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_,
12 - The DallJ Senllntl; MlMeport-Porna oy.o.. March 23, 1m

State Care Will
Be Upgraded

Play Date Set

Tonight, March 23
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday
March 24-25
NIGHT OF
DARK SHADOWS
(Technicolor)
David Selby
GP

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Thursday was 31 degrees with
light snow falling .

THE HORSEMEN
(Technicolor)

Omar Sharif
Leigh Taylor Young

DONATIONS NEEDED
The Meigs Chapter V1CA
Club is collecting nonperishable foods and money
donations to prepare Easter
baskets for needy families.
Those wishing to donate are
asked to call 742-4902 in the
Rutland area; 992-3292 in the
Pomeroy area, and 99~1~ in
the Middleport area, between
the hours of 4 and 9 p. m.
Donutions will be picked up
about 2 p. m. on Sunday.
veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Homer Ha&lt;:k·
man, Cheshire; Debbie Eynon,
Reedsville; Mary Jane Armes,
Minersville ; Thelma Grueser,
Pomeroy; April McGrath,
Rutland .
DfSCHARGED - Bessie
Napper, Evelyn Landers, Gary
Ellla, Sylvia Zwilling, Dorothy
Wells, Ina Ferrell.

MEIGS THEATRE

Lara Par ker

Compton,
Mrs .
Naomi
WilcOllen and Mrs. Jo Ann
Davis, deputy clerks at the
Probate Court office ; Ruth
Cross, Mrs. Ruby Thompson
and Deputy Sheriff James
Crace of the Gallia County
sherlff's department; Gallia
County Assistant Prosecuting
Attorney James Bennett, and
Esta White, the bride's mother.

GP

•

FRJ.;SAT-SUN

MAR 24-25-26

R

COt.OI!
-~IUS-

"HARD ROAD"

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY

l C• •
R

FRIDAY
' .. - SATURDAY SALE!

•

mClRnafi

BEAUTY-MIST PANTY HOSE

Mrs. McCarley

SPRING SALE

Reg. 3.95 Support Pantyhose · • · • • 3 pair 9.50
Reg. 2.00 Scanty Pantyhose · · • • - 3 pair 4.75
Reg. 2.00 All Sheer Pantyhose • · • · 3 pair 4.75
Reg. 1.75 Carefree Mesh Pantyhose
·
·
3 pair 4.15

Mrs. Victoria McCarley, 94,
a resident of Middleport 61
years, died Wednesday in
tMianapolis, Ind.
Childrens Department
Mrs. McCarley, born April
29, 1878 at Foster, W. Va., was
the daughter of the late James
1 1
A. and Julia Dolin Cantley. She
0Wn5 •
married William C. McCarley
REG. 4.50 SETS . . . . . • . . . . . SALE 3.59
on July 12, 1897.
REG. 4.00 SETS . . . . . . . . . . · SALE 3.19
Besides her parents and
REG. 3.50 SETS . . . . - . . . . .. SALE 2.79
husband, she was preceded in t-----------~----,.....~-.-.4
death by three sons, two in
Bargains In Our Foundations Dept
infancy ; two step-daughters, a
ste(Hion, four brothers and a
Reg . 3.00 Stretch Lace
sister. Mrs. McCarley was a
Bra and Bikini Sets · • • • · • · • · Sale 1.99
member of the Middleport
Reg . 2.00 Bra &amp; Bikit}i Swing Sets · · · Sale 1.l9
Church of Christ, having joined
Reg. 1.69 Antron Stretch Bras .. · · · - Sale 1.19
it in 1901 when she was 22.
Reg . 1.00
Surviving are a daughter,
Double Knit Stretch Bikinis - . . • · Sale 69c
Mrs. Glee (Clara ) Stackhouse,
lndianapolla ; a sister, Mrs.
Eliza (Jane) Coyle, of
Palmetto, Fla.; a brother,
Alfred Cantley, Charleston, W.
Va.; two hail-brothers, James
and Bob CanUey, and a halfsister, Rebecca, Foster, W.
Va.; two grandchildren, and
six great-grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeraf Services will be held
at I p. m. Saturday at lbe
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Raullin Moyer
officiating. Burial will be in
Middleport Hill Cemetery.
Friends may eall at the funeral
home anytime after noon
Friday.

Sleep n PI3J Sets · G

DRAPERY
FABRIC
wide. Durable Water

Repellant . Drip Dr\ ·
washable. Little or d·
. Ironing . Solid colors:
Aquatone,
Pussywlllow.
Rose, Pink, Bel~e, Brown.

Double knit slacks of 100 per cent
polyesler. Flare leg slyles and
regular cut models. Rayon,
acrllan and nylon blend fabrics.
Permanent press regular cut
slyles and olher popular styles.
Sizes 29 1o 42 wals1 and extra

Just Received I ·

3 PC. TUFTED
TANK SETS

large sizes 44 to 50.

100 Percem
Nylon Fringed

6.95 Dress Slacks ..... .. .... Sale 5.88
7.95 Dress Slacks ..... .. .. .... Sale 6.88
8.95 Dre.ss Slacks .............. Sale 7.48
9.95 Dress Sl.acks ............. Sale 7.88
10.95 Dress Slacks ............ Sale 8.88
12.95 Dress Slacks ........... .. Sale 10.88
14.95 Dress Slacks .. .. .......... Sale 11 .88
16.95 Dres_s Slacks .. .. .. .. .. .. Sale 12.88
18.95 Dress Slacks ...... .. ...... Sale 14.88

Fits all tanks.
Home machine washable.
Rose - Blue - Avocado - Gold
Tangerine ..

2 for 6.50
SALE! DRESS AND SPORT SHIRTS
FOR THE SMALL FRY
Regular 1.95 Shirts · Permanent press. Solids ·
stripes - plaids . Sizes 2 to 7. Excellent selection of
styles.
~'riday · Saturd;~y S;~le

1.39

1.00 DRESS SOCKS

aac pair

Nationally known brand . Ole size fits sizes 10 to
13 · 75 per cent Hi Bulk Orion · 25 per cent strelch
nylon .
White, black and a tremendous selection of solid
•
colors. Stock up now.

l

London Takes Over Northern Ireland
•
LONDON (UPI)-Brltaln to- including gradual phasing out
day ended 51 years · of ofthelntermentwithoultrialof
Protestant rule in Northern suspected Irish Republican
lrelimd and imposed ditect Army (IRA) gurunen · wOuld
control from London for at pacUy the Roman Catholic
least a year in an effort to end minority,
the violence that has taken •
Reaction Is Biller
nearly 300 lives. A Protestant
At the same lime Heath
leader In Belfast bid civil war sought to placate Protestant
was now inevitable.
fears of a handover to the
Prime Minister Edward Catholic-ruled Republic of IreHeath announced the historic land by : promising periodic
decision to a tense, packed plebiscite votes on the question
House of Commons. His move of the northo~;outh border in
climaxed a constitutional ctisl.4' Ireland. The Protestants outwhich British commentators number the Catholics two to
described as · the gravest to one.
face this country since the
The reaction from Protesabdicallon of King Edward tants and Catholics In NorthVIII in 1936.
em Ireland was immediateIt was a gamble which both sides rejected Heath's
Britain said it would take only solution. Thousands of shouting
as a last resort.
shipyard workers marched
British spokesmen said through Belfast in a demonHeath hoped suspensiOn of rule stration of Protestant rejection
by · Ulster's frotestant of direct rule from London.
Frazer Agnew, Belfast
majority and other moves

chairman df• the Young forcedandsaidiRAoperallons
Unioillst party organization, a will continue until the last
Protestant groop, said Heath's British soldier withdraws from
measures represented a Northern Ireland.
· betrayal of Ulster and a
Instead of a troop withsurrender to the IRA. He said drawal Healb ;mn,oonced that
"this act of betrayal to Ulster 4,000 more British troops had
Loyalists has hastened the _ been placed on standby alert to
inevitability of civil war."
be flown to Norlllern Ireland to
Eamonn McCann, an official bolster 14,500 already there if
of the anti-internment "serious trouble" develOps.
organization which opposes
Heath told parliament he
im(l'isonmentofiRAmembers would introduce legislation
and suspects withouttrlal, said neces8ary to carry out his
the Heath measures will touch pllms before Easter Sunday
off a Protestant reaction that April 2, and opposition Labor
will eclipse the present party leader Harold Wilson
violence in Ulster.
immediately pledged his
Many Dealbs Predicted
party's support, ensu~ing _quick
"There will be a massive passage of lbe legislation.
Protestant reaction," McCann
Special Minister Named
said. "I think there will be 1,000
Heath's announcement folpeople ldlled this summer." lowed two days of conferences
Sean MacStioffan, chief of with Northern Ireland Premier
staff of the militant provisional Brian Faulkner. Faulkner said
rnA, rejected any ln)ce while he and his Belfast cabinet
the Heath proposals
are en- spumed lbe British measures
,.

as ''maintaining a mere sham,
or a face-saving charade." But
he said he would remain in
office for a few days because
he believed it was his duty.
Heath said he was forced to
the action by an ultimatwn
from Faullmer that he and his
whole cabinet would quit if
Britain went through with the
plan.
Heath announced appointment of a special minister
for Northern Ireland to handle
law and order in the province.
He said he would be William
Whitelaw, leader of lbe House
of Commons, regarded as one
of the more liberal-minded
members of the governing
Conservative party.
Northern Ireland, a province
made up of six counties called
Ulster, has been an integ~al
part of lbe United Kingdom
with limited internal •selfgovenment since 1920. 'lbe

Beifast government was controlled by Protestants during
that period.
Republic Welcomes Move
The Catholic minority said
As a pari IIi tbe IJ7Z Easter s..J pfGII~, Meigs
this
government
has
Couaty will partlciplte lu a 18-b- telethon of WSAZ-TV
discriminated against it in
cbanne1 S begiDolng at 11 p.m. Satarday.
jobs, housing and other matLocal ltlgb sebool glrb will be reeeivlq calli of
ters and U1e blUer feeling
resldeata wtiUl1« to pledge c0111riballODI to lbe Easter
erupted in violence in 1968. The
Seal apeclal e&gt;'IOol. All moaey pledled will remain In
rnA, which Is ouUawed bolb in
Meigs Coaoly lor local projeela, Earl lqeli, ebalnoan,
Northern Ireland and in · the
repGI'IetL
Republic of Ireland, unleashed
The Pomeroy Motor Co. will be beadqaarten of tbe
violence which it hoped would
. mour.lelelbon. See today Page 5 report aDd picture IIi
return the six northern
Ohio Easter Seal cbild.
counties to Ireland.
' The situation in Northern
Ireland appeared to be growing
grimmer by the minute, and a
spokesman for the militant
Protestant Ulster vanguard
Movement, which claims
200,000 members, said It-would
fight direct rule all the way. • '
Both Catholics and Protestants b!_gan manning the
(Oiniliiued on page 12)

Telethon Begins Saturday ·

w ater
· Gomg
e

Into Homes

Service was restored to lbe Tuppers Plaink:hester Water
District about 7:30a.m. today.
The di!ltricl was plagued wilb two maJor breaks in line~, one
Wednnesday and one Thursday. As a result, some 500 customers
In Meigs and Athena Counties were without water service over
tbe lw&lt;Miay period.
Repairs on the second break main lines and seven storage
- a 12 Inch line near Forked tanks.
'Run Lake which occurred
Martin highly commended
about I a.m. Thursday - were Raymond Boatright, George
completed at 7:20p.m. Thurs. Sellen, Bob BUrke, all diatricl
day. The work force then began employes, and Lindsey Lyons,
fWfng the lines and the seven water district president, wbo
tanks which had been prac- remained on lbe job about 48
tically drained· during lbe hours during the breaks so that
breakages. The complete repairs could be made as
refilling of tanks and tines took rapidly as ))Oitlllble. Martin was
111111 7:30 thla morning.
the Jut to leave the scene at
Albert Martin, 1Uf1tl'vlaor of 7:30 a.m. today after being on
tbe dblrict,llid 578,000 gallons the job appro1lmately 50
ol water were pumped from the hours.
time the ~ ,... Clim&lt;
pleted Thurllday night until all

For Most All
Vatuum Cleaners

69~

SWEEPERS
Upright or Canister
All Models
Also complete line of
Sunblam . VIsta Sweapers,
uprights and canister vacs
and Eureka 1972 models
Including uprights and
canisters. Come In and see
1he complete line.

SALE
Boys 2.95 Permanent

'
Press

SPORT AND DRESS SHIRTS
Sizes 6 to 20. All famous brands . Bright stripes.
Beautiful solid colors. Floral patterns that are so
popular. Short sleeves. Arranged for your easy
selection.
Save Friday and Saturday

3.95
DRAPERY
FABRIC
54" WIDE
100% COTI'ON ·

2 for .5.00

SALE

112 PR
VISIT ELBERFELD$ ANNEX
See the new wipe cleari

MATCH STICK ROLL-UP BLINDS
Color: Frultwood
Newes1au1omatic cord lock Blinds. New double tubular vinyl
slats. Filters light - yet provides full privacy.
4ft. wide
5 ft. wide
611. wide

7ft. wide
8ft. wide
1oIt. wide
All6 ft. long.

Sale! :Radios · Tape Players • Clock Radios

2.49

YARD

REGULAR 391

·WOVEN CHECK
DISH TOWELS

3 1.00
FOR.

Don't Forget!

GLIDDEN
PAINT
SALE·

2 Reg. 22.9$ RCA AM Clock Radios . - - - .. - - - SAle 15.011
1 Reg. 75.00 RCA AM-FM Radio - ... - . - .. - Sale 4f.IHJ
1 Rot. 125.00 Pan11onic AM-FM 6 Band Radio - - SAle 89.00
2 Reg. 46.95 RCA ·AM-FM Transistor Clock Radio Sole 35.1HJ
House Paint - Florenamel 2 Reg . 49.95 RCA AM-FM Transistor Clock Rod los . .
Spred
Satin - Spred Lustre
Sole 35.00
enamel
All-purpose
2 R.ot· 49.95 RCA AM Pollee Call Radios - - - . - . Sale 30.00 .. enamel · Gloss
.
Spred
Lale~
3 Rot. 27.95 RCA Cl(ssette Tape Players ... - - . Sole 19.00
enamel
Royale
Gel-Flo
1 Reg. 99.95 Panasonic Cassone
House paint - Urethane
Tape Ployor &amp; Record Player - - . - . - - - . Sale 69:1Hl
Varnish.
1 Reg. 49.95
.
RCA Transceiver with Morse Code . . . . Sale 251HJ
1 Reg. 199.95 RCA
.'
On Sale Now at
Steroo Record Play" with Speaker . . . . S.le 145.1HJ
Elberfelds Annex
1 Rot. 39:9! RCA AM-FM Rodlo - . ..• .. .•. Sale 22 .1HJ
In the Middle Bloc~

t

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

BAGS

MEROY
.,

FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1972

NEW HOOVER

Hundreds of items for your home selected from
our regular stock.
Plates · Platters· Saucers . M11gs - Pitchers. Sugar Bowls .
Fiesta Ware · Light Fixtures. Molds- Wax Cleaning Sprays .
Cutlery · Kitchen Gadgets . Decorative Gtasswore.
While they last.

Short sleeve shirts In alremendous selection of solid colors
smart plaids, slripes and novelty patterns. Sizes small (14:
141!, ), medium (1l-1l112). 1arge (16·16V, ) and extra large (1717'h I neck. Tapered and full cu1 styles. Select your needs

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, QHIO

·~·

For your Spring
House Cleaning~ see
the

ODDS 'n' ENDS SALE

SPORT AND DRESS SHIRTS

VOL: XXIV
.. . ... NO. 243

' "'

lHROW AWAY

Sale

Housewares Department

Mens 3.95 Permanent Press

Devol4!d To 1"he ln14!re." Of The Meigs· Malon Area

3.89Set

Scotchgard
Finish .
Beautiful floral patterns.
!'---~~--.;_-..;;_,.;:;.;.;;;:;..::;;,..._ _ _ _- ( All colors.

DANCE SET
RACINE - The Southern
Band Boosters will sponsor a
square dance from 9 to mid·
night Saturday at the Racine
American Legion Hall. Music
will be by the King Kords of
Belpre; the caller, George
Theiss.

cloudy Saturday with hlgh8 In
, the 4011 .

Regular $1.00 pacKag•el

pajama5
•

For This Sale! Mens and Young Mens
Most
American cars
Parts extra, if needed

45"

BOX,ED Gin sns

Front End Alignment

Two Days1 ' 1 9·
Only · •

.

WOMEN'S BLOUSES AND SHIRTS

ON DEAN'S LIST
RACINE - Brenda Brad·
ford , daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Bradford, Racine ,
has made the Dean's List I3-63.49) at Graceland College in
Lamoni, Iowa.

Choose from Four ,
Famous Fragrances
Regular 2.00

· Spetiat!

DRESS
SLACKS

fa118ht .

~y clOUdy to cle8iwttb Iowa In tbe 201, MOIIly

.A Britiah dog named Mlkeve
holdl lbe dol ' world'a· high
, jump rec:ord - a leap over a 9. . foo~. wall from a springboard
_ ,in Kensthgton, London, In 1934. ·

Cologne

MEN'S .AND YOUNG
MEN'S
.

Michael (Mike) Struble, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Struble of
Pomeroy and a senior at Meigs
High School, has been named
to attend the 26th annual World
Affairs Institute in Cincinnati
on April 7 and 8.
Struble, who will be accompanied by his government
teacher, Michael Gerlach, is
Two Days Only
being sponsored to the institute
by the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club.
Our entire selecti.on of womens blouses and sllirts Is reduced
A thousand special students
for this sale. Choose new spring colors, solids or prints In
from Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio
sizes 30 to 46 .
and West Virginia will parREG. 9.98 BLOUSES ·
SALE 8.49
ticipate in the two day meeting
h' h -11 ha
-18 to ·
REG. 8.98 BLOUSES ·
SALE 7.69
W lC WI
ve as 1
PIC ,
REG. 8.00 BLOUSES ·
SALE 6.79
"United States, Canda and
REG.
6.98
BLOUSES
·
SALE 5.99
Western Europe: Shared
REG. 5.98 BLOUSES ·
Heritage, Shared Problems."
SALE 5,09
Young Struble also was
REG. 4.98 BLOUSES ·
SALE 4.19
Meigs County's first place
REG. 4.50 BLO.USES ·
SALE 3.79
winner in the annual American
REG. 3.98 BLOUSES ·
SALE 3.39
Legion Government and
REG. 3.50 BLOUSES ·
SALE 2.99
History test. He was second in r---·--~-----------....,.~-i
the Eighth District of the
Legion.
Choose your favorite style and color and save
now during our

Died Wednesday

Spray MiSt
. .

50 per cent cotton . Permanent press. Good color
selection.
Regular 4.49 Double .Knee
Jeans Sizes 4 to 12 . . • • .. . . Sale 2.25
Regular 5.49 .Sizes 14 and 16 Jeans·
. • Sale 2.75
Slims and regulars. Not every size in every
color .
·

_We.uther

Maker

. Made by Lee. 50 per cent Fortrel Polyester and

Struble Going
To Institute

•

TO 9:00P.M:.

BOYS LEE PREST NO IRON JEANS

during this special sa le.

If your front wheels are out of alignment,
your car won't ride and handle properly,
and your tires will wear out rapidly . Our
expert mechanics will align your wheels
properly on our precision equipment at
this low price.

. SATURDAY 9:30

.~o£.:&gt;;:,:·:~:&gt;;.,-t::')S.o;::m-;:::::::~:::~o;:~:o;$-JZ.

Wedding SolVed P r0blem
Kenny White, 29, Pomeroy,
and Connie Sue White, 18,
Galllpolia, were married this
morning in the judge's
chambers of Gallla County
juvenile court. ,_
White had been arrested last
Friday on a warrant charging
contributing to the deliquency
of a minor_ He and his bride
appeared in juvenile court
Wednesday before Judge Wray
Bevans of Pike County, sitting
by assignment.
The couple told the court
they ha,d been married in New
Mexico, but could not submit
proof.
Judge
Bevans
suggested, therefore, they be
1married before leaving the
Gallla County Jail. Charges
against the couple have now
been dismissed.
Rev. Everett Delaney performed
the
marriage
ceremony. The event was
witnessed by Mrs. Patricia

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

The annual senior play of
Meigs High School bas been
set for April %1. Taking roles
Ia the preselitatloa entitled, _
"Butter on the Bacon" wUI
be· Pal Gress, Mike Struble,
Doris Baraharl, Mlllsa
Rizer, Nathan Robiaelle,
Becky Scaggs, Marla
Neutzllng, Doug Lillie ;
Karen Sulberlaad, Matey
Oweas, Sleven Stanley and
Melanie Hackett.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
- Establishment of mandastate Department of Mental Hy- t~y uniforrn rules relative to
glene and Correction said eight fire safety.
new executive orders will be is- Formation of a "Humanizasued about April I, to update lion Committee" within the de·
the care of mentally ill and partment to assess living condi·
mentally retarded patients in lions, availability of basis hu.state hospitals.
man necessities and total livDr. Kenneth Gaver, director- ing environme nt of patients
designee of the department, said in state institutions.
the new orders would "make • - Establiahment of duties, re·
significant changes" in the care .sponsibilities and authority of
of state hospital patients.
security police at state institu"For too many years sa&lt;:iety tions.
has chosen to ignore the reali· - Provide in-service training
ties within what have been huge of ward level workers to upwarehouses of hUIIlan beings," grade care provided to pa·
said Gaver. "We now have the tients.
resources, the know . how and - Establishment of uniform
the deterrnination to make sig- interim policy for release and
nlficant changes. "
aftercare of patients.
The orders include:
_ Outlining of duties of a su- Establishment of policy pervisor upon learning of the
identifying and prohibiting phy- Occurrence of an unusual inclsical or mental abuse of : dent and defining unusual incipatients and disciplinary ac- : dents.
lion aginst workers involved in . Gaver said that by the end
such abuse.
of March and for the first time
- Establishment of policy for in Ohio's history, at least one
the use of patient restraint and attendant will be on duty
prohibitions against the use of around the clock seven days 8
restraints as punitiv e mea- week in every ward of every
sures.
state hospital.

Now You.Know

.

TOP FOURTH AND SIXTH GRADF; Wtm!F,:ks,.who!, will CO!IlJ!!!Ie Ill county competition
in April are Steve Baker, sixth grade, drawing; KeMy Wilt, sixth grade, tempera; Greg Dee!,
fourth grade, pastels, andKbn Dugan, fourlh grade, crayon.

Recognition to ·Talent
den, Rebecca Lee, Matthew
ByKATIECROW
that same night.
Mayes,
Luke Pickens, Lori
RACINE - Winners in the
First grade
students
cultural arts contest at the receiving blue ribbOns were Maynard, - Randall Werry,
Racine Elementary School Ann Gleen, collage and Robin Johnson, Tonja Salser,
Monday night sponsored by the Richard Maynnrd, watercolor. Richard Dugan, Teresa
PTA were announced at the Receiving red ribbons were Harden, Ted Smilb and Kbn
regular meetin~ of the PTA Michelle Johnson, Lori War- Maynard.

•

ews .• rn
-

By UDlted Press Iotemational

COLUMBUS- THE OHIO WELFARE Department said
today persons living together will have to be related by blood or
marriage before they will be eligible for food stamps as of April I
l!ben new regulations go into effect. It had been reported earlier
lbat persons would not have to be related to receive the food .
stamps. This is the situation now, but lbe rules have been
lightened by tbe U. S. Department of Agriculture.
About 80,000 more Ohloana will be rna~ eligible for the
stamps because of a relaxing of Income requirements. The total
Includes 20,000 weifare recipients who will be able to take advantage of the program because a famlly no longer will be
required to purchase the full amount of the stamps at lbe first of
the month.
NORWALK, OHIO - MRS. IRENE McCABE of Pontiac,
Mich., who is leading a protest march to Washington to
dramatize lbe need for a constitutional amendment on school
busing, said today President NiXon "didn't really say anything"
In hiS statement on busine~.
.
"All it was was a me8ns to appease the public," said Mrs.
.McCabe. "f admire his position against busing but he really
didn't do anything the other night."
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO SUPREME Court ruled today
lbat a group of Republican legislators must be gl~n the opportunity to circulate petitions In an attempt to put the stale
income tax on the November ballot. The GOP lawmakers had
attempted to circulate .Initiate petitions as the first step In
placing the tax on the ballot but a suit by Democratic legislators
threw the case into the Ohio Supreme Court.
The anti-tax group, headed by Rep. Joseph Tulley, RMenlor, now will seek to get 100 signatures on the Initiative
petitions. When these petitions are flled, they then will be turned
over to Secretary of State Ted W. Brown who will live the
le1Walors forms to collect lbe over 300,000 signatures necessary
to place the tax on the ballot.

wer~

TAKING GRAND PRIZES
puplia of Racine Elementary grades one through six.
Winners in the first and second grade were (1..-) Scott Justis, first grade, crayon ; Sherry
Beegle, second grade, watercolor, and Clay Ours, first grade, sculpture. Judging was done by
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis.

Second grade student
receiving a blue ribbon was
Ralph Harden, collage.
Awarded red ribbons were Rita
Slater, Leondus Lee, Kim

Bickers, Brian Cleland, Scott Teresa Johnson, Peter
Frederick, Allen Pape, Cheryl Robinson and Brenda Heck.
Raines, Aifred Lyons, Tyrone
Third
grade
student
Brinager, Rebecca Gheen,
(Continued on page 2)
Stanley Holter, Kent Wolfe,

.

Director of Agency Needed

--J

Gets Year

Sentence
Michael R. Taylor, 18,
Pomeroy, bas been given a one
year sentence in the Cincinnati
Workhouse after entering a
plea of guilty to a marijuana
possession charge before
Judge John C. Bacon in lbe
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Taylor is one of three men
arrested several weeks ago by
the
Middleport
Police
Department of J. J . Cremeans
during a raid on·an apartment.
The two others, Christopher C.
Dinguss, 23, and Roger Lynn
Pickens, 18, entered pleas of
guilty to possession of
marijuana on bills of in·
formation flied by Prosecuting
Attorney Bernard Fultz.
However, Taylor entered a
plea of inna&lt;:ent and was bound
to the grand jury which met on
March 9·and Indicted him on
two counts of possession of a
haullucinogen and one count of
dispensing a hallucinogen to a
minor.
Taylor changed his plea to
the lesser charge of possession
of marijuana and the grand
jury Indictments were nollled.
Pickens and Dinguss, who
earlier received one year
sentences to the workhouse,
have been delivered there by
county authorities.

AMeigs County Information,
Research and Planning
Project was approved March
22 by the Ohio Division of
Administration on Aging.
Purpose of the project is to
arouse interest in problems
and opportunities of aging
persons, to determine some of
their needs and interests, to
determine an organizational
pattern which will secure
widespread participation and
reflect needs of the aging, and
to determine the most
desirable future projects.
The Meigs County Council on
Aging is now laking ap·
plicalions for a dii-ector for Ibis

project. His duties would in· supervision or working with
elude conducting field work in groups, committee~ and ingetting questionnaires com- dividuals, available for full
pleted and to begin a program time work, and have an
of referring the aging to needed automobile available.
services already available.
After a director has been
The qualifications of the hired, two part-time aides will
director will be as follows:
also be employed. This is an
Ability to work with lbe ideal opportunity for anyone
aging, some work leading to a meeting these qualifications.
college degree or the
Anyone interested in apequivalent , experience . in plying for the director's job
should send a complete reswne
- - - - - -- -to Clarence J . Struble, 401 West
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
LOCAL TEMPS
or
present it to Mr. Struble in
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at II am. person. All applications must
Friday was 34 degrees under be received by Wednesday,
March 29.
sunny skies.

wu completed

y 0 uth

The district baa 245 mlles of

Observance ~n·Jured
A Rutland youth was
hospitalized following a onecar accident Tburaday at 4 : ~
.
p.m. on SR 124, one tenth of a
Plans for ob.ervin~ Soil mlle east of Rutland, the Meigs
Stewardship Week, May 7-14, County Sheriff's
Dept.
and for exhlbltinc at lbe Meip reported.
County Fair were begun when
the·board of supervisors of the
Oren Leo Ellis, 17, Rutland,
Meigs Soil and Water Con· drivinl weat on 124, went off
servation District met Thurs- lbe highway to the left and
day niRht at its office In struck and broke off a utility
Pomeroy.
pole, traveled· another 75 feel
Approved by the board as and hit a bridge at the Emmet
cooperators In the soil con- Welch residence, and stopped
servation program were Neva in a creek.
Frederick, Chester Township;
E11ia said when he came
Barbara Sher and Marvin
Milliron, Salisbury township; around a slight curve his left
William
and
Marjorie front wbeel brake locked,
Sfakianoa, Belford Township; causing him to lose control.
Ellia was taken to Veterans
Howard Gilesple, Rutland
Township, and Clifford Memorial Hospital by the
Whittington, Scipio Township. Pomeroy emergency squad.
The board agreed to sponsor He suslained an Injury to his
a student to forestry camp and shoulder and chest and a
to provide cartoon booklets on laceration of his head.
Ellis was cited to court for
conservation for waiting rooms
not
having an operator's
such as doctors, dentists and
lawyers, Anyone wlahlng these license and Peggy Welsh ,
booklets may obtain them by owner of the car, was cited for
contacting the conservation permitting an unlicensed
driver to operate a car.
office.

Is Planned

Adult Mining Course -Set about May 1
By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
Meiga Local Sebool Dlslrlct
We have been receiving a lot of contacts about the
(l'oposed adult mining program. We have had a
number ol people sign up fcir this training. 1 haven't
pushed it too hard to date because we haven't been
exacUy certain what form this course would take.
Now It is taking on a fairly clear outline·and it can
be discussed with some certainty. I will try to do so in
this oolwnn. Don't hold me completely firm on all the

Speaking of Schools-No. 229

details because there sti\) may be some changes.
fn the first place let me empilasize that lbe adult
(I'Ogram is not a condensed version of the two year
high school mine mechanics course. The high school
course is designed to train mechanics. II will last for
two full school years -18 monllls. This first group of
juniors will have only l"l school years.
27,000 SIGN
slide.
The adult class will be designed to help to prepare
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The county engineer will Backers of John V. Undsay men to become coal miners, not mechanics. 11 will be
make the repairs but an un- have announced they have brief In comparison with the two rear course. It will
delen!lined amount of time collected over 27,000 signatures be scheduled for 110 hours over a period of 10 weeks.
will pass before lbe repairs can to place the New York City· There will be two classes of four hours in length for
be made. Meantime, motorists mayor's name on the each of those 10.weeks. .
may use the Mt. Olive Road In California presidential
The course will be practical, down-to~arlh inUeu of the Bigley Ridge Road. primary ballot.
troductior In co"I mining . Great emphasis will be

Road is Ordered Closed
LONG BOTTOM - The
Bigley Ridge road, a township
road lbat leads away from
Lon1 Bottom, has been closed
because of a landslide.
Township Trustees advised
today the road Is dan1erous
becauae a wail has .let go,
aUowlng a part of tbe road to

Third Man

::.refilling

placed on safety throughout all phases of the 20
classes.
The subjects to be studied will Include the
geology of mining, mine gasses, ventilation, mining
methods, electricity in the mine, explosives in the
mine, fires and explosions, mine instruments and
apparatus and first aid.
The program will be paid for partly by state
funds and partly from the tuition paid by the students.
The tuition will be in the neighborhood of $20 per
student for the 80 hour course. That's a dollar for each
four hour class. Students will also have to pay for
their materials as needed.
One thing must be clearly 111detslood from
the start. Taking this course does not f!Wlra&amp;tee
employment. We will attempt to have a good
program and prepare you for work In the mines.
Neverlheless, ihe declsloo to employ you will be
made by the mine folks and we can' guarantee
you or anyone a job as a result of Ibis or any
orogram.
Our present plans are to start our first series of
classes about May L We will probably keep the
enrollment lo aroun&lt;IJ4. It will not be first come, first
served. We hope to get two dozen men who really
wan t ,,;,r wol'k . We will work to select them as best
we .can, especially for this first class.
I don't know what kind of response I will get to

this column, but we are ready to have you contact us
for an application blank for this program starling
Monday. Call 992-2153 or come into my office in the
junior high in Middleport. You should get a new
application even if you signed up earlier. This form is
much more detailed than the earlier one you may
have completed.
Let me again emphasize that Ibis program is
designed to help get you started on a safe, productive
career as a miner. Mining b hard work. The pay is
good. The future loolt.dinn . The decision b yours. We
hope we can help.
· Please remember that we cannot guarantee lbat
you will gel a job as a result of laking this course.
Also remember that we Intend to provide thla
(l'ogram first for lbose men who seem most likely to
be truly lntere~ted In mining as a career and not just
on a first come, first served basis. If you want Ibis
(l'ogram, call me at 992-2153 starting Monday.
NEWS&amp;:NOO'ES-Wearegladtohave Mr. Diehl
back this week -Mr. Morriaon is Improving at hGme
now - The Pay Board iB driving Ohio school people
lip lbe wall- Wilb all the confUBion of sprq, don't
for1et lbat all three school districllt In the county need
your support to get to lbe new state foundation
charge-off millage of 22.5. That will come on May 2 Please forgive my faUure to produce a col1111111laat
week,
·

�?

.. ,. . ...

•

'

-..

--

. 2- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, o., F'riday, March 24,1972

Assembly Fiddled Away on

en

.

'

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio General Assembly is to
make one last stab next week
at getting a. package of constltutiorial amendments on the
May 2 ballot although the final
whistle may already have
blown.
The lawmakers adjourned
Thursday after failing to reach
agreement on the package of 14
amendments, which includes
expense
accoun.ts
for
legislators and a governorlieutenant governor team in
elections.
The office of Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown said it may
be too late to get proper advertislng for the constitutional
"Toposais - five weeks in the

iargest newspaper in each
: county.
"U they send us something
on Monday," said James R.
Marsh, elections counsel to
Brown, "we'Uget it out to the
counties as soon as possible.
But I think for practical purposes, it's dead for the May
ballot."
Marsh noted some counties'
largest newspaper is a weekly
which may already be locked
up by early next week, leaving
only four publications until
May 2. He also pointed to slow
mail service.
But House Speaker Pro Ternpore Charles E. Fry, R-,Springfield , chief sponsor of the legislation, insisted March 28 was

the absolute deadline - five
weeks to the day from the primary.
Last Try
The House, which could muster only 73 of 99 members and
not enough votes to clear the
package Thursday, scheduled
an Bp.m. session for next Monday night for a last-ditch try.
But there were substantialdisagreements over House and
Senate provision on the proposed expense accounts and the
tandem election of a governor
and lieutenant governor.
Although a conference committee quickly came up with a
report, the differences weren't
reso lved. The Senate adopted
the report by 20-7- the exact

number of votes needed to pass
it. There appeared to be more
opposition in the House.
The conference report caUed
for expense accounts beginning
next January, changing language which would have excluded senators whose terms
do not expire this year.
The House version of the resolution had called for the nomination, as well as the election,
of the governor and lieutenant
governor as a team. The Senate version required that the
offices be separated in the pri·mary .
Set Up Tandem
The conference report leaves

•

the matter up to the
legislature, which may set up
tandem
nomination
p-ocedures.
Sen. Robert R. Shaw, R;cQ.
lumbus, said this would result
in "all kinds or chicanery" in
the legislature.
"I can see the legislature
coming back every four years
and deciding on a new way to
p-ovide for the nomination of
governor and lieutenant governor,' agreed Sen. Donald E.
Lukens, R-Mlddletown, and
unsuccessful candidate for the
Republican gubernatorial
nomination in 1970 and a
prospect for 1974.

Talent Recogri.ized

THIRD GRADE STUDENTS were Dwayne Curfman, collage; Tammy Smith, pastels, and
Steve Circle, drawing.

Kathleen Morris. Reports were
(Continued from page I )
receiving a blue ribbon __was given by Sue Ann Beegle and
Mark Simpson for his water- Kay Warden.
Officers for 1972-73, ancolor. Red ribbons went tQ
Paula Wolfe, Carl Morris, nounced by Mrs. Beegle,
James Gheen, Denise Manuel, chairman of the nominating
' Amanda Autherson, Mark CfSIImittee, !ll't! Sue Follrod,
Proffit, Berla Robinson, Kevin president; Sandra Hill, vice
Holter, Jimmy Werry, Tammy president; Janice Salser,
·Harden, Mary Obitz, Eric Hill, secretary, and Sue Ann Beegle,
Sanja Hill and Dells Johnson. treasurer. They will be inTaking the blue ribbon in the stalled In AprU.
fourth grade was Cindy
Tbe attendance banner was
Warden's watercolor. Red won by Duane Wolfe's fifth
ribbons went to Sheri Rose, grade class, who also
Karen 'Wines, Amy Fisher,. pn:sentect the program which
Crlckett Carpenter, Toni consisted of several chorus
Hudaon, Perry Smith, Beth selections, "We've Got a
Huffman, Eddie Adams, Dream" • "Brand New Key" •
Melissa Ible, Lonnie Mayes "Tbe Beat Goes On," "Do You
and Randy Smith. '
Know the Way to San Jose,"
Best in the fifth grade went to and "Put Your Hand in the
Penny Smith for her pastel and Hand." Accompanying the
Linda Norris, tempera. group with guitars were Bob
Presented red ribbons were Deeter and .Mr. Wolfe.
Solos were sung by Becky
Danielle Lisa Warner, Seth
Hill, ·John West, KeUy Taylor, Crow, Unda Norris, Marie
Doug Bell, Becky Crow, Pickens, Janice Carnaban and
Beverly McLain, Louise Lee, Tim Brinager.
Brenda Glenn, Yancy Roush,
Plans for a jitney supper
Brice Hart, John West, George were discussed and a tour of
Knighting, James Carnahan the Fenton Glass Works will be
made in AprU. An Easter party
and BlU Harris.
In the sixth grade clasa the wlU be held March 30th.
blue ribbon went to Butch
Shain; red ribbons to Greg
Huffman, Loretta Holsinger,
Steve HID, Lois Bailey, Cheryl
Roseberry, Peri'y Hill, Herbie
Ervin, Mike Huddleston and
Richard Teaford.
Grand prize winners in each
By BERTHA PARKER
, category will compete for
Sabbath School attendance
county honors at the April 8 March 19 at·the Free Methodist
meetlng..of the Meigs County Church was l22, offering for
Councll of Parents and the day was $212.&amp;1.
Teachers. County winners in
Rev. and Mrs. Eugene Gill
the primary and intermediate, are announcing the birth of a
will be displayed at the District girl, Billy Jean, born March 15
16 spring conference to be beld at Holzer Hospital. This is the
In Jackson and will compete in sixth daughte~ for the Gills.
the cultural arts contest of the
Mr. and Mrs. William
Ohio PTA In the fall.
Jacobs, Columbus, spent the
All entries in the cultural weekend with Mrs . Jacobs'
arts contest were on display at parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Monday night's meeUng of the Jacobs and attended church
PTA.
services Sunday at the local
Judging Monday night was church.
done by Mrs. Margaret Ells · Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bauer,
Lewis of Meigs High School. Marion ; Miss Polly Karr, Mr.
Winners were announced by Ted Mathews, Huron, spent the
Blondena Hudson.
weekend with Mr. Charles
Mrs. Sue Follrod presided at Karr and visited Mrs. Karr
the business session. Girl Scout who is a patient at Veterans
Troop 137 led the pledge of Mell)orial Hospital.
allegiance and the Lord's
Charles Anthony Diehl
Prayer. They also presented visited his father, Mr. Charles
the scout pep song. Leaders Diehl, who is a patient in
were Doris Fisher and University Hospital. Mr. Diehl

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

FIFTH GRADE STUDENTS were Brian Grindstaff, scuipture; Doug !!ell, collage, and
Cecilia Jenkins, watercolor.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB - Wolfpen

..

Formation of Fetus News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
Is Fascinating
of Columbus were weekend

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D .
Dear Dr. Lamb - Would
you please write some information on the gills of a
tin y developing baby . I am
an ex pectant mother and I
think that is very interesting . Are the gills near the
ears? It seems like I have
heard that somewhere.
Dear Reader - When the
baby first starts developing ,
it goes through the different
stages that we identify ,with
the evolution of the animal
species. Zoologists classify
animals from those beg in·
nlng with one cell organisms
through fis h, animals and
man. This arrangeme nt is
called phylogeny . Individuals who su bscribe to evolu·
lion feel that this is how
man developed .
When the fertilized ovum
1eggJ begins to deve lop into
a baby . it undergoes a sequence of events which are
very similar to this organized classification of the animal world . Since the process
of development leading to
birth is called ontogeny. this
observation has been sucrinctly expressed as "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny ," which means that the
development process recaps
the stages of evolution .
In the course of the baby's
development, one stage is
the fish stage and there are
gill ~ entirely analogo us to
those seen in fish . They are
located at the upper part of
the fetus near the a r e a
where the lungs and heart
and ~real. arteries are developmg. As the gi lls are
lost. the arte{Y that :.~rmal -

visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
ly goes a long each gill unHoward
Russell.
dergoes a tran sformation
Mrs. Clyde Collins and
and as these arches of the
of Columbus were
family
arteries are changed they
end up being the main arter- weekend visitors of Mr. and
ies we have in the body in- Mrs. Richard Jeffers and
cluding the large aorta !hat family, and Mrs. Ethel Hatfeeds blood to most of llw field of Middleport.
body except the lungs, the
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
pulmonary artery that feeds
blood to the lungs and the Kail, Charles a nd Kevin,
branches ttiat go lo the neck visited Sunday afternoon with
and head .
Mrs. Lena Knapp of LangsEven the heart itself un- ville .
det·goes a series of develop- Mrs. Kathryn McGhee and
mental changes. They are at son, Charles Arthur and Leigh
one stage analogous to struc- Ann of Colubmu8, were Sunday
tures noted in fish , reptiles
afternoon visitors of Mr. and
and fin ally normal man .
Alm ost all of the specia l- Mrs. Charley Smith.
ized organs of tile body un- Bill McElroy, son of Mr. and
dergo such an evolutionary Mrs . Paul McElroy, was
development. There is a spe- married to Miss Kay Bing,
cies in !he anim al kingdom daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
that will contain some struc·
lure entirely analogous to Vernon Bing at the Zion Church
some temporary state of the Saturday evening, March lB.
developing fetus . This entire Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
complex pt·ocess is carried Columbus were here to be best
out according to individual man for his brother.
bluept·ints. The first cell for- Mrs. J. R. Murphy, Mr. and
mation between the fem ale
egg and the sperm contains Mrs . Harley Johnson and
one·half of the blueprint Elaine Murphy were Thursday
from e a c h parent , or the visitors of Mr. and Mrs. John
ge nes. These w i I I be the Earnheart (Bell) of Logan.
same for all the rest of the · Mr . and Mrs. Harley Johnson
cells for the entire develop· visited Sunday evening with
ing process.
Mr. Albert Heilman ,
I agree with yo u. The en - Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
tire process is absolutely or'Cincinnatl and Mrs. Clinton
fascinal in g.
Gilkey of Albany we re Wed{N(WSPAPEII. ENTERPR;t SE ASSN I
nesday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Lincoln Russell .
Please Jtnd ~our questions and
comm!nh to Lawrence f . Lamb,

M.D., i• '"" of thi• po(J&lt;r. While
Dr. Lamb can~ot onswcr Jndividuol
lttrtm , he w1 ll answer letters of
genetaf i11 teteil in future col11mtu.

WIN AT BRIDGE

A 'How Could You---' Hand
NORTH
• 432

Z4

• 87
t AK6S
"' AK94 ·
WEST ( D)

EAST

• 85

• 7

. AKQJ542 .109 3
• 83
• Q J 10 7 2
oli12
"' Q J I06
SOUTH
• A K Q J 1096

• 6
• 94

"' 853
Both vulnerab le
W,cs l North
Easl South
:J •
Dblc
Pass n •
Pass
Pass
Pas5
OpeninK lead-;-• K

Ry Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

When today's hand was
played back around 1936 it.
ca used quite a squabble.
South wanted to know how
his partner could make a
takeo ut double at the three
level with nothing in spades
and Nort h wanled to know
why South had to go to six
under his own steam after
lhe double.
We fee l the squabble·might
have become a real fight if
North had known that South
could make the slam after
West led two rounds of
hearts .
So uth did try a ve ry ineffective squeeze. After playing a few rounds of trumps
he played three rounrls of
A thought for today : British dianionds. Then he ran the
poet Letitia Elizabeth Landon resl of his trumps .
said "few save the poor feel
It Wes t had been lnng in
f t'h
' ,
hot h minors he WOilld ha vE!
or e poor.
.

entP

S-The DaUy Sent~!, Mlddleport·i&gt;mJ!!I:Olo 0., Friday, March 24, 1972

made the hand , but West
had bid three hearts and
shown up with two spades.
The squeeze had to. be
against East.
South should have played
out all but one trump and
discarded down to ace-king
of clubs and all four diamonds in dummy. East
would have to get down to
s ix cards also. If he hung
onto four diamonds South
could cash dummy's top
clubs, get back to his own
hand by ruffing a diamond
and score the 12th trick with
his eight of clubs.
If East held three clubs
South c o ul d play three
rounds of diamonds to set up
the last diamond in dummy.
Of course, South would ha ve
to decide just what cards
East had, hung onto.
(HEW5PAP£1t lHTUPRISE A$SN. j

The bidding has been:
West

North

Pass

3'¥

Pass

Pass

1¥

4

East

Pass
Pass

Pass

You. South. hold :
.AK~54 .A 2. tJ .AKfi54

What do you do now?
A- Pa.'is. Your partner haS
shown • lot or hearts, but also a
bad

hand.

TODA Y'S QUESTION
I n s Lead ol bidding three
hearts, your p 11 r l n e I' has bid
fnur h e u r l s over your two
spArlel-i. Whott rlo .vou do now'!
Answc1· 1'o1n111"ntw

Lt. Gov. John W. Brown e)[·
ll'esseil cllsBatlafactiCII with
the., ~onfeience report and
appearoo to be working actively to see that It did not go to
the ballot in that form.
Use As Escue
"This Is the s!West damn
thing I ever'heard of," Brown
said. ''They're using Ul as an
ercuse that It has to go to the
ballot In May, so hurry up and
pass it."
,
Fry and other proponents of
the amendments, drawn up by.
a special Constitutional Revission Commission, want the
package on tbe ballot In May so
it will not be confused with

another questim In November
- wllether Oblo should have a
ConstltuUonai Convention.
The Senate unanlmouly
passed and sent to the HOUle a
bill exempting up to ...000
worth of lncoine from fl!deral,
private and self-employed
· pensions from the state lneome

tax.

.

•.

The chief 8J)OilSOI', Sen. Paul
E. Glllmor, R-Tltlin, said the
leglslatlan would exempt all
pensions, ~'for practical purposes, except very large ones."
As adopted by the legislature
la8t December, only state and
local penaloo benefits, Social
Security benefits and rallroad

Syracuse News, Society
Moving into ·new homes in also visited Mr. and Mrs. Ted
the Rustic Hills addition Abolln and family and Mr. and
purchased from Mr. Archie Mrs. Freeman Roush, of
Lee, are Mr. and Mrs. Everett V'll'glnia.
MlcbaelandMr. andMrs.John
Mr..and Mrs. Guy Guinther
D. Wolfe.
accompanied their son .and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Allen daughter-in-law, Mr. and.Mrs.
and son Shawn, Mrs. !JJcllle Willie Guinther, of Gallipolis
Allen, of Newark; Mrs. Naomi Route, tO Athens where they
Autherson, of Portland; and visited Mrs. Ellen Newiana
Mr. and Mrs. James Pape, and
Mr. and Mrs. James Pape
Kristen, local, were Thursday and Kristen and Mrs. Elva
dinner guests of Mrs. Elva Dalley were Sunday dlmer
Dalley.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Betzlng, Auther110n.
Monroe, Mich.; Ernest BetMr. and Mrs. Malcolm
zing, River Rogue, Mich., were Guinther and children and
called here by the death of · Kenneth and Terry Guinther
their mother, Mrs. Ethel visited Mike Griffith and
Be!zing and visited with Mr. famUy.
and Mrs. Donald Cottrill and
Mrs. Don Cottrill and Sbaron
family.
visited with the former's aunt, ·
Mr. and Mrs. Nial Salser Mrs. Laura Sayre, of Racine,
visited recently with Mr. and Route.
Mrs. Cbarles Mugrage, at New
Mrs. Judy Pape and Kristen
Matamoras. .
and mother, Mrs. Elva Dalley,
Mr, and Mrs. Terry L. Wolfe visited ·Mrs. Iva Lawrence at
moved from the Brown trailer PorUand on a Thursday af.
court, Minersville, to a trailer ternoon.
on Second St.
Mr. and Mrs. Wlllle Guinther
Mrs. Wanda Guinther . and of Gallipolis Route spent
son, Malcolm, were at White's Saturday night with hls
Funeral Home at Coolville to parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
pay respects to her cousin, Guinther.
V'll'glnia Baker Reed.
Recent visitors Of Mrs. Elva
Mr. and Mrs. Max Folmer Dalley were Louise Yates,
and daughter, Pam, of Cln- Racine; Naomi Autherson,
cinnali spent a week with her Porlland, and Eleanor BOOram
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert and Nettie Hemsley, local.
HyseU.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dalley rl.
Vetei'BIII Memorial Hoepllal
Newark spent a &amp;lnday with
Tb11nday Adml11toas his mother, Mrs. Elva Dalley. Raymond Hartley, Racine ;
Mr. Eugene Slack . of Barbara Baer, Minersville;
Freeport spent a weekend.with Oren Leo Ellis, Rutland ;
his.mpther, Mrs. Ada.Slack arid Mildred Poweli, Portland;
nephew, Mike Watkins.
Jerry Aleshire, Jr., Syracuse;
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Hayes
Gale Cain, Athena; Veletta G.
recently visited tbe Clinch
Shaffer, Racine; Lizzie
River Plant In Virginia. Tlfoy
Hanning, Middleport.
Discharges - Kathryn
Fairrow, Wilma Anderson,
is improving. Mr. Paul Archer,
Marvin Darst, Carol Drake,
Columbus, brought Charles
Lori Manyard, Nancy Ours,
Anthony home Sunday and
Jay Everett Dalley, Hazel
spent Sunday with his mother, Russell, Wlllma Riggs, Holly
Mrs. Georgia Diehl.
Friend.

•
were

reUrement beneflll
.
exempt .
In other l!JII,.Uve aclhlt)
Thursday:
- The Houle ~creed to ate amendmellll and 11111t Gov.
John J. Glllllan tile ~d­
mlnlstratioll'slllopolll to lpllt
the Department of Mental
Hygiene and CanecUoll IIIIo
two cabinet-mel agepclel.
-The !louse gave overwhellnq approval to I pair rl
Senate-pealed Wls reqalriDg
payment of non~teachins
school employee for da)'l 1cilt
wllen sdloolll are c1oled 4llrtq
a calamlty, and IIW'•teertDa
tliem six ~ bollda)'la yur.
- The Senate tJ!IIlllmOUIIY
agreed with Houle •II!I!IICL
menta and ~ent to the SDVI!flll!l'
a blll requiring a com·
p-ebenslve state wide maper
plan on S)leclel educallan.

.

Helen Help ·
••

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Both began," said Penn after his
Coach Pat Penn of Columbus Silver Knights rallied from a
Re.ady and John Barr of three-point halftime deficit for
Lexington sounded more like a GS-05 decision over Midlosers after their teams posted dletown Madison in the ope.ning
8eJI)).flnal Victories Thursday ·game of the 50th annual
night In the Class AA Ohio High tournament.
School Basketball Tour"ljustcan'tget too excited,"
namen~ .
said Barr, after his team's 511'"It.~as the worst hslf we've 47 win over Poland explaining .
played ..aince the tournament he had come down with a case

of mononucleosis. "It seems
funny to be in a state tournament and feel flat:''
Ready, the No. I ranked
team in the fmal United Press
International
Board of
Coaches' ratings, led early
over Madison, but hit a cold
spell which . saw them go
scoreless. for the first five
minutes of tbe second quarter .

The Knights went from a 17-13
advantage to trail 24-17.
A basket by junior Charles
Taylor restored order,
however, and Ready trailed by
only three, 29-26, at the half.
"It couldn't last forever,"
Penn said, referring to the
drought of points.
Ready, which will carry a 241 record into Saturday mor-

*

42

SVAC ~PS - Eastern's Reserve BasketbaU
Squad were SVAC Co.Qlamps with North Gallia. The team
ended its season with a 10..2 record. Front row, 1... , Byron

McCoy, Steve Goebel, Richard Cross, Tim Baum, Rusty
Walker, Rick Hollon ; back row, Robert Ord, coach, Randy
Orr, Larry Atherton, Tony Millhoan, Steve Dill, Tim Spencer
and John Sh\lftS.

Pro Football Officials Approve Rule Changes
'

.st~.-~\n,~K~~J.W(j~~;:,.,
the playtilg'fiel~, cutting off the
speciaii3ill were Smilliig use ·Of the' sldehne as an extra
today as the National Foot.ball
League moved into Its final day
of Its annual. rileetlng, having
passed several rul~ changes
which will burden the defense.
The bljf dlange came after '
Thursday morning's session
when the owners, by a :1!&gt;-1 ·
vote, deelded to move the hash
marks ci(!Ser to the center of

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTI!RIEST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

hoc . Ed .
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Publishing Com pan v, 111
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992 .2156, Editorial Phone 992·

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Subscfiptlon r:ates : 0! ·
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defensive "player."
Two other changes to help
the offensive team came
during the afternoon sessioncalling a pass incomplete if the
receiver has stepped out of
bounds before catching a pass
and allowing a punt to be run
out of the end zone.
Another rule change, th~
result of the feeling that much
of this infraction was unintentional, reduced tackling by the
face mask from a IS-yard
penalty and automatic first
down to a five-yard penalty and
an automatic fll'st down. But
the owners decided to have the
officials make the judgment
!hat If the infraction was
flagrant, to penalize the violating team IS yards and award
an automatic first down to the
other club .
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
said there was "strong support"for a sudden death period
for all tie sames and the twopoint conversion, both of which
fell short of the 20 votes needed
for passage. However 1 Rozelle
~d more than 20 of the cluhs
were in favor of a change, but
couldn't muster enough votes

SPRING CLOSE-OUT
}

SALE

s
ALUMINUM
•MILL FINISHED OR
•ANODIZED

YJ PRICE
"
.i

AS. LONG AS
lHEY LAST

for .~ii~}"iilili'l!e.

:·:r., ::c · · 'the

Along #lt'tl'l1he hash marks
being moved in, the league
decided to standardize the yard
markers in all stadiums.
The yard markers will now
ali be six feet long, the top of
which will be one yard outside
of the hash marks.
Today 's session was expected to cover amendments to

Racine Social Events
By MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS
Tbe meeting of the Booster
Sunday School Class of the
First Baptist Church at the
home of Mrs. Marie Roy
Friday evening, March 17, was
opened with the singing of
"Tiie Old Rugged Cross." Mter
scripture reading and prayer a
nwhbar of readings were given
by members. Mrs. Marie
Roush, president, presided
over the business session. Mrs.
Dorothy Badgley conducted a
quiz, "Books of the Bible",
with Margie Grimm receiving
the prize. Mrs .• Ura Morris
received the tray prize after
lovely refreshments were
served by the hostess, Mrs.
Roy, assisted by her daughter,
Betty.
Mr . and Mrs. Roderick
Grimm visited Mrs. Grimm's
sister, Mrs. Alberta Saunders,
in Holzer Medical Center.
Duncan
Mahoney
of
Ridgefield, Conn., came to
spend two weeks vacation with
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Wickline and Mrs.
·Laura Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart
spent a weekend in Columbus
with Mr. and Mrs. James Laird
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Jacobs and family.
Mrs . . Ola HyseU of Long
l)ottom visited Mrs. Grace
Krider over the weekend.
Mrs. DrusiUa House and

granddaughter of Columbus
were recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Neigler and other
relatives.
Mrs. Eddie Van Matre of
Clifton was a weekend guest of
ber brother-in-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon West and
family.
Lynn Mallory is spending a
vacation With his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Mallory .
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
and son of Baltimore were
weekend guests of his mother,
Mrs. Carrie Nease.
Hazel Carnahan and Frances
Foster spent the weekend with
Mrs. Loe Tisdale at Buckeye
Lake.

Nicklaus in Tie
For Orleans Lead.,

NEW ORLEANS (UPI)Jack Nicklaus, already the
W. L. Pet. GB terror of the tour, .bas quit
x-Ballimore 37 ~2 .468
Allan Ia
3~ 4cl .425 3'12 smoking-a step he takes only
Cincinnati
28 51 .425 9
when he's really pointing for a
Cleveland
73 56 .291 14
tournament.
Western Conference
The tournament that
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB Nicklaus has in his sights is the
•-Milwaukee 61 19 .763 ...
Masters next month. But he's
Chicago
55 25 .688 6
trying to put it all together in
Phoenix
48 32 .600 13
Detroit
25 54 .316 35'12 the $125,000 Greater New
Pacific Division
Orleans Open this week.
W. L. Pet. GB
He entered the second round
x-LosAnaeles 67 13 .838 ...
·today in a five-way tie for the
Golden Sl.
50 30 .625 17
Seal lie
47 33 .588 20
lead after shooting a six-underHouston
31 48 .392 35112
par
66 Thursday despite
Porlland
18 63 .222 49'/:z
making only one good putt--a
x-Ciincheddlvision title.
Thursday's Results
40-footer --during the round.
I No games scheduled )
He's tied with Billy Casper,
Friday's Games
Mason
Rudolph, Bob Payne
Baltimore at Ci ncinnati
Golden State al Allanla
and Bunky Henry, over the
Houston at Cleveland
7,081)..yard Lakewood Country
Buffal o al Deiroll
Club course.
New York at Milwaukee
Seven players were tied one
Chicago al Philadelphia
Phoenix ai Los Angeles
stroke back and three more
{On lygamesscheduled I
had 68s . Deadlocked at 67 were
ABA Standings
Terry Wilcox, Larry Ziegler,
By United Press International Dave Eichelberger, Billy ZioEast
W. L. Pet. GB bro, Ralph John son, Jim
x· Kentucky 63 16 .797 ...
Colbert and John Schroeder.
Virginia
43 36 .544 20
Defending champion Frank
New York
42 38 .525 21'1&gt;
Beard had an even-par 72 and
Floridians 34 45 . .430 29
Carolina
33 48 .407 31
Gary Player had a 73.
Pi ttsborg_tl 24 56 .300 39'12
Nicklaus, who already this
West
year
is off to the greatest start
W. L. Pet. 'GB
X· Uia h
58 23 .716 ... of any golfer lnhistory, birdied
Indiana
45 34 .570 12
four straight holes on the front
Dallas
39 41 .488 19
nine and two in succession on
Denver
32 48 .400 25
the
back nine, and then an·
Memphis
26 54 .325 31 '12
x- Clincheddivlsion title
nounced :
Thursday's Results
· "I've quit smoking for the
Floridians 126 Pittsburgh 115
Masters. I play better wben
Ulah 137 Memphis 117
{Only games scheduled)
I'm not smoking, but I also eat
Friday's Games
more.
And I play better goit
Kentucky ai Pittsburgh
· Central Division

rung's (11 :30) championship
game against LexingtOn's ZHl,
quickly tied it' at 36-30 at the
start of the second half.
After six more ties, the last
at 40-40, al}.(lhio Bob Taylor
put the Knights in front to stay
with a free throw with UO
remaining in the quarter.
Taylor, who scored 18 points
and hauled down '17 rebounds,
then set up a steal and a basket
by sophomore Jinuny Jones,
Ready's leading scorer with 19
points, and tbe Knights were on
their way .
Penn, who promised "we'll
play better Saturday,'' started
8-4 sophomore Bob Cumberlander in the second half
and It permitted the quick and
agUe Bob Taylor to move out
oo the wing where he caused
more than a few problems for
the Madison shooters.
Ready dominated the
boards, taking 48 rebounds
compared with 38 for the
Mohawks. The Ready defense,
a harassing press in the first
half and a tight 1-3-1 in the
second, forced Madison into 21
turnovers while the Knights
had only 11.
Lexington, rated fourth in
the final UP! AA ratings, never
trailed after taking a 3-G lead
on a free throw by Steve Keck
and a basket by Tim Davis and
appeared to be ready to end it
In a hurry by pulling away to a
111-9 lead at the end of the first
quarter.
Cold Spell Too
The Minutemen, however,
ran into a dry spell not unlike
Ready in the first game, going
nearly four minutes into the
second quarter before scoring
their first paints, a pair of free
throws by Davis. Poland ,
which bowed out of tournament
action with a 22-3 mark, had
narrowed the score by that
time to 1!).18.
Ron Arnett, Lexington's 6-2
senior guard who took over the
chore of breaking the Poland
press, hit th~ first Minuteman
· basket of the second quarter
and thenadded another bafore
intermission to give his team a
28-25 halftime margin.
After a basket by Poland's
Dennis Sullivan, high scorer
for the night, had cut the
margin to 31-30 with 5:50 to go
in the third quarter, Lexington
began to move away, leading
43-35 at the end of the quarter
and never leading by less than
six the rest of the way.
Davis, a !Hi pivotman, led
Lexington in scoring with 17
points, followed by Terry Mong
with 13 and Arnett with 11.
Dave Pigman, usually one of
the Minutemen's top scorers, .
finished with seven points and
missed his first free throw attempt, snapping a string of 'l1
in a row with a miss.
Barr, in his lith year at Lexington, said Saturday's championship game would be between "two strong willed
teams.
"Neither team expects to
lose,'' he said. "I think they've
been looking at each other all
season. We 'II just have to see
what happens."

when I eat less so I have to
watch my eating:"
Nicklaus Is trying to win the
Master• for the fourth time, a
feat acromplished only by
Arnold Palmer .
Casper and Rudolph had
outstanding putting rounds.
(',asper, playing with Nicklaus,
had birdie pulls of 40, 15, 14, 12,
6 and I 'k feet.
Rudolph, who hasn't won in
two years, made three ~oot
putts for birdies and had others
of 8, 10 and 12 feet.
"I had the best putting round
l've had since I've been a pro,''
Rudolph said. "I had about five
that would've gone in a snuff

can."
LADIES SKATING

NEW YORK (UPI)-Terry
Doyle, a nine-year-old from
Massapequa, N.Y., won the
intermediate ladies title
Thursday or the 50th Middle
Atlantic Figure Skating
Championships.
Deborah Ann Lowry of West
Orange, N.J., was second and
Karen Beth Wagner of Hewlltt
Harbor, N.Y., was third.

G\Vin
$10,000

and a

New York vs. Virginia

AI Norfolk

Floridians vs . Carolina

AI Greensboro

Denver vs. Indiana

AI Anderson. l11d.
Memphis at Dallas
{On Iygames scheduled)
NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis
Boston
52 10 10 114
NewYork
48 14 11 107
Mon treal
44 15 14 102
Toronto
30 29 14 7~
Detroit
3233973
Buffalo
IS 42 18 48
Vancouver
18 47 7 43
West
W. L. T. Pis
x-Chicago
43 17 13 99
Mlnnesola
35 27 11 81
Si. Louis
26 ' 36 11 63
California
21 35 18 60
Philadelphia
23 37 12 58
Pillsborgh
23 38 12 58
Los Angeles
18 48 8 44
x-Ciincheddivisiontltle
Thursday's Results
Boston 4 New York 1
Buffalo 4 Mlnn .4, lie
Chicag o4 Philadelphia 2
{Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Torontoat Vancouver
I Onlygamescheduledl
AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis
Bos ton
39 19 13 91
Nova Scotia
37 19 13 87
Springfield
29 27 '~ 72
Providence '
25 35 10 60
Rochesler
2536856

2-HOUR

CLEANING

EAGLES MAKE OFFER
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)The Pbiladelphla Eagles would
like to play host to the 1976
Super Bowl to coincide with the
city's planned celebration of
the U.S. bicentenilial.
According to Eagles sources,
club owner Leonard A. Tose
made the suggestion to National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle at the
owners' meeting in Honolulu.

WINNEBAGO
MOTOR
HOME

West

W. L. T. Pis

Balt imore
31 27 11
Hershey
30 27 11
Celveland
30 33 9
Cinclnnali
, 27 26 15
Richmond
28 31 11
Tidewater
20 41 9
Thursday's Results
Cincl 2 Richmond 2, tie
IOnlygamescheduled)

Details Are
. In

73
71

Cartans Of

69
69

67
o¥1

Friday's Games

Hershey al Baltimore
Cincinnati ai Boston
Nova Scotia al Rochesler
~rovidence at Springfield
{On!ygames scheduled)

Diet Rite . Cola
-

.~:ea.

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MOTOROLA

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(Upon Request)

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._a

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PORTABLE COLOR TV

CLEANERS

2Jo· E. 2nd
Pomeroy
·
Phone 992-5428

-ARROwHOOF INJURED
ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI)- An
injured left fronfhoof will keep
MacArthur Park out of both the
Santa Anita Derby on April I
and the Kentucky Derby,
according to the ·horse's trainer, Tommy Doyle .
MacArthur Park tore off a
portion of his left front hoof
when he stumbled during the
San Miguel Stakes Jan. 27.
Doyle said he would rest
MacArthur Park until the
Hollywood Park season.

.Df"ess·(fl)

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Arrow Shirts- Greatest Selection
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constitution, including
waiver .and player limits and
extending or shortening the
interconverence trading
period. Discussion would also
center on the Chicago All.Star
Game, the contract for which
expires after the 20th meeting
between the Dallas Cowboys
and the College All Stars July
28.

.• £:95

gal.

u

Just wash out your
brush with soap &amp;

Many Styles To Choose
From

water.

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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Atlantic Oivslon
W. t. Pet. GB
x-Boslon
5~ 26 .675 ...
New York
~7 32 .595 6•;,
Philadelphia 30 50 .375 2~
Buffalo
22 )I .278 31'12

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W~-~Y~1~~.; .

Eastern Conferen&lt;;:e

&lt; '•

Harrington.

The Science Fiction Hill of
Fame - edited by Robert
Silverberg.
• C~ocolat~ ;I)~y~, Pop•lcle,

NBA Stonding•
By United Pre•sl~ternatianal

.

A variety of new flcllan baa
been received by the aJ!d·
dieport PubUc Library and are
available for dlstrlbullan, Mill
Jane Bailey, Ubrarlan, report~.
. New new volwne~ IDclulle:
Ellery Queen's MiniMysteries - by Ellery Queen.
For the Love of a Doctor by Elllabetb Seifert.
Trial
by · WilHam

Marshmallow Pie - by
Graham Lord.
The (d:eat Hijack - by
Alfred Tack.
··
Juat What the Doctor Or·
dered - by Colin Watson.
Up the Sandbox - by Anne
Richardson Rolphe.
Green Days by the River by Michael Anthony.
Watchers on the Shore - lly
Stan Barstow.
The Palilenger on the U -by
Claude Aveline. ·
. Deatp of a Dude - by ReJ:
Stout.
Code Name Sebastian - by
James L. Johnlon.
Under the Eye of the Storm
- by John Heney.
By Helen &amp;ttel
Orbits- by (edited) Damon
Kntsht.
Flood - by Lionel Black.
WHO'S DISCRIMINATING NOW?
All the Best People - by
Dear Helen :
I
Sloan Wilson.
' Our medium-&lt;tlzed newspaper seldom has less than five
Mll'tla8lmo - by P. E. H.
pages devoted to sports - and nine-tenths of these sports items Durston,
are for and about men . .
Nebula Award - Storie~
The women's section, by contrast, is a skimpy one-page (half Five - by (edited) JIDlell
ads), except for the &amp;mday brides' Insert, and a weekly two Bllah.
pages of school news. I understand women's page space Is
Great Spy stories from
shrinking all over the country.
Fiction - by Allen Dulles.
Quick · Sand - by John
Discrimination again? - FOR EQUAL SPACE
Dear FES:
Brunner .
The Moonflower Couple -by
More Ukely, NONdiscrimination. News and features about
John
Fairchild.
women are no longer considered "for women only," and so
A Far Sunset - by Edmund
they're often spread all over the paper.
But - let's hear It from editors, who can answer your Cooper.
The Poeeldon Adventure question mUch better than I. - H.
by Paul Galllco .
+++
The Reluctant Mediwn - by
Dear Helen :
L.
P. Davies.
I'm a 511-year-old grandmother who doesn't smoke anything.
True Grit - by Clarles
But I think tile time has come to stop waslng our tax dollars
Portis.
on a law that can't be enforced: We shOuld follow the recomWelcome to Xanadu - by
mendation of the NaUonal Commission on Marijuana and Drug
Nathaniel Benchley.
,
Abuse and "decrimlnallze" marijuana.
·
Cynthl&amp; - by E. V. CunResearch shows that pot Is relatively liarm!ess (to adults) if nin&amp;ham.
used in moderation - probably less harmful than are cigarettes
Ellery Queen 's Mystery
and alcohol, or at least on a par:
Parade - by (edited) Ellery'
Even women's magazines are publishing p-o-legallzatlon Queen.
articles. Officials in the Food and Drug AdmlnlstraUon and the
Bon Voyage - by Noel
Mental Health Association are calling pot "not so black."
Coward.
I ask my contemporaries wbat are the proved dangers o1
marijuana and they say it muat be bad because It's against the
SOMETIUNG NEW
law. Then I ask If they ever took a drink during prohlbltioo. Tbey
B081'0N (UPI) - It was
say, "Yes, but,that's different." How &lt;Ufferent?
I'm not advocating tile use of marijuana or alcohol. I merely something new, even for&lt; the
wish people to become educated on tbe difference between It and veteran State llolill employes
It
truly dangerouS drugs. Maybe then we could have limited who thouabt they had all.
The
Capitol
Wll
thrown
legalization (no sales to juveniles, no ad~ertlsln8, distribution
ooly through specified agencies) and IIJH\fld our efforts fighting Into an up.-- Thlll'ldliy w11en
the real and menacing traffic In hard narcoUcs. - MilS..AL. L. a tall, slender YOIIIII 111111,
about :11, trotted throuch the .
Dear Mrs. L.:
My stand on pot has always been: "LegallzaUoo If proved Boeton· Cctmmon and cbqed
Into the State Houle wear1Jig
relatively safe." Perhaps that time bas come. I don't know, nor
only a beard. Pollee wrapped
(I suspect) do the researchers. But ... is a government that bans
him In a blanket and led him
cyclamates ready· to take a chBill!e oo marijuana?
away.
Decriminalizing pot? Definitely YES! I don't think private
use should be srounda for a "buat," and It seldom Is any more, as
college students will tell you.
In 1941 the Grand Coulee
We should at least modify the law to catch up with the Urnes. Dam on l!!e Colwnbla River
- H.
began produclnc electrical pow.
!"_In the Plclftc Nortbwest.

Us.

Columbus Ready,.Lexington
Advance To Class
Finals

New Fiction
At Library

Tbe Crooked Shamrock - by
C. B. Gllford.
The House on the Strand by Daphne du Maurler.
Last Plane OUt - by John
Ball.
Mirror, Mlrrow -by Noel B. .
Gerson.
Tbe Doctor's Two Lives -by
Elizabeth Seifert.
Ellery Queen's Grand Slam
- by Ellery Queen.
Diagnosis Positive - by · •
Jean Todd Freeman.
The Clock at , 8:16 - by
Edwin Lllllbam.
Calico Palace - by Gwen

Pro Standings

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0•.

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Ph. 985·3307

GAS SERVICE
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Can also be seen at Flo's Antique Shop,
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--

. 2- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, o., F'riday, March 24,1972

Assembly Fiddled Away on

en

.

'

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio General Assembly is to
make one last stab next week
at getting a. package of constltutiorial amendments on the
May 2 ballot although the final
whistle may already have
blown.
The lawmakers adjourned
Thursday after failing to reach
agreement on the package of 14
amendments, which includes
expense
accoun.ts
for
legislators and a governorlieutenant governor team in
elections.
The office of Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown said it may
be too late to get proper advertislng for the constitutional
"Toposais - five weeks in the

iargest newspaper in each
: county.
"U they send us something
on Monday," said James R.
Marsh, elections counsel to
Brown, "we'Uget it out to the
counties as soon as possible.
But I think for practical purposes, it's dead for the May
ballot."
Marsh noted some counties'
largest newspaper is a weekly
which may already be locked
up by early next week, leaving
only four publications until
May 2. He also pointed to slow
mail service.
But House Speaker Pro Ternpore Charles E. Fry, R-,Springfield , chief sponsor of the legislation, insisted March 28 was

the absolute deadline - five
weeks to the day from the primary.
Last Try
The House, which could muster only 73 of 99 members and
not enough votes to clear the
package Thursday, scheduled
an Bp.m. session for next Monday night for a last-ditch try.
But there were substantialdisagreements over House and
Senate provision on the proposed expense accounts and the
tandem election of a governor
and lieutenant governor.
Although a conference committee quickly came up with a
report, the differences weren't
reso lved. The Senate adopted
the report by 20-7- the exact

number of votes needed to pass
it. There appeared to be more
opposition in the House.
The conference report caUed
for expense accounts beginning
next January, changing language which would have excluded senators whose terms
do not expire this year.
The House version of the resolution had called for the nomination, as well as the election,
of the governor and lieutenant
governor as a team. The Senate version required that the
offices be separated in the pri·mary .
Set Up Tandem
The conference report leaves

•

the matter up to the
legislature, which may set up
tandem
nomination
p-ocedures.
Sen. Robert R. Shaw, R;cQ.
lumbus, said this would result
in "all kinds or chicanery" in
the legislature.
"I can see the legislature
coming back every four years
and deciding on a new way to
p-ovide for the nomination of
governor and lieutenant governor,' agreed Sen. Donald E.
Lukens, R-Mlddletown, and
unsuccessful candidate for the
Republican gubernatorial
nomination in 1970 and a
prospect for 1974.

Talent Recogri.ized

THIRD GRADE STUDENTS were Dwayne Curfman, collage; Tammy Smith, pastels, and
Steve Circle, drawing.

Kathleen Morris. Reports were
(Continued from page I )
receiving a blue ribbon __was given by Sue Ann Beegle and
Mark Simpson for his water- Kay Warden.
Officers for 1972-73, ancolor. Red ribbons went tQ
Paula Wolfe, Carl Morris, nounced by Mrs. Beegle,
James Gheen, Denise Manuel, chairman of the nominating
' Amanda Autherson, Mark CfSIImittee, !ll't! Sue Follrod,
Proffit, Berla Robinson, Kevin president; Sandra Hill, vice
Holter, Jimmy Werry, Tammy president; Janice Salser,
·Harden, Mary Obitz, Eric Hill, secretary, and Sue Ann Beegle,
Sanja Hill and Dells Johnson. treasurer. They will be inTaking the blue ribbon in the stalled In AprU.
fourth grade was Cindy
Tbe attendance banner was
Warden's watercolor. Red won by Duane Wolfe's fifth
ribbons went to Sheri Rose, grade class, who also
Karen 'Wines, Amy Fisher,. pn:sentect the program which
Crlckett Carpenter, Toni consisted of several chorus
Hudaon, Perry Smith, Beth selections, "We've Got a
Huffman, Eddie Adams, Dream" • "Brand New Key" •
Melissa Ible, Lonnie Mayes "Tbe Beat Goes On," "Do You
and Randy Smith. '
Know the Way to San Jose,"
Best in the fifth grade went to and "Put Your Hand in the
Penny Smith for her pastel and Hand." Accompanying the
Linda Norris, tempera. group with guitars were Bob
Presented red ribbons were Deeter and .Mr. Wolfe.
Solos were sung by Becky
Danielle Lisa Warner, Seth
Hill, ·John West, KeUy Taylor, Crow, Unda Norris, Marie
Doug Bell, Becky Crow, Pickens, Janice Carnaban and
Beverly McLain, Louise Lee, Tim Brinager.
Brenda Glenn, Yancy Roush,
Plans for a jitney supper
Brice Hart, John West, George were discussed and a tour of
Knighting, James Carnahan the Fenton Glass Works will be
made in AprU. An Easter party
and BlU Harris.
In the sixth grade clasa the wlU be held March 30th.
blue ribbon went to Butch
Shain; red ribbons to Greg
Huffman, Loretta Holsinger,
Steve HID, Lois Bailey, Cheryl
Roseberry, Peri'y Hill, Herbie
Ervin, Mike Huddleston and
Richard Teaford.
Grand prize winners in each
By BERTHA PARKER
, category will compete for
Sabbath School attendance
county honors at the April 8 March 19 at·the Free Methodist
meetlng..of the Meigs County Church was l22, offering for
Councll of Parents and the day was $212.&amp;1.
Teachers. County winners in
Rev. and Mrs. Eugene Gill
the primary and intermediate, are announcing the birth of a
will be displayed at the District girl, Billy Jean, born March 15
16 spring conference to be beld at Holzer Hospital. This is the
In Jackson and will compete in sixth daughte~ for the Gills.
the cultural arts contest of the
Mr. and Mrs. William
Ohio PTA In the fall.
Jacobs, Columbus, spent the
All entries in the cultural weekend with Mrs . Jacobs'
arts contest were on display at parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Monday night's meeUng of the Jacobs and attended church
PTA.
services Sunday at the local
Judging Monday night was church.
done by Mrs. Margaret Ells · Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bauer,
Lewis of Meigs High School. Marion ; Miss Polly Karr, Mr.
Winners were announced by Ted Mathews, Huron, spent the
Blondena Hudson.
weekend with Mr. Charles
Mrs. Sue Follrod presided at Karr and visited Mrs. Karr
the business session. Girl Scout who is a patient at Veterans
Troop 137 led the pledge of Mell)orial Hospital.
allegiance and the Lord's
Charles Anthony Diehl
Prayer. They also presented visited his father, Mr. Charles
the scout pep song. Leaders Diehl, who is a patient in
were Doris Fisher and University Hospital. Mr. Diehl

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

FIFTH GRADE STUDENTS were Brian Grindstaff, scuipture; Doug !!ell, collage, and
Cecilia Jenkins, watercolor.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB - Wolfpen

..

Formation of Fetus News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
Is Fascinating
of Columbus were weekend

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D .
Dear Dr. Lamb - Would
you please write some information on the gills of a
tin y developing baby . I am
an ex pectant mother and I
think that is very interesting . Are the gills near the
ears? It seems like I have
heard that somewhere.
Dear Reader - When the
baby first starts developing ,
it goes through the different
stages that we identify ,with
the evolution of the animal
species. Zoologists classify
animals from those beg in·
nlng with one cell organisms
through fis h, animals and
man. This arrangeme nt is
called phylogeny . Individuals who su bscribe to evolu·
lion feel that this is how
man developed .
When the fertilized ovum
1eggJ begins to deve lop into
a baby . it undergoes a sequence of events which are
very similar to this organized classification of the animal world . Since the process
of development leading to
birth is called ontogeny. this
observation has been sucrinctly expressed as "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny ," which means that the
development process recaps
the stages of evolution .
In the course of the baby's
development, one stage is
the fish stage and there are
gill ~ entirely analogo us to
those seen in fish . They are
located at the upper part of
the fetus near the a r e a
where the lungs and heart
and ~real. arteries are developmg. As the gi lls are
lost. the arte{Y that :.~rmal -

visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
ly goes a long each gill unHoward
Russell.
dergoes a tran sformation
Mrs. Clyde Collins and
and as these arches of the
of Columbus were
family
arteries are changed they
end up being the main arter- weekend visitors of Mr. and
ies we have in the body in- Mrs. Richard Jeffers and
cluding the large aorta !hat family, and Mrs. Ethel Hatfeeds blood to most of llw field of Middleport.
body except the lungs, the
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
pulmonary artery that feeds
blood to the lungs and the Kail, Charles a nd Kevin,
branches ttiat go lo the neck visited Sunday afternoon with
and head .
Mrs. Lena Knapp of LangsEven the heart itself un- ville .
det·goes a series of develop- Mrs. Kathryn McGhee and
mental changes. They are at son, Charles Arthur and Leigh
one stage analogous to struc- Ann of Colubmu8, were Sunday
tures noted in fish , reptiles
afternoon visitors of Mr. and
and fin ally normal man .
Alm ost all of the specia l- Mrs. Charley Smith.
ized organs of tile body un- Bill McElroy, son of Mr. and
dergo such an evolutionary Mrs . Paul McElroy, was
development. There is a spe- married to Miss Kay Bing,
cies in !he anim al kingdom daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
that will contain some struc·
lure entirely analogous to Vernon Bing at the Zion Church
some temporary state of the Saturday evening, March lB.
developing fetus . This entire Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
complex pt·ocess is carried Columbus were here to be best
out according to individual man for his brother.
bluept·ints. The first cell for- Mrs. J. R. Murphy, Mr. and
mation between the fem ale
egg and the sperm contains Mrs . Harley Johnson and
one·half of the blueprint Elaine Murphy were Thursday
from e a c h parent , or the visitors of Mr. and Mrs. John
ge nes. These w i I I be the Earnheart (Bell) of Logan.
same for all the rest of the · Mr . and Mrs. Harley Johnson
cells for the entire develop· visited Sunday evening with
ing process.
Mr. Albert Heilman ,
I agree with yo u. The en - Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
tire process is absolutely or'Cincinnatl and Mrs. Clinton
fascinal in g.
Gilkey of Albany we re Wed{N(WSPAPEII. ENTERPR;t SE ASSN I
nesday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Lincoln Russell .
Please Jtnd ~our questions and
comm!nh to Lawrence f . Lamb,

M.D., i• '"" of thi• po(J&lt;r. While
Dr. Lamb can~ot onswcr Jndividuol
lttrtm , he w1 ll answer letters of
genetaf i11 teteil in future col11mtu.

WIN AT BRIDGE

A 'How Could You---' Hand
NORTH
• 432

Z4

• 87
t AK6S
"' AK94 ·
WEST ( D)

EAST

• 85

• 7

. AKQJ542 .109 3
• 83
• Q J 10 7 2
oli12
"' Q J I06
SOUTH
• A K Q J 1096

• 6
• 94

"' 853
Both vulnerab le
W,cs l North
Easl South
:J •
Dblc
Pass n •
Pass
Pass
Pas5
OpeninK lead-;-• K

Ry Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

When today's hand was
played back around 1936 it.
ca used quite a squabble.
South wanted to know how
his partner could make a
takeo ut double at the three
level with nothing in spades
and Nort h wanled to know
why South had to go to six
under his own steam after
lhe double.
We fee l the squabble·might
have become a real fight if
North had known that South
could make the slam after
West led two rounds of
hearts .
So uth did try a ve ry ineffective squeeze. After playing a few rounds of trumps
he played three rounrls of
A thought for today : British dianionds. Then he ran the
poet Letitia Elizabeth Landon resl of his trumps .
said "few save the poor feel
It Wes t had been lnng in
f t'h
' ,
hot h minors he WOilld ha vE!
or e poor.
.

entP

S-The DaUy Sent~!, Mlddleport·i&gt;mJ!!I:Olo 0., Friday, March 24, 1972

made the hand , but West
had bid three hearts and
shown up with two spades.
The squeeze had to. be
against East.
South should have played
out all but one trump and
discarded down to ace-king
of clubs and all four diamonds in dummy. East
would have to get down to
s ix cards also. If he hung
onto four diamonds South
could cash dummy's top
clubs, get back to his own
hand by ruffing a diamond
and score the 12th trick with
his eight of clubs.
If East held three clubs
South c o ul d play three
rounds of diamonds to set up
the last diamond in dummy.
Of course, South would ha ve
to decide just what cards
East had, hung onto.
(HEW5PAP£1t lHTUPRISE A$SN. j

The bidding has been:
West

North

Pass

3'¥

Pass

Pass

1¥

4

East

Pass
Pass

Pass

You. South. hold :
.AK~54 .A 2. tJ .AKfi54

What do you do now?
A- Pa.'is. Your partner haS
shown • lot or hearts, but also a
bad

hand.

TODA Y'S QUESTION
I n s Lead ol bidding three
hearts, your p 11 r l n e I' has bid
fnur h e u r l s over your two
spArlel-i. Whott rlo .vou do now'!
Answc1· 1'o1n111"ntw

Lt. Gov. John W. Brown e)[·
ll'esseil cllsBatlafactiCII with
the., ~onfeience report and
appearoo to be working actively to see that It did not go to
the ballot in that form.
Use As Escue
"This Is the s!West damn
thing I ever'heard of," Brown
said. ''They're using Ul as an
ercuse that It has to go to the
ballot In May, so hurry up and
pass it."
,
Fry and other proponents of
the amendments, drawn up by.
a special Constitutional Revission Commission, want the
package on tbe ballot In May so
it will not be confused with

another questim In November
- wllether Oblo should have a
ConstltuUonai Convention.
The Senate unanlmouly
passed and sent to the HOUle a
bill exempting up to ...000
worth of lncoine from fl!deral,
private and self-employed
· pensions from the state lneome

tax.

.

•.

The chief 8J)OilSOI', Sen. Paul
E. Glllmor, R-Tltlin, said the
leglslatlan would exempt all
pensions, ~'for practical purposes, except very large ones."
As adopted by the legislature
la8t December, only state and
local penaloo benefits, Social
Security benefits and rallroad

Syracuse News, Society
Moving into ·new homes in also visited Mr. and Mrs. Ted
the Rustic Hills addition Abolln and family and Mr. and
purchased from Mr. Archie Mrs. Freeman Roush, of
Lee, are Mr. and Mrs. Everett V'll'glnia.
MlcbaelandMr. andMrs.John
Mr..and Mrs. Guy Guinther
D. Wolfe.
accompanied their son .and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Allen daughter-in-law, Mr. and.Mrs.
and son Shawn, Mrs. !JJcllle Willie Guinther, of Gallipolis
Allen, of Newark; Mrs. Naomi Route, tO Athens where they
Autherson, of Portland; and visited Mrs. Ellen Newiana
Mr. and Mrs. James Pape, and
Mr. and Mrs. James Pape
Kristen, local, were Thursday and Kristen and Mrs. Elva
dinner guests of Mrs. Elva Dalley were Sunday dlmer
Dalley.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Betzlng, Auther110n.
Monroe, Mich.; Ernest BetMr. and Mrs. Malcolm
zing, River Rogue, Mich., were Guinther and children and
called here by the death of · Kenneth and Terry Guinther
their mother, Mrs. Ethel visited Mike Griffith and
Be!zing and visited with Mr. famUy.
and Mrs. Donald Cottrill and
Mrs. Don Cottrill and Sbaron
family.
visited with the former's aunt, ·
Mr. and Mrs. Nial Salser Mrs. Laura Sayre, of Racine,
visited recently with Mr. and Route.
Mrs. Cbarles Mugrage, at New
Mrs. Judy Pape and Kristen
Matamoras. .
and mother, Mrs. Elva Dalley,
Mr, and Mrs. Terry L. Wolfe visited ·Mrs. Iva Lawrence at
moved from the Brown trailer PorUand on a Thursday af.
court, Minersville, to a trailer ternoon.
on Second St.
Mr. and Mrs. Wlllle Guinther
Mrs. Wanda Guinther . and of Gallipolis Route spent
son, Malcolm, were at White's Saturday night with hls
Funeral Home at Coolville to parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
pay respects to her cousin, Guinther.
V'll'glnia Baker Reed.
Recent visitors Of Mrs. Elva
Mr. and Mrs. Max Folmer Dalley were Louise Yates,
and daughter, Pam, of Cln- Racine; Naomi Autherson,
cinnali spent a week with her Porlland, and Eleanor BOOram
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert and Nettie Hemsley, local.
HyseU.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dalley rl.
Vetei'BIII Memorial Hoepllal
Newark spent a &amp;lnday with
Tb11nday Adml11toas his mother, Mrs. Elva Dalley. Raymond Hartley, Racine ;
Mr. Eugene Slack . of Barbara Baer, Minersville;
Freeport spent a weekend.with Oren Leo Ellis, Rutland ;
his.mpther, Mrs. Ada.Slack arid Mildred Poweli, Portland;
nephew, Mike Watkins.
Jerry Aleshire, Jr., Syracuse;
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Hayes
Gale Cain, Athena; Veletta G.
recently visited tbe Clinch
Shaffer, Racine; Lizzie
River Plant In Virginia. Tlfoy
Hanning, Middleport.
Discharges - Kathryn
Fairrow, Wilma Anderson,
is improving. Mr. Paul Archer,
Marvin Darst, Carol Drake,
Columbus, brought Charles
Lori Manyard, Nancy Ours,
Anthony home Sunday and
Jay Everett Dalley, Hazel
spent Sunday with his mother, Russell, Wlllma Riggs, Holly
Mrs. Georgia Diehl.
Friend.

•
were

reUrement beneflll
.
exempt .
In other l!JII,.Uve aclhlt)
Thursday:
- The Houle ~creed to ate amendmellll and 11111t Gov.
John J. Glllllan tile ~d­
mlnlstratioll'slllopolll to lpllt
the Department of Mental
Hygiene and CanecUoll IIIIo
two cabinet-mel agepclel.
-The !louse gave overwhellnq approval to I pair rl
Senate-pealed Wls reqalriDg
payment of non~teachins
school employee for da)'l 1cilt
wllen sdloolll are c1oled 4llrtq
a calamlty, and IIW'•teertDa
tliem six ~ bollda)'la yur.
- The Senate tJ!IIlllmOUIIY
agreed with Houle •II!I!IICL
menta and ~ent to the SDVI!flll!l'
a blll requiring a com·
p-ebenslve state wide maper
plan on S)leclel educallan.

.

Helen Help ·
••

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Both began," said Penn after his
Coach Pat Penn of Columbus Silver Knights rallied from a
Re.ady and John Barr of three-point halftime deficit for
Lexington sounded more like a GS-05 decision over Midlosers after their teams posted dletown Madison in the ope.ning
8eJI)).flnal Victories Thursday ·game of the 50th annual
night In the Class AA Ohio High tournament.
School Basketball Tour"ljustcan'tget too excited,"
namen~ .
said Barr, after his team's 511'"It.~as the worst hslf we've 47 win over Poland explaining .
played ..aince the tournament he had come down with a case

of mononucleosis. "It seems
funny to be in a state tournament and feel flat:''
Ready, the No. I ranked
team in the fmal United Press
International
Board of
Coaches' ratings, led early
over Madison, but hit a cold
spell which . saw them go
scoreless. for the first five
minutes of tbe second quarter .

The Knights went from a 17-13
advantage to trail 24-17.
A basket by junior Charles
Taylor restored order,
however, and Ready trailed by
only three, 29-26, at the half.
"It couldn't last forever,"
Penn said, referring to the
drought of points.
Ready, which will carry a 241 record into Saturday mor-

*

42

SVAC ~PS - Eastern's Reserve BasketbaU
Squad were SVAC Co.Qlamps with North Gallia. The team
ended its season with a 10..2 record. Front row, 1... , Byron

McCoy, Steve Goebel, Richard Cross, Tim Baum, Rusty
Walker, Rick Hollon ; back row, Robert Ord, coach, Randy
Orr, Larry Atherton, Tony Millhoan, Steve Dill, Tim Spencer
and John Sh\lftS.

Pro Football Officials Approve Rule Changes
'

.st~.-~\n,~K~~J.W(j~~;:,.,
the playtilg'fiel~, cutting off the
speciaii3ill were Smilliig use ·Of the' sldehne as an extra
today as the National Foot.ball
League moved into Its final day
of Its annual. rileetlng, having
passed several rul~ changes
which will burden the defense.
The bljf dlange came after '
Thursday morning's session
when the owners, by a :1!&gt;-1 ·
vote, deelded to move the hash
marks ci(!Ser to the center of

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTI!RIEST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

hoc . Ed .
City Edilor

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
dait v

Published

except

Saturdav bv Tht Ohio Valley
Publishing Com pan v, 111
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
45769 . Business Office Phone
992 .2156, Editorial Phone 992·

2157.

.

Second class postage paid at

Pomerov. Ohio .

National advertis ing
re-presentat i ve
Bottinell i .
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East •2nd
St ., N!w York City, New York .
Subscfiptlon r:ates : 0! ·
livered by carrie-r where
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price Includes Sunday Times .

Se-ntlf)tl.

defensive "player."
Two other changes to help
the offensive team came
during the afternoon sessioncalling a pass incomplete if the
receiver has stepped out of
bounds before catching a pass
and allowing a punt to be run
out of the end zone.
Another rule change, th~
result of the feeling that much
of this infraction was unintentional, reduced tackling by the
face mask from a IS-yard
penalty and automatic first
down to a five-yard penalty and
an automatic fll'st down. But
the owners decided to have the
officials make the judgment
!hat If the infraction was
flagrant, to penalize the violating team IS yards and award
an automatic first down to the
other club .
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
said there was "strong support"for a sudden death period
for all tie sames and the twopoint conversion, both of which
fell short of the 20 votes needed
for passage. However 1 Rozelle
~d more than 20 of the cluhs
were in favor of a change, but
couldn't muster enough votes

SPRING CLOSE-OUT
}

SALE

s
ALUMINUM
•MILL FINISHED OR
•ANODIZED

YJ PRICE
"
.i

AS. LONG AS
lHEY LAST

for .~ii~}"iilili'l!e.

:·:r., ::c · · 'the

Along #lt'tl'l1he hash marks
being moved in, the league
decided to standardize the yard
markers in all stadiums.
The yard markers will now
ali be six feet long, the top of
which will be one yard outside
of the hash marks.
Today 's session was expected to cover amendments to

Racine Social Events
By MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS
Tbe meeting of the Booster
Sunday School Class of the
First Baptist Church at the
home of Mrs. Marie Roy
Friday evening, March 17, was
opened with the singing of
"Tiie Old Rugged Cross." Mter
scripture reading and prayer a
nwhbar of readings were given
by members. Mrs. Marie
Roush, president, presided
over the business session. Mrs.
Dorothy Badgley conducted a
quiz, "Books of the Bible",
with Margie Grimm receiving
the prize. Mrs .• Ura Morris
received the tray prize after
lovely refreshments were
served by the hostess, Mrs.
Roy, assisted by her daughter,
Betty.
Mr . and Mrs. Roderick
Grimm visited Mrs. Grimm's
sister, Mrs. Alberta Saunders,
in Holzer Medical Center.
Duncan
Mahoney
of
Ridgefield, Conn., came to
spend two weeks vacation with
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Wickline and Mrs.
·Laura Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart
spent a weekend in Columbus
with Mr. and Mrs. James Laird
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Jacobs and family.
Mrs . . Ola HyseU of Long
l)ottom visited Mrs. Grace
Krider over the weekend.
Mrs. DrusiUa House and

granddaughter of Columbus
were recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Neigler and other
relatives.
Mrs. Eddie Van Matre of
Clifton was a weekend guest of
ber brother-in-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon West and
family.
Lynn Mallory is spending a
vacation With his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Mallory .
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
and son of Baltimore were
weekend guests of his mother,
Mrs. Carrie Nease.
Hazel Carnahan and Frances
Foster spent the weekend with
Mrs. Loe Tisdale at Buckeye
Lake.

Nicklaus in Tie
For Orleans Lead.,

NEW ORLEANS (UPI)Jack Nicklaus, already the
W. L. Pet. GB terror of the tour, .bas quit
x-Ballimore 37 ~2 .468
Allan Ia
3~ 4cl .425 3'12 smoking-a step he takes only
Cincinnati
28 51 .425 9
when he's really pointing for a
Cleveland
73 56 .291 14
tournament.
Western Conference
The tournament that
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB Nicklaus has in his sights is the
•-Milwaukee 61 19 .763 ...
Masters next month. But he's
Chicago
55 25 .688 6
trying to put it all together in
Phoenix
48 32 .600 13
Detroit
25 54 .316 35'12 the $125,000 Greater New
Pacific Division
Orleans Open this week.
W. L. Pet. GB
He entered the second round
x-LosAnaeles 67 13 .838 ...
·today in a five-way tie for the
Golden Sl.
50 30 .625 17
Seal lie
47 33 .588 20
lead after shooting a six-underHouston
31 48 .392 35112
par
66 Thursday despite
Porlland
18 63 .222 49'/:z
making only one good putt--a
x-Ciincheddlvision title.
Thursday's Results
40-footer --during the round.
I No games scheduled )
He's tied with Billy Casper,
Friday's Games
Mason
Rudolph, Bob Payne
Baltimore at Ci ncinnati
Golden State al Allanla
and Bunky Henry, over the
Houston at Cleveland
7,081)..yard Lakewood Country
Buffal o al Deiroll
Club course.
New York at Milwaukee
Seven players were tied one
Chicago al Philadelphia
Phoenix ai Los Angeles
stroke back and three more
{On lygamesscheduled I
had 68s . Deadlocked at 67 were
ABA Standings
Terry Wilcox, Larry Ziegler,
By United Press International Dave Eichelberger, Billy ZioEast
W. L. Pet. GB bro, Ralph John son, Jim
x· Kentucky 63 16 .797 ...
Colbert and John Schroeder.
Virginia
43 36 .544 20
Defending champion Frank
New York
42 38 .525 21'1&gt;
Beard had an even-par 72 and
Floridians 34 45 . .430 29
Carolina
33 48 .407 31
Gary Player had a 73.
Pi ttsborg_tl 24 56 .300 39'12
Nicklaus, who already this
West
year
is off to the greatest start
W. L. Pet. 'GB
X· Uia h
58 23 .716 ... of any golfer lnhistory, birdied
Indiana
45 34 .570 12
four straight holes on the front
Dallas
39 41 .488 19
nine and two in succession on
Denver
32 48 .400 25
the
back nine, and then an·
Memphis
26 54 .325 31 '12
x- Clincheddivlsion title
nounced :
Thursday's Results
· "I've quit smoking for the
Floridians 126 Pittsburgh 115
Masters. I play better wben
Ulah 137 Memphis 117
{Only games scheduled)
I'm not smoking, but I also eat
Friday's Games
more.
And I play better goit
Kentucky ai Pittsburgh
· Central Division

rung's (11 :30) championship
game against LexingtOn's ZHl,
quickly tied it' at 36-30 at the
start of the second half.
After six more ties, the last
at 40-40, al}.(lhio Bob Taylor
put the Knights in front to stay
with a free throw with UO
remaining in the quarter.
Taylor, who scored 18 points
and hauled down '17 rebounds,
then set up a steal and a basket
by sophomore Jinuny Jones,
Ready's leading scorer with 19
points, and tbe Knights were on
their way .
Penn, who promised "we'll
play better Saturday,'' started
8-4 sophomore Bob Cumberlander in the second half
and It permitted the quick and
agUe Bob Taylor to move out
oo the wing where he caused
more than a few problems for
the Madison shooters.
Ready dominated the
boards, taking 48 rebounds
compared with 38 for the
Mohawks. The Ready defense,
a harassing press in the first
half and a tight 1-3-1 in the
second, forced Madison into 21
turnovers while the Knights
had only 11.
Lexington, rated fourth in
the final UP! AA ratings, never
trailed after taking a 3-G lead
on a free throw by Steve Keck
and a basket by Tim Davis and
appeared to be ready to end it
In a hurry by pulling away to a
111-9 lead at the end of the first
quarter.
Cold Spell Too
The Minutemen, however,
ran into a dry spell not unlike
Ready in the first game, going
nearly four minutes into the
second quarter before scoring
their first paints, a pair of free
throws by Davis. Poland ,
which bowed out of tournament
action with a 22-3 mark, had
narrowed the score by that
time to 1!).18.
Ron Arnett, Lexington's 6-2
senior guard who took over the
chore of breaking the Poland
press, hit th~ first Minuteman
· basket of the second quarter
and thenadded another bafore
intermission to give his team a
28-25 halftime margin.
After a basket by Poland's
Dennis Sullivan, high scorer
for the night, had cut the
margin to 31-30 with 5:50 to go
in the third quarter, Lexington
began to move away, leading
43-35 at the end of the quarter
and never leading by less than
six the rest of the way.
Davis, a !Hi pivotman, led
Lexington in scoring with 17
points, followed by Terry Mong
with 13 and Arnett with 11.
Dave Pigman, usually one of
the Minutemen's top scorers, .
finished with seven points and
missed his first free throw attempt, snapping a string of 'l1
in a row with a miss.
Barr, in his lith year at Lexington, said Saturday's championship game would be between "two strong willed
teams.
"Neither team expects to
lose,'' he said. "I think they've
been looking at each other all
season. We 'II just have to see
what happens."

when I eat less so I have to
watch my eating:"
Nicklaus Is trying to win the
Master• for the fourth time, a
feat acromplished only by
Arnold Palmer .
Casper and Rudolph had
outstanding putting rounds.
(',asper, playing with Nicklaus,
had birdie pulls of 40, 15, 14, 12,
6 and I 'k feet.
Rudolph, who hasn't won in
two years, made three ~oot
putts for birdies and had others
of 8, 10 and 12 feet.
"I had the best putting round
l've had since I've been a pro,''
Rudolph said. "I had about five
that would've gone in a snuff

can."
LADIES SKATING

NEW YORK (UPI)-Terry
Doyle, a nine-year-old from
Massapequa, N.Y., won the
intermediate ladies title
Thursday or the 50th Middle
Atlantic Figure Skating
Championships.
Deborah Ann Lowry of West
Orange, N.J., was second and
Karen Beth Wagner of Hewlltt
Harbor, N.Y., was third.

G\Vin
$10,000

and a

New York vs. Virginia

AI Norfolk

Floridians vs . Carolina

AI Greensboro

Denver vs. Indiana

AI Anderson. l11d.
Memphis at Dallas
{On Iygames scheduled)
NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis
Boston
52 10 10 114
NewYork
48 14 11 107
Mon treal
44 15 14 102
Toronto
30 29 14 7~
Detroit
3233973
Buffalo
IS 42 18 48
Vancouver
18 47 7 43
West
W. L. T. Pis
x-Chicago
43 17 13 99
Mlnnesola
35 27 11 81
Si. Louis
26 ' 36 11 63
California
21 35 18 60
Philadelphia
23 37 12 58
Pillsborgh
23 38 12 58
Los Angeles
18 48 8 44
x-Ciincheddivisiontltle
Thursday's Results
Boston 4 New York 1
Buffalo 4 Mlnn .4, lie
Chicag o4 Philadelphia 2
{Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Torontoat Vancouver
I Onlygamescheduledl
AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis
Bos ton
39 19 13 91
Nova Scotia
37 19 13 87
Springfield
29 27 '~ 72
Providence '
25 35 10 60
Rochesler
2536856

2-HOUR

CLEANING

EAGLES MAKE OFFER
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)The Pbiladelphla Eagles would
like to play host to the 1976
Super Bowl to coincide with the
city's planned celebration of
the U.S. bicentenilial.
According to Eagles sources,
club owner Leonard A. Tose
made the suggestion to National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle at the
owners' meeting in Honolulu.

WINNEBAGO
MOTOR
HOME

West

W. L. T. Pis

Balt imore
31 27 11
Hershey
30 27 11
Celveland
30 33 9
Cinclnnali
, 27 26 15
Richmond
28 31 11
Tidewater
20 41 9
Thursday's Results
Cincl 2 Richmond 2, tie
IOnlygamescheduled)

Details Are
. In

73
71

Cartans Of

69
69

67
o¥1

Friday's Games

Hershey al Baltimore
Cincinnati ai Boston
Nova Scotia al Rochesler
~rovidence at Springfield
{On!ygames scheduled)

Diet Rite . Cola
-

.~:ea.

®

MOTOROLA

./liver Jubilee of

biq vatueJ.
Quasa~ 16" -

(Upon Request)

·ROBINSON;S

1

._a

'''

PORTABLE COLOR TV

CLEANERS

2Jo· E. 2nd
Pomeroy
·
Phone 992-5428

-ARROwHOOF INJURED
ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI)- An
injured left fronfhoof will keep
MacArthur Park out of both the
Santa Anita Derby on April I
and the Kentucky Derby,
according to the ·horse's trainer, Tommy Doyle .
MacArthur Park tore off a
portion of his left front hoof
when he stumbled during the
San Miguel Stakes Jan. 27.
Doyle said he would rest
MacArthur Park until the
Hollywood Park season.

.Df"ess·(fl)

\Jf

Your Headquarters For
Arrow Shirts- Greatest Selection
In The Big Bend Area.

GUARANTY .PLASTIC
OUTSIDE

WHITE PAINT
992-3748

constitution, including
waiver .and player limits and
extending or shortening the
interconverence trading
period. Discussion would also
center on the Chicago All.Star
Game, the contract for which
expires after the 20th meeting
between the Dallas Cowboys
and the College All Stars July
28.

.• £:95

gal.

u

Just wash out your
brush with soap &amp;

Many Styles To Choose
From

water.

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

'

Atlantic Oivslon
W. t. Pet. GB
x-Boslon
5~ 26 .675 ...
New York
~7 32 .595 6•;,
Philadelphia 30 50 .375 2~
Buffalo
22 )I .278 31'12

..-

;

Bristow.

W~-~Y~1~~.; .

Eastern Conferen&lt;;:e

&lt; '•

Harrington.

The Science Fiction Hill of
Fame - edited by Robert
Silverberg.
• C~ocolat~ ;I)~y~, Pop•lcle,

NBA Stonding•
By United Pre•sl~ternatianal

.

A variety of new flcllan baa
been received by the aJ!d·
dieport PubUc Library and are
available for dlstrlbullan, Mill
Jane Bailey, Ubrarlan, report~.
. New new volwne~ IDclulle:
Ellery Queen's MiniMysteries - by Ellery Queen.
For the Love of a Doctor by Elllabetb Seifert.
Trial
by · WilHam

Marshmallow Pie - by
Graham Lord.
The (d:eat Hijack - by
Alfred Tack.
··
Juat What the Doctor Or·
dered - by Colin Watson.
Up the Sandbox - by Anne
Richardson Rolphe.
Green Days by the River by Michael Anthony.
Watchers on the Shore - lly
Stan Barstow.
The Palilenger on the U -by
Claude Aveline. ·
. Deatp of a Dude - by ReJ:
Stout.
Code Name Sebastian - by
James L. Johnlon.
Under the Eye of the Storm
- by John Heney.
By Helen &amp;ttel
Orbits- by (edited) Damon
Kntsht.
Flood - by Lionel Black.
WHO'S DISCRIMINATING NOW?
All the Best People - by
Dear Helen :
I
Sloan Wilson.
' Our medium-&lt;tlzed newspaper seldom has less than five
Mll'tla8lmo - by P. E. H.
pages devoted to sports - and nine-tenths of these sports items Durston,
are for and about men . .
Nebula Award - Storie~
The women's section, by contrast, is a skimpy one-page (half Five - by (edited) JIDlell
ads), except for the &amp;mday brides' Insert, and a weekly two Bllah.
pages of school news. I understand women's page space Is
Great Spy stories from
shrinking all over the country.
Fiction - by Allen Dulles.
Quick · Sand - by John
Discrimination again? - FOR EQUAL SPACE
Dear FES:
Brunner .
The Moonflower Couple -by
More Ukely, NONdiscrimination. News and features about
John
Fairchild.
women are no longer considered "for women only," and so
A Far Sunset - by Edmund
they're often spread all over the paper.
But - let's hear It from editors, who can answer your Cooper.
The Poeeldon Adventure question mUch better than I. - H.
by Paul Galllco .
+++
The Reluctant Mediwn - by
Dear Helen :
L.
P. Davies.
I'm a 511-year-old grandmother who doesn't smoke anything.
True Grit - by Clarles
But I think tile time has come to stop waslng our tax dollars
Portis.
on a law that can't be enforced: We shOuld follow the recomWelcome to Xanadu - by
mendation of the NaUonal Commission on Marijuana and Drug
Nathaniel Benchley.
,
Abuse and "decrimlnallze" marijuana.
·
Cynthl&amp; - by E. V. CunResearch shows that pot Is relatively liarm!ess (to adults) if nin&amp;ham.
used in moderation - probably less harmful than are cigarettes
Ellery Queen 's Mystery
and alcohol, or at least on a par:
Parade - by (edited) Ellery'
Even women's magazines are publishing p-o-legallzatlon Queen.
articles. Officials in the Food and Drug AdmlnlstraUon and the
Bon Voyage - by Noel
Mental Health Association are calling pot "not so black."
Coward.
I ask my contemporaries wbat are the proved dangers o1
marijuana and they say it muat be bad because It's against the
SOMETIUNG NEW
law. Then I ask If they ever took a drink during prohlbltioo. Tbey
B081'0N (UPI) - It was
say, "Yes, but,that's different." How &lt;Ufferent?
I'm not advocating tile use of marijuana or alcohol. I merely something new, even for&lt; the
wish people to become educated on tbe difference between It and veteran State llolill employes
It
truly dangerouS drugs. Maybe then we could have limited who thouabt they had all.
The
Capitol
Wll
thrown
legalization (no sales to juveniles, no ad~ertlsln8, distribution
ooly through specified agencies) and IIJH\fld our efforts fighting Into an up.-- Thlll'ldliy w11en
the real and menacing traffic In hard narcoUcs. - MilS..AL. L. a tall, slender YOIIIII 111111,
about :11, trotted throuch the .
Dear Mrs. L.:
My stand on pot has always been: "LegallzaUoo If proved Boeton· Cctmmon and cbqed
Into the State Houle wear1Jig
relatively safe." Perhaps that time bas come. I don't know, nor
only a beard. Pollee wrapped
(I suspect) do the researchers. But ... is a government that bans
him In a blanket and led him
cyclamates ready· to take a chBill!e oo marijuana?
away.
Decriminalizing pot? Definitely YES! I don't think private
use should be srounda for a "buat," and It seldom Is any more, as
college students will tell you.
In 1941 the Grand Coulee
We should at least modify the law to catch up with the Urnes. Dam on l!!e Colwnbla River
- H.
began produclnc electrical pow.
!"_In the Plclftc Nortbwest.

Us.

Columbus Ready,.Lexington
Advance To Class
Finals

New Fiction
At Library

Tbe Crooked Shamrock - by
C. B. Gllford.
The House on the Strand by Daphne du Maurler.
Last Plane OUt - by John
Ball.
Mirror, Mlrrow -by Noel B. .
Gerson.
Tbe Doctor's Two Lives -by
Elizabeth Seifert.
Ellery Queen's Grand Slam
- by Ellery Queen.
Diagnosis Positive - by · •
Jean Todd Freeman.
The Clock at , 8:16 - by
Edwin Lllllbam.
Calico Palace - by Gwen

Pro Standings

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0•.

·RIDENOUR
Ph. 985·3307

GAS SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

Can also be seen at Flo's Antique Shop,
Coolville, Ohio.
.

~·

�I- 'l'IIID!I11 ~hleJ,M! ftlpol't-P\awoy, 0., Friday, March 24, 1972

4- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·PtuieroY, 0., Friday, M.rcb24, tm

Class .A A4, A Finalists Square Off
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Akron
Central-Hower and Cilicinnati
Princeton kicked off the second
day of firing in the ~ BMual
stale High School Basketball
Tournament as the Oass AAA
and A portions of the compel·
ilion got underway today at St.
John Arena.
Central-Hower, coached by
Joe Siegferth , is making · its
second straight trip to the
semifinals, being eliminated in
the opening round last year by
eventual champion Columbus

Oriole
Rookie
Shines
By United Press International
The three-time American
League champion Baltimore
Orioles have come up with the
only possible thing that could
improve their infield: A fifth
regular.
He's Bob Grich, the minor
leagues' player of the year in
1971 and no doubt the most
frustrated rookie of the spring.
Grieb, who hit .336 with 32
homers for Rochester of the
International League last season, had five straight hits
Thursday in an 11~ victory
over the St. louis Cardinals.
Dave McNally, who has won
20 games in each of tbe last
four seasons and is the Orioles'
likely opening-day pitcher,
worked an easy seven inning:~
during which he aUowed seven
hits and walked one batter.
In other camps: Larry
Dierker, out of action during
the second half of the 1971
season with an inflamed elbow,
allowed one run and four hits in
six innings as the Houston
Astros downed the Montreal
Expos, 7·1... Roberto Clemente
had three singles and Willie
StargeU hit his second homer in
as many games to lead the
Pittsburgh Pirates to an 11-il
romp over the los Angeles
Dodgers. Steve Garvey had
four hits for ~ Dodgers.
Harmon K(llebrew and·Steve
Brye homered in the Minnesota
Twins' 1~ victory over the
Detroit Tigers ... John Milner's
two-run double and Mike
Jorgensen 's two-run homer
were the big blows of a six-run
third-inning outburst which led
the New York Mets to an &amp;-3
triumph over the Philadelphia
Phillies.
Tom Grieve hit a two-run
homer and Dave Nelson
knocked in two runs with a
sacrifice fly and a single as the
Texas Rangers downed the
Atlanta Braves, 7-3 ... Ron
Blomberg, Bobby Murcer and
Rusty Torres homered in the
New York Yankees' 13-7 victory over the Boston Red Sox.
Billy Williams singled in the
tie-breaking run and Don
Kessinger foUowed with .a two·
run single as the Chicago Cubs
scored ftve runs in the ninth
inning for an &amp;-3 triumph over
the Cleveland Indians ...
Winning pitcher Tom Phoebus'
two-l'un double climaxed a
fiverun, fifth-inning rally
against Denny McLain which
lifted the San Diego Padres to
an .8·3 triumph over the
Oakland Athletics.
Tommy ~eynolds' triple and
a single by Rick Auerbach in
the 12th inning gave the
Milwaukee Brewers an 3-7
decision over the California
Angeles.

Walnut Ridge.
The Eagles, paced by returning starters Bradley Robinson,
a IHi ali.Qhioan, and 5-8 WWie
Wade, carried a 23-2 record
into their game against
Princeton.
'
The Vikings, coached by
John HWard, have the worst
record of the four AAA semifinalists, 20-4, but their last two
victories in the Cincinnati
Regional came against unbeaten teams Cincinnati Elder
and Springfield North.
The second game, which
most observers feel will
produce the AAA champion,
matches unbeaten and No. 1
ranked Celina, ,coached by
Dean White, against John
Olavers' Cleveland East Tech
Scarabs, third ranked and 23-1
on the season.
Celina, 24-ll, is paced by 6-7
Curt Shellabarger, a first learn
all-Ohio choice, and 6-1 Dean
White, son of the l'Oach and a
third team all-tllale selection.
East Tech, also making its
second straight trip to the stale
event, is led by 6-4 James·
Abrams, a second learn all·
Ohioan, and 5-10 Lawrence
Bolden, the Scarabs' leading
scorer. The Celina-East Tech

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Women's Thursday
Afternoon League
March 9, 1972
Dave's Tire Land
58
New York Clothing
42
Pomeroy Lanes
40
Simon's Market
38
Smith's Boby Shop
32
Forest Run Block
30

22
38
40

42
48

50

Team High Series - Dave's

Tire Land 1816, New York
Clothing 1754, Smith's Body
Shop 1748.
Team High Game - Smith's
Body Shop 613, New York
Clothing 611, Dave's Tire Land
608.

High Ind. Game - Drema
Smith 191. Marlene Wilson 187,
Mary Voss.
Ind. High Series - MlJry
Voss 501, Drema Smith 496,
Julie Boyles 467.
Women's Thursday
Afternoon League
March t6, t972
Dave's Tire Land
60 28
Pomeroy Lanes
46 42
New Y.ork Clothing
« 44
Simons MlJrket
44 44
Smith's Body Shop
38 50
Forest Run Block
J2 56
High Team Series - Simon' s

Market 1789k . Smith's Body
Shop 1782, Dave·s ~ Tlr.e ~!;end
1749.

·H

.._

~- I

High Teem Game ~ Smith's
Body Parts 674, Dave's Tire
Land 634, Pomeroy Lanes 612.
High Ind. Game - Becky
Dunfee 208, Donna Grate 207,
Julie Boyles 177.
High Ind. Series - Donna
Grate 493, Julie Boyles 483,
Becky Dunfee 468.
Velerals Memorial
Hospital League
March 21, 1972
Standings:
Team
Pis.
Gu!ter Bums
30
Hit &amp; Misses
J6
TheOpens
20
Straight Shooters
18
High Ind. Game - Becky
Anderson, 160, Mick Cundiff
143.
High Ind. Series - Becky
Anderson 395, Bessie Sylvester
395.
Team High Game - Gutler
Bums 446.
Team High Series - Straight
Shoolers 1269.

game is scheduled for 3:30p.m.
A doubleheader tonight,
starting at 7:30will feature the
Cl•"'' Ateams, with tojH'anked
Indian Valley South, ~going
against St. Bernard in the
opener and Morral Ridgedale
and Continental, both 19-5,
going in the second.
IVS, coached by Charles
Huggins, wbo lect Strasburg to
the 1967 Class A title, is considered a solid choiee to caplure the small school honors,
mostly because of Bob

,---·
-------·-------;""!"'-----I Beat .

.

Huggina, son of Coach Huggins
and the UPI Oaas.A player of
the year.
,
In Thursday night's Oaas AA
double, top ranked Columbus
Ready beat Middletown
Madison 116-65 and fourth rated
.Lexington doWJied Poland 5947
to advance to Saturday's
finals.
The AA finals Saturday are
slated for 11:30 a. m., with the
AAA championship game set
for 3:00p.m. and the Class Aat
7:30p.m.

Special Game,
At KC High :

.1

'lbe Kyger Creek Alllmlll
AIIIOCiatiOD Is IJIOIIIOrill&amp; a
basketball game betweeo
memben ol lbt. alamJd aud
tbe faculty at Kyger Creek
Hlgh School. Allyoat who
WIDII to ·participate up to
and iDcludlq grad1111lel tbru
1967 may do BG by coolactlng
FrQllk Cremeana or Soooy
Smltb.
'lbe game will be played at
7:30p.m. Wednesday, Man:b
29 at Kyger Creek. · 'lbe
faculty teaqt Ill U on tbe
seasoo after ]IOitiD&amp; victories oyer the Golden Voices
of WOUB Radio and
Televlllloo aad the Soutbwestera faculty. Proceeds
will go toward tbe 1972
alumni
baaquet and
program.

I
I
I

I
,I

'

I

.."

Will Be Recited
.
·

"Best~Ever"

"I think this is the best UCLA
team ever," said louisville
Coach Denny Crum, a man who
should know. Crum helped
recruit the ingredients for the
Walton Gang, including the
redhaired sophomore himself,

as UCLA Coach John Wooden's
chief assistant for three years
before taking the Kentucky
post this season.
The 6-fool·ll Walton, winner
of the Naismith Award as
coUege basketball's Player of
the Year, scored 33 points and
collected 21 rebounds. He had
•
CONTRACTS SIGNED
PITTSBURGH (UPI)- linebacker Ed Bradley of Wake
Forest and wide receiver Nate
Hawkins of the University of
Nevada at · Las Vegas, the
fourth and 16th round draft
choices of the Pittsburgh
Steelers, have signed contracts
with the National Football
League team.
. The Steelers also §igned four
free agents, wide receiver .Tun
Walkins of Alabama A&amp;M,
runnmg back Larry Grissom of
McNeese State, center John
Callan of Georgia Tech and
defensive back Bob Henby of
North Carolina Stale.

·"'.

··-....,
A ·plclure.que while friune
chapel built in the late 11101k!
sits in a peaceful spot at Great
Bend in Meigs County.
Known as the Bicknell
Chapel, the quiet houae of
worship is adjoined by a
cemetery marked with aged
gravestones.
The lot for the chapel was
provided by Nehemiah
BickneU who had established a
large farm in the Great'Bend
area. Nehemiah was the father
offivedaughtersandasonwho
died in inlanc~. The eldest of
.
these daaghte rs was EmeIme
L. Bicknell. She was apparently qUite inleUigent and
talented. Born on Feb. 19, 1827,
CLEARWATER, Fla. (UP!)- Bud Harrelson, the New York
Mets' nifty little superglove, was talking about the different I&lt;'.''W""":&gt;.m!:m'$&lt;:::~:::::::::::;:::::;&amp;-:; Emeline began leaching school
when she was 16.
ballplayers around today, the good ones, the not-so.good ones, a
Her life was tragic in some
few in between, and eventually he got around to this other group.
respects. She married in 1816
The ones who should ..:.ear a button saying hooray for me!
and was the mother of two
"There are some guys like that in this game," Harrelson says.
children; both died young. She
"They come right out and say 'I'm gonna win the batting title and
divorced her husband and
fizz you.' and then when they do win it, they look around and
resumed leaching. She left
there's no one there to applaud. It'd be awful if everyone in
Meigs County in 1899 and went
baseball was like that. Thank God they're not. Some guys you
,- , to Brooklyn, N. Y., where she
like to see dowell. E&gt;Jen some on the other clubs."
I Spent almost 15 yearS aS a
curtained in shadows,
like who?,
matron in a Methndist · Home And lhe jewels of hope lay
shattered l!V !ale.
"like Joe Torre," said the Mets' shortstop. "You fight him all
for the Aged.
From "Christmas Gift" are
year, bull was glad he won Uie batting title. I was happy for him.
NEW YORK (UPI)-Tom
Mrs. Bicknell· apparently lhe lines:
Everybody was."
McMillen of Maryland and AI returned to Pomeroy about
Williams of Niagara are worlds 1904, and had to be in her 8Qs at ·A Christmas gift, a lillie lhing,
Why?
,.
apart
in size, bac..•round and the time of her death sm·ce she And yet It seems much more ;
AGood Representative
""
For such a lillie offering,
"Because he's a good representative of baseball. He has amount of publicity, but their did contribute to a family Has much more lo do wllh
memory ;
always kept his nose clean and done the tight thing. He's j...t like ability to remain calm when genealogy published in 1913.
the
pressure
bull~•
was
in·
Mrs.
BickneU
was
inclined
We
cherish it with fondest care,
Yogi. Always has good things to say, never knocks anybody.
. ·•
'1"
We look at it in after years;
strumental
Thursday
night
in
toward
the
literary
and
wrote
We
over
it
raise
lhe
sllenl
·'
Nobody ever has had anything bad to say about Joe Torre ."
prayer,
Fans labor under the impression all baUplayers know each their respective schools' ad- stories and poems which were
bathe It often wllh secret
other well, at least weU enough to talk to, but that isn't always vancing to the finals of the 35th published by magazines and And
Home of
tears.
the case. Bud Harrelson is pulling in his sixth year with the Mets, annual National Invitation newspapers. A coUection of
: '
Lines from "Submission"
.some of her poems entitled
i •
and feels he sliD doesn't know aU the veterans in the league well Tournament.
deal!
wllh
the
death
of
Mrs.
the
Fabulous
McMillen,
a
highly "Violets" was published in
enough to start a serious conversation with them. Harrelson is no
Bicknell's young son. They
publicized 6-foot-11 sophomore 1897.
state:
different than the great majority of baUplayers in this sense.
. !
from Mansfield, Pa., stemmel!
Although she had been
That's why they enjoy the clubhouse camaraderie of an AU-Star
a JacksonvUle rally in the married, she u~ her maiden Ah, dead! for whom I could
Game so much. It's the perfect vehicle for breaking the ice second half when he scored name for the remainder of ber
hove died,
My
only son In manhood's
'
among individuals in the same profession who don 'I ordinarily eight points during a two- life and her literary work was
prlme,
gel an opportunity to talk with each other.
minute stretch to lead done under the Bicknell name. Thou were the hope, lhe slaff of
"I've been wanting to talk with Matiry Wills for some time," Maryland to a 91·77 victory. She wrote sentimentally of
pride
Where
I might lean in coming
says Harrelson, "but you don't run up and say 'Hey, Maury .. .'" The big sophomore led his subjects she knew best time .
. '·
"Hasn't Wills ever spoken with you?" I asked the Mets' skinny team with 25 points and death, her children, her loved
I
The book was copyrighled
switch-hitter.
grabbed 12 rebounds.
ones.
-.~
by
Mrs.
Bicknell
In
1897.
''Yes, briefly,'' said Harrelson. ''Last summer, he was taking
Williams, a 5-9 guard from
Cecil Eiselslein of Pomeroy
his lead off second, and he turned around and happened to say, Hempstead, N.Y., wh6 came has a weU..preserved copy of
College Basketball ResuHs
'Hey, man, you're swinging up too much.' He was right. What did into the tournament with Mrs. BlckneU's book which has
By United.Press International
I say to him? WeU, you don't say, 'Gee, thanks, Maury.' I think hardly any advanced billing, been in his family many years. NalionallnvilallonTournamenl
( Somlflnalsl
whatl said was 'Cheez, Maury, I know it.'"
demonstrated his coolness by
We are passing along some
Maryland91 Jacksonvl77
Ordor By Phone
sinking two free throws with excerpts from .Mrs. BickneU's Niagara 69 St. John's 67
. ,,
~ hat~Uon Rule
.
1
1
'K' d _.
jiJVl1 1u) 1' ... " ·
··· ·Ani!J.ako;£ · ·Hoirit. ...
''NCAA1'tuthament I i 'I
Baseball'doehav.'a'ndtrlltetnizatidn rule. II was' put into the ,five · seconds left tb'' gi,-e-~
' ,,, 1t;o •
'i:-~Jl \Jl' i ~ , hG
(Semifinals)
.
Niagara
a'69'67
vlctott
ovefSt.
w~&amp;"-ciose
tli'~H~f"
famlly,
books in the first place to demonstrate tb the public that there is
992•543~
·I '
Florida Sl. 19 No. Carolina 75 ·
no collusion between rival playes. The umpires sit in the stands John's. As a result of Willianns' Mrs. Bicknell penned the UCLA 96 Louisville 77
and enforce the rule, or try to, but there is no rule which says pressure shots Niagara, whom following lines to her mother:
many expected to be knocked
rival ballplayers can't be friends. Agood number are. Harrelson
out in the opening round, is in
and Don Kessinger, the Cubs' shortstop, have been for some· the finals of the NIT for the Fondly, I love thee, Mother.
My heart still clings to thee,
time.
first time in eight tries.
Earth never had another
"!like him and he likes me," says the Mets' shortstop. "We
Could be as thou to me.
McMlllen's Heroles
always talk around the bstting cage whenever we gel a chance.'' , McMillen's heroics in the
many an hour when the heart
Two years ago, Harrelson went 54 consecutive games without opener came after Jackson· 0 was
sick,
an error equaling the National League record for shortstops held viDe had chopped a nine-point And lhe pulses weary beating,
by Kessinger. Immediately after tying the record, Harrelson deficit to three with 12:33 When life seemed naught but a
shadowy wreck,
received a wire from Kessinger saying :
remaining in the game. In the On lhe hours so silently
"We're all proud of you. Good luck, and go get 'em.''
fleeting .
next two minutes the sharpThe next game the Mets played was with the Reds and shooting forward canned three
Thy love flinched not - I was
Harrelson's first chance was an easy two-hopper off the bat of straight J.8.fool jump shots and
thy childPete Rose that was hit only a step away from him. The baU hit hit on two free throws to give No stronger lie could bind
Harrelson's glove and bounced away for an error. There went the the Terrapins a 60-49 edge with Notheescene so dear , or trial so
10:16 remaining.
record.
wild,
Jacksonville never got closer But mother's love could fine
"My hands were like two pieces of metal," Bud Harrelson
me.
than
seven points alter that as
says.
Don Kessinger didn't send a second wire. What kind of friend McMillen and sophomore
One of her numerous poems
center Len Elmore kept the dealing wllh death is enlllled,
would that be anyway?
·
Dolphins off the boards . "The Hour of Death" and
Elmore, a husky 6-:9, finished reads :
with 23 points and puUed down A solemn hour Is met
14 rebounds ·as Maryland When life and time dolh sever ;
Mortal day is set,
outrebounded the tall'Dolphins, The
While life itves on forever.
"We wiU not approve the Scott, who jumped ABA clubs 45-37.
"! was hilling fairly well, To all comes certain death,
l
contract of a player already in recent months and signed
Yet
few
ever
stop
to
ponder
although I thought we could
under contract until a final with NBA teams.
The worth of pulse and brealh.
have
done a little better in· As
through the world lhey
League owners also ap·
court determination is made,"
side,"
said
McMillen,
who
hit
wander.
said Kennedy. "That could prove~ the move of the Cin·
take a long time because it cinnati Royals to Kansas City, on 10-of-17 field goals attempts, The hovr when shadows fall,
could go clear up to the Mo. The new club will play an with eight of his baskets On earthly sight and feeling ;
The records furnished, all
Supreme Court." The com- undetermined number of coming on long jumpers.
Closed
for the great revealing
Williams
Tales
Off
missioner said, however, that games in Omaha, Neb., and
Williams'
chance
to
be
a
hero
the new ruling will not apply to will play in the Midwest
Jim McDaniels and Charlie Division, with Ho...ton moving was almost nullified by his
Coach Frank Layden, who was
to the Central Division.
gelling ready to call out when
the little guard saw an opening
and took off for the basket with
A New and Exciting Ensemble From Our
10 seconds left. He drove
around to the right baseline
and went up for a shot with five
of . ""'ade-Fal'lach.Other"
Sofas
and .Chain
'
'
seconds left when he was hit by
24 of his points and 16 of his point halftime lead to 23-.1~ the Redmen 's 6-9 Greg Ouess.
rebounds in the opening half as - with six minutes gone in the
UCLA built up an eight-pain! second half.
advantage.
Although Robert McAdoo
Larry Farmer added 15 fouled out with 9:48 left, the
F.or All Occasions
points, all in the second half, Tar Heels managed to get to
,
for the Bruins while sopho- within five points with 6\2
W! wire flowers
mores Keith Wilkes and Greg minutes left. They were within
.... _ Evorv.Where
......
Lee finished with 12 and 10, three with live seconds left.
respectively.
McAdoo had :M points and
Jim Price kept louisville in Dennis Wuycik added 20, 15 of
the game with 30 points.
them in the second half, for
Pomeroy Flower Shop ·
It was supposed to be UCLA North Caroliila.
and North Carolina in a The Tar Heels and Cardinals
a·ullernul Ave., Pomerov.
Mrs. Millard Van Moler '
rematch of the 1968 finalists. tangle for third place Saturday
But Ron King and pint-sized at 12: 10 p.m.
floor leader Otto Petty pul the
Seminoles there instead of the
Tar Heels.
·
Watch For Grand Opening
Bakers are a matchmaker when It comes to creating
King Directs Attack
beautiful rooms. And here Is just one of many In our
King had 22points and tl)e 5-7
wonderfully wide, array of decorator ·deslgne~ sofas and
chairs - now at very special prices.
.
Petty came off the bench to
S I'IKU
direct the Tallahassee speed·
sters' attack, ending up with 10
points.
Florlds State, which came
All types of musical instruments,
Into the final round of four with
ster,eo tapes, records, sheet music.
five losses against 26 wins, had
MIDDUPORT, ~;
to hold off a furious second-half
North Carolina rally, though.
.
.
The Seminoles padded a 13-

Maryland
Niagara In

NIT Finals

STEAK
HOUSE

•

i
'

SANDWICH
fJ

.

.

'(

~

FLOWERS

-...___·-

-

-

.....__

992-2039

BILL &amp; LEE'S MUSIC CENTER
SATURDAY, APRIL 1st

POMEROY, OHIO

BAKER

FU~NITURE

.I '

.

JO ANN SCHAFFER, 4, Northampton, Pa.,
is 1972 National Easter Seal Child.
Born with cerebral palsy on June l 4, 1967, ,
Jo Ann began receiving therapy at the center of
the Lehigh Valley Easter Seal Society in
Bethlehem, a few miles from Northampton,
when she was 18 months old .

About caring for,
L

In these pictures, taken recently at the center,
JoAnn re-enacts her progress in walking.
(A. bright child, she seemed to understand
perfectly the purpose of photographing
the three poses.)

~ ~~

Keeping antiques

Is now in a book
By AILEEN SNODDY

NEW YORK_ (NEA) _
Barn· auctions, tag sales, garage sales, wrecking company sale lots ... all these
are becoming familiar terms
across the country.
Th,ey represent a new form
of w.eekend· entertainment
that less serious participants
call "antiqUing," the casual
browsing through old furni·
ture, grimy china and silver
or fabrics Into a lucraiiveand sometimes cutthroatbu.mess, that delights increasing numbers of women
and men.
The person who finds an
old Item that may-or may
not-be a true treasure of
an!iqulty in~esls the object
with special meaning. And,
lik.e a prized pet, it requires
care. ,To this special audi·
ence, a sometimes antiquecollector and constant jour·
Dallstic observer of the col·
lectlng scene addresses a
special book . .
In "The care and Keeping
of Antlgues," (Hawthorn),
Epsie Kinard spells out in
short paragraphs and under·
staodable, simple terms such
problems as how to fight
mildew, mold or overwaxing
Of woods. She also gives a re·
spectable source list of people to turn to for help in
reoovatlng or preserving a
find. But, the importance of
this 160-page book is that it
reflects the loving care col·

lectors of all ages and in·
comes can understand and
appreciate.
In her soft voice still
tinged with a Tennessee·
North Carolina-Texas drawl
after 40 years exposure to
New York City living, Miss
Kinarjl explains she grew up
with a love of old things.
"I can't claim anything in
the way of valuable antiques
·since I never had a house. A
Ne\v York apartment can get
loo cluttered.'' However, she
and her husband live in an
Eastside . brownstone sur·
rounded by period reproduc·
lions and a few antiques. Her
approach to the subject
comes from her famUy and
reporting experience, she
claims. Unlike many of her
graduating college class·
mates, she set her course
and stuck with it. "I got my
degree at 11 a.m. and went
to work for the Denton (Tex.
· as) Record Chronicle at 12
noon."
Epsie worked hard and
turned her woman's page
beat into something special.
"I didn't want to get trapped
writing society news."
From Denton she came to
New York, worked for the
defunct N.Y . Herald-Tribune
and its Sunday magazine,
This Week, and then for
·Newsweek. She di!l a stint as
woman's page editor for
NEA and then wrote a col·
umn aimed at collectors for
~:e:w· ·· 1

Kimberly Styre
. ·Given a Party
SYRACUSE - Kimberly
Sayre waa honored Wednesday
with a party in observance of
her lixlb birthday at the home

-~i~ti1a'fo:~
of hall!, blowotib' 'and play

i

wa
· were gtven. Games
were played and prizes
awarded the winners.
Alter opening her glfiiJ, Ice
cream, cake and Kooi·Aid were
served as refioeshmeniiJ. At·
tending were ~ Cindy WoHe,
Darla .Lambert,
Clyde
Sa)'l'e II, Rhonda and
Robby Edwards, Johnda
and Joy Glllesple, Peony
and . Eddie Wolfe, . Nita
and M.lcolm Guinther II,
Darlelie Duncan, Mary Ed·
wardJ,' Birbara WoHe, Donna
G!tJnlher, AUah.Lambert, Joan
Wolfe, and Effie Gilli!pie.

:r Y!m " tb .

Use Extreme Caution
Redyeing any Carpet
By POLLY CRAMER
POLLY-Uke Margie, we got tired of our beige

carpet,JIIlll. dyed It green. Either liquid or powdered dye

can.be., used Shampoo the carpet first or wet It so it will
absorb the dye. Mlx powdered dye according to direc·
tiona ·on the package. Use a scrub brush to rub dye Into
tbe wet carpet. and, make sure you gel deep lnto the
pile. Use an old toothbrush near baseboards, which you
p~otect as you do the floor under the rug. Wear rubber
i!Jovea as the dye is hard to get off the hands. Let dry.
;.: fan ·or dehumldifer will speed the drying. When dry,
wipe off any excess with old white cloths. Some places
may ·have to be touched up again.-TERRI
. , DEAR GIR~Unless tbe original taga are a.vallable
we are ofteo honestly mistaken about tbe fiber content
of r1111 as well aa fabrics. I would oever plunge lato sucb
a jQb without lint trylag a 1111mple or blddeo spot. There
m17 be a comblnadoo of fibers where one would take
tile dye aDd another would not. A well-known dye com·
Jl*ay states on Ita packagea tbat some polyesters and
acryllea de oot abHrb dye aa well aa olben. I have uiMid
tile-, _,ICHted method on coltoa aad wool very aatla·
faeterll)' IIUt that doea aot meao the resulta will be tbe
..~ wltli. all rup. I wonld o11IY recommend home dye-

big for

o~.1carpeta.-POLLY

•

Polly's Problem .__._ _lll't

DEAR PbLLY -I would like to kn~ what I could ~
make wtth 1my many scraps of polyester knit rna· ~
ter\al, left pver from making dresses.-JUNE
W , k
riD
·u
JU.*lf~!
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with the check·out
stations at 1arge discount stores where they sometimes ,
have as many as 12 check-outs. It seems they could reserve one or two for CASH ONLY customers . .I happen to
be one of those old-fashioned people who pay as they go
sq nothing irks me more than to have to wait endlessly
for the customer ahead to· have his charge plate or check
approved. Many times I have given up and walked out
wben' •I had chosen only one or two items. A very few
store•· do have six item express lanes but these are also
tied uj1·wlth ~hargers. -MRS . A. T..

ill

:. ( 1

(NEWli'Aru lNTUPIISE ASSN. )

·;·!

a doUar U Polly uaea your lavorlle
Mloellilkll( Idea, Pel Peeve, PoUy'1 Problem or solutl~n
lo a ~~m. Wrtk Polly In rare of thl• newopaper.

v.. ·will receive
-·

... t)ll

•

if , •

In June 1970, she began using Canadian
Crutches which is a sign of progress indicating
control and balance had improved .
JoAnn started to walk independently in
September, 1970. The time she can do so is
limited, but increases little by little as her
Easter Seal therapy continues.

House Beautiful for 13 years.
She now is very excited for
young shoppers who find
barn auctions a great source
of furnishings. Some barn
auction objects do turn out
to be valuable, she points
out, and often are over·
looked by older people who
see them as too filthy and
dirty. Patchwork quills, oth·
er textiles, woodenware and
tole are buys "the kids find
and restore. Some may pay
'1.40 for a tole item that
could be worth $500 if you
take the time to clean it up
and bring up the colors in
the original design."
Recogni2ing basic, solid
design in these and such
things as Hitchcock chairs in
need of cleaning and caning
Is a trait more young people
are developing:
"I feel people are getting

pretty smart about antiques
and there is lots of help
around from museum cura.
tors and appraisers," she
says.
But it still takes time to
shop around and to have a
baste gUide to help restore
and maintain ·•a n t i que ..
finds.
With the growing demand
for new items to keep the
"antiques" market fluid, she
suggests that widows and
widowers not be too hasty in
selling off collections, furnishings or clot~ing just to
clear space in a house of an
apartment.
Have an appraiser in
first because usually you'll
hate · yourseH for selling
thinRs for less than they are
worth,., she advises.
11

IHIWIPAPER IHTIRPRII! ASSH .I

EASTER SEAL SALE - Under sponsorship of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club - with Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee serving as general chairman - the Easter Seal
fund drive is underway. Seals have been mailed to ap·
proximately 5700 Meigs County barnes. Contributions are to
be returned to the Rev. Robert Kuhn borne in Pomeroy.

LETART, W. Va.- Edwin L.
Hudson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin F. Hudson of Rt. 2, has
t.cen promoted to staff
sergeant in the U.S. Air Force.
Sergeant · Hudson, an ad·
minislrative specialist at
lockbourne AFB, serves with
a unlt of the Air Weather
Service which provides
weather Information lor
military flight qieratlons. .
A 1965 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, he at·
tended West Virginia · Stale
College.l!ls wife, Dlana,la the
daughter of Mr. and ~. Hale
C. stewart of 2123 Jefferson
Ave., Point Pleasimt.
BASIC COMP!El'ED
MASON, W. Va. - Army
Private Sheridan T. Russell
lll, 19, whose parents live here,
recently completed eight
weeks of· basic trldning at the
U. S. Army Training Center,
Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky. The
private's wife, VIcky, lives at
828 S. Second St., Middleport.
BASIC COMPLETED
RACINE - Army Private
Michael A. Robinson,17, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William A.
Robinson, Route 2, recently
completed eight weeks of basic
training at the U. S. Army
Training Ce!tter, Armor, Ft.
Knox, Ky. He attended
Southern Local High' School.
MIS8LEMAN NOW
MASON, W. Va. - Army
Private Roger D. Young, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John Yoilng Jr.,
recently completed an eight·
week Hawk mlssUe crewman
course at Ft. BUss, Tex. He
entered the anoy In October
1971 and completed basic
training at Ft. Knox, Ky.

11

Uf U

'-''

.
SYRACUSE - Beauhful
church par aments in four
colors were dedicated during
the Sunday morning worship
service at the Firat United
Presbyterian Church here by
the Rev. Dwight L. Zavitz.
The par aments were
presented by Mrs. Pearl
McBride in memory of her
mother, Mrs . Margaret
Williams Mills, her sister, Mrs.
Hazel Mills Qark, and her
husband, Pearl McBride.
Maundy Thursday services
will be held in the local church
annex al 8 o'clock by the Rev.
DEGREES WON

·u be at 8 P.m
recet'ved degrees _ both in
Wt
·
Th H 1 Sat d Ea te nurst'ng _ at Oht' o State
e oY
ur ay
s r University at the winter
Vigil ~rv!ce an4 P,IAJI!I·will he:"
.
• held t .St .
at l'30 p.m and on Eastern . conun~nceme111 · - 11 · · .. ..
'
'
.
· · John Area•on March 17. They
Sunday Masses will be held at are Patricia A. Smith, long
8, 10 a.m. and 12 noon.
Bottom and Nancy Ann
Confessionals on Saturday Holter' Pomeroy
both
wiU be heard by the Rev. Fr. bachel~r of science d~grees in
William Folsum of Mount Sl. nursing.
Mary's Church on Saturday at
7 p.m. and before the Suilday
morning Masses. On Monday, •
Tuesday and Wednesday,
confessions wlll be heard
before the evening Masses, and
on Holy Thursday and Good
hiday from 7:15p.m. to 7:45
p.m. They will also be heard 1ln
Holy Thursday from 11 to 12
and from 3 to 4 p.m. and on
Easter Suilday from 6:30 to
7:15 p.m. and befo~e each
Mass.

Eden News

I

Zavitz. Holy communion wiU
be served around the table. An
offering will be received for the
Deaconess fund .
Sunrise service will be held
Easler morning at 7 o'clock.
After the service coffee, hot
chocolate and donuts will be
served in the annex.
AU interested persons are
cordially invited to these
services. Worship service is
held each Sunday morning al9
o'clock, followed with Sunday
church school at 10 o'clock.
RACINBEABYThDeiESRacine E·R
squad was called to the Glen
J h
'd
tT
R:n';,~~~~~ ~0 p.:~~~
Mrs. Johnson who had given
birth to a son. The infant was
dead on arrival of the squad. At
2:10 j!.m,_they lf.~l'\l ~~ ~
'h · ' · .. , .. " &gt; · '·" " ·'· · -·
t e .Raymona ·· art ey
residence here for Mr. Hartley
who was having difficulty
breathing. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
an d admllted .

HomaiHI hu. niW line of Lawn and
Garden Tractors built to handle
t'ust about an• j'ob better
'
·
Cut arau? A special
scalping design allows
mower deck to float over
bumps instead of scalping
them. Capacities
32" to 48".
Snow removal? At·
tach the snow thrower
easily, q4ickly. Then
throw the snow where
you want it. Capacities
32" and 42". Or, choose
a front blade and whl!lll
weights.
Garden! Rear powertake·ofl collector, or P.T.O. driven
drives Home lite's tiller attach· revitalizer.
ment, either 30" or 36" wide .
The Job Handlers have over
25
easy-on attachments to get
· Spring tooth harrow, garden
the job done for you. Choose
cultivator, and furrow opener
from
5 models from 7lo 15 hp.
are also available.
Drop over 1nd h1ndle the
Lawn ure? Choose from a
. t"o1attac hmen ts 1nc
. 1ud· Job Handlers from Hom1llte
vane
'
JOU!'Mif.
ing a lawn
roller, vacuum

.··. iu"ehour
... SuppIy
" R-,.~ ...

Olester, Ohio

Ph. 985-3308

•

•

The Sprints are here!
The Sprints are here!

Social Notes
By Martha HolslDger
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School March 19 was 100.
Emma VanMeter and
famUy, Belpre, visited Sunday
evening with her mother,
Martha Hollinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hicks,
Wooster, visited Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kerwin.
Mr. and Mrs. Ervan Blake
and family, Springfield, visited
over: the weekend with his
father, Rev. Eldon Blake.
Mr. and Mrs. hame and
famUy, Belpre, visited Suilday
afternoon with Mr. and Mra.
VtrgU Holsinger and Aleshia
Lynn.
Martha Holsinger, Fannie
Bigley and Geraldine and
Aieshla Holsinger visited Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Fields and .
Tooy, Saturday evening.
Alva Holsinger, Jr. and Win
Hobiinger visited the past week
with Mr. and Mra. CU!ford
HQ)singer, Belton, Missouri.
Martha Holsinger vlsiled her
brother, Leonard Barber, Sr.,
Thursday evening.
Sol• Bigley and Virgil
Holsinger visited Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bigley and famUy,
Coolville, Saturday evening.
Eddie Bigley Visited Mr. and "
Mrl. Walter Rockhold and
Dale Monday evening.

COMPLETES BASIC
REEDSVIIJ.E - Private
Sleven 0. Maye, 18, son of Mr .
RILEY ENDS BASIC
MASON, W. Va. - Army and Mrs. Orman Mays, Route
Private Marshall D. Riley, 18, 1, recently compleled eight
son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall weeks of basic training at the
Riley, recently completed U. S. Army training Cll,nler.
eight weeks of basic training at Armor, Fl. Kr.ox, Ky. He was
the U. S. Army Training graduated from Eastern High
·
Center, Almor, Ft. Knox, Ky. School In 1971.

-"

HOMELITE(R)

Pf11Ynments Dedirated

l.Ioly TITeek Serv;ces
0'Pen at SUnda'Jr1} Mass amTwonogM~~! ~::~: '::~:

!.
1.

JoAnn, as National Easter Seal Child,
symbolizes almost 300,000 handicapped children
and adults who annually receive rehabilitation
and other services from Easter Seal societies in
the 50 states, Washington, D.e .• and Puerto Rico.

EPSIE KINARD

Hudson Promoted

POLL'f'S POINTERS

.

Jo Ann took her first steps with tripod crutches
(commonly known as "crab crutches")
·
in September, 1969.

INITIATION SET
lll
YY l
A COIIDiy•wlde lDltlaUoa
for Amerleao Legion
Awdllary memben will be
bekl at 2 p.m. Suday at the
Middleport Legloo hall.
Holy Week servl es at the
Memben of all DDita Ia tbe
c. Ch h
county - Feeney-Bemiett Sacred HearI CathoItc ore
128, Drew Weblle• 19,
have been announced by ~
Rev. Fr. Dn.. - _. r_d Krajcov!c.
Raclae HZ, and Lewis
..,.,,. ··
The solenm blessing of the
Maaley W - are iDvlted to
palms will take place at the 10
altelld wltb their memben to
a.m. Mass Swiday and r~ar
be iDJtlated.
Masses have been scheduled
Following the iDitlatloa,
jlllllon of tbe cocmty wlU . for 7 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday
work oo conagea to be used and Wednesday. The Mass of
as lavon for llle diatriet . the Last Supper on Holy Thurs·
coafereace to be llekl Oli day will be celebrated alB p.m.
and the Good Friday service
April zt at tile Sa~ Heart
CathoDe Church auditorium.

COURSE COMPLETED
MASON, W. Va. - Army
Private Roger D. Young, aon of
Mr. and Mra. John Young Jr.,
recently completed an eigbtweek Hawk Mlssle &lt;Zewman
'
A thou&amp;ht for today: British course at Ft. Bli&amp;!, Tex. Pvt.
King Gearge VI said, "the Young entered the army in
highest ol diallnctlons is service October 1971 and completed
basic training at.F'l. Knox, Ky.
to others."

1e SALE

.

.

'

Miss Otr!Jtlne Bulenieyer, ~.
1I:: representative
·Of ' lb. ·Ad• ~~

Bruins, FSU Clash F o;r Crown
LOS ANGELES (UPI)..:.Bill
Walton, UCLA'sjollyredgiant,
and his young teammates will
play for the Bruins' sixth
straight NCAA basketball title,
as expected, Saturday.
But the opponent will be
Florida Stale and not North
carolina.
The eight-point underdog Se·
minoles provided the only
surprise of the NCAA semlfin·
als Friday night, knocking off
No. 2-l'anked North Carolina,
79-75,
before
Walton
devastaged louisville, 96-77.
So it will be UCLA-the No. 1·
rated team in the country and
undefeated in 29 gamesagainst No. 10 Florida State for
.the championship Saturday at
2 p.m . PST on national
television.

\

~~ miaalons Offlce at Edi1 1Ift
~~ . CoUege, will explain (I!Jel'ltilllll!
1 ol her school to • • ·el
' Meigs High ~'l'll.i&amp;y. .,·
Mrs. MlJry Cross, mother of
!!ldgecU!f Collage ·Ill I four
William Bicknell ' Croos of year co-educational liberal
Racine, was the youngest arts college located 1,11;
slsler of Mrs. Bicknell. DtJrlng suburban dnctnniH, It Olltii:
. ·: ;,
her last days, Mrs. Bi&lt;knell
!'
wrote a poem, "Sick Room" baclv!1or of arts; bicltelor !L' ·
about Mrs. Cross' Illness. It science and a880Ciate decrees
rea.ds; -to approx!malely 850 aludenta,
My sick sister's room,
The academic prORl:am·llllllel'f·
Place of care and gloom,
avaUable 26 ·areas Of ctJri:..' .
Scene of prayers and tears
cenlration including ~
And of hopes and fears,
Of Love's kindest acts,
pre..pharillacy and· .pioe&gt;llw: A
And death's sternest facts ;
high-rise dormllorY, on c:adlpua
They are there - all Ihere. hOUBes female studen,~ while... ~
On a fever bed
She layeth her head,
nearby off-campus hOUiing fl, :
And her cheek is pale,
provided males.
While her form so frail
Is wastlng.away
.'
To Its mother clay. -BROWN
TOLSU
It is so - all so.
I!ATON ROUGE, · r.a·.•
We all gather near
(UPI)-Dale
D. Brown,.at'lU
To the one so dear ;
But she knowelh nol
veteran of 15 '· year..., o~ .-.
The deep, anxious though!
basketball coaching, llaa ~ .,
That fllleth each soul
signed to replace Pre1111 ·
And wllh weight doth roll.
We may pari - all pari. Mar&amp;vlch as head coaCh. of
-,
From "Violets,'' the tllle of louisiana State.
Brown
coached
·
·
at
the book come the lines:
Washington state last Year, '
The breath of violets which and for five yem preVIoul 'to •
grew In the meadows,
Has floated to me wllh the love that he was an aulstaDI 1·at
Utah Stale.
·; ' .,
of my male,
•' .
In hovrs when the heal was

NBA Takes Action To Curb Jumps
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
National Basketball
Association has moved to
discourage "jumping" by
players of the rival American
Basketball Association.
NBA Commissioner J.
Walter Kennedy announced
Thursday that the league will
no longer approve contracts
signed by players who jump
from the ABA.

I•
I
f

·1: Of the Bend
By Bob Hoeflich

liB "'-1 Edgecuu
~ry

1972 EASTER SEAL CAMPAIGN DATES: FEBRUARY 28-APRIL 2

Everything you
Want to know

-~•

Ford Team's Yankee Doodle Dandles
New Special-Value Sprint ecllttons.
Pinto, Mustang, MaVerick.
Beautifully finished in rod, white and blue. Handsome colot·koyod Interiors.
Dual racing mirrors. Mag wheels. Accent stripe. USA emblem. And much more.

rl

Gel in on the Ford Team's Yankee Doodle Dandy buys. See lhe new spe:cial-value

~~

Pinto, Maverick and .Mustang sprints
at your local Ford Dealer's today.
.
:·.~
:'

•

._,

..J

••

~
'l!i
v

KEITH GOBLE FORO, INC.461 South Third Sl, Middleport, 0.

�I- 'l'IIID!I11 ~hleJ,M! ftlpol't-P\awoy, 0., Friday, March 24, 1972

4- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·PtuieroY, 0., Friday, M.rcb24, tm

Class .A A4, A Finalists Square Off
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Akron
Central-Hower and Cilicinnati
Princeton kicked off the second
day of firing in the ~ BMual
stale High School Basketball
Tournament as the Oass AAA
and A portions of the compel·
ilion got underway today at St.
John Arena.
Central-Hower, coached by
Joe Siegferth , is making · its
second straight trip to the
semifinals, being eliminated in
the opening round last year by
eventual champion Columbus

Oriole
Rookie
Shines
By United Press International
The three-time American
League champion Baltimore
Orioles have come up with the
only possible thing that could
improve their infield: A fifth
regular.
He's Bob Grich, the minor
leagues' player of the year in
1971 and no doubt the most
frustrated rookie of the spring.
Grieb, who hit .336 with 32
homers for Rochester of the
International League last season, had five straight hits
Thursday in an 11~ victory
over the St. louis Cardinals.
Dave McNally, who has won
20 games in each of tbe last
four seasons and is the Orioles'
likely opening-day pitcher,
worked an easy seven inning:~
during which he aUowed seven
hits and walked one batter.
In other camps: Larry
Dierker, out of action during
the second half of the 1971
season with an inflamed elbow,
allowed one run and four hits in
six innings as the Houston
Astros downed the Montreal
Expos, 7·1... Roberto Clemente
had three singles and Willie
StargeU hit his second homer in
as many games to lead the
Pittsburgh Pirates to an 11-il
romp over the los Angeles
Dodgers. Steve Garvey had
four hits for ~ Dodgers.
Harmon K(llebrew and·Steve
Brye homered in the Minnesota
Twins' 1~ victory over the
Detroit Tigers ... John Milner's
two-run double and Mike
Jorgensen 's two-run homer
were the big blows of a six-run
third-inning outburst which led
the New York Mets to an &amp;-3
triumph over the Philadelphia
Phillies.
Tom Grieve hit a two-run
homer and Dave Nelson
knocked in two runs with a
sacrifice fly and a single as the
Texas Rangers downed the
Atlanta Braves, 7-3 ... Ron
Blomberg, Bobby Murcer and
Rusty Torres homered in the
New York Yankees' 13-7 victory over the Boston Red Sox.
Billy Williams singled in the
tie-breaking run and Don
Kessinger foUowed with .a two·
run single as the Chicago Cubs
scored ftve runs in the ninth
inning for an &amp;-3 triumph over
the Cleveland Indians ...
Winning pitcher Tom Phoebus'
two-l'un double climaxed a
fiverun, fifth-inning rally
against Denny McLain which
lifted the San Diego Padres to
an .8·3 triumph over the
Oakland Athletics.
Tommy ~eynolds' triple and
a single by Rick Auerbach in
the 12th inning gave the
Milwaukee Brewers an 3-7
decision over the California
Angeles.

Walnut Ridge.
The Eagles, paced by returning starters Bradley Robinson,
a IHi ali.Qhioan, and 5-8 WWie
Wade, carried a 23-2 record
into their game against
Princeton.
'
The Vikings, coached by
John HWard, have the worst
record of the four AAA semifinalists, 20-4, but their last two
victories in the Cincinnati
Regional came against unbeaten teams Cincinnati Elder
and Springfield North.
The second game, which
most observers feel will
produce the AAA champion,
matches unbeaten and No. 1
ranked Celina, ,coached by
Dean White, against John
Olavers' Cleveland East Tech
Scarabs, third ranked and 23-1
on the season.
Celina, 24-ll, is paced by 6-7
Curt Shellabarger, a first learn
all-Ohio choice, and 6-1 Dean
White, son of the l'Oach and a
third team all-tllale selection.
East Tech, also making its
second straight trip to the stale
event, is led by 6-4 James·
Abrams, a second learn all·
Ohioan, and 5-10 Lawrence
Bolden, the Scarabs' leading
scorer. The Celina-East Tech

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Women's Thursday
Afternoon League
March 9, 1972
Dave's Tire Land
58
New York Clothing
42
Pomeroy Lanes
40
Simon's Market
38
Smith's Boby Shop
32
Forest Run Block
30

22
38
40

42
48

50

Team High Series - Dave's

Tire Land 1816, New York
Clothing 1754, Smith's Body
Shop 1748.
Team High Game - Smith's
Body Shop 613, New York
Clothing 611, Dave's Tire Land
608.

High Ind. Game - Drema
Smith 191. Marlene Wilson 187,
Mary Voss.
Ind. High Series - MlJry
Voss 501, Drema Smith 496,
Julie Boyles 467.
Women's Thursday
Afternoon League
March t6, t972
Dave's Tire Land
60 28
Pomeroy Lanes
46 42
New Y.ork Clothing
« 44
Simons MlJrket
44 44
Smith's Body Shop
38 50
Forest Run Block
J2 56
High Team Series - Simon' s

Market 1789k . Smith's Body
Shop 1782, Dave·s ~ Tlr.e ~!;end
1749.

·H

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High Teem Game ~ Smith's
Body Parts 674, Dave's Tire
Land 634, Pomeroy Lanes 612.
High Ind. Game - Becky
Dunfee 208, Donna Grate 207,
Julie Boyles 177.
High Ind. Series - Donna
Grate 493, Julie Boyles 483,
Becky Dunfee 468.
Velerals Memorial
Hospital League
March 21, 1972
Standings:
Team
Pis.
Gu!ter Bums
30
Hit &amp; Misses
J6
TheOpens
20
Straight Shooters
18
High Ind. Game - Becky
Anderson, 160, Mick Cundiff
143.
High Ind. Series - Becky
Anderson 395, Bessie Sylvester
395.
Team High Game - Gutler
Bums 446.
Team High Series - Straight
Shoolers 1269.

game is scheduled for 3:30p.m.
A doubleheader tonight,
starting at 7:30will feature the
Cl•"'' Ateams, with tojH'anked
Indian Valley South, ~going
against St. Bernard in the
opener and Morral Ridgedale
and Continental, both 19-5,
going in the second.
IVS, coached by Charles
Huggins, wbo lect Strasburg to
the 1967 Class A title, is considered a solid choiee to caplure the small school honors,
mostly because of Bob

,---·
-------·-------;""!"'-----I Beat .

.

Huggina, son of Coach Huggins
and the UPI Oaas.A player of
the year.
,
In Thursday night's Oaas AA
double, top ranked Columbus
Ready beat Middletown
Madison 116-65 and fourth rated
.Lexington doWJied Poland 5947
to advance to Saturday's
finals.
The AA finals Saturday are
slated for 11:30 a. m., with the
AAA championship game set
for 3:00p.m. and the Class Aat
7:30p.m.

Special Game,
At KC High :

.1

'lbe Kyger Creek Alllmlll
AIIIOCiatiOD Is IJIOIIIOrill&amp; a
basketball game betweeo
memben ol lbt. alamJd aud
tbe faculty at Kyger Creek
Hlgh School. Allyoat who
WIDII to ·participate up to
and iDcludlq grad1111lel tbru
1967 may do BG by coolactlng
FrQllk Cremeana or Soooy
Smltb.
'lbe game will be played at
7:30p.m. Wednesday, Man:b
29 at Kyger Creek. · 'lbe
faculty teaqt Ill U on tbe
seasoo after ]IOitiD&amp; victories oyer the Golden Voices
of WOUB Radio and
Televlllloo aad the Soutbwestera faculty. Proceeds
will go toward tbe 1972
alumni
baaquet and
program.

I
I
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Will Be Recited
.
·

"Best~Ever"

"I think this is the best UCLA
team ever," said louisville
Coach Denny Crum, a man who
should know. Crum helped
recruit the ingredients for the
Walton Gang, including the
redhaired sophomore himself,

as UCLA Coach John Wooden's
chief assistant for three years
before taking the Kentucky
post this season.
The 6-fool·ll Walton, winner
of the Naismith Award as
coUege basketball's Player of
the Year, scored 33 points and
collected 21 rebounds. He had
•
CONTRACTS SIGNED
PITTSBURGH (UPI)- linebacker Ed Bradley of Wake
Forest and wide receiver Nate
Hawkins of the University of
Nevada at · Las Vegas, the
fourth and 16th round draft
choices of the Pittsburgh
Steelers, have signed contracts
with the National Football
League team.
. The Steelers also §igned four
free agents, wide receiver .Tun
Walkins of Alabama A&amp;M,
runnmg back Larry Grissom of
McNeese State, center John
Callan of Georgia Tech and
defensive back Bob Henby of
North Carolina Stale.

·"'.

··-....,
A ·plclure.que while friune
chapel built in the late 11101k!
sits in a peaceful spot at Great
Bend in Meigs County.
Known as the Bicknell
Chapel, the quiet houae of
worship is adjoined by a
cemetery marked with aged
gravestones.
The lot for the chapel was
provided by Nehemiah
BickneU who had established a
large farm in the Great'Bend
area. Nehemiah was the father
offivedaughtersandasonwho
died in inlanc~. The eldest of
.
these daaghte rs was EmeIme
L. Bicknell. She was apparently qUite inleUigent and
talented. Born on Feb. 19, 1827,
CLEARWATER, Fla. (UP!)- Bud Harrelson, the New York
Mets' nifty little superglove, was talking about the different I&lt;'.''W""":&gt;.m!:m'$&lt;:::~:::::::::::;:::::;&amp;-:; Emeline began leaching school
when she was 16.
ballplayers around today, the good ones, the not-so.good ones, a
Her life was tragic in some
few in between, and eventually he got around to this other group.
respects. She married in 1816
The ones who should ..:.ear a button saying hooray for me!
and was the mother of two
"There are some guys like that in this game," Harrelson says.
children; both died young. She
"They come right out and say 'I'm gonna win the batting title and
divorced her husband and
fizz you.' and then when they do win it, they look around and
resumed leaching. She left
there's no one there to applaud. It'd be awful if everyone in
Meigs County in 1899 and went
baseball was like that. Thank God they're not. Some guys you
,- , to Brooklyn, N. Y., where she
like to see dowell. E&gt;Jen some on the other clubs."
I Spent almost 15 yearS aS a
curtained in shadows,
like who?,
matron in a Methndist · Home And lhe jewels of hope lay
shattered l!V !ale.
"like Joe Torre," said the Mets' shortstop. "You fight him all
for the Aged.
From "Christmas Gift" are
year, bull was glad he won Uie batting title. I was happy for him.
NEW YORK (UPI)-Tom
Mrs. Bicknell· apparently lhe lines:
Everybody was."
McMillen of Maryland and AI returned to Pomeroy about
Williams of Niagara are worlds 1904, and had to be in her 8Qs at ·A Christmas gift, a lillie lhing,
Why?
,.
apart
in size, bac..•round and the time of her death sm·ce she And yet It seems much more ;
AGood Representative
""
For such a lillie offering,
"Because he's a good representative of baseball. He has amount of publicity, but their did contribute to a family Has much more lo do wllh
memory ;
always kept his nose clean and done the tight thing. He's j...t like ability to remain calm when genealogy published in 1913.
the
pressure
bull~•
was
in·
Mrs.
BickneU
was
inclined
We
cherish it with fondest care,
Yogi. Always has good things to say, never knocks anybody.
. ·•
'1"
We look at it in after years;
strumental
Thursday
night
in
toward
the
literary
and
wrote
We
over
it
raise
lhe
sllenl
·'
Nobody ever has had anything bad to say about Joe Torre ."
prayer,
Fans labor under the impression all baUplayers know each their respective schools' ad- stories and poems which were
bathe It often wllh secret
other well, at least weU enough to talk to, but that isn't always vancing to the finals of the 35th published by magazines and And
Home of
tears.
the case. Bud Harrelson is pulling in his sixth year with the Mets, annual National Invitation newspapers. A coUection of
: '
Lines from "Submission"
.some of her poems entitled
i •
and feels he sliD doesn't know aU the veterans in the league well Tournament.
deal!
wllh
the
death
of
Mrs.
the
Fabulous
McMillen,
a
highly "Violets" was published in
enough to start a serious conversation with them. Harrelson is no
Bicknell's young son. They
publicized 6-foot-11 sophomore 1897.
state:
different than the great majority of baUplayers in this sense.
. !
from Mansfield, Pa., stemmel!
Although she had been
That's why they enjoy the clubhouse camaraderie of an AU-Star
a JacksonvUle rally in the married, she u~ her maiden Ah, dead! for whom I could
Game so much. It's the perfect vehicle for breaking the ice second half when he scored name for the remainder of ber
hove died,
My
only son In manhood's
'
among individuals in the same profession who don 'I ordinarily eight points during a two- life and her literary work was
prlme,
gel an opportunity to talk with each other.
minute stretch to lead done under the Bicknell name. Thou were the hope, lhe slaff of
"I've been wanting to talk with Matiry Wills for some time," Maryland to a 91·77 victory. She wrote sentimentally of
pride
Where
I might lean in coming
says Harrelson, "but you don't run up and say 'Hey, Maury .. .'" The big sophomore led his subjects she knew best time .
. '·
"Hasn't Wills ever spoken with you?" I asked the Mets' skinny team with 25 points and death, her children, her loved
I
The book was copyrighled
switch-hitter.
grabbed 12 rebounds.
ones.
-.~
by
Mrs.
Bicknell
In
1897.
''Yes, briefly,'' said Harrelson. ''Last summer, he was taking
Williams, a 5-9 guard from
Cecil Eiselslein of Pomeroy
his lead off second, and he turned around and happened to say, Hempstead, N.Y., wh6 came has a weU..preserved copy of
College Basketball ResuHs
'Hey, man, you're swinging up too much.' He was right. What did into the tournament with Mrs. BlckneU's book which has
By United.Press International
I say to him? WeU, you don't say, 'Gee, thanks, Maury.' I think hardly any advanced billing, been in his family many years. NalionallnvilallonTournamenl
( Somlflnalsl
whatl said was 'Cheez, Maury, I know it.'"
demonstrated his coolness by
We are passing along some
Maryland91 Jacksonvl77
Ordor By Phone
sinking two free throws with excerpts from .Mrs. BickneU's Niagara 69 St. John's 67
. ,,
~ hat~Uon Rule
.
1
1
'K' d _.
jiJVl1 1u) 1' ... " ·
··· ·Ani!J.ako;£ · ·Hoirit. ...
''NCAA1'tuthament I i 'I
Baseball'doehav.'a'ndtrlltetnizatidn rule. II was' put into the ,five · seconds left tb'' gi,-e-~
' ,,, 1t;o •
'i:-~Jl \Jl' i ~ , hG
(Semifinals)
.
Niagara
a'69'67
vlctott
ovefSt.
w~&amp;"-ciose
tli'~H~f"
famlly,
books in the first place to demonstrate tb the public that there is
992•543~
·I '
Florida Sl. 19 No. Carolina 75 ·
no collusion between rival playes. The umpires sit in the stands John's. As a result of Willianns' Mrs. Bicknell penned the UCLA 96 Louisville 77
and enforce the rule, or try to, but there is no rule which says pressure shots Niagara, whom following lines to her mother:
many expected to be knocked
rival ballplayers can't be friends. Agood number are. Harrelson
out in the opening round, is in
and Don Kessinger, the Cubs' shortstop, have been for some· the finals of the NIT for the Fondly, I love thee, Mother.
My heart still clings to thee,
time.
first time in eight tries.
Earth never had another
"!like him and he likes me," says the Mets' shortstop. "We
Could be as thou to me.
McMlllen's Heroles
always talk around the bstting cage whenever we gel a chance.'' , McMillen's heroics in the
many an hour when the heart
Two years ago, Harrelson went 54 consecutive games without opener came after Jackson· 0 was
sick,
an error equaling the National League record for shortstops held viDe had chopped a nine-point And lhe pulses weary beating,
by Kessinger. Immediately after tying the record, Harrelson deficit to three with 12:33 When life seemed naught but a
shadowy wreck,
received a wire from Kessinger saying :
remaining in the game. In the On lhe hours so silently
"We're all proud of you. Good luck, and go get 'em.''
fleeting .
next two minutes the sharpThe next game the Mets played was with the Reds and shooting forward canned three
Thy love flinched not - I was
Harrelson's first chance was an easy two-hopper off the bat of straight J.8.fool jump shots and
thy childPete Rose that was hit only a step away from him. The baU hit hit on two free throws to give No stronger lie could bind
Harrelson's glove and bounced away for an error. There went the the Terrapins a 60-49 edge with Notheescene so dear , or trial so
10:16 remaining.
record.
wild,
Jacksonville never got closer But mother's love could fine
"My hands were like two pieces of metal," Bud Harrelson
me.
than
seven points alter that as
says.
Don Kessinger didn't send a second wire. What kind of friend McMillen and sophomore
One of her numerous poems
center Len Elmore kept the dealing wllh death is enlllled,
would that be anyway?
·
Dolphins off the boards . "The Hour of Death" and
Elmore, a husky 6-:9, finished reads :
with 23 points and puUed down A solemn hour Is met
14 rebounds ·as Maryland When life and time dolh sever ;
Mortal day is set,
outrebounded the tall'Dolphins, The
While life itves on forever.
"We wiU not approve the Scott, who jumped ABA clubs 45-37.
"! was hilling fairly well, To all comes certain death,
l
contract of a player already in recent months and signed
Yet
few
ever
stop
to
ponder
although I thought we could
under contract until a final with NBA teams.
The worth of pulse and brealh.
have
done a little better in· As
through the world lhey
League owners also ap·
court determination is made,"
side,"
said
McMillen,
who
hit
wander.
said Kennedy. "That could prove~ the move of the Cin·
take a long time because it cinnati Royals to Kansas City, on 10-of-17 field goals attempts, The hovr when shadows fall,
could go clear up to the Mo. The new club will play an with eight of his baskets On earthly sight and feeling ;
The records furnished, all
Supreme Court." The com- undetermined number of coming on long jumpers.
Closed
for the great revealing
Williams
Tales
Off
missioner said, however, that games in Omaha, Neb., and
Williams'
chance
to
be
a
hero
the new ruling will not apply to will play in the Midwest
Jim McDaniels and Charlie Division, with Ho...ton moving was almost nullified by his
Coach Frank Layden, who was
to the Central Division.
gelling ready to call out when
the little guard saw an opening
and took off for the basket with
A New and Exciting Ensemble From Our
10 seconds left. He drove
around to the right baseline
and went up for a shot with five
of . ""'ade-Fal'lach.Other"
Sofas
and .Chain
'
'
seconds left when he was hit by
24 of his points and 16 of his point halftime lead to 23-.1~ the Redmen 's 6-9 Greg Ouess.
rebounds in the opening half as - with six minutes gone in the
UCLA built up an eight-pain! second half.
advantage.
Although Robert McAdoo
Larry Farmer added 15 fouled out with 9:48 left, the
F.or All Occasions
points, all in the second half, Tar Heels managed to get to
,
for the Bruins while sopho- within five points with 6\2
W! wire flowers
mores Keith Wilkes and Greg minutes left. They were within
.... _ Evorv.Where
......
Lee finished with 12 and 10, three with live seconds left.
respectively.
McAdoo had :M points and
Jim Price kept louisville in Dennis Wuycik added 20, 15 of
the game with 30 points.
them in the second half, for
Pomeroy Flower Shop ·
It was supposed to be UCLA North Caroliila.
and North Carolina in a The Tar Heels and Cardinals
a·ullernul Ave., Pomerov.
Mrs. Millard Van Moler '
rematch of the 1968 finalists. tangle for third place Saturday
But Ron King and pint-sized at 12: 10 p.m.
floor leader Otto Petty pul the
Seminoles there instead of the
Tar Heels.
·
Watch For Grand Opening
Bakers are a matchmaker when It comes to creating
King Directs Attack
beautiful rooms. And here Is just one of many In our
King had 22points and tl)e 5-7
wonderfully wide, array of decorator ·deslgne~ sofas and
chairs - now at very special prices.
.
Petty came off the bench to
S I'IKU
direct the Tallahassee speed·
sters' attack, ending up with 10
points.
Florlds State, which came
All types of musical instruments,
Into the final round of four with
ster,eo tapes, records, sheet music.
five losses against 26 wins, had
MIDDUPORT, ~;
to hold off a furious second-half
North Carolina rally, though.
.
.
The Seminoles padded a 13-

Maryland
Niagara In

NIT Finals

STEAK
HOUSE

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SANDWICH
fJ

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FLOWERS

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992-2039

BILL &amp; LEE'S MUSIC CENTER
SATURDAY, APRIL 1st

POMEROY, OHIO

BAKER

FU~NITURE

.I '

.

JO ANN SCHAFFER, 4, Northampton, Pa.,
is 1972 National Easter Seal Child.
Born with cerebral palsy on June l 4, 1967, ,
Jo Ann began receiving therapy at the center of
the Lehigh Valley Easter Seal Society in
Bethlehem, a few miles from Northampton,
when she was 18 months old .

About caring for,
L

In these pictures, taken recently at the center,
JoAnn re-enacts her progress in walking.
(A. bright child, she seemed to understand
perfectly the purpose of photographing
the three poses.)

~ ~~

Keeping antiques

Is now in a book
By AILEEN SNODDY

NEW YORK_ (NEA) _
Barn· auctions, tag sales, garage sales, wrecking company sale lots ... all these
are becoming familiar terms
across the country.
Th,ey represent a new form
of w.eekend· entertainment
that less serious participants
call "antiqUing," the casual
browsing through old furni·
ture, grimy china and silver
or fabrics Into a lucraiiveand sometimes cutthroatbu.mess, that delights increasing numbers of women
and men.
The person who finds an
old Item that may-or may
not-be a true treasure of
an!iqulty in~esls the object
with special meaning. And,
lik.e a prized pet, it requires
care. ,To this special audi·
ence, a sometimes antiquecollector and constant jour·
Dallstic observer of the col·
lectlng scene addresses a
special book . .
In "The care and Keeping
of Antlgues," (Hawthorn),
Epsie Kinard spells out in
short paragraphs and under·
staodable, simple terms such
problems as how to fight
mildew, mold or overwaxing
Of woods. She also gives a re·
spectable source list of people to turn to for help in
reoovatlng or preserving a
find. But, the importance of
this 160-page book is that it
reflects the loving care col·

lectors of all ages and in·
comes can understand and
appreciate.
In her soft voice still
tinged with a Tennessee·
North Carolina-Texas drawl
after 40 years exposure to
New York City living, Miss
Kinarjl explains she grew up
with a love of old things.
"I can't claim anything in
the way of valuable antiques
·since I never had a house. A
Ne\v York apartment can get
loo cluttered.'' However, she
and her husband live in an
Eastside . brownstone sur·
rounded by period reproduc·
lions and a few antiques. Her
approach to the subject
comes from her famUy and
reporting experience, she
claims. Unlike many of her
graduating college class·
mates, she set her course
and stuck with it. "I got my
degree at 11 a.m. and went
to work for the Denton (Tex.
· as) Record Chronicle at 12
noon."
Epsie worked hard and
turned her woman's page
beat into something special.
"I didn't want to get trapped
writing society news."
From Denton she came to
New York, worked for the
defunct N.Y . Herald-Tribune
and its Sunday magazine,
This Week, and then for
·Newsweek. She di!l a stint as
woman's page editor for
NEA and then wrote a col·
umn aimed at collectors for
~:e:w· ·· 1

Kimberly Styre
. ·Given a Party
SYRACUSE - Kimberly
Sayre waa honored Wednesday
with a party in observance of
her lixlb birthday at the home

-~i~ti1a'fo:~
of hall!, blowotib' 'and play

i

wa
· were gtven. Games
were played and prizes
awarded the winners.
Alter opening her glfiiJ, Ice
cream, cake and Kooi·Aid were
served as refioeshmeniiJ. At·
tending were ~ Cindy WoHe,
Darla .Lambert,
Clyde
Sa)'l'e II, Rhonda and
Robby Edwards, Johnda
and Joy Glllesple, Peony
and . Eddie Wolfe, . Nita
and M.lcolm Guinther II,
Darlelie Duncan, Mary Ed·
wardJ,' Birbara WoHe, Donna
G!tJnlher, AUah.Lambert, Joan
Wolfe, and Effie Gilli!pie.

:r Y!m " tb .

Use Extreme Caution
Redyeing any Carpet
By POLLY CRAMER
POLLY-Uke Margie, we got tired of our beige

carpet,JIIlll. dyed It green. Either liquid or powdered dye

can.be., used Shampoo the carpet first or wet It so it will
absorb the dye. Mlx powdered dye according to direc·
tiona ·on the package. Use a scrub brush to rub dye Into
tbe wet carpet. and, make sure you gel deep lnto the
pile. Use an old toothbrush near baseboards, which you
p~otect as you do the floor under the rug. Wear rubber
i!Jovea as the dye is hard to get off the hands. Let dry.
;.: fan ·or dehumldifer will speed the drying. When dry,
wipe off any excess with old white cloths. Some places
may ·have to be touched up again.-TERRI
. , DEAR GIR~Unless tbe original taga are a.vallable
we are ofteo honestly mistaken about tbe fiber content
of r1111 as well aa fabrics. I would oever plunge lato sucb
a jQb without lint trylag a 1111mple or blddeo spot. There
m17 be a comblnadoo of fibers where one would take
tile dye aDd another would not. A well-known dye com·
Jl*ay states on Ita packagea tbat some polyesters and
acryllea de oot abHrb dye aa well aa olben. I have uiMid
tile-, _,ICHted method on coltoa aad wool very aatla·
faeterll)' IIUt that doea aot meao the resulta will be tbe
..~ wltli. all rup. I wonld o11IY recommend home dye-

big for

o~.1carpeta.-POLLY

•

Polly's Problem .__._ _lll't

DEAR PbLLY -I would like to kn~ what I could ~
make wtth 1my many scraps of polyester knit rna· ~
ter\al, left pver from making dresses.-JUNE
W , k
riD
·u
JU.*lf~!
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with the check·out
stations at 1arge discount stores where they sometimes ,
have as many as 12 check-outs. It seems they could reserve one or two for CASH ONLY customers . .I happen to
be one of those old-fashioned people who pay as they go
sq nothing irks me more than to have to wait endlessly
for the customer ahead to· have his charge plate or check
approved. Many times I have given up and walked out
wben' •I had chosen only one or two items. A very few
store•· do have six item express lanes but these are also
tied uj1·wlth ~hargers. -MRS . A. T..

ill

:. ( 1

(NEWli'Aru lNTUPIISE ASSN. )

·;·!

a doUar U Polly uaea your lavorlle
Mloellilkll( Idea, Pel Peeve, PoUy'1 Problem or solutl~n
lo a ~~m. Wrtk Polly In rare of thl• newopaper.

v.. ·will receive
-·

... t)ll

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In June 1970, she began using Canadian
Crutches which is a sign of progress indicating
control and balance had improved .
JoAnn started to walk independently in
September, 1970. The time she can do so is
limited, but increases little by little as her
Easter Seal therapy continues.

House Beautiful for 13 years.
She now is very excited for
young shoppers who find
barn auctions a great source
of furnishings. Some barn
auction objects do turn out
to be valuable, she points
out, and often are over·
looked by older people who
see them as too filthy and
dirty. Patchwork quills, oth·
er textiles, woodenware and
tole are buys "the kids find
and restore. Some may pay
'1.40 for a tole item that
could be worth $500 if you
take the time to clean it up
and bring up the colors in
the original design."
Recogni2ing basic, solid
design in these and such
things as Hitchcock chairs in
need of cleaning and caning
Is a trait more young people
are developing:
"I feel people are getting

pretty smart about antiques
and there is lots of help
around from museum cura.
tors and appraisers," she
says.
But it still takes time to
shop around and to have a
baste gUide to help restore
and maintain ·•a n t i que ..
finds.
With the growing demand
for new items to keep the
"antiques" market fluid, she
suggests that widows and
widowers not be too hasty in
selling off collections, furnishings or clot~ing just to
clear space in a house of an
apartment.
Have an appraiser in
first because usually you'll
hate · yourseH for selling
thinRs for less than they are
worth,., she advises.
11

IHIWIPAPER IHTIRPRII! ASSH .I

EASTER SEAL SALE - Under sponsorship of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club - with Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee serving as general chairman - the Easter Seal
fund drive is underway. Seals have been mailed to ap·
proximately 5700 Meigs County barnes. Contributions are to
be returned to the Rev. Robert Kuhn borne in Pomeroy.

LETART, W. Va.- Edwin L.
Hudson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin F. Hudson of Rt. 2, has
t.cen promoted to staff
sergeant in the U.S. Air Force.
Sergeant · Hudson, an ad·
minislrative specialist at
lockbourne AFB, serves with
a unlt of the Air Weather
Service which provides
weather Information lor
military flight qieratlons. .
A 1965 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, he at·
tended West Virginia · Stale
College.l!ls wife, Dlana,la the
daughter of Mr. and ~. Hale
C. stewart of 2123 Jefferson
Ave., Point Pleasimt.
BASIC COMP!El'ED
MASON, W. Va. - Army
Private Sheridan T. Russell
lll, 19, whose parents live here,
recently completed eight
weeks of· basic trldning at the
U. S. Army Training Center,
Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky. The
private's wife, VIcky, lives at
828 S. Second St., Middleport.
BASIC COMPLETED
RACINE - Army Private
Michael A. Robinson,17, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William A.
Robinson, Route 2, recently
completed eight weeks of basic
training at the U. S. Army
Training Ce!tter, Armor, Ft.
Knox, Ky. He attended
Southern Local High' School.
MIS8LEMAN NOW
MASON, W. Va. - Army
Private Roger D. Young, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John Yoilng Jr.,
recently completed an eight·
week Hawk mlssUe crewman
course at Ft. BUss, Tex. He
entered the anoy In October
1971 and completed basic
training at Ft. Knox, Ky.

11

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SYRACUSE - Beauhful
church par aments in four
colors were dedicated during
the Sunday morning worship
service at the Firat United
Presbyterian Church here by
the Rev. Dwight L. Zavitz.
The par aments were
presented by Mrs. Pearl
McBride in memory of her
mother, Mrs . Margaret
Williams Mills, her sister, Mrs.
Hazel Mills Qark, and her
husband, Pearl McBride.
Maundy Thursday services
will be held in the local church
annex al 8 o'clock by the Rev.
DEGREES WON

·u be at 8 P.m
recet'ved degrees _ both in
Wt
·
Th H 1 Sat d Ea te nurst'ng _ at Oht' o State
e oY
ur ay
s r University at the winter
Vigil ~rv!ce an4 P,IAJI!I·will he:"
.
• held t .St .
at l'30 p.m and on Eastern . conun~nceme111 · - 11 · · .. ..
'
'
.
· · John Area•on March 17. They
Sunday Masses will be held at are Patricia A. Smith, long
8, 10 a.m. and 12 noon.
Bottom and Nancy Ann
Confessionals on Saturday Holter' Pomeroy
both
wiU be heard by the Rev. Fr. bachel~r of science d~grees in
William Folsum of Mount Sl. nursing.
Mary's Church on Saturday at
7 p.m. and before the Suilday
morning Masses. On Monday, •
Tuesday and Wednesday,
confessions wlll be heard
before the evening Masses, and
on Holy Thursday and Good
hiday from 7:15p.m. to 7:45
p.m. They will also be heard 1ln
Holy Thursday from 11 to 12
and from 3 to 4 p.m. and on
Easter Suilday from 6:30 to
7:15 p.m. and befo~e each
Mass.

Eden News

I

Zavitz. Holy communion wiU
be served around the table. An
offering will be received for the
Deaconess fund .
Sunrise service will be held
Easler morning at 7 o'clock.
After the service coffee, hot
chocolate and donuts will be
served in the annex.
AU interested persons are
cordially invited to these
services. Worship service is
held each Sunday morning al9
o'clock, followed with Sunday
church school at 10 o'clock.
RACINBEABYThDeiESRacine E·R
squad was called to the Glen
J h
'd
tT
R:n';,~~~~~ ~0 p.:~~~
Mrs. Johnson who had given
birth to a son. The infant was
dead on arrival of the squad. At
2:10 j!.m,_they lf.~l'\l ~~ ~
'h · ' · .. , .. " &gt; · '·" " ·'· · -·
t e .Raymona ·· art ey
residence here for Mr. Hartley
who was having difficulty
breathing. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
an d admllted .

HomaiHI hu. niW line of Lawn and
Garden Tractors built to handle
t'ust about an• j'ob better
'
·
Cut arau? A special
scalping design allows
mower deck to float over
bumps instead of scalping
them. Capacities
32" to 48".
Snow removal? At·
tach the snow thrower
easily, q4ickly. Then
throw the snow where
you want it. Capacities
32" and 42". Or, choose
a front blade and whl!lll
weights.
Garden! Rear powertake·ofl collector, or P.T.O. driven
drives Home lite's tiller attach· revitalizer.
ment, either 30" or 36" wide .
The Job Handlers have over
25
easy-on attachments to get
· Spring tooth harrow, garden
the job done for you. Choose
cultivator, and furrow opener
from
5 models from 7lo 15 hp.
are also available.
Drop over 1nd h1ndle the
Lawn ure? Choose from a
. t"o1attac hmen ts 1nc
. 1ud· Job Handlers from Hom1llte
vane
'
JOU!'Mif.
ing a lawn
roller, vacuum

.··. iu"ehour
... SuppIy
" R-,.~ ...

Olester, Ohio

Ph. 985-3308

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The Sprints are here!
The Sprints are here!

Social Notes
By Martha HolslDger
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School March 19 was 100.
Emma VanMeter and
famUy, Belpre, visited Sunday
evening with her mother,
Martha Hollinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hicks,
Wooster, visited Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kerwin.
Mr. and Mrs. Ervan Blake
and family, Springfield, visited
over: the weekend with his
father, Rev. Eldon Blake.
Mr. and Mrs. hame and
famUy, Belpre, visited Suilday
afternoon with Mr. and Mra.
VtrgU Holsinger and Aleshia
Lynn.
Martha Holsinger, Fannie
Bigley and Geraldine and
Aieshla Holsinger visited Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Fields and .
Tooy, Saturday evening.
Alva Holsinger, Jr. and Win
Hobiinger visited the past week
with Mr. and Mra. CU!ford
HQ)singer, Belton, Missouri.
Martha Holsinger vlsiled her
brother, Leonard Barber, Sr.,
Thursday evening.
Sol• Bigley and Virgil
Holsinger visited Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bigley and famUy,
Coolville, Saturday evening.
Eddie Bigley Visited Mr. and "
Mrl. Walter Rockhold and
Dale Monday evening.

COMPLETES BASIC
REEDSVIIJ.E - Private
Sleven 0. Maye, 18, son of Mr .
RILEY ENDS BASIC
MASON, W. Va. - Army and Mrs. Orman Mays, Route
Private Marshall D. Riley, 18, 1, recently compleled eight
son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall weeks of basic training at the
Riley, recently completed U. S. Army training Cll,nler.
eight weeks of basic training at Armor, Fl. Kr.ox, Ky. He was
the U. S. Army Training graduated from Eastern High
·
Center, Almor, Ft. Knox, Ky. School In 1971.

-"

HOMELITE(R)

Pf11Ynments Dedirated

l.Ioly TITeek Serv;ces
0'Pen at SUnda'Jr1} Mass amTwonogM~~! ~::~: '::~:

!.
1.

JoAnn, as National Easter Seal Child,
symbolizes almost 300,000 handicapped children
and adults who annually receive rehabilitation
and other services from Easter Seal societies in
the 50 states, Washington, D.e .• and Puerto Rico.

EPSIE KINARD

Hudson Promoted

POLL'f'S POINTERS

.

Jo Ann took her first steps with tripod crutches
(commonly known as "crab crutches")
·
in September, 1969.

INITIATION SET
lll
YY l
A COIIDiy•wlde lDltlaUoa
for Amerleao Legion
Awdllary memben will be
bekl at 2 p.m. Suday at the
Middleport Legloo hall.
Holy Week servl es at the
Memben of all DDita Ia tbe
c. Ch h
county - Feeney-Bemiett Sacred HearI CathoItc ore
128, Drew Weblle• 19,
have been announced by ~
Rev. Fr. Dn.. - _. r_d Krajcov!c.
Raclae HZ, and Lewis
..,.,,. ··
The solenm blessing of the
Maaley W - are iDvlted to
palms will take place at the 10
altelld wltb their memben to
a.m. Mass Swiday and r~ar
be iDJtlated.
Masses have been scheduled
Following the iDitlatloa,
jlllllon of tbe cocmty wlU . for 7 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday
work oo conagea to be used and Wednesday. The Mass of
as lavon for llle diatriet . the Last Supper on Holy Thurs·
coafereace to be llekl Oli day will be celebrated alB p.m.
and the Good Friday service
April zt at tile Sa~ Heart
CathoDe Church auditorium.

COURSE COMPLETED
MASON, W. Va. - Army
Private Roger D. Young, aon of
Mr. and Mra. John Young Jr.,
recently completed an eigbtweek Hawk Mlssle &lt;Zewman
'
A thou&amp;ht for today: British course at Ft. Bli&amp;!, Tex. Pvt.
King Gearge VI said, "the Young entered the army in
highest ol diallnctlons is service October 1971 and completed
basic training at.F'l. Knox, Ky.
to others."

1e SALE

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Miss Otr!Jtlne Bulenieyer, ~.
1I:: representative
·Of ' lb. ·Ad• ~~

Bruins, FSU Clash F o;r Crown
LOS ANGELES (UPI)..:.Bill
Walton, UCLA'sjollyredgiant,
and his young teammates will
play for the Bruins' sixth
straight NCAA basketball title,
as expected, Saturday.
But the opponent will be
Florida Stale and not North
carolina.
The eight-point underdog Se·
minoles provided the only
surprise of the NCAA semlfin·
als Friday night, knocking off
No. 2-l'anked North Carolina,
79-75,
before
Walton
devastaged louisville, 96-77.
So it will be UCLA-the No. 1·
rated team in the country and
undefeated in 29 gamesagainst No. 10 Florida State for
.the championship Saturday at
2 p.m . PST on national
television.

\

~~ miaalons Offlce at Edi1 1Ift
~~ . CoUege, will explain (I!Jel'ltilllll!
1 ol her school to • • ·el
' Meigs High ~'l'll.i&amp;y. .,·
Mrs. MlJry Cross, mother of
!!ldgecU!f Collage ·Ill I four
William Bicknell ' Croos of year co-educational liberal
Racine, was the youngest arts college located 1,11;
slsler of Mrs. Bicknell. DtJrlng suburban dnctnniH, It Olltii:
. ·: ;,
her last days, Mrs. Bi&lt;knell
!'
wrote a poem, "Sick Room" baclv!1or of arts; bicltelor !L' ·
about Mrs. Cross' Illness. It science and a880Ciate decrees
rea.ds; -to approx!malely 850 aludenta,
My sick sister's room,
The academic prORl:am·llllllel'f·
Place of care and gloom,
avaUable 26 ·areas Of ctJri:..' .
Scene of prayers and tears
cenlration including ~
And of hopes and fears,
Of Love's kindest acts,
pre..pharillacy and· .pioe&gt;llw: A
And death's sternest facts ;
high-rise dormllorY, on c:adlpua
They are there - all Ihere. hOUBes female studen,~ while... ~
On a fever bed
She layeth her head,
nearby off-campus hOUiing fl, :
And her cheek is pale,
provided males.
While her form so frail
Is wastlng.away
.'
To Its mother clay. -BROWN
TOLSU
It is so - all so.
I!ATON ROUGE, · r.a·.•
We all gather near
(UPI)-Dale
D. Brown,.at'lU
To the one so dear ;
But she knowelh nol
veteran of 15 '· year..., o~ .-.
The deep, anxious though!
basketball coaching, llaa ~ .,
That fllleth each soul
signed to replace Pre1111 ·
And wllh weight doth roll.
We may pari - all pari. Mar&amp;vlch as head coaCh. of
-,
From "Violets,'' the tllle of louisiana State.
Brown
coached
·
·
at
the book come the lines:
Washington state last Year, '
The breath of violets which and for five yem preVIoul 'to •
grew In the meadows,
Has floated to me wllh the love that he was an aulstaDI 1·at
Utah Stale.
·; ' .,
of my male,
•' .
In hovrs when the heal was

NBA Takes Action To Curb Jumps
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
National Basketball
Association has moved to
discourage "jumping" by
players of the rival American
Basketball Association.
NBA Commissioner J.
Walter Kennedy announced
Thursday that the league will
no longer approve contracts
signed by players who jump
from the ABA.

I•
I
f

·1: Of the Bend
By Bob Hoeflich

liB "'-1 Edgecuu
~ry

1972 EASTER SEAL CAMPAIGN DATES: FEBRUARY 28-APRIL 2

Everything you
Want to know

-~•

Ford Team's Yankee Doodle Dandles
New Special-Value Sprint ecllttons.
Pinto, Mustang, MaVerick.
Beautifully finished in rod, white and blue. Handsome colot·koyod Interiors.
Dual racing mirrors. Mag wheels. Accent stripe. USA emblem. And much more.

rl

Gel in on the Ford Team's Yankee Doodle Dandy buys. See lhe new spe:cial-value

~~

Pinto, Maverick and .Mustang sprints
at your local Ford Dealer's today.
.
:·.~
:'

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..J

••

~
'l!i
v

KEITH GOBLE FORO, INC.461 South Third Sl, Middleport, 0.

�•

S- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday. Mlii'Cb 24, 19'12

•

April Sciertce Fair Set

Girl Scout
By
Diary
Church Windows
Cbarlene Hoej/tcb

992-5292

A science fair under the classes for terrarlwns, plant
direction of Mrs. Mary Hysell germination, evolution of fern,
will be staged at the Pomeroy model showing cells, cross, Elementary School on Aprti!O sections of dHferent types of
In conjunction with the wooda, and various others~
Pomeroy PTA meeting.
Models of the brain, the heart,
The niles for the fair specify the ear, bone and muscle
'Ibis week members of Racine Troop 137 completed a
thjlt
every eJhlblt must be structure, jawbone and teelh,
ceramlct course under the direction of Mrs. Allee MillB in
Middleport. 1be girls made bud vuee and miniature pltcbers. developed and made by the and dl8grams depleting the
In the gro~ were Becky Crow, Pear Nelgler, Lillla Fisher, puplls in the clauroom as far respiratory, clrculatory and
Joy Nelgler, Lori Knlgbtlng, Cmnle KnJ&amp;bting, Sheryl Teaford, as is possible. E:rceptlons digestive systeins, a study of
Sonja Hlll, Mary Beth Obetz, Teresa Ervin, Cindy Warden, and pertain to animals which will longevity, diseases and
be exhibited. Cages and elements of the system are the
·Kathy frOBS.
1be girls are saving bottle caps to be redeemed by ROyal aquarlwns for safety in con- classes in the hwnan body
Crown BottlinG Co. in Middleport sa a special fund raising taining tbe exhibits may be category.
In the category for conproject for a summer trip. Plana are currently being made for purchased or made at home.
Mrs.
Hysell
recommends
the
servation
there are classes for
the scouts to visit Ohio University.
use of plaster of paris, paper practices preventing erosion to
MIDDLEPORT GIRL SCOur TROOP 31
mache, wire paper, cardboard, soil, the effects of ground cover
To mark the first day of aprlng and in observance of Earth or other material for the
and how 1t is used in farmln,
Day, members of the Middleport Troop 39 collected Utter in the models, but emphasizes that no scale _ model farm replicas,
Middleport buslnesa district.
entries made from assembled display on water pollution,
Before going out on the litter project, the girls met at Heath commercial kits will be per- charts showing depletion rates
Methodist Clurch for a scout own on the theme of America. mitted.
of our forests, and several
Presenting the state of Wyoming were Tr1na Gibbs, Jennifer
1bere is no limit on the others.
Wise and Jonl Murray. Original poems and drawings about the nwnber of entries each student
Eleven classes are featured
state were presented. Valerie Lewis, Am Fltcb and Pam Powers may make, and all entries will in
the m1cro-orgamsm
sang the Tennesaee Waltz, and Patty Boyles, Martha Krawsczyn be judged on worth of the in- category . These include
and Velvet SWisher did songs of Ohio including "Ohio Homeland" vidlaul entry, and not on a growing various types of molds
and "Stand Up You're an American". Narrator for the program competitive basis. Each en- on bread, etc. and identifying
was JudY Gilkey.
trant will receive a ribbon. the medical use, 1! any, identify
There will be no cash prizes. several of the common
GIRL scour TROOP Zf7
The fair will he divided into diseases of man and present
A sewing project has been started by girls of Troop 247. 1be
three
divisions with several information on the cause, cure,
girls prepared their own sewing kits and are working on individual sewing projects now but later will be making tote bags. categories in each division. and methods of control or
All of the Girls recently completed the health aid badge. This The divisions are Hfe, earth elimination, prepared charts
labeling the parts of the hwnan
included first aid Instruction and preparing first aid kits. Linda and physical.•
In the Hfe division there are cell, and develop a project
Rosenbawn has completed a sewing badge, Susan Zirkle, J81Dle
categories
of animals, plants, wh1ch demonstrates the
Sisson, Unda Reedy and Marla Legar have earned collectors'
body,
micro- process of finger prmting, or
badges, and Sheryl Lefebre has earned the pen pal and human
organisms,
and
conservation.
one on osmosis.
housekeepers badge.
In the earth division of the
1be scouts will give the pledge at the April 10 meeting. 1be The fourteen classes m the
animal division include insect science fair there are four
troop now meets at the Pomeroy Elementary School instead of
collections, skeletal systems, categories:
astronomy,
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
nutrition, animal models and meteorology, earth history,
charts on their envirorunent, and oceanography. There are
survival techniques, and the classes m the astronomy
life cycle.
category for the construction of
The plant category has a sun dial, a cardboard or

Charlene Hoeflich

To Be Repaired
Contributions to Church
Council for the project of
repa1rmg and safeguarding the
sanctuary windows of Trinity
Church were planned when
Friendly Circle met Tuesday
evenmg at the church.
A lily wiU be placed m the
sanctuary for the Easter
services and later will be taken
to a shut-m member of the
congregabon.
Miss Elizabeth Fick prestded
at the business meeting when
the secretary and treasurer
reports were given by Mrs.
Leonard Jewell and Mrs. Elza
Gilmore.
Mrs. James Fugate was
welcomed after an absence
following her husband's injury
Mrs. Thomas Young presented
the program "Church Women
Work in the Commumty."
Avenues of community service
m Clvtc and cultural groups
were discussed in the light of
Christ's words to His
followers: "Ye are the salt of
the earth and the light of the
world."
Related scripture, Matthew
~. 13-!6, was read by Miss Mary
V. Reibel. Mrs. Pearl Mora
gave the offertory prayer.
Members ' comments on
questions for discussion
followed. A poem just for today

Her time is
precious.
Her timepiece
must be
trustworthy.

(~
..fir.

Her choice?
A Caravella.
of course.
Whelher she's l1m1n1 your pulse or
the baby's feedJnf, mry second
counls And Caravello has the
w1tcb she Clll count on 1\ spec11l
nurse's modtl named the "Ralk:liK
8". Water resistonl, shock resistIn!, It h11 17 towels, 1 sweep sec·
ond h1nd, full numeral luminous
dill, sta~nless steel back me And
1 pnct!CII Pllct.

$1595

CARAVELLE ®
by BULOVA

and prayer by Mrs. YoWJg
completed the program hour.
A hand..sewn chicken made
by Miss Reibel with colored
eggs was featured on the
refreshment table for the
dessert course served by Miss
Mary E. Chapman and Mrs.
Phil Up Globokar.

Contest is
Underway
A cancer crusade poster
con test is underway in the
grades one through six of the
Meigs Local School District
schools.
A volunteer project, the
posters are to · be approximately 12 by 18 inches
containing any material the
students select The poster,
according to the rules, is to be
done by the child but parents or
teachers can help w1th
suggestions.
Each teacher ts responsible
for having the posters in her
classroom judged, either by an
outside person or another
teacher. Three wmning posters
will be selected from each
room. 1be selection is to be
completed and the winning
entries turned over to Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis, chslrman of the poster contest, by
March 31.
All posters chosen will be on
display at the Cancer Crusade
Sunday hsppenmg at Me1gs
High School on April 9. Each
child whose poster Is selected
will receive a certificate of
merit from the Cancer Society.
There wiU be no cash prizes.
The certificates will be
presented at the April 9
"happemng." If the child
cannot be present then his
certificate Will be sent to the
school.

PARTY GIVEN
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Billy Jo
Krawsczyn, Middleport, and
Mrs. Jamce Lawson, local,
were hosts to a jewelry party at
the Daughters of Amenca
Lodge hall Friday evening.
Attending were Mildred
Pierce, Thelma Grueser, Jean
Hall, Margaret CottriU, Karyn
Davis , Sharon Cottrill,
Jeanette Dully, Adrienne
Hubbard, Charlotte Nease,
Beatrice Blake, Tina Pierce,
David Lawson, Marvin and
Brenda Teaford.

I Soc~i~i__, . HOSPITAL
NEWS
St.
Patrick
's
Day
ICalendar

FRIDAY
REVIVAL, Clifton United
Methodist Chut·ch, Friday
through Sunday, 7:30p.m. with
Dr Connie Dickens, dlstrtct
superintendent, speaker.
DANCE, Wahama High
School 8 to 11 p.m. Jays will
emcee. Scl!ool sponsored.
PANCAKE SUPPER Friday
5 to 8 p.m. SaleJ_D Center
School. Adults $1, children 50c.
Pancakes, sall,!&amp;ge and eggs . .
SATURDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
F&amp;AM Saturday 7:30p.m. at
hsll in Chester, Inspection and
work In E.A. degree. AU
Master Masons mvited.
TUPPERS PLAINS Communlty Women's Club wiU
sponsor a public spaghetti
supper, Saturday, at Tuppers
Plains School servmg to start
at 4 p.m.
TEEN DANCE, Saturday,
8:3().11 p.m. at Middleport
Junior High School, mUSic by
Foxx, sponaored by Meigs
Chapter VICA Club.
REACH OUT for Hfe service,
7:30 p.m. Saturday, Adventist
Church, Pomeroy . Topic,
"Christianity's Great HangUp! "

MOTOROLA

,([5)

ESCORT PERSONAL PORTABLE
BLACK &amp; WHITE • • T.V.

TUESDAY
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter OES, Tuesday evening
home of Mrs. 1boma• Young,
W. Main St.
REACH OUT for life service,
Pomeroy Adventist Church,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday . Topic,
"Love-How to Have the
9" PICture (measured d~ag o n a lly )
Genuine'' .
Motorola Escort Personal Portable
RACINE POST, American
Black &amp; While TV lnSiant P.clure/
Legion Ladies Auxiliary
Sound Soltd State ChasSis Plays
meeting,
7:30p.m. Tuesday at
on AC current- Plays on Batte11es
post home. PoUuck refresh·
(optional extra) Earphone Included
ments.
Sn•p-On Sun Shteld Ctgaretle
L•ghter Connector Cord Included
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
PlastiCcabmel m Walnut gram f1n1sh
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
p.m. Tuesday. Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Cultural program on sculpture
• •
by Marilyn Swan and Debbie
Flnlaw Beverly Long and
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;._ _ _ _ _ __ , Edwina Scott, hoatesses.

WERNER RADIO &amp;TV
MIDOLfPORT, 0.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-l! p.m.
Maternityvisitinghours2:30to
4' 30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Michael K.
Sergent, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter.
Dlacbargea
Marcus S. Poffenbarger,
Mrs . Earnest McCarty and
son, Maggie L. Jordan, George
o. Davis, Geraldine Bums,
Mrs. ' Hershel Allen Tilynor,
Gloria J. Clonch, John E.
Covert, Stanford W. Cremeans,
Clara Denney Wilma Geer
Elame Gray,' James Han:
Elizabeth Hobstetter James
K. Horton, Ora B. 'Hoschar,
Larry Kendal!, Frances
Payne, Perry A. Riggs, Otto L.
Strauss, Eva M. Wood, Paul
Daniel Council, Lonme Joe
Shinn, Betty L. Bing, Donna J.
Wilson, Rodney Scott Woods,
Christopher S. Hanning, Albert
E. Hawk, Glenna M. Paugh,
Sherry S. Terry and Beth
Louise Morrison.

TO PUN BANQUET
Plans for the basketball
banquet will be made when the
Eastern High School Athletic
Boosters meet at 8 p.m. ThursSQUARE DANCE, Racine
day. Parents and all interested
Legion Hall, 9 to 12 Saturday.
persons are tJrged to attend.
Music by King Korda. Span.
sored by Southern Band
Boosters, George Theiss,
caller.

CLEAN UPSET
A clean up of the Middleport
Hlll and Riverview Cemeteries
will begin Monday, April 3.
Mayor John Zerkle said today
residents wishing to remove
baskets and containers from
SUNDAY
graves should do so by April 3
CHOIR WIIJ. present Don
as such objects left on graves Grant's cantata, "Were You
will be destroyed by mowing There?" at 7:30p.m. Sunday at
during the clean-up.
the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse. Public
welcome.
HYMN SING Sunday 1:30
p.m. Stiversvllle CommWllty
Church. Everyone welcome.
REVIVAL, POMEROY
Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
each evening, Sunday through
March 31, with Fred Albrecht
speaker.
SONGFESI', Sunday, I: 30
p.m. at Tuppers Plains School
with The Revelations Quartet,
Owens Family and Bissell
Messengers as featured
singers.

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, March 24,1972

The Cave Room of The Five
Points Grill was attractively
decorated in keepmg with the
theme of the season for a St.
Patrick's Day party Friday
mght. A sign from the Keck
Distributing Co., with the
greeting, "Happy St. Patrick's
Day," was part of the decor.
A decorated cake, iced in
green, inscribed "Begorra,
'Tis St. Patrick's Day" centered the refreshment table.
Also served were open sandlviches on green bread, cold
cuts, cheeses, crackers, chips
and relishes.
Enjoying the evening were
Mr. andMrs. FioydWeber, Mr.
and Mrs. David Koblentz, Mr.
and Mrs. Philip Werry, Mr.
and Mrs. David Hensler, Mr.

Ob~et·ved

and Mrs. Max Knopp, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Cottrill, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Wmebrenner, Lynn
Mallory, Huck Wagner, Jane
Johnson, Doris Miller, Elmer
Newell, Bill Grueser, Glenn
Hudson, Lou Hemsley, Eileen
Swan, Darlene Justice, Steve
Justice, Larry Well, Gene Ann
James, Ralph Werry, Larry
Lavender, Craig Cottrill, Kay
Dodderer, Joe Proffitt, Roger
Diil~rd, Georgelgarr}s. Larry
Mitch, Russ a W~ll, Greg
Donahue, Bernard Lavalley,
Joe Darriner, Jerry Well,
Sharon Cottrill, JoAnn Crisp,
Buddy Cundiff, and James
Stewart.

i

wooden model illustrating how offer a wid!! range of material
an eclipse of the moon and an for development lri a science
eclipse of the sun appear, a project are matter, energy,
star box with sevetal con-' heat, light, sound, mag. ,
stellationa, models and charts electricity, machines, and
of the eonstellallons, and rockets..satellites.
projects which 4emonstrate or
1be science fair will be open
explain cuases and effects of for viewing by the parenta and
sunspots, solar prominence, teachers at the April PTA
Northern Lights, comets , meeting.
meteors, and metorites.
The earth history division
prov1des classes for fossil
If you care a hoot
collections, display of mineral
collections, plaster of pans about your money,
casts of several tracks with carry
Identifying tnformation,
Arst National ~
dmosaur models tracing on a
\
chart their trigin and exTraveleJS Checks
tinction.
Fourteen classes are included in the metorology
category ranging from a model
weather station to include all
eqmpment, to a demonstration
on Bernoulll 's principle
through construction of a small
airplane or related device.
There are also classes for
presenting the principles of
evaporation and condensation,
the techntques of cloud seeding
and information on water
storage and flood control.
In
the oceanography
category there are classes for
desalinization of ocean water,
development of projects on the
The Atlrons Covnly
value of obtaining food from
Sovl"" &amp; Loan Co.
the sea, constructing ap296 Second St.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
paratus to show the principles
All
Accounf&gt;'
Insured
fo
on which a submarine works,
$20,000
00 by FSLIC.
to mention a few.
Each of the eight categories
of the physical division hsve 15
classes. The categories which

Meigs Co. bdl

~-

~appiness is •••••••••••

MIDDLEPORT PEN ·
TECOSTAL - Third Ave., the
Rev. William Knltlel. paslor.
Ronald Ougan, Sunday school
supl. Classes for all 1 ages ;
evening service, 7.30 p.m.:
Bible sludy, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.. youlh services, Friday,
7 30 P m.
FREEWILL BAPTIST Corner Ash and Plum, Middleporl. Noel Herrman, paslor;
Guy Priddy, Sunday School
.-liupl. Saturdavev!!'lng ~rvlce,
7 P m. Sunday School, 10
.; Sundayevenlngworshlp,
7a .pmm
FIRST BAPTIST of Mid·
dleporl, corner of Sixth and
Palmer )treels, Rev. Charles
Simons,
pa•tor .
Fred
Hoffman, Sunday School
Superlntendenl. Sunday church
schoolfor everyone 9:15 a.m.;
Morning worship 10:15 a.m.;
Evening services, 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday prayer service, 7:30
p.m. Extra youlh activities on
Sunday, 5 p.m., lor all youlh up
lo sixth grade; 6:30 for junior
and senior high students
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Middleport, 5th and Main.
Raulln Moyer, pastor Michael
Gerlach, Sunday School supl.
Bible School, 9:30a.m.; mor·
n1ng worship, 10:30 a.m ;
evening worship, 7:30 p m. ;
prayer service 7 p.m. Wed·
nesday.
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE- Middleport,
Rev. Audry Mil ler, pastor;
Floyd Carson, sup!. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m .; Morning
worship 10:30 a.m., lunlor
society, 6:30p.m.; NYPS, 6: 45
p.m. Sunday evangellsllc
meeltng , 7: 30 p.m. Prayer
meellng Wednesday, 7.30 p.m.

UNITEd MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY, The Umled
Presbyltrian Church, Dwight
L. zavltz, Paslor ·Director :
George w. Hullon and Rev
Linson stebbins, Ass' I PastorDlreclors.
FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN, Harrisonville,
Sunday Church School, 9 30
a.m., Mrs. Homer Lee, Supl ..
Morning WorshiQ 10:30 a.m.
F t RST
UN ITE D
PRESBYTERIAN, Middleport,
Sunday Church School. 9 3D
a .m . Lewis Sauer, Supt . ;
MornlnQ worship, 10·30 a.m
F 1R S T
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse,
Mornln[ Worship, 9 a m ,
Sunday Church School , 10 am.
Mrs. Sampson Hall, Supl.
STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNITY, Rev. Edsel Harl,
pastor . Sunday School service
10 a.m. Prayer Meeting each
Thursday 7:30 p m. Sunday
evening service, 7.30 p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Pomeroy Harrisonville
Road. Kennelh Eberts, pastor.
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School9 3D a.m ..
morning worship and com munlon, 10 30 a.m .; Sunday
evening youth Chrlsllan endeavor. 6: 30; Worship serv1ces,
Sunday, 1· 30 p m. Wednesday
evening prayer meeting and
Bible sludy, 7.30 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN Pine Grove, the Rev Arlhur
Combs. pastor. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m; church services.
10:30 a.m.
~RADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Roy Bill Carfer,
evangelist ; Wilbur Haning,
Bible school sup!; Bible school,
9 30 a.m .. morning worship,
10·30 a.m.; evening worship, 7
p.m ; Christian Workers Class,
Tuesday, 7 p m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting. 7 p.m.

Service, 7. 30 pm , Youlh
meellng 6 30 p.m.; Even ing
worship, 7.30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev. Herbert
Grate, p.&gt;~stor worship service.
11 a.m. and 7.30 p m Sunday.
Sunday School, 9. 30 • m.
POMEROY
,.
Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
POMEROY TRINITY _
ST. PAUL lUTHERAN, _
meellnR. Wednesday, 7·30 P m
W H Pe I
Rev. Arthur c. Lund, ~slor
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
I
R
Rev · · rr n, pas or. or. Sunday School 9 l5 "am·
CHRIST - Cl llford Smith,
Mayer. Supl. Church schooo' Charles Evans, Supt.; worship'
mln1ster Sunday School 9 30
9 1Sa.m.; worshl~ 10: 24 a.m. ; service, 10 , 30 0 m. Conam , mornmg chyrch 10 JO
youlh choir rehea sal Monday, flrmation class Tuesday 4 15
am , Sunday evenmg service,
630p.m.; Mrs. Marvin Burt, lo 5.30 p.m. ; Junlor'con730pm Wednesday servlce. 8
d~reclor;
•enlor
choir 11
p.m.
rehearpsal 1, 7N:30p.md..l Thursday, ~~~~~~~!.ass, Thursday, 6·30
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
M;:oM"e"Ro~~HJi~'ij· OF SEVEN DAY Ab'irENTIST _
METHODIST- Rev . Eugene
Mulberry Height 5 p eroy
Gill , pastor . William Bailey,
•
THE NAZARENE - Corner
om
·
supt Sunday School , 9:30a.m.:
Union and Mulberry. Rev Herber! Morgan , pastor
Morning worship, 10:30 a.m :
Clyde V. Henderson, paslor Sabbalh school.3 15Salurday, 2
Evenmg worship, 7:30 ·p.m .
Sunday School 9. 30 a.m. , P m • worship, · ft.m. Reach
Wednesday , Christian Youth
Raymond Walburn, supt . oul for life mee lngs each
Crusade, 6 30 p.m.; Prayer
Morning worship 10:30 am. Saturday, Tuesda6
and
Thurs·
meellng 7 30 p.m. Thursday,
Evening service 7:30p.m. Mid day evenings, 7·3 ·
choir practice. 7 p.m .
week servlte, Wednesday, 7:30 GRAHAM Ulll TED
DEXTER CHURCH OF
p.m.
METHODIST - Preaching 9·30
CHRIST - Danny Evans,
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev. a.m., f~rst and second Sundays
paslor. Norman C. Will, supt
Stanley Plattenburg, minister. of each monlh, third and fourt~
Sunday School 9· 30 am . .
Morning prayer and sermon, Sundays each monlh, worship
Worship service, 10.30 am
10.30a.m. Holy communion and serviceai7·30p.m Wednesday
Chrlsllan Endeavor Sunday
sermon, first Sundays, 10 3D evenmgs al 7:30. Prayer and
evening .
am . Church school. kin· Bible Study.
'
REORGANIZED CHURCH
dergarten through eighth ' FIRST SOUTHERN BAP·
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATgrade, 10 30 a.m.
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave.,
TER DAY SAINTS- Portland POMEROY CHURCH OF Pomeroy, afflllaled with S.B.C.,
~acme Road. Ralph Johnson,
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr .. the Rev. Fred Hill, paslor.
pastor Herbert While, Sundar.
paslor. Bible School, 9:30a.m .• Sund~y School, 9 30 a.m . •
School Dlreclor. Sunday Schoo ,
worship, 10:30; adult worship !"ornmg worshiR, 10:30 a.m •
9.30 a.m.. Morning worship,
service and young peoples jUnlorsoclely,6:30am. NYPS,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
meellng, both 7:30p.m. Sunday- 6 45 p.m. Sunday evangellsllc
service 7 p.m . Wednesday
evening prayer services, 7 30
Wednesday, combined Bible meeting, 7:30 p.m. Prayer
Sunday
study and prayer meellng, 1 30 meehng Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
pm
• l Ptter
MIDDLEPORT
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST p m.
1.18-25
THE SALVATION ARMYMT. MORIAH BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
Envoy RayS. Wmlng, officer in Corner Fourth and Main.
pastor. Worship service, 9 30
Monday
charge. Sunday, 10 a.m .. , Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
am :Sunday School, 10·30a m
•
Hebrews
Holiness meeting , 10:30 a.m., Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9:30
CARLETON CHURCH 5.5-10
Sunday School. Young People's a.m., Arnold Richards, supt •
Kingsbury Road
Sunday
•
Legion, 7p.m., Thursday, I to 3 Morning wor~hlp 10 3D a.m.
MEIGS
School, 9·30 am ., Ralph Carl,
Tuesday
p m.. Ladles Hon\e League, 7
JEHOVAH S WITNESSESCooPERATIVE
supt Worshtp service, 10 30
• Hebrews
p m., Prep classes
Larry Carnahan presiding
PARISH
a.m and 7 30 p m alternalely
SACRED HEART - Rev. minister Sunday, Bible lecture,
THE UNITED
Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
6:9-20
Falher Bernard Krajcovlc, 9·30 am .• Watchlower study,
METHODIST CHURCH
ANTIQUITY BAPTISt
7 30 p.m. Rev Jay Sllles,
Wednesday
paslor .
Phone
992-2825. 10·30 a.m . ; Tuesday, Bible
Robert R. Card
Rev. Freeland Norris, pastor. pastor.
Salurday evening Mass, 7:30 study, 7·30 p.NJ .; Thursday,
Rev. Stonten Smith
Sundpy school, 10 a.m., church
o L D
D E X T E R
• Htbrtw~
p m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 mlnlslry school 7:30 p.m .,
CHESTER - Worship 9:15 service, 7 p.m. Wednesday CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
7:15-28
The nigh! was dark and calm. All creatures were silent and loaves
am Confessions Saturday 7. serv1ce meeting 8:30p.m.
a.m.; Church School 10 am .
Bible study, 7 p.m .
- R,v. Willard Dutcher ,
stood still as a lone man knell in a garden called Gelhsen~ane and
7.30. p m
'
'
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of ENTERPRISE- Worship, 9
BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE, paslor . Mrs Worley Francis,
Thursday
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Christ in Christian Union - a.m. ; Church School, 10 a.m. Minersville, J A. McWaters, Sunday School Supl. Sunday
prayed, "Not as I will, but as Thou will "
• Hebrews
- Robert Kuhn, paslor; William Lawrence Manley, pastor: Mrs.
FLATWOODS - Worship, 11 pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m . School , 9:45 a.m. Church Ser9:1/-15
Around Him Jesus' disciples lay sleeping. Soon He knew would come
Watson, Sunday school supt. Russell Young, Sunday School am.; Church School 10 a.m.
morning worship , 11 a.m. . v1ces first and lhlrd Sundays
Sundayschool,9·30am : BYF, Sup!. Sunday School 9:30a.m .; POMEROY-Worship, 10:30 Training Union , 6:30p.m .. following Sunday School.
Friday
betrayal, public condemnation and deri~on ... and lhe long last march.
6 p.m ., Bible study, Wed· Evening worship 7 30 Wed- am ; Church School 9· 1S am ., evening worship. 7 30 p.m Second and fourth Salurday
• Hebrews
And yet He prayed, "Thy will be done."
nesday, 7 p.m.; choir pracllce. nesday prayer meeting, 7 3D UMYF 6·30 p.m.
Prayer meelmg, Wednesday, evenings, 8 p m services.
12.1-10
Wednesday, 8·30 p.m.
P m.
ROCK SPRINGS- Worship 7 3D p.m .
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
In the shadow of the Cross Jesus demonstroled perfect love and trust
10 a.m ; Church School 9 am ,
RACINE FIRST CHURCH - Mr. Rober! Wyatf, pas lor,
Saturday
for
God, His Falher. In the hours ahead He would establish His Sonship
UMYF 6 3D p.m .
OF THE NAZARENE - Sunday School supt , Ronald
• Hebrtws
lor lhe alanement of all mankind.
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Sunday School , 9. 30 a.m., Osborne. Bible School, 9:30
13.10-16
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
Morning Worship. 10:30 am ; a.m .• preaching 10:45 a.m. ,
And so lodoy, in a world !hat needs this message of hope, let us
HEATH - Worship 10:30 Evening worsh1p, 7·30 p.m . Evening services, 7·30 p m
a.m.; Church School 9:30a.m; Wednesday , Sunday School
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
commemorale that first Good Frtday by acknowledging God as our
UMYF 7 p.m
Superintendent, Pauline Me- METHODIST - Cecil Wise,
Father, helping our churches to illus1rate His way Ia the hungry, lhe sick,
RUTLAND - Worship 9:15 Cilntock, pas lor. Rev Morris Pas lor. Sunday School. 9:30
and tho needy.
a.m. ; Church School 10 a m ; M. Wolfe.
am. , Morning worship, 10· JO
UMYF 7 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST - a.m. , Young People's service.
S&lt; rlplurtl W!lkted by
SALEM CENTER- Worship Charles Noms, paslor Sunday 6 45 p m.• Evangelistic serv1ce,
9a.m. , Church School10a.m; School, 9.30 a.m ., Morning 7·30 p m. Prayer meehng,
I ~ Amerk&lt;~n Blblt Society
UMYF Thursday, 7 p.m.
worship, 10·45 a.m.: Sunday Thursday, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
evenmg warship, 7 ~0 p m. ,
FREEDOM GOSPEL
Rev.
Forrest
R.
Donley
Wednesday
evenmg
Bible
MISSIONBald Knobs, Rev
By Rev. Robert W. Kuhn
at home.
ASBURY- Worship 11 a.m , Study, 7:30 p.m
L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor.
Flnl Baptlsl Church
These church groups will Church School 9:50a.m.. WSCS,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN. Roger W11fred, Sr, Sunda~
to lsi Tuesday
Rev. Lawrence . Sullivan, School Supt. Sunday School,
Pomeroy
the will help
Y
you
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 pastor Sunday School 9 JO 9 30 a.m., Sunday evening
There are all k1nda of groups upUftyou,
be your best, because you will a.m.; Church School 10 a.m. ; a.m., youlh and junior youlh worsh1p 7 30 Prayer meellng,
springing up over the country be a part of a fellowship that is WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 service, 6015 p.m .; evening Tuesday, 1· 30 p m. Ernesl
Wrtn the hope It will, in some measure , foster and help sustam that wllt.ch ts
tQ help lonely people meet
kin to be tru to th ir high p.m
worship, 7 30 p m.; prayer and Deeler, class leader Youth
see
g
e
e
MINERSVILLE
Worship
praise,
Wednesday.
7:30p.m.
Meeting
Wednesday,
7·30
p
m.
good
in family and community life. th is feature is sponsored by the busmess
congenial friends and com· ideals and purposes.
10 a.m.. Church School 9 a.m. ;
SILVER RUN FREE BAP- Ernest Deeter, leader.
panlons. Everyday we read
Therelsmore.Thlskindofa WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7:30p.m. TIST - Rev Howard Kimble,
MT. HERMON UNITED firms and organizations whose names appear below .
about them in the newspapers fellowship will be spiritually SYRACUSE - Worship, 8 pastor. Sunday schocl 1 10 a.m .: BRETHREN CHURCH IN
a.m.; Church School , 9 a.m ; Henr~ Davis1 supt.: even!~~ .., CHRIST - Rev. Rober! Shook,
will ho
an4 magalilles.~"""- ·
. ....
.,{!
enriching. The group
'"'~'
a .• Prayer alid'"IB!ble · Study. '"serv jce, ' 7··~o 'p.m.1' 'Pia'Y..~ P.slor,, ..sunda~ t, Sohool .,;·9 30
'
. 'J
'·'·
I
This rapid development of loving fellowablp of believers Wednesday, Q:IJII p.m .
meellng, Thurday, 7·30 p m ' am : Roy Pooler. supt; Alfred
I
'
.
organizations directed to the in &lt;hrist You will be enSOUTHERN CLUSTER
CHESTER CHURCH OF Wolle, asst. supt, morning
·
Rev. W. Dole McClurg
GOD-Rev. James Satterfield, worship, 11 a.m .; evening
interests of lonely people incouraged to become a fellow
Rev. FrA~k Chetubrew
paslor Sunday school , 9·30 sermon, 7·30 p.m , allernatlnQ I
dicates there must be a learner with them. Members
Rev. Mltr!H• Ann MaHner
a m ; worship service, 11 a.m. : each Sunday. Class meeting 11
Keepsake Diamond Rings
Phone 992 3481
nwnber of lonely j,eople 11bese will help you to share a faith in
BETHANY (Dorcas)
evening service, 7; prayer a.m. allernatmg ~unday
N. Second•Ave.
312
E.
Main
St
.
Pomeroy,
0
t
a
Saviour
and
Worship,
9.30
a.m.;
Church
service
and
youth
service,
mornings
Alfred
Wolfe,
Chris
Middleport. 0 .
people who feel alone and in J
esus
s
School 10·30 am .
Thursday, 7 p.m.
layleader ; Christian Endeavor.
need
of
friends
are Lord.
CARMEL - Worship, 11
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN 7.30 p.m Sunday Roger
ALL WEATHER ROOFING
everywhere. Are you one of
There is nothing to compare a.m .. tst nnd 3rd Sundays; - Homer Slerhens, pastor Buckley ,J.res1den1 Prayer
and CONSTRUCTION CO.
them? Do you hunger for with a fellowship like that. This c~f.'i!'Lic~~~J~ ".:"worship, ~uo~~r,ro ~~~~~ f,, % 3 ~ ~··~·: ~;::~ng;,ee'll'~:s~rr~·, 7 '(t,~il~r
D. B. A. ANTHONY
friendship and fellowship? Are Is the reason groups outside the 7 30 p m. ; church school, 9:30 Robert Boba, Sunday school each monlh, 1 30 p m. _ __
PLUMBING AND HEATING
you interested in easy ways to church as desirable as they a m.; mid-week service, sup!. ; Sunday evening service.
RUTLAND
Phone 992-3284
992 2550
7 30. Youth meeting, Monday, 7 RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
Middleport
become acquainted with may ~ cannot help you like Wednesday, 8 P m.
•
EAST
LETART
Worship,
p.m.
Mld·week
service.
WedRev
Samuel
Jackson
,
Middl
epo
rt
240
Li
nco
In
St.
groups of Individuals In your the groups within the church. lDa .m , first and lhlrd Sundays ; nesday, 7· 30 p m.
pas lor Sunday School, 10 am .
community whose association · This is the reason wby you will 9 a.m., second and fourth
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Mrs Gertrude Butter, supl
forever be lonely untll you Sundays; church school, 9 a.m., THE NAZARENE- Rev. M. C. Prayer Servtce, t 30 p m. ,
you would greatly enjoy?
flrsland third Sundays ; 10 a.m , Larimore, pastor Bob Ml&gt;Ore, preaching serv1ce, 2 p.m.
H so, there Is rich fellowablp beIong to a chur ch fellowablp · second
and fourlh Sundays. Sunday School .Supt. Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
at your finger tips, and not In a
Bakers of Good Bread
Go to church! Ask the pastor, Mid-week service, Wednesday, School, classes lor all ages, 9:30 CHRIST- Sunday school, 9 30
Middle port, Ohio
"Lonely Heart Club," but in or a member to put you in 8 p.m.
a.m. ; morning worship, 10·45. am.. V. H. Braley, supt
Huntington , W. Va .
GREAT
BENDWorship
11
NYPS
Sunday,
6·
30
p.m
,
communion
and
devollons
the fellowship, study and touch with a group of your a.m., 2nd and 4th Sundays ; evangellsllc service Sunday, 10 30 a.m. Regular board•
service groups within the choice. Become a part of the Church School, 10 am.
7:30 p.m. Mid-week prayer meellng 7:30, lh~rd Salurday
LETART FALLS - Worship meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m. each month
.
church near you. And, this moat wonderful fellowship in
10
a.m.;
Church
School
9
a.m.
Missionary
meeting
,
second
THE
RUTLAND
COM
Sales · Allis Chalmers - Service
fellowship may be yours jus.t the world·
MORNING STAR- Worship Wednesdav. 7 30om
· MUNITY CHURCH - Rev for the asking.
'
Farm Industr ia l-Lawn -Garde n
Don't live a onely life!
9:30a.m.; Church School 10:30
UNITED FAITH NON- Richard Dubbeld, pas lor
Middleport, Ohio
Actually, unless you belong
"Forsakenottheasaembtlng a.m . ; Mid -Week Service, DENOMINATIONAL - Rev. School. 9·30 a.m.; Worship
Tupper s Pla1ns
667-3435
th
Wednesday,
8,p.m.
Robert
Smith,
pastor
Sunday
service,
11
a.m
.;
Wednesday
tog the
I
to a church group, you are of
yourse ves
e r a.~ e
MORSE CHAPEL- Worship school, 9:30a.m.; _Bob Barber, prayer meellng , 7: 30 p.m
lonely. You may be ever so manner of some Is. - 11 a.m., lsi and 3rd Sundays; supt.; worship service, 10·30 Sunday night worship, 7:30.
active in this club, or that Hebrews 10:25.
€hurch School, 10 a.m.
a .m : youth meeting , 6:45
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Pomeroy
Athens t&lt;oao
0
lodge, but untll you share in a
Go to church this SWJday! P ~ ,RlhLu~~hD Sch!f':,h~ : .::, ~r~y~r c.:;:~~~;,. 7~~n~il'::;.' ~~~:d ~.A~~~~~~ ~r.:-pa~~~
Th e Store w1th A Heart
A Family That Worships Together
church-group fellowship, yours Especially at this time of the
SUTTON- Worship, 11 a.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN Sunday School , 9 30 am
Ra c ine
949-3342
Stays Together
Ia a lonely life. Something Is year, the Lenten Season. 2nd and 4th Sundays; Church IN CHRIST-Eldon R Blake, Morning worship, 10:30 am . •
•
lacking. Take a long look at Bebold now is the day of sc~~~(0E~~N IRaclnel
~~~t~f.;
s~~~~Xg~~~~~P\~a,;:;;'
~.~n?
tv'~~e~f
s~;v~~~~~~~~
what is yours for the asking salvation near. Try it, and give Worship, 11 a.m.; Church nlng sermon, 11 a.m .; Even1ng 7 30 p m Wednesday even in '
g
and seeking.
It your best.
School , 10 a.m.
service Christian Endeavor, service 7:30 p.m
Bakers of Holsum Bread
There is no need to be lonely!
UMYF for all churches oflhe 7:30pm.; Mrs. Lyda Chevalier,
Oh1o's Oldest Dodge Denier
There are many kinds of
Soulhern
Cluster.
7·30
p.m.
president.
Song
service
and
MASON
COUNTY
Middleport.
Oh
io
Mtcld leport. 0
groups with the fellowship of &lt; •
each Sunday at the Youlh sermon, 8:20 Mid-Week prayer
THE HILAND CHAPEL
the church. There are different
Cenler IOak Grove Road.)
meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m. George Caslo, paslor. Sunda y•
.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Mrs Marie Hols10ger, class School, 9·30; evening worship •
age groups and almost every
Rev. Jacob Lehman
leader
7:30 Thursday evening praye r
killd of interest group you
Member of the Big 3
Rev.
StAndley
Brondum
POMEROY
LOWER
~IGHT
service.
7:30p.m.
1 Classified Ads
would want.
JOPPAWorship
10
a.m.
;
CHURCH
Harrisonville
•
MASON
FIRST
BAPTIST
General
Merchandise
I
l Church School 9 a.m.. Prayer Road, Rev. Roy Taylor, pastor , Second and Pomeroy Sis , Sla
The welcome you will I
Chest er . Ohio
n
Tuppers Plains
I Meeting, Wednesday, 8 p.m.
667-3280
Henry
Eblin,
Sunday
School
Craig,
paslor
Sunday
schoo
I,
receive in these groups will be 1
bring you
1 LONG BOTTOM - Church &gt;upt. ~UQday ~chool , 9:30a.m., 9 45 a.m., worship service, 11
friendly. You wiU feel wanted,
services, 9 a.m.; Sunday School evening worship. 7 30 p.m am , !raining union, 6.30 p.m ;
extra cash
9.45 am , Bible study every Prayer and praiSe service, evening worship service, 7 30
secure and at ease because of
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
p.m Mid week prayer servlc e.
for
I Thursday, 7:30p.m.
the personal interest in you. I
NORTH BETHEL - Worship
COMMUNITY CHURCH, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
I
I
You will find yourself soon I shopping spraas
m, Church School 10a.m. Dexler - Worship services
CHRISTIAN
SCIENC E
Pomeroy- Membe r 1- . D I C &amp;
Fam1ly Rec reat1o n
1 11a
drawn into the activities of the I
ALFREDSunday
school.
Salurday
and
Sunday
,
7·
30
Services
al
315
Main
St
,
P
t.
I
I
Federal
Rese
rv
e
Syst
em
Sw1ntm ing
9· 45 a.m each Sunday. ' p.m.
Pleasanl, Sunday School 9' 15
group and readlly made to feel
preaChing at 11 a.m. each
HEMLOCK
GROVE am Sundays, 11 a.m., We dMeiq, Coun ty Branch
Sunday . Prayer meeting, 7:45 CHRISTIAN- David ~tautter, nesday, lestlmonlal meeling 8
p m Wednesday ; WSCS, 8 P m. paslor; Stanford Stockton, supt . p.m All welcome. '
on lhlrd Tuesday each month. Morning worship, 9 30 am. ;
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CH\JRC H
Rexall Drugs
REEDSVILLE - Sunday church school, 10:30 am., - Letart Route 1, the Rev Sta n
school, 9.30; preaching, 7.30 young peoples meetmg, 6:30 Craig, pastor . Sunday schoo I, We Fi II All Doctors Prescriptions
HIGHLIGHTS
p.m. Sunday; prayer meellng, p.m. ; evening worship, 7:30. 9 30 am ., prayer and Bib le
Pomeruy
Pomeroy
296WS econo
r'h. 992 386~
7:30pm. Tuesday ; WSCS, 7•30 Blble,»"dy , Wednesday, 7:30 sludy, 7 30 p.m. Collage pray er 992 -2955
with Paul Crabtree
p m.
service , Tuesday , 10 a m ;
first Thursday each monlh .
SILVER
RIDGE
Worship,
MT.
UNION
BAPTIST
worship
service. Friday, 7 30
CALL POINTVIEW : 997-2505
10 am.; Church School, 9 am. Rev Cecil Cox, pastor Sunday p.m.
and
TUPPERS
PLAINS
school supl., Joe Sayre. Sunday
MASON
CHURCH 0 F
Okay, all you basketball deflnllely ls 1nol In the "me
Worship9a.m.; Church School school , 9 · 45 a.m.: Sunday CHRIST - Loren T. Stephen s.
Elecln c Motor Re pa1r
I.
fans
oul
there
In league as "The Ten Com 10 a.m.
__
evening worship, 7 30 Wed- min Isler Worship, 10 a m
St
Rl.
7
Chesler
Ohto
mandments"
or
the
recentlyBlO
W.
Main
992-'5750
Buckeyeland - the big
KEN&lt;rti!URCH OF CHRIST, nesday prayer and Bible sludy, Bible st'{dy, 11 15 am ., event
Choose lhe Church ol Your Cho1 ce
momenl ' Is finally here Ill seen "Ben Hur." Even so,
Hobarl
Newell, supt. Services 7:30pm
worship. 7.30 p.m . Mtd·we~e
ll's
a
fairly
good
film
,
and
Is
Channel 4 begins three hours
weekly, 9:30 a.m. on Sunday.
TUPPERS
PLAINS service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
of lelecasllng of the Ohio lhe Ch. 10 prime-time event
Preaching
firs
I
and
lhlrd
CHRISTIAN
Mr.
John
Wyatl,
MASON ASSEMBLY 0 F
'
high school tournament lonlghl at 8 p. m.
Sundays of month by Clifford pastor: J. S Davis, Sundar. GOD - Second Sl., Mason, w
finals from Columbus this
Stnllh, 9:30a.m.
School supl , Sunday schoo. Va. Chesler Tennant, pastor
Building Supplies and Mill work
Can private enterr.rlse run
evening at 9. The acllon will
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
9 30 a.m., Morning Sermon. Sunday school, 10 a.m ; mora
betler
school
sys
em
lhan
conllnue tomorrow In thiS
General Contracting
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll, 10·30 am Evening sermon, 7 nlng worship, 11 a m
Pomeroy. 0 .
momenl of lrulh for round- !he government can? E~en If
E . Main St .
paslor
Sunday
School
,
9
30
p.m.
evangellsllc
service,
7
30
p
Ph . 992-3978
m.
ll's a black school? A pier·
ball addlcls.
a.m.. Leonard Gilmore, flrsl
LETART FALLS UNITED Bible study and prayer servl ce,
c1ng look at an experiment In
elder
,
evening
service,
7.30
BRETHREN
- Rev. Robert Wednesday, 7·30 p m. Phone
A1925 film classic Is about this field shows up on " Black
p.m. Wednesday prayer Shook, paslor. Herschel Norris, 77J.S133
•
lhe last thlrig you'd ex peel lo Journal.'' Ch. 9, 10 p. m.
meellng, 7 30 p.m.
supl. Sunday school, 9 30 am .,
HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
"""'""at
Hardware
and
see on public- TV, bul crlllcs
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF mofnlng sermon, 10 30 am , CHRIST In Christian Union Paint-Plumbing &amp; Electrical SupOTHER MOVIES· " Has
are high In praise of
GOD
Racine
Route
2
The
evening
sermon,
7:30
alter·
Rev.
O'
Dell
Manley,past
or
Anybody
Seen
My
Gal?"
plies
"Potemkln," a silent
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor. nallng each Sunday Prayer Sunday school , 9 30a m , Rag er
Russian 111m about lhe Imy answer would be "Yes.
Sunday
school, 9: 45 a.m ; ' serv1ce. Wednesday, 7 30 p m. Manley, supl, evening servl ce,
t&lt;acme, Ohio
667-396:f
Ph 949 3771 Tuppers P la ins
abortive 1905 revolullon aboul twenly times too many
morning worship, 11 a m. Prayer mee tmg, 7· 30 p.m. 7 30 Wednesday even ln g
agalnsl lhe Czar. ll's on In reruns "l ll's at 4 p.m. on
Evening services, Thuesday allernallng Sundays.
prayer meeltng , 7:30 p.m
•
"Film Odyssey" on Ch. 11 at Ch '10 which shows lwo
and
Friday,
7·30.
CHESHIRE
CHURCH
OF
Sunday
evening youlh servIce
horror
Immortals
on
lis
8·30 p m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE GOD OF PROPHECY, G. P 6 45 wllh Macy t ou Car ler,
doublE fealure starlln9 al
CHURCH
OF CHRIST- David Sml lh, pastor Sunday School , leader No Tuesday serv1ce
A Biblical !heme seems to 11· 30 Lon Chaney In
Jewell , pastor. Blblestudy, 9 30 10 am 1 Arthur Henson, Supt,
CHRISTIAN
SCI EN CE
" We ~ponsor Jesus" .
!Insure a good movie, but "Oevll's Messe~ger" and
'm ; morning worship, 10· 30 : Morning Worship 11 am . Serv1ces, 3t5 Main Sl., Pt.
Devote d to the inte r est of the Me1g s·
Karloff
In
"Black
Casile."
Rev
. Stan Craig , Pastor
"King ot Klng1.'' wllh Jef·
evening worship, 6 30 p m. Young Pooples service, 7 p m . Pleasant Sunday serv1ces, 11
Mason
a
r
ea
frey Hunl•r a Chrlsl,
Wednesday Bible sludy, 7 30 Eveni11g service, 7:30 p m . am Wednesday TeSi tmon Ia!
I

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�•

S- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday. Mlii'Cb 24, 19'12

•

April Sciertce Fair Set

Girl Scout
By
Diary
Church Windows
Cbarlene Hoej/tcb

992-5292

A science fair under the classes for terrarlwns, plant
direction of Mrs. Mary Hysell germination, evolution of fern,
will be staged at the Pomeroy model showing cells, cross, Elementary School on Aprti!O sections of dHferent types of
In conjunction with the wooda, and various others~
Pomeroy PTA meeting.
Models of the brain, the heart,
The niles for the fair specify the ear, bone and muscle
'Ibis week members of Racine Troop 137 completed a
thjlt
every eJhlblt must be structure, jawbone and teelh,
ceramlct course under the direction of Mrs. Allee MillB in
Middleport. 1be girls made bud vuee and miniature pltcbers. developed and made by the and dl8grams depleting the
In the gro~ were Becky Crow, Pear Nelgler, Lillla Fisher, puplls in the clauroom as far respiratory, clrculatory and
Joy Nelgler, Lori Knlgbtlng, Cmnle KnJ&amp;bting, Sheryl Teaford, as is possible. E:rceptlons digestive systeins, a study of
Sonja Hlll, Mary Beth Obetz, Teresa Ervin, Cindy Warden, and pertain to animals which will longevity, diseases and
be exhibited. Cages and elements of the system are the
·Kathy frOBS.
1be girls are saving bottle caps to be redeemed by ROyal aquarlwns for safety in con- classes in the hwnan body
Crown BottlinG Co. in Middleport sa a special fund raising taining tbe exhibits may be category.
In the category for conproject for a summer trip. Plana are currently being made for purchased or made at home.
Mrs.
Hysell
recommends
the
servation
there are classes for
the scouts to visit Ohio University.
use of plaster of paris, paper practices preventing erosion to
MIDDLEPORT GIRL SCOur TROOP 31
mache, wire paper, cardboard, soil, the effects of ground cover
To mark the first day of aprlng and in observance of Earth or other material for the
and how 1t is used in farmln,
Day, members of the Middleport Troop 39 collected Utter in the models, but emphasizes that no scale _ model farm replicas,
Middleport buslnesa district.
entries made from assembled display on water pollution,
Before going out on the litter project, the girls met at Heath commercial kits will be per- charts showing depletion rates
Methodist Clurch for a scout own on the theme of America. mitted.
of our forests, and several
Presenting the state of Wyoming were Tr1na Gibbs, Jennifer
1bere is no limit on the others.
Wise and Jonl Murray. Original poems and drawings about the nwnber of entries each student
Eleven classes are featured
state were presented. Valerie Lewis, Am Fltcb and Pam Powers may make, and all entries will in
the m1cro-orgamsm
sang the Tennesaee Waltz, and Patty Boyles, Martha Krawsczyn be judged on worth of the in- category . These include
and Velvet SWisher did songs of Ohio including "Ohio Homeland" vidlaul entry, and not on a growing various types of molds
and "Stand Up You're an American". Narrator for the program competitive basis. Each en- on bread, etc. and identifying
was JudY Gilkey.
trant will receive a ribbon. the medical use, 1! any, identify
There will be no cash prizes. several of the common
GIRL scour TROOP Zf7
The fair will he divided into diseases of man and present
A sewing project has been started by girls of Troop 247. 1be
three
divisions with several information on the cause, cure,
girls prepared their own sewing kits and are working on individual sewing projects now but later will be making tote bags. categories in each division. and methods of control or
All of the Girls recently completed the health aid badge. This The divisions are Hfe, earth elimination, prepared charts
labeling the parts of the hwnan
included first aid Instruction and preparing first aid kits. Linda and physical.•
In the Hfe division there are cell, and develop a project
Rosenbawn has completed a sewing badge, Susan Zirkle, J81Dle
categories
of animals, plants, wh1ch demonstrates the
Sisson, Unda Reedy and Marla Legar have earned collectors'
body,
micro- process of finger prmting, or
badges, and Sheryl Lefebre has earned the pen pal and human
organisms,
and
conservation.
one on osmosis.
housekeepers badge.
In the earth division of the
1be scouts will give the pledge at the April 10 meeting. 1be The fourteen classes m the
animal division include insect science fair there are four
troop now meets at the Pomeroy Elementary School instead of
collections, skeletal systems, categories:
astronomy,
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
nutrition, animal models and meteorology, earth history,
charts on their envirorunent, and oceanography. There are
survival techniques, and the classes m the astronomy
life cycle.
category for the construction of
The plant category has a sun dial, a cardboard or

Charlene Hoeflich

To Be Repaired
Contributions to Church
Council for the project of
repa1rmg and safeguarding the
sanctuary windows of Trinity
Church were planned when
Friendly Circle met Tuesday
evenmg at the church.
A lily wiU be placed m the
sanctuary for the Easter
services and later will be taken
to a shut-m member of the
congregabon.
Miss Elizabeth Fick prestded
at the business meeting when
the secretary and treasurer
reports were given by Mrs.
Leonard Jewell and Mrs. Elza
Gilmore.
Mrs. James Fugate was
welcomed after an absence
following her husband's injury
Mrs. Thomas Young presented
the program "Church Women
Work in the Commumty."
Avenues of community service
m Clvtc and cultural groups
were discussed in the light of
Christ's words to His
followers: "Ye are the salt of
the earth and the light of the
world."
Related scripture, Matthew
~. 13-!6, was read by Miss Mary
V. Reibel. Mrs. Pearl Mora
gave the offertory prayer.
Members ' comments on
questions for discussion
followed. A poem just for today

Her time is
precious.
Her timepiece
must be
trustworthy.

(~
..fir.

Her choice?
A Caravella.
of course.
Whelher she's l1m1n1 your pulse or
the baby's feedJnf, mry second
counls And Caravello has the
w1tcb she Clll count on 1\ spec11l
nurse's modtl named the "Ralk:liK
8". Water resistonl, shock resistIn!, It h11 17 towels, 1 sweep sec·
ond h1nd, full numeral luminous
dill, sta~nless steel back me And
1 pnct!CII Pllct.

$1595

CARAVELLE ®
by BULOVA

and prayer by Mrs. YoWJg
completed the program hour.
A hand..sewn chicken made
by Miss Reibel with colored
eggs was featured on the
refreshment table for the
dessert course served by Miss
Mary E. Chapman and Mrs.
Phil Up Globokar.

Contest is
Underway
A cancer crusade poster
con test is underway in the
grades one through six of the
Meigs Local School District
schools.
A volunteer project, the
posters are to · be approximately 12 by 18 inches
containing any material the
students select The poster,
according to the rules, is to be
done by the child but parents or
teachers can help w1th
suggestions.
Each teacher ts responsible
for having the posters in her
classroom judged, either by an
outside person or another
teacher. Three wmning posters
will be selected from each
room. 1be selection is to be
completed and the winning
entries turned over to Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis, chslrman of the poster contest, by
March 31.
All posters chosen will be on
display at the Cancer Crusade
Sunday hsppenmg at Me1gs
High School on April 9. Each
child whose poster Is selected
will receive a certificate of
merit from the Cancer Society.
There wiU be no cash prizes.
The certificates will be
presented at the April 9
"happemng." If the child
cannot be present then his
certificate Will be sent to the
school.

PARTY GIVEN
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Billy Jo
Krawsczyn, Middleport, and
Mrs. Jamce Lawson, local,
were hosts to a jewelry party at
the Daughters of Amenca
Lodge hall Friday evening.
Attending were Mildred
Pierce, Thelma Grueser, Jean
Hall, Margaret CottriU, Karyn
Davis , Sharon Cottrill,
Jeanette Dully, Adrienne
Hubbard, Charlotte Nease,
Beatrice Blake, Tina Pierce,
David Lawson, Marvin and
Brenda Teaford.

I Soc~i~i__, . HOSPITAL
NEWS
St.
Patrick
's
Day
ICalendar

FRIDAY
REVIVAL, Clifton United
Methodist Chut·ch, Friday
through Sunday, 7:30p.m. with
Dr Connie Dickens, dlstrtct
superintendent, speaker.
DANCE, Wahama High
School 8 to 11 p.m. Jays will
emcee. Scl!ool sponsored.
PANCAKE SUPPER Friday
5 to 8 p.m. SaleJ_D Center
School. Adults $1, children 50c.
Pancakes, sall,!&amp;ge and eggs . .
SATURDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
F&amp;AM Saturday 7:30p.m. at
hsll in Chester, Inspection and
work In E.A. degree. AU
Master Masons mvited.
TUPPERS PLAINS Communlty Women's Club wiU
sponsor a public spaghetti
supper, Saturday, at Tuppers
Plains School servmg to start
at 4 p.m.
TEEN DANCE, Saturday,
8:3().11 p.m. at Middleport
Junior High School, mUSic by
Foxx, sponaored by Meigs
Chapter VICA Club.
REACH OUT for Hfe service,
7:30 p.m. Saturday, Adventist
Church, Pomeroy . Topic,
"Christianity's Great HangUp! "

MOTOROLA

,([5)

ESCORT PERSONAL PORTABLE
BLACK &amp; WHITE • • T.V.

TUESDAY
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter OES, Tuesday evening
home of Mrs. 1boma• Young,
W. Main St.
REACH OUT for life service,
Pomeroy Adventist Church,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday . Topic,
"Love-How to Have the
9" PICture (measured d~ag o n a lly )
Genuine'' .
Motorola Escort Personal Portable
RACINE POST, American
Black &amp; While TV lnSiant P.clure/
Legion Ladies Auxiliary
Sound Soltd State ChasSis Plays
meeting,
7:30p.m. Tuesday at
on AC current- Plays on Batte11es
post home. PoUuck refresh·
(optional extra) Earphone Included
ments.
Sn•p-On Sun Shteld Ctgaretle
L•ghter Connector Cord Included
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
PlastiCcabmel m Walnut gram f1n1sh
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
p.m. Tuesday. Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Cultural program on sculpture
• •
by Marilyn Swan and Debbie
Flnlaw Beverly Long and
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;._ _ _ _ _ __ , Edwina Scott, hoatesses.

WERNER RADIO &amp;TV
MIDOLfPORT, 0.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-l! p.m.
Maternityvisitinghours2:30to
4' 30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Michael K.
Sergent, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter.
Dlacbargea
Marcus S. Poffenbarger,
Mrs . Earnest McCarty and
son, Maggie L. Jordan, George
o. Davis, Geraldine Bums,
Mrs. ' Hershel Allen Tilynor,
Gloria J. Clonch, John E.
Covert, Stanford W. Cremeans,
Clara Denney Wilma Geer
Elame Gray,' James Han:
Elizabeth Hobstetter James
K. Horton, Ora B. 'Hoschar,
Larry Kendal!, Frances
Payne, Perry A. Riggs, Otto L.
Strauss, Eva M. Wood, Paul
Daniel Council, Lonme Joe
Shinn, Betty L. Bing, Donna J.
Wilson, Rodney Scott Woods,
Christopher S. Hanning, Albert
E. Hawk, Glenna M. Paugh,
Sherry S. Terry and Beth
Louise Morrison.

TO PUN BANQUET
Plans for the basketball
banquet will be made when the
Eastern High School Athletic
Boosters meet at 8 p.m. ThursSQUARE DANCE, Racine
day. Parents and all interested
Legion Hall, 9 to 12 Saturday.
persons are tJrged to attend.
Music by King Korda. Span.
sored by Southern Band
Boosters, George Theiss,
caller.

CLEAN UPSET
A clean up of the Middleport
Hlll and Riverview Cemeteries
will begin Monday, April 3.
Mayor John Zerkle said today
residents wishing to remove
baskets and containers from
SUNDAY
graves should do so by April 3
CHOIR WIIJ. present Don
as such objects left on graves Grant's cantata, "Were You
will be destroyed by mowing There?" at 7:30p.m. Sunday at
during the clean-up.
the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse. Public
welcome.
HYMN SING Sunday 1:30
p.m. Stiversvllle CommWllty
Church. Everyone welcome.
REVIVAL, POMEROY
Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
each evening, Sunday through
March 31, with Fred Albrecht
speaker.
SONGFESI', Sunday, I: 30
p.m. at Tuppers Plains School
with The Revelations Quartet,
Owens Family and Bissell
Messengers as featured
singers.

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, March 24,1972

The Cave Room of The Five
Points Grill was attractively
decorated in keepmg with the
theme of the season for a St.
Patrick's Day party Friday
mght. A sign from the Keck
Distributing Co., with the
greeting, "Happy St. Patrick's
Day," was part of the decor.
A decorated cake, iced in
green, inscribed "Begorra,
'Tis St. Patrick's Day" centered the refreshment table.
Also served were open sandlviches on green bread, cold
cuts, cheeses, crackers, chips
and relishes.
Enjoying the evening were
Mr. andMrs. FioydWeber, Mr.
and Mrs. David Koblentz, Mr.
and Mrs. Philip Werry, Mr.
and Mrs. David Hensler, Mr.

Ob~et·ved

and Mrs. Max Knopp, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Cottrill, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Wmebrenner, Lynn
Mallory, Huck Wagner, Jane
Johnson, Doris Miller, Elmer
Newell, Bill Grueser, Glenn
Hudson, Lou Hemsley, Eileen
Swan, Darlene Justice, Steve
Justice, Larry Well, Gene Ann
James, Ralph Werry, Larry
Lavender, Craig Cottrill, Kay
Dodderer, Joe Proffitt, Roger
Diil~rd, Georgelgarr}s. Larry
Mitch, Russ a W~ll, Greg
Donahue, Bernard Lavalley,
Joe Darriner, Jerry Well,
Sharon Cottrill, JoAnn Crisp,
Buddy Cundiff, and James
Stewart.

i

wooden model illustrating how offer a wid!! range of material
an eclipse of the moon and an for development lri a science
eclipse of the sun appear, a project are matter, energy,
star box with sevetal con-' heat, light, sound, mag. ,
stellationa, models and charts electricity, machines, and
of the eonstellallons, and rockets..satellites.
projects which 4emonstrate or
1be science fair will be open
explain cuases and effects of for viewing by the parenta and
sunspots, solar prominence, teachers at the April PTA
Northern Lights, comets , meeting.
meteors, and metorites.
The earth history division
prov1des classes for fossil
If you care a hoot
collections, display of mineral
collections, plaster of pans about your money,
casts of several tracks with carry
Identifying tnformation,
Arst National ~
dmosaur models tracing on a
\
chart their trigin and exTraveleJS Checks
tinction.
Fourteen classes are included in the metorology
category ranging from a model
weather station to include all
eqmpment, to a demonstration
on Bernoulll 's principle
through construction of a small
airplane or related device.
There are also classes for
presenting the principles of
evaporation and condensation,
the techntques of cloud seeding
and information on water
storage and flood control.
In
the oceanography
category there are classes for
desalinization of ocean water,
development of projects on the
The Atlrons Covnly
value of obtaining food from
Sovl"" &amp; Loan Co.
the sea, constructing ap296 Second St.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
paratus to show the principles
All
Accounf&gt;'
Insured
fo
on which a submarine works,
$20,000
00 by FSLIC.
to mention a few.
Each of the eight categories
of the physical division hsve 15
classes. The categories which

Meigs Co. bdl

~-

~appiness is •••••••••••

MIDDLEPORT PEN ·
TECOSTAL - Third Ave., the
Rev. William Knltlel. paslor.
Ronald Ougan, Sunday school
supl. Classes for all 1 ages ;
evening service, 7.30 p.m.:
Bible sludy, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.. youlh services, Friday,
7 30 P m.
FREEWILL BAPTIST Corner Ash and Plum, Middleporl. Noel Herrman, paslor;
Guy Priddy, Sunday School
.-liupl. Saturdavev!!'lng ~rvlce,
7 P m. Sunday School, 10
.; Sundayevenlngworshlp,
7a .pmm
FIRST BAPTIST of Mid·
dleporl, corner of Sixth and
Palmer )treels, Rev. Charles
Simons,
pa•tor .
Fred
Hoffman, Sunday School
Superlntendenl. Sunday church
schoolfor everyone 9:15 a.m.;
Morning worship 10:15 a.m.;
Evening services, 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday prayer service, 7:30
p.m. Extra youlh activities on
Sunday, 5 p.m., lor all youlh up
lo sixth grade; 6:30 for junior
and senior high students
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Middleport, 5th and Main.
Raulln Moyer, pastor Michael
Gerlach, Sunday School supl.
Bible School, 9:30a.m.; mor·
n1ng worship, 10:30 a.m ;
evening worship, 7:30 p m. ;
prayer service 7 p.m. Wed·
nesday.
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE- Middleport,
Rev. Audry Mil ler, pastor;
Floyd Carson, sup!. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m .; Morning
worship 10:30 a.m., lunlor
society, 6:30p.m.; NYPS, 6: 45
p.m. Sunday evangellsllc
meeltng , 7: 30 p.m. Prayer
meellng Wednesday, 7.30 p.m.

UNITEd MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY, The Umled
Presbyltrian Church, Dwight
L. zavltz, Paslor ·Director :
George w. Hullon and Rev
Linson stebbins, Ass' I PastorDlreclors.
FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN, Harrisonville,
Sunday Church School, 9 30
a.m., Mrs. Homer Lee, Supl ..
Morning WorshiQ 10:30 a.m.
F t RST
UN ITE D
PRESBYTERIAN, Middleport,
Sunday Church School. 9 3D
a .m . Lewis Sauer, Supt . ;
MornlnQ worship, 10·30 a.m
F 1R S T
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse,
Mornln[ Worship, 9 a m ,
Sunday Church School , 10 am.
Mrs. Sampson Hall, Supl.
STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNITY, Rev. Edsel Harl,
pastor . Sunday School service
10 a.m. Prayer Meeting each
Thursday 7:30 p m. Sunday
evening service, 7.30 p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Pomeroy Harrisonville
Road. Kennelh Eberts, pastor.
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School9 3D a.m ..
morning worship and com munlon, 10 30 a.m .; Sunday
evening youth Chrlsllan endeavor. 6: 30; Worship serv1ces,
Sunday, 1· 30 p m. Wednesday
evening prayer meeting and
Bible sludy, 7.30 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN Pine Grove, the Rev Arlhur
Combs. pastor. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m; church services.
10:30 a.m.
~RADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Roy Bill Carfer,
evangelist ; Wilbur Haning,
Bible school sup!; Bible school,
9 30 a.m .. morning worship,
10·30 a.m.; evening worship, 7
p.m ; Christian Workers Class,
Tuesday, 7 p m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting. 7 p.m.

Service, 7. 30 pm , Youlh
meellng 6 30 p.m.; Even ing
worship, 7.30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev. Herbert
Grate, p.&gt;~stor worship service.
11 a.m. and 7.30 p m Sunday.
Sunday School, 9. 30 • m.
POMEROY
,.
Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
POMEROY TRINITY _
ST. PAUL lUTHERAN, _
meellnR. Wednesday, 7·30 P m
W H Pe I
Rev. Arthur c. Lund, ~slor
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
I
R
Rev · · rr n, pas or. or. Sunday School 9 l5 "am·
CHRIST - Cl llford Smith,
Mayer. Supl. Church schooo' Charles Evans, Supt.; worship'
mln1ster Sunday School 9 30
9 1Sa.m.; worshl~ 10: 24 a.m. ; service, 10 , 30 0 m. Conam , mornmg chyrch 10 JO
youlh choir rehea sal Monday, flrmation class Tuesday 4 15
am , Sunday evenmg service,
630p.m.; Mrs. Marvin Burt, lo 5.30 p.m. ; Junlor'con730pm Wednesday servlce. 8
d~reclor;
•enlor
choir 11
p.m.
rehearpsal 1, 7N:30p.md..l Thursday, ~~~~~~~!.ass, Thursday, 6·30
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
M;:oM"e"Ro~~HJi~'ij· OF SEVEN DAY Ab'irENTIST _
METHODIST- Rev . Eugene
Mulberry Height 5 p eroy
Gill , pastor . William Bailey,
•
THE NAZARENE - Corner
om
·
supt Sunday School , 9:30a.m.:
Union and Mulberry. Rev Herber! Morgan , pastor
Morning worship, 10:30 a.m :
Clyde V. Henderson, paslor Sabbalh school.3 15Salurday, 2
Evenmg worship, 7:30 ·p.m .
Sunday School 9. 30 a.m. , P m • worship, · ft.m. Reach
Wednesday , Christian Youth
Raymond Walburn, supt . oul for life mee lngs each
Crusade, 6 30 p.m.; Prayer
Morning worship 10:30 am. Saturday, Tuesda6
and
Thurs·
meellng 7 30 p.m. Thursday,
Evening service 7:30p.m. Mid day evenings, 7·3 ·
choir practice. 7 p.m .
week servlte, Wednesday, 7:30 GRAHAM Ulll TED
DEXTER CHURCH OF
p.m.
METHODIST - Preaching 9·30
CHRIST - Danny Evans,
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev. a.m., f~rst and second Sundays
paslor. Norman C. Will, supt
Stanley Plattenburg, minister. of each monlh, third and fourt~
Sunday School 9· 30 am . .
Morning prayer and sermon, Sundays each monlh, worship
Worship service, 10.30 am
10.30a.m. Holy communion and serviceai7·30p.m Wednesday
Chrlsllan Endeavor Sunday
sermon, first Sundays, 10 3D evenmgs al 7:30. Prayer and
evening .
am . Church school. kin· Bible Study.
'
REORGANIZED CHURCH
dergarten through eighth ' FIRST SOUTHERN BAP·
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATgrade, 10 30 a.m.
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave.,
TER DAY SAINTS- Portland POMEROY CHURCH OF Pomeroy, afflllaled with S.B.C.,
~acme Road. Ralph Johnson,
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr .. the Rev. Fred Hill, paslor.
pastor Herbert While, Sundar.
paslor. Bible School, 9:30a.m .• Sund~y School, 9 30 a.m . •
School Dlreclor. Sunday Schoo ,
worship, 10:30; adult worship !"ornmg worshiR, 10:30 a.m •
9.30 a.m.. Morning worship,
service and young peoples jUnlorsoclely,6:30am. NYPS,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
meellng, both 7:30p.m. Sunday- 6 45 p.m. Sunday evangellsllc
service 7 p.m . Wednesday
evening prayer services, 7 30
Wednesday, combined Bible meeting, 7:30 p.m. Prayer
Sunday
study and prayer meellng, 1 30 meehng Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
pm
• l Ptter
MIDDLEPORT
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST p m.
1.18-25
THE SALVATION ARMYMT. MORIAH BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
Envoy RayS. Wmlng, officer in Corner Fourth and Main.
pastor. Worship service, 9 30
Monday
charge. Sunday, 10 a.m .. , Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
am :Sunday School, 10·30a m
•
Hebrews
Holiness meeting , 10:30 a.m., Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9:30
CARLETON CHURCH 5.5-10
Sunday School. Young People's a.m., Arnold Richards, supt •
Kingsbury Road
Sunday
•
Legion, 7p.m., Thursday, I to 3 Morning wor~hlp 10 3D a.m.
MEIGS
School, 9·30 am ., Ralph Carl,
Tuesday
p m.. Ladles Hon\e League, 7
JEHOVAH S WITNESSESCooPERATIVE
supt Worshtp service, 10 30
• Hebrews
p m., Prep classes
Larry Carnahan presiding
PARISH
a.m and 7 30 p m alternalely
SACRED HEART - Rev. minister Sunday, Bible lecture,
THE UNITED
Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
6:9-20
Falher Bernard Krajcovlc, 9·30 am .• Watchlower study,
METHODIST CHURCH
ANTIQUITY BAPTISt
7 30 p.m. Rev Jay Sllles,
Wednesday
paslor .
Phone
992-2825. 10·30 a.m . ; Tuesday, Bible
Robert R. Card
Rev. Freeland Norris, pastor. pastor.
Salurday evening Mass, 7:30 study, 7·30 p.NJ .; Thursday,
Rev. Stonten Smith
Sundpy school, 10 a.m., church
o L D
D E X T E R
• Htbrtw~
p m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 mlnlslry school 7:30 p.m .,
CHESTER - Worship 9:15 service, 7 p.m. Wednesday CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
7:15-28
The nigh! was dark and calm. All creatures were silent and loaves
am Confessions Saturday 7. serv1ce meeting 8:30p.m.
a.m.; Church School 10 am .
Bible study, 7 p.m .
- R,v. Willard Dutcher ,
stood still as a lone man knell in a garden called Gelhsen~ane and
7.30. p m
'
'
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of ENTERPRISE- Worship, 9
BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE, paslor . Mrs Worley Francis,
Thursday
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Christ in Christian Union - a.m. ; Church School, 10 a.m. Minersville, J A. McWaters, Sunday School Supl. Sunday
prayed, "Not as I will, but as Thou will "
• Hebrews
- Robert Kuhn, paslor; William Lawrence Manley, pastor: Mrs.
FLATWOODS - Worship, 11 pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m . School , 9:45 a.m. Church Ser9:1/-15
Around Him Jesus' disciples lay sleeping. Soon He knew would come
Watson, Sunday school supt. Russell Young, Sunday School am.; Church School 10 a.m.
morning worship , 11 a.m. . v1ces first and lhlrd Sundays
Sundayschool,9·30am : BYF, Sup!. Sunday School 9:30a.m .; POMEROY-Worship, 10:30 Training Union , 6:30p.m .. following Sunday School.
Friday
betrayal, public condemnation and deri~on ... and lhe long last march.
6 p.m ., Bible study, Wed· Evening worship 7 30 Wed- am ; Church School 9· 1S am ., evening worship. 7 30 p.m Second and fourth Salurday
• Hebrews
And yet He prayed, "Thy will be done."
nesday, 7 p.m.; choir pracllce. nesday prayer meeting, 7 3D UMYF 6·30 p.m.
Prayer meelmg, Wednesday, evenings, 8 p m services.
12.1-10
Wednesday, 8·30 p.m.
P m.
ROCK SPRINGS- Worship 7 3D p.m .
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
In the shadow of the Cross Jesus demonstroled perfect love and trust
10 a.m ; Church School 9 am ,
RACINE FIRST CHURCH - Mr. Rober! Wyatf, pas lor,
Saturday
for
God, His Falher. In the hours ahead He would establish His Sonship
UMYF 6 3D p.m .
OF THE NAZARENE - Sunday School supt , Ronald
• Hebrtws
lor lhe alanement of all mankind.
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Sunday School , 9. 30 a.m., Osborne. Bible School, 9:30
13.10-16
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
Morning Worship. 10:30 am ; a.m .• preaching 10:45 a.m. ,
And so lodoy, in a world !hat needs this message of hope, let us
HEATH - Worship 10:30 Evening worsh1p, 7·30 p.m . Evening services, 7·30 p m
a.m.; Church School 9:30a.m; Wednesday , Sunday School
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
commemorale that first Good Frtday by acknowledging God as our
UMYF 7 p.m
Superintendent, Pauline Me- METHODIST - Cecil Wise,
Father, helping our churches to illus1rate His way Ia the hungry, lhe sick,
RUTLAND - Worship 9:15 Cilntock, pas lor. Rev Morris Pas lor. Sunday School. 9:30
and tho needy.
a.m. ; Church School 10 a m ; M. Wolfe.
am. , Morning worship, 10· JO
UMYF 7 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST - a.m. , Young People's service.
S&lt; rlplurtl W!lkted by
SALEM CENTER- Worship Charles Noms, paslor Sunday 6 45 p m.• Evangelistic serv1ce,
9a.m. , Church School10a.m; School, 9.30 a.m ., Morning 7·30 p m. Prayer meehng,
I ~ Amerk&lt;~n Blblt Society
UMYF Thursday, 7 p.m.
worship, 10·45 a.m.: Sunday Thursday, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
evenmg warship, 7 ~0 p m. ,
FREEDOM GOSPEL
Rev.
Forrest
R.
Donley
Wednesday
evenmg
Bible
MISSIONBald Knobs, Rev
By Rev. Robert W. Kuhn
at home.
ASBURY- Worship 11 a.m , Study, 7:30 p.m
L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor.
Flnl Baptlsl Church
These church groups will Church School 9:50a.m.. WSCS,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN. Roger W11fred, Sr, Sunda~
to lsi Tuesday
Rev. Lawrence . Sullivan, School Supt. Sunday School,
Pomeroy
the will help
Y
you
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 pastor Sunday School 9 JO 9 30 a.m., Sunday evening
There are all k1nda of groups upUftyou,
be your best, because you will a.m.; Church School 10 a.m. ; a.m., youlh and junior youlh worsh1p 7 30 Prayer meellng,
springing up over the country be a part of a fellowship that is WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 service, 6015 p.m .; evening Tuesday, 1· 30 p m. Ernesl
Wrtn the hope It will, in some measure , foster and help sustam that wllt.ch ts
tQ help lonely people meet
kin to be tru to th ir high p.m
worship, 7 30 p m.; prayer and Deeler, class leader Youth
see
g
e
e
MINERSVILLE
Worship
praise,
Wednesday.
7:30p.m.
Meeting
Wednesday,
7·30
p
m.
good
in family and community life. th is feature is sponsored by the busmess
congenial friends and com· ideals and purposes.
10 a.m.. Church School 9 a.m. ;
SILVER RUN FREE BAP- Ernest Deeter, leader.
panlons. Everyday we read
Therelsmore.Thlskindofa WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7:30p.m. TIST - Rev Howard Kimble,
MT. HERMON UNITED firms and organizations whose names appear below .
about them in the newspapers fellowship will be spiritually SYRACUSE - Worship, 8 pastor. Sunday schocl 1 10 a.m .: BRETHREN CHURCH IN
a.m.; Church School , 9 a.m ; Henr~ Davis1 supt.: even!~~ .., CHRIST - Rev. Rober! Shook,
will ho
an4 magalilles.~"""- ·
. ....
.,{!
enriching. The group
'"'~'
a .• Prayer alid'"IB!ble · Study. '"serv jce, ' 7··~o 'p.m.1' 'Pia'Y..~ P.slor,, ..sunda~ t, Sohool .,;·9 30
'
. 'J
'·'·
I
This rapid development of loving fellowablp of believers Wednesday, Q:IJII p.m .
meellng, Thurday, 7·30 p m ' am : Roy Pooler. supt; Alfred
I
'
.
organizations directed to the in &lt;hrist You will be enSOUTHERN CLUSTER
CHESTER CHURCH OF Wolle, asst. supt, morning
·
Rev. W. Dole McClurg
GOD-Rev. James Satterfield, worship, 11 a.m .; evening
interests of lonely people incouraged to become a fellow
Rev. FrA~k Chetubrew
paslor Sunday school , 9·30 sermon, 7·30 p.m , allernatlnQ I
dicates there must be a learner with them. Members
Rev. Mltr!H• Ann MaHner
a m ; worship service, 11 a.m. : each Sunday. Class meeting 11
Keepsake Diamond Rings
Phone 992 3481
nwnber of lonely j,eople 11bese will help you to share a faith in
BETHANY (Dorcas)
evening service, 7; prayer a.m. allernatmg ~unday
N. Second•Ave.
312
E.
Main
St
.
Pomeroy,
0
t
a
Saviour
and
Worship,
9.30
a.m.;
Church
service
and
youth
service,
mornings
Alfred
Wolfe,
Chris
Middleport. 0 .
people who feel alone and in J
esus
s
School 10·30 am .
Thursday, 7 p.m.
layleader ; Christian Endeavor.
need
of
friends
are Lord.
CARMEL - Worship, 11
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN 7.30 p.m Sunday Roger
ALL WEATHER ROOFING
everywhere. Are you one of
There is nothing to compare a.m .. tst nnd 3rd Sundays; - Homer Slerhens, pastor Buckley ,J.res1den1 Prayer
and CONSTRUCTION CO.
them? Do you hunger for with a fellowship like that. This c~f.'i!'Lic~~~J~ ".:"worship, ~uo~~r,ro ~~~~~ f,, % 3 ~ ~··~·: ~;::~ng;,ee'll'~:s~rr~·, 7 '(t,~il~r
D. B. A. ANTHONY
friendship and fellowship? Are Is the reason groups outside the 7 30 p m. ; church school, 9:30 Robert Boba, Sunday school each monlh, 1 30 p m. _ __
PLUMBING AND HEATING
you interested in easy ways to church as desirable as they a m.; mid-week service, sup!. ; Sunday evening service.
RUTLAND
Phone 992-3284
992 2550
7 30. Youth meeting, Monday, 7 RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
Middleport
become acquainted with may ~ cannot help you like Wednesday, 8 P m.
•
EAST
LETART
Worship,
p.m.
Mld·week
service.
WedRev
Samuel
Jackson
,
Middl
epo
rt
240
Li
nco
In
St.
groups of Individuals In your the groups within the church. lDa .m , first and lhlrd Sundays ; nesday, 7· 30 p m.
pas lor Sunday School, 10 am .
community whose association · This is the reason wby you will 9 a.m., second and fourth
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Mrs Gertrude Butter, supl
forever be lonely untll you Sundays; church school, 9 a.m., THE NAZARENE- Rev. M. C. Prayer Servtce, t 30 p m. ,
you would greatly enjoy?
flrsland third Sundays ; 10 a.m , Larimore, pastor Bob Ml&gt;Ore, preaching serv1ce, 2 p.m.
H so, there Is rich fellowablp beIong to a chur ch fellowablp · second
and fourlh Sundays. Sunday School .Supt. Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
at your finger tips, and not In a
Bakers of Good Bread
Go to church! Ask the pastor, Mid-week service, Wednesday, School, classes lor all ages, 9:30 CHRIST- Sunday school, 9 30
Middle port, Ohio
"Lonely Heart Club," but in or a member to put you in 8 p.m.
a.m. ; morning worship, 10·45. am.. V. H. Braley, supt
Huntington , W. Va .
GREAT
BENDWorship
11
NYPS
Sunday,
6·
30
p.m
,
communion
and
devollons
the fellowship, study and touch with a group of your a.m., 2nd and 4th Sundays ; evangellsllc service Sunday, 10 30 a.m. Regular board•
service groups within the choice. Become a part of the Church School, 10 am.
7:30 p.m. Mid-week prayer meellng 7:30, lh~rd Salurday
LETART FALLS - Worship meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m. each month
.
church near you. And, this moat wonderful fellowship in
10
a.m.;
Church
School
9
a.m.
Missionary
meeting
,
second
THE
RUTLAND
COM
Sales · Allis Chalmers - Service
fellowship may be yours jus.t the world·
MORNING STAR- Worship Wednesdav. 7 30om
· MUNITY CHURCH - Rev for the asking.
'
Farm Industr ia l-Lawn -Garde n
Don't live a onely life!
9:30a.m.; Church School 10:30
UNITED FAITH NON- Richard Dubbeld, pas lor
Middleport, Ohio
Actually, unless you belong
"Forsakenottheasaembtlng a.m . ; Mid -Week Service, DENOMINATIONAL - Rev. School. 9·30 a.m.; Worship
Tupper s Pla1ns
667-3435
th
Wednesday,
8,p.m.
Robert
Smith,
pastor
Sunday
service,
11
a.m
.;
Wednesday
tog the
I
to a church group, you are of
yourse ves
e r a.~ e
MORSE CHAPEL- Worship school, 9:30a.m.; _Bob Barber, prayer meellng , 7: 30 p.m
lonely. You may be ever so manner of some Is. - 11 a.m., lsi and 3rd Sundays; supt.; worship service, 10·30 Sunday night worship, 7:30.
active in this club, or that Hebrews 10:25.
€hurch School, 10 a.m.
a .m : youth meeting , 6:45
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Pomeroy
Athens t&lt;oao
0
lodge, but untll you share in a
Go to church this SWJday! P ~ ,RlhLu~~hD Sch!f':,h~ : .::, ~r~y~r c.:;:~~~;,. 7~~n~il'::;.' ~~~:d ~.A~~~~~~ ~r.:-pa~~~
Th e Store w1th A Heart
A Family That Worships Together
church-group fellowship, yours Especially at this time of the
SUTTON- Worship, 11 a.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN Sunday School , 9 30 am
Ra c ine
949-3342
Stays Together
Ia a lonely life. Something Is year, the Lenten Season. 2nd and 4th Sundays; Church IN CHRIST-Eldon R Blake, Morning worship, 10:30 am . •
•
lacking. Take a long look at Bebold now is the day of sc~~~(0E~~N IRaclnel
~~~t~f.;
s~~~~Xg~~~~~P\~a,;:;;'
~.~n?
tv'~~e~f
s~;v~~~~~~~~
what is yours for the asking salvation near. Try it, and give Worship, 11 a.m.; Church nlng sermon, 11 a.m .; Even1ng 7 30 p m Wednesday even in '
g
and seeking.
It your best.
School , 10 a.m.
service Christian Endeavor, service 7:30 p.m
Bakers of Holsum Bread
There is no need to be lonely!
UMYF for all churches oflhe 7:30pm.; Mrs. Lyda Chevalier,
Oh1o's Oldest Dodge Denier
There are many kinds of
Soulhern
Cluster.
7·30
p.m.
president.
Song
service
and
MASON
COUNTY
Middleport.
Oh
io
Mtcld leport. 0
groups with the fellowship of &lt; •
each Sunday at the Youlh sermon, 8:20 Mid-Week prayer
THE HILAND CHAPEL
the church. There are different
Cenler IOak Grove Road.)
meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m. George Caslo, paslor. Sunda y•
.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Mrs Marie Hols10ger, class School, 9·30; evening worship •
age groups and almost every
Rev. Jacob Lehman
leader
7:30 Thursday evening praye r
killd of interest group you
Member of the Big 3
Rev.
StAndley
Brondum
POMEROY
LOWER
~IGHT
service.
7:30p.m.
1 Classified Ads
would want.
JOPPAWorship
10
a.m.
;
CHURCH
Harrisonville
•
MASON
FIRST
BAPTIST
General
Merchandise
I
l Church School 9 a.m.. Prayer Road, Rev. Roy Taylor, pastor , Second and Pomeroy Sis , Sla
The welcome you will I
Chest er . Ohio
n
Tuppers Plains
I Meeting, Wednesday, 8 p.m.
667-3280
Henry
Eblin,
Sunday
School
Craig,
paslor
Sunday
schoo
I,
receive in these groups will be 1
bring you
1 LONG BOTTOM - Church &gt;upt. ~UQday ~chool , 9:30a.m., 9 45 a.m., worship service, 11
friendly. You wiU feel wanted,
services, 9 a.m.; Sunday School evening worship. 7 30 p.m am , !raining union, 6.30 p.m ;
extra cash
9.45 am , Bible study every Prayer and praiSe service, evening worship service, 7 30
secure and at ease because of
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
p.m Mid week prayer servlc e.
for
I Thursday, 7:30p.m.
the personal interest in you. I
NORTH BETHEL - Worship
COMMUNITY CHURCH, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
I
I
You will find yourself soon I shopping spraas
m, Church School 10a.m. Dexler - Worship services
CHRISTIAN
SCIENC E
Pomeroy- Membe r 1- . D I C &amp;
Fam1ly Rec reat1o n
1 11a
drawn into the activities of the I
ALFREDSunday
school.
Salurday
and
Sunday
,
7·
30
Services
al
315
Main
St
,
P
t.
I
I
Federal
Rese
rv
e
Syst
em
Sw1ntm ing
9· 45 a.m each Sunday. ' p.m.
Pleasanl, Sunday School 9' 15
group and readlly made to feel
preaChing at 11 a.m. each
HEMLOCK
GROVE am Sundays, 11 a.m., We dMeiq, Coun ty Branch
Sunday . Prayer meeting, 7:45 CHRISTIAN- David ~tautter, nesday, lestlmonlal meeling 8
p m Wednesday ; WSCS, 8 P m. paslor; Stanford Stockton, supt . p.m All welcome. '
on lhlrd Tuesday each month. Morning worship, 9 30 am. ;
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CH\JRC H
Rexall Drugs
REEDSVILLE - Sunday church school, 10:30 am., - Letart Route 1, the Rev Sta n
school, 9.30; preaching, 7.30 young peoples meetmg, 6:30 Craig, pastor . Sunday schoo I, We Fi II All Doctors Prescriptions
HIGHLIGHTS
p.m. Sunday; prayer meellng, p.m. ; evening worship, 7:30. 9 30 am ., prayer and Bib le
Pomeruy
Pomeroy
296WS econo
r'h. 992 386~
7:30pm. Tuesday ; WSCS, 7•30 Blble,»"dy , Wednesday, 7:30 sludy, 7 30 p.m. Collage pray er 992 -2955
with Paul Crabtree
p m.
service , Tuesday , 10 a m ;
first Thursday each monlh .
SILVER
RIDGE
Worship,
MT.
UNION
BAPTIST
worship
service. Friday, 7 30
CALL POINTVIEW : 997-2505
10 am.; Church School, 9 am. Rev Cecil Cox, pastor Sunday p.m.
and
TUPPERS
PLAINS
school supl., Joe Sayre. Sunday
MASON
CHURCH 0 F
Okay, all you basketball deflnllely ls 1nol In the "me
Worship9a.m.; Church School school , 9 · 45 a.m.: Sunday CHRIST - Loren T. Stephen s.
Elecln c Motor Re pa1r
I.
fans
oul
there
In league as "The Ten Com 10 a.m.
__
evening worship, 7 30 Wed- min Isler Worship, 10 a m
St
Rl.
7
Chesler
Ohto
mandments"
or
the
recentlyBlO
W.
Main
992-'5750
Buckeyeland - the big
KEN&lt;rti!URCH OF CHRIST, nesday prayer and Bible sludy, Bible st'{dy, 11 15 am ., event
Choose lhe Church ol Your Cho1 ce
momenl ' Is finally here Ill seen "Ben Hur." Even so,
Hobarl
Newell, supt. Services 7:30pm
worship. 7.30 p.m . Mtd·we~e
ll's
a
fairly
good
film
,
and
Is
Channel 4 begins three hours
weekly, 9:30 a.m. on Sunday.
TUPPERS
PLAINS service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
of lelecasllng of the Ohio lhe Ch. 10 prime-time event
Preaching
firs
I
and
lhlrd
CHRISTIAN
Mr.
John
Wyatl,
MASON ASSEMBLY 0 F
'
high school tournament lonlghl at 8 p. m.
Sundays of month by Clifford pastor: J. S Davis, Sundar. GOD - Second Sl., Mason, w
finals from Columbus this
Stnllh, 9:30a.m.
School supl , Sunday schoo. Va. Chesler Tennant, pastor
Building Supplies and Mill work
Can private enterr.rlse run
evening at 9. The acllon will
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
9 30 a.m., Morning Sermon. Sunday school, 10 a.m ; mora
betler
school
sys
em
lhan
conllnue tomorrow In thiS
General Contracting
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll, 10·30 am Evening sermon, 7 nlng worship, 11 a m
Pomeroy. 0 .
momenl of lrulh for round- !he government can? E~en If
E . Main St .
paslor
Sunday
School
,
9
30
p.m.
evangellsllc
service,
7
30
p
Ph . 992-3978
m.
ll's a black school? A pier·
ball addlcls.
a.m.. Leonard Gilmore, flrsl
LETART FALLS UNITED Bible study and prayer servl ce,
c1ng look at an experiment In
elder
,
evening
service,
7.30
BRETHREN
- Rev. Robert Wednesday, 7·30 p m. Phone
A1925 film classic Is about this field shows up on " Black
p.m. Wednesday prayer Shook, paslor. Herschel Norris, 77J.S133
•
lhe last thlrig you'd ex peel lo Journal.'' Ch. 9, 10 p. m.
meellng, 7 30 p.m.
supl. Sunday school, 9 30 am .,
HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
"""'""at
Hardware
and
see on public- TV, bul crlllcs
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF mofnlng sermon, 10 30 am , CHRIST In Christian Union Paint-Plumbing &amp; Electrical SupOTHER MOVIES· " Has
are high In praise of
GOD
Racine
Route
2
The
evening
sermon,
7:30
alter·
Rev.
O'
Dell
Manley,past
or
Anybody
Seen
My
Gal?"
plies
"Potemkln," a silent
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor. nallng each Sunday Prayer Sunday school , 9 30a m , Rag er
Russian 111m about lhe Imy answer would be "Yes.
Sunday
school, 9: 45 a.m ; ' serv1ce. Wednesday, 7 30 p m. Manley, supl, evening servl ce,
t&lt;acme, Ohio
667-396:f
Ph 949 3771 Tuppers P la ins
abortive 1905 revolullon aboul twenly times too many
morning worship, 11 a m. Prayer mee tmg, 7· 30 p.m. 7 30 Wednesday even ln g
agalnsl lhe Czar. ll's on In reruns "l ll's at 4 p.m. on
Evening services, Thuesday allernallng Sundays.
prayer meeltng , 7:30 p.m
•
"Film Odyssey" on Ch. 11 at Ch '10 which shows lwo
and
Friday,
7·30.
CHESHIRE
CHURCH
OF
Sunday
evening youlh servIce
horror
Immortals
on
lis
8·30 p m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE GOD OF PROPHECY, G. P 6 45 wllh Macy t ou Car ler,
doublE fealure starlln9 al
CHURCH
OF CHRIST- David Sml lh, pastor Sunday School , leader No Tuesday serv1ce
A Biblical !heme seems to 11· 30 Lon Chaney In
Jewell , pastor. Blblestudy, 9 30 10 am 1 Arthur Henson, Supt,
CHRISTIAN
SCI EN CE
" We ~ponsor Jesus" .
!Insure a good movie, but "Oevll's Messe~ger" and
'm ; morning worship, 10· 30 : Morning Worship 11 am . Serv1ces, 3t5 Main Sl., Pt.
Devote d to the inte r est of the Me1g s·
Karloff
In
"Black
Casile."
Rev
. Stan Craig , Pastor
"King ot Klng1.'' wllh Jef·
evening worship, 6 30 p m. Young Pooples service, 7 p m . Pleasant Sunday serv1ces, 11
Mason
a
r
ea
frey Hunl•r a Chrlsl,
Wednesday Bible sludy, 7 30 Eveni11g service, 7:30 p m . am Wednesday TeSi tmon Ia!
I

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·

DEADLINES
P.M.
Day
Be for&lt;
Publication
.
Monday Deadllnt 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
ill I be accepted untll9 a.m. for,
Day of Publication
·
REGULATIONS

-ROOMS
- -and
-bath with

right to edit or reject any ads

3-22-61p

The Publisher reserves the

deemed

publisher

objectional.

will

not

TRAWBERRY Plants , Charlie
Fhoster near Racine Locks;
P one 247-2309.
3-22-6tp

or

anytime

The

be ONE

responsible for more than one
mcorrec:t Insertion.

RATES

GARDEN

pl ow,

Springfield make rota, price
$60.

Phone 949-3331.

3-23-lOtp

For Want Ad Service
S cents per Word one Insertion

,
Minim um Charge75c
12 cents per word three · GOOD DODGE 318 motor and

consecutive Insertions.
. 18 cents per word. six cOn'Se&lt;:utlve Insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on pale
ads and ads paid within H
days.
CAI!D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
51.50 for

so

word minimum .

Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Charge per

Advertisement.

automatic
transmission.
Phone 985-3353.

3-23-31c

a X35 TRAILER. converted info
camper -type home ; plus
attached new bathroom and 2

bedroom building ; can easily
be moved ; ideal for the
OUTDOORSMAN who wants
a good, but cheap dwelling as

a campsite.

Phone

$15 male and female, phone

742-3656 .

Employment Wanted

1966

3-22-lOtp

HARLEY -DAVIDSON

Sprint, $300, 2 riding mowers,
DRY WALL Finisher con. $25
and 5100, phone 985-3833,
tractor . R. I. Oubbeld, phone Harry
Brown, Chester, Ohio.
742-5a25.
3·20-5tc _ _ __ _ _ _ _
3·_19-6tp

- - - - --

TROPICAL FISH, fancy
guppies. angels and breeders.
Bellas and supplies. Phone

For Sale

Of
QUALRY
,, ..

1200 GALLON water lank, SSO. 992-5443 .
12-30-ffc
Call Waiter Cleland of the
Racine Fire Department at
949-3471.
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy.
3-22-4tc
Park view Kennels. Phone 992·
5443.
PAINT DAMAGE . 1971 Zig-zag
a.JS-ffc

------

sewing machi.nes. Still in
original cartons . No at tachments needed as our
controls are built ln. Sews

·

·

---

- .- -

t969 FORD

S2195

springs, booster brakes, 75Dx16-8 ply fires, beautiful red
finish, chrome body mldgs ., chrome w. c. mirrors, 5 cab
lights, 360 V-B engine, chrome front bumper. rear step
bumper. Priced, for spring action .

tires, clean cab . Color white . See, fry &amp; you'll buy this one.

t967 CHEVROLET CAMINO CUSTOM

51695

V-8 engine. auto. trans. , power steering, good w-w tires,
cover for body, beau1 iful red finish. Priced to move.

Pt~eroy

Motor Co.

'f'PM!ROY, OHIO

For Sale

FREE tickets are now available "STAR" kills rats quickly ~
on a free giant $20 Easter
Sure. 2'11 lbs. 51.69; Ebers·
large chocolate
Basket
bach Hdwe., Sugar Run Mills,
and nut Easter egg . See them
today ond get your free

72 Chevrolet Pickup
Long wide bed, 3 speed, V-8, blue &amp; white .

If you purchase a new or used car from Smith
Nelson during the rest of this month we will
give you $10.50 cash to buy your 1972 Ohio Auto
Tags with. This offer good till 1st of Aprll1972.

72 GMC Van

-

1969 Chrysler........ only $1.895

67 Ford ·Van
71 Chevelle Malibu

Newport Custom 4 dr. sed ., green finish- This
is a real sharp auto . Come in &amp; drive it. Priced
· to seiJ.

lfckels, no purchase required.

at the Bright Star Market ELECTRIC GUITAR + amp.
(Barclay, like new) ; Truck
next to the Drive-In Theatre,
topper 36" high, long wide
Mason, W. Va. where low
bed ; Ripple Afghan, Brown.
prices and convenient Service
orange;
Brownie dress. size 8.
are featured every day, check
Paul Life, Success Rd. near
lhe following prices and stock
Tuppers Plains, phone 667·
your larder . Favorite or
Bonus brand white bread 7 3544.
3-24-3fp
loaves $1 with SlO additional
purchase. Broughton's 2 pel.
sweet milk gal. 99c, Bologna 2 TWIN bed. S25; 1 Kenmore
Electric dryer. $40; 1955 AMC
in piece lb. S9c, grade Asmall
eggs 3 doz . $1 , smoked slab truck , $50; phone 992·5654.
3-24-lOip
bacon whole or half lb. 49c,
Van Camp 2'1 oz. can pork and
beans 2 cans S9c, Hart's whole 2 YEAR old Tennessee Walking

Wise Purchases

1968 Dodge .......... only $1595

4 Dr. sedim, V-8, auto., P.S., factory air, low
mileage .

.,.,-,.,.--~---

Chevy Agency

Polara 4 dr. H.T., gold 'with black vinyl roof,
factory air. Real clean car . Nice tamily car.
one owner.

Pickens Hdwe. , 1\1\ason.

3-19-301p

68 Chevrolet Impala

•

V-8, auto., P.S., P. B., factory air.

1968 Buick ........... only $1995

67 Volkswagen.

Wildcat 4 dr. H. T. , dark gdld with vinyl roof.
factory air . This is one of our double checked
used car. Real nice.
- .. --

Save space. Buy now~ Excellent condition.

1967 Buick .........: only s1295

69 Plymouth

Skylark conv., white with black top. Get ready
for spring in this beauty. Priced to sell.

Road Runner. 4 speed, 383 engine.

Horse; contact ·Larry Jones, 3
NEW JOHN boat, all finished
kernel corn 5 cans Sl.
but bottom, ~5 . phone Otis
Broughton's Ice Milk ice miles E. of Racine on State
Route 124.
Cream, Gal. $1.19, white
Bailey 949-2854.
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
3·24-4fc
3-22-3tp
potatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59,
buttonholes, sew on buttons, --~---Complete assortment of fancy
monograms, and blind hem
RIDING horses, 1 pony, 2 Easter goodies Including AKC REGISTERED Australian
stitch. Full cash price. $38.50 2 saddles,
terrier dogs, nice Easter gift,
Easter Baskets from $1.49 to
Arnold Grafe, phone
New Haven, W. Va.
or budget plan available.
reduced
price $SO each; phone
$20.
We
accept
Federal
Food
742·4211
days
and
742-SSOl
Phone 992-5641.
Albany 698-3202.
Coupon. Stretch your money,
evenings.
3·22-6tc
3-24-lOip
food
coupons
and
time,
see
us
3-19-6tc
Musical Instruments
NICE 2-sfory horne with
for seed potatoes, onion sets
VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
SPINET-CONSOLE
PIANO.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
DON'T
pump
your
sluggish
w p s
and garden plants as needed.
model. Complete with all 0 HOW ALTERs
Wanted responsible party to
air furnace . Near Pomeroy, j
'
et el hop, Save In many ways at Bright
septic tank . Get Klean -Em Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
cleaning tools. Small paint
Elementary School. Phone I
AII Septic Tank Cleaner . take over spinel plano. Easy
Tropical fish and supplies . Star Market, next to Drive-In
damage in shipping. Will take
ter
ms.
Can
be
seen
locally.
992-7384 to Sjle.
·
Landmark
Farm
Bureau,
Stop in and compare.
Theatre, Mason, W. Va.
$27 cash or budget plan
Wri
te
Credit
Manager,
P.
o.
11
-7-tfc
.
Pomeroy.
_ __ _ _ _ __ 3-_ -i27tp _ _ _ _ _ _ ___J-7.1f
available. Phone 992·5641.
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana ------~--3-24-ltc
3·22-6tc
46176.
MODERN 3 or 4 bearoom home.
----------_ _ __ _ __ _
3-_
24-21p
Phone 992 - 3~2 .
WALNUT-Stereo radio com 3·2-ffc
bina tio n, four speed In Real Estate For Sale
termixed changer, four
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
speaker sound srstem, dual
60X12, 2-bedroom, all-elecfric, Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Plains. All . new with total
volume contra . Balance
air conditioned, Bx20 ft . Porch
electric and centra~ air
568.42. Use our budget terms.
and
aluminum awning,
conditioning, bath and &gt;t&lt; fully
Call 992-7085.
aluminum skirting, com c~r pefed, full . basement;
3-22-6tc
and exterior SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
plefely setup. Beautiful
-------HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL INTERIOR
garage In basement. See by
painting
.
R.
I.
Dubbeld,
phone
REASONABLE
rates.
Ph.
446·
location.
Owner
leaving
state.'
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE.
, ,Atlll!l~ 992-2196 .
BEAU;rJ,FUL colonial maple
742-5825.
4782, Gallipolis. John Rus;.::;;' • Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272. • apppJntment,
OHIO.
stereo, AM-FM radio, four
o~
·
1
"12·3585
..
D!I~~\(,T,hornpson.
,
3-20·51c
Owner &amp; Operator.
··""'"?. ,
_::1-.::10:::-•::.ytc. Ftnanclng aV8 11&amp;ble.
3·5·301c
!
speakers, 4 speed automatic
5-12-ffc
12·30-lfc'
changer, separate controls.
J OHN
SEPTIC
tanks
c1eaned.
Miller
BACKHOE
AND
DOZER
work.
Balance $79.56. Use our
Hciu!&gt;E In ·Long Bottom, phone
Sanitation. Stewart. Ohio. Ph .
Septic tanks installed. George VINYL and aluminum siding ; '
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
m -3529.
662-3035.
( Biill Pullins. Phone 992-2478. free estimates; references;
J.22-6fc
1-28-ffc
.
4-25-ffc call collect 446·360a, Byerly
2·12-ffc
- - - -- USED Norge refrigerator, good
.
Construction Co., Gallipol is.
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
condition, Harold Boston, Rl. SEWING MACHINt:.&gt;. Kepalr READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
3-24-30tp
service, all makes. 992-2284.
livered right to your prolect .
1, Reedsv ille, Ohio.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Fast and easy . ~ree
3-22-3fc
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
Authorized
Singer Sales and
estimates. Phone 992-J2a4. O'DELL WHEEL allghment'
Assllciate
- -- - - 11 -21 -tfc
located at Crossroads, Rf. 124 .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ..
.BOAT, motor and trailer. Phone
3-29-ffc
VERA EBLEN
Complete front end service,
Middleport, Ohio.
&amp;67-3031.
tune
up
and
brake
service.
6-30-ffc
.
992-3020
3-22'6tc
Wheels
balanced
elecHARRISON'S
TV
and
Antenna
-----Middleport
N. 2nd
All
work
tronically.
Service. Phone 992-2522.
1971 SCOTTY Camper, never
SEE
US
FOR
:
Awnings.
storm
guaranteed.
Reasoncibte
6-10-ffc
used, refrigerator and stove
MIDDLEPORT
doors and wi ndows, carports,
rates.
Phone
992-3213.
·
608 East Main Street
~early new, 3 a .R., 11f2
with oven ; refrigerator and
marquees, aluminum siding
7-27-ffc bath s. ranch type , bri ck.
POMEROY, OHIO
light run on gas or electric;
and railing. A. Jacob, sales - -- - - Carpeted living rm, with
also has hea t; phone 742-3005.
992-2259 til4 :00
representative. For free
stone fireplace , modern,
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
3-22-3fc
Sunday
&amp; Evenings
3
BR
es timates, phone Charles
built -in ki tchen with gar .
C..mplefe Service
-----992-2568
dis
.,
range,
wall
oven
,
Lisle
,
Syracuse.
V.
v.
Phone 949-3821
OLD lraller about B' x 20',
freezer -refr ig ., oodles of
Johnson and Son, In c.
HOME
Racine, Ohio
suitable to place on river,
cabinets, ulll. rm ., located In
10 ACRES
3-2-ffcCrill Bradford
$400 ; phone 992-5786.
cho ice locallon, overlook ing
Home
aboul
8 years old, 3
ON YOUR LOT
5-1-ffc pool and park on Broadway .
3·22-6tc
bedroom
s
with
closets, bath
493 Broadway . No . 1-3 B.R .,
I car garage, brick front,
- - - - -Coal
Oil Forced
dining
room,
bath , mostly all paneled,
wall to wall carpet.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been living room 22 ft . long, with
air Heat, full basement,
cancelled?
lost
your br ick fireplace , kitchen with
Stucco finish . Possession 1st
Mobile Homes For Sale
ONLY $13,750
built -In features , bar ,
operotor's license? Coli -'1'12· all
of June. $9,500.00.
Wh~
attached garage . No. 22966.
We specialize In aluminum ,
Small three room hdme with
1
vinyl and steel siding ·
2 STORY FRAME
bath . Buy one . get the other
fiberglas , brick and stone :
as a bonus .
3 bedrooms , 1112 baths, front
complete l ine of res identia l
On Most Amer ican Cars.
and
side porches, double
and com mer cla l roof in g ;
POMEROY
-GUARANTEEDgarage,
storm doors and
remodeling ,
building ,
129 Locust St. - 3 B.R. Jl/ 2
ALL
WEATHER
ROOFING
suspended ceilings, Interior
windows
,
close to shopping,
Phone 992-2094
bath , lov ely deco r , includes
itnd exterior painting ; comexcellent location. $12,900.00.
all carpeting , drapes, ven .

Gal . 500, 2 dr. H.T., maroon with black Jn :
terior. This Is one of the nicest Fords we have·
ever had .

tun .

Open Evenings Tiif 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. TillS p.m.
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat.
- -

~·

(Get Your 1972 Ohio Tags Free)

WANTED!

.-

Carrlen For
MASON

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc•.
500 E. Main St.

.'

Pomeroy, Ohio

--====-_..:,_

•

12' · 14' - 24' - WIDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES
1220Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
196a, 60x12 two bedroom mobile
home. fully ca rpeted except

bathroom and kitchen ; 8x16
porch , aluminum awning ,
aluminum skirting . Phone

985-3309 or wrile Terry

Swartz, Rl. 2, Cool ville, Oh io.

3-23-61p
CASH PAID For all makes and
models of mobile homes.

Phone area code 614-423-9531 .
3-23-6tc

ALLSfDE BUILDERS
CONSTR, CO.

&amp;

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR
MARimA
TYPEWRITER
616 Main st.
Belpre, 0 .
423-6551

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

&amp; OONSTRUCTION

Open8Tiil ,
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

&amp; PLUMBING 00.

KITCHEN
and

SON
CONST.
"Everything In Home
Maintenance"

MEIGS, W, VA. 25260
ME fGS 992-71l1
MASON 773-5634

240 Lincotn St.
Middlep11rt, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No matter what
your need. Complete roof or
spouting repilir. Interior or
exterior carptntry . Ctlllna
tile and Pantling and Siding,
Complete Plumbing &amp;

Heating.
Day Number 992-2550

home will be sold at absolute
dealers cost. .Shown by appoin tment only . Coli Belpre,
Ohio, area code 614-423-9531
for appointment.

3-23-6tc
READ THIS! You can save
literally hundreds (even
thousands) of dollars on a lat e
model used or re-possessed

mobile home. Before you buy
any mobile home stop and see
the huge selection of 8, 10 and
12 wide mobile homes that we
have on display. We arrange

.COLONIAL
AUTO BODY
537 High Sl.
Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings , glass
in sta llation .
free
loaner
cars
and
estimates,
also
mechanical
repairs .
Phone 992-3793

~aymenls .

Easy credit terms.
Don't forget we are the area
dealer for "O.Iroller" mobile
homes. One of the oldest and
best names In the Industry.
Don' I wait. Slop now at Berry ·
Miller Mobile Homes Sales,
705 . Farson Street, Belpre,
Ohio, across the railroad
tfacks
from
Kaiser
Aluminum . Phone ar~a code
614-423-9531. Open 7 days a
week . .
3-23-6lc

------

From the largest
Bulldozer Rad iator to the
Sma llest Heater Core.

. Nathan Biggs
Rodlator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
PIUf2-2174

Pomeroy

Carry -out and drive -In located in Pomero'y. Show ing
exce llent returns .
other listings on
homes and business spots.

Many

I Need Listings for Farms and
Hoi!U!s.

2 bedrooms, bath, dining

room, carpeted, pane1ed,
!lied,
porch,
storage
building . 56.950.00.
MAKE AN OFFER
2 story frame, 6 rooms, 3
bedr ooms, good neigh -

borhood.

WE HAVE IMMEDIATE
SALE FOR ALL TYPE
HOMES AND FARMS,
CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REALTOR

992-SS03
992-3898

742-l947

742-4761

We art fully insured

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Free Estimate

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR OONDITIONING

B&amp;W HEATING CO.
For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

REGISTERED

financing for you . Low down

Brick St. , 5 r ms. and bath , or
set up as two apts. Co mplete
with extra lot , suitable for
trailer .

11h STORY BRICK '

We have 24 hr. emergency
service.

SAVE 12.000 to 53,000 on a
modular home. Due to a local
dealer closing his sa les lot,
two 24xS&lt;l Kit Modular homes
and one Ux44 Tek N!odular

blinds , built -in kitchen ,
com plete
with
refrlg .
Basement f i nished with
shower, sinks, and large
freezer goes with th is one.
Attached garage and also
garden spot .

APPOLOOSA
STUD SERVICE
$50 Reg. Mares
$40 Grade

FRANCIS BENEDUM
Phone 667-3856

TERMITES. •TERMITES,
Get Rid of Them
We will protect any single
dwelling residence for
1

149.50

WRITTEN WARRANTY
. Call Collecl61 ~:4$ 2 -3158

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.
Z•nesville, Ohio

Jhe
·Orthid Room
Make reservations for your

pr ivate parties, banquets, ·
special occasions.
Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
privileges.
' Ind ivi dual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people.
Phone
.992-3975

992-5786

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
NEW - 3 bedroom, a'll electric home. 1'12 baths, large
livi ng, nice kitchen with double sink. Utility room. Plenty
of closet space, 2 garages. 1.IS acres. Out on old Route 33.
NICE OLDER HOME
MODERN - 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, birch kitchen, double
, si nk. stove and refrigerator. Gas fireplace, sliding· glass
doors from dining to back and side porch. 2 lots, double
garage .
4 BEDROOMS
NIFTY - Birch kitchen, natural gas furnace, bath, full
basement. Large lot. Garage. 510,000.00.
NEW LISTING
.
HARRISONVILLE - 7 room home. nearly ail carpeted,
l1/2 baths, gas heating . 3 bedrooms, l)'lodern kitchen with
double sink and bar. 6 lots or 1'1• acres. Garage 40x70.
Corner location for service sfaflon.

.
NEW LISTING
142 ACRES - Of nice clean laying land. 2 barns with
sheds. 4 good springs, farm pond and wafering trough. 2
car garage, 2 hen houses. Minerals except coal. Located
on hard road. Salem Township.
4 ACRES
.
NEAR TUPPERS PLAINS - 2 bedrooms, bath, T.P.
wafer. Nice birch kitchen, double sink and stove. 2'living
rooms. Only $10,500.00.
51.500.00 DOWN
3 ACRES - 6 room house, well, spring, garden. Other
buildings. S53.42 a· Month .
DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT IS SOLD, BUY TODAY.
TOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATE.
992 -3325 HELEN L. TEAFORD. ASSOCIATE 992-2378

I

'

'

CLELAND
REALTY

plete tine of Masonry work . All
work guaranteed to customer
satisfaction . We are tully
insured for your protection . 32
N. 2nd . 992 -3918 .

Society News

·To You

Contact

Alignment
5.55

HARTFORD

T":ppers Plains

REALTY~

----------

_____

Station

WHITE .

EXPERT

Alfred
Social Notes

News' Events

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

882-2793

Business Services

·App}e GrOVe

1967 Ford ............. only $1195

HART'S USED CARS

------

_____

- - - -----

Heavy duty.
'

For Sale

Easter bunny and large fruit

See The Used Car Lot With A Hart!

Like new. locally owned.

OPEN EVE$, 1:00 P.M.

By Mn.1Jerbei1~
Mr. and Mrs! Clwlea Wolfe,
Mrs. Linda Black and children
were Saturday villt.n ol Mn.
RllSII Scarberry.
AttenJanc. at MI. Morlah
O!urch of God Sunday School
Card
Thanks
Notice
, was 81.
OUR HEARTFELT thanks to ; - - - - - - - - - - - . ONE LARc;'£ 1ra11er space,
Susie Scarberry, Connie,
our friends and neighbors for
Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,
the m.,y kind- and
Judy and Patty Klier spent
MaSon, W. Va.
. FERTILIZER
.
exr,reulons of sympat~y Order
3-7-18fp
Sunday
afternoon with Debbie
get' early
ex ended .at the lime of the discount.now,
Beg, bulk and
and Loretta Holsinger.
Illness and toss of our dear liquid fe'r tlllzer . Take ·2 BEDROOM. '12 double, 'fur!•lend, Min Bess Sanborn. delivery fr9m our area
Rod Childress celebrated hll
nished on 4fh &amp; C..llege In
Special thanks to our friends, warehouse 1t ·Pomeroy.
Syracuse. Phone 992-2749.
14th birthday with a party held
'Mr. and Mrs. George Hackett,
3-15-tfc
at
the home of his parents, Mr.
Sr .. ./k. and Mrs. Paul S. · ASK ABOUT COMPLETE
and Mrs. Glenn Tucker Friday
Smart, Rev. Chester Tennant, CUSTOM SPRAY SERVICE
1 BWRODM friller . apartRev. Rqberf ·Baumgardner;
ments, Ideal for couples .
evening. lee cream and cake
Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
Ordtr Your
were served to Glenn and Anna
C.lub, . Raw' lings-Coats
992·52&lt;411 or 992-3436. ·
Seed
earn
Now
1
Tucker, Ross and Mildred
Funere Home. Words cannot
3-2J.6tc
expresS our grateful feelings
Scarbei'I'JI,
Etta Mae Parsons
POMEROY
APARTMENT;
217
N.
3rd
Sf.,
to everyone who helped ~so
and children, Kenny and
_Jlck W. C1rsey, Mgr.
many ways. God bless ou.
Middleport, 3 rooms and bath,
Phent
f92-2111
Tonya , Rod and Ross
The Ingels, Earl and ss
private entrance, nice yard,
.
3-2.C.Itp ABOUT YOJJR wetGHT ...
Childress, Randy and Allen
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
3-23-lfc
Tucker and Susie Scarberry .
overweight ladies, teens and
...
men Interested In a Weight
Mrs. Focle Hayman and
PHIL WISE, FORMERLY OF POMEROY, has purWatchers (R) · Cla&amp;S In 2 BEDROOM mobile horne with
Mrs.
Bertha RoblnJon visited
air conditioning In Racine
KOSCOT KOSMETICS a. Flame
Pqmeroy write; Weight
chased Bill Janes Chevrolet, Inc., in McConnelsville . Wise
area
;
pl\one
992-6329.
Uteir aunt, Mrs. Anna Scarof Hope Pet'fumes. Human &amp; Watchers (R), 1863 Section
has served as general manager of the firm for three years.
3-2J.tfc
synfheflc wigs. No need to
Rd., Ci~clnn!ttl, Ohio 45237 ,
berry at Evans, W. Va. Monleave Meigs or Mason County
Some remodeling projects are underway and a long range
10.3-tfc
day and also called on oUter
· for lack · of money. If Inremodeling
program
Is
being
planned.
The
firm
has
a
staff
of
LEGAL
NOTICE
relatives.
terested ca!l 992-5113.
CHiCKEN Barbecue Easter
20
employes.
Sunday,, Aprll2, from 11 a.m.
:i-7-tfc
Benny B~?Bgess returned to
LEGAL NOTICE
.,------,--to S· p.m. at the Racine Fire
The trustees of Letart Twp.,
his employm~nt on the Elger
Station . Complete chicken Meigs County, will accept bids
'GUJ'I SHOOT. Sunday, March
Cliff Boat Sunday.
until
7
p.m.
Monday,
April
3,
dinner $1.50, chicken only $1.
26, 1 p. m. Factory choked
1972,
for
purchase
of
Used
motor
•
3-22-9tc oreder. Minimum
Mr. and Mrs. Clwles Mcguns only . Second place
Phil Wise, formerly of
to be named Phil Wise service, parts .and accounting . attended schools here and Dade of Troy, 0., visited Mr.
shooters get free shot In next R==Eo=u"'c"'Eo-s-af,_e__,.
&amp;--,-fa-st;:_::wifh specifications are as follows :
match. Assorted meats . GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
Chevrolet, Inc. - features a He served in management served two years in the and Mrs. Russell Roush Friday
115 horsepower 6 cylinder Pomeroy, has purchased the
Racine Gun Club.
diesel
engine
Bill Janes Chevrolet, Inc., complete automotive sales and capacities with the Mason European Theatre during evening flld alao spent the
Drugs.
12.foot power shift moldboard
3-23-3tc "water pills' at Nelson3-17-20fp
agency in McCoonelsville.
PQwer steering
service facilities. There are 20 County Motor Co. for 14 years. World War II. He and his wife, weekend with Mrs. Gladys
Ci!lb
comp
lete
He is a graduate of the General Shirley, are the parents oi a Shields and Mrs. Edna Roush
READY NOW FOR Easter,
Formerly associated with staff members.
Scarifier
Mums. geraniums and Found
Wise has had 22 years of Motors Institute at Flint, son, Donald,l9, who is a fresh- at Racine.
l3x2.t tires front and rear, the Mason County Motor Co.,
pansies, CLELAND'S MONEY, Monday, March 13, 10 must
be 75 pet. tread
Wise has been general automotive experience having Mich., as well as several man at Ohio Valley College in
GREENHOUSE. Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Taylor
Lights
a.m.
In
front
of
Liquor
Store.
Parkersburg.
manager of Ute Janes fll'll1 for worked In all phases of the business seminars .
3-23-tfc
Windshield wipers
of
Pt. Pleasant spent Sunday
Owner may have by Iden- Heater and defroster
native
of
Pomeroy,
Wise
A
the
past
three
years.
The
firm
business,
Including
sales
,
tifying amount and paying for
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Flasher lights
IGHT fatigue with Zlpples, the
ad.
Must be delivered and carry a
Donald Hupp and' sons.
great Iron pill. Only $1.98 at
3-l.41-1.4tc l year unconditional warranty
and
Mrs
.
Erwin
Gleckner.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Fugenon
Nelson Drugs.
--------Must be a 1965 model or newer
w · .. ·
Trade-in Is to be one Gallon
3-17-JOfp
Mrs.
William
Hamblin
and
ol
New Haven, W. Va., and
_H
_eIp ~anted
303 motor grader. The trustees
son Richard and daughter
Herschel Norris visited Mr.
Shoot, also rifle
HIGH SCHOOL ' SENIORS.' ~~'!f1•gi~~~ right to relect any
Shelly
of
St.
Louis,
Missouri,
111d
Mrs . Floyd Norris
- open sites only;
Enlist now- stay h9me until
Herbert sayre , Clerk
spent
Ute
weekend
with
Mrs.
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
recenUy.
after graduation. Guaranteed
Letart TownshiP
Sunday School attendance Gil
March 26, 12 noon.
Pauline Wolfe and son , Chris. . March 19 was 50, the offering
assignments to Europe, (31 17, 24, 2tc
Mrs. Shirley Ables visited
3-22-ltc
Korea, Hawaii, or selected
.
Shelly remained for an in- $19.90. Worship services were ·
Mrs.
Zeipha Boggess recently.
locations In the US. See your
By
Mrs.
Herbert
Roush
definite
visit
wiUt
Mrs.
Wolfe.
NG Match, Saturday,
Mr , and Mrs. Clarence
local Army representative for
held at 11 with the Rev. Lebo
25, at tho Roclhe
facts about the 180-Day Notice
Skinner
of Columbus, Mise
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Homer
Warner
Mr
·
and
Mrs.
Henry
Roush
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory
Delayed Entry Program and WILL DO babyslfflng in my spent Sunday with Mr, and and son, Dale, of Racine, spent man bringing Ute m~
Eloise Adams of Pomeroy,
from Luke 23: 27-43 "What
choke guns only. Assorted
the Army's new pay raise.
country
home
wlfh
children
In
Mrs.
Hoyt
Fugerson
at
New
Sunday
afternoon
with
Mr.
and
llpelll
Sunday with Mr. 111d
meat. Sponsored by the
For more Information call
Impression the Cross?",
the
Middleport,
Pomeroy
and
Syracuse Fire Dept. ·
Haven.
Mrs. Early Roush.
collect 593-3022.
Mrs. Charles Hyatt and called
"Standing Afar Off? " to an
Rutland areas. Will pickup
·
3-22-3fc
J.20-11tc
Mr. and Mfs. Edward Miller Miss Millie Ripley of attendance of 32.
Gil Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Nice.
children and deliver them
back to your home. Write, visited their daughter, Mrs. Charleston, W. Va., spent the
Mr, and Mrs. Leiter Manuel
with
flr$1 for
Good Friday services wl11 be
giving age of children and
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. held at Alfred Church Friday
low-priced, guaranteed apand daughter of Logan 11pe11t
address, to Jean. Hackney, Bob Cornwell at Gallipolis Herbert Shields and also
~llances and used furniture.
the weekend with Mr. 111d Mrs.
evening, March 31 at 7:30. Holy
Saturday.
·
·
Route 1, Langsville, Ohio.
See listing In Sunday Sentinel.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush visited Mrs. Ada Norris and Communion will be observed.
__:__
3·24-Jfc
Paul Manuel.
Kuhl S. Bargain Center, Rf. 7,
"at the caution light.'' Tup·
of PorUand were luncheon Mr. and Mrs. Jim Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold LaWIOII
Easter Sunrise services wl11
pers Plains, Ohio. Open to 6
FOR SALE
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert be held at 6:30 here Easter
and C. J. of Letart, W. Va.,
p.m., closed Mondays. Phone
STRAWBERRY
plants
on
hand
Bell
and
Lorna
Sunday.
Shields,
Mrs.
Bertha
RobinSon,
11pe111 Wednesday with Mr. and
Sunday, April 2. Breakfast wl11
667-3858.
'Qncl
now at the Midway Markel.
Mr Do 1s Sa
h
3-20-61c
Mrs . Charles Lawson and
Varieties are Sparkle, Sure
Mrs. Allee Balser returned to
s.
r
yre were s op- be served in the church
Crop, Midland an~ Sunrise. lite home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack ping at Heck's at Belpre baseme~t.
family .
Other
varltles
arriving
nexl
Able
M
d
f
tw
ks'
Sunday.
Ross Scarberry visited hll
DAVID BISSELL
Hennan Taylor was returned
Not A Motor Route.
week are catskill, Robinson.
~ on ay or a . o wee
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
PVT. David M. Bissell, son nephew, Charles Wolfe, at the
Midway and Everbearln~ . vlsii. Mrs.Balserhadspentthe Eastman of Hemlock Grove home Sunday after spending
House ln Columbua•" u
"""!~...-. M[dy;,ay ~kef 0 W.:,._f')!,211n. winter with her son, Mr. and vis!''~' '"'""."'•"a' ""ottls-SIDl
' ·'.· the past week in the Holzer of Mr. and Mrs. ChaRIJ!' State
wedhM
... l;!'. ~"'1 H,A.. .....
,., ~,:;:.'~
ay.
~~;et; · 1'orl)-'.(\\~\ :Phone: !! . Mrs:· Carroll .Balser at Mans""'' """ '!'!. '~
.... Hospital.
Bissell, Chesler, Is un·
field.
day afternoon.
Anna Lee Tucker and Shirley
Several local young people
dergoing eight weeks of
3-24-3tc
Mr S
F' h
f C
.I
.
--------Roger Roush and Jeff Miller
s. ue ts er o In- attended Ute Billy Graham advanced training wlth the Simpson visited Mrs. Beule
The
spent Saturday evening with cinnati, Mrs. Ellen Wilson, . film, "The Restless Ones" U.S. Army aiForl Knox, Ky.
Stitt at Veterans Memorial
Mr.andMrs.RonaldRussellat.
Pome~y;
~s.
~~Fisher
shown at the New Haven
Bissell entered the service al Hospital Friday,
3-22-3tc'
Pomeroy.
of
MinersvUie,
VISited
Mrs.
---;------,---:-Mr. and Mrs. Paul PIII'IIOIII
Theatre on Sunday evening. Fori Knox on January 1 and
That Listens
WOMAN to do spring cleaning.
Mrs. Zelpha Boggess visited Ferne B. Hayman Sunday.
and
children spent Saturday
Vicki and Penni Carr spent
graduated from elghl weeks
Write c-o The Daily Sentinel,
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hodge of the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. of basic lralning on March
night wiUt Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Box 72'1-E, Pomeroy, Ohio.
3-21-iltc
Henry Phelps and Mr. and Columbus were weekend Clair Woode and Connie Sue in 10. He alteoded · Easlern Scarberry and family.
Mia. Junior Spawn.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marvm Circleville, Ohio.
Rev. Char lea Hand and
Hlgb School. His address Is
By Mn. Evelyn Brlcklea
Joe Lee Jarrell celebrated Wickersham.
family have moved from the
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. Pvt. David M. Bissell 287-54For Rent
Sunday School attendance at
his
first
birthday
Saturday
Miss
Heidi
Ashley
spent
3001; !94th Armd. Bde. All. Mt. Moriah O!urch pai'IOIUige
and Mrs. Arthur Atherton were
FURI'II~HED and unftrnlshed the United Methodist Church
Del., 8th Pll.; Fori Knox, to Florida. The church regreta
apartments. Close tol schooC was ~7 and offering wu $18.70. with a party at Ute home of his Fnday mght wtth her grand- Mr. and, Mrs. Clarence
Phone
992·5434.
grandparents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
parents,
Mr.
~nd
Mrs.
Cllfford
to see them go, u they were
Atherton and family •of Long
Ky. 40121.
Worship attendance was 46 and
., . ON YOUR DIAL
10.18-Hc.
Orville Jarrell.
Holter at Racme Rt.
such good workers ln the
Bottom, 0 .; and Mr. and Mrs.
offering was $36.70.
Don
Johnson
of
Tanners
Run
Miss
Bev~rly
~art
spent
church and community.
Ernest Vineyard of Michigan.
A Bean and Corn Bread
Saturday
night'
with
Wednesday
mght
with
Mr.
and
spent
Mrs . lcle Tucker, Anna
Mr. and Mrs. Clwles D.
Supper was held at Ute Annex
Wayne
Roseberry.
Mrs.
Gerald
Hayman
and
Wolfe and sons; Russell,
Woode, Nina RoblnJon and
Saturday evening and the
mother,
Carrie
Swartz,
at
Gillman
and Mickey, Cbrlsa
Mr. and Mrs. Olden Thaxton KeiUt.
Clara Follrod visited Mrs.
proceeda were · $68.60 which
Elmwood
Nursing
Home
Mr. and Mrs. Robert_Ashley Carrie Swartz, Mrs. Kelly, Mr.
Hall, Cindy Tucker, and SUsie
went on the building fund for of Brandon, Fla., spent
Sunday
afternoon.
Saturday
afternoon
with
Mr.
took
thetr
son,
Ke1th,
to
Scarberry visited at the bome
and Mrs. Paul Buckley and
the new church.
Several local families at- of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Tucker
and
Mrs.
Roy
Donohew.
Colwnbus
Thursday
where
he
family
and
others
at
the
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer
How Get ABetter Deal Here
Mr . and Mrs. Vernon ~ent from Utere for a vacation Elmwood Nursing Home tended the operetta, " Cinreturned home ·from a vacation
Sundar:
·
Donohue spent Sunday af- • m Florida.
Joe
Wayne Satterfleld,
Sunday afternoon. other derella" held at Ute Tuppers
trip to North carolina.
Mr. and Mrs.. G~rald guests of Ute Bucldeys were Plains School on Friday Rod an Ross Scarberry, Terry
Mr. and Mrs: Joe Perry of ternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
evening.
Tucker, Ray and David Klaer
Shade spent a recent evening Charles Winebrenner and Hayman and son, Ke1Ut, VISited Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wilber
Parker
family
at
Cheshire.
Thursday
evening
with
Mr.
and
spent an afternoon with
family of Tuppers Plains.
wiUt his uncle, Gerald Violet.
and
Eddie
attended
'Open
Mrs.
Virgil
Roush
and
Mrs.
Mrs.
Gene
Jewell
at
Letart,
W.
Stanley, Okey and Kenny
Ricky Buckley is home on a
Gerald Violet received
House"
at
the
Ohio
State
.
Kiser.
several days vacation. The
wcrd of the death of hll niece, Vltgll Walker of Racine visited Va., Rt.
University,
last
Sunday,
March
their
uncle
Will
Cross
at
Mrs.
Darrell
Norr1s,
Mrs.
' Kenny Parsons spent
Buckley's new home is nearing
Miss Martha Perry, of
12.
Holzer
Medtcal
Center
'SunMarshall
Roush,
Arthur
Hiil
Saturday
night with his
completion.
Columbus, who passed away
day
'
and
Mrs.
Pauline
Hill
are
Vere
Swartz
remains
quite
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Word was received by Mr.
there In the hospital Thursday.
poorly
at
his
home
here.
·
~and
Mrs.
Clwles
Meenjoyln~
Uteir
spring
vacation
Ross Scarberry.
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode of
Her funeral wu at Hughes
Ute deaUt of Uteir aunt, Vlna
Funeral Home in Athena Dade of Troy, 0., called on Mr. from Rio Grande College.
and
Mrs.
Herbert
Roush
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
nan;ell
Norris
Woode of Albany, 0. They
Sunday and Mr. Violet atRoger,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lester
called
on
the
formers
parents,
attended Ute funeral service at
tended the funeral.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Roush and Randall Roberts Mr. and Mrs: Joe Stobarl Ute Hughes Funerar Home,
Sunday afternoon.
70 cadlac Eldorado CouP.e. air........... '5500
Athens, on Monday at 1 p.m.
Brlckles were Sunday af- Saturday
Richard
Fisher
of
Kenna
W
Mrs.
Gerald
Hayman
and
Mrs . Glennie Shumway
ternoon guests of Mr. and Mrs.
13900
69
Cadillt
Sedan
DeVille,
air
.............
Va.
spent
Thursday
wiUt
·Mr:
son,
Keith,
vis!~
Mrs.
Robert
\
passed away in Dayton, O.,last
EmmeU Hawk of Hemlock
'
Hart at Racme Saturday Friday. Mrs. Virgie Buckley
Grove, Ohio.
Ford ~ Pickup,
evening.
attended funeral services at
A baby daughter was born
Mrs. Herbert Roush and son
Sunday
dinner
guests
of
her
Lutheran Funeral Home in
March 4 to Mr. and Mrs,
69 Vollswqen 2 Dr., radio, w/s/w .... :..
Roger visited Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Tuesday at 10:30 a.m.
niece,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Larry
Welaley Arbaugh and has been
Roger Manuel and daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Rex O'Brien of
name!l Bethany Suzann. Curtis and family of Long Thursday ·evening at Racine.
NOW'S TIME!
69 Olds 'H.T. Sedan,
'2495
Bottom.
It
was
In
observance
Stewart,
0
.,
visited
her
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mn.
Jolln Arbaugh of Tuppers of the birthday of Mr. Curtis.
69 Po¢ilc Bonneville 2 H.T., air...... ,'2295
Mr. and Mra. Frank Upton
Plains, and Mrs. Mary
.
received word of the birth of a
Jamiaon of Reedaville. ·
Colwnbus, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
67 Olds 88 Holiday. Coupe ................
Mr. and Mrs. John Hasen granddaughter born to their
Conroy of Columbus.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
and
family
of
Michigan
were
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
66 MercuiJ
'795
&amp;mday guesta of. her brother, Robinson of Colorado. Site has
Maynard Bales were Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Wealey Arbaugh been named Roberta Lynn.
Mrs . Ja,ck Conway of
t6 Buick LaSabll 4 Door, air..............
and daughter, Bethany. They Grandparents are Mr. and
Colwnbus and Mr. and Mrs.
. '
.
also caUed .on her parents, Mr. Mrs. Frank Upton, of Silver Mr. and Mrs. Errol Conway Bill Bahr of Gallipolis.
went to Akron Thursday to visit
Ridge.
65 Oldsmobile 98 .4 Door................... !795 · 111d Mrs. John Arbaugh.
Mrs. Edith Cochran of Nitro,
Mr. and Mrs. John Newell Mr. and Mrs. Junior Conway
Gerald Violet spent Sunday
and Mrs. Addie Acker of
wiUt his sister, Mr. and Mrs. and family of Colwnbus were and Hugh.
65 Buick Electra, 4 Dr., air.................
vial ling her aunt, Mr. and Mrs. ·Edith Osborne visited with Michigan visited Sunday wiUt
Dale Hart of Athena.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hunt.
Marvin Walker and Ruthie Mrs. Alice Dodson Friday.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marvin
Walker
Mr . Rinehart is in the
Ower 40 New Cadillacs &amp;Oldsmobiles .
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Board of
and daughter Ruthie were over the weekend.
Nitro visited Mr. and Mrs. Lee Veterans Memorial Hospital
for a check up. ,
180 Mulbem Ave.
Hunt Saturday.
In Stock!
Mrs
.
Rosie
Hutchson
of
Mrs. Glennie Swatzel and
POMEROY
Margaret St. Clair of Pomeroy 'Arizona has been visiting her
We're Dealin '!
called on Mrs. Allee Dodson parents, Mr. and Mrs. Errol
Presents ·
Sunday. Other visitors were Conroy for a week.
~Oth State Basketball Tournament
-Gleona S. Milhoan
·Mr. and Mrs. Jack Raub .2!
AAA Semi- Finals. Friday 11:20 a.m : on AM
AAA Semi-Finals. Friday 3:20p.m. on AM
A Semi-Finals., Friday 7:20p.m .
•
•
.
. ,
• •
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
9
20
A Semi- Finals, Friday : p.m .
OPTOMETRIST
of Doing B.u siness"
AA
Championship
Saturday
11:20
a.m.
on
AM
992-53•2
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
OFF ICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12. 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AAA Championship Saturday 2:50 P·!'l· on AM
Open Evenings Until 6l00-Til 5
Sat.
A
Championship
Saturday
7:20p.m.
AT NOON Y.
ON THURS.)
- EAST tOURT ST.,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.... llllililp
.

Jt

:a;4 Ton 8' wide body, h. duty equipped Inc. 4 speed.tr:ans.,

1967 CHEVROLET 'h TON
S1495
8ft. wide pickup body, V-Benglne, std. 3 speed trans., good

FIRST FLOOR, • furnished' t
bedroom apartment, phone
992-3874.
-------,-,-.3-.:..
,17-tfc
'
TRAILER, Brown's Tralltf'
Court, Minersville, Ohio,
phone 992-3324.
3-3·tiC: '
_;___

.

\

Frank

.
Gheen. 949-4651 , or Carl
OFFICE HOURS
Gheen, 742·5842.
a:30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
22-6tc
8:30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noon - -- - - - - - - -3·.:::
Saturday.
BEEGLE pups, 6 mon ths old,

Fairview
News Notes

SMALL trailer. 2 ·bedroom, 10
miles north of Pomeroy- us.
a month ; phone 992-7479. .
'3·21-tf(

{ ·,

Polileroy
Motor Co.

2SIINS

basement, double lot, garage
In Pomeroy . Phone 992-5570

after 6 p.m.
weekends .

• r r

I' M". I •..
·
· 24, 1972
WWMOJ, 0., Friday,
March

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Cla~sifieds Get Re~ul~~~
s

• •· .- · ,

For Rent

10-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Poolerov,
0., Fnday. March 24
t"""
.
,

IN~~=~tf.~N

,

'

IN A

•

·~

'1
,...

GREAT
USED CAR

I

•

·l'

AT •••
'·'·

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS ·
Ph. 985-41 00
Located on S. Rt. 7
'

Real Estate For Sale

Chester,

new cement block garage

Auto Sales

dollars

or

co

to .

USED CARS .

o.

HOUSE AND lot on Vine Sf., 1950 INi'E.RNA iiONAL •;, ton
truck, engine recently
Racine. Phone Otis Bailey,
overhauled, phone 992-6602.
949-2854.
3-22-3fp
3-24-3fp '
~~~9&amp;6~P~L~Y~M~O~U~T~H~Sa-te~l~lite, 2
FARM, 160acres, dairy or beef;
door Hardtop, 318 cu. ln.,
large bank barn, 27 stanchion
power steering, radio, heater
milk house equipped, 2 silos ;
and defroster, $695 ; phone
all outside buildings ; 2 ponds:
949-3211. Racine.
,
'
'
hard surface road ; see
anytime, 2 miles N. of Rt. 7 on :=:-::-::-:----~3-.=24-Jfc .. .
Sumner Rd., Co. Rd. 36, 11 1971 DODGE VAN, 6 cylinder, 3
miles NE of Pomeroy, M. v.
speed, Insulated &amp; paneled, :
Fryar .
·
27,000 miles, $2,300 or best ·
offer . Phone 69a-3293.
;·
3-23-31p
3-.:
23:_:·61,c .:
3 BEDROOM House on Lincoln -------~
:•
Heig hts, phone 992-5737.
3-23·6fc
Wanted To Buy
·',.
RACINE - 7 room house, excellent location, out of high
h
•·
waler, 1'12 bath, carpel on two OLD . FURNITURE , dis es; i:.
rooms, new roof, practically clocks, brass beds, mspl\~~e ,
garden ploi, gas heal. Phon~
949-3954.
' 3~
·3tc
- _ _ _ _ _ _ _3:_-2::

:WMP0/1390

J:

0

households. Write .MQnlo. 1
'·
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, ·
· ;.:
Call 99H27 L
3-16-tfc I
~

)t

~

3 ROOMS .
NEW
FURNITURE
1349.95

l·
•l

••

·~
.~

535.00 Down
Salance On
Convenient
Terms.

~

.I

'

MASON
FURNITURE'

.

t

71

v.a, auto., P.s. .... '2895

'1395

98

-

air................

THIS .IS THE PLACEI

Dr.

.'1095

Sta. Walln, v.a auto. ...........
'995 ·

.

"

SPRING

News ~otes

FERTILIZER
FIElD SEEDS

Quality &amp;-Price!
Sugar Run Mills

'195

WJEH·AM &amp; FAM

Karr &amp; Van Zanclt

N

PM.

Mason. W.Va.

~

Keno Ridge

'

w·

COM' PTON 0 D

�..

,.

,

,

I

For Sale

·

DEADLINES
P.M.
Day
Be for&lt;
Publication
.
Monday Deadllnt 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
ill I be accepted untll9 a.m. for,
Day of Publication
·
REGULATIONS

-ROOMS
- -and
-bath with

right to edit or reject any ads

3-22-61p

The Publisher reserves the

deemed

publisher

objectional.

will

not

TRAWBERRY Plants , Charlie
Fhoster near Racine Locks;
P one 247-2309.
3-22-6tp

or

anytime

The

be ONE

responsible for more than one
mcorrec:t Insertion.

RATES

GARDEN

pl ow,

Springfield make rota, price
$60.

Phone 949-3331.

3-23-lOtp

For Want Ad Service
S cents per Word one Insertion

,
Minim um Charge75c
12 cents per word three · GOOD DODGE 318 motor and

consecutive Insertions.
. 18 cents per word. six cOn'Se&lt;:utlve Insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on pale
ads and ads paid within H
days.
CAI!D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
51.50 for

so

word minimum .

Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Charge per

Advertisement.

automatic
transmission.
Phone 985-3353.

3-23-31c

a X35 TRAILER. converted info
camper -type home ; plus
attached new bathroom and 2

bedroom building ; can easily
be moved ; ideal for the
OUTDOORSMAN who wants
a good, but cheap dwelling as

a campsite.

Phone

$15 male and female, phone

742-3656 .

Employment Wanted

1966

3-22-lOtp

HARLEY -DAVIDSON

Sprint, $300, 2 riding mowers,
DRY WALL Finisher con. $25
and 5100, phone 985-3833,
tractor . R. I. Oubbeld, phone Harry
Brown, Chester, Ohio.
742-5a25.
3·20-5tc _ _ __ _ _ _ _
3·_19-6tp

- - - - --

TROPICAL FISH, fancy
guppies. angels and breeders.
Bellas and supplies. Phone

For Sale

Of
QUALRY
,, ..

1200 GALLON water lank, SSO. 992-5443 .
12-30-ffc
Call Waiter Cleland of the
Racine Fire Department at
949-3471.
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy.
3-22-4tc
Park view Kennels. Phone 992·
5443.
PAINT DAMAGE . 1971 Zig-zag
a.JS-ffc

------

sewing machi.nes. Still in
original cartons . No at tachments needed as our
controls are built ln. Sews

·

·

---

- .- -

t969 FORD

S2195

springs, booster brakes, 75Dx16-8 ply fires, beautiful red
finish, chrome body mldgs ., chrome w. c. mirrors, 5 cab
lights, 360 V-B engine, chrome front bumper. rear step
bumper. Priced, for spring action .

tires, clean cab . Color white . See, fry &amp; you'll buy this one.

t967 CHEVROLET CAMINO CUSTOM

51695

V-8 engine. auto. trans. , power steering, good w-w tires,
cover for body, beau1 iful red finish. Priced to move.

Pt~eroy

Motor Co.

'f'PM!ROY, OHIO

For Sale

FREE tickets are now available "STAR" kills rats quickly ~
on a free giant $20 Easter
Sure. 2'11 lbs. 51.69; Ebers·
large chocolate
Basket
bach Hdwe., Sugar Run Mills,
and nut Easter egg . See them
today ond get your free

72 Chevrolet Pickup
Long wide bed, 3 speed, V-8, blue &amp; white .

If you purchase a new or used car from Smith
Nelson during the rest of this month we will
give you $10.50 cash to buy your 1972 Ohio Auto
Tags with. This offer good till 1st of Aprll1972.

72 GMC Van

-

1969 Chrysler........ only $1.895

67 Ford ·Van
71 Chevelle Malibu

Newport Custom 4 dr. sed ., green finish- This
is a real sharp auto . Come in &amp; drive it. Priced
· to seiJ.

lfckels, no purchase required.

at the Bright Star Market ELECTRIC GUITAR + amp.
(Barclay, like new) ; Truck
next to the Drive-In Theatre,
topper 36" high, long wide
Mason, W. Va. where low
bed ; Ripple Afghan, Brown.
prices and convenient Service
orange;
Brownie dress. size 8.
are featured every day, check
Paul Life, Success Rd. near
lhe following prices and stock
Tuppers Plains, phone 667·
your larder . Favorite or
Bonus brand white bread 7 3544.
3-24-3fp
loaves $1 with SlO additional
purchase. Broughton's 2 pel.
sweet milk gal. 99c, Bologna 2 TWIN bed. S25; 1 Kenmore
Electric dryer. $40; 1955 AMC
in piece lb. S9c, grade Asmall
eggs 3 doz . $1 , smoked slab truck , $50; phone 992·5654.
3-24-lOip
bacon whole or half lb. 49c,
Van Camp 2'1 oz. can pork and
beans 2 cans S9c, Hart's whole 2 YEAR old Tennessee Walking

Wise Purchases

1968 Dodge .......... only $1595

4 Dr. sedim, V-8, auto., P.S., factory air, low
mileage .

.,.,-,.,.--~---

Chevy Agency

Polara 4 dr. H.T., gold 'with black vinyl roof,
factory air. Real clean car . Nice tamily car.
one owner.

Pickens Hdwe. , 1\1\ason.

3-19-301p

68 Chevrolet Impala

•

V-8, auto., P.S., P. B., factory air.

1968 Buick ........... only $1995

67 Volkswagen.

Wildcat 4 dr. H. T. , dark gdld with vinyl roof.
factory air . This is one of our double checked
used car. Real nice.
- .. --

Save space. Buy now~ Excellent condition.

1967 Buick .........: only s1295

69 Plymouth

Skylark conv., white with black top. Get ready
for spring in this beauty. Priced to sell.

Road Runner. 4 speed, 383 engine.

Horse; contact ·Larry Jones, 3
NEW JOHN boat, all finished
kernel corn 5 cans Sl.
but bottom, ~5 . phone Otis
Broughton's Ice Milk ice miles E. of Racine on State
Route 124.
Cream, Gal. $1.19, white
Bailey 949-2854.
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
3·24-4fc
3-22-3tp
potatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59,
buttonholes, sew on buttons, --~---Complete assortment of fancy
monograms, and blind hem
RIDING horses, 1 pony, 2 Easter goodies Including AKC REGISTERED Australian
stitch. Full cash price. $38.50 2 saddles,
terrier dogs, nice Easter gift,
Easter Baskets from $1.49 to
Arnold Grafe, phone
New Haven, W. Va.
or budget plan available.
reduced
price $SO each; phone
$20.
We
accept
Federal
Food
742·4211
days
and
742-SSOl
Phone 992-5641.
Albany 698-3202.
Coupon. Stretch your money,
evenings.
3·22-6tc
3-24-lOip
food
coupons
and
time,
see
us
3-19-6tc
Musical Instruments
NICE 2-sfory horne with
for seed potatoes, onion sets
VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
SPINET-CONSOLE
PIANO.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
DON'T
pump
your
sluggish
w p s
and garden plants as needed.
model. Complete with all 0 HOW ALTERs
Wanted responsible party to
air furnace . Near Pomeroy, j
'
et el hop, Save In many ways at Bright
septic tank . Get Klean -Em Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
cleaning tools. Small paint
Elementary School. Phone I
AII Septic Tank Cleaner . take over spinel plano. Easy
Tropical fish and supplies . Star Market, next to Drive-In
damage in shipping. Will take
ter
ms.
Can
be
seen
locally.
992-7384 to Sjle.
·
Landmark
Farm
Bureau,
Stop in and compare.
Theatre, Mason, W. Va.
$27 cash or budget plan
Wri
te
Credit
Manager,
P.
o.
11
-7-tfc
.
Pomeroy.
_ __ _ _ _ __ 3-_ -i27tp _ _ _ _ _ _ ___J-7.1f
available. Phone 992·5641.
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana ------~--3-24-ltc
3·22-6tc
46176.
MODERN 3 or 4 bearoom home.
----------_ _ __ _ __ _
3-_
24-21p
Phone 992 - 3~2 .
WALNUT-Stereo radio com 3·2-ffc
bina tio n, four speed In Real Estate For Sale
termixed changer, four
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
speaker sound srstem, dual
60X12, 2-bedroom, all-elecfric, Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Plains. All . new with total
volume contra . Balance
air conditioned, Bx20 ft . Porch
electric and centra~ air
568.42. Use our budget terms.
and
aluminum awning,
conditioning, bath and &gt;t&lt; fully
Call 992-7085.
aluminum skirting, com c~r pefed, full . basement;
3-22-6tc
and exterior SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
plefely setup. Beautiful
-------HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL INTERIOR
garage In basement. See by
painting
.
R.
I.
Dubbeld,
phone
REASONABLE
rates.
Ph.
446·
location.
Owner
leaving
state.'
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE.
, ,Atlll!l~ 992-2196 .
BEAU;rJ,FUL colonial maple
742-5825.
4782, Gallipolis. John Rus;.::;;' • Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272. • apppJntment,
OHIO.
stereo, AM-FM radio, four
o~
·
1
"12·3585
..
D!I~~\(,T,hornpson.
,
3-20·51c
Owner &amp; Operator.
··""'"?. ,
_::1-.::10:::-•::.ytc. Ftnanclng aV8 11&amp;ble.
3·5·301c
!
speakers, 4 speed automatic
5-12-ffc
12·30-lfc'
changer, separate controls.
J OHN
SEPTIC
tanks
c1eaned.
Miller
BACKHOE
AND
DOZER
work.
Balance $79.56. Use our
Hciu!&gt;E In ·Long Bottom, phone
Sanitation. Stewart. Ohio. Ph .
Septic tanks installed. George VINYL and aluminum siding ; '
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
m -3529.
662-3035.
( Biill Pullins. Phone 992-2478. free estimates; references;
J.22-6fc
1-28-ffc
.
4-25-ffc call collect 446·360a, Byerly
2·12-ffc
- - - -- USED Norge refrigerator, good
.
Construction Co., Gallipol is.
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
condition, Harold Boston, Rl. SEWING MACHINt:.&gt;. Kepalr READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
3-24-30tp
service, all makes. 992-2284.
livered right to your prolect .
1, Reedsv ille, Ohio.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Fast and easy . ~ree
3-22-3fc
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
Authorized
Singer Sales and
estimates. Phone 992-J2a4. O'DELL WHEEL allghment'
Assllciate
- -- - - 11 -21 -tfc
located at Crossroads, Rf. 124 .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ..
.BOAT, motor and trailer. Phone
3-29-ffc
VERA EBLEN
Complete front end service,
Middleport, Ohio.
&amp;67-3031.
tune
up
and
brake
service.
6-30-ffc
.
992-3020
3-22'6tc
Wheels
balanced
elecHARRISON'S
TV
and
Antenna
-----Middleport
N. 2nd
All
work
tronically.
Service. Phone 992-2522.
1971 SCOTTY Camper, never
SEE
US
FOR
:
Awnings.
storm
guaranteed.
Reasoncibte
6-10-ffc
used, refrigerator and stove
MIDDLEPORT
doors and wi ndows, carports,
rates.
Phone
992-3213.
·
608 East Main Street
~early new, 3 a .R., 11f2
with oven ; refrigerator and
marquees, aluminum siding
7-27-ffc bath s. ranch type , bri ck.
POMEROY, OHIO
light run on gas or electric;
and railing. A. Jacob, sales - -- - - Carpeted living rm, with
also has hea t; phone 742-3005.
992-2259 til4 :00
representative. For free
stone fireplace , modern,
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
3-22-3fc
Sunday
&amp; Evenings
3
BR
es timates, phone Charles
built -in ki tchen with gar .
C..mplefe Service
-----992-2568
dis
.,
range,
wall
oven
,
Lisle
,
Syracuse.
V.
v.
Phone 949-3821
OLD lraller about B' x 20',
freezer -refr ig ., oodles of
Johnson and Son, In c.
HOME
Racine, Ohio
suitable to place on river,
cabinets, ulll. rm ., located In
10 ACRES
3-2-ffcCrill Bradford
$400 ; phone 992-5786.
cho ice locallon, overlook ing
Home
aboul
8 years old, 3
ON YOUR LOT
5-1-ffc pool and park on Broadway .
3·22-6tc
bedroom
s
with
closets, bath
493 Broadway . No . 1-3 B.R .,
I car garage, brick front,
- - - - -Coal
Oil Forced
dining
room,
bath , mostly all paneled,
wall to wall carpet.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been living room 22 ft . long, with
air Heat, full basement,
cancelled?
lost
your br ick fireplace , kitchen with
Stucco finish . Possession 1st
Mobile Homes For Sale
ONLY $13,750
built -In features , bar ,
operotor's license? Coli -'1'12· all
of June. $9,500.00.
Wh~
attached garage . No. 22966.
We specialize In aluminum ,
Small three room hdme with
1
vinyl and steel siding ·
2 STORY FRAME
bath . Buy one . get the other
fiberglas , brick and stone :
as a bonus .
3 bedrooms , 1112 baths, front
complete l ine of res identia l
On Most Amer ican Cars.
and
side porches, double
and com mer cla l roof in g ;
POMEROY
-GUARANTEEDgarage,
storm doors and
remodeling ,
building ,
129 Locust St. - 3 B.R. Jl/ 2
ALL
WEATHER
ROOFING
suspended ceilings, Interior
windows
,
close to shopping,
Phone 992-2094
bath , lov ely deco r , includes
itnd exterior painting ; comexcellent location. $12,900.00.
all carpeting , drapes, ven .

Gal . 500, 2 dr. H.T., maroon with black Jn :
terior. This Is one of the nicest Fords we have·
ever had .

tun .

Open Evenings Tiif 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. TillS p.m.
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat.
- -

~·

(Get Your 1972 Ohio Tags Free)

WANTED!

.-

Carrlen For
MASON

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc•.
500 E. Main St.

.'

Pomeroy, Ohio

--====-_..:,_

•

12' · 14' - 24' - WIDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES
1220Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
196a, 60x12 two bedroom mobile
home. fully ca rpeted except

bathroom and kitchen ; 8x16
porch , aluminum awning ,
aluminum skirting . Phone

985-3309 or wrile Terry

Swartz, Rl. 2, Cool ville, Oh io.

3-23-61p
CASH PAID For all makes and
models of mobile homes.

Phone area code 614-423-9531 .
3-23-6tc

ALLSfDE BUILDERS
CONSTR, CO.

&amp;

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR
MARimA
TYPEWRITER
616 Main st.
Belpre, 0 .
423-6551

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

&amp; OONSTRUCTION

Open8Tiil ,
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

&amp; PLUMBING 00.

KITCHEN
and

SON
CONST.
"Everything In Home
Maintenance"

MEIGS, W, VA. 25260
ME fGS 992-71l1
MASON 773-5634

240 Lincotn St.
Middlep11rt, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No matter what
your need. Complete roof or
spouting repilir. Interior or
exterior carptntry . Ctlllna
tile and Pantling and Siding,
Complete Plumbing &amp;

Heating.
Day Number 992-2550

home will be sold at absolute
dealers cost. .Shown by appoin tment only . Coli Belpre,
Ohio, area code 614-423-9531
for appointment.

3-23-6tc
READ THIS! You can save
literally hundreds (even
thousands) of dollars on a lat e
model used or re-possessed

mobile home. Before you buy
any mobile home stop and see
the huge selection of 8, 10 and
12 wide mobile homes that we
have on display. We arrange

.COLONIAL
AUTO BODY
537 High Sl.
Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings , glass
in sta llation .
free
loaner
cars
and
estimates,
also
mechanical
repairs .
Phone 992-3793

~aymenls .

Easy credit terms.
Don't forget we are the area
dealer for "O.Iroller" mobile
homes. One of the oldest and
best names In the Industry.
Don' I wait. Slop now at Berry ·
Miller Mobile Homes Sales,
705 . Farson Street, Belpre,
Ohio, across the railroad
tfacks
from
Kaiser
Aluminum . Phone ar~a code
614-423-9531. Open 7 days a
week . .
3-23-6lc

------

From the largest
Bulldozer Rad iator to the
Sma llest Heater Core.

. Nathan Biggs
Rodlator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
PIUf2-2174

Pomeroy

Carry -out and drive -In located in Pomero'y. Show ing
exce llent returns .
other listings on
homes and business spots.

Many

I Need Listings for Farms and
Hoi!U!s.

2 bedrooms, bath, dining

room, carpeted, pane1ed,
!lied,
porch,
storage
building . 56.950.00.
MAKE AN OFFER
2 story frame, 6 rooms, 3
bedr ooms, good neigh -

borhood.

WE HAVE IMMEDIATE
SALE FOR ALL TYPE
HOMES AND FARMS,
CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REALTOR

992-SS03
992-3898

742-l947

742-4761

We art fully insured

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Free Estimate

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR OONDITIONING

B&amp;W HEATING CO.
For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

REGISTERED

financing for you . Low down

Brick St. , 5 r ms. and bath , or
set up as two apts. Co mplete
with extra lot , suitable for
trailer .

11h STORY BRICK '

We have 24 hr. emergency
service.

SAVE 12.000 to 53,000 on a
modular home. Due to a local
dealer closing his sa les lot,
two 24xS&lt;l Kit Modular homes
and one Ux44 Tek N!odular

blinds , built -in kitchen ,
com plete
with
refrlg .
Basement f i nished with
shower, sinks, and large
freezer goes with th is one.
Attached garage and also
garden spot .

APPOLOOSA
STUD SERVICE
$50 Reg. Mares
$40 Grade

FRANCIS BENEDUM
Phone 667-3856

TERMITES. •TERMITES,
Get Rid of Them
We will protect any single
dwelling residence for
1

149.50

WRITTEN WARRANTY
. Call Collecl61 ~:4$ 2 -3158

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.
Z•nesville, Ohio

Jhe
·Orthid Room
Make reservations for your

pr ivate parties, banquets, ·
special occasions.
Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
privileges.
' Ind ivi dual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people.
Phone
.992-3975

992-5786

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
NEW - 3 bedroom, a'll electric home. 1'12 baths, large
livi ng, nice kitchen with double sink. Utility room. Plenty
of closet space, 2 garages. 1.IS acres. Out on old Route 33.
NICE OLDER HOME
MODERN - 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, birch kitchen, double
, si nk. stove and refrigerator. Gas fireplace, sliding· glass
doors from dining to back and side porch. 2 lots, double
garage .
4 BEDROOMS
NIFTY - Birch kitchen, natural gas furnace, bath, full
basement. Large lot. Garage. 510,000.00.
NEW LISTING
.
HARRISONVILLE - 7 room home. nearly ail carpeted,
l1/2 baths, gas heating . 3 bedrooms, l)'lodern kitchen with
double sink and bar. 6 lots or 1'1• acres. Garage 40x70.
Corner location for service sfaflon.

.
NEW LISTING
142 ACRES - Of nice clean laying land. 2 barns with
sheds. 4 good springs, farm pond and wafering trough. 2
car garage, 2 hen houses. Minerals except coal. Located
on hard road. Salem Township.
4 ACRES
.
NEAR TUPPERS PLAINS - 2 bedrooms, bath, T.P.
wafer. Nice birch kitchen, double sink and stove. 2'living
rooms. Only $10,500.00.
51.500.00 DOWN
3 ACRES - 6 room house, well, spring, garden. Other
buildings. S53.42 a· Month .
DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT IS SOLD, BUY TODAY.
TOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATE.
992 -3325 HELEN L. TEAFORD. ASSOCIATE 992-2378

I

'

'

CLELAND
REALTY

plete tine of Masonry work . All
work guaranteed to customer
satisfaction . We are tully
insured for your protection . 32
N. 2nd . 992 -3918 .

Society News

·To You

Contact

Alignment
5.55

HARTFORD

T":ppers Plains

REALTY~

----------

_____

Station

WHITE .

EXPERT

Alfred
Social Notes

News' Events

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

882-2793

Business Services

·App}e GrOVe

1967 Ford ............. only $1195

HART'S USED CARS

------

_____

- - - -----

Heavy duty.
'

For Sale

Easter bunny and large fruit

See The Used Car Lot With A Hart!

Like new. locally owned.

OPEN EVE$, 1:00 P.M.

By Mn.1Jerbei1~
Mr. and Mrs! Clwlea Wolfe,
Mrs. Linda Black and children
were Saturday villt.n ol Mn.
RllSII Scarberry.
AttenJanc. at MI. Morlah
O!urch of God Sunday School
Card
Thanks
Notice
, was 81.
OUR HEARTFELT thanks to ; - - - - - - - - - - - . ONE LARc;'£ 1ra11er space,
Susie Scarberry, Connie,
our friends and neighbors for
Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,
the m.,y kind- and
Judy and Patty Klier spent
MaSon, W. Va.
. FERTILIZER
.
exr,reulons of sympat~y Order
3-7-18fp
Sunday
afternoon with Debbie
get' early
ex ended .at the lime of the discount.now,
Beg, bulk and
and Loretta Holsinger.
Illness and toss of our dear liquid fe'r tlllzer . Take ·2 BEDROOM. '12 double, 'fur!•lend, Min Bess Sanborn. delivery fr9m our area
Rod Childress celebrated hll
nished on 4fh &amp; C..llege In
Special thanks to our friends, warehouse 1t ·Pomeroy.
Syracuse. Phone 992-2749.
14th birthday with a party held
'Mr. and Mrs. George Hackett,
3-15-tfc
at
the home of his parents, Mr.
Sr .. ./k. and Mrs. Paul S. · ASK ABOUT COMPLETE
and Mrs. Glenn Tucker Friday
Smart, Rev. Chester Tennant, CUSTOM SPRAY SERVICE
1 BWRODM friller . apartRev. Rqberf ·Baumgardner;
ments, Ideal for couples .
evening. lee cream and cake
Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
Ordtr Your
were served to Glenn and Anna
C.lub, . Raw' lings-Coats
992·52&lt;411 or 992-3436. ·
Seed
earn
Now
1
Tucker, Ross and Mildred
Funere Home. Words cannot
3-2J.6tc
expresS our grateful feelings
Scarbei'I'JI,
Etta Mae Parsons
POMEROY
APARTMENT;
217
N.
3rd
Sf.,
to everyone who helped ~so
and children, Kenny and
_Jlck W. C1rsey, Mgr.
many ways. God bless ou.
Middleport, 3 rooms and bath,
Phent
f92-2111
Tonya , Rod and Ross
The Ingels, Earl and ss
private entrance, nice yard,
.
3-2.C.Itp ABOUT YOJJR wetGHT ...
Childress, Randy and Allen
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
3-23-lfc
Tucker and Susie Scarberry .
overweight ladies, teens and
...
men Interested In a Weight
Mrs. Focle Hayman and
PHIL WISE, FORMERLY OF POMEROY, has purWatchers (R) · Cla&amp;S In 2 BEDROOM mobile horne with
Mrs.
Bertha RoblnJon visited
air conditioning In Racine
KOSCOT KOSMETICS a. Flame
Pqmeroy write; Weight
chased Bill Janes Chevrolet, Inc., in McConnelsville . Wise
area
;
pl\one
992-6329.
Uteir aunt, Mrs. Anna Scarof Hope Pet'fumes. Human &amp; Watchers (R), 1863 Section
has served as general manager of the firm for three years.
3-2J.tfc
synfheflc wigs. No need to
Rd., Ci~clnn!ttl, Ohio 45237 ,
berry at Evans, W. Va. Monleave Meigs or Mason County
Some remodeling projects are underway and a long range
10.3-tfc
day and also called on oUter
· for lack · of money. If Inremodeling
program
Is
being
planned.
The
firm
has
a
staff
of
LEGAL
NOTICE
relatives.
terested ca!l 992-5113.
CHiCKEN Barbecue Easter
20
employes.
Sunday,, Aprll2, from 11 a.m.
:i-7-tfc
Benny B~?Bgess returned to
LEGAL NOTICE
.,------,--to S· p.m. at the Racine Fire
The trustees of Letart Twp.,
his employm~nt on the Elger
Station . Complete chicken Meigs County, will accept bids
'GUJ'I SHOOT. Sunday, March
Cliff Boat Sunday.
until
7
p.m.
Monday,
April
3,
dinner $1.50, chicken only $1.
26, 1 p. m. Factory choked
1972,
for
purchase
of
Used
motor
•
3-22-9tc oreder. Minimum
Mr. and Mrs. Clwles Mcguns only . Second place
Phil Wise, formerly of
to be named Phil Wise service, parts .and accounting . attended schools here and Dade of Troy, 0., visited Mr.
shooters get free shot In next R==Eo=u"'c"'Eo-s-af,_e__,.
&amp;--,-fa-st;:_::wifh specifications are as follows :
match. Assorted meats . GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
Chevrolet, Inc. - features a He served in management served two years in the and Mrs. Russell Roush Friday
115 horsepower 6 cylinder Pomeroy, has purchased the
Racine Gun Club.
diesel
engine
Bill Janes Chevrolet, Inc., complete automotive sales and capacities with the Mason European Theatre during evening flld alao spent the
Drugs.
12.foot power shift moldboard
3-23-3tc "water pills' at Nelson3-17-20fp
agency in McCoonelsville.
PQwer steering
service facilities. There are 20 County Motor Co. for 14 years. World War II. He and his wife, weekend with Mrs. Gladys
Ci!lb
comp
lete
He is a graduate of the General Shirley, are the parents oi a Shields and Mrs. Edna Roush
READY NOW FOR Easter,
Formerly associated with staff members.
Scarifier
Mums. geraniums and Found
Wise has had 22 years of Motors Institute at Flint, son, Donald,l9, who is a fresh- at Racine.
l3x2.t tires front and rear, the Mason County Motor Co.,
pansies, CLELAND'S MONEY, Monday, March 13, 10 must
be 75 pet. tread
Wise has been general automotive experience having Mich., as well as several man at Ohio Valley College in
GREENHOUSE. Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Taylor
Lights
a.m.
In
front
of
Liquor
Store.
Parkersburg.
manager of Ute Janes fll'll1 for worked In all phases of the business seminars .
3-23-tfc
Windshield wipers
of
Pt. Pleasant spent Sunday
Owner may have by Iden- Heater and defroster
native
of
Pomeroy,
Wise
A
the
past
three
years.
The
firm
business,
Including
sales
,
tifying amount and paying for
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Flasher lights
IGHT fatigue with Zlpples, the
ad.
Must be delivered and carry a
Donald Hupp and' sons.
great Iron pill. Only $1.98 at
3-l.41-1.4tc l year unconditional warranty
and
Mrs
.
Erwin
Gleckner.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Fugenon
Nelson Drugs.
--------Must be a 1965 model or newer
w · .. ·
Trade-in Is to be one Gallon
3-17-JOfp
Mrs.
William
Hamblin
and
ol
New Haven, W. Va., and
_H
_eIp ~anted
303 motor grader. The trustees
son Richard and daughter
Herschel Norris visited Mr.
Shoot, also rifle
HIGH SCHOOL ' SENIORS.' ~~'!f1•gi~~~ right to relect any
Shelly
of
St.
Louis,
Missouri,
111d
Mrs . Floyd Norris
- open sites only;
Enlist now- stay h9me until
Herbert sayre , Clerk
spent
Ute
weekend
with
Mrs.
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
recenUy.
after graduation. Guaranteed
Letart TownshiP
Sunday School attendance Gil
March 26, 12 noon.
Pauline Wolfe and son , Chris. . March 19 was 50, the offering
assignments to Europe, (31 17, 24, 2tc
Mrs. Shirley Ables visited
3-22-ltc
Korea, Hawaii, or selected
.
Shelly remained for an in- $19.90. Worship services were ·
Mrs.
Zeipha Boggess recently.
locations In the US. See your
By
Mrs.
Herbert
Roush
definite
visit
wiUt
Mrs.
Wolfe.
NG Match, Saturday,
Mr , and Mrs. Clarence
local Army representative for
held at 11 with the Rev. Lebo
25, at tho Roclhe
facts about the 180-Day Notice
Skinner
of Columbus, Mise
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Homer
Warner
Mr
·
and
Mrs.
Henry
Roush
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory
Delayed Entry Program and WILL DO babyslfflng in my spent Sunday with Mr, and and son, Dale, of Racine, spent man bringing Ute m~
Eloise Adams of Pomeroy,
from Luke 23: 27-43 "What
choke guns only. Assorted
the Army's new pay raise.
country
home
wlfh
children
In
Mrs.
Hoyt
Fugerson
at
New
Sunday
afternoon
with
Mr.
and
llpelll
Sunday with Mr. 111d
meat. Sponsored by the
For more Information call
Impression the Cross?",
the
Middleport,
Pomeroy
and
Syracuse Fire Dept. ·
Haven.
Mrs. Early Roush.
collect 593-3022.
Mrs. Charles Hyatt and called
"Standing Afar Off? " to an
Rutland areas. Will pickup
·
3-22-3fc
J.20-11tc
Mr. and Mfs. Edward Miller Miss Millie Ripley of attendance of 32.
Gil Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Nice.
children and deliver them
back to your home. Write, visited their daughter, Mrs. Charleston, W. Va., spent the
Mr, and Mrs. Leiter Manuel
with
flr$1 for
Good Friday services wl11 be
giving age of children and
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. held at Alfred Church Friday
low-priced, guaranteed apand daughter of Logan 11pe11t
address, to Jean. Hackney, Bob Cornwell at Gallipolis Herbert Shields and also
~llances and used furniture.
the weekend with Mr. 111d Mrs.
evening, March 31 at 7:30. Holy
Saturday.
·
·
Route 1, Langsville, Ohio.
See listing In Sunday Sentinel.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush visited Mrs. Ada Norris and Communion will be observed.
__:__
3·24-Jfc
Paul Manuel.
Kuhl S. Bargain Center, Rf. 7,
"at the caution light.'' Tup·
of PorUand were luncheon Mr. and Mrs. Jim Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold LaWIOII
Easter Sunrise services wl11
pers Plains, Ohio. Open to 6
FOR SALE
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert be held at 6:30 here Easter
and C. J. of Letart, W. Va.,
p.m., closed Mondays. Phone
STRAWBERRY
plants
on
hand
Bell
and
Lorna
Sunday.
Shields,
Mrs.
Bertha
RobinSon,
11pe111 Wednesday with Mr. and
Sunday, April 2. Breakfast wl11
667-3858.
'Qncl
now at the Midway Markel.
Mr Do 1s Sa
h
3-20-61c
Mrs . Charles Lawson and
Varieties are Sparkle, Sure
Mrs. Allee Balser returned to
s.
r
yre were s op- be served in the church
Crop, Midland an~ Sunrise. lite home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack ping at Heck's at Belpre baseme~t.
family .
Other
varltles
arriving
nexl
Able
M
d
f
tw
ks'
Sunday.
Ross Scarberry visited hll
DAVID BISSELL
Hennan Taylor was returned
Not A Motor Route.
week are catskill, Robinson.
~ on ay or a . o wee
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
PVT. David M. Bissell, son nephew, Charles Wolfe, at the
Midway and Everbearln~ . vlsii. Mrs.Balserhadspentthe Eastman of Hemlock Grove home Sunday after spending
House ln Columbua•" u
"""!~...-. M[dy;,ay ~kef 0 W.:,._f')!,211n. winter with her son, Mr. and vis!''~' '"'""."'•"a' ""ottls-SIDl
' ·'.· the past week in the Holzer of Mr. and Mrs. ChaRIJ!' State
wedhM
... l;!'. ~"'1 H,A.. .....
,., ~,:;:.'~
ay.
~~;et; · 1'orl)-'.(\\~\ :Phone: !! . Mrs:· Carroll .Balser at Mans""'' """ '!'!. '~
.... Hospital.
Bissell, Chesler, Is un·
field.
day afternoon.
Anna Lee Tucker and Shirley
Several local young people
dergoing eight weeks of
3-24-3tc
Mr S
F' h
f C
.I
.
--------Roger Roush and Jeff Miller
s. ue ts er o In- attended Ute Billy Graham advanced training wlth the Simpson visited Mrs. Beule
The
spent Saturday evening with cinnati, Mrs. Ellen Wilson, . film, "The Restless Ones" U.S. Army aiForl Knox, Ky.
Stitt at Veterans Memorial
Mr.andMrs.RonaldRussellat.
Pome~y;
~s.
~~Fisher
shown at the New Haven
Bissell entered the service al Hospital Friday,
3-22-3tc'
Pomeroy.
of
MinersvUie,
VISited
Mrs.
---;------,---:-Mr. and Mrs. Paul PIII'IIOIII
Theatre on Sunday evening. Fori Knox on January 1 and
That Listens
WOMAN to do spring cleaning.
Mrs. Zelpha Boggess visited Ferne B. Hayman Sunday.
and
children spent Saturday
Vicki and Penni Carr spent
graduated from elghl weeks
Write c-o The Daily Sentinel,
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hodge of the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. of basic lralning on March
night wiUt Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Box 72'1-E, Pomeroy, Ohio.
3-21-iltc
Henry Phelps and Mr. and Columbus were weekend Clair Woode and Connie Sue in 10. He alteoded · Easlern Scarberry and family.
Mia. Junior Spawn.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marvm Circleville, Ohio.
Rev. Char lea Hand and
Hlgb School. His address Is
By Mn. Evelyn Brlcklea
Joe Lee Jarrell celebrated Wickersham.
family have moved from the
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. Pvt. David M. Bissell 287-54For Rent
Sunday School attendance at
his
first
birthday
Saturday
Miss
Heidi
Ashley
spent
3001; !94th Armd. Bde. All. Mt. Moriah O!urch pai'IOIUige
and Mrs. Arthur Atherton were
FURI'II~HED and unftrnlshed the United Methodist Church
Del., 8th Pll.; Fori Knox, to Florida. The church regreta
apartments. Close tol schooC was ~7 and offering wu $18.70. with a party at Ute home of his Fnday mght wtth her grand- Mr. and, Mrs. Clarence
Phone
992·5434.
grandparents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
parents,
Mr.
~nd
Mrs.
Cllfford
to see them go, u they were
Atherton and family •of Long
Ky. 40121.
Worship attendance was 46 and
., . ON YOUR DIAL
10.18-Hc.
Orville Jarrell.
Holter at Racme Rt.
such good workers ln the
Bottom, 0 .; and Mr. and Mrs.
offering was $36.70.
Don
Johnson
of
Tanners
Run
Miss
Bev~rly
~art
spent
church and community.
Ernest Vineyard of Michigan.
A Bean and Corn Bread
Saturday
night'
with
Wednesday
mght
with
Mr.
and
spent
Mrs . lcle Tucker, Anna
Mr. and Mrs. Clwles D.
Supper was held at Ute Annex
Wayne
Roseberry.
Mrs.
Gerald
Hayman
and
Wolfe and sons; Russell,
Woode, Nina RoblnJon and
Saturday evening and the
mother,
Carrie
Swartz,
at
Gillman
and Mickey, Cbrlsa
Mr. and Mrs. Olden Thaxton KeiUt.
Clara Follrod visited Mrs.
proceeda were · $68.60 which
Elmwood
Nursing
Home
Mr. and Mrs. Robert_Ashley Carrie Swartz, Mrs. Kelly, Mr.
Hall, Cindy Tucker, and SUsie
went on the building fund for of Brandon, Fla., spent
Sunday
afternoon.
Saturday
afternoon
with
Mr.
took
thetr
son,
Ke1th,
to
Scarberry visited at the bome
and Mrs. Paul Buckley and
the new church.
Several local families at- of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Tucker
and
Mrs.
Roy
Donohew.
Colwnbus
Thursday
where
he
family
and
others
at
the
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer
How Get ABetter Deal Here
Mr . and Mrs. Vernon ~ent from Utere for a vacation Elmwood Nursing Home tended the operetta, " Cinreturned home ·from a vacation
Sundar:
·
Donohue spent Sunday af- • m Florida.
Joe
Wayne Satterfleld,
Sunday afternoon. other derella" held at Ute Tuppers
trip to North carolina.
Mr. and Mrs.. G~rald guests of Ute Bucldeys were Plains School on Friday Rod an Ross Scarberry, Terry
Mr. and Mrs: Joe Perry of ternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
evening.
Tucker, Ray and David Klaer
Shade spent a recent evening Charles Winebrenner and Hayman and son, Ke1Ut, VISited Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wilber
Parker
family
at
Cheshire.
Thursday
evening
with
Mr.
and
spent an afternoon with
family of Tuppers Plains.
wiUt his uncle, Gerald Violet.
and
Eddie
attended
'Open
Mrs.
Virgil
Roush
and
Mrs.
Mrs.
Gene
Jewell
at
Letart,
W.
Stanley, Okey and Kenny
Ricky Buckley is home on a
Gerald Violet received
House"
at
the
Ohio
State
.
Kiser.
several days vacation. The
wcrd of the death of hll niece, Vltgll Walker of Racine visited Va., Rt.
University,
last
Sunday,
March
their
uncle
Will
Cross
at
Mrs.
Darrell
Norr1s,
Mrs.
' Kenny Parsons spent
Buckley's new home is nearing
Miss Martha Perry, of
12.
Holzer
Medtcal
Center
'SunMarshall
Roush,
Arthur
Hiil
Saturday
night with his
completion.
Columbus, who passed away
day
'
and
Mrs.
Pauline
Hill
are
Vere
Swartz
remains
quite
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Word was received by Mr.
there In the hospital Thursday.
poorly
at
his
home
here.
·
~and
Mrs.
Clwles
Meenjoyln~
Uteir
spring
vacation
Ross Scarberry.
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode of
Her funeral wu at Hughes
Ute deaUt of Uteir aunt, Vlna
Funeral Home in Athena Dade of Troy, 0., called on Mr. from Rio Grande College.
and
Mrs.
Herbert
Roush
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
nan;ell
Norris
Woode of Albany, 0. They
Sunday and Mr. Violet atRoger,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lester
called
on
the
formers
parents,
attended Ute funeral service at
tended the funeral.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Roush and Randall Roberts Mr. and Mrs: Joe Stobarl Ute Hughes Funerar Home,
Sunday afternoon.
70 cadlac Eldorado CouP.e. air........... '5500
Athens, on Monday at 1 p.m.
Brlckles were Sunday af- Saturday
Richard
Fisher
of
Kenna
W
Mrs.
Gerald
Hayman
and
Mrs . Glennie Shumway
ternoon guests of Mr. and Mrs.
13900
69
Cadillt
Sedan
DeVille,
air
.............
Va.
spent
Thursday
wiUt
·Mr:
son,
Keith,
vis!~
Mrs.
Robert
\
passed away in Dayton, O.,last
EmmeU Hawk of Hemlock
'
Hart at Racme Saturday Friday. Mrs. Virgie Buckley
Grove, Ohio.
Ford ~ Pickup,
evening.
attended funeral services at
A baby daughter was born
Mrs. Herbert Roush and son
Sunday
dinner
guests
of
her
Lutheran Funeral Home in
March 4 to Mr. and Mrs,
69 Vollswqen 2 Dr., radio, w/s/w .... :..
Roger visited Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Tuesday at 10:30 a.m.
niece,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Larry
Welaley Arbaugh and has been
Roger Manuel and daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Rex O'Brien of
name!l Bethany Suzann. Curtis and family of Long Thursday ·evening at Racine.
NOW'S TIME!
69 Olds 'H.T. Sedan,
'2495
Bottom.
It
was
In
observance
Stewart,
0
.,
visited
her
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mn.
Jolln Arbaugh of Tuppers of the birthday of Mr. Curtis.
69 Po¢ilc Bonneville 2 H.T., air...... ,'2295
Mr. and Mra. Frank Upton
Plains, and Mrs. Mary
.
received word of the birth of a
Jamiaon of Reedaville. ·
Colwnbus, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
67 Olds 88 Holiday. Coupe ................
Mr. and Mrs. John Hasen granddaughter born to their
Conroy of Columbus.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
and
family
of
Michigan
were
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
66 MercuiJ
'795
&amp;mday guesta of. her brother, Robinson of Colorado. Site has
Maynard Bales were Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Wealey Arbaugh been named Roberta Lynn.
Mrs . Ja,ck Conway of
t6 Buick LaSabll 4 Door, air..............
and daughter, Bethany. They Grandparents are Mr. and
Colwnbus and Mr. and Mrs.
. '
.
also caUed .on her parents, Mr. Mrs. Frank Upton, of Silver Mr. and Mrs. Errol Conway Bill Bahr of Gallipolis.
went to Akron Thursday to visit
Ridge.
65 Oldsmobile 98 .4 Door................... !795 · 111d Mrs. John Arbaugh.
Mrs. Edith Cochran of Nitro,
Mr. and Mrs. John Newell Mr. and Mrs. Junior Conway
Gerald Violet spent Sunday
and Mrs. Addie Acker of
wiUt his sister, Mr. and Mrs. and family of Colwnbus were and Hugh.
65 Buick Electra, 4 Dr., air.................
vial ling her aunt, Mr. and Mrs. ·Edith Osborne visited with Michigan visited Sunday wiUt
Dale Hart of Athena.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hunt.
Marvin Walker and Ruthie Mrs. Alice Dodson Friday.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marvin
Walker
Mr . Rinehart is in the
Ower 40 New Cadillacs &amp;Oldsmobiles .
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Board of
and daughter Ruthie were over the weekend.
Nitro visited Mr. and Mrs. Lee Veterans Memorial Hospital
for a check up. ,
180 Mulbem Ave.
Hunt Saturday.
In Stock!
Mrs
.
Rosie
Hutchson
of
Mrs. Glennie Swatzel and
POMEROY
Margaret St. Clair of Pomeroy 'Arizona has been visiting her
We're Dealin '!
called on Mrs. Allee Dodson parents, Mr. and Mrs. Errol
Presents ·
Sunday. Other visitors were Conroy for a week.
~Oth State Basketball Tournament
-Gleona S. Milhoan
·Mr. and Mrs. Jack Raub .2!
AAA Semi- Finals. Friday 11:20 a.m : on AM
AAA Semi-Finals. Friday 3:20p.m. on AM
A Semi-Finals., Friday 7:20p.m .
•
•
.
. ,
• •
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
9
20
A Semi- Finals, Friday : p.m .
OPTOMETRIST
of Doing B.u siness"
AA
Championship
Saturday
11:20
a.m.
on
AM
992-53•2
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
OFF ICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12. 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AAA Championship Saturday 2:50 P·!'l· on AM
Open Evenings Until 6l00-Til 5
Sat.
A
Championship
Saturday
7:20p.m.
AT NOON Y.
ON THURS.)
- EAST tOURT ST.,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.... llllililp
.

Jt

:a;4 Ton 8' wide body, h. duty equipped Inc. 4 speed.tr:ans.,

1967 CHEVROLET 'h TON
S1495
8ft. wide pickup body, V-Benglne, std. 3 speed trans., good

FIRST FLOOR, • furnished' t
bedroom apartment, phone
992-3874.
-------,-,-.3-.:..
,17-tfc
'
TRAILER, Brown's Tralltf'
Court, Minersville, Ohio,
phone 992-3324.
3-3·tiC: '
_;___

.

\

Frank

.
Gheen. 949-4651 , or Carl
OFFICE HOURS
Gheen, 742·5842.
a:30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
22-6tc
8:30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noon - -- - - - - - - -3·.:::
Saturday.
BEEGLE pups, 6 mon ths old,

Fairview
News Notes

SMALL trailer. 2 ·bedroom, 10
miles north of Pomeroy- us.
a month ; phone 992-7479. .
'3·21-tf(

{ ·,

Polileroy
Motor Co.

2SIINS

basement, double lot, garage
In Pomeroy . Phone 992-5570

after 6 p.m.
weekends .

• r r

I' M". I •..
·
· 24, 1972
WWMOJ, 0., Friday,
March

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Cla~sifieds Get Re~ul~~~
s

• •· .- · ,

For Rent

10-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Poolerov,
0., Fnday. March 24
t"""
.
,

IN~~=~tf.~N

,

'

IN A

•

·~

'1
,...

GREAT
USED CAR

I

•

·l'

AT •••
'·'·

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS ·
Ph. 985-41 00
Located on S. Rt. 7
'

Real Estate For Sale

Chester,

new cement block garage

Auto Sales

dollars

or

co

to .

USED CARS .

o.

HOUSE AND lot on Vine Sf., 1950 INi'E.RNA iiONAL •;, ton
truck, engine recently
Racine. Phone Otis Bailey,
overhauled, phone 992-6602.
949-2854.
3-22-3fp
3-24-3fp '
~~~9&amp;6~P~L~Y~M~O~U~T~H~Sa-te~l~lite, 2
FARM, 160acres, dairy or beef;
door Hardtop, 318 cu. ln.,
large bank barn, 27 stanchion
power steering, radio, heater
milk house equipped, 2 silos ;
and defroster, $695 ; phone
all outside buildings ; 2 ponds:
949-3211. Racine.
,
'
'
hard surface road ; see
anytime, 2 miles N. of Rt. 7 on :=:-::-::-:----~3-.=24-Jfc .. .
Sumner Rd., Co. Rd. 36, 11 1971 DODGE VAN, 6 cylinder, 3
miles NE of Pomeroy, M. v.
speed, Insulated &amp; paneled, :
Fryar .
·
27,000 miles, $2,300 or best ·
offer . Phone 69a-3293.
;·
3-23-31p
3-.:
23:_:·61,c .:
3 BEDROOM House on Lincoln -------~
:•
Heig hts, phone 992-5737.
3-23·6fc
Wanted To Buy
·',.
RACINE - 7 room house, excellent location, out of high
h
•·
waler, 1'12 bath, carpel on two OLD . FURNITURE , dis es; i:.
rooms, new roof, practically clocks, brass beds, mspl\~~e ,
garden ploi, gas heal. Phon~
949-3954.
' 3~
·3tc
- _ _ _ _ _ _ _3:_-2::

:WMP0/1390

J:

0

households. Write .MQnlo. 1
'·
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, ·
· ;.:
Call 99H27 L
3-16-tfc I
~

)t

~

3 ROOMS .
NEW
FURNITURE
1349.95

l·
•l

••

·~
.~

535.00 Down
Salance On
Convenient
Terms.

~

.I

'

MASON
FURNITURE'

.

t

71

v.a, auto., P.s. .... '2895

'1395

98

-

air................

THIS .IS THE PLACEI

Dr.

.'1095

Sta. Walln, v.a auto. ...........
'995 ·

.

"

SPRING

News ~otes

FERTILIZER
FIElD SEEDS

Quality &amp;-Price!
Sugar Run Mills

'195

WJEH·AM &amp; FAM

Karr &amp; Van Zanclt

N

PM.

Mason. W.Va.

~

Keno Ridge

'

w·

COM' PTON 0 D

�,•

"-

12 -

~Daily Sentinel, Midcleport-l'lauaoy, 0., Friday, March 24, 197'J

Ownbers in New Position

I

PT. PLEASANT - A top
county school administrator
has been appointed to a four
year post, two new positions
have been opened in the
education curriculum , and
seven new buses will be P'lfchased to improve transportation facilities in Mason
Coun ty's school system, under
official actions taken by the
Board of Education Thursday
night.
The board , on a split
decision, a ppointed Charles
Chambers to his present
position
as
assis tant
superintendent on a four year
contract from July I, 1972 to
Jul y I, 1976.
Melville Withers is to be
employed as a mathematics
coordinator effective from

March'll unW June 30 this year
and again from July 1, 1972 to
July 1, 1973. And for the first
timeJ Mason County student.
may be coacbed in dramatics
as Raj Kumar Malhotra was
employed as a secondary
teacher for the 72-73 school
year to be placed later ,
Howe ver, Supt. Charles
Withers in making the
reco mmen dation, said
Malhotra will be employed half
a day as an English teacher
and the other half day coaching
dramatics.

(]lief Speaks

At Meigs Inn

The Ohio V•lley Health
Services Foundation board of
directors dined at the Meigs
. Inn Thursday at 6 pm, then
heard Dr. Stewart Nottlngbun,
chief of Hospital and . Ambulance Branch lllvillon of
Emergency Health Servlcea,
U.S. DepartmentofHealthand
Education and Welfare, review
developments in EMS.
Dr. Nottingham said the
seven-county area they
represent is the most adviiiiCed
NEW BRIDGE
test area in .the na\ion.
INDIANAPOlJS (UP!)
The Ohio Valley Health
Indiana Gov. Edgar Whitcomb Services is presently setung up
Thursday announced plans for a plan for emergency aman Ohio River bridge at bulance service in the ~~even­
Markland.
county area 'l'hi~b includes
Meigs_, Gallia, Athens,
Jackson, Vinton, Hocldng and
Lawrence, Approlinlately 30
persons attended.

Tonight, Mar. 26
DOUIII HA!Ull r 'aoetAil

-PLUS ~

"HARD ·ROA~i

INFANT DIES
William Ernest Watkins
Johnson, infant son of Glenn
A. and Judy Ann Jolmsoll, died
Wedneactay evening at the
Johnson residence, Racine
Route 2. Surviving besides the
parents are a sister, Robin Ann
Johnson ; a brother, Glenn A.,
at bQ{Jie; his grandmother,
Mrs, Allee Lashley, Zanesville; great-grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Baise,
Columbus, and an aunt, Mrs.
Jacquinine Connally,
Columbus. Graveaide rites will
be held at 10 am. Saturday at
the Riverview Cemetery with
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral

. - - - - - - - - - -...- - - - -. . Home in charge.

Get In The Swing!
THE GOLF CLASSIC

Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced

MIDDLEPORT,O.

Diee in Penna

.t

Mra. Mu (Bertha Chaplilan) McLaughlin, formerly of
MeigJ Cowlty, dled Tuesday
morning at her home in
Gn!enville, J'il., following a
brief illness. .
Mrs. McLaughlin was born in
Meigs County In February,
1884, on the farm owned by her
parent., whl~ was a part of
the Ohio CQmpany Purchase.
The daughter of the late Riley
and Anna Chapman , Mrs .
McLaughlin lived her early life
on the farm and was a school
teacher.
In 1928 , she married Dr . Max
McLaughlin whereupon they
moved Ill Greenville, where be

PORTLAND ·
General
Telephono Co. of ·Ohio today
announced the completion of a
$34,000 cable project in the
southern section of the Portland exchange.
Kenley Krlnn , -Athens
dis_trict commercial manager,

Olen Doerfer

LODGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Knights Templar, will hold its
annual inspection at 3 p.m.
Saturday at the temple. Dinner
will be served at 6 p.m. lor all
knights and their ladies . The
Order of the Temple will be
conferred at 7:30 p.m.

•.. three times a day
How? Well . we've ordered some placemats.
They're tough, long lasting vinyl , and feature lovely scenes
from around the time PN B got it oil started.
Once they're on your table, you'll wont to leave them there.
And if they occasionally make you think of the bank
that's been se rving Meigs County for o hundred years, fine.
A set of six is waiting for you. It's yours free,
when you deposit $100 or more in o passbook savings account,
at either our main office or Rutland branch.
'
If you don't hove o Pomeroy Notional Bonk savings account,
here 's the excuse you 've been waiting for!
Member FDIC
A Full Service Bank

Tonight &amp;Saturday
March 24 -25

the beiallt ~~-~ ~. 'I1Hn wu 'pai!Uve rteeflon
fr&lt;lm Dublin. SpokMII!III ~
majtr political partlel said
they welccimed Heath's ·move,
and polltlcaliCIW'C8IIIid lrilb
Republican Premier Jack
Lynch mJght flY to LondGII (or
. talb with Heath on the"Ulster
crisis.

Are Open FrldCiy Night and
Saturday Night

••

Unt.il ............................. .

A .Good
- Time
- For

NAMED CHAIRMAN -Mrs. Pearl Welker, third from
left, PID!eroy, was named general · chairman for the
· jroillollon II a two tenth.? of a mill tu levY for mental heslth
IM'JlOI!e&amp; atJ I Jlle\!liN!.I1fJst in f9rn~ Friday, night. With

Family- Shopping
All O,er The Store

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

$129

lb. 45~
~----------------------

JELLY BIRD
EGGS lb. 39~

lb.

35c

EASTER
BASKETS .

CHOCOLATE FILLED

'l"to. '3-8

10~ UP

EASTER 'GRASS ----- 33'
~~-~..,..--·- - CEU.OPHANE .!.~'!..8!!~ 29'
SAND
RIT EGG COLORS-,..-·25'
7r &amp; 98'
RUBY UQUID COLORS ••

---------------------·
COCONUT EGGS

·- ------------------~-,-·--·-·"r-·-1---

FRUIT &amp; NUT EGGS

lb.

,

CHOC. COVERED PEANUTS - CHOC. PEANUT
SUNSET RIDGE CHOCOLATES - ORANGE SLICES CHOC. DROPS
FIU.ED

FRUIT AND NUT
COCONUT CREAM

~

PANTY HOSE

49~

STRETCH

---·--·-·-.-·------SOLID CHOC.

PR. 79~

QUEEN SIZE

44 to 52
Inch Hips

, 149
·

BIG MAMA'S
S' to 5'9"
165 lbs. to 210 1bs.
·
--.u to 54 Hlps---------

•2.29

.-:=----

Sprays - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $1.99-$3.29
Styrofoam Bibles - - - -, - - - - - - - $3.49
Infants' Hearts - · • - - - • - - - $2.59
Crosses - - - - -- -. - - - - • - $2.99

Sun., Mon., &amp; Tues.

par ent
only
: !
I ~~:P~:ci~,~:s~i~~rl
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

.RALL'S

-BEN 'FRANKl..IIN
w....,,
STORE HOURS:

\-

Start Open' e;m. - 5 p.m.
91.m. -•p.m. Sllvrd1y1

-...

.

TR\1NG TO LEARN THE RO\-[ND, "One Finger, One
Thumb," left to right are Raymond Wlllls, Susan gpr&lt;iw, Rev.
Paul Hawks, Mary Beth Fischer, Mary Kay Robinson, Steve
iee, Mar• Hoffman, and Kralg Hankins.
· These participants were selected at random from the

Time for
Ways,

large audience which attended the Annual Cancer Crusade
Variety Show in the Gallla Academy High School auditorium
Friday at 8 p.m., kicking off the April campaign. All talent
was local and made for an enjoyable evening. See other
picture~ and ittory on page seven.

Ye Olde

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH almost a yearning for a return
· PoMEROY - A wave of to a simpler tife style.
nostalgia ·Is sweeping the
On the local scene, the treJtil
nation as more and more pause also is evident. Women are
in the whirlwind pace of day-to- returning to their sewin1
day living fo dip into the past. machines, needlecraft Ia
. We glimpse a surge of abounding, crafts are galnbw
revivals - old movie stara are pq~ularity, things of the put
again "lapping their !Vay to are increasln~ in sentimenlll
stardom," the hard rock music and monetary value, and
II the a!J:Ues 11 shifting to the programs on Appalachian
more muted folk rock, ballads heritage are frequent.
and blues, and everywhere
Tberapy in a day of inpeopleareiurnlngtothe crafts stabilities was the way
which three quar\ers of a members of a class caning .
century ago were nece~~Sities, described their work this week.
but today are novelties.
Mrs. Patrick Locbary ill
Society seema anxious to Instructor of~ clasa - one II
recapture the "good old days" several she 11as conducted thia
- older members remem- year - arranged through the
bering ooly thOle which were Meigs County Extension Office
good, and the young feeling a by Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, home
IT TAKES INSTRUCTION - Mra. Patrick lDchary
· romanticiJm about an era they ~ economics agent.
ahowa tbe technique of chair caning to Mrs, James Titus,
never experience.
A dozen women with chairs,
Pomeroy .
.Everywhere there seems
(Continued on page 7)

•

'

MIDDLIPORT, O.

Vinton Wants Cop
VINTON - VIllage officials here bQpe . be willing to be trained ail soon as possible.
ID employ a pollceman, Mayor Ludetia
Anyone interested in the position
Stolllnp llid Saturday' .
Mayor Stolllnp said federal funds are
available to pay approximately 90 pet. of
the aai.ry lnvotm. CouncU bas voted ID
acctpt the needed funda and asked that
Mayw ~- and Walter McCarley,
CouncU Pteaidellt pro--tem, go to Ports- •
lllliuth ID makt Olf1cial appllcaUon for the
lederal functa.
'n1e pollctiJIIII must be a resident of
thevllla&amp;e tr become a resident .lOOn after
· ICCePtlnc,the poeltion, He must be in good
phyllcal CoodiUon and a trained officer or

should contact ,the Ohio Bureau of Elllployment ·Services; 443 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis, or Mayor Stollinl!l In Vlnton.
DWI Clf.ARGED
GALUPOLIS-CarlR.Bitchfield, 28,
Rt.2, Apple Grove, wu charged with DWI
following a traffic accident at 11:20 p.m.
Friday on Second Ave. City pollee reported
Birchfield lost control of his caJ: which
struck a parked auto" oWl)ed by Vernon
13tJrnbeimer, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. '!'here was
omnor damage to both cars.

MIDDLEPORT - Judge John C.
Bacon of the Meigs County Court · of
Conunon Pleas charged-here Friday nigbt
the nation's news media apparently bu
embarked upon a campaign to legalize pot.
The judge, who last week sentenced
three young men to a year in the Cin~innati
workhouse lor possession of marijuana,
tqld members of the Middleport - Pomeroy
Rotary Club headlines reporting his action
were such as to make "enforcing the law
difficult."
Drawing inferences· from statemenb
about the press attributed to Vice
President SPiro Agnew, the judge cited
still other eilllllples of headline treatment
of events related to crime and punlslunent.
Marshalling addltiOfl!ll "evidence:"
Judge Bacon cited published statemenb
by philosophers, national leaders and
scientists over a period of several hun·
dreds of years that impugned the motives
of publishers and editors:
. The judge was introduced following
dinner at Heath United Methodist Church
served by ladies of the church by program
chairman John Will.
RETURNS TO DATE in the Easter
Seal Sale mailings total $1,230, according
to Rotarian Bob Kubo.
EGG HUNT
Arrangemenb have been completed
for the annual Easter Egg Hunt sponsored
by the Rotary club at Municipal Park.
Chairman Dennis Kirby said 800 eggs
will be-"seeded" with the name of a prize
provider by his committee this week. On
(Continued on page 2)

Death Ruled
·As Suicide

POMEROY - Apparent suicide was
the official ruling in the death Saturday of
Archie D. (Mike ) Well, about 65, whose
l!OOY was found in a well on the Earl
Cremeans property about noon in the
Sumner community,
The body was discovered by the
Cremeans family when one of the family
went to the well, covered by a small
structure as a cover, to draw water. The
.·.·.· ............ ·..·.·.·.•.•.·.·,•.·.•.•,•.•.•.•.•..,·.·.·.·.·.•',",''•'•' Ch,ester Fire Department, Sheriff Robert
Three Held o;i WI
Hartenbach, Deputies Robert Beegle and
GALL1POlJS - Three persons were Dave Sheets, and J)r , Lewis D. Telle,
arrested by the Ohio Highway Patrol deputy coroner, were called to the scene.
The body was raised from the well by
and Galllpolis City Police Department
Ross Cleland of the Chester Fire Depart_.
Friday on DWI charges.
ment.
They were Paul Q, Smith, 32, Rt. 1,
Mr. Well was a neighbor of the
Vin~n; Carl Blrcbfteld, %8, Apple
Grove, and Richard D. Tolliver, 26, Rt. Cremeans family , He apparently lived
alone on the Sumner Road ..
1, Ashton.
...... !_,::;; \',,our ''a:ca :; ~e · ··; ·:rt~!'!WI ' ''$\\'
There. was no indication of any foul
play, officials said.
Planning Be Done
Time of death was not known but it
GALJ.IPOLIS - Further plans lor I!Je was believed he had been dead for only a
annual July 4th River Recreation Festival short time because a wa tch on his wrist
will be made during a special committee was still running when the body was
meeting;'l'hursday, March 30. Sam Neal is recovered.
chair-man , of the River Recreation
The body was taken to the E!l'ing
Festival, The session will begin at 7p.m. at Funeral Home. where arrangements are
the Gallipolis Cham~r of Commerce.
being completed.

.

Memorjal Wreaths · - - - - - - - - • $2.59-$3.49

GP

Brenda Vaccaro

G•llipoli•-Point Ple&amp;S8Jlt

15 CENTS

Judge Has
. Criticism
Fqr Press ·

$818

BRADt'S CANDIES!

·-------·--·---------------114

To

They are soft, cuddly &amp; colorful .

GP

Angel Tompk ins
P. S. Children under 17
illed
unl ess

SUNDAY, MARCH 26, 1972

Pomeroy-Middleport

PLUSH
RABBITS

EGGS

Than 11,000

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

Get hoppin·
·lot Easter shoppin·

EGGS

r

Your Invited Gue.t
Reaching More

tmts

.Mostly !WIIiy"and not quite so
cool Sunday, hilb from tnid 3Ck!
to mid 4111. Fair Sunday nigbt
low in'201 and low 3011. Monday
lncrealling cloudiness and high
in 4111 and law ·501,

about 15 pet. of the potential need in the
three counties, she said.
Pointing up the advantage of the state
aid of three to one matching dollan from
the state, Mrs. Plummer also reported
that federal staffing grants of 100 pet., are
made available through the Health,
Education and Welfare Department for
counties engaging in such mental health
programs. Tbe Gallla-Meigs-Jackson area
holds a number ime priority, so would
undoubtedly receive more help above the
state level, the executive director observed.
Kelly, in extended remarks, theorized
that every famlly In Meigs County wW at
some time need the services being offered
which will also provide help for drug and
alcohol abuse in the future. He pointed Oljt
that the tax levy on a home with a market
value of $8,000 and an assessed value of
$3,200 would cost that home owne 64 cenll
a· year. The value returned by such an
investment in services are tremendous,
Kelly maintained.
Mrs. Plummer disclosed that · Ohlo
University is ntcemely interested in the
three county mental health progrem in
conjunction with a mental health
technicians' school being conducted at the ·
university . Students from the school are
(Continued on page 2)

•

PANTY HOSE

I LOVE MY WIFE
(Technicolor)
Elliott Gould

+

·. Weather

VOL VIi NO: 8

Lara Par ke r

March 26-27-28
DIARY OF A
MAO HOUSEWIFE
&lt;Technicolor)
Richard Benjamin
Fronk Langella
Carrie Snodgrass

. Mrs. Welker, from the left, are Thomas Kelly, Mrs. Maxine
Plummer and Mrs. Russell Brown. Kelly aoo Mrs. Brown are
members of the Mental Healtl! and Mental Retardation
Board of Meigs, _Jackson ~d Gallia Counties, and Mrs.
Plummer is the board's executive director.

POMEROY - Mrs. Ralph (Pearl)
Welker 'of Pomeroy accepted the post of
general chairman for the promotion of a
two tenths of one mill tax levy for mental
health to be' voted upon ilf May at a
meeting Friday night at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy.
About 25 . persons, most of them
representing organizations, heard plans
ouWned for the development of a mental
. health program in Meigs, Gallia and
Jackson Coununties. Thomas Kelly, a
member of the Community Mental Health
and 1\lental-Retardation B.,._rd of the three
counties, and Mrs. Maxine Plummer,
executive director of the board, presided.
Kelly , pointed out that the board
presently is able to operate on a limited
basis through lunda allocated by the
separate
county
commissioner
authorities. He said tha\ the two tenths of a
mill levy, being placed before Meigs
voters for a three year period rather than
for a 10 year period as in Jackson and
Gallia CountiEll, would provide about
$8,000 in local funds and this would be
matched by state funds at a 3.1 rate which
would ~ an additional $:U,OOO towards
the overall operations of the program in
the three county area.
Stating the program " is not
bureaucratic," Kelly I!Bid it is in reality a

situation of local people handling local
problems. If the tax levy falls In Meigs
County, then planned services will be
extremely limited if at all existent, he
said.
Mrs. Plummer said that the office of
the boa!'~ opened in September in
Gallipolis, noting that counties separately
cannot alford ail of the expenses involved
- therefore the level of service - in
treatment of mental problems without the
state funds which are available, but only if
local tax sources are used to help.
So far , the board has employed a
psychiatrist who is conducting a clinic in
Jackson and is receiving patients from the
three county area. In Meigs County, a
clinical psychologist is employed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital one day a
week. Those receiving the services which
are available so fa r are asked to pay a
small amount if they can, but about 50 pet.
are unable to make any payment, Mrs.
Plummer reported.
Of the total handled at the clinic, about
75 pet. are children referred from schools.
According to statistics, Meigs County
having a population of 19,799 would have
about 1,979 persons who would need
mental health and relardation services,
Mrs. Plummer reported.
At present, services are·touching only

~~~~------------~~38~P~A~GE~S~· --------------~------------~-------------l~-H=RE~E~S~EC~TI~ON~S________F._a_m_il_w8________

2 FOR 25~

THE HORSEMEN
ITechnicolor)
Omar Sharif
Leigh Tovlor Young

•

Elberfelds

RABBITS

NIGHT OF
DARK SHADOWS
JTechnicolor)
David Selby

LevyPromotion Planned

itrilet~lheypatupat

Dies Thursday

--------------------------1

MEIGS THEATRE

. (liiiilinued froalJ!Y!

said it replaced facilities which cables along Oblo 1:14.
I 'The company bu Iauncbed
had been filled . Also, lt will
prqvide for future growth in the a program to put enouch eable
where poiSible ID reduce the
area·.
This job involved burying number of customen on party
57,000 feet of cable , This will lines. This cable jo!&gt; is part of
eliminate · service outages that program," said , Krinn.
caused by severe weather and Portland is one of 21 exChanges
automobile accidents, Krinn in the A!hens district. It serves
noted. The job furnished main 185 telephones in a 15.kquare
distribution and " feeder " mile area of Meigs ,County.

'

MEETING CALLED
A joint meeting of Drew
Webster Post 39, Ladies
Auxiliary and the Junior
Auxiliary will be held at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the post home
in Pomeroy. Mrs. Richard
Russell will speak on home
health service. The junior
auxiliary will serve as
hostesses.

•

London12

Cable .Job 'Completed At .Portland

Olen G. Doerfer, 57, Rutland
Route I, died Thursday
.evening at Holzer Medical
Center. Surviving are his Wife,
was hesd of the chemistry Rosalee Doerfer of Proc.
department at Thiel College. !orville; two daughters, Mrs.
Besides her husband, Mrs. . ldalena Roush, Proctorville,
McLaughlin is survived by a and Mrs. Darlene Ritchie,
brother, Lawrence of Dexter Shade; lour sisters , Mrs .
and several nieces and Evelyn Young, Pomeroy; Mrs.
nephews. She was a member of Hazel .Culver' Florida ; Mrs.
the Greenville Presbyterian Lucille Hood, Aki-on, and Mrs.
Church and a fonner member
of the WUkesville Presbyterian Laura Knopp, Clifton, and five
Church. Funeral services were grandchildren.
held Thursday at Greenville
Preceding Mr. Doerfer in
with burial in Greenville death were two brothers, .
Ernest and Henry Doerfer.
Cemetery·
Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
PLANTS SELLING
Funeral Home with the Rev.
The Pomeroy Athletic O'Dell Manley officiating .
Boosters will sell potted plants Burial will be in the Rock
for one .week beginning Springs Cemetery. Friends
Saturday at the barbecue may call at the funeral home
shelter on the upper parking lot anytime.
in Pomeroy. Proceeds from the
sale to be held each day will go
HUGHES TO SPEAK
IDwards providing new lighting
Evangelist Arlen Hughes,
at the football field in Columbus, will be guest
Pomeroy , Guy Morris is speaker at services to be held
president of the sponsoring at 7p.m. Sunday at the Rutland
group.
Apostolic Church. The public is
invited .
PAY, OREUlE
Motorists having unpaid
parking meter tickets in
Middleport will be cited to
mayor's court unless the
tickets are paid immediately,
officials said today. Unpaid
tickets should be taken care of
no later than Tuesday in order
to avoid citations.

CLEANUP SET
Spring cleanup for Middleport residents will be held
Monday through Friday of
next week with village employes to move through the
community picking up tr88h
placed at curbs. This will be
the final spring pickup by
village employes. Anyone
having articles they are unable
to place at the curb are asked
TAKEN TO HOLZER
to report such ltema to village
The Pomeroy E-R squad
hall during the pickup paiod. answered a call to the Roy
Howell residence off the Route
7 by-pass at 7 p.m. Thursday
CANTATA SET
from where Jeffrey Howell,
The Syracuse Asbury United teen-age son of the Howells,
Methodist Choir will present
who w~s . ill, was taken to
the Easter cantata, "Where Holzer Medical Center by
You There" by Don 'Grant,
Ewing ambulance.
Sunday at 7:30pm. Mrs. John
Sauvage is the director and
PLEASANT VALLEY
Mrs. Roy Jenkins the pianist.
Names
of persons admitted
The public is welcome.
have been temporarily
discontinued for publication.
DISCHARGES:
Woodrow
Byer, Reynoldsburg, 0 .; Mrs.
Forrest Hargraves, West
· Columbia; William Bryan ,
Ashton; Albert Boyles, Point
Pleasant; Homer Master, New
Haven; I. G. Volden, Point
Pleasant; Jesse Derrenberger,
Gallipolis Ferry; Kevin
Wallace , Pliny ;
Virgil
Fillinger, Rio Grande; Howard
Carder, Point Pleasant, and
Ralph Grimm, Letart.

We'd like to help
ou remember how
ong we've been
around

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.. .

D

to

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TOURS PLANT SITE - Tenth District Con8!'elllll8JI Clarence E. Miller,
right, was guided on a special tnur of the construction activities Friday at the
James M. Gavin coal generating power plant at Cheshire and the Meigs MJne near
Langsville. Miller was guided by Bill Lazon, left, Gavin Plant manager. Also ln the
party were Donald Moore, Chief of Civil Construction, Ohio Power Company, and
John R. Reece, public affairs coordinaiDr.

Two Burned Alive
MARlETT A, Ohio (UPI ) - Five persons bound car driven by Perkins, with the two
were.killed, two of them burned alive, in a , women as passengers, apparently wen! flammg two car wreck on Ohio 60 about left of center and crashed beadonlnto the
live miles north of here early Saturday. north bound auto driven by Stark. Fortney
The victims were Identified as Ronnie was a passenger in the vehicle driven by
Lee Stark, 19, Marietta, Steve Fortney, 17, Stark.
The patrol said the two C&amp;rll caught lin
Marietta and Randall Brooks Perkins, 22,
Karen Morgan Duley, 22, and Sharon and Stark and Fortney were trapped inalde
McFee, 'll, all of Parkersburg, W. Va.
their vehicle and suffered third degrea
The 'Ohio Highway Patrol said a south- bums over most of their bodlea.
Robert Casto, Parkersburg, W. Va.,
another passenger in the Pertlnll vehicle,
suffered multiple injuries and was in
•tuarded condition at a local holpltal.

Good's Pennzoil is

Successful Bidder
RUTLAND ~ The bid of Good's
Pennzoil, Pomeroy, for ~ ,567 . 20 on power
tools has bee~ accepted by the Leading
Creek Conservancy District, Jack W.
Crisp, president, said Saturday.
Also bidding on the tools was Pomeroy
Home Auto, with a bid of $6,162.59. Crisp
said that Archer Auto Parts, Inc., and the
American Supply Co., both of Marietta,
refused to bid. One other local firm also
submitted a bid but it did not meet
specifications of Delta Rockwell Equipment or its equivalent, Crisp said. The
d~ tcict accepted the lowest bid, Crisp
pomted out.
Crisp said the district appreciated bids
from the other firms but that it is the intention of the district to-always accept the
lowest bid which meets specifications.

Property Valued
at $1,158 is StolenGALLiPoLis - GaiUa Count)'
sheriff's deputies Saturday continued aa
investigation into a breaking and entertnc
at the mobile home of Mike Adami located
three miles south of EUreka.
Adams told deputies his home wu
entered some time between $::10 p.m.
Thursday and 11 :30 p.m. Friday. All
estimated $1,157.84 worth of houlehold
Items were missing.
. The losss included four IUOI. 11.-.e
boxes of shells, 200 roundl of .U caMhtr
rifle slugs ; a sword, bow and arrow, It
inch portable television, stereo outfll,
record albums, sweeper, hair drJw,
toaster, typewriter, jewelrY, clock radio,
mirror, clocks and money.

..

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