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• •

•
12- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport~Y, 0 ., March 2. 1972

Environment
(Continued from page tl
management, conservation,
forest management , soil
science, plant pathology , land
econ om ics.

hou si ng

and

· ·equipment , tamily deve lop'
ment , food technology,
dietetics, food science and
nutrition, sociology , recreation
resour ces . agriculture and
home economics, suggest
areas of study open to students
interested in maintaining the
·· nouri shin~ environment.''
An emphasis of the film was
tha t no prog ram undertaken by
man has or ever will be more
importan t than that which
faces agricu lture today of
raising ·food for an overpopulated world . racets of food
production and prese rvation
and the technology involved,
along with em"ployment opportunities, were presenled .
The OSU team poin ted out
that Ohio State is the only
scho ol offering a degree
program in agriculture .
Meigs students were encouraged to inq uire about environmenl
career
opportunities, and to get "hungup" on the critical things of the
world today rather than .shun
the responsibility by ilacing
the blame on the Establishment.

Mrs. Sheets
(Continued from page I)
Dean of Women .
Mrs. Sheets will be conducting the Home Economics
program in Meigs County and
will be assisting with the 4-H
club program. She is available
for individual consultation by
calling the County Extension
Office in the County Home
Building, 992-3895.

EMS Plan

··":;~;~~ s.~~i~~~=~:·" Road Project
indudl-d in the tour of West
VIrginia Tech's Symphony Estimated to
and Jazz Bands scheduled
for March 6-10.
Cost $774,()()()
The repertoire will indude
!!lusir lnlcrnallonal in srope
(rom a Pulitzer prize Wjoner,
" Prague, 1868" to "Jes us
Christ Superstar", with a Jot
of variety in between. The
program will feature both
symphonk and jazz band
soloists. .

Students F OWid
Guilty by Court
Two former Rio Grande
College students were found
guilty of simple assault
Wednesday afternoon by a
Gallia County petit jury.
Rob Konya , 21, and Eugene
Rafferty, 21, both of Columbus,
had been originally charged
with assault with intent to
produce bod ily harm as the
result of a fight last Oct. 23 with
Roger Stevens, 21, College
Park, Md., a fr eshman at Ri
Grande College. Following the
verdict, Common Pleas Court
Judge Ronald R. Ca lhoun
sentenced both young men to a
60-day term in the Cincinnati
Workhouse and ordered that
they pay the costs or the trial.

Adrian L. Roush
Died Wednesday
Adrian Lester Roush, 71,
Henderson, W. Va ., died
Wednesday afternoon at the
Lakin State Hos pital. Mr .
Roush was born Oct. 30, 1900, at
Graham Station, the son of the
late Reuben and Ellen Roush
Roush.
Surviving are two sisters,
Mrs. Lavina Rickard, Albany ,
and Mrs. Ethel Grimm, of near
Letart, W. Va., and two
brothers, Dorsey, of Letart,
and Stanley, of Albany .
Funeral services will be at 1 p.
m. Friday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Parker Hinzman officiating.
Burial will be in the Broad Run
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 6 this
evening.

(Continued from page 1)
R aervices.
The purpose of the proposed
meeting would be to submit a
proposal that would benefit
Meigs County. Whether the
plan would be approved by the
Ohio Valley Health Services is
something that will have to be
de~rmined after the proposed
plan is submitted, Clark said.
Time and date of the meeting
Cloudy , colde r tonight ,
will be announced.
chance of snow north and east.
Lows in mid 20s. Friday cloudy
and cold, a chance of rain or
NOONE HURT
snow
by afternoon. Highs in the
No one was injured or cited
in a two,car accident at 4:50 p. upper 20s and low 30s north·
m. Wednesday at the junction west.
of County Road 5 and Rt. 7 in
Meigs County. The GaJlia.
Meigs Post Slate Highway Now you Know
The word "s mog " was
Patrol said an auto driven by
Drexal A. Lambert, 58, Rt. I, coined in 1905 in London by Dr.
Rutland , backed into one Harold Desvoeux, a pioneer
operated by Richard L. Fetty ; clean air crusader.
26, Rutla nd. There was minor
damage to both cars. ,

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Department of Highways will
open bids here on March 21 for
improvement and relocation or
three sections or Ohio 554 in
Cheshire Twp., Gallia County,
de!~rred from the first quarter
fisca l '72 construction program
due to a shortage of state
construction funds.
Total programmed estimate
for the project, including not
only constructi on but also
engineering and right or way
costs, is $774,000.
The three sections, one west
or Kyger and two between
Kyger and Cheshire, total 2.3.
miles. Plans call for new 20foot pavement and bridges to
carry Ohio 554 over Kyger and
·Jessie Creeks and TR 17 over
Kyger Creek. Grades will be
raiaed above flood level and
alignment will be adjusted to
improve sight distances .
Relocations will bypass four .
inadequate bridges. Estimated
completion date is Oct. 31.
VACANCIES FILED
Two vacancies on the
Syracuse Board of Public
Affairs were filed Wednesday
nigh t by Mayor Herman
London. Appointed were
Corbett Patterson and Bob
Chapman, both to four year
terms. In other business the
board named Betty Hayes
president. The board meets the
first Wednesday of each
nionth.
MR. FLETCHER DIES
Arthur Fletcher, 89, formerly of Long Bottom, Route I,
died Thursday morning at the
Riverview Manor Nursing
Home in Lucasville . Mr.
Fletcher is survived by his
wife , Mabel ; a daughter,
Geraldine Fletcher, and a son,
Romey, both of Charleston, W.
Va. Funeral aervices will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knob. Burial will be in
Bald Knob Cemetery. Friends
may call at the Ewing Funeral
Home after I p.m. Friday.

Weather

TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Middleport E-R squad
look James Riffle, Racine, to
the Holzer Medical Center at
12;33 a. m. Thursday . Riffle,
driv ing in Middleport, suffered
a aevere headache and was
unable to continue driving. He
notified the police, who called
the squad .

POMONA TO MEET
The Meigs County Pomona
Grange will meet at 8 p. m.
Friday at the Rock Springs
Gran ge Hall with Laurel
Grange the host. Plans will be
made for a banquet in April.

OESTOMEET
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
at the temple. Members are
asked to pay dues then.

Elberfelds - Pomeroy

Many styles to choose from i" button iront and slip-over
styles. Solids and s tripes in all the new spring colors.

See Our Beautiful Selection
of Women's New Spring BlOuses.
Long sleeves and roll s leeves in all the· new
spring colors . A wide se lection of styles and
fabrics to choose from - beautiful solids and
prints . Regular and extra sizes.

vertised on TV - E-Z on . F iberlon - Colony Town - Lustron ~m~.
'

KNIT CAPES
1\-\ade of or ion acry li c knit
wifh fringe assorted patterns- all white. One size

CHROME AND
HOT LEATHER
&lt;Technicolorl
William Smi t h

To ny Young

GP

THE HIRED HAND
ITechnicolorl
Peter Fonda
Warren Da tes

SHOW ST ART57 P.M.

GP

I

See our new spring line of
· Buster Brown in mix and
match shirts, shorts,
scooter skirts, socks and
flare leg pants.

fi ts all.

9.98 . 10.98 .

Visit the 2nd Floor Infants Department
See our fine line of Infants wear. Stretch suits,
diaper sets, dresses, blankets, shirts, sweater
sets, diapers, infants toys and bath toys. Also see
boys and girls 3 to 6x and 7 to 14 suits, dresses,
coats, jackets, sleepwear, gowns, pajamas, slips
and panties . We also carry a line of pre-teen
dresses and coats, blouses, skirts and slacks.

Reg . 2.59 - · - ·
Reg . 2.49 - · - ·
Reg. 1.99- -- ·
Reg. 1.69 - · - ·
Reg. 99c - • • •

All with flu orescent
f
.
cooktop 11ght, ove n
window and light. clock
and timer, lift-up cook-

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

Be sure to see all the other styles in mens knit
shirts - now on display - ready for your selection.

- - · - - - Sale 2 for 3.50
- - - - - - Sale 2 for 3.35
~
Sale 2 for -2.65
Sale 2 for 2.25
- - • - • - - Sale 3 for 2.00

BILLFOLDS
Values to 3.00

Special Purchase
Milliken

E x: fra

heavy ,

woven

si ze.

Regular2.98

Sale 1•49

Bath Towel . . . 2.29
Hand Towel . .• 1.49 .
Wash Cloth - . . 59c

Ready for you to select on the Ist floor . Cards for everyone on
your list -

Father · Son ·- Mother - Daughfer - Grandmother .

LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS

Water repe llent - WO per cent nylon taffeta . unl ined - zipper
front .
So lid colors of navy blue, br own and gold. Sizes sma ll (36-38) ,

-·-

Mens 2. 95 Short Sleeve

Blue Chambray Work Shirts
Small, medium , large and extra large sizes.
Permanent press - long tails- two pockets - 50 per
cent poly ester - 50 per cent cotton .
Stock up now for spring and summer wear .
Friday- Saturday Sale

2.59 .

· Values to 3.50

Sale

99~

BARONET AUTOMATI'C BLAN
Fully Automatic Electric Blanket

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS

OLD COINS WILL BE a part of a flea market to be held
at the Pomeroy Elementary School' beglnnlng at 9 a.m.
Saturday. Separating Indian bead pennies to be sold are,
from the left, Mrs. Carl Roach, Randy Roach; Jim Rosen-

CAPE KENNEDY (UP!)Pioneer 10, fastest object to
leave earth, sped on a near
perfect courae today toward a
historic picture-taking rendez.
vous with the planet Jupiter on
Dec. 2, 1972.
After sweeping within 87,000
miles of the tops of Jupiter's
gtowlng multicolored clouds,
the 565-pound spacecraft wUI
travel on to the far reaches of
the planets and eventually
become the first probe !•leave
the solar system.
It is expected to reach the

59~ - CLING
18 "

Decorat.ive
Adhesive-back all
vinyl stick-on plastic .
Decorates
everythIng.
·Friday and
Saturday

13.95 Twin Size- Sin !lie Control - - . - - - Sale 11.00
14.95 Full Size-Single Control - •.. - . Sale 12.00
16 .95 Full Size-Dual Control • - ... - • Sale 14.00

3 yd. 1.35
Hoover and Norca

Just Received!
New shipment Custom Tailored

Throw-Away

DRAW DRAPERIES
Ready' to Hang!

~

Fiberglass - some self lined with thermal foam .
Solids and patterns in beautiful new spring
colors.

Regular $1.00 Package
Frid•y and Saturday

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
, COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GU.UGAN today msde
several changes on his agenda for a tour of strip mined lands in
eastern Ohio because of a heavy snowfall in thai area. He will
tour the area both by car and airplane.
The governor's office said the plane would land at Zanesville
and his motorcade will then go to near Barnesville for a look at
Hanna Coal Co's. GEM of Egypt, one of the world's largest earth
movers. lie was originally scheduled to land at Barnesville
airport but the heavy snow tbere cancelled out that part of the
plan.

63" - 84'! and 90'' LENGTHS

ORLON
SOCKS
One size fits all sizes 10 to 13. 75 per cent Hi -bulk

WASHINGTON - THE NATION'S unemployment rate
dropped In February to 5.7 pet: from 5.9 pet. in' January, the
lowest rate In 17 months, the government reported today, mainly
from a decline in joblessness among adult workers.
This more than offaet a rise 1!1 unemployment among
teenagers - from 17.8 pet. t&lt;l"i8.8 pet., which matched the
previous high mark aet in World War II. The drop In the jobless
rate was accompanied by a 0.2 hour increase In the average work
week for rank and file workers to 37.3 hours, equaling the highest
mark since July 1970.

o~lon

and 25 per cent stretch nylon . White and
solid colors of black - navy - kelly green . gold .
light blue - maize - bone - cordovan .

Sale Price 69~
Famous Maker

MEN'S

Electric Watches
While they la st .

17.98
8 Track Stereo Tape and Cassette Tape
A nice selecfion of tapes in all popular mu s ic
latest in country and western . Easy listenin~
polka. vocal and sacred.

Large se ler.ti"on of 30" and 36" !laS and electric
ranges. White, avor:ado and t :arvest gohl.
Large double oven Chateau Ranges. Regular
and continuous cle an ovens .

Sale 5.59

.....

SALEI kiMiALL PIANOS
Another shipment of fine quality Klmblll Plonos'- Music O.partmtnl on the lnd floo y
can really save now during our Piano Sate.
·
r. ou
Stop L.. • · See these fjne pianos. Wolnul -·Ponlmll]on . Mlple and Chtr•y wood finis ·
,
~~~u~.imball poanos for their excellent tone, for their fino furniture styling. their oxt~•:;dT:r~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

'

'

baum and Mrs. Richard Rosenbaum. At 3 p.m. an auction
will be held. Numerous articles wlll be offered for sale during
the Saturday evening which is being held by tbe school safety
patrol and their parents ~ raise funds for the annual trip to
Washington, D. C. this spring.

more heat than it receives
from the sun. Scientists also
hoped to determine if there was
.a possiblity its thick atmosphere could support some
fonn of life.
Pioneer 10, drawing power
from four nuclear generators,
set out on its 620-million-mlle
journey to Jupiter Thursday
night. An Atlas-Centaur rocket
accelerated it to a record 31,413
miles per hour-so fast thalli
will be twice as far from earth
as the moon by tonight.
The spacecraft performed
the first critical steps of its 639day mission flawlessly and by 2
a.m. EST today, it had its big
nine-foot dish antenna pointed
back toward the rapidly
shrinking earth . .
The ambitious, $67.5 million
expedition opens a new era in

'

-wm.~:~:;~"t;&amp;?.;~-:;-;m::::::::m:::::::~::

DIEHL IS ILL
James Diehl, principal at
Meigs High School Is con!lned to the Intensive care
unit at Holzer Medical
Center for observation.
Mt. Diehl became Ill at
school Thursday morning.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by head
football roarh Charles
Chancey and later trans·
!erred to Holzer.
man's exploration Qf the
univerae. Pioneer 10 is the first
to venture out beyond Mars,
through the haZardous asteroid
hell and.on through uncharted
space to Jupiter. It is expected
to remain in radio contact with
earth unW 19711 when it is 1.5
billion miles away.

Ice, Snow Caused Accidents
ley highways were blamed In there was heavy damage to his
two single-car accidents early car.
today, . the Meigs County
At 6;45 a.m. on SR 338, five
Sherifl's' Dept. reported.
tenths
of a mile southwest of
At 3 a.m. at the intersection
of U. S. Rt. 33 and 7 at Rock county road 2llat Apple Grove,
Springs, James T. Hobhs, 46, Kermit Drew Fisher, 29,
Upper Malbough, Md., was Racine Rt. 2, was traveling
Ira veling south when his car northeast, skidded Into a utility
went off the highway on the pole and went over an em·
right, came back on tbe high· bankment. There was light
way and turned over on its top. damage to the car, and no
There were ..no injuries, but personal injuries.

An Ohio Department of Health mobile unit, sponsored by the
Meigs County Health DeparUnent and the Meigs County
Tuberculosis and Health Assn., will be in Meigs County, Tuesday
March 7, through March 16 for mass skin testing of tuberculosis
and to x-ray lqlown positive reactors.
Also from March 7_through March 10, skin testing and
readings of the tests will be carried out In the schools of Meigs
County In grades specified by the Ohio Department of He~lth . All
school persormel and workers in the schools also will be tested.
Parents wishing their booth, food aervice operation,
children who are not in the school children expecting to
designated grades tested, work at school cafeterias,
of
socia l
should assume the respon· members
organizations
such
as
lodges,
sibilily of having their children
tested at the health department granges, churches, emergency
offices on East Main Sl., squad and fire department
Pomeroy, between 2and 6 p.m. meinbers, PTA organizations,
on March 13 and 14. Skin tests Legion post members and
will be given all persons packing houae employes and
desiring them at the health anyone serving food to the
department during those hours . general public must have a
on those dates. Skin tests will tuberculin skin test.
Known positive .reactors to
be read at the health depart·
ment offices from 2 to 6 p.m. on skin testing wiD be x-rayed at
Wednesday and Thursday, the mobile unit which will be
parked on the upper parking Jot
March 15 and 16.
Any person who will need a in Pomeroy. The mobile unit
heal!h card during the coming visits Meigs only once each
year in order to work at a fair year.

Taft Gets Bush
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. William B. Saxbe, R.Qhio,
says he doesn't want to gel into
an intra-party dispute, so he's
not going to appeal the White
House decision to replace
Interstate Commerce Com·
missioner John W. Bush of
Portsmouth, Ohio.
Only Sen. Robert Tart Jr., R·
Ohio,
on
the
state's

I

By GEORGE HARGRAVES, SUP!\
FREEZING RAIN, SNOW AND SLEET - PART OF a low
Meigs Local School District
pressure front covering the Eastern United States - continued to
Let me begin with an apology for not being able to
cause ma.Slve power blackouts and hamper traveling early
produce a colwnn last week. Weare quite busy. You
today. &amp;&gt;me 10,000 Pennsylvania Bell Telephone subscribers
don 'I lose the assistance of a worker like Larry
were without service Thursday night and earlY today in the . Morrison wit!Jout encountering a lot of extra pressing
metropolitan Pittsburgh area and southwestern Pennsylvania,
problems. By the way, Mr. Morrison is doing well.
where temperatures dropped 39 degrees In 12 hours and rain
turned to ice on utility lines.
Speaking Schools-No. 227
A .flood watch for 15 western Pennsylvania counties was
Cards may be aent to his home (Uncoln Drive ,
canceled Thursday night, but the Allegheny, Monongahela and
Pomeroy) as he is at home on weekends now.
Ohio rivers are expected to '.rest only one foot below flOod stage
· I would like to uae this space this evening to touch
early today. Heavy SOQW warnings for amounts of four inches or
more were In effect for higher elevations of southern Pennsyl· a n110ber of areas. I trust that one of them will be of
some Interest to you.
vania Thursday night.
We are interested In having our facilities used .
SAIGON - SIX AMERICAN SOLDIERS were wounded In Indeed, they are greatly used, as·could be seen in the
the past :U houra, four of them today when they set off a Coni· building use book that we k&lt; ep. It is vital that
munist booby trap not farfrom Saigon, the U. S. comm~nd said. responsible adult supervision be on hand when young
people use school facilities. This is essential for lne
Thefou~ were members of the 3rd Brigade, lsi Caval~y Division,
one of only two brigades with ground combat troops rem' :o1ing in protection of the young people involved. We do this
Vietnam. They were leaving a belicopter on a mission 20 miles with groups using Rutland, Salisbury, Uarrisonv:.le,
Middleport, etc. on weekends or evenings. We must ·
north of Saigon when they touched off theboobyttap.
'

'

'

I

congressional delegation ,
opposes the nomination of the
62-year-old Bush for a third
term on the ICC.
A Taft spokesman said the
Cincinnati senator "always
told Mr. Bush he wasn't going
to nomimite him and has made
another nomination ." The
Democrat, however, did get
(Continued on page 10)

Nine officers of the
America n Electric Power
Company and Ohio Power
Company will attend the
"Information Dinner" at the
Meigs Inn Monday night
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
John Kerr, president of the
chamber, and Johh Reece,
public affairs coordinator of
the Gen. Jame; Gavin Power
Plant at Cheshire, said dinner
- for which all tickets have
long been sold - will begin at
6:45 p.m. followed by a
question-answe r type meeting.

Fielding questions directed
to the theme, "Development
that will occur in this ·area
because of the construction of
the power plant and the deep
coal Meigs Mine at Salem
Center," will be ;
J oe P. Gills, executive vice
president of the Ohio Power ;
George J . Huber, executive
assistant, Ohio Power ; John T.
Dowd, project manager, Gavin
Power Project, American
Electric; Peter R. Steenland,
assistant vice president and
executive assistant to the
president, AEP; J . W. "Bill"

WASHINGTON, Pa . (UPl)A $10,000 reward awaits the
right person who telephones a
Philadelphia number with the
right information - the real
name of a mysterious "Tony
or whomever else arranged the
assassination of Joseph A.
" Jock" Yablonski .
The two sons of the slain Uni·
ted Mine Workers official, attorneys Kermeth and Joseph
Yablonski, posted the reward
Thursday night after the
second of five suspects was
sentenced to death in the
electric chair.
The Yablonski sons promised
strict anonymity to anyone who
telephones the office or special
prosecutor Richard Spragueat 215~296 - with in·
formation leading to the arrest
and conviction of the real
mastermind behind the Dec.
31, 1969, slayings of their
father, mother and sister in
their Clarksville home.
Sprague said the death pen·
alty imposed Thursday on Paul
E. Gilly, 38, a former Cleve·
·tand housepalnter, bro11ght
federal investigators another
step closer to the mysterious
"Tony" whom witnesses said
actuall y paid for the
assassination.
Gilly's conviction on three
counts of first degree murder
left only his wife, Armet:e
Gilly, 30, and father-in~aw,
Silous Huddleston, 64 , of
LaFollette, Tenn ., yet to stand
trial in the Yablonski murders.
Codefendant Aubran W.
Martin, 23, was sentenced to
death in November and Claude
Vealey , 28, pleaded . guilty
earlier.
Sprague said he had not yet
decided whom to bring to trial
in ApriL
"I think 'Tony ' will be a little
more worried tonight than he
was last night," said Sprague,
P hilade lphia's ass istant
district attorney . "! think
eventually he'll be prosecuted.
Each prosecution is a step.
We're going right to the top."
Gilly shouted a few words in
a squeaky voice distorted by
emotion when jurors brought in
their recommendation for
death after three and a half
hours' deliberation.
One prosecutor quoted Gllly
ali saying; "I'm not going to
take all the blame." Defense
attorney Gerald Gold, sitting
beside Gilly, said the defendant
addressed the jury : " You
heard ail the circumstances. If
(Continued on page 10)
11

DON NEI.WN
Don Nelson, a 1967
graduate of Middleport High
School, has accepted em·
ploymenl with the Pomeroy
National Bank. A varsity
basketball player during his
years at ~lddleport High
School, Neloon hao com·
pleled three years' study at
Ohio Stale University and
the past 20 months has been
employed with City Loan at
Athens and McArthur. He Is
married to the former
Maarlaha Dorst of PoQleroy
••d the couple )las a son,
Jeffrey Todd, two. Nelson Is
a member of the Middleport
Church of Christ. The I8D1Uy
presently Is residing with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Nelson, Grant St.,
Middleport.

C OF C TO MEET
A meeting of the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce
scheduled for 7:30 this evening
at the Columbus an(! Southern
Ohio Electric. Co. office has
been postponed until next
Friday evening, March 10.

9 Utility Officials to
Attend Dinner Monday
Llzon,
appointed
plant
manager of Gavin Plant, Ohio
Power ; Ed A. Higgins, division
man age r,
Portsmouth
Division , Ohio Power ; Fred A.
Morrow, Pomeroy Manager,
Ohio Power; Gealy W.
Wall work, general mine
superintendent, Southern Ohio
Coal, and Reece.
Those who have made
reservations are asked to pick
up their tickets by noon
Monday at the Meigs County
Branch of the Athens County
Savings and Loan Company,
296 West Second St.

these written reconunendations we will attempt to
follow th• same policy at all buildings and with all
structure the revised code.
groups in order to be fair .
If all goes according to plan , by the time you read .
To the parent who wrote the long, unsigned letter
this,
our mining class members should have had a
about comparing the accomplishment of students
look at a coal mine.
from various schools, I have some Information, but I
The new stale school foundation program is
have no intention of discussing it in the newspaper .
contained
in HB 475 that was passed last December.
Contact me 1111d I'll let you know what I have learned .
To have full funding under l~is program a district
If you are hesitant to do so, I can tell you that there
needs 22.5 mills tor operation. All three districts in
are no great differances to be found in grades at·
Meigs County wlll be seeking to reach this level of 22.5
tamed.
Saturday mornings buzz at the Middleport gym mills at the May 2 primary election .
NEWS AND NOTEfSThe water supply problem
all winter long. A Jot of elementary basketball
at
Salem
eenter seems have been solved. We trust
players and their parents gain a lot from the program
that it stays solved _
ks for the manv contacts
sponsored by the Middleport Recreation Council and
' about the welding job. As o1 this writtni, we have
supervised 'by Charles Chancey.
(illed the position _ we_are receiving quite a number
The Monday and Tuesday evening adl!lt program
also holds a good crowd of interested participants. of contacts from prospective teachers - Until the
federal pay board acts, we are in the uneasy position
Coach Chancey also heads this activity.
The annual review of the dress code by the Mei gs of not knowing what our salary schedule will be next
I ~~-al Board will · begin soon. We have a~ked for year - Any person who still belie,es that we have no
written recommendations on each part of the code to drug a buse problem in Meigs County just can't be
be submitled by'·the student cou11cil. the high school very alert - Don 't call it a "school problem" - It's
fa rull)' . and the jun 'or high school faculty. From i muct. more than that.

'

•'

For the
Real Tony

School Facilities are There to be Used

ol

FREE CUSTOMER PARKIN_GLOTS - SEcOND STREET AND MEcHANiC STR~ET

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

star Aldebaran in 1.7 million
years. On the slight chance it
might encounter Intelligent life
elsewhere in the galaxy,
Pioneer 10 carries an !den·
tification plaque. The man
pictured on the plaque has his
hand raised in a gesture of
peace.
Spectacular Giant
· Jupiter, fifth planet out from
the sun, is the spectacular
giant of the solar system. It has
12 moons, a puzzling red "eye"
10 times the size of the United
States and the planet generates

ews.. in Briefi

For all Vacuum Cleaners

· Mens and Youn!l Mens

Fits sizes 10-13. Solid colors
black, cordo vari, w hite,
hunter green, charcoa l,
nav y bl ue .

!

1r ·

Sale!

Washabl e - mothproof - non allergenic . Lighted
Dial Control - adjusts to room temperature.
Avocado - Gold - Pink - Blue.

Special Sale!

45" Wide
65 per cent Dacron
Polyester · 35 per cent
Cotton.
Wash and Wear
Preshrunk - Drip Dry .
Little or no Ironing - permanent press. Beautiful
shades. white, black - light
pa,lel~ •. detk Shldts.
'·• S)MI~J·I Sate
Friday and S.turday

Selected from Stock

Sale 3.88

'

I

BROAI)CLOTH

WOMEN'S GLOVES

UMBRELLAS

I

'

3 Spools 1.00

Hallmark Easter Gift Wraping Paper - Ribbon .
Card enclosures - Buy yours now.

BUBBLE

\

. Extra strong . white . 250
yard spools.
Spaci•J Sale

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

medium (40-421, large (44-46) and extra large 148-50) .
Special Sale Price

2.95

..

I

Quilting·Thread

Gra ndchildren " Sweetheart . Husband . Wife.

Regular 6.00

,...,.

·-

Coats &amp; Clark's

HALLMARK EASTER CARDS

$10,000

Tests
Plan -i-s Set

Blanket Bags - Shoe Bags .
Zipper Closure . Jumbo

ja cquard .

TEN CEN~ .

s

CLOSET
ACCESSORIES

Bath Ensembles

Brig. Gen. 'Jim' Hartinger

Of 'llle Meigi-M01011 Area
FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1972
PHONE 992-2156

fine candies in Easter wrap
- marshmallow eggs •
spiced Jelly Bird eggs creme eggs . chocolote
· c_overed marshmallow
eggs - creme eggs wtth
fruit and nuts • chocolate
rabbits.
Now is the best time to buy
what you need.

You ' ll enjoy see ing fhese fine Hallmark cards and selecfing
the ones you want .

Sale! Mens 100 Percent Nylon

t op, removable oven
door and doo r sea ls,

and ca n't-spill oven
rac ks. Plu s woodlone
tri m on backguard and
front of range . For na tural
contrast or blend ing with kitchen cabinets.

.

Tfr.e-Intere~"

Devoted-To
POMEROY-MIDDLEPOR_I. O_H!O

NO_.XXIV NO. 228

~ig

·
·
-

¥ens and Womens

100 per cent acrylic shirts - crew neck . fashion
knit shirts. Excellent color selection .

2.95

Easter
Candies
selection of &amp;rach's

BRA AND GIRDLE SALE

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS

DRESS SOCKS

"

- -

March 3-4

BUSTER BROWN
CHILDREN'S WEAR

Be sure to see all the other styles - mens and
youn!l mens dress · flare leg slacks. In denims .
cords • blends. Sizes 29 to so.

~:=::

.

at

of the popular ready tied ties.

Womens

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

3-2-3tc

Friday &amp; Saturday

·

Stop 1n the bosy mens department lsi floor. See !hi! fine
selection of Wembley Ties and select one or two for yourself
or for gifts. These are the same Wembley ties you see ad-

100 per cent Polyester double knits that look so
well - wasiJ perfectly - permanent press. Good
selection of solid colors and smart patterns . Both
regular c ut and flare leg style. Sizes 29 to 42
waist .

hardtop, one loca I owner ,
exce ll en t condi tion . Good
tires. ex tra good fin ish. Phone

Tonight, March 2
NOT OP EN

Regular ties to tie and

Solid .colors - new sfripes . neat pat1erns.

Regular Sizes 10 to 20 ---. - - - - - - 4.98
Extra Sizes 32 to 38 - .... - - ~ - . - 5.98

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT DRESS SLACKS

Woodtone

He is credited with· 100
combat missions in the F-4C
Phantom while serving in
Vietnam. The general holds a
master's degree in business
administration from George
Was hington University,
Washington, D. C. He completed the Industrial College of

the Armed Forces in June 1966.
Included
among
the
general's decorations are the
Legion of Merit, Distinguished
Flying Cross, the Air Medal
with eight oak leaf clusters,
and the Air Force Commendation Medal.
General Hartinger and his
wile, the former Susan Aliensworth of Middleport, reside at
3215 Austin Drive in Colorado
Springs with their three
children, Jlmmer, 21; Kris, 19
and Mike ' 17

•

·NJMEN'S BONDED SLACKS

100 per cent acrilan acry lic - elasti c slipon style . stitched
front · full cut for comf ort .
Color s inclu de navy blue, brown , black, and lilac.

2 for 5.00

MAGICCHE~

McConnell AFB, he was F-Ill
test director in the U. S. Air
Force Tactical Fighter
Weapons Cemer at Nellis Air
Force Base, Nev.

two foreign assignments. The
first was at Furstenfelbruck
Germany, and the .second at'
Kunsan, Korea, where he flew
his first combat missions in the
f .lJ.IE Thunder jet.
·More than 4,000 of his 4,700
flyi ng hours are in single
engine jet aircraft and since
stepping into the aeat of an F·
80, some of the aircraft
General Hartinger has piloted
are the F -M, F·l02, F-UH, F ·
105, F-1116, F-4C and the F-111.
Prior to his assignment at

An Excellent Value In

For This Sale

AUTO SALES
1965 BU ICK . Wild cat, 2 door

MEIGS' THEATRE

COLORADO SPRINGS
The Air Force veteran Mcconn'll! "f;ir Force Base,
.
(Special) - Brig. Gen. James fighter pilot with more than Kan. '
.'
General
Hartinger
was
)lorn
V. Hartinger of the North 4,000 hours in single engine jet
American Air Defense Com- · aircraft has been NORAD's April 17, 1925, in Middleport,
msnd (NORAD) headquarters deputy chiel or staff for Plan:i Ohio; and was graduated from
here, a native of Middleport, since July 1970. In this pOsition, high school there. He entered.
Ohio, has been nominated by he develops NORAD plans and the U. s. Infantry in 1943 and
the President of the United objectives for air defense of the two years later entered the U.
States for promotion to major continent. He was promoted to S. Military Academy. in 1949,
general,
brigadier general in October upon graduation ,- he was
commissioned a second
General Hartinger .again IS 1970.
the junior man on the two-star
Prior to moving to NORAD, lieutenant in the U. S. Air
promotion Jist as he was when . he was commander of the Force.
Within the next four years,
he was promoted to ~rigadl~r famed Flying Tiger unit, the
general.
23rd Tactical Fighter Wing, at General Hartinger had logged

WEMBLEY "TIES
FOR MEN

Sizes small , ll)ed ium an~ ldrge.

Special Purchase
Mens Banlon

992-2143 or 992-2142.

2nd· Star

9 P.M.

·An~ther Big Shipment

WOMEN'S KNIT TOPS
2.98 to 6.98

larg e ( 17-17 112} sizes. All permanent preSs .
Soli d co lors in new shades for spring and summer . Beautiful
sfripes and plaid s. 65 per cent Pol yester - 35 per cent cotton
blended fabrics .

LOCAL TEMPS
The te mperature in downtown Pomeroy at II a. m.
Thursday was 62 degrees with
light rain fa lling.
CASE DISMISSED
The case, Th e Citizens
National Bank vs. Robert
Imboden, et al, has been
dismissed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court .

SATURDAY 9:30

'

See our New Selection of

Small (14-1411? ), Med ium (15-1511:2 ), large ( 16-16112 ) and exira

Veterans Memorial Hospital
DISCHARGED - Opal
Cremeans, Betsy Weaver ,
Winnie McKenzie, Steve
Lavalley , Marvin Darst, Paul
Henderson, Amy Eynon,
Clarence Longstreth, Richard
Cross, Barlow Pearson.
·

y

E ERFELDS IN POME
TO
·SHOP f'RIDA Y

,'\J

Bob Hope Will
Lead Ohio '72
'
Cancer Crusade
The master showman of
these times, Bob Hope, has
accepted the position of 1972
Crusade Chairman ror the Ohio
Division of the American
Cancer Society , according to
Ja mes Brewington, President
of the Society's Meigs County
Unil.
The man who has won nearly
a thousand awal'ds for his
humanitarian and professional
activities, will be guest of
honor at the American Cancer
Society, Ohio Division 's 14th
Annual
Cured
Ca ncer
Assembly and· 1972 · Kickoff
Meetin~. March 2G"t the Ohio
Union 011 the campus of Ohio
State University in Columbus.
Paul casd and John Reece,
Co-chairman of the Crusade in
Meigs County, will attend.

�.

. . .

!&gt;IIICHt:K.'i MF.t:r

Const•mer Protected u1
Popular House Action ,
--

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP)) - The
Oh10 General Assembly has
adJourned for the week after
aclang on a popular consumer
credll b1ll and ~ proposal to,
pump an estimated $1 5
nnlhun mto the coffers of
saggmg muniCipal trans1t
cumpames

FRED PUWNS

MICKY WILLIAMS

HEP BARBERS - Back recently from the AII.Ohio
Edllcatlonal Seminar are Micky Williams, and Fred Pullins
of the Karr's Barber !~lop, 110 Lynn street, Pomeroy
~10red by the Ohio State Barber College, the theme of the
llellllnar was "Haircuts Are Coming Back," and lectures and
demonstrations were given in all phases of modern barber
styUng. Nationally known barber stylists, Luigi caruso,
James Rocco, Robert DeGiacomo and Joseph Sc10scia, all
from Pittsburgh, taught the various subjects, who satd that
flag-tops and butch cuts will not dornmate the scene m the
near future.
The "in-etyle" will be a head of hair that is full - but
neat . The hack Will just barely touch the collar, on the sides,
the ears will etlber be fully exposed or only partially covered
For the most part, men will still wear thell' hBll' low on the
forehead Karr's Barber Shop offers complete barbermg
sa-vtces mcludlng razorcutting, stylmg, and stra1ghtenmg.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Med1cal Center, F1rsl
Ave and Cedar Sl. General
v1s1llng hours 2-4 and 7-8 p m
Matermty v1s1tmg hours 2 30 to
4 31l p.m Parents only on
Ped~alncs Ward.
Births
"' Mr and Mrs. Kenneth
~ Yemn , Jackson, a daughter,
Mr and Mrs. James H. Harns,
Galhpohs, a daughter ; Mr. and
Mrs Robert L Ruff, Thurman,
• a son; Mr and Mrs Da v1d
Raynor, Galhpohs, a daughter,
and Mr and Mrs. Domvan
Garber, Vinton, a daughter
~
Discharges
• Mrs. Harvey David Slam
and son, Patncia Sue Hudson,
MarJone M Fruth, W1U1arn
: Ferrell If, Mrs Clotls Eugene
: Hart and daughter, Mrs
; James Imes and daughter,
; Earl F Kmker, Patnc1a A

I
i

i
••

Maynard, Lemlla L King,
Mrs W1lham A Zmn and son,
Terry Jean Kmg, Ehzabelh P.
Allman, W1ldah Burdette, Mrs
Jerry M. Comer and son,
Waller Morns, Patnc1a Ann
Peck, Morgan L Powell, Lorn
Ann Snowden, May Walker and
Arthur Fletcher

SERVICES TONIGHT
ALFRED - World Day of
Prayer services will be held
here at the Alfred Umted
Methodist Church Fnday
evemng, March 3, at 7-45 All
members of churches on the
Cbarge, and any other church
members, are mVIted . The
service 1s sponsored by the
Women 's Society of Cbnst1an
Sel'Vlce, with June Stearns
program leader

t

-..U~~len U~lp
..

J&gt;

ll

·us. • •

~

..

By Helen Bottel

~~

Aftermath ol Bigamy

Dear Helen .
We've been marrted 20 years and have six children. In 1968 my
husband "married" another woman while still hvmg with his
~ family and me.
I found out about 'll almost three years later He sa1d she hved
about 200milesfrom here (he's a salesman and on the road a lot)
and there is a 13-rnonth-old baby They'd broken up a year ago
t andhe'dpaidfor her "divorce" Shed1dn'task chtld support She
has a good job and seems content
~
I forgave him and everything has been fine at home. But I
~ recently learned that this woman 1s usmg my husband's name,
~ and her chUd likewiSe'
It's bad enough that he spent our money on her and even paid
i for a "divorce," but does she have any nght to use MY name'
~ Wlthoutspendingmore than we have on lawyers, how can I force
, her hack to her ma1den name"1 - MAD

I=

i

S

:~

Dear Mad ·
I'm not a lawyer, but my mslmcts say, "Leave bad enough
alone before you make 1t worse'"
Your husband was a btgamist He's reformed No one seems
permanently hurt - but YOU m1ght be 11 the facts came out
• You'll probably never meelthlS woman or her ch1ld So 1sn'l1l
best to drop the matter'
U you don'tagree, consult your Legal AidSoc1ety - H

•
i
!
i!

' Dear Helen

The House Thursday
unammously adopted a
heavily-sponsored bipartisan
b1ll lo ehmmate credil traps
desp1le the fact 1l was considerably weaker than the
ongmal measure mlroduced a
year ago
And the Senate gave 23-4
approval of the bill reimbursing mumc1pal trans1t bus
operators for s1x of the seven
cents they pay m taxes on a
gallon of fuel
The credit bill, cleared 80-(),
had 51 sponsors - more than
half the House membership. It
now goes to the Senate
One of the mam proviswns

fmanclallnsJjtuhons fAke over
cnllechon of installment
payments but are not liable for
defects m the product, The origmal bill would have
made them liable for claims,
hut the bill as adopted gives the
consumer 15 to 30 days to
report any defects. After that,
he has no recourse.
Rep. Harry J Lehman, DShaker Heights, tried to get
this grace period extended to 60
to 90 days. His motion was
labled, 41-36, alter Rep. Joseph
P. Tulley, R-Mentor, contended It could make retailers
reluctant to extend credit.
"This will work to the
d1sadvan tage of the very
people we are trymg to
protect," Tulley sald. "This
would be a time bomb which
could explode m the bank's
face any time within 60 days."

DaiiJ

Fran tier,

Moore and June Collins

by Thomas "'Thomp

To Kill AW1lch, by Bill Knox sonThe Redbook Cookbook.
The Saml and lhe People 1Edlledl by Ruth Fatrch•ld
Importers, by Leslie Char te ns
Templatlon lo Sleal. by Noel Pomeroy
The Plclorlal Encyclopedia
B Gerson
of
FIShes, by S Frank
Mile Htgh, Mtle Deep, by
Landscapmg
with Vmes, by
Rtchard K O'Malley
Frances
Howard
Two Ltltle Rtch Girls, by
Garden Hobbtes, by Estelle
M1gnon Eberhart
H
Rles
Dealh m a Sunny Place. by
The Arl of Macrame, by Joan
R1chard Lockndge
Murder Most Foul An Fisher
Fun Party Games, by
thology, Myslery Wrllers of Bernice
Hogan
Amenca, Edtled by Harold Y
lnses,
by Harry Randall
Masur
How
to
Get a Good Ntght's
Alfred H1tchcock Presen ts
Steep,"
by
Peter J Ste\ncrohn,
Stones lo Slay Awake By
MD
A G1fl From Earth, Larry
RusSia tn the Twentieth
N1 ven
Century.
The Walch Below, James Nenarokov by Albert P
Whtte
The Paths of Poetry, by
Thorns, Roberl Silverberg
The M•dw1ch Cuckoos, John

repreounlattve
Bott.nellt
Gallagher , Inc . 12 East "2nd
St , New York Ctty , Ne'W York
Sl.lbscrtpl ton rates
De
livered by carr.er where
ava1lable 50 cent5 pe-r week ,
By Motor Route where earner
&amp;.ervtce not hallable One
month Sl 75 . 8y mall '" Oh10
and W va . One year su 00
Snc months $7 2S
Three
months s.e 50 Subscr1pt1on
pr1ce tncludes Sundav Ttmes

Senttnel

WIN AT BRIDGE

Drag onfltght.

Anne

NORTH
• 932
¥K101G4J

Louts Untermeyer.

Carder's Parad1 se, Malcolm

Levene

The

Whole

Man,

John

Brunner

The Wanderer, Fritz Letber.

Cnme Prevenhon m Ihe 30th

Centur y, Edtled by Hans
Stafan Santesson

ASpecter Is Haunltng Texas.

Fntz Le1ber

Bug Jack Barron, Norman
Spinrad
The Day of lhe Jackal,
Fredenck Forsvth

3

t6

... Q 106

Me

Caffrey

TWO APPOINTED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Recreation and Resources
Commission has approved the
recent slaff appointments of
Jack E M1ller an~ G Lyman
Dawe In the Natural Resources
Deparlmen l, Dtreclor Wtlham
B Nye sa1d Thursday
M1ller was named ch1ef of
the d1v1s1on of 011 and gas

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

Leiters of opilllon are welcomed . They s~ould be less
th111300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
I and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be
I withheld upon pabllcatlon, however, on request. Letters
I
I should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personHlltles.

Middleport Churches Commended
Dear S1r:
Mtddleport elementary school gym has been the scene this
past week of an unusual senes of meetmgs. An effort m
evangelism has been sponsored by most of the churches In the
town cooperating in this common cause. Although each of the
partiCipating denominations retained its dlstmctive approach to
the Cbristian message, they sang and prayed together, and
presented a collective witness to thell' atrishan fatth.
All never before 1n the history of our nation, soon to celebrate
its bicentenmal, a sptr1tual renewalts needed w1thln and without
of the boundanes of our country. We are threatened by the
Mmster forces of godless matertahsm. Next year a ooordlll8ted
program called Key 73 IS prOiJOsed and ~ndorsed by most
churches, large and small. It is hoped that the successful
crusades m Middleport for this second time In the past three
years will prove a model of what can be done It could well serve
as a pilot for a Meigs County Area campaign lor the
proclamation phase of ;~ey 73.
The slogan adopted by the consultation which has the
backmg of leading rellgtous churchmen In Umted States and
canada IS "Confronting the Continent for Cbrtst." We believe the
churches of Mtddleport are to be commended 1s an advance
vanguard In this prornmmg movement.
Jan ·es A lJe Weerd,
Middleport EvangeEcal Crusade Speaker

DIES OF BURNS
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - A
Cleveland man died Thursday
of burns suffered when a
gasoline can m a car where he
was s1tlmg 1gmted, selling the
automobile aftre The vtctim
was Rudy Brinson , 'tl.

Each year the nation's
livestock producers must
diSpose of an estimateil two
bllhon tons of ammal waste, 10
limes that generated by the
human populahon. Thts
problem has become one of the
major envll'onmental dilemmas or modern agrtclllture
Problems associated with
the management, handling,
and disposal of wastes will be
exammed durmg an An1mal
Waste Sympos1um Thursday,
March 9, at the Ohw
Agricultural Research and
Development Center, Wooster
Planned espec1ally for
hveslock producers, the
program will foeus on many

111 scwmg. The next meeting
w1~ be held allhe home olMrs
Oral" Drake. Present were
Mrs Helen Mllhoanr MPs-.
Anna Wilson, Mrs. Grace'
Warner, Mrs Jean Blazewtcz,
Mrs Ruth Moore, Mrs.
Marlene Wtison, Mrs Delores
Will, Mrs Mabel Moore, Mrs
Drake, Mrs Mary Bpwen, Mrs.
Janet Korn and Mrs Dtxon.

'

WEST

EAST

• J6
• 10
¥AQ
¥J982
tQ87 5
tKH32
... AKJ95
.. 812
SOUTH (0)
.AKQ8154
¥5
t A 109

aspects of the ammal waste
problem.
Thooe attendlng- u;e
pos1um should plan to )OlD one
or two tours to be conducted of
the OAR DC · Beef Center
Manure Handling FaciliUes.
The fll'sl tour begmnlng at 9
a.m. w1ll precede~ morning
program. The final lour will
immediately follow the atternoon session.
Ltvestock producers and
others Interested in attending
are urged to send advance
registration to Wooster Area
Ext~nsion Center, OARDC,
Wooster, Ohio 44691. A
registration fee of $2 will in·
elude lWlch.

Congress Mandates Job of Service
To Military F~Jmilies to Red Cross
The phone rings at 9 p.m. m sends a message to that effect
the home of a Red Cross Ser- to the local chapter so that the
v1ce lo Military Families family can be told !hal the
worker A mother of a ser- serviCeman 1s on his way
v1ceman 1s requeshng an home ThiS return message can
emergency leave for her son m be figured m to the cost for the
V1etnam because hiS Sister IS service
cnt1cally 111.
The cost of the field d~recThe Red Cross worker tor's salary (aboullhesameas
qwckly venf1es the Illness w1lh a schoolteacher's) as well as
the family physician and the cost to mamtain the field
secures hiS recommendatiOn d~rector in V1etnam IS a part of
In this mstance the doctor the total cost for the semce
conftrms that the sister IS
Thus, a message wh1ch
Critically Ill and recommends might cost the local chapter $5
lhe serviceman's presence.
or $6 to process may cost the
The local Red Cross worker nalwnal orgamzalton many
telephones the Nallonal Red t1mes thiS amount 'l';!! local
Cross commWlications off1ce m chapter could not send the
Washmglon, D. C Up unlit now message directly, because the
the cost of the service IS local Armed Forces will accept such
- a percentage of the Red a message only from the
Cross worker's salary and the American NatiOnal Red Cross.
cost of the telephone call
Without access to this worldA Red Cross worker in wide commumcallons network,
Washmglon puts the message the Red Cross could nol
on a teletype tape The
d
provt e emergency messages.
message IS sent over m1Utary
A Red Cross field director
communic'alwns hnes m covers every U. S military unll
V1etnam. The cost of sendmg in the world. The f1eld dtrector
the message IS p1cked up by the 1s an employee of the Nallonal
natwnal orgamzatwn from Red Cross and without hiS
fWlds contributed from local asstslance, the local chapter
chapters on a fatr-share for- would have no means of
mula basis
ass1stmg lam1hes m comA short l1me later the mWliCallng w1lh servicemen,
message amves m V1etnsm A even m emergency s1tualions
Red Cross fteld director
ServiCe to m1lllary famtlles
stationed w1lh the troops 1s a chapter obligation of the
recetves the message. He talks Amer~can NatiOnal Red Cross,
to the serviceman and wh1ch has a congresswnal
discu5ses the message wllh the -"mandate to serve as a
' commandmg off!cer. It 1s the med1um of commumcat!on liE!' "
commandmg officer's decision tween the people of the Umted
and his alone whether the
serviceman
gets
the LEGAL NOTICE
emergency leave. The Red
NOTICE
Cross only provides a message
The underSigned woll offer lor
serv1ce from the family doctor sale, by auclton , allhe prem ises
of the Un1ted Method 1st Church
to lhecommandmg off1cer. The Paroonage at Reedsville, Oh 1o,
leave 1s approved.
the parsonage real estale, on
he
Red
Cross
field
dl•ector
March
9, 1971, at l oo O'Clock
T
P M T~e
properly will be sold
fa the highest bidder, reserving
lo me Troslees lhe right to
relect the h•ghest bid In the
event 1f tS deemed Insufficient
Edward Blake
Dana Hoffman , Sr
Ben Buckley
Charles HenSley
Harold Brannon
lead Maybe West would not
Trusttes,
Reedsville Circuit of
have the last trump
Unlled Methodist Church
Unfortunately We s l d1d
hold 11 and led 1l, whereupon (31 3, 5, 6, 7, e, Sf
South had to wmd up w1th
only mne tncks
All South had to do to
Notlce on F 111 nt of
Inventory and Appnlsement
make h1s contract was to
Probate Court
thank for a moment before The State
of Ohio, Meigs
leadmg to trick-three . Then County .
To the Admintstratrix of the
he could play e1ther a club
estate.
to such of the following
or a hearl
as art&gt; residents of the state of
West would wm and lead Ohio, YIZ - the surviving
the second trump but now spouse, the next of k1n, the
lctartes under the w tll,
South would be able to make benef
and to the attorney or altorneys
the same d1amond play and representing any of ~ the
then dtscard hts 1 a s t dia- aforementioned persons
No 20631, Ralph G. Spel"'cer,
mond on whichever card he
Pomeroy, OhiO , Salisbury
had set up m dummy.
Township
You are hereby notified that
!NEWSPAPER E.NTEIPRI$( ASSN I

'The Premature Ruff'

W~ndham

~

•

"holder m due course," where

Message from Malaga,
Helen Mac Innes
BECKER IN LISBON
The Winds of War, Herman
Wouk
Atrman Randy Becker, son
The Belsy, Harold Robbtns of Don Becker, Mtddleport, and
Our Gang, Phtllp Roth
The Peacab\e Ktngdom, Jan grandson of Mr. and MrS.
de Harlog
Delbert Becker, also of MidLISten lor the Whlsperer, dleport, has been stahoned in
Phyllis A Whtlney
An Allernoon Walk ," !Jshon, Portugal, followmg the
Dorolhy Eden
completion of
advance
The followtng non f1cf1on has lrammg He underwent the
been rece tved
trawmg
tn
Eleanor and Franklin, by advanced
operations of computers and
Joseph P Lash
Art As Therapy Wtlh data processmg machmes at
Children, by Ed1lh Kramer
Louts the Louts Armstrong Sheppard Atr Force Base, Tex
Slory, 1900 1971," by Max HIS new address 1s Airman
Jones and John Chtllon
Randy B. Becker, FR
Car
Facls
and
Feals,
edtled
The followmg novels have
277423636,
HQ
1605,
by Anthony Hardtng
been rece1ved
ABGP
(MAC),
APO
New
York,
The Falal Fnendshlp, by
On lnstruct• ons of My Stanley
Loomis
09406
Government,
by
P1erre
Squeeze
II Ttll the Eagle
Sal1nger
Gnns How to Spend, Save,
Wheels, by Arthur Halley and
Your Money, by
A Girl Named Sooner. by Scoll Entoy
The
Sentinel
Burns
Suzanne Clauser
DEVOTED
TO
THE
Tracey
and
Hepburn
An
Repor t From Beau Harbor. lnhma!e Memmr, by Garson
INTUESTOF
by Oakley Hall
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Dando on Delh1 R1dge. by Kanm
CHESTER
L TANNEHILL,
Nothmg and So Be \1, by
Exec Ed
W•ll•am Cltve
Fallact
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
The Freedom Trap. by Ortana
Beyond
a
Rea~onable Doubt.
Ctty Edttor
Desmond Bagley.
by Sandor Fran ~el
Publ•shed dally ucept
Come a Long Journey, by
Talk tng to Myself, by Pearl Saturday b';' The Oh•o Valley
Alan Frv.
Publ tS htng Company, 111
Batley
The Trial of Judas W•ley , by
Court St , Pomeroy Ohto,
Pratse the Lord and Pass the
Lewis B Pallen
-45169 Busmess OfftCf Phone
by Alan Besllc
992 21Se. Edtfortal Phone 992
Shareworld, by Morm Contnbulton,
The Call, by Oral Roberts
l1S7
Hershman
Hearls
Of
Surgeons
and
Second cl.ns postage pe td at
· " ~ypsy In Amber, by Marlm Transplant s, Mtrades, and Pomeroy,
Oh tO
Srn•th ,,. • ,
DISasters
Along
the
Cardtac
Nat.onal
achert•s•ng
The Khak1e Malta, by Robm

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Dear Helen
Do you think a woman should dress to please her husband or
herself• PREFERS HER OWN TASTE
Dear PHOT·
U you dressed to please your husband, you'd wear last year's
dothes Which, consulcrmg the economy, m1ghl be a good 1dea.
--H.

would also bellef1t, although
the greates t beneficiaries
would be lh""" w1th the largest
transit systems
Much of the debate centered
around a proviSion known as

Your help is urgently
needed at 178 South Third St ,
Middleport Your Mtddleporl
Public Library has been hit by
an avalanche of best selhng
nun-hct10n, current novels,
sc1ence hchon and spmeclulhng myslenes," M1ss Jane
Ba1ley, hbranan, sa1d Thursday
There IS no hm1l to the
number of books patrons may
Lake home to read from the
hbrary wh1ch 1s expecting
another large shipment of
books soon

II

Dear Helen
Last week I expenenced a scare that woke me up to how very
~ Important 11 IS to have children vaccinated agamsl German
~ measles
~
My etght-year-old broke out m a rash Two close neighbors are
~ pregnant and were frantic that if 11 were measles and they
~ caught them, their bab1es would be affected Sometimes the
~ disease 1sso l1ghl that the mother 1sn't aware she has had 1t, One
= g~rl even temporarily cons1dered an abortwn - Wllll we got the
tests for our son and determmed he dtdn't have measles, after
all.
You can be sure that we've all had measles shots now I'll
never again go through the worry and guilt I fell knowing that
perhaps a baby could be born deformed because of my
negligence - Mrs J . P
Dear Readers :
Let this be a remmder J all parents don't put off measles
lmmumzation 1 You or yoo r children may be only slightly 1ll but thmk of the harm you m1ght brmg lo some as yet unborn
baby -H

the terms of Installment contracts, charge
account and other credit transactltlns.
11
forbtds
" balloon "
payments m wh1ch the final
paymenl1s s1gnlftcantly higher
than the others, and outlaws
the practice of diVldmg sales
mto separate transactions so a
h1gher rate of mterest can be
charged
The measure also allows the
seller to relinante final
payments of mslallmenl sales
on terms no less favorable than
the ongmal contract, and
forbids acceleratiOn of
payments because the buyer
defaults
The transit company bill,
authored by Sen. William W
Taft, R-Cleveland, would
benelll Cleveland, Columbus
and Cmcmnall most, but Sen.
Michael J Maloney , RCmcmnall, sa1d 1t was not Just
a b1g c1ty blll
He sa1d smaller c1llzens

New Books Available

!•

My husband's mother "' not expected to hve, as she has mcurable cancer Hts ex-wife wants to attend the fWleral serv1ces,
~ andshewas always a favonte With the fanuly so she'll be mv1ted
U she goes, l'm staymg away Don't you thmk she would have
the decency to gel lost when she IS no longer a part of the fam1ly'
He's mine now! - NEW WIFE
Dear Wife .
For heavens' sake, thiS 1sn'l a soc1al fWlction - 1t's a funeral
where persons who loved the deceased come to say good-bye
,
You've got your man Couldn'tyou extend a tittle chanty to the
~ loser' - H

c

~uve1•ns

evcmn~w••spenlsocially•nd

Animal Waste Symposium
•
Planned on March Nmth

Mrs. Agnes D1xon enlertanK.,Ithc N11ly Slitl:hers at her bume TuesdHy mghl, The

Stales and the Armed Forces.
In serv1ce to m1htary
famtbes, as m all Red Cross
services, the Amencan
Nalwnal Red Cross IS nothmg
more - or less - than the 3,200
local Red Cross Chapters
umted to serve human need.
Home serv1ce lor mllitary
fanubes IS camed out by the
Me1gs County American Red
Cross Chapter which currently
1s conductmg a fund drive
campaign for money on which
to operate lor the next year.
[[]!®

r · '"(Q;'OAll.~··

I Social f
I Calendar I
FRIDAY
OHIO VALLEY Commnndery 24, Kmghts Templar,
7p m. Friday at temple. Order

of Temple to be conferred.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange, 8 th1s evening, Rock
Sprmgs Grange Hall, Laurel
Grange, host.
DANCE
FRIDAY
at
Wahams H1gh School 8 to 11
p m School sponsored Jays
wtll emcee.
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2
p m. Fr1day at the Sacred
Heart Church, sponsored by
Church Women United of
Metgs CoWlly, Mrs campliell
llllrper, president
&lt;•
SATURDAY
DANCE Saturday following
Wahlima BaSketball game 9·31)
p.m to 12 mldmght. Jays will
emcee.
SIGNUP FOR Pomeroy
Ltllle League Boys, 1 to 3 p. m.
Saturday
and
sunday,
ll
Pomeroy Clly Ha
BAKE SALE, rwnmage, flea
market all day Saturday
•
'
Pomeroy Elementary School
by safely patrol and parents.
SUNDAY
SKATING PARTY, Sunday,
2 p m. at Skate-A-Way Rink,
Route 7, by Pomeroy
Elementary Safety Patrol,
open to public
LOVE JOY Ctrcle, Mtd·
dleporl F1rst Baptist Cburch,
to meet at the church at 2: IS
p m. to go to Meigs County
4
Infirmary for a program.

MONDAY
OPEN HOUSE and lamtly
mghl
when Salem Center PTA
.. 43
meets at 6 30 p m. Monday at
Both vulnerable
the school. There w1ll be a
West North East
covered d1sh dinner and en2""
2•
Pass
lerlamment by the Grate
Pass
Pass
Pass
the
Inventory
and
Ap Family
pratsement of the estate of the
Open mg lead- · K
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
aforementioned , deceued, late
of said County, was f1led In this 7·30 p. m. Monday, home of
B) Oswuld &amp; James Jacob)'
Court Said lnventorv and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar. Mrs. E
The btddmg has been
Appraisement will be for
Today 's h a n d from the IV"'l
before this Court on the W Coates, assiSting hostess.
North EaNI Soulh heanng
lOth daY of March, 1972, a11o·oo
Culbe1tson 'Battle Royal" IS
O'clock AM
MIDDLEPORT Garden
most mslruellve m that It 1t
Dbt•
2t
Any person desiring to file
pomts gut a very common Pa~
exceptions thereto must ftle Club, 7 30 p m., home of Mrs.
4+
Pass
them at least five days pr1or to
error We call thiS error " the Pas:;
S.
Pass
C M Hennesy With Mrs. Crary
the date set for hear ing
premature rufl " '
You, SoutH. hold
Given under my hand and
West opened the kmg of .98654.AQ6 tA32 ... J4 seat of said Court, this 29th day Dav1s and Mrs B B. Zeigler,
co-hostesses. M1ss Lucille
of February, 1972
clubs and shifted to the s1x
What
do
you
do
now'l
.~ohn C Bacon Smllh to g1ve the program
of trumps South won and led
Judge and Ex off1cfo
A-Bid
1nx
spades.
Your
partthe ace and a not he r diaClerk of sa id Court "Witchcraft m Your Garden".
mond He ruffed the second ner know!'l ynu pa.ued ori.:inall) By Ann B Watson, Deputy Roll call, a b1rd you like and
d1amond m dummy and If and he i!'l diill tnilll' fur a !iilam Clerk
why
ne could have led another aft c r ynu ha\1e (i\'en him • 13) J, 10
diamond from h1s hand and chance to shtp at .:•me.
. . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . .
TODAY'S QUESTION
1uffed that he would have
Instead of b1dd1ng £1ve ~p&lt;:~de~
made h1s contract
Unfortunately , he was m your partner b1ds four no~
HIGHLIGHTS
dummy A trump lead would trump You show two aces He
do no good lie fmally made b1ds f1ve no-trump. You h1d stx
with Paul Crabtree
a good effort He played clubs and he b1d~ six d1amonds
CAll POINTVIEW: 992 - 2505
dummy 's queen or clubs so WhAt do you do now,.
Ans~Aer Tomorrow
as to fo1 ce West mto Ihe
usually 1~\evlsed, as far as
FRIDAY, MARCH 3
we
knOVtl.)
Return with us now to
+++
lhose lhnlling days of
If
you
like
Allred Hityesteryear, when Rex Kern
chcock - espectally early
was lhe terror of opponents
of Lancaster High School Alfred H1tchcock - then
and Ohoo Stale UniverSity, tonighl Is for you His
classic, "The 39 Steps," Is
lnslel!d of a rookie cor
nerback with the Baltimore the lealured 1\\ck on "Film
Colts Rex rides agatn 1n a Odyssey " 8 JO p m., Ch 11
+++
speCial tontght al 7 30, Ch
MOVIES
The prime-lime
10
$35.00 Down
film
on
Ch
10 Is also a
+++
Balance On
classic,
"
Wutherlng
Play m West Vtrg1ma's
Convenient
Sectional Baskelbal\ Heights," the Bronte novel
thai made a 1939 film with
Tournament al Parkersburg
Terms .
Lawrence Olivier, David
continues lon lghl, 7 JOon Ch
Niven,
Merle Oberon, at 9
7 We're lrymg lo find oul tl
4he region&lt;"ls and
Slate p m Also on Ch 10· "The
Trap," Richard Wldmark, 4
uu1naments 10 etlher West
p m , and horror double'ltrgm1a or Oh1o will be
shown (Sorry, bul the Wesl feature, "Thtn Air," and
Vlrgtnta Slale Tourney Is not "The Human Monattr.''
Mason, W.Va.
slarllng at 11 .30 p.m.

T'

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE

$349.95

MASON
FURNITURE

•

3-The uauy Sentlnei,MtdcUeport-Pomeroy, 0., March 3, 1972

•

•

'

zamz Upsets
By United Press International the NCAA tournament, was

w1th Kenyon challengmg
Wooster m the north
Don Kalb of the Cnisaders
putm17pomtstoleadcapital's
71-64 downing of Otterbem in
which the team never lratled
The Cl1188ders, at one pomt,
held
a 13-point lead over Ot·
recofd.
Larry Garloch and Tun Mey- terbein which was narrowed to
er combined for the flll81 SIX SIX after Otterbem reeled off
points to clinch the win lor the nine straight points, but the
team never really threatened.
Red Skins.
Otterbein Eliminated
Garloch was the game's
The loss ellmlnates Otterbem
14!adlng scorer wtth 24 points ·
while Darrel Dunlap added 20 from the Ohio Conference tournament, leaYIDg the team with
hHd 18 pomts ror a 16-7 mark for the season.""
Life can be better! You can Marshall, Randy Noll 17 and Jack Mehl had IS pomts in
Thursday night's match
become a new person ... You Mike D' Antoni IS.
Muskmgum won a second
Marshall scored 10 consecucan solve your problems Joy,
hope and vibrant llfe ' can flll tive pomts midway m the flrst round berth in the OC playoffs
your heart, and mfluence half for a 23-13 lead and held a after exploding in the second
period, outscoring Marietta 1:143-31 halftime advantage.
those aroWld you
However, Miami caught up 4, to break a nip-and-tuck game
at
61-61 with about seven min- for a declSlve 68-56 lead. The
Attend lh1s great senes of
B1ble-onented d1scuss1ons utes remalDlng in the game. Muskies wrapped up the game
des1gned to help you live more Tl"te game Wj!S tied five more With an easy 81-U wm.
Muskmgum, now 11-11, was
abundantly m every way m times, the last at 71-71 before
led
by Gene Ford with 18 pomts
Gar
loch
and
Meyer
took
over.
the world of the 70's
In the Ohio Conference tour- and Todd Brown with 16.
Martella, whofmtshed with a
nament,
Capilal reeled off an
Starts · 7:30 P.M.
easy wm over Otterbein to ad- 6-17 mark for the season, was
vance to second round compe- led by Rick Elbln and Tom
Sat March 4
tition agamst Muskingum to- Barnes, both With 14.
Overllme Win
mght m the Southern Division
Mulberry Height Rd .
Also m the southern diVISIOn,
while Mt Union faces BaldwinDemson
was forced into overWallace m a Northern DiVISIOn
time agamst Ohio Wesleyan to
Sponsored by Seventh-day game.
Adventlst Church. in your Also m tournament play to- gain a playoff position against
community.
night, Denison meets Witten- Wittenberg tonight, whtch
berg In the southern diolslon,
Marshall Umversity the na- ambushed at Oxford Thursday
tion's lOth ranked OU:jor col- mght.
~
lege basketball team and
Miami University, with an
named Wednesday to a berth m ummpresstve 12·11 record,
stuMed the Thundering Herd
77-71, giYIDg Marshall a 23-3

It can happen to you! fo~;:~i.ee

arshall
drew a first..-ound bye
Demson and Wesleyan held a
ll~hl ra"" throughout, W1lh "
37-:!7 he at inlermi•Sion
Wesleyan had the edge w1lh
one second left, hut Demson's
Tom Hodgkinson pot m a layup
to he It 6~ at the end of
regulatton play.
The Big Red burst out wtth
an 11-point spree m the overtime period on a three-poml
play by Hodgkmson, and held
the Bishops to four pomts, giV·
mg Denison an 84-73 v1ctory
DeniSOn was led by John
Sloan With 21 pomts, While
Oh1o Wesleyan was boosted by
Jack1e Brown's shooting
Wesleyan ended the season
w1th an 11-12 overall mark .
MI. Union Out-Rebounds
In the Northern DiVISion
race, the Purple Raiders of Mt
Union were down 46-42 at the
half but controlled the boards
m the second per1od to take an
87-81 win over Oberlin. The
Raiders out-rebounded Oberlin
49-25 In the game
The wm advances Ml Union
to second round competlon
agamst Baldwin-Wallace
which d1d not compete Thursday- mght
Marty Hunt of Kenyon College provtded the unpetus for
the Lords m thetr narrow 7:1-70
wm over Hetdelberg whtch advanced Kenyon against Woos-

WINTER
CLEARANCE

By United Press International Drake, 99-79, and Rtch Fuqua,
lowsv!Ue's Denny Crum 1s the No. 2 scorer m the nation,
finding out that meeting for- hit 45 points as Oral Roberts

mer coach John Wooden in the
NCAA tournament Isn't gomg
to be as easy as he m1ght thmk.
Crum, who played under
Wooden at UCLA, had hopes of
breaking hiS former coach's
five-year stranglehold on the
NCAA title. But now he's in
jeopardy of not even making
the tournament.
Memphis State (No. 17)
pulled into a tie lor the
Mtssouri Valley Conference
lead Thursday mght wtth a
deCISive ~ rout of the thirdranked cardinals, setting up
the possiblllty of a playoff for
the league title and an NCAA
,berth1 '!:he rWlneryp woul4 go
1M ·.d •~:.~\1'1 ., :~'.1
~ ...
. ...
.
·to
,tHe' 'l'l.tional . Irivitation
" · · Mrvuleport; Ohio
Tournament m· New York.
Larry Finch scored 21 pomts
and Memphis State's defense
held Louisville's high scorer Jun Price -to just four pomts
before he fouled out ll was
Memphis State's second viclory thts season over
LoUISVIlle, Which has lost only
three times in 'tl outings. The
Tigers are now ro-5 and both
teams have 11·2 conference
records.
''They have a fine team and I
didn't think we could Win by
Double Savings thru March 13
that much," said Gene Bartow,
It's Scotts Turf Builder, America's favorite
the Memphis State coach. "We
fertilizer for developing thick, green lawns.
did everything well, espeCially
Turf Builder makes your lawn grow greener,
on defense."
thicker, sturdier - no matter what kind of
Crum satd he expected
grass you have. Keeps It that way longer too,
Memphis State to be confident
because of lis prolonged feeding action.
of victory in a playoff game.
"They beat us twice," said
Crum. "I don't know what the
Turf Builder
odds are on a third time, but I'll
SMIOC 5.000 aq ft .$.M" 4 II
tell you right now, they think
they can do It again "
.... .. 15,000" II __a.w- I II
Bartow agreed. "We beat
Super Turf Builder
them on our home court, we
IIYI Jl
S,OOO lq II 1M Ul
beat them on thell' court ana
..,. $1 10,000 sq n JA.o9t' u.•
we can beat them on a neutral
1--~sntilis,ooo •• n JtM- ·~•
court,"
he said .
Halt' PIUI for Elllltllahtd liWftl
lwt f1
2 500 sq fl ..Mt I •
In the other act1on involving
1m $2
,,000 aq ft JAM' IJ.M
a rated team, Miarru of Ohio
H1ltl Pitas rar Ntw Sttdlnp
upset Marshall, the No 10
2,500 aq tt 1M-' ••
team and holder of an at~arge
NCAA berth, 77-71.
Larry Garloch and Tim
Meyer combined for the fmal
SIX points of the game as
Miami handed Marshall only
1ts third loss m 26 games. The
game was lted 71-71 w1th 2:14
left when Garloch converted
399 W. Main St.
992-2164
Pomeroy,
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF .- two free throws and Meyer hit
a pair of foul shots and a
STUFF"-FOR PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp;
basket.
SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GARDENS.
Elsewhere, Rich Stallworth
and Harry Rogers scored 2.,
I)OIOts each as St. Lows ripped

NEW MARKDOWNS
and
REDUCTIONS

20% to 50%
SAVING AT

BAHR CLOTHIERS

rnJ1~ m~~~
Scotts big
Pre-Spring SALE

lift,,

MODERN SUPPLY
o.

Solid State
Automatic Record Changer

MOTOROLA

Solid Stale Amplllter wtth 15 walt ol lnstanteous
peak power output (7' ' walls EIA music power
output raltngl Automatic record changer plays all
popular sizes and speeds of re&lt;:ordtngs Has two
6"x9" Golden Votce ~ 1"eakers. sw1ng out detachable
speaker wings, light wetghl tone arm, dtamond
stylus, separate bass, treble, balance and loudness

controls Aotomalte shut off, 45 rpm spindle

beat Wisconsin-Milwaukee,
100-96. Rich Garner scored 25
points and Bob Gregory hlt 23
as Manhattan stopped St
Peter's, 98-95,- and Jun LaCorle's 22 points carried Seton
Hall to a 75-62 triumph over
Colgate.

season.
Hilladale of Michigan shot
64.9 per cent from the floor to
take a 94-80 win over Ohio
Northern In the only other Ohio
college basketball game
Dennis Jawieckl pumped m
29 points and Roosevelt York
added another 24 for Hillsdale.

In first round Southern
Conference tournament action,
Funnan set a tourney scormg
record with a 126-00 rout of
VIrginia Mllltary, DavtdiOn
beat Appalachian State, ~-77,
East Carolina topped The
atadel, 110-11 and Wllllam and
Mary defeated Richmond, 91182.

Ironton Ahead In Race
For All-Sports Trophy
Only three and a half points f1erce Wllh the All·Sports
separate the first !1ve teams m Trophy now at stake as well as
the running lor the fll'st All- the regular SEOAL cham·
Sports Trophy to he awarded . p1onsh1ps.
th1~ year in th~ , S"outheas)ern
Pilints on the new award are
Ohio Athletic League
on a basis of e~ght for first,
Ironton, as a result of seven for second, SIX for thtrd
sharing the football crown, and etc , m each of tile f1ve sports,
fmishing third m basketball, football, basketball, baseball,
holds the top spot w1th 13\':t track and golf.
pomts.
The award Initiated through
Athens, co-champtons with a jomt project by the SEOAL
Ironton in football, fmtshed offiCials and SEOAL Sportsfourth In basketball and holds wr1ters and Broadcasters
second place at th1s point w1lh Assoc1at10n 1s mtended to
121&gt; pomts.
promote better balanced
And JUSt a smgle polnl behmd athletic programs at all league
1s Gallipolis, fourth m football schools
and second in basketball. The
Devils have 11\':t pomls.
Collf9e Basketball Results
cage champion Waverly is By Untied Press International
lied with Metgs for fourth place Drew 7• Brklyn Poly 53
Miami (01 77 Marshall 71
with 10 pomts Meigs com- 51
LOUIS 99 Drake 79
pleted the football season m Mnhttn 91 SI.Peter's 95
thll'd place and were fifth m Seton Hall 75 Colgate 62
Rhode Island 83 New Hamp 62
basketball, while Waverly took Captlal
71 Otterbein 64
top pomts in basketball, they Kenyon 72 Heidelberg 70
fimshed seventh m football. Unton, Ky 85 Cmbrlnd 64
Logan iS SIXth With SIX points; Ky St 90 Geotwn, ky 69
Memphts St. 80 Loutsvl 65
Jackson has five pomts for Hillsdale 94 Ohio Nrlhrn 80
seventh place and Wellston, Towson St. 89 Catholic U. 73
fmishing last In hoth football Miss 51 11'1 LSU 71
Batt 67 Mt SI.Mary's 62
and tied for last m basketball EauCialre 9J Plallevl 75
has three points
0 Roberts 100 Wls (Mil) 95
Competition in the spring Musklngum 81 Martella 68
88 Wchta 51 83
sports 1s expt!Cted lo be extra Tulsa
West Tex 72 No Texas 70
Ohio Hioh School
Tournament Scores
By United Press lnternotlonal
eras• 4AA
Kellenng Fatrmonl West 57
Mtamlsburg J7
Daylon Palterson 69
Kettenng Fatrmont Ea5t

S.t

Daylon
Rooseve\1
77
Wllmmglon 50
Dayton Colonel While 65
Centerville 52
West Carrolllon 65 Carroll 56
Cambridge 59 Dover 51
Southview 81 Lakewood 77
Linden McKmley 72 Northland
6J
Mounl Vernon 56 Columbus
East 54 (oil
Massillon 7J Jackson 43
Akron Buchtel 57 Ravenna 37
Boardman 71 Youngstown
Mooney 4J
ClusAA
'
Steubenville Central
77
Shadr,stde S1
St. Cia rsvllle 65 Mingo 51
West Holmes 51 West
Musklngum 411
Coshocton 56 Claymont •9
Waverly 82 Minford -«
Cleveland Holy Na'l1e 75
Aurora 51
Fort Frye 98 River Local 76
Moq,an 78 Shenandoah 75
Gallipolis 71 Rock Hill 56
Urbana 73 Springfield Cothollc
54
Bellefontaine 41 Versailles 39
Class A
Lynchburg Clay 52 Leesburg
Fairfield 48

Soutllern Conference
(1st round!
Furman 126 VMI 80
Davdsn 87 App\chn St 77
East Car 80 Clladel 71
Wm&amp;Mary 98 Richmond 82
Ohto Colleoe
Basketto.ll Scores
By United Press International
Mtaml 77 Marshall 71
Hillsdale (Mich .) 94 Ohio
Norlhern 80
Ohto Conferona Tournament
Southern DIVISIOn at Granvilk!
Demson 8• Ohio Wesleyan 73
to I)
Capllal 71 Otterbein 64
Musk1ngum 81 Martella 68
North~rn Dlvlson at Alliance
Kenyon 72 Heidelberg 70
Moun 1 Union 87 Oberlin 81

NEW
Sugar FreeTaste Great

FLAIR
Royal Crown

Bottling Co.
Middleport, Ohio

PP232
O~r~ brown color
Clblri•t whh • brow " "''"VItn l~tv

~

WERNER RADIO &amp;
MIDDLEPO~T.

ler tomght
Heidelberg held a one-pomt
edge, :1.~14 at the half, but Kenvon went ahead 61-56 with two
nunutcs left which made for a
Lough see-saw hatUe.
Hunt, who SCQred 24 pomts,
put m a jump shot and two free
throws m the fmal seven seconds, however, to chnch the
Vlttory.
Heidelberg, with a 2-18 season record, was led by Art
Dunson with 31 I)Oints.
Both divtsion tiUe games are
scheduled for saturday night,
With diVISIOn wmners meeting
m the !mal playoff Tuesday,
March 7 The OC champion
gams a berth m the NCAA
Great Lakes Regional Tournament.
In other Oh1o college action
Thursday mght, Mi8Uil was
sparked to a 77-71 upset over
NCAA tournament-bound Marshall.
The humlllation given Marshall by the Redsldns marka
only the thlrtll058 in 26 games
for the Thundering Herd this

Louisville Stunned, 80-65

N. W. COMPTON, 0.0.

T~V.·

OPTOMETRIST

0.
.

'

. .

...

1._

......_______..

OFFICE HOURS 9 30 TO t2, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
APT NOON ON THURS)- EAST COURT ST.,
'(.

\

Pro Standings

Blue Devils Win 71·56

ABA Standtngs
By Untted Press lnternlftonal

It will be Gallipolis (16-4) vs. Ironton 03-7) for

Eosl

GB the 1972 Symmes Valley Class AA Sectional
Basketball ToOrnament championship at Willow
~
Wood Saturday night.
Jl 36
28 41 4()6 27
Thursday night, while numerous Gallipolis fans
27 •1 397 27 11&gt;
Ptllsburgh
2J 45 338 31V&gt; were wandering up and down the Lawrence County
West
hills searching for a passable road to the Symmes
W. L Pet. GB
Valley High School gym as a result of high water on
Utah
48 21 696
lnd•ana
33 ~ 567 9
Rt. 141 at Waterloo, Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS
Dallas
JJ J8 465 16
Blue Devils were sweeping the giant Rock Hill
Denver
28 39 424 19
Memphts
2• 40 JSJ 23'1&gt; Redmen off their feet with a blistering first period
Thursday's Results
performance
Kentucky 135 Vtrgtma 130, ot
Utah 123 Dallas 121. ol
By the lime latecomers
IOnly games scheduled)
Blue Devils at their best thl1
am
;ed, GAHS was on top 23-4
Frid1y's Games
season.
From lhal pom l on, the
Ptllsburgh at MemphiS
Offensively, GAHS h1t seven
V1rgtma at Indiana
Galhans coasted to victory,
Carolma at Flondtans
of
11 from the fteld, (63 pet.)
but the
Blue
Dev1ls'
IOnly games S&lt;:hedoled)
overall play durmg the !mal and from the foul ctrcles, the
NHL Standtngs
three perutds was somewhat Blue Dev1ls were perfect,
By Untied Press International
canmng mne for nme GAHS
erratic
East
W. L T Pis
Those who missed tbe first hauled down 10 rebounds In the
Boston
47 8 9 103
period action failed to see the openmg s~za.
New York
4J 11 10 96
Monlreal
J7 1. 12 86
DEVILS (71)
Oetrotl
2818965 PLAYER- PasGALLIPOLIS BLUE
FG-A
FT-A PF RB TO TP
Toronto
27 27 11 65 Rod Ferguson, f
7 11
56
2 14
3 19
Buffalo
13 37 15 4t Rtck Boone. g
1
4
8
8
o
l
3
10
Vancouver
16 41 6 J8 Gtl Pnce, c
s
12
3
s
4
6
6
1J
West
Larry Snowden, g
4-10 7 11 2 3 1 15
W L T Pis Jimmy
Noe.
I
l
9 l 3 s 6
4 6
Ch1cago
40 16 8 88 Kev Sheets, g
0
2
0
0
2
0
1
0
M~nnesola
32 31 9 73 Topper Orr, c
0
1
0
0
1
3
0
0
Sl LouiS
22 34 9 53 Mark Kiesling, f
1J 4 s 2 J
2 6
California
18 J2 15 51 Mtke Berridge, g
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
Phllad•IPh•a
20 J2 11 51 Bill Lemley. f
o.o
o
o
1
o
1
o
Ptllsburgh
20 JS 9 49 TOTALS
21·53 29 31 19 31 21 71
Los Angeles
16 42 7 J9
ROCK
HILL
REDMEN
(56)
Thursday's Results
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A
FT
A
PF RB TO TP
New York 4 Buffalo 3
Jim
Stewart,
c
8
15
4
9
3 16
• 20
Boston 7 Vancouver J
Randy
Ruggles,
f
15
11
3
0
1 3
PIllsburgh 7 Del roll 4
Dove
Schug,
I
5 11
66
2
8
2
16
Phlladelphta J Mmnesota 0
Mike
McFann,
g
J6
01
2
1
8
6
(Only games S&lt;:hedoledl
Mike
Koons,
g
2-9
2-S
l
2
l
6
Fr1d1y's Games
Rick
Steed,
f
01
00
2
1
2
0
Ch1cago a t Callfornta
Jerry
Deer.
f
1J
1
3
4
0
1
3
!Only game scheduled)
Joe Jenkins, g
02
0-0
3
2
1
0
Ben Adams, f
01
00
• 0 J 0
Tom Chrlsltan. g
0 0 1 0
0-1 0-0
John Fearing, f
12 02
0 J
0 2
Perce\ Watts. g
00
0-0 0 1 0 0
TOTALS
21-56 14-27 25 34 26 ,.
Score By Quarters:
Gallipolis Blue Devils
2J 17 18 13
71
Rock Hilt Redman
4 19 17 16 56
Offici• Is - Beecher &amp; Shope.
Kentucky
Vtrgtnta
New York
Flond1ans
Caroltnd

W L Pet
55
lo

14

797 •
580 15
·i&amp;i'il 22

Waverly
In Class
AA Finals

SPECIAL PURCHASE!

Tw1ce-bealen Waverly
moved another step toward a
lrlp to next week's Class AA
d1str1cl ehmma lwns w1lh an 8244 dec1s1on over outmanned
Mmford Thursday evemng.
The 18-2 T1gers face Hillsboro 1n Saturday's sectional
fmals for a berth 1n the Rw
Grande d1str1ct.
Waverly whipped in 50 pel. of
lis shots m putting Mmford
away With a 4-16 log. The
Tigers 'doubled the score m the
second half in pullmg away
comfortably
John Shoemaker's 18 and 17
pomls contributions from M1ke
Oyer and Butch Workman did
Ihe damage as Waverly fired in
36 uf 72 from the field . Minford
shot a cool 26 pel. ( 15 of 57). AI
Ferguson was the blg gWl for
the losers with 16
WAVERLY (11) - Maloy, 50-10, Over, 7-J-17 , Fairchild, 2
2-6 , Gullion, 4 0-8, Workman, 7
3-17: Shoemaker, 9 0 18;
Pletfer, 1-0 2; Helton, 1-2 4.
TOTALS- :U-10-U.
MINFORD (44) - Frazle, 23-7, Ferguson, 5·6-16, Price, 5212 ; Swords, 2 2 6, Shumvay,
t-1-3 'I'OTALS--15-14-41
By Quarters :
Waverly
1.355782
9232744
Minford

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PAIRINGS ANNOUNCED
KANSASCITY,Mo. {UPI) Marquette w1ll be the ftrst
challenger laced by the winner
of the Mid American Con•
ference m the ftrst roWld of the
NCAA basketball playoffs
March 11, offiCials announced
Thursday.
The game will be played at
the University of Tennessee.
Three Ohio teams - Kent
State, Toledo, and Oh1o
Umverstty -are presenUy tied
for the MAC lead

16" Bar and Ch11n
The new P1oneer 2071 has an axclus1ve. new
" Easy·Arc" start1ng mechamsm A gentle pull ts
all it takes to get tl gomg' It also has a semiautomatiC chain tens1oner to help you keep the
cham snug And automatiC cham o1ilng tot longer
bar and cham hie The
new .298 · fine p1tch cham
reduces kickback wh1le Increasing cuttmg speed. It's
also very easy-to-handle;
it only we1ghs 91/z lbsl Cut
loose w1th a new 20711
CHAIN SAWS

AID PLEDGED
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tenthousand dollars was pledged
tu v1clims of the West Virginia
flood d1S8sler Thursday by the
Oh10 Umted Auto Workers
Community Acl10n Program
Council. The council also satd it
m1ght seek to help victims take
legal action agamst owners of
U1e dam which broke, crealmg
the diS8ster

BAUM LUMBER CO.
0. Ph. 985-3301

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

L...---Meigs
County
BranchTo Better
Serve Our
Customers

I

EARL F. INGLES-MGR.
Your Savings Insured
To S2D,OOO

Real Estate Loans
• Home loans • Business Real Estate
loans • Christmas Cub
e Money Ordels e Mobile Homes
e Interest Paid On Deposits
296 W. 2nd ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

.- •

�.

. . .

!&gt;IIICHt:K.'i MF.t:r

Const•mer Protected u1
Popular House Action ,
--

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP)) - The
Oh10 General Assembly has
adJourned for the week after
aclang on a popular consumer
credll b1ll and ~ proposal to,
pump an estimated $1 5
nnlhun mto the coffers of
saggmg muniCipal trans1t
cumpames

FRED PUWNS

MICKY WILLIAMS

HEP BARBERS - Back recently from the AII.Ohio
Edllcatlonal Seminar are Micky Williams, and Fred Pullins
of the Karr's Barber !~lop, 110 Lynn street, Pomeroy
~10red by the Ohio State Barber College, the theme of the
llellllnar was "Haircuts Are Coming Back," and lectures and
demonstrations were given in all phases of modern barber
styUng. Nationally known barber stylists, Luigi caruso,
James Rocco, Robert DeGiacomo and Joseph Sc10scia, all
from Pittsburgh, taught the various subjects, who satd that
flag-tops and butch cuts will not dornmate the scene m the
near future.
The "in-etyle" will be a head of hair that is full - but
neat . The hack Will just barely touch the collar, on the sides,
the ears will etlber be fully exposed or only partially covered
For the most part, men will still wear thell' hBll' low on the
forehead Karr's Barber Shop offers complete barbermg
sa-vtces mcludlng razorcutting, stylmg, and stra1ghtenmg.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Med1cal Center, F1rsl
Ave and Cedar Sl. General
v1s1llng hours 2-4 and 7-8 p m
Matermty v1s1tmg hours 2 30 to
4 31l p.m Parents only on
Ped~alncs Ward.
Births
"' Mr and Mrs. Kenneth
~ Yemn , Jackson, a daughter,
Mr and Mrs. James H. Harns,
Galhpohs, a daughter ; Mr. and
Mrs Robert L Ruff, Thurman,
• a son; Mr and Mrs Da v1d
Raynor, Galhpohs, a daughter,
and Mr and Mrs. Domvan
Garber, Vinton, a daughter
~
Discharges
• Mrs. Harvey David Slam
and son, Patncia Sue Hudson,
MarJone M Fruth, W1U1arn
: Ferrell If, Mrs Clotls Eugene
: Hart and daughter, Mrs
; James Imes and daughter,
; Earl F Kmker, Patnc1a A

I
i

i
••

Maynard, Lemlla L King,
Mrs W1lham A Zmn and son,
Terry Jean Kmg, Ehzabelh P.
Allman, W1ldah Burdette, Mrs
Jerry M. Comer and son,
Waller Morns, Patnc1a Ann
Peck, Morgan L Powell, Lorn
Ann Snowden, May Walker and
Arthur Fletcher

SERVICES TONIGHT
ALFRED - World Day of
Prayer services will be held
here at the Alfred Umted
Methodist Church Fnday
evemng, March 3, at 7-45 All
members of churches on the
Cbarge, and any other church
members, are mVIted . The
service 1s sponsored by the
Women 's Society of Cbnst1an
Sel'Vlce, with June Stearns
program leader

t

-..U~~len U~lp
..

J&gt;

ll

·us. • •

~

..

By Helen Bottel

~~

Aftermath ol Bigamy

Dear Helen .
We've been marrted 20 years and have six children. In 1968 my
husband "married" another woman while still hvmg with his
~ family and me.
I found out about 'll almost three years later He sa1d she hved
about 200milesfrom here (he's a salesman and on the road a lot)
and there is a 13-rnonth-old baby They'd broken up a year ago
t andhe'dpaidfor her "divorce" Shed1dn'task chtld support She
has a good job and seems content
~
I forgave him and everything has been fine at home. But I
~ recently learned that this woman 1s usmg my husband's name,
~ and her chUd likewiSe'
It's bad enough that he spent our money on her and even paid
i for a "divorce," but does she have any nght to use MY name'
~ Wlthoutspendingmore than we have on lawyers, how can I force
, her hack to her ma1den name"1 - MAD

I=

i

S

:~

Dear Mad ·
I'm not a lawyer, but my mslmcts say, "Leave bad enough
alone before you make 1t worse'"
Your husband was a btgamist He's reformed No one seems
permanently hurt - but YOU m1ght be 11 the facts came out
• You'll probably never meelthlS woman or her ch1ld So 1sn'l1l
best to drop the matter'
U you don'tagree, consult your Legal AidSoc1ety - H

•
i
!
i!

' Dear Helen

The House Thursday
unammously adopted a
heavily-sponsored bipartisan
b1ll lo ehmmate credil traps
desp1le the fact 1l was considerably weaker than the
ongmal measure mlroduced a
year ago
And the Senate gave 23-4
approval of the bill reimbursing mumc1pal trans1t bus
operators for s1x of the seven
cents they pay m taxes on a
gallon of fuel
The credit bill, cleared 80-(),
had 51 sponsors - more than
half the House membership. It
now goes to the Senate
One of the mam proviswns

fmanclallnsJjtuhons fAke over
cnllechon of installment
payments but are not liable for
defects m the product, The origmal bill would have
made them liable for claims,
hut the bill as adopted gives the
consumer 15 to 30 days to
report any defects. After that,
he has no recourse.
Rep. Harry J Lehman, DShaker Heights, tried to get
this grace period extended to 60
to 90 days. His motion was
labled, 41-36, alter Rep. Joseph
P. Tulley, R-Mentor, contended It could make retailers
reluctant to extend credit.
"This will work to the
d1sadvan tage of the very
people we are trymg to
protect," Tulley sald. "This
would be a time bomb which
could explode m the bank's
face any time within 60 days."

DaiiJ

Fran tier,

Moore and June Collins

by Thomas "'Thomp

To Kill AW1lch, by Bill Knox sonThe Redbook Cookbook.
The Saml and lhe People 1Edlledl by Ruth Fatrch•ld
Importers, by Leslie Char te ns
Templatlon lo Sleal. by Noel Pomeroy
The Plclorlal Encyclopedia
B Gerson
of
FIShes, by S Frank
Mile Htgh, Mtle Deep, by
Landscapmg
with Vmes, by
Rtchard K O'Malley
Frances
Howard
Two Ltltle Rtch Girls, by
Garden Hobbtes, by Estelle
M1gnon Eberhart
H
Rles
Dealh m a Sunny Place. by
The Arl of Macrame, by Joan
R1chard Lockndge
Murder Most Foul An Fisher
Fun Party Games, by
thology, Myslery Wrllers of Bernice
Hogan
Amenca, Edtled by Harold Y
lnses,
by Harry Randall
Masur
How
to
Get a Good Ntght's
Alfred H1tchcock Presen ts
Steep,"
by
Peter J Ste\ncrohn,
Stones lo Slay Awake By
MD
A G1fl From Earth, Larry
RusSia tn the Twentieth
N1 ven
Century.
The Walch Below, James Nenarokov by Albert P
Whtte
The Paths of Poetry, by
Thorns, Roberl Silverberg
The M•dw1ch Cuckoos, John

repreounlattve
Bott.nellt
Gallagher , Inc . 12 East "2nd
St , New York Ctty , Ne'W York
Sl.lbscrtpl ton rates
De
livered by carr.er where
ava1lable 50 cent5 pe-r week ,
By Motor Route where earner
&amp;.ervtce not hallable One
month Sl 75 . 8y mall '" Oh10
and W va . One year su 00
Snc months $7 2S
Three
months s.e 50 Subscr1pt1on
pr1ce tncludes Sundav Ttmes

Senttnel

WIN AT BRIDGE

Drag onfltght.

Anne

NORTH
• 932
¥K101G4J

Louts Untermeyer.

Carder's Parad1 se, Malcolm

Levene

The

Whole

Man,

John

Brunner

The Wanderer, Fritz Letber.

Cnme Prevenhon m Ihe 30th

Centur y, Edtled by Hans
Stafan Santesson

ASpecter Is Haunltng Texas.

Fntz Le1ber

Bug Jack Barron, Norman
Spinrad
The Day of lhe Jackal,
Fredenck Forsvth

3

t6

... Q 106

Me

Caffrey

TWO APPOINTED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Recreation and Resources
Commission has approved the
recent slaff appointments of
Jack E M1ller an~ G Lyman
Dawe In the Natural Resources
Deparlmen l, Dtreclor Wtlham
B Nye sa1d Thursday
M1ller was named ch1ef of
the d1v1s1on of 011 and gas

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

Leiters of opilllon are welcomed . They s~ould be less
th111300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
I and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be
I withheld upon pabllcatlon, however, on request. Letters
I
I should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personHlltles.

Middleport Churches Commended
Dear S1r:
Mtddleport elementary school gym has been the scene this
past week of an unusual senes of meetmgs. An effort m
evangelism has been sponsored by most of the churches In the
town cooperating in this common cause. Although each of the
partiCipating denominations retained its dlstmctive approach to
the Cbristian message, they sang and prayed together, and
presented a collective witness to thell' atrishan fatth.
All never before 1n the history of our nation, soon to celebrate
its bicentenmal, a sptr1tual renewalts needed w1thln and without
of the boundanes of our country. We are threatened by the
Mmster forces of godless matertahsm. Next year a ooordlll8ted
program called Key 73 IS prOiJOsed and ~ndorsed by most
churches, large and small. It is hoped that the successful
crusades m Middleport for this second time In the past three
years will prove a model of what can be done It could well serve
as a pilot for a Meigs County Area campaign lor the
proclamation phase of ;~ey 73.
The slogan adopted by the consultation which has the
backmg of leading rellgtous churchmen In Umted States and
canada IS "Confronting the Continent for Cbrtst." We believe the
churches of Mtddleport are to be commended 1s an advance
vanguard In this prornmmg movement.
Jan ·es A lJe Weerd,
Middleport EvangeEcal Crusade Speaker

DIES OF BURNS
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - A
Cleveland man died Thursday
of burns suffered when a
gasoline can m a car where he
was s1tlmg 1gmted, selling the
automobile aftre The vtctim
was Rudy Brinson , 'tl.

Each year the nation's
livestock producers must
diSpose of an estimateil two
bllhon tons of ammal waste, 10
limes that generated by the
human populahon. Thts
problem has become one of the
major envll'onmental dilemmas or modern agrtclllture
Problems associated with
the management, handling,
and disposal of wastes will be
exammed durmg an An1mal
Waste Sympos1um Thursday,
March 9, at the Ohw
Agricultural Research and
Development Center, Wooster
Planned espec1ally for
hveslock producers, the
program will foeus on many

111 scwmg. The next meeting
w1~ be held allhe home olMrs
Oral" Drake. Present were
Mrs Helen Mllhoanr MPs-.
Anna Wilson, Mrs. Grace'
Warner, Mrs Jean Blazewtcz,
Mrs Ruth Moore, Mrs.
Marlene Wtison, Mrs Delores
Will, Mrs Mabel Moore, Mrs
Drake, Mrs Mary Bpwen, Mrs.
Janet Korn and Mrs Dtxon.

'

WEST

EAST

• J6
• 10
¥AQ
¥J982
tQ87 5
tKH32
... AKJ95
.. 812
SOUTH (0)
.AKQ8154
¥5
t A 109

aspects of the ammal waste
problem.
Thooe attendlng- u;e
pos1um should plan to )OlD one
or two tours to be conducted of
the OAR DC · Beef Center
Manure Handling FaciliUes.
The fll'sl tour begmnlng at 9
a.m. w1ll precede~ morning
program. The final lour will
immediately follow the atternoon session.
Ltvestock producers and
others Interested in attending
are urged to send advance
registration to Wooster Area
Ext~nsion Center, OARDC,
Wooster, Ohio 44691. A
registration fee of $2 will in·
elude lWlch.

Congress Mandates Job of Service
To Military F~Jmilies to Red Cross
The phone rings at 9 p.m. m sends a message to that effect
the home of a Red Cross Ser- to the local chapter so that the
v1ce lo Military Families family can be told !hal the
worker A mother of a ser- serviCeman 1s on his way
v1ceman 1s requeshng an home ThiS return message can
emergency leave for her son m be figured m to the cost for the
V1etnam because hiS Sister IS service
cnt1cally 111.
The cost of the field d~recThe Red Cross worker tor's salary (aboullhesameas
qwckly venf1es the Illness w1lh a schoolteacher's) as well as
the family physician and the cost to mamtain the field
secures hiS recommendatiOn d~rector in V1etnam IS a part of
In this mstance the doctor the total cost for the semce
conftrms that the sister IS
Thus, a message wh1ch
Critically Ill and recommends might cost the local chapter $5
lhe serviceman's presence.
or $6 to process may cost the
The local Red Cross worker nalwnal orgamzalton many
telephones the Nallonal Red t1mes thiS amount 'l';!! local
Cross commWlications off1ce m chapter could not send the
Washmglon, D. C Up unlit now message directly, because the
the cost of the service IS local Armed Forces will accept such
- a percentage of the Red a message only from the
Cross worker's salary and the American NatiOnal Red Cross.
cost of the telephone call
Without access to this worldA Red Cross worker in wide commumcallons network,
Washmglon puts the message the Red Cross could nol
on a teletype tape The
d
provt e emergency messages.
message IS sent over m1Utary
A Red Cross field director
communic'alwns hnes m covers every U. S military unll
V1etnam. The cost of sendmg in the world. The f1eld dtrector
the message IS p1cked up by the 1s an employee of the Nallonal
natwnal orgamzatwn from Red Cross and without hiS
fWlds contributed from local asstslance, the local chapter
chapters on a fatr-share for- would have no means of
mula basis
ass1stmg lam1hes m comA short l1me later the mWliCallng w1lh servicemen,
message amves m V1etnsm A even m emergency s1tualions
Red Cross fteld director
ServiCe to m1lllary famtlles
stationed w1lh the troops 1s a chapter obligation of the
recetves the message. He talks Amer~can NatiOnal Red Cross,
to the serviceman and wh1ch has a congresswnal
discu5ses the message wllh the -"mandate to serve as a
' commandmg off!cer. It 1s the med1um of commumcat!on liE!' "
commandmg officer's decision tween the people of the Umted
and his alone whether the
serviceman
gets
the LEGAL NOTICE
emergency leave. The Red
NOTICE
Cross only provides a message
The underSigned woll offer lor
serv1ce from the family doctor sale, by auclton , allhe prem ises
of the Un1ted Method 1st Church
to lhecommandmg off1cer. The Paroonage at Reedsville, Oh 1o,
leave 1s approved.
the parsonage real estale, on
he
Red
Cross
field
dl•ector
March
9, 1971, at l oo O'Clock
T
P M T~e
properly will be sold
fa the highest bidder, reserving
lo me Troslees lhe right to
relect the h•ghest bid In the
event 1f tS deemed Insufficient
Edward Blake
Dana Hoffman , Sr
Ben Buckley
Charles HenSley
Harold Brannon
lead Maybe West would not
Trusttes,
Reedsville Circuit of
have the last trump
Unlled Methodist Church
Unfortunately We s l d1d
hold 11 and led 1l, whereupon (31 3, 5, 6, 7, e, Sf
South had to wmd up w1th
only mne tncks
All South had to do to
Notlce on F 111 nt of
Inventory and Appnlsement
make h1s contract was to
Probate Court
thank for a moment before The State
of Ohio, Meigs
leadmg to trick-three . Then County .
To the Admintstratrix of the
he could play e1ther a club
estate.
to such of the following
or a hearl
as art&gt; residents of the state of
West would wm and lead Ohio, YIZ - the surviving
the second trump but now spouse, the next of k1n, the
lctartes under the w tll,
South would be able to make benef
and to the attorney or altorneys
the same d1amond play and representing any of ~ the
then dtscard hts 1 a s t dia- aforementioned persons
No 20631, Ralph G. Spel"'cer,
mond on whichever card he
Pomeroy, OhiO , Salisbury
had set up m dummy.
Township
You are hereby notified that
!NEWSPAPER E.NTEIPRI$( ASSN I

'The Premature Ruff'

W~ndham

~

•

"holder m due course," where

Message from Malaga,
Helen Mac Innes
BECKER IN LISBON
The Winds of War, Herman
Wouk
Atrman Randy Becker, son
The Belsy, Harold Robbtns of Don Becker, Mtddleport, and
Our Gang, Phtllp Roth
The Peacab\e Ktngdom, Jan grandson of Mr. and MrS.
de Harlog
Delbert Becker, also of MidLISten lor the Whlsperer, dleport, has been stahoned in
Phyllis A Whtlney
An Allernoon Walk ," !Jshon, Portugal, followmg the
Dorolhy Eden
completion of
advance
The followtng non f1cf1on has lrammg He underwent the
been rece tved
trawmg
tn
Eleanor and Franklin, by advanced
operations of computers and
Joseph P Lash
Art As Therapy Wtlh data processmg machmes at
Children, by Ed1lh Kramer
Louts the Louts Armstrong Sheppard Atr Force Base, Tex
Slory, 1900 1971," by Max HIS new address 1s Airman
Jones and John Chtllon
Randy B. Becker, FR
Car
Facls
and
Feals,
edtled
The followmg novels have
277423636,
HQ
1605,
by Anthony Hardtng
been rece1ved
ABGP
(MAC),
APO
New
York,
The Falal Fnendshlp, by
On lnstruct• ons of My Stanley
Loomis
09406
Government,
by
P1erre
Squeeze
II Ttll the Eagle
Sal1nger
Gnns How to Spend, Save,
Wheels, by Arthur Halley and
Your Money, by
A Girl Named Sooner. by Scoll Entoy
The
Sentinel
Burns
Suzanne Clauser
DEVOTED
TO
THE
Tracey
and
Hepburn
An
Repor t From Beau Harbor. lnhma!e Memmr, by Garson
INTUESTOF
by Oakley Hall
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Dando on Delh1 R1dge. by Kanm
CHESTER
L TANNEHILL,
Nothmg and So Be \1, by
Exec Ed
W•ll•am Cltve
Fallact
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
The Freedom Trap. by Ortana
Beyond
a
Rea~onable Doubt.
Ctty Edttor
Desmond Bagley.
by Sandor Fran ~el
Publ•shed dally ucept
Come a Long Journey, by
Talk tng to Myself, by Pearl Saturday b';' The Oh•o Valley
Alan Frv.
Publ tS htng Company, 111
Batley
The Trial of Judas W•ley , by
Court St , Pomeroy Ohto,
Pratse the Lord and Pass the
Lewis B Pallen
-45169 Busmess OfftCf Phone
by Alan Besllc
992 21Se. Edtfortal Phone 992
Shareworld, by Morm Contnbulton,
The Call, by Oral Roberts
l1S7
Hershman
Hearls
Of
Surgeons
and
Second cl.ns postage pe td at
· " ~ypsy In Amber, by Marlm Transplant s, Mtrades, and Pomeroy,
Oh tO
Srn•th ,,. • ,
DISasters
Along
the
Cardtac
Nat.onal
achert•s•ng
The Khak1e Malta, by Robm

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Dear Helen
Do you think a woman should dress to please her husband or
herself• PREFERS HER OWN TASTE
Dear PHOT·
U you dressed to please your husband, you'd wear last year's
dothes Which, consulcrmg the economy, m1ghl be a good 1dea.
--H.

would also bellef1t, although
the greates t beneficiaries
would be lh""" w1th the largest
transit systems
Much of the debate centered
around a proviSion known as

Your help is urgently
needed at 178 South Third St ,
Middleport Your Mtddleporl
Public Library has been hit by
an avalanche of best selhng
nun-hct10n, current novels,
sc1ence hchon and spmeclulhng myslenes," M1ss Jane
Ba1ley, hbranan, sa1d Thursday
There IS no hm1l to the
number of books patrons may
Lake home to read from the
hbrary wh1ch 1s expecting
another large shipment of
books soon

II

Dear Helen
Last week I expenenced a scare that woke me up to how very
~ Important 11 IS to have children vaccinated agamsl German
~ measles
~
My etght-year-old broke out m a rash Two close neighbors are
~ pregnant and were frantic that if 11 were measles and they
~ caught them, their bab1es would be affected Sometimes the
~ disease 1sso l1ghl that the mother 1sn't aware she has had 1t, One
= g~rl even temporarily cons1dered an abortwn - Wllll we got the
tests for our son and determmed he dtdn't have measles, after
all.
You can be sure that we've all had measles shots now I'll
never again go through the worry and guilt I fell knowing that
perhaps a baby could be born deformed because of my
negligence - Mrs J . P
Dear Readers :
Let this be a remmder J all parents don't put off measles
lmmumzation 1 You or yoo r children may be only slightly 1ll but thmk of the harm you m1ght brmg lo some as yet unborn
baby -H

the terms of Installment contracts, charge
account and other credit transactltlns.
11
forbtds
" balloon "
payments m wh1ch the final
paymenl1s s1gnlftcantly higher
than the others, and outlaws
the practice of diVldmg sales
mto separate transactions so a
h1gher rate of mterest can be
charged
The measure also allows the
seller to relinante final
payments of mslallmenl sales
on terms no less favorable than
the ongmal contract, and
forbids acceleratiOn of
payments because the buyer
defaults
The transit company bill,
authored by Sen. William W
Taft, R-Cleveland, would
benelll Cleveland, Columbus
and Cmcmnall most, but Sen.
Michael J Maloney , RCmcmnall, sa1d 1t was not Just
a b1g c1ty blll
He sa1d smaller c1llzens

New Books Available

!•

My husband's mother "' not expected to hve, as she has mcurable cancer Hts ex-wife wants to attend the fWleral serv1ces,
~ andshewas always a favonte With the fanuly so she'll be mv1ted
U she goes, l'm staymg away Don't you thmk she would have
the decency to gel lost when she IS no longer a part of the fam1ly'
He's mine now! - NEW WIFE
Dear Wife .
For heavens' sake, thiS 1sn'l a soc1al fWlction - 1t's a funeral
where persons who loved the deceased come to say good-bye
,
You've got your man Couldn'tyou extend a tittle chanty to the
~ loser' - H

c

~uve1•ns

evcmn~w••spenlsocially•nd

Animal Waste Symposium
•
Planned on March Nmth

Mrs. Agnes D1xon enlertanK.,Ithc N11ly Slitl:hers at her bume TuesdHy mghl, The

Stales and the Armed Forces.
In serv1ce to m1htary
famtbes, as m all Red Cross
services, the Amencan
Nalwnal Red Cross IS nothmg
more - or less - than the 3,200
local Red Cross Chapters
umted to serve human need.
Home serv1ce lor mllitary
fanubes IS camed out by the
Me1gs County American Red
Cross Chapter which currently
1s conductmg a fund drive
campaign for money on which
to operate lor the next year.
[[]!®

r · '"(Q;'OAll.~··

I Social f
I Calendar I
FRIDAY
OHIO VALLEY Commnndery 24, Kmghts Templar,
7p m. Friday at temple. Order

of Temple to be conferred.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange, 8 th1s evening, Rock
Sprmgs Grange Hall, Laurel
Grange, host.
DANCE
FRIDAY
at
Wahams H1gh School 8 to 11
p m School sponsored Jays
wtll emcee.
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2
p m. Fr1day at the Sacred
Heart Church, sponsored by
Church Women United of
Metgs CoWlly, Mrs campliell
llllrper, president
&lt;•
SATURDAY
DANCE Saturday following
Wahlima BaSketball game 9·31)
p.m to 12 mldmght. Jays will
emcee.
SIGNUP FOR Pomeroy
Ltllle League Boys, 1 to 3 p. m.
Saturday
and
sunday,
ll
Pomeroy Clly Ha
BAKE SALE, rwnmage, flea
market all day Saturday
•
'
Pomeroy Elementary School
by safely patrol and parents.
SUNDAY
SKATING PARTY, Sunday,
2 p m. at Skate-A-Way Rink,
Route 7, by Pomeroy
Elementary Safety Patrol,
open to public
LOVE JOY Ctrcle, Mtd·
dleporl F1rst Baptist Cburch,
to meet at the church at 2: IS
p m. to go to Meigs County
4
Infirmary for a program.

MONDAY
OPEN HOUSE and lamtly
mghl
when Salem Center PTA
.. 43
meets at 6 30 p m. Monday at
Both vulnerable
the school. There w1ll be a
West North East
covered d1sh dinner and en2""
2•
Pass
lerlamment by the Grate
Pass
Pass
Pass
the
Inventory
and
Ap Family
pratsement of the estate of the
Open mg lead- · K
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
aforementioned , deceued, late
of said County, was f1led In this 7·30 p. m. Monday, home of
B) Oswuld &amp; James Jacob)'
Court Said lnventorv and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar. Mrs. E
The btddmg has been
Appraisement will be for
Today 's h a n d from the IV"'l
before this Court on the W Coates, assiSting hostess.
North EaNI Soulh heanng
lOth daY of March, 1972, a11o·oo
Culbe1tson 'Battle Royal" IS
O'clock AM
MIDDLEPORT Garden
most mslruellve m that It 1t
Dbt•
2t
Any person desiring to file
pomts gut a very common Pa~
exceptions thereto must ftle Club, 7 30 p m., home of Mrs.
4+
Pass
them at least five days pr1or to
error We call thiS error " the Pas:;
S.
Pass
C M Hennesy With Mrs. Crary
the date set for hear ing
premature rufl " '
You, SoutH. hold
Given under my hand and
West opened the kmg of .98654.AQ6 tA32 ... J4 seat of said Court, this 29th day Dav1s and Mrs B B. Zeigler,
co-hostesses. M1ss Lucille
of February, 1972
clubs and shifted to the s1x
What
do
you
do
now'l
.~ohn C Bacon Smllh to g1ve the program
of trumps South won and led
Judge and Ex off1cfo
A-Bid
1nx
spades.
Your
partthe ace and a not he r diaClerk of sa id Court "Witchcraft m Your Garden".
mond He ruffed the second ner know!'l ynu pa.ued ori.:inall) By Ann B Watson, Deputy Roll call, a b1rd you like and
d1amond m dummy and If and he i!'l diill tnilll' fur a !iilam Clerk
why
ne could have led another aft c r ynu ha\1e (i\'en him • 13) J, 10
diamond from h1s hand and chance to shtp at .:•me.
. . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . .
TODAY'S QUESTION
1uffed that he would have
Instead of b1dd1ng £1ve ~p&lt;:~de~
made h1s contract
Unfortunately , he was m your partner b1ds four no~
HIGHLIGHTS
dummy A trump lead would trump You show two aces He
do no good lie fmally made b1ds f1ve no-trump. You h1d stx
with Paul Crabtree
a good effort He played clubs and he b1d~ six d1amonds
CAll POINTVIEW: 992 - 2505
dummy 's queen or clubs so WhAt do you do now,.
Ans~Aer Tomorrow
as to fo1 ce West mto Ihe
usually 1~\evlsed, as far as
FRIDAY, MARCH 3
we
knOVtl.)
Return with us now to
+++
lhose lhnlling days of
If
you
like
Allred Hityesteryear, when Rex Kern
chcock - espectally early
was lhe terror of opponents
of Lancaster High School Alfred H1tchcock - then
and Ohoo Stale UniverSity, tonighl Is for you His
classic, "The 39 Steps," Is
lnslel!d of a rookie cor
nerback with the Baltimore the lealured 1\\ck on "Film
Colts Rex rides agatn 1n a Odyssey " 8 JO p m., Ch 11
+++
speCial tontght al 7 30, Ch
MOVIES
The prime-lime
10
$35.00 Down
film
on
Ch
10 Is also a
+++
Balance On
classic,
"
Wutherlng
Play m West Vtrg1ma's
Convenient
Sectional Baskelbal\ Heights," the Bronte novel
thai made a 1939 film with
Tournament al Parkersburg
Terms .
Lawrence Olivier, David
continues lon lghl, 7 JOon Ch
Niven,
Merle Oberon, at 9
7 We're lrymg lo find oul tl
4he region&lt;"ls and
Slate p m Also on Ch 10· "The
Trap," Richard Wldmark, 4
uu1naments 10 etlher West
p m , and horror double'ltrgm1a or Oh1o will be
shown (Sorry, bul the Wesl feature, "Thtn Air," and
Vlrgtnta Slale Tourney Is not "The Human Monattr.''
Mason, W.Va.
slarllng at 11 .30 p.m.

T'

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE

$349.95

MASON
FURNITURE

•

3-The uauy Sentlnei,MtdcUeport-Pomeroy, 0., March 3, 1972

•

•

'

zamz Upsets
By United Press International the NCAA tournament, was

w1th Kenyon challengmg
Wooster m the north
Don Kalb of the Cnisaders
putm17pomtstoleadcapital's
71-64 downing of Otterbem in
which the team never lratled
The Cl1188ders, at one pomt,
held
a 13-point lead over Ot·
recofd.
Larry Garloch and Tun Mey- terbein which was narrowed to
er combined for the flll81 SIX SIX after Otterbem reeled off
points to clinch the win lor the nine straight points, but the
team never really threatened.
Red Skins.
Otterbein Eliminated
Garloch was the game's
The loss ellmlnates Otterbem
14!adlng scorer wtth 24 points ·
while Darrel Dunlap added 20 from the Ohio Conference tournament, leaYIDg the team with
hHd 18 pomts ror a 16-7 mark for the season.""
Life can be better! You can Marshall, Randy Noll 17 and Jack Mehl had IS pomts in
Thursday night's match
become a new person ... You Mike D' Antoni IS.
Muskmgum won a second
Marshall scored 10 consecucan solve your problems Joy,
hope and vibrant llfe ' can flll tive pomts midway m the flrst round berth in the OC playoffs
your heart, and mfluence half for a 23-13 lead and held a after exploding in the second
period, outscoring Marietta 1:143-31 halftime advantage.
those aroWld you
However, Miami caught up 4, to break a nip-and-tuck game
at
61-61 with about seven min- for a declSlve 68-56 lead. The
Attend lh1s great senes of
B1ble-onented d1scuss1ons utes remalDlng in the game. Muskies wrapped up the game
des1gned to help you live more Tl"te game Wj!S tied five more With an easy 81-U wm.
Muskmgum, now 11-11, was
abundantly m every way m times, the last at 71-71 before
led
by Gene Ford with 18 pomts
Gar
loch
and
Meyer
took
over.
the world of the 70's
In the Ohio Conference tour- and Todd Brown with 16.
Martella, whofmtshed with a
nament,
Capilal reeled off an
Starts · 7:30 P.M.
easy wm over Otterbein to ad- 6-17 mark for the season, was
vance to second round compe- led by Rick Elbln and Tom
Sat March 4
tition agamst Muskingum to- Barnes, both With 14.
Overllme Win
mght m the Southern Division
Mulberry Height Rd .
Also m the southern diVISIOn,
while Mt Union faces BaldwinDemson
was forced into overWallace m a Northern DiVISIOn
time agamst Ohio Wesleyan to
Sponsored by Seventh-day game.
Adventlst Church. in your Also m tournament play to- gain a playoff position against
community.
night, Denison meets Witten- Wittenberg tonight, whtch
berg In the southern diolslon,
Marshall Umversity the na- ambushed at Oxford Thursday
tion's lOth ranked OU:jor col- mght.
~
lege basketball team and
Miami University, with an
named Wednesday to a berth m ummpresstve 12·11 record,
stuMed the Thundering Herd
77-71, giYIDg Marshall a 23-3

It can happen to you! fo~;:~i.ee

arshall
drew a first..-ound bye
Demson and Wesleyan held a
ll~hl ra"" throughout, W1lh "
37-:!7 he at inlermi•Sion
Wesleyan had the edge w1lh
one second left, hut Demson's
Tom Hodgkinson pot m a layup
to he It 6~ at the end of
regulatton play.
The Big Red burst out wtth
an 11-point spree m the overtime period on a three-poml
play by Hodgkmson, and held
the Bishops to four pomts, giV·
mg Denison an 84-73 v1ctory
DeniSOn was led by John
Sloan With 21 pomts, While
Oh1o Wesleyan was boosted by
Jack1e Brown's shooting
Wesleyan ended the season
w1th an 11-12 overall mark .
MI. Union Out-Rebounds
In the Northern DiVISion
race, the Purple Raiders of Mt
Union were down 46-42 at the
half but controlled the boards
m the second per1od to take an
87-81 win over Oberlin. The
Raiders out-rebounded Oberlin
49-25 In the game
The wm advances Ml Union
to second round competlon
agamst Baldwin-Wallace
which d1d not compete Thursday- mght
Marty Hunt of Kenyon College provtded the unpetus for
the Lords m thetr narrow 7:1-70
wm over Hetdelberg whtch advanced Kenyon against Woos-

WINTER
CLEARANCE

By United Press International Drake, 99-79, and Rtch Fuqua,
lowsv!Ue's Denny Crum 1s the No. 2 scorer m the nation,
finding out that meeting for- hit 45 points as Oral Roberts

mer coach John Wooden in the
NCAA tournament Isn't gomg
to be as easy as he m1ght thmk.
Crum, who played under
Wooden at UCLA, had hopes of
breaking hiS former coach's
five-year stranglehold on the
NCAA title. But now he's in
jeopardy of not even making
the tournament.
Memphis State (No. 17)
pulled into a tie lor the
Mtssouri Valley Conference
lead Thursday mght wtth a
deCISive ~ rout of the thirdranked cardinals, setting up
the possiblllty of a playoff for
the league title and an NCAA
,berth1 '!:he rWlneryp woul4 go
1M ·.d •~:.~\1'1 ., :~'.1
~ ...
. ...
.
·to
,tHe' 'l'l.tional . Irivitation
" · · Mrvuleport; Ohio
Tournament m· New York.
Larry Finch scored 21 pomts
and Memphis State's defense
held Louisville's high scorer Jun Price -to just four pomts
before he fouled out ll was
Memphis State's second viclory thts season over
LoUISVIlle, Which has lost only
three times in 'tl outings. The
Tigers are now ro-5 and both
teams have 11·2 conference
records.
''They have a fine team and I
didn't think we could Win by
Double Savings thru March 13
that much," said Gene Bartow,
It's Scotts Turf Builder, America's favorite
the Memphis State coach. "We
fertilizer for developing thick, green lawns.
did everything well, espeCially
Turf Builder makes your lawn grow greener,
on defense."
thicker, sturdier - no matter what kind of
Crum satd he expected
grass you have. Keeps It that way longer too,
Memphis State to be confident
because of lis prolonged feeding action.
of victory in a playoff game.
"They beat us twice," said
Crum. "I don't know what the
Turf Builder
odds are on a third time, but I'll
SMIOC 5.000 aq ft .$.M" 4 II
tell you right now, they think
they can do It again "
.... .. 15,000" II __a.w- I II
Bartow agreed. "We beat
Super Turf Builder
them on our home court, we
IIYI Jl
S,OOO lq II 1M Ul
beat them on thell' court ana
..,. $1 10,000 sq n JA.o9t' u.•
we can beat them on a neutral
1--~sntilis,ooo •• n JtM- ·~•
court,"
he said .
Halt' PIUI for Elllltllahtd liWftl
lwt f1
2 500 sq fl ..Mt I •
In the other act1on involving
1m $2
,,000 aq ft JAM' IJ.M
a rated team, Miarru of Ohio
H1ltl Pitas rar Ntw Sttdlnp
upset Marshall, the No 10
2,500 aq tt 1M-' ••
team and holder of an at~arge
NCAA berth, 77-71.
Larry Garloch and Tim
Meyer combined for the fmal
SIX points of the game as
Miami handed Marshall only
1ts third loss m 26 games. The
game was lted 71-71 w1th 2:14
left when Garloch converted
399 W. Main St.
992-2164
Pomeroy,
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF .- two free throws and Meyer hit
a pair of foul shots and a
STUFF"-FOR PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp;
basket.
SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GARDENS.
Elsewhere, Rich Stallworth
and Harry Rogers scored 2.,
I)OIOts each as St. Lows ripped

NEW MARKDOWNS
and
REDUCTIONS

20% to 50%
SAVING AT

BAHR CLOTHIERS

rnJ1~ m~~~
Scotts big
Pre-Spring SALE

lift,,

MODERN SUPPLY
o.

Solid State
Automatic Record Changer

MOTOROLA

Solid Stale Amplllter wtth 15 walt ol lnstanteous
peak power output (7' ' walls EIA music power
output raltngl Automatic record changer plays all
popular sizes and speeds of re&lt;:ordtngs Has two
6"x9" Golden Votce ~ 1"eakers. sw1ng out detachable
speaker wings, light wetghl tone arm, dtamond
stylus, separate bass, treble, balance and loudness

controls Aotomalte shut off, 45 rpm spindle

beat Wisconsin-Milwaukee,
100-96. Rich Garner scored 25
points and Bob Gregory hlt 23
as Manhattan stopped St
Peter's, 98-95,- and Jun LaCorle's 22 points carried Seton
Hall to a 75-62 triumph over
Colgate.

season.
Hilladale of Michigan shot
64.9 per cent from the floor to
take a 94-80 win over Ohio
Northern In the only other Ohio
college basketball game
Dennis Jawieckl pumped m
29 points and Roosevelt York
added another 24 for Hillsdale.

In first round Southern
Conference tournament action,
Funnan set a tourney scormg
record with a 126-00 rout of
VIrginia Mllltary, DavtdiOn
beat Appalachian State, ~-77,
East Carolina topped The
atadel, 110-11 and Wllllam and
Mary defeated Richmond, 91182.

Ironton Ahead In Race
For All-Sports Trophy
Only three and a half points f1erce Wllh the All·Sports
separate the first !1ve teams m Trophy now at stake as well as
the running lor the fll'st All- the regular SEOAL cham·
Sports Trophy to he awarded . p1onsh1ps.
th1~ year in th~ , S"outheas)ern
Pilints on the new award are
Ohio Athletic League
on a basis of e~ght for first,
Ironton, as a result of seven for second, SIX for thtrd
sharing the football crown, and etc , m each of tile f1ve sports,
fmishing third m basketball, football, basketball, baseball,
holds the top spot w1th 13\':t track and golf.
pomts.
The award Initiated through
Athens, co-champtons with a jomt project by the SEOAL
Ironton in football, fmtshed offiCials and SEOAL Sportsfourth In basketball and holds wr1ters and Broadcasters
second place at th1s point w1lh Assoc1at10n 1s mtended to
121&gt; pomts.
promote better balanced
And JUSt a smgle polnl behmd athletic programs at all league
1s Gallipolis, fourth m football schools
and second in basketball. The
Devils have 11\':t pomls.
Collf9e Basketball Results
cage champion Waverly is By Untied Press International
lied with Metgs for fourth place Drew 7• Brklyn Poly 53
Miami (01 77 Marshall 71
with 10 pomts Meigs com- 51
LOUIS 99 Drake 79
pleted the football season m Mnhttn 91 SI.Peter's 95
thll'd place and were fifth m Seton Hall 75 Colgate 62
Rhode Island 83 New Hamp 62
basketball, while Waverly took Captlal
71 Otterbein 64
top pomts in basketball, they Kenyon 72 Heidelberg 70
fimshed seventh m football. Unton, Ky 85 Cmbrlnd 64
Logan iS SIXth With SIX points; Ky St 90 Geotwn, ky 69
Memphts St. 80 Loutsvl 65
Jackson has five pomts for Hillsdale 94 Ohio Nrlhrn 80
seventh place and Wellston, Towson St. 89 Catholic U. 73
fmishing last In hoth football Miss 51 11'1 LSU 71
Batt 67 Mt SI.Mary's 62
and tied for last m basketball EauCialre 9J Plallevl 75
has three points
0 Roberts 100 Wls (Mil) 95
Competition in the spring Musklngum 81 Martella 68
88 Wchta 51 83
sports 1s expt!Cted lo be extra Tulsa
West Tex 72 No Texas 70
Ohio Hioh School
Tournament Scores
By United Press lnternotlonal
eras• 4AA
Kellenng Fatrmonl West 57
Mtamlsburg J7
Daylon Palterson 69
Kettenng Fatrmont Ea5t

S.t

Daylon
Rooseve\1
77
Wllmmglon 50
Dayton Colonel While 65
Centerville 52
West Carrolllon 65 Carroll 56
Cambridge 59 Dover 51
Southview 81 Lakewood 77
Linden McKmley 72 Northland
6J
Mounl Vernon 56 Columbus
East 54 (oil
Massillon 7J Jackson 43
Akron Buchtel 57 Ravenna 37
Boardman 71 Youngstown
Mooney 4J
ClusAA
'
Steubenville Central
77
Shadr,stde S1
St. Cia rsvllle 65 Mingo 51
West Holmes 51 West
Musklngum 411
Coshocton 56 Claymont •9
Waverly 82 Minford -«
Cleveland Holy Na'l1e 75
Aurora 51
Fort Frye 98 River Local 76
Moq,an 78 Shenandoah 75
Gallipolis 71 Rock Hill 56
Urbana 73 Springfield Cothollc
54
Bellefontaine 41 Versailles 39
Class A
Lynchburg Clay 52 Leesburg
Fairfield 48

Soutllern Conference
(1st round!
Furman 126 VMI 80
Davdsn 87 App\chn St 77
East Car 80 Clladel 71
Wm&amp;Mary 98 Richmond 82
Ohto Colleoe
Basketto.ll Scores
By United Press International
Mtaml 77 Marshall 71
Hillsdale (Mich .) 94 Ohio
Norlhern 80
Ohto Conferona Tournament
Southern DIVISIOn at Granvilk!
Demson 8• Ohio Wesleyan 73
to I)
Capllal 71 Otterbein 64
Musk1ngum 81 Martella 68
North~rn Dlvlson at Alliance
Kenyon 72 Heidelberg 70
Moun 1 Union 87 Oberlin 81

NEW
Sugar FreeTaste Great

FLAIR
Royal Crown

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Middleport, Ohio

PP232
O~r~ brown color
Clblri•t whh • brow " "''"VItn l~tv

~

WERNER RADIO &amp;
MIDDLEPO~T.

ler tomght
Heidelberg held a one-pomt
edge, :1.~14 at the half, but Kenvon went ahead 61-56 with two
nunutcs left which made for a
Lough see-saw hatUe.
Hunt, who SCQred 24 pomts,
put m a jump shot and two free
throws m the fmal seven seconds, however, to chnch the
Vlttory.
Heidelberg, with a 2-18 season record, was led by Art
Dunson with 31 I)Oints.
Both divtsion tiUe games are
scheduled for saturday night,
With diVISIOn wmners meeting
m the !mal playoff Tuesday,
March 7 The OC champion
gams a berth m the NCAA
Great Lakes Regional Tournament.
In other Oh1o college action
Thursday mght, Mi8Uil was
sparked to a 77-71 upset over
NCAA tournament-bound Marshall.
The humlllation given Marshall by the Redsldns marka
only the thlrtll058 in 26 games
for the Thundering Herd this

Louisville Stunned, 80-65

N. W. COMPTON, 0.0.

T~V.·

OPTOMETRIST

0.
.

'

. .

...

1._

......_______..

OFFICE HOURS 9 30 TO t2, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
APT NOON ON THURS)- EAST COURT ST.,
'(.

\

Pro Standings

Blue Devils Win 71·56

ABA Standtngs
By Untted Press lnternlftonal

It will be Gallipolis (16-4) vs. Ironton 03-7) for

Eosl

GB the 1972 Symmes Valley Class AA Sectional
Basketball ToOrnament championship at Willow
~
Wood Saturday night.
Jl 36
28 41 4()6 27
Thursday night, while numerous Gallipolis fans
27 •1 397 27 11&gt;
Ptllsburgh
2J 45 338 31V&gt; were wandering up and down the Lawrence County
West
hills searching for a passable road to the Symmes
W. L Pet. GB
Valley High School gym as a result of high water on
Utah
48 21 696
lnd•ana
33 ~ 567 9
Rt. 141 at Waterloo, Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS
Dallas
JJ J8 465 16
Blue Devils were sweeping the giant Rock Hill
Denver
28 39 424 19
Memphts
2• 40 JSJ 23'1&gt; Redmen off their feet with a blistering first period
Thursday's Results
performance
Kentucky 135 Vtrgtma 130, ot
Utah 123 Dallas 121. ol
By the lime latecomers
IOnly games scheduled)
Blue Devils at their best thl1
am
;ed, GAHS was on top 23-4
Frid1y's Games
season.
From lhal pom l on, the
Ptllsburgh at MemphiS
Offensively, GAHS h1t seven
V1rgtma at Indiana
Galhans coasted to victory,
Carolma at Flondtans
of
11 from the fteld, (63 pet.)
but the
Blue
Dev1ls'
IOnly games S&lt;:hedoled)
overall play durmg the !mal and from the foul ctrcles, the
NHL Standtngs
three perutds was somewhat Blue Dev1ls were perfect,
By Untied Press International
canmng mne for nme GAHS
erratic
East
W. L T Pis
Those who missed tbe first hauled down 10 rebounds In the
Boston
47 8 9 103
period action failed to see the openmg s~za.
New York
4J 11 10 96
Monlreal
J7 1. 12 86
DEVILS (71)
Oetrotl
2818965 PLAYER- PasGALLIPOLIS BLUE
FG-A
FT-A PF RB TO TP
Toronto
27 27 11 65 Rod Ferguson, f
7 11
56
2 14
3 19
Buffalo
13 37 15 4t Rtck Boone. g
1
4
8
8
o
l
3
10
Vancouver
16 41 6 J8 Gtl Pnce, c
s
12
3
s
4
6
6
1J
West
Larry Snowden, g
4-10 7 11 2 3 1 15
W L T Pis Jimmy
Noe.
I
l
9 l 3 s 6
4 6
Ch1cago
40 16 8 88 Kev Sheets, g
0
2
0
0
2
0
1
0
M~nnesola
32 31 9 73 Topper Orr, c
0
1
0
0
1
3
0
0
Sl LouiS
22 34 9 53 Mark Kiesling, f
1J 4 s 2 J
2 6
California
18 J2 15 51 Mtke Berridge, g
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
Phllad•IPh•a
20 J2 11 51 Bill Lemley. f
o.o
o
o
1
o
1
o
Ptllsburgh
20 JS 9 49 TOTALS
21·53 29 31 19 31 21 71
Los Angeles
16 42 7 J9
ROCK
HILL
REDMEN
(56)
Thursday's Results
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A
FT
A
PF RB TO TP
New York 4 Buffalo 3
Jim
Stewart,
c
8
15
4
9
3 16
• 20
Boston 7 Vancouver J
Randy
Ruggles,
f
15
11
3
0
1 3
PIllsburgh 7 Del roll 4
Dove
Schug,
I
5 11
66
2
8
2
16
Phlladelphta J Mmnesota 0
Mike
McFann,
g
J6
01
2
1
8
6
(Only games S&lt;:hedoledl
Mike
Koons,
g
2-9
2-S
l
2
l
6
Fr1d1y's Games
Rick
Steed,
f
01
00
2
1
2
0
Ch1cago a t Callfornta
Jerry
Deer.
f
1J
1
3
4
0
1
3
!Only game scheduled)
Joe Jenkins, g
02
0-0
3
2
1
0
Ben Adams, f
01
00
• 0 J 0
Tom Chrlsltan. g
0 0 1 0
0-1 0-0
John Fearing, f
12 02
0 J
0 2
Perce\ Watts. g
00
0-0 0 1 0 0
TOTALS
21-56 14-27 25 34 26 ,.
Score By Quarters:
Gallipolis Blue Devils
2J 17 18 13
71
Rock Hilt Redman
4 19 17 16 56
Offici• Is - Beecher &amp; Shope.
Kentucky
Vtrgtnta
New York
Flond1ans
Caroltnd

W L Pet
55
lo

14

797 •
580 15
·i&amp;i'il 22

Waverly
In Class
AA Finals

SPECIAL PURCHASE!

Tw1ce-bealen Waverly
moved another step toward a
lrlp to next week's Class AA
d1str1cl ehmma lwns w1lh an 8244 dec1s1on over outmanned
Mmford Thursday evemng.
The 18-2 T1gers face Hillsboro 1n Saturday's sectional
fmals for a berth 1n the Rw
Grande d1str1ct.
Waverly whipped in 50 pel. of
lis shots m putting Mmford
away With a 4-16 log. The
Tigers 'doubled the score m the
second half in pullmg away
comfortably
John Shoemaker's 18 and 17
pomls contributions from M1ke
Oyer and Butch Workman did
Ihe damage as Waverly fired in
36 uf 72 from the field . Minford
shot a cool 26 pel. ( 15 of 57). AI
Ferguson was the blg gWl for
the losers with 16
WAVERLY (11) - Maloy, 50-10, Over, 7-J-17 , Fairchild, 2
2-6 , Gullion, 4 0-8, Workman, 7
3-17: Shoemaker, 9 0 18;
Pletfer, 1-0 2; Helton, 1-2 4.
TOTALS- :U-10-U.
MINFORD (44) - Frazle, 23-7, Ferguson, 5·6-16, Price, 5212 ; Swords, 2 2 6, Shumvay,
t-1-3 'I'OTALS--15-14-41
By Quarters :
Waverly
1.355782
9232744
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NCAA basketball playoffs
March 11, offiCials announced
Thursday.
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AID PLEDGED
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tenthousand dollars was pledged
tu v1clims of the West Virginia
flood d1S8sler Thursday by the
Oh10 Umted Auto Workers
Community Acl10n Program
Council. The council also satd it
m1ght seek to help victims take
legal action agamst owners of
U1e dam which broke, crealmg
the diS8ster

BAUM LUMBER CO.
0. Ph. 985-3301

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

L...---Meigs
County
BranchTo Better
Serve Our
Customers

I

EARL F. INGLES-MGR.
Your Savings Insured
To S2D,OOO

Real Estate Loans
• Home loans • Business Real Estate
loans • Christmas Cub
e Money Ordels e Mobile Homes
e Interest Paid On Deposits
296 W. 2nd ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

.- •

�..
-

:

I

4- 'lbe O.Uy Seltlnel, Mldcllellort·1'1:4neroy, 0.. March 3, 1972

•

~.-......
'

the Sports

LOSE UGLY PAT
,ally s.ays A rm .cv eel·s .cvine ~~y~·~c:~~~Jr~
1: :..:,~;

Valwlble Athletic Reoonls ·
Compiled for Me~ High

111 .7\.T
1 , ... C1

I

B U-'ted ..__ .. ··~-u•-aJ
Y "' .. ...,. ,...,__
and whose wrinkles around the eyes are quite appPrent, un- · Dave McNally who has been
in eal!h ofthe
fortunately won't last forever. Retirement will be upon hlm a 20-game
· By Chet Tannehill
last
four
·Seasons
with a
quicker than we would like. Which Inspires the queation : Who
will do this valuable service when Wolfe )JUts away scratchpa~ oompoaite won..Jost record of
87.;11, had good rews for the
and pen~ls ?
That's a question the school administration will have to try to three-lime American League
answer. Largely a thankless task, Wolfe won't be easy to replace champion Baltimore Orioles
· •ne athletic teams of a new high school - take Meigs, for when the Great Referee whistles his fifth foul and orders him to Thtnday · his arm is back in
example - set a record everytlme they take to court or field .
shape. '
the bench to rest.
. McNally has had arm trouble
That's the way it was in 1967 .when Rutland, Pomeroy and
So to 1972 basketball:
during at least part of the last
·Middleport boys ganged up to become the Marauders of Meigs
NEW RECORDS SET IN 1971·72
four
seasons and was sidelined
High.
TEAM RECORDS :
five weeks en route to a 21-5
For a couple of years no one kept accumulative records. By
Most Field goal attempts, I game, 71, vs.South Point.
record last year.
the time Donald (Piule) Wolfe had sashayed downriver from
Most fieid goals made, I game, 35, vs. Jackson.
"~y arm felt just fine," said
Southern High School where he had been atbletir director, off·
Most total points, I game, 87, Vl!. Wellston.
McNally after a 15-q!inute
and-on coach of this or that (wherever then Supt. Charles
Highest field goal shooting Average, I game, 56 pet., w. workout Thursday.
·
Hayman happened to need a coach), and commercial instructor, Jackson.
Unsigned Oriolea are Boog
the athletic records department was in bad shape. Ma inly
Most rebounds, 1 game, 55, w. Wahama.
Powell, Dave Johnson, Don
because there wasn't any.
Most field goals made, I season, 415.
Buford, Merv Retlenmund,
Largely as a self-assignment derived from a deep interest in
Least field goal attempts, I game, 36, vs. Wellston.
Bobby Grieb and Mike Cuellar.
things athietic, Wolfe in 1969 took upon himself the collection of
Least personal fouls, I season, 315.
Ralph Garr, who hit.343last
all available newspaper and school reports of Marauder athletir
season, signed his 1972conjract
Least rebounds, I game, 20, vs. South Point.
events. Scrapbooks were made up of each year, and the tedious
Least free throw attempts by opponenets, I game, 9, by leaving the Atlanta Braves
compiliation of records undertaken.
with four unsigned playersWellston.
Today, Wolfe has an up-t&lt;Hiate and accurate record of every
pitcher
Cecil Upshaw, catcher
Least free throw attempts by opponenets, I season, 415.
conceivable - and some dern nigh inconceivable - Marauder
Least free throws made by opponenets; I game, 3, by Earl Williams outfielder Rico
'
athletic record.
Waverly.
This is the fifth year of Marauderdom and the fifth year of
Least free throws made by opponents, I season, 233.
records. The news 20 years from now, as Dan Rowan would say,
Lowest free throws made average by opponenet, 1 game, 25 •»:-:-: ••
will be much more exciting and valuable than now in the record pet. by Waverly.
department. The fact of the matter is, it's my guess that no
Lowest free throws made average by opponent, I season, S6
NEW YORK (UP!! athletic department of any school in southeastern Ohio - I '~ pet.
Balloling by the National
even broaden that out to include the whole country - has as INDIDIVUDAL RECORDS:
Association
of
In·
complete a record of team and athletic achievement as Meigs
Most rebounds, I game, 31, by Tony Vaughan, vs. Wahama.
tercolleglate Athlellc's
High .
Coaches Board put Defiance
Best free throws made average, I season, 76 pet., by Jim
All right. AU to the good. But Mr. Wolfe, whose hair is gray, Boggs.
College of Ohio In fourth
place.
First place honors went to
Eau Claire Stale of
1971-72 MEIGS I'I.ARAUD ~ R BASKETBALL STATISTICS
Wisconsin, which received
all 34 first place voles.
FIELD FIELD FIELD FHEE FHEE FREE
AVE . Defiance, 23-1, wiU host Rio
GOAL GOALS GOAL THROWS 1'HROWS THR.
Grande Monday in a District
P.&amp;;RS. TOTAL PER
PLaY.i:RS
Q_ s_ TRIES MADE
AVE. TRIED MiillE AVE, REB. FOULS POINTS GAME 22 NAJA Tournament game.

Wino.;

Desk

,.,,.-.:;:;:.~··~;-~~
:.;.:;:~·~

S .Dunfee
T.Vaughan
R,Ba1ley
J.Boggs
J.Morris
A."Vaughan
Maayre
W,Vaughan
M.W.e rry
R.,Aish
B.Chaney
F1. Burnsy
To tab
Opponents
lJ,)

flu.

19
19
19
18
7
19
18
15
17
14
2
1
19
19

7J
76
67
65
28

221
190
139

6~

4

42
32
20

2

--

1
0
76 1031
76 1143

40%

~8

41%
43%
35%
47%

95
93
59
42

~M

5~

115
88
83
86
45
29
35
0

89
81

29
41
16

56

~

32
32
36
47
9
18

i~

35 ~

21
35
1i
0
0

t

38 %
25%
0
0
40 % 502
41 % 415

11

9

0
0
415
472

-

0
0
294

36
26

50

16
21
15
8

~ii

7
7
16

50

233

Gilbert Has

Doral Lead
MIAMI (UPI) - The 'llewly
overhauled par-S tenth hole. at
the "Blue Monster" Dora!
Country Qub coiD'se is full of
anguish for most of the pros in
the $150,000 Poral Eastern
Open , but It is not bothering
Gibby Gilbert at aU.
Gilbert shot a par 5 on the
hole Thursday and carded a
four-under-par 68 to go into
today's ·second round a shot
ahead of Lee Trevino, Bob
Rosburg, Dick Lotz, Butch
Baird, and Jim Colbert --all
with 69.
And three strokes back at
one-under-par 71 is Jack
Nicklaus.
The highest score on the par 5
bole was an 8 by Dave Marr
who said, ''They must have
designed it backwards."
" ! hate it ," said Baird, who
scored a 6. "It 's an absolute ·
abortion," said Mike Hill, a
former Poral champion who
also shot a bogey on the hole,
and
was just a terrible

:·u

···~::::::~

Tonight's semifinal roun(
action' iri the· Class A· Sec"

124

tlonal
High
School
Basketball Tournament at
Rock Springs between North
Gallla and Symmes Valley (7
p.m.) and Eastern·Hannan
Trace (8:30 p.m. I wUI be
carried live over WJEH-FM
Radio.
~"!~~:~:~~:~::~:~:~:~!:i:!:::::~~::~:::?.?:!::~:?.::::~:::::::~

change," added Rosburg who
managed a par 5.
Gilbert was too happy with
his round to do any complain·
ing .
It was Gilbert's first strong
start since he was injured Jan.
4 when the jetliner in which he
was a passenger hit clear air
turbulence and threw him
against the cabin ceiling,
dumped him in the aisle,
bruised him all over, and gave
him a large blood clot on his
left side.
"It feel s good playing this
well after that accident," he
said.
Since the jetliner incident
Gilbert has played in the
TUcson Open and last week's
Jackie Gleason Inverray Clas·
sic. But the two tournaments
netted him only $887.

NOW'S TIME!

THIS IS THE PLACEI
SPRING

.FERTILIZER
FIELD SEEDS
Funk's Seed Com
Sugar Run Mills
~80

Mulberry .Ave.

POMEROY

STEWART - AI Bowen,
head basketball coach at
Columbus Central High School
and a former coach at AmesBern High School at Ameaville
and Eastern High School of
Meigs County, will be the main
speaker when the Tri-Vailey
Conference holds its annual ailleague basketball banquet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Federal-Hocking High School
here .
Members of the all-league
k:am, selected by the loop's
five coaches, will be honored.
Special honorees will be the
Coach of the Year and the Most
Valuable Player . Those
selections will not be made
public until the night of the
banquet.
Named to the all-league
U:am were Danny Hall and Jim
Schloss of Fooeral-Hocking,
which won the loop championship; Mark Elder, Phil
McGraw and Terry Coffman of
Warren Local ; Mark Humphrey and Jerry Meeiey of
Belpre; Harold Caudill and
Ron Prater of Vinton County
and Joy Seckinger of
Nelsonville-York. Honorable
mention selections were Glen
Hale of Vinton County, Bob
Crissinger of Belpre ; Rob
Smith of FederaJ.Jiocking ; and
Rocky Smathers and Mike
Koker of Nelsonville-York.
Tickets, 'priced at $2 per
person, are on sale at Ft:deraiHocking High School as well as
other league members. The
banquet is open to the public .
Tickets must be purchased
before Monday morning .
Bowen, In his third season as

head coach at Columbus .
Central, was cage mentor at
the .former Ames-Bern High
School for six years (it is now
part of the Federal-Hocking
system), then coached at
Eastern for one year. He
gained numerous championships and honors during
his coaching in this area.

"'" '

"

... ,

...

•

•

......

-

.

.... .

.

0

IS

AJ Bowen ,

~~~r s;wt~rv

';1?1• ~n.r'~,:d:.;

with no questions ukod .
MONAOEX
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Middleport. Moll Ordoro Filled.
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68 Chevy Now 4 Dr., 6 cyl, auto.~ ....... 11495

During This Sale

68 Ford Torino 2 Door H.T.................11295
67 Buick LeSabre 4 Door HrT... ........... 'l195

ON ALL

r-==~ CABINET

MAGIC

REG. 1.98

67 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe .................'1095

66 Olds 88 .4 DOor••••••••••••••••••••••••••.l95
SITE CHANGED

NEW YORK (UPI)-The
Hickok Belt, symbol of the
Professional Athlete of the
Year, will be presented at a
ciifferent site than Rochester,
N.Y., next year, it was announced Thursday by ~urray
Goodman.
The Rod!ester Press and
Radio Club earlier voted to
eliminate its annual present&amp;·
lion ol the award.
SENA n: PASSES BILL
WASHINGTON I UP!) - The
Senate Thursday passed an~
sent to the House bill asking
Pr•osidrnt Nixoo to designate
the fourth Saturday of ·each
September as National Hun·
tin~ and ~·ishing Da)·.
•

66 MercuiJ Sta. Wagon,

v.a auto............?95

66 Buick laSabre 4 Door, air..............:'995
MAGIC

65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door................... ~795
65 Falcon 2 Door, 6.cyl., std............... '495

Over 30 New CadUiacs &amp;Oldsmobiles
In Stock!
We're Dealin '!

a

992·5342

GMC FINANCING

AME RICAH

MAGIC
AMEitiCAN

Beovlllles wood ond 'r~mo!fe'
grease. sfol ns. Just spray pn, wipe

dl.

Remov es sc.r ol ch e~ st uffs,
slo li iS, h vm pona llng, woodV"ork, furnitur e.

Now, enjoy easy tunlnJ, more lifelike color. Philcomotic
•Color
TV line tunes at the touch 9f 1 button and "locks.tn"

VALUES!

the picture. Sot end forget-no fiddling ev.ry lime you
chanil• channels. Gives more lifelike flesh tones, better
color In every scene- outomoticallyl• P~llco Hi·Brlte
MasiColor picture tube • Tilt·front control dock
• Contemporary, almul•ted Walnut finish

'

25 inch plctura mtiSured diagonally, 315 square Inch picture

0~ '549 .
REMAN &amp;ABBOTT
95

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You' ll Like Our Quality W11y
of Doing Business"

· By Goldie Clendenin
· PORTLAND- This reporter
wants to tell other senior
citizens, especially ones in this
community, about our "Get
together" at the Heath United
Methodist Church at Mid·
dleport last Sunday. It was my
privilege, compliments of my
friend Merct:des CondOn, a
music teacher .at Pomeroy, to
attend this meeting, which ivas
for the purpose of organizing a
committee of, and for Senior
Pomeroyout-lying

If I understand it correcLiy,

68 Dodge Polara 2 Door H.T................'1495

.

,

POMEROY

or

· ur~erly arra ngement of St. Patrick's Pay .theme were
cumponent ' parl6." She spoke served .
un line, form, texture , pattern
and color. Mrs. Buel RidenoUr
conducted a quiz with Mrs.
Domald Mora winning first
place and Mrs. Roy Holter,
second . Mrs . Howard Knigbi
conducted a quiz with Mrs.
Hotace Karr win ning llrst.
Mrs. Homer Holter displayed
a blue ribbo n modern
See us for your
arr ange ment
us ing'
a
corkscrew, willow, fern and
PARTY GOODS
allium. Mrs. Richard. Barton
CARDS AND FAVORS
displayed a red ribbon
arrangement using amaryllis.
Asilent auction was held . Mrs.
Chadwell won the door prize.

lor mpil&lt;lllty cummiltee . Mrs.
Wy•l t Chadwell was nmued to
be in charge ~~ ribbons and
Mrs. Rubert Wood W3S named
d erk.
Mr5 . J. M. Gaul, Mrs.
Clarence Neutzling and Mrs.
Chadwell will be in charge of
registration and Mrs. Dale
Kautz will handle entry cards.
The horticulture division will
be headed by Mrs. Richard
. Barton, Mrs. Homer Holter,
Mrs. Gordon Anderson and
Mrs. Pearl Mora. The show
will be held at the Royal Oak
Park archery building. Mrs. I.
B. Walker will be show
publicity director.

Yonker, Mrs. Chlorus Grimm,
and Mrs. Betty Morris. The $5
attendance award was won by
Mrs. Grimm's fifth grade.
It was announced that the
first graders of Miss Betty
Wilson will present the
program at the March meeting
and that the second grade
mothers will serve at that time.
Mrs. Carrie Roush gave the
treasurer's report, and Mrs.
Betty Wilson read the minutes ·
of the last meeting. F.ounder's
Day cake was served by the
first grade mothers with Mrs.
Janet Manual as chairman of
the social hour.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

Members
named their
success
type ·arrangernent
in
answer to roll call and Mrs.
Clarence Neutzling led the
devotional period giving an
article from a paper, "The
Country Parson and the
Contented Person."
Mrs . Wood reported that the
club will tour the Fenton
Glassworks on April 4 and will
meet at the home of Mrs.
Howard Knight at 5:45 leaving
there at 6. Mrs. Pearl Mora
reporting for the sunshine
committee said that she and
Mrs. Donald Mora had taken a·
planter to Mrs. Max Harrah
last month. Mrs. Homer Holter
was namoo to the committee
for March.
Mrs. Summerfield presented
the program, "The. New and
Different Kinds of Roses."
Mrs. Homer Holter displayed
and explainoo articles used in
making arrangements in·
eluding such items as chicken
wire, floral tape, stem wire,
putty, styrofoam, rocks, frogs,
oasis and ottier articles. Mrs.
Reid Young gave a demonstration on deaign in floral
arranging stressing the
definition for design, "The

;:e:fr:es:h:m:e:nts:c;a.~rr~y;in;g~o;u:t~a~~==:;;;::::;

foot down
for STYLE!

DOUBLE
DARE
FLARE

The Department Store
:&gt;f Building Sin~e 1915

Open E1·enings Until 6:00- Til 5 PM. Sat.

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

'/
I

this has to be done in order for
our county to get its fair share
of a government grant of a
million dollars for Ohio's
aging, which would benefit
them in many ways.
These folk are giving of their
time and "know-how" to try to
help ones who cannot help
'themselves. The idea was
started by Pastor Lund of St.
Paul's Lutheran Church of
Pomeroy and ·Pastor Card of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church in Nov. 1971. ·
Weather conditions have
cancelled several meetings
since then . But these men and
women have persisted in this
effort in our behalf and are
fightin g the elements and a
deadline, which is June 30th I
believe,and doing their jobs in
other fields, too. Now is a good
time for us I&lt;&gt; help them to help
us by participating in any way
possible .
Many folk are not able to get
out much, but even one's
presence at meetings show that

2-.HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
i 10 E. lnd'

Pomtroy

Phone 992-5428

he is willing and interested.
Many find that there are
things, even though handicapped, they may do to
contribute to this effort.
Working together for a worthy
cause gives one a feeling of
being needed and useful.
The purpose of the project to
start is :
( I) To arouse ipterest in
problems and opportunities of
the aging.
. (2) To determine some of
their needs and interests.
(31 To get widespread
participatioq a11d reflect the
needs of thes~ folk .
( 4 ) Attempt to determine the

Antique
Brown Grain

the street and in homes, atomic
"Some men see things as
destruction, and death. And they are and ask why. I dream
courage does not come from a of things that never were and
bottle, pill or a needle. It is a say why not," said Robert
quality of ·the mind, the will, Kennedy.
and the spirit that helps one to
But Winston Churchill .said,
face up to life's problems. ·"Courage is the first of human
Courage increases by each qualities because it guarantees
small. victory or courageous . . II oth•rs."
.,
"
act. P.e6pfe"arAw'stten-gih
tO'Jr~g\\8' the Price that life
courage fr'om one another, exacts f~r granting peace.
suppOrted by the wiU of God.
The soul that knows It not
· The record of the courage of
Knows not the li ved·lonUness
Anne Sullivan and Helen Keller of fear,
should help us all, even to
Nor mountain heights where
dreaming impossible dreams. bitter joy can hear
Martin Luther King Jr. said, "!
The sound of hope.
have a dream ... "
BUT THE CLEAREST
·
conception we have of courage
to dream impossible dreams is
Jesus as he stoOd
the
synagogue at Nazareth. Read
Luke: 4:18-19·21.
most needed or desirable
future projects.
Here are a few notes from
the program: There are 944
persons 60-64 years of age, and
2,731 persons 65 and older, total
3,675 (18 pet.) in this county
which has a population of
19,799. There are 3,731
over 55.
•

anll' .

•
d
Senior Citizens ' -17\."jTeedS R· eVteWe

H~tDog

You Don't ·Need CASH
WHEAT

-~

Foot Long

economically .

Great CaiS Make Great Deals

___

grained vl nyl1urface
toke hard knoc:ks,

Give your
that expensive

· paneled

cHgSTE!t - Aspring flower
shuw tu be held April 29 and 30
was discussed when the·
Chester Garden t1ub met at
the hume of Mn. Rose Ginther
with Mrs. Dale Kautz as CO·
'l•ost.ess .
Mrs. Paul Baer and . Mrs.
Horace Karr will be chairmen
the spring show with Mrs.
Earl. Dean, Mrs. Roy Holter,
Mrs. Reid Young, Mrs. J. M.
Gaul, Mrs, Pearl Mora, Mrs.
Donald M~ra, Mrs., Earl
Ingels . and . Mrt Kautz
to serve .on the staging committee. Mrs . Horace Karr, Mrs. Baer and
Mrs. Earl Dean were named to.
the show schedule committee
and Mrs. Leonard Erwin, Mrs.
Roy Miller, Mrs. Howard
Knight and Mrs . Ginther to the
education committee. Mrs.
Pur ley Karr, Mrs . Guy
Summerfield, Mrs. Buell
Ridenour and Mrs. George
Frederick were named to the

School Given Flag

992-2039

We' ll t estimote yoUr m o ti9rh~r ne eds
provide eosy-ro.follow instrvcllons on 1
sia llot io n,

1om

RUTLAND - Replanting Notes" garden clqb column. Flower Show. The RuLiand
shrubbery at the · Rutland Mrs. Charles Lewis was namt:d Club will participate.
Methodist. Church
was
he
1b
to prepare I next c u . ar- . A r~port wa,s given on the
·~lscusse4 a·nd Mrs . Virgil ticle.
newly organized garden club at
Atkins, committee chairman,
It was announced that' M~s. Langsville whi~h is being co• was ~ppointed chairman of the C. 0. Chapman, MrS. Er[ewlne· sponsored along with the
project' w)len the Rutland .and Mrs. Roy, Snowden 'will' Friendly Garden Club. ·Mrs.
Garden Qui&gt; niet this week at conduct a planting pr9ject. at ... Erlewine will .visit the newly
1
ijie ·home of Mrs. Harvey the .Gallipolis State lnsti,tute in forml!d·cJubin the neart;ture. ·
Erlewine, preSident, with Mrs. conjunction with the garden Officers of the new group are
NANNIE RUSSELL
Lawrence Mll~oan and Mrs. club there on March 28.Mrs. Mrs. Larry Bahr, president;
Mrs. Nannle. ' Rusoeb will
Vernon Weber assisting Nelson, Mrs. Ralph Turner, . Mrs. Leslie Hoffman, vice
celebrate her 95tb birtbday
hostesses.
Mrs. Robert canaday, Mrs. president;·Mrs. Emma ·Ledlie,
anniversary on March 10. A
Mrs. Millhone · led a. Erlewine, Mrs. Paul Winn and secretary, and, Mi'\1. Francis
long-time tesidenl of Meigs
devotional period which was Mrs. Chapman will be con- ·Wilcox, treasurer. "
County, Mrs. Rusoell now
followed·by ihe club creed and tributors to the program. The
A bakeless bake sale was
makes her home with a
collect In unison. "Flower . club also agreed to contribute held and was successful. A
daughter, Mrs. Nela Wbite,
~eds you would like to· grow" to highway planting. •Reports . door prize contributed by the 470 Hllock Ave., Columbus. A
was the . roll call respon!!f were given by . Mrs. 'Roy president was awarded to Mrs.
celebration with r.elatlves
an~ered by 18 members.
Snowden and Mrs. Erlewine on Jame&amp; Nicholson.
and friends Is being plauned
' The Good buck Gafden Oub the county. meeting held in
Mills RUby Diehl, was, in
for Mrs. Russell.
Ot the Athens Mental Health Pomeroy. Mrs. ·Snowden at· charge of a program. A horCenter thro\18h Mrs. Victor tendoo the theropy section and ticulture review, "A new eaS)l ·
Nelson sent its ·thanks for the Mrs. Erlewine, the general way for starting seeds was
Chris.lmas glf.ts from the procedures and seed books given . by Mrs . Harry
·
Williamson . The matter
Rutland Club. The club section.
planned another visitation to
It was reported that Mrs. suggested planting by the new
the Athens groitp in November. Thomas Stewart of the seed tape method; the ideal
LETART FALLS - An Ohio
Mrs. Erlewine thanked Friendly Garden Club and Mrs. planting of many vegetables
flag
was presented to the
committees fof their services ReidYoungwillbechairmenof and flowers under plastic,
Letart
Falls Elementary
including Mrs. Kate Jarrell (or the Big Bend Regatta Weekend using pellet type seeds, using ·
preparing valentine rememcommercial jiffy seven packs, School by Mrs. John Boyd,
American Legion Auxiliary of
brarices for residents of the
hobby green house ·packs,
11
Meigs Coimty Children's Home
'fr UC S .
',J'
commercial sectional plastic the Racine Post 602, at a recent
and the Meigs County In.
trays and a number of other meeting of the Letart PTA.
At the request of Mrs. Boyd,
nrmary. The extended thanks
hints.
to William Walters, MidMrs . Robert ·Canaday the PTA agreed to show a film
dleport; a contributor to the
presented "What to do in on cystic fibrosis at the Sep·
project, and thankoo Mrs. Paul
March ." Mrs . Canaday tember meeting. A corsage
Winn and Mrs. Jonah Cotterill
suggested starting tulip cut- was presented by Mrs. Don I
who recently presented a club
LETART F ALI.S - Mrs. lings, resetting Easter lilies, Johnson, president, to Mrs.
program on WMPO Radio. Ferne B. Hayman and repotting houseplants and top June Wickersham, a past
Mrs. Erlewine expressed her daughter,
Mrs ·
June dressing with fresh rich soil, president, who spoke briefly. A
appreciation to those who gave Wickersham, held a products methods to. use in spring Founder's Day offering was
gifts for male patients at the party at the home of the latter pruning, tea and floribunda taken.
Appointed to the nominating
Gallipolis State Institute who at East Letart Tuesday roses, yews, lilacs and
committee
was Mrs. Romon:~
had lost their belongings In a evening. Mrs. Phyllis Cline of rhododendrons.
fire.
Harrisonville was hostess.
Mrs . Snowden announced
Games were playoo and that the Friendly Garden Club
A letter was read from Mrs.
Charlene Hoeflich, society refreshments of sandwiches, is sponsoring a spring cleanup
editor of The Daily Sentinel, in potato chips, mints, coffee, and campaign in the community
regard to the "Green Thumb Kool·Aid were served to Mrs. assisted by the Rutland Village
By Goldie aendenln
. Mrs.
Council.
Mrs.
Erlewme,
1- - - - - - - - - , Belva Fisher, Mrs.PoEileen
PORTLAND
- Thursday
Roush, Mrs. Lucy
nohue, Snowden and Mrs. Williamson evening when the Emma Smith
Mrs. Phyllis O'Brien and will attend the next council Circle of the R.L.D.S. met at
children, Carol and linda, meeting to represent the the church on Racine-Portland
&amp;lr All Occasions
Mrs. Lester Roush, Mrs. Hazel Rutland Qub which will have a Rd. in charge of the leader
We wire flowers
Fox, Mrs. Florence Adams, role in the campaign.
Eula Proffitt, many members
... _...
Everywhere .,..._ Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs :
The hostesses . served col!id not attend, including this
Edna Clark, Mrs. Mabel
of
, ,!llields, Mrs. Marvene Beegle, refre~hfn~:Q·~ at the ~~~ : ~e ! •porter, . l&gt;e~ause of ba~
~
i
'
~ ' Mrs . Doris Sayre, Mrs. meeting; .. ,.' !"l'
·•'· ·· • t ~weather . ·..,_-- ":.::..
•
However,
·the
few
that
were
Genevieve Harvey, Mrs. Focie
there spent most of the time on
Pomeroy
Flower Shop
Hayman, Mrs . Ferne Hayman,
.
-. .
the study topic, "Needing
Mrs. Jtme Wickersham and
BuHernut Ave., Pomeroy
A thought for toda;y : Ameri. Courage."
Mrs. Mitt.rd Von Meter
Mrs. Mildroo Ponohew.
can writer William Henry
Courage is needed because of
Hudson said, "you cannot fly rapid change, uncertainty of
like an eagle with the wings of our era with its fears of
a wren."
rejection, failure, dangers on

_

•

J

Chester. Club Plans ·Show

FLOWERS

Before you ct e.:.•de to polt h ond rt·p•Pintl
tho! cc.ill roy, slop in today ond let us
1

Shrubbery Project
!Accepted by.Club

.

Individual Courage Needed

C/H

(e Conwad
r

On T ues day
" '

stronuo.us exerclse . c ~ango
1 1 Odoy ,
your hfe costs
... lllr
MONADEX
$!.00 tor • 20

BULBS NOl iNClUO EO

Home of

TVc Banquet s~~~r

:::~~:rou;.~rug~.~~:.:'-".1 ~·J

WIDE OVAL ~ ·FIBERGLASS

REG. 19.95

•

·

J

take .

BELTED·JIRES

GRID-LOCK
LIGHT FIXTURE
for suspended
ceilings

TITLE

the Fabulous
~.C,~)$

to

e Conwed

STEAK
HOUSE

18Q
0
0
59
62

euy

WINTER SALE!

CROW'S

itO

26
24
0
0
315 1124
378 1177

and

MONADEX
will~!!'! ceurb
doslrefor
.. ctssf-.
• 1.1vour
oss ·
wel~h leu . Contains no

SAVE DURING OUR

C/H

5
5

tablef

., ....,.

ll

138
128
112
105
91

-

after . their
latest contract
.
tfi ld
negoliallorts ... 0 U e er
Rusty Staub and pitmer Carl
Morton remained unsigned as
th e MonI rea I Expo
. "• went
through the~ wor.k~ut.
Catcher Rich Billmgs ended
•-y holdo uI when he
hiS one....
signed with the Texas Rangers
· have not SJg
· ned
who still
slugger Frank Howard.

________________ _______

. . ...............,.,•,•,•,•,•, •,•,•,•,·,·.:······ ......

12

- - - 8 -- -

-

-

53
55
35

59% 94
58% 2.34
~% 29
7 % 36
75% 109
~% 140
43% 60
51% 18
28% 32
75% 4
0
0
0
0
58% 756
56% 701

' '

Carty"
and ·first baseman
. .
Orlando Cepeda.
Rocky Colavito, former
home run slugger, .signt:d with
the aevelan d Indians as a
parttime outfield and batting
coach ... Second baseman Dick
Green reported to th e Oak!
. an d
Athletics' Mesa Ariz., camp
·
'
but there
were
no new
developments in the negotialions with 24-game winner Vida
Blue ... Dave Kingman, the 6foot, 6-inch power-hitting first.
basemal)-outfielder, will be
tested at third base by the San
Francisco Giants.
..
General Manager Bmg De-.
vine reiterated that the St.
Louis Cardinals have made
their final contract offers to
Joe Torre, Matty Alou, Ted
Simmons, Jerry Reuss, Bob
Burda · nd Jorge Roqu~ ...
OUtfielder Don Hahn s1gned
with the New York Mets for an
,estimated $17,000 ... Relief
pitcher Tom Burgmeier and
the Kansas City Royals apparently remained far apart

,•

~- 'lbe Daily Sentinel, Midlleport-Pwneroy, 0., March 3, 1972

, · "·'/J•hut~; " 11,•;tn

•.1 -.&amp;l,....JI.
Two·Tdn Bli!tk &amp; Burn ished Bron ze
Rich tone on tone ... the Double Dare Flare.
Today's perfectly natural look. Perfectly .
stated. Put your foot down for st yle. We
Double Dare you!

KIPS

t.~

SHOE STORE.
IN MIDDLEPORT

Many are isolated (72 pet.
rural ), lack transportation,
and have very little contact
· with friends and relatives.
From April! to Sept. 30, 1972,
$625 must be raised by local
cash, maybe · by banks,
churches, Individual free-will
offerings. Will you help?

'•
no

mess...
no

defrost
INIOII~·IGIEI
by FEDDERS
Refrigerator and freezer compartm ents are
both fr osHree ... no defrosting . eve r.

Say
Happy Anniversary
Wrth a Unde Star
Whether it's the first or the firtieth, the radiant
romance of a star sapphire says love eloquently.
N£xt to her wedding ring she'll treasure her Linde
Star most. Made only by Union Carbide Corpora.
lion. Li nde Stars are available here in a wide
range of colors in fine jewelry settings.

Choose a 15· 16· 19 cubic fool model. Each
fea tures a giant freezer locker wi th fl ex-out
1ce trays, organ izer shelf, extra·deep door
shelves and optional Built· ln lcemaker .
True re frigerator conven ience with adj ustable can tilevered Shelves. gl ide-out meat

dish. full shell dairy ba rs . portable egg
bucket, twin cris pers. -door shelves which
hold ~ gallon contain ers. plus a glamourous decorator interior. .
·
Fam ous Norge quality constru cti on tea·
lures Quiet-Thrust power unit. stai n-resis!·
ant d ura crylk: finish. easy-grip chrom e han·
dies. thin-wall con struc tion. magnetic doors
and roll·a w8y wh eels. Choose from Copper-

95

tone. Harvest Gold, Avocado, Wh ite .. . rig ht
or Iell hand door swing. Model RTF I 5568
shown.

From

26.00

IN-GELS FURN.ITURE
992-2635

Open .Frl &amp; Sat Nigh1s . MIDDLEPORT ·

�..
-

:

I

4- 'lbe O.Uy Seltlnel, Mldcllellort·1'1:4neroy, 0.. March 3, 1972

•

~.-......
'

the Sports

LOSE UGLY PAT
,ally s.ays A rm .cv eel·s .cvine ~~y~·~c:~~~Jr~
1: :..:,~;

Valwlble Athletic Reoonls ·
Compiled for Me~ High

111 .7\.T
1 , ... C1

I

B U-'ted ..__ .. ··~-u•-aJ
Y "' .. ...,. ,...,__
and whose wrinkles around the eyes are quite appPrent, un- · Dave McNally who has been
in eal!h ofthe
fortunately won't last forever. Retirement will be upon hlm a 20-game
· By Chet Tannehill
last
four
·Seasons
with a
quicker than we would like. Which Inspires the queation : Who
will do this valuable service when Wolfe )JUts away scratchpa~ oompoaite won..Jost record of
87.;11, had good rews for the
and pen~ls ?
That's a question the school administration will have to try to three-lime American League
answer. Largely a thankless task, Wolfe won't be easy to replace champion Baltimore Orioles
· •ne athletic teams of a new high school - take Meigs, for when the Great Referee whistles his fifth foul and orders him to Thtnday · his arm is back in
example - set a record everytlme they take to court or field .
shape. '
the bench to rest.
. McNally has had arm trouble
That's the way it was in 1967 .when Rutland, Pomeroy and
So to 1972 basketball:
during at least part of the last
·Middleport boys ganged up to become the Marauders of Meigs
NEW RECORDS SET IN 1971·72
four
seasons and was sidelined
High.
TEAM RECORDS :
five weeks en route to a 21-5
For a couple of years no one kept accumulative records. By
Most Field goal attempts, I game, 71, vs.South Point.
record last year.
the time Donald (Piule) Wolfe had sashayed downriver from
Most fieid goals made, I game, 35, vs. Jackson.
"~y arm felt just fine," said
Southern High School where he had been atbletir director, off·
Most total points, I game, 87, Vl!. Wellston.
McNally after a 15-q!inute
and-on coach of this or that (wherever then Supt. Charles
Highest field goal shooting Average, I game, 56 pet., w. workout Thursday.
·
Hayman happened to need a coach), and commercial instructor, Jackson.
Unsigned Oriolea are Boog
the athletic records department was in bad shape. Ma inly
Most rebounds, 1 game, 55, w. Wahama.
Powell, Dave Johnson, Don
because there wasn't any.
Most field goals made, I season, 415.
Buford, Merv Retlenmund,
Largely as a self-assignment derived from a deep interest in
Least field goal attempts, I game, 36, vs. Wellston.
Bobby Grieb and Mike Cuellar.
things athietic, Wolfe in 1969 took upon himself the collection of
Least personal fouls, I season, 315.
Ralph Garr, who hit.343last
all available newspaper and school reports of Marauder athletir
season, signed his 1972conjract
Least rebounds, I game, 20, vs. South Point.
events. Scrapbooks were made up of each year, and the tedious
Least free throw attempts by opponenets, I game, 9, by leaving the Atlanta Braves
compiliation of records undertaken.
with four unsigned playersWellston.
Today, Wolfe has an up-t&lt;Hiate and accurate record of every
pitcher
Cecil Upshaw, catcher
Least free throw attempts by opponenets, I season, 415.
conceivable - and some dern nigh inconceivable - Marauder
Least free throws made by opponenets; I game, 3, by Earl Williams outfielder Rico
'
athletic record.
Waverly.
This is the fifth year of Marauderdom and the fifth year of
Least free throws made by opponents, I season, 233.
records. The news 20 years from now, as Dan Rowan would say,
Lowest free throws made average by opponenet, 1 game, 25 •»:-:-: ••
will be much more exciting and valuable than now in the record pet. by Waverly.
department. The fact of the matter is, it's my guess that no
Lowest free throws made average by opponent, I season, S6
NEW YORK (UP!! athletic department of any school in southeastern Ohio - I '~ pet.
Balloling by the National
even broaden that out to include the whole country - has as INDIDIVUDAL RECORDS:
Association
of
In·
complete a record of team and athletic achievement as Meigs
Most rebounds, I game, 31, by Tony Vaughan, vs. Wahama.
tercolleglate Athlellc's
High .
Coaches Board put Defiance
Best free throws made average, I season, 76 pet., by Jim
All right. AU to the good. But Mr. Wolfe, whose hair is gray, Boggs.
College of Ohio In fourth
place.
First place honors went to
Eau Claire Stale of
1971-72 MEIGS I'I.ARAUD ~ R BASKETBALL STATISTICS
Wisconsin, which received
all 34 first place voles.
FIELD FIELD FIELD FHEE FHEE FREE
AVE . Defiance, 23-1, wiU host Rio
GOAL GOALS GOAL THROWS 1'HROWS THR.
Grande Monday in a District
P.&amp;;RS. TOTAL PER
PLaY.i:RS
Q_ s_ TRIES MADE
AVE. TRIED MiillE AVE, REB. FOULS POINTS GAME 22 NAJA Tournament game.

Wino.;

Desk

,.,,.-.:;:;:.~··~;-~~
:.;.:;:~·~

S .Dunfee
T.Vaughan
R,Ba1ley
J.Boggs
J.Morris
A."Vaughan
Maayre
W,Vaughan
M.W.e rry
R.,Aish
B.Chaney
F1. Burnsy
To tab
Opponents
lJ,)

flu.

19
19
19
18
7
19
18
15
17
14
2
1
19
19

7J
76
67
65
28

221
190
139

6~

4

42
32
20

2

--

1
0
76 1031
76 1143

40%

~8

41%
43%
35%
47%

95
93
59
42

~M

5~

115
88
83
86
45
29
35
0

89
81

29
41
16

56

~

32
32
36
47
9
18

i~

35 ~

21
35
1i
0
0

t

38 %
25%
0
0
40 % 502
41 % 415

11

9

0
0
415
472

-

0
0
294

36
26

50

16
21
15
8

~ii

7
7
16

50

233

Gilbert Has

Doral Lead
MIAMI (UPI) - The 'llewly
overhauled par-S tenth hole. at
the "Blue Monster" Dora!
Country Qub coiD'se is full of
anguish for most of the pros in
the $150,000 Poral Eastern
Open , but It is not bothering
Gibby Gilbert at aU.
Gilbert shot a par 5 on the
hole Thursday and carded a
four-under-par 68 to go into
today's ·second round a shot
ahead of Lee Trevino, Bob
Rosburg, Dick Lotz, Butch
Baird, and Jim Colbert --all
with 69.
And three strokes back at
one-under-par 71 is Jack
Nicklaus.
The highest score on the par 5
bole was an 8 by Dave Marr
who said, ''They must have
designed it backwards."
" ! hate it ," said Baird, who
scored a 6. "It 's an absolute ·
abortion," said Mike Hill, a
former Poral champion who
also shot a bogey on the hole,
and
was just a terrible

:·u

···~::::::~

Tonight's semifinal roun(
action' iri the· Class A· Sec"

124

tlonal
High
School
Basketball Tournament at
Rock Springs between North
Gallla and Symmes Valley (7
p.m.) and Eastern·Hannan
Trace (8:30 p.m. I wUI be
carried live over WJEH-FM
Radio.
~"!~~:~:~~:~::~:~:~:~!:i:!:::::~~::~:::?.?:!::~:?.::::~:::::::~

change," added Rosburg who
managed a par 5.
Gilbert was too happy with
his round to do any complain·
ing .
It was Gilbert's first strong
start since he was injured Jan.
4 when the jetliner in which he
was a passenger hit clear air
turbulence and threw him
against the cabin ceiling,
dumped him in the aisle,
bruised him all over, and gave
him a large blood clot on his
left side.
"It feel s good playing this
well after that accident," he
said.
Since the jetliner incident
Gilbert has played in the
TUcson Open and last week's
Jackie Gleason Inverray Clas·
sic. But the two tournaments
netted him only $887.

NOW'S TIME!

THIS IS THE PLACEI
SPRING

.FERTILIZER
FIELD SEEDS
Funk's Seed Com
Sugar Run Mills
~80

Mulberry .Ave.

POMEROY

STEWART - AI Bowen,
head basketball coach at
Columbus Central High School
and a former coach at AmesBern High School at Ameaville
and Eastern High School of
Meigs County, will be the main
speaker when the Tri-Vailey
Conference holds its annual ailleague basketball banquet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Federal-Hocking High School
here .
Members of the all-league
k:am, selected by the loop's
five coaches, will be honored.
Special honorees will be the
Coach of the Year and the Most
Valuable Player . Those
selections will not be made
public until the night of the
banquet.
Named to the all-league
U:am were Danny Hall and Jim
Schloss of Fooeral-Hocking,
which won the loop championship; Mark Elder, Phil
McGraw and Terry Coffman of
Warren Local ; Mark Humphrey and Jerry Meeiey of
Belpre; Harold Caudill and
Ron Prater of Vinton County
and Joy Seckinger of
Nelsonville-York. Honorable
mention selections were Glen
Hale of Vinton County, Bob
Crissinger of Belpre ; Rob
Smith of FederaJ.Jiocking ; and
Rocky Smathers and Mike
Koker of Nelsonville-York.
Tickets, 'priced at $2 per
person, are on sale at Ft:deraiHocking High School as well as
other league members. The
banquet is open to the public .
Tickets must be purchased
before Monday morning .
Bowen, In his third season as

head coach at Columbus .
Central, was cage mentor at
the .former Ames-Bern High
School for six years (it is now
part of the Federal-Hocking
system), then coached at
Eastern for one year. He
gained numerous championships and honors during
his coaching in this area.

"'" '

"

... ,

...

•

•

......

-

.

.... .

.

0

IS

AJ Bowen ,

~~~r s;wt~rv

';1?1• ~n.r'~,:d:.;

with no questions ukod .
MONAOEX
sold wit~
l~is
uaranteo by Is
: 'Swlshor
&amp; Lohso
~rugs , 112 E. Malo, Pom eroy;
0., &amp; DutJon Dru1 1tore,
Middleport. Moll Ordoro Filled.
'
Adv.

AT LOWEST ~ICES
IN THIS A.REA

H&amp;R
FIRESTONE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

,

C/H

1388

Suspended Ceilings

29~

°FORAS
LOW AS ...
. ,.,.

.,.,

.,.

·

SQ.

SANDWICH

PANELING

' I
I

4FOOhiFOOT

I

' . 'I'
'

3~!

I

!.

Order By Phone

t

SHEET

And T~ke Em Home
992·5432

birch

I

face l i

Simul a te d

veneer is beautiful,

p., vd t Part

Held at Home of
ha
Mrs. Wicker.r m

SPECIALS

wood·

look

stay1

CLIP THIS COUPON

smart -

FOOT LONG HOT DOG

3

Open A BUd-A-Count and Say

CARAMEL

CHARGE IT

USED CARS

HotDog
With

,

Sauce
GOOD AT

1

J.&amp; F PIZZA HUT
SATURDAY, MARCH

4 ONLY

or
Middleport and
~:::::::::::::::::::::~Citizens
communities.

71 Buick Electra 2 Dr. H.T., air ........... 14495
1
71 Dodge
Coronet
.
. 4 Door, air............. 2995
. 69 Ford lTD 2 Door H.T................... '1795

10% DIS(OUNT

69 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, air................ 12695

PRAn &amp; LAMBERT PAINTS

69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air.......12595
68 Chevy Now 4 Dr., 6 cyl, auto.~ ....... 11495

During This Sale

68 Ford Torino 2 Door H.T.................11295
67 Buick LeSabre 4 Door HrT... ........... 'l195

ON ALL

r-==~ CABINET

MAGIC

REG. 1.98

67 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe .................'1095

66 Olds 88 .4 DOor••••••••••••••••••••••••••.l95
SITE CHANGED

NEW YORK (UPI)-The
Hickok Belt, symbol of the
Professional Athlete of the
Year, will be presented at a
ciifferent site than Rochester,
N.Y., next year, it was announced Thursday by ~urray
Goodman.
The Rod!ester Press and
Radio Club earlier voted to
eliminate its annual present&amp;·
lion ol the award.
SENA n: PASSES BILL
WASHINGTON I UP!) - The
Senate Thursday passed an~
sent to the House bill asking
Pr•osidrnt Nixoo to designate
the fourth Saturday of ·each
September as National Hun·
tin~ and ~·ishing Da)·.
•

66 MercuiJ Sta. Wagon,

v.a auto............?95

66 Buick laSabre 4 Door, air..............:'995
MAGIC

65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door................... ~795
65 Falcon 2 Door, 6.cyl., std............... '495

Over 30 New CadUiacs &amp;Oldsmobiles
In Stock!
We're Dealin '!

a

992·5342

GMC FINANCING

AME RICAH

MAGIC
AMEitiCAN

Beovlllles wood ond 'r~mo!fe'
grease. sfol ns. Just spray pn, wipe

dl.

Remov es sc.r ol ch e~ st uffs,
slo li iS, h vm pona llng, woodV"ork, furnitur e.

Now, enjoy easy tunlnJ, more lifelike color. Philcomotic
•Color
TV line tunes at the touch 9f 1 button and "locks.tn"

VALUES!

the picture. Sot end forget-no fiddling ev.ry lime you
chanil• channels. Gives more lifelike flesh tones, better
color In every scene- outomoticallyl• P~llco Hi·Brlte
MasiColor picture tube • Tilt·front control dock
• Contemporary, almul•ted Walnut finish

'

25 inch plctura mtiSured diagonally, 315 square Inch picture

0~ '549 .
REMAN &amp;ABBOTT
95

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You' ll Like Our Quality W11y
of Doing Business"

· By Goldie Clendenin
· PORTLAND- This reporter
wants to tell other senior
citizens, especially ones in this
community, about our "Get
together" at the Heath United
Methodist Church at Mid·
dleport last Sunday. It was my
privilege, compliments of my
friend Merct:des CondOn, a
music teacher .at Pomeroy, to
attend this meeting, which ivas
for the purpose of organizing a
committee of, and for Senior
Pomeroyout-lying

If I understand it correcLiy,

68 Dodge Polara 2 Door H.T................'1495

.

,

POMEROY

or

· ur~erly arra ngement of St. Patrick's Pay .theme were
cumponent ' parl6." She spoke served .
un line, form, texture , pattern
and color. Mrs. Buel RidenoUr
conducted a quiz with Mrs.
Domald Mora winning first
place and Mrs. Roy Holter,
second . Mrs . Howard Knigbi
conducted a quiz with Mrs.
Hotace Karr win ning llrst.
Mrs. Homer Holter displayed
a blue ribbo n modern
See us for your
arr ange ment
us ing'
a
corkscrew, willow, fern and
PARTY GOODS
allium. Mrs. Richard. Barton
CARDS AND FAVORS
displayed a red ribbon
arrangement using amaryllis.
Asilent auction was held . Mrs.
Chadwell won the door prize.

lor mpil&lt;lllty cummiltee . Mrs.
Wy•l t Chadwell was nmued to
be in charge ~~ ribbons and
Mrs. Rubert Wood W3S named
d erk.
Mr5 . J. M. Gaul, Mrs.
Clarence Neutzling and Mrs.
Chadwell will be in charge of
registration and Mrs. Dale
Kautz will handle entry cards.
The horticulture division will
be headed by Mrs. Richard
. Barton, Mrs. Homer Holter,
Mrs. Gordon Anderson and
Mrs. Pearl Mora. The show
will be held at the Royal Oak
Park archery building. Mrs. I.
B. Walker will be show
publicity director.

Yonker, Mrs. Chlorus Grimm,
and Mrs. Betty Morris. The $5
attendance award was won by
Mrs. Grimm's fifth grade.
It was announced that the
first graders of Miss Betty
Wilson will present the
program at the March meeting
and that the second grade
mothers will serve at that time.
Mrs. Carrie Roush gave the
treasurer's report, and Mrs.
Betty Wilson read the minutes ·
of the last meeting. F.ounder's
Day cake was served by the
first grade mothers with Mrs.
Janet Manual as chairman of
the social hour.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

Members
named their
success
type ·arrangernent
in
answer to roll call and Mrs.
Clarence Neutzling led the
devotional period giving an
article from a paper, "The
Country Parson and the
Contented Person."
Mrs . Wood reported that the
club will tour the Fenton
Glassworks on April 4 and will
meet at the home of Mrs.
Howard Knight at 5:45 leaving
there at 6. Mrs. Pearl Mora
reporting for the sunshine
committee said that she and
Mrs. Donald Mora had taken a·
planter to Mrs. Max Harrah
last month. Mrs. Homer Holter
was namoo to the committee
for March.
Mrs. Summerfield presented
the program, "The. New and
Different Kinds of Roses."
Mrs. Homer Holter displayed
and explainoo articles used in
making arrangements in·
eluding such items as chicken
wire, floral tape, stem wire,
putty, styrofoam, rocks, frogs,
oasis and ottier articles. Mrs.
Reid Young gave a demonstration on deaign in floral
arranging stressing the
definition for design, "The

;:e:fr:es:h:m:e:nts:c;a.~rr~y;in;g~o;u:t~a~~==:;;;::::;

foot down
for STYLE!

DOUBLE
DARE
FLARE

The Department Store
:&gt;f Building Sin~e 1915

Open E1·enings Until 6:00- Til 5 PM. Sat.

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

'/
I

this has to be done in order for
our county to get its fair share
of a government grant of a
million dollars for Ohio's
aging, which would benefit
them in many ways.
These folk are giving of their
time and "know-how" to try to
help ones who cannot help
'themselves. The idea was
started by Pastor Lund of St.
Paul's Lutheran Church of
Pomeroy and ·Pastor Card of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church in Nov. 1971. ·
Weather conditions have
cancelled several meetings
since then . But these men and
women have persisted in this
effort in our behalf and are
fightin g the elements and a
deadline, which is June 30th I
believe,and doing their jobs in
other fields, too. Now is a good
time for us I&lt;&gt; help them to help
us by participating in any way
possible .
Many folk are not able to get
out much, but even one's
presence at meetings show that

2-.HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
i 10 E. lnd'

Pomtroy

Phone 992-5428

he is willing and interested.
Many find that there are
things, even though handicapped, they may do to
contribute to this effort.
Working together for a worthy
cause gives one a feeling of
being needed and useful.
The purpose of the project to
start is :
( I) To arouse ipterest in
problems and opportunities of
the aging.
. (2) To determine some of
their needs and interests.
(31 To get widespread
participatioq a11d reflect the
needs of thes~ folk .
( 4 ) Attempt to determine the

Antique
Brown Grain

the street and in homes, atomic
"Some men see things as
destruction, and death. And they are and ask why. I dream
courage does not come from a of things that never were and
bottle, pill or a needle. It is a say why not," said Robert
quality of ·the mind, the will, Kennedy.
and the spirit that helps one to
But Winston Churchill .said,
face up to life's problems. ·"Courage is the first of human
Courage increases by each qualities because it guarantees
small. victory or courageous . . II oth•rs."
.,
"
act. P.e6pfe"arAw'stten-gih
tO'Jr~g\\8' the Price that life
courage fr'om one another, exacts f~r granting peace.
suppOrted by the wiU of God.
The soul that knows It not
· The record of the courage of
Knows not the li ved·lonUness
Anne Sullivan and Helen Keller of fear,
should help us all, even to
Nor mountain heights where
dreaming impossible dreams. bitter joy can hear
Martin Luther King Jr. said, "!
The sound of hope.
have a dream ... "
BUT THE CLEAREST
·
conception we have of courage
to dream impossible dreams is
Jesus as he stoOd
the
synagogue at Nazareth. Read
Luke: 4:18-19·21.
most needed or desirable
future projects.
Here are a few notes from
the program: There are 944
persons 60-64 years of age, and
2,731 persons 65 and older, total
3,675 (18 pet.) in this county
which has a population of
19,799. There are 3,731
over 55.
•

anll' .

•
d
Senior Citizens ' -17\."jTeedS R· eVteWe

H~tDog

You Don't ·Need CASH
WHEAT

-~

Foot Long

economically .

Great CaiS Make Great Deals

___

grained vl nyl1urface
toke hard knoc:ks,

Give your
that expensive

· paneled

cHgSTE!t - Aspring flower
shuw tu be held April 29 and 30
was discussed when the·
Chester Garden t1ub met at
the hume of Mn. Rose Ginther
with Mrs. Dale Kautz as CO·
'l•ost.ess .
Mrs. Paul Baer and . Mrs.
Horace Karr will be chairmen
the spring show with Mrs.
Earl. Dean, Mrs. Roy Holter,
Mrs. Reid Young, Mrs. J. M.
Gaul, Mrs, Pearl Mora, Mrs.
Donald M~ra, Mrs., Earl
Ingels . and . Mrt Kautz
to serve .on the staging committee. Mrs . Horace Karr, Mrs. Baer and
Mrs. Earl Dean were named to.
the show schedule committee
and Mrs. Leonard Erwin, Mrs.
Roy Miller, Mrs. Howard
Knight and Mrs . Ginther to the
education committee. Mrs.
Pur ley Karr, Mrs . Guy
Summerfield, Mrs. Buell
Ridenour and Mrs. George
Frederick were named to the

School Given Flag

992-2039

We' ll t estimote yoUr m o ti9rh~r ne eds
provide eosy-ro.follow instrvcllons on 1
sia llot io n,

1om

RUTLAND - Replanting Notes" garden clqb column. Flower Show. The RuLiand
shrubbery at the · Rutland Mrs. Charles Lewis was namt:d Club will participate.
Methodist. Church
was
he
1b
to prepare I next c u . ar- . A r~port wa,s given on the
·~lscusse4 a·nd Mrs . Virgil ticle.
newly organized garden club at
Atkins, committee chairman,
It was announced that' M~s. Langsville whi~h is being co• was ~ppointed chairman of the C. 0. Chapman, MrS. Er[ewlne· sponsored along with the
project' w)len the Rutland .and Mrs. Roy, Snowden 'will' Friendly Garden Club. ·Mrs.
Garden Qui&gt; niet this week at conduct a planting pr9ject. at ... Erlewine will .visit the newly
1
ijie ·home of Mrs. Harvey the .Gallipolis State lnsti,tute in forml!d·cJubin the neart;ture. ·
Erlewine, preSident, with Mrs. conjunction with the garden Officers of the new group are
NANNIE RUSSELL
Lawrence Mll~oan and Mrs. club there on March 28.Mrs. Mrs. Larry Bahr, president;
Mrs. Nannle. ' Rusoeb will
Vernon Weber assisting Nelson, Mrs. Ralph Turner, . Mrs. Leslie Hoffman, vice
celebrate her 95tb birtbday
hostesses.
Mrs. Robert canaday, Mrs. president;·Mrs. Emma ·Ledlie,
anniversary on March 10. A
Mrs. Millhone · led a. Erlewine, Mrs. Paul Winn and secretary, and, Mi'\1. Francis
long-time tesidenl of Meigs
devotional period which was Mrs. Chapman will be con- ·Wilcox, treasurer. "
County, Mrs. Rusoell now
followed·by ihe club creed and tributors to the program. The
A bakeless bake sale was
makes her home with a
collect In unison. "Flower . club also agreed to contribute held and was successful. A
daughter, Mrs. Nela Wbite,
~eds you would like to· grow" to highway planting. •Reports . door prize contributed by the 470 Hllock Ave., Columbus. A
was the . roll call respon!!f were given by . Mrs. 'Roy president was awarded to Mrs.
celebration with r.elatlves
an~ered by 18 members.
Snowden and Mrs. Erlewine on Jame&amp; Nicholson.
and friends Is being plauned
' The Good buck Gafden Oub the county. meeting held in
Mills RUby Diehl, was, in
for Mrs. Russell.
Ot the Athens Mental Health Pomeroy. Mrs. ·Snowden at· charge of a program. A horCenter thro\18h Mrs. Victor tendoo the theropy section and ticulture review, "A new eaS)l ·
Nelson sent its ·thanks for the Mrs. Erlewine, the general way for starting seeds was
Chris.lmas glf.ts from the procedures and seed books given . by Mrs . Harry
·
Williamson . The matter
Rutland Club. The club section.
planned another visitation to
It was reported that Mrs. suggested planting by the new
the Athens groitp in November. Thomas Stewart of the seed tape method; the ideal
LETART FALLS - An Ohio
Mrs. Erlewine thanked Friendly Garden Club and Mrs. planting of many vegetables
flag
was presented to the
committees fof their services ReidYoungwillbechairmenof and flowers under plastic,
Letart
Falls Elementary
including Mrs. Kate Jarrell (or the Big Bend Regatta Weekend using pellet type seeds, using ·
preparing valentine rememcommercial jiffy seven packs, School by Mrs. John Boyd,
American Legion Auxiliary of
brarices for residents of the
hobby green house ·packs,
11
Meigs Coimty Children's Home
'fr UC S .
',J'
commercial sectional plastic the Racine Post 602, at a recent
and the Meigs County In.
trays and a number of other meeting of the Letart PTA.
At the request of Mrs. Boyd,
nrmary. The extended thanks
hints.
to William Walters, MidMrs . Robert ·Canaday the PTA agreed to show a film
dleport; a contributor to the
presented "What to do in on cystic fibrosis at the Sep·
project, and thankoo Mrs. Paul
March ." Mrs . Canaday tember meeting. A corsage
Winn and Mrs. Jonah Cotterill
suggested starting tulip cut- was presented by Mrs. Don I
who recently presented a club
LETART F ALI.S - Mrs. lings, resetting Easter lilies, Johnson, president, to Mrs.
program on WMPO Radio. Ferne B. Hayman and repotting houseplants and top June Wickersham, a past
Mrs. Erlewine expressed her daughter,
Mrs ·
June dressing with fresh rich soil, president, who spoke briefly. A
appreciation to those who gave Wickersham, held a products methods to. use in spring Founder's Day offering was
gifts for male patients at the party at the home of the latter pruning, tea and floribunda taken.
Appointed to the nominating
Gallipolis State Institute who at East Letart Tuesday roses, yews, lilacs and
committee
was Mrs. Romon:~
had lost their belongings In a evening. Mrs. Phyllis Cline of rhododendrons.
fire.
Harrisonville was hostess.
Mrs . Snowden announced
Games were playoo and that the Friendly Garden Club
A letter was read from Mrs.
Charlene Hoeflich, society refreshments of sandwiches, is sponsoring a spring cleanup
editor of The Daily Sentinel, in potato chips, mints, coffee, and campaign in the community
regard to the "Green Thumb Kool·Aid were served to Mrs. assisted by the Rutland Village
By Goldie aendenln
. Mrs.
Council.
Mrs.
Erlewme,
1- - - - - - - - - , Belva Fisher, Mrs.PoEileen
PORTLAND
- Thursday
Roush, Mrs. Lucy
nohue, Snowden and Mrs. Williamson evening when the Emma Smith
Mrs. Phyllis O'Brien and will attend the next council Circle of the R.L.D.S. met at
children, Carol and linda, meeting to represent the the church on Racine-Portland
&amp;lr All Occasions
Mrs. Lester Roush, Mrs. Hazel Rutland Qub which will have a Rd. in charge of the leader
We wire flowers
Fox, Mrs. Florence Adams, role in the campaign.
Eula Proffitt, many members
... _...
Everywhere .,..._ Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs :
The hostesses . served col!id not attend, including this
Edna Clark, Mrs. Mabel
of
, ,!llields, Mrs. Marvene Beegle, refre~hfn~:Q·~ at the ~~~ : ~e ! •porter, . l&gt;e~ause of ba~
~
i
'
~ ' Mrs . Doris Sayre, Mrs. meeting; .. ,.' !"l'
·•'· ·· • t ~weather . ·..,_-- ":.::..
•
However,
·the
few
that
were
Genevieve Harvey, Mrs. Focie
there spent most of the time on
Pomeroy
Flower Shop
Hayman, Mrs . Ferne Hayman,
.
-. .
the study topic, "Needing
Mrs. Jtme Wickersham and
BuHernut Ave., Pomeroy
A thought for toda;y : Ameri. Courage."
Mrs. Mitt.rd Von Meter
Mrs. Mildroo Ponohew.
can writer William Henry
Courage is needed because of
Hudson said, "you cannot fly rapid change, uncertainty of
like an eagle with the wings of our era with its fears of
a wren."
rejection, failure, dangers on

_

•

J

Chester. Club Plans ·Show

FLOWERS

Before you ct e.:.•de to polt h ond rt·p•Pintl
tho! cc.ill roy, slop in today ond let us
1

Shrubbery Project
!Accepted by.Club

.

Individual Courage Needed

C/H

(e Conwad
r

On T ues day
" '

stronuo.us exerclse . c ~ango
1 1 Odoy ,
your hfe costs
... lllr
MONADEX
$!.00 tor • 20

BULBS NOl iNClUO EO

Home of

TVc Banquet s~~~r

:::~~:rou;.~rug~.~~:.:'-".1 ~·J

WIDE OVAL ~ ·FIBERGLASS

REG. 19.95

•

·

J

take .

BELTED·JIRES

GRID-LOCK
LIGHT FIXTURE
for suspended
ceilings

TITLE

the Fabulous
~.C,~)$

to

e Conwed

STEAK
HOUSE

18Q
0
0
59
62

euy

WINTER SALE!

CROW'S

itO

26
24
0
0
315 1124
378 1177

and

MONADEX
will~!!'! ceurb
doslrefor
.. ctssf-.
• 1.1vour
oss ·
wel~h leu . Contains no

SAVE DURING OUR

C/H

5
5

tablef

., ....,.

ll

138
128
112
105
91

-

after . their
latest contract
.
tfi ld
negoliallorts ... 0 U e er
Rusty Staub and pitmer Carl
Morton remained unsigned as
th e MonI rea I Expo
. "• went
through the~ wor.k~ut.
Catcher Rich Billmgs ended
•-y holdo uI when he
hiS one....
signed with the Texas Rangers
· have not SJg
· ned
who still
slugger Frank Howard.

________________ _______

. . ...............,.,•,•,•,•,•, •,•,•,•,·,·.:······ ......

12

- - - 8 -- -

-

-

53
55
35

59% 94
58% 2.34
~% 29
7 % 36
75% 109
~% 140
43% 60
51% 18
28% 32
75% 4
0
0
0
0
58% 756
56% 701

' '

Carty"
and ·first baseman
. .
Orlando Cepeda.
Rocky Colavito, former
home run slugger, .signt:d with
the aevelan d Indians as a
parttime outfield and batting
coach ... Second baseman Dick
Green reported to th e Oak!
. an d
Athletics' Mesa Ariz., camp
·
'
but there
were
no new
developments in the negotialions with 24-game winner Vida
Blue ... Dave Kingman, the 6foot, 6-inch power-hitting first.
basemal)-outfielder, will be
tested at third base by the San
Francisco Giants.
..
General Manager Bmg De-.
vine reiterated that the St.
Louis Cardinals have made
their final contract offers to
Joe Torre, Matty Alou, Ted
Simmons, Jerry Reuss, Bob
Burda · nd Jorge Roqu~ ...
OUtfielder Don Hahn s1gned
with the New York Mets for an
,estimated $17,000 ... Relief
pitcher Tom Burgmeier and
the Kansas City Royals apparently remained far apart

,•

~- 'lbe Daily Sentinel, Midlleport-Pwneroy, 0., March 3, 1972

, · "·'/J•hut~; " 11,•;tn

•.1 -.&amp;l,....JI.
Two·Tdn Bli!tk &amp; Burn ished Bron ze
Rich tone on tone ... the Double Dare Flare.
Today's perfectly natural look. Perfectly .
stated. Put your foot down for st yle. We
Double Dare you!

KIPS

t.~

SHOE STORE.
IN MIDDLEPORT

Many are isolated (72 pet.
rural ), lack transportation,
and have very little contact
· with friends and relatives.
From April! to Sept. 30, 1972,
$625 must be raised by local
cash, maybe · by banks,
churches, Individual free-will
offerings. Will you help?

'•
no

mess...
no

defrost
INIOII~·IGIEI
by FEDDERS
Refrigerator and freezer compartm ents are
both fr osHree ... no defrosting . eve r.

Say
Happy Anniversary
Wrth a Unde Star
Whether it's the first or the firtieth, the radiant
romance of a star sapphire says love eloquently.
N£xt to her wedding ring she'll treasure her Linde
Star most. Made only by Union Carbide Corpora.
lion. Li nde Stars are available here in a wide
range of colors in fine jewelry settings.

Choose a 15· 16· 19 cubic fool model. Each
fea tures a giant freezer locker wi th fl ex-out
1ce trays, organ izer shelf, extra·deep door
shelves and optional Built· ln lcemaker .
True re frigerator conven ience with adj ustable can tilevered Shelves. gl ide-out meat

dish. full shell dairy ba rs . portable egg
bucket, twin cris pers. -door shelves which
hold ~ gallon contain ers. plus a glamourous decorator interior. .
·
Fam ous Norge quality constru cti on tea·
lures Quiet-Thrust power unit. stai n-resis!·
ant d ura crylk: finish. easy-grip chrom e han·
dies. thin-wall con struc tion. magnetic doors
and roll·a w8y wh eels. Choose from Copper-

95

tone. Harvest Gold, Avocado, Wh ite .. . rig ht
or Iell hand door swing. Model RTF I 5568
shown.

From

26.00

IN-GELS FURN.ITURE
992-2635

Open .Frl &amp; Sat Nigh1s . MIDDLEPORT ·

�""'
&amp;• _The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , March 3, 1972

MIDDLEPORT PEN
UNITED MINISTRY OF
TECOSTAL. Third Ave. the MEIGS COUNTY, The Untied

Sorvteo, 7 3D pm . Youth
mectong 6 30 P m . Evenong

Ronald Dugan. Sunday school L Zavtlz, Pastor Director ,
supl Classes for all ages . George w Hulton and Rev
t&gt;ve ntng serv1ce , 1 3(1 p m L111sur. St~bb•ns, Ass ' I Paslor

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev Herber!

Re\1

W•lllam Kmttet, pastor , Presbyrer11n Church, Ow1ghl

Pe oples

Youqg

POMEROY
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN,
POMEROY TRINITY
Rev
Arthur C Lund pastor
Rev W H Pernn, pastor Roy Sunday
School. 9 ll am ,
M.ayer, Supt Church schooot. Charles Evans,
Supt . • worshtp
9 IS a m worsh1p, 10 24 a m ,
servtce,
10 30 a m
youth choir rehearsal Monday ftrmallon class . Tuesday, Con
,. 15
6 30 p m , Mrs Mar v•n Burt, to 5 30 p m
Ju;,lor Con -

meeting,

O~rcc tors

Wednesday . 8 p m , Bobfe
FIRST UNITED PRESstudy. Frlddy, S p m
BYTERIAN, Harrlsonv tl/e,
FREEWILL BAPTIST - Sunday Church School, 9 30
Corner Ash and Plum, Mid am , Mrs Homer Lee, Sup! ,
dleport Noel Herrman, pastor,

Morn ing

Worsh•p 10 30 am

worsh1p , 7 JO p m

..

Grate, pa stor Worsh1p servtee,
11 am and 7 30 P m Sunday

i:••llf_;" •
~:~J., OlCe
~r-:
.

Sunday
RIChard
meellnQ.
Bradford
Cl11tord

School, 9 30 am
Barton, sup! Prayer
Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
Church of ChrlslSm1lh,

~a~Qng

m in1sler

Guy Pnddy, Sunday School F 1 R s T
U N 1 T E D Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Sup! Saturday evenong service, PRESBYTERIAN, Mtddleporl, morn111g church 10 30 am;
1 P m, Sunday School, 10 Sunday Church School. 9' 30 Sunday evening serviCe, 7 30

);Br.'Wa"'J

am , Sunday e'Venlng worsh1p, ' a m , Lew1s Sauer, Supt , P m Wednesday service, 8 p m .
cho•r ftrmali on class, Thursday, 6 30 7 P m
Morntna WorshiP. 10 JO am . LAUREL CLIFF FREE
rehearsal, 7 30 p m , Thursday to745pm
FIRST BAPTIST of Mod ·
F I RST
U N I T E D METHODIST- Rev Eu~ene

director,

senior

Mrs

Paul Nease, d lredor
SEVENTH
DAY
AD· dleport , corner of Sixth and
POMEROY CHURCH OF VENTIST
Pomer oy, Palmer 'Sireets, Rev Charles
THE NAZARENE - Corner Mulberry
pastor
Fred
Hgls
Herber! Simons,
Un1on and Mulberry Rev
Holtman . Sunday School
Morgan
,
pastor
Sabbath
Clyde V Henderson, pastor School Saturday 2 p m , Supenntendenl Sunday church
Sunday School 9 30 a m , worship 3 15 p m Dorcas school for everyone 9 15 am .
Raymond Walburn , supl
Mornmg worsh1p 10 15 a m ,
Morntng worshtp 10 30 am Soctety, 10 a m each Thursday Evening services, 7 30 p m ,
GRAHAM
UNITED
Eventng servtee 7 30 p m Mt~
METHODISTPreaching
9 30 WednesdayprayerservtCe, 7 30
week sennce Wednesday, 7 30
p m Extra youth acf1vltles on
a
m
,
first
and
second
Sundays
pm
each month third and fourlh Sunday, l p m , for all youth up
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev ol
Sundays each month, worsh tp to s1xlh grade, 6 30 for 1un•or
Stanley Pla ttenburg , mmtsler service
7 30 p m Wednesday and sent or htgh students
Morning prayer and sermon, eveningsat at
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
7 30 Prayer and
10 30a m Holy commun1on and
Mtddleporl
, Sth and Main
sermon, f•rst St.~ndays. 10 30 Bible Study
Rauhn Moyer, pastor MIChael
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BAP
a m
Church school, k1n
Gerlach, Sunday School supt
dergar ten through eighth TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave , Btble School, 9 30 am, mor
Pomeroy,
afltlialed
wolh
S
8
C
,
grade 10 30 a m
the Rev Fred Htll. paslor nlng worship, 10 30 am ,
POMEROY CHURCH OF Sunday
School. 9 30 a m , evenmg worshtp, 7 30 p m •
CHRIST- Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr , morning worshtp,
10 30 a m , prayer service 7 P m Wed·
pastor Bible School, 9 JO a m , tun lor society, 6 JO am
NYPS, nesday
worship, 10 30 , adult worship 6 45 p m Sunday evangeltshc
CHURCH
OF
THE
servtce and young peoples
NAZARENE
Mtddleporl,
meeltng , 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting, both 7 30 p m Sunday meeting
Wednesday. 7 JO p m Rev Audry Miller. pastor ,
Wednesday . combined Btble
Floyd Carson, supt Sunday
MIDD~EPORT
study and prayer meeting, 7 30
school.
9 30 a m , Morning
MT MORIAH BAPTIST pm
worshop 10 30 a m • lunlor
Corner
Fourth
and
Mam
,
THE SALVATION ARMY soclely, 6 30 p m . NYPS, 6 4l
Envoy Ray 5 W1nmg, offtcer in Mtddlepo.-1 Rev Henry L Key, p m
Sunday evangeiiSIIc
charge Sunday, 10 a m , Jr, pastor Sunday School 9 30 meeting, 7 30 p m Prayer
a
m
,
Arnold
Richards
,
supt
.
Hohness meetmg., 10 30 am ,
meel tng Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
worsh1p 10 30 am
Sunday School Young People's Mornmg
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES Legion. 7 p m , Thursday, 1 to 3
MEIGS
Larry
presiding
p m , Ladtes Home League. 7 min1ster Carnahan
COOPERATIVE
Sunday, B1ble lecture,
p m , Prep classes
PARISH
9
30
a
m
sludy,
SACRED HEART - Rev 10 30 a m, ,Watchtower
THE
UNITED
Tuesday, Bible
Father Bernard Krajcovlc,
METHODIST
CHURCH
7.30 p m , Thursday,
pastor
Phone
992 282l study,
Robert
R.
Card
ministry school 7 30 p m ,
Saturday eventng Mass, 7 30 service
Rev.
Stanten
Smtih
meelmg 8 30 p m
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10
CHESTER
Worship
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of a m , Church School 10 a m9 15
a m Confessions, Saturday, 7 Chnst
tn Christian Unton 7 30 p m
ENTERPRISE- Worship, 9
Lawrence
Mantey, pastor, Mrs
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Russell Young,
a m ; Church School, 10 a m
Sunday
School
- Robert Ku~n. pastor, Wtlllam Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
F~ATWOODS- Worshtp, 11
Watson , Sunday school supl
a
m
, Church School 10 a m
Sundayschool,9 30om , BYF, Evening worship 7 30 Wed
Wo.-shtp, 10 30
POMEROYnesday prayer meet1ng, 7 30
6 p m , Bible sludy, Wed
a
m
,
Church
School
9 ll a m ,
nesdoy. 7 p m , choir practiCe, pm
UMYF 6 30 p.m
Wednesday, 8 30 p m
ROCK SPRINGS~ Worshtp
10 a m , Church School 9 a m ,
UMYF 6 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev Robert Bumgarner
CLOSINGS ANNOUNCED
HEATH - Wor!hlp 10 30
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The a m , Church School 9: JO a m ,
City's 108 playgrounds and 36 UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND - Worship 9 15
INCREASE APPROVED
pools will be closed for the a m
, Church School 10 a m ,
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The entire year because of a budget UMYF
7pm
federal Pay Board announced cnsiS that IS forcing cutbacks
SALEM CENTER- Worship
Wednesday tis approval of a 7 7 Recreation Comm1ss1oner 9 a m , Church School 10 a m ,
per cent wage mcrease for 539 JohnS Nagy sa1d the pool and UMYF Thursday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE C~USTER
employes of the Centervtlle, playground closmgs were
Rev Forrest A. Donley
Ohw, ctty school dlStrtct The necessitated by a deflated $1 7
ASBURY- Worship 11 am
Church
School9 lOom , WSCS,
mcrease lS retroactive to last m1lhon budget for h1s depart1st Tuesday
Sept 16
ment thiS year
FOREST RUN - Worshtp 9
a m , Church School 10 a m •
WSCS. 3rd Wednesday, 7 30
pm
MINERSVILLE - Worship
10 a m , Church School 9 a m.,
WSCS. 3rd Monday, 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE - Worshtp, 8
a m , Church School, 9 a m. ,
Prayer and Bible Study,
CALL POl NT VIEW : 992 · 2505
Wednesday. 7 30 p.m
.
• M&lt;&gt;
'
·soU'I'HERlol tt:US:rER· ~
Rev. W Dolo McClurg
at th€ nof so marvoelous hour
SATURDAY, MARCH4
Rev.
Frank Cheesebrew
For our money, the best of 11 am Ch 8 If you're
Rev
Martha
Ann MoHner
thtng on TV today may well home from church by then
BETHANY (Dorcas)
these two mas1ers are well
be a children's show
Worshtp, 9 30 a m , Church
Remember the aborted worth the ltstenmg
School 10 30 a m.
+++
Apollo 13 miSSion. while the
CAR ME~ - Worshtp, 11
Basketball, hockey goll
whole world watched as the
a m , lsi and 3rd Sundays ,
crew tried to bnng the1r and tenn1s- Sunday's sports
Church School, 10 am
crippled spaceshtp back calendar has them all
APPLE GROVE - Worship,
The NBA's afternoon
home? Today , astronaut
7 30 p m , church school, 9 30
a m ,
mid week
service,
Jack Swigert tells the story spec1al p1ts tt-.e New York
Wednesday, B p m
of that lrlghtenong flight on Knteks and Ph tladelphla
EAST ~ETART - Worshtp,
Pro
"Take a Giant Slep," 11 76ers. 2 p m Ch 12
10 am , firS I and third Sundays ,
Hockey sees lhe Chicago
am, Chs 2 &amp; 7
9 am , second and fourth
Black Hawks and Mtnnesota
+++
Sundays . church school, 9 a m ,
Saturday sports lwtth on North Stars battling on Ch. 8
ftrsl
and third Sundays , 10 am,
The ftnals of the
eye to the calendar and the at 2 p m
second
and fourth Sundays
Doral Eastern Open Golf
start of exhtbltlon baseball)
M•d
week
serv1ce, Wednesday,
class1c
show
up
at
3
30
p
m
,
College basketball Ohio
8
p
m
and the World
State vs Indiana, 4 p m , Ch. Ch 2
GREAT BEND- Worshtp 11
Tenn1s
4 Florida State (posSible Champfonsh1p
am, 2nd and 4th Sundays,
NCAA PICks! vs Clnetnnatl, Tournament at 3 30 on Chs 4
Church School . 10 am
&amp; 7
1 30 p m , Ch. 2 &amp; 7
LETART FALLS - Worshtp
In addlflon. there's auto
Duke 's
sometimes
10 a m , Church S.:hool 9 a m
racmg - for the year's top
surpnsmg Blue Oev1ls vs
MORNING STAR- Worshtp
No 3 North Carolina, 2 p m , money prize In the California
9 30 a m , Church School 1o 30
Ch 8 lllinoos, whupped by 500 Stock Car Race. 4 30
a m , Mid Week ServiCe,
p m , Ch 6 Fred Taylor's
Wednesday, S i).m
the Buckeyes th•s week, vs
MORSE CHAPEL- Worshtp
M•nnesota , who tried to OSU basketball recap , 12 JO
And West
11 a m , lsi and 3rd Sundays ,
whup the Buckeyes In a p m Ch 4
Church School, 10 a m
different way, 2 p m , Ch 6 V1rgmla Mounta1neer sports,
PORTLAND- Worshtp 7 30
And two shows honormg 1 30 p m , Ch 7 and 4 30
p
m
, Church S.:hool 9. 30 am
pm
,
Ch
S
perhaps lhe best Marshall U
SUTTON
- Worship, 11 a m
basketball team ever, with
+++
2nd and 41h Sundays; Church
I w1sh "R ollm' on the
Marshall highlights at I ll
School 10 a m
p.m , Ch 2 and a specoal R•ver," a relaxing variety
WESLEYAN (Racine) honor1ng MU 's all t1me show with Kenny Rogers and
11 am . Church
Worship,
great Russell Lee, at 3 p m , First Edlhon. would stop
School.
10
am
roHm' from one time slot to
Ch 12
UMYF for all churches of the
another Today's It's on Ch
+++
Southern Cluster, 7 JO p m
Th1s 1s as good a t•me as 12 at 7 30 p m , bul has been
each Sunday at lhe Youth
anv to sa y that publiC shown at d1fferent hours
Center !Oak Grove Road I
televis•on has done a whale
throughoul the season I Also
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
of a tob thos wmter, with Ch !een at 10 30 p m Fnda:y ,
Rev. Jacob lehman
9 brlngmg us all Marshall Ch. 7 I
Rev Standley Brandum
+++
JOPPA - Wo.-shlp 10 a m ,
home games. and Ch II
Church School 9 a m , Prayer
The f.rst b•g poll1•cal
brlngmg Ohto U hockey etc
Mee tmg . Wednesday, 8 p m
showdown of 1972 occurs
Thanks •
LONG BOTTOM - Church
Tuesday in New Hampshire.
++ +
services, 9 a m , Sunday School
Other sports
and two of President Nixon's
9 4l a m Bible study every
NCAA basketball nvals are guests ton1ght on
Thursday, 7 30 p m
Wolloam F
Buckley's
htghltghls 3 30 p m Ch •
NORTH BETHEL- Worship
'F~rl ng Lme " lnterestmg to
Pro Bowlers Tour fr o m
11
a m , Church School 10 a m
hear
from
Callfornta
Rep
Coral Gables. Fla 3 JO
ALFREDSunday school ,
p m , Ch 12
Dora I Pele McCloskey, who thtnk s
4l
a
m
each
Sunday,
9
Nixon's too conservaflve ,
Eastern Open Go lf Tour
prea1;b1ng at 11 am each
nament, 4 p m , Ch 2 And and Oh10's Rep John Ash ,
Sunday Prayer meeltng, 7 45
a golf tourney where the brook who thmks he s too
p m Wednesday , WSCS. B p m
names outwe•gh the artistry, liberal B p m , Ch 11
on th.rd Tuesday each month
+++
lhe
Football Baseball
REEDSVILLE - Sundaf
An
earl 1er
pollf1cal
Players ClassiC 5 p m Ch
school. 9 30, preoch tng, 7 30
showdown •s the sub ject of
10
p m Sunday. prayer meeting,
the fourth mstallment of
+++
7 30 p m Tuesday , WSCS, 7 30
lawrence Welk features
down So uth fav or ites
ton1ght with a melange of

Nashville and Ton Pan Alley
mus1c 7 pm

Chs 7 &amp; 12

+++

MOVIE S

·son

ol

Frankenstein " 11 15 p m ,
Ch 6 and II 30 p m , Ch 12

" Heat of Anger:· 11 30
p m , Ch 10 "Queen of the
Nile.'' 11 JO p m, Ch 7
Trtple feature , " Pony Ex
press." " A Hard Day 's
Nigh!. " lhe Beattes, and
"Showdown,'' starts a/ 1 30
p m, Ch • " Hour of 13,''
Peter Lawford, I a m , Ch
10

+++

SUNDAY, MARCH!
This Sabbath opens and
closes wdh excellent en
tertalnmenf, and some

thought provolong
pr99rammlng
~tortlng off os a marvelous

mt.ture dl those grea1 old
Berthold Brecht-Kurt Weill
songs on "Camera Three,"

"Elizabeth R,' wh1ch IS
draw1ng raves from the

critics Tontghl Queen
Elizabeth confronts a final
solution to the threat posed
by her CatholiC cous in .
Mary. Queen of Scots 9
pm Ch II

+++

MOVIES
The Kong ' s
Thtef.'' 8 a m , ~h 10 1what
happened to lhe Blondle
fdms usually shown at th1s
hour')
' G•rl Ha:'py ,'
11 ll p m, Ch 10

++ +

f~rst

Thursday each month

SILVER RIDGE- Worship,
10 a m , Church School, 9 am
TUPPERS
P~AINS
Worshop 9 a m , Church School
10 am.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Hobar 1 Newe ll , supl

~ervlces

weekly, 9 30 am on Sunday.
Preachtng ftro t and third
Sundays of month by Clifford
Smtih, 9 30 a m
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll,
pastor Sunday School, 9 30
a m , Leonard Gilmore, f1r st
elder

MONDAY Whal wou ld
Howard Cosell say about Ihe
brawl '" the Ohio State
Minnesota basketball game'

'p m

Plenty, we should 1mag1ne

Rev

evening

service,

Wednesday

7 30

prayer

meetmg, 7 JO p m

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Racme Route 2 The
Charles

Hand,

oastor

and he'll be saying tf wtlh

Sunday school. 9 45 • m ,

film clips of the Mmnesota
massacre on Phtl Donahue 'S
show, 10 a m , Ch
8
(Donahue s show IS gettmg
more and more popular, with
one segment or a~other
popping up on Chs 4, 7 aod 8

morn1ng

MN

I

worsh1p ,

11

am

Evening services, Thuesday
and Fnday, 7 30
BEARWA~LOW
RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David
Jewell. pastor btble study, 9 30
am

morning worship, 10 30,

evening worship, 6 30 p m
Wednesday Btble sludy, 7 30
pm

I'

PRESBYTERIAN,

By JACK O'BRIAN
r:'i
~.~ NEW YORK (KFS) -Most
cent ex-Mrs. Winthrop
~ ockdeller Is a G~y 90s
Paldar. Tosses a biD al e)'ery
mft~tainer there: Q!M! dollar
'" With inflation, tbat's about
!IJ,e same as her ex)randpappy-ln-law John D.
RG~:kefeller handed out In hill
thlnlr~ne philanthropic days
Nlson-chou-Mao cheek·
waltzing encourages
Downey's aeptuageparian •
liollllw to hope he'll be freed
a
China ~nson.
Morton Downey's nephew
The N. Y. Boxing Commlsh
In for a f!scal to-the-bone cut.
always been a trough for
hacks.
Namath tells pals he
down Cosmo's nude•@nt.•rf&lt;tld. Burt Reynolds
!ewded the rqoney ... One of
lOP few great Manhattan
tlgh11ciulbs Is bouncing checks
strutted Into
~~~ll'da~~;s with a doll barely
age. Bannald Lenore
..ertun&lt;)ll swlftied, "Who's the
old
with Georgie?"
'I

Syracuse, Gill, pastor. William Batley,

Mornmg Worsh1p , 9 am ,
Sunday Church School, 10 am

sup! Sunday School , 9 30 am ,
Morn1ng worship, 10 30 a ,m .. •
Evening worship, 7 JO p m.

pastor Sunday School serv•ce
10 a m Prayer Meetmg each
Thursday 7 JO p m Sunday
evenmg serv1ce, 7 30 p m

meeting 7 30 p m
choir pract1ce, 7 p

- · Pomeroy Harrisonville

SunQay

Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Sup! Sunday School 9 JO am,
morntng worshtp and com
munlon, 10 30 am , Sun"day
evening youth Christian en,,

Worshtp service. fO 30 am
Chnstlan Endeavor Sunday
eventng.
REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LAT·
TER DAY SAINTS- Portland

Sunday, 7 30 p m Wednesday
evening prayer meeltng and
Btble study, 7 30 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN Pme Grove, the Rev Arthur

Racme Road

9 30 am .,

Ralph Johnson,

10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Roy Bill Carter.
evangelist, Wilbur Haning,
Blbleschoolsupt , Btbleschoo/,
9 30 a m ; morning worship,
10 JO am. , evening worshtp, 7

pastor Herbert Whtle, Sundar.
S.:hool Director. Sunday Schoo ,
9 30 a m , Morning worship,
10 30 am , Sunday evening
service 7 p m Wednesday
even1ng prayer serv•ces. 7 30
p m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor Worshtp service, 9 30
am, Sunday School.lO 30a m
CAR~ETON CHURCH Kingsbury Road
Sunday
School, 9 30 am , Ralph Carl.

p.m , Christ1an Workers Class,

sup I

Combs, pastor Sunday school,
9 30 a m
church services,

Worsh1p serv•ce,

There sht goes ... UNDERWAY at Ioiii You can
almoat feel her confidence when she hih the water.
But who knows what odvonturos await her on the
Seven Seas? How many crucial tolls must tho captain
face before she finally rests at a harbor ol safety?

10 30

ANTIQUITY BAPTISt
Rev Freeland Norns, pastor
Sunday school, 10 a m , church
serv1ce, 7 p m Wednesday
Boble study, 7 p m

BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE,
Minersville. J A. McWaters,
pastor Sunday School, 10 am •
morning worship,

11 a m ,

Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
7 30 p m Rev Jay Stiles.

We're the captains of our own ships In th~ voy·
age through life. We begin with determined opri·
mlsm. We have youth, ambition, determination, We
have health and strength. But as we get "under·
way/' we soon find ourselves faced with sudden
trials and obstados. It is in these mamenh of crisis
that our faith and courage ore challenged.

pas lor

O~D
DEXTER
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
- Rev. Wtllard Dutcher,
pastor Mrs Worley Francis,
Sunday School Supt Sunday
School, 9 4l a m Church Ser
viCes f1rst and thtrd Sundays
followtng Sunday School.
Second and fourth Saturday

GOEGLEIN READY MIX 00.

-

-·

MARK VSTORE

Lanmore , pastor

Bob Moore, preachmg servtce. 2 p m

Sunday School Supt Sunday
RUT~AND CHURCH OF
School , classes for all ages, 9 30 CHRIST- Sunday school, 9. 30
a.m.. mornmg worsh1p, 10 45 am, V H Braley, supt,
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p m , commun1on and devot1ons
evangehst•c serv1ce Sunday, 10 30 a m Regular board•
7 30 p m Mtd week prayer meetong 7 30, third Saturday
meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 p m each month
M1ssionary meeting, second
THE
RUTLAND COM.
Wednesdav 7 30 o m
MUNITY CHURCH - Rev
UNITED FAITH NON- R~&lt;hard Dubbeld, pastor
DENOMINATIONAL - Rev School. 9 30 a m , Worshtp
Rober! Smith, paslor Sunday servtee. 11 am , Wednesday
school , 9 30 am., Bob Barber, prayer meellng. 7 30 p m
supt , worship service, 10 JO Sunday ntght worshtp, 7:30
a m , youth meeting, 6 45
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
p m , church, 7:30 p m, THE NAZARENE - Rev
prayer meeting, Wednesday Lloyd D Grimm, Jr , pastor
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN Sunday School, 9 30 a m
IN CHRIST-Eldon R. !!lake, Morntng worship, 10 30 a m •
pastor Sunday School , 10 am , Young people's service, 6 4l•
Winme Holsinger, supt Mor p m . Evangelistic services
mng sermon, 11 am , Evening 7 30 p m. Wednesday evening'

service Chrlsf•an Endeavor , servtce 1 30 p m
7 30p m , Mrs Lyda Chevalter,
pres1dent Song service and
MASON COUNTY
sermon. B 20 Mid-Week prayer
THE HI~AND CHAPEL
meellng Wednesday, 7 30 p m George Casto, pastor Sunday'
Mrs Mane Holsmger, class School, 9 30 ; evenmg worship
leader
7 30 Thursday evening prayer'
POMEROY 'OWER LIGHT serv•ce, 7 30 p m

CHURCH - Harrisonville
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Road, Rev Roy Taylor, pastor. Second and Pomeroy Sts , Stan
Henry Eblin, Sunday School Craig, pastor Sunday school
::.upT :,unday School, 9:30 a m , 9 .45 a.m , worsh1p serv1ce, 11•
even1ng worship, 7 JO p m a m ; training union, 6 30 p m
Prayer and pra1se serv•ce, evemng worsh1p service, 7 30•
T~ursday , 7 30 p m
p.m M1d week prayer service
COMMUNITY CHURCH, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
Dexler Worship services
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Saturday and Sunday, 7 30 ServiCeS al 31l Matn Sl , PI
pm
- Pleasant, Sunday School 9 Il
HEMLOCK
GROVE a m Sundays, 11 a m , Wed
CHRISTIAN - Davtd !&gt;loutter, nesday, tesllmonlal meeting s
pastor, Stanford Stock ion, supt. p m All welcome
MornlnQ worship, 9 30 a m ,
FAIRVIEW BfB~E CHURCH
church school, 10 30 o.m , - Letarl Roule 1, the Rev Sla n
young peoples meeting, 6 30 Cratg, paslor Sunday schoo I,
p m , evening worship. 7 30 9 30 am . • prayer and Blbl e
Btble •tudy, Wednesday, 7 30 study, 7 30 p m Collage prayer
pm
service, Tuesday, 10 a m
MT. UNION BAPTIST - worshtp service, Friday, 7 30
Rev Cecil Cox. pastor Sunday pm
school supt , Joe Sayre. Sunday
MASON
CHURCH
0F
school. 9 45 a m , Sunday CHRIST - Loren T. Stephens
evening worship, 7 30 Wed- mln lsfer . Worsh1p , 10 am ••
nesday prayer and Btble study, Btblesludy, 11 lla m , evenln
7 30 p m
worship, 7 30 p m Mod wee e
TUPPERS
PLAiiiS service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
CHRISTIAN-Mr John Wyatt,
MASON ASSEMBLY 0 F
pastor, J S Davis, Sunday GOD- Second St , Mason . w
School supt , Sunday school, Va Chester Tennant, paslo r
9 30 a m , Morning Sermon, Sunday !Chool. 10 am , mo r
10 30 a m E\lenlng sermon, 7 ning worship, 11 a m
•
pm
evangells1tc servtce, 7 30 p m
LETART FA~~S UNITED Bible study and prayer service
BRETHREN - Rev Robert Wednesdav, 7 30 p.rr:. Phon e'
Shook. pastor , Herschel Noms, 773 l13J
sup! Sunday school. 9 3(1 a.m ,
HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
morning sermon, 10 . 30 11m. CHRIST tn Chrlsltan Union evenmg sermon , 7 30 alter Rev 0' Dell Manley, paslor
na11ng each Sunday
Prayer Sunday school, 9 30 am, Roge r
serv•ce, Wednesday, 7 30 p m Manley, supl , evening servlc e.
Prayer meeting, 7 30 p m 7 30 Wednesday evenln g
allernaling Sundays
prayer meeting . 7 30 p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF Sunday even1ng youth servic e
GOD OF PRO~HECY, G P 6 4l wl h Macy Lou Carter,
Smtih, pastor Sunday School, leader No Tuesday service
10 a m , Arthu1 Hem ,.n Supl ,
CHRISTIAN
SCIENC E
M orn1ng Worship I I a m , Sermes 31l Maon 51 , Pt
Young People!. S~!rVICe, 7 p m. , Pleas,em • Sunday services, 11
Eventng service, 7 30 p m , ' • 1 Wt-L nesdl'ly Test1moni a:
Weanesday Mid Week Pra)er Meeling, 7 JO ~ •1

.

M&amp; RFOODUNER

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

I

OOMIGAitSOHI.OSTATION

TV VIEWING
'

GAUL'S MARKET

Member of the Btg 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plains
667-3280

THE ~ARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS 00.

Chester, Ohio

Family Recreation
Swimming

Pomeroy-Member F. D. I. C. &amp;
Federal Reserve System

Meigs County Branch

THE AlHENS OOUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN Co~ .
296 w
:Second Ph. 992-3863 Pomeroy

Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

GAUL'S TRAILER SALES

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

and

Electric Motor Repair

St . Rt . 7
Chester, Ohio
Choose the Church of your Choice

810 W. Main

. NEW YORK'CLOTHING HOUSE
Take Someone with You to Church
In Pomeroy•Over 90 Years
Kermit Walton, fW;jr.

Church and Office Supplies-Gifts
Mi.ddleport

992 . 5750

SADIE'S MARKET '
'

Meats and Groceries
Syracuse
992·3986
. .

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
992-2641

.

.

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Bulc 1a Watches-Sales &amp; Service
186 N. Second
Middleport

Furniture and Appliances
Phone 985-3308
Chester,
'
.

0.

Racine, Ohio

_:.

I· Attend the Church of Your Choice
..

BEN fRANKLIN STORE

Pomeroy

VILLAGE CUT RATE
and
VILlAGE FLOWER SHOP

"We Sponsor Jesus ·
Re&lt;. Stan Craig, Pastor

.

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II 30--13, "No Down Payment"
WEDNESDAY
7 OQ-3, "The Thrill of It All"
11 30-13, "Sgt Rutledge"
TlfURSDAY
11 30-13, "The Counterfeit
Plan"

FRIDAY
8 3(}--3, ''How To Frame a
F•g"

9 00-S. " Splendor In the
Grass"
11 30-13, " The Hunters"
SATURDAY
8 30-13, "A Taste of Evil"
9 oo-J, ''Whal Old You 0(1 In
the War, Daddy"
11:30-8, "L11lth"

11.30-13, "The Invisible Ray",
"The Crimson Canary",
"Circus of Fear"

11 50-3, "The Naked Brigade"

Murder"

I

'

t George

t

I1

S

~~
~

' LISTEN

TO

~ Mon.- thru Fri.

FAIRVIEW BIBLE DfURQf

Ph. 949·3272

"The Rookies"

t Invite Alan King and Boston's

w

'

F. J. WAllACE, JEWELER

~13.

=

ROYAL OAK PARK

'

TUESDAY
8

! Big Time.
As WW would've said : don't

Ph. 992-l49b

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport. 0.

LYONS MARKET

SUNDAY
5:0Q-13, "Boy On A Dolp/ltn"
7:30-8, TBA
9:0Q-1J, "Fireball Fo.-word"
&amp;
11.30-13,
"David
Bathsheba"
11· J0-8, "We're No AngelS"
'MONDAY '
7. 00-13, "High Wind In
Jamaica"
9.oo--:-13,. "Jigsaw"
9 oo-J, "I Thank a Fool"
11 30-13, "Bus Stop"
12 oo-s, "Anatomy of a

.

•

2oth CEMTURY
FORMATION HU'UNII

949-3342

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS 00•

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport. Ohio

'

J

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The Store with A"Heart
Racine

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

I
I
I
I

tell-all
c!lffilorter, Baroness
Pallandt, w1U gel
a week In her St. Regis
llal!10nette date. Looks llke
only Clifford Irving wlll go
broke over thisllless ... L. A.
aviation writer Don Dwiggins
who wrote lots about Howard
H1111bes for "Planes &amp; Pilots"
mag, tells pals Irving called
"·'him last year to request a
" browse through Dwiggins'
,,Hughes-file. Said Irving's
approach planely seemed Uke
_,someone wrillng a blog, not an
autob1og ... The acting Chris
Georges (she's Lynda Day)
expect an April stork.
Ethel Merman wasn't
choked up about a $15,000-aweek summer-stock offer;
1, ·shows how selective you can be
;! when you're reeeeally-r\ch ...
•! Desl Arnaz Jr. was at the Copa
:1 ringside w1th Uza Mlnnelll.
·: Neither reallzed Desj Sr. had
•' appeared there 25 years ago with second billing- to. the
, show's star, Pe~ Und Hayes
' .. Second bllllng at the Copa
sent many an unknown Into
; orb1t; Perry Como played
~ there In 1943- the great Willie
•' Howard was the comic tnp• blUed over Perry ... Who ""•
,, discovered at the ropa for the
Chesterfield Suppe: Club back
• when network rad1o was the

Frazier to the same
: Bean town gym . . . Alain
t Delon's ex-wife Nathalie's new
'' love Is young actor Marc
Pore!: who looks just like Alain
' ... Ted Knight of the marvelous
~ Mery Tyler Moore series
~ (plays "Ted Baxter," the TV
~ bulletin shooter) says he bases
~ his brilliantly numbwllted
~ characterization on L. A. TV
' newshawk George Putnam ...
~ ·That should be good for a belt
~ In the kisser.
'• Sidney Blackmer's alllng:
• '• blood transfusions but still
~ ambulatory with a sporty
• cane; !me actor, Sidney- who
' _had nursed a gallant secret for
years ... Comic Milt Mosa Ia
~ gelling scads of nightclub jobs
~ after working only five weeks
the whole of last yell!" .. Who
he • Milt's the hilarious clown
In the Alka Seltzer commercial
("I ate the whooole thing");
mddenly thla year Mill has 16
weeks booked solid •..
Benlhana of Tokyo restaurant
cham owner Rocky Aokl Is
speildlng $9,1100 to pul his Rolls- Royce back Into the $8Q,IIOO
shape 11 came In : tangled with
a trailer truck. Rolza ruck,
Pierre Sichel's book about
Modlgllani will be a movie.
'Aicelic-faced Leonard Lyons
_ told us, "AU of Modlgllanl's
portraits look like me" ... 405
Park Ave Is a building loaded
with showbiz finns, and you
can tell 11 by the doorman
More braid on his uniform than
a Gilbert&amp; Sullivan admiral ...
Fans haven'! been writing
letters
movie slant the la8t
few years; TV gels 'em all bul Twiggy's "Boy Friend"
smallh plied up 31 sacks of
~ gushlngs In the MGM mall
~- room so far.

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Athens Road
POmeroy
A Family That Worships Together
Stays Together

'

r1

ALL WEAlHER ROOANG

-

II

,?J,~~,;~

Tratnlng Union. 6 30 p m ,
Just as the ship has its modern equipment and
eventng worship, 7· 30 p m evenings, 8 p m serv1ces .
Prayer meel•ng, Wednesday,
m lighthouses, 10 we too have a tower of direction
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
7 30 p m
- Mr Roberl Wyatl, pastor,
and strength found in the Church. In the Church of
RACINE FIRST CHURCH Sunday School supt, Ronald
Jesus Christ we lind a lastihg faith, guiding us into
OF THE NAZARENE - Osborne Btble School. 9 30
Sunday School , 9· 30 am , am. , preaching 10 45 a m ,
the calm harbor of ETERNAL life.
Mormng Worshtp, 10. 30 a m , Even1ng serv1ces, 7 30 p m
Even1ng worsh1p, 7 30 p m ,
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
Wednesday, Sunday School METHODIST - Cecil Wose,
Superintendent. Pauline Me Pastor Sunday School, 9 30
SalpturM selected by the Amtrk.tn fllble Sotltty
Cilntock , pastor Rev Morns a m , Morning worship, 10 30
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wodnesday Thursday Friday Saturday
M Wolfe
am , Young People's serv1ce.
Exodus
Psalms
Psalms
Isaiah
Micah
Luke
Isaiah
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST- 6 45 p m , Evoangelishc ser'Vice,
Charles Norns, pastor Sunday 7 30 p m Prayer meeting,
49:18-26 2:23.3:10 25:1-14 89:1·16 51:4-8 7:16-20 1:26-33
School. 9 30 a m , Morntng Thursday, 7 30 p m
- Copyrish11912 Kebtef MtvenhlnJ Service Inc S1r11bura. Vlrslnl•
worship, 10 ol5 a m , Sunday
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
evemng worsh ip, 7 30 p m , MISSION - B'ald Krnbs, Rev
Wednesday evenmg B1ble l
R Giuesenca1 :-&amp;f: pastor
Study, 7 30 p m
Roger Wtlfred, Sr , Sundar.
Wtth the hope tt will. In some measure, foster and help sustain that which ts
DANVILLE WESLEYAN, School Supt Sunday Schoo ,
good
in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the business
Rev
Lawrence
Sullivan, 9 30 a m , Sunday evening
pas tor Sunday School 9 30 worshtp 7 30 Prayer meeting,
firms and organizations whose names appear below.
a m , youth and tumor youth Tuesday. 7 30 p m Ernest
serv1ce, 6 45 p m , evenmg Deeter, class leader Youth
worshtp, 7 30 p m , prayer and Meeltng Wednesday, 7 30 p m ,
praose, Wednesday, 7 JO p m Ernest Deeter, leader
SILVER RUN FREE BAP·
MT. HERMON UNITED
TIST - Rev Howard Kimble, II'RETHREN CHURCH IN
And Construction Co.
pastor Sunday schocl, 10 a m . CHRIST- Rev Roberl Shook,
D.
B.A Anthony Plumbing and
Henry Davis, supt , evening pastor Sunday School, 9 30
Phone 992-3284
Heatinq
Middleport
service, 7 3p p m. Prayer a m , Roy Pooler, supt , Alfred
·
240
Lincoln
·St.
992·2550
Mtddleport
lll,F.eltng, Thulpay, 7: JO p m
•k
Yfqlf~ 11.~•1 , s,upt ; ,rnorotqg "'
. ,. •..,
,.
'
p
I •
•
'" CHESTER • CHURCH OF ~cffsl'dp /' ll ~ a.. m r :aver:tl~ ,:. • 1! '
&gt; - ~ " ~. , . "' i c ~
GOD- Rev James Satterfteld, sermon, 7 30 p m , alternat•na
pastor Sunday school , 9 30 each Sunday Class meeting 11
am, worsh1p serv1ce. 11 am , a m
alternat1ng
!Sunday
evenmg service, 7, prayer morntngs
Alfred Wolfe,
servtce and youth serv1ce , layleader, Chnstian Endeavor,
Bakers of Good Bread
Middleport, Oh to
Thursday, 7 p m
7 30 p m Sundar
Roger
Huntington, W Va.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Buckley, preslden Prayer
"
..
Homer Ster.hens, pastor meeling, Wednesday, 7· 30 p m
Sunday Schoo , 9 30 a m . Board meeting first Monday
mornmg worsh1p, 10· 30 a m , each month, 7 30 p m
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
supt , Sunday eventng ser'VICe,
RUTLAND
Sales· Allis Chalmers - Service
7 30 Youth meeting, Monday. 7
RUTLAND Fl RST BAPTIST
p m M1d-week serv1ce, Wed Middleport, Ohio
Farm · Industrial · Lawn. Garden
Rev Samuel Jackson •
nesday, 7 30 p m
pas lor Sunday School, 10 a m ,
Tuppers Plains
667-3435
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Mrs Gerlrude Butler, supt
THE NAZARENE- Rev M C Prayer Service, 1 30 p m ,

HEINER'S BAKERY

'

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'

'

Rfll

Tuesday, 7 p m, Wednesday am and 7 30 p m alternalely
prayer meeting, 7 P m

.

m:

Thursday,

m. .,.
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Danny Evans,
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST pastor Norman C Will. supl

cleavor , 6 30, Worsh1p serv1ces,

TO BETTER ·

t)

Mrs Sampson Hall , Supt
STIVERSVILLE
COM· Wednesday, Christian Youlh
MUNITY, Rev Edsel Hart, CruSljde, 6 30 p.m.; Prayer

School

WBEKL Y GUIDE

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.,z

�""'
&amp;• _The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , March 3, 1972

MIDDLEPORT PEN
UNITED MINISTRY OF
TECOSTAL. Third Ave. the MEIGS COUNTY, The Untied

Sorvteo, 7 3D pm . Youth
mectong 6 30 P m . Evenong

Ronald Dugan. Sunday school L Zavtlz, Pastor Director ,
supl Classes for all ages . George w Hulton and Rev
t&gt;ve ntng serv1ce , 1 3(1 p m L111sur. St~bb•ns, Ass ' I Paslor

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev Herber!

Re\1

W•lllam Kmttet, pastor , Presbyrer11n Church, Ow1ghl

Pe oples

Youqg

POMEROY
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN,
POMEROY TRINITY
Rev
Arthur C Lund pastor
Rev W H Pernn, pastor Roy Sunday
School. 9 ll am ,
M.ayer, Supt Church schooot. Charles Evans,
Supt . • worshtp
9 IS a m worsh1p, 10 24 a m ,
servtce,
10 30 a m
youth choir rehearsal Monday ftrmallon class . Tuesday, Con
,. 15
6 30 p m , Mrs Mar v•n Burt, to 5 30 p m
Ju;,lor Con -

meeting,

O~rcc tors

Wednesday . 8 p m , Bobfe
FIRST UNITED PRESstudy. Frlddy, S p m
BYTERIAN, Harrlsonv tl/e,
FREEWILL BAPTIST - Sunday Church School, 9 30
Corner Ash and Plum, Mid am , Mrs Homer Lee, Sup! ,
dleport Noel Herrman, pastor,

Morn ing

Worsh•p 10 30 am

worsh1p , 7 JO p m

..

Grate, pa stor Worsh1p servtee,
11 am and 7 30 P m Sunday

i:••llf_;" •
~:~J., OlCe
~r-:
.

Sunday
RIChard
meellnQ.
Bradford
Cl11tord

School, 9 30 am
Barton, sup! Prayer
Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
Church of ChrlslSm1lh,

~a~Qng

m in1sler

Guy Pnddy, Sunday School F 1 R s T
U N 1 T E D Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Sup! Saturday evenong service, PRESBYTERIAN, Mtddleporl, morn111g church 10 30 am;
1 P m, Sunday School, 10 Sunday Church School. 9' 30 Sunday evening serviCe, 7 30

);Br.'Wa"'J

am , Sunday e'Venlng worsh1p, ' a m , Lew1s Sauer, Supt , P m Wednesday service, 8 p m .
cho•r ftrmali on class, Thursday, 6 30 7 P m
Morntna WorshiP. 10 JO am . LAUREL CLIFF FREE
rehearsal, 7 30 p m , Thursday to745pm
FIRST BAPTIST of Mod ·
F I RST
U N I T E D METHODIST- Rev Eu~ene

director,

senior

Mrs

Paul Nease, d lredor
SEVENTH
DAY
AD· dleport , corner of Sixth and
POMEROY CHURCH OF VENTIST
Pomer oy, Palmer 'Sireets, Rev Charles
THE NAZARENE - Corner Mulberry
pastor
Fred
Hgls
Herber! Simons,
Un1on and Mulberry Rev
Holtman . Sunday School
Morgan
,
pastor
Sabbath
Clyde V Henderson, pastor School Saturday 2 p m , Supenntendenl Sunday church
Sunday School 9 30 a m , worship 3 15 p m Dorcas school for everyone 9 15 am .
Raymond Walburn , supl
Mornmg worsh1p 10 15 a m ,
Morntng worshtp 10 30 am Soctety, 10 a m each Thursday Evening services, 7 30 p m ,
GRAHAM
UNITED
Eventng servtee 7 30 p m Mt~
METHODISTPreaching
9 30 WednesdayprayerservtCe, 7 30
week sennce Wednesday, 7 30
p m Extra youth acf1vltles on
a
m
,
first
and
second
Sundays
pm
each month third and fourlh Sunday, l p m , for all youth up
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev ol
Sundays each month, worsh tp to s1xlh grade, 6 30 for 1un•or
Stanley Pla ttenburg , mmtsler service
7 30 p m Wednesday and sent or htgh students
Morning prayer and sermon, eveningsat at
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
7 30 Prayer and
10 30a m Holy commun1on and
Mtddleporl
, Sth and Main
sermon, f•rst St.~ndays. 10 30 Bible Study
Rauhn Moyer, pastor MIChael
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BAP
a m
Church school, k1n
Gerlach, Sunday School supt
dergar ten through eighth TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave , Btble School, 9 30 am, mor
Pomeroy,
afltlialed
wolh
S
8
C
,
grade 10 30 a m
the Rev Fred Htll. paslor nlng worship, 10 30 am ,
POMEROY CHURCH OF Sunday
School. 9 30 a m , evenmg worshtp, 7 30 p m •
CHRIST- Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr , morning worshtp,
10 30 a m , prayer service 7 P m Wed·
pastor Bible School, 9 JO a m , tun lor society, 6 JO am
NYPS, nesday
worship, 10 30 , adult worship 6 45 p m Sunday evangeltshc
CHURCH
OF
THE
servtce and young peoples
NAZARENE
Mtddleporl,
meeltng , 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting, both 7 30 p m Sunday meeting
Wednesday. 7 JO p m Rev Audry Miller. pastor ,
Wednesday . combined Btble
Floyd Carson, supt Sunday
MIDD~EPORT
study and prayer meeting, 7 30
school.
9 30 a m , Morning
MT MORIAH BAPTIST pm
worshop 10 30 a m • lunlor
Corner
Fourth
and
Mam
,
THE SALVATION ARMY soclely, 6 30 p m . NYPS, 6 4l
Envoy Ray 5 W1nmg, offtcer in Mtddlepo.-1 Rev Henry L Key, p m
Sunday evangeiiSIIc
charge Sunday, 10 a m , Jr, pastor Sunday School 9 30 meeting, 7 30 p m Prayer
a
m
,
Arnold
Richards
,
supt
.
Hohness meetmg., 10 30 am ,
meel tng Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
worsh1p 10 30 am
Sunday School Young People's Mornmg
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES Legion. 7 p m , Thursday, 1 to 3
MEIGS
Larry
presiding
p m , Ladtes Home League. 7 min1ster Carnahan
COOPERATIVE
Sunday, B1ble lecture,
p m , Prep classes
PARISH
9
30
a
m
sludy,
SACRED HEART - Rev 10 30 a m, ,Watchtower
THE
UNITED
Tuesday, Bible
Father Bernard Krajcovlc,
METHODIST
CHURCH
7.30 p m , Thursday,
pastor
Phone
992 282l study,
Robert
R.
Card
ministry school 7 30 p m ,
Saturday eventng Mass, 7 30 service
Rev.
Stanten
Smtih
meelmg 8 30 p m
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10
CHESTER
Worship
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of a m , Church School 10 a m9 15
a m Confessions, Saturday, 7 Chnst
tn Christian Unton 7 30 p m
ENTERPRISE- Worship, 9
Lawrence
Mantey, pastor, Mrs
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Russell Young,
a m ; Church School, 10 a m
Sunday
School
- Robert Ku~n. pastor, Wtlllam Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
F~ATWOODS- Worshtp, 11
Watson , Sunday school supl
a
m
, Church School 10 a m
Sundayschool,9 30om , BYF, Evening worship 7 30 Wed
Wo.-shtp, 10 30
POMEROYnesday prayer meet1ng, 7 30
6 p m , Bible sludy, Wed
a
m
,
Church
School
9 ll a m ,
nesdoy. 7 p m , choir practiCe, pm
UMYF 6 30 p.m
Wednesday, 8 30 p m
ROCK SPRINGS~ Worshtp
10 a m , Church School 9 a m ,
UMYF 6 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev Robert Bumgarner
CLOSINGS ANNOUNCED
HEATH - Wor!hlp 10 30
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The a m , Church School 9: JO a m ,
City's 108 playgrounds and 36 UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND - Worship 9 15
INCREASE APPROVED
pools will be closed for the a m
, Church School 10 a m ,
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The entire year because of a budget UMYF
7pm
federal Pay Board announced cnsiS that IS forcing cutbacks
SALEM CENTER- Worship
Wednesday tis approval of a 7 7 Recreation Comm1ss1oner 9 a m , Church School 10 a m ,
per cent wage mcrease for 539 JohnS Nagy sa1d the pool and UMYF Thursday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE C~USTER
employes of the Centervtlle, playground closmgs were
Rev Forrest A. Donley
Ohw, ctty school dlStrtct The necessitated by a deflated $1 7
ASBURY- Worship 11 am
Church
School9 lOom , WSCS,
mcrease lS retroactive to last m1lhon budget for h1s depart1st Tuesday
Sept 16
ment thiS year
FOREST RUN - Worshtp 9
a m , Church School 10 a m •
WSCS. 3rd Wednesday, 7 30
pm
MINERSVILLE - Worship
10 a m , Church School 9 a m.,
WSCS. 3rd Monday, 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE - Worshtp, 8
a m , Church School, 9 a m. ,
Prayer and Bible Study,
CALL POl NT VIEW : 992 · 2505
Wednesday. 7 30 p.m
.
• M&lt;&gt;
'
·soU'I'HERlol tt:US:rER· ~
Rev. W Dolo McClurg
at th€ nof so marvoelous hour
SATURDAY, MARCH4
Rev.
Frank Cheesebrew
For our money, the best of 11 am Ch 8 If you're
Rev
Martha
Ann MoHner
thtng on TV today may well home from church by then
BETHANY (Dorcas)
these two mas1ers are well
be a children's show
Worshtp, 9 30 a m , Church
Remember the aborted worth the ltstenmg
School 10 30 a m.
+++
Apollo 13 miSSion. while the
CAR ME~ - Worshtp, 11
Basketball, hockey goll
whole world watched as the
a m , lsi and 3rd Sundays ,
crew tried to bnng the1r and tenn1s- Sunday's sports
Church School, 10 am
crippled spaceshtp back calendar has them all
APPLE GROVE - Worship,
The NBA's afternoon
home? Today , astronaut
7 30 p m , church school, 9 30
a m ,
mid week
service,
Jack Swigert tells the story spec1al p1ts tt-.e New York
Wednesday, B p m
of that lrlghtenong flight on Knteks and Ph tladelphla
EAST ~ETART - Worshtp,
Pro
"Take a Giant Slep," 11 76ers. 2 p m Ch 12
10 am , firS I and third Sundays ,
Hockey sees lhe Chicago
am, Chs 2 &amp; 7
9 am , second and fourth
Black Hawks and Mtnnesota
+++
Sundays . church school, 9 a m ,
Saturday sports lwtth on North Stars battling on Ch. 8
ftrsl
and third Sundays , 10 am,
The ftnals of the
eye to the calendar and the at 2 p m
second
and fourth Sundays
Doral Eastern Open Golf
start of exhtbltlon baseball)
M•d
week
serv1ce, Wednesday,
class1c
show
up
at
3
30
p
m
,
College basketball Ohio
8
p
m
and the World
State vs Indiana, 4 p m , Ch. Ch 2
GREAT BEND- Worshtp 11
Tenn1s
4 Florida State (posSible Champfonsh1p
am, 2nd and 4th Sundays,
NCAA PICks! vs Clnetnnatl, Tournament at 3 30 on Chs 4
Church School . 10 am
&amp; 7
1 30 p m , Ch. 2 &amp; 7
LETART FALLS - Worshtp
In addlflon. there's auto
Duke 's
sometimes
10 a m , Church S.:hool 9 a m
racmg - for the year's top
surpnsmg Blue Oev1ls vs
MORNING STAR- Worshtp
No 3 North Carolina, 2 p m , money prize In the California
9 30 a m , Church School 1o 30
Ch 8 lllinoos, whupped by 500 Stock Car Race. 4 30
a m , Mid Week ServiCe,
p m , Ch 6 Fred Taylor's
Wednesday, S i).m
the Buckeyes th•s week, vs
MORSE CHAPEL- Worshtp
M•nnesota , who tried to OSU basketball recap , 12 JO
And West
11 a m , lsi and 3rd Sundays ,
whup the Buckeyes In a p m Ch 4
Church School, 10 a m
different way, 2 p m , Ch 6 V1rgmla Mounta1neer sports,
PORTLAND- Worshtp 7 30
And two shows honormg 1 30 p m , Ch 7 and 4 30
p
m
, Church S.:hool 9. 30 am
pm
,
Ch
S
perhaps lhe best Marshall U
SUTTON
- Worship, 11 a m
basketball team ever, with
+++
2nd and 41h Sundays; Church
I w1sh "R ollm' on the
Marshall highlights at I ll
School 10 a m
p.m , Ch 2 and a specoal R•ver," a relaxing variety
WESLEYAN (Racine) honor1ng MU 's all t1me show with Kenny Rogers and
11 am . Church
Worship,
great Russell Lee, at 3 p m , First Edlhon. would stop
School.
10
am
roHm' from one time slot to
Ch 12
UMYF for all churches of the
another Today's It's on Ch
+++
Southern Cluster, 7 JO p m
Th1s 1s as good a t•me as 12 at 7 30 p m , bul has been
each Sunday at lhe Youth
anv to sa y that publiC shown at d1fferent hours
Center !Oak Grove Road I
televis•on has done a whale
throughoul the season I Also
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
of a tob thos wmter, with Ch !een at 10 30 p m Fnda:y ,
Rev. Jacob lehman
9 brlngmg us all Marshall Ch. 7 I
Rev Standley Brandum
+++
JOPPA - Wo.-shlp 10 a m ,
home games. and Ch II
Church School 9 a m , Prayer
The f.rst b•g poll1•cal
brlngmg Ohto U hockey etc
Mee tmg . Wednesday, 8 p m
showdown of 1972 occurs
Thanks •
LONG BOTTOM - Church
Tuesday in New Hampshire.
++ +
services, 9 a m , Sunday School
Other sports
and two of President Nixon's
9 4l a m Bible study every
NCAA basketball nvals are guests ton1ght on
Thursday, 7 30 p m
Wolloam F
Buckley's
htghltghls 3 30 p m Ch •
NORTH BETHEL- Worship
'F~rl ng Lme " lnterestmg to
Pro Bowlers Tour fr o m
11
a m , Church School 10 a m
hear
from
Callfornta
Rep
Coral Gables. Fla 3 JO
ALFREDSunday school ,
p m , Ch 12
Dora I Pele McCloskey, who thtnk s
4l
a
m
each
Sunday,
9
Nixon's too conservaflve ,
Eastern Open Go lf Tour
prea1;b1ng at 11 am each
nament, 4 p m , Ch 2 And and Oh10's Rep John Ash ,
Sunday Prayer meeltng, 7 45
a golf tourney where the brook who thmks he s too
p m Wednesday , WSCS. B p m
names outwe•gh the artistry, liberal B p m , Ch 11
on th.rd Tuesday each month
+++
lhe
Football Baseball
REEDSVILLE - Sundaf
An
earl 1er
pollf1cal
Players ClassiC 5 p m Ch
school. 9 30, preoch tng, 7 30
showdown •s the sub ject of
10
p m Sunday. prayer meeting,
the fourth mstallment of
+++
7 30 p m Tuesday , WSCS, 7 30
lawrence Welk features
down So uth fav or ites
ton1ght with a melange of

Nashville and Ton Pan Alley
mus1c 7 pm

Chs 7 &amp; 12

+++

MOVIE S

·son

ol

Frankenstein " 11 15 p m ,
Ch 6 and II 30 p m , Ch 12

" Heat of Anger:· 11 30
p m , Ch 10 "Queen of the
Nile.'' 11 JO p m, Ch 7
Trtple feature , " Pony Ex
press." " A Hard Day 's
Nigh!. " lhe Beattes, and
"Showdown,'' starts a/ 1 30
p m, Ch • " Hour of 13,''
Peter Lawford, I a m , Ch
10

+++

SUNDAY, MARCH!
This Sabbath opens and
closes wdh excellent en
tertalnmenf, and some

thought provolong
pr99rammlng
~tortlng off os a marvelous

mt.ture dl those grea1 old
Berthold Brecht-Kurt Weill
songs on "Camera Three,"

"Elizabeth R,' wh1ch IS
draw1ng raves from the

critics Tontghl Queen
Elizabeth confronts a final
solution to the threat posed
by her CatholiC cous in .
Mary. Queen of Scots 9
pm Ch II

+++

MOVIES
The Kong ' s
Thtef.'' 8 a m , ~h 10 1what
happened to lhe Blondle
fdms usually shown at th1s
hour')
' G•rl Ha:'py ,'
11 ll p m, Ch 10

++ +

f~rst

Thursday each month

SILVER RIDGE- Worship,
10 a m , Church School, 9 am
TUPPERS
P~AINS
Worshop 9 a m , Church School
10 am.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Hobar 1 Newe ll , supl

~ervlces

weekly, 9 30 am on Sunday.
Preachtng ftro t and third
Sundays of month by Clifford
Smtih, 9 30 a m
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll,
pastor Sunday School, 9 30
a m , Leonard Gilmore, f1r st
elder

MONDAY Whal wou ld
Howard Cosell say about Ihe
brawl '" the Ohio State
Minnesota basketball game'

'p m

Plenty, we should 1mag1ne

Rev

evening

service,

Wednesday

7 30

prayer

meetmg, 7 JO p m

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Racme Route 2 The
Charles

Hand,

oastor

and he'll be saying tf wtlh

Sunday school. 9 45 • m ,

film clips of the Mmnesota
massacre on Phtl Donahue 'S
show, 10 a m , Ch
8
(Donahue s show IS gettmg
more and more popular, with
one segment or a~other
popping up on Chs 4, 7 aod 8

morn1ng

MN

I

worsh1p ,

11

am

Evening services, Thuesday
and Fnday, 7 30
BEARWA~LOW
RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David
Jewell. pastor btble study, 9 30
am

morning worship, 10 30,

evening worship, 6 30 p m
Wednesday Btble sludy, 7 30
pm

I'

PRESBYTERIAN,

By JACK O'BRIAN
r:'i
~.~ NEW YORK (KFS) -Most
cent ex-Mrs. Winthrop
~ ockdeller Is a G~y 90s
Paldar. Tosses a biD al e)'ery
mft~tainer there: Q!M! dollar
'" With inflation, tbat's about
!IJ,e same as her ex)randpappy-ln-law John D.
RG~:kefeller handed out In hill
thlnlr~ne philanthropic days
Nlson-chou-Mao cheek·
waltzing encourages
Downey's aeptuageparian •
liollllw to hope he'll be freed
a
China ~nson.
Morton Downey's nephew
The N. Y. Boxing Commlsh
In for a f!scal to-the-bone cut.
always been a trough for
hacks.
Namath tells pals he
down Cosmo's nude•@nt.•rf&lt;tld. Burt Reynolds
!ewded the rqoney ... One of
lOP few great Manhattan
tlgh11ciulbs Is bouncing checks
strutted Into
~~~ll'da~~;s with a doll barely
age. Bannald Lenore
..ertun&lt;)ll swlftied, "Who's the
old
with Georgie?"
'I

Syracuse, Gill, pastor. William Batley,

Mornmg Worsh1p , 9 am ,
Sunday Church School, 10 am

sup! Sunday School , 9 30 am ,
Morn1ng worship, 10 30 a ,m .. •
Evening worship, 7 JO p m.

pastor Sunday School serv•ce
10 a m Prayer Meetmg each
Thursday 7 JO p m Sunday
evenmg serv1ce, 7 30 p m

meeting 7 30 p m
choir pract1ce, 7 p

- · Pomeroy Harrisonville

SunQay

Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Sup! Sunday School 9 JO am,
morntng worshtp and com
munlon, 10 30 am , Sun"day
evening youth Christian en,,

Worshtp service. fO 30 am
Chnstlan Endeavor Sunday
eventng.
REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LAT·
TER DAY SAINTS- Portland

Sunday, 7 30 p m Wednesday
evening prayer meeltng and
Btble study, 7 30 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN Pme Grove, the Rev Arthur

Racme Road

9 30 am .,

Ralph Johnson,

10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Roy Bill Carter.
evangelist, Wilbur Haning,
Blbleschoolsupt , Btbleschoo/,
9 30 a m ; morning worship,
10 JO am. , evening worshtp, 7

pastor Herbert Whtle, Sundar.
S.:hool Director. Sunday Schoo ,
9 30 a m , Morning worship,
10 30 am , Sunday evening
service 7 p m Wednesday
even1ng prayer serv•ces. 7 30
p m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor Worshtp service, 9 30
am, Sunday School.lO 30a m
CAR~ETON CHURCH Kingsbury Road
Sunday
School, 9 30 am , Ralph Carl.

p.m , Christ1an Workers Class,

sup I

Combs, pastor Sunday school,
9 30 a m
church services,

Worsh1p serv•ce,

There sht goes ... UNDERWAY at Ioiii You can
almoat feel her confidence when she hih the water.
But who knows what odvonturos await her on the
Seven Seas? How many crucial tolls must tho captain
face before she finally rests at a harbor ol safety?

10 30

ANTIQUITY BAPTISt
Rev Freeland Norns, pastor
Sunday school, 10 a m , church
serv1ce, 7 p m Wednesday
Boble study, 7 p m

BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE,
Minersville. J A. McWaters,
pastor Sunday School, 10 am •
morning worship,

11 a m ,

Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
7 30 p m Rev Jay Stiles.

We're the captains of our own ships In th~ voy·
age through life. We begin with determined opri·
mlsm. We have youth, ambition, determination, We
have health and strength. But as we get "under·
way/' we soon find ourselves faced with sudden
trials and obstados. It is in these mamenh of crisis
that our faith and courage ore challenged.

pas lor

O~D
DEXTER
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
- Rev. Wtllard Dutcher,
pastor Mrs Worley Francis,
Sunday School Supt Sunday
School, 9 4l a m Church Ser
viCes f1rst and thtrd Sundays
followtng Sunday School.
Second and fourth Saturday

GOEGLEIN READY MIX 00.

-

-·

MARK VSTORE

Lanmore , pastor

Bob Moore, preachmg servtce. 2 p m

Sunday School Supt Sunday
RUT~AND CHURCH OF
School , classes for all ages, 9 30 CHRIST- Sunday school, 9. 30
a.m.. mornmg worsh1p, 10 45 am, V H Braley, supt,
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p m , commun1on and devot1ons
evangehst•c serv1ce Sunday, 10 30 a m Regular board•
7 30 p m Mtd week prayer meetong 7 30, third Saturday
meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 p m each month
M1ssionary meeting, second
THE
RUTLAND COM.
Wednesdav 7 30 o m
MUNITY CHURCH - Rev
UNITED FAITH NON- R~&lt;hard Dubbeld, pastor
DENOMINATIONAL - Rev School. 9 30 a m , Worshtp
Rober! Smith, paslor Sunday servtee. 11 am , Wednesday
school , 9 30 am., Bob Barber, prayer meellng. 7 30 p m
supt , worship service, 10 JO Sunday ntght worshtp, 7:30
a m , youth meeting, 6 45
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
p m , church, 7:30 p m, THE NAZARENE - Rev
prayer meeting, Wednesday Lloyd D Grimm, Jr , pastor
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN Sunday School, 9 30 a m
IN CHRIST-Eldon R. !!lake, Morntng worship, 10 30 a m •
pastor Sunday School , 10 am , Young people's service, 6 4l•
Winme Holsinger, supt Mor p m . Evangelistic services
mng sermon, 11 am , Evening 7 30 p m. Wednesday evening'

service Chrlsf•an Endeavor , servtce 1 30 p m
7 30p m , Mrs Lyda Chevalter,
pres1dent Song service and
MASON COUNTY
sermon. B 20 Mid-Week prayer
THE HI~AND CHAPEL
meellng Wednesday, 7 30 p m George Casto, pastor Sunday'
Mrs Mane Holsmger, class School, 9 30 ; evenmg worship
leader
7 30 Thursday evening prayer'
POMEROY 'OWER LIGHT serv•ce, 7 30 p m

CHURCH - Harrisonville
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Road, Rev Roy Taylor, pastor. Second and Pomeroy Sts , Stan
Henry Eblin, Sunday School Craig, pastor Sunday school
::.upT :,unday School, 9:30 a m , 9 .45 a.m , worsh1p serv1ce, 11•
even1ng worship, 7 JO p m a m ; training union, 6 30 p m
Prayer and pra1se serv•ce, evemng worsh1p service, 7 30•
T~ursday , 7 30 p m
p.m M1d week prayer service
COMMUNITY CHURCH, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
Dexler Worship services
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Saturday and Sunday, 7 30 ServiCeS al 31l Matn Sl , PI
pm
- Pleasant, Sunday School 9 Il
HEMLOCK
GROVE a m Sundays, 11 a m , Wed
CHRISTIAN - Davtd !&gt;loutter, nesday, tesllmonlal meeting s
pastor, Stanford Stock ion, supt. p m All welcome
MornlnQ worship, 9 30 a m ,
FAIRVIEW BfB~E CHURCH
church school, 10 30 o.m , - Letarl Roule 1, the Rev Sla n
young peoples meeting, 6 30 Cratg, paslor Sunday schoo I,
p m , evening worship. 7 30 9 30 am . • prayer and Blbl e
Btble •tudy, Wednesday, 7 30 study, 7 30 p m Collage prayer
pm
service, Tuesday, 10 a m
MT. UNION BAPTIST - worshtp service, Friday, 7 30
Rev Cecil Cox. pastor Sunday pm
school supt , Joe Sayre. Sunday
MASON
CHURCH
0F
school. 9 45 a m , Sunday CHRIST - Loren T. Stephens
evening worship, 7 30 Wed- mln lsfer . Worsh1p , 10 am ••
nesday prayer and Btble study, Btblesludy, 11 lla m , evenln
7 30 p m
worship, 7 30 p m Mod wee e
TUPPERS
PLAiiiS service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
CHRISTIAN-Mr John Wyatt,
MASON ASSEMBLY 0 F
pastor, J S Davis, Sunday GOD- Second St , Mason . w
School supt , Sunday school, Va Chester Tennant, paslo r
9 30 a m , Morning Sermon, Sunday !Chool. 10 am , mo r
10 30 a m E\lenlng sermon, 7 ning worship, 11 a m
•
pm
evangells1tc servtce, 7 30 p m
LETART FA~~S UNITED Bible study and prayer service
BRETHREN - Rev Robert Wednesdav, 7 30 p.rr:. Phon e'
Shook. pastor , Herschel Noms, 773 l13J
sup! Sunday school. 9 3(1 a.m ,
HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
morning sermon, 10 . 30 11m. CHRIST tn Chrlsltan Union evenmg sermon , 7 30 alter Rev 0' Dell Manley, paslor
na11ng each Sunday
Prayer Sunday school, 9 30 am, Roge r
serv•ce, Wednesday, 7 30 p m Manley, supl , evening servlc e.
Prayer meeting, 7 30 p m 7 30 Wednesday evenln g
allernaling Sundays
prayer meeting . 7 30 p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF Sunday even1ng youth servic e
GOD OF PRO~HECY, G P 6 4l wl h Macy Lou Carter,
Smtih, pastor Sunday School, leader No Tuesday service
10 a m , Arthu1 Hem ,.n Supl ,
CHRISTIAN
SCIENC E
M orn1ng Worship I I a m , Sermes 31l Maon 51 , Pt
Young People!. S~!rVICe, 7 p m. , Pleas,em • Sunday services, 11
Eventng service, 7 30 p m , ' • 1 Wt-L nesdl'ly Test1moni a:
Weanesday Mid Week Pra)er Meeling, 7 JO ~ •1

.

M&amp; RFOODUNER

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

I

OOMIGAitSOHI.OSTATION

TV VIEWING
'

GAUL'S MARKET

Member of the Btg 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plains
667-3280

THE ~ARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS 00.

Chester, Ohio

Family Recreation
Swimming

Pomeroy-Member F. D. I. C. &amp;
Federal Reserve System

Meigs County Branch

THE AlHENS OOUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN Co~ .
296 w
:Second Ph. 992-3863 Pomeroy

Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

GAUL'S TRAILER SALES

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

and

Electric Motor Repair

St . Rt . 7
Chester, Ohio
Choose the Church of your Choice

810 W. Main

. NEW YORK'CLOTHING HOUSE
Take Someone with You to Church
In Pomeroy•Over 90 Years
Kermit Walton, fW;jr.

Church and Office Supplies-Gifts
Mi.ddleport

992 . 5750

SADIE'S MARKET '
'

Meats and Groceries
Syracuse
992·3986
. .

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
992-2641

.

.

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Bulc 1a Watches-Sales &amp; Service
186 N. Second
Middleport

Furniture and Appliances
Phone 985-3308
Chester,
'
.

0.

Racine, Ohio

_:.

I· Attend the Church of Your Choice
..

BEN fRANKLIN STORE

Pomeroy

VILLAGE CUT RATE
and
VILlAGE FLOWER SHOP

"We Sponsor Jesus ·
Re&lt;. Stan Craig, Pastor

.

'

•

II 30--13, "No Down Payment"
WEDNESDAY
7 OQ-3, "The Thrill of It All"
11 30-13, "Sgt Rutledge"
TlfURSDAY
11 30-13, "The Counterfeit
Plan"

FRIDAY
8 3(}--3, ''How To Frame a
F•g"

9 00-S. " Splendor In the
Grass"
11 30-13, " The Hunters"
SATURDAY
8 30-13, "A Taste of Evil"
9 oo-J, ''Whal Old You 0(1 In
the War, Daddy"
11:30-8, "L11lth"

11.30-13, "The Invisible Ray",
"The Crimson Canary",
"Circus of Fear"

11 50-3, "The Naked Brigade"

Murder"

I

'

t George

t

I1

S

~~
~

' LISTEN

TO

~ Mon.- thru Fri.

FAIRVIEW BIBLE DfURQf

Ph. 949·3272

"The Rookies"

t Invite Alan King and Boston's

w

'

F. J. WAllACE, JEWELER

~13.

=

ROYAL OAK PARK

'

TUESDAY
8

! Big Time.
As WW would've said : don't

Ph. 992-l49b

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport. 0.

LYONS MARKET

SUNDAY
5:0Q-13, "Boy On A Dolp/ltn"
7:30-8, TBA
9:0Q-1J, "Fireball Fo.-word"
&amp;
11.30-13,
"David
Bathsheba"
11· J0-8, "We're No AngelS"
'MONDAY '
7. 00-13, "High Wind In
Jamaica"
9.oo--:-13,. "Jigsaw"
9 oo-J, "I Thank a Fool"
11 30-13, "Bus Stop"
12 oo-s, "Anatomy of a

.

•

2oth CEMTURY
FORMATION HU'UNII

949-3342

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS 00•

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport. Ohio

'

J

.

The Store with A"Heart
Racine

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

I
I
I
I

tell-all
c!lffilorter, Baroness
Pallandt, w1U gel
a week In her St. Regis
llal!10nette date. Looks llke
only Clifford Irving wlll go
broke over thisllless ... L. A.
aviation writer Don Dwiggins
who wrote lots about Howard
H1111bes for "Planes &amp; Pilots"
mag, tells pals Irving called
"·'him last year to request a
" browse through Dwiggins'
,,Hughes-file. Said Irving's
approach planely seemed Uke
_,someone wrillng a blog, not an
autob1og ... The acting Chris
Georges (she's Lynda Day)
expect an April stork.
Ethel Merman wasn't
choked up about a $15,000-aweek summer-stock offer;
1, ·shows how selective you can be
;! when you're reeeeally-r\ch ...
•! Desl Arnaz Jr. was at the Copa
:1 ringside w1th Uza Mlnnelll.
·: Neither reallzed Desj Sr. had
•' appeared there 25 years ago with second billing- to. the
, show's star, Pe~ Und Hayes
' .. Second bllllng at the Copa
sent many an unknown Into
; orb1t; Perry Como played
~ there In 1943- the great Willie
•' Howard was the comic tnp• blUed over Perry ... Who ""•
,, discovered at the ropa for the
Chesterfield Suppe: Club back
• when network rad1o was the

Frazier to the same
: Bean town gym . . . Alain
t Delon's ex-wife Nathalie's new
'' love Is young actor Marc
Pore!: who looks just like Alain
' ... Ted Knight of the marvelous
~ Mery Tyler Moore series
~ (plays "Ted Baxter," the TV
~ bulletin shooter) says he bases
~ his brilliantly numbwllted
~ characterization on L. A. TV
' newshawk George Putnam ...
~ ·That should be good for a belt
~ In the kisser.
'• Sidney Blackmer's alllng:
• '• blood transfusions but still
~ ambulatory with a sporty
• cane; !me actor, Sidney- who
' _had nursed a gallant secret for
years ... Comic Milt Mosa Ia
~ gelling scads of nightclub jobs
~ after working only five weeks
the whole of last yell!" .. Who
he • Milt's the hilarious clown
In the Alka Seltzer commercial
("I ate the whooole thing");
mddenly thla year Mill has 16
weeks booked solid •..
Benlhana of Tokyo restaurant
cham owner Rocky Aokl Is
speildlng $9,1100 to pul his Rolls- Royce back Into the $8Q,IIOO
shape 11 came In : tangled with
a trailer truck. Rolza ruck,
Pierre Sichel's book about
Modlgllani will be a movie.
'Aicelic-faced Leonard Lyons
_ told us, "AU of Modlgllanl's
portraits look like me" ... 405
Park Ave Is a building loaded
with showbiz finns, and you
can tell 11 by the doorman
More braid on his uniform than
a Gilbert&amp; Sullivan admiral ...
Fans haven'! been writing
letters
movie slant the la8t
few years; TV gels 'em all bul Twiggy's "Boy Friend"
smallh plied up 31 sacks of
~ gushlngs In the MGM mall
~- room so far.

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Athens Road
POmeroy
A Family That Worships Together
Stays Together

'

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ALL WEAlHER ROOANG

-

II

,?J,~~,;~

Tratnlng Union. 6 30 p m ,
Just as the ship has its modern equipment and
eventng worship, 7· 30 p m evenings, 8 p m serv1ces .
Prayer meel•ng, Wednesday,
m lighthouses, 10 we too have a tower of direction
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
7 30 p m
- Mr Roberl Wyatl, pastor,
and strength found in the Church. In the Church of
RACINE FIRST CHURCH Sunday School supt, Ronald
Jesus Christ we lind a lastihg faith, guiding us into
OF THE NAZARENE - Osborne Btble School. 9 30
Sunday School , 9· 30 am , am. , preaching 10 45 a m ,
the calm harbor of ETERNAL life.
Mormng Worshtp, 10. 30 a m , Even1ng serv1ces, 7 30 p m
Even1ng worsh1p, 7 30 p m ,
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
Wednesday, Sunday School METHODIST - Cecil Wose,
Superintendent. Pauline Me Pastor Sunday School, 9 30
SalpturM selected by the Amtrk.tn fllble Sotltty
Cilntock , pastor Rev Morns a m , Morning worship, 10 30
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wodnesday Thursday Friday Saturday
M Wolfe
am , Young People's serv1ce.
Exodus
Psalms
Psalms
Isaiah
Micah
Luke
Isaiah
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST- 6 45 p m , Evoangelishc ser'Vice,
Charles Norns, pastor Sunday 7 30 p m Prayer meeting,
49:18-26 2:23.3:10 25:1-14 89:1·16 51:4-8 7:16-20 1:26-33
School. 9 30 a m , Morntng Thursday, 7 30 p m
- Copyrish11912 Kebtef MtvenhlnJ Service Inc S1r11bura. Vlrslnl•
worship, 10 ol5 a m , Sunday
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
evemng worsh ip, 7 30 p m , MISSION - B'ald Krnbs, Rev
Wednesday evenmg B1ble l
R Giuesenca1 :-&amp;f: pastor
Study, 7 30 p m
Roger Wtlfred, Sr , Sundar.
Wtth the hope tt will. In some measure, foster and help sustain that which ts
DANVILLE WESLEYAN, School Supt Sunday Schoo ,
good
in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the business
Rev
Lawrence
Sullivan, 9 30 a m , Sunday evening
pas tor Sunday School 9 30 worshtp 7 30 Prayer meeting,
firms and organizations whose names appear below.
a m , youth and tumor youth Tuesday. 7 30 p m Ernest
serv1ce, 6 45 p m , evenmg Deeter, class leader Youth
worshtp, 7 30 p m , prayer and Meeltng Wednesday, 7 30 p m ,
praose, Wednesday, 7 JO p m Ernest Deeter, leader
SILVER RUN FREE BAP·
MT. HERMON UNITED
TIST - Rev Howard Kimble, II'RETHREN CHURCH IN
And Construction Co.
pastor Sunday schocl, 10 a m . CHRIST- Rev Roberl Shook,
D.
B.A Anthony Plumbing and
Henry Davis, supt , evening pastor Sunday School, 9 30
Phone 992-3284
Heatinq
Middleport
service, 7 3p p m. Prayer a m , Roy Pooler, supt , Alfred
·
240
Lincoln
·St.
992·2550
Mtddleport
lll,F.eltng, Thulpay, 7: JO p m
•k
Yfqlf~ 11.~•1 , s,upt ; ,rnorotqg "'
. ,. •..,
,.
'
p
I •
•
'" CHESTER • CHURCH OF ~cffsl'dp /' ll ~ a.. m r :aver:tl~ ,:. • 1! '
&gt; - ~ " ~. , . "' i c ~
GOD- Rev James Satterfteld, sermon, 7 30 p m , alternat•na
pastor Sunday school , 9 30 each Sunday Class meeting 11
am, worsh1p serv1ce. 11 am , a m
alternat1ng
!Sunday
evenmg service, 7, prayer morntngs
Alfred Wolfe,
servtce and youth serv1ce , layleader, Chnstian Endeavor,
Bakers of Good Bread
Middleport, Oh to
Thursday, 7 p m
7 30 p m Sundar
Roger
Huntington, W Va.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Buckley, preslden Prayer
"
..
Homer Ster.hens, pastor meeling, Wednesday, 7· 30 p m
Sunday Schoo , 9 30 a m . Board meeting first Monday
mornmg worsh1p, 10· 30 a m , each month, 7 30 p m
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
supt , Sunday eventng ser'VICe,
RUTLAND
Sales· Allis Chalmers - Service
7 30 Youth meeting, Monday. 7
RUTLAND Fl RST BAPTIST
p m M1d-week serv1ce, Wed Middleport, Ohio
Farm · Industrial · Lawn. Garden
Rev Samuel Jackson •
nesday, 7 30 p m
pas lor Sunday School, 10 a m ,
Tuppers Plains
667-3435
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Mrs Gerlrude Butler, supt
THE NAZARENE- Rev M C Prayer Service, 1 30 p m ,

HEINER'S BAKERY

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'

Rfll

Tuesday, 7 p m, Wednesday am and 7 30 p m alternalely
prayer meeting, 7 P m

.

m:

Thursday,

m. .,.
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Danny Evans,
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST pastor Norman C Will. supl

cleavor , 6 30, Worsh1p serv1ces,

TO BETTER ·

t)

Mrs Sampson Hall , Supt
STIVERSVILLE
COM· Wednesday, Christian Youlh
MUNITY, Rev Edsel Hart, CruSljde, 6 30 p.m.; Prayer

School

WBEKL Y GUIDE

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c
c

.,z

�i

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8-The Daily Senlinel, Mlddleport·l'ooM!roy, 0 .. M•n·b 3,1972

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel. Classifie_ds ·Get Resul~~!
'

•

'

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.

OF
QUALITY

Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted Until9 a .m . lor,

'

Day of Publication

REGULATIONS '

1971 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN

The Publisher reserves the
deemed

objel,':tional.

The

publisher
will
not
be
responsible for more than one

1970 CHEVELLE S5396 CPE .

Incorrect insertion.

RATES
5 cents per Word one insertion

Minimum Charge 75c
cents per word three

12
consecutive insertions.

1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.

240 Lincoln St.

Middleport, Ohio
Oba Anlhof1y Plumbing
We have a complete Home

12095

v.a ~gine,

Maintenance Service the
year around. No mJHer what
your need. Complete roof or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling

automatic, trans ., .P· steering, factory air
condlf•oned, good w-w hres, radto, dark green finish with
spotless interior .

18 cents per word she c6n secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

ads and ads paid with in 10
days.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .

·,

tPMEROV, OHIO

-

tile and Paneling aod Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

12295

'Green finish. blk. vinyl roof, green vinyl interior, new
wide oval tires, 4 speed trans., power steC'ring, rad io. A
sweetheart of a buy .

For ·want Ad "Service

Additional 25c Charge
Advertisement.

I ALL WEATHER ROOFING
I
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp;·PLUMBING CO.

12495

'

We have 24 hr. emergency

service.

per

992-5803
992-3898

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. lo 5:00p.m . Daily,
· 8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon

Notice
of Hope Perfumes, Human
and Synthetic wigs. We're
here for rour convenience .

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our

Please cal 992-5113.

husband and father , William
Gera ld Graham , who passed
away one year ago, March 3,
1971. We miss you now, our
hearts are sore as time goes
by ; We miss you mor e, your
loving smi le, your gentle face .
no one can fill your vacant
place.
Sadly missed by your wife,
Goldie, children and grand·
children.

UPHOLSTERING

Aluminum
Sheets

SERVICt,

comp let e selection of fabrics
andvinyltochoosefrom. Pick
up and delivery . Slater
Upholstering, Rt . J , Pomeroy,

phone 9'12-3617.

2-3-30tp

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

ANYONE interested in learning
crafts and making flowers
contact Eulah Francis at 992-

3-3-llp

-----Card ol Thanks

8 for $1.00

5884.
3·2-6tp

WE WISH to express our sin·
cere thanks to all who
assisted in the care and death
of o'ur husband, father and
grandfather, Russell Painter.
The Veterans M emo rial

A SHOT GUN and rille ma tc h
will be held Sunday, March 5,
at 12 o'clock, Rutland Gun
Club, New Lima Road. Hand
choked
shotguns will be
Hospital Employees. Dr .
Rifles will be in
handicapped.
Pickens ,
Rev .
Charles

The
Daily Sentinel

2-I0-301p

992.5.433

everywhere except bathroom

TWO. Bedroom home in Albany - SHOOTING Match, Saturday,
·
3·3-3tc
and kitchen. Call 992-5947.
Langsville . Middlepor t March 4. at the Racine
3-l-6tc
Planing Mill at 6 p.m. Factory JOHN Deere baler and hay - - - - - Pomeroy area . A. W. Watson,
choke guns only . Assorted
P. 0 . Bo• 35, Langsville, Ohio.
conditioner. Phone 949·3193. FOR THE BEST deal in a new
3-Hlp
meal. Sponsored by the
or used mobile home. try
3-3-3lc
--,--.----,-.,----,Syracuse Fire Dept.
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales.
MODERN 3 or 4 bedroom home.
3-l-3fc FOR Quality· Tropical Fish &amp;
Kanauga, Ohio.
pt&gt;one 992-3062 .
12-lHOtc
Supplies, try !he SOUTH
t.
. ""'·
J.2. tic ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ,,,
SEAS. Mason , W. · Va.
overweight ladies. teens and
Specials starting March 4th 6oxi2. ·2:bedroom. ·all -eie'ctrlc,
men
Interested
in
a
Weight
air conditioned, Bx 20 ft . Porch
are : Spenops Mol lies- 3 for
Notice
Watchers I R) Class in
and aluminum
awning ,
$1.00; ~eons - 4 for Sl.OO;
Pomeroy write : Weigh!
aluminum skirting, com .
Giant Kuhli Loaches, 69 cents
Watchers I R), 1863 Section
Now's Time To
pletely setup. Beautiful
each ; mi xed guppies ~ 10
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
l'lcation. Owner leaving state .
cents each.
. 10-3-tfc
ORDER
Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
3-2·2lc
1-10-ilc
SAVE
up
to
one
hall
.
Bring
your
NEW
Kawasaki
mini
-bike
.
'fiELD SEEDS
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
Phone 992-201&gt;8 after 4 p. m.
151 Butternut Ave .• . Pomerov.

FERT,ILIZER
'
SEED CORN

Wanted To Buy

~

~OMIWOY

4 WHEEL drive jeep. Phone
after 5 p.m. 992-301&gt;2.
2-27·12tc

·

.lacll w. CltRl,' Mtr.
P ..... tft. 11t

OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
fables, Brass beds, dishes,
clocks, and-or complete
households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271.

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

-

.4 pc . Band. Country Music,

Soft Rock from Belpre, Ohio.
services in the pr ivrtcy of my

home. Evelyn C. Young ,
phone 949-37 .41, Rac ine .

2-11·12fc
YARD sale, Friday and
Saturday , 1284 Powell Slreei,

Mid~leport . Few antiques, old
oil lamps, di shes, misc . items.

3-l-3tc

12x60, 2 Bedroom Mobile home,
like new . Priced for quick
sale. For further information

call 742-3183.

1964

PLYMOUTH

Valiant

Station Wagon , $150 ; Living
room suit e, contour chair, $10.

Ph. 614-992-2156

Centurion, new condition.
never raced. Phone after 6 p.

m. 992-3 401.

3-2-6tc

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992 -

5443.

Employment Wanted

Market. 3 mile south. Mid·

dleport, Rt. 7.

3-2·3lp

Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.

changer , 4 speaker sound
system, Balance $79.32. Use
our budget terms . Call 992·

7085.

3·1-3tc NEW , 12x60. two bedroom
mobil e home across from
Bradbury School. Call 992- STEREO-Rad io Combinalior,
GU N SHOOT, Broa d Run Rod
lovely WALNUT finish , lour
5308
or see Charles Lewis, 2n d
and Gun Club. Su nda y, March
---~--

3·2·31c
GUN 5HOOT, Sunday,, March 5,

2-21-tfc

1 p. m. Factory choked guns
only . Second place shooters
get free shot in next match.
Asso rted meats. ·Ra ci ne Gun

2 BEDROOM mob ile home in

Club.

5PAC IOUS

3-2-31c

Rarine area . Phone 992-6329.

2-16-lfc
unf u rnished

Middleport, Ohio.

Co.,

6-30-llc .

B&amp;W HEATING CO.
For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

ss.ss

On Most American Cars

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8Ti15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Real Estate For Sale
~-;;;;;;;;-----1

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service . Phone 992-2522 .
6-10-lfc

speed intermixed changer, 4
speaker sound
system,
Balan ce $63 .99 , Use our

budget ierms. Call 992-7085.
3-1-6tc

----4 GRAVE lot ai Meigs
Memorial

ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con struction Co. We specialize in
aluminum, vinyl and stee l
siding ; fiberglas, brick sand
stone ; complete lin e of
residential and commercial
roofing ;
remodeling,
building, suspended ceili ngs,
interior and exterior painli ng ; comp lete l ine of
Masonry work . All work
guaranteed to customer
satisfact ion. We are fully
insured for your protection. 32

Contact Associate
- VERA EBLEN
992-3020
192 N. 2nd
Middleport
LOOKING ·for investment·

property? Fantastic is lhe1
word for this spacious 12N. 5econd. ph. 992-3918.
room , 2-bath all brick home,
2·15-301c
setup as duplex , or can ·be
used as offices . Located in SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller

Middleport's business district
overlooking the Ohio River.
. '" "': ..,,
,.
~
6 R'oO'ITI•2 ' bath • ~home·,

.

'

Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3935.
..... 't
:· ~~:.
2-12-ifc

(shingle), cellar house,
garage, plus extra lots. One lot
has wa lkways, set up tor
trailer , Located in business
district , across from the A&amp;P

.:.____,.:·e"==
-O'DELL
--·- WHEEL aiighment
~ -- . ~ - ·--

Wheels balanced
tron ically .
All

Store in Middlepori. Floor
furn . Asking ... $20,000 for all .
Lot with partial garage,
(needs roof) 90 fl. fron tage,
suitable for large trailer or
small business . In business
distric t. across fr om the A&amp;P

guaranteed .

doors and windows. carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A. Ja cob, sa les
representative . For free
estima tes, phone Charles
Li sle. Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

3-2-tfc: -- -- - - -

Broker

110 Mechanic St.

72 Chevrolet Pick Up
4 Speed. V-8, like new.

oil

heal . Lot 50x200. Both for
Olly $3500.00.
2 APARTMENTS
3 BEDROOMS - Bath,
furna ce heat. Storm doors
and windows . 1 Bedroom
apartment rlown . Only
$1500 .00 THIS MONTH .

RURAL
3 BEDROOMS- Nice bath,
modern kitchen, double sink,
gas furnace . Drilled well. 6
lots. Busin~s building 30x44.

All for $21.500.00.
3 HOUSES
2 RENTED - Main house
ha s 3 bedrooms, bath, gas

Gar dens ,

rea sonable. Phone 949-4962.
3-1-6tc

on one iloor . FREE GAS, in
all

three. 19 acres. Only

$16 ,000 .00 . Th is month.
beller hurry.
NEW LISTING
4 BEDROOMS - 1' ' baths,
gas furnace, nice birch
k itchen', Full basement,
fron t porch. Garage . Lot

80&lt;209. Only 510,000.00 .
MODERN
3 BEDROOMS- I' , baths,

-------

- - -- - -

69 Ford
V-8, auto .• P..S .• P. B. • factory air, low mileage :

69 Chevrolet Custom
Impala 2 dr., H.T., V-8, P .S., P. B.. auto .•
factory dir.

69 Volkswagen Bug
70 Kerem Ghia
Auto .• stick shift.

63 Chevrolet Nova

That Listens

To You

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAi.

••
t

FURNISHED and unfurnished

Ail buii l-in to buttonhole, do

apartments. Close to school.

st re tch sewing and fancy
stitching . Pay jus I 5.48 .75 cash
or terms available. Tt ade-ins

Phone 992-sm.

.

10-18-lfc
-:
5--::
R-=o-=o:c
M:-:-h-c-us- e-.- 1"'2""0....,.,..Lincoln
Road. phone 99? 1433 or 992·
1
2883
3-3-6tc
TRA I LE R, Br own 's Trailer
Court. M i nersvilkJ, Ohio .

phone 99? 33?4 .

\

1 3 li e.

,
!
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....

69 Ford Mustang..........$1295
68 Ponr1ac ...........;........ $1595.
69 Dodge......·................. $l895.·
68 Mercury.................. ..Sl695 .

I'VE MKED 'IOU ONE
OF MY FAMOUS APPLE
PIES, BIG BILL
DEAR!.' r---"

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lf

71- Plymouth ................ ..S2895 .J

HOW AIOUT PI.AYIN'
WITH ONi OF yell:
OlhM -roys,
CICERO?

WINNIE WINKLE

Road Runner. like new.
i.OOK'-MISS WINKLE: 1
1 HOP~ MY 91-iARING
YOUR TABLE lODAY

67 Chevrolet Pick Up.... $995

DOE5N'T EM13ARI&lt;'I59

6 Cyl., long bed .

YOU IN ANY

68 Mercury....................$1295

,. i,.

I. DON'T .SEE: WHY
WELLtyOU KNON
IT SHOULD,e'OB. AFTER WHA I. MEAN.
AFTER. ALL, l
ALl. , IT 15 A PUBLIC
AM A NEWCOMER
PLACE: AND WE WERE
AT 60NNAZ. AND
OUT THERE IN THE
YOU AilE THE:
OPEN!
130~5!

WAY!

THE. GOSSIP MONGERS IT LOOK&amp; LIKE: WINNIE: 1&amp;
GOING TO DEFY CONVENTION
CAN MAKE WHAT
AND SEE: MORE: OF 13013 J'i\n:~
THEY WANT 'OF IT
13ALL THAN EVER.
13013. IM AFRAID
WE CAN'T :7TOP
BEFORE:!

IDLE: 'TONGUES
FRO.'A WAGGiNG!

' '•

Real Clean. atr.

66 Ford Custom ............. $795

C\ YEAH, I GOT 1&gt;.
J FEW UTTLr THtNC..S

SOLNE'NtRs~·

SEE: RAY R.IGGS, AL ZEIGLER

. '

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
Ph. 985-4100
Located on

S. Rt. 7

Chester,

64 Chevrolet Impala
Super Sport, V-8, auto., P.S. , P . B.

accepted. Phone 9'12-56.1.
3·1-61c

- -- - - VACUUM Cleaner. new 197,
model. Complete wilh

all

cleaning too . Small paint
damage in i..- ing. Will take

$27 cas or
udge • pian
avajlab . Phon 992·5641.
3-1-61&lt;

----...!---

NEW BLOCK ·- 2 bedroom
home. bath, and garage Lol
200x 150 .. IN THE COU NTRY.

INV!'ST IN PROPERTY,
MON ~Y WI1 N' T K!;l"!'.
BUT REAL ESTATE WILL.
PROPERTY PICTURES ON
OUR OFFICE WALL
HELEN L. TEAf-ORD.
ASSO:tATE
992-J32S
992-2371

1 w.tHJCHA T'TAKE

{' . \,___IILONG Wllll 'IN'
)
~7??

-1[' . .

GASOLINE ALLEY

o.

Sin ith ,Nelson Motors,. Inc•

!

;:: J

I

500 E. Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2174

~

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

New Car Sale. We Have 35 New
_Buicks, Pontiacs &amp;Opels In Stock

SiHCE YOU TWO AIM'T
MEVER MET &lt;ORMAL,
CHICKEN liTTLE, IT'S
M~ PLEASURE . 1'
I

Air Conditioning Free

~

•••

I

For this week only on the following urs in stock. If you
buy one of these cars we will give you the air tonditioning.
FREE.
Stock No. 58 Catalina 4 dr . H. T., bronze with
. tan vinyl top. Sticker price $5086.05 less air
cond. FREE.,
Your Price $4632.12
Stock No. 59 Catalina 2 dr . H. T., green with
white top . Price S4952 .291ess air FREE. Your
Price
$4508.36
Stock No . 85 Cat a Iina Broug . 4 dr . sed., solid
green . Sticker Price $4821.90 less air cond.
FREE. Buy a full size Pontiac with air for
only
$4390.90
Stock No . 91 Lesabre Buick, 4 dr. sed . , ·dark
blue bottom &amp; light blue. Sticker Price $5053.05
les.s air cond. FREE .
Your Price $4622.05
Stock No. 92. Catalina 4 dr. sed :. color dark
green. Sticker Price $4603.90 le.s s air FREE.
You can move up to a full size Pontiac. For
only
$4172.90
Stock No. 97 Catalina Broug. 2 dr . H. T., gold, ·
black vinyl top . Sticker Price $4909.90. Your
price with the air FREE. Just think this car
for only
54478.90

35. Movecl
turbulently
37. Not at
home
38. Loosen
39. lle
river
important
12. Stimulale
40. Con13. Cut of
sidered
meat

•

Queene"
;~f,~:~~~f.:~~-:-~[~~~~~ 14. "Faerie
character

ary Brit·
. ish king
18. Mouthful
11. Follower
of Attila
18. Summer
TV fare
%0. Unacceptable
21. Church·
man
!2. Overwhelming
23. Oriental
porter
_..;_4-..1 25. Bishop's
status
symbol
26. "Step
-!"
27. Ride to
the
hounds
28. My (Fr.)
29. Patriarch
31. German

All these ca rs have auto .. power steeririg, power ·disc
brakes, radio, fully equipped. No power windows or power
seais.

J

See Bitt Nelson, Ron Smith, Coward catvert, or E
Bartels.
Open Evenings Till 1 P.M., Sat. Till 5 P.M. Service on
Sat. Till 12 Noon.
SALE ENDS MARCH 11 , 1972

TIIUCKI

.

Smith Nelson Motors, ·Inc.
500 E.

Main

St.

a must

U . Romanian
city

15. Legend-

AI!OOT lltAT·I!tiT
WHOEVER Wi5HE5 TO
~E CONTACT 5PECIFIED

YOU BV NAME ,

DOWN
I. Drop in

2. Love, in
Paris

3. 20th·
century

Unlcnmble lhele four Jwabl-.
letter to eltdl !MIIIIIn, to

-

form four ordinary wonl1.

I

weapon-

wielding
9. Quench
10. Hero's
darling
16, Cachet
19. Turf
2!. Suggestion
23. Roundtripper
!4. Wind·

flower

weapon
4. Sea eagle

cUlJJ/~~;~::::" 1.-J=

5. Of Livy's
birthplace
6. Explode
7. Ark skip·
per (var.)
8. 20th·
~ .:::,!d ~ l~
century

25. Perfume
bose

27.-Formed
a drove
29. Girl in th e
family
30. Lariat
34. Scru-

4 Dr . V-8, auto. with air.

•

tJ I

tinized

36. "A Shrop·
shire - "
37. South
American
parrot

~) I I

SCUSID

(]

Jo.Ut..u DOUSE OIOIN LAYOfF PliAYII
Yellerfty'•

~

wwer1 JJ'hal. mlfl/!1 be ltidden in a ~'"''•~P- DANOII

river

·.

announce·

ment
word

Pomeroy, Ohio ::.

Ph. 992-2174

Ui\ILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

Real Estate For Sale

Auto Sales

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

Is

CAP!'AIN EASY

THUNDERBIRD Con- ,
NICE 2-story home with full 1960
~e rtible, new l.op, 36,000 ac basement, 2 lots, new forced
tual miles, phone H2-~386. :
air furnace. Near Pomeroy .
2-27-6tc ·
Elementary School. Phone
992-7384 to see.
1P-Ifc
--~---

65 Ford Fairlane

·===-

IPPUL

32. Exasper·
ate
33. Wedding

2 Dr. H.T.

- -- -- -

The Station

t1

---

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm

Teaford, Sr.

nice bedrooms, bath,

Station Wagon.

R'easonable

--::---::-:-----~7·.:
27-lfc

$ . .

'

rates. Phone 992-3213.

Virgil B.

NEW LISTING
MOBILE HOME- IOxSO. 2

~

' 'J
/

67 _Mercury...................... 995

elecwork

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
5t ore , Midd leport, Ohio .
P,!lone 949-3821
Ask in g ... $4,000.
Racine, Ohio
Crill
Br~dlord
Le tart Falls - 10 room house
with bath , basement, fenced - _ __ _ _ ___s:._·l -ttc
in lawn, two buildings, fuel oil
heat, 5 lots, three of them
loc ated on · the river front.

. .

Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.

Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy, 0., 45769

Ton .............$1895 .

66 Ford Falcon................$195

located a! Crossroads, Rf. 124.

I Need listings for Farms and
Homes. Also Handle Rentals.

gas forced air furnace~ Wall
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop, . to wall ct;~ rpeting in li ving
773-5975.
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985 - 33~ . and dining rooms . Beautiful
2-27 -61t
kit ... hen with
disposal.
Tropi cal fish and supplies .
Stop In and compa re .
freezer · refrigerator . nice
2 BEDROOM, '&gt; double , fur 3-1-27tp range with oven and controls
nished on 41h &amp; , College in
over. gas fireplace . '1 lots. 2
Syracuse. Phone 992-2749.
1971 ZIG-ZAG SewinQ Ma chi ne car garage.
2·29-6tc
lef t in layaway.. • Beautiful
·. NEW LISTING
pastel color , full size model.
apar tment in Mason, 4 rooms
8. bath, electr ic heat ; phone

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix

E.l.Ci-1 BPOK, BEFOR:I:

VOlJ DECIDE

REAI&gt;ING
THEMl

furnace . Fully ca rpeted and

3-1-6tc

house south from Bradbury
Sc hool . Pels welcome .

Free Estimate

livered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free

.

Belpre, Ohio

~

2 Dr .• gray, black vinyl top.

fbr all . Home has two porches,
one enclosed, within walking
distance of school.

1220 Washington Blvd . .

See Edna Monk. Larkin St..
Rutland .
3-2-3lc

1970 KAWA5AKI , model G-31,

HARTFORD
The Daily Sentinel

MOTORS.· INC.
Pomeroy

READY -MIX CONCRETE de-

T~~VGH

tM

Pickup . ·

Ph . 992 -2174

992-5786

DO YOU I-lAVE TO SPEN~ TWO
OR ~R:EE. MINUTES Fl.IPPING

•

.

69 Ford

SMITH NELSON

seil ing due to ill heallh, $25,000

MOBILE HOMES

- -- - - - -

woo d. Sale Mgr .. Rl . 3,

5, noon til! .

MILLER

3-2-3tc

8-15-tlc
DRY WALL Finisher con 15th ANNUAL Herelord 5ale: 26
FISH . fancy
1rac! or . R. I. Dubbeld, phone TROPICAL
-·-B'ulls and 22 Females ,
guppies. angels and breeders,
741·5825.
Southeastern Ohio Hereford
Beltas and supplies. Phone
2-28-Stc
Associa t ion .
AH
clean - - - - ?92-5443.
ped igrees both horned and
12-30-lfc
polled. Saturday, March 18, For Rent
1972. Show 10:00 A.M. Sale 1 5 ROOM and bath apartment, EARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
PM . Rock Springs Fair
AM -FM ra_dio, 4 speed
furnis hed .
M&amp;G
Food
Grounds. Rt . 33, three miles
north of Pomeroy, Ohio. For
ca tal ogs wri te to Lloyd Bla ck ·

12' · 14' • 24' · WiDE

3-2-31p

and

WILL DO bookkeeping. tax

Market soon. Phone 992·2582
or 992-2565.
3-2-Jic

with 6 wk. old calves, also
yearling grade Angus heife r s.
Phone 8.43·2436.

Carriers for
MASON

The Outcash.

Midwa y and Sunrise. Leave
your order at the Midway

THREE one-half Angus cows

WANTED!

Music By : Lowell Thomas &amp;

5TRAWBERRY
Plants .
Robinson's,
Catskill,
Midland, Sure Crop, 5parkte,

-l1-ll-tfc

Help Wanted

Friday &amp; Saturday
Night
10 Til2

3·2-31p

11 - 21 - lf~

..

Order Now &amp; Save!

except weekends.

'

· · Nathan 8iggs
Radtitor Specialist

Phone
992-3975

. 68 Mercury
Comet... ....sl095 .
.

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smalle,st Heater. Core.

SEPTIC TANKS C~EANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446- GET your boat ready for
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell ;
summe r! Call D. Karr, 992·
()..vner &amp; Operator.
5367.
5-12-tfc
2-27-!lc
--SEWING MACHINES. Repair AUTOMOBILE insurance been
service, ail makes. 9?)-2284.
cancelled?
Lost
your
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
operator's license? Call .992·
Authorized Singer Sa ies and
2966.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
6-15-tfc
3·29-lfc
-- - -- - - - SIGNS, posters, mail boxes ano DOZER WORK . Reasonable
rates. ACHD II, Phone D.
favorite saying; hand letKarr, .992-5367 .
tered; in your favorite style.
2-27-61p
David Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany,
Ohio 45710 (Pagelown) .
2-6-30tc . BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks installed. George
Why buy new furniture? Have
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
that old made new by Sylvia's
4-25-lfc
Upho lste ri ng Shop, Mrs .•

-----------

Make reservations for your
priv.ate parties, ba.nquets,
special occasions.
.
Ideal for meeting place ......
wi th or without kitchen
priyileges.
Individual CaterinQ
Will seat up to 150 people.

INTER lOR &amp; exterior oaintinQ.

scope. bench rest and off
Wanted To Do
hand. Rifle shooters will
furnish own shells. Any
the cemetery, Evelyn Wood.
ca libre of rifle, muzzle DON'T PUMP your sluggish BABYSITTING in my home,
Dorothy and Harry Brown for
Mrs. Glenn Smith , Rock
loaders includ~.
the use of their home, friends
septic tank . Get Kiean -EmSprings
Rd ., phone 992-6187 .
3-l-41c
relatives
for
their
cards,
and
AU Septic Tank Cleaner,
3-1-61c
flowers and food and a II those
Landmark Farm Bureau,
GUN
SHOOT.
also
rifle
matches
who helped In any wa~.
Pomeroy .
·
- open sites only, Forked
Russell Painter Family
3·3-ltc Mobile Homes For Sale
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
3-3-llp
March 5, 12 noon.
SKYLI NE Mobile home, 10 x 50 . 60 X 10, 2 BEDROOM trai~er ,
- - -- - 3-1 -3tc
~ $2,000 ; il interested phone
wal l to wall carpetmg

Wanted . T.9 .. Rent

Orchid Room

742 -4761

Woodrow T. Zwilling , Prop .,
Syracuse, Ohio.

0

SfOP BEINt5 EVASIVE.

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

two classes. Open sites and

RusselL Jr., Ewing Funeral
Home. Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, those who worked at

~

The

R. I. Dubbeld. phohe 742-5825.
·
2-28-5tc

36" K 23" X .009

2-25-lfc

742-3W

We are fully insured

For Sale

KQSCOT KOSMETICS, Flame

Saturday ,

r

Business Services

Loca l 1 owner, new car trade in, 13,000 miles, automatic
tran s., luggage rack , radio , chrome wheel covers, blue
co lor, blk . vinyl interior .

rtghl to edit or reject any ads

•

'

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

251615

'·

A Cryptogram Quotatloll

Real Estate For Sale

SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut BUILDING lots in Btanchwood •
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137 ' ' Subdivision at Rock Springs,
T. P. water, phone 992-2789.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
'
)-1-12~
Ohio, phone 237·4J34.
11 -21 -tfc
3 BEDROOM ranch lyf! home,
Arbaugh Addition, Tupper.
,HOUSE. io42 Lincoln Heigtlts.
Plains. All new with total
Call Danny Thompson, 992electric and central air
2196.
conditioning, bath and "• fully
7-18-ttc
carpeted, fu 11 ~ basement 1
---'--garage i.n · basement·. See by .
appointment,
phbna 992-2196
HOUSE in Long Bottom. phone
or 992-3585. Denny Tho111pson .
985-3529.
Financing available.
··
1 1
1·21-llc

------"--'--- ,

ALV

BPJV

ll V PH R V

XPN

J V BV BF V J .

SPJZD, AX:V

DCX , ' ALV
A L V 'E V S V J

QJVCAVJ

ALV

RVDD
ALV

HJPETA . -

f:VWVRPW
Ynterday'• Crypti&gt;quole: FOR . F.VERY TALENT THAT
POVf,RTY liAS ~TIMULATED lT liAS BLHmTED A IIUNIlRED.-JOHN W. GARDNER
(4&gt; 1972 l\:111:' fo',.,l\lt\'1' ~vnrlil'atfl! . lnro'

\'
I

C:·

.'

.

'

WELL!

WHAT DO 'lOll
THINK 0~ T~AT?

HERE'~ lliE lo)cli!Ul
illo\R l Fl.I/IN6 ACE
ZOOIIIN6 TIIROt/611
lliE AI( IN H~
501\Mlll CAMEl I

�i

I

,.r'

I

II

.

I

.. .

.

.

•

,.

8-The Daily Senlinel, Mlddleport·l'ooM!roy, 0 .. M•n·b 3,1972

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel. Classifie_ds ·Get Resul~~!
'

•

'

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.

OF
QUALITY

Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted Until9 a .m . lor,

'

Day of Publication

REGULATIONS '

1971 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN

The Publisher reserves the
deemed

objel,':tional.

The

publisher
will
not
be
responsible for more than one

1970 CHEVELLE S5396 CPE .

Incorrect insertion.

RATES
5 cents per Word one insertion

Minimum Charge 75c
cents per word three

12
consecutive insertions.

1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.

240 Lincoln St.

Middleport, Ohio
Oba Anlhof1y Plumbing
We have a complete Home

12095

v.a ~gine,

Maintenance Service the
year around. No mJHer what
your need. Complete roof or
spouting repair. Interior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling

automatic, trans ., .P· steering, factory air
condlf•oned, good w-w hres, radto, dark green finish with
spotless interior .

18 cents per word she c6n secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

ads and ads paid with in 10
days.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .

·,

tPMEROV, OHIO

-

tile and Paneling aod Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS

12295

'Green finish. blk. vinyl roof, green vinyl interior, new
wide oval tires, 4 speed trans., power steC'ring, rad io. A
sweetheart of a buy .

For ·want Ad "Service

Additional 25c Charge
Advertisement.

I ALL WEATHER ROOFING
I
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp;·PLUMBING CO.

12495

'

We have 24 hr. emergency

service.

per

992-5803
992-3898

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. lo 5:00p.m . Daily,
· 8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon

Notice
of Hope Perfumes, Human
and Synthetic wigs. We're
here for rour convenience .

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our

Please cal 992-5113.

husband and father , William
Gera ld Graham , who passed
away one year ago, March 3,
1971. We miss you now, our
hearts are sore as time goes
by ; We miss you mor e, your
loving smi le, your gentle face .
no one can fill your vacant
place.
Sadly missed by your wife,
Goldie, children and grand·
children.

UPHOLSTERING

Aluminum
Sheets

SERVICt,

comp let e selection of fabrics
andvinyltochoosefrom. Pick
up and delivery . Slater
Upholstering, Rt . J , Pomeroy,

phone 9'12-3617.

2-3-30tp

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

ANYONE interested in learning
crafts and making flowers
contact Eulah Francis at 992-

3-3-llp

-----Card ol Thanks

8 for $1.00

5884.
3·2-6tp

WE WISH to express our sin·
cere thanks to all who
assisted in the care and death
of o'ur husband, father and
grandfather, Russell Painter.
The Veterans M emo rial

A SHOT GUN and rille ma tc h
will be held Sunday, March 5,
at 12 o'clock, Rutland Gun
Club, New Lima Road. Hand
choked
shotguns will be
Hospital Employees. Dr .
Rifles will be in
handicapped.
Pickens ,
Rev .
Charles

The
Daily Sentinel

2-I0-301p

992.5.433

everywhere except bathroom

TWO. Bedroom home in Albany - SHOOTING Match, Saturday,
·
3·3-3tc
and kitchen. Call 992-5947.
Langsville . Middlepor t March 4. at the Racine
3-l-6tc
Planing Mill at 6 p.m. Factory JOHN Deere baler and hay - - - - - Pomeroy area . A. W. Watson,
choke guns only . Assorted
P. 0 . Bo• 35, Langsville, Ohio.
conditioner. Phone 949·3193. FOR THE BEST deal in a new
3-Hlp
meal. Sponsored by the
or used mobile home. try
3-3-3lc
--,--.----,-.,----,Syracuse Fire Dept.
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales.
MODERN 3 or 4 bedroom home.
3-l-3fc FOR Quality· Tropical Fish &amp;
Kanauga, Ohio.
pt&gt;one 992-3062 .
12-lHOtc
Supplies, try !he SOUTH
t.
. ""'·
J.2. tic ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ,,,
SEAS. Mason , W. · Va.
overweight ladies. teens and
Specials starting March 4th 6oxi2. ·2:bedroom. ·all -eie'ctrlc,
men
Interested
in
a
Weight
air conditioned, Bx 20 ft . Porch
are : Spenops Mol lies- 3 for
Notice
Watchers I R) Class in
and aluminum
awning ,
$1.00; ~eons - 4 for Sl.OO;
Pomeroy write : Weigh!
aluminum skirting, com .
Giant Kuhli Loaches, 69 cents
Watchers I R), 1863 Section
Now's Time To
pletely setup. Beautiful
each ; mi xed guppies ~ 10
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
l'lcation. Owner leaving state .
cents each.
. 10-3-tfc
ORDER
Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
3-2·2lc
1-10-ilc
SAVE
up
to
one
hall
.
Bring
your
NEW
Kawasaki
mini
-bike
.
'fiELD SEEDS
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
Phone 992-201&gt;8 after 4 p. m.
151 Butternut Ave .• . Pomerov.

FERT,ILIZER
'
SEED CORN

Wanted To Buy

~

~OMIWOY

4 WHEEL drive jeep. Phone
after 5 p.m. 992-301&gt;2.
2-27·12tc

·

.lacll w. CltRl,' Mtr.
P ..... tft. 11t

OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
fables, Brass beds, dishes,
clocks, and-or complete
households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271.

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

-

.4 pc . Band. Country Music,

Soft Rock from Belpre, Ohio.
services in the pr ivrtcy of my

home. Evelyn C. Young ,
phone 949-37 .41, Rac ine .

2-11·12fc
YARD sale, Friday and
Saturday , 1284 Powell Slreei,

Mid~leport . Few antiques, old
oil lamps, di shes, misc . items.

3-l-3tc

12x60, 2 Bedroom Mobile home,
like new . Priced for quick
sale. For further information

call 742-3183.

1964

PLYMOUTH

Valiant

Station Wagon , $150 ; Living
room suit e, contour chair, $10.

Ph. 614-992-2156

Centurion, new condition.
never raced. Phone after 6 p.

m. 992-3 401.

3-2-6tc

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992 -

5443.

Employment Wanted

Market. 3 mile south. Mid·

dleport, Rt. 7.

3-2·3lp

Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.

changer , 4 speaker sound
system, Balance $79.32. Use
our budget terms . Call 992·

7085.

3·1-3tc NEW , 12x60. two bedroom
mobil e home across from
Bradbury School. Call 992- STEREO-Rad io Combinalior,
GU N SHOOT, Broa d Run Rod
lovely WALNUT finish , lour
5308
or see Charles Lewis, 2n d
and Gun Club. Su nda y, March
---~--

3·2·31c
GUN 5HOOT, Sunday,, March 5,

2-21-tfc

1 p. m. Factory choked guns
only . Second place shooters
get free shot in next match.
Asso rted meats. ·Ra ci ne Gun

2 BEDROOM mob ile home in

Club.

5PAC IOUS

3-2-31c

Rarine area . Phone 992-6329.

2-16-lfc
unf u rnished

Middleport, Ohio.

Co.,

6-30-llc .

B&amp;W HEATING CO.
For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

ss.ss

On Most American Cars

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8Ti15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Real Estate For Sale
~-;;;;;;;;-----1

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service . Phone 992-2522 .
6-10-lfc

speed intermixed changer, 4
speaker sound
system,
Balan ce $63 .99 , Use our

budget ierms. Call 992-7085.
3-1-6tc

----4 GRAVE lot ai Meigs
Memorial

ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con struction Co. We specialize in
aluminum, vinyl and stee l
siding ; fiberglas, brick sand
stone ; complete lin e of
residential and commercial
roofing ;
remodeling,
building, suspended ceili ngs,
interior and exterior painli ng ; comp lete l ine of
Masonry work . All work
guaranteed to customer
satisfact ion. We are fully
insured for your protection. 32

Contact Associate
- VERA EBLEN
992-3020
192 N. 2nd
Middleport
LOOKING ·for investment·

property? Fantastic is lhe1
word for this spacious 12N. 5econd. ph. 992-3918.
room , 2-bath all brick home,
2·15-301c
setup as duplex , or can ·be
used as offices . Located in SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller

Middleport's business district
overlooking the Ohio River.
. '" "': ..,,
,.
~
6 R'oO'ITI•2 ' bath • ~home·,

.

'

Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3935.
..... 't
:· ~~:.
2-12-ifc

(shingle), cellar house,
garage, plus extra lots. One lot
has wa lkways, set up tor
trailer , Located in business
district , across from the A&amp;P

.:.____,.:·e"==
-O'DELL
--·- WHEEL aiighment
~ -- . ~ - ·--

Wheels balanced
tron ically .
All

Store in Middlepori. Floor
furn . Asking ... $20,000 for all .
Lot with partial garage,
(needs roof) 90 fl. fron tage,
suitable for large trailer or
small business . In business
distric t. across fr om the A&amp;P

guaranteed .

doors and windows. carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A. Ja cob, sa les
representative . For free
estima tes, phone Charles
Li sle. Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

3-2-tfc: -- -- - - -

Broker

110 Mechanic St.

72 Chevrolet Pick Up
4 Speed. V-8, like new.

oil

heal . Lot 50x200. Both for
Olly $3500.00.
2 APARTMENTS
3 BEDROOMS - Bath,
furna ce heat. Storm doors
and windows . 1 Bedroom
apartment rlown . Only
$1500 .00 THIS MONTH .

RURAL
3 BEDROOMS- Nice bath,
modern kitchen, double sink,
gas furnace . Drilled well. 6
lots. Busin~s building 30x44.

All for $21.500.00.
3 HOUSES
2 RENTED - Main house
ha s 3 bedrooms, bath, gas

Gar dens ,

rea sonable. Phone 949-4962.
3-1-6tc

on one iloor . FREE GAS, in
all

three. 19 acres. Only

$16 ,000 .00 . Th is month.
beller hurry.
NEW LISTING
4 BEDROOMS - 1' ' baths,
gas furnace, nice birch
k itchen', Full basement,
fron t porch. Garage . Lot

80&lt;209. Only 510,000.00 .
MODERN
3 BEDROOMS- I' , baths,

-------

- - -- - -

69 Ford
V-8, auto .• P..S .• P. B. • factory air, low mileage :

69 Chevrolet Custom
Impala 2 dr., H.T., V-8, P .S., P. B.. auto .•
factory dir.

69 Volkswagen Bug
70 Kerem Ghia
Auto .• stick shift.

63 Chevrolet Nova

That Listens

To You

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAi.

••
t

FURNISHED and unfurnished

Ail buii l-in to buttonhole, do

apartments. Close to school.

st re tch sewing and fancy
stitching . Pay jus I 5.48 .75 cash
or terms available. Tt ade-ins

Phone 992-sm.

.

10-18-lfc
-:
5--::
R-=o-=o:c
M:-:-h-c-us- e-.- 1"'2""0....,.,..Lincoln
Road. phone 99? 1433 or 992·
1
2883
3-3-6tc
TRA I LE R, Br own 's Trailer
Court. M i nersvilkJ, Ohio .

phone 99? 33?4 .

\

1 3 li e.

,
!
l

....

69 Ford Mustang..........$1295
68 Ponr1ac ...........;........ $1595.
69 Dodge......·................. $l895.·
68 Mercury.................. ..Sl695 .

I'VE MKED 'IOU ONE
OF MY FAMOUS APPLE
PIES, BIG BILL
DEAR!.' r---"

l1
•

'
~
lf

71- Plymouth ................ ..S2895 .J

HOW AIOUT PI.AYIN'
WITH ONi OF yell:
OlhM -roys,
CICERO?

WINNIE WINKLE

Road Runner. like new.
i.OOK'-MISS WINKLE: 1
1 HOP~ MY 91-iARING
YOUR TABLE lODAY

67 Chevrolet Pick Up.... $995

DOE5N'T EM13ARI&lt;'I59

6 Cyl., long bed .

YOU IN ANY

68 Mercury....................$1295

,. i,.

I. DON'T .SEE: WHY
WELLtyOU KNON
IT SHOULD,e'OB. AFTER WHA I. MEAN.
AFTER. ALL, l
ALl. , IT 15 A PUBLIC
AM A NEWCOMER
PLACE: AND WE WERE
AT 60NNAZ. AND
OUT THERE IN THE
YOU AilE THE:
OPEN!
130~5!

WAY!

THE. GOSSIP MONGERS IT LOOK&amp; LIKE: WINNIE: 1&amp;
GOING TO DEFY CONVENTION
CAN MAKE WHAT
AND SEE: MORE: OF 13013 J'i\n:~
THEY WANT 'OF IT
13ALL THAN EVER.
13013. IM AFRAID
WE CAN'T :7TOP
BEFORE:!

IDLE: 'TONGUES
FRO.'A WAGGiNG!

' '•

Real Clean. atr.

66 Ford Custom ............. $795

C\ YEAH, I GOT 1&gt;.
J FEW UTTLr THtNC..S

SOLNE'NtRs~·

SEE: RAY R.IGGS, AL ZEIGLER

. '

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
Ph. 985-4100
Located on

S. Rt. 7

Chester,

64 Chevrolet Impala
Super Sport, V-8, auto., P.S. , P . B.

accepted. Phone 9'12-56.1.
3·1-61c

- -- - - VACUUM Cleaner. new 197,
model. Complete wilh

all

cleaning too . Small paint
damage in i..- ing. Will take

$27 cas or
udge • pian
avajlab . Phon 992·5641.
3-1-61&lt;

----...!---

NEW BLOCK ·- 2 bedroom
home. bath, and garage Lol
200x 150 .. IN THE COU NTRY.

INV!'ST IN PROPERTY,
MON ~Y WI1 N' T K!;l"!'.
BUT REAL ESTATE WILL.
PROPERTY PICTURES ON
OUR OFFICE WALL
HELEN L. TEAf-ORD.
ASSO:tATE
992-J32S
992-2371

1 w.tHJCHA T'TAKE

{' . \,___IILONG Wllll 'IN'
)
~7??

-1[' . .

GASOLINE ALLEY

o.

Sin ith ,Nelson Motors,. Inc•

!

;:: J

I

500 E. Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2174

~

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

New Car Sale. We Have 35 New
_Buicks, Pontiacs &amp;Opels In Stock

SiHCE YOU TWO AIM'T
MEVER MET &lt;ORMAL,
CHICKEN liTTLE, IT'S
M~ PLEASURE . 1'
I

Air Conditioning Free

~

•••

I

For this week only on the following urs in stock. If you
buy one of these cars we will give you the air tonditioning.
FREE.
Stock No. 58 Catalina 4 dr . H. T., bronze with
. tan vinyl top. Sticker price $5086.05 less air
cond. FREE.,
Your Price $4632.12
Stock No. 59 Catalina 2 dr . H. T., green with
white top . Price S4952 .291ess air FREE. Your
Price
$4508.36
Stock No . 85 Cat a Iina Broug . 4 dr . sed., solid
green . Sticker Price $4821.90 less air cond.
FREE. Buy a full size Pontiac with air for
only
$4390.90
Stock No . 91 Lesabre Buick, 4 dr. sed . , ·dark
blue bottom &amp; light blue. Sticker Price $5053.05
les.s air cond. FREE .
Your Price $4622.05
Stock No. 92. Catalina 4 dr. sed :. color dark
green. Sticker Price $4603.90 le.s s air FREE.
You can move up to a full size Pontiac. For
only
$4172.90
Stock No. 97 Catalina Broug. 2 dr . H. T., gold, ·
black vinyl top . Sticker Price $4909.90. Your
price with the air FREE. Just think this car
for only
54478.90

35. Movecl
turbulently
37. Not at
home
38. Loosen
39. lle
river
important
12. Stimulale
40. Con13. Cut of
sidered
meat

•

Queene"
;~f,~:~~~f.:~~-:-~[~~~~~ 14. "Faerie
character

ary Brit·
. ish king
18. Mouthful
11. Follower
of Attila
18. Summer
TV fare
%0. Unacceptable
21. Church·
man
!2. Overwhelming
23. Oriental
porter
_..;_4-..1 25. Bishop's
status
symbol
26. "Step
-!"
27. Ride to
the
hounds
28. My (Fr.)
29. Patriarch
31. German

All these ca rs have auto .. power steeririg, power ·disc
brakes, radio, fully equipped. No power windows or power
seais.

J

See Bitt Nelson, Ron Smith, Coward catvert, or E
Bartels.
Open Evenings Till 1 P.M., Sat. Till 5 P.M. Service on
Sat. Till 12 Noon.
SALE ENDS MARCH 11 , 1972

TIIUCKI

.

Smith Nelson Motors, ·Inc.
500 E.

Main

St.

a must

U . Romanian
city

15. Legend-

AI!OOT lltAT·I!tiT
WHOEVER Wi5HE5 TO
~E CONTACT 5PECIFIED

YOU BV NAME ,

DOWN
I. Drop in

2. Love, in
Paris

3. 20th·
century

Unlcnmble lhele four Jwabl-.
letter to eltdl !MIIIIIn, to

-

form four ordinary wonl1.

I

weapon-

wielding
9. Quench
10. Hero's
darling
16, Cachet
19. Turf
2!. Suggestion
23. Roundtripper
!4. Wind·

flower

weapon
4. Sea eagle

cUlJJ/~~;~::::" 1.-J=

5. Of Livy's
birthplace
6. Explode
7. Ark skip·
per (var.)
8. 20th·
~ .:::,!d ~ l~
century

25. Perfume
bose

27.-Formed
a drove
29. Girl in th e
family
30. Lariat
34. Scru-

4 Dr . V-8, auto. with air.

•

tJ I

tinized

36. "A Shrop·
shire - "
37. South
American
parrot

~) I I

SCUSID

(]

Jo.Ut..u DOUSE OIOIN LAYOfF PliAYII
Yellerfty'•

~

wwer1 JJ'hal. mlfl/!1 be ltidden in a ~'"''•~P- DANOII

river

·.

announce·

ment
word

Pomeroy, Ohio ::.

Ph. 992-2174

Ui\ILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

Real Estate For Sale

Auto Sales

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

Is

CAP!'AIN EASY

THUNDERBIRD Con- ,
NICE 2-story home with full 1960
~e rtible, new l.op, 36,000 ac basement, 2 lots, new forced
tual miles, phone H2-~386. :
air furnace. Near Pomeroy .
2-27-6tc ·
Elementary School. Phone
992-7384 to see.
1P-Ifc
--~---

65 Ford Fairlane

·===-

IPPUL

32. Exasper·
ate
33. Wedding

2 Dr. H.T.

- -- -- -

The Station

t1

---

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm

Teaford, Sr.

nice bedrooms, bath,

Station Wagon.

R'easonable

--::---::-:-----~7·.:
27-lfc

$ . .

'

rates. Phone 992-3213.

Virgil B.

NEW LISTING
MOBILE HOME- IOxSO. 2

~

' 'J
/

67 _Mercury...................... 995

elecwork

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
5t ore , Midd leport, Ohio .
P,!lone 949-3821
Ask in g ... $4,000.
Racine, Ohio
Crill
Br~dlord
Le tart Falls - 10 room house
with bath , basement, fenced - _ __ _ _ ___s:._·l -ttc
in lawn, two buildings, fuel oil
heat, 5 lots, three of them
loc ated on · the river front.

. .

Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.

Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy, 0., 45769

Ton .............$1895 .

66 Ford Falcon................$195

located a! Crossroads, Rf. 124.

I Need listings for Farms and
Homes. Also Handle Rentals.

gas forced air furnace~ Wall
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop, . to wall ct;~ rpeting in li ving
773-5975.
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985 - 33~ . and dining rooms . Beautiful
2-27 -61t
kit ... hen with
disposal.
Tropi cal fish and supplies .
Stop In and compa re .
freezer · refrigerator . nice
2 BEDROOM, '&gt; double , fur 3-1-27tp range with oven and controls
nished on 41h &amp; , College in
over. gas fireplace . '1 lots. 2
Syracuse. Phone 992-2749.
1971 ZIG-ZAG SewinQ Ma chi ne car garage.
2·29-6tc
lef t in layaway.. • Beautiful
·. NEW LISTING
pastel color , full size model.
apar tment in Mason, 4 rooms
8. bath, electr ic heat ; phone

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix

E.l.Ci-1 BPOK, BEFOR:I:

VOlJ DECIDE

REAI&gt;ING
THEMl

furnace . Fully ca rpeted and

3-1-6tc

house south from Bradbury
Sc hool . Pels welcome .

Free Estimate

livered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free

.

Belpre, Ohio

~

2 Dr .• gray, black vinyl top.

fbr all . Home has two porches,
one enclosed, within walking
distance of school.

1220 Washington Blvd . .

See Edna Monk. Larkin St..
Rutland .
3-2-3lc

1970 KAWA5AKI , model G-31,

HARTFORD
The Daily Sentinel

MOTORS.· INC.
Pomeroy

READY -MIX CONCRETE de-

T~~VGH

tM

Pickup . ·

Ph . 992 -2174

992-5786

DO YOU I-lAVE TO SPEN~ TWO
OR ~R:EE. MINUTES Fl.IPPING

•

.

69 Ford

SMITH NELSON

seil ing due to ill heallh, $25,000

MOBILE HOMES

- -- - - - -

woo d. Sale Mgr .. Rl . 3,

5, noon til! .

MILLER

3-2-3tc

8-15-tlc
DRY WALL Finisher con 15th ANNUAL Herelord 5ale: 26
FISH . fancy
1rac! or . R. I. Dubbeld, phone TROPICAL
-·-B'ulls and 22 Females ,
guppies. angels and breeders,
741·5825.
Southeastern Ohio Hereford
Beltas and supplies. Phone
2-28-Stc
Associa t ion .
AH
clean - - - - ?92-5443.
ped igrees both horned and
12-30-lfc
polled. Saturday, March 18, For Rent
1972. Show 10:00 A.M. Sale 1 5 ROOM and bath apartment, EARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
PM . Rock Springs Fair
AM -FM ra_dio, 4 speed
furnis hed .
M&amp;G
Food
Grounds. Rt . 33, three miles
north of Pomeroy, Ohio. For
ca tal ogs wri te to Lloyd Bla ck ·

12' · 14' • 24' · WiDE

3-2-31p

and

WILL DO bookkeeping. tax

Market soon. Phone 992·2582
or 992-2565.
3-2-Jic

with 6 wk. old calves, also
yearling grade Angus heife r s.
Phone 8.43·2436.

Carriers for
MASON

The Outcash.

Midwa y and Sunrise. Leave
your order at the Midway

THREE one-half Angus cows

WANTED!

Music By : Lowell Thomas &amp;

5TRAWBERRY
Plants .
Robinson's,
Catskill,
Midland, Sure Crop, 5parkte,

-l1-ll-tfc

Help Wanted

Friday &amp; Saturday
Night
10 Til2

3·2-31p

11 - 21 - lf~

..

Order Now &amp; Save!

except weekends.

'

· · Nathan 8iggs
Radtitor Specialist

Phone
992-3975

. 68 Mercury
Comet... ....sl095 .
.

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smalle,st Heater. Core.

SEPTIC TANKS C~EANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446- GET your boat ready for
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell ;
summe r! Call D. Karr, 992·
()..vner &amp; Operator.
5367.
5-12-tfc
2-27-!lc
--SEWING MACHINES. Repair AUTOMOBILE insurance been
service, ail makes. 9?)-2284.
cancelled?
Lost
your
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
operator's license? Call .992·
Authorized Singer Sa ies and
2966.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
6-15-tfc
3·29-lfc
-- - -- - - - SIGNS, posters, mail boxes ano DOZER WORK . Reasonable
rates. ACHD II, Phone D.
favorite saying; hand letKarr, .992-5367 .
tered; in your favorite style.
2-27-61p
David Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany,
Ohio 45710 (Pagelown) .
2-6-30tc . BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks installed. George
Why buy new furniture? Have
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
that old made new by Sylvia's
4-25-lfc
Upho lste ri ng Shop, Mrs .•

-----------

Make reservations for your
priv.ate parties, ba.nquets,
special occasions.
.
Ideal for meeting place ......
wi th or without kitchen
priyileges.
Individual CaterinQ
Will seat up to 150 people.

INTER lOR &amp; exterior oaintinQ.

scope. bench rest and off
Wanted To Do
hand. Rifle shooters will
furnish own shells. Any
the cemetery, Evelyn Wood.
ca libre of rifle, muzzle DON'T PUMP your sluggish BABYSITTING in my home,
Dorothy and Harry Brown for
Mrs. Glenn Smith , Rock
loaders includ~.
the use of their home, friends
septic tank . Get Kiean -EmSprings
Rd ., phone 992-6187 .
3-l-41c
relatives
for
their
cards,
and
AU Septic Tank Cleaner,
3-1-61c
flowers and food and a II those
Landmark Farm Bureau,
GUN
SHOOT.
also
rifle
matches
who helped In any wa~.
Pomeroy .
·
- open sites only, Forked
Russell Painter Family
3·3-ltc Mobile Homes For Sale
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
3-3-llp
March 5, 12 noon.
SKYLI NE Mobile home, 10 x 50 . 60 X 10, 2 BEDROOM trai~er ,
- - -- - 3-1 -3tc
~ $2,000 ; il interested phone
wal l to wall carpetmg

Wanted . T.9 .. Rent

Orchid Room

742 -4761

Woodrow T. Zwilling , Prop .,
Syracuse, Ohio.

0

SfOP BEINt5 EVASIVE.

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

two classes. Open sites and

RusselL Jr., Ewing Funeral
Home. Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, those who worked at

~

The

R. I. Dubbeld. phohe 742-5825.
·
2-28-5tc

36" K 23" X .009

2-25-lfc

742-3W

We are fully insured

For Sale

KQSCOT KOSMETICS, Flame

Saturday ,

r

Business Services

Loca l 1 owner, new car trade in, 13,000 miles, automatic
tran s., luggage rack , radio , chrome wheel covers, blue
co lor, blk . vinyl interior .

rtghl to edit or reject any ads

•

'

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

251615

'·

A Cryptogram Quotatloll

Real Estate For Sale

SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut BUILDING lots in Btanchwood •
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137 ' ' Subdivision at Rock Springs,
T. P. water, phone 992-2789.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
'
)-1-12~
Ohio, phone 237·4J34.
11 -21 -tfc
3 BEDROOM ranch lyf! home,
Arbaugh Addition, Tupper.
,HOUSE. io42 Lincoln Heigtlts.
Plains. All new with total
Call Danny Thompson, 992electric and central air
2196.
conditioning, bath and "• fully
7-18-ttc
carpeted, fu 11 ~ basement 1
---'--garage i.n · basement·. See by .
appointment,
phbna 992-2196
HOUSE in Long Bottom. phone
or 992-3585. Denny Tho111pson .
985-3529.
Financing available.
··
1 1
1·21-llc

------"--'--- ,

ALV

BPJV

ll V PH R V

XPN

J V BV BF V J .

SPJZD, AX:V

DCX , ' ALV
A L V 'E V S V J

QJVCAVJ

ALV

RVDD
ALV

HJPETA . -

f:VWVRPW
Ynterday'• Crypti&gt;quole: FOR . F.VERY TALENT THAT
POVf,RTY liAS ~TIMULATED lT liAS BLHmTED A IIUNIlRED.-JOHN W. GARDNER
(4&gt; 1972 l\:111:' fo',.,l\lt\'1' ~vnrlil'atfl! . lnro'

\'
I

C:·

.'

.

'

WELL!

WHAT DO 'lOll
THINK 0~ T~AT?

HERE'~ lliE lo)cli!Ul
illo\R l Fl.I/IN6 ACE
ZOOIIIN6 TIIROt/611
lliE AI( IN H~
501\Mlll CAMEl I

�I" ,

f

10- 'l'he DaUy sentl!lel, Mlddleport-PGineroy, 0., Marcll3, tt72

Weather
Variable · rloudiness and
rather cold today through
Sunday . Chance of snow
flurries today and snow is
likely !'a te tonight and Saturday. Daytime highs in the
upper 20s or lower 30s and lows
at night 15 lo 20.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
March 3-4
CHROME AND
HOT LEATHER
( Technicolor)

William Smi th
Tony Young

GP

THE HIRED ·HANO
(Technicolor)

Peter Fonda
Warren Oates

GP
Sun. , Mon . &amp; Tues.
March 5-7
Walt Disnev 's
THE LADY AND
THE TRAMP
&lt;Technicolor)

Disney Featurette:
Wet

Back

Hound

Disney Car1oon :
Tiger Trouble

Donald's Vacation
Swim Dog, Swim
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

QUALITY •••
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!

BUT

I

!amotion Division approved
plans for reh8bUI~tion of the
stripped areas before the coal
removal.
"This plantiog is part of our
effort to make the land more
productive after mining than It
was prior to the coal removal,"
said Chris Olengelis, association president. ''That is the law
in Ohio."
He said the plantings were
designed to nurture future tim-

YOU'LL NEVER BUY QUALITY

The Stale Highway Patrol
investigated lwo minor accidents in Meigs County
Thursday , Patrolman Jim
Sheets reported.
The first occurred at 2:50
p.m. on US Rt. 33, three tenths
of a mile north of SR 7 where
Vernon Lance, 41, Portland,
Rt. 1, headed south, missed a
turn and went onto lhe median.
There was minor damage to
lhe undercarriage of Lance's
car.
Al4:55 p.m. on SR 7, Wallace
Davis,
17, Middleport,
traveling north, lost control on
wet pavement. He drove off the

Tony

FOR LESS
THAN YOU DO AT

BAKER'S
Furniture

MIDDLEPORT

OHIO

(Continued from page I)
you can live with your consciences,! can live with mine."
Yablonski was au•sslnated
just a few weeks after he lost a
contested election for the UMW
presidency to Incumbent W.A.
"Tony" Boyle.
When the name "Tony" first
entered the case last June,
UMW headquarters
vehemently denied it had
anything to do with Boyle.

Pomeroy National Bank.
It's been a hundred years.
So far.

Ju ne 17. t872. to June 17, t972. One
cen tury. A century that 's seen war and

peace. least and lamina. The century
man learned to fly"and flew to the moon.
Seventy-two to seventy-two. The first
100 years of Pomeroy National Bank.
We'd like to take the credlllor getting
the town started. but lhe fact is the area
had been settled lor nearly 70 years before we first opened our doors. Pomeroy

had been the seat ot Meigs County since
t 841 , and the town was well on ils way

a big '"thank you very kindly'" for you.
You and the people in your past are responsible lor our past, and necessary
for our future.
The big celebration will be the week
ot June t 7. Please plan to drop in. Mean-

while. drop in any lime. Particularly on
Saturday morqtngs for a piece of our
birthday cake. or any time. to pick up
your copy of a brochure commemorating

to a solid com mercial foothold in . coal

your city's latest hundred years. We'd
just like to say hello. Even II you don't
bank here, we all live here.
At both the main office and Rutland

small feat in the early days of American

branch. we've been showing a modern
new look and referring to ourselves as

and sail.
0 1course. the doors stayed open. No
banking. And through those doors ever
vate citizens who 'd made the decision

'" The Bank ol the Century'" , Great. But
we're really talking about two centuries-

thai here wa s where the business of

one of fond memory, one of firm com-

since have. come businessmen and pri·

banking was best conducted.
During 1972, we'd like to com bine our
little pat-on-the-back for ourselves with

pom.. or
f ullond

DiedR~dy ~.

ber -relaled industries,
enhance the beauty and quality
ol the envtromnent, stimulate
wildlife development and
provide recreation and ·
development sites.
The association said it planted more than 65.7 million trees
in the last 25 years. The total
acreage planted In trees and
11 ~ed with gra~ totaled
more than 110,000.

2 Cars Go Off Highway

••

Fin~

Betty FOrenuln :

3¥2 Million Trees
On Stripped ·Land
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Reclamation Association
plans to plant more than 3.5
million trees, as well as grass·es and legumes, on some 4,000
acres of strip-mined land this
summer as part of an environmental improvement and reclmalion project .
The association said about 24
varieties of trees, mainly hardwood types, will be placed on
private land in 16 counties
which had been primarily
scrub forests and marginal
farm s prior to the coal
removal.
To get ready for the project,
a special training program for
planting foremen was held at
Cambridge this week. The
foremen were taught to follow
the planting plans, developed
in keeping with soil conditions,
good conservation techniques
and future land use objectives.
The state Forestry and Rec-

•

'

J

I

mitment.
We're thinking about one. And work·

ing on the other.

pomeroy
natlona
bank

highway on the right and over
an embankment. There was
minor damage to his car.
There were no ~citations
Issued or personal injuries
reported in either accident.

MelO'S Fems
0

·

'

""'e

w•m 42.25
.
The Meigs girls' basketball
squad downed the Gallia
Academy girls' learn Thursday
nigh!, 42 lo 25, at Meigs High
School.
Meigs trailed at the end of
the first quarter 10 lo 9, but
came on strong in the second
quarter and held GaUipolis to
only three poin Is.
For Meigs, Pal Harris was
lhe big gun with 13 points
followed by Sherrie King with
10, Leanne Sebo and Debbie
Ohlinger with 9 each and
Sharon Cogar, 1.
For Gallipolis Swain led all
scorers with 18 followed by
Christy King with 4, Carol
Folden 2, and Helen Akers 1.
Pictures of the game will be
published SUtiday.
BY QUARTERS
Meigs
9 20 25 42
Gallipolis
10 13 19 25

PAINT BRUSHES AND ROLLERS, and paper hanging equipment were the IDola of the
day Wednesday when some 15 Meigs County women began redecoratiog a modern apartment
over the Meigs County Museum. The apartment is to be rented to help the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society defray expenses of operating the museum. Among tbose
donating their services were, from left, Mrs. Margaret Rose, r,linersvllle; Mrs. Ada Titus,
Pomeroy (on ladder), and Mrs. Bertha Canaday, Pomeroy.
CHAPTER TO MEET
SUPPORT ASKED
Past
matrons and past
Under the Slates' Reciprocal
Agreement Acl, Kathleen patrons wiU be honored at a
Mary Hall, Pt. Pleasant, has meeting of Racine Chapter No,
filed for support in Meigs 134, Order of Eastern Star, to
County Common Pleas Court be held at 8 p.m. Monday
against Marvin Noel Moore, evening at the temple. Those
having March birthdays will
Middleport.
also be honored. Members are
asked to pay dues Monday.
DF.ADLINE NOTED
INFANT ILL
Mrs. Sue Imboden, MidThe
Middleport
E-R squad
dleport, Deputy Registrar of
Motor Vehicles, said today answered a call at 7:53 p.m.
plates may be reserved until Thursday to the home of Mr.
March 10. Her office is located and Mrs. William Harris ,
Second Ave., for Michael
at ~22 Palmer St.
Harris, an infant, who was iU.
He was taken to and admitted
al
Veterans Memorial
SERVICE TONIGHT
Members of Chester Lodge Hospital.
323, Daughters of America, wiU
conduct memorial services for
Mrs. Idonia Johnston al 7:30
tonight at the White Funeral
Home in CoolviUe. AU members are asked to wear white.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Names of persons admitted
have been temporarily
discontinued until further
notice.
Discharges: Roy Brinker,
Clifton; Mrs. Gary Clark,
Clifton; Delores Duff, Charles
HiU, Mrs. Rodney Wamsley,
Mrs. Ralph Amburgey,
Timothy Harmon, Point
Pleasant.
LODGE TO MEET
A regular meeting of Mid·
dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM will
be held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
lhe temple. All master masons
at·e invited . Wednesday
evening the grand master wiU
visit. Dinner will he held at 6:30
p.m. with ladies invited.

. LODGE TO MEET
PROGRAM NOTE
The Meigs Chapter, Order of
A program, "Wings of
DeMolay, will meet at 7:30 Healjng," will be on WMPO
p.m. Monday al the Middleport Radio at 7 a.m. Sunday by
Masonic Temple.
Dorothy Overton.

Taft
·· (Continued from page I)
the endorsement of all other
members of the Ohio ·
delegation.
"For some strange reason,
Taft's opposed' io me," Bush
said. "He's opposed to the
whole commission."
Th• Portsmouth man, first
appointed to the ICC in 1961 by
President John F. Kennedy
and re-named in 1964 by
President Johnson , was
notified Wednesday he would
not he reappointed for another
seven-year term. His term
expired Dec. 31 bul he continues in office until a successor is named and confirmed
by the senate.
Bush said leaders of both
parties in both the House and
Senate have asked for his
renomination, along with the
Ohio Trucking Association, rail
truck, bus and oil pipeline
groups, and the Teamsters and
railway unions: .
Robert Feldkamp, Saxbe's
press secretary, said his
senator had backed Bush despite the fact he belonged to the
opposite party. When asked if
Saxbe· would lake the matter
again to the White House,
Feldkamp said, "No, definitely
not." He explained Saxbe did
not want to get into an intriparty dispute over the matter.
There was soeculation the
new ICC conimissioner would
not be an Ohioan.

Mrs . Edward (Betty)
Foreman, 38, died Ja•t Friday
at the MI. Carmel Hotipl!jll 1n;
Columbus following a long·
illness. She was a member of
the Darbydale . Nazarene
Olurch · at Grove City where
she lived.
•
Surviving are her husband, ,
Edward; three daughters,.
Sylvia, tolaomi and JennHer;;
· two sons, John, and Robert, all;
at home; her parenb, Mr. and:
Mrs. Harold Rawson, of
Canton ; two brothers, Paul:
Rawson and Dale Whitlach,:
USAF; and her grandmother,:
Mrs . Betty Collj~s. of;
Pomeroy.
;
Funeral services were held;
Monday I p.m. at ~. Par-;
bydale Nazarene Church at;
Grove City with the Rev.;
Walter Moore officiating.;
Burial was in the Concord;
Cemetery. Schoedinger-Norris:
funeral home was In charge ot:
arrangements. Mrs. Foreman:
was a former Meigs County;
resident.
.:
Attending .funeral services.;
for Mrs. Foreman were Mr ,,
and Mrs. Joe Foreman, James,.:
David and Joyce; Mrs. Vernon;
Lance, Gene ~mley, . and Mr;::
and Mrs. Ray Heiney, aU of.~
Haclne.
:i

~ov.

GOVERN'OR GILLIGAN

,I

'

.

SCHOOLS CLOSED ~
All Meigs County schoolij
were closed today due ·'"to ~
three-inch snowfall overnigh ~
This is the fourth day of closin~
this school term for the Melg~
and Southern Local Schooli:
and the third for the Easter~
District due to weather con,:
dilions. Districts are permitte¢
five · days of such closings:
without time having to be made
.
up.
.
.;

SUnday cloudy, windy and
colder with a chance of snow
flurries northeast and variable
cloudiness
and
colder
elsewhere . High Sunday In the
30s. Partly cloudy northeast .
and fair elsewhere Sunday
night.

.

Veterans Memorial Hospital !.'·
Discharged· - Florence:
Rowe, Charles Crislip, Anna~
Hoffman, DIUon Taylor, Nora:
Curtis, Paul Burton, Nell,;
White, John Bailey, Burke:·
Hathaway, Edna Davidson,:
Marjorie Wamsley, Rex:
Argabrite.

-

34 PAGES

'HREE SECTIONS
SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972

...... .

.

'

·,

I

•••.• will be

~-11

lor

tile

~cil ~ctingthe sehoolltUUdlng
with" -ita necelsary appurtenances,
equipMent and iiCqul.lltiOn d. land. ·
The two mill levy, H approved, will
continue for 10 years. The school would
acconunodate 750 students In the lith and
12th grades.
.
Thompson said by approving the
measure In May, the proPQsal will.be on
the state's list for matching and federal
funds. Priority will be lost Hthe IBsue falls.
The structure estimated to COli $3,922,122
wiU be financed by the State Department
of Education, Appalachian Act and local
laxation.
The state share would total $1,961,060;
the federal share would be t714,240 whUe
$1,176,820 would come from local lunda.
The Gallis.Jackson CGWlty Vocational
C. ROGER BARRON
Board was fanned ·after the Jackson
APPOINTED CO-CHAIRMAN
County Vocational Board disbanded in·
C. Roger Barron, 12% Balllanl Dr.,
August, It'll. Gallis and Jackson each
GaiUpolls, former pre11de1l of !be
proposed separate tax levies and bond
Galllpollo Chamber of Commeree, aad
Issues In last year's .Primary. All were
Claude Swick of . Wellltoa 8alarllly
defeated;
were umed co-chalrmaa ol the Gallfa·
Gallia County voters defeated two taJ:
Jackson Joint Voullo4al School · issues for Its proposed joint vocational
CGI!llllltlee. They wm be Ia charge of all
school. A 2.2 miU tax levy failed by 200
public Information promellou con·
votes, 1,668 to 1,4811. A .9 mUI bond issue
cernlng !be school btaae. The ap·
failed by 195 votes,l,633 to 1,438. The Issue
pointments were announced by
passed only in one district, NOrth Gallis.
Clarence E, Thompson, Gallla CGUDty
In 1969, House BiU 531 enacted by the
School Superintendent.

-~9:t!ll·~1'~·9P1
Children's Department
Second Floor

.
'

Families

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

15 CENTS

.

Ohio Legislature stated U..t by 1974 all
school districbl In the State of Ohio must
have a vocational J!rogram that would
support to pet. ol the lltudent l*!Y,
'!'his program mtllrt colilprlle not less
ihan 12 different dli'ricaluni ~ and
~~~ ' . I widt'oollelti tbln Jti£iicWil per
ciau. ~one 'cif . tht. achooll Iii tlie .Gallis·
Jaclim .Joint V'oc&amp;ilonal School niltrict
mee!J lOOse req~enll. , . . •
· The Gallia.JacWBon Joint Vocational
School would offer studenbt In ihe 11th and
12th . grades of any of the eight par- .
tlcipatingschoolsan opportunity to attend
a vocational 1chool ··.regardless of
academic standing (high, low, or
..medium) . ..
Students attending would still be
'assodated with their school district. The
siudent would graduate from his parent
school an! stiU be eligible to participate In
any extra-curricular activities In his
school such as athletics, band, music, etc.
Districts particlpatiog are Gallipolis City,
Jackson City, Wellston City, Kyger Creek,
Hannan Trace, Southwestern, Oak Hill
Union, and North Gallia.
. '
According to the Joint Vocational Board,
the school would offer more training lor aU
students · and adults; provide special
courses to meet the particular needl in
agriculture, Industry and busineu; area
buying power, through more productive
citizens, wlll,lle Increased and economic
growth will be stlmulaled. Vocational
training produces better citizens which
lowers welfare costs because more
(Continued on page 3)

SIUPMENT OF MUSTANGS ARRIVE- Bob Evans,
!l"esident of Bob Evans Farms, Inc., Rio Grande, Saturday
received from Mrs. Jan Eggleton, Gusher, Utah, a shipment
of five wild Mustangs - two of them above - which wiU live
on the Evans Farms, joining four others obtained earlier in
Mexico. Evans said the animals will be the nucleus of a

Mustang herd. So far as Is known It will be the only sucll~Jerd
in eastern United states. Mustangs are small, tough horses
direct descendants of Spanish horses brought into south·
western United States by the Spaniard! the 16th Century.
They roam wild In the west. The horses Mrs. Eggleton
brought were captured two weeks ago.

m

Venereal Diseases on Increase
BY DALE R0'111GEB, JR.
GALUPOIJS - Venereal disease Is
on the rise In Gallia County according to
Dr. Francil W. Shane, County Health
'CGnunlssioner, who gave his annual repi&gt;rt
Friday to the county's Health Advisory
Council. ·
Dr. Shane said venereal disease
outnumbers all other communicable
diseases except the conunon cold.
Gallia CoUnty Is foUowlng the national
trend with gonorrheal Infections outnumbering syphillsaeven to one. The

young age group experiences the highest
attack rate according to Dr. Shane. During
1971, 13 local cases of gonorrhea
reported to the Gallia County Health
Department along with four syphilis cases.
Those are only a few cases we know about
said Slane.
..
Several other persons affected by the
disease were treated by their personal
physicians, who did not make a report to
the local ·health agency.
Dr. Shane advlaed that the keys to
fighting venereal disease are recognitlon,

immediate treatment and Immediate
examination of all sell contacts. There are
no Isolated cases of venereal disease.
For every patient treated there is at
least one additional patient who needs
treatment. Dr. Shane said the Gallia
County Health Department provides free
venereal disease examinations and
treatment. He said the disease attacks
Without warning,crosses all races, sex and
social-economic boundaries.
Diseases ofthe heart and blood vessels
(Continued on page 3)

2 'Plead
Guilty

t ~ t ce~ \ LII~

u \obi•1hed 161l

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down. town Pomeroy at II a.m.
Friday was 30 degrees with
light snow failing.

''

POMEROY - Three men
were arraigned on charges of
possession of marijuana
Friday before Judge John C.
Bacon In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

.,

······~·~····················

The three were arrested
Thursday as the result of a raid
on an apartment in Middleport
by Middleport Pollee Chief J.
J. Cremeans and his department assisted by the .Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.

AT THE

MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO

Than 11,000

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

.
GALUPOLIS - The G.llia.Jackson May ·Primary Election.
According to qaJ1ia County School
Joint Vocational School ..,e will be
SUperintendent
Clare:nce E. Thompson,
submitted as a multi-purpolf levy In the
I
«XiJy ~o milll oo tile combined Gallia:
Jac~scin Count)' tax duplicate .of'

tht bonk ol

The Critics Otoice
SATURDAY NIGHT, 9 'TIL 1

Reaching More

oint Voc-Ed Plan
On

MARRIAGE LICENSE
John Harvey Wiles, 19,
Pomeroy, and Carla Jean
Fisher, 19, MineraviUe.

'

Your Invited Guest

tmts
Pomeroy-Middleport

VOL. VII _NO. 5

SHOP SATURDAY 9:30A.M. TO 9:00P.M.

tJri fJ!~:!£!'!!3

+

Weather

PPEN" TONIGHT, FRIDAY UNTIL 9 ·P.:M:
D~A~fJ

the
Atlantic,
the Congress from (,)hlo's Ftrat Gilligan sought and won a seat In a .major political upset, and Ohio. He was inaugurated on
GAWPOUS - John J. in
Gilligan, Ohio's 62nd governor, . Mediterranean and the Pacific. District, a district U..t bad sent on Cincinnati City Council was narrowly defeated by Jan. 11. 1971.
Republican William B. Saxbe
will be the principal speaker At Okinawa, he saved fellow ·a Democrat to Congress only again In 1967.
Jack and Katie Gilligan have
in the 1968 general election.
during the Gallipolis Chamber crew members'. from the twice In 6$ yea~ , He was caUed
In 1968, he dedded to seek his
On May 5, 1970, he won the four children, Donald, 24, a
Of Commerce's 35th annual destroyer U.S.S. l!odman, set "exciting and among the
teacher at BiShop Hartley High
dinner meeting, sla~ for 6:30 afire by enemy guna. His hardest working members Of party's,nomination for the U. S. Democratic nomination for School in Columbus; Kathleen,
p.m., on 'l'hursday, Match 16, gallantry earned for him the Congress" by the New. York senate, laking on the venerable Governor of Ohio, garnering 23, a recent graduate of Trinity
Times and "an unusuaUy in· incumbent Frank J. Lausche. more · votes than any
in the Rio Grande College Silver Star.
College in Washington , D. C.;
Discharged as a lieutenant teUigent and capable young Earning the slate De~ocratlc Democratic nominee in Ohio
Cafeteria.
John P., 22, currently serving
Executive Committee's en- history . - ··
Tlcllefi"re now on sale at the (j.g.) in 1945, Jack Gilligan man" by Time Magazine.
On Nov. 3, 1970, he was in the U.S. Army, and Ellen,
chamber office. They are $5 returned to Cincinnati and, on · Defeated in his bid ' for re- dorsement, he went on to
18, a student at Boston College.
per person . Deadline for June 28, 1945, _married Mary election by Robert Taft, Jr., defeat Lausche in the primary elected the 62nd Governor of
reservations is Thursday, Kathryn Dillon, daughter of a
Match 10.
·
Cincinnati judge. He then
Richard Carter, Wendell enrolled at the University of
Thomas and Earl Tope are in Cincinnati where he earned a
charge of this year's banquet master:s degre!\.
From 1948-53, Gilligan was
activities.
POMEROY - An Ohio Department of program to community leaders and in- selective development approach and to
Born March 22, 1921 in an instructor of literature at
Development
program funded by an terested citizens. The program seminar is involve each respective community in the
In
CinXavier
University
Cincinnati, Gilligan graduated
from St. Xavier High School, cinnati, but a growing interest $85,000federal grantfrom the Appalachian scheduled to be held at 9:30 am. at the _pro IJ!:am ·
"Aitilough every interested Apthen reaeived his bachelor's in the problems of his city and Regional COmii\lSiloit -10 stiiiiulafe in- United" MethOdiSt Olurch.
Sweet pointed out that since the palachian community will be involved ,"
degree from Notre Dame its people led to his su~X:essful du.atrial development In Ohio's 28 Appalachian
counties
has
entered
the
improgram's
inception in November, staff Sweet said, "the program Initially
campaign fpt Cincinnati City
University in 1943.
members have met with more than 450 designated Portsmouth, Zanesville,
From Notre Dame, he was CoUncil in November, 1953. He plementation phase.
Department
Director
David
C.
Sweet
community
leaders and private citizens in SteubenvJUe and their respective counties
commissioned as an ensign in was re-elected in 1955, 1957,
said his staff wiU be In Pomeroy March 16 15 communities throughout the Ap· as 'target areas.' But due to enthusiaStic
the Navy and served 'l1 months 1959, 1961, and 1963.
In 1964, he was elected to to present the selective development palachian region in an effort to explain the
• (Continued on page 3)
of sea duty as a gunnery officer

Development Seminar in Pomeroy

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

Gilligan is Otamber Sp~aker

For Lillie Patriots, fresh -looking
striped seersucker with star motif.
Long -wearing . and easily cared-for
blend of 65 per cent Polyester· and 35
per tent cotton . The com pi ete
collection includes :

--~

'

Hotall, Shorts, Slacks and Infants' Bubble. A11 to be worn with famous Buster
Brown shirts and socks made of 100 per cent Premium Bebon Cotton .
'i

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I.

'

:..

·'

APASSENGER TRAINwuwrecked (len, above), In theftood of 1916 at
Cabin Creek, W. Va. Soldiers of the second Regiment of the West Virginia
National Guard guard one of the cars reported to contain a considerable

amoWlt of money. Ealtey Hill, Pomeroy, took part In the cleaning up of the
damaged area as a member of the Second Regiment of theW. Va. National
Guard. The damage, above, right, in the recent disaster of Logan, W. Va.,
was similar to that which occurred at Cilbin Creek.

Tragedy at Cabin Creek in 1916 is Recalled

Arrested were Christopher
C. Dinguss, 23, Middleport;
Michael R. Taylor, Pomeroy
BY KATIE CROW
was involved In a similar
Route 4, 18, and Roger L.
POMEROY - The recent tragedy in 1916.
Pickens, 18, Middleport.
dl8aster in Logan CoUnty, W.' · It was Aug. 9, 1916, Hill was
Va ., brought back unpleasant stationed at !{anauga City with
Arraigned' on a bill of in·
memor-ies to Eskey Hill .who the !50th Infantry, U. S. Army,
formation filed by Prosecuting
·Attorney B.ernard ~'ultr.
Friday afternoon, Pickens and Thieves Rob Church Pop Machine
Dlnguss entered pleas ·of
guilty. Taylor entered an in: , GALLIPOUS - City pollee also reported Saturday. Bill
Saturday investigated the theft Mills, manager of the upper G.
nocent plea and reques~ a
of approximately $15 to $20 in
1ury trial.
change from a soft drink C. Murphy Store sald'SOilleone
Prosecuting Attorney. Fultz machine at the Grace United used a pellet gun in breaking
w111 call a grand jury soon to Metliodist Church. The theft the glass out of the rear door to
hear evidence against Taylor.. occurred sometime between 4 his store, A similar act was
The
defendants
were p.m. Friday and 10:10 .a.m. reported by Wayne Niday of
·
remanded 1o the custody of Saturday.
the Commercial · and Savings
Two acts of vandalism were Bank . ...
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach.

which later became the Second u.~u . Creek were carried out
Regiment of the West Virginia on pack milles. Hill remembers
National Guard when a terrific a passenger train that was
cloudburst -occurred at Cabin wrecked during the flood . One
Creek, causing a disastrous of the cars contained a large
flood . There was near total amoun l of money and HIU was
destruction and heavy loss of .
life.
H111, only 18 at the time, and
EXILE KILLED .
his unit were sent Into the area
BEIRUT (UP!) - Exiled
to aearch for bodies and clean
Gen.
Mohanuned Omran, a
'IP debris. 'l'hey were in the
ar 'a five days,, subsisting on former Syrian Vice premier
canned meat and coffee.
who had lived in the nllfthern
· Hlll said the cleanlr:g up don., Lebanese city of Tripoli for the.
by large l!l!Uipment at Buffalo past three years, was shot and
Creek was done In 1916 by killed Saturday when he anh(lrH I. BudiPs nt l11r \'ir·'im!; al
sw~red a kn cr.k on his door.

.

assigned to stand guard. The
engineer gave him a blackjack
which he later gave to the late
Walter Wolfe who was at the
time Pomeroy Police chief.
HEADS HUNT
cOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
retired president of the Kroger ·
Co., has been named to head a
new search for a successor to
Novice G. Fawcett who Is
retiring_ ~s presidunt of Ohio
State University. jacob E.
bavis will head a 15 member
group to look for a new
president.

ESKEY HILL, Pomeroy, at home today, The L91110
County, W. Va ., tragedy last week recalled for him a slmU&amp;r
event In 1916 at Cabin Creek.

1

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