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                  <text>Rizer, Seho Going to Institute

I

f

I

I.

FRANKLIN RIZER II

•

•

Franklin M. Rizer, II, and
John David Sebo, Meigs High
School seniors, have been
selected to attend the 25th
annual World Affairs Institute
to bP held at Cincinnati on April
2 and 3.
Sponsoring their attendance
at the annual event is the
Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary
Club.
Preceding the formal opening
of the institute, the two Meigs
High School seniors will visit a
number of the chief cultural
centers of Cincinnati. Topic of
the 1971 institute will be "China
- A Major World Factor

During the Next Quarter
Century".
Following dinner Friday
evening, the two local delegates
will hear a widely recognized
American scholar conduct
presentations and coloquies by
leading authorities, outlining
main contemporary political,
economic and cultural facts in
Mainland China and projecting
emerging domestic and international policy questions
confronting both Mainland
China and National China.
On
Saturday morning,
present and future issues in
relations between China and

other countries, including the
United States, the Soviet Union
and Nationalist China will be
discussed.
Rizer is a two-year member
of the National Honor Society, a
member of the Arts and Crafts
Club, a three-time winner in the
American Legion Americanism
and government contest, a
National Merit Scholarship
semi-finalist, the photographer
for the annual staff, wrestling
team captain, an Eagle Scout,
and is principal nominee from
the lOth Congressional District
and the competitive nominee to
the United State Air Force

VOL. XXIII

NO. 236

Of The Meigs-Mason Area
THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

2,000 Men Rescued
SAIGON (UPI)-U.S. helicopters airlifted nearly 2,000 more
South Vietnamese troops out of
Laotian jungle near abandoned
Fire Base "Lolo" today.
Another South Vietnamese unit
was reported surrounded by
North Vietnamese after suffering more than 100 dead and
wounded.
A South Vietnamese spokesman in Saigon denied reports
that North Vietnamese forces
have forced the South Vietnamese to pull back toward the
border with South Vietnam.
"We have not been put to
rout," the spokesman said.
"Rumors saying the Communists forced the South Vietna-

mese back to the border are
completely untrue."
'All-Out Assault'
At Fire Base "Brown," near
"Lolo," beleaguered South Vietnamese forces were reported
preparing for what military
sources called ''an all-out North
Vietnamese assault."
Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam,
commander of South Vietnamese forces in Laos, said
government troops had maintained a 10-1 kill ratio over the
Communists since the Laotian
drive began Feb. 8.
Lam called the casualty
figures "a victory ... a sign of
winning."
Nevertheless, the 50 killed

i------------------ -~-------.
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tews .•. zn B rze
1

Award Withdrawn from Hope
NEW YORK -THE NEW YORK CITY COUNCIL of Churche , giving in I 11 essure from young liberal ministers, has
milv of Man Award from Bob Hope and
vo
to with~
y to Whitney M. Young Jr., it wa
instead give 1
learned Wedn
The Rev.
rd Neuhaus, one &lt;&gt;f the ministers who
challenged the eSignatlon of Hope, said the comedian was too
closely identified with military interests and had made no public
commitment on poverty, racial justice and peace.

Railroad Re-Evaluations Due
COLUMBUS- ALL LAND AND PROPERTY holdings of the
Penn Central Railroad in Ohio are to be re-evaluated by the Board
of Tax Appeals under direction of the Ohio Supreme Court. The
state's highest court ruled Wednesday the board followed
"unlawful" procedure in determining the railroad's property
value for tax purposes.
The deicision could result in new valuations on the property
and land owned by all railroads in Ohio if the board used the same
procedure in other determinations. "The board must consider not
only the earnings of a regulated public utility," the court ruled,
"but all other factors relevant to the valuation of its property,
including the cost of the property and the debit of the company.''

Secret kept Two Years

•

WASHINGTON - TRICIA NIXON AND Harvard law student
Edward Finch Cox were secretly engaged for more than two
years before the official announcement Tuesday night - and even
the President didn't know. "Eddie is my first and last love,"
Tricia said Wednesday.
She said that although she and Cox became engaged at about
the time of Nixon's inauguration in January, 1969, they did not tell
her father until last Thanksgiving weekend, when Cox asked
Nixon for her hand. The request was made on a Saturday night at
the President's Camp David, Md., mountain retreat. "I think he
(Nixon) was speechless for a moment," Tricia said.

34,000 Priests Petition to Wed
BALTIMORE - AN ORGANIZATION representing 34,000
priests in the United States asked the Roman Catholic church
Wednesday night to grant priests permission to marry.
The 209 delegates of the National Federation of Catholic
Priests Councils, largest organization of priests in the United
States, recommended an end to mandatory celibacy in a six-page
"statement of renewal." The document will be sent to the International Synod of Bishops for consideration when it meets in
Rome in September.

Higher Taxes Now Unlikely

,

and 80 wounded the South
Vietnamese repo:~ed in fighting
today near "Lolo" were the
highest acknowledged by Saigon
in a single battle since the
Laotian campaign began. The
spokesman said the North
Vietnamese lost 567 killed in
the same fighting, less than two
miles from Lolo, which is nine
miles southeast of the shattered
Ho Chi Minh trail junction of
Sepone.
Heavy overcast and rain
prevented U.S. helicopters from
carrying out an emergency
resupply mission to a battered
South Vietnamese battalion
under Communist attack southwest of "A Loui," 11 miles
inside Laos on Highway 9.
Field reports said the unit
was surrounded and had taken

losses of at least 100 dead and
wounded. They said the estimated 160 men still at the
outpost were ordered to "break
out of the position" but no
further reports were available.
South Vietnamese spokesmen
said 10,259 Communist troops
had been killed in the fiveweek-old Laotian campaign
with government losses of 860
killed, 3,235 wounded and 193
missing.
Casualty Report
The U.S. command said today
45 Americans were killed last
week and 156 wounded. It was
one more dead than the
previous week and down from
the previous week's 434 wounded. Three Gls were killed and
14 wounded in the U.S. air
mission over Laos.

TEN CENTS

Israeli Reject Peace Pwn
By United Press International
Israel's already-strained relations with
the United States took a turn for the worse
today with Prime Minister Golda Meir's
rejection of Washington's latest Middle
East peace platform.
Secretary of State William P. Rogers
said Tuesday Israel's security could best be
served by international guarantees rather
than territorial acquisition. But Mrs. Meir
said Wednesday night, "We cannot trus
what Rogers offers us, even if he does say it
with the best of intentions."
In New York, Israeli Foreign Minister
Abba Eban was meeting with U. N.
Secretary General Thant and U. N.
mediator Gunnar V. Jarring to discuss
possible moves in light of Israel's rejection
of U. N. appeals to withdraw from occupied
Arab territory.

1

By United Press International

•

JOHN SEBO

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The lnteresll

•

Academy in Colorado Springs,
Colo. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Rizer, E. Main
St., Pomeroy, and is a member
of the Asbury United Methodist
Church at Syracuse.
Sebo, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Sebo, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, is a member of Meigs
High School "Varsity M" Club.
He is president of the National
Honor Society and a past
master councilor of the Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMolay. He
has been on the staff of the
school newspaper three years;
is a two-year member of the
(Continued on page 10)

E verybody
Taxed Same

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON wants Congress to
increase Social Security taxes right away, instead of next year, to
pay for the new 10 per cent increase in old age benefits. If
Congress goes along, the increase would take $468 instead of the
present $405 per year out of the paychecks of those earning $9,000
or more. The $3.6 billion-a-year benefit increases Nixon signed
Wednesday would delay the higher taxes until next year . Nixon
complained such a delay could aggravate the nation's still critical
inflation problems unless it is paid for immediately by increased
revenue collections.
It appeared unlikely Congress would go along with Nixon's
request for added revenue. Many economists think the benefit
increase without a tax boost is just what the sluggish economy
needs. There are few signs of the strong business r ecovery which
Nixon predicted for this year.

Police Called to North High
COLUMBUS - POLICE WERE CALLED to Colnmbus North
High School Wednesday after a group of about 80 stude~ts refused
to go to classes. Two 11l-year-{)ld boys were charged with wrongful
influence on minors and seven other students were taken into
cus tory "for safekeeping"' until parents could pick them up.
The incident was belicvf'd involved in a police campaign on
teenage drug users called "Project Tripper." Police used the
school public addn~ss sy!-ltern earlier Wednesday to deny that
;;tudcnts were providing th~&gt;rn wi th narrws of s uspected drug
users.

Transplant Moved Up
A kidney transplant for
George C. Thompson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Thortlpson of
Pomeroy, may be performed
March 30.
Mr. and Mrs. Thompson
received a telephone call from
their 18-year old son confined to

the Cleveland Clinic informing
them of the possibility of the
early transplant. It had been
expected that the transplant
would not take place until
sometime in April. Mrs.
Thompson reported George was
in good spirits.

Jersey Driver in Luck
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach's Dept. investigated three accidents
Wednesday in which no injuries
or arrests were r eported .
At 8:04p.m. on SR 681, about
4.1 miles west of Tuppers
Plains, Arnold A. Waldstein, 22,
of New Jersey, was traveling
west when a tire blew out,
causing his auto to go off the
highway, then roll over three
times. The car was demolished.
Miraculously, Wa ldstein was
uninjured.

Donor of the kidney for the
transplant will be Mrs. Wayne
Roush of ljnlcre, a sister of
George.
Young Thompson recently
had both kidneys removed at
the Cleveland Clinic and it was
hoped on one or two occasions
that he might be able to come
home. However, his condition
each time cancelled the plan for
him to return to Pomeroy.
Meantime, under the sponsorship of the Winding Trail
Garden Club, a fund drive is
continuing. Response so far has
been excellent. Checks are to be
made payable to the George
Thompson Kidney Fund and
may be sent to the Postmaster
at Pomeroy.

At 12:15 p.m. on SR 338 in the
village of Racine, Linley M.
Hart, 52, Racine, backed his car
out of a driveway into a car
parked along the highway
owned by Ray E. Sayre, 78,
Roseville, Ohio. There was
minor damage to the Sayre car,
none to Hart's.
At 5 a.m., Bobby Joe Adams,
20, Racine, Rt. 1, traveling on
LOCAL TEMPS
Lebanon Township Road in a
Temperature in downtown
GMC truck, went off the high- Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a. m .
way and over a hill. There was was 36 degrees under sunny
heavy damage to the truck.
skies.

3 Project Freedom Meetings Monday
-

"Project Freedom" meetings
to outline the conditions of
American prisoners of war in
Vietnam and steps which are to
be taken, hopefully to alleviate
the situa tion, will be held in
Meigs County Monday.
Location for three of the
meetings will be schools - and
these sessions are open to the
public - while the 1vurth
session will be an evening
meeting at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy.
Coming from Columbus to
appear a t the schools will be
Commander Frank Poyet, state
cha irman of the Project
Freedom movement which is
designed to secure signatures
protesting the treatment of

prisoners of war.
Commander Poyet will speak
at Southern High School in
Racine at 10:15 a.m. Monday ;
at the Meigs Junior High School
in Middleport at 1 p . m . and at
the Eastern High School at 2:30
p . m.
To emphasize the Vietnamese
situation, a bamboo ca ge, made
locally through the Meigs
County American Red Cross,
will be taken to the three
schools Monday and will be on
display at the m eetings. The
cage was made in accordance
with official specifications
provided by the U. S. Navy and
is such as is used by the Vietnamese to confine prisoners of
war .

The Rev. Bill Perrin who is
county cha irman of the
""Project Freedom" program
will be in charge of the Monday
evening session at 7: 30p.m. at
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
His session will deal with
securing signa tures on letters of
protest and to map ways of
providing the some $200
financial burden resting with
the program. Commander
Poyet will also be on hand for
the Monday evening meeting .
Meigs County is one of the 54
counties in Ohio which is
organizing for one week in May
when signatures will be sought
on the letters of protest.

Medical Center where he was
treated in the emergency room.
He was examined by Dr. Kelly
Berkley who diag nosed his
condition as a chest wall injury.
The plaintiff says Sullins
r eturned to the hospital on
several occasions for treatment
by Dr. Berkley and Dr. Coronel
while in their course of employment with the hospital.
Mrs. Harbour further contends
that the decedent, on several
occasions, complained of severe
chest pains, pain radiating into
the arms and hyperventilation,
but on each occasion his
complaints were dismissed as a
chest wall injury .
On Dec. 31, 1969, Sullins once

again returned to the hospital at
which
time
an
electrocar diog r am was taken
r evealing evide nce of a
myocardial infraction a nd
placed under car e until his
death on March 25, 1970.
Plaintiff says his death was a
direct result of negligence of the
defendants and each of them in
improperly di ag nosing the
decedent's condition and failure
to use the ordinary skills and
diligence used by physicians to
determine the nature of his
illness. Other causes of alleged
.tegligence listed were :
( 1) Failure to timely diagnose
Sullins heart eondition; ( 2)
Failure to timely provide him

Welker Protests
Scalping of Fair
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Rep. Ralph Welker, R-Pomeroy,
said today Gov. John J. Gilligan's proposal to reduce the
Ohio State Fair budget by $325,000 a year will " scalp" it of
high-class entertainment.
"This big name entertainment, including Bob Hope,
Johnny Cash and the Supremes,
drew the crowds which helped
to fund the 4-H and FFA prizes
for our farm youth," Welker
said. "Without the gate receipts, how can we help these
kids participate in the state

S ieide

fair and build their interest in
this kind of responsible activity?"
Welker, chairman of the Ohio
House Agribusiness Subcommittee, said Gilligan's budget contends the fair fund does not
need all the money it has been
allocated because "big name
entertainment ... should be
self-sustaining."
"No budget that makes the
Ohio State Fair second class
will get my vote and I'll work
to keep the fair number one in
the nation," Welker said.

Rul~v~

in

McDaniel's Death

RICHARD GRESS

Gress Wins
Promotion

Dead today from an apparent
self inflicted rifle bullet wound
in the chest is Albert Edward
McDaniel, 44, of Rutland.
The
shooting
followed
beatings which McDaniel
allegedly inflicted on his former
wife, Barbara Haley McDaniel,
and her mother, Mrs. Worley
Haley, at the Haley residence in
Happy Hollow Wednesday
night. Earlier Wednesday, Mrs.
McDaniel was granted a
divorce from her husband in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
The two women told investigators that Mrs. McDaniel
had noticed her former
husband's car go past the Haley
residence Wednesday night .
McDaniel apparently parked
the car about a tenth of a mile
from the home and went to the
residence armed with a rifle.
The women said McDaniel
broke out a window pane and
stuck the barrel of the gun into
the house. They pulled him into
the house, after which he beat
both of them, they said.
McDaniel then left, and the

Richard P. Gress, master
maintenance man at Kyger
Creek Plant of Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation, has been
promoted to the position of
maintenance foreman.
Louis R. Ford, Jr., Plant
Manager , said Gress replaces
Don Galloway who was recently
promoted to plant engineer.
Gress joined OVEC in 1955 as a
maintenance helper and advanced within the maintenance
department until he was
promoted to master maintenance man in 1959, a position
he has held until his most recent
promotion.
Dick is a graduate of
Pomeroy High School and
served three years in the U. S.
Army during World War II. He
resides at 823 Pearl Street,
Middleport, with his wife ,
State highway patrol officers
Mary, and sons, Richard and
cited both drivers to Municipal
Mark.
Court following investigation of
an accident at 6:05 a. m .
Wednesday on Rt. 7, six-tenths
of a mile south of the GalliaMeigs County line .
According to the report,
with adequate treatment for metal objects · came from a
said heart condition ; (3) Im- tractor trailer rig driven by
properly diagnosing his con- Ronald Green, 27, Middletown,
dition as a chest wall injury and Pa., into the windshield and
providing treatment therefore hood of an auto operated by
which was contrary to his Rossland Stobart, 35, Midcompla ints, symptoms and dleport. Green was cited for
clinical findings; ( 4) Failure to insecure load . Stobart was
timely consult or confer with a charged with fa ilure to display
specialist in internal medicine registration.
Another Gallia
County
who was readily available and
( 5) Failure to take timely mishap occurred at 3:35 p. m .
precautionary measures with on Rt. J5 at the west junction to
respect to his heart condition . Rt. 160, wher e vehicles driven
Sullins expired at the age of by Freda Baugher, 23, Rt. 1,
Vinton, and Carl w. Polsley, 26,
35.
In addition to the damages, Gallipolis, collided. Baugher
plaintiff also demands a jury was cited for failure to yield the
trial. Mrs. Sullins was killed w a right of wa y . There was
traffic accirlent last summer. moderate damage to botl1 cars.

$327,000 Damage Action Filed
A $327,000 damage suit has
been filed in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court against
the Holzer Medica l Center and
two members of its medical
staff, Dr. Marcel Q. Coronel and
Dr. Kelly M. Berkley.
Mrs . Eileen Harbour, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, administratrix of the
estate of David E. Sullins,
deceased, filed the actwn on
behalf of Roberta J ean Sullins,
the surviving spouse (but now
deceased) a nd their fi ve
children.
According to the petition,
decedent David E. Sullins on
Oct. 24, 1969 fell from a ladder to
the ground , la nding on his chest.
He was ta ken to the Holzer

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Most American families pay about
the same percentage of their earnings in federal, state and local
taxes whether their annual income is an impoverished $2,000, an
affluent $50,000 or anywhere in between, Census Bureau figures
showed today.
Taxes- direct and indirect, obvious and hidden - take about
30 per cent of the income of the vast majority of American
families because regressive sales and property taxes offset in·
come taxes which are scaled to the ability to pay.
The biggest tax bite is felt by the poorest group of families,
those with income of less than $2,000 a year. They pay an average
of 50 per cent of their earnings in taxes .
But taken together, persons tax collections - individual
with income of less than $2,000 income tax, Social Security tax
and more than $50,000 account and the portion of the corporate
for less than 10 per cent of the profit tax that is passed along to
population. For the rest of the consumers in the form of higher
income groups, the total tax prices - generally rose with
percentage
is
strikingly income although there were a
similar: $2,000- $4,QOO, 34.6 per few exceptions and the rate of
cent; $4,000-$6,000, 31 per cent; increase was small.
$6,000 - $8,000, 30.1 per cent;
But, Miller said, state and
$8,000 - $10,000, 29.2 per cent; local taxes- mostly sales and
$10,000- $15,000, 29.8 per cent; property taxes ·- were
$15,000 - $25,000, 30 per cent; "regressive at all income
$25,000 - $50,000, 32.8 per cent. levels." The lowest income
Herman P . Miller, chief of the group, under $2,000, paid the
Census Bureau's population highest percentage of earnings,
division, revealed the figures in 27.2 per cent, in state and local
a speech prepared for the taxes. The rate declined
Conference Board, a research steadily as income rose, with
organization for commerce and the highest income group, those
industry meeting in New York. over $50,000, paying the
The text was released here.
smallest tax percentage, 6.7 per
The census found that federal cent.

Meml from Rig

Hit Windshield,
Hood, of Auto

two women fled to the home of a
neighbor .
The
sheriff's
department, notified at 8:45 p.
m., sent Deputy Robert Beegle
to the scene. He found McDaniel, in his former wife's car,
dead from a rifle wound. The
rifle was lying against his chest.
Joining Beegle at the scene
were the Pomeroy and Middleport emergency s quads,
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach,
Prosecutor Bernard Fultz, Dr.
R. R. Pickens, coroner, and
Rutland Marshal Bruce Davis.
Mrs. Haley and Mrs. McDaniel were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the E-R
squads. Mrs. Haley was treated
and released, but Mrs. McDaniel was kept overnight for
observation. She was reported
in satisfactory condition today.
A carpenter in construction
work, Mr. McDaniel was born
at Mason, W. Va. , in 1927. He
was preceded in death by his
father, Albert Eugene McDaniel in 1956.
Surviving are his mother,
Eutha, of Mason; a daughter,
Mrs. Joyce Ann Sterling of
Brilliant, Ohio; two sons,
Dwight and Keith; three sisters,
Mrs. Alice Clark and Mrs.
Louise Spires, both of Mason,
and Mrs. Ava Johnson, Sardis,
Ohio; a brother, Clarence, of
Rutland, and a grandson,
Bryant Lee Sterling.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p. m . Saturday at the
Graham Station Baptis t Church
with the Rev . Lloyd D. Grimm
officiating. Burial will be in the
Graham Cemetery. The body
will be taken to the church one
hour before the service. Friends
may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home anytime after 3
p.m. Friday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Ohio Weather
outlook Saturday through
Monday.
Variabl e cloudiness
Saturday with ~ chance of
snow flurries northeast. Fair
Sunday and l\londay. Highs in
mid 30s to mid 40s Sat·
urday. rising to upper 40s
north and 50s south oil
Monday. Lows in the upper
20s and 30s.

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�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., MarC'h 18, 1971

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

Miller, Harsha Sponsor
Environmental Package
amount will correct the national
waste treatment backlog and
establish an equitable and effective program to finance the
construction of waste treatment
facilities.
ESTABLISHMENT and
enforcement of water quality
standards - This measure
would strengthen and clarify
the authority of the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency
to establish and enforce water
quality standards as well as
providing new authority
relating to monitoring, surveillance, citizens' suits and
abatement of pollution from
hazardous substances.
ENVIRONMENTAL financing authority- This bill would
create an Environmental
Financing Authority so that
every community has an opportunity to sell its waste
treatment plant construction
bonds. The agency would be
authorized
to
purchase
I
obligations issued by state and
:
By Helen Bottel
1 local public bodies to finance
the non-federal share of the cost
of
waste treatment construction
Y mTH ASKED FOR IT!
projects.
This column is for young people, their problems and pleasures,
"This package of legislation,"
their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help Us!, it
Miller said, "would give us the
welcomes laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a brushnecessary tools to effectively
off.
deal with the pollution of our
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
nation's waterways. These
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper .
measures will help us control
THE TWAIN SHOULD MEET
water pollution by providing
Dear Helen:
states with the funds to parThere's only one thing wrong with this great teacher. The tops
ticipate in this nationwide
of her nylons come just a few inches above her knees, and when
program."
she crosses her legs, bends over, or reaches up, you can see bare
Miller indicated
these
skin and garters.
proposals would make available
Naturally the boys have a game. They drop stuff so she will
adequate funds and accessibility of capital to build
pick it up, see who can get her toreachhighestfor maps, etc.
municipal waste treatment
She's young ('ll) and cute and awfully nice. How can we
plants, and strengthen and
convert her to panty hose without hurting her feelings? -MARTY
clarify the present standards
Dear Marty:
and enforcement authority to
Sometimes it's kindest to be frank. A "great" teacher might
make the program work.
even thank you for the tip. - H.
Dear Helen :
I'm 14 and need help bad. You see, my mom told me tonight
that she would be leaving soon. She said she would rather be
tormented in hell the rest of her life than be tormented the way
she is here at home.
I never knew she felt this way, at least this strong. I've
packed before, but I've always stayed. We have family problems.
I've cried plenty of nights because of fights .
Helen, v.
Mom leaves there will be only me and Dad. I
Recent developments conkn w how
utI still need a mother. And he needs a
cerning
cigar
tobacco
mto tlus because ilil!y ·ght over me production in Ohio provide for
so mean and un-understanding. Do you changes in surrender and
suppose if I
y, they'd stay together? Or how can I get reallocation of allotment
them to see that behmd these tear-stained eyes, I love them both acreages, according to Dave
McKenzie, county executive
and want them here? - S. C.
director, ASCS, and Bud Carter,
DearS.:
Crying in the night- alone - doesn't help nearly so much as county extension agent.
Applications for reallocated
being brave - and understanding - enough to talk it out with
acreage of cigar binder and
your folks.
Ask your mother to read this column. Then ask her what you filler tobacco will be taken at
can do . She probably feels as estranged and guilty as you, and she the Gallia County ASCS Office
needs to know she is appreciated. That's the first step. Let's hope until March 26.
Gallia County farmers apyour father takes it from there. - H.
plying for cigar tobacco
Dear Helen :
allotment acreage would be
Here's my version of WHAT IS BREAKING-UP?
applying for acreage that is to
After all your hours of crying you still can't believe he's gone.
be surrendered in a limited
In school, you hide your face in your book so the tears won't amount from the Miami Valley
show when you start remembering all those good times you this year. The surrender and
shared.
reallocation is a voluntary
You feel you can't face anyone, but you know you must.
program and on an annual
You look the other way fast when you pass that corner where basis.
you always met because, if you don't, your mascara will start
Cigar binder and filler
running.
tobacco has not been grown to
You realize now how important are the three simple words, "I any extent in this area, but from
love you."
research available, indications
You turn the radio on full blast when "your song" comes on are that cigar tobacco can be
grown successfully within the
if only to drown out your crying.
county. Farmers must have
And you still say, "Why? Why did it have to end?"
I'm sure a lot of girls can relate to this. It's only too bad they adequate barns for curing, land,
labor and equipment available
have to. - H. S.

WASHINGTON, D. C. Congressman Clarence E.
Miller this week joined
Representative William Harsha
(Ohio-6th) ranking minority
Member of the House Public
Works Committee, in cosponsoring a package of four
legislative proposals outlined
by the President in his environmental message which
would strengthen water quality
and pollution control programs.
A summary of the principal
features of the four bills
follows:
STATE PROGRAM GRANTS
- This proposal would increase
the authorization for state and
interstate water pollution
prevention
and
control
programs, increase the grant
awarding flexibility of the

Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency
and add bonus incentives for
specific categories of program
improvements and grants for
special pollution controlled
projects. Increased financial
support would better enable
states and interstate agencies to
meet their responsibilities and
obligations which result from
participation in national
pollution control programs.
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
for construction of waste
treatment plants - This bill
would authorize' $6 billion over
the next three years to provide
the full federal share of a $12
billion program of waste
treatment facilities. A recent
EPA study indicated that this

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

!Helen Help Us!I

.....
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BY JACK O'BRIAN

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""=

Of the Bend

DOES FRAZIER HAVE A
ROCKY ROUTE FOR ALI?
NEW YORK - Jack Dempsey's cane and
difficult gait are from his arthritic hip. He has to
keep out of crowds .... Sen. Jim Buckley now is a
celebrity, officially : His birthday was listed in
the Celebrity Bulletin .... Old champ tennist
Bobby Riggs' daughter Dolly broke both legs
skiing. Swank Cushing Academy won't say
Hello, Dolly, to her for six months .... Duke
Ellington's nephew, Stephen Daniel James,
moved into a new East Side apartment, and his
mail is · all confused: another Stephen Daniel
James was there already ... Hank Perisi at
Gallagher's 33 handled a pleasant weirdorequest from New Jersey - for several boxes of
the spot's matches - for the 33rd anniversary
party being tossed for - you guessed it - folks
named Gallagher.
Fight historian Arthur Susskind tells us the
Frazier-Ali fight was "A playback of the first
Marciano-Ezzard Charles fight. In the return,
Rocky won by a kayo in eight." .... No press
agent had to balloon the crowd-count during the
smash engagement of the Temptations at the
Copacabana: We walked by and saw the crowd
stretched to 5th Ave., behind barricades ; and the
imminent James Brown show there promises to
be bigger .... Cong. John Murphy of Staten Island
entertained a visiting Ohio solon the smart way:
At Caterina Valente's galvanic Royal Box
performance .... No performer in show b1z does
so many things so well, a fantastic variety show
in herself .... Liberty Magazine's revival as a
quarterly this sprin~ will havP. Flo Siegfeld's nodoubt sizzling slap : ''Thl' American chorus girl
1s beautiful
but she's knock kneed."'

The quite mature Gladys Shelley wrote the
new and jingly "The Coolest Hotpants" ditty, so
she felt she had to wear the coolest hot pants into
L'Etoile restaurant; and she's got the gams for
them .... Astronauts Shepard, Roosa and Mitchell danced like pros at Raffles .... Helen Hayes
drove two hours from her country place to see
the flyboys at the mayor's party at L'Etoile and
get their autographs for her grandchildren ....
Patsy Kelly wheedled six from the astros for her
nieces and nephews .
Next time someone says 50 . million Frenchmen can't be wrong, tell him now it's 51 ...
Speaking of France (we were, weren't we?)
French political leader Jacques Chaban-Delmas
will wed his longplay galpal, Micheline, a
divorcee with four leetle ones .... Burgess
Meredith at Les Pyrenees (between gulps of frog
legs Provencal) said he'll revive "Ulysses in
Nighttown" (an off-Bdwy. hit ten years ago) on
the West Coast with hopes of bringing it to Bdwy.
eventually .... Paul Zindel (he wrote the off.
Bdwy. hit ''Marigolds" and the new on-Bdwy.
"And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little") is a
bachelor - and the adopted father of a ninemonth-old boy.
Clark Gable's widow, Kay, has a $1,000,000
pricetag on her Encino, Calif., property .... Son
John, now 10, is a junior look-alike for his late
pop ... . Marilyn Stark, one of the stark-nakeds of
"Oh! Calcutta!", made her film debut in
Paramount's "A New Leaf." Starkers in that,
too .... Aristocratic actress Betsy Von Furstenberg of "The Gingerbread Lady" no longer
is just an amateur painter: Her stuff is selling
nicely .... Producers of an upcoming show are
frantic their star will cancel out before the
opening. She's making exaggerated "sick"
noises already .

I
I
I
I

A Hand From
Wonderland

I
I
I
I

By Bob Hoeflich

Students of the Salisbury Elementary School are swinging
these days preparing a spring minstrel under the direction of
John Lisle, faculty member.
Musical and talented ~1ohn, last spring prepared a short
patriotic program using his own students and it was well
received. This year's effort will be a full length production using
students from all of the grad~s of the school. Costuming is being
created for the show mostly through the efforts of John's mother,
Mrs. Mary Lisle of Syracuse. The production will play at the
school on two nights, May 7 and 8.
Incidentally, John was recently named to begin serving as
principal of the Salisbury School starting next fall. He replaces
capable, pleasant, Miss Rosalie Story, who has done an excellent
job, but asked to be relieved from the post.

18

NORTH

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WEST

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Both vulnerable
West

North

3¥

East
Pass

1.

South
Pass

Pass

Opening lead-¥ K
MRS. TOM CROW, SR., AS HAS been her custom, sent her
bouquet of flowers to the annual birthday observance of Drew
Webster . Post American Legion, named for her brother, on
Tuesday evening. Following the observance the flowers were sent
to Mrs. Mayme Holmes, Syracuse, a member of the post's
auxiliary who is ill.
JOE AND ANN MULLIGAN of Athens spent the past week in
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., with Larry Gladwell and Jeff Boggs,
formerly of Middleport.
The Mulligans enjoyed swimming for several days with
temperatures in the mid 80's. The group watched the New York
Yankees defeat the Baltimore Orioles in a spring training game at
Lauderdale. Joe recently completed work for his master's degree
at Ohio University and reports next week to Fort Knox, Ky., for
officer training .
SPEAKING OF FLORIDA, that deep tan that Edison Hobstetter is sporting is the result of a month's vacation which he and
wife, Marcia, spent there. That tan really makes the rest of us
sun-starved Meigs Countians look pale.
IT'S A SMALL WORLD TODAY.
Mrs. Maxine Griffith left today by plane for Jackson, Miss.,
as a member of the Bank Operations Committee of the Ohio
Bankers Association. She'll view the Southern Vital Records
Center at Jackson and then board a plane returning to Colwnbus
Friday. Howard Sturgeon, secretary of the Ohio Bankers
Association, accompanied the four members of the conunittee
which will study the operations at the center, an installation for
safekeeping and storage of records. It is located on some 600 acres
of ground and records are on microfilm. Armed guards assisted
by German Shepherd watchdogs guard the place.
Incidentally, Mrs. Griffith is the only woman and the first
woman in Ohio to serve on the committee .

Rookie

Cigar Tobacco Acreage

!Voice along Broadway !

WIN AT BRIDGE

I

Beat....

Announce Reallocation

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

I

for the production of cigar
tobacco.
The flft-nter must assure the
ASCS County Committee the
acreage reallocated will be
grown.
The average price for this
type tobacco grown in the
Miami Valley last year was
approximately 35 cents per
pound. Complete information is
not available at the present
time on seed supply and
marketing outlets for tobacco
grown in Gallia County.
However, the Scotten Dillon
Company (which buys on a
contract basis) located in
Gallipolis will be attempting to
place contracts for a total of 15
acres in Gallia County this year.

Meigs

Property
Transfers
C. C. Howard, Lena Howard
to Jerry L. Tillis, Darlene Tillis,
Parcel, Scipio.
C. C. Howard, Lena Howard
to Jerry L. Cline, Phyllis M.
Cline, Parcels, Scipio.
Otto Hartenbach, Anna
Hartenbach to Manning D.
Webster, Parcel, Sutton.
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
Webster to Otto Hartenbach,
Anna Hartenbach, Parcel,
Sutton.
Lena Baxter to David M.
Lynas, Lynn M. Lynas, Parcel,
Bedford.
Martha Lou Beegle, Robert
G. Beegle to Dennis E. Hill,
Sandra L. Hill, Parcel, SuttonRacine.
William M. Harden, Dorothy
E. Harden, Roy Ptoffitt, Liilian
Proffitt, to Tim E. Hay, Elaine
F. Hay, Parcels, Pomeroy.
William M. Harden, Dorothy
E. Harden, Roy Proffitt, Lillian
·Proffitt to James H. Smith,
Faye H. Smith, Parcels, Sutton.
Roger Lee Bahr, Mary Bahr
to Dennis M. Parker, Parcels,
Chester-Orange.
Beatrice E. Rairden, Carl
Rairden to Luther P. Oldaker,
112 Acre, Rutland.

QUICK QUIZ
Q- Whal 1s the highest
mouutain peak to be climbed
b!J u:umen:&gt;

A- Two .Japanese women
have be co m e the first of
their sex to &lt;:limb 24.853-foot
Annapurna·3 in the Himala~·a
Mountains

Osburn

{

r·
:;;

Sharp

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here is another hand from
VVonderland's mad tea party.
After each side had a game
Alice dealt herself a comfortable spade opener. The
March Hare overcalled with
three hearts and her part·
ner the Mad Hatter jumped
to game. Alice decided to
pass and get the rubber over.
She looked at the dummy
after the king of hearts was
led. She won with the ace.
"Curiouser and curiouser.
That must be the worst jump
to game ever made. Still he
is supposed to be mad. It
looks like down one."
She laid down her ace of
trumps. The dormouse woke
up just enough to discard the
eight of diamonds and things
looked bleak indeed. Was
there any way to avoid a
two-trick set? Yes, there
was!
Alice saw a ch nee to
make the contract by means
of a most unusual play-a
forced-double-discard pI a y .
If the March Hare held exactly one diamond and two
clubs. She cashed the king
of trumps, ace-king of clubs
and ace of diamonds. Then
she led her jack of hearts.
The March Hare won, took
his high trump and then had
to lead a heart. Alice discarded a diamond from dummy and the last club from
her hand. On the next heart
lead she was able to discard
dummy's last losing diamond, ruff in her hand and
claim the rest of the tricks.
"Cut and deal!" said the
March Hare.
"Not a chance " said the
dormouse. "I qUit She's too
good for u~ '
(NEWSPAPER £HTERPRISE ASSN)

18

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - Pat
Osburn, who scorched the
Florida Instructional League
last fall, may earn himself a
spot on the Cincinnati Reds'
pitching staff if he keeps up the
work he has started.
The 21-year-old rookie leftbander reeled off five scoreless
innings Wednesday as the
National League champs beat
the Detroit Tigers 5-1 in
exhibition play here.
Osburn was signed last year
as a free agent after pitching
Florida State to the college
world series. He was 6-0 with a
0.90 earned run average in the
instructional league.
Bill Plwnmer drilled home
three of the Reds' five runs with
a pair of singles.
The Reds meet the Boston
Red Sox at Winterhaven today.

Tourney Will Be

On TV Next Week
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Class AAA basketball championship will be televised in
eight Ohio cities March 27,
Regional Features, Inc. announced VVednesday.
Stations in Cincinnati,
Cleveland, Colwnbus, Dayton,
Lima, Toledo, Youngstown, and
Zanesville will broadcast the
match, the firm said.
The game, to be played at
Ohio State University's St. John
Arena, is to start at 7:30 p.m.

Trmely Quotes
I think the only way to get
an all-volunteer Army is to
draft it.

- Rep. f? Edward Hebert,
D-La., chairman of the
House Armed Services
Committee.

tz:Rn :11~rkl!UU
The bidding has been:
West

Pass
Pass

North

2"'

3•

1.

East

South

Pass
Pass

3+
?

You, South, hold:

.8 ¥Kl0765 +AKQ94 "'A2

What do you do now?
A-Bid four hearts only. Your

partnc1· has merely given a
pt·efetence for hearts.

NEW EDITOR
CHICAGO (UPI) -Ray Sons,
a veteran News city side
reporter and sports writer, was
named sports editor of the
Chic.ago Daily News Wednesday.
Sons joined the Daily News
staff in 1953 from the Middletown (Ohio) Journal where he
had been Sunday editor and
associate news editor. A
spokesman for the paper said
that former Sports Editor John
P. Carmichael will continue to
write his colwnn, "The Barber
Shop."

McRae's Ready
By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - Hal
McRae would like to prove that
the first half of his rookie season was not a fluke. He thinks
the second half was.
McRae batted .248 last year
with the Reds, splitting time in
leftfield with Bernie Carbo.
But McRae's average included
a .320 first half performance
and .189 after July 1.
"I don't like to alibi, but I
do feel that not playing in the
second half of the season as
much as I did in the first half
had some bearing on the way I
played the second half," McRae
says.
The figures disagree, since
McRae batted 75 times in April,
May and June and 90 times
after that, but in any case he
will get a chance this season
to prove he should play every
day.
Bobby Tolan's injury saw to
that.
With Tolan out of the lineup,
the Reds will move Pete Rose
to centerfield and McRae and
Carbo both will be regulars,
McRae in left and Carbo in
right.
"I'm really looking forward
to it and I hope that I'm
ready," McRae says. "I'm confident that I can play regularly,
I just hope I can do a good
job. Last year, I was a rookie,
and I was glad to do anything
so I didn't mind not playing

every day."
McRae did manage to hit .455
in the World Series, getting 5
hits in 11 at-bats, including two
doubles, and driving in three
runs .
"That restored my confidence," he said.
The Reds sent McRae to the
Winter Instruct10nal League iq
Florida to learn to play third
base amid trade rumors.
"I'd heard rwnors that they
were going to trade Lee May,
move Tony Perez to first and
play me at third," McRae said.
The trade never developed,
but a job did open up when
Tolan suffered a torn Achilles
tendon playing basketball Jan.
7.
McRae also is recovering
from an injury, a leg he broke
in 1968 playing winter ball in
Puerto Rico.
"It still isn't perfect again, but
it's about 95 per cent now and
maybe by mid-season I'll feel
100 per cent again," McRae
said.
"I know I can run n2w,
though. I don't know how m-_h
speed I've lost. I haven't timed
myself because I'm afraid. I
don't want to get discouraged
by seeing my time. All I know
is I'm fast enough to do the
job and steal some bases."
Manager Sparkey Anderson
was pleased because McRae reported to camp 15 pounds lighter than he weighed at the Efd
of last season.

Eastern Pulls
OutofMOVC
Eastern High School placed
two players on the Mid-Ohio
Valley Conference all-star
basketball team, Dennis
Eichinger and Howie Caldwell,
Wednesday' night at the
Sportsman Cafe in Athens.
Eastern, represented by
Coach Bill Phillips, who participated in the all star voting,
and by Bob Ord, principal,
officially withdrew from the
league, but indicated it would
play Miller and Glouster next
year.
J['he all star teams:
FIRST TEAM
Dennis Eichinger, Eastern;
Sam Hern, Miller; Jerry Banks,
Miller; Rich White, Alexander;
Howie Caldwell, Eastern.
(Eichinger, a junior this year,
was named to the second team
when a freshman and has been
named to all star first team the
past two years.)
SECOND TEAM
Greg Brooks, Alexander;
Bruce Starner, Miller; Jan Seel,
Alexander; Jim Wright and
Jerry Kovach, both of Glouster.
HONORABLE MENTION Tom Karr, Dave Smith, Mike
Boring, Eastern; Pete Kiener

and John Hinkle, Miller; Gary
Risley, Alexander; Terry
Everett, Glouster.
The league champioPship
went to Miller and coach of the
;ear was Bob Towner of Miller.
Coaches attending were
Towner of Miller, Doug Lat- J
timer, Alexander, Bill PhillipS,
Eastern, and William Wht2,
Glouster.
FLAME SCHEDULE
MUNICH, Germany (UPI)The Olympic Flame for the
1972 Summer Games in Munich
will be carried from the classic
starting point at Olympia in
Greece through Turkey, Romania, Yugoslavia, Hungary
d
Austria, it was announced
Wednesday by the Olympic
Organization Committee.
The flame is scheduled to
arrive at the Koenigsplatz in
downtown Munich, Aug. 25,
1972, one day before the games
begin.
In 1962 the French ~d
Algerians signed a cease-fire,
ending a seven-year civil war
and bringing independence to
the North African territory.

Frazier Reported.
In Good Conditio

By WILLIAM VERIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Joe Frazier is alive and well, if
still "tired," in a hospital here.
He's munching watermelon,
listening to his stereo at full
blast and entertaining any
friends who manage to slip past
THE DAI~Y SENTINEL
the 24-hour guard standing
DEVOTED TO
outside the door.
INTEREST OF
"Take my picture, put it in
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
the papers," Joe said WednesExec. Ed.
day. "Then they can see for
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
themselves."
Published daily except
The rwnor began late TuesSaturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111 1ay night that the 27-year-old
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, ?hiladelphian was "seriously
.45769. Busine5s Office Phone
992 -2156, Ed ito&lt; ial Phone 992
ill" and by Wednesday morning
:2157.
Second class postage paid at he was supposed to be dead.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
"It's going to be hard to hold
National advertising
representative Bottinelti. him down because he feels so
Gallagher, tnc., 12 East 42nd well," Giuffre said, "but I want
St ., New York City, New York.
subscription
rates : him to stay isolated here for
Delivered by carrier where one week . I was concerned
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier because any time you take a
service [10t available: On!!, guy like Joe, a healthy, vibrant
month $1.75. By mail In Ohio
and w . va., one year $14.00. specimen, and he complains
Six months $7.25. Three that he is tired, it's cause to
months $4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times . look for something more
:.sentineL
- serious.
"After taking hiS blood

r

pressure I found an elevation,"
the doctor added. "We took lo
of other tests and a few resul
were not to my liking. I wante
to make sure that he was no
coming down with some chroni
medical problem. Since he'
been here there has bee
tremendous improvement, ,Jj[l
his condition is good. I v.'(llru
definitely not suggest to h"
that he retire for physica
reasons."
Frazier has not yet decide
whether to retire. His manager
Yank Durham, has urged bin
to quit boxing, and so has hi
wife, but Frazier said he will
wait until he confers with thf ·
and also with several offi~ls
of Cloverlay Inc., which ow .
his contract, before making ..
final decision.
"Do I look dead?" Frazier
asked from his hospital bed.
"Do I look seriously ill? "I'm
just getting ready to get out of
here. I might not do much in
the gym for a couple of months
... but I won't let myself get.J!u
of shape."
J\

'Frisco Dampens Royals Hopes
By United Press International
Bob Cousy's master plan for
the Cincinnati Royals may have
to wait another year.
Cousy's rebuilding program,
which began last season with
the sale of Jerry Lucas and
continued early this season with
tht: trade of Oscar Robertson,
both long-time Cincinnati stars,
suffered a snag Wednesday
night when the San Francisco
Warriors downed the Royals

110-92.
The Warrior victory all but
crushed Cincinnati's hopes for
the second-place playoff berth
behind Baltimore in the National Basketball Association's Central Division. The Royals trail
the second-place Atlanta Hawks
by two games and each team
has two games remaining to
play.
In other NBA action Wednesday night, San Diego beat

Detroit 106-99, Baltimore defeated Cleveland 113-109 and
Boston downed Los Angeles 112104.
Jeff Mullins scored 30 points
and Nate Thurmond added 23 to
boost the Warriors past Cincinnati, which could produce only
36 points in the first two
periods. Sam Lacey led the
Royab w1th 20 points.
Eh•in Hayes scored Zo )JOints

as San Diego beat the Pistons
It was the fifth straight victor):
for the Rockets, tying a clu
mark, and the 31lth victora o
the season, a team record.
Earl Monroe and Kevi
Loughery hit baskets in the las
45 seconds to lift Baltimor
past Cleveland.
John Havhcek's 27-pcAnt e
fort helped Boston coast pa
t.os Ant&gt;eles. Wilt Chamberlai
had 25 to lead th{' !..akers.

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 18, 1971

NIT Fireworks Will Begin In Garden Saturday
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
National Invitation Tournament
can't compete with the NCAA
basketball tournament in terms
of quality teams, but this year's
NIT might just outdo the NCAA
when it comes to showmanship.
Forced to settle for conference also-rans and lesser independents, the NIT doesn't
command the national respect
of the NCAA tournament.
However, this year's tournament, which begins Satur-

....

...day, has a circus-like quality
about it which just might make
it a major attraction.
For one thing, Madison
Square Garden, in an effort to
beef up attendance to the early
round games, has scheduled a
pair of tripleheaders-a differentapproach to the tournament.
Second, the appearance of
Hawaii and Tennessee in the
tourney will provide quite a bit
of color for the spectators.
Hawaii, which is the first

• IL
..
•

•

J

the Sports Desk
by Chet Tannehill

l

Sunday evening at 6:30 in Middleport at town hall is when all
you fellas and gals who have an idea how the community's Boys'
League baseball program SHOULD be conducted, can get your 75
cents worth in. Dick Hovatter, association president, is calling a
meeting at that hour at town hall to launch the 1971 season. Of.
ficers will be elected- don't let that scare you away -and a
Sign-Up Day and a Tag Day probably will be set.
In Pomeroy at a similar meeting of all managers and interested parents, the Pee Wee, Boys' League and Pony League
will be set up at 7 p. m. this evening at Pomeroy City Hall. Tom
Grueser is president.

Warriors Expect To
Make OSU 40th Victim

AH L Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pts
Montreal
25 27 12 62
Quebec
23 27 14 60
Providence
23 27 12 58
Springfield
24 31 8 56
West
W. L. T. Pts
Baltimore
36 17 7 79
Cleveland
32 23 7 71
Hershey
25 27 10 60
Rochester
22 31 10 54
Wednesday's Results
Hershey 4 Prov. 2
Cleveland 4 Sprngfld 1
Rochester 4 Quebec 2
No Games loday

ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) - The
second-ranked Marquette War·
riors seek to stretch college
basketball's longest current
winning streak to 40 games tonight when they take on Big

Marquette (27-0) and the lOth
ranked Buckeyes (19-5) meet at
7:05p.m. and seventh -ranked
Western Kentucky (21-5) meets
eight - ranked Kentucky (22-4)
at 9: 05 in the regional semefinals at the sold-out, 13,000 - seat
Tonight's Ohio State- university of Georgia Coliseum.
Tonight's winners meet here
Marquette game will be
at
4:05 p.m. Saturday for the
televised over Channel 4,
Columbus for those on the regional championship while toTower Communications, Inc., night's losers play a consolation
cable service in the Gallipolis game, starting at 2 p.m.
Al McGuire's Warriors
area. Pre-game activities will
haven't
been beaten since Feb.
start at 7 o'clock.
7, 1970, when they lost by oneTen champion Ohio State in the point, 96-95, at Notre Dame.
opening game of the NCAA They won their last 12 games
•of the 1969~70 season, including
Mideast Regional.

NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pts
Boston
52 10 7 lll
New York
44 14 11 99
Montreal
35 21 13 83
Toronto
34 29 6 74
19 37 13 51
Buffalo
20 38 10 50
Detroit
A COUPLE OF MONTHS AGO Sports Desk reviewed Vancouver
19 42 7 45
proposals that recurr annually to combine the Boys' League
West
W. L. T. Pts
activities of the county into one organization. Comment was inx-Chicago
44 16 9 97
vited. Guess how much comment arrived: One verbal vote of St. Louis
29 23 17 75
thanks for discussing the issue publicly. So that pretty much Minnesota
26 30 15 67
Philadelphia
25 30 13 63
settled that.
Pittsburgh
20 32 18 58
Pomeroy and Middleport are organizing, and the small Los Angeles
20 35 12 52
communities of the county, Syracuse, Racine, Portland, Letart California
18 47 5 41
Falls, Rutland (maybe), Harrisonville, Tuppers Plains, etc., etc., x Clinched div, title
Wednesday's Result
will do what they can later, by themselves, independently or in California 5 Pittsbgh 2
Thursday's Games
combines where possible.
at Montreal
And Pomeroy and Middleport in all likelihood will go into a Toronto
New York at Phila
Pairings for the first three
summer of play with four teams in each community. No more Detroit at Boston
nights of the Second Annual
than five years ago Middleport had six teams, all crowded, with a St. Louis at Buffalo
North Gallia Independent
Chicago at Los Angeles
PeeWee program serving two teams, and Pomeroy a comparable
(Only games scheduled)
Basketball Tournament
or larger league.
scheduled March 25-31 were
Middleport, Pomeroy and Racine in years past fielded
announced today by Phil
powerful entires in the Southeastern Ohio Boys' League TorrSkidmore,
tournament director.
ABA Standings
nament at Wellston. Middleport won a number of championships
Bickers' Bidwell Milling will
By United Press International
East
- only Woody Call, manager, knows exactly how many - at
the Gallipolis Area
w. L. Pet. GB meet
Wellston. In late years Meigs all star clubs at Wellston haven't
Jaycees
in the first game on
,653
...
49 26
Virginia
fared nearly as well. Lately, Pomeroy has not entered.
Thursday, March 25 . Rio
42 35 .545 8
Kentucky
39 37 .513 10112 Grande A.T.D. Fraternity will
Meigs teams have won their share of Kyger Creek Little New York
33 45 .423 171/2 battle Goodyear in the second
Pittsburgh
League titles. Pomeroy and Middleport clubs always make a good Floridians
33 46 .418 18
showing. This tournament puts most of the teams of Meigs, Gallia Carolina
29 47 .382 20112 contest of the evening at 8 p . m.
West
Athens Masonary and French
and Mason Counties in the running, usually around 40. The
W. L. Pet. GB City Mobile Home Center will
tourney is sponsored annually by the Kyger Creek Power Plant Utah
51 23 .689 •..
play the first contest on Friday,
Indiana
53 24 .688 ...
Employees' Club.
38 38 .500 14
March 26. W. R. "Dick" Brown
But boy interest appears to be slimming down. Of late, fewer Memphis
Denver
27 49 .355 25
Insurance will tangle with
boys are showing interest. The number of teams has been Texas
26 50 .342 26
Smith Performance Center in
Wednesday's
Results
declining.
the finale. Beach Athletic Club
New York 122 Kentucky 120
ings tonight in Pomeroy and Sunday in Floridians
Therefor
120 Utah 116
and Wellston's Eagles will lock
aal significance. It simmers down about to Pittsburgh 133 Carolina 120
Middleport ha
horns at 7 p. m. on March 27.
Indiana 123 Texas 109
this:
Bob Saunders' Quaker State
Thursday's Games
If you, as parents of boys eligible to participate, want the Utah at Denver
Service Center and Royal
(Only games scheduled)
programs to ontinue, and to be revived perhaps, you should
Crown Bottling of Middleport
come to these meetings. It takes people to run a program. Which
will meet in the second game on
means you.
the 27th.
Trophies will be presented to
NBA Stand.ngs
By United Press International the first three teams. Individual
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB trophies will go to the first
x-NewYork
51 29 .638 .. , team. A trophy will also be
Philadelphia 45 34 .570 51!2 presented to the Most Valuable
Boston
42 38 .525 9
Player and top scorer.
Buffalo
22 58 .275 29
Each team will be permitted
Central Division
Notre Dame (20-7) vs . Drake
NEW YORK (UPTl- The
x-Baltimore 41 38 .519 ...
pairings for tonight's NCAA (20-7}
35 45 .438 6112
Kansas (25 -1) vs . Houston Atlanta
regional competition:
(21 ·6)
Cincinnati
33 47 .413 6112
East
West
(Raleigh, N.C.)
28
(Salt Lake City, Utah)
Pennsylvania (27-0) vs . South
W. L. Pet. GB 1r~ I
Hr1gham Young (19-9) vs.
Carolina (23-4)
x-Milwaukee 66 14 .825 ...
Ford ham (24·2) vs, Villanova UCLA (25-1)
Long Beach State (23-4 ) vs. Chicago
50 28 .641 15
(24-6)
Phoenix
46 32 .590 19
Pacific (21 -5).
Mideast
Detroit
43 36 .544 22112
(Athens, Ga.)
Pacific Division
Winners meet in regional
Marquette (27-0) vs. Ohio
W. L. Pet. GB
finals Saturday and national
State (19-5)
Western Kentucky (21 -5) vs. semifinalists meet in Houston, x-Los Angel es 47 33 .588 ... By United Press International
Thursday, March 25. The NCAA San Francisco 40 40 .500 7
Kentucky (22-4)
Denis Menke, who might be
38 42 .475 91/2
final will be played Sa turday, San Diego
Midwest
the
best shortstop in the
Seattle
36 42 .462 10
March 27.
(Wichita, Kan.)
National League, apparently is
Portland
25 53 .321 21
x-Ciinched div. title
going to be the Houston Astros'
Wednesday's Results
first
baseman this season.
Baltimore 113 Cleveland 109
Menke, 21, who hit .304 last
Boston 112 Los Angeles 104
San Fran 110 Cincinnati 92
season and covers more ground
San Diego 106 Detroit 99
than any other shortstop in the
Thursday's Games
league
with the possible excepNew York at Phoenix
Milwa ukee at Seattle
tion of Don Kessinger of the
San Francisco a t Chicago
Chicago Cubs, knew it was
(Only games schedu led)
coming because the Astros want
their regular shortstop to be
either Roger Metzger or Marty
Martinez .
Menke was switched to first
base for the first time this
WHOLE HOUSE AIR
spring Wednesday and had
CONDITIONING.
three singles as the Astros
SAME DAY
whippeG the Boston Red Sox, 8INSTALLATION IS QUICK,
SERVICE
2. The performance suggested
In At 9-0ut At 5
EASY AND PERMANENT
to manager Harry Walker what
he has been claiming all along,
Use'Our Free Parking Lo,
that Menke will hit "regardless
of where he plays."
On other fronts : Jose Cruz'
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
ninth-inning double gave the St.

the four they needed to capture
the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) championship -and
have won 27 straight so far this
season.
Marquette turned down its
invitation to last year's NCAA
playoffs because they were
placed in the Midwest ~gional
instead of the Mideast.
The Warriors, paced by AllAmerica guard Dean "The
Dream" Meminger and 6-foot-11
sophomore Jim Chones, are favored tonight but don't expect
an easy time against Ohio State
which won 15 of its last
16 games enroute to the Big
Ten title.

12 Teams Entered In

••

.

,...

NCAA Pairings

'"

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VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
992-2 709

"Bickers" Bidwell Milling
John Milhoan, Steve Fuller,
Bob Beckettal, Fred Deel, Ron
Greenlee, Jack Adams, Greig
McDevitt,
Dave
Holder
(Coach).
Rio Grande A. T. D.
Dick Fowler, Douq Hart. Ed
Jacobs, Darrell Ba II, Ron
Wyckoff, bean· Rausnaugh, Ron
Lambert, Gary Urit, Joe Wells,
and Bob Beckett. Mike Sk iver
(Coach).
Athens Masonry
Ken Turner, Dave Hamill,
Greg McDaniel, Forest Ervin,
Tom Bobo, Larry Coon, Tim
Gross, Ed Sams, Jerry Bobo,
and Steve Hamill. Don Hawk
(Coach),
John
Perry
(Manager).
W. R. "Dick" Brown Insurance
Steve Elliott (Coach), Roger
Foster, Barry Bennett, Ron
Thornton, Steve Bartram, Dave
Dru, Bernard Williams, Sam
Pulle y, Steve Towler, and

71./l'enke rDaces
Houston Win

~

Amana

to have a ten man roster, plus a
coach and manager. If the
coach is a player, he will be
included in the 10 man roster.
Officials donating their
services are Bob Taylor, Mike
Hardway, Larry Lee, Pete
Young, Hindu Henderson, Bill
Underwood, Ralph Wigal, John
Shupert and John Fisher. Admission will be 35 cents for
students and 75 cents for adults.
Here are the rosters of the
various teams participating.

MIDDLEPORT

I

Louis Cardinals a 4-3 victory
over the Philadelphia Phillies.
Jose Cardenal hit a three-run
homer for the Cardinals, who
have won nine of their 12 spring
games ... Cleon Jones hit a
double and a homer and Gary
Gen1ry pitched five innings of
one-hit ball as the New York
Mets beat the Kansas City
Royals, 6-1 ... The Minnesota
Twins said that outfielder Tony
Oliva, two-time American
League batting champion, had
agreed to a two-year contract
which it indicated called for
slightly less than $100,000 a
year. Oliva batted .325 last
season, drove in 107 runs and
had 204 hits.
Dave Campbell singled home
Rod Gaspar with the winning
run in the ninth to give the San
Diego Padres an 8-7 victory
over the Chicago Cubs .. . The
Milwaukee Brewers took advantage of five errors to beat
the San Francisco Giants, 10-9.
OLIVA IN CAMP
MIAMI, Fla. (UPI) - The
Minnesota Twins said Wednesday night that two-time
American League batting
champion Tony Oliva has
agreed to a two-year contract
and indicated that it called for
slightly less than $100,000 a
year .
It was believed that Oliva's,
contract will call for $95,000 a
year.
Oliva, who led the AL in
batting in 1963 and 1964, batted
.325 las t season, drove in 107
runs and had 204 hits.
Four s tates - North Da·
kota . South Dakota. Montana and Washington - will
mark the 82:1 anniversary ot
their admission to the t 'nion
in November this vear.

game and St. Bonaventure
takes on Purdue in the nightcap.
Hawaii finally swings into
action on Monday against
Oklahoma in the first game of a
1ripleheader to conclude first
round play.
Ohio H. s. Basketball
Tournament Scores
By United Press lnternationa I
Class AAA
CAt Canton)
Boardman 81 Canton McKinley
60

Cleve. East Tech 96
Cleve. St. Ignatius 54
(At Columbus)
Celina 78 Whitehall 73
Class AA
(At Copley)
The Buckeyes will counter
Chones with a towering sopho- Champion 72 Elyria Catholic 53
more of their own, 7-foot Luke
Witte, and hope to offset Meminger with the sharp shooting of
sophomore Allan Hornyak.
But Ohio State coach Fred
Taylor, who directed his teams
Services Do We
to the NCAA finals three
straight years ( 1960 - 61 - 62),
Have For You ..
admits concern for Marquett's
full - court press, the weapon
-Home Improvement Loans
that enabled the Warriors to
-Christmas Club
beat Miami of Ohio, 62-47, in
- Home Financing Loans
last Saturday's pre - regional
-Vacation Club
-Home Construction Loans
game at Notre Dame.
-Money Orders
"It's for sure we're going to
- Passbook Savings at 4314
have to beat their press," sa:,;
percent
Taylor who had his squau
-Certificates of Deposit
working on just that for the
from 5 percent to 6 percent
depending on the amount
past week. "You're not going to
and length of time
score any points if you can't
deposited,
get the ball up the court."
Kentucky, winner of 26 Southeastern Conference titles and
four NCAA championships, is
favored in the nightcap - but
the outcome of that game
probably will be decided by
how the Wildcats handle Jim
Of The Athens County
McDaniels, Western Kentucky's
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
7-foot second team All-America.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
That assignment goes to 7-foot2 sophomore Tom Payne whom
ff.)..ll!!Mr'i?
veteran Kentucky coach Adolph
%
•
•
Rupp insists has developed into
~'1-t-ts~'&gt;'"'
one of the "best big men in the
country."

WHAT

Meigs Co. Branch

North Gallia Tourney

oJ

team-and Georgia Tech
meeting LaSalle.
,
On Sunday there is another
doubleheader as first-round
action continues. Michigan
meets Syracuse in the first

Pro Standings

!

_____..._....~---..........,~....,..---~---~-J

on Providence and Dayton
meets Duke to conclude the
afternoon round and the first
day's action continues Saturday
night with Tennessee opposing
St. John's- the only local

that features Golbetrotter antics and unicyclists. ,
It is the first timE: in nine
years that the NIT will have less
than two local teams, and it will
be interesting to see if out-of-

r----.-.-.-.-.-.~.-~.~~~~~~·~---..-.---~·--·""'

1

town clubs can draw in the early
rounds.
The tournament opens with
North Carolina meeting Massachusetts in the first game of a
1ripleheader. Louisville takes

team from outside the continental United States ever to appear
in the NIT, features hula girl
cheerleaders who throw orchids
into the stands, and Tennessee
has a pre-game warmup drill

Charlie Baker.
Beach Athletic Club
Dave Smith, Joe Taylor,
Randy Noll, Rick- Turnbow,
Blain Henry, Tony Bass, Bob
Depathy, Jim Wedge, and Dan
Dan toni. Frank Beach (Coach).
Bob Saunders
Quaker State
Carl Wolfe, AI Martin, Bob
Mabry, Dick Schelat, Bob
Vojtecky, Dean Rinehart, Gary
Popplewell , Bernie Williams,
Asa Bradbury, and Sam Pulley.
Tom Sprague (Coach) .
Gallipolis Area J.C.'s
Harold Montgomery, Paul
Wickline, Don Saunders, Ron
Lemon, Terry Rucker, Gary
Harrison, Don McDade, Mike
Allen, Bill Thomas, and Chick
Conley (Coach).
Goodyear of Pt. Pleasant
George Johnston (Coach),
Mike Johnson, Willie Call. Jerry
Persinger, Doxie Walters, Bill
Kaiser, Dale Miller, Jerry Hall,
Nelson Cottrill and Glen Me·
Clellan.
Freel
Tackett
(Manager).
French City Mobile
Home Center
Robert Leith, Paul Dillion,
Jim Halley, Lloyd Myers, Bill
Brown, Danny Cornell, Ron
Halley,
Richard
Dillion,
Richard Hamilton, and Junior
Hager.
Delbert
Bloomer
(Coach) .
Smith Performance CentPr
Pete Anderson, Dick Smith
(Coach), Fred HiiL Ed Ho~ard,
John Garnes, Mario Levrador,
Fred Davis, and Paul Fraley .
Wellston "Eagles"
Vernon Royster, Ronnie
Carpenter, Denni s Dupree,
Mike Carman, Mike Hughes,
Bob Phillips, Tom Stetser, Tom
Montgomery, Tom Compston,
and Joe Ramsey. Larry
Walburn (Coach).
Roy a I Crown Bottling
of Middleport
Ron Hanning, Dave Thomas,
Dick Bane, Dave Lyons
(Coach), Roger Puckett, Jerry
Davenport, George Hoffman,
Larry Burnett, Keith French
and C A. Duncan.

@

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�-----~---

~-

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 18, 1971

.

r---------------------------r
!I

Washington l

I
II

Report By~urrer

I

Clarence

I
II
I

I

,·

I
I

The junked automobile is the
most obvious example of our
nationwide solid waste disposal
problem. In his environmental
message last year the President
noted that "Few of America's
eyesores are so unsightly as its
millions of junk automobiles."
It has been estimated that if
we placed all the bandoned and
obsolete automobiles in the
United States side by side, we
could put a "girdle around the
earth." The number of rusty
hulks in junkpiles and
graveyards throughout the
country is estimated between 15
and 20 million and represents $1
billion in reuseable metals. This
year 85 per cent of the 9 million
automobiles which will go out of
service will be recycled into
new metals, but the remaining
1,300,000 will sunply be abandoned on neighborhood streets,
deserted roads, or country
hillsides.
The richest mineral source of
the products discarded by our
affluent society is interestingly
enJugh scrap
Although
diSCarded (.a
titute
on! a maL
the
waste dispo
!em in
terms of to
, they are
higher in metal recycle value
than other material.
Recent studies by the Bureau
of Mines on the conversion of
old cars to metals suitable for
recycling pointed to the fact
that
a
representative
automobile would yield 2,500
pounds of steel, 500 pounds of
zinc, 20 pounds of lead, and 51
pounds of aluminum. The use of
just 1 ton of scrap would
eliminate the need for Ph tons
of iron ore, 1 ton of coke and
one-half ton of limestone.
There is growing recognition
in the Congress and throughout
the nation that we need to
recycle solid waste material

back into the economy instead
of permitting it to deface our
landscape and pollute our environment. The Resource
Recovery Act approved by the
91st Congress was an important
step forward in providing the
mechanism for proper solid
waste management, but we
need to do more in this area.
I
have
co-sponsored
legislation which I believe will
effectively deal with the
abandoned automobile problem
and change it from a national
eyesore into a national asset by
recycling these rusting, wornout hulks back into the steel
making process.
The legislation is designed to
encourage states to establish
abandoned automobile removal
programs and to provide tax
incentives for the recycling of
auto scrap.
Specifically, the bill would
annually earmark 1 per cent of
the federal auto excise tax to
assist states in funding pickup
and removal programs.
It is felt that this amount will
enal;&gt;le tis tQ collect the number
of automobJes abandoned each
l' ear and begm to remove the 5
to 20 million strewn throughout
our countryside. In order for
scrap processors to increase
efficiency and handle the added
volume under these collection
programs, the bill would allow
rapid amortization tax benefits
for the purchase of modern
equipment and machinery for
reducing old cars to useable
scrap.
As I have indicated an old,
junked car is a valuable
mineral resource if recycled.
The reclamation of abandoned
automobiles is a logical answer
to cleaning up our landscape
and at the same time conserving irreplaceable natural
minerals.

Washington Window

'

THIS PICTURE BELONGING to Pauline Stewart,
Mason, W.Va., shows Clifton, W. Va.,as itlookedin 1928. The
man on the sidewalk at the right is the late Joseph Lockett,
brother of Filson Lockett who resides with his daughter,
Evelyn. On the left is the Clifton Post Office operated by the
late Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Haynes. The car in the foreground
was parked in front of the home of Mrs. Myrtle Barker which
long ago was torn down. The store building at right was
owned by Barkers and in later years by Mr. and Mrs.
Haynes. Mrs. Stewart is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Haynes who operated a confectionary in the post office
building.

Son Born March 16
MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Luckeydoo of Charleston,
W.Va. are announcing the birth
of a son on March 16 at the
Thomas Memorial Hospital in
Charleston. Mrs. Luckeydoo is
the former Karen Roush.
The infant weighed 7 lbs. 15
oz. and has been named Phillip
Dean. Mr. and Mrs. Luckeydoo
have another son, Larry Edward, age 2. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Roush,
Camp Conley; Mr. and Mrs.
Alva Luckeydoo, Letart, W.
Va.; great-grandparents are
Mrs. Revna King, Sr., Henderson; Mr. and Mrs. Gro\·er
Roush, Mason.

..
·=

..::

•.

::.

to be in a gracious mood, he
may tell her what day she can
expect him. But it is useless for
her to ask what time of day
he'll arrive. So she has to sit at
home all day, neglecting her
other errands, while she waits
for him to show up and
perform the mysterious rites of
mechanical adjustment for
which he charges a fee that
would be more appropriate for a
brain surgeon .
Power failures sever the
lifeline between urban man and

WOODESHICK SIGNS
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Tom Woodeshick, veteran running back who missed the last
nine games of the 1970 National
Football League season with a
broken right leg, has signed his
1971 contract with the Philadelphia Eagles .
SINGLE GAME DECIDES
NEW YORK (UPI)- A single
game wtll be played to decide
the winner in the Central,
Midwest or Pacific divisions of
the National Basketball Association, in the event of a tie, it
was annuunced Wednesday by
NBA Commissioner Walter
Kennedy.
The winner of the season
series between the deadlocked
teams wtll be the home team .
A flip of a coin will decide the
home tram if thr trams have
s plit IJit:l ~ ,1:.&lt;&gt;n St!I"IPS.

By DEBORAH M. CONKLIN
Ext. Agent, Home Econ.
Should mothers work outside
the home? That question is
being debated by almost
everyone from marriage
counselors
to
women's
liberation supporters. The fact
is that more mothers are joining
the labor force, reports Kent
Hamdorf, Extension family life
specialist, The Ohio State
University.
Since World War II, the
number of working mothers in
the labor force has increased
eight-fold, according to the
Women's Bureau, U. S.
Department of Labor. In 1940,
one of 10 mothers worked; in
1969, four of 10. The 1969 labor
force included 11.5 million
working mothers with children
under 18. About four million had
children under age s1x.
Why do these women work?
The biggest reason is money.

Economic need forces more
mothers to work than any other
factor. Working mothers list
other reasons, too, job
availability in the community,
education or training, available
child care facilities, suitable
working hours.
The "work or not to work"
decision depends on the individual and her family, but
Hamdorf suggests that the
whole family needs to think
through some
important
questions.
Why work? For financial
gain? Self-fulfillment? Escape
from household duties or child
care?
How will Mom's new
responsibility affect family
life? Will Dad accept another
breadwinner in the family
without feeling threatened? Will
the children adjust easily to a
new routine? Will the family
feel neglected by Mom's

working hours?
Is the job worth it? How much
money will need to be spent for
child care, transportation,
clothing, household help? Would
each family member assume
more household duties? Will
Mom still have time and energy
to attend civic, church, school,
and job-related activities if she
wants to?
What kind of employment is
available? Will on-the-job or
additional training be needed?
Will Mom's working hours fit
into a regular schedule for the
family?
What type of child care
supervision will be needed?
What's available - a relative,
babysitter, housekeeper, child
care center, nursery school?
Where will school-age children
spend those before-and-after
school hours?
The family that thinks
through such basic questions

•

DEBORAH CONKLIN
will be able to make a wiser
decision, Hamdorf believes- a
decision that fits that particular
family's needs and situation.

SOUP, BAKE SALE
The Ladies
MASON Auxiliary of the Mason
Volunteer Fire Department are
having a soup and bake sale on
Saturday, March 20 starting at
10 a.m. at City Hall in Mason.
Mrs. Earl Ingles, president,
requested that patrons bring
containers for soup. Proceeds
will be used for the benefit of the
fire department.

$25 DONATED
MASON The Ladies
Auxiliary at its meeting on
Monday at City Hll voted to
donate $25 to the Thompson
Kidney Fund. Mrs. Earl Ingles,
president, presided. Refreshments were served by Jean
Tennant and Mrs. Ingles. Attending were Katheryn Stewart,
Charlotte Jenks, Virginia
DINNER HELD
PT. PLEASANT - A dinner Shrimplin, Jean Tennant and
was held at Krodel Park on Mrs. Earl Ingles.
Sunday in honor of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Bailey of San Antonio,
Durable Record
Texas.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)Attending were the honorees Andy Uram's 97-yard touchand Mrs. Revna King and down run from scrimmage
Charles Lewis of Henderson; against the Chicago Cardinais
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. King, Jr. of has been a National Football
New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Alva League record since 1939.
Luckeydoo, Letart, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Landon Smith,
Harrisonville, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Leport, Henderson;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Reynolds, Keith and Kelly
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Lynn; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Attendance at Sunday School
Reynolds and son, Revna Jay; was 52 and offering was $17.41
Norman Reynolds, all of and worship attendance was 30,
Mason; Mr. and Mrs. carroll offering $100.77.
Shinn, Lowell and Alisa of Leon,
Gerald Violet visited Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Perry of Shade Sunday
W. Va.
afternoon and then Sunday
evening they went to Doctors
Hospital in Columbus to visit
Joe's sister, Miss Martha Perry
who had undergone major
surgery there. She is improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor
attended the funeral of her aunt,
Mrs.
Anna
Richter
at
the technological matrix of his Wileyville, W. Va. Saturday.
existence. It's not just a matter They also visited other relatives
of being plunged into darkness. while there and were overnight
That he could cope with, by guests of her niece, Mr. and
lighting candles. But if he has a Mrs. Edward Yoho of New
furnace with a electric-powered Martinsville, W. Va., Route 7.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles
blower, he will have no heat
until the power comes on. He were Sunday dinner guests of
can't cook on his electric ~tove, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Spencer
take a shower in electrically and family of Chester. Others in
heated water, or make ice the Spencer home were Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Spencer and
cubes.
Worst of all, he can't find out daughter of Belpre and Miss
how lung he's going to be in Elaine Cale of Mt. Herman.
Oscar Babcock was taken to
this plight. If he calls the power
Hospital,
company, he'll either find its Camden Clark
lines busy or he'll get an Parkersburg, Tuesday sufevasive answer from a bored fering with pneunwnia and
employe who doesn't know, and plurisy.
Several from here went to
apparently doesn't much care,
when service is likely to be Whites Funeral Home at
Coolville to see Mrs. Norman
restored.
We could go on for hours McCain who passed away at
listing the petty and not-so- Parkersburg Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles
petty vexations to which homos
urbanus is daily exposed. When visited Mr. and Mrs. John
you consider how much we all Hayes of Chester Saturday
have to put up with , the wonder afternoon and also went to
is that we're not at each other's Ewings Funeral Home to see
throats all of the time, instead Emerson Hayes who passed
of only now and then.
away at a Portsmouth nursing
home.

EAGLE BADGE - Ronald McClintock, Point Pleasant's
newest Eagle Scout, receives his Eagle Badge from his
mother, Mrs. George McClintock, during Sunday's Court of

Honor. At left is Mr. McClintock while Bill Knight, M-G-M
Scout District Chairman, looks on at right after presenting
the Eagle Badge to Mrs. McClintock.

McClintock is New Eagle Scout
PT. PLEASANT- Ronald E.
McClmtock, a 17 year-old Point
Pleasant High School senior,
achieved scouting's highest
rank Sunday, Mar. 7, during an

Tuppers Plains Society News

Megopolis Life Frustrating
By LOUIS CASSELS
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - We
were standing in the rain, six of
us, waiting for a D.C. Transit
"express" bus that was scheduled to leave the Maryland
suburbs for downtown Washington at 8:48 a .m .
At 9: 15, the bus finally
lumbered into view .
"It's outrageous," muttered a
lawyer who was gomg to be
late for an important appointment. "But what can you do?"
That despairing questio~,
"What can you do ?" is
becoming the litany of 20th
century urban man.
It expresses more eloquently
than any angry outburst the
deep sense of frustration and
powerlessness that overwhelms
the modern city-dweller when
he perceives how dependent he
is on things over which he has
little or no control.
Just getting to and from work
can be a daily trauma once a
city has reached a certain size.
Even if your bus leaves on
time, it may get tied up in a
traffic jam or break down from
lack of adequate maintenance.
And there 's nobody to blame or
complain to except the hapless
bus driver, who is not your
persecutor but your fellow
victim.
Housewtves are spared the
travail of commuting, but they
have problems of their '&gt;wn. If
lhf' rrfrigerator u. washing
rn:whinr br~&lt;~k s down &lt;;flc calls
tile repair man . If h,. happens

More Mothers Are Taking Jobs

impressive Court of Honor
ceremony at the St. Paul's
United Methodist Church here.
McClintock, president of
Explorer Post 257, became the
first scout of the M-G-M District
to ever receive the Eagle Scout
honor without having been a
Boy Scout.
George Lamp, advisor of Post
257, revealed during the Court
of Honor that McClintock did
not begin his scouting career
until after having observed his
14th birthday and his first
participation in scouting was as
a member of former Explorer
Post 261. Special efforts on the
part of McClintock made it
possible for McClintock to pass
through the necessary steps to
become an Eagle Scout.

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Nichols visited Saturday with
her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Shockey of Ravenswood, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Newell
and John Newell of Columbus
and Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
Newell and daughter of Chester
were weekend visitors of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jessie
Newell.
Jimmie Kakowitz of San
Antonio, Tex., spent the
weekend here with his niece,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Barnett
WEEKEND GUESTS
and daughter.
Weekend guests at the homes
Mrs. Ethel Stout visited her of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Wyant
brother, Ralph Parker at and Mrs. Judy Gilliam and
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Terri were Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy. Mr. Parker remains Stanley Beal and Mr. and Mrs.
quite ill.
Pete Majstorovic of Cleveland;
Stanley Beal, Jr . of Ohio
March 22nd is the earliest University; Sonny Hunt, of
date on which Easter can Addison , and Miss Elaine
fall . This last occurred in Grimm of Point Pleasant, W.
1818 and will not occur again
Va.
d urmg the 20th century.

Troop Advisor Lamp formally
introduced the candidate,
certified him and introduced his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
McClintock.
The Eagle Charge and Oath
was given McClintock by
Chadds Hall, M-G-M District
Scouting executive and Bill
Knight, District Chairman,
presented Mrs. McClintock with
the Eagle Badge which she
pinned on Ronald.
Dr. Pedro J. Obregon,
committee chairman of Post
257, offered the Mother's Pin
which
Mrs.
McClintock
presented her son and this
activity was followed by Gene
Newsome, scoutmaster of
Troop 257, presenting Ronald

with a tie bar for his father.
The new Eagle Scout has four
aunts and an uncle in Meigs
County, Mrs. Gordon Wolf ,
Apple Grove; Mrs. Guy Neigler,
Racine; Mrs. Ernest Grimm,
Letart Falls; Mrs. Lewis
Roush, Minersville, and Otis
McClintock, Racine.

CERTIFIED WELDER

Portable Equipment
~hop

or Field

Chase Hardware '::
Locust St.

Middleport

cp,

what goes
into your
prescription?

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

DEPENDABILITY
When you bring a prescription
here to be compounded, do so
with confidence -

in our ac-

curacy, our knowledge, a d
quality of our pharmaceuticals.

rrYou Are Always Welcome"

DON'T BE FAT
MONADEX wilt help you lose weight. MONAD EX is a tiny tablet
and easily swa ll owed. Start los ing weight now. Contains no
dange rous drugs_ and does not make you nervous. MONAD EX
re~u ces your de!:&gt;ire for excess food . Helps you ea t less- so you
we1gh less. For your health's sake - get rid of excess fat. You
must _lose ugly fa+ or your money will be refunded by your
druggi_St w1th no questions asked. MONADEX costs $3 .00 and is
sold With thiS quarantee by. Swisher &amp; Lohse, Pomeroy &amp; Dutton
Drug Store Middleport. Mail Orders Filled.
- adv.

REG. $139

SALE

$99.90 SET

BAKERS

=

Ph. 992-2511

�5- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 18. 1971

Another
High Day
Hoped for
' '

•
•

. DIXIELAND GRO~P- David Kayser, John Pantaloukas and Bill Rainey, left to right,
Wl~ present the song, Do You Know What It Means," during the "Black Knight Revue"
Fr1day and Saturday nights at the Point Pleasant High School gymnasium under sponsorship
of the PPHS Band.
patriotic salute is planned for
the closing numbers featuring a
24 member chorus made up of
band students, along with
Modern Millie," and J. C. Hall majorettes, performing to
in "What the World Needs "You're a Grand Old Flag" and
Now," "Marne," and "Hi-De- "This Is My Country."
Ho."
A short intermission will be
Miss Diane Fisher will twirl observed because of the length
her baton to "Spinning Wheel" of the performance, and the
as another special feature band will open up the second
number.
half with a tribute to Glenn
During the grand finale, a Miller.

Variety Show Set
PT. PLEASANT- A variety

"

of selections, among them
Country and Western, Folk and
Disieland music, will be
presented during the first annual "Black Knight Revue"
Friday and Saturday nights by
members of the Point Pleasant
High School Band.
The event will be held nightly
at 7:30 p.m. in the PPHS
gymnasium under the direction
of Gerald (Gary) Stewart.
Special numbers to be
presented by the Stage Band
will include "Big Band
Dixieland," "Li'l Darlin,'"
"Goin' Out of My Head," "Walk
Wild," "New Generation "
"Aquarius" and "Let the
Sunshine In."
Majorettes will be featured in
selections titled "Thoroughly
Modern Mil he," "Raindrops
Keep Fallin' On My Head,"
"Marne" and "Sunday Morning."
Instrumental soloist will
include David Kayser with the
Dixieland Group and Sarah
Flowers
m '"' umpeter's
Lullab)e.
Vocal solo
Kitti Thomas
Cowboy" an

Easter Event Planned
the sunrise service was planned
and $150 was designated to pay
off the debt of the new church
roof during the Monday night
meeting of the Minersville
Methodist Church Women's
Society of Christian Service.
The Society also voted during
the meeting presided over by
Mrs. Clifford Phillips to donate
$10 to the George Thompson
Kidney Fund and to giVe $5 for
the prayer and self denial offering.
Mrs. Karl Grueser, Mrs.
William Russell and Mrs.
Hosmer Roush were appointed
to the nominating committee. A
card was signed for Earl
Renshaw, a patient at Veterans

Mrs. Phillips announced the
Athens District WSCS meeting
to be held at Logan on April 14.
Also presented was an
evaluation report by Mrs. Roy
Ballard, district president. A
card was received from Mrs.
Margaret Perrin of Dayton
thanking the group for
remembrances during her
recent hospitalization. She
spoke of her desire to return
here having spent three months
with a cousin, Miss Clara
Garland.
Group singing of "The Old
Rugged Cross" followed by
prayer by Mrs. lillie Starcher
opened the meeting . Mrs.
Russell read an article "The
Crumbs of Happiness", Mrs.
Herbert
Pugh presented
"Church", and Mrs. Phillips
gave "America" and "Birds".
An article by Mrs. Karl Gureser
was "American's It's Time to
get Busy".
Mrs. Charles Grueser and
Mrs. Roush served refreshments to those named and Mrs.
Eugene Forbes, Mrs. Brooks
Sayre, Mrs. Pearl Phillips, Mrs.
Adolph Grueser, and Miss
Garland.

FOR THE YOUNGER SETINFANTS THRU SIZE 12

•

•Boys Suits 2 &amp; 4 pc.
.Boys Eton Suits
By 'roddle Tyke and
Tiny Tot. Size 6 to 18

mo.

Birthday Observed
Shirts by Rob Roy
Carters
Underwear
and Sleepwear
Coats, Bows,
Purses, Gloves
Trimfit Hosiery

Mrs. Waid Spencer of near
Chester entertained Monday
evening with a supper in observance of the birthday anniversary of her husband.
A decorated cake and gifts
were presented to him. Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Henry Spencer, Vance Spencer,
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Bing and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Elson
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Dayton
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Barnhart and Vaughan, Mr. and
Mrs. Jame&lt;;; Mays and Jeffrey,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Spencer,
Tommy Wolfe, and Tom and
Ray Spencer.

•

new sprtng coats

'

4

An exciting group of coats in the very latest sty les and lengths!
in spring's prettiest hues.

LADIES AND GIRLS

•

COATS $19.95 to $39.95
COATS FOR GIRLS
Washable Polyester Cotton
Little girls stay dry

~h~~e~~~mthr~i~u~~ $11.95 To~l3.95
ton -front coat.

•

Corner

The Bethel United Methodist
Church, located near Coolville
in Troy Township, will be
holding a weekend revival
March 26, 27, 28. Rev. Arlie
Marks is to be the speaker and
the Bissell Brothers of near
Long Bottom and Reedsville,
the featured singers.
This church building, built in
1854, was dedicated in 1855 by
Rev. Jacob Young, who left a
lasting memorial in his
"Autobiography of a Pioneer"
printed in 1860.
In it one reads, "It was a high
day on Waterman's Hill. God's
ministers were clothed with
salvation and the saints shouted
aloud for joy. When I saw the
smiling face of Jacob Humphrey, and heard his wellknown voice, it brought to my
recollection those years when
God was turning the captivity of
Zion as the streams of the
south."
The congregation of Bethel
hopes that this forthcoming
revival will produce another
"high day" on Waterman Hill,
that name of location only
remembered by those of the
older generations in the area in
1971.
The church is located on the
older part of state route 7
(easily seen from the highway)
between Coolville and Tuppers
Plains, and is the only church
building between the two towns.
Everyone is welcome.

Supper Tonight

An Easter breakfast to follow Memorial Hospital.

STER IS A HaPPY Dali'vl
• SPRING DRESSES

Circle Topic is Love

New shipment Ladies Spring Shoes,
l~t&lt;&gt;o:;t st les &amp; colors.
New

Store Hours
Monday thru
Friday
9 til5
Sdlurday
9 til9

At Rutland Gym
The need for a folding table to
be used when serving coffee for
firemen on the scene of a fire
was noted during a meeting
Tuesday night of the Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary.
Auxiliary members Tuesday
morning served coffee to
firemen at the Wilkesville fire .
Plans were completed at the
meeting for a jitney supper to
be held tonight in the Rutland
gymnasium.
The next meeting was set for
April 20 at the firehouse with
Mrs. Tom Martin and Mrs.
Archie McKinney to serve the
refreshments. Mrs. Robert
Bishop will provide the
traveling prize.
Mrs. Charles Barrett and
Mrs. Bob Dugan were accepted
into membership of the
Auxiliary. At the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Kenneth Michael, Mrs. Larry
Edwards, Mrs. Russell little,
Mrs. Bill Williamson, Mrs.
Bruce Davis, Mrs. Bill Gaddis,
Mrs. Howard Birchfield, Mrs.
Merle Davis, Mrs. Denny
Garnes, Mrs. Dick Foley, Mrs.
Jerry Eads, Mrs. Bob Miller,
and Mrs. Maxine Dyer. The
traveling prize sent by Mrs. Bill
Willford was won by Mrs.
McRinney. Mrs. Michael and
Mrs. Foley served refreshments.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

j::.:

We lay in our trenches as
around us the bullets flew
As shell fire rose nearer t~ the
ground I drew.
My blood ran cold for now I
knew
The day's charge was long
· over due.
So I prayed to myself as
around me shells hit.
The. rna~ next to me went into
a crymg ftt.
Did I say a man, he was but a
boy;
But in his hands a rifle wasn't
a toy.
The word at last came,
"Over the top!"
As we rose the boy at my side
a shell he did stop;
I let out a scream as the barb
wire was cleared
No man's land we now
neared!
I heard the sound of incoming
mail,
I dove to the mud to escape
this man-made hell.
Coming up from the mud my
uniform was now smeared with
blood.
With anger boiling deep in my
blood.
I staggered forward thru the
mud.
They fell to the left and to the
right;
Day for them was turned to
forever night.
I screamed a charge! We
were in the barb wire once more
Soon I would even my score.
I fired my gun as the barb
wire was cleared;
The Germans I now neared.
We jumped to the trenches
and fought hand to hand,
Man against man, we fought
for Britain, they for the
fatherland.
They now began a quick
retreat, Many of their comrades
lay at my feet.
The toll of battle was high this
day, and all in all I must say,
We had taken the trenches for
some general's whim;
All my friends, I had . lost
them.
Whether in green or gray or
black or white, Wrong is wrong
and right is right.

st~~v~o~~ ~~~ti~;~~!~: t~;
Miss Mary Virginia Reibel
when Friendly Circle met
Tuesday night at Trinity
Church.
It was brought out by Miss
Reibel that "God is love" and
that His love is a three way
involvement - an attitude of
understanding, a spirit of
compassion, and action through
deeds with God working
through the Christian.
The moving story of a young
man struck with leprosy while
in high school, of his six years of
isolation at a Louisiana
leprosarium, of the cure that

ca_me too late to spare deformtty and disfigurement of
desertion by family and frie~ds
and finally of his friendship with
Bishop Fulton B. Sheen whose
love and trust made life worth
living again emphasized Miss
Reibel's study topic.
Our worry and lack of trust in
so many situations was noted
with the conclusion appropriate
to the Easter season that we
should trust God to "roll away
the stone." Easter declares that
there are some things God will
do His way, Miss Reibel concluded.
Scripture from 1st Corinthians 13, a chapter on love, was

Lodge Rally At Chester
The District 13 rally to be held
at the Chester Elementary
School on May 14 was announced to members of
Theodorus
Council
17,
Daughters of America, Monday
night at the IOOF hall.
It was also announced that
inspection has been set for May
19 with Mrs. Esther Ridenour
district deputy, to be the in~
specting officer.
In a letter from the new state
secretary, Lura Larrick of
Byesville, the state session was
announced for Aug. 31-8ept. 1 at
the Sheridan'-columbus Motor
Hotel in Columbus. Mrs. Edna
Reibel, deputy of Theodorus,
will
serve
as
council
representative with Mrs. Nettie
Hayes to be the alternate
representative.
A letter was read from Mrs.
Beatrice Floeck who has
resigned as state secretary.
Also presented was a communication from Mrs. Ridenour
regarding the death of Mrs.
Neita Deeds, superintendent of
the National Home of the DAY
in Tiffin. Mrs. Deeds, she noted,
was employed there 34 years
before being named assistant
superintendent in 1960 and
superintendent in 1963. The
charter was draped fror Mrs.

Deeds.
A $10 contribution was made
to the George Thompson Kidney
Fund. Mrs. Mary Baldwin,
councilor, presided at the
meeting. The death of Mrs.
Genevieve Mees at the
Westerville Nursing Center in
Westerville was reported. It
was also reported that Mrs.
Albert Roush and Marvin Darst
are patients at Veterans
Memorial Hospital and that
Mrs. Nancy Walker is suffering
from a back injury.
Arrangements were made to
audit the books before the next
meeting. Games were played
and refreshments served. A
practice for inspection will be
held at the next meeting.

read by Miss Mary Elizabeth
Chapman. The opening prayer
and the dedication of the offering were by Miss Reibel.
Miss
Elizabeth
Fick,
president, opened the business
meeting with a poem thought,
"I Met God in the Morning." It
was voted to place a lily in the
sanctuary for Easter to be
taken later to a shutin member
of the church.
Members were reminded of
two Guild projects, the supper
for the George Thompson
Kidney Fund to be served at the
church on March 26 - open to
the public - and the bake sale
in the church basement on
Saturday, April 10.
Cards will be sent to several
members of the congregation
who are ill. Prayer in unison
closed the meeting.
Members were seated at a
table decorated with a
leprechaun centerpiece and
shamrocks for salad and sandwiches served by Mrs. Thomas
Young and Mrs. James Fugate.

CALL 992-2057
Pickup &amp; Delivery

Launary &amp;
Dry Cleaning

HOME LAUNDRY
2nd Ave.

Middleport

~~PROPRIATE

Eastar
FOR

MOTHER

Russell Davis, age 14
Ring Style

What's this
World Coming To

No. b8

Are you wondering, my good
people,
What this world's coming to?
And you cannot find the answer
'
Well, I have one for you.

Set with radiant birthstones - one stone for
each member of the
famify.

I know what is going to happen

Ring can be made to
hold from two to five
birthstones .

For I have it written here
I found it in a book of wisd~ms,
And I keep it ever near.
It tells me of trials and troubles
Such as the world has never
seen
It tells me of peace and calmness,
Such as one could never dream.

In precious IOkt. yellow
or white gold.

Today's FUNNY will pay $1.00 for
each or~ginal "funny" used. Send gags
to: Today's FUNNY, 1200 West Third
St, Cleveland, Ohio 44113.

$3.00 Additiona I
For Each Birthstone

GOESSLER

AUXILIARY TO MEET
The ladies auxiliary of Racine
American Legion post 602 will
It tells me that the end is meet in regular session at 7:30
coming
p.m. Tuesday at the post home.
For the signs have been
fulfilled,
Now it's time to stop and listen;
For that trumpe~ on the hill.

If you have someone you've
hated
Now's the time to make
amends,
Mercy be to those who've
Holzer Medical Center, First
waited,
Ave . and Cedar St. General For tomorrow may be the end.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Help your brother, help your
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
sister
Pediatrics Ward.
Read your Bible every day
Births
Try to walk in God's great pathMr. and Mrs. David D. Tulloh,
way
Mason, a daughter.
For the Lord is on the way.
Discharges
- Mary Bahr, Rt. 1, ReedMrs. Leo E. Bush and infant
sville
son, Sherman Buskirk, Jr., Mrs.
William Christian, Gordon
Cofer, Brian L. Diehl, Mrs.
James Dye, Mrs. Edward
Findley and infant son, Mrs.
Willard Fitzpatrick, Mrs. Artie
TODD COMING
E. Gibson, Miss Charlotte
Wayne Todd, Congressman
Griffith, Mrs. Eliza Harris Clarence Miller's represen William H. Harris, Clarence R: tative, will be in Pomeroy and
Hash, Mrs. Thomas Hut- Gallipolis Tuesday, March 23,
chinson, Clarence E. Johnson at the Meigs County Court
Levina M. Legg, Mrs. Walter
House from 9-11 a.m. and at the
Lewis, William R. Lewis, Jo Gallia County Court House from
Ann Lipscomb, Terry L. Mc- 2-4 p.m. Anyone wishing ,
Manus, Francis E. Queen, Jerri assistance on matters relating
E. Spencer, Mrs. Audrey to the Federal Government is
Stover, Charles Tussey, Mrs. invited to stop by at this time.
Nina Wagner, Francis A. Whitt,
Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. John
Codner, Catherine Ousley, and
Mrs. David Sharp and infant
REVENUE RETURNED
son.
The State of Ohio distributed
to local political subdivisions a
BOOSTERS TO MEET
total of $8,102,921 in gasoline
The Southern Local School taxes in March. Amounts
District Band Boosters will received in Meigs County were
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Middleport, $1,877; Pomeroy,
the high school in Racine. All $1,934; Racine, $417; Rutland,
parents of b1"&lt;~ members are $436, and Syracuse, $411 for a
asked tc attend.
total of $5,075.
'

JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

HOP To

Infants 2·5 and 5'h·8. All
are from our regular
stock and all are
reduced. Prices begin at
$2.00 up.

Small Group
of
Discontinued
Misses

THIS

PRE-EASTER
SALE

Hush
Puppies

Womens loafers &amp;
dress shoes . Broken
sizes but prices begin
at $2.00.

j~['"~h
~~-.....,..-~

Small group of mens
black leather oxfordmoctoe.
10pairat
$5.00

L:

Mens black safety
toe oxford - only 7
pair.
Made
by
/ Wolver;"~
$10.00
4 Pairs

Mens

Engineer
Boots
Were $19.95

Angel
Treads
Only A
Few But

THE

Bachelor Girl Hose
2 for

in dark shade.

38c
Ll m ited supply.
few nurses white

A

ALL SALES
FINAL
Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced.
MiD::&gt;LEPORT, 0.

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 18, 1971

Easter Events Planned l!!~~~~~~i~~ Spring

Easter projects were planned
during meetings of the three
circles of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church Tuesday night.
Announced at the meetings
was the Rio Grande Baptist
Association meeting to be held
at the Calvary Baptist. Church
at Rio Grande Saturday. The
meeting will feature workshop
interest groups on Christian
Education by the Rev. Lee
Morris; Christian Higher
Education by the Rev. Ray
Farrow, and World Missionary
Support by Dr. Russell Jones
and Mrs. Paul Crosier.
Dr. Jones and Mrs. Crosier,
now vice president of American
Baptists, will speak at the
Women's Association meeting
at 5 p.m. Mrs. Gladys Rife is
president.
In April the three circles will
meet at the church for a potluck
dinner. At that time plans will
be furthered for the annual
mother-daughter banquet to be
held in May.
DORCAS CIRCLE
Preceding their regular
meeting, members of the
Dorcas Circle went to the
Elmwood Rest Home at Tuppers Plains for a visit with the
resi 'ents. They served cupcakes and ice cream.
In the group which returned
to the home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin for a meeting were Mrs.

John Fultz, Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, Mrs. Charles
Edwards, Mrs. Slavin, Mrs.
Arland King, Michl King, and
Mrs. Tony Fowler.
At the meeting conducted by
Mrs. King a donation was made
to the George Thompson Kidney
Fund. A gift of money and an
Easter booklet will be sent to
Miss Connie Williamson,
Baptist scholarship girl.
Baskets of fruit will be prepared.
for shutins at Easter.
Mrs.
Charles
Simons
presented devotions using " The
Dimension of Life" as her
meditation topic. She concluded
with a poem "Every Martha
and Mary" and prayer. Mrs.
Simons and Mrs. John Werner
presented
the
program.
Refreshments of salad, mints,
coffee and tea were served.
Others there were Miss Freddie
Houdashelt, Mrs. Freda Hood,
and Wes and Carol Simons and
.Dee Slavin, guests.
ELECI'A CIRCLE
Ten dollars were given for
milk for needy children by the
EJecta Circle meeting at the
home of Mrs. Mary Lyons.
The circle decided to attend
revival services at the
Nazarene Church in a group and
made arrangements to provide
Easter remembrances for shutins. Birthdays of missionaries
will also be remembered.
Devotions by Mrs. James
Souders included an article on

Baptists, the 91st Psalm and
prayer. Mrs. Manning Kloes
read " Local Churches on Trial"
and Mrs. Willis Anthony had the
closing prayer.
Mrs. Lyons served a dessert
course to those named and Mrs.
Charles Searles, Mrs. Dale
Walburn, Mrs. Jacob Turner,
Mrs. Dana Hamm, Mrs. Goldie
Mourning, Mrs. Ethel Hughes.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
A report on a visit to the
Arcadia Rest Home at Coolville
to see Harold Hall was given by
Mrs. Fred Lewis and Mrs.
Robert Richardson at a meeting
of the Love Joy Circle held at
the .home of Mrs. Richard
Owen. The two provided a birthday cake for Mr. Hall.
Plans were made to take
Easter baskets to shut-ins and
to send money to Steven Pullins
on his birthday anniversary.
Thank-you notes were read
from William Werner, Maude
Betz, and Lucinda Dains for
remembrances.
Mrs. Lewis gave devotions
using a meditation "If A Man
Dies Shall He Live Again''. Mrs.
Richardson read articles from
Guidepost.
Mrs. Owen served a salad
course. Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Charles White, Mrs.
Beulah White, Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt, and Mrs. Paul
Smart.

Scholarships Reviewed
Applicants for the Wddleport
Business and Professional
Women's nursing scholarship
were guests at a meeting of the
club Monday night at the
Columbia Gas of Ohio office.
Mrs. Nellie Vale, chainnan of
the scholarship committee,
presented the applications and
told of the a istance to a
student attending the Holzer
School of Nursing. Introduced
were Mary Bradbury, a senior
at Meigs High School, and her

mother, Mrs. Charles Bradbury, and Debbie Woods, a
senior at Eastern High School,
and her mother, Mrs. Robert
Woods. Both girls spoke briefly
of their interest in nursing as a
career.
Mrs. Grace Pratt, president,
noted that the legislative
conference scheduled for this
month in Cleveland has been
cancelled. She reported on the
state convention to be held in
May 'with the club to send

2 Contributions Voted
trbt
Co ty Soc1e
Childr n and
Thompson Kld::
m ade by the Homebwlders
Class of the Middleport Church
of Christ during a meeting
Tuesday night at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. William Grueser.
The class also discussed plans
for assisting in the church
decorations for Palm Sunday
and Easter with Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Kincaid being appoi~ted to help. The class will
purchase two lilies to be used in
the sanctuary on Easter.
Herman Kincaid reported on
the carpet project and announced a bake sale to be held
on April12 at the Western Auto
Store with all proceeds to go
toward the carpeting.
The Rev . Raullin Moyer
spoke on the revival to start on
April 4 with Mr. Bo Deaton of
Milligan College to be the
evangelist. Lawrence Stewart
presided at the meeting with
Mrs. Carl Roach giving the
secretary and treasurer's
reports. It was reported that
Mrs. Denver Rice is a patient at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Milton Houdashelt gave the
prayer to open the meeting.
Refreshments were served
during a concluding social hour
by Mr. and Mrs. Grueser, Mr.
and Mrs. Clay Tuttle, and Mr.

and Mrs. Russell Wilson, to
those named and Miss Thelma
Boyer, Mrs. Leonard Van
Meter, Mrs. ~orman Yeauger,
Mr. and Mrs. Chester E rwin,
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart, Mrs.
Milton Houdashelt and Mrs.
Stella Grueser, a guest.

DONATION MADE
A donation was made to the
George Thompson Kidney Fund
at the Tuesday night meeting of
Group II of the Women's
Association, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
held at the home of Mrs. Dwight
Wallace. Mrs. Don Lowrey gave
devotions using a meditation
" Jesus Only" by Dr. Oscar
Klinkerman. Mrs. Myron Miller
presented the program from
"The Presbyterian Life". The
hostess served a salad course.

SCHEDULE REVISED
A revised schedule will be
followed by "Mr. Eddy", the
county bookmobile this Friday.
Stops for the unit this Friday
according to the new schedule
include 9-9:15, Catholic Church,
Long Bottom; Riverview
School, 9:45-11:30 a.m.; Reedsville, 12 noon - 1 p.m.; Long
Bottom,1:30-3p.m.; Keno,3:304 p.m .; Bashan, 4:15-4:30 p.m .

r::~~"'''~:::::::· ::::::::::··:::·:~~~;;::~~:;:;;;;w:&lt;;::·~~":;:::;:::··:&lt;~:m::;:,::;:::;::~

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~

CONVENTION SET
The Missionary Convention of
the Hocking District will meet
at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the
Naomi
Baptist
Church,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Campbell is the
president, and the Rev. Samuel
read from Mrs. Maxine Arnold Jackson is pastor of the host
thanking the unit for the past church.
president's gift.
Father's Night was observed from Psalms 22, James 4 and
with the attendance award Proverbs 28, with prayer .
going to John Arnott's sixth
Refreshments were served by
grade. A film, "Man in Space", Mrs. Joe Stanley, Mrs. Vernal
provided by the Columbus and Well, Mrs. James Smith, Mrs.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. was Richard Mees, Mrs. Donald
shown.
Dorst, Mrs. Gene Whaley, Mrs.
The Rev. Donald Brickles Herbert Whaley, Mrs. Dorset
gave devotions using "Why Biggs, Mrs. Ardella Herdman,
Prayers are Not Answered" as Mrs. Stanley Kaldor, Mrs.
his topic. He used scripture Floyd Brickles, and Miss Story.

We have a credit plan designed to fit your budget.

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XL

Boys 6 to 20
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POMEROY, OHIO

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scholarship time is April 15 and
that the cancelled stamp drive
is still on. Mrs. Orval Wiles
noted that the white cross quota
is ready for mailing.
The April meeting was
changed from Maundy Thursday to April15 with Mrs. Cook to
review ''The Reconciling
Community".
Mrs. Cook appointed Mrs.
George Skinner and Mrs. Ivan
Walker to arrange a trip to the
infirmary around Easter.
Mrs. Kuhn was at the piano
for group singing of the theme
song, "Be Strong, We Are Not
Here to Play". Devotions were
by Mrs. Skirmer who used a
poem- on faith from "Ideals", f
scripture from First Peter, and
prayer.
Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs. Albert
Smith served refreshments '
carrying out the St. Patrick's
Day theme. Attending besides
those named were Mrs. T. T.
Shelton, Mrs. J. E. Foster, Mrs.
Harry Bailey, Mrs. William
death of her sister, Mrs. Lois Watson and Mrs. Oliver
McCain. It was reported that Michael.
Mrs. Esther Ridenour, Mrs.
Dorothy Ritchie and Mrs.
Clarice Allen are ill. Mrs. Allen
fractured her wrist and also
burned her right arm and hand
when she fell with a container of
hot water.
Quarterly birthdays were
observed with potluck refreshments. A St. Patrick's Day
theme was carried out with a
gift at each place and a
decorated cake baked by Mrs.
Margaret Tuttle. Seated at the
table were Mrs. Lawson, Mrs.
Goldie Wolfe, Mrs. Tuttle, Mrs.
Marcia Keller, Mrs. Mary Jo
Pooler, Mrs. Zona Biggs, Mrs.
Mabel Van Meter, and Mrs.
Hollon.
Others at the meeting were
Mrs. Thelma White, Mrs. Betty
Excitrng Keepsake stylesRoush, Mrs. Helen Wolfe, Mrs.
from classically simple to in·
Barbara Sargent, Mrs. Letha
tricately carved. Each with a
flawless center diamond .
Wood, Mrs. Ada Neutzling, Mrs.
Hattie Frederick, Mrs. Mary
Kay Holter, Mrs. Mary
Showalter, Mrs. Zelda Weber,
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mrs.
Ethel Orr, Mrs. Dorothy Myers,
Mrs. Elizabeth Wickham, Mrs.
Mae Spencer, Mrs. Goldie
Frederick, Mrs. Mary Hayes,
Mrs. lnzy Newell, Mrs. Thelma
Call and Mrs. Doris Koenig.

Lead

~~

t

Middleport and Cheshire. She
urged the women to pray for
peace and spoke of the faith of
Miss Arlene Spurlock
a
missionary to the Niger
Republic, currently on leave
from her work sponsored by
Evangelical Baptist Missions.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn noted that
the Sedziols will be leaving the
association to accept a
pastorate in Belpre and spoke of
their cooperation and contribution to Association work.
The March 28 silver tea of the
Cheshire church was announced.
During the meeting it was
decided to make the George
Thompson Kidney Fund a
church project. Mrs. Joseph
Cook advised the members that

Summer and knit shirts .. .
they go together. Lots of
styles, plenty of colors.

::;:.
t~

EASTER LILIES, DAFFODILS, NARCISSUS'
;

t~

Past councilor's cards were
presented to Mrs. Patricia
Thomas and Mrs. Opal Hollon
at the Tuesday night meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America.
Mrs. Erma Cleland, council
deputy, made the presentation
of the cards after Mrs. Thomas
and Mrs. Hollon had been
escorted to the altar.
Arrangements were made
during the meeting conducted
by Mrs. Jean Summerfield to
audit the books at the home of
Mrs. Ada Van Meter on March
30. The April 6 meeting will be
held at 8 p. m. instead of 7:30
and at that time the charter will
be draped for Ralph Chevalier.
Members are asked to wear
white. A game period will also
be conducted by the home and
orphans committee.
A thank you note was read
from Mrs. Erma Cleland for
kindnesses extended at the

PTA Election Set
Mrs. Jack Welker, Mrs.
Richard Friend, and Mrs. Uoyd
Haggy were appointed to the
nominating committee for the
Salisbury P.T.A. at a meeting
Tuesday night.
The committee will report at
the April meeting at which time
the officers for the 1971-72
school year will be elected. Miss
Rosalie
Story
discussed
progress on solving the
playground problem of standing
water. She said the Board of
Education has surveyed the
situation and has asked
engineers to determine the
cause and recommended
corrective measures .
Plans were made to serve the
annual Pomona Grange dinner
on April 16 at the Salisbury
School and Mrs. James Will,
chairman , has asked that
anyone willing to help be at the
school by 1 p.m. on that date.
A white elephant auction was
set for the April meeting with
Mrs. Kathy Pullins to serve as
auctioneer. In the absence of
Mrs. Wendell Hoover, Mrs. Ned
Swindell gave the secretary's
report. Mrs. Ed Kennedy,
president, and Mrs. Will spoke
on proposed revisions to the bylaws of the Meigs County
Council of Parents and
Teachers. A thank-you note was

Event Set

D of A Lodge Met

SUNDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Prayer
service, Sunday, 2 p.m. at the
Chester Church of the
Nazarene; Okey Ahart, leader.
MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 1: 15 p .m. Thurs- p.m. high school cafeteria.
day at the home of Mrs. Fred
Goeglein.
TUESDAY
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
PUBLIC MEETING, Racine
tonight, 7:30 p.m. at Racine Junior High, 8 p.m. Tuesday,
clubhouse; refreshments.
representative
of
ComDEMOCRATIC executive monwealth System Corp. to be
meeting, 7:30 p.m. tonight at present to discuss sewerage
headquarters, W. Main St., system for Racine. All residents
Pomeroy.
invited.
FRIDAY
MEIGS County Committee on
SOUP SUPPER, 4:30 p.m. Alcohol and Drug Abuse,
Friday at the Syracuse Asbury Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at St. Paul
Methodist Church. Soup, pie, Lutheran Church, 231 E.
sandwiches. Containers to be Second, Pomeroy. Public inprovided for take-&lt;&gt;ut orders. vited.
SOUTHERN Local Band
BASKETBALL
games, Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
Syracuse Grade School, Friday, high school, Racine. Parents of
7 p .m., fifth grade boys versus band members urged to attend.
sixth grade boys; 8 p.m. fathers RACINE American Legion
versus sons. Proceeds for Post Auxiliary, 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday at post home.
basketball banquet.

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

:~li

REV. EDWIN McLeod
Belpre, will show film slides of
The Rio Grande Baptist
th~ Holy Land, 7:30 p.m. Association annual spring
Friday, Bald Knob Freedom meeting to be held Saturday at
Gospel Mission, Stiversville- Rio Grande Calvary Baptist
Bashan Road. Public invited. Church was announced during a
recent meeting
of
the
SATURDAY
Missionary Society of the
SQUARE DANCE, Saturday, Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
9 p.m. -1 a.m. Royal Oak Park
Mrs. Ralph Rife, president of
archery building. Music by the Women's Association, and
Mike Garrell and band, caller Mrs. David Sedziol, wife of the
Jim. Carnahan. Sponsored by pastor of the Cheshire Baptist
Southern Local Band Boosters. Church met with the Pomeroy
RACINE POST 602, American women to outline plans for the
Legion
birthday
party' spring meeting.
Saturday, 6:30 p .m. Auxiliary
Mrs. Paul Crosier, vice
members take covered dish for president of American Baptists,
potluck dinner.
and former president of Ohio
HIGH SCHOOL dance party, Baptists, will be a speaker. In
Meigs Junior High School, talking to the group, Mrs. Rife
Middleport, Saturday, 8 to 11 reflected on the old Pomeroy
p.m. with Jays emceeing. Association made up of churSchool sponsored.
ches in Racine, Pomeroy,
RUMMAGE SALE Friday
and Saturday, Fry building,
Middleport, 10 a .m. to 4 p.m., by
Middleport Junior Troop 5.

~

«

·-~:~; :

d~;legates, and of the national
convention to be held in
Cleveland later this year.
Mrs. Pratt also reported that
$725 was collected in Middleport
in the Heart Sunday canvass
headed by Mrs. Harold Sargent.
Mrs . Ann Bailey , finance
chairman, announced a rummage sale to be held April15-17
in the Fry building.
Mrs. Harry Moore donated a
walker to the hospital loan
center of the club. Mrs. James
Conkle and Mrs. Betty Cline
thanked the club for remembrances during their illnesses
and a card was signed for Mrs.
L. E. Reynolds.
Members were advised that
Mrs. Elizabeth Yearing is the
new district director, and that
Faye Thompson has been
elected a member of the state
nominating committee. A
foreign tour being sponsored by
the Lima Club was also noted.
"Have the Russians Bought
Cuba" was the topic of the
program presented by Mrs.
Lucille Swackhamer, chairman
of the world affairs committee.
She presented facts and figures
on the Russian assistance to
Cuba, of its weak and
revolutionary status. The
outlook for an independent Cuba
is not bright, she said, in
pointing out its proximity to the
United States.
She suggested that if the men
continue to let the situation go
unnoticed, then perhaps the
women will have to do
something about it. "We're
given two ends - one to think
with and the other to sit on and
perhaps it's time to get off the
one and on to the other," she
concluded.
Mrs. Swackhamer and Mrs.
Leo Kennedy, also on the
foreign affairs committee,
served refreshments.

THURSDAY
ANNUAL BIRTHDAY observance of F~eney-Bennett
Post 128: Amencan Legwn, 6
p.m. dmner followed by
program.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30p.m. home of Mrs. W. A.
Morgan.
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.
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 , an d 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 4:30 p.m.

992-2284

Pomeroy, 0.

�7-The

•

I

r.

.'

'

•

' r

} ,r . .

NELSON'S MARCH VALUES
See Our Window•.• See
ARE MONSTROUS Our Displays. Mar. 18, 19, 20, 21.

•

I

BUFFERIN
'Reg. 1.59

lOO's

99~

•

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Regular 1.19

70l.
SIZE

•
liTl'Tnlll:l.l

36's

•

Reg. 3. 79

KODAK FILM

lOO's . .. ,.,. . . . · . . . . . .·

congespirin

Regular 1.40

40's

Chewable Cold K:lblets
for Children
Analgesic Nasot Decongestant

ONLY

VASELINE
Reg. 45~
~
4 oz
29
Q-TIPS

1.19

B~~-GAY

GREASELESS
Reg. 1.89 }
3 oz.

•

2g
SYLVANIA

SYLVANIA

FLASH CUBES

MAGICUBES

Reg.

1.85

Reg. 2.35

99~

HANKSCRAFT VAPORIZER

••

NO. 219

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~

COLDENE
COLD MEDICINE

Re~

Reg. 1.09
'2 5/16 oz.

6.95

Beauty
Buys Are Best At Nelson's

Coty Sheer Puffery Foam
BRONZE LIGHT
MEDIUM
DEEP TONE

2 50
e

No. 108 Color
Reg.
. 5.49
CX-126-12
EASTMAN

I70's

...

59~

POLAROID
FILM

ONCE A YEAR SPECIAL!

Matchabelli Spray Colognes
Wind Song
Golden Autumn

2 25
•

TUSSY
MOISTURE
CREAM
Regularly 3.75

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4.88

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 18,1971

Bargains"' Bare-ains, ru:td More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
- WANT AD
INFORMATION
Notice
DEADLINES
s P.M. t&gt;ey Before Publication GUN shoot. Forked Run
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
• Cance.ll~tion &amp; Corrections
March 21, 12 Noon.
Will be accepted untn 9 a.m. f
3-17·3tc
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS .
The Pub Iis her reserves theo 1\IEW SHIPMENTwomen'sand
·~ight to edit or' rerect any adsl
children's clothing has
.deemed
obi·ectiot'lal.
The
arrived at Jeffers Clothing
publisher will not be responsible
Store. Plenty of men's work
for' more than one incorrecf
clothes also. Jeffers Clothing
insertion.
Store, Rt. 33 going toward
RATES
For Want Ad ~e·rvice
fairgrounds.
5 cents eer Word one insertior.
3-12-6tc
Minlmtm Clli!rge 7Sc
12 cents per word th re~ VFW GUN shoot, Sunday,
:onsecutivt~.insertions.
March 21, noon. Broad Run
18 cents- per word s~x con·
Rod and Gun Club, New
secutive insertions.
•
• 25 Per cenl Discount on pale
Haven, W. Va., sponsored by
ads and ads paid within 10 days
Stewart Johnson Post 9926,
CARD OF THANKS •
Mason, W. Va.
&amp; OBITUARY
'
3-18-3tp
'$1.50 for 50 word~ minimum
Each additional word 2c.
GUN shoot, 1 p.m., Sunday,
·BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
March 21. Still and trap
Advertisement.
·
targets. Rutland Gun Club.
OFFICE HOURS
Also, Friday night pistol
8:30 t!.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally
shoot.
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noor
3-18-3tc
raturday. .
•

Harrisonville
Society News

,.
,_•

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...
t
f

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'

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I

Mr. Robert R. Gibson on
business for his companJ
passed through town Wed·
nesday evening, ate supper with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Alkire and made calls on
his grandmothers, Lana Gibson
and Ava Gilkey.
Mr. Melvin Morris (Johnny)
has sold his farm near
Snowville and retained 1 Acre
and expects to buy a trailer.
Mr. Duff sold his farm to Mr.
Lawson near Athens.
The Garden Club met with
Sharon Jewell Thursday.
Terry Payne has returned
from the hospital after a bout
with pneumonia.
Mr. Charles McGrath and
children were supper guests of
Earl McGraths.
Mrs. Henry Waggoner spent
an afternoon with Frances
Alkire recently and reported
that Jack Waggoner's wife had
passed away in California.
The Alumni Association with
Dale Whaley, president and
Clinton Gilkey, vice president,
met Friday evening at
Presbyterian Church and set
May 29 for the banquet.
Mr. and Mrs. Darold Graham
a1 :1 three children spent the
weekend with his mother,
Bessie Graham.
Mr. Darold Graham and
Kenneth Payne were in
Columbus, 0. on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Whaley
t
·
'th th
spen an evenmg Wl
e
Robert Alkires.
Mrs. Golda Jones and Mrs.
Minnie Foit were released from
.
Veterans Hospital Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
of Albany 0. visited his mother
. '
'
Ava Gilkey.
Mrs. Mary Wright, who
formerly owned the Tom
Musser farm, has purchased
the Monk farm near the Zion
Church.
The Lend-A-Hand met with
Sharon Jewell Wednesday
evening.
Mrs. Raymond Donahue
hosted a Rubber-Maid party at
her home Friday evening.
Mrs. Mamie Newlun has
returned home after a visit in
Pt. Pleasant.
Mrs. Neilie Borgan is on the
sick list.
M
Earl
cllli e of Cc
spe
g the"
assisting his
cared for the
e in
Foit's absence.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carsey and
daughter, Kathy, were supper
guests of the Darold Grahams
on Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGrath
visited his sister, who is ill at
Shade, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
had as dinner guests Sunday
Mrs. Ruby Halliday, Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Atkins and Mr. and
Mrs.
Glen
Jewell
of
Downington. An afternoon guest
was Duane Will.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGrath
had as dinner guests Mr. and
Mr. Otis McGrath and son of
Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
McGrath and two children of
Coolville and Charles McGrath
and children.

• •
F rurvieW
..... NeWS N0 t es
.....

....

••'

.:•'

.

~-

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Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields,
Mrs. Marlene Fisher, Molly,
Larry and Amy of Racine; Mrs.
Ann Radford and Stephanie of
Pomeroy Rt. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Robinson of Flatrock,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Robinson of Cleveland, 0. were
dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Robinson at Antiquity.
Mrs. Bertha Robinson spent
Saturday night in the Robinson
home.
Mrs. Butch Wilson and
mother of Ripley, W.Va. called
on Mrs. Russell Roush Tuesday.
George and Roger Parsons of
Ashland, Ohio spent Saturday
night with their sister, Mr . and
Mrs. Donald Hupp and sons.
Marion Parsons of Caldwell,
0. and Everett Parsons of
Neyley, 0 . called on Preston
Parsons Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W.Va.; Ronnie Russell
of Pomeroy spent Sunday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush.

Lost
LARGE
black
German
Shepherd.
Portland-Racine
area. Call Clarence Lawrence, phone 843-2815.
316-3tc
$25 REWARD for female dog,
one year old, 14 inches tall.
Black with silver overcast,
silver legs and face; has very
long hair that hangs in her
eyes, and floppy ears. Very
friendly. Answers to name of
Buttons, or Buddy. She wears
a leather collar with rabies
tag. Contact anyone at Newt
Humphrey farm adjacent to
Rock Springs fairgrounds or
call 992-6787 after 6 p.m.
3·18-3tp

For Sale or Trade
1962 CHEVROLET 2 ton V8, 4
speed transmission, 2 speed
axle, new rubber, 16 ft. flat.
$650.

'

1959 Dodqe 2 ton cab and
chassis, VB, 5 speed transmission, 2 speed axle, good
rubber. $250.
Also, International K-5, 4 speed
transmission, 2 speed axle,
8x12 flat bed, runs good. $150.
Will trade for farm tractor or
pick up truck. Phone 992-6048.
3-18-3tc

N t• ·

0 ICe
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
2-23-3otc
WILL PICK up merchandise
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc
AUCTION - WHEN? Each
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
Hayman's Auction House,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Pomeroy
Middleport Bypass.
2-7-tfc
WILL GIVE piano and organ
lessons In my hoi'T'e. Phone
992-3666.
8-16-tfc
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
10-18-tfc
RUBBER STAMPS made to
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Ohio.
2-12-90tc
GUN SHOO I, Sunday, March
21, at Racine G·un Club.
Hams, bacon, steaks, pork
chops.
3-15-6tc

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Probate Court
To the Executor of the estate;
to such of the following as are
residents of the State of Ohio,
viz : - the surviving spouse, the
next of kin, the beneficiaries
under the will ; and to the at .
torney
or
attorneys
representing any of the
a for em entioned persons :
Clara Barbara Whaley,
Deceased, No. 20430, Route 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Salisbury
Township .
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Ap praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased, late
of said Counfy, was filed in this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hearing before this CC'urt on the
29th day of March, 1971, at 10:00
o'clock A.M.
Any person desiring to file
exceptions thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing.
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, this 9th day of
March 1971.
John C. Bacon
Judge and ex-officio Clerk
of said Court
(3)

By Ann B . Watson
Deputy Clerk
11.
18,
2tc

A thought for today : British
philosopher Alfred North Whithead defined civilization as:
"Civilized society exhibiting the
five qualities of truth, beauty,
adventure, art, peace."

DANNIE'S
Mobile, Homes
Pomeroy

We talk to you

1st In Selection
1st In Volume
1st In Service

like a person.

12 Year Terms Available
We will never knowingly be
undersold!

DANNIE'S

WMP0/1390

Pomeroy
992-7195
Open 7 Days A Week

ATTENTION ladies! Would you
like to try a wig on in the
privacy of your own home?
You can. Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Koscot,
of
course.
Distributors, Brown's. Phone
Middleport 992-5113.
12-31-tfc
GUN SHOOT: Every Saturday
night, 6 p.m., near Racine
Planing Mill, sponsored by
Syracuse Fire Department.
Assorted meats.
3-l7-3tc
BAND- Friday and Saturday
nights- 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Hl-7
Club.
3-17-3tc

Wanted To Buy
SMALL farm and house,
buildings, Meigs County area.
Contacf Oris Frederick, 3221
Georgetown
Rd.,
In·
dianapolis, Ind. 46224. Phone
317-291-9130.
3-9-12tc
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
condition, as long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will
be pick-up day. Write, giving
good directions. Witten Piano
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Ohio 43946.
B-20-tfc
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-6271.
9-1-tfc

Wanted
GOOD home for dog, black part
Cocker
Spaniel,
likes
children. Will give away.
Phone 992-5737.

Employment Wanted

·B usfuess Services

TRAIL - BREAKER

.EXPERIENCED

A Rough Terrain Bike

4~ Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

T1me You Ever Spent.

.Saturday. Sunday and
Monday- March 20-21-22
9:00 AM to 5:00 PM

WARREN MOWER SHOP
992-7357

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
f. tr\\'INSOR
«BUDDY

MIXED HAY, clover, alfalfa KILL TERMITES and yard
and timothy. Lester Keaton,
insects with Arab "You-Dolt." King Builders Supply
phone Chester 985-3809.
3-14-6tc
Company, Middleport.
2-21-6otc
REGISTER ED quarter-horses.
Pleasure, contest, racing,
yearlings, bred mares, $200 to
$300. Phone 992-5883.
3-l4-6tc

From the Largest Truck or/
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

14 FOOT runabout with 40 hp.
motor, $450. Phone 247-2911 or
247-2677.
3-1B-3tp
WALNUT STEREO radio
combination. Four speed
intermixed
changer.
4
speaker sound system, dual
volume control. Balance
$66.15. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-3352.
I
3-18-6tc

All FLOOR SAMPLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES
Every One
Marked Down

1

POMEROY .,
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
Stereo, AM&amp;FM radio, four 1------------~
speakers, 4 speed automatic HOME OF W. M. Sinclair, Rt. 7.
changer, separate controls.
Lovely three bedroom home,
Balance $79.35. Use our time
bath and half, two garages,
payment plan. Call 992-3352. full basement, storm windows
3-18-6tc and doors, 1112 acres, call 9922441 daytime, Chester 985-3840
SINGER Cabinet Model Sewing after 5:30p.m.
Machine, equipped with dial
3-17-tfc
control for zig -zag, buttonhole - - - - - - - - - and fancy design work as well CAR TAPE player and tape.
as beautiful straight sewing. $50. Phone 742-3656.
Will sacrifice for $51.60 cash
3-17-3tp
or terms available. Phone 992- - - - - - - - - - - 5641.
SAVE BIG! Clean rugs and
3-16-6tc upholstery with Blue Lustre.
.- - , - - - - - - - - - - Rent electric shampooer. $1.
COAL; limestone. Exc!!ISio:··
Baker Furniture , Middleport.
Salt Works, E. Main ·' St.
3-17-3tc
Pomeroy. Phone 992-389Jt:t
4-9-tfc. ELECTROLUX
CLEANER
~
---------large deluxe model. Complete
RECONDITIONE:U IV sets,
with all cleaning tools and
For information or service
paper bags. Used but cleans
call Sparkie's TV Service,
like new. Will sell for $2B cash
phone Mason 773-5933.
or terms available. Phone 9923-12-12tc 5641.
3-16-6tc

ARE YOU .
HAPPY?,

REPAIR

.Wheel Alignment

T.V. SERVICE

-GUARAt.ITEEDPhone 992-20911

J . Durbin- C. Inscore
Service Personnel

:Pomeroy Home &amp; "Autfi
61M f' Motln, Pomeroy,

o:

Estate For Sale

Cleland Reali)
60B East Mam
POMEROY
RACINE RT. 2 - ACROSS
FROM KAISER PLANT Located on the river, out of
floods, 1 story, 2 bedrooms,
bath , nice kitchen, part
basement, drilled well, 1.37
ACRES GROUND. $7,500.
MINERSVILLE
GOOD
VIEW OF THE RIVER EXCELLENT CONDITION
1112 story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, basement,
panelling, aluminum siding,
large yard. $10,000.
POMEROY - BEAUTIFUL
BRICK, ALMOST NEW- 1
story, 3 large bedrooms,
double closets, built-in kitchen, dining bar and area,
carpeting, bath, basement
with recreation room, utility
room, 1 acre. ALL FOR
$27,500.
TO BUY OR SELL
CONTACT US
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
3-18-6tc

BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-247B.
11-29-tfc
HARRISON'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-tfc

------------------RALPH'S
CARPET

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

CUSTOM MEAT cutting.
Contact Richard Vaughan,
phone 992-3374 or Dale Little,
phone 992-6346.
3-3-12tc
AIR
CONDITIONING.
Refrigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc

George s. HobsteMer, Jr.
REAL ESTATE BROKER
Phone 985·4186
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Phone 949-3211
FOR ALL your real estate
needs, contact us.
ACREAGE wan ted between
Middleport,
Ohio
and
Cheshire, 0.
3-12-6tc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pqmeroy, Ohio

JP!infiJS f/JC

nmcJo71uY
BEST SELECTION
BEST PRICES

1969 Chev.

Townsman Station Wagon,
low mileage local owned
with auto. trans., power
steering, new tires, radio.
Pleasing blue finish. See this
before you buy.

1968 Chevy II $1595
Nova 2 dr., white finish, blue
interior, 6 cyl.
eng. ,
automatic trans., new tires,
radio &amp; heater.

1967 Plymouth5l39
Belvedere 2 dr. hardtop, V-8
motor, power steering, std.
3-speed trans., blk. +op,
cc:eam body, radio .

service, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

car, clean interior, dark
aqua finish, like new tires, 6
cyl. engine &amp; automatic
trans. , radio. Popular model
&amp; priced to go.

Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

1966 Chevelle $1295

------------------SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Serv ice
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford

Conv. cpe., local1 owner car,
blk. vinyl interior with
bucket seats, 4-speed trans.,
std. V-B engine, good tires,
radio, maroon finish &amp; blk.
top.

5-1-tfc

~966 Impala $1395
------------------PAINTING,
roofing
and
spouting service. Richard
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
3-11-3otc

ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
hold-up. Southeastern
Security Systems. Call Ray
Adams 247-2055 Mike
O'Brien 247-2113.
3-17-tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
"Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
Phone
John
Russell,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-7-tfc

CONCRETE
RURAL - NEW 3 bedrooms, READY-MIX
delivered right to your
Jl/2 baths, gas furnace, nice
project. Fast and easy . Free
kitchen with dining area.
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Utility room, cook and bake
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
units. Carport. 112 Acre. On
Middleport, Ohio.
124. $19,500.00.
6-30-tfc
RENTING IS WASTEFUL.
4 bedroorr.s, O' BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
SYRACUSE bath , nice paneled ri1cr~·n.
Commercial , residential and
Furnace heat . Basemer.:
industrial wiring. Phone 247Large garden, $12,000.00.
2113.
SAVE MONEY,
3-12-12tp
BUY PROPERTY NOW.
ROCK SPRINGS SUB- O'DELL WHEEL alignment
DIVISION - NEW electric 3
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
bedrooms , 2 full baths.
Complete front end service,
bequtiful kitchen with dining
tune up and brake service.
area. Therm-o-pane windows .
Wheels
balanced
elecFull basement, 2 car garage .
tronically .
All
work
Lot 100 X 145. Have key, will
guaranteed.
Reasonable
show. $23,500.00.
rates.
WE NEED VACANT
3-17-30tc
LAND NEAR CHESHIRE
75 ACRES - 20 tractor tillable,
. 30 in pasture . 4 bedroom farm
house. Implement shed, small
ba r n .
MINERALS.
$13,500.00.
lnsuranc~
MAY WE HELP YOU
SELL, BUY, OR TRADE.
AUTOMOBILE insuranc.. &gt;)een
cancelled?
Lost
yc 1r
991-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
operator's license? Call 991ASSOCIATE 992-2378
2966.
6-15-tfc
312-6tc

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

HT Sedan. Local 1 owner
car, blk. finish &amp; red cloth
interior, good tires, V-B
engine, automatic trans. &amp; p.
steering, radio. Nice family
car.

Mr. (614)
Harold
Curtis
593-6661

Falcon 2 dr., 6 cyl. std.
trans. , all good tires, smart
lookin~ copper finish, radio.
Real economy in this car.

1966 Ford
Galaxie Hl L.pe. , 6 cyl:
engine, std . trans ., air
conditioning, good tires ,
clean interior, dark green
finish.

1968 Ford
112 Ton B' Styleside Pickup, VB engine, std. trans., custom
cab. R-step bumper, chrome
Int. bumper, radio, white &amp;
red finish . Good tires.

1966 CheftOkrt$1695
2 Ton Cab-Chassis, B4"-cab
to axle. Good 825x20 tires, 2
speed rear axle, clean cab,
292-cu: in. 6 cyl engine.

Pomeroy .
Motor Co.
Ph. 992-2126
OPEN EVES TIL8
Your Chevy Deale~

Arnold Grate

Home

2-~-tfc,

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Rutland, 0.

sg9s

1966 Ford

CO NV ENIENT but sectuo~u
building lots on T79 at Rock
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
School , a 5 minute drive from·
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI
Witte weekends, or after 5 ,
p.m. weekdays . Phone 992·
6B87.
Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps .
Auto.
water
level
control .
Lint
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator.
Perma-Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat . No hot spots,
no overdry ing .
Fine Mesh Lint
Filter.
We Specialize in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

$2495

1968 Plymouth$1395
------------------SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Valiant 4 Dr. Local 1 ownPr

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

FOR

742-4211

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

MASON COUNTY

. $5.55

~eal

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

TELEVISIOr4

EXPERT

SENTINEL
CARRIER

Athens, Ohio
Wednesday 1 p.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday 9 a .m.-9 p.m.
Friday 9 a .m.- Noon

·I

Get the Big Discount!
22 cu. ft. side by side
Frostless Combination, 19
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
Up. Freezer, 2-11 cu. ft.
Chest Freezers and Elec.
Dryer. Must make room.
Priced for fast sale!

·-4'ALSO
OOUBL!;-...WIDES

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

BlAETTNARS

CLOSE OUT!

USED OFFICE equipment:
Desks, bookcases, drafting
table, typewriters, adding
machines and calculators.
Phone 247-2911 or 247-2677.
3-18-3tp

..irCHAMPION
*VAN DYKE

.5EE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW ·

Pomeroy, 0.

248 Condor

For

CAR HOP and waitress wanted.
Apply in person, Craw's Steak
House.
3-ll -6tc

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

Radiator Service

On Display-·-

WOMAN-wants housework to do
in Pomeroy area . Phone
Rent
-Chester 985-3900.
·uNFURNISHED 3
room 2
BEDROOM
house
in
3-16-3tc
apartment. Phone 992-228B.
Pomeroy .
Recenily
1-31-tfc
remodeled, large lawn .
Business Opportunities
Inquire of owner. Phone 9922619.
RIGHT PERSON to manage or TWO OR three bedroom home,
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
3-16-6tp
buy dry cleaning route or
Adults only . Phone 992-5133.
truck. Will sell plant and
3-2-tfc
building. ABC Cleaners.
For Sale
Mason, W. Va .
3-10-tfc TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33, Livestock for Sale
- - - - - - - - - -lf2.mile north of new Meigs ONE 2 year Hereford bull. Also,
High School. Phone 992-2941.
young Black Angus bull.
Male Help Wanted
3-5-tfc
Phone Chester 9B5-3930. Carl
NEED MONEY? Sell Knapp FURNISHED and unfurnished
Ritchie, Reedsville .
shoes, part time or full time.
3-17-3tp
apartments.
Close
to
school.
No investment. Send for free
Phone
992-5434.
selling kit. High commissions
for Sale
10-18-tfc Livestock
plus bonus. Write to E. M.
REGISTERED polled Hereford
Bistow,
Knapp
Shoes,
bulls. We have 10 registered
4 rooms, bath, garage,
Brock ton, Massachusetts HOUSE,
service age bulls for sale at
Spring
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
Also,
02401.
farm. 1B to 24 months of age.
3-room, bath, semi -furnished
3-17-3tc
Contact Byron Miller; phone
apartment and 2-room, bath,
614-992-6639 or 614-985-3341.
furnished
apartment,
Royal Oak Farm, Rt. 3,
Mulberry Ave. References
For Sale or 'Rent
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
required. Phone 992-66\IB.
3-17 -3tc
DISCOUNT still on: Con 3-10-tfc
tinental. Skamper, Go-Tag-AAlong, and Champion cam- 2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
pers, trailers and motor
Hts., Pomeroy. Phone 992- f\uto Sales
homes. Some here - more
5127 after 4 p.m.
coming; Don't walk, start
3-2-tfc 1969 TOYOTA Wagon. Good gas
running to Gaul Trailer Sales,
mileage. Reason for sellingInc., Chester, Ohio. Phone 5 ROOM house, furnished,
need bigger car. See Leonard
985-3832. P. S. - Reserve your
Scarbrough at Darwin.
phone 992-2433. Mrs. A. R.
rental unit for the coming
3-17-3tp
Knight, Pomeroy, Ohio.
season NOW.
3-16-6tc
"1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-d~
3-7-13tc
hardtop, power steering,
2 BEDROOM trailer. Adults
power brakes, air, 18,!)00
only . Phone 992-5592.
Help Wanted
miles. ~xcellent condUron.
·
3-17-tfc
Phone 992-2288.
MATURE woman for companion for elderly lady. Live 3 ROOM apartment, all electric, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..11:....·.:.:10-~t:..:f.lllii
wall oven , table top range , 1963 01:: LUX 1:: t-ord Station
in. References required.
stainless steel double sink,
Wagon. 5 new tires , new 36
Phone Chester 9B5-3301 .
food disposal. Nice clean
month battery. For details
3-17-tfc
apartment. See to appreciate.
call 992-2804 or 992-5246.
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
3-18-3tc
LADIES! Did you give up a
Gallipolis 446 9539.
career
to
become
a
3-17-tfc
homemaker? Now you can
have a career and remain a
Real Estate For Sale
glamorous wife and mother. U-N F U R N I S H E D 3- room
apartment in Coats Bldg., 7 ROOM house, bath, good
For appointment call 1-446·
condition , on one acre land.
Middleport.
Inquire
at
4146 or 949-3703.
Tuppers
Plains,
phone
apartment 16 or phone 9923-17-3tc
Coolville 667-3347 .
3641.
3-1B-6tp
3-1B-12tc
WE.' RE NOT firing - we' re
hiring, all the men , women, or
200 ACRE farm near Mt. Union
col lege students we can train 60X12 TRAILER, Cheshire. No
Church, Carpenter. Available
ch
ildren.
Phone
367-7512.
to work full or part time
soon. George Caldwell, Rt. 4,
3-16-6tp
collecting past due accounts
Pomeroy, Ohio.
by phone or soliciting past due
3-18-12tp
acco unts. If you are in
~--------------terested in applying yourself
HOUSE, 1640 L.lnCOIJI MTS . ,
to a rewarding future - apply
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
in person only . Credit Bureau
10-25-tfc
of Point Pleasant, 312 Main
St., Point Pleasant, W. Va.
4 ROOM house, bath, 2 lots;
3-17-6tc
good location. Phone 992-2806.
DO
YOU
earn
a
minimum
--~--------------3-14-6tc
R ESPONSiliT.E' personto work
of 514,500 a year?
establi shed route. Good
DO YOU earn $100 per
commission. ABC Cleaners,
month car allowance?
Mason.
DO YOU earn stock op3-5-tfc
tions?
DO YOU call on qualified
leads?
WANTED
DO YOU work for a wellcapitalized Ohio company
where earnings and ad vancements are unlimited?
If you are looking for a job
- don't bother to call.
If you are looking for an
opportunity where earnings
and advancements are
unlimited ...
Call Collect

HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

d·

For Sale

JEMO ASSOCIATES.
PAUL and ALICE GLEASON
1B1 Beech St.
Middleport
.
"When we bought our new home
from J.A., our friends said, ' You
get all the breaks.' We told them
· to see AI Moody and they could
get a break , too! Why not you? "

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

�I

•

T

1

''TWO- GUN II
WES LAWTON IS
DOWN AT TH'
MOVIN' PITCHERS
IN ''SHOOT-OUT
AT DRY GULCH 11

CAN "'E SPARE
A LEETLE DAB
OF CHANGE.
UNKSNUFFV?

T

'

r

,

r

r

'

'

K I ~DA.

r

'

r

HITS 'TtJU

WH€R.E "tbU LIVE,

TIME'SN.''

COE.SIJ'T IT ?

A·WASTI .•

3-18

MAY ~e He HAD A HOLE'
IN /-115 POQ:ET.

•
NO MAN 15
ALLOWED
NEAR NO
"BOlLIN'

•

POINTE~s'!.

•
-:1-'AT&amp; A
VERY BAD .JOKE /

® TOO BAD IM NOT

IN /HE GARBAGE
COLLECTION 13U51NE55;
WINNIE. I COULD
CLEAN UP AROUND

tJER~AN:J

I 'M
NOT MUCH IN THE
MOOD FOR

JOKE8 IDDAY.

YES, uERRY, I Dlv.
I DIDN'T MEAN TO
SNAP AT yOU I BUT
I'VE 6EEN TRYING
P&amp;$P&amp;RATELY
1'0 HELP!

SYLVESTER, YE~ NOTHJJI.I'
BUT A SCIC:'OUNGIN' BUM!

I KNOW...I KNOW. YOU'VE OH , JERRY, DON1T
6AY 1HAT. YOU
BEEN WORKING LATE
GAVE MEA
AND WORKING HARD.
r'LL BET 1otJRE SORRY
CHANCE WHEN
'10 ONE ELSE
YOU EVER uOINED l'HI5
WOULD.
"TWO -BIT OUTFIT t

. .. AN' I DON'T SEE

MLJO..I $1:NSE IN
WAmNG IWY 1.DNGER

T'CROWN 1M Elll-lER!

•

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6l(TRA If.! M'{ ~N'-'El.~

l&lt;NO'N WAAH IFMV

~ ~ MG

HE; w;.G

~

t:RIDA'(, I'D 6G A
l./f3.P..Y HAPPf' FGI....LA!

WIIJ" TO SlOW HIS
AP~GZ.IATIDtJ OF MV

~KI~

OIJSRTIAAe...

•
DAILY CROSSWO RD
ACROSS
1. Word before
and after
u wh~re' '

5. Woe
unto us !
9 Ceremony
10. Cruel
Individual
13. Elliptical
H. River in
Nebraska
15. Cozy
sanctum
16. Byway of
17. Bronze
18. Make
esteemed
20. Be careful
21. Cay or holm
22. Without
repetition
23. Feel
25. Pilot's

•

DOWN
1 . Disintegrate
2. Animate
3. Prescribed
procedure
(2wds.)
4.. Wriggler
5 . Aim at
6. Refrain in
old songs
7. City in
Oklahoma
8. In a
favorable
position
(2 wds.)
11. Posture
12. Proffer
16. Valley
19. German
city

20. Clement
Clarke
23. Nutcracker
and
others
24. Wandering
25. Talk
!ncoherently
21. Monopolized
(slang)
30. Railroad
car

BAL.

A R I E L IS H
~i
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TOG TRAP
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HONEY ENNUI
EM

TE

0

UNT

Yesterday'• An••·er

31. Grandiloqu!ze
33. King of
Siam's
friend
36. Choler
37. Seer's gift,
for short

CAPI'AIN EASY

26. Compulsion
21. Stringed
instrument
28. Symbol of
strength
29. Exaggerate
32.Seafarer
33. Vale of
years
3•. Norse
healing
goddess
35. Final part
37. Spirit lamp
38. "Tristram
Shandy"
author
39. Proofreading
direction
4.0. Peruse
·U. Funeral
pile

01

I I

WHAi THE TAL.L

J I

MAN BECAME
AFTER MARRIAI&amp;E.

I

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Now

WONOE:R HE: i HRE:ATE:NEP
ME ? 0 VIOLE:f\ITL.Y OVE:R L07 1N6
THAT MONEY He INVE:.!?TE:P!

.:. . .:.Prin.:.:. :th=-e
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A Cryptogram Quotat1on

DSM

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l:'esU!rday's CryptGquo~: I AM ALLERGIC TO ALL I~ISH
\VIT, CHARM AND HUMOR NOT PROVIDED BY MYSELI-'
- DENIS W . BROGAN
~
.
1'/ ) 1971 King Features Syndicut&lt;'. Inc. )

DOUBLY

PRIMER

Jl''hnl tile formerl,· prosperous fortrme-teller
tlre(lmrd (lbo~tt - HER PALMY DAYS

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L 's , X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

GIWB

"[

(An•wen tomorrow)

Jumt.t ..., LOUSY

AXl:"DLBAAXR
Is

the

the
by

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
~0

•

SOOIIR

arrance
circled letters
1!:1/FJ'Ol" (
to form
surprise answer, a
[
J
J
~::::::=::::::=:=~=======-:su~g~g~ested
the above cartoon.

"O.K."

••• AHC7, AS THE SECOND MUSTANG PULlS OUl;
CENTERS IT IN HIS Gl.IN SIGHT.

~iYMIDLb~;-!7.4=t.=..r::::·
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one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

TJ.IAT'S NOT FROM ANC(

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CHUCIC!TIVJ LffiER IS-FROM

fi..E!C(OU LIKEME,CHUCK!
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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 18,1971

Goodell Would Dulllp Nixon
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Former Sen. Charles E. Goodell of
New York said today liberal
Republicans should start laying
the groundwork for a possible
"dump Nixon" movement in
1972.
Goodell predicted Nixon
would dump Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew in 1972 and
choose a running mate "who is
relatively uncontroversial ... a
political eunuch ."
Goodell, defeated last fall at
least in part because of
opposition from President Nixon, criticized the President for
"widenmg" the Indochina war
and for his handling of
domestic problems, adding, "I
would support opposition to the
President now."
Goodell said he was not

"urgmg open revolt" within the
party at this time but is
meeting with dissident GOP
liberals throughout the country
"to see if we can get a
significant insurgency within
the Republican party with the
threat of moving toward a
challenge in the primaries."
He said such a challenge to
Nixon's renomination would be
''a healthy thing" and "we
should at least be laying the
groundwork for this possibili-

ty. "

Goodell, 45, said he had no
personal political ambttions. He
termed the prospects of his
bemg the one to challenge
Nixon next year unlikelyalthough he did not rule out the
possibility.
Goodell made the remarks at
a news conference at which he
also announced he was joining
the New York City law firm of
Roth, Carlson, Kwit, Spengler
and Mallin as a senior partner.

H;~tr(•• fur II (}u \fit~ It h r/ r. ().,

n l'

IJ.u

'il' l

twd

Wants
Less Frivolty

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - House
Speaker Charles F. Kurfess, RBowling Green, would like to
stop the flow of bills except for
administration programs into
the lower chamber soon, perhaps by the end of the month.
Kurfess said Wednesday a
cutoff date would be considered
soon, mainly to curb introduction of frivolous legislation.
A total of 414 bills have entered the House and another
144 in the Senate, which rarely
sets such a deadline.
Rep. Uoyd George Kerns, RRaymond, said the House
Finance Committee will begin
hearings next Tuesday and
Wednesday on the proposed $9
billion budget of Gov. John J.
Gilligan.
The House voted on two
measures during the day, passing 92-1 a bill requiring tank
trucks for transportation of sewage and sending back to committee legislation requiring
safety glass to be used in critical areas of homes.
Thesafety glass bill, sponsored
by Rep. George E. Mastics, RFairview Park, was scheduled
for a final vote but was returned to the Judiciary Committee on a 53-37 vote after its
opponents voiced concern about
provisions for safety glass in
storm door panels.
A similar bill authored by
Mastics cleared the House last
year but died in the Senate
Rules Committee.
The sewage transportatiOn bill, sponsored by Rep.
John E. Johnson, D - Orrville,
is designed to prevent sewage

Complex
Proposed
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Plans
for what is termed the largest
suburban office development in
Ohio were announced today by
the Deffet Companies · of
C1 \un1bus.
Officials said the development, "Fountain Park" would
be built east of Northland
Shopping Center on Colwnbus'
north side.
The 35-acre, 14-building
complex, slated for completion
in late 1972, would be the third
largest development in terms of
footage within a 10-state area of
the midwest. Spokesmen said
the development would have a
value in excess of $16 million
and would gross its owners $2
million annually.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, M arch 18
NOT OPEN

Friday &amp; Saturday
March 19-20
HOUSE OF
DARK SHADOWS
( Technico lor)
Jonatrin Fr1rJ

Gray

GP
M OON 2
!Tt'Ch

hel

GP
SHOW STAR TS 7 P.M.

Dodge City News
1969 Chevrolet
Biscayne 4 door, 6 cylinder.

1966 Chevrolet
Malibu 4 door, air cond.

1968 Dodge Coronet
4 Door, 6 cylinder.

now hauled in open trucks from
spilling onto highways.
The lone dissenter to the bill
was Rep. John A. Bechtold, RCincinnati, said sewage haulers
providing a "truly valuable service" would be unfairly treated.
Rep. Richard G. Reichel, RMassillon, said the sewage
should be treated in the county
of origin instead of being transported all over the state. ·
"We don't want to be the
dumping ground for two large
cities who do not treat their
waste," Reichel said, referring
to Clevelend and Cincinnati.
In the Senate, Sens. Ronald
M. Mottl, D - Parma, and
Anthony 0. Calabrese, D-Cleveland, introduced the administration bill raising unemployment
compensation benefits and
changing coverage.
The legislation would increase
payments to 55 per cent of an
individual's average weekly
wage, or up to 66 per cent if
he has four • or more dependents.

20Named on
Jr. High Roll
Twenty Southern Junior High
School students have been
named to the honor roll at the
close of the fourth six weeks
grading period, Jennings
Beegle, principal, reports.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in all three subjects to be
listed on the roll were: (those in
capital letters, all A's).
Eighth grade: Hope Bird, Jeff
Circle, Susan Gooch, Monty
Hart, Ellis McMillan, Paul
Simpson, STEPHANIE ORO,
VICKI WOLFE.
Seventh grade: Kim Jarrell,
Tim Jenkins, Irene Knighting,
Steve Nease, Bob Roush, BILL
BUSH, PAUL CROSS, MOLLY
FISHER, CHERYL LARKINS,
SANDRA NORRIS, CORENA
RHODES, BECKY SAYRE.
Arizona has the largest
Indian populatiOn of any of
the states.

JAY WARNER, 12-year-old
son of Mrs. Jean Warner, a
newsboy for The Daily
Sentinel, is a student at Meigs
Junior High School at Middleport. He serves customers
on Pomeroy's West Main
Street. Jay builds models and
loves camping. He and his
family spend each summer at
Royal Oak Park. Jay, a
member of Boy Scout Troop
249, is a dependable newsboy
who gives excellent service.

2 Door, V-8, 4 speed.

1966 Dodge Charger
2 Door, V-8, t -flite.

The French Art Colony of
Gallipolis will present an
exhibit of the work of Meigs
County artist Jack Slavin
Friday evening in conjunction
with the Tri-County Community
Concert Association's third
concert.

Clothing Rules

Crime Increase

Causing Delay

In Ohio Courts

..••••••••••••••• • ••••••II

1969 Ford Torino GT
2 Door, V-8, p-st.

1967 Ford Mustang
1970 Plymouth GTX
2 Door, V-8, t -flite.

1970 VolkswagenTransporter
3 Door, 4 speed, 3 seats.

1965 Jeep Wagoneer
For convenience, economy, efficiency, keep
your Checking and Savings Accounts together
here at our comp:ete-service bank. We will
gladly open either or both accounts for you.

JU St

If we do. we 11 call arid tell you . And we II hold the car
un t1l you can come down and see ot No obligati on

The car I want is :
Mode l or Body Slyle

MaKe
~=''.lU!ppt:d

Yea r

Wlt'l

Pncec' at abou t
M Y •RADE N IS
M ak £'

( 1 Ch eck here of no trade- rn
Mo &lt;lPI or Bo dy Styl e

!Oqu•pped "''th
n ( 1 fa"
1 ) good

Year

POMEROY, 0.

( 1 excellent cona ot .on

N am

Member Federal Reserve System

~ l rf!e'

c ty

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

S tal e

F~ 0 1f1

The Dodge City Posse Wants You
WALLACE AMBERGER EMERSON JONES
BOB BRATTON H ILTON WOLFE
DICK RAWLINGS

RAWLINGS DODGE CITY
992 -2152

992-2151

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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

DEPOSITS NOW INSURED TO $20,000 BY F.D.I.C.

NEWCOMERS TO OUR COMMUNITY

Scioto is
I
Reelected
Carl Mauntel, county commissioner of Scioto County, has
been re-€lected chairman of the
Ohio
Valley
Regional
Development Commission for
the 1971-72 term of office.
Mauntel will begin his fourth
term as chairman of the
Development District
Organization.
William Lewis, a representative of the Jackson County
Community
Action
Organization, was re-elected as
vice chairman and William
Dulaney of the Adams County
Overall Economic Development
Committee was re-elected to the
office of treasurer.
The election of officers took
place at the annual March
meeting of the commission held
at business office in Portsmouth. A nominating committee consisting of Grant
McDonald of Ross County,
Homer Fuller of Lawrence
County, Richard Sayre of Gallia
County, Harvey Cutright of
Highland County and Max
Morrow of Jackson County
nominated the slate of officers.

Ouh Likes
Blueprints

Cloudy and windy tonight and
Friday with rain likely tonight,
changing to showers Friday.
Warmer tonight with the lows in
mid 30s to lower 40s. Highs
Friday in upper 40s and 50s, but
' turning cooler during the day.

MILLER SELECTED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- U.S.
Rep. Clarence Miller, R-Ohio,
was appointed Wednesday to a
15-member Republican committee to seek solutions to help
reserve the nation's energy
supply.
DIVORCES GRANTED
Three divorces were granted
in Meigs County Court Wednesday on charges of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty. Elizabeth Oiler won a
divorce from Harry Richard
Oiler, Barbara McDaniel from
Albert McDaniel, and Helen
Riggs from Hobart F. Riggs.
SALE FRIDAY
The Young Adult Class of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
is holding a rummage sale
Friday from 9 a.m . until 3 p.m.
at the Boothe Bldg. on West
:vtain St., Pomeroy, and will
continue through Saturday if
the merchandise is not all sold

WE I NVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
COM E I N A N D SEE US!
. . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • by closing time Friday.

•

The blueprint for a proposed
community building a t Tuppers
Plains was displayed and
discussed by Carl Barnhill at a
r ecent meeting of the Tuppers J
Plains Community Club at the
home of Mrs. Bonnie Hackney
Appr oval of the plans as
pr esented was given by 15
members a t the meeting.
Fund raising projects were
discussed, one of which is a
"garage sale." Members are
~ked to contribute items for
the sale on Ma rch 'J:l from 10
a.m. to 5:30p.m. a t the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Don Headley.
Articles are to be taken to th.
Headley home on March 26.
A square dance was set for•
March Z1 from 8:30 p.m. to 1
a.m. at the Royal Oak Park.
archery building. Club members will serve refreshments at
horse shows on June 5 and 19.
The next meeting will be on
April 14 at 10 a.m. at the home
of Mrs. Gay Ann Burke,
Refreshments were ser ved.

Rizer, Sebo
(Contir:IUed from page 1)
student council, a member of
the Latin Club, F.C.A., the
Youth of Ohio Association for
Retarded Children, and a
member of the Nature Club. H.
is a county winner of the Ohio
History and Government Test.
Sebo played basketball until the
past season. He is employed
part-time at Krogers in
Pomeroy.

Weather

4 Wh . drive, p-st ., 6 cyl., 4 door.

1965 Rambler Classic

Mauntel of

•

1, 1973. Under state law, the
board must continue to pay his
salary for the duration of the
contract.
The court was told that the
only grounds for dismissal or
suspension of the superintendent, according to state law,
were
immorality,
incompetency, insubordination,
intemperance or suspension o•
the superintendent, according
to state law, were immorality,
incompetency, insubordination,
intemperance or willful neglect
of duty .
Smith claims the list of 22
charges does not satisfy that
state statute.
Attor neys representing board
members Theodore R. Stevensl
Charles Eshenaur, Ray Fields,
and Bill Withers, however, said
Smith had violated regulations
of the West Vir ginia Secondary
Schools Activities Commission,
his own regulations, had failed
to file certificates of attendance
and had made vicious and
threa tening statements to
Charles Withers.
Smith, represented by at&amp;
tor ney Larr y Losch who is a law
partner of Gordon Billheimer,
was unable to attend the session·
personally due to a recent
m ishap in which he sustained a
fractured ankle.

ELBERFELDS STORE IN POMEROY IS OPEN BOTH FRIDAY

2,500 FURLOUGHED
CINCINNATI (UPI)
General Motors Corp. has
furloughed 2,500 workers at its
Chevrolet and Fisher Body
plants in suburban Norwood
and shut down the third shifts
because of economic conditions.

2 Door, V-8, 3 speed.

If you d;dl' t fmd the kmd of car you want 1n th1 s ad.
fdl n th1s coupon and maol 11 to us. We may have
JU St the u sed car you re lookmg for nght on our lot.

is employed by Goodyear. He
was an instructor in sculpture
for the French Art Colony in
1969 and 1970. Hie one-man show
will feature paintings in oil and
acrylic, wall reliefs in wood,
hammered bronze, ceramic and
a variety of other media.
Pieces of sculpture in
ceramic,
fiber
glass,
styrofoam, bronze and five
varieties of wood will be on
display, as well as several small
ceramic pieces.
Slavin's wor k is particularly
interesting for the variety of
material he uses. Every new or
unusual type of material he sees
represents a challenge to his
creativity.

Facing Changes

2 Door, V-8, t -flite.

Mail us the car you're looking for.

hearing.
Smith contended he was
suspended during the February
20 hearing and was not allowed
to cross examine witnesses or
present his case.
During the arguments before
the state's highest court, Mason
County Prosecutor Michael
Shaw said he recommended to
the board of education aga inst
suspending Smith until after the
hearing was completed.
Shaw related, however, that
the board members privately
hired their own counsel, attorney Edward Greene of
Huntington, who advised them
to go ahead and suspend Smith.
The
suspended
school
superintendent is under a fouryear contract that expires J uly

CHARLESTON - Suspended
Mason County Superintendent I.
Brooks Smith Tuesday asked
the State Supreme Court to
order the Mason County Boar d
of Education to reinstate him.
The board suspended Smith
February 20, after it had
previously detailed 22 charges
against him. The boar d named
Charles Withers, brother of a
board of education member, to
succeed Smith.
In his petition before the
court, which was heard
Tuesday afternoon, Smith
contended the board's action
was void and illegal. The
central point in the case is at
what point a board of education
can suspend a superintendent,
before, during or after a

Slavin Art Show at Concert

Coal

1968 Dodge Charger

4 Door, 6 cyl., automatic .

Sntith Asks Reinstatentent

At 8 p.m. the Neil Wolfe Trio
will present a concert on the
stage of the Gallia Academy
High School. Prior to the concert and during intermission,
the art show will be on display
in the lobby of the auditorium.
Slavin, a one-time student of
the French Ar t Colony, 1s a
:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: graduate of Rupert High School
PARIS (UPI) - The Viet and attended Rio Grande
Cong delegation to the Paris College. In 1970 he received his
peace talks charged today the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree
alleged My Lai massacre was from Ohio University.
Miner~
He exhibited his work at Rio
not an isolated case of
College in 1966, in the
Grande
American atrocities but one
of severaf massacres of Hocking Valley Craftsmen's
Vietnamese civilians by U. S. show in 1969, the Big Bend
Regatta Art Exhibit in 1968,
troops.
Both the Viet Cong and Gallipolis' River Recreation
North Vietnamese chief Festival Art Exhibit in 1968 and
delegates boycotted the talks 1969 and the Bear Wallow Arts
for the third week in a row to Festival in Athens in the fall of
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The protest the Allied drive into 1969.
Slavin, who lives in Syracuse,
leaving
lesser
Interior Department has Laos,
proposed new rules for coal delegates to attend today's
miners'
clothing
and 107th session of the talks.
HOSPITAL NEWS
regulations for machinery to be
effective June 30.
veterans Memorial Hospital
Under
the
machinery
ADMITTED - Mary Zerkle,
proposal, published in the
Hartford;
Vickie Branham,
Federal Register, underground
Pomeroy; Brian Riffle, Racine;
coal mine machinery will have
Steven Riffle, Racine; Fred
to be equipped with emergency
Smith, Racine; Barbara Mcquick shut off devices and
Daniel, Rutland; Herman
protective
canopies
for
Black, Coolville.
operators.
DISCHARGED - Pamela
The rule covers all elecCOLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio McLaughlin, Natasha Mulford,
trically powered equipment
used in working "face" areas of Supreme Court Chief Justice C. Howard Nutter, Luella Hysell,
Hayman,
Daniel
coal mines. Under the clothing William O'Neill said today an Kim
Livingston
regulation, hard hats and hard- ''enormous increase in crime"
toe shoes customarily worn for has caused an "intolerable"
protection would become delay in the handling of
Pleasant Valley Hospital
mandatory. Under certain other criminal cases in Ohio.
Admissions - Robert Van
conditions protective work
"The
concentration of Matre, Clifton; Teresa Roush,
clothes, goggles, face shields, criminal cases among a few West Columbia; William
gloves and vehicle seat belts trial lawyers i)1 larger cities, Wamsley, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
would also become legal also adds to the delay," said Otho Wolfe, Gallipolis; Mildred
O'Neill.
Woomer, Letart; Mrs. Robert
requirements.
"In a number of metropolitan Gibbs, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
counties the delays in handling Darrell Hawthorne, Long
SEEDLINGS HERE
criminal cases are longer than Bottom, 0.; William Doss,
Meigs County 4-H club six months," said O'Neill. "This Point Pleasant, and Robert
members who have ordered is intolerable and we propose to Anders, Henderson.
forest tree seedlings should pick make rules to correct it."
Discharges - John David,
them up at the County ExO'Neill said a rule limiting Okey Jordan and Mrs. Joseph
tension Office, Friday af- cases a trial lawyer can accept Martin and son.
ternoon, March 19, according to may be included in a new set of
Births - March 17, a son to
C. E . Blakeslee, County Ex- rules the Ohio Supreme Court is Mr. and Mrs. David Sigman,
tension Agent.
drafting to speed up criminal Letart, and March 17, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Roy
justice.
"The rules being drafted now Mayes, Point Pleasant.
are aimed at reducing the delay
between arrest and trial," said
O'Neill.

BANKING
TWINS

1968 Dodge Dart

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Johnny Jones, who wrote
more than 10,000 columns for
the Columbus Dispatch, died
Wednesday. He was 71.
Jones was injured in a car
accident in August 1969 and
never fully
recovered.
University Hospital said
death was caused by
hemorrhaging. He joined the
Dispatch on June 17, 1940, and
the next day his first column
"Now Let Me Tell You"
appeared.
NOW YOU KNOW
More than 1,500 American
soldiers lost their lives during
the Seminole wars in the
Florida territory at the
beginning of the 19th century.

Kurfes~

Surburban

Jame:
Catherina

Columnist JJies

AND SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 - A GOOD TIME FOR
FAMILY SHOPPING - SEE THE MANY NEW ARRIVALS ALL
OVER THE STORE - WEARING APPAREL FOR YOUR FAMILY
AND FURNISHINGS FOR YOUR HOME - ALSO SEE THE
COMPLETE SELECTION OF "LAWN BOY" MOWERS '10RO MOWERS"- AND ALSO OUR SPECIAL ~8.00 MOWER THE NEW LINE OF MAGIC CHEF GAS AND ELECTRIC RANGES
THE COMPLETE LINE OF WHIRLPOOL WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, FREEZERS AND THE NEW WHIRLPOOL
TRASHMASTER - THE NEW DISWASHERS - HUMIDIFIERS DEHUMIDIFIERS - "HOOVER" WASHERS AND DRYERS
CLEANERS - AND APPLIANCES -THE SANDUSKY
METAL CABINETS.

Sensible Credit - Prompt Delivery Continuou.~ Service

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

�</text>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2019">
              <text>March 18, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="181">
      <name>mcdaniel</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
