<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="945" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/945?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T11:23:15+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="10845">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/36beaaea38d520dab20c50fc59d00561.pdf</src>
      <authentication>efdc6a3a9b6f902c28454815b5ba2f4a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2030">
                  <text>r

I

I

Laos Operation A Milestone
•

WASHINGTON ( UPI )-President Nixon, declaring that the
full importance of the Laos
invasion will not be known for
some time, said the campaign
shows the South Vietnamese
can fight very well and have
"passed a milestone" in the
capability to take over the
fighting.
Nixon, in an easy, relaxed
hour-long interview with ABCTV commentator Howard K.
Smith, predicted the Laos

operation would enable him to accelerated withdrawals and
continue withdrawing U.S. for- his next announcement may
ces at the current rate of 12,500 display "the end of the tunnel,"
a phrase often used during the
a month.
The Laos operation, Nixon Johnson administration.
"For six weeks the South
said, "cannot be judged a great
success" but it "cannot be Vietnamese have disrupted the
judged a failure." He said the enemy supply lines," he said.
campaign could be assessed "For six weeks they've tied
only on a long range basis, and down some of the enemy's best
that would not be known for divisions, and for six weeks, we
have seen, too, that the South
some time.
He said it now may be Vietnamese have been able to
possible for him to announce handle themselves quite well

Now You Know
In the year following the
establishment of Northern
Ireland in 1921, 232 persons
including two members of
Parliament were killed in
disturbances throughout the
country.

VOL. XXVI

under very, very difficult
circumstances."
Smith asked Nixon· if the
Communists will be able to
repair their trails and pipelines
before the rainy season begins
in about a month.
''They can never gain back
the time," Nixon said .
The interview in the White
House Library, was devoted
mainly to Nixon's guardedly
optimistic assessment of the
Laos operation. But the Pres-

ident did speak about 1972.
Nixon, who was widely
written off after his 1962 defeat
for the California governorship
and his lost bid for the
presidency two years earlier,
said he had made no decisions
about 1972.
And he volunteered-without
prompting by Smith-that he
had not decided who "may be
the man who runs for vice
president." Some liberal Republicans are demanding thai

~~

•

1

BUENOS AIRES - THE ARGENTINE Armed Forces
overthrew President Roberto M. Levingston in a bloodless coup
and set up a three-man military junta today to rule until further
notice.
A communique from Army headquarters shortly after
midnight said "the commanders-in-chief of the Armed Forces
have decided to fire Gen. Levingston in his functions as president
of the Republic. We have decided to assume political power in the
nation until we fulfill the process of the Argentine Revolution."
WASHINGTON - GOVERNMENT HEALTH authorities
sought hospital cooperation today in a crash program to stop the
use of an intravenous solution linked with an outbreak of blood
infection blamed for at least nine deaths.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ordered the
contaminated product recalled from hospitals Monday but said
each hospital would first have to replace it with another brand.
WASHINGTON - CONGRESS PLANNED to give its approval today to a r.ew constitution right - to vote at age 18 - and
send the propo
Am ndment to the U. S. Constitution to the
tate f r ratf
The Hous
expected to be easy debate
proval of a proposed amendment that
would require s
d locahbes to lower their minimum voting
age to 18. Sponsors have hoped the required 38 state legislatures
would ratify the C'hange in time for the 1972 elections.

•

COLUMBUS -THE PRESIDENT of Nationwide Insurance
sad today the firm has not produced an operating profit in auto
insurance since 1962 because of ''fragile cars mounted with
flimsy bumpers" and riSing repair and medical costs.
Dean W. Jeffers said the firm reported net earnings of $24
million in 1970, mainly because of investment income. He said the
auto and fire insurance business experienced an overall operating
loss of $2.1 million.

WITH FIRE hose, Pomeroy firemen Monday night began washing sidewalks and streets in
the Pomeroy business section.

•

~·

Growing by leaps and bounds
in Meigs County, the George
Thompson Kidney Fund now
shows an increase of $1,300 in
the past four days.
The fund, as of Monday
evening, amounted to $2,931.12,
Mrs. Robert Lewis, chairman of
the drive on behalf of the
Winding Trail Garden Club,
reports. Last Thursday the total
was approximately $1,600.
Purpose of the drive is to
provide financial aid for 18year-old George Thompson, son
of Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Thompson of Pomeroy, a
patient at the Cleveland Clinic.
Thompson has had both kidneys

POW Contntittees Nruned

•

The timing on the cleanup of
Pomeroy, underway this week,
is excellent since it is National
Lawn and Garden Week.
Street department employes
were making their way through
the business section Monday
shoveling up dirt and picH:ing up
waste.
Monday night Pomeroy
firemen began washing the
streets. In exchange for the fire
department's efforts, Pomeroy
businessmen will give the
firemen a gift of $300 with which
to purchase raincoats and
accessory equipment. Pomeroy
banker, Edison Hobstetter, is
heading the raising of the
money for the cleanup project.
Meantime, Mayor Charles
Legar has announced that a
cleanup of the residential
section will start in the near
future with a village truck
traveling to various sections of

Geo -..ue Thompson Kidney l?und
G
• By Leaps And Bounds
rowzng

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND -Development Minister
Brian Faulkner today was elected prime minister of Northern
Ireland to succeed James Chichester-Clark who resigned
Saturday under pressure by Protestant Conservatives demanding
tougher policy against the province's Roman Catholic militants.
Unionist Party members elected Faulkner over William
Craig, the rightwing leader of the Party by a vote of 26-4.
Faulkner, like Chichester-Clark, is considered a moderate in the
Protestant-dominated Unionist Party which has ruled Northern
Ireland since 1922.

Committees were named
Monday night at the "Project
Freedom" meeting held at the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy, the
Rev. Bill Perrin, chairman,
reported today.
The purpose of Project
Freedom is to outline the
conditions
of
American
Prisoners of War in Vietnam
and steps which are to be taken,
hopefully to alleviate the
situation.
Attending from Columbus
was Commander Frank Poyet,
state chairman of the Project
Freedom movement, designed
to secure signatures protesting
the treatment of prisoners of
war.
Also attending was Mrs.
Robert Smith of Athens whose
husband is a prisoner of war or
missing in action. Commander
Poyet and Mrs. Smith spoke at
public meetings held earlier at
Southern High School, Eastern
High School and the Meigs
Junior High School.
A bamboo prisoner of war
cage like those used in Vietnam
,o;as displayed at the locations.
Dr. Keith Riggs was named
chatrman. It was noted
that anyone wishing to make a
contribution
to
Project
Freedom may do so by mail.
Checks are to be made payable
to POW -MIA or Project
Freedom and sent to Box 429,
Pomeroy.
Canvassing districts and
committees named were Mrs.

Weather
Partly cloudy and cold tonight
and Wednesday. Lows tonight in
the 20s and upper teens. Highs
Wednesday mostlv in the 20s.

Charles Karr, Jr., Middleport; within the next ten days from
John J.
Gilligan
Joe Struble, Pomeroy; Paul Gov .
Kloes, Minersville; Mary Kautz proclaiming May 10 through the
and Rose Ginther, Chester, and 16 as Project Freedom Week.
Roy Miller, Tuppers Plains and
Orange Township.
Other areas of the county not
represented are asked to
contact the Rev. Perrin or Mrs.
Carrie Neutzling .

removed and is confined to the
hospital waiting a kidney
transplant. If all goes well, he
will receive the transplant on
March 30. The donor will be his
sister, Mrs. Wayne Roush of
Belpre.
This Friday at 4 p.m. a public
cafeteria style dinner will be
held at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy on behalf of young
Thompson. The dinner, which
will extend over the evening
hours, is being sponsored by the
Women's Guild of the church.
However,
the
entire
congregation is helping with the
project and is being joined by
members of the Winding Trail
Garden Club. All proceeds will
gv to the Thompson Kidney
Fund.
Residents wishing to contribute to the fund may send
their donations to the George
Thompson Kidney Fund, in care
of the Pomeroy Postmaster.
Mrs. Lewis reports that postal

employes have been "wonderful" in handling the money
being received in the drive.
Checks are to be made payable
to the George Thompson Kidney
Fund.
Latest contributors to the
fund include Hattie H. Paynter,
The Chatter Club, Little Kyger
Ladies Aid, fifth grade of Mrs.
Mary Hysell at the . Pomeroy
Elementary School, Gladys
Crooks Hayman, Mary E.
Bacon, Fritz Buck, Reed
Gandee, Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints in Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Reibel, Middleport Child
Conservation League, Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene E. Underwood,
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Lohse, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
Chester PTA, Forest Run
WSCS, Ralph D. Shain, Robert
Duckworth, Busy Bee Class of
Middleport First Baptist
Church, Eleanor W. Zeiher, Ira
I. Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton

Wolfe, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Wiseman, Betty Bishop,
Frances Young, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Alkire, Kenneth Welsh,
Robert Welsh, Ruby Dier.l,
Mary Diehl, Gloria Riggs, Felix
Alkire, Mrs. B. E. Carl, Mrs.
Eugene Atkins, Norma Lee, Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Waggoner, LendA-Hand Society, Janitors and
cooks at Meigs High School
including Sadje Carl, Helen
Quivey, Avis Bailey, Melva
Turner, Mildred Bailey, Lloyd
Moore, Mickey Werner, and
Mildred Hysell, Meigs Junior
High Cannister, Syracuse
United Methodist Church, Mr.
and Mrs. E. L. Clark, Rutland
Post 467 American Legion, Jane
Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jones, Little Kyger Church, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul M. Darnell, Mrs.
Edward Ebersbach, Lowell,
Ohio; Norma Goodwin, Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Hines, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, Mr.
(Continued on page 8)

-

Signature petitions will also
be placed in plants in the
surrounding areas.. It was also
suggested that, if possible, short
signature petitions will be sent
home with s tudents of the
county for family and close
neighbors signatures.

GROUND will be broken April1 for a 25 by 40 addition to
the Village Pharmacy in Middleport. Operated by Dan
Meadows, the pharmacy on North Second Ave . opened in
property then owned by Dr. and Mrs . J. J. Davis in
November, 1967. Since then Meadows purchased the building

the community to pick up waste
people will gather around their
yards and place on the curbings.
This is the third annual observance of National Lawn and
Garden
Week
but
its
significance is being especially
stressed due to the emphasis on
ecology and the environment.
Robert E. Quilliall)., state
conservationist for the USDA
Soil Conservation Service in
Ohio, comments:
"This theme is especially

which also houses the offices of Dr. Richard Slack. The
presents tore is 18 by 40 feet. The new addition expected to be
completed in the fall will be built by the Werner Corutruction
Co. Plans for the early American design were drawn by Don
Ervin of Middleport. The exterior will be brick veneer .

pertinent for the SCS, since our
agency's work with urban
people on soil and water
problems
is
increasing
tremendously."
Many communities are
already carrying out action
programs, Quilliam stated.
State Conservation Districts
across the state have helped the
reforestation and wildlife effort
by making planting packets
available to anyone desiring
them.

Commies Kill
8 Americans ·
SAIGON (UPI) - The U. S. command said
today Communist commandos killed eight
Americans and wounded 29 others in a series of
attacks in and around the big U.S. base at Khe Sanh
oar the Laotian border.
,. ..
The infiltrators destroyed two U. S. helicopters
in their attack against the base at Khe Sanh,
throwing explosive charges as they ran. Three Gls
were killed and 13 wounded by the intruders.
Military spokesmen said 20 of the estimated 40
Communist sappers were killed in the at ck at Khe
Sanh.
South Vietnamese troops continued their withdrawal from
Laos today and by nightfall
only a few thousand of the
original 24,000-man task force
remained across the border,
military sources said.
The government units were
pushing back into South Vietnam aboard tanks and other
armored vehicles which took
almost continuous harrassing
fire from Communist troops as
they moved along French
Colonial Route 9, field reports
said.
The U.S. command disclosed
that Communist missile fire
knocked an American jet
fighter-bomber from the skies
over North Vietnam for the
first time in more than 37
months, but said the two
crewmen were rescued after a
tense night in enemy territory.
The crewmen were identified
as Maj. Robert D. Priest, 38,
Victorville, Calif., and Maj.
Robert Cubberly, 33, Bowling
Green, Ohio. Their $2.4 million

CONTRIBUTIONS SOUGHT
This is "School Week of
Giving" in the annual Meigs
County Easter Seal fund drive,
Mrs. Charles Simons, chairman, reports.
Mrs. Simons urges parents to
send in their contributions and
then give their youngsters a few
coins to be. dropped in the
container at their respective
schools. Friday will be the final
day for the children's collection
in the fund drive, Mrs. Simons
said. ,

It was decided to place
signature petitions in business
establishments throughout the
county. Ralph Graves will
distribute petitions in Pomeroy,
Roy Miller in Chester and
Tuppers Plains, Herschel
McClure in Middleport, and
Carrie Neutzling in Rutland.

Other organizations committed to support the program
are the Ladies Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39 of The
American Legion, Lions Club,
Farm Bureau, Meigs Salon 710,
8&amp;40, and the Pomeroy
Ministerial Association. It was
also noted that members of 4-H
and Girl and Boy Scouts may
assist in the program.
Rev. Perrin noted that an
anuouncemen t is expected

TEN CENTS

Oeanup, Fixup
Timing Excellent

I

By United Press International
Fr. BENNING, GA.- LT. WilLIAM L. Calley's defense
attorneys complained bitterly today that his murder courtmartial jury was "wining and dining" and worrying about
paychecks and laundry when it should be buckled down in
deliberation "with a life at stake."
The military judge, Col. Reid W. Kennedy, replied that the six
officers on the jury were supposed to relax when they returned
after deliberation hours to the officers quarters in which they are
sequestered.

•

His goal in South Vietnam,
Nixon declared, was to end the
war in such a way that South
Vietnam "will survive as an
independent country."

TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

..

home and the Communists took
over South Vietnam, then all
over Southeast Asia, all over
the pacific, in the Mideast, in
Europe, in the world would
suffer a blow ... would suffer a
blow from which it might not
recover."

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

NO. 239

7\.T
~ews

any deadlin~ for complete
withdrawal-which Democrats
in Congress are demanding. He
contended it would "torpedo"
what little hope remains for a
negotiated settlement and enable the Communists to adjust
their military tactics accordingly.
The South Vietnamese, he
said, had shown in Laos their
"capability of hacking it," and
"if the United States now were
to throw in the towel and come

The Daily Sentinel

. s :
• :i---------------------------,
1
.•• zn B rze
1
I

Nixon dump Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew from the ticket.
But as to whether he would
voluntarily become a one-term
president, Nixon told Smith:
"The idea of what you call
'voluntary retirement,' I would
suggest, is quite premature
where I am concerned and I
would say that anybody who
reads my life would perhaps
take that kind of story with a
grain of salt."
Nixon steadfastly ruled out

- - Nixon

WASHINGTON (UPI) The House stamped final
congressional approval today
on a constitutional amendment to let 18-year-olds vote
in all elections, possibly as
early as 1972.
If approved
by the
legislatures of three-fourths
(38) of the states, it will
become the 26th Amendment
to the nation's basic set of
Jaws, overriding state laws
that still set 21 as the
minimum voting age for state
and local elections.

F4 Phantom jet was the first
American plane shot down by
Surface-to-Air (SAM) missiles
over the North since Feb. 14,
1968, the U.S. command said.
The aircraft was participating in Monday's second day of
"protective reaction" strikes
over North Vietnam in retaliation for antiaircraft fire against
U.S. planes hitting the Ho Chi
Minh supply trail in Laos and
unarmed reconnaissance jets
flying over North Vietnam
itself.
Priest and Cubberly were
lifted out of jungles near
coastal Dong Hoi, about 50
miles north of the Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ) border, by Air
Force HH53 Super Jolly Green
Giant rescue helicopters early
today.
The U.S. command also
disclosed the loss of an Air
Force F100 Supersabre jet to
antiaircraft fire over the
southern panhandle of Laos
Monday. Military sources said
the aircraft "blew up" in the
air" but the pilot was officially
listed as missing in action.
U.S. spokesmen also reported
that two Army UH1 helicopters
were shot down Monday afternoon deep in the Mekong Delta
150 miles southwest of Saigon,
wounding four of the crewmen.
A delayed report said a Huey
chopper was downed in Laos on
Sunday and that three men
aboard were wounded.
At least 88 U.S. helicopters
have been destroyed in support
of the 44-day-old South Vietnamese operation in Laos, records
showed, at the cost to the
United States of 61 men killed,
78 wounded and 24 missing .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Oretha
Lambert, Middleport;
Margaret Blankenship, Albany;
Dewey Bentley, Rutland; Joy
Rife, Cheshire;
Barbara
Segrave, Parkersburg; Joseph
Hood, Minersville; Mary
Pickens, Racine; Chester
Tannehill, Middleport; Naomi
Weatherby, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Martha
Anderson, Marvin Darst,
Barbara McDaniel, Miles
Childre!"~

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;h. r'vmeroy, 0., March 23,1971

Mrs. Letcher Jarvis Wine
Honored with Bridal Shower

Rutland to Host OAGC Meet
The Region 11, Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
spring meeting will be held
Saturday, April 24, at the
Rutland gymnasium, with the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
serving as the host club.
Registration and a coffee
hour will be held from 9:15 to 10
a.m. A luncheon will be served
at the Rutland Elementary
School cafeteria at $1.50 per
plate and prepaid luncheon
reservations are to be sent to
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Rutland, by
April 19.
The business session will
begin at 10 a.m. Just preceding
the luncheon there will be a
brief meeting of clubs
presidents at which time a
regional director will be elected.
The afternoon program will
feature Mrs. Floyd J. Ruble, an
Ohio Association of Garden
Club's accredited judge for 15
years. She will use as her topic
"The Beauty of Weathered
Wood."
Mrs. Ruble has judged county
and state fair and garden club

Star Class To
Prepare Baskets
SYRACUSE - Plans were
made to prepare Easter baskets
for the church's shut-ins and for
the local rest home, when the
Star Class of the First United
Presbyterian Church met in the
church annex Tuesday afternoon, March 16.
Psalm 46 was read by
president Frankie Mumaw to
open the meeting. Reports were
given and accepted as read.
Flowers were sent to Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Williams for their
recent 57th wedding anniversary.
It was decided to start having
a grab bag sale at each meeting
and to begin at the April
meeting. The article is to not
cost less than a quarter.
The April roll call word will
be Bible flower and hostess will
be Ada Slack.
Miss Mumaw had for the
program session reading from
booklet "Irish Treasures" as
follows, Lines Addressed To A
&amp;a ull, by F
Potts,
L
T
H
1

m

refreshments .

Anniversary
Observed
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Evans
were surprised Sunday with a
25th wedding anniversary party
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Mees, Lancaster.
The affair was planned by
Mrs. Robert Mees, sister-in-law
of Mr. and Mrs. Evans. A buffet
dinner was served along with a
tiered wedding cake. Numerous
gifts were presented to the
couple.
Coming in especially for the
celebration was Mrs. Floyd
Mees who has been visiting for
the past several months in
South Orange, N. J. with her
sister, Mrs. L. W. Hench.
Others present were the
honored couple's son, Bobby,
Mr. and Mrs. Vic tor Miller,
Joan and Julie, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mees, Mrs. Michael
Doty, Mrs. Charles Ward, Tom
and Sue, and Mr . and Mrs.
Michael Mees and son, Eric.
BIRTHDAYS OBSERVED
The birthday a nniversaries of
Wayne Sharp and Paul Haptons tall were observed over the
weekend with a family
gathering at the Haptonstall
home.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Sharp and daughter, Marilyn
Jo, Zanesville ; Bill Hap tons tall,
home from Ohio University;
Mr. and Mrs. :'vlichael Zirkle
a nd da ughter, Michele, Robert
Sharp and Mr . and Mrs. Haptons tall .

I THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS · MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily e-t&lt; c ept
Saturday by The Otlio Vall ey
Publi s hing Company, 111
Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Bu s iness Office Phone
992 -2156 , Editorial Phone 992 ·
2157.
Sec ond class postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio .
National
advertising
epre s ent a tive
B.ottineui .
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 E ast 42nci
St., New York City, N ew York
S ub sc ription
rate s:
Deliv ered by carri er wh ere
availabl e 50 c ents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
servi c e pot available : One
month $1 .15. By maihn OhiO'
and w . va ., On e year $14.00.
Six months $7 . 25. Three
month s $4 . 50 . Sub s cription
price inc'udes Sunday Times
~ ntin.!!_. __

shows all over Central Ohio, has
given demonstrations at state
and regional meetings and has
taught garden club classes for
many ,years. .
Mrs. Robert J. Lewis,
regional publicity chairman, in
announcing
the regional
meeting, also reminded club
members of the 25 cent dues
payable before Oct. 1. Names of
club members for the outstanding gardener award are to

be presented to the regional
director prior to July 1.
A regional tour of Old Man's
Cave has been planned for May
20 with those attending to take a
sack lunch. The state OAGC
convention will be held Aug. 1012 at the Neil House in
Columbus and the annual
Gardeners' Day Out will be on
Sept. 23 at the Historical
Museum on the Ohio State
Fairgrounds.

Officers Elected By
Homemakers Club
SYRACUSE - New officers May 8th, for this tour.
were named when the Third The new officers were asked
Wednesday Homemakers Club to make the year books for the
met March 17 in the meeting new year.
hall at the Municipal Park. The
Prayer was given by Mrs.
meeting conducted by the Sauvage, before the delicious
president, Linda Ferrell, potluck dinner was served at
opened with the Lord's Prayer noon. Hostesses were Mable
and pledge to the American flag Pickens and Eleanor Bahram.
in umson. Devotions were
Mrs. Nolan told about the
Psalms 15, read by Jean Hall. craft workshop being held the
Thought for the day was "He fourth Thursday of each month
who serves self constantly, at the Bookmobile building, and
engaged in big busmess but the project being done.
small blessings". A St.
Those enjoying the day were
Patrick's poem, Reason Why, Elva Dailey, Irene Parker,
was read by Mildred Pierce.
Jean Half, Charlotte Nease,
Roll call was answered by 16 Eleanor Bahram, Mabel
members with a St. Patrick's Pickens, Myla Hudson, Mildred
Day poem or reading. How to Pierce, Pauline Morarity,
Run A Church Without Money, Janice Lawson, Margaret
was read by Ann Sauvage; Cottrill, Margaret Bailey, Linda
Irene Parker read, The Ferrell, Ann Sauvage, Ada
Working Wife's Lament. Slack, and Geneva Nolan.
Secretary - treasurer's report
was read and approved.
Charlotte Nease was welcomed
into the club.
The following were named by
the nominating committee:
President, Jean Hall; VicePresident, Margaret Cottrill;
POMEROY - The annual
Secretary-Treasurer, Agnes Candy Striper tea was anWhite;
Card
Chairman,
Margaret Eichinger; and
Health Committee, Myla
WEDNESDAY
Hudson and Ada Slack.
POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT
The annual
trip was Lions Club, Wednesday, noon,
discussed. It was decided to Pomeroy United Methodist
tour Best Studio, Coolville; and Church.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Dudley's in Parkersburg, W.
Va.onWednesday,April2l.The-. Pack 245, 7 p.m. Thursday,
group will leave the local Post' American Legion hall.
Office at 9 a.m. Those in- WILLING Workers, Thursterested who were not at the day, 7:30 p.m. home of Mrs.
meeting may contact Mrs. James Will.
Ferr U. It was also decided to
THURSDAY
t ' wark, Ohio, Tu abf,, RIVERVIE\X Garden Club,
May ~!1. for the annual " Tour of Thursday, at 7:30 p.m. at the
HJmes." Reservation fee of home of Mrs. Claremont
$2.50 must be paid to Mrs. Harris ; co-hostess, Mrs .
F errell or Elva Dailey before Herman Grossnickle; members
are to make and wear an Easter
bonnet.
SOUTHERN LOCAL
Education Assn., 7:30 p.m.,
~ Thursday at Southern High
School, Racine, with Dr. Acie C.
Waldron, extension specialist,
Ohio State University, speaking
on "Pollution and Our EnTUESDAY
vironment".
Public invited.
PUBLIC MEETING, Racine
Junior High, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Refreshments by high school
representative
of
Com- teachers.

Miss Nancy Ellen Hoback
Mr. and Mrs. William Hoback of Racine are announcing
the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Nancy Ellen, to Mr. Charles Johnston, son of Mr.
and Mrs. T. L. Johnston of Land 0' Lakes, Fla.
The bride-elect is a 1967 graduate of Southern Local High
School and attended the University of South Florida in
Tampa. Her fiance also attended the University of South
Florida.
The open church wedding will be an e ent of Friday,
April2, at 7:30p.m. at the Dorcas Pentecostal Assembly.

Hospital Auxiliary Plans Tea

--· ---------1

Social
Calendar

~

1

monwealth System Corp. to be
presen.t to discuss sewerage
system for Racine. All residents
invited.
MEIGS County Committee on
Alcohol and Drug Abuse,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at St. Paul
Lutheran Church, 231 E.
Second, Pomeroy. Public invited.
SOUTHERN Local Band
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
high school, Racine. Parents of
band members urged to attend.
RACINE American Legion
Post Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at post home.
POMEROY Eastern Star
Club Tuesday, Bowers Drive-In
Restaurant, 7:30 p.m. Nellie
Tracy, hostess.
COMMUNITY service
program when Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
meets at 7: 30p.m . Tuesday at
post home. Corrine Lund and
Lillian Moore, representing
cancer society, will speak and
show cancer film . Red Cross
workers turn in collections at
Tuesday meeting.
MEIGS
RIDING
Club
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at Salisbury
Township building on Rock
Springs Fairgrounds . All
persons interested in horseback
riding invited to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Community
Lenten services , 7: 30 p.m.
Wednesday, at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, Rev. W. H.
Perrin, Envoy Ray Wining in
charge.

We talk to you
like a person.

WMP0/1390

nounced for April 19, at 7:30
p.m. in the elementary school
house and a bake sale for April
10, by the girls.
A nice group of toys were
brought by the members for the
children's ward when the
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital met in the
hospital dining room Tuesday
evening.
The meeting in charge of
President Mrs. Alex Wheeler,
opened with Mrs. Bertha
Parker giving Psalm 23 for
Hospital Auxiliaries. Minutes
were read and treasurer's
repoH given.
Auxiliary Chairman, Mrs.
Hugh Bearhs, stated the women
had worked 6,595 hours in 1970.
Candy Stripers interested in
becoming nurses are to send in
their applications to make them
eligible to be selected for the
nursing scholarship fund. A
committee was named for this
as follows Janice Ritchie,
teacher; Mrs. Donald Diener,
chairman ; Mr. Asa Hoskins,
Board member; Mr. Ray R.
Pickens, doctor; Mrs. Maxine
Hobstetter, Director of Nursing ; Mrs . Richard Slack,
Auxiliary member.
Hopes are to open the new
wing under construction for use
on May 4. The Auxiliary will
furnish refreshments for an
open house to be held at a date
to be announced later.

A round-robin card was given
to member Mrs. Albert Roush,
a patient.
A new member, Mrs. Pauline
Searles, was present and the
names of two applicants were
read.
Hostesses named for April
were Mrs. Lewis Grueser, Mrs.
Nettie Hayes, Mrs. Albert
Roush and Mrs. Harold Will Sr.
For the program session Mrs.
Parker led in a game which was
won by Mrs. Bearhs; Mrs.
Harold Sauer read, Horse
Sense; and Each Year, by Mrs.
Dana Nelson.
Mrs. Parker read, How Much
Can I Take from This Earth;
Mrs. Ray Pickens Sr., A Saint
Patrick Leprechaun. Coneluding the program was a
game by Mrs. Eugene Eskew,
won by Mrs. Sauer.
Refreshments were served to
Mrs. Pauline Searls, Mrs. Elsie
Mossman, Mrs. Eliza Powell,
Mrs. Gerald Morris, Mrs.
George White, Mrs. Ernest
Molden, Mrs. Thomas Mankin,
Mrs. Alex Wheeler, Mrs. Dana
Nelson, Mrs. Harold Will Sr.,
Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Mrs. Ray
Pickens, Sr., Mrs. Edith Fox,
Mrs. Bertha Parker, Mrs.
Richard Slack, Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Miss Erma Smith, Mrs.
Eugene Eskew, Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs, Mrs. Myla Hudson and
Mrs. Ada Slack.

Mrs. Letcher Jarvis Wine, the
former Shirley Patricia Martin,
was honored with a bridal
shower Sunday afternoon at the
American Legion hall in
Pomeroy. Hostesses were Mrs.
Jack Matthew of Gallipolis and
Mrs. Virgil Walker.
A yellow and white color
scheme was carried out in the
decorations. A bride doll in
yellow flanked by tapers centered the refreshment table,
and one in white was used on the
gift table.
Mrs. Virgil Roush and Mrs.
Walker conducted games with
prizes being won by Mrs.
Gerald Wildermuth, Mrs. Julia
Norris, Mrs. Albert Brinker,
Mrs. Grover Neville, and Mrs.
Iva Powell. Cake, punch, nuts
and mints were served with
Mrs. Neville and Mrs. Matthews presiding at the table.
Attending the shower besides
those named were Mrs. Leona
Martin of Columbus; Jack and
Barry Matthews, Mrs. Albert
Martin, Susanne and Brian
Beeler, Mrs. Dean Brinker,
Mrs. George Mowrey, Mrs.
John Boyd, Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, Mrs. Ferne Cheesebrew,
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Mrs.
Ruth H. Thornton.
Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Wine were Mrs. Danny
Wellman, Mrs. Delbert Frigley,
Athens; Mrs. Chester Hutton,
Mrs. Lowell Thompson, Mrs.
Lowell McNickle, Mrs. George
Hackett, Sr., Mrs. Olan Knapp,
Mrs. Harry Reapp, Debbie
Maiden, Mrs. Wilbur Theobald,
Mrs. Don Erwin, Mrs. Joe
Bishop, Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs.

l

Pomeroy....

\

~

Personal Notes

\

l..... - - -

--=::..--~

Edgar Roush, Miss Kate
A gift was also presented to
Carpenter, and Mrs. Edna the honored guest by Meigs
Monk.
Salon 710, Eight and Forty.

--- -

__.__.._...,._

--

-----::-~

Community
Corner By

Charlene Hoeflich

1
\

Again this year Meigs CoWity organizations will be asked to
send a girl to the Appalachian Heritage Camp of the Four Rivers
Girl Scout Council.
The camp program -a week at Sandy Bend near Elizabeth,
W.Va.- presents an opportunity for disadvantaged girls to gain~
new experiences and a view at a different way of life. The cost is
$10.90 per girl and Meigs County this year has been given a quota
of 10. Camp dat:&gt; is Aug. 15-21.
Barbara Scites, home health nurse for the Meigs-Gallia
Community Action Program, is handling selection and screening
of the girls to attend. She will be assisted in the recruiting by
members of the Middleport Child Conservation League and the
girls will be equipped and clothed for the week at camp by the
scout troops of the county.
Last year 19 girls went from Meigs County and they all were
bubbling over when they returned home. The week was filled with
activities culminating with Christmas in August. The girls went
"shopping" in a big barn for good used clothing which had been
collected, and each one got a new blouse from a store in
Parkersburg as a Christmas gift, delivered by one of Santa's
helpers.
Mrs. Scites is anxious for organizations to consider now
sponsoring a girl to the Heritage Camp. Let her know if your
group can h_elp.
•
FOR YEARS NOW home economists have been urging women
who don't work outside their homes to refer to themselves as G
homemakers and not housewives. There seems to be some stigma
about this word "housewife."
And now Women's Lib deepens the connotation, whatever it
may be. Says Barbara Walters of the Today Show: "One great
disadvantage of the women's liberation movement is that it is
giving women who want to stay home an inferiority complex."
EDWARD JOHN STRAUSS II, Pomeroy High School
graduate, has been accepted into the College of Dentistry at Ohio
State University. His record at OSU is so good that he is being
accepted now despite the fact that he lacks 25 hours for his ,.
bachelor's degree.
After graduation from Pomeroy High School, John attended a
year at State, and then enlisted in the U. S. Army. He spent 13
man ths of his three years in the Anny in Korea. When he got back
he married Barbara Fusman of Zanesville and went back to
college.
Johri's ambition always has been to be a dentist.
MRS. DALLAS HILL of Apple Grove, Patricia Bahr of
Chester, and Mrs. Ellen Couch of Pomeroy are three more worr.en
of the county soliciting for the George Thompson Kidney Fund.
House-to-house solicitation is a project of the American Legion
Auxiliary units of Meigs County under the leadership of Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, Eighth District president.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Weir of
Mount Vernon were recent
visitors of her mother, Mrs.
Mabel Pettit, who was 82 on St.
Patrick's Day.
Mr . and Mrs. Lowell
Thompson and children of South
Point were weekend visitors of
her mother, Mrs. Edgar Roush
and Mr. and Mrs. Osby Martin . ....,___._.............~.....~---_....._...,__ _ _-.t'·
Mr. and Mrs. Wal r MeDaniel and children a nd Mrs.
Thelma McDaniel of M.ddleport
were in Charleston, W. Va .
Sunday to attend the circus.

Mason County

News Notes·

c
,

B'rth
1

.BY Alma :M arshall

~

Spec. 4 and Mrs. David H.
Sigman, Letart, W. Va., Route
1, are announcing the birth of a
seven pound, eight ounce son,
David Jr., born March 17 in
Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Fields, Letart
Route 1, and Mrs. Leora
Sigman, Middleport. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Fields, Hartford, and
Mr. and Mrs. 0. H. Rardin of
Coolville. Specialist Sigman is
currently serving in Vietnam.

Thank you, Mrs. John King, of Letart, W. Va. for such a nice
letter in regards to Sandra Fowler of West Columbia -and thank
you for getting the news item about Sandra to me- one of the joys
of writing news is making others happy.
Sandra was complimented many times after persons had
read about her many accomplishments, she in turn thanked them,
and then said, " the credit all goes to God." Hope we'll be hearing
WOMEN'S Assn. of the
more about Sandra - and her poetry.
Middleport First United
MY HUSBAND AND I are busy getting ready for craft fairs Presbyterian Church will meet
it's most interesting to cut rocks which are millions of years old
at 7:30 Thursday night at the
and come up with a new creation. Some of the colors are
church. Mrs. Tom Rue is to
especially pretty.
present the book study; Mrs.
We went to an old coal mine in Ohio and got petrified wood,
Michael Zirkle, the devotions.
the colors are not so good -but there can be no doubt, it was once
Hostesses are to be Mrs.
a tree. The bark has even agatized. We were happy with our find,
Richard Karr, Mrs. Jessie
but, oh, the damage to the hills in Ohio. Where the top of the hills
Shumaker, Mrs. Joe Bailey,
have been cut away to obtain the coal, they are barren. In some
and Mrs. Helen Lewis.
places after the top of the hill had been removed, soil, as well as
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
trees below, slipped down the hill and the trees broke over.
cooking demonstration at the 1
It's no wonder some people are so against strip mining.
Columbus and Southern Ohio I
.
MORE
about West Columbia: During the stirring days of the
Electric Co. 7:30 Thursday
shadowed by astronaut Frank Borman - from Civil War, West Columbia was quite desolate. The able-bodied
BY JACK O'BRIAN
night.
the 1969 moon launch yet .... "The Me Nobody men had gone into the service leaving a few old men, the women
YESTERDAY'S VULGARISMS ARE
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Knows"
is profiting a neat $6,000 a week with just and children to hold the fort and do the best they could.
TODA
Y'S
CHILD'S
PLAY
7:30 Thursday, Columbus and
When the corn meal bin began to run low, there was nothing to
NEW YORK - St. Regis Hotel's security on one angel - Edgar Bronfman of the Seagram
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
whiskey
family
..
..
Canny
Edgar
also
has
a
do
but
buy a sack of corn, shell it and take the corn to Hogg's old
the
astronauts
was
so
perfect
they
couldn't
even
cooking demonstration.
WOMEN'S Association, 7:30 get their own room keys .... St. Regis manager $100,000 slice of the longrun, delightful smash water mill and either exchange the corn for meal or wait until
Thursday night, Middleport Ed Carey had a heart attack .... Met Roz Russell "1776" (peddled also as a film to Jack Warner your grist was ground before returning home .
The mill was located six or seven miles below town on the Pt.
First United Presbyterian in Saks 5th, buying a birthday gift for her for $1,500,000 - cash) .... Somehow the Chicago
husband, Freddie Brisson .... Met cutie Jill "Me Nobody Knows" is struggling hard, may Pleasant road and the trip down to the mill for meal was generally
Church.
REGULAR meeting Thurs- Corey at St. Patrick's Cathedral, gallantly back have to close by the time you read this; sad, for made by women. It was a common sight in those days to see a
day, Xi Gamma Mu 8 p.m. at the TV-audition grind. Her husband, baseball it's a unanimously N. Y. - praised offbeat en- woman on a horse with a sack of corn on her way to the mill. Much
of the success of the Federal army belongs to the brave women •
home of Mrs. Karl Krautter .
star Don Hoak, died too young, and Jill has a chantment.
JUNIOR Leagion Auxiliary, little girl to support with her considerable talent
Money isn't the lure love-sex-nostalgia is: (according to John Mason) wt.o were left at home unprotected to
Drew Webster Post 39, Thurs- .... Brody Restaurants' exec-veep Brian Daly, "The Rothschilds" on Bdwy. is limping along at battle single-handed and alone against the pangs of hunger and
day, 6 p.m. at Pomeroy Legion Irish-born, was fired with exquisite anti-timing $62,000 under capacity ... . "No, No, Nanette" and privation, and Mason said, until this grand army of housewive.&gt; 1 )
Hall. Joint practice session with - on St. Patrick's Day; Brian is one of the finest, "Sleuth" alone are steady sellouts .... "Ap- have been paid, this government is indebted to them.
Junior Members of Feeney classiest restaurant execs in N. Y.
plause" remains in the hit class, about $14,000
When the Civil War broke out all the salt works and coal
Bennett Post 128, Middleport at
Veteran producer Max Gordon recalls the Wider sellout, cheaper seats more available than mines closed down indefinitely and there seemed to be nothing to
6:45p.m.
tizzy when his "The Women" (by Clare Boothe its $15 and $12 downfronts.
do but enlist in the service.
PAST Matrons Evangeline Luce) opened on B'dwy, for almost 700 perMany persons were named that answered the first call and
One of the most famous Bdwy. non-performing
Chapter Thursday in basement
formances with all manner of viciously vixenish names snarls his present show is the worst he's remained in federal service throughout the war: Will tell you
dining room at Middleport
euphemisms, considered terribly naughty in 1936 ever been connected with, and we agree .... Anita about two- Isaac Lewis was a hero of three wars, according to
Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m.
.. .. "Today 'The Women' could be done in Gillette of the musicals and composer ("Golden (John Mason, written in 1909). Mr. Lewis participated in the war
HOLIDA YC RAFTS Club, children's theatres," Max sighed.
Earrings," "I Gatta Be Me") Walter Marks said of 1812, the Mexican and Civil wars.
regular meeting, Thursday,
After the Civil War was over he returned home, and notSinatra, Jill Corey, Godfrey Cambridge and they're engaged, at the Pen &amp; Pencil; unless it
9:30 a .m. to 2 p.m. at BookGuy Marks flew to Bos£on to a benefit for the was just for dinner - Walter's also writing withstanding the great service he had rendered to his country in
mobile Headquarters Mrs.
ailing and tax-beleaguered Frank Fontaine; Anita's new supperclub act .... Author of the her hour of need, aged and broken in health, he made a living for
Vilma Pikkoja will instruct on
making
string
pictures . wonder why his TV-for-years-pal Gleason didn't BrW.;h-import play, "The Philanthropist," himself and his good old wife by making brooms and doing odd
Members are to take their own .... Marauding "prostitutes" around hotels and Christopher Hampton, is an old playhand : He's jobs as he could find to do. One morning he put some brooms into
background with a s imple darker East Side streets often are men in drag : 23; had his first play on the London boards when an old skiff and rowed to Middleport to dispose of em and wu
A lone pedestrian doesn't consider women, even he was 18.
never seen alive again. A few weeks later his body was take~
design and a sack lunch.
the river at the head of Eight Mile island and laid to rest
Champion
Joe
Frazier
got
$2,500,000
for
his
in
small
packs,
dangerous,
which
lulls
innocent
FRIDAY
DANCE PARTY, Friday, 8:30 gents into not avoiding the camouflaged males' 90-minute fight spectacular, but he'll take in only cemetery hill. The little mound where lies the remains of o
to 11 p.m. at Racine Junior High proximity .... Almost - funny evening scene $17,500 for his Las Vegas one-weeker, Variety this country's real defenders is still unmarked and there are
School with "The Rose between Bdwy. at 7th Ave . as theaters were notes .... We don't get it: Edward G. Robinson's who could point out the place, according to Mason.
Hamilton Johnson was taken prisoner and sent to AnCathedral, " Point Pleasant, pouring showgoers homewards: A dozen fire TV pitch (reported pay $50,000 guarantee) for a
providing music. Sponsored by apparati had as an audience a baker's dozen (we razorblade - still in full beard . . .. Connie dersonville Prison where he remained for several months. He was
Southern
High
School counted 'em -13) of the hookers lined up against Stevens is expected to wed Nancy Wilson's ex, finally exchanged and returned to his home - a mere shadow of
storefronts, ogling the hooking ladders (they Ken Dennis; Connie forgot Eddie Fisher eons his former self - broken in health and nearly starved to death
sophomores.
ago .... The "70 Girls 70" musical is upending but still in full possession of that proud, brave spirit of the true
MONDAY
love uniforms?) .
MEIGS County NFO meeting,
Merv Griffin bought his sixth radio station .... everything, backstage and front: Lighting ex- soldier. According to John Mason in 1909, Mr. Johnson at that
8 p.m . Monday at Chester Huntington Hartford had three blondes at the pert David Segal ("Love Story" author Erich's time was still living at his home in Mason City, honored and
Grange Hall.
respected by all who knew him.
Pierre's La Foret - but was completely over- brother) already vamoosed.

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

Voice along Broadway

!

.... _

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 23, 1971

. Waverly's HawheeOhio Coach Of Year
•

,

of the Athens Regional Samrday night.
The loss ended Waverly's
season with a 22-2 record.
Last season, the Tigers advanced all the way to the state
semi-finals, losing to eventual
state
champion
Dayton
Chaminade.
With three starters back from
that team, including second

COLUMBUS (UPI) -C. D.
Hawhee, who guided Waverly
to the No. 1 spot in the final
United Press International
Board of Coaches' Class AA
basketball ratings, has been
voted AA coach of the year.
Hawhee, 50, just completed
25 years of coaching at Waverly when his Tigers were beaten
66-62 by Maysville in the finals

•
•

By United Press International
Juan Marichal may be the
San Francisco Giants' key
pitcher this year but Gaylord
Perry is the one likely to get
the honor of pitching on opening
day.
Perry, who had a 23-13 record
and pitched 329 innings last
season, virtually clinched the
April 6 assignment against the
San Diego Padres when he
allowed two runs in seven
innings Monday in a 5-2 victory
over the Cleveland Indians.
Perry, whose brother, Jim
also is a likely opening day
pitcher for the Minnesota
Twins, will go into the 1971
season as the Giants' No. 1
pitcher. Marichal, a six-time 20game winner who was sidelined
during much of the 1970 season
with a freak ailment and had a
12-10 record, is regarded as the
"pitcher who must come
through," However, if the
Giants are to be a contender in
the N;1tional League West.
Willie Mays, going into the
new season with 628 homers,
showed the fans in Phoenix,
Ariz., some of his old skills
when he hit a 450-foot homer
off Mark Ballinger.
On other fronts: Rico Petrocelli drove m five runs with
a homer, double and single as
the Boston Red Sox beat the
Los Angeles Dodgers, 10-5.
Billy Conigliaro added two
doubles and a smgle to the Red
Sox' 14-hit attack. Steve Gar.vey
and Duke Sims homered for the
Dodgers ... Bob Robertson and

AI Oliver hit homers to lead the
Pittsburgh Pirates to an 8-4
triumph over the Kansas City
Royals. The Pirates' spring
record is 10-3.
The Montreal Expos scored
three unearned runs off Denny
McLain in six innings and beat
the Washington Senators, 5-3,
for their eighth victory in nine
games ... AI Santorini, who was
1-8 last season but has a fine
arm, pitched two-hit ball for
seven innings as the Padres
downed the California Angels,
10-0. Jim Maloney, acquired by
the Angels during the winter
and a key pitcher in their AI
West pennant plans, was tagged
for 10 runs and walked six
batters in 4 1-3 innings.
Ken Boswell scored the
winning run when pitcher Fred
Norman threw Tommie Agee's
bunt single into right field,
giving the New York Mets a 21, 10-inning decision over the St.
Louis Cardinals .. . homers by
Hal Jestadt and Johnny Callison and a tie-breaking double
by Hal Breeden enabled the
Chicago cubs to overcome a
four-run deficit and shade the
Oakland Athletics, 5-4.
Singles by Tim McCarver,
Ron Stone, Larry Bowa and
Don Money, a walk and an
error on a fielder's choice
enabled the Philadelphia Phillies to score four runs in the
ninth inning and defeat the
Cincinnati Reds, 8-7. Larry
Hisle homered for the Phils and
Tony Pere:~; connected for the
Reds.

I

:- 1971 AA All-Ohio Team
•

CO' UMBUc:
Tl,"
19/ Un1tC'd P
a
Cia AA all
basketball te
grade and sco
First
m
Joe Fisher, L ma Central
Catholic, 6 81/ 2, Sr., 28.6.
Don Mclane, Steubenville
Central Catholic, 6-5, Sr., 25.5.
Bob Fleischer, Youngstown
Lib rty, 6·9, Sr., 25.3.
Jol'&gt;'1 O'Hara, Claymont, 6·1,
Sr., 28.1.
Tim Gebhardt, Wynford, 5·10,
Sr., 22.5.
Second Team
Phil Miller, Waverly, 6-3, Sr.
18.5.
Alan Walter, Columb s
Ready, 6-0, Sr., 25.6.
Steve Fields, Colum s
DeSales, 6·5, Sr., 26.5.
Steve Martin, Licking Val ey,
6-4, Sr., 30.5.
Doug Carpenter, Shady ide,
6-2, Sr., 30.1.
Third Team
Scott Penhorwood,
Bath, 6·2, Sr., 27.0.
John Lewis, Wellsvil , 6·4,
Sr., 17.1.
Doug Crowe, Brookv lie, 6·8,
Jr., 25.2.
Rick Eblin, Waverly 6-5, Sr.,

Fosto /a ·
Wolfe,
Dean
Maysvfllc
ionorable Ment10n
Gr
Ashorn, Deer Park;
R1cl, Alessi, Steubenville
Cen I;
Larry
Arthur,
Clel/f!land Holy Name; Chris
Beaker, Akron St. Vincent;
Riqh Bevly, Youngstown North;
Larry Baldasare, Wellsville;
~eg Bell, Columbus Mohawk;
ob Baird, Poland; John
rown, Bellefontaine; Rick
~uckosh, Lorain Clearview;
Freeman Blade, Twinsburg;
Dave Bailey, Twinsburg; Mike
Buurma, Willard; Jim Church,
Napoleon; Larry Crowe ll,
Jefferson; Mel Constant,
Kenston; Warren Dorsey,
Mifflin;
J erry
Draga,
Firelands;
Jim
Evans,
Warrensville; Ross Felumlee,
Granvil le;
Will
Finley,
Morgan;
Randy
Ganter,
Garaway;
Kevin
Goist,
Columbiana ; Carme l Hopkins,
Patrick
Henry;
Dean
Holdgrave, Delphos St. John;
Mike Harriman, Elgin; Rick
Hill, Perrysburg; Larry Ivory,
Akron South; Allan Jones,
Mariemont; Charlie Kitchen,
Ironton;
Ga ry
Kennedy,
Bucyrus;
Bill
Lybarger,
Fredericktown; Brent Moss,
Delta;
Mark
McConnell,
Coshocton; Gary Martin,
Jonathan Alder; Mark Moeller,
Ca nfi e ld ;
Bob Martinko,
Campbell Memorial; Jim
Martin, Clear Fork; Doug
Maze, St. Marys.
Rick Marcu, Cardinal; Jerry
Mihalic, Lorain Clearview;
George Modreck, Bellaire St.
John ; Rick Ma ll ett, River;
Cletus
McGee,
Preble
Shawnee; Joe Moeder, Coldwater ; Mike Owen, Rossford;
Brian Phelps, Garrettsv ill e;
Randy Ratliff, Wellston; Chuck
Robinson, Federa I Hocking ;
Greg Roberts, Bellefontaine;
Guy Rondo, Kenston; Ned
Roach, Pymatuning Valley;
Craig Readshaw, Pymatuning
Valley .
Craig Rock, Toronto; Kim
Stanbery, John Glenn; Larry
Snowden, Gallipolis; Ear l
Stitz le in , Loudonville; Tim
Shetzer, Fremont St. Joseph;
Jerry Sta ley, Mt. Gi lead; Bob
Tucker, Teays Valley; Bob
Taylor, Columbus Ready; Mike
Telep, Parma Byzantine; Tim
Taush, Triway; Tim Witchey,
St. Clairsvi ll e; John William·
son, Buckeye Valley; Ron
Weber, Rossford.

I

••

••

•

23.4.

Bill Andreas, Gar
Sr., 18.0_
Special Menton
Dave Burkhold , Delta;
Dave
Bailey,
Casta lia
Margaretta; Bill B wn, Elida;
Tim Corbett, Solon Tim Davis,
Lexington; Do g Gerber,
Elyria Catholic; ary Gaerke,
Goldwater; Crai Kuszmaul,
Champion ; D ny Lucas,
Martins Ferry ; Randy Little,
Tri.Valley; Joh Mills, Canton
Lehman ; Jeff elson, Upper
Peters, Tip
Sandusky; Ma
pecanoe ;
F ank
Rohrs ,
Napoleon; R er Remenaric,
Fairless; C aries Spie les,
Delphos St. J hn; Jeff Tyson,

1-'or Elegance in Pipe
Smoking Pleasure, Select a
Pipe that Needs No
Breaking ln.
/

Tawney JeY'elers
422 Second ve.
Gallipolis, hio

how tough its been on me."
Hawhee, who has a ·25 - year
basketball coaching record at
Waverly of 380-158, said he did
several things to try to cut the
mounting pressure.
"We shortened up our practice sessions," Hawhee said,
"and tried to add a little
humor at every point we could

to make sure we were still
playing for fun.
"I think the kids felt they
had to win, and everything we
did win, the sectional and district, there was no celebrating."
I&lt;'or his first 19 years at
Waverly, Hawhee was also
head football coach, but he

gave that up six years ago after
compiling a 116-37-5 mark and
nine Southern Ohio Conference
ti ties.
Since then, his basketball
teams have won 118 and lost
14 with six of those losses being in tournament play.
Hawhee, a native of Indiana,
began his college education at

Ball State, playing basketball
under the late Branch McCracken, later coach at Indiana
University.
His career, however, was interrupted by World War II, and
he finished his education at
Morehead State in Kentucky.
As for next year, "It's going
to definitely be a rebuilding

Duke Tops Vols, 78-64

Perry Is Ready

•

..

team all-Ohioan Phil Miller and
Third teamer Rick Eblin, Hawhee said fans expected the
Tigers to go all the way this
season.
"It put a real strain on the
kids," Hawhee said. "When
you're at the top, it's kind of
a feather in the cap of your
opponent to beat you. Mentally
it's tough on the kids. I know

COACH OF THE YEAR
CARROLL HAWHEE

UCLA Is
Favored
Thursday
LOS ANGELES (UPI)~erry
Tarkanian, a man who has
played them both, says it'll be
UCLA over Kansas Thursday
night.
•'I feel UCLA will go all the
way," the folksy coach of the
Cal State Long Beach 49ers told
the Southern California Basketball Writers Monday. "I don't
think Kansas can win."
It was a particularly interesting opinion since Tarkanian's
club lost to the Jayhawks by 17
points in its season opener and
nearly upset the Bruins last
weekend.
"I feel UCLA's pressure will
turn the game around," the
Long Beach mentor added. "I
hear Kansas has been trying to
run, but they can't run against
UCLA."
Shooting for an incredible
fifth consecutive NCAA title,
the No. 1-ranked Bruins face
the Jayhawks in the national
semifinals at the Houston
Astrodome. Western Kentucky
and Villanova collide in the
other semifinal test.
Wooden Voices Hope
UCLA's John Wooden said he
will, indeed, use a pressure
defense against Kansas in the
form of the Bruins' famed zone
press.
"It is felt their guards are
not the most maneuverable,"
he said.
Wooden, whose team got past
Long Beach 57-55 in the
Western Regionals Finals at
Salt Lake City Saturday, said
he expected the Jayhawks to
use a 1-3-1 zone.
"I hope we're better prepared
this time," he said.
Long Beach used a 2-3 zone to
nearly knock UCLA out of the
playoffs. The 49ers led by 11
points in the second half. And
the Bruins shot only 29 per cent
from the field.
Jerry's Loss Painful
"Long Beach's zones surprised us and gave us a lot of
trouble," Wooden declared.
"I'm sure it had much to do with
our poor shooting average.
"However, most of our shots
were not forced and I think it is
most unlikely that we will again
shoot s poorly against any
defense ."
Tarkanian told the writers
the loss to UCLA "was the
most painful I've ever had. "
Los Angeles Lakers' coach
Joe Mullaney said he will start
rookie Jim McMillian against
the Chicago Bulls in the NBA
playoffs here Wednesday night.
McMillian is scheduled to
start at forward with Happy
Hairston while Mullaney said
he will use Keith Erickson and
Gail Goodrich at guards, and
Wilt Chamberlain at center.
-

FOR SALE -

The Homer Lovett real estate
located in Lebanon Township,
Me1gs County, Ohio, containing
approximately 40 acres more o-r
less, will be sold to the highest
bidder on Saturday, March
27th , 1971, at 10 :30 A.M. at the
office of Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
Attorneys, Pomeroy, Ohio . Real
Estate is appraised at $3,000.00
and cannot be so ld for less than
this amount. Sale subject to the
approval of th e Probate Court,
Meigs County, Ohio.
Clara Belle Yinger
Adm ini stratrix of th e Estate of
Homer Lovett, Deceased
(3)21,22,23

NEW YORK (UPI)-Duke
and North Carolina, tested on
the Atlantic Coast Conference
battlefield, scored the AAC's
biggest advance in the National
Invitation Basketball Tournament Monday and today
emerged as the top choices to
win the 1971 title.
OnJy one of the teams,
however, will reach Saturday's
final round because the scheduling bracket pits the two schools
against each other in one of
Thursday night's semifinals.
The other semi matches the
survivors of Wednesday night's
Hawaii-St. Bonaventure and
Michigan-Georgia Tech games.
Ray Mears, the Tennessee

North Carolina and Duke met
three times this season, with
the Tar Heels winning twice.
"The total difference in those
three games is two points,"
said Duke coach Bucky Waters,
"and that's for 120 minutes of
play."
Waters had a close game
with Tennessee as the Vol held
Duke in check until the last
1:54 when the Blue Devils ran
off an 8-2 spurt. Duke was held
to only two points during a
seven-minute stretch late in the
second half when Tennessee
closed from a 63-54 deficit to 6460 as the Devils went into a
stalling game.
Denton scored 32 points and

coach who watched North
Carolina beat Providence 86-79
and then saw his Volunteers
lose to Duke 78-64, in Monday
night's quarterfinals, doesn't
see how the survivor of the
N.C.-Duke game can lose in the
title round.
"They're the class of the
tourney," Mears said. "We lost
to Duke and all I can say is
they have a fine player in
Randy Denton, who shoots and
rebounds well ."
Hawaii, which came to its
first NIT with hula girls and
pineapples, defeated Oklahoma,
88-87, in double overtime in an
opening round game to start
Monday's tripleheader.

Fisher Player Of Year
COLUMBUS (UPI) - I don't
think you could ask for a better
all-around type of individual,"
said Lima Central Catholic
Coach Joe Gottfried of his star
Joe Fisher, and about 200 college coaches agree.
Fisher, 6-foot-8 1/2, 220-pounds,
was the overwhelming choice in
the 1971 balloting for Class AA
All-Ohio, earning him player of
the year honors.
Fisher, who led the Thunderbirds to a 20-4 record with his
28.6 scoring average and 15.6
rebounds, is being sought by
more than 200 schools.
He is the only repeater from
last year's Class AA all - Ohio
first team, when there were
only two divisions.
Gottfried, who took over the
Lima Central coaching job this
year, said of Fisher: "His mobility is unbelievable for a boy
his size. If you had to you
could play him at guard. He's
at home anywhere, on the
court."
Shows Leadership
Besides this, Gottfried said,
"he possesses great leadership
qualities and he's a very coacha ble type of person."
Scholastically, Fisher ranks
15th in his class of 250.
Other members of the first
team are Steubenville Central
Catholic's Don "Kip'' McLane,
Youngstown Liberty 's Bob
Fleischer, John O'Hara of
Claymont and Tim Gebtart of
Wynford.
McLane, 6 - foot - 5 and 190
pounds, led Steubenville Central to a 19-4 record with his
25.5 scoring and 20 rebound averages.
His best games came against
the Crusaders' toughest opposition, including 37 points and 33
ret ounds against AAA Wintersville, 33 points and 25 rebounds
against Martins Ferry, and a 29
point, 17 rebound performance
in his team's 58-57 upset of
Steubenville Big Red, their only
loss.
Fleischer is a 6-foot-9 center
who led Youngstown Liberty to
a 17-1 regular season mark and
a No. 2 ranking in the final
UPI poll.
He averaged 25.3 points per
game, and an even more impressive 23 rebounds, but excels
in setting up teammates as
well.
Hits Both Ways
O'Hara, a 6 - foot - 1 guard,
showed deadly accuracy from
both the floor and free throw
line in rining up a 28.1 points

per game mark .
He hit on 48 per cent of his
floor shots, excellent for a
guard, and had an incredible 86
per cent mark from the line.
Only on two occasions was
O'Hara held to less than 20
points, 16 and 18, and he had
high games of 45, 37, 35 and
35 points.
The final spot on the first
team went to Gebhardt, a 5foot-10 senior guard, who led
Coach Jim Bauer's Wynford
Royals to their second straight
17-1 regular season record.
Gebhardt, who edged out
Waverly's talented Phil
Miller in the voting, averaged
22.5 points per game and was
Wynford's floor general.
Miller, a 6-foot-3 guard with
an 18.5 scoring average, headed
the second team. Along with
third team member Rick Eblin,
he led Waverly to the No. 1
ranking among the state's Class
AA schools.
The other members of the first
team were Columbus Ready's
slick 6-foot guard, Alan Walter,
6-foot-5 Steve Fields of Colum-

1 Q-Which is the longest

bf the Psalms and what is

co11ec ted 17 reb ounds and
completely dominated the smaller Vols. The 6-10 Duke center
scored only eight points against
Dayton in the opening round,
but attributed that low total to
"an inability to stay loose."
Don Johnson, hitting from the
outside, scored 24 points for
Tennessee.
North Carolina also employed
slow-down tactics in its win
over Providence and it paid off,
too, for the Southern school.
The Tar Heels led by 11
points with 7:18 remaining, but
began losing their momentum
when the Friars closed to
within five points at the fiveminute mark. Then Bill Chamberlain sparked the winners on
a six-point burst that carried
North Carolina to its 24th win
in 30 games this season.
Chamberlain finished with 19
points, but it was teammate
Dave Chadwick, a sub, who
grabbed scoring honors when
he tallied 22 points as a
replacement for injured Dennis
Wuycik. Lee Dedmon netted 18
points and George Karl scored
15. Enrie DiGregorio led
Providence with 23 points.

EARLY BIRD LEAGUE
March 17, 1971
Standings
Wl
76 2(
Mark V
66 3(
D. D. Pinnettes
Welker's Maplelawn
Poultry
42 54
Evelyn's. Grocery
42 5~
Rawlings Dodge
34 6~
Coca·Cola Dropouts
28 6£
First Team Game - D. 0
Pinnettes 846; Firs+ Teai'T'
Series - D. D. Pinnettes 2312.
First lnd Game- Mary Voss
244; Second Ind. Game Martha Nash 194.
First Ind. Series - Mary Voss
603; Second Ind. Series - Julia
Boyles 475.

Your Savings

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. L. Pet. GB
X· Virginia
51 27 .654
Kentucky
42 37 .532 9112
New York
39 39 .500 12
Floridians
34 46 .452 18
Pittsburgh
33 46 .418 18'12
Carolina
30 48 .385 21
West
w. L. Pet. GB
Indiana
55 24 .696
Utah
54 24 .692 112
38 40 .487 16112
Memphis
Texas
28 50 .359 26'12
Denver
27 50 .351 27
X·Ciinched Div. Title
Monday's Result
Indiana 110 Utah 106
Tuesday's Games
New York at Memphis
Denver at Utah
(Only games scheduled)

3,4%
Tire$tone
Per year, compounded
quarterly
on
regular
passbook savings and school
savings. No minimum or
maximum amount. Interest
from date of deposit to date
of withdrawal as long as you
maintain an open account.

Strato-Streak

LeSabre 4 door. Burgundy
finish, black vinyl int.
Factory air.

$1295
Karr &amp; Van landt
"You'll Like Our Quality'
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til6:00
Til S .P.M. Sat.

L_J-·

-

_/

WHITEWALLS
The NEW Long Mileage Tires

• HUJu::ed luu~· bo•ltc:d cuJUtrU\·tlun ~ 1 - ~.Uu;;h
r01~tm tread helh h... l&lt;! lw..l nat for 1'""\
luldi.. n. !on.( rni!.,.. j:.. llnoi ~~~t.:an;;c t .. !tT'IJ-'h

MEIGS CO. BRANCH

• Wtdc•

@

·;~ Jf'tlto&lt; tr~land

ttrong

ra~on coroi

l«ty&lt;'o&gt;mbin.. tn,lwo•munth. qui..t rWJnrl
ltuid; h&lt;&gt;"'llin11

Buy these new tires today

SAVE $39to $54

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

per set of four
FREE TV Given Away Mar. 31. Coma In &amp; Reglstarl
No purchase necessary

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

(Quarter Finals)
N.C. 86 Prov. 79
Duke 78 Tennessee 64

AFTER A WINTrR LIKE THIS ... IS IT ANY WONDER THAT

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2094

606 E. Main

Here Is .T he "Spring Tonic" It Needs!

YOUR BUGGY'S LOST IT'S BOUNCE!

MUFFLER &amp; BRAKE
SERVICE
"'B ATIERY

66 BUICK

its subject?
A-Psalm 119; its subject
is the

Local Bowling

This Week's Special

USED CARS

(

EARN MORE

Pro Standings

College Basketball Results
By United Press lnternationa I
NIT at New York
.
(Opening Round)
Hawaii 88 Okla. 87 (2 otl

bus DeSales, 6-foot-4 Steve Martin of Licking Valley and 6-foot2 Doug Carpenter of Shadyside.
Besides the 6-foot-5 Eblin on
the third team were 6-foot-2
Scott Penhorwood of Lima
Bath, 6-foot-4 John Lewis of
Wellsville, 6-foot-8 Doug Crow
of Brookville and 6-foot-8 BL
Andreas of Garaway.

year," Hawhee said, "but to me
that's the real challenge of
coaching."
Hawhee and his wife, Bea,
have been married for 30 years
and have three daughters.
Other coaches who made
strong support in the coach of
the year voting were Bob Dawson of Wellsville, Jim Bauer of
Wynford, Bob Arnzen of Delphos St. John and Fred Churck
of Napoleon.

~~~:.~!~'11
Tough On Your "Winter Weary' Car and the

SERVICE

Tune-&lt;~p Service
with New Champion or AC
Spark Plu!(S.

lleavy Duty

"'TUNt-UPS
FACTORY TRAINED
MECHANics

I~mition

System

SHOCK
ABSORBERS
INSlALLEb

a safer, steadier

Bouncing, Pulling and Dragging Thru Snow

.---N•E•W-S•T•O•R•E
...H.iiiOiiiUiiiR.iiSiii:-~~111!11

smoother ride

and Mud Have Taken A Terrific Toll On the

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. TIL8 P. M.

for all Cars

Motor. Jarring It Daily From Stem to Stern.

M
0
0
R
E'
S
HEADQUARTERSC

SEE US FOR A

SERViCE

TUN.E-UP

POMEROY

992-2848

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor. .ll.1eroy, 0 ., March 23, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

•

•

Unlucky Expert 81ds
23

XORTII
.AJ876

¥3
• J 63
... ~864

'W EST
EAST
• Q9
.K532
V K 10 9 7 4
V 8
+K85
+AQ1094
.t.K32
.t.QJ7
SOUTH (D)
.104
VAQJ65 2
• 72

.t.A 105
None vulnera ble
North East South
1\'
2 \' I

3" \
Pass

Officers Elected
Aga1n
By Mary Shrine

North's one-spade response
was nothing to ring bells
about. but it is the sort of
response that should be
made. He has six high-card
points and a decent five-card
spade suit.
East's three-diamond call
was one of t hose gambling
reopening bids. East could
be pretty sure his partner
would have some high cards.
Otherwise. North and South
would have bid more. He
knew that he might be doubled at three diamonds but
he took that gamble. It paid
off when South bid once
more and once too often.
We approve of competition. otherwise your opponents will partial-score you
to death. However, South had
no reason to bid a third time.
North still had a bid if he
had the right hand.

Election of new officers
highlighted a recent meeting of
Mary Shrine 37, Order of the
White Shrine of Jerusalem, held
at the IOOF hall.
Elected were Mrs. Maxine
Wingett, worthy high priestess;
Ernest Wingett, watchman of
shepherds;
Mrs.
Pear l
Reynolds, noble prophe tess;
Raymond Adams, ass ociate
watchman of shepherds ; Mrs.
Nellie Tracy, chaplain; Mrs.
Bernice
Winn,
worthy
shepherdess; Mrs. Arlene
Davis, worthy guide; Mr s.
Barbara Dugan, worthy scribe;

93,Claimed

S. D. (Seldon) Vale, 93, for' mer Meigs County resident,
Mrs. Elizabeth Lear , worthy died Monday at his home in
Belleville, Ill.
treasurer .
Mr. Vale attended Gallta
Plans were made for open
Academy
and Ohio University .
installation on April17 at 8 p.m.
at th~ IOOF hall. A business He was a teacher in Meigs
meeting will be held at 4 p.m . County for several years before
going to Chicago and later to
with potluck refreshments.
where
before
Mrs. Naoma Brinker, worthy Belleville
high priestess presided at the retirement he held an executive
meeting. Presented were position with a furnace
Beatrice Blue, district deputy; manufacturing firm. He had
Donald Blue, Mrs. Juanita been confined to the St.
McPeek, noble prophetess; and Elizabeth Hospital in Belleville
Clinic McPeek, watchmen of for three months but had been
shepherds, a ll of Ma'rietta, at his home for the past two
weeks.
Shrine 12.
Mr . Vale was married to the
former Della Aldridge of
Harrisonville who survives. The
couple had been married for 68
years. Besides his wife, Mr.
Vale is survived by a son,
Maurice of Bellville, and two
grandsons, Maurice, Jr.,
Columbia , Ill., and James of
Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Lightfoot Carterville, Ill.
and Mr. Roush is the son of C-M
Funeral services will be held
Sgt. and Mrs. Clifford Roush, all at 10 a.m. Wednesday at
of Columbus.
Belleville.
The bride was given in
marriage by her father. Her
only attendant was Miss Edwina Shellhamer. The groom
HOSPITALIZED
was attended by his brother, Harold Swartz of Belpre, a
Michael.
former Middleport resident, is a
Mr. Roush is the grandson of patient at the Camden Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Dillon Cross of Hospital at Parkersburg, W.
Racine.
Va. He has been confined there
since suffering a heart attack.
His room number is 111.

Miss Lightfoot is
~z: en :1 •'*l!ntD Bride of Mr. Roush
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

The bidding has been:
West
North
East
South
1v
3
4V
5 "'-

Miss Claudia Lynn Lightfoot
and Mr. Arthur Dillon Roush
exchanged wedding vows at
7:30 p.m. on March 15 at the
~:::
~
~~~~
~ East Livingston Ave. Baptist
Church in Columbus.
You, South, hold:
•8 VK 10 7 6 5 +A K Q 9 4 .t.A 2
The bride is the daughter of
What do you do now?

Pass
Pass
Pass

2 .t.
3¥
4•

:.T.

Pass
Pass
Pass

+

6

A-Pass. Your partner has
placed the contract.

Ch u•ch
7\.T
ew
l ~~
• '

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding three hearts rp
your partner has bid four clubs ~
over your three diamonds. What

Be Built
A t Mason
0

do you do now?

Mason Area
News, Notes

v.ill travel to Glen Dale, W. Va.

Saturday where they will
participate in a concert a t John
Marshall High School.
The 17 will be accompanied
by !VIr. and Mrs. Gerald Simmons, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gilmore.
They are Kay Hoffman ,
Connie Gilland, Sus ie McDaniel, }iarriett Layne, Becky
Gilmore, Diane Harris, Vivian
Woodr um , Anitr Wriston,
Debb Rkkard,
Rtck ( nnoll}, J
Arbs,
Gary
Carolyn Barnette
and Debbie Gillar:
The band students and adults
will leave on Thursday and stay
at Down Towner Inn in
Wheeling.

Michael Johnson, FN, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson, is
spending fifteen days visiting
his parents. Johnson, stationed
in the Navy at Mayport,
Jacksonville, Fla . is on leave.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Johnson and Michael over the
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Russell, Evelyn Mae and
Gary of Sauk Village, Ill.; Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Gardner,
Mason; Mrs. Louella Moore,
Amos and Bobbie Lou of
Syracuse, 0. and Angie Davis,
Minersville, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
accompanied their son, Kevin,
to Ripley on Saturday where he
participated in the bowling
Jur ament. Three leagues
frcm Mason Bowling Center
partictpated
Pam Roush, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Roush, has
accepted employment at Dr.
John Ridgway 's office in
Pomeroy.

Death Claims
Mr. Russell

D'ORSAY SET

k!Carved.
the LOve Ring TM
J&gt;"('pJP.
W e have Love Rings from ArtCarved for p eople who know
that love is what a wedding is
all a bout. Our Love Rings are
beautiful. Whether y ou choose
a conte mporary sculpture , a tra d itiona l scroll or a ribboned d e·
s ign, ArtCarved Love Rings a r e
for y ou. Come see.

GOESSLER

Charles Allen Russell, 35,
former Meigs County resident,
died Saturday evening at his
home at 720 Second St.,
Chillicothe, following a heart
attack.
Mr. Russell was born Jan. 26,
1936, in Meigs County, son of
Mrs. Nettie Pierce Russell
Goble of Middleport and the late
Lewis Russell.
Besides his mother, he is
survived by his wife, Mildred
Trout Russell, two daughters,
Mary Ann and Suzanne Janette,
both at home; two sisters, Mrs.
Gladys Taylor, Chillicothe, and
Mrs .
Lena
Grundy
of
Bellefontaine.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Hill
Funeral Home in Kingston.
Burial will be in the Grove Lane
Cemetery at Chillicothe.
Friends may call at the funeral
home any time.

A thought for today :
poe t Osborne Davis
"Come in the evening, or
~tore
in the morning, come
Pomeroy you're looked for, or
rt St.
. .Cou
__
__ _ _ _ _ _ _• without warning."

Jewelry

Bible School
Dates Announced

MASON - Plans are under
way for the construction of a
new First Baptist Church at
Mason.
The Rev. Stan Craig, Jr.,
Pas tor, reported that the
children of the church have for
their project "Buy A Brick"
with donations going into the
building fund for just that
purpose.
The new church will be
erected on the corner of Main
and Fogelsong Street in Mason.
Church services are presently
being held in the DAV building
on Pomeroy Street in Mason.
Ground breaking for the new
building will be done in June
with construction to be completed by fall.
Easter Sunrise services will
be held at 6 a.m. in the open on
the site where the new building
will be erected. Everyone is
cordially invited to attend the
Sunrise services.

Birth l.

r olls, coffee and tea for $1 and
may be eaten there or car ried
I
out.
Easter is only two weeks
away so please order your
Easter baskets and homemade
Easter eggs now, for they will
be filled ready to be picked up
beginning on April 6. See any
Auxiliary member or phone 9922419, 992-2801 or 992-7351 or 9922015.
Doris Friend and Ada Slack,
Pomeroy
hostesses, served refreshments 216 E. 2nd
Phone 992-5428
to Eleanor Bohram, Elva
P.ailey, T~l~a Grueser, Jean

2-HOUR
CLEANING

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

Harvard University Library, with 7.6 million volumes, is the nation's largest
academic library. Second
largest is Yale and third that
of the University of Illinois.

~:

LET BLOCK
SOLVE THE
MYSTERY OF
THIS YEAR'S

INCOME TAX
The yearly tax cha nges
hold no mystery for our
Tax detectives. O ur service is fast, accurate a nd
dependable . . . the cost
is low. Save yourself needless, time and worry. See
BLOCK today. It's a good
place to place your confidence.

BOTH

FEDERAL
AND
STATE

$
0

M . , . •J..O!;If. 19 71

GUARANTEE :=~:=:=:=:=:=:=ffi
W e guara ntee accurate preparation of every tax return.
If we make any errors that cost you any penalty or
inte rest, we will pay that penalty or interest.

t·······~····~
~A THOUGH11
.~FOR TODAYt

iC

+

A great help in ove r- iC

i(•

acknowledge them .

~ coming mistakes is to it
~

~

- Anonymous

~t

* * *
It's Quick! Easy

iC

it

t~

it

DRIVE-.IN ~
BANKING

t

H&amp;
R

B3

~K(co.

AMERICA'S LARG£ST TAX SERVICE WITH OVER 5000 OFFICES

i

t

Electric•ty
... powerful work!
for a cleaner Obi

•

t Fridays Only it
iC T he Dr ive- In Wi ndow t
t
is Open
it
iC
9 A. M. to 7 P. M.
t
iC
(Conti nuously)
-tc
t Other
Banking Hours to iC
and to as us ua l on t

•

9

ie 3

5

7

~

iC Fridays.

t_,. FARMERS BANK

t

~
iC
and SAVINGS CO. ~

iC

POM EROY, OH IO

t+:

Member FDIC
Member Federa l
Reserve System

+:

iC

ic
i(

iC

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

Easter Now!
Our Easte r basket of
fashion fabrics is brim·
ming with bright new looks
for Spr ing . Select beautiful
fabr ics now and sew up
savings for yourself .::~ nd
little paraders.

See the new
Polyester Knits,
Polyester &amp; Cottons,
Dacron Crepes and
all the
beautiful ones.

• Cleaning up Ohio's air and water,
and conserving her resources is going
to be a big job. Electricity will play a
vital part in getting it done.
Industrial air pollution controls will
operate electrically. Experiments now
underway use electricity to re-cycle
garbage and trash, turning it into usable resources. Electricity powers
"aerators," the newest tool in the fight
to put needed oxygen back into our
rivers. Electricity powers giant shredders that convert old autos and other
"junk" into useful materials. Many of
these "clean up" operations have begun; mor·e are on the way. All depend

SING E R SALES &amp; SERV iCE
McCALL'S&amp; S IM P LI C ITY PATTER N S

992 -2284

•

upon ample electric power.
To supply electricity for the
u p," plus the greater amounts uceu e u
in factories, hospitals and hom
must increase our ~apacity.
with other industries, the ele r ic
companies of Ohio are well aware of
the pollution problem. We are har d at
work on answers to help solve our part
of this problem.
\
The answers will take me. And
they will cost millions .
industry and consumers to share the cost. A clean
be achieved easily-but it is
efforts of all of us!

.,
•

Yotir Ohio Electric.Com}Janies
ProL· idi.ny lotc cost. 1dia/J!e

115 W. Second

•

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

SEW UP

Irish
said,
come
when
come

..

•

~

"

Mr. and Mrs. William Sterrett
of Copley are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Emily
Jeanne, on March 19 at the
Akron General Hospital. The
baby weighed eight pounds, two
ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Sterrett have
another da ughter, Rachael, 18
months. Mr. and Mrs. L. P.
Sterrett of Pomeroy and Mr.
and Mrs. W. R. Cox of Clearwater, Fla. ar e the grandparents.

•

FREE CLOTHING DAY
The Salvation Army will hold
its regular free clothing day
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 12
noon at the headquarters
located at 115 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Anyone in the area
needing clothing is invited to
attend.

•

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-S p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.
King, Pt. Pleasant, a son and
Mr . and Mrs. William C. Hayes,
Jackson, a daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Charles R. Adkins and
infant son, Mrs. William A.
Armstrong, Mrs. Paul B.
Fraley , Mrs. Frederick M.
Lamm, Mrs. Rosalee May
Mayhew, Mrs. Clare McCoy,
Jr ., Mrs. William L. Wilson,
Thomas Lee Laverty, Herbert
E. Reffitt, and Michael Campbell.

SYRACUSE - Plans for the
chicken dinner were completed
when the Ladies Auxiliary of
Volunteer Firemen met at their
headquarters.
For devotions Myla Hudson
read Ezekiel6 : 1-5. Roll call was
answered by 12 members giving
a St. Patrick reading or poem.
Various reports were read and
approved.
Saturday, March 27, is the
date for the chicken dinner to be
held at headquarters at
Municipal park with serving to
start exactly at 11:30 a.m., and
will continue through an early
supper hour. The menu is baked
chicken, mashed potatoes,
noodles, green beans, cole slaw,

MASON - Vacation Bible
school at the First Baptist
Church in Mason will be held
June 14-25.
On June 12 a parade will be
held at 10 a.m. with members of
the church participating.
Children of any age may
attend classes.

it

HOSPITAL NEWS

Hall, Edith Hood, Myla Hudson,
Janice Lawson, Mabel Pickens,
Marie Rizer, Agnes White, and
the hostesses.

Auxiliary Chicken Dinner Set

S.D. Vale,

JIOII'CI'

•

to S millio11 )I£'O]Jlr.

• The Cincinna ti Gas &amp; Electric Com pan~· ·The Clcvl'land E lect r it- llluminntin~ Company
• Columbus and South ern Ohio Elect r ir Company ·The D:~ yl o n Pnwrr and Light Company
• Monon gahela Po&gt;vcr Company ·Ohio Edi son Company
• Ohio Powt&gt;t' C(1mp;111)' • Tlw Tnh'dn I:&lt;:di!'nn Cnmp:ill.\'

Pomeroy, 0 .

\

�------~---------~-----------------.

S- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 23,1971

•
WHY PAY MORE •••
SUPERIORS BRAND

USDA CHOICE.
SUPERIORS FINEST MEATS

PORK CHOPS
FAMILY
PACK

CHOICE
Thursday Only!

Everyday
lb.

SUPERIORS
BRAND lb.

BUDGET

Low Prices!

4 9 c-

Slic. Bacon

Fresh Ground Beef...........~~-. 69'
Lean Ground Chuck ............1~:. 79~
Fryers, fresh dressed ...........1~·. 39'
Choice Cube Steak ........... !~:.1.29
Pork Cutlets .. ~:.~~.~-~~?~...... ~~·..79e
Pork Sausage...~~~~..~.a.~: .. ~~:: 49'
Lunch Meat ....1.~·•• 79~

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

•

USDA

For The Finest Meats? All Cuts

411/J'

3

1.00

lb.

SUPERIOR PORK

NECK BONES
5 lb. 1.00
SUPERIOR DART

SLICED BACON
59e
lb. ·

3 Rolls

• Scot Lad Jumbo

$1
'1

TOWELS

Thursday Only!

Sealtest Grade A

12 rolls

Edon Toilet

• TISSUE

MILK
/z

ORA GE
DRINK

gallon carton

1

Tropicana

UNCLASSIFIED

ts.
MRS. FILBERT'S WHIPPED

doz..

MARGARINE
Large Unclassified

• EGGS

t

3 doz.

$1

3 lb. for only
BONUS BUY I KRISPY

CRACKERS

Gg
·------Royal Crown
COLA s pak

¢

Toilet Soap Buy!

3Reg.
size bars

DIAL

MODI LAC Plain or Iron
CAN

.

3 - 1 lb. boxes

ICE
MILK

Regular

Regular 10e
BABY RUTH

10~

CANDY BARS

29¢

Mars Bars, 3 Musketeers,
Milky Ways and
Snickers Bars. . . _

6 pack

49¢

CANDY BARS
7 pack

494

Choice Golden Ripe

h gal.
only

1
PURINA TUNA, KAL KAN
OR KIT KAT

for

Wrigley's

6 pack

2

1 • 00

loaves

CHEWING
GUM

Danish Lunch Meat

.• Luncheon Loaf

FAVORITE BREAD

6

4·9¢

Gerber's Baby Milk

•

Saturday Only!

Many

lb.1 oe
Aorida Juicy

d

ORANGES....... ~•• 39

CAT FOOD

0

¢

STORE COUPON

•

Clip &amp; Redeem For

I.J~

•

8 OZ. JAR MAXIM
1

j

WITH THIS COUPON
AT MARK V- GOOD3-22THROUGH __
4-1__
7 __

Dolly Madison Cinnamon

LOAF

Reg. 49~ Special

3g¢

OCEAN PERCH
BOOTH FROZEN

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

lb. 59~

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

"We Reserve The Right T o L imit Ouon tities"

MIDDLEPORT, 0 ..

PLENTY OF ON-STREET PARKING AFTER 5:00 P.M.

�6- The Dailv Sentinel. Middle()~. · :'1meroy, 0., Marco ~. 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
LEGAL NOTICE
Jack M. Matich, whose
residence is unknown; Irene M.
Matich, whose residence is
unknown to the plaintiff, anct
The Unknown Heirs of Jacob
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Edward
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Emma
Schaefer Ashworth, deceased;
The Unknown Heirs of Florence
Schaefer Radford, deceased,
also known as Flora Schaefer
Radford; The Unknown Heirs of
Edward Schaefer, deceased,
grandson of Jacob Schaefer,
deceased; The Unknown Heirs
of Ethel s. Archer, deceased;
The Unknown Heirs of Gus
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Elmer
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Elza Ashworth, deceased; The Unknown
Heirs of Elmer Ashworth,
deceased; The Unknown Heirs
of Mabel Ashworth, deceased;
The Unknown Heirs of Dayton
Ashworth,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Otho Ashworth, deceased; The Unknown
Heirs of Amanda Schaefer
Goeglein,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Louise
Goeglein Matich, deceased;
The Unknown Heirs of Mike
Matich, also known as Michael
Matich,
deceased;
The
Unknown Heirs of Dorothy
Radford Croy, deceased, will
take notice that they have been
sued by the Director of High ways {)f the State of Ohio, who
has instituted a proceeding in
the Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, to ap propriate certain property
described hereafter tor high way purposes, namely the
making, construction or im provement of State Route No.7,
Section 6.34, Meigs County,
Ohio, and to fix the value of said
property. The property sought
to be appropriated is more
specifically
described
as
fc lows:
DESCRIPTION OF THE
PARCEL OF LAND
AND ESTATE, INTEREST
OR RIGHT THEREIN
APPROPRIATED
The following parcel, located
in Town 2, Range 13, Section
Fraction 6, Salisbury Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, lying on the
letr and right side of the cen ter! ine of a survey made by the
Department of Highways, and
recorded in the records of Meigs
County, Ohio , and being more
fully described as follows ·
PARCEL NO. 1170-WL
(HIGHWAYf
ALL RIGHT, TITLE AND
INTEREST IN FEE SIMPLE,
INCLUDING LIMITATION OF
ACCESS,
IN
THE
FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED
PROPERTY
Commencing at the northwest
corner of Fraction Section 6,
said point also being the true
place of beg inn ing of the
following described tract of
land.
Thence along the North line of
said fraction section bearing
South 87 degrees 11 minutes 49
seconds East a distance of
393.36 feet to a point, said point
being 126.47 feet right of Station
441 plus 14.30; thence South 3
degrees 41 minutes 24 seconds
West a distance of 155.40 feet to
a point on the southerly limited
access right of way of Meigs 76.15, said ;&gt;oint being 270.42 feet
right of Station 440 plus 48.89;
thence along said right of way
bearing South 66 degrees 04
minutes 32 seconds West a
•o a point
d sta.,ce of 443
c 'he west
c on
ect n 6, satd
• oo
feet rtg!lt of
us
71 09 thence a
a t on
lme bearmg N
ees 41
m mutes 24
East a
distance of 355
t to t'1e true
place of beginn 11g, contatnlng
2.304 acres, more or less, of
which the present road occupies
0.002 of an acre.
This description prepared by
Theodore W . Sushka, P. E.
34792, for the Ohio Department
of Highways in 1970, and is
based on a survey made by

Richard
C.
Glasgow,
Registered Surveyor No. 5161.
Owners claim title by in
strument of record in Deed
Book 50, Page 99, County
Recorder's Office.
Together with all rights or
easements of access or or from
said limited access highway,
from or to the land of said
persons abutting upon that
portion of said limited access
highway, between the following
points.
From a point 265 feet right of
centerline Station 435 plus 71.09
to a point 270.42 feet right of
centerline Station 440 plus 48.89
as shown by the plans of said
im provement herein referred
to. Said stations being the
Station numbers as stipulated in
the hereinbefore mentioned
survey.
Said persons named or noted
above shall further take notice
that unless they answer on or
before Saturday, the 17th day of
April, 1971, they will be deemed
to have waived their right to
answer, and the Petition will be
taken as true and Judgment will
be rendered accordingly.
P. E. Masheter
Director of Highways
(2) 23 (3) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, 6tc
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice to Bidders:
Sealed quotations will be
received by the Board of
Commissioners
of
Meigs
County, Ohio, at the office of the
County Commissioners, in the
Court House, in the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, until
10:00 o'clock A.f'{l. on the 6th
day of April, 1971 for the fur nishing of Bituminous Materials
for the Meigs County Highway
Department.
Estimated quantity of liquid
asphalt
required,
approximately 600,000 gallons.
Quotations to be submitted as
follows :
Quote price per gallon,
F.O.B. Vendors Plant, and the
price per gallon delivered to
Vendors portable tank to any
location
in
the
County
designated by the County
Engineer, for the various
grades of bituminous materials
which may be required by the
Meigs
County
Highway
Department ,
which
shall
conform to the Pertinent State
of Ohio, Department of the
Highway Construction and
Material Specification, "702
Bitum incus Materials,'' dated
January 1, 1971.
Prices quoted on this bid shall
be in effect for the remainder of
the year, 1971.
With respect to the aforesaid
estimated quantities, the bidder
shall understand that no
guarantee is given as to the
actual quantities of bitum incus
material to be furnished, but
each successful bidder shall be
required to furnish all or any
part of the Meigs County actual
requirements as ordered during
the bid period.
On the envelope containing
each bid, the name and address
of the bidder must be shown and
plainly marked "Bituminous
Bid."
Proposals are to be returned
on bid forms supplied by the
Vendor, and will be opened on
the date and place specified
above.
The Meigs County Commissioners reserve the right to
reject any and all Quotations or
any part thereof .
Martha Chambers, Clerk
Meigs county Board of
Commissioners.
{3)

23, 30, 3tc..

NOTICE
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
2-23-30tc
RUBBER STAMPS made to
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Ohio.
2-12-90tc

.---------------------------,

iHelen Help Us!I
I

:

By Helen Bottel

1

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us!, it welcomes laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a
brush-off.
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
ELUCIDATE BEFORE YOU NAVIGATE
Dear Helen:
I am in the process of running away from home because no
matter what I do I get in trouble.
I split four times before for other reasons. What can I do? RUNAWAY
Dear Runaway:
If you communicate as little to your parents as you did to me,
it's no wonder they don't understand or sympathize.
How do you get in trouble? What are the other reasons?
Elucidate before you split, and maybe this trip won't be
necessary. - H.
Dear Helen :
I have this girl who is okay for laughs, but not exactly what I'd
like to live with all my life. To illustrate: she thinks Laos is some
kind of crawling bug. She's not much better on the housekeeping
end either. Doing my laundry the other day she wanted to spin-dry
a towel, so she turned to "R" for "wring." And insisted the
machine was crazy when she got rinse water!
Now she's got this dwnb idea we're engaged. I'm 22, and have
a bachelor apartment. She is still in school, though it hasn't
helped her mentality any. How do you get a beautiful but
brainless female to see that marriage is not what I have in mind?
Without getting rid of her entirely? - NOT THAT SERIOUS
Dear Not :
Your brainless bombshell may be smarter than you think.
"Marriage was not what I had in mind" are famous last words for
many an ex-bachelor who couldn't quite make the final break.
Remember, I warned you! - H.
Dear Helen :
I am popular in school. All my friends are always visiting
each other, but I live in an awful old ugly house. The furniture is
shabby too. I'm ashamed, so none of my friends is invited over.
I know you'll say if they're true friends it won't matter, but
they have beautiful homes, and I don't want their pity.
Another thing is boy friends. They want to come and visit me
but I always have an excuse. I'm too young to date (my folks say),
but when I start, how can I keep guys from knowing about my
house? Also my father drinks and I never know how he'll act.
How can I stay in my crowd and keep my home life secret? N.A.
Dear N. :
If you accept your house and family life as things over which
you have no control, your friends will do likewise. But if you try to
hide what most already know, they'll see you as a snob ... Or else
they'll gradually agree with YOUR opinion about your "inferiority."
It's tough, not having the advantages other kids enjoy, but only
"shameful" if you make it so! - H.

Pomeroy
Motor Co~

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

1968 PLYMOUTH
$1395
Valiant 4 Dr. Local1 owner car, clean interior, dark aqua
finish, like new tires, 6 cyl. engine &amp; automatic trans.,
radio. Popular model &amp; priced to go.
1966 CHEVELLE
$1295
Conv. cpe., local 1 owner car, blk. vinyl interior with
bucket seats, 4-speed trans., std. V 8 engine, good tires,
radio, maroon finish &amp; blk. top.
19661MPALA
$1395
HT Sedan. Local 1 owner car, blk. finish &amp; red cloth interior, good tires, V-8 engine, automatic trans., &amp; p.
steering, radin. Nice family car.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Help Wanted
LADY TO live in with elderly
lady, light housekeeping.
Phone 949-4904 or 667-3319.
3-21-3tc
WE'RE NOT firing we're
hiring, all the men, women, or
college students we can train
to work full or part time
collecting past due accounts
by phone or soliciting past due
accounts. If you are interested in applying yourself
to a rewarding future- apply
in person only. Credit Bureau
of Point Pleasant, 312 Main
Sl., Point Pleasant, W. Va .
3-17-6tc

------

RESPONSIBLE person to work
established
route.
Good
commission. ABC Cleaners,
Mason.
3-5-tfc

WANTED

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M. Oay Before Publication REVIVAL now in progress until
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
March 28 at the Pomeroy
Cance.llation &amp; Corrections
Lower Light Church on Route
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. f
143, '12 mile from SR 7 Bypass.
Day of Publication
Rev.
Raymond
Price,
REGULATIONS 1
Byesville, Ohio, Evangelist.
The Publisher reserves theright to edit or reject any ads
Rev. Roy Taylor, Pastor,
deemed
objectional.
The
Everyone welcome.
publisher will not be responsible
3-23-4tc
for more than one incorrect
insertion.
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
RATES
like to try a wig on in the
For Want Ad Service
privacy of your own home?
~cents per Word one insertion
Mlnim~arge75c
You can. Just call us. We also
12 cents per word three.
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
consecutive. insertions.
Koscot,
of
course.
18 cents per word s~x conDistributors, Brown's. Phone
secutive insertions.
•
Middleport 992-5113.
25 Per cent Discount on paid
12-31-tfc
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
WILL PICK up merchandise
. $1.50 for 50 word·' minimum
and take to auction on a
Each additional word 2c.
percentage basis. Call Jim
BLIND ADS
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
Additional 25c Charge per
Phone 742-4461.
Advertisement.
9-23-tfc
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 -a·.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noor. AUCTION WHEN? Each
Saturday.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
Hayman's Auction House,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Pomeroy
Middleport ByWE WISH to express our sinpass.
cere thanks to our relatives
2-7-tfc
and friends for the beautiful
flowers,
the
Veterans WILL GIVE piano and organ
Memorial Hospital, Ewing
lessons in my home. Phone
Funeral Home, music, to Rev.
992-3666.
Dale McClurg for his con8-16-tfc
soling words. Your acts of
kindness at the death of our
father, Orner Cramlet, will
always be remembered.
BLACK and white English
Mrs Orner Cram lett and
Setter and a brown and white
Daughters, Mrs. Ora Hill and
Brittainy Spaniel, lost at the
Mrs . Doris Wilt.
Isaak. Walton Farm. Reward.
3-23-ltc
Art Skinner, phone 992-2500.
3-21-3tp

SENTINEL
CARRIER
FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

Notice

Card o.f Thanks

Lost

Notice

RUMMAGE sale, Fry Building,
Middleport,
Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday.
3-23-3tc

Pets For Sale

. Wanted To Rent
$20.00 REWARD to the person
who finds me a 2 - 3 bedroom
house for rent. Phone Athens
collect 592-4757.
3-22-3tc

For Rent
2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
Hts., Pomeroy . Phone 9925127 after 4 p.m .
3-2-lfc
4

ROOM, bath, unfurnished
house. 1650 Lincoln Heights.
Phone 992-3874.
3-23-tfc

.EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

WEDNESDAY night special at
the Skate-A-Way. Oldest
skater receives a free pass.
Open Wednesday, Friday and
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
p.m. Also private parties.
condition, as long as have not
Phone 985-3929 or 985-3585.
been wet. Paying $10 each.
3-21-3tc
STEREO
radio
First floor only. Mondays will WALNUT
combination. Four speed
be pick-up day. Write, giving
intermixed
changer.
4
good directions. Witten Piano
speaker sound system, dual
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
volume control. Balance
Ohio 43946.
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
$66.15. Use our budget terms .
8-20-tfc
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
Call 992-3352.
OHIO.
3-18-6tc
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
SAVINGS COMPANY,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
An Ohio Corporation,
Stereo, AM&amp;FM radio, four
992-6271.
Pomeroy, Ohio,
speakers, 4 speed automatic
9-1-tfc
Pia in tiff,
changer, separate controls.
vs .
Balance $79.35. Use our time
Russell E. Lewis, et al.
payment plan. Call 992-3352.
Defendants.
3-18-6tc
No. 14,817 HOUSEWORK by day or week.
NOTICE
Phone Cheshire 367 -7700.
Russel l E. Lewis, whose place
3-23-tfc
COAL, limestone. Excelsio:
of residence is unknown, will
take notice that on the 13th day
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
of February 1971, the un Pomeroy. Phone 992-38-9f.
I
dersigned, The Farmers Bank
4-9-tfc
._
&amp; Savings Company, filed its
petition against you in the
Kl LL TERM I I t::S and yard
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, praying for a
insects with Arab "You-Dojudgment on a promissory note
lt." King Builders Supply
in the amount of 53,253.94, with
Company, Middleport.
interest at 7 112 per cent per
2-21 -60tc
annum from September 25,
Will Buy Yours 1970, and for forec losure of
USED automatic washer, used
Whole House Or
mortgage upon the following
described rea I property :
wringer type washer, used
Separate
Pieces
Situated in the Village of
range, used dryer. Phone 9&lt;;2Ph. 742-4211
Pomeroy, County of Meigs, and
2094, Pomeroy Home and
State of Ohio : Being Lot No. 502
Auto, Pomeroy.
in the Village of Pomeroy,
3-21 -3tc
County of Meigs and State of
Ohio, nnd there is also conveyed
COLUMBUS
30"
gas
range,
herewith, all rights with re!;pect
Rutland, Ohio
avocado. Phone 992-5709.
to the use of the sidewa lk bet ween lots Nos. 502 and 503 as
3-21 -3tc
was transferred lo the Grantor
herein.
RECONDITIONED TV sets,
Reference Deeds : Vol. 227, RIGHT PERSON to manage or
For information or service
page 987, and Vol. 168, page 371,
buy dry cleaning route or
ca ll Spark.ie's TV Service,
Deed Records, Meigs County,
truck. Will sell plant and
phone Mason 773-5933.
Ohio .
building. ABC Clean ers,
You are required to answer
3-12-12tc
Mason, W . Va.
the said complaint within 28
days after the last publication
namely on the 28th. day of April,
1971, or judgment by default
will be rendered against you.
THE FARMERS BANK MATURE woman for com&amp; SAVINGS COMPANY,
panion for elderly lady. Live
Plaintiff.
in. References required .
CROW, CROW &amp; PORTER,
Phone Chester 985-3301.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
3-17 tfc
(2) 16, 23, (3) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, 7tc

Wanted To Buy

For Sale

LEGAL NOTICE

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

Wanted

WANTED!

Used Furniture
and Appliances

Rutland Furniture

Business Opportunities

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

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-4211

Arnold Grate

Rutland, 0.

.. CHAMPION
ifVAN DYKE

.. ALSO
DOUBLE ..... WIDES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW
From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
. Smallest Heater Core.

1

BLAElTNARS
Pomeroy

PAINTING,
roofing
and
spouting service. Richard
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
3-11-3otc

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

Roofing &amp; Carpenter

TELEVISIOi1
REPAIR

Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

All Makes &amp; Models
Also
Stereos &amp; Tapes
675-2241 or 773-5196

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction co.
DEXTER, 0. 45126
PH ONE 742-3945

T.V. SERVICE

1966 MERCURY Monterey, 2door, white with black vinyl
roof. Automatic, powersteering, radio. $795. Phone
843-2211.
3-23-3tp

------------------MAINE eating potatoes,

10
pounds $.59. Idaho Bakers, 10
pounds $.69. Large fancv
tomatoes, $.4\1 pound. Onion
sets, head lettuce, cabbage, at
a savings. Dwight Spencer
Produce, 120 Main St.,
Pomeroy.
3-23-ltc

------------------18 FOOT fiberglas boat, 90 H. P.
Evinrude motor, tandem
trailer. Excellent mechanical
condition. Cost over $5,000
new. $1,000 and it's yours.
Phone 949-3913.
3-23-6tp

CLOSE OUT!
ALL FLOOR SA PLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES
Every One
Marked Down
Get the Big Discount!
22 cu. ft. side by side
Frostless Combination, 19
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
Up. Freezer, 2-11 cu. ft.
Chest Freezers and Elec.
Dryer. Must make room.
Priced for fast sale!

b

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

MASON COUNTY

For Sale

POMEROY

J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

Auto Sales
1964 CHEVELLE: convertible,
good condition. Phone 9923917.
3-21-6tp
1969 DATSUN, 4 door standard
shift. Phone 992-6995.
3-21 -6tc
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,poo
miles. ~xcellent condiffon.
Phone 992-2288.
11-1 0-tfG.

____ r

J. Durbin- C. Inscore

Insured-Experienced
Work Guaranteed

Service Personnel

Real Estate For Sale

__,

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

$5.55

SR.

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pqmeroy, Ohio

..,~
•

:Pomeroy Home &amp; "Auto

POMEROY - 6 room house,
gas heat, basement, large lot,
out of high water. $4,000.00.

606 E. Ma1n, Pomeroy, C.

POME I&lt;Ul - 3 bedrooms, Jlh
baths, nice kitchen, TV room . SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Full basement, steam heat. "Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
Double garage. $20,000.00
Phone
John
Russell,
BETTER BUY TODAY
Gallipolis 446-4782.
15 ACRES- 4 bedrooms with
closets, bath, nice modern _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 4_-7-tf.
kitchen, stainless steel sink.
CONCRETE
Gas forced air furnace. Full READY-MIX
delivered right to your
basement with recreation
project. Fast and easy . Free
room. Double garage. All
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
minerals. $22,000.00
Goeglein Ready-Mix C9.,
FEEL FREE,OWN
Middleport, Ohio.
RUTLAND- 2 nice bedrooms,
6-30-tfc
bath, utility. Large living and
kitchen. Large lot. $9,500.00
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial, residential and
ACREAGE NEEDED
industrial wiring. Phone 247ANYWHERE
2113.
50 ACRES - Modern 6 room
3-12-1 2t
home, bath, gas furnace. Full
basement. Double garage. All
minerals. Large stocked farm O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
pond. Bargain.
Complete front end service,
TO BUY, SELL or
tune up and brake service.
TRADE CALL US
Wheels
balanced
elec992 -3325
tronically .
All
work
HELEN L. TEAFORD
guaranteed.
Reasonable
AS SOC lATE 992-2378
rates. 992-3213.
3-19-6tc
3-17-3otc

Cleland Realty
608 East Main
POMEROY
RACINE RT. 2 ACROSS
FROM KAISER PLANT Loca led on the river, out of
floods, 1 story, 2 bedrooms,
bath, nice kitchen, part
basement, drilled well, 1.37
ACRES GROUND. $7,500.
MINERSVILLE
GOOD
VIEW OF THE RIVER EXCELLENT
CONDITION
1'12 story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, basement,
panelling, aluminum siding,
large yard. $10,000.
POMEROY BEAUTIFUL
BRICK, ALMOST NEW - 1
story, 3 large bedrooms,
double closets, built-in kit chen, dining bar and area,
carpeting, bath, basement
with recreation room, utility
room, 1 acre. ALL FOR
$27,500.
TO BUY OR SELL
CONTACT US
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
3-18-6tc

BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phon
992-2478.
11-29-tfc
HARRISON'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992 2522.
6-10-tfc
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-tfc

•

RALPH'S
CARPET
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
Free
estimates.
Phone
Gallipolis 446-0294.
3-12-tfc
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
•
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5-1-tfc

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

ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
hold - up.
Southeastern
Security Systems. Call Ray
Adams 247-2055 Mike
O'Brien 247-2113.
3-17-tfc

7 ROOM house, bath, good
1969 CAMARO, super Sport, 350
cond ition, on one acre land.
cu. in., 300 H.P., Power
Tuppers
Plains,
phone
steering, Disc brak es, 4
Coolville 667-3347.
speed, 30,000 miles, Lemans
3-18-6tp
blue, excellent condition.
$2,095.00. Phone 882-2198 or
CONVENIENT but secluded SEWING MACHINES. Repair
882-2511.
service, all makes. 992-228building lots on T79 at Rock
3-23-3tc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Springs. Within walking
Authorized Singer Sales and
dislance of Meigs High
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
School, a 5 minute drive from·
3-29-tfc
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
200 ACR~ farm near Mt. Union
Witte weekends, or after 5
Church, Carpenter. Available
p .m. weekdays. Phone 992soon. George Caldwell, Rt. 4,
6887.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
2-3-lfc, .~UTOMOBI LE insurance been
3-18-12tp
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992- ,
~4 ACRE farm, Salem Town
HOUSE, 1640 Linc..u•ro nrs.,
2966.
ship. Phone 742-4459 .
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
6-15-tfc
3-23-6tp
10-25-tfc

Real E$tate For Sale

Insurance

Help Wanted

Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation .
Choice of water
tern ps .
Auto .
water
level
contro l .
Lint
Fi lter or Power
Fin Agi tator .
Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround cloth es
with gentle, even
heat . No hot spots,
no
overdrying.
Fine Mesh Lint
Fi lter.
we Specialize in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most P~ofitable
Time You Ever Spent.

icWINSOR
«:BUDDY

NEW 1970 Zig-Zag Sewing
Machine in original factory
carton. Zig-Zag to make
only. Phone 992-5592.
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
3-17-tfc
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just the twist of a
ROOM,
bath,
furnished
or
3
single dial. Left in lay-away
semi -furnished
apartment.
and never been used. Will sell
Also, 2 room, bath, furnished
for only $47 cash, or credit
apartment. Mulberry Ave.,
terms available. Phone 992Pomeroy.
References
5641.
requ1red. Phone 992-6698.
3-23 6tc
3-23-tfc
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Cleaner complete with at UNFURNISHED 3-room
tachments, cordwinder and
apartment in Coats Bldg.,
paint spray . Used but in like
Midd I eport.
Inquire
at
new condition. Pay $34.45
apartment 16 or phone 992cash or budget plan available.
3641.
Phone 992-5641.
3-18-12tc
3-23-6tc

Female Help Wanted

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

------------------2 BEDROOM trailer. Adults

REGISTERED Toy Fox Terrier
puppies. Phone 742-5625 or UNFURNISHED 3 - room
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
contact Mrs. Vernon Weber,
1-31-lfc
Rutland.
3-23-6tc
TWO OR three bedroom home,
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
3-2-tfc
LADIES - You can help the
family budget. Three or four
hours a day will bring you a TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
'12-mile north of new Meigs
profitable income. Write
High School. Phone 992-2941.
Personal Shopper Dept. 10,
3-5-lfc
Watkins
Products,
Inc. ,
Winona, Minn. 55987.
3-23-ltc FURNISHED and unfurnished
-----------apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

I

Business Services

Ph. 992,-2143

OP.EN EVES. 8:00P.M.
-ta()MEROY. OHIO

SPECIAL
for
you
Evangelistic services at Fir:t
Baptist
Church, 6th
&amp;
Pal mer, Middleport, from
Wednesday, Mar. 24 thru
Sunday, March 28. Plan to
attend, you'll be glad you did.
Rev.
Charles
S1mons,
speaker. Special music.
3-22-6tc

[

Home

No Tedious Stirring

e

JEMO ASSOCIATES

It's Homogenized
Because of its im proved one-coat hiding
power, Spred Satin
covers so well it's like
putting on two coats at
once. Dries in just 20
minutes.

DAVI~ &amp; DIANE ASHLEY
175 Beech s•
Middleport
" Word s cannot describe the
feeling one gets to get up in the
morning and . walk barefooted
through the house on wall -to-wall
carpeting without being cold. We
urge everyone we know to see
about buying a home. from Jem
Associates."

2,978 Decorator Colors
Sites Available
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 992-7034

King Builders Supply Co.
992-3748

2nd AVE .

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

�TH' SAME WAY SHE

•

BROKE IN HER
SKITTISH OL'

TH UNDERATION !!
HOW ON AIRTH DID

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , EEK AND ~EEK
DEEP OO..VIV

HUSBAND

ElVINEY EVER BREAK IN

HJS.IDE;-:0-;)F;;-;M;E.;,--r-----:::=========:::~1

BE.I-\ItJD "THIS To&lt;.x;H FACADE
THERE UE.S /'&gt;.. 'SOfT WARM

CREJ!&gt;..IURE

YE.ARNIU:.

"--URIS.HMEtvT !

THAT SKITTISH OL'
WALL- EYED MULE
• OF HER"N?

FOR

•
I I TOOK lt11/! i"WO HOUR?
TO &amp;E=T THIS HANDOUT
FROM MI.{ HUSBANC7.
'\

•

BUGS BUNNY
"THERE: ARE A FEW MINOR
DETAILB I &amp;TILL HAVE
TO WORK ON 1 BUT IN
THE MEANTIME THIS
GOES INID THE SAFE!

WINNIE I THIS
IDEA IB SO SENSATIONAL/ DON'T
EVEN TELL YOUR
MOTHER ABOUT
IT!

•
GASOLINE ALLEY

know how jealou~
the4 are of everl.j inch
of Gpace! It would
di~rupt...

THE BORN LOSER
1
\ '1&amp; WT "TIJ..6fJf'i1111'!65 FtRGENT

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

FEW~ CAVITI6S!

I'D

PREHY DUMB

JERK IF I DIDN'T,
PUNJAB! AN' DOri'
WORRY 'BOUT ME~
I GOT SANDY T'
PROTECT ME IF
THE GOIN' GETS
ROUQH!

•

i.

BE~

DAILY
ACROSS
1. Swagger
stick

42. Social
insect
43. - - of clay

5. -

DICK TRACY
. TRAC'r', DON'T TRY
TO FIGURE THIS
ONE, .JUST ACT!

TAKE AN AIR c.AA AND
HEAD NORTHWEST FROM
n.tE PARK5 OLD ZOO

ENTRANCE.ALTI"l\JDE ABOUT
300 FEET...

•

Tse-tung
8. Once again
9. Crossword
direction
13. Likable
14. Lease a
certain way
15.Inquire
16.Lawyer
(abbr.)
17. Uninteresting
18. Allow
19. Scottish
river
20. Self (Scot.)
21. European
river
23. Skin
condition
24. Besmirch
~-----------' 26. Yearned
27. Li'l Abner's
creator
28.In - (totally)
29. Anecdotal
collection
30. Declare
tabu
31. Seraglio
room

=,,.:::..,;=-•

GOT THROUGH TO ONE OF MY MEN,

f-.-.l:...a&amp;.&amp;--..._..~._, SENOR I'RESiDENTE. HE'S AT THE

AIRFORT. THE SOUNDS WE HEARl?
CABALLO'S PLANES 13LOWING
UP ON THE GROUNV•

•

11. Tranquil
12. Fashioned
16.Jewish
DOWN
month
1. Welland
22.Dupe
and
23. ImiPanama
tate
2.Liqueur
Brando
flavo..rng
3. Horse opera 24. Surmount- Yelterday'• Annver
hanging
(2wds.)
ed
30. Richt25. One
of. Distaff
hofen,
of
lamb
for
Peggy
5. Subjugate
example
6. Penetrating
Lee's
32. Obtuse
7. Sphere
hits
33. Adjust
10. Symbol of
26. Topclannishnotch
38. "Let's Call
28. Natural
- - Day"
ness
(3wds.)
gift
39. Sprite

VARAL

I I
LORFIC

I
I I·
:==·==
BINNGE

PrE
:::.:...::*=-=SURPIIGE==..:. . :.:.:..=
: ANSWBI
.:..::..:.=:..:•.::.:.:.._.__JI

L - _ __ _

Jumbleo: FLUID

BLAZE:? ~ PL.5NT'f OF HIDINe PLACE:;;.,,
AND TH.E 5LlN'? G01~6 DOWN,.. W8
c OIJLP Bl:: A? K IN&amp; FOR A :'&gt;HOT IN
TI-lE BACK'

•

Answer: What the •emicircular 8olfer

played- HALF A ROUND

'

39. Sicilian
volcano
-tO. City in Ohio
H. Speech
imperfection

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
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.
is

A Cryptogram Quotation
KWU

OGCFIU

VIR JVUOU
R

HENNA AGENDA

Yeoterday'e

•""''"'L...J 37. Complete

..&gt;:..&amp;o&lt;:~-'--.&gt;.--'

'T I I

cartoon.

xn "·

(Aiuwen toaorrow)

gibbon
35. Robin
Hood's
drink
36. Went ahead

CAP!'A1N EASY

Now arrange the circled letten

yr '-l
to form the surprise answer, aa
====U~====-=sug::;gested by the above

~.Malay

•

b

OCOQGG

GH
KG

GH

KWU

IURIGPI

OZGOQDGFQ,
ORZZ

DWUP

DVKW
VK

VI

IJFVPN . - ZVOWKUPSUFN
Yestforday's Cryptoquote: IT IS AFTER YOU HAVE LOST
YOUR TEETH THAT YOU CAN AFFORD TO BUY STEAKS.
- PIERRE A. RENOIR &lt;C 1971 King Featur..e Syndical.,, !nc.)

ROBBER

�1

~,~~-~·~~~~--~~~--~--~~--,-~~~----------------~~--------------.,--------------------------------~-T~-----.~~------------------~-

I

I

'

1

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-. •..eroy, 0., March 23, 1971
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Dessie
Burdette, Paul Allinder, Sherrie
Smith, Mrs. William Doss, all
Point Pleasant, and Everett
Thomas, Glenwood.
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Billy
Stevens, William Wamsley,
Elmer Fife, Robert Anders,
Elias Davis, Steve Newsome,
Mrs. Roy Mays and daughter,
Robert Higginbotham and
Clarence Embrick.
BIRTH - March 22, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre,
Point Pleasant.
CONTRIBUTES SUM .
MASON The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Mason
Volunteer Fire Department
contributed $50 to the George
Thompson Kidney Fund instead
of $25 as was previously
reported.

MEIGS TfiEATRE

George . ..
(Continued from Page 1)
and Mrs. W. G. Baronick,
Episcopal Church Women
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Cari
Hysell, Racine Baptist Church,
Mr. and Mrs. Early Roush, Star
Class
of
First
United
Presbyterian Church,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Emmet
Shuler, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Kloes, Syracuse Girl Scout
Troop 254, Hemlock Grove
Church, Rock Springs Better
Health Club, Mr. and Mrs.
David Holter, Larry B. Morris,
Bruce Morris, Pomeroy Flower
Shop,
Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church, Oleva
Cottrill, Mrs. W. Neal, and
Margaret Douglas.
The new total includes
several
anonymous
contributions and $366.16 gathered
from approximately 60 cannisters which have been placed
in business houses as a part of
the fund drive activity.

Tonight, March 23
SUPPOSE THEY GAVE
A WAR AND
NOBODY CAME
(Technicolor)
Brian Keith
Ernest Borgnine
GP
Colo rca rtoons:
Oil Thru the Day
Split Level
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

RELATIVES VISIT
MRS. JUNE WICKERSHAM, employe of the Meigs
Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy
County
Stabilization and Conservation Service Office in
and son, Hugh, of Akron were
Pomeroy, assists two Meigs County farmers in completing
Wednesday overnight guests of
his mother, Mrs. B. A. Dodson,
Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Conroy were
enroute home from Orlando,
Fla. where they were called by
the death of her brother, George
Henry Stace. While in Florida
they visited Mr. Conroy's
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Conroy of
Meigs County farmers have cents per bushel times their
Miami.
until Friday, April 9, to sign for yield for 50 per cent of their
participation in the 1971 wheat base whether they plant corn or
not. However, he may lose base
and feed grain program.
The 1971 program is geared to if he does not plant corn.
Farmers may call at the
production of feed grains as the
surplus of past years has almost Agriculture Stabilization and
disappeared. In this area of
Ohio, corn blight reduced
production for 1970. In order to
increase the supply of corn,
Pomeroy police reported
farmers can set aside only 20 today the investigation of two
per cent of their corn base for accidents.
1971 and then they are free to
The first occurred at 4:50
plantas much corn as they wish p.m. Monday night at the
and still maintain their con- Beacon Service Station when a
serving base.
car driven by Kenneth Frye, 27,
There is no cross compliance Gordonsville, Tenn., backed
from farm to farm as in past into a parked car owned by
years . If a farmer wishes to Pauline Hysell of Minersville.
raise more corn than in past Damages were light and no
years, he may apply for con- charges were filed.
serving ·base adjustment to fit
At 12:27 a.m. Tuesday, a car
his needs.
driven by Gary D. Arnold, 19,
A farmer will get paid 32 Mason, was backing from a

their applications for participation in the 1971 wheat and feed
grain program. The farmers are Ziba Midkiff, Hemlock
Grove area,left, and Roger Riebel, Long Bottom area.

April 9 Is Deadline For

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
March24·25
NOT OPEN

Wheat, Food Registration

COMING:
"WOODSTOCK"
April2 thru 6th

Conservation Office, Masonic
Temple building in Pomeroy,
and have plans worked out for
their farm in 1971. Payments
will be made in July of this
year.

Two Accidents Investigated
parking space on the parking lot
along the river and struck an
auto driven by Charlton
Thornton, 22, Point Pleasant,
who was also backing from a
space. There was moderate
damage. Arnold was cited to
mayor's court on an improper
backing charge.

Services Underway
LETART, W. Va. -Sunday
evening was the opening of
Evangelistic
services
at
Graham United Methodist
Church with the Reverend
Charles Thompson of the
Trinity Church in Pt. Pleasant,
bringing the message. He was
introduced by Rev. Mrs. Achsah
Miller.
The services for the Letart
Charge will continue through
the 28th and commence each
evening at 7:30p.m. at Graham
United Methodist Church.
On Sunday evening a choir
composed of 20 persons sang,
"Surely Goodness and Mercy
Shall Follow Me", and other
selections. Mrs. John Brabham,
New Haven, served as pianist
and Jack Needs, New Haven,
directed the choir.

Shop Weekdays 9:30

Open Friday and Saturday 9:00 to 9:00

ELBERFELD$
IN POMEROY

GRA~TED DIVORCE
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Brenda Hood was
granted a divorce from Lester
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Ray Hood on charges of gross
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Tuesday ne·g lect of duty and extreme
was 28 degrees under cloudy cruelty.

skies.
''IT'S THE. fJREATE.ST }'ET!"

You Gli/1 Don IHave A

CHECKING ACCOUNT?

MYSTERY

M&amp;R
SHOPPING CENTER
M&amp;R

PITTSBURGH

llibens
~al:iorwl B hk
--c.

1

Special Signs
and Listen

For Specials

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
BARGAINLAND

and Free Gifts
All Evening
7 P.M. Til12

CINCINNATI

EARTH-MOVING equipment was being used Monday for pre-construction investigation of
the Ohio Power Company's new 2.6 million kilowatt coal-burning power plant on the Ohio River
at Cheshire. The $488 million plant will be constructed behind the old Pilot Wheel Tavern,
located between the Kyger Creek Power Plant and the village of Cheshire.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Your Invitation To

Evangelistic Services

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owens
observed their 25th wedding
anniversary today at their
Pomeroy home.
Friends and neighbors
presented the couple with a
money tree. Mr. and Mrs.
Owens have two daughters,
Linda, at home, and Mrs. Gene
(Patty) Carsey of Hysell Run.
Mr. Owens, who for many years
was employed with Robinson's
Notice
Laundry, is unable to work due .
REVIVAL, Mt. Hermon U. B.
Church March 26 to Apri I 4. to failing health.

CONTRIBUTE TO CENTER
Contributing for a recent
community service party at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center were the
American Legion Auxiliary
units of Wilkesville 476, Murray
City 420, and Gallipolis 27. The
three units were omitted in a list
of contributors published
earlier.

Rev.
Carey
Knittle,
evangelist, Cincinnati. Kev .
Freeland
Norris,
song
MARRIAGE LICE~SE
evangelist. Stories for the
Gerald Wayne Howard, 22,
chi ldren. Everyone welcome.
Albany, and Barbara Ann
7:30p.m. each evening.
3-23-1Otc Caldwell, 16, Pomeroy, Rt. 4.

iht first laptist (hun:h

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

DEPOSIT THIS ENTRY BLANK DURING OUR MYSTERY MOONLIGHT
SALE. DRAWING WILL BE EVERY 10 MINUTES DURING SALE.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

6th and Palmer

We'd like to

Jlliddl eport, flhio

have YOU

WED., MAR 24 - SUN., MAR. 28

.
.

................•.•..
,
.
:Inspiring Messages:
:
:
by Rev.

NO OFFERING TAKEN

.
.: Chas. Simons .:
···········~·········

Special Gospel
Music
Each Night!
PLAN TO ATTEND!

l

l

AT

407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

7:30 NIGHTLY

.j

j

CHECKING ACCOUNTS PROTECT YOUR
MONEY! Your money is always safe, yet
ready when you want it. See us about a
checking account today.

~

to 5:00

.·•·••·•••••••········
FRIDAY,
MAR. 26
Youth Night

·····················

for dinner
or fresh up with a satisfying
SUNDAE, SHAKE OR CON E. ~~·.
Tasty sandwiches, popular soft drinks.

DAIRY VALLEY
992-2S56

At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

PRIZE DRAWING ENTRY BLANK
NAME-------------------------ADDRESS ___ --------------------TOWN-------------------------PHONE.------------ AGE·---------MUST BE 16 YEARS Of AGE
MUST BE DEPOSITED DURING THE MYSTERY
M&amp;R MOONLIGHT SALE

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

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="74">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1732">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="3828">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2031">
              <text>March 23, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
