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                  <text>Rhea Mora is Dairy Princess

DEBORAH CROSS, center, was named runner-up in the
annual Meigs County Dairy Princess contest Thursday night

A panel of three judges
Thursday night selected Rhea
Mora, Eastern High School
senior and daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Mora, Pomeroy
Route 3, as Meigs County's 1971
Dairy Princess.
Miss Mora was selected for
the honor from a field of six
contestants during the winter
meeting of the Southeastern
Ohio Guernsey Breeders Assn.
and the Meigs Dairy Service
Unit held at the Southern High
School in Racine.
Selecting Miss Mora was a
panel of judges composed of
Mrs. Janet Korn, Pomeroy,
with WJEH in Gallipolis: Roger
Hysell of The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co., Pomeroy, and
John Heiskell, former Pomeroy
resident now with WSAZ-TV in
Huntin~ton, W. Va.
Selected as runner-up was

at Racine with Rhea Mora named princess. Other contestants from the left were Mary Lou King, Linda Hollon,
Margie Jeffers and Rita Salser.

Deborah Cross, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Cross, Racine
Route 1. Miss Cross will become
princess if Miss Mora is unable
to fulfill the duties of the
position. Miss Mora will
represent Meigs County in the
state competition in the summer.
Other contestants were Rita
Salser, daughter of Mr. and

Mrs. Grover Salser, Jr., Racine
Route 1; Linda Hollon, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hollon
Minersville Route 1; Mary Lo~
King, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil King, Pomeroy Route 2,
and Margie Jeffers, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers
Albany Route 2.
'
Miss Mora received a trophy,
gifts and expense money to the

·:·· .· :.. ::.. •;·;::. •.. ·:·::::;:;:;::·:··:·····:·::;··::::;:;::;::;::::::. :::. :::::;::·::::::: . .•. ::::::::::::::=::::::::::::;:·::· ·:.=::.:.:::::::::::;::::::;:·:··:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

Passage Certain
WASHINGTON (UPI) Senate passage is assured for
a bill that would increase
Social Security benefits by 10
per cent, raise the minimum
benefit to $100 and give the
economy a $5 billion shot in
the arm.
The key remaining question

was whether the provision
boosting
the
present
minimum payments of $64 for
a single person and $96 for a
couple would survive when
the bill reaches the House.
The likelihood was that it
would not.

state event. Miss Cross received
a cup trophy and gifts and other
contestants were presenced
gifts by Mrs. David Nease. Mr
and Mrs. Nease were 111 charge
of the contest. The gifts, money
and trophies were provided by
Francis Florist, lola's, K. and
C. Jewelers, Nelson's Drugs, L.
and Z. Dress Shop, Swisher and
Lohse Drug Store, Elberfelds,
Goessler Jewelry Store, Stifflers, Pomeroy Flower Shop,
Dutton Drugs, Middleport
Department Store, Dudley
Florist, Pomeroy Ben Franklin
Store, Athens Savings and Loan
Co., Meigs Branch; Racine
Home National Bank, Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy
National
Bank,
Citizens
National Bank, Landmark,
Sugar Run Mill and the Meigs
Equipment Co.

The Daily Sentinel
,.,,.....

Devoted To The

~.

Of The Meigs-MtJMJn Area

~
• J

f

lnter~u

)&lt;

"

VOL. XXIII

NO. 232

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TEN CENTS

FRIDAY. MARCH 12, 1971

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

;

/
/

Reds Mass near Sepone

)

t.:

SAIGON (UPI) - Military
spokesmen said today elements
of six North Vietnamese
regiments have moved in
around the Laotian Ho Chi
Minh trail junction of Sepone
but have made no major moves
against the South Vietnamese
forces who control it.
Military sources at the same
time reported American air

RHEA MORA, Pomeroy Route 3, was crowned Meigs
County's 1971 Dairy Princess by Mrs. Janet Korn, Pomeroy,
one of three judges, in Racine Thursday night.

. .,.,,.,, ,.,... Parked Auto

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Dairymen Dine
•

~

RACINE - Three directors
were named and awards were
announced by the Meigs Dairy
Service Unit Thursday night at
Southern High School here.
Held in conjunction with the
unit meeting was the winter
seSSlon of the So
Ohio
G
Bre
d 0 th
as
r~ of tt
unit were Gene
Carnahan, and Edl5 n Hollon.
Hollon was in charge of the
dairy unit portion of the
program and Edson Roush of
the Guernsey breeders section.
Honor awards from the Ohio
Da1ry Assn. of the Dairy Herd
Improvement Assn. went to Rex
Shenefield, who had an average
production of 13,250 pounds of
milk and 568 pounds of butterfat
for 35.6 cows, and Edson Roush
who had 12,963 pounds of milk
and 622 pounds of butterfat for
26.9 cows.
An Ohio Dairyman's Assn.
certificate went to James
Gibson for two cows with over
5,000 pounds of butterfat, three
cows producing over 4,000
pounds of butterfat, and two
cows producing over 3,000
pounds of butterfat, all in their
lifetimes.
Anna
Vaughan,
Mary

Bucyrus, now a teacher in
Columbus, related her experiences as an international
foreign exchange student in
Nicaragua. She led a 4-H team
caravan to Spain last year.
Ron Eberhard, Ohio GuernBreeders field man,
.t' ,........,~a
ere s made by
br ed rs Central ana
An1er1can farmers a e
anxtous to secure man} more
Guernsey cattle, Eberhard
said.
Clayton Coffey, Southern
vocational
High
School
agriculture instructor, announced that Tom Han1m of
Southern has been selected as a
district winner in a dairy efficiency contest of the Future
Farmers of America program.
Virgil Atkins, production
testor of the dairy service unit,
spoke briefly.
A potluck supper and
selection of the Dairy Princess
completed the meeting. Prayer
was by the Rev. Paul Sellers.
Presenting instrumental music
were Mrs. Garrett Circle and
Ray Byers and vocal numbers
were presented by Pam Hill,
Garcia McGraw and Sharon
Ervin with Mrs. Circle accompanying on the piano.

(---------------------------,
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By United Press International

strikes have killed more than
2,200 North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong since the South
Vietnamese drive into Laos
began Feb. 8.
South Vietnamese officials
said the North Vietnamese
were as close as 12 miles to
Sepone, situated 27 miles inside
Laos on Highway 9. A North
Vietnamese- regiment totals

I

)l

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Sunday through Tuesday.
Mild through the period
with a chance of rain Monday
and Tuesday. Daytime highs
in the 50s north to the 60s
south. Overnight lows from
the mid 30s to the mid 40s.

GasCo to
onor Ten
Employes
Ten employees of Columbia
Gas of Ohio, Inc., - including
four from Pomeroy - will be
honored for accident-free
driving at a breakfast Tuesday
at Oscar's Restaurant in
Gallipolis.
C. T. Cassell, manager in the
Pomeroy-Middleport area for
th' gas company, said the
en'lployees who will attend the
breakfast represent a total of 99
yl!ars of driving company
vehicles without an accident.
Award
winners
from
Pomeroy and the number of
years each has driven without
an accident include:
Howard Logan, 201 Condor
St., 19 years; Julius Sauvage,
Route 2, 10 years; Maurice
Durst, 4 East St., nine years,
and Harley Hendricks, Route 3,
(Continued on page 10)

Js Struck
Middleport police are investigating an accident at the
corner of North Second and
~::son Sts. at 5:40 p.m. ThursPolice reported a car driven
by Rodney C. Hysell, 22',
Pomeroy Route 2, turning from
Second onto Hudson, struck the
front of a parked car owned by
William P. Davis, Middleport.
Police said charges will be filed
against Hysell. There were no
injuries and the extent of
damage to the cars had not been
determined today.
Also at Middleport, the E-R
unit answered a call to the
Happy Hollow Road at 7:22p.m.
Thursday for Donald Dailey
who suffered fractured ribs
playing football. Dailey, 18, was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
TO DISCUSS DRUGS
The Rev. Arthur Lund of
Pomeroy will show a film and
speak on the topic drug abuse,
when the Racine PTA meets at
7: 30 p.m. Monday at the school.
Racine Girl Scout Troop 137 will
present a program.
STILL CLOSED
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
Marion-Franklin High School,
which closed early Thursday
because of a student problem,
remained shut down today as
school officials attempted to
resolve the tensions.

2,900 men but the spokesmen
did not say the Communist
units were at full-strength.
Casualty Claims
South Vietnamese 1st Infantry Division units early today
halted a Communist attack on a
government outpost 13 miles
southeast of Sepone and said
they killed 12 of the attackers
at a cost of one dead and three
wounded.
sp~~~~~e~ie~7:::~ :il~~:~

7,386 Commun1sts have been
killed in the Laotian campaign
and the government losses were
711 killed, 2,664 wounded and
166 missing.

rJ"l
a
x
.J.
~

The U.S. command today
reported the loss of six more
American helicopters in support
of the Laotian operation and to
the south, North Vietnamese
forces increased attacks
against Laotian troops in the
strategic Bolivens Plateau.
Military spokesmen said
three helicopters were shot
down inside Laos and two in
South Vietnam next to the
Laotian border Thursday,
resulting in one American killed
and seven wounded. The sixth
chopper was downed Saturday.
Its crew still was missing.
It brought to 61 the number of
helicopters officially listed as

shot down since South Vietnamese troops crossed the
border Feb. 8 to cut the Ho Chi
Minh trail, the primary Communist supply route into South
Vietnam and Cambodia. Five
more were listed as lost in
accidents in support of the
Laotian drive.
The U.S. command counts as
lost only those helicopters
destroyed and not those shot
down and the wreckage
recovered.
U. S. headquarters said 51
Americans have been killed in
the helicopter losses with 13
injured and 18 crewmen
missing.

Burdens Poor

COLl,JMBUS (UPI) - An
Ohio State University economist
said today Ohio's tax structure
is a "product of th£; depression" \\ith low income families
bearing 2% times the tax rate
of high income families.
Fr~derick D. Stocker, in an
analysis of the tax structure
written for the OSU Center for
Business and Economic Research, said Ohio has one of the
nation's lowest tax rates but
the burden is carried by those
who can afford it least.
Stocker said the main weaknesses of the state's tax structure were that it was regressive, it does not match fiscal
needs with taxable resources
and it has an uneven impact.
"The Ohio tax system is distinctly regresSive," said Stocker. "One recent study has
found that Ohio's 1968 state and
local taxes, in terms of effective
rate on family income, averaged more than 21;2 times as heavy on families with income under $3,500 than on families with
$50,000 or more."
Heavy Reliance
Stocker said the main cause

for the regressive pattern in
Ohio is the heavy reliance on
the personal property tax.
Stocker said the reliance on
the property tax has also failed to match fiscal needs with
taxable resources.
"Ohio's heavy relative reliance on local taxes, especially
the property tax, has produced
a situation of fiscal mismatch
between public service needs
and taxable resources," said
Stocker.
"One result is inequality in
levels of public school support
and presumably in quality of
public education," said Stocker.
"Another is inequality in tax
levels on homeowners and businesses depending on where they
are located."
"While Ohio taxes average
low, they impact very unevenly," he said. "Some individuals,
businesses and communities are
hit hard while others are almost
completely missed."
Stocker said many highly
profitable and rapidly growing
industries do not pay their fair
share under the present tax system.

"In general terms, these are
activities that generate large incomes but employ little taxable
property," he said.
"Some examples are the professions, advertising and consulting firms," he said.
Stocker said Ohio's dependence on the property tax, ."the
most stable of all taxes", was
not out of line in the depression years but it is today.
He said sales and excise taxes also are relatively unresponsive to economic changes. The
sales tax was adopted in 1934
and the cigaret tax in 1931.
"Our sales tax, because it
fails to reach the rapidly growing personal service component,
does not keep up with economic
expansion," he said.
Stocker said although the
problems he cited are not the
only ones causing fiscal problems for state and local governments, they are the key.
"There are innumerable ways
in which more tax money can be
obtained," he said, "but there
are only a few that will also
correct such depression born
structural problems . . . "

100 Doctors Will Have to Go
COLUMBUS- THE ARMED FORCES WILL take 100 Ohio
doctors into military service by July 1, regardless of the effect the
physician's absence might have on his community, the Ohio
Selective Service System said today. State medical officials said
the draft could cause an "intolerable situation" in many areas of
the state.
Maj. Richard Thomas, chief of the manpower section of th1~
Ohio Selective Service System, said most of the 100 physicians, in
addition to 11 osteopaths and 32 dentists, would receive inductio11l
notices during April and May with all100 receiving notification by
July 1. "Because of an order by President Nixon, there have been
no deferments allowed for any reason since April 23, 1970, unless
the person was deferred or requested a deferment before that
date," said Thomas.

Soviets Key to Mid East
f

NEW CONCORD, OHIO - ISRAELI AMBASSADOR to tbe
United States, Gen. Itzhak Rabin, claims the Soviet Union is the
main obstacle to peace in the Middle East. "For the Soviet Unidn,
elimination of tension in the Middle East would be a total
disaster," Rabin said Thursday night to an audience at
Muskingum College.
"The present situation makes the Arabs dependent on them,"
he said. "Since the Six Day war, Russia has poured $3.5 billion
worth of war material into Egypt." He said that if the SoviP.t
Union were to intervene on a massive scale, "I'm not sure "~e
could stand it."

f\

•

Free Trade Battle Looms
WASHINGTON - PRESIDE~T NIXON'S rejection of a
Japanese offer to restrict textile imports may have touched off a&lt;n
all-out free trade battle in Congress and - perhaps more
significantly - dropped a new roadblock in front of Nixon'.s
domestic legislative program,
Nixon turned down Thursday a .Japanese offer to restrict the
(Continued on pagt• IOJ

Dress Code: an Open Letter to a 'Kid'
By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Superintendent
Meigs Local School District
AN OPEN LETTER TO A "KID"
You may have noticed in the Wednesday
newspaper that there was some discussion about dress
and dress code at our Tuesday evening board meeting.
One item that was not reported completely was a brief

Speaking of Schools-No. 179

"You see, Kid, people who hire people aren't 'with'
a lot of things. We know more about Bing than Ringo,
and we have some Stone-Age ideas about who owes
whom a living. Maybe that makes us prehistoric, but
there's nothing wrong with the checks we sign, and if
you want one you'd better tune to our wave length.
"Ever hear of 'empathy'? It's the trick of seeing
the other fellow's side of things. I couldn't have cared
less that you're behind in your car payments. That's
your problem, and President Nixon's. What I needed
was someone who'd go out on the job, keep his eyes
open, and work for me like he'd work for himself. If you
have even the vaguest idea of what I'm trying to say,
let it show the next time you ask for a job. You'll be
head and shoulders over the rest.
"Look kid: The only time jobs grew on trees was
while most of the manpower was wearing G.I.'s and
pulling K.P. For all the rest of history you've had to get
a job like you get a girl: 'Case' the situation, wear a
clean shirt, and try to appear reasonably willing.
"Maybe jobs aren't as plentiful right now, but a lot
of us can remember when master craftsmen walked
the streets. By comparison you don't know the
meaning of 'scarce.'
"You may not believe it, but all around you employers are looking for young men smart enough to go
after a job in the old-fashioned way. When they find
one, they can 't wait to unload some of their worries on
him.
"For both our sakes get eager, will you?"

magazine article that board member Frank Porter
read.
The article was entitled "An Open Letter to a Kid."
It was originally printed in the New Mexico Building
Magazine and was reprinted in the Industrial News
Review Digest. I include this article for your consideration. It is as follows.
Dear Kid:
"Today you asked me for a job. From the look of
your shoulders as you walk out, I suspect you've been
turned down before, and maybe you believe by now
that kids out of high school can't find work.
"But, I hired a teen-ager today. You saw him. He
was the one with polished shoes and a necktie. Not
experience, neither of you had any. It was his attitude
that put him on the payroll instead of you. Attitude,
son. A-T-T-I-T-U-D-E. He wanted the job badly enough
to shuck the leather jl-lcket, get a haircut, and look in
the phone book to find out what this company makes.
ANOTHER QUOTE from the same magazine
He did his best to impress me. That's where he edged
listed TV's Sam Levenson's Ten Commandments for
you out.

Parents as reprinted from the Tulsa, Oklahoma, Star.
Here they are for you to read.
-Thou shalt guard thy children in the home and
on the street.
- Thou shalt make thy home a sanctuary of love
and devotion.
- Thou shalt honor the teachers of thy children
and teach thy children to honor them.
- Thou shalt not condone the faults of thy children
through a misguided sense of family loyalty.
-Thou shalt teach thy children respect for the law
and keep them from the companionship of children
who indicate disrespect for the law.
- Thou shalt not lead thy children into temptation
by providing them with the means thereof: too much
money, a car, or adult privileges.
- Thou shalt enforce decency in the dress of thy
daughters, and dignity in the dress of thy sons.
- Thou shalt protect the morals of thy children
from the indiscretions of youthful ardor and inexperience.
- Thou shalt conduct thine own affairs in such a
manner as to set an example worthy of imitation by the
children.
- Thou shalt not permit thy children to bear arms
except in the service of their country.
IF YOU HAVE read this far, you should have
something to think about and something to discuss with
any teenager in your family. How about ricing your fair
share in helping these young people toward social and
emotional maturi'.y? They need all the assistance that
they can get.

PENNY SMITH
DOING HER BIT to help
humanity is Penny Smith,
Racine. A collection is underway currently of Betty
Crocker coupons which can
be used to help secure a
kidney machine for the
Holzer Medical Center
Penny, a member of Girl
Scout Troop 137, Racine, has
collected 345 coupons for the
machine. Coupons are being
accepted at The Daily Sentinel office.

Contest

Offered
Meigs County high school
students have the opportunity to
research interesting local
history and pick up cash prizes
at the same time.
For the second year, the
Newcomers Group of the .Vleigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society is sponsoring an oral
and written county history
contest.
Open to high school students
in grades nine through 12, the
contest will feature cash prizes
of $8 and $4.50 to the top winners
in both the oral and \\Titten
work in each high school. The
top winner of each school in
both categories will compete for
county honors on April 22 with
the first place winners in both
speaking and \\Titing to receive
prizes of $12.50.
In the speaking contest each
oration is to be not less than
three nor more than five
minutes in length. It must be
original and deal w1th any
phase of Meigs County history
such as an event, docrnnent,
industry, a person or persons.
The written section of the
contest may cover the same
subject matter. Each composition is to be not less than 500
or more than 1,500 words,
typewritten and double-spaced.
Judgwg of the speaking
contest will be on the basis of
originality of selection, expression of thoughts , voice of
speaker including such qualities
as force, inflection, pause, rate,
breath control, body expression,
personality
of
speaker, and general effectiveness . The written
evaluation will be on the basis of
originality of selection, validity
of contents, general Pffecliveness and grammar .
All entries in the count)
contest must be sublJJitted to
the SOCICt), P. 0. BOJ&gt; 32
Pomeroy, on or before Apri! 15.
The Rev. Stanley Plattcnburg is
heading the contest for the
SOClety.

�GENE GRATE
GENE GRATE, a student
at Bethany Nazarene College
and son of Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Grate of near
Rutland, will be speaker at
the youth revival which will
be held at the Hysell Run
Free Methodist Church.
Young Grate will speak at
7:30 tonight and Saturday
evening at the church and at
the morning worship service
at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday.
Special music will be
provided at both of the
evening services. The Rev.
Cecil Wise, pastor of the
Hysell Run church, extends
an invitation to the public.

school. New members are, front row, 1-r, Debbie LaValley,
and Loretta Middleswart; second row, Debbie Norris, Patti
Thle, Cheryl Powell, Rita Salser, Bill Cornell, Beth Theiss,
and Candy Hoback; third row, Ed Cross and Tim Ihle.

ELEVEN STUDENTS at Southern High School were
tapped for National Honor Society membership during a
National Honor Society Assembly Thursday at the high

Leave Was
Extended

OFFICERS AND MEMBERS OF the National Honor Society at Southern High School, front
row, 1-r, Pam Buck, vice president, Denise Snodgrass, reporter, Sandy Sayre, treasurer, and
Karen Sayre, secretary; back row, Tom Hamm, president, Keith Ashley, pianist, Sharon
Ervin, Dan Nease and Roger Nease, members.

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Maxine Price, Com., Ethel
McMillan, dec., to Ellis McMillan, parcels, Sutton.
Ellis McMillan, Phyllis
McMillan to Roy Dowell,
Beverly Dowell, parcels, Sutton.
Clair F. Shenefield, Lela B.
Shenefield to Ohio Power Co.,
easement, Salem.
Ben E. Petrel, dec., to Addie
E. Petrel, Ruth Ann Feuerbacher, Ben Petrel, affid. for
trans., Sutton.
THESE WERE THE TOP seven s~udents of Southern High School in an Ohio University
Edna Mae Monk to Marvin L.
sponsored American History Contest. Front row, 1-r, Keith Ashley, first place, Jeff Harris,
Monk, divorce decree, Rutland.
second place, Patti Ihle, third place; back row, Denise Snodgrass and Karen Sayre, tied for
Marvin L. Monk to Mary
fourth place, Sharon Ervin, fifth, Shirley Congo, sixth, and Carl Weese, History and GovernWright, 77 acres, Rutland.
ment teacher.
Anna Charlotte Copeland,
Lucille Story, Leo Story, Janice
Lochacy , Cha
hary to
Ckor S Ca
~
Carper, 16 t1
d
Jemo Ass
Henrietta Rob
dleport.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The have offered many of the pro- voter registration as proposed
Wilbur E. Gillilan, Mary E. General Assembly has recessed posals contained in the Gilligan by the Democrats would "open
Gillilan to Donald Pooler, until Monday, when it will re- administration election reform the door to fraud."
Barbara Pooler, 3 acres, turn for an 8 p.m. address on package. Some are similar to
In the area of education,
Chester.
Sens. Ralph S. Regula, R - Nathe budget and taxes for the the GOP bill.
Olaf L. Thomas Jr., Ida A. next two years by Gov. John
Major provisions of the Re- varre, and Oliver Ocasek, the
publican bill would:
Thomas to Gene Bass, Avenell J. Gilligan.
Senate Democratic whip from
Bass, lot, Pomeroy.
- Implement a constitutional Akron, offered a bipartisan pair
It is doubtful the legislators
will lose any sleep over the amendment adopted by the vot- of bills designed to set up eduweekend anticipating Gilligan's ers to reduce the residency re- cation resource centers and proproposals, but many have ex- quirement from one year to six vide an "adequate" basic education for every child in Ohio.
:-JEW YORK (UPI) - Chase pressed growing curiosity over months for Ohio voters.
Reduce
from
Under one of the bills, teach7
per
cent
to
1
how
much
the
governor
hopes
Manhattan bank Thursday cut
its prime business loan rate to to spend and how he expects per cent of the electorate the ers' basic starting salaries
number of signatures required would be increased from $4,500
to raise the money.
5 1 ~ per cent from 5% per cent,
The House and Senate Thurs- to formally establish and main- a year to $6,800, school s ubsieffective immediately. Chase is
dies for educating children from
the nation's third largest bank. day received another heavy tain a political party.
-Establish
major,
intermediwelfare families would be subbundle
of
bills,
including
RepubMoney market sources expect
stantially increased, and an imother commercial banks across lican education and election re- ate and minor parties.
-Provide for absentee regis- partial referee would hear
the nation will follow suit, form packages.
tration of voters by mail.
teacher contract termination
Proposes Election Changes
although some were surprised
-Extend
from
40
to
30
days
complaints.
The
GOP
election
reform
bill,
by the half-point Chase move
Pollution Control Planned
because most of the recent drafted in the office of Secre- before an election the period
Rep. George V. Voinovich, Rprime rate cuts have been 1 4 tary of State Ted W. Brown, for voter registration.
Cleveland, announced plans to
Brown Disagrees
was introduced in the Senate by
point.
Brown said a Gilligan propos- introduce next week a major
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, who promised his Sen- al to expand the period still bill replacing the air and waate Elections Committee would further to 10 days beft•re an ter pollution control boards with
Mississippi's state capital. begin hearings on it within 10 election would be an adminis- a new Environmental ProtecJackson, is named in honor days.
trative nightmare.
tion Agency under control of
of Andrew Jackson .
He also said house - to-house the governor.
House Democrats already
The agency would govern air,
r---~-------------------------------------water and land pollution control
now relegated to a very minor
1
j place in the state Health Department, according to VoinoI
.
vich.
IS'V JACK O'BRIAN
banned gals in pants, now don't even bother to
In another development on
CLEAVER SEES LEARY AS
discourage hot pants ... In fact, the staffs con- pollution control, the new House
A DRUG ON THE MARKET
sider them great optical therapy.
Environment Committee set up
NEW YORK - The writer going around
Sammy Gallop, who wrote happy songs specially to handle environmenclaiming she has an okay to write a biography of ("There Must Be a WaY,", etc.) and committed tal protection legislation killed
Rose Kennedy - hasn't '"Mrs. Kennedy says suicide last week, was just one of many its first bill, which would have
she'd rather do it herself ... "21" co-owner songwriters whose lives couldn't be as blithe as set standards for noise and
Sheldon Tannen's in the first scene - at "21" their ditties: Felix Powell won the prize for the emissions from aircraft.
The bill was postponed indefiof "The Lull Machine" ... Eldridge Cleaver morale-boosting number for WW I buddies with
proclaimed Timothy Leary now is in his out- his "Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit nitely on a near - unanimous
group because Leary's drug adoration is a Bag" but died of his own choice in '42 ... Billy vote following testimony that
"distraction" to the Revolution, and here's the Hill's "Home in Wyomin' " and "Cabin in the the federal government has
irony: Cleaver's first conviction, before starting Pines" were among his many peaceful- pre - empted the right to set
his illustrious career as a rapist, came when he contented numbers, but Billy also wrote "The emisswn standards and control
noise of aircraft in flight.
was caught with a shopping bag full of Last Roundup" on the way to his suicide.
The House unanimously passmarijuana ... Anyone claiming all this isn't true,
Oscar-nominee (for "Ryan's Daughter")
just consult Cleaver's "Soul on Ice" book in John Mills has been offered the job of running ed and sent the Senate a bill
which he brags it as it was ... Intriguing whisper Australia's film industry ... Liz Taylor and setting up a Capital Improveout of Haiti: That Papa Doc Duvalier's main Margaret Leighton co-star in "X, Y and Zee" ments Committee to replace
two existing agencies.
business associate is Joseph "Joe Bananas" and have something else in common: Liz's ex,
Michael Wilding, is La Leighton's current ...
Bonanno of The Mob.
Kirk Kerkorian tells pals backing Jim Joan Garrity, square name of the "J" who wrote
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Aubrey, TV's erstwhile Jungle Jim, has cost him "The Sensuous Woman" por-novelty, bought a
ADMISSIONS
Frances
$60 million, meaning the $100,000,000 it took to condominium in one of Palm Beach's swankiest Tygrat, Thomas McNeeley,
control MGM now is worth $40 mill ... Joyce buildings - and passed the board of directors :virs. Inez Burdette, Paul Akers,
Brothers ducked questions before the Frazier-Ali simply by not mentioning her smuttiest-of-the- all Point Pleasant; William
fight she hasn't uttered much on prizefighting year best seller.
Wray, Ashton; Nellie Zahrmdt,
since she won the $64,000 Question using boxing
Louis Prima at his Rainbow Grill opening Mason:
Montie
Davis,
as her spectalty. One of the longrun N. Y. night gave credit to retired Bdwy. Columnist Columbus; Agnes Rusche!,
restaurants may have closed by the: time this Louis Sobol for discovering him; Louis Sobol saw Hartford; Dell Barnett, Rockgets into print.
Prima perform in New Orleans in the early castle and Mrs . Harold
Three stars sure picked bad shows : Angela
thirties, told him to look him up inN. Y. if he ever Meadows, Mason.
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Otis
Lansbury (flopped already, out of town), Carol wanted a shot at the Big Apple, and Prima did
Channing and Danny Kaye .. . "21" and the just that - and Sobol kept his always dependable Knight, Mrs. Franklin F ields
and Joe Hamm;.ek
Colony restaurants; two high -r · ~ . ..: spots that once word ... The rest ts nmsy jazz history.

A dress Comes Mon ay

Interest Cut

Voice along Broadway

THIS VOCAL GROUP known as the "King's
Messengers" from Akron will be appearing at the Hysell Run
Free Methodist Church during the morning worship service
at 10:30 Sunday. The group will also sing at a "teen
singspiration" to be held at the church at 2:30p.m. Sunday.
The public is invited.

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

iHelen Help Us!

I
I

'I

By Helen Bottel

t

I
I

1
I

ECOLOGY, POLLUTION: POPULAR
ISSUE OR MAJOR ISSUE?
Dear Helen:
Is this ecology-pollution kick we're on just a fad like bomb
shelters and air raid watches - and probably population control
too? I wonder if we'll still be scurrying around to "ecology centers" and madly collecting bottles, etc. five years from now -or
will something else have taken front-center in our reform drive?
- DOUBTFUL
Dear Doubtful:
Five years from now - I HOPE - pollution-ecology education
will be so widespread that we will no longer need to "scurry
around" campaigning. Presently, waking people up to the
dangers is everybody's job. And my correspondents do their
share. Read on:
Dear Helen:
"Mrs. H.S., Texas," said, "Let the government do it." The
reason we find our government in such a bureaucratic Il;less is
we've said this too often and too long. The individual citizen
doesn't want to take responsibility. Why should we expe~ the
government to tell industry it can or can't make a product wflen a
buyers' boycott of a harmful item is far more effective? The
is
company will soon change! The best way to enforce a "No
not to remove it from reach but to offer a better replacementafter teaching the danger of the first.
Take away freedom of choice and responsibility from the individual and he becomes an automaton. Is this what Mrs. H. S.
would like to see? - MRS. B. G.
Dear Helen :
Salvage centers are multiplying. The health of the Earth is in
our hands. Maybe it's a "nuisance" having three garbage ca~
(for aluminum bottles and "garbage") and carting recyclables to
centers, but this little start may grow into great awareness
Manufacturers constantly feel the public pulse and when they
know we won't stand for pollution (and that means the bigger
dirts in our air and waterways) they'll come around. Our job is to
educate! And that includes flooding our Congressmen and
lawmakers with millions of letters. Have at it, people! - CINDY:
MRS. V. C.
Dear Helen:
The industries are already spending billions to find solutions for
pollution. Is it too much to ask that we expend a little effort, instead of expecting Big Brother (the government) to do it all? We
the people are the cause of pollution, not the factory, not the
automobile, not the government. When enough of us admit this
and stop buying pollutants and using them carelessly we will
begin to see results. - JOHN T.
Dear Mrs. Bottel:
A while back one of your pollution - conscious readers ~m­
plained bitterly about the packaging of a box of crackers: About
the "heavy plastic bag and then the four individually wrapped
packages."
While she mentioned no brand name, we believe she referred to
our product.
We would like to point out that the plastic bag and inner
separate air tight packages DO keep the product fresher for
considerably longer periods. The new packaging was developed to
meet the desires and needs of our customers, many of whom live
in damp areas where crispness disappears overnight. Sales have
zoomed, proving the need.
We've had letters from 'pleased customers who report that a
flooded kitchen left almost all packaged food a soggy mess except
our thoughtfully wrapped crackers. We even received a report on
the cargo on a sunken boat - we'll let you guess what ca,me up
"krispy."
Also, the polyethylene bag does not need to be burned. It has a
long life and many uses in the kitchen. - Sunshiningly yours, H.
C., Public Relations Director, Sunshine Biscuits, Inc.
(Kitchen-OoOders and boat-sinkers of the world: Help is a~
hand! - H.)

J ..

~------------------------------------~--------------------------~~----------------L

Last year 12 Meigs County
servicemen serving overseas
learned of the births of their
children through messages
processed by the local
American Red Cross Chapter.
Another service related to
childbirth was performed by the
Red Cross Chapter at the time
of the birth of a son to Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Roush. Roush was
home on leave at the time of the
birth of his son but was due to
report to his U. S. Navy station
on the day his wife and son were
to be discharged from the
hospital.
The attending physician felt
that Mike's presence for a few
days longer would be a morale
booster. Mike had not been
permitted to even hold the
youngster at the hospital. The
-Red Cross verified the doctor's
recommendation to the military
and Mike was permitted to
remain home a few extra days
with his family.
Mike, the son of Mrs. Mary
Roush and John Roush of
Pomeroy, is stationed in
California. His address is AMSAN John M. Roush, VFP-3. 1st
LT, NAS, Miramar, California.
The annual fund drive of the
Meigs Red Cross Chapter is
currently underway.

Mike

ush

A thought for today: American writer John Marquand said,
"His father watched him aero..
the gulf of years and patho
which always must divide a
father from his son."

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

2)6 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428
"

BROWNOUT WARNING
WASHINGTON (UPI) Some parts of the nation are in
for another summer of power
shortages and brownouts, according to Assistant Treasury
Secretary James R. Smith. "We
are in a crunch," Smith said
Thursday. "There is no question
about it." He said he did not
anticipate, however, that any
area of the country would suffer
a complete blackout.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published dally l't&lt;:cept
Saturday by The Ohio Vall ey
Publishing Company, Hl
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
.45769. Business Office Phone
;92-2 156, Editorial Phone 992 2157.
Second c lass postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertising
representative
B.ottinelli ,.,
Gallagher, Inc., 12 E ast 42nd
St .;New York City, New York.
Subscription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service pot available: _one
month ' $1.75. By mail in Ohio
and W. Va ., One year $14.00.
Six months $7.25. l'hree
mopth s $4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times.
;..sentinel.
-

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Quality In Materials
Quality You Can Trust.

-w. fo/'~in

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,

�Marauders
Honored
BY KATE CROW
"Basketball is a clinic on life
yet it is a lot of fun," Craig
Love, outstanding basketball
center on the Ohio University
basketball team, told members
of the Meigs basketball squad at
the fourth annual basketball
banquet Thursday night.

•

Love told of his experiences
as a player for Ohio University,
adding, "Basketball has taught
me many things, among them,
how to get along with people,
discipline, and goals." Love is
an engineering major with a 3.6
average.

\
I

"""

opening of the new gym and the
seven overtimes in which the
varsity won two games. He
said:
"I am happy to have had such
a fine group for boys, and I am
sad to see seven of them leave."
Wolfe introduced assistant
coaches Bill Wickline and
Roger Birch. Wickline introduced the reserve team and
Wolfe the varsity squad and
managers.
The most valuable player
award went to the three-year
varsity regular senior Jeff Tyo.
Tyo was also ?resented the foul
shooting award. The best
rebounder award went to Jeff
Morris and the best defensive
award to Rick Van Matre.

Nolan Swackhamer served as
master
of
ceremonies.
Swackhamer, at 5-7, once a
"pivot man" who played under
and around the basket for OU,
introduced faculty members
and Marauder head coach Carl ,
Wolfe.

THE LONG AND SHORT OF IT -Nolan Swackhamer
right, in the 1930s a 5-7_ pivot man for the Ohio Universit;
basketball team "and a darned good one" according to
old timers, is dwarfed by the modern version of the man who
works around close to the enemy basket, Craig Love, of the
1970-71 OU team. Love was guest speaker at the fourth annual banquet Thursday night at Meigs High School for the
Marauder team.

THE MOST VALUABLE PLAYER AWARD IN
Marauder basketball went to senior forward Jeff Tyo
Thursday night at the fourth annual basketball banquet.

Changes Are Noted
In All-Star Selections

Wolfe, in his remarks, thanked
the school administration for its
fine cooperation. He reviewed
highlights of the season, the

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(UPI)--Several changes have
been made in the balloting
procedures for the 1971 major
league, star team, it was
announced today by baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
The fans once again will vote
for the starting teams of the
American
and
National
Leagues, but the most notable
change is an increase of 33 per
cent in the number of
candidates who will appear on
the ballots. Kuhn named 128
nominees who will be listed on
the ballots
Eight players have been
nominated for each infield
position and catcher, as op-

NCAA Play To
Start Saturday
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)Marquette and Western Kentucky, ranked No. 2 and No. 8
nationally, will have a homecourt advantage away from
home Saturday when they play
unranked Miami of Ohio and
Jacksonville m first-round
games of the CAA basketball
tournament.
The games, both on national
television, will be played in the
1~,345 capacity Notre Dame
Cmvocation Center, and every
se~t will be filled. But both
M~rquette and Western Kentmky requested
.-~ received
('1{ a IC'kets
It!
s
t th

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of 750.
Jacksonville returned some
tickets and the Dolphins, ranked No. 6 nationally, will have
few fans in the stands to give
them vocal support, while Miamt probably will not use more
than its initial allotment.
Marquette, with a 38-game
winning streak and unbeaten
this season with 26 wins, was
a solid favorite to trip unr.anked Miami in the opening game
of the program. The contest
should be a defensive spectacle
since the Warriors were thirdbest nationally, allowing or.ly
1.'3 pomts per game, and Miami
wa fourth best, permitting 63.7.
Miami, wh1ch has a 20-4 seaon record, also has a winnin~
streak, 13 games. It has not
played Marquette since 1006
and has lost both games played
previously with the Warriors.
N.liami Coach Darrell Hedric
said his team does not have
"any super stars" and all 12
players have contributed to the
Redskins' outstanding record.
"We had to sell our players
on the fact that we would have
to play as a 12-man team," he
said. "We had to let them
know that every player would

have to give us 100 per cent
at all times if we were to win.
"They know they can be expected to go into any game in
key situations," said Hedric.
"These are the most dedicated, unselfish, hard working
kids that I have ever been
around," he said. "It doesn't
make any difference to them
who scores or who plays, just
as long as we win."
The Jacksonville - Western
Kentucky contest should be a
sharp contrast to the opener
since the Dolphins, with 101
points per game, lead the nation in scoring, while Western
Kentucky, led by 7-foot center
Jim McDaniels, also ranks high
on offense.
But the Hilltoppers won't
have a height advantage since
Jacksonville boasts a 7-foot-2
center, Artis Gilmore, and a 7foot forward, Pembrook Burrows.
Jacksonville, 22-3 this season,
took one of its losses from
Western Kentucky 97-84, but
defeated the Hilltoppers 109-96
in the NCAA first round a year
ago. Western Kentucky has a
20-5 mark this season.

Ohio H. S. Basketball
Tournament Scores
RACING LEADER
By United Press International
Class AAA
MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica
At Cleveland
(UPI)- Ted Turner's American Cleveland
East
Tech
90
Eagle, a 12-meter sloop which
Cleveland E. 70
At Normandy
is the point leader in a series of
. Ignatius 72 Valley Forge 58
19 internation;d races counting
At Eastlake
toward the first ocean racing
ainesville Harvey 55 Geneva
46
world championship, heads a
At Bowling Green
record entry list for the Miami- I
Celina 90 Mansfield Senior 63
to-Monteg~/Bay race starting
At Canton
Massillon 54 Canton Lincoln 50
March 19.
At Toledo
More t n 50 ocean sailing }
Toledo Woodward 44 Toledo St.
yachts a~· entered for the BOOJohn 40
mile ra e, including Salty
At Lorain
Tiger, o ned by John Powell 1 Bay 76 Avon Lake 70 (2 otl
Troy
and Wplly Frank and the Springfield AtNorth
69 Dayton
runnetrup boat in the world( Stebbins 52
Class AA
point
At Canton
I
Canton Lehman 60 Akron South
59
Fairless 63 Manchester 56 {ot)
At Marietta
Martins Ferry 84 Morgan 73
At Ottawa-Galandorf
Lima Bath 72 Napoleon 70
At New Concord
Coshocton 54 New Concord J.
Glenn 47
At Toledo
Rossford 59 Eastwood 32
At Berea
North Ridgeville 64 Byzantine
62
At Youngstown
Young stown North 67 Poland 57
At Urbana
Tipp City 84 Bellebrook 67
Class A
At Columbus
Mar on Pleasant 66 Canal

~

I

'•

You'll purr with pleos'f.e
at the satisfaction you'll
receive at H &amp; F, BlOCK.
Point your po"s toward
H &amp; R BLOCK a 1d receive
prompt and quoror\teed
accurate serv· e. It's a
good place to place your
confidenc e.

Dodgers Want Sadecki
By United Press International
The Los Angeles Dodgers are
reportedly interested in obtaining Ray Sadecki from the New
York Mets, but the veteran
southpaw may have flunked his
job interview.
The Dodgers, who are supposedly ready to deal either
catcher Jeff Torborg or catcher
Tom Haller to the Mets for
Sadecki, got a look at the 30year-old lefty in an exhibition
game Thursday and tagged him
with a 5-4 loss.
Sadecki, who worked three
innings in relief, was tagged for
four hits, walked two and
struck out two but failed to
retire a batter in the ninth
inning when the Dodgers rallied
for two runs to win.
Jerry Grote of the Mets had
the game's only home run.
Other Games
In other camps: Lou Brock's
three-run homer in the eighth
inning carried the St. Louis
Cardinals to a 7-4 triumph over
the Boston Red Sox. It was the
Cardinals' fifth straight victory
... The Kansas City Royals held
tt&gt;e New York Yankees hitless
for 6 2-3 innings but had to
rally for four runs in the lOth
inning to score their first spring
victory, 7-3. Joe Keough's runscoring triple was the big hit
for Kansas City in the lOth.
Amos Otis had a 450-foot homer
for the Royals early in the
Winchester 57
At Celina
St. Henry 79 Wapakoneta St.
Joseph 73
At Lima
Grover Hill 97 Pandora Gilboa
84
At Findlay
Vanlue 73 Arcadia 72
At Columbus
Ridgedale 60 Lancaster Fisher
45
At Chillicothe
Crooksville 62 Paint Valley 60
At Steubenville
Indian
Valley
South
65
Springfield Local 38
Newcomerstown 59 Conotton
Valley 45

game.
Al Kaline drew a basesloaded walk in the ninth inning
to force home the winning run
as the Detro1t Tigers edged the
Houston Astros, 8-7. The game
featured five homers, two by
Detroit's Norm Cash. Jim
Northrup had a three-run
homer for the Tigers while
Doug Rader and Jim Wynn
each homered for the Astros ...
The Atlanta Braves took
advantage of two Pittsburgh
errors to score three unearned
runs in the seventh inning and
defeat the Pirates, 5-2. Phil
Niekro of the Braves turned in
four innings of two-hit ball to
spark the victory.
Johnny Bench had two hits
and drove in three runs and Bill
Plummer had a two-run homer
and a run-scoring single as the
Cincinnati Reds edged the
Minnesota Twins, 9-8, for their
first victory this spring. Cesar
Tovar finally agreed to terms
with the Tw~ns for $50,000 ...
Carlos May paced a 16-hit
attack with four hits as the
Chicago White Sox bombed the
Philadelphia Phillies, 9-2.
Padres Club Cubs
Rafael Robles collected three
singles, scored four runs and
drove home a pair to lead the
San Diego Padres to an 11-7
triumph over the Chicago Cubs.
Larry Stahl also had three hits
for the Padres ... Danny Walton
hit a three-run pinch-hit homer
in the seventh inning to give
the Milwaukee Brewers a 7-5

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In the second round of play at
the Fourth Annual Meigs Invitational Girls Basketball
Tournament, Nelsonville-York
dumped Federal Hocking 44 to
17.
For Nelsonville, the big gun
was Hannas with 16 points,
followed by Evans with 10,
Dexter 7, Stage 5, Coffman 4
and Howe 2.
For Federal Hocking, Cole
had 6, M. Delaval 4, Gorrell 3,
Brandberry and Russell 2 each.
Three games are on tap for
tonight beginning at 5 p.m.,
Meigs versus Gallipolis, in the
losers' bracket; at 6:30 p.m.,
winners Kyger Creek vs.
Belpre, and at 8 p.m. Athens
goes against Nelsonville.

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posed to six last year, and 24
for the three outfield positions,
an increase of six.
Baseball was embarrassed
last year when several outstanding players, such as
National League batting champion Rico Carty of Atlanta,
were left off the ballots. Carty
was elected to the team by a
strong write-in vote.
The Gillette Company once
again will underwrite the costs
associated with the election
which last year drew more tha~
two million computerized ballots. The balloting period will
extend from May 28 through
June 30 for the game being
played at Detroit's Tiger
Stadium on July 13.

7 p.m. - South Point {14-6)
vs Ross Southeastern {23-0) .
Waverly (19 l)
8:30 p.m.
vs Federal Hocking {18-2).
Championship game 7: 30p.m .•
Saturday.
Class A District)
(At Chillicothe)
7:30p.m . - Fairland {19-ll
vs. Western Pike {21 -2).

Plus Fed. Ex. Tax

~¥=========~~~

Nel-York is
Cage Victor

triumph over the San Francisco
Giants.
Reggie Jackson and Dave
Duncan each hit two-run
homers to spark the Oakland
Athletics to a 6-1 victory over
the California Angels. The
game was hotly disputed by
California manager Lefty Phillips and general manager Dick
Walsh over use of the three-ball
walk experiment. The Angels
claimed the rule should not
have been enforced since both
teams had not agreed to it
beforeheand.
Jerry Davanon's two-run single in the eighth inning carried
the Baltimore Orioles to a 6-4
victory over the Tokyo Giants
... Ken Harrelson collected two
doubles and rookie Mark
NBA DRAFT NOTES
Ballinger worked five scoreless
NEW YORK (UPI)- A com
innings as the Cleveland
Indians blanked the Lotte flip will be held in Commissioner Walter Kennedy's office at
Orions of Japan, 2-0.
noon next Monday to determine
whether the Cleveland CavaTonight's Games
liers or Portland Trail Blazers
(Class AAA District)
will get first pick in the
(At Athens)
7 p .m . - Steubenville {19-1) National Basketball Association
collegiate player draft.
vs. Marietta (8-12).
8:30p.m. - Cambridge (14-6)
Portland will call the flip,
vs. Chillicothe (13-7). Cham - which will be made with an
pionship game 8 p.m., Saturuncirculated 1946 silver half
day.
•
(Class AA District)
dollar, minted the year the
(At Rio Grande)
NBA was established.

$33.85

guara~tee accurate preparation of every tax return.
we ma.&lt;e ~ny errors that cost you any penalty or
tnterest, VI! wtll pay that penalty or interest.
.

We

RICK VAN MATRE and Jeff Tyo, 1-r, presented Meigs High head basketball coach
Carl Wolfe with a gift at the fourth annual basketball banquet Thursday night.

BOTH

FEDERAL
AND
STATE

Tyo also won the foul shooting award. Jeff Morris, junicr
center, won the best rebounder award and Rick VanMatre
the best defensive player award. Left to right are Coach Carl
Wolfe, Morris, Van Matre and Tyo.

N. 2nd Ave.

992-2238

Middleport, 0.

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

the professional-quality dog food 11
with formula built on
35 years' experience

Wayne Dog Food in cons, the nutritious doily
ration your dog needs to stay healthy, happy
and full of life.
Cooked in the con to seal in all the fine seasonings, natural flavors and aroma dogs love!
Also available: tasty conned Wayne Extra
Special, completely nourishing in four hearty
varieties.

ODERN SUPPLY

992-2164
Pomeroy o
T HE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
PETS
STABLES
LARGE AND SMALL ANIMALS .

399 West Main Street

LAWNS

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

FOR

GA~DENS

----------~

�4 - The Daily Sentinel. MidnlPnnrt-Pnm"r"" n
--

1(\''71

1\L-.....1

Pro Standings

lA

II

KYGER CREEK TROPHY WINNERS - Three senior
members of the 1970-71 Kyger Creek cage team received
trophies during the school's annual basketball banquet. Ken
Brown, 6-1 forward, second from left, was presented the Best
Free Throw Trophy and the Best Field Goal Percentage
Trophy. Wade Henson, 6-1 center, was named the team's

Most Valuable Player and Best Rebounder and Gary
Saunders, 5-7 guard, was awarded the trophy for showing the
most hustle. They are flanked by Head Coach John Sang.
Howard (Jack) Duncan, former KC Junior High Coach and a
former star eager at Rio Grande College was the featured
speaker.

Blazers Humble Bullets
By United Press International
The Baltimore Bullets got a
good example Thursday night
of how hard life can be without
Wes Unseld.
Unseld, who dragged the
Bullets from last place to a
consistent playoff contender in
his 'three-year pro career, is
sidelined indefinitely with a
badly sprained ankle. His
absence showed Thursday night
as Geoff Petrie scored 30 points
to lead the Portland Trail
Blazers to a 136-118 rout of the
Bullets.
Petrie, making a solid bid for
Rookie of the Year honors,
exploded for 19 points during a
38-point second quarter that put
Portland ahead 67-50.
In other NBA action, Seattle
trounced Detroit 130-97 and San
Diego swamped Boston 115-91.

Don Smith and Spencer
PT. PLEASANT -Lawrence
Haywood combined for 57 G. Mohr has announced efpoints to help the Sonics blast fective immediately he is
Detroit. Dave Bing led Detroit prepared to serve the public in
scorers with 22 points.
both funeral and ambulance
Stu Lantz scored 29 points service. Mohr stated that Carl
and Elvin Hayes added 22 as W. Siders, who has been
San Diego ripped the Celtics, associated with him for more
moving the Rockets to within than 13 years will continue the
two games of idle San association. Siders is also a
Francisco in the race for the member of the Point Pleasant
final playoff spot in the Pacific City Council.
Division. The Rocket defense
It was explained that their
held Boston to a total of 37 services will be provided
points in the second and third through the cooperation of two
periods.
area funeral homes, Chapman
GARDENERS TO MEET
The
Rutland
Alumni
Association will meet Sunday at
1 p.m. in the Rutland gymnasium to discuss plans for the
annual alumni reunion.

Made Arrangements

,_____________________,
I

I

1 Value-Rat~d Buys . . .

1

I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

I

I

I

I

I

II
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Mrs. Joe Bolin, Mrs. Fred
Williamson and Mrs. James
Carpenter made the floral
arrangements displayed at the
Rutland Branch, Pomeroy
Nationa:
Bank
during
February. Reds were featured
in several of the arrangements
which carried out the Valentine
theme . The display of
arrangements daily is one of the
continuing projects of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
with Mrs . Bruce May as
chairman.

70 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air ________ '000
69 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, air. _______~000

I
I

Fairview
News Notes

67 Olds 88 H.T. Sedan, air--------- '1795
1 66 Olds 98 Lux. Sedan, air ________ }1795
66 Ford LTD 4 Door Hardtop. ________$1595
67 Chev. Impala 2 Dr. H.T. ·-------- '1595
67 Olds 98 4 dr., air, ------------'1795
66 Buick Wildcat 4 dr.,.__________ ,sl395
66 Chevrolet Impala 4 door ---------·'1195
65 Olds 88 4 dr. H.T., ___________ }795

1

65 Pontiac GP 2 dr. H.T., air, -------""'1195

60 Ford lf2 ton Pickup ------------s250
Several 1971 Olds In Stock
For Immediate Sale!

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Qua lity Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMAC FINA NCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Until6 : 00-Til5 P.M . Sat.

L--------------------·

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cleland
and children of Marietta, Mrs.
Anna Wines, Karen and Jackie,
of Racine visited Mrs. Kate
Rowe and Ada Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
and Charles of Letart, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson and
family spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Lawson, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Proffit of Mt.
Moriah called in the Lawson
home Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Donohue and son, David, Mr .
and Mrs. Edward Laudermilt
and children of Pomeroy and
Mrs. Rose Bachus spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blackwell at Letart Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Beegle
and children of Zanesville, Mr.
and Mrs. John Beegle of New
Philadelphia spent Sunday with
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre and
David.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
and Mrs. Herbert Shields were
Columbus visitors Wednesday.
Herbert Shields returned home
with them after spending three

The new Datsun 1200s are really something.
We took the ugly out of economy
and put the performance in.
Each 1200 has the new high-ca m
69 HP engine. Quick acceleration.

Up to 30 MPG.
Sure-stopping front disc brakes.
All-synchromesh 4-speed stick shift.
Steel unibody construction for solid
protection.
Plus, many other features and nocost extras. Like locking gas
cap and whitewall tires.
The value is really
something.

Drive a Datsun,
then decide.

The Something Special

DATSU-=

SMITH AUTO SALES
KANAUGA, OHIO

Mortuary of Point Pleasant and
Foglesong Funeral Home of
Mason. It was stated that
arrangements have been made
to utilize the facilities of either
of the establishments depending
upon the convenience and
wishes of the family being
served. It was emphasized that
Mohr and Siders would give
their close personal attention to
all services.
Mohr said the operation will
be called Lawrence G. Mohr
Funeral and Ambulance Service. Mohr emphasized he and
Siders are working under these
arrangements temporarily until
they can relocate in their former location at 1300 Viand
Street, which is expected to be
less than a year.
Questions concerning these
arrangements will be answered
by calling Mohr Funeral and
Ambulance Service at 675-4181.

Group I Meets
Devotions on problems facing
the Christian home were given
by Mrs. William Sprouse at the
Wednesday night meeting of
Group 1 at the home of Mrs.
Jack Satterfield.
Preceding the meeting
members attended the study
course on the role of the church
at the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church. Projects
were discussed by Mrs. Michael
Zirkle. Mrs. Satterfield served
pizza.
days in Columbus attending an
agriculture meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
David Edward and Nancy and
Ronnie Russell were Gallipolis
visitors Sunday.
Mrs. Ann Rose and children of
St. Louis, Mo., arrived Saturday
for an indefinite visit with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Boggess.
The Racine emergency squad
transported Mrs. Lloyd Nice to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W. Va ., spent Sunday
afternoon with Sharon and
Cindy Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blackwell of Letart spent Saturday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Donohue.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields
spent Saturday evening with
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
Mrs . Ruth Parsons returned
to her home on Tanners Run
Tuesday after visiting her
children, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Parsons, at Delaware, Mr. and
Mrs. Martin Matteson at
Poland, 0., and Mr. and Mrs.
Everette Parsons at Negley.
Mr . and and Mrs. Everette
Parsons and Mrs. Ruth Parsons
visited Elmer Parsons at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Moderate Dies
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Whitney M. Young, Jr .,
executive director of the
National Urban League, died
Thursday in Lagos, Nigeria, the
State Department announced.
He was 49.
Officials said the moderate
civil rights leader suffered a
heart attack while swimming at
a beach. He was in Lagos to
attend a meeting of a discussion
group sponsored by the MricanAmerican Association.

Eastern High School basketball players and fans are steamed
up about one event this week but they should be mightily pleased
about another.
The slow burn - in some cases quite rapid - is when they
reflect upon what happened at Oscar's Wednesday night when the
Southern Valley Athletic Conference basketball coaches (no one
else, mind you) named the league all star squads. The smiles,
which should be some balm, may come upon pondering the team's
pairing in the district tournament at Chillicothe this weekend.
First, the bad: The coaches elected Dennis Eichinger to the
first team and Howie Caldwell to the second team. Tom Karr, also
nominated, had to settle for honorable mention. Compare this to
North Gallia's fortune: Arthur Clark and Roger Pelfrey, first
team, and Larry Justus, second team, members of a club that
Eastern clobbered twice, and lost to once by four points, and with
which Eastern shared the SVAC title.
In an off-the-record review of the voting it turned out that one
of the coaches (no coach could vote for his own players) did not
name Eichinger for any honor. Eichinger had four "10" votes, as
being the top player in the league. Five coaches could vote for him
on the scale of 10 to 1. This has to rank well down in the annual
standings (never published) for sportsmanship among a
fraternity that is supposed to be teaching it together with skills in
dribbling, shooting, etc etc.
Said John Riebel, Eastern Supt., to a Sports Desk aide
Thursday morning, when he had recovered from the shock to
speak: "This is something beyond belief."
All young Mr. Eichinger- a junior -has done is lead his
team in rebounding and scoring to stand in seventh place at this
point in overall scoring among all basketball players of all three
classes in southeastern Ohio (excepting four SVAC teams, North
Gallia included) with a 20.4 average. And a coach in his own
conference elected to think him not deserving even a second team
all star berth.
Caldwell led his team (19.6) in scoring in regular games;
Eichinger had 19.5.1n post season play, Caldwell's 19.1 all games
average is good for tenth place in area standings.
NOTHING HERE IS INTENDED to detract from the all-star
recognition accorded Clark, Pelfrey, and Justus. They are fine
players and fine boys. Clark led the SVAC with 23.2 in all games;
25.4in the league. Pelfrey was sixth in all games (16.4), and fourth
in the league (18.6).
If you are confused by the bracketed note above indicating
four SVAC teams are not included in the area scoring, rebounding, and other stats that were published throughout the season,
you are not alone.
The fact that the boys of Hannan Trace, North Gallia, Kyger
Creek and Southwestern, all in Gallia County, aren't in the area
listings is one of those nuts nobody has been able to crack. The
Southeastern Ohio Sportswriters and Broadcasters underwrite
Tom Metters' (Athens) collection and dissemination of SEOAL
stats. Metters throws in gratis what area stats are available to
him.
THE BALM to Eastern must be taken from this:
Eastern, which flattened North Gallia 81-64 to get into the
district A tournament at Chillicothe, got what must be regarded
as a luckY draw. We shouldn't say Coach Bill Phillips boys are a
sure-shot to make it to the regional, but we will admit the Eagles
likely never will have a better chance. For get this:
Eastern (17-3) plays one game Saturday night in the district
tournament to advance to the Class A regional at Athens Th&amp;
Eagles' opposition will be Crooksville (14-8) the 62-60 winn r last
night over Paint Valley (8-17). Oh Ho, so what? Look at the other
bracket:
Wednesday night Western Pike (20-2) took on Clay (13-10),
won 53-51, and tonight runs into the red hot Fairland Dragons (191), loser during the regular season only to Double A Chesa~eake,
68-66 in an overtime. And Eastern does not have to tangle with the
winner between Fairland and the Western Pike because both
brackets sends their winner into the regional at Athens!

MIDDLEWEIGHT BOUT
BOLOGNA, Italy (UPI)Nino Benvenuti will warm up
for his rematch with world
middleweight champion Carlos
Monzon by fighting Jose Robert
Chirino here next Wednesday.
Chirino is an Argentine now
living in New York.
Benvenuti, who lost his world
title to Monzon last Nov. 7,
takes on the Argentine champ
again in Rome next month .

MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary
members scheduled for Sunday
has been cancelled.

NBA St andings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
49 29 .628
Philadelphia 45 32 .584 3112
40 37 .519 81/2
Boston
Buffalo
21 56 .277 27112
Centra I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
x-Baltimore
40 35 .533 ...
Atlanta
32 44 .421 81/2
Cincinnati
29 46 .387 11
Cleveland
13 2 .173 27
M idwest Di 'sion
W.
Pet. GB
x-Milwaukce 65 1 .844 ...
Chicago
47 27 .635 161/2
Phoenix
45 29 .608 18112
Detroit
42 33 560 22
Pacific Divisio

A H L Stand ings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pfs
Montreal
24 26 12 60
Quebec
23 24 14 60
Providence
21 26 12 54
Springfield
22 30 8 52
West
W. L. T. Pts
Baltimore
36 15 7 79
Cleveland
29 23 7 65
Hershey
23 27 10 56
Rochester
21 28 10 52
Thursday's Results
Quebec 4 Providence 4
(Only ~arne scheduled)
F nday's Games
Rochester at Montreal
Quebec at Providence
(Only games scheduled)

W. L.

x-Los Angeles 46 30
NH L Standings
San Francisco 37 39
By United Press International
San Diego
36 42
East
Seattle
35 41
w. L. T. Pts
Portland
24 52
50 10 7 197
Boston
X-Ciinched div. title
42 14 11 95
New York
Thursday's Results
34 19 13 81
Montreal
San Diego 115 Boston 91
34 27 6 74 r
Toronto
Seattle 130 Detroit 97
18 36 13 49
Buffalo
Portland 136 Baltimore 118
19 36 10 48
Detroit
(Only 9ames scheduled)
19 40 7 45
Vancouver
Fr1day's Games
West
Phoenix at Chicago
W. L. T. Pts
Buffalo at Los Angeles
Chicago
42 '16 8 92
Seattle at San Francisco
S,t. Louis
27 23 16 70
Atlanta at Cleveland
Minnesota
25 29 14 64
Boston vs. Cincinnati
Philadelphia
24 29 13 61
at Omaha Pittsburgh
20 30 17 57
Detroit at Portland
Los Angeles
19 35 12 50
(Only games scheduled)
CaHfornia
17 46 5 39
Thursday's Results
Boston 7 Los Angeles 2
Vancouver 7 Detroit 3
(Only qames scheduled)
::
Fnday's Games
Philadelphia at New York
(Only game scheduled)

•

lodafs FUNNY

SERVICES SET
Pomeroy corrununity Lenten
services will be held at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Unite&lt;ft
Methodist Church. The Rev. Bill
Perrin and Envoy Ray Wining
will conduct the services which
is sponsored by the Pomeroy
Ministerial Assn.

Thinking About A

Today's FUNNY will pay $1.00 for
eoch original "funny" used. Send gags
to: Today's FUNNY, 1200 West Third
St., Clcyelond, Ohio ~ 113,

MOBLE
HOME

UNDERGOES SURGERY
Miss Vanessa Pettit, 17,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Pettit, underwent surgery
Thursday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Her room
number is 105.

It doesn't take long to make
that thought a reality when
you stop in at

'Meiss Co. Branch

@

BAKE SALE NOTED
A bake sale will be held
Saturday, beginning at 9:30
a.m., at the Western Auto
Supply Store in Middleport by
the Loyal Pals Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.

Meigs County
Branch of
The Athens Coun1Y
Savings &amp; Loan
296 Second St. 1
Pomeroy, Ohio

Cp.

VISIT RELATIVES
Jerry Berry of Stow was the
recent visitor of his mother,
Mrs. Mabel Sanborn and Miss
Bess Sanborn, Middleport, who
is recuperating from injuries
suffered in a fall recently.

SPECIAL

Book of Good Counsel
Book of Good Counsel is the
subtitle of the Hitopadesa ,
a celebrated Sanskrit collection of fables, most of which
have passed into the literature of all civilized countries.

Any car sold during the
Month of March David
Riggs will buy your
License Plates!

You Can't Beat A Riggs D~l
~--~--SPECIAL --------~

•

DODGE% TON

Pickup true 6 cyl., stand. trans., heavy duty , step
rear bumper .

' 17 9 5 Now ' 1595

67 PONTIAC CATALl NA
4 Dr. Sedan , extra sharp low mileage used car. P.S. , P. B. &amp; AT.

one owner

69 PONTIAC CATALINA

$2795 1

Sta. Wagon, factory air conditioned, one owner
trade-in from a very satisfied owner. Shows fine
care, AT., P.S., &amp; PB.

69 GTO PONTIAC
2 dr. Hardtop, 22,135 easy miles, one careful local
owner, automatic trans. , power steering, power
disc brakes. Extra sharp. Dark blue exterior.

68 FlREBIRD V8 PONTIAC
2 Dr . hardtop, 400 cu. in. engine, auto. trans., power
steering, power disc brakes, low mileage. Sharp
one owner car we sold new.

70 PONTIAC CATALINA
2 Dr. hardtop, a low mileage sharp one owner car.
Like new tires , power steering, auto. trans.

66 PONTIAC 2 DR.
Hardtop, extra ni ce for model. P. S., P. B. &amp; AT.

65 PONTIAC CATALINA
2 Dr. hardtop, like new fini sh.

MONZON'S CHALLENGER
LONDON ( UPI) - Mark
Rowe, the former British
middleweight champion who is
campaigning for Carlos Monzon's world crown, will meet
former world welterweight BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
champion Curtis Cokes of
116 Years of Continuous Business
Dallas April 6 in a 10-round PHON E 992 -2143
POMEROY, OHIO
bout at the Royal Albert ~;:~!1.

Many more

BLAETTNARS

70 DUSTER
340 V-8, 2 dr. H. T. 4 sp. , competition oranae
w ith white vinyl op, bucket seats, racing
wheels .
69 TRIUMPH SPIT
Convertible, 4 sp
rad io. Real
Sharp. Was $1595.

S1495

69 COUGAR
Convertible, 302 V-8,
speed trans ., lime
green with white top, adio &amp; w-w tires.
69 CHEV. IMPALA
Custom , 2 Dr. H. T., d
green interior. P.S., P.

k green with light
, low mileage.

68 PONTIAC
2 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B., wh e with black vinyl
top. Real sharp.
66 MUSTANG
2 Dr. H. T , 6 cyl .• auto. t rans delu
light blue, radio, w -w tires.

interior,

$1195

66 LINCOLN CONTINENTA

4 Dr. sedan, all power, air co d., auto. trans.,
tilt steering wheel, 4 new ti res. Like rew. Was
$1 795. Now
65 OLDSMOBILE
4 Dr. H.T., P.S., P. B.• auto. t r ans., a·r condition.

'995

tS MUSTANG

289, auto. trans .. l ig ht blue with dark blue
bucket seat s, 32,000 actual miles.

'995

6S FALCON
2 Dr. Sedan, 6 cyl.. stand. trans., dark blue,
rl)a lclean, 42 ,000actual mi les. Was$895. NiJw

? 95

t.S F ORD CUSTOM

/

'695

2 Dr. sedan, 6 cyl ., auto . trans ., r adio, w -·v

tires.

SEE: Gale Ingraham - Ray
David Riggs

•

~i.ggs

RIGGS BROS., INt~
USED CARS Ber,re, 0.
813 Farson St.
423-6331

Corner of Rt. 7 and Farson Street

•

�_..._,____ l

_5-:- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 12, 1971

~Fantastic'

• Columbus Show was
•

•
•
•

"The show was fantastic;
well worth the trip," was Mrs.
Homer Parker's comment
about the Dispatch Charities
Garden and Flower Show.
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners, of which Mrs. Parker is
a member, attended the show
held in the Lausche Building on
the Ohio State Fairgrounds
Sunday. Her commentary on
the event follows:
"This year's show theme was
"Come Into Our World," which
seemed to exactly fit the occasion. The group traveled
through snow squalls most of
the way to Columbus and back.
Upon entering the show, you
truly were in a different world;
leaving the howling snow swept
winds and walking into a setting
that literally shouted "Spring is
here."
"A formal garden located
near the entrance featured
multi colored fountains of water
in a pool. A brick walkway led to
a patio in front of the pool which
was surrounded by weeping
willow trees. Forsythia and
azaleas added much color along
with numerous spring blooming
flowers.
"The Central Ohio Rose
Society had an informative
exhibit with roses growing in
various stages from start to
bloom, including some plants
demonstrating the proper way
to winterize roses, some unpruned and some pruned.
"The Ohio State University
College of Agriculture had

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

•

Home of

the Fabulous

•

CH

SAN

Order By Phone
And Toke Em Home

992-5432

•

evergreens and other blooming
shrubs as well as vines bearing
foot long cucumbers and a vine
with ripe tomatoes. They offered information on growmg,
combatting plant disease, etc.
"Another featured the four
seasons in gardens using plant
materials suited to the season.
An herb garden was of special
interest to those who enjoy
cooking. In all, there were 17
beautifully landscaped gardens
prepared by experts. Most of
the gardens had numerous
blooming shrubs, including
forsythia, azaleas, and quince;
as well as hundreds of tulips,
narc1ss1,
hyacinth
and
muscarri. Many flowering trees
such as crab apple, Dogwood,
and red bud were used extensively along with the unusual

forms of corkscrew willow and
contorted shrubs.
"A real eyeca tcher was the
merry-go-round prepared by
the Allied Florists Association.
The inner circle of horses had
been removed and enormous
floral arrangements were in
their place, while large potted
ferns were spaced between
these and the outer circle of the
carousel. Each horse had a
large arrangement placed on
the saddle and festoon floral
pieces were suspended from the
top of the merry-go-round,
while potted azaleas completely
encircled it on the floor level. To
give an idea of the size of the
floral arrangements, one
contained 150 roses. If you
haven't attended this show, this
probably sounds quite large, but

Sixty Entertained
Approximately 60 patients at
the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center were guests
Thursday afternoon for the
Eighth District American
Legion Junior
Auxiliary
community service party.
Assisting were units of
Somerset, Jackson, Wilkesville,
Wells ton, Middleport, Pomeroy,
and Racine. Prizes for games
purchased from monetary
contributions from the units
included stationery, powder,
puffs, change purses, nail
polish, pencils, lipstick, and
diabetic gum and candy.
. . The Pomeroy unit sent two
dozen sandwiches, three pounds
of candy and cookies along with

pocketbooks, and novelty soap
and washcloth sets.
The Middleport unit provided
eight dozen cookies, six pounds
of candy and two dozen sandwiches, and took along a
number of items which had
been contributed by the public.
These included handkerchiefs,
socks, headscarves, toothbrushes, paste, and perfume.
Going to assist at the party
were Janice Couch and Mrs.
Harry Davis of Pomeroy 39;
Mrs. Helen Kennedy, Mrs.
Rosie Searles, Mrs. Etta Will,
Mrs. Erma Hendricks, Mrs.
Patricia Might, and Mrs .
Charles Kessinger, Eighth
District junior activities
chairman.

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

:
I

HOSPITAL NEWS

_ _

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. R. Keith Jeffers, Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and
Mrs. Dwane V. Giles, Ravenswood, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. D. Thomas Russell, Pt.
Pleasant, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene E. Hornsby, Gallipolis,
a daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Everett E. West, Wellston, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul D. McGuire, Kerr, a son.
Discharges
.
Pau1 D. Ab1es, Mrs . Co11ts
Adkins, Mrs. Ronald Allison,
Mrs. R onald Ash wor th , Mrs.
Ethel Ball , Mrs · Andrew Byus ,
Ernest Criner, Thomas Duncan,
Mrs. Genevieve G oe, Mrs.
Donald Houdashelt, Mrs. James

PUBLIC SALE
Saturday Morning - 9 O'Clock
·
March 20th
Selling the personal property from the estate of the late
Harry Goetting which consists of:
Many antiques, household items, farm machinery and
tools.
DIRECTION : From Gallipolis take Route 35 to Raccoon
Bridge, after crossing the Raccoon bridge turn right,
cross another bridge on Old Route 35 coming back across
Raccoon Cr eek , then turn left on Harri sburg-Ada m svill e
Road, go to Everett Denny Road and turn right, go to th e
next road turn right again. Watch for Sale Signs.
AUCTIONEERS : Col. R. E. Knotts and Son Dave,
Assisted by Col. Jimmy Sayre.
Administrix, Bernice McCulty
RobertS. Betz, Attorney for the Estate
Watch for Listing of Merchandise in Sunday, March 14
Sunday Times- Sentinel.

PLUMBING EMERGENCY?

lI

F . Imes, Mrs. C. Rell Jordan,
Mrs. William Miller, Mrs. Carl
Muncy and infant son, Mrs.
Ralph Neigler, Mrs. Frank
Puckett, Harry Rhodes, Mrs.
Elber Riebel , Mrs. Robert Ross,
Mrs. John Stebbins, Mrs.
Harley Swisher, Mrs. Susan
Theobald, Todd Wiseman ,
Harley Woltz, Jr., Mrs .
Eldridge Sauer, Amanda
Sisson, Melissa Nance, Mrs.
Perry Rood, Mrs. Bertram
Rucker, Frank Woods, and
Charles Swisher.

Attend Service

·
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hannahs
attended funeral services
Thursday for Gerald R. (Dick)
Hannahs of Lancaster Route 3,
a former Pomeroy resident.
Mr. Hannahs, 67• died at the
Mount St. Mary's Hospital in
Nelsonville following a long
illness. He was the son of the
late John and Elizabeth Hannabs, and a retired employe of
North American-Rockwell Co.,
Columbus.
Survivors are his wife,
Delores, two sons, Jack of
Reynoldsburg, and James at
the Homestead Air Force Base,
Fla., and a daughter, Mrs. Jane
Scheidogger, Arlington.

Daughter Honored
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Covert
entertained Tuesday at the
Orchid Room with a party
honoring their daughter, Sharon
Ann, on her lOth birthday . A
ham and turkey buffet with
cake and ice cream was served
to Chris tine Musser, Keith
Musser , Anna Wiles, Ray Eblin,
Don Little, Melvin Durst, Penny
Lee Dill, Virgil Dill, Peggy
Girolami, Herm Martin, Vince
Martin, Sammy Little, and
Marlene Smith.

Girl Scout
Diary

Drive Planned

A clothing drive for an orphanage in Mexico was planned
during Wednesday's meeting of
the Helping Hands Missionary
Circle of the Bradford Church of
By Charlene Hoeflich
Christ.
Peggy Russell, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Russell of
Girl Scout books will be available at the Pomeroy Public Bradbury, has worked in
conjunction with establishing
Library next week.
Mrs. William Ohlinger, chairman of the Big Bend Neigh- the orphanage. Clothing for
~rhood, reports that a shelf at the library will be designated for boys and girls 2 to 7 is needed.
A $5 contribution was made to
the girl scout reference books to be provided by the Four Rivers
the George Thompson Kidney
Girl Scout Council.
A Neighborhood meeting is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. next Fund. It was also voted to assist
Wednesday at the Cohunbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. social financially with sending some
room. At that time a final report will be given on the annual girl young people to a retreat this
scout cookie sale, and plans will be furthered for day camp to be weekend at the Darwin Church
Camp. Plans were discussed for
held at Camp Kiashuta in June.
assisting
the young people of the
Four Meigs County girl scout leaders will receive recognition
for leadership at the Four Rivers' Council spring luncheon to be church with the Easter sunrise
held April 7 at the University Inn. Mrs. William Sheridan, Mrs. service. The Tuesday before
Easter was set as cleanup day
Richard Vaughan and Mrs. Mary Bahr will receive 10 year pins
at the church.
and Mrs. Lela Curtis will receive a five year pin.
House slippers are being
YOUTH CONSERVATION AWARDS
made for the residents of the
March 19, just a week from today, is the deadline for com- Meigs County Infirmary, and
peting in the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District youth
awards program for girl scouts.
An award of $5 will be given to the first place winner in each
troop with the winning project then to compete for a $15 prize in
county competition. Each local scout leader is responsible for
selection of the winner from the troop. The winning entries are to
A flag was presented to the
be taken to the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District office
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary by
by not later than March 26.
Projects can be of any nature as long as they relate to soil, the Racine American Legion
Auxiliary at a re-:mt meeting of
water and natural resources or air pollution in Meigs County.
the firemen 's group at the home
POMEROY BROWNIES 171
Posters on ecology were prepared by Brownie Troop 171 at a of Mrs. Beulah Autherson,
meeting Monday night at the Pomeroy First Baptist. Each of the president.
Mrs. Marie Boyd, Legion
17 girls use crayons to tell a story of polluted environment and
Auxiliary
president, and Mrs.
what can be done about it. The poster selected as the best of the
troop will be entered in county competition. Mrs. Sheridan served Lenora Young, Americanism
chairman, made the presengirl scout cookies and chocolate milk.
MEIGS SENIOR TROOP 198
A leader-in-training program for senior girl scouts will begin
Sunday at the Enterprise United Methodist Church.
Homemade articles were
The session to be conducted by Mrs. Noby Savage of Athens, displayed and sold at Tuesday
district advisor, will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Scouts are to take a night's meeting of the Golden
leader's notebook. Completion of the eight week course will Rule Class of the Pomeroy
qualify the girls to assist with brownie, junior and cadette troops. Church of Christ at the home of
Mrs. Phil Ohlinger is leader of the senior troop.
Mrs. Elwood Bowers, Chester
"Garden Club of the Air," a
SALISBURY CADETIES 208
Road.
monthly program over local
Creating with clay is the current project of the Salisbury
radio, was presented by the
Mrs. Charles Eskew presided
Rutland Friendly Gardeners f".-adettes. Meeting Tuesday night at the Salisbury School, the girls with members answering roll
turned out a variety of items to be fired and painted. They call with a favorite verse or
Monday.
Mrs. Tom Stewart, club radio recently completed a ceramics course and the pottery project will personal experience. A sketch
chairman, and Mrs. Harold qualify them for the ceramic and pottery badge.
on St. Luke was given by Mrs.
Wolfe, president, presented the
SALISBURY BROWNIES
Louis Osborne, and devotions
program featuring gardening
A tea for their mothers has been planned by the Salisbury by Mrs. Clarence Andrews
and lawn tips and activities of Brownies for March 25 to mark completion of a four week cooking included a meditation entitled
the club, including plans for course. At that time Miss Joanna Distler, Columbus and Southern "The 23rd Channel" with
hosting the Region 11 spring Ohio Electric Co. home economics specialist, will present cer- prayer by Mrs. Eskew.
meeting on April 24.
Mrs. Harold Smith and Mrs.
tificates to the scouts.
Other topics discussed the
Thursday night the Brownies prepared their supper of Osborn won game prizes.
club's work with the special scalloped potatoes, lima beans with white sauce, candied carrots, Refreshments were served to
education class of the Rutland apple crisp and punch. Next week it will be spaghetti.
the above named and Mrs.
Elementary School, the antiStanley
Bass and Mrs. Denver
POMEROY TROOP 61
litter c1v1c beautification
Kapple.
Interest patrols were organized during Thursday night's
project, "Let's Keep ~utland a
meeting
of Pomeroy Troop 61.
Bloomin' Clean Town," with
Jane Sisson, Cathy Blaettnar and Paige Smith went into the
Mrs. Howard Birchfield and
WE NOW HAVE··
Mrs. Bruce May co-chairmen, rambler patrol; Cindy McKinney, Shari Mitch, Sherrie Osborne
and the flowering crab and and Tammy Guinther, pets; Ann McKinney, housekeeping; and
Judy Hall, Melinda Barnett and Kim Taylor, my home.
dogwood tree offer.
Mrs. v·1rg1·1 Atk'ms of the
A hike was planned for Saturday with the younger girls of the
Rutland Garden Club is the troop to work on the gypsy badge and the older ones on the ~.-rambler and foot traveler.
county radio chairman.
No's 1 Thru 8
Mrs. Jane Taylor was elected committee chairman for the
troop with Mrs. Gene Mitch as a committee member. Paige Smith
and Cathy Blaettnar conducted games. There wa~ sO'me work on
the manners badge, and Anna McKinney prQvided cookies for
refreshments.
Meeting with the girls at the Pometoy Elementary School
The lOth birthday of Toni Ann
Pope was observed with a party were the leaders, Mrs. Linda Guinther and Mrs. April Smith.
at her home Wednesday night.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
Gifts were presented to the
A record sale of 950 boxes of girl scout cookies was reported
honored guest, games were during Monday night'JVineeting of Troop 39 at Heath United
played and refreshments were
/
served. Attending were Kim- Methodist Church_..
Jul' Kitch
In obserywfce of Girl Scout Week the troop attended services
berly. Payne,
Jle B en, at Heat~Ydhurch in a group. Plans were made for a skating party
Debbie Johnson, ay eaver,
h Sk t
W
. k
,........to _7ld on March 20, 2:~0 to 4:30p.m. at t e a e-a- ay rm ~
Christine and Cherry Fry.

all the floral pieces were truly
beautiful. The merry-gO-round
was topped with 50 giant stems
of bright yellow forsythia. The
florists
also
displayed
arrangements suitable for all
occasions.
"The Ohio Department of
Natural Resources had a picture display of Ohio's state
parks. There were many
displays of lawn furniture,
gardening equipment, fencing,
and booths offering plant sales,
dried materials and potted
houseplants.
"Prof. James Caldwell,
Extension Horticulturist at Ohio
State University, presented the
afternoon program on "Annuals
and Perennials."
"Members purchased several
new perennials to add to their
garden, as well as soil conditioners, potting soil and other
gardening aids.
"Many garden club members
from Central Ohio displayed
floral arrangements in niches
throughout the show. Students
from the Columbus area schools
displayed dozens of items made
from gourds. The gourds were
raised by many of the
youngsters displaying at the
show.
Lighting
displays
featured various type fixtures,
some suited for walkways and
lawns, while others were for
garden use to show off your
plant materials to the best
advantage after dusk.
"Members thought the show
was fantastic, well worth the
trip."

Easter flowers will be made for
shut-ins of the community. Mrs.
Tressie Hendricks had charge
of the meeting with Mrs. Vada
Hazelton giving devotions. She
read scripture from Acts 13
using "Forgiveness Through
Christ" as her theme and
concluded with a question and
answer period on the book of
Acts.
It was reported that Jim
Lambert is a patient at
University Hospital and that
Mrs. Bertha Barrett is confined
to Veterans Memorial. Art
Hendricks is home from the
hospital. Cards were signed for
Mrs. Barrett and Sharon
Russell.
A potluck dinner was sened
at noon to those named and Mrs.
Eulah Evans, Mrs. Ver'lie
Hysell, Mrs. Frances Hysell,
Mrs. Eleanor Hoover , and
Cynthia Hazelton.

Flag Given Auxiliary

Church Class Met

Program Aired
By Garden Club

SONGS
OF INSPIRATION
.$1.00 to $2.98.

d
Birthday Observe

------------MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

WEEKEND GUESTS
/ .,_._._._._..__....-.........-...-...--•. - -.........-..-...-.--...-."':"~
Gary Ault and sons, Tobie and
Todd , of Springfield were
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
..-...-...-...-...-.._.....--.__...-..-..-.._...J
William Ault and family, South
FRIDAY
Brothers Quartet. Public inFront St., Middleport. Also
MARY SHRINE of White vited.
visiting recently with the Aults Shrine of Jerusalem Friday 8
SUNDAY
were Mr. and Mrs. Ron Logan. p.m. I.O.O.F. Hall, Pomeroy.
ALL
WORLD
War I veterans
Mrs. Logan is a nurse at Election of officers. Potluck
asked
to
be
at Middleport
Riverside Methodist Hospital ; refreshments.
American Legion Hall at 1:30 ,
her husband is a senior at Ohio
Add Saturday
p.m. Dinner following meeting.··
State.
BAND DANCE Saturday at
CHESTER
Community
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Southern High School 9:30 to 12 vacation Bible School meeting,
p.m . Music by "Quintet" from 2 p. m. Sunday, at Chester
Athens. Admission 75 cents. Methodist Church.
Sponsored by Southern Band
DISTRICT
MEETING
Boosters.
Sunday 2 p.m. for Fraternal
AFTER BASKETBALL game Order of Eagles at Pomeroy
dance, Friday, 9 to 12 at hall2171. Glen Gardner, Logan,
Wahama
High
School speaker ; refreshments 5 p.m.
auditorium sponsored by junior Initiation of members.
class. Jays emceeing.
MONDAY
HARRISONVILLE Alumni
MIDDLEPORT P.T.A., 7:30
Assn . meeting, Friday, 8 p.m., p.m. Monday; Soul Inspirations
Harrisonville Presbyterian to provide program of music.
Church. Officers and members
CHESTER PTA Monday
urged to attend to plan annual night at 8 p.m. Family Night to
banquet.
be observed .
SATURDAY
TUESDAY
ANNUAL PANCAKE Supper,
SALISBURY P.T.A., 7:30
Salem Center PTA sponsored, p.m . Tuesday, Fathers Night to
Saturday at school from 5 p. m. be observed with fathers to
to 8p. m. Menu, pancakes, eggs, count double toward room
sausage, all one can eat, $1.
award. Refreshments.
Public invited.
MEIGS LOCAL Athletic
MEIGS COUNTY Heart Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
Association sponsoring dance, 8 high school. Program on
to 11 p.m ., Saturday, Meigs wrestling by Fenton Taylor,
Junior High Auditorium, Tracy Whaley, Refreshments.
COMPLETE PROGRAMS
Middleport. Queen of Hearts to
FOR DOGS AND PUPPIES
be crowned. Jays will emcee,
OF ALL BREEDS
proceeds to Heart Assn.
XI GAMMA Mu meeting and
COME HOME
St. Patrick day party Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Wise of
home of Eleanor Thomas,
Waverly spent the weekend at
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.
HYMN SING, 7: 30 p .m. their Middleport home. On
Saturday at Freedom Gospel Sa turday they visited with R.
180 Mulberry Ave.
-2115
Pomeroy
Mission, Bald Knob on Stivers- W. Harris who observed hi::; 90th
992
birthday on Sunday.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ville -Bashan Road. Bissell

tation and talked on the use of
the flag.
Plans were discussed for the
new building with Mrs. Ruth
Gosney who is assisting with the
design. Fund raising activities
were outlined with a bake sale
set for April 10 and a rug auction. The group is also selling
disposable garbage bags.
Games were conducted by
Mrs . Emma Lyons and Mrs.
Gene Lyons who also served
refreshments. Ten members
attended with Mrs. Marie
Roush and Mrs. Gosney as
guests. Mrs. Autherson won the
door prize.

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t A THOUGHT i

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FOR TODAY :

.
: ....
iC Nothing can bring you -tl
~ peace bu t yourself.
:
-tc -Ralph Waldo Emerson iC

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-tc

iC

:

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-tc

:

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It's Quick! Easy :
DRIVE-IN ~
..

Fridays Only
9 A.M. toT P.M.

ISOp~~

:

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(Continuously)

-tc

..

d o n't d o it your se lf . Exp e ri e n ce d

•

plum be r s a r e r ea dy t o r e p a ir a ny
f aulty plumb1ng. Get t op qu a l1ty work
a t lowest pri ces. Ca ll up!

Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp; Heating
992 -2036

Edward Baer, owner

Pomeroy

·-------------------------

SUGAR RUN MILLS

.

Jtic',

..: FARMERS BANK ·
1C Fridays.

1C

~

{ and SAVINGS CO. :

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POMEROY, OHIO
M ember FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

f

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

~

••

~ Meigs Social Calendar ~

l. ~~·-·_.._...._..,_........

:so.. time and

steps. Install it where th.
wash is - anywhere you can get adequate
wirinv. plumbing and venting. 2·speed
Washer doos family site loads with Regula r
and Delkato senings. flawing Heat Dryer
drt.s clothes. sunst.ine fresh . Perrnortent
l'ron Care in bath washer and d ryer .

$389
.
I ............FURNITURE
BAKER. MIDDLEPORT, 0.
,...,.

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~ Other Bdnking Hours 9 to
1C and 5 to 7 as usual on-tc

DOG FOOD

A word t o th e w1 se h om eowner . ..

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Red Rose

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-tc The Drive-In Window-tc

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DON'T FUSS!

....

BANKING

~

�MASON
ASSEMBLY
OF
RACINE FIRST CHURCH meeting, 6: 30 p. m.; Evening
worship, 7:30 p. m.
GOD -Second Sf., Mason, W. OF THE NAZARENE
Va. Chester Tennant, pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
APPLE GROVE UNITE.O
Sunday school, 10 a. m .; Morning Worship, 10:30 a. m.; METHODIST CHURCH - W.
When Tom retired, it seemed as if his dreams had come true. For years
morning worship, 11 a. m.; Evening worshiJ?, 7:30 p. m. Dale McClurg, pastor. Worship
evangelistic service, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, Sunday School service, first and third Sundays
he and Grace had been planning. There would be that little pink house in
Bible study and prayer service, Superintendent, Pauline Mc- of each month at 8 p. m.;
Florida and time to do all the things they wanted. They could keep in touch
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Phone CI intock, pastor. Rev. Morris Sunday School every Sunday at
with
their friends back home, and there would be occasional visits back
9:30
a
.
m.;
WSCS,
second
M.
Wolfe.
773-5133.
MIDD I EPORT
p OMEROY
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
and forth.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST- Tuesday of each month at 7: 30
POMEROY
TRINITY
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST- Christ in Christian Union- CharlesNorris, pastor. Sunday p . m.; Bible Study, Wednesday,
What they hadn't realized was how much they would miss their church.
U.nitedChurch of. Christ -Rev Corner Fourth and Main,
Rev.O'Dell Manley, pastor. School, 9:30 a. m.; Morning 8 p.m.
Perrin, pastor. Fred Blaettnar, Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
Sunday School, 9:30a.m., Rev. worship, 10:45 a. m.; Sunday
It had been such a part of their life! Now it seemed that no other church
CARME.L
UNITED
METHsupt. Sunday School, 9: 15 a. m.; Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9: 30 Guy Sayre, supt.; evening evening worship, 7:30 p.m.; ODIST Paul A. Sellers,
could fill the gap. In fact, they didn't go to another church their first few
Worship, 10:25 a. m.; youth a. m ., Arnold Richards, supt. ; service, 7:30. Tuesday Bible Wednesday evening
Bible pastor; Wayne Roush, supt.
weeks in Florida.
chotr rehearsal, Monday, 6:30 Morning worship 10:30 a_. m. 1 study, 7:30 p. m. Thursday Study, 7:30 p. m.
Worship service, 10:45 a. m.,
p. m., Mrs. Marvin Burt.
FIRST UNITED PRES- evening prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
But finally one Sunday they went to the little church they had been
SOUTH BETHEL UNITED first and third Sundays;
director.
Senior
choir BYTERIAN, Middleport-Rev. m. Sunday evening youth METHODIST passing each day on the way to the golf course. True, it wasn't like the
Rev. Randy evening worship, 8 p. m. second
rehearsal, 7:30p.m Thursday, Russell Lester, pastor. sunday services, 6:30 with Roger Lavender, pastor. Sunday Sunday.
church back home-outwardly. But, when you got down to essentials, it was
~- Paul Nease, director.' School 9:30 a. m., Lewis Sauer,. Manley, youth leader. .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
school, 9 a.m., Mrs. Wilma
the same.
Thursday, all day Busy Bee supt.; worship service 10:30
MASON FIRST BAPTIST- Bahr, Supt. Youth Fellowship 6 NAZARENE Rev. Herbert
quilting party in church social a.m.
Second and Pomeroy Sts., Stan
Grate, pastor. Worship service,
If you have moved to another community, find a new
room.
MIDDLEPORT
HEATH Craig, pastor. Sunday school, p.m. each Sunday at Tuppers 11 a.m. and 7:30p.m. Sunday.
Plains
United
Methodist
church home. Regardless of its appearance, remember
POMEROY CHURCH OF UNITED METHODIST-Rev. 9:45a.m.; worship service, 11 Church.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
that it is God's House and in it you will be welcome.
THE 'NAZARENE Corner Max E. Donahue, minister; a.m.; training union, 6:30"p.m.;
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J. Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
Union and Mulberry. Rev. Eric Chambers, Sunday School evening worship service, 7:30 A. Curry, pastor. Sunday meeting, Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.
Clyde V . Henderson, pastor. superintendent. Church School p.m. Mid-week prayer service, School, 9:30 a. m .; Youth and
HARRISONVILLE
PRESSunday School 9:30 a. m.; 9:30 a. m.; morning worship, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Mrs. Norma
junior youth service, 6:45p.m.; BYTERIAN Raymond
Walburn,
supf. 10:30a. m.; youth meeting, 7.P·
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE Evening worship, 7:30 p. m. Lee, Sunday Schoop SuperinMorning worship 10:30 a. m.; m.; Choir rehearsal, Wed -· Services at 315 Main St., Pf. Prayer and praise Wed., 7:30 p. tendent. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m. Sunday Service 8 p . m. Rev.
E~ning service 7:30p.m. Mid
nesday 7-7:30 p. m.; Mrs . E. Pleasant, Sunday School 9:15 m.
a.m. Sundays, 11 a.m.· WedMax Donahue, Middleport.
week service, Wednesday, 7:30 Robert Hamm, director.
HEMLOCK
GROVE
pastor.
p. m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES- nesday, testimonial meeting 8
CHRISTIAN- David Stauffer,
BETHANY
UNITED
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev. Larry Carnahan presiding p.m. All welcome.
pastor;
Stanford
Stockton,
supt.
METHODIST -Paul A. Sellers,
Stanley Plattenburg, minister. ,minister. Sunday, Bible lecture,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Morning
worship,
9:30
a.m.;
Morning prayer and sermon, 9:30 a. m.; Watchtower study,
S
pastor ; Blythe Theiss, Sunday
church school, 10:30 a.m.; School supt. Worship service,
10:30 a. m. Holy communion 10 : 30 a. m.; Tuesday, Bible -Letart Route 1, the Rev. tan
young peoples meeting, 6: 30 9: 30 a. m. second and fourth
and sermon, first Sundays, study, 7: 30 p. m.; Thursday, Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
p.m.; evening worship, 7:30. Sundays;. Evening worship, 8 p.
10:30 a. m. Church school, ministry school 7:30 p. m., 9:30 a.m.; prayer and Bible
Bible study, Wednesday, 7:30 m. first-Sunday.
kindergarten through eighth service meeting 8:30p.m.
study, 7:30p.m. Cottage prayer
p.m.
grade, 10:30 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH service, Tuesday, 10 a.m.;
LOTTRIDGE
UNITED
POMEROY CHURCH OF of Christ in Christian Unio·n-- worship service, Friday, 7: 30
SILVER RUN FREE BAP- METHODIST - Worship, first
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr., Lawrence Manley, pastor; Mrs. p .m.
TIST - Rev. Howard Kimble, and third Sundays, 10: 45 a.m .;
pastor. Bible School, 9:30a.m_.; Russell Young, Sunday School
MASON
CHURCH
OF pastor. Sunday school, 10 a.f!1 .; second and fourth Sundays,
worship, 10:30; adult worshtp Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m .; CHRIST- John Steele, pastor. Henry Davis, supt.; evenmg 7: 30p. m. Sunday School, 9:45 a.
service and .. YOUIJQ _peoples Evening worship 7:30. Wed- Worship, 10 a.m.; Bible study, service, 7:30 p.m. Prayer m . Christian Endeavor, third
meeting, both 7·30 p.m. Sun- nesday prayer meeting, 7:30 p. 11:15 a.m.; evening worship, meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Saturday of each month.
··day-Wednesday,
combined m.
7:30 p.m. Mid-week service,
LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
Bible study and
prayer
CHURCH OF THE NAZA· Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF METHODIST - Rev. Eugene
meeting, 7:30 p. m .
RENT Middleport, R~v.
GOD- Rev. Donald A. Sheets, Gill, pastor. William Bailey,
pastor. Sunday School 9:30 a. supt. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
THE SALVATION ARMY- Audry Mtlt~r, pastor; Floya MEIGS COUNTY
Envoy Ray S. Wining, officer in Carson, supt. Sunday school,
m.; Worship service, 11 a. m.; Morning worshi p, 10:30 a. m .;
A L F R E 0
U N I T E D Evening service, 7:30. Prayer Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
c)large. Sunday, 10 a. m., 9:30
a.m.;
Morning
warMETHODIST
Rev.
Randy
service
and youth service, Wednesday, Christian Youth
Holiness meeting; 10:30 a. ";'· ship,
10:30
a.m.;
junior
Sun?ay School. Young Peoples. ~~~JCiety, 6:30 p.m.; NYPS 6;45 Lavender, pastor. Sunday Thursday, 7:30p.m.
Crusade, 6:30 p. m.; Prayer
FOREST RUN METHODIST meeting 7:30 p. m . Thursday,
Legion,7p._m.;Thursday,lt?3 p.m. Sunday evangelistic School, 9:45 a. m., Llo~d
supt. ;. Worshtp -Rev Forrest Donely, pastor. choir practice, 7 p. m.
p. m., Ladtes Home League, 7 meeting, 7:30 p.m. Prayer Di II i_nger'
Hamilton
supt. ·
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
p. m. Prep classes.
meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. servtce, 11 a.m. w_1th the Rev. • Ch 1 ·
Mr
Lavender tn charge.
ar e.s
.
•
:
SACRI;D HEART t'i.t:v._
Evans,
T
·
d
8
m
Women's
Worship
service,
9
a.
m. , CHRIST -Danny
Father Bernard Krajcovic,
MIDDLE P 0 R T
PENpastor.
Norman
C.
Will,
supt.
ue.s ay,
P·
f. G
·
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
pastor.
Phone
992-2825; TECOSTAL- Third Ave., the Societ~ at h~me o
enevteve
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Sunday School 9: 30 a. m.;
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30 Rev. William Knittel, pastor; Guthne wt~h
an
Ea~ter _ Robert Eugene Musser, Worship service, 10:30 a. m.
p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 Ralph Priddy, Sunday School program furntshed by var~ous pastor. Sunday school, 9:30 Christian Endeavor Sunday
a.m. Confessions, Saturday 7- supt.; Classes for all ages, members. ~rayer service, a.m.; morning worship, 10:30; eveniQ_g.
7:30p.m.
Sund_ay School: lOa. m.; Sunday Wed.!:,lesdav, 7· 45 P· m.
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST evenmg service, ?:30 p. m.
UNITED FAITH- Robert.E. supt. Sunday evening service , OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATWednesday evening Young Smith, pastor. Worship service 7: 30 p.m .; youth meetina, TER DAY SAINTS- Portland-~obert Kuhn, pastor. George People's meeting and Bible and Sunday school, 9:30 a.r:n., Monday, 7 p.m. Midweek Racine Road. Ralph Johnson,
Skmner, Sunday ~chool supt: Study, 7:30. Saturday evening Fred Samsel, supt.; even 1
service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. pastor . Sunday School, 9:30 a.
Sund~y School! 9. 30 a. m.. service, 7:30.
worship,
7:30
p.m.;
you
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF m.; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
mornmgworshtp, 1~:30a. m.;
MIDDLEPORT
FIRSll meeting, 7 p.m. P.rayer meeting THE
NAZARENE- Rev. M. C. m .; Sunday evening service, 7
BYF, 6 P· m .; Bible Stud_y BAPTIST -Charles W. Simons.
Thursday,
7:30p.m.
Larimore,
pastor. Bob Moore, p. m. Wednesday evening
Wedn~sday 7 p. m.; chotr pastor. Danny Thompson, SunSunday
School
Supt. Sunday prayer services, 7:30 p. m .
practtce_,_Wed., 8:30 P. m.
day School Supt. Sunday
School
,
classes
for
all ages, 9: 30
Fl RST SOUTH. ERN BAP- Church School, 9:15 a. m.;
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST a . m.; mor_cing worship, 10:45, Great Bend, Charles Norris,
TI~T- 220 E_. Matn, Pomeroy, Morning worship, 10:15 a. m.
NYPS
Sunday,
6:30
p.
m.;
Hobart
Newell,
supt.
Serafftltated w1th S.B.C. Rev. Sunday Bible study hour 7:30 p..
pastor. Worship service, 9:30 a.
Tuesday
Clifford Coleman, pastor. m. Sunday, 4:30 p. m., game vices weekly, 9:30a.m. Sunday. evangelistic service, Sunday, m .; Sunday School, 10:30 a.m.
Psalms
7:30
p.m.
Mid
-week
prayer.
Preaching
first
and
third
Su nday school, 9:30 a.m., 'time tor youth. weanesday
730:1-8
meeting,
Wednesday,
7:30p.m.
Sundays
of
month
by
Charles
MORNING STAR UNITED
Hershel M~Ciure, supt.; wor- evening prayer service, 7:30.
Mssionary meeting, second METHODIST - Rev. Will iam
Russell, 9:30a.m.
ship servtce, 10:30 a.m.;
Scripturesselected by lhe Amerocan Bible Society
Copyright 1971 Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Virgin ia
WednesdayJ 7:30 o. m.
evening worship 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST, MidAirson, pastor; Roy Van Meter, .• ----- .
-"R 0 C K . S P R I N G S supt.;
Wednesday prayer meeting and - dleport, 5th and Main. Raullin
Sunday School , 9:30 ~ ·
.
h' h ·
METHODIST - Rev. Richard
Bible study, 7:30p .m.
_ Moyer, pastor. Thomas Kelly,
With the hope it will, in some measure, foster and help sustam that w
IS
Pumphrey, pastor; Harold m.; Morning worsh.ip, 10: ~~ a.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN Sunday School supt. Bible
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN Blackston ,
Youth Fellowship and 3ible
. f
.
d
·t l·fe this feature is sponsored by the busrness
superintendent. m.;
1
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, pastor. School, 9:30 a. m.; morning
study,
Thursday,
8
p.
m.
Fred
good
tn
amt
y
an
communi
Y
t
'
UNION Darrel Doddrill,
Sunday School, 9:15 a. m., worship, 10:30 a. m.; evening pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a. Morning worship, 9:30 a.m. ; Sm ith, layleader.
firms and organizations whose names appear below.
Charles Evans, Supt; worship worship, 7:30 p, m.; oravPr m., A.:nie Mohler, supt.; church school, 10:15 a.m.;
evening worship, 7:30 p.m .;
service, 10:30 a. m. Con- service 7 p. m. Wednesday.
CARLETON CHURCH Leonard Gilmore, first elder; MYF, 6 p.m. Prayer meeting
firmation class, Saturday, 9:45
Road.
Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....
evening service, 7:30 p . m. and Bible Study, Wednesday, Kingsbury
a.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m. A ministrative School, 9: 30 a. m., Ralph Carl,
POMEROY-CHESTER
MASON COUNTY_
7:30 p. m.
Council first Monday, 7:30p.m. supt. Worship service, 10:30 a.
UNITED
METHODIST m. and 7: 30 p. m. alternately.
- CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
PLUMBING AND HEATING
Robert R . Card, pastor. Services, 315 Main St., Pt. - MT. MORIAH CHURCH 0~ -EDEN UNITED BRETHREN Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
Pomeroy - Wors p 10 30 a. Pleasant. Sunday services, 11 GOO - Racine Route 2. The IN CHRIST- Elden R. Blake, 7:30 p. m. Rev. Jay Stiles,
Phone 992-3284
Middleport
992-2550
Charles
Hand,
pastor.
Rev.
Sunday School, lOa. m.; pastor
m , C"u ch Scho;
a.m. Wednesday Testimonial Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; pastor.
Middleport
Winnie Holsinger, supt. Mor 240 Lincoln St.
Frank
Vaugh
n meet'ng. 7 30 p.m.
morning worship, 11 a.m. ning sermon, 11 a.m.; Evening
-- ·
._ hind
Chester
a
OLD
DEXTER
CONEvening
services,
Tuesday
and
service
Christian
Endeavor,
m. ; Church Sch
GREGATIONAL CHURCH GRAHAM UNITED METH- Friday, 7· 30.
7:30 p. m.; Mrs.
Lyda Rev. Wi liard Dutcher, pastor.
Roge .. Epple, su
ODIST CHURCH - Preaching
TUPPERS
PLAINS Cheva I ier, president. Song Mrs. Worley Francis, Sunday
SEVENTH DA
ADVEN~
9 30 a. m., first and second
UNITED service and sermon, 8:20. Mid- School Supt. Sunday School ,
TIST Pomeroy, Mulberry Sundays of each month; third CHARGE
Hgts. Herbert Morgan, pastor. and fourth Sundays each month, METHODIST. Sunday worship Week prayer meeting Wed - 9:45 a. m. Church Services first
Bakers of Good Bread
St. Paul's 9 a.m.; South nesday, 7:30 p. m. Mrs . Mazie and third Sundays follow ing
Sabbath S~hool, Saturday, 2 p. worship service at 7:30 p. m. Huntington, W.Va.
Holsinqer,
class
leader.
m.; worshtp, 3:15 p. m. Dorcas Wednesday evenings at 7:30, Bethel9:55 a.m.; Alfred 11 a.m.
Sunday School, Second and
POMEROY LOWER LiGHT fourth Saturday evenings, 8 p -----------------------~------------------~
(First and third Sundays) 7:45
Society, lOa. m. each Thursday. Prayer and Bible Study.
p.m.; (Second and 4th Sun- CHURCH- Harrisonville Road, m. services .
clays). Lottridge -7: 45 p.m. ~ev. Roy Taylor, pastor ; Henry
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
(First and third Sundays), 11 Eblin, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9: 30 a. m . ;, - Mr. Robert Wyatt, pastor;
r~.m. Second and 4th Sundays.
evening worship, 7:30 p. m. Sunday School supt., Ronald
LO -N G
BOTTOM Prayer and prasie service, Osborne. Bible School, 9: 30 a.
Middleport, Ohio
METHODIST - Rev. Freeland Thursday2:l.Q..P- m.
m.; preaching 10:45 a. m.;
Norris, pastor. Sunday School,
Evening
services,
7:30
p
.
m
.
RACINE - LETART
WESBY FRANK A. CHEESEBREW
10 a.m.; church services, 11
LEYAN UNITED METHODIST
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
a.m.
Pastor, Cheshire U .M . Circuit
Racine, W. Dale McClurg,
METHODIST Cecil Wise,
BEARWALLOW RIDGE pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a. Pastor. Sunday School, 9:30
CHURCH OF CHRIST - John m. ; Worship service, 10:30 a.
THEME: THE SECOND TOUCH, Scripture, Mark 8:22-26.
Morning worship, 10:30
Athens Road
Pomeroy
Rockhold, pastor. Bible study, m.; UMYF, 7 p. m. each Sun- a.m.;
a.m.; Young People's service,
9:30 a.m.; morning worship, day; Senior Choir practice, 6:45p.m .; Evangelistic service,
A Family That Worships Together
10: 30; evening wo~ship, 7:30 Thursday, 7:30 p. m.; Service 7:30 p .m. Prayer meeting,
This lesson records the only example in the Gospels of a
Stays Together
p.m . Wednesday Btble study, Gund., fourth Monday, 7:30 p.
progressive cure on the part of our Lord. When He healed the
m.; Happy Hustlers Sunday Thursday, 7:30p.m.
1-------------~----~---------------+-----------------------------------J
7:30p.m.
School Class meeting, fourth
leper (Mark 1:40-42), and when he took the daughter of Jairus by
STIVEkSVILLt:
COM - Friday, 6 p. m.; WSCS second
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
the hand (Mark 5: 22-42), one touch was enough. In the case of the
MUNITY CHURCH Rev . Friday, 7: 30 p. m .; Official MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev
Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday Board, second Monday, 7:30 p. L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor
blind man of Bethsaida, Jesus touched the man twice. After the
morning worship service, .10
first touch, the cure was only partial; the man saw "men as trees
Roger Wilfred, Sr., Sunday
m. - --Bakers of Holsum Bread
a.m., Dell Talbot , superin- -c-oMMUNITY
CHURCH, School Supt. Sunday School ,
walking." He has passed from blindness into sight, but that was
Middleport, Ohio
tendent. Prayer meeting, each Dexter- Rev. Basil DeWeese, 9:30 a. m. ; Sunday evening
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Sunday pastor . Sunday morning worabout all. ''After that He put His hands again upon his eyes ... and
worship 7:30. Prayer meeting,~----------------------------------~----------------------------------~
evening service, 7:30.
ship, 10 a. m .; Worship ser - Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Ernest
he saw every man clearly." (v.25).
vices, 7:30 p. m . Tuesday and Deeter, c lass leader. Yough
This incident is a parable of spiritual life which centers in
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday evenings.
Meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ,
Pomeroy-Harrisonville
Jesus, the light of the world, who came to give physical light and,
ST.
PAUL'S
UNITED Ernest Deeter, leader.
Member of the Big 3
Road. John Webster, pastor ;
more importantly, spiritual light.
Paul McElroy , Sunday School METHODIST CHURCH General Merchandise
MT.
HERMON
UNITED
Tuppers
Plains.
Rev.
Randy
Supt. Sunday School, 9: 30 a. m.;
Most of us have been touched by the spirit of Jesus, but unTuppers Plains
667-3280
Md'rning Worship and com- Lavender, pastor . Sunday BRETHERN CHURCH IN
doubtedly many have not permitted Jesus to restore full, clear
munion, 10: 30 a. m.; Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; youth CHRIS1- Rev . Robert Shook,
fellowship, 6 p. m. ; Sunday pastor, Sunday School, 9: 30 a
vision to them. Such people need a second touch by Jesus.
evening youth Christian En
m., Roy Pooler, supt.; Alfred
d eaver, 6 p. m.; Worship ser- evening wors hip, 7:30 p. m.
--Consider the possibility that some of us need a second touch
LETART
UNITED Wolfe, asst. supt.; morning
vices, 7 p. m.; Wednesday
in coming to know who Jesus really is. Paul said, "For me to live
evening prayer meeting and METHODIST CHURCH -First worship, 11 a.m.; evening
and second Sundays, preaching sermon, 7:30 p.m., alternating
is Christ." Jesus saves us from our sins, and we cannot know who
Bible study, 7:30 p. m .
_
each Sunday. Class meeting, 11
Pomeroy-Member F. D. I. C. &amp;
SYRACUSE
BAPTIST at 8 p. m.; Third and fourth a. m. alternating Sunday
Jesus really is W1less we have had a saving experience with him
Sundays, Sunday School, 10 a.
TABERNACLE
Raymond
Federal Reserve System •·
and have allowed him to free us from our sins. We can have some
mornings ,
Alfred
Wolfe,
m.;
worship
service
at
11
a.
m.;
Butcher, pastor . Sunday school,
layleader ; Christian Endeavor, 1------------------------------------+---------=-------------------::-~
knowledge of Jesus without this saving experience - a first touch
9:30 a.m.; worship service, Tuesday evenings at 8 p. m., 7:30
p. m. Sunday, Roger
prayer and Bible Study.
10:30 a.m.
_ but the highest knowledge of Jesus is to know Him as our
FLATWOODS
UNITED Buckley, president. Prayer
METHODIST, Rev. W illia m meeting, Wednesday, 7:30 p. m
Savior.
ST. JOHN 'LUTHERAN ~ Airson, pastor, Robert Eason, Board meeting first Monday
Rexall Drugs
- It may be that Jesus will have to touch us a second time
Pine Grove, Rev. Gerald supt . Sunday School at 10 a. m., each month, 7:30 p. m .
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
before we come to know who our fellowmen really are. We often
Herbener, pastor. Sunday Wors hip service at 11 a. m.
school, 9 a.m.; Church se~vice, Prayer meeting Thursday, 8 p.
m~rn
~mffoy
see others "as trees walking." These are they, "for whom Christ
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
10 a.m.
m.
PRESBYTERIAN
- Rev
died." These are they for whom He poured out His life's blood.
SYRACUSE
UNITED
MT. UNION BAPTIST Russell Lester, pastor. Worship
METHODIST Paul A. Rev. Ceci l Cox, pas~or. Sunday service, 9 a.m.; Sunday School,
These are they who are bought with a price.
Sellers,
pastor
;
Ben
Quisenschool supt ., Joe Sayre. Sunday
- It may be that we need a second touch in coming to know
LINCOLN-MERCURY
berry, Sunday School Supt. school, 9:45 a.m.; Sunday 10 a.m.
what the Church really is. The Church of Jesus Christ is a com·
worship service, 9:30 a. m. first
AMERICAN MOTORS
Electric Motor Repair
evening
worship,
7:30.
Wed'RUTLAND
and third Sunday. Evening nesday prayer and Bibl e study,
mW1ity of people dedicated to Him: people working, worshipping,
Phone 593-6601
810 W. Main
992-5750
service, 8 p. m . fourth Sunday. 7:30 p.m.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPand praying together; people l earning to love one another
85 N. Court St.
Athens
LANGSVILLE MIDWAY TU PP E RS
P LA I N S TIST - Rev. Samuel Jackson,
because of the love that Jesus has placed in their hearts. The
services each Sunday at 10 a.m. CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Mr . pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m .;
and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday ev ening John Wyatt, pastor; J. S. Davis, Mrs. Gertrude Butler, supt
trouble with many of our churches is that we have merely seen
wor ship, 7:30.
Sunday School supt .; Sunday Prayer Service, 1:30 p. m.;
one another as trees walking.
SUTTON
UNITED school, 9: 30 a. m ., Morning oreaching service, 2 p. m.
_
- We need to let Jesus guide us into a growing experience of
METHODIST Paul A.
Take Someone with You to Church
Meats and Groceries
Sermon, 10:30 a. m. Evening - THE - RUTLAND
METHSellers,
pastor;
Martha
Lee,
fellowship by which we learn to love and care for and to know our
7 p. m .
ODIST
R
R' h
In Pomeroy Over 90 Years
Syracuse
992-3986
Sunday School Supt. Worship sermon,
EAST
LETART
FALLS
ev.
tc
ard
C
fellow men _ to see "every man clearly. W e may need a second
service, 10: 45 a. m . ;second and UNITED
Kermit Walton, Mgr.
MET H 0 DIS T Pumphery,
pastor.
Church
fourth
Sundays;
e vening CHURCH - W. Dale M cClurg, Sch~ol 9:30 a.m.; Worship
touch a third touch, a sixth touch. But let us not be dismayed. Let
worhsip, 8 p.m. third Sunday. pas tor. Worship services, serv1ce 10: 30 a.m.
us go 'an the way with Jesus, knowing that He will go all the way
ENTERPRISE
UNITED second and fourth Sundays of
METHODIST - Rev. William each month at 9 a.m. ; Sunday
RUTLAND ~HURCH OF
with us.
Airson, pastor. Ralph Spencer, School , first and third Sundays CHRIST- Sunday school, 9:30
Supt.; Carl Jennings, asst. supt. of each monthat 9 a.m.; second a .m., V. H. Braley, supt. ;
Furniture and Appliances
Church and Office Supplies- Gifts
Worship services, 9:30 a. m.; and fourth Sundays of each communion and devotions,
Phone
985-3308
Chester, 0.
992 -2641
Middleport
Sunday School, 10: 30 a. m .; mon th at 10 a . m .; Bible study, 10:30 a . m. Regular board
The Almanac
meeting 7:30, third Saturday
Law organized the first Girls Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. m .; Wednesday .
choir, 6:15 p. m.
;.,.ch month.
.
By United Press International
Scouts of America troop in Wednesday,
LETART FALLS UNITED
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
THE
RUTLAND
COMAttend the Church of Your Choice
BRETHREN
Rev.
Rob~rt
Today is Friday, March 12, Savannah, Ga.
MUNITY CHURCH -Rev
Norman McCain, s upt .
Shook, pastor ; Herschel Norris,
the 7lst day of 1971.
In 1933 President Franklin D. Serv 1ces weekly at 9: 30 a. m. supt . Sunday sc hool , 9:30a.m .; Amos Tillis, pastor. Sunday
The moon is between its full Roosevelt, in office eigh t days, Preaching fir st and third morning sermon, 10:30 a.m.; School, 9:30 a. m .; Worship
Bulova Watches-Sales &amp; Service
service, 11 a. m.; Wednesday
Sundays of month by Char les
phase and last quarter .
Pomeroy .
evening sermon, 7:30 alter- prayer meeting , 7:30 p. m
Ph. 992-3498
made the first of many radio ~ussell, 9:30 a . m . _
186 N. Second
Middleport
nating each Sunday. Prayer
The morning stars are Venus, "Fireside Chats."
BRADBURY CHURCH OF service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . Sunday night worship, 7:30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF f.Mars and Jupiter.
Roy Bill Carter, Prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m .
In 1938 Germany invaded CHIRST evangel
is
I
;
Thurman
Carsey,
The evening stars are Mercu- Austria.
alternating Sundays.
Bible School supt. ; Bible School
ry and Saturn.
and
In 1963 the House voted to 9: 30 a . m .; morning worship,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF School, 9: 30 a. m. ; Morning
Those horn on this day are grant Sir Winston Churchill 10: 30 a. m. ; youth meeting, 6 p. CHRIST Roy W. Carter, worship, 10 :30 a. m. ; Young
.
pastor; Jerry Davis, Sunday people's service, 6:45 p . m.;
under the sign of Pisces.
honorary cil!zenship in the m .; evening service, 7 p . m. School super intendent. Sunday
Chrislian
Work ers
Class,
Evangelistic services, 7:30 p
Serving The Big Bend Area
On this day in histc,ry.
United States.
Tuesday, 7· 30 p. m ; prayer School, 9:30 a. m .; Morninq m.Wednnday~~i~~rvi~,l. . . . . . . . . . . .~~. . . . . . . .~~~. . . . . .~. .~~~~~~~~~~~~~--. .•
/:30
p
.
m.
,
worship, 10:30 u . m.; Youth
In 1912 Mrs. Juliette Gorr' ' li
meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

•

•

•

7fi

.

•.c

WILLIS ANTHONY

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

•

HEINER'S BAKERY

MARK V STORE

the Serrnonette

OOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

LYONS MARKET

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

RAYBUCK MOTOR SALES Inc.

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

NEW YORK CLOTiiiNG HOUSE

SADIE'S MARKET

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

F. J. WALLACE, JEWELER

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11 :00 Family Affair
11: 30 Love of Life
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11:30
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CH.t\NNEL 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 Beverl y 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 Secret Storm
3:30 Edge of Night
4:00 Movie
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 Cronkite
7:00 What's My Line
7:30 Interns
8:00
8: 30 Andy Griffith
9 : 00 Movie
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11 : 30 Movie
12:00

7: 15 Farm Report
7:30 Un iv. of Michigan
8:00 The Christophers
8:30 Underdog
9:00 Rocky &amp; His Friends
9:30 Jack LaLanne
10:00 Mike Douglas
10:30
11 :00
11:30 That Gi rl
12:00 News
12:30
1: 00 All My Children
1: 30 Let' s Make A Deal
2:00 Newlywed Game
2:30 Dating Game
3: 00 General Hospital
3: 30 Munsters
4:00 Addams Family
5:00 Wi ld Wild West
5: 30
6:00 Big_Valley
6:30
7:00 News
7:30 Special
8:00
.
8:30 Partridge Family
9:00 That Girl
9:30 The Odd Couple
10:00 Love American Style
10: 30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12:00
1:30 News

6:00
6:30
6:45
7:00 John' s Almanac
7:30
8:00 Tom Foolery
8:30 Heckle and Jeckle
9: 00 Woody Woodpecker
9:30 The Bugaloos
10:00 Dr. Dool ittle
10:30 Pink Panther
11: 00 Pufns tuf
11:30 Here Comes the Grump
12:00 Hot Dog
12:30 Kartoon Karniva r
12:45 Bill Anderson
1: 15 Sports Cha llenge
2:00 NCAA Basketball
2:30
3:00
3 : 00
4:00
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 NBC News
7:00 Nashville Music
7:30 Andy Wi lliams
8: 00
8:30 Movie
9:00
9: 30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11:15 Late Mo~ie
12:00
12: 15

CHANNEL 8
6:00
6:30 TV Classroom

CHANNEL 13

6:00
6: 30 Ken tu ck v Afield
6:45
6: 45
7:00 Neighbors
7: 00 Cartoons
7:15 Women 's View
7: 30 Green Hornet
7: 30 Wonderama
8: 00 Bugs Bunny
8: 30
8: 30 Roadrunner
9:00 Lancel ot Link
9: 00 Sabrina
9: 30
9:30 Groovy Coolies
10:00 Josie
10:00 Jerry Lewis
10:30 The Double Deckers
10:30 Globetrotters
11:00 H.S. Basketbal l
11:00 Archie' s Fun House
11:30
11:30
12: 00
12:00 Scooby.Do
12:30
12:30 The Monkees
1:00
1:00 Dastardly &amp; Muttley
1: 30
1: 30 Jetsons
2:00 Viewpoint
2:00 Visual Girl
2:30 To Whom I May Concern 2:30 Bowli ng
3:00 Bonn ie Lou &amp; Buster
3:00 TBA.
3:30 ....
3:30 Pro Bowler' s Tour
4:00
4:00 Golf
4:30 Golf
4:30
5: 00 Wide World of Sports
5: 30
5:00 Wrestling
6:00
5:30
6: 30 Fishing Show
6:00 News
7:00 Wilburn Bros.
6:30 CBS News
6:30 Roger Mudd
7:30 Lawrence Welk
7:00 To Rome with Love
8:00 H.S. Basketball
7:30 Mission Impossible
8:30 Pearl Bailey
9:00
8:00
8: 30 My Three Sons
9:30
10: 00 Movie
9:00 Arnie
10:30
9: 30 Mary Tyler Moore
11:00
10: 00 Mannix
11:30
10:30
12:30 Chiller
11:00 News
11:30 Movie

�8 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 12, 1971

Bargains., Bargains., and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds . ., .
2 SIGNS
RADIO, lV,
Pomeroy
·Business·
Services
J
OF

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

Notice

AUCTION WHEN? Each
Friday ntghl, 7 p.m. Where?
Hayman's Auction House,
Laurel Cliff on new RI. 7
Pomeroy-Middleport
By .
pass.
2·7-tfc

1 .•
5 P M Day Before Publication
/11\Dnday Deadline 9 a.m.
1
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publi&lt;:ation
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
REGULATIONS
'
Bring them in and Save
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
1ne Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
If
tl
cost
you
$28.00
to
have
deemed
objectional.
The GUN SHOOT: Every Saturday
Time You Ever Spent.
1~68FO~D112_TON
$1895
your TV set repaired you lost
pub I is her will not be responsible
night, 6 p.m., near Racine
8 Stylestde Ptckup, V 8 engine, std. trans., custom cab. R
money. If you had brought it
for more than one incorrect
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
Planing Mill, sponsored by
insertion.
s_tep bumper, chrome int. bumper, radio, white &amp; red
to Chuck's TV it probably
Syracuse Fire Department.
RATES
ftnlsh. Good tires.
would
have
cost
you
$19.00
~WINSOR
'*CHAMPION
i'AL$0
Assorted meats.
For Want Ad Service
for the same repairs. I have
3-10-3tc
«BUDDY
it VAN DYKE
DOUBLE~WIDES
_?_ cents,p~~ord one inser_!ion
1966
CHEVROLET
2
TON
$1695
-GUARANTEEDno
overhead
to
pay
out
so
the
Mtntmum Charge 75c
CabChassis,
84"-cab
to
axle.
Good
825x20
tires,
2-speed
12 cents per word three RUMMAGE SALE, old post
savinqs is yours.
SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW
Phone 992-2094
consecutive insertions
rear axle, clean cab, 292.cu. in. 6 cyl. engine.
office bldg., in New Haven, W.
Your -service men are
18 cents per word six con
Va., March 12 and 13, Friday
Chuck Humphreys &amp;
secutive insertions .
'.
1969 CHEV. CAPRICE 4 DR.
$3495
and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Scott Smith
25 Per cent Discount on paid
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
Facto:y air cond., auto. trans., P.S., P. B., vinyl roof. Like
sponsored by St. Joseph Altar
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
606 E Ma'in, Pomeroy, 0.
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.
new ttres. Local owner with only 14,000 mi.
Guild, St. Joseph Church,
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Mason, W. Va.
$1.50 for 50 word' minlmun.
310 3tc
Pomeroy, 0.
RALPH'S
CARPET
152 Butternut
Each additional word 2c.
Uphols.tery Cleaning Service.
BLIND ADS
See Us At The ...
Open 9 Till 5-Six Days
Free
estimates.
Phone
Additional 25c Charge per&gt; GUN SHOOT, Sunday, March
14, 1 p.m., Mile Hill Road,
Advertisement.
Gallipolis 446-0294.
sponsored by Racine Fire
OFFICE HOURS
3-12-tfc
Dept. Hams, bacons, half hog.
8:30 -a·.m . to 5:00 p m Daily,
OPEN
EVES.
8:00
P.M.
3-10-4tc
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Saturday.
. P.OMEROY, OHIO
Commercial, residential and
"ATTENTION ladies! Wo-uld you
industrial wiring. Phone 247
like to try a wig on in the
2113.
privacy of your own home?
3-12-6tc
You can. Just call us. We also
NOTICE ON FILING
WE
WISH
to
thank
Dr.
Pickens,
UN
FURNISHED
3room
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics.
OF INVENTORY
HARRISON'S TV AND ANDr. Telle, the nurses at
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
Kosco!. of course. DisAND APPRAISEMENT
TEJ.jNA SERVICE. Phone
The State of Ohio, Meigs
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
tributors, Brown's.,, Ph9.1).!'
County. Probate Court.
992-2522.
1-31-tfc
the ladies of the D.A.V.
From the Largest Truck or
Middleport 992-5113.
To the Executor or Ad·
6-10-tfc
Auxiliary, the American 12-31-tfc
Bulldozer Radiator to the
ministrator of the estate, to
Legion, the Veterans who TWO OR three bedroom home,
such of the follow ing as are
NEIGLER Construction. For 1 Smallest Heater Core.
were
pallbearers,
all
who
sent
Cottage
Road,
Syracuse.
CHAIRS
recaned.
Call-992-6771.
residents of the State of Ohio,
building or remodeling your
flowers, the Rev. Frank
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
viz - the surviving spouse, the
2-28-12tp
home. Call Guy Neigler,
Cheesebrew for consoling
3-2-tfc
next of kin, the beneficiaries
Racine, Ohio.
under the will; and to the at - BAND- The Suns, Friday and
words, the Ewing Funeral
Pomeroy
Ph. 992~2143
torney
or
attorneys
7-31-tfc
Home and all who helped in TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
Saturday nights, 9 p.m. to 2
representing
any of
the
------------'-112-mile north of new Meigs
any
way.
Thanks
so
much.
p
.m.
HI
7
Club.
Broker
aforementioned persons
READY-MIX CONCRETE deHigh School. Phone 992-2941.
THE FAMILY of Sadie
3-10-3tp
110 Mechanic St.
Delilah Mays, Olive Town
3-5-tfc
livered right to your project.
Wolfe, Grace and Shirley
Pomeroy, Ohio
ship , Meigs County , Ohio, No.
Fast
and
easy.
Free ·
Wolfe, Howard and Frank
20.369.
WILL GIVE piano and organ
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Gilkey and Family.
You are hereby notified that
lessons in my home. Phone
FURNISHED and unfurnished RURAL - NEW 3 bedrooms,
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co ,
the
Inventory
and
ApJ112 baths, gas furnace, nice
3-12-ltp
apartments. Close to school.
992-3666.
praisement of the estate of the
Middleport. Ohio.
ki !chen with dining area.
816-ttc. _W_E
__W
__I-SH---to__
e_
x -p _
r e_s_s_o_u_r-si nPhone 992 ' 5 ~34 ·
aforementioned, deceased, late
6-30-tfc
Utility room, cook and bake
10-18-tfc
of said county, was tiled in this
cere thanks to the neighbors,
units. Carport. 112 Acre. On
Court. Said inventory and ap- RUBBER STAMPS made to
All Makes &amp; Models
CUSTOM
MEAT
cutting.
relatives and friends for their HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, garage,
124. $19,500.00.
praisement will be for hearing
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
Also
Contact
Richard
Vaughan,
sympathy
and
kindness
RENTING
IS
WASTEFUL.
before this Court on the 22nd
Spring Ave., Pomeroy. Also,
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Stereos &amp; Tapes
phone
992-3374
or
Dale
Little
,
during
the
death
of
our
SYRACUSE
4
bedrooms,
day of March, 1971, at 10 : 00
3-room, bath, semi-furnished
Ohio.
675-2241 or 773-5196
phone 992-6346.
o'clock A .M
mother, Barbara Young.
bath, nice paneled kitchen.
2-12-90tc
apartment and 2-room, bath,
Any person desiring to file
3-3-12tc
Thanks to Dr. Pickens,
Furnace
heat.
Basement.
furnished
apartment.
exceptions thereto must file
nurses, and all who helped in
Large garden, $12,000.00.
Mulberry Ave. References
DOZER- WORK. Septic tanks,
them at least five days prior to
BACK HOE and end-loader
any
way
at
the
Veterans
SAVE MONEY,
required. Phone 992-6698.
leach beds. Phone 949•4761~
the date set for hearing.
Open:
work. Septic tanks installed.
Memorial
Hospital
during
her
BUY
PROPERTY
NOW.
3-10-tfc
Given under MY hand and
10-18-tfc
9 Til9 Mon., Tues.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
illness. Thanks to Rev. Robert
ROCK SPRINGS SUBseal of said Court. this 2nd day
Wed. &amp; Fri.
992-2478.
J. Durbin- C. Inscore
Card and Ewing Funeral 2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
DIVISION- NEW electric 3
of March 1971.
SPIRITUAL-Aires of Columbus
11-29-tfc
9 Til6 Thurs. &amp; Sat.
John C Bacon,
Service Personnel
Home for their fine service.
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
will be singing at the Rutland
His., Pomeroy. Phone 992992-7261
Acting Judge and
beautiful kitchen with dining
Free-Will Baptist Church THE FAMILY of Barbara
5127 after 4 p. m.
ex officio Clerk of said Court
305 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
Young .
area. Therm-o-pane windows. AIR cONDITIONING. ReSunday, March 14, 2 p.m.
3-2- tfc
frigeration service. Jack's
3-12-ltc
Full
basement.
2
car
garage.
Come
and
worship
with
us.
By Janet E. Morris
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Lot 100 X 145. Have key, will
3-7-7tc
Deputy Clerk
SMALL ONE -Bedroom trailer,
Phone 882-2079.
show. $23,500.00.
(3) S, 12, 2tc
forced atr heat and air con4-6-tfc
WE NEED VACANT
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327. WILL PICK up merchandise~ ditioning. Phone 992-6452.
LAND NEAR CHESHIRE
3·4-tfc 75 ACRES- 20 tractor tillable, SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Home
2-23-30tc
and take to auction on a
LEGAL NOTICE
service, all makes. 992-2284.
30 in pasture. 4 bedroom farm
B1ds will be receiv ed in the NEW SHIPMENT women's and
percentage basis. Call Jim
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
office of the VIll ag e clerk of
house. Implement shed, small
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
ch i ldren's
clothing
has
Rutland for the repa ir and re
Authorized Singer Sales and
barn.
MINERALS.
Phone 742-4461.
arrived at Jeffers Clothing
surfacing of all streets within
$13,500.00.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
9-23-tfc
Store.
Plenty
of
men's
work
th e v i llage . Spec fications are
3·29-tfc
MAY
WE
HELP
YOU
clothes
also
.
Jeffers
Clothing
ava1 ab e by contacting Vernon
SELL, BUY, OR TRADE.
c---~-----------Weber, Clerk, Rutland , Ohio .
Store. Rt. 33 going toward
992-3325
's'EPfic tanKs cleaned . Miller
(2l 26, (3) 5, 8, 3tc
fairgrounds .
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
3-12-6tc BOY'S Gi...ASSES, lost at Dairy
AS
SOC
lATE
992-2378
662-3035.
Valley,
Pomeroy.
Call
3-12-6tc
2-12-ttc
Cheshire collect 367-7285.
MEIGS County Fish and Game
3-12-3tp
Association will meet Friday,
March 12, 7: 30 p.m ., at ------- ------ -------OHIO RIVER lot. Boat lovers!
Every One
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL HARRIS
Approximately 2112-acres, 200Coonhunters Club, Snowball
Complete Service
Marked
Down
192 Beech St.
Middleport
Hill, Syracuse. Election of
fool river frontage, septic
Phone 949-3821
" The sense of pride one has in
offi cers will be held .
SMALL farm and house,
tank,
city
water,
gas
Racine, Ohio
buildings, Meigs County area.
22 cu. ft. side by side
owning their own home cannol be
3-9 If
available. Also, 1970 trailer,
Cri+t Bradford
Contact Oris Frederick, 3221
Frostless Combination, 19
measured in dollars and cen+s.
12x63, 3-bedroom, bath and
1 tfc
Georgetown
Rd.,
Incu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
We will be eternally gratefu l io
half Property could be used SEPTIC TANKS CLEA ED.
U l\1 SHOOT Forked Run
dianapolis, Ind. 46224. Phone
Up . Freezer , 15 cu. ft.
Jerno Associates for this op
Spor t s man Club Sunday
as sma l l trailer park or " Ditching. Electric sewer
317 291 9130.
Refrigerator, 12 cu. ft.
By Mrs. H er
starting at noon. Everyone
re!irement home. Samuel
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
portunily."
3-9-121c
Refrigerator, 4-11 cu. ft.
Barnhar t, across from Racine
w elcome
Phone
John
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs.
3-12-2tc - - - - - - -------------Chest Freezers and Elec.
Planing MilL Rt. 124, above
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Tanners Run
pent Sunday
OLD furniture, dishes, bras~
4-7-tfc
Dryer. Must make room.
Syracuse.
afternoon with 1\K...r. and Mrs.
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
3-9-6tc
Priced for fast sale!
Rt, 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
Roy Donohue . Miss Loretta
Robert Wood suffered a
PAINTING,
roofing
and
992-6271.
CONVENIENT but secluded
spouting service. Richard
POMEROY
Ours of Middleport was a dinner stroke at his home Wednesday
9-1 -tfcbuilding
lots
on
T79
at
Rock
Wilt. phone 992-2889 .
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
guest Sunday of the Donohues. night and is confined to Holzer
Springs . Within walking
3-11 -30tc
Phone 992-2181
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
SMALL SCALES to weigh up to
distance of Meigs High
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Roush Medical Center.
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
60 pounds. Dale Kautz, phone
School,
a
5
minute
drive
from
of Cincmnati spent the weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Wiggington
Phone 992-7034
Chester 985-3831.
Pomeroy.
Call
or
see
BUI
SALE GOING ON. HOUSE,
Wlth. Mrs. Elizabeth Roush and of St. Albans,
Va., spent
3-12-3tp
Wi lie weekends, or after 5
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE,
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992farmly.
Sunday with the latter's
HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
6887.
DEPOT ST., RUTLAND,
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Donohue parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jess
condition, as long as have not
2-3-tfc
OHIO. SALE SIGNS UP.
608 East Main
and baby of Marion spent the Anderson.
been wet. Paying $10 each.
3-11 3tc
POMEROY
First floor only. Mondays will
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts., FARM - about 170 acres, 45 for
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
be
pick-up
day.
Write,
giving
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
Vernon Donohue.
cu ltivation , 2 wel ls, pond, 3
Erma Wilson and Mrs. Judy
good directions. Witten Piano LIME spreader . Phone 247-2161.
10-25-tfc
barns, shed, silo, milk house,
3-11 3tc
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Abbott Roberts were visitors Friday at
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
corn crib, good 8 room home
of Woodville, W. Va., were Gallipolis. Mrs. Roush conOhio 43946.
with bath, part minerals.
8-20-tfc MODERN WALNUT stereodinner guest Saturday of Mr. sulted a doctor at Holzer
$20,000.
radio combination . Four
and Mrs. St. Clair Hill and Medical Center.
speed intermixed changer .
SYRACUSE- JUST 8 YEARS
called at the Ewing Funeral
Four speaker sound system,
Mrs. Harold Wolfe and
OLD, 1 story frame, 3
GEO. HOBSTETTER,
separate controls. Balance
Home to pay respect to Mrs. children of Chester visited Mrs. WILL DO babysitting in my
bedrooms, bath, utility room ,
REAL ESTATE
$69.40.
Use
our
budget
terms.
home in Chester. Write c -o
carport. level lot. $15,950.
Florence Hill.
45 ACRES land, plenty of
Mildred Spencer. Mrs. Spencer
Call
992-3352.
The Daily Sentinel, Box 729-R,
timber, $4,000. 100 acres land,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Miller spent the weekend with her
3 11 -6tc
Pomeroy, Ohio.
POMEROY NEW ROOF,
all timber , $9,000.
and son, Jeff, spent a recent daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
3-9-6tc
SIDING and CARPORT,
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
COLONIAL
MAPLE
stereo
weekend with their daughter, Jackson and sons at Leetonia.
bath, 3 bedrooms, small yard .
Phone 949-3211
radio
beautiful
Early
$3 ,900.
3-12-3tc
Mr. and Mrs. David Hadley, at
Amertcan style, with AM-FM
Mr. and, Mrs. Everett Parsons
TO BUY OR SELL
Cincinnati.
radio,
four
speakers,
4
speed
CALL US
of Negley, Ohio, called on Mr. BEELINE Fashions offer Past
automatic changer. Balance
Jeff Donohue i s commuting to and Mrs. Herbert Roush and
HENRY CLELAND
Party Plan dealers 26 reasons
$82.30. Use our time payment
REALTOR
Nelsonville to sc hool each day. Roger Tuesday evening. They
why you should inquire about
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
plan. Call 992-3352.
Office 992-2259
our plan. For personal incancelled?
Lost
your
3-ll -6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler also visited Preston Parsons at
Residence 992-2568
terview call 949-3703 or 1-446operator's license? Call 992and Bill spent a weekend with
310 6tc
4146.
2966.
Antiquity .
3-10-3tc RIDING horse , saddle, bridle,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Foster and
6-15-tfc
Friends here have learned
- -- - - - $175. Gravely tractor with
children at Columbus.
that Hayman Barnitz, a former
mower. $185. Call Chester 985Mr. and Mrs. Harold Grimm, resident of the Letart Falls
3395.
Dr . and Mrs. Earl Grimm of community , has suffered a CAR HOP and waitress wanted.
3-10·3tc
DISCOUNT stiTI on : Con Columbus were dinner guests stroke and is a patient at Holzer
Apply in person, Craw's Steak
George S. Hobstetter, Jr.
tinental, Skamper, Go-Tag -A House.
FOR
LONGER
wear
keep
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Don Medical Center .
Along, and Champion camREAL ESTATE BROKER
3 11 6tc
carpets clean with Blue
pers , trailers and motor
Phone 985-4186
Bell and Lorna.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Deeter ----------- ---------Lustre.
Rent
electric
homes. Some here - more
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Mrs. Flossie Church of and three children of Bashan
shampooer, $1. Baker FurDRIVERS NEEDED
coming ; Don't walk, start
Phone 949-3211
niture, Middleport.
Marion spent a weekend with called on Mr. and Mrs. Randall Train now to drive semi truck,
running to Gaul Trailer Sales, FOR ALL your real estate
3-10-6tc
local
and
over
the
road.
Inc.. Chester, Ohio. Phone
needs, contact us.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Adams. Roberts Monday.
Diesel or gas; experience
985-3832. P. S. - Reserve your
Mrs. Phyllis Young of Mason,
helpful
but
not
necessary.
Harold Hayman of Wester22 FT. LAYTON camping
rental unit for the coming ACREAGE wan ted between
You can earn over $4.50 per
Mrs. Bill Whitlach and son, ville called on his brother, Mr.
trailer, self contained, exMiddleport,
Ohio
and
season NOW.
TOM CROW
DALE DUTTON
LARRY SPENCER
hour
after
short
training.
For
cellent condition. $2,500.00.
3-7-13tc
Derr i ck , of N el sonville spent and Mrs. Ray Hayman, Sunday
Cheshire, 0.
992 2580
992·2534
992-3433
application and interview,
Phone 949-3621.
3-12-6tc
Tuesday afternoon with Mr. and and attended funeral services
call 513-241 -5572, or write
3-10-3tc
Mrs. G erald Hayman and
Safety Dept., United Systems,
for Mrs. Florence Hill at the
inc., co Motor Freight
Keith
1963 3f4·1on G.M.C. pickup, V-6 ,
Letart Falls Methodist Church .
Terminal Bldg., 3101 Gano
4-speed, power steering,
Mrs. Margeuretta Roush and
Rd ., Sharonville, Cincinnati,
radio, heavy duty springs.
sons, J erry a nd Jake , of
Ohio, 45241 .
Dale Kautz, phone Cht:ster
MINIAl URE Schnauzers .,,d
311 2tc
Pomeroy sp ent Sunday af985-3831 .
Poodle puppies. Permanent
3-12-3tp
t ernoon with Mrs . Ferne
injections and groomed .
RESPONSIBLE person to work
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
Hayman and Wesley Belles Sr. RIGHT PERSON to manage or
established route.
Good TAKE OVER payments on 1970
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
buy dry cleaning route or
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson
Dodge Dart Swinger. Also, 2commission . ABC Cleaners,
right. Phone Cool vi lie 667truck. Will sell plant and
year old buckskin mare for
Mason.
of New Haven, W. Va., spent
3654.
building . ABC Cleaners,
sale. Phone Coolville 667-3652.
3-5-tfc
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
2-11 -30tc
Mason, W. Va.
3-12 ·21c ---------------3-lO.tfc NEEDED immediately :
Homer Warner.
DON'T pump your sluggish
Mature, experienced woman
Mr. and Mrs. Theron Johnson
SERVICE station for lea se.
septic lank . Get Klean · Emto babysit two small children ,
attended a banker s meeting in
program .
Paid
training
All septic tank cleaner . 1969 PONTIAC. Phone 992-3588.
21·2 years and 4 months, in my
Phone
992-5221.
New Orleans, La ., the past
Landmark Farm Bureau,
310-31c
home, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. May
3·10.tfc
Pomeroy.
live in. Reference preferred .
week.
3 12 ltc 1969 BUICK LeSabre , 2-dr.
Call 949 4663 after 6 p.m .
3-12-3tc
hardtop , power steering ,
COAL , limestone. Exceisio :
power br akes, air, 18,000
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
miles . Excellent condition.
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
Phone 992-2288.
4-9-tfc
11 -10-tfc
WORKING
man
wants
two
or
Thi s position is at th e local plant of a. multi I hree bedroom country house
1967
GTO,
400
cu
.
in.
with
.060
plant corporation . The position r equires the
in Meig s County. Phone KILL TERMITES and yard
overbor e brand new engine
TERMS : With no money down a family with 3 children ancf a bcbf' 1ncom('
insects
w
th
Arab
"
You
Do
A lhens 592-4757.
nppli cant to have a minimum of three year s of
with many extras , including
II. " King Builders Supply
of $6 ,000 per year can own a new home for S60 per month at 71 pt. r &lt;Pnl
3-9-61c
JANS,
CRANE
,
HOLLEY,
t:' xperi en c£&gt; in general plant drafting.
Company, Middleport.
annual pHcentage rate and 396 payments. Call us and let ' c; talk it C"\.(r
ELDEBROCK, HOOKER,
2-21 -60tc
Postt ion off£- r &lt;; a good salary, company
ZOOM rod shop heads. 1968
Bu1lt on our lot. your lot or will buy a lot for you.
pc1 1d fring e benefit s inc luding a liberal life and
Mun ci e 220. 1 transmission
RECONDITIONED TV set s,
1962
CHEVROLET
2
ton
truck
,
and
much
more.
$1.900
with
hospit a li 1ation coverag e.
For information or service
4 speed , 2-speed axle, V.8,
M. T. c.iuminum wheels. Call
lnrercstcd persons please submit resume
call Spcarkie's TV S~;rvice,
new rubber Good condition ,
992 -3453 or 992-3381 . 583 S.
Call Collect Anytime - Phone 992 7136 or Phone 592-1240 Anytime
phone Mason 773-5933.
$650. Phone 992 6048.
,•) Box 211!, New Haven, West Virqinia 25265.
Second St. , Middleport , Ohio.
3-12-12tc
3 11 ·31p
3-7·61p

Motor Co.

QUALITY

SOUND SYSTEMS

EXPERT

Wheel Alignment

$5.55

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

•

Porn eroy Home &amp; Auto

CHUCKS TV

~eroy n~otor

LEGAL NOTICE

Card of Thanks

Co.

For Rent

EXPERIENCED

EVERYBODY
Shops the

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

Radiator service

Beat Inflation!

WANT AD WAY

WE

Real Estate For Sale

BUY - SELL

0

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

SWAP SHOP

\

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

BLAETTNARS

SR.

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

TELEVISIOr~

REPAIR

-

OR

TRADE

NEW AND
USED FURNITURt:
ALSO
APPLIANCES AND

I

1-----H__
OU__S~~A~ES ~

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

SWAP SHOP

Notice

For Sale

CLOSE OUT!

Lost

Apple Grove

N

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES

JEMO ASSOCIATES

•

Wanted To Buy

s,

.

b

Real Estate For Sale

w.

Cleland Realty.

CAN YO

Employment Wanted

HOBSTETTER

Female Help Wanted

Insurance

Help Wanted

For Sale or Rent

HOBSTETTER

NO MATTER WHAT YOUR INCOME
WE HAVE CONVENIENT FINANCING

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
MODELS AVAILABLE FOR INSPECTION
CALL 992-7129

Pets For Sale

Business Opportunities

HOME BUYS

NOW'S TIME TO GET YOURS!

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

Auto Sales

GOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR DRAFTSMAN

Wanted To Rent

2, 3, 4 Bedrooms From •12,900 to '17,000
NO M01VEY DOJV!V

For Sale or Trade

Weber Construction Co., Meigs-Gal ia Area

•

�11ARNEY
HIS BAND GIVE UP
COUNTRY AN' WESTERN
MUSIC AN' SWITCHED

Ml.f BOI.f ARKI.f
SENT 'EM TO ME
FROM TH'
FLATLANDS

•

TO ROCK-Al'J'-ROLL

•

TH.I\T SHOUlD SPOIL
IHEf~ VJI-'OI..E

f\JEN-

f~, TfZ:'I'it-1.6 To J:~Ll~E"

oi.JT l,lJHAf l \/JANf.
1~-JEJJ... To E.NJoy!

•

---

3 · /:l.

lt71,.._ .......... ~

BUGS BUNNY

WINNIE WINKLE

ORGAN/ ZATION

COVIE: UP WITH

®

TOP- FLIGHT GAVE
ME A JOB WHEN I
NEEDED ONE. I OWE
THI.? COMPANY
A LDT.

YA JU5T FILL5 IN WHATEVER' YER AGAIN5T
THIS WE:EK!

"I RUN At-.l
EFFICIENT

I WISH I COULD

HERE 1 DOC!

A MIL:..ION:JOLLAR IDEA
THA~ WOULD
:&lt;EALLY PUT
U5 ON THE

MA?!

•
ALLEY OOP

•
•
W,:IIT UI"'TIL lHE FIEMDISH
KROOS DEPART,.. AHD iHEI"f
RETURH TO YOUR OWN
LAHD--·

•
Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: HE THAT IS EXTRAVAGANT

DAILY CROSSWORD
6. Zodiac
sign
1. Kind of
7. - - society
card
8. Pernicious
7. Yield
9. Terrible
11. Complete
10. First
12. Greedy
mates'
13. Flaming sea
quarters
phenomenon
(3wds.)
H. Pronoun
17. Mr. Onassis'
15. - - down
(soften)
nickname
18.Com, 16. Troy name
17. Peer Gynt's
prehend
19. Arab
mother
garment
19. Have lofty
20. Aggregate
~
ambitions
21. Before
23. Border on
(prefix)
27. Wahoo or
summer
22. Hostel
23. Mother of
cypress
Hazekiah
(2 wds.)
29. So be it
30. Evening
party
31. Knowing
(slang)
32. Sudden
outburst
36. Afternoon
receptions
40. Suffer from
unrequited
love
ACROSS

•
TERRY
M~. POOL, Sl~. THIS PHOTO
HAt7 TO 15E TAKEN WHE!re •
EVER lie&gt;LORES DfEPSIX

:;~~~~:~

15 BEING HELO.

YES, SIR-AN AIRPlANE! ANI?
8K'ING5 US RIGHT BACK TO
AL CABALLO, POESN'T IT, I

WILL SOON BECOME POOR, AND POVERTY WILL EN-

FORCE DEPENDENCE, AND INVITE CORRUPTION.
24. Prickly
JOHNSON
fruit
&lt;© 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
covering
25. Function
26. Common
article
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
28. The
one letter to each square, to
Repubform four ordinary words.
licans
31. AttentionYesterday's Answer
getting call
37. Hibernia
32. Shoo!
38. Farmer's
33. Glazier's
holding
item
34. Department 39. Lean-to
41. Altar conof Greece
stellation
35. Decorate
42. Vietnamese
36.In - holiday
(entirely)

JJWJMill1b~®:::.3~==

I [) [J

I (X)I I
DIELf:l"

I

,.~::s'

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

!riiJ'DriiiJau

Jumbi ... , SOLAR

Yeot.. rday'o

415. Athletic
group
46. Did penance

I

FENCE

AMOUNT

RANDOM

An•w.. r: } "o u're no lonfiwr free under thi~ - ARREST

I DON'! KNOIJ.l HOW THE5E
THINGS HAPPEN .. MAYBE HE'S
ALLJAL/S LIKED ME AND JUST
NEVER REALL't SAID AN'&lt;IHING ..
I HATEm MAKE HIM UNHAfN ...

DOWN
1. Nuisance
2. Wise about
3. British gun
' ·Bathroom
flooring
5. Prepare for
battle

DAU..Y CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
IIJ

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,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
GUGDPXW

SPUQ

E5Y B I11N6 IN5EC.T5 .

(Anowers tomorrow t

•a. Opposed to

Wll-. . H. Withdraw

ATW

t
I XJ I

;=:~~;:;;;;;;:::~~~;::~~

(3 wds.)·

BWHAH

[]

t(;RINTY

J

HOW 10 PREVENT
INF=ECTION CAUGEI/

GKI

CTPXT

DYPK

EN

SYMYDQ.

TGUW

WUWD

WUWDQ

HAGAW .

�10

ThE Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 12 1971
.

• ... .

·-·.- . •:: ;. ·.·

..

•

•

...

-~

·' •. ·= •' ::· .

:·::·.: ::. ·:
0

•

•

Tricia to Wed a Nader Raiderr
FW YORK ,UPI)-Trlcla
~ixon 1s not marrymg the boy
next door.
\\hen she marries Edward
Finch Cox -the engagement is
scheduled to be announced
Tuesda) - she will become the
w1fe of a New York anstocrat
hhJ is a cousin of the late
Elanor Roosevelt. Cox has had
extraordinary advantages of
wealth, education, emotional
security and mtelligence.
But Cox IS no snob. He has
been one of the most fired-up of
Ralph Nader's "raiders'' and
helped research and write the
19G9 Nader report which
skewered the Federal Trade
CommissiOn for being a toothless wakhdog of conswners
interests He believes m involvement and hopes to become
a crusading lawyer.
The law is in "Eddie's"
blood. His mother's family has
practiced law and sat on the
be ch in New York for well
over 200 years. His maternal
grandfather was the distinguished jurist Edward Ridley
Finch. His father, a muchdecorated World War II Air
Force pilot, is a partner in Cox,
TrE&gt;anor and Shaughnessy, a
:'\1anhattan law firm.
Young Cox is a hardworking
sophomore at the Harvard Law
Schoo! and has been active in a
district attorney's program for
~a" students in Cambridge,
Mass. He plans to work for the
U.S Attorney's office in Manhattan next swnmer.
A clas,mate, \\ho asked not
to be 1dent1fied, had this to say
of Cox: "Ed is quiet, but
::trtlculate. I fmd h1m a kind
pt: son. I think he is quite
b11~ht, although not the brightest m the law school. He's a
gentleman. But I must add,
t. s a little behind the times in
anss &lt;;tyle "
Tall, boyish at 24, with the
sam blonde hair, light blue
eyt' and rlazzlirg c;mile as
fnt a, (ox lives 'ike any other
student in a modest Cambndge,
~ass., apartment wh1ch a
fn rd described as "a crummy
little hole " H1s conservative
clothPs have the typical Ivy
League rumple and he drives
ar. old stabonwagon.
In New York, life is more

c:
M

h

TARZAN
D ADLY SIL
I Techn•colc.
Ron Ely
Jo&lt;.k Mahoney
EL CONDOR
(Technicolor)
Jim Brown
LeE:' Van Clee'
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

formal and he is no stranger to
wbite til.' and tails. Home is a
small
brick
Victorian
townhouse near Gracie Mansion, the mayor's residence. Its
intimate rooms are full of
family heirlooms. The Cozes
weekended and summer at an
unpretentious 10-acre estate of

Long Island's Westhampton
Beach that has been in Mrs.
Cox's family for 100 years.
Westhampton Beach is
several miles removed from
fashionable Southampton and
East Hampton in both distance
and social cachet but the Coxes

need not worry. They are not
extravagently rich, but they ~re
secure-listees in the Social
Register and members of exclusive clubs and organizations
including the Colonial Dames of
America and Sons of the
American Revolution.

Minor Injuries
In Auto Wreck

THIS VOCAL GROUP known as the "King's
Messengers" from Akron will be appearing at the Hysell Run
Free Methodist Church during the morning worship service
at 10:30 Sunday. The group will also sing at a " teen
singspiration" to be held at the church at 2:30p.m. Sunday.
The public is invited.

News ... in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
growth of that country's noncotton textile exports to the United
States during the next three years. The President said the offer
was unacceptable because it would have used current export
levels as a base, and those exports were at a record level in
January. One factor in Nixon's decision was an admitted
irritation that the Japanese had by-passed the long-stalled
negotiations between the two governments and reached their
decision with the help of Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., chairman
of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Calley Trial in Recess

esureway
to double

PREMIER QUILTS
ANKARA (UPI)- Turkish
Premier Suleyman Demirel
resigned today in the face of
an ultimatum to quit or face a

military takeover. Military
leaders had demanded the
move to save Turkey from
what they said was the threat
of civil strife.

S2000ina
ma'tc&gt; of years.
You'll be doubly glad
you save with us.

MOTOROLA~

'L'

•·~

llJ

..."'

AM CLOCK RADIO

\_

d

...

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

WASHINGTON (UPI) -To
understand the following "story
of international intrigue," it
may help the reader first to get
the names str ight. The $4
million plot unfolds later.
There is first Fidel Goetz,
described as a tycoon in
Liechtenstein. Next, there are
the brothers Rosenbawn, Washington attorneys Joseph and
Francis.
Other personages include
David Bevan, a former official
of the bankrupt Penn Central
Railroad, and Dr~s Peter
Marxer and Adulf Goop,
attorneys of Vaduz, Liechtenstein.
Now the story, caliPrl "::~ tale

l

Interest Is Computed Daily
On Savings Accounts
and Payable Quarterly

POMEROY
TIONAL BANK
POMEROY
Serving Meigs County
Sint•e 1872

AM clock radio in an ebony color cabinet.

Exquisite design with deluxe, full feature clock.
Lazalarm and sleep switch. Solid State Chassis.
3" Golden Voice Speaker. Calibrated Volume
Control. Luminous hands that tell time in the dark.

RUTLAND
Built·in Ferrite Antenna

•

Werner Radio &amp; T.V.

"'lembc r F-Pc"er&lt;tl Dero•'.'l Insurance Corporation
All Aero nts Insured Up To $20,000.00

•
•'

•
THESE ARE NOT YOUNG ladies of 1971 in maxi dresses. They are of the Clifton M. E.
Sunday school about the year 1911. The picture is from the collection of Mrs. Ray Pickens of
Clifton.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

of financial chicanery rarely
matched in the annals of the
business world," by the staff of
the House Banking and Currency Committee in Part Four of
its long-running saga: "The
Penn Central failure and the
role of financial institutions."
Worldwide Dreams ...
Part Two of the report, the
staff reminds the reader at the
outset, gave details of "the
involvement of Penn Central,
and particularly David Bevan,
its chief financial officer, in the
Executive Jet Aviation (EJA)
adventure, including its dreams
of worldwide operation.'' In
summary, the staff said then
that Penn Central had invested

Program Undenvay
A new program in elementary
physical education, instructed
by Rio Grande College juniors
and seniors majoring in
physical education, has been
initiated by the college and the
Gallipolis City School System.
The program involves students
in grades one through six at the
Washington
Elementary
School.
Arranged
through
the
cooperation of Supt. Paul Kuhn
of the Gallipolis City Schools,
Washington Principal Neil
Sanders and Patricia Dunnuck,
instructor in physical education
at Rio Grande College, the
program has two advantages.
First,
the
elementary
students are exposed to
" movement education," an
approach that gives a child a
souna background in motor
development before he becomes
engaged in activities that
require a high degree of skill.
Movement education involves
the whole body in moving,
exploring and seeking a solution
to a stated problem.
Second, the Rio Grande

Weather
Cloudy and not so cold tonight
with chance of rain, possibly
mixed with snow extreme
north. Low in 30s and low 40s.
Saturday partly cloudy and
warmer. High in upper 40s and
50s except 60s extreme south .
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Friday was
45 degrees under sunny skies.

J..l.!J'

Continuous Service On
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

•

New Physical Education

..lJII!

a!.!

Q.l.

With Sculptured Look of Tomorrow

'..!..J. p

I

PLEAD INNOCENT
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
Representatives of three of
four Ohio banks indicted on
charges of making ilJegal
loans to political candidates,
today pleaded innocent in U.
S. District Court here.
U. S. District Court Judge
ordered a delay of one week
in the arraignment of the
First National Bank of Cincinnati and told the bank's
attorney, Robert Staebler, to
have an officer of the bank
present when he appeared for
pleading.

•

$4 Million Plot Will Unfold

FT. BENNING, GA. -THE CALLEY murder court-martial
jury began a three-day recess today under a schedule that indicated they would start deliberation on the third anniversary of
My Lai. Testimony ended Thursday, the 46th court day since the
start of the jury picking.
The judge, Col. Reid W. Kennedy, delivers his charge- it is
called "instructions" in military court - to the jury after the
summations. If the oratory is not too prolonged, the officers who
MINELLI COMING
will decide the fate of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. should get the case
Charles Minelh of OhiO sometime Tuesday.
University Music Dept., Athens,
will be the guest speaker at the Choppers w_ill Stay in Laos
Southern
Band
banquet
WASHINGTON - THE ARMY'S ENTHUSIASM for
Saturday night at Southern helicopters in combat is undimmed by heavy losses to Communist
High School. Dinner will be fire in Laos. Nor have the losses caused the Army to re-evaluate
served at 6:30p.m.
the role of the choppers in battle, says Brig. Gen. W. J . Maddox,
,Jr., the man in charge of U.S. Army aviation.
"We have seen no reason to believe we should reduce our
dependence on them or change the way we essentially employ
them," Maddox said Thursday in an interview. Neither Maddox
nor anyone else disputes the losses have been high. The Pentagon
said between Feb. 7 and Wednesday a total of 54 helicopters were
shot down and counted as destroyed. Another five were lost
through mechanical failure and pilot error. It cost 31lives and left
51 wounded and 12 missing. Reports from Saigon today said 61
helicopters have been downed in the Laotian invasion.

Amazing but true ..
$1000 in a Savings Account
autoMatically becomes

·. ·::: .:;..;:· ;;:

LODGE TO MEET
A special meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will be
held at the hall in Chester
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Work will
be in the master masons
degree. All master masons are
invited.

Died Thursday

your mone~

•.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Naomi
Bentley, Rutland; Martha
Anderson, Racine, Helen
Bodimer, Middleport; Evelyn
Hoi ter, Racine; Kim Morrow,
Syracuse.
DISCHARGED - Sharon
Russell, Pamela Cole, Kelly
Powell, Anna Grim, Opal
Cummins.

Emerson Hayes

SPEAKER ~AMED
Dr.
Joseph
Graham,
superintendent of Athens
District United Methodist
Church, will occupy the pulpit of
Rock Springs Methodist Church
Sunday at 9:30 a.m. and the
d United Method1st
at 10 30 am. Everyone

•'

·:;:::~:::::::;:::::::::::::;::::·=:;:;:::::::=::.. ::;.,;::~::~:::::::=::·~::::.;.;::;:;:::::::::::::::··=·

Richard H. Stewart, 41, Rt. 2,
Cheshire, suffered only minor
injuries in a two vehicle
collision at 4:25 p.m. Thursday
on County Road 2, east of Rt. 7
in Meigs County.
According to the Gallipolis
Post State Highway Patrol,
Stewart's auto was struck in the
rear by another operated by
Douglas J. Camp, 42, West
Colwnbia, W. Va. Camp was
charged with failure to stop
withm the assured clear
distance. Moderate damage
resulted.

Emerson Hayes, 95, Long
Bottom RD, died Thursday
evening at Elmwood Village
convalescent home in Portsmouth.
Mr. Hayes is survived by a
son, John, Long Bottom ; one
granddaughter, Esther
Ridenour, Chester, two greatgrandsons, Lowell and John
Ridenour, Chester, and several
nieces and nephews.
··Mrs. Hayes was preceded in
death by his wife, Pearl Tall
Hayes; two infant daughters,
four brothers, and two sisters.
Funeral services will be
Sunday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Robert
Card officiating Burial will be
m Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
any time.

:..:...:...~: •.·

GETS OU POST
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)
Meade R. Burnett, 39, head
track and cross country coach
at Ashland College, has been
named head track coach at Ohio
University, it was announced
Thursday, replacing Stan
Huntsman who resigned to take
a similar post at the University
of Tennessee.
FAVORS TAX
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Council of Churches has
gone on record in favor of a
personal state income tax
couph;d with tax relief for the
elderly. The tax recommendations were among a
number of resolutions passed by
council delegates at a meeting
here Thursday.
MEET TUESDAY
The Women's Auxiliary of

V~terans Memonal Hospital

College students involved m
instructing gain the eKpe ence
of working with childr
at
grade levels one throug~ stx. As
in the college's student-teaching
program, student-instructors in
this program work in a practical situation.
Students in grades one
through four at the Washington
Elementary School will attend
the physical education classes
at the school, while students in
grades five and six will visit the
college's Paul R. Lyne Center
and participate in a physical
education program .
The classes, which began in
February, will last one and onehalf hours per session, with one
or two sessions scheduled each
week. The Lyne Center classes
include instruction in both the
gymnasium and the swimming
pool. Students instructing in the
program are enrolled in
Education 413 - Teaching
Physical Education in the
Elementary School.

$20 million plus in an unsuccessful effort to set up an
international airline.
In transmitting the report to
committee members, Chairman Wright Patman, D-Tex.,
wrote "while there is no
evidence that any Penn Central
officer personally profited"
when the railroad lost $4
million of a $10 million loan
fund, it could not have
happened "without the aid" of
Bevan.
When EJA went sour in 1969,
the new chapter released today
said, Bevan sought to walk
away from the wreckage, but
Goetz of Liechtenstein, who had
taken a $4 million bath in the
venture, was demanding his
money back. And, it said,
Bevan did not want Goetz to
make public their airline
association because a number
of the transactions were
"conducted in contravention of
the Federal Aviation Act."
Penn Central at the time
already was in trouble with the
C1vil Aeronautics Board (CAB)
the staff said .
"To put it bluntly," the
report was still before the
CAB."
...And Complicated Loans
Enter the Rosenbaums,
American lawyers for Goetz.
Joseph Rosenbaum, who previously had arranged some
loans for the railroad, helped
line up a $10 million loan from
a group of German banks to
pay for fixing up Penn Cen~al
equipment.
Accordmg to the staff report,
Bevan then agreed to let the
$10 million loan be deposited in
a convernment-controlled
trust. This had to be done by
a series of complicated transfers from a Berlin bank to a
Frankfurt bank to the First
Financial Trust of Liechtenstein. It said Goetz took
Francis Rosenbaum to see
Marxer, "a very influential

man in Liechtenstein affairs,"
and Goop, his partner. Rosenbaum was introduced, the staff
said, as an "authorized attorney" of Penn Central.
There, in "no more than two
hours," Marxer and Goop
became agents for First
Financial Trust, headed by the
Rosenbawns, and signed over
$4 million of the loan to Vileda
Anstalt, a Goetz company. The
other $6 million went where all
the money was supposed to goto fix railroad cars.
·
All this came out, the report
said, when Penn Central went
broke and came under Jle
control of trustees in 1970, and
the new overseers demanded to
know what happened to the $10
·million. First Financial trust
replied that there was less than
$4 million left.
The trustees tried valiently to
get the money back, and "at
one time it appeared that there
was an agreement to return the
money to Penn Central without
the necessity of instituting legal
action."
"This turned out not to be the
case and the final settlement
offered by Fidel Goetz was a
tiny fraction of the entire sum
misappropriated," the report
said.

Gas Co
(Continued from page 1)
six years.
Cassell, 311 Rutland St.,
Middleport, will receive an
award for nine years of accident-free driving.
Gallipolis award winners are
Paul Harrison, Route 1, 17
years; J. M. Koebel, Patriot
Star Route, 14 years; Harvey
Brown, Route 2, 10 years; Earl
Robinson, 515 Oak Dr., four
years, and Robert Bennett,
Route 1, one year.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are Open
Both Friday and Saturday Nights
Until 9:00
See the many new arrivals all over the store - Furniture, Aoor
Coverings and Appliances on the 3rd Aoor.
Dress Fabric and Drapes in the Drapery Department
Women's, Girls and Infants Apparel in the Ready To Wear
Department.
Music, Toy and luggage Department on the Second Aoor.
Men and Boys Department - House Furnishings Department
lingerie . Hosiery · Jewelry • Handbags • Notions • Cosmetics •
Stationery • Sheets and Pillow Cases · Towels and Domestics
Department All on the 1st Floor.
Visit all over the store - Open until 9 Friday
and Saturday Nights

EIberfeIds In pom eroy

~illt~~ee~~:pi~;~ p~~~t~~i:~dar . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
program is planned

4

4t

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