<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="954" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/954?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T14:20:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="10854">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/51a413407f975cde08745ceacd207f50.pdf</src>
      <authentication>faaac1a7458ea6368f6894ea6acc7da5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2048">
                  <text>Now You Know

•

The Australian aborigines of
'Melville Island spend as much
as three months carrying out
funeral rites.

Weather

The Daily Sentinel

Increasing cloudiness and not
as cool tonight. Lows in upper
30s and 40s. Thursday variable
cloudiness and warm with
chance of showers. Highs in
upper 60s and lower 70s.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meig.41-Mmon Area

VOL. XXVI

•

Man

FBI zn Hunt
By DALE ROTHGEB JR.
The FBI has been called to
assist in the search for a man
wanted for questioning in
connection with the alleged
abduction and assault Tuesday
night of Michelle (Shelly) Price,
21, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
Thomas W. Price, 148 Portsmouth Rd., Gallipolis.
Police did not elaborate on the
description of the man beyond
that he was white and believed
to be between 30 and 40 years of
age. The FBI entered the case
because it involves interstate
lines.
Miss Price, a student at Rio
Grande College, is expected to
be released later today from the
Holzer Medical Center where
she was treated for mild
scratches, bruises, exposure
and a head injury. She was
listed in satisfactory condition.
A hospital spokesman said
she was not sexually assaulted.
Accordmg to Gallipolis Chief
of Police John Taylor, Dr. Price
called his department at 8:05
p.m. after his daughter failed to
return home from Da e's Food
Market on Third Ave. Taylor
said Dr. Price became concerned because his daughter
had
received
several
threatening phone calls in
recent weeks.
Chief Taylor notified the
Gallia
County
sheriff's
department, state highway

•

-~

...

CORE DRllLING for gravel is underway in the Letart
Falls area by Richards and Sons Inc., of Thornville, Ohio.
The firm has had gravel operations at Apple Grove a number
of years. Farms in the Letart area were sold about 15 years
ago to the Consolidation Coal Co. Former owners have annually leased the ground for farming since that time.
Recently, those who have been leasing the property learned
in a form letter from the Consolidation Coal Co. of Pittsburgh, a subsidiary of Continental Oil Co., that the community had entered into a prospecting agreement with
Richards and Sons, Inc., on the lands at Letart Falls now
under lease. Approximately 3,000 acres will be core drilled.
Charles Findley, employe of Richards and Sons, is operating
the drill above.

•

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

patrol and Gallia County Civil
Defense, who proceeded to
conduct one of the most intensive searches in the history
of Gallia County.
During the search for Miss
Price's 1969 Ford Station
Wagon, other law enforcement
agencies in the tri-county area
also were alerted.
Mason County sheriff's
deputies joined the search at 10
p.m. after receiving a call from
Mrs. John Gill of Gallipolis
Ferry, W. Va., that a young

woman had collapsed in her
doorway.
Sheriff's deputies went to the
Gill home and transported the
woman, later identified as Miss
Price, to the Holzer Medical
Center.
According to Chief Taylor,
Miss Price gave the following
account of her experience:
She had gotten into her car to
return home from Dale's
Market when a man suddenly
reached up from the back seat
and placed a knife to her throat.

•

! News •.. in Briefs i Smts Open
1

1

By united Press International ,

Try Again for the Good Life

•

•

MOSCOW THE COMMUNIST PARTY has for
the first time ordered production of conswner goods expanded to keep aread of the rising standard of living of Soviet
pE:'!&gt;ple
teleVI ian sets, washing machines,
ds 1S tre ultimate goal of the
d I Brezhnev told the 24th
C ngress Tuesday.

Learning How not to Over-React
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO NATIONAL Guard is undergoing
intensive training on the control of riots, which combined with the
use of less lethal weapons will "get the job done .... without
somebody getting hurt," the troops' new commander feels. Adjutant General Dana L . Stewart, named Jan. 11 by Gov. John J.
Gilligan to replace the controversial S. T. Del Corso, said he is
concerned that the troops be able to do their jobs effectively when
called on, but not over-react.
While the guardsmen await new additional federal equipment
from the Pentagon, they are spending their weekends learning
new procedures ordered from Washington following last May's
shooting of four Kent State University students.

Lucky there Was no Shooting
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO - FRANK BETTS, Youngstown,
started out on an evening drive late Tuesday and wound up stuffed
in the trunk of his car which was chased by police at high speeds
for 23 blocks. He was lucky they didn't shoot. Betts said he had
stopped his car when three men came up to the door, pulled a gun
on him and told him to get out. The men put him in the trunk and
drove away.
They drove to the other side of town where they held up a
dairy store. The bandits were spotted by police and the chase was
on. The chase ended 23blocks later without a shot being fired. The
car was taken to a police garage and only then was it discovered
that Betts was in the trunk.

Administration Challenged
WASHINGTON - SEN. J. WILLIAM Fulbright, D-Ark., has
challenged the Nixon administration's contention that the Allied
operation in Laos was a success. He said that assessment was
either a "massive deception of the American people" or "a
massive musjudgment on the part of our political or military
leaders ."
Fulbright, in a Senate speech Tuesday, suggested the original
goal of the mission was to cut off Communist troops in Cambodia
and Laos from their supplies, causing them to "die on the vine."
But he said the operation was crushed long before it could achieve
any of these or other goals set by the administration.

Fling Tickets on Sale
Tickets are on sale for the
"Spring Fling'' sponsored by
the Pomeroy Jaycees, proceeds
from which will be given to the
George Thompson Kidney
Fund.
The event will be held April 30
at the former Pomeroy Junior
High School auditorium from 9
to 1 a.m .
Auction s will be held

BOYS KILLED
WAVERLY, Ohio fUPIJ
Two Pike County youths were
killed Tuesday when struck by a
B &amp; 0 freight train about 10
miles south of here. The victims, who had been ftshing on a
railroad trcsslc, were identified
as Steven Fields, 1:1, and Travis
Sin.rrwns, 8.

throughout the evening with
Larry Ritchie the auctioneer.
Tickets at $4 per couple may
be purchased at the Pomeroy
Home and Auto or from any
member of the Jaycees and the
Winding Trail Garden Club.
Music will be provided by the
Gary Billups trio ..

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Ohio Weather
Outlook Friday Through
Sunday:
A chance of showers
Friday, becoming. fair and
"ooler over the weekend.
Highs Friday in the 60s,
dropping to the 50s by Sunday. 0v£&gt;rnight lows in the 40s
and low 50s, lowering to the
:llls by Sunday morning.

The man then forced her to
drive down Third Ave., across
to First Ave., north on Route 7
and across the Silver Memorial
Bridge. They continued down
W. Va. Rt. 2 and turned off on
Crab Creek Rd .
The assailant then forced her
to drive up a lane to the old
Moore Castle where her car
became mired iri mud. They
walked to the home where he
forced her to disrobe. Later, he
struck her in the head with a
brick and fled.

Lt. Calley's Life

FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI)- it is acutely aware of the
Lt. William L. Calley Jr., who responsibility it carries. It took
says he never wantonly killed a 13 days to convict the stubby
human being in his entire 27 former platoon leader of
years, may learn today whether deliberately forming a design to
the jury that convicted him in slaughter shrieking women,
the My Lai massacre demands children, and old men in the
his death to balance the scales hamlet three years ago.
In an emotional two minutes
of military justice.
The six veterans of battle in and 12 seconds Tuesday, the 5Vietnam, Korea, and World foot-3 Miamian spoke his last
War II who found Calley guilty words to the men who will
of premeditated murder of 22 punish him: "Yesterday, you
Vietnamese on Monday took up stripped me of all my honor.
the new burden of deciding his Please, by your actions that
fate late Tuesday. They deliber- you take here today, don't strip
ated an hour and 37 minutes future ... (his voice broke in a
sob) ... future soldiers of their
before recessing until today.
Charging them that life honor, I beg of you."
"The facts, gentlemen," reimprisonment was the lightest
sentence they could bring and plied the driving young prosecudeath the maximum, the judge, tor, Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel.
Col. Re1d W. Kennedy, told the "The United States government
did not create the facts. What
jury of officers:
"You alone are responsible he did made the facts.
"You did not strip him of his
for determining an appropriate
sentence. You should select a honor. What he did stripped
sentence that is appropriate to him of his honor.
"Your courage will continue
the offenses of which you have
convicted Lt. Calley, his needs, to be tested. The government
the welfare of society, and good says to you: Take those facts,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - order and discipline within the gentlemen. You must arrive at
a ~en~nce ..:ommensurate with
Ohio Attorney G~neral William miiitary serv!Ce."
Brown declared "the use of this
The jury l:as given evidence you- findings I verdict), which
state's rivers as sewage dumps
will no longer be tolerated" and
filed suits against two
Cleveland firms for polluting
the Cuyahoga River.
By United Press International
The suits were filed against
Organizations and individuals have started taking
Metals Applied Inc. and Inaction to help Lt. William L. Calley Jr., convicted of
ternational Salt Co., Brown said
premeditated murder in the My Lai massacre. A
at a news conference here.
resolution urging President Nixon to grant executive
"This is the first step toward
clemency to Calley and restore him to active duty with
a cleanup of Ohio's waterthe Army was introduced in the lllinois House
ways," said Brown. "The time
Tuesday.
for industry to thumb its nose at
An American Legion Post in Columbus, Ga.,
the law is past."
star ted ana tiona! campaign to raise $100,000 to finance
Brown said Metals Applied
Calley's appeal. A Vietnam widow in Louisville, Mrs.
Inc. was discharging "highly
Inge Dunbar, circulated a petition to protest the
dangerous concentrations" of
conviction.
cyanide and chromic acid

Moves for
Clean a t er

w

Action Started for Calley

directly into the river at the rate
of 40,000 gallons a day.
He said International Salt
dumped salts into the river at
the rate of 26,000 tons a day.
Both suits were filed in
Cuyahoga County Common
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UPI)Pleas Court.
Ex-Marine Bill Dawson, an announcer at station WNXT here,
said in an editorial broadcast
today that if Lt. William Calley
is guilty of premeditated murder then, "they had better come
and get me."

Moto-Cross to
Benefit E-R
Unit SundJJy

The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad will benefit from
proceeds derived from a motocross to be staged Sunday by the
Meigs Motorcycle Club, Inc. of
Pomeroy.
Gates for the event will open
at 10:30 with the start scheduled
at 1:30 p.m. There will be free
parking on the club grounds and
refreshments will be available.
Trophies for the event have
been donated by Dannie's
Mobile Homes, Horak's Carry
Out, K. and C. Jewelers, New
York Clothing House, Pomeroy
Pastry Shop, Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes, A. D. Weed and Son,
Pomeroy Emergency Squad, G.
and J. Auto Parts, Athens
County Savings and Loan Assn.,
Lou's Ashland Station, Dairy
Valley, Pomeroy Ben Franklin
~tore, Karr and Van Zandt
Motor Sales, Blue and Grey,
Phillips Bar, lola 's Ladies
Apparel, Eagles Club and
Hartley 's Shoes.

Dawson told of participating
in the last battle of World War
II on Okinawa where the Japanese were well dug in but the
"Okinawan peasant was left out
in the open."
Dawson, in the broadcast,
said some of them hid, others

must show the principle involved: It is not honor and it
never has been considered
honor to kill unarmed men,
women, and children."
By speaking to the jury just
before it retired to deliberate,
Calley waived the right to
speak up just before it delivers
its sentence. Choking back sobs
and heavy breathing that
interrupted his extemporaneous
statement several times, the
rusty-haired, tilt-nosed defendant provided the most moving
moment of the trial.
Prior to his words, his 70year-old, soft-spoken attorney,
George W. Latimer, pleased for
Calley's life: "There is a place
for Lt. Calley to go on and
make something of his life, but
he can't do it from a graveyard
... I go away with a heavy
heart, for I see a life ruined."
Latimer was misty-eyed when
he finished a speech in which
he said, "There is no other
reason in the world that this
boy killed except that he
thought the Umted States Army
to get the war over nPeded to
kill; if th&lt;&gt;t warr 1
&lt; .l. th
penalty' I;;. :)r r..
,ense
of perspective ..
"You don't have to have eyes
of glass and hearts d stone.
Somewhere along the line a few
hwnanities ought to be worked
in to this thing where the
maximum is not given ... who
taught him to kill ... kill ... kill
... kill? If you indoctrinate men,
that's the way they act."
The jurymen are instructors
in the Army Infantry School
whose sword-shield motto is
"Follow Me."
Before Calley made his
statement to the jury, Latimer
told them that "because of the
(Continued on Page 8)

lives I was personally responsible for," he said. "I can tell
you that I did feel the guilt to
the extent that my own personal condition was diagnosed as
combat fatigue."
Dawson said he lived with the
nightmare even after discharge.
"I had a war going on within
me constantly "said Dawson.
'
"No matter what they do with
Lieutenant Calley he has- and
will suffer - these same emotions," he said. "And what ever
his sentence, it can never compare to his own inner turmoil."

posure.
Mrs. Gill was asked to notify
the Ohio State Highway Patrol,
but called the Mason County
Sheriff's Department which in
turn notified Ohio authorities.
Sheriff's deputies combing
the area this morning found
Miss Price's coat and one of her
shoes. Her station wagon was
impounded at the Mason County
Courthouse where it is being
checked for fingerprints.

Balance

,

__ _

MRS. PAUL CHAPMAN, right, and Mrs. Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., complete plans for the April meeting_ of the South
Central Ohio Preservation Society (SCOPS) to
'held in
Pomeroy s~turday. The affair will open with an 11 a.m .•
br-uilch a" Grace Epist.u al PariSh House 'len:~ ~l Jt'.~•
Laszlo Krompecher, will preside at the meetu110 A tou • of
historic sites has been planned and will include the Chester
Courthouse built in 1823 and the Excelsior Salt Works. Both
Mrs. Chapman and Mrs. Reed are active members of the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society which is hosting
the meeting. Mrs. Reed is county contact chairman for
SCOPS.

oe

Pupils Give 8 203
Meigs County school pupils
have contributed about onesixth of the funds needed to
reach the $1,250 goal of the
annual Easter Seal campaign
this spring.
Mrs. Christine Simons, drive
chairman, said students of
Meigs County schools contributed $203.03 to the Meigs
County Society for Crippled
Children and Adults during the
"school work for giving."
Mrs. Simons, on behalf of the
society, extended thanks to
George Hargraves, John Riebel
and Ralph Sayre, superintendents of the local school
districts in Meigs County, for
their cooperation in the project.
Cannisters used in the schools

were collected by the Rev.
Charles Simons, president of
the Middleport - Pomeroy
Rotary Club, which sponsors
the drive annually in its dual
role as the local Crippled
Children's Society.
"Teachers and students are to
be commended for their concern and support," Mrs. Simons
said.
Contributions by schools
include: Bradbury, $8.10;
Chester, $18.14; Eastern High,
$4.48; Meigs Junior High,
$15.96; Middleport Elementary,
$13.27; Pomeroy Elementary,
$19.57; Racine Elementary,
$6.33; Riverview Elementary,
$10.91; Rutland Elementary,
$7.47; Salem Center, $13.20;
Salisbury, $24.06; Southern
High, $5.88; Southern Junior
High, $10.15; Syracuse, $6.72;
Tuppers Plams, $20.14.
Individuals who have not yet
answered their Easter Seal
letters may still contribute by
sending their donation of
Middleport will have another "Easter Seals," Middleport.
chance to show it is interested in
the summer boy's baseball
program that has operated
continuously since 1955.
Richard Hovatter, president
of the Boys' League Assn.,
today announced a meeting
.J
next Monday at 7:30 p.m. at ..L' 1 U4
-woe
town hall, when another attempt will be made to organize
The approximate 60 members
for the season. A meeting of the Meigs High School
Sunday, March 21, failed to Concert Band will be presented
produce anything like a in a spring concert at 8 p.1.1.
representative group, Hovatter Friday under the direction of
said.
Lewis Shields.
·· 'It is hard to understand why
Staged in the new high school
there is such an apparent laek auditorium,
the
spring
of interest," said Hovatter, of presentation will include
the earlier meeting. "We must "Kings Go Forth" by O'Reilly;
have the suppor t of more ''Sonatina for Band'' by Frank
parents and community-minded Erickson, Leroy Jackson's
folks if the program is to con- "Little Scotch Suite ,'' "Traces"
and "Prelude and March'' by
tinue," he said.
Ray Luke.
Following an intermission the
'\1EETING DELAYED
band will play Clifton Williams'
A meeting of the Meigs
·Tntil Scenes"; "Sunny" by
Countv American RP(l Cross Hobby Hcbb .. : "1\lini Suite No .
Boani sd~t:tiuied for Thursday, 1" L~ Dun Haddad anci close
;\pnl 1, 'ws been postponed to with ·Back Talk March."
Thur&lt;;tlay , April 8, at Veterans t\dmi!;Sion is free and the public
.:\lc liWl'ial H•&gt;spitnl.
1s ilwit£'d to at ter.d.

Another Try
sc h edu}ed

Meigs Concert

Band on Stage
vn· -y Evenin.u

l'

~\

t

t\.P ,\ l ll Ol'

rr

l'l'Hl'HSJ-:
HI

HfS • . t)\ I · H

J-:1- t· · ·~ · ..

I. J· •

~ 1f \ t

ntu

11 \"+

HPJ lt4\ t LU'
P\t I t"UH
I

U.~\:'1\J(

s:

\"

4
\

JU It

Hll&lt; I.

FINED $25, COSTS
Okey Kiser, Letart Falls, was
fined $25 and costs by Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar Tuesday
nig:1 t on conviction of in toxication.
LOCAL TEMPS
.The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m . Wednesday,
under sunny skies, was 48
degrees .

After
regaining
consciousness, Miss Price, still
half-dazed and half-clothed,
managed to walk to the Gill
farmhouse, approximately onehalf mile away.
Mrs. Gill told the newspaper
this morning that she and her
husband heard a loud knock on
their front door. Before they
could get the door open, Miss
Price had collapsed on the
porch. She was brought inside
where she was apparently
suffering from shock and ex-

•
ID

Similar Guilt .Claimed
ran but some tried to kill American troops.
"We didn't pull any punches,"
said Dawson. "I personally fired
on everything that moved. '
"I personally tossed grenades
like they were baseballs - both
fragmentary and phosphorus
grenades," he said. "Phosphorous grenades
the kind that
burn through anything .
"I saw little children, old
men, old women, rush to the
ocean in an effort to get relief
for their wounds, all to no
avail," he said.
"I cannot tell you how many

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 197!

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 63

STEVE STANLEY, son of Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley, Harrisonville. and a junior at
Meigs High School, was award~d an achievement rating of "Good" by the Ohio Academy of
Science in recognition of a science project at the District Science Day at Ohw t.:ni\ersll)
Saturday. Steve's display was on Dielectric Properties. Robert Hamm is the chenustr:. in structor at Meigs High School.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 31, 1971

Marsh&lt;tl Wren, Mr. and Mrs.
Wt!lie Jo Grinstead, Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Rizer, Mr. and
Mrs. William Yonker, Mr . •
Mrs. Ralph T. Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Layne, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Fields, Mr. and Mrs.
Emmo Woods, Mr. and Mrs.
William Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Workman, Mr. and Mrs.
H. C. Perry, Mr. and Mrs. C. T.
Dodd, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Zerkle, Mr. and Mrs. William
Zerkle, Mr. and Mrs. C. ~ ·
Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Fr'rd
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Cliff
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Charles 1
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jo
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Young, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Paf
Williamson, Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Fields, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Grant
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Ever
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Hornet
Meredith and Mike, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Roush, Mr. and Mrs. l
James Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Mel'
Clark, Mr. and Mrs. William
Roush, Mae Stukey, Sadie
Warth, Iva Capehart, Mary
Aumiller, Helen Knapp, Harry
Knapp, Thelma Capehart, Ve!ll
Thompson, Gene Grues. , l
Another craft interesting him items.
is lapidary. He was first
His hobbies keep him busy James MacKnight, V. E. Crites,
presented a templet by John and he says he never gets in a C. M. Wolf, Pat Paugh, Mary
Marshall and with slices of rut on anything. But how would Fry, Harry Ray Fry, Charlotte
Roush, Kathy Rickard, Edgar
rocks and machinery, he now he have time?
Besides his hobbies, he raises Layne, Eleanor Roush.
turns out beautiful cabachons
RECREATION FOUND.
fitting for jewelry mountings. a garden, freezes fruits and
The New Haven Recreation
In addition to the crafts vegetables. He and his wife,
mentioned, he has made bird Grace, are seen often calling on Foundation wishes to announce
houses, easels to hold slabs of the sick in hospitals and the that there will be no more I
recreation days on Saturd • J
rocks, and many, many more bereaved.
until further notice.

Hobbiest Makes Coach Replica
0

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL students and eighth graders heard about careers in radio,
television and communications from David Gierhart, Ohio University, seated near the window,
during orientation career day held Tuesday.

Career Day at Eastern
Joseph Rose, representative
of Century Career College in
Huntington, W. Va., was the
keynote speaker to kick off a
successful career orientation
day at Eastern High School
Tuesday.
Talks on various careers were
given during the day from
representatives in the fields of
endeavor spoke not only to high
school students but eighth
graders, who were transported
to the high school, as well.
Garry 0. Parsons, school
counselor, was in charge of the
day's activities designed to give
students some insight into
various fields of employment.
Speakers for the day included
Mrs. Nancy Hathaway of the
Mid.Ohio Valley Dietetic Assn.,
on dietetics; David Gierhart,
Ohio University, on radio,
television and communications
careers; Agent Ellis of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation; Steve Elberfeld,
Holzer Medical Center, on
medical technician positions;
Robert Gillespie, Bliss College
on accounting computer and
busmess ca
Roy An&lt;Jer~n, C.
Energy
Commiss10r
..patlons
• related to at
gy; Mr.
and a1rline
Rose, on f~
occupations ; Gerald Hahn,
Athens County engineer on
careers in engineering; C. E .
Blakeslee, Meigs Agricultural
Agent, and Roy Miller on
careers in agriculture; Mrs.
Glenna Riebel on nursing occupations; Earl Ingels, of the
Meigs Branch of the Athens
County Savings and Loans, on
finance and banking; Gene
Riggs, John Hancock Insurance
representative, insurance
business; Dr. Randall, Ohio
University, careers in science;
representatives of the Navy, Air
Force and Marines.
Each student was given an
opportunity to hear seven
speakers during the day.

BY ALMA MARSHALL
PT. PLEASANT - Some
people after retiring just sit and
twiddle their thumbs (so to
speak) but not A. L. (Al)
Stewart of Charleston Road, Pt.
Pleasant. Since his retirement
11 years ago from Marietta
Manufacturing Co., he has
scarcely had an idle moment.
He is happiest when he is
creating something from odds
and ends around the house.
The stage coach pictured here
is an exact scaled replica,
complete with brakes and single
trees that the horses are hooked
to, of those used in the west. The
coach is entirely handmade,
and cost nothing except for a
small can of black paint used on
the metal, and varnish for the
wood. The mahogany was
formerly crate wood which
enclosed an item shipped from
the Philippines. The hubcaps
are made of copper tubing, the
hinges are made from metal
strapping and brads. Even the
chain on the luggage boot was
handmade.
Mr. Stewart is holding - in
the picture - one of his
creations made of copper wire.
The Lord's Prayer was written
with twisted wire. He has given
several of the 23rd Psalm to
funeral homes in the area, one
to a minister and another to Dr.
Roy Eshenaur, Pt. Pleasant,
which can be seen in the doctor's office.

The birds pictured are also
handmade. One is made of
gourd, another is the bird of
paradise seed pod. A hickory
nut was used for a head and on
some he used plastic wood.
Lead was used to hold the
"critters" down, and with
feathers added (perhaps pulled
from a neighbor's chicken) one
sees the results.

Mason County

News Notes
By Ahna Marshall
~

JOSEPH RGSE of the Century Career College in Huntington, W. Va .• left, was the keynote speaker for an
assembly wluch opened career orientation day at Eastern
High School Tuesday. Planning the day and overseeing the
activities Tuesday was Garry 0. Parsons, right, Eastern
High School guidance counselor.

Old Salem Social Notes
Mrs. Jack Bolen and Greg
visited a few days with her
parents at Paintsville, Kentucky. Her father has been
seriously ill but was some
better.
Visitors at the Marvin Wilson
home over the weekend were
their daughters, Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Smith of Hazard, Ky.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Corwin Smith,
Kathy and Susan, of Columbus.
They also visited their grandmother, Mrs. Effie Hoosier.

LETART, W. Va.- the Rev.
Charles Thompson of the
Trinity United Methodist
Church, Pt. Pleasant, delivered
the message at the conclusion of
the evangelistic services at
Graham United Methodist
Church on Sunday evening.
Services for the week were
held at Graham United
Methodist and Bachtel, Broad
Run and Letart participated.
The visiting evangelist, Rev.
Thompson, spoke on the
Realities of Religion on Sunday
evening.
Pastor of the church, Rev.
Mrs. Achsah Miller, welcomed
guests and members.
The children's choir composed of Connie Bird, Alice
Roush, Carla Richards, Gary
Richards, Terry Brown and
Lisa Brown sang several
selections. The choir director is
Ruth Pickens. Pianist for the
children was Mrs. Herbert
Richards.
A special selection was sung
by Terri Johnson and Patricia
Riggs from Broad Run. Thf'
adult choir directed by Jack
Needs sang several songs. They
were accompanied by Mrs.
John Brabham at the piano.

Voice along Broadway i

Edward Lemley

Died Monday

1

I

New Haven Social Events

~

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bennett of
Pt. Pleasant were afternoon
visitors with her brother,
Fadely Erlewine and family.
The Dale Patton family has
moved to Columbus. Marcia is
stying with the Harold Erlewine
family so she can finish school
here. She is a senior at Meigs
Local.
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Bolen of
Columbus were Saturday guests
at the home of his mother, Mr.
they visited with his brother,
and Mrs. Grover Stout. Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bolen and
Greg.
r---~--~----------------------------------Mrs . Rex Shenefield accompanied her husband on a
business trip in Pennsylvania.
Mrs. Lawrence Chapman and
I
. " Mrs. Blanche Nelson attended a
Home Demonstration meeting
Oona and Charlie Chaplin forgave their 18-year- held at the home of Mrs. Vivian
BY JACK O'BRIAN
old Victoria for running off with penniless Tope.
THERE'S A DEMAND FOR
French clown Jean-Baptiste Thierree; tossed a
A RETIRING PERSONALITY-SINATRA
Mr. and Mrs. Don Minor and
champagne bash for the kids in Paris .... Shirley two children of Kingston visited
NEW YORK - Arlene Dahl (now Mrs.
Rounsevelle W. Schaum) won't have her baby MacLaine's all giddy-widdy about Anita Loos Sunday afternoon with his
(Gentlemen Prefer Blondes) writing a Bdwy. cousin, Mrs. Blanche Nelson.
"Sonny" (born Dec. 7) baptized until next month
- she waited until Dr. Norman Vincent Peale musical for her.
Franco Zeffirelli picked British folk-singerwas available for the reverent splashdown ....
Sinatra's retirement comes when he still can composer Donovan as musical collaborator on
earn a fortune in nightclubs (but not in Las his film about the early days of St. Francis of
Vegas, where he's still wanted for questioning in Assisi, "Brother Sun and Sister Moon" ....
the Caesars Palace ugliness)- but his last half Donovan's already created a dozen songs with
Edward R. Lemley, 69, Malta,
dozen movies were from disasterville .... Multi- the modern beat, if St. Francis isn't rocking over Ohio, died Monday evening at
millionaire realtor - promoter Ben Marden in his grave already.
the Good Samaritan Hospital,
The Astaire-Rogers "Shall We Dance" was Zanesville.
surprised his beautiful wife, Alma Dupuy, by
delivering five luxurious fur coats to her while being late-showed on aN. Y. channel, and who
Mr. Lemley, born May 26,
she was dining with Ziegfeldoll Irene Hayes in interrupted Ginger Rogers but Ginger Rogers, 1901, was the son of the late
Louise's E. 58th St. spot .... Astronaut Frank pitching record albums of songs popular in the John and Anna Lemley. He was
Borman (now an Eastern Airlines veep) bought Fred-Ginger era .... Bet your hippy Maureen also preceded in death by three
newscaster Prescott Robinson' s house in Miami. Stapleton will be around when Warner's half-sisters and one step-sister.
Recommended without reservation : Dr. "Summer of '42" opens this spring : a key role is He servied in the U. S. Army
Berthold Eric Schwarz' "You CAN Raise Decent played by Katharine Allentuck - Maureen's during World War II.
Survivors
include
one
Children," a richly rewarding how-to book by a daughter.
brilliant child psychiatrist .... No stars ever are
Lad in Dempsey's intoned "I have an item brother, Wilbur, Phoenix, Ariz.;
mentioned in "Oh! Calcutta!" because everyone about me singing with AI Donahue's band .... " two sisters, Mrs . Marjorie
in the cast has small parts .... Old time "It Pays and it was Phil Brito, who sang decades ago with Lemley and Mrs. Louise Baker,
to be Ignorant" panelist George Shelton (vaude- the stylish Donahue's Rainbow Room orchestra both of Cincinnati; two halfradio partner of Tom Shelton) died the hard way (Paula Kelly was the gal singer) .... Phil's had a brothers, George Lemley,
in aN. Y. nursing home : Book of matches ex- rough time recently with open-heart surgery but Cheshire, Rt. 2, and Harold
ploded as he tried to light his pipe. The flames is all fine again, handsomer than ever at 53 and Lemley, Lancaster ; two stepback singing on the Jerida label .... Phil reports brothers, Benjamin Fox, Zanesspread to his bedclothes.
old
boss Al Donahue and manager Frank Walsh ville, and Harmon Fox,
Dirty literary pool : The National Lampoon's
Pomeroy; three step-sisters,
next issue titles an article "The Spoilers" and it now run a Calif. music shop .... As an old big- Mrs. Olive Munyon, Newark ;
is - tattles the endings to more than 50 classic band fan from the 30s, we often wonder what Mrs. Helen Lewis, Zanesville,
mysteries and films (the editor did it!) .. .. ever happened to some of our old radio-heroes and Mrs. Gladys Dott, RavensLiberty Magazine's quarterly warmover of old (tuning them in took the place of polo in our wood, and several nieces and
articles won't be a full quart - Dr. Seuss kept all Depression days) ... . Such as Bill Smith, who nephews.
future rights to his famed drawings .... Since Mel sang with a heavy but most pleasant baritone
Funeral services were held
Brooks created the "12 Chairs" film (wrote - vibrato; etc.
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the
Owner Bruno of Quo Vadis pointed to a Rawlings Coats Funeral Home
directed - acted - composed) he calls himself
handsome continental fellow and confided : with the Rev . 0. H. Cart of"The Jewish Orson Welles."
I&lt;'lip Wilson nominates Mae West and "He's the right type." Why? "Because he's the ficiating . Burial was in
Twiggy for an ·'Odd Couple" company road head of Oli•:etti," Bruno punned, back-spacing Gravel
Hill
Cemetery,
troupe; why not Tiny Tim c-·!d Moms Mabley'! ... away.
Cheshire.

1

AI Stewart, with Hobbies

MASON - Mason Bowling
Center has had a full house this
past weekend when Junior
QUAM Bowling enthusiasts
from all over the states of West
Virginia participated in a
Bowling Tournament there.
New Haven Council No. 175
Jr. QUAM, reported as one of
the most active lodges in the
state, was also a participant.
Russell Capehart, Manager of
Mason Bowling Center, reports
that the tournament will conclude this next weekend.
THE FOLLOWING seniors
have been named to participate
in Wahama Senior Class play.
They are Erie Morris, Connie
Gilland, Lee Bumgarner, Cozy
Cooke, Susie McDaniel, Debbie
King, Harriet Layne, Sarah
Carsey, Brent Clark, Bobbie
Dye, Libby Brown, Bernita
Staats, Jim Artis.
Lonnie Newell, a seventh
grader at Wahama Junior High,
will play the part of a 12 year old
boy. The play is entitled, "The
Death and Life of Larry Benson," and will be directed by
Dave Bennett of the faculty.
The play will be presented on
April 30.
PT. PLEASANT The
Mason County Homemakers
Quilt Show will be held Wednesday, Ap il 28 and April 29
from 9 to 12 noon and from 1 to 4
p.m. both days. The exhibit will
be in the auditorium of the
courthouse annex. Those having
quilts to exhibit are asked to
bring them on April 27 from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m.
On the evening of the 29th, in
addition to the Quilt Show, a
songfest is being planned.
Persons who can play an old
type of musical instrument such
as dulcimer, harmonica, accordion, bass fiddle, guitar,
fiddle, etc. are invited to participate. Persons knowing of
people or groups who play folk
songs are asked to contact Miss
Hattie Jordan at 675-1510 or the
extension office, Pt. Pleasant.
LETART - Over 40 attended
the surprise birthday dinner for
Harry Staats at his home here
Sunday. His wife, Nora and
daughter, Bernita, served as
hostesses for the happy occasion. Attending were Mr . and
Mrs. Wesley Kelvington, Linda
and Ralph; Mr. and Mrs. James
Staats and Jimmy; Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Staats, Max and
Carol; Miss Faye Hoffman,
Mrs. Lillian Smith, Don
Meadows, all of Letart; Mr. and
Mrs. James Hart, Alan, Jane
and Brent, New Haven; Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Lieving, Mr. and
Mrs . Harold Zerkle, Ronnie and
Belinda, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hesson and Paul David, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Hoffman, all of
New Haven ; Mike Finnicum,
Mason; Bruce and Jeff Staats,
Mason;
Bonnie
Staats,
Gallipolis; Dorothy and Rick
Johnson, Wheeling; Mr . and
Mrs. Reggie Hart ar:d daughter,
Huntington; Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Broadwater and
Scottie Hoover, Akron, Ohio.

Roy Ambergy, Superintendent of the Central Coal
Company, gave a very interesting talk to the members of
the New Haven Rotary Club at
their dinner meeting on
Thursday evening. He discussed the amount of coal
owned by the company and the
approximate length of time it
would take to mine it.
Members attending the
meeting were Dick Ord, John
Thorne, Karl Wiles, Lloyd
Roush, Donald F. Roush, James
N. Roush, Harry Miller, Rome
Williamson, Herman Layne,
Ralph Sayre, Jr., Richard Kent
and the guest speaker.
CLUB MET
Mrs. F. A. Batey was hostess
at the Tuesday afternoon
meeting of the Julia T. Bryant
Sewing Club. Members attending were Mrs. Donald
Smith, Mrs. W. T. Stone, Mrs.
N. 0. Wein, Mrs. Lena Knight,
Mrs. Herman Layne, Mrs. John
C.
Fry,
Mrs.
Howard
Wagenhals, Mrs. Lloyd Roush,
Mrs. James MacKnight and the
hostess. The date of the next
meeting will be announced
later.
BffiTHDAY OBSERVED
The 41st birthday of the New
Haven Garden Club was observed on Friday evening,
March 19, with a dinner held in
the new cafeteria room at the
Hartford Elementary School.
The Garden Club was organized
in 1930 with ten charter
members. There are now 29
members in the club. The first
president of the club was Mrs.
Harry L. Dyer.
The invocation at the dinner
was given by the president,
Mrs. Lee Gibbs. The dinner was
served by the ladies who do the
cooking at the school.
Members and guests at tending the dinner were Mrs. N.
0. Wein, Mrs. Lena Knight,
Mrs. Donald Smith, Mrs. Kay
Wilson, Mrs. Lloyd Roush, Mrs.
John C. Fry, Mrs. Donald F.
Roush, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs.
Howard Wagenhals, Mrs.
Martin Ohlinger, Mrs. F. A.
Batey, Mrs. W. T. Stone, Mrs.
James MacKnight, Mrs. Ottie
Roush, Mrs. Irving Karr, Jr.,
Mrs. Dorothy James, Mrs. Ray
Fox, Mrs. Ray Pickens, Sr.,
Mrs. Lee Gibbs, Mrs. Herman
Layne, Mrs. Carroll Adams,
Jr., Mrs. Patrick Riley and
Mrs. Mitzi Oldaker.
WOMEN MEET
The Rhododendron Home
Demonstration Club held its
March meeting at clubhouse
with the president, Mary
Phillips, presiding. Devotions
were in charge of Mrs. G. B.
Hazlett, who read scripture,
followed with a prayer by Mrs .
Albert Roush. Mrs. Roush also
read a poem "March Weather."
The lesson study for the
meeting, entitled "Appalachian
Heritage," was presented by
Mrs. Hazlett, who closed her
discussion with a reading

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON.'S
CLEANERS

2)6 E. 2nd

Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428

"What Is a Hillbilly?"
During the business meeting
the group discussed ways of
making money for the club, and
decided to sell vinyl shopping
bags.
Hostesses for the day were
Mrs. Robert Hoffman and Mrs.
0. 0. Sayre. The St. Patrick's
Day theme was carried out in
the decorations and refreshments.
Attending were Mrs. G. B.
Hazlett, Mrs. Charles Jewell,
Mary Phillips, Mrs. Albert
Roush, Mrs. T. Bert Roush,
Mrs. Velma Roush, Mrs.
William Chisler, Mrs. Clarence
Thomas, Kay Roush, Lisa
Thomas, and the hostesses.
LEGION BffiTHDAY
The meml:iers of the
American Legion SmithCapehart Post 140 and their
guests held their annual birthday dinner on March 15 at the
Legion Hall. The dinner was
served by the Legion Auxiliary.
Harry Miller served as master
of ceremonies. The invocation
was given by the chaplain,
Richard Ord. Following the
dinner the guest speaker was
introduced by Mr. Miller. The
speaker was Mr. Woody
Williams of Huntington, W.Va.
He was born in Marion County,
W. Va. served in the Marine
Corps during World War II,
received the congressional
Medal of Honor. Mr. Williams
used as his theme the Love of
God, Love of your fellowmen
and the love of your country.
Registering were Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Ord, Mr. and Mrs.
John Ferguson, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Roush, Mr. and Mrs.

I ·l'HE DAILY SENTINEL
DE\ru reo TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily e'l&lt;cept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
&lt;15769. Business Office Phone
~92- 2156, Editorial Phone 992·
2157.
•
Second c l ass postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National
advertising
representative
Bottinelli
Ga llagher, Inc., 12 East 42nct
St., New York City, New York .
Subscription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available : On~
month $1.75. By mail in Ohio·
and W. Va., One year $14.00.
Six months $7.25 . Three
months $4.50. Subscription
price inc lud es Sunday Times .
,:..Sentinel.

OFFERS BILL
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
bill prohibiting television and
radio broadcasters from
editing, altering or stating news
events without labeling them as
such was in traduced in the
House Tuesday by U. S.
William E. Minshall, R.Ohio.

Ref.

J

1

l

BLAST AT PLANT
LOVELAND, Ohio (UPI)
Robert Davenport, 62, Cincinnati, was seriously injured
Tuesday in an explosion at the ~
Tri-State
Fireworks
M~ufacturing Co. here.
j
~~ I
J.

the new alarm
clock swinger.
Caravelle® by

18
She"s big, bold ond beautiful. A
great g ift for anybody who
thinks young. Her sleek Modern
lines and zingy colors tur~ on
any room. Her precision alarm
wakes you up on schedule. The
luminous oial tells you what
time it is i~ the dark. Sh e"s what
todoy"s design 1s all about.
Yellow/orange, white/block,
oronge/plue, ovocodo/gotd.

s"x5"x3',4" $10.95

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 31, 1971

Pro Standings

ll

-

•
*

N BA Playoff Standings
By United Press International
(First Round)
(Best Of Seven)
Eastern Division
Series "A"
w. L.
New York
3. 1
Atlanta
1 3
Series "B"
w. L.
Baltimore
3 1
Philadelphia
1 3
Western Division
Series "C" 2
w. L.
Milwaukee
3 0
San Francisco
0 3
Seires "D"
L.
Los Angeles
2 2
Chicago
2 2
Tuesday's Results
Bait. 120 Phila. 105
New York 113 Atlanta 107
Chicago 112 L.A. 102
Milw. 114 San Fran. 102
Wednesday's Games
(No games scheduled)

..

New York
Montreal
Buffalo
Detroit
Vancouver

by Che~ Tannehill

~~-..._.. •.....-•.._......_..._.._,._.__,.....,.........,..... ..............,.•._...__. •._......,...,..., ........ ....,.....j

47 17 11 105
41 21 13 95
23 39 13 59
22 43 10 54
23 45 7 53

IN THE SOUTHERN division, Gallipolis edged Jackson 2-1
and Waverly postponed its game with Ironton. Earl James, editor
of the Waverly News (weekly), said, "Our boys haven't had time
West
W. L. T. Pts to get their bats out yet." Understandable, since the Tigers were
48 18 9 105 involved in basketball until a few days ago.
83
72

69
60
58
43

YOU SAVE
DOES MAKE A

DIFFERENCE
We pay you to save
(and the pay is good).

4%%
PASSBOOK
RATE

Meigs Co. Branch

•.--- @
...

~

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

•

"

•
•

Logan Wins 7 4
•

Maybe the ball was too cold,
too hot, or had corners. Maybe
it just wouldn't bounce right. It
certainly had no handles.
That was about the story of
seven unearned runs that
crossed the plate in the first
mmng Tuesday at Municipal
park dtamond in Middleport
wher Logan and • Meigs high
schools opened the 1971 northern division play in the
Sou thea stern Ohio League
baseball race.
Logan's big righthander,
Mark Shaw, survived eight
Marauder hits - including a
pair of triples by Roger Abbott
- to win 7-4. Three of Meigs'
runs were of the earned variety.
After that disastrous opening
frame, when three errors, two
hits, and three walks produced
the seven Logan runs, senior
righthander Rick Van Matre
and his mates settled down to
retire Logan harmlessly the
second and third innings. Logan
got only one more hit, a single,
off Van Matre.
Senior lefty Tim Demoskey
came on in the fourth to work
through the sixth, giving up two
singles, both in the fifth,
walking nobody, and fanning
four. He looked sharp even in
the sub-50 degree temperature.
Jed Will, senior righthander
mopped up in the seventh,
fanning one, walking nobody.
Shaw walked only one and
fanned eight in his seven innings. He had two shaky innings, in both of which Abbott's

...
n

At H&amp;R Firestone
AT GIANT SAVI N GS

SEASON OPENS MON DAY

Get Your
Wilson Baseball
Equipment and
Supplies . ...

.••
-.•.
•

ALSO AND ~
1971 RESIDENT
NON-RESIDENT FISHING
LICENSE FOR SALE.
.
_

H&amp;R Firestone
..•
•

big bat got to him.
The
11arauders
never
threatened until the fourth
inning when centerfielder Gene
Powell singled to left. Senior
first baseman Dave Boyd hit a
high fly to rightfield for the first
out Abbott, senior second
baseman, smashed a high fly
ball to right center field for a
triple scoring Powell. Van
Matre struck out but catcher
Roger Dixon singled to center to
plate Abbott. Stan Wilson
grounded to shortstop for the
third out.
In the sixth, Meigs got its last
two runs when Abbott and Van
Matre hit back-to-back triples.
Dixon was safe at first when the
first baseman dropped the ball,
Van Matre scoring. Abbott's
blow was a line smash into right
center that rolled into the picnic
area.
Abbott added a single to his
two triples to lead the
Marauders at bat. Steve Dunfee
had a double in the first inning
of play, and Chip Haggerty
singled in the fourth.
Collecting hits for Logan were
Mike Tucker, Steve Brown,
Shaw, Tim Mundy and Keith
Porter, all singles.
BY INNINGS
Logan
700 000 0-7 5 1
000 202 0--4 8 4
Meigs
Shaw and Porter. Van Matre
(LP), Demosky (4), Will (7),
and Dixon.
-

Fight Results
By United Press International
NEW YORK (UP!) - Herschel Jacobs, 180%, New York,
stopped Harold Johnson, 177,
Philadelphia (3).

...

-.

~
}

A LOT OF INFIELD WORK no doubt will be ordered by
Coach Ed Bartels -the boys Just haven't had a chance to do
anything yet outside, really- should help what appears to be a
very sound Marauder pitching staff. Tim Demoskey, the really
good looking lefthander, has a smooth delivery motion, a good
release snap of the ball, and what is still somewhat rare, apparent
good control. Jed Will, the third pitcher, looked good in one innning, getting in no trouble.
Since pitching is the name of the game, the Marauders will be
heard from this spring.
Logan, touted as a real title contender, showed excellent
defense in the field on the still somewhat bumpy Marauder infield
and decidedly tricky outfield terrain. But Logan got only five (by
the book) hits, all singles, off our pitching.
Athens, with an 8-0victory over Wellston Tuesday in the other
NHL Standings
northern division contest, doesn't meet Meigs until April 13, at
By United Press International
Athens. The Marauders' next game is Pt. Pleasant here on April
· -east
W. L. T. Pfs 5, a non-league test. Meigs goes to Wellston April 6 for its next
x-Boston
54 14 7 115 league game.

WH E

..

~

_.l

GB
...
1112
18
29
29

x Chicago
St. Louis
33 25 17
Minnesota
28 32 16
Philadelphia
27 33 15
Pittsburgh
21 35 18
• Los Angeles
23 39 12
California
19 51 5
x-Ciinched Div Tt.tle
Tueday's Results
Vancouver 2 Mi,,. 1
•
St. Louis 4 L.A. 3
Wednesday's Games
Boston at Montreal
Detroit at Toron ~o
Chicago at New York
Buffalo at Pittsbu1·gh
Vancouver at Los Angeles
• Minnesota at Cali• rua
(
ygames sc

••
••

r--:-·----._.·-··~·-·--._..--._....,..._ ._..~.__...__..

For the few of you who braved the toe-tingling temperature
yesterday afternoon to catch the Marauders' first baseball game,
w.
which was lost 7-4, the afterglow couldn't have been a ltogether
gloomy.
Outside of that monstrous first inning when Logan scored all
its seven unearned runs on three errors, three walks and two hits,
the Marauders were the better team, especially with the bat. Our
boys just couldn't find a useable handle on the ball in that inning.
In fact, a couple of the offensive efforts by Logan in that inning
could just as well have been labeled "error" rather than hits off
senior righthander Rick VanMatre.
ABA Standings
Facing one of the better pitchers in either division of the
By United Press lnternationa I
East
league, Mark Shaw, the Marauders got home three earned runs
W. L. Pr.t. GB and a fourth on Logan's only bobble, a dropped ball at first on a
x -Virginia
54 29 .651 ...
Kentucky
44 40 .524 1Q1;2 play at first base with Van Matre on third base. Van Matre had
New York
40 43 .482 14
tripled home Rober Abbott who moments before had gotten his
Floridians
37 46 .446 17
36 47 .429 18112 second triple of the game, a line shot past the centerfielder that
Pittsburgh
rolled across the park roadway into the area of the kids' teeterCarolina
34 49 .410 20
West
totter, probably over 450 feet from where Abbott tagged it.

W. L. Pr.t.
x-lndiana
58 25 .699
Utah
57 27 .679
Memphis
40 43 .482
Texas
29 54 .349
~
Denver
29 54 .349
-• x -Ciinched Div T itle
Tuestay's Results
Denver 129 Virg i nia 119
Utah 115 New York 97
Pittsburgh 149 Ky. 132
Carolina 114 Indiana 112
Texas 99 Memphis 86
Wednesday's Games
New York at Denver
Virginia at Florida
-.._. Carolina at Memphis
• Jt Texas at Indiana
(Only games scheduled)

.,

Bucks, Knicks Move Forward In Playoffs
.
__ .
i the Sports Desk I

N. 2nd Ave.
992 2238
M idd leport , 0.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,..
~----------_.

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UPI)
- Irish Bobby Cassidy, 170,
New York and Paul Kaspar,
170, Miami Beach, fought to no
contest (6) . (No contest
declared when Kaspar hit below
belt and unable to continue).
STATELINE, Nev . (UPI) Dennis Moyer, 157h, Portland,
Ore., outpointed Jimmy Lester,
156 112, San Francisco ( 12).
(Retains North American
middleweight title) .

By United Press International
MASON SWAPPED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- The
Los Angeles Rams Tuesday
anno unced the trade of veteran
running back Tommy Mason to
the Washington Redskins in
exchange for an undisclosed
draft choice. Mason, 31, has
spent 10 years in the National
Fuolball League-six with Minncsola and four with the Rams .

By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
Lew Alcindor and Willis Reed
are a step closer to the greatest
playoff battle of centers since
the Bill Russell-Wilt Chamberlain match-up of 1969.
Alcindor scored 33 points
Tuesday night as the Milwaukee Bucks defeated the San
Francisco Warriors 114-102 to
take a commanding 3-0 lead in
their Western Conference playoff series and Reed tallied 16
for New York while the
champion Knicks were beating
Atlanta 113-107 for a 3-1
Eastern Division playoff margin over the Hawks.
Chamberlain's chances for

appearing in possibly his last
National Basketball Association
playoff were hurt when the
Chicago Bulls stopped Los
Angeles 112-102 to even that
Western Conference series at 22. Baltimore gained a superior
3-1 edge over Philadelphia on a
120-105 decision.
Alcindor, the NBA's Most
Valuable Player, has conquered
every opposing pivotman in the
league this season with the
exception of Reed, who seems
to psych out the Milwaukee 7foot-2 giant at each meeting.
New York beat the Bucks four
of five games during the
regular season, almost a third
of Milwaukee's total of 16

losses.
As usual, Alcindor had no
trouble handling Nate Thurmond as Milwaukee beat San
Francisco for the 12th straight
time over two seasons. Big Lew
turned the pivot into a gattling
gun as he hooked, popped and
dWlked to mow down the
Warr iors. Bob Dandridge contributed 23 points to the Buck
attack. J erry Lucas led San
Francisco with 25 points and
Thurmond added 23.
Reed and Dick Barnett
combined for eight straight
points in a two-minute span
while the league's best defensive team held Atlanta scoreless. New York's 108-100 lead

Chance Traded By Mets
By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
Dean Chance and Jim Lonborg, a pair of Cy Young
Award winners, are suffering
the price of fleeting fame.
Chance, at least, had another
chance today as he became the
newest addition to the Detroit
Tiger moWld staff after he was
traded by the New York Mets
to the American League club.
Lonborg was optioned to
Louisville of the International
League when Boston finally
gave up on him following his
award winning year in 1967
when he led the Red Sox to the
A.L. pennant. A skiing accident
after the championship season
was Lonborg's downfall. His

spectacular 22-9 year was
followed by 6-10, 7-11, and 4-1
seasons.
Chance, Cy Young winner
with the California Angels in
1964, had one more good season
as a 20-game winner with
Minnesota in 1967. He was
traded to Cleveland after the
1969 campaign and sold to the
Mets last year for $150,000
when New York needed pitching help in a stretch drive. He
was 9-8 with Cleveland and 0-1
with New York in 1970.
The Mets showed they still
need pitching as New York
dropped a 6-3 decision to
Cincinnati Tuesday night. The
Reds pounde starter Jerry
Koosman for 10 hits and all

their runs. Cincinnati first
baseman Lee May flew back to
Ohio for hospitalization and
treatment of damaged ligaments inside his left knee
suffered in a baseline collision
with Tim Foli. Cleon Jones
homered for New York.
In other exhibition action,
Pittsburgh defeated the Chicago
White Sox, 8-6; St. Louis routed
Kansas City, 10-3; Montreal
poWlded Atlanta, 9-3; Washington hammered the New York
Yanks, 9-7; Philadelphia edged
Detroit, 5-4; the Chicago Cubs
whipped California, 6-3, San
Diego beat Cleveland, 6-3; Los
Angeles rapped San Francisco,
9-1; and Milwaukee nipped
Oakland 6-5.

with two minutes to play was • Among the lame and limp were
safe as a jittery Atlanta team Gus Johnson with 14 points and
began throwing the ball away. Wes Unseld, who had eight.
Walt Fr azier, who scored 29 Archie Clark led the 76ers with
points in each of his two 24 points and Hal Greer netted
previous playoff games with the 18.
Baltimore was held to a 62-62
Hawks, led New York on 26
points and Bamett had 22. Lou halftime, but moved in front,
Hudson, the NBA's fifth leading 89-81 entering the fourth
scorer,' topped the Hawks with quarter. Marin then scored half
30 points.
of the Bullets' last period
Jack Marin scored 15 of his points .
Bob Love of Chicago got hot
game-high 27 points in Baltimore's fourth quar ter surge in the fourth quarter with 17 of
and Earl Monroe netted 26 as his 36 points and the barrage
the seemingly crippled Bullets came just in time. The Bulls
throttled the 76ers again. were trailing, 83-78, going into
the last period when the slender
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Love scored the fat part of his
Registration day
fo r point total. Gail Goodrich led
the Lakers with 32 points and
Pomeroy boy's baseba ll
league will be held Sunday a t Chamberlain had 12.
Three of the teams can nail
Pomeroy City Hall. All indown first round victories
terested in participating in
Thursday night as the scene
the program should take $3 to
to New York, Baltiswitches
pay for the cost of insurance
more and Oakland, where San
and caps. Players should
Francisco is playing its home
know their cap size.
games. Chicago is at Los
::::;:::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;::::: Angeles that night, too.
A H Press
L Standtngs
By United
Inter nationa l
W. l. T.
27 28 14
27 29 13
27 34 8
23 30 16

Pts
68

W. L. T.
x-Bal ti more
39 20 9
Cleveland
36 26 7
Hershey
27 30 10
Rochester
24 34 11
x-Ci inched Div Ttile
Tuesd ay's Results
Ball. 7 Roch. 3
Wednesday's Game
Baltimore at Hershey
(Only game scheduled)

Pt s
87
79
66
59

Mon treal
Providence
Springfield
Quebec
West

night by ousting Bickers'
Bidwell Milling, 100-89. Rio
A.T.D. edged Bob Saunders.
Quaker State Service Center,
112-110. Blaine Henry's 26 points
paced Beach to its victory. Tony
Bass pumped in 23 points, Dan
D'Antoni had 14 and Joe Taylor

canned 19 points. Greg McDevitt led the losers with 28
points John Milhoan and Craig
Love scored 24 points each.
Beach led 41-38 at halftime
Four players had double
figures in leading Rio to its
close victory over Bob SaWlders' Quaker State Service
Center. Ron Lambert led the
way with 43 points. Ed Jacobs
dumped in 28 points; Doug Hart
scored 16 and Dick Fowler
added 14 points.
Carl Wolfe and AI Martin
paced QSSC with 24 and 23
points respectively Rio led at
halftime, 57-55.
Bickers and Bob Saunders
Quaker State Service Center
will tangle for consolation
honors in the first game this
evening.
Trophies will be given to the
first three teams, the fourth
place team will receive the
tournament ball donated by Bob
Saunders.
Trophies will also be
presented to the tournament's
Most Valuable Player and top
scorer. Mike Hardway and
Melvin Carter officiated
Tuesday's ball game.

Lee May Injured In
Exhibition Contest
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UP!) -Cincinnati Reds first
baseman Lee May suffered
damaged knee ligaments in a
baseline collision during the
Reds' 6-3 win Tuesday night
over the New York Mets.
May was carried from the
field here and examined by
team physician Dr. George Ballous, who recommended that he
be flown to Cincinnati for "observation and treatment."
May was admitted to Christ
Hospital in Cincinnati. It was
not immediately determined
when he would return to action.
The Reds socked Mets pitcher
Jerry Koosman for 10 hits during the game, scoring two runs
in the first inning on a single
by Pete Rose, a double by
Frank Duffy and a sacrifice
fly.
They added two unearned
PLAYERS FARMED
FT. MYERS, Fla. (UPI)The Kansas City Royals announced Tuesday the assignment of seven players to their
minor league base at Sarasota,
Fla.
Farmed out were pitchers
Lance Clemons, Paul Splittorff
and Bob Garibaldi, infielders
Bobby Floyd and Tom Matchick
and outfielders John Matias and
Bill Sorrell.

runs in the fifth on a double
by Bernie Carbo and Bob Aspromonte's throwing error.
Singles by Tony Perez, Johnny
Bench, Hal McRae and Woody
Woodward accounted for the
other two rWls in the seventh.
Cleon Jones drove in all three
Mets runs with a homer and
an infield out, raising his
spring average to .439.
The Reds met Kansas City
today at Tampa.

CHAS. JACKSON KILLED
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP!)
- The former chief mechanic
for ex-Grand National Stock
Car racer Jim Hurtbise was
killed Tuesday.
Charles N. Jackson, who also
worked on cars for Mickey
Thompson and Craig Breedlove,
was killed when a car he was
driving struck a railroad
overpass support.

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating

67
62
62

You r Dependable
Dea le r For

PLUMBING
AND

HEATING
P ho ne 992·2550

,••• PRICED

Extra Special

Tourney Final is Tonight
Beach Athletic Club and Rio
A.T.D. will meet this evening in
the championship game of the
Second Annual North Gallia
Band Boosters Independent
Basketball Tournament. This
will be a rematch of last year.
Beach advanced Tuesday

· p,Jil_
i _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

East

TO SELL FAST!

GOOD/YEAR
II

MARATHON"

$

00
• 735x14
black wall
tubeless
plus $2.01
Fed. Ex. Tax 1
and old tire _. 1
• Tufsyn rubber for'
durability in the body ..•
long mileage in the tread
• More than 0.000 gripping
edges give traction •..
rain or shine
• Modern wrap-around tread
for stable steering control
in the turns

White Wall
735x14x4 Ply

$20.00
Fed. Ex. Tax $2.01

I Use our EASY PAY PLAN...FREE MOUNTING! I
CO~

RIZER OIL

700 E. Main
POMEROY , 0.

992-2101

A--------------------------------,

I

.

II Old Fashioned Bargain Days
~

SUNDCD
. ''\
&lt;-.....:\

MILLS SIGNED
COMMERCE, Tex. (UPI)Wake Forest University announced Tuesday the signing of
Bradt~y Mills, defensive coach
at East Texas State the past
year, to a similar position on
the Demon Deacon staff.

STARTING APRIL 1st

STOP 'N' SAVE

AT• • ••

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT
992-3422

Locust St.

Midd leport , 0.

I

1I

I
I

GOBLE

IN A
GUARANTEED
USED CAR

II

~~~
~AT ~
.
I

TIRES
95
START AT

SAVE WITH

•

SUGGESTED
PRICE

Credit Terms Ava il ab le.
Use Your Sunoco Credit Card.

Plus $1.78 Excise Tax
50x13 Renown 4- Ply N ylon

B. W.

PEPSI
ONE QUART
1

:

I
I
I

Freel

Freel

APRIL 1-2-3

I

a

I
I
I ,
I
I
I
I
I I

J

I
I
I
I

I

I
I
I

I
I
II
I
I

I
I

WITH MINIMUM 10 GAL GASOLINE
PURCHASE.

I

Offer May Vary At Participating Dealers

I
I
I

•••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-------------------------- ..-----•·a......r.

I

'

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 31, 1971

I

I

,

...

0
GRAD
LAR

.

e BARGAINLAND
JERGENS
LOTION

LUSTRE
CREME

HAIR
SPRAY

FAMILY

INSTANT
SHAVE

SIZE

99e

49tp

PRELL
SHAMPOO
Family Size
11%

79tp

33tp

M.P.M. SPRINGTONE
LATEX

oz.

QUAKER STATE
MOTOR OIL

HOUSE PAINT

QUART

GALLON
ONLY

c

· ONLY

•

DEL MONV

SEEDLESS
RAISINS
15 oz. boJ

MAXWELL

DAIRY FA

ICE Mr

USE
FFEE

h Gal.

1

Carton

Regular, Drip
or Elec. Perk

.

'

BANQUET
CHICKEN
BEEF
TURKEY

•

LARGE SOLID

HEAD
LETTUCE

EA.

KING SIZE

c
HEAD

FOODLINER

LIMIT 1 BOX

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor t-P omer oy, 0., Mar ch 31, 1971

'

~';:.,....~. -~·

s'~

Right
Reserved
To Limit
Quantities!

i

DOZEN

•

AT
I.G.A.
WE CARRY OUT
YOUR
GROCERIES

nto Beans
•

LB. BAG

...
...

Honey Dale .

SLICED
BACON

KLEE
FACIAL
TISSUES
(125 ct.)

lib.
Pkg.

TENDER

59¢

LB.

Pork Sausage

SIRLOIN
STEAK

Whole

Pork Loin
17 lb. Avg.
Cut To Your

Satisfaction

r·

LB.

BOOTHS

Boneless

Fully Cooked
BREADED
FISH
CAKES

\

sge

SIRLOIN
TIP
ROAST

$} 0!

lb.

Bargain land

�Beulah Roush
Hosts Circle

MRS. ~LEN HOLT, left, Peoples Terrace, Pomeroy, a cured cancer patient, was greeted
by Fran Allison, ~tar of the Kukla, Fran and Ollie series, at the 13th annual Cured Cancer
Assembly and Oh10 Can~er Crusade Kickoff at the Ohio Union on Ohio State University campus
Monda.y. Others attendmg from here were Wendell Hoover, crusade chairman, Mrs. Rosetta
Redov1an, treasurer, Mrs. Corrine Lund, executive director of the Meigs County Unit, and
Larry Coleman, Pomeroy, "Youth Against Cancer" representative of Meigs County.

Russell Roush Given Surprise Upon Birthday
A surprise birthday dinner
'\\-as enjoyed at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush at
Fairview Sunday in honor of
Mr. Roush who celebrated his
birthday Saturday. A cake with
"Happy Birthday, Russell" was
baked by Mrs. Roush, and his
daughter, Mrs. Dana Lewis
also presented him a cake. Mr:
Roush received several lovely
gifts and money.
AttE:nding were Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Durst of Ravenswood; Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Durst,
Niles,
Ohio;
Mr.
and
Mrs. Dana Lewis, Clifton; Ronnie Russell, Porn:: eroy; Mrs. Edna Roush,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush and Roger, Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsa Parsons, Nancy, Sharon,
David, Cindy, and Edward.
Calling in the afternoon were
Mrs. Gladys Shields, Racine;

HAVE BAKE SALE
The Homebuilders Class of
the Middleport Church of Christ
will have a bake sale Friday in
. • the Western Auto Store
beg nnmg at 9:J
CAR WA
A car wash
held
Saturday at the A:;..
d Serv1cc
Stahon on Locust St. by the
Youth Fellowship of the Heath
United Methodist Church. The
car wash will begin at 9 a.m.

Todd, Leslie and Chad Roberts,
Letart Falls, and Miss Jan Hill,
Tommy Roseberry and Dean
Hill, local. The day was spent
socially and with games.
The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, March
31, the 90th day of 1971.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born today are under
the sign of Aries.
Austrian composer Franz
Joseph Haydn was born March
31, 1732.
On this day in history:
In 1870 Thomas PetersonMundy of Perth Amboy, N. J.,
became the first American
Negro to vote, one hour after
ratification of the 15th amendment.
In 1918 Daylight Savings
Time went into effect throughout the United States for the
first time .
In 1933 Congress set up the
ClVihan Conservation Corps to
pro tde vocational training and
mpt yment for young American men.
In 1968 President Lyndon
Johnson announced he would
not seek re-election and ordered
suspension of U.S. bombing in
North Vietnam.

f~i;~':;~~~=~::;1
The lOth birthday ari:
niversary of Elaine Barnhart
was observed Saturday afternoon with a party at the
home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs.
William
Barnhart,
Pomeroy.
Nancy Greenlee assisted Mrs.
Barnhart with the party. Games
were played with prizes going to
Tammy Guinther, Jamie
Johnson, and Shari Mitch.
Other guests were Lori Wood,
Jan Van Vranken, Connie
Romine, and Beverly Faulkner.
Cake, ice cream, and Kool-Aid
were served. Easter candies
were given as favors. Anna
Wiles was unable to attend due
to illness.
Liechtenstein has an area
of only 62 square miles.

By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - The Emma
Smith Circle of the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints met at the home of
Beulah
Roush
Thursday
evening in charge of the leader,
Goldie Clendenin.
Devotions were by Lucy
Taylor on the topic, Women's
Work in the Church. Collection
for the pledge fund was taken by
Jane Johnson. Beulah Roush
read the secretary's report. A
date was set to meet at the
church and pack a box of
cookies for Jimmie Diddle, son
of Maxine and Tom Diddle who
is still with the "Green Berets"
in Cambodia. Included were his
favorites, rice crispy squares!
An Easter card was sent, along
with names of those there, Eula
Proffitt, llah Roush, Nancy
Adams, Ruth Johnson, Goldie
Clendenin, and mother, MaxinE'.
Lucy Taylor sent cookies.
Beulah served sandwiches,
cookies, ice cream and candy,
coffee and punch to those
named and Golda Gillilan,
Myrtle Proffitt, Joan Proffitt,
Pearl Proffitt and Dessie
Patterson, a visitor. Four round
robin cards were signed to
neighbors and shut-ins.
There was a silent auction
netting about $8. Joan Proffitt
donated four small chairs made
from quart plastic milk containers and scraps of new
material and foam rubber, to be
used for needle and pin cushions
as the seat lifts up to store
thread and needles in the bottom. All were useful and
beautiful, but one was
especially so, made from antique looking patch work
material.
Ralph Johnson (pastor) sent
an item wrapped in a brown
paper bag which his sister, Ruth
Johnson, got for 75c. It was a
4x4xH2 ft. of walnut lumber. A
note on it said it was from
Noah's Ark, because it had
never been in it!
Now he is having to make his
sister
candleholders,
or
something from it.

]ones &amp;ys

Taxiway Bids are Invited

in Fifth Store

Sealed bids will be received
until noon April 21 at the
Gallipolis City Building for
construction of a taxiway at
Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport.
The work for which bids are
invited consists of grading,
drainage, paving, and lighting
for taxiway and tiedown areas.
Bids will be compared on the

bas1s of the estimated quantities given in the contract
documents. These quantitiies
are approximate, being given
only as a uniform basis for the
comparison of bids and the
airport authority reserves the
right to increase, decrease or
omit the amount of any class or
portion of the work as provided

SALE SATURDAY
A bake sale will be held at
Dudley's Saturday at 9 a.m. by
the Junior American Legion
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128. Auxiliary members
contributing are asked to take
their baked goods to Dudley's at
that time or call Mrs. Charles
Kessinger for pickup.

BOND SALES NOTED
Ohio sales of Series E &amp; H
United States Savings Bonds in
February were $25.9 million. At
the end of February, the State
attained 16.5 per cent of its 1971
sales goal of $322.7 million.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Meigs
County Volunteer Savings
Bonds Chairman, reported
February sales of Savings
Bonds in the County were
$59,630, achieving 18.7 per cent
of its annual sales goal.

The Jones Boys' newest
discount store, fifth in the
growing retail chain, opened its
doors in New Lexington today.
James A. Stiffler, Jones Boys'
president, said the New
Lexington store is in a large
new
masonry
building
replacing one destroyed by fire
two years ago.
Other Jones Boys' stores are
located at Gallipolis, where a
building expansion program is
underway; Morrow, .Jackson,
and Waverly.
In addition to the established
Jones Boys' merchandise in
clothing, footwear, housewares,
automotive supplies, sporting
equipment, lawn and garden
needs, health and beauty aids,
toys, glasswares, and small
electrical appliances, the New
Lexington store offers a complete line of groceries.
Bob Wiseman, vice-president
of Jones Boys, will be in charge
of operations at the New
Lexington store. Tom Moore, a
veteran Jones Boys' store
manager and buyer will
manage the new outlet, assisted
by Judy Nedro of New
Lexington.
The New Lexington store has
about 10,000 square feet of
space, and modern shelving and
lighting.

DINNER TONIGHT
The annual dinner of the
Auxiliary of the Middleport
Firemen is tonight, not Thursday night, as announced
previously. Members are to
meet at the firemen's hall at
6:30 and from there will go to
Oscar's in Gallipolis.

Calls
accepted
9 to 9

COLOR

FURNITURE
$349.95
$35.00 DownBalance On

ails
accepted

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

For Interior and

Serving

Exterior Use

Repairmen

Jim Durbin
Chuck Inscore

~

~

•

Dudley's Aorist
59 N. 2nd

992-5560
Middleport

-

Latex Paint

WHITE
GAU.ON

On serv1ce' call.
Expires 4-7-71. To be returned with service order.

399

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

~~~!::::· 11¥+11· •• ~ ·~
G
SAVE $2.00
~
1;.'

•

9t 9

TELEVISION
REPAIR!

Ph. 675-3482
or
773-5196

Conve.Rient
Terrns.

Arrangement
&amp;
Corsage

&amp;Zuspan
Early Season
SPECIAL

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE CO.

NEW

Happy Nest

Hogg

Point Pleasant and Meigs Mason Area

3 ROOMS

Watch For The

FATHER IS ILL
Edward Templeton and
Junior Templeton of Bailey Run
were called to Hillsboro Friday
due to the illness of their father,
Lawton Templeton, Sr.

SALE DAYS SET
The Meigs Band Boosters will
hold a rummage sale Thursday,
Friday and Saturday in the
Stark Building across from the
Pomeroy Post office. Residents
are to leave rummage at the
building Wednesday.

Although Thomas A. Edison filed for a patent on an
electrical voting recorder, no
voting machine was used in
the United States until 1892.

in the contract.
The bidder will be required to •
state in full detail, on his
proposal his experience in this
class of work and bids from
contractors inexperienced in
this particular case of work will
not be considered.
Plans and specification may
be purchased at the office of E.
S. Preston Associates, Inc.,
Columbus.
The Gallia-Meigs Airport tJ
Authority has been allocated
$100,000 for improvement of the
airstrip dedicated in 1968. D.
Kenneth Morgan, Gallipolis
City Manager, is president of
the airport authority.

MATERIALS CO.

~
~
~

773-5554

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

We Deliver

MASON

·.

•
SALE!
Supreme
Idaho
.:SV.. oz. s~
lnsta t Potatoes ••••••••••Plastic

M

.

•

Miracle Whipped

argar1ne.~-~t~~ •••••••••••• l f~~·

Great. American
cans
Varrety to Choose
Sale! Soup ..................
5 for

CHOICE ROUND

Peanut Butter.s~;~~: ..... ~!~; 89~

CANNED PICNICS
DUBUQUE
.TASTY
QUALITY

3 2.49
lb.
can

WIENERs

JOWL

FRENCH CITY

20 ct.

••••••••••••••••• p~

99e

BACON.~ :.:R~~E: ......2 : ; 79e
0

OUR JOe PRODUCE SPECIALS

.·.

Seed Potatoes
and
Onion Sets

Bananas, lb.
Radishes, bch.
Cabbage, lb.

C

V·lenna

Sausage ••••••••••
Armour
9 oz
can. 39 ~

Stuffed

• •••••••••••••
Mario"s
7 oz. 49¢
01 IVeS
jar

Economy Buy
$}19
Gain Detergent••••••••••• Stze
.
Family Scott
4 paks
(12 rolls)
Toilet Tissue
3 for

•
5th and PEARL STS., RACINE"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

Right reserved to limit quantities

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective Mar. 31-Apr. 6
Open Mon.-Fri. 9 to 7
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

Ki~g

••••••••••••

BAYER ASPIRIN
1.19
200 ct.

BAKERY SPECIAL!
Holsum Regular 38'

Brown &amp; Serve

3 pkgs.

1.00

ROLLS

DAIRY SPECIAL!
FAIRMONT

Ice Milk Bars
12 pak
only

sge

•

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 31, 1971

...........

-~...,......,....

. . . . . ..._.....,..-..-.. . . . l

• Community
Corner By

Charlene Hoeflich

!

THE POMEROY Safety Patrol parents are really on the
move trying to make enough money to send their kids off to
Washington, D. C. in May.
They now have about $800, and that leaves about $650 to raise
between now and May 3, deadline for mailing it in.
So - Thursday and Friday evenings someone will be
knocking at your door with bread to sell, Satw-day baked goods
will be sold at Kroger's, and Thursday, Friday and Saturday, a
rununage sale will be held in the Trinity Church basement.
Candy is being sold every day at the Pomeroy school, bottle
caps are being collected, and the safety patrol boys and girls are
doing cleanup work for contributions to the fund.

•

A

Maureen
Hennesy
has
received the endorsement of the
Junior
American
Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post
39 for District 8 president to be
elected at the spring conference
to be held at Wilkesville on April
24.
Meeting Thw-sday night at
the Pomeroy hall, the junior
unit elected Pam Powers as
"Little Miss Poppy" and Ida
Casci, as "Junior Miss Poppy."

\

Ladies, now is the time to start practicing on those cakes and
pies. The Meigs Bake-a-Rama has been set for Thw-sday, June 3,
at the Ohio Power Co. in Pomeroy.
First, second and third place prizes will be awarded in both
the cake and pie categories and the champions will go on to the
Ohio State Fair to compete for state honors.
Remember practice makes perfect, so bake, bake, bakeyow- family will love you for it!

t ·'

Miss Maureen Hennesy Endorsed for District Eight President

TALENTED KAREN GRIFFITH has an invitation to play
with the Ohio State University brass choir. Quite an honor for a
freshman. The 20-piece choir has six trumpets and the invitation
to Karen was extended on the recommendation of her music
professor.

They will
honors at
Tammy
Casci will

compete for district
the conference.
Guinther and Ida
represent the unit in

INSPECTION PLANNED
Dorothy Hawkins, grand
guardian of Ohio, International
Order of Job's Daughters, will
be the inspecting officer at
inspection of Bethel 62 Saturday
night at the Masonic Temple. A
dinner at 5:45 p.m. at the
Temple will precede the 7:30
p.m. inspection. All parents of
Job's Daughters, Masons and
VISIT MOTHER
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lee Howell Eastern Star members are
of Comfort, W.Va. and Mr. and invited to attend.
Mrs. Gary Lee of Elyria were in
Middleport over the weekend to
visit their mother, Mrs. Betty • • • • • Howell. Mr. Lee came
especially to visit his brother,
Clarence, who is a patient at the
Holzer
Medical
Center,
receiving treatment for injw-ies
suffered in an accident Friday
night. Mr. and Mrs. Howell and
Mr. and Mrs. Lee visited their
father, Ed Howell, Mulberry
Ave., on Sunday.

PATRICIA AUTHERSON
Mr. and Mrs. James
Autherson of Syracuse entertained Monday evening
with a party in observance of
the 12th birthday anniversary
of their daughter, Patricia. A
decorated cake made by the
honored guest's mother was
served with ice cream, mints,
Kool-Aid and coffee to Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Autherson,
Kathy Pickens and Augusta
Will. Patricia received cards
and gifts.
VISITING DAUGHTER
Mrs. Bernard Schramm of
Zanesville is in Middleport
visiting her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John
Lyons and family.

the Pomeroy and Middleport
units will present the skit, "Our
American Heritage" at both the
Wilkesville conference and the
Department conference to be
held on June 5 at Columbus. A
practice session was set for
Sunday at 2 p.m.
Easter baskets were com-

the Panama doll costume
competition and several of the
members will make conference
covers and poppy posters to be
entered in competition.
Diane Carsey, Eighth District
junior pres1dent, will preside at
the meeting with Melanie Burt
and Vicki Vaughan to serve as
color bearers, Miss Hennesy to
lead in the pledge of allegiance,
Shari Reuter to serve on the
registration committee, Miss
Carsey on the resolutions
committee, and Miss Hennesy
as a teller.
Name tags for the conference
will be provided by the
Pomeroy girls. The juniors of

pleted for the children at the
Meigs County Community
School for Retarded Children .
A thank you note was read
from Mrs. Charles Flowers of
the Dayton V A. Hospital
thanking the girls for a box of
ribbons. These are used by the
blind veterans in making rugs.

, $100

SAVE TAN~

FULL

Under Maior Oil Prices
XE-110 Ethyl-over 100 octane

Certified Gas Stations
Pomeroy, 0.

538 W. Main

(We honor BankAme r icard and Master
Charge)

APRIL IS QUITE a month for the Soulsby family.
Saturday Jim and Susie mark up 19 years of marriage; on
Sunday, Jimmer, a fifth grader, has his 11th birthday; on April16,
Pat, who is in the seventh grade, celebrates his 13th birthday; and
on April 20, Susie, a junior, tw-ns 17.
That leaves Cindy. She was three on March 29. All four
children were born to the Soulsbys under the same sign - Aries.
..

PEGGY KERN, WHO has had lots of problems with one of her
feet, is now in the St. Joseph Hospital at Parkersbw-g undergoing
therapy . Seems that last summer she fell over the hill as she
mowed the law and broke some small bones on top of her foot. The
pain got progressively worse as time passed and she is now under
the care of an orthopedist.
-~"'1

Pomeroy....

\

Personal Notes

•
•

•

Mr. and Mrs. Elza Gilmore,
Jr. retw-ned theJ.r son, Roger,
and Tim Glaze, to Ohio State
University Monday after the
two had spent the spring break
here with their families.
Mrs. Carol Moore and family
of Chesapeake were brief
visitors Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
William Barnha~t. Also visiting
the Barnhart family during the
day was Miss
TbQrr.ton
of Salem Cen•
Mr. and Mrs
v of
d here
Akron spent ll
with his moth
s. B. A.
Dodson, Chester. Spending an
evening with the Conroys and
Mrs. Dodson were Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Reynolds of Middleport.
Mrs. Raymond Frank of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Edith
Osborn of Keno were Tuesday
guests of Mrs. B. A. Dodson.
Richard Koblentz spent part
of his spring break from Ohio
State University with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
Koblentz, Chester. The other
part he spent in Pepper Pike,
Ohio, and Glen Falls, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wolfe
were the weekend guests of
their parents, Mr . and Mrs.
David Koblentz and Mr. and
Mrs. George Wolfe.

Mrs. Neutzling
Hosts Sewers
A donation was made to the
George Thompson Kidney Fund
dw-ing a recent meeting of the
Sew-Rite-Sewing Club held at
the home of Mrs. James
Neutzling. Mrs. Bill McDaniel
was a contributing hostess .
Mrs. Larry Wehrung presided
at the meeting dw-ing which
time it was voted to sell dishcloths for a money-making
project. Members were also
asked to start saving Betty
Crocker coupons. A silent
auction was held followmg the
meetmg.
The next meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs. Willard
Boyer with Mrs. Charles Hoffman as co-hostess. The St.
Patrick's Day theme was
carried out in refreshments
served to those named and Mrs.
George Hoffman, Mrs. Flo
Strickland, Mrs. Marshall King,
Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mrs. Don
Collins, Mrs. Edward Wells,
Mrs. Ray Baity, Mrs. Ronald
Browning, Mrs. Don McKnight,
and Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.

Swiss Steak R~~~3l~~~E. • • •
Sirloin Steaks OVA~ur NE
Boneless Sirloin Tip Steak •
Boneless Top Sirloin Steak.
80

•

•

•

• Jb.45c

•

•

LEAN BUTT CUTS

Pork Steaks

• '.b.&amp;gc

• • • • •

FRYER LEG OR

Breast Quarters

•

•

•

• lb.agc

•

•

•

•

lb.

$117

•

•

•

lb.

$159

•

•

•

lb.

$179

•

Roasting Chickens

• lb.49c

•

•

SUPERIOR ASSORTED

Lunch Meat • •
Bologna

8-lb. Can $o.99

Canned Hams .4
Sliced Bacon 2 •. 1
Young Turkeys .
Pork Chops·,:~i~g~~, . •

•

•

•

1-Ib.·79c

pkg.

FRESH, CHUNK

SPECIAL LOW PRICE
ANY SIZE PIECE

•

• lb.57c

•

•

ALBERTI, BREADED

ALL GOOD BRAND

QUARTER LOIN-CENTER CHOPS INCLUDED

• pkg.lr.J-

SULTANA BRAND, ALL VARIETIES

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

tb.

box

CAP'N JOHN'S FAMOUS

1G-oz.49C

• pkg•

BEEF, SALAMI, OR CHOPPED HAM

kz.eRc:

II

• pkg.

TASTY. LEAN

Easter Keilbassi

• • • • lb.79c

Party Was Surprise

Mrs. Earl Dean and Mrs.
David Koblentz entertained
Sunday, March 21, with a
surprise 45th wedding an niversary party honoring their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Genheimer.
A decorated cake inscribed
"Happy 45th Anniversary Mom
and Dad" was served with
homemade ice cream. A conFLORIDA
cert lawn seat was given to the
LARGE
couple. Attending were Mr. and
100 SIZE
WEDNESDAY
Mrs. Dean, Jennifer, Melanie
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, and Denise, and Mr. and Mrs.
Royal and Select Masters, Koblentz and Richard.
special assembly, Wednesday, 7
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
OFFERING PLANNED
Pw-posc to confer the royal
An offering to be taken to this
master degree and the select
master degree on several evening's Pomeroy community
Lenten service will be given to
candidates.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club, the George Thompson Kidney
. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Fund. The service will be held
home of Mrs. Victor Hysell. at 7:30p.m. at the Sacred Heart
pili:II.E:B:IIE VALUABLE COUPON h O·• h D-'. ~::U::&amp;:It:E· VALUABLE COUPON :lili·E:II!ICI'ii::Df.l
Mrs. Milton Houdashelt to be Chw-ch with the Rev. Father
Bernard
Krajcovic
conducting
the assisting hostess.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary the service and the Rev. Robert
W. Kuhn, pastor of the First
Club, 2 p.m. home of Mrs.
Baptist Church, will be speaker.
Thereon Johnson, Racine, with
· f'\_ 13c oFF
~·&gt;) LABEL btl.
COUPON .
'
bottle
COUPON
Mrs. Emerson Jones reviewing
TWO SALE DAYS
"Huey Long."
. I~
Good thru Sat., April 3.
·
Good thru Sat., April 3.
The
Racine
Reserve . /~'\
In All Cols. Div. A&amp;P Stores
.
In All Cols. Div . .A.&amp;P Stores
THURSDAY
ONE PER FAMILY
.
ONE PER FAMI LY
EVANGELINE CHAPTER cheerleaders will sponsor a . .:.____J
172, Order of the Eastern Star, rummage sale in Pomeroy from
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday and fijD::U::o:\1·Cl%· VALUABLE COUPON ::11:·£:11!1·ca:::::,::e p::u::a:zm VALUABLE COUPON ::IE::O::D:liti.J
Masonic Temple, Middleport. Saturday in the Smith building
LAUREL Cliff Better Health on E . Second St.
Club, 7:30 Thursday night home
of Mrs. Clarence Curtis. Mrs.
SATURDAY
1·;-\
big
Paul Frick, co-hostess.
pkgs.
COUPON
btl.
COUPON
BEAUX Arts Ball, Saturday,
9:30-12 midnight, Southern High
Good thru Sa t., April 3.
,.-i
-"
Good t hru Sat., April 3.
REVIVAL, April 1 through School Auditorium. Music by 0 .
In All Cols. Div. A&amp;P Stores
. ··
In All Cols. Div. A&amp;P Stores
April 10, 7:30 p.m. each U. Quintet.
O NE PER FAMILY
ONE PER FAM ILY
even in g , Orange Christian
BAKE SALE, Saturday, 10
Church, near Athens County a .m. to 4 p.m., at New Haven
· VALUABLE COUPON ::lli·Em·CD::::rf : '"' h h H VALUABLE COUPON :::·Em·CC:ct'B
line. Speaker each service, Super Market sponsored by St. pcc::::::o:·:::i.E
public invited.
Joseph's Atlas Guild.
FRIDAY
SUNDAY
ONE 10-oz. JAR OF
ONE 10-lb. BAG
.
RETURN Jonathan Chapter,
HYMN SING, Plants Mission
D.A.R., Friday, 2 p.m ., home of
8
Mrs. Dale Dutton. Rev. Stanley Church, at Racine near new
P latten burg speaking; Mrs . locks and dam site. Bissell
Good thru Sat., April 3.
Good thru Sat., April 3.
Jam es Brew in gton, Miss Brothers and other groups
In All Cols. Div. A&amp;P Stores
In All Cols. Div. A&amp;P Stores
present.
Rev.
E.
J
.
Griffith
in
Frienda r'aehn lc, ass1sllng
ONE PER FAMILY
ONE PER FAMILY
cl1arge. Public invitee! .
h t1SlCSSCS .

Valencia Oranges

SC Each

38c.b.

Fresh Asparagus

Fresh Pineapples

49clb.

39~Each

Florida Grapefruit
INDIAN RIVER
WHITE OR
PINK

4

b
s·J um27
~

•ze

s

69C

Green Cabbage ....... 3

;,-:;~~$1.00

Pascal Celery ........ 3 ~~~~$1.00
Fresh Carrots . . . . . . . . 3 ~~;~ $1.00
Iceberg lettuce .... ... 3 "•IU!s$1.00

CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAVE
Ajax Liquid Cleaner

:

2s-oz.39C '1~W

Gen. Mills Snacks

2 69 c '1~W

'

•

1-lb.Mc
•
•
~~ sasa Round .Shrimp
•
•
·'
•
~eat Pies . • • •
5 17
~~
Bacon End Slices • • 5 98c
••
Fish Sticks • • • • •
• •
Oscar Mayer Lu~~~~N .
u.,-

A":rl FU LLY BASTED-12 to 14-lb. avg.

31f2 TO 4 LB. AVERAGE

Vine-Ripe Tomatoes

•

•

Porterhouse Steaks • • • • • • lb. $139
• lb. $139
Cube Steaks T~~~R.
• •
New York Strip SteaksB?~E • • • • lb. $199
Ground Round Steak • • • • • , • lb.ggc

"SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS

FRESH PICNIC STYLE

Pork Roast

•

• lb.ggc

•

•

Heinz Ketchup

: ·~

2o-oz. 29C

'1~~~

Ajax Window Cleaner
'i 20-oz. 19c '1~W

SAVE 40c copuri~:iHI~~UR . SAVE 15c copur6JEiHI1~UR:
Folgers Instant Coffee

'

.....\

~

Gold Medal Flour

L~Wt

Everyday Low Price!
KING SIZE

t:i&amp;::&amp;:IIEZIE V ALU ABLE COUPON

:a::a::.:cr;Jf.f

Bisquick

'·8=
.ISQUIIill
nP.w
. 40·oz.
L'

box

9-f:::.:iio.
~~~

49c

'1~~~

COUPON

Good thru Sat., April 3.
In All Cols. Div. A&amp;P Stores
ONE PER FAMILY

~IIEIIE:ili:D:·

VALUABLE COUPON :::·E mCCI:lliR

Miracle Maize
CORN
MUFFIN
MIX

2

13·oz.
pkgs.

39c

WITH
.
THIS
.
COUPON .

Good thru Sat., April 3.
In All Cols. Div. A&amp;P Stores
ONE PER FAMILY

~·:D'ilO·•~ac-•::::zal:l!·•:::llaE·'

::lli·~·cc:::::zt:a

FREE ~~1:~~~,~~11~~~
VALUABLE COUPON

A6PACKPACKAGEOr

Hefty Trash Can Liners
Good thru Sat., April 3.
In All Cols. Div. A&amp;P Stores
ONE PER FAMILY

Tide Detergent
5-lb•• 4·01.
55
pkCJ.

$1

JANE PARKER

White Bread
Potato Chips
Apple Pies •

•

•

•

•

•

•

JANE PARKER

•

•

1-lb. tOe

pkg• .,.,-

JANE PARKER

• • • •

Shop for Cijts
. · _;n the Plaid
Stamp Cataloq!

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 31,1971

•

Dump zn Laos Hit
Minh supply trail. Fifty U.S.
helicopters carried the 300
troops into battle.
Before announcing the new
incursion in Laos, Thieu told
South Vietnamese troops at
Dong Ha near the Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ), "We attack
Cambodia, Laos and we can
attack North Vietnam."
Thieu did not say how long
the South Vietnamese planned
(Continued from page 1)
to remain at what he termed
makeup of the boy" Calley had "Communist Base Area No.
inisisted the defense put on no 611" but an earlier, canceled
witnesses for him but had
requested "to stand on defense
on his own two feet and make
such statements as he has to.
"I hope the young boy will be
able to do it without caving in,"
By United Press International
Latimer continued. "For 18
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Nalong months he has been under tional average farm prices rethe horrors of prosecution."
mained unchanged in the month
Calley did seem on the point ending March 15, the Agriculof caving a few times. He ture Department reported Tuesbegan by saying he had asked
day.
Latimer not to put in a
This left the farm price index
mitigation case in hopes of
lightening the sentence:
Agri-Notes
"There's a lot of things that at two per cent below a year
really aren't appropriate, and I earlier.
don't think it matters what kind
The crop reporting board said
of individual I am.
prices for lettuce, tomatoes and
"And I'm not going to stand oranges rose during the month
here and plead for my life and but these gains were offset by
m; freedom.
lower priced hogs and other
"But I would like you to ask commodities.
-to ask you to consider the
Farm costs, according to the
thousands more lives that are report, also remained unchanggoing to be lost in Southeast ed from last month's level.
Asia. The thousands more to be
imprisoned, not only here in the
WASHINGTON (UPI)- AmUnited States, but in North erican consumers last month got
Vietnam, and in hospitals all a little less beef but a lot more
over the world as amputees.
pork than a year ago, an Agri"I've never known a soldier, culture Department report
nor did I ever myself ever shows.
wantonly kill a human being in
The report underlines the
my entire life. If I have market price results which both
committed a crime, the only farmers and consumers have
crime that I have committed is found recently. Beef cattle pricin judgment of my values.
es for the month ending March
"Apparently I valued my 15 were virtually the same as a
troops' lives more than I did year earlier, but hog prices rethat of the enemy when my
troops were getting massacred
and mauled by an enemy that I
couldn't see, I couldn't feel, and
I couldn't touch-that nobody in
the military system ever
Two defendants were fined
described as anything other and a third forfeited bond
than Communism (his voice Tuesday night in Middleport
broke).
Mayor C. 0. Fisher's court.
"They didn't give it a race.
Fined $100 and costs and
They didtt't give it a sex. They sentenced to three days in jail
didn't give it
a e They on conviction of driving while
ltmeb
t intoxicated was Clyde A.
n
a p 1• pt.y
d raylor, 27, Middleport. Michael
That was my
c r...l aruthers, 19, Cheshire, was
ana had to v
1ves of fined $10 and costs for speeding.
my troops, and
1 that is the Forfeiting a $30 bond posted on
only crime I have committed." an intoxication charge was
He ended by saying the jury Daniel L. Schmalenberger,
had stripped him of all honor. Columbus.

By ALAN DAWSON
SAIGON l UPI )--South Vietnamese commandos today attacked a Communist base camp
inside Laos in what President
Nguyen Van Thieu called an
"encouraging" new phase of
the campaign to cut the Ho Chi

Lt. Calley

operation into the same area,
33 miles south of Khe Sanh and
west of the upper half of the A
Shau valley, was supposed to
last three days.
Thieu said the combat assault
by elite Black Panther troops of
the 1st Infantry Division of the
South Vietnamese Army was
preceded by massive American
bombing raids.
The Communist base area is
18 miles south of Highway 9 in
Laos.
Thieu said South Vietnamese

units "have just landed in
(Communist) Base No. 611 in
the Laotian operations area and
the attack is still continuing."
He said the attack already was
"bringing encouraging results."
The first campaign to cut the
Ho Chi Min Trail, the primary
Communist supply network into
Cambodia and South Vietnam,
began Feb. 8 and appeared to
have ended a week ago with the
withdraw! of nearly all the
24,000 South Vietnamese troops
involved.

F arnt Price Averages Firnt

Jail Sentence

Given by Mayor

y

mained substantially below a ture Department economists
year ago - $16.90 a hundred- predict.
The report said the 1971 crop
weight compared with $25.60.
may be a record high of around
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Soy- 1.250 billion bushels, but sharply
bean supplies in the 1971-crop reduced carryover stocks will
marketing season which opens put the total supply for the new
next fall will be tight and pric- season slightly lower than toes will continue high, Agricul- tals for the current season.
Economists said prices for
soybeans next season will be inReed in Capital
fluenced by world supplies of
competing crops, but the tight
soybean supply pointed to conWith Bankers
tinued high prices. This outlook,
Theodore Reed, Jr., president in turn, could influence some
of The Farmers Bank and further acreage shift to producSavings Co., Pomeroy, is one of tion of soybeans this spring, the
39 Ohio bankers attending the report said.
state bankers associati:on
meeting with congressional
leaders in Washington, D. C.
this week.
MILLER RELEASED
Reed will visit the American
Gallia County sheriff's
Bankers' Assn. offices for a deputies Tuesday afternoon
briefing on federal legislation, released James F. Miller, 24,
call on the Ohio congressional Bidwell, who had been
delegation, meet with Dr. questioned in connection with
Claude Baldwin, assistant the theft of $200 from an elderly
director of research, Division of Bidwell resident. Sheriff's
Internal Revenue Service, and deputies reported Tuesday that
pay a visit with the honorable Miller had been charged with
Charles E. Walker, Under grand larceny but this was
Secretary of the Treasurer.
incorrect.

SERVICE SET
Easter Sunrise services will
be conducted at the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church at 5:30
a.m. Church and Sunday School
services will be held at the
regular hours.

Operation

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS Vickie
Sutton, Middleport; Mrs. Kenna
Bush, Bidwell; Mrs. Forrest H.
Stephens, Leon; Mrs. B. H.
Morgan, Apple Grove.
DISCHARGES - Corleda K.
Lively, Lawrence Lambert,
Mrs. James Yost, Mrs. Paul
Bonecutter, Mrs. Oris La they,
VIvian L. Mayes, Audrey
Baker, William Doss, Mrs. Hoyt
Jividen, Mrs. Estelle Meaige.
BIRTHS- March 30, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. George E. Jones,
II of St. Albans; March 30, a son
to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith,
Point Pleasant.

Successful
A kidney transplant was
performed on George Thompson, 18-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Robert
Thompson,
Pomeroy, at Cleveland Clinic
Tuesday as scheduled.
According to a telephone call
received here early Tuesday
evening by Mrs. Robert Lewis
from Mrs. Thompson, "Everything went fine" during
the surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Thompson had
talked to their daughter, Mrs.
Wayne Roush, Belpre, who was
the donor of the kidney for her
brother. George was in the
intensive care section Tuesday
evening but could be seen
through glass by members of
his family all of whom are in
Cleveland.
A fund drive on behalf of
young Thompson is underway
at the present time. Collections
have gone over the $5,300 mark.
Contributions may be sent to the
Pomeroy Postmaster and
checks are to be made payable
to the George Thompson Kidney
Fund.

Five Die in Fire
BOSTON ( UPI) - A fastmoving fire destroyed an
apartment complex crowded
with university students and
elderly early today.
Fire officials said five persons died when flames swept
the five-story building at the
corner of Jersey and Peterboro
Streets, near Fenway Park,
home of the Boston Red Sox.

PT. PLEASANT_ M. Harold
Brown, Supervisor of Secondary Section of Elementary and
Secondary Education in the
Ohio Department of Education
in Columbus, will be guest
speaker for the 70th anniversary luncheon of the
Colonel Charles Lewis Chapter,
NSDAR, Saturday at 1 p.m. at
the Moose Club.
Also during the luncheon,
Mrs. William H. Russell of New
Haven will be soloist with Mrs.
J. V. McGrew, also of New
Haven, accompanist.
Brown, of Gallipolis, worked
on an International Development Program in Vietnam
through Ohio University from
1967-70. He was an assistant
superintendent of schools in
Miamisburg, Ohio from 1962-63
and superintendent of schools in
Miamisburg from 1963-67.
Earlier, he was administrator

Corsages

For Easter!
Designed In Your
Favorite Colors

Dudley's Aorist
992-5560
59

Middleport

N. 2nd

CARPETING
BUY~S_,__, I~AIJA!

501_NYLON

spred®~ The

Big Difference
Between Painting And Decorating!

$399
SQUARE YARD

§PEC.iAL!

• Durable-cleans in •
minute
• Dries in 20 minutes to a
:soft, flat finish

9xl2 RUG---~----- 48.00
12xl5 .RUG--------·79.00

• One c:oat coverage

• 5-way written guarantee
• A professional-looking
finish every time

KILLED IN CRASH
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPI)
- Minnie A. Ratliff, 77, Lancaster, died Tuesday when the
car she was riding in collided
with a truck in Clinton County
near here.

of the Gallipolis Clinic from
1956-62, and a principal &lt;
Miamisburg, from 1955 to 5U
Locally he was principal of
Gallia Academy High School
from 1942 unti11955 and teacher
in Gallia Academy High School
from 1933 until 1942. He
graduated from Parkersburg
High
School
and
Ohio
University.

IT'S INGElS FOR BEST

MARRIAGE LICENSES
Edwin Sellers, 60, Racine,
and Yvonne Marie Wells, 38,
Racine; Charles William
Veterans Memorial Hospital Johnson, 21, Land Lakes, Fla.,
ADMITTED - Josie Roush, and Nancy Ellen Hoback, 21,
Racine;
Charles
Frank, Racine, Rt. 1.
Pomeroy; Ern a
Haynes,
Middleport; Carrin Bolen,
Syracuse; Glenora Swatzel,
LEVY DEFEATED
Pomeroy; Ear la Pickens,
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Voters
Racine; Russell Starcher,
Pomeroy; Kenneth Hanning, in the Northwest School District
of Hamilton County rejected a
Middleport.
DISCHARGED- Edith Rice, 9.86-mill operating levy in a
James Hall, Ray Hall, Pauline special election Tuesday and
Darst, Barbara Seagraves, education officials said the 1971Naomi
Bentley, . Juanita 72 school year may be shortended as a result.
Wamsley, Margaret Sauer.

NEAR ESCAPE
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Draft exemptions for divinity
school students should be
abolished because too many
young men are studying for the
ministry just so they can escape
the draft, according to Rep .
Richard H. !chord, D-Mo.

UNACCEPTABLE
WASHINGTON (UPI) - I. W.
Abel, president of the United
Steel Workers (USW), the
nation's thtrd largest union,
says an annual ";:, per cent
wage limitation proposed by the
Nixon administration "would
not be acceptable."

Brown T 0 Addr ess DAR

King Builders Supply Co.

INGELS FURNITURE

992-3748

Ml DOLE PORT, 0.

2nd AVE.

Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

992-2635

PRICES

Middleport

BS

EFFECTIVE
THRU APRIL 7

AT TUPPERS PLAINS

LYONS MARKET

USDA CHOICE
SUPERIOR

AT RUTLAND

BLADE
CUT

CHUCK ROAST
59e

lb.

Half

BACONw~~~e------~sucEo ____________

Towels 3

l9¢

.~. 49~

Big
Jumbo
Heads

49¢

BEST GRADE

ICE CREAM----~~_g~l:_89e

gal.

COTTAGE CHEESE _____ 5.9e

OXYDOL

BAKERY BUY
Reg.

4~c

BAKE &amp; SERVE BREAD

79e

3 Loave~l OO
.•

18

oz.

.

TEEN QUEEN

KIDNEY BEANS
303

CANS

99~

j - -----BIG-lMKTS~couP"oN-------- i

AMERICAN OR PIMENTO

I

CHEESE ~~K~~- 65¢

I
I
I

I
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A 10 OL JAR OF
INSTANT

MAXWELL HOUSE®coFFEE

FROZEN

FRENCH FRIES 2!K~~-

59~

JAR

JOAN OF ARC

KRAfT

104 OFF GIANT SIZE

FAMILY SIZE

Quantities

PEANUT BUTTER

5

39e

To
Limit

BIG TOP

l
l

1 lb.
pkgs.

MAGIC
BLEACH

DAIRy-sPECIALS

R
0

MARGARINE

Fine Cookers

4 lb. bag

..::::

Right
Reserved'

We Accept Federal Food Starn ps

PAR KAY

ROME APPLES

HEAD LETTUCE

HOLSUM

Bounty Assorted

.PRODUCE

FRESH, SOLID CRISP

-

~: : : :;: :;:;:;:;:;.!:~·~.!:,:, ;: ~;!:~.~-~:-.•:·. •· · · · · ~:

Arm Roast ___~~_69¢
SLAB

RUTLAND

J

CHUCK ROAST 49~
CENTER CUT

;·,:,:

69

W11h Coupon

s 1.6-t

$1.29

Without Coupon

�9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 31, 1971

Style and beauty highlight
these washable coots for .
boys' and g irls'. Ch oose
from a .sorted styles and :
•
colors.

~"v

LADIES'

LADIES'

AND
UP

BUTTON FRONT

EASTER DRESSES
Choose from a large selection of Blends
and fabric combinations in these fashionable Easter dresses. Choose from a
wide range of sizes and colors.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

/,/

JEANS

Welcome Easter and the
Spring season with these
fashion right outfits.
A Iorge selection of
blends and sizes.

A g reot selection of solids and
stripes ore yours to chaos~
from in these unoque button
front jeans. Sizes, 6-16.

HECK'S

$-:.~..

$8~!D

$

499

UP

TODDLER
BOYS'

DRESSY
SLACKS
LADIES'
FANCY

INFANTS'
&amp;
TODDLERS'

PANTS

EASTER
DRESSES

LADIES'
ROLL SLEEVES

Choose from o Iorge
selection of dresses for
your child's Easter
Parade. Assorted sizes.

r

Stripes and solids ore the
order for the day in these
fancy jeans for the lad ies'.
Button styles include; Sailor, Safari, and Yoke .
Choose from navy, red,
brown and blue. Sizes: 8-

LADIES' WALTZ

LADIES' BABY DOLL

GOWN

PAJAMAS

Permal"'ent pren, Gingham &lt;~e ck, waltz
length gowns. Complete with lace trim. Col·
on, Blue. Pink and Maize. Sizes, S-M- l.

Tr~mm~d

bo~y

Moite , Sires: S·M·l.

$166

HECK'S
REG.
$2.2 8

HECK'S
REG.

$2.28

16.

in lore. l heie GinQhom check

doll style pa1omos come in Slut , P•nk, and

Smart and fashionable . These
shirts feature pointed or convertable collars, long toils, and comes
in solids and prints. Sizes: 32-38.

AND UP

HECK'S REG. $2 .28

ClOTHING DEPT.

CLOTHIIIC DEPT.

GIRLS' DRESSY
Flore leg slacks ore the 'thing' and
these permanent press striped denims ore 'in'. ALSO AVAILABLE IN
CHECKS AND SOLIDS.

EASTER BLOUSES
Fresh, bright and crisp!
These dressy blouses ore
just the thing. Choose
from assorted sizes.

HECK'S REG. $7.94

ClOTHING DEPT.

••

AIIDUP

LADIES' STRETCH

GLOVES

LADIES'

HAND BAGS
LADIES' COTTON

$2 66

KNIT TOPS
~a::::::;;~;; ~~~~~oat~;

these ~nit tops ore leodin9
th• porod e. Choose I rom
s.ol•ds, pr•nh and knih . S•.t·
es . S-M-l.

Choose f , om o lorve
seltctian o~ pottenh,
mo•shollon, and seaton
leathe r and straw can·

~::~,';~1e hi~"~u:;,~~

$399

little \l. thinvs" odd style and
! oMplemen t any wardrobe .
One ' i.r:e fih oil in theH- white
v lo vu and t he.,. o re sure to
accent your outf it,

AND UP

CLOTHING
DEPT.

AND

$188

colon

GIRLS'

ClOTHING DEPT.

GIRLS'
FANCY

LADIES' ONE SIZE

SLIPS

PANTY HOSE

Chao1• from sol. d1
and foncys. Mod• o t
Kadel and cotton S•:r.

Pacific, Cinnamon , Brown ,

Coffee. and Off Black colored
panty hose are yours to
choose from in a miracle
stretch fabric.

SKIRTS
A Iorge selection of dress and
scooter skirts . Choose from o
Io rge assortment of denims ,
knits and Indian prints. Assort•
ed styles and colors. Sizes: 714

es\4•1-4 .

$199
AND UP

CLOTHING
DEPT.

'
I

ClOTHING
DEPT.

$138

f

$]88
AND UP

ClOTHING
DEPT.

�----------------------------------------·-------------------------------------------------------~-

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 31,1971

,,

I

'

FOLDING CHAIR

THERMOS BOTTLES
PINT·WIDEMOUTH

"-·

15"x 1O"x21/'"

BAKE&amp;IOAST
PAll

(!

An idea thing for all occasions. These
wooden, folding chairs are great for
parties, bridge club, or any get togeth-

$1''
ALUMINUM
PINT VACUUM

$199

B.

BOTTLE

$166

TEFLON ANGEL FOOD

CAKE PAN

I

c.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.
E.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

12 CUP

MUFFIN
PAN

77(

6 CUP 77•

9" PIE PLATE

WITH JUICE CATCHER

~,~

88(

PINE SOL

KITCHEN
GADGET
SALE

,f~

-.,.

SPONGE MOP

28 OUNCE

$122

$1.44

$122
Pt. Pleasant Store Only

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

E.
F.
G.
H.
I.

8 OUNCE

~IIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII- SIZE
WITH SPRAYER

23(

9" ROUND TEFLON

CAKE PAN
$122
9" SQUARE TEFLON
CAKE PAN
$166

88(

HECK'S REG.

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

$1.18

~··

16 OUNCE

0.

KITCHEN DRANO

SEEN' TAKE
PAN WITH
PLASTIC COVER

HECK'S REG.

$266

92~

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

77c

J

•

J. CORONET MOLD ••• 4 CUPS
K. PINEAPPLE MOLD ••• 4 CUPS
L. 3 CUP FLOUR SIFTER
I. HOSTESS SERVER

~~

WARMING OVEN

HECK'S REG. 34•

1

SLICING KNIFE ~~~~ ~·;:~y~~~k &amp; &lt;&gt;&lt;•••Y
MEASURING CUP SET
6 WAY CHOPPER GRATER
RANGE REFLECTOR PAN
HI-FRY DOME COVER
PROTECT N' FRY
EGG BEATER
RING MOLD ••• 4 CUPS
CHARLOTTE MOLD ••• 6 CUPS

A.
B.
C.
D.

REG.

HECK'S REG. $1 .04

BREAD &amp;LOAF
PAll
SJll

(

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

HECK'S REG.
T0$2.56

$266

..

CHOICE

77(

.

HECK'S REG. TO $2.40

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

QJL.

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

~M.

.::r\.

JJ ...J ' ,~

GUND
DREAMY BUNNY,
BUNNY DOLL,
FOAM FILLED

48" DANCING
RABBIT
• Cotton Stuffed
e Elastic bands for
a ttachme nt o n feet

PLASTIC

PLASTIC
TOY

SAND PAIL

WHEELBARROW

u

EASTER RABBITS
HECK'S REG. CHOICE

$244

$;~8

$212
TOY DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $3.44

TOY DEPT.

37(

HECK'S REG.

54'

TOY DEPT.

PLUSH
EASTER RABBITS
• Sizes to 2 5"

SJ77
HECK'S REG. $2.24

TOY DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
99•

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK'S

REG.

$1.77

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT.

STYLING STAND
COMBINATION

80'

COSMETIC DEPT.

48(

HECK'S REG.
$1.19

COSMETIC DEPT.

DIAL

54

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
96;

COSMETIC DEPT.

EASTER EGGS

26c

38C

IN BAG

HECK'S REG. 42'

HECK'S REG. 52;

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT.
13 Ol.

CLAIROL

WHITE
RAIN

NICE N' EASY
HAIR COLOR

• Regular

Hard -to-Hold

o nd Unscented

HAIR
SPRAY

76(
COSMETIC
DEPT.
70Z.

VASELINE

MEIIIIEII

NURSERY JAR

DEODORANT

1

PLASTIC
EASTER EGGS

77(

60Z.

HECK'S REG.

..

12 PIECE PLASTIC

Quality wig block and "magic hold" sue·
tion base styling stand togethe r.

GOODY
BRUSH
ROLLERS
HECK'S REG.

SJ24

$1.66

AND

MOUTHWASH

~faa!.

14" FILLED
EASTER BASKETS

WIG BLOCK

CEPACOL

74(

$133

HECK'S REG.

14 OUNCE

~

3 PIECE
FILLED

GILLETTE PLATINUM PLUS
INJECTOR 7's

78(

BAYER ASPIRIN
50's

HECK'S REG.

58;

44(

12 oz.

PUSH BUTTON
DEODORANT

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

84'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

\

$1.09

COSMETIC
DEPT.

I

�������</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="74">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1732">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="3821">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2049">
              <text>March 31, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
