<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="947" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/947?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T20:38:32+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="10847">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/30edcf8958c22910bb32a5851e58e688.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c30814b13b8272c83b6a4425235abab8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2034">
                  <text>. Now You Know

•

Cleveland, Ohio, originally
was spelled "Cleaveland," but
the "A" was dropped in 1832 to
shorten
a
newspaper's
masthead.

The Daily S

Weather
Clear and cold tonight. Lows
in the teens and lower 20s.
Mostly sunny and not as cold
Thursday. Highs in the 30s and
low 40s.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXVI NO. 240

tt

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1971

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

In Order To Support Program, AFL-CIO Says:

..

•
4

Stripped Land Must Be Reclainted
COLUMBUS CUPI)- A spokesman for the Ohio
AFL-CIO said if strip mine owners or the state do not
require stripped land to be reclaimed, then the labor
federation "will have no alternative but to back a
total ban on this type of coal mining."
Charles Borsari, public relations directqr of the
750,000-member state labor groups, appeared
Tuesday night before the House Environment
Committee which is considering a bill that would
strictly regulate strip mining.
"We believe there is some economic benefit to
be derived from strip mining- both for strip miners

and the people in affected counties," said Borsari. said, with opponents testifying next Tuesday and
Thursday.
But, he added, "if strip miners do not
Ohio State University Professor Earl Murphy,
reclaim the land and if Ohio does not require
who helped draft the proposed strip mine law, exhonest reclamation, then the Ohio AFL-CJO will
plained it detail-by-detail Tuesday night, emhave no alternative but to back a total ban on this
phasizing the requirements, detailed enforcement
type of coal mining."
procedures and penalties.
The bill would create a five-member board
Supporters of the legislation, sponsored by
House Minority Leader A. G. Lancione, D-Bellaire, which would establish rules and regulations, conhad their say during the hearing, the second held on duct inspections and hearings, issue cease and desist
the bill. Pro testimony will be concluded Thursday, orders and revoke licenses.
The full-time jobs would be for five years with
committee chairman Kenneth Creasy, R-Delaware,

i---------------------------,
7\.T
•
B rze
. .+.s 1
l
1 ~ews .•.• zn
1

•
•
•

I

I

I

!

Fl'. BENNING, GA. -APPARENTLY quickening its pace,
the Calley murder jury got down to work early today in its stark
deliberation room crowded with 165 court-martial exhibits.
The jury arrived at 8:20 a.m., doffed jackets, and began its
second week of deliberation on a verdict in the case of point-blank
slaughter at My Lai.
The six officers ended their first week of deliberation
Tuesday, spending nearly seven hours in its narrow little room.

WOMEN of the Syracuse Fire Department Auxiliary are
making these homemade eggs in 14 flavors to sell for the

Easter season. The group already has orders for over 1,100
and total production this year should go o,ver the 3,000 mark.

i'1ti'odu•~..d by
U.S. Rep. Wayne Hays, D-Ohio,
would require surface miners to
save the top soil taken from the
land when they mine coal. The
miners would have to replace
rock, topped with the top soil, to
return the land to its normal

of G """'
m 1970, t
(H.J:.. • said t
The aeath
infants Wld • one year of age, estrrnated
from a national samplmg of death certificates, was 19.8 deaths for
each 10,000 live births in 1970, compared with 20.7 per 1,000 in 1969.
From 1915 to 1919 the rate was 95.7 deaths per 1,000. In 1950 it
was 29.2, and in 1960 it was 26.0.

•

•

•

Dairymen Invited
To Attend Session
Meigs Cowtty dairymen have
been invited to part-icipate in
the Dairy ''Udder Health"
meeting to be held at 8 p.m.,
Thursday evening, in Gallipolis.
The meeting location is the
Columbus
and
Southern
Electric Company Building at
Third Ave. and Sycamore St. in
Gallipolis. This building is
located diagonally across from
Central Soya behind the electric
substation - beside the railroad
tracks.
The main topic will be
"Reducing Mastitis Loss in
Dairy Herds". The speaker will
be Dr. Harry Barr, Extension
Dairy Specialist, Ohio State
University.

FORFEIT BONDS
Two defendants forfeited
bonds and three others were
fined in the court of Middleport
Mayor C. 0. Fisher Tuesday
night. Forfeiting $25 bonds were
Wayne Little, 45, Columbus,
charged with fighting, and
Marice Toler, 23, Bidwell,
speeding.
Fined were Mildred E. Roush,
51, Racine, $10 and costs on
improper backing charges;
Kenneth Hayes, 18, Middleport,
$5 and costs, speeding, and
Bernard Gilkey, 44, Middleport,
$10 and costs, intoxication.

contour.
Reseeding
and
reforesting would also be
mandatory.
"The way they are leaving
this land in Ohio at the present
time, it is as wtproductive as a
desert with 100 or 200-foot high
walls all around the stripped
area," Hays said. "The area
stripped is left with the acid
bearing rock and other nonproductive elements on top."
Hays said one strip miner in
Ohio estimated the reclamation
requirements would only cost
an additional 35 cents per ton of
coal.

28 From Here Attend Welcome

Autos Collide On Lincoln Heights

•

WASHL'lGTON (UPI) - An
Ohio congressman has introduced legislation which
would require strip miners
throughout the country to
reclaim the land after it is
mined to prevent "desert" type
countryside from scarring the

na,tion.
• e measure

MERICA'S INFAJIII"T DEATH rate, long a
t u 4- r
.. 1o a !'€ o. •
abon and Welh:re Dep:.~rtment

belonging
to
Lawrence
Morarity, Lincoln Heights
resident.
Schrimsher was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted for
treatment. The Pomeroy
emergency unit transported
him to the hospital. Schrimsher
has been cited to mayor's court
on a left of center charge.

Ahmad said reclamation alone would not
prevent acid from polluting surrounding ground and
surface water. He disputed earlier claims by Pennsylvania experts that ponds created in reclaimed
areas contained clear water.

New Measure
Introduced

PHILADELPHIA- FEDERAL INVESTIGATORS open a
grand jury inquiry today for clues to the baffling disappearance of
'1:17 Penn Central boxcars and whether criminal activity was
involved. The boxcars, values at $1 million, vanished during the
past year.
A government attorney conducting the investigation said
"something like 100" of the missing cars have been located.

Two cars received medium
damages and a driver was
injured as the result of an accident on Lincoln Heights in
Pomeroy at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday
night.
Pomeroy police said that a
car driven by Bert Schrimsher,
19, Long Bottom, went arowtd a
curve, crossed over the centerline and struck a parked car

Ohio State geology professor Moid Ahmad
warned against a llowing str ipping in areas
where acid mining drainage could result.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Public Works
Committee is expected today to extend for four years the 13state Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC).
The committee planned to tack on a Senate-passed extension to the $2 billion Public Works Act, it was reported
Tuesday. The act is in jeopardy of a Presidential veto . ·
The House version originally called for only a two-year
extension but apparently agreed to the Senate version.
Formed in 1965, ARC was due to expire June 30. The
Nixon administration wanted to phase out the commission
and then put its funds under the proposed federal-sta te
revenu~ sharin_g _plan.

By United Press International
SAN FRANCISCO - A SUBURBAN JUDGE took over the
Angela Davis murder case today with a pledge to conduct a trial
that the black militant and the commwtity will feel is "fair."
Judge Alan A. Lindsay of nearby Alameda County was
assigned Tuesday by the California Judicial Council to hear
pretrial proceedings for Miss Davis and her codefendant, Ruchell
Magee.

.JS

an annual salary of $5,000.

CARRYING OUT their annual Easter basket project,
these Syracuse Fire Department Auxiliary members are
decorating and placing handles on the baskets created from

plastic containers. Around the table from the left are Ada
Slack, Myla Hudson, Mildred Pierce, chairman; Jean Hall,
president; Eleanor Bohra!fl, Agnes White and Doris Friend.

E as t er Bask et Project Underway

·zz·

Spring rolls around every
year and so does the annual
Easter basket project of the
Women's Auxiliary of the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department.
Although the pressure is
applied in March and April
when the women of the group
must face the reality that
deli very date of the filled
Easter baskets is approaching
rapidly, the women actually

begin their annual project in
January . Collection of the
hundreds of plastic containers
which are fashioned into attractive and colorful Easter
baskets is the first step in the
process. Cutting the containers
so that each basket features an
animal replica comes next.
Then, the members must spend
hours in coloring the figures and
accenting the baskets with
markers.

in prices from 25 cents to $1
each. However, this year the
group is cutting back to 800 and
will sell only $1 baskets. In
addition, the homemade
chocolate eggs will be sold.
Orders may be placed by
telephoning 992-2015, 992-2659,
992-2481, 992-2801 or 992-7351.
Last spring, the auxiliary Mrs. Mildred Pierce is chairBids were received for
members hit an all-time high man of this year's project.
with their Easter baskets filling Auxiliary president is Mrs. depository money when the
• Meigs County commissioners
over 1,300 orders. These ranged Jean Hall.
met Tuesday.
Submitting bids for study
were Citizens National Bank,
Racine Home National Bank,
Farmers Bank and Savings and
Pomeroy National Bank. The
children because his daughter- relatives.
commissioners will award the
in-law wouldn't let him see
Also in the house, Rep . bid at a later date.
them openly.
Chester Cruze, R-Cincinnati,
In other business the com-An amendment was tacked on offered a resolution requesting missioners approved the
broaden ing
the
original a Legislative Service Com- relocation and vacation of
provisions of the bill that only mission review of the problems Township Roads 207 and 79 and
included grandparents to en- of over-population.
County Road 20 for the proposed
compass all relatives and the
new SR 7 bypass.
Both the House and Senate
bill was passed 55-33 over obAdele Cullums was granted
jections it would invite intrusion were to return today at 1:30 perm1ss1on to attend a
into families by unwanted p.m.
C.A.M.P.S. meeting at the
Gallia County welfare department March 29.
The commissioners approved
an animal claim submitted by
Erwin Gloeckner, Racine, RD. 1
in the amount of $75 for the loss
of a Hereford.
Vietnamese operation, a Lao- men saw the incurstion as a
Jean Braun of the Meigs
tian military spokesman said victory that disrupted the Ho Chapter of the American Red
heavy fighting broke out today Chi Minh Trail, slowed down Cross was granted permission
only half a mile north of the Communist operations in South to display a bamboo prisoner of
airfield at the royal capital of Vietnam and Cambodia for war cage like those used in
Luang Prabang. Twenty-five many weeks and destroyed vast Vietnam on the lawn between
American dependants were quantities of war materiel. the courthouse and the sheriff's
flown out earlier but Kmg Saigon said its troops d·'~~royed office.
~avang Vatthana stayed on or captured more than 176,000
Attending were Charles R.
despite what spokesmen called tons of enemy munitions and Karr, Sr ., Bob Clark, Warden
killed 13,000 Communist sola "critical" situation .
Ours, commissioners, and
Saigon and Pentagon spokes- chers in a 10 to 1 kill ratio.
Martha Chambers, C'lerlc

Besides purchasing candy for
filling the baskets, members
take on a sideline of making
several thousand chocolate
covered eggs. These are made
in 14 different flavors and the
goal this year is something like
3,000 of these eggs.

G l zuan 's P ackage Presented To Senate

~'
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Gilligan administration's
comprehensive package for
state employes, including a 16
REGISTER SATURDAY
per cent across-the-board pay
Registration for the Racine raise, was introduced in the
Pee Wee team, Little League state Senate Tuesday.
team and Pony League will be
The pay hike, which would go
held from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. into effect J uly 1 if approved by
Saturday at the Simpson the General Assembly, has a
Building in Racine. Players $75.8 million price tag for fiscal
may sign up for summer in- 1972 and another $91 million for
surance . Players having fiscal 1973.
uniforms are to take them to the
The proposal also contains an
building. A bake sale will be automatic cost-of-living con held in conjunction with the version. It was introduced by
registration to raise funds for Sen. Robert T. Secrest, Dthe program . Next or- Cambridge.
ganizational meeting will be
The cost-of-living increase,
held at 7:30 p.m. next Wed- beginning in fiscal 1973, would
nesday at the Club Restaw·ant. cost the state about $12.5 million
a year.
The life insurance policies,
insunng all state employes 11 ~
ISSt:ES WARNING
times their annual salary,
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed would cost the state $7.7 million
Webster
today
warned for two years.
residents owning dogs that they
The sick leave proposal would
must bP tied or owners will bP permit an employe to take his
prosecutl·d.
unused sick leave in cash at

retirement, at a rate of 25 per
cent of the time accrued.
Additional pay range increases are included for 200 job
classes.
Sen. Ronald Mottl, D-Parma,
also introduced a resolution
proposing a unicameral - or
single chamber - legislature.
In the House, a bill permitting

courts to grant reasonable
visitation rights to relatives of
children living with one parent
whose spouse died was passed
after considerable debate.
The bill was sponsored by
Rep . Norman A. Murdock, RCincinnati, who cited a grandfather io his constituency who
was forced to seek ''clanestine
meetings" with his grand-

Complete Troop Pullout
By BERT W. OKULEY
SAIGON ( UPI )---South Vietnam withdrew the last of its
army and armor from Laos
today, leaving only a small
rearguard of marines in the
final phase of the controversial
drive agamst the Ho Chi
Minh Trail. Americans began
pulling out of Khe Sanh as
Communist tanks and infantrymen neared the border of South

Vietnam .
U.S. air strikes destroyed
four North Vietnamese tanks
and damaged two today, but
U.S. helicopter pilot 1st Lt.
Erick Heintz, 25, of Spokane,
Wash ., said in Khe Sanh. ' 'the
way the Communists are
moving they'll be on top of this
place in a week."
In northern Laos, 400 miles
north of the 45-·day-old South

Twenty-eight persons at- national church originated
tended a regional welcome for here.
The Rt. Rev. John McGill
Attending from here, largest
Krumm, Bishop of the Diocese group represented, were Dr.
of Southern Ohio, from the and Mrs. Stanley Plattenburg,
Southeastern Region of the Mr. and Mrs. Leo Story, Mr.
diocese at the Ohio University and Mrs. Fred Crow, Mr. and
Inn, Athens, Tuesday evening. Mrs. Rome Williamson, Mr. and
The Rt. Rev. Krumm, who Mrs. Harry S. Moore, Mrs.
was elected to the post of bishop James Titus and Morton Titus,
in December, was chaplain at Mr. and Mrs. James Bailey, Mr.
Columbia University 13 years and Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mr.
and rector at the Church of the and Mrs. Ted Reed, Mr. and
Ascension in New York City Mrs. Larry Spencer, Mrs.
since 1965.
Everett Hayes, Mrs. J. 0.
Rev. Krumm takes over one Roedel, Mrs. A. R. Knight, Mrs .
of the nation's most important J. E. D. Hartinger, Mr. and
arms of the Episcopal Church. Mrs. Dale Dutton, and Mrs. Eva
The 45,000 member diocese has Stout and Mrs. David C. Miller.
been a model for "activist".
Christianity, as many of tthhe
programs adopted by
e ,

Bids Are
R eceived

Three ]nJ"Ured

In Accident
Three persons were injured in
a two vehicle collision at 12:50
p.m. Tuesday on Rt. 7 at the
junction of County Road 5.
Admitted
to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital suffering
from head injuries was Cormal
Jewett, 41, Rutland. He is listed
in satisfactory condition.
Treated and released for
minor injuries were Earl King,
89, and a passenger in his car,
Leona King, 72, both of Rutland.
According to the Gallipolis
Post State Highway Patrol,
King pulled from the county
road into the path of the Jewett
auto. King was charged with
failure to yield the right of way.
There was moderate damage to
both cars.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITIED - Steven Riffle,
Racine; Elmer Burns, Middleport; Madolyn Rickard,
Clifton;
Carmel
Jewett,
Rutland; Vance Newland,
Reedsville; Philip Donovan ,
Syracuse; Bert Schrimsher ,
Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED - Charles
Eads, Harry Cross, Herman
Biack, Brian Dowell, Oretha
Lambert, Helen Jeffers, Velsia
Roush, and Dana Covert.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
PomerO) Wednesday at 11 a.m .
was 30 degrees under snowy
skies.

�2 _ Thl' Daily &amp;'ntine l. :\-ltddleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 24, 1971

"I Have a Feeling I'm N ot R1ght

Charlie Smith Is 128
And Still in Business

for Hot Pants!"

By TOM 'I'II&lt;:DE

Legislature At A Glance
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
glance at activity Tuesday in
the Ohio General Assembly:
House
Bill Passed
Am. HB 163, Murdock, Grants
visitation rights for persons
other than parents interested in
the welfare of a child. Vote: 5533
Bill Introduced
HB 443, Young, Provides for
terms of Dayton Municipal
Court judges to begin on successive days beginning with
Jan. 1.
Resolution Offered
HR 44, Cruze, Requests
Legislative Service Commission to review the problems
of over-population.
Senat
Re olutro
SJ
t ot

0

unicameral legislature.
Bills Introduced
SB
147,
Secrest,
Administration bill increasing
state employe pay 16 per cent
across-the-board.
SB 148, Taft, Conveys state
land in Shaker Heights to the
Cleveland Skating Club.
SB 149, Weisenborn, Allow
joint vocational school to

operate on a quarter or timester
basis.
SB 150, Weisenborn, Requires
natura! resources director to
impose flood plan zoning if local
zoning is not adopted.
SB 151, Armstrong, Raises
annual salary percentage to
compute police and fire pensions.

Alfred
Sunday School attendance on
March 21 was 49. The offering
was $19.80
Worship services were held at
11 with the Rev. Lavender
reading from Luke 18:1-14, and
speaking on "Prayer.'
East Su11Ji$e sen-ices will
br b el here at the cln.trch at 6
lock Easter morning, April

L VIEW

Why China Skirts
Viet War Role
By LEON DENNEN
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y INEAl
Chma and North Vietnam are as close as "lips and
teeth," said Peking Premier Chou En-lai after his visit
to Hanoi .
He pledged "all-out support" to_ the ~;ople o~ In~o·
china- if the United States contmues expandmg 1ts
war."
· h t
·
Chma will not hesitate to make the "h1g es sacnfices," Chou warned. Nevertheless, he appear~d t&lt;? ru~e
out any commitment of Chinese troops to the ftghtmg m
Indochina.
p k" ·
As the history of the last six years shows, . e mg s
rulers do not take their verbal assaults very senously.
Specialists on communism see four maJo~ reasons why
China is not likely to intervene more act1vely m Indochina.
They are:
.
, .
,,
,
• An unwritten Amertcan-Chmese agreement to preserve the integrity of 1\'orth Vietnam.
• The accelerated withdrawal of u S. troops from
South Vietnam .
• Peking's fear of a Russian attack.
• :\lao Tse-tung's efforts to break nut from his diplomatic isolation and to g ain admission to the United Nations.
.
M
· t L ·
There is little doubt that the Chmese arx1s s- ~~~!lists \\ould like to contmue the "revoluti~mary war m
Indochina to the las t Vietnamese, Laot1an and Cambodian.
.
.
But their basic commitment has always been to PIeserve the integrity of l':orth Vietnam.
.
According to East European diplomats, Pekmg made
this repeatedly clear at talks in Warsaw. Poland, by
1\merican and Chinese ambassadors.
.
Peking's inte rvention in t!1e war would become a possibilitv onlv if U.S. troops mvaded North VIetnam and
drove toward China 's southern border.
.
As the diplomats see it. this is, in effect, an unwr_1tten
American-Chinese understandin g. It explams Pres1dent
:'-iixon ' s public and private assertions that there is n0
plan to mvade Hanoi ard that China has no. reason to be
concerned that the war might expand near 1ts borders.
Because of the withdrawal of American troops from
South Vietnam , Pekin g. it is increasingly clear, no longer
regards tlw US presence in Indochina_ as a threat. to
China's security, as It d1d durm g the penod of the buJ!f!.
up in 1965 .
.
.
.
. .
But Russi:t is an 1mmed1ate and ever-present tht eat to
China .
.
·thd
.
f
S tth
While tlw United States IS WI . rawmg ~om . _o~ .
Vietnam, the Russians are steppmg _up thet~ nuhta ~
preparations on their border with Chma and m the
dian (kean
. .
, ,
Peking 1s aware. of course .. that the Russiaf!s. b) H ·
~andin g their navy in the Ind1an Ocean . also ann to outflank and contain the Chinese.
Thu~. some 100.000 of China's . crack troor~
e . r!.'JJorted to he mobilized on the Russian border. 1 ~1e.~ have
IJeen then• s ince the Chinese-Hussian border rnc1dents
of 1!!69
· .
I Cl · · , · ·
Because the~· fear Soviet aggressiOn, t1_c
1mes~ a1 e
al so demonstratmg increasing interest m broadc•!1111g
ttu•ir international contacts in virtually every part of the
wmld . Therr diplomacy shows gn•ater flexibility " . .
\!lao no lon l.-:1:'1' in sist s on tlw n•cognition ol Hed rJ nma s
soven•1gnt~ ove1 tltP Cl;inl'sc H&lt;•puhlic· on Taiwan
Tim: dc•tnand has h&lt;•t•n liftt•d wh&lt;•nt•ver i'&lt;•k111g consid·
Pred it ;tdv;.u1l&lt;ll.~ l'OI! S to establis h dtplomatic n•laltun:;
wtl It cou nl ric•s that siH&gt;Wf'd thc·nisl'lves rl'luctant to n•, .
ognt 1.•· tiH' C'ommunists· clal!ll to Taiwan.
1\., :'\txon HlfiiC'afP&lt;I. thi s will tllHk&lt;· 1t possible for fh(•
('nil&lt;'d "ila1Ps to c•st;d&gt;lis h r&lt;'latiolls wtth tlw Hl'd Chrnt•st•
ilrtrl 1&gt;:11 k 'I&gt;• 11
d111ission I" flu• r ·niiPd '\'atwns
fr•&gt;lllc,dl' . 11 1 fl11• f:ll ..,s t; &gt;IJ ( OI1Jilllllll S1s \\Ito an• IIO\\

1

:u

ftlkf•\\&lt;Jilll ; d"•lll h ;l' ll" IIH ''ll!rt' 'i( ( llll'llllllli ' l s a s ill••!!
1 '1l'iJ', ('&gt;Ill IIi
IHI ~ illlfll 'i Ill 'liP (

11, with breakfast to follow in
the church basement.
The Women's Society held its
regular meeting on Tuesday
evening, March 16, at the home
of Genevieve Guthrie, with an
attendance of 12 members and
two :visitors, Mary Pennington
and Charlotte Van Meter)~
Nellie Parkers, president,
presided at the meeting which
opened with prayer by Florence
Spencer, followed by the hymn
"He Lives."
A total of 13 sick and shut-in
calls was reported.
Two hand-woven rugs were
displayed for sale, as well as
gelatin. The vanilla has been
reported sold.
Communications were read
from Mrs. Daniel Evans,
district treasurer, on the dates
of April 24, Distnct all day
meeting at Logan, and the May
14 Conference meeting. Mrs.
Pennington explained these
meetings and the Mission school
to be held during the summer
and urged that someone attend.
Renewal of the two subscriptions to "Response and
World Outlook" was made.
Also a contribution of $5 was
sent to Fair Chance, Inc.
Mrs. Pennington, District
Missions secretary, gave a
missionary report, and read
letters from missionaries,
whom the Society supports.
The nominating committee,
consisting of Nina Robinson,
Isola Taylor, and Florence
Spencer is to name new officers,
and report at the April meeting.
The program was presented
with "Easter" as the theme, as
follows .
Reading, depicting Mary and
her feelings, as the mother of
.Jesus, as He was crucified, Osie
Follrod; Resurrection, Nina
Robinson ; Blessings, Isola
Taylor; Prelude for Easter,
Outside of Time, St. Patrick,
June Stearns; The Time of
Awakening, Eleanor Boyles;
The hymn, Were You There, by
Helen Woode, assisted by
Florence Spencer and others;
poem, Because He Lives, Helen
Woode; True Meaning of
Easter, Alma Swartz; Early
Easter Morn, Nellie Parker;
Easter
p r ogram
from
Response, by Thelma Hen derson, Florence Spencer and
June Stearns; Closing Prayer,
Thelma Henderson.
The hostess served delicious
refreshments, during the social
hour .
The next meeting will be on
Tuesday evening, April 20, at
the home of Osie Follrod, with
Helen Woode, program leader .
J\.lr.s . Emma Findling spent
las l Thursday with Clara
Follrod and Nma Robinson .
Guests of Mr . and Mrs
Charles D. Woode, from
Thursday evening to Saturday
aftenwon, were her brother-inlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Hussell Hainu111 of Cultunbus.

BARTOW, l&lt;'la -I NEA lCharlie Smith runs the most
tmusual variety store in this
eomn11mitv. T. h e r e are a
vanety or' things not for sale
in it. Soda pop isn't for sale,
candy isn't for sale. and
there are endless brands of
cakes, crackers, shoelaces
chewing gum, etcetera.
which aren't for sale either.
B u t if Charlie Smith's
s t ore seems unique, you
should see Char I i e Smith.
He's one in 207 million He's
128 years old and, according
to well-kept Social Security
records, perhaps the most
ancient man in the United
States.
He's bald, his vision's failing and he doesn't "motivate" any more than he has
to now. But the old man
&lt;'pens his variety store every
day and is not about to apolCharlie Smith
ogize for the fact there isn't
a single thing for sale
Opell for no business
After all, he g r u m p s, called him 'Dad' like his
"am't no customers come t'ther children "
in here anyway."
And so, Charlie insists, "I
That's Charlie. A stubborn ain't never been no real
independent cuss since be- slave .''
fore Abe Lincoln was presIndeed not. Quite the opident. For · '129 years come
July 4" he has been happily posite, Charlie Smith seel!ls
running stores with nothing to have always been a npfor sale-that is to say liv- snorting free spirit. Others
ing according to his own 'Who reach great age often
credit their longevity to abrules.
Born in Africa in 1842, a stinence or Bible reading
But Charlie scoffs at both .
year before the advent of the "I ain't never been in a
telegraph, Charlie S m it h
church." he says. " I been
was brought to America on
a slave ship. He didn't want in more jails than churches."
True to his cowboy herto come He was shanghaied
by his own curiosity: "The itage, the old man claims
captain of the sh1p, he told he has enjoyed vices more
us to come aboard and get than verses Shooting, drinka look at his fritter tree. mg. gambling . "I was pretty
Fritter, that's another word good at all of 'em ." Last
for pancake. Well, he said time he was arrested, he
he had this heah fritter tree says, smiling, the judge
and we could pick fritters found him guilty and fined
right off it Next thing we him $100. Charlie said he
knew we wuz away out m didn't have the money on
him The judge said, O.K..
the ocean "
and let Charlie go to get it.
Despite his back door en- Charlie left the court and,
trance to the United States, of course. never went back
Charlie did not suffer the
Ah, Charlie likes to sigh,
usual fate of black men in
those ungodly times . He was those were the days .
"I remember once one of
plucked off a New Orlea_ns
auction block by a wh1te my wives sold one of my
Texas r a n c h e r named .4!ls. I've had three wives.
Charles Smith . Smith. says
Charlie. was no Simon Legree - he was a fair and
even generous fellow·
"I was more like h1 son
than .::u~ything else. He gaH~
me his name . he raised me
inside his h o m e I even

/

I've always had two .4!ls.
Anyway, this one wife she
done sold one of the guns
to the high shenff, of all
people." Charlie sits on a
wfa while remembering the
mcident. D res s c d in old
clothes and a blue bandana,
his eyes and his mouth are
the only parts of him moving. I fe recalls confronting
the wife, confronting the
sheriff and warning both. In
the end , he says, "I got my
gun back from the sheriff."
As for the wife? "Why, I
n e v e r saed that woman
agin."
The years, of course, have
slowed Charlie Smith's irreverence a bit But only a
bit. His guns are gone now,
he doesn't bootleg liquor
any more, and it has been
ages since he filled an inside
straight. Yet he's still nobody to tinker with.
Last year he was taken to
a Bartow Hospital "because
my water wasn't working
right." He says the doctors
" damn near ruint me forever." He says they didn't
use anesthetic, they kept
" fiddling around with some
kind of tube." He says they
cut him up the navel, stuck
their hands inside and sort
of "t w i s t e d everything
around-" He didn't like it
He had to be held down dur·
ing surgery.
The old man has perpetual
blood in his eyes.
Maybe that's why nobody
ever comes to Charlie's store
any more.
Regardless, the centenarian opens for no business
daily. He says he has always
worked and would never accept welfare. He sits atop
a pile of old papers which act
as cushions for an old sofa .
Sometimes he listens to the
radio ( .. What's this talk
about the moon: ain't nobody can ever go to the
moon!" ), sometimes he
doesn't. Until 5 p.m . That's
closing time and Charlie 's
the kind of guy who would
never allow anybody to buy
nothing in his store after
closing time .

DR. LAWRENCE E. LA B..,

liTIS/ Is the Tipoff
To Inflammation

TIMELY
QUOTES
The war-baby boom has
hit your police force ... The
blue-coated pig out on the
street is, often as not. merely
a piglet. about the age of the
college dissenter, possibly
younger. a little more ma·
ture.
- Joseph Wambaugh, a ser·
geant in the Los Ange~es
Po~ice Department and au·
tho1· of a po~ice novel.
"Th e N ew Centurions."
I do not discount the pos·
sible contribution of married
priests, particularly in cer·
tain areas of contemporary
life, but they will not be the
shock troops that will carry
the day against the monumental powers of darkness
that presently threaten the
people of God.
- The Rev. TheodoTe M .
He s buT g h, president of
N o t r e Dame University,
defending the tradition of
a celibate Catholic clergy.

It's a sad state of affairs
when we have to try to pass
laws to get motorists to lock
their cars and remove the
i g n it i o n keys . If people
don't care about their property enough to take simple
precautions, what can law
enforcement agencies or the
insurance industry hope to
accomplish'?
- Robert L. Barton, special
a g e 11 t for the National
Automobile Theft Bureau.
Well, we haven't put in
pay toilets yet. I don't think
we will, but anything where
you can reduce costs and
earn some extra revenue is
going to be looked at.
- A 11 airlines official, com ·
menting 011 the industry's
economic &gt;iluation.
The I a y man's constitu·
tiona! view is that what he
likes is constitutional and
that which he doesn't like is
unconstitutional. That about
measures up the constitu tional acumen of the average
person .
- Huyo J Black. a .~socwtr
justice oj the U.S 811·
preme Court.
CARDS COMPLETED SKED
ST. LOUIS IUPI) - The St.
Louis Cardinals Tuesday
completed their National
Football Leag ue pre-season
schedule by announcing a game
with the Washington Redskins,
Aug . 21, at Washrngton and with
thr Cincinnagi Rengals, August
28, at Cincinnati.

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb- ! would
like to know what gastriti ..; is
and also colitis . Are they related in any way'? Also, what
are some of the food s 1t
would be better not to eat?
What is good to take for iF
Dear Reader- There ar·~ fl
few standard clues to medical terminology that are use·
ful for everyone to know.
One of these is the ending
lTIS . Whenever you see this
term use1 you can be certain that it means infldmmation. Thus. gastritis is In·
flammation of the stomach.
Colitis is inflammation of the
colon . Appendicitis is inflammation of the appendix. l.aryngitis in inflammation of
the larynx. Sinusitis is inflammation of the sinus. Bursitis is inflammation of the
bursae (the lining around
the joints). Nephritis is inflammation of the kidneys
tnephro refers to kid_neysl .
Cystitis is inflammatton of
the bladder.
Inflammation does not a lways mean an infection. although that is one way . to
produce it. InflammatiOn
can be caused by chemict'~l
trauma. mechanical trauma,
burns and radiation, as well
as infection.
Gastritis is usually caused
by an excess amount of the

3 PLAYERS REASSIGNED
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
( UPI) - The Washington
Senators announced Tuesday
that infielder Dave Nelson,
pitcher Dick Such and catcher
Rick Stelmaszek have been sent
to their minor league camp for
reassignment.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEV-OTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Published daily e)(cept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Pub l ishing Company , 111
Court St , Pomeroy , Ohio,
45 769 . Business Office Phone
99 ?-2156, E ditorial Phone 992 21 57.
Se cond class po stage paid at
Pomeroy , Oh io.
Nat ion al
advertising
repre s entative
Bottinelli·
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East 42no
St., N ew York City, New York.
Subscription
rates :
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available . One
.nonth $1 .75 . By mai l in Ohio
and W. Va ., One year $14 .00.
Six months $7 25. Three
months $4.50 . Subscription
price includes Sunday Times ·
Sentinel.

!

------ - - -

•

BERRY'S WORLD

acid pepsin juice normally
secreted by the stomach.
You can, of course, have an
acute gastritis , like the person who has alcoholic gastritis after an episode of
drinking too much alc_ohol.
Colitis is often associated
with poor bowel habits and
sometimes nervous tenston.
Impulses from the nervous
system , usually as a result
of prolonged a n x i e t y and
stress can at least contribute to' the problem of gast.ri··
tis and colitis. In both mstances it is better to eat
mild bland foods and avoid
thos~ which are he a vi I y
spiced. Low-fat milk, unc r e a m e d cottage cheese,
vegetables, baked chicken
and fish are usually tolerated. Some people with colitis have trouble with certain vegetables, but they will
soon learn which ones to
avoid.
Gastritis is often relieved
by taking antacids usually
those made with aluminum
hydroxide which can be obtained in either tablet or
liquid form in th~ ~rugstore
without a prescnptton. Persons who have a persistent
problem with either their
stomach or their colon, however should see a physician
for ~ complete evaluation to
determine the cause.

.

'

•
~~

1971 by HEA, Inc.

"A tear gas pen! For cryin' out loud, lady, don't you
know that's illegal?"

Energy Supply
For All Time
A 21st-century historian writing about our own t_ime
might well observe that "never did so many have so little
faith in the future."
.
.
This is not the first age given to predictwns of dis_aster.
All of Christendom believed that the world was gomg to
end in the year 1000. Our modern fears, howev~r, are
based not on superstition or numerology b~t on sciencerather, some of the undesirable frmts of science and tec~­
nology, such as pollution, overpopulatiOn and the possibility of nuclear Arma_geddon.
.
But this same h1stonan may also observe that. our fallure of faith curiously came at a time when mankmd st~fld
on the verge of a true Golden Age, _and that the most ~m­
portant event of the 20th century, tf not of all centunes,
was not World Wars I or II or the threat of III but something presaged by a recent announcement out of the New
Mexico desert.
Scientists at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory _report that they have taken a major step tow~rd developmg
a controlled fusion or thermonuclear reactwn, the same
kind of reaction that provides the energy of the sun and,
uncontrolled, of the hydrogen bomb.
With a research device called Scyllac, they were able
to produce a hot stream of ionized deute_rium ~as, or
plasma Deuterium, a form of hydrogen, ts readily extracted from sea wate.
.
.
According to project director Dr. Fred Rtbe, there IS
enough potential energy in the world's oce~ns to supp~y
power at 100 times current world consumption for 10 btllion years. Not only that, but a fusion reactor woul~ be
virtually pollution-free and would produce no long-hved
radioactive wastes.
It may be years before a fusion reactor is perfected and
many more before its energy can be harnessed on a large
scale .
f
t.
But an age of unlimited power, and every a~tas 1c
thing that can mean to the world's billions, lies m the
future-if we can keep the present world together long
enough for it to happen .

Compact Trash but Then ..
Those new gadgets that compact household trash are
pretty neat.
.
One make, which comes in either free-standing or bUiltin models and is available in white, avocado, harvest gold
and coppertone can compress enough trash to fill four
garbage cans ('a week's worth for the average family)
into a 1.5-foot cube weighing about 25 pounds.
.
Cans, jars, bottles, newspapers, cartons-everyt~mg
except food wastes- are compacted by a ram mechamsm
and delivered up in a sanitized plastic bag ready to be
carried out to the sidewalk.
This is a great convenience to the householder, and
presumably to the trash collector.
Unfortunately, the challenge facing many commut:~iti~s
today is not how to collect trash but what to do w1th 1t
after it is collected.
We are not only running out of convenient sites for
landfills and not only taxing incineration facilities, but we
are beginning to realize that the millions of tons of stuff
we are burying in the ground or burning in an incinerator,
in some cases, dumping in the ocean, is not trash but a
valuable resource we must sooner or later learn how to
exploit.
Rather than compact household waste into an undifferentiated mass, we will have to separate it into its components of paper, metal, glass, plastic and organic waste.
each component to be reclaimed or reprocessed.
In the meantime. the home trash compactor is indeed
a handy gadget- on the same order as the automatic
stoker for coal-burning home furnaces, and promises to
have about as long a heyday.

THIS PIECE HAS A NICK IN
IT··· TH IS 01-JE 15 DENTED· ..
LETS SEE 50.'AE MORE!

So how DOEs THE

••

•
•

•
•

•

llatlo's They'll Do It Every Time
F RITTER DEMANDED PERI=ECT
1-4ARDWOOD Pf:&gt;..NEI-1 NG !=OR i-115 DOIT- YOt&gt;R5EL-I= BASEMENT JOB·--·

•

A-1 sTocK

LOOK A~="TER HE GETS THROUGH
WITH iT? GIVE A LOOKY, COOKY· ··

•

•

�r

1

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 24, 1971

Stahl T op Class AAA Player

.Twins Thump
Braves, 8-3
By United Press International
Rich Reese, who apparently
lost his job to Harmon
~Hebrew during the winter,
w1ll be back at his old first base
stand for the Minnesota Twins
• this year.
Reese, a surprise star when
he batted .322 in 1969, dropped to
.261 last season and club
President Calvin Griffith said
that Killebrew would be moved
from third to first base this
year. One of Griffith's reasons
for suggesting the switch was
the hope of prolonging the 34year-old Killebrew's career.
It sounded like a good idea
until Manager Bill Rigney got a
look at the 6-3, 190-pound Reese
this spring. Reese is batting
.368, with 14 hits in 38 at bats
and Tuesday singled in th~
winning run in the fifth inning
as the Twins beat the Atlanta
Braves, 8-3. Both Reese and
Danny Thompson had three hits
to lead the Twins' 16-hit attack.
. Lui_s Tiant, 7-3l~st season and
p1tching for the f1rst time since
he suffered a pulled muscle in

f

t

his right elbow three weeks ago,
held the Braves to one run in
four innings.
On other fronts: the Chicago
White Sox raised their spring
record to 13-5 by beating the
New York Yankees, 4-3. Tom
Egan led the White Sox with a
homer and three doubles . .. a
two-run homer by Billy
Williams and a two-run double
by Johnny Callison led the
Chicago Cubs to an 8-0 decision
over the San Francisco Giants.
Ray Newman, Joe Decker and
Juan Pizarro blanked the
Giants on six hits.
Doug Rader and Cesar
Cedeno homered to lead the
Houston Astros to an 8-3
triumph over the Los Angeles
Dodgers. Tom Griffin worked
the first six innings for the
Astros ... Jose Cardenal went 4for-4, including two doubles, as
the St. Louis Cardinals broke a
five-game losing streak with a
5-2 win over the Cincinnati Reds
.... Steve Carlton went seven
innings for the Cardinals and
allowed one run.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ed
Stahl, the main cog in Columbus
Walnut Ridge's well-oiled
basketball machine, is the 1971
United Press International
Class AAA high school
basketball player of the year.
The 6-foot-10 Stahl, was
mentioned on 75 per cent of the
ballots, averaged 23.5 points per
game during the Scots' 17-0
regular season.
"He (Stahl) could be
averaging 40-45 points a game
on an average team," said
Coach Jack Moore. "He is the
most unselfish kid I've ever
seen.
"Whether he gets 35 points or
10, he never changes. Not once
have I ever heard him complaintabout not getting the ball.
He's completely loved by
everybody here."

Stahl is being wooed by well
over 200 colleges, but, according to Moore, has told
recruiters he will not think
about his future until after the
high school season ends.
Still Alive
The Scots, No. 1 in the AAA
ratings all season, are still alive
in tournament action and meet
Akron Central-Hower in one of
two Friday night semi-final
games.
"I have heard coaches from
some of the biggest schools in
the country tell him he is their
No. 1 choice," Moore said. "He
just smiles and says thanks ."
What makes Stahl even more
sought after by the colleges is
his 3.4 grade average. A
National
Honor
Society
member, he ranks 34th in a
class of 431.

Speed Worries
Hawaii Mentor

Second in the Class AAA
balloting of coaches and news
media people was Findlay's 6foot-6 Steve Wenner, whose 23.9
points and 17.4 rebounds per
game led the Trojans to an 18-0
regular season mark and the
No.3 rating in the AAA ratings .
Rounding out the first team
are Greg Dunn of Boardman,
Kevin Grevey of Hamilton Taft
and Rod Dieringer of Lakewood
St. Edward.
Dunn, whose second-ranked
Boardman team was upset by
Central-Hower in the regional
finals, not only led his team in
scoring, but also in assists, and
was one of its top rebounders.
The 6-foot-5 Dunn, who played
guard on the tall Boardman
squad, averaged 24.1 points per
game.
Never Stops Working

"He never stops working and
is constantly trying to improve
himself," said Boardman Coach
Alan Burns, whose school
career scoring record was
broken this season by Dunn.
Top scorer on the AAA first
team is Hamilton Taft's 6-foot-5
Grevey, who hit 32.5 points per
game.
Grevey, who started every
game for Taft for three years,
increased his average about 10
points each year, going from
13.4 his sophomore year to 23.6
his junior year to 32.5 this
season.
"Kevin continues to amaze
me with his hard work and
dedication to the game," said
Taft Coach Marv McCollum.
In Taft's regional finals loss
to Dayton Dunbar, Grevey
scored 18 of his 33 points in the

fourth quarter, cutting a 12point deficit at the end of three
quarters to 73-72.
Dieringer, who took the final
first team berth, is the son of
Ray Dieringer, head coach at
Cleveland State University.
The 5-foot-10 "Hot Rod," as he
is called, averaged 26.3 points
per game in leading the Eagles
to a 17-1 regular season mark
and 6th in the ratings.
Second Team Mem bers
On the second team are
Zanesville's Eric Jones, who
was named to the same spot last
year, 6-foot-4 Greg Olson,
Stahl's teammate at Walnut
Ridge, 6-foot-6 Doug Ashworth
of Xenia Beavercreek, 6-foot-4
Gary Deidrick of Lorain Admiral King, and 6-foot-3 John
Kantner of Toledo Whitmer, the
state's leading scorer with a

Tourney Teams Ready

the season. Included among
King's accomplishments was a
string of 34 straight free throws
are
the
big
offensive
during tournament play. It was
Freeman
NEW YORK (UPI) - Red
broken in Pleasant's 59-58
Rocha and Whaek Hyder have threats for Hawaii and John
Penebacker ranks among the
regional final win over East
that worried look.
Canton.
Speed is what's bothering nation's leading rebounders.
Hyder is faced with stopping
The second game, beginning
Rocha, whose Hawaii club takes
at 9:30, pits fourth ranked Fort
on St. Bonaventure tonight in Michigan's strongboys without
Recovery against ninth ranked
the quarterfinals of the National getting his one-man scoring
Convoy Crestview.
Invitation Tournament. And machine, Rich Yunkus, in
PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI)- parently a compromise was strength is on Hyder's mind as trouble. Yunkus, a 6-foot-9
The Indians of Coach A1
Club owners of the National nominated three times before it he prepares his Georgia Tech center, averaged close to 30
Souder had to knock off the
Football League emerged from got the winning tally.
state's No. 1 ranked Class A
points a gam; for the Engineers
team for Michigan.
team Sidney Lehman to reach
a three-hour session at high
Rozelle said another factor
"We have a quick team," said but he doesn t have the phystcal
the fi~alfour, and the; did 63-55
society's Breakers Hotel was the promise of the New Rocha, "but, by God, they're tools to mix it up under the
Tuesday and announced that Orleans delegation to install really quick. They're about the boards.
Jl;f"
in the finals of the Dayton
the next Super Bowl game artificial turf in the Sugar Bowl quickest team I've seen all
Regional.
Ken Brady, a 6-9, 240-pound
sophomo,re whu _n~utr~liz~d
Fort Recovery brings a 24-2
would be played in New in time for the game.
year."
mark into the game while
Orleans.
Rocha's colorful Rainbows Sy_rac_use ~ 6-11 B1~ Sm1th m
It caught a lot of people by ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;.;;;.
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
toClevelandEastTechand then undefeated, and capture the Convoy Crestview, which beat
struggled into the. quarterfinals M_1ch1gan s openmg_ game
state championship. Two more vanlue 56-47 in the Bowling
NEW YORK (UPI) - Mike with an 88-87 victory in double tnumph on Sunday_, wtl~ make Columbus Walnut Ridge Coach to Toledo Scott.
surprise, particularly the
Jack Moore, who has seen both
Walnut Ridge was rated No. 1 victories and all will be fulfilled. Green Regional finals, is 22-2.
Wren of Miami of Ohio was overtime over Oklahoma Yunkus work for h1~ pomts.
delegations from Miami,
Would S~op Wtlmore .
feast and famine in his 18 years from the first week of the UPI
''This could be my best
All three state championship
named today to the 23rd Monday night. St. Bonaventure
Dallas, Houstin, Los Angeles
And Hyder 1s concerned w1th as a head basketball coach, is Board of Coaches' ratings as the team," Moore said. "I don't games will be played Saturday
annual United Press In- stunned Purdue in its tourand Jacksonville, who had been
stopping Henry Wilmore, the the 1971 United Press In- Scots romped through a 17- really know because styles the Class A at noon the AA at
ternational Small America nament opener.
courting the football kings.
at 7:30
Baseball team.
NFL Commissioner Pete
The Bonnies, possibly the Wolverines' sophomore whiz ternational Class AAA coach of game regular season schedule. change. It's definitely one of the 3:00 p.m. and the
"We've had more pressure best, but I had some great p.m.
Wren, a 5-foot-9 senior, smallest team in the tour- and the spark in the Michigan the year.
Rozelle was at a loss to explain
Moore came to Walnut Ridge this year than I ever had at teams over at East High, with
The opening AA game will see
averaged just 8. 7 points per nament, are perhaps the most attack.
what swayed the owners to
"Certainly we'll have to key when it was new 10 years ago East," Moore said, "because Mel Nowell, Joe Roberts and Tipp City (19-5) going against
game for Miami, but he was adept at the fast-break. With
return the game to the Sugar
Canton Lehman (22-2), with
at his best in the clutch. Greg Gary and Carl Jackson on Wilmore," said Hyder, after eight successful years at we were rated No. 1 right off the Larry Jones."
Bowl, where foul weather
Moore and his wife, Barbara, Warren Champion (21-3)
Coach Darrell Hedric con- leading the way, the Bonnies whose club upset LaSalle in Columbus East. With no bat."
spoiled the fun two years ago.
Moore said the team set three have four children. Kathy, a meeting Maysville ( 19-5) in the
siders him the main reason ran slower Purdue off the floor. opening round play. "But we're basketball tradition, some of
The decision ca 1e on the 14th
ballot, Rozelle saic. with 20 of 26 the Redskins won the Mid· Hawaii's attack is much the going to play our normal offense Walnut Ridge's basketball goals for the season, to win the freshman at Miami University, second contest.
The Class AAA semi-final
club owners voting m favor of American Conference.
same - run and shoot - and in and normal defense. We go with seasons have been pretty lean . Columbus City League, go and Scott, 15, David 14, and
"What we've tried to do through the regular season Steve 12.
matchups find top-ranked
An excellent ball • handler, most cases when fast-breaking a man-to-man but we'll be
New Orleans.
Columbus Walnut Ridge (23-0)
The voting was by secret Mike also was an adept free teams are matched, the race ready to jump into a zone if we here," said Moore, whose team
have to."
is 23-0 and still going strong in
taking on Akron Central-Hower
ballot and Rozelle wouldn't throw shooter. The team is goes to the swiftest.
Johnny Orr, the Michigan tournament play, "is the same
(17-6) d Cl l dE t T h
speeulate on what was the made up of players 5-foot-10
Game Won't Change
playing
coach, is hopeful his club can thing we tned to do at East. Get
u • • 11 (21-2) an
eveDayton
an
asDunbar
ec
or under.
decf&lt;lmg irtfluen
But Rocha, a former National
get
over
its
first
round
jitters.
the
kids
to
play
as
much
(23-1).
26 :·!!!·:::::::::::·=-=~::::.::·:·::;;:~:~~::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Basketball Association star,
"I can't look in
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - The Rick Beck, Youngstown Car- . .- - -- - - - - - - •
club owners,"
doesn't foresee any changes in The Wolverines committed 24 summer basketball as possible 1971
turnovers in beating Syracuse, against the best competition
UnHed Press International dina I Mooney; Clarence BenAT ASC&amp;l
But
the
the Hawaii attack.
82_76_
they can find.
Class AAA all-Ohio high school nett, Steubenville; David Byrd,
basketball team, with height, Cleveland John Adams; Ken
mentioned severa
"We haven't changed our
"I think this is the thing that grade and scoring average:
Brooks,
Findlay ;
Randy
" I don't think we'll play as
may have been mvolved,
game for anyone," said Rocha.
has made us a winner. Our
First Team
Clemens, Vandalia Butler;
poorly
as
we
did
on
Sunday,"
specifically an inclination to
"If we tried to stall, we'd
l
, d d' t'
t
k .
Ed Stahl, Columbus Walnut Dave Da lton, Wooster ; Dave
Davis, Akron North ; Bill
alternate the site be tween
probably throw the ball away. said Orr. "We were the first Big payers e 1ca ton o wor 111 Ridge, 6-10, Sr., 23.5.
Steve Wenner, Findlay, 6-6, Daniels, Day ton Patterson;
American and National ConBut we played pretty good Ten team ever to play in the the summer.
While at East, Moore had one Sr., 23.9 .
Brad Davino, Newark ; Jerry
ference cities and "the
defense in the second half NIT and we were a little ner- state semi-finalist team, in 1955,
Kevin Grevey, Hamilton Taft, Davis, Toledo Woodward ; Dave
vous.
I
think
Georgia
Tech
was
6-5,
Sr.,
32.5.
Erickson, Boardman ; Randy
tremendous football interest" in
against Oklahoma and I feel we
Greg Dunn, Boardman, 6-5, Foster ,
Newa rk;
Randy
New Orleans.
can do a good job against St. nervous, too, and I don't think buttheTigerslosttoCincinnati
Hughes that year.
Sr., 24.1.
Felhaber, Oregon Clay ; Harry
they
played
particularly
well
in
Behind the closed doors it
Bonaventure, too. The NIT has
In both 1958 and 1959, East
Rod Dieringer, Lakewood St. Fishleigh, Mentor ; Bob Foster,
Per year on 1 year cerEdward, 5-10, Sr. , 26.3.
boiled down to a fight between
Euclid; Harold Fails , Warren
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) - been a driving force for the boys beating LaSalle."
tificates
of
deposit.
Second Team
Harding.
Tonight's winners will meet in lost in the regional finals, first
Miami and Dallas, the Texas Johnny Neumann, some $2 all season long. They felt they
Minimum Deposit $10,000 .
Mike F Ia nag an, Sidney;
Eric Jones, Zanesville, 6 6,
Thursday night's semifinals,
city apparently the favorite million richer and w~th a "no had something to prove.
Interest payable semi Steve Gwin, Bowl ing Green;
Sr., 17.0.
annually (Present cerwith its new 65,000-seat cut, five year contract," was
Greg Olson , Columbus Walnut Jim Hood, Ashtabula ; Bob
But we're not the type of team with Duke playing North hurt our team since we have
tifi cates MUST be exHudson, Painesville Harvey;
stadium. New Orleans, ap- expected to take part in half- that can play a bad game and Carolina in the other semifinal such a good field goal kicker in Ridge, 6-4, Sr., 20.3.
Doug Ashworth, Beaver- Bill Howard, Dayton Dunbar;
changed to receive this
:or
game.
The
final
is
scheduled
time "signing" ceremonies still win. We have to play well to
Jan ::Stenerud."
Rich Harr, Boardman ; Henry
creek, 6-6, Sr., 21.0.
rate).
Final NBA Standings
Saturday morning at 11 a.m.
Kantner ,
Toledo Harris, Mansfield Malabar ; Bill
John
"I like it," said Vic Estes, a
90 Days interest withheld if
By United Press International tonight at the Pros-Denver win ."
Whitmer,
6-2,
Sr.
,
36.3.
Lee,
Be
llaire;
Brian
Mcwithdrawn
be f ore
American
Basketball
Bob Nash and Jerome (EST).
Houston computer programAtlantic Division
Gary Deidrick, Lorain Ad- Dermot t, Bowling Green; Tony
W. L Pet. GB Association game at the Midmaturity.
mer. " I think kicking has been mira I Kina, 6-4, Sr., 29.2.
Manning,
Shaker
Heights;
Scott
52 30 .634
New York
Third Team
' May , Sandusky; Kirk Minteer ,
blown all out of proportion.
Meigs Co. Branch
South Coliseum.
47 35 .573 5
Philadelphia
Freddie Beamon, Cleveland Fairborn Baker ; Casimier
Another reason, I never have
Many suspect, however, that
44 38 .537 8
Boston
East Tech , 6-5, Sr., 21.4.
Moss , Cleveland East; Scott
22 60 .268 30
Buffalo
understood why, if you can
Neumann, the nation's college
Cornelius Cash, Dayton McDavid, Galion; Tim McKee,
Central Division
Cuyahoga Fal ls; Charles
advance the ball to the 40, kick a Dunbar, 6-7, Sr., 18.0.
W. L. Pet. GB basketball scoring leader from
Bil l Boyer, Cambridge, 6-4, Milliner, Toledo Macomber.
the University of Mississippi,
field goal and miss it, it
42 40 .512
Baltimore
Sr., 18.3.
Fred Pakis, Eastlake North ;
36 46 .439 6
Atlanta
automatically qualifies you to
already has signed with the
Benny Cole, Middletown, 6-3, Wil lis Price, East Cleveland
Meigs County Branch of The
33 49 .402 9
Cincinnati
gain
another
20
yards.
Yes,
I'd
Memphis club.
Shaw; Mike Roberts , Cleveland
Sr., 26. 0.
15 67 .183 28
Athens County Savings &amp;
Cleveland
Jeff
Montgomery,
MiSt.
Ignatius
;
Mike
Rouse,
be in 100 per cent favor of it."
The agreement was anMidwest Division
Loan Co.
6-0,
Sr.,
34.0.
Jackson
;
Lynn
Schwendeman,
amisburg,
NEW YORK ( UPI) - If pro rule change at its annual
W. L. Pet. GB nounced in New York Tuesday
296 Second St.
A group of fans in St. Louis
Special Mention
Avon Lake; Jim Schoff, Salem;
66 16 .805
meeting
in
Palm
Beach,
Fla.,
had
their
way,
the
Pomeroy, Ohio
football
fans
Milwaukee
by
ABA
Commissioner
Jack
believed
the
change
would
Curt
Shellabarger,
Celina;
Dale
Larry
Arrington,
Massillon
;
51 31 .672 15
Chicago
place - kicking this week, and the proponents of increase runbaeks which they Geoff Bommer, Columbus Thompson, Chillicothe; Don
Dolph, who said the contract game's
48 34 .585 18
Phoenix
Eastmoor; Don Brown, Toledo Vanderhorst, Celina; Les
45 37 .549 21
was approved by the league's specialists would be getting the proposal feel coaches will felt were more exciting than Woodward
Detroit
; Stan Cox, Sylvania; Washing ton, Steubenville ; Ted
think
twice
before
ordering
rest
in
the
years
some
added
Pacific Division
board of trustees in light of a
field goals anyway. A local Van Gregg, Whitehall; Brad Wybensinger, Bellevue; Chuck
W. L. Pet. GB
field-goal
tries
close
to
the
50California Circuit Court judge's ahead.
bartender said: "What team Hoffman, Columbus Walnut Williams , Columbus East;
48 34 .585
Los Angeles
Dave
Honaker, Lardine Weston, Dover; Dean
Fan
reaction
appears yard line if it meant risking would attempt a field goal from Ridge;
decision that a draft limited to
41 41 .500 7
San Fran.
Ashland; Lou Hart, Mansfield White Jr., Celina; Brian
40 42 .488 8
San Diego
seniors was in violation of anti- favorable to the National giving the ball back to the op- further out then, say, the 35- Madison ; Bill Higgins, Dayton Will iams, Columbus South.
38 44 .463 10
Seattle
Football League rule proposal position in good field position yard-Jine if they knew they'd be Dunbar; Art Johnson, Cin
trust laws .
29 53 .354 19
Portland
that would eliminate placing the should a touchback result.
na ti Hughes; Cra ig Lynch, , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
giving the other team excellent cin
Toledo Start ; Mike Plunkett,
An informal sampling across field position."
ball for missed field goal atPrinceton;
Jay Schmidt,
tempts on the 20-yard line and the nation shows evidence that
Another idea offered by the Mansfield Mala bar ; Mark
change the placement to the line most fans agree, but Jim Wolf, fans who favored the proposal Shaw, Logan; Jack Schulte,
•
of scrimmage for all kicks 54, a season ticket holder with was that the value of the field Dayton Wilbur Wright ; Dave
Turner, Canton McKinley .
the Kansas City Chiefs said: goal and the field goal kicker
outside the 20-yard line.
I MAYTAG
1 G.E.
I
Honorable Mention
Fra nk Ayers , Springfield
The NFL is considering the "I'm against it. I think it would could be enhanced.
James
Abrams,
North;
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . George Henson of Dallas Cleveland East Tech; Keith
said: "It would even be more of Allerton, Canton South; Pete
1
1
I
a premium on having a reliable Accetta, Cincinnati St. Xavier;
Jim Ball. Cambridge; Jim
kicker. But if it's changed, I can Barnett,
Ma nsfield
Sr .; r--- -- ----- - - ~------------,
: 1-G.E. 21"
I
see Tom Dempsey's record Rooseve lt Barnes, Bedford; I 2-21" SYLVA N IA
standing
up
practically Mike Blauman, Geneva; Bob
Banks, YoL·ngstown Ursuline;
s.w
forever."
I Your
I
I
Choice
I
B-W
I

New Orleans To
Host Super Bowl

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Firing
starts Thursday night in the
first three-classification state
high school basketball tournament, with two semi-final
Class A games on tap.
The Class AA semi-finals are
scheduled to begin at 11:30
Friday morning, with the Class
AAA semis set for split sessions
Friday evening, the first at 5:30
p.m. and the second at 9:30.
Zanesville Rosecrans (21-3),
making its first advance past

district tournament action,
takes on Marion Pleasant (20-4)
in Thursday night's opening
game at 7:30.
Rosecrans, led by 6-foot-5 allOhio Dan Bollinger, moved into
the semi-finals by winning the
Athens Regional. The Bishops
topped Crooksville 58-57 in their
opening regional game, and
then blasted Western Pike 68-54
in the finals as Bollinger poured
in 37 points.
Rosecrans comes into the

semi-finals with a 15-game
winning streak, longest among
Class A schools.
Pleasant Coach Stan Kirby,
who starts two sophomores and
three seniors, said, "We're one
of those teams without a star.
We're going to come down and
try to do the best job we can. It's
too late to change anything
now."
Kirby's tallest starter is 6foot-3 sophomore Terry King,
who averaged 17 points during

l,_l_oore N arned AAA

•

36.:3 average.
The third team is composed of
6-foot-5 Freddie Beamon of
Cleveland East Tech, 6-foot-7
Cornelius Cash of Dayton
Dunbar, 6-foot-4 Bill Boyer of
Cambridge, 6-foot-3 Benny Cole
of Middletown, and 6-foot Jeff
Montgomery of Miamisburg.
Stahl, Olson, Beamon and
Cash will be on display in the
state high school finals this
week at Ohio State's St. John
Arena.
Bedford's Roosevelt Barnes
who led the Bearcats to a 17-l
regular season mark and was
among the players receiving
honorable mention, died of an
apparent heart attack while
taking part in a pickup game
two weeks ago .
The 6-foot-5 senior had
averaged 20.4 points per game.

coach

AAA

•

Class AAA Tteg .......
1
7

•

Neumann

SAVINGS

GROW FASTER

Turns Pro

5%%

Tonight

•
•
•

Pro Fans Favor New
NFL Kicking Rule

SAVE WITH

•

•

@

H&amp;R fiRESTONE • • •
TRADE IN BARGAINS

GOBLE

STOP 'N' SAVE

t-------------r------------,

!
l

Early Spring Discounts!

E

$1.00

TANK FULL

Automatic trans. and Air Conditioning

Under Maior Oil Prices

•1895

XE-110 Ethyl -over 100 octane

$59.95

KEITH GOBLE FORD

Starting At

USED CAR LOT

GENERAL TIRE SALES

992 34'l2
LocustS!.

Mtddleport,

o.

'}92 - 7161

M IDDLEPORT, 0.

Certified Gas Stations
538 W. Main
(We honor
Charqel

Pomeroy, 0.
BankAmericard and Master

l

ELEC. DRYER
64.95

ELEC. DRYER
49.00

l
l

I Console T.V.
I Console TV" " :
l
'65.00
r-------------~------------1
I USED
II UsedKELVI
Elec.
·:
I
N ATOR
1
I
I

I

Gas Range
1 29.00

1

I

I

Refrigerator
1 59.00

1

I

I

L------------~------------J
I 2 Dr . 15 c.u. ft. G. E. :

: 2-20" Boys
I
D E Luxe G.T.o.

l1

BICYCLES
•29.00 each

I

:
I

Refngerator
,
249.00

I

:
1

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

H&amp;R Firestone
992 -2238

N. l!ld Ave.

Midd leport, 0 .

�4

Tlw Dail) Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 24, 1971

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

plan· a~ !llf' ll11rd br·.~l r·ard
in the• o.;uil If l•:&lt;Jslls foolish
c·nough to c:onlJnU!' hearts.
South will have &lt;Jn r·xtra
lwa rl trick.
01 c.:ours!', If West had led
the J0 of hearts from flVC
lo thc• king-HJ, the low heart

1 Washington ! House Vote May Or May Not
Be
Reversed
By
Senate
Action
R
I
enort
:
I

I

I

I

1

By Clarence

r

I
I

Miller

I

Sinn' coming to Washington
ns your Representative, I have
endeavored to maintain an
actiw, open and direct line of
cnmmunica tion with all the
residents of the 13 counties
composing
the
lOth
Congressional District. To
attain this objective we make
full use of news releases,
constituent newsletters, radio
reports,
questionnaires,
speaking engagements and
regular Open Door sessions
which give us the opportunity to
meet individually with citizens.
We have always encouraged citizens to write. And
fortunately, many individuals
needing information or seeking
federal assistance in one form
or another have written us. This
correspondence has double
usefulness: it gives you the
opportunity to exerctse your
right as an American to express
your opinions and, in turn, this
correspondence gives us yet
another opportunity to monitor
the needs, interests and concerns of Southeastern Ohio . .
A large portion of our incoming mail consists of
requests for assistance in
military, social security,
veterans, and pension matters.
This is case work - that is,
trying to resolve problems
between people and their
government.
I cannot initiate the action.
That is, I cannot file for your
Social Security benefits or
apply for a serviceman's
hardship discharge. What I can
do IS express my interest in
your situation - be it an application for assistance or a
letter to an agency for information or an unanswered
appea! Essentially, I can help
those who are trying to help
themselves; and I am glad to do
it
Such help from our office
can best be rendered if a few
preliminary guidelines were
followed by the author before
placing a letter in the mailbox:
1. Social Security
Send in
number
your social sec
an
t f v
get
f t.s f&lt;
2 Veterans I.
your VA clatms
3 Military - SE
the social
security and-or serial number
wfiich the military uses for
identification.
4. Selective Service - Send
your draft registration number.
5. Internal Revenue Service

I

I

BY WILLIAM S. WHITE

I
I

Send your social security
number.
6. Passports-Send your date
and place of birth and the date
and place you filed for passport.
However, if an emergency
exists, call us BEFORE you
mail the passport application.
Last, but not least, send your
telephone number if you have
one, so we can call you back for
any essential information which
may have been omitted.
It's also helpful to me if you
would describe briefly what you
have done to date on the
problem you discuss. For
example, that you have turned
in your application for a change
of assignment in the Army; that
you waited a certain number of
days and your Social Security
check still hasn't arrived; that
you applied for a veteran's
pension and haven't heard from
the VA.
When you don't get the kind of
attention and service you feel
you deserve from the federal
government, let me know.
We're happy to express our
interest in any subject area
concerning
the
federal
government, but where city,
county, and state officials make
the final decision on a case, you
should then work through these
officials to expedite your
request.
As your federal representative, I have an obligation to
assist
the
people
of
Southeastern Ohio in matters
relating to the federal government. We place the highest
priority on our responsiveness
to the needs of America's
citizens and we will continue to
do so in the future.

WASHINGTON
The
narrow vote of the House of
Representatives to kill the
supersonic transport (SST), in
which $884 milhon of government money has already been
invested, may or may not be
reversed by subsequent Senate
action.
If not, the consequence in
material terms will be a
disas~.er for the United States in
a world where both the Soviet
Union and the British and
French, the latter working in
tandem, are already preparing
just such giant aircraft.
In any event, however- and
this is the real theme of this
piece - what the House has
done, over the objections of the
leaders of both parties and of
President Nixon, is in moral
terms a catastrophe. For it
represents the first undeniable
triumph for a so-called New
Politics that seeks a little and a
st.eadily contracting America;
that long for policies of
deliberate national weakness,
and uses the techniques of a
pseudo-religious
scare
philosophy.
It is, in short, a Holy-Roller
politics in which victory goes to
those who can shout the loudest
and who are most able to feed
emotionalism in its rawest
forms. It is, in fact, the most

WORLD ALMANAC

frightening development in
many years, not so much
because of what has occurred as
because of its implications for
the future.
Palpable nonsense - an
overreaction
against
"pollution" to the point of sheer
hysteria fed by reckless
suggestions from such as Sen.
William Proxmire that those
who favor the production of a
demonstrably essential aircraft
are also in favor of "skin
cancer" - has not within
memory so swept a generally
responsible legislative body.
What it all really means is
that the obvious necessity to
take prudent steps against
pJllution is being exploited into
a national neurosis far more
dangerous even than physical
pollution itself. Psychologists
speak sometimes of a desire by
patients to "return to the
womb" - that is, to escape
from all adult reality.
The analogy here is that while
some of those who fight SST do
so for perfectly adult reasons its cost, plus fears that it might
not work well enough, and so on
-the critical margin of defeat
.came from quite other sources.
These are what might be called
the Carrie Nations of the '70s.
The new Carrie Nations so
oversimplified the undoubted
evils of pollution as to yearn to

r- ~n-:-;t~s--:r...;~;;-;;;:;:-::lI
welcomed. The editor reserves the right to shorten letters.
All letters must be signed, with a fiill. address, although
initials may be used upon request.
~

... 1)~..1-~-?Jtt. UUUl"L:

£

I

!~
I

March 23, 1971
Dear Mr. Editor:
Dear friends of our community, I am sure that you have all
heard of request for letters for our prisoners of war in North
Vietnam, on the radio, through the schools, on T.V. and in the
newspapers. We all agree something should be done about it, but
what have we done? And in each humble heart we feel, one person
can not do much, which also I have said to myself. But the thought
is still buried in my mind as WP hear of boys and men missing in
action or taken prisoners of war. I think you and I should take
time out of our busy lives even five minutes to write a letter to
plead for the life or humane treatment of our soldiers. Just think if
every one in Meigs County wrote one letter, how many that would
be.
Let's don't just talk but do something. Remember the boy's life
you may help to save might be your own.
Contact the American Red Cross for the exact address and
write today. Thank you!
Sincerely,
Mrs. Thelma Berry
Middleport, Ohio

FACTS

also called
v.ildc t. ts a small lynx nattve to most parts of the
l mted States. The bobcat
ts a no c t urn a 1 predator
whose name Is d e r i v e d
from Its short bobtail, The
World Almanac says
Though a medium-sized
member of the cat family.
it becomes a fierce fighter
when cornered.

repeal the 20th century.
They fail to recognize the selfevident truths that pollution
proceeds only from people and
that total abolition of pollution
would literally strangle an
industnal society. The womb to
which they wish to return is the
time in which this was the land
of the murmuring pmes and
hemlocks.
But it is no longer such a land,
and has not been for over a
century. And the Walden Pond
of Henry Thoreau has long since
been covered over to make a
bowling alley.
This is sad in a way, as it was
when the Age of the Squire in
England was succeeded by the
Industrial Revolution. But there
is nothing about it nearly sad

enough to justify the conscious
jettisoning of a new machine of
massive mobility without which
this nation could become almost
overnight a third-rate power in
the air.
Very well. The Holy Rollers
have had their way - thus far
at least- as those who recoiled
in horror at the gasoline buggy
were fortunately not able to
have. But some of these "antipollution" heroes, who want to
do it all at once and as of
yesterday, will within months
be screaming about the
unemployment that their hoteyed evangelism will have
brought about - and in more
than the aircraft and space
industries - unless cooler
heads prevail.

play would lo~c the &lt;"ontract, but we would pay off
to anyone who did that to us.

BARBS
By PIIIL I'ASTOitET

Steady nl:rvc IS what a
lllooehcr poss:sses.
SrJmeh()W, curnpus [JTO·
test.&lt;; scarcely avP.raye ()Ut
in interest to the old-time
panty mids

*

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

o:H;l :] ,,$@!1
The bidding
West
North

ha~

hcell'
East
South

'"

Pass
2+
Pass
:lt
?
Pass
4
Pass
You, South, hold:
¥K 10765 +AKQ94+A2
What do you do now'!
.'\-Bid four diamonds. You
want (() show that you- hold at
least fi-l:c cards in you•· second

+

.1!

suit.

*

Never worry about
money-but a little skulling about the lack of it
is quite permissible.

•

We know-we knowknickers are back, but do
you get a free baseball and
'Jat with each patr, liketl
mce-upon·a-time'?

SOMEBODY
new in pink or blue?
Congratulate
the
mother- welcome the
new baby
with
beautiful flowers.
•

Dudley's Aorist
992-5560
59 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, 0.

WIN AT BRIDGE

A Backward Type of Coup
no trouble making nine
tricks. At a few tables West
led the heart 10. That lead
94
separated the sheep from
• J 8 73
the goats.
+KB2
Every declarer covered
WEST
EAST
with dummy's jack. East
.874
.10653
covered in turn with the
¥102
¥KQ86a
queen.
If any declarer was
+A65
+92
foolish
enough
to win with
+.J 10743
+Qii
the ace he lived to regret it.
SOUTH (D)
Eventually West would get
• K92
m With the ace of diamonds
¥A 7 5
and
lead a second heart.
+ K Q 10 4
whereupon East would cash
+A95
four heart tricks. If any deBoth vulnerable
c!arer made this play, we
Wes(
North
East South
would have to drop him to
lN.T.
the foot of ow· class.
Pass
3 N.T.
Pass Pass
If South lets East hold
Pass
that first heart trick he will
Open mg lead .See a1 tide
have made a sort of backward Bath Coup. True, the
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby jack has been played but
Forty years ago the late the nme spot has taken its
Walter Wyman wrote an
article entitled, "How to
Tell a Bath Coup from a
Bath Tub."
The classic Bath coup occures when the king is
opened and declarer plays
small from ace-jack-small. If
the suit is continued declarer collects two tricks instead
of one. If there is a shift
declarer still has control of
that first suit.
When todav's hand was
2)6 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
played m a duplicate game
Phone 992-5428
and East opened anything
but a heart the declarer had
NORTH
.AQJ

IT'S INGELS FOR BEST

CARPETING

24

BUY~S=---~~

"J

•
501 NYLON

$399

2-HOUR
CLEANING

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

SQUARE YARD

§PiC.iAL!

•

9xl2 RUG---------48.00
12x15 RUG--------·79.00

•

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

Middleport

Bakery Buy!

Reg. 59e Holsum

PIES

Choice, Lean, Tender

Our Dairy Special
FAIRMONT

PORK CHOP

ICE CREAM SANDWICHES
AND DRUMSTICKS
6 pack 49c

CENTER

PEAK BRAND

CUTS

PINTO BEANS

lb.

4

RATH CANNED

TIME
TO
PLANT.

FINEST SELECTED PRODUCE

COOKING

JUMBO SIZE

MAINE

ON IONS CELERY POTATOES
3 lb.

bag

19¢

jumbo
beh.

10

49e

Open Mon.-Fri. 9 to 7
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

Luncheon Loaf........3 12 $1 •
e
CAKE FROSTING
e
2
b~s. 2 5
Jiffy M I eXes................
PILLSBURY ASSORTED
$1
Cake MIxes ................. 3
&amp;

,•

..

Prices Effective Mar. 24-30

OL

FRAN KS .....................:~:.69e

·:

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

cans

FRENCH CITY

..

Right reserved to limit quantities

BILTMORE

HAMS ..............~.~~:.~~~-- 3.2 9
HOME MADE
SAUSAGE ......... 2 lb.1. 19
,•

lb.

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
''The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"

lb.
bag

Phebe Has .•.

ONION SETS
SEED POTATOES
• •

COBBLERS - PONTIACS - KENNEBEC

CLIP &amp; SAVE

]If,. OL

bxs for

Campbell's.~-~?.~~~~-~-~~-~- 6

cans for

$1

Tom a toes.~!~~.~~~.~.~~~·~·-·· 5 303 s1
2Vz $
P
4
t
5 w. 0 a t oes~~-~~-~~.
1

•

cans

No.
cans

COFFEE

Maxwell House...~.!~:-~~~:.2 49

Tea Bags .. ~.~~-~~-~-~~~~-----·--~~-~~-~~~ 49~
oz.
Detergent
49 e
FOR DISHWASHING 32
AUSTIN'S lEMON-FRESH bot.

•

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 24, 1971

Rainbow Trout Fishing
•
Derby This Weekend
•

•

•
•

If catching r ainbow trout is
your bag, you don't have to hunt
a mountain stream. No sir !
Rainbow trout fishing will be
offered to the public at Forest
Acres Park this weekend.
Sponsored by the Leading
Creek Conservancy District and
the Leading Creek Watershed
Association, the weekend of
rainbow trout fishing will be
presented in the form of a
fishing derby. Ther e 'll be
prizes, too !
Some 300 rainbow trout from
a Port Clinton nursery have
been brought to the three acre
lake at Forest Acres Park,
located on the New Lima Road
out of Rutland, in preparation
for the Saturday and Sunday
event.
Fishing both days will begin
at 7 a .m. and conclude at 7 p.m.
At least two persons will be on
hand during the designated
hours to record the catches of
residents. The fisherman
catching the longest fish will
receive a $15 cash prize with a
$10 cash prize offer ed for second
place and a one year fishing
permit at the lake (a $5 value)
to the third and fourth place
winners. The trout brought to
the lake weigh from one pound
to almost six pounds.
No state fishing license is
required for fishing at the
Forest Acres Lake and contestants can use any type of
equipment. All kinds of bait are
permissable also except minnows.
Refreshm ents
will
be
available on the grounds. Admission for adults to take part
in the fishing is $2 a day and the
charge for children is $1 a day.
Limit is four trout but a person
can resume fishing if he pays
another admission fee after
catching the limit.

REVIVAL SCHEDULED
The Rev. James B. McClung,
Sugar Grove, will be the
evangelist for a revival which
gets underway at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene Thursday, extending through Sunday,
April 4. Services will begin at
7:30 each evening and there will
be special singing. The Rev. M.
C. Larrimore, pastor, invites
the public.
COMPLETES TRAINING
Pvt. Virgil R. Phillips, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Austin Phillips,
has completed his basic combat
training at Ft. Knox, Ky., and
has been transferred to Ft.
Bliss, Texas. He will train in
electronic maintenance on Nike
Hercules missiles. His address
is Pvt. Virgil P. Phillips, 281-506476, Btry B, 3rd ADTNG Bn.
(NH), 1st AIT Bde (AD), Ft.
Bliss, Texas 79916.

JACK CRISP, president of the Leading Creek Conservancy District, seated, and Charles Russell, counselor for
the district, put the finishing touches on plans for a rainbow
trout fishing derby to be held Saturday and Sunday at Forest
Acres Park on the New Lima Road out of Rutland.

•

•

•
•

•

•

PT. PLEASANT - Paul
Crabtree, president of the
company developing cable
television service for Pt.
Pleasant and nearby communities, has been selected by
WSAZ-TV in Huntington to
respond to an editorial run by
Channel 3 which criticized some
cable policies.
Crabtree will appear on five
of the station's newscasts in the
next few days.
He disputes the station's

Smith, render a decision, and
afford him the right to appeal.
"I advise you to comply
immediately with the dictate of
the court.
"Gentlemen, you may
re-member trat when the board
too t.iis action, I adVIsed you
agamst it, tre court has rendered a decision reflecting
exactly the advice I gave you,
wh1ch you refused to follow. I
am not suggesting that this

contention that cable TV could
grow into Pay TV - which he
opposes bitterly.
He points out that this could
not happen because his cable
company is limited by each city
- including Pt. Plea sant,
Middleport and Pomeroy - on
the amount of monthly charges
it may make.
Crabtree joined with Channel
3 in urging the public to write
their
Congressmen
and
Senator s to support legislation

wa~

The Eastern High School
Band, directed by F rank
Wooters, has been quite active
in competition festivals during
the past month.
At the solo and ensemble
contest in Athens on Feb. 27,
Paula Hauber received a
superior rating of her snare
drum solo. Also receiving a
superior rating was a trombone
trio composed of Robin Humphrey, J ill Swain and David
Weber, accompanied on the
piano by Jean Whitehead. Also
participating was a tr umpet
quartet consisting of Steve
Follrod, Steve Goebel, Cheryl
Kuhn and Martie Caldwell and
Sherry McCain and Mar tie
Caldwell performed piano solos
at the contest.
The newly formed stage band

6.50 X 13
tubeless plus
Fed. EX. Tax
$1.79 and o l d

"ALL-WEATHE R.li"'
BLACKWALL TIRE

tire.

ANY OF TH ESE SIZES

7.75

X

15

8.25 X 14

Plu' $2 17 to $7 33 Fed Ex Tax anJ old lore

•

office will not make er rors, but I
am suggesting that in the past.
the opinions and decisions of
this office have been sustained
by the courts in the numerous
litigations in which this Board
of Education has become involved.
"I will stand ready to continue to serve the board, with
hopes that we can avoid
problems of this nature in the
future."

Eastern Band
A
d S Announced

BEST
TIRE
BUY
IN ITS PRICE RANGE
4·PLV $
95
NYLON
CORD
7.75x14

MASON- Clarron D. "Jack"
Brown, 67, 6424 MacCorkle
Ave., St. Albans, W. Va., died
Tuesday in the Riverside
Convalescent Hospital in St.
Albans.
He was born Dec. 17, 1903, son
of the late Robert E. and
Georgiana Belcher Brown. He
was employed as a truck driver
for the Bell Lines before his
retirement. He was a member
of Masonic Lodge 159 at Dunbar.
Surviving are his wife, Mae
Pickens Brown, two sons,
Frank, South Charleston, and
Harold of Richmond, Va.; a
daughter, Mrs. Glenn Akin,
Bowling Green, Ky., three
brothers, Guy of Morgantown,
Ky.: Wendell of Old Hickory,
Tenn., and Warren of Evansville, Ind.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Friday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Clark Parsons officiating . Burial will be in the
Longdale Cemetery, Longdale
Community, near Letart. The
Masonic Lodge will conduct
graveside rites. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 3
p.m. on Thursday.

TOUR PHOTO PLANT
The pupils of Mrs. Robert
Roberts' third grade at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
completed their social studies
unit with an educational field
trip to Best Photo Developing
Co. at Coolville recently.
After studying about an
imaginary trip to "Children of
Other Lands", the pupils visited
the photo firm to learn how their
pictures and slides of the trip
would have been developed had
they actually been taken. AcKCC DAY PLANNED
companying the group were
The Meigs County Youth
Mrs. Roberts, Mrs. Reginald
Sherrill, student teacher, and Rally will sponsor a KCC Day at
the Ohio Valley Christian
Robert D. Roberts.
Assembly Camp on former
Route 33 at Bedford Saturday
from 1 to 4 p.m. There will be
group singing, special music,
that would forbid converting plays and a fellowship hour. The
free TV events - such as the public is invited.
World Series, Super Bowl or
first-run movies - to a Pay TV
events off the air and limiting
basis.
Philip R. Beuth, general them to cable TV.
"Therefore, I join with Cannel
manager of WSAZ Television,
said he was glad to extend such 3 in urging people to write their
time to Crabtree under the Congressmen to keep free TV ...
FCC's "Fairness Doctrine," to let Cable TV grow ... and to
and said he agreed with many of outlaw Pay TV.
"While they're at it, citizens
the points clarified by Crabtree.
The text of Crabtree's should protest a plan now being
studies by the FCC to require
statement follows:
"A recent Channel 3 editorial cable operators to cut out
complained that cable TV may commercials of some stations,
be the first step toward Pay TV, and to put local commercials in
and objected to the way the their place. We don't want to do
Channel 3 signal is being this, because it's terribly extampered with in Parkersburg. pensive.
"Channel 3 has had an
"Our company is building a
cable system to serve ?t. unhappy experience with
Pleasant, Pomeroy, Mid- commercial substitution. We
clleport, Mason and New Haven. hope this will show the FCC that
"We agree with some of this plan is very unwise.
"Cable TV is a blessing. For
ChMnel 3's points.
"To begin with, we know that example, "Sesame Street," that
if it weren't for free broadcast great children's program, is
television, there would't be any shown five times a day within
forty miles of my home in Ft.
cable TV industry.
"But we disagree with the Pleasant - and yet my fivecontention tha t cable TV could year-old daughter cannot see it
grow into Pay TV - with without cable TV.
"And cable TV can provide
customers having to pay special
prices for the World Series, the local serices. Let's be realistic:
Super Bowl, or a first-run ?t. Pleasant, Midclleport and
Pomeroy never could support
movie.
"This just can't happen, and their own broadcast TV station.
I'm glad - because I am op- But with cable, we can provide
posed to Pay TV in any form . local news coverage to comCable TV operates under a plement broadcast news service
franchise from each city. I'm but not compete with it.
"Our philosophy of television
sure none of our city councils
would let us change our rates to is simply this : The American
let Pay TV come. A basic people are entitled to as much
monthly fee is all that we are TV as modern technology can
bring to them, but without
allowed to charge.
"Channel3 also knows that all excessive costs. Broadcast TV
legislation now pending in can do this. So can Cable TV.
Congress on regulation of Cable Pay TV cannot , and we join in
TV prohibits taking free sports opposing it."

Crabtree Will Defend Cable TV

Board
Will
Meet
•
PT. PLEASANT - Mason
County's Board of Education
will hold a special meeting
tonight at 7:30 "for the purpose
of reinstating I
oks Smith
as supermten
ply
w1th a Supre
bve,' accord1
today from Te
president.
Meanwhile, members of the
five member board were
directed through a letter by
Prosecuting Attorney Michael
Shaw, the board's legal advisor,
that it must reinstate Smith and
remove Charles Withers as
acting superintendent. This
came about after a directive
was issued by the State
Supreme Court Tuesday
morning.
Shaw's letter, which was sent
to each of the five member
board individually addressed,
read as follows:
"I have just at this hour been
advised that the Supreme Court
has handed a decision in the
above referred to matter. The
clerk of the Supreme Court has
advised me that the court has
clecided the following :
"The board must reinstate I.
Brooks Smith as superintendent
of schools and remove Charles
Withers as acting superintendent. The board was arbitrary and capricious in
removing I. Brooks Smith and
in placing Charles Withers in
the position, and the board must
proceed without any delay to
complete their hearing on the
charges against I. Brooks

C. D. Brown,
67, Oaimed

·1&amp;95

traveled to Clarksburg, W. Va.,
on March 6 to participate in the
annual Stage Band Festival.
Here, the group was judged on
var ious aspects of performance
in the jazz idiom . These include
phrasing, style, rhythms, and
ensemble sound. The group was
adjudicated by Bob Bunton,
leader of the air force stage
band, " The Airmen of Note".
He was highly complimentary
towards the group's sound "for
a fairly new organization".
The stage band is composed
of Karen Reed, Regina Kimes,
Vicki Gaul , Denis Dean, Rick
Buckley, Jane Whitehead and
Steve F ollrod, saxophones;
Robin Humphrey , Jill Swain,
David Ba nnum a nd David
Weber , tr ombones;
Bob
Grossnickle , Craig Reed,
guitar s ; Steve Reed, bass; Tom
Kar r, drums, and J ean
Whitehead, piano. The group
will be featured in the upcoming
annual minstrel at Eastern
High School.
The concert band on March 20
competed in District XV at
Portsmouth. The band was
judged on its own mer its as to
its performing ability and not
against other bands. The band
received an overall rating of
excellent. Included in this was-a
superior or I rating in sight
reading which is an indication
of fine musicianship within the
or ganiza tion, Wooter s c om mented. In sight reading the
band must play a selection
neither they nor their director
have seen befor e.
"This gr oup has done an
excellent job of learning all of
the music played befor e them
this year, which has been a
considerable amount , and they
can be proud of their fine work
thi s year," Wooter s concluded.
CONTACT MRS. WALKER
Anyone wishing to go to
Sandusky on April 5 to attend a
meeting of Erie County Salon , 8
and 40, is asked to contact Mrs.
Myrtle Walker , 949-2599, immediately.

Humphrey Services Held Today
Graveside services for
Charles Earle Humphrey, 77,
Reedsville, who died at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital Monday were held at the
Reedsville cemetery at 2 p.m .
today. The Rev. J. Lover
Johnson officiated. Mas onic
graveside rites were conducted
by Shade River Lodge No. 453 of
Chester.
Mr. Humphrey was born in
Belleville the son of the late
Edwin Jacob and Clara Ellen
Stephenson Humphrey.
He was graduated from old
Marietta Academy and from
Marietta College in 1915. He was
elected as an alumnus of the
college to its board of trustees in
1947 and in 1955 was elected a
regular trustee and served in

------------------Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. George
Westfall, Wirt Robbins, Douglas
Gheen, Mrs. Hoyt Jividen , Mrs.
Dwight Taylor, Mrs. James
Oldaker, Mrs. Oris Lacey,
Evelyn Wiseman, David
Greathouse, Floyd Sayre, all
Point Pleasant. Mrs. Charles
Oliver, Gallipolis Ferry; Jeff
Clendenin, Letart; Mrs. Herbert Roush, Hurricane; Mrs.
Chester Jeffers, Southside;
Angela McDonald, Rutland, 0.;
Oscar Phillips, Rodney, 0.
DISCHARGES-- Mrs. Eber
Pickens and son, Mrs. Bernard
Jordan, Glen McCarty, Mrs.
Nellie Zahrndt, John McDermitt III, Mrs. Cecil Pickens,
Donald Martin, Michael Herdman , Teresa Wallace, Mrs.
Joseph Ellis and Oris Hubbard.
BIRTHS - March 23, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
George
Westfall,
Point
Pleasant.

'!.....................-\'...............,

that capacity until his death.
While attending Marietta
A THOUGHT:
College he earned four letters in
football and one each in ~ FOR TODAY :
basketball and track. He was a
member of Alpha Sigma Phi
~ There is no pillow so soft:
social fraternity.
-tt as a clear consc1ence.
iC
Mr. Humphrey was a
•
-tc
member of Shade River Lodge .~
No. 453 of Chester and a -tt
- French Proverb -tt
member of Pomeroy American
lf ..
Legion and was a veteran of W. ..
W. I having served in Scotland
and Ireland with the 338th Aero :
It's Qu1ck! Easy ~
Service Squad. He worked in
~
Texas for a time as a ~
representative of Parkersburg iC
-tt
Rig ~nd Re71 Co: He spent most .:
Fridays Only
~
of h1s workmg life as a farmer -tt The Drive-In Window -t~
specializing in hybrid corn.
~
is Open
-t1
He is survived by his wife, -tt
9 A.M. to 7 'P.M.
~
Mrs. Earle Humphrey, a _son, C. -tt
(Continuously)
-tt
Ed Humphrey, Reedsville; a iC
-4c
daughter, Mrs. Ellen Earlen ~ Other Banking Hours 9 to 3-tc
Stone, Cleveland; two brothers, -tt an~ s to 7 as usual on~
Errett, Belleville, and Dr. E . J. -tt Fndays.
-tt
Humphrey of Huntington; two -tt
-tt
sisters, Mrs . Ada Boso, ~
Belleville, and Mrs. Brady '-tt
(Ellen) Buckley of Springfield, ~
-tt
Mass., and six grandchildren. ~
POMEROY, OHIO
~
He was preceded in death by -tt
Member FDIC
iC
one brother, George, and one -tt
MRembeerF5edteral
-tt
.
.
iC
eserv ys em
-i'
sister, Mrs. Lydia Young.
¥¥.,

t

•

•

.
1

•

..

fARMERS BANK t
and SAVINGS CO.

.ltOf¥•••••••

BAKER

"IT'S THE GR EATEST YE T! "

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

MYSTERY

AT

M&amp;R
SHOPPING CENTER
407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

M&amp;R
FOODLINER

M&amp;R
BARGAINLAND

Look For
Special Signs
and Listen

For Specials
and Free Gifts
All Evening
7 P.M. Till2

Spring and

&amp;IPA
Fashion Firsts
OUR NEW

JEWELRY
-----------------------------------DEPOSIT THIS ENTRY BLANK DURING OUR MYSTERY MOONLIGHT
See the New
Red, White. Blue
Jewelry
Nev er has our spring coll ection
been more v ari ed in new pieces
and colors. See the new fi sh,
butterfly and oth er new pi eces .
Just about everything in a qua lity
sh o wing i s r ea dy for your
choosing. Drop in and t a ke a peek.

1.00 and up

t

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

INSPECTION SLATED
Inspection of Shade River
Lodge 453, F and AM, will be
held at 7:30p.m. Saturday at
the hall in Chester. Work will be
in the FC degree. Refreshments
will be served . All Master
Masons are invited.
SEEKS DIVORCE
John C. Eynon , Syracuse ,
filed suit for divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
aga inst Elizabeth Eynon, East
Naples, Fla., charging extreme
cruelty and willful absence .

...

SALE. DRAWING Will BE EVERY 10 MINUTES DURING SALE.
NO PURCHASE NEC ESS ARY

NAME---- --------- - -----------ADDRESS--- ___ ----- -------_ - - --_
TOWN------------ - ------- - ----PHONE.--- - -------- AGE·-- - - -----MUST BE 16 YEARS OF AGE
MUST BE DEPOSITED DURING THE MYSTERY
M&amp;R MOONLIGHT SALE

ENTRY BLANK CAN BE CLIPPED FROM YOUR PAPER:
Sunday 21st, Monday 22nd, Tuesday 23rd, Wednesday 24th

�l

A

:-:~. :~
,-;

·.

..

· -:
:· ::.

.-

Malpractice
Insurance
Isn't Dead

··:

::: :-·

NEW YORK (UPI )-Doctors
and lawyers worried because
their insurance agents can't get
malpractice polices for them
any longer , need not despair, a
top insurance executive said
today.
"Malpr actice insurance isn 't
going the way of the hula hoop
and the Nehru jacket," said
Thomas F. Tucker, a vice
president of Continental Casual
ty Co. in Chicago.
"True, it's almost as hard to
buy an individual malpractice
insurance policy today as to
find a colony of whooping
cranes," Tucker said. " Dozens
of companies have quit the
business because they couldn't
break even in it in spite of rate
boosts of 50 to 400 per cent."
But malpractice insurance
now is being sold by Continental and other companies on ~
group basis through medical
societies and bar associations in
a number of communities. It
should gradually become avai•
!able to doctors and lawyers all
across the land at rates, not
cheap but well within reach.
However, there 's more to the
group malpractice insurance
plans than sending the local
medical society or bar association a check and asking to be
insured.
"These group plans are really
'risk control' a gencies," Tucker
told United Press International.
"It takes months to set one up
so that it can have the
machinery to screen the risks

and make the operation sound
and profitable."
The plans control risks in two
ways. First, doctors and
lawyers are screened by their
own professional societies to
determine if they are proper
risks and restrictive rules are
laid down . For example, doctor
and an internist, is told firmly
he cannot suddenly branch into
specialty for which he hasn't
proper traming and still get
malpractice insurance. Lawyers
also are screened and given
certain rules to observe.
Second, the group screens all
malpractice claims filed
against members, deciding
which claims should be settled
out of court and which should
be firmly resisted by the
society, the insurance company
and the doctor or lawyer
involved .
They also are profit sharing
plans. If they become profitable, the societies and their
members can hope for partial
premium rebates.
Continental Casualty, a member of the CNA Financial Corp.
family , pioneered the new
approach to medical malpractice insurance with the San
Diego County Medical Society
in California, enrolling 75 per
cent of its members as they
were screened and became
eligible. The plan already has
saved money and resulted in
faster settlement of claims and
given doctors more peace of
mind, Tucker said.

Gen. Cole Predicts More Surprises •
By JANE DENISON
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
television lights are off, the
hearing room is locked, the
records have been forwarded to
the Treasury and Justice
departments for possible prosecution, and senators have gone
on to other things.
But the two-year Senate
investigation into alleged
bribery and corruption at
military clubs and post exchanges around the world is more at
parade rest than dismissed.
"God, I don't see how it can
ever really end," says a staff
aide to the Senate permanent
investigations
subcommittee
which has been looking into the
situation since as early as 1968.
"I think a lot of things are
going to happen now-surprising things," says former Brig.
Gen. Earl F. Cole, the highestranking witness to testify on
the subcommittee's charges.
"Slanderously" Accused
Insisting he has been "slanderously" accused of allowing and
even fostering corruption under
his commands, Cole said he

believes others have lied to the
subcommittee "to save their
own tails."
From time to time after the
latest hearings began Feb. 16,
charges were entered in the
record that Army superior
officers "hindered and blocked"
the inquiry, that the Pentagon
withheld crucial information,
and that commanders in
Vietnam knew of wrongdoing
but covered it up, "obviously
because high-ranking officers
were involved."
Similar charges were made
by several witnesses in sworn
testimony.
The subcommittee has concentrated its attention mainly
on Cole because his name was
first linked in public testimony
17 months ago with that of
William J. Crum, an American
entrepreneur who sold slot
machines, liquor and other
goods to club and PX systems
which Cole supervised in
Vietnam.
Federal Indictments
Initial hearings in the fall of
1969 focused on a clique of

NO T I CE O N F ILIN G
O F INV E NT O RY
AND APP R A I SE M E NT
Th e St a t e of O hi o, M e ig s
C ounty . Probat e Co u r t .
To the Executor or Ad ·
minis t ratrix of the estates; t o
such of t he f o ll owing as are
residen ts o f t h e St ate of O h io,
viz _
t he su rv iving spou se, th e
next o f k i n, th e b en ef i ciaries
under the wi ll ; a nd to t he at
torney
or
a tt or n eys
representing
any
of
th e
aforemen ti oned person s:
Ra l ph E Bar t on, Dece a sed ,
Reedsv ill e, Ohio R t . 1. N o
2043~.

Ste ll a Lem l ey, Deceased.
T u ppers P l ains, O h 10, No. 20431
Yo u are hereby n ot ified th a t
t he
In ventories
an d
t{p
praisernent s o f the es t ates of th e
a f oremen l •oned, deceased, l a t e
of sa i d County, were fi l ed in th is
Co u r t. Said Inven t or i es a n d
Appraisements w ill be f o r
hearing be f ore t his Co u r t on th e
l Oth day o l Apri l , 1971, a t 10 00
o'clock AM
Any person des.ring t o f il e
exceptions t hereto rn ust t i l e
them a t l east f ive days prior to
t t&gt;e dn t r. set for hear.ng
Given under my h a n d and
o;eil l o f ~,lid Cour•, th is 72nd day
o f Mnrc h 191
John C Bacon
Juclq&lt;' &lt;lr'd &lt;'X o ff icio Cl erk
o• said Cour t

lb.

important things than money.
·'What's really important is
to sattsf~ other dreams and
fantasies I've had about acting
smce I was a little girl.''
Sally said she never cared for
her "Gidget'' or nun characterizations.
"I never had an opportunity
to act when I played the nun,"
she said. " I was like a robot. I
pressed a button to smile,
another button to look sad and
another to be contrite.
Would Enjoy Drama
"You know what I'd like to
do-play drama. I'd really
enjoy playing murder scenes or
nude scenes, explaining myself
by creating other lives."
Sally's large brown eyes filled
with anticipation.
"I'd like to see what it's like
to murder someone without
taking the consequences," she
said. "You can get away with
that sort of thing if you're an
actress."
One hopes Sally's wishes are BEEF OR CHICKEN
fulfilled. Not so much because
she would erase her image as a
sweet young thing, but because
VINING BIRDIE BROOMS OR
California doesn 't need another
Goody-T .vo-Shoes
running
amok.

Jjy A n r&gt; B Wa l son
Depu l y CIPrk
C1)24,31.2tc

Cut Fr om Cor n Fed Beef!

FRESH WHOLE

.

Fryer Legs . • • •
Pork Chops • • •
Smoked Picnics •
Ground Chuck •

•

0

pkg.

pkg.

' SUPER-RIGHT" WHOLE

Froz:n

FRESH LEAN -

3-LB. PKG. OR LARGER

•

79~.

•

45~
89~.

•

•

cans

5

ai~:w.- 1 oo

HANOVER

cans

$1 00

Strawberries

BANANAS

1-lb.$100

h.§ 0.§ " · VALUABLE COUPON ·§ §.D h

Q.§

n.q

ii

:l~~g~

ORANGES

20

L~.~ge $

·* h H A·• H • ·I VALUABLE

Buitoni Spaghetti Sauce
WI TH
THI S
CO UPO N

25c OFF
LABEL

.Hi

0-f

§-i

I VALUABLE COUPON &amp;· ::III::D:::III:::II:R

Lucky Whip Topping
7c OFF
LA BEL

3

4-oz.

pkg&amp;.

$100

Good Thru Saturday Morc h 27t h In All
Columbus, Division A&amp;P's-One Per Family

·o·•·o·• ·o•.:·o·•·o·• ·o·• ·o·• ·o••·o·• ·o·•·o·•·o·•·o••·o·•·o·• ·

Slz:e

1

3 $1 00
for

Your Choice
Mix or Match

COUPON ·

·

·

·

KING S IZE
:S-lh. 12-o&lt;.
pkg.

99

Good Thru Saturda y. Ma rch 27th In All
Colu mbus, Divisior A&amp;P's- One P~r Family
# .§ § . ii *·§ # .0 § .0 + ii §·§ ! .§ 1.§ *· § § . § § .U * ·§ a.g §·§ .

i:P::::C::::CII£:11:::1·Cl:l
· VALUABLE COUPON :t::lli:t::lliCI:CI:qj

Baker's Chocolate Chips '
12-oz.
)&gt;kg .

39(

WITH
TH IS
CO UPO N

Good Thru S•t urd ay, March 27th In All
Columb us, Division A&amp;P's- One Per Fa mily

:::lliE·::II·E:lliiCII:I~

:iliE
·

Sunnyfield Corn Flakes
18-oz.
pk g.

WI TH
TH IS
COUPON

29C

§.!!

4·0

*·0 * ·§

§ ,§

SAVE 15

Brown &amp; Sene French Rolls

*·§

§ ,§

*·#

1 ·4 § .!1

WI TH THIS COUPON
O N YOUR PURCHASE
OF l -Ib. CAN

Good Thru Sa turday. M• rch 171h In All
Colu,.., bus, Division A &amp;P s- One Per F ~ mily

3 s1 00
pkiJs.

I

C

WITH THIS COUPON
O N YO UR PURCHASE
OF S· LB. BAG

Domino Sugar
Good Thru Soturday . March 27th • All
Col umbus. Division A&amp; P' s

sgc

&amp;9c
Cheese Pizza • • • •
Sausage Pizza . • • 18',-l-oz. 79c
79c
Pepperoni Pizza • • •
French Fries . • • • 2 lb. age
•

1212-oz.
al.ze

CH EF BOY-AR-DEE FROZEN

size

•

size

§ . I,

Maxwell House Coffee

SAVE 7

~ Cans

KITCHEN
SLICED
GREEN
BEANS 16·0Z.

13-oz.

- ·0·-·0·-·0·- ·0·- ·0·-·0·-·0·-·0·- ·0·- ·0·-·0•.:·0·- ·0·- ·0·- ·0·- ·

Raisin Bread ,i~~:R . 3 ~:!· s1oo
Brown Sugar Buns ,i~~:R . pk,.39c
Dutch Apple Pie,i~~~R
each59c

ANN PAG E

•

•·• o• o. A g.o o.1 VALLIAIILE COUPON ::0:
· ::0:
· ::0:·::0:::0:~

C.

SULTANA

CHEF BO Y-AR-DEE FROZEN

Good Thru Saturday. Ma&lt;eh 27th In All
Col umbus , O ivis:on A&amp; P s .. -On e Per Fa mily
1 ·0 1 ·0 1 ·0 i .O § .ii

VACUUM PACK

CHEF BO Y.AR-DEE FROZEN

t,plll!:IIE:liE:lliiCII:I· VALUABLE COUPON

WITH
THI S
COU PO N

(

32-oz.

PEAS 17-0Z., NIILETS CORN 12-0Z., AND

Carrot ~;!'~·

00

Ahoy Detergent • • 3 btls. $1 00
Chase &amp; San born • • •
Salad Dressing • • • •
Jelly Eggs • • • • • • 1-Ib. 35c

Green Giant

H n.t A·* u ' o.t VALUABL E COUPON :t::lli:t::lli:t::lli:t::lli:t::lli'C

JANE
PARKER

roll

Your Choice- Mix or Ma tc h!

PASCAL CELERY ;~~Ke
Cabbage LHY:oe
Fresh Kale or Spinach 10-oz. Bag

Rinso Detergent

Good Thru Saturda y, Morc h 27th In All
Columbus, Division A&amp;P's-One Per Family

§.§ §.§

1-lb.

superiors

pkg.

59~"""

10~..

GOLDEN
RIPE

l:;~:· 1 oo
5

CLIP THESE COUPONS A ND SAVE

h

8-oz.
pkg. " " ..

LIQUID

Bouitque Towels
Pork &amp;Beans ..

U:V.-oz.$1 00

pkCJS.

59C

pkg.

5

KLEEN EX J UMBO

MIRACLE MA-RGARINE

Jllr

pkg.

•

57~.

Kraft

3~-oz.

•

Bologna

Special This W eek!

ALL
VARI ETIES

•

CHUNK STYLE

A -PENN

• .&lt; §-i h

Fresh Fryer Thighs • •
t-lb. 75c
Sliced Bacon s~~:~~o·
Freezer Queen 8"G:.:;d • • 2-lb. $1 19
Boneless Pork Chops cc::r • lb. s149
Country Style Spare Ribs . lb.&amp;gc
Lean Boiling Beef Plate . lb.29c
Fresh Picnic Pork Roast . lb.45c
Lunch Meat t.~~·.~~~h· • • • Aftc:
69c
Polish Sausage
• •
Check! Co mpare! Sa ve!

College Inn Broth • 5
Dust Mop • • • • •
Lux Bath Soap • • •
Spray Starch • • • 3

3

59~.

•

SIRLOIN CUT

pkg.

BATH SIZE

Advice and guidance to assist
parents, employers and otner
persons in under standing and
CJCTeplmg the crippled and in
finding rweded lreatrn en t for
handi caps IS avmlublt• from
yout Easl r-r St•;d .')(1( i&lt;"ty

•

SHANK ·
HALF

Prices Good Thru Sat urday, March 27th

20-oz.

SYRACUSE - Roll call was
answer ed with a Bible verse
containing the word "spring,"
when the Sunshine Makers class
of the First United Presbyterian
Church held its regular meeting
in the annex recently.

Students of the Chester
Elementary School using a
theme of "We Love the U.S.A. "
will present their annual
musical program Friday at 8
p.m. in the school auditorium.
The musical will feature
songs and dances from different
sections of the United States.
A rhythr.n band cor.nposed of
the morning and afternoon
kindergarten classes will open
the program with patriotic
numbers. Another feature of the
musical will be a train with
second graders as passengers
taking the audience to various

HAM

•'b·65c
Eckrich Wieners orF;:nk~ • t-lb. 79c
Oscar Mayer Bologna • 1-lb. age
Braunschweiger s:~:~ . • 1roll-Jb. 79c
Sliced Bacon s:~:·, • • • 2 lb. $169
Superior Fresh Sausage • 1roll-lb.4r
Ocean Perch Fillets
• lb ss~
Fried Fish Cakes . . • • lb. &amp;5c
Dressed Whiting. . . 5boxlb. $199

The meeting was conducted
by the president, Naomi London. Devotions, Matthew
chapter 6, 1 through 15, was
read by Jean Hall, followed with
the Lord's Prayer. She also
r ead "A P uzzling Prayer
Request," from My Da ily Bread
book. Mildred Pier ce r ead an
article "The Reason Why."
Free will offering was taken,
treasurer 's r epor t was accepted
as read. Routine business was
discussed.
Bibl e s tud y of Ma tthew
chapters 5, 6 and 7 were
reviewed, followed by very
interesting group discussion.
During the social hour
delicious refr es hments werP
served by hostesses, Beatrice
Blake and Charlotte Nease to
He len
Diddle,
Pauline
Mor ari ty , Mildr ed Pierce ,
Janice La wson, J ea n Hall ,
Margaret Cottrill , and Naomi
London . Diana Nease and Tina
Pi er ce were guests.

~Iated Friday

COOKED
ROUND BONE
SHOULDER

rs;;ine Makers Meet

the late Hep. L. Mendel Rivers,
D-S.C., chairman of the House
Armed Services Cor.nmi ttee ,
tw1ce tried to stop the Senate
investiga tion by · calling the
acting subcommittee chairman ,
Sen. Abrahar.n Ribicoff, DConn., to vou&lt;.; h for Cole's
character.
..
Ribicoff says his subcommittee is willing to go "anywhere
in the world" to get Crum's
story first hand.
What will come of it all, only
time- and possibly the Justice
sections of the country. The and Treasury departments--&lt;!an
train cars were made by the tell.
spec ial educa tion class of
Carolyn Parker. The Eastern
High School Art Club and
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
sponsor, Donna Chadwell, have
Mr. and Mrs. Eber Pickens of
painted the background scene
Syracuse are announcing the
for the performance.
The program is under the birth of a son, born March 20, a t
direction of Maxine Whitehead, Pleasant Valley Hospital. He
vocal music supervisor of the weighed 6 pounds, 7% ounces
distric t,
and
cla ssro om and has been named Eber
teachers . Jennie Dean will Odell. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pickens,
serve as accompanist.
The public is invited to attend. Syracuse . Clara Lavender, also ~
A small dona tion will be asked of Sy racuse, is maternal
grandpa rent.
at the door.

years, CBS did- and broadcast
an interview with him the night
before the latest hearings
ended
Crum told in terviewer Mike
Wallace that he would testify
only if investigators visited him
in Hong Kong because he was
too ill to go to Washington.
There were allegations that

nsuper-Right" Smoked

Sally Fields Is
99(
Tired Of TV l1nage Fresh Fryer Breasts
By VERNON SCOTI
p ndent
HOlLYWOOD
y
Field the i!Ilp
who played the
"The f1ymg Nu.
senes, 1s no sa1r
her best to prove 1t.
First as television's "Gidget"
and later as Sister Bertrille,
Sally established a sickenly
sweet image.
It did, in fact, make Sally
sicker than most.
She is married now and the
mother of a two-year-old son.
She is also anxious to prove to
the world she is not a road
company Debbie Reynolds.
Stars in TV Drama
Toward that end she recently
starred in a television drama,
"Maybe I'll Be Home in the
Spring" in which she played a
runaway, and will be seen this
fall in "Marriage, Year 1,"
another non-sugary role.
Lest she develop a fatal case
of diabetes through her parts.
Sally is determined to act her
age and use the language of her
genera tion.
" I could go on playing Goody
Two-Shoes," she said the other
day. " But there are more

huge U.S. Army Headquarters
Base at Long Binh near Saigon.
Most Wanted Man
The man the subcommittee
most wanted to question-Crum
himself -appeared not in the
hearing room but on network
television. Although Senate
investigators had been unable
to find Crum for more than two

Special Th is Week ! Save!

Swiss Steak

UPI Hollywood C

career Army sergeants who
operated enlisted men 's clubs in
Vietnam and Germany and
resulted a month ago in federal
indictments against seven men
on charges of conspiracy, fraud
and bribery .
Cole, 51, was relieved of his
European PX command at the
time of the 1969 hearings and
was .shipped back to Washington . Last summer, he was
demoted to colonel stripped of
his Distinguished Service Medal
and retired.
Cole says he'll go all the way
to the Supreme Court if
necessary to get his general's
star and his medal back, and
has challenged subcommittee
members to repeat their
allegations outside the halls of
Congress, where they are
immune from lawsuits.
Most of the charges against
Cole were made by two menJack Bybee, a former Crum
employe, and Maj. Clement E.
St. Martin, who testified he was
dismissed by Cole after confronting him with evidence of
underhanded activities at the

One Per f amily

A&amp;P FROZEN

pkg.

Shop for Cijts •
in the Plaid
Stamp Cataloq!

�7- The Daily &amp;ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. March 24, 1971

•

::..:..:: .. ·: .~. ·::..•:

.•'

:=.:·· • . .

:.:

Ban Said Unrealistic

Overnight Wire
·.=.=·.·
.:'

'.:.:_·.:.·:...=~.·~~ .= .=.~. ·.·.: ·:;.

·.·

.

·: '::.

-:: ::

:-

·:

~::

·::

•

•,

·, ·:·

•.· ·,·:

. .
·. · .

.

,:;.

,•

:-·:.
'

·.

: ·..

.•.· -:·: .;:· •. ·.·

:: ·::· ::· : '·

··:

::

·.::·_:: :::· .· .::

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - STATE REP. Gordon M. Scherer, RCincinnati, has proposed legislation to eliminate alleged political
kickbacks from fees charged by deputy registrars in the state.
Scherer said Tuesday his bill would reduce the 50-cent fee
charged by registrars for issuing auto tags and licenses to 40
•
cents.
"Under my bill deputy registrars wouldn't make enough
profit to help finance a political operation," he said.
WASHINGTON- THE U.S. SUPREME Court has ordered
Ohio's suit against alleged mercury polluting companies to be
tried in state courts. Ohio filed the suit against three firms,
charging they polluted Lake Erie and its tributaries by dumping
mercury mto the water. The state asked the Supreme Court to
issue an injunction to stop such dumping and to require the
removal of mercury from the lake.
~
Charged in the suit filed by former Ohio attorney general
!l!'.l Paul Brown were Dow Chemical Co. of Canada; Dow Chemical
Co. of Midland, Mich.; and Wyandotte Chemical Corp. of
Wyandotte, Mich.
DAYTON - TWO PERSONS WERE reported missing
Tuesday in a fire that swept through a block-long pillow
manufacturing plant five days after authorities told the firm the
"whole building would burn down" if it ever caught fire.
Authorities said the employes were listed only as "unaccounted for'' and no remains had yet been found in the burned out
Peri-Leisure Products Co. plant. About 40 persons were in the
plant at the time.
WASHINGTON-U.S. REP. CHARLES Whalen Jr., R-Ohio,
voted for the defeated SST provision in the House last week, but
thinks the vote, means the House was "returned to the people of
the United States."
Whalen said his frustration at the bill's defeat was "more
than assuaged" by new House voting procedures which make
legislators take a stand on specific issues.
"Now that he must go on record," said Whalen, "each
representative will cast his teller vote on the basis of constituent,
rather than colleague, considerations.
COLUMBUS-THE OHIO SUPREME COURT has adopted a
new two-part rule calling for the removal from office of a judge
whose conduct is "prejudicial to justice" or whose conduct could
bring his office into "disrepute."
Ute new regulations also disqualify a judge from performing
his duties while an indictment charging him with a felony is
pending against him.
A judge could be removed or suspended if he became engaged
in "willful and persistent failure to perform his judicial duties, is
habitually intemperate, or engages in conduct prejudicial to the
administration of justice or which would bring the judicial office
into disrepute.''
WASHINGTON- THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
estimates there were 44 million hogs and pigs on farms in the 10
corn belt states as of March 1.
The figure was 9 percent higher than one year ago. Hogs
intended for market totaled 37.1 million, up 13 per cent from last
year.

-

•

-

Mark V - Middleport
CORRECTION!

....
........ ROYA

PRICE SHOULD HAVE BEEN

. ... co
•
••..

By DREW VON BF:RGEN
WASH INGTON IUPI) Carl
E. Bagge, president of the National Coal Association rNCAJ
says it is " unrealistic and irresponsile" to ban strip mining which may w1pe out :15 per
cent of U.S. coal production and
threaten the nation 's energy
supply.
Bagge, now in his third
month as president, emphasized that "we are in favor
of regulation and enforcemen t
of surface mining." He said
NCA backed a federal law to
control strip mining and pleaded for flexibility in such a law
on a state to state basis.

:: ::·· ;.•.

8 PAK

THIS is a photograph of a third grade class at the Pomeroy Sugar Run School many years
ago. It is the pr operty of Mrs. Robert Niday (Marie Eblin), former resident who has lived :n
Springfield for the past 45 years moving there from Gallipolis with her husband, born and
reared in Gallipolis. Mrs. Niday would like identification of the children on the picture. The
teacher on the left was Miss Lucille Will. Mrs. Niday is the first girl on the left on the front row.
Some of the others she can identify include: front row, from left Oliver Hart, James Bickel,
Charles Orr; second row, from left, John Baker, Darrell Quivey, Donald Turnbull, Ronald
Feiger, Frances Jones; third row: Henry Ewing is the second boy from the left and Thelma
Wildermuth and Mildred Hill are on the end. Residents may write Mrs. Niday at 559 South
Limestone St., Springfield, Ohio, 45505.

narrow, finer-like seed pods,
and is very high in protein
content.
Hatch illustrated his talk by
slides
of
the
showing
reclamation operations in
Harrison and Belmont Counties.
He took issue to the recent story
on NBC News depicting his
operations in Egypt Valley.
"Their repor t was a pack of
lies," he said. "We have and
will continue to reclaim the
land. We are here today to take
this opportunity to show what
we do and want to do in Gallia
County.'' Also outlined with the
reclamation was the upkeep of
the county and state highways
whtch will be in constant use by
coal haulers. " All county roads
will be maintained," Hatch
said.
Other company officials introduced Monday were Cecil
DeL!oma, Vice-President of
Surface Operations;
Art
Wallace, Superintendent of
Land Use and Reclamation;
Frank Street, Superintendent
Egypt Valley Mine, Belmont
Co.; Henry Gilham, Electrical
Engineer;
Dick
Carter,
Superintendent Crown City
Mine;
Wendell
Bearce,
Engineering Assistant to VicePresident, and Joe Hickle, Chief
Strip Mining Operations.

Hanna Coal Co~npany Plans
Operations In Gallia Area
BY DALE ROTHGEB
Plans for the development of
a 750,000 ton per year stripmining operation with employment for 75 persons in the
lower part of Gallia County and
the western part o! Lawrence
County
were
announced
:Monday afterngon by Ralph W.
Hatch, President of the Hanna
Coal Company, a Division of
Consolidation Coal Company,
Cadiz, Ohio.
Hatch
made
the
announcement during a special
noon luncheon held with various
county leaders at Oscar's
Restaurant.
Hatch revealed that Gallia
County's surface mining project
in Ohio and Guyan Twps., will
begin July 1, if all consumer
contracts are signed. He said
his company does not have a
major buyer, but that
negotiations are continuing for
the coal which will be mined in
the Crown City area.
t o President
.
Accordmg
Hatch, the project will cover 12
to 15 years. Coal will be transported from Rocky Fork Rd.,
to a major docking site housing
12 jJmbo barges and 16 standard size barges on the Ohio
River at Crown City. Coal will
be mined by a huge shovel

Midwest.
The Crown City mmmg
operation involves over 10,300
acres in Gallia and Lawrence
Counties.
Dick Clinton, an associate of
Hanna Coal Co., for the past 24
years will serve as superintendent of the Crown City Mine.
Clinton, a native of Cadiz,
presently resides in Green
Acres Subdivision. Employees
of the mining operation will be
100 per cent union under the
United Mine Workers of
America.
Hatch said the union scale for
miners is currently $21 per day
but this amount will be increased to hike a miner's salary
to approximately $10,000 per
year.
The coal company executive
also announced that his firm
will practice land reclamation
during the stripping project.
He said, "We know that down
here, you have had bad experiences with reclamation. We
will reclaim the land as we go."
Hatch then reviewed the
various ways land is reclaimed
by his company in its operations
m Harrison and Belmont
Counties.
Hanna's surface operations
affect between 2,000 and 2,500

which, an equivalent amount is
reclaimed.
Within one year after
beginning surface mining in
1940, Hanna began reclaiming
its disturbed land by the
planting of tree . The original
planting of trees was not only to
make the land productive again
but also as a source of posts for
Hanna's underground mines.
Arthur Wallace, Superin tendent of Reclamation and
Land Use, has supervised the
planting of crown-vetch, a plant
with creeping stems two to six
feet long. Its leaves consist of 15
to 20 pairs of oblong leaflets.
Crownvetch produces long,

3 ROOMS

Nf W
fURNITURE
$349.95

He said a ban proposed &lt;m
a national level by l{ep. Ken
Heckler, D-W.Va. and on state
level by West Virgmia Secrewry of State John D. Rockefeller reflects a "lack of know!edge .. . m land reclamation."
In another aspect, Bagge endorsed President Nixon's reorganization plan to combine reievant federal agencies mto a
department of natural resources.
He also said the keystone of
a national energy policy must
be a decision to rely mainly on
domes tic energy sources.
"The United States will lose
its freedom to act in its own
best interests if its energy lifeline becomes subject to the vagaries of unstable or unfriendly
foreign government."
He added unless Congress limits fuel imports "domestic fuel
industries will have difficulty
attracting investors with the
capital to search for more oil
and gas, or to finance large
plants needed to produce synthetic fuels from coal and oil
shale.
Bagge also:

Helci:tsed the text of a letter
to Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark.,
urging his House Ways and
Means Committee to consider
giving an investment credit to
coal operators opening new
mines
-Opposed a proposed sulfur
emission tax "because of · its
punitivenature."Headded that,
1f sur:h a tax is enacted, it
should go back to the coal industry for research.
-Endorsed proposed bills to
increase the coal depletion allowance, and another to grant
rapid depreciation for facilities
to convert coal or oil shale to
low-pollutant fuels .

~-----------.

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating
Your Dependable
Dealer For

PLUMBING
AHD

HEATING
P ho ne

992-2550

CARLOAD PURCHASE!

Pre-Cut Studs
2x4's

Plenty of Framing
and Sheathing lumber
-NEW SHIPMENT!
---- ----- ------------~---

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

$35.00 DownBalance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON
FURN IJURr~

•1

MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

Mason, W. Va.

We Deliver

MASON

&amp;.......................................::::~s:h:ip:p:e:d~i:n~t:h:isaa:r~e:a~f:ro:n:l~t:h:e~a:cr:e:s.:of~la:n:d~e:ac:h~y:e:a,~·,.:of~~-.-.-.-.-.-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:~-:-:-:~-:-:-:-:~~-:~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

....

Prices Effective March 25 thru 31st

.....

~
~-.· · ·

-

5
9
¢
PORK CHOPS
FIRST CUT

LB.

SUPERIOR
ALL MEAT

BOILED
CENTER CUT
HAM
FRANKIES
PORK CH PS

....
..

.
•
J

Right
Reserved'

RUTLAND
DEPT. STORE

lb.
pkg.

To
Limit
Quantities

1fz

•

l'fltJIJIICE
JttJvli!s DA/lY •/

-

~il'• lllllllllll

·'-o;'.c·c·c·'O· ·c·o&lt;··k'

Aorida Large

HOLSUM

Specials!

CELERY

ICE MILK

69¢

bch.19e
Idaho Baking

CHOC. MILK

PQTATOES

10 lb. 79e

..

QT.

33

¢

ROBIN

ROLLS

=

=

39¢

ONLY

PURPOSE

wifliour
couPoN

PRI CE

5 lb.
OFFER EXP IRES

•

CHOC. CHIPS

.,

TEEN QUEEN

PORK &amp; BEANS
DOUBLE LUCK

GREEN BEANS

21;.

$}

GOLDEN ISLE

5 00
4 s~~~ $}.00
SI;E

•

~

~
_

59e _-

lllllllllll ...i·tue

VALUABLE COUPON

Chase &amp; Sanborn

COFFEE

10. oz.
tar

ONLY

$} 19~
•

:

WITH T H IS COUP ON

$1.59

PRICE W ITHOUT
COUPO N

BIG 3 MKTS.
3-30·71

3·30·71

Nabisco
Chipsters
BAKERS

lb.

W ITH THI S COUPO N

. . . . . 11111 111111

GOOD
ONLY
AT

e Frozen Food Buy

Perch Fillets

lllllllllll@_i.fl'!

FLOUR 49~

- HOOD
=
All

Reg. 45~
CINNAMON

VALUABL E COUPO N

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

FRUIT

COCKTAIL

12 oz.
pkg.

2

ARGO

PEAS

GIAN T SIZE (22 fl. oz. )

'7ln~lo

2Vz
size

.L/(,v~

DISHWASHING
LI QUID

39e

WITH TH IS

COU PON

PRICE WITHOUT COUPON IS

6

303

Reueemable only at

size

Expires

59c

BIG 3 MKTS.
3-30-71

�1
8

The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 24,1971

Miss Tuttle

State Vice-President is
Sorority Guest Speaker
Miss Ruth Becker of
Wheeling, W. Va., vice
president
of
the
state
association of Delta Kappa
Gamma Society, was guest
speaker at a joint meeting of the
Beta Alpha and Alpha Omicron
Chapters Saturday at Rio
Grande College.
Principles of Delta Kappa
Gamma were discussed by the
speaker. These include bringing
honor to women for their service to education, sponsoring
and supporting educational
legislation, endowing
scholarships to women in
education around the world,
stimulating professional and
personal growth, and keeping
the membership well informed.
Miss Becker announced that
this year was the last in the
study of values and that a fouryear study on "Our Changing
Times" will begin in the fall.
Mrs. Lynn Davis led in
devotions preceding the luncheon. She read a poem and led
the group in reciting the 23rd
Psalm.
Roger Williams of the Oak
Hill Schools entertained the
group with four vocal selectirms, I Love Life, A Little Bit of
Heaven, When Irish Eyes are
Smiling, and Hills of Home. He
was accompanied on the piano
by his sister, Margaret Thomas.
Plans were discussed for a

recruitment tea to be held at
McArthur on April 18.
Attendmg the meeting from
Meigs County were Rosalie
Story, Geneva Joachim, Lucille
Smith, Nellie Parker, Nellie
Vale, Mary Virginia Reibel,

Mrs. Vikki Gloeckner was
elected president of the Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority at a meeting
Tuesday night at the Gloeckner
home on Mulberry Heights.
Other officers named for the
1971-72 year were Mrs. Judy
Werry, vice-president; Mrs.
Charlotte Hanning, recording
secretary; Mrs. Terri Michael,
treasurer; Mrs . Susan Baer,
corresponding secretary.
Members signed a letter to go
to North Vietnam about the
treatment of prisoners of war.
Arrangements were made for
the Easter egg hunt for the
Community Class for Retarded
Children at the Rutland school.

Miss Hackett

Middleport
~
Persona 1 N0tes
1
r

! OSU
c
1

\

Mrs. Frank Titus is a patient
at the University Hospital,
Columbus, for observation and
treatment. She was accompanied there by Mrs.
William Swisher and Paula and
Mrs. John Fultz.
Mr. and Mrs . Harold
Vogelsong and Melinda of
Portsmouth were Saturday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John
Fultz and Marc. Joining the
group for dinner was Mrs. Lera
Jon s , Minersvill
The Rev.
~
Donahue and
NEv. ark Satu
he
wedding of 1\
anue 's
r, to Miss
nephew, Mark
Rita Elliott. Kim Donahue was
the flower girl and the Rev. Mr.
Donahue assisted with the
ceremony. The family was
Friday overnight guests of Mrs.
Donahue's sister, Freeman
Snider of Pleasantville.
Mrs. William Grueser, Mrs.
Carl Brannan, Mrs. Gertrude
Miller visited last week with
Mrs. Robert Jay and Mrs.
Susan Rawlings in Coltunbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Fox of
Mansfield came to Columbus
for Mrs. Miller who is there now
for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Gerlach spent the weekend in
Chillicothe visiting his parents,
Mr . and Mrs. Wendell Gerlach.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Miller,
Tina and Timmy, were weekend
visitors of relatives in East
Liverpool.

GET WELL
flowers and plants
Will cheer up that
loved one or friend on
the sick list.

Dudley's Aorist
992-5560
59 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, 0.

Calls
accepted
9 to 9

Degree

Miss Rose Marie Hackett
received her bachelor of
biological sciences degree in
commencement exercises
Friday morning at Ohio State
University.
Following her graduation,
Miss Hackett's grandparents,
Mr and Mrs. Paul Smart entertained with a luncheon in her
honor at the Jai Lai. Guests
were Mr. and Mrs. George
Hackett, Jr., Bill, Linda, Dennis
and Melanie, Mr. and Mrs.
George Hackett, Sr., Mrs.
Charles Jordan and Kellie, Mrs.
Mannmg Kloes, Kent, Lori and
Lyrm, Marvin Fry, Miss Cindy
Bnght of Mansfield, a roommate of :Miss Hackett, and
Henry Solano, a classmate of
Bill Hackett at Case-Western
Reserve.
Miss Hackett is currently
employed at Ohio State
University and will resume her
studies in the fall.

Laurel Oiff
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance at
the Free Methodist Church
March 21 was 139. Offering was
$33.06. Persons attending
preaching services March 14
numbered 137.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore
visited Sunday with their
daughter and son-in-law and
two children, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Darst, Milan. Mrs.
Darst sprained her ankle and
can't walk . Mrs. Gilmore will
stay for nine weeks to help care
for Mrs. Darst and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bauer,
Marion, spent the weekend with
Mrs. Bauer's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. C"tarles Karr, Sr.
Mrs. Georgia Diehl and
grandson, Charles Diehl, and
Mary Smith spent Friday
evening with the Charles Diehl
family to help Peggy Staat
celebrate her brithday.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise,
McConnelsville, attended
services Sunday at the local
church.

COLOR

TELEVISION
REPAIR I
Serving
Point Pleasant and Meigs Mason Area

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE CO.
Ph. 675-2241
or

773-5196
r&lt;epdll

i

men

.11m Durbin
Chuck Inscore

~

:-

SAVE ~2.00

~ On 5erv1ce ca II.

&gt;

1
~
~

E~p 1res 3 31 71. To be re- :,.
,,• turned with service order . :j
L._•.~t. . "' ." "'" " ~ "A" ...h •• • . ., .._ ... A

__........--- -

Inspection was planned for
April 3 when Bethel 62, International Order of Jobs
Daughters met Monday night at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
A dinner will be held
preceding the inspection with
parents, Masons, and Eastern
Star
members
in vi ted.
Reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Paul Taylor. New
robes are being made for the
Bethel.
Plans were made for the
Easter bazaar to be held on
April 10. Baked goods and
homemade gift items will be for
sale and all proceeds will go
toward the expense of making
the new robes.
Twila Clatworthy, honored
queen, presented Diana Carsey
with a gift. Miss Carsey's name,
"Petunia" was selected for the
birthday pig to be used by
Bethel members. Deposits will
go into the flower fund.

Homemakers
Contribute
To Fund
A contribution to the heart
fund was made by the Haven
Homemakers during a meeting
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. William Fields, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Jesse Maynard was cohostess for the meeting.
Final plans were made for the
game party to be held at Lakin
on Wednesday. Mrs. Harry
Vickers, Jr., gave the
secretary's report, and Mrs.
David Zirkle the treasurer's
report. Program on "Appalachian Heritage" was given
by Mrs. Lewis Johnson .
Mrs. Jim Wise gave devotions
using scripture from Acts 4 and
prayer. A white elephant sale
was held and secret sisters
exchanged gifts. The April
meeting will be at the home of
Mrs. Zirkle. Several door prizes
were awarded .
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs . AI
Sprouse, Mrs. Emory Hart,
Mrs. Iva Capehart, Mrs. Sadie
Warth, and Mrs. Russell
Maynard.

Two Given
Baptism Rites

Baptist Church Begins
Evangelistic Services
Evangelistic services will
begin this evening at the First
Baptist Church, Sixth and
Palmer Streets, Middleport at
7:30 p.m. Sunday School night
will serve as the topic for
tonight's meeting. All members
of the church who participate in
Sunday School activity are
urged to attend.
Special music will be by the
quartet from the Meigs Corale.
Making up the quartet are Anita
Fultz, Carol
Hargraves,
Richard Dean and Duane Will.
They will be accompanied by
Mrs.
Christine
Guthrie,
director.
Dot Anthony has prepared
special music for the services.
Leaflets were prepared and
mailed by members of the

........'-.. ... ~ ~ . ·,.......~ ·..n. .. • . .o~

Junior High Baptist Youth
Fellowship and the Hearthstone
Class. Marilyn Fultz promoted
a telephone campaign. All
residents of Middleport were
extended an invitation by Miss
Fultz.
Danny Thompson is serving
as special emphasis chairman,
Beulah White is the director of
extra cottage prayer meetings,
June Kloes is in charge of the
visitation ministry for people in
Middleport who do not attend
any church regularly, and the
Golden Rule Class will receive
guests at the door.
The church chose their own
minister, the Rev. Charles
Simons, to be the speaker. No
offering will be taken during the
special services.

Youth Group
Emphasizes
Bible Study

A parade of homemade
Easter bonnets highlighted a
meeting of the Rose Garden
Club held recently at the home
of Mrs. James Stout.
The hats were judged by Mrs.
Rose Carr, with Mrs. Leota
Massar and Mrs. Howard
Caldwell winning for the
prettiest, Mrs. Carl Barnhart,

128 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT

&amp;1\ViNGs
Patt &amp;PIING!
24"x13Y2"x11"
CEDARIZED

STORAGE CHEST

88

"Your Bible and You" with
emphasis on becoming a new
person through Bible study was
the topic at the Sunday night

EACH
JUMBO ROLL

Northern
Paper Towels

4

ROLLS

Honored On
Birthday
Mrs. Malcolm Miller and
Mrs. Gene Coleman entertained
recently with a party in observance of the birthday anniversary of Mrs. Gail Miller.
Cake, ice cream, coffee an&lt;l
soft drinks were served. Gifts
and cards were presented to
Mrs. Miller. Attending were the
honored guest's husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Malcolm Miller, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Coleman, Janie
Coleman, Rusty Bolin, and Jeff,
Michael, and Holly Renee
Miller.

HOSPITAL NEWS

INSULATED
FOAM CUPS

100

93~

,.------- -I

~

NAVY

~\

Pomeroy....

1

Personal Notes

\

OR

T-SHIRTS

Rose Mary Andrews and her
roommate, Sandy Conner,
Columbus, were Sunday visitors
of Miss Andrews' parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Andrews, and
Barbara, Long Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs . Bill Gibbs and
daughter of Kent arrived
Tuesday for a visit with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs . W. A.
Gibbs.

SLIGHT
IRREGULARS

WHITE
CAPE COD

PICKET FENCE

4

DALE DUTTON
qQ? -2534

FOR

1.00

10 PC. SET
ANCHOR HOCKING

MADRID
BEVERAGE SET
10 • 13 OZ. TUMBLERS

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
LARRY SPENLER

99~ PKG. 0: 2

AVOCADO • BLUE • GOLD

OFFICE 992-7129
TOM CROW
992 2580

!

41 ~QT.

liiTLE OR NO DOWN PAYMENT!
CALL US...

992 3433

a l

QUAKER STATE
SUPER BLEND
MOTOR OIL

Chapman's
SHOES

new FHA
financing
program
makes
•
renting
ridiculous

DIET, P.O. BOX 15331

•

MEN'S BRIEFS

BROWN

CONCERT IN COLUMBUS
Miss Anita Marie Fultz and
Duane Will were in Columbus
over the weekend for a concert
with the Ohio Youth Choir at
Macon, Ohio. They were taken
to Columbus Friday by Mrs.
Norman Will.

•

PKG.

FAMOUS LABEL

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Mrs. Charles R. Aeiker and
infant daughter, Mrs. Donald L.
In England, the game of
Pomeroy
Brooks, Mrs. William K.
Mam St.
Brooks, Charles Chapman, Miss handball is known as "fives ."
Helen Dempsey, Mrs . Nona
Frye, Charles E. Johnson, Mrs. .,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....
Thomas Kabisch, Mrs. Julia
McGhee, Dimitar Mitrikov,
Mrs. Ronald Neal and infant
son, Mrs. William Rice and
infant daughter, Eugene Rutz,
Charles Sayre, Mrs. Donald
Smith, Joseph Smith, Wilma
Smith, Mrs. Raymond Staats
and infant oaughter, G. Floyd
Thomas, Mrs. Michael Treida
and infant son, Mrs. David D.
Tulloh and infant daughter,
Paul Wagner, Mrs. Barbara
White, Willis Frost, Vernon
Dolin, Oral Malone, Paula
Thomas, and Mrs. Ivan S.
Spriggs.

Eat three meals a day. Send $1 and stamped
se If-add res sed envelope to:
DEPT. P0-32

$1 .00 •

7 OZ. DISPOSABLE

COUNT

Mrs. Miller

~

meeting of youth.
the Hysell Run Free · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . . .
Methodist
Prayer by Joyce Vance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
opened the meeting. Songs
included "Teach Me, Lord,"
"He Cared That Much for Me"
and "He Filled a Longing." The
offering was taken by Roxie
Patterson.
Next SundaY'.night there will
be a recording played of the
sermon by Estus W. Pirkae at
Mount Zion, based on Jeremiah
12andentitled "If Footmen Tire
You, What Will Horses Do?"
Meetings are open to all area
youth.
Attending besides those
named were Ronnie Harrison,
Sherry Michaels, Peggy Welch,
Kathy Harrison, Fred Lemley,
Marty Dugan, Randy George,
Kathy Hysell, Roger Roush, Joy
the most original, and Mrs. Hayes, Sherry Hayes, and Jim
Kenneth Griffith, the funniest. Schuler.
Plans were discussed for a
silent auction to be held at the
April meeting at the home of
Mrs. Carl Barnhill, and for a
flower show to be staged at the
home of Mrs. Clarence Headley
in July.
Mrs. Oscar Pennington gave
devotions with Mrs. Massar
A soft moe with
giving a meditation entitled
stacked heel.
"The Light of God". A program
on "Growing Pansies" was
given by Mrs. Hazel Barnhill.
Fourteen members attended
the meeting.

Easter Bonnets Made
By Rose Garden Club

LOSE UP T020 L BS.
IN TWO WE EKS

,. .. ,..,, . . .,. . . . ,.&lt;nq' ·• • · .. rr::::::a,.--......,...........,......

~

Inspection
Planned

The Open Church Wedding of
Anna Kathryn Tuttle, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn W.
Tuttle, Minersville, Rt. 1, to Mr.
Emerson Ray Johnson, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson C.
Johnson, Portland, w1ll be an
event of this Saturday at 7:30
p.m . at the Long Bottom
Methodist Church.
Mr. Johnson is a petty officer
third class in the United States
Navy.
A reception at the church will
follow the ceremony.

DISPLAY POSTERS- Trina Gibbs, left, and Valerie
Lewis display posters which tell about Evangelistic Services
to be held at the First Baptist Church in Middleport beginning this evening through Saturday at 7:30p.m.

GRAPEFRUIT DIET

:':NAME

~ADDRESS

Baskets will be provided for
each child.
A rummage sale will be held
April 9 and 10 in the Coats
building in Middleport. The
annual Founder's Day observance will be on April 20 at
the Uptowner Inn at Parkersburg.
A pizza party was held in
conjunction with the meeting
attended by 30 members.

Lydia and Edwin Johnson,
children of Mrs. Carolyn
Johnson of Boston, Mass. ,
received the rites of baptism at
the Heath United Methodist
Church Sunday morning.
The Rev. Max Donahue officiated at the service. Sponsors
were the children's grand mother, Mrs . Robert C.
Rinehart, with whom they live,
and Mrs. Lee McComas. The
choir presented the anthem,
"There is a Faun tain,"
preceding the ritualistic service.
A luncheon in their honor was
held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Lee McComas. Mrs .
Rinehart was also a guest.

Calls
accepted
9 to 9

Nuptial Plans

Roberta Wilson, Ruth Euler,
Emily Sprague, Dorothy
Woodard, Margaret Parsons,
Geneva Nolan, Ann Webster,
Mildred Hawley, Ethel Chapman, Maxine Philson, Betsy
Horky, Martha Husted, and
Anna Turner.

Mrs. Vikki Gloeckner
To Head Beta Sorority

~Receives

!

Completes

REG.
1.49

$1.00

SET

•

•

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer?y, 0., March 24, 1971

•

•

FLOOR SHINE

FOLDING DOOR

.
•

' · · .
·: ' ;, '

'

•;

• i-;

l
i·

' ' .;

$122
HECK'S REG. $1.97

The new Wonder-fold door has teles·
coping lead post that allows the door
covering to
shortened and lead
post adjusted to fit with-out cutting.
The Wonder-Fold is perfect for closets.

&gt;·

3 LBS. 6 OZ.

KITCHEN DRANO

GIANT SIZE

(r'
1

·~~ ·~· ·····~.
·~~.-.¥

.rr

' .

,.

·

·r1sem99eos.

HECK'S REG. $3.49

,

SPIC &amp;SPAN

77(

be

·

. ... ,

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

16 OUNCE

WONDER FOLD

46 OUNCE
FORMICA

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

89(

HECK'S REG. 92 1

HECK'S REG. 99 1

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

4 LBS. 1 OZ.

28 OUNCE

KING SIZE

PINE SOL

BONUS

•

$129

77(

HECK'S REG. $1.59

HECK'S REG. $1 .04
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

14

8 OUNCE SIZE
WITH SPRAYER

23(

•

HECK'S REG. 34•

FESCO PLASTIC

~·
.:~~7

D. ·.. .

10.5 OUNCE

B LEE

16

CHOICE2 FOR

KITCHEN WAX
HECK' S
97•

SJOO

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.06 EACH

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

QUART SIZE

QUART SIZE

IVORY

HECK'S LIQUID

DETERGENT

H;;~~;;RE

HECK'S REG. 89•

•

$144

0-CEDAR

46 OUNCE

;;~. ~~-

HECK'S REG. 85 1

cleaner
&amp;..tot• ... ,nt

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

NYLON

DUST MOP
HECK'S REG.

$1.09
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

6 OZ. RAYON OR 9 OZ. COTTON

DECK MOPS

SAN I-FLUSH
POWDER

CHOICE

0-CEDAR

SPLIT-TIP

LIGHT AND EASY

BRISTLE BROOM

ANGLER BROOM

99(

99&lt;

44&lt;

•

t

17 OUNCE

66(

HECK'S REG. $1.29

,

PACKED SPONGES ...... 44&lt;

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 894

88(

HECK'S REG. 44' PKG.
ALSO: BIG VALUE

HECK'S REG. $1 .73

HECK'S REG. $1.47

73(
WINDOW SHADES

29(

FLOOR WAX

89(

FAVOR

HOUSEWARE DEPT•

4 SPONGES

LIQUID

FURNITURE POLISH

$1 00

THRIFT PACK

46 OUNCE

K_
LEAR

•

DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. TO $1 .79

$144

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 63•

HECK'S REG. $1.88

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

7 OUNCE

0-CEDAR

GLADE

•

CHOOSE FROM ASSORTED
SCENTS: Golden , Evergreen,
French Modern, Spring Flower,
Floral Sachet and Disinfectant.

39(

HECK'S REG. 56 1

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

•

SPONGE MOP

00
?tf?

Glade

r

WOOLITE

7 OUNCE

8

4 FOR

HECK'SREG.

oz.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

63&lt;

33e
HECK'S REG. 191 EA.

D. 10 QT. DISH PAN
E. BUSHEL LAUNDRY BASKET

LIQUID

2FOR

A. 9 QT. UTILITY TUB
B. 10 QT. PAIL
C. 9 QT. WASTEBASKET

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

•

COMET

CONTAINERS

.

oz.

REGULAR SIZE

88(

:-~---.

FLOORMASTER

SPONGE MOP
$222

HECK'S REG.

$1.44
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $2.98

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

10''WAXER

66(
HECK'S REG.
$1.09

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 24, 1971

•

•
MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE

D.icJcie£

KNIT
SHIRTS

MEN'S

SLACKS
SPECIAL
PURCHASE
FLARES
REGULAR CUTS
CONTINENTALS
EXECUTIVE CUTS

4

Get an early start
on the warm weather with these knit
shirts for men. A
new shipment for
Spring brings you
Assorted colors and
styles. Sizes: S-M-l-

FOR

ssoo

HECK'S REG. $6.99

•

ClOTHING DEPT.

66

INFANTS'

$2''

$644

ro$11.00

ClOTHING DEPT.

Flare legged, double-knit nylon
jeans in all new spring colors. These
attractive pants come complete with
belt loops and fly front.

A large selection of stripes,
solids and prints in these permanent press cotton-denim
pant suits. Sizes: 7 · 14.

NATIONAL BRAND VALUES

Xl.

JEANS

PANT SUITS

We feature a large selection of
colors, and styles. Sizes: 28-44
... 29-36.

HECK'S REG. $1.99 EACH

LADIES'

GIRLS'

Choose from a complete range of
sizes. Solids, stripes, plaids and
checks . . . all in easy care fabrics-feawring NO IRONING.

SEE HECK'S
SELECTION

POLO
SHIRTS

OF

Just the thing for the
young ones, 6-18
months, in your fami·
ly. Choose from assorted styles and colors. ALSO AVAILABLE IN SIZES: 1-4

CHILDRENS
E TER
BONNETS

$1!~

REG.
$1.38 .....,._.,.....

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

•
LADIES' NYLON

HALF-SLIP
Pretty and practical half·
slip with Ieee trim or in tai·
lored style. White and
assorted pastel colors.
Sizes S, M, L ... Short and
Average lengths .

$

1

99

HECK'S REG. $2.48

ClOTHING DEPT.

LADIES'
ONE-SIZE

LADIES' COTTON

KNIT TOPS

HOSE

J
SOLIDS!
STRIPES!
PRINTS!
These cotton
knit,
short
sleeve
tops
come in size; S·
M· l.

2 PAIR

BOXER SLACKS
LADIES' KNIT
r~;,

;,

itt

HOT
PANTS
;, ,.,.
$

344

r~;,

'bigg..l
to"d goir\gest" tl\•ng tn fosl'uon
for this Spriftg and Summer ,
T"'-w polye1otaf, doubl• knit
pants feotur• pull -on waist,

cuffed bottom1 and com• in
blue, pink, white, brown, and
lilac.
s- 16.

s;,.,

The stripe denim and hi -rise front &amp; bock
point to comfort and styling in these jumpers
for infants. Mode of durable press polyester
and cotton, these jumpsuits come assorted
colors.

HECK'S IEti. $1.96

ClOTHING DEPT.

$1''

The polyester and cotton fabric in
these slacks mean rugged wear for
the younqers . Completely permanent
press. Choose from prints and solids.
Sizes: 2·4

4.5 OUNCE

BRYLCREEM

77(

$1.14

h't!NNEI'f

SOFSTROKE

stroke.

58(

~
sof'

~L -li~f¥@Wi)cfTAf'-t
-6.75
OUNCE

MACLEANS
TOOTHPASTE
REGULAR OR MINT
COSMETIC DEPT.

58(

TALC

28(
HECK'S REG.
48'

$1 4D~ZEN
HECK'S REG. $2.00

CLOTHING DEPT.

JERGENS FACIAL
CLEANSER

94(

EXTRA DRY

DEODORANT

99(

HECK'S REG. $1 .34

COSMETIC DEPT.

Regular, Hard-To-Hold,
Tinted &amp; Bleached

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. $1 .08

9 OUNCE
ARRID

oz.

SUAVE
HAIR SPRAY

·~~LA VORIS

66(
COSMETIC
DEPT.

13

200UNCE

4.5 OUNCE

COSMETIC DEPT.

APRIL SHOWERS

Softness is highlighted in these softspun diapers. Made of Birdseye
quality. Size: 27x27.

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 88'

4oz.

HECK'S REG.
79•

ClOTHING
DEPT.

REGULAR OR MENTHOL

COSMETIC DEPT.

BIRDSEYE
DIAPERS

REG.
67 1 PAIR

ClOTHING DEPT.

MENNEN

REG.

$1 00

$2.48

ClOTHING DEPT.

11 OUNCE

H~CK'S

$1 ?.~.

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. $1.28

HECK'S REG. $2.38

• I

Choose from Pa ·
cific, cinn. brown,
toast and off
black in these
miracle stretch
hose.

$1.28

co::';!/."

I)

COSMETIC DEPT.
16 Oz.

80z.

SUAVE

DESERT FLOWER
HAND&amp;BODY
LOTION

HECK'S REG. 66•

'bESEJtf

.·.fLoWER

IIANl) ,\ 0 ;:;0~
· 1o;ootl

SHAMPOO AND
CREME RINSE
CHOICE

48(

HECK'S REG. 79 1

HECK'S REG. 84'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

•

•
/

�������</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="74">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1732">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="3827">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2035">
              <text>March 24, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
