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·Hundreds Hunt

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For Prize Eggs

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JACK WE13H, Rotary Clul&gt; treasurer, presents a P cash !rlze to Darin Marr, son of Mr •.
and Mrs. Gerald Marr, New Haven, who found the .silver egg during the annual Easter Egg
Hunt of the Middleport. Pomeroy Rotary Club Sunday .

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i'M WRJTI~G.
MY i MEMOIR~~

WHAT A.RE 'TbU
001 tJG I ME.E.k ?

BUT I DOf.J'T ktJO~
VVHA.T TO CALL IT !

;

Another successful Easter
Egg hunt was staged Sunday
afternoon by the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club at . the
Middleport Community Park.
Hundreds of children from
toddlers through age 12 of the
area searched for over 400 eggs
with as mimy prizes awarded by
area business houses. Chief of
Police J, J, Cremeans fired a
gun to signal the official
opening of the hunt following

remarks of welcome by Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisher.
Middleport firemen were
traditionally on hand to assist
Rotary Club members. A public
address system was provided
by John Werner.

A silver egg worth $5 was won
by Darin Matr, son of Mr . and · ·
Mrs. Gerald Marr of New
Haven. Cash prizes for the two
eggs were provided by the
Rotary Club. Chairman of the
hunt was Cash Bahr. ·

Top find ·of the day was the
gold egg which was good for a
$10 cash prize. It was found by
Joe Gleason, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Gleason, Middleport.

A perfect, sunny and warm
Easter Sunday afternoon with
temperatures in the mid-70s
helped make the annual event a
success.

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Devoled To 'l7u! lntere.ll Of 'l7u! Meigs-Maaon Area

VOL XXIII NO. 253

THAT'S GOWfVA. E£'
'3:::M5 BOOK !

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By United Press lnlernatiooal

Pakistan Confrontation Feared

SAIGON (UP!) - U.S. milita· frequently to avoid bombing
ry sources said today the U.S. attacks. The headquarters is·
Air Force was dropping 7.5-ton •known as B3.
bombs on Coinmunist troop The 7.5-ton bombs have been
concentrations around besieged used previously to blast out
Fire Base 6 in the first such landing pads in the jungles for
tactical use of the weapons in U.S. helicopters but mllitary
the war. B52s also hit sources said they were effective
Communist positions there to- against massed Communist
day with 500 tons of bombs.
troops. In some operations the
UP! correspondent Robert E. big bombs are floated down by
Sullivan reported from the area parachute and detonated a few
that the North Vietnamese yards off the ground to blast
Soviets Beefing Up Sadat ~ AF
commander in charge of the out an area the site of a
AN ISRAELI SOURCE SAID TODAY in Tel Aviv Egypt had . attack on Fire Base 6 had football field.
received ·"new types of aircraft" from the Soviet Union and that II)OVed his headquarters from Front dispatches said the
they were manned by Soviet crews. He declined to specify the j..aos into South Vietnam to bombs were used today six to
make of the new combat jets involved, but previous reports said direct the fight. The base is eight miles southwest of the
they were MIG23s which can outperform American F4 Phantoms. near the intersection· of Laos, border ranger post of Ben· Het,
The diaclosure came as political sources said Prime Minister Cambodia and South Vietnam itself six mil s northwest of
Golda Melr may call a special meeting to diacuss the final draft of in the Central Highlands.
Fire Base 6.
Israel's coun!eri&gt;lan for reopening the SUez Canal under an in·
Sullivan, quoting highly Sullivlm, reporting from the
terim setUeinent of the Middle East conflict. '['he Israeli source, placed South Vietnamese mili- Central Highlands, said a North
comii\Emting on newspaper reports Egypt has acquired MIG23s tary sources, said the head- Vietnamese defector told inter·
and possibly an advanced version of the Sukhoi7 fighter-bomber, quarters of Hoang Minh Thoa, rogators he had seen 2,000 fresh
said "it constituted a qualitative contribution" to Egypt's commander of the 13-day-old North Vietnamese troops in a
offensive against the base, was rear area awaiting orders to
military might:
believed located about 14 miles move into the battle area. He
Hanky Panky Denied
southwest of the base, but that said the defector, Lt. Bui Ngoc
PIDLADELPHIA - CHARGES OF WRONGDOING which he moved · his headquarters Chieu, told questioners his
· battalion had been ordered . to
repcrtedly caused the plunge into bankruptcy of the huge Penn
cut HighW&lt;~Y 5i2 east of Ben
Central Railroad have been denied by its former chief financial
Ret, the base's only land link to
officer. David C. Bevan !Bsued a statement Sunday saying that the
the outside.
blame should be pinned on the two former top officials of the Penn
Central, Stuart T. Satinders and Alfred E. Perlman.
ACcording to Bevan, it was the job of Saunders, the former
ch8irman, and Perlman, the vice chairman, to run the railroad
and they were responsible for the results. All three were fired 12
Brush fires continued to
days before the Penn Central filed for reorganization under the
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
Bankruptcy Act on June 20, 1970. The huge carrier said it was plague Middleport firemen over
recently
completed private surthe weekend.
virtually without cash and could not pay its bills.
At 5:33 p.m. Saturday, the vey of intended com planting
lir~me11 went to Vine St. to stop indicateS acreage seeded in the
Mandatory Pay~ents Recf?mmended
one, their second trip to the heart of the corn belt this spring
. .
may fall short of earlier gov·
location that day.
CJDCAGO -AN AMENDMENT to the Eastern Ohio-Western
At 11:20p.m. they were called
PennsYlilanla federal milk marketing order, which would make to the Hudson St. area where a
Ag-Notes
. partial payments by milk dealers mandatory for milk delivered to fire was reported, but none
them the first 15 days of the monl,b, has been recommended by the could be found. At 2:02 p.m. ernment estimates.
. The survey &lt;vas made in five
Agriculture Department.
·
Sunday, firemen went to the major, corn belt states, where
Partial payments to producers or cooperative associations Little Kyger road near
68 pet cent of the nation's corn
are presently required only when requested.
·
Cheshire. Residents of the area crop is produced, by the Corn
had kept a brush fire there Refiners Association.
under control until the depart· The association report indicatment arrived.
ed farmers in the five states
wouid expand corn plantings 3.2
per cent this year -less than
half the 7A per cent increase
forecasi in an Agriculture De·
o
pariment survey made five
weeks.earlier.
WASlUNGTON (UP!) -The of the Department of HealU1,

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Wf.lAT5
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Brush Fires
Persisting

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WO~DER

.. \NEL.L.TH~RE~ ONE
WP...Y TO Fit-.ID CVT!

SA'M IF THIS lP.NTEJ&lt;I-J IS

THAT LANTE:I&lt;N WAS MP.NUFACfi.Jj;1ED

REALLY GENUI~E IT WILl..

IN A~{2.0N, OHIO·--···.AND l CAN
PROVE fM ·Af.l HONEST MAN ! .

I

HElP ME FIND AN
HONE.Sf MAN!

. · IF THE LANTERN

i&lt;EALLY .
BE.\..ON&lt;SED To
· D103ENESi' ·

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.· ONLY AN HONE.ST MA.N
WOULD ADMITTK~T He
. Cf{EATED SOMe~DY/.

~:tow.

_More Leadership
Wh0 Ie Sta•l e
N·eeded in Health
d
·Like Tm er

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HAVE' AN fl.PPOINTMf;I-JTAT THE COJ&lt;}J ER.

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}IJtTri A' ~lEND.

~U,ESS SHE'S BEEN
HEr(f: .Af.DGONE! ~....,

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TEN CENTS

usters

NEW DELHI- INDIAN AND WEm' PAKISTAN troops
stood within nine mlles of each other along the East Pakistan
border today, increasing fears of a confrontation between the two
nations. Official Pakistan Radio said Sunday Pakistani troops had
''wiped out" two companies of Indian border security forces in the
Benapole area two mlles inside East Pakistan Saturday,
India denied the claim and accused Pakistan of kidnaping three
of Its border security gumts who had been on a routine patrol in
the Petrapole region on the Indian side of the border. The Indian
government demanded the release of the men.
Fears the Civil War In East PakiStan might lead to fighting
between India and Pakistan have swept New Delhi for several
days. Indl8 has voiced support of the East Pakistani rebels but
has denied Pakistan's charges it is smuggling arms to them
a~r!ll!!f the border.

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PHONt: 992-2156

MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

RECEIVING A$10 CASH award for finding the gold egg
in Sunday's Rotary Club Easter Egg Hunt held in Middlepol't
from Jack Welsh, treasurer, is Joe .Gleason, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Gleason, Middleport.

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president of the Blue Cross
Association said Sunday in·
creased leadership from the
federal government ls essential
to any plan aimed at Improving
the nation's ]lealth care sysl.eiJI.
Appearing on NBC's Meet the·
Preas, Walter J. McNerney said
while the demands for quality
and additional facUlties have
grown steadily, "the apparatus
we've used for year ls now
outdated."
·
He stopped short of calling
fer a complete govel'lllllent
takeover of health care, saying
· public and private &amp;ectors must
. share responsibility_and "neith·
«can do II illone." ·
· He said .the federal govern·
Jllfint currently ·contributes up
to one-thlr~ of . health care
expe,ildllures thro11gh such
plans as r.fedlcare and Medi·

U.S. helicopters managed to
resupply the base today despite
heavy ground fire. All were
fired upon today but none was
shot down . Sunday, only 5 to 10
.helicopters managed to land at
the base and one of these was
shot down.
The U.S. command reported
Communist troops inflicted the
worst American casualties in
two weeks Sunday when they
shot down a U.S. helicopter on
South Vietnam's upper coast
and ambushed ground forces
that . ~arne to rescue the
crewmen. One airman and 10
rescuers were killed.

Seedings Down

Education and Welfare, saytng
"No plan will work unless HEW
The continuing dry spell has • WASHINGTON (UP!)- Stor·
is ·strengthened and control left West Virginia woodlands a age fees paid by the governmust be ·given tile backing of ~irtual tinderbox, promptiD!l ment for federal surplus grain
governmenC'
officials to warn that the foresi held in commercial warehouses
McNerney criticized the Nix- fire potentiarremalns critically will be increased soon, Agrlcul·
on · administration proposal high again today, the UP! ture Department Sources have
which would give greater health r.eported.
.
hinted.
insurance benefitS io poor
Since Fflday, the Department I Officials shied Away . from
families with .children, saying of Natural · Resources' fire speciflcforecasts,bqtconftrmed
"All persons under a given controldlvisionhasreported 144 they had been "NegQtlating"
income should be included and · ·separate fires, mostly in over an increase in rates paid'
should be involved in the southern counties.
under the uniform grain storgraduated payment of preOnly light rainfall has · been ageagreementwithwarehousea.
miums ."
recorded. during the period and
At present, a warehoUseman
Asked-why hospital costs has the National Weather Office In who takes in a bushel of gov·
gone up 12'h per cent In the CharlestOn says precipitation is ernment-owned grain or farmer
psst year, McNerney ~ld the well below the normal rate for owned grain, held under price
chief reason Is increased cost of · April.
supp(Jrts, and holds it for a
labor for !iervices provided by
New fires Sunday totaled .49 year before shipping It out, gets
hospitals -labor costs accOunt- and inclUded six each ln Mingo a total of 18.5 tQ !9.5 cents a
lng for. 70 per cent of hospital and Wyoming, four In Kanawha bushel for storage and handling
expenditures. Another reason, and Raleigh and three. ea~h m IM!rvices. W11rehouse induatcy
~e said, is that hospitals are Harrison and Barbour counties. g~oups reportedly have been
not conipetltive arid/there is no• (~NR) Forester A.
Kelly Seeking an increase of about 5
· cald.
force operating to make 1\lem sa!d . none . of the blazes was cent.t a buahel to offset riaing
He callecUor reoraanizatlon efficient and economic.~·
conSidered major: .
COf!ts,

w.

Ben Ret withsto.od a 5Eklay
Communist. siege in the spring
of 1969 when it was a Green
Beret camp.
While the C131ls unloaded
their blockbusters, B52s returned to the area in strength.
Military sources said the big
eight-engine bombers have
dropped nearly 2,500 tons of
bombs on the Communists
around Fire Base 6 since the
post was overrun 13 days ago.
It was recaptured later and is
still in government hands .

WASHINGTON (UPl) - Agri·
culture Depariment officials,
who have !placed a $150 per
Copy Charge On their list Of far·
mers who got big government
subsidies in 1970, say there
have been no cash orders since
the lists were made available
last Thursday.
But a number of congressmen
have been calling for free excerpts from the list, spokesmen
reported.
The list includes the list of
137,000 farms and fanners who
got federal farm subsidies of
$5,000 apiece or more in 1970.
The list, b.rok~n down by states
and counttes, mcluded 14 recip·
ients of $500,000 to $1 million,

ANYTHING GOES! - Apparently anythilig goes these days in Meigs County when it
comes to dumping solid waste. This impromptu dump Is one which has developed on the Rock
Springs fairgrounds. In Pomeroy, residents are using an area between Mechanic St. and
Butternut Ave. to dispose of their trash and garbage. Meantime, the Mi.ddleport dump off the
Route 7 by-Jllii!S has been closed. The latter problem will be taken up tonight when Middleport
Council meets.
·

Prizes Awar.ded
Money prizes were awarded
at the annual Easter egg hunt
staged Sunday at the Rutland
American Legion farm on the
Beech· Grove Road by the
Auxiliary of the Rutland Fire
Department.
·
Prize money for the hunt was
donated by the American
Legion and · the Rutland
firemen. Candy for treats was
provided by the legion, and free
coffee and donuts w~re set:,.ved
throughout the afternoon by
Archie's Recreation Center at

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rrr0 'E.aa v 1• J.ll
~~ .L' I n.rers
Rutland.
Alarge crowd was on hand for
the hunt. A $100 savings bond
was awarded to Ray Hood of
Mansfield. Proceeds from the
project sponsored by the
Rutland firemen will be used to
purchase?.. new alarm siren for
the village.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Monday
was 64 degrees. under sunny
skipr

Ousted Liu's Thought is
PEKING (UPI)- American
table tennis players talked and
played basketball today will\
Chinese Communist university
students who told them that
ousted Presiden~ Uu Sha~hi
was alive but ''his thought is
dead." ·
The 15-member U. S. contingent st9pped off at Chinghua
University on the way to see the
Great Wall of China. They were
delayed for about five hours as
they talked with the students
and toured the university
grounds 'in Peking.
After eating a late lunch at
the university, the Americans
piled into
and two bpses
and travled .to the Great WalL
They Jater returned to their
hotel in Peking~
The "American table tepnis
teani has .yet to play a.formal

cars

match, b4t officials said the U.
S. players , who arrived
Saturday on an unprecedented
visit, would play here Tuesday
afternoon and then leave for
Shanghai on Wednesday.
The highlight of the day for
the Americans was the trip to
the university .
They left their hotel about" 9
a.m. and reached the university
at 10 a.m. where they were
greeted by the school's
revolutionary committee
members, teachers, students
and school workers.
The Americana sat in a
reception ·room around a table
with a white•. table cloth,
sn1oklng ·cigarettes and sipping
black Chinese tea .
· Later, .the Americans were
taken on a t.our of the .school
grounds a~d they chatted with a

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wednesday through Friday:
Cool Wednesday through
Friday. A chance of showers,
mainly east, Wednesday.
High. mostly in the 50s()
Wedn~sday and u~per 40s to
mid 50s· Thursday and
Frid&amp;y. Lows in the upper 30s
and low 40s Wednesday
· morning, dropping into the
upper 20s and low 30s by
Thursday· night. '

De~d

number of other teachers in ship with Foreign Co).Ultries,
their late 50's and 60's who had the Chinese and the Americans
studied in the states.
toasted each other with glass .
When they stopped off at a after glass of mau tai, a
"727 truck" factory, Graham powerful wine made in Nor~h
Steenhoven
of · Detroit, China from sorghwn.
president of the U. S. Table Speeches given by the Chi·
Tennis Association, climbed. up nese and Americans were ·
into the cab of one of the trucks shor', based on the theme of
and drove it. around.
friendship between the two
The "7'1:1" stands for July 7, peoples.
1968, when the first propaganda ." We do not confuse tl1e
team came in to help run the American people with the U.S. .
school and uniie two disputing governme.nt, " one Chinese offi·
factions during the cultural cial told the American visitors.
revolution.
In his banquet toast tO the
On their way back from the ' .nericans, .U Ching-Chuan, an
faCtorY, the Americans ambled official in the Chinese Peoples' f
into an open basketball class AssociatiOJl, said:
and paused to try a f~w sho'ts. . ."The &lt;;hinese people anrl the ·
,At a S\mday nighi' banq~el American people have always
g1ven by the Ali-China Sports . been friendly to each other.:We
Federation and the Chinese express our good w1shes for the
Peoples' Association fo~ Friend(Continued on Page 8) ·

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2-1be Daily.Sentinei,Mlddleport-Ponleroy, 0 ., April 12, 11171

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EAST
IOS3

" Why are we so scared of our kids?" asks Fred B
Lifton a member of the board of education of Niles Township Commumty High School m Skokte, Ill
Granted that student activism can' be troublesome at
t•mes, he writes m the Amertcan School Board Journal
Nevertheless , we seem to be overly reluctant to gtve
,, • students opportumlles to exercise the new freedoms and
. .•:. responsibilities we so ghby discuss m the abstract.
Take student dress, or undress, he says
.
It would be folly to try to compute the number of man·
hours devoted by board members and admmtstrators
to defming acceptable dress codes How much of that
' ' big block of time taken up by " the battle of the thigh,''
,;.· · for example, 1s necessary-to assure quality educatwn•
Why not simply perm1t students to set the•r own stand"·
ards? he suggests. It's been done in some schools, and
, : · the kids have often come up with more restrictive codes
than administrators had in mmd. At least, they will be
.·-: more responsible to their own code than one set by adults
Girls attending class in slacks, after all, Will not cause
serious harm to education, says Lifton So long as the
teacher can do his job in the classroom, no reason ex1sts
for school boards and administrators to devote their
•· · limited energies to playinj: wardrobe mistress.
•' · All of. which is true, but all of which may not be all
.. ·· the truth.
Permissive codes, whether regarding dress or any·
thing else, proceed on the assumption that all kids know
"''. all the time what they want or what they should do, that
. ,•. a child's judgment is oo a par with that of experienced
• ~ults
•
"' ·· Permissivism forgets that many youngsters want and
· · need rules and standards of behaviOr, and that some of
, · them would rather be g1ven thos~ standards by adults
,1; · than be dictated to by ihe leaders or trend-setters among
tbetr peers.
·. ·. Granted that a gtrl's slacks or a boy's flowmg locks
and ragged jeans may have nothmg to do w1th thetr abll·
; .. ' tty to construct a sentence out of English. Might there
not be a more subtle Interference w1th education-educatiOn In the broadest sense?
"Dressing up" is a sign of respect, for oneself as well
.. • as others. If school or teachers or classmates don't de·
., .· serve respect, maybe nothing else does either

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North-South vulnerable
Wed North East South

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tc) 1971· ., NI'A,

Joe.~

"Her, A~. I tbllf'' til de ,_, IHid ,.., recoiled!"

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ATLANTA (UPI)- Tbe sputtering Big Red Machine, win·
less since the 1971 season began
a week ago, faced of! today
against th6 AUanta Braves who
started the defending National
League champions? year off so
miserably.
Jim McGlothlin (~I) was to
fa.ce Ron Reed (!~) on the
mound here today. The Braves
beat the Reds twice last week
and Cincinnati's luck was no

A nation mu$t be capable
of tenactous solitude.
-' Foretgn Mtmster
Evan of /~rael.

Abba

Priests no longer want to
be a certain caste apart from
people

-The Rev. Frank Bonmke,
pres1dent of the N atwnal
Fed e rat 10 n of Pnests'
Councils, after its adOption
of a resolution askmg that
prtests be given a choice
of marnage or celibacy.

- Black leader Stokeley Carmtchael.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Nate Colbert 1s only one of
three reasons why the San
Diego Padres are flexing
unpresstve muscles m thetr
third year as an expansion
team.
At tlle moment, however, the
6-!oot, 2-mch, 210-pound first
baseman is the hottest hitter in
the Naltonal League and one of
baseball's most under-publi·
cized sluggers.
Colbert drove in SIX runs with
two homers and an infield out
to lead the Padres to a 9-7
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers Sunday and now has
f1ve homers and 14 runs batted
m after six games. The Padres
are 3-3 after their stx games
and feel they are far ahead of

Science is, perhaps, some
kind of cosmiC apple juice
from the Garden of Eden.
Those who drink of It )ire
doomed to carry the burden
of oflginal sin.

-LeWIS M Branscomb, direc·
tor of the Natwnal Bureau
of Standards, on growmg
popular susp1c1on of technolo~

Moses traveled 40 years in
the desert and picked the
only country in the Middle
East with no oil. ·
-Y1tzhak Rabin, lsraeh am·
bassador to the United
States

I

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Not long ago I listened to a couple of dozen mature
college students talk about the problems of the day They
were friendly, inqumng, alert-but astomshmgly shallow
m thetr perceptions of reahty
Though one or two were of the total antihero, antlpohtlcs vanety, most seemed anxwus to fmd a candtdate they
could support for the prestdency m 1972 Their bent, of
course, was toward the DemocratiC party But they complamed that, wtth the exception of Sen Henry M Jackson's dtvergence on war and the SST, the presently vtsible
choices were "all the same on the tssues "
They dtd not appear to be faulimg the "let's set a daie
and get out soon" posture of most Democratic candidates
toward the V1enam war What several asked was
" When they all share thts vtew, how do we choose
among them?"
They were talkmg, of course, about Sens Edmund Muskte , Edward Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey, George McGovern, Harold Hughes and Btrch Bayh.
If I was hearing right, they were saymg that the only
thmg they had to go by was the verbal or wntten utterance of these men on the tssues
Whatever became of the 1dea that when we choose a
president, we are wetghmg not merely h1s prociatmed
vtews , but hts record of performance, his character, h1s
capacity for judgment, h1s temperamental fttness for office and his potential for growth and change?
These matters never came up that day Faced wtth six
leading figures who were percetved to be saymg substantially the same things about the war. the students pro·
fessed absolute helplessness m dtscnmmatmg and selectmg
Indeed, they wanted assistance A few thought that the
candidates should aid them by domg s6methmg "admmts·
tratlve," by not only concetvmg but carrymg out a pro·

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

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Voice along Broadway

[

RAQUEL WELCH FIGURES
OUT PROBLEMS
f
NEW YORK - Ingrid Bergman told David
Frost in London she wouldn't have missed
marrying Ro~llbii ''for the world"; but of her
three husbands, incumbent Lars Schmidt "1s the
only one who understands me" .... The news
from Raquel Welch that she and husband Pat
CUrlls have marital "problems" was no surprise
to everyone who saw Pat and his secretary (10
hot pants) doing the Madrid spoil! .... Ruby
Keeler is going to the resuscitated Liberty
Magazine's "Nostalgia" bash at the Rainbow
Room April 20 mostly for a reunion wttb old
H'wood pal Alice Faye .... Alice will be Liberty's
"Film Star to Remember."
Katharine Hepburn tossed a btg "Coco"
touring-cast party at Niagara Falls which
ranged from all 50 gueslll garbed in oilskins for a
traipse through the Cave of the Winds under the
' falls to a dlruler high above, with a picturewindowed falls view from atop a nearby hotel ....
Ginger Rogers is fed up with H'wood explaining
,her new city of Paris love; Barbara Stanwyck
feelsthe$8IIleway,Gingersald,andhassoldher
Beverly Hills mansion .... Former wellerwetgbt
champ Emile Griffith said at the VIP he gave 13
rounds to Frazier vs. Muhammad Ali; Emile's a
better fighter than ring judge.
DorothyColllnadldaCinderellaescapefrom
the Rainbow Room at midnight after 'her
triumph In "Follies"- to meet her paren~ (up
frOm Florida) for a q'lleter celebration at the
Plaza .... What e:qM!I'lence has Marlon Brando
for being "1be Godfather"? Former Scripps·
Howard columnist Frank Farrell has been a
~~ 24 t1mea - includiJ1i Pamela Howard,
publllberJackHoward'•lprlc;nowaN. Y. Poat
J~l .... Which expl•lned the greeUng and
bJc Plm gave Jraldlat Jttfl!ea wben they met.
'lblllp P'Uid aet lplcl.- at the ~ntagon:
Sec. ol Delelllt Laird ubcl Dldt Conloo of

IPidll ,llllllllrd ....

Nallllll'l

j
I

BY JACKO 'BRIAN

o.l!alber'a

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

the taxi bosses are screaming "foul!" .... This is
the same greedy gang that foisted the 50 per cent
cab!are hike on the N. Y. public and has come to
rue till cynical coup; the eliJifeSS justifies itself If
only on the basis of ecological improvement ....
Let's also put in a small word for the airline
industry ..!whose planes in all account for lesa
than Ill. per cent of the nation's pollution ....
Motor cars pollute most, so the fewer cabs, the
healthier populace.
Ginger Rogers looked so great on the Dick
cavett show that our phone jangled with
questions about her age: "Who's Who In the
Tbeatre" says she'll be 60 this Jaly; looks
decades younger .... Joan (Mrs. Teddy) Ken·
nedy's consistently far-out costumes for White
House, visi1S convmce capital • watchers they
are carefully planned as political disdain for the
Incumbents she'd love to unseat .... New
recording a cinch for success, Tin Pan Alley
insists: "The Ballad of Lieut. Calley'' ....
Remember the recording of "The Death of Floyd
Collina"? You do? You're old! •
SjleUa Sloan, the RingUng Bros. cirCUli gal
stiltwalker who fell 30 feet from her ambulatory
perch opening nlgllt at Madison sQuare Garden,
didn't just bllflt one arm, but two: And her
tradillonally superstlUous circwJ co..wtrkers are
watching for the old equation of disasters-ln.
threes .... Last year three ligen met the threefal.e and Mt long before~ elephants.
Madison ,Square Gai'den's profit on the
Frazler·All fight: $800,000 .... The flgbters never
even tried to arrange postponed paymentfor tax
avoidance, and All is expected to be In the
saddest fiscal shape .... Mal Kllle tella ua Joe
Louis' top ca~ pune n• PGO,OOO, for the
~nd Billy Conn fight- and ten da,a later Joe
asked for and cot a f21,000 advuee from
Jl'Omoter Mike Jacoba .... Old Jacobi Beach
insiders ln,illt 11111 solf-huaUIJW llua,ie taught
lhe Bro1lll Jlomber bow to JII*Y ''iGIIDg golf" ....
Mal a11o lelia • Glrd4n pna ap~~t Jolll
C!lld!ll had a pwl llptlllartechcbeme to bave

....

..~'1111

C nJ)yrll{ht ® l'lil,

NewHPRih' r Bntennle.e

~~~~~~~~~~the~J~oln.t~'s_MID~~mmwt~~AII~·~"~"";.a~lOi~be~tH~Diuildgrun~f~or~

NGw we'n partial, to i'l'elldelltll:"'l,batlt-lmNshedlftbellla$
IIIII.
'
"'""'"•• wllo
111at

to aend dol1l

In 1886, the Statue of Liberty was ded1cated as a
symbol of freedom, commemorating Franco-Amencan friendship The World
Almanac notes that the 225ton statue was created by
French sculptor ·Frederic
Bartholdt, who v1sual1zed
a colossal statue at !'lew
York harbor, welcoming
the peoples of the world
with the torch of hberty
Aa~tm

ON T\4EIR VACATION COS/I() At-ID FRAI.l

apparenUy got his signals
crossed.
Catcher Johnny Bench signal·
ed for a fast ball, but Granger
threw a curve tbet skipped
away and rolled to the screen
behind home plate. Donn Clendenon raced hom from third
with the run the Melli needed to
win 3-2.
Bobby Tolan, who won't see
action untll later m tbe season
because of an .injured Achilles

"

tendon, offered some comic re- pttcher, topm hun w1th hts thlfd
loss of the season.
lief to lift the gloom.
On Saturday Granger un"We'll wm one by the All:Star leashed his wild pitch with two
game;" he consoled his out and two strikes on Grote.
Sore arm pitchers Jerry
teliinmates. "Don't worry ' L
Sunday's game was a pitch- Koosman of the Mets and Gary
er's battle as the Mets' Tom Nolan of the Reds had battled
Seaver burled nine innings, but through the first etght mnmgs
denied any runs although the with the score tied 2-2
bases were loaded twtcl,.
Nolan, who had shoulder trouThe Mets, however, finally
got to Granger, the Reds' fourth ble two years ago, pttched the

.

"We think Colbert 1s acqwring the stamp of a hom~ run
httter," says Manager Preston
Gomez. "If he can cut 20
strikeouts off his 1970 total of
150 he can btl 45 to 48 homers

Colbert homered wtth two on
after Tommy Dean walked and
Gaston smgled m the ftrst
mmng and connected agam
after Gaston walked m the
third. Both shots were off Don
Sutton and went deep mto the
left field stands Tommy
Phoebus, acqwred from the
Baltimore Orwles m a wtnter
trade, went five inmngs for h1s
ftrst NL VICtory.
The loss was the fourth m s1x
games for the Dodgers, ptcked
by most experts to wm the
National League's Western
Division Title.
Jerry Grote led off the
bottom of the 11th inning wtth a
homer off Wayne Granger to
gtve Met reliever Tug McGraw
hts ftrst wm of the year Tom
Seaver allowed f1ve h1ts and
struck out 10 10 mne mmngs
before g1vmg way to McGraw,
whose medwcre work out of the
bullpen was constdered one of
the reasons for the Mets'
failure to wm the NL pennant
m 1970. The loss was the fourth
Walks to Ken Harrelson and m a row for the Reds, who
Ted Ford accounted for another
run, Eddie Leon smgled in
another and rookie Gomer
Hoo6 e doubled for the ft!th run
of the inning
The hit was the fourth 10 as
many maJor league at-bats for
Hodge and his fourth run batted
10.
lnterna!Jonal
Foster was bothered by By Umted Press
East
wildness in h1s ftrst AL start,
W. L. Pel. GB
3 I 15U
walking mne batters, but NY
P1tt
3 2 .600 •;,
Cleveland Manager Alvm Dark Phil
225001
IS suffiCiently Impressed.
Sl Louis
2 3 400 1'12
243332
"His kid knows how to pttch," Chocago
1 3 250 2'12
said Dark, ."and I'm .npt Montreal
West
wlirried about hil)l 1He'll do the
W L. Pet. GB
job and I thmk he'll do 11 much Atlanta
4 I BOO
5 2 714
better than I had hoped he Houston
San Fran
4 2 667 'h
would."
San Doego
3 3 500 1'12
In other American League Los Ang
2 4 333 2'12
0 4 000 3112
action, Baltunore beat Detrott Cm
Sunday's Results
9-3 after losing the doublehead· Sf Louis 4 San Fran 2 (1st)
er opener $-4, Washmgton San Fran 1 St Lou1s 2 (2nd)
mpped New York after bowtng Phil 11 Mont 4
San D&gt;ego 9 Los Ang 7
1..0 m the f1rst game, Milwauk- Houston
7 Ch1cago 4
ee blanked Cali!orma 3-0, Allanla 3 Pitt. 1
Kansas City rtpped oakland 10- NY 1 Cin 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
5 and Minnesota shut out
(All Times EST)
Chicago 6-0.
Houston (Btasmgame 1 0) Sl
In the National League, LouiS (Carollan 1-0) 9 p m
(McGlothlin 0-1),
Atlanta downed Pittsburgh 3-1, at Cmc1nnat1
Atlanta (Reed 1-0) B p m ,
San Franctsco beat St. Lows 7·2
Ch1cago (Holtzman 0-1 I at
losmg the opener 4--2, New York Los Angeles (Vance 0-01 II p m
edged Clncmnatl I~ in II San D1ego (K1rby 0 l) al San
(Perry 1 0) , 4 p.m
innings, Houston wh1pped Clu- Francisco
P1tlsburgh (Johnson 0 0) at
cago 7-4, San Diego defeated Philadelphia (Wise o 01. 1 30
Los Angeles 9-7 and Philadel- p.m.
h d d)
.
, (Only games sc e u1e
1
ph1a trounced Montrea 11-4.
Tuesday's Games
Dave McNally pttched a Pllt al Phil (n~ghil
seven-hitter for hts second Houston at St LouiS
.
Cm al Altanta (n1ghll
VICtory of the season to lead Ch1cago at LA (noght)
the Orioles to theJr second San D&gt;ego at San Fran (noghil
game deciSion after Bill Free· N Y al Montreal
han's llth-inmng homer gave
Detroit the triwnph in the

and be one of the game's
outstandmg sluggers."
The Melll nipped the Cincmnall Reds, 1~, m II innings, the
Houston Astros beat the Chicago Cubs, 7-4, the Atlanta
Braves topped the Pittsburgh
Pirates, 3·1, the Phtladelphla
Phill1es whipped the Montreal
Expos, 11-4, and the San
Franctsco Gtants downed the
St. Louis Cardinals, 7-2, after a
4--2 loss, m other National
League games
In the American League, 1!
was Detrmt 5 Baltimore 4 10 II
mmngs and Baltimore 9 Detro1t
3, New York 1 Washington 0
and Washington 4 New York 3,
Cleveland 7 Boston 2, Milwaukee 3 C&amp;liforma 0, Minnesota 6
Clucago 0 and Kansas City 10
Oakland 5.

Foster Hurls 3-Hitter
\
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
A change of scenery finally
seems to be bringmg out the
best m Alan Foster.
Foster, billed for nearly f1ve
years as the second commg of
Sandy Kou!ax, never qwte
made it wtth the Los Angeles
Dodgers, compiling a 14--24
record m three seasons.
The Dodgers peddled Foster
to Cle.veland during the off.
season and Foster made his

Dear Helen :
How do you put down a stupid know~t.all• This guy is dumb.
But he thinks he is an authonty on everything. No matter what
you start discussing, he has "the solution" and it's not only wrong
but so prejudiced and hateful that you can't just ignore him. He's
dsngerous, too, for the loud ones get heard, and sometimes
believed.
He was the one who tr1ed to get our block organized against a
new white famlly that had an adopted black baby. He started all
kinds of rumors, none true, as I proved, but these really great
people were made miserable for a while.
I wish there was a law against verbal littering! How do you
neutralize a btg mouth? - M.A.D.
Dear M.:
... When he starts,"Uiiterating In public places" show up his
tgnorance with pointed questions -and a gentle needle · great for
sewing up big mouths. - H.
'
Dear Helen:
We don't have a place to put our fireplace wood under locks,
so we stack It out In back.
Each night when we come home from work, our wood pile has
dwindled.
We don't point fingers, but our neighbor's chimney belcbes
smoke, and he hasn't bought wood all winter.
To catch the thief, would It be all right to bore boles In a few
top chunks of wood, insert small firecrackers or maybe pouches
of sulplntr? An explosion or a house full of fumes would at least
discourage him. - BURNED UP
Dear Burned:
Definitely not!
Firecrackers exploding under pressure are dangerous, and
sulphur fumes might almost stifle small children or animals.
Even though you could prove theft, you might have a big law suit
on your hands.
... And what if you used the wrong piece of wood In your own
fireplace?
Better to alert your friendly neighborhood policeman - and
let your neighbor know about it. - H. •
Dear Helen:
A recent letter m your column reminded me of my own
''Wonderful, strong, handsome husband" who "isn't normal." He
too has sky-dived, but be prefers mountain climbing or shoo\ing
rapids in a kayak.
No, my husband isn't normal. He's something very special,
notaparasitewhoissatisfiedwithwatching life via TV. Bob must
experience the pain, the hardship and the exhilaration for himself, and I am proud of him.
I'm afraid this worried writer is In for much heartache. Sbe
has a lion on her hands whereas all she wanted was a big, cozy,
overweight hamster. Surely she knew she was marrying a sports
nut. If she tries to change him now she will either amother him,
drive him crazy, or away. My advice toherla :
I. Accept what your husband does and try to Wlderstand wn~
be enjoys II. I am neither strong nor brave enough to cllmb
mountains, buticanseewhy HE Ukes to.
2. Do NOT make him feel guilty. He'll begin to resent YOU.
3. Listen with interest as he relates his adventures.
·
4. Pray you will live as loog as be does, though he may be
healthier, having enjoyed a fuller life.
5. Love him now and always for the man he Ia, and not as a
reflection of what you wish he were.- KAREN

Hatlo's

such previous expanaton teams
as the New York Mets and
Houston Astros in development
toward pennant contention.
In addlllon to Colbert, the
sluggers the Padres are countmg upon to make them
contenders are Ollie Brown and
Clarence Gaston, drafted by
club Prestdent E.J Bavasi
along with Nate in the 1968
draft which formed the club.
The trio combined for a total of
90 homers m 1970 -three more
than wen hit by the whole
Dodger team

I

VERBAL LITTERING IS
HIS PROBLEM

gram or two, to demonstrate the genuineness of their
tssue pos11lons (Ail of the candtdates m question are
)egtslators who do not ordinarily get admtmstratlve opportumt•es )
Mmd you, now These young people were not cymcal.
They were not shoutmg "A plague on poilllcs" but were
searchmg for someone to rally around Yet they were
totally lackmg m zeal for the quest.
They were abd1catmg the responsibility they carry as
Citizens They were looking at Musk1e, Kennedy, Me·
Govern, et a! as 1! they had blank faces with tssue cards
pasted over them, as 1f these men were all spiritless bearers of a common written message-and nothing more.
As a matter of fact, the six candidates do not even speak
the same way about the war, even though they do come
together on some key pomts
Is 11 really Impossible to JUdge among these men unless
they ail run · out and start little proJects to prove they
mean what they say?
What IS the Democratic process of selecbon all about, if
not wetghmg tM candidates' observable quallhes of mmd,
thelf degree of emotional balance, their record of per·
formance, past and present?
Admtttedly, choosmg can be dtfftcult. But democracy
was not des1gned to be easy work.
Whtch brmgs us to another pomt Underlying not just
the1r athtudes toward candidate chmce but many other
matters was a strange weanness. The new vogue word,
"despair," did not apply What these young people lacked
was a taste for the hard challenges of life By their own
testimony, .they are easily crushed by defeat They do not
talk of rtsmg to ftght another day.
They want assurances of swtft, total triumph. They want
to beheve m something and someone. But they don't want
to have to dig They want 1t all out on the sleeve to be
taken m at a glance.

better in two weekend games in
New York.
For reliever Wayne Granger
Sunday was Uke a recurring
nightmare -which had Its first
showing the day before.
Jerry Grote of the Meta hit
Granger's first pitch of the 11th
inning Sunday for the homer
that defeated the Rem 1.0. On
Saturday Granger had an ~2
count on Grote with the bases
loaded in the 11th -when he

, first eight for the Reds, allowing
six hill!, strtking out two and
walking one
The Reds' first run was unearned when Pete Rose lengthened Tony Perez' double by
vtrtue of catcher Grote's droppmg the ball at the plate.

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.
.-.r the Sports Desk
h~' f:het Tannehill
-·
-.-...-..-._...-..-. .._.. _
............_._

---·---- ·-·--~-·

.-

When do you push the panic button •
Berme carbo homered m the
Perhaps that 1s the substance o! a question Sparky Anderson,
seventh for thetr second run. second-year p1lot of the Cincmnati Reds IS asking himself,
because the Reds yesterday 10 losing 1..0 m II innings to the Mets
equalled thetr longest losing strmg of 1970 before getting out of the
starting gate.
Don't look for anythmg serwus to happen to Sparky's
managertal career until Bob Howsam, executive vice-prestdent
and general manager, calls Sparky in to tell him he has been
gwen a vote of confidence
That, based on experience of other managers, IS when Sparky
Swoboda , the former Met,
tripled m a run durmg a three- better look for some place to land.
If thts IS an overly-gloomy assessment of what has been
run etghth-mnmg upnsmg by
happemng to the Reds m this still brand new baseball season, 11 IS
the Expos.
Power-pttchmg was the name the tradttional response of the fatr weather baseball fan
On the other hand, the true Reds fan points out that there ts
of the game m St Louts, w1th
Bob G1bson dmng the honors little wrong with the club that Bobby Tolan and the Btg Bopper
for the Ca1 dmals m the first won't cure when they return. Lee May (the Bopper) IS due back m
game and Juan Mancha! a week; Tolan no later than the end of May, berring unforeseen
returnmg the comphment for acc1den1S, and perhaps much sooner as a pmchhitter
the (itants m the second game
Gtbson, who hasn't lost to the
THE MARAUDER baseball team goes to Athens tomorrow
Gtants smce Sept 17, 1968, beat for a "big one." ThiS one they really need if they are to stay in the
them for the s1xth straight lime thtck of the battle for the northern divtsion t1tle. Havmg lost their
w1U1 a slx-httter The vtclory conference opener to Logan (7-4 ) m a downpour of errors, they
was h1s first of the season and evened the record at Wellston, and now meet the Bulldogs who are
191st of Ius career Mancha!, cormng out for the1r last season under veteran coach Ed Rannow
stdehncd w1lh a freak atlment a
(retirmg) .
year ago, came back m the
Rannow's boys are 4..:lon tbe season,losmg 3·2 to Logan and a
second ~ a rn e wtth a sevendoubleheader
to Lancaster on openmg day They took two from
httter to rmse h1s 1971 record to
Parkersburg B1g Reds this past weekend, and earher had cltpped
Z-0 Joe Torre htt hts thtrd
homer for the Cardmais m the Wellston~ Bulldog pitching this year is young and inexperl!!nced.
second game
Furthermore, Mike Greene, junior rtghthander, injured a leg last
week and ts not expected to ~e ready Mter Greene, the pitchers
are lefty Steve Inbody and righty Don Wood, both sophomores .
Inbody started against Logan and was shelled off the mouiKI the
first mning Mark Bridgewater, an upperclassman, and r~gular
flfstsacker, has pttched in brtefrelief, and other soph pitchers are
Mtke Handley and Jon Kosllval
The Marauders can win this one, then by taking Logan in thelf
return match , be m the thick of the race
Metgs Coach Ed Bartels will have all three of hts semor pitchers ready. RICk Van Maire p1tched seven mnmgs last Thursday
ATHENS, Ohto (UP!) - agamst Vmton. Tim Demoskey, the lefthander, should be well·
George Wetherbee, a graduate rested after his I -bitter agamst Wellston of last Tuesday. And led
student at the Umvers1ty of Wtll, righthander, also is ready. Will pitched last MondBy,
Akron , was crowned w1th a defeating Pt Pleasant.
laurel wreath from Greece after wmmng the fourth annual Z6
A U S passport IS valid for
NBA Playofl Standings
mtle marathon Sunday.
By Un~!ed Press International three years It may be re·
DIVISIOn Finals
Wetherbee covered the 26
newed to be valtd for \he
Best of Seven
mties from Coo!Yiile to the
remamde~ of the five-year
East
Ohw Umvers1ty football stadmm
W. L. Pet . penod from the ongmal date
'
10 2 hours, 34 mmutes, 6 3 sec- New York
2 1 667 of issue.
Balllmore
· 1 2 333
onds.
Wesf ~1 '
•
A record 71 men entered the
fW. L. Pet.
race , run over the hllly and Molwaukee
' 2 0 1 000
0 2 .000
curvy roads of southern Ohto Los Angeles
Sunday's
flesutts
Ftfty men fmtshed
Milwaukee 91 Los Angeles 73
Douglas Scorrar, a nallve of Ballomore 114 New York BS
Monday's Games
New Zealand and a graduate
(No
games
scheduled I
student at Ohto State, fm1shed
second m 2 hours, 35 mmutes,
Playoff Standings
II seconds. Thtrd was Carl Hat- By AHL
Un1ted Press lnternattonal
field of Parkersburg, W Va., in
(Quarferflna ts I
( Best of Seven I
2 hours, 38 minutes, 27 seconds.
Series A
The team title, awarded to
W L
the orgamzallon havmg three Prov
2 1
I 2
runners ftmshmg htghest, went Bal
Senes B
to Kent State Umvers1ty, led by
(Best of Five)
Harvey Fa hi who came in fourth .
W. L.
Other ftmshers from KSU were Spring
2 0
0 2
Scott Weber and Robert Mintz. Mont
Senes C
The oldest runner was Clatr
(Best of Five)
Duckham, 64, Dayton. who has
W. L.
•
2 1
competed and fmished in all Cleveland
Hershey
I 2
four marathons
Sunday's Result
Prov 6 Baltimore S
'
Monday's Game
Phone
992-23lH
Spnngfletd at Montreal

Padres Surprise In NL 's First Week

The maJor preoccupation
of a revolutionary is butld·
ing, with creating, not to
destroy.

!Helen Help Us!
l
I

Politics Without Challenge

• ,r,

.."'~·~·'

,,•

~

t]

By Helen Bottel

·: Extra Vitamins
: ·often Helpful

"

TIMELY
QUOTES

.---------------------------1

What Youth Wants •••

...

BERRf'S WORlD
•

4¥

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Jim "Here IS a good hand
for second-hand low South
c o u 1d n't watt to put the
queen of dtamonds on West's
Jack and hts ace on East's
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
kmg,."
Oswald. " If South had
used a transfer btd to get
St·.nJe~+
the four-heart play mto the
The b1dding has been
North hand there would have
W&lt;st
North East South
been no trouble winning
?
game and rubber Or 1f South
You, South, hold
had s1mply played low from .AKQJH
¥KJ32 +65 "'2
dummy as he should have,
What do you bid?
everythtng woUld have
one spade. There arc
worked out nicely Even tooA-Bid
many slam possibilities for
after playmg the queen of a preemptive opening
dtamonds, South could have
made 10 tncks if he had let
East hold the first trick "
Jun· ''I'll show the play
after lettmg East hold that

BRUCE BIOSSAt

··.Especially with Poor Diet

r•

p~,

Pass
lead- + J

first trick East's best return
1s a dtamond South must go
up with the ace, enter dum·
my w1th a trump, ruff a club,
enler dummy w1th a second
trump, ruff a second club, go
to dummy w1th an o t h e r
trump, ruff out dummy's last
~lub and fmally throw West
10 w1th a d1~mond "
Oswald "West's best lead
Will be a spade If he leads
low, South must s\lck 10
dummy's mne If he leads
the Jack, South must cover
wtth dummy's queen "
J1m "Etther way . East 1s
end-piayeJ and forced to
g,ve South the rest of the
trtcks "
,
Oswald "! menttoned
transfer btds earher Actually, this South hand 1s not
one that really cnes out for
us~ of a transfer btd smce
sometimes 1t IS better to
keep the really unbalanced
hand concealed "

•¥c RRD

.'

and fru1t m tbetr diet, it is
possible to develop v1tam10
deficiencies
Some older people. particularly those who llve alone,
are aft to have deficient
diets know a lot of money
ts waste~ on excess vitamins
which tlieoretically shouldn't
be necessary, but m fact,
often are. Finally, I can't
criticize succ~ss , If vitamins
have done that much for you,
go ahead
Dear Dr. Lamb- Would It
hurt my father (age 58) if he
takes Vitamin E and B-complex with liver and Iron,
along with nerve pills, high
blood pressure pills, and Blif·
Jerin for arthritis? He drinks
quite a b1t on Saturdays I
don't thmk he Is drunk, It is
probably the effect of nerve
pills and beer and whisky
combined What if he also
takes Vitamin C, along with
E and B-complex? I worry
about him
Dear Reader - I can't say
as I blame you for worrying
about Y.our father The vita·
mm ptlls are probably the
least of hts dtf!ICultles Alcohol and certain "nerve piUs"
do not m1x well. I don't know
what kind of medicine he is
taking, but It seems to me
that this should be discussed
with your doctor I have in
mind the interaction which
occurs between two drugs.
Many famous person who
has taken sleeping pills and
alcohol bas not lived to talk
about It
In a half-way adequate
diet, there 1s usually suffici·
ent Vitamm E since it is
abundant in many food sub·
stances I prefer that people
do not drmk too much alco·
hoi, but for those who do,
Vitam10 B-complex may be
helpful Th1s is particularly
true of the person who drinks
too much alcohol and neglects his food intake.

IN.T
Pass

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First TriGk Can Be :· Costly

Why Permissive
Dress Codes Fail

·• By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
.' · Dear Dr. Lamb - I don't
, know what your opinion Is on
•:laking yltamins. Several doctors nave told me no, but I
started taking Vltamm B.·· tomplex with 1ron and liver
~: Before the vitamins, I bad
:-· terrible headaches, cramps
.:., i)efore and after periods, de·
::'· pression, head and body Itch·
mg 1 J was tired all the time,
craoby and lifeless. After I
started taking vltamm pills ,
l didn't have any of these
problems and have a lot
more zip. I am not saying
this Is the right vitamin for
everybody, but aren't vita·
mins really good for some
• people? I am only 37 and
~ they' have helped me a lot.
'•
Dear Reader - I am not
~ opposed to vitamins, clearly
~: they may even be !lie-saving
' m individuals who need
~ them . Many people died of
;::::, scurvy before Vitamin C was
.. atscovered This was a real
:.,, health hazard m military
.~ camppigns and for sailors A
"'· deflctency of thtamme (Vita·
:::. min B-complex group) can
~ 1·ause a lar~e number of dis·
;:: turbances m the body, In·
~ eluding heart failure in som~
,.. people. Vltamm deflctencles
~ can also cause liver disease
::
Wlthm reasonable limits,
..; • the amount of extra vttamins
:: one mtght get from taking
:t;. vitamin tablets w1ll not cause
.,.,;any harm. The two vttamlns
..-..:•bleb can accumulate and
"'l:: cause illness 1! taken m ex~• .(lesslvely large doses, are
•• Vttamins A and D.
~ . · . Considering frequency of
~: an inadequate diet, v1tam10
:: supplements are probably
•: helpful for many people
: ; Theoretically, one shouldn't
"'· need to take vltam10s in adj: dillon to an adequate diet
Since people o f t e n eat
starches, greasy foods and
sugars wtthout enough of a
variety of fresh vegetables

,,

WIN AT BRIDGE

"Is This My Reflection?"

EDITORIALS
.

Reds

•:-:=--~~

,:::.:-::;::~~-

I

S- The Daily Sentinel, MlddlepofWomeroy, 0., April12, lt'/1

\

Amertcan League debut a
memorable one Sunday, allowmg only three htlll m his 8 1-3
mmngs and igniting a ftve..-un
etghth inning rally that carried
the Indians to a 7-2 victory over
the Boston Red Sox.
W1th the score lied at 2-2 10
the etghth, Foster doubled off
Gary Peters and Larry Brown
was hit by a pttch. Vada
Pinson's smgle scored Foster
wtth the go-ahead run and
Brown scored on an infield out.

Today's Sport Parade

Tolan Is Past
Critical Stage

Do It Every Time

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-l-IlT OTROS COllt.lTRY'· .. • OAAI-IGE
GIOP.IES RIGHT »&gt;D LEFT' · •

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By MILTON RICHAMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-'Bobby
Tolan stung the ball hard
• It took off on a blurred lme
for the right !teld corner where
1t hit the fence on one of those
qwck bounces, then caromed
craztly the other way toward
center fteld.
The ball would've been good
for two bases sure ... 1! th1s
wasn't battmg practice ... tf
Bobby Tolan could only run .
But Cincmnall's !me center
fielder hasn't been able to run
for the past three months, smce
last Jan. 6 to be exact when he
ruptured the Achilles tendon in
hts right leg playing basketball
wtth several of h1s Reds'
teammates.
Bobby Tolan underwent an
operation the next day and
everybody he meelll now
always starts off askmg the
same two questions.
"'How's the leg?' and •when
you gonna be back?"' Bobby
Tolan says, repeating the
questions and smiling to show
he apprectates people's concern
even though they've been
asking the same thinpnr three
months now.
"It's tough to answer those
quest1ons," Tolan says. "You
'don't know, you hope. Look at
Rico Carty. He was coming
along fine. You have to be hurt
yourself to appreciate what
someone else is going through.
I know' what J,ohnny Unitas IS
go10g through now. You gotta
sympathize with the guy. It's
gonna take a Iotta hard work
on his part. It did on my part
and l'ip younger."
Bobby Tolan is 25 and
Johnnny Unitas wtll be 38 next
month. Tolan can swing the bat
rtght now the same way he did
last season when all he did was
- hit .316, drive in 80 runs and
fimsh with 16 homers for the
Reds, but what he can't do is
steal 57 bases for them the way
be diHlast year.
All he can "o now is jog,
work hard and hOpe for the
best.
"Tjler;'s still a little pain,"
Tolan'says, "but it's the kind of
pam you can bear. Tbe doctor
said the crltlcal stage would be
the loth to the 12tb week, wben
I'd get very active and I could
the leDdCIII
'DIIa

my 14th week though. I'm
past my critical stage now."
Bobby Tolan may be but not
necessarily the Reds. Without
hun tliey simPly are not the
same ball club they were last
season offensively or defensive·
ly.
The Reds' front office had
warned Tolan againfit playing
basketball but he felt he had to
do someth10g to stay in good
condition.
"We had just moved from
Los Angeles to Cincinnati
where we bought a new home,"
Tolan says, "and if I had
stayed in Los Angeles I
would've been playing baseball
every day. In Cincinnati I
couldn 'I because of the weather
so I played basketball. Would I
ever do it again? I think so but
I don't know for sure. I don't
think It was foolish or stupid.
Most everybody on our ball
club played, too, and if 1t was
foolish or stupid why would
they do 1!?"
Bobby Tolan takes battmg
practice with the Reds every
day and hopes he'll be ready to
pinch bit for them in a month.
"The doctors told me the only
thing they can do is put the
tendon back together," be said.
How it works out after that
depends on how much work the
individual does. The work is
more boring than hard. What I
have to do now is develop a
calf muscle. I was 10 a cast two
months and there's no muscle
there.''
Tolan's spirits are good. He's
doing hts work every day and
listening to some advtce h1s
mother has gtven him.
"Be pallent and do what the
doctor said," she told him.
''You'll still be a good
ballplayer."
1
Some people !fon't realize how
good a ballplayer the lefthanded hitting Tolan is. He hit
.368 against lef~ed pitching
two years ago and .335 against
Southpaws last year. Wban
Sparky Anderson, the Reds'
manager, half;jdddingly asked
him "How come you hit lefthamders so gOod?" the other
day, Bobby TQlan didn't blink
an eye.
"I'm just a naturally good
hitter,'' be said.
He wasn 'I kidding either.
18

·'

open_e£.

.

Don Buford had three h1ts
and scored two runs in the
second game to highlight an II·
htt Baltunore attack. Dave
Johnson, Boog Powell and Andy
Etchebarren drove in two runs
each for the World Champion
Orwles.
Freehan 's homer in the
opener came after Baltunore
had rallied in the etghth and
ninth mnmgs to tie tlie game at
4-4.

Berme Allen's bases-loaded,
pmch-hit single tied the score
and Curt Blefary's error on the
hit allowed the winning run to
cross the plate as the Senators
earned a doubleheader split
wtth the Yankees.

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
tHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH.'

Coty Editor

Publl~hed

dally excepl
S.!!furday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St , Pomeroy , OhJO,
45769 Business Off1ce Phone
992 2156, Editorial Phone 992 -

2151

Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio
National advertising
representative
Bottrneiii Gallagher, Inc , 12 East .42nd
St, New York C1ty, New York
SubscriptiOn rates · De

livered by carrier where
available so cents per week,
8y Motor Route where carrier

service not available
month S175. By

m~111

Ont

In Ohio

and w Va .. Ont year su.oo
Six months S1 25 Three
months s• 50 Subscription
prlct Includes Sunday Times

Sentlntl

haven't won yet thts season
Cesar Cedeno, at 20 one of
the NL's bnghtest young
prospects, drove m three runs
w1th a tnple and a sacnflce fly
for the Astros Don Wilson
surVIved a three-run barrage m
the first mnmg and went the
dtstance for the victory . Bill
Hands suffered h1s second
straight loss for the Cubs
Sonny Jackson of the Braves
tr1pied m the !Je-breakmg run
lh the etghth and scored on a
sacnf1ce fly by Ralph Garr
after Atlanta hed the score at
1-1 on a seventh-mnmg homer
by Orlando Cepeda Jtm Nash
ytelded seven Pirate htts m
scormg h1s f~rst v1ctory of the
season Dock Ell1s was the
loser
Rookte Roger Freed, acqutred
from the Onoles durmg the
wmter. h1t reliever How1e
Reed's first p1tch for a fl!thmmng grand slam homer and
drove 1n another run for the
Phllhes. Barry Lersch ptcked
up the VIctory w1th the rehef
help of Darrell Brandon Ron

Student

Winner

Amencan League

Ball
Ciev
Washmg
New York
Delro1l
Boston
MIIW

Ch1cago

East
W L Pel GB
4 I .800
3 I 150 'h
3 3 500 1'12

2 3 4002
234002
I 3 250 2112
West
W L. Pel GB
3 I 150
3 2 600

'h

600 '12
Kansas C1 ty
335001
Oak
2 4 .333 2
Calif
1 4 200 21h
Sunday's Results
NY 1 Wash 0 (1st)
Wash 4 N Y 3 (2nd)
Del 5 Bait 4 (1st) 11 1nn)
Ball 9 Detroli 3 (2nd)
Kansas C1ty 10 Oak 5
Clev 7 Boston 2
Monn 6 Choc 0
Molw 3 Cai&gt;f 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
(Atl T1mes EST I
Oilkland !Fmgers 0-01 at
Milwaukee (Krausse 0 I I 2 30
pm
Boston (Culp 1 0) at Washmg
lon (Janeskl 0 0 or Grzenda 0
0). 7 30 p m
Californoa (May 0 O) al
Ch&gt;cago (Wood 0 01. 2 15 p.m
Mmnesola (Blyeven 1 0) at
Kansas Cily (Drago I O). 8 30
pm
(Only games scheduled)
.Tuesday's Games
Mmn

3

2

Mmnesota at Kansa s C1ty n1ght

Qak al Milwaukee

P. J. Pauley

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY ~

Pro Standings

NH L Stand1ngs
Balllmore at Cleveland twilight By Un1ted Pres$ lnternaliona t
Quarterfmals-Best of Seven)
Boston at Washmglon noghl
East
Detrool at New York
Setres A
W L. GF Ga
Boston
2 2 14 13
Montreat
2 2 13 14

Callforn1a at Ch1cago

Coody's 279

Tops Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI)-Charhe Coody, who got the Masters
Champwnshtp, ·a new green
coat for the Easter Parade, and
"revenge" all 10 the same
package, jomed wtth the
disappointed man he defeated,
Jack Nicklaus, today to offer
the duffers of Am~nca a
strange bit of advice :
"If you want to play
championship golf- be nervous
"I never got over my !1rst-tee
jitters all day, and 11 helped
me," satd the new champton
from Abilene, Tex. "It helped
me to keep concentrating and
keep thinking apout gettmg
done the thmgs I had to get
done."
"l was just too darned
relaxed,'' said -the crestfallen
Ntcklaus, who saw his hopes for
golf's first pro grand slam go
down the dram as be and young
John Mtller tied for second
place, two strokes behind
Coody's winmng nine-under-par
score of 279 for 72 holes,
"I birdied the ftrst hole and I
tho~ght, 'Ah, now everythmg IS
gmng according to pian,"' said
Nicklaus "It never did. But all
the lime I kept thinking that It
was going to-I kept feeling
sure that aoon everyth10g would
start
for me, that l
would
and I' would

Graduate

2 ROMANIANS WIN
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
(UPI)- Ihe Nastase and fellow
Romanian Jon T1riac won the
Monte Carlo Open Men's
Doubles Tennis title Sunday,
Senes B
defeatmg
Tom Okker of HolW. L. GF GA
Toronto
2 2 13 11 land and Bnta10's Roger
New York
2 2 11 13 Taylor, 1-6, 6-3, 6-3, 8-6
West

AUTO
FIRE-LIFE
HEALTH
MUTUAL FUNDS

~I NATIONWIOE

~.J!~~.~~~~~~

Series C

x Ch•cago

Ph&gt;l

W. L. GF GA
4 0 20 8
0 4 8 20

Setres 0

W. L. GF GA
wm the tournament It hap- ~t Loui s
2 2 10 7
Mmnesota
2 2 1 10
pened, but the oppostte way.
x-CIInched
Seroes
"Yes, I was overconfident,"
Sunday's results
confessed NJCklaus, who alrea- Boslon 5 Montreal 2
dy won the PGA Champ1onsh1p Ch1cago 6 Philadelphia 2
New York 4 Toronto 2
th1s year and was aumng at a M1
nnesota 2 St LOUI S 1
"slam" mcludmg the Masters
Monday's Games
and US, and Bntish Opens
(No
games
~c hedut ed )
"Not unlll I heard Coody had
parred, did I reahze I wasn't
gomg to wm "
WETHERBEE WINS RACE
The 33-year-old Coody fired a ATHENS, Ohw (UP!)
!1\0·under-par 70, after startmg George Wetherbee won the
the day lied w1th Ntcklaus for fourth annual Athens Marathon
the lead. Nicklaus had a par 72 Sunday, runmng the 26-mae
and the 23-year-old Mtller of dtstance m two hours, 34
Napa, Calif., shot a stunmng 68. minutes, 6 3 seconds WetherMiller actually held the lead bee 1s a graduate student at the
after 15 holes, standmg mne• Umvers1ty of Akron
under-par. But he bogeyed the
16th and 18th
- - - - -Coody knows bow that fells, m 1969 and blew 11 by bogeying
all nghl-untii h1s trmmph the last three holes
Sunday ~e was known m It was "revenge" that Coody
Masters history as the man mentiOned the first thmg m bts
who had the title..in hts hands hour of trmmph .

MONEY PROBLEMS.? ,.:
... not any more !

PHONE 992-2171

· 125 E. MAIN
POMEROY OHIO
I

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�•

•

.

2-1be Daily.Sentinei,Mlddleport-Ponleroy, 0 ., April 12, 11171

1

EAST
IOS3

" Why are we so scared of our kids?" asks Fred B
Lifton a member of the board of education of Niles Township Commumty High School m Skokte, Ill
Granted that student activism can' be troublesome at
t•mes, he writes m the Amertcan School Board Journal
Nevertheless , we seem to be overly reluctant to gtve
,, • students opportumlles to exercise the new freedoms and
. .•:. responsibilities we so ghby discuss m the abstract.
Take student dress, or undress, he says
.
It would be folly to try to compute the number of man·
hours devoted by board members and admmtstrators
to defming acceptable dress codes How much of that
' ' big block of time taken up by " the battle of the thigh,''
,;.· · for example, 1s necessary-to assure quality educatwn•
Why not simply perm1t students to set the•r own stand"·
ards? he suggests. It's been done in some schools, and
, : · the kids have often come up with more restrictive codes
than administrators had in mmd. At least, they will be
.·-: more responsible to their own code than one set by adults
Girls attending class in slacks, after all, Will not cause
serious harm to education, says Lifton So long as the
teacher can do his job in the classroom, no reason ex1sts
for school boards and administrators to devote their
•· · limited energies to playinj: wardrobe mistress.
•' · All of. which is true, but all of which may not be all
.. ·· the truth.
Permissive codes, whether regarding dress or any·
thing else, proceed on the assumption that all kids know
"''. all the time what they want or what they should do, that
. ,•. a child's judgment is oo a par with that of experienced
• ~ults
•
"' ·· Permissivism forgets that many youngsters want and
· · need rules and standards of behaviOr, and that some of
, · them would rather be g1ven thos~ standards by adults
,1; · than be dictated to by ihe leaders or trend-setters among
tbetr peers.
·. ·. Granted that a gtrl's slacks or a boy's flowmg locks
and ragged jeans may have nothmg to do w1th thetr abll·
; .. ' tty to construct a sentence out of English. Might there
not be a more subtle Interference w1th education-educatiOn In the broadest sense?
"Dressing up" is a sign of respect, for oneself as well
.. • as others. If school or teachers or classmates don't de·
., .· serve respect, maybe nothing else does either

• K

¥6

+ K65

... KJ872

North-South vulnerable
Wed North East South

Pass

Openmg

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---;.• u;;;;=:;:

tc) 1971· ., NI'A,

Joe.~

"Her, A~. I tbllf'' til de ,_, IHid ,.., recoiled!"

'''
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~'/.

w.

~!
%

ATLANTA (UPI)- Tbe sputtering Big Red Machine, win·
less since the 1971 season began
a week ago, faced of! today
against th6 AUanta Braves who
started the defending National
League champions? year off so
miserably.
Jim McGlothlin (~I) was to
fa.ce Ron Reed (!~) on the
mound here today. The Braves
beat the Reds twice last week
and Cincinnati's luck was no

A nation mu$t be capable
of tenactous solitude.
-' Foretgn Mtmster
Evan of /~rael.

Abba

Priests no longer want to
be a certain caste apart from
people

-The Rev. Frank Bonmke,
pres1dent of the N atwnal
Fed e rat 10 n of Pnests'
Councils, after its adOption
of a resolution askmg that
prtests be given a choice
of marnage or celibacy.

- Black leader Stokeley Carmtchael.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Nate Colbert 1s only one of
three reasons why the San
Diego Padres are flexing
unpresstve muscles m thetr
third year as an expansion
team.
At tlle moment, however, the
6-!oot, 2-mch, 210-pound first
baseman is the hottest hitter in
the Naltonal League and one of
baseball's most under-publi·
cized sluggers.
Colbert drove in SIX runs with
two homers and an infield out
to lead the Padres to a 9-7
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers Sunday and now has
f1ve homers and 14 runs batted
m after six games. The Padres
are 3-3 after their stx games
and feel they are far ahead of

Science is, perhaps, some
kind of cosmiC apple juice
from the Garden of Eden.
Those who drink of It )ire
doomed to carry the burden
of oflginal sin.

-LeWIS M Branscomb, direc·
tor of the Natwnal Bureau
of Standards, on growmg
popular susp1c1on of technolo~

Moses traveled 40 years in
the desert and picked the
only country in the Middle
East with no oil. ·
-Y1tzhak Rabin, lsraeh am·
bassador to the United
States

I

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Not long ago I listened to a couple of dozen mature
college students talk about the problems of the day They
were friendly, inqumng, alert-but astomshmgly shallow
m thetr perceptions of reahty
Though one or two were of the total antihero, antlpohtlcs vanety, most seemed anxwus to fmd a candtdate they
could support for the prestdency m 1972 Their bent, of
course, was toward the DemocratiC party But they complamed that, wtth the exception of Sen Henry M Jackson's dtvergence on war and the SST, the presently vtsible
choices were "all the same on the tssues "
They dtd not appear to be faulimg the "let's set a daie
and get out soon" posture of most Democratic candidates
toward the V1enam war What several asked was
" When they all share thts vtew, how do we choose
among them?"
They were talkmg, of course, about Sens Edmund Muskte , Edward Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey, George McGovern, Harold Hughes and Btrch Bayh.
If I was hearing right, they were saymg that the only
thmg they had to go by was the verbal or wntten utterance of these men on the tssues
Whatever became of the 1dea that when we choose a
president, we are wetghmg not merely h1s prociatmed
vtews , but hts record of performance, his character, h1s
capacity for judgment, h1s temperamental fttness for office and his potential for growth and change?
These matters never came up that day Faced wtth six
leading figures who were percetved to be saymg substantially the same things about the war. the students pro·
fessed absolute helplessness m dtscnmmatmg and selectmg
Indeed, they wanted assistance A few thought that the
candidates should aid them by domg s6methmg "admmts·
tratlve," by not only concetvmg but carrymg out a pro·

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

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

Voice along Broadway

[

RAQUEL WELCH FIGURES
OUT PROBLEMS
f
NEW YORK - Ingrid Bergman told David
Frost in London she wouldn't have missed
marrying Ro~llbii ''for the world"; but of her
three husbands, incumbent Lars Schmidt "1s the
only one who understands me" .... The news
from Raquel Welch that she and husband Pat
CUrlls have marital "problems" was no surprise
to everyone who saw Pat and his secretary (10
hot pants) doing the Madrid spoil! .... Ruby
Keeler is going to the resuscitated Liberty
Magazine's "Nostalgia" bash at the Rainbow
Room April 20 mostly for a reunion wttb old
H'wood pal Alice Faye .... Alice will be Liberty's
"Film Star to Remember."
Katharine Hepburn tossed a btg "Coco"
touring-cast party at Niagara Falls which
ranged from all 50 gueslll garbed in oilskins for a
traipse through the Cave of the Winds under the
' falls to a dlruler high above, with a picturewindowed falls view from atop a nearby hotel ....
Ginger Rogers is fed up with H'wood explaining
,her new city of Paris love; Barbara Stanwyck
feelsthe$8IIleway,Gingersald,andhassoldher
Beverly Hills mansion .... Former wellerwetgbt
champ Emile Griffith said at the VIP he gave 13
rounds to Frazier vs. Muhammad Ali; Emile's a
better fighter than ring judge.
DorothyColllnadldaCinderellaescapefrom
the Rainbow Room at midnight after 'her
triumph In "Follies"- to meet her paren~ (up
frOm Florida) for a q'lleter celebration at the
Plaza .... What e:qM!I'lence has Marlon Brando
for being "1be Godfather"? Former Scripps·
Howard columnist Frank Farrell has been a
~~ 24 t1mea - includiJ1i Pamela Howard,
publllberJackHoward'•lprlc;nowaN. Y. Poat
J~l .... Which expl•lned the greeUng and
bJc Plm gave Jraldlat Jttfl!ea wben they met.
'lblllp P'Uid aet lplcl.- at the ~ntagon:
Sec. ol Delelllt Laird ubcl Dldt Conloo of

IPidll ,llllllllrd ....

Nallllll'l

j
I

BY JACKO 'BRIAN

o.l!alber'a

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

the taxi bosses are screaming "foul!" .... This is
the same greedy gang that foisted the 50 per cent
cab!are hike on the N. Y. public and has come to
rue till cynical coup; the eliJifeSS justifies itself If
only on the basis of ecological improvement ....
Let's also put in a small word for the airline
industry ..!whose planes in all account for lesa
than Ill. per cent of the nation's pollution ....
Motor cars pollute most, so the fewer cabs, the
healthier populace.
Ginger Rogers looked so great on the Dick
cavett show that our phone jangled with
questions about her age: "Who's Who In the
Tbeatre" says she'll be 60 this Jaly; looks
decades younger .... Joan (Mrs. Teddy) Ken·
nedy's consistently far-out costumes for White
House, visi1S convmce capital • watchers they
are carefully planned as political disdain for the
Incumbents she'd love to unseat .... New
recording a cinch for success, Tin Pan Alley
insists: "The Ballad of Lieut. Calley'' ....
Remember the recording of "The Death of Floyd
Collina"? You do? You're old! •
SjleUa Sloan, the RingUng Bros. cirCUli gal
stiltwalker who fell 30 feet from her ambulatory
perch opening nlgllt at Madison sQuare Garden,
didn't just bllflt one arm, but two: And her
tradillonally superstlUous circwJ co..wtrkers are
watching for the old equation of disasters-ln.
threes .... Last year three ligen met the threefal.e and Mt long before~ elephants.
Madison ,Square Gai'den's profit on the
Frazler·All fight: $800,000 .... The flgbters never
even tried to arrange postponed paymentfor tax
avoidance, and All is expected to be In the
saddest fiscal shape .... Mal Kllle tella ua Joe
Louis' top ca~ pune n• PGO,OOO, for the
~nd Billy Conn fight- and ten da,a later Joe
asked for and cot a f21,000 advuee from
Jl'Omoter Mike Jacoba .... Old Jacobi Beach
insiders ln,illt 11111 solf-huaUIJW llua,ie taught
lhe Bro1lll Jlomber bow to JII*Y ''iGIIDg golf" ....
Mal a11o lelia • Glrd4n pna ap~~t Jolll
C!lld!ll had a pwl llptlllartechcbeme to bave

....

..~'1111

C nJ)yrll{ht ® l'lil,

NewHPRih' r Bntennle.e

~~~~~~~~~~the~J~oln.t~'s_MID~~mmwt~~AII~·~"~"";.a~lOi~be~tH~Diuildgrun~f~or~

NGw we'n partial, to i'l'elldelltll:"'l,batlt-lmNshedlftbellla$
IIIII.
'
"'""'"•• wllo
111at

to aend dol1l

In 1886, the Statue of Liberty was ded1cated as a
symbol of freedom, commemorating Franco-Amencan friendship The World
Almanac notes that the 225ton statue was created by
French sculptor ·Frederic
Bartholdt, who v1sual1zed
a colossal statue at !'lew
York harbor, welcoming
the peoples of the world
with the torch of hberty
Aa~tm

ON T\4EIR VACATION COS/I() At-ID FRAI.l

apparenUy got his signals
crossed.
Catcher Johnny Bench signal·
ed for a fast ball, but Granger
threw a curve tbet skipped
away and rolled to the screen
behind home plate. Donn Clendenon raced hom from third
with the run the Melli needed to
win 3-2.
Bobby Tolan, who won't see
action untll later m tbe season
because of an .injured Achilles

"

tendon, offered some comic re- pttcher, topm hun w1th hts thlfd
loss of the season.
lief to lift the gloom.
On Saturday Granger un"We'll wm one by the All:Star leashed his wild pitch with two
game;" he consoled his out and two strikes on Grote.
Sore arm pitchers Jerry
teliinmates. "Don't worry ' L
Sunday's game was a pitch- Koosman of the Mets and Gary
er's battle as the Mets' Tom Nolan of the Reds had battled
Seaver burled nine innings, but through the first etght mnmgs
denied any runs although the with the score tied 2-2
bases were loaded twtcl,.
Nolan, who had shoulder trouThe Mets, however, finally
got to Granger, the Reds' fourth ble two years ago, pttched the

.

"We think Colbert 1s acqwring the stamp of a hom~ run
httter," says Manager Preston
Gomez. "If he can cut 20
strikeouts off his 1970 total of
150 he can btl 45 to 48 homers

Colbert homered wtth two on
after Tommy Dean walked and
Gaston smgled m the ftrst
mmng and connected agam
after Gaston walked m the
third. Both shots were off Don
Sutton and went deep mto the
left field stands Tommy
Phoebus, acqwred from the
Baltimore Orwles m a wtnter
trade, went five inmngs for h1s
ftrst NL VICtory.
The loss was the fourth m s1x
games for the Dodgers, ptcked
by most experts to wm the
National League's Western
Division Title.
Jerry Grote led off the
bottom of the 11th inning wtth a
homer off Wayne Granger to
gtve Met reliever Tug McGraw
hts ftrst wm of the year Tom
Seaver allowed f1ve h1ts and
struck out 10 10 mne mmngs
before g1vmg way to McGraw,
whose medwcre work out of the
bullpen was constdered one of
the reasons for the Mets'
failure to wm the NL pennant
m 1970. The loss was the fourth
Walks to Ken Harrelson and m a row for the Reds, who
Ted Ford accounted for another
run, Eddie Leon smgled in
another and rookie Gomer
Hoo6 e doubled for the ft!th run
of the inning
The hit was the fourth 10 as
many maJor league at-bats for
Hodge and his fourth run batted
10.
lnterna!Jonal
Foster was bothered by By Umted Press
East
wildness in h1s ftrst AL start,
W. L. Pel. GB
3 I 15U
walking mne batters, but NY
P1tt
3 2 .600 •;,
Cleveland Manager Alvm Dark Phil
225001
IS suffiCiently Impressed.
Sl Louis
2 3 400 1'12
243332
"His kid knows how to pttch," Chocago
1 3 250 2'12
said Dark, ."and I'm .npt Montreal
West
wlirried about hil)l 1He'll do the
W L. Pet. GB
job and I thmk he'll do 11 much Atlanta
4 I BOO
5 2 714
better than I had hoped he Houston
San Fran
4 2 667 'h
would."
San Doego
3 3 500 1'12
In other American League Los Ang
2 4 333 2'12
0 4 000 3112
action, Baltunore beat Detrott Cm
Sunday's Results
9-3 after losing the doublehead· Sf Louis 4 San Fran 2 (1st)
er opener $-4, Washmgton San Fran 1 St Lou1s 2 (2nd)
mpped New York after bowtng Phil 11 Mont 4
San D&gt;ego 9 Los Ang 7
1..0 m the f1rst game, Milwauk- Houston
7 Ch1cago 4
ee blanked Cali!orma 3-0, Allanla 3 Pitt. 1
Kansas City rtpped oakland 10- NY 1 Cin 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
5 and Minnesota shut out
(All Times EST)
Chicago 6-0.
Houston (Btasmgame 1 0) Sl
In the National League, LouiS (Carollan 1-0) 9 p m
(McGlothlin 0-1),
Atlanta downed Pittsburgh 3-1, at Cmc1nnat1
Atlanta (Reed 1-0) B p m ,
San Franctsco beat St. Lows 7·2
Ch1cago (Holtzman 0-1 I at
losmg the opener 4--2, New York Los Angeles (Vance 0-01 II p m
edged Clncmnatl I~ in II San D1ego (K1rby 0 l) al San
(Perry 1 0) , 4 p.m
innings, Houston wh1pped Clu- Francisco
P1tlsburgh (Johnson 0 0) at
cago 7-4, San Diego defeated Philadelphia (Wise o 01. 1 30
Los Angeles 9-7 and Philadel- p.m.
h d d)
.
, (Only games sc e u1e
1
ph1a trounced Montrea 11-4.
Tuesday's Games
Dave McNally pttched a Pllt al Phil (n~ghil
seven-hitter for hts second Houston at St LouiS
.
Cm al Altanta (n1ghll
VICtory of the season to lead Ch1cago at LA (noght)
the Orioles to theJr second San D&gt;ego at San Fran (noghil
game deciSion after Bill Free· N Y al Montreal
han's llth-inmng homer gave
Detroit the triwnph in the

and be one of the game's
outstandmg sluggers."
The Melll nipped the Cincmnall Reds, 1~, m II innings, the
Houston Astros beat the Chicago Cubs, 7-4, the Atlanta
Braves topped the Pittsburgh
Pirates, 3·1, the Phtladelphla
Phill1es whipped the Montreal
Expos, 11-4, and the San
Franctsco Gtants downed the
St. Louis Cardinals, 7-2, after a
4--2 loss, m other National
League games
In the American League, 1!
was Detrmt 5 Baltimore 4 10 II
mmngs and Baltimore 9 Detro1t
3, New York 1 Washington 0
and Washington 4 New York 3,
Cleveland 7 Boston 2, Milwaukee 3 C&amp;liforma 0, Minnesota 6
Clucago 0 and Kansas City 10
Oakland 5.

Foster Hurls 3-Hitter
\
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
A change of scenery finally
seems to be bringmg out the
best m Alan Foster.
Foster, billed for nearly f1ve
years as the second commg of
Sandy Kou!ax, never qwte
made it wtth the Los Angeles
Dodgers, compiling a 14--24
record m three seasons.
The Dodgers peddled Foster
to Cle.veland during the off.
season and Foster made his

Dear Helen :
How do you put down a stupid know~t.all• This guy is dumb.
But he thinks he is an authonty on everything. No matter what
you start discussing, he has "the solution" and it's not only wrong
but so prejudiced and hateful that you can't just ignore him. He's
dsngerous, too, for the loud ones get heard, and sometimes
believed.
He was the one who tr1ed to get our block organized against a
new white famlly that had an adopted black baby. He started all
kinds of rumors, none true, as I proved, but these really great
people were made miserable for a while.
I wish there was a law against verbal littering! How do you
neutralize a btg mouth? - M.A.D.
Dear M.:
... When he starts,"Uiiterating In public places" show up his
tgnorance with pointed questions -and a gentle needle · great for
sewing up big mouths. - H.
'
Dear Helen:
We don't have a place to put our fireplace wood under locks,
so we stack It out In back.
Each night when we come home from work, our wood pile has
dwindled.
We don't point fingers, but our neighbor's chimney belcbes
smoke, and he hasn't bought wood all winter.
To catch the thief, would It be all right to bore boles In a few
top chunks of wood, insert small firecrackers or maybe pouches
of sulplntr? An explosion or a house full of fumes would at least
discourage him. - BURNED UP
Dear Burned:
Definitely not!
Firecrackers exploding under pressure are dangerous, and
sulphur fumes might almost stifle small children or animals.
Even though you could prove theft, you might have a big law suit
on your hands.
... And what if you used the wrong piece of wood In your own
fireplace?
Better to alert your friendly neighborhood policeman - and
let your neighbor know about it. - H. •
Dear Helen:
A recent letter m your column reminded me of my own
''Wonderful, strong, handsome husband" who "isn't normal." He
too has sky-dived, but be prefers mountain climbing or shoo\ing
rapids in a kayak.
No, my husband isn't normal. He's something very special,
notaparasitewhoissatisfiedwithwatching life via TV. Bob must
experience the pain, the hardship and the exhilaration for himself, and I am proud of him.
I'm afraid this worried writer is In for much heartache. Sbe
has a lion on her hands whereas all she wanted was a big, cozy,
overweight hamster. Surely she knew she was marrying a sports
nut. If she tries to change him now she will either amother him,
drive him crazy, or away. My advice toherla :
I. Accept what your husband does and try to Wlderstand wn~
be enjoys II. I am neither strong nor brave enough to cllmb
mountains, buticanseewhy HE Ukes to.
2. Do NOT make him feel guilty. He'll begin to resent YOU.
3. Listen with interest as he relates his adventures.
·
4. Pray you will live as loog as be does, though he may be
healthier, having enjoyed a fuller life.
5. Love him now and always for the man he Ia, and not as a
reflection of what you wish he were.- KAREN

Hatlo's

such previous expanaton teams
as the New York Mets and
Houston Astros in development
toward pennant contention.
In addlllon to Colbert, the
sluggers the Padres are countmg upon to make them
contenders are Ollie Brown and
Clarence Gaston, drafted by
club Prestdent E.J Bavasi
along with Nate in the 1968
draft which formed the club.
The trio combined for a total of
90 homers m 1970 -three more
than wen hit by the whole
Dodger team

I

VERBAL LITTERING IS
HIS PROBLEM

gram or two, to demonstrate the genuineness of their
tssue pos11lons (Ail of the candtdates m question are
)egtslators who do not ordinarily get admtmstratlve opportumt•es )
Mmd you, now These young people were not cymcal.
They were not shoutmg "A plague on poilllcs" but were
searchmg for someone to rally around Yet they were
totally lackmg m zeal for the quest.
They were abd1catmg the responsibility they carry as
Citizens They were looking at Musk1e, Kennedy, Me·
Govern, et a! as 1! they had blank faces with tssue cards
pasted over them, as 1f these men were all spiritless bearers of a common written message-and nothing more.
As a matter of fact, the six candidates do not even speak
the same way about the war, even though they do come
together on some key pomts
Is 11 really Impossible to JUdge among these men unless
they ail run · out and start little proJects to prove they
mean what they say?
What IS the Democratic process of selecbon all about, if
not wetghmg tM candidates' observable quallhes of mmd,
thelf degree of emotional balance, their record of per·
formance, past and present?
Admtttedly, choosmg can be dtfftcult. But democracy
was not des1gned to be easy work.
Whtch brmgs us to another pomt Underlying not just
the1r athtudes toward candidate chmce but many other
matters was a strange weanness. The new vogue word,
"despair," did not apply What these young people lacked
was a taste for the hard challenges of life By their own
testimony, .they are easily crushed by defeat They do not
talk of rtsmg to ftght another day.
They want assurances of swtft, total triumph. They want
to beheve m something and someone. But they don't want
to have to dig They want 1t all out on the sleeve to be
taken m at a glance.

better in two weekend games in
New York.
For reliever Wayne Granger
Sunday was Uke a recurring
nightmare -which had Its first
showing the day before.
Jerry Grote of the Meta hit
Granger's first pitch of the 11th
inning Sunday for the homer
that defeated the Rem 1.0. On
Saturday Granger had an ~2
count on Grote with the bases
loaded in the 11th -when he

, first eight for the Reds, allowing
six hill!, strtking out two and
walking one
The Reds' first run was unearned when Pete Rose lengthened Tony Perez' double by
vtrtue of catcher Grote's droppmg the ball at the plate.

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.-.r the Sports Desk
h~' f:het Tannehill
-·
-.-...-..-._...-..-. .._.. _
............_._

---·---- ·-·--~-·

.-

When do you push the panic button •
Berme carbo homered m the
Perhaps that 1s the substance o! a question Sparky Anderson,
seventh for thetr second run. second-year p1lot of the Cincmnati Reds IS asking himself,
because the Reds yesterday 10 losing 1..0 m II innings to the Mets
equalled thetr longest losing strmg of 1970 before getting out of the
starting gate.
Don't look for anythmg serwus to happen to Sparky's
managertal career until Bob Howsam, executive vice-prestdent
and general manager, calls Sparky in to tell him he has been
gwen a vote of confidence
That, based on experience of other managers, IS when Sparky
Swoboda , the former Met,
tripled m a run durmg a three- better look for some place to land.
If thts IS an overly-gloomy assessment of what has been
run etghth-mnmg upnsmg by
happemng to the Reds m this still brand new baseball season, 11 IS
the Expos.
Power-pttchmg was the name the tradttional response of the fatr weather baseball fan
On the other hand, the true Reds fan points out that there ts
of the game m St Louts, w1th
Bob G1bson dmng the honors little wrong with the club that Bobby Tolan and the Btg Bopper
for the Ca1 dmals m the first won't cure when they return. Lee May (the Bopper) IS due back m
game and Juan Mancha! a week; Tolan no later than the end of May, berring unforeseen
returnmg the comphment for acc1den1S, and perhaps much sooner as a pmchhitter
the (itants m the second game
Gtbson, who hasn't lost to the
THE MARAUDER baseball team goes to Athens tomorrow
Gtants smce Sept 17, 1968, beat for a "big one." ThiS one they really need if they are to stay in the
them for the s1xth straight lime thtck of the battle for the northern divtsion t1tle. Havmg lost their
w1U1 a slx-httter The vtclory conference opener to Logan (7-4 ) m a downpour of errors, they
was h1s first of the season and evened the record at Wellston, and now meet the Bulldogs who are
191st of Ius career Mancha!, cormng out for the1r last season under veteran coach Ed Rannow
stdehncd w1lh a freak atlment a
(retirmg) .
year ago, came back m the
Rannow's boys are 4..:lon tbe season,losmg 3·2 to Logan and a
second ~ a rn e wtth a sevendoubleheader
to Lancaster on openmg day They took two from
httter to rmse h1s 1971 record to
Parkersburg B1g Reds this past weekend, and earher had cltpped
Z-0 Joe Torre htt hts thtrd
homer for the Cardmais m the Wellston~ Bulldog pitching this year is young and inexperl!!nced.
second game
Furthermore, Mike Greene, junior rtghthander, injured a leg last
week and ts not expected to ~e ready Mter Greene, the pitchers
are lefty Steve Inbody and righty Don Wood, both sophomores .
Inbody started against Logan and was shelled off the mouiKI the
first mning Mark Bridgewater, an upperclassman, and r~gular
flfstsacker, has pttched in brtefrelief, and other soph pitchers are
Mtke Handley and Jon Kosllval
The Marauders can win this one, then by taking Logan in thelf
return match , be m the thick of the race
Metgs Coach Ed Bartels will have all three of hts semor pitchers ready. RICk Van Maire p1tched seven mnmgs last Thursday
ATHENS, Ohto (UP!) - agamst Vmton. Tim Demoskey, the lefthander, should be well·
George Wetherbee, a graduate rested after his I -bitter agamst Wellston of last Tuesday. And led
student at the Umvers1ty of Wtll, righthander, also is ready. Will pitched last MondBy,
Akron , was crowned w1th a defeating Pt Pleasant.
laurel wreath from Greece after wmmng the fourth annual Z6
A U S passport IS valid for
NBA Playofl Standings
mtle marathon Sunday.
By Un~!ed Press International three years It may be re·
DIVISIOn Finals
Wetherbee covered the 26
newed to be valtd for \he
Best of Seven
mties from Coo!Yiile to the
remamde~ of the five-year
East
Ohw Umvers1ty football stadmm
W. L. Pet . penod from the ongmal date
'
10 2 hours, 34 mmutes, 6 3 sec- New York
2 1 667 of issue.
Balllmore
· 1 2 333
onds.
Wesf ~1 '
•
A record 71 men entered the
fW. L. Pet.
race , run over the hllly and Molwaukee
' 2 0 1 000
0 2 .000
curvy roads of southern Ohto Los Angeles
Sunday's
flesutts
Ftfty men fmtshed
Milwaukee 91 Los Angeles 73
Douglas Scorrar, a nallve of Ballomore 114 New York BS
Monday's Games
New Zealand and a graduate
(No
games
scheduled I
student at Ohto State, fm1shed
second m 2 hours, 35 mmutes,
Playoff Standings
II seconds. Thtrd was Carl Hat- By AHL
Un1ted Press lnternattonal
field of Parkersburg, W Va., in
(Quarferflna ts I
( Best of Seven I
2 hours, 38 minutes, 27 seconds.
Series A
The team title, awarded to
W L
the orgamzallon havmg three Prov
2 1
I 2
runners ftmshmg htghest, went Bal
Senes B
to Kent State Umvers1ty, led by
(Best of Five)
Harvey Fa hi who came in fourth .
W. L.
Other ftmshers from KSU were Spring
2 0
0 2
Scott Weber and Robert Mintz. Mont
Senes C
The oldest runner was Clatr
(Best of Five)
Duckham, 64, Dayton. who has
W. L.
•
2 1
competed and fmished in all Cleveland
Hershey
I 2
four marathons
Sunday's Result
Prov 6 Baltimore S
'
Monday's Game
Phone
992-23lH
Spnngfletd at Montreal

Padres Surprise In NL 's First Week

The maJor preoccupation
of a revolutionary is butld·
ing, with creating, not to
destroy.

!Helen Help Us!
l
I

Politics Without Challenge

• ,r,

.."'~·~·'

,,•

~

t]

By Helen Bottel

·: Extra Vitamins
: ·often Helpful

"

TIMELY
QUOTES

.---------------------------1

What Youth Wants •••

...

BERRf'S WORlD
•

4¥

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Jim "Here IS a good hand
for second-hand low South
c o u 1d n't watt to put the
queen of dtamonds on West's
Jack and hts ace on East's
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
kmg,."
Oswald. " If South had
used a transfer btd to get
St·.nJe~+
the four-heart play mto the
The b1dding has been
North hand there would have
W&lt;st
North East South
been no trouble winning
?
game and rubber Or 1f South
You, South, hold
had s1mply played low from .AKQJH
¥KJ32 +65 "'2
dummy as he should have,
What do you bid?
everythtng woUld have
one spade. There arc
worked out nicely Even tooA-Bid
many slam possibilities for
after playmg the queen of a preemptive opening
dtamonds, South could have
made 10 tncks if he had let
East hold the first trick "
Jun· ''I'll show the play
after lettmg East hold that

BRUCE BIOSSAt

··.Especially with Poor Diet

r•

p~,

Pass
lead- + J

first trick East's best return
1s a dtamond South must go
up with the ace, enter dum·
my w1th a trump, ruff a club,
enler dummy w1th a second
trump, ruff a second club, go
to dummy w1th an o t h e r
trump, ruff out dummy's last
~lub and fmally throw West
10 w1th a d1~mond "
Oswald "West's best lead
Will be a spade If he leads
low, South must s\lck 10
dummy's mne If he leads
the Jack, South must cover
wtth dummy's queen "
J1m "Etther way . East 1s
end-piayeJ and forced to
g,ve South the rest of the
trtcks "
,
Oswald "! menttoned
transfer btds earher Actually, this South hand 1s not
one that really cnes out for
us~ of a transfer btd smce
sometimes 1t IS better to
keep the really unbalanced
hand concealed "

•¥c RRD

.'

and fru1t m tbetr diet, it is
possible to develop v1tam10
deficiencies
Some older people. particularly those who llve alone,
are aft to have deficient
diets know a lot of money
ts waste~ on excess vitamins
which tlieoretically shouldn't
be necessary, but m fact,
often are. Finally, I can't
criticize succ~ss , If vitamins
have done that much for you,
go ahead
Dear Dr. Lamb- Would It
hurt my father (age 58) if he
takes Vitamin E and B-complex with liver and Iron,
along with nerve pills, high
blood pressure pills, and Blif·
Jerin for arthritis? He drinks
quite a b1t on Saturdays I
don't thmk he Is drunk, It is
probably the effect of nerve
pills and beer and whisky
combined What if he also
takes Vitamin C, along with
E and B-complex? I worry
about him
Dear Reader - I can't say
as I blame you for worrying
about Y.our father The vita·
mm ptlls are probably the
least of hts dtf!ICultles Alcohol and certain "nerve piUs"
do not m1x well. I don't know
what kind of medicine he is
taking, but It seems to me
that this should be discussed
with your doctor I have in
mind the interaction which
occurs between two drugs.
Many famous person who
has taken sleeping pills and
alcohol bas not lived to talk
about It
In a half-way adequate
diet, there 1s usually suffici·
ent Vitamm E since it is
abundant in many food sub·
stances I prefer that people
do not drmk too much alco·
hoi, but for those who do,
Vitam10 B-complex may be
helpful Th1s is particularly
true of the person who drinks
too much alcohol and neglects his food intake.

IN.T
Pass

.'
!.

First TriGk Can Be :· Costly

Why Permissive
Dress Codes Fail

·• By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
.' · Dear Dr. Lamb - I don't
, know what your opinion Is on
•:laking yltamins. Several doctors nave told me no, but I
started taking Vltamm B.·· tomplex with 1ron and liver
~: Before the vitamins, I bad
:-· terrible headaches, cramps
.:., i)efore and after periods, de·
::'· pression, head and body Itch·
mg 1 J was tired all the time,
craoby and lifeless. After I
started taking vltamm pills ,
l didn't have any of these
problems and have a lot
more zip. I am not saying
this Is the right vitamin for
everybody, but aren't vita·
mins really good for some
• people? I am only 37 and
~ they' have helped me a lot.
'•
Dear Reader - I am not
~ opposed to vitamins, clearly
~: they may even be !lie-saving
' m individuals who need
~ them . Many people died of
;::::, scurvy before Vitamin C was
.. atscovered This was a real
:.,, health hazard m military
.~ camppigns and for sailors A
"'· deflctency of thtamme (Vita·
:::. min B-complex group) can
~ 1·ause a lar~e number of dis·
;:: turbances m the body, In·
~ eluding heart failure in som~
,.. people. Vltamm deflctencles
~ can also cause liver disease
::
Wlthm reasonable limits,
..; • the amount of extra vttamins
:: one mtght get from taking
:t;. vitamin tablets w1ll not cause
.,.,;any harm. The two vttamlns
..-..:•bleb can accumulate and
"'l:: cause illness 1! taken m ex~• .(lesslvely large doses, are
•• Vttamins A and D.
~ . · . Considering frequency of
~: an inadequate diet, v1tam10
:: supplements are probably
•: helpful for many people
: ; Theoretically, one shouldn't
"'· need to take vltam10s in adj: dillon to an adequate diet
Since people o f t e n eat
starches, greasy foods and
sugars wtthout enough of a
variety of fresh vegetables

,,

WIN AT BRIDGE

"Is This My Reflection?"

EDITORIALS
.

Reds

•:-:=--~~

,:::.:-::;::~~-

I

S- The Daily Sentinel, MlddlepofWomeroy, 0., April12, lt'/1

\

Amertcan League debut a
memorable one Sunday, allowmg only three htlll m his 8 1-3
mmngs and igniting a ftve..-un
etghth inning rally that carried
the Indians to a 7-2 victory over
the Boston Red Sox.
W1th the score lied at 2-2 10
the etghth, Foster doubled off
Gary Peters and Larry Brown
was hit by a pttch. Vada
Pinson's smgle scored Foster
wtth the go-ahead run and
Brown scored on an infield out.

Today's Sport Parade

Tolan Is Past
Critical Stage

Do It Every Time

'
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-l-IlT OTROS COllt.lTRY'· .. • OAAI-IGE
GIOP.IES RIGHT »&gt;D LEFT' · •

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By MILTON RICHAMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-'Bobby
Tolan stung the ball hard
• It took off on a blurred lme
for the right !teld corner where
1t hit the fence on one of those
qwck bounces, then caromed
craztly the other way toward
center fteld.
The ball would've been good
for two bases sure ... 1! th1s
wasn't battmg practice ... tf
Bobby Tolan could only run .
But Cincmnall's !me center
fielder hasn't been able to run
for the past three months, smce
last Jan. 6 to be exact when he
ruptured the Achilles tendon in
hts right leg playing basketball
wtth several of h1s Reds'
teammates.
Bobby Tolan underwent an
operation the next day and
everybody he meelll now
always starts off askmg the
same two questions.
"'How's the leg?' and •when
you gonna be back?"' Bobby
Tolan says, repeating the
questions and smiling to show
he apprectates people's concern
even though they've been
asking the same thinpnr three
months now.
"It's tough to answer those
quest1ons," Tolan says. "You
'don't know, you hope. Look at
Rico Carty. He was coming
along fine. You have to be hurt
yourself to appreciate what
someone else is going through.
I know' what J,ohnny Unitas IS
go10g through now. You gotta
sympathize with the guy. It's
gonna take a Iotta hard work
on his part. It did on my part
and l'ip younger."
Bobby Tolan is 25 and
Johnnny Unitas wtll be 38 next
month. Tolan can swing the bat
rtght now the same way he did
last season when all he did was
- hit .316, drive in 80 runs and
fimsh with 16 homers for the
Reds, but what he can't do is
steal 57 bases for them the way
be diHlast year.
All he can "o now is jog,
work hard and hOpe for the
best.
"Tjler;'s still a little pain,"
Tolan'says, "but it's the kind of
pam you can bear. Tbe doctor
said the crltlcal stage would be
the loth to the 12tb week, wben
I'd get very active and I could
the leDdCIII
'DIIa

my 14th week though. I'm
past my critical stage now."
Bobby Tolan may be but not
necessarily the Reds. Without
hun tliey simPly are not the
same ball club they were last
season offensively or defensive·
ly.
The Reds' front office had
warned Tolan againfit playing
basketball but he felt he had to
do someth10g to stay in good
condition.
"We had just moved from
Los Angeles to Cincinnati
where we bought a new home,"
Tolan says, "and if I had
stayed in Los Angeles I
would've been playing baseball
every day. In Cincinnati I
couldn 'I because of the weather
so I played basketball. Would I
ever do it again? I think so but
I don't know for sure. I don't
think It was foolish or stupid.
Most everybody on our ball
club played, too, and if 1t was
foolish or stupid why would
they do 1!?"
Bobby Tolan takes battmg
practice with the Reds every
day and hopes he'll be ready to
pinch bit for them in a month.
"The doctors told me the only
thing they can do is put the
tendon back together," be said.
How it works out after that
depends on how much work the
individual does. The work is
more boring than hard. What I
have to do now is develop a
calf muscle. I was 10 a cast two
months and there's no muscle
there.''
Tolan's spirits are good. He's
doing hts work every day and
listening to some advtce h1s
mother has gtven him.
"Be pallent and do what the
doctor said," she told him.
''You'll still be a good
ballplayer."
1
Some people !fon't realize how
good a ballplayer the lefthanded hitting Tolan is. He hit
.368 against lef~ed pitching
two years ago and .335 against
Southpaws last year. Wban
Sparky Anderson, the Reds'
manager, half;jdddingly asked
him "How come you hit lefthamders so gOod?" the other
day, Bobby TQlan didn't blink
an eye.
"I'm just a naturally good
hitter,'' be said.
He wasn 'I kidding either.
18

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open_e£.

.

Don Buford had three h1ts
and scored two runs in the
second game to highlight an II·
htt Baltunore attack. Dave
Johnson, Boog Powell and Andy
Etchebarren drove in two runs
each for the World Champion
Orwles.
Freehan 's homer in the
opener came after Baltunore
had rallied in the etghth and
ninth mnmgs to tie tlie game at
4-4.

Berme Allen's bases-loaded,
pmch-hit single tied the score
and Curt Blefary's error on the
hit allowed the winning run to
cross the plate as the Senators
earned a doubleheader split
wtth the Yankees.

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
tHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH.'

Coty Editor

Publl~hed

dally excepl
S.!!furday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St , Pomeroy , OhJO,
45769 Business Off1ce Phone
992 2156, Editorial Phone 992 -

2151

Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio
National advertising
representative
Bottrneiii Gallagher, Inc , 12 East .42nd
St, New York C1ty, New York
SubscriptiOn rates · De

livered by carrier where
available so cents per week,
8y Motor Route where carrier

service not available
month S175. By

m~111

Ont

In Ohio

and w Va .. Ont year su.oo
Six months S1 25 Three
months s• 50 Subscription
prlct Includes Sunday Times

Sentlntl

haven't won yet thts season
Cesar Cedeno, at 20 one of
the NL's bnghtest young
prospects, drove m three runs
w1th a tnple and a sacnflce fly
for the Astros Don Wilson
surVIved a three-run barrage m
the first mnmg and went the
dtstance for the victory . Bill
Hands suffered h1s second
straight loss for the Cubs
Sonny Jackson of the Braves
tr1pied m the !Je-breakmg run
lh the etghth and scored on a
sacnf1ce fly by Ralph Garr
after Atlanta hed the score at
1-1 on a seventh-mnmg homer
by Orlando Cepeda Jtm Nash
ytelded seven Pirate htts m
scormg h1s f~rst v1ctory of the
season Dock Ell1s was the
loser
Rookte Roger Freed, acqutred
from the Onoles durmg the
wmter. h1t reliever How1e
Reed's first p1tch for a fl!thmmng grand slam homer and
drove 1n another run for the
Phllhes. Barry Lersch ptcked
up the VIctory w1th the rehef
help of Darrell Brandon Ron

Student

Winner

Amencan League

Ball
Ciev
Washmg
New York
Delro1l
Boston
MIIW

Ch1cago

East
W L Pel GB
4 I .800
3 I 150 'h
3 3 500 1'12

2 3 4002
234002
I 3 250 2112
West
W L. Pel GB
3 I 150
3 2 600

'h

600 '12
Kansas C1 ty
335001
Oak
2 4 .333 2
Calif
1 4 200 21h
Sunday's Results
NY 1 Wash 0 (1st)
Wash 4 N Y 3 (2nd)
Del 5 Bait 4 (1st) 11 1nn)
Ball 9 Detroli 3 (2nd)
Kansas C1ty 10 Oak 5
Clev 7 Boston 2
Monn 6 Choc 0
Molw 3 Cai&gt;f 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
(Atl T1mes EST I
Oilkland !Fmgers 0-01 at
Milwaukee (Krausse 0 I I 2 30
pm
Boston (Culp 1 0) at Washmg
lon (Janeskl 0 0 or Grzenda 0
0). 7 30 p m
Californoa (May 0 O) al
Ch&gt;cago (Wood 0 01. 2 15 p.m
Mmnesola (Blyeven 1 0) at
Kansas Cily (Drago I O). 8 30
pm
(Only games scheduled)
.Tuesday's Games
Mmn

3

2

Mmnesota at Kansa s C1ty n1ght

Qak al Milwaukee

P. J. Pauley

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY ~

Pro Standings

NH L Stand1ngs
Balllmore at Cleveland twilight By Un1ted Pres$ lnternaliona t
Quarterfmals-Best of Seven)
Boston at Washmglon noghl
East
Detrool at New York
Setres A
W L. GF Ga
Boston
2 2 14 13
Montreat
2 2 13 14

Callforn1a at Ch1cago

Coody's 279

Tops Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI)-Charhe Coody, who got the Masters
Champwnshtp, ·a new green
coat for the Easter Parade, and
"revenge" all 10 the same
package, jomed wtth the
disappointed man he defeated,
Jack Nicklaus, today to offer
the duffers of Am~nca a
strange bit of advice :
"If you want to play
championship golf- be nervous
"I never got over my !1rst-tee
jitters all day, and 11 helped
me," satd the new champton
from Abilene, Tex. "It helped
me to keep concentrating and
keep thinking apout gettmg
done the thmgs I had to get
done."
"l was just too darned
relaxed,'' said -the crestfallen
Ntcklaus, who saw his hopes for
golf's first pro grand slam go
down the dram as be and young
John Mtller tied for second
place, two strokes behind
Coody's winmng nine-under-par
score of 279 for 72 holes,
"I birdied the ftrst hole and I
tho~ght, 'Ah, now everythmg IS
gmng according to pian,"' said
Nicklaus "It never did. But all
the lime I kept thinking that It
was going to-I kept feeling
sure that aoon everyth10g would
start
for me, that l
would
and I' would

Graduate

2 ROMANIANS WIN
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
(UPI)- Ihe Nastase and fellow
Romanian Jon T1riac won the
Monte Carlo Open Men's
Doubles Tennis title Sunday,
Senes B
defeatmg
Tom Okker of HolW. L. GF GA
Toronto
2 2 13 11 land and Bnta10's Roger
New York
2 2 11 13 Taylor, 1-6, 6-3, 6-3, 8-6
West

AUTO
FIRE-LIFE
HEALTH
MUTUAL FUNDS

~I NATIONWIOE

~.J!~~.~~~~~~

Series C

x Ch•cago

Ph&gt;l

W. L. GF GA
4 0 20 8
0 4 8 20

Setres 0

W. L. GF GA
wm the tournament It hap- ~t Loui s
2 2 10 7
Mmnesota
2 2 1 10
pened, but the oppostte way.
x-CIInched
Seroes
"Yes, I was overconfident,"
Sunday's results
confessed NJCklaus, who alrea- Boslon 5 Montreal 2
dy won the PGA Champ1onsh1p Ch1cago 6 Philadelphia 2
New York 4 Toronto 2
th1s year and was aumng at a M1
nnesota 2 St LOUI S 1
"slam" mcludmg the Masters
Monday's Games
and US, and Bntish Opens
(No
games
~c hedut ed )
"Not unlll I heard Coody had
parred, did I reahze I wasn't
gomg to wm "
WETHERBEE WINS RACE
The 33-year-old Coody fired a ATHENS, Ohw (UP!)
!1\0·under-par 70, after startmg George Wetherbee won the
the day lied w1th Ntcklaus for fourth annual Athens Marathon
the lead. Nicklaus had a par 72 Sunday, runmng the 26-mae
and the 23-year-old Mtller of dtstance m two hours, 34
Napa, Calif., shot a stunmng 68. minutes, 6 3 seconds WetherMiller actually held the lead bee 1s a graduate student at the
after 15 holes, standmg mne• Umvers1ty of Akron
under-par. But he bogeyed the
16th and 18th
- - - - -Coody knows bow that fells, m 1969 and blew 11 by bogeying
all nghl-untii h1s trmmph the last three holes
Sunday ~e was known m It was "revenge" that Coody
Masters history as the man mentiOned the first thmg m bts
who had the title..in hts hands hour of trmmph .

MONEY PROBLEMS.? ,.:
... not any more !

PHONE 992-2171

· 125 E. MAIN
POMEROY OHIO
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'-The Dailv sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprill2, 1971

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Stateliouse Repe,rter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Rep. Sam Speck, R-New Concord, today unveiled ·a draft of
the strongest strip mine bill yet
to be presented to the General
Assembly this yeaF.
Speck said he would immediately introduce the bill ,
which applies strict regulations
not only to the 3lripping of
coal, but to clay, sand , gravel
and limestone mining.
The comprehensive package
also includes imposition of a
tax on the severance of minerals from Ohio land at the rate
of 2 per cent of the gross value
· of any coal, sand , gravel and
clay taken from the soil and 3
per cent on limestone.
One-third of the revenues
from .the tax, also recommend.ed by Gov . John J. Gilligan
and the Ohio AFl.rCIO, would
go into a special industrial and
recreational · site development
fund to help refurbish stripped
areas, mo'st of which are in
Speck's territory of eastern
Ohio.
Two-thirds of the revenues
would go toward state reclamalion of land stripped in years
past and abandoned by_ coal
mine operators.
Raise $5 Million
Speck said the tax would
raise about $5, million a year:~bout $18 million less than Gilhgan 'sk'proposal
b"ll . · d
Spee s 1 me1u es a nwn-

Your
Avent ,
Dale Warner

UNDERINSURED
a horrible com bination of words . Let
us take away those
first five letters .
'Insure - be sure!

Con11ult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992-2966

114 Qourt 51.

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ber of features recommended
by state Natural Resources Director William B. Nye,· who offered them as improvements to
a strip mine bill sponsored by
House Minority Leader A. G.
Lancione, D-Bellaire.
Also under consideration is a
weaker bill sponsored by Rep.
Ralph Welker, R-Po1Jleroy.
Speck said he is confident his
bill will be the vehicle for the
ultimate strip mine law.
While Lancione's bill requires

Collltrucllve Letlen of ()plnlca, Ia good lute, ue
welcomed. The editor reoerves llle rtgbt to llhorlelllelten.
All letters must be slgDed, will! a IDD addreu, allbOQib
lnltlals may be 111ed upon ftquelt. ' .

Proud to Live in Meigs County
Aprilll, 1971
Dear Editor:
I would like to thank this newspaper so very much for the
coverage that you gave the Easter Seal campaign.
Also, I'd like to state that I'm proud to live in a county like
Meigs, because you folks really reach out to people in need. One of
the tangible ways this love for others has been shoW!) here in
Meigs County has been the response toward the George Thompson Kidney Fund. I think it has been just wonderful! The other
evidence of Meigs Countians' concern has been shown in the
contributions that have been sent to Easter Seals. This year the
Meigs County Society for Crippled Children and Adults have gone
over their goal of $1250. So far our treasurer Mr. Jack Welch
'
• residents and
• $203.02 from the'
the adult
' has received $1,854 from
· school children which comes to a total (so far) of $2,057.02. Our
society is of course very thankful for this response.
I, as Easter seal Chairman, would like to thank everyone in
Meigs County who helped or contributed in any way to make this
campaign a success. Avery special thanks goes to my husband,
Rev. Charles Simons, who has been a very big help to me. If it
hadn't been for him, I would not have been able to conduct the
campaign at all. Still perfonning his many regular duties for our
church and community, as well as organizing and conducting
evangelistic services at our Baptist Church, he very graciously
drove all around Meigs County (helping me put up posters, taking
me to speaking engagements, newspaper offices, radio station,
Meigs County schools), carried heavy boxes of Easter Seal
material (back and forth to the high school, around the county and
to Rotary meeting). He has been so understanding that I wanted
him, as well as those others who are interested in the Easter Seal
· campaign, to know how thankful! am for his help.
For those of you who have not contributed to Easter seals you
may still do so by sending your contribution to "Easter Seals,"
Middleport, Ohio.
I'd like to say "thank you" again and next year I hope that
you Meigs Countians support the new chairman as you have
suppor~d me.
Mrs. Charles Simons
1971 Easter seal Chairman

WASHINGTON (UPI)- MUlions of Americans, many of
them scarcely able to afford it,
are paying more income taxes
than they really owe this year
because they are confused by

On ly you can prevent fo rest fi res.

the complexity of the Internal
Revenue Law.
Some are overlooking benefits
they should have because they
do not understand how to claim
special advantages.
This is particularly true of
some elderly persons permitted
acreditof15percentforsome
of their fe lirement income.
This credit is designed to cut
. b d
1
th e ta x· ur en on the e derly.
In theory it is easier this
year for. such a person to claim
retirement credit since the IRS
will do most of the work. If
such a person wants the
government to figure his credit,
he has only to list the amount
of his tax-exempt pensions
(including Social security and
payments from any private
pension fund) plus the amount
of his earned income and the
total of his qualifying retirement income.
This is far simpler than the
system used last year. But th~
taxpayer still must obtain
information that is sometimes
difficult to assemble; he must
file it on a separate piece of
paper ; and-in the first placehe must realize he qualifies
for the credit.
The iRS concedes many
taxpayers overpay every year.
No one. knows exactly how
many but the {igure surely tops
a million.
The Senate Special Commit-

parks.
..:.permits water ·impoundments at least 10 feet deep if
there is "no siltation, acid accumulation or acid drainage.
- Requires replacement of
topsoil unless 'better soil is
round below the surface, and
forbids any rocks lo be left to
interfere with plowing.
- Tightens blasting regulattions, forbidding the use of ex-

Give·n for Couple

plosives within 300 feet of a
public building or occupied
dwelling.
- A "squealer" clause requiring anyone knowing 1hat
officials 'are not enforcing the
Ia w to report it under penalty
of perjury.
· .
- Authorizes citizens to force
hearings on whether a mine
operator can obtain a penn}! to
strip a certain area.

Mr. and Mrs. · William and Donna, Letart,. w. Va.; Mr.
Krackomberger of Keasby, N. and Mrs. E. R. Hollon, Mrs.
J. were honored Saturday with Opal Hollon, and Rick, and Mrs .
a dinner party and open house Iva Singer, Chester; Mrs.
celebration in, observance ~~ Hester Rayburn, Mason, w.
their silver wedding an- Va.; Mr. and Mrs. James
niversary at the home ·or·their Hollon, Sherrie, Teresa, and
son and daughter-Iii-law, Mr. Shannon, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene .
and Mrs. Eugene Long.
Long, Debra, Billy and Dennis,
Numerous gilts and cards Mrs. Myrtle Bentz, Minersville;
were presented to the couple. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lipps, Gale,
An anniversary cake baked by Pamela, Terry and . Re_becca,
Bruce Enlow of Vincent and a Vmcent; Bruce Enlow, Vmcent.
four-tiered cake baked by Mrs.
Mr, and Mrs . Sterling
Krackomberger were ·served Rayburn, Sterling, Jr. ·and
during the day.
Samuel, Howell Township, N.
Guests at the dinner were Mr. J.; Mr. and Mrs. William&gt;
and Mrs . Norman Gates, Krackomberger, Jr., and son,
Vienna; Mrs. Rex Cooper, Billy, Kerns, N. J.; Richie
Parkersburg ; Mr. and Mrs. Don Mosca, Kerns, N. J.; Miss
Browning and Patty, Grove Marie Ronzo, Colonia, N. J.;
City; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miss Mary Jane KrackomHolter, Racine; David, Michael · berger, Keasby, N. J.; and Mrs.
and ·Sherrie Singer and Mr. and )llary Birch and Mrs. Leota
Mrs. Perry Singer, Toledo; Mr. Birch, Portland.
and Mrs. Robert Parke,, Bobby
Mternoon callers were Mr.
and Kelly, Marietta; Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Hollon, Columbus; and Mrs. Charles Bissell and
Mr. and Mrs. · Lester Hill, Danny, Chester; Gary Griffith,
Minersville; Mr. and Mrs. Troy
Frankfort.
Manna and smith Long"-Long Zwilling, Syracuse; and Mr.
Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. Elson and Mrs. Denver Gibbs and
Long, Timmy, Lisa, Rodney Stephania, Letari, W. Va.

Rhod.es Drawing $1200 Month Pension
was governor. From November, 196!i, when the
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Fonner Gov. James A. Rhodes governor's salary was hiked by $15,000 until he retired
Rhodes earneil $39,890 a year.
is drawing public employe retirement benefits apJ. Douglass Peters, deputy director of PERS, said it
proaching $1,200 a month before taxes and will connormiilly takes retirants only three years to use up all
the contributions they put into the system.
A UPI Exclusive
If this rule of thwnb applied to Rhodes, he could have
linue to do so for 20years, if he lives that long.
contributed up to $40,000 to the pension fund during the
lfhedtiesnot, the money will go to his wife, Helen, or 31 years he was Columbus city auditor, mayor of
to his estate. In any event, the pension will · ap- Columbus, state auditor and .governor.
proximate the estimated $14,000-a-year figure until a Rhodes' benefits were calculated by taking 1.9 per
I 't.! per cent cost-of~iving increase.takes effect July 1, cent of the average of his five highest annual salaries,
1974.
$39,890, and multiplying by his number of years of
The Public Employes Retirement System (PERS) is public service, 31, This produces a base annual benefit
forbidden to make public the pension of any of its of $23,495.
membera. Rhodes' benefits were calculated by United If he had been 65 at retirement and chosen the
Press International according to a complex fonnula "straight life" plan, he would have received the full
furnished by PERS.
amount. However, if he died, Mrs. Rhodes would only
The governor begsn drawing his pension in have received a lump cash payment of his conFebruary, choosing a plan which guarantees "certain tributions to the system.
and continuous" payments for 20 years. As of Feb- Instead, Rbodes chose the 20 year plan, stretching
ruary, 1991, his benefits will be exhausted.
out the monthly payments and reducing their amount
It must be noted Rhodes contributed heavily to his by roughly 32 per cent. Taking 68 per cent of $23,495
retirement fund, particularly during the eight years he produces an annual benefit of $15,976 for a retirant 65

Defense

Milwaukee

by his Bucks, a performance
which was good enough to win,
but still way below the Bucks'
standards.
Milwaukee shot 48 per cent
from the floor, spd the only
reason they won was because
the Lakers could only hit on 33
per cent of their shots.
The 73 points run up by the
Lakers tied the record for the
fewest points scored against the

MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)Larry Costello issued a warning
to the Los Angeles Lakers
following
the
Sunday
Milwaukee Bucks 91-73 win over
the Lakers. ·
· "We're going out there ready
to explod~," Costello said.
"We're way overdue and I can
feel it coming."
Costello was talking about the
shoddy offensive performance

Bullets Surprise
Knicks, 114 To 88
BALTIMORE (UP!) _ The second quarter.

Pay too _Much

of strip mining and rec]amalion, 'to which appeals can be
made from decisions of the
chief.
-Forbids mining within 200
feet of any road , stream or
lake.
-Forbids mining within 200
feet of adjacent property without consent of the owner.
-Forbids mining in any area
. adversely affecting public

years old.
Rhodes, however, was only 61 at retirement, shaving
his annual benefit by another 12 per cent to $14,058 a
year or $1,171 a month.
There were other options open to the fanner
governor. He could have chosen a lump sum payment
under which he would have received only what he paid
into the system. Peters said' this choice Is used most
frequently by persons with only a few years of service
who want to take their pension contributions when they
· leave.
Another plan allows the widow to receive haU the
retirant's monthly benefits if he dies, while still
another with smaller monthly payments giveS the
widow full benefits for life if he dies. The benefits are
figured on life expectancy tables.
Certain and continuous annuities, suCh ,s Rhodes
chooe, can be taken on five.-year or 10.year plans.
Peters pointed out Rhodes selected smaller payments
and gambled that he will live 20 years, although
benefits go to survivors.
Both employes and public employers contribute to
PERS, which pays out about $5 million a month in
retirement benefits.

Bucks in their history, and
Costello credited that to a
defense by Milwaukee he called
"superb."
"Our defense won the game
for us," be said. "Theguyswere
really hustling, forcing them
(the Lakers) to take bad shots.
We were superb."
Lakers Coach Joe Mullaney
sort of agreed with Costello. "I
don't know if they were that
tough defensively," Mullaney
said, "but our problem was
hitting the open man. We had a
problem executing against that
type defense."
The defense both coaches
were talking about was a
ferocious trap defense that saw
Milwaukee players continuously double-teaming the

Middleport
Personal Notes

SAVE

Tough
Admittedly Milwaukee's task
was made easier by the
troubled health status of the
Lakers. Jerry West and Elgin
Baylor were on the . bench as
expected, but just before the
game the Lakers received
another blow.
Keith Erickson, who has
providedsomefirepowerforthe
Lakers' offense, came down
with a bad case of stomach
cramps and didn't even dress
for the contest.
Mullaney admitted that the
Lakers "missed Erickson." But
he said it was "more the Bucks'
style of defense that bothered us
thanthelossofanyoneplayer."
The lfefense the Bucks emplayed held Gail Goodrich to
just 10 porn
· ts for the whole

FOR YOUR OWN

SPECIAL
PURPOSE
Enjoy safety •.• p1us
extra earning power.

4%%
Meigs Co. Branch

LAWN BOY '89.9~ to '104,95
I

RIDER 301'

FURNITURE FOR TODAY'S

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l"side Paint 1.65-qt '4.95 pl
Also L1tex satin Enamel '2.29 gt.

,

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.OOMS.,. t

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NEW '
RJRNITURE
'

'349.95

Funeral Will Be on Tuesday

ON

fURNITUR.£
'I

SAYI

60c

...--· ....

II
~i! ·

Moondusters Plan

Educational Tours

CUT f~96

-~~·,~.lila"'•=· .

2-SPEED

Wizard
Sweeper-Vac

1' 4~!1...1

Wizard 18-ln.
table Brazier

Donald Johnsons

Announce Birth

Smooth, Silent Wi!ard
Electric Trolling .Motor

o..........

97: c'

'

7f'
•3.33
59'
4f'

.SHIRT.

FINISHING

HOME~KERS

awaitinf( you at. . ; .

1.

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$fi6.66 .

.And General Hd~. and Plumbing Supplies. '

·TUPPEIS PLAINS HOWE.

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MIDDLIIIORT, 0.

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Robinsoo's Cleaners

See m11ny totallotik inspirations and new ideas

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-RYl SALE STuis TODAY!
EIIDS APIIl Me
.
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LOOK! LESS

FALCON 20" '49.95
. · 12 Beautiful.Colors

Holzer Medical Center, First Brown, Tom Von Cherrington,
Ave. and Cedar St. General Mrs . Mattie Clay, E. Donald
1J
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Davis, Mrs.' Javis D. Dye, Mrs.
..
fMaternity visiting hours 2:30 to Tom 0. Davis, Mrs. Walter .
t'
.~
.I14:30 p.m. Parents only on NewVahner, and Arthur B.
11 1
1
T
II IT-,
IPediatrics Ward."
Maloy. .
;...
Births
Terry Alexander, Mrs.
~ .
.:..
11Mr . and Mrs. · Floyd L. Cinderella Baier, Mrs. Robert
1I" ..
I I f"' p
1 r
·Campbell, Jackson , a daughter; Bobo, William Boswell, Chester
L..
1Mr . and Mrs. Donald H. Hall, Cremeens, Earl Cremeens,
P.t. Pleasant, a daughter; Mr. Mrs . Clare nce Davis, Mrs .
I"
I
Tl
1and Mrs. Sam Hicks, Jr., Michael Davis and daughter,
11Vinton, a son; Mr . and Mrs. Cheryl Downard, Mrs. Victoria
111Joseph H. Ferrell, Vinton , a Ferrell, Willia Frost, Debra
11I"
I I I I" I
'son; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Gillenwater, Clifford E. Grady,
I
Petrie, Vin ton, a son, and Mr. Mrs. L: Roger Hudson, Mrs. W.
f
and Mrs. Daniel E. Knotts, Cecil Johnson, Miss Marcelle E.
11Gallipolis, a son.
·
Jones, Earl Lewis, Russell
~ ·
Discharges
LitUe, Dwight Logan, Sandra
t1._ .
Stanley H. Allen , Mrs. C. Logan, Kathy McCarley, Kathy
1'1 r r r
,41. .J- il , r. ...l.~~ ... -' I
Vance
Baker, Mrs. John C. McCombs, Carol Morris, .lames
}Sy MrS'; :,tc t.o r uya li 1
kl !,ld~
\J u Men Cluh
L..
Barney and daughter, John Oney, Tamara Parker, Mrs.
Edward
Callicoat, Mrs. David Peterson and son, Oscar
Dow 1'1
A C Ro S&gt; S
Ric
hard
E.
Cox, Mrs. William Poetker, Homer Pott, Mrs.
\, \N ood'/ . ~::&gt;o;a'(e'fl"·,o..\ r''o._(ltlo !\ ~ s+e'IY\
j , W co J~ lola. nt vhf~
R. Davi~, Vickie !•· Deer , Jerry Larry Pyles, Edward Quick,
"-· \--\ o.. v 1 "'i \,fe c.. ~ c.. I ~ 11"1 o V\e
o~ &lt; e &lt;o..\ ~ t e. Y\"1 \.
D. Eads, Richard Sean Jeffers, Mrs. Autum n Scott, Mrs.
· S~o.sc\'\ ~
to . ~ u.l'\ o; lo,~e ""'"d __
Mrs. Nettie Johnson., Mrs . Harold E. Shortridge and son,
l. 1. t m o. l&lt;e&gt; ouc we~Her.
14 . L ,v:,"''l -t'ro rYI '{~ t.._ ,· tr. /"' 'u- Norma N. Johnson, Oakey Ronald Spears, Kimberly
~- ':\econ~ wo&lt;d ~ ~ OAG C.
Johnson, Mrs. Larry W. Jones Stiffler, Mrs . Calvin Waugh and
15", ';i -f ~ +~ ~\ow e c o-1' C• rii D
and son, Marion Lee Kii"tiey, daughter, Oral Waugh, Brenda
o lo~"-" ·
1(.., D a. ~ -to .ti.\, -lo r 0'(1~.
Mrs. Rutter Kni ght, Mrs . . Winkler, Mrs. Herman Wriston,
5. ';)+~ te h"" of 0hoo
11 L a.&lt;;. t Y'l o ...-cl 111 ()AG C
Cha1·les E. Marlin, Mrs. John R. Virgil Yarbrough, Mrs. Hollis
l , \l \ o. n t o c c \H 1 n~ e v ._ v j
ls \o'l o. n,
McGuiness, Mrs. Ruth M. Rice, North, Mrs. Billy E. Hale, and ~
-\-wo ~ eo..&lt;-; .
1~, Ne~ d &lt; cl \o1 j' ' 'lev1•r
Thomas B. Ruth, Jr., Mrs. Mrs. M. Lucille Harkins.
Q-\'-f ev' wov \..
·
'7. fo..,o&lt;•T e -t\~,.H +11 o&lt; n1
James L. Shaver and daughter, ,
~te.mmed
·
lq I:Je,t 1.1 \e ~ o 1• I e .. ve' d,
Mrs. E1·vin Tollier, Christa A.
l \ -9 t e,...
.,. u_ k 1 \1 1.
~. C:, o.n:\eV\&lt;.c\ too\ .
Trainer , Mrs. Ronald J .
Wilcoxon and son, Kathy P.
Both the ruby and the sap·
'-0 . A ~ ( o.c\ ~- o. \"\1,- \' ln e, I 'S \'es +.
Yo
ho,
Mrs.
George
Harry
phire
are made of the same
'- 1 .rI I .( J I ,.,
' ,, ,
~" OY C1 I" l _, ,-, ''-1 \. _
inorganic
m in e r a 1, corunZuspan and son. Charles .A.
1o. fo u ;._ VJ,, 0 \ , w '.t~oc&lt;T w, ,+ ;,..
1
Gales, David W. Crawford, dum , the hardest mineral
J
1
Christi D. Bonecutter, Woodrow excepting the diamond.
11.\ ~\&lt;~. w ocd " 011 Cr C \I, "1 ~ n

99.!

Meigs ·County
Branch of
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co."
296 Socond St.
Pomeroy, ()hio

See ' our vast display of
merchandise . . . newest
shipnie~ts from all liver
the
nation
grouped
together at one location fOr
your
shopping
con-'1. . ·
venience! Take advantage
of the many special values
Bakers Iiiier.

LAWN MOWERS 18" • 19" • 20''

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
United Methodist Church.
Program will be the film, "The
Mekegan Delta."
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
PAST COUNCILORS, Chester
Co.uncil 323, !laughters of
America, Wectnesday night at
the hall. Miscellaneous shower
for Mrs. Laura Mae Nice. All
members urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
h~me of Mrs. Harold Lohse,
with Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee and .
Mrs. Russell Brown as cohostesses. C. .E. Blakeslee,

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.Personal Notes

MONDAY
. POMEROY ' High Alumni
Association meeting, 7:30p. m.
Monday at Pomeroy City Hall
council chambers. All alumni
invited.
MONDAY, Apri\ 12 special
meeting, Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM, 7":30 p.m. E. A. Degree.
W.S.C.S, HEATH United
Methodist. Church, 7:30 p.m.
Monday night at Ute church.
MEIGSSALON710,Eightand
Forty, 7:30Monday night at the
home of Mrs. George Hackett,
Sr,
·
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority 8:15,
Tuesday, . Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. ·
TUESDAY, APRIL 13 special
meeting Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM, 6:30p.m. Master Mason
Degree.
POMEROY PTA, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. David Bowen, instrumental music instructor
will present the program.
MINIST!&gt;RIAL Assn .,
Tuesday at Middleport Church
of the r;azarene at 10 a.m.

..

HOSPITAL NEWS

.

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WESTERN AUTO'S

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Specials

· Pomeroy....

Social
Calendar ·

Ohio Gardener's Puzzle

Mr. and Mrs. Val Reynolds,
Miss Jean Hines of Columbus
Lynn, Gynn, and Val, Jr., of spent the Easter weekend here
Oklahoma City; brothers, Carl
$35.00 DownMorgantown were Easter with her mother, Mrs. Edward
Funeral services for Dr. R a graduaU, of the University o( P., Huntirtgton, W. Va . and F.
Balanj:e Qn
weekend guests of his parents, Hines, Minersville.
Brooks Lamb, 79, of Columbus Louisville Dental College and a Allen, Grantsville; and sisters, Convenient
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at charter member of Delta Sigma Mrs. Edna Summerfield,
Weekend guests of Mr. and Lochary, Miss Helen Lochary,
the Deyo-Davis Funeral Home, Delta.
Chester; Mrs . Opal Powell,
TeMrmA's
·
Mrs. G. V. Rupe were Mr. and and Mrs . Elizabeth Chase
Grandview Heights, with in- Survivors include his wife, Gallipolis; and Mrs, Georgia
Mrs. Joe McKay, Sally, Cinda returned Thursday night from a
terment in the Union Cemetery. Edith , a son, Russell of Clifford, Columbus.
and Victor; Warren.
Florida vacation. Mr. and Mrs.
A practicing llentist for 52 Chicago; two daughters, Mrs.
Dr. Lamb died Saturday at
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Fanner of Lochary visited Mr. and Mrs.
years, Dr . Lamb at one time Loraine Lee, Columbus, and the Riverside Methodist
.Mason, W. Va.
Dayton were here over the Ralph Henry at Lakeland. Miss
EJttens10n Agent, to ha.:d~o:ff:ic:es:in~P~o:m:e~ro~y~.H~e:.:w:as~M:rs~._:K~a~t:ha:l:ee:n;_~O~'R~e:i:ll~y~,~H:o:sp:i:ta~l.;__ _ _ _ _ __;·;;;;;;i.iijij;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;!~;;!;;;;;;!;~~jjjiiip;;!i
weekend to visit his mother, Lochary had spent most of the Meigs
·
present the program.
1
Mrs. David Farmer and Mr. winter in Florida returning to
MIDDLEPORT Literary Club
and Mrs. Arthur Skinner.
her Butternut Ave. home here .
meeting Wednesday 2 p.m. at
Mrs. Clarence Arther and Jack Chase joined his mother the home of Mrs. Rodney
children, Charles and Cheryl here Sunday and the two have
Downing. Mrs.. Thereon
Ann of Akron are the guests this now. returned to their home in
Johnson will review "Zelba."
c.~
week of Mrs. Minerva Childers, Dayton.
THURSDAY
Mrs. Nina Bland and ]\1rs. Pearl
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grimm
hel .
CLASS !2, Heath United
Reynolds.
and children, Steve, Christy and
forStowtl
Mrs. Frank Betz and Mrs. Amy, of Columbus were Easter Methodist Church, 7:30 ThursLucinda Daines were · in weekend guests of his parents, day. Mrs. M. L. French to
Columbus Sunday to pay last Mr. and Mrs . Bert Grimm, present the program; Devotions
by Mrs. David Entsminger;
respects to Mrs. Betz' brother- Letart Falls.
105515
in-law, R. Brooks l.afllb, retired
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer Hostesses, Mrs. Jack Bechtle,
dentist. Mrs. Betz and Mrs. , and daughter, Kim, visited over Mrs. John Kincaid, Mrs. Gilkey,
.
Daines were taken to Columbus the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. C. E. Young.
tiOCR SPRINGS Better
by Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
Bob Hoeflich and Jayne. On
~51!
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wharten Friday night Mr. and Mrs. Health Club, Thursday, I: 15
of The Plains spent Easter Hoeflich and Jayne were in p.m. home of Mrs. William
\
Sunday visiting her mother, Athens for an Easter visit with Grueser.
, , · ~ ~. ,
Mrs. Gertrude Cabeen, and Mr. her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
u:i .~
and Mrs. William Slater.
Howou-d Nicholson.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gilkey,
Mr. and Mrs. George Dallas,
Jr. were in Columbus Friday to Bill, Steve, Michael and
visit their grandmother, Mrs. Melissa, of St. Paris, were
.r·w..-;):
Gertrude Varian, a patient at holiday weekend visitors of
the Riverside . Methodist Mrs. Forest Bachtel and Miss Educational tours were
· ~-HP Brigg( 'l Sht;t'~
Hospital.
.
carol Bachtel, Middleport, and
Mrs. Golda Mourning 's Mr. and Mrs. Bill Matlack, discussed during a recent
meeting of the Moondusters 4-li
1r' Wii'M Mt'a411i
Easter guests were her son and Chester Road, Pomeroy ,
Club held at the home of Mrs.
C•.Wil!:IOfi
'
'
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson
p
••·'lt·- :ll!a•cl
. ~-· \ ;~·rr , . ' . , I •
'~James Mourning and chlldren, and children, Doug, Cindy and Harold Sauer, advisor.
tUnn.int ~~~~ ~ , ,. .,,
p G I l .• 'l'W a I
to~ ikyde ongl~ll
Columbus. They spent Sunday Lisa of Columbus were Easter Tammy SmiU! was welcomed
•
Easy1tr.....IU•o ~~. ·
in Point'Pleasant with Mr. and weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. into the club membership and in
~rloct for """ll'lawns
Mrs. Tom Walters. Mrs. James William Folmer. Mrs. 'Johnson response to roll call members
and lrimmlngl 2XC4201
Mourning and children were in and ~ children came .Wed- gave safety tips. Project books
Point Pleasant for aU of last nesday and were joined here by were distributed. Joy White,
week.
Mr. Johnson Friday evening. vice president and program
chairman, announced
Miss Penny Price arrived Making a pre-Easter visit with
DAYS
.c._.'
Sunday from Bloomington, Ind., Mr. and ·Mrs. William Folmer assignments for the April 14
ONIYI
for a week's visit with her and Mr . and Mrs. Scott Folmer meeting which will be held at
the home of Mrs. W. R. Hayes,
Regular 1.1..Y:
grandmother, ·Mrs. Golda were Mr. and· Mrs. James ,
W.A. Valuel
Mourning and Mr. and Mrs. Durham, Chris and Susan, of assistant leader. Joy Suaer
conducted recreation and
Reg.
As
Handy As a
WU!iam Nelson and the Story Hamburg, N. Y.
3.9S Volue
children.
Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks and refreshments were served by
Broom! For Rugs
Mrs. Sauer to those named and
6GC1004
Of!ly
Mr. and Mrs. James H.. children of kReynoldsburg
were
&amp;
Bare
Floors
d
Opal Dyer, Billy Dyer, Mary
Mourning of Tucson, Ariz., are Easter wee en guests of their Ruth Sauer, Patty ·Dyer, Mrs.
or Any Quick
'
• 3-position chrome grill I
here for a month's visit with her parents, Mrs. Frances Scholl Hayes and Mrs. Maxine flYer.
Job!
• Rust-resi1tant' legtl
sister,Mrs.NanMoore,andMr. and Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks.
2KC321!1
and Mrs. Everett Davis.
Richard Nease, a teacher in
the Mechanicsburg schools ,
A bad peace is better than
spent the Easter weekend here a good war.
lGVtl 7-Position
wiU! his parents, Mr. and Mrs. --David Ben-Gurion, 84, Israel's
first
prime
minister,
Paul Nease.
Web-Aluminum
3 Speeds Forward
saying Israel should give
Chaise Lounge
3 Speeds R-everse
back all the territory
6-ft. Naivrai
SON BORN FRIDAY
taken in the Six-Day War
Full comfort - 7.f in .. long I
Rtdlwo•MI Yrellll
Mr. and Mrs. James Grate
X130.S,9
in 1967.
'
are announcing the birth of
Full strength - 21
SAVE 68c TODAY!
weatherproof poly
· their first child, a son, at . the
. 10'
propylene web1 1
New York County, N.Y.,
Mr. and Mr-s. Donald E. ' Cabell County Hospital in
tal LIWI Ft•c•
.,.
Johnson, Columbus; announce Huntington, W. Va., on Friday, with an area of 22 sq\jare
w•Jt.,a.....
,...
miles,
is
the
smallest
county
Folding
Well
Handsome
Redwood
()(!agonal
Planter
anct
the birth of their first child, a April 9. The eight pound, eight
in the Uniled Stafes.
&amp;.Aiumi•!!.lll
Stand. Beautiful decorator piece! Bands and
• 6 tilt adjustments &amp; lock-up!
son, James Michael, born April ounce boy has been named
stand
are brass plated. Tub Is 12" In diameter,
• Auto -Pilot and 360e sl~tering!
4 at Holzer Hospital. The infant Jonathan Roger. Grandparents
ll
"tall.
X1J37-34.
, Bolll4.77 '
• Night fithing light with •witthl
weighed eight pounds, 7lf• are Mr. and Mrs. WU!iam Grate
3-Foot
"\ll(rought
lron"-Styled
Decorator
Foncr
Auns all
on l full
Section. ·white poty•lyrene won't de~i.
ounces.
of South Charleston, W. Va.
Paternal. grandparents are
1 QUART
Mr. and fyl(s. Gerald Johnson,
THERMOS BOTTLE
R'EG.,$3.29 ONLY--- ---' ' · "
On May. 1, if the governReedsville, formerly · of
'SAMJ:
DAY
GIANT 44-QT.
Cheshire. Great-grandparents ment has not stopped the
SERVICE
REG. $1:69.-----·
WASTEBASKET" PLASTIC"
are Mr. and -Mrs. Roy Johnson, war by then, we are going to
"In At ~Out At 5
ADULT SIZE
Chester, and Mrs. Lizzie Han-· stop the government from
functioning.
REG. 54.6•-----LIFE VEST
nipg, Middleport. Maternal -John l"roines , peace acUst'OUr FrH Perking Lot
DOUBLE DRIVEWAY
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
tivist and one of the "ChiREG.79t------Elwood
Howard,
Sr. , . cago Seven" defendants,
REFLECTOR "BIG3"
SIZE"
PEG. 99c, ____
revealing plans tor a fMS·.
LAUNDRY' BASKET ''BUSHEL
Harris 9nville , also former
216
E.
2nd,
Pomer'ov
sive march on Washingresi4enlli of Cheshire.
14-TOOTH BOW RAKE

Baltimore Bullets were expect- "All three games have been
ed to roll over and play dead the same for us except this man with the ball.
game. Goodrich averaged 30.1
but suddenly they're alive and time we made our shots within
in the first round playoffs
kicking more than ever.
the 15-foot range. 1 have the
against Chicago, but he has
The Bullets, down 2-0 to New shot charts to back that up ." Linescores
averaged only 13 against
York in their Eastern Confer- Fred carter,
Mllwaukee
in the
two of
Lakers
. the · sub guard
losses
in the
finals
the
b
f
ence est-o -seven playoff se- who scored 18 of his 20 poin\5 By Uniied Press International
ries, were just about written off in the first half, credited the
Nationa 1 League
Western Conference Championbf S d '
All Sta B ]tim
· t
t te
k (1st Gamel
ship.
e ore un ay s game.
r a
ore VIC ory o amwor . San Fran ooo ooo 02o- 2 6 2 ,:__--------~~~~~=~~~~~
forward Gus Johnson was out "The main thing was team- St. Louis 010 030 oox- 4 7 1 I'
wiU! an injured knee, guard work," said carter. "Five men
Robertson, Bryant (51 and •
Eddie Miles was sidelined with doing the job and when's the Dietz; GLiPbsoRn b(l -1) and Sim . .
d K . 1 t t"
h d th t ··
mons .
. o ertson (0 . 1)
a Ieg m)ury, guar
evm__ as 1meyou ear a mpro HRS-Foster llsll. Bonds (lsi).
Loughery was benched with a ball? We didn't commit fouls (2nd Game)
·
foot ailment and high scorer 'because we couldn't afford to I ·San Fran 204 100 ooo- 7 10 o
Ear1 Monroe had a tWISe
. t d don 't th"mk ,th e Kn'ICks were fl.at St.Marichat
Louis ooo(2.01
002 ooo2 9 2.
and G"b
ankle. The Knicks came looking at the start. We just came out Cleveland, Norman (3) , ra0~;
for slaughter.
and didn't let them play their (4). Bunet (6). Linzy (7), and
It was the hunter who game. Moving
the ball is Cleveland
McNertney,(0Simmons
. LP.
. 11 HRS17l. Torre
became hunted, however, as the always a tomcfor us. It sets us (Jrdl. Cardinal ( tstl .
Bullets, with a superb team off. We need it like we need air Mont
100 000 030- 4 13 0
effort, broke the game open in to breathe. Our shots were Phil
000 344 OOx- 11 10 1
the third period and humiliated going in this time and it didn't Moorlon, Reed (5) and
Bateman ; Lersch 0-01 and
the defending champion Knicks happen in the other two games. McCarver.
LP-Morlon (0-2) HR114-88. The fourth game of the The B.ullets are hopeful that Freed llstl.
series is scheduled for Wednes- Johnson, a rugged rebounder
day night in Baltimore.
who keeps Baltimore moving Pittsbgh ooo 010 ooo- 1 7 1
Allanta 000 000 12x- 3 5 1
Monroe and Jack Marin with his hustle, will be
Ellis (1 ·11 and Sanguillen;
sparked a string of 14 straight available for WedneS\fay night's Nash (1 -01 and King . Hr-Cepeda
(lsll .
points in the third quarter and game.
it was all over as Baltimore "There's a good chance Gus San Diego 302·012 lQO- 9 9 2
forged ahead to a 26-point lead. will play Wedne_sday," said Skip Los Angeles
003 002 002- 7 12 1'
Monroe finished with 31 points Feldman, the Baltimore traiRoss (6). Severlnsen
Phoebus,
and Marin added 22.
ner. "It depends on the therapy (91 and Barton
; Sutton, Moeller
"We made the shots tonight and the rest and whether he (41, O'Brien (7), Hough. 191 and
and didn't turn the ball over," gets his knee back to fuil Sudakts. WP-Phoebus (1-1) . LP(0-2) . HRS-Cotbert 2 (4th
said Bullets' coach Gene Shue. bending. You can't rule him out Sullon
&amp; 51h). Stahl (2nd), Gaston
"If we got in foul trouble we ·of anything. He's not a cripple (1st),
would have been in big trouble yet."
because we couldn't afford it Red Holzman, the Knick
playing five men. Actually, you coach, conceded early in the
shouldn't get in foul trouble last period, taking out his
against the Knicks since they're regulars and clearing his bench.
an 'outside shooting team. We Walt Frazier's 17 points were
won it by building a lead in the high for New York.

,tee on Aging said recently the
cost of honest mistakes falls
hardest on the elderly.
The committee urged creation of a simpler tax return.

5- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April12, 1971

D_
inner, Open Hou·se

er Strongest •Strip .MineBill Yet
tending five years beyond the
expiration date of the mining
penni! .
·
Other features of Speck's
bill:
'
-Flexible powers for the
chief of the division of reclamation overseeing the reclamalion projects.
-Empowers the governor to
remove without appeal any of
the five members of the board

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

.......

· -~-~~ ~---;---,....,.-

•
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planting within a year, forbids
moving equipment from the site
until reclamation is completed
and requires the state to retain
. bond posted by the operator until an inspection is made.
Bond is set on coal stripping
at $5,000 or $500 an acre, which
ever is more, and a minimum
of $300 an acre on clay, sand
and gravel. The bond must be
written to cover a period ex-

__
~,

.

.

coal mine operators to backfill
their strippings to the original
contour of the land within 300
yards of where they are
digging. Speck's bill requires
continuous backfilling with a
six-month limit.
Speck said time was a more
realistic factor than distance,
sinceoperatorscouldslowdown
the'ir digging and stay within
300 yards of their original excava,tion for months.
speck's bill also requires re-

-,--,..

JJ

ton.

•

SALE CONTJI'AJj!:D
. A rummige sale.by the Eight
and Forty in a building .on
SecOnd st., Pomeroy, will be
conlillued Tue~Y. All itemS
will
a\10 and 25 c:enls
for
clearance,
'J , M.

I

w. COMPTON.
0. D. ' .
OPTOMITRIST ,

· OFf ICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12.' 2 TO s (CLOSE
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,

6

$19.95

WEST CRAFT 4-FT. HOE
D !NT SHOVEL

YOUtHHOICE

WESTERN AUTO
49 N. 2nd AYE.

992·5515

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'-The Dailv sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprill2, 1971

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Stateliouse Repe,rter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Rep. Sam Speck, R-New Concord, today unveiled ·a draft of
the strongest strip mine bill yet
to be presented to the General
Assembly this yeaF.
Speck said he would immediately introduce the bill ,
which applies strict regulations
not only to the 3lripping of
coal, but to clay, sand , gravel
and limestone mining.
The comprehensive package
also includes imposition of a
tax on the severance of minerals from Ohio land at the rate
of 2 per cent of the gross value
· of any coal, sand , gravel and
clay taken from the soil and 3
per cent on limestone.
One-third of the revenues
from .the tax, also recommend.ed by Gov . John J. Gilligan
and the Ohio AFl.rCIO, would
go into a special industrial and
recreational · site development
fund to help refurbish stripped
areas, mo'st of which are in
Speck's territory of eastern
Ohio.
Two-thirds of the revenues
would go toward state reclamalion of land stripped in years
past and abandoned by_ coal
mine operators.
Raise $5 Million
Speck said the tax would
raise about $5, million a year:~bout $18 million less than Gilhgan 'sk'proposal
b"ll . · d
Spee s 1 me1u es a nwn-

Your
Avent ,
Dale Warner

UNDERINSURED
a horrible com bination of words . Let
us take away those
first five letters .
'Insure - be sure!

Con11ult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992-2966

114 Qourt 51.

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ber of features recommended
by state Natural Resources Director William B. Nye,· who offered them as improvements to
a strip mine bill sponsored by
House Minority Leader A. G.
Lancione, D-Bellaire.
Also under consideration is a
weaker bill sponsored by Rep.
Ralph Welker, R-Po1Jleroy.
Speck said he is confident his
bill will be the vehicle for the
ultimate strip mine law.
While Lancione's bill requires

Collltrucllve Letlen of ()plnlca, Ia good lute, ue
welcomed. The editor reoerves llle rtgbt to llhorlelllelten.
All letters must be slgDed, will! a IDD addreu, allbOQib
lnltlals may be 111ed upon ftquelt. ' .

Proud to Live in Meigs County
Aprilll, 1971
Dear Editor:
I would like to thank this newspaper so very much for the
coverage that you gave the Easter Seal campaign.
Also, I'd like to state that I'm proud to live in a county like
Meigs, because you folks really reach out to people in need. One of
the tangible ways this love for others has been shoW!) here in
Meigs County has been the response toward the George Thompson Kidney Fund. I think it has been just wonderful! The other
evidence of Meigs Countians' concern has been shown in the
contributions that have been sent to Easter Seals. This year the
Meigs County Society for Crippled Children and Adults have gone
over their goal of $1250. So far our treasurer Mr. Jack Welch
'
• residents and
• $203.02 from the'
the adult
' has received $1,854 from
· school children which comes to a total (so far) of $2,057.02. Our
society is of course very thankful for this response.
I, as Easter seal Chairman, would like to thank everyone in
Meigs County who helped or contributed in any way to make this
campaign a success. Avery special thanks goes to my husband,
Rev. Charles Simons, who has been a very big help to me. If it
hadn't been for him, I would not have been able to conduct the
campaign at all. Still perfonning his many regular duties for our
church and community, as well as organizing and conducting
evangelistic services at our Baptist Church, he very graciously
drove all around Meigs County (helping me put up posters, taking
me to speaking engagements, newspaper offices, radio station,
Meigs County schools), carried heavy boxes of Easter Seal
material (back and forth to the high school, around the county and
to Rotary meeting). He has been so understanding that I wanted
him, as well as those others who are interested in the Easter Seal
· campaign, to know how thankful! am for his help.
For those of you who have not contributed to Easter seals you
may still do so by sending your contribution to "Easter Seals,"
Middleport, Ohio.
I'd like to say "thank you" again and next year I hope that
you Meigs Countians support the new chairman as you have
suppor~d me.
Mrs. Charles Simons
1971 Easter seal Chairman

WASHINGTON (UPI)- MUlions of Americans, many of
them scarcely able to afford it,
are paying more income taxes
than they really owe this year
because they are confused by

On ly you can prevent fo rest fi res.

the complexity of the Internal
Revenue Law.
Some are overlooking benefits
they should have because they
do not understand how to claim
special advantages.
This is particularly true of
some elderly persons permitted
acreditof15percentforsome
of their fe lirement income.
This credit is designed to cut
. b d
1
th e ta x· ur en on the e derly.
In theory it is easier this
year for. such a person to claim
retirement credit since the IRS
will do most of the work. If
such a person wants the
government to figure his credit,
he has only to list the amount
of his tax-exempt pensions
(including Social security and
payments from any private
pension fund) plus the amount
of his earned income and the
total of his qualifying retirement income.
This is far simpler than the
system used last year. But th~
taxpayer still must obtain
information that is sometimes
difficult to assemble; he must
file it on a separate piece of
paper ; and-in the first placehe must realize he qualifies
for the credit.
The iRS concedes many
taxpayers overpay every year.
No one. knows exactly how
many but the {igure surely tops
a million.
The Senate Special Commit-

parks.
..:.permits water ·impoundments at least 10 feet deep if
there is "no siltation, acid accumulation or acid drainage.
- Requires replacement of
topsoil unless 'better soil is
round below the surface, and
forbids any rocks lo be left to
interfere with plowing.
- Tightens blasting regulattions, forbidding the use of ex-

Give·n for Couple

plosives within 300 feet of a
public building or occupied
dwelling.
- A "squealer" clause requiring anyone knowing 1hat
officials 'are not enforcing the
Ia w to report it under penalty
of perjury.
· .
- Authorizes citizens to force
hearings on whether a mine
operator can obtain a penn}! to
strip a certain area.

Mr. and Mrs. · William and Donna, Letart,. w. Va.; Mr.
Krackomberger of Keasby, N. and Mrs. E. R. Hollon, Mrs.
J. were honored Saturday with Opal Hollon, and Rick, and Mrs .
a dinner party and open house Iva Singer, Chester; Mrs.
celebration in, observance ~~ Hester Rayburn, Mason, w.
their silver wedding an- Va.; Mr. and Mrs. James
niversary at the home ·or·their Hollon, Sherrie, Teresa, and
son and daughter-Iii-law, Mr. Shannon, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene .
and Mrs. Eugene Long.
Long, Debra, Billy and Dennis,
Numerous gilts and cards Mrs. Myrtle Bentz, Minersville;
were presented to the couple. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lipps, Gale,
An anniversary cake baked by Pamela, Terry and . Re_becca,
Bruce Enlow of Vincent and a Vmcent; Bruce Enlow, Vmcent.
four-tiered cake baked by Mrs.
Mr, and Mrs . Sterling
Krackomberger were ·served Rayburn, Sterling, Jr. ·and
during the day.
Samuel, Howell Township, N.
Guests at the dinner were Mr. J.; Mr. and Mrs. William&gt;
and Mrs . Norman Gates, Krackomberger, Jr., and son,
Vienna; Mrs. Rex Cooper, Billy, Kerns, N. J.; Richie
Parkersburg ; Mr. and Mrs. Don Mosca, Kerns, N. J.; Miss
Browning and Patty, Grove Marie Ronzo, Colonia, N. J.;
City; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miss Mary Jane KrackomHolter, Racine; David, Michael · berger, Keasby, N. J.; and Mrs.
and ·Sherrie Singer and Mr. and )llary Birch and Mrs. Leota
Mrs. Perry Singer, Toledo; Mr. Birch, Portland.
and Mrs. Robert Parke,, Bobby
Mternoon callers were Mr.
and Kelly, Marietta; Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Hollon, Columbus; and Mrs. Charles Bissell and
Mr. and Mrs. · Lester Hill, Danny, Chester; Gary Griffith,
Minersville; Mr. and Mrs. Troy
Frankfort.
Manna and smith Long"-Long Zwilling, Syracuse; and Mr.
Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. Elson and Mrs. Denver Gibbs and
Long, Timmy, Lisa, Rodney Stephania, Letari, W. Va.

Rhod.es Drawing $1200 Month Pension
was governor. From November, 196!i, when the
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Fonner Gov. James A. Rhodes governor's salary was hiked by $15,000 until he retired
Rhodes earneil $39,890 a year.
is drawing public employe retirement benefits apJ. Douglass Peters, deputy director of PERS, said it
proaching $1,200 a month before taxes and will connormiilly takes retirants only three years to use up all
the contributions they put into the system.
A UPI Exclusive
If this rule of thwnb applied to Rhodes, he could have
linue to do so for 20years, if he lives that long.
contributed up to $40,000 to the pension fund during the
lfhedtiesnot, the money will go to his wife, Helen, or 31 years he was Columbus city auditor, mayor of
to his estate. In any event, the pension will · ap- Columbus, state auditor and .governor.
proximate the estimated $14,000-a-year figure until a Rhodes' benefits were calculated by taking 1.9 per
I 't.! per cent cost-of~iving increase.takes effect July 1, cent of the average of his five highest annual salaries,
1974.
$39,890, and multiplying by his number of years of
The Public Employes Retirement System (PERS) is public service, 31, This produces a base annual benefit
forbidden to make public the pension of any of its of $23,495.
membera. Rhodes' benefits were calculated by United If he had been 65 at retirement and chosen the
Press International according to a complex fonnula "straight life" plan, he would have received the full
furnished by PERS.
amount. However, if he died, Mrs. Rhodes would only
The governor begsn drawing his pension in have received a lump cash payment of his conFebruary, choosing a plan which guarantees "certain tributions to the system.
and continuous" payments for 20 years. As of Feb- Instead, Rbodes chose the 20 year plan, stretching
ruary, 1991, his benefits will be exhausted.
out the monthly payments and reducing their amount
It must be noted Rhodes contributed heavily to his by roughly 32 per cent. Taking 68 per cent of $23,495
retirement fund, particularly during the eight years he produces an annual benefit of $15,976 for a retirant 65

Defense

Milwaukee

by his Bucks, a performance
which was good enough to win,
but still way below the Bucks'
standards.
Milwaukee shot 48 per cent
from the floor, spd the only
reason they won was because
the Lakers could only hit on 33
per cent of their shots.
The 73 points run up by the
Lakers tied the record for the
fewest points scored against the

MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)Larry Costello issued a warning
to the Los Angeles Lakers
following
the
Sunday
Milwaukee Bucks 91-73 win over
the Lakers. ·
· "We're going out there ready
to explod~," Costello said.
"We're way overdue and I can
feel it coming."
Costello was talking about the
shoddy offensive performance

Bullets Surprise
Knicks, 114 To 88
BALTIMORE (UP!) _ The second quarter.

Pay too _Much

of strip mining and rec]amalion, 'to which appeals can be
made from decisions of the
chief.
-Forbids mining within 200
feet of any road , stream or
lake.
-Forbids mining within 200
feet of adjacent property without consent of the owner.
-Forbids mining in any area
. adversely affecting public

years old.
Rhodes, however, was only 61 at retirement, shaving
his annual benefit by another 12 per cent to $14,058 a
year or $1,171 a month.
There were other options open to the fanner
governor. He could have chosen a lump sum payment
under which he would have received only what he paid
into the system. Peters said' this choice Is used most
frequently by persons with only a few years of service
who want to take their pension contributions when they
· leave.
Another plan allows the widow to receive haU the
retirant's monthly benefits if he dies, while still
another with smaller monthly payments giveS the
widow full benefits for life if he dies. The benefits are
figured on life expectancy tables.
Certain and continuous annuities, suCh ,s Rhodes
chooe, can be taken on five.-year or 10.year plans.
Peters pointed out Rhodes selected smaller payments
and gambled that he will live 20 years, although
benefits go to survivors.
Both employes and public employers contribute to
PERS, which pays out about $5 million a month in
retirement benefits.

Bucks in their history, and
Costello credited that to a
defense by Milwaukee he called
"superb."
"Our defense won the game
for us," be said. "Theguyswere
really hustling, forcing them
(the Lakers) to take bad shots.
We were superb."
Lakers Coach Joe Mullaney
sort of agreed with Costello. "I
don't know if they were that
tough defensively," Mullaney
said, "but our problem was
hitting the open man. We had a
problem executing against that
type defense."
The defense both coaches
were talking about was a
ferocious trap defense that saw
Milwaukee players continuously double-teaming the

Middleport
Personal Notes

SAVE

Tough
Admittedly Milwaukee's task
was made easier by the
troubled health status of the
Lakers. Jerry West and Elgin
Baylor were on the . bench as
expected, but just before the
game the Lakers received
another blow.
Keith Erickson, who has
providedsomefirepowerforthe
Lakers' offense, came down
with a bad case of stomach
cramps and didn't even dress
for the contest.
Mullaney admitted that the
Lakers "missed Erickson." But
he said it was "more the Bucks'
style of defense that bothered us
thanthelossofanyoneplayer."
The lfefense the Bucks emplayed held Gail Goodrich to
just 10 porn
· ts for the whole

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Holzer Medical Center, First Brown, Tom Von Cherrington,
Ave. and Cedar St. General Mrs . Mattie Clay, E. Donald
1J
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Davis, Mrs.' Javis D. Dye, Mrs.
..
fMaternity visiting hours 2:30 to Tom 0. Davis, Mrs. Walter .
t'
.~
.I14:30 p.m. Parents only on NewVahner, and Arthur B.
11 1
1
T
II IT-,
IPediatrics Ward."
Maloy. .
;...
Births
Terry Alexander, Mrs.
~ .
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11Mr . and Mrs. · Floyd L. Cinderella Baier, Mrs. Robert
1I" ..
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·Campbell, Jackson , a daughter; Bobo, William Boswell, Chester
L..
1Mr . and Mrs. Donald H. Hall, Cremeens, Earl Cremeens,
P.t. Pleasant, a daughter; Mr. Mrs . Clare nce Davis, Mrs .
I"
I
Tl
1and Mrs. Sam Hicks, Jr., Michael Davis and daughter,
11Vinton, a son; Mr . and Mrs. Cheryl Downard, Mrs. Victoria
111Joseph H. Ferrell, Vinton , a Ferrell, Willia Frost, Debra
11I"
I I I I" I
'son; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Gillenwater, Clifford E. Grady,
I
Petrie, Vin ton, a son, and Mr. Mrs. L: Roger Hudson, Mrs. W.
f
and Mrs. Daniel E. Knotts, Cecil Johnson, Miss Marcelle E.
11Gallipolis, a son.
·
Jones, Earl Lewis, Russell
~ ·
Discharges
LitUe, Dwight Logan, Sandra
t1._ .
Stanley H. Allen , Mrs. C. Logan, Kathy McCarley, Kathy
1'1 r r r
,41. .J- il , r. ...l.~~ ... -' I
Vance
Baker, Mrs. John C. McCombs, Carol Morris, .lames
}Sy MrS'; :,tc t.o r uya li 1
kl !,ld~
\J u Men Cluh
L..
Barney and daughter, John Oney, Tamara Parker, Mrs.
Edward
Callicoat, Mrs. David Peterson and son, Oscar
Dow 1'1
A C Ro S&gt; S
Ric
hard
E.
Cox, Mrs. William Poetker, Homer Pott, Mrs.
\, \N ood'/ . ~::&gt;o;a'(e'fl"·,o..\ r''o._(ltlo !\ ~ s+e'IY\
j , W co J~ lola. nt vhf~
R. Davi~, Vickie !•· Deer , Jerry Larry Pyles, Edward Quick,
"-· \--\ o.. v 1 "'i \,fe c.. ~ c.. I ~ 11"1 o V\e
o~ &lt; e &lt;o..\ ~ t e. Y\"1 \.
D. Eads, Richard Sean Jeffers, Mrs. Autum n Scott, Mrs.
· S~o.sc\'\ ~
to . ~ u.l'\ o; lo,~e ""'"d __
Mrs. Nettie Johnson., Mrs . Harold E. Shortridge and son,
l. 1. t m o. l&lt;e&gt; ouc we~Her.
14 . L ,v:,"''l -t'ro rYI '{~ t.._ ,· tr. /"' 'u- Norma N. Johnson, Oakey Ronald Spears, Kimberly
~- ':\econ~ wo&lt;d ~ ~ OAG C.
Johnson, Mrs. Larry W. Jones Stiffler, Mrs . Calvin Waugh and
15", ';i -f ~ +~ ~\ow e c o-1' C• rii D
and son, Marion Lee Kii"tiey, daughter, Oral Waugh, Brenda
o lo~"-" ·
1(.., D a. ~ -to .ti.\, -lo r 0'(1~.
Mrs. Rutter Kni ght, Mrs . . Winkler, Mrs. Herman Wriston,
5. ';)+~ te h"" of 0hoo
11 L a.&lt;;. t Y'l o ...-cl 111 ()AG C
Cha1·les E. Marlin, Mrs. John R. Virgil Yarbrough, Mrs. Hollis
l , \l \ o. n t o c c \H 1 n~ e v ._ v j
ls \o'l o. n,
McGuiness, Mrs. Ruth M. Rice, North, Mrs. Billy E. Hale, and ~
-\-wo ~ eo..&lt;-; .
1~, Ne~ d &lt; cl \o1 j' ' 'lev1•r
Thomas B. Ruth, Jr., Mrs. Mrs. M. Lucille Harkins.
Q-\'-f ev' wov \..
·
'7. fo..,o&lt;•T e -t\~,.H +11 o&lt; n1
James L. Shaver and daughter, ,
~te.mmed
·
lq I:Je,t 1.1 \e ~ o 1• I e .. ve' d,
Mrs. E1·vin Tollier, Christa A.
l \ -9 t e,...
.,. u_ k 1 \1 1.
~. C:, o.n:\eV\&lt;.c\ too\ .
Trainer , Mrs. Ronald J .
Wilcoxon and son, Kathy P.
Both the ruby and the sap·
'-0 . A ~ ( o.c\ ~- o. \"\1,- \' ln e, I 'S \'es +.
Yo
ho,
Mrs.
George
Harry
phire
are made of the same
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inorganic
m in e r a 1, corunZuspan and son. Charles .A.
1o. fo u ;._ VJ,, 0 \ , w '.t~oc&lt;T w, ,+ ;,..
1
Gales, David W. Crawford, dum , the hardest mineral
J
1
Christi D. Bonecutter, Woodrow excepting the diamond.
11.\ ~\&lt;~. w ocd " 011 Cr C \I, "1 ~ n

99.!

Meigs ·County
Branch of
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296 Socond St.
Pomeroy, ()hio

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WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
United Methodist Church.
Program will be the film, "The
Mekegan Delta."
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
PAST COUNCILORS, Chester
Co.uncil 323, !laughters of
America, Wectnesday night at
the hall. Miscellaneous shower
for Mrs. Laura Mae Nice. All
members urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
h~me of Mrs. Harold Lohse,
with Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee and .
Mrs. Russell Brown as cohostesses. C. .E. Blakeslee,

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.Personal Notes

MONDAY
. POMEROY ' High Alumni
Association meeting, 7:30p. m.
Monday at Pomeroy City Hall
council chambers. All alumni
invited.
MONDAY, Apri\ 12 special
meeting, Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM, 7":30 p.m. E. A. Degree.
W.S.C.S, HEATH United
Methodist. Church, 7:30 p.m.
Monday night at Ute church.
MEIGSSALON710,Eightand
Forty, 7:30Monday night at the
home of Mrs. George Hackett,
Sr,
·
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority 8:15,
Tuesday, . Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. ·
TUESDAY, APRIL 13 special
meeting Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM, 6:30p.m. Master Mason
Degree.
POMEROY PTA, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. David Bowen, instrumental music instructor
will present the program.
MINIST!&gt;RIAL Assn .,
Tuesday at Middleport Church
of the r;azarene at 10 a.m.

..

HOSPITAL NEWS

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WESTERN AUTO'S

PASSBOOK RATE

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Specials

· Pomeroy....

Social
Calendar ·

Ohio Gardener's Puzzle

Mr. and Mrs. Val Reynolds,
Miss Jean Hines of Columbus
Lynn, Gynn, and Val, Jr., of spent the Easter weekend here
Oklahoma City; brothers, Carl
$35.00 DownMorgantown were Easter with her mother, Mrs. Edward
Funeral services for Dr. R a graduaU, of the University o( P., Huntirtgton, W. Va . and F.
Balanj:e Qn
weekend guests of his parents, Hines, Minersville.
Brooks Lamb, 79, of Columbus Louisville Dental College and a Allen, Grantsville; and sisters, Convenient
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at charter member of Delta Sigma Mrs. Edna Summerfield,
Weekend guests of Mr. and Lochary, Miss Helen Lochary,
the Deyo-Davis Funeral Home, Delta.
Chester; Mrs . Opal Powell,
TeMrmA's
·
Mrs. G. V. Rupe were Mr. and and Mrs . Elizabeth Chase
Grandview Heights, with in- Survivors include his wife, Gallipolis; and Mrs, Georgia
Mrs. Joe McKay, Sally, Cinda returned Thursday night from a
terment in the Union Cemetery. Edith , a son, Russell of Clifford, Columbus.
and Victor; Warren.
Florida vacation. Mr. and Mrs.
A practicing llentist for 52 Chicago; two daughters, Mrs.
Dr. Lamb died Saturday at
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Fanner of Lochary visited Mr. and Mrs.
years, Dr . Lamb at one time Loraine Lee, Columbus, and the Riverside Methodist
.Mason, W. Va.
Dayton were here over the Ralph Henry at Lakeland. Miss
EJttens10n Agent, to ha.:d~o:ff:ic:es:in~P~o:m:e~ro~y~.H~e:.:w:as~M:rs~._:K~a~t:ha:l:ee:n;_~O~'R~e:i:ll~y~,~H:o:sp:i:ta~l.;__ _ _ _ _ __;·;;;;;;i.iijij;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;!~;;!;;;;;;!;~~jjjiiip;;!i
weekend to visit his mother, Lochary had spent most of the Meigs
·
present the program.
1
Mrs. David Farmer and Mr. winter in Florida returning to
MIDDLEPORT Literary Club
and Mrs. Arthur Skinner.
her Butternut Ave. home here .
meeting Wednesday 2 p.m. at
Mrs. Clarence Arther and Jack Chase joined his mother the home of Mrs. Rodney
children, Charles and Cheryl here Sunday and the two have
Downing. Mrs.. Thereon
Ann of Akron are the guests this now. returned to their home in
Johnson will review "Zelba."
c.~
week of Mrs. Minerva Childers, Dayton.
THURSDAY
Mrs. Nina Bland and ]\1rs. Pearl
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grimm
hel .
CLASS !2, Heath United
Reynolds.
and children, Steve, Christy and
forStowtl
Mrs. Frank Betz and Mrs. Amy, of Columbus were Easter Methodist Church, 7:30 ThursLucinda Daines were · in weekend guests of his parents, day. Mrs. M. L. French to
Columbus Sunday to pay last Mr. and Mrs . Bert Grimm, present the program; Devotions
by Mrs. David Entsminger;
respects to Mrs. Betz' brother- Letart Falls.
105515
in-law, R. Brooks l.afllb, retired
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer Hostesses, Mrs. Jack Bechtle,
dentist. Mrs. Betz and Mrs. , and daughter, Kim, visited over Mrs. John Kincaid, Mrs. Gilkey,
.
Daines were taken to Columbus the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. C. E. Young.
tiOCR SPRINGS Better
by Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
Bob Hoeflich and Jayne. On
~51!
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wharten Friday night Mr. and Mrs. Health Club, Thursday, I: 15
of The Plains spent Easter Hoeflich and Jayne were in p.m. home of Mrs. William
\
Sunday visiting her mother, Athens for an Easter visit with Grueser.
, , · ~ ~. ,
Mrs. Gertrude Cabeen, and Mr. her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
u:i .~
and Mrs. William Slater.
Howou-d Nicholson.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gilkey,
Mr. and Mrs. George Dallas,
Jr. were in Columbus Friday to Bill, Steve, Michael and
visit their grandmother, Mrs. Melissa, of St. Paris, were
.r·w..-;):
Gertrude Varian, a patient at holiday weekend visitors of
the Riverside . Methodist Mrs. Forest Bachtel and Miss Educational tours were
· ~-HP Brigg( 'l Sht;t'~
Hospital.
.
carol Bachtel, Middleport, and
Mrs. Golda Mourning 's Mr. and Mrs. Bill Matlack, discussed during a recent
meeting of the Moondusters 4-li
1r' Wii'M Mt'a411i
Easter guests were her son and Chester Road, Pomeroy ,
Club held at the home of Mrs.
C•.Wil!:IOfi
'
'
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson
p
••·'lt·- :ll!a•cl
. ~-· \ ;~·rr , . ' . , I •
'~James Mourning and chlldren, and children, Doug, Cindy and Harold Sauer, advisor.
tUnn.int ~~~~ ~ , ,. .,,
p G I l .• 'l'W a I
to~ ikyde ongl~ll
Columbus. They spent Sunday Lisa of Columbus were Easter Tammy SmiU! was welcomed
•
Easy1tr.....IU•o ~~. ·
in Point'Pleasant with Mr. and weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. into the club membership and in
~rloct for """ll'lawns
Mrs. Tom Walters. Mrs. James William Folmer. Mrs. 'Johnson response to roll call members
and lrimmlngl 2XC4201
Mourning and children were in and ~ children came .Wed- gave safety tips. Project books
Point Pleasant for aU of last nesday and were joined here by were distributed. Joy White,
week.
Mr. Johnson Friday evening. vice president and program
chairman, announced
Miss Penny Price arrived Making a pre-Easter visit with
DAYS
.c._.'
Sunday from Bloomington, Ind., Mr. and ·Mrs. William Folmer assignments for the April 14
ONIYI
for a week's visit with her and Mr . and Mrs. Scott Folmer meeting which will be held at
the home of Mrs. W. R. Hayes,
Regular 1.1..Y:
grandmother, ·Mrs. Golda were Mr. and· Mrs. James ,
W.A. Valuel
Mourning and Mr. and Mrs. Durham, Chris and Susan, of assistant leader. Joy Suaer
conducted recreation and
Reg.
As
Handy As a
WU!iam Nelson and the Story Hamburg, N. Y.
3.9S Volue
children.
Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks and refreshments were served by
Broom! For Rugs
Mrs. Sauer to those named and
6GC1004
Of!ly
Mr. and Mrs. James H.. children of kReynoldsburg
were
&amp;
Bare
Floors
d
Opal Dyer, Billy Dyer, Mary
Mourning of Tucson, Ariz., are Easter wee en guests of their Ruth Sauer, Patty ·Dyer, Mrs.
or Any Quick
'
• 3-position chrome grill I
here for a month's visit with her parents, Mrs. Frances Scholl Hayes and Mrs. Maxine flYer.
Job!
• Rust-resi1tant' legtl
sister,Mrs.NanMoore,andMr. and Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks.
2KC321!1
and Mrs. Everett Davis.
Richard Nease, a teacher in
the Mechanicsburg schools ,
A bad peace is better than
spent the Easter weekend here a good war.
lGVtl 7-Position
wiU! his parents, Mr. and Mrs. --David Ben-Gurion, 84, Israel's
first
prime
minister,
Paul Nease.
Web-Aluminum
3 Speeds Forward
saying Israel should give
Chaise Lounge
3 Speeds R-everse
back all the territory
6-ft. Naivrai
SON BORN FRIDAY
taken in the Six-Day War
Full comfort - 7.f in .. long I
Rtdlwo•MI Yrellll
Mr. and Mrs. James Grate
X130.S,9
in 1967.
'
are announcing the birth of
Full strength - 21
SAVE 68c TODAY!
weatherproof poly
· their first child, a son, at . the
. 10'
propylene web1 1
New York County, N.Y.,
Mr. and Mr-s. Donald E. ' Cabell County Hospital in
tal LIWI Ft•c•
.,.
Johnson, Columbus; announce Huntington, W. Va., on Friday, with an area of 22 sq\jare
w•Jt.,a.....
,...
miles,
is
the
smallest
county
Folding
Well
Handsome
Redwood
()(!agonal
Planter
anct
the birth of their first child, a April 9. The eight pound, eight
in the Uniled Stafes.
&amp;.Aiumi•!!.lll
Stand. Beautiful decorator piece! Bands and
• 6 tilt adjustments &amp; lock-up!
son, James Michael, born April ounce boy has been named
stand
are brass plated. Tub Is 12" In diameter,
• Auto -Pilot and 360e sl~tering!
4 at Holzer Hospital. The infant Jonathan Roger. Grandparents
ll
"tall.
X1J37-34.
, Bolll4.77 '
• Night fithing light with •witthl
weighed eight pounds, 7lf• are Mr. and Mrs. WU!iam Grate
3-Foot
"\ll(rought
lron"-Styled
Decorator
Foncr
Auns all
on l full
Section. ·white poty•lyrene won't de~i.
ounces.
of South Charleston, W. Va.
Paternal. grandparents are
1 QUART
Mr. and fyl(s. Gerald Johnson,
THERMOS BOTTLE
R'EG.,$3.29 ONLY--- ---' ' · "
On May. 1, if the governReedsville, formerly · of
'SAMJ:
DAY
GIANT 44-QT.
Cheshire. Great-grandparents ment has not stopped the
SERVICE
REG. $1:69.-----·
WASTEBASKET" PLASTIC"
are Mr. and -Mrs. Roy Johnson, war by then, we are going to
"In At ~Out At 5
ADULT SIZE
Chester, and Mrs. Lizzie Han-· stop the government from
functioning.
REG. 54.6•-----LIFE VEST
nipg, Middleport. Maternal -John l"roines , peace acUst'OUr FrH Perking Lot
DOUBLE DRIVEWAY
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
tivist and one of the "ChiREG.79t------Elwood
Howard,
Sr. , . cago Seven" defendants,
REFLECTOR "BIG3"
SIZE"
PEG. 99c, ____
revealing plans tor a fMS·.
LAUNDRY' BASKET ''BUSHEL
Harris 9nville , also former
216
E.
2nd,
Pomer'ov
sive march on Washingresi4enlli of Cheshire.
14-TOOTH BOW RAKE

Baltimore Bullets were expect- "All three games have been
ed to roll over and play dead the same for us except this man with the ball.
game. Goodrich averaged 30.1
but suddenly they're alive and time we made our shots within
in the first round playoffs
kicking more than ever.
the 15-foot range. 1 have the
against Chicago, but he has
The Bullets, down 2-0 to New shot charts to back that up ." Linescores
averaged only 13 against
York in their Eastern Confer- Fred carter,
Mllwaukee
in the
two of
Lakers
. the · sub guard
losses
in the
finals
the
b
f
ence est-o -seven playoff se- who scored 18 of his 20 poin\5 By Uniied Press International
ries, were just about written off in the first half, credited the
Nationa 1 League
Western Conference Championbf S d '
All Sta B ]tim
· t
t te
k (1st Gamel
ship.
e ore un ay s game.
r a
ore VIC ory o amwor . San Fran ooo ooo 02o- 2 6 2 ,:__--------~~~~~=~~~~~
forward Gus Johnson was out "The main thing was team- St. Louis 010 030 oox- 4 7 1 I'
wiU! an injured knee, guard work," said carter. "Five men
Robertson, Bryant (51 and •
Eddie Miles was sidelined with doing the job and when's the Dietz; GLiPbsoRn b(l -1) and Sim . .
d K . 1 t t"
h d th t ··
mons .
. o ertson (0 . 1)
a Ieg m)ury, guar
evm__ as 1meyou ear a mpro HRS-Foster llsll. Bonds (lsi).
Loughery was benched with a ball? We didn't commit fouls (2nd Game)
·
foot ailment and high scorer 'because we couldn't afford to I ·San Fran 204 100 ooo- 7 10 o
Ear1 Monroe had a tWISe
. t d don 't th"mk ,th e Kn'ICks were fl.at St.Marichat
Louis ooo(2.01
002 ooo2 9 2.
and G"b
ankle. The Knicks came looking at the start. We just came out Cleveland, Norman (3) , ra0~;
for slaughter.
and didn't let them play their (4). Bunet (6). Linzy (7), and
It was the hunter who game. Moving
the ball is Cleveland
McNertney,(0Simmons
. LP.
. 11 HRS17l. Torre
became hunted, however, as the always a tomcfor us. It sets us (Jrdl. Cardinal ( tstl .
Bullets, with a superb team off. We need it like we need air Mont
100 000 030- 4 13 0
effort, broke the game open in to breathe. Our shots were Phil
000 344 OOx- 11 10 1
the third period and humiliated going in this time and it didn't Moorlon, Reed (5) and
Bateman ; Lersch 0-01 and
the defending champion Knicks happen in the other two games. McCarver.
LP-Morlon (0-2) HR114-88. The fourth game of the The B.ullets are hopeful that Freed llstl.
series is scheduled for Wednes- Johnson, a rugged rebounder
day night in Baltimore.
who keeps Baltimore moving Pittsbgh ooo 010 ooo- 1 7 1
Allanta 000 000 12x- 3 5 1
Monroe and Jack Marin with his hustle, will be
Ellis (1 ·11 and Sanguillen;
sparked a string of 14 straight available for WedneS\fay night's Nash (1 -01 and King . Hr-Cepeda
(lsll .
points in the third quarter and game.
it was all over as Baltimore "There's a good chance Gus San Diego 302·012 lQO- 9 9 2
forged ahead to a 26-point lead. will play Wedne_sday," said Skip Los Angeles
003 002 002- 7 12 1'
Monroe finished with 31 points Feldman, the Baltimore traiRoss (6). Severlnsen
Phoebus,
and Marin added 22.
ner. "It depends on the therapy (91 and Barton
; Sutton, Moeller
"We made the shots tonight and the rest and whether he (41, O'Brien (7), Hough. 191 and
and didn't turn the ball over," gets his knee back to fuil Sudakts. WP-Phoebus (1-1) . LP(0-2) . HRS-Cotbert 2 (4th
said Bullets' coach Gene Shue. bending. You can't rule him out Sullon
&amp; 51h). Stahl (2nd), Gaston
"If we got in foul trouble we ·of anything. He's not a cripple (1st),
would have been in big trouble yet."
because we couldn't afford it Red Holzman, the Knick
playing five men. Actually, you coach, conceded early in the
shouldn't get in foul trouble last period, taking out his
against the Knicks since they're regulars and clearing his bench.
an 'outside shooting team. We Walt Frazier's 17 points were
won it by building a lead in the high for New York.

,tee on Aging said recently the
cost of honest mistakes falls
hardest on the elderly.
The committee urged creation of a simpler tax return.

5- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April12, 1971

D_
inner, Open Hou·se

er Strongest •Strip .MineBill Yet
tending five years beyond the
expiration date of the mining
penni! .
·
Other features of Speck's
bill:
'
-Flexible powers for the
chief of the division of reclamation overseeing the reclamalion projects.
-Empowers the governor to
remove without appeal any of
the five members of the board

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

.......

· -~-~~ ~---;---,....,.-

•
\'

planting within a year, forbids
moving equipment from the site
until reclamation is completed
and requires the state to retain
. bond posted by the operator until an inspection is made.
Bond is set on coal stripping
at $5,000 or $500 an acre, which
ever is more, and a minimum
of $300 an acre on clay, sand
and gravel. The bond must be
written to cover a period ex-

__
~,

.

.

coal mine operators to backfill
their strippings to the original
contour of the land within 300
yards of where they are
digging. Speck's bill requires
continuous backfilling with a
six-month limit.
Speck said time was a more
realistic factor than distance,
sinceoperatorscouldslowdown
the'ir digging and stay within
300 yards of their original excava,tion for months.
speck's bill also requires re-

-,--,..

JJ

ton.

•

SALE CONTJI'AJj!:D
. A rummige sale.by the Eight
and Forty in a building .on
SecOnd st., Pomeroy, will be
conlillued Tue~Y. All itemS
will
a\10 and 25 c:enls
for
clearance,
'J , M.

I

w. COMPTON.
0. D. ' .
OPTOMITRIST ,

· OFf ICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12.' 2 TO s (CLOSE
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,

6

$19.95

WEST CRAFT 4-FT. HOE
D !NT SHOVEL

YOUtHHOICE

WESTERN AUTO
49 N. 2nd AYE.

992·5515

''

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

--·•1.M

�. ...
'
.

&amp;-The DAlly Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, O.•.April12, 1971

'

Bargains, Bargains, and ~ More Bargains In. Sentinel Classifieds.

NOPE-- NOT
NO MORE
WE DON'T,
HONEY POT

.

Apple Grove News, Events

~f

MotQr

QUALITY

PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig-Zag

·co.

sewi ng

ma chihes . Stil-l · in
o rlgin~l car tons . No atla climents needed, as our
ccmlrols are built in. Sews
with .1 or 2 needles, makes
bu ttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and blind hem

®·

THINK ABOUT ITI

SR.

Whispering Pines
Nite Qub

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A -Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer 's Home, V.A., F.H.A., .
And Conventional Loans.

Come See Us Al97'12 N. Second St., Middleport.

IGreen Hill Homes, Inc. ro
992-7129
Evenings Call: 992-2534 992-3433
Dutton

. LONG i'S AH KE:'.I'.P
FEE:'.DIN"EM TOLI'L

ABNER, HE.'L.L. .
STA'I FAT- AN'
Wi!;'LL.

992-2580

SpenCer

Crow

...P"''"

STA'I

MARRIED!!

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well-Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.
·

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
i(WINSOR
.BUDDY
~EE

-lrCHAMPtON
.jiVAN DYKE

-t'ALSO
DOUBLE- WIDES

TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

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

WHAT ON EARTH
COULD BE KEEPING
CANDY AVON ? SHE
WA5 SUPPOeE[) 10
MEET ME HERE
FII'T~EN MINUTt5

EXPERT lawn mower and BACK HOE and end-loader
ti ller repa ir . Free pi ckup and
work. Sepllc tan ks Installed .
delivery. Warr en's Mower
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
Shop, 248 Condor Sl. Phone
992-1478.
991-7357.
11 -29-lfc
4-6-6tc
- -- - -SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
PAINTING , roofi ng and " Ditching . Electric sewer
spo ut ing service . Richard

Will. phone 992-2889.

3-11 -30tc

AOO!

.Mcleaning." 'Reasonable rates.

Phone
John
Gall ipolis 446-4782.

Russel l.
4-7-lfc

-------

SEWIN G MACHINES . Repair READY -MI X CONCRETE
servi ce, all m akes. 992-2284
delivere d right to '[Our
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
project.
Fast and easy. Free
Authorized Singer Sates and
es
timales.
Phone 992-3184.
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
Goeglein
·
Read
y- Mi x Co.,
3-29-lfc
Middleporl, Ohio.
6-30-tfc
HARRI SON'S TV AND ' AN TENNA SERVICE . Phone O'B RIEN ELECTRIC Servi ce.
992-2522.

6-10-tfc

Commercial, residential and
industr ial wiring: Phone 2472113 .

NEIGLER Conslruction. For

3-12-lfc

building or remodeling you r

home . Call Guy Neigler . O' DELL WHEEL alignment
loca led al Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Raci ne, Ohio.
Comp
lete fron t end servi ce,'
7-31 -lfc

------

RALPH'S
CA RPET
Upholster y Cleaning Service.
Free

estimates.

Phon e

Gallipolis 446-0294.

tune up and brake service.

Wheel s

ba la nced
All

tronica ll y.
guaranteed.

rates. 992-3213.

- -- - c. BRADFOR LJ, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Racine, Ohio

Crill Bradford

5-1-lfc

- - -- - -

PtA'/ Wml A~
LOSeR, I SSE!

3-17-30tc
•» THE GoLD· MAO CAP'H J\HAB, UIUIIILE TO
ACCEPT TilE '!RUTH "tHAT 'ALL '111AT

FOR. expe r t electrical wor k ca ll

992-517.9.

Phone 949-3821

THE ·BORN LOSER

elec-

work
Rea sona ble

3-12-lfc

GLIT'ri:R~ IS HOT GOLD," COtiTIHUim HIS

4·6-24tp

April 1971.

today·~ FUN~Y
r". . .,.,.,. . .

Q ••....,...... "·····.,.,--

•

F . H. O' Brien
Ju dge and ex .offlcio
of seid Court
By Janet E. Morr is
Deputy Cieri(

......._,

I DIETI N6

; 1S
'

!4112, 19, 21c

~~u~::.,r

v\} j '-~ H f"' UJ . .

~AJ kl NK IN61

; ·. '• .

·~··.···"""""·•. ..,.,.._. . .~

,. ,. .1·

•

~
~'.'.·:-..···'.'·,j_'· '

'

. ·.~c.·

..

'

(J;J
'.

'··~

NOTICE OF
APPOIN!TMENT
,
Cuo No. 20-445

·SENTINEL
CARRIER
FOR

HARTfORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

AAA-1 manufacturer has
Deceased .
developed new pressure
sensitive rubber tape for
Notice Is · hereby wlveri that
Faye- P. WatSon, of R . D. 1,
repairing roofs and n..hlngs.
Reedsville, Ohio, has been duly
Every roof owner a prospect.
appo lntt_d Executrl»e of the
High
commissions - lots of
Estate of Orville E . wat.son, :
repeat sales. Write for fr"
deceased, late of Mtlgi County,
Ohio .
·
. ·
·
· sample and &amp;~los kit. E.' C.
Creditors are, required to file . Hand, V. P., P.ARR tNC.,
the ir claims with said fiduciary
11400" , Syracu&amp;e
Ave..
with in four mo11ths.
Cleveland,
Ohio
-«1~
. .
1 Dated · this' '6th day ot April
'1"11
1971.
.
. ·
' · . . . ..
~ •· c
F •.H.'O'Brltn -'---'---"-'---,;-'--PtObatt&gt;Judgt
of Slid County
'j
Girafea U I U a11 y sleep
\~

19, 26.ltc

ONE saddle horse. One brood HOUSE, 6 rooms and ba th,
mare. Daye Yost. Portland, .phone 742·5613.
Ohio. Phone 843-22~1 .
3-30-1 2tp
4-9-3tp

~=-------

.,

i'

LOCUST POSTS, John Wells, Ll~;d~~~
bed~~~~;~or~
Long Bottom, Ohio.
bath . Call collect 1-614-962·
WOMAN for companion to
4-9-31p
1018, between 9 a.m. aM 5
elderly
lady.
Light ----~---p.m ., Monday through
housekeepl~g and cooking. BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
Friday .
•
Phone 99 2·5397 ·
·
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
4·8·6tc
·
· 4-12-3tc
--------~-4-lmc .

Estate of · Orville E . Watson

w

Warren Pickens

ICandinl

up.

·Cleland Realty
608 East Main Street
POMEROY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Roule ·7
- 1 LEVJ;L ACRE, 7.room s,
bath, 4 bedroo ms, cellar.
garage, ci.ly water and dee p
well. $9,308.

- 2 'slory frame, 6
.-A-,-U-M-IN-U--. - -.
2 STORY • mOdern home, 7 POMEROY
rooms,
3
bedrooms, bath,
"
M car lop boats, 10.
rooms and bath. Can be seen . $3,750.
12·13 fool. Lorenzo D. Davis,
after 5 p.m. or all day on
. Kingsbury Road.
Sundays or Mondays. Phone NEAR CARPENTER - FARM
3-2~·30tc
98!h4175.
•
- about 170 acres, 3 barns,
4·8,Stc
sll~. pond, 2 wells, other
KILL ' TERMITES and yard
buildings. Home has new
· lnsecls with ARAB ",You-Do.. .
~
·
.
II." King Builders Supply C~NVENIENT bul secluded · Alum . siding, 41 bedrooms, l
balh. s2o,ooo.
.
.
Company, Middleport.
ulldlng lots ~n ·T79'at Rock
TO
BUY
OR
SELl
· 2·2!-60tc
Springs .. Wllhln walking
. distance ol Meigs High
CALL US
School, a 5 mlnut.e drive from
· HENR)' CLELAND
TESTIED ;and approved by
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI'
R!'~L'I'OR
mill Oils of h!)mtmakere. Blue
Witte weekends, or · after 5
Office 992-2259
1 •
Lustre carpet cl•ner Is tops.
kd
Ph
Residence
992-2568
Baktr Furniture, Middleport.
p.m. ' wee ays.
one ,,..·
6187 •
·
4-11-6tc
.j.7.71
7 -~· lfc

... AIIO TH~ KRO&lt;lS, COIIVIIICED THAT
PUKJAB IS THEIR GOD EROG, Kl!EEL Ill
Vl\)ltSKIPFUL R2VEREHCE ...

FRAKTIC SBIIRCH FOR "HIOOEII

------insurance

a nd AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cance lled ?
Lost · you•
removal. Fully Insu r ed. Free
operalor's license? Call 992 ~
estimates. tall af ter 5 p.m .,
1966.
collec l
Dick
Hayman,
6-15-lfc
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
Hayman, Chester 985-3509 .
3-28-301p

TREE - TRIMMING

PAPER -HANGING, painting·,
plastering, dry wall. Arthur
Musser. Phone 991-3630.
3-18-301p
SE PTIC tanks cleaned. Mi ller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .

662-3035.
2-12-lfc

------

ROOFING,

Spouting

DAilY CROSSWORD

building 10xl0, concrete floor ,
erected, for $300. Richard
Will, Phone 992-2889.
4-12-JOtc

2.More

AOKQSS

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

!.Proposal
6.Part of

3. SllghUy
(3wds.)

A.

TOOL
KIT,

POUCH!

Saint

. (2 wdl.)
e. capti.ln.

of
2~•.Any-

creatot

tldng

(Fr.)
8. Unlntolt\•
cated

prefix

· 31. Bpunlty

profit-

7.Jsl&amp;nd

20. Goodman

Yl!ltenlaJ'I hiWf'l'

story

Nemo's

ment

LOBOD

~red·
of
bureaucracy 26.Type

16. Sl:almum

.2t Appoint-

71

Rickles

25.Gath•

18.Perlod
19. Numerical

;11. Traitor
:;a2, '•No slrre&amp;"

4·11.·

dian,

~.Symbol

lS. Well-known
golfer
H . Insurgent
15. I,ounprey

Unscramble theM four Jumble1,
one letter to tilth square, to
form four ordinary weirdo.

X. Come-

&lt;!.Acting

paramour

WMP0/1390

tary

sous~d

11. Sitter
12.Abacond
with a

JllYd~;~.:!t!-tc

.23.Danubo
tribu-

exqul!ite

a cap

and

Pain ting . Also, metal storag e

tor

(2

(4wds.)

D

~.Vandyke,

wdl.)
29.Reat-

emmple
39.liiM
Fabray,
to friends

dent
of"'

9. Manage
10. Consanguineous

RUCRl'

38.li'Qrelp.

able

partner

I rJ

I MAINK41

61. Nolther's

convent

17.Frost
2lS. Point of
vlew
J7.P!'Opounded

.

II

1

tJ I

~Ai

GUNMAN
60T A KICt&lt;. OUT 0~

!&amp;. -Blane
~· ~ola. n~v~l

PER

HOBSTmER
REAL ESTATE

For

-

You will have somethi ng of va lue to shoW for' the $$$ you
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain at')
Income Ta x benefit, you bu ild an equity and you ar e nof
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.

------

------

..

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

-~:m:~~~o:~o~u!J

TEAFORD

0 lfll .. Mlt\.l.r.. T.W. .... U.S. ,._·"""::_
·-

,.

THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

· EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Virgil B.

0 •

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

$5.,55

Everyone Can!

NO
KJAITI/oJG.

'

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ServiCe

BLAETTNARS

Want Ad

Given under my hand and
seal ot said Court, thjs 9th day of

-

G\lt (1-\AI R

Business· _Services

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Floyd Norris Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck and
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
Pam spent a recent weekend were visitors in RutlAnd Sunslitch. Full cash price, $38.50
with relatives in Columbus.
day.
'1962 T. BIRD
$495
or budgel plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
H.T. Cpe,, lite blue finish, good tires, clean vinyl Interior,
Mr. andMts. WaidFoster and
Mrs. Charles Skeels (Kitty
4-6-6tc
auto.
trans
..
'power
steering
and
brakes,
radio,
heater.
children of Columbus spent a Allen), a former resident of
1968
FORD
51895
=-:-:::-=-::-::-:--:-:-:--:-:-:--weekend With their parents·, Mr. Letart Falls, will celebrate her
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
'12 Ton 8' Styleslde Pickup, V-8 engine, std. trans .. custom
and Mrs. Charles Foster and 8211d birthday on April 7.
Cleaner complete with atcab, R-step bumper, chrome Int. bumper, radio, while &amp;
tachments, cordwinder and
Mr. and Mrs . Albert Hill. Jr. at ' David
Gloeckner
has
red finish . Good tires.
painl
spray. Used bul in like
1966 CHEVROLET
$1695
Racine. John Dean Foster will resumed his studies at Ohio
new
conditi on. Pay $37.45
2 Ton Cab-Chassis. 84" cab to axle. Good 825x20 tires. 2·
spend a week with his grand- State Vnlversity.
cas
h
or
credit
term s
speed rear aKie, clean cab, 292 cu . ln . 6 cy l. engine.
available. Phone 992-5641.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Sgt. and Mrs. Skipper Miller
From the Largest Truck or
4-6-61c
Foster, and Cheryl will spend a of Texas iu'e spending a week
Bolldozer Radiator to the
week with Mr. and Mrs. Hill at withtheirparents,Mr.andMrs.
$mallest Heater Core.
1968 GMC •i,. lon pickup, 23,000
Racine.
Herbert Miller and Mr. and
miles, new ti res, ca mpe'f top, '
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Sbiel&lt;ts and · Ml;s. Roush at New Haven.
good conditi on. Phone 9922805. Eldon Walburn.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher, Larry,
CllffordAshleyisemployedat
Pomeroy
Ph. 992.-2143
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
3-28·1fc
Molly and Amy, spent Sunday the Kaiser plant at RavensI
POMEROY, OHIO
with Mr. and Mrs. Howard wood, W. Va.
G&amp;T lOUR MAK wmiA
Robinson at Flatrock, W. Va.
Mr . and Mrs. Elmer Stone of
Spending Sunday evening Leon, . W. Va., are announcing
• WANT AD
with Mr. and .Mrs. Ro_y Buck the birth of a son, Sunday, at St.
Wanted
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
and Pam were Mrs. Mildred Marys Hospital, Huntington.
~ ...Oay Before Publication FEMALE Basset Hound . Phone
LIVING
ROOM
suite,
Foster and son, Robert, and · He weighed 8 pounds, 2 ounces, 5 P .Monday
Deadline 9 a.m . ·
949-3056 afler 5 p.m.
automatic
washer
and
dryer,
friend, Timmy Stellar, of and has been named Tlmotliy i Cancellation &amp; Corrections
4-11 -31p
kitchen wall cabinet, beds and
untn 9a.m . f
Columbus,andMrs.CoraBuck. Elmer. Grandparen!s are Mr. Will beoccepted
Day of Publication
dresser. Depot 51., Rutland.
REGULATIONS
Sunday guests of Mrs. Eula and'Mrs. Leo Taylor of Racine
Sale signs up. .
-GUARAfilTEEDPATIENTS lo care for in my
The Publisher reserves the4-11-31c
home. Phone Mason 773-5712.
Wolfe and Aaron were Mr. and and Mf. Stone of Leon. He was tight to edit of relect any ads.
Phone 992-2094
4·6·12tc
Mrs. JesS Lyons of Mason, Mr. greeted by a sister, Missy, who deemed obje-ctionaL The
OU CAN BUY AT LANDMARK
publisher will not be responslbJe,
and Mrs. James Lewis and is spending a week with her for
' more than one incorrect'
For ·Rent
Barbara of Pl. Pleasant; Mr. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Insertion .
RATES .
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
andMrs. JackOrdofLetart, W. Taylor.
For Want Ad Service
Sale Prices Thru April
Courl , Rt. 124, Syracuse,
•' ·
Va :, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Weekend guests of Mr. and J..~!.nts ptr worune inJertlon
Ohio. 992-2951.
Min mOm
arge Sc
HAND
PUSH
MOWERS
Norris of SyracUJie; Johnny and Mrs. Leo Taylor were Mr. and · 12 cents per word three
4-2-tfc As Low As
63.95
Kevin Wolfe were weekend Mrs. David Taylor, Sandra and consecutl~.lnsertrons.
=-:-::--:-:----~
Roofing &amp; Carpenter
RIDING MOWERS
18 cents .. per ·. word sJx con · TRAILER. Brown 's Trailer
guests of the Wolfes.
Polly Taylor. Sandra remained ncutrve
Insertions .
211.95
Park, Minersville. Phone·992- As Low As
Work
25 Per cent Dl$count on paid
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Connally for a week's vacation with her
3324.
ECONOMY TILLERS
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
4-9-61c As Low A&lt;
andBrianhavemovediromthe parents. Mrs. Leo Taylor, Mr.
Spouting, Roof
CAR O· OF THANKS
134.95
&amp;
OBITUARY
Quillen residence to their new and Mrs. David Taylor, Sandra
$1 .50 f.o r SO word~ minimum . UNFURNISHED 3
room
Painting
home at Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. and Polly Taylor, Columbus, Each
POMEROY ,
additional word 2c .
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
J. W. Carsey, Mgr
tiLIND ADS
NEw &amp; OLD WORK
Daniel Riffle and family have · called at the St. Marys Hospital
t-31-tfc
Additional · 25c Charge per - -- - - - Phone 992-2181
moved from Pomeroy to the Sunday to see Mrs. Stone and Advertisement .
·
·TWO OR three bedroom home.
All Wea ther ~ooting &amp;
OFFICE HOURS
Quillen residence.
new baby.
Construction Co.
Co ttage Road, Syracuse.
8:30 .-.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Dye of
r,!r. and Mrs. Robert Hart of ~ : 30 • .m. to 12 :00 Noon
Adults only. Phone 992-51 33 . ANTIQUES, phone 992-5327.
DEXTER. 0 . 45726
PHONE 742·l94S
~
Columbus are announcing the Racine spent Fi-iday with Mr. :Saturday . ·
3.2.tfc - - - - ----4-_7-301c
Insured- Experi enced
birth of a daughter, Betsy and Mrs . Gerald Hayman, Notice
:T::R-:
A-::1L
- :E
:-:R
::-::SP
:-:A
:-C
:-:E'·o_n_o_ld-R:-1. 33, MODERN WALNUT slereoWork Guarant eed
Patricia,
at
Riverside Brian, Chris and David Hupp
1h-mlle north of new Meigs
radio combination. 4 speaker
High School. Phone 992-2941.
so und sys tem, 4 speed
Methodist Hospital. She and Jell Knighting called on
chang
er, separate controls.
3-5-lfc
weighed seven pounds. Grand- Keith Hayman Sunday. Mrs.
Cindy Clark
Balan ce $68.31. Use our Real Estate For Sale
:F:-:U::R-:N-:1:-:SH_
E_
D_a_n_d_
un~.f-u-rn-ished
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman spent Monday
budgel lerms. Call 99i3352.
and the Night Riders
Robert Casper, Mr. and Mrs. with her daughter, Mrs. Linda
apartments. Close to school.
4·8·61c
Phone
992-5434.
Robert Dye of Columbus. Great- Jewell at New haven and took
-:--:::-::---::::::-:-:-:4 Piece Band
10-18-tfc MAPLE ST EREO -radio
grandmotber Is Mrs. Dolly Bobby Jewell home after he had
And Vocalist ·
combination AM&amp;FM radio,
Wolfe, local. Mr. and Mrs. spent some time with Mrs.
3
ROOM,
bath,
..
furnished
or
f ou r speake r St 4 speed
from Beverly, Ohio
semi-furnished
apartment.
automati c cha ng er, dual
Robert Casper brought Billy Hayman and family.
Also. 2 room , bath, furni shed
volume co ntr ol. Use our
Dye to the home of his greatMrs. Vivian Phelps of Letart
apartment. Mulberry Ave .,
budget terms, or pay balance
Broker
grandmother •.Mrs. Dolly Wol{e, was a dinner guest recenUy of
Pomeroy .
Referen ces
of $83.29. Ca ll 992-3351.
110
Mechanic
St.
required. Phone 991-6698.
·
4-8-61c
Friday where he will visit in- Mrs. Benny Boggess.
Pqmeroy,
Ohio
3-23-tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Anderson
definitely.
Friday and
1968 BULTACO 100 c.c. Lobllo.
Joey Roush is ill with the flu. celebrated the 57th wedding
Saturday Nig~ts
New paint and cables, ex. Ml DOLE PORT - 4 bedrooms,
Tina Boggess, small daughter, anniversary Monday, April 5.
Auction
balh, gas forced air furnace
cellenl condition . Asking $325
with
air
con dition in g.
or
bes
t
offer.
Must
sell.
Phone
of M~ . and Mu. Charles
Mrs. Junior Spawn of J;elart WILL DO tailoring and
AUCTION
Beaut iful kitchen with cook
uphobtery.
Phone
992-3561.
Syracuse
,
Ohio
992-71
73
l Boggess, has'pneumonia, and is . ~l!ifSundaY· On · Mr. ·ana.Mrs. · · .,
April 17, al the
3-31 -JOtc SATURDA'(,
and oven units. Ni ce 2 car
Virgil
Price
farm
2V2 miles E. evening only.
a patient at Holzer Medical Jess Anderson. Willard Lusher
garage. $14,500.00. .
of Chester on Riebel Road .
4-7-6tc
Center.
and children of Sharon, W. Va., n1LL Ph.. " up Rlt:• .... . .andlse
Follow auction signs from S. - - - -- - -- SYRACUSE - 4 bedrooms,
and lake to auction on a
Bill, Dave and Art Wilson of spent Saturday with the AnR. 248 at Chester Golf Course. Auto Sales
ba th. dining with fireplace.
Call
Jim
percentage
basis.
Livestock
Bolivar Dam are spending a dersons. Mrs. Benny Boggess
Full basement. Gas furnace. 3
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland. I
CHAROLAIS -Hereford 1958 FORD 6-cyl inder. excellent
week with their grandmother, spent the weekend with her
porches . M odern k itc hen ,
Phone 742-4461.
r
b
nning
co
nditi
on·
.
Bod
y
springer cow, 2 yeariing
paneled . Large garden .
9-23-tfc
Mrs. Erma Wilson.
parents, the Andersons.
Holsleln hellers, 2 Angus needs some r epair , $100.
Asking $13,000.00.
-'
Phone 949-1755.
heifers, 1 Charotais-Holstein
Mrs. Mae Pearson and Mrs.
AUCTION - WHEN? Each
4-9-31c
heller, 2 yearling Holslein
Ada Cramlett of Racine were
MIDDLEPORT
COM.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
LEGAL NOTICE
bulls.
MERCtAL
LOT
Next
lo M.
Hayman ' s Auction House,
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Seal tel bids will b~ received at
Farm Machinery
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
and
R.
Only
$3,500.00.
the
office
of
the
Village
Clerk
,
Laurel
Cliff
on
new
Rt.
7
Mrs. Roy Pearson.
1~69 MASSEY -Ferguson 135
power steering,
on Second Street, VIllage of
Pomeroy
Middleport ByTractor (only 136 hrs. use). 2 hardtop,
St. Clair Hill is a ' medical Pomeroy, Ohio, until 12 o'c lock; pass.
power brakes, air, 1s,poo MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
,
Botlom Plows, 6 fl. disc. 5 It. miles . E!xcellenl ~:ondltt\&gt;n.
noon , May, 3, , 1971, for the
one stor y house near stores.
patient at Holzer Medical fOllowing
2-7-11&lt;:, brush hog, spring tooth
propos'al.
Phone
992-2288.
Bal h. la r ge kitc hen and
Center. Mrs. Martha Anderson
harrow, (all with 3 pf. hllchl.
For sere of Lot 12 and Lot 13,
11-10-tf'i;
dining
area . 2 leve l lots. 011y
on the corner of East kUOta:l( .31 AMPS made to
2-wheel trailer; Dual-Wheel
is a medical patient at Veterans located
$5,000.00.
Main Street and New Street,
order. 2.4 hour service. Owain
Gravely Tractor with Rotary 1968 CHEVROLET Super Sport
Memorial Hospital.
diagonally across from The
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
396, 2 door, 4 on the floor. 375 COUNTRY HOME - 4 nice
Mower , plow, cultivator ,
Whlte House Cafe, by the
Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Don, Richard VIllage
H.P., $1400. Phone 949-4843.
Grader
blade,
seed
and
of Pomeroy, .Ohio.
bedrooms, modern bath, and
2·12-901c
fertilizer
spreader,
saw,
and
4-9-3tp
HiU are announcing the birth of
Each bid must con.t aln the full
kitchen
. Gas furnace. Dr illed
riding sulky; Toro lawn - - - -- - name of · every person or
a daughter at Holzer Medical company
well.
Good
cellar . 57 ACRES
OVEN"'
FRESH
bakery
1965 MUSTANG convertibl e.
Interested In the
mower·tlller combination.
Minerals
.
Asking
$10.000.00.
Center . 'She weighed seven same, anl1 be accompanied by a
pr oducts . Jimmy ' s Pastry ·
fair condition, $300. See Dan
Toots and Misc. equip.
or certlftied check In the
Shop, N. 2nd Ave.. Mid- HOME LITE XL 101 Chain saw.
Creme~ ns . Nel son Road ,
pounds; five ounces, and has bond
76 ACRES - 20 tractor land.
sum of $100.00 to the satisfaction
Rutland.
dleporl. Phone 992-3555.
2
carpenter
saws
(power),
2
been named Carissa Dawn and of VIllage Counc.rt as a guaranty
Good implement shed and
4-9-3tp
3-28-30tc
elec. grinders, 2 elec. drills,
that If the bid Is accepted
ce llar . 8 r oom older home
was greeted by "a brother, contract
vise andanvll , elder mill, slip- :-:::::---::::=-::-:-::-::-:::-:will be entered Into and
with 4 bedrooms. Running
scraper, plastic and iron pipe, 1971 FORD PICKUP, v, lon
Heath. Graildpare~ts are Mr. rts performance . property ATTENTION ladles! Would you
waler.
$13,500.00.
Rang er, automatic, power
.
.
like to try a wig on In the
smooth and woven wire, 2 air
and Mrs. Henry Euler and Mrs. secured
These checks or bonds wilt be
steering, 360 engine, red and
privacy of your own home?
compressors. lard : trees, 2
Inez Hill of Racine.
returned at once to all except
white, like new. Will sell NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
You can. Just call us. We also
tarps , truck rack, large ami.
BEFORE
THEY . Go
successful
bidder.
His
check
under dealer's cost. Also ,
have the Mink Oil Kosmellcs,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bostick .fhe
of hand tools, ropes, chains,
HIGHER.
CALL
US TODAY.
or bond will be held until the
camper top with or without
· and other lools.
Koscot,
of
course.
and family of Dunbar, w. Va., contract or bid Is properly
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD.
truck . Ha rold E. HyselL
Dlslrlbulors, Brown's . Phone
Household Furniture
by him .
ASSOCIATE
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl executed
•
Middleport 992-5 113.
3-PIECE living room suite, 2- phone 742-3154.
The right Is reserved to reject
992-3325
Johnson and Patrick, Jack any and all bids .
.4-9-31
c
12-31.tfc
piece living room suite, 2
bedroom suites (like new), - -- - - Bostick and Mrs. Laura Circle
Jane Walton , Clerk HOME sewing . Phone 99i.sJ27.
24 ACRE FA.RM. Long Bottom.
Gas
range, 1
Grand
of Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Milford
with or wilhout fa rm
Frigidaire
refrigerators.
1
7Real
Estate
For
Safe
(.4) 12, 19, 2tc ~~----~3~-~
~Jmc . piece dlnelte set. 2 5-piece
Frederick and children of
machinery . Hou se with 3
dlnetle
sels,
Antique
cup·
HOUSE,
6
rooms
·
a
nd
balh,
bedrooms,
din ing room , living
Dorcas visited over the
Lost
room, l'h baths, enclosed
board,
Empire
gas
heater.
3
·
phone
Z42-5613.
weekend with . ..
NOTICE ON FILING
A MOTHER'S pin , vicinity of 21 in. Television ~els. large
back porch, wall to wall
4-l1 -111c
·'
OF INVENTORY
· Robert Wood a
E!berf.elds Store. Reward . amf. of dishes, pols, pans. =:==---- - GIIU
car~tlng . .Al umi num siding.
ANO APPRAISEMENT
Phone 992·5010.
awnrng, storm windows and
elc., end lables, odd chairs, HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His.,
Waid Johnson.
The Slife of Ohio, Meigs
storm doors. City water .
County . Probate Court
4-11-3tc
many
other
items.
Pomeroy.
Phone
991-2293.
lables.
and
Mr . and Mrs . Milford
To the Executor or Ad ·
Selling due to ill health. Phone
10-25-lfc
Frederick Jr. and family have m inistrator of the estate; to Wanted To Buy
614-985-3938.
THIS IS a large sale of good
suc
h
of
the
follow
ing
as
are
4-9-12tp
moved their mobile home from ,..e.;;Gents of the State of- Ohio,
merchandise .
Sale
of ·HOUSE, 4 room s, bath, 2 lots
OLU
IUrniture,
dishes,
brass
Household will start promptl~
located In Syracuse. Call after
Minersville Route to the rw~ viz : - the surviving spouse, the
beds, elc. Write M. D. Miller,
al
10:00
A.M.
Farm
items
in
3
p.m. weekday s. phone 991next
of
kin,
the
benefic
iaries
Proffitt farm at Dorcas.
Rl. 4, ,Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
FORS~
allernooh . Lunch served. No!
under the will ; and to the at.
2806.
992-6271.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Warner tornev
or
attorneys
4-7-61c The spacious hom e of the
responsible for accidents.
pre senting any of the
9-1-lfc
Aucf. : I. D. " Mac" McCoy - - - - - - - - of Dorcas spent Tuesday with re
late Mrs. Bessie M. Pickens,
aforementioned persons :
&lt;Niner:
VIrgil Price
·
•
Sadie Wolfe , Middleport ,
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
situated on clpproxi mately
4-11 -3tc
County, Ohio,, No. 20,469. ttelp Wamed
six a ~ re s in Raci ne, Ohio.
and assisted them in papering Meigs
You are hereby notified that
Hot water heat by· free gas.
and painting.
Inventory
and
Ap ·
the
Inter est in produci ng gas
pralsement of the estat'e of the
Miss Lorna Bell spent aforementioned, deceased, late
Safe
well.
·
Geqrge S. HobsteHer, Jr.
WANTED
Monday night with Denise Cross ot said County, was filed in this
Broker
ANTIQUES,
Phone
992-5317.
'
Court . Sa ld . I rw ento·ry and
Phone 985-4186
at Oak Grove . .
4-6-301c
Appraisement Will be for
Hilton
Wolfe, Salesman
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Shook hearing before this Court on the
Phone
949·3211
day of April, 1971, al 10:00
Exec. of Estate
and children of Pomeroy Route ·291h
o'c lock A.M .
COAL. limestone. ~xcelslo: CALL US for all your real estate
Reedsville,
Ohio
needs. Inquire of our list ing s
and .Rev. and Mrs. Kettler of
Any person desiring . to file
Salt Works, E. Mal" ' St.,
378.6289
exce
ptions
thereto
must
file
before
you
buy
,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·••·
Cincinnati called on Mr. and them at least five days prior to
4-6-61c
4-9-tfc
.
the date set for hearing .

Pomeroy Motor Co.

L

t'or Sate

·Pomeroy

2 SIGNS

'

I..OVeRS

30. Coin of
Timor

611E5S 1 LOOK ENOUGH Lll&lt;f JUST AHOTHER
VACATIOHIN,; 5l!E~T 10 8I.EIW INTO Ti1f

MONTH*

31. FawkesDay

PlACE TO

32. Poke
35. 30days
(abbr.)
36.-Gennan

"TAXI,

~TilE CAR

Will Buy A New.
3 Bedroom Ranch Home

CONYAINING
POLORE5AIW

conjunction

TilE TWO NEll
10 THE 15!ANO'S

Antwerr W'hal ,•• t'rT.uy .....nurutr wo•-"DIIt· PY"

ST. Mexican
' tree

'TWl'LYE OAR

38. See 25

BAY' HOT!:L

With wall-to-wall carpeting, aluminum
s1d1ng, F.A. gas heat, buill-in ca~inets,
etc. etc.

Ju•bt." JOINT
Slturct.y'•

(Aawen to•• lf!.P)
DOWDY ,PAYING A"IAI

.

1'1\,11'

--

Across

40. -

lnk

, 42. Hebrew

prophet
48;Jolly4J,. Tttomas

MISS ~ELEN SIIIEE151CRV, ~
Of ' THE SIX.I!UNN'I-W\NIIf5 AAP
· THEIR WATEf BEP' !! 511E

ANSWEREP M'f FAN ~ETTER!

'45. Drtft

DOWN
1. Central
caucasian

,See Today

. DAILY ORYl"llQUOTE-Here'• .how to work It: l!,•:.!l
·"U..Ioto.lii-...L...--..--'

. .'

· At 203 Park St., Middleport, or r.all AI
Moody, 992-7034, for appointment. ·

AXYDL ,BAAXB
.:

•

Based on family Income of $5.000 . with three

children, taxes and ipsuranc~ not Included .

LONGl!'lDLLOW ·
One letter lllmpty ot&amp;D4f tor another. In this sample A br Ml~ HELEN m~mHEQ
used tor the )hrH L'o, X for tile .two 0'1, etc. Bln1te letters. THI~ ENVELOPE WITH HER HANDS!
apostrophes, the len,th anc:l tcmnatlon or the words are all
Tf.!IS 15 100 MVCH!
lllnts.
. Each day
. the co4e letters are different.
.,

.

.'
'~
••

br

I

.A. &lt;bn&gt;tornm QuolaUOn
S

j

I

o

:Iil T X.

lllll

~

o

ll: S 0

W K .W N

Jl S K

HBKVA.BB JISO. ' LV'F STR. BDLOF HJC

•

S O'l'JI.

·.

..

S:DX . . WB:Kl!l,.- - .A:QKJI..A.O

OZ~KH

.::!:4~=~;J:0=~~~~?;L:e:.::::::!:::::!::!::=:l..WJD&amp;a 'l'riJii AVOJJ&gt;.- -sOB:IN KIIlRKIDGAARD
..

L_L~~~~L_J

�. ...
'
.

&amp;-The DAlly Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, O.•.April12, 1971

'

Bargains, Bargains, and ~ More Bargains In. Sentinel Classifieds.

NOPE-- NOT
NO MORE
WE DON'T,
HONEY POT

.

Apple Grove News, Events

~f

MotQr

QUALITY

PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig-Zag

·co.

sewi ng

ma chihes . Stil-l · in
o rlgin~l car tons . No atla climents needed, as our
ccmlrols are built in. Sews
with .1 or 2 needles, makes
bu ttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and blind hem

®·

THINK ABOUT ITI

SR.

Whispering Pines
Nite Qub

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A -Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer 's Home, V.A., F.H.A., .
And Conventional Loans.

Come See Us Al97'12 N. Second St., Middleport.

IGreen Hill Homes, Inc. ro
992-7129
Evenings Call: 992-2534 992-3433
Dutton

. LONG i'S AH KE:'.I'.P
FEE:'.DIN"EM TOLI'L

ABNER, HE.'L.L. .
STA'I FAT- AN'
Wi!;'LL.

992-2580

SpenCer

Crow

...P"''"

STA'I

MARRIED!!

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well-Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.
·

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
i(WINSOR
.BUDDY
~EE

-lrCHAMPtON
.jiVAN DYKE

-t'ALSO
DOUBLE- WIDES

TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

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

WHAT ON EARTH
COULD BE KEEPING
CANDY AVON ? SHE
WA5 SUPPOeE[) 10
MEET ME HERE
FII'T~EN MINUTt5

EXPERT lawn mower and BACK HOE and end-loader
ti ller repa ir . Free pi ckup and
work. Sepllc tan ks Installed .
delivery. Warr en's Mower
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
Shop, 248 Condor Sl. Phone
992-1478.
991-7357.
11 -29-lfc
4-6-6tc
- -- - -SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
PAINTING , roofi ng and " Ditching . Electric sewer
spo ut ing service . Richard

Will. phone 992-2889.

3-11 -30tc

AOO!

.Mcleaning." 'Reasonable rates.

Phone
John
Gall ipolis 446-4782.

Russel l.
4-7-lfc

-------

SEWIN G MACHINES . Repair READY -MI X CONCRETE
servi ce, all m akes. 992-2284
delivere d right to '[Our
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
project.
Fast and easy. Free
Authorized Singer Sates and
es
timales.
Phone 992-3184.
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
Goeglein
·
Read
y- Mi x Co.,
3-29-lfc
Middleporl, Ohio.
6-30-tfc
HARRI SON'S TV AND ' AN TENNA SERVICE . Phone O'B RIEN ELECTRIC Servi ce.
992-2522.

6-10-tfc

Commercial, residential and
industr ial wiring: Phone 2472113 .

NEIGLER Conslruction. For

3-12-lfc

building or remodeling you r

home . Call Guy Neigler . O' DELL WHEEL alignment
loca led al Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Raci ne, Ohio.
Comp
lete fron t end servi ce,'
7-31 -lfc

------

RALPH'S
CA RPET
Upholster y Cleaning Service.
Free

estimates.

Phon e

Gallipolis 446-0294.

tune up and brake service.

Wheel s

ba la nced
All

tronica ll y.
guaranteed.

rates. 992-3213.

- -- - c. BRADFOR LJ, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Racine, Ohio

Crill Bradford

5-1-lfc

- - -- - -

PtA'/ Wml A~
LOSeR, I SSE!

3-17-30tc
•» THE GoLD· MAO CAP'H J\HAB, UIUIIILE TO
ACCEPT TilE '!RUTH "tHAT 'ALL '111AT

FOR. expe r t electrical wor k ca ll

992-517.9.

Phone 949-3821

THE ·BORN LOSER

elec-

work
Rea sona ble

3-12-lfc

GLIT'ri:R~ IS HOT GOLD," COtiTIHUim HIS

4·6-24tp

April 1971.

today·~ FUN~Y
r". . .,.,.,. . .

Q ••....,...... "·····.,.,--

•

F . H. O' Brien
Ju dge and ex .offlcio
of seid Court
By Janet E. Morr is
Deputy Cieri(

......._,

I DIETI N6

; 1S
'

!4112, 19, 21c

~~u~::.,r

v\} j '-~ H f"' UJ . .

~AJ kl NK IN61

; ·. '• .

·~··.···"""""·•. ..,.,.._. . .~

,. ,. .1·

•

~
~'.'.·:-..···'.'·,j_'· '

'

. ·.~c.·

..

'

(J;J
'.

'··~

NOTICE OF
APPOIN!TMENT
,
Cuo No. 20-445

·SENTINEL
CARRIER
FOR

HARTfORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

AAA-1 manufacturer has
Deceased .
developed new pressure
sensitive rubber tape for
Notice Is · hereby wlveri that
Faye- P. WatSon, of R . D. 1,
repairing roofs and n..hlngs.
Reedsville, Ohio, has been duly
Every roof owner a prospect.
appo lntt_d Executrl»e of the
High
commissions - lots of
Estate of Orville E . wat.son, :
repeat sales. Write for fr"
deceased, late of Mtlgi County,
Ohio .
·
. ·
·
· sample and &amp;~los kit. E.' C.
Creditors are, required to file . Hand, V. P., P.ARR tNC.,
the ir claims with said fiduciary
11400" , Syracu&amp;e
Ave..
with in four mo11ths.
Cleveland,
Ohio
-«1~
. .
1 Dated · this' '6th day ot April
'1"11
1971.
.
. ·
' · . . . ..
~ •· c
F •.H.'O'Brltn -'---'---"-'---,;-'--PtObatt&gt;Judgt
of Slid County
'j
Girafea U I U a11 y sleep
\~

19, 26.ltc

ONE saddle horse. One brood HOUSE, 6 rooms and ba th,
mare. Daye Yost. Portland, .phone 742·5613.
Ohio. Phone 843-22~1 .
3-30-1 2tp
4-9-3tp

~=-------

.,

i'

LOCUST POSTS, John Wells, Ll~;d~~~
bed~~~~;~or~
Long Bottom, Ohio.
bath . Call collect 1-614-962·
WOMAN for companion to
4-9-31p
1018, between 9 a.m. aM 5
elderly
lady.
Light ----~---p.m ., Monday through
housekeepl~g and cooking. BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
Friday .
•
Phone 99 2·5397 ·
·
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
4·8·6tc
·
· 4-12-3tc
--------~-4-lmc .

Estate of · Orville E . Watson

w

Warren Pickens

ICandinl

up.

·Cleland Realty
608 East Main Street
POMEROY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Roule ·7
- 1 LEVJ;L ACRE, 7.room s,
bath, 4 bedroo ms, cellar.
garage, ci.ly water and dee p
well. $9,308.

- 2 'slory frame, 6
.-A-,-U-M-IN-U--. - -.
2 STORY • mOdern home, 7 POMEROY
rooms,
3
bedrooms, bath,
"
M car lop boats, 10.
rooms and bath. Can be seen . $3,750.
12·13 fool. Lorenzo D. Davis,
after 5 p.m. or all day on
. Kingsbury Road.
Sundays or Mondays. Phone NEAR CARPENTER - FARM
3-2~·30tc
98!h4175.
•
- about 170 acres, 3 barns,
4·8,Stc
sll~. pond, 2 wells, other
KILL ' TERMITES and yard
buildings. Home has new
· lnsecls with ARAB ",You-Do.. .
~
·
.
II." King Builders Supply C~NVENIENT bul secluded · Alum . siding, 41 bedrooms, l
balh. s2o,ooo.
.
.
Company, Middleport.
ulldlng lots ~n ·T79'at Rock
TO
BUY
OR
SELl
· 2·2!-60tc
Springs .. Wllhln walking
. distance ol Meigs High
CALL US
School, a 5 mlnut.e drive from
· HENR)' CLELAND
TESTIED ;and approved by
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI'
R!'~L'I'OR
mill Oils of h!)mtmakere. Blue
Witte weekends, or · after 5
Office 992-2259
1 •
Lustre carpet cl•ner Is tops.
kd
Ph
Residence
992-2568
Baktr Furniture, Middleport.
p.m. ' wee ays.
one ,,..·
6187 •
·
4-11-6tc
.j.7.71
7 -~· lfc

... AIIO TH~ KRO&lt;lS, COIIVIIICED THAT
PUKJAB IS THEIR GOD EROG, Kl!EEL Ill
Vl\)ltSKIPFUL R2VEREHCE ...

FRAKTIC SBIIRCH FOR "HIOOEII

------insurance

a nd AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cance lled ?
Lost · you•
removal. Fully Insu r ed. Free
operalor's license? Call 992 ~
estimates. tall af ter 5 p.m .,
1966.
collec l
Dick
Hayman,
6-15-lfc
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
Hayman, Chester 985-3509 .
3-28-301p

TREE - TRIMMING

PAPER -HANGING, painting·,
plastering, dry wall. Arthur
Musser. Phone 991-3630.
3-18-301p
SE PTIC tanks cleaned. Mi ller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .

662-3035.
2-12-lfc

------

ROOFING,

Spouting

DAilY CROSSWORD

building 10xl0, concrete floor ,
erected, for $300. Richard
Will, Phone 992-2889.
4-12-JOtc

2.More

AOKQSS

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

!.Proposal
6.Part of

3. SllghUy
(3wds.)

A.

TOOL
KIT,

POUCH!

Saint

. (2 wdl.)
e. capti.ln.

of
2~•.Any-

creatot

tldng

(Fr.)
8. Unlntolt\•
cated

prefix

· 31. Bpunlty

profit-

7.Jsl&amp;nd

20. Goodman

Yl!ltenlaJ'I hiWf'l'

story

Nemo's

ment

LOBOD

~red·
of
bureaucracy 26.Type

16. Sl:almum

.2t Appoint-

71

Rickles

25.Gath•

18.Perlod
19. Numerical

;11. Traitor
:;a2, '•No slrre&amp;"

4·11.·

dian,

~.Symbol

lS. Well-known
golfer
H . Insurgent
15. I,ounprey

Unscramble theM four Jumble1,
one letter to tilth square, to
form four ordinary weirdo.

X. Come-

&lt;!.Acting

paramour

WMP0/1390

tary

sous~d

11. Sitter
12.Abacond
with a

JllYd~;~.:!t!-tc

.23.Danubo
tribu-

exqul!ite

a cap

and

Pain ting . Also, metal storag e

tor

(2

(4wds.)

D

~.Vandyke,

wdl.)
29.Reat-

emmple
39.liiM
Fabray,
to friends

dent
of"'

9. Manage
10. Consanguineous

RUCRl'

38.li'Qrelp.

able

partner

I rJ

I MAINK41

61. Nolther's

convent

17.Frost
2lS. Point of
vlew
J7.P!'Opounded

.

II

1

tJ I

~Ai

GUNMAN
60T A KICt&lt;. OUT 0~

!&amp;. -Blane
~· ~ola. n~v~l

PER

HOBSTmER
REAL ESTATE

For

-

You will have somethi ng of va lue to shoW for' the $$$ you
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain at')
Income Ta x benefit, you bu ild an equity and you ar e nof
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.

------

------

..

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

-~:m:~~~o:~o~u!J

TEAFORD

0 lfll .. Mlt\.l.r.. T.W. .... U.S. ,._·"""::_
·-

,.

THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

· EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Virgil B.

0 •

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

$5.,55

Everyone Can!

NO
KJAITI/oJG.

'

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ServiCe

BLAETTNARS

Want Ad

Given under my hand and
seal ot said Court, thjs 9th day of

-

G\lt (1-\AI R

Business· _Services

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Floyd Norris Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck and
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
Pam spent a recent weekend were visitors in RutlAnd Sunslitch. Full cash price, $38.50
with relatives in Columbus.
day.
'1962 T. BIRD
$495
or budgel plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
H.T. Cpe,, lite blue finish, good tires, clean vinyl Interior,
Mr. andMts. WaidFoster and
Mrs. Charles Skeels (Kitty
4-6-6tc
auto.
trans
..
'power
steering
and
brakes,
radio,
heater.
children of Columbus spent a Allen), a former resident of
1968
FORD
51895
=-:-:::-=-::-::-:--:-:-:--:-:-:--weekend With their parents·, Mr. Letart Falls, will celebrate her
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
'12 Ton 8' Styleslde Pickup, V-8 engine, std. trans .. custom
and Mrs. Charles Foster and 8211d birthday on April 7.
Cleaner complete with atcab, R-step bumper, chrome Int. bumper, radio, while &amp;
tachments, cordwinder and
Mr. and Mrs . Albert Hill. Jr. at ' David
Gloeckner
has
red finish . Good tires.
painl
spray. Used bul in like
1966 CHEVROLET
$1695
Racine. John Dean Foster will resumed his studies at Ohio
new
conditi on. Pay $37.45
2 Ton Cab-Chassis. 84" cab to axle. Good 825x20 tires. 2·
spend a week with his grand- State Vnlversity.
cas
h
or
credit
term s
speed rear aKie, clean cab, 292 cu . ln . 6 cy l. engine.
available. Phone 992-5641.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Sgt. and Mrs. Skipper Miller
From the Largest Truck or
4-6-61c
Foster, and Cheryl will spend a of Texas iu'e spending a week
Bolldozer Radiator to the
week with Mr. and Mrs. Hill at withtheirparents,Mr.andMrs.
$mallest Heater Core.
1968 GMC •i,. lon pickup, 23,000
Racine.
Herbert Miller and Mr. and
miles, new ti res, ca mpe'f top, '
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Sbiel&lt;ts and · Ml;s. Roush at New Haven.
good conditi on. Phone 9922805. Eldon Walburn.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher, Larry,
CllffordAshleyisemployedat
Pomeroy
Ph. 992.-2143
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
3-28·1fc
Molly and Amy, spent Sunday the Kaiser plant at RavensI
POMEROY, OHIO
with Mr. and Mrs. Howard wood, W. Va.
G&amp;T lOUR MAK wmiA
Robinson at Flatrock, W. Va.
Mr . and Mrs. Elmer Stone of
Spending Sunday evening Leon, . W. Va., are announcing
• WANT AD
with Mr. and .Mrs. Ro_y Buck the birth of a son, Sunday, at St.
Wanted
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
and Pam were Mrs. Mildred Marys Hospital, Huntington.
~ ...Oay Before Publication FEMALE Basset Hound . Phone
LIVING
ROOM
suite,
Foster and son, Robert, and · He weighed 8 pounds, 2 ounces, 5 P .Monday
Deadline 9 a.m . ·
949-3056 afler 5 p.m.
automatic
washer
and
dryer,
friend, Timmy Stellar, of and has been named Tlmotliy i Cancellation &amp; Corrections
4-11 -31p
kitchen wall cabinet, beds and
untn 9a.m . f
Columbus,andMrs.CoraBuck. Elmer. Grandparen!s are Mr. Will beoccepted
Day of Publication
dresser. Depot 51., Rutland.
REGULATIONS
Sunday guests of Mrs. Eula and'Mrs. Leo Taylor of Racine
Sale signs up. .
-GUARAfilTEEDPATIENTS lo care for in my
The Publisher reserves the4-11-31c
home. Phone Mason 773-5712.
Wolfe and Aaron were Mr. and and Mf. Stone of Leon. He was tight to edit of relect any ads.
Phone 992-2094
4·6·12tc
Mrs. JesS Lyons of Mason, Mr. greeted by a sister, Missy, who deemed obje-ctionaL The
OU CAN BUY AT LANDMARK
publisher will not be responslbJe,
and Mrs. James Lewis and is spending a week with her for
' more than one incorrect'
For ·Rent
Barbara of Pl. Pleasant; Mr. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Insertion .
RATES .
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
andMrs. JackOrdofLetart, W. Taylor.
For Want Ad Service
Sale Prices Thru April
Courl , Rt. 124, Syracuse,
•' ·
Va :, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Weekend guests of Mr. and J..~!.nts ptr worune inJertlon
Ohio. 992-2951.
Min mOm
arge Sc
HAND
PUSH
MOWERS
Norris of SyracUJie; Johnny and Mrs. Leo Taylor were Mr. and · 12 cents per word three
4-2-tfc As Low As
63.95
Kevin Wolfe were weekend Mrs. David Taylor, Sandra and consecutl~.lnsertrons.
=-:-::--:-:----~
Roofing &amp; Carpenter
RIDING MOWERS
18 cents .. per ·. word sJx con · TRAILER. Brown 's Trailer
guests of the Wolfes.
Polly Taylor. Sandra remained ncutrve
Insertions .
211.95
Park, Minersville. Phone·992- As Low As
Work
25 Per cent Dl$count on paid
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Connally for a week's vacation with her
3324.
ECONOMY TILLERS
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
4-9-61c As Low A&lt;
andBrianhavemovediromthe parents. Mrs. Leo Taylor, Mr.
Spouting, Roof
CAR O· OF THANKS
134.95
&amp;
OBITUARY
Quillen residence to their new and Mrs. David Taylor, Sandra
$1 .50 f.o r SO word~ minimum . UNFURNISHED 3
room
Painting
home at Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. and Polly Taylor, Columbus, Each
POMEROY ,
additional word 2c .
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
J. W. Carsey, Mgr
tiLIND ADS
NEw &amp; OLD WORK
Daniel Riffle and family have · called at the St. Marys Hospital
t-31-tfc
Additional · 25c Charge per - -- - - - Phone 992-2181
moved from Pomeroy to the Sunday to see Mrs. Stone and Advertisement .
·
·TWO OR three bedroom home.
All Wea ther ~ooting &amp;
OFFICE HOURS
Quillen residence.
new baby.
Construction Co.
Co ttage Road, Syracuse.
8:30 .-.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Dye of
r,!r. and Mrs. Robert Hart of ~ : 30 • .m. to 12 :00 Noon
Adults only. Phone 992-51 33 . ANTIQUES, phone 992-5327.
DEXTER. 0 . 45726
PHONE 742·l94S
~
Columbus are announcing the Racine spent Fi-iday with Mr. :Saturday . ·
3.2.tfc - - - - ----4-_7-301c
Insured- Experi enced
birth of a daughter, Betsy and Mrs . Gerald Hayman, Notice
:T::R-:
A-::1L
- :E
:-:R
::-::SP
:-:A
:-C
:-:E'·o_n_o_ld-R:-1. 33, MODERN WALNUT slereoWork Guarant eed
Patricia,
at
Riverside Brian, Chris and David Hupp
1h-mlle north of new Meigs
radio combination. 4 speaker
High School. Phone 992-2941.
so und sys tem, 4 speed
Methodist Hospital. She and Jell Knighting called on
chang
er, separate controls.
3-5-lfc
weighed seven pounds. Grand- Keith Hayman Sunday. Mrs.
Cindy Clark
Balan ce $68.31. Use our Real Estate For Sale
:F:-:U::R-:N-:1:-:SH_
E_
D_a_n_d_
un~.f-u-rn-ished
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman spent Monday
budgel lerms. Call 99i3352.
and the Night Riders
Robert Casper, Mr. and Mrs. with her daughter, Mrs. Linda
apartments. Close to school.
4·8·61c
Phone
992-5434.
Robert Dye of Columbus. Great- Jewell at New haven and took
-:--:::-::---::::::-:-:-:4 Piece Band
10-18-tfc MAPLE ST EREO -radio
grandmotber Is Mrs. Dolly Bobby Jewell home after he had
And Vocalist ·
combination AM&amp;FM radio,
Wolfe, local. Mr. and Mrs. spent some time with Mrs.
3
ROOM,
bath,
..
furnished
or
f ou r speake r St 4 speed
from Beverly, Ohio
semi-furnished
apartment.
automati c cha ng er, dual
Robert Casper brought Billy Hayman and family.
Also. 2 room , bath, furni shed
volume co ntr ol. Use our
Dye to the home of his greatMrs. Vivian Phelps of Letart
apartment. Mulberry Ave .,
budget terms, or pay balance
Broker
grandmother •.Mrs. Dolly Wol{e, was a dinner guest recenUy of
Pomeroy .
Referen ces
of $83.29. Ca ll 992-3351.
110
Mechanic
St.
required. Phone 991-6698.
·
4-8-61c
Friday where he will visit in- Mrs. Benny Boggess.
Pqmeroy,
Ohio
3-23-tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Anderson
definitely.
Friday and
1968 BULTACO 100 c.c. Lobllo.
Joey Roush is ill with the flu. celebrated the 57th wedding
Saturday Nig~ts
New paint and cables, ex. Ml DOLE PORT - 4 bedrooms,
Tina Boggess, small daughter, anniversary Monday, April 5.
Auction
balh, gas forced air furnace
cellenl condition . Asking $325
with
air
con dition in g.
or
bes
t
offer.
Must
sell.
Phone
of M~ . and Mu. Charles
Mrs. Junior Spawn of J;elart WILL DO tailoring and
AUCTION
Beaut iful kitchen with cook
uphobtery.
Phone
992-3561.
Syracuse
,
Ohio
992-71
73
l Boggess, has'pneumonia, and is . ~l!ifSundaY· On · Mr. ·ana.Mrs. · · .,
April 17, al the
3-31 -JOtc SATURDA'(,
and oven units. Ni ce 2 car
Virgil
Price
farm
2V2 miles E. evening only.
a patient at Holzer Medical Jess Anderson. Willard Lusher
garage. $14,500.00. .
of Chester on Riebel Road .
4-7-6tc
Center.
and children of Sharon, W. Va., n1LL Ph.. " up Rlt:• .... . .andlse
Follow auction signs from S. - - - -- - -- SYRACUSE - 4 bedrooms,
and lake to auction on a
Bill, Dave and Art Wilson of spent Saturday with the AnR. 248 at Chester Golf Course. Auto Sales
ba th. dining with fireplace.
Call
Jim
percentage
basis.
Livestock
Bolivar Dam are spending a dersons. Mrs. Benny Boggess
Full basement. Gas furnace. 3
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland. I
CHAROLAIS -Hereford 1958 FORD 6-cyl inder. excellent
week with their grandmother, spent the weekend with her
porches . M odern k itc hen ,
Phone 742-4461.
r
b
nning
co
nditi
on·
.
Bod
y
springer cow, 2 yeariing
paneled . Large garden .
9-23-tfc
Mrs. Erma Wilson.
parents, the Andersons.
Holsleln hellers, 2 Angus needs some r epair , $100.
Asking $13,000.00.
-'
Phone 949-1755.
heifers, 1 Charotais-Holstein
Mrs. Mae Pearson and Mrs.
AUCTION - WHEN? Each
4-9-31c
heller, 2 yearling Holslein
Ada Cramlett of Racine were
MIDDLEPORT
COM.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
LEGAL NOTICE
bulls.
MERCtAL
LOT
Next
lo M.
Hayman ' s Auction House,
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Seal tel bids will b~ received at
Farm Machinery
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
and
R.
Only
$3,500.00.
the
office
of
the
Village
Clerk
,
Laurel
Cliff
on
new
Rt.
7
Mrs. Roy Pearson.
1~69 MASSEY -Ferguson 135
power steering,
on Second Street, VIllage of
Pomeroy
Middleport ByTractor (only 136 hrs. use). 2 hardtop,
St. Clair Hill is a ' medical Pomeroy, Ohio, until 12 o'c lock; pass.
power brakes, air, 1s,poo MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
,
Botlom Plows, 6 fl. disc. 5 It. miles . E!xcellenl ~:ondltt\&gt;n.
noon , May, 3, , 1971, for the
one stor y house near stores.
patient at Holzer Medical fOllowing
2-7-11&lt;:, brush hog, spring tooth
propos'al.
Phone
992-2288.
Bal h. la r ge kitc hen and
Center. Mrs. Martha Anderson
harrow, (all with 3 pf. hllchl.
For sere of Lot 12 and Lot 13,
11-10-tf'i;
dining
area . 2 leve l lots. 011y
on the corner of East kUOta:l( .31 AMPS made to
2-wheel trailer; Dual-Wheel
is a medical patient at Veterans located
$5,000.00.
Main Street and New Street,
order. 2.4 hour service. Owain
Gravely Tractor with Rotary 1968 CHEVROLET Super Sport
Memorial Hospital.
diagonally across from The
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
396, 2 door, 4 on the floor. 375 COUNTRY HOME - 4 nice
Mower , plow, cultivator ,
Whlte House Cafe, by the
Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Don, Richard VIllage
H.P., $1400. Phone 949-4843.
Grader
blade,
seed
and
of Pomeroy, .Ohio.
bedrooms, modern bath, and
2·12-901c
fertilizer
spreader,
saw,
and
4-9-3tp
HiU are announcing the birth of
Each bid must con.t aln the full
kitchen
. Gas furnace. Dr illed
riding sulky; Toro lawn - - - -- - name of · every person or
a daughter at Holzer Medical company
well.
Good
cellar . 57 ACRES
OVEN"'
FRESH
bakery
1965 MUSTANG convertibl e.
Interested In the
mower·tlller combination.
Minerals
.
Asking
$10.000.00.
Center . 'She weighed seven same, anl1 be accompanied by a
pr oducts . Jimmy ' s Pastry ·
fair condition, $300. See Dan
Toots and Misc. equip.
or certlftied check In the
Shop, N. 2nd Ave.. Mid- HOME LITE XL 101 Chain saw.
Creme~ ns . Nel son Road ,
pounds; five ounces, and has bond
76 ACRES - 20 tractor land.
sum of $100.00 to the satisfaction
Rutland.
dleporl. Phone 992-3555.
2
carpenter
saws
(power),
2
been named Carissa Dawn and of VIllage Counc.rt as a guaranty
Good implement shed and
4-9-3tp
3-28-30tc
elec. grinders, 2 elec. drills,
that If the bid Is accepted
ce llar . 8 r oom older home
was greeted by "a brother, contract
vise andanvll , elder mill, slip- :-:::::---::::=-::-:-::-::-:::-:will be entered Into and
with 4 bedrooms. Running
scraper, plastic and iron pipe, 1971 FORD PICKUP, v, lon
Heath. Graildpare~ts are Mr. rts performance . property ATTENTION ladles! Would you
waler.
$13,500.00.
Rang er, automatic, power
.
.
like to try a wig on In the
smooth and woven wire, 2 air
and Mrs. Henry Euler and Mrs. secured
These checks or bonds wilt be
steering, 360 engine, red and
privacy of your own home?
compressors. lard : trees, 2
Inez Hill of Racine.
returned at once to all except
white, like new. Will sell NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
You can. Just call us. We also
tarps , truck rack, large ami.
BEFORE
THEY . Go
successful
bidder.
His
check
under dealer's cost. Also ,
have the Mink Oil Kosmellcs,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bostick .fhe
of hand tools, ropes, chains,
HIGHER.
CALL
US TODAY.
or bond will be held until the
camper top with or without
· and other lools.
Koscot,
of
course.
and family of Dunbar, w. Va., contract or bid Is properly
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD.
truck . Ha rold E. HyselL
Dlslrlbulors, Brown's . Phone
Household Furniture
by him .
ASSOCIATE
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl executed
•
Middleport 992-5 113.
3-PIECE living room suite, 2- phone 742-3154.
The right Is reserved to reject
992-3325
Johnson and Patrick, Jack any and all bids .
.4-9-31
c
12-31.tfc
piece living room suite, 2
bedroom suites (like new), - -- - - Bostick and Mrs. Laura Circle
Jane Walton , Clerk HOME sewing . Phone 99i.sJ27.
24 ACRE FA.RM. Long Bottom.
Gas
range, 1
Grand
of Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Milford
with or wilhout fa rm
Frigidaire
refrigerators.
1
7Real
Estate
For
Safe
(.4) 12, 19, 2tc ~~----~3~-~
~Jmc . piece dlnelte set. 2 5-piece
Frederick and children of
machinery . Hou se with 3
dlnetle
sels,
Antique
cup·
HOUSE,
6
rooms
·
a
nd
balh,
bedrooms,
din ing room , living
Dorcas visited over the
Lost
room, l'h baths, enclosed
board,
Empire
gas
heater.
3
·
phone
Z42-5613.
weekend with . ..
NOTICE ON FILING
A MOTHER'S pin , vicinity of 21 in. Television ~els. large
back porch, wall to wall
4-l1 -111c
·'
OF INVENTORY
· Robert Wood a
E!berf.elds Store. Reward . amf. of dishes, pols, pans. =:==---- - GIIU
car~tlng . .Al umi num siding.
ANO APPRAISEMENT
Phone 992·5010.
awnrng, storm windows and
elc., end lables, odd chairs, HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His.,
Waid Johnson.
The Slife of Ohio, Meigs
storm doors. City water .
County . Probate Court
4-11-3tc
many
other
items.
Pomeroy.
Phone
991-2293.
lables.
and
Mr . and Mrs . Milford
To the Executor or Ad ·
Selling due to ill health. Phone
10-25-lfc
Frederick Jr. and family have m inistrator of the estate; to Wanted To Buy
614-985-3938.
THIS IS a large sale of good
suc
h
of
the
follow
ing
as
are
4-9-12tp
moved their mobile home from ,..e.;;Gents of the State of- Ohio,
merchandise .
Sale
of ·HOUSE, 4 room s, bath, 2 lots
OLU
IUrniture,
dishes,
brass
Household will start promptl~
located In Syracuse. Call after
Minersville Route to the rw~ viz : - the surviving spouse, the
beds, elc. Write M. D. Miller,
al
10:00
A.M.
Farm
items
in
3
p.m. weekday s. phone 991next
of
kin,
the
benefic
iaries
Proffitt farm at Dorcas.
Rl. 4, ,Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
FORS~
allernooh . Lunch served. No!
under the will ; and to the at.
2806.
992-6271.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Warner tornev
or
attorneys
4-7-61c The spacious hom e of the
responsible for accidents.
pre senting any of the
9-1-lfc
Aucf. : I. D. " Mac" McCoy - - - - - - - - of Dorcas spent Tuesday with re
late Mrs. Bessie M. Pickens,
aforementioned persons :
&lt;Niner:
VIrgil Price
·
•
Sadie Wolfe , Middleport ,
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
situated on clpproxi mately
4-11 -3tc
County, Ohio,, No. 20,469. ttelp Wamed
six a ~ re s in Raci ne, Ohio.
and assisted them in papering Meigs
You are hereby notified that
Hot water heat by· free gas.
and painting.
Inventory
and
Ap ·
the
Inter est in produci ng gas
pralsement of the estat'e of the
Miss Lorna Bell spent aforementioned, deceased, late
Safe
well.
·
Geqrge S. HobsteHer, Jr.
WANTED
Monday night with Denise Cross ot said County, was filed in this
Broker
ANTIQUES,
Phone
992-5317.
'
Court . Sa ld . I rw ento·ry and
Phone 985-4186
at Oak Grove . .
4-6-301c
Appraisement Will be for
Hilton
Wolfe, Salesman
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Shook hearing before this Court on the
Phone
949·3211
day of April, 1971, al 10:00
Exec. of Estate
and children of Pomeroy Route ·291h
o'c lock A.M .
COAL. limestone. ~xcelslo: CALL US for all your real estate
Reedsville,
Ohio
needs. Inquire of our list ing s
and .Rev. and Mrs. Kettler of
Any person desiring . to file
Salt Works, E. Mal" ' St.,
378.6289
exce
ptions
thereto
must
file
before
you
buy
,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·••·
Cincinnati called on Mr. and them at least five days prior to
4-6-61c
4-9-tfc
.
the date set for hearing .

Pomeroy Motor Co.

L

t'or Sate

·Pomeroy

2 SIGNS

'

I..OVeRS

30. Coin of
Timor

611E5S 1 LOOK ENOUGH Lll&lt;f JUST AHOTHER
VACATIOHIN,; 5l!E~T 10 8I.EIW INTO Ti1f

MONTH*

31. FawkesDay

PlACE TO

32. Poke
35. 30days
(abbr.)
36.-Gennan

"TAXI,

~TilE CAR

Will Buy A New.
3 Bedroom Ranch Home

CONYAINING
POLORE5AIW

conjunction

TilE TWO NEll
10 THE 15!ANO'S

Antwerr W'hal ,•• t'rT.uy .....nurutr wo•-"DIIt· PY"

ST. Mexican
' tree

'TWl'LYE OAR

38. See 25

BAY' HOT!:L

With wall-to-wall carpeting, aluminum
s1d1ng, F.A. gas heat, buill-in ca~inets,
etc. etc.

Ju•bt." JOINT
Slturct.y'•

(Aawen to•• lf!.P)
DOWDY ,PAYING A"IAI

.

1'1\,11'

--

Across

40. -

lnk

, 42. Hebrew

prophet
48;Jolly4J,. Tttomas

MISS ~ELEN SIIIEE151CRV, ~
Of ' THE SIX.I!UNN'I-W\NIIf5 AAP
· THEIR WATEf BEP' !! 511E

ANSWEREP M'f FAN ~ETTER!

'45. Drtft

DOWN
1. Central
caucasian

,See Today

. DAILY ORYl"llQUOTE-Here'• .how to work It: l!,•:.!l
·"U..Ioto.lii-...L...--..--'

. .'

· At 203 Park St., Middleport, or r.all AI
Moody, 992-7034, for appointment. ·

AXYDL ,BAAXB
.:

•

Based on family Income of $5.000 . with three

children, taxes and ipsuranc~ not Included .

LONGl!'lDLLOW ·
One letter lllmpty ot&amp;D4f tor another. In this sample A br Ml~ HELEN m~mHEQ
used tor the )hrH L'o, X for tile .two 0'1, etc. Bln1te letters. THI~ ENVELOPE WITH HER HANDS!
apostrophes, the len,th anc:l tcmnatlon or the words are all
Tf.!IS 15 100 MVCH!
lllnts.
. Each day
. the co4e letters are different.
.,

.

.'
'~
••

br

I

.A. &lt;bn&gt;tornm QuolaUOn
S

j

I

o

:Iil T X.

lllll

~

o

ll: S 0

W K .W N

Jl S K

HBKVA.BB JISO. ' LV'F STR. BDLOF HJC

•

S O'l'JI.

·.

..

S:DX . . WB:Kl!l,.- - .A:QKJI..A.O

OZ~KH

.::!:4~=~;J:0=~~~~?;L:e:.::::::!:::::!::!::=:l..WJD&amp;a 'l'riJii AVOJJ&gt;.- -sOB:IN KIIlRKIDGAARD
..

L_L~~~~L_J

�•

/

8-The Daily sentinel, Mlddleport-t&gt;omeroy, 0., April12,19'11

v

Calley Case Confusing
.
WASHINGTON ( UP!) ~ U.S.
Rep. J'jltn Ashbrok, R.Ohio,
said.\oday the American people
are looking for "simple solu·
tions" in the case of Lt. William Calley, just as they did a
year ago when four students
were killed In a confrontation
with Ohio National Guardsmen
on the Kent State University
campus.
,
"While I think Lt. Calley is a
vtctim of the impossible situa·
tion in which we find ourselves
in Southeast Asia," Ashbrook
said in his weekly newsletter. "I
reject the notion that he should
be made any kind of national
hero.
" It is interesting to note that
there was an emotional appeal in
our country last year to paint
the Kent State students who
were killed by National Guards·

men as innocent victims and and we adjust."
national heroes. This they were
"In a guerrilla war you have
not. Unfortunate, misguided, to adjust your targets and your
foolish, yes, but innooent, no.
methods," Ashbrook said. "Lt.
"As in the Kent State tragedy Calley and his troops were at a
the public now seems to look Viet Cong stronghold, My Lai.
for simple solutions to complex He fought on Viet Cong terms,
problems. They just aren't not on our terms, and he was
there. "
thi!refore prOieCIIted.''
Ashbrook said the U.S. is not
equipped "psychologically or ,
constitutionally" to fight a guer'
rtlla war, "a war of civilians
opposed to the traditional war
of contending armies."
"To the guerrilla, the civilian
population is the target," Ash·
brook said. "To us, we fight the
government and its annies and
as a basic policy try to spare
civilians as much as possible.:•
Ashbrook said in wars such
as the one in Southeast Asia,
the communists "set the rules

'For Pete's Sake'
Opens
.
At Colony On Thursday
· " For Pete's Sake," from
World Wide Pictures, will
premiere at the Colony Theater
in Gallipolis Thursday for a one·
week run . Produced in wide
screen and Eastman color, this
comedy-drama stars Robert
Sampson and Pippa Scott In a
mile-high Denver setting,
against the backdrop of the
Rockies.
On a damp, gray, Sunday
afternoon, Pete Harper was one
of a large crowd at Denver's
Bear Stadium listening to a
sermon during a Billy Graham
Crusade. Why was he there? "It
was free." II was free, but Pete,
his wife, and their son all got
more than thfY had bargained
for. Moved by the message,
they found themselves going
forward.
Robert Sampson, who portrays Pete Harper, also starred
in World Wide's "The Restless

•t ••••••••••••••
A-ThoUght
Happy Is the man who has it:
broken the chains which it:
hurt the mind and has

given up worrying once

l

and for all.
- Anonymous it:

f-lfs* Quick!* Easy* :t

t

DRIVE·IN
• BANKING

tt

tit:

Friq~ys Only

it:

t

t
The Drive-In Window t
is· Open
•9 A.M. to7 P.M.
(Continuously)

it:
it:

t
t

it:
it:
it:
it: Other Banking Hours 9 to it:
it: 3 and s to 7 as usual on
{ Fridays.
•

£FARMERS BANK t

t and SAVINGS CO. t

it:

POMEROY, OHIO

-II

i..............""t
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

Ones," which il; still playing to
capacity audiences throughout
the world. ' Pippa Scott, as
Pete's wife, Marge, is well·
known for her Broadway appearances and starring roles In
most major television shows.
Al Freeman Jr., and John
Milford work with Pete in their
Denver service station. Al, who
starred on Broadway in "Blues :::'' ':' '''''''''''' '''''· ' ' '·'·'·' ,.,., , ., ,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,, ''' ' ' ''':·'·' '' '·'
For Mr. Charley" and was seen
COLUMBUS (UPI) - fbe
in "Golden Boy," adds a special
threat of ftres In the state's
musical message.
fields and timberlands will
continue until dry conditions
which have existed since tbe
first of April end, Ernest J.
Gebhart, chief of the Forestry
and Reclamation Division of
'
the Department of Natural
Resourtes, said today.
"What we need Is a good
general rain to qulet things
(Continued from page I)
down a little .bit," Gebhart
said, "and for everybody to
American sportsmen and put their matches away."
people .
"To safeguard and develop
the friendship between the
people of the two countries is in
conformity with the desire of Variable cloudiness and mild
the Chinese and American tonight with a chance of
people.
showers north and west. Lows
'"Fhe visit of the )J.S. table in the 50s. Considerable
tennis delegation to China is an cloudiness with a chance of
expression of friendship of the showers and turning cooler
American people for the Tuesday. ijighs in the 60s north
Chinese people."
and 70s south.
In reply, Graham Steenhoven
of Detroit, president of the U.S.
Table Tennis Association, said Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS"We have received a warm
welcome everywhere we have Alva Lee Reed, Chester;
been In China. It warms my William H. Reed, Chester;
heart to see thefhinese players Howard Barber, Reedsville; A.
generously giv~ their time L. Phelps, Jr., Pomeroy; Cecil
and talent to our players. . Gibbeaut, McKees Rock, Pa.;
"On behalf of all Americans, William Aull, Middleport.
I thank you from the bottom of
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
my heart."
- Richard E. Gill, Hilda
The Americans spent Easter Harris, Kay Howell, William
Sunday visiting Tien An Men Lynch, Howard Barber.
Square in front of the Gate of
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Heavenly Peace and practicing Eva Shaffer, Racine; Samuel
ping pong shots with the Byers, Long Bottom; Charles
Chinese. The square, where Norris, Racine; Brill King,
upwards to I million Chinese Pomeroy; Don Webb, Racine.
parade each Oct. I on
SUNDAY DISCHARGES John
Arthur
Fletcher,
Communist China's National
Day, was swept by yellow dust Weatherby.
blown in from the Gobi Desert.

Great

Wall

«

il

$5, COSTS EACH
Fined $5 and costs each by
Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar
Saturday night, all on con·
vlclion of running a red light,
were Alvin Haggy, Pomeroy;
Paul A. Wolfe, Syracuse, and
Steven Tatterson , Pomeroy.
Fined $10 and costs for In·
toxication was Donald Lovett,
no address listed.

CORDAWAl

FIRE DOUSED
Pomeroy firemen answered a
call to extinguish a brush fire
near the John Halliday
residence in Columbia Twp. at
5:03 p.m. Sunday.

wcoRD
~REU
(
:
~
•,

ED PATTERSON
Airman Edward E. Patterson of 106 Brick St.,
Pomeroy, bas completed
basic training at !lcklaod
AFB, Tex. He has been
assigned to Keesler AFB,
Mtss., for training In the
communications field.
Patterson Is a 196t graduate
of ·SUver Grove (Ky.) Hlgb
School. His wife Is the former
Constance
Mobbs
of
Pomeroy.

Weather

~ For Today

i
j

~o®@®/news

Automatically
, 4els cord in.
out, as yo~
rleed \1. N

';
taoallngl
•\ q. , __ _,Q•' ,.0

NIECE DIES
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) ·Mary Strother Taylor, 97, a
niece of Zachary Taylor, 12th
President of the United Slates,
died Sunday at a nursing home
here.

The rugged, all steel cannister that ·cleans rugs •
furniture • drapes-everything-deep down ,
Eureka dependability, lifetime lubricated motor,
for yea~ of superior service. Beautifully styled
"Misty Gold" metallic finish .
· ·

REG. 49.95 VALUE
Mode! 738 A

•3.9 '5

INGELS FURNITURE

Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights ·
MIDDLEPORT

OFFICERS TO MEET
Offi~ers and directors of the
"Ken Amsbary Chapter, lzaak
Walton League of America, wUI
meel at 7 tonlg~t at the. club
house n~ar Chester ..

MEIGS THEATRE.
Tonltht&amp; Tutsdly

Allflt 12·13
ON A CLEAR

DAY YOU Co\N

~U 1'0REVEA
ITICIInlcolo~l

Barbera Strelsand
YvnMontand
tGI

focus
Menninger Anacks
Early Causes of Crime
By TOM TIEDE
CHICAGO - (NEA)- Psy.
chiatrist Karl Menninger
was picking through a news·
paper the other day when he
stopped at a headline about
one of Charles Manson's
cult-tied girl friends. "Look
at this young girl," he sa1d.
"All anybody wants to know
is whether she's guilty or
not. Nobody ever stops to
ask why she is guilty . Nobody ever stops to wonder
what made her that way.
Nobody ever thinks about
the things of her youth, or
the mind that forced the life
she 1i ves."
Nobody, that is , except
Karl Menninger.
He has been looking be·
hind the .headlines. behind
the guilt and behind the de·
formities of people for the
. 78 years. DDC·
Ias t 50 of hIS
tor, psychi~trist , ~riminolo·
gtst, humamst, he IS a dozen
professionals in one, each of
them extraordmary.
No attention·paying graducte of the· American educa·
llon system can be ignorant
of his name. Founder of the
famed Menninger Institute
in Kansas, author of 12 books
on man's motivation, adviser
to at least 50 commissions,
committees and counci!s, he
IS the loud, elo9uent vmce of
compassiOn whtch once sa1d :
"I susPect that all the
cnmes c.ommttted by all the
Jailed cnmt~als do not equal
m total soc1al damage that
of th~~e committed agamst
them .
Not everyone appreciates
his opinions. He has been
hooted and, worse, Ignored.
Even some who do agree
with him feel he 's somewhat
lofty and therefore ineffec·
live.
Yet now, when he should
be getting out of the line of
fire, picking flowers in Topeka, he has set out on one
great, perhaps final, passion.
His thoughts on . Manson's
girl friend give a clue : "For
50 years I've been healing
people after they are sick or
broken. Now I want to help
them before that point is
reached"

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturday, Aprll10,1971
SALES REPORT of
Obio Valley Uvestock Co.
HOGS-175 to 220 lbs. 15.85 to
16.10; 220 to 250 lbs. 15.40 to
15.60; Fat So)l's II to 14; Boars
10 to 12.35; Pigs 4-12.
CATTLE -Steers 25to 32.50;
Heifers 20 to 25.50; Baby Beef 30
to 38.25; Fat Cows 17 to 22;
Canners 16 to 22.90; BuJJs 21 to
27; Milk Cows 145 to 265.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 46.25;
Seconds 35 to 42; Medium 35 to
42; Com. &amp; Hvs. 28 to 40; CuJis
28 Down.
BABY CALVES- 37.50 to 65 ..
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Hogs: 20().230, 16.50; Number
I, 16.75; 23\):240, 1~.25; 24().260,
15.75; 260.260, 15.25; 280-J00, 14;
16().180, 13.25; Sows, la.8().15.40;
Boars, 11-13.65; Stocll Hogs, 1().
14.50; Pigs By the Head, 6.5().
10.25.
Callie: Choice Steers, 31.11().
32.50; Goad, 29.10-30.90;
Holstein, 27.75-26.35; Good
Heifers, 27.50-30; Good Cows,
22·25.40; Utility Cows. 18.5().20;
Feeder Steers, 24.50-29.40;
Stock Calveu, 25.50-JS.lO; BuJis,
26.9().27.40,
..
Veal Calves: Choice, 47-48;
Good, 45; Medium, 41; Com·
mercia!, 37.50; Calves By The
Head, 2().47.

N e bra s k a has been doing

somewhat- similar work for

54 years. But Menmnger's

Dr. Karl Menninger
Looking beyond gu1lt.

In brief, Menninger proposes to interrupt the life
cycle development of underprivileged children. He 'says
that at least one in every
1,000 kids m the nation today
1s on the road to ruin, and
obviously so. They are homeless, neglected, abused, wild
- you name 11. "They get a
bad start," says Menninger,
" and they never overcome
it. My hope is .~o help them
to overcome 1!.
This in mind then, the psychiatrist has erected two
small homes on his institute
grounds in Topeka. Each
houses a dozen kids, ages 10
to 17 The kids are losers in
hfe . Like the one whose
prostitute mother an!) ne 'er·
do-well father shuffled him
back and forth on a bus between residences for months ,
each one refusing to keep
him . Or the younger boy who
in the first few years of his
life had been in and out of a
half-dozen foster homes. The
kids ~re grouped together
~nder what Me.~nmger calls
plam old love m order to
grow more n r m a II Y mto
adulthood .
The co?,cept is ~ailed "The
Vtllages. Mennmger vows
it will grow nationwide.
At bas·e, the plan is not
revolutionary . Boys Town in

°

idea may be more t ran S·
plantable. He insists his
homes be kept small and
situated in the home towns
of the youth affected. He
also insists the kids not be
institutionalized, but pI a y
real, normal and meanmgful
roles in their communities,
schools and churche~.
"The villages will not be
treatment centers," he says.
"We are . not trying to correct youngsters. What we
are .talking about here, sim·
ply, is prev'ention."
For those familiar · with
the Menninger philosophy,
his concept of the Villages is
an obvious chip from a mas·
ter block. He believes cnme ,
a natural result of an imperfeet world, cannot be controlled by traditional "eye·
for-eye" means. Perhaps his
whole life, he has been totally against jud1cial punish·
men!. Penalization, yes-but
" you can 't convert a man by
beatmg him ." Yet even pe·
nalization seems to htm often
absurd. "Too often the pub·
lie wants only revenge. And
tt that's what we're after in
jails, revenge, 1! makes us a
little barbaric."
Therefore, he apparently
has decided that even an enlightened penal system- still
a ges away in the U n 1ted
States- is not the ull.imate
answer. Why not instead, he
asks, do something right now
for "those people we know
are one day going to knock
us over the head. be arrested, be tried and be sent
to fill our overpopulated
prisons"?
Thus, the Villages plan .
Prevention.
"When I was young," says
Menninger, " I treated hun·
dreds of cases of typhoid fever, while countless other
doctors were figuring out a
cure for it . When the cure
was found, I was out of busi·
ness. Now, I think we should
all work on a cure for crime
- prevention-and put people
like me out of business once
again."

Doctor Thanked
On behalf of the James
Simpson family 1 the Ra~j~~ E·
R squad and Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach extend thanks to
Dr . John Ridgway for his "fine
cooperation" Sunday night
when Mr. ~Impson became ill at
his home in Raci.ne . Dr .
Ridgway was brought from his
home by the sheriff's dept. to
the Simpson residence to assist
the squad. The squad was
unable to move Mr. Simpson
because of the lack of oxygen
and his physical c~ndilion.

.

James Simpson Died Swulay
James Edward Simpson, 48,
widely' known Racine resident,
died Sunday night at his home.
The Racine E·R unit an·
swered a call to tlle home about
11:10 p.'m. when Mr. Simpson
became ill. The unit ad·
ministered oxygen and Dr. John
Ridgway answered a call to the
residence. Deatll was attributed
to a coronary attack.
Mr. Simpson was a member
of Racine American Legion
Post 682, the Wesleyan United
Methodist Church of Racine and
was a past member of the
Racine Fire Dept.
·
Surviving are his wife, Ruth
C. Simpson, a son, Steven
(Pete) of Racine; his motller,
Mrs. Lavinia B. Simpson,
Racine; a sister, Mrs. Marian
Knlghtstep, Columbus, and a
niece, Alicia Knightstep, also of
Columbus. He was preceded In
death by his father, George
Simpson.
Mr. Simpson was employed

OPEN HIGHER ,
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
stock market opened higher in
fairly active trading . toda~.
Shortly after the opemng, th~
Dow Jones Industrial average
sho~Yed a gain of 0.21 at 920.80.
And of the 502 Issues cr~ssing
the .tape, 220 pointed htgher,
while 140 declined.
General .Motors held unchanged at M%, while Ford
gained \2 to 62%. Chrysler
picked up \1 to ~. as did
REVENUE OFF
White Motor at 17. American COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
.Motors, however, surrendered Ohio Turnpike collected ~.9
\1 to H'•·
million in toll tevenue during
the first three months of IW/1,
abOut $200,000 less than the
prior year,. ll'he Turnpike
·BOOSTERS TO MEET ·
Ccmmlsaion reported 3.9 ·
Tbe Eulllrn J!lnd Boolters million vehicles traveled on the
will meet at the bleb llchool at toll road during the period, 111a0

by tlle Ohio River Co.
Funeral services will be
at 3 p. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home witll
Rev. Paul sellers and the Rev.
Dale McClurg officiating
Burial will be In the LeU!tn
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytinle.
Meigs Marriage Ucenses
Ray Wald Smith, 19, Portland
Route 1, and Roberta
Teaford, 16, Syracuse; 118!"0ld
William Brinker, 21,
Route 1, and Penny Lee Dill, 20,
Syracuse.
OESTOMEET
Harrisonville OES Chapter
will meet in regular session at 8
p. m. Tuesday. The worthy
matron asks that members
bring homemade candy for the
special project of the Worthy
Grand Matron.

A temporary solution to
Middleport's solid waste'
disposal problem w~s agreed
upon Monday night by Middleport town council.
The problem had reached a
point of near desperation last
week when the village dump
located in flle Leading Creek
area off the Route 7 by-pass was
'in effect ordered closed by the
Meigs County Department of
Health. Three regular haulers
- Lawrence Boyd, Lawrence
Manley and Jerry Ward - also
were left without employment
with the closing__
The seriousness of the
problem was reflected in the
interest shown by residents who
turned out for last night's
meeting. Joining the group also
were the three haulers and two
out of county residents who

offered solutions .to Middleport's lack of a dump
facility.
Don Griffin · of Hockingport
offered to operate a pickup
service and disposal for the
town. His ra~ would be $2.50 a
month for homes for two cans
picked up once a week or $3.50
for three cans with lower rates
in hardship cases. Griffin is
presenUy providing the service
for Pomeroy.
Coming up with the solutionon a 3lklay basis - was Darrel
Cozart of Coolville who offered
temporary use of his landfill
dump in Athens County to the
three Mid~leport haulers. They
will be permitted to use' their
present vehicles but garbage
and trash must be in plastic
bags or packed in boxes. There
is to be no increase in present

rates of local haulers.
Following an open discussion
on
Middleport's
dump
problems, at which residents
mentioned a variety of ideas,
council moved into executive
session. The three haulers and
Cozart were called into the
private session and apparently
any questions were answered to
the satisfaction of council which
returned to its chambers and
Council President John Zerkle
announced the plan to use the
Cozart facility the next 30 days.
Haulers began working today
after being idle since Friday.
Edison Baker of the Mid·
dleport Planning Commission,
recommended that Harold
Chase, village maintenance
supervisor, be named to the
planning commission and to the
post of zoning inspector to

Overnight Wire

.

Elberfelds
In
Pomeroy
'

'

... for extra· full fit over cowbo~ boo!$.
The new "Boot Cut" has many of the
traditional Lee Rider features, such as a
slim, snug fit from waist to knee, .but
differs with the slightly flared cut from
knee to boot. .. for plenty of room over the
boot tops and down to the bottom of the
boot heel. A good· looking Lee-Prest Western
Twill of 50% polyester and 50% cotton
means no ironmg ever for these · dress.up
Western pants. A neat, front crease completes

the new· Lee Rider took.
'Tanbark; Rust, Blue Denim and

Olive.
See the complete line of slim cut
Let .Riders. WHtern Jackets and

W"tern Shirts.

.

PRIST 'BOOT CUT' Lli Rmll$

throw garbage into the Ohio
Rjver Sundav and had notified
police on the matter. He said
that he feels that police action
should be taken against persons
"throwing garbage aU over
towfl u. Mrs . Roger Morgan,
council woman, c·ommented
that she 1s in agreement.
Vaughan also brought up that
police officers are leaving the
Middleport Police Department
for jobs with other departments. Chtef of Pollee J. J.
Cremeans commented that it is
logical that officers do this since
Middleport has one of the lowest
paid police departments in the
State of OhiO. Police Officer
David Acree commented that
village offtctals according to
pay scales apparentl y hold
street department workers in
htgher evaluation than they do
pollee offtcers.

•

VOL X NO. 254

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
administration of Gov. John J.
Gilligan today introduced legis' lation that would abolish the
·Ferguson Act which prohibits
, strikes by public employes because the act has relegated
these employes "to second-class
citizenship."
The bill would cteate an Ohio
Employment Relations Board,
grant the employes the right to
organize for coll~ctive bargain·
lng and give all but policemen,
firemen and guards at penal
and mental institutions the right

to strike.
Sponsors of the bill are Rep.
Arthur Wilkowski, D-'l'oledo,
and sens. William F. Bowen, D·
Cincinnati and Ronald Mottl,
D-Parma.
In cases involving policemen,
firemen and guards, disput~s
would be submitted to binding
arbitration . Other employes
could strike, but if the board
determined that there was a
danger to public health and
safety, it- could authorize the
public employer to seek an injunction in court.

If the injunction was granted of five members appointed by

and a settlement could not be·
reached within 10 days, the
dispute would also be submitted for binding arbitration.
"Ohw's public employes have
been relegated to second . class
citizenship because we have no
provisions for dealing with their
employment problems," satd
Gilligan. "And becuse the Ferguson· Act is so unfair, public
employers have been reluctant
to enforce it."
The new Employment
Relations board would consist

Ute governor . lt would establish
procedures for implementing
the new
law, resolve
representation issues, establish
appropriate bargaining units,
determine unfair labor prac\ices and act as a clearing house
for information on public employmenl.
.
Other provisions of the legislation included :
- Certified employe organiza.
twns would be granted exclusive representation status for at
least a year after an Initial

r--------------.-------------..,

! News •.• in Briefs ! Ch~ch
.

1

By

umted

I

Press Internauooal

Black Dar for Education

Drunaged

·

CINCINNATI - IN A MOVE CAlLED a "black day for
education ir) Cincinnati," the clty board of education slashed $4
mUUon from Its bUdget for the upcoming year, eliminating 862
jobs ·and drastically cutting back unessential programs.
The cutbacks were mandated by the failure of a school bond
Issue last November. The $62 mlllion budget the system has to
work within will result in the elimination of 205 teaching jobs, the
putting of another 240 teachers on a substitute status and the
eradication of. 400 non-teaching pcsltlons. It also will
mean an end to most physical education programs in the schools.
There will be only half as many kindergarten classes.

Damage to the Pomeroy
Church of Christ caused by a
fire early today is expected to
run into thousands of dollars,
Henry Werry, Pomeroy Fire
Chief, said.
The Pomeroy Fire Dept. was
called at I :45 a.m. II was
discovered by Bob Hysell.
Werry, who has asked for
assistance In de terming how the
fire slarted, said there was
evidence of an explosion.
Two Decomposed Bodies Found
COLUMBUS- TilE BADLY DECOMPOSED bQdies of Dale Plaster in ceilings throughout
Russell and hill wife Margaret, both In their 60s, were found the church feU and lights and an
Monday· night in their apartment in the Ohio State University eleclric organ was destroyed.
There was also cons;derable
area. Columbus police said there were no apjlarent signs of
smoke arfd water damage.
violence. An autopsy will be performed.
Two other fire runs were
Pollee said the bodies were found by the owner of the building . made by the department
who investigated after neighbors complained of a bad odor Monday, at 12:13 p.m. to Pine
coming from the dead couple's apartment.
Grove Road near the Memorial
Gardens for a brush fire, and at
300 Students Shot Down
4:43p.m. to Darwin for another
NEW DEUU - PAKISTAN TROOPS machlne'fllllll1ed to brush fire which it was unable
death some 300studenlsat a school in Jessore, East Pakistan, the to find.
Press Trust of India (PTI) said today.
The news agency quoted Roman Catholic Church officials In
Shlllong, capital of the Indian State of Assam. PTI said the church
•
ciflcials were informed the West Pakistani soldiers took an
Italian priest a\ the school and the students, Uned th~ up against
a wall and machine1!UJ1ned them.
Arrests in Middleport. for
Seven Die in Freak Accident
March totaled 31, Chief of
GOLCONDA, ILL. - BILL LONG, 30, POI.UIIIEO off his Police J. J. Cremeans reported
lwtch and trudged down the narrow tunnel into the Ozark- to Middleport Village Council
Mahoning Co. lluorspar mine Monday. ilia job was to measure Monday night.
Umbers 800 feet underground. When he didn't return to where
Arrests for the month inother miners were working, one by one they went to check on him. cluded four on speeding
'lbey were overcome by deadly, colorless hydrogen sulfide gas. charges; three, reckless
seven miners, including Long, died In what stale officials · operation; three, improper
called a freak accident. seven others managed to serainble to backing; one assured clear
.lllfety before fumes could cut them down. "It was so stroog it distance; three, driving while
·abnos! knocked me down," said Marlow Ewell, 43, Harrisburg, intoxicated; eight, intoxication;
two, aSS{lult and battery; two,
ane 0! t11011e 'who escaped.
disturbin'g· the peace; two,
fighting;
one e,ach for
Veterans Mell)orial 'lospltal
UNIT CALLED
ADMISSIONS Dana misconduct attempted theft
The Pomeroy E·R squad was Robins, Pomeroy; ' Melvina and failure 1~ yield the right.()f·
called at 7:36p.m. to Mulberry Davidson, Pomeroy; Katie way .
1
Parking
meter
collections
for
Ave., for Vada Caldwell who Wilson, Pomer,oy;, Vada
the month totaled $1,2t2.59 and
was taken lo Veterans ,C.ldwe , Pomeroy,
Memorial Hospital and ad- DIS HARGES - • Leslie 15 traffic accidents were in·
.
,
rnitted.
Price A. L. Phelps, Br)ll King. ' vestigated.

GALLIPOUS, Ohio (UP!) - class. The workers have power.
The father of John Tannehill, In the United States the work·
19, Middleport, Ohio, a mem- ers are taken advantage of.
ber of the U.S. Table tennis
"Mao is certainly the greatest
team visiting Communist China moral and intellectual leader in
who was quoted as saying he the world today," said Tannemay stay behind the Bamboo hill according to the newspapCurtain said he was sure his er. "He reaches the most peo..
son was "not aware" of the pie and influences the most peo..
impact of such statements.
pie. His philosophy is beauti"He is good in table tennis fitl. "
but he is not aware at all of "I suppose he said it," the
the overall effect of what he elder Tannehill said. "! certainsaid would have on himself and ly couldn't say he didn't say it
other people," said Chester although it doesn't sound like
Tannehill, executive editor of him. He never expressed
the Gallipolis Tribune and the thoughts like that before. He's
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel. ·
searching for something to be·
The younger Tannehill, a Jieve in. Lets put it that way."
freshman at the University of Tannehill· said his son was a
Cincinnati, was quoted by the "young person who is intelligent
Toronto, Canada, Globe &amp; Mail and reads a lot" who may ba've
in a dispatch with a Peking some ideas he is not prepared
dateline as saying he was "loy- to handle.
ing with lile idea of staying in "He is in the limelight and
China. Maybe forever but prob· probably doesn't realize it,"
ably not." The dispak!h was al· said Tannehill. "He has a world
so carried in the United States wide forum for his thoughts.
by the New York Times.
"! think the American pa~;ty
The newspaper quoted the na- over there should have more
lion's No.2 ranked table tennis ·control over what their people
player as saying the philosophy say," said Tannehill. "I don't
of Mao Tse Tung was "heauli· think the news organizations
lui."
should take an immature boy
Tannehill was also quoted as and quote him like that. I think
saying there is a "lack of ·they obviously are trying to
questioning" in the United crucify him.
States and \be "university en- "They look for stmething sen.
vironmenl is stifling.
sa tiona! and wild to say," said
The Toronto newspaper said TannehilL "Then they will lake
Tannehill said, In China there an immature kid and quote
is no exploiting of the working him."
'
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: .. . ·.... ' '·
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•' ~

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Ohio ·weather
Outlook Thursday through
Saturday:
Fair and cool Thursday and
Friday. Warmer with a
chance of showers •Saturday.
Highs generally In the 50s
Thursday and Friday and
warming to the 10s Saturday.
Lows In the 318 aDd upper 20s
Thursday morning, rising to
tbe upper 318 and low 40s by
Saturday morning.

Benefit Dance

.,

,
"""""".-Donated.

PLANTING TIME - Ten !lowering crabapple tteea
were planted by the Rutland Frienllly Gardeners Monday
along Rutland's Main ,Street. One was also planted at the
Rutland Park by Mrs. Howard Birchfield, left, the clvlc co..
chairman of the club, and Mrs. Harold Wolf~, club president.
The tw.owereasslsted In planting the other trees by Mrs. Bill
WUliamson, Mrs. Joan Stewart, and Mrs. Joan Fetty. The
plantings were made as a part of the garden club's
beauliflcation project, "Let's Keep Rutland a Bloomin' Clean
Town," which has 1leen entered In the Sears Community
Improvement Project. About 70 trees were sold by the club to
residents for planting on private property in the village.

C

. · ·.

ret '·emetery PrOposed
Is Middlepcrt's Riverview other hand, loyal pel owners
Cemetery going to the dogs? could charg&lt;! such a ·law
Well - not really.
discriminatory should one exist.
However, Village Main· The subject of dead pels died
tenance Supervisor Harold without any action being taken.
Chase off~red an idea to council
Monday night \hal perhaps the
group ·would be interested in p,·re on H!"ll
setting aside a part of the
cemetery for pets.
•
Chase said he had been ap- SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
proached numerous ·times by Fire Dept. was called today at
residents willing to pay very 10 a.m . to Sno"Cball Hill where
well to have their pets buried. trash was on fire.
So far, he has refused.
AI Lipscomb said four emOf course, the idea brought. ployes of Operation Mainout that it may be against the stream working at Syra,cuse
law to bury people and pets in Municipal Park assisted in
the · same cemetery. On the figh~ng the fire .

••

.'

representative election.
- An Ohio Public Employment
Citizens Advisory Council,
named by the governor, would
make recommendations regarding labor relations matter in
the public sector.
- All proceedings of the board
would be open to the public.
Gilligan said the law would
"modernize Ohio's antiquated and unworkable laws dealing
with the rights and responsibilities of public employes."

I

Coming Friday n

Asquaredanceforlhebene!}t
of the George Thompson Kidney
Fund will be held from 8 to
midnight Friday at the archery
building of Royal Oak Park.
The dance, open to the public,
is being planned by Ellen
Thoma and is sponsored by the
Five-Point Stitchers 4-H Club.
Gary Thoma and the Corn
Huskers are providing music
for the dance and are donating
. their services. Special callers
will be featured and a cake walk
SHOW CANCELLED
A talent show planned for will be held.
Saturday night at the Racirie
High School for the benefit of
FIRE DOUSED
the Racine Baseball Assn. Is 't'he. Middleport Fire dept.
being postponed. A rehearsal of was' called to· extinguish an oil
the show set ,for tonight has drip fire at the Texaco Bulk
beeK cancelled.
, Plant ~onday at 10:18 a.m.

TEN CENTS

Tractor

Son Unaware
_ -of~Tmp.lications
FIVE HUNDRED RAINliOW trout were placed In ·Forest Acres Park Lake Monday
evening in preparation for a trout derby to be staged Saturday and Sunday. Fishing will be
from 5:30a.m. to 7 p.m. both days and sportsmen may use only artificial ball on Saturday. On
Sunday any kind of bait~ with the exception of minnows- may be used. The derby is sponsored by the Leading Creek Conservancy District and the LeBdlng Creek Watershed Assn.

.J

Showers ending from the
northwest and cooler tonight.
Lows from the mid 30s nor.
thweslto the mid 40s southeast.
Partly cloudy and cooler
Wednesday. High's in mid 40s to&lt;
low 50s north and in 50s
elsewhere.

PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1971

Chiel of Police Cremeans told. , .
officials that he will be
resigning before the end_ of the .
year.
'
Council approved the mayor's -~
report showing receipts of ·
$873.30 in fines and fees during
March and $148 in merchant
police collec'tions for a total· of :
$1,021.30.
Acommunication' was read In
regard to the pension fund for
full time poliCe officers . and
firemen . Middleport. dces not
presently take part in the plan
but instead includes the pclice
officers in the public employes
retirement system. The matter
will be referred to the village
solicitor.
Attending the meeting
besides those named earlier
were Councilmen David
Ohlmger and
Lawrence
Stewart.

Weather

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

31 Arrests
Reported

Lee
ID

firms entered in accordance
with specifications were the
York Co. of Nelsonville,
$30,661.07 and the Brewer-co. of
Lancaster; $29,100.
Goldsberry said his firm can
start ~bout May 3 and could
have the work finished in about
30 days. He asked that council
give the company the green
light on the project ·as soon as
possible since the firm does
have an asphalt plant operating
in the county at the present
time.
Councilman Dick Vaughan
suggested that Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate advertise for a pool
manager. lifeguards and other
employes who will be needed at
the community pool this
summer.
Vaughan also reported that
h1s son had seen a resident

I

'

.

· replace the late Emmet Shuler.
Mayor C. 0. Fisher made the
appointnients, which were
approved by council. Chase's
term will expire Dec. 31, 1974.
AI Baker's request, council
also agreed to take steps to
change the zoning classification
of a lot near Powell's· Service
Station from business to
residential so that a trailer can
be placed on the Jot.
Gene Goldsberry represen-.
ting the Shelly Construction.Co.
met with council to discuss bids
on a road improvement project
being planned by 'council.
The Shelly firm was the
lowest bidder on the project.
The Shelly bid was for $25,990 on
the project as advertised and
$28,297.50 on additional footage
not
included
in
the
specifications. Bids of other·

Anyone · who has ever
cleaned out an attic knows
that anything worth saving
is worth throwing away to
begin with.

By UDited Press International
ZANESVILLE, OHIO - A ZZ.~LD Vle!Jtam war
veteran charged with murder hanged himself in a shower room at
the Muskingum County jail during the weekend. Sheriff Fred
Uffner said David Homer McCoy, of Zanesville, on' of two men
charged with the apparent shotgun slaying of James Edward
Holmes, 39, about four montha ago, fashioned a noose from a
bedsheet.
Uffner said he tied It to an overhead bar in the shower room,
stepped up on a stool and kicked It away. Coroner S. S. Dow officially ruled the death suicide. McCoy and Freeman Larry Stage,
26, Zanesville, were to have been arraigned today on charges of
premeditated murder and murder committed during a robbery.
WASHINGTON - A TASK FORCE REPORT on efforts to
clean up water pollution, sponsored by Ralph Nader, charged
today OQio bas attempted to provide a "safe haven" for Industrial
polluters. "Ohio has always tried 'to provide Industry with a Slife
haven from the tough pollution control requirements that would
otherwise be part o! the cost of settling In a heavily, Industrialized
state," the report said.
It also claimed little has been•done to stop the pollution of
Lake Erie despite the fact the lake's problems have been known
for years. Industrial plants located on the Ohlo River, ltsa!d, have
"not even complied with the m!nlmum control requirements" set
by the Ohio RIVOJ;. Valley Water Sanitation Commisslan In the
1950s and 295 communities on the river "still have no sewage
plants." ORSANCO,In 22 years of existence, "lias not Initiated an
abatement order against a single lndusfrlal polluter,"lt charged.
WASHINGTON - EVERY AMERICAN serviceman in
Southeast Asia could be brought home by the end of 1972 if
President Nixon can engineer a release of American prilloners of
war, according to senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott. Scott
said on a televl8lon interview Sunday (ABC - Issues and Anr
swers} that the puJiout would Include suppbrt, as well as COIIlbat
troops.
He based his contention on a briefing which Nixon gave
congressional leaders last Wednesday juat hours before he
outlined to the nation his further plans for winding down the war.
HONOLULU - FIVE OF SIX DESPERADOES who broke
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
out of a county jail and threatened to kill any policeman in sight
surrendered meekly and were back behind bars today. The
RECEIPTS IN
mother of one - triple murder suspect William K. Medeiroa Receipts a \the office of Meigs said she hoped the public wound't condemn him because
County Court Judge Frank W. "everybody's a litUe naughty at times."
Porter in March were $2,318.62.
Police armed with sawecklff sholgwis and Ml6 rifles closed In
Of the total, $458.65 in fines was on a rented house In the swank suburb of Klihala &amp;mday and
paid to the state, $108.60 In fees seized Medeiros, Daniel Cuevas and Edward L. Silva, also ac·
of the sheriff, $1,170.16 to the1 cused kl!lers.
.
county general fund, $302.45 into
Three women also were arrested at the home, which ill in an
the county law library fund, and area contalnlng homes of celebrities such as actm Jack Lord
$276 .96 to the county auto (Hawaii ft.O) and Richard Boone and ·former ambassador Clare
license and gas fund .
Booth Luce.

'

'

Now You Know

-

Bashan
Mrs. Mae Pearson and Mrs.
Ada Cramlet of Racine and
Mrs . Linda Hubbard and
daughter of Syracuse, Mrs. Ola
Hysell, Mrs. Mary Grace
Cowdery aqd son of Long
Bottom were calling on Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Trussell recently.
The Bashari Fire Department
was called to the Gary Griffith
farm on Saturday to put out a
brush fire.
Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours
called on Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Taylor recently. Mr. Taylor has.
been very poorly.
· Mr. and Mrs. Paul Orr visited
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kellar of
Pomeroy R. D.
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Bashan Fire Department met
recenUy. A Stanley Hostess
party was planned for April29
and a Tupperware party
sometime in May.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Trusseli 1
and Mr. ' and Mrs. Ralph
Trussell : and children spent
Sunday at Mt. Vernon with Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Trussell and
daughter.
· David Ballard and Cindy and
Robin Pitzer have been ill; the
past week.

.

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I

A · traciOf·lrailer will be
donated for use In disposing of
solid waste collections in
Middleport.
Middleport Council Monday
night agreed that the three
haulers of the community may
continue in business using the
Cozart landfill dump in Athens
County. ·
The haulers, however, were
met with the stipulation that
rates charged residents CB!Inot.
be increased.
To enable the haulers to
function without increasing
rates, Council President John
Zerkle Is donating the use of a
tractor-trailer ' which will be
filled with the solid waste by the
three haulers and taken to the
Athens County landfill.
The haulers will be responsible for transferring the
collections from their vehicles
to the larger vehicle and for
unloading the larger vehicle at
the landfill. The semi will be
taken to the landfill when II Is
fuJI.
Meantime, residents with
collection service are asked to
pack their trash into plastic
bags or boxes for pickup by
their collectors. No brush will
be taken by the three haulers.

9 Carriers
Win Awards
Nine Daily Sentinel carriers
were awarded Easter corsages
for their mothers as the result of
a subscription con (est staged by.
the newspaper.
.
Winning corsages in ' the i
contest were Todd Smith, Tina
Voss, Mary Rusche), Pomeroy;
David Rose, Mason; Jay
Manley, Beth Vaughan, Mllte ·,
Hoffman, Middleport; Bruce
Cottrill of Syracuse, and Glen
Roush, Racine .
Winner o( a grand prize - an
FM-AM transistor radio - was
Miss Voss.

COME TO PARK
The annual open bouse of
Forked Run State •Park' llt&amp;r
Reedsville will be beld all day
Sunday. Residents are lnylletl
to visit the )lllrk durin&amp; tilt
day aad look over lb,e
facllltles now ready for tbe .
summer season.

•

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