take the
tournament and Judy Zipfel, Athens Coach.

ers were veterans Jim Cleamons of Ohio State and Fred
B~
n of Iowa
All five were clear-cut choices
of the 10 conference coaches,
and three of them, Wilmore,
McGmnis and Brown, were
unanimous picks. Every coach
also named Cleamons and Witte, but some of them placed
these two on their second unit.
McGinnis was a standout all
season for the Hoosiers and set
a Big Ten record for scoring by
a sophomore with 418 points,

surpassing the previous mark
of Rick Mount of Purdue, while
winning the league scoring
championship.
Wilmore, at times the leader
in scoring, wound up third m
scoring with 390 points in the
14 game conference schedule.
Brown, described by most
coaches as the best pure guard
in the counti-y, was second to
McGinnis in scoring and the
only other player to go over 400 '
points with 404 for the season.

UCLA Is Crowned UPI Champ
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- Although they may not want it,
the UCLA Bruins have the
endorsement of Bob Boyd.
Boyd, whose University of
Southern California Trojans lost
the Pacifie-S title to the Bruins
Saturday, picked John Wooden's
club to win its fifth consecutive
NCAA championship.
"I don't want to put the
Bruins on the spot," Boyd told
the Southern California basketball writers Monday. "But if I
had to pick one team from the
remaining 16 teams, they would
be my choice."
An 11-point winner over the
Trojans to complete the tough
Pacific-8 schedule with an
unbeaten record in 14 games,
the No. 1-ranked UCLA faces
Brigham Young in the semifinals of the Western regionals
Thursday night.
In the other semifinal game,
Cal State Long Beach goes
against Pacific.
"I'm not overconfident but I
don't lack confidence either,"

Witte, who developed fast in
the late season for the conference champion Buckeyes, tied
for llth in sconng with 262
points, wh1le Cleamons, hampered by a wrist injury in late
season, still tallied 214 points to
finish in the top 20 scorers.
Both Brown and Cleamons
were on the second all conference team last year.
Named to the second team by
the coaches were Bob Ford of
Purdue, Sophomore Jim Brewer of Minnesota, sophomore
Alan Hornyak of Ohio State,
senior Clarence Sherrod of Wisconsin, and senior Rick Howat
of Illinois.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ken
Kowall of Ohio University,
earlier named player of the
year of the Mid-American
Conference, and Ruben Vance
of Kent State head the All-MAC
basketball team.
Kowall, who led the league in
scoring, and Vance, who led the
Flashes with a 21.9 points per
game scoring average, were
unanimous selections for the
dream team in balloting by
conference coaches.
Kowall led all MAC scorers
with a 22.6 per game average.
He set a new single season mark
for Ohio u. with 502 points.
Also named were Craig Love
of Ohio u., Earl Jenkins and
Chuck washington of Western
Michigan and Tom Kozelko of
Toledo.
The second team consists of
Mike Wren and Darrel Dunlap
of Miami, Jim Connally and
Rich Walker of Bowling Green,
and Roger Evans of Kent.

sixth Astro pitcher as he came
to the rescue of lefthander Rick
Evans . Harris retired Angel
Br avo on a pop-up and got
Jimmy Stewar t to hit into a
game-ending force.
The Reds had jumped out to
an 8-5 lead in the seventh when
Da rrel Chaney slammed a
three-run homer and four other
Cincinna ti runs scored.
But Houston came back in
the eighth to put four runs
across a nd regain the lead.
Houston's Larry Dierker
worked the first five innings,
giving up one run on three
hits. Milt Wilcox pitched the
first five for the Reds and was
touched for three runs.

Monday's Fight Results
By United Press International
PARIS (UPI) -Billy Backus,
148~~. Syracuse, N. Y., outpointed Robert Gallois, 147 1 4,
France (10.).
TAMPA, Fla. (UPil Lorenzo
"Boom
Boom"
Trujillo, 130, Houston, outpointed Nestor Rojas, 130,
Venezuela (10).

MALOCHE SUMMONED
CHICAGO (UPI)-The Chicago Black Hawks of the National
Hockey League Monday recalled goalie Giles Maloche
from their Flint, Mich., farm
club after learning that alterPACKERS SIGN TWO
nate goalkeeper Gerry DesjarGREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)- dins has been lost for the
The Green Bay Packers of the season with a broken arm he
National Football League Mon- suffered Sunday.
day announced the signing of
two draft choices-Win Headley, a center from Wake Forest
and Leonard Garrett, a . tight
This Week's Specia l
end from New Mexico Highlands. The Packers also signed
free agents Ricky Gunnels, a
linebacker from Texas El Paso
and kicker John O'Dell from
Parsons College.

straight NAIA crown. Only one
of the nation's top 20 teams13th ranked North Carolina-is
in the field but Kentucky State
was still bypassed.
"Some of the big schools
don't want to play a small
college," Mitchell said. "We
could have won it, we had the
team to do it. If they chose a
small college, they might have
trouble in selections from the
larger schools. But teams like
ours only come along every five
years or so."
Kentucky State, led by 7-foot2 Elmore Smith who's one of
the nation's most heralded big
men, was hoping to duplicate
the feat of Southern Illinois
when Walt Frazier led the
Salukis to the NIT crown.
However, SIU had the advantage of being an NCAA school
while Kentucky State is an
NAIA school.
Of course, the NIT officials
firmly denied Mitchell's charge
that there was any pressure
from the major college teams
to keep the small college NAIA
club out of the tournament.
Ken Norton, a member of the
selection committee, said, "It's
not a case of leaving out
Kentucky State, it was a
matter of selecting other
teams. We weighed the merits
of several teams by their
schedule and records and
decided to select Duke and
Purdue as our last two clubs."
Duke was eliminated in the
first round of the Atlantic Coast
Conference Tourney and has an
18-8 record while Purdue wound
up third in the Big Ten and is
18-6.
The 13th and 14th teams,
North Carolina and Louisville,
v.erc the runnerup teams in the
ACC and the Big Eight.
The other 12 teams named
earlier were Massachusetts,
Providence, Tennessee, Dayton,
St. Bonaventure, Hawaii, Oklahoma, Michigan, Syracuse,
Georgia Tech, LaSalle and St.
John's.

Weis' power in beating Minnesota, 6-1, Monday Weis, who
hit one homer all last year,
connected with a man on to cap
a three-run second inmng off
loser Jim Kaat. Tom Seaver
allowed the Twins' lone run as
he issued four singles in five
innings.
Paul Popovich, turning into a
Cub hitting hero, singled home
the winning run in the lOth
inmng as Chicago edged San
Francisco, 8-7. There were
seven errors in the game,
including a rare three-base
miscue by Willie Mays. The
Giants outfielder, who has his
sights on Babe Ruth's legendary record of 714 homers, atoned
for his mistake with two
homers

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"Our strength is our deNo purchase necessary
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in the Pomeroy Bowling nament All-Star team. Named
tional major college national have the balanced offense we place
Association Tournament from to the team were Dwight
basketball champions:
had last year. But all our Feb. 26 through March 7, at t he Lamar and Roy Ebron of
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1950-51- Kentucky
"You'll Like Our Qua l ity
players are playing much
Paul Harris and Ed Voss, Southwestern Louisiana, Lloyd
Way of Doing Business ."
1951-52" Kentucky
better defense."
both employees of the Pomeroy Neal and Ted McClain of
GMAC FI NA NCIN G
1952-53- Indiana
Post Office, combined to win the
992-5342
Pomeroy
doubles match with a 1294 Tennessee State and Mike
1953-54- Indiana
Ph. 992 2094
Open Eveni ngs ' Til6 : 00
series,
and
Char
l
es
Green
and
Andy
Knowles
of
220 N. 2n d
1954-55-San Francisco
606 E. Main
Pomeroy
Ti l 5 .P.M . Sat.
Winebrenner shot a 718, with Louisiana Tech.
MIOOL EPORT
1955-56-San Francisco
Handicap to win the singles
NEW
YORK
(UPI)- The event.
1956-57-North Carolina
Un iled Press International top
1957-58-West Virginia
20 major college. basketball• their
scores including
handicap
A complete
li st of winners
and lll!!ll••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~'l
1958-59-Kansas State
teams with first place voles as they finished, follows (in
and
won
-lost
records
in
paren
order)
:
1959-60- California
theses (15th and final week) . •
TEAM EVENT
1960-61-0hio State
... Team
Points
The Big Five. 3131. and
1961-62-0hio State
326 Swisher and Lohse Drugs, 3040.
1. UCLA (29) (25-1)
2. Marquette (3) (27 0)
285
1962-63- Cincinna ti
DOUBLES
3 Pennsylvania (27-0)
244
Paul Harns; Ed Voss 1294,
1963-64- Cincinna ti
4. Kansas ( l) (25-ll
196 Clyde Sayre Pleasant Ellis 1244,
1964-65- Michigan
5. Southern Calif (24 2)
174 Bill Wilford "Tom Clelland 1233,
6. South Carolina (23"4)
119 Rex Shenefield - Jack Carsey
1965-66- Kentucky
7 Wes tern Kentucky (21 5)115 1231, Jack
Peterson Hank
1966-67- UCLA
8. Kentucky (22 -4)
89 Clalwor•hy 1230.
1967-68-Houston
9 Fordham (25 -2)
80
SI NGLES
10 Ohio State (19-5)
51
1968-69- UCLA
Char les Winebrenner 718,
11 (tiel Jacksonville (22 4) 22 Charles Blakeslee 696, Bill
1969-70 - Kentucky
(tiel Brigham Young ( 19"9) Wilford 668, Gilbert Woods 644,
1970-71- UCLA
22 Bill Airson 641, Larry Dugan

Bowen's Was

Wooden said. "I think we've
peaked at the right time. On
the other hand, any team is
capable of beating you at this
point."
The UCLA coach, whose team
compiled a 25-1 record, said his
Bruins couldn't take Brigham

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• 13. North Carolina (22"6)
20 639, Kendall Dunfee 639, Bert
14. (tie) Notre Dame (20"7) 13 Bodimer 638, Harold Lohse 638.
(li e) Long Beach St (23 4) 13
ALL EVENTS
16. Drake (20 7)
ll
Charles Winebrenner 1978, Ed
17. Villanova (?4"6)
10 Voss 1904, Harold Lohse 1822,
18. (lie) Duquesne (21 4)
6 Clarence Boyles, 1812, Tom
(tie) Houston (21-6)
6 Clelland 1810.
20. Weber St. (21 6)
4

OH 0

The New York Mets, 1969
N .L. pennant winners, rode the
mysterious source of slender AI

NIT Ignores Kentucky State

Sophs Dontinate Big 10 All-Stars
&lt;..1IICAGO ft
soph mores do
all B1g Ten b
p1cked by the co
es for United Pre
al.
Rookies who were named to
the honor five in their first
season of college competition
were league-leading scorer
George McGinnis of Indiana,
Henry Wilmore of Michigan,
and 7-foot center Luke Witte of
Ohio State.
Completing the top five play-

a game-winning smgle 1n the
eighth.
Carlton had winning records
of 13-11 and 17-11 when St.
Louis won the National League
pennants in 1967 and 1968. He
correctly attributed his 1970
downfall to a preparation
failure caused by his long
holdout.

..

1

TONG HONORED
OBERLIN, Ohio (UPI)
Curt Tong, who coached Otterbein to an 11-2 Ohio Conference Mark and 18-4 overall
record this season, has been
named 1971 OC coach of the
year.
The Cardinals under Tong the
past eight years have collected
a 121-45 record and finished
second in the OC thiS year.
Tong, 35, a graduate of Otterbein with a Ph D. from Ohio
State, was twice runnerup for
coach of the year honors.

games.
As the las t Cardinal to sign
his contrac t th1s year, Torre is
paying early dividends on his
$110,000 contract. He took extra
ba tting practice each day after
his late a rrival and the results
are noticeable.
Torre ga ve St. Louis a 1-0
lead in the fourth inning with
his first homer of the game and
then .belted a two-run drive in
the se¥enth inning. Pinch-hitter
Lero'n Lee broke a 3-3 tie WIth

M ORE'S
124 W. MAI N

POMEROY
PH. 992 -2848

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16, 1971

~S~ci~l-l

Wedding Vows

T~i~e!;,~~~c~"d~h Calendar
and Mr. Kenneth Dale Siders
exchanged wedding vows at 3
p.m. on March 6 at the DeVore
home in Marietta before
members of the immediate
families.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Randolph, Pomeroy, Route 3, and
the bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Leland (Jack) Stders,
Marietta, Route 6.
A reception honoring the
couple was held immediately
following the ceremony at the
home of the bridegroom's
parents.
The new Mrs. Siders is a
graduate of Meigs High School
and attends the Ohio Valley
Beauty School at Marietta. Mr.
Siders, a graduate of Marietta
High School, is employed by the
Marietta Police Department.
The couple reside on Third St.
in Marietta.
A belling and shower
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Siders
will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday
night at the Hemlock Grove
Grange Hall.

THURSDAY
CLASS 12, Heath United
Methodist Church 7: 30 Thursday. Devotions by Mrs. Carroll
Swanson; program by Mrs.
James Euler; hostesses, Mrs.
Earl Knight, Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel, and Mrs. E. M. Wood.
MIDDLEPORT
CHILD
Conservation League, 7:30
Thursday.
Guest
night .
Program, "Press the Button
and Be Seated." Names for
membership to be submitted.
JITNEY SUPPER, Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary, Rutland
Grade School, Thursday with
serving to begin at 4:30p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 1:15 p.m . Thursday at the home of Mrs. Fred
Goeglein.
FniDAY
SOUP SUI"PER, 4:30 p.m.
Friday at the Syracuse Asbury
Methodist Church. Soup, pie,
sandwiches. Containers to be
provided for take-Qut orders.

l

TUESDAY
SALISBURY P.T.A., 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, Fathers Night to
be observed with fathers to
count double toward room
award. Refreslunents.
MEIGS LOCAL Athletic
Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
high school. Program on
wrestling by Fenton Taylor,
Tracy Whaley, Refreslunents.
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., Chester.
Work in Master Mason degree,
all Masons invited.
WOMEN'S
AUXILIARY,
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, hospital
cafeteria, program.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
F&amp;AM, Tuesday 7:30p.m. Work
in Fellow Craft degree.
THIRD TUESDAY Club, 7:30
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Mabel Wolfe, W. Main St.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 8 p.m.
Tuesday at Trinity Church.
Miss Mary V. Reibel to have the
program.
GROUP II, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
7:30 Tuesday. Mrs. Don
Lowery , devotional leader;
Mrs. Myron Miller, book study.
HAVEN HOMEMAKERS,
7:30 tonight at home of l't.ll"s.
William Fields, Pomeroy.
Members take something for
white elephant ~ale.
WEDNESDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masons,
stated assembly, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m . Masonic Temple.
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons, special meeting
to follow Bosworth Council.
Royal Arch degree to be conferred on four candidates.
Refreslunents.
SYRACUSE THIRD Wednesday Homemakers, Wednesday, 10 a.m. at headquarters
with "Chair Caning" topic of
program. Hostesses, Eleanor
Bohram, Agnes White, Mabel
Pickens, potluck at noon.
POMEROY Community
Lenten service, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, the Rev. Bill
Perrin and Envoy Ray Wining
m charge.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7:30 Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. U oyd Moore.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
COMMUNITY
Lenten service, 7:30 p.m., St.
Paul Lutheran Church, Rev.
Stanley Plattenburg speaking.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary
Club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
home of Mrs. Harold Sauer.
Mrs. Sauer and Mrs. Maxine
Philson will give the reviews.
THURSDAY
ANNUAL BIRTHDAY observance of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion, 6
p.m. dinner followed by
program.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 p.m. home of Mrs. W. A.
Morgan.
THURSDAY
REVIVAL,
POMEROY
Lower Light Church, Thursday
through Sunday, March 28, Rev.
Raymond Rice, Byesville,
speaking, 7:30 each evening.
Public invited.
SOUTHERN LOCAL School
Board, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
high school, Racine.

'71 SENIORS
FOR A BffiER JOB, SOONER - GO
TO BUSINESS COLLEGE
Please mail the GBC Catalog to
Name·---------------------Address---------------------One - and Two - Year Courses Available

·.

No need for you to incur room &amp; board costs
awa y from home - you can drive daily to GBC
from any point in Meig s County.
GBC is approved by th e Ohio State Board of
School and Coll ege Registration . Credit s
earned are transferrable to many four y ear
colleges.
G B C standards are high and will get you to an
ex ce llent position!

Middleport PTA Meets

Replicas of the little red
schoolhouse were used as pin·
ous for the instruction night
observance of Harrisonville
Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star.
Past matrons and past
patrons were presented and
escorted to the East. Mrs.
Avanelle George, worthy
matron, announced initiation
for the next meeting when
there will be a homemade
candy sale with proceeds to
go to one of the special
projects of the worthy grand
matron.
A rummage sale was
planned for April!, 2 and 3 in
the Booth building in
Pomeroy. Get-well cards will
be sent to members who are
ill. The group sang "Happy
Birthday"
to
several
members. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Joan
Stewart, Mrs. Donna Lathey,
Mrs. Janet Bolin, and Mrs.
Grace Turner.

A letter-writing campaign to
Congressman Clarence E.
Miller regarding federal funding for the Meigs County bookmobile service was suggested
by Mrs. Larry Spencer,
president, at the Middleport
P.T.A. meeting Monday night.
Mrs. Spencer reported to the
P.T.A. on her trip to Columbus
last week as a delegate of the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers to the
legislative seminar of the Ohio
P.T.A. All phases of school
financing
and
outreach
procedures in local communities were discussed.
Mrs. Don Reuter, Mrs.
Thomas Kelly and Mrs. Jean
Thomas were appointed to the
nominating committee with the
new officers to be installed next
month.
The spring conference of the
District 16, Ohio P.T.A., to be
held on May 1 at the Pomeroy
Elementary School was noted
and it was reported that Mrs.
Bernice Carpenter has charge
of the cultural arts program for
the Middleport school. Children

If uou don't know the
difference between a lawyer and a barrister,
you'll wise-up when you
get the bilL.

are working on projects which
will be displayed at the school
and judged prior to the April
P.T.A. meeting. Winners in
school competition will have
their entries exhibited at the
spring conference and at the
County Council meeting at
Letart Falls, also to be held in
May.
An Easter egg sale and bake
sale was planned for the
Saturday before Easter at the
Western Auto Store. Orders for
colored eggs will be taken prior
to the day of the sale. Proceeds
will be divided between the nine
rooms in the elementary school.
Mrs. Manning Kloes is ways
and means chairman.
The second grade of Mrs.
Sara Rupe won the $5 attendance award. Mrs. Max
Donahue, program chairman,
introduced the Community Soul
Inspirations. Directed by Mrs.
Harvey Van Vranken, the 14
Meigs High School students in
blue and white costuming sang
"I Am an American," "What
the World Needs Now is Love,"
"Mountain High, Valley Low,"

"Let There be Peace on Earth,"
"Aquarius," and "Let the
Sunshine In."
Brownie Troop 87 led in the
pledge to the flag w1 th group
singing of "America" opening
the meeting. Refreshments
were served by the second
grade homeroom mothers.
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Jennifer Taunton's first birthday ~as c.e lebrated Sunday with
a party - at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Taunton, Middleport. Guests
were Jennifer's grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Wright of
Nelsonville; Mrs. Jack Bechtle,
Miss Sarah Bechtle, and Mr.
and Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
Middleport.

WALTON IS SPEAKER
Kermit Walton of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church was guest speaker at a
recent meeting of the Men 's
Brotherhood of the Enterprise
Church held at the home of
Eldon Weeks when a countywide
brotherhood
was
discussed. Attending were the
Rev. William Airson, Marvin
Spencer, Ed King, Ralph
Spencer, Ed Bowen, Carl
Jennings, James Will. Refreshments were served.

SON BORN MAR. 5
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Lee
McKinney, 85 South Second
Ave., Middleport, are a.iJ
nouncing the birth of a so'?r,
Jerry David, 7 lb., 10 oz.,
Friday, March 5 at the Holzer
Medical Center. Grandparents
are Rev. and Mrs. Audrey
Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
McKinney, Middleport. Mr. and
Mrs. Burdell S. McKinney of
Point Pleasant and Mrs. Estella
Casterline, New Philadelphia,
are great-grandparents.
1-

People On The Go ...
go for Dairy Valley
Young or Old ... For Smiles
All Around and Prices to Please.

ATTEND FUNERAL
Miss Genevieve Stobart, Mr.
and Mrs. Eldon Weeks and Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Bowen attended
the funeral services for the Rev.
A. 1'.. Grueser at Grove City.
John Weeks of Reynoldsburg
came for Miss Stobart and his
parents who returned Sunday
with the Bowens.

DAIRY VALLEY
992-2556
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

OUR 30TH
MARCH 18 • 19 • 20 • 22 • 23
BLACK &amp; DECKER TOOLS
PREFINISHED PANELIN ~DRILL
Carolina Spice·········-·····-····$2.79 II~ ~i~
BEST SELECTION IN TRI-COUNTY AREA

NO. 7000
l4 DRILL &amp; ACCESS. KIT

STANLEY

#7510

•
I

24
(COUPON DAYS)

T~;~~oAi~~~:~~~~Es

H~~~~~H~~~~,

FREE- ANNIVERSARY SALE

Sandstone---······-··············-··$4.65....
~~~~~~.........,
Fawn CheStnUt -·-···-······-·$4 •35
CoI. Birch --························ $6.95
s4 68
Bur lw ood·········~:~::7::::::··········· $8.95 ~: :~~ ~~~~ 8~HE
Mil_REs_Aw_co_MPL_ETE_ _
EV AHS REDLINE STYLE BOARD
MARBLELIZED PLASTIC FINISH
FOR KITCHEN &amp; BATH

VALUABLE COUPON
THIS COUPON WORTH

-10% DISCOUNT

ON ALL SPINDLE-FLEX
PURCHASES DURING

CREAMO BLUE

N

INDOOR - OUTDOOR

CARPET s2.50

SQ. YD.

6' &amp; 12' WIDTHS

52 Gal.
ELECTRIC WATER HEATER

SPECIAL $64.95
INSULATIONS VALUES
2J2" THICK15"

WIDE 100

ROLL

SO. FT ..................... S5.00

so. fT ..................... S7.65
3Y2"THICK 15"WIDE 70 SO. FT .................... S4.48
3Y2"THICK13"WIDE 107 so. FT .................... S6.85
PER BAG ..............................

8:00 - 5:00

PHONE
675-1160

SPECIAL $19S.50
20' Extension Cords ..................... 99e ea.
SL 113 Light Fixtures
................ S1.59 ea.
.
SL 466-4 Light Fixtures............ $1.99 ea.
Y2" x 10' onduit ..................................

1.19

CEILING TILE
ARMSTRONG NO. 102
SMOOTH WHITE FINISH

evoe Wondertone Paint
OUR BEST GRADE - INT. WALL PAINT

PLUS FREE
PER CARTON

9 X 12 PLASTIC DROP CLOTH

64 SQ. FT.

WITH EACH PURCHASE

PRiME SIDING 12" X16' $1.~~,~~0
STORE HOURS
FOR SALE DAYS

ELECTRIC BAKE CLEAN RANGES

No Purchase Necessary

1Y2"THICK 23" WIDE 153

. POURING WOOL

ROYAL CHEF MODEL WCP430

BE SURE
TO PICK UP
YOUR TREASURE
CHEST KEY
MANY
VALUABLE
PRIZES
FOIL
FACED

4X

FOR SATURDAY- ONLY
FREE FURRING STRIPS WITH
EACH JOB OF CEILING TILE PURCHASED.

BE SURE AND
VISIT WITH OUR
CEILING DOCTOR

4 Ft. Alum. Stepladder 8.75
5 Ft. Alum. Step Ladder 10.15
6 FT. Alum. Step Ladder 11.50
New Platform Ladder 9.85
5.60
3 Way Ladder Tray

For catalog and full information, c.ut &amp; mail
th e coupon . No one will call or visit you; our
standards are high enough that w e donot need
to use thi s m ean s to obtain students.

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

Locus1 S1reet
Phone 446 -4367

36

Gallipolis, Ohio

&lt;;t:ltP

Reg . No 71 -02-0032 B

•

POINT PLEASANT,
312 -6TH. ST.

W.VA.

•

�• S-TheDaUyMirtii'i(M~c,l MEAT SPECIALS
VALUABLE COUPON

FR E

SUPERIOR
BRAND

•

One phase Ill Deodorant Bar
Bath Size when you buy
Two Bath Size Bars at

QUALITY
LOW

WITH THIS COUPON

c

I.
B.
•

GIANT SIZE (22 fl. oz.)

'f)

WI EN ERS....~.~~~.~.~.~.~~..................1~·. 49¢
SPARE
R
I
BS
.
~-~~~.~:.~~-~-· .........!~:59~
•
LU NCH MEAT.~~-~-~-~~~~~---· .....!~:.. 79¢
NECK BON ES...~~~~············· 5 $1
lb.

PORK CUTLETS.:~~~.~:.~.~.~~.:...'~. . 79~
STEW MEAT..~~~~-~-~~.~-~.~.~~......~~: 79¢
GROUND BEEF.~.~~;-~.~.~f.......!~: 69¢
GROUND CHUCK.;~~~!:~~.....!~: 79¢

39¢

PRICE WITHOUT COUPON IS

65•

LIMIT 1 COUPON PER BOTTLE

MARK V STORE

Redeemable only at

3-21-71

Expires.

~Frozen

THURSDAY ONLY!

SUPERIORS

•

DISHWASHING
LIQUID

i'IID

..L/Ovr;/
WITH THIS
COUPON

.

•

49~

FOR

MARK V STORE

Redeemable
only a t . _

PRICE

2

LIMIT-I FREE BAR
PER COUPON

.TENDER
SMOKED

BEST

]~

FAVORITE

Bacon
Ends &amp; Pieces
3 1b. 5 9~

8 PAK

6

box

BREAD
loaves
00
for

1

Foods
SALE!

~

• ...........................~~-~-oz...39~
0range JuIce
Cream PieS..~'~-~~~~~~~~~.............. 4 $1
Turkey Cutlets.~~.~:.~~~~ ...............~k.~~~.l 25
12

BIRDSEYE

•

BANQUET

For

"ON COR"

•

BOOnf BRAND

SCOT LAD JUMBO

PAPER
TO W ELS

Ocean Perch

3 $1
Rfiorolls

lb.

ss~

·-----------~-----------------------

•

SCOT PRIDE
WRlGL£Y'S

CHEWING

•

!~39

¢

ICE MILK

U. S. Grade A Small

Variety of

EGGS

GUN\

3

~:~

Flavors
Gallon

1.00

OYSTER
~: STEW
~ fl~l,

=
~

UNCOLA SPECIAL

7-UP
DIET OR REGUl.Atl

3 9e

can

~

49~

COFFEE
3 lb.

1/Jlt

.fLORIDA
5 lb.bag

MAXWELL HOUSE
HILTON'S FAMOUS

89

Rich In Vitamin C

TOMATOES

2.39

FIRM
RED Rl PE

3

POUND
BASKET

69~

SCOT LAD
MIX OR MATCH

Apple Sauce - Spinach .
Whole Kernel Com
Gr. Beans - Pears
Shellie Beans

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

PHONE: 992-3480
" We Res erve The R,ght To Limit Ouontltl e s"

P

.

MIDDLE. ORT, 0.

�6~ The Dailv Sel'ltinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

0., March 16,1971

Bargains., Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
Card of Thanks
WE WISH to extend our mcere
thanks to all who donaled and
attended our pancake supper.
Your support made it a
success.
Salem Center P.T.A.
3-16-ltc

LEGAL NOTICE

..,,
.....•
....'•'•

LEGAL NOTICE
Jack M. Matich, whose
,-esidence is unknown ; Irene M.
Matich, whose residence is
unknown to the plaintiff, and·
The Unknown Heirs of Jacob
Schaefer, deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Edward
Schaefer, deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Emma
Schaefer Ashworth, 'deceased;
The Unknown Heirs of F Iorence
Schaefer Radford, deceased,
also known as Flora Schaefer
Radford; The Unknown Heirs of
Edward Schaefer, deceased,
grandson of Jacob Schaefer,
deceased; The Unknown Heirs
of Ethel S. Archer, deceased.
The Unknown Heirs of Gus
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Elmer
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Elza Ash·
worth, deceased ; The Unknown
Heirs of Elmer Ashworth,
deceased; The Unknown Heirs
of Mabel Ashworth, deceased;
The Unknown Heirs of Dayton
Ashworth, deceased; The
Unknown Heirs of Otho Ashworth. deceased; The Unknown
Heirs of Amanda Schaefer
Goeglein,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Louise
Goeglein Matich, deceased;
The Unknown Heirs of Mike
Matich, also known as Michael
Matich ,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Dorothy
Radford Croy, deceased, will
take notice that they have been
sued by the Director of High .
ways of the State of Ohio, who
has instituted a proceeding in
the Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, to ap.
propriate certain property
described hereafter for highway purposes, namely the
making, construction or im
provement of State Route No.7,
Section 6.3.4, Meigs County,
Ohio, and to fix the value of said
property. The property sought
to be appropriated is more
specifically
described
as
follows:
DESCRIPTION OF THE
PARCEL OF LAND
AND ESTATE, INTEREST
OR RIGHT THEREIN
APPROPRIATED
The followmg parcel, located
in Town 2, Range 13, Section
Fraction 6, Salisbury Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, lying on the
left and right side of the cen
terline of a survey made by the
Department of Highways, and
recorded in the records of Meigs
County, Ohio, and being more
fully described as follows:
PARCEL NO. 1170-WL
(HIGHWAYf
ALL RIGHT, TITLE AND
INTEREST IN FEE SIMPLE,
INCLUDING LIMITATION OF
ACCESS,
IN
THE
FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
PROPERTY
Commencing at the northwest
corner of Fraction Section 6,
said point also being the true
place of beginning of the
following described tract of
land
Thence along the North line of
sa 1d traction s
o bearing
So1.. h 87 degree
u es 49
sec. nd, Fast
of
39.s 6 fe • to a
t
ber g 26.41 fee
.4.41 pus 14.30,
degrees 41 mir
West a distance
4(.; feet to
a point on the southerly l1rrited
access right of way of Meigs 7
6.15, said point being 270.42 feet
right of Station 440 plus 48.89;
thence along said right of way
bearing South 66 degrees 04
minutes 32 seconds West a
distance of 443.87 feet to a point
on the west Iine of Fraction
Section 6, said point being 265.00
feet right of Station 435 plus
71.09; thence along said fraction
line bearing North 3 degrees 41
minutes 24 seconds East a
distance of 355.06 feet to the true
place of beginning, containing
2.304 acres, more or less, of
which the present road occupies
0.002 of an acre.
This description prepared by
Theodore W. Sushka, P. E.
34792, for the Ohio Department
of Highways in 1970, and is
based on a survey made by
Richard
C.
Glasgow,
Registered Surveyor No. 5161.
Owners claim title by in ·
strument of record in Deed
Book 50, Page 99, County
Recorder's Office.
Together with all riqhts or
easements of access or or from
said limited access highway,
from or to the land of said
persons abutting upon that
portion of said limited access
highway, between the following
points
From a point 265 feet right of
centerline Station 435 plus 71.09
to a point 270.42 feet right of
centerline Station .440 plus 48.89
as shown by the plans of said
improvement herein referred
to. Said stat ions being the
Station numbers as stipu lated in
the hereinbefore mentioned
survey.
Said persons named or noted
above sha ll further take notice
that unless they answer on or
before Saturday. the 17th day of
April, 1971, they will be deemed
to have waived their right to
answer, and the Petition will be
taken as true and Judgment will
be rendered accordingly.
P. E. Masheter
Director of Highways
(2) 23 (3) 2, 9, 16, 23. 30, 6tc

GUESTS AT DINNER
Mrs. Helen Skeens and
children, Terry, Homer, Candy
and Jimmy of Charleston; Miss
Lmda Gibbs, Hartford, W. Va.
and
Carlos
Williams,
Charleston, W.Va. were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Walter Hayes and family of
Letart, Route 1. Other Sunday
visitors at the Hayes' home
were Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Hayes of Middleport; Mr. a nd
Mrs. Richard Hayes, Columbus,
David Hayes, Middleport, and
Mary Smith, Racine.

DAUGHTER BORN

WANT AD '
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Oay Before Publicatlor
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
Cance.llation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. fo1
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS ·
The
Publisher reserves the
1
r.ight to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectiol'lal.
The,
publisher will not be responsible!
for more than one incorrect'
insertion.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
~cents per Word one Insertion
,v,n1unum Lnarge

J':Jc.;.

, 12 cents per word three
consecutiv-&amp;. insertions.
18 cents- per word sJx con
secutlve Insertions.
•
25 Per cent Discount on palo
ads and ads paid within 10 day~.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word• minimur.l.
Each additional word 2c.
•BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 il.m. to 5:00 p m. Daily
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noor
Saturday. ·

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.

2 SIGNS
OF

QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1966 FORD FALCON 2 DR.
$995
6 Cyl. std. trans., all good tires, smart looking copper
finish, radio. Real economy in this car.
1966 FORD GALAX IE
$1095
HT Cpe., 6 Cyl. engine, std. trans .. air conditioning, good
tires, clean interior, da!k green finish.
1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE
$995
4 Dr ., 350 V-8, Turbo Hydramatic, power steering, disc frt.
brakes, good tires, vinyl interior, used commercial service.

Potner·oy Motor Co.
OP-EN EVES. 8:00 P..M.
POMEROY, OHIO

Notice
HOME sewing. Phone 992·5327.
2-23-30tc

Help Wanted
'

RESPONSIBLE person to work
established route. Good
commission ABC Cleaners,
Mason.
3-5-tfc

Radiator Service

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle !
'icWINSOR
«BUDDY

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

+

+

CLOSE OUT!

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES

v.

L

1------------------1

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

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

TELEVISIOI~

Pomeroy

REPAIR

EXPERT

All Makes &amp; Models
Also
Stereos &amp; Tapes
675-2241 or 773-5196

Wheel Alignment

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

J. Durbin- C. Inscore
Service Personnel

.Pomeroy Home &amp; ~uto

HARRISON ' S TV ~ND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
\
6-10-ttc

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

NEIGLER Construction. Fo'r
building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neig ler ,
Racine, Ohio.
'
?-31-tfc

\uto Sales

RADIO, TV, ••
SOUND SYSTEMS
•

Bring them in and Save
If it cost you $28 .00 to have
your TV set repaired you lost
money . If you had brough t it
to Chuck' s TV it probably
would have cost you $19.00
fOf' the same repairs. I hav~_.
no overhead to pay out so the,•
savinqs is yours.
Your -service men are
Chuck Humphreys &amp;
Scott Smith

CHUCKS TV

152 Butternut

Pomeroy, 0.

Open 9 Till 5-Six

~ays

1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr:
)EPTIC TANKS CLEANEDM,
hardtop, power steering,
'Ditching. Electric sewe,. '
power brakes, air, 18,QOO!
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
RALPH
'
S
CARPET
miles. Excellent conditfon.
Phone
John
Russell.
Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
Phone 992-2288.
G&lt;U li pol is 446-4782.
Free
estimates.
Phone
11-10-tfs.
4·7-tfc
Gallipol is 446-0294.
3-12-tfc
1964 CORVAIR Monza, good
condition,
$300.
Lowell
MEAT
cutting. READY-MIX CONCRETE deWingett, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, CUSTOM
livered r ight to your project.
Contact Richard Vaughan ,
phone 992-2922.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
phone 992-3374 or Dale Little,
314-etc
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
phone 992-6346.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
3-3·12tc
1963 DODGE 4-door, $300.
Middleport, Ohio.
Phone 992-3070.
6-30-tfcf
AIR
CONDIT
IONING.
Re.
3-14-3tc
·fri geration serv ice. Jack's
Refr igeration, New Haven.
O'BRIEN ELECTR IC Service .
Phone 882'2079.
Commercial , resident ial and
Real tstate For Sale
4-6-tfc
industrial wiring . Phone 247·
CONVEN 1 Ei'4 1 but sec.;1uded
2113.
epa ir
building lots on T79 at Rock ~S:=E::;Wr.I~N~G:=::M::=A~C:;:::H::;::::IN::::E:-S::-.-:R......
3-12-6tc
Springs. Within walking
service, all makes. 992-2284.
distance of Meigs High
'eA&lt;;K
HOE
a
nd
ena·u.Jader
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.'
School, a 5 minute drive from
work. Septic tanks installed.
Author ized Singer Sa les and
Pomeroy. Call or see BiJI
George ( Bil l) Pullins. Ptsone
Serv ice. We Sharpen Scissors.
Wit'e weekends, or after 5
992-2478.
3-29-tfc
p.m. weekdays. Phone 99211-29-tfc
6887.
SEPTIC tanKs cteanea. Miller
?.1.tfr
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph
Insurance
662-3035.
2-12-tfc AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? Call -992·
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
2966.
Complete Serv ice
608 East Main
6-15-tfc
Phone 949-3821
POMEROY
Racine, Ohio
FARM- about 170 acres, 45 for
Critt Bradford
cultivation, 2 wells, pord, 3
~- 1-tfc
barns, shed. silo, milk house,
roofing
and
corn crib, good 8 room home PAINTING,
spouting service. Richard
with bath, part minerals.
Wi It. phone 992-2889.
$20,000.
3-11-30tc
DO YOU earn a minimum
SYRACUSE- JUST 8 YEARS
of $14,500 a year?
OLD, 1 story frame, 3
DO YOU earn $100 per
bedrooms, bath, utility room, Real Estate For Sale
month car allowance?
carport, level lot. $15,950.
DO YOU earn stock op4 ROOM house, bath, 2 lots,
tions?
good location. Phone 992-2806.
POMEROY NEW ROOF,
DO YOU call on qualified
3-14-6tc
SIDING and CARPORT,
leads?
bath, 3 bedrooms, small yard.
$3,900.
DO YOU work for a wellHOUSE, .1640 Lincoln Hts. ,
TO BUY OR SELL
capitalized Ohio company
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
CALL US
where earnings and ad10-25-tfc
HENRY CLELAND
vancements are unlimited?
REALTOR
If you are looking for a job
Office 992-2259
- don 't bother to call.
Residence 992-2568
If you are looking for an
3-10-6tc
opportunity where earnings
George s. Hobstetter, Jr.
and advancements are
REAL ESTATE BROKER
unlimited ...
Phone 985-4186
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Call Collect
Phone 949-3211
FOR ALL your real estate
needs, contact us.
(614) 593-6661
Athens, Ohio
ACREAGE wanted between
Wednesday 1 p.m.-9 p.m.
Middleport ,
Ohio
and
Thursday 9 a.m. -9 p .m.
Broker
Cheshire, 0.
110 Mechanic St.
Friday 9 a.m.-Noon
3·12-6tc
PC?meroy, Ohio
(

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

.

Cleland Realty

ARE YOU
HAPPY?

I

HOBSTETTER

Virgil B.

Mr. Harold Curtis

TEAFORD
SR.

RURAL - NEW 3 bedrooms,
1112 baths, gas furnace, n ice
kitchen with dining area.
Utility room, cook and bake
units. Carport. 112 Acre. On
124. $19,500.00.
RENTING IS WASTEF UL.
SYRACUSE 4 bedrooms,
bath, nice paneled kitchen.
Furnace heat. Basement.
Large garden , $12,000.00.
SAVE MONEY,
BUY PROPERTY NOW.
ROCK SPRINGS SUB.
DIVISION - NEW electric 3
bedrooms , 2 fu ll baths ,
beautiful kitchen with din ing
area. Therm -o-pane windows.
Full basement. 2 car garage.
Lot 100 X 145. Have key, will
show. $23,500.00.
WE NEED VACANT
LAND NEAR CHESHIRE
75 ACRES - 20 tractor tillable,
30 in pasture. 4 bedroom farm
house. Implement shed, small
barn.
MINERALS .
$13,500.00.
MAY W E H ELP YOU
SELL, BUY, OR TRADE.
992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
AS SOC IATE 992-2378
3·12·6tc
Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps.
Auto.
water
level
control.
Lint
F i Iter or Power
Fin Agitator.
Perm a -Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat. No hot spots,
no overdrying.
Fine Mesh Lint
Filter.
We Specialize in
MAY TAG
Red Carpet
Service

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-4211

DOUBLE-WIDES

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

BLAffiNARS
Ph. 992,.2143

GOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR DRAFTSMAN

paid fringe benefits inc luding a liberal life and
hospitalization coverage.
Interested persons please submit resume
to Box 2 18, New Haven, West Virginia 25265.

~ALSO

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

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

Signals
Sign-Off

.. CHAMPION
*VAN DYKE

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

BEDROOM
house
in
Pomeroy.
Recently
remodeled, large
lawn.
Inquire of owner. Phone 9922619.
3-16-6tp

Response

South
I 'I

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

For Sale or ·Rent

THE FARMERS BANK &amp;
------------------SAVINGS COMPANY,
WILL PICK 'up merchandise
MIXED HAY, clover, alfalfa
An Ohio Corporation,
and take to auction on a
and timothy. Lester Keaton,
Pomeroy, Ohio,
percentage basis. Call Jim
phone Chester 985-3809.
Plaintiff,
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
3-14-6tc
vs .
Phone 742·4461.
Russell E. Lewis, et at.
9-23-tfc
Defendants.
GOOD USED New Holland hay
No. 14,817
conditioner . Harry Holter ,
NOTICE
24TH ANNUAL Hereford Sale,
Minersville, phone 949-4983.
Russell E. Lewis, whose place
25 bulls and 24 females,
3-14-3tp
of residence is unknown, Will
Southeastern Ohio Hereford
take notice that on the 13th day
Assocoation.
All
clean
REGISTERED quarter-horses.
of February 1971, the unpedigrees, both horned and
dersigned, The Farmers Bank
Pleasure, contest, racing,
polled. Saturday, March 20,
&amp; Savings Company, filed its
yearlings, bred mares, $200 to
petition against you in the
1971. Show 10a.m. , Sale 1 p.m.
$300. Phone 992-5883.
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
Rocksprings Fairgrounds,
3-14-6tc
County, Ohio, praying for a
R t. 33, three miles north ot
judgment on a promissory note
Pomeroy, Ohio. For catalogs,
in the amount of $3,253.94, with
MODERN WALNUT stereo
Notice
write to Lloyd Blackwood,
interest at 7'12 per cent per
radio combination. Four
Sales
Manager, Rt. 3,
annum from September 25,
speed intermixed changer.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
1970, and for foreclosure of
ATTENriON ladies! Would you
Four spea er sound system,
mortgage upon the following
3-14-3tc
like to try a wig on in the separate controls. Ba lance
descr ibed real property:
privacy
of
your
own
home?
$69.40. Use our budget terms.
Situated in the Village of AUCTION WHE:N? E::ach
You can. Just call us. We also Call 992-3352.
Pomeroy, County of Meigs, and
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
3-11-6tc
State of Ohio: Being Lot No. 502
Hayman's Auction House,
Kosco!, of course. Dis----------------------in the Village of Pomeroy,
Laurel
Cliff
on
new
Rt.
7
County of Meigs and State of
tributors, .Brown's~ . Ph9.1J§ COLONIAL MAPLE stereo·
P_omeroy-Middleport
ByOhio, and there is a I so conveyed
Middleport 992-5113.
radio
beautiful
Early
pass.
herewith, all rights with respect
12-31 -tfc American style, with AM-FM
to the use of the sidewalk bet.
2-7-tfc ------------------radio, four speakers, 4 speed
ween lots Nos. 502 and 503 as
was transferred to the Grantor ----------------~automatic changer. Balance
RUBBER STAMPS made to
WILL
t.;.IVE
piano
ana
organ
herein.
$82.30. Use our time payment
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
lessons in my home. Phone
Reference Deeds: Vol. 227,
plan. Call 992-3352.
or Wi Im a Casto, Portland,
992-3666.
page 987, and Vol. 168, page 371,
3-11-6tc
Ohio.
8-16-tfc
Deed Records, Meigs County,
2-12-90tc
Ohio.
You are required to answer SKATE-A-WAY,
Wednesday·
FOR LONGER wear keep
the said complaint within 28
night, Family Special. Free
carpets c lean with Blue
Lost
days after the last publication
family pass to family having
Lustre.
Rent
e 1ectric
namely on the 28th. day of April,
most
skaters
present.
Open
shampooer,
$1. Bc.kc· FurLARGE
black
German
1971 , or judgment by default
Wednesday, Friday and
will be rendered against you.
Shepherd.
Portland-Racine
niture, Middleport.
THE FARMERS BANK
Saturday. Private parties
3-10-6tc
area. Call Clarence Law&amp; SAVINGS COMPANY,
available. Phone Chester 985·
rence, phone 843-2815.
Plaintiff.
3929 or 985-2585.
3·16-3tc SINGER Cabinet Model Sewing
CROW, CROW &amp; PORTER,
3-14-3tc
Machine, equipped with dial
Attorneys for Plaintiff
control for zig-zag, buttonhole
(2) 16, 23, (3) 2. 9, 16, 23, 30, 7tc
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
Wanted To Buy
and fancy design work as well
leach beds. Phone 949·4761,
as beautiful slraight sewing.
farm and house,
10-18-~fc SMALL
Wi II sacrifice for $51 .60 cash
buildings, Meigs County area.
WIN AT BRIDGE
or terms available. Phone 992Contact Oris Frederick, 3221
NEW SHIPMENT women's and
5641.
Georgetown
Rd.,
In ·
children's
clothing
has
3-16-6tc
dianapolis, Ind . 46224. Phone
arrived at Jeffers Clothing
317·291-9130.
Store. Plenty of men's work
3 9 12tc ELECTROLUX
CLEANER
clothes also. Jeffers Clothing
large deluxe model. Complete
Store, Rt. 33 going toward
with all cleaning tools and
fairgrounds .
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
paper bags. Used but cleans
3-12-6tc
condition, as long as have not
like new . Will sell for $28 cash
been wet.- Paying $10 each.
or terms available. Phone 992First floor only. Mondays will
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, March
5641.
be pick-up day. Write, giving
21, at Racine Gun Club.
3-16-6tc
good directions. Witten Piano
Hams, bacon, steaks, pork
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
chops.
:SORTH (D)
16
Ohio 43946.
COAL, limestone. l::xcelsio:
3-15-6tc
4A8
8-20-tfc
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
¥ A932
-----------------Pomeroy. Phone 992-389f.
HOSPITAL
NEWS
Al06 4
4-9-tfr
OLD
turniture,
dishes,
bras~
Holzer Medical Center, First
oTeKJ7
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller, !.'--------------------Ave. and Cedar St. General
WEST
EAST
Rt, 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call KILL TERMITES and yard
4 K104
4Q2
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p .m.
992-6271 .
insects with Arab "You- Do·
9-1 -tfc•
II." King Builders Supply
¥Q 10
¥KJ75
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
Company, Middleport.
K72
• QJ85
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
2·21·60tc
... 98543
4t A 10 6
Pediatrics ward.
Employment Wanted
SOUTH
Births
4J97653
WOMAN wants housework to do
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Joe
in Pomeroy area. Phone
¥864
Chester 985-3900.
• 93
Fowler, Crown City, a son; Mr.
3-16-3tc
""Q 2
and Mrs . Ronald G. Webb,
Both vulnerable
Addison, a daughter; and Mr. Business Opportunities
West North East South
and Mrs. Thomas K. Woods,
1 N.T. Pass 2 4
RIGHT PERSON to manage or
Middleport, a daughter.
Every One
Pass
Pass
Pass
buy dry cleaning route or
Discharges
truck. Will sell plant and
Marked Down
Opening lead- oTe 3
building. ABC Cleaners,
Mrs. Phil A. Bowman and
Mason , W. Va.
Get the Big Discount!
infant son, Sharon Lynn Deem,
3-1 0-tfc
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Kenneth L. Dement, Mrs.
22 cu. ft. side by side
The North hand is a stand- Dwane
Frostless Combination, 19
Giles and infant For Rent
ard no-trump opening and
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
daughter , Mrs. Richard R.
has been bid from the time
Up. Freezer, 2-11 cu. ft .
th R H.
U N F U R N I S H E D 3. roo m
·
txon,
apartment. Phone 992-2288. Chest Freezers and E lee.
Oswald Jacoby first started G rueser • K enne
u sing point count no-trump Jeffrey A. Javins, Mrs. Keith
Dryer. Must make room.
Priced for fast sale!
Jeffers
and infant son,
1-31 -lfc
until today.
Back in the 30s, South Lawrence J. Jones, George TWO OR three bedroom home, .
would respond two spades . Mays, Mrs . Paul D. McGuire
POMEROY
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
This would be a one round and infant son, F. Keith Moore,
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
Phone 992·2181
force and North would rebid Mrs. Garland I. Plymale,
3-2-ttc
to two no-trump whereupon
South would sign off at three Joseph W. Rose, Eward A. TRAIL ER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
'h· mile north of new Meigs RECONDITIONED TV sets,
spades and sensible North Willet Jr., Mrs. Creighton J.
Williams and infant son, Mrs.
High School. Phone 992-2941.
For information or service
players would pass.
call Sparkle's TV Service,
I
Everett
E.
West
and
infant
3-5·
fc
phone
Mason 773-5933.
South wouldn't make three
spades. He would be one daughter, John Perkins, Mrs.
3-12-12tc
trick down but that would be Frank Weisenberg, and Earl FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments.
Close
to
school.
better than letting North Wilfong.
Phone 992·5~34.
Pets For Sale
play one no-trump and go
10-18-tfc
down two tricks.
MIN IA TU R E Schnauzers , ,,d
HERE FROM BEVERLY
Poodle puppies. Permanent
S tandard American bidHOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, garage,
Mrs. Roberta Mindling and
in jections and groomed.
ders have the same trouble
Spring Ave., Pomeroy. Also,
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
today but those who use Mrs. Wilma Styer of Beverly
3-room, bath, semi-furn ished
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
apartment and 2-room, bath,
Stayman land at the right were Thursday evening dinner
right. Phone Coolville 667furnished
apartment,
contract. They simply re- guests of Mr . and Mrs. William
3654.
Mulberry Ave. References
spond two spades and North King and family. They were
2-11-JOtc
required. Phone 992-6698.
will pass. Responses of two here especially for the in3-10-tfc 9
W
EEK
O
L
D
German
diamonds, hearts and spad es
Shepherd puppies. $10 each.
are all sign-offs . The no- spection of Evangeline Chapter, 2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
Rt. 1, Reedsville, Ohio, phone
trumper will only rebid if his Order of the Eastern Star.
Hts., Pomeroy. Phone 992667-3566.
5127 after 4 p. m.
no-trump is maximum with
3-16-2tc
2 ...
Pass
3+
3-2-tfc
good s upport for partner's Pass
Pass
4
¥
Pass
4
N.T.
suit.
Pass
5¥
Pass
?
5 ROOM house, furnished,
With a s uit hand responder
You, South, hold:
phone 992-2433. Mrs. A. R.
bids eith er the artificial 48 ¥Kl0765 +AKQ94 4tA2
Knight, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Stayman two-clubs to ask
What do you do now?
3 16 6tc
partner to s how a four-card
A-Bid five no- trump. This
major if he has one or he bid asks for kings, but also an- 60X12 TRA IL ER. Cheshire. No
chi ldren. Phone 367 7512.
j umps in his suit if it is a nounces your s ide hold all the
3-16-6tp
aces.
good one.
What do you do with a club
bust opposite a no-trump
opening when you play Stayman'? There are ways to
handle
this but in the
This position is at the local }&gt;-lant of a multiJACOBY MODERN version
p
lant corporation. The position requires the
of Stayman you ju'st pass. [f
applicant to have a minimum of three years of
your partner get s doubled
experience in general plant drafting.
you can sti ll run to c lubs.
If he doesn't get doublE'd
Position offers a good salary, company
just let h1m suffer

Mr. and Mrs. Owame Giles of
Ravenswood are announcing
the birth of a five pound
daughter, Angela Denise, born
Man:h 9 at the Holzer Medtcal
Cen tcr. They have another
daug ht~r, Tammy, age 2. Mr.
and Mrs. Randolph Ward and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Giles,
Ravenswood, are the grandparents. Mrs ..James :\-lurray of
Th•• l"drlinl.( IH•s ' "''"'
Middleport
is
a
great- \V•·'t
:\'orth
Ea,t
grandmother.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

.EXPERIENCED

For Sale
WANTED

1

Business Services

I.

CAR HOP and waitress wanted.
Apply in person, Craw's Stea~
House.
3-11-6tc

DISCOUNT still on: Continental, Skamper, Go-Tag·A·
Along, and Champion cam.
pers , trailers and motor
homes. Some here - more
coming; Don't walk, start
running to Gaul Trailer Sales,
Inc., Chester. Ohio. Phone
985-3832. P. S. -Res~rve your
rental unit for the coming
season NOW.
3-7-13tc

•

Arnold Grate

Rutland, 0.

I

TOWEL CLOSE OUT
SO BRAND NEW TOWELS-$5.95
NOT SECONDS BUT NEW UNWOVEN COTTON AND RAYON.
DELUXE QUALITY - PASTEL COLORS.

100 TOWELS only $10.95 - 200 for $20.95
-----OR---24 TURKISH BATH TOWELS-$8.95
REGULAR RETAIL PRICE OVER $30.00. BEAUTIFUL ASSORTED
COLORS. FULLY GUARANTEED DELUXE QUALITY.

48 TOWELS $16.95- 96 TOWELS $32.95
Enclose 25c for Postage With Each Order- No C. 0. D.'s
Samples Sent on Request. Please Send SOc for Each Sample.
Coyers Cost and Postage.

TEMPLE TOWEL CO.,

TEMPLE, GA. 30179 •

Home

jfMO ASSOCIATES
MR. &amp; MRS. HAROLD STEWART
260 Sycamore
Middleport
" We never thought we could
afford a new home. Not only are
our payments less than rent, but
we are now building for our
future instead of collecting rent
receipts."

;,1res Available
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 992-7034

�•

LOOK AT
THAT
PURTY
DOC PRITCHART -SHETLAND
AUNT LOWEEI.Y SAID
PONY!'
FER ME TO DRRP IN
HERE ON MY WAY
HOME FROM SCHOOL"/E HAD SOMETHIN'
FER ME
-

•
LE1i5 NOT TA[jc( MOOT Tt-11:'-

MtLLIOf\.l DOLLAe5 THAT
HONEYe.EE' FDUf\.lD / IT
DOESN'T 6ELO~e To US,

So LEftS RJT ITC:VT OF
~MINOS!

:f

Ll 'L ABNJ4.;H.

~ONA
MAN MAD,

HOW DIDOUR
''MR. PERFECT''
CONTEST COME.
OUT?

'WE FED THEIR VOTES INTO
OUR COMPUTER -AND
NORMAN CROCK'WELL--

PUBLISHER.
OF
'PLOWBOY"

•

caa...c::~
lt71 N~~.... ,...,.I"'C

w.,..d • ..,.. ""•....,.

WINNIE WINKLE
YOU SAID YOU'D BE
WORKING LATE 1
WINNIE, BUT I HAD
NO IDEA YOU'D BE
THIS LATe!

IM OORRY! _!!10M I
5lfT I WANT 60
MUCH TO HELP
TOP- FLIGHT OUT

OF ITB RUT/

fMYBE YOU'RE
PUe,HING YOURSELF TOO
HARD, DEAR!

IVE GOT 10, MOM! IF

:r:

DONT COME UP WrrH
50METHING PRETTY
SENSATIONAL, I HAVE

A FEELING I'LL BE OUT
OF A rJOB BEFORE. TOO
LONG!

•
•
THE BORN LOSER

MI'I'(BE I'M LOSIN' MY MARBLE'-3
~·B UT ALL I CRN SPOT ARE
THEM Cl.UMPS Q' tJUSHES "'

CONCEALMENT AND
S URPRISE RRE.OUR
O NLY HOPES AGAINST
SO DREADFUL R FOE
AS THE KRO~S!

•
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS

2. Russian
city
3. Hazard
4. Alleviate
5. Topic
6. Wander
7. Part of
a.m.
8. Performer
9. Boot the
baseball
13. From one's
own garden
15. Observed
17, Interjection
for silence
18. Spire ornament
19. Before

1. Gaze in-

•

DICK TRACY
1 WANT ONE MORE
TI-liNG -REVENGE! AND
AS FOR YOU MOLE_N_ _~"

•
TERRY

(E

•

•

JN A RELUCTANTLY
LOANEP WORLP ~---~=&gt;-tf--'---"r

!5ETTER HOLD THE COURSE CABALLO GAVE
UNTIL I'VE GOT SOME DISTANCE, OR HE'll
SEN[;&gt; UP HIS WHOLE AERIAL ARMADA TO
CURE MY IMPULSIVENESS.

WAR .JJ: FIGHTER,

TERRY TAJ&lt;ES
OFF FROM THE
CITY'S AIRPORT
WHICH A LSO
SERVES AS A
SASE FOR
CA!5ALL0'5
AIR FORCE .

tently
5. Baseball
deal
. - - - - - - - " " " ! ' " - - - • 1 0. Operatic
19 YEARS IN A CELL
highlight
GAVE ME ARTI-lRITIS, 11. Beginning
GOUT, HEART TROUBLE,
ofthe
ULC.ERS, HYPERTENSION
Fourth
A~JD GALLSTONES. TAKE
CommandHEED,
ment
12. Minus
3. Hoodlum's
gat
H. Film
beauty
(2wds.)
6. Scotch
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TAKE TASKS THAT YOUTH SHIRKED BECAUS E
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8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16, 1971

General, Colonel Charged
FT. MCPHERSON, Ga.
t UP!) A highly decorated
Army officer. contending
•·some generals c•Jnsider themselves God." formally charged
two of his superiors Monday
with covenng up the electric
shock torture of a woman and
the murder of five prisoners in
Vietnam.
Lt. Col. Anthony B. Herbert,
holder of the four Silver Stars
and other decorations for
service in Vietnam and Korea,
also charged Maj. Gen. John
Barnes and Col. Ross Franklin
with other coverups, including
the water torture of a Viet
Cong suspect.
"My part is finished,"
Herbert said after mailing off
the accusations against Barnes
a nd
Franklin
Monday.
" Whatever the Army decides, it
is up to them and all I can do
is wait and see."
Herbert said he had charged
Franklin with seven instances
each of dereliction of duty and
failure to comply with written
directives to report mistreatment of prisoners in Vietnam,
and Barnes with three charges
each of dereliction of duty and
failure to report alleged torture
and murder.
Barnes was the commanding
officer and Franklin the deputy
commander of the 173rd
Airborne Brigade in Vietnam

when Herbert was attached to
that outfit and when the alleged
mistreatment took place.
We're going to clean up the
Army from within the Army.
Those of us who really care
rather than worry about
whether we get a good
retirement, those men who love
the Army are going to see the
Army comes out of this fine.
''Those men who love themselves, of course, are going to
try to cover up in order to
protect what they consider
success, the fat retirement or
what have you.
'·Some generals consider
themselves God, which is a
fatal mistake," Herbert said.
Herbert said he personally
witnessed four of the incidents
he cites in the charges against
Franklin, including the murder

TONI JONES, OF BELPRE, NO. 00, with the ball, can do
it all, shoot, dri_b ble, feed. Here she works toward making an
assist in the championship game of the Meigs Invitational
Girls Basketball Tournament won by Athens High School
Monday at Meigs High. The wind-blown hair is owned by
linda Hunsicker, A!hens junior. See page 3 for more pictures
and report of the championship game.

h.! Carved.

JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

Boggs Decked
W\SHINGTON (UPI ) - An
angry Republ.can decked House
Democratic Leader Hale Boggs,
D-La., with one punch to end an
argument in the men's room of
a Wa shington hotel over the
weekend.
The blow was struck by
Edward A. Mitchell of Evans-

OLD CAR DRIVING
YOU

:
I

Died on Sunday
Miss Laura M. Bradfield, 78,
69 West Califorma Ave.,
Columbus, a Pomeroy school
teacher five years, died Sunday
at Riverside Hospital in
Columbus.
Miss Bradfield, a retired
associate of the Wolfe Wear-UWell Corp., was a member of
the Quarter Century Club of the
Wolfe industry and was a
member of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
Survtving are her sister,
Kathleen Bradfield, and a
brother, Bernard, both of
Columbus; five nieces, Linda,
Laura, Carole and Nancy
Bradfield, Mrs.
Richard
· Richards, two grand nephews
and two grand nieces.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p .m. Wednesday at the
Schoedinger State Street Chapel
where friends may call from 7
to 9 p.m. tonight. Officiating at
services will be Dr. William
Smith. Interment will be in
Sunset Cemetery.

MAD?

Calm Down, Brighten Up!
Steer Here for a Loan

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a .m . Tuesday
was 47 degrees under cloudy
skies.

Fee l like b ashing in that o ld car? And you've
re ally had it? Yo u need soothing -

ville , Ind., a former congressman, Mitchell's wife confirmed
Monday. The incident occurred
Saturday night during the
annual Washington Gridiron
Club dinner, a program of
satire staged by journalists and
attended by hundreds of Washington notables.
Neither Boggs nor Mitchell
could be reached for comment,
but Mrs. Mitchell told UPI her
husband was offended by
Boggs' comments cntical of the
Nixon administration as they
sat at the same banquet table
at the Statler-Hilton Hotel.
Mrs. Mitchell said the two
men eventually met "by
coincidence" in a men's room
and after more sharp words
Mitchell swung at Boggs. Boggs
"got knocked down and didn't
choose to get up," Mrs.
Mitchell said.
" Ed's a strong Republican,
and he didn 't like the things he
(Boggs) was saying about
(Attorney General) John Mitchell and the President," Mrs.
Mitchell said.
She said that when Boggs
returned to the table he
referred to Mitchell as "Jack
Dempsey."
CBS newscaster Walter Cronkite on his Monday evening
telecast reported Boggs later
threatened legal action.
Cronkite said Mitchell's nply
was, "I'll meet him in court or
in the gym if he's man
enough."
Boggs , 56, has served in
Congress since 1946. Mitchell
also was elected that year but
served only one term.
Mrs . Mitchell described her
husband as "60 but rugged." .

Grass Roots

Want ARC
WASHINGTON (UPI) Public opinion has "directed a
continuation" of the 13-state
Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), says Rep .
Robert E. Jones, D-Ala.,
chairman of the House Public
Works subcommittee.
The House subcommittee is
now considering senate-passed
legislation to extend federal air
to the Appalachia poverty belt.
"The weight of public opinion
has directed us to a continuation
of this program," Chairman
Jones said Monday, the first
day of hearings into the ARC.
The Senate last week voted to
extend ARC, despite the Nix0n
administration's plans to phase
out the commission after one
year and put its funds under
federal - state revenue sharing.

•
B rze
. s
... zn
1
~.f.

By United Press International

MEIGS THEATRE

talk it ove r. Yo ur Full Service Bank care s.

Tonight, March 16

WHEN YOU VI S IT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

Uibens ~alional ~ahk
~

MII)OI J:Pf)f?T

OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Me mbe r Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

i

SIN ATR A is
01 RTY DINGUSS
MAGEE
( Techni color)
Frank Sinatra
Georg e Ke nnedy
':o lo rca rtoo ns:
Mozambique
Summer Encounter
Supersonic Age
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M .
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
March 17- 18
NOT OPEN

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E -R squad
answered a call at the Mr .
Bernice Dars t home on Spring
Ave. at 1:08 a.m. Tuesday .
Darst was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital ' where he
was admitted for medi cal
treatment.
DIVORCE ASKED
Charging gross neglect of
duty, Esther Lynn Stump,
Middleport, has filed suit for
divorce from William A. Stump,
New Haven, W. Va. The
plaintiff asks for restoration of
her maiden name, Daniels .

I
1

..

·

COLUMBUS - HERBERT G. KLEIN, director of communications for the White House, says FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover
is "anything but senile" and there are no plans afoot to replace
him. "Mr. Hoover remains in very high esteem with the
President," Klein told a news conference here Monday. " I know
of no plans to replace him.
"I've talked to Mr. Hoover recently and I can assure you he's
anything but senile," he added in response to a query about ~uch .' k
report. Klein, here to address the Columbus Rotary and Kiwamr
clubs, also said there are no plans for a South Vietnamese invasion of North Vietnam with American participation.

This is the Day for Lt. Calley

THE REV. BilL KNIITEL of Portsmouth has been
named pastor of the Middleport Pentecostal Church, Third
Avenue. Pastor and Mrs. Knittel have three children, Trent,
12; Tammy, 11, and Tony, 10 months. The family will move
here as soon as a home is located. This Saturday night's
service at the Middleport Church at 7:30 p.m. will feature
singers from the Portsmouth Church. The public is welcome.

walked today through war's
grim dregs, over fields of blood,
over graveless men. I saw the
dead, the crucified, the
headless, the limbless, the
pleading, the crying. I saw the
pain, the waste; I smelled the
odor of rotted flesh. I saw the
children gathered round watching, naked, hungry,
weeping, diseased, dirty - the
baby trying to nurse from a
dead mother. The ruins, the
agony, the despair! Disaster,
disaster all around! Blinded
with tears, I fled down these
streets. I
stumbled, then
stopped. I shouted:
"Why, God? Why? Why do
you let man sin, hate, suffer? Unmerficul Father? God, art
Thou blind, art Thou wicked and
cruel? God, canst Thou watch
and do nought? Why must this
be?" The world grew silent. I
waited reply. The silence was
heavy. I started to tremble. I
waited long, half rebuking, half
fearing. Then I heard from
close behind me:
"Why, Man? Why? "
As Junior Leaders we can
make the difference.
We shall not pass this way
again.
Any good thing that we do, or
any kindness that we show,
Let us do it now!
Let us not defer it or neglect it.
For we shall not pass this way
again.

FT. BENNING, GA. - ON THE THIRD anniversary of a
slaughter that singed the conscience of a nation, the government
commits to six combat-tested officers today its case of murder
against Lt. William L. Calley. Calley damned his own defense of
muted mental ability during the May Lai sweep, the prosecution•
contended, when he took the stand and told of the complex though
processes he had as commander of an American infantry platoon
that hit the Vietnamese sub-hamlet.
The 27-year-old, 5-foot-3 Miamian, his face turning pink occasionally, scrawled random notes late Monday while the
prosecutor, capt. Aubrey M. Daniel, accused him repeatedly of
personally slaying "women, children, and babies." Daniel's
continuing argument today was to be followed by that of defense
attorney George W. Latimer in the wind-up summations on the
49th court day of the Calley court-martial. The defense contends
calley was following orders on March 16, 1968, to kill every livin.
thing in a village harboring only VietCong and sympathizers.

Traffic Blocked

Safe Streets in Columbus

Traffic near the intersection
of Route 33 and the Route 7
bypass at Rock Springs was
blocked over an hour this
morning when a tractor - trailer
ran into guard railing.
The department of Sheriff
Robert Hartenbach said the
truck stalled, then lost the air
from its brake system. The
driver, Charles Ishorwood,
Zelienople, Pa., permitted the
truck to drift backwards and
into guard railing , blocking both
routes. Two wreckers were
reqmred to remove the vehicle
from across the highway so that
traffic could proceed.

COLUMBUS - CITY COUNCIL has passed an ordinance
banning students under the age of 18 from the streets or public
places during the hours that schools are in session. Under the new
law enacted Monday night by the council and expected to be
signed today by Mayor M. E. Sensenbrenner, no person under 18
who was required by law to attend school would be permitted
elsewhere unless he had a valid excuse.
The exception would be if the person was accompanied by a
parent, guardian or other adult or "is upon an emergency errand
or other legitimate business."

Observance Set

,,
•
,
•

W

Nasty Weather, Elsewhere
HIGH WINDS SPUN THROUGH THE Great Lakes region
and upper Ohio Valley Monday and early today, causing extensive damage in Indiana. A tornado ripped the tin roof off a
manufacturing plant in Waynesboro, Ga., and floods threatened
river areas in the Midwest.
•
Squalls moved through the central third of Indiana Monday.
Five persons were injured in Shelbyville where winds blew over
trees and power lines, damaged a Junior High School building and
an industrial plant.

The annual birthday observance of Drew Webster Post
139, American Legion, will be Marxist Takeover Stopped
held at 7:30p.m. this evening at
MEXICO CITY -THE MEXICAN government said Monday
the post home on West Main St.
it
has
smashed a plot in which North Korea trained Mexican
The annual dinner of the post in
observance of the anniversary students as guerrillas in an attempt to overthrow the government
has been cancelled this year and replace it with a Marxist-Leninist regime. Attorney GeneraL .
because of costs involved, and Julim Sanchez Vargas announced the arrest of 20 Mexicans and"
there will be no speaker this said the search was on for 29 other members of a group trained in
year. Among the special awards terrorism at a North Korean Anny camp near Pyongyang.
''This group was trained by North Korean soldiers with the
to be presented will be the
naming of the Legionnaire of aim of imposing a Marxist- Leninist regime on Mexico," Sanchez
the Year and for membership. said.
The ladies auxihar) will
serve refreshments at the close 1~1ethadone Draws Criticism
of the evening .
WASHINGTON -METHADONE, THE synthetic narcotic
that suppresses the craving for heroin, should not be prescribed
by private doctors, the American Medical Association and th.
National Academy of Sciences -National Research Council said
TO SHOW FILMS
today. In their first statement on methadone therapy, the two
The Rev. Edwin McLeod,
powerful groups said there is danger methadone could get into
Belpre, will show films of the
illegal drug channels. In addition they said there are many acHoly Land at 7:30p.m. Friday
companying
treatment services that can only be supplied by
at the Bald Knob Freedom
Gospel Mission located on the special clinics or drug treatment centers.
"Methadone maintenance is not feasible in the office practice
Stiversville-Bashan Road. The
of
private
physicians," they said in a two-page statement on
public is invited.
treatment guidelines.

Elbe r fe lds In Pomero)!

Loungewear For
Spring
THE BODY SHIRT
Wearability is the key to our
body shirts. They move with you
smooth natural lines, tab button front, elasticized
waist with snap crotch. Wear them for lounging
at home and everywhere you go
great under pants and skirts.

FIRST FLOOR
LINGERIE
DEPARTMENT

and a low·

cost Automobil e Loa n. You need us. Co me in ,

--c.CINCINNATI

Eight Meigs County junior
leaders of 4-H made an excellent impression Mar. 12-13 at
Rio Grande College during the
Junior Leadership Round-up,
according to C. E. Blakeslee,
extension agent.
They were Mike Benedum,
Ken Bolen, Alan Holter, Janice
Holter, Margie Jeffers, Barbara Jordan, Mike Lawson, and
Sherri
Young.
Junior
Leadership Round-Up was a
conference designed for older 4H youth in local 4-H clubs who
wish to increase their abilities
in individual leadership as well
as group leadership responsibilities.
The Meigs County Junior
Leaders impressively
presented the following choral
reading during the round-up:
WHY? - I walked today
through the slums of life, down
the dark streets of wretchedness and pain. I trod today
where few have trod and as I
walked I challenged God. I saw
the sots in the barrooms. I saw
the prostitutes in the dance
halls. I saw the thieves as they
picked pockets. I saw men and
women devoid of life - living in
worlds of sin - and above the
din I whispered:
"Why, God ? Why?" - I
walked today down the lanes of
hate, hearing the jeers of bitter
men, hearing the names as they
cursed and spat - "Dago,"
"Nigger," "Kite," "Jap"; I
saw the dejected men they
stoned. I felt the anguish of their
cries. I saw them as they
slapped the lonely, as they
turned their backs on human
needs. Snarling, growling were
the fiends of hell. These, God
called His sons ! Gasping for air,
I cried:
"Why, God? Why?" - I

7\. T
1 ~ e ws

Hoover in High Esteem

Are Impressive

the LOve Ring ·K
people.

GOES LER

I

J unior Leaders-

PRESIDIO S£T

W e h ave Love Rmgs from Art·
Carved for p eople wh o know
tha t love is what a wedding i5
nil about. Our Lo"e R m gs are
al • fu Wh~:&gt;
choose

of four men and a woman, and
three instances of torture-by
pouring water down the throat
of a Viet Cong suspect, by
wiring a woman tp_ a field
telephonrro·Shock her each
time it was cranked and by
striking a suspect with either
the hand or a bamboo stick.
Herbert noted he was one
year short of retirement with 19
years of active service and that
no matter what course the
Army took his military career
was ended.
"If I had waited until I
retired, I wouldn't have been fit
to listen to," he said. "Somebody had to speak out and I
didn 't want people to think I
was in a safe category where I
could retire after making
charges."

Miss Bradfield

MIDI PETII-TWIRL
Colorful swirls and flowers with flounced hem
and elasticized waist. Black · Green · Red . Royal

Shop Week Days
9:30 - 5 P.M.
Open Both Friday and
Saturday9 :30 - 9 P.M.

ELBERFELD$

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