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                  <text>II- Tile Dally lletilnel,lllclllepoc W'uaw 07, 0., April i7, Jr/2

Amazon Cruise Is Recormted

.

Bombing

Mrs. Charles Gaskill gave an .
account of her recent trip to
South America when the
Mtddleport Literary Club met
Wednesd~y at the home of Mrs.
James T1tus:
Mrs. Gaskill and ·her
husband joined 200 fun eral
directors and their wives for
the jet trip to South America .
There they ·boarded a .Greek
cruiser for a six da y trip on the

One Dead In ·Barroom Shootout ·

Amazon River. · She com.·
. (ConUriued from Page I)
mented .on the various ports lroadcast that a Soviet 'ship,
w.here · they stopped; the the Slmperopol, wbiCh was
BUfFALO, N.Y. (UP!)- two motorcycle dubs, pollee
ceremonies and rituals of docked In· Haiphong was da·
crossing the equator, the maged by the bcmblng-lbe One person was tllled, three said.
Dea~ of a head wound was
customs and work 'conditions of first to strike Hanoi and lbe were inJured and sa.· others
arrested
today
when
a
'Wayne
R. San_tner, 22, of 11Ubthe natives iii the villages.
port since 18111. II said "an
·barroom
bnwl
erupted
Into
a
urban
West
Seneca, a member
Mrs. Nan Moore, MrJ. M. L. officer named Mlstorosbln was
llhootlng
spree
by
members
of
,
af
the
"Renegades"
motorFrench ll!ld Mrs. James Euler wounded In the face" aboard
were appointed to a committee the ship.
to select a lilting memorial for
In the ground war, military
· ·
the late Miss Bess Sanborn a sources said.hundreds of South
'
Mrs. Roma Mahalia Stanley brothers, · Rqbert, Jack,
member of the club. Mrs.
Vle1namese paratroopers were
Deal,
71, pomeroy Route 4, Eugene and Virgil Stanley, all
Richard Owen presided at the lifted by hellcopter Into the
KINGS CELEBMTE
meeting. Candy was served by besieged toWn of An Loc, 60 died early Monday morning at of Athens; 13 grandchUdren,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. the hostess .
miles north of Saigon, Sunday: Mercy Hoapltalln Portsmouth. eight great-grandchildren, and
Mrs. Deal was preceded in .several nieces and nephews:
King celebrated their 44th
Although the battle CCiltlllued
Funeral serVices wlll be held
wedding anniversary Satur·
today, the Colpmun~ forces death by her parents, John and
Mary
Stanley;
a
son,
William
at
I p.m. Wednesday at the
day. Among their -recent
that three times ti-led to
visitors were Leota King and
overrun the provi!lelsl capital E: Deal, and three brothers. Ewing Funeral Home with the
Jimmy King of Akron; Charles
Surviving are her husband, Rev. Jay Stiles officiating.
bad been driven back 210 miles
William
G. Beal; two sons, Burial will be in the
W. King arid daughter, Susan,
from town, the sources said,
Mr: and Mrs . Edward J . King,
altholl8h a few dozen North Wayne, Pomeroy Route 4, and Burlingham Cemetery·.
Cleveland·, thre· e
Joe , Michael, Tommy, Mr. and
Vietnamese still were reported · Stanley,
da h
.
Friends may call at the funeral
Mrs. Jack King, Jackie, Jef·
holding out In some area of An
118 ters, Mrs. Paul (Evelyn) home any time:
frey, and Jennifer, Mr. and
Hicks, Bristol, Tenn.; Mrs.
Pouad Commwdsta ·. Noel (Leona) Young, Dayton,
Mrs. William King, Mary and
Cindy, sons of Franklin King.
85211 continued to pound the and Mrs. Martin (Lilcllle)
Baking and sewing contests Communlsta around An Loc, Swart, Columbus; four
were held Thursday night at which the North Vietnamese
(Continued from Page I)
the meeting of the Rock bad vowed to make their
dioed back. They found nothing,
capital In South VIetnam. The
Springs Grange.
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
wrong.
Judging the enlries were South Vietnamese said they
April17-18
Nevertheless, the astronauts
Mrs. Lucille Story and Mrs. bad knocked out nine more
SOMETHING BIG
said
the Clllltlng on a thin
Helen Quivey. Taking first irr Communist tanks.
I Technicolorl
alwnillum panel coverin!l a set
In northern South Vietnam
--the dress contest was Mrs.
Dean Martin
of tanks for control rockets bad
nesr
the
Demllitarlzed
Zone
Brian Kei th
James Conkle. In the cencurled up and looked like
" GP" tennial cupcake contest, Mrs. (DMZ), the clUes of DoQg Ha
Disney Cartoons:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
shredded wheat.
Frances Goeglein took first, and Quang Trl reported only
Mickey Down Under
Names
of
patients
admitted
"It's very perplexing as to
sca.ttered
flghtin!l.
Pressure
with Mrs. Conkle and Mrs.
Switzerland
have
been
discontinued
for
·
what
caused the skin to
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
Ethel Grueser tying for second, alsO eased on Arllllery Base
and Mrs. William Grueser • Bastogne, a besieged ootpost publlcatlon by hospital degrade but at this time there
is no undue contern about it,"
surrounded by Communists 10 authorities.
taking third.
DISCHARGES:
Louise
the wokesman said at midHemlock Grove Grange miles (rom Hue.
Two of six U.S. military Lambert, Pomeroy; Mrs. John 1 night.
.
members were guests with
Oshel,
Point
Pleasant;
William
1
Before
goin!l
to
sleep after
advisers
mlsalng
since
the
Mrs. Carol Jones lecturer
'
'
Newell,
Southside;
Mrs.
!
their
first
day
In
space, the
giving the program. It included town of Loc Nlnh 75 miles nOrth
a reading on wring by Mrs. of Saigon was overrun by William White, Point Pleasant; : moon pllots turned the 511-ton
Jones; "Spring Now" by Mrs. Communist forces April 7 Barbara Quivey, Pomeroy; spaceship around and photostumbled out of the jungle William Neal, Point Pleasant; graphed the Earth In
r:;;=========t James Quivey; " A Caller Sunday,
military sources said. Rhonda Roush, Kanauga · Mrs. ultraviolet light that is not
Knows Best," by Ronald
They
said
the two made their Dorn Sayre, Buffalo; J~e visible to man . This ex"Miracle of
Eastman;
Easte r ," ' Mrs. Leo Story; WfY 60 miles across the Joe Wedge, Point Pleasant· perlment was planned to help
"Sounds of Spring," Stanford countryside to Bien Hoa, 14 Mrs. Ernest Higginbotham', scientists better prepare for
Sanford Blair, Point Pleasant; robot probes of other planets
Stockton;
"The
In- miles northeast of Saigon.
In
the
air
war,
two
U.S.
Frances Clark, Henderson; using ultraviolet sensors.
destructible" by Frank Clark;
planes
were
downed
during
the
Robert Chapman, Point
Wlll Use Weightlessness
"Spring Housekeeping" by
raid
over
Hanoi
and
Haiphong.
Pleasant;
Denver
.
Kennedy,
Later
today,'the astronauts
Clara Paulson; "Gill of
Point
Pleasant;
Jolm
Peck,
planned
to use the weightlessTwo crewmen from one plane
Spring" by Alice Stockton . .
Inform a lion on plastic were mlsalng but the second Leon; John Elliott, Point ness of space to test an 1mroasting wrap was given by plane guided his stricken Pleasant, and . Mrs. Roy proved process · to purify
mobile materials. If sueMrs. Bernice Hawk . There was aircraft over the South China Domlgan, Coolvllle.
BIRTHS: April 16, a son to cessful, the space agency said
,quizes by the lecturer and a Sea and parachuted to safety.
It
was
not
known
how
the
Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Willison, the demonstration might lead
poem entitle " Happiness" by
C HW I
planes
were
downed.
Vinton,
0.; a daughter to Mr. to the economical production of
Mrs. Ronald Eastman.
Mr. Fri end ly
The U.S. command said an and Mrs. Gerald Gibbs, Mason,. vaccines In space stations.
It was noted that Rock
Young and Duke wlll spend
"AI ways try to think of woy 1 Springs will visit Alfred on Air Force F4 crashed Sunday and a sol) to Mr. and Mrs.
of
unknown
causes
10
miles
William Morrison Point 73 hours on an undulating
to make others happy hen
April28..Reported ill were Mrs.
If It's anly by letting them
'
plateau riorth of the crater
south of the DMZ, and both Pleasant.
tt....:•:;:'•:::.•:.:.•·:..."------~J. Helen Radford and Mrs. Leona crewmen were missing. Four
Descartes,
situated on the
·
Karr . Ice cream and cupcakes
lower
right
side
of the moon's
U.S.
helicopter
crewmen
were
were served by the home
Veterans Me\D.orlal Hospital face as viewed from earth.
And you'll be hop~y with one
wounded .Sundif when their
economics committee.
Of our Tool Mate 10 pc.
VistUngJioilr!: '2-4 and?-8: 30
Mattingly will · remain In
UH1 Huey utWtY cliopper was p.m.
Scr:ewdrlver Sets . The
lunar orbit, mapping the moon
shot. down In Quang Tin
regular price Is $2 .98. "THE
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS with sophisticated cameras
FRIENDLY ONES" are
AUTO IN DITCH
Province 360 miles north of - Emmett Stehem, Long
sell lng them for - would you
and radiation sensors.
Middleport P&lt;ilice reported' Saigon.
Bottom; Wanda Teaford,
believe - Just 99c !
All three astronauts will
today Willard D. Reeves, 64,
rn neighboring Cambodia, Rutland.
leave
moon orbit April 25 and
Columbus, ran his auto Into a the high conunand In Plmom
SATURDAY DISCHARGES splash down· In the Pacific
ditch on Middleport Hill Penli reparted that Communist - Grace Roush, Maxine
Sunday at 4:35p. m. There was forces have withdrawn from Brumley, Charles .Wildermuth, three days later.
an estimated $30 damage to the · Kompong Trach, 75 miles Alice Mills, James Hamm,
vehicle, and no injuries. No ' southwest of Phnom Penh. The Carrie Whaley, Lucinda Wolie.
The Dept. Store of Building
citation was issued.
capital Itself came under atSince 191S.
BOOSTERS TO MEET •
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS tack Sunday when 50 SovietRACINE
- The Southern
made 122mm rockets struck Herbert Gilkey, Shade; Mary Local Band Boosters wlll meet
the airport on the outskirts of Roush, Racine; Temela Tuesday evening at 7:30 at the
the city, killing one person and Bowers, Racine; Beatrice high school in Racine.
Bush, Vinton; Frank Cornell,
wounding five.
Por~land;
Marie Dailey,
GRANGE TO MEET
LOCAL TEMPS
Raeme; Robert K. Wilson,
CHESTER
Chester Mason; Ike Neal, Middleport. Temperature In downtown
Grange 2609 will meet
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m.
Tuesday,April25, at8 p. m. All Faurlce Neece, Amy Eynon, was 58 degrees under sunny
members are asked to attend. Karl Grueser.
skies.
'

'

,
Mrs• Roma Beal Died on Monday

Baking,
Sewing
·
Contests Held ~z.

Lander's

MEIGS THEATRE .

HOSPITAL

NEWS

•

i

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

Who Wants
To Keep Records!

Twin Dairy Bar

.

'

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'

.

FAA.·~tening ­
Private Flying .

cycle club ot Buffalo.
Shot in the shoulder and 1n
fair condition was Patriels
, records, sald tb8 propoaals
Klopp, 25, of Buffalo. SUj,er. COLUMBUS (UP!) - Jerrie would "aound a death knell to
flclally wounded. was Steve Mock, the flrat woman to Ry privatuviation" In thla counBritt, 18, of l!uffalo. Both were · aolo around the world, said
patrons 1n the Jdastbead Inn Sunday changes being try. she said they 'iYQuld put
"an economic burden on the
operated by Michael Bennett, propoaed in Federal Aviation average pilot that ',l'llltake him
who suffered faelsllacentions Admlnlstratl.on regulations
out of the skies and at the same •
llllld a·broken nose, pollee said. will "sound · a death knell' to time have no pcllitive effect."
According to police, mem· states
private aviaUon" In the United
"Many of these propoeals are
bers of the "Renegades" and
·
based on ruies ~tiona! IIi
the "Hell ·Benders," a
The proposed edenslve rev!. les.Hdvanced countries whicH
motorcycle . club based In sions Include. 8 continual and have
fewer
lilrplanea
.Colwnb111, Ohio, entered the ongoing re-eu.mlnatlon It apl.- reglatered than In almost any ·
Inn and were told bj&gt; Bennett to lot'$ skllla In the~ and knowl- metropolltan center of the
leave since gangs were barred. edge of fundarilentals. The U.S.," she said. "Yet our
''Trouble ensued, the patrons changes were proposed last government studies their rules
came to the assistance of the week and hearinga wW be held as a basis to recodify our
00
owner&amp;ndtheygotthemoutof, Ibis summer them.
regulations."
the place
_ ,"said Leo J. Don"Titese regqiations have no
The suburban IInley houaend of the homl bearing whatsoever with
ovan comma er
• established accidental wlfe, po~ out that one prO'
elde bureau. ,
posed regulallon stipulates
''The motorcycle group went statlsUcs,yet they will make It
that although a student ca11
to a van they bad parked out- economically lmpoeslble for a pass a goverrment written
side and got a couple of guns large percentage of pilots,
and started shooting."
whether they be private pilots examlnailon, he will not bt
Six persons were arrested. or those holding more ad- allowed to take It unless he ~
They were Identified 88 LOuis vance&lt;! ratings,. to coniine to studied under a government;
appointed u.rtructor.
.:
Gofdon, 21, of Columbus; MJ. Dy," she said. .
"[Jl
other
worda
"
she
said
chael Schuse, 25, af Buffalo;
Mrs. Mock, who holds more
·'
George McMabb, 19, of Colum- than 20 speed and dlatance air "it's not what you know but
who taught It to you and boW:
bus; Steven Stern, 21, Colum·many hours you have warmed
bus; Bryant Vsrish, 18, Tonaa chair.
',
wanda,N.Y.,and Wesley Ford,
"It Is Inconceivable that any
18, Columbus.
Industry can sit back and let
Police said aU of those ar- J:1
bureaurcrats legislate them ·
rested were members of the .L'
out of business, let alone cori;
motorcycle clubs.
done such actions, yet this It
just what the aviation lndustcy:
Three Divorces
has been doing for the past two:
or three decades.
,
ROME (UP!) - A New
"Taking the average private:
Granted by Court Yorker who told pollee he was pilot out of the sky wl1l be the
a CIA general and a member of first move In restricting the baf
Three divorces were gran led the Cosa Noslra hijacked a sic right of pe1'8011al freedom of
and another was dismissed in Swissair Uner to Rome today movement," she said.
Meigs County Common Pleas and demanded to see Pope
Paul VI and U. S. Ambassador
Court.
::~Qm:m:l~:Jt.W: 'Vo?t
Maxine Diddle, on a cross Graham A. Marlin.
The man, identified as
PT. PLEASANT - The
complaint, was awarded a
Marion VIctor Maimone, 30, Mason-Jackson Labor Council
divorce from Thomas Diddle,
Brady Sayre from Carol J. was overpowered at Rome's has gone on record for supSayre and Linda Sue Casey military Ciamplno airport porting four candidates In the
from James Wesley Casey, after a priest and· a U. S. forthcoming Primary Election,
each on grounds of gross military officer agreed to according to Robert RoUlns1
neglect of duty and extreme impersonate the Pope and the COPE Director. The group Is
ambassador.
supporting Orton Jones on the ·
cruelty.
Miamone's
New
York
ad·
Republican ticket and Paul
The divorce action by Ruth
dress
is
103
East
64th
St.
Crabtree
on the Democratic
Smilh versus Homer Smith
Police
said
Maimone
ticket
in
the
State Senate race.
was dismissed.
demanded
to
see
Martin
so
he
On the non-partisan Board of
The trustees of Reedsville
could
renew
his p4ssport and Education, it endorses · In·
Circuit of the Methodist Church
were authorized to sell wanted to see the Pope to "pay cumbent board members
property owned by the clrcuil his respects." Otherwise, he Charles Eshenaur and Ted
located in Olive Thownship to said, he would blow up the Stevens, who both seek
Otis K. and Telitha Casto for plane. He waved a box which reelection.,
later was found to contain
the sum o,f $3,300.
cigars and not explosives.

.

BY KATIE CROW
Five of the ~ix eaqdidates for
Meigs County Commissioner
responded to invitations .
Monday from the Pomeroy '
Chamber of ·Commerce at the ,
Meigs Inn to discuss publicly
their platforms.
The first candidate to speak
was democrat William
Snouffer, who stated that he
had no axes to grind; and no
faulls to find .
Snouffer said Meigs County
should be a progresstve county
and certain things need to be

done .
the money come from. "
Ours said Charles Karr , .Bob
"The commissioner job is a - "W,e have had five major Clark and he had worked
worklrig job, and I have no highwa y slips at a cost of tirelessly toward establishing a
mirac11lous plan ," Snouffer $80,000 and have had three landfill. Ours also disclosed
said. "As a / Meigs County bridges washed out which cost that a new heating system had ·
Commissioner I would devote $50,000 to replace, and this still to be install.ed in the Court
the amount of time n~cessary leaves highways untouched ", House, and that the roof also
to do a . good job," Snouffer Ours stated.
needed repair. He added that
said.
Speaking on the slmitary the Meigs County jail needed
The next candidate to speak landfill, Ours noted that the improvement.
was incumbent republican commissioners have ·decided
"Things didn 't get the way
Warden Ours. Ours spoke on several sites only to have they are over night and cannot
about what should be done:and them turned down by the State be cured over night," he
notet! t,hat upgrad~g of high· Department of Health and by concluded. He said he gives his
ways Is one of, the Issues.
residents protesting. to site best to the commissioner post.
But he added, "Where does locations.
Richard Jones, republican

.

•

Now You Know
to make one gallon of maple
syrup.

Devoted To The

lnter~r.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. VOL XXIV ' NO. 260

• Roil -Away Wheels

I

WEDO
That's our busine.ss. When you have a Checking
Account here, we keep meticulous records ol•your"' '
depos1ts and Withdrawals and give you a regular
statement. Let us do your bookkeeping .

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1972

Described as " fantastic,
magniricent and exciting,'' the
new $21 million Holzer Medical
Center was dedicated Monday
afternoon before more than
1,000 persons on the spacious
parking lot fronting the six·
story structure. •
Perfect weather conditions
prevailed for the long-awaited
event. Temperatures ranged in
the low 70s under a bright
sunny sky.
1

Speakers, seated on a

. AUTOGRAPH HOUNDS- Da¥1d Hartman, NBC·'l'V 1tar of The Bold Ones (inset), is
surrounded by autograph seekers at the speakers stand lollowlng Monday's dedication
ciiremonie8bfthe new $21 million Holzer Medical Center north of Gallipolis. Hartman was one
of the dedication speakers.

platform decorated with
miniature U.S. Flags, included
Dr. Charles E. Holzer, chief of
staff; Harland Martin,
chairman or the board of
trustees; · John W. Rafferty,
executive vice president; Dr.
John W. Cashman, director,
Ohio Department of Health and
David Hartman, television's
Dr. Paul Hunter who stars in
The Bold Ones on the National
Broadcasting Company network.
Dr. Holzer, son of the late Dr.
Charles E. Holzer Sr., who
founded Holzer Hospital in
1910, served as master of

Candystripers' Service Recognized

BIG SELECTIONS- WELL KNOWN MAKES
.

fl,.H1a .·- .
.

.

PORDf, LAWN AND PATIO FURNITURE
LAWN BOY MOWERS
TORO MOWERS
ARMSTRoNG AND CONGOL£UM FLOOR COVERINGS
MOHAWK NYLON CARPETING
OVAL BRAIDED RUGS - AU. SIZES
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
MEDiANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

ro,.tUOY, OHIO

INGELS FURNITURE
·.

'
Open
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

MiddlepOrt

_M...W'*-!Rtll NS)IIan
01 ,...,. Plr Dllii II 'II ~Iii II
0,.. ....... 7 ..... ((lw!J • ) •

ONLy 1 LEFT ~ ••
Over ' 4ll Candystrlpers of Smith, Jane Thomas, Debbie
Triplett, Brend~ Van Meter,
Veterans Memorial Hospital Dianna White, Debbie Mo~ery.
Flftr Hours - Opal Berry,
received awards at the annual
Jan
Belling, Vi cki Grate,
spring tea held Monday night
Nancy Greenlee , Julia Holter,
: at ·the Pomeroy Elementary Anne Ohlinger, Debbie
School.
Ohlinger. Karen Price, Connie
Caps were presented girls · Radford. Leanne Sebo, Debbie
who .have served at least 10 . Stewart, ,Debbie Werry,
Melinda Am•bary, Barbara
hours; certificates to those Archer, Karla Beal, Jyi
. with 50 hours of service; pins to Beaver, Jane Brewer, Melanie
thoae withlOO 200 300 500 and Burt, Nancy Buskirk, Su•y
'
'
'
Card, Vicki Clelland, Brenda ,
600 hours.
Donahue, Cindy Farrar-, Cherie
Receiving the awards were: Reuter, Diane , Ridgway ,
• Ten Hours - Vicki Grate, Connie Smith, VicKI Spencer,
; Nencr, Greenlee, Karen Price, Jeannie Stanley, J_lll Swain,
• Debb e Stewart, Debbie Werry, Jane Thomas, Debb1e Triplett,
• Jyl Beaver, Melanie Burl. Brenda Van MeJer, Sandro
: Paii.L.Gioze, Connie Herdman,
(Continued on page 2)
• Becky ftockman, Diane lewis,
Debbie McDaniel, Connie
TWO CALUI TAKEN
The Pomeroy E·R squad
.
answered a call at 12:02 p.m.
•
'1% FILE HERE·
Monday to the Morgan French
•• The Middleport Public · residence on Nye Ave. from
Llbrary haa recel ved the where Mr. F~eneh, 88, was
Thilnaa Re&amp;lster 91 American taken and admitted to
Manufaeturen • and the Veterans Memorial HD8pllal.
ThCIIIII Register catalog File At 9:25 a.m. today the squad
11'12. rn,
11 volumes can wu called to Meigs High
be f~ company names, School . for Djxle Snyder, a
~oducta, services, brand atuden~ who suffered a lei
D8lllll, a....,_,IOCII offices Injury In a fall. She was taken
and telepltoae lllllllben, Mlu lo
Veterans
Memorial
•. Jane Bailer, librarian, reporta. HOIJ)Ital.
.

NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME,

. ....,

WALL TO WAll CARPETING~
AlUMINUM SIDING,
CORNER LOT AT 35 RIVER VIEW PlACE •
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
~

PHONE )EMO ASSOCIATES INC.
·. COLLECT -FOR SHOWING, 614-261-1810

.

"CALL
.

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·· TODAY"
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u-

..,.., . I •IIAruce
JW lldl D t htr

A Representative WiU Be In Town Wedia~y, Aprill9rh.

.....
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and women offenders."
YOUTII : "Also, it is about
ti me we started to ta ke time to
lis ten to our yo uth. We,
perhaps, have been ta lking too
much when we s hould be
listening. We must look at the
possi bihty of a county youth
center. This election is oot an
elec ti on be tween individ uals
but an election for progreSs .
IContinued on page 8)

Weather
Vari able cloudiness and
warmer toni ght with lows in
the 40s and 50s. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday with a chance of
showers and thundershowers.
Highs in the 60s and lower 70s
north and 70s and 80s south.

PHONE 992-2156

Dr . Cashman read a
ceremonies.
congratulatory message from
Chairman Martin said :
"Today's the day we've ~ll the governor who, due to a
been looking forward to. This previous committment, could
fine medical center is for you . not attend.
Final speaker was David
More important, we have the
Hartman,
better known to TV
finest medical staff in the
country to go with it. On behalf fans as ~· nr. Paul Hunter'' on
of the board,! thank everybody NBC's The Bold Ones.
" A fantastlc ~chievement, "
for
attending
today's
dedication. Many people are said Hartman as he turned and
responsible for this fine looked at the $21 million
medical facility . I thank each structure. "We of the enand everyone who helped make tertainment field try to make
it all possible ."
Dr. Holzer, beaming with
pride, remarked, "After three
years planning and two and
one-half years construction,
here it .is folks ... in its full
magnificence.''
Continued Dr. Holzer, "It's a
very exciting day for all of us.
We appreciate your concern
and attendance here today."
Executive Vice President
Rafferty, on behalf of the board
of trustees and medical staff,
expressed his appreciation to
ail individuals who made
Holzer Medical Center
possible."
"Holzer Medical Center Is
not just a building. II is an
idea, a concept that
represents the beat posaible
medical care we can offer. If
Holzer Medical Center can
instill confidence and pride
in those It serves, lhen we
have achieved what we aet
out to do," remarked Raf·
ferty.
Before proclaiming Holzer
Medical Center dedicated,
Rafferty called upon the U. S.
Marine Corps Color Guard and
'Instructed them to march to
the sign plaza to raise the
United States, Ohio and Holter
Medical Center flags on the
three poles located behind the
IIMC sign, just off Rt. 35. The
GAHS band played the
National Anthem during Ragraising ceremonies.
Rafferty then called on Rev.
Robert Davis, pastor of Hope
Winners in the poster contest
United Methodist Church, sponsored by the Meigs County
Wellston, and secretary of the Soil and Water Conserv~tion
IIMC Chaplaincy program, to Ser~ice were selected Monday.
deliver the dedicatory prayer .
F1r~ t place among _the nme
Dr. Cashman, who prior to . finalists representing that
Monday had been director- many schoois went to the
designate or the Ohio Depart- poster or Steve Payton, Meigs
ment of Health said his first Junior High School student.
afficial act as ODH director Second place winner was Jaye
was to participate in the Ord of the Syracuse
dedication of Holzer Medical
Center.
Representing Gov . John
Gilligan, Dr. Cashman praised
local and srea residents for
their effor~ in making a dream
a reallty. "It's a great pleasure
to participate ln thla,
memorable event. You can
count on our department for
assistance when you need it."

Posters
Judged

AMERICAN STANDARD HOME
."ALBERMARLE"
MODEL

no facilities to house juveniles

TEN CENTS

New Medical Center Dedicated

To See Pope

NO DOWN PAYMENT. AND LOW LOW IMONTHLY
PAYMENTS FOR QUAUAED BUYER.

enttne

Of The Meigs-Mason Area

Deep Storage Doors
• Freezer Shelf

•

I

condition of the court house
and th~ Meigs County jail
needs considerati on . We have

candidate for the seat occupied . available and wha t roads returned. We must stimulate
by Ours, said he does 'not seek aren't pa Ve~ and give this top entlmsiasm ..''
Expl ore
th e
FINANCES : "One of the
the offi ce because he stood for · priority .
possibility
to
continue
the
first
things that should be"done
something good but for the
progress that Meigs County Route 7 bypass, stimulate wouldbeto calionthe township
interest in every organiza ti on tr us tees and hear th eir
needs.
and
move forward to opening suggestions. Next, look real
In mapping out a platform,
Jones said his blueprint for up the Eastern end of our close at the county budget,
senators
and
progress in Meigs County in· county . The roa d needing contac t
priority
is
SR
124
."
congressman
for
information
eludes the following :
LANDFILL :. "We must · as to what federal programs
ROADS! "itis lime to begin
make
every effort to begin a ar e available for Meigs
tg put forth every effort to
sanitary
landfill . Jones said he County . We haven't made an
make better roads in Meigs
County a reality. I suggest a was distressed to hear Ours eff ort for this type of
five year program be adopted. say the money allocated for a program."
PHYSICAL PLANT : "The
First, look over what money is landfill would have to be

at y

It takes 30 to 50 gallons of sap

orced to Fly

ISIT ELBERFELDS WAR.£HOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREET

·w.w~~-w

·Commissioner CandicLltes Explain Platfo-f.ms

Swissair Liner

JOINS MARINES
SYRACUSE
Elden
Eugene Slack, youngest son of
Mrs. Ada Slack, has enlis!ed in
the U. S. Marines and is now
undergoing· basic training at
Paris Island, S. C. Slack also
has served three years and
four months in the U. S. Army.
His wife, Candice, and children
Suzanne and Philip , are
residing at Freeport during
Slack's !raining period.

.

...::::::.;~..~~:-t{..'"®:&gt;:=:~.:::::~«:::::·~Pt.'$:11tO!O!IIt'lite.llt:~.llt..::IIJL::IIJ::IIe~~llt'lltRQ'IIt~llt.mm~~t~llt''llt'~·-·*W::;'888!8:e!:!~=~~W:!:'..&lt;!C::t.:•~::$~~=-"::Z~:~~~:.::~:~::~::::=:-;.::::::8::::::::?.!::::~::::::::::-':"«::.-x:::::~:.~:.w:ex:·· ··-a:ioe·, ·u·

. ANNUAL TEA - Candystrlpers of Veterans Memorial
Howltal (top picture) held their annual tes and. awarda
ceremonies Monday night at Uie l;'omeroy Elementary
School. Seated, I to r, are Jane Thomas, Stella Hawk, Denise
Hendricks, Nancy Greenlee, Brenda Van Meter, Quois
Miller, Dlama White, Becky Hockman, Jyl ~ver, Vicki
Clelland; standing, Diane Norris, Patty Glaze, Connie Smith
Jane Brewer, Glenda Lawson, Venedla Young, Diana Lewis:
Sandy Van Meter, Melanie Burt, Cherie Reuter, Vicki Grate
Susy Card and Kim ¥owery.
.
'

FOUR HAVE 2100 HOURS- Four girls In this group of
candystrlpen (lower picture) having 2100 hours of wlunteer
aervlee at Veterans Memorlallloapltal .were honored. They
are Becky Wrlght, prel!.denl, 600 houn, ..d DeLene
Del.egal, ConDie Gru_. andMlllsa Rizer, each 500houre.
the cro~. seated, Ito r, are Patti Well, Karla Beal, Opal
Berry, Sterrle McCain, Sandy Wood, Cathy Pickens, VIcki
Spencer, CCilllle Lanning, secretary, 'and Mlas Wright; back
row, Jan Bttzlng, Stella Fobn.-, Bobbie Arch.-, JUII!arrls,
Mill ru., "Mill Gru_., Julia Holter, Mill lleLegal, ·
Rolemsry Reed and ~rend&amp; Donahue.
_

rn

· SHRINE TO MEET
The Twin City Shrine Club
will meel at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the clubhouae 1n Racine.
Refreahmenta will be s'erved.

TWO DISMISSED
Two cases . have been
dismissed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court, Unda
Priddy versus James Priddy,
and Lucy Barringer versl18
Mary Lucille Peel.

(

B. 0. HENNIGER

personal contributions to
society . You, the people of this
area, have mijde your contribution with the construction
or this fantastic ·medical
center."
Rev. A. H. MacKenzie, St.
Peter 's Episcopal Church ,
deliv ered invocation for
Monday's ceremony.
Dignitaries toured the new
hospilal following dedication
ceremonies.
Prior to the program,

members of the Gallia
Academy High School band,
under the direction of Charles
Rowe, presented a concert.
Members of the Hoize~
Medical Center School of
Nursing (senior class) and
members of the Holzer Medical
Center Candy Stripers served
as usherettes.
Me10bers oNhe Gallia-Meigs
Post, State Highway Patrol,
and Gallia County Sheriff's
Department directed traffic .

H. E. S!DELDS, MEIGS AGRICULTURE, Stabilization
and Conservation Service; David Perry, Meigs SoU Conservationist, and c. E. Blal\_eslee, Meigs County Extension
Service agent, from the left, judged entries In the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation Service contest Monday.
Elementary School. Payton
will receive a cash award of $1&gt;
and Ord $10.
All the finalists received $5
awards in the contest. Other
finalists and the schools th ~y
represented were Harry
Graham, Salisbury Elemen·
tary; Pam Spencer, Racine ;
Jennifer. Wise, Bradbury ;
Sandra Buchanan, Riverview ;
Douglas Gloyd, Salem Center ;

Mark
Mitch,
Pomeroy
Elementary, and Janet Horky,
Middleport Elementary.
The contest was open to
pupils in the fourth through the
eighth grades. One poster was
selected from each school for
th e final competition. The
judges (see picture ) said all
the final entrie$ "were excellent. "

Engineer Named
Bernard 0 . Henniger,
veteran construction engineer
for Ohio Power Co. and other
affiliates of the American
Electric Power System, has
been appointed resident
engineer to build the IO.mile
coal conveyor system between
the new Meil!$.. Mjne and the
General James M. Gavin
power plant, now under construction at Cheshire.
A native of Lowell in
Washlngtoh County, Henniger
has had wide experience in

AEP System construction
·projects, primarily power
plants but also operations
buildings, office buildings and
other facilities.
Power plants he helped build
include Muskingum River In
Ohio, Philip Spqrn and Cabin
Creek 'In West Virginia, Twin
Branch and Tanners Creek in
ln~iana, Clinch River in
Virginia, and Big Sandy in
Kentucky . He moves to the
Meigs conveyor installation
(Continued on page 8)

Pomeroy Litterers are ·Wanted

Pomeroy Mayor Wllllam
·Baronick Informed his council
Monday night an ordinance
prohibiting tittering In town
will be enforced i)nmedlately.
The ordinance carries a fine
of $25 for the first offense and
$25 for every offen,e
LOCAL TEMPS·
thereafter. Persons 'ap!fhe temperature in down· prehended littering will be
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. cited to court.
Tuesday ·was 114 degrees under
CouncllatiProved the second
sunny skies.
and ·third required readings to

a zoning ordinance regulating
trailers. In its final form the
ordinance does not require the
covering of fuel oil tanks and
trailers may be 15 feet from a
,
property line.
An ordinance regulaijng the
aale of produce on Pomeroy
streets was· read but council
members felt the ISsue should
have more study and tabled it
unUl the next meeting.
In other business "council

voted to place .nine 400 watt
mercury vapor lights on · the
town parking Iota at a cost of
$l,!!M per year. The lights wlU
be installed In the nell lllx to
eight weeks. Coun~ Jim
Mees presented the estimated
cost to council IIUbmitted by
Columbus and Southern Ohio
ElectriC Co. and a 'map
showinK the location of the
lights.
Councll also screed to aend

for the 100 parking meters on
order and bear the expense of
the cost or frel!lht which
council earlier de~~Uned to do.
Cost of the additional freight on
the meters totaled $45.
'
Dean Lutz, at the request of
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, asked council for
the use of a portion.of the upper
parking lot for advertlalng
display space durinR tlw. Bi~
(Continued on page ~)

�2- Tile DlllfiJeo•I!•J;Mll!cleJIOI t-Puu1t!1117, 0., ~II, 1m

Candystripers ~.

5 Norris Sennons
In Booklet Form
111111101

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 .P.M. Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadllnt 9 a.m.
Cancellatio.n &amp;. Corrections
Will be ncepted until9a.m. tor,
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed ob jectiona l. The
publisher

wi II

not

responsible tor more than
incorrect Insertion.

be
one

RACINE - The Rev. Charles
Norris, pastor of lhe Racine
First· Baptist Church and the
Bethlebem Firsl Baptist
Church at Oreal Bend, has
authored a booklet, " Chris ~ is
the Answer" which will be
distributed .beginning Wednesday . .
The booklet, containing five
completesermonsaslhey were
·
delivered by the Rev . Mr.
Norris, was compiled to fill
requests he bas received for
copies.
,. The opening sermon is en·

titled "Christ is th.e Answer.' 1
RATES
For Want ·Ad Service
Olher sermons are featured.
5 cents per Word one Insertion The Rev, Mr. Norris comments
Minimum Charge75c
in his foreward :
12

cents

per

word three
consecutl\le Insertions.
18 cents Per word• six con-

secutlve Insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on palo,
ads and ads paid within 10
days.
CA~D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
suo lor 50 word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement: .
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,·
8:30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon

Sat~rday.

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to thank everyone
Who was so kind and
thoughtful after the death of
our husband, father and
grandfather, William H.
Thuener·. We especially wish
to thank Doctors Memorial
Hospllal , Huntington, Ewing
Funeral Home, Rev . Forrest
Donley, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Davis, Mrs. Homer Hawkins,
those sending flowers and

food, pallbearers, Landmark ,
all of our friends and neigh.bors for their kindnesses and

1

'This is my first experience

in writing sermo.ns to be
published for public reading.·
Their purpose in print, as from
the pulpit, is the salvation of
sinners and to st rengthen
God's people. If one soul is
brought from death to life
through these sermons, I will
be repaid in full for the effort
which has gone into preparing
them."
The Rev. Mr. Norris, the son
of the Rev. and Mrs. Freeland
Norris, Racine, was ordained
into the mtnistry on April 9,
1969. His work in preparation
for the . ministry was done at

-:--:::-----~

·: In Memory

:· IN LOVING memory ol Gordon
H. Chevalier who passed
•· away April IS, 1969.
~ He had a nature Jou c.ould not
help loving, An a heart that
was purer than gold. And to
those who knew and loved
him . His memory will never

grow cold.
Sadly missed by his wile,
Betty, sons, Rodney and Kirk.
4-18-llp
IN LOV.ING met:nory of our
dear husband and father.
, David q1~r, who passed away
· ' u ve6n ogo, April 11.

IS

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·:;RE -SPONSIBLE person tor
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ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ... The
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-HARTFORD

I The Daily Sentinel·

992-2156
Pamtray
I.

I

Cassell-Carsey

l.

The bidding has been :
\\lest
Nort h
East
South
I•
Pass

?
Pass
2•
Pass
You, South, hold :
.A6 54 'IK632 tQI07 ... 54
What do you do now?

A-Pass. You aren't happy
about the contrlrt, but your
p a r t n e r is almost certain to
show up with four di11monds
and you m&amp;)' be in the best spot
after all. In any event, don't try
to find a better landing place.

Extc. Ed.
·
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published dally except

E. Voss

The Eastern Eagles provided
four runs in the bottom of the
seventh Inning 'to edge by a ~
score lhe Federal-Hocking
Lancers, who had scored five
times lo la_ke the lead in lhe lop
of lhe seventh Monday evening ·
on the Eagles' diamond.
Going into .the wild seventh,
Coach Larry Heines' crew had
a 5-3 lead. The Lancers,
however, rallied for five big
runs on three hi Is to lake a•
seemingly safe 11-0 advantage
into the home half of the last
Inning. But the Eagles came up

Saturday by The OtiiO Valley
Publishing Company, 11.1
Court Sl ., Pomeroy. Ohio,

,.57". Business Office Pnone

Holler 444.
9cn21S6, Editoritl Phone 992·
High Game - Men : E. Voss 2157.
Second clan postaoe paid''
214, E. Voss 201, F. Morrow 191.
High Ga me - Women: M. Voss Pomeroy, Ohio .
Nat ional advertising
201, N. Carsey 163, P. Holler repruentative
Bott lne ll i·
159.
· Gatlaoher. Inc ., 12 East ~2nd
St ., New York City, New 'fork . .
Veterans Memorial Ho5pita't
. Subscription rilles : De Apri I 11, 1972
. livered by carrier where
Fts available SO cents per week; ·
Hit&amp;. Misses
58 Bv Motor Route-where carrier
service not available: One
Gutter Bums
48
SU5 . By mall In Ohio
TheOpens
28 month
and w·..Va .• One ye.u su .oo .
Straight Shooters
26 Six months $7 .25 . Three
Hlgll Ind . Game - Bessie months SA ~ 5D . Subscription
Sylvester 195, Sue Cundiff 19_1. pr ice includes Sundav TimesHigh Ind . Series - Bessie
Sentinel.
Sylvester 490, Sue Cundiff 485.
In 1964, 17 servicemen were
Team High Game - Straight
Shooters 488; Team High killed when tw~ troop planes
Series ~ Straight Shooters
collided over Ohio.
1373. '

Pis
78
74
10
58

Reed, Cherie Reuter, Connie Fultz-Bentley .

ADVERTISED PRICES
ARE IN EFFECT WEDNESDAY, 9:30 A.M.
THRU MONDAY, APRIL 24th OR
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

A DISCOUNT
D£PARTMf.NT STOitl

MASON, W.VA.

VITO STE!LINO
UPI Sports Writer
Doug Rader has found his
power swing and Lee May has
lost his.
The combination proved just
right Monday night for the
Houston Astros as they recorded their first victory of the
delayed season by clubbing the
San Francisco Giants, 7-2.
Rader contributed a two-run
homer and a two-I'Ull triple
whOe May chipped in with a
pair of run-scoring singles as
the Astros, generally picked to
be the most Improved team in
baseball this spring, gained
their initial victory after losing
their first two games.
In the Aslros' first three
games, May has five hits in 12
at-bats for a healthy .416
average. But all five hits have
been singles and the Astros
didn't gel May from Cincinnati
to hit singles.
"I don 't feel good, I dori't
have any rhythm and I'm just
punching the ~II," May said
as he explained that he didn't
pick up a bat during the recent
strike and isn't in the grove.
In the other two National
League games, Les Angeles
drubbed AUanta, 8-3, and St.
Leuis edged Philadelphia, 5-4.
In the only two American

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BARBARA WELL
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daughter of Mrs. Evelyn
Well, Pomeroy- Route 3, bas
been choseu girl of lhe mouth
for April by the Eastern High
School Future Homemakers
of America. Barbara, 16, bas
beeu au active member for
three years and se.rved as
recreation leader iu her
secoud year. Miss Well will
represent the chapter on
April 21 and 22 at the FHA
coovenlion. She has been a
member of the Pep Club at
the high school for two years
and a member of lhe T.N.T.
4-H Club for six years.

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with four runs on three singles,
two walks, a hil balsman, and
an

error.

Randy Boring leading off the
linal frame for Eastern,
singled, then stole second. Rick
Sanders . beat out an infield
single with Boring, taking
lhird. Sanders stole second and
Dennis . Eichinger singled to
drive in both runners to make it
8-7.
Alan Duvall, who eventually
scored the winning run, was hit
by a pitch, putting runners on
second and first. Rick Blake,

'
bunting, was safe on an error

by the pitcher , scoring
Eichinger lo tie it up. Duvall
went to third, and Blake then
stole second. After a strikeout,
Randy Young and Bill
Osbourne drew walks, the final
base on balls forcing in Duvall
for lhe winning run.
Duvall started on the hill for
the winners and lasted until the
sixth when he gave way to Rick
Blake. Blake was replaced by
winning pitcher Randy Cross in
the seventh. Together, they
fanned six and walked five

while allowing seven hits.
Ruckswait started for the
Lancers. He was lilted ·for
Smith in the sixtli, who in turn
gave way to Hail in the
seventh. Combined, the ,
Federal-Hocking trio fanned ·
six, issued 11 bases on balls,
and bit one.
Leading the Eagles at the
plate was senior catcher
Randy. Young wilh three
singles in three trips. Blake
bad two singles, Bob Caldwell,
a double, and Eichinger.,
Sanders,
Boring,
and

League games, Cleveland
blanked Boston, 4·0, ' and
Baltimore shut out New York
by the same U margin.
. Manny 1!fota and Willie Davis wbo find It very comfortable batting back-to-back in
front of Frank ·Robinson in the
Dodger lineup, combined for
seven hits and five RB!s in the
victory over AUanta. Frank
Robinson chipped in with two ·
walks, one with the bases
loaded, and a single: Hoy!
Wilhelm made his 1,055th
appearance and got the save
for the Dodgers although Chris
Cannizzaro was charged with
three passed balls in the ninth

while trying to catch William's
knuckle balL
The St. Leuis-Philadelphia
game had a frantic finisb and .
Cardinal Manager Red
Schoendlenst said, "We damn
near blew that one and we've
blown two already." The Cards
took a 5-3 lead in the top of the
ninth as Ted Sinunons doubled
in a run and scored on Dal
Maxvill's sacrifice fly. But the
Phils came back for a run in
the last of the ninth and had the
bases loaded before AI Santorini got Tlm McCarver to
ground out to end the game.
The Orioles, who don't seem
to be missing Frank Robinson,

Wiggins to Lead M-M
League officers agreed that
Kenny Wiggins of Pomeroy
was re-elected president of the next Sunday·, April 23, will be
Meigs-Mason Slo-Pitch Softball the final date !or a team to
League Sunday at the Royal apply to President Wiggins for
Crown Bottling Company admittance into the league.
Another me~ting of league
Garage in Middleport.
Other officers named to managers will be held April 30
serve during the 1972 season to decide on any applications.
The entry fee was set al $20
were Gary Reed, vice
president; Tommy Myers, for each team and a toursecre tary;
John Wolfe, nament for league teams will
treasurer and Bob Wingett, be held on June 16-17-18 with
President Wiggins in charge.
publicity.

STANDINGS

A fat 7-run third inning, in which visiting Meigs Local's
defense · became unglued, was the difference as the Point
Pleasant Big Blacks went on to post a 10-6 decision over the
.·Hard-hitting Marauders at Harmon Field yesterday.
Bill Chaney started on the hill for Melga again and Miller
opposed. But Chaney wasrot around at the finish, the victim of
some shoddy play. He drew the loss.
Rick Ash came in from
Meigs scored in their !irst
centerfield to finish up for licks on Cooke's two-bagger
Meigs, giving up lour blows inside the third base bag, and
and three runs in three and an oul!ield error on Dunfee's
one-third innings.
drive.
Catcher Roger Dixon drove
It started with one out. Terry
home three Meigs rWiners with Rollins reached on a throwing
a ground out and a long two-run error. Moore's shot to center
homer.
scored him. Harbrecht reached
Floyd Burney cracked two on a force and an error. Miller
singles and a double for the singled to center. With two out,
losers. Chester Wigf\1 went !1- Doeffinge walked. Fetty legged
for -3. And Tom Cooke rifled a oul a dribbler for a hit. Warner
twl&gt;-bagger and a single and reached on an error. Thomas
scored twice.
walked, Rollins walked. Two
The Big Blacks had elghl hits more errors and 7 runs were
in their attack but capitalized across on only three hits. That
on five Meigs errors and seven made it 7-1, Blatks . .
bases on balls .
In the fourth, Meigs rallied

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UND~ES SURGERY
TAIPE ( UPI )-Chi Cheng,
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-•· - · -

Meigs Local-100 302 0-6 13 5
Big Blacks • 007 022x • 10 8 2

CASUAL
TOPS
Fabrics of
care

Get Him
\ w•

leads the team with a .636
swatmark. Marvin Moore is 5for-11 and batting A55.
The Big Blacks next outing
will be a Friday night affair
here against visiting Kyger
Creek, game time at 7:00.
Coach Dick Adams' Bobcats
were H-1 through last Friday .

SHELLS OR TANK TOPS
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VALUES TO 11.95

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Select lrom 150 titles.
Fiction, reference, hlslory,
autobiography, etc. Great
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EVERl DAY LOW

•

·C

-

Logan took over undisputed first place ·in the
Southeastern Ohio League baseball race Monday by
downing host Ironton, 6·2.
The Chieftains are scheduled to lock horns with
the Gallipolis Blue Devils this evening. The game
will probably be played at Rio Grande sihce
Memorial Field is covered by floodwater . LHS is 3·1
in league play. GARS is 2-1.
··
In a non-league game at
Fairland Monday, Coach
David Lucas' Dragons. tallied
single runs in the third and fifth
innings to hand the Blue Devils
a 2-1 setback.
It was Fairland's seventh
win in eighl starts. The loss left
GAHS wilh a 3-2 season mark.
Jay Love wenl the distance
for Fairland, allowing five hits.
Skipper Johnson was charged
with the Joss. Johnson gave up
only three hits. GAHS left
several baserunners stranded
for the second straight game.
Johnson fanned five and
Love six.
In other area games Monday , Pt. Pleasant bombed
Meigs, 10-6, Eastern defeated
Federal-Hocking 9-8, and
Southern defeated it.s alumni 74 in a p1·actice tilt.
FAIRLAND
PLAYER- Pos.
AB H H
Mayo, c
3 0 0

has one you'll like!

'

.

I

0
0
o
1
0
o

o

0
0
0
1
1
o

2

0
3

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$ .,

'{

I

R H
0 1
0 0

3 0

4

0

0

Kiesling, c

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0

0

J

0

1

Taylor,2b
Niday, 1b
Briggs. rt
Johnson, p
TOTALS

1

2 1 0
2 0. 1
0 o 0

By Innings:

Ga l.
Fai rla nd

24

1 4

010 000 o-1 4 1
011 000 X- 2 3 2

Major League Results
By Unlled Press tnternallonal
Nalional League
St.Louis
300000002-5111
Phila
002 100 001- 4 9 1
Cleveland, Frzenda (8), Higgins (9), Shaw (9), Sanlorlnl
Simmons;

and

Fryman,

AHL Playoff Standings
By United Press lnlernatlonal
(All Series Best-of-Seven)

San Fran
000 020 ooo- 2 1 0
Houston . 000 022 03x- 8 9 0
Cumberland, Stone (6), Bryant
Series E
W. L gf ga (7), Barr (8); Morr is (8) and
Nova Scotia
1 0 4 l Healy ; Dierker, Ray (8) and
Boston
0 1 1 4 Edwards, WP- Dierker (t-0) .
LP- Cumberland (O. I) . HRDoug Rader (1 sf).
Series F
W. L. gf ga
Baltimore
0 0 0 0 Los Angeles 12·o OOQ 032 s 16 o
000 020 001- 3 6 1
Cincinnati
0 0 0 0 Allan fa
·Singer, Wilhelm (8) and
Monday's Results
Cannizzaro ; Stone, Neibauer
Nova Scotia 4 Basion 1
(2), McQueen (8) and Williams.
{Only game scheduled )
WP- Singer (1-01. LP-Stone
Tuesday's Games
(0-1) . HR- Evans (lsi), Davis
Cincinnati at Baltimore
(1st), Mota (1st!.
{Only game scheduled)
(Only games scheduled)
Cleveland 000 000 031-4 s 0
•
Boston
000 000 1)(]()-1) 2 1
ROCKETS WIN
Wll co• and Fosse ; Culp, Lee
CHESHIRE - Wellston (8), . Krausse (9)) and Josedefeated Kyger Creek High in phson . WP-Wilcox 11-0). LPbaseball 5-4 Monday when a Culp 1°·11- HR -McCraw 11511
dropped fly ball in the fifth New York
ooo 000 ooo- o.; o
inning permitted two runs )0 Baltimore
000 000 3lx- 4 d 0·
Peterso'n, Aker (8) and
score, one proving to be th e · Munson; McNally U-01 · and
winning run. Mike Johnson, Etchebarren. LP-Peterson (0Kyger CJ:eek righthander, was 11 .
the losi ng pitcher.
(Only games scheduled)

HAVE YOU TRIED .
COLUMBUS PARCEL?
FOR NEXT DAY DELIVERY
FROM COWMBUS
Your Columbus supplier may be using
CPS regularly.
If not- perhaps you should insist they try
CPS on your next shipment (up to 200 lbs.) .

COWMBUS PARCEL SERVICE, INC.
PHONE (AC614) 294-6241

AMER.CAN'M,A'Di

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IN POMEROY

EA.
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Perry,

1
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Hoerner (9) and M~Carver . WP
- Santorin i (1 .1I. LP- Hoerner
(0-11 . HR- Fryman (1st) .

Pro Standings

YOUNGEST COACH
INSTITUTE, W.Va. (UP!)Olrl Price, 21, a starting guard
on the 1971·'a- West Virginia
basketbaU,team, Monday was
signed as head coach at West
Virginia State College, making
him the youngesl head coach in
tbe nation .

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Financing Ohio People Since 1912
l .

New, 3b
2
Roberts, ss
3·
G. Wa rd, 1b
1
White, lb
1
Keenan. It
3
Love, p
1
Arnold, rl
2
Thacker. cf
2
Ours. 1b
2
TOTALS
21
GALLIPOLIS
PLAYER-Pas.
AB
Davis, 3b
4
Boone, cf
3

(9)

Downing-Childs Agency ·Int.
PHONE 992-2342

Whatever you buy, It will pay to
atk your dealer for thrifty City
Loan "Action-Plan Financing."

Gullett On·
d
Tonight

REVIVAL NOTED
HARTFORD, W. Va. -The
Rev. Fred Bales, Po~tsrnouth,
will be the evangelist for a
revival at the Churc~ of Christ
In ChrisUan Union nere the
·evening of April 24. There will
be special singing by tbe Bales
famOy . The public Is welcome.

necks, mock turtle necks. A big
assortment bf colors and styles.
No Ironing needed.

"SANDY McGEE" BRAND

American League Standings
By united Pr~~~ 1nternalional
W. L. Pel. GB
Baltimore
2 0 1.000 Detroit
1 0 1.000 '12 111
Milwaukee
1 o 1.000 . '12 1r~oun
Cleveland
1 1 .500 1
Boston
02 .0002
New York
0 2 .000 1
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Kansas City
3 0 1.000 -. HOUSTON (UPI)- Big Lee
California
1 1 .500 1 v, May of the Houston Astros
Minnesota
1 1 .500 1 112 did 't .
b d . th
Oakland
1 1 .500 1 '12
n swmg a a1 urmg e
Texas
1 1 .500 1'12 13-day baseball strike, but he
Chicago
0 J .000 3 went back borne to Cincinnati
Monday's Results
·
b 1
Cleveland 4 Boston o
today w1th a .417 alt ng
Baltimore 4 New York 0
average.
!Only games scheduled)
May,acquiredfrom the Reds
Today's Probable Pitchers
durin• the winter, returned
( Las1 year's records
"&lt;e
In rarentheses)
borne to Cincinnati during the
AI Times EST
strike and spent' his training
American League
d I'll'
·
Cleveland (Tidrow 0-0) at 1lme runmng an
I mg
Boston (Siebert 16-10), .1:30 weights at Spinney Field, home
p.m.
of the Cincinnati Bengals of the
Milwaukee (Lockwood 10-15) N t' at F00 tball Lea
H
at New York ( Keklch 10-9) , 1:30 a ton
gue. e
p.m.
·
didn't pick up a tiat WIW last
Detroit (Coleman 20-9) at Friday, the day before the
Balllmor: :Palmer 20-91. 1:30 season's opener, but he's gone
P·rexas (Gogolewski 6.5) at 5-for-12 in his first three
Chicago {Johnson 12-10), 9:00 games.
p.m.
He went Z-for-1 and drove in
Kansas City {Hedlund 15-8) at two runs, including the tieOakland (McClain 10-21) , 11 :00
p.m.
breaker in the sixth inning, to
Minnesota (Perry 17-17} ai lea~theAStrostoa 7~2vi~tory
California !Ryan 10 - 1~1 . 11 :00 over the San Francisco Giants
Monday nigh!.
p.m. Wednesday's Games
K.C. at Oakland ttwl -nlghll
"! don't feel good at the
Minn at California (night )
plate," May said. "!don'\ have
Texas at Chicago
Detroit at Bait (night)
any rhythm. I'm just punching
Milwaukee at New York
the ball."
.
Cleveland at Boston.
May, who bas averaged :r1
homers the last three seasOIIS,
hasn 't hit for any power yet. All
,lnternotlonal League
five
hits haVil been singles.
Standings
The big one Monday night
United Press International
Tidewater
4 1 .800
came with the -score tied 2-2
Peninsula
2 2 .500 1'12 and runners on flrst 'and third.
Rochester
2 2 .500 1'12
Charleston
1 1 .soo 1'12 It was a line drive to left that
Richmond
1 1 .500 m IICOred Roger Metzger and sent
Toledo
1 2 .333 2
Jlm WyM to second, where he
Louisville
1 4 .200 3
IICOred an insurance run on a
Monday's Results
Charleston 1 Toledo 0
single by Bob Watson.
Louisville 8 Peninsula 4
Houston opens a two-game
Rochester 2 Tidewater 0
series in Cincinnati tonight
{Only games scheduled)
with Ken Forsch, S-8 last
season, going against Don
Gullett, 18-8.

1

SU.N GLASSES

..

,

American League

In parentheses)
All Times EST

CHILDREN'S PlASTIC

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Regular price Is SL69.
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644

for three on singles by Wigal,
Eason, Burney and · Dunfee,
plus two bases on balls. They
left three rWiners stranded.
That made it 7-4.
The locals came back in the
bottom of the fifth on a single
by Fetty, Warner's sacrifice,
an error, a walk and Jim
Chandler's pinch single, plus a
double steaL So now it was 9-4.
Dixon's towering home rWI
behind Burney's single in the
sixth narrowed the count to 9-&lt;i.
The blast cleared the·Jeft field
fence by plenty.
The Blacks wrapped it up one
more in the bottom of the sixth.
Well, that's how it goes
sometimes. Meigs Coach Don
Wolfe look it philosophically.
"High school baseball," he
grinned. "Anything can
happen."
Sophomore Bill Painter, with
his two hits, is now 7-for-11 and

Logan In First
After 6-2 Win

(Last Y!ilr'5 records

Pointers Win over:~eigs 10-6

Generation
Rap
. . .

MUG TREE

7-4 Monday bY
Tornado Nine

Os\)ourne, each a single.
RACINE - The Southerri
Rockswalt led the Lancers at
the plate with !hree singles in Local Tornadoes scored two
runs in each of the first three
four at bats.
innings
and one in the sixth to
With the win, the Eagles go
defeat
the Southern Hi gh
to3-2 tosnapa two-game losing
streak. Eastern remains at 2-1 Alumni here !fl&gt;nday night, 7-4 .
The Tornad'oes, coached by
in the Southern Valley Con•
Hilton
Wolfe, were originally
ference . The Eagles play Norlh
Gal!ia today at Eastern · in a scheduled to play the Glouster
Tomcats at Glouster , but wet
key SVAC tilt.
Fed-Hock . 010 011 :i-ll 7 3 grounds on the Tomcat field
Eastern
001 013 4- 9 10 4 forced a postponement. The
Ruckswalt, Smith, (6) (LPI, Tornadoes are now 3-1 overall .
Top hitters for the Tornadoes
Hall (7 ), and Mahoney. Duvall,
Blake, (6), Cross, (WP) (7), were Bruce Hart with a single
and double and Brett Hart with
and Young .
two singles. Other hitters were
Steve Jenkins, a double, and
Jim Hubbard, Mike Nease, Pat
Arnold, and Stan Kiser, each a
single.
For the ex-Southern High
&amp;hool stars, Bill Maynard had
blanked the Yanks on Dave right! It's going to be more fun a double and David Spencer,
McNally's four-hitter. Brooks than doing it ln a longer Darrell Dugan, and Bill
Robinson, who wasn't booed season."
Wickline each a single.
It was Patriot's Day in.
this time, triggered a three-run
Mike Nease, starling on the
seventh with a ru~HCoring Boston but it was a holiday for hill forO the Tornado varsity,
double. The Orioles, going for Cleveland as Milt Wilcox's worked the first four innings,
their fourth straight 100 victory two-hitter and Tom McCraw's fanning one and walking two.
season, will have.more difficul- three-run homer in the eighth Arnold started lhe fifth and
ty reaching !bat goal in a carried the Indians past was relieved by Hubbard in the
·shorter season. But Manager Boston.
same inning after Arnold
Earl Weaver said, "98 to go, ·
walked five and struck out
none. Hubbard got the save
with one base on balls and five
MAJOR
strikeouts. Tom Wolfe hurled
all the way for the Alumni,
LEAGUE
giving up four walks and
National ~eagueStandings
National League
fanning three.
By Uniled Press International
Chicago (Pappas 17-14) at
Other players with th e
East
Pittsburgh !Moose 11 -7), 1:35
W. L. Pet. GB p.m.
Alumni were Jon Arnott,
1 0 1.000
New York ( Koosman 6-111 at Dennis Evans, Jim Wickline,
Montreal
1 1 .500 1 Montreal (Renko 15-141, 2:15
Chicago
George Lawrence, Ron Fuller,
I 1 .500 1 p.m.
New York
1 1 .500 1
St. Louis (Spinks 1-0) at Ronnie Salser, Dennis Hart,
Pittsburgh
1 2 .333 1'12 Philadelphia (Champion 3-51. and Greg Wood. Larry Wolfe :
Philadelphia
1 2 .333 1'12 8:05 p.m .
St. Louis
West .
Los Angeles (Osteen 14-11) at was wnpire .
W. L. Pet. GB Atlanta (Kel)ey 9-5), 8:05 p.m. The varsity Tornadoes play
Los Angeles
2 1 .667
Houston ( Forsoh 8-8) at tonight against the .Symmes
San Diego
1 1- .667
Cincinnati (Gullett 16·-6), 8:05 Valley Vikings at Racine in a
San Francisco
2 1 .667
p.m .
Cincinnati
1 1 .500 11:r San Francisco (Carrithers 5· Southern Valley Conference
Houston
1 2 .333 1 3) at San Diego (Phoebus 3- 11), game, in which the Tornadoes
Atlanta
1 3 .250 1•12 10:30 p.m.
lead with a 2-0 slate.
Monday's Results
Wednesday's Games
Alumni .
000 040 0-4 4 3
St. Louis 5 Philadelphia 4
New York at Mtl , night
Los Angeles 8 Atlanta 3
Chicago at Pitts, ni~ht
Southern
222 001 x- 7 9 3
Houston 7 San Francisco 2
St. Louis at Phlla. n1ght
Wolfe and Dugan. Nease,
(Only games scheduled!
Los Ang at Atlanta, night
(WP), Arnold, (5), Hubbard ,
(Pickup Tuesday's Games)
Houston al Clnci, night
Today's Probable Pitchers
San Fran at San Diego, night (5), and Jenkins.

•

SLIPON HEAVY WEIGH

Alumni Clipped

Houston Clobbers Giants, 7-2

REV. NORRIS

East was one of those realBy Helen and Sue Bottel
ly dangerous players who
think they are expe rts while
they do everything wrong.
HELP IS AS NEAR AS THE PHONE
Dear
Rap:
His choice o! a spade instead of club bid is a case
I am a17-year-old boy who is mature and just like other guys
in point. This time it should except for one thing: I am honosexuaL I like girls as friends . I go
have worked out for him , be·
cause it got his opponents on dates with them and we get along great, so maybe I'm even bito three no -trump and. when sexual.
I hate myself for these queer feelings. I know I'm sick in the
West placed the queen of
clubs on the table, South head and sometimes I think suicide is the only way out. If my
could count to just eight friends ever knew or even suspected, I'd kill myself for sure.
tricks and no furl her .
Is there any way I can get help without embarrassment' South took the first club SCARED
and rallied off six diam ond Dear Helen and Sue :
tricks and East had to make
I am almost 15, and just know I'm going to be a lesbian. I like
five di scards . The ii rst fou r
girls
better than boys, and even had a crush on one of my woman
were r a I h e r easy. He
chucked two spa ~ es, a heart teachers. I can'tstand the way I feeL So I avoid girls now, too,
and a club .
because I'm scared they'llfmdoutl'm -NOTNORMAL
'
The fi flh ca used him a
problem and he solved it in- D~AR AU. OF YOU WHO WORRY ABOUT HOMoSEXUAL
correclly. He jellisoned the TENDENCIES OR INCLINATIONS (AND SO MANY
queen of s pades.
TEENAGERS DO!) :
Now South knocked out the
Help is as near as your telephone. Most cities these days
spade ace. The defense ba , . . lin ,. "Y th II! li ,. "te hot 1- " h
ve criSIS es;
ou
e nes,
en
tnes w ere
cashed thl·ee clubs and South
made the last two tricks and ' young people may call in anonymously and talk out their
his contract.
problems. If more expert or in-depth counseling is indicated,
" I just coul~n'l_ play you they are referred to professionals.
for four clubs, sa td East to
Your County Mental Health Association will also refer you to
close-in help. The nwnber is listed in the phone book, and if you
5•n~ $1 fo&gt; JACOBY MODERN book
can't
find it, ask your operator. ,
to: "Win at Bridge," (c/o tltis rrewsOften
what teenagers believe to be hom95exual feelings are
pa~r), P.O. Box 419, RaJia City
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
only the natural attractions and curiosities of adolescence. Older
teens sometimes fear they are "doomed for life" because of one
his unforlunale partner. " I or two unhappy experiences. Needed here is reassurance, and a
had five myself. "
.
therapist can provide it in a single session•
We ca n't print his par( - · But when there Is a dee(H'ooted problem, then psychiatry is
ner's reply, but we !eel that
il was justified this lime. the answer for, before a patient can help himself, he must stop
The point is lhat East was hating himself .
nol goin g to biiat the hand
"Scared" asked, "Is there any way I can get help withoul
unless his partner held four embarrassment?" No one save your parents need know you are
clubs .
visiting a MenlalH~lth Clinic. Naturally you'd prefer that your
. (NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSH .)
parents don't know either, oot usually a psychiatrist works with
the whole famOy, not just the underage patient. Ancf adult a~
proval is necessary before you receive treatrnent, in most states.
Summing it up : if you're worried about your "normalcy"
don't be afraid to express your fears. You'd be surprised hilw
many others worry too - and how often their fears are unFINISH SEtOND
founded. - HELEN
The Meigs Marauder golf
learn finished second in a fo ur- Dear Sue and Helen:
way malch at Logan Monday
I am 15, and Saturday I got drun~ for the first and last time.
night.
Coac h
Nolan But maybe that's one time too many. It was at a party, and this
Swackhammer's Marauder guy encouraged me on a liquor spree. After a whOe 1 encouraged
linkslers posted a fine 231 him, I guess, too. Anyway I wa:in 't in the best condition for
score, second behind Logan's ·resisting and I doq't really know what I did, but I know I made a
218. Nelsonville-York was third big fool of myself.
with a 236 and Miller finished a
Some kids brought me home and dwnped me on the front
distant fourth, swinging 281
lawn, then rang the doorbell and drove off. So my mother found
times.
me almosl passed out. Naturally I'm grounded and in big trouble
and so awfully ashamed.
·
The kids know about'it, but won't tell me what! did. The guy
probably doesn't remember elther, exactly. I haven't seen him
· since, but when I do, should I apologize or expeet him to? Am I
more to blame than he Is? .- E.A.
Dear E.:
·
M~SON
I'd expecl an apology from HIM : He was the one wbo "encouraged'' you- and sometimes it's pretty hard to say ''No." If
he doesn't tell you he's sorry, then pretend he doesn't exist. Not A Motor RouiP. :suE
Dear E.:
You were both to blame, and so were the kids wbo dumped
you on the fronl lawn and ran! Apologies? Fine, but the best
.Ph. 614-992·2156
solution Is: CHANGE CROWDS! - HELE!II

Carriers For

CARRIER ·
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Cathy Pickens, Rosemary

-M~n :

Voss . 483, N. Carsey 449. P.

April 12, 1912

Donna Lantz, Glenda Lawson,
Sherri ·McCain, Chris Miller, Owen-Holter
Kim Mowery, Diane Norris, Morrow-Moore

: cHESTER ·L. TANNEttiLL,

Pass 3 N.T.
Pass
Opening lead-• Q

.WANTED!

"NOTICE"

High Series

595, ·r . Morrow 510 i D. ONen
502. High Series- Women: M .

POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Late Mi•ed

Cllrd, Brenda Donahue, Donna
Francis, Denise Hendricks,

Owen-·

..

Eagles Rilly, Edge F-H 9-8

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA ·.

· 677; Owen·

HnltP.r 671.

Local Bowling

Lanning, Pam Manley, Debbie
Ohlinger. Connie Radford,
L-.nne Sebo, Karla Beal, Susy

The OaiiJ Setltinel

3¥
P.oss

. ~ A pr~clous one from us has By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
' gone,f A pla'ce Is vacant In my

home, Which will never be
tilled.
Sadly missed by his wife,
Roxie and daughters, VIolet
Batey and Mlldren Mill iron,
grandchildren, and great grandchildren.
4-t8-11c

Harris; Julia Holter, Connie

Morrow~}lloore

S-TbeDaOySenttnet,MI~o)..o.,AprlliB,Im ~·

DEVOTED TD THE

Holter 1842; High Team Game
- Rosenbaum-Meadows 693;

Smith, Vicki Spencer, Jeannie
(Continued from Page I) ·
Stanley,
Jill Swain, Jane
Van Meter. Patti W.ell. Dianna . Thomas, Sandra
Meter,
White, Sandy Wood, Venedla PaHl ·weii ,....Veri_ediaVan
Young.
Young, Donna Francis, Nancy
200
Hours
Andrea
Gill. Patty Glaze, Amy Hamm, Dewhurst,
Sheila
Folmer·
Sheila Hawk, Debbie Heaton, Melanie Hackett, Jill Harris,,
Den ise Hendricks. Connie
. Lanning , Debbie
Herdman, Becky Hockman, Connie
Lavalley,
Susy Card, Brenda
Debbie Jeffers, Donna Lantz,
Donahue,
Sherri
Kim
Glenda Lawson, Diane Lewis, MOwery'; Connie McCain,
Smith,
Jane
Sherri McCain, Debbie Me'
. Daniel. Chris Miller; Pa.ula Thomas.
300 Hours - Melissa Proffitt:.
Morris . Kim Mowery. Diane Chris Miller.
Norris, , Cathv Pickens . . Calhv
500 Hours De Lene
Rayburn, Rosemary Re~.
Del'egaJ, Connie ' Grueser,
100 Hours- Opal Berry, J• ., Mllisa.
Ri zer.
Betzing, Terry Bird, Sheila · 600 Hours
- Becky Wright.
Folmer, Melanie Hackett. Jill

West Virginia and Indiana.
The Rev. Mr. Norris Is
married to the former Erma
Boring of Harrisonville.
Residents of Racine, they bave
four daughters, Diana, 17;
Sandra, 14; Debra, 12, and
Unda, II.
The booklet will go on sale
Wednesday at $1 a copy at _the
Middleport Book Store, the
New York Clothing House in .
Pomeroy, and the Racine
De par tmenl
Store.
All
proceeds will be used in church
work.

A Set Was There, But--NORTH

Morrow- Moore ~ l886;

services in this area and in

WIN AT BRIDGE

an'tone else who helped in

anoyway. Mrs. Sadie Th.uener
and fam ily.
4- 18-llp

Ohio University, Rio Grande
College and a religious school ·
in Nas~vllle , Tenn. ·
·
He bas been a pastor nine
years. He served as a pastor of;
the former Federated Church,
now the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy, eight months an~ as
pastor of the pomeroy Fifst
Baptist Church the same
length of lime. He was pastor ·
of · . lhe
Langsville
Christian
Congregational
Church thre~ years and of the
Reedsville Charge, five
churches, one year, He
pastored the Letart Methodist
Charge a year and a half. This
was also composed of five
churches.
He has held evangelistic

Rosenbaum-Meadows
56
f!lake$1ee-Hoyt·28
High · Team Series
Rosenbaum . Meadows · 1930;

�2- Tile DlllfiJeo•I!•J;Mll!cleJIOI t-Puu1t!1117, 0., ~II, 1m

Candystripers ~.

5 Norris Sennons
In Booklet Form
111111101

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 .P.M. Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadllnt 9 a.m.
Cancellatio.n &amp;. Corrections
Will be ncepted until9a.m. tor,
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed ob jectiona l. The
publisher

wi II

not

responsible tor more than
incorrect Insertion.

be
one

RACINE - The Rev. Charles
Norris, pastor of lhe Racine
First· Baptist Church and the
Bethlebem Firsl Baptist
Church at Oreal Bend, has
authored a booklet, " Chris ~ is
the Answer" which will be
distributed .beginning Wednesday . .
The booklet, containing five
completesermonsaslhey were
·
delivered by the Rev . Mr.
Norris, was compiled to fill
requests he bas received for
copies.
,. The opening sermon is en·

titled "Christ is th.e Answer.' 1
RATES
For Want ·Ad Service
Olher sermons are featured.
5 cents per Word one Insertion The Rev, Mr. Norris comments
Minimum Charge75c
in his foreward :
12

cents

per

word three
consecutl\le Insertions.
18 cents Per word• six con-

secutlve Insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on palo,
ads and ads paid within 10
days.
CA~D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
suo lor 50 word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement: .
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,·
8:30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon

Sat~rday.

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to thank everyone
Who was so kind and
thoughtful after the death of
our husband, father and
grandfather, William H.
Thuener·. We especially wish
to thank Doctors Memorial
Hospllal , Huntington, Ewing
Funeral Home, Rev . Forrest
Donley, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Davis, Mrs. Homer Hawkins,
those sending flowers and

food, pallbearers, Landmark ,
all of our friends and neigh.bors for their kindnesses and

1

'This is my first experience

in writing sermo.ns to be
published for public reading.·
Their purpose in print, as from
the pulpit, is the salvation of
sinners and to st rengthen
God's people. If one soul is
brought from death to life
through these sermons, I will
be repaid in full for the effort
which has gone into preparing
them."
The Rev. Mr. Norris, the son
of the Rev. and Mrs. Freeland
Norris, Racine, was ordained
into the mtnistry on April 9,
1969. His work in preparation
for the . ministry was done at

-:--:::-----~

·: In Memory

:· IN LOVING memory ol Gordon
H. Chevalier who passed
•· away April IS, 1969.
~ He had a nature Jou c.ould not
help loving, An a heart that
was purer than gold. And to
those who knew and loved
him . His memory will never

grow cold.
Sadly missed by his wile,
Betty, sons, Rodney and Kirk.
4-18-llp
IN LOV.ING met:nory of our
dear husband and father.
, David q1~r, who passed away
· ' u ve6n ogo, April 11.

IS

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Mum5, Geraniums, Pansies ,

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-HARTFORD

I The Daily Sentinel·

992-2156
Pamtray
I.

I

Cassell-Carsey

l.

The bidding has been :
\\lest
Nort h
East
South
I•
Pass

?
Pass
2•
Pass
You, South, hold :
.A6 54 'IK632 tQI07 ... 54
What do you do now?

A-Pass. You aren't happy
about the contrlrt, but your
p a r t n e r is almost certain to
show up with four di11monds
and you m&amp;)' be in the best spot
after all. In any event, don't try
to find a better landing place.

Extc. Ed.
·
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published dally except

E. Voss

The Eastern Eagles provided
four runs in the bottom of the
seventh Inning 'to edge by a ~
score lhe Federal-Hocking
Lancers, who had scored five
times lo la_ke the lead in lhe lop
of lhe seventh Monday evening ·
on the Eagles' diamond.
Going into .the wild seventh,
Coach Larry Heines' crew had
a 5-3 lead. The Lancers,
however, rallied for five big
runs on three hi Is to lake a•
seemingly safe 11-0 advantage
into the home half of the last
Inning. But the Eagles came up

Saturday by The OtiiO Valley
Publishing Company, 11.1
Court Sl ., Pomeroy. Ohio,

,.57". Business Office Pnone

Holler 444.
9cn21S6, Editoritl Phone 992·
High Game - Men : E. Voss 2157.
Second clan postaoe paid''
214, E. Voss 201, F. Morrow 191.
High Ga me - Women: M. Voss Pomeroy, Ohio .
Nat ional advertising
201, N. Carsey 163, P. Holler repruentative
Bott lne ll i·
159.
· Gatlaoher. Inc ., 12 East ~2nd
St ., New York City, New 'fork . .
Veterans Memorial Ho5pita't
. Subscription rilles : De Apri I 11, 1972
. livered by carrier where
Fts available SO cents per week; ·
Hit&amp;. Misses
58 Bv Motor Route-where carrier
service not available: One
Gutter Bums
48
SU5 . By mall In Ohio
TheOpens
28 month
and w·..Va .• One ye.u su .oo .
Straight Shooters
26 Six months $7 .25 . Three
Hlgll Ind . Game - Bessie months SA ~ 5D . Subscription
Sylvester 195, Sue Cundiff 19_1. pr ice includes Sundav TimesHigh Ind . Series - Bessie
Sentinel.
Sylvester 490, Sue Cundiff 485.
In 1964, 17 servicemen were
Team High Game - Straight
Shooters 488; Team High killed when tw~ troop planes
Series ~ Straight Shooters
collided over Ohio.
1373. '

Pis
78
74
10
58

Reed, Cherie Reuter, Connie Fultz-Bentley .

ADVERTISED PRICES
ARE IN EFFECT WEDNESDAY, 9:30 A.M.
THRU MONDAY, APRIL 24th OR
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

A DISCOUNT
D£PARTMf.NT STOitl

MASON, W.VA.

VITO STE!LINO
UPI Sports Writer
Doug Rader has found his
power swing and Lee May has
lost his.
The combination proved just
right Monday night for the
Houston Astros as they recorded their first victory of the
delayed season by clubbing the
San Francisco Giants, 7-2.
Rader contributed a two-run
homer and a two-I'Ull triple
whOe May chipped in with a
pair of run-scoring singles as
the Astros, generally picked to
be the most Improved team in
baseball this spring, gained
their initial victory after losing
their first two games.
In the Aslros' first three
games, May has five hits in 12
at-bats for a healthy .416
average. But all five hits have
been singles and the Astros
didn't gel May from Cincinnati
to hit singles.
"I don 't feel good, I dori't
have any rhythm and I'm just
punching the ~II," May said
as he explained that he didn't
pick up a bat during the recent
strike and isn't in the grove.
In the other two National
League games, Les Angeles
drubbed AUanta, 8-3, and St.
Leuis edged Philadelphia, 5-4.
In the only two American

ON SALE MASON STORE ONLY!
"TUCKER" - BUSHEL SIZE

OVENPROOF- WHITE CERAMIC

'

LAUNDRY BASKETS

CUPS, BOWLS.AND MUGS
BARBARA WELL
·BARBARA WELL,
daughter of Mrs. Evelyn
Well, Pomeroy- Route 3, bas
been choseu girl of lhe mouth
for April by the Eastern High
School Future Homemakers
of America. Barbara, 16, bas
beeu au active member for
three years and se.rved as
recreation leader iu her
secoud year. Miss Well will
represent the chapter on
April 21 and 22 at the FHA
coovenlion. She has been a
member of the Pep Club at
the high school for two years
and a member of lhe T.N.T.
4-H Club for six years.

Factory rejects from a famous
southern Ohio pottery mfgr.
Actual values t~ 49c . Stock up!

2

FOR

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29~
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with four runs on three singles,
two walks, a hil balsman, and
an

error.

Randy Boring leading off the
linal frame for Eastern,
singled, then stole second. Rick
Sanders . beat out an infield
single with Boring, taking
lhird. Sanders stole second and
Dennis . Eichinger singled to
drive in both runners to make it
8-7.
Alan Duvall, who eventually
scored the winning run, was hit
by a pitch, putting runners on
second and first. Rick Blake,

'
bunting, was safe on an error

by the pitcher , scoring
Eichinger lo tie it up. Duvall
went to third, and Blake then
stole second. After a strikeout,
Randy Young and Bill
Osbourne drew walks, the final
base on balls forcing in Duvall
for lhe winning run.
Duvall started on the hill for
the winners and lasted until the
sixth when he gave way to Rick
Blake. Blake was replaced by
winning pitcher Randy Cross in
the seventh. Together, they
fanned six and walked five

while allowing seven hits.
Ruckswait started for the
Lancers. He was lilted ·for
Smith in the sixtli, who in turn
gave way to Hail in the
seventh. Combined, the ,
Federal-Hocking trio fanned ·
six, issued 11 bases on balls,
and bit one.
Leading the Eagles at the
plate was senior catcher
Randy. Young wilh three
singles in three trips. Blake
bad two singles, Bob Caldwell,
a double, and Eichinger.,
Sanders,
Boring,
and

League games, Cleveland
blanked Boston, 4·0, ' and
Baltimore shut out New York
by the same U margin.
. Manny 1!fota and Willie Davis wbo find It very comfortable batting back-to-back in
front of Frank ·Robinson in the
Dodger lineup, combined for
seven hits and five RB!s in the
victory over AUanta. Frank
Robinson chipped in with two ·
walks, one with the bases
loaded, and a single: Hoy!
Wilhelm made his 1,055th
appearance and got the save
for the Dodgers although Chris
Cannizzaro was charged with
three passed balls in the ninth

while trying to catch William's
knuckle balL
The St. Leuis-Philadelphia
game had a frantic finisb and .
Cardinal Manager Red
Schoendlenst said, "We damn
near blew that one and we've
blown two already." The Cards
took a 5-3 lead in the top of the
ninth as Ted Sinunons doubled
in a run and scored on Dal
Maxvill's sacrifice fly. But the
Phils came back for a run in
the last of the ninth and had the
bases loaded before AI Santorini got Tlm McCarver to
ground out to end the game.
The Orioles, who don't seem
to be missing Frank Robinson,

Wiggins to Lead M-M
League officers agreed that
Kenny Wiggins of Pomeroy
was re-elected president of the next Sunday·, April 23, will be
Meigs-Mason Slo-Pitch Softball the final date !or a team to
League Sunday at the Royal apply to President Wiggins for
Crown Bottling Company admittance into the league.
Another me~ting of league
Garage in Middleport.
Other officers named to managers will be held April 30
serve during the 1972 season to decide on any applications.
The entry fee was set al $20
were Gary Reed, vice
president; Tommy Myers, for each team and a toursecre tary;
John Wolfe, nament for league teams will
treasurer and Bob Wingett, be held on June 16-17-18 with
President Wiggins in charge.
publicity.

STANDINGS

A fat 7-run third inning, in which visiting Meigs Local's
defense · became unglued, was the difference as the Point
Pleasant Big Blacks went on to post a 10-6 decision over the
.·Hard-hitting Marauders at Harmon Field yesterday.
Bill Chaney started on the hill for Melga again and Miller
opposed. But Chaney wasrot around at the finish, the victim of
some shoddy play. He drew the loss.
Rick Ash came in from
Meigs scored in their !irst
centerfield to finish up for licks on Cooke's two-bagger
Meigs, giving up lour blows inside the third base bag, and
and three runs in three and an oul!ield error on Dunfee's
one-third innings.
drive.
Catcher Roger Dixon drove
It started with one out. Terry
home three Meigs rWiners with Rollins reached on a throwing
a ground out and a long two-run error. Moore's shot to center
homer.
scored him. Harbrecht reached
Floyd Burney cracked two on a force and an error. Miller
singles and a double for the singled to center. With two out,
losers. Chester Wigf\1 went !1- Doeffinge walked. Fetty legged
for -3. And Tom Cooke rifled a oul a dribbler for a hit. Warner
twl&gt;-bagger and a single and reached on an error. Thomas
scored twice.
walked, Rollins walked. Two
The Big Blacks had elghl hits more errors and 7 runs were
in their attack but capitalized across on only three hits. That
on five Meigs errors and seven made it 7-1, Blatks . .
bases on balls .
In the fourth, Meigs rallied

DRASTIC REDUCTIONS! ! !

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UND~ES SURGERY
TAIPE ( UPI )-Chi Cheng,
the hig y acclaimed ''world's
fastest woman" who has four
world records to her credit,
Monday underwent surgery to
cure a soreness in her legs
which caused ·her to withdraw
from tbe Munich Olympics this
summer.

easy

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DEEP PRICE CUTS! VALUES TO .110.95
-•· - · -

Meigs Local-100 302 0-6 13 5
Big Blacks • 007 022x • 10 8 2

CASUAL
TOPS
Fabrics of
care

Get Him
\ w•

leads the team with a .636
swatmark. Marvin Moore is 5for-11 and batting A55.
The Big Blacks next outing
will be a Friday night affair
here against visiting Kyger
Creek, game time at 7:00.
Coach Dick Adams' Bobcats
were H-1 through last Friday .

SHELLS OR TANK TOPS
WOMEN'S AU: PURPOSE

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Discontinued styles from all 4
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97~· TO

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plan too ...

New Shipment Just Arrived!
ARTIFICIAL POLY PLASTIC

A

PAPER BACK BOOKS
VALUES TO 11.95

Roses,

SPRING
FLOWERS
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Tulips, Dal·stes;
Marigolds, Hyaclnihs,
Dahlias, Lily of the
Valley, Petunias, Baby
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Dogwood, Greenery and
many other type&lt;.

Select lrom 150 titles.
Fiction, reference, hlslory,
autobiography, etc. Great
savings for all readers.

EVERl DAY LOW

•

·C

-

Logan took over undisputed first place ·in the
Southeastern Ohio League baseball race Monday by
downing host Ironton, 6·2.
The Chieftains are scheduled to lock horns with
the Gallipolis Blue Devils this evening. The game
will probably be played at Rio Grande sihce
Memorial Field is covered by floodwater . LHS is 3·1
in league play. GARS is 2-1.
··
In a non-league game at
Fairland Monday, Coach
David Lucas' Dragons. tallied
single runs in the third and fifth
innings to hand the Blue Devils
a 2-1 setback.
It was Fairland's seventh
win in eighl starts. The loss left
GAHS wilh a 3-2 season mark.
Jay Love wenl the distance
for Fairland, allowing five hits.
Skipper Johnson was charged
with the Joss. Johnson gave up
only three hits. GAHS left
several baserunners stranded
for the second straight game.
Johnson fanned five and
Love six.
In other area games Monday , Pt. Pleasant bombed
Meigs, 10-6, Eastern defeated
Federal-Hocking 9-8, and
Southern defeated it.s alumni 74 in a p1·actice tilt.
FAIRLAND
PLAYER- Pos.
AB H H
Mayo, c
3 0 0

has one you'll like!

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Niday, 1b
Briggs. rt
Johnson, p
TOTALS

1

2 1 0
2 0. 1
0 o 0

By Innings:

Ga l.
Fai rla nd

24

1 4

010 000 o-1 4 1
011 000 X- 2 3 2

Major League Results
By Unlled Press tnternallonal
Nalional League
St.Louis
300000002-5111
Phila
002 100 001- 4 9 1
Cleveland, Frzenda (8), Higgins (9), Shaw (9), Sanlorlnl
Simmons;

and

Fryman,

AHL Playoff Standings
By United Press lnlernatlonal
(All Series Best-of-Seven)

San Fran
000 020 ooo- 2 1 0
Houston . 000 022 03x- 8 9 0
Cumberland, Stone (6), Bryant
Series E
W. L gf ga (7), Barr (8); Morr is (8) and
Nova Scotia
1 0 4 l Healy ; Dierker, Ray (8) and
Boston
0 1 1 4 Edwards, WP- Dierker (t-0) .
LP- Cumberland (O. I) . HRDoug Rader (1 sf).
Series F
W. L. gf ga
Baltimore
0 0 0 0 Los Angeles 12·o OOQ 032 s 16 o
000 020 001- 3 6 1
Cincinnati
0 0 0 0 Allan fa
·Singer, Wilhelm (8) and
Monday's Results
Cannizzaro ; Stone, Neibauer
Nova Scotia 4 Basion 1
(2), McQueen (8) and Williams.
{Only game scheduled )
WP- Singer (1-01. LP-Stone
Tuesday's Games
(0-1) . HR- Evans (lsi), Davis
Cincinnati at Baltimore
(1st), Mota (1st!.
{Only game scheduled)
(Only games scheduled)
Cleveland 000 000 031-4 s 0
•
Boston
000 000 1)(]()-1) 2 1
ROCKETS WIN
Wll co• and Fosse ; Culp, Lee
CHESHIRE - Wellston (8), . Krausse (9)) and Josedefeated Kyger Creek High in phson . WP-Wilcox 11-0). LPbaseball 5-4 Monday when a Culp 1°·11- HR -McCraw 11511
dropped fly ball in the fifth New York
ooo 000 ooo- o.; o
inning permitted two runs )0 Baltimore
000 000 3lx- 4 d 0·
Peterso'n, Aker (8) and
score, one proving to be th e · Munson; McNally U-01 · and
winning run. Mike Johnson, Etchebarren. LP-Peterson (0Kyger CJ:eek righthander, was 11 .
the losi ng pitcher.
(Only games scheduled)

HAVE YOU TRIED .
COLUMBUS PARCEL?
FOR NEXT DAY DELIVERY
FROM COWMBUS
Your Columbus supplier may be using
CPS regularly.
If not- perhaps you should insist they try
CPS on your next shipment (up to 200 lbs.) .

COWMBUS PARCEL SERVICE, INC.
PHONE (AC614) 294-6241

AMER.CAN'M,A'Di

GARDENING

TOOLS
'{O:t\
HOE
Shank pattern hoe wiTh
heavy steel blade and 4
ft. wooden handle .

,~

$ 37
RAKE

Bowed-end garden nike
with 14 heavy steel teeft1
and sturdy 54" handle.

FOLDING FENCE
DuPONT, ACRYLIC
COATED STEEL
10-Ft. LONG
t8W' HIGH

S1.2f

Ml DOLE PORT, 0.

JUST ARRIVED
BASEBALL SHQES

MOORE'S
MAIN ST.

~

ss

o

Sheets, If

IN POMEROY

EA.
•

Perry,

1
0

Hoerner (9) and M~Carver . WP
- Santorin i (1 .1I. LP- Hoerner
(0-11 . HR- Fryman (1st) .

Pro Standings

YOUNGEST COACH
INSTITUTE, W.Va. (UP!)Olrl Price, 21, a starting guard
on the 1971·'a- West Virginia
basketbaU,team, Monday was
signed as head coach at West
Virginia State College, making
him the youngesl head coach in
tbe nation .

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Financing Ohio People Since 1912
l .

New, 3b
2
Roberts, ss
3·
G. Wa rd, 1b
1
White, lb
1
Keenan. It
3
Love, p
1
Arnold, rl
2
Thacker. cf
2
Ours. 1b
2
TOTALS
21
GALLIPOLIS
PLAYER-Pas.
AB
Davis, 3b
4
Boone, cf
3

(9)

Downing-Childs Agency ·Int.
PHONE 992-2342

Whatever you buy, It will pay to
atk your dealer for thrifty City
Loan "Action-Plan Financing."

Gullett On·
d
Tonight

REVIVAL NOTED
HARTFORD, W. Va. -The
Rev. Fred Bales, Po~tsrnouth,
will be the evangelist for a
revival at the Churc~ of Christ
In ChrisUan Union nere the
·evening of April 24. There will
be special singing by tbe Bales
famOy . The public Is welcome.

necks, mock turtle necks. A big
assortment bf colors and styles.
No Ironing needed.

"SANDY McGEE" BRAND

American League Standings
By united Pr~~~ 1nternalional
W. L. Pel. GB
Baltimore
2 0 1.000 Detroit
1 0 1.000 '12 111
Milwaukee
1 o 1.000 . '12 1r~oun
Cleveland
1 1 .500 1
Boston
02 .0002
New York
0 2 .000 1
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Kansas City
3 0 1.000 -. HOUSTON (UPI)- Big Lee
California
1 1 .500 1 v, May of the Houston Astros
Minnesota
1 1 .500 1 112 did 't .
b d . th
Oakland
1 1 .500 1 '12
n swmg a a1 urmg e
Texas
1 1 .500 1'12 13-day baseball strike, but he
Chicago
0 J .000 3 went back borne to Cincinnati
Monday's Results
·
b 1
Cleveland 4 Boston o
today w1th a .417 alt ng
Baltimore 4 New York 0
average.
!Only games scheduled)
May,acquiredfrom the Reds
Today's Probable Pitchers
durin• the winter, returned
( Las1 year's records
"&lt;e
In rarentheses)
borne to Cincinnati during the
AI Times EST
strike and spent' his training
American League
d I'll'
·
Cleveland (Tidrow 0-0) at 1lme runmng an
I mg
Boston (Siebert 16-10), .1:30 weights at Spinney Field, home
p.m.
of the Cincinnati Bengals of the
Milwaukee (Lockwood 10-15) N t' at F00 tball Lea
H
at New York ( Keklch 10-9) , 1:30 a ton
gue. e
p.m.
·
didn't pick up a tiat WIW last
Detroit (Coleman 20-9) at Friday, the day before the
Balllmor: :Palmer 20-91. 1:30 season's opener, but he's gone
P·rexas (Gogolewski 6.5) at 5-for-12 in his first three
Chicago {Johnson 12-10), 9:00 games.
p.m.
He went Z-for-1 and drove in
Kansas City {Hedlund 15-8) at two runs, including the tieOakland (McClain 10-21) , 11 :00
p.m.
breaker in the sixth inning, to
Minnesota (Perry 17-17} ai lea~theAStrostoa 7~2vi~tory
California !Ryan 10 - 1~1 . 11 :00 over the San Francisco Giants
Monday nigh!.
p.m. Wednesday's Games
K.C. at Oakland ttwl -nlghll
"! don't feel good at the
Minn at California (night )
plate," May said. "!don'\ have
Texas at Chicago
Detroit at Bait (night)
any rhythm. I'm just punching
Milwaukee at New York
the ball."
.
Cleveland at Boston.
May, who bas averaged :r1
homers the last three seasOIIS,
hasn 't hit for any power yet. All
,lnternotlonal League
five
hits haVil been singles.
Standings
The big one Monday night
United Press International
Tidewater
4 1 .800
came with the -score tied 2-2
Peninsula
2 2 .500 1'12 and runners on flrst 'and third.
Rochester
2 2 .500 1'12
Charleston
1 1 .soo 1'12 It was a line drive to left that
Richmond
1 1 .500 m IICOred Roger Metzger and sent
Toledo
1 2 .333 2
Jlm WyM to second, where he
Louisville
1 4 .200 3
IICOred an insurance run on a
Monday's Results
Charleston 1 Toledo 0
single by Bob Watson.
Louisville 8 Peninsula 4
Houston opens a two-game
Rochester 2 Tidewater 0
series in Cincinnati tonight
{Only games scheduled)
with Ken Forsch, S-8 last
season, going against Don
Gullett, 18-8.

1

SU.N GLASSES

..

,

American League

In parentheses)
All Times EST

CHILDREN'S PlASTIC

THE JUMBO 56 QUART SIZE!!
RUGGED PLASTIC

Regular price Is SL69.
Available In 3 colors.
See Them Wednesday.

644

for three on singles by Wigal,
Eason, Burney and · Dunfee,
plus two bases on balls. They
left three rWiners stranded.
That made it 7-4.
The locals came back in the
bottom of the fifth on a single
by Fetty, Warner's sacrifice,
an error, a walk and Jim
Chandler's pinch single, plus a
double steaL So now it was 9-4.
Dixon's towering home rWI
behind Burney's single in the
sixth narrowed the count to 9-&lt;i.
The blast cleared the·Jeft field
fence by plenty.
The Blacks wrapped it up one
more in the bottom of the sixth.
Well, that's how it goes
sometimes. Meigs Coach Don
Wolfe look it philosophically.
"High school baseball," he
grinned. "Anything can
happen."
Sophomore Bill Painter, with
his two hits, is now 7-for-11 and

Logan In First
After 6-2 Win

(Last Y!ilr'5 records

Pointers Win over:~eigs 10-6

Generation
Rap
. . .

MUG TREE

7-4 Monday bY
Tornado Nine

Os\)ourne, each a single.
RACINE - The Southerri
Rockswalt led the Lancers at
the plate with !hree singles in Local Tornadoes scored two
runs in each of the first three
four at bats.
innings
and one in the sixth to
With the win, the Eagles go
defeat
the Southern Hi gh
to3-2 tosnapa two-game losing
streak. Eastern remains at 2-1 Alumni here !fl&gt;nday night, 7-4 .
The Tornad'oes, coached by
in the Southern Valley Con•
Hilton
Wolfe, were originally
ference . The Eagles play Norlh
Gal!ia today at Eastern · in a scheduled to play the Glouster
Tomcats at Glouster , but wet
key SVAC tilt.
Fed-Hock . 010 011 :i-ll 7 3 grounds on the Tomcat field
Eastern
001 013 4- 9 10 4 forced a postponement. The
Ruckswalt, Smith, (6) (LPI, Tornadoes are now 3-1 overall .
Top hitters for the Tornadoes
Hall (7 ), and Mahoney. Duvall,
Blake, (6), Cross, (WP) (7), were Bruce Hart with a single
and double and Brett Hart with
and Young .
two singles. Other hitters were
Steve Jenkins, a double, and
Jim Hubbard, Mike Nease, Pat
Arnold, and Stan Kiser, each a
single.
For the ex-Southern High
&amp;hool stars, Bill Maynard had
blanked the Yanks on Dave right! It's going to be more fun a double and David Spencer,
McNally's four-hitter. Brooks than doing it ln a longer Darrell Dugan, and Bill
Robinson, who wasn't booed season."
Wickline each a single.
It was Patriot's Day in.
this time, triggered a three-run
Mike Nease, starling on the
seventh with a ru~HCoring Boston but it was a holiday for hill forO the Tornado varsity,
double. The Orioles, going for Cleveland as Milt Wilcox's worked the first four innings,
their fourth straight 100 victory two-hitter and Tom McCraw's fanning one and walking two.
season, will have.more difficul- three-run homer in the eighth Arnold started lhe fifth and
ty reaching !bat goal in a carried the Indians past was relieved by Hubbard in the
·shorter season. But Manager Boston.
same inning after Arnold
Earl Weaver said, "98 to go, ·
walked five and struck out
none. Hubbard got the save
with one base on balls and five
MAJOR
strikeouts. Tom Wolfe hurled
all the way for the Alumni,
LEAGUE
giving up four walks and
National ~eagueStandings
National League
fanning three.
By Uniled Press International
Chicago (Pappas 17-14) at
Other players with th e
East
Pittsburgh !Moose 11 -7), 1:35
W. L. Pet. GB p.m.
Alumni were Jon Arnott,
1 0 1.000
New York ( Koosman 6-111 at Dennis Evans, Jim Wickline,
Montreal
1 1 .500 1 Montreal (Renko 15-141, 2:15
Chicago
George Lawrence, Ron Fuller,
I 1 .500 1 p.m.
New York
1 1 .500 1
St. Louis (Spinks 1-0) at Ronnie Salser, Dennis Hart,
Pittsburgh
1 2 .333 1'12 Philadelphia (Champion 3-51. and Greg Wood. Larry Wolfe :
Philadelphia
1 2 .333 1'12 8:05 p.m .
St. Louis
West .
Los Angeles (Osteen 14-11) at was wnpire .
W. L. Pet. GB Atlanta (Kel)ey 9-5), 8:05 p.m. The varsity Tornadoes play
Los Angeles
2 1 .667
Houston ( Forsoh 8-8) at tonight against the .Symmes
San Diego
1 1- .667
Cincinnati (Gullett 16·-6), 8:05 Valley Vikings at Racine in a
San Francisco
2 1 .667
p.m .
Cincinnati
1 1 .500 11:r San Francisco (Carrithers 5· Southern Valley Conference
Houston
1 2 .333 1 3) at San Diego (Phoebus 3- 11), game, in which the Tornadoes
Atlanta
1 3 .250 1•12 10:30 p.m.
lead with a 2-0 slate.
Monday's Results
Wednesday's Games
Alumni .
000 040 0-4 4 3
St. Louis 5 Philadelphia 4
New York at Mtl , night
Los Angeles 8 Atlanta 3
Chicago at Pitts, ni~ht
Southern
222 001 x- 7 9 3
Houston 7 San Francisco 2
St. Louis at Phlla. n1ght
Wolfe and Dugan. Nease,
(Only games scheduled!
Los Ang at Atlanta, night
(WP), Arnold, (5), Hubbard ,
(Pickup Tuesday's Games)
Houston al Clnci, night
Today's Probable Pitchers
San Fran at San Diego, night (5), and Jenkins.

•

SLIPON HEAVY WEIGH

Alumni Clipped

Houston Clobbers Giants, 7-2

REV. NORRIS

East was one of those realBy Helen and Sue Bottel
ly dangerous players who
think they are expe rts while
they do everything wrong.
HELP IS AS NEAR AS THE PHONE
Dear
Rap:
His choice o! a spade instead of club bid is a case
I am a17-year-old boy who is mature and just like other guys
in point. This time it should except for one thing: I am honosexuaL I like girls as friends . I go
have worked out for him , be·
cause it got his opponents on dates with them and we get along great, so maybe I'm even bito three no -trump and. when sexual.
I hate myself for these queer feelings. I know I'm sick in the
West placed the queen of
clubs on the table, South head and sometimes I think suicide is the only way out. If my
could count to just eight friends ever knew or even suspected, I'd kill myself for sure.
tricks and no furl her .
Is there any way I can get help without embarrassment' South took the first club SCARED
and rallied off six diam ond Dear Helen and Sue :
tricks and East had to make
I am almost 15, and just know I'm going to be a lesbian. I like
five di scards . The ii rst fou r
girls
better than boys, and even had a crush on one of my woman
were r a I h e r easy. He
chucked two spa ~ es, a heart teachers. I can'tstand the way I feeL So I avoid girls now, too,
and a club .
because I'm scared they'llfmdoutl'm -NOTNORMAL
'
The fi flh ca used him a
problem and he solved it in- D~AR AU. OF YOU WHO WORRY ABOUT HOMoSEXUAL
correclly. He jellisoned the TENDENCIES OR INCLINATIONS (AND SO MANY
queen of s pades.
TEENAGERS DO!) :
Now South knocked out the
Help is as near as your telephone. Most cities these days
spade ace. The defense ba , . . lin ,. "Y th II! li ,. "te hot 1- " h
ve criSIS es;
ou
e nes,
en
tnes w ere
cashed thl·ee clubs and South
made the last two tricks and ' young people may call in anonymously and talk out their
his contract.
problems. If more expert or in-depth counseling is indicated,
" I just coul~n'l_ play you they are referred to professionals.
for four clubs, sa td East to
Your County Mental Health Association will also refer you to
close-in help. The nwnber is listed in the phone book, and if you
5•n~ $1 fo&gt; JACOBY MODERN book
can't
find it, ask your operator. ,
to: "Win at Bridge," (c/o tltis rrewsOften
what teenagers believe to be hom95exual feelings are
pa~r), P.O. Box 419, RaJia City
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
only the natural attractions and curiosities of adolescence. Older
teens sometimes fear they are "doomed for life" because of one
his unforlunale partner. " I or two unhappy experiences. Needed here is reassurance, and a
had five myself. "
.
therapist can provide it in a single session•
We ca n't print his par( - · But when there Is a dee(H'ooted problem, then psychiatry is
ner's reply, but we !eel that
il was justified this lime. the answer for, before a patient can help himself, he must stop
The point is lhat East was hating himself .
nol goin g to biiat the hand
"Scared" asked, "Is there any way I can get help withoul
unless his partner held four embarrassment?" No one save your parents need know you are
clubs .
visiting a MenlalH~lth Clinic. Naturally you'd prefer that your
. (NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSH .)
parents don't know either, oot usually a psychiatrist works with
the whole famOy, not just the underage patient. Ancf adult a~
proval is necessary before you receive treatrnent, in most states.
Summing it up : if you're worried about your "normalcy"
don't be afraid to express your fears. You'd be surprised hilw
many others worry too - and how often their fears are unFINISH SEtOND
founded. - HELEN
The Meigs Marauder golf
learn finished second in a fo ur- Dear Sue and Helen:
way malch at Logan Monday
I am 15, and Saturday I got drun~ for the first and last time.
night.
Coac h
Nolan But maybe that's one time too many. It was at a party, and this
Swackhammer's Marauder guy encouraged me on a liquor spree. After a whOe 1 encouraged
linkslers posted a fine 231 him, I guess, too. Anyway I wa:in 't in the best condition for
score, second behind Logan's ·resisting and I doq't really know what I did, but I know I made a
218. Nelsonville-York was third big fool of myself.
with a 236 and Miller finished a
Some kids brought me home and dwnped me on the front
distant fourth, swinging 281
lawn, then rang the doorbell and drove off. So my mother found
times.
me almosl passed out. Naturally I'm grounded and in big trouble
and so awfully ashamed.
·
The kids know about'it, but won't tell me what! did. The guy
probably doesn't remember elther, exactly. I haven't seen him
· since, but when I do, should I apologize or expeet him to? Am I
more to blame than he Is? .- E.A.
Dear E.:
·
M~SON
I'd expecl an apology from HIM : He was the one wbo "encouraged'' you- and sometimes it's pretty hard to say ''No." If
he doesn't tell you he's sorry, then pretend he doesn't exist. Not A Motor RouiP. :suE
Dear E.:
You were both to blame, and so were the kids wbo dumped
you on the fronl lawn and ran! Apologies? Fine, but the best
.Ph. 614-992·2156
solution Is: CHANGE CROWDS! - HELE!II

Carriers For

CARRIER ·
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Cathy Pickens, Rosemary

-M~n :

Voss . 483, N. Carsey 449. P.

April 12, 1912

Donna Lantz, Glenda Lawson,
Sherri ·McCain, Chris Miller, Owen-Holter
Kim Mowery, Diane Norris, Morrow-Moore

: cHESTER ·L. TANNEttiLL,

Pass 3 N.T.
Pass
Opening lead-• Q

.WANTED!

"NOTICE"

High Series

595, ·r . Morrow 510 i D. ONen
502. High Series- Women: M .

POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Late Mi•ed

Cllrd, Brenda Donahue, Donna
Francis, Denise Hendricks,

Owen-·

..

Eagles Rilly, Edge F-H 9-8

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA ·.

· 677; Owen·

HnltP.r 671.

Local Bowling

Lanning, Pam Manley, Debbie
Ohlinger. Connie Radford,
L-.nne Sebo, Karla Beal, Susy

The OaiiJ Setltinel

3¥
P.oss

. ~ A pr~clous one from us has By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
' gone,f A pla'ce Is vacant In my

home, Which will never be
tilled.
Sadly missed by his wife,
Roxie and daughters, VIolet
Batey and Mlldren Mill iron,
grandchildren, and great grandchildren.
4-t8-11c

Harris; Julia Holter, Connie

Morrow~}lloore

S-TbeDaOySenttnet,MI~o)..o.,AprlliB,Im ~·

DEVOTED TD THE

Holter 1842; High Team Game
- Rosenbaum-Meadows 693;

Smith, Vicki Spencer, Jeannie
(Continued from Page I) ·
Stanley,
Jill Swain, Jane
Van Meter. Patti W.ell. Dianna . Thomas, Sandra
Meter,
White, Sandy Wood, Venedla PaHl ·weii ,....Veri_ediaVan
Young.
Young, Donna Francis, Nancy
200
Hours
Andrea
Gill. Patty Glaze, Amy Hamm, Dewhurst,
Sheila
Folmer·
Sheila Hawk, Debbie Heaton, Melanie Hackett, Jill Harris,,
Den ise Hendricks. Connie
. Lanning , Debbie
Herdman, Becky Hockman, Connie
Lavalley,
Susy Card, Brenda
Debbie Jeffers, Donna Lantz,
Donahue,
Sherri
Kim
Glenda Lawson, Diane Lewis, MOwery'; Connie McCain,
Smith,
Jane
Sherri McCain, Debbie Me'
. Daniel. Chris Miller; Pa.ula Thomas.
300 Hours - Melissa Proffitt:.
Morris . Kim Mowery. Diane Chris Miller.
Norris, , Cathv Pickens . . Calhv
500 Hours De Lene
Rayburn, Rosemary Re~.
Del'egaJ, Connie ' Grueser,
100 Hours- Opal Berry, J• ., Mllisa.
Ri zer.
Betzing, Terry Bird, Sheila · 600 Hours
- Becky Wright.
Folmer, Melanie Hackett. Jill

West Virginia and Indiana.
The Rev. Mr. Norris Is
married to the former Erma
Boring of Harrisonville.
Residents of Racine, they bave
four daughters, Diana, 17;
Sandra, 14; Debra, 12, and
Unda, II.
The booklet will go on sale
Wednesday at $1 a copy at _the
Middleport Book Store, the
New York Clothing House in .
Pomeroy, and the Racine
De par tmenl
Store.
All
proceeds will be used in church
work.

A Set Was There, But--NORTH

Morrow- Moore ~ l886;

services in this area and in

WIN AT BRIDGE

an'tone else who helped in

anoyway. Mrs. Sadie Th.uener
and fam ily.
4- 18-llp

Ohio University, Rio Grande
College and a religious school ·
in Nas~vllle , Tenn. ·
·
He bas been a pastor nine
years. He served as a pastor of;
the former Federated Church,
now the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy, eight months an~ as
pastor of the pomeroy Fifst
Baptist Church the same
length of lime. He was pastor ·
of · . lhe
Langsville
Christian
Congregational
Church thre~ years and of the
Reedsville Charge, five
churches, one year, He
pastored the Letart Methodist
Charge a year and a half. This
was also composed of five
churches.
He has held evangelistic

Rosenbaum-Meadows
56
f!lake$1ee-Hoyt·28
High · Team Series
Rosenbaum . Meadows · 1930;

�•

•

t

•-Tile Dill)' 8emlnel,~. o.,Aprll 11,1m
.

' '

-

r ·w;;rrrrrrrr: ... :
·
n
•
.
.
·130 at Grange
'

Memoriat ·Held

Ft''ve Attended
Presbyterial

Pomeroy .
Personal Notes

Pastor Discusses His Book
The Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastor of Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, discussed .. his book
"Look Who's Killing God" at
the Thursday night meeting of
Eleanor Circle at Heath United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Roscoe Wise, program
chairman , introduced the
minister who cornrnen ted on
why he wrote the book and
gave a general review of the
contents.
Mr . William Compton
·presided· at the session with
Mrs. Wise and Mrs. Sieve
Houchi~s announcing that
Bible School wiD be held July 7-

14 at Heath Church. Teena_gers
from Logan will conduct the
school following a training
session at a church camp.
A potluck for the entire
church to be held sometime the
week of May 7 was planned
with the Rev. Robert
Bwngarner to have charge of
the program. Members were
advised that contributions to a
memorial for the late Miss
Bess Ssnborn are to be given to
Mrs. Compton. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Wise,
Mrs. Eddie Blake, and Mrs.
Ernie Fraser.

YouthsPresentTalentNight
Talent night was observed
Sunday evening at the Middleport First Baptist Church
with a progr~m sponsored by
the youth.
Following an opening hymn,
the Rev. and Mrs. Charles
Simons and children, Carol and
Wes, sang two choruses, "I'll
Be A Sunbeam" and "Sing and
Shout Out." Judy Owen had a

poem,

~~ I

Am An American/'

Lori Kloes played a piano solo,
and Mrs. Beulah White and
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall sang
"Shall I Crucify My Saviour."
There was a trumpet duel by
Marc Fultz and Barbara Anthony with Mrs. Gerald Anthony at the plan!, and a
marimba solo by. Barbara,
"Mansion Over the Hilltop."

Pre-Insfection
Visit is Made
--Mrs. Mar1ene Logston,
.deputy grand matron, made a
pre -inspection , visit · to
Harrisonville Chapter, Order
of the Eastern Star, Tuesday
night. Initiatory work for two
new members was held with
Mrs. Logston complimenting
the officers on their work. Also
present for the meeting was
!Ms. Roberts K. Mindling, past
grand matron.
Mrs. Unda Sheets, associate
matron, announced a rwnmage sale to be held April27-29
in the basement of the King
Builder Supply Co. In Middleport. Those with rummage ·
to contribute are asked to
contact either Mrs. Sheets at
992-5792, or Mrs. Lois Pauley,
992-5792.

•

OPENS TONIGHT
The Rev. Charles Davidson,
Jacbon, wtn be evangellst at
revival services which open at
7:30 IIIla ewnilig at the Middleport Penlecoatal Olurch,
South 'lblrd Ave., Middleport.
The Rev •. Mr. Davidson, formeriy of Tezaa, Ia now
· Presbyter fer the Soulhe811em
aedlon ol Oblo. 'llle Rev.
WlWam L. Knittel, Jlll!ll«,
allnda an lnvitallon to' the
pabUc.

Mrs. White presented a
monologue, "Dorthy Dumb
Cans," Venida Gibbs had a
piano solo, "He," and Danny
Thompson sang "I Just Keep
Trusting My Lord." There was
a poem, "I Believe" by Trina
Gibbs, and a quartet composed
of Trina, Velvet Swisher,
Marty Krawsczyn, and Patty
Boyles, sang "If You Are a
Christian, Then You Know It."
They were joined in a chorus
by the congregation with the
closing prayer being given by
Lacey Barton.

Spring Pouvior
Held in Newport
Mrs. Mary Ma-rtin of
Pomeroy, departemental
chapeau of the Ohio Eight and
Forty, and Miss Dorothy oQIIe,
national chapeau, were
honored guests at .the spring
pouvior of the Kentucky
Deparlemental Salon 48,
staged Sunday at the Beverly
Hills Country Club at Newport,
Ky.
Accompanying Mrs. Martin
to the pourvior were Mrs.
Mrytle Walker . of Racine,
deparlemental le secretairecassiere, and Mrs. Pearl

Knapp, stale resolutions
chairman. All are members of
the Meigs County Ssjon 710.
Mrs. Mae Wilson, Ia archivisle departemental and
national scrapbook chairman,
presented gifts to all three of
the Meigs CoUnty women. Miss
Dolle presented a horse replica
to Mrs. Martin in conjunction
with a racing theme being
carried out in · the national
Eight and Forty program.

Meigs

Transfers

FIGHT RESULTS
CIDCAGO (UPI) - Tap
Harris, 152¥•, Cleveland,
defeated Billy Goodwin, 1531!1,
Milwaukee, in eight · rounds
Monday night.
Ringo Carrington, 1381!1,
Cleveland, defeated Tom
Rarritlno, 138, Milwaukee, in
six rounds.

'

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Symphony Cond~l« Leopold
Stokowski was born April 18, :
1882.

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Middleport
Personal Notes

Count Your
Blessings::
'W'ith the
Elegant

•••••••••••

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CHEESE SPREAD...~~~~~~~~................ lb. 79"
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CLUB TO MEET
sYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club
wtnmeetat lOa.m. Wednesday
at tbe headquarters, Municipal
Park. Abusiness session In the
forenoon wiD IMr followed by a
potluck hmch at noon. 'llle
afternoon will be spent In
malting gift wrapping paper
beads with Mra. Howard Nolan
· as leader. Hllllesses are Elva
Dailey and Pauline Morarlty.

ECK BONES
lbs.

BETTER

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

SUPERIORS FRESH PORK

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~- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprill8, 1972

/}(J(/ND YO/Ill liST8111/N

LETART Farm Boys 4-H ~~~
Club, 7 p.nt. Wednesday at
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Zeigler of"
Le4trt Falls Community Hall.
Morgantown,
W. Va. were
POMEROY
Women 's
11
weekend
guests
of Mrs. B. B.
Bow 1·mg Assn., . 12 :o"Q p.m.
meeting at the Pomeroy Lanes. Zeigler and Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Davenport. Arriving today for
Election of ·officers.
·
a
visit were Mrs. C. H. Lilly
THURSDAY
WfLUNG WORKERS Class, and son of Pineville, W. Va.
Enterprise United Methodist Easter weekend guests were
Ch!U'ch, 7:30 Thursday at the Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Grimes of
Ellicott City, Md. and Pam
home of Mrs . Dale Davis.
"Zeigler of Belts, Md. ·
·
CLASS 12, 7:30 Thursday
tings
night, at Heath Unit~d
Thursday guest of 1\11'. and
Mrs. Clyde Andrews.
' · Methodist . Church. Mrs. Mrs . Paul Grueser was
REVIVAL .Monday through Forrest Bachtel to present the Howard Snider of Wheeling, W.
April30at Long Bottom Uni.ted· , program. Mrs. c. E. Young ," Va ., son·in-Jaw of Mrs.
Methodist Church with William Mrs. Norman Wayland, Miss Grueser. Snider has been
Hatfield as evangelist.' Special Frieda Faehnle, and Mrs. Orin promoted
by
Sherman
music, services, 7:30 each Smith, hostesses.
Williams to general sales
evening. Public invited.
M-IDDLEPORT Child manager and wiU be moving to
REV. CLARENCE Kopp, Conservation League, 7:30 Cleveland in the near future.
Jr., Columbus, speaking and Thursday at the Meigs Inn.
showing slides of Holy Land, Annual dinner m.eeting .
· u Monday Members may take a guest.
Mr. and Mrs. Eimer John7: 30 each evemn.
thVI'tedrou.gh April 23. "!'blic InROCK SPRINGS Better son, Jr. of Wheeling, W. Va.
were weekend guests of Mr.
SPECIAL SERVICES Health Club, 1'i5 p.m. Thurs- and Mrs. Paul Grueser. On
day, home of Mrs. Arlee Ab1
a birthstone
through Friday at Middleport" bolt. Mrs. William Witte , Ssturday evening Mrs. Mabe
Actl·on Church of Chrt'st' 7' 30 program; Mrs. Welby Whaley, Wolfe entertained with a
fin· each. child
each evening with David contest.
dinner party In observance of
As Cornelia, famed
Stauffer, Athens, speaking.
LAUREL CLIFF Better Mrs. Grueser's birthday anmother of Ancient Rome·,
Special music, public invited. Health Club, 7:30 Thursday, niversary.
said of her children . ...
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY home of Mrs. Pearl Parker.
"These are my jewels."
Mrs. Ural Thomas returned
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at Veterans
FAMILY NIGHT potluck,
The modern way of
to
Columbus Sunday after
' 1Counting YOJ.Jr BlessMemorial Hospital. Slate Grace Episcopal Church
visiting
here
several
days
with
ing
s" is with the ele Highway Patrol speaker on women to hosl. 6:30 p.m..
ganlly
new Cornelia En·
women drIvers .
Speaker will be the Rev . Mr. her brother-in-law and sister,
semble.
1
SALISBURY PTA, Tuesday, David Allardyce, rector of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Turner,
1 Available in 14K yellow
Middleport,
and
in
Racine
with
7:30p.m. Fifth an~ sixth grade Grace Church, Circieville.
or white gold, or alterband students to present
M E 1 G s c 0 u N T y Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson.
nate combination of golds.
program; election of officers. Alcoholism -and Drug Abuse She returned to Columbus
Two rings in one .. . -in FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 7:30 Committee, 7:30 p.m. Thurs- Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
ner stone -~et band can
Tuesday night at Trinity day at st. Paul Lutheran Robert Roush who bad spent
be worn attractively withChurch. Mr3. W. H. Perrin to Chu_rch, Pomeroy . Robert the weekend with the Watsons.
out
guard ring.
Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Turner and
present the program.
&amp;ll96J Corn1111 's Jewels~
SOUTHERN Local Band Sweet, health education con- Mrs. Watson, aU sisters, atsu14tnl of the Ohio Department
tended the Daughters of
Goessler's Jewelry
Boosters Tuesday, 7' 30 p.m. at of Health, guest speaker.
America
rally
at
Syracuse
the high school.
FRIDAy
• MEIGS ATHLETIC
MEIGS HIGH School Senior Thursday.
Mrs. L. E. Triplett spent the
Boosters, 7:30Tuesday night at Class play, "Butler on the
weekend
In AshviiJe visiting
the high school. ·
Bacon," 8 p.m. Friday night at
WEDNESDAY
the high school. Admission 50 her sister, Mrs. Ida Cook.
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew cents for students, $1 for
Webster Post 39, American adults. Tickets will be sold at ====
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 Wed- the door·.
nesday, home of Mrs. Harry
FRIDAY
Houdashelt, Middleport.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR Royal Arch Masons, Friday,
Gardeners, Wednesday night, 7:30 Masonic Temple, Royal
Ohio Power Co., Pomeroy, arch degree to be conferred.
following open garden club
THIRD FRIDAY Club,
IJleeling being held there.
Friday, 7:30p.m. at the home
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, of Mrs. Ben Neultling due to
Royal and Select Masters will the illness of Mrs. Carrie ·
hold a staled meeting on Meinhart.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
VALUD
CARD PARTY, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday , Orchid Room,
Pomeroy. Sponsored by two
chapters, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, proceeds to cancer
crusade.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club open meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Ohio Power Co. All Meigs
FURNnull,
garden club members invited.
Miss Edelene Wood of 210 E. 2nd
Mllllll£PORT, 0.
Pomeroy
Parkersburg, guest speaker,
Phone 992 -5428
on wild fonds.

PARTY GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Brinker,
Middleport, entertained
recently with a party in observance of their first an"
niversary. Guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Hudson, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Stephenson, and
Harriet B. Sterrett, Com., Frank (Penny) Dill. Gifts were
Norman E. Frederick, dec., to presented to the couple and
Goldie M. Frederick, 43'14 A., cake and ice cream were
served. Sending gifts were
Chesler.
William B. Witte, Ssrah Sue Mrs. Mildred Hubbard, Mr.
Wille to Clair F. Hunt, Shirley and Mrs. Robert Manley and
daughters, and Mrs. John
A. Hunt, Lots, Chester.
Lauerne Dodson, dec'd., to Bacon.
James A. Jenkins, Cert.
Trans., Middleport.
RECEPTION PLANNED
Goldie F . Hawk to Roy F.
Mr.
and Mrs. Perry Smith of
Burton, Lot, Pomeroy.
New
Lexington,
wiU observe
Paul Basim Jr., Opal Basim
their
golden
wedding
anto Donald R. Pullins, Paulette
niversary Sunday with an open
Pullins, .6 A., Olive.
Leona M. Ebersbach to reception at the Rehoboth
Maurice Durst, Marcella Grange Hall. Friends and
relatives will be received
Durst, Lot, Bradbury.
throughout
the day. Mr. and
Elwood Bowers, Eileen
Bowers, William Matlack, Ula Mrs. Smith are former Meigs
Matlack to Columbia Gas of County residents.
Ohio, Inc., R-Way, Chester.
Darrell Landon, Esther
SON BORN ON llml
Landon to Donald G. Guthrie,
SYRACUSE
- Mr. and Mrs.
Nora D. Guthrie, Lot, Olive.
Bryan
Lee
Yonker
of Syracuse
Bernard V. Fultz to Alogsuis
A. Grueser, Ann Sue Grueser, are announcing tbe birth of
their first child, a son, Derek
Lots, Middleport.
William Pooler, Jr., Alma Lee, April 10 at the Holzer ·
Jean Pooler to Paul E. Harris, Medical Center. Tbe infant
Marylyn A. Harris, 39 A., weighed six pounds, 13 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Chester.
Thomas Diddle to Maxine Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Johnson,
Racine , and the palernal
Diddle, 65 A., Lebanon.
grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. ,
John W. Davis, Nan C. Davis
F.
Yonker,
Letart, W.
Olarles
to Bernice Ann Durst, Lot,
Va. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Johnson
Middleport.
of Racine, RFD; Mra. Mabel
Roush, Racine, Mrs. Jessie
Yonker, Florida, and Mra.
REIBER ASSIGNED
Helen Grinstead, Letart, W.
RACINE - Navy Seaman Va. are great-grandparents.
Recruit Terry L. Reiber, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Reiber
SPAGHETrl SATURDAY.
of Route I, Racine, graduated
A
spaghetti dinner will be
from recruit training at the
served Ssturday from 4 to 8
Naval Training Center at Ssn
p.m. at the American Legion
Diego. A 1969 graduate of
11all In Pomeroy sponsored by
Southern High School, he is
scheduled to report to the Ladles Auxlllary. Price will
Boilerman "A" School, Great be .1.50 for adults and $1 for
children under 12.
Lakes, JU.

Property

•• .::.:

.TUESDAY
.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, ~:30
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Debbie Finlaw. Program
on architecture by · Mrs.
Jeanette Thomas . and Mrs.
Judy Crooks . Mrs . Carol
Adams and Mrs. Fin law,
hostesses.
EVANGELINE- Missionary Society of Pomeroy Church of Christ
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at home of

Halo If Htlf

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i'lno Mesh Lin&gt;

jF IIter. ;:.'- ·' ·
w....c.-.uin
MJ.YTAO ·'"

RUTlAND
.. ·fURNITURE
.

'SUP·ER MARKET • Open Daiiy 9 to. 10 • Sun.

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C~tr'IICI

.jl42·4211

bag

Antique white cradlephone

RIG torpol

'•

501b.$,00

8 SIZE,.

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We Accept Federal FOOd Otnmp:l

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Comer Mill and Seccmd'Sts.

Rutland, o.
I

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•

· .trtner · Social

Approxilllately 130 persons Starkey, the Ohio State Grange
attended the annual dinner of gatekeeper.
Cbarlene Hoefli,-b
992·5292
the Meil(S County Pomona
Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan,
·Grange Friday night at the secretary, read the history of
Sslisbury school under the Pomona Grange prepared· by
auspices of Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Ruby Halliday and Mrs.
deputy state master of Meigs Della Radekin. Atki~s noted
County, and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, U~at Mrs. Ora Ogdin Profitt,
deputy junior matron of Meigs unable to attend the dinner due
County,
with Norman . Will, to high water; has been a
Amemorial trlbule to Mrs. I. Struble costumed as Uttle
member of the grange for 68
B. Weed, long-time member of Jack Horner, greeted the P"mona master, assisting·.
Mrs . Atkins gave grace years, the longest of anyone in
the Happy Harvesters Class of guests who followed limericks
Trinity Church, highlighted the to arrive at the place of the preceding the dinner. There the county, Recognized was
was a welcome by the Pomona Mrs. Halliday who has had
• Friday night maeting of the party.
class.
·
·
An arrangement of red master. The program con- ~ontin ual membership in
The members sang "How roses donated by. Francis slsled of piano music by Keith grange for 64 years.
A vole of thanks was exGreat Thou Art" with Miss Florists and a grave replica Ashley, remarks by Atkins, a
Erma Smith reading scripture bearing the inscription "At baton-dance routine by the t,ended to Mrs. Fred Goeglein
from Matthew 6. She 'also read Res.t" carrying out tbe theme Karr sisters, and a talk by Earl and Mrs. Fred Leifheit, cooks
who prepared liJe dinner, and
an article, "She lived Just One of the party, were used on the
those · providing the enDay ala Time," a poem, "Be a ' table. Favors were rainhats.
tertainment.
Bulwark to Your Church and Mrs. Louis Reibel gave
.
Your Home," and concluded devotions, which included a
Group singing of "Gnd Be
With You" and the benediction
with prayer.
hymn sing, a poem, " 'Twas a
concluded the evening.
lt was decided that the class Shaep Not a .Lainb in the
wiUsponsora mother-daughter Parable," and prayer.
Five members of the Midbanquet on Sunday evening,
Games were played with dleport
First
United ~P:OJIIOMI-.!Wd~Pml"WWi~~
May 7, and will serve a wed- prizes going to Mrs. Homer Presbyterian Church were in.
ding reception on June. 24. Holler, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Swan, &lt;;hillicothe Friday for the
Members signed a card for Mrs. Frecker, Mrs. Fred spring meeting of the Scioto
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart who is Dessauer, Mrs. Clarence Presbyterial.
Ul.
Massar, Mra. Oris Ginther,
Going from here were Mrs.
Cards of thanks were read Mrs. Struble, Mrs. Henry Thomas Rue, Mrs. Dwight
Mra. Mildred Frank and
lrom Mr. and Mrs. James Reibel, and . Mrs. Lawrence Zavitz, Mrs. Richard Karr,
Clatworthy, the I. B. Weed LaMing. Gelling the lucky Mrs. Thomas Kelly, and Mrs. Mrs. Inez Carson attended the
family, and Mrs. Ben Neutzling plates for the "prize" of Dwight Wallace. "Thy.God, My wedding of Miss San(Jta
for flowers sent at the death 1lf washing the dishes were Mrs. God" was the theme of the Trussell and Richard Kerns at
ber brother, Arthur Ebers- Wolfe, 1\irs. Ullle Hauck, Mrs. meeting with Mrs. Donald the Chester United Methodist
bach. A check for bottle cape Dessauer, and Mrs. Frecker. Vallas, president of the Scioto Church on April 9.
Weekend guest of Mrs. Allee
.was presented, and Mrs. Dale
Hostesses were Mrs. Ben Presbyterial presiding.
Dodson
at her Long Bottom
Smith turned In funds from the Neutzllng, Mrs. Everett
Mrs. Richard Holl!ard, the
home
was
Mrs. Mildred Frank.
Lenten breakfast. Donations to Dailey, Mrs. Ruby Erb, Mrs. 1971 Columbus Ciiizen's Choice
VIsiting
there
on Ssturday was
the class 'Were acknowledged Reibel, and Mrs. Freda Duffey. of Churchwoman of the Year,
from the Clatworthys, Mrs. Others attending were Mrs. was lhe guest speaker. She Mrs. Edith Osborne.
Mr. and Mra. Warden Ours
Mabel Wolfe, Mrs. ArvUia Roy Seyfried, Mrs. Stella used "An East Africa Haphad
as their guests Sslurday
Frecker, and Mrs. Eulah Kloes, Mrs. Clara Karr, Mrs. pening" as her theme and
Swan.
Clarence Headley, Mrs. Gladys talked on what Presbylerian night their grandsons, Mark
The meeting was preceded Cuckler,
Mrs.
Ethel Women in the United States are and David of Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. David Henry
by tbe April fun party which WUllamson, Mrs. John Terrell, doing for the women in Mrica.
and children of Columbus were
started with a creamed baked Mrs. PhU Meinhart, Miss Sybil
weekend guests of Mr. and
chicken dinner. Mrs. Joe Ebersbach.
Mrs. Patrick Lochary.

:.,,,_.,rr:;;•;tl
n.
Calendar ~ ·. ·

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PHONE: 992·3480
"IN. iieservo The

Ri~ht T0

Limit Ouonlilies"

!ftQDLEPORT. 0.

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'

Memoriat ·Held

Ft''ve Attended
Presbyterial

Pomeroy .
Personal Notes

Pastor Discusses His Book
The Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastor of Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, discussed .. his book
"Look Who's Killing God" at
the Thursday night meeting of
Eleanor Circle at Heath United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Roscoe Wise, program
chairman , introduced the
minister who cornrnen ted on
why he wrote the book and
gave a general review of the
contents.
Mr . William Compton
·presided· at the session with
Mrs. Wise and Mrs. Sieve
Houchi~s announcing that
Bible School wiD be held July 7-

14 at Heath Church. Teena_gers
from Logan will conduct the
school following a training
session at a church camp.
A potluck for the entire
church to be held sometime the
week of May 7 was planned
with the Rev. Robert
Bwngarner to have charge of
the program. Members were
advised that contributions to a
memorial for the late Miss
Bess Ssnborn are to be given to
Mrs. Compton. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Wise,
Mrs. Eddie Blake, and Mrs.
Ernie Fraser.

YouthsPresentTalentNight
Talent night was observed
Sunday evening at the Middleport First Baptist Church
with a progr~m sponsored by
the youth.
Following an opening hymn,
the Rev. and Mrs. Charles
Simons and children, Carol and
Wes, sang two choruses, "I'll
Be A Sunbeam" and "Sing and
Shout Out." Judy Owen had a

poem,

~~ I

Am An American/'

Lori Kloes played a piano solo,
and Mrs. Beulah White and
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall sang
"Shall I Crucify My Saviour."
There was a trumpet duel by
Marc Fultz and Barbara Anthony with Mrs. Gerald Anthony at the plan!, and a
marimba solo by. Barbara,
"Mansion Over the Hilltop."

Pre-Insfection
Visit is Made
--Mrs. Mar1ene Logston,
.deputy grand matron, made a
pre -inspection , visit · to
Harrisonville Chapter, Order
of the Eastern Star, Tuesday
night. Initiatory work for two
new members was held with
Mrs. Logston complimenting
the officers on their work. Also
present for the meeting was
!Ms. Roberts K. Mindling, past
grand matron.
Mrs. Unda Sheets, associate
matron, announced a rwnmage sale to be held April27-29
in the basement of the King
Builder Supply Co. In Middleport. Those with rummage ·
to contribute are asked to
contact either Mrs. Sheets at
992-5792, or Mrs. Lois Pauley,
992-5792.

•

OPENS TONIGHT
The Rev. Charles Davidson,
Jacbon, wtn be evangellst at
revival services which open at
7:30 IIIla ewnilig at the Middleport Penlecoatal Olurch,
South 'lblrd Ave., Middleport.
The Rev •. Mr. Davidson, formeriy of Tezaa, Ia now
· Presbyter fer the Soulhe811em
aedlon ol Oblo. 'llle Rev.
WlWam L. Knittel, Jlll!ll«,
allnda an lnvitallon to' the
pabUc.

Mrs. White presented a
monologue, "Dorthy Dumb
Cans," Venida Gibbs had a
piano solo, "He," and Danny
Thompson sang "I Just Keep
Trusting My Lord." There was
a poem, "I Believe" by Trina
Gibbs, and a quartet composed
of Trina, Velvet Swisher,
Marty Krawsczyn, and Patty
Boyles, sang "If You Are a
Christian, Then You Know It."
They were joined in a chorus
by the congregation with the
closing prayer being given by
Lacey Barton.

Spring Pouvior
Held in Newport
Mrs. Mary Ma-rtin of
Pomeroy, departemental
chapeau of the Ohio Eight and
Forty, and Miss Dorothy oQIIe,
national chapeau, were
honored guests at .the spring
pouvior of the Kentucky
Deparlemental Salon 48,
staged Sunday at the Beverly
Hills Country Club at Newport,
Ky.
Accompanying Mrs. Martin
to the pourvior were Mrs.
Mrytle Walker . of Racine,
deparlemental le secretairecassiere, and Mrs. Pearl

Knapp, stale resolutions
chairman. All are members of
the Meigs County Ssjon 710.
Mrs. Mae Wilson, Ia archivisle departemental and
national scrapbook chairman,
presented gifts to all three of
the Meigs CoUnty women. Miss
Dolle presented a horse replica
to Mrs. Martin in conjunction
with a racing theme being
carried out in · the national
Eight and Forty program.

Meigs

Transfers

FIGHT RESULTS
CIDCAGO (UPI) - Tap
Harris, 152¥•, Cleveland,
defeated Billy Goodwin, 1531!1,
Milwaukee, in eight · rounds
Monday night.
Ringo Carrington, 1381!1,
Cleveland, defeated Tom
Rarritlno, 138, Milwaukee, in
six rounds.

'

.•. ,., ....
.ez .... i..tX.i.&amp;

) %

Symphony Cond~l« Leopold
Stokowski was born April 18, :
1882.

\. ..

~

*!

*'

Middleport
Personal Notes

Count Your
Blessings::
'W'ith the
Elegant

•••••••••••

~~kl,trm~~&amp;i •
twa

"IT'S TRUE"

in one

CHOPPED SIRLOIN

STEAK.............~
BACON ...~~~.~~...................................... Ib. 79"
CHEESE SPREAD...~~~~~~~~................ lb. 79"
HAM SPREAD ........~?.~.~~~.~~................. lb. 79'-

lb.

SUPERIORS
BRAUNSCHWEIGER

---

.QU~EN OF SCOT

11

COFFEE CREAMERREESE

l eanut Butter

2-HOUR
·CLEANING

FOSTER
ATO JUICE

(Upon Request)

.oz.] 9~

'JAR

$}

3
oz.$}
3
10

_ PKG.

46
.CANS

SCOITS VIVA ASSORTED

BAKER

PAPER ·TOWELS

3

JUMBO
ROLLS

$_1

CRACKER SALE

6u$}
3120L$1 3

ARMOUR'S

MIX OR MATCH
SCOT LAD SALTINES - HI-HO'S
FIRESIDE GRAHAMS

CANS

POTTED MEAT
BILTMORE CANNED

o

l,lb.
boxes

CANS

MEAT ·

',.

SCQT
FRENCH FRIES .. 5 LB.
OR .
KRINKLE KUTS BAG

1·• 00

I

1'

8

12 oz.

'

BEEF
CHICKEN
TURKEY

...

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REG.

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ONLY

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CREAM
PIES

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POTATO CHIPS

cans

BANQUET

!

•

32oz.

MISTER BEE

WEDNESDAY ONLY SPECIAL

r

Then call her up on it and ask her where
she's been all your life
,
You can have one of these or a selection
of other Decorator Thlephones. Just pick

BUFFET SUPPERS

I

REAMES
EGG
NOODLES

'OR ONCAR

FAYGO DIET - SUGAR FREE

•

.

49¢

. lb.

251 OFF

each

OXYDOL
KING SIZE

THURSDAY ONLY SALE!
'

up your ordinary phone and call your
General Telephone business office. They
will give you all the details.

RC COLA

DAIRY BUYS

General Telephone·

Brocade cradlephone

~

SEALTEST .

8
.

I

ICE CREAM........~. ~.79 ·

Ilk

16 Of.

69~.

FRIDAY ONLY SPECIAL!
UNCLASSIFIED - lARGE SIZE

EGGS

FAIRMONT ·

dOt

FUDGE .BARS................ ~: . ..
•

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Cholct

1

1tem ps .

,w 1 t

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Gre&lt;:ian cameo cradlephone

confr·ol.
Filter o~ P.ower

Fin Agttator.

POT-ATOES

.

... .,.irlili-Pr"tls·

Moylot

CLUB TO MEET
sYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club
wtnmeetat lOa.m. Wednesday
at tbe headquarters, Municipal
Park. Abusiness session In the
forenoon wiD IMr followed by a
potluck hmch at noon. 'llle
afternoon will be spent In
malting gift wrapping paper
beads with Mra. Howard Nolan
· as leader. Hllllesses are Elva
Dailey and Pauline Morarlty.

ECK BONES
lbs.

BETTER

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

SUPERIORS FRESH PORK

I

SMOKED

•

ChewI

•

~- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprill8, 1972

/}(J(/ND YO/Ill liST8111/N

LETART Farm Boys 4-H ~~~
Club, 7 p.nt. Wednesday at
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Zeigler of"
Le4trt Falls Community Hall.
Morgantown,
W. Va. were
POMEROY
Women 's
11
weekend
guests
of Mrs. B. B.
Bow 1·mg Assn., . 12 :o"Q p.m.
meeting at the Pomeroy Lanes. Zeigler and Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Davenport. Arriving today for
Election of ·officers.
·
a
visit were Mrs. C. H. Lilly
THURSDAY
WfLUNG WORKERS Class, and son of Pineville, W. Va.
Enterprise United Methodist Easter weekend guests were
Ch!U'ch, 7:30 Thursday at the Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Grimes of
Ellicott City, Md. and Pam
home of Mrs . Dale Davis.
"Zeigler of Belts, Md. ·
·
CLASS 12, 7:30 Thursday
tings
night, at Heath Unit~d
Thursday guest of 1\11'. and
Mrs. Clyde Andrews.
' · Methodist . Church. Mrs. Mrs . Paul Grueser was
REVIVAL .Monday through Forrest Bachtel to present the Howard Snider of Wheeling, W.
April30at Long Bottom Uni.ted· , program. Mrs. c. E. Young ," Va ., son·in-Jaw of Mrs.
Methodist Church with William Mrs. Norman Wayland, Miss Grueser. Snider has been
Hatfield as evangelist.' Special Frieda Faehnle, and Mrs. Orin promoted
by
Sherman
music, services, 7:30 each Smith, hostesses.
Williams to general sales
evening. Public invited.
M-IDDLEPORT Child manager and wiU be moving to
REV. CLARENCE Kopp, Conservation League, 7:30 Cleveland in the near future.
Jr., Columbus, speaking and Thursday at the Meigs Inn.
showing slides of Holy Land, Annual dinner m.eeting .
· u Monday Members may take a guest.
Mr. and Mrs. Eimer John7: 30 each evemn.
thVI'tedrou.gh April 23. "!'blic InROCK SPRINGS Better son, Jr. of Wheeling, W. Va.
were weekend guests of Mr.
SPECIAL SERVICES Health Club, 1'i5 p.m. Thurs- and Mrs. Paul Grueser. On
day, home of Mrs. Arlee Ab1
a birthstone
through Friday at Middleport" bolt. Mrs. William Witte , Ssturday evening Mrs. Mabe
Actl·on Church of Chrt'st' 7' 30 program; Mrs. Welby Whaley, Wolfe entertained with a
fin· each. child
each evening with David contest.
dinner party In observance of
As Cornelia, famed
Stauffer, Athens, speaking.
LAUREL CLIFF Better Mrs. Grueser's birthday anmother of Ancient Rome·,
Special music, public invited. Health Club, 7:30 Thursday, niversary.
said of her children . ...
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY home of Mrs. Pearl Parker.
"These are my jewels."
Mrs. Ural Thomas returned
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at Veterans
FAMILY NIGHT potluck,
The modern way of
to
Columbus Sunday after
' 1Counting YOJ.Jr BlessMemorial Hospital. Slate Grace Episcopal Church
visiting
here
several
days
with
ing
s" is with the ele Highway Patrol speaker on women to hosl. 6:30 p.m..
ganlly
new Cornelia En·
women drIvers .
Speaker will be the Rev . Mr. her brother-in-law and sister,
semble.
1
SALISBURY PTA, Tuesday, David Allardyce, rector of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Turner,
1 Available in 14K yellow
Middleport,
and
in
Racine
with
7:30p.m. Fifth an~ sixth grade Grace Church, Circieville.
or white gold, or alterband students to present
M E 1 G s c 0 u N T y Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson.
nate combination of golds.
program; election of officers. Alcoholism -and Drug Abuse She returned to Columbus
Two rings in one .. . -in FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 7:30 Committee, 7:30 p.m. Thurs- Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
ner stone -~et band can
Tuesday night at Trinity day at st. Paul Lutheran Robert Roush who bad spent
be worn attractively withChurch. Mr3. W. H. Perrin to Chu_rch, Pomeroy . Robert the weekend with the Watsons.
out
guard ring.
Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Turner and
present the program.
&amp;ll96J Corn1111 's Jewels~
SOUTHERN Local Band Sweet, health education con- Mrs. Watson, aU sisters, atsu14tnl of the Ohio Department
tended the Daughters of
Goessler's Jewelry
Boosters Tuesday, 7' 30 p.m. at of Health, guest speaker.
America
rally
at
Syracuse
the high school.
FRIDAy
• MEIGS ATHLETIC
MEIGS HIGH School Senior Thursday.
Mrs. L. E. Triplett spent the
Boosters, 7:30Tuesday night at Class play, "Butler on the
weekend
In AshviiJe visiting
the high school. ·
Bacon," 8 p.m. Friday night at
WEDNESDAY
the high school. Admission 50 her sister, Mrs. Ida Cook.
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew cents for students, $1 for
Webster Post 39, American adults. Tickets will be sold at ====
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 Wed- the door·.
nesday, home of Mrs. Harry
FRIDAY
Houdashelt, Middleport.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR Royal Arch Masons, Friday,
Gardeners, Wednesday night, 7:30 Masonic Temple, Royal
Ohio Power Co., Pomeroy, arch degree to be conferred.
following open garden club
THIRD FRIDAY Club,
IJleeling being held there.
Friday, 7:30p.m. at the home
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, of Mrs. Ben Neultling due to
Royal and Select Masters will the illness of Mrs. Carrie ·
hold a staled meeting on Meinhart.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
VALUD
CARD PARTY, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday , Orchid Room,
Pomeroy. Sponsored by two
chapters, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, proceeds to cancer
crusade.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club open meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Ohio Power Co. All Meigs
FURNnull,
garden club members invited.
Miss Edelene Wood of 210 E. 2nd
Mllllll£PORT, 0.
Pomeroy
Parkersburg, guest speaker,
Phone 992 -5428
on wild fonds.

PARTY GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Brinker,
Middleport, entertained
recently with a party in observance of their first an"
niversary. Guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Hudson, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Stephenson, and
Harriet B. Sterrett, Com., Frank (Penny) Dill. Gifts were
Norman E. Frederick, dec., to presented to the couple and
Goldie M. Frederick, 43'14 A., cake and ice cream were
served. Sending gifts were
Chesler.
William B. Witte, Ssrah Sue Mrs. Mildred Hubbard, Mr.
Wille to Clair F. Hunt, Shirley and Mrs. Robert Manley and
daughters, and Mrs. John
A. Hunt, Lots, Chester.
Lauerne Dodson, dec'd., to Bacon.
James A. Jenkins, Cert.
Trans., Middleport.
RECEPTION PLANNED
Goldie F . Hawk to Roy F.
Mr.
and Mrs. Perry Smith of
Burton, Lot, Pomeroy.
New
Lexington,
wiU observe
Paul Basim Jr., Opal Basim
their
golden
wedding
anto Donald R. Pullins, Paulette
niversary Sunday with an open
Pullins, .6 A., Olive.
Leona M. Ebersbach to reception at the Rehoboth
Maurice Durst, Marcella Grange Hall. Friends and
relatives will be received
Durst, Lot, Bradbury.
throughout
the day. Mr. and
Elwood Bowers, Eileen
Bowers, William Matlack, Ula Mrs. Smith are former Meigs
Matlack to Columbia Gas of County residents.
Ohio, Inc., R-Way, Chester.
Darrell Landon, Esther
SON BORN ON llml
Landon to Donald G. Guthrie,
SYRACUSE
- Mr. and Mrs.
Nora D. Guthrie, Lot, Olive.
Bryan
Lee
Yonker
of Syracuse
Bernard V. Fultz to Alogsuis
A. Grueser, Ann Sue Grueser, are announcing tbe birth of
their first child, a son, Derek
Lots, Middleport.
William Pooler, Jr., Alma Lee, April 10 at the Holzer ·
Jean Pooler to Paul E. Harris, Medical Center. Tbe infant
Marylyn A. Harris, 39 A., weighed six pounds, 13 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Chester.
Thomas Diddle to Maxine Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Johnson,
Racine , and the palernal
Diddle, 65 A., Lebanon.
grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. ,
John W. Davis, Nan C. Davis
F.
Yonker,
Letart, W.
Olarles
to Bernice Ann Durst, Lot,
Va. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Johnson
Middleport.
of Racine, RFD; Mra. Mabel
Roush, Racine, Mrs. Jessie
Yonker, Florida, and Mra.
REIBER ASSIGNED
Helen Grinstead, Letart, W.
RACINE - Navy Seaman Va. are great-grandparents.
Recruit Terry L. Reiber, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Reiber
SPAGHETrl SATURDAY.
of Route I, Racine, graduated
A
spaghetti dinner will be
from recruit training at the
served Ssturday from 4 to 8
Naval Training Center at Ssn
p.m. at the American Legion
Diego. A 1969 graduate of
11all In Pomeroy sponsored by
Southern High School, he is
scheduled to report to the Ladles Auxlllary. Price will
Boilerman "A" School, Great be .1.50 for adults and $1 for
children under 12.
Lakes, JU.

Property

•• .::.:

.TUESDAY
.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, ~:30
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Debbie Finlaw. Program
on architecture by · Mrs.
Jeanette Thomas . and Mrs.
Judy Crooks . Mrs . Carol
Adams and Mrs. Fin law,
hostesses.
EVANGELINE- Missionary Society of Pomeroy Church of Christ
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at home of

Halo If Htlf

· DrY.tn
Surround etoll'lt!s

wllh genllo,

~~~n ·

.

,

no ovordrylng.)
i'lno Mesh Lin&gt;

jF IIter. ;:.'- ·' ·
w....c.-.uin
MJ.YTAO ·'"

RUTlAND
.. ·fURNITURE
.

'SUP·ER MARKET • Open Daiiy 9 to. 10 • Sun.

j

C~tr'IICI

.jl42·4211

bag

Antique white cradlephone

RIG torpol

'•

501b.$,00

8 SIZE,.

ht"lt_, No hoUpol$,

We Accept Federal FOOd Otnmp:l

0

0

'
Comer Mill and Seccmd'Sts.

Rutland, o.
I

I

•

· .trtner · Social

Approxilllately 130 persons Starkey, the Ohio State Grange
attended the annual dinner of gatekeeper.
Cbarlene Hoefli,-b
992·5292
the Meil(S County Pomona
Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan,
·Grange Friday night at the secretary, read the history of
Sslisbury school under the Pomona Grange prepared· by
auspices of Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Ruby Halliday and Mrs.
deputy state master of Meigs Della Radekin. Atki~s noted
County, and Mrs. Virgil Atkins, U~at Mrs. Ora Ogdin Profitt,
deputy junior matron of Meigs unable to attend the dinner due
County,
with Norman . Will, to high water; has been a
Amemorial trlbule to Mrs. I. Struble costumed as Uttle
member of the grange for 68
B. Weed, long-time member of Jack Horner, greeted the P"mona master, assisting·.
Mrs . Atkins gave grace years, the longest of anyone in
the Happy Harvesters Class of guests who followed limericks
Trinity Church, highlighted the to arrive at the place of the preceding the dinner. There the county, Recognized was
was a welcome by the Pomona Mrs. Halliday who has had
• Friday night maeting of the party.
class.
·
·
An arrangement of red master. The program con- ~ontin ual membership in
The members sang "How roses donated by. Francis slsled of piano music by Keith grange for 64 years.
A vole of thanks was exGreat Thou Art" with Miss Florists and a grave replica Ashley, remarks by Atkins, a
Erma Smith reading scripture bearing the inscription "At baton-dance routine by the t,ended to Mrs. Fred Goeglein
from Matthew 6. She 'also read Res.t" carrying out tbe theme Karr sisters, and a talk by Earl and Mrs. Fred Leifheit, cooks
who prepared liJe dinner, and
an article, "She lived Just One of the party, were used on the
those · providing the enDay ala Time," a poem, "Be a ' table. Favors were rainhats.
tertainment.
Bulwark to Your Church and Mrs. Louis Reibel gave
.
Your Home," and concluded devotions, which included a
Group singing of "Gnd Be
With You" and the benediction
with prayer.
hymn sing, a poem, " 'Twas a
concluded the evening.
lt was decided that the class Shaep Not a .Lainb in the
wiUsponsora mother-daughter Parable," and prayer.
Five members of the Midbanquet on Sunday evening,
Games were played with dleport
First
United ~P:OJIIOMI-.!Wd~Pml"WWi~~
May 7, and will serve a wed- prizes going to Mrs. Homer Presbyterian Church were in.
ding reception on June. 24. Holler, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Swan, &lt;;hillicothe Friday for the
Members signed a card for Mrs. Frecker, Mrs. Fred spring meeting of the Scioto
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart who is Dessauer, Mrs. Clarence Presbyterial.
Ul.
Massar, Mra. Oris Ginther,
Going from here were Mrs.
Cards of thanks were read Mrs. Struble, Mrs. Henry Thomas Rue, Mrs. Dwight
Mra. Mildred Frank and
lrom Mr. and Mrs. James Reibel, and . Mrs. Lawrence Zavitz, Mrs. Richard Karr,
Clatworthy, the I. B. Weed LaMing. Gelling the lucky Mrs. Thomas Kelly, and Mrs. Mrs. Inez Carson attended the
family, and Mrs. Ben Neutzling plates for the "prize" of Dwight Wallace. "Thy.God, My wedding of Miss San(Jta
for flowers sent at the death 1lf washing the dishes were Mrs. God" was the theme of the Trussell and Richard Kerns at
ber brother, Arthur Ebers- Wolfe, 1\irs. Ullle Hauck, Mrs. meeting with Mrs. Donald the Chester United Methodist
bach. A check for bottle cape Dessauer, and Mrs. Frecker. Vallas, president of the Scioto Church on April 9.
Weekend guest of Mrs. Allee
.was presented, and Mrs. Dale
Hostesses were Mrs. Ben Presbyterial presiding.
Dodson
at her Long Bottom
Smith turned In funds from the Neutzllng, Mrs. Everett
Mrs. Richard Holl!ard, the
home
was
Mrs. Mildred Frank.
Lenten breakfast. Donations to Dailey, Mrs. Ruby Erb, Mrs. 1971 Columbus Ciiizen's Choice
VIsiting
there
on Ssturday was
the class 'Were acknowledged Reibel, and Mrs. Freda Duffey. of Churchwoman of the Year,
from the Clatworthys, Mrs. Others attending were Mrs. was lhe guest speaker. She Mrs. Edith Osborne.
Mr. and Mra. Warden Ours
Mabel Wolfe, Mrs. ArvUia Roy Seyfried, Mrs. Stella used "An East Africa Haphad
as their guests Sslurday
Frecker, and Mrs. Eulah Kloes, Mrs. Clara Karr, Mrs. pening" as her theme and
Swan.
Clarence Headley, Mrs. Gladys talked on what Presbylerian night their grandsons, Mark
The meeting was preceded Cuckler,
Mrs.
Ethel Women in the United States are and David of Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. David Henry
by tbe April fun party which WUllamson, Mrs. John Terrell, doing for the women in Mrica.
and children of Columbus were
started with a creamed baked Mrs. PhU Meinhart, Miss Sybil
weekend guests of Mr. and
chicken dinner. Mrs. Joe Ebersbach.
Mrs. Patrick Lochary.

:.,,,_.,rr:;;•;tl
n.
Calendar ~ ·. ·

dJ :

a

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•

•

j'

.,.
I

•

0

·'1

·

PHONE: 992·3480
"IN. iieservo The

Ri~ht T0

Limit Ouonlilies"

!ftQDLEPORT. 0.

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•

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,...

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1-Tile DIQJ llei4bel,llldclejiHI-PWii!IOf,.0 ,, April II, 1972

'

Sentinel f;lassifieds:Get Action! Sentinel Cll.ssifieds Get R~sult~!
Mere Classifieds'
On Page 2
Male He Ip Wanted
PARTTIME . nights
and
weekends. See Corter French,
Pomeroy Sunooo.
4·16·31c

Employment Wanted
DRY WALL finisher controclor,
R. I. Dubbeld, phone742·5a25.
4·11·51c
CARPENTER work o·r any
kind . Phone Dexter, Ohio 142·
11179.
J.28·301p

:. ®

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Z SIGNS

· or

DUALITY

1969 FORD CUSTOM ST. WAG.

~ nd see us. · Two
beaut-ifUl new homes, lh mile

North of Eastern Hlgti School
on St. Rt . 7. Both homes have

l'f69 FO!tD FAIR LANE HTCPE.

garage. Get um while !hey
i·a st. Ca ll Sherman Sum .
HOUSE
merfleld 985·3598.

$1595

tires, while finish , blue interior, radio .
.

1967 FORD MUSTANG HTCPE.

5139S

v.a engine. automatic trans.; p. steering , fa ctory air
conditioned, wide oval tir es, radio &amp; many other extras.
Gold fin ish, blk. interior.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

hecilthy home raised, per manent Injections, wormed -

trade for

older

model

S7S.S85; Coolville 66H21 4.
4·12·12tp

PORTABLE cement mixer ,
Phone 99H309.
ALUMINUM car .l op · boat s,
4·1J.61p
won 't rust or rol , safe and
lightweight. 10, 1213 and 14ft.
In stock now . 'Ph one 992-6256
OLD FURNITURE. dishes.
after 5 p. m.
clocks, brass beds, sliver
3·30·30tc
doll1rs
or
c )mplete
households. Wrlle M. D,.
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. .POODLE. puppies; Sliver Toy,,
Parkvlew Kennels, Phone-9'12-·
Call 992-6271 .
54~3 .
3-16-lfc
8-l5·1k•

4-12-6tc

WHITE .

·12' · 14' · 24' · WiDE .

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

carpeted, 2 bedroom. full size

utility room , underpinn ing
kills rat s quickly ,
.ROOM &amp; BOARD. Chester, " STAR"
included.
Phone 99H602.
Sure. 2112 lbs . $1.69; EbersPhone ·985-3371.
4·1J.61c
bach Hdwe. , Sugar Run Mi lls,
4·6-121p
Pickens Hdwe ., Mason .
3-t9·301p CASH pa id for all makes and
~ 8~0-ROOM mobile home with
models of mobile homes .
Phone·area code 61H2J.9531.
air conditioning In Racine GOOD MIXED second culling
4·13·tfC
clover, llmolhy, alfalfa , hay,
area; phone 992-6329.
3·23-tfc
65c per bale, phone 985·3809.
3 AND. 4 ROO-M
- fu_r_n_ls-hed
-and ,
H ·IOic ) 970 SCHULT, 12 x 65 with
Central Air, 4 miles from
Gav in Plant , phone 367 -7530.
unfurnished apartments. 16 FT. TRAVEL trailer, self·
4·18·61 c
Phone 992-5434.
·
contained, ready to go, hItch
4-lHfc
Included . Phone 77J.5651 ,
SOXtO TEMPO mobile home,
Mason, W. Va .
- - - - -- - -$ 2 , ~00. Phone 247-2161.
o .tfc
4·16·31c
2
SADDLE
horses
I
mare,
THE
spotted and I gelding , bay in .-60X 12, Hedroom , all ·electiiC:
air conditioned, Bx20 ft. Porch
color; phone 949-3196 for
and aluminum
awning .

MEIGS INN
,r ·ROOMS
•·j. -

br
Oay, WHk,Monlh
Llberll Rates

PH. 992-3629
HousE.- block, st. Rt. · 124 ·,n
Syracuse, Ohio: 7 rooms and
beth, large yard, shade trees,
garage, Phone Gallipolis 4469539 for Information affer 5
p.m. weekdays.
4·1Hfc

For Sale
CHOICE cemetery lot, A grave
plat, 66-D, I, 2, 3, and 4, Sec. I,
Meigs Memory Gardens, $350.
Phone 949-2820, R. H. Ballard,
Long Bollom.
A-17-3tc
ON E. yearling horned Hereford
bull, 4 yearling hollers, good
breeding . E. A. Wingett ,
Racine, 9A9·2~1.
4·18-Jic

information .

4·14-71c
GOOD Dodge 318 motor and 318
transmission . Phone 985-3353.

4·1Hic
TRY US you ' ll like it - our
price. Lowes! In Tri -State

camper, sleeps 8, phone ~2 ·
5007, James Hollon.
. A·l2.61p

-GOOD refrigerator,

pl e tely setup . Beautiful .
l·&gt;&lt;allon. Ow\'\er leaving stale.·
Phone 949·4892 or 9n5212. .
1.JO.tfc

lovely 3 B.R. elec. home,
bath, family room , eat-in
kitchen featuring rang e top,
wall oven , bar . Basement.
porch, birch -veneer front .
Immediate possess ion .
bath , gas furn ace, gar age,
1% A. ground, 2'12 mi. out of

Rutland on good road .
$10,000.
MIDDLEPORT
2 beautiful home s on
Broadway in Middl eport.

both are Ran ch Type.
POMEROY
Very nice . very mod£-rn .
ve ry reasonabl e, 3 B .~ .• Ph

SPECIAL
MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS
Economy Tiller, 3'1' h.p. B&amp; S
engine. Reg. 159.95
144.95
Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S 311:1
h.p. engine . In carton 70.25

POMEROY
·• •- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Ail
Pttone 991-2181

1969 V.W. CAMPMOBILE wllh
raised lop and tent, mileage
21,000, $2,495 ; phone 992-:ro76.
4·16-6tp

8 ACRES of land o,n St. Rt. 143,
appro&gt;c lmately 1 mile~. SE of
Harrisonville, water tap paid ;

phon e 742·4095.

Cleland
Realty

shrubbery of
or call Faye
Racine, 949·
4·16·31p

RACINE - 6 room house. bath,
ut ilit y room, garage, $10,000 ;
phone 949·4195.
3·3J.tfc

Office 992-2259 Ti 114 :oo
Sundays &amp; Evenings 99'2 -2569

WE WOU LD LI KE TO SE LL
YOU R P ROPER TY FOR
YOU .
DESIGNED FOR
GRACIOUS LIVING
LOV E L Y BRI CK -

3 l arg e

bedroom s (double closets ), a

l
bat hs. util it y r oom ,
r oom,
fu ll
r ec re at ion
base men!. all ca rpeted ,
larg e carport . $29 ,000 . A
ho use wife 's dr eam .
WASHINGTON COUNTY
8
yea r
old
br ic k over looking lake Ve t o, 3

la r ge bedr ooms, bea utiful
ba tn , a ki tc hen to su i t any

HOU SE and lot on

ga r ag&amp;,

Street ,

Pome roy ,

was

2 LARGE lots, 6 .r.ooms, bath,
garage, cellar $8,500; Maggie
Whllllnglon , De pot St ..
Rutland, Ohio.
4·7·301P
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
. 98,·3529.
1·28-tfc
====c,--~===-

Nft E- 2.'siory home with fu·ll
ba sement, 2 lot s, new forced

air f~lfl'dce. Near Pomeroy . •
Elementary School. Phone
992.7384 to s,ee.
JJ.7.1fc

I

.

Nova, 6 cylinder, automatic .
t r ansmis.si on , Vincent

corn er lot , about

~~

acr es . $25, 000. 00.
POMEROY
Larg e Building for storage,
cov ers about Jlots , ha s about
30.000 foot storag e space, out
of all flood s, easy loading ,
r en t ed at present , 3 oth er lo ts
for tr ailer space, $9,300 .00.
THESE ARE SCARCE
2 bedroom frame , (new bat h,
for ced air furna ce, tlot water
tank) , ni ce lot, good neigh borhood . Wh y pay rent ?

S5,500.00.

WORTH THE MONEY

2 stot y fram e (new Si ding ,
roof and
carport J, 3
bedroom s, ba th, low tax es .
good

35.000.00.

4.9.tfc

personal car , '68
Oldsmobile 98 l u&lt;ury Sedan ;
4 door, Dark Green with
Blac k Vinyl top ; Bla ck

--~~--

damag ed by fire; phone 992·
3359.
4·12·61c

Royalle Deluxe inferior; full
pow er equipment, climate
control air conditioning ; Tilt

&amp; Telescope wheel; AM·FM
St ereolonlc rad io ; rad i al
ti r es ; excellent condition and

cl ean . Avery Goegleln ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Rl. 2, on old
Rt . 33.
4-16.3to
This Week's Special

Complete tine of office
equipment, furnilure &amp;
supplies. Typewriter &amp;
Adding ~chine Repair.

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

PHONE 675-3628
424 Main St.

USED CARS

From the lar(!est
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

Johnson Masonry
&amp; Remodeling

Nathan Biggs
Rad;ator Sptclatlsl

'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992·2174
Pomeroy

FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

2nd . 992·3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

n e i ghborho o d .

Ff2.CM 'ri'U i"

ONLY 1 LEFT

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, la rge li ving .
Front and ba ck porches, utility building, level lot nea r M
&amp; R. $8,500.00.
.
4 ACRES PLUS
SPLIT LEVEL - Altracllve 3 or 5 bedroom s, 111, baths,
all electric home. Den 12&lt;24? Paneled . Basemen!, plenty
of closet space. A beautiful view ol Route 7, near town. A
good buy at $27.500.00.
·
BRAND NEW
RT. 124 - 3 bedroom all paneled home. Nice both with

$69goo

.Only

,

tall992-3523
For Appointment
·Fully insured
protection .

for

3UT FIRST

your

Ot= ALL

hOW'S

~E

FAM!LY?

COULDc~'T 6E BETTERTU·TU , PAPA , 'Tf'E BOYS ...

THEY'RE ALL ;:;NE.
AND &amp;E ND THEIR
LOVE.
/1=

Wheel
. Alignment'

!

.

$5.55

-GUARANTEE!)-:

O' DELL WHEEl al lghmept
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124. ·
Complete front e~d service,
tune up and brakii'-servlce.
Wheels balanced elec·
troDically .
All
w_.fl.rk

I'll nor
drive and

1'11 nor

cactqe!

ReasoO~Ie

guaranteed.

rates . Phone 992-3213.
:
. 7·27·11&lt;

llO WOIJD6R

Bathroom or Kitchen

Insured-But best of all
" WE' RE HONEST
Ph. 992·7608 Pomeroy, Ohio

SALE

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?

Lost . your

operator's license? Call ,q&lt;/2.
2966.
6·15-llc
'sEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller'
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035 .
· 2·12-tfc
·- · .
.
UPHOLSTERING SERVICE ,

~~
ACROSS
:1. High
11. Auguries

WE MUST SELL
5 HOMES THIS WEEK
"OUR LOSS -

YOUR GAIN"

1. Harass
priest
6. City in
3.Iraq
semper
11. Cut off a
tyrannis
t. Former
syllable
1:1. "The
name for
Thinker"
Tokyo
sculptor
5. Number
13. One of
on a
,..,-.~~~~:':":':-:'':':-:::::....:,
Ethan
lacrosse
Allen's
team
conquests 6. Sphere
15. "-Rainy 7. Upright
Night in
8. BusUe
Rio"
9. Equip
16. Name as· 18. Anecdotal
sociated
collection
U . Swallow
with
Yorktown I&amp;. Italian
23. Monkey
composer,
:U. French
Francesco
island
25. Fold
26. Tennessee

,•

·'

Some homes reduced SI,OOO. Some slightly above factory

cost.
Such as 50xl2 completely furnished .

WAS $4270.00

All Homes Manufactured by Skyline Corp. - Tho urges!
Builder of Mobile Homes.

MEIGS MOBIL£ HOME..SA' ES

.. S~PTIC TANKS CLEANE-D
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446
4782. Gallipolis. John Russell
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-12·tfc

.. -

667-3891

TUPPERS PLAINS, 0.
•

'

"t.... .

I

AMERICAN STANDARD HOME
,"ALBERMARLE" ·
MODEL

· N~ DOWN .PAYMENT A~D LOW

'
.
IN TOWN
Nice 2 bedrooms, bath, lovely oak .floors , and small
garden. ~asemenl, 5 rooms'wlfh outbuilding. Front porch.
Only $6,500.00.
OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE •
1200 FE~T - Fine for boat launching and weeken'd
camping. Drilled well and 2 houses. Bath and furna ce in
one. All this for only 516,500.00.

'.

LOw MONTHLY

PAYMENTS FOR QUALIFIED BOYER.
PHONE JEMO ASSOCIATES INC.
COLLECT FOR SHOWING, 614-268-1810

'

~1JJJW®~®~ lmdi,J .-1,_

18. Inlet
19. InsurrecUnacra1r' •hose four Jumble1,
tlonist
one leltt. .u each square, to
Turner
form four ordinary words.
20. Jargon
Zl. Scene
of
Yee1erd•1'• Au"'
thelUad
22. Observed 36.- Fall,
23. Burst
Irish
forth
crownlr.g
26. Work unit
stone
27. Hair pad 37. Coxcomb
21. "Show
38. Mining
Boat"
find
captain
39. 'Slower
U.-Keller
(mus.)
SZ. Listless ,...-40, Under·
St. Actor
stand
Morrow
41. District
S5. Alas, In
of
Bonn
England

l •y Itt Nil I •\liNt II II

(X I I I

tLENKERI

WHAT THEY s.AID
WHCN "THEY HELD UP

THE 51-iOP.

28. Poet's
uyet"
21. Region

of Spain
31. See16
Across .
Break of
34. Bivouac
oftbe
Continen·
tal army
U. More
geUd
•"-::~~,._
U.
Bay
--.
window
U.lntone
ts.Inslgnlft·
cant

.

ftJGinve,
NEA11E6T
CAME~A

CRfW WILL

COVER .

(Aatwen te..,...)

Ye.tenl•1'•

Jumbt•" ORIIT ADULT IUNKU CHIOMI
•
A.ntwer• An [~iJhfonn o/Korlc-LAIOUI

DOWN
1. Put
money
· down

"CALL

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

-.

II

'
to

&amp;XTDLB&amp;AXIl
LONGFELLOW

work ltl
•

One letter simply standi for another. In this sample A Is

Uled· for ihe three L's, X for tbe two O's, ole. Sin1!e letters,

TODAY"

apollrophe•, ihe len(lh and formation of the words are all
hint.. Each. d~y . ihe eode letters are dlfteront.

''

. CltYPTOQUOTES

f

1
i

S 1 W Ill J F M L G

~

.·

·:
;.

~F

-

... ..

'

PF

D1S 0

L

v ~

JY

DRDJWG.-WKSOPWK

BOPLRHG

Yesterat1 CliPIOIIMte: CtJl,TURE IS THE HABIT OF '--....;11•
BEING pu:usn WITH THE BEST AND KNOWING WHY.
-IIENRY.VANDYU
.
(0 lt'lll[lnr :Wea\urw BJnlkat., 1... )

.' • !

~.

·II F

~AUGHt

VPWRTL ' JY PLLRTLIIIT, PF PLLRTLMJT

·:

A Representative
Will Be In ·Town Wednead.y, April l9th..
,
• r
.

, , ol It• •tl 1 1 I

name

·''

CORNER LOT AT 35 RIVER VIEW PlACE,
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Only $11.000.00.

TilE'~ CAlL ~
OF TiiE' SEA!

MOBILE HOME SPRING

ALUMINUM SIDING,

fUrnace, 3 bedrooms, bath, paneling, garag e. and l/4 acre.
Nice wrap around concr ete po·rch with wrought Iron po sts.

,..,

*""'"."""~'" "'

EXPERT

WALL TO. WALL CARPETING,
'

shower . Natural gas forced air furnace, utility room and

TO ~OPi"

AN' LURE HIM ONTO
TH' PLA NE.'!''")

...,. .........

4 · 1B

NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME,

carport . Lot 75&lt;291. All for only $17,000.00.
RENOVATED
COUN TRY HOME - Yel has clly woter, na tural gas

OF CONV51&lt;'SATION!

On Your Home

'

110 Mechanic Street

(-"8UTAH 15 PR07!:CTED
B Y MAH EARPt.l/&amp;5 . AH'L L
P£RT£ND AH /S AMOOZ£0.

WHEN iS HIS MAD
BORROWING Gol"6

Jii//IJ/111/It! SIIJ/1/G

·i

Realtor

®

"-__...,

LIKE
\!)UI;: USUALToPIC

-nt~ Ci1iCK6tJ

HOUSE BU.ILDERS, CALL:
GUY NEIGLER , RACINE ,
OHIO.
J.5.JOtc

GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til 8:0~
Til S P.M. Sat.

I~RO.V~iN6

'n!RU MAY 15
1000 SQ. FT. OF

'3795

" You ' ll Like Our Quality

DO I GET~

Lei us show our samples.
Let. Us. Do-Over. Your

wall tir es.

Way of Doing Busi ness."

.

A GREAT
SPE.EIH~EAI&gt;ER ~

Open BTII 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, PoJMray, 0.

Zanesville, Ohio

HARRISON'S TV and Aiitentfa •
Service. Phone 9n.2522. .:
~iltilf&lt;

'2095
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

PRES."

A GOO!&gt;
ANI&gt; WHAT

On Most. Am_eric!J! C"*

Pf. Pleasant

Radiator

3-28-:rotp

2 Dr., H. T.. V-8, auto.
trans.. P.S., P.B., vinyl top.
factory air, 5 new white-

NEE~

Pomeroy Ho.me &amp; Auto

ph one 99':1·3617.

69 PONTIAC
LeMANS

l

~ITTER ,

Phone 992-2094

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main Sl.

complete selec tion of fabrics
and vi nyl to choose from .
Pick -up and delivery . Slater
Uphols tering , Rt. 3, Pomeroy,

Henry E. Clelond Sr.

.'

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 614-452-lt58

'5 7 CHEVROLET. 283 cu . in ..
standard shift : '63 Chevrolet

LEAGUE BALL, JOSEPJ./
' E. CROJII"-

Free Estimate

'149.50

~ · 18 . Jtp

MY OWN

ho use wif e comp le te with
ref , r ange an d ov en ; d ining
room , cor ner f ir epla ce in th e
livi ng room , full base ment,
ut i l ity spa ce, rec. roo m,

Lauret·

4989.

-------

1t 2

wa~r

cyl i nder, power · steering ,
good condition, phone 949-

985·3554.

drea m k itchen and dining

~Is .

ME I&lt;;S, W.VA. 25260
MEIG$992-7151
MASON 713-5634

~E

FLOWER!&gt; ~D GN-J.rl'(.

',;)l:f:ICIAL MIERICAN

We specialize in aluminum ,
vinyl and Steel siding ;
fiberglas, brick and slon~;
complete line of residential
and commerc ial roofing ;
remodeling, , bull ,d ing,
suspended ceilinOJ, lnttrlor
and exterior paintlng i com .
ptete line of Masonry work. All
work guaranteed to customer
satisfa c tion . We are fully
insured for your protection . 32
N.

I GPENT If ALL ON

CAMPUS CLA '!TEl\

ONLY $13,750 •

I

Maintenance''

For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

1967 CAMARO, automatic, 6

front,

I car garage, brick

wall to wall carpel.

YOU EVER HtRR TH'ONE AE'&gt;OUT THE
FROZEN MACKEREL SAL!':S MAN A N D
THE COLESLAW !"ARMER'S SEVE N
D0TTI'.R5 ?

"Everything In Home

B&amp;W HEATING"OO.

Get Rid ol Them
We will protect any single
dwelling r~sidence lor

.
ON YOUR LOT

HI, LANCE'... MIND IF

CONST.

ON
CENTRA~ HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

TERMITES•• TERMITES,

.

KITCHEN
and

Free Estimate

4·12-61c

3 BR
HOME

.'

992 · 3~36

good
condition ,
Harold
Brewer. L:.ong Bottom, phone

area, spaci ou s li v ing r oom ,

ACREAGE oi
available, also
all kinds . See
Powell, Rt . I.
2405.

40,000 actual miles. Phone
R. H. Bal la rd , Long
Bottom .
4·11·61c

9~9· 2820.

Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
phone
985·3554.
Lois.
H ·lf C
.,...,tr_u_c,..
k.- 9
- ra in
,- - - - - - - - - - ; ::,9::60:-;:F"·s'-'oo:-;F:.,Ac;R"M
bed·caltle racks, good tires,

Wadsworth Dr i ve, Columbu s,

H -30tp

standard, excellent condition,

Se veral Farms and Bu.ilding

@

jll'L ABNEI\

Cumm ins diesel. sl eeper cab,
air tag a&gt;cle. Will trade,

offer .

742-3947

742·4761
' We t1re fully in,ured

SON

1965 CHEVROLET - Ton, long,
wide bed pickup, 6·cyllnder.

1961 FORD truck tra ctor , 220

home,

_ ·r

992:58~3

after 7 p.m.

Auto Sales

garage, e&gt;ctra lot for garden.
S 18,000 or owner wi II listen to

Ave . Contacl Ed Hedrick , 2137 :

lot s. Phone 949·4313 .

Pomeroy . Phone 992· 3525

Broderick, Rt. 2, Pomeroy .
4·12·61C

Real Estate For Sale

bath , basement, garage, two

Ra cine, Ohio

basement.

bath

Heating .

992 -3891

done by hot.ir or contract.

Crill Bradford

1972 FORD Pinto, call
or 9,92.5248.

lite and Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbl"'l &amp;

service.

dozers, 2 size loaders. Work·
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt, lop soil. Duml&gt;
trucks and low-boy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jolters,

New Lima Road , 4 B. R. and

pickup electric
SSO; go 4 DOUBLE
guitar,
case
and amplifier ;
miles east Tupp~trs Plains,
Simco
western
horse saddle,
Rt. 611, turn right, 3rd house.
excellent condition. Phone
~·9· 101p
992·2941.
" ··'
"
4-16-31c
:TRUI'It;AL
FISH, laney
· IIUI&gt;PI••· angels and breeders, . NEW Holland Mower '450, 3
BeUu and supplies. Phone
point ·wlfh condlfloner hlfch ;
f92.,U(J,
.
sol of 3fl Inch duals for !rae·
12-30-lfc
WAN-T TO MOVE SOON, YOU SHOULD SEE US WE
tor; 4·16 semi-mounted plow;
HAVE SEVERAl VACANT ttOUSES READY TO MOVE
phone 985-3831.
·
ANTIQUE ;_ardrobe, drop·lea:
INTO. SEVERAL LOCATIONS FOR NEW HOUSES AND
4·16·31p
table and • few other Items.
SINESSES. DON'T RISK A MISS. CALL 992·3325 or
l'hane 992-4695.
DACHSHUND puppies; P.hone
·2378.
•16-3tc
742-5474.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOtlATE .
·
--~----4-16·31c L------------~--.;...,.----1
'

•

com -

cessories, complete package
Ohio. phone 237·433 4.
deal. Camp Conley Starcraft
n. n nc
Sales, Rt . 62, N. of Pl.
Pleasant, W. Va .
4·10tc RACINE - 10 room house,

TWI"' needle sewlnQ machine
1971 Model In walnut stand.
ANTIQUE organ wllh stool,
All features built-In to make
anllque square grand plano,
fancy designs and do stretch
phone 9111-2253.
sewing . Also buttonhole s ~
4·18-61c
blind hems etc. $43.35 cash
price or te rms available .
4 BLACK Angus cows wllh
calves, 3 and 4 years old,
Phone 992·5641.
4·12-6lc
Carol Pierce, Sr.. Rl. I,
Rutland. call 742-5195.
-----4·18-2tp VACUUM cleaner . :lectr o
Hygiene New Demonstrator
has all cleaning attachments
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pel Shop,
plus the new Erectro Suds for
Chester,Ohlo, Phone 985·3356.
shampooing carpet. Only
Tropical fish · and supplies .
$27.50 cash pr ice or terms
J.28·30tp
available. Phone 992·5641.
4· lUte
ONE TRAIN case, jr. pullman,
SIS; one wardrobe case, SS; 3. POl NT hllch adaptor for fast
24" Electric range SID; phone
hllch lnfernallonallrat tor; 3·
992·3818.
point hllch tractor , front
4·7·101p
mounted 6' blade power lake·
off belt pulley for above :
REMINGTON Model 700 ADL,
Portable cement mi xer;
22-250 with scope, cos! over
electric motor or can be
S200, special new, $125 ; phone
mounted on above tractor on
742·36Stl.
'
rear ·and run off power take·
H ·IOip
off: 250 McCullough chain
saw, A· l condition ; 8,pl y
ALLIS CHALMERS WC tractor
truck tires and wheels for 3/•
and equipment, ssso. Allis
ton Ford (8 hole) : 1960, 1.965
Chalmers Combine , $350.
Buick Wildcat wheels and
tires (tubeless) . •Call we,ek
Phone 7A2-3656.
4-9.10tp
days after 6 p.m., Rutland.
742.5113.
4·16·31p
cSTRAWBERRY plants, Charles
Fosler, Rt . 338, near Racine
IRISH setter. SSO, can be seen at
Locks, phone 24J.2309.
95 Pearl St .. Middleport any
4-12·121c
time .
4-16-6tc
WALNUT, modern style, with
AM-FM radio, 4. speaker
sound system , 4 speed PORTA~LE typewriter and
case, tine shape, $25; Rev . R.
autonnallc changer. Balance
D. Brown, Rt . I, langsville,
$83.17. Use our budget terms .
0
.
Call 992·7085.
4·16·3tp
4-12-61c

-- -- 1970 STARCRAFT fold·down

alum i num skirting ,

Hysell Run just 'h mi. from
S.R . 7 off 124, wooded
country reclu se, 3 A. tract,

Area on travel trailers and SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut'

campers . We stock all ac-

.

COUNTRY LIVING

BEAUTIFUL Early American
style. stereo -radio Cc;Jm;
Wanted To Rent
blnollon, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed automatic
A OR 5 ROOM house In country ,
1220 Washington Blvd.
changer. separate control s.
phone 992-7311 .
Belpre, Ohio
Balance $79.56. Use our
4·18·21c
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
- -- - -----4·1Hic 1970 MONTEREY. 12x60,ful ly

Fnr Rent

9'12-3020
160 Coal St.
Middleport

exteriOr carpentry . Ceiling

We hove 24 hr. emergency

basement, land·
scaping. We haVe 2 size

BACKHOE AND DOZER wOrk. ·
Septi c tanks Installed. George.
(Bill ) Pullins. Phone 992-2~78.
4.2S·Ifc

VERA E8LEN

yGur need. Complete roof or
spouting repair. Interior or

Dozer &amp; End loa~er work,

INTERIOR and ex terior
painting. R. I. Dubbeld, phone
742.5825.
4·17·51c

Contact Ass!H:iate

We have a complete Home
Mainlen~nce Service the
year around. No m1tter what

Day Number 992·2550

pOnds,

5· t.lfc

REA L TY~

..

240 Lincoln St.
Micklltport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing

EARTH MOVING

3·2·1fc- - - - - - - .
C. BRADFORD, Auclloneer
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821

JOHN

&lt;§

,,,.'lrr4)

'

Specializing In
Small Businesses

marquees, al ummum stdtng
and r a ll i n~ . A. Jacob, sales
r epresentati ve. F or fr ee
est imates. phone Charl es
Li sle, Syra cuse,
v. v.
Johnson and Son. Inc.

3886 Pt. Pleasant, W. Va . .
4·4·18lp
'61 FIAT, 4 door sedan, will sell ·~====--:----,
truck, phone 985·392C.

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

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

4·1Htc
.3 BEDROOM ranch type ho,;. , ·
,
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers · R~ADY · MIX CONCRETE de ·
Plains. Alt . new wilh total
livered right to your prolecl.
304 E. Main St.
electr ic and centra~ air
Fast and easy . l'ree
Pomeroy, Ohio
conditioning, bath and '~~• tully , estimates . Phone 992-3284 .·
Phone 992-3795
carpeted, full basement : ' Goegleln Reall y- Mix Co.,
garage In basement. See by
Mlddleporl. Ohio.
·
or Mason 773-5535
appointment, p~one 992-2196 ·
6.Jo.tlc,i ':=========~
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson. ,·
.
.
,..
Financing available.
· SEE US FOR . Awnmgs. storm
·.
l2·30·1fc', doors and wlndol'fs, car~o\ts ,

For Sale or Trade
or

&amp;

4.· 16-61c
roof pai nting end

Phone 'I'IH085.

3 13EDROOM home on twothirds acre lot ; all . co~ v eniences ; at GallipoliS
Ferry, W. Va . only $10,000:
come see ; Call675-3666or 675-

OPI!M I!VI!S. 1:00 P.M.
f'PMEROY, OHIO

YONDER COMES
TH' PARSON

ElECfti..JG A
CAtv BE'

'======~===;-r=====::::=:::::::::::=;~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~==~
· ~ ·--

repa ir work . Free estimates.

4· 1~· 1fC

V-8 engine, automatic tr ans ., p. steer ing, tocall owner car
with less than 23,000 miles, spotless Inter ior, good w-w

SAKES ALIVE!!

Business Services

4 bedrooms~ bath and a half,
Service. We Sharpen Sdssors.
3·29·ttc ; _
built in ki tchens and utility
1
rooms; wall to wall carpet DOZER and Ba-c7k- "H'oe---cW
"ork;
will be installed soon. One
PhQile 99B361; Ponds and
house has a larg_e family room
septic. tank s; B &amp; K Ex·
and a den. Both have a
ca vating.

$19f9

1-t:lU KIJCIW

Business Services

.S EWING MACHINES . Repair
serv ice, all makes. 992·2284.
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. :
Authorized Sing er Sales and t

COME

351 V-8 eng., automatic trans., poWer brakes. good tires,
clean Interior, beige f lnisl1, radio.

WILL .PAINT roof or houses,
!rim and cut trees ; clean
allies ; basements, etc . Phone
9111·3221 .
For Sale
4·16·61c AKC - puppies - Schnauzers,
Poodles , Cairn Terrier s,

Wanted To Buy

Real Estate For Sale

·:: BARNEY

"

'I

,.

�,

. I"

•

·""

,...

I

;-

•'

'

,•• ..

~

,,

1-Tile DIQJ llei4bel,llldclejiHI-PWii!IOf,.0 ,, April II, 1972

'

Sentinel f;lassifieds:Get Action! Sentinel Cll.ssifieds Get R~sult~!
Mere Classifieds'
On Page 2
Male He Ip Wanted
PARTTIME . nights
and
weekends. See Corter French,
Pomeroy Sunooo.
4·16·31c

Employment Wanted
DRY WALL finisher controclor,
R. I. Dubbeld, phone742·5a25.
4·11·51c
CARPENTER work o·r any
kind . Phone Dexter, Ohio 142·
11179.
J.28·301p

:. ®

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Z SIGNS

· or

DUALITY

1969 FORD CUSTOM ST. WAG.

~ nd see us. · Two
beaut-ifUl new homes, lh mile

North of Eastern Hlgti School
on St. Rt . 7. Both homes have

l'f69 FO!tD FAIR LANE HTCPE.

garage. Get um while !hey
i·a st. Ca ll Sherman Sum .
HOUSE
merfleld 985·3598.

$1595

tires, while finish , blue interior, radio .
.

1967 FORD MUSTANG HTCPE.

5139S

v.a engine. automatic trans.; p. steering , fa ctory air
conditioned, wide oval tir es, radio &amp; many other extras.
Gold fin ish, blk. interior.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

hecilthy home raised, per manent Injections, wormed -

trade for

older

model

S7S.S85; Coolville 66H21 4.
4·12·12tp

PORTABLE cement mixer ,
Phone 99H309.
ALUMINUM car .l op · boat s,
4·1J.61p
won 't rust or rol , safe and
lightweight. 10, 1213 and 14ft.
In stock now . 'Ph one 992-6256
OLD FURNITURE. dishes.
after 5 p. m.
clocks, brass beds, sliver
3·30·30tc
doll1rs
or
c )mplete
households. Wrlle M. D,.
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. .POODLE. puppies; Sliver Toy,,
Parkvlew Kennels, Phone-9'12-·
Call 992-6271 .
54~3 .
3-16-lfc
8-l5·1k•

4-12-6tc

WHITE .

·12' · 14' · 24' · WiDE .

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

carpeted, 2 bedroom. full size

utility room , underpinn ing
kills rat s quickly ,
.ROOM &amp; BOARD. Chester, " STAR"
included.
Phone 99H602.
Sure. 2112 lbs . $1.69; EbersPhone ·985-3371.
4·1J.61c
bach Hdwe. , Sugar Run Mi lls,
4·6-121p
Pickens Hdwe ., Mason .
3-t9·301p CASH pa id for all makes and
~ 8~0-ROOM mobile home with
models of mobile homes .
Phone·area code 61H2J.9531.
air conditioning In Racine GOOD MIXED second culling
4·13·tfC
clover, llmolhy, alfalfa , hay,
area; phone 992-6329.
3·23-tfc
65c per bale, phone 985·3809.
3 AND. 4 ROO-M
- fu_r_n_ls-hed
-and ,
H ·IOic ) 970 SCHULT, 12 x 65 with
Central Air, 4 miles from
Gav in Plant , phone 367 -7530.
unfurnished apartments. 16 FT. TRAVEL trailer, self·
4·18·61 c
Phone 992-5434.
·
contained, ready to go, hItch
4-lHfc
Included . Phone 77J.5651 ,
SOXtO TEMPO mobile home,
Mason, W. Va .
- - - - -- - -$ 2 , ~00. Phone 247-2161.
o .tfc
4·16·31c
2
SADDLE
horses
I
mare,
THE
spotted and I gelding , bay in .-60X 12, Hedroom , all ·electiiC:
air conditioned, Bx20 ft. Porch
color; phone 949-3196 for
and aluminum
awning .

MEIGS INN
,r ·ROOMS
•·j. -

br
Oay, WHk,Monlh
Llberll Rates

PH. 992-3629
HousE.- block, st. Rt. · 124 ·,n
Syracuse, Ohio: 7 rooms and
beth, large yard, shade trees,
garage, Phone Gallipolis 4469539 for Information affer 5
p.m. weekdays.
4·1Hfc

For Sale
CHOICE cemetery lot, A grave
plat, 66-D, I, 2, 3, and 4, Sec. I,
Meigs Memory Gardens, $350.
Phone 949-2820, R. H. Ballard,
Long Bollom.
A-17-3tc
ON E. yearling horned Hereford
bull, 4 yearling hollers, good
breeding . E. A. Wingett ,
Racine, 9A9·2~1.
4·18-Jic

information .

4·14-71c
GOOD Dodge 318 motor and 318
transmission . Phone 985-3353.

4·1Hic
TRY US you ' ll like it - our
price. Lowes! In Tri -State

camper, sleeps 8, phone ~2 ·
5007, James Hollon.
. A·l2.61p

-GOOD refrigerator,

pl e tely setup . Beautiful .
l·&gt;&lt;allon. Ow\'\er leaving stale.·
Phone 949·4892 or 9n5212. .
1.JO.tfc

lovely 3 B.R. elec. home,
bath, family room , eat-in
kitchen featuring rang e top,
wall oven , bar . Basement.
porch, birch -veneer front .
Immediate possess ion .
bath , gas furn ace, gar age,
1% A. ground, 2'12 mi. out of

Rutland on good road .
$10,000.
MIDDLEPORT
2 beautiful home s on
Broadway in Middl eport.

both are Ran ch Type.
POMEROY
Very nice . very mod£-rn .
ve ry reasonabl e, 3 B .~ .• Ph

SPECIAL
MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS
Economy Tiller, 3'1' h.p. B&amp; S
engine. Reg. 159.95
144.95
Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S 311:1
h.p. engine . In carton 70.25

POMEROY
·• •- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Ail
Pttone 991-2181

1969 V.W. CAMPMOBILE wllh
raised lop and tent, mileage
21,000, $2,495 ; phone 992-:ro76.
4·16-6tp

8 ACRES of land o,n St. Rt. 143,
appro&gt;c lmately 1 mile~. SE of
Harrisonville, water tap paid ;

phon e 742·4095.

Cleland
Realty

shrubbery of
or call Faye
Racine, 949·
4·16·31p

RACINE - 6 room house. bath,
ut ilit y room, garage, $10,000 ;
phone 949·4195.
3·3J.tfc

Office 992-2259 Ti 114 :oo
Sundays &amp; Evenings 99'2 -2569

WE WOU LD LI KE TO SE LL
YOU R P ROPER TY FOR
YOU .
DESIGNED FOR
GRACIOUS LIVING
LOV E L Y BRI CK -

3 l arg e

bedroom s (double closets ), a

l
bat hs. util it y r oom ,
r oom,
fu ll
r ec re at ion
base men!. all ca rpeted ,
larg e carport . $29 ,000 . A
ho use wife 's dr eam .
WASHINGTON COUNTY
8
yea r
old
br ic k over looking lake Ve t o, 3

la r ge bedr ooms, bea utiful
ba tn , a ki tc hen to su i t any

HOU SE and lot on

ga r ag&amp;,

Street ,

Pome roy ,

was

2 LARGE lots, 6 .r.ooms, bath,
garage, cellar $8,500; Maggie
Whllllnglon , De pot St ..
Rutland, Ohio.
4·7·301P
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
. 98,·3529.
1·28-tfc
====c,--~===-

Nft E- 2.'siory home with fu·ll
ba sement, 2 lot s, new forced

air f~lfl'dce. Near Pomeroy . •
Elementary School. Phone
992.7384 to s,ee.
JJ.7.1fc

I

.

Nova, 6 cylinder, automatic .
t r ansmis.si on , Vincent

corn er lot , about

~~

acr es . $25, 000. 00.
POMEROY
Larg e Building for storage,
cov ers about Jlots , ha s about
30.000 foot storag e space, out
of all flood s, easy loading ,
r en t ed at present , 3 oth er lo ts
for tr ailer space, $9,300 .00.
THESE ARE SCARCE
2 bedroom frame , (new bat h,
for ced air furna ce, tlot water
tank) , ni ce lot, good neigh borhood . Wh y pay rent ?

S5,500.00.

WORTH THE MONEY

2 stot y fram e (new Si ding ,
roof and
carport J, 3
bedroom s, ba th, low tax es .
good

35.000.00.

4.9.tfc

personal car , '68
Oldsmobile 98 l u&lt;ury Sedan ;
4 door, Dark Green with
Blac k Vinyl top ; Bla ck

--~~--

damag ed by fire; phone 992·
3359.
4·12·61c

Royalle Deluxe inferior; full
pow er equipment, climate
control air conditioning ; Tilt

&amp; Telescope wheel; AM·FM
St ereolonlc rad io ; rad i al
ti r es ; excellent condition and

cl ean . Avery Goegleln ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Rl. 2, on old
Rt . 33.
4-16.3to
This Week's Special

Complete tine of office
equipment, furnilure &amp;
supplies. Typewriter &amp;
Adding ~chine Repair.

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

PHONE 675-3628
424 Main St.

USED CARS

From the lar(!est
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

Johnson Masonry
&amp; Remodeling

Nathan Biggs
Rad;ator Sptclatlsl

'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992·2174
Pomeroy

FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

2nd . 992·3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

n e i ghborho o d .

Ff2.CM 'ri'U i"

ONLY 1 LEFT

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, la rge li ving .
Front and ba ck porches, utility building, level lot nea r M
&amp; R. $8,500.00.
.
4 ACRES PLUS
SPLIT LEVEL - Altracllve 3 or 5 bedroom s, 111, baths,
all electric home. Den 12&lt;24? Paneled . Basemen!, plenty
of closet space. A beautiful view ol Route 7, near town. A
good buy at $27.500.00.
·
BRAND NEW
RT. 124 - 3 bedroom all paneled home. Nice both with

$69goo

.Only

,

tall992-3523
For Appointment
·Fully insured
protection .

for

3UT FIRST

your

Ot= ALL

hOW'S

~E

FAM!LY?

COULDc~'T 6E BETTERTU·TU , PAPA , 'Tf'E BOYS ...

THEY'RE ALL ;:;NE.
AND &amp;E ND THEIR
LOVE.
/1=

Wheel
. Alignment'

!

.

$5.55

-GUARANTEE!)-:

O' DELL WHEEl al lghmept
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124. ·
Complete front e~d service,
tune up and brakii'-servlce.
Wheels balanced elec·
troDically .
All
w_.fl.rk

I'll nor
drive and

1'11 nor

cactqe!

ReasoO~Ie

guaranteed.

rates . Phone 992-3213.
:
. 7·27·11&lt;

llO WOIJD6R

Bathroom or Kitchen

Insured-But best of all
" WE' RE HONEST
Ph. 992·7608 Pomeroy, Ohio

SALE

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?

Lost . your

operator's license? Call ,q&lt;/2.
2966.
6·15-llc
'sEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller'
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035 .
· 2·12-tfc
·- · .
.
UPHOLSTERING SERVICE ,

~~
ACROSS
:1. High
11. Auguries

WE MUST SELL
5 HOMES THIS WEEK
"OUR LOSS -

YOUR GAIN"

1. Harass
priest
6. City in
3.Iraq
semper
11. Cut off a
tyrannis
t. Former
syllable
1:1. "The
name for
Thinker"
Tokyo
sculptor
5. Number
13. One of
on a
,..,-.~~~~:':":':-:'':':-:::::....:,
Ethan
lacrosse
Allen's
team
conquests 6. Sphere
15. "-Rainy 7. Upright
Night in
8. BusUe
Rio"
9. Equip
16. Name as· 18. Anecdotal
sociated
collection
U . Swallow
with
Yorktown I&amp;. Italian
23. Monkey
composer,
:U. French
Francesco
island
25. Fold
26. Tennessee

,•

·'

Some homes reduced SI,OOO. Some slightly above factory

cost.
Such as 50xl2 completely furnished .

WAS $4270.00

All Homes Manufactured by Skyline Corp. - Tho urges!
Builder of Mobile Homes.

MEIGS MOBIL£ HOME..SA' ES

.. S~PTIC TANKS CLEANE-D
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446
4782. Gallipolis. John Russell
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-12·tfc

.. -

667-3891

TUPPERS PLAINS, 0.
•

'

"t.... .

I

AMERICAN STANDARD HOME
,"ALBERMARLE" ·
MODEL

· N~ DOWN .PAYMENT A~D LOW

'
.
IN TOWN
Nice 2 bedrooms, bath, lovely oak .floors , and small
garden. ~asemenl, 5 rooms'wlfh outbuilding. Front porch.
Only $6,500.00.
OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE •
1200 FE~T - Fine for boat launching and weeken'd
camping. Drilled well and 2 houses. Bath and furna ce in
one. All this for only 516,500.00.

'.

LOw MONTHLY

PAYMENTS FOR QUALIFIED BOYER.
PHONE JEMO ASSOCIATES INC.
COLLECT FOR SHOWING, 614-268-1810

'

~1JJJW®~®~ lmdi,J .-1,_

18. Inlet
19. InsurrecUnacra1r' •hose four Jumble1,
tlonist
one leltt. .u each square, to
Turner
form four ordinary words.
20. Jargon
Zl. Scene
of
Yee1erd•1'• Au"'
thelUad
22. Observed 36.- Fall,
23. Burst
Irish
forth
crownlr.g
26. Work unit
stone
27. Hair pad 37. Coxcomb
21. "Show
38. Mining
Boat"
find
captain
39. 'Slower
U.-Keller
(mus.)
SZ. Listless ,...-40, Under·
St. Actor
stand
Morrow
41. District
S5. Alas, In
of
Bonn
England

l •y Itt Nil I •\liNt II II

(X I I I

tLENKERI

WHAT THEY s.AID
WHCN "THEY HELD UP

THE 51-iOP.

28. Poet's
uyet"
21. Region

of Spain
31. See16
Across .
Break of
34. Bivouac
oftbe
Continen·
tal army
U. More
geUd
•"-::~~,._
U.
Bay
--.
window
U.lntone
ts.Inslgnlft·
cant

.

ftJGinve,
NEA11E6T
CAME~A

CRfW WILL

COVER .

(Aatwen te..,...)

Ye.tenl•1'•

Jumbt•" ORIIT ADULT IUNKU CHIOMI
•
A.ntwer• An [~iJhfonn o/Korlc-LAIOUI

DOWN
1. Put
money
· down

"CALL

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

-.

II

'
to

&amp;XTDLB&amp;AXIl
LONGFELLOW

work ltl
•

One letter simply standi for another. In this sample A Is

Uled· for ihe three L's, X for tbe two O's, ole. Sin1!e letters,

TODAY"

apollrophe•, ihe len(lh and formation of the words are all
hint.. Each. d~y . ihe eode letters are dlfteront.

''

. CltYPTOQUOTES

f

1
i

S 1 W Ill J F M L G

~

.·

·:
;.

~F

-

... ..

'

PF

D1S 0

L

v ~

JY

DRDJWG.-WKSOPWK

BOPLRHG

Yesterat1 CliPIOIIMte: CtJl,TURE IS THE HABIT OF '--....;11•
BEING pu:usn WITH THE BEST AND KNOWING WHY.
-IIENRY.VANDYU
.
(0 lt'lll[lnr :Wea\urw BJnlkat., 1... )

.' • !

~.

·II F

~AUGHt

VPWRTL ' JY PLLRTLIIIT, PF PLLRTLMJT

·:

A Representative
Will Be In ·Town Wednead.y, April l9th..
,
• r
.

, , ol It• •tl 1 1 I

name

·''

CORNER LOT AT 35 RIVER VIEW PlACE,
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Only $11.000.00.

TilE'~ CAlL ~
OF TiiE' SEA!

MOBILE HOME SPRING

ALUMINUM SIDING,

fUrnace, 3 bedrooms, bath, paneling, garag e. and l/4 acre.
Nice wrap around concr ete po·rch with wrought Iron po sts.

,..,

*""'"."""~'" "'

EXPERT

WALL TO. WALL CARPETING,
'

shower . Natural gas forced air furnace, utility room and

TO ~OPi"

AN' LURE HIM ONTO
TH' PLA NE.'!''")

...,. .........

4 · 1B

NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME,

carport . Lot 75&lt;291. All for only $17,000.00.
RENOVATED
COUN TRY HOME - Yel has clly woter, na tural gas

OF CONV51&lt;'SATION!

On Your Home

'

110 Mechanic Street

(-"8UTAH 15 PR07!:CTED
B Y MAH EARPt.l/&amp;5 . AH'L L
P£RT£ND AH /S AMOOZ£0.

WHEN iS HIS MAD
BORROWING Gol"6

Jii//IJ/111/It! SIIJ/1/G

·i

Realtor

®

"-__...,

LIKE
\!)UI;: USUALToPIC

-nt~ Ci1iCK6tJ

HOUSE BU.ILDERS, CALL:
GUY NEIGLER , RACINE ,
OHIO.
J.5.JOtc

GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til 8:0~
Til S P.M. Sat.

I~RO.V~iN6

'n!RU MAY 15
1000 SQ. FT. OF

'3795

" You ' ll Like Our Quality

DO I GET~

Lei us show our samples.
Let. Us. Do-Over. Your

wall tir es.

Way of Doing Busi ness."

.

A GREAT
SPE.EIH~EAI&gt;ER ~

Open BTII 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, PoJMray, 0.

Zanesville, Ohio

HARRISON'S TV and Aiitentfa •
Service. Phone 9n.2522. .:
~iltilf&lt;

'2095
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

PRES."

A GOO!&gt;
ANI&gt; WHAT

On Most. Am_eric!J! C"*

Pf. Pleasant

Radiator

3-28-:rotp

2 Dr., H. T.. V-8, auto.
trans.. P.S., P.B., vinyl top.
factory air, 5 new white-

NEE~

Pomeroy Ho.me &amp; Auto

ph one 99':1·3617.

69 PONTIAC
LeMANS

l

~ITTER ,

Phone 992-2094

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main Sl.

complete selec tion of fabrics
and vi nyl to choose from .
Pick -up and delivery . Slater
Uphols tering , Rt. 3, Pomeroy,

Henry E. Clelond Sr.

.'

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 614-452-lt58

'5 7 CHEVROLET. 283 cu . in ..
standard shift : '63 Chevrolet

LEAGUE BALL, JOSEPJ./
' E. CROJII"-

Free Estimate

'149.50

~ · 18 . Jtp

MY OWN

ho use wif e comp le te with
ref , r ange an d ov en ; d ining
room , cor ner f ir epla ce in th e
livi ng room , full base ment,
ut i l ity spa ce, rec. roo m,

Lauret·

4989.

-------

1t 2

wa~r

cyl i nder, power · steering ,
good condition, phone 949-

985·3554.

drea m k itchen and dining

~Is .

ME I&lt;;S, W.VA. 25260
MEIG$992-7151
MASON 713-5634

~E

FLOWER!&gt; ~D GN-J.rl'(.

',;)l:f:ICIAL MIERICAN

We specialize in aluminum ,
vinyl and Steel siding ;
fiberglas, brick and slon~;
complete line of residential
and commerc ial roofing ;
remodeling, , bull ,d ing,
suspended ceilinOJ, lnttrlor
and exterior paintlng i com .
ptete line of Masonry work. All
work guaranteed to customer
satisfa c tion . We are fully
insured for your protection . 32
N.

I GPENT If ALL ON

CAMPUS CLA '!TEl\

ONLY $13,750 •

I

Maintenance''

For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

1967 CAMARO, automatic, 6

front,

I car garage, brick

wall to wall carpel.

YOU EVER HtRR TH'ONE AE'&gt;OUT THE
FROZEN MACKEREL SAL!':S MAN A N D
THE COLESLAW !"ARMER'S SEVE N
D0TTI'.R5 ?

"Everything In Home

B&amp;W HEATING"OO.

Get Rid ol Them
We will protect any single
dwelling r~sidence lor

.
ON YOUR LOT

HI, LANCE'... MIND IF

CONST.

ON
CENTRA~ HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

TERMITES•• TERMITES,

.

KITCHEN
and

Free Estimate

4·12-61c

3 BR
HOME

.'

992 · 3~36

good
condition ,
Harold
Brewer. L:.ong Bottom, phone

area, spaci ou s li v ing r oom ,

ACREAGE oi
available, also
all kinds . See
Powell, Rt . I.
2405.

40,000 actual miles. Phone
R. H. Bal la rd , Long
Bottom .
4·11·61c

9~9· 2820.

Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
phone
985·3554.
Lois.
H ·lf C
.,...,tr_u_c,..
k.- 9
- ra in
,- - - - - - - - - - ; ::,9::60:-;:F"·s'-'oo:-;F:.,Ac;R"M
bed·caltle racks, good tires,

Wadsworth Dr i ve, Columbu s,

H -30tp

standard, excellent condition,

Se veral Farms and Bu.ilding

@

jll'L ABNEI\

Cumm ins diesel. sl eeper cab,
air tag a&gt;cle. Will trade,

offer .

742-3947

742·4761
' We t1re fully in,ured

SON

1965 CHEVROLET - Ton, long,
wide bed pickup, 6·cyllnder.

1961 FORD truck tra ctor , 220

home,

_ ·r

992:58~3

after 7 p.m.

Auto Sales

garage, e&gt;ctra lot for garden.
S 18,000 or owner wi II listen to

Ave . Contacl Ed Hedrick , 2137 :

lot s. Phone 949·4313 .

Pomeroy . Phone 992· 3525

Broderick, Rt. 2, Pomeroy .
4·12·61C

Real Estate For Sale

bath , basement, garage, two

Ra cine, Ohio

basement.

bath

Heating .

992 -3891

done by hot.ir or contract.

Crill Bradford

1972 FORD Pinto, call
or 9,92.5248.

lite and Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbl"'l &amp;

service.

dozers, 2 size loaders. Work·
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt, lop soil. Duml&gt;
trucks and low-boy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jolters,

New Lima Road , 4 B. R. and

pickup electric
SSO; go 4 DOUBLE
guitar,
case
and amplifier ;
miles east Tupp~trs Plains,
Simco
western
horse saddle,
Rt. 611, turn right, 3rd house.
excellent condition. Phone
~·9· 101p
992·2941.
" ··'
"
4-16-31c
:TRUI'It;AL
FISH, laney
· IIUI&gt;PI••· angels and breeders, . NEW Holland Mower '450, 3
BeUu and supplies. Phone
point ·wlfh condlfloner hlfch ;
f92.,U(J,
.
sol of 3fl Inch duals for !rae·
12-30-lfc
WAN-T TO MOVE SOON, YOU SHOULD SEE US WE
tor; 4·16 semi-mounted plow;
HAVE SEVERAl VACANT ttOUSES READY TO MOVE
phone 985-3831.
·
ANTIQUE ;_ardrobe, drop·lea:
INTO. SEVERAL LOCATIONS FOR NEW HOUSES AND
4·16·31p
table and • few other Items.
SINESSES. DON'T RISK A MISS. CALL 992·3325 or
l'hane 992-4695.
DACHSHUND puppies; P.hone
·2378.
•16-3tc
742-5474.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOtlATE .
·
--~----4-16·31c L------------~--.;...,.----1
'

•

com -

cessories, complete package
Ohio. phone 237·433 4.
deal. Camp Conley Starcraft
n. n nc
Sales, Rt . 62, N. of Pl.
Pleasant, W. Va .
4·10tc RACINE - 10 room house,

TWI"' needle sewlnQ machine
1971 Model In walnut stand.
ANTIQUE organ wllh stool,
All features built-In to make
anllque square grand plano,
fancy designs and do stretch
phone 9111-2253.
sewing . Also buttonhole s ~
4·18-61c
blind hems etc. $43.35 cash
price or te rms available .
4 BLACK Angus cows wllh
calves, 3 and 4 years old,
Phone 992·5641.
4·12-6lc
Carol Pierce, Sr.. Rl. I,
Rutland. call 742-5195.
-----4·18-2tp VACUUM cleaner . :lectr o
Hygiene New Demonstrator
has all cleaning attachments
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pel Shop,
plus the new Erectro Suds for
Chester,Ohlo, Phone 985·3356.
shampooing carpet. Only
Tropical fish · and supplies .
$27.50 cash pr ice or terms
J.28·30tp
available. Phone 992·5641.
4· lUte
ONE TRAIN case, jr. pullman,
SIS; one wardrobe case, SS; 3. POl NT hllch adaptor for fast
24" Electric range SID; phone
hllch lnfernallonallrat tor; 3·
992·3818.
point hllch tractor , front
4·7·101p
mounted 6' blade power lake·
off belt pulley for above :
REMINGTON Model 700 ADL,
Portable cement mi xer;
22-250 with scope, cos! over
electric motor or can be
S200, special new, $125 ; phone
mounted on above tractor on
742·36Stl.
'
rear ·and run off power take·
H ·IOip
off: 250 McCullough chain
saw, A· l condition ; 8,pl y
ALLIS CHALMERS WC tractor
truck tires and wheels for 3/•
and equipment, ssso. Allis
ton Ford (8 hole) : 1960, 1.965
Chalmers Combine , $350.
Buick Wildcat wheels and
tires (tubeless) . •Call we,ek
Phone 7A2-3656.
4-9.10tp
days after 6 p.m., Rutland.
742.5113.
4·16·31p
cSTRAWBERRY plants, Charles
Fosler, Rt . 338, near Racine
IRISH setter. SSO, can be seen at
Locks, phone 24J.2309.
95 Pearl St .. Middleport any
4-12·121c
time .
4-16-6tc
WALNUT, modern style, with
AM-FM radio, 4. speaker
sound system , 4 speed PORTA~LE typewriter and
case, tine shape, $25; Rev . R.
autonnallc changer. Balance
D. Brown, Rt . I, langsville,
$83.17. Use our budget terms .
0
.
Call 992·7085.
4·16·3tp
4-12-61c

-- -- 1970 STARCRAFT fold·down

alum i num skirting ,

Hysell Run just 'h mi. from
S.R . 7 off 124, wooded
country reclu se, 3 A. tract,

Area on travel trailers and SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut'

campers . We stock all ac-

.

COUNTRY LIVING

BEAUTIFUL Early American
style. stereo -radio Cc;Jm;
Wanted To Rent
blnollon, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed automatic
A OR 5 ROOM house In country ,
1220 Washington Blvd.
changer. separate control s.
phone 992-7311 .
Belpre, Ohio
Balance $79.56. Use our
4·18·21c
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
- -- - -----4·1Hic 1970 MONTEREY. 12x60,ful ly

Fnr Rent

9'12-3020
160 Coal St.
Middleport

exteriOr carpentry . Ceiling

We hove 24 hr. emergency

basement, land·
scaping. We haVe 2 size

BACKHOE AND DOZER wOrk. ·
Septi c tanks Installed. George.
(Bill ) Pullins. Phone 992-2~78.
4.2S·Ifc

VERA E8LEN

yGur need. Complete roof or
spouting repair. Interior or

Dozer &amp; End loa~er work,

INTERIOR and ex terior
painting. R. I. Dubbeld, phone
742.5825.
4·17·51c

Contact Ass!H:iate

We have a complete Home
Mainlen~nce Service the
year around. No m1tter what

Day Number 992·2550

pOnds,

5· t.lfc

REA L TY~

..

240 Lincoln St.
Micklltport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing

EARTH MOVING

3·2·1fc- - - - - - - .
C. BRADFORD, Auclloneer
Complete Service
Phone 949·3821

JOHN

&lt;§

,,,.'lrr4)

'

Specializing In
Small Businesses

marquees, al ummum stdtng
and r a ll i n~ . A. Jacob, sales
r epresentati ve. F or fr ee
est imates. phone Charl es
Li sle, Syra cuse,
v. v.
Johnson and Son. Inc.

3886 Pt. Pleasant, W. Va . .
4·4·18lp
'61 FIAT, 4 door sedan, will sell ·~====--:----,
truck, phone 985·392C.

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

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

4·1Htc
.3 BEDROOM ranch type ho,;. , ·
,
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers · R~ADY · MIX CONCRETE de ·
Plains. Alt . new wilh total
livered right to your prolecl.
304 E. Main St.
electr ic and centra~ air
Fast and easy . l'ree
Pomeroy, Ohio
conditioning, bath and '~~• tully , estimates . Phone 992-3284 .·
Phone 992-3795
carpeted, full basement : ' Goegleln Reall y- Mix Co.,
garage In basement. See by
Mlddleporl. Ohio.
·
or Mason 773-5535
appointment, p~one 992-2196 ·
6.Jo.tlc,i ':=========~
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson. ,·
.
.
,..
Financing available.
· SEE US FOR . Awnmgs. storm
·.
l2·30·1fc', doors and wlndol'fs, car~o\ts ,

For Sale or Trade
or

&amp;

4.· 16-61c
roof pai nting end

Phone 'I'IH085.

3 13EDROOM home on twothirds acre lot ; all . co~ v eniences ; at GallipoliS
Ferry, W. Va . only $10,000:
come see ; Call675-3666or 675-

OPI!M I!VI!S. 1:00 P.M.
f'PMEROY, OHIO

YONDER COMES
TH' PARSON

ElECfti..JG A
CAtv BE'

'======~===;-r=====::::=:::::::::::=;~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~==~
· ~ ·--

repa ir work . Free estimates.

4· 1~· 1fC

V-8 engine, automatic tr ans ., p. steer ing, tocall owner car
with less than 23,000 miles, spotless Inter ior, good w-w

SAKES ALIVE!!

Business Services

4 bedrooms~ bath and a half,
Service. We Sharpen Sdssors.
3·29·ttc ; _
built in ki tchens and utility
1
rooms; wall to wall carpet DOZER and Ba-c7k- "H'oe---cW
"ork;
will be installed soon. One
PhQile 99B361; Ponds and
house has a larg_e family room
septic. tank s; B &amp; K Ex·
and a den. Both have a
ca vating.

$19f9

1-t:lU KIJCIW

Business Services

.S EWING MACHINES . Repair
serv ice, all makes. 992·2284.
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. :
Authorized Sing er Sales and t

COME

351 V-8 eng., automatic trans., poWer brakes. good tires,
clean Interior, beige f lnisl1, radio.

WILL .PAINT roof or houses,
!rim and cut trees ; clean
allies ; basements, etc . Phone
9111·3221 .
For Sale
4·16·61c AKC - puppies - Schnauzers,
Poodles , Cairn Terrier s,

Wanted To Buy

Real Estate For Sale

·:: BARNEY

"

'I

,.

�'
8-The DallJ Seatlael, ut•"" wt-l'm oy, 0., April II, JJ'11
· "If Meigs County is not
moving forward, I don't know
how to·make it move," Clark
said. "We have spen_t !ftOre
I Continued from page I )
time on the sanitary landfill
lha
n any other problem since I
Who ca n lead Meigs· County
forward'' 1. tf)ink I can .do that have been in office," Clark
said .
job."
"Expenses have gone up and
J ones also mentioned a
surplus of money carried over we have never asked for adin the general fund . "This ditional taxes. We are finanmoney could be used to great cially soWJd," Clark said.
advantage,'' he said;
" DannY T h 0 m P s 0 n •
Bob Clark , republican in- Republican candidate for Ours'
cumbent whose seat is not seat, followed Clark.
contested, said he would not · "Now is the time we the
talk •il&lt;&gt;~J.~ .wJw! can be done, people of Meigs County must
but II-·••wtiat has lleen done.
He join logether to IJ!Ove ahead,"
• •
showed that tbe commtsstoners Thompson stated in his opening
llave "taken a lot of criticism." remarks .
Of the sanitary landfill Clark . · "We have now to obtain State
sa id Archie Lee of Syracuse and Federal aid to solve the
had a proposal that failed to problems facing Meigs CoWJty
materialize. "This was ap- with the opening of the new
proximately two years ago. mines," Thompson· n~ted.
Since that time a site for a
"We must be optimistic in
landfill has not been found . We looking at Meigs coun£y, not
need 10 acres of ground for the pessimi.stic. We must begin
operation . The state has given now with executed plans:
.approval for us to lease or buy
!- Upgrading and surfacing
land for the operation."
county toads;
Clark explained the process . 2~A sanitary landfill along
involved in securing a landfill: with roads. This system is
"First, the state has to give upper most in the minds of the
tentative approval to a site; Citizens of Meigs County;
3-We must cooperate with
Dave Parry of the Meigs
County Soil and Water Con- and assist all coWJty -and
servation Service does the core village groups i,n planning for
drillin g, the Meigs County water, sewage, recreation, 81ld
Engineer surveys the site and training facilities;
the state inspector requires
4- We need zoning for the
tha.t appraisals be made. Then purpose of determining where
housing
and
after all this work, the state industry,
will
be
allowed
to
be
recreation
fails to approve the site ." He
continued: "!( cost $1,000 to developed."
"This is a golden opportunity
have the appraisals made. We
have a $.37,000 compactor that to make our county move
we can't get dirty. The road forward . I'll never give you
program hasn ' t been a any reason to regret voting lor
program that hasn't been in- me. Go to the polls and really
exercise your conscience,
vestigated," he said.
"Under Issue One we were compare platforms and
given $% million for an access records of the candidate. I
road (Highland Church Road ) want to be a Meigs County
Commissioner for whall know
to the hospital. This road was
given first priority, 80 per cent I can do for Meigs County,"
of the prelimilUlry engineering Thompson conCluded.
During the question and
has
been
completed .
Preliminary engineering of answer period, Clark was
Pearl Street in Middleport has asked why .surplus money was
carried over In the general
been com_pleted."
fund . Clark noted t)lat when he
took office he resolved not to

Candidates ·

•

H . ! . ·1
DEADLINE NEAR .
Tbe delldllDe fcir a!Joealee
•· • p.m. on 'lb. u:...
•• y,
votIa1...
.....
. April %7, ~e Melp Ctitmty
Board of EleciiO!II reports .
How~er, oa Salllrda~, April
%2, the flaal Salarday before
lbat deadllae IJie bOard of·
lice, located Ia lbe Ma10Dic
Temple, Pomeroy, ...01 be
opeafromla.m.tolZ aooa, 1
to 4 p.m. aad 7 to t p.m. lor
tbe conveDI~ace of MeiJs
Countfalll wo""'M• oulllde of
"'""'
the conoty aad aeedla&amp; to.
cast ableotee blllloll. 'lbe
. board olllce Is alao opeo
from 1 ·. 18 4 p.m. each af.
ternooo e1cept Sunday lor
ablealee votlllg.

'

Coach Roach is

.EllS Speaker

Marietta College Head
Basketball Coach Phil Roach
will be guest speaker at the
annual Eastern High School
basketball banquet to be held
Sa urda A '129
at 7 p.m. on t
Y• prt •
at the school.. .
Roach, 32, a native of
Columbus, is a graduate of
Ohio Wesleyan University aild
earned his Master's Degree at
Ohio University. He has done
:,:~·&gt;::::iw,::::;:::::::'&lt;&lt;::::·::::::::::::::::::l:i::::::::::&lt; post graduate work at Ohio
.W~~::::::::!:::i::,:::,:::ti:::~:::::!::::::::::::&gt;.::::::::::~~ State University.
forces to establish an airport.
Roach joined the Marietta
Also meeting with chamber College faculty and ~oaching
members
was
George stall in 1970 as assistant
Hargraves, Meigs High School professor of physical education
Superintendent. Hargraves and head coac h of both
spoke of the upcoming five mill basketball and soccer.
levy to be voted on May 2.
F 0 r mer 1y 1 res h men
Hargraves explained that · basketball coach and varsity
Meigs Local receives about 70 soccer coach at Ohio
pet. of its operating dollars UniversitY, Roach previously
from the state, while about 30 coached at Wittenberg
pet. of these dollars come from University, Ohio Wesleyan.
local taxes.
"Across the state It's just the
reverse, about 70 pet. of the
operating dollars come from
local taxes and about 30 pet..
come from the state. The slate (Continued from page I)
is doing its share for Meigs Bend Regatta weekend.
Council approved the request.
Local," Hargraves said.
Baronick presented a letter
To obtain full IWlding WJder
the new foWJdation program, a from Pat Meeker, Ohio
district needs 2Z'I.! mills voted Department of Natural
for operation. Meigs Local Resources, which stated that
depends greatly on the foun· funds. are not available ·for
dation program and needs full assistance in correcting the
fWJding under it. Meigs Local erosion on the upper parking
must increase Its operation lot wall. Meeker will be.at the
ills
millage from 17 ·5 m· to 22 ·5 Orchid Room in Pomeroy on
April 24 at 8 p.m. for those who
mills.
·
wish
to discuss the situation.
The operation millage for
Mees. was named chairman
Meigs Local has gone from 16.8
mills to 17.5 mills, an increase of the ordinance committee
of O.'lmills.ln fact, the 0.7 mills following the resignation of
is the only operation increase Elma Russell. Mrs. Russell
voted since the district was accepted a seat on the street
formed in 1966, Hargraves committee .
explained.
.
Folrowing a report by the
mayor,
the roof on the second
The state average per capita
property tax, for all purposes, ward fire house will be
get the county in debt and he is $!77, high is $250 and the repaired and a request by
has kept that promise. "You lowest is $71 which is Meigs, Dorothy Fisher, Lincoln Hill,
Tonight, April18
never know what unexpected
for a guardrail will be fulfilled .
said Hargraves.
expenses you might be faced
The chamber went on
SOMETHING BIG
QoWJcil approyed a transfer
(Technicolorl
with," ·Clark answered.
record to support the of $1,232.89 from tl)e parking
Dean Martin
When asked.about an airport,
passage of the proposed live meter fWld to the special street
Brian Keith
Clark noted that there were no
repair fWld and $1,000 from
" GP"
.
mllllevy.
plans for an airport. Location
Dean Lutz, co-chairman for parking meter to cemetery
Disney Cartoons:
Mickey Down Under
of an airport seemed to be the selling display space during fund .
Swituriand
biggest drawback and of the Big Bend Regatta, reported
Mayor Barunick presented a
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
course the cost of such an that he would meet with proclamation horn Gov. John
operation. Clark noted that the Pomeroy Village CoWJcil in Gilligan proclaiming the we~ k
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
airport authority recomApril19-20
mended that Meig~allia join regard to using the upper of April 16 through the 22 Youth
Temperance Education Week.
parking
lot,
II
chamber
members wished him to do so. The Ohio Women's Christian
The chamber voted to have Tempe~ance Union has set
aside to promote informing
i Lutz meet with coWJcil.
Lutz also reported that young people of the. dangers in
letters have been received the use of alcohol, drugs and
from area businessmen narcotics.
Edgar Vanlnwagen met with
requesting display space.
Attending in addition to those coWJcil in regard to dogs
named were, Jack Kerr, running loose in his neighpresident, Bill. Grueser, Willie borhood, especially at night
Cundiff, Dale Warner, Wendall that keep him awake. The
Hoover, Norbert Compton, matter will be investigated.
Richard Chambers, Carson
Jean Will also met with
Crow, Dean Lutz, Dennis council in regard to trailers
Keney, Tom Cassell, Marge and dai~ clipper in the area
Hollner, Bob Jacobs, C. E. near her home, charging them
Blakeslee, Earl Ingels, DolUlld a nuisance and detrimental to
surroWJding properties.
• • • • •. .• • • • • • • • • • • • - Deiner and Jack Carsey.
Jed Webster noted that he
had been to the area and would
further investigate the

Litter

MEIGS THEATRE

~===NO:T:O:P;E:N;:::.--~•••••••

Troy High School and
Chauncey Dover High School.
In 10 years of coaching, he has
had but one !ising season in
basketball.
Coach Roach , working with
the Marietta Shrine Club, instituted in the 1971-72 season ·
the first Marietta Invitational
Shrine Tournament. This
summer he will conduct the
second annuaL pioneer
COACH ROACH
basketball camp for boys in !he
seventh throUgh 10 grades.
Last fall, he conducted the
FINES LEVIED
second annual Marietta
Syracuse Police Chief Milton
College basketball clinic for Varian reported that Henry
area basketball coaches .
Walker, 59, Portland , was fined
Tickets for the banquet at Monday in Mayor Herman
$1.7S each are being ·sold at London's court $150 and costs
Nelson's Drug~ in Pomeroy and given two days in jail for
llnd at the high school office. driving while his license is
The banquet is being sponsored WJder suspension and $125 and
by the Eastern Athletic costs and three days in Jail ior
Boosters.
driving while intoxicated.

Falcons

Win Big

. The Wahaffill White ralc.ons
IJllined their fourth victo~ in a
row Monday . when .they
poWJded out 1'3 hits arid scored
19 runs In five Innings over the
hapless Buffalo Bisons of
Putnam County.
Three Wah9ma pitchers
allowedoniy two hits in the five
inning stint while posting their .
first shut-out of the .yoWJg
season.
Rlck 'Hesson, makln~ his:,
second · start of his career,
picked up the win which was
also his second of the season.
~tanley Adkins, making his
first appearance this season,
pitched an impressive two
innings in only giving up one hit
and wallting none. Kevin Camp
pitched the final inning to
preserve lbe shut-out.
Rick Hesson ·also proved to
be the big stick in the game as
he went two for three and drove
in lour rWJs .
Chester and CurUs Roush
also poWJded out two hits each
as did Robbie Lambert.
The Falcons scored two runs

mand records began in 1969.
Senior U.S. offlciaiB said theY
had no word of any bomb halt
over North Vietnam. '!bey said
they would be "surprised" if
there was a halt and hoped
none had been called. They
reported the weather over
North Vietnam was clear, an
indication new strikes might be
carried out.
The war also blazed up today
in Quang Tri Province, just
below the Demilitarized Zone,
and front dispatches said the
Quang Tri combat base 10
miles below the DMZ and
Artillery Base Pedro 12 miles
to the southwest were hit today
with at least 200 rounds of 130
millimeter artillery, the
biggest in the North VIet·
namese arsenal.
Other front dispatches said ·
every South Vietnamese base
in Kontum Province was
shelled as usual today but that
Tan Canh, headquarters of a
South Vietnamese regiment,
wll!l hit by 1115 mm al1ille~,
indicating main Communist
forces were drawing cloile. 'lbe
CommuniBts kept the An Khe
Pass supply route blocked and
ambusbed a South Korean
colwnn, kUling four men and
knocking out two armored
personnel carriers.
North Vietnamese Reegroup
A front dispatch said the
situation at Fire Base Bastogne, a key defense for the

- COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
federal Pay Board Monday, In
writing, notified the Ohio
Department of Education it
has approved Ohio's statemandated minimum teacher
salary schedule and the 20
cen~ per hour wage increase
for non-teaching school
workers.
The deCision is not to become
filUll WJW April 'll after the end
of a two-week review period
which began April 13. Martin
W. Essex, state superintendent
of schools, said he did not
expect any reversal or
modification of the decision. ·
The new salary schedule,
along with the non-teacher
'
worker wage increase,
was ·
included in the state's comprebensive budget-tax bill and
both are retroactive to Jan. 1,
1972. The salary schedule
establiahes an BMUal salary of
$5,800 lor a starting teacher
with a bachelor's degree, an
additiolUll ~ more than the
old rate of $5,200. 0"- July 1 the
starling salary will increase to
Veterau Memorial Hospital
VISITING HOURS - 2-4 and
7-8 :ilO p.m.
ADMITTED - Howard
Largent, Syracuse; Morgan
French, Pomeroy; Pearl
Koblentz, Pomeroy; Paul
McElroy, Pomeroy; Harold
Thomas, Cheshire; John
Ginther, Long Bottom; Roland
Morris, Pomeroy.
-DISCHARGED - Mark
Hudson, Wilbur Hood, Larry
Jacobs, Lewia Edgell, Eric
Diddle and Charlotte Mayle.

All Cpstomers Age 65 Or Over
Just Stop In The Bank and Inform

city of Hue 12 miles to the
northeast had eaaed today,
apparently beeause the North
Vietnamese were regro~lng.
Helicopters were flying In
oupplles
againot
com·
paratlvely 1111all ground fire.

Service Charge Free.

..

WI1E~

YOU VISIT. PARK

~REE

MIDD_LEPOR:r; OHIO
Member Fede(ll .~l_lJWr.llee CerponU.

•

•

....
j l,.&lt;•

t

the new ·Wilmar Cafeteria
meeting rooms in Parkersburg
were Mr. and Mrs. Ga~
Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Clint
Mullens, Mr. and Mrs. David
Chadwell, Mrs . Janice Ritchie,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Parker,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Parker,
Mrs . Thelma Orr, Mrs.
Kathryn Baum, Mrs. Betty
Roush, Mrs. Goldie Story, Miss
Rosalie Story, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Kessinger, Mrs. Carolyn
Franz, Mrs. Pauline Myers,
Mrs. Grace Weber, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Knight and Mrs.
Maxine Whitehead.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy t,yednesday at 11 a.m.
was 74 degrees under sunny
skies.

Chi1dren's Dreams Came True_

AUTOS COLLIDE
Investigation is continuing
into an accident on West Main
St., Pomeroy at 3:12 p.m.
Monday. Chief of Police Jed
Webster said the accident_.
occurred when a car driven by
Jeose Lambert, Pqmeroy,
pulled from a lot near Shuler's
Market Into the path of a car
driven by Mike Globokar,
Pomeroy. Damage to
vehi~les was heavy.
drivers were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where they
were Irea ted for injuries and
released.
A thought for today: British
statesman John Selden sald,
"They that govern the most
make the least noise."

you get them all at once,"
Mattingly said. "You 'll be
happy to know we shared our
peaches with Casper. He ate as
much as we did."
Busiest Day
. ~:Th~,'s, ~UU ~Jot of peach
on t '.:Sper's face, ' Young said.
This was the- busiest day for
the trio since Sunday's launch,
the maneuvers starting with
jettisoning "of a mapping
camera panel and winding up
with a power dive to within 12
miles of the moon at about 7:30
p.m. EST.
On this next-to-last missiQn
in the moonf!ight series, the 51·
ton Apollo 16 spaceship came
Wlder the moon's gravitational
pull at 12: 13 a .m. EST on the
last leg of its journey from
Cape Kennedy, Fla .

·E astern Teachers
Endorse Tax Levy

known quality brands,

selection now at Sale Prices.

3:23p.m. ESf -a little over 24
hours before tbe scheduled
landing between Stone Mountain and th~Smokies .
1 The most serious problem of
the flight so far -trouble in the
~·II guidance-system 'as down-graded to nothing
more than a . phantom
nuisance.
Correction Canceled
The astronauts, Navy Capt.

JNe~s:. i~ Brie/~

On Sale At The Warehouse on Mechanic St.
very well made and .an exba fine

Maybe the kids thought he
wouldn't come.
After all, why should he? He
had IAI be a real buay guy acting
like Dr. Paul Hunter on the The
Bold ones TV show they were
permitted to stay up to flee
Sunday nights. ·visions of the
affluence, comlorla, p~tty
ladlea around, big cars and
gUttering Ughll In the
lmaglnatioll of the 2S
yCJl!llgslen who reside at lbe
Gallla County Children's home
had to mak- their request that
David Hartman villi them
Monday more than forlorn.

Redwood furniture · Includes picnic
table with benches, straight chairs,
rockers, gen. running
chairs.
Aluminum furlliture such as chair
lounges, gliders. foldiftg chairs, gliders
· porch and lawn umbrellas. A truly
excellent selection of stYles.

Also at the Warehouse big"sa~ of carpet · finolium • Ll~n
Paddigg • Metal Trim • Wheelbarrows

Showers likely and cooler
north tonight and Thursday.
Lows tonight in the 50s central
and upper 50s and lower 60s
soulh. Highs Thursday Sib and
60s north and 60s and 71b
ce ntral and south. ·

T~N

PHOI'IE 992-21'56

Scaggs, Melaine Hackett, Pat Gress, Doug Little, Mike Struble, Doris
Barnhart and Mr . Cfder ; back row, Nathan Robinette, Karen Sutherland,
Marcy Owens, Steve Stanley, Diana King, Becky Will, Andrea Dewhurst,
John Gillian, Marian Neutzling, Dennis Gilmore, Tom Kern and Darla
Neutzling.

John W. Young, . Lt. Cmdr.
Thomas K. Mattingly and Air
Force Lt. Col. Charles M.
Duke, awoke without a call
from the ground about 7 a.m.
ESf and reporled everything
was n01111a1 a!»Mtd· Spaceship
Casper. Tbey ate breakfast
while listening to music played
by an onboard tape machine.
The astronauts.were told that
their course was so good that'
flight director Philip Shaffer
had canceled the last course
correction schedule.:! · before
Apollo 16 reached the moon.
Mattingly good natbredly
reported that the spacemen
By UDIIed Pre111Dle1'111tlooal
COLUMBUS- A MASS RALLY IS BEING planned for later had some trouble Tuesday
this tolonth as a result of a federal court rullng Invalidating the eating from a new snaptop can
state's Indirect aid to parochial schools. Catholic school of peaches, being tested for the
superintendents from Columbus, Cleveland, Cinclrutatl, Youngs- · Skylab space station.
"When you open that can,
town, Steubenville and Toledo dioceses met here Tuesday to map
the rally, tentallvely set for April 29 ·30.
Attorney David Young, who met with the Catholic officials to
explain in detail the court ruling, platmed to meet today with
Lutheran, Jewish, Christian and non..-eligious private school
le11ders today. Young said two main alterlUltlves are under
consideration - ~ect appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court or
legislation giving non.publlc school parents an exemption or
Teachers of the Eastern
credit on their state income tales.
Local
School
District
unanimously
endorsed
the
WASHINGTON - AFLCIO PRESIDENT 'George Meany
three
and
a
half
mill
tax
levy
to
said Tuesday he no longer believes strikes are good tools for
organized labor and has appointed a conunittee to find an be voted on in May, ~~ a dinner
alternative weapon to lbe strike. "I don't believe in strikes," he meeting of the- Eastern Local
Education Association.
said. "I don't belleve~y mean what theydldyearsago."
Tbe group decided to send
Meany made the comments during an appearance before a
letters
of appreciation to Rep.
Senate labor subcommittee which Ia COtl.!ldering a prllp()SBI from
Clarence E. Miller and ~o the
President Nilon to ouUaw strikes in the transportation indus!~.
Ohio Education Association for
Meany said he still opposes the administration's plan, favoring
their recenl support of the
inlltead one that would allow strikes that would tie up only up to educators ''of southeastern
441 per cent of a given transportation industcy.
Ohio.
Meany said his general views llll strikes have changed over
Officers named for the
the years, from the time when a strike union could afford to pay coming year are, Mrs. Nellie
ita workers only 60 cents an hour in strike benefits. Now, he said, Par-ker, president; Mrs. Carla
~en though'•the benefits may be a Uttle better, they · are not
Salser, first vice president;
sufficient for working people who have children in college, Miss Linda Hutchinson, second
mortgage payments and other responsibilities.
vice president; Dllvld Chad·
well, secretary, and Howard
SANTIAGO .;.. PRESIDENT SALVADOit ALLENDE at· Parker, treasurer.
.
Attending the dinner in one of
(Continued ~n page 16)

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UP!) - Apollo 16's astronauts
awoke an hour early, in good
spirits, and sped toward moon
orbit today to line up for a
landing Tlllndiy In lite unex·
plorW IWI'' llll!ll8nlll.
Tbelr ml!isinh settled down to
smooth routine and all systems
were "go" lor the criUcal
brake into orbit.
That maneuver was set for

Us of Your Age and Your

Checking Account WiU Be

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1972

Highlands Touchdown

Engineer
(Continued from page I )
from -B1i -Sandy,- located at
Louisa, Ky., where he was
resident engineer for its
800,000-kilowatt Unit 2.
He served with the U. S.
Corps of Engineers from 1934
to 1941. He is a past master of
the F&amp;AM Lodge and a
member and past chancellor of
the Knights of Pythias, both in ·
Lowell.

OHIO

Astronauts Poised for

~ .400.

·Beginning April 21 There
Will Be No Service Charge
On Checking Accounts For

POMEROY-MIDDLE~ORT,

SENIOR PLAY CAS!' - "Butter On the Bacon" is the title of the threeact play the cast of the senior class of Meigs High School will present Friday
evening at 8 p.m., preceded by a matinee performance lor students Friday
afternoon. Charles Corder is director. Front row, 1..-, are Milisa Rizer, Becky

PORCH, LAWN and PATIO FURNITURE

A MESSAGE TO ALL
SENIOR CITIZENS

enttne

Teacher Raise
Now Official
By Pay Board

.

Weather

ao, &amp; Taro Mowers • CarPet

blood?
•
David Hartman, alias Dr.
Hunter, stepped lroin his car at
the children's late Monday
afternoon, shucked off his
jacket, then his tie, remarked,
"ll's too hot for that stuff."
Looking toward the youngsters
grouped to his front, he added
amiably,
"Let's
play
basllelball!"
That did it. Tbelr dream was
here in UU, tall, perhaps
unhandsome man owning a
vital presence. David Hart·
man!

Aller a lo.ttle play they
More Uke 1 dream, or a wllh trooped lnllde the borne to sit
made upcln blowing out birth- in atarce circle .With . .tman
day CU. candlll. Wbo apac11 l1elrl.ng ea«;h child ~troduce
INCII 111. bectml '1'1111 ... · li""'lf. Each receiVed hil

ELBERFELDS IN. POMEROY

.

. autograph.
spoke in.formally for 15
Marianne Campbell, vice · minutes, and after the
president in charge of dedication exercises, he was
development at Holzer Medical told of the children's invitation.
Center, and Sam Neal, communications director, had
Cancelling a scheduled ·tour
gotten call from Mrs. James of the new center with
Singleton, matron, earlier dignitaries. Hartman asked
Monday telling them that her Mrs. Campbell and Neal to
children would awfully much take him to the home which is
like to
Hartman.
within "seeing distance" of the
He was the · speaker for new hospital.
dedication exercises of the new
Hartman, due back in
$21 million medical center at 2 , Hollywood where he does
research-for The Bold Ones, as
p.m. Monday.
Tbe~ held Utile real hope the well as stars in the show, told
children's wish could be ' Mrs. Campbell and Neal:
sstisfied. .
"I have never before in my
Nevertlteless, after Harbnan life, in all my travels lor public
had lunch With visiting press, appearance, met so many nice,
rlidlo and TV persllnnelat noon sincere people as I have here in
in the new center, where he . Gallipolis ."
'
'

a

see

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Friday through Sunday:
Chance of showers daily
with near seasonal tern·
peratures. Highs mainly in
tbe 60s and lows generally In
the 40s.

welcome
.
Given 7

Seven
persons
were
welcomed. as new members of
the American Legion , Drew
Webster Post 39 , Tuesday
nigh t.
They were Dor Coates, Allan
Downie, Melvin Swisher ,
Robert Armes, Clarence Schmucker, Roger Mowery and
Ed Wahley.
Attending the eighth district
conference last Sunday were
Commander Leonard Jewell
and Frank Vaughan .
All boys in Meigs County who
will be attending Boys State at
Ashland College are asked to
attend a special meeting on
May 7 at 2 p.m. at the Athens
Legion Post Home, Paul Casci
said .
Bob Armes, chairman of the
teena ge hop for Regatta
weekend has announced that
the rock and roll group "The
Foxx" has been engaged to
play at the two dances at Meigs
Junior High in Middleport on.
June 16 and 17.
Members are asked to
donate bloOd at the next visit of
the bloodmobile on April 24 in
the name of Frank Fugate.
Reported on sick call were
Harold Smith, a patient at
Holzer Medical .Center, and
Paul E. Henderson, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
A dance for all Legionnaires
will be held on May 6 at the
Logan Armory beginning at 9
p.m. Refreshments were
served by Roy Reuter.

Junior Board
··--- -

Makes Plans
Possible revtstons · of the
constitution and assigning
committee chairmen
highlighted a recent meeting of
the Meigs County JWJior Fair
Board at the extension office.
The boa!'tl discussed· seiling
· market· hogs at the annual
Meigs County Fair and
achievement awards which
this year also will go to Future
Homemaliers of America and
the Girl Scouts.
.
Tbe jWJior board officers
made plans to attend 1/fe senior
fair hoard meeting on May 1at
the fairgrounds. Fifteen
members and three advisors
attended the meeting.

SAIGON (UPI)-CommWJist
forces launched a ground attack against South Vietnamese
positions only 'll miles from
Saigon today. Heavy fighting,
including hand -to-hand
combat, flared along Highway
I in Cambodia and the
strategic roadway from
Phnom Penh to Saigon was cut.
The U.S. command said that
a Navy ship believed to have
been attacked bY North Vietnamese torpedo boats actually
was hit by two missiles fired
from U.S. aircraft. One sailor
was killed and nine injured
Sunday in the incident aboard
the guided missile frigate
Worden.
Communist troops shelled
Lai Khe, headquarters of the
South Vietnamese 5th Infant~
Divillion, killing one soldier
and wounding seven. Lai Khe is
the last big South Vietnamese
base to tbe north of Saigon and
no government troops are stationed between the base and
the capltal 29 miles away.
Field reports said a local
Viet Cong force early today
attacked the government
militia outpost at Ben Cat, 'll
miles north of Saigon.
The reports said the defenders called in artillery strikes
which hit a populated area,
killing eight civilians, Including a man and his four
children. Only one Viet Cong
was known dead.
In neighboring Cambodia,
Communist troops launched
concentrated attacks on a 40mile stretch of Highway I,
which links Phnom Penh to
Saig'?". 'P.!~~~.'Y~.~~~d
cut m a number 111 places,
including at the provincial
capital o(Svay Rieng which is
only 12 miles from the South
Vietnamese border.
Military officials said Com·
munist forces took threequarters of the roadside
market town of Kompong
Trabek 55 miles southeast of
Phnom Penh and that fighting
was under way there and at
other govenunent positions on
the road.
A number of other Commu-

nist attacks also were reported in South Vietnam-four when a
near Saigon. Milita~ spokes- UHI Huey crashed near Tuy
man said there was fighting Hoa on the central coast and
Tuesday four miles so.uth of two when an Army AHI Cobra
Chon Thanh, about 40 miles gunship was shot down 37 miles
north of Saigon, and in the north of Saigon in Binh 0\long
marshlands near Rach Kien, Province . ·
The Worden was one of two
only 1~ miles south of Saigon.
In tbe air war, the U.S. ·U.S. ships hit this week. On
command said B52s made 22 Monday the ·guided missile'
strikes against Communist cruiser Buchllilan was hit by
positions in South Vietnam. In Communist shOre fire, killing
addition, six Americans were one man and injuring seven
killed in two hlllicopter crashes others.

CHOIR DIRECTOR - Glenville Thomas, a native of
Wales, will direct the Ohio state Youth Ololr which will
present a concert at Meigs High School at 3 pm. on S111day,
May 14, under the sponsorship of Ohio Eta Flti and XI
Gamma Mu Chapters of tbe Beta Sigma Fill Sorority. '!be
1411-voice choir made up o! high school students from all of
Ohio's 88 coWJties has appeared on the same progralllll with
such well known professional entertainers as Bob Hope,
Johnny Carson, Ancjy Willlams and the &amp;nothers Broll!ers
and recently perfonned lor President Nimn at the White
House. Local members of tbe group are Jo Ellen Diebl and
Melanie Hackett, seniors at Meigs High School, and W~
Well, a Meigs graduate now attending Ohio University.

29 Prepared to Travel
Twenty-nine Pomeroy safety
patrol boys and girls will leave
Friday, April 28 for a weekend
sighlseeing trip of Washington,
D.C .
Final plans for the annual
trip were completed at a recent
meeting of the parents of the
safety patrol members with
Mrs. Bonnie Fisher, sixth
grade teacher, and patrol
advisor.
This year the trip will be
Wlder the guidance of Eugene
Brundige, an Atherui teacher.
Mrs. Fisher and Miss Wendy
Schmidt, also a teacher at the
Pomeroy Elementary School,
will be chaperones. Six boys
and girls from other school
patrols will join the Pomeroy
group at their own expense.
The general schedule calls
for the safety patrol students to
meet at the school at 7 p.m.
They will travel to . Parkers·
burg on a school bus, and there
will -board a Greyhound for
Washington, D. C. arriving at 5
a.m. The Harrington Hotel will
'

Lincoln Memorial and other
monuments. Tbe afternoon wW
be spent on Capitol Hill visiting
the Capitol Building. A visit
with Congressman ClarellCII
Miller has tentatively been
Memorial Service scheduled. After tbe evening
meal the group will tour the
Wax Museum. A pizza party is
At 2 on Saturday
planned lor that evening.
Memorial services for David
On Sunday morning the
Lee Watson, son of David and students will visit the
Marilyn Grindley Watson, Smithsonian Institute . ·
formerly of Minersville, who is Departure will be by Embassy .
believed to have drowned in the Row and a stop will be made at
Guyandotte River March 31 the National Cathedral. The
will be held at 2 p.m. Saturda; . group will arrive back in
at the Syracuse Church of the Parkersburg at 9:30 p.m.
Nazarene .
The · Rev . Willis Coburn,
assisted by the Rev. M. C.
Larimore will conduct the
services. Besides his parents,
'
.
David, a first grader at the
Barboursville, W. Va .,
Elemenlary School, is survived
by a sister, Dena, and his
grandmothers, Mrs. Christine
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Freeman, Pomeroy, and Mrs.· Dept. investigated two acCora Grindley, Minersville. . cidents Tuesday. One 9CCW'fed
on SR 248, one and two tenths of
a mile east of Chester where
James Satterfield, 35, Racine,
Rt. 2, traveling east at 8 p.m.
Materials Company, Cam· topped a hill and appUed
bridge, was awarded the bid brakes but struck a car in ill
side driven by lUckie Lee
for the balance.
The commissioners ap- Hollon, 16, Long Bottom, Rt. 1.
There were no injuries and
proved a project submitted by
County Engineer Theodore medium damage to both
Beegle to repair a landslide on vehicles. No citation waa
.
county road 28 at a total cost of issued.
Tuesday
at
5:30
p.JIL
011
$6,044.40.
Barringer
!Uclge
Roac:,
one
and
The commissioners ordered
12 gross of grave marker flags three tenths mile north of SR
for Memorial Day, and set 124, Ray Edward lleara, ..
. another· meeting on Monday Clay, w. va., driving ncrib,
went off the highway, and
before election day.
struck a mailbol beloncJnl Ill
Attending were Charles R. Owen Dalley and fence posts 011
Karr, Bob Clark and Waraen the Ester Dilley proper!)'.
Ours, commissioners, and Sears was cited to court an
charges of hit lklp.
Martha Chamber, clerk.
be headquarters for the
students.
On Saturday morning the
boys and girls will visit
Arlington Cemetery, the

2 'Accidents

Investigated

Mix Bids Awarded

The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday received
bids on aggregate materials
for roads which will be studied
and a warded at a later date,
Bids received were by TriState Material Company,
Parkersburg; James Merry
Stone Co., Bidwell ; Richard &amp;
Sons Co., Pomeroy, and
Diamond Stone Quarries, of
Albany .
Bituminous mix bids,
EVENT POSTPONED
received earlier,
were
The . mother-daughter awarded Tuesday calling for
banquet of the B~ Bee Class 700,000 gallons to he purchased.
of the Middleport First Baplist Asphalts Materials, Marid lll,
Church, scheduled Thursday ·.received 011e bid not to exceed
evening, has been postponed. 60,000 gallon and the D. E.

'

l,

CEN13

Saigon Under
Ground·Attack

.

, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. situation.
The mayor's report showing
receipts of $1,748.70 for the
month of March was accepted.
Attending were Baronick,
Mees, Don Collins, Ralph
Werry, Mrs. Russell, William
Snouffer, council members;
Jane Walton, clerk, and
Webster.

•

. _ /JeiJoted To 'I'M lntere~l$ Of 'I'M MeigJ-~ason Area

VOL XXIV NO. 261

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
NaOOilal~

at y

Tbe Houston Astrodome Ia so
lafge t,hal 811 11kto~ building
could be spun inside like a
. pinwheel and: never touch the
roof, floor or sides of the
stadium.

ift-lbe second; nine in the third,
and four each in the fourth and
fifthtoroundoulthescoringby
innings.
Wahama will be Idle tonight
but journey to Gallipolis
tomorrow night to take on the
SEOAL Blue Devils. Robbie
I,ambert (0-1) willJl!'Obably.be
on ·the mound 'for ~ White
Falcons.
029 44-19 13 1 ..
WHS ·
Buffalo
000
011- 0 2.• 5
· -·
·

2 U. S. Warships Hit
SAIGON (UP! )-CommWlist
gunfire killed two American
WASHINGTON (UP!) sailors and woWJded 16 off the
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
coast of Vietnam SIUlday and
Laird said today American
Monday, the U.S. command
warplanes were out on raids
said today. Two ships were put
"at this moment" io North
out of action but it was WlVieinam. Laird appeared on
certain whether one was hit by
Capitol
Hill to give two key
a PT boat in a repetition of the
Senate ~ommlttees reports
1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident.
on the heavy' new U. S. raids
Despite WJusually heavy B52
amid growing controversy
and fighter-bomber strikes in
over the raids ordered by
South Vietnam the Communist
President Nixon, including
widened their offensive and ·
weekend strikes at Haool
burned four refugee villages
and Haiphong.
near the coastal city of Quang
Other officials also said
Ngai, 160 miles below the
Hanoi
and Haiphong had not
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
been necessarily ruled off
Military sources said the
limits
to bombers.
CommWJists also had occupied
all towns and villages in Binh
Dinh Province north of An Loc,
60 miles north of Saigon. mander predicted heavy
Fighting was reported three Communist onslaughts against
miles from An Loc today and An Loc tonight or Wednesday.
the South Vietnamese comMilitary sources said B52
strikes Monday a mile north of
An !.De wiped out a North
PLEASANT VALLEY
Vietnamese regiment of about
Names of patients admitted 1,400 men in a quarter-mile
have been discontinued by wide bombing pattern when the
hospital authorities.
bombers struck in force.
• msCHARGES: Mrs. God- Weather Good lor Raids
frey Moore, Point Pleasant;
The U.S. command said in
Matthew Crabtree, Point the 24- hours ending at noon
Pleasant; Ace Rayburn, Point today some of the heaviest
Pleasant; Roy West Brinker, raids of the Indochina War
Ill ; Clifton; · Juanita Runyon, were carried out. It said 20 B52
Robertsburg;
Homer missions were flown over the
Deren berger, Henderson, and South and 524 tactical air
Mrs. Robert Wood , Poinl strikes were Down in the
Pleasant.
heaviest strikes since com-

•

Now You Know

'

.·

-·

•

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