<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="866" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/866?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:02:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="10766">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2d59eaed8c49827912f46fe039b4e309.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7dcc96d9aeb96e899b1bc2c2915b89f5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1872">
                  <text>•

Budget
Billion
$11.6
Nixon
zn Red
•
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon today sent Congress a $229.2 billion budget
calling for $11.6 billion of deficit
spending which he said would
spur the lagging economy into
prosperity "without war and
without runaway inflation."
The President made no effort
to pare the deficit with higher
taxes. The only major tax
change he proposed was a $2.8
billion boost in Social Security
payroll levies to pay for a 6 per
cent increase in benefits.
Never since World War II has
a president deliberately budget-

ed for such a large deficit and
no Republican President ever
has done so. But Nixon adopted
the economic theory that deficit
spending will help restore
prosperity. If it does not work
out that way within a year, his
own budget figures indicated
the deficit could be far bigger.

As usual, the spending figwe
was a record, reflecting the
growth in population and the
economy.
Nixon said his budget for the
1972 fiscal year which begins
July 1 breaks down to 34 per

Now You Know

'

The Koran denies Moslems all
games except chess.

cent for national defense, 42 per
cent for human resources, 11
per cent for physical resources,
8 per cent for interest on the
national debt and 5 per cent for
other programs.
His emphasis throughout, was
on reviving the sluggish economy.
"The 1972 budget reaffirms
the determination of the federal
government to take an activist
role in bringing about the kind
of prosperity that has rarely
existed in the American economy -a prosperity without war
and without runaway inflation,"

he said.
Here is how the new budget
compares with estimated
spending in the current fiscal
year (billions of dollars):

1971
1972
Outlays
212.8
229.2
Revenue
194.2
217.6
Deficit
18.6
11.6
It was the first time the
administration publicly had
estimated the size of the deficit
for the current 12 months
ending June 30. When the 1971
budget went to Congress a year

ago, Nixon foresaw a $1.3
billion surplus. Since then,
projected spending has increased by $12 billion while
anticipated revenues have declined by $7.9 billion.
The chief executive unveiled
no major new programs in the
budget.
As he did in his State of the
Union speech a week ago, he
stressed domestic issues. Less
than two paces of the 22-page
budget message were devoted
to defense and that was headed
"toward a full generation of
peace."

He proposed spending $77.5
billion for national defense, an
increase of $1.1 billion over the
current fiscal year but still $2.7
billion below spending in the
1970 fiscal year.

For the second straight year,
there was no specific figure for
the cost of the war in
Indochina. An administration
official said the budget assumed that the cost would
decline during the fiscal year
as U.S. troops continue to be
withdrawn.
Nixon placed emphasis on his

revenue sharing plan, saying it beyond the start of the new
would "return power to the fiscal year.
people" by eliminating most of
The budget proposed that $9.6
the strings on about one-third of
the budget's $38 billion in billion in existing federal aid
federal aid to state and local grants for more than 100
governments.
specific programs be converted
into general purpose block
The President announced last grants. Many of the programs
week that revenue sharing· initiated by Democratic former
would total $16 billion a· year Presidents John F. Kennedy
including $6 billion in new and Lyndon B. Johnson, would
money. But the budget called lose their specific identity.
for spending $13.6 billion next About half of the funds
year, including $4 billion in new earmarked for revenue sharing
funds because the proposed come from New Frontier and
starting date has been delayed Great Society programs.

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXVI

NO. 202

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Weather
Snow today likely one to two
inches south. Temperatures
rising into low 30s overnight.
Windy, temperatures low 20s
Saturday.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1971

TEN CENTS

Charges Aired
•
THIS FENCED AREA USED for storage for a nwnber of years by the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. on Middleport's Park St. has been

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

! News ...in Briefs !
By United Press International

Reform of Court System Sought

•

a

sold to Jemo Associates, Inc., which lS developing housing area close by.
The property stored in the enclosed area will be moved in the spring.

Bust Possible

use of contractors. Blough is
well remembered in WashingWASHINGTON -SEN. WllLIAM B. SAXBE, R.Ohio, and
ton for his confrontation with
three other senators have Introduced legislation to reform the
President John F. Kennedy
criminal justice system by ending what the "piecemeal" apnearly a decade ago when U.S.
proach to fighting crime. Saxbe sponsored by the bill Thursday
Steel posted price inct:eases
with Sens. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., Edward W. Brooke, Rwhich Kennedy called excesMass., and Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn.
sive. The President forced the
Refonns required by the legislation include establishment of
steel industry to backtrack.
homogenous recruitment as well as educational, promotional,
In m~ch _the same way,
retirement and salary criteria for police; implementation of
Blough unplied, the federal
criminal trials within 60 days of arrest or charge; and updating
governm~nt must now force
correctional institutions. The measure calls for the federal
construction l~bo~ to backtra~k.
The COnSlfUChOn mdustry, With
goverrunent to finance 75 per cent of the costs of those which
3 4 million employes he said is
require state legislation or local ordinances.
~rger than the aut~ and s~el
industry combined and accounts
Men Who Weren't There
for 13 per cent of the total
Bids for three trucks to be
value of the nation's goods and
PHNOM PEHN - OFFIC~ INSIST the congressional
services.
used by the Meigs County Highamendment barring U.S. advisers and troops in Cambodia is not
way Department were sold
being violated. But there is growing evidence of the American
when the Meigs County ComWASHINGTON (UPI)- A
presence in this embattled Asian nation. These events unmissioners met in speci!ll
request for $75,000 for general
derscored the use of American men and material:
session Thursday.
investigation of flood control
-Four U.S. soldiers, dressed in civilian clothes, were seen at
The Goble Ford bid of $5,769
projects in Appalachia was
Social problems arising from
The Middleport }&gt;ost will
a nwnber of places in Phnom Penh defusing or touching off exincluded in the Army Corps of
drug abuse, not only in the cities sponsor a drug abuse program on a 1971 truck, cab and chassis,
plosives; 19 Gis dressed in civilian clothes flown into Phnom Penh
Engineers water resources
but in rural areas, were and Roach is available to speak was accepted. Other bidders
were Meigs Equipment Co.,
airport to rig damaged American-built helicopters for recovery;
development budget subdiscussed by James Roach to community groups.
$5,900; Blaettnar Auto, $5,949,
official American sources acknowledged that some U.S. soldiers
mitted to Congress today.
Wednesday night in a talk to
It was voted to send a bowling R. H. Rawlings Sons, $5,781.40,
will be authorized to go into the field to check on the use of
The study includes Ohio,
members of Feeney-Bennett
team to the eighth district and Pomeroy Motor, $5,992.
American military aid; arrival in Cambodia of military equipWest Virginia, Alabama,
Post 128, American Legion.
The
Meigs
Equipment
Georgia,
Kentucky,
Roach, a medic in the U. S. tournament and the Feb. 10
ment, including two new UHl Huey helicopters, eight river patrol
Maryland, North Carolina,
Coast Guard four years and now meeting was cancelled so that Company's bid of $5,800 to
boats, and 1,400 tons of military equipment and aid flown in after
New York, Pennsylvania,
an employe of Veterans the hall will be available for a deliver a 1971 dump truck and of
the Communist attack on the airport.
South Carolins, Tennessee
Memorial Hospital, returned meeting of the Gallia-Meigs $2,000 for a 1971 pickup were
and Virginia.
recently from a seminar on Fraternal Order of Police. also accepted. Other bidders
Promises Letter of the Law
drug abuse in Cleveland. He Thomas Roush and Frank were Goble Ford, dump truck
was sponsored to the seminar Murray were reported confined $6,626, pickup $2,810; Blaettnar
WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE William P.
to the Veterans Hospital in Auto, dump truck, $6,594,
RULING
OUT
FRIGHT
by the post.
Rogers has promised a skeptical Senate Foreign Relations
Huntington and Harry Kauff pickup $2,617; R. H. Rawlings
LONDON (UPI) - A high
Roach
disclosed
he
has
Committee a congressional ban upon the use of U. S. ground
court . judge took off his wig petitions which he is having was reported home from a Sons, dump truck $6,446, pickup
troops in Cambodia will be followed to the letter.
$2,736, and Pomeroy Motor,
Thursday so a 9-year-old ap-. signed to send to represen- hospital.
Rogers testified for more than three hours Thursday at a
Members of the post's ladies dump truck $6,170, pickup
pearing in a court case would tatives and senators in
closed meeting of the committee, trying to quiet concern over the not be frightened when she met
Congress urging them not to auxiliary served a pork dinner $2,553.
increased use of American air power in Cambodia.
A 1971 four door sedan will be
preceding the meeting.
him in his chambers.
legalize marijuana.
bought later.
Due to the illness of George
Logan, dog warden, who is a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, the commissioners
By George Hargraves, Superintendent
teachers and, most of all, for students.
protect our students and successfully correct our named Roger Smith temporary
Meigs Local School District
dog warden. Attending were
As you know, if you have read recent columns, we problem.
The unfortunate events of last Friday night have are having a series of building meetings. In these
That was quite a wind on Tuesday. Our TV antenna Bob Clark and Warden Ours,
been the subject of much hashing and rehashing during meetings Mr. Morrison and I sit down with the lost a couple of guy wires at Bradbury. We took down commissioners and Martha
this past week. It is not my intention to complicate an teachers and principal and discuss what is on their the flag in front of the high school. I thought it could Chambers, clerk.
already confused picture.
minds.
easily cause the pole to snap. Marietta High School lost Heart Specialist
I do simply want to state that school officials of
I mentioned that grades have been a matter of part of the roof on its gymnasium. I believe there was
both the Gallipolis and Meigs school districts have met concern in other meetings. It proved to be the main also some damage at Athens High School. A large To Speak Feb. 9
and discussed the problem at considerable length. concern of the Rutland staff also. This was particularly building with a large expanse of flat roof is under real
Dr. Charles V. Meckstroth, a
true with the primary teachers at Rutland and the pressure when the strong winds blow. It's best to keep heart specialist associated with
Speaking of Schools-No. 173 , other schools.
University
Hospital
in
a couple of those fingers crossed.
Columbus,
will
be
guest
speaker
It
seems
to
me
that
we
are
going
to
have
to
give
DRUG ABUSE constitutes probably the single
Officials of both districts are committed to the
at a public meeting set for
development of the best relationship between the two some deep thought and intense study to grading and greatest threat to our nation and our young people. I
Thursday, Feb. 9, at 7:30p.m.
reporting
at
the
primary
level.
I
know
for
certain
that
at
the
beginning
there
is
the
promise
of
a
bright,
guess
districts and their students. The cooperation of all
at Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
students, parents and townspeople will be greatly this is not a problem that we have alone. It's a common new, exciting "in" experience.
The talk by Dr. Meckstroth
one
and
there
is
no
easy
answer.
We'll
have
to
look.
it
go
for
the
individual
and
for
a
Where
does
needed and is sincerely requested.
will
be given in conjunction with
A couple of weeks ago we had a problem with our society? Check Stewart Alsop's column in this week's
During the early part of this weel.t it was Conthe annual heart fund drive
water
at
Salem
Center.
The
check
for
purity
made
by
Newsweek magazine. The column is entitled "The
ference Time at Bradbury. Students were not in school
programs to be conducted
on Monday. Conferences were held all during that day. the Meigs County Health Department showed us that Smell of Death". It just might shake the plastic during February. Xi Gamma
eyeballs of some potential user. Why not look for "The
Additional conferences were held on Monday and we did have a problem.
Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
We followed their directions, boiled all drinking Smell of Death". I guarantee that it will bother you.
Tuesday evenings.
Sorority and the Middleport
NEWS AND NOTES
Mrs. Hackett reports that we had between 80 per water for several days, cleaned out the storage tank
Busmess and Professional
We are going to try to encourage a Sportsmanship Women's Club will serve as
cent and 90 per cent of the parents participate in these and then sent new samples to the Nelsonville Lab.
conferences. Some just couldn't come and so phone Samples from the well, the storage tank and the Award in the SEOAL. It seems to me that this would be hostesses for the Feb. 9 meeting
conferences or written evaluations have been or will be drinking fountains have all tested O.K. So we are back a proper move. -Thanks to all who tossed money into and refreshments will be served
in normal operation.
the Combined Charity Dr1ve sheet at our last home by the two groups. Topic of Dr.
made for these parents.
I want to thank the folks at the Health Department game. - Do you realize that most kids do the right Meckstroth will be "Heart
The Bradbury Staff and I certainly thank these
parents for their fine cooperation. These conferences for their prompt assistance and helpful suggestions. By thing almost all the time, but you never hear about it, Surgery - Research Into
following them we were able to keep school open, do you? Nevertheless, it's a fact, and that's the truth. Reality."
have been of real value . I am certain, for parents,
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Roger Blough, former board
chairman of U.S. Steel, said
today a colossal economic bust
could occur if inflation gets
worse.
Blough suggested the federal
government should crack down
hard on organized labor in the
construction industry, which he
portrayed as the worst villain.
In testimony prepared for the
House-Senate Joint Economic
Committee, Blough proposed
that the federal government,
through the U.S. Employment
Service, replace the unioncontrolled hiring hall. He said

that would "remove much of
the power local unions have to
make or break contractors by
gr.anting or denying the contractor's request for competent
employes."
He also suggested President
Nixon declare inflation an
"economic national emergency" and then suspend the DavisBacon Act under which the
federal government, the biggest
user of construction labor, must
pay the prevailing wage
"however high the wage rate"
goes.
Blough spoke as chairman of
the "Construction Users AntiInflation Roundtable," a group
of employers who make heavy

Roach Discusses Drugs

•

•

Best Inter-School Relations Desired

•

•

PT. PLEASANT - Mason
County's five member Board of
Education Thursday night
made public 22 charges against
I. Brooks Smith, Supt. of
Schools, in a long meeting
producing several split votes of
4-1 and others that died for lack
of a second.
Minutes of a January 23
special meeting were approved
as corrected, but with Harry
Siders casting the dissenting
vote in 4-1 split. Inserted in
these minutes were 22 charges
against Supt. Smith as filed by
four board members, Ray
Fields, Bill Withers, Charles W.
Eshenaur and Theodore R.
Stevens, who
seek the
superintendent's removal.
Three delegations were heard
including information on drug
resources available, attempts
for getting Wahama High
School into the North Central
Association and a fire alarm
demonstration.
Four members of a committee formed at Wahama High
School some three years ag&lt;' to
assist in getting the bend area
high school into the North
Central Association were given
the go ahead last night. The
group comprised of Neil
Haymaker Robert Gurtis.
'

Charles Yeager and Lester
Foreman, came before the
board and pointed out several
improvements that have been
made which would help the
school to qualify and also asked
what the concensus of the board
was now that a change had been
made in personnel.
The 22 charges brought
against Smith were, in summary:
"Unbecoming remarks
against employees of the Mason
County Board of Education.
"Employing personnel and
then asking the Board of
Education to approve the
employment and suggesting
that it be retroactive back to the
date you employed said personnel.
"Authorized and approved
payment of a trip to Florida for
your wife, Mrs. Katie Smith,
without authorization from the
Board of Education.
"Remained in the room and
at the meeting of tbe Board of
Education when yo•r emPWYmcn • con
• 'Vita
lCl

upon.

requested by members of the
Board.
"Required an art supervisor
under Title I to unload commodities.
"Acted insubordinately l:iy
refusing to gtve the Board a list
of substitute cooks at Point
Pleasant High School.
"Made slanderous statements
of and concerning employees of
the Mason County Board of
Education.
"Authorized your wife, Katie
Smith, to attend a conference in
Florida during the school term
without the approval of the
Mason County Board of
Education.
"Deliberately made false
statements of and concerning
Charles Withers and Charles
Chambers in that you informed
the Board of Education of
Mason County that the said
Withers and Chambers were
guilty of willful neglect of duty.
"Misrepresented to the Board
as to the qualification ol certain

teaehers.
"
uc d .,m
LawrenCe Rice, to stay

e
&amp;Wit!)'

' Employed teachers for from Board meetings UDCiel
positions other than those f« threat that the said employee
would be dismissed.
which they were trained.
(Continued on page 10)
"Refused to furnish items

D
D
d
rrotests
rresse
County Buys

2

VehicleS

.
.
.
Local public action seeking
improv~ telephone service and
protesting a proposed telephone
rate increase will move to
Col~bus next week.
This was decided by an
estimated 25 persons, including
Rep. Ralph Welker, at a secor"
public meeting Thursday nigUt
at the Salisbury elementary
school.
Steps to be taken in lodging
local complaints with the public
utilities commission wnre

.
revtewed. Rep. Welker' and
p~ibly an a~torney, will m~et
With a conuruttee repr~senting
the Meigs County group in
Columbus next week. The date
of the meeting, and who will
represent the complainants, has
not been determined.
At present, the group heading
the action against General
Telephone Co. of Ohio is
soliciting funds needed to carry
the action to the commission.

As of 4 p.m. Thursday, only 10 petitions of candidacy had been
filed for May primaries in Pomeroy and Middleport with the
Meigs County Board of Elections.
Deadline for filing Is 4 p.m. Wednesday. The deadline is the
same for Republican, Democratic and independent candidates.
It's reported that a nwnber of petitions are out. Whether they will
be circulated and returned for filing with the board is yet to be
seen. However, if they do get back in, the political picture should
be interesting in both towns.
FOlLOWING TRADmON, members of Xi Ganuna Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority and the Middleport Business
and Professional Women's Club will be making their annual
house-to-house canvass for the heart fund drive on Sunday, Feb.
21. The sorority will function in the Pomeroy area and the
business women in Middleport. The two groups also will hostess a
public meeting on Feb. 9 at Trinity Church in Pomeroy when a
heart specialist will speak.
OHIO UNIVERSITY'S SPORTS information department has
issued a letter pointing out that one of every three varsity athlete..
on Ohio University's 11 teams scored a three point or better
scholastically out of a four point for the past grading period.
Among the athletes listed is Carson Crow, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred W. Crow, Syracuse, who came up with a 3. 7 average.
OONTRIBUTIONS TOTALING $25 have been received during
the past week by Mrs. Charles Hayes from residents wishing to
give to the establishment of a Meigs County Musewn. Mrs. Hayes
serves as treasurer of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical
Society which has high hopes of establishing the museum in the
former home of Dr. and Mrs. Ray Heaton on Butternut Ave. in
Pomeroy.
All contributions are acceptable. Even small amounts are
highly desired since tht!y will measure public interest and give
each donor a part in the museum, so to speak. Latest contributors
to the museum fund are Mrs. Thomas Young, Pomeroy, and Seth
Nicholson of the Rutland area.
Donations may be sent to Mrs. Hayes at 13 Oak Sl., Pomeroy.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29, 1971

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
TO THE PUBLIC
UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF OHIO FOR AN
INCREASE IN ELECTRIC
RATES
TO WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN :
Pursuant to the requirements
of section 4909.19 of the Revised
Code of Ot -;o, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Company, hereby gives notice that
on December 21. 1970, it filed
with The Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio, an Ap plication for authority to amend
and increase throughout its
service area most of its electric
rate schedules under the
jurisdiction of The Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
The Application does not in clude rates and schedules for
standard residential and other
small secondary electric service within the municipalities of
Bainbridge ,
Columbus,
Ga II ipol is, Manchester, Middleport, Peebles, Piketon,
Pomeroy, Seaman, Waverly,
Wellston, West Union and
Winchester . Further, area
lighting and flat rate com merclal schedules are not affected by the Application.
The
Application
seeks
authority to cancel the following
sheets of the
Company's
schedules contained in its
PUCO NO. 1, and to substitute
new sheets therefor: Sixth
Rev ised Sheet No. 4, Third
Rev ised Sheets Nos. 4-B and 4-B
(continued),
Fourteenth
Revised Sheet No. 35, Twelfth
Revised Sheet No . 48, Second
Revised Sheets Nos. 101 and 102,
Third Revised Sheet No . 104,
Second Revised Sheet No. 107,
First Rev i sed Sheet No. 108,
Second Revised Sheet No. 110,
First Revised Sheet No. 111,
Tenth Revised Sheets Nos . 113
and 114, Third Revised Sheet
No. 116, Original Sheets Nos. 203
and 203-A, Third Rev i sed
Supplement No . 15, Supplement
No. 15-A, Fifth Revised Sup plement No. 17, Second Revised
Supplement No . 17-A and
Supplement No . 19.
Further, the Company seeks
authority to adjust for future
tax changes all of its rate
schedules affected by this
Application.
The substance of the rate
revisions proposed in the Application are as follows:
The standard Residential
rates (Schedules R in Franklin
County, R -S and R-S-R in other
areas) are increased 15 cents in
the first step and approx imately
10 per cent in each succeeding
step of the rates. A seasonal
provision is included to provide
for a lower term in at rate tor
high users during the 8 month
heating season. A fuel ad justment c l ause has been ad ded.
The Genera 1 Service-Sr, all
Secondary rates (SchE:dutes G-1
in Franklin County and G-S-1 in
all other areas ) are increased 15
cents in the first step; .2 cents
per KWH in the second step; .3
cents per KWH in the third step
and .2 cents per KWH in each of
the remain i ng two steps of the
rates. A fuel adjustment clause
has been added.
The
General
ServiceMedium-Secondary
rates
(Schedules G -2 in Franklin
County and G-S-2 in ali other
areas) are two part rates . The
capac i ty charges are increased
approximately 10 cents per KW
for the first 50 K W and 5 cents
per KW for all additional KW of
maximum capacity. The energy
charges are increased .2 cents
wr KWH ii; each of tl\a fi!Jst 2
steps of thE! rate; .1 c!'hts per
~WH iQ each of the following 2
i'teps; and .05 cents per KWH in
the final 2 steps of the rate. A
fuel adjustment clause has been
added.
The
General
ServiceMedium - Primar y
rate
(Schedule G -3) is a two part
, rate. The capacity charge is
Increased 5 cents per KW in ali
steps. The energy portion of the
• rate is increased .1 cents in each
of the first 5 steps of the rate
and the sixth step is increased
.06 cents . The fuel adjustment
clause i s retained with minor
changes .
The General Service-Large Transmission (Schedule G -4) is
. a two part rate. The capacity
• charge portion is increased 10
· cents per KW in the second and
: third blocks and 5 cents per KW
in the remaining block . The
· energy portion of the rate is
increased .1 cents in each of the
· first three steps of the rate ; .07
cents in the fourth step ; and .06
cents in the fifth step. The fuel
· adjustment clause is retained
with min or changes.
The Optional High Use
Res idential rate (Supplement
17) is a ttered by increasing the
minimum monthly charge from
$20.00 to $22.00, increasing the
first step .2 cents per KWH , and
by the add it ion of a fuel adjustment charge. This schedule
would be withdrawn except for
present customers .
The " All Electric Home"
service schedule (Supplement
17-A) is altered by increasing
the first step .2 cents per KWH

~~~r::::::::~::::::::::::::::=~=~f.:::=====:::~::::::::::~:~::f.::::::::~:=:::=:=:::~:::;::::~:~

$278 Million for Appalachia
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Nixon administration today
budgeted $278 million for Appalachia Regional Commission
development projects, but earmarked the funds for block
grants to states if Congress approves its federal-state revenue
sharing.
The ARC money would be
part of $1 billion making up
the rural community development portion of the President's
revenue sharing proposal.
For the past five years, the
13-state commission has funneled more than $1.3 billion into
Appalachia development.
Under the new concept, the
money would be distributed directly to the individual states,
the development projects appropriate for each community
will be determined by state and
local governments.
There was no assurance in
the budget, that the $278 milliol!_ would go to only Ap-·
palachia states under the revenue-sharing proposal.
"Through this combination of
special revenue sharing, local
initiative, and local decisionmaking, rural areas can
strengthen rural enterprise, increase economic opportunities
for rural residents, and improve rural communities," the
budget said.
Gov. Arch Moore of West
Virginia, states' co-chairman of
the ARC, foretold the fate of
the commission at a press con-

Mayor Proclaims
USO Week Here
Mayor C. 0. Fisher of Middleport has proclaimed the
week of Jan. 31 -Feb. 6, 1971 as
USO WEEK in Middleport and
urges the citizens to assist in
every way its observance.
The week marks the 30th
anniversary of the United
Service Organization founded to
provide a "home away from
home" for American servicemen and women.
and by the addition of a fuel
adjustment charge.
The Water Heater serv ice
schedules (Supplements 15 and
15-A) and the General Service
Space
Heating
schedule
(Supplement 19) provide for the
addition of the fuel adjustment
clause.
The Interruptible Power rate
(Sch ule I.e_.) i!J increased aw:t
the
el K!ustment clau'fe
changed to the standard fuel
adjustment clause.
The Company's Appl ication
further states that the rate of
return on the value of the
property affected by such
Application
is
presently
inadequate and that the rates
proposed will not produce more
than a fair return on such
property.
The Application prays that
the Commission (1 l find that the
present rates, prices, charges
and other provisions of the
schedules affected by such
Application are unjust and
unreasonable and insufficient to
yield just compensation for the
serv ice rendered thereunder;
and (2) find and determine that
the rates, prices, charges and
other
provisions
of
the
schedules tendered with such
Application for filing are just
and reasonable, and approve
such schedules in the form
tendered with such Application
and make such schedules effective as soon as it is practicable to do so.
COLUMBUS AND
SOUTHERN OHIO
ELECTRIC COMPANY
J . L. McNeatey, President
(1) 22,29- (2) 5
3T

ference Wednesday. At the
time, however, Moore expressed
the feeling the program would
be kept intact through fiscal
1972, which ends June 30, 1972.
Current authorization for the
commission ends this June 30,
and unless Congress extends
that authorization, the ARC
would become non~xistent.
Sen. Jennings Randolph, DW.Va., who Moore said informed him of the White House decision to scrap the commission,
plans to offer a measure to
continue ARC authority for four

more years.
Hearings on the proposal are
planned to begin in the Senate
Feb. 9.
The ARC includes the states
of Ohio, Alabama, Georgia,
Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi, New York, North Carolina,
Pennsylvania, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Virginia and West
Virginia.
Under the budget request for
the commission, major monies
were aimed at the Appalachian
Development Highway System,
demonstration health projects,

The Se:~o;:;;:;-~g
Grace Episcopal Church
I JOHN 4:20 -"If a man say, I love God, and hateth his
brother; he is a liar: for he that loveth not his brother whom he
hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen."
ISAIAH 1 - "To what purpose is the multitude of your
sacrifices unto me? saith the Lord: I am full of the burnt offerings
of rams, and the fat of fed beasts; and I delight not in the blood of
bullocks, or of lambs, or of he-goats. Bring no more vain oblations
unto me. I am weary to bear them. Wash you, make you clean;
put away the evil of your doings from before Mine eyes, cease to
do evil; learn to do well, seek judgment, relieve the oppressed,
judge the fatherless, plead for the widow."
A SUMMARY definition of the Christian faith taken from
these words from the New and Old Testament might be: An encounter of man with God through Jesus Christ which is given
reality in the meeting of man with man. From the New Testament
we read "There is no love relationship with God, except there be a
love relationship with man," and from Old Testament, ''The acts
of our worship have no meaning or significance unless made
manifest in the life we live with others." The reality of our faith
depends upon our relationship with one another.
What we do in services of worship is pertinent and speaks
directly to one of the most serious problems of life, human

relationships. In the liturgy, of our services of worship, the
Christian life is dramatically proclaimed. What God has done and
is doing, and how he acts toward his creation is proclaimed. Our
response to this action of God, which we call faith, is defined
clearly and specifically in the liturgy. There are five words that
mark this faith-response: - adoration, confession, petition, intercession, thanksgiving. These are the words that mark the
meeting of man with God and these are the words that are made
real in man's relationship with man.
The word "adoration" means "self-giving," and we know
from experience that there is no real meeting of persons, no real
coming together except there be a self-offering. It is only when I
am willing to give myself to another that all the barriers that keep
us apart and separate us are overcome. We only really meet when
we offer and present ourselves to each other. This speaks of selfrevelation. No person is ever truly !mown except he comes out of
his place of hiding and lets himself be seen by another. This is how
you and I come to know God. In a very real sense; God came out
of his place of hiding and offered Himself to us. We talk frequently
in our services of worship of offering and presenting ourselves
unto God, but this has no real meaning or significance except as
we offer and present ourselves unto each other. It is a very simple
thing to say in our services of worship we offer and present
ourselves to God, but this is made real and actual only as we offer

=~r=:~o~~l;:~t:~~;~.:md to say, "Here I am, I want

The word "Confession" speaks to us of forgiveness and this is
the place where we all stand, in need of forgiveness. Each one of
us is responsible for broken relationships in life. Each one of us is
a part of the evil in life that we judge and condemn. Along with all
the potential for goodness in every person, there is the potential
for what we judge in others. We can enter into the practice of
confession in our services of worship but mark this, we can only
receive God's forgiveness to the extent we are willing to forgive
others. This all becomes real and actual as we move out to each
other being willing to forgive even before it is asked from us. This
is the forgiveness that we see on the cross. While we were yet
sinners, Christ died for us and the words from the cross "Father
forgive" were uttered before forgiveness was asked. We can
share in God's forgiveness only as we forgive each other.
The word "petition" indicates our depeni:Iency. Petition is the
kind of prayer that asks for a special gift of assistance. Think of
this in terms of our relationships. We are dependent upon each
other. There is no such thing as a self-made man. You and I can
only become persons in the deepest meaning of that word because
of other persons. We were created to live in community. We need
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
each other. And then you know, there is a commonness about us;
Case No. 20437
deep down we are all very much alike. Every one of us has the
Estate of JAMES CLARENCE
BELL, Deceased.
same kinds of yearnings, longings, the same kinds of frustrations
Notice is hereby given that
Bessie E . Jones, of 1795 Oak
and tensions and anxieties, and each one of us has the same kinds
Street. Columbus, Ohio, has
fears . Every one of us need's to be loved and to be set free in
of
been duly appointed
Ad ministratrix of the Estate of
order to trust. We talk about loving God in our services of worJames Clarence Bell, deceased,
ship, but in reality we love God only so much as the person we love
late of Meigs County, Ohio .
Creditors are required to f i le
least
of all in life. The "I" that is crucified with Christ is the intheir eta ims with said fiduciary
dependent self-sufficient "I," and the new man in Christ is a
with four months.
Dated this 18th day of
social reality. The life of Christ in a believer is a corporate life.
January 1971 .
Intercession - Intercession is our practice of praying for
~ A pound of pluck is worth._ ,
F. H. O'Brien
others or for special causes, and it marks for us our responsibility
a ton of luck.
~
Probate Judge
of said County
for others. I am my brother's keeper. I cannot say, "I will do with
._
- James A· Garfield
my life what I please," for whatever I do and whatever I am in life
( 1) 22. 29 (2) 5, 3tc
has its effect upon the collective life of the world. We are bound so
~r - -- -- - - - - - - , . closely together that there is not anyone who can do whatever he
pleases.
THE DAILY SENYINEL
ic
•
We come into the state of benediction and grace not for our
DEVOTED
TO
It's Quick! Easy ~
INTEREST OF
own comfort and our own convenience, but we come into the state
MEIGS-MASON AREA
of benediction and grace in order to move out, and to be a part of
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
God's benediction and grace and saving help for the world. I am
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
redeemed, not for myself, not for my own comfort, I am
City Editor
Published daily e·xcept
redeemed for God's purpose of salvation for all mankind. When
:
Fridays Only
•
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
• The Drive-In Window~ Publishing Company, 111 we pray for others we are bound up in their needs, and in a sense
Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio,
we become a part of the answer to that prayer.
~
is Open
•
45769. Business Office Phone
992 -2156, Editorial Phone 992 When I pray for sick and lonely people, I must be doing
•
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
•
something about sick and lonely people wherever I am. When I
(Continuously)
~ 2157.
•
, Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
pray for peace and justice in the world, I must be doing something
Other Banking Hours 9 to ~
Nat i onal
advertising
•3 and S to 7 as usual on •
about peace and justice wherever I live. It is an easy thing to utter
representative
Bottinelli Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
•
• Fridays.
prayers for others: but when we utter those prayers we are
St. , New York City, New York .
becoming a part of their problem and of their need; and the
Subscription
rates:
Del i vered by carrier where
prayer becomes real and significant as we become a part of its
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
answer.
service not available: One
The word "Thanksgiving"- The great joy and blessing that
.nonth sus. By mail in Ohio
POMEROY, OHIO
W . Va., One year $14.00.
comes to us in life just because of other people! In our prayers of
Member FDIC
ic and
Six months S7.25. Three
thanksgiving, we ask that this praise be more than lip-service;
~
Member Federal
._
months $4 . 50. Subscription
price
includes Sunday Times •
Reserve System
•
certainly
this means that we seek the well-being of others as this
. Sentinel.
is God's purpose for mankind.
The words of our worship are the words of christian meeting,
and the words of christian community, and the words to be made
flesh in our lives.

t:"...................................
M THOUGHTI
fFOR TODAYt

..

..

t

t~
~
t

.
*:
t

* *

DRIVE-IN

:

BANKING~

t

~ FARMERS BANK ]

:and SAVINGS CO. ]
~

#

and supplements to federal
grants-in-aid.
Despite the administration action, Moore expressed optimism
Congress would continue the
ARC program, noting a "very,
very good ... reception" on
Capitol Hill.
He also warned a sharp cutoff would be "a foolish squandering of a heck of a lot of
money."
Moore explained by saying
roads being built might not be
completed, any bridges under
construction may lead nowhere.

Red Tape Blocks
•
Repair of Bridge

rf.!

.::~:

WASHINGTON (UPI)- ~
@f ~resident Nixon today ~
:g mcluded more than $13 ~
million in his water ~
resource - development ::~j
)j budget for operation and
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
t:: maintenance of Ohio River :ji~ mayor
of Marietta has asked
::::: locks and dams and the ;r:,
: state officials for help in the
~::::
;;~
: ;::: open channel.
M repairing or replacing of a
_) Of the total, $11,826,000
bridge that runs through the
:} was earmarked for the @ southeastern Ohio city's downlocks and dams, and W town.
:::::: $1,760,000 for the open m Mayor John A. Burnworth
?i:
channel. The budget .•X
fi tolli state Highway Director J.
.,.,.,
}i: request affects Illinois, f* Phillip Richley Thursday the
1t Pennsylvania, Ohio, W. iJ problem was not so much lack
Virginia, Kentucky, and
of funds, but red tape that pre-

::t
if

f

:t:

t::

m

It

!\t:~,!,~,: i;~:;:;:;:;: : : : : : ':~: : : ':':': : : : : :': ;:;: : :; ;: : l~i

vented money from being spent
on the project.

$58.6 Million for
w.ater zn B u dg'nt
e

.:::;;,

By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON(UPI)-President Nixon asked Congress in
his 1972 fiscal budget today to
approve $58.6 million of water
resources development projects
for Ohio.
Included was $12.1 million for
construction of the Hannibal
locks and dam between Ohio
and West Virginia, and $10.1
million for construction of a
flood control project at Alum
Creek Lake.
The projects are part of the
Army Corps of Engineers' budget request.
Of the total, $50.4 million was
earmarked for construction projects, mostly for flood control.
Flood control construction ineluded: Caesar Creek Lake, $2.1
million; Clarence J. Brown
Dam and Reservoir, $4,505,000;
East Fork Lake, $3,715,000;
Fremont, $5,635,000;
north
branch, Kokosing River Lake,
$1,675,000; Paint Creek Lake,
$4,440,000, and Youngstown,
$1,650,000.
Navigation construction ineluded: Lorain Harbor, $1,600,000; and Willow Island Locks
and Dam between Ohio and
West Virginia, $2,900,000.
For operation and maintenance of flood control projects,
the budget asked: Berlin Lake,
$286,000; Deer Creek Lake,
$141,000; Delaware Lake, $137,OOO; Dillon Lake, $140,000; Massillon, $8,000; Michael J. Kirwan
Dam and Reservoir (}Vest
branch of Mahoning River Lake)
$179,000 ; Mosquito Lake, $180,000; Muskingwn River Reservoirs ( 14 reservoirs) $1,205,000;
Newark, $7,000; Paint Creek
Lake, $60,000; Roseville, $5,000;
and West fork of Mill Creek

Lake, $110,000.
For operation and maintenance of navigation projects the
budget seeks: Ashtabula Harbor, $180,000; Cleveland Harbor,
$2,150,000; Conneaut Harbor,
$175,000; Fairport Harbor, $260,000; Huron Habor, $130,000; Lorain Harbor, $210,000; Rocky
River Habor, $20,000; Sandusky
Harbor, $230,000; Toledo Harbor, 900,000; Tom Jenkins
Dam, $105,000; Vermilion Harbor, $325,000.
General investigation funds
included four flood control projects and one navigation project.
Flood control projects were:
Central Ohio Survey, $50,000;
Cuyahoga River Basin, $300,000;
Miami River, Little Miami River and Mill Creek basins, $140,000, and Muskingum River Basin, $100,000. For Navigation,
$45,000, was earmarked for a
study of the Lake Erie coast in
Ohio, Pennsylvania and New
York.
Requests for advance engineering and design for flood
control projects included: Newark, $80,000 and utica Lake,
$270,000.
Not included in the Ohio
total, but part of the budget request were four items involving
the Great Lakes. They included
a survey under special study of
water levels on Great Lakes,
$425,000; Great Lakes diked disposal areas operation and maintenance, $41 million, a comprehensive survey under study of
the Great Lakes region, $479,000, and St. Lawrence Seaway
navigation season extension survey, $300,000.
Also of interest to Ohio, were
requests of $70,000 for a general navigation investigation of

Cross Wabash Valley Waterway
(Indiana, lllinois, Michigan and
Ohio); and $1,750,000 for construction and $260,000 for operation of the Shenango River
Lake, with Pennsylvania.

Rl.ce Takes
SEORC Job

Fred Rice, of Jackson County,
will become the executive
director of the Southeastern
Ohio Regional Council on Feb.
1.
Rice ended recently eight
years with the Rhodes Administration, first as State Fire
Marshall and the last five years
as the State Registrar and
Director of the Bureau of Motor
Samuel Clemens, who
Vehicles. Earlier, he was the
wrote under the name of
representative in the State Mark Twain, is buried in
Legislatuve from Jackson Woodlawn Cemetery, ElmiCounty.
ra, N.Y.
The Regional Council has
operated without a full-time
director since July 1969 when the imminent Schwartz-Dietz
the former director, Carl revue; the latter have created
Dahlberg, became associated three new songs ... It will be 'l
with Rio Grande College. pleasure to have a revue on •
During the past year and a half, Bdwy. again; TV somewhat
the directors of the organization sullied the edge oi almost
and other members have anything topical which revues
maintained its program. The might use for sketches.
council is involved in programs
for the total development of its
member
counties
in
Southeastern Ohio.
The council will maintain
office space in Columbus and
also in Southeastern Ohio, E. E.
Davis, president, said. Riee, his
wife Virginia and two sons are
presently residing in Columbus.

•

r---~--------------------------------------

1

Voice along Broadway i

I
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Ed Sullivan's
talking up a network series he'd
produce for Rodney (No
Respect) Dangerfield ... Dick
Cavett says the striking phone
workers threaten if they don't
get what they want, they'll
continue normal service ... Flip
Wilson's buying his first RollsRoyce ... Pianist Bobby Short's
first book "Black &amp; White
Baby" is due in March from
Dodd, Mead ... One night at a
party at Jerry Silverman's
spectacular penthouse some
bore was pressing Bobby on the
lifelong problems of being black
in a white world : "Look, fella,"
Bobby smilingly countered, "I
feel like a white Anglo-Saxon
Protestant."
Ex-pitching star Bo Belinsky
and his ex-Playboy centerfoldeuse wife, Jo Collins, are
in splitsville ... This should
incite
some
delightfully
regressive jazz: Doris Day
wants to do a TV special with Jo
Stafford and Patti Page.
Leonard Frey, who played
flaming honor-guest at the
birthday party which formed
the plot of the "Boys in the
Band" film, just finished
"Fiddler on the Roof" filming in
Europe and signed for Alan
Lerner's "Lolita" Bdwy.
musical to be retitled "Lolita,
My Love" in the stage per-

version ... Frey signed with the
agreement he gets time off from
the Lolita leers if he's
nominated for an Oscar for the
"Band" flick.
Anita Ekberg's suing her
American actor-husband Rick
Von Nutter for return of
household goods she claims she
bought ... England's tax rates
chased song star Shirley Bassey
to Switzerland where all her
earnings henceforth will be
deposited in a company
registered there ... Candy
Bergen's playing chic chauffeur
all over H'wood to Italian
director Count Don Luchino
Visconti.
The marvelous "My Fair
Lady" revival at the Criterion
on Times Square is a solid
smash all over again :
Audiences applaud musical
numbers as if it were a stage
musical .. . And groups are
reserving ticket blocks for
parties, especially for young
people ... It's one of the mighty
few films available for children
these grubby culluloid days.
Only a few hundred irate calls
resented the ethnic epithets
used in the "All in the Family"
TV series; Fred Allen must be
rolling over in his hilarious
heaven, realizing how NBC
excised some of the most trivial
giggles from Fred's old shows
.. . Even one famous line in

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE.
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY.

C~J

11111&amp;1 •

"Charley's Aunt" years ago
was banned from a movie
remake: "Brazil - Where the
nuts come from."
with
Marriage must have made
Sammy Davis thrifty: The
$..100,000 Bahamas home he'd
MEIGS HIGH
announced he would build a
year ago has been modified. His
wife, Altavise, said at the Kings
Inn there that she's doing over
floor plans for a much smaller
house.
Guy Lombardo will fight
inflation: His prices for nextsummer's "Sound of Music"
(July 7-Sept. 5) at Jones Beach
will have 1,000 seats a night created by
available at $2 on a family plan John Roberts
.. . It's not because the show
Four-Week Shipment
lacked customers last season it was a $1,420,000 smash ... And
a show for the entire family, a
rarity indeed.
S. J. Perelman was persuaded to write a new sketch for

Your Personalized

CLASS RING

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

BAKE_~R~·s___.___..-.:::1

''tt\G\J.t\ot\\''
(kttu"t\~t

~o"ttl "oot'-ro~ (lU~\.\Ti

McCLURE'S

ll~"{lRtSS lr.

i

....................................

He said the Putnam Street
Bridge, at the mouth of the
Muskingum River, would cost
$300,000 to be repaired or $800,000 to be replaced. Only $161,000 has been set aside in the
county budget, however, he '
said.
"We've got to get as much
help from the state as we can,"
Burnworth said. "The bridge is
the lifeline ·to our central business district."
In order to reshuffle state
funds given Washington County,
the state's permission is needed, he said.
"He ( Richley) promised cocoperation i1,1 expediting the
changing of priorities," said the
mayor.
Burnworth also talked with
Gov. John J. Gilligan briefly "to alert him to the seriousness of the problem." However,
he said he believed Richley's
pledge of cooperation was all
that was necessary.
''Mr. Richley has been
briefed on this matter and authorized Max Farley, new District 10 director, to meet and
coordinate plans with us," the
mayor said.
The decision on the old bridge
will be made next Tuesday at
a city-county meeting, he said.
The span was built in 1914
and is used by about 15,000 ve- •
hicles daily. It would be closed
for six to eight months for repairs or upwards of two years
for replacement, he said.
Accompanying Burnworth to
the state capital were Dan Cole,
president of the Marietta Chamber of Commerce, Washington
County Commissioner John
Schaffer and Marietta Development Director Robert Nichlas.

~Ol s~R\~GS

THE SNACK SHOPPE
THAT CAN'T BE BEAT
NEW HOURS
Monday thru Thursday
Friday and Saturday
Sunday

10 tillO: 00
10 tilll :30
12tilll:OO

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

Midd lepo~t,

o.

REG. s139

SALE

S99.9Q

SET

FURNITURE
BAKERS Middleport,
0.

•
•

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29, 1971

··~mtir~ilM'r'~t~~';mmil'ii!i~i~m~~~w~tm~~M~[{{
•

:~~:~:
~;!;!~! .

f

•

;:;:~
}~!;:.

NEW YORK (UPI)-The Jim
Plunkett mystery is over and
~~:~:~
:r:~;: the George Allen mystery
~:;:;:;!
~:M·. continues today as the National
Chet Tannehill
;:;:~;~;Football League heads into the
~!§
t:;;: second day of its annual college
~::
··:::::~, player draft.
BASKETBALL IS on its final lap of 1970-1971, then the hiatus
The Boston Patriots ended
before high school baseball, and baseball itself wraps up the year two months of speculation
in southeastern Ohio prep athletics.
Thursday when they turned
From here my money is on Waverly to take the SEOAL down 17 trade ?ffers to take
basketball crown although if Meigs can't have it I'd rather see P~un~ett, the He1sman TrophyAthens win it. Coach C. D. (I've never yet seen his whole first wmmng quarterback from Stan· t) Hawhee at Waverly may be a scholar and a gen- f~rd who set NCAA_ career and
.
name m prm
.
smgle season passmg records
tleman but because I know Charley McAfee at Athens lS exactly 1 t
Th p t . ts h
'
Whi h · alt th · 1
t f
as season.
e a no , w o
that the Bulldogs get my vote.
c IS oge er rrre evan • 0
finished with the worst record
course~ bec~us~ what does the d~gr:e of a ~ach's sainthood have in the league last season, made
to do With wmnmg a baske~ball title · Certain!! none.
.
.
Plunkett the first player to be
Waverly, knocked off It:.l perch as No. 1m the AA OhiO High chosen in the 17-round session.
School poll this week, will have to make a romp of the Athens
But the machinations of Allen
game tonight to have a chance to recoup. Chances of that ~p- have been something else.
pening are slim, if not remote. But Waverly has to be the favorite. Allen, fired by Los Angeles and
Waverly went to the finals of the state tournament last year hired by Washington as coach
against the big boys, losing to Columbus Walnut Ridge which almost without hesitation, took
heads the Triple A ratings this week.
back a good portion of his Ram
Hawhee's Tigers tromped the Marauders down there, yes, but team Thursday.
from the back row of the gym-auditorium where I sat in on that
Two Stunning Trades
game did not impress me as a team that would be going beyond
Allen acquired his three
the regional playoffs, may be even in its new, easier AA class. veteran linebackers - Myron
This year the Tigers campaign in the AA tournament against the Pottios, Maxie Baughan and
likes of South Point, Wellston, Gallipolis, et. al. It should be easier Jack Pardee, defensive tackle
than last year to get to the big finale in St. John's arena. And Diron Talbert, offensive guard
perhaps Waverly will make it.
John Wilbur and running back
They like to bang away at the basket from outside. When
they're hot, as they were against us, they won't be beaten. But
we've all seen outside shooting teams that come up cold as a
pickerel under Erie ice. And they lose.
Federal-Hocking is barely mentioned in the AA Poll (having
eight votes or more). Eastern of Meigs is ignored in the A Poll,
and North Gallia, which defeated Eastern, is in the A Poll also
mentioned list. Thus, nobody upstate seems to think either
Eastern or North Gallia will get out of their district.
I'd like to see one or both fool the city dudes up north.

Jeff Jordan for linebacker
Marlin McKeever and a host of
Redskin draft choices for the
next two seasons. The Redskins
forked over their first and third
choices in the 1971 draft and
their third, fourth, fifth, sixth
and seventh next year for the
six Rams.
Allen, who claims he's
thinking of winning now, not in
the future, then pulled another
stunner by trading off still
another draft choice for Boyd
Dowler, the veteran Green Bay
wide receiver who coached for
Allen at Los Angeles last
season.
Plunkett, who said he felt, "a
lot of pride" at his first
selection, was labeled "further
advanced at this stage than Joe
Namath." Coach John Mazur
added: "We hope Plunkett will
do for us what Namath did for
the Jets."
Quarterbacks Picked Early
Quarterbacks filled the first
three spots in the opening
round. After Boston took
Plunkett, New Orleans selected
Archie Manning of Mississippi
and Houston took Dan Pastorini
of Santa Clara.

By United Press International
Miami of Ohio copped its
third straight win Thursday
night in Ohio college basketball
action.
The Redskins shot a hot 75
per cent from the foul line and
48 per cent from the field to
beat Tulane going away 91-66.
Darrel Dunlap paced Miami,
now 10-4, with 21 points as the
Skins freely substituted in the
last eight minutes of play.
~ In other games, Youngstown
State pulled away to beat Alliance (Pa.) 74-60, Cedarville
defeated Marion (Ind.) 87-81,
Otterbein downed Ohio Conference foe Ohio Wesleyan 85-76
and Malone edged cross-town
rival Walsh 73-71.
Billy Johnson poured out 29
points as Youngstown finally escaped from an uneasy situation
of having Alliance on its heels.
The Penguins, 13-3, led by

only five points with six minutes left, when they outscored
the opposition 12-1 to ice the
win.
Otterbein's Dwight Miller accounted for 25 points to lead
the Otters to an 11-2 season
and 6-1 in the OC. Jackie
Brown led Ohio Wesleyan, now
7-9 and 1-6, with 27 points.
Cedarville won its ninth game
in 17 outings and Marion fell to
11-8. Gary Holbrook was high
for Cedarville with 22 points.
Game honors went to Marion's
Ray Hunt with 30.
Malone gained its third win
in 14 tries by leading all the
way over Walsh, now 6-9.
Bob Stevenson had 25 points
for Malone. Walsh was led by
Hoppy Collier with 20.
One game was on top tonight
- Philadelphia Textile at Steubenville.

::;:;:;:

•

th e s.nortS D es k'
'.I""'
·by

'Skins Rip

•

Foe 91-66

Tigers Scare
Pennsylvania

•

•

•

By United Press International
Princeton had the champagne
on ice but Corky went "pop"
for Pennsylvania to spoil it all.
Unheralded Princeton, in the
midst of a losing season, came
within two seconds of beating
unbeaten and fourth-ranked
Pennsylvania Thursday night,
but a 23-foot jump shot by the
Quakers' Corky Calhoun tied
the score 60-60 at the end of
regulation time and Penn went
on to score a 66-62 victory in
overtime.
Actually, Princeton appeared
to have the game in hand with
2:19 left when with a 56-49
lead. However, the Quakers
closed in with one field goal
and seven free throws before
Calhoun tied the score with his
dramatic jumper.
In the overtime, Bob Morse
put Penn ahead with a jump
shot then Phil Hankinson tipped
in a rebound for a four-point
lead and the Tigers were
finished . The victory was
Penn's 16th straight this season
while Princeton is a meager 510.
In other games, 14th-ranked
LaSalle whipped Drexel, 81-63;
18th-ranked Duquesne beat DePaul, 90-74; and Memphis
State, also ranked 18th, lost to
Wichita State, 98-87.
Elsewhere, Greg Gary's 18

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use'Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners

•

216

E. 2nd, Pomeroy

points paced St. Bonaventure to
a 79-76 victory over Canisius,
Bobby Jones scored 20 points to
spark Drake to a 90-66 rout of
North Texas State and Weber
State ran its record to 12-2 by
downing Boise State, 77-61.

College Basketball Results
By United Press International
East
Penn 66 Princeton 62 (ot)
Duquesne 90 DePaul 74
LaSalle 81 Drexel 63
St. Bona 79 Canisius 76
South
Clemson 45 Virginia 44
Morehead Sf 90 W. Tex . St. 78
Ky Wesl 102 E. Mich 90
Loyloa (La) 118 Wm&amp;Mary 87
Midwest
Miami (Ohio) 91 Tulane 66
Wichita St 98 Memphis St 87
Southwest
Drake 90 N Texas St 66
Utah 99 Arizona 86
West
Weber Sf 77 Boise St 61

Tonight's Games
Gallipolis at Logan
Athens at Waverly
Wellston at Ironton
Meigs at Jackson
Eastern at Miller
Southern at Kyger Creek
Wahama at Wirt
Parkersburg at Pt. Pleasant
Chesapeake at Oak Hill
South Point at Coal Grove
SATURDAY
Ironton at Athens
Jackson at Gallipolis
Logan at Wellston
Waverly at Meigs
Eastern at Federal Hocking
Southern at Glouster
Nelsonville-York at
Kyger Creek
Coal Grove at Hannan Trace

TRIM THE~

FAT
OUT OF
YOUR

INCOME TAX
BOTH
We exercise your rightsFEDERAL
in making deductions, and AND
STATE
reducing your taxes! Be- H&amp;R BLOCK
TAX SERVICE
cause BLOCK knows taxes HAS BEEN REVIEWED
AJID AUTHDRIZ£0
inside-out, we'll make sure TO USE THIS SEAL
you get every legitimate ~-~'4.
...~~~~0N1~~~~~
deduction- and maximum .r~-&gt;&lt;:i
·~u••• ••
"'
savings! Our service is PARENTS'
quick, convenient and in· \ o~£;i~~~ .,:
expensive. You'll be glad ..,&lt;:~:~:~;.~.(
we got together.

Plan Conference
Egg, turkey, and broiler
producers in Meigs County are
putting Friday, Feb. 26 on their
calendar. That's the day of the
annual Egg, Turkey, and
Broiler Conference at the
Agricultural Administration
Building at Ohio State
University.
Topics to be discussed between 9:15 and 3 p.m. are:
Stretching the Feed Dollar,
Edward C. Naber.
A Peek at the Poultry House

Junior Benders
Name Officers
Eight girls attended the
Pomeroy Jr. Benders 4-H Club
meeting recently at the home of
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, advisor,
when new officers were elected,
new projects selected and the
next meeting was discussed.
Ingrid Hawley was in charge
of recreation and the group
played geography. Melanie
Burt and Ingrid Hawley serVed
refreshments.
The next meeting will be at
Jenny Chapman's house on
February 1. Plans were made to
have a party and to answer
invitations. - Tina Duffy,
reporter.
PIRATES SIGN THREE
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates announced
Thursday outfielders Gene
Clines, John Jeter and infielder
Jose Pagan have signed their
1971 contracts.

of the Future, Ted Craig, a
poultry industry executive with
international experience, who
talks about the poultry houses of
tomorrow.
Up-to-Date on Poultry Meat
Inspection, John Richardson.
What's Ahead?, Poultry Meat
and Eggs, Ralph L. Baker.
The
Future
of
the
Southeastern Poultry Industry,
Morley G. McCartney.
Poultry Waste Management,
E. Paul Taiganides (The O.S.U.
world-known
expert
on
agricultural waste) will bring
the problem into focus and
discuss "cures."
A film, Agricultural Waste
Management, principally about
the waste disposal problem.

Mr. Circle,
68, Oaimed

J.D. Hill, a wide receiver
from Arizona State, was the
first non-quarterback taken,
going to Buffalo. Philadelphia
took defensive tackle Richard
Harris, the first of five
Grambling players taken in the
first two rounds.
The New York Jets took John
Riggins, a running back from
Kansas, and Atlanta selected
running back Joe Profit of
Northeast Louisiana. Pittsburgh
grabbed off wide receiver
Frank Lewis of Grambling and
Green Bay chose running back
John Brockington of Ohio State.
'Sleeper' For Giants
Los Angeles, which had
Washington's first choice,
picked linebacker Isiah Robertson of Southern University and
Chicago named running back
Joe Moore of Missouri. Denver
got tackle Marv Montgomery of
Southern California while San
Diego went for running back
Leon Burns of Long Beach
State. Cleveland selected defensive back Clarence Scott of
Kansas State while Cincinnati
went for tackle Vernon Holland
of Tennessee State .
Elmo Wright, a wide receiver
from the University of Houston,
went to Kansas City and St.
Louis took Norm Thompson, a
defensive back from Utah.
The New York Giants picked
the first "sleeper" of the draft
in Ralph "Rocky" Thompson, a
wide receiver from West Texas
State, and Oakland grabbed off
Jack Tatum, Ohio State's twotime All America defensive
back.
Second Pick For Rams
Florida defensive end Jack
Youngblood went to Los Angeles on the Rams' second pick
of the round and defensive
tackle Bob Bell of the
University of Cincinnati went to
Detroit. Don McCauley, the
North Carolina running back,
went to Baltimore, using a pick
obtained from Miami, and San
F:rancisco drafted defensive
back Tim Anderson of Ohio
State.
Minnesota selected running
back Leo Hayden of Ohio State
and Dallas took defensive
tackle Tody Smith of Southern
California. Baltimore closed out
the first round by taking
defensive back Leonard Dunlap
of North Texas State.
Four All Americas went on
the second round. Pittsburgh
took linebacker Jack Ham of
Penn State, St. Louis selected
tackle Dan Dierdorf of Michigan, Detroit drafted linel:lacker
Charlie Weaver of Southern Cal
and Baltimore took defensive
end Bill Atessis of Texas.
Some of the bigger names of
college football were well down
the list behind a large number
of small college players.

weal Bowling
TRI-COUNTY BOWLING
LEAGUE
Jan. 19, 1971
Pts.
18
Mason Furniture
Rawlings Dodge
18
Davis-Warner Ins.
16
Eagles ,
8
H&amp;1-&lt; t-ires tone
8
Holsum Sales Dept.
4
Team High Series
Davis
Warner Ins. , 2630; High Team
Game, Davis-Warner Ins. 974.
Individual
High Series Rober t Bowen, Sr., 623; High
Game - George Grate, 246.
Season High Series - Ed
Voss, 636; High Game - Paul
Harris, 267.

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. l. Pet. GB
Virginia
35 17 .673 ...
Kentucky
30 23 .566 5112
New York
22 28 .440 12
Pittsburgh
23 31 .426 13
Carolina
22 31 .415 13 112
Floridians
21 34 .382 15112
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Indiana
33 18 .647 ...
33 18 .647 ...
Utah
32 23 .582 3
Memphis
Denver
19 32 .373 14
Texas
18 33 .353 15
Thursday's Results
Memphis 122 Texas 99
(Only game scheduled)
Friday's Games
Pittsburgh at New York
Virginia at Kentucky
Memphis vs. Carol ina
at Greensboro, N.C.
Denver at Indiana
Utah at Texas

J. Wilmer Circle, owner of the
Circle Motel, Gallipolis, died
Thursday afternoon at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Born in the Racine-Bashan
area, he is survived by his wife,
Ruth Kiesling Circle, three
sons, Henry Kiesling, Charles
Kiesling, and Robert Kiesling,
all of Gallipolis; nine grandchildren, a sister, Mrs. Audrey
Theobald, Middleport, and a
brother, Arthur Circle, Toledo.
Friends may call at the
Funeral
Waugh-Halley-Wood
Home Saturday evening from 7
to 9 p.m. Funeral services will
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
funeral home.

0 " 6 Jl 8LO C•

ID71

GUARANTEE

304 E. Main Street
Ph. 992-3795
Pomeroy, Ohio

AMERICA'S LARGEST TAX SERVICE WITH OVER 5000 OFFICES
. . . . . . . NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY _ _ _ _. .

freshman who became eligible
second semester has forged into
second place with a 25.3
average.
Oakland City's Jim Fleming
continues to lead the KIAC in
rebounding with a 18.8 per game
average. Flemming still is the
most accurate field goal percentage shooter having hit 126
of 206 field goals being successful 61 per cent of the time.
Teammate Larry Harris is
close behind Fleming in
rebounding with a 13.3 average
and close behind Union's Terry
Smallwood, the KIAC best free
throw shooter, hitting 85 percent of his shots; while Harris
has hit on 84 percent of his free
throws.
(Leading Scorers)
FC FT TP Avg.
Harris, Oakland
City
183 101 472 26.2
Lambert, Rio Grande
89 80 228 25.3
Butcher,
Pikeville
165 99 429 25.2
Bass, Rio Grande
152 81 385 22.6
Hodges, Cumberland
127 so 306 19.1
Trueblood, Oakland
City
136 70 340 18.9
Swafford,
Union
142 43 316 18.5
Smallwood,
Union
134 59 309 17.1
Purvis, Camp106 72 284 17.0
bellsville

Property

Transfers

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

Team
Union
Campbellsville
Oakland City
Pikeville
Berea
Rio Grande
Cumberland

W L
5
5

2
3

6
3
4
3

3
4
5

5
2 6

Meigs 7th Grade
Lost to Southern
Southern District seventh
grade basketball team defeated
Meigs 54-47 Wednesday at
Racine.
Shooting in double figures for
the winners were Tim Jenkins
with 12 and Paul Schultz with 10.
Other scorers for Southern were
Greg Dunning and Mike
Roberts with 8points each, Paul
Cross 5, J. F. Young 4, Danny
Brown 2 and Keith Circle 1.
For Meigs, Davenport led all
scorers with 17 followed by
Martin with 12. Other scorers
were Marshall and Blake with 6
each, and Qualls 3nd Call e.:::Ch
2.
BY QUARTERS
16 34 48 54
Southern
Meigs
4 28 32 47

BOB'S
THICK SHAKE
MASON, W.VA.

Closing Jan. 31
Open March 1

Closing Specilll

Bucket of Chicken

$2.10

Convvecl
\!)

imp_am
resistant
fJBIUNIJ Tl££

Perfect for rec rooms, playrooms - any rooms where ceilings
are subject to hard knocks. Has deep-textured " stucco look"
that takes abuse as no ordinary ceiling tile possibly could.
Absorbs noise too. Let us show you the on ly ti le that looks
good being durable! Conwed Stone Face Ceiling Tile!

Installs easy too!
Goes up easy, whether you're a
pro or a do-it·yourselfer. Comes in
fast-hanging 2 x 4-ft. panels for
suspended ceilings. Or regular
12 x 12-in. size for staple or ad·
hesive application.

OUR NEW BILLS
p

Union Regains
Lead In KIAC

Union College, the top
defensive team, regained the
KIAC lead last week from
Oakland City, Indiana, the top
offensive club in the conference.
Union is allowing opponents
only 81.5 points per game while
Oakland City is scoring 96.6
points per game. Something
must give Monday night when
Union College hosts Oakland
City- defense vs. offense in the
Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference race.
Larry Harris, Oakland City's
senior forward, has taken the
scoring lead from Pikeville's
NBA Standings
By United Press International Steve Butcher due to Harris' 50
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB point scoring spree against
New York
37 17 .685 ... Berea. Harris is averaging 26.2
Philadelphia 33 22 .600 41J2 per game while Butcher is
Boston
29 25 .537 8
scoring 25.2.
Buffalo
16 42 .276 23
Ron Lambert, a Rio Grande
Centra I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Bat tim ore
31 21 .596 ...
Meigs
22 29 .431 8'12
Cincinnati
At lanta
17 37 .315 15
Cleveland
9 47 .161 24
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
42 9 .824 ...
Detroit
34 19 .642 9
31 22 .585 12
Chicago
Phoenix
32 23 .582 12
Pacific Division'
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 29 21 .580
Mildred Carson to John A.
San Francisco 28 26 .519 3
Duerr, Ruth L. Duerr, 20 acres,
Seattle
25 28 .472 5'12 Salem.
San Diego
24 31 .436 7'12
Freda Foley to Robert Alkire,
Portland
17 37 .315 14
Thursday's Results
Frances Alkire, parcel, Scipio.
Phoenix 118 Los Angeles 112
Freeman Williams, VonSeattle 120 Buffalo 110
derine Williams to Patrick E.
(Only games scheduled )
Friday's Games
Williams, Bertha J. Williams,
Cincinnati at Bal timore
3.05 acres, Chester.
New York a t Boston
Lyle W. Hysell, Leona Hysell
San Diego at Detroit
Milwaukee at Phila
to Ronald E. Riffle, Unda L.
Seattle a t Los Angeles
Riffle, .87 acre, Salisbury.
Buffalo a t San Francisco
Frederick B. Goeglein, Joan
Cleveland at Atlanta
Phoenix at Portland
W. Goeglein, Carl Fred
Goeglein, Frances Goeglein to
State of Ohio, 2.18 acres.
AHL Standings
Frederick B. Goeglein, Joan
By United Press International
W. Goeglein, Carl Fred
East
W. L. T. Pts Goeglein, Frances Goeglein to
Quebec
19 18 7 45 State of Ohio, .11 acre ,
Springfield
17 21 5 39 Salisbury.
Mon treal
16 21 6 38
Frederick B. Goeglein, Joan
Providence
14 20 9 37
W. Goeglein, Carl Fred
West
W. L. T. Pts Goeglein, Frances Goeglein to
25 11 s 55 State of Ohio, 5.35 acres,
Baltimore
Cleveland
21 16 5 47
Rochester
17 20 7 41 Salisbury.
Hershey
17 19 6 40
Frederick B. Goeglein, Joan
Thursday's Results
W. Goeglein, Carl Fred
Quebed 4 Rochester 2
Goeglein, Frances Goeglein to
(Only game scheduled)
Friday's Games
State of Ohio, 4.51 acres,
Springfield at Cleve
Salisbury.
Baltimore at Montreal
Frederick B. Goeglein, Joan
(On ly games scheduled)
W. Goeglein, Carl Fred
Goeglein, Franct.s Goe'6lein to
State
of Ohio, 23.93 acres,
NHL Standings
By United Press International Salisbury.
East
Stella Grueser to Freeman
W. L. T. Pts Williams, Vonderine Williams,
Bos ton
34 8 6 74
New York
30 9 9 69 parcels, Sutton.
Montreal
22 14 11 55
22 24 3 47
Toronto
Vancouver
15 28 5 35
Detroit
14 27 6 34 COACHING SWITCH
Buffalo
11 26 10 32
Mass.
WILLIAMSTOWN,
West
(UPI)-Williams College anW. L. T. Pfs
Chicago
32 10 6 70 nounced the hiring of AI Jacks
St. Louis
21 13 13 55 as its new head football coach
Philadelphia
17 22 9 43 Thursday. Jacks coached ClaPittsburgh
15 22 12 42 rion State (Pa. ) College to
Minnesota
16 22 10 42
Los Angeles
14 23 9 37 three league championships in
California
15 30 3 33 eight seasons.
Thursday' s Results
Boston 6 Phila 2
St. Louis 1 Detroit 1
BLUES BUY FRAN HICK
Chicago 4 Pittsburgh 1
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-The St.
(On ly games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Louis Blues of the National
Buffalo at California
Hockey League announced the
Minnesota at Vancouver
acquisition of center Fran Huck
(Only games schedu led)
from the Montreal Canadiens
Thursday for a 1971 amateur
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
draft choice.
By United Press International
Miami 91 Tulane 66
Youngstown State 74 Alliance 60
Wherever ceilings
Cedarville 87 Marion (Ind.) 81
Otterbein 85 Ohio Wesleyan 76
must take abuse ...
Mal one 73 Walsh 71

$

We guarantee a~curate preparation of every tox return .
If we make any errors that cost you any penalty ar
interest, we will pay that penalty ar interest.

•

Pro Standings

Pro Grid Draft Continues

Big selection of Conwed
Washable Vinyl Kitchen
Tile too!

will pay a lot of

YOUR OLD BILLS•••
.call for

~--=£Ph~~~~
125 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.

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

Cooks Great, Looks Great
Priced Right!

Your Choice
. . . . . . . .L
...........................

Just what you need to top off the kitchen. It's guaranteed
grease-proof. Which means grease, cooking vapor accumulation and most ordinary household mishaps won't hurt it
a bit.
The super vinyl coating does it. To clean, just wipe with a
damp cloth. Conwed Vinyl Tile. Choise of patterns plus
sparkling white. Stop in today!

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

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

---

- --------~---J

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29, 1971

84 High Schools Teaching the Bible
By LOUIS CASSELS
UPI Religion Writer
At least 84 public high schools, scattered ~r?m
Massachusetts to California, are proving that rehgwn
can be taught objectively without violating the Constitution.
There may be others. But 84 are definitely known to

Religio-n-in Am-erica
the Religious Instruction Association, a nonsectarian
"the legal, proper and
significant study of religion in the public school."
The majority of the schools are approaching the
teaching of religion by including in English or
humanities courses one or more units on the Bible as
literature.
Bible As Uterature
For example, Lincoln High School in Bloomington,
Ind., includes a unit of Bible study in its 12th grade
English course. Mrs. Betty Stainer, one of the teachers
of the course, says the Bible unit is extremely popular
with students, and teachers have found it "a most
rewarding experience, well worth the preparation time
required."

body which advocates

At lower Merion High School, Ardmore, Pa., Mrs.
Marion A. Klaus teaches a course on "the Bible and
literature." Its objectives, she says, are to acquaint
students with "the rich variety of literary forms"poetry, short stories, dramas, history-to be found in
the Bible; to help them appreciate "the great influence
exerted on our culture by the Bible"; and to familiarize
them with "the various views of biblical scholars
concerning the origin and nature of the books of the
Bible."
"For drama and human interest, the Bible rivals any
body of writing in the world," says Robert H. Baylis, a
teacher at Acalanes Union High School, Walnut Creek,
Calif. "A course in the Bible at the secondary school
level should be no different from any other well-taught
literary course. It should emphasize the reading of the
text and the discovery of significant human experience."
Interfaith Reader
To meet the need for a textbook !&gt;uitable for high
school Bible courses, a Protestant-Catholic-Jewish
team of scholars has produced a volume called "The
Bible Reader" which includes selected passages of the
Bible with commentaries acceptable to all three faiths.

It is published in paperback by Bruce Publishing Co.,
N.Y., and is supplemented by a teacher's guide.
The Religious Instruction Association knows of 27
public high schools that have incorporated in their
social studies courses units on the various religions of
mankind and their impact on history.
For example, the Northwest Classen High School in
Oklahoma City offers a descriptive survey of the major
world faiths. Its teacher, Miss Charline Burton, says no
attempt is made to compare the worth of the various
faiths. The emphasis is on trying to gain a "sympathetic understanding" of what others believe and
why they believe it.
Among the books available in paperback which are
suitable for use as textbooks in such courses are ''The
Religions of Man" (Harper &amp; Row), "The World's
Religions" (Abingdon) and "What's the Difference? A
Comparison of the Faiths Men Live By" (Doubleday).
Any high school teacher, principal, or PTA interested in teaching religion in the way that the U.S.
Supreme Court explicitly recommended can obtain
additional information about curriculum materials
and teacher preparation from the Religious Instruction
Association. (Box 533, rort Wayne, Ind. 46807).

Answers to Child Feeding Problems
By Deborah M. Conklin

Ext. Agent, Home Econ.
Feeding your children during
the infancy and pre-school age
often is a problem. It is very
important that eating to be
pleasant experience because
the attitudes developed at this
time may influence the child's
reaction to food throughout life.
Patience is probably the key
to encouraging the youngster to
feed himself. Parents should
expect some messiness and
spills as their child is learning
to feed himself. Children vary in
their muscle control. Some
develop faster than others, but
all must learn how to chew and
swallow different foods, how to
hold a spoon and cup, how to
transfer food from plate to
mouth. This will take time and
patience on the part of the
parents.
Ask yourself if you are
providing an atmosphere that
will make it easy for the child to
---

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

:

Turn Your Dimes
Into

f
I

I

II
I

II

DOLLARS,

4¥.1%

I

I

Interest per yea r, com.l
pounded
quarterly
on I
regular passboo k saving s
accounts, no m inimum or
. maximum amoun t. Interest
is paid from date of depos it
to date of withdra wa l as long
1 as you ma inta in an open
I account .

l
1

I1
I

·Meigs

c0.· Branch

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

.·.

All Accounts Insured By

feed himself. Is the child
comfortable at mealtime? Does
he have a comfortable chair
that allows him to reach the
table? Does he have support for
his feet? Are foods cut to bitesize so they are easy to eat? Are
they colorful and inviting? Are
eating utensils suitable for
small hands?
When food is played with, the
child may be showing his independence . When he understands that he does have a
choice of playing or eating, it
may no longer be a problem.
Parents with this problem
should:
Be patient.
Conceal their concern by
being casual and not becoming
angry.
If the child consistently plays
with the same food, offer him
other foods in its place. If he ~
continues to play with his food
at meals, tell him at the end of a
half hour or so that he will get
no more food until the next
meal. Make it clear that the
decision of whether or not to eat
is up to him. If he still shows no
interest, calmly remove his
plate. After a few days of this
cool but consistent discipline,
the problem eater will probably
beg\n to show a gradual interest
in food if there is not a more
basic problem involved.
CHILDREN WILL have
preferences just as adults do, so
not all foods will be a hit. When
serving a new food, it is often
suggested to serve the new food
with another food that is a
favorite of the child. Parents
should serve the new food
calmly and not be surprised if it
is rejected. If this does happen,
it is a good idea to try serving
the food again in a few days,
perhaps prepared in a different
way. It may be that the flavor
was too extreme for the child to
accept quickly. Remind parents
to reward the child with a
compliment, even after he had
tried just one bite of a new food.
A food jag is a common eating
problem among preschoolers. It
is best not to make an issue out
of this ... not to force, bribe or
punish a child. When a food jag
is handled casually, it usually

Why Wait For Spring?
Buy It Now
While Prices Are

4 Dr. Sedan. One of the nicest 65's anywhere, 6 cyl. std. shift.

70 PONTIAC

Reduced s1100

4 Dr. HT &amp; Two Door HT. Demos. These cars have low mileage
and fully equipped including factory air.

!

DEBBIE CONKLIN

each day, usually midmorning
and in the afternoon following
naptime. Constant nibbling
between meals should be
discouraged. If a child's appetite is very poor at meals,
reducing or even eliminating
snacks may spark his appetite.
It is important to plan snacks
that will contribute to the
child's nutritional well-being.
Such snacks might include
celery or carrot sticks, peanut
butter, cheese, raisins, cereal,
milk and fruit.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Adams,
Cheshire, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd M. Sams, Jr., Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, a daughter; and Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis M. Sayre, New
Haven, a son.
Discharges
Helen
Anderson,
Mrs.
Francis Andrew, Mrs. Sara
Betz, Mrs. Warren Black and
infant daughter, Mrs. John L.
Cheney, Mrs. Stanley C.
Church, William V. Cogar,

OHIO CITIES WIN
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Two
Ohio cities are winners of the
National Clean City Contest.
The National Clean-up, Paintup, Fix-up Bureau Tuesday
named 30 winn~rs of trophies,
from which the national winner
will be announced Feb. 23 by
Mrs. Richard Nixon. The cities
included Dayton and Solon.

approach for the Democratic
"categorical grants" during the
1960's, but succeeded only on
one substantial program -the
Safe Streets or Law Enforcement Assistance Act. That
program originally called for
states to decide on the
distribution of federal crimefighting funds, a system that
pleased governors but irked
many mayors.
The $9.6 billion in special
revenue sharing funds would
have to be spent in general
areas specified by the federal
government, but local governments would determine specific
programs. The less controversial $4 billion "general revenue
sharing" plan would go to
states with no strings attached.

SINGLE LEVER FAUCET
SPRAY AND STRAINER

e

S1295

COMPLETE PROGRAMS
FOR DOGS AND PUPPIES
OF ALL BREEDS

Many more

BLAETTNARS

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
116 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE 992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO

SUGAR180 RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

Pomeroy

Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp; Heating
Edward Baer, owner

• AFC-Automatic Fine·tuning Control
• TITAN 80 Handcrafted Chassis
• Sunshine&lt;~&gt; Color Picture Tube
• Super VidEo Range Tuner

TIIIIJJI

~

The quality goes in
before the name goes on~

INGELS
FURNITURE
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
992-2635
Middleport

----------------------·
oo'fS
I

\.os' 'J. n
)0~~0
I

I

!
~

I

I
I
I
69 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, air--------~100 I
.
I
66 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham 4 dr., air__·s2095 I

L

66 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air_ __ --- - __'2195
67 Olds 98 4 dr., air, 'Has s1995 ______ s1795 1
66 Pontiac Bonneville 4 door _________ s1295

I
1 66 Buick Wildcat 4 dr., was s1595·----- s1395 I
II 66 Chevrolet Impala 4 door __________sll95 I
1
t¥
I

A sink designed to make your kitchen lovelier, your work
easier! Many modern features to give you maximum
convenience for minimum cost. Soft satin stainless steel
surface will never crack, chip, peel or stain . Sound
deadening undercoating . Self-rim simplifies installation .
Twin basins and aerator faucet . Size is 33" x 22" (fits a 32"
x 21" cutout).

992-2036

HANDCRAFTED!

65 Pontiac GP 2 dr. H.T., air, was s1295 __sll95
I
65 Chev. Impala 2 Dr. H.T. __________ 5895 1
64 Olds 88 H.T. Coupe ____________ ~95

Your Choice $1795

1·2 Dr. H.T. Coupe, 1-4 dr . H T. Sedan, cho ice of two ex cellent cars, tops in condition, extra good quality, P.S.,
P. B., auto. trans.

s49995

1 65 Olds 88 4 dr. H.T., was ~95 _______s795 I

S PEGIAL

V·8 4 dr. hardtop, factory air conditioned. silver finish with
black top and luxurious nylon black interior . Power windows,
power steering, power brakes. A luxury car at a low price.

The FARLEY
B2981W
Contemporary styled com
console in grained Wain
color. VHF/UHF
Spotlite Dials.

I

I
I
STAINLESS
STEEL SINK
WITH

Impala 2 dr. hardtop, 283 cu. in. V-8 std. trans., spark l ing
maroon finish, black vinyl interior. Sharp car.

67 BUICK WILDCATS

By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - The Emma
Smith Circle met at the home of
the leader, Goldie Clendenin on
Thursday evening opening with
devotions on the stewardship
theme, developed through
prayer, readings and open
discussion. Following Beulah
Roush reading the minutes and
Earlene Stobart's report on
finances, refreshments were
served buffet style by the
hostess assisted by Jane
Johnson to Eula Proffitt, Pearl
Proffitt, Myrtle Proffitt, Lucy
Taylor, Ilah Roush, Beulah
Roush, Earlene Stobart and
Goldie Gillilan.
A mini-rummage sale was
held which the group enjoyed
and which put some money in
the collection. Jane Johnson
received the door prize and all
receive~ rainhats as favors.
Jimmie Diddle has arrived in
Vietnam reports his mother,
Maxine Diddle. He's been in the
Green Berets several months
and the Circle will send him a
Christmas
box,
delayed
because of no address while
transferring.
The sick of this branch are
Edgar Taylor and Henry
Walker, both in hospitals .

Hammerfest, situated on
an island off the northern
coast of Norway, 300 miles
north of the' Arctic Circle, is
the most northerly incorporated town in the world.

DOG FOOD

66 CHEVROLET V8

LOWEST
PRICE EVER!

Emma Smith

Red ~ Rose

Electra 4 dr. Hardtop, factory air condition, less than 11,000
miles, executive car. Never been titled . Five year warrantybetter hurry .

65 CAPRICE CHEVROLET

Robert T. Fanning, Mrs. Carrie
Flack, Mrs. Daniel Gilmore and
infant son, Richard L. Henry,
Mrs. Lester R. Hudson, Mrs.
Emma D. Icard, Mrs. Robert F.
James, Harry Kauff, Mrs.
Dorsel Keefer, Clifford Kidd,
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Floyd
Leffler, Mrs. William Mitchell,
Mrs. James Montgomery and
infant son, Mrs. Flora Ragan,
Mary Smith, Verlin Swain, Mrs.
Carl Trippett and infant son,
James D. Walker, Pamela
Warrens, Leon West, Angela
Wheeler, Mrs. Bobby Williams,
Mrs. Paui Wright and infant

•

daughter, Mrs. Lula Long,
Glenna Wears, and Carter
Franklin.

Circle ·Mee1s

Nixon Would Dunip
Social Programs
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Pres- sharing" plan now are being programs involved and wrote
ident Nixon's revenue sharing paid out in federal programs into them the strong federal
plan to relax federal controls first enacted during the Kenne- controls that Nixon now seeks to
over $9.6 billion in special dy and Johnson administra- loosen.
purpose aid funds for states tions.
The issue is not whether state
and cities also would erase a
Programs that would lose and local governments will get
long list of New Frontier and their identities included Model the $9.6 billion, but under what
Great Society social programs. Cities, Appalachia assistance, conditions. In most of the aid
Nixon's effort to dump some depressed areas aid, the Safe programs approved during the
of the Democrats' proudest Streets Act, manpower training, 1960's, Congress earmarked the
programs into his new revenue antipoverty community action, funds for specific purposes and
sharing pool emphasized one of school aid for poor neighbor- gave federal agencies authority
the sharpest points of differ- hoods and Lady Bird Johnson's to keep close check on them.
ence between the two major highway beautification.
The idea of "block grants,"
parties: whether government About $5.1 billion of the as the special revenue sharing
works best from Washington or funds in the Nixon plan would proposal originally was called,
from the statehouses and city come from Democratic-origin- grew from the complaints of
ated programs.
governors and mayors that the
halls.
The President's fiscal 1972 The special revenue sharing aid programs gave them no
budget, presented to Congress seems likely to arouse the leeway in meeting their needs
today showed that more than Democratic-controlled Con- and that the federal bureaucrahalf of the dollars proposed for gress because its recent cy was too snarled in red tape
the Nixon "special revenue predecessors gave birth to the to distribute the funds efficient---------------llllllliiilly.
Republicans repeatedly tried
to substitute the block grant

!

HOSPITAL NEWS

Reduced $1100

70 BUICK

BUICK

r---------------------------~

t)

65 DODGE CORONET
Bonneville

does not last long. Peanut butter trouble meeting the daily
is a good source of protein, and recommendations for milk for
peanut butter sandwiches are their children might try serving
milk in smaller glasses and
not necessarily "bad."
However, if other foods are refilling the glasses; serving
available besides peanut butter milk right from the refrigerator
sandwiches, the child will if their children prefer it very
probably soon turn to them, if cold, or at room temperature
left along to make the decision. for those younger children who
"Do you like vegetables?" If prefer this; serving milk in
the answer is "no," it is quite colorful glasses; allowing the
possible this attitude has been children to drink milk through
passed on to the child. If parents straws on occasion; permitting
learn to like vegetables and eat children to pour their own milk
them when their children do, from small pitchers; drinking
this is a big step toward solving milk with their children.
the problem. The following
It may be that parents have
advice can be. given on serving been pushing milk with such
vegetables:
great gusto that children are
Be careful not to overcook apprehensive about drinking it.
vegetables, particularly the Parents need not be overly
strong flavored or green concerned when children don't
vegetables. They are apt to drink three glasses every day.
become stronger in flavor or to Some days children may not
lose their bright green color if have the appetite, and by forovercooked.
cing them to drink this much
Strive for variety in the types milk, parents may spoil the
of vegetables served. Serve children's appetites for other
vegetables in interesting ways _ important foods. Also, it is not
necessary to drink this much
for meals and snacks.
Strips and slices of raw every day. Dishes made with
vegetables such as carrots and milk may be served that will
celery, radishes, flowerets or help meet the quota.
raw cauliflower or broccoli and
Many preschool children need
small wedges of lettuce or some food between meals.
cabbage are usually liked by Between-meal snacks should be
young children. It is important planned to be satisfying but
to wash all raw vegetables small enough so that the child
thoroughly before serving will be hungry for the next
them.
meal. Food between meals is
PARENTS WHO ARE having best offered at the same time

PREPARE MAILERS FOR MARCH OF DIMES - Girl Scout Troop 592 of Mason was
busy one night this week preparing mailers for the March of Dimes. Addressing the envelopes are, l to r, seated, Cheryl VanMeter, Sylvia VanMeter, Martha Jones, Denise
Werry, Jan Wilson, Teresa Proffitt, Robin Stewart, and Diana Johnson; standing, Belva
Johnson, Terry Ross and Teresa VanMeter. Mrs. Ruby Jones is troop advisor; Mrs. Emil
Martin of Pt. Pleasant the March of Dimes chairman.

Pomeroy

64 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. -- -- ----- - s395 I
I
,50 Ford lfz ton Pickup --.----------s2so I

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMAC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Until6 : 00-Til 5 P.M. Sat.

. ________

IaI
I

--... -----

I

1

1

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29,1971
-------~·._...._...._...__..._...__..__..______..l

• Girl Scout
Diary

By Charlene Hoeflich

As a special conununity service project, Tuppers Plains Girl

•

Scout Troop 267 will place trash containers along the streets of the
village.
Other activities plarmed during recent meetings of the troop
include a valentine party and a troop birthday party. Girl Scout
Sunday will be observed by group attendance at the St. Paul's
Methodist Church.
Thank you cards were made and sent to adults who have
assisted with troop activit\es during the past year. The girls made
a visit to the Elmwood Nursing Home over the holidays. They
presented the patients there with a candy wreath and had a carol
sing. A roller skating party was another holiday activity of the
group.
Newly appointed patrol leaders are Teresa Lmgenette, Cathy
Collins, and Diana Benedum. Cheryl Griffin is the scribe, Teresa
Benedum, the treasurer, and Jane Millhone, the reporter.
RACINE JUNIOR TROOP 137
PAM BUCK, CARY Morris, and Renee Burke, Southern High
School majorettes, gave a demonstration on twirling, strutting
and other phases of majorette work at a meeting this week of
Racine Troop 137 at the American Legion hall.
The scouts are continuing their work on the magic carpet
badge under the direction of Mrs. Carl Morris and Mrs. Doris
Fisher, leaders.
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 61
WORK ON THE health aid badge was completed Thursday
night when Troop 61 met at the Pomeroy Elementary School. The
girls to earn the badge have prepared first aid kits, performed
skits and pantomimes on health, given demonstrations and
prepared emergency telephone cards for their homes.
Assisting Mrs. Thomas Smith, leader, with the troop are Mrs.
Guy E. Guinther, and two senior scouts, Debbie Harbrecht and
Becky Houdashelt.
New patrols were organized last week with Mandy Sisson and
Paige Smith being elected patrol leaders. Crystal Hall is the
scribe and Kathy Blaettnar is the treasurer.
MIDDLEPORT BROWNIE TROOP 87
JAPAN HAS BEEN selected by Brownie Troop 87 as the
country they will present at International Thinking Day program
on Feb. 21 at the Middleport Elementary School. Mrs. Larry
Spencer, leader of the troop, spent three years in Japan and will
assist the girls with costuming, native songs and games, and the
finger foods which they are to provide.

Youngest Lodge Master
•

William G. Wolfe, husband of
the former Charlesanna K. Hess
of Pomeroy, was recently installed as worshipful master of
the Masonic Lodge 147 of
Sarasota, Fla.
Wolfe, 25, is the youngest man
ever to be elected master of the

Second School of
Religion Planned

Sarasota Lodge. Born in
Rochester, N. Y., he moved
with his parents to Sarasota
when he was 15. In 1960 he
petitioned the Sarasota Order of
Demolay for degrees in that
order. He took an active part in
the Order and in 1962 was
elected Master Councilor. He
received many honors, including the degree of chevalier.
On his 21st birthday he was
received into the Sarasota
Masonic Lodge and that same
year became a master mason.
He is now a 32nd degree mason.
Wolfe is employed as
assistant head .teller at the
National Bank at Sarasota. He
and his wife, who teaches in
kindergarten, have two sons,
Clay and Jeffrey. Following
their father's installation as
master of the Sarasota Lodge,
the boys presented him with a
miniature gavel.
Mrs. Wolfe is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spencer
of Anna Maria, Fla., and the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John Terrell, Pomeroy.

The second annual Hocking
Area School of Religion,
Providence District, will be
conducted at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Church on six consecutive Sundays beginning
Feb. 7.
The session will be held from
3 to 5 p.m. each Sunday. The
adult course will be "The 70's
Opportunities
for
Your
Church," and the youth course
will be "Youth, World and the
Church." Baptist doctrine will
be taught in both classes.
Credits will be issued to those
completing the courses.
Mr. Eddie Buffington, student
at the Kentucky Christian
College, will give the keynote
address on the first Sunday of
the school. Mrs. Bernice Borden
is the director of education for
Jon Perrin was the guest of
the Providence District.
honor at a party celebrating his
fifth birthday Wednesday at his
home, 213 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, decorated in red,
TY7
J ~
white and blue. Games were
w
played and prizes awarded.
Funeral services for Wesley After Jon opened his gifts, Mrs.
Cozart, 81, Portland, who died W. H. Perrin, assisted by her
Wednesday at Delaware, Ohio daughter, Faith, served birthhave been set for 1 p.m. day cake and ice cream.
Attending were Barbara
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Grueser, Nicky Riggs, Brian
Home .
Surviving are the following Betzing, Gregg Thomas, Bobby
children, Mrs. Linda Ward, Williams, Barbara and Harvey
Portland; Mrs. Arlene Peas and Whitlatch, Jayne Hoeflich, and
Mrs. Mildred Slaven, both of Beth Perrin. Unable to attend
Ravenswood, W. Va.; Mrs. but sending a gift were Mike
Wanda Brewer, Denniston, Ky.; and David Kennedy.
Floyd, Cleveland; Ferrell of
Wood Haven, Mich., and Mrs.
Virginia Kibler, Sandyville, W.
Va. Also surviving are a
brother, John, Ipava, TIL, 21
grandchildren and 14 greatgrandchildren. Before his
retirement Mr. Cozart was
employed at U. S. Lock and
Dam 21 at Portland.
Officiating at the services
Quality In ~raftsmanship
Saturday will be the Rev.
Quality In Materials
Lawrence Gluesencamp. Burial
Quality You Can Trust.
will be in the Stiversville
992· 5314
Cemetery. Friends may call at
W• .Y;~in
Pomeroy, 0 .
the funeral home at any time.

Birthday Observes

• Wesley Cozart
Died

•

d

e nesuay

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE
$349.95

•

$35.00 Down-

Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

Favors Will
Be Made by
Junior Unit

-Social--1 Project Freedom
Ca en dar l
'
~

SUNDAY
SPECIAL YOUTH revival,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday through
Sunday; special speakers and
music; Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene, all young people
welcome.
JOINT SERVICE at Mason
Christian Brethren Church ,
Mason First Baptist and
Fairview Bible Church taking
part; Rev. Stan Craig, Jr.
sspeaking, 7:30 p.m.; Good
Time hour following worship
service, refreshments.
MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA,
Monday, 7:30 p.m.; Founder's
Day program by Mrs. Olive
Page; talk on drugs by Mrs.
Nellie Vale; panel on safety.
POMEROY GARDEN Club, 1
p.m. Monday, home of Mrs. J.
W. McMurray, Mason, W.Va. ;
Mrs. Harold Brown assisting
hostess.
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Monday, IOOF hall; important
business, members asked to
attend.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay, Middleport Masonic
Temple, 7:30 p.m. Monday;
Advisory Council meeting, 7
p.m.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
regular session at temple.

Support of the "Project
Freedom" movement designed
to bring pressure on Hanoi for
better treatment and eventual
release of American prisoners
of war was pledged by the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128
Wednesday night.
The unit agreed to assist in
the May house-to-house canvass
to secure signatures on letters
which will go to Hanoi. The Rev.
W. H. Perrin and Mrs. Ben
Neutzling are heading up the
project in Meigs County.
Several members of the unit
also volunteered to assist with
the Meigs County Red Cross
fund drive. It was voted to
sponsor one girl and to cosponsor another to the
American Legion Auxiliary
Buckeye Girls State in June.
Plans were made for the
annual American Legion birthday dinner in March, with the
Auxiliary to prepare the dinner.
Midwinter conference being
held in Columbus this weekend
was discussed. Mrs. Charles
Kessinger, president, will
represent the unit and it was
voted to assist with her expenses in attending. The unit
will provide 10 dozen cookies for
a reception being held at the
conference.
A $5 contribution was made to
the March of Dimes. Communications were read from
district, department and
national officials. Several thank
you notes from those receiving
Christmas trays were read,
along with notes from the
Althea Miller and Hazel Morris

Wins Support

families and the Collins sisters.
The charter was draped for
Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Morris.
It was reported that the new
constitution and by-laws of the
unit have been approved and
auxiliary members wanting
copies are asked to contact Mrs.
Kessinger.
Mrs. Kessinger reported on
the Chillicothe birthday party in
December, the party for
veterans at the Southeastern

Ohio Mental Health Center, and
junior initiation and Christmas
party held at the Middleport
hall.
A new coffee pot will be
purchased for use at the hall.
Reported ill were Mrs. Ellen
Sayre, Veterans Memorial;
Mrs . Pauline Gallagher at
home; Frank Murray and Tom
Roush, both in the Veterans
Hospital at Huntington ; Harry
Kauff, returned home Wednesday from the hospital;
William Lewis, a patient at
Holzer Medical Center; William
Harmon at the Chillicothe
Hospital, and Dave Jenkins and
John Kauff, both home now.
Sympathy cards have been
sent to the Van Cooney, Miller
and Morris families.
Plans were made for James
Roach to speak at the February
meeting on drug use and bause.
A dinner will be served that
night at 6 p.m. preceding the
Legion and Auxiliary meetings.
Darla Morris was welcomed
into the junior unit of the
auxiliary.

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

•

Valentine favors will be made
for the patients at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Home of
Junior American Legion
Auxiliary members of FeeneyBennett Post 128.
the Fabulous
Meeting Tuesday night at the
Middleport hall, the girls
decided to set Feb. 7 for a work
session. At that time they will
make the valentine favors and
also practice for a skit to be
presented at the spring conference of juniors, June 5, at
Columbus.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Eighth
Mrs. Kenneth Scites, MeigsDistrict president of the
Galli a Community Action
Auxiliary, met with the young
Program home health nurse,
people to assist with the conspoke on drug abuse at the
ference program. Rules for
Tuesday night meeting of the
conference contests were
Order By Phone
Meigs TOPS Knotchers Club at
distributed and explained. It
the Meigs County Infirmary.
was decided to collect bottle
And Take Em Home
Following her talk Mrs. Scites
caps to be redeemed by the
992-5432
distributed literature on the
Royal Crown Bottling Co. to
drugs
most
commonly
abused.
help with the expenses of atThe TOPS prayer and pledge
tending the conference.
and the fellowship song opened
Darla Morris was accepted
the meeting. Mrs. Frances
into membership of the unit. A
Haggy was declared queen for
bake sale was planned for the
the week with Mrs. Joan Eads
Saturday before Easter, and the
as runnerup for weight loss.
group made a donation to the
Showing the most gain was Mrs.
March of Dimes. Money was
Clara Adams and her runnersalso given for gifts for the
up were Mrs. Nellie Haggy,
"adopted" handicapped child
Mrs. Nina Theiss, and Mrs.
and senior citizen of the junior
Cecelia Mitch.
auxiliary.
Mrs. Eads was the monthly
Recordings of the girls giving
queen with Mrs. Grace Turner
the pledge to the flag and
as runner-up. Plans were anComes in black
singing were made by Mrs.
and
walnutnounced for a new contest to
Harold Will, senior advisor.
gra i ned
begin at next Tuesday's
Mrs. Charles Kessinger and
polystyrene
meeting.
TWIN SONS BORN
Mrs. Will served refreshments
case
with
Twin sons, Scott and Shawn
white trim.
after grace by Pamela Morris.
were born to Mr. and Mrs:
The Lord's Prayer in unison
Mrs. Homer Holter, in James W. Hawley of Wallbridge
concluded the meeting. Mrs.
oriental costume, showed slides Thursday morning at a Toledo I
Ellen Couch was a guest.
Several Varieties
of Expo '70 and the In- hospital. Mr. Hawley is the I
ternational Flower Show in grandson of Mrs. Grace Hawley
Japan to members of the of Middleport and the twins are : Constant Comment
Wildwood Garden Club Wed- Mrs. Hawley's first great- : English Breakfast
nesday night at the Ohio Power grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. 1 Dayeeling
Co. Mrs. Holter also presented James E. Hawley of WinChinese Fortune
Mrs. Don Erwin entertained slides of her trip around the tersville are the paternal
Records and plays on 4 " C" Celr
grandparents.
recently with a party in ob- world last summer.
J Chinese-Mint
batteries,
or AC current. A.C.
Guests for the open meeting
servance of the fourth birthday
Adapter. Dynamic microphone with
1 Irish-Green
anniversary of her daughter, were registered by Mrs. Hiram
SALE PLANNED
remote
control switch.
Amy. A Raggety Ann theme Fisher. Mrs. Victor Hysell,
:
Ceylon
Orange
Pekoe
A rummage sale will be held
was carried out in the president, extended a welcome at Heath United Methodist
1 Hot Tea Mix
decorations. Games were to the guests who introduced Church, Thursday, Feb. 4.
I
themselves.
played with prizes going to
Residents of Middleport having
A blue ribbon was awarded to articles they wish to contribute
Megan Long and Scott
McKinley. Cake and Kool-Aid Mrs. Hysell who displayed the are to call 992-7183 for pickup
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
: I
were served and favors were arrangement of the month. Mrs. service.
'
:
..l::.--=--:...--=--:...-:..
":.-:..--::...--::...-::..
-:..;·_.
Fred Nease and Mrs. Edison
balloons and bubble gum.
Attending besides Megan and Hollon served punch and ,--------~;--------------------- - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - - Scott were Danny Thomas, cookies from a table decorated
Kathy Thomas, Mary Beth in the valentine motif.
Long, David Reuter , Holly
MOTHERS HELP
Renee Miller, Tammy Moyer,
Middleport PTA mothers
Mike Miller, Terry Sprouse,
Beth Wolfe, and Mrs. Dan assisted in the elementary
Thomas, Mrs. Karen Sprouse, classrooms Wednesday while
Mrs. Don Reuter, Debbie Wolfe, the teachers conferred with a
Mrs. Earl McKinley, and Mrs. book company representative.
Assisting were Mrs. Larry
Chester Erwin.
Spencer, Mrs. Delores Lynch,
Mrs. Carl Gardner, Mrs.
Charles Simons, Mrs. Ralph
MRS. MILLER HOME
Edwards, Mrs. David Zirkle,
Mrs. Malcolm Miller is and Mrs. Max Donahue.
recuperating at home following
surgery at the Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Fred Leifheit of Rock Springs
was taken by ambulance
HAS TITLE ROLE
Wednesday
morning to the
Vega
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Marlon Brando will play the Holzer Medical Center after
Base Car (2-Door Coupe)
$2197.00
$2313.00
title role in the screen version of becoming ill at his home.
Comparable Engine
125hp
$ 42.35
Mario Puzo's novel ''The
(Horsepower)
std.
(110 hp opt.)
Godfather," Paramount Pic- . .
White Sidewall Tires
$ 26.85
$ 48.20
tures announced Wednesday.
Lowest priced available type
Branda will play an age range
For All Occasl'ons·
Duster-6.45 x 14" Polyester
of 54 to 64 in the film as a don of
Vega-A7Bx 13" Bias-Belted
a Mafia family.
. -- w
- .-w-lr_e_f_lo-w-. -r .- .-v-e-ry-w-h.-r-.-11
$ 25.15
Wheel Ornamentation
$ 26.50
(Covers) (Trim Rings)
~&gt;-Chrysler
$2365.00
TOTAL
$2314.05
Corporation
The name Peter Funk is
$ 50.95
Difference
associated with the custom
• Based on a comparison ol manufacturers• sugof using the name for a perPomeroy Flower Shop
When you
gested retail prices excluding state and local
son employed at an auction
taxes. destination charges and equipment reButternut Ave. Pomeroy
compare
quired by state law.
to offer bogus bids in order
Mrs.
Mi
liard
Van
Meter
our
Duster
to raise the price.
to their Vega,
and see how
much more
Duster gives,
you'll know
you've come to
the right place.
Because Duster not
only has more room,
more trunk, bigger tires
and brakes and more
Duster 2·Door Coupe
power than Vega, it's
st1 ll JUst as easy on gas as
it i~ on your budget. The big
difference between Duster
and Vega? Find out at the right
place ... it's not the p•ice.

Mrs. Holter Shows

Slides of Travels

Pound Watchers
Meet Tuesday

fomBoy

SANDWICH

MOTOROLAe@
Cassette Player Recorder

With Youthful

Styling

1"-------------,
:

Bigelow Tea

Amy Erwin's Fourth
Birthday Observed

I

r------------•

I: MIDDLEPORT l

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

BOOK STORE :

-.FL-O•W-E•R-S•••

992-2039

CHECKERBOARD DAIRY

You can take advantage of present high milk prices by
getting your cow s to produce at their bred-in ability- at a
low cost. Checkerboard Dairy is the milking ration for the
dairyman who wants a highly efficient , yet a low.cost
ration for his herd. Checkerboard Dairy has a balance of
vitamins, minera ls and protein cows need for top per.
formance. And it's a comp lete mi lk ing ration, high in
molasses for added palatability and pelleted for easy
handlinq and feeding .
Put your herd on Checkerboard Dairy . See us today - and
let Checkerboard Dairy help your cows produce all the
milk that 's bred i nto them - and let you take advan tage of
today's good milk prices.
Stop In &amp; Check Our Bulk
Delivery Prices.

MODERN SUPPLY

JYY W. :.,am St.
992 -2 164
Pomeroy , Ohio
TheStoreWith"ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
For Pets Stables Large &amp; Small Animals Lawns
Gardens .

AUTHORIZED

Check us for
our price, you'll see ...

YOU'VE lOmE TO

PAA

tht! riaht plaaa.l

DEALERS~~
CHRYSLER
'fAU MOIORS CORPORATIOII
Record sales mean
record resale value.

People are goong for Duster n record
numbers Sales are up 58°o for first
quarter- 71 model year And '' you
thonk we're loading the dice. last year
they were 181 o~ ahead ol comparable
sales the year before Which IS a big
reason why Plymouth"s small cars are
le~ders tn thpcr field in resale value

TOM RUE MOTORS, 399 SOUTH 3rd AVE., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�MASON
ASSEMBLY
Q.F
GOD
Second St., Mason, W.
Va. Chester Tennant, pastor.
Sunday school , 10 a. m . ;
morning worship, 11 a . m. ;
evangelistic service, 7: 30 p. m.
Bible study and prayer service,
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m . Phone
773-5133.
SEVENTH DAY ADVEN~
POMEROY
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
TIST Pomeroy, Mulberry
POMEROY
TRINITY Hgts. Herbert Morgan, pastor.
Christ in Christian Union UnrtedChurch .of Christ -Rev . Sabbat h S~hool. Saturday, 2 p.
Rev .O' De l l Manley, pastor.
Perrin, pastor Fred Blaettnar, m. ; worship, 3:1 5 p. m . Dorcas
Sunday School, 9:30a.m., Rev.
supt. Sunday School, 9: 15a.m.; Society, lOa. m. each Thursday .
Guy Sayre, supt.; evening
Worship, 10:25 a . m.r youth
service, 7:30. Tuesday Bible
- choir rehearsal, Monday, 6: 30 Ml DOLE PORT
study, 7: 30 p. m . Thursday
p. m ., Mrs. Marvin Burt.
FIRST UNITED
PRES- evening prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
director .
Senior
choir BYTERIAN, Middleport- Rev . m. Sunday evening youth
rehearsal. 7: 30p . m . Thursday, Russell Lester, pastor. Sunday services , 6 : 30 with Roger
Mlts . Paul Nease , director. ' School 9: 30a.m ., Lewis Sauer, Manley, youth leader .
MASON
CHURCH
OF
Thursday, all day Busy Bee supt.; worship service 10: 30
CHRIST- John Steele, pastor .
quilting party in church social a.m.
roo~
MIDDLEPORT
HEATH Worship, 10 a .m .; Bible study,
POMEROY CHURCH OF UNITED METHODIST-Rev. 11 : 15 a .m.; evening worship,
THE 'NAZARENE Corner Max E. Donahue, minister ; 7:30 p.m . M id-week service,
Union and Mulberry . Rev . Er ic Chambers, Sunday School Wednesday, 7: 30 p .m.
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor. superintendent. Church School
GRAHAM UN I TED MEl HSunday School 9: 30 a. m .; 9: 30 a . m .; morning worship,
ODIST CHURCH - Preaching
Raymond
Walburn ,
supt. 10: 30 a . m .; youth meet ing, 7 p. 9:30 a. m., first and second
Morn ing worsh i p 10: 30 a. m. ; m. ; Choir rehearsal , Wed -' Sundays of each month; third
_ E.ening service 7:30p.m . Mid- nesday 7-7:30 p. m .; Mrs. E . and fourth Sundays each month,
week service, Wednesday, 7:30 Robert Hamm , director.
worship service at 7: 30 p. m.
p. m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES- Wednesday evenings at 7:30,
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev. Larry Carnahan presiding
Pr ayer and Bible Study.
Stanley Plattenburg, m inister. ,minister. Sunday, Bible lecture,
MASON FIRST BAPTISTMorning prayer and serm~m, 9: 30 a. m. ; Watchtower study,
10:30 a. m. Holy communiOn 10:30 a. m. ; Tuesday, Bible Second and Pomeroy Sts., Stan
and sermon, first Sundays, study, 7:30 p. m. ; Thursday, Craig , pastor. Sunday school,
10:30 a. m . Church school , ministry school 7:30 p. m ., 9: 45a.m.; worship service, 11
a .m .; training union , 6:30"p.m. ;
'kindergarten through eighth service meeting 8: 30p. m.
grade, 10: 30.a . m .
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH evening worship service, 7:30
POMEROY CHURCH OF of Christ in Christian Unio·n- p.m. Mid-week prayer serv ice,
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr., Lawrence Manley, pastor ; Mrs. Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
pastor. BibleSchool, 9: 30a . m:; Russe l l Young, Sunday School
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
worship, 10: 30 ; adult worship Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m. ; Serv ices at 315 Main St., Pt .
service and .. youQa .Peoples Evening worship 7:30. Wed- Pleasant, Sunday School 9: 15
meeting, both 7: 30 p. m. Sun- nesday prayer meeting, 7:30 p. a .m. Sundays, 11 a.m .; Wedday-Wednesday ,
combined m .
nesday , testimonial meeting 8
Bible study and
prayer
CHURCH OF THE NAZA- p .m. All welcome.
meeting, 7: 30 p. m.
.REhi.J - Midd leoort. R'"'
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
THE SALVATION ARMY Audry Miller, pastor; Floyd
... Envoy Rays·. Wining, officer in Carson, supt. Sunday schoo l, - Lelart Route 1, the Rev. Stan
(jlarge. Sunday, _ 10 a. m., 9: 30 a .m .;
Morning
war- Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
Holiness meeting ; 10: 30 a . m. ship,
10: 30
a.m .;
junior 9: 30 a .m. ; prayer and Bible
Sunday School. Young People's ~gciety , 6: 30p.m .; NYPS 6;45 s tudy, 7:30p.m. Cottage prayer
Legion , 7 p. m.; Thursday, 1 to 3 p .m . Sunday evange l is tic service, Tuesday, 10 a.m.;
p.m., Ladies Home League; 7 m eeting, 7:30 p.m. Prayer worsh ip service, Friday, 7: 30
p. m . Prep classes.
meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m . p.m .
SACRED HEAt&lt; I Rev._
Father Bernard Krajcovic,
MIDDLEPO.RT
PEN : MEIGS COUNTY
pastor.
Phone
992-2825, TECOSTAL - Th1rd Ave., the
ALFRED
UNITED
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30 Rev· B . . l. Barrett, pastor . METHODIST Rev . Randy
p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 Ralph Pnddy, Sunday schoo l Lavender , pastor. Sunday
a .m . Confessions, Saturday 7- supt. Classes for a l l ages, School, 9:45 a. m .r Lloyd
Pm
Sund~y school. 10 a.m .; Sunday
.
Worship
_7· 30 · · .
evenmg service, 7: 30 p.m. D i l l inger , supt .;
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Wednesday evening young service, 11 a. m. w ith the Rev.
-Robert Kuhn, pastor. George people's meeting and Bible Mr. Lavender in charge .
Skinner, Sunday School supt. study . Saturday evening ser- Wednesday, 7:45 p. m ., prayer
service.
Sunday School, 9: 30 a . m. ; v1ce, 7: 30 p.m .
morning worship, 1~:30 a.m. ;
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST I
BYF, 6 p . m . ; Bible Study BAPTIST -Charles W. Simons .
Wedn~sday 7 p. m .; cho1r pastor. Danny Thompson, Sunpractlce_, __ll,/ed., 8:30 P. m .
day School Supt . Sunday
FIRST SOUTH. ERN BAP- Church ¥hool, 9: 15 a. m .;
Tl~r:- 220 E: Mam, Pomeroy, Morning worship, 10: 15 a . m .
af!ll1ated wdh S.B . C. Rev . Sunday Bib le study hou r 7:30 p. :
Cl1fford Coleman, pastor. m . Sunday, 4:30 p. m ., game
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., 't i me for youth . Wednesday
He_rshel M~Ciure, supt. ; war- evening prayer service, 7:30.
sh1p. serv1ce, . 10:30 a.m .; - MT. MORIAH BAPTIST-'
.even1ng worsh i p, 7: 3~ p.m. Corner Fourth and Main,
~ednesday prayer meetmg and- Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
B1ble study, 7: 30p.m.
_ Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9: 30
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN a. m. , Arnold Richards, supt.;
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, pastor. Morning worship 10: 30 a. m.
Sunday School. 9:15 a. 0:·• - CHliRCH OF CHRIST, MidChar!es Evans, Supt.; worship dleport, st h and Mai n. Raullin
s.ervlc.e , 10 : 30 a. m . Con- Moyer, pastor. Thomas Kelly,
f1rmat1on class, Saturday, 9: 45 Sunday Sc hool supt. B i ble
a. m.
School. 9: 30 a . m .; morn ing
POMEROY-CHESTER
worship, 10: 30 a . m.; evening
UNITED
METHODIST - worship, 7: 30 p . m . ; or avPr
Robert R. Card,
pastor. service 7 p.m . Wednesday ..
Pomeroy - Worship, 10: 30 a .
m . ; Church ~chool, 9; 15 a . m.; MASON COUNTY
Frank
Vaughan'- - "5\Jperin
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
tendent. Chester wor.ship, 9 a. Services, 315 Main St., Pt.
m. ; Church School , 10 a . m. ; Pleasant . Sunday services, 11
Roger Epple, supt.
a.m. Wednesday Testimonia l
meeting, 7:30 p.m .

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

!Helen Help Us!
I

l

:

By Helen Bottel

COMMON MALADY BURGLAR PARANOIA
Dear Helen:
My husband is a sane man
who has suddenly gone freaky
on burglar alarms. He has
every window wired so that if
they're even jarred, screeching
noises happen - and this can
really shake you in the middle
of the night when the wind or an
animal sets one off.
He's got our sliding doors so
well reinforced that I can't open
them without major carpentry.
Our back door has two bolts and
a chain lock, and you should see
the front door! I'm not supposed
to open it unless I peek through
the periscope type viewer, then
communicate by intercome.
Even so, I must never take the
chain off unless I recognize the
person.
Now he wants to equip our
hou·se with an alarm system
that will light up at a central
place whPre they'll call the
police immediately. It costs into
the thousands i
Helen, if we must live in such
abject fear, why live at all?
Isn't this big push for " home
protection" something like the
last scare about backyard bomb
shelters? I realize a little
caution is a good thing, but it
seems to me promoters are
overdoing it - they're hitting
the fright button to make a
bundle for themselves.
And some people, like my
man, become " protection
collectors." It's like a hobby trying to see what gadget you'll
get next to outdo your neighbor.
How about injecting a little
sanity into the burgeoning
burglar alarm business?
NOT THAT PARANOID
Dear Not:
I know a man who spent
weeks burglar-proofing his
home before a vacation, then in
the rush of last minute alarm
settings, walked off and forgot
to lock his front door.
Three weeks later he returned
to an un-hit house.
I know another family whose
elaborate system of bells ,
ligh ts, etc. only challenged
in trudcrs.
They
were
burglarized twice, vandalized
once, and now the man has a
loaded gun by his h.,d - an

!

extremely dangerous practice.
So what can I say ·! With
break-ins increasing several
hundred percent in many areas,
home
protection
seems
frightening necessary. But even
the best is not fool-proof. And
paranoia can (as you say) turn
a sane person into a fear-freak.
Suggestions, anyone? - H.

Local Bowling
LAMPLIGHT!: RS
Jan. 25, 1971
Standings:
Team
Lucky Strikes
26
4 D' s
24
Untouchables
22
Tagalongs
18
Brite Lites
16
L&amp; N
14
High Indi vidual Game - Ed
Voss, 241; Pandora Collins, 199.
Second High Ind. Game Larry Dugan, 224; Maxi ne
Dugan, 174.
High Series - Ed Voss, 646 ;
Pandora Collins, 500.
Second High Series - Larry
Dugan, 619 ; Max ine Dugan, 469.
Team High Game - 4 D' s,
752.
Team High Series - 4 D' s,
2184.
Thursday Afterr.Bon
Jan. 21, 197\
Standings :
Team
Simons Market
11 0
M &amp; R Foodliner
102
New York Clothing
72
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
64
Moores
59
48
Racine Food Market
High Individua l Game
Calista Searls (sub). 195.
Second High Ind. Game
Patty Carson. 187.
High Series, Cal ista Searls
(sub, 546.
Second High Ser ies - Norma
Amsbary, 493.
New
Team High Game
York Clothing, 785.
New
Team High Series
York Clothing, 2230.
:::;:;:~;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::

Middleport church attendance Sunday, Jan. 17,
550.

SILVER RUN FREE WILL
METHODIST - Rev. Howard
Kimble, pastor. Sunday School,
10 a . m ., Henry Davis, supt. ;
evening service, 7:30 p. m .
Prayer meeting Thursday, 7: 30
p.m .
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION Darrel Doddri l l,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a .
m ., Ann i e Mohler, supt. ;
Leonard Gilmore, first elder;
even ing service, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday prayer meeting,
7:30 p. m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Racine Route 2. The
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. ;
morning worship , 11 a.m.
Evening services, Tuesday and
Friday, 7:30.
TUPPE~
PLAINS
CHARGE
UNITED
METHODIS~. Sunday worship
St. Pauls 9 a .m.; South
Bethel9: 55 a.m.; Alfred 11 a.m.
(First and third Sundays) T: 45
p .m.; (Second and 4th Sun days) . Lottridge -7: 45 p.m.
(First and th ird Sundays). 11
a .m . Second and 4th Sundays.
~ L 0 N G
B 0 TT 0 M
METHODIST- Rev. Freeland
Norris , pastor . Sunday School ,
10 a.m.; church services, 11
a.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- John
Rockhold, pastor. Bible study,
9:30 a.m . ; morning worship,
10: 30; evening worship, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday Bible study,
7:30p.m .
STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNITY CHURCH Rev.
Edsel Hart , pastor. Sunday
morning worship service, .10
a .m., De ll Talbot , super i ntendent. Prayer meeting , each
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Sunday
evening service, 7: 30.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRISt
Pomeroy - Harrisonv i lle
Road . John Webster, pastor;
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School , 9:30a . m . ;
Mdrning Worship and com munion, 10:30 a. m. ; Sunday
evening youth Ch r istian En d eavor, 6 p. m.; Worship ser vices, 7 p. m . ; Wednesday
evening prayer meeting and
Bible study, 7:30 o. m .
SYRACUSE
BAPTIST
TABERNACLE Raymond
Butcher, pastor. Sunday school,
9: 30 a.m . ; worship service,
10:30 a .m.
ST. JOH .N LUTHERAN Pine Grove, Rev . Gera l d
Herbener, pastor. Sunday
school , 9 a . m. ; Church service,
10 a. m.
SYRACUSE
UNITED
METHODIST Paul A .
Sellers, pastor ; Ben Quisenberry, Sunday School S1.1pt .
worship service, 9:30a . m. first
and third Sunday . Evening
serviLe, 8 p. m . fourth Sunday.
LAN GSV ILLE MIDWAY seuices each Sunday at 10 a . m .
and 7: 30p.m . Tuesday evening
worship, 7:30.
SUTTON
UNITED
METHODIST Paul A.
Sellers, pastor ; Mart ha Lee ,
Sunday School Supt . Worship
service, 10 : 45 a. m. ;second and
fourth
Sundays ;
evening
worhsip, 8 p . m . third Sunday.
ENTERPRISE
UNITED
M ETHODIST -Rev . William
Airson, pastor. Ralph Spencer,
Sup t.; Carl Jennings, asst. supt .
Worship services, 9: 30 a. m.;
Sunday School , 10: 30 a . m.;
Youth F ellowship, 6: 30 p. m. ;
Wednesday, choi r , 6: 15 p . m .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Norman McCain, supt .
Serv ices weekly at 9: 30 a. m .
Prea ching f i rst and t h ird
Sundays of month by Charles
Russe ll, 9 : 30 a . m .
UNITED FAITH- Robert E .
Smith , pastor. Worship service
and Sunday school, 9: 30 a.m .,
Fred Samsel, supt.; evening
worship , 7:30 p .m .; youth
meeting, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting
Thursday, 7: 30p.m .

Middleport 1970 census .
population, 2,784.
" If my people, who are
called by my name, shall
humble themselves and pray,
and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then
\\ill I hear from heaven, andBRADFORD CHURCH Ot\\ill forgive their sin, and heal _ CHRIST - Charles Russell . Jr.,
pastor :
Ben
Rife ,
Earl
tht•ir land." ( 1II Chronicles
Mossman , superintendents .
7:14( .

- Middleport Ministerial
Assn.

Sunday School, 9: 30 a. m .;
Worship service, 10 : 30 a. m .;
Evening worsh i p, 7 p . m .
Wednesday evening service, 7
p. m.

RACINE FIRS r CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School , 9: 30 a. m. ;
Morning Worship, 10: 30 a.m .;
Evening worshil?, 7: 30 p . _m .
Wednesday, Sunday School
Superintendent, Pauline MeCli ntock, pastor. Rev. Morris
M . Wolfe.
RACINE FIRST BAPTISTCharlesNorris, pastor . Sunday
School , 9:30 a. m. ; Morning
worship, 10:45 a . m.; Sunday
evening worship, 7: 30 p .m .;
Wednesday even i ng Bib l e
Study, 7:30 0 . m.
SOUTH BETHEL UNITED
METHODIST _ Rev. Randy
L aven d er • pas t or· Sun d ay
school, 9 a.m., Mrs. Wi lma
Bahr, Supt . Youth Fellowship 6
p.m . each Sunday at Tuppers
Plains
United
Methodist
Church.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J .
A . Curry, pastor. Sunday
School. 9:30 a . m .; Youth and
junior youth service, 6:45p.m . ;
Evening worship, 7: 30 p . m.
Prayer and praise Wed ., 7:30 p.
m.
HEM L 0 c K
b K 0 'V E

meeti':'g, 6:30 P· m. ; Evening
worship, 7: 30p.m .
-APPLE G R OVE UNITED
METHODIST CHUR CH - W .
Dale McClurg, pastor . Worship
service, first and third Sundays
of each month at 8 p. m. ;
Sunday School every Sunday at
9:30 a . m .; WSCS , second
Tuesday of each month at 7:30
p. m. ; Bible Study, Wednesday,
8 ~·A~M E L UNITE D MET HODIST Paul A. Sellers ,
pastor; Wayne Roush, supt.
Worship service, 10: 45 a. m .,
f i rst and th i rd Sundays ;
evening worsh ip, 8 p. m . second
Sunday .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
R
H b t
ev.
er er
Grate , pastor. Worsh ip service ,
11 a.m . and 7:30p.m. Sunday.
Sunday School. 9:30 a. m.
Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
weeting , Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
HARRISONVILLE
PR E SBYTE R IAN Mrs. Norma
Lee, Sunday Schaap Superintendent. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m. Sunday Service 8 p.m. Rev.
Max Donahue , Middleport.
pastor .
BETHANy
UN 1 TED
METHODIST -Paul A. Sellers,
pastor ; Blythe Theiss, Sunday
School supt. Worsh ip service,.
9: 30 a . m. second and fourth
~ .days; ·Even ing worsh ip, 8 p.
m . first Sunday.
LOTTRIDGE
UNITED
METHODIST- Worship, first
and third Sundays, 10:45 a.m .;
second and fourth Sundays,
7: 30p. m. Sunday School, 9:45 a .
m . Christian Endeavor, third
Saturday of each mont h.
LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST- Rev. Eugene
Gi ll, pastor. William Bailey,
supt. Sunday School, 9: 30a.m.;
Morning worship, 10 : 30 a. m .;
Evening worship, 7: 30 p . m.
Wednesday , Chr istian Youth
Crusade, 6:30 p. m.; Prayer
meeting 7:30 p. m. Thursday,
choir practice, 7 p. m.
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST -Danny
Evans,
pastor . Norman C. Wil l, supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a. m .;
Worsh ip service, 10:30 a. m.
Chr i stian Endeavor Sunday
evening.
_ __
R-EORGANI ZED
CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATT ER DAY SAINTS- PortlandRacine Road. Ralph Johnson ,
pastor. Sunday School. 9: 30 a.
m. ; Morning worship, 10: 30 a .
m .; Sunday evening service, 7
p. m. Wednesday even ing
prayer ser vices, 7: 30 p . m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST _
Great Bend, Charles Norr is,
pa~tor. Worsh ip servic~ , 9:30 a.
m. , Sunday School, 10. 30 a.m .
MORNING STAR UN ITED
' METHODIST- Rev. William
Ai rson , pastor; Roy Van Meter ,
supt .; Sunday School, 9: 30 ?I ·
m .; Morning worsh ip , 10: 15 a.
m . ; Yout h Fellowship and Bible
Study, Thursday, 8 p. m . Fred
Sm ith layleader.
'

CHRISTIAN- David Stauffer,
pastor; Stanford Stockton , supt.
Morning worship, 9: 30 a.m . ;
church school, 10:30 a .m. ;
young peoples meeting, 6:30
p.m . ; evening worship, 7: 30.
Bible study, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.
SILVER RUN FREE WILL
BAPl'IST Rev . Caudill
Atk ins, pastor. Carroll Matthews, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday Schoool, 10 a. m .;
Worship, 7: 30 p. m . Prayer
meeting, Thursday, 7:30p . m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD- Rev. Donald A. Sheets,
pastor. Sunday School 9: 30 a.
m .; Worship service, 11 a.m .;
Evening service, 7:30. Prayer
service and youth service,
Thursday, 7: 30 p. m.
FOREST RUN METHODIST
-Rev. Forrest Donley, pastor ;
Mrs . Fread Nease, supt.
Worship service 9a . m.; Sunday
School , JO a . m .
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
Robert Eugene Musser,
pastor. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m .; morning worship, 10: 30 ;
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
supt. Sunday even ing service,
7:30 p.m .; youth meet i na .
Monday, 7 p.m. Midweek
service, Wednesday, 7: 30 p .m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE- Rev . M . C.
Larimore, pastor . Bob Moore,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School. c lasses for all ages, 9:30
a. m ·; mar_ping worsh ip, 10 : 45 •
NYPS Sunday, 6: 30 p. m.;
evangel ist ic servi ce, Sunday,
7: 30 p.m . Mid-week prayer.
mee!ing, Wednesd~y , 7: 30p.m.
Mss10nary meeti ng, second
W!;l,dnesdav,. 7: 30P.m .
R 0 C K
S P R I ~ G S
METHODIST - Rev: R1chard
Pumphrey, pastor.. Haro l d
Bla c ~ston,
super1~tendent :
Mornmg worship, 9.30 a .m .,
church school , 10 : 15 a .m.;
even ing worship, 7:30 p.m.;
CARLETON CHURCH MYF, 6 p.m. Prayer meeting
Road.
Sunday
and Bible Study, Wednesday, K i ngsb ury
7: 30 p.m . A ministrative School , 9:30 a. m., Ralph Car l,
supt.
Worship
service
,
10:30 a.
~oun cil first Monday, 7:30p.m.
. and 7:30 p. m . alternatel y .
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN m
IN CHRIST- Elden R. Blake, Prayer met!ting, Wednesday,
7:30 p. m. Rev. Jay Stiles ,
pastor . Sunday School. lOa. m. ; pas tor.
Winn ie Hol:;inger, supt., MorAin~ sermon, 11 a.m. ; Evening
OLD
DEXT E R
COttservice Christ i an Endeavor , GREGATIONAL CHURCH 7: 30 p . m .; Mrs.
Lyda Rev. Wi llard Dutcher, pastor.
Cheva li er , presi d en t. Song Mrs. Worley Francis, Sunday
service and sermon, 8:20. M id
School Supt. Sunday School,
Week prayer meeting Wed- 9:45 a. m. Church Services first
nesday, 7:30 p. m . Mrs. Mazie and third Sundays following
Holsinqer , class leader.
Sunday School, Second and
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT fourth Saturday ev enings, 8 p.
CHURCH-Harrisonville Road. m. ser vices .
1-{ev. Roy Taylor, pastor ; Henry
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Eblin , Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9: 30a.m .;. - Mr. Robert Wyatt, pastor ;
evening worsh ip, 7:30 p . m. Sunday School supt., Ronald
Pr ayer and prasie service, Osborne. Bible School, 9:30 a.
m. ; preaching 10: 45 a . m. ;
Thursday, 7: 30 o. m.
RACINE-LETART
WI:S- Evening services, 7:30p.m.
LEYAN UNITED METHODIST
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
Ra c ine , W. Da l e McClurg,
Ceci l Wise,
pastor. Sunday School, 9: 30 a . METHODIST m. ; Wor ship service, 10:30 a. Pastor . Sunday School. 9: 30
m. ; UMYF, 7 p. m . each Sun- a.m. ; Morning worship, 10: 30
day ; Senior Choir practice, a .m.; Young People's service,
Thursday, 7: 30 p . m. ; Service 6:45p.m .; Evangelistic service,
Guild , fourth Monday, 7:30 p. 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeti ng,
m. ; Happy Hustlers Sunday Thursday, 7:30p.m .
School Class meeting, fourth
Friday , 6 p . m. ; WSCS second
FREEDOM
G OSPEL
Fr iday, 7: 30 p. m.; Offic ial · MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev .
Board , second Monday, 7: 30 p. L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor .
m.
Roger Wilfred , Sr. , Sunday
- COMMUNITY
CHURCH, School Supt. Sunday School.
Dexter- Rev. Basil DeWeese, 9: 30 a. m. ; Sunday evening
past or. Sunday morning wor- worship 7:30. Prayer meeting ,
ship, 10 a. m .; Worship ser- Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Ernest
v ices, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday and Deeter, class leader. Youg h
Sunday evenings.
Meet ing Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.,
ST.
PAUL'S
UN I TED Ernest Deeter, leader.
METHODIST CHURCH MT. HERMON UNIT ED
Tuppers Plains. Rev . Randy
BRETHREN Rev . Robert
Lavender , pastor . Sunday Shook
pastor . Sunday school,
Schoo l, 9:30 a. m .; yout h
fellowship, 6 p. m. ; Sunday 9:30a .m. ; Alfred Wolfe, supt.;
Roy Pooler, ass istant. Morning ,
ev en ing worship, 7: 30 p. m .
LETART
UNITED worship , 11 a .m.; evening
METHODIST CHURCH -F irst sermon, 7: 30 p.m . alternating
each Sunday . Class meeting, 11
and second Sundays, preaching a.m.
a I ternating
Sunday
at 8 p. m .; Thir d a nd four th
Sundays, Sunday School, 10 a. mornings , Dav id Hoi ter, cl ass
m .; worsh ip service at 11 a .m.; leader . Christian Endeavor,
7:30 p.m. every other Sunday
Tuesday evenings at 8 p. m·., evening,
Roger
Buckley,
prayer and Bible Study .
Prayer meeting, 7: 30
FLATWOODS
UNITED president.
p.m . each Wednesday. Board
METHODIST, Re v. Wi l liam
Ai rson, pastor, Robert Eason, meeting first Monday of month,
supt. Sunda y School at 10 a. m., 7:30 p.m.
Worsh i p service at 11 a. m.
Pr ayer meeting Thursday, 8 p.
SYRAC US E FIRST UNITED
m.
P R E SB YTERIAN
-Rev.
MT. UNION BAPTIST Russe l l Lester, pastor. Worship
Rev . Ceci l Cox, pastor. Sunday service, 9 a.m .; Sunday School ,
school supt ., Joe Sayre. Sunday 10 a.m .
schoo l, 9 : 45 a .m.; Sunday
evening worship, 7: 30. Wed - ·R U TLAN~
nesda y prayer and Bible study,
7: 30 p.m.
RUTLAND FIRST BA PTUPPERS
PLAINS TIST- Rev. Samuel Jackson ,
CHRISTIAN CHURCH -Mr. pastor . Sunday Schoo l, 10 a . m .;
John Wyatt, pastor; J. S. Davis, Mrs. Gertr ude Butler , supt.
Sunday School supt.; Sunday Prayer Service, 1:30 p. m .;
school , 9: 30 a. m. , Morning _Qreaching service, 2 o. m.
Sermon, 10: 30 a. m. Evening
T HE
RUTLAND
METHsermon, 7 p . m .
Rev. Richard C.
EAST
LETART
FALLS ODIST pastor.
Church
UNITED
METHOD I ST Pumphery,
CHURCH -W. Dale McCl urg, School 9 : 30 a.m. ; Worship
pastor . Wo r ship services, service 10: 30 a.m .
second and fourt h Sundays of
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
ea ch mont h at 9 a . m. ; Sunday
School, f irst and third Sundays CHRIST- Sunday schoo l, 9: 30
of ea ch monthat 9 a . m .; second a.m., V. H. Bra ley, supt. ;
and fourth Sundays of each communion and devotions ,
month at 10 a.m . ; Bible study, 10:30 a .m . Regular board
meeting 7:30, third Saturday
Wednesday.
Pi'lch m0nth.
.
LETART FALLS UNITED
THE
RUTLAND
COMBRETHREN Rev. Robert MUNITY CHURCH -Rev .
Shook, pastor ; Herschel Norris, Amos Ti ll is , pastor . Sunday
supt. Sunday school , 9: 30 a.m .; School, 9: 30 a. m. ; Worsh ip
morning sermon , 10: 30 a.m. ; service, 11 a . m .; Wednesday
evening serm on, 7: 30 a lter - prayer meeting , 7:30 p. m.
na ti ng each Sunday. Prayer Sunday n ight worship, 7.30.
service . Wednesday, 7: 30 p .m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Praye r meeting , 7 : 30 p . m .
alternating Sundays.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF School. 9:30 a. m.; Morning
CHRIST Roy W. Carter , worsh ip, 10: 30 a . m. ; Young
pastor ; Jerry Da v is, Sunday people's ser vice , 6 : 45 p . m .;
School superintendent. Sunday Evangelistic serv ices, 7: 30 p .
School, 9· 30 a . m .; Morning m.W~nn~yev~ ingerv i~
'
worship, 10: 30 a. m. ; Youth 7: 30 p . m.

6~~r~~~5;.~~a-;J~r~\u~~~~

If ever a man's job became obsolete, it was this fellow's. And what
a job it was. He learned everything first, then imparted the news to others.
If he had a good memory, he was usually the best informed man in town.
Who else read every release and then shouted it all over town? He also
wa:;; the principal advertising medium f or the tradespeople and shopkeepers. He announced their products, services and special sales.

e

And in most communities the town crier reminded men of the approach of the Sabbath, urging them to be present for worship at the appointed hour in the churches of the community.
The newspaper made the town crier a has-been. It has taken over all
his functions and performed them more efficiently. That includes reminding- men of the day of worship, and, through advertisements such as this,
urging us to worship.

'

You see one thing hasn't changed. Man's need for God!

MEET YESTERDAY'S
NEWSPAPER I

Cop.) right

J Q?J

•

Kthtu Ad, er t ia lnr

Sen icc:, Inc-•• Str•tbur&amp;, Va.

Snipturu n l~cted b) the

•

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesda'y Thursday Friday Saturday
Revelation Mark
Luke
Matthew
Matthew Matthew Matthew
3:8-12
4:14-20 4 :33-37
7:24-27
7:7-11
9:10-13 10:16-33

With the hope it w ill, in some measure, foster and hel11 sustain that which is
good in faiT'iiY and community life, this feature is sponsored by the business
firm s and organizations whose names appear below.

WILLIS ANTHONY
PLUMB ING AND HEATING

Phone 992-3284

992-2550
240 lincoLn ?t.

- ...

GOEGLEIN READY MIX 00.
Middleport

Middleport

("&gt;0

HEINER'S BAKERY

M &amp; R FOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
,Huntington, W.Va.

MARK V STORE
Middleport, Ohio

DOM IGAN SOHIO STATION
Athens Road
Pomeroy
A Family That Worships Together
Stays Together

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

LYONS MARKET
Member of the Big 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plains
667-3280

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

Middleport, Ohio

BOGGS EQUIPMENT
Sales- Allis Chalmers- Service
Farm - Industrial- Lawn - Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

RACINE FOOD MARKET
The Store with A. Heart
Racine

949-3342

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, 0.

GAUL'S MARKET
Chester, Ohio

ROYAL OAK PARK
Fam il y Recreation
Swimming

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

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

RAYBUCK MOTOR SALES Inc.

LINCOLN-M E RCURY
AMERICAN MOTORS
Phone 593-6601
85 N. Court St.
Athens

NEW YORK CLOffiiNG HOUSE
Take Someone with You to Church
In Pomeroy Over 90 Years
Kermit Walton , Mgr.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK :srORE
Church and Office Supplies-Gifts
Middleport

992-2641

F. J. WALLACE, JEWELER
Bulova Watches-Sa les &amp; Service
186 N. Second
Middleport

The Daily Sentinel
WANT
ADS
Always Get Results•

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES
Comfortable Liv ingReasonably Priced
Tuppers Pla ins
667-3891

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE'
Electr ic Motor Repair
810 W. Ma in

992-5750

SADIE'S MARKET
Meats and Groceries
Syracuse
992-3986

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
Furniture and Appliances
Phone 985-3308
Chester,

o.

Attend the Church of Your Choice

BEN FRANKLIN STORE
Pomeroy

THE DAILY SENTINEL
sunday
. "lnd
Tlmes' Sent'meI

1.-----~------·--~--S~e~r~v~in~g~
T~
ne~B~ig~B•M•d-A.re.a~.~

�~

'C -- :s: 0

;;u
m

Ql ...

3: .,....,
OQ
w
0
;;u;:r=~
c.Q
=
~ -c: c:::n • • •
3:nVi
f
~

._..

g3:ow

P-C coO:;
~ci&gt;z..._~
&lt;
r-"""',....c

"'

z3:
m
..,.,_
~

:-·

l&gt;m-i

-czm

0--tz
ZC:--1

z;;uO

o-&lt;
c:

·cLIP

OIANNEL 3
6.00 .
6:30
6:45
7:00
7: 3D Herald of Truth
8:00 The An~wer
8:30 TV Chapel
9:00 Singing Jubilee
9:30
10:00 This is· the Life
10:30 Capt. Noah
11:00 Kartoon Karnival
11:30 Jambo
12:00 Mormon Choir
12:30 At Issue
1: 00 Meet the Press
1:30 No Miracle
2:00 Californians
2:30 Experiment in TV
3:00
3: 30 Roller Derby
. 4:00
4:30 Jet Set
5 ~00 Perry Mason
5:30
6:00 Untamed World
6:30 News
7:00 Wild Kmgdom
7: 30 Walt Disney
8:00
8:30 Bill Cosbv
9:00 Bonanza

Y:JO
10:00 News
10:30 The Bold Ones
11:00
11:15
11:30 Tonight Show

•

....
~

~,

"0

Q..~ ri~ ::ro&lt; t"'
::rOC.~~

...
::r - --o 0
~~11'=-:"'~~'t"'
~

Q)

Oq

= . . . ....

~
~cr~

c..a. ...

:"'~'C;.;:
C'll~-

=!"

~ ~;:to'(=~~;-

.

~

=QlQlilll'&lt;~"'

C"~

~~6.~ ;·~-:

6:00
6:30
6:45
7:00
7:30 Faith for Today
8:00 Evangelist
8: 30 Discovery
9:00 Tom &amp; Jerry
9:30 Penelope Pitstoo
10:00 Oral Roberts
10:30 Facing Life
11:00 Camera Three
11 : 30 Face the Nation
12:00 Rex Humbard
12:30
12: 45
1: 00 Garden Club
1: 30 TBA
2: 00 Hockey
2: 30
3: 0D
3: 30
4:00
I
4:30 Children's Film Feature
5: 00 '
5: 30
6: 00 News
6:3D
7: 00 Lassie
7:30 Hoqan's Heroes
8:00 Ed Sullivan
8:30
9:00 Glenn Campbell
9:30
10: 00 The Honeymooners
10:30
11:00 News
11:15
':30 Movie

Q~-g~g~-g
~Q.~Q

CIO ••

•

~

~

-·= ....w

~

CLIP

CHANNEL 13 CHANNEL 3
6:00
6:30
6: 45 Corn Cob Report
7:00 Today
7:30
8: 00
8:15
8:30
9:00 Movie Game
9:30 Truth or Consequences
10: 00 Dinah's Place
10:30 Concentration
11:00 Sale of Century
11:30 Hollywood Squares
12:00 Jeopardy
12 :30 Who, What, Where
1:00 Mid-Day News
1:30 Words and Music
2: 00 Days of Our Lives
2:30 The Doctors
3 : 00 Another World
3:30 Bright Promise
4:00 Mr. Cartoon
4:30 Petticoat Junction
5:00 Wagon Train
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 NBC News
7:00 Movie
7:30
8:00
8: 30 This is Your Life
9: 00 First Tuesday
9:30
10:00
10:30
11 : 00 News
11:30 Tonight Show
12:00

6:00
6:30
6:45
7:00 Newsmaker '70
7:30 Gospel Hour
8:00 Mamre Church
8:30 Rex Hum bard
9:00
9: 30 Smokey Bear
10:00 Johnny Quest
10: 30 Cattanooga Cats
11: 00 Bullwinkle
11 : 30 Discovery
12:00 Living Manna
12: 30 Revival Fires
1 : 00 Lower Liq hthouse
1: 30 Apollo 14 Pre-Launch
2:00 Basketball
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
4: 30
5:00 Golf
5:30
6:00
6:30
7: 00 Buck Owens
7:30 Wilburn Brothers
8:00 The FBI
8:30
9:00 Movie
9:30
10:00
10: 30
11 : 00 News
11:15
11 : 30 David Frost
12:00
12: 30 News

~-

z ~0
~ ... ~ ~

0

~-

~~:;~gg~o

•

~

::-

~ ~

Q..

::&lt;

&gt;

~·

8~~~~"'8~
;~a·~~i~~

Tuesday
CHANNEL 8 CHANNEL 13
6:30
7:00
7: 30 Univ. of M ich.
8:00 Christopher
8: 30 Underdog
9: 00 Rocky
9: 30 Jack La La nne
10:00 Mike Douglas
10:30
- -·
11:00
11 : 30 That Girl
12:00 News
12:30
1:00 All My Children
1:30 Make A Dea l
2: 00 Newlywed Game
2: 30 Dating Game
3: 00 General Hosoital
3:30 Munsters
4:00 Addams Family
4:30 Flints tones
5: DO Wild Wild West
5:30
6 : 00 Big Valley
6 : 30
7:00 News
7:30 Movie
8:00
8 : 30 Movie
9:00 ABC Special
9:30
10:00 Marcus Welbv
10:30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12:00
12:30 News

6:00
6:30
7:00 News
7:30 Sleepy Jeffers
8:00
8:30 Romper Room
9:00 Captain Kangaroo
9:30
10:00 Jackie Oblinqer
10:30 Beverly Hillbillies
11:00 Family Affair
11: 30 Love ·of Life
12:00 Galloping Gourmet
12:30 Search for Tomorrow
1: 00 Divorce Court
1:30 As the World Turns
2: 00 Love is Splendored
2:30 Guiding Light
3:00 Edge of Night
4: 00 Gomer Pyle
4:30 Captain Scarlet
5:00 Batman
5:30 What's My Line
6: 00 Capital News
6:30 Walter Cronkite
7: 00 Death Valley Days
7: 30 Beverly Hillbillies
8: 00 Green Acres
8 : 30 Hee-Haw
9:00
9 : 30 All in the Family
10:00 CBS Reports
10: 30 News Special
11:00 News
11:30 Merv Griffin
12:00

•

!"
, ......,Q.. . . . . ~
z~c~~n::;.·;r
:..C~-3 3 g .g :T;:.

..

.,.~

::J

~ -·...

~

10 ni:IIIO
.:
o o .. ::: N o~.. o::~ m ~
-&lt; - )( n ..;· "&lt; ~ ;:.

.... r;n

.

...

...

g~

=0 ;:; .. ;·
'zo· :-..~,a g:

~ ~ f""''.
~=
~
til
(I)

9. -·

cr '!:!. :a m

g CCP.. 'ij '1:l toJ o"

•

•

.:&lt; ~ ~ ;· ~

::r
!):

~ ....

Sunday
CHANNEL 8

n

~ r:r
=~•.., &lt;:»

==eecn('t) ..

...

~

&lt;II l::i'Oq

"'"p..+::r
;·II&gt;
0 ... g.

cr~ &gt;O.., t"'
~(i'"'::rC~ ~-&lt;

::r-~

"'C ....

.Q

;~Ql=g.~ll)~
-:=:"""=C) :
"'~::r .. c.::loo&gt;
:T ... ;~~:c:-o
&lt;')

•

~~il&gt;~~~~·~bi
LlU .... c
&lt;~&gt;
g_ ...111 ~~w{n
S:
·- ;· =- 0 -c g "" t:J z §:
- ;.~ ..-s- -c g: ~ s·
~ .. c

=Ql~O;:;:=,_.&gt;

=

•

•

•

g~~~~s~~

- tl&gt; Cb
::z: "0 .....

~g~~s~~c.

a

Cb (") 0
CIJ -

II)

"1 ..... '&lt;

~ . : ..... II)

0..

(1)

"1 "1

'&lt;

tl&gt; ,...O'::IQ

~

g~ogs~~

0..

::s 0 ::s
..,
0.. &lt;;

~~~

~:::~

~~s~~~~c.~ss~~~

....
0 ;;· : .: Cb II) : tl&gt; til ::;· &gt;-3 II) II) 0 tl&gt; "1 tl&gt; 0.. ::I .: 0 '&lt; Cb ~ "' &gt;-3
tl&gt; 0..
0.. z 0..
..... r.n 0..
0.. ::r 0.. 0.. ;.;"« - ·'&lt; O'O'Q (") ::s
::s ..... ::::&gt;'
~ ~ ~ g ~ (1) ~ ~ ~ ~~ '0 ~ ~ ~- ~- g, ~ e:'&lt; '0 ~ iii'@"0 . _o_ ~ ~ g ~ ~ (") : :. &lt;I&gt; g 8. a~ ~ Cb ~ ~- ::::&gt;' ~ ~ Cb
{; .... ~ ::;: .... .., ~ tl&gt; O'Q Cb s= - · ~ ~II) ;.;' (") 0 0.. 0 0 "1 s '&lt; iii' : -. 0' Cb E.
c .... "1 0"' 0 0 ;.;' ::r 0 .... ~ ('!) 2 ~ CIJ
.g g ('!) 0 ~ 5« g &lt; ..... ::s 0 ~ til II) ;::r E. ~ -= ~ 0 '&lt; ~ .....
~ o.. II) 0' g_r;· ~- g-:::: =e II) ('!) - ::s
~ ::s &lt;I&gt; 2'
~
~8-~~'r:. . . . o..~::+:O'Q~-se:::rO'o..ci~~a-~~~g ~::r~ &amp;tl&gt;~~~~ag~~'"'c.~~::r('!)o..~~
"'
~ ..... :::~ g"' o g ~ _.., ;;;· .... ::r S '0 ~~&gt; ~ "' ::r ::s &lt;1&gt; : s= ~ ;.;- ::r.....
~
!:! - ...,
...... tl&gt; 3 E ::! ~
::s S o..
&lt;~&gt; ~ ..., .: ::s
"' ....., ::::&gt;' ;::&gt;
s= s=
::I
- - - :::1
- I I ) O'Q
- · ::s
('!) S "'d .&lt;1&gt;.,- .....
::::&gt;'
..... .....
0
Cb
&lt;; ..........
;a
('!) ('!) "' -o
- ~ o... o.. .SO'Q
~~' ;::&gt; - .., &lt; . ., ~
o..O'Q ::s
~~'
::r
::r ..,
=::! « .........
::r tl&gt; 0::s O'Q '-'
til .., .o o ::;: ::r
-t; ::s
o.. ~ o.. s= 0' o o ::::&gt;''&lt; 0
o ro ::r ..... 0 O'Q D&gt; ..,
• o.. &lt; ro ~ ~~' ::r'0 ..... "'- .... ..., o.. ::r
s= &lt; ::r Ct&gt; o..
a- ~ 2- -= ~~' s til tl&gt; !§..., g. o..;: r:. &amp; ::;· s '0 ~~' o.. ::;· · ::r ~ g, tl&gt; g ('!)
ro o.. ;;;· ..... ~ ~ it o ~ o o ~ ~ ::r -=
..
o..S« '0"1
-'Elf5~~&gt;c "' ::riil .... -oO'Q&gt;&lt;CI&gt;
~
"';.;"
~~s ~o..5 &lt;1&gt;..,co..~ ...... ::s
)&gt;. tl&gt; ~ s .... ~ ~ ('!) s ::r 2' ~ ;.;'::: ~sit;;;·«
iii'...,
g :;!
~~' ~ 1t
ao:s... o II)(") .....'-' -g"1 o ::r- - . ~ tl&gt; •0' tl&gt;::s 0..~ re 0..... s til:::~~'~
o.. ~
..
...
0 ...
('!) ..... 0
w
tl&gt;
Cb
('~!) ....
&lt;;
w
0..
..... 0..
t; ::1'""':&lt; ..... ~ ~ S S
· ::l ~ cr...,O..o..::ro..
..., 8 ° 2.::..,
~ O'Q til iii'-S "'t:r:~5.~~o.. 0.. o..~o
~s::r ro ::rD&gt;tl&gt;o O'Q::;:Ct&gt;ci~ tl&gt;- ~ ..... ::s~~'tll ro.., -!"' o::r«~oiilt~&gt;&lt;~&gt;~ro ::r~e~s~~~~'~~~'::r~~'=;.;-=
&lt;~&gt;::rCt&gt;:::~So::S::r
s=
::&gt;'O'Q~ro~ ro
::rc~
R ~- ..,.., "'oo::s::rm::r -~11'3 0'Q~::r
~

tl&gt;

•

•

~
Cb ..... 0

0'

a

•

=0. t"+'-&lt;
CLIP
0..

('t)

('t) ('t)

CHANNEL 3
6:00
6: 30
6: 45 Corn Cob Report
7:00 Today
7:30
8:00
8:15
8: 30
9: 00 Movie Game
9: 30 Truth or Consequences
10:00 Dinah,s Place
10: 30 Concentr ation
11:00 Sale of Century
11 : 30 Hollywood Squares
12: 00 Jeopardy
12:30 What, What, Where
1:00 News
1: 30 Words and Music
2: 00 Days of Our Lives
2:30 Doctors
3:00 Another World
2: 30 Bright Prom ises
4: 00 M r. Cartoon
4: 30 Petticoat Junction
5:00 Wagon Train
5: 30
6:00 News
6 : 30 NBC News
7:00 Red Skelton
7:30 Flip Wilson
8: 00
8:30 Ironside
9: 00
9: 30 Adarn 12
10: 00 Dean Martin
11:00 News
11 : 30 Tonight Show
12: 00

0.

1

::S

i:J

I

.......

0.

('b

I

('t) •

c-+- 0.~

I

('t) """" ~

..... """"'- •

('t) ~ f"""fo C"+ f"+ ~ ('t) Cl) ('b

I

I

6:00
6: 30
7:00
7:30
8:00
8: 30
9: 00
9:30
10: 00'
10:30
11:00
11: 30
12:00
12:30
1: 00
1:30
2: 00
2:30
3: 00
3: 30
4: 00
4: 30
5:00
5:30
6 :00
6 : 30
7:00
7:30
8:00
8: 30
9:00
9 : 30
1D:OO
10:30
11:00
11:30
12: 00

Bible Answers
News
Sleepy Jeffers
Romper Room
Capt. Kangaroo
Jackie Oblinger
Beverly Hillbillies
Family Affair
Love of Life
Galloping Gourmet
Search for Tomorrow
Divorce Court
As the World Turns
Love is Splendored
Guiding Light
Secret Storm
Edge of Night
Gomer Pyle
Stingray
Batman
What's My Line
News
Cronkite
Death Valley Days
Family Affair
Jim Nabors
Movie

News
Merv Griffin

CHANNEL 13.

CHANNEL 8

CHANNELI3:CHANNEL3

-------------,-------------

CHANNEL 8 I CHANNEL 13

I

CHANNEL 3

•
,()

&gt;~-'""',()&amp;5

&lt;l&gt;~~ .... ~

c.. ~zr••c•r:nc..""
~ ~~&gt;~g
~

~

'1:l
l&gt;l

!j;

!T

~ a&gt;c:..,~ .... ~

5'&lt;

~~

~ ~
iil

'1:l'""IJlo"
lU ~ 0

!j;

~;.

:0

~""w

""

~
~

,() &gt; cc &gt; 0

6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30 Univ. of M ich.
8:00 The Story
8: 30 Underdog
9:00 Rocky
9: 30 Jack La La nne
10:00 M ike Douglas
10:30
11:00
12: 00 News
12:30
1: 00 All My Ch ildren
1: 30 Make A Deal
2: 00 Newlywed Game
2: 30 Dating Game
3: 00 General Hospita l
3:30 Munsters
4:00 Addams Fami ly
4 : 30
5 : 00 Wild Wi ld West
5 : 30
I
6 :00 Big Valley
I
6 : 30
I
7:00 News
I
7: 30 Alias Smith Jones
I
8 : 00
I
8: 30 Bewitched
9: 00 Make Room for Granddaddy
9 : 30 ban August
10: 00 The Immortal
10: 30
11 : 00 News
11 : 30 Movie
12: 00

=

,....

to()

:~0
m~-z

"'0

;- ::::s

C:...&lt;D.()-&gt; II&gt;
tJt -&gt;
w~
&lt;:» .... ""...,.

;o:z
a.m:I:O

g

~g-

3 )&gt; &lt;D :- )&gt;
0 )&gt;
::s~ ~
-&lt; i63-&lt;

:

0
-·

0

::s

n

:J

0
.,

"'

&lt;D

&lt;D

_. ..0

--o

. ..

a.
&lt;1)

__,

__......,

cc.:.
c..:.c..:.
- o .....
oo
="'
&lt;D() ()()

~ c.:.c.
coo

wo

,.. .

co

()() a.()()
?'?' ~;:r ?'-l(j)?':e?'?'
~m., _m%~fJ mww
- ;o w -c: - o- ~...:t- , -i:;o ~z : :
tXJCXJC
:i6111 CllmN-t
l&gt;)&gt;)&gt;
tXJ 0
:&gt;&lt;"III!Jl::Y
: :-&lt; cd'l&gt; &lt;D Co ro
&lt;»..,-&lt; nl&gt;:x:"C
-g ~
~ -&lt;o 2.
3":..
co c: ~

.

-...

~

"T1

~

.,
0

a;' ""w 0
~

1:

'&lt;

cc. . -.
" tXJ "-o _ .

-t\ __,

01 wi.O w

tD!-'1?~!-":7?~?

()&lt;D()"'

w

?

::s
()
!!!,Q:;y ::Y:J()QI() :J
0 . . (j)~&lt;D :J :;:rIll '
--~Cll-_g .
l&gt;c:J
Ql

3 - -

:&lt;1)

"T1

w _._

'c:J -

:

J

2 -

::;o;O

zo-·
_ , )&gt;o

~ -&lt;(j)

&lt;

.....

-.

Ql

::s

:

&lt;D -· 0
:;,
za.-g.

Ill

Qllll-t-

a.

&lt;D

3

6
C)
m

::l

a.

J

&lt;D

~

~

~~~~

~Q.&lt;o~
~~

Cll,

Ql,

&lt;

0

""'

.....

~ J g_

t.lt;;: .

:·c

&lt; Cllw C

a.

('t)

-

z
"TT
~· ~

.....
DJ
~ - · )&gt; ::0

._, • • • • to:!

@n -&lt;_?'?'

'&lt;

I a:~ c

:::r

('t)

0

e.

~:J7~'!»t:)a.n

-

""""

~~~;;:s
1
s
""
.... ""C

~

=t~
'&lt;C

0

"'

Qo

=:..o

•

:1:111

~0--i~

CLIP

Ql

&lt;Dm

•

'"&lt;

-

::s

CHANNEL 3

:0
lU

........

0

ednesday

s·

Oq

~

~~

8 ~~~c.
b~C.:. g
- &lt;D ?
~ ?,
~
Q:::!.
gnn

,..,

I

::s

.... ••••z

~

- 5l

('0

o-1

s_...t.Q01 : ;;;
o
.....
Ql

Monday

&lt;II

CLIP

Thursday
CHANNEL-8

•

~ :-1 :Cll3
0 l&gt;CXJ
n - l &gt; &lt;D

I

0
"'!j;!j;

11)

:&gt;'

-------------~-------------1

'1:l'1:l

lUlU

a

f!

--

"

~

§f&lt;~~
&lt; ~~--~~ ....
~-~ ~~~
a~~~~
~-~~~~

=c
g~-~ 0
~

11.

~

riJ

§"

1--1

~

~

---------------r----------------~------------~------------

Friday
CHANNEL 8

CHANNEL 13

! CHANNEL 3

6:00
6:30 Bible Answers
6:45
7:00 News
7:30 Sleepy Jeffers
8:00
8: 30 Romper Room
9: 00 Capt. Kangaroo
9: 30
10:00 J. Oblinger
10:30 Beverly Hillbillies
11 : 00 Family Affair
11: 30 Love of Life
12: 00 Galloping Fourmet
12:30 Search for Tomorrow
1: 00 Divorce Court
1:30 As The World Turns
2:00 Love Is Splendored
2: 30 Guiding Light
3 : 00 Secret Storm
3: 30 Edge of Night
4:00 Gomer P,y le
4:30 Sti ngray
5:00 Batman
5 : 30 What's My Line
6 : 00 News
6 : 30 Cronkite
7: 00 Death Valley Days
7: 30 Interns
8:00
.
8:30 Andy Griffith
9: 00 Movie
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11 : 30 Movie

6 : 30 Un iv. of Michigan
7: 00 Christophers
8 : 00 Rocky
8 : 30 Jack LaLanne
9 : 00 A World Apart
9:30 Bewitched
10: 00 M ike Doug las
10:30
11:00
11 : 30 That Gir l
12:00 News
12: 30
1:00 All My Children
1: 30 Let's Make A Dea I
2: 00 Newlywed Game
2:30 Dating Game
3: 00 General Hoso ita l
3 : 30 Munsters
4:00 Addams Family
4: 30 Flintstones
5:00 Wild Wild West
5 : 30
6: 00 Big Valley
6:30
7:00 News
7:30 T he Brady Bunch
8: 00 Nanny and Professor
8:30 Partridge Family
9: 00 That Girl
9: 30 T he Old Couple
10: 00 Love American Style
10:30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12: 00

6:00
6: 30
6:45
7:00 John' s Almanac
7: 30
8:00 Tom Foolery
8:15
8:30 Heckle and Jeckle
9: 00 Woody Woodpecker
9:30 The Bugaloos
10:00 Dr . Doo Little
10:30 Pink Panther
11: oo Pufnstuf
11 :30 The Grump
12:00 Hot Dog
1? : 30 Kartoon Karnival
1:00 .
1:30 College Basketba ll

S~turday
I CHANNEL 8 I CHANNEL 13

I
6:00
6:30
6: 45
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:15
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11: 30
12: 00
12:30
1: 00
1: 30
2: oo

2 : 30
3 : 00
3 : 30
4 : 00
4:30
5:00
5: 30
6 : 00
6 :30
7 : 00
7:30
8 : 00
8 : 30
9:00
9 : 30
10: 00
10:30
11:00
11 : 30

12:00

Corn Cob Report
Today

Movie Game
Truth or Consequence
Dir.ah's Place
Concentration
Sale of the Century
Hollywood Squares
Jeopardy
Who, What, Where
News
Words and Music
Days of Our Lives
The Doctors
Another World
Bright Promise
Mr. Cartoon
Petticoat Junction
Wagon Train
News
NBC News
II Takes a Thief
Laugh-In
Movie

News
Tonight Show

6:00
6:30 Bible Answers
6:45
7:00 News
7 : 30 Sleepy Jeffers
8 : 00
8 : 30 Rom-per Room
9 : 00 Capt. Kangaroo
9:30
10:00 Jackie Oblinqer
10:30 Beverly Hillbillies
11 : 00 Family Affair
11 : 30 Love of Life
12:00 Galloping Gourmet
12: 30 Search
1: 00 Divorce Court
1:30 As the World Turns
2:00 Love Is
2:30 Guiding Light
3:00 Secret Storm
3:30 Edge of Night
4:00 Gomer Pyle
4: 30 Captain Scarlet
5 : 00 Batman
5:30 What's My Line
6: 00 Evening News
6:30 Walter Cronkite
7:00 Death Valley
7: 30 Gunsmoke
8 : 00
8: 30 The Lucy Show
9:00 Mayberry RFD
9 : 30 Doris Day
10: 00 Carol Burnett
10: 30
11 : 00 News
11 : 30 Merv Griffin
12: 00

6: 00
6:30
7:00
7:30
8: 00
8: 30
9:00
9: 30
10: DO
10: 30
11:00
11: 30
12: 00
12:30

Univ. of Mich.
Word of Life
Underdog
Rocky
Jack LaLanne
Mike Douglas
That Girl
News

1: 00 All My Children
1: 30 Make A Deal
2:00 Newlywed Game
2:30 Dating Game
3 : 00 General Hospital
3 : 30 Munsters
4: 00 Addams Family
4:30 F lintstones
5:00 Wild West
5 : 30
6:00 Big Valley
6:30
7 : 00 News
7:30 Let's Make a Deal
8:00 Newlywed Game
8: 30 Reel Game
9:00 Movie
9:30
10: 00
10:30
11 : 00 News
11 : 30 Movie
12:00

I 6 : 00
I 6: 30
I 6: 45 Corn Cob Report

7:00 Today
7:30
8:00
8:15
8:30
9:00 Movie Game
9: 30 Truth or Consequences
10: 00 Dinah's Place
11: 30 Concentration
11 : 00 Sale of Century
11:30 Hollywood Squares
12: 00 Jeopardy
12:30 Name Droppers
1:00 News
1:30 Words and Music
2:00 Days of Our Lives
2:30 Doctors
3:00 Another World
3:30 Bright Promise
4:00 Mr. Cartoon
4:30 Petticoat Junction
5:00 Wagon Train
5:30
6:00 News
6 : 30 NBC News
7:00 Petticoat Junction
7:30 Hallmark Hall of Fame
8:30
9:00 Music Hall
9:30
.
10: 00 Four in One
11 : oo News
11:30 Tonight Show
12: 00

6•00
-6 ; 30 Bible Answers
6: 45
7:00 News
7:30 Sleepy Jeffers
8:00
8: 30 Romper Room
9:00 Capt. Kangaroo
9: 30 Movie Game
10: 00 Jackie Oblinger
10:30 Hillbillies
11 : 00 Family Affair
11:30 Love -of Life
12:00 Galloping Gourmet
12: 30 Search for Tomorro
1:00 Divorce Court
1:30 As the World Turns
2:00 Love Is
2:30 Guiding Light
3:00 Secret Storm
3:30 Edqe pf Niaht
4: 00 Gomer Pyle
4:30 Stingray
5:00 Batman
5: 30 What's My Line
6: 00 Capital News
6:30 Cronkite
7:00 Death Valley
7:30 Adventure Special
8:00
8: 30 I an Tyson Show
9:00 Medical Center
9:30
10:00 Hawaii Flve-0
11 : 00 News
11 : 30 ~rv Griffin
12: 00

6:00
6: 30
7:00
7:30 Univ. of Mich.
8: 00 Glory Road
8: 30 Underdog
9: 00 Rocky
9: 30 Jack LaLanne
10: 00 Mike Douglas
10:30
11 : 00
11 : 30 That Girl
12: 00 News
12 : 30
1: 00 All My Children
1:30 Make A Deal
2:00 Newlywed Game
2:30 Dating Game
3:00 Gen. Hospital
3:30 Muns ters
4: 00 Addams Family
4:30 Flintstones
5:0D Wild Wild West
5:30
6:00 Big Valley
6 : 30
7: 00 News
7:30 Eddie' s Father
8: 00 ~oom 222 8 : 30 Smith Family
9: 00 Johnny Cash
9:30
10:00 Young Lawyers
10: 30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12:00

6:00
6 : 30
6: 45 Corn Cob Report
7:00 Today
7:30
8:00
8: 15
8: 30
9: 00 Movie Game
9 : 30 Truth or Consequences
10:00 Dinah's Place
10:30 Concentration
11:00 Sale of Century
11: 30 Hollywood Squares
12: 00 Jeopardy
12:30 Who, What, Where
1:00 News
"' 1:30 Words and Music
2:00 Days of Our Lives
2:30 Doctors
3: 00 Another World
3 : 30 Bright Promises
4: 00 Mr. Cartoon
4:30 Petticoat Junction
5:00 Wagon Train
5 : 30
6: 00 News
6: 30 NBC Evening News
7: 00 Porter Wagoner
7:30 Amer ican Wilderness
7:45
.
8: 30 Name of the Game
9: 00
9 : 30
10: 00 Strange Report
10: 30
11 : 00 News
11:30 Tonight
12:00

12:00

2:00

2: 45 Movie
3: 00
3 : 30 Movie
4:00
4:30
5:00
5 : 30
6:00 Bi ll Anderson
6: 30 News
7:00 Nashvifle Music
7:30 Andy Williams
8:00
.
8: 30 Movie
9 : 00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11: 00 News
11 : 30 Movie

12:00
12:15

6:00
6 : 30 TV Classroom
6 : 45
7: 00 Cartoons
7: 30 Green Hornet
8 : 00 Bugs Bunny
8:15
8 : 30 Roadrunner
9:00 Sabrina
9:30 Gr oovy Coolies
10:00 Josie
10: 30 Globetrotters
11:00 Ar chie
11: 30
12: 00 Scooby-Do
12:30 The Mohkees
1:00 Dastardly &amp; Muttley
1: 30 Jetsons ·
2: 00 ACC Basketball
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00 Golf
4: 30
5: 00 Wrestling
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 Roger Mudd
7: 00 To Rome With Love
7: 30 M lssiOI'I Impossible
8: 00
8 : 30 M y Three Sons
9 : 00 Arnie
9:30 Mary Tyler Moore
10:00 Mannix
11:00 News
11:30 Movie

6:00
6:30
. 6:45
7:00 Neighbors
7: 15 Women 's View
7: 30
8: 30
9: 00 Lancelot Link
9:30
10: 00 Jerry Lewis
10: 30 Doubledeckers
11:00 Hot Wheels
11: 30 Sky Hawk
12: 00 Motor Mouse
12: 30 Hardy Boys
1:00 Amer ican Bandstand
1:30
2:00 Let's Dance
2:30
3:00 Bonnie lou &amp; Buster
3: 30 Pro Bowler' s Tour
4:00
4:30
5:00 Wide World of Soorts
5 : 30
6:00
6: 30 Golf
7:00
7: 30 Lawr ence ·We&gt; 1k
8:00
8: 30 Pearl Bai ley
9:00
9:30 Movie
10:00
10:30
11: 00
11:30 Chiller
12:30

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 _Jan. 29,1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
RESOLUTION
N 0 . 970-71
ANNUAL APPROPRIATION
RESOLUTION

by law to approve the same, or
an ordinance or resolution of
council to make the ex
penditures; provided that no
warrants shall be drawn or paid
for salaries or wages except to
persons employed by authority
of and in accordance with law or
ordinance . Provided further
that the appropriations for
contingencies can only be ex pended upon appea I of two thirds vote of council for items
of expense constitut ing a legal
obligation against the village,
and tor purposes other than
those covered by the other
specific appropriations herein
made.
section 18. This resolution
shall take effect at the earliest
per iod allowed by law.
John W. Zerkle
President of Council
Passed January 11, 1971
Attest: Gene Grate
Clerk of Council
CERTIFICATE
Section 5705.39, R .c. - "No
appropriation measure shall
become effective until there is
filed with the appropriating
authority by the county auditor
a certificate that the total appropriations from each fund,
taken together with all other
outstanding appropriations, do
not exceed
such
official
estimate or amended official
estimate.
When
the
appropriation does not exceed
such official estimate, the
county auditor shall give such
certificate forthwith upon
rece i ving
from
the
appropriating authority a certified
copy of the appropriation
measure ."

WANT AD '
INFORMATION
DEADLINE:S
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline9a .m.
Canc~llation &amp; Corrections
Will be .. ccepted unti19 a.m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
inserti5n.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
. 5 cents per Word one insertion
MirilmumLfiarge' 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six consecutive insertions .
· 25 Per cent Discount on paid·
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word ' minimum.
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
QFFICE HOURS
8 : 30a.m. to 5:00p .m. Daily,
8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

_u_s_in_e_s_s_S-=--e~r_v_:___i_c-=-e_;;_~-__jr

11-....----:-------:---B_
.

(VILLAGE)
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
A RES0 1 UTION to make
appropriations tor Current
ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHOExpenses and other
Ex (1) Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
penditures of the Village of
(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
66 PONTIAC _
$1295
Middleport , State of Ohio ,
GTO &lt;;pe., wh1~e finish, vinyl interior, 4 speed trans., good
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
duri ng the fiscal year ending
INCOMES OF S4,000to $9,000 PER YEAR
December 31, 1971.
w -w t1res, rad1o &amp; heater.
.-.;;:::
Section 1. BE IT RESOLVED
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
~:
.
~
·-~~~~
by the council tor the Village of
66 CHEVROLET
$1495
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
l '11'''1'''' 1"'1
Middleport , State of Ohio, That.
I~ II'' J,I
11 1:1"1
S.S. lr·!lpala, H.T. Cpe., power steering, automatic trans.,
cases pay less.
to provide tor the current ex· r. 1:•·11;,,
~lk. v~nyl b~cket seats &amp; console, 327 V-8 engine, good
penses and other expenditures
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
I
I!
I
•
I
,.
I
of the said Village of Middleport
ttres, beaut1ful gold finish.
1. No money down
duri ng the fiscal year ending
2. We wi II furnish lot or erect on your lot.
December
31.
1971.
the
66
FORD
$995
follow ing sums be and they are
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
Falcon 2 _d~., 6 cyl. ~td. trans., all good tires, smart looking
hereby set aside and ap ·
From the Largest Truck or
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
. copper f1n1sh. radto. Real economy in this car.
propriated as follows , vir:
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day
Section 2. That there be ap·
' S:-nallest Heater Core.
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night
propriated from the GENERAL
FUND :
GENERAL
AIR CONDITIONING, ReGOVERNMENTAL
frigeration service . Jack's
SERVICES
Pomeroy
I Ph. 992-2143
Refrigeration, New Haven.
MAYOR
OP-EN
EVES.
8:00P.M.
I
$1 ,500.00
Phone 882-2079.
Personal Serv i ces
POMER~Y,
OHIO
3,300.00
4-6-tfc
Other
4,800.00
Total for Mayor
CLERK - CL E R K .
service, Mrs.
1
REDUCE SAFE and fast with BOOKKE:tt-'ING
TREASURER
Marvin King, 112-mile north on
1,500.00
Personal Servi ces
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
1
•
•your
phone
wi
11
j
in1le
1
700.00
Rt. 33. 8hone 992-3762. WeekTOWNSHIP ANNUAL
Other
waler pills. Nelson's Drugs.
I " cash re1ul t 1 "• too, when 1 HOUSEWIVES: Beeline
APPROPRIATION
days 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Total for Clerk
1-22-30tp
you place en action lant
Clerk -Treasurer
2,200.00
RESOLUTION
Saturdays 9 a.m. to noon.
Fashions will supplement
-GUARANTEEDSOLICITOR-LEGAL
AD The Board of Trustees of I Ad. You can eell furniture I
Evenings by appointment.
your family's income and
Phone 992-2094
Salisbury Township, Meigs I applhnces, clothes .. • do: I
VISOR
12-15-tfc
wardrobe. Highest comRay Humme•
500.00
County, Ohio, met in special Jaen• of other unu1ed but I
Personal Services
mission. Up to $300 samples.
I
Says:
session on the 7th day of 1u•eful ltem1!
Total for SolicitorREADY-MIX CONCRETE deCall 949-3703 or Gallipolis 446500.00
Legal Advisor
January , 1971, at the office of
livered right to your project.
Township Trustees with the
4146.
COUNCIL
606 E. Mctin, Pomeroy, 0.
Personal Services
576.00
following members present:
l-28-3tc
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Total for Council
576.00 The State of Ohio Meigs County, Denver G. Hysell. Bernard D. I WISH to extend my sincere
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
GENERAL GOV. SERVICES
Gilkey, Guy A. Russell.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
,: .
thanks to those who sent
Other
65,000.00 ss .I , Gene Grate, Clerk of the
Mr.
Gilkey
moved
the
Middleport, Ohio.
JOHNSON MASONRY, Comcards, flowers and visited me
Total tor General Gov.
adoption
of
the
following
"
Village of Middleport, Ohio in
·• Country Squire
6-30-tfc
mercial
or
residential
while I was a patient at Hol;zer ONE 12 toot meat case. One 10
Services
65,000.00 said County, and in whose Resolution:
MUD &amp; SNOW TIRES
remodeling. Brick, block,
fool vegetable case. One 6x6
Total for General Govern - custody the Files, Journals and
BE IT RESOLVED by the
Medical
Center.
Your
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
stone, cement work, garages,
All sizes in stock . Lowest
mental
walk-in. Inquire M and G
thoughtfulness was deeply
Records are required by the Board of Trustees of Salisbury
Services
73,076.00 Laws
Township, Meigs County, Ohio,
Complete Service
prices. Free installation. We
septic tanks. Backhoe work.
Food Market, Rt . 7, south of
appreciated. Mr. J. Dillon
of
the
State
of
Ohio
to
be
SECURITY OF
Phone 949-3821
do studding.
Free estimates . Jim, Larry,
kept, do hereby certify that the that to provide for the current
Middleport.
Cross.
PERSONS AND
expenses
and
other
ex
Racine, Ohio
Jake. 992-7044.
foregoing Annual Appropriation
1-26-6tp
1-29-ltc
PROPERTY
POMEROY
penditures
of
said
Board
of
Resolution is taken and copied
Critt Bradford
1-7-JOtc
POLICE DEPARTMENT
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
from the original Resolution Trustees, during the fiscal year ,
5- 1-tfc
NEW 1970 zig-zag sewing
Personal Services
18,500.00 now on file with said Village, ending December 31, 1971, the
Phone992-2181 ....
machine in original factory
Other
6,500.00 that the foregoing Resolution following sums be and the same
HARRISON'S TV AND AN- SAW FILING, all kinds of ~
Total for Police
are hereby set aside and ap - DANCE at Red's Club in Mason
carton. Zig-zag to make
has
been
com
pared
by
me
with
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
sharpening, lawn mower ,..
Department
25,000.00 the said original and that the propriated for the seve'ral
bultonholes, sew on buttons,
Friday night, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m:
992-2522.
FIRE DEPARTMENT
repair, Briggs and Stratton
purposes
for
which
ex monograms,
and
make
fancy
same
is
a
true
and
correct
copy
and
Saturday,
9
p.m.
to
1:30
6-10-tfc
500.00
Personal Services
penditures
are
to
be
made
for
engine
service. Low cost pick
designs with just the twist of a HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts. ,
a .m. Band, Gail and the T. C.
8,000.00 thereof.
Capital Outlay
up and delivery. Phone 992Witness my signature, this and during said fiscal year, as
Pomeroy
.
Phone
992-2293.
single
dial.
Left
in
lay-away
Playmates.
All
members
and
2,900.00
Other
follows: viz:
12th day of January 1971.
2804. ~olmers Saw Shop,
10-25-tfc NEIGLER Construction. For
and never been used . Will sell
guests welcome.
Total for Fire
GENERAL FUND
building or remodeling your
Mechan1c St , Pomeroy.
for
only
$47
cash,
or
E-Z
Department
11.400.00
ADMINISTRATIVE
1-28-2tc
Gene Grate
home, Call Guy Neigler,
1-28-3tc
PARKING METER FUND
$4,800.00
lerms available. Phone 992Clerk of the Village of Salaries- Trustees
Racine, Ohio.
·
1,600.00 GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Jan. 31, 1
Other
500.00
5641.
M iddteport, Ohio Salary-Clerk
7-31-tfc
Total for Parking
1-26-6tc
p.m. Mile Hill Road . Smoked
Meigs County, Ohio Supplies 500.00
100.00
Meter Fund
Administration
ham,
beef,
bacon
half
hog,
SEPTIC
tanks
cleaned.
Miller AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Total tor Security of
1,500.00
(1 l 22, 29, 2tc Insurance
Sponsored by Racine Fire ELECTROLUX
vacuum
300.00
Persons and
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
Burial Expenses
cancelled?
Lost
your
cleaner complete with atDepartment.
Property
36,900.00
Memorial Day
662-3035.
operator's license? Call 992NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1-28-3tc
lachments, cordwinder, and
LEISURE TIME
50.00
Expenses
2-12-tfc
Sealed proposal will be
2966.
ACTIVITIES
painl spray. Used, but in like
received by Mr. L. W. Mc- Employer 's Retirement
6-15-tfc .
------~---------PARKS
AND
580.00
Contribution
new conditton. Pay $34.45, or
Comas, clerk of the Meigs Local
WHEEL Horse Sales and
Broker
PLAYGROUNDS
School
&amp;
Ministerial
terms
if
desired.
Phone
992District
Board of
Service.
Baum
Lumber
110 Mechanic St.
4,000.00 School
100.00
Personal Services
Land Rents
See Us At The--5641.
3,5!0.00 Education, Middleport, Ohio at Workmen's
Company, Chester, Ohio.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Other
the
office
of
the
clerk
in
the
1-26-6tc
150.00
Total for Parks and
Phone
985-3301.
Compensation
Junior High School,
NEAR KROGER'S
Playgrounds
7,520.00 Middleport
5-20-tfc
South Third Avenue, Mid- 'General Health
Total for Leisure Time
1957 OLIVER Dozer DC 3, ,
District
1.900.00
dleport.
Ohio
45760,
until
12:00
___
C_L_E_A_NED:
Activit i es
7,520,00 o'clock noon E .S .T. February Auditor's - Treasurer's
new motor, new paint job, Middleport- 4 bedrooms, bath, S t:: P-T-1C.,---,T-A_N_K_S
COMMUNITY
150.00
Fees
moder.n kitchen, cook and
front end loader, fork lift, 61f2Reasonable rates. Phone
16, 1971, and opened and read
ENVIRONMENT
State Examiners'
bake units. Forced air gas
foot blade, $1200. Phone 992John Russell, Gallipolis 446PLANN lNG
COMMISSION aloud immediately thereafter .
100.00
Charge
furnace with air conditioning.
6048.
4782 after 5:30 p. m.
Personal Services
500.00 Bids are being taken for the Election Expense
800.00
New double garage. Lot from
4-7-tfc
l-29-6tc
Other
2,000.00 installation of air conditioning Contingency
in
various
areas
of
the
New
High to Page. Only $14,500.00
350.00
Total for Planning
Account
Meigs
High
School
located
on
Commission
2,500.00
Thursday, Friday
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Total Miscellaneous
SOLID WAST,E COLLEC- C.H. 25 near U.S. Route 33. All
12,480.00
1970 SCHULT mobile home. 17 WARM 2 years old. 3
Purposes
service, all makes. 992-2284.
bids
shall
be
in
accordance
with
Saturday
and
TION
acres land. Bailey Run Road.
bedrooms. 1'12 baths, gas
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
3,500.00 the drawings and specifications TOWN HALLS, MEMORIAL
Personal Services
Sunday
Nights
Phone 742-5222.
forced air furnace with air
Authorized Singer Sales and
4,500.00 prepared by Sullivan, Isaacs BUILDINGS &amp; GROUNDS
Other
1-27-6tc
conditioning.
Stove
and
and Sullivan , Architects and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Total for Solid waste
Utilities
100.00
Associated
Engineers,
on
file
refrigerator. Heated garage .
3-29-tfc
8,000.00
Collection
Repairs
100.00
during
regular
office
hours
in
CARPETS
AND
life,
too,
can
be
Level lot. January's gas bill
Total for Community
Total Town Hall
the
office
of
the
Clerk,
South
10,500.00
beautiful if you use Blue
$18.60. Asking $26,500.00
Environment
BACK HOE and end:loader
Purposes
200.00
Third Avenue, Middleport.
STREET MAINT .
Lustre.
Rent
electric
FIRE PROTECTION PURwork. Septic tanks installed.
12,000.00 Ohio; at the office of the Ar- POSES:
Personal Serv i ces
GU~ SHOOT every Saturday
shampooer,
$1.
Baker
Fur
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Large
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
12,000.00 chitect. 1800 Reading Road, Contracts
Personal Services
700.00
n1ght,
6
p.m.
at
Racine
niture.
Middleport.
old
house,
7
large
rooms,
floor
Reading, Cincinnati, Ohio
992-2478.
Supplies and
Total Fire Protection
Planing Mill, sponsored by
1-27-6tc
45215;
at
the
Dodge
Report
Plan
furnace.
Lot
60
x
320.
Asking
11-29-tfc
3,000.00
Materials
Purposes
700.00
Syracuse Fire Dept. Assorted
$6,500.00. Offer welcomed .
2,000.00 Rooms, 2528 Kemper Lane, CEMETERY PURPOSES:
Capital Outlay
Cincinnati,
Ohio
and
1333
W.
5th
meats,
'12-hog.
TEAFORDS
HAVE
31.000.00
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
Other
400.00
Avenue, Columbus, Ohio; at the Salaries
1-27-3tc
GOOD BUYS
Total for Street
Salt Works, E . Main St.,
Land Purposes
690.00
Maint.
48,000.00 Allied Construction Industries, Repairs
HELEN TEAFORD,
100.00
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
1010
Yale
Street,
Cincinnati,
Total for Street Main t .
Other Expenses
180.00 WILL PICK up merchandise
ASS&lt;iCIATE
4-9-tfc
1961 FORD FlOO pickup. Also,
and Construction
48,000.00 Ohio .
Cemeterv
992-3325
Principal contractors may Total
and take to auction on a
1964 Ford F100 pickup, extra
Total for Street Construction ,
Purposes
1,370.00
992-2378
obtain
one
(
1)
·
set
of
bid
percentage
basis.
Call
Jim
nice. Archie Wheeler, Dexter,
Maintenance and Repair
FIRM, JUICY Winesap and
LIGHTING PURPOSES
documents
for
the
purpose
of
1-29-6tc
Adams,
auctioneer
.
Rutland
.
Fund
48,000.00
50.00
Ohio. Phone 742-4423.
Rome Beauty apples - 4 lbs.
Contracts
Section 5. That there be ap - bidding on the principal con- Total Lighting
Phone 742-4461.
1-27-3tp
$.49. Large, juicy Yellow and
9-23-tfc
propriated from the STATE tract from Sullivan, Isaacs and
Purposes
50.00
Red
Delicious
apples
3
lb.
Sullivan,
1800
Reading
Road,
HIGHWAY
IMPROVEMENT
TOTAL GENERAL FUND
1U9 BUICK Le~abre, 2-dr.
$.49. Nice, mild and good
FUND (7 11&gt; per cent OF AUTO Cincinnati, Ohio 45215, upon a
APPROPR lATIONS 14,800.00 DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
hardtop, power steering,
tomatoes $.98 basket.
LICENSE AND GASOLINE deposit of Ten Dollars ($10.00)
MOTOR VEHICLE
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
which
deposit
will
be
refunded
power brakes, air, 18,000
Cucumbers
and
mango
TAX)
LICENSE TAX FUND
10-18-tfc
to
each
bidder
submitting
a
miles. Excellent condition.
STATE HIGHWAY
peppers, 2 for $.29. You will
MISCELLANEOUS
POMEROY
6
ROOM
Open:
1,300.00 bona -fide bid, upon return of the Sa Ia ries -Trustees
Personal Services
400.00
Phone 992-2288.
also find good fresh eggs,
FRAME, 3 bedrooms, bath, 2
9 Til 9 Mon. Tues. Wed. &amp;
WILL GIVE piano and organ
720 .00 bid documents in good condition Employer's Retirement
Other
11-10-tfc
Fairmont
milk,
bread,
porches, GOOD NEIGHwithin a period of ten (10) days
120.00
lessons in my home. Phone
Total for State
Contribution
Fri.
cookies, candy, pop, sweet
of the receipt of bids the entire
BORHOOD. $3.750.
Highway
2,020.00 deposit
.1965 PONTIAC Bonneviile,2
Workmen's
9 Til6 Thurs. &amp; Sat.
992-3666.
sha II be forfeited.
cider and many items at a
50.00
Total for State Highway
Compensation
8-16-tfc
door, with snow tires. Good
992-7261
Bids shall be submitted on the
savings. Dwight Spencer
POMEROY LITTLE BUT
Improvement Fund
2,020.00 form
Tools
&amp;
condition. Doyle Sargent,
furnished with each set of
305 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport
Market, 120 Main St., Middle
PUBLIC HEALTH
NICE 2 story frame, 2
600.00
Equipment
bid
documents or on
a
Phone 992-6252.
SERVICES
200.00 ATTENTION ladies! Would you
Block, Pomeroy.
bedrooms, bath, utility room,
copy of that form. Supplies
like to try a wig on in the
1-24-6tp
CEMETERY OPERATIONS typewritten
1-29-ltc
NEW forced air gas furnace.
Each bid shall be accompanied Maintenance of
privacy of your own home?
200.00
AND MAINT .
Equipment
LARGE LOT. $5,300.
by
a
bid
bond,
certified
check
or
5,760.00
You can. Just call us. We also STEREO, walnut finished,
100.00
Personal Services
Notes &amp; Interest
2,100.00 cashiers check in the amount of MAINTENANCE
Other
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
least 10 per cent of the gross
contemporary cabinet, 4SYRACUSE- ALMOST NEW
Total for Cemetery Operation at
Salaries
900.00
Koscot, of course.
Disspeaker sound system, 4- 5 room frame, 3 bedrooms,
7,860.00 bid with the understanding that Material
and Maintenance
700.00
tributors,
Brown's
.
Phone
·
it shall guarantee that the
speed changer .
Balance
bath, gas forced air furnace,
Total for Cemetery
TOTAL MOTOR VEHICLE
bidder
shall
not
withdraw
his
Middleport
992-5113.
7,860.00
$69.57. Use our budget plan.
carport, hardwood floors. A
Fund
LICENSE TAX
bid
for
a
period
of
thirty
(30)
12-31
-tfc
STREET LIGHTING
3,270.00
STEAL AT JUST $15,950.
Call 992-3352.
days after the sch~duled closing FUND
1,600.00
Other
GASOLINE
1-28-6tc
time for receipt of bids; that if
Total tor Street
TAX
FUND
INCOME TAX service, daily
are these inspected and reconditioned used
is accepted, bidder will
POMEROY BEAUTIFUL
Lighting
1,600.00 bid
except Sunday. Evenings by STEREO, early American
enter into formal contract with MISCELLANEOUS
BRICK- 3 large bedrooms
cars.
Total for Transportation
Employer's
Retirement
Owner and that the required
appointment only . Phone 992cabinet with AM- FM radio, 4double closets, built in kitFacilities
1,600.00 the
450.00
Contribution
Performance Bond will be
2272. Mrs . Wanda Eblin,
speaker sound system, 4chen, wall to wall carpet.
Section 3. That there be ap - given.
Workmen's
The bond or check of all
loca ted on Rt. 7 bypass, one
propriated from the GENERAL unsuccessful
speed changer.
Balance
bath, recreation room, utility
150.00
Compensation
bidders will be
1970' MERCURY CYCLONE SPOILER
FUN 0 for contingencies for returned when
mile south of fairgrounds.
$72 .39. Use our budget plan.
room, full basement. carport,
contract and Tools &amp;
(Week's Special
purposes
not
otherwise
2,600.00
12-31-30tc
Equipment
1 acre of ground. $27,500.
Call 992-3352.
bond
have
been
executed.
429 V-8, competition blue, 2 dr. hdtp., bucket.
1,000.00
provided tor, to be expended in
Supplies
1-28-6tc
TO
BUY
OR
SELL
Check
made
payable
to
the
300.00
accordance with the provisions Meigs Local School District, Repairs
se~ts, P.S., P.B., 8,000 actual miles, sticker
CONTACT US.
of Section 5705.40, R. C., the sum
Maintenance of
once $4300. Now
Board of Education.
ONE PAIR men's cowboy
FARMS NEEDED.
500.00
Equipment
Of
The bidder to whom contract
69 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE
boots, size 11, worn once,
HENRY CLELAND
1,000.00
HOUSEKEEPER needed. Live
is awarded shall execute and Notes &amp;
Grant Total GENERAL FUND deliver
brown. Two country and
REALTOR
Convertible, 4 speed trans ., radio. Real
400.00
Interest
to the Owner with in ten
in if desired. Good working
Appropriation
130,596.00 ( 10) days
MAINTENANCE
Office
992-2259
western men's shirts, gold
Sharp.
after the award and
conditions. Phone 992-5251.
Section 9. That there be ap - before signing
Salaries
5,000.00
and
green,
size
l61f2,
new.
One
Residence
992-2568
contract, a
1-19-tfc
propriated from the WATER corporate suretythe
69
DODGE 112 TON
Material
2,000.00
1-25-6tc
pair
men's
western
slacks,
bond in a penal
(REVENUE) FUND
Pickup truck, 6 cyl., stand. trans., heavy
sum equal to at least 100 per TOTAL GASOLINE TAX
never worn, olive green, waist
ADMINISTRATION
FUND
12,400.00
cent of the contract sum, and
duty, step rear bumper.
size 35 . One cub scout
ROAD AND BRIDGE
WATER
uniform, shirt and slacks,
13,400.00 the cost of such bond shall be
FUND
Personal Services
69 PLYMOUTH VALIANT SIGNET
OLD
furniture,
dishes,
brass
paid for by the bidder.
worn once, size 10. One lady's
Supplies and
2 Dr. Sedan, bucket seats, radio, V-8 auto.
The Meigs Local School MISCELLANEOUS
beds, etc. Write M . D . Miller,
Materia Is
18,685.00 District,
Employer's
Retirement
country
and
western
blouse,
Board of Education,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
lrans.
GEORGE S.
Debt Service
36,570.00 reserves the
100.00
Contribution
skirt
and
long
vest,
size
12,
to reject any
992-6271.
Other
17,540.00 or all bids,right
HOBSTETTER, JR.,
Workmen's
69 FORD MUSTANG
metallic
green,
new.
Also,
to
waive
in
9-1-tfc
50.00
Total for AdministrationCompensation
Real Estate Broker
Mach 1, light yellow finish, 351 V -8 eng., 4 sp.,
forma lities and to wit'1hold final
used exercise cycle, $10. Used
Water
86,195.00 awarding
Tools
&amp;
Phone
985-4186,
Pomeroy
of the c&lt;:o1tract for
baby stroller, good condition,
19,000 actual miles.
,
800.00
WATER IMP .
Equipment
HILTON
WOLFE,
thirty
(30)
days
after
opening
of
$5. Used play pen, $5. Phone
8,300.00
300.00 OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
Capital Outlay
Supplies
68
CAMARO
bids.
Salesman
condition, as long as have not
700.00
949 4603, Jean Trussell.
Other
The Meigs Local School District Maintenance of
R_ally Sports, dark green finish with black
Phone 949-3211 , Racine
been wet. Paying $10 each.
300.00
1-28-3tc
Total for Water
Lquipment
of Education
vmyl top, 327 V-8 eng., 3 sp., air condition.
200.00
2 STORY frame house, 7 rooms,
Imp.
9,000.00 Board
First floor only. Mondays will
Insurance
MR.
L.
W.
McCOMAS,
Clerk
150.00
Tot a I for Administrationbath, front and back porch,
Notes- Other
be pick-up day . Write, giving F 1R EWOOD,
68 MUSTANG
also,
good
Water
9,000.00 Jan. 15, 22, 29, Feb. 5 4tc
MAINTENANCE
storm doors, storm windows,
good directions. Witten Piano
Hampshire
pigs,
10
weeks
old.
1,000.00
G.T. Fastback, V -8, auto. trans., P.B.
Total for Water (Revenue)
Sal aries
383
N.
3rd
St.,
Middleport.
A
Company,
Box
188,
Sardis,
NOTICE OF
Fund
95, 195.00
1,000.00
Gerald King , phone Shade
Material
good buy at $13,500.00.
68 FORD
APPOINTMENT
Ohio 43946.
Section 10. That there be
TOTAL ROAD AND
696-1287.
Case No . 20426
8-20-tfc
Cus I om 500, 4 dr ., Sedan 390 V -8 p
appropriated from the SEWER
air
BRIDGE FUND
3,900.00
1 28-6tp
Sadie
Jones, GRAND TOTAL OF ALL
condilion.
'
' · .,
6 ROOM house, 50 acres land,
(REVENUE) FUND
Estate
of
A 0 M I N I S T RAT I 0 N
Deceased.
free gas, income from gas
FUNDS
34,370.00
STAR kills rats quickly, surely .
SEWAGE
Notice is hereby given that
68 CHEV. PICKUP 112 TON TRUCK
Mr
R usselt seconded the
well and rent, $42.00 month.
2112 pounds, $1.69. Ebersbach
Personal Services
11.850.00 Charles Jones of Middleport,
Resolution and the roll being
Long bed, 6 cyl., stand. trans.
Th!s is a very good buy .
Capital Outlay
6,600.00 Oh10, has been duly appointed
Hardware, Sugar Run Mills,
called upon its adoption the vote FURNISHED and unfurnished
Pnced $4,000.00.
Debt Service
24,360.00 Administrator of the Estate of resulted as follows: Mr Hysell
apartments. Close to school.
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
1-29-3tc
Other
9,050.00 Sadie Jones, deceased, late of
67 COUGAR V-8
yes; Mr. Gilkey
yes; Mr .
Phone 992-5434.
1-5-30tp
Total for AdminiStration Meigs County, Ohio.
10-18-tfc
Russell yes.
2 Dr. ~._T., a_
u lo. trans., P.S., factory air,
Sewage
51,860.00
Creditors are required to file
Adopted January 7, 1971
coral f1n1sh w1th black vinyl top.
Total for Sewer &lt;Revenue)
' their claims with said fiduciary
Richard Bailey
Fund
51.860.00 within four months.
clerk, Board of 3 ROOM, ground floor furnished
67 OLDS 442
apartment. Phone 742-5032.
Section 13. That there be
Dated this 13th day of
Township Trustees
V-8, aut_o. trans., P.S., silver-gray finish with
appropriated
from
the January, 1971 .
1-27-3tc
F . H. O'BRIEN
black v~nyl top, radio.
G E N E R A L
B 0 N D
THE STATE OF OHIO, MEIGS
Probate Judge of
RETIREMENT FUND
5 ROOM house, bath , Racine
COUNTY, SS:
65 OLDS
sa 1d County
Payment of Principal
6,000.00
I, Richard Bailey, Clerk of the
area. Phone 992-6329.
Jan
.
15,
22,
29
3tc
4 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B., auto. trans., air conPayment of
Board of Trustees of Salisbury
1-27-4tc
825.00
dition .
Interest
Township, Meigs County, Ohio,
300.00
and
in
whose
custody
the
Files,
Other
NEW MOBILE home. Adults
3 Reasons to go Datsun Automatic
NOTICE OF
Total for General Bond
Journals and Records of said
APPOINTMENT
only. Phone 992-5592.
Retirement Fund
7,125.00
61 CORVAIR
Board are required by the Laws
1. 3-speed smoothness a 2-speed can't match
Case No. 20,350 of the State of Ohio to be kept,
ADDITIONAL FUNDS
1-7-tfc
4 Dr ., auto. trans.
Section 15. That there be Estate of Neiss Carter Powell,
2. Up to 25 miles per gallon
do hereby certify that the
appropriated from the Meter Deceased .
63 FORD GALAXIE SOO
foregoing Annual Appropriation
3. Delivers peak performance with 96 H p
Notice is hereby given that
Deposit Fund
Resolution is taken and copied
2 Dr. H .T.
engine
· ·
1.500.00 Ruth Isabella Powell, of Mid - from the original Resolution
Other
dleport, Ohio , has been duly
Total for Meter Deposit
now on file with said Board, and CAMPERS and travel trailers.
1.500.00 appo1nted Executr ix of the
Drive a Datsun ... then decide.
Fund
Don't buy until you see our
the foreqoing Resolution has
Estate of Neiss carter Powell,
Total tor Additional
been compared by me with the
new line Coming in February.
Funds
1,500 00 deceased. late ot Meigs County
said original and that the same
What a surprise! You pick it
Ohio.
'
is a true and correct copy
out. we'll put it on sale. Gaul
Creditors are required to file
Section 17. And the Village
thereof
Trailer Sales, Inc., One -half
Clerk is hereby authorized to their claims with said fiduciary
WITNESS my signature, thiS
mile north of Chester, Ohio off
draw his warrants on the within tour months.
7th day of January, 1971.
Village Treasurer for payments
Daled this 13th day of
Rt. 7, watch for sign. Yes, WE
from any of th e foregoing ap January, 1971
Belpre, 0.
423-6331
Richard Bailey
RENT campers and travel
813 Farson St.
F . H. O'BRIEN
propriations upon receiving
Township Clerk
trailers. Phone 614-985-3832
Kanauga,
Ohio
Corner
of
Rt.
7
and
Farson
Street
Probate Judge
prop e r
cert1fic.atc~
and
for full information.
of said County
vouchtrs therefor, approved by
(1) 22. 29. 2tc
1-17-12tc
the board of off•cers author ized Jan 15, 22, 29 3tc

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

-/--·-, I'

I'

.-Pomeroy ·Motor Co.

,-------=--...:; ___

•

...._........

BLAmNARS

I, For Sale

-----

Female Help Wanted

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

L...-------------1
Card cf Thanks

For Sale

•

Notice

Real Estate For Sale

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

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

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

------------------Jf\Surance

SR.

BAND

Charley

SWAP SHOP

u~

and
The Earthquakes

Beat Inflation!

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

WE

BUY

Hl-7 CLUB

-

SELL

•

OR

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

TRADE

NEW AND

Auto ,Sales

USED FURNITURE
ALSO

•

APPLIANCES AND
HOUSEWARES.

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

Cleland Realty

SWAP SHOP

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

on CLASS
for so Little Cash
HIGH

You Can't Beat A Riggs Deal

Help Wanted

•

$2995

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

$1595

Wanted To Buy

$1795 I• ·
$1695

HOBSTETTER

$2395

s

For Rent

$1895
$1795
$1595
$1695

-

$1595

..

$1595

~95

------------------For Rent or Sale

DATSUN

SMITH AUTO SALES

$250
$250

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS

"
\

•

�EEK AND MEEK
-~-----.

l~

I'LL GIVE "'E
A CHANCET TO
WIN HER BACK
TOMORRV
NIGHT

YES , BUT1HEr&lt;E'S ONE
T~I/'JG .ABaJT HeRTKAr
'(OJ DIDN'T NOITCI! !

U'LABNER
HOLD IT!! WOMEN ARE NO
LONGER Sl...AVES TO MEN'S
BEASTL"Y APPETITES."!

YOU'RE
LIBERATED!!'

- A. TI-IIRD, UNAWARE OF

TI-lE OTHER TWO, BUT WITH
PURPOSE,THE PROTECTION

O F A GIRL NAMED LIZZ..

ACROSS
1. - Editll
Evans
5. Shoe
gripper
10.Insurgent
11. German
city
12. Cream of
society
13. Proverb
H. Yellow
ocher
15. Camper's
item
17. Legislative
body
(abbr.)
18."Nowheard
everytlling! "
19. Interjection of

45. Virtuous
47. Noisemaker
48. Seeing red
49. Perfume
50. Story
DOWN
1. Convey

2. City in

Texas
3. Encountered
4. Choose

10. Withstand
16. - - of
bounds
22. Pierce,
as
a
cask
24. Kook
26. Lineage u::H~!..JJ;;J~I.!..
28. Generous

~(t]JMID~~;-!!.4~::!:.::::
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

29.Raise
30. Enter -

5. Idle talk
6. Guided
7. Expunge
8. Theatrical
backer
9.Wee
(colloq. )

trJ
I I

36. Cognizant
38. Send
back
payment
44.Sty
46. "- pro

tain
32. Ascot ,

for
one
34. Ga ther
35. Good

tllinking

Yl'INT

nobis"

dis-

liSTEN, PELF, WE'VE GOT TO
k'FEP HIM SO BUSY WE
WON'T BE MISSED UNTIL WE
HOU7 A PJ&lt;f'55 CONFERENCE
ON LIBERATED TURF.

approval
20. District of
England
21. Dispatched
23. Sawbuck
25. Trample
27. Sovereign
31. Favorite
33. Floor
material
34. Between
Ga. and

Now arranre the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, aa
sucrested by the above cartoon.

)

)[ ]

I~::~ I ( I X JTHE r I I I

)oN[ I

I]

(Anowera lomorrowJ

Jumbl..•: LOWLY

Miss.

Yeolrrday' o

37. Knightly
title
39. Implore
40. C ut the
grass
41. Written
letter
42. "Stowe"
character
43. Wide open

I

WHOSE

GARBLE

BAMBOO

An•wn : The barfly'a f avorite bird - THE SWALLOW

DEAR F~IEND OF FRIENDS ...
l{OU WOULD HAVE BEENPROUD
OF ME I(ESTERDAI(... I WA5 THE
STAR OF OUR FIELD TRIP... "

11

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, L___l.sl\!!!l!&amp;:~-.l===:::i.t;.S.!J
apostrophes, the length and formation of tlle words are all
hints. Eaeh day the code letters are diffe rent.
11

A Cryptocram QuotaUon

XLJWGL
LG :
VH
-

NVH
CD

CNL
VTLW

MVQL

ZGWK C VKWR
DP

DCNLGH

W
W

ODE ·

MDDT

CVYL

XWT

CVYL .

WHDHAYDBH

Ye.terday's Cryptoquote: WHEN OUR HATRED IS VIOLENT, IT SINKS US EVEN BENEATH THOSE WE HATE.
- ROCHEFOUCAULD
10 1971 Kin II' Featurea Syndknte, Inc. )

I FOUND FIVE WORM5 ....
AND ONLl( THREE WORM5
FOUND /IAE ! HA HA! II

L - - -...1-..L..l. U . . - - - - - - '

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 29,1971

REAP Enterges front ACP

Damage Heavy
Heavy property damage was
reported in a single car accident
Thursday at 7:30p.m. on SR 338
at the Racine dam entrance,
Sheriff Robert Harten bach's
department reported.
.
Michael Joe Hill, 20, Racme,
Rt. 2, driving a 1970 Ford, said
his car slid across the highway
and hit a road sign when he
drove onto an icy area in pulling
from a driveway. There were no
injuries or arrest.

A new program, Rural Environmental Assistance
Program (REAP), formerly
known as the Agricultural
Conservation Program (ACP),
has been announced by the
Department of Agriculture
according to Wayne Chase,
chairman of the Meigs County
ASCS Committee.
Farmers and others participating in REAP projects will
in most cases pay an equal, or
more than equal, amount of the
costs. REAP updates the
conservation cost-sharing
program through which for
many years the Federal
Government and farmers have
been partners in establishing
conservation practices needed

SHRINETIES MEET
Plans were made for the new
year when the Twin City
Shrinettes met Thursday at the
Shrine club house in Racine. A
color film about Shrine crippled
children hospitals and the
BW'ns Institute was shown. The
Collect for Club Women by
Mary Stewart was given by
Jean
Moore,
president.
Refreshments were served
during the social hoW' by Mary
Baldwin and Violet Miller,
hostesses.
OES TO MEET
Racine Chapter 134 Order of
Eastern Stars will meet Monday at 8 p.m. in a school of instruction. The deputy grand
matron will visit. All officers
are urged to attend.

MEIGS THEATRE

in the public interest.
Chase said that the Meigs
County ASC Committee will
work not only with farmers but
other
communityalso
interested groups, including
city and local governments, to
determine
priority
for
agricultural conservation
projects with both rW'al and
W'ban benefits. These benefits
could include cleaner water,
purer air, improved open space,
recreational oppor•unities,

better wildlife habitat, and
similar environmental improvements.
REAP will help farmers
carry out needed conservation
and environmental protection
measures on their farms with
costs shared by the Federal
Government. Emphasis will beplaced on long-range preservation of the environment, and
on practices that will return
more benefits to the public at
less public cost. This is being

accomplished, Department
Officials announced, through
the elimination from the
National Program of certa.
production-oriented, temporary, and other low priority
practices formerly carried out
under ACP, and through the
restructuring of
others.
Counties will have the option of
continuing in 1971 practices
from 1970 they deem necessary
to round out their county
program.
The program will be
ministered by ASCS in the
county.

a#-

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Otarges

KERM PACKS 'EM IN- Shoppers braved freezing temperatures Friday morning to
line up outside both entrances to the New York Clothing House in Pomeroy before doors
opened for the store's semi-annual sale. When they got in, above is how it went. The sale
continues over the weekend at the store owned by Kermit (Kerm) Walton.

Attending Conferences

Tonight &amp; Saturday
January 29•30
CAPT. NEMO AND THE
UNDERWATER CITY
Chuck Conners
Robert Ryan
DARING GAME
~T;;~~i~l~~~
Nico Minardos
Admission:
Adults, $1.00, Children 60c
Sun., Mon., &amp; Tues.
Jan. 31 · Feb. 1-2
DARLING LILI
Julie Andrews
Rock Hudson
Also Cartoon
. .IIIISIIH•O•W•S•T•A•R•T•S•7•P•.iiM•.• •PI

The Executive Committee of
the Board of Trustees at Rio
Grande College has unanimously voted to increase
student tuition by $200 for the
1971-72 academic year.
Student tuition will be $1,700
for the 1971-72 year, and will
still be one of the lowest tuition
charges among private, independent
colleges
and
universities in Ohio.

(Continued from Page 1)
"Relocated a large food
locker (freezer) in a location
other than that approved by the
Board.
"Employed a substitute cook
on a permanent basis without
the approval of the Board.
"Threatened the Board that if
they did not accept your
recommendation of Mike
Whalen you would not make
another recommendation.
"Made false promises to
prospective employees concerning salaries and necessity
of certification.
"Changed final grades and
permanent grades of students.
''Misrepresented to the Board
the need to purchase television
sets.
"Misrepresented to a Home
Economics teacher that she
could not purchase food in
amount of $10, to embarrass the
Board.
"Circulated
untrue
statements of and concerning
Grant Barnette, an employee of
the Board.
_ "Failed to require the attendance director to file a
certified statement to the
Superintendent each month as
required by Chapter 18, Article
8, Section e of the West Virginia
Code.

OPEN TONIGHT

and
SATURDAY TIL 9 P.M.

Mrs. Ben Neutzling, eighth bership skit will be followed by
district president of the Lawrence Koeppe of Bryan,
American Legion Auxiliary, Ohio, representative to the 1970
will be at the Neil House Motor teachers seminar held at
Hotel in Colwnbus this weekend Freedom's Foundation, Valley
for the annual Mid-Winter Forge, Pa., speaking on the
Conference of Ohio units.
values of that program. A
Mrs. Neutzling will be active national security forwn will
in meetings on Americanism, close the business sessions.
Children and Youth, ComHighlight of Saturday evening
munity Service, Civil Defense, will be the national president's :::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:
Junior Activities, Veterans reception banquet and ball
Affairs and Rehabilitation.
honoring Mrs. Charles C. Shaw
Saturday's sessions will from Illinois. Many auxiliary
feature veterans hospital members will remain in
representatives and a showing Colwnbus for the American
of the Buckeye Girls, state Legion's Mid-Winter Condocwnentary film. A mem- , ference to be held Sunday at the
Mrs. Lema Leota Lynch,
Youth
Center,
state Cheshire, Rt. 2, age 81, died
fairgrounds.
Thursday afternoon in Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Lynch was born May 30,
1889 in Guyan Township, the
daughter of the late Emory and
Mrs. Viola Hall, 75, Coolville, Charolette Wilcox Saunders.
She was also preceded in death
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Rt. 1, died unexpectedly Thurs- by her husband, Frank, a
ADMITTED- Benny Spears,
day evening at Camden Clark daughter, two brothers, and Syracuse; Darlene Blackwood,
Memorial Hospital, Parkers- three sisters.
Rutland; Owen Wiseman,
bW'g.
Mrs. Lynch was a member of Rutland; Pauline Miller, West
She is survived by three sons,
Colwnbia.
Missionary Baptist
Austin, Jr., Caldwell, Idaho; Siloam
Church and Kyger Council D of
DISCHARGED- John Jones,
Ray S., Little Hocking, and
A
No.
227.
She
was
employed
as
rM_a_r_t_ha_M_c_E_l_ro_y_,_M_a_r_y-::Ze...__r_kl_e
_. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ~-----~~--------Fred E., Coolville; three
a
light
tender
for
the
Coast
daughters,
Mrs.
Gladys
Richardson , Frost; Mrs. Freda Guard 15 years.
She is survived by a son,
Heim, Dexter, Michigan, and
Arthur,
Cheshire, Rt. 2; two
Mrs. Bernace Engel, Ypsilant,
Mich.; one brother, Cameron brothers, Roosevelt Saunders,
Stalnaker, Elkins, W. Va.; a Cleveland, and Terry Saunders,
sister, Mrs. Mary Huffman, Baltimore, Md.; four grand16
greatMill Creek, W. Va .; 10 grand- children,
children, and several nieces and grandchildren and two greatgreat-grandchildren, and
nephews.
several
nieces, nephews and
Mrs. Hall was born at MonApplicants who need credit for
terville Mountain, W. Va., the cousins.
sound purposes are assured of a cordial
Funeral services will be
daughter of the late Sidney and
welcome, and in most cases prompt
Mary Hogan Stalnaker. She was Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
approval, atthis Full-Service Bank. We
also preceded in death by a Rawlings Coats Funeral Home
invite you to bring your credit
sister and her husband, Austin, with the Rev. Merlin Teets
officiating.
problem to us. We shall be happy to talk
who died in 1969.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
it over with you, and to give you
She was a member of
Hockingport United Methodist Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
the benefit of our experience,
Church, having resided in the may call at the funeral home
without obligation.
this evening from 7 to 9 p.m.,
Youba Ridge area 50 years.
Saturday
from noon till 9 p.m.
Funeral services will be
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the White and Sunday until time of serContinuous $ervice On
Funeral Home in Coolville with vices.
the Rev. James B. Arbogast
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
officiating. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery. Friends
TWO TREATED
Yes, we've got 'em.
may call at the funeral home
Treated for lacerations at
Immediate
delivery
after noon Saturday.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
on America's little carefree car. 75 hp.
and released Thursday night
Averaged over 25 mpg in simulated city/suburban
were Michael Still, 21, and Mark
driving. Goes 6,000 miles per oil change.
Still, 18, both of Pomeroy, both
More room inside.
taken to the hospital by the
FINED, JAILED
Pomeroy E-R squad. The squad
Larry Gene Whited, 29, was called to the home of Mrs.
Racine, who was cited to Barbara coats, 1519 Nye Ave., a
Syracuse Mayor Herman sister of the Stills.
Serv~ng Meigs County
London's court by village
marshall
Milton
Varian
IN HOSPITAL
Since 1872
Thursday night was fined $100
APPLE GROVE, Ohio -Bill
and costs and sentenced to three Heiney, a former resident here,
Member Federal Reserve System
days in jail on conviction of is in serious condition in Baptist
driving while intoxicated, and Hospital at Phoenix, Ariz. His
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
for speeding, fined $25 and costs brother is Ray Heiney and his
All Accounts Insured Up To $20,000.00
with $15 suspended.
sister, Mrs. Floyd Farra, both
of Racine. Mr. Heiney was an
• • • • •• •• • •• • •• • • • • •• • • • •• • • • • • •employe of old Lock 23 at Apple
Grove a number of years.

Lema L. Lynch

Dies Thursday

Mrs. Viola Hall
Dies Thursday

IN

A WORD •••

Take Advantage Of The Special

Sale Prices During Our

END OF THE MONTH SAtE
SAVE IN EVERY
DEPARTMENT ON
ALL THREE FLOORS

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

RUTLAND

•

''GREAT NEWS!''
SAVE II

20-30

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was
24 degrees under cloudy skies.

40- 50%

WE
SPECIALIZ E
IN WED DIN GS

JANUARY

-~Continues on FAMOUS BRAND
NAME CLOTHING •••
,.,.., For Both Men and Women ai

BAHR CLOTHIERS

N. Second Ave.

M iddleport, 0 .

Everything but the Ring and
the Groom.
Invitations
Napkins
Books
Decorations
Engraved Cake Knives,
Servers, Punch Bowls by
Starlight.
Great selection of Albums to
choose from.

FREE POWER STEERING •.. FREE POWER BRAKES
ON SPECIAL WHITE SALE GALAXIES

ordered with extras like air conditioning, vinyl roof,
special interior and exterior trim, other popular items.

UP TO $308t OFF FORD EXPLORER SPECIAL
tManufacturer's suggested retail prices now reduced
up to $308 when you buy th is luxury-equipped
Explorer Special Pickup.

•Manufacturer' s auggeated reta1l pr1ce . Wh11c aldewalls $29, accont oph on $60, dealer prcpJr alton chmgos, 1f any, transpot tahon charges, &amp;tate and loca l taxes not Included

THE

QUALITY
PRINT SHOP
992-3345

Middleport, 0

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC. 461 South Third St, Middleport

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="72">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1730">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="3532">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
          <elementText elementTextId="3770">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1873">
              <text>January 29, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="380">
      <name>lynch</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
