<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11401" 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="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11401?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T14:02:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42369">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e45f7c2caf47536e558f8ee8ce43d9b5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c3b69ea46da0fdf6a84202d620b3069d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35922">
                  <text>.

'

/

Weather

Now You Know

The first public motion picture performance in the United
States was a coin-operated
peep-show device called a
kinetoscope invented by
Thomas A. Edison in 1887 and
exhibited on Broadway in 1894.

t2 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 18. 1971

(---------------------------,
News ... in Briefs

Friday and Saturday Sale ..• Elberfelds ·In P()meroy
STORE HOURS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9-.30 AM TO 9 AT NIGHT

By Unlled Press lnternaUooal
WASHINGTON - OPPOSITION senators. maneuvered for
more time today lo investigate Supreme Court nominee William
H. Rehnquist, but it was uncertain whether they could forestall
Senate Judiciary Committee approval of his nomination. Uberal
senators on the committee said they were not satisfied with answers the assistant U.S. atlorney general supplieq about his civil
rights and civil liberties philosophies.

Sale!
Friday and Saturday ·

WOMEN'S
COATS

NEW DEIJII - INDIAN BORDER forces beat back a
Pakistani attack at Boyra on the East Pakistan border Wednesday, the Press Trust of India (PTI) reported today. PTI also
said exchanges of fire were reported across at least two points of
the frontier, scene of the current border confrontation between
the two nations.

Tinsley
(Continued from page I)
spire of the church built in
memory of his son, Henry. Miss
Caroline Pomeroy, a sister of
Mrs. Horton, donated the bell,
and the rectory was built by P.
B. Stanbery in memory of his
daughter, Cecelia . Mrs. G. W.
Plantz gave the pipe organ
which was built by the Barckoff organ factory in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy.
The construction of the
church took place at a time
when Pomeroy was prospering
with coal mining, salt
production, and industries
including the manufacture of
organs, barges, and furniture. A
foundry and brewery also
flourished.
The Pomeroy church was ivy
covered many years until the
old stone was sandblasted and
other improvements made in
recent years.
The present rector is the Rev.
Stanley Plattenburg.
The church easily could be the
oldest in Pomeroy or Middleport still in use. The Sacred
Heart Church, according to the
history books, came later .
However, this i.s not certain.

Pay Boost
(Continued from page 1)
last three business years , the
test which the commission
requires as a justification for
price hikes.
The price panel also took
under advisement price increase requests from Chrysler
Corp. --5.9 per cent -and Ford
Motor Co. -2 per cent.
In another action Wednesday.
the Price Commission turned
down a request for an
exemption from United Illwninating Co ., a utility in New
Haven, Conn . The firm had
wanted to increase its rates on
a retroactive basis -back to
when the freeze began Aug . IS
-even though the commission
has ruled out retroactive price

Tonight, Nov 18
NOT OPEN
Friday thru Tuesday
November J9.2J
" BIG JAKE"
!Technicolorl
John Wayne and sons :
Mlch..,l , 36 yn. old ; Patrick,
31 years old; John Ethan, 8
years old, youngest oon.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Scott
Williams, Pomeroy ; Carl Still,
Middleport; Julia Gibbs,
Pomeroy .
DISCHARGED - Herman
Michael , Charle s King ,
Charlene Cochran, Mary
Rudolph, Murl Ours, William
Fields, Ruth Simpson.

Reg. 5.49

21 oz.

Supported back .

Ideal for upholstering and
wall covering . 54" wide .

master masons are invited.

SERVICE SET
A county prayer service will
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Hobson Church of Christ in
Christian Union. Okey Ahart,
leader, invites the public.
FESTIVAL SET
The Salisbury PTA will
sponsor a fall festival from 6:30
to 9:30 Saturday night at the
school. Games, door prizes, a
bazaar, country store and
refreshments will be featured .
The public is invited.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Local Band
Boosters will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the high school in
Racine.

SEE BOGUS BILL
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach has invited in"G" terested .merchants of the area
Footurone:
to come to his office to inspect a
D!~~!. ~f!~ll•.!!! ~~~~ . c&lt;,unterfeit $10 bill passed in the

MOTHER KNITS
100 per cent Acrilan Acryloc .

FRIDAY AND SATU RDAY
1, r
WOMEN'S ,

' _~· '..._

18" All Vinyl Stick on

I Blend.

SALE 3.28 YD.

Parade Printed Knit
100 per cent
polyester . .45"

te xtured
machine

washable.

1 Hi·LO Wide Wale
I

CORDUROY
I SALE 1 ••8 YD.

I

----~~~~~~!-Y~~;..~!~··~::- ... ·-····-· ......1
Reg. 4.99
Terry Warp Knit
54 .. machine washable

I

1
1

machine washable
Printed Cordurvy
100 per cent Cotton · Fashion
C lors

patterns . . Friday

Saturday.

Reg. 1.99
54" Velvet Touch

II 54R~~o5.149

A ylic
ron cr

~· ~n?.ve ~?~e~~nd ~~~~S "":3::--y_d~s-·__1_._1_9!:-•. ~s~-==~~~;~;:;:.1 !_;~;;;!!~
name brand car coat s and pants

coats. Many styles to choose from
in pile, wool welton . corduroy,
and wool tweed. All new fa ll

) 29c

NYLON NET

colors.

72" wide
All colors

Sizes B to 20

1
WOMEN'S SKIRTS r - - - - - - r

\"

anS1;, ;2;1h

Reg. 13.95 Skirts
Reg . 12.95 Skirts
Reg . 10.95 Skirts
Reg. 8.95 Skirts
Reg. 7.95 Skirts
Reg. 5.95 Skirts
~

-

Sale 10.00
Sale 9.00
Sale 7.00
Sale 6.00
Sale 5.00
Sale 4.00

BATES
BEDSPREADS

{ Irregular of better quality
spread) Al l cotton cloth
prints .

8.99
MEN 'S
WRANGLER

KNEE SOCKS
Our entire stack of wamens and gir ls knee sacks is redu ced
for th is sale. Many patterns and colors 9.11, 7-9.

WESTERN STYLED

Sale 89c
Sale 79c
Sale 69c
Sale S9c
Sale 49c

Button front style ·
slim fitting . made of
heavy weight blue
denim . action back ·
2 slash pockets and 2
chest pockets. Sizes
36 to 46 .

GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR
Robes · Gowns · Culottes · Pajamas
Sizes 2·4T, 3 to 6x and 7 to 14
REG. 11.00 SLEEPWEAR
. · . . . . . . SALE 7.18
REG. 10.00 SLEEPWEAR
· - - - . . . . SAlE 6.48
REG. 7.98 SLEEPWEAR
· · • . . . SALE 5.18
REG. 6.98 SLEEPWEAR
· · . . . . . . SALE 4.48
REG. 5.98 SLEEPWEAR
SALE 4.18
REG. 4.98 SLEEPWEAR
SALE 3.48
REG. 3.98 SLEEPWEAR
SALE 2.98
REG. 3.49 SLEEPWEAR
SALE 2.58

6.95

Boys Wrangler
Blue Denim
Western Styled

Sale S9c

Reg . 1.25 White Lily Face Wash · . . . .
Sale 59c
Reg. 1.00 Decorator Candles · · · · · .
Sale 49c
Reg. 2.00 Rosebud Soaps . . . . . . . .
Sale 99c
Reg. 1.25 Bath Oil Beads . . . . . . . .
Sale 59c
Reg. 2.00 Decorator Candles . . . . . . .
Sale 99c
Reg . 2.00 Bath Salts . . . · · · · · . . .
Sale 99c
Reg. 3-1.00 Hand Rolled Soap Balis . . . . Sale 3 for 49c
Reg. 1.50 Decorator Candles . . . . . . . . . Sale 69c

JACKETS
(
'

MEN 'S PERMANENT PR

WORK
NIFORMS

Sale! Mens 5.95 Full Cut

CASUAL SLACKS
Permanent press . 65 percenf
Dacron Polyester, 35 percent

Cotton . Sizes 29 to

46

waist. Solid

color s navy blue . Ioden g"reen
alrforce blue.

Moss Green . Antique Gold. Two Day Sale

4.19
TAPESTRY SQUARES
Big shipment - new fabrics and patterl's . Ideal
for cushions, small upholstery jobs. etc .

50$ ear..
100 per cent Cotton · Fast color. Attractive decorator trim in
all colors. Friday and Saturday.

BuHon front sty le - slash
pockets . re1nforced at
points of strain . San·
forized coarse weave
blue denim .
Sizes 6 to 18.

• · · • • SALE 1.59
• · · · • SALE 1.29
• · • • · SALE 89c

On Sale at Elberfelds Toyland
114 East Main Street

ROASTWELL
ENAMELED ROASTERS
Clean easy porcelain enamel . oval roasters and buJit.in
gravy well.

No. 15 tor 15 lb. fowl ·
No. 16 tor 18 lb. ,fowl •
Also Large Aluminum
for 22 lb. fQwls - -

Blue Cornflower design consists
1 Quart covered saucepan
llh quart covered saucepan
134 quart covered saucepan

1 Serving cradle

8.99

r---------------------------,
7\.T
•
B . ,.f.

l

1

1811

Special ,1 9.99

Save 39c on two.

2 for 99'

Large size. Beautifully
decor a fed.

3.95

SALEI SERTAREST
I

'

air vents - handles for easy furninQ . Full or Twin size.

'.

and

5.95

.

Innerspring mattress and matching bo• springs. Superbly
crafted by Serta. Designed to give a firm healthhil support.

78.00 A Set

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·21 56

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1971

rze1 s :
I

PHNOM PENH -CAMBODIAN TROOPS including youths
getting their first taste of combat battled Communist troops to a
standstill near Phnom Penh today. The situation was so serious
13,000 men were sent to help relieve the pressure, Cambodian
,.
military sources said.
The Cambodian command said a force of 8,000 government
troops, with the help ,of U.S. jet fighter-bombers and helicopter
gunships, halted one force of 2,000 North Vietnamese and Viet
Cong 11 miles outside Phnom Penh. Tile command has reported
two Cornrnunist regiments -'" about 6,000 men - in the area.
COLUMBUS -THE OHIO SENATE passed by a 27-3 vote
legislation requiring licensing and setting safety standards and
operating regulations for snowmobiles, mini-bikes and trail bikes.
The bill was sent back to )he House for concurrence in amend(Continued on page IO)
I

The National Labor Relations
Board in Washington has
reversed a decision by the labor
board of Region 9 in Cincinnati
which ruled that the labor
dispute at Imperial Electric Co.
in Middleport was a labor
dispute, Argyle Deeter,
president of Local 1587, International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, said today.
Deeter said the to&lt;:al appealed
the decision of the Region 9
board through Donald G.
Logsdon, International union
attorney of Charleston, W. Va.
A hearing had been set for
Thursday in the Meigs County
courtroom on the appeal, but

master of ceremonies.

more like happiness.
''Managing time is certainly a
matter a self-discipline,"
commented the genial home
economist, who said that
"whether you're in. the mood or
not is beside the point - just
pitch in and do and you'll find
enthusiasm will grow."
She listed planning and
executing the plan as the two
steps in managing time, and
said that the planning or
scheduling can be either mental
or written depending on the
preference of the individual.
She emphasized, however, that
the first lhing is to either write
~own or thlnlt through things
) ou need to accomplish, and
then put them in order of importance.
Miss Glass said that in order
to manage time better we have
to get more time (through
cutting down or limiting certain
activities) use time in a better
and more productive way, and
lower our standards.
Time "robbers" she listed
were interruptions, careless
habits, poor tools or an inability
to find tools, shopping habits,
methods of work , and
arrangement of equipment.
How much you enjoy
Christmas and how much your
family enjoys it may depend on
how well you manage your time
between now .and Christmas,
she said.
Miss Glass suggested that a
list be made of all the things to
be done ben.een now and
Christmas. This list, she pointed
out, will depend on your goalshow much entertaining you will
be doing, how much time you
want to spend together as a
family, what social, church,
community activities you will
be participating in and what you
expect the house to look like.
A t,ime plan was recommended by the speaker. She
suggested one for the entire
time between now and
Christmas, and then a daily one.
Putting first things first,
alternating light lasks with
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Cold Sunday with a chance
of rain or snow. Chance of
snow flurries Monday mainly
northeast half. Partly cloudy
with moderating temperatures Tuesday. Highs In
the 308 and lower 40s Sunday
and Monday and In the 40s
Tuesday. Overnight low in the
30s Sunday morning and In
the 20s Monday and Tuesday
mornings.

•

Blue Cornflower design. The percolator bow'lls made of non.
porous glass-cera mi c. The metal Inserts are stainless steel.
Save 9.96.

TURKEY
PLATIERS

,ews... zn

l

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THE GOVERNMENT announced today
the cost of living rose 0.2 pet . in October, the second full month of
the wage-price freeze. The rise was even less - 0.1 pet., smallest
in 4'h years - when adjusted for seasonal variations.
President Nixon's 90-day freeze, now r~laced by more
flexible Phase II ~o ntrols, affected about 80 pet. of the items
measured in the monthly Labor Department survey. The
depariment said higher prices for new cars and clothing accounted for almost all of the Oclober increase.

SAVE 6.00
SPECIAL

1

:

ELECTROMATIC PERCOLATORS

9" PIE PLATES

Extension Agent, home economics assistant, center, and

Mrs. Margaret Brown of Reedsville, program chairman.

29.95 Corning Ware 10 Cup

69c Pyrex Brand

ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL - John Reece, public
affairs coordinator for the Ohio Power Co. gave a slide
presentation on the Gavin plant and its pollution control
facilities . With Reece, above, are Mrs. James Sheets, Meigs

3.49
4.75

• - · · • - Roasters
• • • -

Friday. Saturday Sale

5.00

Other highlights of the
meeting included a presentation
emphasizing ecology on the
Gen. James Gavin Plant at
Cheshire by John Reece, public
affairs coordinator, and a
display of holiday decorations
called "Chri'stmas Sparkle" by
M1ss Joanna Distler , home
economist, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Using "Time for Christmas!"
as her theme, Miss Glass gave
tips on time management
geared toward making these
final 36 days 'til Christmas
something less than hectic and

Machine wash and dry .

ROYAL FAMILY SOS

3 plastic storage covers
1 10 inch cove red skillet

Complete Suit.
Pants and Shirt

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
"Remember - in the home,
people are lhe most important,
not how clean the house is, or
how great a cook you are. or the
num ber of Christmas gifts you
made . The important lhing is
how happy , satisfied and
achieving are the famil y
members."
This was the message of
Miss Patsy L. Glass, area extension agent, home economics,
featured speaker at an all-day
meeting of the Meigs Extension
Homemakers Club Thursday at
St. Paul's Lutheran Church.

Binding . Designed for function and wellr, this conventional

REG. 2.29 CANDLES
REG. 1.79 CANDLES
REG. 1.29 CANDLES

Area

E. Davis, of Oak Hill welcomed
the guests and Carl Dahlberg,
executive secretary, was

Others honored were Earl
Hilleary and William G. Hoffman of Nelsonville ; William
Mooney, New Lexington; the
Rev. William G. Black, Athens;
William S. Miller, Logan ; Leo
L. Crownover , McArthur;
Roger Barron, Gallipolis;
Edward L. Glockner, Ports· '~Mo re than anyone else,'' mouth ; Dr. Ralph F. Massie,
sa id Fultz, ''Horace Karr has Ironton ; Ronald L. Hand,
spenl his own money to develop Waverly, and Robert W.
Meigs County."
Talbott, Jackson.
Karr, in brief acceptance
remarks, showed deep ap- Also attending from Meigs
County were Edison Hobstetter,
preciation.
Presentations to Karr and the Alfred Elberfeld, Rodney
other 11 men followed dinner in Downing, Bill Chil&lt;js, Cash
the President's Room of the Inn Bahr, Dick Owen, Manning
attended by more than 100 Webster, Wendell Hoover, Jim
persons. Council President E. Arnold and Chet Tannehill.

weave blanket has hi loft. deep nap pile, nylon bound.

Corning Ware 24.88

Wrangler Wear work pants
with matching shirts. Navy
blue - green · Charcoal grey.
so per cent Fortrel Polyester 50 per cent cotton permanent

9.98

72x90 Fits Twin or Full Beds
Blend of SO percent polyester, so percent Rayon . l " nylon

• I

Another big shipment of

press fabric. Scolchgard soil

FINESSE"
FIBERWOVEN BLANKETS
11

4.95

of :

release finish . Pants sizes 29
to so waist . Shirts sizes 141o 20
in your correct sleeve length .

and region, especially for his
agricultural practices."
Bernard Fultz of Middleport,
himself a past council honoree,
listed Karr's credentials in his
introduction .
He recalled that Karr has
built and operates Ohio's
largest and finest outdoor
trailer recreation park and has
won statewide recognition for
conservation practices in
agriculture and preservation of
wildlife .

CHRISTMAS CANDLES

Reg. 2.00 Shampoo Concentrated . . . . . . . . Sale 99c
Reg. 2.00 Bath Oil . . . . . . . . . . . .
Sale 99c
Reg. 1.25 Body Pomade . . . . . . . . . .
Sale 59c
-

ATHENS - Horace Karr,
building contractor,
businessman and rancher of
Chester Township was one of 12
southeastern Ohio men honored
here Thursday night at .Ohio
University Inn by the
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council.
Karr, who built the new Meigs
High School at a saving of
nearly a quarter of a million
dollars, and the new wing on
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
also has won statewide
recognition for conservation
practices on his land holdings.
It was for the latter that the
SEORC especially rewarded
him .
Said a handsome plaque
presented to KQrr by Fred Rice ,
former State Registrar of Motor
Vehicles, "This Plaque is given
in recognition of outstanding
services to community, county

Two Day Sale

I

- •

60x72-For Small Chairs · · - · - - - - · · - 6.95
72x90-For large Chairs &amp; Davenos .-- . - 7.95
72x120-For most Sofas - · •• - . - . - . 10.95
72x140-For Extra Large Sofas, Sectionels 11.95

'

Meig.~-Ma.,on

Karr Honored by
Regional Council

35$ BALL FRINGE

FIRST FLOOR COSMETICS

-

New shipment of " Woodmen " P~ttern , a beautiful floral In
Brown, Red or Blue.
Foam back {will not slipL machine washab le, fringed all
around .

.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The HQIJle is for Happiness

THROW COVERS

JACKETS

Two Day Sale

Reg . 1.2S Glycerine and Rosewater

Multi Purpose

Special Sale Frida·v and Saturday

I

1.25 Knee Socks ·
1.00 Knee Socks 89c Knee Socks
79c Knee Socks
69c Knee Socks

Shop our second floor Home Sewing Department
for a complete selection of patterns, thread,
zippers, trims and sewing accessories.

Friday and Saturday

Two Days Only

Reg .
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

·

I Reg. 4.98
!'COMPOSITE' KN
I Celanese Fortrel blend .
I
1 SALE 3.48 YD.

~v1e~:~~ii~g Big~=~~~~~~~ndto~ .,._!_~L,!~~l_!_!_l).:,.,l~.!~!:.~!:!!..!~:..

CAR COATS

\

CLING

59~

\

1

I KNIT 'N' TUCK
: s•" machine washable

~-····-·--·-··-·--·-~~---------·-··-~
Reg. 4.99
1 Reg . 2.39

2.49 yd.

LODGE TO MEET
River Lodge 4S3, F&amp;AM, will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at
the temple . Two master mason
degrees will be given. All ·

ACETATE KNIT

VINYL
UPHOLSTERY

Sale I
A special meeting of Shade

Tempo

Chatelaine

Sale I

DINNER PLANNED
The Brethren of the Ancient
Accepted Scottish Rite of Meigs
and Gallia Counties, members
of the Valley of Columbus, will
hold a joint dinner meeting at
6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
There will be a film and
speaker.. There will be no
charge, but reservations must
be made by Saturday, Nov. 20,
with the fraternal relations
committee of Delbert Byers and
Clarence J. Struble, cochairmen, so that the proper
number of dinners are planned.

DINNER SATURDAY
SYRACUSE -A plate dinner
will be served Saturday by the
Ladies Auxiliary of the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Dept.
at the meeting headquarters in
municipal park in Syracuse.
The dinner will start at 11:30
and will be served until food is
sold out. The menu includes
turkey, dressing , mashed
potatoes, corn, slaw, rolls,
coffee and lei for $1. A
Christmas bazaar table, a
country store, bake sale and
homemade candy will be sold at
the same time.
·

1-·--·-~·· ------~---------·-•"!••.
1
Reg.
1.99 yd.
I Reg. 1.79

~~4~9-'~y~a~ro~~:~fS~A~L;.E,_l~!!E~-~-~~!J~!!E~-

Sizes for Juniors,
Misses and Half Sizes

preceding the service. Officiating will be the Rev.
Charles Dozer. Burial will be in
the Robinson Cemetery.
American Legion Post 467 will
conduct graveside military
rites.

MAONS TO MEET
Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM,
will hold their Religious Af.
firmation Day on Sunday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All
Masons, members of the Order
of Eastern Star, the Bethel of
Job's Daughters, and the Order
of the DeMolay Chapter of
Mldctiepcrt are invited. Darnell
will be master of ceremonies,
with Jesse E. Brinker, high
priest of the chapter, and officers and their wives in charge
of the program.

FASHION FABRIC SALE

100 percent Cotton

An unusual assortment of
patterns - suitab le for
comforts, pajamas, gowns,
night shirts, children's
wear etc. 46 inches wide .
Friday and Saturday

Spice · Avocado . Gold .

Burbage Spaulding is Dead

VOL. XY 1V NO. 154

TWO DAYS ONLY!

FLANNELETIE

Our entire stock of womens fur trim
coats and casual coats. Many styles to
·choose from - sol ids, tweeds and
plaids. Latest in styling - all new fall
colors.

BIRMINGHAM, ALA.- THE FEDERAL government, in its
first action under the t970 Clear Air Act, got an order today virtually shutting down 23 plants accused of polluting the air over
this industrial city. A spokesman for the federal Environmental
Protection Agency said U. S. marshals would begin serving
restraining orders against the plants, which include U. S. Steel's
huge Fairfield works, this morning.

Funeral services for Burbage
Spaulding, 78, Vinton Route t,
who died at his home Wednesday morning, will be held at
I p.m. Saturday at the Danville
Wesleyan Church.
A retired coal miner, Mr .
Spaudling was a veteran of
World War I. He is survived by
his wife, Alice; six daughters,
Mrs. Eunice Smith, Columbus;
Mrs. Beatrice Stevenson,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Katherine
Canton, Vinton; Mrs. Angetine
Hall, Buckeye Lake; Mrs. Benil
Davis, Williamstown, W. Va.,
and Mrs. Nancy Glassburn,
Westerville; two sons, the Rev.
Vona Spaulding and Thomas,
Jr. , Columbus; three brothers,
the Rev. Jack Spaulding and the
Rev. Ervie Spaulding, both of
West Virginia, and Russell of
Gallipolis; 27 grandchildren,
and tO great-grandchildren.
Friends may can · at the
Martin Funeral Home in
Rutland from 7 to 9this evening
and at the residence anytime
after t p. m. Friday. The body
will be taken to the church
where it will lie in state one hour

S9c Printed

Devoted To The lntere&amp;ts Of The

Lows tonight in the 3ns.
Saturday, i· partly ' cloudy and
cooler except northeast portion
where there will be variable
c'.oudiness with a chance of
showers or snow flurries . Highs
Saturday in the 40s.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
.\OMITTED - Alia Eastman, Harrisonville ; Harvey
Rockhold, Reedsville; Mary
Gilkey, Pomeroy; Catherine
Pierce, New Haven ; Nancy
Johnson, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Mary
Jones, Dora France, Lucille
Lambert, Kathleen Noble ,
Beverly Powell, Larry Ward.

KARR HONORED- Horace Karr, left, accepts plaque
in recognition of his selection as one of 12 outstanding men of
southeastern Ohio from Fred Rice.

Subdivisions
Step Adopted
A resolution setting up
regulations and standards to be
followed m establishment of
housing subdivisions in Meigs
County was adopted ·Thursday
mght by the Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission
at the county extension office.
Meeting with the commission
was Pat Meeker, representing
Surveys Unlimited, a consultant
firm of Cable, Ohio, which is
engaged in making up a comprehensive county-wide plan for
11/leigs County.
The adopted resolution is
designed to protect public
health, safety and welfare in
establishment of sl&lt;lndards in
setting up subdivisions. It would
promote the general laying out
of lots m each division and
provide for adequate open
spaces,

recreation,

water

drainage , sewage and services
in such subdivision
The planning commission
would serve as the ad·
ministrative body of the subdivision regulations . The
resolution , as approved Thursday night, will now be submitted to the county commissioners for approval.

.II

The resolution is a part of the
county plan which is bemg
drawn up by Surveys
Unlimited . A federa l grant plus
funds from the commissioners

Deeter said he and others had
been ad¥ised that the hearing
has been postponed until further
notice .
Deeter said he has received a
letter from Logsdon that the
appeal has been sustained in
Washington.
The content of the letter,
Deeter said, is:
"Your appeal in the above
matter has been duly considered. The appeal ·is
sustained. The cessation of
work on June 3, t971, was
deemed to present issues
warranting determination by
the board. The case is therefor

remanded to the regional
director for issuance of appropriate ·action as outlined in
BA, paragraphs 1 and 3 of the
complaint."
It stressed that parties to the

dispute may proceed toward a
settlement.
The letter was signed by
Peter G. Nash, general counsel,
Washington , D. C.
Deeter .also reported that an
appeal on union members
collecting unemployment
benefits - which have thus far
been denied - is to be' held in
the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court in the near future.

Jackson in Race
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Sen.
Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson
loday announced he is a candidate for the Democratic
presidential nomination. He
said the No. I issue in the
coming election campaign will
be putting people back to work.
The Washington Democrat,
running behind in the polls and
admitting he is an underdog,
made the long-expected announcement at a news conference during which he described
himself as a liberal.
"I am today announcing that I
am a candidate for the office of
the President of the United
States," he said in beginning a
prepared statement outlining
his reasons for entering the

are being used to finance the
planning. A public hearing is
expected to be held before the
commissioners act on the
resolution.
'The planning commission
has applied for federal funds for
the next year. At Thursday's
meeting , presided over by E. F.
Robinson, Pomeroy, chairman,
plans were made to invite the
public to attend future The Rev. Charles Norris,
meetings. The next session will clerk of the Southern Local
be on Dec. 16.
School Board, resigned that
position effective next Jan. 2 at
a meeting of the board Thursday night.
Rev. Norris, who has held the
Christmas
post two years, is pastor of the
First Baptist Church in Racine.
• Countdown
He resigned in order to devote
•
• more time to his ministerial
duties.
11 more mad 1119 days
Applications for the cl~rkship
lor out-ol-town
may
be sent to Box 127, Racine,
packages
prior to Nov. 29. A clerk will be
hired at the Nov. 2ll meeting.
In other business the board
set baccalaureate and com-

race.

The 59-year-&lt;Jld son of Norwegian immigrants, born in
Everett, Wash., was accompanied by his wife, Helen, and
his two children- Anna Marie,
8, and Peter, 5-as he went
before television cameras to
make the announcement.
Jackson, who has never lost
an election since he was first
voted in as prosecuting attorney
of Washington's Snohomish
County in 1938, thus became the
third declltred Democratic candidate . The others are Sen.
George S. McGovern of South
Dakota and Mayor Sam Yorty
of Los Angeles. Before the year
is out there may be two or three
others.

Jackson said President Nixon
has "lost the trust of millions of
Americans," chiefly because of
unemployment and economic
troubles.
"I think we can honestly and
flatly say: It's a mess," be said.
"So the No. I priority in this
country must be to put our
people hack to work ."
Jackson said the need was for
a president who would have the
trust of both business and labor
-and that Nixon did not have
that trust.
"I believe that more than any
potential candidate, I have the
trust of both labor and
business,' he said. "That is one
reason I am

running."

Norris Resigns Oerkship
mencement exercises on
Sunday, May 21. Baccalaureate
will be at 2 p.m. and commencement at 8 p.m.
The board also voted to serve
uniform school lunches
throughout the district. It was
also noted that school lunch
prices will be raised when tne
present freeze is lifted from 25
cents to 30 cents.
Permission was granted
Chlorus Grimm to attend the
Ohio Education Assn. meeting
in Columbus Dec. 2, 3, 4.
Southern Local School
District has been selected to
participate in a career decision-

making program in conjunction
with guidance and counseling.
The program is federally
funded. Southern Local is the
only school in the county participating.
The board also adopted an
attendance policy and a right to
read program. Ralph Wigal will
represent the district in the
right to read program.
Attending were Charles
Pyles, president ; Clarence
Lawrence, vice president ;
Denny Hill, David Nease, and
Gene Yost, members ; Ralph
Sayre, superintendent, and
Norris.

Mayor Having Moving ·Problems

COLUMBUS (UPI) - M. E.
Sensenbrenner, who lost reelection to a fifth term as mayor
by just 998 vote~, said today
"somehow I didn't think people
could turn down somebody who
gave them 14 years and loved
the job so much."
The outspoken Democrat was
beaten once, in 1960, but he
came back four years later and

He has amassed an incredible
collection of sourvenirs, antiques and mementoes that line
his office at city hall -much of
it patriotic in nature - and he
likes to be given the chance to
show it off to visitors .
Two Edison phonographs are
in the collection.
"Sometimes 150 people a
week came into the office just to
won.
hear this" he sald, putting on a
"I won't do that !his time," he record entitled "How Could
said. "I'm 69 and I'll never run George Washington Be a
for anything again ... unless it's Married Man and Never, Never
the Ladies Aid Society."
Tell a Lie."

I

"That Edison - he sure was a office.
on Nov. 2, Sensenbrenner is
great fella, " Sensenbrenner
"I got enough eagles collected busy lining up activities for his

said.
The walls are dotted as well.
"Look at . the Wee Willie
award over there - got that for
helping crippled kids up curbs
and stuff.
"How a bout that painting of
Christopher Columbus? Hey, I
don 't blame Isabella for getting
rid of him if he looked like that
... all that long hair .... A janitor
fell through that painting one
time. I've never thought much
of it anyway, but it goes with the

to fly outta here ... and it looks
like I've got to."
He also has an entire room of
mementoes of the late President John F. Kennedy, wbo he
idolized. He valued those treasures at $100,000.
"That was one reason I wanted to get re-elected," be joked.
"I didn't know where else to
store all this stuff."
Although he has asked for a
recount to verify that Republican Tom Moody actually won

future out of office.
"I figure it's gonna take me a
year just to look at my antiques," he said. "Also I got a
lot of speaking engagem•nts
lined up across the country ...
talking about America and the
flag.
''I'll never adjust to it. I'll
probably make a mistake, head
for this office on Jan. 2, run
right into Moody and ask what
he's doing in my chair."

F oothall Banquet a Fine Experience
BY GEORGE HARGRAVES, SUPT.
Meigs Local School District
I will touch a lot of bases this evening, each having
something to do with our schools.
The 300 folks at the annual football banquet last
Tuesday enjoyed a fine experience. Lee McComas's
Rotary committee did an excellent job in preparing the
details of the banquet. General Hartinger brought a
message of real importance to the young people who
were being honored. It was truly a pleasant ex-

Speaking of Schools-No. 214

perience. We extend congratulations to all who made it
the success that it was.
BOB HOEFLICH, THE BIG BEND Minstrel
Association, and the Meigs Athletic Boosters put
logether an excellent production at the Meigs High
School last Saturday night. Over 1,000 people
thoroughly enjoyed nearly two hours of high quality
entertainment. Over $1,000 profit was realized from
IN HOLZER
this excellent program. All those involved are cerMrs. James Scott Reed, Sr., tainly to be highly commended for the excellence of
Middleport, is a patient at the their effort and for the contribution to the Meigs
Holzer Medical Center. Her athletic program.
room nwnber is 383.
TOM KELLY IS STARTING our Adult Basic

Education classes again. These classes are meant to
prepare folks to pass the G.E.D. test and obtain a
certificate of high school equivalency. If you missed
earlier announcements in the press, call Mr. Kelly at
the high school at 992-2158. We will be having these
classes in two locations this year.
By the way, you are never too late to learn . Why
not give this some serious thought ?
THE BASKETBALL really si&lt;Jrts to bounce this
evening with a preview in Athens. Our high school
team will be one of a number participating in this
annual preview. Our first game is a home opener on
Saturday, Nov . 27, against South Point. This Is a nonleague game but it should be a good one.
JUST LESS THAN two weeks ago we sent 11ut
nearly 600 questionnaires to Meigs High graduates of
1969, 1970, and 1971. We strongly urge you to see that
these get to the graduates. We strongly urge our
graduates to complete them and return them as soon
as possible. Our response to date has been satisfactory
·but we would like to llllve all of them returned. Your
help will be appreciated.
HERE ARE SOME DATES to think about . Next
Wednesday, on November 24, we will be completing the
second six weeks of the 1971-72 school year. There will

not be an early dismissal on November 24. There will
be no classes on November 25 or November 26. The
third six weeks begins on Monday, Novamber 29.
Report cards will go out on Thursday, December 2.
WE ARE STILL PLUGGING away on trying to
establish a Mine Maintenance Mechanics course that
would begin in January. As I have mentioned
previously, a lot of things have to fall into place just
right and very quickly for this to occur. We have had a
few snags that we have not been able to overcome as
yet . We are still working away at it and will try to keep
you posted.
MANY MONTHS AGO I wrote in this column about
the clouds that existed over education in Ohio as a
result ofthelegislative logjam plus the uncertainties of
the wage-price freeze. I believe that it bears repeating
that these same clouds still exist and for the same
reasons. I can assure you that there is great concern ln
the education community across the entire state of
Ohio because of the long delay in legislative action.
These concerns deal with the .complex uncertainties of
today and the even greater uncertainties of the future.
We can only hope that logic wm finally prevail and a
workable compromise can be agreed to by our
legislators.
'

�•
2-The uaUy Sentlnel,Midtleport-1\tllf'I'OY, 0., Nov. l9,1971

can, and a door wreath.
Mrs ." Margaret .Brow.n of
Reedsville, chal·rman for U1e
meeting, was assisted by Mrs.
James Sheets, Meigs County ·
Extension Agent assistant. A
fellowship dinner was held at
noon.
Displays included a ceramic
nativity scene by Eleanor
Lohse; Chrisbnas candles, tree
ornaments, wre~ths and other
holiday decorations by Mrs.
Howard Nolan; stuffed dolls
and animals by Mrs , Mabel
Pickens, multicolored fancy
pillows and aprons by Mrs.
Oleva Cotterill, and needlecraft
by Mrs. Marguerite Karr.

*165,000Drive Launched
The Holzer Hospital Foundation Board of Trustees, the
governing body of Holzer
Medical Center, today announced· it is supporting a
$165,000 Landscaping and
Exterior Beautification Fund
Raising Drive for the new $20
million medical center on Route
35 west of Gallipolis.
Board Chairman Harland
Marlin said, "We feel appropriate landscaping and
exterior beautification for the
r.ew
medical center is
necessary if the structure Is to
reflect the image of the community as a whole."
· He pointed out that without
the
proper
landscaping
example set by the medical
center, the entire Route 35 area
could become a "commercial
wasteland" with flashing signs,
· cold steel and brick structures,
and numerous ~yesores along
· the highway .
Keeping the appearance of
the community as a whole in
mind, the · board of trustees
decided to move ahead with a
landscaping plan for the new
structure and authorized work
to begin while weather permitted.
The new medical center will
be in operation in early spring
of 1972 and there will not be
another growing.season prior to

the move . In order to make the
grounds more attractive for
patients and visitors, the tfoard
decided to proceed with initial
planting and seeding this year
rather than wail until next year.
Martin was confident about
the fund drive . He said, "I'm
sure the citizens of the sevencounty area we serve will
support us in this action. We
cannot, and will not, let the new
medical center become the
prelude to an industrialcommercial junkyard ."
Al!hilugh a portion of the
111oney for construction of the
new medical center came from
the federal government through
the Hill-Burton Act and the
Appalachia Regional Commission, no land improvement
funds are available. All landscaping must be done by the
local community .
acquiring the $20 million to
build the new Holzer Medical
Cenrer, no new taxes were
added to the citizens of the area
and the debt is .to be paid from
hospital revenues. .
"If we can construct the most
modern rural medical ce.nter in
the world without additional
ta~es. then I feel the people in
Gallia, Jackson. Meigs,
Lawrence and Mason counties
will donate the $165,000 for
exterior beautification," Marlin

In

land~cape

and
exterior
said.
Today 's announcement of beautification cost is $35,000
board support for the land- outside lighting, $20,000 for the
scaping project marks the plaza at the intersection of
beginning of the drive to raise Routes 35 and 160, and $ll0,000
the $165,000. Chairman Martin for the actual landscaping.
"We hope the people we serve
said the appoinbnent of a Fund
at
Holzer Medical Center will
Raising Drive Chairman would
get behind us and push us over
be announced later.
our
goal by the end of the year,"
The general breakdown of the
Marlin said.

stX•th Grauers GtVe
• program
J

·

SYRACUSE
A
Thanksgiving program was
presented by the sixth grade
students when the Syracuse
PTA met in the school
auditorium November 9. A
report on the Meigs County
Council meeting was read by
the secretary, Janice Deem .
Plans were made to hold a
Children's Bazaar on December
3 and Mrs. Emogene Holstein,
Mrs . Judy Flagg, Mrs. Etta
Mae Norton, Mrs. Daisy Pat-

Nine .Members
Attend Meet

Nine members attended the
meeting of the Cradle To
College Mothers League Nov. 11
at the home of Mrs. Sharon
Saunders.
The door prize was won by
•
~--•••••••••••••••llllill!lll Mrs . Joan Pitchford. Members
di sc ussed money -making
projects and decided to help
someone for Christmas.
Craig Parker, a speech
500 E. Main St.
therapeutist, gave a talk on the
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992 -2174
problems of speech with
children. The next meeting will
SOME GREAT BUYS ON THESE DOUBLE
be with Mrs. Ruth Fuller Dec. 2.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.
CHECKED USED CARS.
ALL READY FOR WINTER.

1971 Electra 225 Limited, 4 dr. H. T. This ca r is
loaded with equip., sticker price was $7584.24.
You can own this luxurious auto.
$6295.
1970 Pontiac Catalina 2 Dr . H. T. This is a oneowner car, sharp red outside &amp; black vinyl
interior. We want to move this car so it 's on
Sale .
$2595
1969 Chevy , 112 Ton Pick. You better hurry &amp;
get this one -owner, V-8, long wheel base style
side. A real buy.
$2395
1967 Plymouth Fury Ill 2 dr . H. T., all while
with ivory interior. This is a local car. We can
refer you to the previous owner. Ha s P.S.,
P. B., aula .
$1295
1
1967 G.M.C. 12 Ton . This truck has only 41,781
miles on it . All blue , 6 cyl., standard trans.,
long wheel base, wide iide . A Great Buy . $1595
1966 Buick Wildcat 4 dr . sed., all white with
beige vinyl interior, auto .. P. S., P. B. A real
nice car for the model
·
$795
Come In &amp; See Bill Nelson, Ron Smith, Ceward
Ca !vert or Ed Bartles For All Your
Automotive Needs.

THREE INITIATED
Miss Naomi Jo Smith and two
other honor students were
initiated into Kappa Omicron
Phi, home economics honorary
society, this month. Miss Smith
is the daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Charles D. Smith, Wolfpen
Road, Pomeroy Route 4. She is
a graduate of Pomeroy High
School and will receive her
bachelor of science degree in
secondary educa lion , home
economics, from Concord
College, Athens , W. Va.
SPEAKING SUNDAY
Mrs . Leora Sigman, a
member of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, will speak on
WMPO Radio at 7:45 a.m .
Sunday on the church sponsored program entitled "Light
for Christ." Mrs. Sigman will
speak on her duties as secretary
to the Middleport mayor and on
her duties as editor of the
church's monthly newspaper
also called "Lights for Christ."

The

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL
SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.
OUR WORD IS OUR BOND

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.
500 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO PH. 992-2174

MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHill.
E x.ec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Pub l ished da i ly except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
P ubliShing Company, 1 11

Court

Great Cars -Great Buys

St .,

Pomer o y,

Ohio ,

45769 . Busines s Office Phone
992 -2156 , Editorial Phone 992
2157 '
Second cla ss poslage pa id at
Pomeroy, Oh 10 .
Nationa l a'dvertising
r epresentative
Bottin elli
Gallagher , Inc , 12 East 42nd
St , New York City , N ew York .
Subscript ion ral es · De l ivered by carrier w he re
avai lable so ce nts per week ;
By Motor Route where ca rrier
se rvic e not a11ailabte : One
month Sl.lS . B-,. mait in Ohio
and W Va ., One YE'ar S14 .00 .

Si x months $7 . 2.5 . Three
mont hs $4 .50 . Subscr iption
pri ce includes Sunday Times .
Sent inel.

69 Mustang 2 Dr. H.T., 6 cyl., 3 speed 11795
69 Ford XL Convertible, air ................ '1995
69 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, air............. '2995

.

69 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe, air .. •.. •.. ·.. 2495

•

68 Oldsmobile 88 4 Door ............... '1795

•

1

67 Chevelle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T. .......... 11395
67 Ponijac Catalina 4 Dr. Sedan, Air .... 11395
66 Olds 88 4 Door ............ , .......... '895
66 Mercury Sta. Wagon, V.S auto.......... 1795 ·
65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door
........ '795
65 Mercury Monterey 4 Dr., V.S auto... ;• '595
65 Mercury SlatKin Wagon, air ............ 1695
65 Pontiar 8onn. 2 ~r. H.T., air ......... .'795

'

!I

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
.Open Evenings Unti/8: 00-Ti/5 P.M. Sat .

••
t
I

I

I

'

"

Property

Flora Hayos, Harold Hayes,
Eva Hayes. Garold Hayes ,
Audra Hayes, Manda Easbnan:
Wilber Eastman, Pearl Hayes,
Grace
Hayes ,
Margery
Douglas, Harold · Douglas to
Kenneth Eugene Hayes, 71 1,
Acres, Meigs.
Excelsior Salt Works, [nc. to
Ohio
Power,
Ease.
Meigs.
Dale Connoll y, Donna Connolly to Norman Yeauger,
Dorothy Yeauger, 3.85 Acres,
Olive . .
Letha Cowen to Daniel B.
O'Dell, Parcel, Bedford.
[da M. Childs to Manning D.
Webster, Headley &amp; Russell Lot
No. 5, Middleport.
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
Webster to fda M. Childs,
Virgmia E. Scott, Headley &amp;
Russell Lot No. 5, Middleport.
Donald E. Myers, Pauline
Myers to William H. Reed, Alva
Lee Reed, Parcel Baum's Sub.
Div., Chester.
William E. Swalzel, Teresa C.
Swatzel to Emma L. Hoffner,
Albert V. Hoffner , Gerald H.
Hoffner, Lot, Pomeroy .
Maxine Rethlake to Rhoda R.
Hall, Lot No. 15, SalisburyMiddleport.
Dale M. Dutton, Margaret
Dutton to Citizens National
Bank, Lots, Middleport.

$10 Given for
Building Fund
A $10 contribution was made
to the Middleport firemen's
building fund when the Jolly
Bunch Sewing Club met Wednesday night at the home of
Mrs . Beatrice Robson. Cohostesses were Mrs. Evelyn
Grueser and Mrs. Mattie Bush.
Mrs. Nora Mills had charge of
the meeting and also conducted
the games with prizes going to
Mrs . Gertrude Miller, Mrs.
Edith Jividen, Mrs. Helen
Reyn olds and Mrs. Lillian
Smith. Jolly pal gifts were
dist•ibuted and members
displayed craft items.
Chrisbnas dinner plans were
discussed with an announ cement on time and
localion to be made later. At-

. '

Our

life

is

-1c
largely -ll

by

our..;:

thoughts. You wilt find i&lt;
that as you alter your.;:

il thoughts toward things i&lt;
.il and people, things · and il

ti&lt;

'l1ME FOR CHRISTMAs- FeatUred llpeBker at !be all·
day program was Miss Patsy L. Glass, area extension agent,
home economics, whose emphasis was on basic time
management principles for the remaining bect!c days before
Christmas. In her presentation, Miss Glass used a Christmas
tree sketch with Ups on time savers as the ornaments.

(Continued from page 1l.
peak at 3,000people in the fall of
heavy ones., letting each family 1973 and ·hold to that figure
member carry a fair share of about six months. Once the
the responsibility, distributing plant is completed, the public
work and recreation by doing affairs coordinator said, it will
what you like to do along with take about 22ii people to operate
what you have to do, and it.
Commenting on the deep
planning lime and energy
sav ing combinations of ac-. mine coal project, Reece adtivities where possible were milted that not·a lot is going on
among Miss Glass ' recom- there now, but promised that in
mendations .
the very near future things will
She spok~ of developing ef- get moying. He said that at the
ficienl methods of work which • m.me only between 150 and 200
may involve learning new persons ":ill bee~1ployed for the
skills, reducing the amount of construction phases but that
time to do a task, especially about 2,000 wtll be needed to
routine jobs, working al times operate the factlity. Aboul1,600
or least fatigue, deciding when of these 2,000 ~Ill be mvolved m
you are most productive and the actual mmmg of the. coal
doing as much as possible while the remal~mg 400 will be
during that lime, offering guards, adm1mstrattve peryourself an incentive, and using sonnel, and clerical workers.
"odds and ends" of time for
CHRISTMAS SPARKLE
"mini" jobs.
Seven lighted
holiday
In conclusion Miss Glass arrangements were displayed
emphasized
that
time by Miss Joanna Distler, home
management is strictly a "do it economist for the Columbus and
yourself job,"but that if time is Southern Ohio Electric Co.
managed wisely it can pay high
She explained how to make
dividends . She cautioned the attractive decorations all of
against fussing and fuming over which were lighted with
projects which couldn 't possibly miniature clear bulbs. While
repay an individual for the time her arrangements were made
devoted, and suggested trying with artificial g]lllerials, Miss
"no" to outside interests more Distler sugges~. that the "real
often during these final weeks thing" would be as effective and
before Christmas.
much less expensive.
Environmental Controls
Included in her program were
The Ohio Power Co.'s plan tips on arranging such as using
for environmental controls at heavy hairpins to secure acthe new Gen. James Gavin cessories and greenery to
Plant at Cheshire were outlined styrofoam frames , spraying
by John Reece, public affairs ribbon to secure a special color,
coordinator.
and using burned out ligbl
tation,
described
his
Using Reece
slides in
his presencompany's plan for holding
pollution of air, land and water
to a minimum. He showed
technical features or the Gavin
plant which supports the industry's approach to the
pollution .problem .
The landscaping and site
beautification at the plant were
noted by Reece who gave a
figure of $70,000 as the cost of
trees and shrubs. He displayed
a large map showing the landscaping plan for the facility,
and repeated the Ohio Power
Co.'s promise to fill and landscape the two large gravel pits
created.
Reece said there are about 600
people on the job at the Gavin
Plant generating a weekly
payroll of about $180,000.
Employment at the site will

bulbs, sprayed and glittered to
create attractive tree ornamenls.
Particularly attractive was a
lighted Madonna arrangement.
The Madonna figtire in a lamp
chimney was surrounded by a
blue-green garland on a circle
of styrofoam with miniature
clear lights placed at random at
the base.
0 the r a r r a n gem en t s
displayed included a Chrisbnas
CrabApple Centerpiece m pmks
and greens, a silver pear tree, a
basket of . oranges, , .an
arrangement m a watermg

people will alter toward:
you.
-Anonymous -j(

ti&lt; ,· **:* ....t
t... lfs Quick! Easy ....t
t DRIVE-IN t

:

:_..

BANKING -..

t

FridanOnly
:
il The Drive - In Windowi&lt;
:
is Open
:
i&lt;
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
o1&lt;
-ll
(Continuously l . :
:

01
. her Banking Hours 9 to 3.;:

«:and S to

7 as

i&lt; Fridays.

usual on+;

i&lt;

t FARMERS BANK t
t and SAVINGS oo::

:
i&lt;
i&lt;

POME-ROY, OHIO
Member FDIC

..fC
-j(

eserve ystem

MRember Fsederal

100 LBS.

SURE WIN
40% Hog Supplement
ANALTliiS
Crude Protein . . . Min.
Crude Fat . ..... Min.
Crude Fib'tr ..... M.x.

40.00%
2.50%
7.00%

INGREDIENTS
Wheat ·Middlings, Soy Bean Meal, Meat
and Bone Scraps, Alfalfa Meal, Calcium
Carbonate from Limestone, Salt, Di Calcium Phosphate, Dried Fermentation
Corn Extractives, Corn Distillers' Dried
Solubles, Corn Distillers Dried Grains,
Dried Streptomyces Fermentation Solu·
bles, Soybean Mill Feed, Riboflavin Supplement, Vitamin A Palmitate, Vitamin
D2 Supplement, Menadione Sodium BIsulfate, Vitamin B12 Supplement, Ethoxyquln and BHA and BHT (Preservatives)
Choline Chloride, Choline Pantothenate,
Niacin, Vitamin E Supplement, Manganous Oxide, Ferrous Carbonate, Cobalt
Carbonate, Copper Oxide, Calcium fC)date and Zlnc Oxide,

:
i&lt;

_ .;:

-tr:
•

**************~

~--••••••••••••••••. .

NOTICE
SQUARE DANCE
LEGION GROVE
1 Mile South of Wilkesville,on Rt. 124.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER .2().27
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4-11
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31
MUSIC BY GUY THOMA &amp; THE
OHIO RIVER BOYS

~~:;~mffl~

NBA Standings

NHL Standings

By United Press International

By United Press International

Eastern Conference
Altantic Oivisiopn
GB.
W. l . ct.
New York
Boston
ll 5 .688
Montreal
Philadelphia 9 7 .563 2
Boston
9 .471 31:'2
Buffalo
7 . 9 .43a 4
Central Division
W. L. Pet . GB
Baltimore
7 9 .438 ...

New York

8

Cincinnati

5

Atl~nta

9

4 11

Cleveland

East

w. L. T Pis
12 I 4 2a
12 2 4 2a
11 5 1 23

Detroit

5
5

10

Buffalo
Vancouver

4
5

10
13

7 17
3 13
5 . 13
3 13

L.

T. Pis

Toronto

West

w.

.357 1
.267

2112

4 12 .250 3

l4

4

Minnesota

12

4 2 26

Pitts.burgh

a 10
7 a

Midwest Division
Philadelph ia
W. l. Pet. GB California

Milwaukee

16

Chicago
Detroit

10 5 .667 5
a 9 .471 a

Phoenix

1 .941

7 10

.412

6

Chicago

Western Conference

.. .

6 10

St. Louis

4 10

o 28

2 18

2 16
3 15
3

9

Mohtrea'l 2 St . LOuis 2

1

·

Los Angeles

15 3 .a33 ...

· GoldenS tate

- Seallte

13
ll

6

.684 21/ 7

6 .647 3'12

Houston

3 16 .158121/2

Portland

2 13

Minn~sota 4 Pittsburgh 3

.(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games

.13311 112

Thursday's Resulls
Detroit 12a Phoenix 126
Golden State 115 Portland 105
I Only games scheduled)

(No games scheduled)

AHL Slandings

By United

Friday's Games

~ress

Boston

Buffalo at Balli mar~

Springf iel?
Nova Scot1a
Rochester
Providen ce

Clncinnali at Basion

Chicago at Philadelphia

Houston at Los Angeles

Milwaukee at Seattle

8
6

6
9

3
3

4

9

5 13

Hershey
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Balt im ote

7
5

4
7

6 20
5 15

4 10
4 12
NEW GOLF EVEI')T
Richmond
4 8 2 10
NEW YORK I UP! l -'The Tidewaler
3 12 3 9
Thursday's Results
$110,000 Dina Shore-Colgate
Scotia B Rochester 1
Winner's . Circle Tournament Nova
(Only game scheduled)
was added to the Ladies
. Friday's Games
Professional Golf Association Cincinnati at Cleveland
at Richmond
Circuit Thursday ·and immedi- Springfield
Providence at Rochester
ately became the richest event
(Only games scheduled I
on the tour. It will be played at
Palm Springs, Calif., next April
12-16.
Tbe 1971-7Z basketball
previews for Southern VaDey
Alhletfc Conference teams
JOE'S FIRST WORKOUT
wiD begin at 7· o'clock lonlght
NEW YORK (UP! ) -Joe at Kyger Creek, First
Namath worked out Thursday preview (two quarters) game
with the New York Jets' pits Hannan Trace against
offensive unit for the first time !be Meigs Resei:Ves. Second
since he injured his left knee tilt finds Southwestern batlast August but the longhaired Uing Eastern. Third tilt sends
quarterback said that he still Kyger Creek against Symmes
wasn't healthy enough to return Valley and the nightcaps
to action.
finds North Gallla taking on
"! certainly haven 't worked Southern.
enough to decide if I'm
Logan and Athens wiD also
healthy," said Namath . "Right conduct pre-season previews,
now I'm not."
beginning at 7 this evening.

STEVE AT NCAA
EUGENE, Ore. i UPl i Steve Prefontaine, the defend- Thursday's Fight Results
ing NCAA titleholder, will lead By Unlted Press International
the University of Oregon track STOCKTON, Calif. (UPl )team into the NCAA Cross Aiberty Reyes, 123~, the
Country Championships at Philippines, outpointed Jesus
Robles, 127, Mexico (10 ); Elisio
Knoxville, Tenn.
Estrada, 126, San Antonio, Tex.,
stopped Angel Arias, 1231'.. ,
Mexico 15).
34 MIDGET CARS RACE
NEW YORK !UP!) -ThirtyPORTLAND, Maine I UP!)four cars will compete in seven
races tonight at the Midget Chuck Wilburn, 138, Cleveland,
ChampiimshipAutomobile! aces stopped Azael Curet, 134,
Nashua ,N.H.( 4).
al Madison Square Garden-.

I

w. COMPTON. 0. D.
. OPTOM_ET_RI.ST

• Install it where the wnh lskitc:IMh, bath, nui'Mry • .. 1nywhtr11,
you can aet: ldequatt wlrina. plumb-

· . ~. ·~·.,igg~.

ina:•nd vantinl'.

• Wesher •nd dryer ttc11 do a ftm·
ily·slzt l01d at the ume time or in·

• ••••••• • •

dependently.

• 2·Spttd Wathtr. Rtlular plut
O.lic:.ete Mttinas for the fteltibllity 1

-8PECIAL-

famlty Wisher must have.

• Permanent ·Prtu Cue in both

67 Ford Mustang..........$1195

Washer and Dryer. ,
ModollC ·I

Fast Back, auto. trans .

---------------------71 Ford Pinto ....................... ..S1895

FURNITURE

Auto . trans ., radio, 7.000 miles, blue.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

69 MercuiJ Marque ................. $1995
2 Dr . H T., P.S., P. B.

68 MerCUIJ Monterey ............... s1395

Trust Your Home Heat To.

COLUMBUS (UP! l - Ohio
State football coaoh Woody
Hayes loses 20 players after
Saturday's game at Michigan .
That's the number of seniors
the Buckeyes have.
The team was to depart Columbus at 9 a.m. today for Ann

4 Dr ..

•

P.S., P. B.

68 MertUIJ ·Montego................ $1195
4 Dr., auto. trans .

67 Pontiac Tempest ................ s1195
Conv ., auto. t ra ns.

69 Chevrolet Pick-Up .............. }1595
Short Bed, 1!2 ton, clean, standard trans .

66 GMC Pick:UP ,.................. }1095
•11 Ton , long bed.

50 Ford Pick-Up .......................s250
112 Ton flat bed .

- Manufactured by -

67 Comet Villager Wagon

... ;. $1295

SUGAR RUN MILLS
992-2115

Pomercy

992-5186

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PT. PL'EASANT, W.VA •
.

.

-·--------...
-·------ 992-2039

llill_.

GENIE

edge over Philadelphia.
Atlanta is picked by eight
over Green Bay in the
nationally televised Monday
night encounter.
Miami is a three-point pick to
widen its American Conrerence
East lead to two games over
Baltimore, Kansas City is a two
-touchdown favorite over Denver, Cincinnati is picked by
eight over Houston , Cleveland
by 10 over New England, the
New York Jets by seven over
Buffalo and the raiders by !4
over San Diego .
Pittsburgh is picked by rour
over the New York Giants in
the only inter-conference game.
Detroit, coming off a tough 21
-13 loss to Los Angeles, will
throw the conference's best
r1..1ning attack against the
Bears, who rank a lowly lith in
defending against the rush.
Former Heisman Trophy
winner Steve Owens, now in his
Sophomore season , spearheads
the ground game. The ex-

GRASS SHEAR

AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR

;:~, 27!~4;9-;:;;:::::::

OPENER SYSTEM

9900

REG . 129 .95
l vtod i u Uu ll uu

in

r111J Gu rri u ~r , (J~

"r' Ul!l

l'J'

I:J w o rk

DI5S TON

BLACK &amp; DECKER
DELUXE SHRUB &amp; HEDGE
TRIMMER

Cordless Electric

UPRIGHT GRASS SHEAR
REG . 34.95

( H

1799

•a tOO

Ir

Make 49 payments, SOc
to $10.00 and we make
I he

50TH

• l'lol

,..,J,J•·

~;,.~~o.:

3249

e

e
rr ~!d

TEFLON-S
BLADES

•811 0
13" double edye blode, br
io sHH CJII•ng,
V/ru1- or r.;~r.o
1\undlt:.

wl "' " 11011

t l rdr·

BlACK &amp; DECKER
DELUXE LAWN
EDGER/TRIMMER
"8220

CH

SHEET

•

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

Bank .
_

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp . All
ac co unts i nsured up to

WITH
EACH
CAR PURCHASE
UNTIL THANKSGIVING

29¢

.f

520,000.00.

TURKEY

BANANA- SPICE Iii H 1:01

-- Beautify your home
with sus pend ed
. ceilings for as low os

Member Federal Home Loa n

12 INCH • 12 INCH PLAIN WHITE
IN CARTONS ON lY OF 114 TilES

Co~w~d 9~

PER SQ. FT.

FREEl

SWIRLS

STA-LlTE

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE

18~

21%~

EA.

~I ·!

~

EA.

'!f'·;"&lt;.

i'l'&gt;lf'.O 0'!!."
~ ~ . :.(1 .. ~;J ~x. -.:.u~ n.

'•

BULLETIN BOARD
PANELS

deluxe Lauan
Mahogany Shelves
JENCRAFT

J/ 4 INCH

68 CHEVROLET II
3 speed, red.

68 MERCURY PARKLANE
4 Or ., H.T., auto. tran s., P.S, P. B. , vinyl top , Split
Electric seat , air condition , maroon .

69 OLDSMOBILE 98
Loaded with extras, gold interior and ex ter ior

,...

lnsu lale s,
1/2" lhi do:

~oc r~ s

239

12.. .24 '

4 PANElS

Uf-' n u i~ ~:: . A full

BUllETIN BOARD
CORK

12'" . 24 "

REG
2..99

PKG.

PER PACKAGE

69 CADILLAC 4 DR.
H. T.. loaded w it_h all ex tras.

69 .CONTINENTAL
Mark Ill with all conti ne ntal extras .

71 MARK II

DESK/BOOKCASE

1497
IN (IN .

EASI LY

ASSEMBLED

241NCH
MEDICINE CABINET

•

J

1777 I:
WILliAM~

---

REGUlAR
36.95

"

• I

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

·

Chester, o,

1973,

.

.

,. •

'

\

:. dt&lt;llo;·~l&lt;o \lold lien tlt:~ign mok e~ lh,.
.'..,: r.t: l•o;•J lucc kit un co ~y blend lor

uny

Wllli .AM 5

rl~wr.

1• .

1

:

,.

.&gt;

Eosy to lnsloll Yourself

WA ll HAN G

• .'

2988
'.

. :·

'

•

•,

~ ~

l .

•

•'

I

' \' ;

'

'

· ••

''c . ' ',. ·.

,. ' ,..

. ·'·

_ '• ,_

. "I ii

Pre w t panels and mould

iqj~ lrll tund o rd f , ~t:t · f ou ll ub~.

--~-- ·-

I

SPACEMATE
MEDICINE CABI NET

UNDER CABINET LIGHT

Loaded with all continen tal ed ra s.

588

REG . 39.95

69 EL CAMINO
SWIM MEET AT BELGRADE
SINGAPORE (UP!) - Belgrade, Yugoslavia will be the
site of the first world swimming championships of the
llitetnatlonale de Nation Alna·
teur (FINAl, Aug. ZO-Sept. 2,

&lt;

• I

REG. 24.95

PRICE

IN CTN

DELUXE 5Ft. MELAMINE lit--e-:-,.....,_.,....,-,-{
TUB KIT
' '
.

AFCO

'
SAlE

27BB

YOURSELF
WITH JUST
A SCREWORIV ER

REG. 28.95

IN CIN .

68 CADILLAC 4 DR.
Deville, yellow with bla ck vinyl top , loaded with extras .

BOOKCASE/
CURIO CABINET

REG . 19.95

68 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

71 CADILLAC COUPE

PANElS
PER PACKAGE

RECORD CABINET

Loaded with extras , air cond i tioning , vinyl top. ster eo
tape. player buill in.

H. T., loaded with extra s.

4

MQDAR Walt Fumilure

70• MONTE CARLO

Caprice. J seater .

WAlN UT

.

H. T., V-8, auto., 302 engi ne, viny l top .

66 CHEVROLET WAGON

81NCH x 24 INCH

.·

... ,.

69 FORD XL 2 DR.

Auto., P.S .. P B.. vinyl top.

J(

NATURAl

70 PONTIAC 2 DR.
H .T., V-8. auto . tran s., P.S., P. B., viny l top .

UCH

Conwad 12" x 12" WASHABlE CEiliNG TILES

FROM THE TOWN WITH A HART!

V -8,

.-

BLADES

BLACK &amp; DECKER
SHRUB &amp; HEDGE TRIMMER

cd l Or

~.

THlON.S

IIi!! ~I! OH r ly nf

Electric

Cordless

Sp ider Conver.fiblc&gt; .

l.oca ted on s. Rt. 7

I

FLOWERS

CHRISTMAS

Louis is given a seven-point

70 FIAT 850

SEE: RAY RIGGS, AL ZEIGLER

"Service For Over 100 Years"

Oklahoma ace has gained 724
yards, second only to John
Brockington of Green Bay.
Allie Taylor, who ran for 101
yards against the Rams, ranks
sixth in the conference with 534
yards.
Quarterback Greg Landry
has added 344 yards rushing
and his 13 touchdown passes
lead the conference.
The Bears won, 28-23, on Oct.
24 in the first meeting of the
two clubs this year, as
Douglass passed ror two touchdowns and ran for another.

Trade Two

V-8, auto. trans .

180 Mulbeny

Staley and Ed O'Bradovich up
front, Doug Buffone and Lee
Roy Caffey flanking Butkus and
Charlie Ford, Phil Clark, Dick
Daniels and Joe Taylor in the
secondary - have held opponents to an average of 17 points
a game.
The contest is rated a pickem affair.
In other NFC action Sunday,
Dallas is a three-point favorite
over the Redskins in a battle
for leadership of the Eastern
Division; Minnesota is up by
seven over a Saints team that
has knocked off the Cowboys
and San Francisco and tied
Oakland in recent weeks ; the
Forty N'iners and Los Angeles
are rated even in a struggle for
dominance of the West and St.

Condors

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Condors traded
rookie Jim O'Brien to Kentucky
· and veteran Stew Johnson to
Carolina in separate deals for
Jim Ligon and Bob Verga, in
an attempt to bolster a defense
which gives up an average 126
points per ball game.
"Both Ligon an11 Verga are
physical ball players- they'll
make our defense that much
tougher," said Mark Binstecn,
Pittsburgh coach and general
manager.
Einstein said Ligon , a fouryear veteran 6-foot-7 forward
obtained from Kentucky "is
just what I need-a fellow who
can't shoot."
Verga, a 6-foot-one guard
obtained for Carolina, has twice
been an ABA All Star. But he
has played ror five teams and
he has a reputation for being a
gunner. Binstein said he was
unworried. "! ·have three
players who will kill him if he
doesn't give up the ball ."
O'Brien, averaging only 4.8
points per game, was touted as
the play-making guard Pittsburgh needed to control its
game, when tabbed third in the
rookie draft. Johnson, who set
the ABA scoring record of 62
points last season, had been a
Coodors' regular for two
seasons. The Condors have an
6-10 record and are 4-4 since
BJnstein look over the coaching
dulies.

ing career.

r·---:::::::::::::-:;::~=~------~~~~-

R ·e d Hot NFC Central
Race Resumes Sunday
By BOB D1 PIETRO
. UP! Sports Writer
An auto rental agency once
mounted its entire ad campaign
on the plight of being secondbest.
The Chicago Bears find
themselves in that bind .
They're second to Minnesota
in the National Conference
Central Division and they'll be
trying harder to at least
mainlain that position if they
fail to gain a tie with the
Vikings for the division lead:
Here's the situation : Chicago
(6-3), a game behind Minnesota
(7-2) hosts third place Detroit
(:&gt;-J.1) this Sunday, I! the Bears
win and Minnesota loses to
audacious New Orleans, a firstplace tie results. But if Chicago
loses, the Lions will vault into
second no matter what the
Vikings do. .
Chicago and Detroit are the
tough, physical ball clubs who
play the '·let's-grind-it-out-andhold-em" football so typical of
the division.
The Chicago "attack" usually
consists of a scrambling pass
by southpaw quarterback
Bobby Douglass to wide receiver Dick Gordon and a field goal
attempt by Mac Percival once
the Bears get anywhere inside
the 5().yard line.
Percival kicked three field
goals last week in the Bears· 16
-15 victory over Washington, a
game consisting of eight field
goals and a frarltic conversion
pass from Douglass to Dick
Butkus.
It's the Chicago defense,
sparked by Butkus at middle
linebacker , that has been the
key to the team's surprising
showing so far this season.
The veteran crew-with Willie
Holman, George Seals, Bill

their third straight, the first
tinie that · has happened to
Ha yes in the last 25 years,
which covers his college coach-

ka, Dick Wakefield, Jimmie . - - - - - - - - - . ,
Lee Harris and Fred Schram.
De Leone , All-American center
·•
candidate injur&lt;;Sf against
For All Occasions
Northwestern las t weekend, will
not see action in his rinal colWe wire flow~rs
Everywhere
lege career game .
[f the Wolverines of Michigan
should win the game it would
mark their first perfect season
since 1948. Two years ago they
Pomeroy Flower Shop
delivered a stunning upset, 2412, on the top-ranked Bucks in
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
the season finale .
A Buckeye loss would be .__ _ _ _ _ _ _

a good week .'" Hayes said aftArbor, where Hayes planned to .and a bid to the Rose Bowl.
put them through their paces
Hayes says the Buckeyes, 6-3, er the final tuneup he re Thursat Michigan Stadium "if it are "reasonably up" for the day .
After Saturday, no matter
isn't raining .n
game against their arch-rival ,
what
the outcome , Hayes will
Most observers have wril.ten one that traditionally closes
most likely start looking toward
off Ohio Stale for the game aft- both the teams' seasons.
er looking at Michigan, 10.0,
"We've had a good week of 1972. He is losing the bulwark
assured of the Big Ten title
work, both offense and &lt;!efense,

Players

(Only 2 feet wide)

BAKER

19

15

West
W. L. T. Pis
tO 2 3 23

Cleveland at Portland

!Only games sc heduled)

International

W. L. T. Pis
12 I 2 26
8 3 4 20

of his .team to graduation .
Those seniors include c6-captains Tom DeLeone and Harry
Howard, Tom Campana, Stan
Whi te, Ken Luttner, Don Lam-

20.Buckeye SeniorS To
End Careers At Michigan

Philadelphia 2 Los Angeles 0

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

Fri_gidaire
Sk1nny Mini.
Fits almost
anywhere.

11

Los Angeles
3 15 1 7
" Thursday's Results

Pacific Division
· Boston S Vancouver 0
W. L. Pet. GB California 7 Buffalo 5

~------------------------------.

tending besides those named
were Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan,
Mrs. Freda Mitch, Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Alma Miller, Mrs.
Jane Gilkey, Mrs. Grace
Johnson, Mrs. Betty Cline, and
Mrs. Mae Weber,

. .1

8

......~

wn

-j(

For Today

determined

Home is for Happiness

Transfers

NET WEIGHT

71 Ford LTD 4 Door H.T., air ........... '3795

••

Meigs

•**************'
A Thought t

LIVndfJ CH1tr

USED CARS

I•

terson and Larry Wolfe were
named to lhe organmng
commtltee.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Momson
of Vere-Smith Audio Visual .
Inc., demonstrated equipment
designed to help pupils develop
read ing skills. The guest
speaker at the December
meeting will be Mrs. Leah Ord,
gmdance counselor or Southern
Local High School. Refreshments w11l be served by the
fourth grade mothers.

-I

•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O. ,Nov.. 19, 1971

REG. 7.49

Perl eel lor kitchen, den, or ch ll·
HOU5E ·O .U:E

d r en'; room. ·

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
Department Stote of Buillling Since 1VlS
I

�•
2-The uaUy Sentlnel,Midtleport-1\tllf'I'OY, 0., Nov. l9,1971

can, and a door wreath.
Mrs ." Margaret .Brow.n of
Reedsville, chal·rman for U1e
meeting, was assisted by Mrs.
James Sheets, Meigs County ·
Extension Agent assistant. A
fellowship dinner was held at
noon.
Displays included a ceramic
nativity scene by Eleanor
Lohse; Chrisbnas candles, tree
ornaments, wre~ths and other
holiday decorations by Mrs.
Howard Nolan; stuffed dolls
and animals by Mrs , Mabel
Pickens, multicolored fancy
pillows and aprons by Mrs.
Oleva Cotterill, and needlecraft
by Mrs. Marguerite Karr.

*165,000Drive Launched
The Holzer Hospital Foundation Board of Trustees, the
governing body of Holzer
Medical Center, today announced· it is supporting a
$165,000 Landscaping and
Exterior Beautification Fund
Raising Drive for the new $20
million medical center on Route
35 west of Gallipolis.
Board Chairman Harland
Marlin said, "We feel appropriate landscaping and
exterior beautification for the
r.ew
medical center is
necessary if the structure Is to
reflect the image of the community as a whole."
· He pointed out that without
the
proper
landscaping
example set by the medical
center, the entire Route 35 area
could become a "commercial
wasteland" with flashing signs,
· cold steel and brick structures,
and numerous ~yesores along
· the highway .
Keeping the appearance of
the community as a whole in
mind, the · board of trustees
decided to move ahead with a
landscaping plan for the new
structure and authorized work
to begin while weather permitted.
The new medical center will
be in operation in early spring
of 1972 and there will not be
another growing.season prior to

the move . In order to make the
grounds more attractive for
patients and visitors, the tfoard
decided to proceed with initial
planting and seeding this year
rather than wail until next year.
Martin was confident about
the fund drive . He said, "I'm
sure the citizens of the sevencounty area we serve will
support us in this action. We
cannot, and will not, let the new
medical center become the
prelude to an industrialcommercial junkyard ."
Al!hilugh a portion of the
111oney for construction of the
new medical center came from
the federal government through
the Hill-Burton Act and the
Appalachia Regional Commission, no land improvement
funds are available. All landscaping must be done by the
local community .
acquiring the $20 million to
build the new Holzer Medical
Cenrer, no new taxes were
added to the citizens of the area
and the debt is .to be paid from
hospital revenues. .
"If we can construct the most
modern rural medical ce.nter in
the world without additional
ta~es. then I feel the people in
Gallia, Jackson. Meigs,
Lawrence and Mason counties
will donate the $165,000 for
exterior beautification," Marlin

In

land~cape

and
exterior
said.
Today 's announcement of beautification cost is $35,000
board support for the land- outside lighting, $20,000 for the
scaping project marks the plaza at the intersection of
beginning of the drive to raise Routes 35 and 160, and $ll0,000
the $165,000. Chairman Martin for the actual landscaping.
"We hope the people we serve
said the appoinbnent of a Fund
at
Holzer Medical Center will
Raising Drive Chairman would
get behind us and push us over
be announced later.
our
goal by the end of the year,"
The general breakdown of the
Marlin said.

stX•th Grauers GtVe
• program
J

·

SYRACUSE
A
Thanksgiving program was
presented by the sixth grade
students when the Syracuse
PTA met in the school
auditorium November 9. A
report on the Meigs County
Council meeting was read by
the secretary, Janice Deem .
Plans were made to hold a
Children's Bazaar on December
3 and Mrs. Emogene Holstein,
Mrs . Judy Flagg, Mrs. Etta
Mae Norton, Mrs. Daisy Pat-

Nine .Members
Attend Meet

Nine members attended the
meeting of the Cradle To
College Mothers League Nov. 11
at the home of Mrs. Sharon
Saunders.
The door prize was won by
•
~--•••••••••••••••llllill!lll Mrs . Joan Pitchford. Members
di sc ussed money -making
projects and decided to help
someone for Christmas.
Craig Parker, a speech
500 E. Main St.
therapeutist, gave a talk on the
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992 -2174
problems of speech with
children. The next meeting will
SOME GREAT BUYS ON THESE DOUBLE
be with Mrs. Ruth Fuller Dec. 2.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.
CHECKED USED CARS.
ALL READY FOR WINTER.

1971 Electra 225 Limited, 4 dr. H. T. This ca r is
loaded with equip., sticker price was $7584.24.
You can own this luxurious auto.
$6295.
1970 Pontiac Catalina 2 Dr . H. T. This is a oneowner car, sharp red outside &amp; black vinyl
interior. We want to move this car so it 's on
Sale .
$2595
1969 Chevy , 112 Ton Pick. You better hurry &amp;
get this one -owner, V-8, long wheel base style
side. A real buy.
$2395
1967 Plymouth Fury Ill 2 dr . H. T., all while
with ivory interior. This is a local car. We can
refer you to the previous owner. Ha s P.S.,
P. B., aula .
$1295
1
1967 G.M.C. 12 Ton . This truck has only 41,781
miles on it . All blue , 6 cyl., standard trans.,
long wheel base, wide iide . A Great Buy . $1595
1966 Buick Wildcat 4 dr . sed., all white with
beige vinyl interior, auto .. P. S., P. B. A real
nice car for the model
·
$795
Come In &amp; See Bill Nelson, Ron Smith, Ceward
Ca !vert or Ed Bartles For All Your
Automotive Needs.

THREE INITIATED
Miss Naomi Jo Smith and two
other honor students were
initiated into Kappa Omicron
Phi, home economics honorary
society, this month. Miss Smith
is the daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Charles D. Smith, Wolfpen
Road, Pomeroy Route 4. She is
a graduate of Pomeroy High
School and will receive her
bachelor of science degree in
secondary educa lion , home
economics, from Concord
College, Athens , W. Va.
SPEAKING SUNDAY
Mrs . Leora Sigman, a
member of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, will speak on
WMPO Radio at 7:45 a.m .
Sunday on the church sponsored program entitled "Light
for Christ." Mrs. Sigman will
speak on her duties as secretary
to the Middleport mayor and on
her duties as editor of the
church's monthly newspaper
also called "Lights for Christ."

The

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL
SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.
OUR WORD IS OUR BOND

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.
500 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO PH. 992-2174

MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHill.
E x.ec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Pub l ished da i ly except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
P ubliShing Company, 1 11

Court

Great Cars -Great Buys

St .,

Pomer o y,

Ohio ,

45769 . Busines s Office Phone
992 -2156 , Editorial Phone 992
2157 '
Second cla ss poslage pa id at
Pomeroy, Oh 10 .
Nationa l a'dvertising
r epresentative
Bottin elli
Gallagher , Inc , 12 East 42nd
St , New York City , N ew York .
Subscript ion ral es · De l ivered by carrier w he re
avai lable so ce nts per week ;
By Motor Route where ca rrier
se rvic e not a11ailabte : One
month Sl.lS . B-,. mait in Ohio
and W Va ., One YE'ar S14 .00 .

Si x months $7 . 2.5 . Three
mont hs $4 .50 . Subscr iption
pri ce includes Sunday Times .
Sent inel.

69 Mustang 2 Dr. H.T., 6 cyl., 3 speed 11795
69 Ford XL Convertible, air ................ '1995
69 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, air............. '2995

.

69 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe, air .. •.. •.. ·.. 2495

•

68 Oldsmobile 88 4 Door ............... '1795

•

1

67 Chevelle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T. .......... 11395
67 Ponijac Catalina 4 Dr. Sedan, Air .... 11395
66 Olds 88 4 Door ............ , .......... '895
66 Mercury Sta. Wagon, V.S auto.......... 1795 ·
65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door
........ '795
65 Mercury Monterey 4 Dr., V.S auto... ;• '595
65 Mercury SlatKin Wagon, air ............ 1695
65 Pontiar 8onn. 2 ~r. H.T., air ......... .'795

'

!I

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
.Open Evenings Unti/8: 00-Ti/5 P.M. Sat .

••
t
I

I

I

'

"

Property

Flora Hayos, Harold Hayes,
Eva Hayes. Garold Hayes ,
Audra Hayes, Manda Easbnan:
Wilber Eastman, Pearl Hayes,
Grace
Hayes ,
Margery
Douglas, Harold · Douglas to
Kenneth Eugene Hayes, 71 1,
Acres, Meigs.
Excelsior Salt Works, [nc. to
Ohio
Power,
Ease.
Meigs.
Dale Connoll y, Donna Connolly to Norman Yeauger,
Dorothy Yeauger, 3.85 Acres,
Olive . .
Letha Cowen to Daniel B.
O'Dell, Parcel, Bedford.
[da M. Childs to Manning D.
Webster, Headley &amp; Russell Lot
No. 5, Middleport.
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
Webster to fda M. Childs,
Virgmia E. Scott, Headley &amp;
Russell Lot No. 5, Middleport.
Donald E. Myers, Pauline
Myers to William H. Reed, Alva
Lee Reed, Parcel Baum's Sub.
Div., Chester.
William E. Swalzel, Teresa C.
Swatzel to Emma L. Hoffner,
Albert V. Hoffner , Gerald H.
Hoffner, Lot, Pomeroy .
Maxine Rethlake to Rhoda R.
Hall, Lot No. 15, SalisburyMiddleport.
Dale M. Dutton, Margaret
Dutton to Citizens National
Bank, Lots, Middleport.

$10 Given for
Building Fund
A $10 contribution was made
to the Middleport firemen's
building fund when the Jolly
Bunch Sewing Club met Wednesday night at the home of
Mrs . Beatrice Robson. Cohostesses were Mrs. Evelyn
Grueser and Mrs. Mattie Bush.
Mrs. Nora Mills had charge of
the meeting and also conducted
the games with prizes going to
Mrs . Gertrude Miller, Mrs.
Edith Jividen, Mrs. Helen
Reyn olds and Mrs. Lillian
Smith. Jolly pal gifts were
dist•ibuted and members
displayed craft items.
Chrisbnas dinner plans were
discussed with an announ cement on time and
localion to be made later. At-

. '

Our

life

is

-1c
largely -ll

by

our..;:

thoughts. You wilt find i&lt;
that as you alter your.;:

il thoughts toward things i&lt;
.il and people, things · and il

ti&lt;

'l1ME FOR CHRISTMAs- FeatUred llpeBker at !be all·
day program was Miss Patsy L. Glass, area extension agent,
home economics, whose emphasis was on basic time
management principles for the remaining bect!c days before
Christmas. In her presentation, Miss Glass used a Christmas
tree sketch with Ups on time savers as the ornaments.

(Continued from page 1l.
peak at 3,000people in the fall of
heavy ones., letting each family 1973 and ·hold to that figure
member carry a fair share of about six months. Once the
the responsibility, distributing plant is completed, the public
work and recreation by doing affairs coordinator said, it will
what you like to do along with take about 22ii people to operate
what you have to do, and it.
Commenting on the deep
planning lime and energy
sav ing combinations of ac-. mine coal project, Reece adtivities where possible were milted that not·a lot is going on
among Miss Glass ' recom- there now, but promised that in
mendations .
the very near future things will
She spok~ of developing ef- get moying. He said that at the
ficienl methods of work which • m.me only between 150 and 200
may involve learning new persons ":ill bee~1ployed for the
skills, reducing the amount of construction phases but that
time to do a task, especially about 2,000 wtll be needed to
routine jobs, working al times operate the factlity. Aboul1,600
or least fatigue, deciding when of these 2,000 ~Ill be mvolved m
you are most productive and the actual mmmg of the. coal
doing as much as possible while the remal~mg 400 will be
during that lime, offering guards, adm1mstrattve peryourself an incentive, and using sonnel, and clerical workers.
"odds and ends" of time for
CHRISTMAS SPARKLE
"mini" jobs.
Seven lighted
holiday
In conclusion Miss Glass arrangements were displayed
emphasized
that
time by Miss Joanna Distler, home
management is strictly a "do it economist for the Columbus and
yourself job,"but that if time is Southern Ohio Electric Co.
managed wisely it can pay high
She explained how to make
dividends . She cautioned the attractive decorations all of
against fussing and fuming over which were lighted with
projects which couldn 't possibly miniature clear bulbs. While
repay an individual for the time her arrangements were made
devoted, and suggested trying with artificial g]lllerials, Miss
"no" to outside interests more Distler sugges~. that the "real
often during these final weeks thing" would be as effective and
before Christmas.
much less expensive.
Environmental Controls
Included in her program were
The Ohio Power Co.'s plan tips on arranging such as using
for environmental controls at heavy hairpins to secure acthe new Gen. James Gavin cessories and greenery to
Plant at Cheshire were outlined styrofoam frames , spraying
by John Reece, public affairs ribbon to secure a special color,
coordinator.
and using burned out ligbl
tation,
described
his
Using Reece
slides in
his presencompany's plan for holding
pollution of air, land and water
to a minimum. He showed
technical features or the Gavin
plant which supports the industry's approach to the
pollution .problem .
The landscaping and site
beautification at the plant were
noted by Reece who gave a
figure of $70,000 as the cost of
trees and shrubs. He displayed
a large map showing the landscaping plan for the facility,
and repeated the Ohio Power
Co.'s promise to fill and landscape the two large gravel pits
created.
Reece said there are about 600
people on the job at the Gavin
Plant generating a weekly
payroll of about $180,000.
Employment at the site will

bulbs, sprayed and glittered to
create attractive tree ornamenls.
Particularly attractive was a
lighted Madonna arrangement.
The Madonna figtire in a lamp
chimney was surrounded by a
blue-green garland on a circle
of styrofoam with miniature
clear lights placed at random at
the base.
0 the r a r r a n gem en t s
displayed included a Chrisbnas
CrabApple Centerpiece m pmks
and greens, a silver pear tree, a
basket of . oranges, , .an
arrangement m a watermg

people will alter toward:
you.
-Anonymous -j(

ti&lt; ,· **:* ....t
t... lfs Quick! Easy ....t
t DRIVE-IN t

:

:_..

BANKING -..

t

FridanOnly
:
il The Drive - In Windowi&lt;
:
is Open
:
i&lt;
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
o1&lt;
-ll
(Continuously l . :
:

01
. her Banking Hours 9 to 3.;:

«:and S to

7 as

i&lt; Fridays.

usual on+;

i&lt;

t FARMERS BANK t
t and SAVINGS oo::

:
i&lt;
i&lt;

POME-ROY, OHIO
Member FDIC

..fC
-j(

eserve ystem

MRember Fsederal

100 LBS.

SURE WIN
40% Hog Supplement
ANALTliiS
Crude Protein . . . Min.
Crude Fat . ..... Min.
Crude Fib'tr ..... M.x.

40.00%
2.50%
7.00%

INGREDIENTS
Wheat ·Middlings, Soy Bean Meal, Meat
and Bone Scraps, Alfalfa Meal, Calcium
Carbonate from Limestone, Salt, Di Calcium Phosphate, Dried Fermentation
Corn Extractives, Corn Distillers' Dried
Solubles, Corn Distillers Dried Grains,
Dried Streptomyces Fermentation Solu·
bles, Soybean Mill Feed, Riboflavin Supplement, Vitamin A Palmitate, Vitamin
D2 Supplement, Menadione Sodium BIsulfate, Vitamin B12 Supplement, Ethoxyquln and BHA and BHT (Preservatives)
Choline Chloride, Choline Pantothenate,
Niacin, Vitamin E Supplement, Manganous Oxide, Ferrous Carbonate, Cobalt
Carbonate, Copper Oxide, Calcium fC)date and Zlnc Oxide,

:
i&lt;

_ .;:

-tr:
•

**************~

~--••••••••••••••••. .

NOTICE
SQUARE DANCE
LEGION GROVE
1 Mile South of Wilkesville,on Rt. 124.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER .2().27
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4-11
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31
MUSIC BY GUY THOMA &amp; THE
OHIO RIVER BOYS

~~:;~mffl~

NBA Standings

NHL Standings

By United Press International

By United Press International

Eastern Conference
Altantic Oivisiopn
GB.
W. l . ct.
New York
Boston
ll 5 .688
Montreal
Philadelphia 9 7 .563 2
Boston
9 .471 31:'2
Buffalo
7 . 9 .43a 4
Central Division
W. L. Pet . GB
Baltimore
7 9 .438 ...

New York

8

Cincinnati

5

Atl~nta

9

4 11

Cleveland

East

w. L. T Pis
12 I 4 2a
12 2 4 2a
11 5 1 23

Detroit

5
5

10

Buffalo
Vancouver

4
5

10
13

7 17
3 13
5 . 13
3 13

L.

T. Pis

Toronto

West

w.

.357 1
.267

2112

4 12 .250 3

l4

4

Minnesota

12

4 2 26

Pitts.burgh

a 10
7 a

Midwest Division
Philadelph ia
W. l. Pet. GB California

Milwaukee

16

Chicago
Detroit

10 5 .667 5
a 9 .471 a

Phoenix

1 .941

7 10

.412

6

Chicago

Western Conference

.. .

6 10

St. Louis

4 10

o 28

2 18

2 16
3 15
3

9

Mohtrea'l 2 St . LOuis 2

1

·

Los Angeles

15 3 .a33 ...

· GoldenS tate

- Seallte

13
ll

6

.684 21/ 7

6 .647 3'12

Houston

3 16 .158121/2

Portland

2 13

Minn~sota 4 Pittsburgh 3

.(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games

.13311 112

Thursday's Resulls
Detroit 12a Phoenix 126
Golden State 115 Portland 105
I Only games scheduled)

(No games scheduled)

AHL Slandings

By United

Friday's Games

~ress

Boston

Buffalo at Balli mar~

Springf iel?
Nova Scot1a
Rochester
Providen ce

Clncinnali at Basion

Chicago at Philadelphia

Houston at Los Angeles

Milwaukee at Seattle

8
6

6
9

3
3

4

9

5 13

Hershey
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Balt im ote

7
5

4
7

6 20
5 15

4 10
4 12
NEW GOLF EVEI')T
Richmond
4 8 2 10
NEW YORK I UP! l -'The Tidewaler
3 12 3 9
Thursday's Results
$110,000 Dina Shore-Colgate
Scotia B Rochester 1
Winner's . Circle Tournament Nova
(Only game scheduled)
was added to the Ladies
. Friday's Games
Professional Golf Association Cincinnati at Cleveland
at Richmond
Circuit Thursday ·and immedi- Springfield
Providence at Rochester
ately became the richest event
(Only games scheduled I
on the tour. It will be played at
Palm Springs, Calif., next April
12-16.
Tbe 1971-7Z basketball
previews for Southern VaDey
Alhletfc Conference teams
JOE'S FIRST WORKOUT
wiD begin at 7· o'clock lonlght
NEW YORK (UP! ) -Joe at Kyger Creek, First
Namath worked out Thursday preview (two quarters) game
with the New York Jets' pits Hannan Trace against
offensive unit for the first time !be Meigs Resei:Ves. Second
since he injured his left knee tilt finds Southwestern batlast August but the longhaired Uing Eastern. Third tilt sends
quarterback said that he still Kyger Creek against Symmes
wasn't healthy enough to return Valley and the nightcaps
to action.
finds North Gallla taking on
"! certainly haven 't worked Southern.
enough to decide if I'm
Logan and Athens wiD also
healthy," said Namath . "Right conduct pre-season previews,
now I'm not."
beginning at 7 this evening.

STEVE AT NCAA
EUGENE, Ore. i UPl i Steve Prefontaine, the defend- Thursday's Fight Results
ing NCAA titleholder, will lead By Unlted Press International
the University of Oregon track STOCKTON, Calif. (UPl )team into the NCAA Cross Aiberty Reyes, 123~, the
Country Championships at Philippines, outpointed Jesus
Robles, 127, Mexico (10 ); Elisio
Knoxville, Tenn.
Estrada, 126, San Antonio, Tex.,
stopped Angel Arias, 1231'.. ,
Mexico 15).
34 MIDGET CARS RACE
NEW YORK !UP!) -ThirtyPORTLAND, Maine I UP!)four cars will compete in seven
races tonight at the Midget Chuck Wilburn, 138, Cleveland,
ChampiimshipAutomobile! aces stopped Azael Curet, 134,
Nashua ,N.H.( 4).
al Madison Square Garden-.

I

w. COMPTON. 0. D.
. OPTOM_ET_RI.ST

• Install it where the wnh lskitc:IMh, bath, nui'Mry • .. 1nywhtr11,
you can aet: ldequatt wlrina. plumb-

· . ~. ·~·.,igg~.

ina:•nd vantinl'.

• Wesher •nd dryer ttc11 do a ftm·
ily·slzt l01d at the ume time or in·

• ••••••• • •

dependently.

• 2·Spttd Wathtr. Rtlular plut
O.lic:.ete Mttinas for the fteltibllity 1

-8PECIAL-

famlty Wisher must have.

• Permanent ·Prtu Cue in both

67 Ford Mustang..........$1195

Washer and Dryer. ,
ModollC ·I

Fast Back, auto. trans .

---------------------71 Ford Pinto ....................... ..S1895

FURNITURE

Auto . trans ., radio, 7.000 miles, blue.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

69 MercuiJ Marque ................. $1995
2 Dr . H T., P.S., P. B.

68 MerCUIJ Monterey ............... s1395

Trust Your Home Heat To.

COLUMBUS (UP! l - Ohio
State football coaoh Woody
Hayes loses 20 players after
Saturday's game at Michigan .
That's the number of seniors
the Buckeyes have.
The team was to depart Columbus at 9 a.m. today for Ann

4 Dr ..

•

P.S., P. B.

68 MertUIJ ·Montego................ $1195
4 Dr., auto. trans .

67 Pontiac Tempest ................ s1195
Conv ., auto. t ra ns.

69 Chevrolet Pick-Up .............. }1595
Short Bed, 1!2 ton, clean, standard trans .

66 GMC Pick:UP ,.................. }1095
•11 Ton , long bed.

50 Ford Pick-Up .......................s250
112 Ton flat bed .

- Manufactured by -

67 Comet Villager Wagon

... ;. $1295

SUGAR RUN MILLS
992-2115

Pomercy

992-5186

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PT. PL'EASANT, W.VA •
.

.

-·--------...
-·------ 992-2039

llill_.

GENIE

edge over Philadelphia.
Atlanta is picked by eight
over Green Bay in the
nationally televised Monday
night encounter.
Miami is a three-point pick to
widen its American Conrerence
East lead to two games over
Baltimore, Kansas City is a two
-touchdown favorite over Denver, Cincinnati is picked by
eight over Houston , Cleveland
by 10 over New England, the
New York Jets by seven over
Buffalo and the raiders by !4
over San Diego .
Pittsburgh is picked by rour
over the New York Giants in
the only inter-conference game.
Detroit, coming off a tough 21
-13 loss to Los Angeles, will
throw the conference's best
r1..1ning attack against the
Bears, who rank a lowly lith in
defending against the rush.
Former Heisman Trophy
winner Steve Owens, now in his
Sophomore season , spearheads
the ground game. The ex-

GRASS SHEAR

AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR

;:~, 27!~4;9-;:;;:::::::

OPENER SYSTEM

9900

REG . 129 .95
l vtod i u Uu ll uu

in

r111J Gu rri u ~r , (J~

"r' Ul!l

l'J'

I:J w o rk

DI5S TON

BLACK &amp; DECKER
DELUXE SHRUB &amp; HEDGE
TRIMMER

Cordless Electric

UPRIGHT GRASS SHEAR
REG . 34.95

( H

1799

•a tOO

Ir

Make 49 payments, SOc
to $10.00 and we make
I he

50TH

• l'lol

,..,J,J•·

~;,.~~o.:

3249

e

e
rr ~!d

TEFLON-S
BLADES

•811 0
13" double edye blode, br
io sHH CJII•ng,
V/ru1- or r.;~r.o
1\undlt:.

wl "' " 11011

t l rdr·

BlACK &amp; DECKER
DELUXE LAWN
EDGER/TRIMMER
"8220

CH

SHEET

•

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

Bank .
_

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp . All
ac co unts i nsured up to

WITH
EACH
CAR PURCHASE
UNTIL THANKSGIVING

29¢

.f

520,000.00.

TURKEY

BANANA- SPICE Iii H 1:01

-- Beautify your home
with sus pend ed
. ceilings for as low os

Member Federal Home Loa n

12 INCH • 12 INCH PLAIN WHITE
IN CARTONS ON lY OF 114 TilES

Co~w~d 9~

PER SQ. FT.

FREEl

SWIRLS

STA-LlTE

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE

18~

21%~

EA.

~I ·!

~

EA.

'!f'·;"&lt;.

i'l'&gt;lf'.O 0'!!."
~ ~ . :.(1 .. ~;J ~x. -.:.u~ n.

'•

BULLETIN BOARD
PANELS

deluxe Lauan
Mahogany Shelves
JENCRAFT

J/ 4 INCH

68 CHEVROLET II
3 speed, red.

68 MERCURY PARKLANE
4 Or ., H.T., auto. tran s., P.S, P. B. , vinyl top , Split
Electric seat , air condition , maroon .

69 OLDSMOBILE 98
Loaded with extras, gold interior and ex ter ior

,...

lnsu lale s,
1/2" lhi do:

~oc r~ s

239

12.. .24 '

4 PANElS

Uf-' n u i~ ~:: . A full

BUllETIN BOARD
CORK

12'" . 24 "

REG
2..99

PKG.

PER PACKAGE

69 CADILLAC 4 DR.
H. T.. loaded w it_h all ex tras.

69 .CONTINENTAL
Mark Ill with all conti ne ntal extras .

71 MARK II

DESK/BOOKCASE

1497
IN (IN .

EASI LY

ASSEMBLED

241NCH
MEDICINE CABINET

•

J

1777 I:
WILliAM~

---

REGUlAR
36.95

"

• I

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

·

Chester, o,

1973,

.

.

,. •

'

\

:. dt&lt;llo;·~l&lt;o \lold lien tlt:~ign mok e~ lh,.
.'..,: r.t: l•o;•J lucc kit un co ~y blend lor

uny

Wllli .AM 5

rl~wr.

1• .

1

:

,.

.&gt;

Eosy to lnsloll Yourself

WA ll HAN G

• .'

2988
'.

. :·

'

•

•,

~ ~

l .

•

•'

I

' \' ;

'

'

· ••

''c . ' ',. ·.

,. ' ,..

. ·'·

_ '• ,_

. "I ii

Pre w t panels and mould

iqj~ lrll tund o rd f , ~t:t · f ou ll ub~.

--~-- ·-

I

SPACEMATE
MEDICINE CABI NET

UNDER CABINET LIGHT

Loaded with all continen tal ed ra s.

588

REG . 39.95

69 EL CAMINO
SWIM MEET AT BELGRADE
SINGAPORE (UP!) - Belgrade, Yugoslavia will be the
site of the first world swimming championships of the
llitetnatlonale de Nation Alna·
teur (FINAl, Aug. ZO-Sept. 2,

&lt;

• I

REG. 24.95

PRICE

IN CTN

DELUXE 5Ft. MELAMINE lit--e-:-,.....,_.,....,-,-{
TUB KIT
' '
.

AFCO

'
SAlE

27BB

YOURSELF
WITH JUST
A SCREWORIV ER

REG. 28.95

IN CIN .

68 CADILLAC 4 DR.
Deville, yellow with bla ck vinyl top , loaded with extras .

BOOKCASE/
CURIO CABINET

REG . 19.95

68 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

71 CADILLAC COUPE

PANElS
PER PACKAGE

RECORD CABINET

Loaded with extras , air cond i tioning , vinyl top. ster eo
tape. player buill in.

H. T., loaded with extra s.

4

MQDAR Walt Fumilure

70• MONTE CARLO

Caprice. J seater .

WAlN UT

.

H. T., V-8, auto., 302 engi ne, viny l top .

66 CHEVROLET WAGON

81NCH x 24 INCH

.·

... ,.

69 FORD XL 2 DR.

Auto., P.S .. P B.. vinyl top.

J(

NATURAl

70 PONTIAC 2 DR.
H .T., V-8. auto . tran s., P.S., P. B., viny l top .

UCH

Conwad 12" x 12" WASHABlE CEiliNG TILES

FROM THE TOWN WITH A HART!

V -8,

.-

BLADES

BLACK &amp; DECKER
SHRUB &amp; HEDGE TRIMMER

cd l Or

~.

THlON.S

IIi!! ~I! OH r ly nf

Electric

Cordless

Sp ider Conver.fiblc&gt; .

l.oca ted on s. Rt. 7

I

FLOWERS

CHRISTMAS

Louis is given a seven-point

70 FIAT 850

SEE: RAY RIGGS, AL ZEIGLER

"Service For Over 100 Years"

Oklahoma ace has gained 724
yards, second only to John
Brockington of Green Bay.
Allie Taylor, who ran for 101
yards against the Rams, ranks
sixth in the conference with 534
yards.
Quarterback Greg Landry
has added 344 yards rushing
and his 13 touchdown passes
lead the conference.
The Bears won, 28-23, on Oct.
24 in the first meeting of the
two clubs this year, as
Douglass passed ror two touchdowns and ran for another.

Trade Two

V-8, auto. trans .

180 Mulbeny

Staley and Ed O'Bradovich up
front, Doug Buffone and Lee
Roy Caffey flanking Butkus and
Charlie Ford, Phil Clark, Dick
Daniels and Joe Taylor in the
secondary - have held opponents to an average of 17 points
a game.
The contest is rated a pickem affair.
In other NFC action Sunday,
Dallas is a three-point favorite
over the Redskins in a battle
for leadership of the Eastern
Division; Minnesota is up by
seven over a Saints team that
has knocked off the Cowboys
and San Francisco and tied
Oakland in recent weeks ; the
Forty N'iners and Los Angeles
are rated even in a struggle for
dominance of the West and St.

Condors

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Condors traded
rookie Jim O'Brien to Kentucky
· and veteran Stew Johnson to
Carolina in separate deals for
Jim Ligon and Bob Verga, in
an attempt to bolster a defense
which gives up an average 126
points per ball game.
"Both Ligon an11 Verga are
physical ball players- they'll
make our defense that much
tougher," said Mark Binstecn,
Pittsburgh coach and general
manager.
Einstein said Ligon , a fouryear veteran 6-foot-7 forward
obtained from Kentucky "is
just what I need-a fellow who
can't shoot."
Verga, a 6-foot-one guard
obtained for Carolina, has twice
been an ABA All Star. But he
has played ror five teams and
he has a reputation for being a
gunner. Binstein said he was
unworried. "! ·have three
players who will kill him if he
doesn't give up the ball ."
O'Brien, averaging only 4.8
points per game, was touted as
the play-making guard Pittsburgh needed to control its
game, when tabbed third in the
rookie draft. Johnson, who set
the ABA scoring record of 62
points last season, had been a
Coodors' regular for two
seasons. The Condors have an
6-10 record and are 4-4 since
BJnstein look over the coaching
dulies.

ing career.

r·---:::::::::::::-:;::~=~------~~~~-

R ·e d Hot NFC Central
Race Resumes Sunday
By BOB D1 PIETRO
. UP! Sports Writer
An auto rental agency once
mounted its entire ad campaign
on the plight of being secondbest.
The Chicago Bears find
themselves in that bind .
They're second to Minnesota
in the National Conference
Central Division and they'll be
trying harder to at least
mainlain that position if they
fail to gain a tie with the
Vikings for the division lead:
Here's the situation : Chicago
(6-3), a game behind Minnesota
(7-2) hosts third place Detroit
(:&gt;-J.1) this Sunday, I! the Bears
win and Minnesota loses to
audacious New Orleans, a firstplace tie results. But if Chicago
loses, the Lions will vault into
second no matter what the
Vikings do. .
Chicago and Detroit are the
tough, physical ball clubs who
play the '·let's-grind-it-out-andhold-em" football so typical of
the division.
The Chicago "attack" usually
consists of a scrambling pass
by southpaw quarterback
Bobby Douglass to wide receiver Dick Gordon and a field goal
attempt by Mac Percival once
the Bears get anywhere inside
the 5().yard line.
Percival kicked three field
goals last week in the Bears· 16
-15 victory over Washington, a
game consisting of eight field
goals and a frarltic conversion
pass from Douglass to Dick
Butkus.
It's the Chicago defense,
sparked by Butkus at middle
linebacker , that has been the
key to the team's surprising
showing so far this season.
The veteran crew-with Willie
Holman, George Seals, Bill

their third straight, the first
tinie that · has happened to
Ha yes in the last 25 years,
which covers his college coach-

ka, Dick Wakefield, Jimmie . - - - - - - - - - . ,
Lee Harris and Fred Schram.
De Leone , All-American center
·•
candidate injur&lt;;Sf against
For All Occasions
Northwestern las t weekend, will
not see action in his rinal colWe wire flow~rs
Everywhere
lege career game .
[f the Wolverines of Michigan
should win the game it would
mark their first perfect season
since 1948. Two years ago they
Pomeroy Flower Shop
delivered a stunning upset, 2412, on the top-ranked Bucks in
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
the season finale .
A Buckeye loss would be .__ _ _ _ _ _ _

a good week .'" Hayes said aftArbor, where Hayes planned to .and a bid to the Rose Bowl.
put them through their paces
Hayes says the Buckeyes, 6-3, er the final tuneup he re Thursat Michigan Stadium "if it are "reasonably up" for the day .
After Saturday, no matter
isn't raining .n
game against their arch-rival ,
what
the outcome , Hayes will
Most observers have wril.ten one that traditionally closes
most likely start looking toward
off Ohio Stale for the game aft- both the teams' seasons.
er looking at Michigan, 10.0,
"We've had a good week of 1972. He is losing the bulwark
assured of the Big Ten title
work, both offense and &lt;!efense,

Players

(Only 2 feet wide)

BAKER

19

15

West
W. L. T. Pis
tO 2 3 23

Cleveland at Portland

!Only games sc heduled)

International

W. L. T. Pis
12 I 2 26
8 3 4 20

of his .team to graduation .
Those seniors include c6-captains Tom DeLeone and Harry
Howard, Tom Campana, Stan
Whi te, Ken Luttner, Don Lam-

20.Buckeye SeniorS To
End Careers At Michigan

Philadelphia 2 Los Angeles 0

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

Fri_gidaire
Sk1nny Mini.
Fits almost
anywhere.

11

Los Angeles
3 15 1 7
" Thursday's Results

Pacific Division
· Boston S Vancouver 0
W. L. Pet. GB California 7 Buffalo 5

~------------------------------.

tending besides those named
were Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan,
Mrs. Freda Mitch, Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Alma Miller, Mrs.
Jane Gilkey, Mrs. Grace
Johnson, Mrs. Betty Cline, and
Mrs. Mae Weber,

. .1

8

......~

wn

-j(

For Today

determined

Home is for Happiness

Transfers

NET WEIGHT

71 Ford LTD 4 Door H.T., air ........... '3795

••

Meigs

•**************'
A Thought t

LIVndfJ CH1tr

USED CARS

I•

terson and Larry Wolfe were
named to lhe organmng
commtltee.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Momson
of Vere-Smith Audio Visual .
Inc., demonstrated equipment
designed to help pupils develop
read ing skills. The guest
speaker at the December
meeting will be Mrs. Leah Ord,
gmdance counselor or Southern
Local High School. Refreshments w11l be served by the
fourth grade mothers.

-I

•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O. ,Nov.. 19, 1971

REG. 7.49

Perl eel lor kitchen, den, or ch ll·
HOU5E ·O .U:E

d r en'; room. ·

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
Department Stote of Buillling Since 1VlS
I

�,-

4- The !:lailySentinel, MiddlepJrt-Pomi'!'Oy, 0 ., Nov : 19,1971

\

Program at GSI.

Cubs Rehire
Leo Durocher
CHICAGO I UPI) -Leo .' ·The
Up" Durocher hardly said a
word to quelch the din of
speculators who predicted a
dark future for him, but the
doughty Cubs manager wound
up sitting in the catbird seat
anyway .
The 65-year-old Lip, whose
major league career stretches
back in '1928, was signed
Thursday to manage the Cubs
again in 1972, much to the
surprise of many a sports·
writer, and doubtless to the
chagrin of not a few of his
player.
The Cubs made the announcement a few hours after
Durocher had huddled with club
owner Philip K. Wrigley and
Vice President John Holland .
Wrigley, the 76-year-old chewing gum magnate, has made no
secret. of his contempt for
Durocher's critics, and he
became so incensed over the
an ti-Durocher rumors last sum·
mer he took out a generous
amount of paid advertising
space in Chicago newspapers to
point out Durocher was still his
man.
He also reminded the public
1and the press ) that Durocher

Team
Spenr::er 's Markel

Newell Sunoco

HOSPITAL
NEWS

·The Next
Time You Buy
A Pair
Of Shoesl

Christmas
Program
Books and
Plays

Local Bowling
Tuesday Industrial League
Team
Burton Sunoco

·

Coca Cola

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

W. L.
60 20
56 24
42 Ja

Penn Cen tral

Mason Ag

38

42
32 40

New Ha ven Fur n i ture
Caro lina Lumber

0 t6

Team J games - Burton
Sunoco 2728 ; Coca Cola 2578 .

'

Team game 944 ;

CROW'S

Bur ton Sunoco

Burton Su noco

894.

Ind . 3 games - C. Gibbs 642 ;
D. Miller 599 .
Ind. game - C. Gibbs 229 ; D. .

Mille~,!:~~orkers

League
Nov . 10, 1971

STEAK
HOUSE

Pis.
62

Team

Rejects
Ferros

57

54
52
50
34
22
13
Rejects

Wonders
Foote Heels

•

Nut s &amp; Bolts

Stingers

Home of

Skips
Wheels

Team 3 games -

2724 ; Wonders 2665.
Team game - Rejects 926 ;
Re jects 909 .
Ind . 3 games - R. Sines 588 ;
G. Roush 578.
Ind . ga me - R. Si nes 223 ; R.
Sines 212 .

the Fabulous

Kyger Creek League

Nov .

SANDWICH

48
46

Tax Workshop
On December 2

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave . and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m . Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J.
McDaniel, Leon , W.Va., a son.
Discharges
Daniel B. Bales, Eddie
Bolling, Mrs . .. Wayne Brown,
Emory Bunch , Guy Campbell,
Sr., Merch Clark, Mrs . Nora
Cremeens, Thomas Gooldin,
Clifford HaU, Perry Hall, Archie Hutchinson , Albert Kuhn,
Mrs . Marcella Leach, Mrs.
Howard Markel, Ernie McCoy,
Mrs. Kirby Oiler, Jr ., Ancil
Prunty, Lige Shields, Mrs .
Nellie Sifrit, Mrs. Martin
Stanley, Mrs . Iva Stewart,
Burnace Stout, Sr., Amos
Waugh, OtiS Young, Sr., Connie
Zeoli, Harold Priest Ill, Mrs.
Ruth Thompson and Mrs .
James Reynolds.

KIPS

10m Boy

Pis .

Excelsior Oil Co .
43
Domigan Sohio
J6
Gibbs Grocery
35
had brought the Cubs into first- G.
&amp; J. Auto Parts
32
division contention since he
High Team 3 Games
Newell Sunoco 2201 ; Domigan
became manager in 1965.
The Cubs' announcement Sohio 2135 ; Gib bs Grocery 2069.
High Team game - Newell
Thursday carried through the Sunoco 757 ; New ell's &amp;
Domigan 's 745 ; Gibbs Grocery
theme :
"For Durocher, this will be 735.
High Ind. 3 Games - Janet'
his seventh year as field Duffy 425 ; Sandy Korn 418;
manager of the Cubs. With the Donna Koehler 415.
High Ind . Game - Donna
exception of the rebuilding year
Koehler 179 ; Sandy Korn 171 ;
of 1966, the Cubs have compiled Janet Duffy 168.
a record of 430 wins against 379
MASON BOWLING
losses, or 51 games over .500
under Leo's direction," it said.
Tuesay Women's League
But that record did not satisfy Team
w. L.
62 18
Durocher's critics, who wanted f!J\ason Furni ture
Hai r Harbour
60 20
to see the Cubs win a pennant M &amp; R Foodliner
51 29
or even a divisional title in Hart 's Used Cars
50 30
36 44
1971. They predicted Whitey Roush Constru ction
Tom
Rue
Motors
30 50
Lockman , Cubs director of Team No.5
19 61
player develop ment, would take Ingels Furnitu re
12 68
Tearn 3 · games
Mason
Leo's job, and some of
Durocher's players sniped at
him openly .

TRY

4,

Team
A.shitt
C.shift
timber Splitters
Odd Ba ll s
Slruggters
Rejects
D. Main I.
. B.shilt
,

1971

Team 3 games -

W. L.
54 18
40 32
38 34
J6 36
32 40
32 40
30 42
26 J6

Odd Balls

Meigs County farmers are
invited to participate in the
Farm Income Tax Workshop
Dec, 2 and 9 at the Tri.County
Vocation High School at
Nelsonville . It will bring the
new tax changes for 1971 and
update tax management.
Cooperating in the instruction
are Don Young , Hocking County
Agricultural Ager.t and Ken
Ackerman, Athens County
Agricultural
Agent.
No
reservation is necessary for this
workshop according to C. E.
Blakeslee, county extension
agent.
To be covered on December 2
are Farm Tax Management
Pointers, New Tax Changes for
1971, Review of Tax Form
1040F, Depreciation Deductions, Methods of Computing
Depreciation, Limitations ,
Recapture and Investment
Credit, and a question and
answer period .
The schedule lor December 9
includes Capital Gains Rules on
Livestock Sales, Farm Sales,
Installment Sales, Cost Basis
lor Gifts, Inheritance , and
Trades. Property, Operating
Loss Carry Back and Carry
Over, Income Averaging, New
Personal Exemptions, Itemized
Deductions, Low-Income Tax
Breaks, and Student Deduction .
Copies of the program can be
secured from the Meigs County
Extension Office. Meeting time
is 7:30p.m.

The Suns, expected to battle
By United Press International see~;I~s to have fallen in on the
for the runnerup slot behind
All of a sudden the roof Phoenix Suns .
Milwaukee in the NBA's rugged
Midwest Division, suddenly
have fallen upon' hard times.
Wednesday Late
BROCKINGTON
TOPS
They
suffered their third loss in
EYES SUPER YEAR .,
Mixed League
Team
W. L.
NEW YORK (UPI ) - John as many nights Thursday night
Try Hards
48
24
Tl
UPI
Tw
Brockington
has taken over the when Bob Lanier and Jimmy
Pir, Spotters
l o42 30 CINCINNA (
H&amp;H
41 l1 time National League batting rushing lead in the NFL Walker combined for 66 points
Alley Gators
40 32 champion Pete Rose, who did National Conference, gaining to lead Detroit to a 128-126
Smith &amp; Roush
36 36 not have a spectacular season 751 yards in 137 carries.
victory and the Suns now find
Shamrocks
25 43
Brockington, the No. I draft themselves in last place.
Wooties
28 44 last year, signed his 1972 conLanier hit for 37 and Walker
Son·O-Gun s
24 48 tract with the Cincinnati Reds choice of the Green Bay
Team3games - AIIey Gato rs- Thursday and said he will get Packers from Ohio Stale, has added 29 as the Pistons
1963; Try Hards 1914.
,
Team game - Try Hards 724; ready now for one super averaged 5.5 yards Pjlr carry snapped a three-game losing
and two touchdowns per game. spin of their own. The Pistons
Alley Gators 688.
year."
Ind . 3 games - Men , C.
Cincinnati Bengals quar· took a 127-124 lead on Curtis
Yeager 623 ; Women - J. Wh ite Rose reportedly signed for a terback Virgil Carter is third in Rowe's basket and Phoenix cut
473. Men·-:- w. King 557 ; Women salar)' in the neighborhood of passing in the NFL American that to one point on a field goal
- N. Sm1lh 452 .
Ind . game - Men. c. Yeager $100,000-plus, the third year he Conference with 70 completions by Clem Haskins. Howard
268 ; Women , N. Smith 188; Me n, has commanded such a sum . in 121 attempts for 906 yards Komives dropped in a foul shot
W. King. 208 ; Women . J. White
and five touchdowns.
for Detroit's final point and
179.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) Unless the Southwest Conference football race turns topsyturvy, Arkansas will be one of
the learns in the Liberty Bowl
Dec. 20th.
"We are proud to announce
that the University of Arkansas
has agreed to be one or the
participating teams in the 13th
annual Liberty · Bowl provided
they do not go to the Cotton
Bowl," Liberty Bowl Executive
Director A. F. 1Bud ) Dudley
said Thursday .
The only way for Arkansas (7
-2-1) to wind up in Dallas on
- ---------

SP4 Moratity 's
Furlough Ends
SYRACUSE A preThanksgiving dinner was held
Sunday, Nov. 7, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Dick 'Harris
honormg SP-4 Marty L.
Morarity who was home on a 30day furlough from Schweinfurt,
Cermany ·
Enjoying the day were Mrs .
Marty Morarity of Pataskala :
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Morarity •
Marcy Jo and Terry Lee of
Groveport; Connie Morarity
and Bob Hansford of Columbus;
Mrs. Oma Truex and Mr . Earl
Morris, of Marietta : Mr s.
Pauline Morarity, local ; the
honored gues t and the host and
hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Harris .
SP-4 Moranty returns to
Germany today .

A family potluck dinner and
stewardship program were held
Sunday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy. Following
the dinner, Robert Elberfeld,
director of the activities ,
welcomed the members and
friends of St. Paul Lutheran
Church.
Included in the program was
a talk by Charles Evans on
"What My Church Means To
Me," followed by the senior
choir singing, "Jericho Road "
and the Sunday School children,
nursery through fourth grade,
singing "Into My Heart" and

"Jesus Loves Me ."

Jeff Ridgway, representing
youths of the church, gave a
brief talk on "What My Church
Means To Me." Mrs. Corrine
Lund covered the topic of
"Giving to the Church." The
Youth Singers sang " Hey
Jude ," 14 Love Story,n and
"Never Ending Love."
Richard Jones reported on the
proposed church budger for
1972. After a skit about
"Giving" was performed by
Lois Clelland, Rachael Downie,
Corrine Lund, Helen Holt, and
Donna Jones, the Stewardship
Program ended with more
group singing.

Saturday Festival is Ready

. 2599 ; Odd Balls 2550 .
Team game - Odd Ball s 936 ;
Odd Balls 922 .
lnd 3 games - G. Shrimptin
, 643 ; R. Jewell and R. Cremeans

WATER HEA'i ER

Mrs. Margie Graf, speech and
hearing therapist, was inlloduced to the parents. Room
visitation was held . Mrs. Ed
Kennedy presided at the
meeting . Refreshments were
served at the conclusion of the
meeting by Mrs. William Witte,
Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs .
Kennedy, Mrs. John Blake,
Mrs. Vernon Blevins, Mrs .
Robert Chaney, Mrs. Ronald
Browning, Mrs. Oscar Smith,.
Mrs. James Bearhs, Mrs. Uoyd
Haggy, Mrs. Hershel McClure,
Mrs. Norman Hysell, and John
Arnott.

New Year's Day would be for
heavily-favored Texas to lose to
Texas A&amp;M this Saturday while
Arkansas defeats Texas Tech at
Fayetteville as expected.
The Razorbacks were heavily
favored to go to the Cotton
Bowl after trouncing Texas 31-7
at mid-season, but an upset 2424 tie with Rice two weeks ago
put Texas bsck in the driver's
seat in the Southwest Conference.
Arkansas has beaten California, Oklahoma State, TCU,
Baylor, Texas and North Texas
State this season. But a 21-20
upset loss to Tulsa and a 17-9
defeat by Texas A&amp;M has all

but extinguished the Razorback
hope of winning the conference
title.
An opponent has not yet been
named for the Razorbacks, but
Mississippi , North Carolina and
Tennessee are in the running,
with Tennessee reportedly on
. the inside track .
The announcement of the
Arkansas acceptance was made
under an NCAA rule whi ch
permits a team to accept a
bowl bid on the third Saturday
in November or one week prior
to it;; final game - whichever
comes first. The Texas Tech
ga me will finis h the regular
season for Arkansas.

Connie Hawkins' shot at the
buzzer just missed.
Neal Walk led the Suns with
30 points and Haskins added 28.
In the only other NBA game,
Cazzie Russell scored 29 points
and Jell Mullins added · 25 as
the Golden State Warriors beat
the Portla!ld Trail Blazers 115105. Sidney Wicks led Portland
with 29 points.
LIVING M~/fl)f'f(.••
TRI~ ...

t;fl ~N. DURING

/he l1lii7UII1l6llt

Distinction

Legar Monument

Arkansas Headed For Liberty Bowl

Dinner Pro6aram Eni01Jed
J J

Final plans for the fall
festival to be held Saturday
night at 6:30 at the Salisbury
992-5432
599.
Elementary School were made
during
the Tuesday night
Ind. game243.
- G. Mitch 245 ; R.
r- : : : : : : ; ; : : ; ; ; ; : Cremeans
meeting of the Salisbury PTA.
Members willing to help with
the festival are to be at the
school at 12:30 p.m. There will
be no PTA meeting in
December and a family potluck
was planned for January.
Mrs. James Will, kitchen
chairman, thanked those who
helped with the Soil Conservation and Farm Bureau
dinners. Named to a project
committee were Mrs . Ned
Swindell,
Mrs .
William
Wickline, Mr. and Mrs . Ronald
Handy tabletop
Browning, Mrs. Will, and
design adds
Herschel McClure .
convenience
to this
heater.
Can be
placed in
Order By Phone
And Toke Em Home

·5.- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 19, 1971

992·5314

Pomeroy

FAMOUS
BRAND

World's Toughest Pants
Denims with Regular, Super Slims and Flair Legs
- Permanent Press

Articles made by the Division
of the Services of the Blind to be
sold by the Middleport Literary
Club were displayed at the
Wednesday meeting·held at the
home of Mrs . M. L. French.
The program centered on the
life and works of Willa Cather
with Mrs . Richard Owe~
reviewing "Willa Cather- Her
Life and Art " by James
Woodruss, and Mrs. Nan Moore
reviewing Willa Cather's book,
" My Antonia ."
Mrs . Owen told of the
numerous novels short stories
and plays writ'ten by Mis;
Cather who at one time worked
as a newspaper reporter and a
drama critic, and taught high
school in Pittsburgh, Pa. "My
Antonia" reviewed by Mrs.
Moore was the story or a young

Tapered and Flared legs

man living with his grandparents in Nebraska and his
relationship to a poor Bohemian
girl.
Members responded to roll
call with a comment on Miss
Cather 's life . Mrs . Donald
Stivers was a guest. Candy was
served.

~----------------------·

!BAHR CLOTHIERS l
I
I

Middleport, 0.

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

MOTOROLA
FM-AM Per so nal Portable .. . Powerf ul
FM-AM solid stat e cha ss is . Grea t sen

si l ivily from tuned RF stag e on FM . 3
stage tran sistoriz ed audio system . verni er
luning , telescopi c F M ant enna . Au tom ati c

Circle Meets
The White House Conference
on Aging to be held in
Washington, D. C., Nov. 28-Dec.
3 was discussed by Mrs. Vilma
Pikkoja, guest speaker at a
meeting of the Lydia Circle of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church Wednesday night.
Mrs. Pikkoja noted that she is
the only local representative
and the only librarian in Ohio
chosen to serve on the state
delegation . She said the emphasis of the conference will be
on what the aged need, how they
can be helped , and the financial
assistance available.
Mrs. William llaronick
presided at the meeting with
each member and guest inlloducing herself. Plans were
made to join the Women's
Society of Christian Service for
a Chr istmas potluck in
December. Miss Myrtis Kay
Parker and Mrs. Roy Reuter
served a salad course from a
table decorated in the
Thanksgiving motif.

Frequency Control on F M. Pu sh-pull audio
sys tem . FM AM log sca le. Rugged Texan
case . 3" x 4 J ~" Golden Voice speak er .
Operate s on 4 Jl ?- vol t " ( " cell s or AC
house cu rr ent (batt er ies not included ) .
Si ze SJ./' wide . 61 / ' high, 31 , .. deep .

TP55 FE . Black .

arrangement base to complete
the Thanksgiving arrangement.
Then pine cone trees topped
with a Christmas bauble were
made to be used later. A
" match the flower " identification game was played with
each member receiving a gift of
jewelry as her prize.
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Region II
director, thanked the dub for
attending the fall regional
meeting held at Gallipolis on
October 30. She presented each
of the members with garden
calendars on behalf of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs.
Mrs . Howard Birchfield,
chairman of the refreslmient
committee presided at the.table
which was centered by a
Thanksgiving arran@ement of
mums and leatherleaf fern in a
turkey container. Salad, made
by Mrs. Tom Stewart, crackers,
mints, and a drink were served.
Napkins carrying out the
Thanksgiving theme were used.
The floral arrangement had
been made by Mrs. William
Willford . It was noted that the
first Thanksgiving was a
festiva l thanking God for the
bountiful harvest of crops, and
that we as garden club members should not only thankful for
the many foods provided us but
also for the hundreds of flowers
we are able to use and enjoy in
our gardening work.
A poem, "Thanksgiving" by
Willard G. Seaman was read,
and the grace for Thanksgiving
Day by Alice Kennelly Roberts
was given prior to serving of
refreshments, to 20 members of
the Nature's Garden Club.

Committees were also appointed for remembering the
shut-ins at Christmas. Roundrobin cards were signed by the
members present for a number
of members and friends who are
ill and hospitalized.
The meeting closed with tha
song "God Will Take Care of
You." The home of Mrs .
Yeauger was decorated with
arrangements of fall flowers,
fruit and candles in traditional
Thanksgiving
manner .
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses to those mentioned above and Mrs. Vernon
Nease, Mrs. John Scott, Mrs.
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mrs . Denver Holter, Mrs .
Forrest Donley, Mrs . Lela
Curtis and one guest, Sandra
Lee Curtiss.

FRIDAY
Salisbury Elementary School
DANCE , 9 till midnight, by PTA, 6:30 to 9:30p .m. Door
Friday, Wahama High School prizes, games, bazaar, country
auditorium following alumni store, refre shmen t. Public
basketball game . School invited .
sponsored, Jays 'ernceeing, 75 BAKE SALE and Christmas
cents admission.
bazaar, beginning, 10 a.m .
REVIVAL through Sunday, Saturday at Simpson building
Salvation Army, Butternut next to Club "Restaurant by
Ave., Pomeroy, 7:30 each Racine Fire Department
evening, Dorothy Overton, Auxiliary .
evangelist, special singing.
TURKEY SUPPER,
BAZAAR AND bake sale, Saturday, starting 4 p.m. at
Friday, beginning 9:30a.m. by Tuppers Plains Grade School by
Loyal Women's Class, Mid- Tuppers Plains Community
dleport Church of Christ, at Club. Turkey and "trimmings,"
Dudley's Florist, North Second adults, $1.50; children, 75c.
Ave.
SUNDAY
PAST
MATRONS, COUNTY PRAYER service, 2
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order p.m. Sunday at Hobson Church
of the Eastern Star will meet at
of Christ in Christian Union .
the home of Mrs. James
Leader Okey Ahart welcomes
Buchanan at 7:30 p.m . Friday
public .
night. Mrs. Marie Hawkins will
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
be co-hostess for the meeting.
Royal Arch Masons, religious
RACINE
GRANGE affirmation day, Sunday at
Thanksgiving dinner, 6:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All
Friday, home of Mr. and Mrs. Masons, members of OES,
Earl Cross. Take own l&lt;lble Bethel of Job's Daughters, and
sefvice, articles for pig in Order of DeMolay , Middleport,
poke" auction and gifts for invited . Paul M. Darnell,
Southeastern Ohio Mental master of ceremonies; Jesse E.
Health Center, Athens .
Brinker, high priest of chapter,
BAZAAR Friday, Trinity and officers and wives in charge
Church, Pomeroy, starting with of p1·ogram.
lunch at 11 a.m. Needlework,
HYMN SING, Sunday, I :30
craft items and baked goods for p.m., Sliversville Community
sale.
Church. Special singers, Jimmy
WEEKEND revival, Chester Gavett, Dennis Manuel, Duane
Church of God, 7 p.m. each Wolfe. All singers welcome .
evening with Evangelist Bobby Public invited.
Porter, Oak Hill, special singing
every night. Public invited .
SATURDAY
PLATE DINNER, Saturday,
beginning il:30 a.m. at meeting
headquarters
of
LadiesTHE
Auxiliary, Syracuse Fire
Department, Municipal Park,
Syracuse . Also Christmas
bazaar table, country store,
bake sale and homemade
candy.
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM , 7:30
p.m. Saturday . Two · Master
Masons degrees to be given . All
Master Masons invited .
FALL
FESTIVAL
at

the compact

DEPOSIT AT MY IIIIWOIJ

GIFT·A·RAMA
$101£

NAME _____________________
ADDUIS ___

_ _ __ __

Werner Radio &amp; TV
Middleport, 0.

•104
lo Valley
Plumbing &amp; Heating
.232 E. 2nd

:;'h. 992-2036

Pomero

McCLURE'S
4th &amp; Locust

992 ·5248

Middlepllrt, o.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

Many Special Thanks

.. II ~:

( ""'

Willis Frost
Clerk of Chester Township
Pd . Pol. Adv .

THINK ABOUT YOU.
vvethink
you
to

•
r1ve

~

Everybod.y

•,
"

a car
before
you buy it!

!::::::::::::::
Likes Jt

I Would like To Say THANKS

For Their Support

Edna Swick
Township Clerk
Pd . Pol. Adv .

YOU ARE INVITED

t~st-drive

POLARA!

When you take Polara on the road, you'll find out
what .. the ride with quiet inside .. is all about
Pol~ra ·s Torsion -Quiet Ride isolates you from
road and engine noises. It also gives Polara those
great handling characteristics. What's more. our
big, strong Polara has been compleWIY restyled
this year to give you a fresh choice in the big -car."
field. So test-drive a new 1972 Dodge Polara.
You'll be impressed .

test-drive
CHARGER!

test-drive
CORONET!

test-drive
DART DEMON

With last year's Charger sales up 75
percent, you know that a lot of peopl!?
think Charger is the car for them. Most
people are initially attracted to Chargers
great·looking shape. But when you take
a new Charger for a test drive, you'll
discover other reasons for Chargers
success. Like the real family-sized room
of Charger. If you want a real family
sports car-get a '72 Charger. Take one
for a test drive soon!

Bring you r whole fami ly down to th e
showroom and check out the real con venience of Coronet's four big doors .
Easy in . Easy out. On those lon g vaca lions, the kids won't be craw ltng over
you every time you stop. And your w1fe
will like Coronet's nelt.( styling . So before
you buy your family a new car. bring
them all down to your local Dodge Bqy's.
And take a ride in the new 1972 Dodge
Coronet .

See fo r yourself how our lowest' priced
Dart proves th at an economy car doesn't
have to be a li ttle car. Dart Demon has a
ve, 1• compact ,')nce. yet offers more room
th an 1ioc new mini ·ca rs. It seats five com lortably, l1 a' a b1g 15.9 cubic -foot trunk,
and Six or VB power Size up Dart Demon
yoursel f.

CHRISTMAS
WONDERLAND
SATURDAY&amp;SUNDAY - NOV. 20-21

~~~HMENTI - DOORP~Z~ \
See the most interesting and complete
of
candles,
I ights,
selection
wall
and
table
arrangements,
decorations, make-up material, and
artificial trees.
Balled and Burlapped Trees to plant outside
after Christmas. We will tag your seltction
for delivery later.
'

CITY ICE &amp;-FUEL·CO.
POINT PLEASANT, .W.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

9~
Open 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
4 miles west of Gallipolis

..

To The Voters of Chesler Township for
Re-electing Me as Clerk

THANKS

SONNY'S

As low As

(Upon Request)

, __________

DANCE SATURDAY
The Shade River Belles and
Beaus will hold an open square
dance at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov.
'll, at Royal Oak Park's archery
building . All visitors are
welcome to attend as spectators. The regular club dance
on Thursday, Nov . 25, will be
cancelled due to Thanksgiving.

Desi gned or igina ll y for the
moth er at three lolii ng
daughter s. The Moth er 's
Ring wa s sub.s equently
made ava ilable. at her
r cques L to the mothers · of
Amer i(a . . who gathered
it to t he ir heart s.
Tw in bands of 14 kara t
gold s1gnifying mother and
f at he r ar e ioine d by
• lustr ous syntheti c stones
mark ing the bi rth of each
chil d.
~
Ins is t
on
the
true
ori g in a l- T he Mother ' s
Ring by Guert in Brothers .

LARDNER USGA CHIEF
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
United States Golf Association
nominated Lynford Lardner, Jr.
of Milwaukee to the post or
Pomeroy
president succeeding Philip H. 1tt E. 2nd
~hGne 992 -5428
Strubing of Philadelphia, who
served two one-year te rms.
.__,..._ _ _ _ _ _..

TAST.ES SO
GOOD

To The Annual Opening Of

Hey, Gangl

FOR
COOL REFRESHMENTS

2-HOUR
CLEANING

DODGE

TEL. NO. - - - - -- - - - - - -

SEE YOU AT

design.
30·40·50
gallon sizes.
s.vear
Warranty.

A Vietnam veteran at the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital
· will be remembered with il gift
eac h month by the Pa st
Presidents of the American
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39.
Meeting Wednesday night at
the home of Mrs. Olin Knapp,
Gallipolis, the group voted to
begin this month remembering
the young man. For several
years they have sent gifts each
month to a retired nurse, Miss
Constance Thom , at Miller
Cottage in Dayton .
Christmas party plans were
made with a dinner to be held at
the home of Mrs. &gt;l(e n Neutzling

14

utility area ...
lines malch
your washer
1nd dryer

.I

To The Voters of Rutland Township

The flag ceremony to open the
meeting was by members of
Brownie Troop 220. Devotions
were given by McClure.

basement or

I
1

The WSCS of the Forest Run
United Methodist Church met at
the home of Mrs . Alfred
Yeauger Wednesday evening
with Mrs . Harry Wyatt as cohostess .
The meeting opened with a
song, "Count Your Blessings"
by the group, followed by a
prayer of Thanksgiving .
Devotions entitled "Blessed are
those who give without
remembering and receive
without forg etting" were
presented by Mrs. Russ Watson .
The program, in charge of Mrs.
Edison Hollon, was in keeping
with the Thanksgiving season,
each member having an article
pertainingtoThanksgiving. The
leaderalsohadaBiblequizwith
answers to questions starting
with the letter "T."
Each member present answered the roll call with a Bible
verse containing the word
"Thanks" as they paid their
love-offering. It was decided to
have a potluck dinner at !he
churc h for the December
meeting with each member
bringing a gift for e&lt;change.

·Monihly Gift Made

~~'M4'04'04o&lt;il'1,q,_,q,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~

WSCS ·Group Meets

Mr. levi's: Permanent Press Slacks,

Life of Willa Cather Reviewed

"Thanksgiving Will Soon Be
Here" was the theme of the
therapy program presented by
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners for a meeting of the
Nature Garden Club or the
Gallipolis State Institute
Tuesday.
Mrs. Homer Parker planned
the program with assistance in
presenting it from Mrs. Joe
Bolin, Mrs. Howard Birchfield
and Mrs. William Willford.
Mrs. Donald Galloway of the
Gallipolis Garden Club, Mrs.
Garnet Wood of the . occupational therapy serivce of
the GSI, and Mrs. Gomer
Phillips, Region II garden
· therapy chairman were in attendance.
Members wore name tags
with pictures of pilgrims, Indians, harvest baskets, cornucopia, Mayfair ship and
turkeys for identification. Each
member made a floral
arrangement with a pine cone
turkey as an accessory to carry
out the Thanksgiving theme.
Pine cone trees were also made,
so that after the upcoming
holiday, the turkey could be
removed and the tree added to
convert it to a Christmas
arrangement. Styrofoam bases
were used and the line material
added and the flowers arranged
to complete the floral piece.
Next, a pipe cleaner was wound
about a pine cone (that still had
· a portion of the stem left to
represent the turkey's head ) to
form legs. Then a tail of dried
celosia 1cockscomb) was added
and the turkey's head was
painted yellow. These were
placed onto the flower

Social Calendar

~

fvr Medl lalton'' as her topic. A served to those named and Mrs.
poe m · " For Gr owing Old Owen Watson, Mrs. Ernest
Cracefull)'" was given b~ Mrs. Powell, Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs.
Charles Sauer, Mrs. George
George Hackett, Sr .
on Dec . 15. Members will ex·
Pumpktn pie and coffee were Bearhs, and Mrs. Jed Webster.
change $1 gift;;.
Each. one attendin g signed a
card for William Grueser, a
patient at the Veterans Hospital
Give her the ring that aaptured
at Lexington, Ky. A card will
the heart of America ·
also be sent to Mrs .. Gaynelle
The one and o~ ly
Fugate.
Mrs. Harry Houdashelt had
charge of the meetin g which
opened with the flag pled~e and
the Lord 's Prayer. Mrs. Knapp
had devotions using "Moment;;

Dodge ~tJ.~
AUTHORIZED DEALERS

R.·, H. Rawlings Sons Co.

on U. S. 35.

Mill &amp;Second Street

Middleport, Ohio 45760
~~

.

DITHE

BDYB

�,-

4- The !:lailySentinel, MiddlepJrt-Pomi'!'Oy, 0 ., Nov : 19,1971

\

Program at GSI.

Cubs Rehire
Leo Durocher
CHICAGO I UPI) -Leo .' ·The
Up" Durocher hardly said a
word to quelch the din of
speculators who predicted a
dark future for him, but the
doughty Cubs manager wound
up sitting in the catbird seat
anyway .
The 65-year-old Lip, whose
major league career stretches
back in '1928, was signed
Thursday to manage the Cubs
again in 1972, much to the
surprise of many a sports·
writer, and doubtless to the
chagrin of not a few of his
player.
The Cubs made the announcement a few hours after
Durocher had huddled with club
owner Philip K. Wrigley and
Vice President John Holland .
Wrigley, the 76-year-old chewing gum magnate, has made no
secret. of his contempt for
Durocher's critics, and he
became so incensed over the
an ti-Durocher rumors last sum·
mer he took out a generous
amount of paid advertising
space in Chicago newspapers to
point out Durocher was still his
man.
He also reminded the public
1and the press ) that Durocher

Team
Spenr::er 's Markel

Newell Sunoco

HOSPITAL
NEWS

·The Next
Time You Buy
A Pair
Of Shoesl

Christmas
Program
Books and
Plays

Local Bowling
Tuesday Industrial League
Team
Burton Sunoco

·

Coca Cola

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

W. L.
60 20
56 24
42 Ja

Penn Cen tral

Mason Ag

38

42
32 40

New Ha ven Fur n i ture
Caro lina Lumber

0 t6

Team J games - Burton
Sunoco 2728 ; Coca Cola 2578 .

'

Team game 944 ;

CROW'S

Bur ton Sunoco

Burton Su noco

894.

Ind . 3 games - C. Gibbs 642 ;
D. Miller 599 .
Ind. game - C. Gibbs 229 ; D. .

Mille~,!:~~orkers

League
Nov . 10, 1971

STEAK
HOUSE

Pis.
62

Team

Rejects
Ferros

57

54
52
50
34
22
13
Rejects

Wonders
Foote Heels

•

Nut s &amp; Bolts

Stingers

Home of

Skips
Wheels

Team 3 games -

2724 ; Wonders 2665.
Team game - Rejects 926 ;
Re jects 909 .
Ind . 3 games - R. Sines 588 ;
G. Roush 578.
Ind . ga me - R. Si nes 223 ; R.
Sines 212 .

the Fabulous

Kyger Creek League

Nov .

SANDWICH

48
46

Tax Workshop
On December 2

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave . and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m . Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J.
McDaniel, Leon , W.Va., a son.
Discharges
Daniel B. Bales, Eddie
Bolling, Mrs . .. Wayne Brown,
Emory Bunch , Guy Campbell,
Sr., Merch Clark, Mrs . Nora
Cremeens, Thomas Gooldin,
Clifford HaU, Perry Hall, Archie Hutchinson , Albert Kuhn,
Mrs . Marcella Leach, Mrs.
Howard Markel, Ernie McCoy,
Mrs. Kirby Oiler, Jr ., Ancil
Prunty, Lige Shields, Mrs .
Nellie Sifrit, Mrs. Martin
Stanley, Mrs . Iva Stewart,
Burnace Stout, Sr., Amos
Waugh, OtiS Young, Sr., Connie
Zeoli, Harold Priest Ill, Mrs.
Ruth Thompson and Mrs .
James Reynolds.

KIPS

10m Boy

Pis .

Excelsior Oil Co .
43
Domigan Sohio
J6
Gibbs Grocery
35
had brought the Cubs into first- G.
&amp; J. Auto Parts
32
division contention since he
High Team 3 Games
Newell Sunoco 2201 ; Domigan
became manager in 1965.
The Cubs' announcement Sohio 2135 ; Gib bs Grocery 2069.
High Team game - Newell
Thursday carried through the Sunoco 757 ; New ell's &amp;
Domigan 's 745 ; Gibbs Grocery
theme :
"For Durocher, this will be 735.
High Ind. 3 Games - Janet'
his seventh year as field Duffy 425 ; Sandy Korn 418;
manager of the Cubs. With the Donna Koehler 415.
High Ind . Game - Donna
exception of the rebuilding year
Koehler 179 ; Sandy Korn 171 ;
of 1966, the Cubs have compiled Janet Duffy 168.
a record of 430 wins against 379
MASON BOWLING
losses, or 51 games over .500
under Leo's direction," it said.
Tuesay Women's League
But that record did not satisfy Team
w. L.
62 18
Durocher's critics, who wanted f!J\ason Furni ture
Hai r Harbour
60 20
to see the Cubs win a pennant M &amp; R Foodliner
51 29
or even a divisional title in Hart 's Used Cars
50 30
36 44
1971. They predicted Whitey Roush Constru ction
Tom
Rue
Motors
30 50
Lockman , Cubs director of Team No.5
19 61
player develop ment, would take Ingels Furnitu re
12 68
Tearn 3 · games
Mason
Leo's job, and some of
Durocher's players sniped at
him openly .

TRY

4,

Team
A.shitt
C.shift
timber Splitters
Odd Ba ll s
Slruggters
Rejects
D. Main I.
. B.shilt
,

1971

Team 3 games -

W. L.
54 18
40 32
38 34
J6 36
32 40
32 40
30 42
26 J6

Odd Balls

Meigs County farmers are
invited to participate in the
Farm Income Tax Workshop
Dec, 2 and 9 at the Tri.County
Vocation High School at
Nelsonville . It will bring the
new tax changes for 1971 and
update tax management.
Cooperating in the instruction
are Don Young , Hocking County
Agricultural Ager.t and Ken
Ackerman, Athens County
Agricultural
Agent.
No
reservation is necessary for this
workshop according to C. E.
Blakeslee, county extension
agent.
To be covered on December 2
are Farm Tax Management
Pointers, New Tax Changes for
1971, Review of Tax Form
1040F, Depreciation Deductions, Methods of Computing
Depreciation, Limitations ,
Recapture and Investment
Credit, and a question and
answer period .
The schedule lor December 9
includes Capital Gains Rules on
Livestock Sales, Farm Sales,
Installment Sales, Cost Basis
lor Gifts, Inheritance , and
Trades. Property, Operating
Loss Carry Back and Carry
Over, Income Averaging, New
Personal Exemptions, Itemized
Deductions, Low-Income Tax
Breaks, and Student Deduction .
Copies of the program can be
secured from the Meigs County
Extension Office. Meeting time
is 7:30p.m.

The Suns, expected to battle
By United Press International see~;I~s to have fallen in on the
for the runnerup slot behind
All of a sudden the roof Phoenix Suns .
Milwaukee in the NBA's rugged
Midwest Division, suddenly
have fallen upon' hard times.
Wednesday Late
BROCKINGTON
TOPS
They
suffered their third loss in
EYES SUPER YEAR .,
Mixed League
Team
W. L.
NEW YORK (UPI ) - John as many nights Thursday night
Try Hards
48
24
Tl
UPI
Tw
Brockington
has taken over the when Bob Lanier and Jimmy
Pir, Spotters
l o42 30 CINCINNA (
H&amp;H
41 l1 time National League batting rushing lead in the NFL Walker combined for 66 points
Alley Gators
40 32 champion Pete Rose, who did National Conference, gaining to lead Detroit to a 128-126
Smith &amp; Roush
36 36 not have a spectacular season 751 yards in 137 carries.
victory and the Suns now find
Shamrocks
25 43
Brockington, the No. I draft themselves in last place.
Wooties
28 44 last year, signed his 1972 conLanier hit for 37 and Walker
Son·O-Gun s
24 48 tract with the Cincinnati Reds choice of the Green Bay
Team3games - AIIey Gato rs- Thursday and said he will get Packers from Ohio Stale, has added 29 as the Pistons
1963; Try Hards 1914.
,
Team game - Try Hards 724; ready now for one super averaged 5.5 yards Pjlr carry snapped a three-game losing
and two touchdowns per game. spin of their own. The Pistons
Alley Gators 688.
year."
Ind . 3 games - Men , C.
Cincinnati Bengals quar· took a 127-124 lead on Curtis
Yeager 623 ; Women - J. Wh ite Rose reportedly signed for a terback Virgil Carter is third in Rowe's basket and Phoenix cut
473. Men·-:- w. King 557 ; Women salar)' in the neighborhood of passing in the NFL American that to one point on a field goal
- N. Sm1lh 452 .
Ind . game - Men. c. Yeager $100,000-plus, the third year he Conference with 70 completions by Clem Haskins. Howard
268 ; Women , N. Smith 188; Me n, has commanded such a sum . in 121 attempts for 906 yards Komives dropped in a foul shot
W. King. 208 ; Women . J. White
and five touchdowns.
for Detroit's final point and
179.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) Unless the Southwest Conference football race turns topsyturvy, Arkansas will be one of
the learns in the Liberty Bowl
Dec. 20th.
"We are proud to announce
that the University of Arkansas
has agreed to be one or the
participating teams in the 13th
annual Liberty · Bowl provided
they do not go to the Cotton
Bowl," Liberty Bowl Executive
Director A. F. 1Bud ) Dudley
said Thursday .
The only way for Arkansas (7
-2-1) to wind up in Dallas on
- ---------

SP4 Moratity 's
Furlough Ends
SYRACUSE A preThanksgiving dinner was held
Sunday, Nov. 7, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Dick 'Harris
honormg SP-4 Marty L.
Morarity who was home on a 30day furlough from Schweinfurt,
Cermany ·
Enjoying the day were Mrs .
Marty Morarity of Pataskala :
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Morarity •
Marcy Jo and Terry Lee of
Groveport; Connie Morarity
and Bob Hansford of Columbus;
Mrs. Oma Truex and Mr . Earl
Morris, of Marietta : Mr s.
Pauline Morarity, local ; the
honored gues t and the host and
hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Harris .
SP-4 Moranty returns to
Germany today .

A family potluck dinner and
stewardship program were held
Sunday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy. Following
the dinner, Robert Elberfeld,
director of the activities ,
welcomed the members and
friends of St. Paul Lutheran
Church.
Included in the program was
a talk by Charles Evans on
"What My Church Means To
Me," followed by the senior
choir singing, "Jericho Road "
and the Sunday School children,
nursery through fourth grade,
singing "Into My Heart" and

"Jesus Loves Me ."

Jeff Ridgway, representing
youths of the church, gave a
brief talk on "What My Church
Means To Me." Mrs. Corrine
Lund covered the topic of
"Giving to the Church." The
Youth Singers sang " Hey
Jude ," 14 Love Story,n and
"Never Ending Love."
Richard Jones reported on the
proposed church budger for
1972. After a skit about
"Giving" was performed by
Lois Clelland, Rachael Downie,
Corrine Lund, Helen Holt, and
Donna Jones, the Stewardship
Program ended with more
group singing.

Saturday Festival is Ready

. 2599 ; Odd Balls 2550 .
Team game - Odd Ball s 936 ;
Odd Balls 922 .
lnd 3 games - G. Shrimptin
, 643 ; R. Jewell and R. Cremeans

WATER HEA'i ER

Mrs. Margie Graf, speech and
hearing therapist, was inlloduced to the parents. Room
visitation was held . Mrs. Ed
Kennedy presided at the
meeting . Refreshments were
served at the conclusion of the
meeting by Mrs. William Witte,
Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs .
Kennedy, Mrs. John Blake,
Mrs. Vernon Blevins, Mrs .
Robert Chaney, Mrs. Ronald
Browning, Mrs. Oscar Smith,.
Mrs. James Bearhs, Mrs. Uoyd
Haggy, Mrs. Hershel McClure,
Mrs. Norman Hysell, and John
Arnott.

New Year's Day would be for
heavily-favored Texas to lose to
Texas A&amp;M this Saturday while
Arkansas defeats Texas Tech at
Fayetteville as expected.
The Razorbacks were heavily
favored to go to the Cotton
Bowl after trouncing Texas 31-7
at mid-season, but an upset 2424 tie with Rice two weeks ago
put Texas bsck in the driver's
seat in the Southwest Conference.
Arkansas has beaten California, Oklahoma State, TCU,
Baylor, Texas and North Texas
State this season. But a 21-20
upset loss to Tulsa and a 17-9
defeat by Texas A&amp;M has all

but extinguished the Razorback
hope of winning the conference
title.
An opponent has not yet been
named for the Razorbacks, but
Mississippi , North Carolina and
Tennessee are in the running,
with Tennessee reportedly on
. the inside track .
The announcement of the
Arkansas acceptance was made
under an NCAA rule whi ch
permits a team to accept a
bowl bid on the third Saturday
in November or one week prior
to it;; final game - whichever
comes first. The Texas Tech
ga me will finis h the regular
season for Arkansas.

Connie Hawkins' shot at the
buzzer just missed.
Neal Walk led the Suns with
30 points and Haskins added 28.
In the only other NBA game,
Cazzie Russell scored 29 points
and Jell Mullins added · 25 as
the Golden State Warriors beat
the Portla!ld Trail Blazers 115105. Sidney Wicks led Portland
with 29 points.
LIVING M~/fl)f'f(.••
TRI~ ...

t;fl ~N. DURING

/he l1lii7UII1l6llt

Distinction

Legar Monument

Arkansas Headed For Liberty Bowl

Dinner Pro6aram Eni01Jed
J J

Final plans for the fall
festival to be held Saturday
night at 6:30 at the Salisbury
992-5432
599.
Elementary School were made
during
the Tuesday night
Ind. game243.
- G. Mitch 245 ; R.
r- : : : : : : ; ; : : ; ; ; ; : Cremeans
meeting of the Salisbury PTA.
Members willing to help with
the festival are to be at the
school at 12:30 p.m. There will
be no PTA meeting in
December and a family potluck
was planned for January.
Mrs. James Will, kitchen
chairman, thanked those who
helped with the Soil Conservation and Farm Bureau
dinners. Named to a project
committee were Mrs . Ned
Swindell,
Mrs .
William
Wickline, Mr. and Mrs . Ronald
Handy tabletop
Browning, Mrs. Will, and
design adds
Herschel McClure .
convenience
to this
heater.
Can be
placed in
Order By Phone
And Toke Em Home

·5.- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 19, 1971

992·5314

Pomeroy

FAMOUS
BRAND

World's Toughest Pants
Denims with Regular, Super Slims and Flair Legs
- Permanent Press

Articles made by the Division
of the Services of the Blind to be
sold by the Middleport Literary
Club were displayed at the
Wednesday meeting·held at the
home of Mrs . M. L. French.
The program centered on the
life and works of Willa Cather
with Mrs . Richard Owe~
reviewing "Willa Cather- Her
Life and Art " by James
Woodruss, and Mrs. Nan Moore
reviewing Willa Cather's book,
" My Antonia ."
Mrs . Owen told of the
numerous novels short stories
and plays writ'ten by Mis;
Cather who at one time worked
as a newspaper reporter and a
drama critic, and taught high
school in Pittsburgh, Pa. "My
Antonia" reviewed by Mrs.
Moore was the story or a young

Tapered and Flared legs

man living with his grandparents in Nebraska and his
relationship to a poor Bohemian
girl.
Members responded to roll
call with a comment on Miss
Cather 's life . Mrs . Donald
Stivers was a guest. Candy was
served.

~----------------------·

!BAHR CLOTHIERS l
I
I

Middleport, 0.

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

MOTOROLA
FM-AM Per so nal Portable .. . Powerf ul
FM-AM solid stat e cha ss is . Grea t sen

si l ivily from tuned RF stag e on FM . 3
stage tran sistoriz ed audio system . verni er
luning , telescopi c F M ant enna . Au tom ati c

Circle Meets
The White House Conference
on Aging to be held in
Washington, D. C., Nov. 28-Dec.
3 was discussed by Mrs. Vilma
Pikkoja, guest speaker at a
meeting of the Lydia Circle of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church Wednesday night.
Mrs. Pikkoja noted that she is
the only local representative
and the only librarian in Ohio
chosen to serve on the state
delegation . She said the emphasis of the conference will be
on what the aged need, how they
can be helped , and the financial
assistance available.
Mrs. William llaronick
presided at the meeting with
each member and guest inlloducing herself. Plans were
made to join the Women's
Society of Christian Service for
a Chr istmas potluck in
December. Miss Myrtis Kay
Parker and Mrs. Roy Reuter
served a salad course from a
table decorated in the
Thanksgiving motif.

Frequency Control on F M. Pu sh-pull audio
sys tem . FM AM log sca le. Rugged Texan
case . 3" x 4 J ~" Golden Voice speak er .
Operate s on 4 Jl ?- vol t " ( " cell s or AC
house cu rr ent (batt er ies not included ) .
Si ze SJ./' wide . 61 / ' high, 31 , .. deep .

TP55 FE . Black .

arrangement base to complete
the Thanksgiving arrangement.
Then pine cone trees topped
with a Christmas bauble were
made to be used later. A
" match the flower " identification game was played with
each member receiving a gift of
jewelry as her prize.
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Region II
director, thanked the dub for
attending the fall regional
meeting held at Gallipolis on
October 30. She presented each
of the members with garden
calendars on behalf of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs.
Mrs . Howard Birchfield,
chairman of the refreslmient
committee presided at the.table
which was centered by a
Thanksgiving arran@ement of
mums and leatherleaf fern in a
turkey container. Salad, made
by Mrs. Tom Stewart, crackers,
mints, and a drink were served.
Napkins carrying out the
Thanksgiving theme were used.
The floral arrangement had
been made by Mrs. William
Willford . It was noted that the
first Thanksgiving was a
festiva l thanking God for the
bountiful harvest of crops, and
that we as garden club members should not only thankful for
the many foods provided us but
also for the hundreds of flowers
we are able to use and enjoy in
our gardening work.
A poem, "Thanksgiving" by
Willard G. Seaman was read,
and the grace for Thanksgiving
Day by Alice Kennelly Roberts
was given prior to serving of
refreshments, to 20 members of
the Nature's Garden Club.

Committees were also appointed for remembering the
shut-ins at Christmas. Roundrobin cards were signed by the
members present for a number
of members and friends who are
ill and hospitalized.
The meeting closed with tha
song "God Will Take Care of
You." The home of Mrs .
Yeauger was decorated with
arrangements of fall flowers,
fruit and candles in traditional
Thanksgiving
manner .
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses to those mentioned above and Mrs. Vernon
Nease, Mrs. John Scott, Mrs.
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mrs . Denver Holter, Mrs .
Forrest Donley, Mrs . Lela
Curtis and one guest, Sandra
Lee Curtiss.

FRIDAY
Salisbury Elementary School
DANCE , 9 till midnight, by PTA, 6:30 to 9:30p .m. Door
Friday, Wahama High School prizes, games, bazaar, country
auditorium following alumni store, refre shmen t. Public
basketball game . School invited .
sponsored, Jays 'ernceeing, 75 BAKE SALE and Christmas
cents admission.
bazaar, beginning, 10 a.m .
REVIVAL through Sunday, Saturday at Simpson building
Salvation Army, Butternut next to Club "Restaurant by
Ave., Pomeroy, 7:30 each Racine Fire Department
evening, Dorothy Overton, Auxiliary .
evangelist, special singing.
TURKEY SUPPER,
BAZAAR AND bake sale, Saturday, starting 4 p.m. at
Friday, beginning 9:30a.m. by Tuppers Plains Grade School by
Loyal Women's Class, Mid- Tuppers Plains Community
dleport Church of Christ, at Club. Turkey and "trimmings,"
Dudley's Florist, North Second adults, $1.50; children, 75c.
Ave.
SUNDAY
PAST
MATRONS, COUNTY PRAYER service, 2
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order p.m. Sunday at Hobson Church
of the Eastern Star will meet at
of Christ in Christian Union .
the home of Mrs. James
Leader Okey Ahart welcomes
Buchanan at 7:30 p.m . Friday
public .
night. Mrs. Marie Hawkins will
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
be co-hostess for the meeting.
Royal Arch Masons, religious
RACINE
GRANGE affirmation day, Sunday at
Thanksgiving dinner, 6:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All
Friday, home of Mr. and Mrs. Masons, members of OES,
Earl Cross. Take own l&lt;lble Bethel of Job's Daughters, and
sefvice, articles for pig in Order of DeMolay , Middleport,
poke" auction and gifts for invited . Paul M. Darnell,
Southeastern Ohio Mental master of ceremonies; Jesse E.
Health Center, Athens .
Brinker, high priest of chapter,
BAZAAR Friday, Trinity and officers and wives in charge
Church, Pomeroy, starting with of p1·ogram.
lunch at 11 a.m. Needlework,
HYMN SING, Sunday, I :30
craft items and baked goods for p.m., Sliversville Community
sale.
Church. Special singers, Jimmy
WEEKEND revival, Chester Gavett, Dennis Manuel, Duane
Church of God, 7 p.m. each Wolfe. All singers welcome .
evening with Evangelist Bobby Public invited.
Porter, Oak Hill, special singing
every night. Public invited .
SATURDAY
PLATE DINNER, Saturday,
beginning il:30 a.m. at meeting
headquarters
of
LadiesTHE
Auxiliary, Syracuse Fire
Department, Municipal Park,
Syracuse . Also Christmas
bazaar table, country store,
bake sale and homemade
candy.
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM , 7:30
p.m. Saturday . Two · Master
Masons degrees to be given . All
Master Masons invited .
FALL
FESTIVAL
at

the compact

DEPOSIT AT MY IIIIWOIJ

GIFT·A·RAMA
$101£

NAME _____________________
ADDUIS ___

_ _ __ __

Werner Radio &amp; TV
Middleport, 0.

•104
lo Valley
Plumbing &amp; Heating
.232 E. 2nd

:;'h. 992-2036

Pomero

McCLURE'S
4th &amp; Locust

992 ·5248

Middlepllrt, o.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

Many Special Thanks

.. II ~:

( ""'

Willis Frost
Clerk of Chester Township
Pd . Pol. Adv .

THINK ABOUT YOU.
vvethink
you
to

•
r1ve

~

Everybod.y

•,
"

a car
before
you buy it!

!::::::::::::::
Likes Jt

I Would like To Say THANKS

For Their Support

Edna Swick
Township Clerk
Pd . Pol. Adv .

YOU ARE INVITED

t~st-drive

POLARA!

When you take Polara on the road, you'll find out
what .. the ride with quiet inside .. is all about
Pol~ra ·s Torsion -Quiet Ride isolates you from
road and engine noises. It also gives Polara those
great handling characteristics. What's more. our
big, strong Polara has been compleWIY restyled
this year to give you a fresh choice in the big -car."
field. So test-drive a new 1972 Dodge Polara.
You'll be impressed .

test-drive
CHARGER!

test-drive
CORONET!

test-drive
DART DEMON

With last year's Charger sales up 75
percent, you know that a lot of peopl!?
think Charger is the car for them. Most
people are initially attracted to Chargers
great·looking shape. But when you take
a new Charger for a test drive, you'll
discover other reasons for Chargers
success. Like the real family-sized room
of Charger. If you want a real family
sports car-get a '72 Charger. Take one
for a test drive soon!

Bring you r whole fami ly down to th e
showroom and check out the real con venience of Coronet's four big doors .
Easy in . Easy out. On those lon g vaca lions, the kids won't be craw ltng over
you every time you stop. And your w1fe
will like Coronet's nelt.( styling . So before
you buy your family a new car. bring
them all down to your local Dodge Bqy's.
And take a ride in the new 1972 Dodge
Coronet .

See fo r yourself how our lowest' priced
Dart proves th at an economy car doesn't
have to be a li ttle car. Dart Demon has a
ve, 1• compact ,')nce. yet offers more room
th an 1ioc new mini ·ca rs. It seats five com lortably, l1 a' a b1g 15.9 cubic -foot trunk,
and Six or VB power Size up Dart Demon
yoursel f.

CHRISTMAS
WONDERLAND
SATURDAY&amp;SUNDAY - NOV. 20-21

~~~HMENTI - DOORP~Z~ \
See the most interesting and complete
of
candles,
I ights,
selection
wall
and
table
arrangements,
decorations, make-up material, and
artificial trees.
Balled and Burlapped Trees to plant outside
after Christmas. We will tag your seltction
for delivery later.
'

CITY ICE &amp;-FUEL·CO.
POINT PLEASANT, .W.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

9~
Open 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
4 miles west of Gallipolis

..

To The Voters of Chesler Township for
Re-electing Me as Clerk

THANKS

SONNY'S

As low As

(Upon Request)

, __________

DANCE SATURDAY
The Shade River Belles and
Beaus will hold an open square
dance at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov.
'll, at Royal Oak Park's archery
building . All visitors are
welcome to attend as spectators. The regular club dance
on Thursday, Nov . 25, will be
cancelled due to Thanksgiving.

Desi gned or igina ll y for the
moth er at three lolii ng
daughter s. The Moth er 's
Ring wa s sub.s equently
made ava ilable. at her
r cques L to the mothers · of
Amer i(a . . who gathered
it to t he ir heart s.
Tw in bands of 14 kara t
gold s1gnifying mother and
f at he r ar e ioine d by
• lustr ous syntheti c stones
mark ing the bi rth of each
chil d.
~
Ins is t
on
the
true
ori g in a l- T he Mother ' s
Ring by Guert in Brothers .

LARDNER USGA CHIEF
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
United States Golf Association
nominated Lynford Lardner, Jr.
of Milwaukee to the post or
Pomeroy
president succeeding Philip H. 1tt E. 2nd
~hGne 992 -5428
Strubing of Philadelphia, who
served two one-year te rms.
.__,..._ _ _ _ _ _..

TAST.ES SO
GOOD

To The Annual Opening Of

Hey, Gangl

FOR
COOL REFRESHMENTS

2-HOUR
CLEANING

DODGE

TEL. NO. - - - - -- - - - - - -

SEE YOU AT

design.
30·40·50
gallon sizes.
s.vear
Warranty.

A Vietnam veteran at the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital
· will be remembered with il gift
eac h month by the Pa st
Presidents of the American
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39.
Meeting Wednesday night at
the home of Mrs. Olin Knapp,
Gallipolis, the group voted to
begin this month remembering
the young man. For several
years they have sent gifts each
month to a retired nurse, Miss
Constance Thom , at Miller
Cottage in Dayton .
Christmas party plans were
made with a dinner to be held at
the home of Mrs. &gt;l(e n Neutzling

14

utility area ...
lines malch
your washer
1nd dryer

.I

To The Voters of Rutland Township

The flag ceremony to open the
meeting was by members of
Brownie Troop 220. Devotions
were given by McClure.

basement or

I
1

The WSCS of the Forest Run
United Methodist Church met at
the home of Mrs . Alfred
Yeauger Wednesday evening
with Mrs . Harry Wyatt as cohostess .
The meeting opened with a
song, "Count Your Blessings"
by the group, followed by a
prayer of Thanksgiving .
Devotions entitled "Blessed are
those who give without
remembering and receive
without forg etting" were
presented by Mrs. Russ Watson .
The program, in charge of Mrs.
Edison Hollon, was in keeping
with the Thanksgiving season,
each member having an article
pertainingtoThanksgiving. The
leaderalsohadaBiblequizwith
answers to questions starting
with the letter "T."
Each member present answered the roll call with a Bible
verse containing the word
"Thanks" as they paid their
love-offering. It was decided to
have a potluck dinner at !he
churc h for the December
meeting with each member
bringing a gift for e&lt;change.

·Monihly Gift Made

~~'M4'04'04o&lt;il'1,q,_,q,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~

WSCS ·Group Meets

Mr. levi's: Permanent Press Slacks,

Life of Willa Cather Reviewed

"Thanksgiving Will Soon Be
Here" was the theme of the
therapy program presented by
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners for a meeting of the
Nature Garden Club or the
Gallipolis State Institute
Tuesday.
Mrs. Homer Parker planned
the program with assistance in
presenting it from Mrs. Joe
Bolin, Mrs. Howard Birchfield
and Mrs. William Willford.
Mrs. Donald Galloway of the
Gallipolis Garden Club, Mrs.
Garnet Wood of the . occupational therapy serivce of
the GSI, and Mrs. Gomer
Phillips, Region II garden
· therapy chairman were in attendance.
Members wore name tags
with pictures of pilgrims, Indians, harvest baskets, cornucopia, Mayfair ship and
turkeys for identification. Each
member made a floral
arrangement with a pine cone
turkey as an accessory to carry
out the Thanksgiving theme.
Pine cone trees were also made,
so that after the upcoming
holiday, the turkey could be
removed and the tree added to
convert it to a Christmas
arrangement. Styrofoam bases
were used and the line material
added and the flowers arranged
to complete the floral piece.
Next, a pipe cleaner was wound
about a pine cone (that still had
· a portion of the stem left to
represent the turkey's head ) to
form legs. Then a tail of dried
celosia 1cockscomb) was added
and the turkey's head was
painted yellow. These were
placed onto the flower

Social Calendar

~

fvr Medl lalton'' as her topic. A served to those named and Mrs.
poe m · " For Gr owing Old Owen Watson, Mrs. Ernest
Cracefull)'" was given b~ Mrs. Powell, Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs.
Charles Sauer, Mrs. George
George Hackett, Sr .
on Dec . 15. Members will ex·
Pumpktn pie and coffee were Bearhs, and Mrs. Jed Webster.
change $1 gift;;.
Each. one attendin g signed a
card for William Grueser, a
patient at the Veterans Hospital
Give her the ring that aaptured
at Lexington, Ky. A card will
the heart of America ·
also be sent to Mrs .. Gaynelle
The one and o~ ly
Fugate.
Mrs. Harry Houdashelt had
charge of the meetin g which
opened with the flag pled~e and
the Lord 's Prayer. Mrs. Knapp
had devotions using "Moment;;

Dodge ~tJ.~
AUTHORIZED DEALERS

R.·, H. Rawlings Sons Co.

on U. S. 35.

Mill &amp;Second Street

Middleport, Ohio 45760
~~

.

DITHE

BDYB

�•
C: HUR CH OF THE NAZA·
HEMLOCK
GROVE
BAPtiST TEMPLE
RENE ::- Mtddlepocl Rev - ~IBLE
CHRISTIAN
Davtd
Slaulfer,
Mtnersvdle Sunday School.

Audry Miller, pas1or , r1oya
Carson supt Sunday s,chool.
9 JO a m
Morn1ng
wor
shtp,
10 30
am
tun lor
~octety .

FIRST SOUTHERN BAP ·
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave ,
Pomeroy, afltl~ated wl lh S B C ,

POME~r.v
I'IJM(]f0Y tlfllfiTY- Rev
W. H Perrm, pastor Roy the Rev Fred Hill. pastor
Mayer, Supt Church school, Sunday School, 9 30 a m ,
9· 1Sa. m : worship, 10 24 a m , mornmg worsh1p , 10 30 a m

~youth

choir rehearsal Monday . 1Un1or SOCiety , 6 30 a m NY PS ,
6· 30 p m. , Mrs Marv1n Burt 6 45 p m Sunday evangelistiC
director ,
sen1or
cho1 r meetmg , 7 30 p m Prayer

rehearsal, 7.30 p m , Thursday , meetmg Wednesday , 7 30 n m
Mrs. Paul Nease, dtrector All
day qutlltng party for Busy Bee
MIDDLEPORT
Class. Thursday , at church
MT
. MOR IAH BAPTISTsocial room
PO~EROY

Un 1on and

OF
Corner

CHv~~H

THE NAZARENE Mulberry

Re\1

Clyde V

Henderson, pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Raymond

Walburn ,

supt

4~

6 30 p m , NY PS ;,

p m
Sunday
e vange l i sltc
n'ee t 1ng 7 30 p m Prayer
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m

MASON COUNTY

MASON FIRST BAPTIST -

Jr., pastor Sunday School 9 30

a

m Arnold Rtchards supt
M orn tng worship lO 30 a m

MIDWAY

~~~es da~

'J'

Second and Pomeroy Sis , Stan
Cra tg , pastor Sunday school,
9 45 a m
worship serv tce , ll
a m , tra1nmg un1on , 6 JO"p m ,
eventng worshtp servtce, 7 30
p m. M1d week prayer serv1ce
Wednesday , 7 30 p m

CHRISTIAN

F IRST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN, Mtddleport

CHURCH

la ng sville Dexter
Prayer
meeti ng , 7 30 p m Tuesday
Rev Robe rt Searles pas tor

SCIENCE

HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION - Darrel Doddrtll ,
pastor Sunday School, 9 30 a
m , Annie Mohler , supt ,
Leonard Gilmore, ftrst elder ,
evenmg serv tce, 7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer meetmg,
7 30 p m

MEIGS COUN
MEIGS
COOPERATIVF
PARISH

9 30 a m ., ftrst and second
Sundays of each month ' lht rd

Gerlac h, Sunday School supt
Btble Sc hool. 9 30 a m , mor
ntng worshtp, 10 30 am

and fourth Sundays each month, eventng worshtp, 7 30 p m
worshtp servtce at 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventngs at 7 30,
Prayer and B1ble Study

prayer servtce 7 p m
nesday

wed

I

By Helen Bottel

J

l
1

Dear Helen :
What's wrong Wlth young parents today'. They have to be on
the go constantly!
Our son and daughter-m-la'~&gt; belong to every club, ta ke tn
every party, drmk to excess, try to be soctahttes, and the heck
wtth thetr children. He calls tt "upward mobihty." Says he has to
meet the rtght people to get ahead, and she must golf and drink
cocktails WJth thetr WJves dunng the day.
The children suffer. They never know who their next sttter
will be. I doubt that they even really know thetr parents. They're
high.,strung and hard to manage, This causes problems the few
times their parents are home--the adults are worn out, possibly
hung over, and the kids "drive them batty."
I'm not saymg ALL parents are like this, but most of the ones
I meet in our son's crowd are. Tell me, Helen, why does this type
have children'-U'ITERLY DISGUSTED GRANDPARENTS
Dear Grandparents :
Possibly because the "Country Club Image" has always
been : successful executtvNype husband, charming wife, show·
place home, and a couple of children who will grow up to marry
offSJX'ing of other country clubbers.
But the ptcture is changing , for these neglected 1'nch ktds"
often hit the road early nowadays, or drop out and jom communes
wbere they feel "together," even if they haven't much else.
(And the parents' stock lament is "How could they do it, when
we gave them EVERYTHING'" )
Maybe you could g1ve your grandchtldren a little of the
securtty and stability they want, "Grandparents." Sometunes all
a child needs ts Just one older person to talk to.-H
Dear Helen
What can you do about a mother who is a dirty housekeeper?
tv. a child , I never noticed When I grew up I pttched m and
helped, built was a case of the blind leading the blmd Mom took a
)Db then , and it's been downhtll ever since.
I've been married seven years and have three children-and
a clean home I'm proud of.
My husband and I can't eat at my folks' house wtthout feeling
sl1ghu y nauseous due to film y utens1 Is , not so cIean dtshes, an d
dog and cat hatr The anunals also add not-too-(!ehcate aroma .
We used to get aroi.Uld thos by iJ\Vltmg my parents to our
home. As they had an apartment, Lt was handter, anyway. But
now they've bought a new home about 100 miles from us, and they
expect us to viSlt them ovemoght
We 've been very close to Mom and Dad. In every other wa y,
they're wonderful ! But even the chtldren had started nollcmg the
dirt in th e apartment~specta IIy m the bathroom.
HowcanlteUMomwithouthurtmgher, andwoulditdoany
good ?Can a woman m her 50s change the housekeepmg habits of
ye ars? - DAUGHTER IN A DILEMMA
Dear Daughter :
Your mother knows she tsn't a good housekeeper, so "tellin g
' 1
yth
ber" WO uldn 'save an mg
I'd suggest that you quietly clean what you can during your
vlsits,andignoretherest.Aht tledirtwon'thurtyou.-H.

Dear Helen:
Here's a tip I some of your up tlght readers: Try livmg life
as agiftinsteado! a job to be done right It feels better that way .GUSSIE
Dear GUBBie :
Thanlt8 ! ) needed that-too.-H.

'Ihls column is dedicated to famtly llvmg so tf you're having
kid tl'ouble or just plain trouble, let Helen help you. She Wlll also
welcome your own amusing experiences. Write to Helen Bottel
c:.rt

of this newt!pllper.

ENTERPRISE - Worsh•p, 9
a m

Church Schoo), 10 a m

FLATWOODS - Worshtp, 11
a m , Church Schoo l 10 a m

POMEROY - Wors htp, 10 30
a m , Church School9 15 a m ,

NORTII

BAPTIST -

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST -

Rev Freeland Norns, pastor
Sunday school, lG am chur ch
se r vtce , 7 p m Wednesday
Btb !e study, 7 p m

John Wyatt, pas tor, J S Davts,
Sunday School supt , Sunday
school 9 30 a m , M orn tng
Sermon , 10 30 a m Eventng
se rm on, 7 p m

10 a m

Church School 9 a m

Rev . Robert Bumgarner

week l y, 9 30 am
Preachtng f 1rst

on Sunday
and th 1rd

.l

cut enemy commumcatwns

Sunday
Romans
6, 11 -18

Church Sc hool 9 30 a m ,

UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND - Worshtp

9

15 a

m , Church School 10 a

m .

UMYF 7 p m
SALEM CENTER - Worsh tp

9a m

Churc h Schoo l lO a m ,

UMYF Thursday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER

ASBURY - Worsh tp 11 a m ,
Schoo l 9 50

a

m ,

WSCS, lsi Tuesday
FOREST RUN -Worsh tp9 a
rn , Church School 10 a

m ,

WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 p
m

MINERSVILLE 10 a m

Worshtp

Church School 9 a m ,

WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7 JO p m
SYRACU E - Worshtp, 8 a
m , Church School, 9 a

m ,

Prayer and Btble Study ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . W Dale McClurg
Rev . Frank Cheesebrew
Rev Martha Ann Mattner

BETHANY

!Dorcas)

Worshtp, 9 30 a . m

Church

School 10 30 a m
CARMEL - Worshtp, 11 a
m , 1st and Jrd

FIR5f CHURCH
NAZARENE

Sun day School, 9 30 a m
M orntng Wor shtp 10 30 a m ,
Evenmg worsh1p, 7 30 p m

11 a m and 7 30 p m. Sunday

Monday

Sund ay Sc hool, 9 30 a. m
Rtchard Ba r ton, supt Prayer
l]lee tmg, Wednes day, 7 30 IJ m

I Corinthian!

HARRISONVILLE
BYTERIAN - Mrs

Tuesday
II Thena1oniano
1, 1-12

L 1-8

•

PRES
Norma

Lee, Sunday Schoop Supenn
tendent Sunday School 9 30 a
m Sunday Servtce 8 p m Rev
Ma x Donahue , Middl eport ,
pastor

•

Wednesday
Dame I

FREE
Eugene

Jesus satd," l am come that they mtght havr ll f e and that they mtght
hs.ve it more abundantly."

6, 10-23

Gtll, pa stor Wtlll am Ba tley,
su pt Sunday Schoo l, 9 30 a m
M or nmg worsh1p, 10 30 a m ,
Eve ntng wor shtp, 7 30 p m
Wednesday , Chnsttan Youth
Crusade , 6 30 p m , Prayer
meet1ng 7 30 p m Th ursday,
chotr pra cf tce, 7 p m

Now tt HI a trtbule to t he mtelhgence of men t hat no one thtnks He was
talk mg about the matertal abu ndance we enjoy today. Everybody knows

Psa lme
84, 1-1 2

He was talk tng about somethmg else
But what else'?., What could Ch rt st add to your posses!l tons 1 What can
He gwe men that mtght accou nt for th e log1ral dlstmctton we readtl&gt;· make
betv. een a hfe of abundance and thf abwtdartt lt/e 1
Htmself' That 's tt That's all PreWH!b what He satd "I am come
that
"
To know Htm and to know the rnea mng Ht s Ltfe has f or' ou r lt\ es ts to

OF

CHRIST
- Danny
E vans .
past or Norman C Wtll, supt
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Wors htp serv tce, 10 30 a m..
( hrt st ta n Endeavor Sunday

Re v

flftorns

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Charles Norns, pastor Sunday
School, 9 30 a m , Morntng
worsh1p, 10 45 a m , Sunday
evenmg worsh 1p, 7 30 p m ;
Wednesday even tng Btble

Does your fam tly u.se the Churc h

eve nmg

7 30 p m ; church sc hool, 9 30
a.m ,
mtd week
servtce,

Wednesday , 8 p m
EAST LETART - Worshtp,
10 a m , ltrst and thtrd Sundays ,
9 a m , second and fourth
Sundays, ch urch school , 9 a m ,
f tr st and thtrd Sundays, 10 am ,
second and fo urth Sundays.
M td week servtce, Wednesday ,
8 pm
GREA f BEND - Worshtp 11
a m , 2nd a nd .4t h Sundays,

Church School. 10 a m
LETART FALLS - Worshtp
10 a m , Ch urch School 9 a. m
MORN 1NG STAR - Worshtp
9 30 a m , Church School 10 30
a m ; MidWeek Se rvt ce,
Wednesday , 8 p m
MORSE CHAPEL- Worship
11 a m , Ist and 3rd Sundays ,
Church School. 10 a m
PORTLAND - Worshtp 7·30
p m , Ch urch School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - Worshtp, 11 a m
l nd and 41h Sundays, Church
School 10 a m.
WESLEYAN &lt;Racone) Worshtp, 11 a. m ' Chur ch
School. 10 a m
UM y F tor all churches of the
Southern Cluster, 7 30 p m
each Sunday at the Youth
Center (Oak Grove Road )
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Jacob Lehman
Rev . Standley Brandum
- JOPPA - Worsht p 10 a m,
Church School 9 a m , Prayer
Meeting , Wed nesday, 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM - Church
servtces, 9a m , Sunday School
9 45 a. m Bible slud y every
Thursday, 7 30 p m
NORTH BETHEL - Worshtp
11 a m , Church School 10 a m
ALFRED - Sunday school.

P!a lrn s

86, 1-8

•

Saturda y
Luke

1, 68-79

CARLETON CHURCH -

Phone 992 -3284

MONDAY
7 Q0-.13, "Stagecoach"
9 ll0--3, " Raid On Rommel "
11 30- 8, " Prtde and th e
Passion"

12 30-13, " Pursuit Across the
Desert "

TUESDAY
8 30-13, " Reluctant Heroes"

-=&lt;
1110

\)( )\ I L~

11 30-13, "Cash McCall"
11 311-8, " Treasure of Sierra
Madre"

WEDNESDAY
7 ll0--3, " Bedltme Story"
8 Q0-.13, "South Pactfte"
8 30-3, "Somebody's Out fo
Get Jenny"

11 30-8, " It Happened to Jane"
11 30-13, "Tall Story"

THURSDAY
5 30--3, "The War Lord"
11 30- 8, "Once More wtlh
Feeltng"
11 30-13, "Thtrly"

FRIDAY
9 00- 8, " A Death of In
nocence"
11 30-8, "Who Was That Lady"
11 30--13, " Maylaya"

SATURDAY
1 ll0--8, "Lost In Pa1amas"
8 30-13, "The Failing of
Raymond"
9 OQ-J, " Hour of the Gun"
II 20-3, " A Gathertng

of
Eagles"
11 30-8, "The Brothers Rtco"
11·30- 13,

"S ptrtti sm "

and

"Bring Me the Vamptre"

Sond Sl lor JACOBY MODERN book
to "Wm at Bndge," (c/o tl'lls nlwJ ·
popetJ, PO Box 439, Rodto City
Stohon, New York, NY . 10019

hts km g Then he leads hts
ntne of spades and breathes
a stgh of relte f when West
plays low No" he dtscard s
dumm y's last diamond East
wins lhe trick but can "l put
hts partner m
Th1s play ts 1eally a form ...,.
of the loser-on-loser play but
the nam e sctssors coup 1s fat
more elegant

whtch is
bustness

d

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

PLUMBING AND HEATING
992 -2550
Middl eport
24o-Linc51r1 St

Sunddy School, 10 30 a m
--

Middleport

"•'

.

Su nd ay

supt Worshtp se rvt ce , 10 30 a
m and 7 30 p m a lternately
Prayer meetmg , Wednes day ,
7 30 p m Rev Jay Stt les,
pastor

HEINER'S BAKERY

(NIW!.PAPER ENTIRPRISE ASSN l

Mtddleport,

pa stor Sunday school 9 30
am , wors htp servtce, 11 am
eventng se r vtce, 7, prayer
se r vtce and you th serv tce,

Thursday, 7 p m

Ern~sl

Deete r , cla ss leader

Yo ugh

morn 1ng worshtp, 10 30 am ,
Robe r ! Babe , Sun day sch{)ol

CHRIST- Rev Robert Shook.
pastor , Sunday School, 9 JO a

supl , Sun day evening servtce,
7 30 Youth m ee ttng , M onday , 7
p m Mtd week servtce, Wed·
nesday, 7 30 p m

Wol fe, ass! supl
wors h 1p , 11 am
se rm on , 7 JO p m.,
each Sunday C111ss

Bob Moore,

Sunday School Supt

, morn tng
, eventh g
alternaftng
meehng, 11

m

NYPS Sunday, 6:30 p
servtce,

Sunday, Roger

Sunday , eac h month , 7 30 p m

7 30 p m Mid week prayer. SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 P m. , PRESBYTERIAN - Rev
M ss tonary meel!ng, secon d Dwtght L. Zav ltz, pastor .
Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
Wors htp service, 9 a m. ,
UNIT EO FAITH NON · Sunday school , 10 am
DENOMINATION Rev
DenniS Weaver, pastor Sunday 'RUTLAND
sc hool , 9 30 a m., Bob Barber,
RUTLAND FIRST BAPsupt , worshtp serv •ce, 10 JO
am , youth meefmg, 6· .45 p m .; TIST - Rev . Samu el Jackson,
churc h, 7 30 p m Btble st ud y, pastor Sunday School, 10 a m ,
Mrs Gertrude Butler, supt.
Wed nesday, 7 30 p.m

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 w :-Second Ph , 992 3863 Pomeroy

I··

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE
.

810 W.

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

'

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Meats and Groceries
Syracuse
992-3986
'

worshtp, 10 30 a m , Young

I·

people' s serv1..:e, 6: 45 p. m ,

E;angeltSite serv tces, 7:30 ,p

'

m Wedne sda y (:!Venlrw servrct

'

and

Racine, Ohio

Ph. 949-3272

.

.. .

Pomeroy

,

VIUAGE .FLOWER SHOP

0.

-

BEN FRANKLIN .STORE

. Vlu.AGE CUT RATE

D. Gdmm, Jr., pas tor. Sunday
Schoo l. 9 30 a m ; Morning

Furniture and Appliances
Phone 985-3308
Chester,

Attend the Church of y ,,, · Choice

Bulova Watches- Sales &amp; Service
Middleport
186 N. Second

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev Lloyd·

.

'

F. J. WALlACE, JEWELER
'

.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Church and Office Supplies-Gifts
992-2641
Middleport
'

Sunday ntght wors htp, 7 30.

Dble

Pa~s

Ps ss

Db\e

Pa~

Pa ss

On this day in history.
In 1863 President Abraham
Uncoln delivered the Gettys·
burg Addr~ss .
In 1874 Wtlliam Marcy
Tweed, leader of New York 's
Tammany Hall, was sentenced
to , 12 years Ul prison for
defrauding the city of ~
million.
Also in 1874 the national
Women's Christian Temperance
Union was organized in Cleveland,

Electric Motor Repair
Main
992 . 5750

.

1q 30 a m Regular board
meeting 7:30, third Saturday
••ch
THEmonth
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHURCH - Rev
Rtchard Dubbeld , pa stor .
School, 9 30 a. tn ; Worship'
se rvtce, 11 a m , Wednesday
pra yer meeting, 7:30 p m

1¥

1N T

SADIE'S MARKET

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

m ,

•

Meig s County Branch

1

ning sermon, 11 a m , Evenmg am ' V
H. Braley, supt. ;
serv1ce Chri shan Endeavor , communton and devottons ,

7 JO P m,

.

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

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN nr~achtnQ serv1ce, 2 p m.
IN CHRIST- Elde n R. Blake,
pastor Sunday School, lOa m.,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Wtnnte Holsinger, supt Mor- CHRIST- Su nday school, 9 30

7 30 p m ; Mr s. Lyda
Cheval 'oe r, prestdent. Son~
serv tce an d ser mon, 8 20 M.t .
Week prayer meettng Wed·
9 45 am. each
Sunday, nesday, 7 30 p m. Mrs Ma zie
preacht ng at II am each Hols mqer, class leader
Sunday Prayer meettng, 7 45
&gt; OMERO Y LOWER LIGH I
~nmth~~d~~~~~~Y ~~(; · ~tn»: CHURCH- Harns onvtlle Road,
RE E DSVILLE - Sunday t&lt;ev Roy Tay lor, pastor , Henry
school , 9 30 ; preachtng, 7.30 Ebl •n, Su nd ay School Supt.
Sunda y School, 9 30 a m :,
p m Sunday , prayer meeting, evenmg
worship, 7 30 p m
7 30 p m. Tc•esday, WSCS, 7 30,
Prayer and pra s te se r vlce,
ftr sl T~_yrs day each month
Thursday, 7.30 p m.
SILVER RIDGE - Worship~ •
10 a m ' Church School, 9 a. m
COMMUNtf l
CHUR CH
TUPPERS
PLAINS De)Cter
Worsh
i
p
serviCeS
Wor$hlp ~ a'm , 1 Church Sthool
Saturd•y anG Sunday, 7' 30 p.m
10 • · rn ,

Family Recreation
&lt;-·• Imming

GAUL'S TRAILER SALES
and GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN

m ; Board meeltng ftrsl Monday

Pi=ayer Service, 1 30 p

'

Rexall Drug s
We Fill All Doctors Prescr iptions
Pomeroy
992-2955

School , classes for all ages, 9· 30 Buckley, prestdent . Pray er
a m ; mor,pmg worsh tp, 10 45, meeti ng , Wednesday, 7 30 p m.

Pa s~

1752,

ROYAL OAK PARK

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Sunday
Wolfe,

lay leader , Chrtsttan Endeavor,

Sunday 7 30 p

Chester , Olio

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

m , Roy Pooler, sup! : Alfred

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF a m allernaltng
THE NAZARENE - Rev M C morntngs , Alfred

GAUL'S MARKET

'

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

Pa ss
Pa 5~

The Almanac
By Ualled PreiS l.alernatloul
Today is Friday, Nov, 19, the
323rd day of 1971.
The moon ts between its new
phase and ftrst quarter,
The morning star is Saturn
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter,
Tbooe born on this day
under the sign of Scorpio.
American explorer George
Rogers Clark was born Nov . 19,

Ohio ' s Oldest Dodge Dealer
Mid dleport. 0 .

Member of the Big 3
General Merchandise
667 -3280
Tuppe r s Plains

Meeltng Wednesday, 7 30 p m ,
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Ernes t Deeter, leader
- Homer Stephens, pastor
MT, HERMON UNITED
Sunday Sc hool, 9 30 am , BRETHERN CHURCH IN

Sou th
I t

What do you do no""
A-Pass You are \e r ~ un happy. but ~o u don ' t wm e\ Ct'
lime

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

LYONS MARKET

9 30 a m , Sunday even ing
worshtp 7 30 Prayer meet mg,

Easl

The Store with A' Hearf
Ra cine
949-3342

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

Gluesen camp , pastor

~· orth

RACINE FOOD MARKEJ

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.'

R09 er Wilfr ed, Sr , Sunday
School Supt Sun day School,
Tuesday , 7 30 p m

OJ io

West

You , South, hold
.AQ4 .K 6 tAQ 10 85 4K 10 9

Sales · All is Chalmers - Service
Farm · Industri a I · Lawn . Garden
Tuppers Plain s
667-3435

Pomeroy
Ath e ns Road
A F am ily That Wors hips Together
Stays Together

FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MI SSION - Bald Knobs, Rev
R

• BOGGS EQUIPMENT

DOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

pas :.or Sunday school. 10 a m , a m , Young Peopl e's servtce,
Henry Davts, sup! , evenmg 6 45 p m ., Evangel•stt c serv1ce,
Prayer meeti ng ,
se rv1ce, 7 30 p m
Prayer 7 JO p m
Th
ur
sday,
7·30
p m.
mee tt ng , Thursday, 7 30 p m

L

•

M tddleport, Olio

MARK VSTORE

Sunday School,

9 45 a m Church Serv1ces ftrst
and th 1rd Sundays followmg
Sunday School, Second and
fourth Sa turday eventngs, 8 p
m servtces

SILVER RUN FREE BAP- Pastor Sunday School, 9 30
TIST - Re v Howard Ktmb le, a m , M ornmg worship, 10 30

CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD - Rev James Satter tte ld ,

The b1dding has been

..

Mr s Wor ley Franc ts, Sunday

Sc hool Supt

M &amp; RFOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
Hunttngton , W Va .

am
youth and IUn tor youth Eventng servtces, 7 30 p m
serv tce, 6 45 p m , evenmg
wor sht p, 7 30 p m , prayer and
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
pratse , Wednesday , 7 30 p m . METHODIST - Cectl Wise,

ev angel1st1c

•

f ai thful!}' as t he market ~

ANTHONY

Prosecution''

U ·: l\·~

unfrtendly shift to the three
ol clubs
Soulh can vtsualtze East's
nasly plan and sees one wa y
lo fml lhe dastardly vtllatn
In stead of playmg trumps he
leads a spade to dummy 's
ace and a second spade lo

Frtday

Racme Road Ralph Johnson, , ·
Wtth the hope it w ill. in some measure , foster and h elp sustatn that
pas tor Herbert Whtte, Sunday
Schoo l Dtrector Sunday Sc hool ,
good tn famtly and co mmuni ty ltfe, thts feature ts sponso r ed by the
9 30 a m . Morn 1ng worshtp,
ftrms a nd organizattons whose names appear belo w
10 30 a m
Sunday even mg
servtce, 7 p m Wedne sday
evenmg pra yer serv tces 7 30 p
m

LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
- Mr Rober I Wy etl, pas lor ,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Sunday School supl , Ronald
Rev
Lawrence
Sull tvan, Osborne Bible School , 9 30 a
pastor Sunday School 9 30 m , preachtng 10 45 a m ,

Lar1m or e, pastor

m1

;..=

fu st d1amond and mr~kP " th o..

REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LAT
TER DAY SAINTS - Portland

Sludy, 7 30 o m

Sundays.

Church School, 10 a m
APPLE GROVE - Worshtp,

•

Thursday

dtecover the abundant ltfe'

OLD
DEXTER
CONWednesday , Sunday Sc hoo l GREGATIONAL
CHURCH
Super mtendent. Paulme Me Rev Wtllard Dutc her , pastor
Cl tnlock, pastor
M Wolfe

Rev Forrest R Donley
Church

RACINE
OF THE

Today 's hand os take n from
the encyclopedoa of bndge
and tll ustra les the play
So uth " ve t y happy wtl h
hos four -hearl conh act when
he sees the dummy If East
plays ilke a fttend he woll
cash two dtamonds and sh tl l
to a cl ub wh et eupon South
woll lose lo t he ace of hea t ts
,md ta ke the t e s 1 of lhe
lncks
lJnfot tunatelv fo t So uth s
peace of nund 'Easl wms lhe

•

Gra t e pas tor Worshtp servtce ,

Road

" .

Wtth hts gent us for pub- ~
~
ilcot y the late Ely Culbertson
wrote a boul a play whtch he U
called the "Coup Without a
name." Modernts(s h a v e
named tt the · S c i s s o t s
Co up " stnce t! ts desogned to

•

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev Herber I

K tngsbury

4 00-13, " Mus1c Man "

7 30-8, TBA
9 ti0--'13, " Tony Rome"
11 30- 8, " Witness for the

r.l

Morntng Worshtp 1l a m ,
You ng Peop les servtce, 7 p m
Eventng serv tce, 7 30 p m ,
Wedne sday Mtd Week Prayer
Ser v1 ce, 7 30 p m
meetmg, 6 30 p m , Evenil1g
wors h1 p, 7 30 o m

m

SUNDAY

4¥

.

CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOD OF PROPHECY, G P
Smtih, pastor Su nday School,
10 a m , Ar thur Henson, Supt ,

CHURCH

\\

l. 1.

B~ Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

·o

School, 9 30 a m , Ralph Carl,

HEATH - Worshtp 10 30 a
m

¥ K Q 10 4 2
• 97
.A J4
'East- West vulnerabl e
Wesl North Eas t South
Pass
3¥
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Openmg lead- + 3

WEEKLY GUIDE
TO BETTER
TV VIEWING

Fold and Place Near Your Television Set -~~
for Convenient Reference
~~

"'3

. K96

Shook, pas tor, Herschel Norns,
supt Sunday school, 9 30 a.m ,
mornmg sermon, 10 30 a.m
eve nmg sermon, 7 30 alter
natmg each Sunday Prayer
serv tce, Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Prayer meettng, 7 30 p m
alter naf tng Su ndays

SIU'days of month by Cltftord
Smith, 9 30 am

-" 9852
SOUTH

LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN - Rev Robert

DEXTER

·~
r

• J 9 73
• J2
-"K Ql076
WEST
EAST (D)
. 8752
. QJ43
¥ 65
¥ A8
+ Q63
+AK 10854

CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Mr

LAUREL CLIFF
METHODIST - Rev

19

• AIO

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST UMYF 6 30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Great Bend, Char les Noms,
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh tp - Hob art Newell. supt Servtces· pas t or Wor sh1p se r v tce , 9 30 a
UMYF 6 30 p m
· MIODLEPORT CLUSTER

,---------------------------1
i Helen Help Us!

MT. UNION

Rev Cec tl Cox, p.lstor Sunday
school Sl.4Jlt , Joe Sayre Sunday
srhoo l , 9 45 a m , Sunday
even1ng worsh tp, 7 30 Wed
nesday prayer and B1ble study,
rr , Sunday eventng servtce ,
730 pm
7 30 p m Wednesday servtce . 8
TUPPERS
PLAINS
P m

B t~l ~ s;~~~~

m ,worshtp,3 15p m Dorcas
CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
Soctel;', lOa m each Thursday Mtddleport , 51h and Matn
'GRAHAM ·uNITED METHODIST CHURCH _ Preach tng Raultn Moyer, pastor Mtchael

Clipped by
~~~s~ors Coup

Btble sludy , Wednesday , 7 30
pm

Serv tces at 315 Matn St, PI
Pleasant. Sunday School 9 15
Rev
Dwtght L
Zavttz ,
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
week serv1ce. Wednesday , 7 JO pastor Sunday school. 9 30 a m Su ndays, 11 am , Wed GOD - Ractne Route 2 The
nesday, lest tmontal meetmg 8 Rev Charl es Hand, pastor
P m
a m , LewiS Sauer. supt ,
p m All wel come
GRACE EPISCOPAL - Rev worsh tp servtce , 10 30 am
Su nday sc hool. 9 45 a m ,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH mornmg
Stanley Plattenburg , mm1sfer
worsh ip, 11 a m
Letart Route 1, the Rev Stan
Morn1ng prayer and sermon,
Evenmg servt ces Tuesday and
JEHOVAH ' S WITNESSES- -Cratg
, pastor Sunday schoo L Frtday, 7 30
10 30 a m Hol y.. comm un 1on ' Larry Carnahan prestdtng
9
30
a m , prayer and Btble
and sermon f1rst Sundays, mtntster Sunday Btble lecture ,
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
study
.
7 30 p m Cottage prayer
10 30 a m Church school , 9 30 a m Watchtower study ,
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Davtd
servtce,
Tuesday,
10
am
,
ktndergart en through etgh t h 10 30 a m
Tuesday , Btble
Jewell, pastor Btble study , 9 30
grade, 10 30 a m
sludy , 7 JO p m Thursday, worshtp serv tce, Fnday, 7 30 am , mormng worshtp . 10 30 ,
•
POMEROY CHURCH OF mtntstry school 7 30 p m , p m
eve nmg worsh tp 6 30 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST- Mr Hoy I Allen, Jr , se rv1ce meettng B 30 p m
,
Wednesday B1b le stud y 7 30
pastor Btble School, 9 30 a. m ,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH CHRIST- John Steele , paslor pm
Worshtp,
10
am
,
Btbl
e
study,
worshtp, 10 JO adult worsh1p of Chnst m Chnsttan UntonPLANTS
COMMUNITY
serv1ce and . YOUQQ people s Lawren ce Manley , pastor, Mr s 11 15 am , evenmg worship,
meeting, bot h 7 30 p m Sun Russell Young , Sunday School 7 30 p m M 1d week serv1ce. MIS SION - Aet 1qutly Ser
vtces, 7 30 p m Th urs day and
day -Wednesda y,
combtned Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m , Wednesday, 7 30 p m
Btble study
and
prayer Eventng worsh tp 7 30 Wed
111ASON ASSEMBLY OF Sunday even1ngs John Dill,
meetmg, 7 30 p m
GOD -Second Sl , Mason, W pastor
nesday prayer m eetm g, 7 30 p
THE SALVATION ARMY - m
Va Chester Tennant. pa stor
STIVERSVILLE
COM·
•
Sunday school, 10 a
m , MUNITY . Rev Edsel Harl.
Envoy Ray S Wtnmg , offtcer m
c;harge Su nday, 10 a m ,
MIDDLE PORT PEN
morntng worsh tp , 11 a m.
tor Sunday School servtee
Hoi mess meetmg , 10 30 a m TECOSTAL, Thtrd Ave, Ihe eva ngelts t1c servtce, 7 30 p m pas
10 a m Prayer Meett ng each
Sunday School Young People 's Re;v Wtlltam Kntttel, pastor ,
Btb le study and pr ayer servtce, Th ursday 7 30 p m Sunday
Leg ton , 7 p m , Thursday, 1 lo 3 Ronald Dugan, Su nday School Wednesday , 7 30 p m Phone even
tng serv 1ce. 7 30 p m
p m , Ladtes Home Leao tte 7 supt , Classes fo r all ages,
773 5133
ZION
CHURCH OF CHRIST
p m Prep classes.
evenmg serv~ee , 8 p m Young
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
SACR~D HEART Rev People's meettng and Btble CHRIST tn Ch r 1Sttan Un1on - - Pomeroy Harrtson v t!le
Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor
Father Bernard Kratcov lc,_St udy Fnday 8 P m
Rev 0 Dell Manley , pastor
McElroy ,
Sunday
pastor
Ph one
992 2825,
Sunday sc hool, 9 30 a m Roger Paul
School
Su
pt
Sunday
School
9 30
Man ley , supt , eventng serv tce ,
Sat urday eventng Mass. 7 30
FREEWILL
BAPTIST
a
m
,
morntng
worsh
tp
and
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 CHURCH - Corner Ash and 7 30
Wedn esday eve ntng
com
m
u
niOn,
lO
30
a
m
,
a m Confesstons, Saturda y 7 Plum,
Mtddleoort
Noel prayer meettng , 7 30 p m
Sunday evenmg youth Chnsttan
Sunday
evenmg
youth
serv
1
ce
7 30 p m
Herr man, pastor , Guy Pnddy ,
endeavor, 6 30 , Worshtp ser
45 wtt h Macy Lou Ca rter
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Sunday Schoo l Supt Saturday 6leader
v tces, Su nda y 7 30 p m
No Tuesday serv tce
-Robert Kuhn , pastor George eventng serv tce, 7 p m Sunday '
Wednesday eventng pray e r
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE meetmg and B1ble st udy , 7 30 p
Su nda y
Sktnner, Sunday School supt School, 10 a m
Serv ices, 315 Main St, PI m
Sunday School, 9 iO a m , eventng worshtp 7 p m
Pleasant Sunday servi ces, 11
mornmg worship, 10 30 a m ,
a
m Wednesday Testi momal
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN 6
'p
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH of meetmn 7· 30 p m
Pme Grove the Rev Arthur
.PI~ttce. Wed, a J_~m
MtddleporL corner of Stxth and
Combs, pastor Sunday school.
1r
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN Palmer Streets, Rev Charles
9 30 a m , church ser vtces ,
Rev Arthur C lund, pastor Stmons ,
pas t or
Danny
10 30 a m
Sunday School , 9 15 a m., Th om pson , Sunday School
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
!Charles Evans, Supt. ; worsh•p Supertntendent
Sundav
CHRIST
, Roy Bt ll Carter.
service, 10 JO a m
Con
church school for everyone
evangel ist Thurman Carsey ,
flrmalton c lass, Tuesday , 4 15 9 15 am , Morntng worship
Btble School sup! Btble School
THE UNITED
Ia 5 30 p m , Junior Con
10 15 am
Eventng ser vtces,
9 30 am
morntng worship,
METHODIST CHURCH
f1rmal1on class , Thursday, 6 30 7 30 P m , Wednesday prayer
10
30
a
m
,
youth meet1ng, 6
Robert
R.
Card
,
Director
to~ m
serv1ce. 7 30 p m Extra youth
eventng
servtce, 7 p m ,
p
m
,
POMEROY
CLUSTER
&gt;EVEN"TH DAY ADVENT.-acttvt ltes on Sunday, 5 p m, for
Chrt
sl
tan
Workers
Cl ass,
Rev
.
Robert
R
Card
TIST - Pomeroy , Mu lberry all youlh up lo Stxth grade , 6 30
Tuesda y 7 30 p m
prayer
Rev. Stanten Smtih
Hgts Herbert Morgan , pastor for tunt or and sen tor htgh
CHESTER - Worsht p 9 15 a meelt ng Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Sabba th School, Saturday, 2 p students
m Church School 10 a m

Mornmg worsh1p 10 30 a m
E9enlng serv1ce 7 30 p m M1d

WIN AT BRIDGE

pastor , Stanf ord Stockton , supt
Morntng worshtp, 9 JO a m ,
church sc hool. 10 30 a m . •
young peoples meellng, 6 30
p m , even1ng worship, 7 30

BRADFORD CHURCH OF
THE HILAND CHAPEL CHR
IST - Cltllord Sm tih ,
George Casto , pastor Sunday
m1n1sler
Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a
SchooL · 9 30; evenmg worship ,
m
,
morntng chur ch 10 30 a
7. 30 Thursda y evenmg prayer
service , 7 JO p m

.._arner Fourth and M a1n
M1ddlepcrt Rev Hen r y L Key ,

10 a rn , preachtng, 11 a m ,
even 1ng worshtp, 7 30 p m M td
week prayer servtce, Tuesday,
7 30prn

'

Ph . 992-3498

AU WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONstRUCTION CO.

'

992-2550
I; 240 Lincoln St ,

United States warships
salute the President and important foreign visitors by
firing their big guns. The
guest's standing determines
the number of rounds fired.

LISTEN TO
2oth CENTURY
EFORMATION HOIJI

Mon. thru Fri•
9:30AM

1360 g~A~HI:

Mlddlepbtt

•

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
•

'·

II

�•
C: HUR CH OF THE NAZA·
HEMLOCK
GROVE
BAPtiST TEMPLE
RENE ::- Mtddlepocl Rev - ~IBLE
CHRISTIAN
Davtd
Slaulfer,
Mtnersvdle Sunday School.

Audry Miller, pas1or , r1oya
Carson supt Sunday s,chool.
9 JO a m
Morn1ng
wor
shtp,
10 30
am
tun lor
~octety .

FIRST SOUTHERN BAP ·
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave ,
Pomeroy, afltl~ated wl lh S B C ,

POME~r.v
I'IJM(]f0Y tlfllfiTY- Rev
W. H Perrm, pastor Roy the Rev Fred Hill. pastor
Mayer, Supt Church school, Sunday School, 9 30 a m ,
9· 1Sa. m : worship, 10 24 a m , mornmg worsh1p , 10 30 a m

~youth

choir rehearsal Monday . 1Un1or SOCiety , 6 30 a m NY PS ,
6· 30 p m. , Mrs Marv1n Burt 6 45 p m Sunday evangelistiC
director ,
sen1or
cho1 r meetmg , 7 30 p m Prayer

rehearsal, 7.30 p m , Thursday , meetmg Wednesday , 7 30 n m
Mrs. Paul Nease, dtrector All
day qutlltng party for Busy Bee
MIDDLEPORT
Class. Thursday , at church
MT
. MOR IAH BAPTISTsocial room
PO~EROY

Un 1on and

OF
Corner

CHv~~H

THE NAZARENE Mulberry

Re\1

Clyde V

Henderson, pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Raymond

Walburn ,

supt

4~

6 30 p m , NY PS ;,

p m
Sunday
e vange l i sltc
n'ee t 1ng 7 30 p m Prayer
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m

MASON COUNTY

MASON FIRST BAPTIST -

Jr., pastor Sunday School 9 30

a

m Arnold Rtchards supt
M orn tng worship lO 30 a m

MIDWAY

~~~es da~

'J'

Second and Pomeroy Sis , Stan
Cra tg , pastor Sunday school,
9 45 a m
worship serv tce , ll
a m , tra1nmg un1on , 6 JO"p m ,
eventng worshtp servtce, 7 30
p m. M1d week prayer serv1ce
Wednesday , 7 30 p m

CHRISTIAN

F IRST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN, Mtddleport

CHURCH

la ng sville Dexter
Prayer
meeti ng , 7 30 p m Tuesday
Rev Robe rt Searles pas tor

SCIENCE

HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION - Darrel Doddrtll ,
pastor Sunday School, 9 30 a
m , Annie Mohler , supt ,
Leonard Gilmore, ftrst elder ,
evenmg serv tce, 7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer meetmg,
7 30 p m

MEIGS COUN
MEIGS
COOPERATIVF
PARISH

9 30 a m ., ftrst and second
Sundays of each month ' lht rd

Gerlac h, Sunday School supt
Btble Sc hool. 9 30 a m , mor
ntng worshtp, 10 30 am

and fourth Sundays each month, eventng worshtp, 7 30 p m
worshtp servtce at 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventngs at 7 30,
Prayer and B1ble Study

prayer servtce 7 p m
nesday

wed

I

By Helen Bottel

J

l
1

Dear Helen :
What's wrong Wlth young parents today'. They have to be on
the go constantly!
Our son and daughter-m-la'~&gt; belong to every club, ta ke tn
every party, drmk to excess, try to be soctahttes, and the heck
wtth thetr children. He calls tt "upward mobihty." Says he has to
meet the rtght people to get ahead, and she must golf and drink
cocktails WJth thetr WJves dunng the day.
The children suffer. They never know who their next sttter
will be. I doubt that they even really know thetr parents. They're
high.,strung and hard to manage, This causes problems the few
times their parents are home--the adults are worn out, possibly
hung over, and the kids "drive them batty."
I'm not saymg ALL parents are like this, but most of the ones
I meet in our son's crowd are. Tell me, Helen, why does this type
have children'-U'ITERLY DISGUSTED GRANDPARENTS
Dear Grandparents :
Possibly because the "Country Club Image" has always
been : successful executtvNype husband, charming wife, show·
place home, and a couple of children who will grow up to marry
offSJX'ing of other country clubbers.
But the ptcture is changing , for these neglected 1'nch ktds"
often hit the road early nowadays, or drop out and jom communes
wbere they feel "together," even if they haven't much else.
(And the parents' stock lament is "How could they do it, when
we gave them EVERYTHING'" )
Maybe you could g1ve your grandchtldren a little of the
securtty and stability they want, "Grandparents." Sometunes all
a child needs ts Just one older person to talk to.-H
Dear Helen
What can you do about a mother who is a dirty housekeeper?
tv. a child , I never noticed When I grew up I pttched m and
helped, built was a case of the blind leading the blmd Mom took a
)Db then , and it's been downhtll ever since.
I've been married seven years and have three children-and
a clean home I'm proud of.
My husband and I can't eat at my folks' house wtthout feeling
sl1ghu y nauseous due to film y utens1 Is , not so cIean dtshes, an d
dog and cat hatr The anunals also add not-too-(!ehcate aroma .
We used to get aroi.Uld thos by iJ\Vltmg my parents to our
home. As they had an apartment, Lt was handter, anyway. But
now they've bought a new home about 100 miles from us, and they
expect us to viSlt them ovemoght
We 've been very close to Mom and Dad. In every other wa y,
they're wonderful ! But even the chtldren had started nollcmg the
dirt in th e apartment~specta IIy m the bathroom.
HowcanlteUMomwithouthurtmgher, andwoulditdoany
good ?Can a woman m her 50s change the housekeepmg habits of
ye ars? - DAUGHTER IN A DILEMMA
Dear Daughter :
Your mother knows she tsn't a good housekeeper, so "tellin g
' 1
yth
ber" WO uldn 'save an mg
I'd suggest that you quietly clean what you can during your
vlsits,andignoretherest.Aht tledirtwon'thurtyou.-H.

Dear Helen:
Here's a tip I some of your up tlght readers: Try livmg life
as agiftinsteado! a job to be done right It feels better that way .GUSSIE
Dear GUBBie :
Thanlt8 ! ) needed that-too.-H.

'Ihls column is dedicated to famtly llvmg so tf you're having
kid tl'ouble or just plain trouble, let Helen help you. She Wlll also
welcome your own amusing experiences. Write to Helen Bottel
c:.rt

of this newt!pllper.

ENTERPRISE - Worsh•p, 9
a m

Church Schoo), 10 a m

FLATWOODS - Worshtp, 11
a m , Church Schoo l 10 a m

POMEROY - Wors htp, 10 30
a m , Church School9 15 a m ,

NORTII

BAPTIST -

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST -

Rev Freeland Norns, pastor
Sunday school, lG am chur ch
se r vtce , 7 p m Wednesday
Btb !e study, 7 p m

John Wyatt, pas tor, J S Davts,
Sunday School supt , Sunday
school 9 30 a m , M orn tng
Sermon , 10 30 a m Eventng
se rm on, 7 p m

10 a m

Church School 9 a m

Rev . Robert Bumgarner

week l y, 9 30 am
Preachtng f 1rst

on Sunday
and th 1rd

.l

cut enemy commumcatwns

Sunday
Romans
6, 11 -18

Church Sc hool 9 30 a m ,

UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND - Worshtp

9

15 a

m , Church School 10 a

m .

UMYF 7 p m
SALEM CENTER - Worsh tp

9a m

Churc h Schoo l lO a m ,

UMYF Thursday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER

ASBURY - Worsh tp 11 a m ,
Schoo l 9 50

a

m ,

WSCS, lsi Tuesday
FOREST RUN -Worsh tp9 a
rn , Church School 10 a

m ,

WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 p
m

MINERSVILLE 10 a m

Worshtp

Church School 9 a m ,

WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7 JO p m
SYRACU E - Worshtp, 8 a
m , Church School, 9 a

m ,

Prayer and Btble Study ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . W Dale McClurg
Rev . Frank Cheesebrew
Rev Martha Ann Mattner

BETHANY

!Dorcas)

Worshtp, 9 30 a . m

Church

School 10 30 a m
CARMEL - Worshtp, 11 a
m , 1st and Jrd

FIR5f CHURCH
NAZARENE

Sun day School, 9 30 a m
M orntng Wor shtp 10 30 a m ,
Evenmg worsh1p, 7 30 p m

11 a m and 7 30 p m. Sunday

Monday

Sund ay Sc hool, 9 30 a. m
Rtchard Ba r ton, supt Prayer
l]lee tmg, Wednes day, 7 30 IJ m

I Corinthian!

HARRISONVILLE
BYTERIAN - Mrs

Tuesday
II Thena1oniano
1, 1-12

L 1-8

•

PRES
Norma

Lee, Sunday Schoop Supenn
tendent Sunday School 9 30 a
m Sunday Servtce 8 p m Rev
Ma x Donahue , Middl eport ,
pastor

•

Wednesday
Dame I

FREE
Eugene

Jesus satd," l am come that they mtght havr ll f e and that they mtght
hs.ve it more abundantly."

6, 10-23

Gtll, pa stor Wtlll am Ba tley,
su pt Sunday Schoo l, 9 30 a m
M or nmg worsh1p, 10 30 a m ,
Eve ntng wor shtp, 7 30 p m
Wednesday , Chnsttan Youth
Crusade , 6 30 p m , Prayer
meet1ng 7 30 p m Th ursday,
chotr pra cf tce, 7 p m

Now tt HI a trtbule to t he mtelhgence of men t hat no one thtnks He was
talk mg about the matertal abu ndance we enjoy today. Everybody knows

Psa lme
84, 1-1 2

He was talk tng about somethmg else
But what else'?., What could Ch rt st add to your posses!l tons 1 What can
He gwe men that mtght accou nt for th e log1ral dlstmctton we readtl&gt;· make
betv. een a hfe of abundance and thf abwtdartt lt/e 1
Htmself' That 's tt That's all PreWH!b what He satd "I am come
that
"
To know Htm and to know the rnea mng Ht s Ltfe has f or' ou r lt\ es ts to

OF

CHRIST
- Danny
E vans .
past or Norman C Wtll, supt
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Wors htp serv tce, 10 30 a m..
( hrt st ta n Endeavor Sunday

Re v

flftorns

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Charles Norns, pastor Sunday
School, 9 30 a m , Morntng
worsh1p, 10 45 a m , Sunday
evenmg worsh 1p, 7 30 p m ;
Wednesday even tng Btble

Does your fam tly u.se the Churc h

eve nmg

7 30 p m ; church sc hool, 9 30
a.m ,
mtd week
servtce,

Wednesday , 8 p m
EAST LETART - Worshtp,
10 a m , ltrst and thtrd Sundays ,
9 a m , second and fourth
Sundays, ch urch school , 9 a m ,
f tr st and thtrd Sundays, 10 am ,
second and fo urth Sundays.
M td week servtce, Wednesday ,
8 pm
GREA f BEND - Worshtp 11
a m , 2nd a nd .4t h Sundays,

Church School. 10 a m
LETART FALLS - Worshtp
10 a m , Ch urch School 9 a. m
MORN 1NG STAR - Worshtp
9 30 a m , Church School 10 30
a m ; MidWeek Se rvt ce,
Wednesday , 8 p m
MORSE CHAPEL- Worship
11 a m , Ist and 3rd Sundays ,
Church School. 10 a m
PORTLAND - Worshtp 7·30
p m , Ch urch School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - Worshtp, 11 a m
l nd and 41h Sundays, Church
School 10 a m.
WESLEYAN &lt;Racone) Worshtp, 11 a. m ' Chur ch
School. 10 a m
UM y F tor all churches of the
Southern Cluster, 7 30 p m
each Sunday at the Youth
Center (Oak Grove Road )
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Jacob Lehman
Rev . Standley Brandum
- JOPPA - Worsht p 10 a m,
Church School 9 a m , Prayer
Meeting , Wed nesday, 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM - Church
servtces, 9a m , Sunday School
9 45 a. m Bible slud y every
Thursday, 7 30 p m
NORTH BETHEL - Worshtp
11 a m , Church School 10 a m
ALFRED - Sunday school.

P!a lrn s

86, 1-8

•

Saturda y
Luke

1, 68-79

CARLETON CHURCH -

Phone 992 -3284

MONDAY
7 Q0-.13, "Stagecoach"
9 ll0--3, " Raid On Rommel "
11 30- 8, " Prtde and th e
Passion"

12 30-13, " Pursuit Across the
Desert "

TUESDAY
8 30-13, " Reluctant Heroes"

-=&lt;
1110

\)( )\ I L~

11 30-13, "Cash McCall"
11 311-8, " Treasure of Sierra
Madre"

WEDNESDAY
7 ll0--3, " Bedltme Story"
8 Q0-.13, "South Pactfte"
8 30-3, "Somebody's Out fo
Get Jenny"

11 30-8, " It Happened to Jane"
11 30-13, "Tall Story"

THURSDAY
5 30--3, "The War Lord"
11 30- 8, "Once More wtlh
Feeltng"
11 30-13, "Thtrly"

FRIDAY
9 00- 8, " A Death of In
nocence"
11 30-8, "Who Was That Lady"
11 30--13, " Maylaya"

SATURDAY
1 ll0--8, "Lost In Pa1amas"
8 30-13, "The Failing of
Raymond"
9 OQ-J, " Hour of the Gun"
II 20-3, " A Gathertng

of
Eagles"
11 30-8, "The Brothers Rtco"
11·30- 13,

"S ptrtti sm "

and

"Bring Me the Vamptre"

Sond Sl lor JACOBY MODERN book
to "Wm at Bndge," (c/o tl'lls nlwJ ·
popetJ, PO Box 439, Rodto City
Stohon, New York, NY . 10019

hts km g Then he leads hts
ntne of spades and breathes
a stgh of relte f when West
plays low No" he dtscard s
dumm y's last diamond East
wins lhe trick but can "l put
hts partner m
Th1s play ts 1eally a form ...,.
of the loser-on-loser play but
the nam e sctssors coup 1s fat
more elegant

whtch is
bustness

d

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

PLUMBING AND HEATING
992 -2550
Middl eport
24o-Linc51r1 St

Sunddy School, 10 30 a m
--

Middleport

"•'

.

Su nd ay

supt Worshtp se rvt ce , 10 30 a
m and 7 30 p m a lternately
Prayer meetmg , Wednes day ,
7 30 p m Rev Jay Stt les,
pastor

HEINER'S BAKERY

(NIW!.PAPER ENTIRPRISE ASSN l

Mtddleport,

pa stor Sunday school 9 30
am , wors htp servtce, 11 am
eventng se r vtce, 7, prayer
se r vtce and you th serv tce,

Thursday, 7 p m

Ern~sl

Deete r , cla ss leader

Yo ugh

morn 1ng worshtp, 10 30 am ,
Robe r ! Babe , Sun day sch{)ol

CHRIST- Rev Robert Shook.
pastor , Sunday School, 9 JO a

supl , Sun day evening servtce,
7 30 Youth m ee ttng , M onday , 7
p m Mtd week servtce, Wed·
nesday, 7 30 p m

Wol fe, ass! supl
wors h 1p , 11 am
se rm on , 7 JO p m.,
each Sunday C111ss

Bob Moore,

Sunday School Supt

, morn tng
, eventh g
alternaftng
meehng, 11

m

NYPS Sunday, 6:30 p
servtce,

Sunday, Roger

Sunday , eac h month , 7 30 p m

7 30 p m Mid week prayer. SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 P m. , PRESBYTERIAN - Rev
M ss tonary meel!ng, secon d Dwtght L. Zav ltz, pastor .
Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
Wors htp service, 9 a m. ,
UNIT EO FAITH NON · Sunday school , 10 am
DENOMINATION Rev
DenniS Weaver, pastor Sunday 'RUTLAND
sc hool , 9 30 a m., Bob Barber,
RUTLAND FIRST BAPsupt , worshtp serv •ce, 10 JO
am , youth meefmg, 6· .45 p m .; TIST - Rev . Samu el Jackson,
churc h, 7 30 p m Btble st ud y, pastor Sunday School, 10 a m ,
Mrs Gertrude Butler, supt.
Wed nesday, 7 30 p.m

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 w :-Second Ph , 992 3863 Pomeroy

I··

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE
.

810 W.

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

'

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Meats and Groceries
Syracuse
992-3986
'

worshtp, 10 30 a m , Young

I·

people' s serv1..:e, 6: 45 p. m ,

E;angeltSite serv tces, 7:30 ,p

'

m Wedne sda y (:!Venlrw servrct

'

and

Racine, Ohio

Ph. 949-3272

.

.. .

Pomeroy

,

VIUAGE .FLOWER SHOP

0.

-

BEN FRANKLIN .STORE

. Vlu.AGE CUT RATE

D. Gdmm, Jr., pas tor. Sunday
Schoo l. 9 30 a m ; Morning

Furniture and Appliances
Phone 985-3308
Chester,

Attend the Church of y ,,, · Choice

Bulova Watches- Sales &amp; Service
Middleport
186 N. Second

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev Lloyd·

.

'

F. J. WALlACE, JEWELER
'

.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Church and Office Supplies-Gifts
992-2641
Middleport
'

Sunday ntght wors htp, 7 30.

Dble

Pa~s

Ps ss

Db\e

Pa~

Pa ss

On this day in history.
In 1863 President Abraham
Uncoln delivered the Gettys·
burg Addr~ss .
In 1874 Wtlliam Marcy
Tweed, leader of New York 's
Tammany Hall, was sentenced
to , 12 years Ul prison for
defrauding the city of ~
million.
Also in 1874 the national
Women's Christian Temperance
Union was organized in Cleveland,

Electric Motor Repair
Main
992 . 5750

.

1q 30 a m Regular board
meeting 7:30, third Saturday
••ch
THEmonth
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHURCH - Rev
Rtchard Dubbeld , pa stor .
School, 9 30 a. tn ; Worship'
se rvtce, 11 a m , Wednesday
pra yer meeting, 7:30 p m

1¥

1N T

SADIE'S MARKET

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

m ,

•

Meig s County Branch

1

ning sermon, 11 a m , Evenmg am ' V
H. Braley, supt. ;
serv1ce Chri shan Endeavor , communton and devottons ,

7 JO P m,

.

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

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN nr~achtnQ serv1ce, 2 p m.
IN CHRIST- Elde n R. Blake,
pastor Sunday School, lOa m.,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Wtnnte Holsinger, supt Mor- CHRIST- Su nday school, 9 30

7 30 p m ; Mr s. Lyda
Cheval 'oe r, prestdent. Son~
serv tce an d ser mon, 8 20 M.t .
Week prayer meettng Wed·
9 45 am. each
Sunday, nesday, 7 30 p m. Mrs Ma zie
preacht ng at II am each Hols mqer, class leader
Sunday Prayer meettng, 7 45
&gt; OMERO Y LOWER LIGH I
~nmth~~d~~~~~~Y ~~(; · ~tn»: CHURCH- Harns onvtlle Road,
RE E DSVILLE - Sunday t&lt;ev Roy Tay lor, pastor , Henry
school , 9 30 ; preachtng, 7.30 Ebl •n, Su nd ay School Supt.
Sunda y School, 9 30 a m :,
p m Sunday , prayer meeting, evenmg
worship, 7 30 p m
7 30 p m. Tc•esday, WSCS, 7 30,
Prayer and pra s te se r vlce,
ftr sl T~_yrs day each month
Thursday, 7.30 p m.
SILVER RIDGE - Worship~ •
10 a m ' Church School, 9 a. m
COMMUNtf l
CHUR CH
TUPPERS
PLAINS De)Cter
Worsh
i
p
serviCeS
Wor$hlp ~ a'm , 1 Church Sthool
Saturd•y anG Sunday, 7' 30 p.m
10 • · rn ,

Family Recreation
&lt;-·• Imming

GAUL'S TRAILER SALES
and GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN

m ; Board meeltng ftrsl Monday

Pi=ayer Service, 1 30 p

'

Rexall Drug s
We Fill All Doctors Prescr iptions
Pomeroy
992-2955

School , classes for all ages, 9· 30 Buckley, prestdent . Pray er
a m ; mor,pmg worsh tp, 10 45, meeti ng , Wednesday, 7 30 p m.

Pa s~

1752,

ROYAL OAK PARK

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Sunday
Wolfe,

lay leader , Chrtsttan Endeavor,

Sunday 7 30 p

Chester , Olio

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

m , Roy Pooler, sup! : Alfred

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF a m allernaltng
THE NAZARENE - Rev M C morntngs , Alfred

GAUL'S MARKET

'

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

Pa ss
Pa 5~

The Almanac
By Ualled PreiS l.alernatloul
Today is Friday, Nov, 19, the
323rd day of 1971.
The moon ts between its new
phase and ftrst quarter,
The morning star is Saturn
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter,
Tbooe born on this day
under the sign of Scorpio.
American explorer George
Rogers Clark was born Nov . 19,

Ohio ' s Oldest Dodge Dealer
Mid dleport. 0 .

Member of the Big 3
General Merchandise
667 -3280
Tuppe r s Plains

Meeltng Wednesday, 7 30 p m ,
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Ernes t Deeter, leader
- Homer Stephens, pastor
MT, HERMON UNITED
Sunday Sc hool, 9 30 am , BRETHERN CHURCH IN

Sou th
I t

What do you do no""
A-Pass You are \e r ~ un happy. but ~o u don ' t wm e\ Ct'
lime

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

LYONS MARKET

9 30 a m , Sunday even ing
worshtp 7 30 Prayer meet mg,

Easl

The Store with A' Hearf
Ra cine
949-3342

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

Gluesen camp , pastor

~· orth

RACINE FOOD MARKEJ

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.'

R09 er Wilfr ed, Sr , Sunday
School Supt Sun day School,
Tuesday , 7 30 p m

OJ io

West

You , South, hold
.AQ4 .K 6 tAQ 10 85 4K 10 9

Sales · All is Chalmers - Service
Farm · Industri a I · Lawn . Garden
Tuppers Plain s
667-3435

Pomeroy
Ath e ns Road
A F am ily That Wors hips Together
Stays Together

FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MI SSION - Bald Knobs, Rev
R

• BOGGS EQUIPMENT

DOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

pas :.or Sunday school. 10 a m , a m , Young Peopl e's servtce,
Henry Davts, sup! , evenmg 6 45 p m ., Evangel•stt c serv1ce,
Prayer meeti ng ,
se rv1ce, 7 30 p m
Prayer 7 JO p m
Th
ur
sday,
7·30
p m.
mee tt ng , Thursday, 7 30 p m

L

•

M tddleport, Olio

MARK VSTORE

Sunday School,

9 45 a m Church Serv1ces ftrst
and th 1rd Sundays followmg
Sunday School, Second and
fourth Sa turday eventngs, 8 p
m servtces

SILVER RUN FREE BAP- Pastor Sunday School, 9 30
TIST - Re v Howard Ktmb le, a m , M ornmg worship, 10 30

CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD - Rev James Satter tte ld ,

The b1dding has been

..

Mr s Wor ley Franc ts, Sunday

Sc hool Supt

M &amp; RFOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
Hunttngton , W Va .

am
youth and IUn tor youth Eventng servtces, 7 30 p m
serv tce, 6 45 p m , evenmg
wor sht p, 7 30 p m , prayer and
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
pratse , Wednesday , 7 30 p m . METHODIST - Cectl Wise,

ev angel1st1c

•

f ai thful!}' as t he market ~

ANTHONY

Prosecution''

U ·: l\·~

unfrtendly shift to the three
ol clubs
Soulh can vtsualtze East's
nasly plan and sees one wa y
lo fml lhe dastardly vtllatn
In stead of playmg trumps he
leads a spade to dummy 's
ace and a second spade lo

Frtday

Racme Road Ralph Johnson, , ·
Wtth the hope it w ill. in some measure , foster and h elp sustatn that
pas tor Herbert Whtte, Sunday
Schoo l Dtrector Sunday Sc hool ,
good tn famtly and co mmuni ty ltfe, thts feature ts sponso r ed by the
9 30 a m . Morn 1ng worshtp,
ftrms a nd organizattons whose names appear belo w
10 30 a m
Sunday even mg
servtce, 7 p m Wedne sday
evenmg pra yer serv tces 7 30 p
m

LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
- Mr Rober I Wy etl, pas lor ,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Sunday School supl , Ronald
Rev
Lawrence
Sull tvan, Osborne Bible School , 9 30 a
pastor Sunday School 9 30 m , preachtng 10 45 a m ,

Lar1m or e, pastor

m1

;..=

fu st d1amond and mr~kP " th o..

REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LAT
TER DAY SAINTS - Portland

Sludy, 7 30 o m

Sundays.

Church School, 10 a m
APPLE GROVE - Worshtp,

•

Thursday

dtecover the abundant ltfe'

OLD
DEXTER
CONWednesday , Sunday Sc hoo l GREGATIONAL
CHURCH
Super mtendent. Paulme Me Rev Wtllard Dutc her , pastor
Cl tnlock, pastor
M Wolfe

Rev Forrest R Donley
Church

RACINE
OF THE

Today 's hand os take n from
the encyclopedoa of bndge
and tll ustra les the play
So uth " ve t y happy wtl h
hos four -hearl conh act when
he sees the dummy If East
plays ilke a fttend he woll
cash two dtamonds and sh tl l
to a cl ub wh et eupon South
woll lose lo t he ace of hea t ts
,md ta ke the t e s 1 of lhe
lncks
lJnfot tunatelv fo t So uth s
peace of nund 'Easl wms lhe

•

Gra t e pas tor Worshtp servtce ,

Road

" .

Wtth hts gent us for pub- ~
~
ilcot y the late Ely Culbertson
wrote a boul a play whtch he U
called the "Coup Without a
name." Modernts(s h a v e
named tt the · S c i s s o t s
Co up " stnce t! ts desogned to

•

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev Herber I

K tngsbury

4 00-13, " Mus1c Man "

7 30-8, TBA
9 ti0--'13, " Tony Rome"
11 30- 8, " Witness for the

r.l

Morntng Worshtp 1l a m ,
You ng Peop les servtce, 7 p m
Eventng serv tce, 7 30 p m ,
Wedne sday Mtd Week Prayer
Ser v1 ce, 7 30 p m
meetmg, 6 30 p m , Evenil1g
wors h1 p, 7 30 o m

m

SUNDAY

4¥

.

CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOD OF PROPHECY, G P
Smtih, pastor Su nday School,
10 a m , Ar thur Henson, Supt ,

CHURCH

\\

l. 1.

B~ Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

·o

School, 9 30 a m , Ralph Carl,

HEATH - Worshtp 10 30 a
m

¥ K Q 10 4 2
• 97
.A J4
'East- West vulnerabl e
Wesl North Eas t South
Pass
3¥
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Openmg lead- + 3

WEEKLY GUIDE
TO BETTER
TV VIEWING

Fold and Place Near Your Television Set -~~
for Convenient Reference
~~

"'3

. K96

Shook, pas tor, Herschel Norns,
supt Sunday school, 9 30 a.m ,
mornmg sermon, 10 30 a.m
eve nmg sermon, 7 30 alter
natmg each Sunday Prayer
serv tce, Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Prayer meettng, 7 30 p m
alter naf tng Su ndays

SIU'days of month by Cltftord
Smith, 9 30 am

-" 9852
SOUTH

LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN - Rev Robert

DEXTER

·~
r

• J 9 73
• J2
-"K Ql076
WEST
EAST (D)
. 8752
. QJ43
¥ 65
¥ A8
+ Q63
+AK 10854

CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Mr

LAUREL CLIFF
METHODIST - Rev

19

• AIO

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST UMYF 6 30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Great Bend, Char les Noms,
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh tp - Hob art Newell. supt Servtces· pas t or Wor sh1p se r v tce , 9 30 a
UMYF 6 30 p m
· MIODLEPORT CLUSTER

,---------------------------1
i Helen Help Us!

MT. UNION

Rev Cec tl Cox, p.lstor Sunday
school Sl.4Jlt , Joe Sayre Sunday
srhoo l , 9 45 a m , Sunday
even1ng worsh tp, 7 30 Wed
nesday prayer and B1ble study,
rr , Sunday eventng servtce ,
730 pm
7 30 p m Wednesday servtce . 8
TUPPERS
PLAINS
P m

B t~l ~ s;~~~~

m ,worshtp,3 15p m Dorcas
CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
Soctel;', lOa m each Thursday Mtddleport , 51h and Matn
'GRAHAM ·uNITED METHODIST CHURCH _ Preach tng Raultn Moyer, pastor Mtchael

Clipped by
~~~s~ors Coup

Btble sludy , Wednesday , 7 30
pm

Serv tces at 315 Matn St, PI
Pleasant. Sunday School 9 15
Rev
Dwtght L
Zavttz ,
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
week serv1ce. Wednesday , 7 JO pastor Sunday school. 9 30 a m Su ndays, 11 am , Wed GOD - Ractne Route 2 The
nesday, lest tmontal meetmg 8 Rev Charl es Hand, pastor
P m
a m , LewiS Sauer. supt ,
p m All wel come
GRACE EPISCOPAL - Rev worsh tp servtce , 10 30 am
Su nday sc hool. 9 45 a m ,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH mornmg
Stanley Plattenburg , mm1sfer
worsh ip, 11 a m
Letart Route 1, the Rev Stan
Morn1ng prayer and sermon,
Evenmg servt ces Tuesday and
JEHOVAH ' S WITNESSES- -Cratg
, pastor Sunday schoo L Frtday, 7 30
10 30 a m Hol y.. comm un 1on ' Larry Carnahan prestdtng
9
30
a m , prayer and Btble
and sermon f1rst Sundays, mtntster Sunday Btble lecture ,
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
study
.
7 30 p m Cottage prayer
10 30 a m Church school , 9 30 a m Watchtower study ,
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Davtd
servtce,
Tuesday,
10
am
,
ktndergart en through etgh t h 10 30 a m
Tuesday , Btble
Jewell, pastor Btble study , 9 30
grade, 10 30 a m
sludy , 7 JO p m Thursday, worshtp serv tce, Fnday, 7 30 am , mormng worshtp . 10 30 ,
•
POMEROY CHURCH OF mtntstry school 7 30 p m , p m
eve nmg worsh tp 6 30 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST- Mr Hoy I Allen, Jr , se rv1ce meettng B 30 p m
,
Wednesday B1b le stud y 7 30
pastor Btble School, 9 30 a. m ,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH CHRIST- John Steele , paslor pm
Worshtp,
10
am
,
Btbl
e
study,
worshtp, 10 JO adult worsh1p of Chnst m Chnsttan UntonPLANTS
COMMUNITY
serv1ce and . YOUQQ people s Lawren ce Manley , pastor, Mr s 11 15 am , evenmg worship,
meeting, bot h 7 30 p m Sun Russell Young , Sunday School 7 30 p m M 1d week serv1ce. MIS SION - Aet 1qutly Ser
vtces, 7 30 p m Th urs day and
day -Wednesda y,
combtned Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m , Wednesday, 7 30 p m
Btble study
and
prayer Eventng worsh tp 7 30 Wed
111ASON ASSEMBLY OF Sunday even1ngs John Dill,
meetmg, 7 30 p m
GOD -Second Sl , Mason, W pastor
nesday prayer m eetm g, 7 30 p
THE SALVATION ARMY - m
Va Chester Tennant. pa stor
STIVERSVILLE
COM·
•
Sunday school, 10 a
m , MUNITY . Rev Edsel Harl.
Envoy Ray S Wtnmg , offtcer m
c;harge Su nday, 10 a m ,
MIDDLE PORT PEN
morntng worsh tp , 11 a m.
tor Sunday School servtee
Hoi mess meetmg , 10 30 a m TECOSTAL, Thtrd Ave, Ihe eva ngelts t1c servtce, 7 30 p m pas
10 a m Prayer Meett ng each
Sunday School Young People 's Re;v Wtlltam Kntttel, pastor ,
Btb le study and pr ayer servtce, Th ursday 7 30 p m Sunday
Leg ton , 7 p m , Thursday, 1 lo 3 Ronald Dugan, Su nday School Wednesday , 7 30 p m Phone even
tng serv 1ce. 7 30 p m
p m , Ladtes Home Leao tte 7 supt , Classes fo r all ages,
773 5133
ZION
CHURCH OF CHRIST
p m Prep classes.
evenmg serv~ee , 8 p m Young
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
SACR~D HEART Rev People's meettng and Btble CHRIST tn Ch r 1Sttan Un1on - - Pomeroy Harrtson v t!le
Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor
Father Bernard Kratcov lc,_St udy Fnday 8 P m
Rev 0 Dell Manley , pastor
McElroy ,
Sunday
pastor
Ph one
992 2825,
Sunday sc hool, 9 30 a m Roger Paul
School
Su
pt
Sunday
School
9 30
Man ley , supt , eventng serv tce ,
Sat urday eventng Mass. 7 30
FREEWILL
BAPTIST
a
m
,
morntng
worsh
tp
and
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 CHURCH - Corner Ash and 7 30
Wedn esday eve ntng
com
m
u
niOn,
lO
30
a
m
,
a m Confesstons, Saturda y 7 Plum,
Mtddleoort
Noel prayer meettng , 7 30 p m
Sunday evenmg youth Chnsttan
Sunday
evenmg
youth
serv
1
ce
7 30 p m
Herr man, pastor , Guy Pnddy ,
endeavor, 6 30 , Worshtp ser
45 wtt h Macy Lou Ca rter
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Sunday Schoo l Supt Saturday 6leader
v tces, Su nda y 7 30 p m
No Tuesday serv tce
-Robert Kuhn , pastor George eventng serv tce, 7 p m Sunday '
Wednesday eventng pray e r
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE meetmg and B1ble st udy , 7 30 p
Su nda y
Sktnner, Sunday School supt School, 10 a m
Serv ices, 315 Main St, PI m
Sunday School, 9 iO a m , eventng worshtp 7 p m
Pleasant Sunday servi ces, 11
mornmg worship, 10 30 a m ,
a
m Wednesday Testi momal
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN 6
'p
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH of meetmn 7· 30 p m
Pme Grove the Rev Arthur
.PI~ttce. Wed, a J_~m
MtddleporL corner of Stxth and
Combs, pastor Sunday school.
1r
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN Palmer Streets, Rev Charles
9 30 a m , church ser vtces ,
Rev Arthur C lund, pastor Stmons ,
pas t or
Danny
10 30 a m
Sunday School , 9 15 a m., Th om pson , Sunday School
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
!Charles Evans, Supt. ; worsh•p Supertntendent
Sundav
CHRIST
, Roy Bt ll Carter.
service, 10 JO a m
Con
church school for everyone
evangel ist Thurman Carsey ,
flrmalton c lass, Tuesday , 4 15 9 15 am , Morntng worship
Btble School sup! Btble School
THE UNITED
Ia 5 30 p m , Junior Con
10 15 am
Eventng ser vtces,
9 30 am
morntng worship,
METHODIST CHURCH
f1rmal1on class , Thursday, 6 30 7 30 P m , Wednesday prayer
10
30
a
m
,
youth meet1ng, 6
Robert
R.
Card
,
Director
to~ m
serv1ce. 7 30 p m Extra youth
eventng
servtce, 7 p m ,
p
m
,
POMEROY
CLUSTER
&gt;EVEN"TH DAY ADVENT.-acttvt ltes on Sunday, 5 p m, for
Chrt
sl
tan
Workers
Cl ass,
Rev
.
Robert
R
Card
TIST - Pomeroy , Mu lberry all youlh up lo Stxth grade , 6 30
Tuesda y 7 30 p m
prayer
Rev. Stanten Smtih
Hgts Herbert Morgan , pastor for tunt or and sen tor htgh
CHESTER - Worsht p 9 15 a meelt ng Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Sabba th School, Saturday, 2 p students
m Church School 10 a m

Mornmg worsh1p 10 30 a m
E9enlng serv1ce 7 30 p m M1d

WIN AT BRIDGE

pastor , Stanf ord Stockton , supt
Morntng worshtp, 9 JO a m ,
church sc hool. 10 30 a m . •
young peoples meellng, 6 30
p m , even1ng worship, 7 30

BRADFORD CHURCH OF
THE HILAND CHAPEL CHR
IST - Cltllord Sm tih ,
George Casto , pastor Sunday
m1n1sler
Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a
SchooL · 9 30; evenmg worship ,
m
,
morntng chur ch 10 30 a
7. 30 Thursda y evenmg prayer
service , 7 JO p m

.._arner Fourth and M a1n
M1ddlepcrt Rev Hen r y L Key ,

10 a rn , preachtng, 11 a m ,
even 1ng worshtp, 7 30 p m M td
week prayer servtce, Tuesday,
7 30prn

'

Ph . 992-3498

AU WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONstRUCTION CO.

'

992-2550
I; 240 Lincoln St ,

United States warships
salute the President and important foreign visitors by
firing their big guns. The
guest's standing determines
the number of rounds fired.

LISTEN TO
2oth CENTURY
EFORMATION HOIJI

Mon. thru Fri•
9:30AM

1360 g~A~HI:

Mlddlepbtt

•

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
•

'·

II

�a.:.: The raUy Strilnel, Mlckleport-1\tloa ny, 0., Nov. 19,1971

EE~

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Lost

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P .M. Day Before Publ ication
MQI1day Deadline9a .m
. _£~ng!14fion &amp; Corrections

•

FEMALE Siamese cat was
hidden underneafh car and ~
lost between Chester on RL 7
and Foote Mineral Plant.

Will be accepted until9 a .m. far ·
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

Of

Graham Station , W. Va . Call
collect 614.98S.J962.
11 ·17·31p

IIUALITY

• The Publisher reserves theright to edit or re ject any ~ds SEALPOINT Siamese cat in
vic1nity of elementary school
deemed objectional.
The
on
Beech SL in Middleport .
publisher will not be responsible
Phone
992·3516 or 992·2888.
for more than one incorrect
Reward .
··
Insertion .

1970 CAMARO CPE .

For Want Ad Service
LOST ~ Man 's gold diamond
Scents per Word one insertion
sol i taire ring . Small diamond.
Minimum Charge 75c
sentimental
value.
big
12 cents per word three.
Reward
.
Bob
Hoeflich
, 992.
("Onsecutlve insert ions .

18 cen ts per word sbc con secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid:
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word m ini mum .

Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

Advertisem~nt .

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Daily ,
8:3 0 a .m . to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .

In Memory

ll ·19·31c

1970 DODGE POLAR A

Notice
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...

10.J.Ifc

Sale,

Building ,

Boothe

Friday

STILL &amp; TRAP Shoot, Sunday.
Nov. 21. 1 p. m., Rutland Gun
Club on New lim a Rd .

sunset, Where lovel iness REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese tablets and E.Vap·
never dies, Dad dwells in a

Some day we hope to meet
him, When our days on earth

are o're, On the beautiful isle

of somewhere, where sorrows
are no more .
Sadly missed by children and

grandchildren.

11.19. ttp

Card of Thanks
TO WISH many thanks to Dr .
Harder, all nurses, all X-ray
doctors and nurses for their
excellent courtesy, and all
those who served me for their

kindness and excellent work
for which I received at Holzer
.Medical Center . I cou ld not

have received better care.
Mrs . Harley Johnson

11 ·1 9· ttc

Water Pills . Nelson Drugs .

ll·l7·30tp
A WEEKEND revival begin ·
KOSCOT Kosmetics and wigs .
Yes we have Koscot Products
and wigs in stock for your
immediate needs. Yes we do
deliver . Would you like to
select your own customers
and have your own route and
make good money? Cal l
Brown's in Middleport 992 ·
5113, distributors of Koscot
Kosmetics .
ll -16.tfc

SMALLEY'S

Gift

Chester, Ohio . Over a
thousand items to choose
from for Christmas gifts,
flower arrangements for
Christmas, large collection of
Avon Bottles, lots of toys.
Open Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. , Thursday,
Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to

9 p.m. Closed Monday .
11 ·17·12fc

husband and father, John E.
Foreman . Special thanks to GUN

shoot , Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
November 21. 12 noon .
11 · 17-3tc

the
Rac i ne
Emergency
Sq uad, doctors, nurses, aides
and orderlies of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Ewing
Funeral
Home ,
Rev. SHOOTING Match, Saturday.
Freeland Norris, pallbearers
Nov. 20 at the Racine Planing
and all who assisted in any
Mill at 6 p.m . Factory choke
way.
guns only . Assorted meat .
Mrs. John E. Foreman and
Sponsored by the Syracuse

11 .19.1tc

lf .17·3fc
old Phone 742·4874 .

USED deep.well ief pump. Ji m

11 ·14·61p

DANCE

111612tp

Mixed League

Nov. J, 1971
Standings

Team
Young's Market

W. L.
48 J2

Smith· Nelson Motors
Oiler's Sohio

46 34
46 J4

Zide's Sport Shop

38 42

Tenfh Framers

32 -48

Nelson 's Drug
Hi gh Individual

Game ~

30 50
A. L.

l sring
l

f

off II
1
SIEGLER I

I
I

HEATERS
FUEL OIL

II

I All sizes in ~lock . We install , I
I finance , ser v ice .

I~
•

I

POMEROY

Jack W. Carsey, Mtr.

Phone tU-2 111

·--------~Help Wanted

II
J

EARN at home addressi ng
envelopes. Rush stamped
self -addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn ,
Davi sburg , Mich. 48019 .

10·24 30tp

OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks ,
and.or complete households.

1024·tiC

For Rent or Sale
10X52 HOME Crest trailer. 2·
bedroom, lurnished , gas heat,
good condifion . Home Crest
on good highway . Reynolds
Flower Shop 773-5147, MC~ son,

W. Va .

11 · 16·61p

Phelps 200.
Women High Ind. Game -

Women High Series -

Betty

Smith 530.
Team High Game

Zide's

Sport Shop 693 .
Team High Series

Zide 's

Sport Shop 1979.
Pomeroy Nitional Bank

Junior League

Team

W. L.

Raiders

21

19
15
14
13
8

9

11

High Individual Game
Mick Davenport 152.

Second High Ind . Game
Sfeve Bachner 151.
High
Series

Davenport 433.
Second High Series -

Mick

Outs 897 .
Team High Series

Pis.

48
44

Rawlings Dodge

High

Individual

1968, 250 FORD pickup, 4 wheel

38

drive, good condition. lockout

18

Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,

Tyree 590.

Strike

Rawlings Dodge 1103 .

Thun -

Rawlipgs Dodge 3115.

Team
Team

High
High

John

Standings

$1,495.

11 · 17·5fp
1965 PONTIAC GTO, excellent
condition, phone 949 ·2632,
John lhle, Rt. 1. Racine.
11 ·19.3tc
transaxle, front end, steering
box for bus . High performance equipment for 36

Series

diesel model sao CK
Tractor, loader and backhoe
with 18" and 24 " buckets,
power shuttle. Cost new-

W.
13
11
10
10

L.
7

2

bedroom mobile home across
from Bradbury School. Call
991 5308 or see Charl es Lewis,
south
from
2nd hou se
Bradbury
School
Pets
welcome .

tf . Js.tfc

Will se ll for

General 2 ax te trailer with

ball hitch and brake kit. Cost
new- S\,575.00. Will sell for

Sl.OOO.OO. Equipment 1 year
old , 250 hours. Phone 992.7608

days, and 742-4902 evenin~s .
Can be seen at corner Unton
Avenue and Rt . 7, Pomeroy .

APPLIANCES

at

TRAILER , Brown's Trailer
Park, Miner sville . Phone 992
3374 .
11 l8.6tc

TRAILER LOTS. Bob's .Mobile
Court , Rt . 124, Syracuse,

'-!)

C. ,

•

_._\
(I - /

U\ ' '' CliO

THE~~~~========~-,

AREN'T VOU AWARe.
OF OUR Fl NANCIAL
CRISIS T~tS 'lEAR,

THe MA'&gt;I:&gt;RS CGIIM\IfiEE
6TII.L ~ WI OON'r NEfl)
A NEW HEADQUARTER&amp;,
f&gt;GT. BLOTTER.

B1MO~

1HI6

1

f"UC:!i 16 SO

OLD, ITS 'fHE ONLY

BUII.OING IN '!HE

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph . 992·2174

BILL NELSON 992·3657
TOM CROW, 991·2580

,IOHNSON MASONRY .

EXPERT

Original Cabinet

Wheel Alignment

Company

'5.55

Now Offering A

New Service

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

We hav e added a cra ft sma n
with 20 years experience in
roofing to our staff.

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

1

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP
~S PECIALS~

November 1 thru 6

LOVING CARE
Reg. S6.50
Now $5.00
November 8 thru IJ

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

HOUSE MOVING : Houses. etc

And

LANCEWT

fit,, ---....

MARR~IN'

SAM OF
THE S HIFT'&gt;' E'f/C.S
TIPPED ME TO SHORT
CuT WH Et&gt;.E SAFET'i

HOO·HA , STRANGER!! - I
Gar FONN'{ STOR'l' FOR 'IOU.
A TRAVELLINK BLUBBER
SALESMAN'S SLED BROKE
DOWN AT A LONESOME

• • o -M'I
SENSITI VE
POETIC EARS
DETIC.CT ---

LIES ~

Endloader Work
Leach Beds.

PERMANENT
Reg . lt2.50
Now $8.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 99H474
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

OFFICE SUPPLIES

'·

Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0.

.t-2-lfc

Baths

Room AdditionJ
And Patios

Open 8 Til5

Ph. 992·7796

992 -2094

Complete
Remodiding
Kitchens~

-- GUARANTEE[)....:.
Phone 992-2094

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

.~

HILTON WOLFE 949·3211
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

..

Pomeroy

992-7608
ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

Real Estate For Sale

CAN'T I HAVe
~E.

USUAL
CREDIT
TERMS?

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weathor Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony flumbing &amp; Heoting .'
Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and Ajr Con -

tM AFRAID YOU HAVEN 'T

MTA8LISHEO CREDIT

WI~ Utl,M155 WINKLE: .
YIJU KNOW

WELL, LET'S

NO ... BUT I
~INK I 1M

PUT IT

TH15 WAY...

...YOU CAN EITH!&lt;11 LOOK AT
IT NOW, 011 POSTPONE TH'
AC&gt;ONV UNTIL. AFTER

DINNEI'I.!

8EG/NNIN0

,--..-/

TO FIND OUT!

NEW oU51N

C'IN BE .

ditioning .

240 Lincoln St., ,Middlepo~1

Phone 992·2550
Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us lor
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

Bargai n Center , Tuppers HOUSE , 4 rooms and bath on
raised , moved, underpinned,
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___j J remodeled. Estimates fr ee,
Plains , 51 . Rt. 7 at the- cau tion
Pea cock
Ave .
Rent
l ight. Automa tic washers S35 ;
anywhere . National House
reasonable . Phone 992 ·5293 . NEIGLER Building Supply
elecl.
dryers
$30 :
Movers. Box 5002 , Charleston,
Free
estimate
on
building
11 . 16·ft c
refrigerators $20 up. Only a
W. Va . 25311, or phone 304·925
your new home. Wil l draw
sample of ou r mercha ndise
3279
prints to suit the lay of your
and prices . Come out and see
9 30·60fp
land . Ca ll Guy Neigler ,
for yourself. Open 't il 6 p.m.
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
MIDDLEPORT -- 7 r oo m
Closed Mondays.
alu minum siding , soffe t and SE PTIC tanks cleaned . Miller HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
house, 1' 1 baths , 3 bedroo ms .
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
1t 19 21c
gutter . Call Donald Smith,
Service. Phone 992·2522 .
storm windows and door s,
662·3035.
Rac ine, Oh io.
6·10.ttc
fronl and ba ck por ch. 2 car
DON'T PUMP your sluggish
2·12·tf C
10·7 tf c
garage, on co rner lo t. J83 N.
septic tank . Ge t Klean . Em .
- - - - - -- ~~
W~N~I~N~G~S~.-st~orm
---d~oo
-rs--and READYM IX
Th ird St. , Middl eport Pho ne A
CONCRETE
All Septic Tank Cl eaner .
74 2·4874.
windows , carports .
del i vered right to your
Landmark Farm Bureau ,
NOTICE OF
It IHtp
marquees, aluminum siding
project. Fasl and easy. Free
Pomeroy .
PUBLIC SALE
and rail ing . Call A. Jacob,
estimates . Phone 992 ·3284 . TO WHOM IT MAY CON ·
ll ·19·11C
HOUSE , \642 L incoln Heights .
sales representati ve. For free
Goeglein Ready .Mix Co ., CERN :
Notice is hereby given thai on
Call Danny Thompson , 992 ·
e:stimates, phone Charles
Middleport. Ohio.
UNABLE to hunt and must sell
29th., 1971. at 10 : 30
2196.
6·30·tfc aNovember
Lisle ,
Syracuse,
V
v.
2 Beagle ma le dogs, J years
.m
.
a
public sale wilt bt held at
Johnson and Son, In c.
old . Phone 8432476.
Pomeroy MOtor Co., Pomeroy ,
s.v .tfc SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
11 ·17.6fc
Ohio to sell for cash the
Reasonable rates . Ph . -446 ·4782, following coll ateral, to wit : 1970
NICE 2·::. .vry home wilh (u ll
AUTOMOB ILE insurance
Gallipolis . John Russell, Chevrolet , Spt. Cpe ., Ser . No .
basement,
2
lots,
new
for
ced
NEW STEPUP bumper for late
136370A 10638ol. sa1d collattral
been cancelled? Lost your
O.Vner &amp; Opera tor.
air
fu
rnace
.
Near
Pomeroy
model GMC truck . Phone 992 ·
being
held to secure an
operator
'
s
license?
Call
992
·
512·ffc
Elementary Sch ool. Phone
3676 or 992 ·5947 .
obligation arising under a reta il
1966.
=--,-,,--------992 7384 to see.
11 ·16·31c
6 JJ.tfc BACKHOE AND DOZER work~ instalment security agreement
11 ·7 lie
Septic tanks insta ll ed. George executed by vanS . Stewart and
held by Generol Motors At ·
5 ROOM house , bath, hot and
I Bill) Pullins, Phone 991·2478. ceptance
Corporation
as
cold wat er . 1 acres land CO NVEN IENT bul secluded
4·2S.tfc secured party . Seid publ ic sale
Phon e 843 ·2648.
bui lding lois on T79 at Rock
~~---­
Is to be conducted according to
11 18-3tc
Springs . With in walki ng SIX ~OOM house . balh , full SEWING MACHINES . Repair the taws ot the State of Oh io.
distance ol M eigs High
servi ce. all makes . 99'2 ·2284. General Motors Acceptance
Jasement. 133 But te rn~ Ave ..
School , a 5 minute dr i ve fr om
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Corporation rnerves the right
Bx35 MOBILE home. Phone 991
iust walking distance from
Pomeroy . Call or see Bill
Authorized
Singer Sa les and to bid at this sale.
3324.
dow n town Pomer oy . Contact
The colla teral Is presently
Wi tte weekends, or after 5
11 . 18.Jic
: rj Hedri ck , 1137 Wadswo1 It\ Service. We Sharpen Scissors. stored
and may be seen at
p.m . weekdays . Ph one 992 ·
J.29.ffc Pomeroy Motor Company,
,_,rive, Co lumbus, Ohio, phone
6887 .
GRAVELY
tra c tors ,
1971
Pomeroy, Ohio.
237 4334 . Columbus .
11 -JJ.61c
models af 1971 prices. Buy
GENERAL MOTORS
5·9·110 C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
ACCEP.TANCE
now and gel a special Winter
Comp lete Ser vice
COR PO RATION
Phone 949·3821
discount . A 10 pet. deposit
(111 9, lt
Racine , Ohio
now will hold your tractor and
Critt Bradford
equipment until Spring and
5.1.tfc
you can take advantage of the
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Noti~e is hereby g iven , In
Winter prices now in efl ect .
ALLSIDE Builder s &amp; General compl1ance wlfh Section S715·
Also Gravely owners can get
Contrac tors. Gallipolis, Ohio. .17 r evised code, thaf the taK
spec ial Winter repair rates by
Comp lete line of aluminum. returns or Meigs County, tor the
having your tractor repaired
Broker
year 1971 have been revised and
v inyl and stee l siding . the
now. Gravely Tractor Sates,
608 East Main
valuations com pleted and
Complete line of building, are open tor public Inspection at
Pomero y, phone 992 -2975.
POMEROY
additions , and remode ling . the office of the County Auditor
Br.oker
t J. 18·61 c
RUTLAND - 11h story fram e,
All work guaran teed. Com . in .the Court House, Pomerov ,
110 Mechanic Street
NEW SIDING, STORM·
mercial and residential Oh1o . Comp laint!. against any
Pomeroy , Ohio
1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine
DOORS
and WINDOWS.
roofing . No job too smal l. valuation or assessment , eKcept
left in layaway . Beautiful
large lot , good neig hborhood.
Phone 1146 · 3839 fo r fr ee the valuations fixed and
POMEROY
~
warm
3
bedroom
pastel color . full size model.
JUST $5,995.00.
assessments made bv the Ta)l
estimates.
renovated home, ceramic
All built -in to buHonhote ,
Commissioner or Ohio. will be
11
·18·JOtc
bath , gas furnace . new ki t- RACINE ~ INVESTMENT
overcast and fan cy stitch .
heard by the County Board of
chen
with range, All
Pay just SMU5 cash or terms
PROPERTY - 6 renta ls, "UBBER stamps made to Revision, at i ts office In the
ROOMS
PANELED .
Court House. Pomeroy , Ohio, on
available . Trade -ins ac LOW
UP. KEEP ,
EX ·
order, 24·hour service. Dwain or ~fler Nov . 12, 1971. Com .
$12.000.00.
cepted. Phone 992.5641.
CELLENT
CONDITION ,
or Wilma Casto, Portland.
plamts must be made in
11 ·16-6tc
$21,500.00.
writing,
on blanks furnished by
10·24·301c
RURAL - 6 room older house,
t~e Co~ n ty Auditor and filed in
kitchen, sink with pump . RACINE RURAL - Jl ACRES
VACUUM clea ner , brand new
O' DELL WHEEL alignment h1s off1ce on or before the time
Fr ont por ch, extra lot Only
1971 model. Complet e with all
AT LESS THAN $100.00 per
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12-4. l imifed for payment of ta•es for
$2,500.00.
clea n ing tools . Sma ll paint
ACRE .
Comp lete front end service, t~e Hrst ha lt year. or at any
t 1me. during wh ich taxes are
damage in shipping. Will take
tune up and brake service . re ce1 ved
by
the
County
$27 cash or budgef plan POMEROY ~ nice 7 room DEXTER 8 room house,
Wheels
balanced
elec . Treasurer , wi thout penalty for
home, 11/2 baths , gas forced
avai lable. Phone 992 ·5641.
(G REAT
FOR
THE
Ironical ly.
All
work the f irs t half year .
air furnace, wall to wal t
11 ·16·61c
FAMILY) bath , enclosed
guaranteed
.
Reasonable
Gor don H . Caldwell
carpeling . 3 bedrooms, double
porch , storage bu ild ings,
Auditor of Meigs County
rates . Phone 992 ·3213.
EARLY American stereo.radio
garage. REDUCED St,SOO.OO.
$8,900.00.
7·27·1fC (11) 14· 10tc
comb ination, AM-FM r adio. 4
speaker sou n.d system, 4 RURAL ~ 8 room home. bath, RUTLAND - WANT A GOOD
speed automatic changer.
gas heat. Drilled well on
BUSINESS WITH A GREAT
Bal ance 578.59. Use our
Chesler water . Only $4,500.00.
FUTURE? Living quarters

LEGAL NOTICE

Tell them 1
~a i d

he llo'

Nice q'JLJ,;!

we qet
a vis it

from a
~e n ator,

Wilmer!

For Sale
I SET 1971 World Book of En .

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

budge! terms. Ca ll 992·7085.
11 ·15 6tc BUSINESS

~

30 room brick

w ilh eHellent view of lh e
Ohio r iver . 0 ·1·2-J licenses .
Parking lot

from 5c, 10c and 20c - $35 .
BUSINESS ~ 3 bedroom home,
Phone 992·9981 .
bath, 2 acres of land. NEW
11 · 16-3tc
building 30 x 44 .

Oeland
Realty

(MODERN) over. pays well,
STOCK AND REAL· ESTATE
AT JUST 518,900.00.
POMEROY

~

l rame,

ba t h,

ca binets ,
$7,900.00.

2 bedrooms,
basement,

LARGE

LOT.

9
W. L. Ball Brt!akers
cyclopedia, 1 set 1969 Work POTATOES, Charles Hitlon,
SOLD-2 OUT OF 3 LISTINGS
Sneaky
Snakes
tO
LAND - 27 acres on blacktop
52 28 Pin Busters
Bo ok,
Chi ld crafl ,
Di e
Porlland
,
Ohio.
Phone
843
·
WITHIN 1 WEEK , OF·
10
road .
$2,500.00 .
NEW
46 34
1ionaries, Alias, 1 set 1970
1268.
FERED FOR SALE BY
Zodiac's
9
11
LISTING. .
46 34
Childcraft
.
Eldon
R
10·28.1fc
OWNER
AND BROKER FOR
's
7 1J
WA'NT ACTION, SEE
38 42 Mustang
Kraeu1er , 9-49 ·2-491 .
·
A
PERIOD
OF ONE YEAR
High Individual Game US NEAR KROGER 'S
Roseber.r y's Sohio
3A 46
ll ·1Htp WALNUT dining room suite
BEFORE WE LISTED.
Greg
Smith
128.
992·3325 992·2378
Farmer's Bank
2-4 56
wi th buffet and 6 chairs, oval
CLELAND REALTY
Second
High
Ind.
Game
~
Helen
L. Teaford,
High Men Individua l Game ~
MODERN
Walnut
style
stereo.
library
ta
ble
,
antique
wash
Office 992-2259
Bruce Fisher - Greg Smith 10J .
Associate
Dick Dugan 221.
radio, AM - FM radio , 4 stand. old rocking chair,
Residence
992-2568
High Series - Greg Smi th
Women 1-jlgh Ind. Game ~ 231.
speaker sound systems, 4 wood, set of 4 Oak dining
11 .J7.6fc
Betty Smith 188.
.
speed automatic changer .
room chairs. B x 10 wool rug
Second
High
Series
Bruce
High Series ~ Gary Wayland Fisher 199.
Separate controls . Balanc e
with pad. Phone 992·6133.
570.
$69
.32.
Use
our
budget
terms.
11 · 17·31c
Team High Game
Red
High Series ~ Betty Smith
Ca ll 992-7085.
Barons
707
.
483.
11 ·1Htc GRA ND OPE NIN G SA LE .
Team Hi~h Series
Red
Team High Game - Racine
Reynolds AluminUm Builders
Barons 1368:
Food Market 726 .
Supply of Mason City. Amrax
COAL, l imestone . E)lcelsior
Team High Series - Eagles
Slone and Brick sidi ng ,
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Club 1939.
aluminum vinyl and wood .
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
Buy 10 white storm windows
4·9·ff c
and
get 2 storm doors FREE .
Strange Punt
Senior league
1st 50 orde r s, 100 storm door s
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
sJs:oo ·Down-·
Nov. 6, 1971
How ollen do you have
to give awar, wllh thi s Grand
Park view Kennels, Phone 992.
Slonding•
Balance On
5443.
Opening Sa e. 10,000 feet of
punt on fourth down and go• I
Team
w. L. to
Reynolds
Aluminum
sidi
ng
at
a. t5.tfc
go'! S.vracuse Unlvcrsll,·
Convenient
19 11
Gutter Dusters
huge
discount.
Gutter,
did
earlier
this
st•aso
n
lrt
its
Ter,.c
Born Losers
19 11
awnings , patios, all types of
APPLES ~ Fitzpatrick Or
Pin Busters
17 13 g " m e with Northw es tern .
windows,
kitchen
cabinets,
chards , Stale Route 689
Royal Crowns
16 14 The Oran~cmcn bt•gan tht·
indoor ·ouldoor carpet, 501
phone Wil esvi lle, 669.J785 . '
The Pros
It 19 series on the Northwt•stcrn
nylon.
Your com plete Home
9 3·ffc
Strikers
8 22 ninc·yard line but lusl :J:;
lmprovemenl H~adquarters .
High Individual Game ~ Rich
Easy credit lerms available.
yards in thn·•· lllays and 8 WEEKS old pigs. Phone 949.
Belley 200.
·
On now'· Reynoh s, 77J.5147 ,
2834
or
949·3172.
flunlcd
lmm
fh&lt;•
1\'i
hl(•al
41
Second High Ind. ·Game
Mason,
Va.
,,
11 . 10. t5tp
\ 1· 18·3fc
on rourth down .
Rick Stober! 187.
~--~~----~--------~
.,

Team
Eagles Club
Tom's Carry Out
Forest Run Block
Racine Food Market

AS: THE NIGHT THE DAY

From the Largest TrUck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

Jhto. 992 ·2951.

Kuhl 's

h.p . Roger Hook er, Rt. 2.
Albany ( Pageville).
CA NDY machine, A-1 working
11 ·19·61c
con dit1on. 8 slot s, c hange~

Bantam League
Nov . 6, 1971
Sfandings
Team
Red Barons

~

V.W. REBUILT engines and

Game

dering Herd 1519.
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Nov. 7, 1971

hubs, power brakes

Ohio, phone 985·3554.

Game

Harold Blackston 244.
Second High Ind. Game
Richard Ash 226.
. High Series ~ A. L. Phelps,
Jr. 607 .
Second High Series -

seen at 199 Mill St .. Mid·
dleport. Ohio.
11 ·17·5tc

38
32

Steve

Bachner 418.
Team High Game

Team
Pomeroy Cement t:llock
Davis Warner Ins .

1t Larry's Ashland
15 H. &amp; R. Firestone
16 Holsum Bakery
22

Auto Sales

Second High Series - Gene 1960 FORD :~;,. ton truck. ex .
cellent condition, -4 speed
Davis 443 .
standard, phone 742 ·4874.
Team High Game - Gutter
11 !Hlp
Dusters 749.
Team . High Series - Gutter
196J CHEVROLET, 327 cu . in .
Dusfers 2161 .
engine. needs work done on
automatic
transmission,
engine is in fine running
Tri -County League
condition. $150 cash. May be
Nov . ?, 1971

Standings

Nov . 6, 1971
Standings
Thundering Herd
Bengals
Strike Outs
Rams
Zodiac's

Rich Bailey

I Case

12x60.

AND 17 MUST FOLLOW,

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

·-anted To Buy

Phone 992·2876.

4 piece Band : piano, drums,
trumpet, sax.
From Mariet1a. Ohio

FOR SALE!

NEW,

r---------..I

10 p.m. till 2 a.m.

Belly Smith 214.
High Series High Series ~ A. L. Phelps
483.
542.

BRAND

$10,675.00.
S8,600.00.

I 10 x 50

Ri chardson ~ $2.395 ; 1 1970
Schull -- save $1.000 ; I 1970
Broadmor e cl ass - save

1

Syracuse and Pomeroy area .

MUSIC BY
RUSS CHIDESTER
DANCE BAND

REPOSSESSED.

noon,

HOUSECLEANING in Racine.

Whispering Pines
Nite Club

1220 Washington Bl.vd.
Belpre, Ohio

Sunday. November 21. Broad 2 12 GA. SHOTGUNS, 1 K·3 2 BEDROOM mobi le home in
Racine area . Phone 992 ·6329.
scope, l car tape player, 6
Run Gun Club, New Haven .
1J.J. If c
tapes. Phone 742-3656 .
Sponsored by Post 9926,
11 . f9·21p
Mason, W. Va .
11 · J8.31p
NEW, 2 bedroom mobile horn e
wi!h air co ndit 1oni ng in
SO NY stereo tape recorder, 2
Middleport area . Adults only .
speakers, 2 microphones ,
Phon e 992 ·5443 .
public address. AC voltage ,
Save $10.00 Now! ·
11 ·7-lf c
selector and many other
--------features, 43 ·7 in ch tapes .
this ad and get $10
Phone 992-5655 .
FURNISHED , 1· bedroom
on your purchase of a new
11
·
19-31c
apartment . Adults on l y,
Siegler hea ter .
Middleport. Phon e 992·3874 .
CLEAN ,
GUARANTEED
JJ . J6.6fc

Employment Wanted

Saturday Night
Early Wedn..day

V.F.W. GU NSHOOT,

Write M. D. Miller, Rf . 4.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-627 1.
8·15· tic

Nally , Rt. 3, Pomeroy . Phone

985·41 18 or 985·4233 .

11 183fc

Fire Dept .

PUPP IES to give away , 6 weeks

Wanteli To Buy

ning Nov . 19 at Chester
Church
at
God
with
Evangelist Bobby Porter of
Oak Hill, Ohio. Special
singing each night Services
start at 7 p. m. Everyone
welcome.

Shop ,

WE WISH to express our sin - REVIVAL at The Plains Free
cere thanks to relatives ,
Will Baptist Church, Nov . 22.
friends and neighbors for
7: 30p.m . Special singing each
their kindness, cards, flowers
night. Rev. John Elswick,
and e)lpressions of sympathy
Evangelist.
in the illness and death of our
ll ·173tp

14mlly.

11 18·3fc

MOBILE. HOMES

For Rent

1 p. m. , Racine Gun Club.

11 · t8.31c

1968. Somewhere back of the

he
has
suffered
and
everything that was unfair ;

For Sale

GUN SHOOT. Sunday , Nov . 21,

and

SELl' lie TRUE ...

_..C),

FOUR NEW HOMES,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home ca n be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as 165.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three chi ldren. 7•;, Pel. annual
per.centlage rate.

MILLER

elec 1ric -- bargain ; 1 1970
F Iee l wood , 4 bedroom bnrgnin . 1. 1970 Vi sion , 65. x 11
barg a1n ; R. A. Miller,
Be lpre . Ohio ~ ph one 423·
953 I.
11 12 121c

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
"PMEROY, OHIO

Notice

l2' • 14' • 24' : WIDE

$1,000 .- 1 196• Schull all

PoMeroy Motor Co.

overweig ht la dies, tee ns and
men interested in a Weight
Watchers {Rl Class in
Pom e-r oy write : Weight
Wa tc hers ( R) , 1863 Section
Rd. , Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.

Saturday , 9 to 5 p.m.
R. Jacks who lef1 us three
11
·19.Jtc
years ago on November 20,

land of glory near God and the
blue skies; Dear Lord, be thou
good to him, Keep him in your
tender care ; Make up for all

12495

v.a

4 Dr .,
engine, automatic tran s., P .S., factory air , good
tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish , clean interior .

RUMMAGE

IN LOVING memory of Richard

12595

Less than 10.000 m iles by local owner . Sharp as new in al l
ways, white over gold finish , 350 V·B engine, power
steering, radio, white walls , wh . .cover s.

5292 or 991·2156.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

13095

1970 CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR

"TO THINE OWIJ

Business Services

Less than 11 ,000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 model. Rally
Sport equipped , Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirror s,
console, a ir spoiler, turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 c u. in . V-8 engi ne. Really sharp.

11 ·19·11(

RATES

15 CINDERELLV
HOME'

--~------------------------------------------~~·

Mobile Homes for Sale

PoMeroy
Motor Co•

Z SIGNS

I DIDN'T SEE WHO IT
WUZ IN MV HENHOUSE, .
SHER IF F-· BUT HE THROWED
HIS SHOE GITTIN' AWAY

AND MEEJ\

3 ROOMS
NEW
FURNITURE
.$349.95

w

·MASON

~URNITURE

AFTER I'VE REPI&gt;IRED THESE PIANOS,
ANNIE "' I &lt;:\ELL THEM TO PEOPLE WHO
CAN'T AFFORD NEW INSTRUMEN1S ,
I MAKE A SMALL MONETARY PROFIT"·
f\I'I D 8 ~GE '9PIRIJUAL @AIN

IT'S NICE MEE111"i' UP IN'ITH YOU~
HOMER! Al'l ' REMEMBER ... I~ YOU
CAN CONVINCE "DADDY" THAT YOU
DESERVE MORE DOU"H ... '!!\JiOT JI!

'0
~

WELL, THAT SHOWS 1' GO YA,
SA NDY 1 JUST BECAUSE A GUY CAN'T
SEE DON'T MEAN HE CAN' T 'see" ...
~ t!l§ ~ .ill.f .lli§ HArms~

..Q.R t&gt;IYSfLFl

1
~

J

•

~
"'"'

...,.

~
11-!9

Yeslerday'a Cryptoquole: PITHY SENTENCES ARE LIKE
SHARP NAILS WHICH FORCE TRUTH UPON OUR MEM·
ORY.~DENIS DIDEROT
(C 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

DICK TRACY

ACROSS
1. Old cloth

36.Hum·
mingbird
.31.
Guaran·
measure
C. Circle
teed
segment
38. Muffin
1. Wahine's 39. Son of
garland
Odin
8. Visionary 40. Before
12. Hard·
DOWN
working
1. Liveliness
colonist
2. Conrad's
13. Plane's
11
Victory"
route
heroine
(2 wds.)
14. Pendleton 3. Nieces
and
15. "What others
Boy?"
(2wds.)
16. Thes·
4. Ascended
salian

\

5. SougM
office
again
6. White
House
nickname
8. Chinese
Yetlerday'• An• wer
clty
21. Football
9. Kind of
players
shake·
22.
Separate
down
24.
Repaired
cruise
26. Chan·
(2 wds.)
teuse
10. Approve
28. Arctic
11. Re·
explorer
sponded
18. Elliptical 32. Eternally
33. Subdue
20. Try to
35. Kook
equal

JJ\YWffiM; 1/..t u•~·$1,1.-J ~
Unocramble theoe four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

a

III

mountain

..Going Out Of Business

THE !Mil WANTS US
TO USE OORRl51TIOH5
IN COIIGRESS TO GAIN

Immediately"

CONTROL OF IT· ANP
THE COUNTRY.

We Gave Up Our Lease For Progress
The new business to be built on
this site will employ 40 people. We only
emply 2 - 38 more jobs for Meigs
County.

....__....... 11. Signora
. Ponti
,...-----,...-- - -- --.r'i?' 19. Milburn
IF l(J(J HAVE MY :;t;NSE,
ANP, SINCE WE ARE
Stone role
Pl'TER,
'/OtJ'LL 00 WHAT
TO jjf Hl5 S100GES,
20. Football
I Ml-f'ICI&lt;I NG M1
HE WOUW THEN ~E
team
THIS NATION'S FIRST
22.Saucy
PICTATOR .
23. City of
the Sforza
• castle
24. Clergyman's •

ICLUGEDj

I K I I I
KERUBE ~
'IJ I
I VJ

t

Now arranr• the cirded lelten
to rorm the ourprioe anawer, u

C:::::A~~~~~~~~t&gt;,_~;:..~•uueoled by lhe abo•• cartoon.

L....,-

_Prill
__
. _lltll.:..:..•.......
• I!Sl:..:....INSWIIIc.::..::....:_;_lltn.:...._j'

o r xI I I I 1
(Aiuwel'l tomol't"'w)

resicfence
25. Single
26. Was
useful
27.Showed
the way
28.·Horse or
bean

a/

Jumhl•" OCTET MOUNT REfUGE NOTifY
Yc.te ..d•y'•

An••er1 .~mmrU on rhe level - A MONOTONE

6~ THE TIME IJE GROW UP,
THE METRIC S~STEM WILL

Z9. Moreau's

PROBABtH BE

'friend"
.30. Purpose
31. Still
34. Adoles·
1

CAP!' AIN EASY

Construction will begin as soon as
every mobile home is sold.

OFFICIAL. ..

cenee

DAILY cltYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
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 lengtn and formation of lhe word~ are all
hints, Each day the code letters are different.

SAVE AS MUCH AS •2.000
DURING THIS SALE• . ,

Ia

15 NEW MOBILE HOMES
TO BE SOLDI

A Ceyplo1ram QuolatloD
K

DANNIE'S AT POMEROY

CIYRS

CZQP

'

Pomeroy, 0.
I

'

YV

XPAKQVP

YC.-BVAKZ

992-7195

1011 W. Main

•
.i•
i

----=----

EVERY MOBILE HOME TO BE
SOLD AT NEAR WHOLESALE .
COST.

I
l

RBC
K

JYUHP

RPAPVVKZYUN
OKR

HYPV

DBZ

ONEINCH IS Z.Sq CENTIMETERS., I'LL NEVER ME~Si/RE AN'tTHIN6
ONE FOOT IS Q,3()ljg METERSAND IAbFIIIN M LON6 A5 [ LIVE !

ONE MILE IS 1.60, KILOMETERS ...

•••
'

II.,'"
h

,,

jj

'

~-l

�a.:.: The raUy Strilnel, Mlckleport-1\tloa ny, 0., Nov. 19,1971

EE~

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Lost

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P .M. Day Before Publ ication
MQI1day Deadline9a .m
. _£~ng!14fion &amp; Corrections

•

FEMALE Siamese cat was
hidden underneafh car and ~
lost between Chester on RL 7
and Foote Mineral Plant.

Will be accepted until9 a .m. far ·
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

Of

Graham Station , W. Va . Call
collect 614.98S.J962.
11 ·17·31p

IIUALITY

• The Publisher reserves theright to edit or re ject any ~ds SEALPOINT Siamese cat in
vic1nity of elementary school
deemed objectional.
The
on
Beech SL in Middleport .
publisher will not be responsible
Phone
992·3516 or 992·2888.
for more than one incorrect
Reward .
··
Insertion .

1970 CAMARO CPE .

For Want Ad Service
LOST ~ Man 's gold diamond
Scents per Word one insertion
sol i taire ring . Small diamond.
Minimum Charge 75c
sentimental
value.
big
12 cents per word three.
Reward
.
Bob
Hoeflich
, 992.
("Onsecutlve insert ions .

18 cen ts per word sbc con secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid:
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word m ini mum .

Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

Advertisem~nt .

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Daily ,
8:3 0 a .m . to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .

In Memory

ll ·19·31c

1970 DODGE POLAR A

Notice
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...

10.J.Ifc

Sale,

Building ,

Boothe

Friday

STILL &amp; TRAP Shoot, Sunday.
Nov. 21. 1 p. m., Rutland Gun
Club on New lim a Rd .

sunset, Where lovel iness REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese tablets and E.Vap·
never dies, Dad dwells in a

Some day we hope to meet
him, When our days on earth

are o're, On the beautiful isle

of somewhere, where sorrows
are no more .
Sadly missed by children and

grandchildren.

11.19. ttp

Card of Thanks
TO WISH many thanks to Dr .
Harder, all nurses, all X-ray
doctors and nurses for their
excellent courtesy, and all
those who served me for their

kindness and excellent work
for which I received at Holzer
.Medical Center . I cou ld not

have received better care.
Mrs . Harley Johnson

11 ·1 9· ttc

Water Pills . Nelson Drugs .

ll·l7·30tp
A WEEKEND revival begin ·
KOSCOT Kosmetics and wigs .
Yes we have Koscot Products
and wigs in stock for your
immediate needs. Yes we do
deliver . Would you like to
select your own customers
and have your own route and
make good money? Cal l
Brown's in Middleport 992 ·
5113, distributors of Koscot
Kosmetics .
ll -16.tfc

SMALLEY'S

Gift

Chester, Ohio . Over a
thousand items to choose
from for Christmas gifts,
flower arrangements for
Christmas, large collection of
Avon Bottles, lots of toys.
Open Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. , Thursday,
Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to

9 p.m. Closed Monday .
11 ·17·12fc

husband and father, John E.
Foreman . Special thanks to GUN

shoot , Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
November 21. 12 noon .
11 · 17-3tc

the
Rac i ne
Emergency
Sq uad, doctors, nurses, aides
and orderlies of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Ewing
Funeral
Home ,
Rev. SHOOTING Match, Saturday.
Freeland Norris, pallbearers
Nov. 20 at the Racine Planing
and all who assisted in any
Mill at 6 p.m . Factory choke
way.
guns only . Assorted meat .
Mrs. John E. Foreman and
Sponsored by the Syracuse

11 .19.1tc

lf .17·3fc
old Phone 742·4874 .

USED deep.well ief pump. Ji m

11 ·14·61p

DANCE

111612tp

Mixed League

Nov. J, 1971
Standings

Team
Young's Market

W. L.
48 J2

Smith· Nelson Motors
Oiler's Sohio

46 34
46 J4

Zide's Sport Shop

38 42

Tenfh Framers

32 -48

Nelson 's Drug
Hi gh Individual

Game ~

30 50
A. L.

l sring
l

f

off II
1
SIEGLER I

I
I

HEATERS
FUEL OIL

II

I All sizes in ~lock . We install , I
I finance , ser v ice .

I~
•

I

POMEROY

Jack W. Carsey, Mtr.

Phone tU-2 111

·--------~Help Wanted

II
J

EARN at home addressi ng
envelopes. Rush stamped
self -addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn ,
Davi sburg , Mich. 48019 .

10·24 30tp

OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks ,
and.or complete households.

1024·tiC

For Rent or Sale
10X52 HOME Crest trailer. 2·
bedroom, lurnished , gas heat,
good condifion . Home Crest
on good highway . Reynolds
Flower Shop 773-5147, MC~ son,

W. Va .

11 · 16·61p

Phelps 200.
Women High Ind. Game -

Women High Series -

Betty

Smith 530.
Team High Game

Zide's

Sport Shop 693 .
Team High Series

Zide 's

Sport Shop 1979.
Pomeroy Nitional Bank

Junior League

Team

W. L.

Raiders

21

19
15
14
13
8

9

11

High Individual Game
Mick Davenport 152.

Second High Ind . Game
Sfeve Bachner 151.
High
Series

Davenport 433.
Second High Series -

Mick

Outs 897 .
Team High Series

Pis.

48
44

Rawlings Dodge

High

Individual

1968, 250 FORD pickup, 4 wheel

38

drive, good condition. lockout

18

Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,

Tyree 590.

Strike

Rawlings Dodge 1103 .

Thun -

Rawlipgs Dodge 3115.

Team
Team

High
High

John

Standings

$1,495.

11 · 17·5fp
1965 PONTIAC GTO, excellent
condition, phone 949 ·2632,
John lhle, Rt. 1. Racine.
11 ·19.3tc
transaxle, front end, steering
box for bus . High performance equipment for 36

Series

diesel model sao CK
Tractor, loader and backhoe
with 18" and 24 " buckets,
power shuttle. Cost new-

W.
13
11
10
10

L.
7

2

bedroom mobile home across
from Bradbury School. Call
991 5308 or see Charl es Lewis,
south
from
2nd hou se
Bradbury
School
Pets
welcome .

tf . Js.tfc

Will se ll for

General 2 ax te trailer with

ball hitch and brake kit. Cost
new- S\,575.00. Will sell for

Sl.OOO.OO. Equipment 1 year
old , 250 hours. Phone 992.7608

days, and 742-4902 evenin~s .
Can be seen at corner Unton
Avenue and Rt . 7, Pomeroy .

APPLIANCES

at

TRAILER , Brown's Trailer
Park, Miner sville . Phone 992
3374 .
11 l8.6tc

TRAILER LOTS. Bob's .Mobile
Court , Rt . 124, Syracuse,

'-!)

C. ,

•

_._\
(I - /

U\ ' '' CliO

THE~~~~========~-,

AREN'T VOU AWARe.
OF OUR Fl NANCIAL
CRISIS T~tS 'lEAR,

THe MA'&gt;I:&gt;RS CGIIM\IfiEE
6TII.L ~ WI OON'r NEfl)
A NEW HEADQUARTER&amp;,
f&gt;GT. BLOTTER.

B1MO~

1HI6

1

f"UC:!i 16 SO

OLD, ITS 'fHE ONLY

BUII.OING IN '!HE

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph . 992·2174

BILL NELSON 992·3657
TOM CROW, 991·2580

,IOHNSON MASONRY .

EXPERT

Original Cabinet

Wheel Alignment

Company

'5.55

Now Offering A

New Service

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

We hav e added a cra ft sma n
with 20 years experience in
roofing to our staff.

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

1

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP
~S PECIALS~

November 1 thru 6

LOVING CARE
Reg. S6.50
Now $5.00
November 8 thru IJ

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

HOUSE MOVING : Houses. etc

And

LANCEWT

fit,, ---....

MARR~IN'

SAM OF
THE S HIFT'&gt;' E'f/C.S
TIPPED ME TO SHORT
CuT WH Et&gt;.E SAFET'i

HOO·HA , STRANGER!! - I
Gar FONN'{ STOR'l' FOR 'IOU.
A TRAVELLINK BLUBBER
SALESMAN'S SLED BROKE
DOWN AT A LONESOME

• • o -M'I
SENSITI VE
POETIC EARS
DETIC.CT ---

LIES ~

Endloader Work
Leach Beds.

PERMANENT
Reg . lt2.50
Now $8.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 99H474
Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

OFFICE SUPPLIES

'·

Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0.

.t-2-lfc

Baths

Room AdditionJ
And Patios

Open 8 Til5

Ph. 992·7796

992 -2094

Complete
Remodiding
Kitchens~

-- GUARANTEE[)....:.
Phone 992-2094

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

.~

HILTON WOLFE 949·3211
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

..

Pomeroy

992-7608
ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

Real Estate For Sale

CAN'T I HAVe
~E.

USUAL
CREDIT
TERMS?

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weathor Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony flumbing &amp; Heoting .'
Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and Ajr Con -

tM AFRAID YOU HAVEN 'T

MTA8LISHEO CREDIT

WI~ Utl,M155 WINKLE: .
YIJU KNOW

WELL, LET'S

NO ... BUT I
~INK I 1M

PUT IT

TH15 WAY...

...YOU CAN EITH!&lt;11 LOOK AT
IT NOW, 011 POSTPONE TH'
AC&gt;ONV UNTIL. AFTER

DINNEI'I.!

8EG/NNIN0

,--..-/

TO FIND OUT!

NEW oU51N

C'IN BE .

ditioning .

240 Lincoln St., ,Middlepo~1

Phone 992·2550
Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us lor
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

Bargai n Center , Tuppers HOUSE , 4 rooms and bath on
raised , moved, underpinned,
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___j J remodeled. Estimates fr ee,
Plains , 51 . Rt. 7 at the- cau tion
Pea cock
Ave .
Rent
l ight. Automa tic washers S35 ;
anywhere . National House
reasonable . Phone 992 ·5293 . NEIGLER Building Supply
elecl.
dryers
$30 :
Movers. Box 5002 , Charleston,
Free
estimate
on
building
11 . 16·ft c
refrigerators $20 up. Only a
W. Va . 25311, or phone 304·925
your new home. Wil l draw
sample of ou r mercha ndise
3279
prints to suit the lay of your
and prices . Come out and see
9 30·60fp
land . Ca ll Guy Neigler ,
for yourself. Open 't il 6 p.m.
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
MIDDLEPORT -- 7 r oo m
Closed Mondays.
alu minum siding , soffe t and SE PTIC tanks cleaned . Miller HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
house, 1' 1 baths , 3 bedroo ms .
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
1t 19 21c
gutter . Call Donald Smith,
Service. Phone 992·2522 .
storm windows and door s,
662·3035.
Rac ine, Oh io.
6·10.ttc
fronl and ba ck por ch. 2 car
DON'T PUMP your sluggish
2·12·tf C
10·7 tf c
garage, on co rner lo t. J83 N.
septic tank . Ge t Klean . Em .
- - - - - -- ~~
W~N~I~N~G~S~.-st~orm
---d~oo
-rs--and READYM IX
Th ird St. , Middl eport Pho ne A
CONCRETE
All Septic Tank Cl eaner .
74 2·4874.
windows , carports .
del i vered right to your
Landmark Farm Bureau ,
NOTICE OF
It IHtp
marquees, aluminum siding
project. Fasl and easy. Free
Pomeroy .
PUBLIC SALE
and rail ing . Call A. Jacob,
estimates . Phone 992 ·3284 . TO WHOM IT MAY CON ·
ll ·19·11C
HOUSE , \642 L incoln Heights .
sales representati ve. For free
Goeglein Ready .Mix Co ., CERN :
Notice is hereby given thai on
Call Danny Thompson , 992 ·
e:stimates, phone Charles
Middleport. Ohio.
UNABLE to hunt and must sell
29th., 1971. at 10 : 30
2196.
6·30·tfc aNovember
Lisle ,
Syracuse,
V
v.
2 Beagle ma le dogs, J years
.m
.
a
public sale wilt bt held at
Johnson and Son, In c.
old . Phone 8432476.
Pomeroy MOtor Co., Pomeroy ,
s.v .tfc SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
11 ·17.6fc
Ohio to sell for cash the
Reasonable rates . Ph . -446 ·4782, following coll ateral, to wit : 1970
NICE 2·::. .vry home wilh (u ll
AUTOMOB ILE insurance
Gallipolis . John Russell, Chevrolet , Spt. Cpe ., Ser . No .
basement,
2
lots,
new
for
ced
NEW STEPUP bumper for late
136370A 10638ol. sa1d collattral
been cancelled? Lost your
O.Vner &amp; Opera tor.
air
fu
rnace
.
Near
Pomeroy
model GMC truck . Phone 992 ·
being
held to secure an
operator
'
s
license?
Call
992
·
512·ffc
Elementary Sch ool. Phone
3676 or 992 ·5947 .
obligation arising under a reta il
1966.
=--,-,,--------992 7384 to see.
11 ·16·31c
6 JJ.tfc BACKHOE AND DOZER work~ instalment security agreement
11 ·7 lie
Septic tanks insta ll ed. George executed by vanS . Stewart and
held by Generol Motors At ·
5 ROOM house , bath, hot and
I Bill) Pullins, Phone 991·2478. ceptance
Corporation
as
cold wat er . 1 acres land CO NVEN IENT bul secluded
4·2S.tfc secured party . Seid publ ic sale
Phon e 843 ·2648.
bui lding lois on T79 at Rock
~~---­
Is to be conducted according to
11 18-3tc
Springs . With in walki ng SIX ~OOM house . balh , full SEWING MACHINES . Repair the taws ot the State of Oh io.
distance ol M eigs High
servi ce. all makes . 99'2 ·2284. General Motors Acceptance
Jasement. 133 But te rn~ Ave ..
School , a 5 minute dr i ve fr om
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Corporation rnerves the right
Bx35 MOBILE home. Phone 991
iust walking distance from
Pomeroy . Call or see Bill
Authorized
Singer Sa les and to bid at this sale.
3324.
dow n town Pomer oy . Contact
The colla teral Is presently
Wi tte weekends, or after 5
11 . 18.Jic
: rj Hedri ck , 1137 Wadswo1 It\ Service. We Sharpen Scissors. stored
and may be seen at
p.m . weekdays . Ph one 992 ·
J.29.ffc Pomeroy Motor Company,
,_,rive, Co lumbus, Ohio, phone
6887 .
GRAVELY
tra c tors ,
1971
Pomeroy, Ohio.
237 4334 . Columbus .
11 -JJ.61c
models af 1971 prices. Buy
GENERAL MOTORS
5·9·110 C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
ACCEP.TANCE
now and gel a special Winter
Comp lete Ser vice
COR PO RATION
Phone 949·3821
discount . A 10 pet. deposit
(111 9, lt
Racine , Ohio
now will hold your tractor and
Critt Bradford
equipment until Spring and
5.1.tfc
you can take advantage of the
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Noti~e is hereby g iven , In
Winter prices now in efl ect .
ALLSIDE Builder s &amp; General compl1ance wlfh Section S715·
Also Gravely owners can get
Contrac tors. Gallipolis, Ohio. .17 r evised code, thaf the taK
spec ial Winter repair rates by
Comp lete line of aluminum. returns or Meigs County, tor the
having your tractor repaired
Broker
year 1971 have been revised and
v inyl and stee l siding . the
now. Gravely Tractor Sates,
608 East Main
valuations com pleted and
Complete line of building, are open tor public Inspection at
Pomero y, phone 992 -2975.
POMEROY
additions , and remode ling . the office of the County Auditor
Br.oker
t J. 18·61 c
RUTLAND - 11h story fram e,
All work guaran teed. Com . in .the Court House, Pomerov ,
110 Mechanic Street
NEW SIDING, STORM·
mercial and residential Oh1o . Comp laint!. against any
Pomeroy , Ohio
1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine
DOORS
and WINDOWS.
roofing . No job too smal l. valuation or assessment , eKcept
left in layaway . Beautiful
large lot , good neig hborhood.
Phone 1146 · 3839 fo r fr ee the valuations fixed and
POMEROY
~
warm
3
bedroom
pastel color . full size model.
JUST $5,995.00.
assessments made bv the Ta)l
estimates.
renovated home, ceramic
All built -in to buHonhote ,
Commissioner or Ohio. will be
11
·18·JOtc
bath , gas furnace . new ki t- RACINE ~ INVESTMENT
overcast and fan cy stitch .
heard by the County Board of
chen
with range, All
Pay just SMU5 cash or terms
PROPERTY - 6 renta ls, "UBBER stamps made to Revision, at i ts office In the
ROOMS
PANELED .
Court House. Pomeroy , Ohio, on
available . Trade -ins ac LOW
UP. KEEP ,
EX ·
order, 24·hour service. Dwain or ~fler Nov . 12, 1971. Com .
$12.000.00.
cepted. Phone 992.5641.
CELLENT
CONDITION ,
or Wilma Casto, Portland.
plamts must be made in
11 ·16-6tc
$21,500.00.
writing,
on blanks furnished by
10·24·301c
RURAL - 6 room older house,
t~e Co~ n ty Auditor and filed in
kitchen, sink with pump . RACINE RURAL - Jl ACRES
VACUUM clea ner , brand new
O' DELL WHEEL alignment h1s off1ce on or before the time
Fr ont por ch, extra lot Only
1971 model. Complet e with all
AT LESS THAN $100.00 per
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12-4. l imifed for payment of ta•es for
$2,500.00.
clea n ing tools . Sma ll paint
ACRE .
Comp lete front end service, t~e Hrst ha lt year. or at any
t 1me. during wh ich taxes are
damage in shipping. Will take
tune up and brake service . re ce1 ved
by
the
County
$27 cash or budgef plan POMEROY ~ nice 7 room DEXTER 8 room house,
Wheels
balanced
elec . Treasurer , wi thout penalty for
home, 11/2 baths , gas forced
avai lable. Phone 992 ·5641.
(G REAT
FOR
THE
Ironical ly.
All
work the f irs t half year .
air furnace, wall to wal t
11 ·16·61c
FAMILY) bath , enclosed
guaranteed
.
Reasonable
Gor don H . Caldwell
carpeling . 3 bedrooms, double
porch , storage bu ild ings,
Auditor of Meigs County
rates . Phone 992 ·3213.
EARLY American stereo.radio
garage. REDUCED St,SOO.OO.
$8,900.00.
7·27·1fC (11) 14· 10tc
comb ination, AM-FM r adio. 4
speaker sou n.d system, 4 RURAL ~ 8 room home. bath, RUTLAND - WANT A GOOD
speed automatic changer.
gas heat. Drilled well on
BUSINESS WITH A GREAT
Bal ance 578.59. Use our
Chesler water . Only $4,500.00.
FUTURE? Living quarters

LEGAL NOTICE

Tell them 1
~a i d

he llo'

Nice q'JLJ,;!

we qet
a vis it

from a
~e n ator,

Wilmer!

For Sale
I SET 1971 World Book of En .

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

budge! terms. Ca ll 992·7085.
11 ·15 6tc BUSINESS

~

30 room brick

w ilh eHellent view of lh e
Ohio r iver . 0 ·1·2-J licenses .
Parking lot

from 5c, 10c and 20c - $35 .
BUSINESS ~ 3 bedroom home,
Phone 992·9981 .
bath, 2 acres of land. NEW
11 · 16-3tc
building 30 x 44 .

Oeland
Realty

(MODERN) over. pays well,
STOCK AND REAL· ESTATE
AT JUST 518,900.00.
POMEROY

~

l rame,

ba t h,

ca binets ,
$7,900.00.

2 bedrooms,
basement,

LARGE

LOT.

9
W. L. Ball Brt!akers
cyclopedia, 1 set 1969 Work POTATOES, Charles Hitlon,
SOLD-2 OUT OF 3 LISTINGS
Sneaky
Snakes
tO
LAND - 27 acres on blacktop
52 28 Pin Busters
Bo ok,
Chi ld crafl ,
Di e
Porlland
,
Ohio.
Phone
843
·
WITHIN 1 WEEK , OF·
10
road .
$2,500.00 .
NEW
46 34
1ionaries, Alias, 1 set 1970
1268.
FERED FOR SALE BY
Zodiac's
9
11
LISTING. .
46 34
Childcraft
.
Eldon
R
10·28.1fc
OWNER
AND BROKER FOR
's
7 1J
WA'NT ACTION, SEE
38 42 Mustang
Kraeu1er , 9-49 ·2-491 .
·
A
PERIOD
OF ONE YEAR
High Individual Game US NEAR KROGER 'S
Roseber.r y's Sohio
3A 46
ll ·1Htp WALNUT dining room suite
BEFORE WE LISTED.
Greg
Smith
128.
992·3325 992·2378
Farmer's Bank
2-4 56
wi th buffet and 6 chairs, oval
CLELAND REALTY
Second
High
Ind.
Game
~
Helen
L. Teaford,
High Men Individua l Game ~
MODERN
Walnut
style
stereo.
library
ta
ble
,
antique
wash
Office 992-2259
Bruce Fisher - Greg Smith 10J .
Associate
Dick Dugan 221.
radio, AM - FM radio , 4 stand. old rocking chair,
Residence
992-2568
High Series - Greg Smi th
Women 1-jlgh Ind. Game ~ 231.
speaker sound systems, 4 wood, set of 4 Oak dining
11 .J7.6fc
Betty Smith 188.
.
speed automatic changer .
room chairs. B x 10 wool rug
Second
High
Series
Bruce
High Series ~ Gary Wayland Fisher 199.
Separate controls . Balanc e
with pad. Phone 992·6133.
570.
$69
.32.
Use
our
budget
terms.
11 · 17·31c
Team High Game
Red
High Series ~ Betty Smith
Ca ll 992-7085.
Barons
707
.
483.
11 ·1Htc GRA ND OPE NIN G SA LE .
Team Hi~h Series
Red
Team High Game - Racine
Reynolds AluminUm Builders
Barons 1368:
Food Market 726 .
Supply of Mason City. Amrax
COAL, l imestone . E)lcelsior
Team High Series - Eagles
Slone and Brick sidi ng ,
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Club 1939.
aluminum vinyl and wood .
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
Buy 10 white storm windows
4·9·ff c
and
get 2 storm doors FREE .
Strange Punt
Senior league
1st 50 orde r s, 100 storm door s
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
sJs:oo ·Down-·
Nov. 6, 1971
How ollen do you have
to give awar, wllh thi s Grand
Park view Kennels, Phone 992.
Slonding•
Balance On
5443.
Opening Sa e. 10,000 feet of
punt on fourth down and go• I
Team
w. L. to
Reynolds
Aluminum
sidi
ng
at
a. t5.tfc
go'! S.vracuse Unlvcrsll,·
Convenient
19 11
Gutter Dusters
huge
discount.
Gutter,
did
earlier
this
st•aso
n
lrt
its
Ter,.c
Born Losers
19 11
awnings , patios, all types of
APPLES ~ Fitzpatrick Or
Pin Busters
17 13 g " m e with Northw es tern .
windows,
kitchen
cabinets,
chards , Stale Route 689
Royal Crowns
16 14 The Oran~cmcn bt•gan tht·
indoor ·ouldoor carpet, 501
phone Wil esvi lle, 669.J785 . '
The Pros
It 19 series on the Northwt•stcrn
nylon.
Your com plete Home
9 3·ffc
Strikers
8 22 ninc·yard line but lusl :J:;
lmprovemenl H~adquarters .
High Individual Game ~ Rich
Easy credit lerms available.
yards in thn·•· lllays and 8 WEEKS old pigs. Phone 949.
Belley 200.
·
On now'· Reynoh s, 77J.5147 ,
2834
or
949·3172.
flunlcd
lmm
fh&lt;•
1\'i
hl(•al
41
Second High Ind. ·Game
Mason,
Va.
,,
11 . 10. t5tp
\ 1· 18·3fc
on rourth down .
Rick Stober! 187.
~--~~----~--------~
.,

Team
Eagles Club
Tom's Carry Out
Forest Run Block
Racine Food Market

AS: THE NIGHT THE DAY

From the Largest TrUck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

Jhto. 992 ·2951.

Kuhl 's

h.p . Roger Hook er, Rt. 2.
Albany ( Pageville).
CA NDY machine, A-1 working
11 ·19·61c
con dit1on. 8 slot s, c hange~

Bantam League
Nov . 6, 1971
Sfandings
Team
Red Barons

~

V.W. REBUILT engines and

Game

dering Herd 1519.
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Nov. 7, 1971

hubs, power brakes

Ohio, phone 985·3554.

Game

Harold Blackston 244.
Second High Ind. Game
Richard Ash 226.
. High Series ~ A. L. Phelps,
Jr. 607 .
Second High Series -

seen at 199 Mill St .. Mid·
dleport. Ohio.
11 ·17·5tc

38
32

Steve

Bachner 418.
Team High Game

Team
Pomeroy Cement t:llock
Davis Warner Ins .

1t Larry's Ashland
15 H. &amp; R. Firestone
16 Holsum Bakery
22

Auto Sales

Second High Series - Gene 1960 FORD :~;,. ton truck. ex .
cellent condition, -4 speed
Davis 443 .
standard, phone 742 ·4874.
Team High Game - Gutter
11 !Hlp
Dusters 749.
Team . High Series - Gutter
196J CHEVROLET, 327 cu . in .
Dusfers 2161 .
engine. needs work done on
automatic
transmission,
engine is in fine running
Tri -County League
condition. $150 cash. May be
Nov . ?, 1971

Standings

Nov . 6, 1971
Standings
Thundering Herd
Bengals
Strike Outs
Rams
Zodiac's

Rich Bailey

I Case

12x60.

AND 17 MUST FOLLOW,

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

·-anted To Buy

Phone 992·2876.

4 piece Band : piano, drums,
trumpet, sax.
From Mariet1a. Ohio

FOR SALE!

NEW,

r---------..I

10 p.m. till 2 a.m.

Belly Smith 214.
High Series High Series ~ A. L. Phelps
483.
542.

BRAND

$10,675.00.
S8,600.00.

I 10 x 50

Ri chardson ~ $2.395 ; 1 1970
Schull -- save $1.000 ; I 1970
Broadmor e cl ass - save

1

Syracuse and Pomeroy area .

MUSIC BY
RUSS CHIDESTER
DANCE BAND

REPOSSESSED.

noon,

HOUSECLEANING in Racine.

Whispering Pines
Nite Club

1220 Washington Bl.vd.
Belpre, Ohio

Sunday. November 21. Broad 2 12 GA. SHOTGUNS, 1 K·3 2 BEDROOM mobi le home in
Racine area . Phone 992 ·6329.
scope, l car tape player, 6
Run Gun Club, New Haven .
1J.J. If c
tapes. Phone 742-3656 .
Sponsored by Post 9926,
11 . f9·21p
Mason, W. Va .
11 · J8.31p
NEW, 2 bedroom mobile horn e
wi!h air co ndit 1oni ng in
SO NY stereo tape recorder, 2
Middleport area . Adults only .
speakers, 2 microphones ,
Phon e 992 ·5443 .
public address. AC voltage ,
Save $10.00 Now! ·
11 ·7-lf c
selector and many other
--------features, 43 ·7 in ch tapes .
this ad and get $10
Phone 992-5655 .
FURNISHED , 1· bedroom
on your purchase of a new
11
·
19-31c
apartment . Adults on l y,
Siegler hea ter .
Middleport. Phon e 992·3874 .
CLEAN ,
GUARANTEED
JJ . J6.6fc

Employment Wanted

Saturday Night
Early Wedn..day

V.F.W. GU NSHOOT,

Write M. D. Miller, Rf . 4.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-627 1.
8·15· tic

Nally , Rt. 3, Pomeroy . Phone

985·41 18 or 985·4233 .

11 183fc

Fire Dept .

PUPP IES to give away , 6 weeks

Wanteli To Buy

ning Nov . 19 at Chester
Church
at
God
with
Evangelist Bobby Porter of
Oak Hill, Ohio. Special
singing each night Services
start at 7 p. m. Everyone
welcome.

Shop ,

WE WISH to express our sin - REVIVAL at The Plains Free
cere thanks to relatives ,
Will Baptist Church, Nov . 22.
friends and neighbors for
7: 30p.m . Special singing each
their kindness, cards, flowers
night. Rev. John Elswick,
and e)lpressions of sympathy
Evangelist.
in the illness and death of our
ll ·173tp

14mlly.

11 18·3fc

MOBILE. HOMES

For Rent

1 p. m. , Racine Gun Club.

11 · t8.31c

1968. Somewhere back of the

he
has
suffered
and
everything that was unfair ;

For Sale

GUN SHOOT. Sunday , Nov . 21,

and

SELl' lie TRUE ...

_..C),

FOUR NEW HOMES,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home ca n be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as 165.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three chi ldren. 7•;, Pel. annual
per.centlage rate.

MILLER

elec 1ric -- bargain ; 1 1970
F Iee l wood , 4 bedroom bnrgnin . 1. 1970 Vi sion , 65. x 11
barg a1n ; R. A. Miller,
Be lpre . Ohio ~ ph one 423·
953 I.
11 12 121c

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
"PMEROY, OHIO

Notice

l2' • 14' • 24' : WIDE

$1,000 .- 1 196• Schull all

PoMeroy Motor Co.

overweig ht la dies, tee ns and
men interested in a Weight
Watchers {Rl Class in
Pom e-r oy write : Weight
Wa tc hers ( R) , 1863 Section
Rd. , Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.

Saturday , 9 to 5 p.m.
R. Jacks who lef1 us three
11
·19.Jtc
years ago on November 20,

land of glory near God and the
blue skies; Dear Lord, be thou
good to him, Keep him in your
tender care ; Make up for all

12495

v.a

4 Dr .,
engine, automatic tran s., P .S., factory air , good
tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish , clean interior .

RUMMAGE

IN LOVING memory of Richard

12595

Less than 10.000 m iles by local owner . Sharp as new in al l
ways, white over gold finish , 350 V·B engine, power
steering, radio, white walls , wh . .cover s.

5292 or 991·2156.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

13095

1970 CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR

"TO THINE OWIJ

Business Services

Less than 11 ,000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 model. Rally
Sport equipped , Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirror s,
console, a ir spoiler, turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 c u. in . V-8 engi ne. Really sharp.

11 ·19·11(

RATES

15 CINDERELLV
HOME'

--~------------------------------------------~~·

Mobile Homes for Sale

PoMeroy
Motor Co•

Z SIGNS

I DIDN'T SEE WHO IT
WUZ IN MV HENHOUSE, .
SHER IF F-· BUT HE THROWED
HIS SHOE GITTIN' AWAY

AND MEEJ\

3 ROOMS
NEW
FURNITURE
.$349.95

w

·MASON

~URNITURE

AFTER I'VE REPI&gt;IRED THESE PIANOS,
ANNIE "' I &lt;:\ELL THEM TO PEOPLE WHO
CAN'T AFFORD NEW INSTRUMEN1S ,
I MAKE A SMALL MONETARY PROFIT"·
f\I'I D 8 ~GE '9PIRIJUAL @AIN

IT'S NICE MEE111"i' UP IN'ITH YOU~
HOMER! Al'l ' REMEMBER ... I~ YOU
CAN CONVINCE "DADDY" THAT YOU
DESERVE MORE DOU"H ... '!!\JiOT JI!

'0
~

WELL, THAT SHOWS 1' GO YA,
SA NDY 1 JUST BECAUSE A GUY CAN'T
SEE DON'T MEAN HE CAN' T 'see" ...
~ t!l§ ~ .ill.f .lli§ HArms~

..Q.R t&gt;IYSfLFl

1
~

J

•

~
"'"'

...,.

~
11-!9

Yeslerday'a Cryptoquole: PITHY SENTENCES ARE LIKE
SHARP NAILS WHICH FORCE TRUTH UPON OUR MEM·
ORY.~DENIS DIDEROT
(C 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

DICK TRACY

ACROSS
1. Old cloth

36.Hum·
mingbird
.31.
Guaran·
measure
C. Circle
teed
segment
38. Muffin
1. Wahine's 39. Son of
garland
Odin
8. Visionary 40. Before
12. Hard·
DOWN
working
1. Liveliness
colonist
2. Conrad's
13. Plane's
11
Victory"
route
heroine
(2 wds.)
14. Pendleton 3. Nieces
and
15. "What others
Boy?"
(2wds.)
16. Thes·
4. Ascended
salian

\

5. SougM
office
again
6. White
House
nickname
8. Chinese
Yetlerday'• An• wer
clty
21. Football
9. Kind of
players
shake·
22.
Separate
down
24.
Repaired
cruise
26. Chan·
(2 wds.)
teuse
10. Approve
28. Arctic
11. Re·
explorer
sponded
18. Elliptical 32. Eternally
33. Subdue
20. Try to
35. Kook
equal

JJ\YWffiM; 1/..t u•~·$1,1.-J ~
Unocramble theoe four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

a

III

mountain

..Going Out Of Business

THE !Mil WANTS US
TO USE OORRl51TIOH5
IN COIIGRESS TO GAIN

Immediately"

CONTROL OF IT· ANP
THE COUNTRY.

We Gave Up Our Lease For Progress
The new business to be built on
this site will employ 40 people. We only
emply 2 - 38 more jobs for Meigs
County.

....__....... 11. Signora
. Ponti
,...-----,...-- - -- --.r'i?' 19. Milburn
IF l(J(J HAVE MY :;t;NSE,
ANP, SINCE WE ARE
Stone role
Pl'TER,
'/OtJ'LL 00 WHAT
TO jjf Hl5 S100GES,
20. Football
I Ml-f'ICI&lt;I NG M1
HE WOUW THEN ~E
team
THIS NATION'S FIRST
22.Saucy
PICTATOR .
23. City of
the Sforza
• castle
24. Clergyman's •

ICLUGEDj

I K I I I
KERUBE ~
'IJ I
I VJ

t

Now arranr• the cirded lelten
to rorm the ourprioe anawer, u

C:::::A~~~~~~~~t&gt;,_~;:..~•uueoled by lhe abo•• cartoon.

L....,-

_Prill
__
. _lltll.:..:..•.......
• I!Sl:..:....INSWIIIc.::..::....:_;_lltn.:...._j'

o r xI I I I 1
(Aiuwel'l tomol't"'w)

resicfence
25. Single
26. Was
useful
27.Showed
the way
28.·Horse or
bean

a/

Jumhl•" OCTET MOUNT REfUGE NOTifY
Yc.te ..d•y'•

An••er1 .~mmrU on rhe level - A MONOTONE

6~ THE TIME IJE GROW UP,
THE METRIC S~STEM WILL

Z9. Moreau's

PROBABtH BE

'friend"
.30. Purpose
31. Still
34. Adoles·
1

CAP!' AIN EASY

Construction will begin as soon as
every mobile home is sold.

OFFICIAL. ..

cenee

DAILY cltYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
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 lengtn and formation of lhe word~ are all
hints, Each day the code letters are different.

SAVE AS MUCH AS •2.000
DURING THIS SALE• . ,

Ia

15 NEW MOBILE HOMES
TO BE SOLDI

A Ceyplo1ram QuolatloD
K

DANNIE'S AT POMEROY

CIYRS

CZQP

'

Pomeroy, 0.
I

'

YV

XPAKQVP

YC.-BVAKZ

992-7195

1011 W. Main

•
.i•
i

----=----

EVERY MOBILE HOME TO BE
SOLD AT NEAR WHOLESALE .
COST.

I
l

RBC
K

JYUHP

RPAPVVKZYUN
OKR

HYPV

DBZ

ONEINCH IS Z.Sq CENTIMETERS., I'LL NEVER ME~Si/RE AN'tTHIN6
ONE FOOT IS Q,3()ljg METERSAND IAbFIIIN M LON6 A5 [ LIVE !

ONE MILE IS 1.60, KILOMETERS ...

•••
'

II.,'"
h

,,

jj

'

~-l

�·'

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon&gt;oroy, 0 ., Nov. 19, 1971

George Promoted
To Purchase Boss
Harold George, 30, a native 01
Gallipolis, IS the new pur·
chasing agent for Holzer
Medical Center
George was promoted from
storeroom manager to hts
present
posthon . Since
graduatiOn from North Gallia
Htgh Schooltn 1960, he has been
employed at H o~er Medtcal
Ce nter He started m the
housekeepmg department, then
.noved to the storeroom where
he became manager
Married to the former Dianne
McComas of Middleport, they
have three chtldren , Bnan 7,
Brent 5, and Davtd, 3. The
Georges restde at 271 State St.,
Gallipolis, and are members of
Heath Um ted Mcthodtst Church
in Mtddleport
He ts a member of the
Gallipolis PTA, Masomc Lodge
in Middleport, Holzer Med1cal
Center RecreatiOn Conumttee,
Tri.State Purchasmg Agents
Assn., and of the Oh10 Hosp1tal
Assn Hts hobbles are huntmg
and fishmg
John W. Rafferty, execut1ve
vtce-prestdent of Holzer
Medical Center, sa1d, "We are
fortunate tn ha vtng a man w1 th

MEIGS THEAIIif
Tomght lhru Tuesda y
Nove mber 19 23

" BIG JAKE "
J ohn

( Techn tcolo r)
Way ne and sons

M1c hael , 36 yrs o ld, Patnck ,
31 years old , John Ethan, 8

years old. youngest son.
. G"

Featurette:
D•zzy Detect1ve, 3 Stooges
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M

Bertha]. .Gill Died Thursday
Mrs. Bertha J. Gtll, 73, a
rormer resident or Middleport,
died Thursday at St. John s
Medical Center in Steubenville.
Mrs. G11l was a member of the
Cheslure Baptist Church and
Rock Springs Grange.
She Is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. Ernal Howell, Toronto ,
Ohio, a mece, Mrs. Virgima
Fusco, Arcadta, Fla., whom she
reared ; a sister, Mrs. Belva

Sloan, Pomeroy, two brothers,
Noah Haskins, Middleport, and
Elmer Haskms, Wm ter Garden,
Fla ; two grandc hildren, three
gr eat-gran dchtldr en, a nd
several nieces and nephews
Funeral servtces w11l be held

at I p.m. Sunday a t the Ewing
Funeral Home wtth the Rev.
Ge rald Kos ter off1 ctating .
Burial wtll be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
may call at the funeral home 11,t
6 thts evemng.

a l1me to pause

·After Nov. 25 counseling will
be made ava1lable evenings to
residents of the Kyger Creek
Local School District according
to Gary Mmton, high school
guidance counselor.

Adults , students , anyone
wishmg or needing counseling
may make an appointment by
calling the high school (3677336) or by commg by the school
Thursday evenings between
6:30-8:30 Counseling may be
personal or vocational.

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
RUTLAND

POMEROY

News ... in BriefS

MIAMI BEACH - PRDSIDENT NIXON, his Phase II wagepme controls threatened by orgaruzed labor, enters the bon's den
of his severest critics today when he addresses the btennial
conventiOn of the 13.6-mtlhon member AFU::IO
Despite labor 's continued sharp attack on h1s econom1c
pohcies and other domestic programs, the President was expected to get a cordial, although cool, recepl!on from the more
than 2,000 delegates and altnerates to the convention m the plush
Americana Hotel along the beach .

Serving Meigs County
Since 1872
Member Federa l Reserve System
Member Federal Depos1t Insurance Corporat1on
Al l Acco unts Insured Up To$20.000.00

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

managing director of the host Point Pleasant-Mason CoWtly
C of C; Eugene Ball, Mason County representative in the
House of Delegates who introduced the speaker and Otarles
Lanham, C of C president. Visitors enjoyed a tour of 1~1
industrial exhibits m the Moose Hall, scene of the dinner.

GOP
Caught

Baptist Church To Host Town's Annual Seroice

men Is
Sen. Ralph S. Regula, R-Navarre , floor manager of the
legiSlation, satd tt would allevtate growing problems with the
vehicles settmg safety and notse standards, reqlllfing headlights
and taillights for mght ttme operatton and requinng licenses to
drtve them on public roads.

for al l we enJOY
m th1s hfe

COVIC DINNER- Earl Vickers, speaker for the annual
dinner meeting of the Central Ohio Valley lndustnal Council
Thursday mght m Point Pleasant, third from left, ts
presented a key to the city by Mayor Jon M. Leighty , far left.
Others pictured, left to nght, are Belva Mae Farley,

TO MEET
SERVICE CANCELLED
There wtll be no servtces at Mtddleport merchan ts will
the Apple Grove Umted meet at 8 tomght at the
Methodtst Church this Sunda}. Colwnbus and &amp;Juthern Ohio
Electric Co offices to discuss
plans for the annual Christmas
STRIKE BROKEN
COLUMBUS(UPl) - A ''stek season program.
call" strike by Ohto Pemtentiary guards appeared broken
LODGE TO MEET
MRS. PAUL POWELL , librarian at New Haven Ubrary , conducted a tour of the library
today as half the usual over- A spectal meeting of Racine Thursda y durmg the annual open house which was held from I to 5 p.m. and 6-ll p.m . Students or
mght force showed up late Lodge 461, F&amp;AM , will be held New Haven Elementary were among the groups attending the afternoon visitatton.
Thursday mghtafter thetr unton at 7·30 p.m. Tuesday at the
1roned out a few grtevances temple to honor past members
wtth prison admtmstrators.
All master masons are inv1ted

!Continued fr om page 1)

and g1ve thanll.s

ED. NOTE: Mike Wise, 16, a ~enio r m children toward the pohce and everyt11ing
College Preparatory at Hannan Trace concermng the orderly functioning or our
High School, thmks he would like a legal or government. They are actually defeating
military career. He'd settle for an ap- themselves after a lime.
pointment to West Point. An honor student,
If people continue to refer to police as
Mike IS employed by the Ohto Valley · the "fuzz" long enough, they become
Publishing Co. Saturdays in the edttortal ' resentful also toward the officer per' department and in photo processmg
fo rming h1s duty
All policemen aren't angels. For inBY MIKE WISE
stance, tt is a national scandal that some
GALLIPOLIS - The Policeman - ts police m New York City are drug pushers
he really apprectated' Many people refer There ts good reason to detest such acto him deriSively as the fuzz. They may not tivity But let's take a look at the small
mean to tear down the establishment, but tow n law officer.
by calling a law enforcement officer the
Just who 1s the pohceman ?
"fuzz " they are helping to do just that
Isn't he the guy thatmspects your car
When parents use this term in front or - !'OR YOUR OWN SAFETY '
Isn't he the guy that patrols the block
their children they are instillmg a
resentful and rebellious attttude m the - TO PROTECT YOUR CHILDREN '

Counselor Offers
Public Services

PAGEANT SATURDAY
MASON - The 1972 Mason
County J umor Mtss Pageant
will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday
at the Wahama High School
g)mnaslwn carrymg out the
HAROLD GEORGE
theme , ' ·New Generation." Jim
PLEASANT VALLEY
Mees wtll be emcee. Twelve ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Charles
Harold's quahftcattons and contestants wtll take part
Rogers, Pmnt Pleasant; Ernest
expenence on the staff at the Ttckels are $1.25 at the door .
Knott, Pomt Pleasant; Samuel
med1cal center and are always
Oldaker, Leon ; Helen Huffman,
happy to promote from w1thm
Poca ; Donald Belcher, new
DINNER SET
our orgamzatwn H1s ll years
Haven
; Rachel Bush, Pmnt
expenence in Uus area will gtve The congregation of the
Pleasant, and Jack Sltres, Jr.,
us added strength m the pur- Rutla nd Umted Methodist
Churc h w1ll hold a potluck Mason .
chasmg department "
dmner at 6.30 p.m Sunday m DISCHARGES · Bru ce
the church soctal room. Those Stewart, Mrs. Charles Hannon,
attendmg are to bring a covered Stephame Ross, Mrs Donald
TWO CALLS MADE
The Pomeroy E-R unt t an- d1sh and thetr own table ser- Waugh , Walter Fttzpatrick,
swered a call to 1676 Lmcoln vice Mrs Harold Sauer will Mrs. Thelma Carter , Mrs.
He1ghts at 4p m Thursday for show slides of her tnp to Europe Morns Moore, Lenora Gilman,
Nancy Johnson, three-)ear-old la st swnmer The public ts William H Taft Bost, Roy
Pearson, Fl ora Wtlhams,
daughter of Mr and Mrs. Allen In VIted.
Chone
Fmley , Orville Poore,
Johnson, who w~s 111 The chtld
Mrs. Clyde Conna lly and
MARRIAGE LICENSES
was take n to Vete ra ns
Randy Lee W1lliams, 18, Samuel Oldaker .
Memonal Hospttal where she
was admitted At 12·48 a.m Langsvtlle, Rt. I, and Demse
FIRE DOUSED
Thursda y, the squad wen t to the Lynn Barnhart, 18, Racme ;
Wtlhams
Burnell
Petitt,
31
,
The Middleport Ftre dept.
Leonard Lunsofrd restdence on
Route 33 near Pomeroy. Lun- Mtddleport, and Nancy Lou answered a call at 2:19 p.m.
Thursday to the Ltberty Lane
sford. who was having dtf£tculty Weddle, 30, Pomeroy.
area
to extmgmsh a brush hre.
m breathmg, was taken to
At 4'45 p.m. Thursday the
Veterans Memona l Hospttal
LOCAL TEMPS
Middl eport E-R squad was
and adnutted
The temperature in downtown
called to Turkdy Run Road m
Pomeroy at 11 a. m Fnday
under cloudy sktes wtth light back of Cheshire for Fay Amos,
18, who was taken to the Holzer
ram railing was 55 degrees.
Medtcal Center

Thanksgiving

Your Policeman is the Guy Who Does it All for So Liule

The annual Pomeroy Com- Church, East Main St.
muntty Thanksg1vmg servtce Mm!Sters of the parttc1patmg
w1ll be at 8 p.m. Wednesday at chur ches wt ll conduct the
the Pomeroy F~rs t Ba pttst serv1ce w1th the Rev !'ather
Bernard Kra)covlc, pas tor of
Sac red
Heart
Chur ch,
deltvenng the Thanksg iving
sermon and the chotr or St. Paul
Lut heran Church presenting
It is believed that the shootmg
spectal mus1c
early Thursday mormng of
The cooperatmg churches are
Charles Lawson Cheshtre,
occurred at the mouth of
Zuspan Hollow Road m Metgs
Coun ty instead or tn West PT. PLEASA NT - The
V1rgin1a, as was reported Shadle Bridge has been opened
earher , the Me1gs County permane ntly to two-way traffic
Shenff's department reported The barncades were taken
toda y.
down at 4 p.m Thursday,
Lawson was shot through the marking the end to traffic delay
mouth , the bullet lodgmg in hts tn the 1mmed1 a te bridge
neck. He was shot wtth a .38 cal. VICJnt ty
revolver Lawson underwent RenovatiOn or the bridge deck
surgery Thursday and is listed and sidewalk as well as other
m fair condttion at Holzer re pair work ha s hampered
Medtcal Center. Herman Henry motonsts tra veling U. S. 35 and
of the Bureau of Cnmmal In- State Route 2 since late last
vestigation will arnve today to spnng when the work was
asstst the shenff's dept. m the started by Charleston Concrete
mvesttgatton
Floor Company

BCI Agent to
Assist Probe

Bridge Opened

NEW YORK -BETHLEHEM STEEL CORP. Thursday
confirmed reports it has asked the Price Cormmssion to approve
an increase of approximately eight per cent on the tin mill
products sold to can manufacturers and other users.
Other steel producers are believed to be preparing applications for the price commissiOn , whtch is helping to steward
Phase Two of the government's new economic policies. The applications cover tin mill and certain other products. The nation's
second largest steel producer noted it had posted the mcrease on
tinmill products early in August followmg settlement of a new
MORE QUESTIONS
wage agreemenet with the United Steelworkers but could not put
WASHI
NGTON (U P! )
tt mto effect on October 1 as scheduled because of the !l().day
Liberals on the - Senate
price-wage fr~ze.
Jud1c1ar y Committee were

ques homng Supreme Court
nommee Wtlham H. Rehnqmst
anew today ahout allegatiOns he
harrassed black voters, that he

Grace Ept sc opal, Pomer oy
Untied Methodtst, St Pa ul
Lutheran , Tnmt y Church,
Sacred Heart Church, Salvation
Army and the host church. The
pubhc is invited. An ofrering
wtll be taken to be used for
~ a n o u s ?rO
Jects of the Pomeroy
Mtmsten al Assn

Appeal Made
The Rev. Btl! Perrin has
tssued an appeal on behalf of
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goodin
whose tratler home was
recently destroyed by fire in the
Sand Hill area. The couple is
restding m Harrisonvtlle.
They need kitchen utensils,
kettles, pans, a toaster, wash
and dtsh pans, a sweeper and
general household ttems. They
are also m need of clothing.
Mrs. Goodin wears size 201&gt;.
Mr. Goodwin wears mediwn
s1ze shtrts and trousers and a
stze stx shoe. Items may be left
at the hasement of Trimly
Church in Pomeroy.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
Senate's Democrats said today
they will hold President Nixon's
multibillion tax cuts hostage
until the Republicans permit a
vote on a plan to finance the
1971 presidential elecUon campaigns through tax dollars.
"Outrageous," replied Senate
Republican Leader Hugh Scott.
"Scandalous. Indefensible."
But he admitted the Republicans were probably locked .
In a remarkable vote which
united Misstsstppl 's James 0 .
Eastland with Massachusetts'
Edward M. Kennedy and
Georgia's Herman E. Tahnadge
with &amp;luth Dakota's George S.
McGovern, the Democrats
showed Thursday they had the
strength to adopt the plan.
The Republicans blocked a
rmal vote with amendment
after amendment. And they had
at least 10 more to offer today
The issue is the Democrats'
plan to permit taxpayers to
check a hox on their tax fonns
next year to earmark $1 of
thetr taxes to fmance the
presidential campaigns through
public funds rather than the
gifts of wealtliy supporters.
Tax experts estimated at
least $47 million would be
ratsed--enough to gtve the
Democratic Party, which is $9 .3
IIUllion m debt, and the GOP{a
campaign fund of $20.4 mtllion
each.
George Wallace would get
$6 3 million if he ran in 1972.
New parties would be retnlbursed proportionate to their
vote if they drew at least 5 per
cent of the total vote.
The Democratic strategy was
to attach the plan to Nixon 's
bill which would cut business
and lndivtdual taxes by $15.5
btllion over the next three
years. The Senate has voted $II
btllion in additional tax cuts
over the next three years. Most
of them offer tax relief to
Individuals.
The Democrats consider the
btU "veto.proof" because Nixon
needs It to restore the
economy's vitality and to
bolster his own re~lection
prospects.

BOYS 3.95

Mens
Davis 40
Cushion Foot

SPORT SHIRTS
Long sleeves. Sttes 8
to 18 . sol 1d colors,
str1pes and pl a1ds

WORK
SOCKS

All are permanent
~press Popul ar co lla r
'!s t y le s
Exper tl y
made

...

American Home Muslin

Partially cloudy, cold tonigh t
and Monday. Lows southern
porllon 30-35 ton1ght. Htgh
Monday in 50s.

Idea f. for work , for sports,
for gener al wear No bind,
stay up t op Si zes 10 to 13.

Plain white or grey Sa le

pn ce Sa tu rda y.

3 pairs

#19 SliCk 1011

(

-

no bind 1tretc:h
top
- 100% cotton
sizes 10 thru 13
Dup, Soli, Tony

Cush1on bs.. Evtr)'

Step You Teke'

1 59

SALE! SATURDAY

Mens 4.29 Zipper Brief Cases
Size zipper, security loc k
and standard size . Black.

3.69

Sale! Recliner &amp;Swivel Rockers
All su pported vmy l and combina t iOn of vi nyl and Her cul on
Green. blc1Ck , go ld a nd brown

I

REDMON

CLOTHES
HAMPERS
Se l ect

y ou r
fa vor tie s1ze, type

and col or cl othes
hamper now fo r
your sel f or

Sale!

for

Chnstm as gi ving

Elherfelds In Pomeroy- Furnishings For Your Home- ~earing Apparel For Your Family

ford to g1ve hun one . They need then
money 111 101 other places. Guess who gels
th e vel) last c on s idere~twn ? The fuzz, of
cowse 1
The policeman ts busy constantly
There Isn't lune to IJe ~1ck or to loaf When
there Js an eme r~e n cy, even 1f he 1sn't on
duty, he IS expected tube at the scene 1f
ca lied
And then there are all the little thmgs
he ljas to do that goes w1th hiS ro b If

because of cnmmals, but

VOL. VI NO. 43

11!

th~

salar:r· ami the salisfaction of scn•tng the
public Let's all remember thiS the next
hme we 're tempted to rebuk e e~n offi ce r of

the law for dmng h1s dut}

R eaching More
Than 11,000

Families

FOUR SECTIONS
Pomeroy-Middleport

be ee~use

rreeway trafftc
The policeman 1s a human bewg
n skmg hiS hfe and respect to protect
people wtth the only rewards bemg a small

Ynur Invited Guest

38 PAGES
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21 , 1971

GC~ I llpo li s-Pmnt

15 CENTS

Plea!:ianl

Army Draft
May End
During '73

SENIOR CITIZENS from Gallta, Jackson, Meigs and
Vmton Counties met at Rio Grande College wtth Gerald A

Ramsay, (L) director of special services at the college, and
Mrs. Betlte Bjorn, Southeastern Ohio Field RepresentaUve of
Ute Diviston of AdmtrustrattOn on Aging

Senior Citizens Want Recognition
RIO GRANDE - Semor cttizens of
Gallla , Jackson , Meigs a nd Vinton
Counties - just unaer 25 pet. of the total
populallon - want more recognitiOn
They have made Rto Grande College
their district command post and wtll use
the college as a resource and mformal!on
center. Twenty-nine senior cittzens met
last Wednesday at the college to establish
a "District Counctl on Aging" m the fourcounty area. They met with Bettie Bjorn ,
the Southeastern Ohto Fteld Representative of the Dtvision of Administration on
Agmg, and Gerald A. Ramsay, dtrector of

special services at the college.
A 12-member Dtstrtct Council on
Aging was selected , w1 th three members
from each county. The council approved a
resolutton requestmg that Rto Grande
College become a district headquarter for
the Counctl and be a resource and information center for the aging in the rour
counties.
The council also selected Ramsay to
continue as coordinator of the program.
In discussing needs of senior citizens,
Mrs. BJorn said that shghtiy more than 18
pet. of the populatiOn in the state of Ohio is

Housewares Dept.
1st Floor

1•5 0

gow n for that h1g g1aduLJtJOn fling, the car
needs overhauled
What about thot nuse'1 Unfortun otely
the mumcJpal g{Jvernment JUSL ccm't af-

yoU've ever had to fill out em mcome tax
form you know what I mean He has to fill
out a detailed report on everything that he
does
The Sta le H1ghway Patrol offi cer
rea lly has 1t rough He has to go to a
special school, to be tramed Ill not to ntrol,
freeway surve11lance and many uther
specialized pohce dulles He must be
ready to n sk h1s hfe constantly, not only

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

Unb leac hed , 40 1nches w1 d e, exce ll ent qua li ty Saturday Sale

5

Oh yes, an offller of the Jaw does have
a f,uruly He has problems like the rest of
us Junwr needs bra ces on his teeth, the
house pet yment IS due, sts needs 3 new

tmts

RESTING AT VILLA
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UP! )
associated with n ght win g - President Nixon flew to his
polittca l aclton groups and Florida retreat Thursday night
about hts attitudes on civil for a weekend or relaxation in
nghts and civilliberbes.
hts bayside villa.

Just Received '
yards
Another Big
r----~-----·~--~-~----1 Shipment

anythmg Illegal and unmoral.
The policeman docs have a b1g JOb He
doesn't have to put up with the namecalling and the abuse by the people he has
to protect because he could gel anothc1
jOb.
People thtnk that a poltceman ISn' t
human. He is just as human as you and I
He has feeli ngs It doesn't make hun feel
ve ry good whe n he 1s dmng hiS rob and
someone calls htm "the fuzz " ,
How do you thmk a policeman feels
when he sees the flag that he respects and
reveres gomg down the street on the
bottom of somebody's pants'
When he has to bust your k1d for usmg
drugs he'gel' no sadiStiCpleasure out of 1t
He probabl} realizes that th1s could have
been his son, JUSt as well as someone else

+

WEATHER REPORT

ELBERFELDS STORE IS OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY UNTIL 9:00P.M.
Saturday
Special!

Isn't he the guy who gtves you a l!cket
- WHEN YOU ARE TRYING TO BREAI.
YOUR NECK SPEEDI NG?
Isn't he the guy who risk• his life
trackmg down a kn9wn murdered on the
rampage? Isn't he the guy who escorts
your expecta nt wtfe to the hosp1tal (maybe
even delivering your son or daughter )?
Isn't he the guy freezing himself to death
dtrectmg Christmas rush traffic? Isn't he
the guy sponsoring those street dances for
the teenagers? Isn't he the guy that ts
underpaid, overworked, sptt on, cursed at,
shot at?
Now you say this is not very mce, but tl
comes with the job. Stop and thmk. What 1f
he just up and qui t' What if all law offtcers
qmt'! Wouldn 't we have a nice mess?
People lootmg, burning, destroying, domg

TilE FIRST PITCHER of them all was this one given to Mrs. Randolph by a
relative over 40 years ago. It started her extensive collection. Mr. Randolph also 1s
proud of the collection . The Randol phs have been married 59 years

Over 500 Pitchers
In Rare Collection
BY BOB HOEFLICH
REEDSVILLE - Although she isn 't
even a baseball fan, Mrs. P. R. (Bertha)
Randolph of Reedsville has plenty of
"pitchers." However, sport fans, Mrs.
Randolph's "pitchers" are or the hqutd
holding vessel type.
For over 40 years, Mrs. Randolph has
been collecting pitchers which come from
about every state in the union. H~ r
collection ts now somewhere over 500.
The:;e pitchers - so many shapes and
sizes - aro attracttvely dtsplayed on

shelves m the kitchen of the comfortable
Randolph home.
Mrs. Randolph first became a "pttcher addict" when an aunt of her husband,
who restded m Ptttsburgh, gave her a
p1 tcher made as a replica of a cow. She
was off and collecting in no time ; the
collection grew and grew as friends and
relal!ves traveling ahout remembered to
p1ck up an addition for the collection.
As yea rs have passed, Mrs. Randolph's eollec ti on has become qUite
tContmued on page 21

55 years of age or older .

In contrast, she said, 22.Z pet of the
people in Gallla County are 55 or older,
while the figure Is 22.8 pet. In Jackson,
24.1 pet. In Meigs and 23.6 pet. in Vinton.
She saiJ that the total number of persons
55 or older In the four counties Is 18,173,
approximately 23 pet. of the population,
The group also dtscussed state and
federal funding or senior citizens' projects,
federal laws on ambulances and nursing
homes, and the need for semor citizens to
orgamze and obtam group recognition.
The District Counctl meets agam
January 12, at 10 a.m., in the Rto Grande
College Board Room. For more informahon on the newly-formed Council on
Aging, contact Gerald A. Ramsay at the
college.
Selected to the 12-member Council on
Agmg from Gallia County were Mrs.
Beatrice Clark, Richard Sayre, and Mrs.
Ann White. Meigs County representatives
are Mrs. Hugh Custer, Mrs. Howard Nolan
and Mrs. Vtlma Pikkoja.
From Jackson CoWlty, the Rev. Glenn
Biddle, the Rev. Henry Lancaster and
Mrs. Helen Whttmore were appointed.
The Rev. DeBoss Smith, Harold
Shively and Miss Ann Darby were named
from Vinton County.
Attendmg from Gallia County were
Maxine S. Plummer, Rev. Lenson H.
Stebbms, Jonathan E. Louden, Rev. Ed
Wallen, Jean Cooper, Pearl Hatfield,
Margaret Ecker, Mrs. James L. Clark,
Mrs. Anne White, Mrs. Lora Hackworth,
Mr. Chester Leaper, Gregory Briggs,
Harold Wetherholt, and Paul W. Hawks;
from Jackson County, Mr. and Mrs Archer Graham, Mr . and Mrs. Chauncey
Lambert, Melbra Thornton, Rev. Glenn
Biddle, Helen Whttemore, Anna Ayers;
from Meigs County, Rtchard S. Sayre,
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, and Mrs. Hugh
Custer, and from Vinton County, Mrs.
Mary N. Brown, George L. Brown, and the
Rev De Loss Smith .

WASHI NGTON iUPl i - The nation's
health secretary sa1d Saturday he wtll take
steps to phase out the quasim11ilary
federal doctor corps wh1ch serves lnd1ans,
seamen and other groups and replace it
w1th a CIVIlian corps.
Secreta ry Ell1ot L litchardson of
Health , Educatwn and Welfare satd he
was adoptmg a spectal comm ittee 's
recommendatiOn that the Pubhc Health
Service Commtsstoned Corps, whose 5,500
officers are supphed mamly by SelectiVe
Servtce, be replaced by a c1v1han system
Rtchardson noted tn announcmg the
mtended change tha t the draft system may
cease m the summer of 1973 and that plans
had to be made no w to assure a corps wtll
conttnu~ after that date.
Until then, however , the corps would
contmue to rely on conscription for 1t.s
doctors and dentiSts until the transttton is
completed, Richardson sa1d.
He satd he would make two exceptiOns to
the comm1ttee recommendatw ns No
specific date wtll be set fo r haltmg new
appomtmenls to the corps and promotton
wtthin the corps wtll continue
U.S. Surgeon General Jesse L Stemfeld,
who heads the corps now, was m Latm
America when Ri chardson's decisiOns y.,as
announced, but he has called the committee report &lt;~destruct ive to the corps .
to morale, to recrUitment and to retention" of offll'ers in the crops.
Rtchardson satd the changes, which he
wtll seek through whatever legtslal!on ts
needed , "are designed to assure the
maintenance of such vital health servtces
as those to Indtans and other federal
beneftctaries and those authomed under
the Emergency Health Personnel Ac t of
1970."
The act, still not fully Implemented,
provides for assignment of government
medical teams to big city slums and rural
pove rty areas in addition to tts former
dulles of serving merchant seamen, fn dians, lepers, narcotics aduoecomme nding the changes was headed by Dr. John A
Perkins of Northwestern University.

PRESENTED AWARD- Herman K. Theiss, chief engineer of the Gallipolis
Locks and Dam the past 13 yea rs, left , is presented the U. S. Corps of Engineers
Susta tned Suoerv1sors Award by Galhpohs Locks and Dam Lockmaster Bernard
Diddl ~ for an outstanding performance in the installalton of equtpment at the
roller dam the past yea r. Theiss , of Bidwell, formerl y of Dorcas in Metgs County.
also was rewarded w1th $200 for hiS work . Dtddle has been GalhpoliS Locks and
Dam Lockmaster smce last June 13 Ear her he was master at Locks 16and 21 .

4 are Injured
GALLIPOLIS - Four persons were
mrured m a two-car acctdent Fnday aftern oon on Rt. 35 at the JUnction of F'1fth
Ave , m Kanauga
Reported m "fa ir condttion" at the
Holzer Mcd1cal Center Sa turday were Carl
W. Fru th, 76, and Nora N. LoomiS, 78, Pt.
Pleasant. The exact exten t of their tnjunes
was not known.
Helen M !'ruth, 69. Pt Pleasant,
Sister of Mr F'ru th, and dn ver of one of the
cars Involved, was treated and released
for mmor inJUries.

Also IDJ ured was Carl Hun tley , 22,
Vmton , drt ver of the other ca r, who
sustained a fra ctured right an kle and
lacerat tons of the head.
According to the state htghway patrol,
the Fruth car pulled off Rt. 7 mto the path
of the Hu ntley auto. .
Helen Fruth was ctted to Mumc1pal
Court for fatlure to yield the nght of way
A single ca r mtshap occurred at 8 30
p m. l'nday on Rt. 775, fou r miles south of
Rt. 141 where Wtlliam C. Ramey, 41 ,

Hay Elevator
Struck by Car
POMEROY - Shenff's deput1es
arrested Robert K. W1lhams, 24, Pomeroy
Rt. 3, today on susptcton or htt and run
involving a hay elevator.
Jenmngs Beegle, Mmersvdle Rt. 1, told
the department about 12: 30 a .m Saturday
a car struck, then left the scene, hts hay
elevator located on hiS property damagmg
11 heavtl y.
lnvestigatton Sa turday revea led
enough evidence to broadcast a general
description of the damaged vehtcle that htt
the elevator Mtddleport pohce Saturday
nottced a car fitting the description going
through to" n and aler ted county off1ccrs.
The arres t foll owed.

II Cases to

Grand Jury
GALLIPOLIS - Eleven cases will be
-revtewed by the September term of the
Grand County Grand Jury dunng its
second sesston Tuesday, Nov. 23.
The jury wtll convene at 9 a.m. at the
Gallia County Courthouse. Defendants and
the charges are Paul McCarty, 47,
Gallipolis, bad checks ; Btlly L. Wiley , 38,
Gallipolis, non-support; Ntcy Ray Bass,
60, Bidwell, assault with a deadly weapon ;
Max Pickett, 42, Rt. 2, Crown City,
sodomy; Chris Anderson, 44 , Gallipolis,
unlawful deltvery.of a barbtturatc; Marlin
E. Johnson, 38, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, nonsupport ; Joh n Robert Justice, 20,
Columbus, and James Herbert Stra1ght,
21, Columbus, auto theft ; Larry A
Murray, 19, Rt. l, Ewington, and Harold E
Williams, 29, Rt . 1, EwtnPton , breaktng
ami ente n ng, a11d Mtchael ~arl McMahon ,
22. Rt·. l, Scollown , arson

Northup, lost control of hiS car and
overturned mlo a creek He was charged
w1th reckless operation and ha vmg ftcb twus reg istrat ion.
Asemi rig was tnvolved man aCCident at
10 45 p m on the Galltpohs Bypass near a
btg shp m the roadway. Officers sa1d an
auto attemptmg to pass operated by an
unknown drtver forced the n g mto the
barm ade, wh1ch kn ocked over SIX barrels.
There was moderate damage to the rig
dme n by Ea rl F Wt lhams, 63,
Wtlmmgton.
A two-car acc tdent was mvesttgated at
11 a.m. Saturday a t the mtersectwn of Rt.
554 and Rt 7 m Cheshi•e Officers said an
auto dn ven by Jerry Ramsey, 23,
Cheshire , struck the rear of a car operated
by Catherme Ltttle, 48, Cheshtre. There
was moderate damage to both cars
Ramsey was cha rged wtth reckless
operatiOn .

::,::/'' ':!:'t:=:!:!:(?t!!!J!tt'mt:!:!:::::!:::!:!:!::::;':':!:\ii!i!,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Culd Tuesday and warmer
Wednesday and Thursday
with a chance of some rain
Thursday.
High temp e ratur es
Tuesday in the 30s, Wednesday in the 40s and Thursday In the 40s north and 50s
south. Lows Tuesday and
Wednesday In the 20s and
SOUTHERN'S HEAD FOOTBALL COACH Bruce Wallace, nght , ltives his
squad a few p~mte rs on how to beat members of Rto Grande l'raternity 10 a
fo11tball match Wedn esda v at Southern

SHu~ : ill l u1 Hncme.

K1ckuff IS 7 30 pIl l .

Alumm of Soullwrn Hi ~ h School make up 1"' .q,.a,l coached b) Wa!lace. Wallaec
Will :1 lsu In• putt in~ Oil l.:t&gt;&lt;lr to )• )Jn ttw fun.

\\II:J\.

:~:~o:.os, and Wednesday In

j\ll\:l

,1,1,\,\,., ...... • , • , •,• ,•, • ,•,• ,•,•,•,•,•. •,•,•,·,•,•,•,•,•,•,• ,•,• , •,•,•,•,•,•,•,•,•~·······!-!·:·!

::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::~:;:~:::;:;::

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="82">
    <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="1802">
                <text>11. November</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="35924">
            <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="35923">
              <text>November 19, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="422">
      <name>gill</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
