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                  <text>Cham be Invited to Act
Frank W Porter, Pomeroy
attorney and president of the
Meigs
Local
Hoard
of
Education, urged the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Monday
to take more of a leading role to
improve condi lions in Pomeroy
and the county.
Porter had been invited to
outline programs that could
lead to improved conditions so
as to interest new people in
coming to Meigs County in view
of the recent announcement
made by the Ohio Power Co., to
build a 2.6 million kilowatt coalburning power plant on the Ohio
River at Cheshire at $488
million. Porter also recently
authored a public letter stating
what should and could be done

to improve the county.
"I'm going to step on lhe toes
of all present," Porter said in
his opening remarks at Bowers'
Restaurant, following luncheon.
"I don't think the chamber
accomplishes anything,"
Porter said.
''In the past 13 years people
have
accomplished
who
anything have been outsiders.
We must look at ourselves and
our property," Porter said.
"Meigs County needs a face
lifting. We need confidence in
ourselves and in our future,"
Porter noted.
Porter recalled that he put all
his prestige "on the line" when
he announced in mid-1970 the
coming industry. He said he

knew several years ago the
power plant and deep mine
were coming.
"We are trying to get people
in our community, but what do
we have to offer," Porter
stated.
"Just recently .two different
industries have contacted me to
ask if a site or building were
available to house new plants
here. One would hire 300 people,
the other 125.
"I have been asked by several
for the use of the school
buildings not presently being
used, two in Pomeroy and one in
Rutland. The answer was no, as
I predict the schools now closed
will again open for the 1971-72
school year," Porter noted.

Porter suggested several
programs the chamber could
promote. One was at the intersection of East Main Street
and Nye Ave., where signs
should come down and litter
cleaned up. Other suggestions
by Porter were a clean up day
once a week of the business
district; learn how to step on
toes, sign a block captain in
each city block, four people to a
block, and make a list of improvements to each business,
and present their findings to the
owners, and to inspire village
council to act through an effective condemnation code.
"Why must we rely on the
State to get a building condemned?" Porter asked.

"Why wait for outs1ders. Why
not
form
a
non-profit
organization and apply for tax
exempt status and sell bonds to
dress up our county. Be proud
instead of humble," Porter
said.
Bill Grueser, president, noted
that Pomeroy firemen are to be
commended for the cleaning
and hosing of the village streets
recently.
Grueser suggested that
chamber members make a list
of things to be done and
suggestions on how to accomplish the objectives.
Henry Cleland, local realtor,
noted that, being a member of
the
National
Realtors
Association, he has received

several calls from men who will
be working at the new plant at
Cheshire, wanting apartment.'&gt;.
Meigs County has a problem 111
that apartment buildings such
as requested are not available
in Meigs County. Cleland Realty
will serve as a clearing house
for listing of rental property.
Persons having property to rent
may call 992-2259.
Paul Simon suggested that
the
chamber
set
up
headquarters for people who
wish information about what is
available in Meigs County and
offered office space to the
Chamber free of charge.
Kathleen Francis said the
closest Western Umon Office is '
(Continued on page 8)

The Daily Sentinel

•

FATHERS GET into the act of Pomeroy Elementary
School sixth graders who are doing lawn and yard work for
contributions toward the Washington, D. C., trip fund. Here's
a father, Don Thomas and son, Greg, who turned out
Saturday not only to supervise but also give a helpin' hand.
The other adult supervisor is Howard Smith.

Devoted To The Interest~ Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXIII

NO. 244

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TIIESDAY, MARCH 30, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Soviets Ask Big 'P owers
Ban Nuclear, Germ War
•

•

•
SIXTH GRADERS of the Pomeroy Elementary School
are not only helping with the "spruce up Pomeroy" campaign now under way but are earning money to help with the
school patrol trip to Washington, D. C. this spring. Among the
group reporting to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard

Rawlings, Union Ave., Saturday afternoon were these girls,
from the left, Faith Perrin, Becky Thomas, Trudy Roach and
Beth McKnight. The group will exchange lawn and yard work
for a contribution to the trip fund. About $600 more is needed
for the trip. Calls for service can be made to the school or to
Howard Smith or Edgar Vanlnwagen.

MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet
Union called today for the five
major powers-including Communist China-to meet in an
effort to outlaw nuclear weapons.
Communist Party General
Secretary Leonid I. Brzhnev, in
a 50,000-word keynote speech
opening the 24th Communist
Party Congress in the Kremlin,
outlined a program to guide
Soviet foreign policy. He named
six "basic concrete tasks,"
including:
-A ban on nuclear, chemical
and bacteriological weapons, an
end to weapons tests, and
conferences of the Soviet Union,
the United States, Britain,
France and Communist China
for complete nucler disurmament.
-A world conference to
consider general and total
disarmament, with preliminary
agreements to reduce military
expenditures.
-"Eliminate the hotbeds of
war in Southeast Asia and the
Middle East'' by promoting
political settlement in those
areas ''on the basis of respect
for the legitimate rights of
states and peoples subjected to
aggression."

-A move toward col ective
security in Europe with the
"recognition of the territorial
changes that occurred in
Europe as the result of the
Second World War." This would
be preceded by the dismantling
of the North Atlantic Treaty
Alliance and its Communist
counterpart, the Warsaw Pact.
- An implementation of all
U.N. decisions to end colonialism and a condemnation of all
racism.

-An expansion of relations
with states which want to help
conserve the environment, eradicate disease and help in space
exploration.
Speaking in a subdued tone
befor~
the 4,963 delegates
from all over the Soviet Union
and a number of other nations,
Brezhnev denounced American
policy in Indochina and the
Middle East but said "an
improvement of Soviet-Ameri-

can relations would bt:! in the
interests of both peoples and
for a stronger peace."
He said, however, that "in
recent years the U.S. administration has taken a more rigid
stance on a number of
international issues, including
those which have a bearing on
the interests of the Soviet
Union ... (thus) making dealings
with the United States much
more difficult."

• Controversial Dump's Days Numbered
The Middleport landfill garbage dump, center of
controversy nearly two years, may be closed within the
next eight days.
Meeting in special session Monday night to review
again problems of the operation of the dump, town
council voted unanimously to give Mayor C. 0. Fisher
15 days in which to provide a place the people of
Middleport may dispose of solid wastes that does not
conflict with the law.
Discussion indicated that it should be advisable if
Mayor Fisher solves the problem in the next eight days
because Middleport Village has been cited to a hearing
before the Meigs County Board of Health on April6 to
give reasons why its dump, located off the Route 7 bypass in Salisbury Township, should be permitted to
remain open.
The dump has been operated without a license
from the health department since the first of this year.
The village had applied for a license, but no action was
taken by the board. Meantime, numerous complaints
against the dump have come from the Bradbury and
Leading Creek areas, particularly since a fire broke
out at the dump about eight days ago, and on numerous
similar occasions in 1970.
Council had met in special session on the matter
last week to discuss directions which it could go in solid
waste disposal. Meeting with council at both sessions

was Dale Dutton, president of the health board, who
stressed on both occasions that he was not there in an
official capacity.
Upon questioning last night, however, Dutton told
council that the dump situation had reached a point at
which the village would have to comply with state
requirements or close the dump.
Councilman Clifford Stumbo brought out early in
the meeting that the village should, perhaps, purchase
a packer and operate the dump in a business-like way.
However, discussion swung to locating another area
where solid waste could be taken by the three haulers
of the village, or by indi~iduals.

Middleport residents are not to pay haulers increased
prices for service.
. Although settlement of the problem by closing the
Middleport dump and using the Mason landfill would
relieve the primary problem facing the Meigs County
Board of Health at the April 6 hearing, Dutton
recommended that the village be represented at the
meeting any way. It would be expected that the village
would outline plans for final covering of the refuse at
the Middleport dump at the April 6 meeting. Dutton
stressed that the health board is willing to go along
with any reasonable plan.

Water Safety Training Paid Off
CERTIFICATE RECEIVED - Mrs. Roger (Mary) Bahr, right, Reedsville Rt. 1, received
a framed certificate of appreciation Monday from Mrs. Yvonne Scally, Meigs County
American Red Cross water safety chairman, who in 1968at the Middleport pool gave Mrs. Bahr
life saving water safety training. That and more training by Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar in
1969 paid off, because last August 19 at Forked Run Lake Mrs. Bahr, employed as a lifeguard,
saved the life of State Highway Patrohnan Pat Weldon of Lancaster.
Weldon, who dived into the water and struck his head, was pulled out unconscious by Mrs.
Bahr and given emergency first aid. Patl. Weldon, completely paralyzed, now after long
hospitalization and treatment is preparing to return to work with the patrol. The Patrol
honored Mrs. Bahr last October. Patl. Weldon and Roger Bahr, have become close friends
since the incident, and Roger has been accepted for patrol training starting June 26.

Closing of the Middleport dump will be contingent
on whther the mayor is able to put into effect his plan
for haulers and other residents to use the Mason landfill.
Mayor Fisher said that he will report plans as soon
as they are completed so that the public will be advised
of actions to be taken.
Attending the meeting in addition to those named
above were Councihnen John Zerkle, Dick Vaughan,
David Ohlinger and Clarence Stewart; Clerk·Treasurer Gene Grate; Maintenance Supervisor
.:~:~:!:!:~:~:~:!:!:!:~:!:~:~:~:::;:!:::;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:
Harold Chase; Chief of Police J. J. Cremeans and Paul
Gerard, a democratic candidate for mayor of Mid- :\l\l UPPER MONTCLAIR,
dleport in the May primary election.
i:1:~ N. J. (UPI) - Sen. Barry~=~~
::::; Goldwater, R-Ariz., plans :;:;
:;:: to retire from the Senate at ::;:
1:?, the end of his current term, :1:1
·.1l;: acc.ording ~o his ~on. "H.e's
·:::: a firm believer m movmg :;::
.
.
:;:; aside and making way for :;;;
at the meetmg for $2. ::::
" u s ::::
Chillicothe,
which
had avmlable
At S t d ,
t
:·:· younger peop1e,
. . :·:·
deteriorated badly in recent
a ur ay s even ' o~ners :::: Rep. Barrv Goldwater Jr., ;:;;
have been m the ::::
years . The center now is of farms wh1ch
.
·:·: R-Ca 1. sa•:d Mon day m·ght..::::
;.:
same. fam1ly
will ;:::
G o'1d wa
. t er J r. sai'd ;:;:
"coming back."
. dfor. 100 years
.
...
..
Conaway will speak on what bc rccogmzc with certificates. ;:;:President Nixon ''couldn't:;:;
has been done in Ohio's first In. the afternoon .there will be a ~1;j get elected in California 1~~~
capital city and will display the bne~ tour of. pomts of 1~terest :::; today ... it's basically a :;:;
Gaede drawings which, it is and mcluded m the tour will be a :;:;conservative state." He l:l:
reported, may be applied to any v1~1 t to the home of Mr: ~nd ~l~~ said he continues to sup- :1:
town . Copies of the study will be M1 s. Paul Huston, th: ongmal ~:l: port the President, and the .1:~:
~uartus Bndgeman p1 operty m :::: only area of the President's .:::;
HOME DESTROYED
Syracuse, restored by. the ;:;:programs he opposes is:;:;
The mobile home of Harry Hustons. A display of river boat ~111 welfare reform.
i:l:
::::
Neville, Roush Road, near pictures owned by W1lham ::::
Cheshire, was destroyed when it Weaver, Racine, will be .;:::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
was struck by fire this morning. featured also for the visitors.
Middleport firemen, called to
Reservations for the luncheon
Clear tonight. Lows in mid 20s
the svene, said the fire was out should be made immediately north to upper 20s and low :lOs
of control when they arrived. with Mrs. Paul Chapman or south . Part!} sunn) and warThey remained almost two Mrs . Theudort:! Reed, Jr. Mrs. mer Wednesday. Highs in the
hours, returning to their local Reed is the county contact upper 40s and low 50s north to
chairlllan of SCOPS.
thl' uppt-r 50s and !iOs south .
station at 10:15 a .m.

Mayor Fisher told council he had talked with E. C.
Carson, operator of a landfill in Mason County, W.Va.,
and that Carson had told him that Middleport Village
can use that landfill for dumping refuse. The mayor
said that he had conferred with Carson on the subject
following last week's special session. He said he would
again talk to Carson immediately. Carson apparently
has indicated that Middleport can start hauling trash
to the Mason dump any time.
The mayor said, however, that he would need time
in which to work out arrangements with the three
Middleport haulers . The authorization for Mayor
Fisher to handle the dump problem stipulates that

J Harris to E~ncee

•
0
mtng
! News ... in Briefs i Gaede Drawings C
i---------------------------1

By Uni~d Press International
SAIGON - FOUR U.S. AIR FORCE Jets attacked artillery
emplacements in the North Vietnamese part of the so~alled
Demilitarized Zone Tuesday in a move to knock out long range
guns capable of shelling American bases in South Vietnamese
territory. U. S. headquarters said North Vietnamese attacks in
areas just below the DMZ killed five Americans and wounded 35.
Three U. S. helicopters were shot down.
Military sources said the Air Force raids in the northern half
of the DMZ - a six-mile-wide strip originally established as a
buffer strip between North Vietnam and South Vietnam - were
designed to protect American troops withdrawing from bases
which were used to support the South Vietnamese offensive into
Laos .
WASHINGTON - OPPONENTS OF THE VIETNAM War are
gathering forces in the Hous e to try to limit President Nixon's
, requested draft extension to only one year instead of two .
Nixon asked for a two-year extension to keep the draft alive
until mid-1973 when he hopes to achieve a zero draft call; but
several House Armed s~rvices Committee members fear that a
two-year extension would constitute Hous( endorsement of the
wa:I

•

•

Businessmen are urged
particularly to attend a meeting
of the South Central Ohio
Preservation Society, Inc .,
(SCOPS 1 which gets undt:!rway
with a luncheon at 11 a.m.
Saturday at Grace Episcopal
Parish House in Pomeroy.
Franklin Conaway, a young
altornt:!y of Chillicothe, has been
working with the distinguished
architectural histori n, Robert
Gaede, Cleveland, on a study of
the old business enter of

i

Weather

SQUAD TO MEET
A special meeting of the
Pon;eroy E -R squad will be held
at 7::30 tonight in the first floor
llll'Pllng room of Pomeroy town
hall.

Aluntni Banquet
Gordon Harris, former
Middleport High School in strwnental music supervisor
and now a Columbus school
administrator, will emcee the
1971 Middleport High School
Alumni Assori~t.ion reunion .
The officers and executive
committee of the association
have secured Harris to serve as
toastmaster for the annual
reunion which has been set for
6::!0 p .m . on Saturday, May 29.
The banquet, to be served under
directwn of 1\llrs. Iva Stewart,
will be in what is now the Meigs
Junwr High School cafeteria. A
dai'ce \dll follow 1n the
audi toriwn.
Those who graduated 50 years
a~o or IJI.H"l' frm:; :\liddleport
fl!gh Sclwol will be hmldf"Cd.
Mrs. Franl'b H. Klein will
pr"\'Jdl' b&lt;tckground pianu

music during the entire banquet
and will play for group singing
with Mary Farmer Skinner as
song leader. A musical program
lS p!auJJed.
A ways and means committee
has been formed under the
chairmanship of Mrs. Jean
Cr&lt;tig. The committee will meet
Wednesday at the school to
discuss money-making projects
among which will be a bake
sale.
Cost of the dinner this year
will be $3, includi'lg alunmi
dues of $1, with 50 cf'nts of the
dill':; going mto the Susan Park
Scholarship Fund. Mrs. Joe
Bailey is in charge of the
('tolnmitlce
to
sl'led
a
sl'lllllarship n'ctpll'nt this year.
The l'l't'IJlll'lll will I.Je a 1971
graduate nf l\Icigs High Sclwol
1. Continued on Page 8\

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 30,1971

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

·1'HE DAILY SENTINEL
DEV-OTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily ~n&lt;cept
Saturday by The Ot1io Valley
Publishing Company, l l l
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
.ol5769. Busine6s Office Phone
992-2156, Editorial Phone 992·
2157.
}
Secona class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertising
representative
BottinelliGallagher, Inc., 12 East 4W.If·
"St.~ew YorK City, New York.
Subscription
rates;
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service pot available: On~
frtonth $1.75. By mail ' in Ohio'
and W. Va., One year $14.00.Six months $7.25. l'hree
months S4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times ntinel.

204,000 Pintos
Being Recalled
DETROIT (UPI) - Ford
Motor Co. announced today it
was recalling its entire
production of Pinto minicars
for modification to prevent
possible ignition of fuel
vapors in the air cleaner.
A spokesman for the
company said "a few" cars
had been destroyed by fire in
the engine compartment, but
emphasized that there was no
cas~ where the flames had
• penetrated the passenger
• compartment.
A total of 204,000 of the 1971
• model Pintos were involved,
starting from
original
production last July until
March 19, when modifications
were made on all cars coming
off the production line.
VA. LACROSSE LEADER

NEW YORK (UPI) - Virginia, with seven first-place
votes, heads the list of the top
20 college lacrosse teams in the
nation as compiled by the
United States Intercollegiate
. Lacrosse Association. Others in
' the top five are Navy,
Maryland, Army and Cornell.

i' Voice along Broadway !.
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NUDE BATHERS UNSUITED
TO WESTERN WHITE HOUSE
NEW YORK- Their pals expect Desi Arnaz
Jr. to wed Patty Duke. Lucille Ball doesn't. Desi
)[-. doesn'tcare .... Bobo Rockefeller, Winthrop's
ex, was given only five invitations to her son
Winthrop Jr.'s wedding to Deborah Cluett Sage,
she told friends and said she even hadn't any for
the groom's maternal grandmom .... Famed gal
who wed a rna ture millionaire hired three press
agents (ostensibly each was buddy-buddy with
one columnist each) .... Mickey Rooney's severe
financial problems seem to have everyone
worried except the insouciant Mick .... Arlene
Francis chose "Plaza Suite" for her summer
vehicle .... Music's supposed to soothe the savage
breast, but Tom Jones will have a dozen extra
guards when he opens at the Miami Beach
Deauville, April 2 .... He refuses to perform on
Good Friday, the 9th.
The Western Sunbathing Ass'n. tried to get
the Calif. parks-recreation dep't to okay a beach
near the Western White House but that's the
skinnydipping nudist outfit, and the bare answer
came back "no" .... The Spanish Toledo dinerie
tried to satisfy just Iberian - oriented tastebuds
but customers insisted on other comestibles, so
now they serve French - Italian - American
vittles, too .... The Yankees and Jawn Lindsay
assured everyone the team will stay in Yankee
Stadium, but the hotdog-delly sellers around
there say the team'll shift in two-three years.
Ben Finney's "Feet First" autobiography
was given a rave review by Publishers' Weekly;
Ben's a legendary New Yorker; not only knew all
the famous but was there with li-tem for great
shared experiences (Hemingway, the Scott
Fitzgeralds, Texas Guinan, Sherman
Billingsley); was a silent film star and soldier of
fortune as well as an honored Marine officer in
two world wars .... And one of the most polished
gentlemen we've ever known.
Lee Marvin's ex, Betty, will wed Brian St.
Pierre .... The 5th Dimension will break it up in
Russia on a State Dep't tour .... Musical comedy
star Gretchen Wyler's turned producer and has
lured Betty Buckley from the "1776" musical hit
to Gretch's "Johnny Pot," Betty said at Au
Tunnel .... Basketball miracleman Willis Reed
will be a May judge at the Miss USA Miami
Beach Pageant.
Robert Shaw gets the Spencer Tracy role in
the Del Mann remake of "Kidnapped," but
they're still scrounging for a lad in the role

.---------------------------,

!Helen Help Us!!
By Helen Bottel

I

'

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for ~oung people, their problems and pleasures,
with the rest of Helen Help Us!, it
their troubles an
welcomes laughs
e a serious question with a brushoff.
Send your teeru::
ons to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help Us
newspaper.
TEASING TEACHER TURNS HER OFF
Dear Helen:
My math teacher!
Just because my boy friend and I were walking down the hall
holding hands, she now teases him and calls him "lover boy."
Nowhewon'tholdmy hand because of her. How can I tell her
to mind her own business and leave my guy alone.- A COLD

HAND
Dear C. H.:
I doubt you can change the cutey-pie approach in a teacher,
but you CAN change your boy friend's attitude toward it. Teach
him to laugh off teasing and he should be forever grateful. - H.
Dear Helen:
I've been going with this fella for 12 weeks, and he's only
kissed me once; and then I walked off, not because I was against
it, but because he embarrassed me in front of everybody. So he
thinks I don't want him to kiss me.
But I do! I hate to just walk up and say, "Kiss me," so how
can I get it across that a girl wants a good-night kiss, but only
when she and a boy are alone together?
Please write your answer in simple words so I'll know exactly
what to do. - NEEDS A KISS
Dear NAK:
Three simple words: Kiss him first.
A light brush on the cheek as you thank him for a nice evening
should speak louder than words. - H.
Dear Helen:
My boy friend and I have been going together for two years.
He respects me and knows I'm not the type for pre-marital sex. At
barely 16, I'm not ready, though I love him, I think. He is! Ready,
I mean.
So he thinks nothing of picking up a "road runner" on the
nights he doesn't see me. He says this is practical, and not untrue
to me, because he doesn't care about these other girls and they
don't care about him.
Somehow I think evey a "freesy" has feelings and maybe
they really fall for these guys that use them.
Or maybe he's just "using" me as someone he can show off to
his friends but he really prefers the other girls.
I'm confused, Helen. To keep him, must I give in to him
against my will? To tell the truth, he's never asked me. - UNDECIDED
Dear Un:
It's chancy, dating a boy who thinks "pure girls" are for
pedestals, and "bad girls" for fun, because: 1. He doesn't see
females as people but only things to be used (one way or another).
2. He may "pick up" more than he expects, and transmit it to
others, and 3. His double standard ideas of "good girl" vs. "goodtime girl" might make him a poor husband and lousy lover.
You won't keep him by giving in to him, as he'd soon consider
YOU a road rwmer too and start looking for a new Miss Untouchable .
My question: Do you really want this junior male chauvinist?
- H.

Freddie Bartholomew made famous .... Cynical
age-&lt;Jf-the-buck quote from Sir James Carreras,
who turns out Frankenstein flicks: Roman
Catholic countries are his sitting, paying ducks
because "The crucifix wins out every time. In
Spain and Italy, when the monster is defeated by
The Cross, the audience stands up and cheers.''
Sir James, have one big boo.
Manny Rosen of the Stage Deily is Bdwy.'s
Lox Laureate: He writes endless poems, mostly
about his wife who had him alimony-jailed for
five months; an ex-fighter who won 65 fights and
lost six, Manny was bullied by five unwary
jailbirds who thereupon each wished they'd paid
the alimony instead of getting knocked out.
Six-high cab fares from Kennedy Airport to
Manhattan ($13 plus) have folks using buses
($2.50) instead, so the insolent cabbies catcall:
"Too cheap to take a taxi?" .... Maybe we'd
better send Manny Rosen out there.
Dick Cavett had the integrity to note that TV
studio audiences are not "typical" of public
responses to critical topics; that was understatement indeed: The "applause" sign
winking wildly at studio audiences elicits
ovations on straight lines, and the history of such
wildly fabricated enthusiastic network studio
audiences is the most fickle of all: The roundedup robots over the seasons have reacted wildly to
the signboard's exhortations. They have roared
approval of Les Crane, Jerry Lester, Steve
Allen, Joey Bishop, Arthur Godfrey, Jack E.
Leonard, Regis Philbin, Morey Amsterdam, a
gaggle of newspaper columnists on NBC's
"America in the Dark" which preceded Jack
Paar (who abdicated at his popularity-high) all firmly testify that light-bulb-inspired applause isn't worth the wattage it generates when
it comes to credible cross-section reaction.
Ryan O'Neal's "Love Story" and his recent
Barbra Streisand escort-service convinced him
he can be nippy to photogs; too soon, Ryan, too
soon .... Elder Bdwy. statesman Carl Erbe joined
the board of the Skowhegan School of Painting
and Sculpture. Its first annual Arts Award
dinner is at the Hilton here April 27 .... The underworld will try to get "The Gang That Couldn't
Shoot Straight" to blip all Mafia and Cosa Nostra
references; it's filming here now .... Visitors and
N. Y. citizens, beware: New car-thieves' gimmick is to appear in uniform cap as you arrive at
spots which actually do not have doormen; then
politely take your car -for good .... Jazz great
Tony Parenti, 73, hasn't faded away into a
clarinet cadenza -he's starring every Thurs. at
Staten Island's Hadaar nightclub.

30

• Q92
• J 109
AQ94

+

... 962

WF.ST
EAST
• AJ 10 73
• 65
¥7 3
¥54
+53
tKJ62
... K Q 10 8
... J 7 5 4 3
SOUTH (D)
• K84
¥AKQ862
• 108 7

... A
Both vulnerable
West North
East South

1•

1¥

2¥
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- ... K

4¥

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Remember the advice to
the young lawyer, "If you
have a good case try it on
merits; if you have a bad
case try anything you can
think of."
South won the club opening, drew trumps with two
leads, led the 10 of diamonds
and let it ride. East won with
the jack and played the six
of spades. South played low
and West stuck in the 10.
South won with dummy's
queen, ruffed a club to get
back to his hand and led the
eight of diamonds for a .&gt;econd finesse East grab be J
the trick with his king and
led his last spade. West took
two spade tricks and South
had lost his contract.
South was voluble in hi:&gt;
protests He lost two diamond finesses. Other players
never lost any, much less
two .
South finally blamed his

~

-

--

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Optometrist

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partner Why hadn't North
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raising hearts? Three notrump wouldn't depend on
any finesses . North could be
sure of one spade, six hearts
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So u t h had a bad case~
North may have made three
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tricks, while four hearts was
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It was fine to draw trumps
and attack d i a m on d s but
when East led the spade six,
South should have played
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87

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West
North
East
]

Dr. T. J. Bradshaw

NEW YORK ( UPI) -John
Unitas, the Baltimore Colts
quarterback who was chosen as
1970 National Football League
Man of the Year, Monday night
presented National Merit Scholarships in his name to five
Baltimore high school seniors
at an awards dinner
Baltimore.

Bad Case Loses at Table
NORTH

All jellyfish are equipped

wJth stinging cells, but only

WIN AT BRIDGE

4 N.T.
Pass
3 ¥
Pass
?
5¥
Pass
Pass
You, South, hold:
¥K 10 7 6 5 +A K Q ll 4 ... A 2
What do you do now?
A- Just bid six hearts. Youl'
side has all the aces, but you1·
partner's three- heart call was a
limit raise-10-12 points.

.8

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~

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 30, 197!

Cavs Get Carr; Royals Get Durrett
.....

·-••

•
-

By United Press International
The Cleveland Cavaliers, the
Charlie Brown team of the
National Basketball Association
last season, has Austin Carr and
what is past is past.
The Cavs, an expansion team
whose 15-67 record tied the
NBA's all-time losing mark, got
to pick first Monday in the
college draft of players and the
6-foot-3 Notre Dame guard was
the man.
"We could have won a lot
more games this year with him
at guard," Cavs coach Bill
Fitch said, calling Carr "someone of superstar status."
"We feel we got the best
man who was available at his
position," he added.
If Carr was taken aback by
being chosen by the worst team
in the league, he did not indicate it. In fact he seemed more
than pleased and his attorney
said he expected the contract to
be signed " without any tremendous hassling."
" No, I don 't see any doubt
that I'll play for Cleveland,"
Carr said . "I like Cleveland and
I prefer playing in the NBA. I
like the whole situation in
Cleveland."
Royals Get Durrett
Cleveland's sister team in the
Central Division, the Cincinnati
Royals , picked LaSalle 6-foot-7
forward Kenny Durrett, who
coach Bob Cousy said will " fit
in well with our fast break offense."
Ohio State's Jim Cleamons,
the Buckeyes' only senior last
season, went in the first round
to the Los Angeles Lakers.
The 6-foot-3 Cleamons was
captain of the Ohio State Big

11

•

Ten championship team, which
despite its sophomore majority
went on to the NCAA championship regionals to stun No. 2
rated Marquette.
Cleamons' scoring average
slipped from more than 21
points per game as a junior to
17 this year, but during his last
season he took control of the
team and coach Fred Taylor
gave him credit for keeping the
squad composed.
Durrett was the No. 4 pick in
the draft because of the Royals'
designated place.
"He's an exciting, mobile
player," Cousy said. "Very good
offensively outside and inside."
"Willing To Pay"
Club general Manager Joe
Axelson said he knows what
Durrett was asking for in a
contract " and we are willing to
pay it. "
Durrett averaged 27 points
per game, but a knee injury late
in the year hampered his play
in post - season trournament
play. Cousy said he will prob-

PLANT11

here an d wa tch it
"bloom"! Earn at our
current a nn ua l rate of

~-----...-.-.__....__....__.

I

I
~

ably be put on a weight lifting
program once signed to
strengthen the knee.
Cleveland's other picks included UCLA center Steve Patterson and Willie Long of New
Mexico in the second round . Also: Gerald Lockett, Arkansas
AM&amp;N; Jack Ridgle, California;
Cliff Harris, Hardin Simmons;
Brian Mahoney, Manhattan College; Mike Childress, Colorado;
Tom Bush, Drake; Charles
Davis, Wake Forest; Rich
Walker , Bowling Green; Jim
Meredith, Washington State.
Cincinnatichose Auburn guard
John Mengelt in the second
round and picked up Creighton
forward Joe Bergman in a deal
with the Lakers which sent
Royals guard Flynn Robinson to
Los Angeles.
Other Cincinnati picks included Rich Yunkus, Georgia
Tech; Sid Catlett, Notre Dame;
Jim Guyman, Eastern New
Mexico; Tyrone Marionneaux,
Loyola (La.); Gil McGregor,
Wake Forest; Ollie Shannon,

.

.. ...__..__.......-. ..,......-..__..

___

Minnesota; Frank Fitzgerald,
Boston College.
Ohio University's 6 - foot - 8
Craig Love was taken in the
eighth round by the Buffalo
Bills and Dayton's Ken May

BY KEITH WISECUP
Eight Lettermen and strong
right-handed pitching will be
the mark of the Eastern Eagle
baseball squad this spring.

...

-

,

.

-

•

By United Press International innings Monday in a 4-1 triumph last season -have found little

No Americen League pitcher
in the last 30 years has strung
together four straight 2~victory
seasons but Dave McNally of
the Baltimore Orioles looks
equal to the task this year.
McNally, who posted 22-10, 2(}7 and 24-8 records during the
last three seasons, became the
first Oriole pitcher to go nine

..__..)
~

~

ATD

L----·---·-·--·---------J
Logan High School sends its title-expectant baseball teams
into Middleport today to open the 1971 northern division prep
season against the Marauders. The Chiefs are loaded with strong
pitching and experienced hands (10 lettermen) everywhere except possibly at a couple infield posts. Furthermore, they have a
new coach, Kelley Stilwell, a hometown boy lately out of Ohio
State University where he pitched for the Buckeyes. Last year
Logan went 6-0 in northern division play and lost at Ironton 7-6 in a
showdown for the SEOAL title.
Top pitcher on the club has to be the strapping senior
righthander Mark Shaw who was 6-1last year. The No. 2 thrower
is junior lefty Greg Smith, 2-1 in 1970. Mike Tucker, a little used
righthander last year, looks like the No. 3 man. Shaw will play at
first base when Smith is pitching, and Smith will be there when
Shaw pitches. Two sophomores, Ken Culbertson (remember
football ?) and Randy Norris, strong hurlers on the freshman
team last spring, give added depth to Stilwell's mound staff.
The pitchers will be hitting the big mitt of Dave Rauch behind
the plate. Rauch, who lettered last year at first base, takes over
for the veteran catcher Pubby Hartman who has graduated.
Second base has been given to Tim Mundy, letterman .
Steve Brown, a converted outfielder, has been installed at
third base, and veteran outfielders, all good hitters, are Dave
Chute, Bill Good and Richard Klinger.

THE MARUADERS open the season with three experienced
vsngs and talented pitchers in righthanders Jed Will and Rick Van
on 6-mo
certsficat
Matre and lefthander Tim Demoskey . If this trio can get their
arms in shape before having to work too hard in these cool days,
M igs
h
and stay healthy, there is no r eason why Coach Ed Bartels' crew
won't make a good run in the northern division .
The club has good lefthanded hitting power in infielder Ron
Clonch, catcher - outfielder Gene Powell, and Demoskey. I had
the distinct pleasure of starting Clonch in little league where from
Meigs County Br anch of The
thefirstdayhis swing of the bat was a thing of beauty .
Athens County Savings &amp;
Also,look for Roger Dixon, who probably will be the catcher,
Loan Co.
296 Second St.
and Dave Boyd to hit the ball. Dixon hit well last summer in
Pomeroy, Ohio
Legion ball. Boyd, first baseman, brings a big hunk of lumber up
to the plate.
Chip Haggerty and Steve Dunfee, the other infielders! and
lettermen outfielders Stan Wilson and Rick Ash likely will round
out the batting order.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
So, let's Play Ball!

•
"'

--......
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-.-.....
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•.-..
-...

•

Four players scored 20 or
more points for the losers.
Greg McDaniel paced the attack with 27 points. Larry Coon
poured in 22 points. Tim Goss
and Forrest Ervin scored 20
points.
Ron Lambert's 41 point
performance led Rio A.T.D. to
its 15 point victory over Brown
Insurance . Other scoring
leaders were Dick Fowler with
29 points and Eddie Jacobs with
26 points.
Four players had double
figures for the losers. Steve
Bartrum led the way with 25
points; Sam Pulley added 23;
Charles Baker 21 and Bernard
Williams, 17.
Rio led at halftime, 55-43. The
consolation game and championship will be played Wednesday night.

Daniels Wins MVP Honor
INDIANA~OLIS, Ind. (l!PI)
_ Mel Daniels of the In~ana
Pacers won the Amencan
Basketball Association's "Most
Valuable Player" award
Monday for the second time in
three seasons.
Daniels, 26, a 6-9, 225-pound
New Mexico native, came to the
Pacers from the Minnesota
Muskiers for $100,000, a No. 1
draft choice and two other
players in May, 1968.
He received nine first place

Wilcox In
Mid -Season

hope for optimism this spring.
The staff seems as strong as
ever and pitching coach George
Bamberger even has predicted
that it may have a fourth 2~
game winner in Pat Dobson, a
14-game winner with the San
Diego Padres last season.
Red Ruffing of the New York
Yankees was the last AL pitcher
to win 20 games four years in a
row, posting marks of 20-12, 207-21-7 and 21-7 from 1936 through
1939.
The Orioles took a 2-0 lead in
the fourth inning when Merv
Rettenmund doubled home
Boog Powell and then scored on
Andy Etchebarren's single.
Frank Robinson homered in
the fifth and Brooks Robinson
tripled and scored on a sacrifice
fly by Etchebarren in the sixth.
On other . fronts : Reggie
Jackson drove in four runs with
two homers, his ninth and lOth
of the spring, as the Oakland
Athletics beat the Padres, 9-6.
... Nate Colbert of the Padres
also hit two homers and drove in
a total of five runs ... Ken
Holtzman, ineffective in previous exhibition outings, allowed one run in six innings in
the Chicago Cubs' 5-l triumph
over the San Francisco Giants.
The Cubs have a 15-9 exhibition
record.
Milt Wilcox yielded two runs
in seven innings and hit a tworun double to lead the Cincinnati Reds to a 5-2 win over
the Philadelphia Phillies.
Wilcox shutout the Phillies until
the seventh when Bobby Pfiel
doubled and Tim McCarver
homered ... Jo~ ~iekro pitch.ed
seven strong mrungs and Jrm
Northrup homered for the
Detroit Tigers as they downed
the Kansas City Royals, 7-5.

votes and 84 points to five and 69
for runnerup Zelmo Beaty of the
Utah Stars and five and 64 for
third-place Charlie Scott of the
::::::::::::::::;:;:~:;:~:~:~:!:~:::::::~::::::~:::::~:::~::::::::!:8:!!!:!;
Virginia Squires.
A 22-man committee of the
United States Basketball
Writers Association balloted on
The annual basketball
the selection.
banquet
at Eastern High
Daniels was the ABA's Most
Valuable Player in the league's School will be held Monday,
All-Star gam e Jan . 23 in AprilS at 6:30p.m. at the high
Greensboro, N. C. , and Player school. Tickets, which are $2
of the Year in a poll of ABA each, may be purchased from
any member of the basketball
players for Sporting News.
Daniels said his second MVP squad or at the school.
award was "a greater thrill Reservations must be made
than the first - it means more by Thursday.
because there are so many ;;;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Banquet Set

~~~~~

players in the league

Bout In Row

....

-

h
rzump

rJ"'.
.1.

Bickers' Bidwell Milling
resembling Coach Jim Snyder's
Ohio University Bobcats and
Beach's
Athletic
Club,
resembling Marshall University, will battle this evening in
the semi finals of the Second
Annual North Gallia Band
Boosters'
Independent
Basketball Tournament.
Rio A.T.D. will meet Bob
Saunders' Quaker State Service
Center . Bickers' Bidwell
defeated
Athens
Milling
Masonary, 110-103 last night.
Rio A.T.D. outran W. R. (Dick)
Brown Insurance, 122-107.
Ken Kowall pumped in 44
points to lead Bickers to its
victory. Teammate Greg
McDevitt ripped the cords for 35
points. Dave Holter and John
Milhoan added 11 and 10
respectively.

..@

•---...-.
-...

..

over the Montreal Expos.
McNally allowed 10 hits but the
only run off him was on a homer
by Adolfo Phillips in the eighth
inning.
Rivals looking for a crack in
the Orioles' solid-front of three
20-game winners -Mike
Cuellar and Jim Palmer also
won 20 games for the Orioles

the Sports Desk lBidwell, Rio

Patterson
Wins Third

-

seniors Mike Boring, Howie
Caldwell, Gordon Holter, Dave
Smith, and Terry Stethem.
Junior lettermen are Bob
Caldwell and Rick Sanders and

First-year coach Larry Hines
will take over the helm vacated
by Don Wright, the Eagles'
coach last year .
The returning lettermen are

McNally Goes -Route First

4%% or 5%

•

the San Diego Rockets.
Skip Young of Florida State,
a teammate of Cleamons while
at Columbus Linden McKinley
High School, went to the Boston
Celtics in the seventh round.

went in the seventh round to the
San Francisco Warriors.
Rudy Benjamin, former Dayton Roosevelt High School star
who played for Michigan State,
was taken in the fifth round by

Eagles Face 22-Game Schedule

.._......_

hy Chet Tannehill

Pro Standings

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POMEROY

N BA Playoff Standings
By United Press International
(First Round Best of Seven)
Eastern Division
Series "A 11
W. L.
New York
2 1
At lanta
l 2
Series "B"
w. L.
Baltimore
2 l

PHILADELPIDA (UPI)
Former Heavyweight Champion
Floyd Patterson scored an easy
TKO over Roger Russell at 1:29
of the ninth round at the Arena
Monda y for his third consecutive victory.
Patterson, a 36-year-old New
Yorker on the comeback ·t rail,
sent Russell to the ropes with a
left hook to the head that dazed
him and forced referee Zack
Clayton to stop the bout.
Russell was putting up little
resistance by the ninth round,
and Clayton warned him twice
that if he wouldn't punch the
fight would be stopped.
Patterson carried the fight to
Russell~ whom he outweighed
192 to 185 pounds, despite a
bothersome cut over his left
eye. Russell caught Patterson
with a left hook in the second
round, opening the cut, which
bled for two rounds.
Dr. Wilbur H. Strickland, a
State Boxing Commission physician who examined Patterson
after the fight, said he would
need three or four stitches to
close the cut and it may keep
him out of ·the ring for the next
month.
Russell, a Philadelphian, has
lost eight fights in a row.
In the third round, both
fighters fell through the ropes
in a flurr y of punches.
Patterson regained his composure and slipped to the canvas,
but there was no count.
Russell, whose eye was
swollen after the exchange in
which Patterson's eye was cut,
complained of his eye after the
seventh round. Dr. Alfred E .
Ayella , ring physician, examined him and allowed the
fight to continue.
The victory, Pa tterson 's third

Form
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) _ Milt
Wilcox held Philadelphia scoreless for six innings and doubled
home two runs Monday as the
Cincinnati Reds picked up a 5-2
Grapefruit League win.
The Reds scored four of their
five runs in the fourth inning,
the two from Wilcox and two
more on a single by rookie
Frank Duffy.
A homer by Willie Smith off
righthander Darrel Brandon in
the ninth accounted for Cincinnati's final run.
The Phillies broke loose from
their scoreless mold in the seventh as Bobby Pfiel doubled and
Tim McCarver homered.
Wayne Granger and Clay
Carroll teamed up the last two
innings to blank the Phils.
The Reds traveled to St.
Petersburg today to meet the
New York Mets.

BEST DOUBLES TOTAL
DETROIT (UPI) - John
Pezzin of Toledo, Ohio, and
Jerry Held of Monroe, Mich .
combined for the best doubles
total of the day at the American
Bowling Congr ess Tournament
here Monday.
Pezzin had a 585 and Held a
650 for a 1,235 total.

Alan Duvall is returning
sophomore veteran.
The mound corps will be
headed by Boring,. Stethem,
Smith, Howie, Caldwell, and
junior Dennis Eichinger, who is
not a letterman because he
participated in track last year
instead of baseball.
Catching, next to pitching the
most important position, will
present a problem. Someone
will have to fill the shoes of Bob
Ritchie who graduated last
year. Leading candidates for
the job are senior Gordon Holter
and juniors Randy Young and
Rick Blake.
In the solid infield will be
Howie Caldwell, Eichinger,
senior Tom Karr, Sanders, and
Stethem. The outfield will be
patrolled by B. Caldwell, junior
Doug Karr, Duvall, freshman
Steve Goebel, junior Alan
Holter, senior Danny Lantz,
sophomore Bill Osborne, and
sophomore Rusty Walker.
The Eagles have a whopping
22-game schedule. In the week
of April 26-30, Eastern will play
five games, one each day, and
all seven of the squad's seniors
will be on their senior trip. That
might prove to be quite a toughy
of a week for Hines.
THE SCHEDULE
APRIL
A
2 Federal-Hocking
H
6 Federal-Hocking
A
8 Southwestern
H
13 Nelsonville-York
A
14 Starr Washington
A
16 Meigs
A
19 Southern
H
21 Starr Washington
A
23 Waterford
H
26 Southwestern
A
27 Kyger Creek
A
28 Hannan Trace
A
29 Nelsonville-York
H
20 Meigs
MAY
A
3 Wahama
H
5 Hannan Trace
J In ~·
H
6 Southern
H
~
7 Kyger Creek
H
10 Wahama
A
11 Symmes Valley
H
14 Waterford
H
21 Symmes Valley

II

Milwaukee
San Francisco
Series

1 2

w.

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

D

11

w.

Los Angeles
Chicago
Monday's Result
Milw. 104 San Fran. 90
Tuesday's Games
San Fran. at Milwaukee
Los Angeles at Chicago
New York at Atlanta
Bait. at Phila.

L.
2 1

1

Monday's Fight Results
By United Press International
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Floyd Patterson, 192, New
York, stopped Roger Russell,
185, Philadelphia, (9).

"Why didn't
I think
of insurance?"
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
54 28 .659 . .
x-Virginia
44 39 .530 10112
Kentucky
140 42 .488 14
New York
37 46 .446 19112
Floridians
35 48 .422 19112
Pittsburgh
Carolina
33 49 .402 21
West
W. L. Pet. GB
x-lndiana
58 24 .707 .. .
Utah
56 27 .675 21!2
Memphis
40 42 .488 18
Texas
28 54 .341 30
Denver
28 54 q.341 30
x-Ciinched Div. Title.
Monday's Result
Kentucky 109 Memphis 107
Tuesday's Games
New York at Utah
Kentucky at Pittsburgh
Virginia at Denver
Carolina at Indiana
Memphis at Texas

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RACE DRAWS 4,241
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Despite the presence. of snow
flurnes, 4,241 racmg fans
turned out Mon~ay
at
Thistledown for the third day of
the 1971 meet, wagering a total
of $400,510.
Shatter Glass and Royal
Hyperion paid $251.60 in the
daily double.

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Philadelphia
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Series C"

Ph. 992-2094

Pomeroy

�1

__.._..._.________ -

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 30, 1971

~l

Farewell Given
Corner By

Charlene Hoeflich

Carol Scott Bachtel jetted to San Antonio this morning -her
first flight- to visit the former Millie Roderick of Gallipolis and
her husband. The two are fast friends from their days in training
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Carol and Millie haven't seen much of each other since Butch
was stationed down therewith the Air Force and at that time they
both lived in the same apartment complex.
Incidentally, Butch is looking forward to June when he'll be
getting a 3!kiay leave. He's stationed in Alaska.
PFC. BERNARD LYONS, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons of
Middleport, graduated Friday from the armored radar school at
Fort Gordon, Ga. and as of yet has no orders. He had some
training in communications at Fort Knox before going to Ft.
Gordon and there's some possibility more training is in store for
him.
TIME REALLY FLIES and kids are grown up and gone
before you know it. Teaches one an appreciation of every day with
all the good and bad of it.
Take Betty and Bill Everson's girls. Jan graduated from
nurse's training last year and joined the Women's Air Force.
Patty, who was in elementary school when the Eversons left here,
is a high school senior. She is interested in drama and that is the
course she plans to pursue when she enters college this fall.
The weekend after Easter she will star in "My Fair Lady," a
St. Paris High School play. Earlier this year she had the lead in
"Miracle Worker."
By the way, Bill Dallas (a sophomore, would you believe it!),
also has a good role in "My Fair Lady." He, of course, is the son of
Kitty and George Dallas.
DIDN'T KNOW UNTIL just the other day that Jerry Nii,
husband of Ramora Boice, is a performer. He appears every
Saturday night at the Hawaiian Village Room of a Howard
Johnson motor lodge in Cincinnati, playing the ukulele and a
couple of other instruments.
ALEX H. FISHER has been admitted to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and will be observing his 92nd birthday anniversary
there Wednesday. He is Edna Schoenleb's beloved "Pappa."
IN ADDITION TO writing Congressman Clarence Miller
about federal funding for library service, there's another small
way you can help with Mr. Eddy's financial problems.
Many books are overdue and need to be returned and put back
into circulation. Notices will soon have to be sent out to those who
have overdue books. Everyone who brings back in those overdue
books NOW instead of waiting for a notice, will, in fact, be contributing the money whid1 would have been spent for postage to
other phases of the bookmobile operation -like gas for Mr. Eddy.
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, librarian, emphasizes that every cent
counts now. About 9,000 books are out, not all overdue, of course,
but getting in those which are overdue before notices have to be
sent out will result in considerable savings in the limited finances
of the operation.
And again, let us urge that you write your congressman about
federal funding. Let's not be guilty of waiting until it's too late.
Mrs. Pikkoja is most complimentary about her staff at the
bookmobile headquarters. She told us that just recently Mrs.
Louise Brewer and her husband, Edgar, volunteered to take a
true to Napole
ad of books from the library facilities
there wiLch we
year. They brought back 4,200
children's books
now m Clrculation here.

Meigs

Property
Transfers
C. C. Howard, Lena Howard
to Uoyd Hughes, Ruie Fay
Hughes, 1.6 Acres, Scipio.
Carl Hysell, Thelma Hysell to
Orville
Johnson,
Velma
Johnson, 3/4 Acre, Rutland.
Niese! A. Weatherman to Sam
Baias, Neva L. Baias, Lots 1112, Weatherman's Sub., Orange.
Peter A. Sewar, Opal Sewar
to Clarence C. Ogdin, Anna E.
Ogdin, 1.27 Acre, Rutland.
Robert A. Wolfe, Freda M.
Wolfe to Walter N. Watson,
Edith M. Watson, 1f2 Acre,
Pomeroy.
Elmer Whittington to Adolph
E. Saelens, Loretta M. Saelens,
Lot Middleport.
MaryS. Cowdery, Ronnie W.
Cowdery to P . M. Cowdery,
Parcels, Chester.
Marilyn M . Trussell, Robert
Trussell to P. M. Cowdery,
Parcels, Chester.
Harry R. Oiler to Elizabeth
Oiler, Lot 267 Middleport.
Raymond W. Holsinger, Anna
Holsinger to Early R. Scarberry, Mildred Scarberry, 1
Acre, Letart.
Archie McKinney, Eva Mae
McKinney, Virgil Parsons to
Ohio Power Co., Ease.,
Salisbury.

A farewell party was held
Sunday afternoon at the Middleport Church of Christ for
Mrs. Gladys Mowrey who will
be leaving next week to make
her home in California. Mrs.
Mowrey has purchased a home
in Monrovia, on the same street
where her three grandchildren
live.
Hosting the party Sunday
were members of Meigs Salon
710, Eight and Forty, and the
Loyal Bereans Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
For the party, Mrs. Mowrey
wore a carnation corsage, the
gift of Mrs. Osby Martin, her
Eight and Forty secret sister.
Numerous gifts were presented
to her including ones fL·om the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39; the
Women's Auxiliary of the
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
the Loyal Bereans Class and the
Eight and Forty. A handkerchief shower was also held
by the Eight and Forty.
Mrs. Martha Childs and Mrs.
Cathryn Erwin registered the
guests. Spring flowers centered
the refreshment table which
carried out a yellow and white
color scheme. Mrs. Eunie

Brinker, chapeau of Meigs
Salon, pres1ded at the punch
bowl.
Attending besides those
named were Mr. and Mrs.
Milford Mowrey, Megan and
Melissa, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Pearl Knapp, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Earl French, Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Thurber, Debbie and
Steve, Cohunbus; Mrs. Robert
Martin
and
daughter,
Stephanie, Alliance.
Mrs. J. M. Thornton, Mrs.
Harry Davis, Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, Mrs. Clyda Allensworth,
Mrs. Bessie Ashley, Mrs.
Myrtle Walker, Mrs. John
Boyd, Mrs. Virgil Roush, Mrs.
George Hackett, Sr., Mrs. Iva
Powell, Mrs. Betty Cline, Mrs.
Lena McKinley, Mrs. George
Meinhart, Mrs. Ed Haggerty,
Mrs. Leonard Jewell, Mrs. Don
Hunnel, Mrs. Ben Neutzling,
Mrs. Ellen Couch, Elwyn R.
Yost, Mrs. Virgil Hamm, Mrs.
J. A. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. M. L.
Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wiley,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wolfe,
Mrs. Louise Bearhs, Raullin V.
Moyer, Mrs. Bradford Maag,
Mrs. Ella Grueser, Mrs. Grace
Fisher, and Mrs. Teresa Fisher.

Baileys Surprised
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bailey
were surprised Sunday with a
party in observance of their
golden wedding anniversary at
their Rutland home.
The event was hosted by Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth (Lois)
McElhinny, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Keith (Fauna) Nelson
of Reynoldsburg; and Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Bailey of Bradbury.
Also assisting in planning the
surprise observance were Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Gibbs.
Lifelong residents of Meigs
County, Mr. and Mrs. Bailey
were married on March 23, 1921.
They have two daughters, Mrs.
McElhinny and Mrs. Nelson,
and a son, Joe Bailey, five
grandchildren, and two greatgrandchildren, all of whom
were
present
for
the

WEDNESDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
special assembly, Wednesday, 7
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Purpose to confer the royal
master degree and the select
master degree on several
candidates.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Victor Hysell.
Mrs. Milton Houdashelt to be
the assisting hostess.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary
Club, 2 p.m. home of Mrs.
The Almanac
Thereon Johnson, Racine, with
By United Press International Mrs. Emerson Jones reviewing
Today is Tuesday, March 30, "Huey Long."
the 89th day of 1971.
THURSDAY
The moon is between its new
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
phase and first quarter.
172, Order of the Eastern Star,
The morning stars are Venus, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Mars and Jupiter.
Masonic Temple, Middleport.
The evening stars are MercuAUXILIARY of the Midry and Saturn.
dleport
Firemen, annual dinner
Those born on this day are
Thursday evening at Oscar's in
under the sign of Aries.
Gallipolis. Members to meet at
Dutch painter Vincent van
the fireball at 6:30 p.m.
Gogh was born March 30, 1853.
LAUREL Cliff Better Health
On this day in history:
Club, 7:30 Thursday night home
In 1858 Hyman Lipman of
Philadelphia received a patent of Mrs. Clarence Curtis. Mrs.
Paul Frick, co-hostess.
for a pencil to be equipped with
an eraser.
In 1867 Secretary of State Lowell said, "Then it is the
William Seward reached an brave man chooses, while the
agreement with Russia for the coward stands alone."
purchase of Alaska for $7.2
million in gold.
In 1923 the Cunard liner
"Laconia," first passenger ship
to circumnavigate the world, iC
ie
arrived in New York City after ie
iC
iC
a cruise of 130 days.
iC The surest way not to fail iC
In 1967 a jetliner crashed into iC is to determine to sue- iC
a motel near New Orleans
ceed.
-iC
kllling 18 Wisconsin schooi -iC
- Richard B. Sheridan :
children on a tour of Louisiana.
RITES HELD
Graveside rites for Mrs.
Harry (Erma) Sadler of
Bridgeport, were conducted
Monday at 12:30 at the Plants
Cemetery. Funeral services
were held at 7 p.m. Sunday
night at the funeral home in
Bridgeport. Mrs. Paul Grueser
returned home Monday after
being in Bridgeport since the
death of her sister. Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe remained for two weeks
at the Sadler home.

••••••••••••••••

celebration.
A tiered anniversary cake
accented with the numeral "50"
in gold was featured on the
refreshment table. Cake,
punch, mints, nuts and coffee
were served from 2 to 5 p.m.
Numerous gifts, floral pieces
and cards were presented to the
honored couple.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
George Waters, Denise, of
Zanesville; Mrs. Joycelyn Redd
and daughter, Sheila, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Johnson and sons,
Charles and Roger, Miss Debbie
Gabrill, Mrs. Jean Heines, and
Darlene
Justice,
Miss
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
Warner French, Delbert and
Sandy, Mrs. Judy McKinney,
Doug and Pam, Worthington;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack King,
Chauncey; Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Gibbs, Circleville; Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Nelson and Earl
Nelson, Albany; and Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Nelson, Terri,
David, and Lisa, Reynoldsburg.
Local friends and relatives
attending besides Mr. and Mrs.
McElhinny and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Bailey, were Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Stewart, Greg and
Barry, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Murray, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Sisson, Miss Nina Russell, Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth, Mrs. Carl
Brannan,
Mrs.
William
Grueser, Miss Hallie Zerkle,
Miss Nellie Zerkle, Mrs .
Mildred Beeson, Mrs. Mae
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Grate.
Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar
Reynolds, Mrs. Pearl Williams,
Mrs . Karl Krautter and Kim,
Mr. and Mrs. William Swatzel,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Willford, Ray,
Van and Mike, Mrs. Bernice
Willford, T. W. Autherson, Mrs.
Eva Struble, Mr. and Mrs . John
Hood and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell McElhinny and "J. R."

Barron
Gets 25
Years

Engineering School
. The first engineering school
m the United States was
founded in 1802 at the U.S.
Military Academy at West
Point. according to Encyclo- A thought for the day :
American poet James Russel
paedia Britannica .

___

_.....,_

Pomeroy....

I

~

BRING THE

Personal Notes

FAMILY
DRIVE IN FOR A CONE,
SUNDAE, OR SHAKE.

PROMPT SERVICE
Ta sty sandwiches, popu lar solf drinks.

OAIRY VALLEY
992 -2556
At The End Of Pomero y Bridge

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Other Banking Hours 9 to
3 and 5 to 7 as usual on ~
Fndays.
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POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
ReservE' System

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Shower is Given

PATTERNS, TOO!

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VERY SPECIAL

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OFF

THIS WEEK

byBULOVA

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Because Bu!oYa 011 the
dial ~a)S the diamonds
arc real. :'\ot r hip.,. Each
diamond has at least 17
facets to unle.tsh the
deep fire and sparkle.

Court St.

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a Diamond
Watch

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JEWELRY
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Among our diamond
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9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
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* * *

ie

Boys in the Letart Falls area
between the ages of 10 and 13
are invited to meet at the Letart
Falls School on Friday evening,
April 2nd at 7 p.m. to organize a
4-H club for the year. Parents
are also urged to come.
Attending will be county
agent, C. E. Blakeslee, and club f'
leaders, Randall Roberts and
Donald Hupp. The boys will be
assisted in project selection and
in plans for the year.

Fashions by the Yard

t-iC
t-iC
t It's Quick! Easy t
DRIVE-IN
BANKING

•

Scouts Do Clean-up

t

t

Organize 4-H Club

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- Former West Virginia Gov.
Wallace Barron
William
Monday pleaded guilty to three
counts of conspiring to bribe a
member of a federal grand
jury.
And the former Democratic
political powerhouse was
sentenced immediately by U.S. spiracy trial and Elkins atDistrict Judge John A. Field Jr. torney Bonn Brown, a confidant
to a 25-year prison term, pen- of the former governor's and
ding a classification study of the codefendant in the 1968 trial.
WORK CREW - These cub and boy scouts joined S. T.
U. S. prison-medical facility at They were to answer later
Smith, cubmaster of Pack 245, Marshall McMillion, a
Springfield,
Mo. He was Monday.
committee member, and Albert Roush of Feeney-Bennett
transported there by Chief
Charges contained in a
Post 128 for a clean-up session at American Legion Park
Deputy Marshall Gordon Coen. previous indictment against
Saturday.
Barron was one of three Barron and his wife were
defendants named in a sealed dropped by Judge Field after
ind1~tment returned by a Upton told the court that Mrs.
federal grand jury March 24. Barron had acted at the
The other two are Charleston direction of her husband and
attorney Robert G. Perry, who charges against her should be
won an acquittal for Barron in dismissed in the "interests of •
With spring in the air and Mark Hood, Gregg Knapp, John his 1968 federal bribery con- justice ."
energy to spare, Middleport Byer, David Wilcox, Joe Mcscouts gathered Saturday at the Cloud, James Gheen, Kenny
American Legion Park on Mill Roush, Billy McMillion, Kevin
St. for a clean-up work session. Smith, Leslie Whittington,
The project was in con- Dorsel Thomas, Keith Doss,
junction with the National Save webeloes and cubs of Pack 245;
Our American Resources and Kevin Yeauger, Kenny
program of the Boy Scouts of Byer, Gene Hood, and Dale
America. Twenty-five scouts Spencer of Troop 245.
met with Albert Roush of
....,
.......
............
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, Selwyn T.
Smith, cubmaster of Pack 245
and Marshall McMillion'
committee member, to clea;
the hillside of sticks and debris
in preparation for spring use of
the park facilities.
All from the
Miss Evelyn Fick returned
Den mothers present to lend a
hand were Mrs. Jean Thomas, home Saturday aft~r spending a
leading
Mrs. Frances Whittington, Mrs. week at the home of Hobart
Young at Sidney. Enroute to
Judy Spencer, and Mrs. Eulah
mills of
Sidney, Mr. Young and Miss
Francis.
Fick visited his mother, Mrs.
The boys taking part were
th e
Mitchell Cart, Ivan Lane, Sylvia Young at Guysville.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. 0. A.
Donald Geary, Danny Smith,
country!
Dean Spencer, Ricky Blevins, Martin and Mrs. Edgar Roush
over
the
weekend
were
Mr.
and
Jeff Jaudermilt, Max Geary,
Mrs. Letcher Wines, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Martin and
Stephanie of Alliance, and Mr.
A shower for Mrs. Diane and Mrs. Lowell Thompson,
Holliday Young was held at a Todd and Bruce of South Point.
recent meeting of the Friendly Mr. and Mrs. Wines came here
Neighbors Club at the home of from Copen, W.Va. where they
Mrs . John Holliday where the visited his parents. They will be
day was spent quilting, going to Cleveland this week
crocheting, and knitting. A and Mr. Wines will be
potluck dinner was served at hospitalized at a hospital there.
noon. It was voted to give $5 to
Miss Janice Eastman, freshthe George Thompson Kidney man at Harding College,
Fund.
Searcy, Arkansas, is home for
Mrs. Holliday served cookies the spring break with her
and punch during the afternoon. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert R.
Mrs. Rex Shenefield will be Eastman, Ron and Chuck,
SI NGE R SALES &amp; SE RV ICE
hostess for the April meeting. Bearwallow Ridge.
McCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTE RNS
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Russell,
both students at Ohio State
MRS. KERNS CONFINED
Pomeroy, 0.
992-2284
115 W. Second
Mrs. Peggy Kerns is a patient University, spent the past week
at the St. Joseph Hospital, here with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Truman Russell.
Parkersburg, W. Va.

t A Thought

t
t
For Today

Boys 10-13, Will

Baked by

.]/~

l
l

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 30, 1971

•

Meat
Cuts
USDA
Choice

At Mark V
Liver Pudding.. .':~~-~-~-~-~-~:.':.................. !~: .. 69~
Slab Bacon ...... l.~~-~-~~~-~~-~~~-~........... .1.~·.. 49~

•

' • Bacon Ends &amp; Pieces .. ~~~~-~~-~-~~ ... 3
Pork Neck Bones.........~~~~~ ........ 5

lb.

100
Ground Beef.... :~~~~-~~..:~~-~ ..~:~!.............. ~~~ .. 69e
Ground Chuck.......~~-~i-~~:.~.~~~................ ~~~ .. 79~
Ch
d
Turkey, Corned Beef,
00
lb.

e

WIENERS
20 ct.

l-Ib. roll

.............

c

pkg.

Good Grade
Reg. 1.49

•

99e

2 lb.
ROLL

French City's Finest

SAUSAGE

oppe Ham and Beef.•••••••••••••••••••• 3 Pkgs. 1
Lunch Meats ... ~~~~~!~~-~-~~;.~~~~~................ ~~:. 79e
Fresh Fryers ... ~~-c-~~-~-~:~~--~~;.~~:~
!?:.. 39e
Chicken Parts.:.~~~-~~~--~~~-~~~-~~~~~~-~~........1~:•• 39e

SAUSAGE

CHOICE

Thursday
Only!
ROLL PORK

69~

Ohio Valley Pork

USDA

All

Saturday
Only!
SAVE 40e LB.

PANTY HOSE

•

CUBE STEAK

79C

pair
only

Lean
No

Save On The

Waste

Finest Brands

ARCHWAY

• COOKIES
REGULAR

43~

DOLL

SCOT LAD

3
pkgs.

LUNCH MEAT

• FRUI PIES
REGULAR

15~

6 for

6 pak

4

KING SIZE

~~f, 1.19

FOR

J •

for

'1

Birds Eye 12 oz.

02

gal.99""
gal.
crt.

'n

Pies.~~~~-~:~.............. 5

range u•ce.......~?-~ .... 39~
Egg Noodles.~~:~.e.':_3~~g s .' '1
CoHee Whit8necr~.~.29~
Perch-~~~~--~~~ .....................~~:. 49~

MILK

TIGER

TIDE

Pot
0

SEALTEST
GRADE A

lARGE 15 OUNCE JAR

•

c

cans

PET POWDER
• Coffee Creamer

LARGE LOAVES

3 FLAVORS
TO CHOOSE

12 oz.

CATSUP

• BREAD

NORTH STAR

POPSICLES

d BROOKS
12 OZ. BOnLES

VANILLA
CHOCOLATE

BILTMORE

D ON

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ICE MILK

Low Price Special!

53e

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ceI

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Fresh, Crisp

ery_~:g~_s~~~~----------b~~-

19~

Choice
Golden Ripe

Potatoes~~s.:.~~~----- 1 0 ~~g

49~

BANANAS

Lett uce_~:r~:.~~----------~:·_

29~

Maine

Fresh, Solid Heads

Grape fru I•t ·------~:a~-- 5
White

lb.
bag

59~

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

Corner Mill ana Second Sts.

PHONE: 992-3480
"We Reserve The Right To Limit Ouantitles"

MIDDLEPORT, 0 . .

PLENTY OF ON-STREET PARKING AFTER 5:00 P.M.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 30, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds . •
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
,______B-=-u_s1._·
n_e_s_s
_
S_ervice"G
OF
Motor Co.

LEGAL NOTICE

- WANT AD
INFORMATION
LEGAL NOTICE
DEADLINES
Jack M. Matich, whose
' P.M. Oay Before Pub! ication
Tesidence is unknown; I rene M.
, Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Matich, whose residence is
-_Cancellation &amp; Corrections
unknown to the plaintiff, and
Will be accepted until9a.m. r
The Unknown Heirs of Jacob
Day of Pub I ication
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
REGULATIONS
Unknown Heirs of Edward
The Publisher reserves the·
Schaefer,
deceased;
The right to edit or reject any ads
Unknown Heirs of Emma deef!led
objectional.
The
Schaefer Ashworth, deceased; publiSher will not be responsible
The Unknown Heirs of Florence !or n:ore than one incorrect'
Schaefer Radford, deceased, msert•on.
also known as Flora Schaefer
RATES
Radford; T.he Unknown Heirs of
For Want Ad Service
Edward Schaefer, deceased, _i~_nt~er W9rd one insertion
grandson of Jacob Schaefer,
i'ii'ion1mum Charge
deceased; The Unknown Heirs
12 cents per word three.
of Ethel S. Archer, deceased; consecutiYil. insertions.
The Unknown Heirs of Gus
18 cents· per word s~x conSchaefer,
deceased;
The secutive insertions.
.
Unknown Heirs of Elmer , 25 Per cent Discount on pa i d·
Schaefer,
deceased;
The ads and ads paid within 10 days.
Unknown Heirs of Elza Ash
CARD OF THANKS
worth, deceased; The Unknown
&amp; OBITUARY
Heirs of Elmer Ashworth,
$1.50 for 50 word• minimum
deceased; The Unknown Heirs Each additional word 2c.
of Mabel Ashworth, deceased;
-BLIND ADS
The Unknown Heirs of Dayton
Additional 25c Charge per
Ashworth,
deceased;
The Advertisement.
·
Unknown Heirs of Otho Ash·
OFFICE HOURS
worth, deceased; The Unknown
8:30 i!·.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Heirs of Amanda Schaefer 8:30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noor
Goeglein,
deceased;
The Saturday.
Unknown Heirs of Louise
Goeglein Matich, deceased;
The Unknown Heirs of Mike
Matich, also known as Michael
Matich,
deceased;
The IN LOVING memory of Olan
Goodwin who died one year
Unknown Heirs of Dorothy
ago today, March 30, 1970.
Radford Croy, deceased, will
take notice that they have been
Mrs. Norma Goodwin and
sued by the Director of High·
family.
ways of the State of Ohio, who
3-30-ltc
has instituted a proceeding in
the Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, to ap .
propriate certain property
described hereafter for high- SKATE-A-WAY. April Fool
way purposes, namely the
Party, Wednesday, March 31.
making, construction or imRaces, prizes, balloons. Open
provement of State Route No.7,
Wednesday,
Friday and
Section 6.34, Meigs County,
Ohio, and to fix the value of said
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. to 10:30
property. The property sought
p.m.
Private
parties
to be appropriated is more
available Monday, Tuesday
specifically
described
as
and
Thursday
nights;
follows:
Saturday and Sunday p.m.
DESCRIPTION OF THE
Phone 985-3929 or 985-3585.
PARCEL OF LAND
3-28-3tc
AND ESTATE, INTEREST
OR RIGHT THEREIN
APPROPRIATED
RUBBER STAMPS made to
The following parcel, located
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
in Town 2, Range 13, Section
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Fraction 6, Salisbury Township,
Ohio.
Meigs county, Ohio, lying on the
2-12-90tc
left and right side of the cen
terline of a survey made by the
Department of Highways, and
recorded in the records of Meigs
County, Ohio, and being more 4 ROOM house and bath in
fully described as follows:
Hartford, W . Va. Phone 882PARCEL NO. 1170-WL
2370.
(HIGHWAY)
3-29-3tc
ALL RIGHT, TITLE AND
INTEREST IN FEE SIMPLE,
INCLUDING LIMITATION OF
ACCESS,
IN
THE
FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
PROPERTY
COIN OPERATED pool table.
Commencing at the northwest
Phone 882-2370.
corner of Fraction Section 6,
3-29-3tc
said point also being the true
place of beginning of the
following described tract of
land.
Thence a long th e North I ine of
LEGAL NOTICE
said fraction sec t ion bearing
Notice to Bidders:
South 87 degrees 11 minutes 49
Sealed quotations will be
seconds East a distance of received by the Board of
393.36 teet to a point, said point Commissioners
of
Meigs
being 126.47 feet right of Station
County, Ohio, at the office of the
441 plus 14.30; thence South 3 County Commissioners, in the
degrees 41 minutes 24 seconds Court House, in the Village of
West a distance of 155.40 feet to
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, until
a point on the southerly limited
10:00 o'clock A.M . on the 6th
access right of way of Meigs 7- day of April, 1971 for the fur 6.15, said point being 270.42 feet nishing of Bituminous Materials
right of Station
s 48 .89 , for the Meigs County Highway
thence along sa
wey Department
beartng South
o.l
E $tlrnated quantity of liquid
minutes 32 Sf.'C
a spl'fl'ilt
required,
ap distan ce of 443.8
proximately 600,000 gallons.
on the west ' in
Quotations to be submitted as
Section 6, said po
follows :
feet right of Sta on 435 plus
Quote price per gallon,
71.09 ; thence alon g sai d fra ct ion
F .O B Vendors Plant, and the
I ine bearing North 3 degrees 41
price per gallon delivered to
minutes 24 seconds East a Vendors portable tank to any
distance of 355.06 f eet to the true location
in
the
County
place of beginning, containing designated by the County
2.304 acres, more or less, of
Engineer, for the various
which the present road occupies grades of bituminous materials
0.002 of an acre.
which may be required by the
This description prepared by Meigs
County
Highway
Theodore W . Sushka , P. E.
Department.
which
shall
34792, for the Ohio Department conform to the Pertinent State
of Highways in 1970, and is of Ohio, Department of the
based on a survey made by
Highway Construction and
Richard
C.
Glasgow, Material Specification, "702
Registered Surveyor No. 5161.
Bituminous Materia Is," dated
owners claim title by in - January 1, 1971.
strument of record in Deed
Prices quoted on this bid shall
Book so, Page 99, county be in effect for the remainder of
Recorder's Office.
the year, 1971 .
Together with all rights or
With respect to the aforesaid
easements of access or or from
estimated quantities, the bidder
said limited access highway, shal l understand that no
from or to the land of said guarantee is given as to the
persons abutting upon that actual quantities of bituminous
portion of said li mited access
material to be furnished, but
highway, between the following
each successful bidder shall be
points:
required to furnish all or any
From a point 265 feet right of part of the Meigs County actual
centerline Station 435 plus 71 .09 requirements as ordered during
to a point 270.42 feet right of the bid period.
centerline Station 440 plus 48.89
On the envelope conta ining
as shown by the plans of said each bid, the name and address
improvement herein referred of the bidder must be shown and
to
Said stations being the plainly marked "Bituminous
Station numbers as stip ulated in
Bid."
the hereinbefore mentioned
Proposals are to be returned
survey .
on bid forms supp li ed by the
Said persons named or noted
Vendor, and will be opened on
above shall further take notice the date and place specified
that unless they answer on or above.
before Saturday, the 17th day of
The Meigs County Com .
April, 1971, they will be deemed missioners reserve the right to
to have waived their right to reject any and all Quotations or
an swer, and the Petition will be any part thereof.
taken as true and Judgment will
Martha Chambers, Cl erk
be rendered accordingly .
Meigs County Board of
P. E . Masheter
Commiss ioners.
Director of Highways
(2) 23 (3) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, 6tc
(3) 23, 30, 3tc

For Sale

.&gt;

KILL TERMITES and yard
insects with ARAB "You-Do-11." King Builders Supply
Company, Middleport.
2-21-60tc

QUALITY

196~ PlYMOUTH
$1395
":'a!1ant ~Dr. Loc~ll owner car, clean interior, dark aqua
f1m~h, like new t1res, 6 cyl. engine &amp; automatic trans.,
rad1o. Popular model &amp; priced to go.

1966 CHEVELLE
$1295
Conv. cpe., local 1 owner car, blk. vinyl interior with
buc~et seats, 4-~peed trans., std. V-B engine. good tires,
rad10, maroon fmish &amp; blk. top.

/Sc-

1966 IMPALA
$139S
HT_ Sedan. Lo~al 1 owner car, blk. finish &amp; red cloth in.teno~, good _t1res: V-8 engine, automatic trans. &amp; p.
•steenng, rad1o. N1ce family car.

GANDY
SPREADER
and
seeder. Double barrel 12gauge shotgun. Hopkins and
Allen single shot rifle; 1890
Winchester pump rifle. Phone
247 2161.
3-30 3tc
TWO GOODY EAR wrinkledwall drag slicks, 900x14, 7inches wide; $60 or trade.
Phone 992-5663.
3-30-4tc

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OP-EN EVES. 8:00 ,P.M.
P_OMEROY, OHIO

For Rent

For Sale

LEGAL NOTICE

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;
SAVINGS COMPANY,
An Ohio Corporation,
Porn eroy, Ohio,
Plaintiff,
v s.
Ru ssell E. L ewi s, et al .
Defendants .
No. 14,817
NOTICE
Russell E . Lewi s, whose place
of residence is unknown , will
take notice that on the 13th day
of February 1971. the un dersigned, The Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Company, filed its
petition aga ins! you in the
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
County , Ohio, praying for a
judgment on a promissory note
in the amount of $3,253.94, with
interest at 7112 per cent per
annum from September 25,
1970, and for toreclosure of
mortgage upon the fo,lowing
described real property :
Situated in the Village of
Pomeroy, County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio. Being Lot No 502
in the Vi II age of Pomeroy.
County of Meigs and State of
Ohio, and there is also conveyed
herewith, all rights wi th respect
to the use of th e sidewa I k bet ·
ween lot s Nos . 502 and 503 as
was transferred to the Grantor
herein.
Reference Deeds : Vol. 227,
page 987, and Vol. 168, page 371.
Deed Records, Meigs County,
Ohio .
You are required to answer
the said complaint within 28
days after the l ast publ ica1ion
namely on the 28th . day of Apri l ,
1971. or judgment by default
will be rendered against you .
THE FARMERS BANK
&amp; SAVINGS COMPANY,
P laintiff
CROW, CROW &amp; PORTER,
Attorney s for Pla1nliff
t2) 16, 23 , (3l 2. 9. 16, 23, 30, 7tc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford

TWO COWS, fresh. Two horsedrawn manure spreaders. 1216 discs. High wheeled wagon.
John Houdashelt, Minersville.
3-30-3tp

Notice

Help Wanted

COINS. Bought, sold, traded.
Complete line of supplies,
albums, price guides. Open
daily 5 p. m. to 9 p. m. and all
day Saturday. Freasure Chest
Coins, U.S. Rt. 33 South
(Pomeroy Road), Athens,
Ohio. 10 per cent off on any
supplies with this ad.
3-26-6tc
MADAM MARY PALMISTRY.
Reader
and
advisor. Tells past, present
and future. I will tell you just
what you want to know about
friends and enemies. I give
never failing advice on all
mat lers
of
I ife.
707 112
Washington Blvd., Belpre,
Ohio. Look for sign. For
appointment call 423-9153.
3-24-10tc

WANTED

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

IT'S HERE- Mini -motor home
of the year . Seeing is
believing at Gaul Trailer
Sales, Inc., Chester, Ohio,
County Road 36. Rentals,
sup pi ies, travel trailers,
campers. Champion, Continental, Tag-A-Long and
Skamper.
3-24-7tc

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

5-1-tfc

VEGETABLE
PLANTS,
cabbage,
cauliflower,
broccoli, big boy tomatoes,
brussel sprouts. Also, pansy,
snapdragon,
delphinium.
Midway Market. W. Main St.,
Pomeroy. P.hone 992-2582 or
992-2565.
3-28-3tc

BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-1 0-tfc

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

-tit ALSO
DOUBLE~ WI DES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES. INC.
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

~------, ·
.EXPER~NCED

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial. residential and
industrial wiring. Phone 2472113.
3-12-tfc
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
electronically.
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. 992-3213.
3-17-30tc

-kCHAMPION
*VAN DYKE

.fcWINSOR
«BUDDY

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

ALUMINUM car top boats, 1012-13 foot. Lorenzo D. Davis,
Kingsbury Road.
3-24-30tc

MATURE woman for companion for elderly lady. Live
in. References required.
Phone Chester 985-3301.
3-17-tfc

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
"Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
·Phone
John
Russell,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-7-tfc

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

In Memory

Notice

1967 HONDA 160. Also, 1952
Chevy 283, 3 speed. Call 9926196.
3-30-3tc

3EPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2 12-tfc

Radiator Service

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.
DEXTER, 0. 45726
PHONE 742-3945

•

From the Largest Truck or'
Bu II dozer Radiator to the
~mallest Heater Core.

1nsured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed

BLAETT~ARS
PAINTING,
roofing
and
spouting service. Richard
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
3-11-30tc
ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
hold-up . Southeastern
Security Systems. Call Ray
Adams 247-2055 Mike
O'Brien 247-2113.
3-17-tfc

EXPERT

•

:Wheel Alignment

$5.55

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

TREE-TRIMMING
and
removal. Fully insured. Free
estimates. Call after 5 p.m.,
collect
Dick
Hayman,
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
Hayman, Chester 985-3509.
3-28-30tp

Pomeroy.

Ph. 992r2143

STRAWSER R Y
PLANTS, NEIGLER Construction. For
I -GUARANTEEDarnv1ng
Monday • night.
building
or
remodeling
your
Phone 992-?094
REVIVAL meeting at the
Varielies, Midland, Sparkle,
.'
home, Call Guy Neigler,
Church of God at Chester BARMAID. Apply in-person. HiCatskills and
Surecrop.
Racine,
Ohio.
starting March 28 at 7:30p.m.
Midway Market. W. Main St.,
Ho Bar, Middleport.
7-31 -tfc
with Evangelist Emma Jean
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2582 or
3-26-6tc
606 E. M~n. Pomeroy,
Perry
from
Cincinnati.
992-2565.
CARPET
Special singing and prayer for LADY TO stay with person who
3-28-3tc RALPH'S
Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
PAPER-HANGING,
painting,
the sick each evening. Come
is ill. Good wages. Call 992Free
estimates.
Phone
plastering, dry wall. Arthur
and bring a friend.
2646.
HANNAH'S husband Hector
Gallipolis 446-0294.
Musser. Phone 992-3630.
3-25-6tc
3-30-3tc
3-12-tfc
hates hard work so he cleans
3-28-30tp
the rugs with Blue Lustre.
REVIVAL, Mt. Hermon U. B.
Rent electric shampooer, $1.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Church March 26 to April 4.
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
service, all makes. 992-2284
Rev.
Carey
Knittle, 2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
3-24-6tc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
All Makes &amp; Models
evangelist, Cincinnati. Rev.
Hts., Pomeroy. Phone 992Authorized Singer Sales and
Freeland
Norris,
song
Also
12-FOOT meat case, 10-foot
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
5127 after 4 p.m .
evangelist. Stories for the
Stereos &amp; Tapes
vegelable case. Also, 1959
3-29-tfc
3-2-tfc
children. Everyone welcome.
675-3482 or 773-5196
Chevrolet pickup. Rebuilt
7:30p.m. each evening.
motor. Inquire M and G Food
4
ROOM,
bath,
unfurnished
3-23-lOtc
Market, Rt. 7, three miles
house. 1650 Lincoln Heights.
soulh of Middleport.
Phone 992-387 4.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
OVEN
FRESH
bakery
3-28-31p
3-23-tfc
Broker
cancelled?
lost
your
products. Jimmy's Pastry
110 Mechanic St.
operator's license? Call 992Shop, N. 2nd Ave ., Mid- UNFURNISHED 3-room
J. Durbin- C. Inscore
Pqmeroy, Ohio
dleport. Phone 992-3555.
2966.
Service Personnel
apartment in Coats Bldg.,
3-28-30+c
6-15-tfc
Middleport.
Inquire
at 1958 GMC wide bed pickup truck RACINE
RURAL
"
for sale or trade for cattle.
apartment 16 or phone 992
bedrooms, bath, nice kitchen
THE KYGER Creek Credit
John Hayes. phone Chester
3641.
with oven and cook unHs. Full
Union will accept sealed bids
3-18-12tc
985-3515.
basement. Furnace Carport.
unlil 3 p.m., April 9, 1971 for a
3-28-3tp
VI DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES DANNIE'S MOBI
$8,300.00.
1968 Chrysler Newport and a UNFURNISHED 3 - room
~
I
1964 Chevrolet Malibu. Said
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
MIDDLEPORT4
bedrooms,
cars may be viewed in the
1-31 -tfc
bath, gas heat. Large living,
parking lot at the plant.
1967 FORD Ranger pickup.
side porch and garage.
:J:
Kyger Creek Credit Union TWO OR three bedroom home,
Phone 247-2161.
Asking $10,500.00.
LU
reserves the right to reject
~
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
3-30-6tc
1st In Service-lstln Volume-1st In Selection
.J
any or all bids. Bids may be
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
2
HOUSES
2
bedrooms,
bath,
UP
TO
12
YEAR
TERMS
VI
mailed to Box 81, Gallipolis,
3-2-tfc 1969 BUfCK LeSabre, 2-dr.
a:l
gas heat. Rented. Second: 3
Ohio.
0
hardtop, power steering,
bedrooms, gas furnace, full
3-30-3tc TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
)&gt;
power brakes, air, 18,000
basement. 3 car garages. 6
_L_O_A_D
__O
__
F-9_
x l_2_ r_u_g_s ,- -t-il-t-b- ack
'h-mile north of new Meigs
miles. Excellent condition.
acres only $18,000.00.
VI
99
Phone 992-2288.
chairs, indoor-outdoor carpet,
High School. Phone
~--~~1f1c
60X12
~
50Xl2
w
11 -10-tfc;; HARRISONVILLE- 4 rooms,
glassware, shoes. Hayman
1"1\
half bath, cistern water .
Auction, Friday night.
FURNISHED and unfurnished 1968 GMC '12-lon pickup, 23,000
Outbuildings. Large level lot.
3-30-3ic
mi les, new tires, camper top,
apartments. Close to school.
$7,500.00.
~
good condition . Phone 992Phone 992-5434.
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
10-18-tfc
2805, Eldon Walburn.
ASSOCIATE
2-23-30tc
3-28-tfc
Now
LAND AND HOUSES
M AND G Food Market and
r
WANTED
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
equ ipment. Also, 3-room 1964 CHEVELLE convertible.
Ca II 992-3325
like to try a wig on in the
Good condition, 8-cylinder,
furnished apartment, uti lilies
3-26-6tc
:J:
privacy of your own home?
automatic
transmission.
paid. Inquire at M and G Food
0
You can . .Just call us. We also
Market, Rt. 7, three miles
Phone 992-3917.
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
3-28-6tp 24 ACRE farm at Long Bottom,
~
south of Middleport.
house with 3 bedrooms, dining
Koscot,
of
course.
m
3-28-3tp
room, kitchen, living room,
VI
Distributors, Brown's. Phone
Hillcrest
112 baths, e nclosed
1
back
Middleport 992-5113.
3 ROOM, bath, furnished or
3 Bedroom
porch, wall to wall carpeting,
12-31 -tfc
sem i -furnished
apartme nt. HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
)&gt;
aluminum siding, awning,
Now
Also, 2 room, bath, furnished
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
storm
windows
and
storm
apartment. Mulberry Ave.,
10-25-tfc
doors, city water. Selling due
Now
Pomeroy .
Referen c es
to ill health. Phone 614-985m
required. Phone 992-6698.
3938.
3-23-tfc
WE
HAVE
BUTCHERED
PRICES
VI
3-26-12tp

HOSPITAL

NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p .m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Keenan,
Gallipolis, a son; and Mr. and
Mrs. John Williams, Gallipolis,
a son.
Discharges
James Roy Barnett, Mrs.
Charles Keith Bowman and
infant daughter, Miss Beatrice
R . Eisnaugle, June D. Harvey,
James Largent, Clarence C.
Murnahan , Mrs . Dale D .
Rothgeb Sr ., Mrs. Sharon L .
Roush, Kellie M. Russell, Mrs.
Melvin Skidmore, Robert L.
Snowden, Mrs. Cl arence D.
Weddle, Mrs. Thomas J. White,
Mrs. Cecil H. Brown, Mrs. Gary
D. Evans and daughter, Mrs.
Thomas E. F l eming, Mrs .
Douglas A . Griffith and son,
Mrs . Jerry L . Jacks and son,
Mrs Ronald Kennedy and
daughter,
Mrs.
Paul
V.
Harnson, Julia A . Crislip, a nd
Mrs William R. Biggs.

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

:Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

o.·

·------~·
TELEVISIOr~

For Rent

REPAIR

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

1,EAFORD
SR.

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

Insurance

For Sale or Trade

~

Auto Sales

DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES
POMEROY

m

E
m

:E

c
z

SAVE

~

z Hillcrest
z

Park .;,

'7872

65'xl2'

60'x12'

Buckingham
By King

Real Estate For Sale

SS250

W){)

HERE IT lSI

~m ·
c
z
z

~

Cleland Realty..

Olde Fashioned
SPRING
OPEN HOUSE
APRIL 1·2-3

Lots of old
fashi~ned
bargains, money-saving sa le
specia l s . ..
FUN- PRIZES
REFRESHMENTS
EVER_YqNE INVITED

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
WILL PICK up merchandise
and take to auction on a
percentage basi s. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
Phone 742-4461 .
9-23-tfc

------------------AUCTI ON 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 home. Phone
992-3666.
8-16-tfc

Wanted To Buy
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
c ondition, as long a s have not
been w et. Paying $10 eac h .
First floor on ly . Mondays will
be pick -up day. Write, giving
good d irection s. Witten Piano
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Ohio 43946.
8-20-tfc
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
beds, etc . Write M . D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992·6271.
9-1-tfc
HORSE saddle. Phone 949-2227 .
3-30 -31p

---------

TWO
BEDROOM
trailer,
POMEROY- Liberty Avenue
Syracuse, Ohio . Elderly
l 1/2 story frame, 2
couple or elderly people. No
bedrooms,
bath,
porch,
chi ldren. Call after 5 p .m .
basement, NEEDS SOME
phone 992-5249.
REPAIR. $3,500.
3-28-3tc

Pets For Sale
REGISTERED black male toy
poodle. House broken. Call
992-3591.
3-29-6tc

For Sale
22-FOOT Layton camper, self·
contained . Excellent c on dition . Phone 949-3621.
3-30-3tc
COAL, lim estone. Excelsio:
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-389L
4-9-tfc
MODERN WALNUT STEREO
radio combination, solid
stale s tereo, 4 speed changer,
4 speaker scund system . Pay
balance $68 .70 . Use our
budget terms. Ca ll 992-3352.
3-25-6tc

200 ACRE farm near Mt. Union
Church, Carpenter. Available
soon. George Caldwell, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
3-18-12tp

RUTLAND - Depot Street - 1
story cement block, ALMOST
NEW, 3 bedrooms, bath,
porch, 2 ACRES. $8,900.

6-ROOM house
Large lawn
!railer.
possession.

POMEROY
Butternut
Avenue - 2 story frame, 3
bedrooms,
bath,
porch,
BASEMENT HAS APAR~
MENT.
Garden
space,
garage. $10,000.

HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath,
phone 742-5613.
3-30-5tc

TO BUY OR SELL
CALL US
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568 3-28-6tc
CONVENIENT but secluded
building l ots on T79 at Rock
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy . Ca ll or see BU I
Wi lie weekends, or after 5
p .m . weekdays. Phone 9926887.
2-3 tfc

z ~~~~VERY
c:t

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnold Grate

Rutland, 0.

POMEROY
992-7195

~

0

tD

r-

m

DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES DANNIE'S MOBILE

LOOK
If You Haven't
Bought A
NEW HOME

BECAUSE:
Down payment too high,
Monthly payments too high,

Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps.
Auto .
water
level
co ntrol .
Lint
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator.
Perm a-Press
May tag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat. No hot spots,
no
overdrying .
Fine Mesh Lint
Fi lter.
We Specialize in
MAY TAG
Red Carpet
Service

742-4211

.

C Open 7 Days A Week

WMP0/1390

1971 DIAL &amp; SEW Zig - Z~g
Sewing Machine left 1n
l ayaway. Beautiful pastel
col or, full size model. All
built -in buttonhole, overcast
and fancy stitc h . Pay just
cash
or
te rm s
$48 .75
avai l able . Trade -ins ac cepled. Phone 992-5641.
3-30-61c

FREE
SET-UP

DANNIE'S

Z

ITEM: Jack Kane.
You somehow get the
feeling he has thought
a bout
what
he's
sharing with you. Your
feeling is right.

MAPLE
STEREO - Radio
combination . Equipped with
AM-FM radio, 4 speakers,
four
speed
automatic
changer, separa te control s.
Balan c e $82 .50 . Use our
budget terms. Ca ll 992-3352.
3-25-6tc

VACUUM Cleaner brand new
1970 model. Complete with a ll
cleaning tool s. Sma ll paint
damage in shipping . Will take
$27 cash or budget p la n
avai lable. Phone 992-5641
3-30-61c

in Monkey Run .
with space for
Immediate
Phone 992-2619.
3-30-6tp

All Homes Are Priced To Sell Now!

w

don't own your
own lot. ..

DR. MOODY OF

JEMO ASSOCIATES
Can cure

your

ill s! Contact him

today at .. .
Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.
Middleport, Ohio
~

992-7034 or 1-268-181 0

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

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,-~--,------,---,----r--o---------.....,.,----,-----------------.---.--.----

'BARNEY
WHILE 'IE WUZ GONE
OFF, AUNT LOWEEZYTATER GOT IN '-fORE
PANTRV AN' BUSTED A
JAR OF PEACH BUTTER ,
POURED SORGHUM IN TH'
CORN MEAL AN'ET A
WHOLE JAR OF PICKLED

BEETS

AN'~.

BALLS 0 ' FIRE!!

c-~~

I TOLD '-IE TO WATCH
THAT '-IOUNG - UN

"---y~?

-·~ ~--,

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HE.R MEMOIP"S:. READ
L-IkE TI-l£ PASS£f0C£+--~
LIST' CF ll-\c 74-7 I

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1(:r

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BUT-??- DON'T'
FOLKS SA'/ THEY
,GOT A SARTII'J

'ORAVJBACK"?

BUGS BUNNY

WINNIE WINKLE

1971 ~, w••,... 1.-- ,_
T ~ ,..,. U \.
Off.

"~"'

HE WAS IN BRIGHT AND EARLY
}()ISS WINKLE. COULDNT WAIT
ID START INTERVIEWING 11115'
CO~LECTION OF SKIN
AND BONEe&gt;!

® T~ATS FUNNY.

TOP-FLIGHT IS --ADVERTISIN6 FOR
A MOOEL IN TODAY'S PAPER !
&lt;.JERRY DIDNT

r.•.

&amp;AYAWORO
ABOUT IT!

3·30

•

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HE'£. GONE AH'
DONE IT, 'SANDY''! ~~~()J
THEM KROGS ARE
GFWVELII'i' AN' 11/HII'UN'
AGAIN·" LEAVIN' 1'10
DOUBT THAT THEY'VE
CONNED THEMSE'IVfS
INTA THIHt&lt;IN 1 HE'S
THEIR GOO, EROG."

DAILY CROSSWORD
45. Identical

ACROSS

•

DICK TRACY
POUCI-l, YOU'RE A FOOL!

YOU AND MOLENE ARE 80TH
FOOL S. I'M STAYING
HT HERE.

•

M

16. Geratnt's

T

WI

A HY OR ATO
L
IS E M
TAN KIT
''even''
wife
pride
L
TO LEN
4. Man of few
20. Mrs.
DOWN
i= R
1. New Guinea
Copperwords,
OF OR A OR
E. TER
port
field
E
informally
PA TE F r:N LE
22. Organ
8. Beach house 2. Inlaid
ICH AI N. RElC.
piece
pipe
11. Links target
CL EA VE. DI\ VE
3.
Struck
25.
Sall12. Most
TE RR OR-01~ R
competent
gently
ing
~·
4. Oriental tea
hazard
13. Gunther's
YPsterday's ADawer
5. Go to pieces 27.Go
"Inside
hungry
(3wds.)
34. Gift
28. Smoothed
6. Foreign
14. Golf
recipient
down
instructor
7.Repasts
40. Zee's
30. Origi8. Taker of
15. French
n eighnate
season
prisoners
bor
32. Spars
17. Cad, to a
9. Erode
42. - Cockney
10. Let oneself 33. Prefix for
Yutang
within
go (3 wds.)
18. P laying
marble
19. Sinews
21. Fragrance
23. Lord in
1. Trumpeter's 46. Poetically

JJWJMJ]l~® tkJ 4ct4M~I.I . , J ~
hy t -U :: N R I ARNOLD d n d BOB L E£

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

I I

IIIWOU/i I

TERRY
PROBAI3LY CURSING THE AI?CH !TECT
WHO t7fSIGNEI7 THIS PlACE FOR PUTTING
11'4 ONLY ONE STAIRCASE TO THIS FLOOR,

TERENCE, I'll ADMIT YOU'RE
!IOWNRIGHT LOVAIHE, 13UT;
A$ l ONG AS 'IOU WERE
GALLOPING MADLY TO' MY
RESCUE ANYWAY, COUli/N 1T
'IOU HAVE STUCK A HAM
IN '/OUR POCKET?

11 PEEK OUT

THE WINDOW, MA'M. iF WHAT I THINK
1$ GOING ON I$, WE CAN FINO OUT IF GENERAL
CABALLO'S LARI/ER DOESN'T HAVE SO'&gt;IETHING
11
MORE FESTIVE • j:::!~==~~ifll..-~;~;

•

WITH THE MANJARVIS·
SoTIL.L. IN A COMA·

5 E~VAI'Jli

DUCEY AND VIDA

GET DINNER. ...

IIUJAU:
()

Tale"
24. Allude
26. Attire
29. Nourish
31. Nick and
Nora's dog
32. Offense
35.Pokey
36. Zealot
a mong
insects
37. Backward
38. Military
supplies
(abbr.)
39. Ragout
·U. Heading for
the altar
(2wds.)
-i3. Walter's
H .

I

Pride SMISUNSWIUen

LOOK\ MAYBE

WF:: CAl'! i"&gt;ALVAGE

ENOUGH PAR.T7
FROM YOUR RAriO·
TE:l EPHOIJE TO R\6
UP A TRAN?MITTf:R

HOPELE77 ~ "THE: WEIRDO''

7 MA7 HEO THIIII65&gt; UP TOO

W&amp;/...l.- OR MAYBE I'M JIJST
NOT A GOOD - E IVOUGH
,ELE CT~OIJI CS MAI\J:

TF:Y REPAIRIIJG
THE CRUI? ER ENC,INE
11J THE M0RNIN6~

"[

Now arrance the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

I I I J r X I I )"

(An.wen tomorrow)
Yf'tt~rdav•a

I

· """"'"r'

~~=:ulsed

NEVE:R :&gt;AY DIE~

L.Eil'~

I THE

Jun•hleo: TOPAZ

Is

A X \' DLBAAXR
L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

SHOWY

AROUSE

LAWYER

Why the Turki&amp;h btlth u-orkers u-ent on
•trike - IT WAS A SWEAT SHOP

~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

CAP!' AIN EASY

D

I
:====::===::::::::--'--.,L_-=I

"Winter's

I==

L.

One lett er s imply s tandS !or another. In this sample A is "'-~
~- -..
used for the three L's, X tor the two O's, etc. Single letters. .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __~ L.---...U.--....L..lo---~
apostrophes, the length and !onnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lett ers are different.

r - ----------,

A Cryptogram Quotation

VZX

HEGB

SGB
VZX

VZX

HSLXU

SJHSRU

NG

SCJXUV

GSLEFSVNOU.

UEBX

NM

SOX
VZX

XB H SOB

F'ECCNG
Yeaurday's Cryptoquote: CONSERVATION MEANS THE
WISE USE OF THE EARTH AND ITS RESOURCES F0R
THE LASTING GOOD OF MEN.- GIFFORD PJNCHOT
(~

1971 King F•nturh

Syndl&lt;·~ t~ .

In&lt;' )

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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 30, 1971

Calley's Life at Stake
FT. BE:&gt;miNG. Ga. t UPil William L. Calley Jr.,
prisoner No. 179, arose before
dawn in the army stockade
routine today and prepared for
an afternoon in court listening
to arguments why a jury of
battle veterans should spare his
life.
Three years and 13 days after
he led an American infantry
platoon into My Lai, the stubby,
5-foot-3 first lieutenant was
convicted by that jury Monday
of the premeditated murder of
at least 22 screaming and
pleading Vietnamese women,
children and old men.
The verdict was what the
government has asked the sixofficer jury to return for the
"summary execution in cold
blood" of unresisting civilians
in the hamlet where the
Americans had expected to
meet a bitter enemy, the 48th
Viet Cong battalion.
The prosecutor, Capt. Aubrey
M. Daniel III, had asked the
jury-five combat veterans of
Lt.

Vietnam and one of Wol'ld War that another panel would be

Kidney Fund at $5,387

cJlmcr, in
The G
Thompson and Mrs. Marvin Miller, Langs- and Mrs. Ge(Jrge F
The jury returns for the
Kidney F~~~-g~as mcreased ville; Feeney-Bennett Post 128, memory of their son, Don, wh()
afternoon session of "mitigation
died six years ago as the result
over $1,800 the past four days. American Legion; Mr. and Mrs.
and extenuation" argument
New total of the fund as of William Grueser.
of a kidney disease; Mr · and
Mr.
by the defense on the possible
· ht
$5 386 58
V. D. Edwards, Sutton Sun- Mrs. George Hargraves'
Mon day mg
was
, . .
and Mrs. Michael Fulton of
sentences. George W. Latimer,
Last Thursday evening it was ~~~s~~~o~'te~v:~ra~ar~~h~r~i Milford Centel', Ohio; Mrs. J.
70, said he probably would urge
the jurors to reconsider-as is
$3S,5p7o7n.3s7o.red by the Winding children, Mr. and Mrs. Olden W. Waddell, Women's Assn. of
M· d d 1
t p
b t ·
their privilege and change the
Trail Garden Club, the drive is Thaxton, Brandon, Fla.; Mr . • 1 epor
res y enan
verdict downward so a lesser (Continued from page 1)
to benefit George Thompson, 18,
sentence could be brought. He
in Gallipolis. Simon said he has SO}l of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
will not call witnesses.
made application for the ser- Thompson, Pomeroy, who 1s to
vice.
undergo a kidney transplant at
BY DALE ROTHGEB
facilities would also be used in
Queried as to what he was
George Hargraves, Meigs the .Cleveland.Cli~ic today. The
Announcement is expected the evenings for recreational
going to ask for, Latimer said:
Local School superintendent,
''I'm not going to ask them to said that in a recent issue of Thompson tam1ly Monday soon on the disposition of the purposes for groups at the
afternoon wen.t to Cleveland to idle Bishop Fenwick High Gallipolis State Institute.
put him on the gallows and
Look Magazine there is an be at the hosp1tal. Donor of the School Building located north of
Another future proposal
string him up by the neck." article about a program in
kidney
is
Mrs.
Wayne
(Louella
Cheshire.
The
school
was
closed
would
bring mentally retarded
The last soldier executed in this
Rochester, Pa., where old
country was Pvt. John Bennett buildings are being refurbished Thompson) ~oush of Bel~re. shortly after its construction in children from Meigs County
. into the building for classes and
on April 13, 1961, hanged for with students participating in She was adm1~ted to the hospttal 1963.
Monday
mormng
to
prepare
for
In
recent
weeks,
Galha
instruction. This proposal has
rape.
work study program through the surgery.
County's
Mental
Retardation
been discussed due to the
The case of "United States
local schools.
The
largest
contributio~
to
Board
has
been
negotiating
a
central
location of the school.
vs. Calley" was far from an
The majority attending the latest total was prov1ded lease with Monsignor Henry B.
:Mrs. Annabell Ball Director
end. Latimer said he would agreed
with
Porter's
appeal the verdict all the way statements and noted that local through the Women's Guild of O'Donnel, who has charge of the of the Guiding Hand School,
up through the military court of government should pass laws to Trinity Church, :-"hich, aided by real estate owned by the said if the lease is signed, the
the congregatiOn, staged a Diocese of Steubenville.
board will take over the
appeals, which automatically improve the situation.
ca~eteria
supper
at
the
church
The
school
is
located
on
a
17building immediately.
will review the decision.
At the suggestion of Norbert Fnday evemng. All proceeds acre tract near Rt. 7 and the
The big question now is "Will
Compton, the Chamber en- from th_e supper- $434- were Chesapeake and Ohio Railway the building be available?"
dorsed the closing of local turned mto the Th?m~son fund. spur linking Pomeroy and
According to an out-of-town
businesses on Good Friday from !he latest contnbutwns also Gallipolis.
newspaper Sunday, promoters
12 to 1:30 p.m. Twenty persons mcl~des several donors from
It was designed to ac- planning businesses in the
attended the Monday meeting. outstde the county, one as far commodate 250 students of Cheshire area to profit from the
has been any justice in this
.
.
parishioners in Meigs and influx of construction workers
away as Florida.
courtroom."
Mrs. Robert Lew1s, dnve Gallia Counties, but the at the Ohio Power Company's
"Yt!ur system is just a game
Veterans Memorial Hospital chairman, said latest con- enrollment did not approach $488 million Gavin Plant have
in which you all make money,"
ADMITTED - Hattie E. tributors are Mr. and Mrs. N. expectations.
contacted Monsignor O'Donnel
Miss Van Houten shouted.
Powell, Racine; Martha An- Clark, the Rev. and Mrs.
The school was closed after it regarding purchase of the
It took Court Clerk Gene derson, Racine; Jan Stevens, Stanley Plattenburg, Mr. and became apparent tha~ its property.
Darrow more than 20 minutes Vinton; Betty Roush, Mason; Mrs. Ed King, Mr · and Mrs. operation was not economtcally
Cheshire village officials say
to read the verdicts. The names Connie Roush, Pomeroy; Harry Howard Knight, Mr. and Mrs. feasible.
they have been besieged with
of the victims were never Cross, Middleport; Jarold Don Betzing, Hemlock Grove;
A non-profit organizational inquiries from strangers who
mentioned.
Sexton, Pomeroy; Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Whal~y, board headed by Gallia County say they are interested in
Superior Court Judge Charles Lutheran, Racine.
Loyal Berean Class of ~ld- School Superintendent Clarence locations for the establishment
H. Older told the jury if it were
DISCHARGED - Lillian dleport Church of Chnst, E. Thompson has been working of various businesses.
in his power he would award Singer, Edith Elias, Clyde Willing Workers Sunday School with the Guiding Hand School in
The school has apparently
them a medal for serving on Brown, Flossie Hysell, Joyce Class of Long Bottom Methodist an attempt to lease the struc- become a "hot commodity"
the jury, which was seques- Bing, Bessie Jones, Carson Church, Mr. and Mrs. Robert ture for use by the mentally since it has its own sewer and
tered longer than any other Hayes.
Lewis, Bob and ~~xine Russell retarded children currently water systems while the Village
panel in history.
of Rosev1lle, W1lhng ~orkers attending the Guiding Hand of Cheshire has no sewage
He stepped from the bench
MORE BEDS
Class of the Enterpr~e UM School at the Catholic Youth system and will be without a
and shook hands with each
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI)
public water system until the
Church, Jack Neal_, B~dwell; Center in Gallipolis.
juror, calling them by name.
Selby General Hospital officials Racine Grange, Lydta C1rcle of
Ken
Sweeney,
Project Gallia County Rural Water
He was to formally pro- announced Monday a new the Pomeroy UM Church, Mr · Director
for
the
Oh~o System now under construction
nounced sentence April 19, but $250,000 addition will be built to and Mrs. A. C. ~radfo~d, Green Evaluation Unit in Athens, 1s is functioning.
it was not expected that provide 30 new beds.
H1lls Farm, Mmersv1lle; Mr · serving as a liaison between the
Manson and the women would
local board and the Diocese of
be executed for at least three
Steubenville.
CLEANUP SCHEDULED
to five years, if ever. An appeal
Hopefully, if the lease is
The Gravel Hill Cemetery
to the California Supreme Court
approved, the school, which has board of trustees announced
is automatic in all death
Gallia County sheriff's from his truck.
its own water supply and today that lot owners should
penalty cases.
deputies are still seeking two
One arrest recorded Monday sewage disposal systems, will remove all winter flowers prior
masked bandits who beat up night was James F. Miller, 24, be used for an expanded mental
to April 10. Caretakers will
and robbed twin elderly Bidwell, booked for grand health program not only for
clean up the cemetery after
brothers Monday morning in larceny in the theft of $200 from classroom studies but also
April 10.
the western section of the an elderly Bidwell resident.
sheltered workshops. The
county.
Sheriff Denver A. Walker,
after further investigation
Monday afternoon, said approximately $2,000 was taken in
The 1970-71 graduation of the robbery.
Early reports indicated that
Gallipolis Business College was
only
a .22 calibre pistol and $305
held Saturday evening at the
Grace
United Methodist in cash had been taken. Walker,
however, learned that $1,500
Church.
Rev. Paul W. Hawks, Pastor had been taken from an old
of Grace United Methodist trunk which was broken open.
Orie Rossiter, 72, Rt. 1, Crown
Church, was the guest speaker.
Diplomas and Associate City, hospitalized as a result of
Degrees were presented by Mr. injuries suffered during the
Thomas C. Breech, director. robbery is reported in good
Receiving associate degrees condition today at the Holzer
were Yvonne M. Atkinson, Medical Center.
He sustained a concussion,
Henderson; Harley E. Hendricks, Mason; Nina Heugel fractured nose and multiple
Brumfield, Gallipolis; Joyce facial and head contusions.
His twin brother, Emmett
Roush, Pt. Pleasant; and
1
Rossiter,
was treated and
Richard Scott, Gallipolis.
Diplomas were presented to released for lacerations of the
Charlotte Clevenger, Rt. 1, nose and mouth and an abrasion
Letart; Patricia Cartwright of the head. Their older sister,
Grogan, Clifton; Art E. Hartley, Gillie Jane Tumbersome, was
Jr., Pt. Pleasant; Barbara not harmed.
According to the sheriff's
Lawhorn, Bidwell ; Patricia
Rankin Gibbs, Cheshire; department, Orie Rossiter
Marsha Rodger:s, Cheshire; awakened about 5 o'clock
Mary Beth Schuldt, Route 2, Monday morning to go to the
Patriot; Kathlene Skaggs, Rt. 1, outdoor toilet near his home.
Enroute, he was attacked by
Gallipolis; Harriet Smith,
Kanauga; Linda Weaver, New two men wearing masks, who
Haven; Rhonda Wood, Rt. 1, beat him severely outside, then
Letart; and Sandra Yates, took him inside where his
brother and sister were
Middleport.
Mrs. Paula McDonald, awakened. The pair then
student, provided organ music manhandled Orie's brother, tied
With soft tricot cups
for the graduation. Miss Brenda all three victims, then ranand smooth profile seams
Lee, student, gave the in- sacked the house.
Later, Orie Rossiter managed
vocation and benediction.
for a rounded natural look.
Student usheretts were Redith to untie himself and was able to
Boster and Nanette McKenzie. walk to a neighbor's home for
assistance.
Famous Cross Your Heart design
Deputies Monday afternoon
for
youthful separation,
BIG ONES BANNED
inves tigated a theft case
uplift
and support.
BEREA, Ohio (UPI)
reported by Stanley Shaver, Rt.
Mobile homes measuring more 1 Cheshire . Shaver said
• Sheer elastic back and sides
than 12 feet across are taboo on s~meone took a tire and wheel
for around- the-body fit
the Ohio Turnpike after noon on
and comfort.
Thursday.
You ' ll feel and look great
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - Helen Rice,
1n today's fa c; hions.
This Week's Specia I
Larry Smith, Kendall Clendenin, Mrs. Harry Alburgh,
Bonita McCarty, Carolida
Available rn :
Lieving, Mrs. John Ross, Mrs.
SOFT C.UP #85 $5.00
Lucille Morehead, all Point
"zcs 32-361\, 32-408, 32· 40C
Pleasant; Mrs. George Jones,
FIBERFILL LI N ING #86 $6.00
USED CARS
II, St. Albans; Mrs. James
o;izes 32 -36A, ~2 38B, 32 4UC
Boswell, Letart; Anthony
Martin, Middleport; Nellie
Zahrndt, Mason;
Lyman
Capr;ce 4 door H.T. Gold fin.,
Shop Monday - Thursday
black top, matc hing int ., full
Gillispie, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
power equ ip, factory air.
William Powell, ~ew Haven;
9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Mrs. Paul Buck. Mason;
George Reynolds, Puducah,
Open Both Friday and Saturday
Ky.; Mrs . Lonnie Stanley,
Southside and Clifford Cornell,
9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Apple Grove.
"You' ll Like Our Quality
DISCHARGES Arthur
Way of Doing Business."
Lang, Clyde Hammack, Jr ,
GMAC FINANCING
Mrs . John Hamm, Mrs. Charles
992-5342
Pomeroy
\IV 4J /185 Cup~. ''0~"" nylon Cul!t&gt;r B.md .1nd B~,cl.. U,l&lt;iif~t nv 1on . .-.p.lrldl..'X, ll.• ... ltt '·'""' '' !t,, •n
11
Open Evenings'Til6:00
.Jones, Jr ., and son; :Ylrs. Lora
st·ntt·r Band JntliJ.Kk [IJ~I ( nvlon . 'pandt'X liJ\,(Il r.l~IJP \OII llr\ P\ltJn ' I"•' n.ft' l-..~.lu~i\\ ~~ ( ~' (: "' ..h \. \
Til5 P.M. Sat.
Greenlee, Mrs. William Doss
~lSI?" BY INTi RNATICNAl PLJ\Yl"t
CORF'OFIATION
PRINTE-D IN
S .A
and Clyde Casto.

II and Korea -to be "the required for sentencing.

conscience of the United States
Army, the conscience of this
country" in a finding of
premediated murder.
At 4:33 p.m. on the 14th
deliberation day they delivered.
Under the uniform code of
military justice, the verdict
makes a sentence of life
imprisonment or death mandatory, and the same jury that
convicted must deliberate again
on a sentence. But another
section of the code says a
three-fourth vote-five jurors in
this case - is necessary for life
imprisonment, and a unanimity
of six for death.
The apparent conflict of
making the life sentence
mandatory, if death is not
voted, and then requiring it to
be voted by five was scheduled
as the subject for heated
morning session argument with
the jury absent. The defense
contends a vote of less than
five would be a hung jury and

MASON - Charles Stanley,
president of the Mason Little
League, has called a meeting
for 6 p.m. Thursday at the
Mason Youth Center to elect
new officers and discuss bylaws. All interested persons
are asked to attend.

C of C

F enWIC
• k.,s F ate Due Soon

Jury Satisfied at Job
By KATHLEEN NEUMEYER
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-A
jury which believed it .was
rrotecting society from a
dangerous influence Monday
decreed death for Charles
Manson and his women, who
were dragged shrieking from
the courtroom before the
verdicts were read.
None of the four ever
expressed any remorse for two
nights of death and carnage in
August, 1969, when pregnant
actress Sharon Tate and six
other persons were knifed and
shot and their blood used to
smear the words "death to
pigs" on the walls.
It took the seven men and
five women on the jury 10 days
to reach a verdict on the guilt
of Manson, Susan Atkins,
Patric1a Krenwmkel and Leslie
Van Houten, but only 10 hours
to sentence them to death on
all 27 counts of murder and
conspiracy.
"We made our decision
early," juror Marie Mesmer, a
retired drama critic, told
newsmen, "but we argued all
tne pomts so
rvone would
ha\e a say-s
Jurors
• Charles M
rous mfluenc e
}•
said. "1 think
go home
with peace of mmd now,
knowing I have protected

society."
The defendants, whose outbursts during the trial which
lasted nine and a half months,
cost nearly $1 million, and often
caused them to be removed
from the courtroom, came into
court giggling and smirking.
Manson, whose forehead was
carved with a swastika, had
shaved his head, and the girls
had shorn their waist-length
tresses into close~ropped pixie
cuts.
As the grim-faced jurors took
their seats, Manson called out
truculently, "I don't see how
you can get away with not
letting me put on a defense ."
Defendants Shout
"You have no authority over
me," he told the jurors.
"Half of you aren't as good
as I am."
He was led out by bailiffs
before even hearing the verdicts.
As death was decreed for the
cult leader, the young women
all began shouting.
"You've judged yourselves,"
:Miss Atkins cried, lunging
toward the jury box. She was
~estramed and led out.
M1•s Krenwinkel echoed:
"You re removing yourselves
from the face of the earth.
You're all fools. There never

............................

Tonight, March 30

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Mar. 31 - Aprill
NOT OPEN
COMING:
"WOODSTOCK"
Apri I 2 thru 6th

.....

Social
Calendar

MEIGS THEATRE
Lee Marvin
In
MONTE WALSH
(Technicolorl
Lee Marvin
Jeanne Moreau
Colo rca rtoon:
Skyscraper (Phantom)
Win Lucky
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

- ----

THURSDAY
REVIVAL, April 1 through
April 10, 7:30 p.m. each
evening, Orange Christian
Church, near Athens County
line. Speaker each service,
public invited.
FRIDAY
hETURN Jonathan Chapter,
D.A.R., Friday, 2 p.m., home of
Mrs. Dale Dutton. Rev. Stanley
Plattenburg speaking; Mrs.
James Brewington, Miss
Frienda Faehnle, assisting
hostesses.

ON THE GO?

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J,-1/ ~.........:.....

-;;;,.-,...,.__

$7'"

~~

BANK BY MAIL

• • •

If your daily schedule is filled to capacity let a 6c stamp do your banking
for you. Deposits ... Checking ... Savings . . .

You can do it all with our
bank-by-mail envelopes.
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

Bandits Sought

Rev. Hawks
Graduation
Speaker

J

Aluntni

(Continued from page 1)
who resides in Middleport.
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning has
been named to be in charge of
refreshments to be sold during
the dance portion of the reunion
with the Glenn Glaze Combo
providing music for dancing
from 9 to 12.
..
The officers and executive
committee will meet on April 7
to choose a theme for the
banquet and dance and to plan
for coordinated decorations for
both segments of the reunion.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis is
president of the association this
j
year. As an innovation to this
j
year's reunion, Mrs. Lewis has
J
had rosters made of Middlepor.
•
High School graduates from
1872 through 1965. These will be
j
given as favors at this year's
banquet.
I

l

~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Headquarters For Playtex

WeW

PLAYTEX*

CROSS
YOUR

IIEART.

67 CHEVROLET

$1795

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federc:.l Depos1t Insurance Corporation

Church, Danvill!' Wesleyan
11 M
d
Church lal f. L~Ings~l e, Mr. and
Mrs. A en r ug es,
r. an
Mrs Elza Birch Friendly
··
1 b ' f s 1
Neighbors C u
o
a em
d M H ld
Township, Mr. an
rs. aro
Beathard, London, Ohio; Loyal
Womehn's fClaCshs oft MWiddlleport
Churc o
ns ,
es eyan.
WSCS of Racine, Stella E.
Kloes.
Mrs. Alma Kitchen, Dayton;
Salisbury Brownie Troop 220,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Headley,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebersbach,
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold _Grate,
Francis Florist, ExcelsiOr 011
Co., Pomeroy; PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club, Mrs.
Claude A. H_usted, _home roo~
205 of Me1gs Htgh School,
students of Martha Husted, and
Dale Harrison; Pomeroy
Firemen's Assn., Trinity
Church of Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Struble, Mr. and Mrs.
Julius Sauvage, Busy Bees of
Trinity Church, Flatwoods
United Methodist Church, and
Mrs. William A. Morgan.
The new total includes also.
~
$176 collected t~rough cannisters placed m P?me_roy
business houses. Contnbuhons
may be sent to the postmaster
at Pomeroy. Checks -are to be
made payable to the George
Thompson Kidney Fund.

t

)I

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1

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