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U-TbdlallySeNinel,

,
W, W'GIDM.;,
Pill

'
0., May 11,11'/2

,

News . . . in Briefs Manw.wer Conference _Announced
~•

·
. · (ConUn ed fr
1)
.
u
om page
Joopbole, but It does Uttle for other Americans. AFLCIO
LeglllatlveDirectDr Andrew J. Belmlllereakl the adminilttatlon
proposals for Income tax deductiOIIIJ for penalcin lund contrlbutlooa by !ndlvlduall and the aell-employed was another In a
long Une of efforts bY Nblln to redlltrlbute the nation's wealth
towardtheril'handawayfromwageearners'andthepoor.
In ~ prepared !or the Houae Ways and Means Com·
mlttee, Belmlller said the proposed tax deductions would provide
llttle or no tu relle! for wage earners and other low and middle
lllcome Americans, mainly because thoae per80ll8 cannot afford
to put any cash Into private retirement plans. But he said
.

.I

.
CALLED TWICE

.

The Middleport E·R sqUad
Power~lantnearCheshirewill Mine; Frank Kazak, training was c;alled out twice Wed·
be outhned May 17 in a special coordinator for American
nesday night, at 9:54 for Ml!le
meetln~ for area school Electric, and John Stewart,
Beebe, !7, Cheshire, who
super ~ nlendenls, guidance assistant training coordinator,
sustained a possible broken leg
c ouns~ lors and principals coal
mmmg, Ameri can in a motorcycle accident, and
sponsored by the Southern Coal Electric. The session will be at who was taken to Holier
and . American . Electric Ohio University Inn in Ath~ns. Hospital, aild at 11:16 for Mrs.
Companies.
Raymond Klein, suffering
Speakers will include G. G.
fr9m a possible heart attack.
Bi Ide r ba c b ,· . em pI o ye e
0~ any glven day, nearly 1.3 · Mrs. !Qein's· doctor could not
Ia
re t1~ns supervisor for Ohio million persons are patients In be located and she refused to
Power ; White Bourland, mine U. 'S. hospitals.
be taken to a hospital.
superintendent, Southern Ohio

· lmpendfng needs in the
recruiUng of manpower for the
mining industry in conjUI)ction
with the James M, Gayin
SUIT FILED
A suit for $631.50 has been
f'led 1 M . "" . 1 C
1 n el~ ""un Y onunon
Pleas Court by George Ingels,
dba Ingels Furniture, Mid·
dleporl, against John .]lloUey,
.
Sr., Columbus.

Sakes .Alive!·Women Aren't Wanting Liberation

·Robberies Reported . ..
;i.,
Sberlff;s
•

.
Paul Ervin, Raeille, Rt.
reported that • lo.p!lon ~
containing · appr011mat_41lf
gaUooa of milk 1f88 take!'
from outside hiB ~ouae. : '.·
~

The Meigs County
· Dept. conUniled tnvelu.auon
today of the theft ~ milk. the
disappearance of three cows
and .a dlsll. and v-ndallsm.
These Incidents were
reported to the • department
Wednesday : two Ures on 11 1m
Olds 91 · belonging to Agnes·
Stevens of .Michigan, parked ·
near th~ Alice Ward residence,
Langsville, Rt.l, were slashed.

'

OOLUMBUS (UP!) -The proposed 'lith
amendment to the U. s. Constllutlon
guaranteeing equal rights for wOil)en, a~
pears to have ruil into a aerio111 roadblock
to ratification in Ohio - woruen.

of early testimony from organized women's groupa.
''OpPonents were strangely sUent during
colll11i.lttee testimony," Aronoff said.
"They are not sUent now."
He said several thousand letters have
state Sen. Stsnley J. AronOff, R- pabred into leli!iialors' offices, making it
Cinclnnali, .chairman of the Senate · likely the amendment will remain lodged
Elections COmmittee, said today the . In the Senate Rules Committee.
amendment "seems to .be picking up a
"The average male legislator Is ingreat deal of Inertia In reverse and now terested in wbat the women think,' Aronoff
appears In aerious Jeopardy for 1972" in said. "If a substantial porUoo of women dq
the Ohio General Assembly. ·
not want this, our legislators are going tq
"The amendment has run into masalve be reluctant .to support It."
resistance ffom a most devastating source
Special Privilege
- women," said Aronoff, whole comThe letters come from Catholic women's
mlttee approved the measure on the basis groups, parent-teacher groups, working

u.r.e

Jennlnas Beegle, !oilner~·
I!ViUe, Rt. 1, reporlecl tlntll.
young c~ves are ml.llling ftcin
hls.fum. Adiak on property :of
the late FrAnk Cornell lri
PorUand wu taken May 5. ;

. . . -..

wealthy tupayers who put $1,500a year (thema:dmliln covered , . - - - - - - - - - -...-------------"'!"'--~----..;.-----.--~~-"""~-llllil--

~~~ln~~:~~=~::.wrecouphallormore~

~~t~~i~=ea~;~~~r::~q:~~

meaalell Immunization clinic children be Immunized against
Saturday lllOI'lllnll from 8:30 a. regular measles, and three day
m. to 11 :30 a. m. at the health measles before entering

=~~c!~~oi. m~ East

l'urpole of the clinic ~ to
provide a "last chance" lor
parents to have their children,
ages 1·10, Immunized with the

school.

0.() Altimni Will
Meet on Sunday

(Continued from page I)
learned the sludenls were not
planning to forcibly prohibit
federal employes from enterins the bulldillg.
Elsewhere around Ohio,
Miami University President R.
PhiUip Shriver told a campus
· rally of about 3,000 students
Wednesday night "I do beUe\re
lhla war must end now" and
proposed that the United
Nalions step in to brina the
Indochina conflict to a conclusion.
Shriver was one of several Velerul Memorial Hoaplial
Ohio college prealdenll to take ADMITTEP - Cynthia
standa on the u.s. blockade of Hlndy, Middleport; Ronald
North Vietnam and the student Bostic, Point Pleasant; Nellie
protests .the new policy Hatfield, Dexter ; Belinda
trlagered lhla week.
Deem, Racine Route 1;
At Ohio University Wed· WlUiam Rlgbthouae, Ponieroy;
nesday night President Claude Henry Roney, New Ha~n;
Sowle .answered students' Earl Hoffman, Hartford; Betty
questlona In a campua · McKinley • Middleport.
broadcast regardlna the
DISCHARdED - Ronnie
arruls of 77 persons the night Powell, Edith Pearson, John
before during a sit-In at the Roush.
ROTC building.
Allhough he said he
disa~reea with the slate
campus dl.vupUon Jaw under
N~"·On
which the 77, Including two
.....,..
lnstructora, were charged, "It (Continued from page 1) .
Is the Jaw, It~ applicable, It is
Minnesota and Frank Ucht of
· my duty to 'enforce it."
Island.
·
:J'lte ail-In was 'in protest to Rhode
:J'
!
le
six sent telegrams to
the war, but also against ROTC their C·' ongressional
on campus. Sowle said he had delegations, ssying they lelt
·not changed hiB mind "a bit"
"compelled to sp~ak out
about the ROTC program.
against
the deciaion announced
"It has a place In the of.
by the President to intensify
ferlngs of 'universities," he
the war In Southeast Asia in a
said. "As long asstudents want manner perilous of world
to· IUitain the program, It peace,
llhould be provided."
"We appeal to the President
OU students carrying cans and Congress to take prompt
soUcited money on the streels acUon to reverse this grave
Wednesday to raise hall for the and · dangerous
policy
77, liiOit of whom remained In decision, " their telegrams
custody today under $1,000 stated.
bonds. Arrested were 71
students, four non.,tudenls and
U... two teachers.

Voters
(ConUnued !rom page

DRIVER CITED
Pomeroy pollee reported
today Jerry Swartz, Mid·
dleport, was cited to Pomeroy
Mayor William Baronlck's
Court on charges of leaving the
scene of accident. Swartz
struck a car at the Dairy
"alley dfivsn by Mary
Francia, Pomeroy.

UNIT CAIJ.ED
The Pomeroy E-R ~~quad was
called today at 9:32 a.m. to the
Ray WUIJams residence, Cooks

Gap Hill, for Mabel
Winebnmer who wu taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

MASON DRIVE IN
Tonight &amp; Frldly
Mly 11-12
Double Feoture Progrom
"THE HOT BOX"
Their guns are hot and their
bodies hard!
IRl
- PIUI-

"LITTLE MURDERS"
I Color)

Elliott Gould
Donald Sutherland
I R-l

':::=====~
1

ME.I.GS THrl'JR£
1;ft
Tonight, Mly II
NOT OPEN

Frichy lhru Twsdly
Mly t2,16
W1H Dis,.y's
SONG OF THE SOUTH

"G"

Dllnty Clrtoons:
Plu.. 's

MOTHER'S DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS ---ill

'(ou'll find a lot of wonderful gift ideas for your moth~r all over the store.
Stop in every department- Visit every floor. Select the gifts you want and
be ready for Mother's Day next Sunday .

OPEN FRIDAY

Kid lrolh..TNclltn an ........
Fltan &amp; Fr..,kio
Adulfl: SUO Children: 75c

TheAug
first
day
school will
be
on
. 28.
Theofcalendar
Is the
same as approved recenUy by
the county board of education.
Mrs . Juanita Spencer was
added to the approved list of
subllUtute cooks.
Michael Morgan was hired to
teach
summer
driver
education and non-certified
employes hired were Roger
Dillon, bus driver and aaslstanl
custodian, two years; Ruth
D!Uon, custodian, two yean;
Arvella Frecker, cook and
asalstanl custodian, two years,

, and ,HelenHeaton,aecretary,a

contln)llng conlnct. Bills were
appro\red for payment. The
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
. meeUng 'IriS recessed until
. ._ _ _ _ _ _.. Fryday, May 19.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.VOL XXV NO. 20

By Ualted Pres• lnlenwlaul trip to Moscow May 22-30.

The U.S ...SOviet crlsla .over
the American blockade of
Nlll'th VIetnam's ports appeared to have eaaed today and
Pr-.aldent Nlxm was spending
the weekend at camp David,
Md., working out details of b1s

Aside from the official
Kremun denunciation Thursday of the American move,
there was no further official
Soviet comment and high
Russian officials visiting
Washington said Thursday

after a jovial meeting with
Nixon the Moscow trip was sliD
on.
The U.S. 7th Fleet pulled
hack some of its ships from the
Haiphong vicinity, including·
the missile cruiser Oklahoma
City, flagship of the 7th Fleet.

solids,
stripes,
patterns in orion,
polyester and cotton
knits · beautiful
colors.
Regular and
Extra Sizes

REMEMBER
YOUR MOTHER WITH A
HOSI~RY GIFT

Love~

of the salespeople will
help you find what you'd
like to give.

Gift

Tailor-ed and lace trimmed
styles in wh]te and fashion
colors. Choose her favorite
style, proper size. Have It
gift wrapped and you're
sure I please your mom .
Ask an of our salespeople
to help you with your
selection.

Any Mother
Would Love
Tq Get

Choose a New .Dress
to Please Her From
Our Outstanding

Lingerie Department
See our
large
selection from ail
top name brands.
Many fabrics and
colors to choose
from .

SIZES·

Group of Beautiful ·
Dresses •
Hundreds to
Choose From.

6 to 18.
•

Jewelry
MAKES AN
APPRECIATED
MOTHER'S DAY GIFT!

All Size Ranges

Earrings : Necklaces .
Bracelets · Pins . Rings. All
boxed and ready fo give.
Whlte.and fashion colors.

ONE SIZE FITS ALL

/fi';I:J

•

,,, .&gt;E._ . , ..,;···.;

1

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

It returned to the Quang Tri said the leisurely pace of the

area today and bombarded a
North Vietnamese buUdup in
the captured provincial
capital.
Pentagon officials said a
Soviet freighter turned hack
after arriving near North
Vietnam's mined harbors
while 24 other ships heading for
Haiphong were stU! several
days away, postponing any
immediate showdown.
The Japan Defense Agency
in Tokyo repurted thai a 15,400.
ton Soviet cruiser and a 2,1156lon missile destroyer were
seen proceeding at 10 knots
southward through the Korean
- Strait separaUng Korea and
Japan.
Japanese military officials

warships which are capable of
a 34-knot speed indicated they
!l'Obably were heading for
training exercises In the Indian
Ocean rather than toward any
confrontation with the 7th
Fleet. Both sailed from Vladi·
vostok after Nixon announced
the blockade.
•
.
The Pentagon sources ss1d
that if Soviet or Chinese&lt;&gt;.
minesw~ attempt to clear
~phong and other harbors of
mmes U.S. ships probably
would simply rep_lace the
mines rather than riSk an international Incident by al·
tacking the Conununist ships.
They said so far there was no
evidence of any effort by
Communist minesweepers to

clear the harbors. One· official
said, "I don't think we're going
to see anyone trying to go into
any of the harbors or trying to
remove the mines unless
something extremely sur!l'ising happens."
There was diplomatic speculation in many world capitals
that China and the Soviet Union
would simply do nothing for the
ll'•sent about the U.S. Navy·
blockade other than issue
sharply critical statement&amp;,
hoping that the crisis would ,
work ltseU out without any
(Continued on page 12)

I

I

One 50-calibre, One 20-mm

2 ·Cartridges

Compare~

Francis (Tiny) Webb, letart 20mm cannon, while the 50
Falls, has solved the mystery calibre is an armor piercing
as io whallype of a gun sheD machine gun bullet.
young Nathan Smith of the
Early in the U. S. parHobson are• found recently . ticipation in World War II Ill
.
Webb, who serVed with the aircraft were ·artned' wllh the
U. S. Navy as a radar and 5&lt;kal. machine gun. But such
sonor operator orl mine weapons were also standard on
sweepers in World 'War II, has tanlls and personnel carriers
20-milimeter and 50-calibre as weUa$ on ships at sea. They
Members of !he Meigs Neigler, Suzie Harris, CeHa machine gun cartridges he were effective, too, as ground
broughl hack from overseas. anti-aircraft guns, often
County Women 's Democrat Bailey.
Webb
is pbsitive that the shell mounted on vehicles as light as
Association heard Joan
An Informal meeting wiD be
found
by young Smith Is a ~ the jeep.
SpraUey, Director of Women's held June 12 at 7:30p.m. at the
milimeter shell.
Activi lies of the State Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
nie 3knm cannon later
Above, Webb has in his left became standard weaponry on
Democrat Party, describe
hand a 5lk:alibre sheD and in pursuit and bomber aircraft,
women's role in politics. She
his
right hand a ,21knlllmeter. on ships, and .on ground
spoke at TrinitY Church in
LOCAL TEMPS
Webb
fired the 50 callbre ve)licles in limited numbers.
Pomeroy Tuesday on the OC·
Temperature in downtown
casion of an organization Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was shell that he holds while on a
Webb recalled that the
meeting. Mrs. Spratley said 62 degrees under sunny skies. ship in the South Paclllc powder had to be removed
Theater of War. He ssid the 20 from the 20mm sheD before he
"new polillcs are In, but
milimeter sheD is known as a could bring il hack to the
despite the TV tube aild all
other news media, there's an
old hoilaehold gadget thai's
been around along time, which
is the woman. Women are
going to make the difference.
"THANK YOU"
"We're not the screaming
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The by the Ohio State University
Bra Burning woman demanconvention of · the Ohio State College of Medicine In which
FOR QUICK ACTION
ding our rights, but with 53 pet.
Medical Association was told medical studenls are sent into
of the vote in Ohio and after 50
Thursday that 42 Ohio counlles non-metropolitan areas to .
years of having the vote It's 19~7 CADILLAC pickup, 1965 lost a total of 124 physicians work
with
practicing
time we have a HtUe piece of Mustang . Phone ...... .
during the 1960's although the physicians.
the action," she concluded.
4·20-Jtc population gained by 75,000.
Temporary officers and
"Many rural counties have
"Without it,. studenls would
committees named were
aging
doctors
and,in
another
10
never
see non-city .areas,"
GET .QUICK
president, Cella Bailey;
years they're really g0ing to · Reiheld ssld.
secretary-treasurer, Jane
have a problem unless we do
He noted that although the
ACTION ON WHAT
Snouffer; member·shlp
something about it," Dr. OMA gained 831 dGctor
chairman, Mary McAngus ;
Reiheld of OrrviUe, members in the 1910's, only &amp;a
YOU WANT TO SELL Robert
nominating committee, .
Wayne County, told delegates practice outside metropolitan
Audrey Young, Lucille
to the convention . '
areas. Reiheld is chairman of
Haggerty, Lee Enoch, and
CALL 992·2156
Reiheld cited one program the OMA's committee on rural
constitution and by-laws,
which was started last October health.
Phyllis Hennessy, Harriet

.Mother's Day Gift Suggestions
From The Housewares Department - 1st Floor
Famous brands known for excellent quality. Hoover . Sun.
beam · Corning · Revere · Farberware . General Electric .
West Bend.
Waffle lrOI;'Is
Electric Toasters
Electric Irons
Electric Skillets
Fondue Pots
Hair Dryers
Corelte Dinnerware
Electric Percolators
Stainless Steel Flatware Sets
Westmoreland Milk Glass Clothes H~mpers
Rubbermald Housewares Wall Plaques
Decorator Clocks
And many, many others.

FANNY FARMER CANDY
FOR YOUR MOTHER
See the fine selection of boxed
Fanny Farmer Candy on the
. lsi lloor. All lrl Mother's Day
Gill wrapping ready for you to
glye.

Party Action

Next
Sunday!

seamless hosiery. Any

WHITE ONLY.

·.

WomenWanting
.

Slips

For Her Day .

Jeans
Are A·

hosiery

A wonderful chill ·
chMer for cool spring
and summer da~ and
evenings · fine quality
Wlntuk orion acrylic.
knit · in beautiful
patterns .
Fully
fringed.

"There is no way in which a woman is
equal with us men or ever wiD be," he
wr.ote. "Don't put a burden on our women
they will be unable to bear."

·~

Select her favorite style, size
and color on the lsi floor. Big
selections of Panty Hose.

EVERY MOTHER
WILl LOVE
ACAPE
FROM ELBERFELDS

.

"We want equal pay for equal work but
not the other foolishness contained in this
biD," wrote a working woman from St.
Bernard, Ohio.
"Let us be soft, peaceful women, not
combat women," said another.
"It took just one loud, crazy woman to
get prayers kicked out of the public schools
and it'D take another 20 years to get the
ll'ayers hack in," said another. "Now it's
this crazy equal rights for women."
Would Leave U.S.
ANorwalk woman threatened to move to

enttne

FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1972

A wide selection of

See the fine selection of
Handbags on the 1st floor.
Smooth and crinkle vinyls .
straws. White and an excellent
color assortment.

alike?'.'

'

Canada if the amendment is ratified.
"I've told my husband aDd he jokingly
said he'd wave goodbye at the doclt," she
wrote. "Uttle does he know how serious I
am. As much as I love him, I cannot live in
a society which is ruled by women lib.
be rs. ••
ACollllllbUS nun called the legislation "a
Satanic-Inspired amendment to our Constllulion."
One man, from Goshen, Ohio, felt
compeUed to join the cbrobs.

Tension Eased, Suntmit is On

AKNIT TOP
TO COORDINATE
WITH HER
FAVORITE SlACKS .
AND SHORts.

Give Her A·
Summer Handbag

different, and their roles in this world are
not alike," wrote another. "Wby should
they he fotced by legislatures to act

•

Of The Meigi-Ma10n Area

Devoted To The Intereall

SIZES 8 TO 20 and
32 to 38

Nylon . Dacron and Cotton blends.
Shortie Pajamas, Baby Dolls, ~ull
length Pajamas.
Full length gowns and shorty
gowns. Regular and extra large
sizes. Famous brands such as
Phil-Maid
Katz
Formfit
Rogers. ·-·

1)

Joyce Bing, Janice Boggs,
Kathy Brawley, Melanie Dean,
Kathy Dill, Janice Di1on,
Barbara Ebershach, Marjorie
Gillilan, Diana Grueser, Joyce
Grueser, Nita Harris, Sue
Caldwell, Julia Holter, Jenny
Lawson, Jean Reynolds,
Debbie Pierce, Rhea Yonker,
Janice Robinson, Connie
Rockhold, Kathy Sanders,
Connie Sayre, Donna Wells,
Mary Jo Wolf, MarceUa Wyers,
Unda Provence, SheUey Wells,
Rick
Sanders,
Larry
Stalnaker, Jim Amsbary,
Larry Baker, Mike Benedum,
Rick Blake, Sam Brown, Er·
nest Calaway, Warren
Calaway, Bob CaldweU, Doug
Carr, Terry Carson,, John
Cline, David Cremeans, Dennis
Eichinger, Tim Gumpf, Rick
Hauber, Alan Holter, Roger
Karr, Steve Kirkman, Randy
Koehler, Rick Koenig, Charles
Marcinko, David Marcinko,
Dennis Marcinko, Rick MarUn,
David Millhone, Harvey
Roseberry, Marvin Taylor,
'Rick Williams and Randy
Young.
The board approved the
attendance of C. 0 . Newland,
Clerk, to a clerk·treasurers
clinic on June 7 in Athens aild
the school calendar for 19'12-73.

a1 y

Choose f~om many fine name brands bermuda shorts, jamaica shorts, hot
pants, washable polyester knits, cotton
knits 'and de~cro·n &amp; cotton blends- dark
tones and pastels.

Visit the Ungerie Department ·
1st Aoor

Support

•

An Ideal Gift' For Mother
Sborts of All,lengths

For Sleepwear Gifts

committee last month equality for women
should be written Into the Constllution.
"Many of us are satisfied with things the
way they are, so why bpther to change
them for a few noiay women?" wrote one
woman.
others claimed to be wriUng on behalf of
the "hawy holnemaker" and said the
amendment would be a "blow to
womanhood."
"Other FooUIIImess"
"The Lib Women are an unhappy
minority," wrote a Cincinnati woman.
"The rest of uS are happy being 100 per
cent women, enjoying the privileges and
respect that go with it."
"The good Ulril made men and women

'

r----~·--~-----------~------·'7~

SATURDAY NIGHTS 11L 9 PM

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tbe
Olive-Orange High School
Alumni Alan. officers wiD meet
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
elementary school here to
complete plans for the annual
bl!nquet and-reunion at7 p.m.,
Saturday, May 'll.
' Officers, the decorating
committee and . others in·
terested are urged to attend.
Invitations have been aent and
anyone wishing to make
reservations is asked to call
Mrs. John Arbaugh, secretary,
667-3289.

Students

CTtchnlcolorl
AII·C._rtooro htalure.

.EL.BERFELDS 1·N POMERO

women and housewives.
No rolling pins have been enclolled, but
the writers make It clear they believe
ratification of the amendment would "violate the simctlty of the family," cause
domestic trouble, subject women to
militsry draft, ellmlnate penalties for rape
and disadvantage women when it coines to
alimony and child support. .
"We do not want our righls lowered to
equal," wrote one woman. "We already
have the status of special privilege."
Ohio wa$ the deciding state In ratifying
the 26th amendment granting 111-to·:/Al year
olds .the right to vote. The legislature
seemed to be roUlng along the ssme track
as women's rights grou(ll told Aronoff's

1st Floor

HOLE FIWD IN - An acavatlon near the intersection of Fourth and Butternut Sts ..in
Pomeroy the put two weeks is now filled in. The Pomeroy Street Dept. searched for a break in
the sanitary sewer frOI!l Lincoln Hill to the lift station near the viUage • owned parking.lot between Mechanic St. and Butternut Ave. Fourth St. 'ha.s been closed to traffic. The'bteak in the
sewer hu been corrected.

"
-

WWL. UdbbLJ

.

M.. , .,.. ... oo~.·

d . , ;;;

· ews•• in Br:iefi

By Ullllecl Preu llllernalloul
SANTA MONICA, CAUF. -A WOtJW.BE extorUonlst had
planned to drop bombs on Lu Vegu casinos from a private
plane to force them to pay him $2 mllllon, federal autboritle11 say.

FBI agenls arreeted Nathan N. Marks, 28, Thursday, on a
federal warrant. Ball was setal $500,000. Assistant U. S. Attorney
Brian O'Neill said Msrlat, a self-employed radio and sale~~
jl'OIIlotlon man; propoaed the extortion scheme two months ago
to an unidentified Texas man, who notified the FBI and agreed to
inform authorities.

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MolHERS JIRE
PEOP~, ToO ·
Mothers are so nice to
us, we sometimes forget
they're just PEI?Pie, too
-they need to be told
that they're wanted and
loved. Thai's why there's
a Mother's Day, Sunday,
May 14. And that's why
we feature Hallmark
Mother's Day CO[ds-the
kind that say just what
you want sold, perfeelly.
.
A.lso 1 fine s~lection of Hallmark Mother's ·Day
G1ft Wrap, Rtbbon, ties and card enclosures to
make your gift a perfect one.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extellded Outlook Sunday through Tuesday:
Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers Sunday,
becoming partly cloudy
Monday through Tuesday.
Daylme highs ID .the 70s and
alghl-tlme lows ID the 50s.
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FARMINGTDN, W. VA. -RECOVERY teama returned
today to the corridors of the e:l)llosloo«arred No. Bmine pat
yielded another sil vlctlma Thursday of the November, i11611,
mine dlaaster.
A ljiOII:esman for ConaoHdation Coal Co., owner of the
sprawling mine eompla, aald search parUes ,:ombed an area
where the 8bodies 1'el'e found, but saw no Immediate algn of the
remalna ~ 56 other coal miners who perlahed In the tragedy.
"That probably will be·lt!or awhile," the Consolapokesman said.

"'

l.MiyGifb
Always Come From

ELBERFELDS.
IN POMEROY

Doctors Going to W.ties

area.

Three Sign for
Marietta Team
Three All-SGutheru .VaUey
Athletic Conferenc e
basketball players have
signed letter of lntenl ai
Martella College according
to an &amp;l!llouncement today
by Phil Roach, Pioneer head
coach.
Artbur Clark, U center
for the SV AC champion
Plratea, the league's Most
Valuable Player; Denis
Eichinger, &amp;.3 Center for the
Easteru Eaglea, ud Larry
Justus, 6-4 forward lor the
Pirates, will enroll at
Marietta thia faU. All lbree
players were outstanding
during their blgb school cage
careers.
EXPLOSION EXPlAINED
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - An
April 30 explosion al an Ohio
University studenl apartment
which Injured two youths has
been traced to fireworks that
apparently were in the process
of being made when they went
off.

.Consensus Meeting May 24 Is for All

NEW BRAUNFEIB, TEX. - '11IE MUDDY Guadalupe
River, BWOHen to fiood strength by week-long rains, swept over a
25-mlle atretch o! South Central TeD&amp; today, pouring through
dtlea and riveralde tUlllllUilltlea and forcing thousands from
their homea. At leut sil penons were delld.
More thari 4,500 pe110111 were evacuated from homes in San
Anlonlo and ljan Marcound along the river from New Brallllfels
to Seguin. Many peraons were reported mlaslng In the flood
nun. '"We know of ftve, conflnned lataUtles," said New
. Braunfela POlice Chief Royce Couch. "But we fear the total will
,0 much high.-. So many people were washed away."
SEVERAL HUNDRED . AN'I'I·WAR DEMONSTRATDRS
wbo were turned away from the ROTC building at Ohio State
Unlvnlty Thursday night ngroii[Mid In the streets near the
"'mPII and ckew a crowd eetlmated at more than 1,000.
PoUce took more than eo youths who refuled to clllbune into
l.'llllody and aald more were being booked early today.
PollclnMn armed with fllabllllcka and wooden pellet 1111111
dJ 1 d youtha up aide Ill eell near OSU alter an order wu pwn
·llloriiY liter IJIIdnlabt to dllper11. Rock tbrowinll wu reported
1114 m pera1111 auftnd minor lnjurlel.

SOLD!

States, adding that if the
powder has not been removed
from the shell the Smith bny
found II is "very dangerous"
and should not be handled.
Webb Is a mail carrier lor the
U. S. Pool Oflice in the Racine

LIND8EY LYONS
LINDSEY LYONS of
Tuppen . Plallll baa been
1111111ed reaenl muager of
lhe Tappen Plallll· Chetter
Water Dl1trlct, a new
potltloa. Ly0111 ud bl1 wile
bave operated a grocery In
Tapper1 Plalna the pall M
yean •. 4'.-. Ia a vete!'ID
member of the board of
dlrectora of the water

11IB AIUIES1' TOTAL Sll«JE PRBSmDfT ~N an..0..-1 mining o1 North Vlatnlm.harbon nemd the 2,000 mart dlltrlct.
today Ia ut1111r clemiiQflll'llt tbe ~ wbidl have
led 110 ina ealld violence IIIII IDjurlel. ~ 'llkl pollee In
Albuqupqut, N, M., !Ired lato a.crowd of demoaltraton, on tbe
Unhallty of New 11a1oo .,......, with a Wtpa. 'l1le
· LODGE 'I'D MEET
Middleport L«&lt;ge 383 F&amp;AM
UN•allty of New Malco blaltb ~ , llkllq ~were
will
confer the FeDowcra!t
~n~lild lor ~ldll
WOIIIIdl llld ~n .
Dtl!'ee
on one candidate
&amp; r'W b•ted Cllll yoalb lor !dmQv WOIIItds., •.
A 21-JeaMid .-, ...tl"'e4 lw I ~ b!Ut at Tuadayal7:30p.n. AU master
· (CGnlbluld on ..ae !)J
rna10111 are invited.

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at 8 p.m. Thursday, May ~. will· be the last day of
BY GEORGE HARGRA.VF8, SUPt.
classesforstlldenta.OnFrlday, May :16, teiehers will
Mell• Local School lllltrlct
In this evening's column I will touch on a number meet and complete their work for the school year. '
Report cards will be aent b&lt;me on Thursday, ]llay
of topics, trusting one or more will be of interest to
25,1n
grades 1-6. Report carda for grades 7-12 will be
you.
·'
On May 24 ai the high school at 7 p.m. we will nWled home on Friday, May :16. We !eel that this
have the Meigs Local meeting dealing with "Search 'arrangement will have some definite advantagea and ·
for Consensus." Tb1s meeting Is part of a state wide the savings in not running the buses on Friday will go
effort to help restate the goals for Ohio's schools. a long way toward cove~ the COlt of maUing the
cards In grades 7·12. The report carda thai are maUed
should resell you on Saturday ~ or no later
Speaking of Schools-No. 236
than on ]llooday, if aU goes accordiDg to plan.
JOHN LISLE AND InS STAFF llld the Sallsbtry
· Mrs. Richard Vaughan and Mrs. Gene Mltcb are pupils are to be commended for the aceUW
servlilg u CIH:balrmen mthla lliiJIPiln.
p-eaentation they made In their Variety Show last
They will try to get a rep!'! eentalion from
Friday and Satta"day evenings. A lot of bard work
crganilatlonll In the commllllty to attend th~ went into that program. The results certainly showed
meeting, bullet me emtUIIII that tbe.Jll"tlas Is It.
open to the pabllc. Anyone can attend. Everyone II
In tiW flnt part of thla column this evening I
Invited. We look forward to seeq you at Melp High mentioned the concerns that exlat about lldlooll.
at 7 p.m. on May 24.
ThOll of usln.e&amp;lcation, of courae, are laterelted In
Wbl1e we are 1llllng datee on tbe future cllendar, trying to do lbe job In imptoved and different ways.
let me inclwle the follow,lna:
The key to trying aomethlng new ~ a eta!f that Ia
Tanlgbt there will be 1 vocal concert It the high
wiOing to work bard and try new tNnp:
school. Twuomiw mnlng the bend bl. .et will be
When we do this, however, we open, ouneJV. to
held at the 1iCb ldlool at 1:30. Oft SUnda7, Motber's erttlclmi. This is a large part rl the story at Brad·
Dey, the AD.()blo Y011tb a.alr Will pre111111 eancert , bury. Webaveahard working sta!fthatia ~new
In tbe IIIIIIIW at tbe 1icb ldlool. BaccUiueate things. They make no claim to per!ec:IICil, Tbe7 jllll
will be Clll Slllday,llay 21,11111 l'•tdMIICflllllllt will want tbe cUilce to work bard to find bella' ways to
be on Tlatlday, May :11. Botb of lhelle will take place teacb your children. The 1eut aU of 111 shoulcl do II

attempt to underSfand what they are doing, appreciate their hard work, and encom:age lhein.
In other Schools In our · district, teachers are
working bard on other 1llnds of programs that they
hope will produce better resulta. They an need to be
encouraged.
n•aeasy to teach the same way as20 years ago. It
Is hard work to try to improve. Let's encourage our
teachers wherever they are making this effort to
improve tlrougll change.
As we prepare our schedules for the coming year
we find that we still have a number of 'lludent
In aeveral of our vocational programs. We
can take more stude!U Ia COIIIlelu]ogy, mine
mecbanica, drafting, and radio and TV. Students who
desire to be in these pt'Ojp IIIII itllGuld make the
ne~ arrqementa as aoon u poeslble.
•
Our AW!t Mining Procram 11 lllder way. n
meets each 'futada7 and Tlllnday evening fnm ~10.
Thla dall will last about 161 weelta. Following that
we will 11art a iiCiilll
for aiiCIOMr till week.
perlad. 'l1le JU'POII of tbla brief pr'Oifllll 15 tO.
provide .. baucb:tiom Ill miND&amp; far tbOII paaple ·
intenlted In ~In the- mine. There 1i
no guirutea of ~t, of caune, but we are
hopeful that I tralaed p&amp;IOII will bave I better op.
poriWIIty kt be emp1aJed and to be IIIIIIN prac:tlWI ·
emploJW. If,.,..... ~ In the nnt
call
Ill)' olflce at •nu IIIII 1111 will ltend YIN 111 applleatlon form.

open•

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3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 12, 1!172

Dr. €Iarke Head.s-State MA' -

Dr. Oscar W. Clar)re, M. D.
\
President-Elect, Ohio Medical Association

Oscar W. Clarke, ii3, M.D. of
the Holzer Medical · Center
Clinic and trustee of the Holzer
Hosp it al Fqundalion,
Gallipolis, Thursday became
tile first medical man of southeastern Ohio to be elected
p?el;ident of the Ohio Slate
Medical Association.
·
An internist, Dr. Clarke was
installed presldenW.Iecl of the
OSMA during the association's
annual meeting In Cincinnati at
the conclusioo of a four-day
convention.
Dr. Clarke will be installed
as president a! ihe 1973 conven lion nexi May in Columbus.
Retiring president is P. John
Robenchek, M.D., of Cleveland.
Attended by 3,500, the convention featured four days of
scientific and education
forums and exhibits as well as
sessions by- the House of
Delegates where elected
representatives of all of Ohio's
medical societies set State
Association policiei! for Ute
coming year and conducted
elections.
The Ohio State Medical
Association is composed of 88
couoly medical societies with a
10,000
membership · of
physicians. II is the largest and
oldest medical organization in
the slate. The Association
· devotes Its efforts toward

I

beller ,patient car~ by and he has one grandaoo, physicians to "speak up for good g~edical care sllll c;a1111ol
providing Ute physiciarls of Jinuny.
medicine" and "act ralher combat adverse health conOhio
with
scientific
Dr. Clarke is a Presiding than read:'' He said ditioos and bad habits such' as
educational courses, rules of Elder of .the First United physicians · should 1 "let ovmaUng; lack of exercise,
ethics, and serves as a coo- Presbyterian Church of everyone know what nledlclne .smoking, drug abuse and
suiting body for all problems Gallipolis.
Is, where-we stand, what we alcohol, while medicine's pleas
facing tile medical community
A native of Petersburg, Va., stand for, wllat.wt have done · for moderation laP 011 deaf
in Ohio. It provided a nine-rna~ Dr. Clarke came to GalUpolis and what we are doing.' '
ears. He said that plwerly • bad
delegation to represent the in 1950 as a member of the
Stating that the nation has housing, lack of educational
physicians of Ohio In tile af- Gallipolis Clinic staff. ~
been so ,besel by delu!lon ped· faclli'Ues and ·unemployment
fairs of the American Medical
Elected to replace Dr. Clarke dlen that "the souncls of truth· are basic forerunners of many
Association .
as a member of the Council of have been droWned out," Dr." diseases, buL. these are socioDr. Clarke has been active in the Ohio State Medical Sehwtzwarried that, unlesa·the economlcproblemsthatcannot '
the medical affairs of S&lt;lulh- Association was Thomas W. medical ' profeSSion "pounds be solved by_doctors.
eastern Ohio and' has Morgan, M.D., attenalng out the message of truth tQ the
Dr. Schultz told the
represented Ibis area. on the surgeon at IIlii Holzer Medical people of this country, unless Association's House . of
Council of the Ohio Stale Center . in Gallipolis. Dr. we give lheril an honest ap- Delegates, "II is time to dectde
Medical Association for the Morgan joined the ijolzer staff· pralsal of facts, oUr patienli - what med(!:ine and doctQrs can
past six years.
In 1952, and was cerUfied by Ute · the jleople - are going to be do and ~ha~ we cannot expect
His activities within the Ohio American Board of Surgery in misled into making some to do if we • are to •void
State Medical Association have 1955.
serious, Irrevocable and far- frustrations that result from
consisted of Chairman of llie
He has served as Preslden' reaching mtatakes.''
unduly high expectati~ on
Scientific Exhibition 'of the Ohio Chapter, American
Noting Ulal three of four the pari of Ute · consumer,
Evaluation
Commillee, CollegeofSurgeons,artdlsnow deaths in America today ill'e aggr~vated ' by impossible
Chairman of the Auditing and serving as Chairman of their caused: _by ·cardiovascular · promiSeS on the·.part of the
Appropriations Committee, State Advisory Committee. He disease, cancer or accidents, political demagogue ." He
Chairman of the Liaison was elected to the National Dr. Schultz emphasized !hat warned Ulat no national health'
Committee with the Ohio Slate
on Trauma,
Bar Assbcialion, Chairman of Committee
American College of Surgeons
the Advisory Committee to the last year, and presently serves
Women's Auxiliary, Trustee of as Chief of Section V..,comMedical Advances Institute, mittee .on Trauma.
·
member of the Hospital
He has authored numerous
Relations Commillee, member publications and Is active In
of the Workmen's Com- civic
and
community
pensation Committee, member organizations, in addition to his
of the Membership and professional affiliations. He
Planning Co,mmitlee, membe~ will replace Dr. Cll!rke as
of the Joint Coordinallng . couocilot of the 9th District
Heallh Planning Committee representing the physicians of
with the Ohi~ Stale Hospital GaUia, Jackson, Meigs, VInton,
Association, representative to Lawrence, Pike, Scioto all!l
the Professional Relations Hocking counties at the Ohio
Committee of the Ohio Stale Stale Medical Association.
Hospital Association and as a
In the area of ass.oclaUon
delegate to the American policy, a statewide "Up with
Medical Association.
Medicine" program was
Dr. Clarke is married to the outlined here today by the new
former Susan Frances King of president of the Ohio State
Kalispell, Montana and has Medical Association, William
three daughters, Susan who is_ R. Schultz, M.D., of Wooster.
a junior at Denn.tson Univerfn his inaugural address at
sity1 Jennifer who is a the conclusion of the
sophomore at Gallia Academy Association 's annual conand Elizabeth who is married vention, Dr. Schultz called on

Perry Stops

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DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Misery Caused ~
By Misinforma.tion
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

hair is to hav e adequate rePuteur's Achievements
De ·a r Dr. Lamb - .My placement of thyroid horLouis
Pasteur · originated
'
daughter had a very un - mone .
and
was
the first to use vac·
happy love affair and con- The best ·approach tu oint- cines lot rabies, anthrax and
tracted . go n o r r he a. This ments . and shampoos is to chicken cholera ; saved the
happened 25 years ago . What use as little as possible ami wine, beer and silk indusI would like to know is, can use mild shampoos. In truth tries of "France and elseshe work in a hospital or harsh shampoos, man.v lint.. where from extinction ; but
restaurant? We ~ know this and rinses can actuallv irri- lng the pasteurization prockind of work requires a tilood tate the scalp of some peo he is best known for developBy Helen Hottel
test. Would the lest show ple .. This can aggravate th ess, according to Encycloproblem
rather
t6an
help
it
that she has had this'! She
paedia Britannica.
wouldn't want anyone io
I'
know that she had this p;ob.J
That Nude Dude Centerfold!
lem.
Dear
Helen:
She had a good doctor and
DAVID POLING,
Remember the girlie magazine has.sle In your mlumn?
was checked afterward for a
•tong lime. Thank God she
Uptight dames, furious about !heir husbands' nudle-watching,
had the good sense to go
said they'd display picture&amp; of naked males on their coffee tabla,
straight to lhe doctor. She
e1cept
the very idea "made them sick.'' A few said this kind of .
has asked me . several Urnes
revenge would backfire, as friends would figure they were dingy.
about the blood test problem
What WOMAN, they asked, would look at an unclollted man?
and I have never been able
to give her an answer.
Boy, am I laughing! If Ute little ladles don't care for manly
Hy REV. DAVID POLING
curves
(with a lot of skin), how come you couldn't find an April
Dear iteader- Your letter
POURS IN PROGRESS - Concrete is being poured dally In the erection of Cooling Tower
.
One
dictionary
that
we
use
defines
·'chapel"
as
"a
place
Cosmopolltan anyWhere In town three hours after it hit Ute
is a beautiful testimony to
'No. I at the Gavin Power Plant neat Cheshire. By Monday an estimated eight to 10 feel of tile
of
worship
subordinate
_
t
o
a
church.
especially
in
a
college
stands?
- Because the gals Snapped 'em up to drool over that
the human misery that can
tower (upward from the steel meshing) was in pla_ce.
or
hospital."
VVhile
hospitals
and
colleges
may
head
the
centerfold.
be caused by mi'sinformation li st in number, military and prison chapels are everyor lack of information. I am
So next, I imagine, you 'U be getting letters from irate
sorry to say that you and wh ere present
husbands whose wives go for nude dudes. (Should we call them
As the reli gious community becomes more and more
your daughter have been
"boysie magazines"?)
inslltutionalized,
chapels
are
bound
to
flouriSh
as
an
exn ee d I e s s I y concerned for
tension
or
the
church.
Right? -BURT, BUT NOT REYNOLDS
nearly 25 years. The type of
Dear Burt:
blood test that is used for The newest chapels . rather !he newest outposts where
various types of employment chapels have been established, are at the major airports.
WIN AT BRIDGE
Right and rtgbt! They've already started. Read on :
is for syphilis and is unre- In New York, Boston and Chicago's O'Hare, there is a
reg ular program of worship service ·and full-time counsel
lated lo gonorrhea.
Dear Helen:
offered by clergymen . ln each setting, the approach does
As you state, your daugh- vary. but the activity and ministry is definitely on !he
My wife has taped the centerfold of Burt Reynolds above OlD'
ter
was
wise
to
go
straight
in
crease~
.
Four spades is almost an
bed, and she snickers every time I get oodreued. SaYII she'll take
to the physic ian and if she
NORTH
12
ironclad contract and five
In New York, the Protestant-Catholic-Jewish houses of
It
down wbenlthrow awaymyVill'ga calendar, ·
was treated adequately at worship form a dramatic cluster in the outer reaches of
• AJ9632
actually makes. but it seems
What's gotlntQwomen? '"-F(&gt;R BASIC MALE RIGHTS
tlJe time of the illness, there Kennedy. The architecture of the. buildings and the cen¥ K 8 73
!hal the ot her team was also
would
be
no
evidence
whatDear
FBMR:
• 52
Herman
(Butch)
Ohlinger,
ga mblin g three no-trump adtral location is most appealing .soever
that
she
had
gonorEqual "sights" - that's wh~t!
80, South Sixth Ave ., Middicts.
Bul Kennedy has traffic problems and one can hardly
WEST
EAST
South opened the same dleport, died Thursday evening rhea. This can be a serious walk from any of the air terminals to the chapels without
Aak your wife If she'll settle for a Burt Reynold.&lt;! calenclar
disease
but
if
il
is
treated
• Q 10 5
.. 8 4
th ree no-trump. Wes t opened at
Veterans
Memorial immedial~ly , there is mini- dashing across four.-lane target areas. One must take bus
nelrt year. - HELEN
. 1094
¥ A652
the l h r e e or clubs. East Hospital.
or
cab
to
reach
the
location,
discouraging
to
those
who
P.S. A local barbershop plays no favoritee. Pinned on lhe
• 43
• 76
mal risk IIf residual difficul- have less than half an hour for such a visit.
played the ace and returned
Mr
.
Ohlinger
was
born
June
"'K Q632
. A 10984
wall nell to the reclining Reynolds waa a Playmate of the lllonth.
the eig ht.
ties. The most common comLogan Field in Boston, 'the chapel can be reached by
SOUTH (0)
Below - !hill note:
VVest I o o k e d at South's 28, 1891 at Pomeroy, the son of plication that occurs in wom- a At
five- or 10-minute walk from almost any direction. Our
• K7
jack for a long time and fi. the late Martin and Katherine en is to have scarring or fi- last
"Fellas preferring•the male-nude, go tQ 01Bir No. 1. Ferdie
visit was during a Sunday afternoon in July-and the
• QJ
nally c am e up with the Kohl Ohlinger . He . was brosis of their .tubes so that cha pel
wW
do your hair.'' -H .
was
crowded,
with
a
wedding
in
progress.
Some
' t AKQJl098
super-brilliant play of the associated with his father who !hey are unable to have chil- 70 or 80 people had gathered for a Roman Catholic serv• J7
deuce. This is the sort of owned and operated !he dren. Of course, this prob- ice and the priest and chapel was just what they wanted.
Dear Helen :
None vulnerable
mista ke on ly a great ex~ert Ohlinger Bakery in Middlepqrt. lem also occurs from other
It
appears
that
the
airport
chapels
(there
are
only
three
can make. Ordinary players
West North
East Sou th
About the woman who says she "doelll'f really mmd If her
causes besides gonorrhea.
fully staffed centers that we know of in the United States
can't get q11ile such violent a number of years . Mr.
3N.T.
gentleman friend alwaya ends up raping her when they'~ alone
I surely do hope !hat this and none overseas ) serve a resident community of airline
brainstorms.
P..ass Pass
Pass
· Ohlinger was a veteran of
information
will
help
you
In
her apartment - but she willies she could talk to him more "
much
as
they
assist
the
travelers
.
personnel
and
staff
as
' It didn't hurt South . He World War I and a member of
Open ing lead- · 3
•
and
your
daughter
both
to
the
problem truly Is communication :• ·
At O'Hare, the chapel is four. levels down in the basegasped and the n proceeded the Middleport · Church of
quit worrying about this . ment, surrounded by steam pipes and air-conditioning
to take the rest of the tricks Christ.
·Conlentlng adults; married or n!JI, will no .doubt agree with
•
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby by
Your letter also demon- vents . Yet a li~ely , attractive worship center has been
taking the spade finesse.
Utat wonderful quote, ''The difference between rape and rlpture
Surviving are his wife, Nellie slrates how people punish created and attendance ,is good.
One of the popular bids · (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Ia
SALESMANSHIP!" -MURPH
Longstaff Ohlinger: a sister, them s e I v e s . through ill- At O'Hare, the ecumenical touch Is what counts. Prot:
with our younger experts toadvised
guill
reactions.
Dear
Heleu:
•
Miss Alma Ohlinger, Midday is the so-called "games tants and Catholics share fqlly the same .facilities, with
Here Ia another lllory of teenage hafaument,
·
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dleport, and two nieces, Mrs.
bling three no -trump."
the Community of Our Lady of Loreto served full-time
·
Dear
Dr.
Lamb-!
have
a
The
biddi!"lg
has
been
·
. This bid shows a solid miJohn (Susan) George, Min- thyroid deficiency and my by Fat~er John J . Keough.
My 11111 waa laaued two Uckell for vlolatlo111 ~ lU
Ea."t
nor suit with a little some- \~ es t North
South neapolis, Minn ., and Mrs. scalp is dry and Oakey. l am
Our last Sunday attendance was during the winter. The
IIIOlllliOblle, even lbouah at the time he waa home watdtJna TV.
l ,fo
1¥ ' t •
thing on the side and is deJames (Daun) Shields of using an ointment and some services were given good publicity over the public address
NaturaUy, be pleaded "not guilty." He had to llOflt _,for uu·
Pass
signed to upset the oppo- Pass 2 +
2 N.T.
system
of
the
airport
and
at
least
100
showed
up
for
the
to
Md
shampoo.
Can
you
recomprivilege.
When he aaked the Judge why, he wu put In jaU fur
Pass 3N.T. ~mg n, , ·
nents. It works occasionally, Pass 3 •
1:10 p.m. mass. Here again, it seemed that baggage
1
mend
any
special
treat·
?
Besides
hiS
parents
he
was
contempt
of
court. ·
·• •
but in our opirlion it is deli· Dble Redb lc Pass
handlers.
car
rental
clerks
and
·air
line
staffers
were
the
·
ment?
,
preceded In death by a brother,
You ,' So uth. ho ld:
nitely a losing proposition.
FolD' days later, after paying a Ial!yl!r fliO, be hi releiRCL
majority of those present.
The bid led to the early • A654 ¥K63 2 tQt07 .54 Eddie .
Dear · Reader - It is true One does not r~all railroad stations having chapelsAllbe bell'lnc over the. two tlcketa (lawyer's fee an .tdltklnil
elimination from this year's
Whit do you do now?
Fuoeral services will be held !hat thyfoid deficiency can although Traveler's Aid was always ready and waiting. '
fliO) both llckell were Cllicelled becalllll be wia not auJit1,
;
Vanderbilt of one or AmerA -Pa.~s. And don'l he un- at 1 p.m. Sunday at the cause scalp problems and The airports see thousands of people ¥n hour at the larger
The
lilY
I
Me
it
is
lhat
I
neipbor,
who
Ia
a
GC!P
11
dowa
on
Ica's leading bridg~ teams. happy. You arc likel y to m•kc Rawlings-Coals Funeral Home even loss or hair. Of course, terminals and many of these are families and individuals
1
our
lOB
and
be
put
the
other
GCIP
up
tQ
~
the
tleketl.
l'l'ovlq ~
South:s bid shut everybody this t!Ontrlcl .
with the Rev. Raullln Moyer there are many more cases in great trouble. Some are hurrying to a loved one close
out, but it did not keep West
thbi,ol
co_
n
e,1111111dcoatmorelhlnwe've
to death. Others are returning from a funeral or family
TODAV'S QUESTION
pfliciallng. Burial.will be In the of individuals who lose hair tragedy.
from opening a club and lhe
'
~ wu aeveral monilia aco, and I'm still burnluc - and
with
normal
thyroids
than
AJ:tain you t· partner opcn.'l one Greenlawn Cemetery ·a!
defense had five club tricks
there
are
with
individuals
still
bruke111 lhU jtllllet! ~MRS. R. L.
Often
the
chaplain
at
Kennedy
or
O'!Jare
Is
the
ftrst
and a heart before declarer club. Ttl is tim~ you hold:
Nelsonville. Friends may call ' with thyroid trouble. In any clergyman to g1ve immediate and personal comfort to·
.KJ$4
.K87G
t3
2,oloQ10
7
Dear
Ml'l. t.:
could get in.
at the funeral home on case, if you really have a de- someone in trouble. II is not a bad slogan: SupPort Your
What do you do now?
The only man it shut out
, , If t1U Ia the mfabt IQOfll,.tbat I'd aylt'nnotber diOJinl
Saturday from 2 to 4 and from 7 ficient thyroid, the b e s t Local Airport Chaplain. They are establishing an essenof the bidding was North.
remlntlerlhataDIIDIIplltyaatll )I'OVIII)n-t. Jultlet? 11Jr
to 9 p.m.
t,realment for your scalp anrl tial and creative ministry to trav_eling mankind.
went lhataway! :-H.
•
.

Helen Help

Us.

••

D.D.

Airport Chapels
Proving Popular

-

cleats for the season and
cancelled all of their remaining .
games.
Danny , Wilson wenI all lhe
way for the Vikings and fanned
five . walked only one, and
allowed seven hils. Jim
Hubbard, now 5-3 on the year,
lost his second straight game in
fanning nine, walking foUF, and
permitting five hils, two of
'·

"And She Used to Be Such a Wallflower!"

'

The 'Gambling Three N.T.'

The Symmes Valley Vikings
tightened lhe Southern Valley
Conference race with a ii-3 win
over the Southern Tornadoes at
Symmes Valley ·Thursday.
Four learns are still contending for the SV AC title with
Southern on ~p al 7-1, Kyger
Creek, 6-1, Synnes Va)ley ii-I
and Eastern, ii-2. 1'lie Nor th
Gallia Pirates hung up their

insurance scheme, or ~o new
90-(alJed "heallh care deUvery
system" will haveanreffect on
the paitems of living or the
disease-causing habita of
Americans.
Citing an October, 1971
Harris poll which showed 61
per cen( of AmeriC&amp;III have "a
great deal of confidence" in
medicine ,and oils leadenhlp,
Dt. Schultz liald the Slllle pqll
showed only 23 per eent expressed " a great deal of
confidence" in the Supreme
Court, 27 per cent in religion, 19
per cent In Congress 18 per
cent in Ute preia 14 pe~ cent in
organized labor ~d 13 per cent
in advertising.
He urged that the "Up wllh
Medicine" program involve all
physicians, thai they inform
themselves fully and accurately, and thatlhey speak
out 10 their patients their
friends and their c~unlty
·
·

\

Gallia Academy High
School's baseball team advanced to the Class AA Central
Sectional finals Thursday
evening by eliminating Minford's Falcons, 8-1.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils, now 11-4 overall, will
battle the winner of loday 's
Wellston - Northwest ·contest
Saturday at I p.m., for the
sectional title, and a trip to the
Class AA District to be held at
Rio Grande College next
weekend.
The seCtional finals will be
played on the diamond of the
Wellston-Northwest winner
Saturday. Both Wellston and
GAHS drew (irst round byes .
Minford had knocked off Parismouth West 3-2 last Friday in
the opening round of the
Central Sectional.
Stan Perry, senior GAHS
mound ace, came within two
outs of hurling his first nohit, no-run contest of the
year at Minford Thursday.
Perry, who whiffed 18
Falcons in notChing his fifth
win in eight slarls this spring,
struck out Mike Price, big
Falcon catcher to start the
bottom of the ~venth.
Perry than fanned Phil
Swords, but the ball got away
from catcher Mark Kiesling,
and Swords reached first base
on the Devils • only error.
Pinchhiller Phil Doddridge
then uncorked a double to
righiiield to spoil Perry's bid
for a shutout and no-hitter.
Perry walked four and hit one
batter. ·
After walking two Falcons in
the first inning, Perry retired
12 Minford batters in a row

Wildcats~

before hilling Larry Davis in fanned eight, walked none. and
1
tlle fifth rung.
hit one batter.
The Blue Devils wrapped It
Brisker, who gave up six
up In the second inning by
runs and five hits, fanned
taking advantage of three
nobody, walked three and hit
'
walks
Issued by starling
one baller. The Falcons
hurler Harry Brisker, a hit
committed six cos tly' errors.
batsman, sacrifice, two
The Gallians added two
Minford errors, and timely
insurance markers in the sixth
singles by Mark , Kiesling,
on back-to-back singles by
Sieve Slone and Perry. In all,
Slone, Perry and Rick Boone
eleven Blue Devils went to
and two Falcon errors.
the plate - six of them
Kiesling, Slone, Perry and
scored.
Boone each had two hits for
Phil Swords relieved Brisker
the Galllans. Boone's double
and hurled the final five in- In the sixth was Gallla's only
nings for Minford , which
extra base hi!. ·
bowed out with a respectable 9Score By lnmngs :
060 002 D-8 9 1
3 season mark. Swords gave up Gal lipolis
Minford
000 000 1- 1 1 6
l wo ' runs and four hits. He

CHAMPS SIGNED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-Jo
Jo Starbuck,and Ken Sllflley, a
pair of three-time U.S. figure
skating pairs champions from
Downey, Calif., have been
signed to a professional con- By Uniied PreSs ·International
Leading Bailers
tract, it was announced ThursNa!ional
League
day by Ice Capades president
g. ab r. h. pel .
George W. Eby ..
Russi , LA 19 41 4 19 .463
Tolan,Cin 21 83 17 33 .398
S!enel, Pi I 16 53 10 21 .396
Cedeno, Hou 18 76 14 30 .395
Lee, SD
16 51 7 20 .392
Mondy, Chi 20 56 13 21 .375
FOURTH YEAR
Hi ckmn , Chi 16 56 15 21 .375
KANSAS CITY Mo. (UPl)- Torre,SI.
L 20 77 11 28 .364
Bob Cousy, who has thus far Snguiln. Pit 20 84 8 30 .357
been unable to build a winner Alou, S!.L 21 78 8 27 .346
American League
as a professional basketball
, g. ab r. h. pel.
coach after a 117-34 record in Braun , Min 14 5(] 7 20 .400
the college ranks at Boston Cash. Del 18 58 11 21 .362
College, Thursday signed for a K•lly, Chi 15 54 7 19 .352
Brhmer Cle 13 49 8 17 .347
fourth ·year as coach of the Pinsn,Cal 19 70 7 24 .343
Cincinnati-Kansas City Royals Pn iela. KC 21 79 11 27 .342
of the National Basketball Fr•ehn, Del 16 62 12 21 .339
Drw in, Min 18 65 11 22 .338
Association .
Tmpsn, Min 18 75 11 25 .333
Munsn.NY 19 6A 7 21 .328
fi!.cCrw,
~le.. J~ 61,,.. .9,...~q~. .328
._ tJOo. ..~.Runs
Na!ion~ L L~Igue :· Colbert, SD
8; Aa'ron, Afl , Wynn , Hou and
King man , SF 6; Seven players

Popped·

ti ed wi th 5.
American

14-0 by Eastern
The Eastern Eagles tuned up
for district tournament play
next week with a I~ romp
over the Himnan Trace
Wildcats at Hannan Trace
Thursday in a game that was
called aft~r five innings.
Rick Blake went the distance
for the Eagles and allowed only
two singles. Blake fanned
seven and walked two. Montgomery also went the distance
for the Wlldcals and walked
four and struck out five.
Blake and David Baker also
topped the Eagles at the plate
with two singles each. Other
hitters were Mike Larkins with
a bases loaded triple, Bobby
Edwards and Bob Caldwell, a

double each, and Rick Sanders,
Alan Duvall . Randy Boring,
Greg Bailey, and Phil Bowen
each a single.
Coach Larry Heines' Eagles
ripped for · six runs in the
opening frame . The Eagles'
head man then began substituting freely in the second
inning . Eastern is now Hl-5 on
the year and ii-2 in Southern
Valley Conference play.
Eastern's next game is
Tuesday at home against
Symmes Valley.
Eastern
614 12-14 12 I
HT
00000-0 23
Blake and Youhg, Edwards
(2) . Montgomery and Hall.

(
.
---------Major League Standings
By United Press lnternaitional

National League
·
East
w. L. Pel, ()B.

New York
Philadelphi a

Montreal
Chicago
St. Loui s

Pi11sburgh

EXTERIOR ALKYD HOUSE

PAINT
1-COAT SPRED ,GEL-FLO .

13

B .619

Los Ange les

14 10 .583

San D1ego

10 13 .435' A

112

At lanta
9 14 .3,91 5
Cincinna ti
B 13 .3Bl 5
San Frarfcisco 9 16 .360 6
Thursday's Result s
New Yor k 2 Los Ang 1, ls i
Los Ang 6 N ew Yor k 4, 2nd
St. Louis 4 Houston 3
Los Angeles 6 New York 4 (2nd
game, nig hO t Phlla 6 San D1ego
5, 12 inn s
1
San Fran 6 fv\ontreal 2

!Only games schedul ed)

FACTS

I All Times EDT&gt;

San Diego (Greif 2 31 a!
(Morton

p.m .

1- 1),

DINNER DANCE
WESTBURY , N.Y . (UPIIThe 15th anniversary of the
Standardbred Owners Association will be celebrated with a
dinner dance at the Holidsy Inn
in Hempstead, N.Y. on June 11.
The SOA, founded in 1957, is
one of Ute country's foremost
harness racing associations.

8: 05

ofJ

San Francisco (Ston e 0-2 )

Meigs Gets

WORW ALMANAC

Today's Probable Pitchers

Montreal

at

New York ( Genlry 2-1I. 8 p.m.
Los Angeles [Sutton 4-0) al
Philadelphia (Selma 1-2), 7:35
P m.
Pittsburgh (Blass 2-IJ at
Houston (Dier ker 2- 1J. 6: 30

p.m.

Belpre in

Ch icago

( Hands

l -1)

at

AllanIa (Reed 1-JI, 8:05p.m.
St . loui s (Cleveland 3-01 a!
Cinci nnati (Gri msley 0-0), 8:05

The Belpre Golden Eagles,
winners of the Tri-Valley
Conference, outslugged the
Warren Local Warriors at
Warren Local Thursday night,
14-13, to earn the right to play
the Meigs Marauders in the
" AA " sectional finals at Belpre
today.
Jerry Meeley, the Belpre
ace, hurled all seven innings
for tile Eagles and will undoubtably not start against the
Marauders.
The Warriors trailed 14-8
heading for the bottoni of the
seventh when they came up
with five runs on five hits. They
had a· man on second with one
out and the score 14-13. After a
groundoul to the pitcher, tile
runner moved to third. A
strikeout, however ended the
game.
Belpre
300 038 {)-!4 14 7
W. Local '006 020 3--13 10 7

n ·es. "e"'ID.,:
TYI!ln
,
w' "
12 2 Thursda'y
..,.~

-

p.m.

actually meleoroids which
vapor ize by the heat of frictllm w h e n they pa ss
Los Angeles a! Phlla. nigh!
thro ugh lhe ear th 's atm os Pi11sburgh at Hous. nigh !
phere and are see n as
Ch icago at At lanta , ni ght
meleors.
The World AlmaSt . Lou1s at Ci~ci, night
nac says . While most of
American league
them are consumed , a few
East
fall to earth as fused melal
W. L. Pcf. GB · or stone and are called
Cleveland
12 7 .632
•;, meteorit es. Meteoroids are
Detro1t
11 7 .611
th ough! to be fragments
Baltimore
11 8 .579 1
Bos ton
from comels or the asteroid
6 11 .353 s
New Yor k
6 13 .316 6
belt.
Milwaukee
5 12 .294 6
Wes1
W. L. Pel. GB .
Minnesota

14

Chicago

10

Texas
Cali1or.nia
Kansas City

· Thursday's Results

(Only games schedul ed)

'4'" up
lounge ·
Chairs
'11'5 up

Ball a! Chi cago, night

Texas at Cleve lan d

lriternational League

Louisville

10 11

.476

4lf:z

Char les!on
9 10 .474 4'12
Syracu se
10 13 .435 5'1&gt;
10 13 .435 5'1?
De1roit I Lolieh 5·11 at Kansas Toledo
Penins ula
10.,. 15 . .400 6 1/ 2
Ci!y !Drago 2-1 ), 8:30p.m.
J ThuYssla-Y.'&amp;,;Results ,....
Baltimor-e CCue11ar ~-2 ) ~ a t
Richmond 7 CHarl•s1on 1
Chi cago (Wood 4-2 ). 9 p.m.
Texas ( Ha nd 0-1 or Bo S'man

Middleport. Ohio

Folding Chairs

Standings
By United Press International
!All Time! EDT)
.
W. L. Pel. GB
Bos1on (Sieber! 2·1 1 a!
15 . 7 .682
Oakl and !Mclain 1-2). 11 p.m. Ri chmond
14 11 .560 2'h
New York (Kline 1-11 a! Tidewater
13 ll .542 3
Calilornia (Cla rk 2-2), 11 p.m. Rochester

1 4) a! Cleveland [Wilcox 4-21.
7:30 p.m.

Royal Crown
Bottling Co.

$AVE

· Today's Probable Pitchrs

Mi lwauk ee { Pa rsons 2-2) at
M mnesota ( Woodson J -0) , 8:30
P m.

FLAIR

With Lawn Furniture

4 .778
5 .706
9 .526

Te)(as 3 Balt im ore 1
Bos ton 8 California 1

Sugar FreeTaste Great

Enjoy Summer Living

Saturday's Games
p;,
41/2 Boston a t Oakland
9 11 .450 6 New York at Cal i f , night
Milwaukee at Minn esota
B 12 .AOO . 7
B 13 .381 ?I t'] De troi t a t Ka nsas City

12

NEW

"S hooting s t a r s'! are

Saturday's r.~mes
San Diego at Mont, night
San Fran c isco at New York

Oakland

three in the second, five in the
third and fourth frames and
eight in the six th .
Soul~western was pac-ed by
junior Mike Dillon w~o
slmnmed a double and two
singles. Mike Crouse had a
double and single. The
High landers scored five.runs in
the f1£lh on two errors, four
walks and doub les by Crouse
and Dillon.
By Innings : • I
KC
13; 528 {)-24' 17 14
svv
010 151 ()..._ 8 8 7
Curry ( W) Stid ham ( 5)
Johnson (51 and Bias. Walker
( L ) Bush (31 and Carte r (51
Gi ll !G) and Whitt.

Padded
Lounge

Porch Set

Chairs
'lloo up .__4_p_c._•4_1_so_

H&amp;R

Louisvi lle 6 Rochester 2
Syra c use 7 Toledo 1
Tidewater 5 Pen insula 2

I

•

__.

I:'IRESTON~ .

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

l

League : Darwin ,

Minn 6; Cash . Del 5; Allen, Chi
and Duncan, Oak 4; Oliver, Cal,
Johnson, C[ev , Kir kpalrlck, KC
and Conigliaro. Mil 3.
Runs Balll!d In

Over RocketS

..,.,~ ,.,.. ' .&amp;

The Meigs
Marauder
National League : K ingman ,
scored.
seven
runs in
reserves
SF 24 ; Tolan, Cin 21; Wynn ,
Hou and Col berl, SD 19; May. the first two innings and went
Hou 18.
·on to soundly defeat the
American Leagul! : Da rwi n, Wellston rese rves 12-2 a!
Mi nn 20; Cash, Del 15 ;
Freehan, Dei 14; Powell, Bat! Middleport Municipal Park
and Killebrew. Mlnn 13.
Thursday. The reserves are
Pitching
now 2-0.
National League: Ray. HOU'
Mille Richards, who pitched
and McDowell , SF 5-0 ; Seaver;' all the way for the . llltle
NY and Ca rl!on , Phil 5-1;
Sutton, LA A-0; Nlekro, All 4-3. Marauders, gave up just five
American League: Lolich , hits, all to the first three hitters
Del 5-1; · Perry, Clev 5-2; in the Wellston order. Richard.&lt;!
McNally, Bal l, Blyleven, Minn
and Hol1zmann. Oak 4-1: Wood, fa1111ed 13 and walked only one.
Eanes and Collins shared the
Chi, Wilcox, Clev and Coleman ,
De1 4-2.
mound duties for tbe little
Rockets. They fanned three
.V and walked two. The Meigs'
boys clouted 14 hits off them.
Topping Meigs at !be plate
was Chuck Faulk with two
singles, a double, and a tong
home run In four at bats. Dave
Wolfe had two singles and a
double in four trips, Mick Ash,
a single and double, Bill
Chaney, a triple, and Mike
Nesselroad, Rick Stobart,
Chuck Eastman,. and Steve
Price each had a single.
Gillan and Lockhard each
had two singles and Speraw a
double for Wellston.
Meigs erupted for their four
runs in the first when Ash
singled, Faulk singled, W1lfe
doubled In two runs, Chaney
tripled In another, and Eastman singled home the fourth
run.
The Meigs reserves, coacbed
TDday't !F UN~Y will PD1 $1 ,00 lor
by Don Wolfe and Roger Birch,
eoch oriti~~e~t "f11nn p" uud . Send gog'
will play the Gallipolis
to: TNor'1 'UNNY', 1200 W111 Tturd
St , Cte••l•n4. Ohto 44113 .
reserves at Gallipolis next
Tuesday.
The Wellston squad was
made up entirely of freshmen;
Wellston
000 020 0- 2 5 2
Meigs
.
430 203 1- 2 . 5 2
The Dai1J Sentinel
Eanes (LP), Colllns (5) and
DEVOTED TO THI!
INTEREST OF
Henry. Richards and Ash ..

...

'''"!''~ ~, !~''·.

~

Satoltto

Gives You 2 Coats In 1 If Needed.

hoc. Ed.

·K·•··

COMES IN WHITE
AND 2000 MIXED COLORS.
'.
. .

,,

dally except
Saturday by Ttle Ohib Valley
Publhhlng Company , 111
Court St. , Pomeroy, Otllo ,
45769 . Business Office Phone
992-2156, Edlloriol Phone 99 22117.
Second class postaoe pa id at
Pom•roy, Ohio,.
Nallonal advertising ·
rtPrtttntatlve
8ottinelll ·

Gallaot\l'r, Inc ., 11 Ent •2nd
St .• New York City, Ntw York .
Subscript ion rtfts : Oe-

tivered by carrier whtre
av1ilablt so cents ptf wtlk ;
By Motor Route wt1trt carrier
service not available : Ont
month 11.75. By m1il i n OBio
and W. Va ., One yttr SU.OO.
. Sik months 17 .25 . Three
months u .so. Subsc.riptlon
price include' SunPIY Times .
Sentinel . •

aot.

I

.

'

.t

Base Veh[c lo MSAP
Automatic Trans. 3·spd.
Powe&lt; Slee•lng ·
· Powec Brakes-Disc
Air Condlllon
Tinted
Glass lng
. Radio-AM

$2,701.00 *
21 110
113:70
68.05
378.4S

Protective Side Molding
Total
'

15.15
$3,607.80 *

~~~:~~f,';{~.

Publisl1ed

1

DATE SET
OAKLANO.(UPI) - The first
appearance of Oakland A's
pttcher Vida Blue Is expect¢
to be May 28 against the
Ollcago White Sox at Oakland.
mue was a holdout over salary
for 1972 until early May.
TEAM CAPTAIN
NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y.
(UPI)-Al Williams, a' 5-9
junior guard from Hem)lllead,
N.Y., has been nariled captain
of the 1972-73 Niagara
University baaketbaU team.

.,

'

Chlv1 Chl••ll•

New Plymouth Satellile might just be the

t-;;::::-;:::;:::-::-;:;;;::;;----lr2::·D;-:;'·;::c:=o~u:':o'-t-:::'::=:::::::-+-:sF::":;;c~o;:•~ best looking car in America. Maybe the best

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

cu, Edl1or

~I

West
W. L. Pet. GB .

Hou ston

ROIEU HOI!Fl1CH, ·

M2-3748

14 7
.1&gt;&lt; 7 o;,
14 8 .636
12 9 .571 2
10 II .476 4
10 12 455 411
9 II ·. 450 4112'

· Cc.aeh Dick Adams' Kyger rcmainircg SVAC games.
Creek Bobcals ripped four
The Bobcats will play
Southwestern hurlers for 17 Syfllmcs Valley Sa turday
hils Thursday night in bombing morning in a 1".3ke-up game.
the Highlanders, 24-ll in a KC plays at Southern Tuesday
South ern Valley A lh l ~lic and Eastern Thursday .
Conferencegameplayeton the
Junior righthander George
Rio Grande College diamond. Curry paced the Bobcat win.
The wi n pushed •Kyge r Cur ry hurled four innings
Creek's
league mark to 1&gt;-I. Thed permi tting two runs on five
n
oobca ts hold down secon · hils. He was also three fo r
place in the leagcie behind the three at the plate including a
Southern Tornadoes who were two run homer over the leftbeaten Thursday night by held fence.
Symmes Valley.
Other Bobcat hitters with
The Vikings are 5-1 while the two more safeties were Lou
Eastern Eagles are ii-2. Nor th Loude n with a triple and two
Gallia Thursday forfeited ils Singles, Greg McCa rty and
Clay Hudson and two singles
each and John Baird had a
double and si ngle. The Bobca ts
scored a single run in the fi rst,

foday· S FUNNY

.5

((

al bals. Rodney Holman kept
his six-game hitting streak
alive wilh two si ngles and Pat
Arnold and Steve Jenkins each
had a single.
Jene Myers anll Jamie Lafon
each had home runs lor the
Vikings. These shols were over
a ditch that crosses the outfield
and is fairly easy to clear.
;J)ave Dunfee added two Singles
and Jim Bennett had a single
·for the Vikings.
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tornadoes, ljaving only 10 players
due to high Sl!hool's senior trip
this week, is now 12-3 on the
year .
· The Tornadoes will play the
Starr-Washington Generals at
h6rne next Monday and Kyger
Creek, also at home, on
Tuesday .
Southern
000 200 1- 3 7 4
sv
ll1 020 x- 5 &gt;3
Hubbard and Jenkins. Wilson
and llennetl.

Sectional

Died Thursday

'

them home runs.
The Vikings scored a ruo in
each of the lirst three innings
to ta~e a 3-Q adva ntage, then
scored the lwo·winnihg ruos in
the fifth, Southern came up ·
with two in the fourth and one
in the seventh.
Hubbar d paced the To r-'
nadQes at the plate with a
double and ·~0 singles in four

Minford ~

Mr. Ohlinger

.

~~sr:S Bobcats Slam SW, ~4-8

Vikings Upset Tornadoes, 5•3

$2,762.00*•
$2,758.70*
21089 (' spd 118Soo
112:07 •· · m :oo
58.26
68.00
402.24
397.00
64.37
65.00

64.90

~::~~ ·

~t~

33.20

suous•

Difference

2 ~-00

~ 3 :~

Slous

$3,173.70*
116.10

· Mar•

More

*Bned o~' a comparison of man ulacturers ' tu ggelted retail pr ices for 1972 Slletl lte Coupe ,
Ford To r1no :wr. H. T. and CheVy Chevelle Sport Cou pe wi th eq uipment lilted. Pr ic es
. lr~clude Federal EIICI!Je Tax lr\d 8lCjude .state Md local IIKea , delflnatior~ ctlarQea Md
optional eQ~ipmeru other that that listed above.

bargain, tOO. Satellite fits a young man's
fancy- a young family man who thi~ks he's
stili single. There's full room for a family
wilhout sacrificing the flair of a sporty car.
Best ol all, Sateliile doesn 't carry a lull-size
price. And when it comes to price, Satellite
has Torino and Chevei le beat all hollow. Let
us put a lillie joy into your life and put
you in a new
UQU Satellite now.

J Q:V tO

J
J
f rom
us.

We're trying to put a little more joy Into your II Wi~Ym:RII
·
car buying and driving,

PAA

TOM .RUE MOTORS 399 SOUTH. ltd' AVE., MIDDlEpORT, 0.

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10( 11

...

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3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 12, 1!172

Dr. €Iarke Head.s-State MA' -

Dr. Oscar W. Clar)re, M. D.
\
President-Elect, Ohio Medical Association

Oscar W. Clarke, ii3, M.D. of
the Holzer Medical · Center
Clinic and trustee of the Holzer
Hosp it al Fqundalion,
Gallipolis, Thursday became
tile first medical man of southeastern Ohio to be elected
p?el;ident of the Ohio Slate
Medical Association.
·
An internist, Dr. Clarke was
installed presldenW.Iecl of the
OSMA during the association's
annual meeting In Cincinnati at
the conclusioo of a four-day
convention.
Dr. Clarke will be installed
as president a! ihe 1973 conven lion nexi May in Columbus.
Retiring president is P. John
Robenchek, M.D., of Cleveland.
Attended by 3,500, the convention featured four days of
scientific and education
forums and exhibits as well as
sessions by- the House of
Delegates where elected
representatives of all of Ohio's
medical societies set State
Association policiei! for Ute
coming year and conducted
elections.
The Ohio State Medical
Association is composed of 88
couoly medical societies with a
10,000
membership · of
physicians. II is the largest and
oldest medical organization in
the slate. The Association
· devotes Its efforts toward

I

beller ,patient car~ by and he has one grandaoo, physicians to "speak up for good g~edical care sllll c;a1111ol
providing Ute physiciarls of Jinuny.
medicine" and "act ralher combat adverse health conOhio
with
scientific
Dr. Clarke is a Presiding than read:'' He said ditioos and bad habits such' as
educational courses, rules of Elder of .the First United physicians · should 1 "let ovmaUng; lack of exercise,
ethics, and serves as a coo- Presbyterian Church of everyone know what nledlclne .smoking, drug abuse and
suiting body for all problems Gallipolis.
Is, where-we stand, what we alcohol, while medicine's pleas
facing tile medical community
A native of Petersburg, Va., stand for, wllat.wt have done · for moderation laP 011 deaf
in Ohio. It provided a nine-rna~ Dr. Clarke came to GalUpolis and what we are doing.' '
ears. He said that plwerly • bad
delegation to represent the in 1950 as a member of the
Stating that the nation has housing, lack of educational
physicians of Ohio In tile af- Gallipolis Clinic staff. ~
been so ,besel by delu!lon ped· faclli'Ues and ·unemployment
fairs of the American Medical
Elected to replace Dr. Clarke dlen that "the souncls of truth· are basic forerunners of many
Association .
as a member of the Council of have been droWned out," Dr." diseases, buL. these are socioDr. Clarke has been active in the Ohio State Medical Sehwtzwarried that, unlesa·the economlcproblemsthatcannot '
the medical affairs of S&lt;lulh- Association was Thomas W. medical ' profeSSion "pounds be solved by_doctors.
eastern Ohio and' has Morgan, M.D., attenalng out the message of truth tQ the
Dr. Schultz told the
represented Ibis area. on the surgeon at IIlii Holzer Medical people of this country, unless Association's House . of
Council of the Ohio Stale Center . in Gallipolis. Dr. we give lheril an honest ap- Delegates, "II is time to dectde
Medical Association for the Morgan joined the ijolzer staff· pralsal of facts, oUr patienli - what med(!:ine and doctQrs can
past six years.
In 1952, and was cerUfied by Ute · the jleople - are going to be do and ~ha~ we cannot expect
His activities within the Ohio American Board of Surgery in misled into making some to do if we • are to •void
State Medical Association have 1955.
serious, Irrevocable and far- frustrations that result from
consisted of Chairman of llie
He has served as Preslden' reaching mtatakes.''
unduly high expectati~ on
Scientific Exhibition 'of the Ohio Chapter, American
Noting Ulal three of four the pari of Ute · consumer,
Evaluation
Commillee, CollegeofSurgeons,artdlsnow deaths in America today ill'e aggr~vated ' by impossible
Chairman of the Auditing and serving as Chairman of their caused: _by ·cardiovascular · promiSeS on the·.part of the
Appropriations Committee, State Advisory Committee. He disease, cancer or accidents, political demagogue ." He
Chairman of the Liaison was elected to the National Dr. Schultz emphasized !hat warned Ulat no national health'
Committee with the Ohio Slate
on Trauma,
Bar Assbcialion, Chairman of Committee
American College of Surgeons
the Advisory Committee to the last year, and presently serves
Women's Auxiliary, Trustee of as Chief of Section V..,comMedical Advances Institute, mittee .on Trauma.
·
member of the Hospital
He has authored numerous
Relations Commillee, member publications and Is active In
of the Workmen's Com- civic
and
community
pensation Committee, member organizations, in addition to his
of the Membership and professional affiliations. He
Planning Co,mmitlee, membe~ will replace Dr. Cll!rke as
of the Joint Coordinallng . couocilot of the 9th District
Heallh Planning Committee representing the physicians of
with the Ohi~ Stale Hospital GaUia, Jackson, Meigs, VInton,
Association, representative to Lawrence, Pike, Scioto all!l
the Professional Relations Hocking counties at the Ohio
Committee of the Ohio Stale Stale Medical Association.
Hospital Association and as a
In the area of ass.oclaUon
delegate to the American policy, a statewide "Up with
Medical Association.
Medicine" program was
Dr. Clarke is married to the outlined here today by the new
former Susan Frances King of president of the Ohio State
Kalispell, Montana and has Medical Association, William
three daughters, Susan who is_ R. Schultz, M.D., of Wooster.
a junior at Denn.tson Univerfn his inaugural address at
sity1 Jennifer who is a the conclusion of the
sophomore at Gallia Academy Association 's annual conand Elizabeth who is married vention, Dr. Schultz called on

Perry Stops

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•

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Misery Caused ~
By Misinforma.tion
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

hair is to hav e adequate rePuteur's Achievements
De ·a r Dr. Lamb - .My placement of thyroid horLouis
Pasteur · originated
'
daughter had a very un - mone .
and
was
the first to use vac·
happy love affair and con- The best ·approach tu oint- cines lot rabies, anthrax and
tracted . go n o r r he a. This ments . and shampoos is to chicken cholera ; saved the
happened 25 years ago . What use as little as possible ami wine, beer and silk indusI would like to know is, can use mild shampoos. In truth tries of "France and elseshe work in a hospital or harsh shampoos, man.v lint.. where from extinction ; but
restaurant? We ~ know this and rinses can actuallv irri- lng the pasteurization prockind of work requires a tilood tate the scalp of some peo he is best known for developBy Helen Hottel
test. Would the lest show ple .. This can aggravate th ess, according to Encycloproblem
rather
t6an
help
it
that she has had this'! She
paedia Britannica.
wouldn't want anyone io
I'
know that she had this p;ob.J
That Nude Dude Centerfold!
lem.
Dear
Helen:
She had a good doctor and
DAVID POLING,
Remember the girlie magazine has.sle In your mlumn?
was checked afterward for a
•tong lime. Thank God she
Uptight dames, furious about !heir husbands' nudle-watching,
had the good sense to go
said they'd display picture&amp; of naked males on their coffee tabla,
straight to lhe doctor. She
e1cept
the very idea "made them sick.'' A few said this kind of .
has asked me . several Urnes
revenge would backfire, as friends would figure they were dingy.
about the blood test problem
What WOMAN, they asked, would look at an unclollted man?
and I have never been able
to give her an answer.
Boy, am I laughing! If Ute little ladles don't care for manly
Hy REV. DAVID POLING
curves
(with a lot of skin), how come you couldn't find an April
Dear iteader- Your letter
POURS IN PROGRESS - Concrete is being poured dally In the erection of Cooling Tower
.
One
dictionary
that
we
use
defines
·'chapel"
as
"a
place
Cosmopolltan anyWhere In town three hours after it hit Ute
is a beautiful testimony to
'No. I at the Gavin Power Plant neat Cheshire. By Monday an estimated eight to 10 feel of tile
of
worship
subordinate
_
t
o
a
church.
especially
in
a
college
stands?
- Because the gals Snapped 'em up to drool over that
the human misery that can
tower (upward from the steel meshing) was in pla_ce.
or
hospital."
VVhile
hospitals
and
colleges
may
head
the
centerfold.
be caused by mi'sinformation li st in number, military and prison chapels are everyor lack of information. I am
So next, I imagine, you 'U be getting letters from irate
sorry to say that you and wh ere present
husbands whose wives go for nude dudes. (Should we call them
As the reli gious community becomes more and more
your daughter have been
"boysie magazines"?)
inslltutionalized,
chapels
are
bound
to
flouriSh
as
an
exn ee d I e s s I y concerned for
tension
or
the
church.
Right? -BURT, BUT NOT REYNOLDS
nearly 25 years. The type of
Dear Burt:
blood test that is used for The newest chapels . rather !he newest outposts where
various types of employment chapels have been established, are at the major airports.
WIN AT BRIDGE
Right and rtgbt! They've already started. Read on :
is for syphilis and is unre- In New York, Boston and Chicago's O'Hare, there is a
reg ular program of worship service ·and full-time counsel
lated lo gonorrhea.
Dear Helen:
offered by clergymen . ln each setting, the approach does
As you state, your daugh- vary. but the activity and ministry is definitely on !he
My wife has taped the centerfold of Burt Reynolds above OlD'
ter
was
wise
to
go
straight
in
crease~
.
Four spades is almost an
bed, and she snickers every time I get oodreued. SaYII she'll take
to the physic ian and if she
NORTH
12
ironclad contract and five
In New York, the Protestant-Catholic-Jewish houses of
It
down wbenlthrow awaymyVill'ga calendar, ·
was treated adequately at worship form a dramatic cluster in the outer reaches of
• AJ9632
actually makes. but it seems
What's gotlntQwomen? '"-F(&gt;R BASIC MALE RIGHTS
tlJe time of the illness, there Kennedy. The architecture of the. buildings and the cen¥ K 8 73
!hal the ot her team was also
would
be
no
evidence
whatDear
FBMR:
• 52
Herman
(Butch)
Ohlinger,
ga mblin g three no-trump adtral location is most appealing .soever
that
she
had
gonorEqual "sights" - that's wh~t!
80, South Sixth Ave ., Middicts.
Bul Kennedy has traffic problems and one can hardly
WEST
EAST
South opened the same dleport, died Thursday evening rhea. This can be a serious walk from any of the air terminals to the chapels without
Aak your wife If she'll settle for a Burt Reynold.&lt;! calenclar
disease
but
if
il
is
treated
• Q 10 5
.. 8 4
th ree no-trump. Wes t opened at
Veterans
Memorial immedial~ly , there is mini- dashing across four.-lane target areas. One must take bus
nelrt year. - HELEN
. 1094
¥ A652
the l h r e e or clubs. East Hospital.
or
cab
to
reach
the
location,
discouraging
to
those
who
P.S. A local barbershop plays no favoritee. Pinned on lhe
• 43
• 76
mal risk IIf residual difficul- have less than half an hour for such a visit.
played the ace and returned
Mr
.
Ohlinger
was
born
June
"'K Q632
. A 10984
wall nell to the reclining Reynolds waa a Playmate of the lllonth.
the eig ht.
ties. The most common comLogan Field in Boston, 'the chapel can be reached by
SOUTH (0)
Below - !hill note:
VVest I o o k e d at South's 28, 1891 at Pomeroy, the son of plication that occurs in wom- a At
five- or 10-minute walk from almost any direction. Our
• K7
jack for a long time and fi. the late Martin and Katherine en is to have scarring or fi- last
"Fellas preferring•the male-nude, go tQ 01Bir No. 1. Ferdie
visit was during a Sunday afternoon in July-and the
• QJ
nally c am e up with the Kohl Ohlinger . He . was brosis of their .tubes so that cha pel
wW
do your hair.'' -H .
was
crowded,
with
a
wedding
in
progress.
Some
' t AKQJl098
super-brilliant play of the associated with his father who !hey are unable to have chil- 70 or 80 people had gathered for a Roman Catholic serv• J7
deuce. This is the sort of owned and operated !he dren. Of course, this prob- ice and the priest and chapel was just what they wanted.
Dear Helen :
None vulnerable
mista ke on ly a great ex~ert Ohlinger Bakery in Middlepqrt. lem also occurs from other
It
appears
that
the
airport
chapels
(there
are
only
three
can make. Ordinary players
West North
East Sou th
About the woman who says she "doelll'f really mmd If her
causes besides gonorrhea.
fully staffed centers that we know of in the United States
can't get q11ile such violent a number of years . Mr.
3N.T.
gentleman friend alwaya ends up raping her when they'~ alone
I surely do hope !hat this and none overseas ) serve a resident community of airline
brainstorms.
P..ass Pass
Pass
· Ohlinger was a veteran of
information
will
help
you
In
her apartment - but she willies she could talk to him more "
much
as
they
assist
the
travelers
.
personnel
and
staff
as
' It didn't hurt South . He World War I and a member of
Open ing lead- · 3
•
and
your
daughter
both
to
the
problem truly Is communication :• ·
At O'Hare, the chapel is four. levels down in the basegasped and the n proceeded the Middleport · Church of
quit worrying about this . ment, surrounded by steam pipes and air-conditioning
to take the rest of the tricks Christ.
·Conlentlng adults; married or n!JI, will no .doubt agree with
•
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby by
Your letter also demon- vents . Yet a li~ely , attractive worship center has been
taking the spade finesse.
Utat wonderful quote, ''The difference between rape and rlpture
Surviving are his wife, Nellie slrates how people punish created and attendance ,is good.
One of the popular bids · (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Ia
SALESMANSHIP!" -MURPH
Longstaff Ohlinger: a sister, them s e I v e s . through ill- At O'Hare, the ecumenical touch Is what counts. Prot:
with our younger experts toadvised
guill
reactions.
Dear
Heleu:
•
Miss Alma Ohlinger, Midday is the so-called "games tants and Catholics share fqlly the same .facilities, with
Here Ia another lllory of teenage hafaument,
·
I
dleport, and two nieces, Mrs.
bling three no -trump."
the Community of Our Lady of Loreto served full-time
·
Dear
Dr.
Lamb-!
have
a
The
biddi!"lg
has
been
·
. This bid shows a solid miJohn (Susan) George, Min- thyroid deficiency and my by Fat~er John J . Keough.
My 11111 waa laaued two Uckell for vlolatlo111 ~ lU
Ea."t
nor suit with a little some- \~ es t North
South neapolis, Minn ., and Mrs. scalp is dry and Oakey. l am
Our last Sunday attendance was during the winter. The
IIIOlllliOblle, even lbouah at the time he waa home watdtJna TV.
l ,fo
1¥ ' t •
thing on the side and is deJames (Daun) Shields of using an ointment and some services were given good publicity over the public address
NaturaUy, be pleaded "not guilty." He had to llOflt _,for uu·
Pass
signed to upset the oppo- Pass 2 +
2 N.T.
system
of
the
airport
and
at
least
100
showed
up
for
the
to
Md
shampoo.
Can
you
recomprivilege.
When he aaked the Judge why, he wu put In jaU fur
Pass 3N.T. ~mg n, , ·
nents. It works occasionally, Pass 3 •
1:10 p.m. mass. Here again, it seemed that baggage
1
mend
any
special
treat·
?
Besides
hiS
parents
he
was
contempt
of
court. ·
·• •
but in our opirlion it is deli· Dble Redb lc Pass
handlers.
car
rental
clerks
and
·air
line
staffers
were
the
·
ment?
,
preceded In death by a brother,
You ,' So uth. ho ld:
nitely a losing proposition.
FolD' days later, after paying a Ial!yl!r fliO, be hi releiRCL
majority of those present.
The bid led to the early • A654 ¥K63 2 tQt07 .54 Eddie .
Dear · Reader - It is true One does not r~all railroad stations having chapelsAllbe bell'lnc over the. two tlcketa (lawyer's fee an .tdltklnil
elimination from this year's
Whit do you do now?
Fuoeral services will be held !hat thyfoid deficiency can although Traveler's Aid was always ready and waiting. '
fliO) both llckell were Cllicelled becalllll be wia not auJit1,
;
Vanderbilt of one or AmerA -Pa.~s. And don'l he un- at 1 p.m. Sunday at the cause scalp problems and The airports see thousands of people ¥n hour at the larger
The
lilY
I
Me
it
is
lhat
I
neipbor,
who
Ia
a
GC!P
11
dowa
on
Ica's leading bridg~ teams. happy. You arc likel y to m•kc Rawlings-Coals Funeral Home even loss or hair. Of course, terminals and many of these are families and individuals
1
our
lOB
and
be
put
the
other
GCIP
up
tQ
~
the
tleketl.
l'l'ovlq ~
South:s bid shut everybody this t!Ontrlcl .
with the Rev. Raullln Moyer there are many more cases in great trouble. Some are hurrying to a loved one close
out, but it did not keep West
thbi,ol
co_
n
e,1111111dcoatmorelhlnwe've
to death. Others are returning from a funeral or family
TODAV'S QUESTION
pfliciallng. Burial.will be In the of individuals who lose hair tragedy.
from opening a club and lhe
'
~ wu aeveral monilia aco, and I'm still burnluc - and
with
normal
thyroids
than
AJ:tain you t· partner opcn.'l one Greenlawn Cemetery ·a!
defense had five club tricks
there
are
with
individuals
still
bruke111 lhU jtllllet! ~MRS. R. L.
Often
the
chaplain
at
Kennedy
or
O'!Jare
Is
the
ftrst
and a heart before declarer club. Ttl is tim~ you hold:
Nelsonville. Friends may call ' with thyroid trouble. In any clergyman to g1ve immediate and personal comfort to·
.KJ$4
.K87G
t3
2,oloQ10
7
Dear
Ml'l. t.:
could get in.
at the funeral home on case, if you really have a de- someone in trouble. II is not a bad slogan: SupPort Your
What do you do now?
The only man it shut out
, , If t1U Ia the mfabt IQOfll,.tbat I'd aylt'nnotber diOJinl
Saturday from 2 to 4 and from 7 ficient thyroid, the b e s t Local Airport Chaplain. They are establishing an essenof the bidding was North.
remlntlerlhataDIIDIIplltyaatll )I'OVIII)n-t. Jultlet? 11Jr
to 9 p.m.
t,realment for your scalp anrl tial and creative ministry to trav_eling mankind.
went lhataway! :-H.
•
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Helen Help

Us.

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D.D.

Airport Chapels
Proving Popular

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cleats for the season and
cancelled all of their remaining .
games.
Danny , Wilson wenI all lhe
way for the Vikings and fanned
five . walked only one, and
allowed seven hils. Jim
Hubbard, now 5-3 on the year,
lost his second straight game in
fanning nine, walking foUF, and
permitting five hils, two of
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"And She Used to Be Such a Wallflower!"

'

The 'Gambling Three N.T.'

The Symmes Valley Vikings
tightened lhe Southern Valley
Conference race with a ii-3 win
over the Southern Tornadoes at
Symmes Valley ·Thursday.
Four learns are still contending for the SV AC title with
Southern on ~p al 7-1, Kyger
Creek, 6-1, Synnes Va)ley ii-I
and Eastern, ii-2. 1'lie Nor th
Gallia Pirates hung up their

insurance scheme, or ~o new
90-(alJed "heallh care deUvery
system" will haveanreffect on
the paitems of living or the
disease-causing habita of
Americans.
Citing an October, 1971
Harris poll which showed 61
per cen( of AmeriC&amp;III have "a
great deal of confidence" in
medicine ,and oils leadenhlp,
Dt. Schultz liald the Slllle pqll
showed only 23 per eent expressed " a great deal of
confidence" in the Supreme
Court, 27 per cent in religion, 19
per cent In Congress 18 per
cent in Ute preia 14 pe~ cent in
organized labor ~d 13 per cent
in advertising.
He urged that the "Up wllh
Medicine" program involve all
physicians, thai they inform
themselves fully and accurately, and thatlhey speak
out 10 their patients their
friends and their c~unlty
·
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Gallia Academy High
School's baseball team advanced to the Class AA Central
Sectional finals Thursday
evening by eliminating Minford's Falcons, 8-1.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils, now 11-4 overall, will
battle the winner of loday 's
Wellston - Northwest ·contest
Saturday at I p.m., for the
sectional title, and a trip to the
Class AA District to be held at
Rio Grande College next
weekend.
The seCtional finals will be
played on the diamond of the
Wellston-Northwest winner
Saturday. Both Wellston and
GAHS drew (irst round byes .
Minford had knocked off Parismouth West 3-2 last Friday in
the opening round of the
Central Sectional.
Stan Perry, senior GAHS
mound ace, came within two
outs of hurling his first nohit, no-run contest of the
year at Minford Thursday.
Perry, who whiffed 18
Falcons in notChing his fifth
win in eight slarls this spring,
struck out Mike Price, big
Falcon catcher to start the
bottom of the ~venth.
Perry than fanned Phil
Swords, but the ball got away
from catcher Mark Kiesling,
and Swords reached first base
on the Devils • only error.
Pinchhiller Phil Doddridge
then uncorked a double to
righiiield to spoil Perry's bid
for a shutout and no-hitter.
Perry walked four and hit one
batter. ·
After walking two Falcons in
the first inning, Perry retired
12 Minford batters in a row

Wildcats~

before hilling Larry Davis in fanned eight, walked none. and
1
tlle fifth rung.
hit one batter.
The Blue Devils wrapped It
Brisker, who gave up six
up In the second inning by
runs and five hits, fanned
taking advantage of three
nobody, walked three and hit
'
walks
Issued by starling
one baller. The Falcons
hurler Harry Brisker, a hit
committed six cos tly' errors.
batsman, sacrifice, two
The Gallians added two
Minford errors, and timely
insurance markers in the sixth
singles by Mark , Kiesling,
on back-to-back singles by
Sieve Slone and Perry. In all,
Slone, Perry and Rick Boone
eleven Blue Devils went to
and two Falcon errors.
the plate - six of them
Kiesling, Slone, Perry and
scored.
Boone each had two hits for
Phil Swords relieved Brisker
the Galllans. Boone's double
and hurled the final five in- In the sixth was Gallla's only
nings for Minford , which
extra base hi!. ·
bowed out with a respectable 9Score By lnmngs :
060 002 D-8 9 1
3 season mark. Swords gave up Gal lipolis
Minford
000 000 1- 1 1 6
l wo ' runs and four hits. He

CHAMPS SIGNED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-Jo
Jo Starbuck,and Ken Sllflley, a
pair of three-time U.S. figure
skating pairs champions from
Downey, Calif., have been
signed to a professional con- By Uniied PreSs ·International
Leading Bailers
tract, it was announced ThursNa!ional
League
day by Ice Capades president
g. ab r. h. pel .
George W. Eby ..
Russi , LA 19 41 4 19 .463
Tolan,Cin 21 83 17 33 .398
S!enel, Pi I 16 53 10 21 .396
Cedeno, Hou 18 76 14 30 .395
Lee, SD
16 51 7 20 .392
Mondy, Chi 20 56 13 21 .375
FOURTH YEAR
Hi ckmn , Chi 16 56 15 21 .375
KANSAS CITY Mo. (UPl)- Torre,SI.
L 20 77 11 28 .364
Bob Cousy, who has thus far Snguiln. Pit 20 84 8 30 .357
been unable to build a winner Alou, S!.L 21 78 8 27 .346
American League
as a professional basketball
, g. ab r. h. pel.
coach after a 117-34 record in Braun , Min 14 5(] 7 20 .400
the college ranks at Boston Cash. Del 18 58 11 21 .362
College, Thursday signed for a K•lly, Chi 15 54 7 19 .352
Brhmer Cle 13 49 8 17 .347
fourth ·year as coach of the Pinsn,Cal 19 70 7 24 .343
Cincinnati-Kansas City Royals Pn iela. KC 21 79 11 27 .342
of the National Basketball Fr•ehn, Del 16 62 12 21 .339
Drw in, Min 18 65 11 22 .338
Association .
Tmpsn, Min 18 75 11 25 .333
Munsn.NY 19 6A 7 21 .328
fi!.cCrw,
~le.. J~ 61,,.. .9,...~q~. .328
._ tJOo. ..~.Runs
Na!ion~ L L~Igue :· Colbert, SD
8; Aa'ron, Afl , Wynn , Hou and
King man , SF 6; Seven players

Popped·

ti ed wi th 5.
American

14-0 by Eastern
The Eastern Eagles tuned up
for district tournament play
next week with a I~ romp
over the Himnan Trace
Wildcats at Hannan Trace
Thursday in a game that was
called aft~r five innings.
Rick Blake went the distance
for the Eagles and allowed only
two singles. Blake fanned
seven and walked two. Montgomery also went the distance
for the Wlldcals and walked
four and struck out five.
Blake and David Baker also
topped the Eagles at the plate
with two singles each. Other
hitters were Mike Larkins with
a bases loaded triple, Bobby
Edwards and Bob Caldwell, a

double each, and Rick Sanders,
Alan Duvall . Randy Boring,
Greg Bailey, and Phil Bowen
each a single.
Coach Larry Heines' Eagles
ripped for · six runs in the
opening frame . The Eagles'
head man then began substituting freely in the second
inning . Eastern is now Hl-5 on
the year and ii-2 in Southern
Valley Conference play.
Eastern's next game is
Tuesday at home against
Symmes Valley.
Eastern
614 12-14 12 I
HT
00000-0 23
Blake and Youhg, Edwards
(2) . Montgomery and Hall.

(
.
---------Major League Standings
By United Press lnternaitional

National League
·
East
w. L. Pel, ()B.

New York
Philadelphi a

Montreal
Chicago
St. Loui s

Pi11sburgh

EXTERIOR ALKYD HOUSE

PAINT
1-COAT SPRED ,GEL-FLO .

13

B .619

Los Ange les

14 10 .583

San D1ego

10 13 .435' A

112

At lanta
9 14 .3,91 5
Cincinna ti
B 13 .3Bl 5
San Frarfcisco 9 16 .360 6
Thursday's Result s
New Yor k 2 Los Ang 1, ls i
Los Ang 6 N ew Yor k 4, 2nd
St. Louis 4 Houston 3
Los Angeles 6 New York 4 (2nd
game, nig hO t Phlla 6 San D1ego
5, 12 inn s
1
San Fran 6 fv\ontreal 2

!Only games schedul ed)

FACTS

I All Times EDT&gt;

San Diego (Greif 2 31 a!
(Morton

p.m .

1- 1),

DINNER DANCE
WESTBURY , N.Y . (UPIIThe 15th anniversary of the
Standardbred Owners Association will be celebrated with a
dinner dance at the Holidsy Inn
in Hempstead, N.Y. on June 11.
The SOA, founded in 1957, is
one of Ute country's foremost
harness racing associations.

8: 05

ofJ

San Francisco (Ston e 0-2 )

Meigs Gets

WORW ALMANAC

Today's Probable Pitchers

Montreal

at

New York ( Genlry 2-1I. 8 p.m.
Los Angeles [Sutton 4-0) al
Philadelphia (Selma 1-2), 7:35
P m.
Pittsburgh (Blass 2-IJ at
Houston (Dier ker 2- 1J. 6: 30

p.m.

Belpre in

Ch icago

( Hands

l -1)

at

AllanIa (Reed 1-JI, 8:05p.m.
St . loui s (Cleveland 3-01 a!
Cinci nnati (Gri msley 0-0), 8:05

The Belpre Golden Eagles,
winners of the Tri-Valley
Conference, outslugged the
Warren Local Warriors at
Warren Local Thursday night,
14-13, to earn the right to play
the Meigs Marauders in the
" AA " sectional finals at Belpre
today.
Jerry Meeley, the Belpre
ace, hurled all seven innings
for tile Eagles and will undoubtably not start against the
Marauders.
The Warriors trailed 14-8
heading for the bottoni of the
seventh when they came up
with five runs on five hits. They
had a· man on second with one
out and the score 14-13. After a
groundoul to the pitcher, tile
runner moved to third. A
strikeout, however ended the
game.
Belpre
300 038 {)-!4 14 7
W. Local '006 020 3--13 10 7

n ·es. "e"'ID.,:
TYI!ln
,
w' "
12 2 Thursda'y
..,.~

-

p.m.

actually meleoroids which
vapor ize by the heat of frictllm w h e n they pa ss
Los Angeles a! Phlla. nigh!
thro ugh lhe ear th 's atm os Pi11sburgh at Hous. nigh !
phere and are see n as
Ch icago at At lanta , ni ght
meleors.
The World AlmaSt . Lou1s at Ci~ci, night
nac says . While most of
American league
them are consumed , a few
East
fall to earth as fused melal
W. L. Pcf. GB · or stone and are called
Cleveland
12 7 .632
•;, meteorit es. Meteoroids are
Detro1t
11 7 .611
th ough! to be fragments
Baltimore
11 8 .579 1
Bos ton
from comels or the asteroid
6 11 .353 s
New Yor k
6 13 .316 6
belt.
Milwaukee
5 12 .294 6
Wes1
W. L. Pel. GB .
Minnesota

14

Chicago

10

Texas
Cali1or.nia
Kansas City

· Thursday's Results

(Only games schedul ed)

'4'" up
lounge ·
Chairs
'11'5 up

Ball a! Chi cago, night

Texas at Cleve lan d

lriternational League

Louisville

10 11

.476

4lf:z

Char les!on
9 10 .474 4'12
Syracu se
10 13 .435 5'1&gt;
10 13 .435 5'1?
De1roit I Lolieh 5·11 at Kansas Toledo
Penins ula
10.,. 15 . .400 6 1/ 2
Ci!y !Drago 2-1 ), 8:30p.m.
J ThuYssla-Y.'&amp;,;Results ,....
Baltimor-e CCue11ar ~-2 ) ~ a t
Richmond 7 CHarl•s1on 1
Chi cago (Wood 4-2 ). 9 p.m.
Texas ( Ha nd 0-1 or Bo S'man

Middleport. Ohio

Folding Chairs

Standings
By United Press International
!All Time! EDT)
.
W. L. Pel. GB
Bos1on (Sieber! 2·1 1 a!
15 . 7 .682
Oakl and !Mclain 1-2). 11 p.m. Ri chmond
14 11 .560 2'h
New York (Kline 1-11 a! Tidewater
13 ll .542 3
Calilornia (Cla rk 2-2), 11 p.m. Rochester

1 4) a! Cleveland [Wilcox 4-21.
7:30 p.m.

Royal Crown
Bottling Co.

$AVE

· Today's Probable Pitchrs

Mi lwauk ee { Pa rsons 2-2) at
M mnesota ( Woodson J -0) , 8:30
P m.

FLAIR

With Lawn Furniture

4 .778
5 .706
9 .526

Te)(as 3 Balt im ore 1
Bos ton 8 California 1

Sugar FreeTaste Great

Enjoy Summer Living

Saturday's Games
p;,
41/2 Boston a t Oakland
9 11 .450 6 New York at Cal i f , night
Milwaukee at Minn esota
B 12 .AOO . 7
B 13 .381 ?I t'] De troi t a t Ka nsas City

12

NEW

"S hooting s t a r s'! are

Saturday's r.~mes
San Diego at Mont, night
San Fran c isco at New York

Oakland

three in the second, five in the
third and fourth frames and
eight in the six th .
Soul~western was pac-ed by
junior Mike Dillon w~o
slmnmed a double and two
singles. Mike Crouse had a
double and single. The
High landers scored five.runs in
the f1£lh on two errors, four
walks and doub les by Crouse
and Dillon.
By Innings : • I
KC
13; 528 {)-24' 17 14
svv
010 151 ()..._ 8 8 7
Curry ( W) Stid ham ( 5)
Johnson (51 and Bias. Walker
( L ) Bush (31 and Carte r (51
Gi ll !G) and Whitt.

Padded
Lounge

Porch Set

Chairs
'lloo up .__4_p_c._•4_1_so_

H&amp;R

Louisvi lle 6 Rochester 2
Syra c use 7 Toledo 1
Tidewater 5 Pen insula 2

I

•

__.

I:'IRESTON~ .

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

l

League : Darwin ,

Minn 6; Cash . Del 5; Allen, Chi
and Duncan, Oak 4; Oliver, Cal,
Johnson, C[ev , Kir kpalrlck, KC
and Conigliaro. Mil 3.
Runs Balll!d In

Over RocketS

..,.,~ ,.,.. ' .&amp;

The Meigs
Marauder
National League : K ingman ,
scored.
seven
runs in
reserves
SF 24 ; Tolan, Cin 21; Wynn ,
Hou and Col berl, SD 19; May. the first two innings and went
Hou 18.
·on to soundly defeat the
American Leagul! : Da rwi n, Wellston rese rves 12-2 a!
Mi nn 20; Cash, Del 15 ;
Freehan, Dei 14; Powell, Bat! Middleport Municipal Park
and Killebrew. Mlnn 13.
Thursday. The reserves are
Pitching
now 2-0.
National League: Ray. HOU'
Mille Richards, who pitched
and McDowell , SF 5-0 ; Seaver;' all the way for the . llltle
NY and Ca rl!on , Phil 5-1;
Sutton, LA A-0; Nlekro, All 4-3. Marauders, gave up just five
American League: Lolich , hits, all to the first three hitters
Del 5-1; · Perry, Clev 5-2; in the Wellston order. Richard.&lt;!
McNally, Bal l, Blyleven, Minn
and Hol1zmann. Oak 4-1: Wood, fa1111ed 13 and walked only one.
Eanes and Collins shared the
Chi, Wilcox, Clev and Coleman ,
De1 4-2.
mound duties for tbe little
Rockets. They fanned three
.V and walked two. The Meigs'
boys clouted 14 hits off them.
Topping Meigs at !be plate
was Chuck Faulk with two
singles, a double, and a tong
home run In four at bats. Dave
Wolfe had two singles and a
double in four trips, Mick Ash,
a single and double, Bill
Chaney, a triple, and Mike
Nesselroad, Rick Stobart,
Chuck Eastman,. and Steve
Price each had a single.
Gillan and Lockhard each
had two singles and Speraw a
double for Wellston.
Meigs erupted for their four
runs in the first when Ash
singled, Faulk singled, W1lfe
doubled In two runs, Chaney
tripled In another, and Eastman singled home the fourth
run.
The Meigs reserves, coacbed
TDday't !F UN~Y will PD1 $1 ,00 lor
by Don Wolfe and Roger Birch,
eoch oriti~~e~t "f11nn p" uud . Send gog'
will play the Gallipolis
to: TNor'1 'UNNY', 1200 W111 Tturd
St , Cte••l•n4. Ohto 44113 .
reserves at Gallipolis next
Tuesday.
The Wellston squad was
made up entirely of freshmen;
Wellston
000 020 0- 2 5 2
Meigs
.
430 203 1- 2 . 5 2
The Dai1J Sentinel
Eanes (LP), Colllns (5) and
DEVOTED TO THI!
INTEREST OF
Henry. Richards and Ash ..

...

'''"!''~ ~, !~''·.

~

Satoltto

Gives You 2 Coats In 1 If Needed.

hoc. Ed.

·K·•··

COMES IN WHITE
AND 2000 MIXED COLORS.
'.
. .

,,

dally except
Saturday by Ttle Ohib Valley
Publhhlng Company , 111
Court St. , Pomeroy, Otllo ,
45769 . Business Office Phone
992-2156, Edlloriol Phone 99 22117.
Second class postaoe pa id at
Pom•roy, Ohio,.
Nallonal advertising ·
rtPrtttntatlve
8ottinelll ·

Gallaot\l'r, Inc ., 11 Ent •2nd
St .• New York City, Ntw York .
Subscript ion rtfts : Oe-

tivered by carrier whtre
av1ilablt so cents ptf wtlk ;
By Motor Route wt1trt carrier
service not available : Ont
month 11.75. By m1il i n OBio
and W. Va ., One yttr SU.OO.
. Sik months 17 .25 . Three
months u .so. Subsc.riptlon
price include' SunPIY Times .
Sentinel . •

aot.

I

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'

.t

Base Veh[c lo MSAP
Automatic Trans. 3·spd.
Powe&lt; Slee•lng ·
· Powec Brakes-Disc
Air Condlllon
Tinted
Glass lng
. Radio-AM

$2,701.00 *
21 110
113:70
68.05
378.4S

Protective Side Molding
Total
'

15.15
$3,607.80 *

~~~:~~f,';{~.

Publisl1ed

1

DATE SET
OAKLANO.(UPI) - The first
appearance of Oakland A's
pttcher Vida Blue Is expect¢
to be May 28 against the
Ollcago White Sox at Oakland.
mue was a holdout over salary
for 1972 until early May.
TEAM CAPTAIN
NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y.
(UPI)-Al Williams, a' 5-9
junior guard from Hem)lllead,
N.Y., has been nariled captain
of the 1972-73 Niagara
University baaketbaU team.

.,

'

Chlv1 Chl••ll•

New Plymouth Satellile might just be the

t-;;::::-;:::;:::-::-;:;;;::;;----lr2::·D;-:;'·;::c:=o~u:':o'-t-:::'::=:::::::-+-:sF::":;;c~o;:•~ best looking car in America. Maybe the best

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

cu, Edl1or

~I

West
W. L. Pet. GB .

Hou ston

ROIEU HOI!Fl1CH, ·

M2-3748

14 7
.1&gt;&lt; 7 o;,
14 8 .636
12 9 .571 2
10 II .476 4
10 12 455 411
9 II ·. 450 4112'

· Cc.aeh Dick Adams' Kyger rcmainircg SVAC games.
Creek Bobcals ripped four
The Bobcats will play
Southwestern hurlers for 17 Syfllmcs Valley Sa turday
hils Thursday night in bombing morning in a 1".3ke-up game.
the Highlanders, 24-ll in a KC plays at Southern Tuesday
South ern Valley A lh l ~lic and Eastern Thursday .
Conferencegameplayeton the
Junior righthander George
Rio Grande College diamond. Curry paced the Bobcat win.
The wi n pushed •Kyge r Cur ry hurled four innings
Creek's
league mark to 1&gt;-I. Thed permi tting two runs on five
n
oobca ts hold down secon · hils. He was also three fo r
place in the leagcie behind the three at the plate including a
Southern Tornadoes who were two run homer over the leftbeaten Thursday night by held fence.
Symmes Valley.
Other Bobcat hitters with
The Vikings are 5-1 while the two more safeties were Lou
Eastern Eagles are ii-2. Nor th Loude n with a triple and two
Gallia Thursday forfeited ils Singles, Greg McCa rty and
Clay Hudson and two singles
each and John Baird had a
double and si ngle. The Bobca ts
scored a single run in the fi rst,

foday· S FUNNY

.5

((

al bals. Rodney Holman kept
his six-game hitting streak
alive wilh two si ngles and Pat
Arnold and Steve Jenkins each
had a single.
Jene Myers anll Jamie Lafon
each had home runs lor the
Vikings. These shols were over
a ditch that crosses the outfield
and is fairly easy to clear.
;J)ave Dunfee added two Singles
and Jim Bennett had a single
·for the Vikings.
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tornadoes, ljaving only 10 players
due to high Sl!hool's senior trip
this week, is now 12-3 on the
year .
· The Tornadoes will play the
Starr-Washington Generals at
h6rne next Monday and Kyger
Creek, also at home, on
Tuesday .
Southern
000 200 1- 3 7 4
sv
ll1 020 x- 5 &gt;3
Hubbard and Jenkins. Wilson
and llennetl.

Sectional

Died Thursday

'

them home runs.
The Vikings scored a ruo in
each of the lirst three innings
to ta~e a 3-Q adva ntage, then
scored the lwo·winnihg ruos in
the fifth, Southern came up ·
with two in the fourth and one
in the seventh.
Hubbar d paced the To r-'
nadQes at the plate with a
double and ·~0 singles in four

Minford ~

Mr. Ohlinger

.

~~sr:S Bobcats Slam SW, ~4-8

Vikings Upset Tornadoes, 5•3

$2,762.00*•
$2,758.70*
21089 (' spd 118Soo
112:07 •· · m :oo
58.26
68.00
402.24
397.00
64.37
65.00

64.90

~::~~ ·

~t~

33.20

suous•

Difference

2 ~-00

~ 3 :~

Slous

$3,173.70*
116.10

· Mar•

More

*Bned o~' a comparison of man ulacturers ' tu ggelted retail pr ices for 1972 Slletl lte Coupe ,
Ford To r1no :wr. H. T. and CheVy Chevelle Sport Cou pe wi th eq uipment lilted. Pr ic es
. lr~clude Federal EIICI!Je Tax lr\d 8lCjude .state Md local IIKea , delflnatior~ ctlarQea Md
optional eQ~ipmeru other that that listed above.

bargain, tOO. Satellite fits a young man's
fancy- a young family man who thi~ks he's
stili single. There's full room for a family
wilhout sacrificing the flair of a sporty car.
Best ol all, Sateliile doesn 't carry a lull-size
price. And when it comes to price, Satellite
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us put a lillie joy into your life and put
you in a new
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J Q:V tO

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PAA

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•

'

•

•

�'·

t'

Pacers

Today's .·

SJX!'1of:!£atk
UPI Sporll Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) -They were giving Willie Mays what he
deserves.
That means they were giving him lhe royal treatment,
First biB new employer, the Mets, provided a shiny black
Cadillac limo~sine which took !lim to Sheji Stadium and When he
'arrived there he wa8 whisked upstalra to talk with the press, say
· .11few words for radto and TV and meet
other plaple with
'\h"e club.
.
.
Willie Mays did everything he was asked. Everything they
wanted him to do.
·
Then he did something HE wanted to ~to. He did it without
anybody else around. No one from the media.
He walked Into the Mets' Clubhouse for the first lime. He had
never been in there before.
Most of the players were out on the field for tbe opener of a daynight doubleheader with the Dodgers.
,
But Jerry Grote, the Mets' catcher, happened· to be in the
clubhouse. He had come in to get something.
"Welcome and good luck, Willie," Grote ssid, shaking Mays'
hand.
·
·
BeaiiChamp Follows
Jim Beauchamp, the Mets' pinch-hitter and part-time first
baseman, followed Grote in.
"Hey, Jim!" Willie called out, noticing the 24 on his back.
"Whaddya doing with my number?"
Beauchamp laughed.
Dave Marshall, who had played with Willie two years wi!h the
Giants, also walked Into the clubhouse and when he saw his old
buddy his face lit up.
"Look who's here!" he laughed, pumping Willie's hand.
Willie Mays originally thought he'd play his first game for the
Mets Sunday. His old club, the Giants, would furnish the op.
position and Sam McDowell, a lefth!lflder would be going for
them and lefthimders always have been a little easier for WUile.
On thinking about It, though, he changed his mind and said he'd
suit up against the Giants tonight .But In a way, the Mets already
had weicombed him aboard.
Not only the Mets, but all those who knew him when-the
baseball fans of New York.
All Willle emerged from the ballpark for the trip back to
Manhattan, a couple of photographers stayed with him and urged
him to pose in ~ont of one of the stadhun enirances atop which
there was a sign reading : SHEA STADIUM.
Willie obliged.
There was nobody around now but from 50 yards or so away, a
woman Happened to spot Mays and· sheo began walking, not
hurriedly but at a rather normal pace, toward him. ·
When she reached him, she looked at him and smiled happily.
WOlle Gets Klaoed
He was still posing for !be photographers, arid·after they had
made their picture, she threw both anna around WUile and
kissed him on the cheek.
·
The woman's name was Naomi Smokes and she "!lid she had
recently undergone hospital surgery.
"I heard he 111as here and I just had to come," she beamed. "I
can't work and I can't drive, but I had to come. Oh mercy, now I
know I'm gonna get better."
On the way back to midtown Manhattan In another llmousine,
Willie talked about !be events of the past hour.
" ... That someone still wantS you at my age," he said softly,
1:~&lt;-W !!llnself. "It ma~t!f yoo lee lao good, so,.wonderful. I
J, ·illiililetlitftifu)"IMUngs.tonlywlshlkneW'hDll." ·
He loOked at a newsman seated In the car alongside him.
"You expre.u it for met'' he said. "Please."
Willie tslked about his fonner employer, Horace stoneham,
the president of the Giants who, when they asked him how he felt
about giving up Mays, had said:
·
"I'm going to be very lonesome, and very happy because I feel
I accomplished something that will make his future completely
secure."
Hurt at First
At first, Willle explained, he was hurt that Stoneham hadn't
called him totellhimabout the deal with the Mets. Mays found It
out when a newsman catied him in Philadelphia.
"But now I understand," Wtllie said as the limousine tooled
through the Midtown '1\!Me!. "Horace was more 'COIIcerned for
me than I was. He couldn't call me. The kind of emotion both of
us have, if he'd have·called me before, we'd both start crying. He
called me in Montreal yes\erday and said 'Come to New York.'
He didn't have to say a lot more. I understood what be meant
then but I didn't know that at !be beginning. I went through a
week of hell not knowing anything."
Willie then talked about Don Grant, the Mets' board chairman,
about how considerate Grant was of him and how he kept
thinking about the Mets' fans alllhe time.
He Wollld've Played
"He wanted me to play tontghl," WUile said. "He asked me to
and I said, 'If that's what you wantl'll do.lt.' But It takes 24 hours
for ,100-(trade) papers to clear soli! couldn't be done. I would've
vJa~ed. lf a man comes to you a!f says, 'Cbee, could you come
and play tonight for the fans? ' I woUldn't care II I went ~or-10,
I'd do it."
Mays feels It will probably work oot better this year, anyway,
meaning he will have two days to get his things in order before
playing for the Mets lor the first time.
";I'Wo daya will give me lime to get mysell9ut of the sky down
to the ground," he said. ''I'll be much more effective. I'll be able.
to do more for the fans."
What about that woman who had run up and kissed him?
"I don't want: to. say anything about the cities because I was
treBled wonderfully in San Francisco," WUile said. "But I just
don't have anything like that In San FrllllCisco. What happened
back there, with the jieople In the ballpark and that woman I
mean, that Is true love ."

some

,.

Time Trials To
Begin Saturday
INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!) surpass the i90 miles an hour
- Racing teams worked today barrier In practice this spHng.
to .~eel tl)eir mal!hlnes in
There was no doubt Revson's
·preilliraUon for what should be one and four-lap records of
a record shattering opening 179.354 and 178.696 m.p.h.
day of 500mlle race time trials would be shattered a number of
Saturday.
times Saturday, weather
While lair conditions were in pennltllng:
today's forecast, the outlook
Rookie Lee Brayton, Coldfor Saturday was uncertain. water, Mlchi, escaped serious
Earller predictions had called injury in the first crash of the
for a chance of rsin both month at the speedway ThursSaturday and Sunday, but later day. His racer spun in the No. t
forecasts hedged on the tum, skidded HO feet, struck
possibility of precipitation.
. the outsldt wall and skidded·
Today was the laslfull day of another 480 feet, spinning
)l'actice before the first of two around twice.
weekends of 'qualifications for . He W81 hospitalized for
the May 'II Indianapolis "500." observation. The car, which
Peter Revson, Redondo was heavily damaged, . wu ~
Beach, Calif., who established owned by A. J. Fo)'l, Houston,
records in winning the pole Tex., and sat on the pole In th~
position last year, Thursday 19119 race.
became the third driver to
. .

,

v

.I .

The Daily Sentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., May l2, 1872

·Linescores
Amtric.an League

•

Have .it ·.

To Win

\

UNIONDALE, N.Y. (UPI) Going (MI . experience, the In·
diana Paceri have the lineup to
win the American Buketball
Association Iitle against a New
York Nets· team matlng Ill
first appearanee In the league
playoff flnalll.
·
Roger Brown, Freddie
Lewis, Mel Daniels, Bob
Netollcky, John BarnhUI and
Billy Keller were members of
the 1970 ·chmpionship Pacer
team. They look lor a 2-llead
over the Nets tontghl in their
bid for another title.
New York considers itself
the Clnderells club of pro
basketball after fil)ishing 24
gamea behind Kentucky and
then knocking off the Colonels
in first round playoff actkln. ·
The Nets then ~ of the
Virginia Squires In !be Eastern
Division flnab and now find
themselves with a good chance
to take a commanding 3-1lead
over Indiana by winning the
Friday and Monday night
home games.
Rick Barry beat the Pacers
in Tuesday night's second
game with a field goal and a
free throw that carried New
York from a 11().114 deficit to a
117-115 victory.
"II was a consolidated team
effort that won thai game,"
Barry said, and added
modestly that he was only a
(,'Og in the victory machine.
Barry emphasized that each .
member of the team made
vital contributions to !be win"Tbey moved the hall crisply,
found the open . man and
oub'ebounded the Pacers."
Tom Washington, the Nets'
second leading rebounder behind DUly Paultz, did not play
In the second game, but will try
to make the lineup tonight
despite an eye injury. If
Trooper Washington Is still
sidelined, Coach Lou Carnesecca will go once again with
John Baum.
An NBA castoff, Baum .
neutralized rookie .!orward
George McGIMis under the
boards and seems to have steel
springs In his~ aa he g~ Jill
for the rehoWif."' McGinniS
Sllared 22 rebounds In the first
game, but was held to half !hal
total In the second contest.
The fifth game of the series
will be played In Indianapolis
next Thursday.

'

Kyger .
Homer Hochman visited Mr.
and Mrs. Rliy Snider at. Logan
recently.
The Kyger Ladies Aid met at.
the Lodge Hall Wednesday.
Opening song was "Count
Your Blessings". The Lord's
Prayer W85 prayed in unison.
Scripture was given by Mrs.
Betty Conkle. Thought for the
day by Mrs. Nina Rupe and a
reading by Mrs. Malinda
Bradbury. Others present were
Mrs. James Bradbury, Mrs.
Frances Conkle and Mrs. Mary
Sisson. The gl'\)up tied carpet
rags. Mrs. James Bradbury
¥ryed refreshments. II was
deelded to hold a rummage
sale at the next regular
meeting, May 17 at the Lodge
Hall. Members are to bring a
sack lunch.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rupe and
Mrs. Dale Sisson attended the
funeral of Denver Kennedy.
Charles Whitt, who has
returned from Viet Nam, will
be on a 3Cklay furlough before
going to Washington. He is a
brother of Mrs: Kay Hockman.
Several from the area attended the sale· of Mrs. Hazel
Rhodes on Wheaton Road.
Charles Stewart and sons,
Albany, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Stewart.
Billy Hockman, J. D. and
Michael· Bradbury enjoyed a
marshmallow roast at the
Bradbury home, recenUy.
Mr . and Mrs. carl Wright
visited Wednesday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Wright.
Those from a distarlce who
attended the funeral of Walter
Perry Rupe, 78, were Mr. and
Mrs. Burdell Bradbury, Urbana, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bradbury and Mr. and Mrs.

MOTHERS DAY

llloming Plants
10% off
cash &amp;carry

Dudley's Flcrist
Serving: G.lllpolls,
Pomeroy, Mlcldt.port, 0 .,
&amp; Muon Co., W.Va.

[.

Pointers Knock
Off Panthers

Big Welcome Platlned
For Mays By Yorkers

QUICK QUIZ

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

Pro Standings

•

the Fabulous

''~'•

.,.., ~ ,,

;. SANDWICH:"

Baker's
Spring Time Values

ADMIRAL

Open Now At 120 W•.Main

Mayer·

Hill

BARBER
SHOP

Prices ,

HOOVER
Several Nice Mother's
Rings We Ma~e Up Available Immediately!

THE B. DAVID.

FAMILY
CROWN PIN

mother • fo•lfHuetn ·for tilt wtddln1

Sweepers - They
Beat as they sweep
as they clean.
Portable Washers &amp;
Dryers

SPEED QUEEN

FRIGIDAIRE

Quality
Laundry
Equipment
Since 1909

Only Frigicjlire 1 ~·
Makes Frigidaire

Relrigeratc!rs '

•
The a tory of ,Mother'• life
beautifully told in a truly
quality piece of jewelry !hat
will be worn with pride and
cherished alway11, Beautiful
pear ahape slonea In the
color of the family' • birthatones peroonalize and give
thia pin apecial llgnilicance.
only

•n.oo

FLEXSTEEL

The Quality
Furniture with
The Patented
Life-lime sprl119
•

'.

t

.. •

•

• •

•

•

••

•

•

Tributes to mother were
given by members of the
Golden Rule Class . of the
Pome roy Church of Chfist for
roll call at a meeting held
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Doris Carder .

Mrs. Lo uis Osborne had
charge of the meeting with
Mrs. Elwood Bowers readin~
from Ma tthew 22, 34-46, and
Mrs. 'carder givillg prayer.
Each member displayed a
decorated bar of soap with
Mrs. Elwood Bowers winning
the prize for the prettiest. A
character sketch on Esther

.

was given by Mrs. Charles
Eskew.
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Den~er Kappie with
prizes goi ng to Mrs. Eskew,
Mrs. Raymond Baity, Mrs.
Don McKnighi, a guest,' Mrs ..
Harry Guen ther, · and Mrs.
Bowers who QlsO won the door
prize. The decorated bars of
soap were sold during the
evening.
Refreshments were served to
lliose named an~ Mrs. Stanley
Bass, and Mrs. Clarence 'Andrews.

~:~~n~fp~:~d!i~~~r~ ~~~ Elliotts Will Conduct Revival.-------------.

PROGRAM OUTIJNED - The Rev. K. Demel! Qoehm, cOlumbus, assistant· to the
zresldent of parish education 'for the Oh!o District of the American Lutl!eran Church, left, and
the Rev, Bill Behrens, sec&lt;ind from left, leadership develqpment secretary In parish education
of the American Lutheran Church, Minneapoils, were In Pomeroy Wednesday evening to
outline a program for lbe annual Pomeroy Daily VacaUon Bible School to be! h~ld at the
Pomeroy Elementary School June 20 through June 22 and June 26 through June 211 fro in 6:30 to
·8each evening. With the visiUng ministers are the Rev. Arthur Lund, third from the left, pastor
of the st. Paul Lutheran Cllurch, :and the Rev. Robert Card, pastor of the Pomeroy United
. Methodist Cllurch.

M~igs

4-H Club News

The ~isonville Boys 4-H
Honor Club reorganized with
the following officers elected
for the coming year; Eddie
Kennedy, pre~l,dent; vice
president, Mark Briggs;
secretary, Steven Stanley;
treasurer, David w. Tbere
were three advisors attending.
- Steven Stanley.
THE POMEROY Benders
&lt;irganized'for the year when
they met Monday night at Mrs.
Daisy Blakeslee's home. All ·
members will take Fun with
Food for Lunches and Suppers
81 the club project 'along with
other individual project
selections.
New officers are: president,
Kim Jones; &amp;eo/elary, Tina
Duffy; treasurer, Carol LewiS;
news reporter, Jenny Chapllljln; recreation lea~der, Lisa
Thomas.
Ingrid Hawley lead the
recreational game, Geography
after refreshments were
served by the advisor. Special
lans for. the next m.eeting Ma~
, lncladt ~Yi meal.ngna Hawi~~"''
'
THE LEADING Creek
Helpers met at Eva Milliron's
with Mrs . Milliron and Mrs.
Kauff and 12 members at.tending. Wheeler Thomas had
a special re~t "What 4-H is"
and a comJiarlson study on
Neatness wa. given by Tamml
Milliron, Rhonda Jones, Steve
Rile, and Joe Rife.
Chris Capehart and Joe Rife
was In charge of recreation and
Robin Capehart · served
refreshments. The next
meeting will be May 13. Eac~
member wlllllllk about health
or safety and review what
they've read in the first
. chapter of their Pfoject books.
-Jane Thomas.
THE MOONDUSTERS
discussed the years program
when they met April 29. There
were eight members and two
advisors present. The project
books were disfl'ibuted and the
requirements for each were
discussed.
Games were played and Mrs.
Audrey Hayes, hostess served
.J(ool-Aid and cookies. Mrs.
Faye Sauer will have the next
meeting May 13, at 1:30.
Demonsiralions and reports
will be given by Joy Hayes,
Patty Dyer, and Beverly ·
Wilcox. Roll call wUI be, Name
your favorite sport. - Opal
.Oyer.
THE OOLUMBIA Make It 4· H Club met May 2, at the
Carpenter ·Baptist Church,
with 16 members present.
Mary Jordan and Betty
Johnson were the attending
'advisors. Items of business

e

included decision to buy fisgs
from the club treasury. Two
members will be, appointed to
dust the church at each 4-H
meeting.
Project
books
were
distributed. Ruth Coen showed
threading a sewing machine;
Rachael Coen demonstrated
pulling hem in garmet and
Julia Johnson told the proper
utensils for various recipes.
Betty Jordan and Pal Holcomb
led outdoor games of tag and
Hide-Go Seek. Refreshments
were served by Cheryl Lawson,
Connie Miller, and Kim
Almond.
Each member is to bring
material and·patterns to worlt
on at the May 16 meeting. Also
reports will be given on
Community project of picking
up trash along roads leading to
members' homes. - Debbie
Birchfield.
THE MEIGS County. Belter
Livestock 4-H Dairy Club met
at the Jim Carnahan's dairy
farm on May 2. Jan Holter
presided at the busines~
m~eting. There were 17
members present. A new
member Robin Windi~nd was
infl'oduced. It was announced
that three dairy breeds will be
represented at the County Fair
through the club this year.
Janie Carnahan gave a
demonstration leading her
Guernsey cow, on show ring
procedure, and Tony Carnahan
showed the proper brushing
and grooming for a dairy
animal. A discussion was held
on the selection and care of
baby calves to be used for
project work. The next meeting
will be May 23 • at Leland
Parker's home. - Ed Parker.
THE STAR STITCHER J.L.s
met at · Debbie Boatright' s
home Thursday evening. Roll
call discussion was proper
accessories for special occaslons.
Mrs . Annie Chapman,
Pomeroy business woman,
displayed many styles of shoes
and told with what attire and
for what occasions they could
be worn. She told of the new
trends lor the different
materials used In making
shoes and gave fashion tips to
lool! for wben shopping for this
suinmer and for fall.
·
Uncia Myers reported that
the bake sale would be at
Gaul's Market in Chester on
May 20, and Sheri Young was
appointed chairman of
stationery sales. Delicious
refreshments of homemade Ice
cream and cake were served
by the hostess and her mother.
- Unda Myers.
. HEARS CONCERT

It matures ·
sponerthan
you.tbink. .

last until resUmed in the fall.
Mrs . . Bachtel's book was a
MASON - Revival rpeellngs with Evangelist Giles and
collection of sermonneltes, a Dorothy Elliolt of Buchanan, W. Va ., will begin Tuesday, May 16
spiritual autobiography, by through 28th a 7:30pm. at th'e Mason Assembly of God Church,
Miss Turnbull.
Second St. The Elliotts will minister in music and preaching,
Presenting "In Thi~ House tSf with other special singing. There will be special service for the
Brede," by Rumer Goddea, youth every night prior to the e~ilngelistic service featuring
was Mrs. James Euler, stories, choruses and songs.
program chairman. Mrs. Euler
The Rev. and Mrs. Elliott have ministered since 1943 In the
rtad the review prepared by Appalachi~n District of the Assemblies of God as evangelists and
Mrs. Ben Philson who was pastor and started seven churches in the Virginia area.
unable to attend. It was the
Mrs. Elliott has written and composed gospel songs, her
story of a 42-year old wtdow . latest that has been released in sheet music and on a record is,
who became a nun, and of her "I've Been Touched by His Nail-Scarred Hand." A welcome is
work in Japan. .
extended to everyone by the pastor, Chesler Tennant.
A report was g1ven on plans
for · the Bess Sanborn
'
memorial.
Mrs. ' Owen opened
the meeting with the club
collect and 17 members
responded to roll call by
naming a sentimental novel.
The unemployment sys·
A dessert course .was served
tern has come as a shock to
many college students who,
at the conclusion of the
up to this time. considered
meeting.
Brooks Sununerfield, dec'd, ~tori es of the Great Depres·
to Evelyn Summerfield, Cert. sion as part of Amen can
Trans.
folklore. The idea that an
Edward Sycks, June Sycks to op portunity to have a job is
MaxGrueser, 36'h A., Bedford. somethin g to be cherished IS
Wayne 0. Roush, Claudia C. a new concept for some of
Roush to Manning D. Webster, th em.
- William W. Carlson, presi·
Parcels, Sutton.
dent of the University of
Holzer Medical Center, First
Manning D. Webster, Mary
Toledo.
Ave. and Cedar St. General A. Webster to Wayne 0. Roush,

Property

Mrs. Maxine Grllfith attended a twilight concert at
Mirror Lake Hollow Wednesday evening by the Ohio
State University's Buckeye
Scarlet Band. Mrs. Griffith's
daughter, Karen, plays firs(
chair solo tnunpet in this band,

.

Costume Jewelry
Keepsake Diamonds
Meeker Purses &amp; Billfolds
FeAton Ware
West VIrginia Glass
Fostoria Crystal
Royal Doulton China

.

,·

Class Pays Tributes to MGther

"You can find happiness
anyWhere", was the theme of '
the book "Out of My Heart" by
. Agnes Slight Turnbull,
reviewed by Mrs. Juanita
Bachtel Wednesday afternoon
for the Middleport Literary
Club.
The meeting, held at the

ores

rece
.

..- '

Review Book
Wednesday
L#erary Club

Mets, Dodgers.Split Two

Texas
200 000 OOJ- ~ S I
Baltimore
1100 000 10()- I 4 I
Gogolewskl, Plna (8). Lind·
blad (8). Cox (II and King:
Seaver Scom l3lh
Rick Wile, wellherlng a lo.blt
Palmer, Alexander (9) and
There was only (IRe flaw in .an
Etdlebarren, Oat., (9) . WP- JI()B D1 PIETRO
Seaver
scored
his
13th
win
In
Houston
attlcll, went t)le
otherwise perfect script as far
UPI SJ1011S Writer
Gogolewskl (2·1) . 'LP-Palmer
Thursday was one of the u the Mets were clincerned the 15 lifetime decisions in the distance to llrq ~ ~ to .
(2·1) . HR·Bialr Hndl.
,
more 'memorable days in hitting of Willie Crawford, who opener against )..os Angeles, 3-2.
Pldll1el Will MlnlliOia
Bcslon
120 030 20()- 8 9 0
nt Metshistory. Probably homered and tripled In the though he needed relief belp
California
1100 000 010- I 9 0
from
Danny
Frisella
after
LJzlnlkl delivtred •
Culp (2·3) and Montgomery : the most memorable since the nightcab of a day-nigh\ affair
yielding
a
leadoff
single
to
Bill
lw(H)Ul
single
in the IJill. ~
Messersmith, Queen (71, Allen glory days of the 1969 pennant, to spark the Dodgers to a 6-4
(9) . and Ta&lt;borg. LP- Messer·. season.
•
Buckner
In
the
ninth
Inning.
to
'
s
core
Terry
Ha,rmlll and
victory.
sm1th (2·4l. HR- Srmth Ostl.
Will'
M
ba
.
k
to
Crawford homered In the · give the' P11illllil the' 1lln ID a
In other NL contests, San
'
1e · ays cap1e
c
fourth
Inning and tripled to marathon. Phlladel~ !!lt(Only games schOduledl
New York~ aq Am!IZin'. • Francisco downl.! Montreal, 6igplt~
a four-run seventh- Ued . back from a U dtflclt;
And Tom Seaver wh.ose 2, St. Louis ~ed Houston, 4-3
mound . talents ·brought the . and Philadelphia nipped San IMing rally In . the second which the Padrla' Nl"' Colbert
game, aa Tommy Jo!m went 7 helped to provldia will) - , UfC!r&amp;gamufiins of the diamond to Diego, 6-5, In 12 innings.
In the American · League, 2-3 Innings to record his third run homer Ia the third. It ., ..
respectabillly-and then to the
Colbert's eighth circuit blast of
world championship-won his Texas turned back Baltimore, w1n 1n five decisions.
Jl,on
Bryant
was
roughed
lor
the year.
·
. 1oo,th major ,league game, 3-1, and Boston trounced
12
hits,
but
he
didn't
walk
Elliott
'MaddoJ:
straked
·a
'
california, 6-1.
South Point eliminated beating Los Angeles, :1.-1.
anyone and faMed seven In pair of cloUbla and Cue7 Colt:
Chesapeake.l3-IO in a Cl;lss AA
going the distance ss the wrapped a ufeguard around
Southern Sectional TourGiants beat Montreal for the Bill Gogo!ewakl's second vlqtonamen l game Thursday
second strailibt!ime'. :·
ry of ihe year' u the ~era
evening. The Pointers will now
The Cardinals raiDed for downed the Orlolea. Cos &amp;ol
tackle SEOAL co-champion
three runs In the bottom of the clutch-hitting Broob &amp;btr.op
Ironton for the sectional title,
ninth. Marty Martinez capped on a Oy bs1l with, ll!e bases
and a trip to the Rio Grande
the rally with a run~ring loaded In the el&amp;hth inning.
District, to be held next
smgle off Wade Blasingame.
Ray Culp 'i lmprove~ his
weekend .
NJi;W YORK (UPI)-WUile have a Jftlty good team and
spotless record against
In other AA games Thurs· Mays will start his first day they're not going to put me out
California to 6-0 with a routeday, Belpre nudged Warren "back home" In New York with there just because I'm Willle
going performance and
Local 14-13, and will meet a greeting from Mayor Lindaay Mays. But I feel I can con·
received offensive enMeigs in the Northeast Sec· at City Hall and em! il under tribute. I'm not coming out
couragement from Tolnmy
tiona! finals today.
Q-Wiw was the first Harper, who drove in thHe
the lights of Shea Stadium.
here and saying, 'Here I am!
In the Northwest Sectional
The 41-year-()ld Mays, ac- Play me or I'll go back home.' woman to be i\ominated for .runs with a triple and a pair of
today, defending champion quired .from San Francisco I'D do what I always did, the tl&lt;e office of president of the sbigles, and Resgle Smith, who
U11ited States?
Greenfield will tackle Sheridan Thursday for minor league best I can."
A~Victoria Clalin Wood- lashed his first hcmt run of .the
for the title, and a berth in the pitcher Charlie WUilams and
"I think he'll be very heljXuf hull , who ran as the candi· year. Andy Meaetllnltb waa
Rio District. Greenfield $50,000, wUI be officially wei- this year and hopefully in years date of the E q u a 1 Rights bumped for six runs on six hits
bounced Wavl\l'ly 13-2 and corned home at a noon press to come," said M; DOnald Party in 1872.
In six Innings aa his record
Sheridan downed Hillsboro 9-5 conference presided over by Grant, chairman of the board,
Q- Which is the most dis· dipped to 2-4.
in opening round games.
Mayor Undsay. He'll put on a "We would like him to be out tinctively American breed of
Gallipolis beat Minford 6-1 Met uniform for the ftm time. there on the field after his
., . ----~oi·.;·--'1
Thursday, and will play the
"He'll be In unifonn tonight career is over. It worked for horse?
A- The Quarter Horse, de· 'I
winner of the Wellston-North- but he won't start," said Yogi and I'm sure the same veloped in Am~ric'a during .
\\'esJ_game Saturday for the Manager Yogi B,erra. "WUile thing canhappenforWUile. He the early 1700s. Breeders
Central Sectional title.
will be used to spell Tommie has a job with us for the rest of crossed thoroughbreds from
England wiih horses from 1
Agee in center field wben his life if he wants it.''
the Spanish colonies of North
Tommie's knees are troubling
Baseball fans in other cities, America.
him and possibly at first base especially San Francisco
Q- What type of tobacco
against left-handed pit- wbere Mays actually played
ha
s practically no nicotine?
chers."
the largest part of his career,
Atobacco ; good
"I am delighted to hear that must wonder at the special H a v aTurkish
n a tobacco contains
Willie Mays will again be affectionNewYorkershavefor little of it. ·
playing for a New York Willie.
Final NHL Standings
Home of
- Tbe Beglulng
By United Press International baseball team," said Mayor
Q-How
many
strings
does
,
"
(Best.Of.Seven Finals)
' its beginning In 1951
John V. Lindaay In announcing
It had
w. I. gl ga the fonnai 'City Hall greeting. wben the shy Negro outfielder a lute have?
x-Boston
4 2 18 16
A- Usually si~ pairs of '
New York
2 4 16 18 "The pennant-bound Mets are joined the floundering Giants strings.
x-Bastan wins series and Indeed fortunate to have one of and became the catalyst that
Stanley Cup
Q- Wiwt is tl•e earliest ·
baseball's great ail-time play- enabled tbem to' stage their
Thursday's Result
date
ers In their lineup. But most of ''miracle Jll!!lnant victory" in fail ? on whic/1 Easter may
Boston 3 New York 0
all we New Yorkers are ap. 1951, after ualllng the Dodgers - A- Easter cannot come be· ·.
')l'eciative that Willie Mays is by 13'h games on .Aug. ll1 and fore March 22 or after April
back home."
to win a world cbampionshlp In 25.
AHL Playoff Standings
A
Valuable
Asset
1954 In a four-game World
By Unilod Press International
Q- What was the original
( Bost.Of.Seven Finals I
"He'll be a valuable asset," Series sweep over the salary . of the president of
w. I. gl ga said Berra. "WUile has always Cleveland Indians.
the United States?
Nova Scotia
3 2 17 7
B~ljtm.ore , ... ,, 2 J 1 11 heen,a gre~t lea!J! pla&gt;:er,,~ ,I , Mays went to San Francisco
, A-;;$~ , QOO II Y.O.~! · , ,
.1IIH.J.J. l o
• • " ,·., u ..l
1
1
'
Thursd•y's Rasults
kn\lW h,e'll be the '\"'"e n~e. With "the"'Gialliit ifj r ihe exQWhat
primary
breath·
Nova Scotia ~ Boltlmore 1
He'll be a good example.to our pansion year •Ut'l1958 and ing process of man a11d ani·
· Friday's Games
young players and he'll give us achieved as much there as he mals is reversed in plants?
(No games scheduled)
much needed right-handed hit- . did In New York . He never
A- Man and ani m a 1s 1
Ord1r By Phon•
ling bench strength when he's really achieved the same "folk breathe in oxygen and
not in the lineup.''
hero" status in San Francisco breathe out carbon dioxide .
And Tako l;m H6me
Otber members of the Meta as be had in New York, Plants take in carbon diox·
·
992-5432
echoed the manager's state- however, and New York fans ide and give off oxygen.
David Swisher, Columbus.
A recent windstonn blew ments, emphasizing that !bey yearned over the years to
some roof . off the Wesley were happy to have Mays on resume their special long~ost
their side but recognizing that "love affair."
Chapel Church.
he
is unlikely to play regularly.
It was resumed yesterday
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Brad·
"It's the best thing thai ever oot, like other old love affairs,
bury, Mrs. Dale Mulford and
happened
to me In my life," nobody really knows how it is
Mrs. Dale Sisson visited Mrs.
Willie
said
at a news confer- going to p!rn out.
Ina P. Rife and her sister, f&gt;!rs.
ence
Thursday.
"The Mets
Ada Pierce, Gallipolis,
Saturday morning.
QUWTY
Rev. Howard Fuller conAPPLIANCES
ducted Fifth Sunday services
at the Kyger Methodist
Church, Sunday night. The
group from Kanauga sang
12.1 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator
$197
several specials.
56" freezer - 28" wide
Ben Cookson Inc ., New
Philadelphia, have started
18" Color T.V.
$29?
work on the relocation of three
sections of Route 554 in
9" B&amp;W Portable T.V.
$68
Cheshire Twp.'
Console Stereo
$299
Mrs . Gall Sisson acAM-FM tape deck, 6 speakers
companied by Mrs. Mary
Sisson took Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Schukert and family to
Microsonic Ovens
$388
Columbus, Tuesday, where
Air
Conditioners
Early
Welcome! Come In and See Us!
they boarded a plane for their
Bird
home in Gennany.

·-

JUST CHICKEN
Middleport · Volunteer
Firemen will stage a chicken
barbecue Sunday beginning at
11 a.m. in the park back of the
Poat Office. Only chlc~n will
be sold. All proceeds will go
toward equiJiplng the new fire
headcjuarters bulldlnB.

P-~~~~

Transfers

HOSPITAL
NEWS

visiting hours 2-4 .and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting h~urs 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Charles D. Long, Sr., Shelii
Diane Keatts, Mrs. John Alton
ROGER ROUSH
Wood, Jr., Brenda K. Smith,
RACINE - Roger Herbert Anna Parry , Donald W.
Roush, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lanhart, Mrs. Tom ls~n and
Herbert Roush, RD 2, wiD son, Grant James, Jert Leah
graduate from Rio Grande Camp, Evelyn Adair, Basil
College, receiving his Duncan, Mrs. Ronald Carter
bachelor of science degree in ahd son, Alma Caudtll, Mary
Elementary Education at Ann Figgins, Mildred Gregory,
commencement exercises James D. Halley,.Cresllyn Hill,
Sunday, May 14 at 2:30p.m. Florence Louise Hutchinson,
at Rio. Grande. Rpger Is Wen~ell T. James, Albert G.
teaehlntt 'third •gud~ ' at· Kei!Ton;:'JI'., 'Mr~: · J~ii'~ 'Dll~~
Letart Fills ElementarY, Raines' and daughter, Bonnte
School, and has been rehired
Ratliff, Cora Smith, Elma
for the coming year. He also
Williams, Margaret Halslop,
engages In farming during
Linley Hart, Mayme Boster,
his summer vacations.
Billy Hager, Constance Smith
and Tammy Lynn Biars.

Hand Tooled

HANDBAGS

LOT NO. 160
t'riced

S12to $40
~illfolds

15.00 up

~or NO. 160 - Top grain hand tooled Cow·
hide with sueded Cowhide body lined with

finished Cowhide. Lots of interior zipper
pockets, adjustable two~way shoulder strap.
Finished in Antique Brown to compliment
the Buck or Chocol ate sueded Cowhide body
in!le rts . Approximate·s ize lOlA x 7 x 4V4 •

MODERN SUPPLY
399 WE STMAIN STR EET 992.2164 POMEROY, OHIO
THE STORE WI TH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS - STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS- LA WNS - GARDEN S- TROPICAL FISH.

Claudia C. Roush, Parcels,
Sutton.
.
Charles A. Chaffee, Gladys
Chaffee to MaMing . D. Webster, 11 .032 A., 0 range.
Manning D. Webster, Mary
A. 'Webster to Charles A.
Ch~fee,Gladys Chaffee, 11.032
A., 0 range.
Minter V. Fryar, Ruth M..
Fryar to David Kenneth
Yonker, Sarah Grace Yonker,
"160 A., Orange.
William c. Jones, Elsie L.
Jones to David C. Pratt,
Barbara J. Pratt, Parcels,
Bedford.
·
I
Loui"" t t&gt;llio Annn'M' ElliS
to caP,\'(i'."'Mo\;.~;;"~ity, F.
Mowery, Lot; Middlepbrt.
Gypsy Mae Chapman to Levi
Ezra Adkins, Kenneth Randall
Adkins, Parcels, Scipio.
Howard German, Lizzie
German to John German ,
Evelyn German, 30 A.,
Rutland.
Oaten S. Brown, Louise P.
Brown to James F. Butcher,
Jennifer S. Butcher, Lot,
Middleport.
Blanche Spaide, aka,
Blanche Harris, dec. to Lindy ·
M. Harris, Lena T.urner,
Barbara Linn, Paul Harris,
Cert. for Trans.

IN HOLZER
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja ,
supervisor of the Meigs Book·
mobile Service, is a medical
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center, Room 232, Gallipolis.
Mrs. Pikkoja, who became ill
'
FRIDAY
while attending a meeting in
MARY SHRINE 37 of White Cleveland and underwent
Shrine of Jerusalem Friday surgery at a Cleveland
IOOF Halt 8 p.m.
hospital, mo~e recently again
YOUNG ADULT Class, became ill and was taken to the
Bradford Church of Christ, 7 Holzer Medical Center.
p.m. Friday.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
House Decision
American Revolution, 2 pm.
Friday at the home of Mrs.
Only U.S. vice-president to
Emerson Jones. Members to defeat a pre s ident was
name a historical building for Thomas Jefferson, who de·
roll call. Assisting hostesse&amp;, feated John Adams. The
of .1800 was thrown
Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs. election
into the House of RepresenLawrence Milhoan.
tatives and decided 1n favor
io ·e.2nd
Pomeroy
or Jefferson.
·
Phone 992-5428
SUNDAY
MlDDLEPORT Firemen's
chicken barbecu.e wi lit serving
to begin at 11 a.m. Sunday.
Chicken only: a half 75 cents,
three halves, $2. In the park
behind the post office. All
proceeds to go the purchase of
equipment for the MW
building. .
MONDAY
PLANS For Decoration Day
dinner to be made Monday at
1:30 p.m. at Letart Falls
Community Hall.
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter of
OAPSE Monday, 7:30 p.m., .
junior high cafeieria, Middleport. Meeting open to all
Meigs Local nop-eertified
school employees.
MEIGS Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, Monday, 7:3o p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Semi-annual inspection.
Mother's Club wUI meet In the
basement dining room.
SPRING
TUESDAY
PLANTING
MEIGS County Alcoholism
aild Drug. Abuse committee
Let Us Your
Tuesday 7:30p.m. at St. Paul
Lutheran Church.
FERTILI~R
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Circle, 7:30 Tuesday, Mrs,
·Kenneth Harris, laac!er; Mrs.
Henry Ewing,, Mn. Carl

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Pacers

Today's .·

SJX!'1of:!£atk
UPI Sporll Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) -They were giving Willie Mays what he
deserves.
That means they were giving him lhe royal treatment,
First biB new employer, the Mets, provided a shiny black
Cadillac limo~sine which took !lim to Sheji Stadium and When he
'arrived there he wa8 whisked upstalra to talk with the press, say
· .11few words for radto and TV and meet
other plaple with
'\h"e club.
.
.
Willie Mays did everything he was asked. Everything they
wanted him to do.
·
Then he did something HE wanted to ~to. He did it without
anybody else around. No one from the media.
He walked Into the Mets' Clubhouse for the first lime. He had
never been in there before.
Most of the players were out on the field for tbe opener of a daynight doubleheader with the Dodgers.
,
But Jerry Grote, the Mets' catcher, happened· to be in the
clubhouse. He had come in to get something.
"Welcome and good luck, Willie," Grote ssid, shaking Mays'
hand.
·
·
BeaiiChamp Follows
Jim Beauchamp, the Mets' pinch-hitter and part-time first
baseman, followed Grote in.
"Hey, Jim!" Willie called out, noticing the 24 on his back.
"Whaddya doing with my number?"
Beauchamp laughed.
Dave Marshall, who had played with Willie two years wi!h the
Giants, also walked Into the clubhouse and when he saw his old
buddy his face lit up.
"Look who's here!" he laughed, pumping Willie's hand.
Willie Mays originally thought he'd play his first game for the
Mets Sunday. His old club, the Giants, would furnish the op.
position and Sam McDowell, a lefth!lflder would be going for
them and lefthimders always have been a little easier for WUile.
On thinking about It, though, he changed his mind and said he'd
suit up against the Giants tonight .But In a way, the Mets already
had weicombed him aboard.
Not only the Mets, but all those who knew him when-the
baseball fans of New York.
All Willle emerged from the ballpark for the trip back to
Manhattan, a couple of photographers stayed with him and urged
him to pose in ~ont of one of the stadhun enirances atop which
there was a sign reading : SHEA STADIUM.
Willie obliged.
There was nobody around now but from 50 yards or so away, a
woman Happened to spot Mays and· sheo began walking, not
hurriedly but at a rather normal pace, toward him. ·
When she reached him, she looked at him and smiled happily.
WOlle Gets Klaoed
He was still posing for !be photographers, arid·after they had
made their picture, she threw both anna around WUile and
kissed him on the cheek.
·
The woman's name was Naomi Smokes and she "!lid she had
recently undergone hospital surgery.
"I heard he 111as here and I just had to come," she beamed. "I
can't work and I can't drive, but I had to come. Oh mercy, now I
know I'm gonna get better."
On the way back to midtown Manhattan In another llmousine,
Willie talked about !be events of the past hour.
" ... That someone still wantS you at my age," he said softly,
1:~&lt;-W !!llnself. "It ma~t!f yoo lee lao good, so,.wonderful. I
J, ·illiililetlitftifu)"IMUngs.tonlywlshlkneW'hDll." ·
He loOked at a newsman seated In the car alongside him.
"You expre.u it for met'' he said. "Please."
Willie tslked about his fonner employer, Horace stoneham,
the president of the Giants who, when they asked him how he felt
about giving up Mays, had said:
·
"I'm going to be very lonesome, and very happy because I feel
I accomplished something that will make his future completely
secure."
Hurt at First
At first, Willle explained, he was hurt that Stoneham hadn't
called him totellhimabout the deal with the Mets. Mays found It
out when a newsman catied him in Philadelphia.
"But now I understand," Wtllie said as the limousine tooled
through the Midtown '1\!Me!. "Horace was more 'COIIcerned for
me than I was. He couldn't call me. The kind of emotion both of
us have, if he'd have·called me before, we'd both start crying. He
called me in Montreal yes\erday and said 'Come to New York.'
He didn't have to say a lot more. I understood what be meant
then but I didn't know that at !be beginning. I went through a
week of hell not knowing anything."
Willie then talked about Don Grant, the Mets' board chairman,
about how considerate Grant was of him and how he kept
thinking about the Mets' fans alllhe time.
He Wollld've Played
"He wanted me to play tontghl," WUile said. "He asked me to
and I said, 'If that's what you wantl'll do.lt.' But It takes 24 hours
for ,100-(trade) papers to clear soli! couldn't be done. I would've
vJa~ed. lf a man comes to you a!f says, 'Cbee, could you come
and play tonight for the fans? ' I woUldn't care II I went ~or-10,
I'd do it."
Mays feels It will probably work oot better this year, anyway,
meaning he will have two days to get his things in order before
playing for the Mets lor the first time.
";I'Wo daya will give me lime to get mysell9ut of the sky down
to the ground," he said. ''I'll be much more effective. I'll be able.
to do more for the fans."
What about that woman who had run up and kissed him?
"I don't want: to. say anything about the cities because I was
treBled wonderfully in San Francisco," WUile said. "But I just
don't have anything like that In San FrllllCisco. What happened
back there, with the jieople In the ballpark and that woman I
mean, that Is true love ."

some

,.

Time Trials To
Begin Saturday
INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!) surpass the i90 miles an hour
- Racing teams worked today barrier In practice this spHng.
to .~eel tl)eir mal!hlnes in
There was no doubt Revson's
·preilliraUon for what should be one and four-lap records of
a record shattering opening 179.354 and 178.696 m.p.h.
day of 500mlle race time trials would be shattered a number of
Saturday.
times Saturday, weather
While lair conditions were in pennltllng:
today's forecast, the outlook
Rookie Lee Brayton, Coldfor Saturday was uncertain. water, Mlchi, escaped serious
Earller predictions had called injury in the first crash of the
for a chance of rsin both month at the speedway ThursSaturday and Sunday, but later day. His racer spun in the No. t
forecasts hedged on the tum, skidded HO feet, struck
possibility of precipitation.
. the outsldt wall and skidded·
Today was the laslfull day of another 480 feet, spinning
)l'actice before the first of two around twice.
weekends of 'qualifications for . He W81 hospitalized for
the May 'II Indianapolis "500." observation. The car, which
Peter Revson, Redondo was heavily damaged, . wu ~
Beach, Calif., who established owned by A. J. Fo)'l, Houston,
records in winning the pole Tex., and sat on the pole In th~
position last year, Thursday 19119 race.
became the third driver to
. .

,

v

.I .

The Daily Sentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., May l2, 1872

·Linescores
Amtric.an League

•

Have .it ·.

To Win

\

UNIONDALE, N.Y. (UPI) Going (MI . experience, the In·
diana Paceri have the lineup to
win the American Buketball
Association Iitle against a New
York Nets· team matlng Ill
first appearanee In the league
playoff flnalll.
·
Roger Brown, Freddie
Lewis, Mel Daniels, Bob
Netollcky, John BarnhUI and
Billy Keller were members of
the 1970 ·chmpionship Pacer
team. They look lor a 2-llead
over the Nets tontghl in their
bid for another title.
New York considers itself
the Clnderells club of pro
basketball after fil)ishing 24
gamea behind Kentucky and
then knocking off the Colonels
in first round playoff actkln. ·
The Nets then ~ of the
Virginia Squires In !be Eastern
Division flnab and now find
themselves with a good chance
to take a commanding 3-1lead
over Indiana by winning the
Friday and Monday night
home games.
Rick Barry beat the Pacers
in Tuesday night's second
game with a field goal and a
free throw that carried New
York from a 11().114 deficit to a
117-115 victory.
"II was a consolidated team
effort that won thai game,"
Barry said, and added
modestly that he was only a
(,'Og in the victory machine.
Barry emphasized that each .
member of the team made
vital contributions to !be win"Tbey moved the hall crisply,
found the open . man and
oub'ebounded the Pacers."
Tom Washington, the Nets'
second leading rebounder behind DUly Paultz, did not play
In the second game, but will try
to make the lineup tonight
despite an eye injury. If
Trooper Washington Is still
sidelined, Coach Lou Carnesecca will go once again with
John Baum.
An NBA castoff, Baum .
neutralized rookie .!orward
George McGIMis under the
boards and seems to have steel
springs In his~ aa he g~ Jill
for the rehoWif."' McGinniS
Sllared 22 rebounds In the first
game, but was held to half !hal
total In the second contest.
The fifth game of the series
will be played In Indianapolis
next Thursday.

'

Kyger .
Homer Hochman visited Mr.
and Mrs. Rliy Snider at. Logan
recently.
The Kyger Ladies Aid met at.
the Lodge Hall Wednesday.
Opening song was "Count
Your Blessings". The Lord's
Prayer W85 prayed in unison.
Scripture was given by Mrs.
Betty Conkle. Thought for the
day by Mrs. Nina Rupe and a
reading by Mrs. Malinda
Bradbury. Others present were
Mrs. James Bradbury, Mrs.
Frances Conkle and Mrs. Mary
Sisson. The gl'\)up tied carpet
rags. Mrs. James Bradbury
¥ryed refreshments. II was
deelded to hold a rummage
sale at the next regular
meeting, May 17 at the Lodge
Hall. Members are to bring a
sack lunch.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rupe and
Mrs. Dale Sisson attended the
funeral of Denver Kennedy.
Charles Whitt, who has
returned from Viet Nam, will
be on a 3Cklay furlough before
going to Washington. He is a
brother of Mrs: Kay Hockman.
Several from the area attended the sale· of Mrs. Hazel
Rhodes on Wheaton Road.
Charles Stewart and sons,
Albany, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Stewart.
Billy Hockman, J. D. and
Michael· Bradbury enjoyed a
marshmallow roast at the
Bradbury home, recenUy.
Mr . and Mrs. carl Wright
visited Wednesday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Wright.
Those from a distarlce who
attended the funeral of Walter
Perry Rupe, 78, were Mr. and
Mrs. Burdell Bradbury, Urbana, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bradbury and Mr. and Mrs.

MOTHERS DAY

llloming Plants
10% off
cash &amp;carry

Dudley's Flcrist
Serving: G.lllpolls,
Pomeroy, Mlcldt.port, 0 .,
&amp; Muon Co., W.Va.

[.

Pointers Knock
Off Panthers

Big Welcome Platlned
For Mays By Yorkers

QUICK QUIZ

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Several Nice Mother's
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beautifully told in a truly
quality piece of jewelry !hat
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Tributes to mother were
given by members of the
Golden Rule Class . of the
Pome roy Church of Chfist for
roll call at a meeting held
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Doris Carder .

Mrs. Lo uis Osborne had
charge of the meeting with
Mrs. Elwood Bowers readin~
from Ma tthew 22, 34-46, and
Mrs. 'carder givillg prayer.
Each member displayed a
decorated bar of soap with
Mrs. Elwood Bowers winning
the prize for the prettiest. A
character sketch on Esther

.

was given by Mrs. Charles
Eskew.
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Den~er Kappie with
prizes goi ng to Mrs. Eskew,
Mrs. Raymond Baity, Mrs.
Don McKnighi, a guest,' Mrs ..
Harry Guen ther, · and Mrs.
Bowers who QlsO won the door
prize. The decorated bars of
soap were sold during the
evening.
Refreshments were served to
lliose named an~ Mrs. Stanley
Bass, and Mrs. Clarence 'Andrews.

~:~~n~fp~:~d!i~~~r~ ~~~ Elliotts Will Conduct Revival.-------------.

PROGRAM OUTIJNED - The Rev. K. Demel! Qoehm, cOlumbus, assistant· to the
zresldent of parish education 'for the Oh!o District of the American Lutl!eran Church, left, and
the Rev, Bill Behrens, sec&lt;ind from left, leadership develqpment secretary In parish education
of the American Lutheran Church, Minneapoils, were In Pomeroy Wednesday evening to
outline a program for lbe annual Pomeroy Daily VacaUon Bible School to be! h~ld at the
Pomeroy Elementary School June 20 through June 22 and June 26 through June 211 fro in 6:30 to
·8each evening. With the visiUng ministers are the Rev. Arthur Lund, third from the left, pastor
of the st. Paul Lutheran Cllurch, :and the Rev. Robert Card, pastor of the Pomeroy United
. Methodist Cllurch.

M~igs

4-H Club News

The ~isonville Boys 4-H
Honor Club reorganized with
the following officers elected
for the coming year; Eddie
Kennedy, pre~l,dent; vice
president, Mark Briggs;
secretary, Steven Stanley;
treasurer, David w. Tbere
were three advisors attending.
- Steven Stanley.
THE POMEROY Benders
&lt;irganized'for the year when
they met Monday night at Mrs.
Daisy Blakeslee's home. All ·
members will take Fun with
Food for Lunches and Suppers
81 the club project 'along with
other individual project
selections.
New officers are: president,
Kim Jones; &amp;eo/elary, Tina
Duffy; treasurer, Carol LewiS;
news reporter, Jenny Chapllljln; recreation lea~der, Lisa
Thomas.
Ingrid Hawley lead the
recreational game, Geography
after refreshments were
served by the advisor. Special
lans for. the next m.eeting Ma~
, lncladt ~Yi meal.ngna Hawi~~"''
'
THE LEADING Creek
Helpers met at Eva Milliron's
with Mrs . Milliron and Mrs.
Kauff and 12 members at.tending. Wheeler Thomas had
a special re~t "What 4-H is"
and a comJiarlson study on
Neatness wa. given by Tamml
Milliron, Rhonda Jones, Steve
Rile, and Joe Rife.
Chris Capehart and Joe Rife
was In charge of recreation and
Robin Capehart · served
refreshments. The next
meeting will be May 13. Eac~
member wlllllllk about health
or safety and review what
they've read in the first
. chapter of their Pfoject books.
-Jane Thomas.
THE MOONDUSTERS
discussed the years program
when they met April 29. There
were eight members and two
advisors present. The project
books were disfl'ibuted and the
requirements for each were
discussed.
Games were played and Mrs.
Audrey Hayes, hostess served
.J(ool-Aid and cookies. Mrs.
Faye Sauer will have the next
meeting May 13, at 1:30.
Demonsiralions and reports
will be given by Joy Hayes,
Patty Dyer, and Beverly ·
Wilcox. Roll call wUI be, Name
your favorite sport. - Opal
.Oyer.
THE OOLUMBIA Make It 4· H Club met May 2, at the
Carpenter ·Baptist Church,
with 16 members present.
Mary Jordan and Betty
Johnson were the attending
'advisors. Items of business

e

included decision to buy fisgs
from the club treasury. Two
members will be, appointed to
dust the church at each 4-H
meeting.
Project
books
were
distributed. Ruth Coen showed
threading a sewing machine;
Rachael Coen demonstrated
pulling hem in garmet and
Julia Johnson told the proper
utensils for various recipes.
Betty Jordan and Pal Holcomb
led outdoor games of tag and
Hide-Go Seek. Refreshments
were served by Cheryl Lawson,
Connie Miller, and Kim
Almond.
Each member is to bring
material and·patterns to worlt
on at the May 16 meeting. Also
reports will be given on
Community project of picking
up trash along roads leading to
members' homes. - Debbie
Birchfield.
THE MEIGS County. Belter
Livestock 4-H Dairy Club met
at the Jim Carnahan's dairy
farm on May 2. Jan Holter
presided at the busines~
m~eting. There were 17
members present. A new
member Robin Windi~nd was
infl'oduced. It was announced
that three dairy breeds will be
represented at the County Fair
through the club this year.
Janie Carnahan gave a
demonstration leading her
Guernsey cow, on show ring
procedure, and Tony Carnahan
showed the proper brushing
and grooming for a dairy
animal. A discussion was held
on the selection and care of
baby calves to be used for
project work. The next meeting
will be May 23 • at Leland
Parker's home. - Ed Parker.
THE STAR STITCHER J.L.s
met at · Debbie Boatright' s
home Thursday evening. Roll
call discussion was proper
accessories for special occaslons.
Mrs . Annie Chapman,
Pomeroy business woman,
displayed many styles of shoes
and told with what attire and
for what occasions they could
be worn. She told of the new
trends lor the different
materials used In making
shoes and gave fashion tips to
lool! for wben shopping for this
suinmer and for fall.
·
Uncia Myers reported that
the bake sale would be at
Gaul's Market in Chester on
May 20, and Sheri Young was
appointed chairman of
stationery sales. Delicious
refreshments of homemade Ice
cream and cake were served
by the hostess and her mother.
- Unda Myers.
. HEARS CONCERT

It matures ·
sponerthan
you.tbink. .

last until resUmed in the fall.
Mrs . . Bachtel's book was a
MASON - Revival rpeellngs with Evangelist Giles and
collection of sermonneltes, a Dorothy Elliolt of Buchanan, W. Va ., will begin Tuesday, May 16
spiritual autobiography, by through 28th a 7:30pm. at th'e Mason Assembly of God Church,
Miss Turnbull.
Second St. The Elliotts will minister in music and preaching,
Presenting "In Thi~ House tSf with other special singing. There will be special service for the
Brede," by Rumer Goddea, youth every night prior to the e~ilngelistic service featuring
was Mrs. James Euler, stories, choruses and songs.
program chairman. Mrs. Euler
The Rev. and Mrs. Elliott have ministered since 1943 In the
rtad the review prepared by Appalachi~n District of the Assemblies of God as evangelists and
Mrs. Ben Philson who was pastor and started seven churches in the Virginia area.
unable to attend. It was the
Mrs. Elliott has written and composed gospel songs, her
story of a 42-year old wtdow . latest that has been released in sheet music and on a record is,
who became a nun, and of her "I've Been Touched by His Nail-Scarred Hand." A welcome is
work in Japan. .
extended to everyone by the pastor, Chesler Tennant.
A report was g1ven on plans
for · the Bess Sanborn
'
memorial.
Mrs. ' Owen opened
the meeting with the club
collect and 17 members
responded to roll call by
naming a sentimental novel.
The unemployment sys·
A dessert course .was served
tern has come as a shock to
many college students who,
at the conclusion of the
up to this time. considered
meeting.
Brooks Sununerfield, dec'd, ~tori es of the Great Depres·
to Evelyn Summerfield, Cert. sion as part of Amen can
Trans.
folklore. The idea that an
Edward Sycks, June Sycks to op portunity to have a job is
MaxGrueser, 36'h A., Bedford. somethin g to be cherished IS
Wayne 0. Roush, Claudia C. a new concept for some of
Roush to Manning D. Webster, th em.
- William W. Carlson, presi·
Parcels, Sutton.
dent of the University of
Holzer Medical Center, First
Manning D. Webster, Mary
Toledo.
Ave. and Cedar St. General A. Webster to Wayne 0. Roush,

Property

Mrs. Maxine Grllfith attended a twilight concert at
Mirror Lake Hollow Wednesday evening by the Ohio
State University's Buckeye
Scarlet Band. Mrs. Griffith's
daughter, Karen, plays firs(
chair solo tnunpet in this band,

.

Costume Jewelry
Keepsake Diamonds
Meeker Purses &amp; Billfolds
FeAton Ware
West VIrginia Glass
Fostoria Crystal
Royal Doulton China

.

,·

Class Pays Tributes to MGther

"You can find happiness
anyWhere", was the theme of '
the book "Out of My Heart" by
. Agnes Slight Turnbull,
reviewed by Mrs. Juanita
Bachtel Wednesday afternoon
for the Middleport Literary
Club.
The meeting, held at the

ores

rece
.

..- '

Review Book
Wednesday
L#erary Club

Mets, Dodgers.Split Two

Texas
200 000 OOJ- ~ S I
Baltimore
1100 000 10()- I 4 I
Gogolewskl, Plna (8). Lind·
blad (8). Cox (II and King:
Seaver Scom l3lh
Rick Wile, wellherlng a lo.blt
Palmer, Alexander (9) and
There was only (IRe flaw in .an
Etdlebarren, Oat., (9) . WP- JI()B D1 PIETRO
Seaver
scored
his
13th
win
In
Houston
attlcll, went t)le
otherwise perfect script as far
UPI SJ1011S Writer
Gogolewskl (2·1) . 'LP-Palmer
Thursday was one of the u the Mets were clincerned the 15 lifetime decisions in the distance to llrq ~ ~ to .
(2·1) . HR·Bialr Hndl.
,
more 'memorable days in hitting of Willie Crawford, who opener against )..os Angeles, 3-2.
Pldll1el Will MlnlliOia
Bcslon
120 030 20()- 8 9 0
nt Metshistory. Probably homered and tripled In the though he needed relief belp
California
1100 000 010- I 9 0
from
Danny
Frisella
after
LJzlnlkl delivtred •
Culp (2·3) and Montgomery : the most memorable since the nightcab of a day-nigh\ affair
yielding
a
leadoff
single
to
Bill
lw(H)Ul
single
in the IJill. ~
Messersmith, Queen (71, Allen glory days of the 1969 pennant, to spark the Dodgers to a 6-4
(9) . and Ta&lt;borg. LP- Messer·. season.
•
Buckner
In
the
ninth
Inning.
to
'
s
core
Terry
Ha,rmlll and
victory.
sm1th (2·4l. HR- Srmth Ostl.
Will'
M
ba
.
k
to
Crawford homered In the · give the' P11illllil the' 1lln ID a
In other NL contests, San
'
1e · ays cap1e
c
fourth
Inning and tripled to marathon. Phlladel~ !!lt(Only games schOduledl
New York~ aq Am!IZin'. • Francisco downl.! Montreal, 6igplt~
a four-run seventh- Ued . back from a U dtflclt;
And Tom Seaver wh.ose 2, St. Louis ~ed Houston, 4-3
mound . talents ·brought the . and Philadelphia nipped San IMing rally In . the second which the Padrla' Nl"' Colbert
game, aa Tommy Jo!m went 7 helped to provldia will) - , UfC!r&amp;gamufiins of the diamond to Diego, 6-5, In 12 innings.
In the American · League, 2-3 Innings to record his third run homer Ia the third. It ., ..
respectabillly-and then to the
Colbert's eighth circuit blast of
world championship-won his Texas turned back Baltimore, w1n 1n five decisions.
Jl,on
Bryant
was
roughed
lor
the year.
·
. 1oo,th major ,league game, 3-1, and Boston trounced
12
hits,
but
he
didn't
walk
Elliott
'MaddoJ:
straked
·a
'
california, 6-1.
South Point eliminated beating Los Angeles, :1.-1.
anyone and faMed seven In pair of cloUbla and Cue7 Colt:
Chesapeake.l3-IO in a Cl;lss AA
going the distance ss the wrapped a ufeguard around
Southern Sectional TourGiants beat Montreal for the Bill Gogo!ewakl's second vlqtonamen l game Thursday
second strailibt!ime'. :·
ry of ihe year' u the ~era
evening. The Pointers will now
The Cardinals raiDed for downed the Orlolea. Cos &amp;ol
tackle SEOAL co-champion
three runs In the bottom of the clutch-hitting Broob &amp;btr.op
Ironton for the sectional title,
ninth. Marty Martinez capped on a Oy bs1l with, ll!e bases
and a trip to the Rio Grande
the rally with a run~ring loaded In the el&amp;hth inning.
District, to be held next
smgle off Wade Blasingame.
Ray Culp 'i lmprove~ his
weekend .
NJi;W YORK (UPI)-WUile have a Jftlty good team and
spotless record against
In other AA games Thurs· Mays will start his first day they're not going to put me out
California to 6-0 with a routeday, Belpre nudged Warren "back home" In New York with there just because I'm Willle
going performance and
Local 14-13, and will meet a greeting from Mayor Lindaay Mays. But I feel I can con·
received offensive enMeigs in the Northeast Sec· at City Hall and em! il under tribute. I'm not coming out
couragement from Tolnmy
tiona! finals today.
Q-Wiw was the first Harper, who drove in thHe
the lights of Shea Stadium.
here and saying, 'Here I am!
In the Northwest Sectional
The 41-year-()ld Mays, ac- Play me or I'll go back home.' woman to be i\ominated for .runs with a triple and a pair of
today, defending champion quired .from San Francisco I'D do what I always did, the tl&lt;e office of president of the sbigles, and Resgle Smith, who
U11ited States?
Greenfield will tackle Sheridan Thursday for minor league best I can."
A~Victoria Clalin Wood- lashed his first hcmt run of .the
for the title, and a berth in the pitcher Charlie WUilams and
"I think he'll be very heljXuf hull , who ran as the candi· year. Andy Meaetllnltb waa
Rio District. Greenfield $50,000, wUI be officially wei- this year and hopefully in years date of the E q u a 1 Rights bumped for six runs on six hits
bounced Wavl\l'ly 13-2 and corned home at a noon press to come," said M; DOnald Party in 1872.
In six Innings aa his record
Sheridan downed Hillsboro 9-5 conference presided over by Grant, chairman of the board,
Q- Which is the most dis· dipped to 2-4.
in opening round games.
Mayor Undsay. He'll put on a "We would like him to be out tinctively American breed of
Gallipolis beat Minford 6-1 Met uniform for the ftm time. there on the field after his
., . ----~oi·.;·--'1
Thursday, and will play the
"He'll be In unifonn tonight career is over. It worked for horse?
A- The Quarter Horse, de· 'I
winner of the Wellston-North- but he won't start," said Yogi and I'm sure the same veloped in Am~ric'a during .
\\'esJ_game Saturday for the Manager Yogi B,erra. "WUile thing canhappenforWUile. He the early 1700s. Breeders
Central Sectional title.
will be used to spell Tommie has a job with us for the rest of crossed thoroughbreds from
England wiih horses from 1
Agee in center field wben his life if he wants it.''
the Spanish colonies of North
Tommie's knees are troubling
Baseball fans in other cities, America.
him and possibly at first base especially San Francisco
Q- What type of tobacco
against left-handed pit- wbere Mays actually played
ha
s practically no nicotine?
chers."
the largest part of his career,
Atobacco ; good
"I am delighted to hear that must wonder at the special H a v aTurkish
n a tobacco contains
Willie Mays will again be affectionNewYorkershavefor little of it. ·
playing for a New York Willie.
Final NHL Standings
Home of
- Tbe Beglulng
By United Press International baseball team," said Mayor
Q-How
many
strings
does
,
"
(Best.Of.Seven Finals)
' its beginning In 1951
John V. Lindaay In announcing
It had
w. I. gl ga the fonnai 'City Hall greeting. wben the shy Negro outfielder a lute have?
x-Boston
4 2 18 16
A- Usually si~ pairs of '
New York
2 4 16 18 "The pennant-bound Mets are joined the floundering Giants strings.
x-Bastan wins series and Indeed fortunate to have one of and became the catalyst that
Stanley Cup
Q- Wiwt is tl•e earliest ·
baseball's great ail-time play- enabled tbem to' stage their
Thursday's Result
date
ers In their lineup. But most of ''miracle Jll!!lnant victory" in fail ? on whic/1 Easter may
Boston 3 New York 0
all we New Yorkers are ap. 1951, after ualllng the Dodgers - A- Easter cannot come be· ·.
')l'eciative that Willie Mays is by 13'h games on .Aug. ll1 and fore March 22 or after April
back home."
to win a world cbampionshlp In 25.
AHL Playoff Standings
A
Valuable
Asset
1954 In a four-game World
By Unilod Press International
Q- What was the original
( Bost.Of.Seven Finals I
"He'll be a valuable asset," Series sweep over the salary . of the president of
w. I. gl ga said Berra. "WUile has always Cleveland Indians.
the United States?
Nova Scotia
3 2 17 7
B~ljtm.ore , ... ,, 2 J 1 11 heen,a gre~t lea!J! pla&gt;:er,,~ ,I , Mays went to San Francisco
, A-;;$~ , QOO II Y.O.~! · , ,
.1IIH.J.J. l o
• • " ,·., u ..l
1
1
'
Thursd•y's Rasults
kn\lW h,e'll be the '\"'"e n~e. With "the"'Gialliit ifj r ihe exQWhat
primary
breath·
Nova Scotia ~ Boltlmore 1
He'll be a good example.to our pansion year •Ut'l1958 and ing process of man a11d ani·
· Friday's Games
young players and he'll give us achieved as much there as he mals is reversed in plants?
(No games scheduled)
much needed right-handed hit- . did In New York . He never
A- Man and ani m a 1s 1
Ord1r By Phon•
ling bench strength when he's really achieved the same "folk breathe in oxygen and
not in the lineup.''
hero" status in San Francisco breathe out carbon dioxide .
And Tako l;m H6me
Otber members of the Meta as be had in New York, Plants take in carbon diox·
·
992-5432
echoed the manager's state- however, and New York fans ide and give off oxygen.
David Swisher, Columbus.
A recent windstonn blew ments, emphasizing that !bey yearned over the years to
some roof . off the Wesley were happy to have Mays on resume their special long~ost
their side but recognizing that "love affair."
Chapel Church.
he
is unlikely to play regularly.
It was resumed yesterday
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Brad·
"It's the best thing thai ever oot, like other old love affairs,
bury, Mrs. Dale Mulford and
happened
to me In my life," nobody really knows how it is
Mrs. Dale Sisson visited Mrs.
Willie
said
at a news confer- going to p!rn out.
Ina P. Rife and her sister, f&gt;!rs.
ence
Thursday.
"The Mets
Ada Pierce, Gallipolis,
Saturday morning.
QUWTY
Rev. Howard Fuller conAPPLIANCES
ducted Fifth Sunday services
at the Kyger Methodist
Church, Sunday night. The
group from Kanauga sang
12.1 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator
$197
several specials.
56" freezer - 28" wide
Ben Cookson Inc ., New
Philadelphia, have started
18" Color T.V.
$29?
work on the relocation of three
sections of Route 554 in
9" B&amp;W Portable T.V.
$68
Cheshire Twp.'
Console Stereo
$299
Mrs . Gall Sisson acAM-FM tape deck, 6 speakers
companied by Mrs. Mary
Sisson took Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Schukert and family to
Microsonic Ovens
$388
Columbus, Tuesday, where
Air
Conditioners
Early
Welcome! Come In and See Us!
they boarded a plane for their
Bird
home in Gennany.

·-

JUST CHICKEN
Middleport · Volunteer
Firemen will stage a chicken
barbecue Sunday beginning at
11 a.m. in the park back of the
Poat Office. Only chlc~n will
be sold. All proceeds will go
toward equiJiplng the new fire
headcjuarters bulldlnB.

P-~~~~

Transfers

HOSPITAL
NEWS

visiting hours 2-4 .and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting h~urs 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Charles D. Long, Sr., Shelii
Diane Keatts, Mrs. John Alton
ROGER ROUSH
Wood, Jr., Brenda K. Smith,
RACINE - Roger Herbert Anna Parry , Donald W.
Roush, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lanhart, Mrs. Tom ls~n and
Herbert Roush, RD 2, wiD son, Grant James, Jert Leah
graduate from Rio Grande Camp, Evelyn Adair, Basil
College, receiving his Duncan, Mrs. Ronald Carter
bachelor of science degree in ahd son, Alma Caudtll, Mary
Elementary Education at Ann Figgins, Mildred Gregory,
commencement exercises James D. Halley,.Cresllyn Hill,
Sunday, May 14 at 2:30p.m. Florence Louise Hutchinson,
at Rio. Grande. Rpger Is Wen~ell T. James, Albert G.
teaehlntt 'third •gud~ ' at· Kei!Ton;:'JI'., 'Mr~: · J~ii'~ 'Dll~~
Letart Fills ElementarY, Raines' and daughter, Bonnte
School, and has been rehired
Ratliff, Cora Smith, Elma
for the coming year. He also
Williams, Margaret Halslop,
engages In farming during
Linley Hart, Mayme Boster,
his summer vacations.
Billy Hager, Constance Smith
and Tammy Lynn Biars.

Hand Tooled

HANDBAGS

LOT NO. 160
t'riced

S12to $40
~illfolds

15.00 up

~or NO. 160 - Top grain hand tooled Cow·
hide with sueded Cowhide body lined with

finished Cowhide. Lots of interior zipper
pockets, adjustable two~way shoulder strap.
Finished in Antique Brown to compliment
the Buck or Chocol ate sueded Cowhide body
in!le rts . Approximate·s ize lOlA x 7 x 4V4 •

MODERN SUPPLY
399 WE STMAIN STR EET 992.2164 POMEROY, OHIO
THE STORE WI TH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS - STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS- LA WNS - GARDEN S- TROPICAL FISH.

Claudia C. Roush, Parcels,
Sutton.
.
Charles A. Chaffee, Gladys
Chaffee to MaMing . D. Webster, 11 .032 A., 0 range.
Manning D. Webster, Mary
A. 'Webster to Charles A.
Ch~fee,Gladys Chaffee, 11.032
A., 0 range.
Minter V. Fryar, Ruth M..
Fryar to David Kenneth
Yonker, Sarah Grace Yonker,
"160 A., Orange.
William c. Jones, Elsie L.
Jones to David C. Pratt,
Barbara J. Pratt, Parcels,
Bedford.
·
I
Loui"" t t&gt;llio Annn'M' ElliS
to caP,\'(i'."'Mo\;.~;;"~ity, F.
Mowery, Lot; Middlepbrt.
Gypsy Mae Chapman to Levi
Ezra Adkins, Kenneth Randall
Adkins, Parcels, Scipio.
Howard German, Lizzie
German to John German ,
Evelyn German, 30 A.,
Rutland.
Oaten S. Brown, Louise P.
Brown to James F. Butcher,
Jennifer S. Butcher, Lot,
Middleport.
Blanche Spaide, aka,
Blanche Harris, dec. to Lindy ·
M. Harris, Lena T.urner,
Barbara Linn, Paul Harris,
Cert. for Trans.

IN HOLZER
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja ,
supervisor of the Meigs Book·
mobile Service, is a medical
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center, Room 232, Gallipolis.
Mrs. Pikkoja, who became ill
'
FRIDAY
while attending a meeting in
MARY SHRINE 37 of White Cleveland and underwent
Shrine of Jerusalem Friday surgery at a Cleveland
IOOF Halt 8 p.m.
hospital, mo~e recently again
YOUNG ADULT Class, became ill and was taken to the
Bradford Church of Christ, 7 Holzer Medical Center.
p.m. Friday.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
House Decision
American Revolution, 2 pm.
Friday at the home of Mrs.
Only U.S. vice-president to
Emerson Jones. Members to defeat a pre s ident was
name a historical building for Thomas Jefferson, who de·
roll call. Assisting hostesse&amp;, feated John Adams. The
of .1800 was thrown
Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs. election
into the House of RepresenLawrence Milhoan.
tatives and decided 1n favor
io ·e.2nd
Pomeroy
or Jefferson.
·
Phone 992-5428
SUNDAY
MlDDLEPORT Firemen's
chicken barbecu.e wi lit serving
to begin at 11 a.m. Sunday.
Chicken only: a half 75 cents,
three halves, $2. In the park
behind the post office. All
proceeds to go the purchase of
equipment for the MW
building. .
MONDAY
PLANS For Decoration Day
dinner to be made Monday at
1:30 p.m. at Letart Falls
Community Hall.
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter of
OAPSE Monday, 7:30 p.m., .
junior high cafeieria, Middleport. Meeting open to all
Meigs Local nop-eertified
school employees.
MEIGS Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, Monday, 7:3o p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Semi-annual inspection.
Mother's Club wUI meet In the
basement dining room.
SPRING
TUESDAY
PLANTING
MEIGS County Alcoholism
aild Drug. Abuse committee
Let Us Your
Tuesday 7:30p.m. at St. Paul
Lutheran Church.
FERTILI~R
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Circle, 7:30 Tuesday, Mrs,
·Kenneth Harris, laac!er; Mrs.
Henry Ewing,, Mn. Carl

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HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 !CLOSE
THURS.!..._ EAST'c:OURT ST.,

•

Timely Quotes

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SUGAR RUN· MILLS
'

"Semce FOr Over 100 Years"
180 Mulblny
992-2115
Pomii'OJ

$1~.00

ZENITH HANDCRAFTED QUALITY

SUPER-SCREEN

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INGELS FU.RNITURE
992-2635

•

.OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDLEPORT

�' ... ,

.'

r

I

J

•

•

I

I

Rev

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY

w

S·T. PAUL LUTHERAN', Rev Arthur C Lund. pastor

H Pernn, pastor' Roy Sunday

Sc hool, 9. 15 am •

Mayer, Supt Church schoool. Charles Evans, Supl , worship
9 15 a .m.• worship, 10 24 am , serv1ce, 10 . 30 a m
Con

ybuth cho1r rehearsal Monday, f irmat,!on class, Tuesday, 4.15

6·30 p.m : Mrs Marv in Burt.
director ,
senior
choi r
rehearsal, 7 30 p m , Thursday,
Mrs Paul Nease, director
POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Union and Mulberry. Rev .
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor.
Sunday School 9 30 a.m ,
Raymond Walburn, supt
Morning worship 10 30 am
Evening service 7 30 P m Mid
week service, Wednesday, 7 30

to 5 30 p m.. Junior Con
flrmat1on class. Thursday, 6 30
to 7 45 P m
SEVEN-DAY ADVENTIST
Mulberry
Hetghls ,
Pomeroy Herbert Morgan ,
pastor
Sabbath schooL
Saturday, 2 p m. with c;hurch
service followtng at 3 19 P m
Open Bible discussion each
Thursday, 7 30 p m.
G R A HAM U NI T E D
METHODIST _ Preachmg 9 30

p.m.

am

GRACE EPISCOPAL Rev. Leroy, Davis, minister

first and second Sundays

of ea'ch month , third and fourth

Sundays each month, worshiP
Morning prayer and sermon, service at 7 30 p m. Wednesday
10 30la m Holy communion and1 evenings at 7 30 Prayer and

,·sermon, first Sundays, 10 30
am Church school. ktn ·
dergarlen through eighth
graPdeoM' 1EOR·300Ya mCHURCH OF
CHRIST- Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr •
pastor Bible School, 9 30 a.m •
worship, 10 30, adull worship
service and young peoples
meeting, both 7 30 p.m. Sundar,·
Wednesday, combined Bib e
study and prayer meeting, 7 30
Pm
THE SALVATION ARMY En•oy RayS Wining, otllcer tn
charge Sunday, 10 am. •
Holiness meeting, 10'30 a.m ..
Sunday School. Young People's
Legion. 7 p m , Thursday, 1 to 3

Bible Study
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP·
TIST _ 282 Mulberry Ave ,
Pomeroy.afflltated with S B C,
the Rev Fred Hill, pastor
Sunday School, 9 30 a m..
morning worship, 10 30 am ..
junior society, 6• 30 a m NYPS,
6 45 p m. Sunday evangelistic
meeltng , 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday, 1 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Corner Fourth and Matn ,
Middleport Rev Henry L Key,
Jr pastor Sunday School 9·30
a;;, Arnold Richards. supt ,
Mor~lng worship 10 30 a.m •
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES -

p.m., Ladles Home league , 7 Larry Carnahan pres1dmg
p.m .. Prep classes
m inister Sunday, Bible lecture,

SACRED HEART - Rev
Father Bernard Krajcovlc.
pastor
Phone
992-2825
Saturday evening Mass, 7.30
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10
am Confessions, $aturday, 7
7 30
p 0 P·mEROY FIRST BAPTIST
M
-Robert Kuhn, pastor: William
Watson. Sunday school
Sunday school, 9 30 o.m .. B F,
6 p m , Bible study, Wed
nesday, 7 p m , choir practice ,
Wednesday, 8 30 p m.

•\fF'·

Carpen~r

-N.ews, Event
ff11!.~

-·

Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe
Tackett, Mrs. Mary Collier and
Mrs. Ed Hensley of Flatwoods,
Ky., were guests of their
pll'llllla, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
CUlwell and their brother and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. WUllam

CUlwell.

Pm

CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE - Mtddleport.
Rev Audry Miller. pastor,
Floyd Carson, supt. Sunday
schooL 9 30 a m , Morn lng

11 am . and 7 30 P m

un ay.

am , Supday evening service,

pm
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHDDIS,T - Rev. Eugene
Gill, pastor William Bailey.
supt. Sunday School, 9.30 am :
Niornlng worship, 10 30 am ,

Evenmg worshtp, 7·30 p.m.
Wednesday, Chrlsltan Youth
Crusade, 6. 30 p.m.. Prayer
meeting 7:30 p m Thursday,
choir pracltce, 7 p.m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRI~T Danny Evans,

pastor Nonnan C Will, supt

Sunday School 9 30 a.m :
Worshtp servtce, 10;30 a.m.
Chmlian Endeavor Sunday

Wednesday

Chnstmas arranQement, may
mclude dried, preserved,
pamted. or glittered matenals,

evenmg prayer serv1ces, 7•30

evemngs, 8 p m serv1ces

after rain" Scripture Job 42·12
A reading "! heard the World
of Prayer" and Prayer. The
group sang "There Shall Be
lilowers of Blessing" with Mrs
!Babel Simpson, pianist After
a business sess10n, the Love
Gift offerings of the Circles
were dedicated by Grella
Simpson, L11llan Hayman, and
Sandra Boothe, followed by
installation and rededication of
officers' Mrs Erma Noms,
installing offlcer, used
"Beatitudes for Officers."
Refreshments were served lp
the basement social rooms by
the Esther Circle members.
For table decorations an Indian theme was used with
place mats and napkms Wllh
the map Imprinted
Mr. C H. Bryson IS a patient
m Veterans Hospital, Huntington. His address Is Mr.
Charles H Bryson, c-o V A.
Hospital Ward A-1, 1540 Spring
Valley Drive, Huntington, W.
Va. 25701.
Mrs. Ullian Jividen went to
Athens to vtslt her son, Dr and
Mrs. Charles Jividen. She was
accompanied by Mrs. AM Coe
and Mrs. Otis McClintock.
They visited with Mrs Essie
Wiltshire m the Kimes Nursmg
Home.
Mr. and Mrs Charles
Rausch of Westfield, N J.,
spent a few days w1th !hell' sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Rush Philson, Erich and
Sarah
Mrs. Violet Fisher of Akron
is a guest of her parents, Mr.
B!ld Mrs. Henry Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould of
Marietta spent a day with her
parents, Mr and Mrs Francrs
Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fleur·
bacher of Jackson were recent
guesta of Mrs. Addle Petrel
Mrs. Belle Theiss of Dorcas
spent Friday afternoon with
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
of Patriot spent Sunday w1th
his mother, Mrs. Frances
Roberts.
• 1
Miss -Helen Sauvage, Miss
&amp;ISle Biggs and Mr. Charley
Brown vislted over the week
end at Marysville, Ohio with
Margrette Terry Blld Mrs
Fred Vandale.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Jacobs
and children of Lockbourne Air
Base, Columbus visited her
grandparents, Mr. and Mr~.
Henry Roush .
Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew returned after
vacationing In Florida. They
visited Rev and Mrs. Samuel
Boyd at Ft. Lauderdale and
other places of Interest on both
East and West Coast.
,Mr.and Mrs. Sam Curtis and
daughter, Mrs . Sue Ann
Barkenhagen, of Lorain and
Mrs. Marcia Ann Wells of
Washington, C. H. spent the
week end with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Olrtls.
Other guesta on Saturday were
Mr. Jack Eslocker and two
daughters, Carol and JBIIice.

Rev. Robert Bumgarner

Eventng worsh1p, 7 30 p m ,

am , preaching 10.45 a.m •

HEATH - Worsh ip 10.30
am.ChurchSchool930am ,
UMYF 7 p m
R\ITLAND - Worsh ip 9 15
am , Church School 10 am ,

Wednesday, Sunday School
Supenntendenl, Paultne Me·
Cltntock, pastor . Rev. Morris
M Wolfe
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST -

Eventng services, 7 30 p m
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST - Cecil WISe,
Pastor Sunday School. 9 30
am , Morntng wo•shlp, 10.30

UMYF 7 p m

Charles Norris, pastor Sunday

a m , Young People's service,

SALEM CENTER- Worship
9 a.m , Church School 10 am ,
UMYF Thursday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev. Forrest R. Donley
ASBURY - Worship 11 a m ,
Church School 9:50a.m .. WSCS,
ls i Tuesday
FOREST RUN - Worship 9

School, 9 30 am , Morntng
worshtp, 10 45 am , Sunday
eventng worshtp, 7•30 p m ,
Wednesday eventng Btble
Sludy, 7 30 p.m
•
DANVILLE WESLEY AN ,
Rev
Lawrence Sullivan,
pastor Sunday School 9· 30
am , youth and jUnior youth

am , Church School 10 a .m , serv1ce, 6 45 p m • evenmg
WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 worshtp, 7 30 p m , prayer and
pm

MINERSVILLE - Worship
10 am : Church School 9 am •
WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7 30 p.m
SYRACUSE - Worship, 8
~ m , Church Schaal. 9L,a m ,
Prayer and Blole ,:;tucl,¥~
Wednesday, 7:30pm.
' SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. W. Dale McClurg
Aev Frank Cheesebrew
Rev Martha Ann Mattner

BETHANY

(Dorcas)

pra1se, Wednesday, 7 30 p m

SILVER RUN FREE BAP·
TJST - Rev Howard Ktmble
pastor Sunday schocl. 10 am,
Henry DaviS, supt eventng
servtce, 7 30 p m Prayer
meelffl!t, Thurdo'il 1' :1Ct"P m ~
CHEHER CHURCH OF
GOD- Rev James Satterftela,
pastor Sunday school. 9 30

There's a lot of sentimentality in the observance of
Mother's Day. Let's be practocal.
Only one thing really counts· MY CHILD'
There is no glory hi being a mother unless one has
learned how to prepare a child for Life. Nor is there any
pride m motherhood unless one has don~ her utm?SI to share
w1th her chtld the. great spintual hentage wh1ch IS her own
People love to complunent us: "Just like her mother!"
they say.
If mothers through the centunes had been satisfied w1th
that goal, our civthzation would have stagnated in the days
of the cave men.
The mark of a devoted mother is her desrre to make of
her child even a finer person than she or her husband has
become. And in this common atm she and her husband find
their staunchest ally in the Church.

a m , worship service, 11 a m ,
e~Jenlng serv1ce, 7. prayer
service and youth service,

Worship, 9 30 a.m.. Church Thursday, 7 p m
School 'lD 30 am
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
CARMEL - Worshtp, 11 - Homer Slerhens, pastor
am, 1st and 3rd Sundays,
Church School, 10 a.m .

Sunday Schoo, 9 30 a m ,
mornmg worshtp, 10 30 am ,

APPLE GROVE - Worshtp, Robert Bobo, Sunday school

7 30 p m , church school, 9 30 supt , Sunday evening serv1ce,
a m,
mtd week service, 1 30 Youth meeltng, Monday, 7

Sunday
ages, 9 30

second and four th Sundays
Mtd·week service, Wednesday,
8pm
GREAT BEND- Worshtp 11
am , 2nd and 4th Sundays,
Church School, 10 a.m
LETART FALLS - Worship
10 am, Church School 9 am
MORNING STAR- Worshtp
9 30 a.m , Church School 10 30
a m , Mtd -Week Service .
Wednesday, 8,.p m
MORSE CHAPEL- Worship
11 am, lsi and 3rd Sundays,
Church School, 10 am
PORTLAND- Worshtp 7 30
p m, Church S&lt;:hool 9 30 am
SUTTON - vlorshtp, 11 am
2nd and 4th Sundays . Church

School, classes for all
am, morn ing worshtp, 10·45
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p.m..
evangelistiC service Sunday,
1 30 p m Mtd week prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
MISSionary meettng, second
Wednesdav. 7 30om
UNITED FAITH NON·
DENOMINATIONAL - Rev
Robert Smith, pastor Sunday
school, 9 30 am , Bob Barber,
supt , worship service, 10 30
am , youth meeflng , 6 45
p m : church , 7 30 p.m..
prayer meeting, Wednesday
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN
'IN CHRIST-Eldon R Slake,
pastor Sunday SchooL 10 a.m.,

School 10 am

Winme Holsinger. supt

Mor

WESLEYAN (Racine) - n1ng sermon, 11 am , Evening
Wor sh1p, 11 a m , Church service Chnshan Endeavor,

Sct&gt;ool, 10 a m
UMYF for all churches of the
Southern Cluster, 7 30 P m
each Sunday at the Youth
Center (Oak Grove Road)
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Jacob Lehman
Rev. Slondley Brandum
JOPPA - Worship 10 am ,
Church School 9 am.; Prayer
Meeting, Wednesday, 8 ~ m.
LONG BOTTOM - Church
services, 9a m; Sunday School
9 4S am

Bible study every

Thursday, 7 30 p m
NORTH BETHEL - Worship
11 am , Church School 10 am
ALFRED - Sunday school,
9. 45 a.m. each Sunday ,
preaching at 11 'lf. m each
Sunday Prayer meeting, 7 45
p m Wednesday; WSCS, 8 p.m.
on th ird Tuesday each month.
RE E DSV I U E - Sunday
school, 9 30; preaching, 7 30
p m Sunday, prayer meeting,
7 30 p m. Tuesday: WSCS, 7:30
first Thursday each month.
SILVER RIDGE- Worsh ip,
10 am , Church School, 9 a m.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Worship 9 am., Church School
10 am
KENOCHURCHOFCHRIST,
Hpbart Newell, supt Service!
weekly, 9 30 am. on Sunday
Preaching llrsf and third
Sundays of month by Cllllor~
Smith, 9 30 a m ~
HOBSON CHRISTIAN
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll,
pasfor Sunday School, 9 30
am, Leonard Gilmore, first
elder , evening service, 7 ~D
P m
Wednesday prayer
meetJng, 7 30 p m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Ractne Route 2. The
Rev Cha•las Hand, pastor
Sunday ochool, 9: 4S a m.,
morning worship, 11 a..m.
Evening services, Thuesday
and Fnday, 7 30.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David
Jewell , pastor. Blblesludy, 9 30
&amp;:m: morning worship, 10:30,
evening "worship, 6 30 p.m
Wednesday Btble study, 7:30
pm

30 p m , Mrs l:yda Chevalter,
prestdent Song service and
sermon, 8 20 Mid Week prayer
meettng Wednesday, 7 30 p m
M&lt;s. Marie Holsinger, class
leader
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT
CHURCH Harrisonville
Road, Rev Roy Taylor, pasto,,
Henry Eblin, Sunday School
:.upt :.unday ~chool, 9:30am.:
eventng worship, 7 30 p m.
Prayer and praise service,
7

Sunday
Lamentations
3.22-36
Monday

Tuesday

John
1:1-/4

John

3:1-6
Wednesday Thursday
John

John

5.17-31
Friday
Romani
2.1-11

17:1-10
Saturday
Galatians
3:7-14

I. Giif Scout
I Diary
«

Youth

ALLAndWEAlHER
ROOFING
Construction Co.

~(

, •11 M•df:llePQth

HEINER'S BAKERY

M&amp;RFOODLINER

Bakers Of Good Bread
Huntington, W. Va.

Middleport, Ohio
'

-

Buckley , prestden
Prayer
meehng, Wednesday , 7 30 p m

Board meeting first Monday

'

Sales · Allis Chalmers - Service
Farm lndustnal· Lawn · Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

Middleport. Ohio

I

OOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Sunday school. 9·30
am, V H. Braley; supl '
communion and devotions
10 30 am . Regular board'
meeltng 7 30, thi rd Salurda y
each month
THE RUTLAND COM
MUNITY CHURCH - Rev
Richard Dubbeld, pastor
School, 9· 30 am ., Worshl p
service, 11 a m , Wednesda y
prayer meeting, 7: 30 p m
Sunday night worship, 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH 0 F
THE NAZARENE - Rev
Ll oyd D Grimm, Jr, pastor
Sunday School, 9 30 a m
Morning worship, 10 30 am '

'

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

MARK VSTORE

each month , 7:30pm

, )ii'''t

'

.

morntngs
Alfred Wolfe,
layleader, Chmltan Endeavor,
1 30 p m
Sundar Roger

RACINE FOOD MARKB'

Athens Road
Pomeroy
The Store with A Heart
A Family That Worships Together , Ractne
•949-3342
Stays Together
II

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, 0.

LYONS MARKET

servtce 7 30 p m.

Chester, Ohio

.
'

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

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

.

.
GAUL'S TRAILER SALES

.

:
Electric Motor Repair
810 W. Main
992-575()

.

SADIE'S MARKET

NEW YORK CI.OlHING HOUSE

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE'

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
;

•

Racine, Ohio

"'

.'

Furniture and Appliances
Phone 985-330~
Chester, Q,

.

- Attend. the Church
.· of Your Choice

-

. BEN FRANKUN SIORE

.

POrneruy

'

\

11!.., 992-349b

·:

. FAIRVIEW BIBLE OfURat
"We Sponsor Jesus"
.
.
Rev. Stan Cf alg, Pasto'
Ph. 949·3272
.. ,: •.

Arbor Day. Providing flower
arrangemenls for the Pomeroy
Alumm Association ba~quet
was discussed.
A dessert course was served
to members and 8\lests at the
conclusion of the meeting.

Recogmtion of the oldest
mother, Mrs. Juha Patterson,
and the youngest mother, Mrs
Max Eichinger, was a feature
of the annual mother daughter banquet of the
American Lutheran Church
Women of St. Paul Lutheran
Church
Mrs Patterson and Mrs
Eichinger were presented
corsages Spec1ai guests for ll)e
banquet were women of the
Meigs County Infirmary
Pastor Arthur 1Lund gave the

VISITORS HERE
Mr and Mrs. John Sm1th of
Medma, Mr. and Mrs Nathan
Rarman, Jr. of. Erle, ,Pa. and
Mr and Mrs. Charles Bmg til
Cleveland were recent visitors
of Mr and Mrs. Vmcent Dabo,
Pomeroy, and Mrs J. K
Sm1th, Middleport A former
teacher 1n the Cleveland
schools, Mr Bmg has retired
and the family plans to move to
St Petersburg, Fla m June
ATIENDS SESSION
Hazel McKelvey, fiscal officer of the Gallia-Me1gs C.A.P
Office, spent the past week m
Chicago, Ill., where she at.
tended a trammg workshop for
advanced accountants of
O.E.O.
Agencies
The
workshop was conducted by
Alexander Grant and Co.,
certified public accounts,
under contract with the Region
V Office · of Economic Opportunity.

THIRD SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs George Korn,
Jr., 103 Wright St, Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of
their third son, Bracy Adam,
on May 4 at the Holzer Medical
Center. Mr. and Mrs. Korn
have sons, ' Brei, five and
Bryan, three. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs. Ruth
Thomas of cary' 111. and the
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. George Korn 1 Sr.,
Pomeroy. Ella Quillen,
'.Syracuse, Is a maternal greatgrandmother.

VISIT PARENTS
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Cec1J H1ll and daughters of
Uma vislted last Friday with
Mrs. l;lill's parente, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Clark, Racine. On
Saturday the Hill family accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.
Clark, traveled to New
Lexington to attend the wed·
ding of the Clarks' grandson,
· Johnny O'Brien, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernafll O'Brien.

some
fromIn making
cloth and
other · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
procedure
the dolls,

-

Church and Office Supplles·ulfts
992-2641 1
Ml_ddleport

WANT AD

·-

Meats and Groceries
"
Syracuse •
992·3986
.

'

VIUAGE CUT RATE
and
'
VIUAGE FLOWER SHOP

Mrs. Pauline Hester of New
Haven, W. Va. displayed her
collecUon of decorated ej!gs
and bandmade character dolls
at a recent open meeting of the
Pomeroy Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs. Ed Baer.
Mrs. Hester ex\&gt;lained the

.

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

-

Garden Club

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE:

St . Rt. 7
Chester, Ohio
Chaos!! the Church of your Choice

Bulova Watches-Sal~s &amp; Service
186 N, Second
~ddleport
.
..

Collection Shown

296 W. Second Ph. 992-3863 Pomeroy

and

F. J. WAlLACE, JEwELfR

.

lHE AlHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp;LOAN 00.

Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

-

'

Meig s County Branch

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

..

•
.

lHE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

..

'

..GAUL'S MARKET

Member of the Big 3
General Merchandtse
Tuppers Plains
667-3280

Young people's serv1ce, 6 45'
p m , Evangelist i c services
7 30 p m Wednesday evening'

MASON COUNTY
THE HILAND CHAPEL
George Casto, pastor Sunda y'
School, 9 30; eventng worsht p,
7 30 Thursday evening prayer
servtce, 7:30pm
'
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sis., Stan
Cratg, pastor. Sunday schoo I,
9·45 a.m.: worship service, 11
am.; training union, 6 30 p.m
Thursday , 7.30 p.m
evenrng worship service, 7 30
COMMUNITY CHURCH, p.m Mid week prayer servlce,
Dexter - Worship services Wednesdav. 7:30p .m
Saturday and Sunday, 7 30
FAIRVIE" 0 ,.,LL CHURC H
Q m.
celart Route 1, the Rev. Sfa n
HEM L 0 C K
G R 0 v E &lt;:ra tg, pastor. Sunday schoo I,
CHRISTIAN- David :.rautter, 9 30 a.m , prayer and - Bibl e
pastor: Stanford Stockton, supt. study1 7 30 p.m Cottage praye
Morntng worship, 9 30 am: serv 1ce, Tuesday, 10 a.m r:
~hurch school, 10· 30 a.m , worshtp service, Friday, 7:30
young peoples meeting., 6 30 ' p m
·
pm., evening worship, 7·30 ·MASON
CHURCH
0
Btble.,Vwdy, Wednesday, 7 30 CHRIST- Loren T Stephen s,F
P m.
minister Worshtp. 10 am
MT. UNION BAPTIST - Blblestody, 11: 15a.m .. evenln
Rev. C'lliJI Cox, pastor. Sunday worship, 7.30 p m Mid-wee
school ~tlJ)t., Joe Sayre Sunday service, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m~
schooL 9:45 am, Sunday MASON .ASSEMBLY 0
evening worship, 7•30 Wed· GOD- Second Sf., Mason, WF
nesday prayer and Bible study, Va. Chester :rennant, pasto r.
7 30 pm
~ --Sunday school, 10 am, mo
TUPPERS
PLAINS nlng worship, 11 a m r-:
CHRISTIAN CHURCH - evangeiiSIJc service. 7 30 p m.
Eugene Underwood, pastor: Bible study and prayer servlce,
Howard Caldwell, Jr, Sundar. Wednesday, 7.30 p m Phon e
School Supt .. Sunday Schoo , 773 5133
930 a. m. : Morntng sermon, HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
10 30 a m , Sunday evening CHRIST '" Chrlsltan Union
servlce, 1 o m
· Rev O'Dell Manley, pastar.
LETART FALLS UNITED Sunday school, 9·30a m., Rog er
BRETHREN - Rev Robert Manley, sup! ; evening service
Shook, pastor, Herschel Norris, 7 30 Wednesday even Ing'
supt Sunday school, 9.30 am : prayer meetmg, 7:30 p.m
morning sermon, 10:30 am.; Sunday evening youth servl
evening sermon, 7:30 alter 6 45 with Macy Lou Cartece
r,
natlng each Sunday Prayer leader No Tuesday service. '
service, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m - - - - - - - - - - - - - Prayer meeflng, 7 30 p m. 1
I
alternating Sundays.
1
You 'II
I
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF 1
I
tract It durn
GOD OF PROPHECY, G. P 1
I
Smith, pastor. Sunday School. I
much faster
I
10 am., Arthur Henson, Sup!:
I
Morntng Worship 11 am., I1
wl th a
Youn? Peoples service, 7 p.m •
•
Eventng "rvlce, 7 30 p.m., I
JII
WednescU!y Mid Week Prayer 1·-------------

Phone 992-3284

I'
I

Craft projects were completed and a bicycle hike was
planned durmg the Tuesday nil!hl meetmg of Racine Troop 137
held at the American Legion hall.
It was noted that 10 girls will be attending day camp to be
held the week of June 5at Kiashuta near Chester. Bottle caps are
being collected by the girls. A committee meeting was set for
t Maf' 18 at tJill home of Mrs. Carl M~rrls with the next troop
meeting to be held May 23 at the boll park.
During the sununer months, meetings will be held every
other Tuesday. Mrs. HarrlllOn Smith and Mrs MorriS served
refreshments to Lori Knighting, Unda Fisher, Cheryl Teaford,
cathy Cross, Cindy Warden, Sonya Hill, carol Morris, Unda
• Norris, Dorma Rtce, Teresa R1ce, Peggy Neigler, Becky Crow,
feresa Ervm, and Permy Smith.
,
SAUSBURY BROWNIES Z20
Plans for a fly-up ceremony to he held later thiS month were
dlscussed when the Salisbury Brownies met Thursday night at
the school.
Mrs. Walter Morris, leader, Issued an appeal for a leader,
ooting that the girls leavmg Brownies and moving lntp the Junior
scout program are without a leader. Any parent mterested m
assisting with a juruor troop IS asked to contact Mrs. Morris.
Six of the girls wtU be attending day camp at Kiashuta. A
Mother's Day project was completed durmg !be meeting
MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP.
Scouts of Troop 39 entertained Monday with a party for their
mothers m observance of Mother's Day. Program consisted of
the flag ceremony, several songs, a skit about Mother's Day and
an original poem entitled "Mother".
The girls served a decorated cake inscribed "Welcome
Mothers of Troop 39" and ptinch. A gift was presented to Mrs.
Roscoe Wise, troop lesder.
Guests at the party were Mrs Richard Bailey, Mrs Bob
Byer, Mary Teresa Byer, Mrs. William Demookey, Mrs. Robert
Pooler, Mrs. Harold Filch, Mrs Edward Kitchen and J. R., Mrs.
John Krawsczyn, Mrs. Fred Lewis B!ld David, Mrs. Fr~nk
Martin B!ld Frankie, Mrs. Burdell McKinney, Mrs. Bobby Payne
and Angela, Mrs. William SWisher, Mrs. Jack Welsh.
Hosting the party were carin Bailey, Patty Boyles, Julie
Byers, Linda Demookey, Sarah Diddle, Ann Fitch, Trina Gibbs,
Judy Gilkey, Julie Kitchen, Lori Ki04lll, Marty Krawsczyn,
Valerie Lawis, Angela Martin, Margo Martin, Tanuny Me·
Daniel, Jo McKinney, JomMurray, Kim Payne, Velvet Swisher,
Marianne Welsh, Jennifer Wise, and Debbte and Terri Zirkle.

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

D. B A. Anthony Plurnblng and
t• Heatin_g_ h• .~. ,, •
Q40 Lineal~ SW 992-2550 Middleport

sermon 7 30 p.m , alternallnQ
each Sunday Class meehng 11
am
alternating
~un. .day

preach1ng service, 2 p m

Jun lors, I ArtlsliG DtviSton)

Class 9,
Puppy,"
contammg
Juntors.

" Havmg a Ne:w
an arrangement
an ani mal flgunne
(horticulture) Class

more labeled), Class 27, cacti
and or succulents. Class 28,
house plants, and Class 29,
gourds

Educaltonal,

Class

30,

evergreen spec1mens, ftve or
more. labeled, and, Class 31,
w1ld flowers or plants, ltve, ftve
or more labeled

SHOW NO. 2
In the second show, Aug 18,
wh1ch

features

the

same

Juntors
(artrstic
arrangements}
Class
9.
"Believing In Santa Claus," an
arrangement m a to-y
Jun1ors (horttculture) Class
10, dahlias, one large or three
porn pons, Class 11, asters.
three , and Class 12. zlnntas,

tree or shrub
Educational,
Class 30,
garden1ng
book s and or
maga zines ,
Class
31.
spec1mens, nat1ve tree and-or
nat1 ve shrubs. f1ve or more

labeled

handcrafted or homemade
containers (three or more),
and Class 14, collage, must
contam some plant matenal
Horticulture, Class 15, rose.

one stem. zi nnia. large, three
of one color, z1nn1a, fantasy ,
thre of one color, Ctass 19,
gladtolus, exhibitor my enter
one m each color class. one set
of ribbons to the class. Class

Eventng," usmg flowers m coot
colors, Class 3, "Havmg •

Spare When You Get A Flat,&lt;'

usmg two con tamers , Class -4,
"Counting Your Blessmgs," a
Thanksg1vrng arrangement
usmg frUits and -or vegetables.
Class 5, " Keepmg Busy ,"
showmg mot1on , Class 6,

· Going to Church With the
Fam1lr,," w1th a rellgtous aura,

sutlab e for the home, Class 7,
20, gladtolus, colleclton of "Reca llmg th e Good Old
three, Class 21, martgold, DaYs." Including weathered or
farge, th ree of one color , Class

one , Class 24, dahlia, one,

large, Class 25, dahlta, pom

pan , three of one color , and

dnft wood and some dned
matertals, may or may not
1nclude fresh matenals
In vitational,
Class
8,
"Traveling to Far Places, "
your favortte arrM~~mf!lnt

The Invitational classes In
both shows are open to out of.
county parttctpants, a mem-

bershtp ticket being the only
by all per50f'ls.
lr Is not requtred for juniors

fee for entry

under 12 however.

three
Spectal DISplay, Class 13,
d1sh gardens , Class 14, p1cture
made on weathered or drift

wood, may be In two dimension

DO-IT-YOURSELF
.

or three dimension

theme, " Happiness Is," the
Horftculture, Class, 15, rose,
followmg classes are listed hybrid tea, one: Class 16, tose,
10, Zinnias, three large or
Artisfte
Arrangements, fiorlbunds, one stem, Class 17,
fantasy, Class 11 , mangold , Class 1, " Belonging to a
z1nnia, la rge. three of one
Class 12, asters
Garden Club," Jnterpret1ve , color Class 18, z1nnia, fantasy,
Spectal Display , Class 13, Class 2, Relaxtng In the three of one color, Class 19,

•

materials and some from dried
apples, and showed a variety of
deccrated eggs.
Mrs. L. C. Karr presided at
the meeting which opened wtth
devoU0111 by Mrs. Roy Betzlng,
co-hO&amp;tess.
Betzlng read
IICiipture, ha~ a meditation
and prayer. A communicaUon
wu read from the Rutland
Glrden Club Inviting members
to atlend an open meeting later
thla month. Allo read wu a
thank you nole from the
Pomeroy National Bank
thanking the club fat an
arrangement 1n a~~aervance or

Mts.

'

SAVINGS

gladiolus, exh1bltor may enter
one In each color c lass

One set of ribbons and

'

premtums to the class, red,
ptnk, whtte, ye llow, blue,
purple, orange, salmon. green,

other

Class 20. gladiOlus, collection

All PURPOSE

of three. Class 21. cockscomb,
plume, one, Class 22, cocks
comb, crested, one, Clas$ 23,
dahlia, larg e, one; Class 24,
dahi1as, pom-pon, three of one
color . Class 25, asters. one

STEEL SHELVING
4 SHELF UNIT WITH
t2 INCH SHELVES
Adjustable 3 t" to 60" high
REG. 9.99

Class 26, marigolds, large,
three of one color
~
SpeCimen Collection, (f1ve or

more labeled ), Class 27,

AfriCan V1olets , Class 28,
colored corn, Class 29, native

prayer.
Fotlowmg the dmner, Mrs
Lillian Moore presented the
program wh1ch opened w1th
"Mother" and "Look What
They've Done to My Song, Ma"
by the primary class choir
accompamed by Ed1e Mees
Mrs. Rachel Dowme read
uwanted, Chnstian Mothers,"
and Mrs. Jenmfer Anderson
presented "Every Day IS
Mother's Day " Readmgs by
Mrs Jeanne Braun were en.
titled "An Adored Mother,"
and "AI Wtt's End."
Knsten Anderson read
"What IS a Grandmother?"
and there was a duet "In the
Garden" by Mrs Downie and
Mrs Betty Will A pa1r of
slippers was presented to each
of the women of the Infirmary
by Mrs. Veda DaviS
Mrs
DaVIs remmded
members of the requ1red
health card for food handling
and also displayed the
American Cancer Society
certificate of merit presented
to the A.LCW

Inspection Set

hall
Others wmmng were Mrs
Rose Carr of Alfred Grange,
second m the stste contest, and
Mrs. Fraley of Columbia, first
in children's clothmg.
Judges were Mrs. Jennifer
Sheets, Me1gs extensiOn agent,
home economics, and Mrs
Robert Bumgarner, Mid·
dieport, a sewmg mstructor
The degree of Pomona was
presented m full form for two
candidates, and Deputy Master
V1rg1l Alluns conducted the
annual mspecholl . Norman
W11l, master, presided at the
meetmg hosted by Star
Grange. Reports were g1ven by
all 10 granges
Grangers were remmded
that entnes in the Metgs
County Fa1r are to be listed
w1th Atkins before July I
The Ohio State Grange
Centenmal was the theme of

-.. /

the program presented by Mrs .
Elizabeth Jordan. Members
sang the grange song. Mrs.
Neva Nicholson read "Our
Grange," Mrs Alice Stockton
led m a diSCUSSIOn on the topic
"Grange Br1dges the Gap,"
and the foundmg of the order
was presented by Norman W1ll,
Stanford Stockton, Charles
Carr, Carl Greenlee, Fred
Goeglem, George Genhetmer,
and Earl Starkey
Roll call for those over 50
was a remembrance of an
outstandmg event. Humorous
readmgs were g1ven by Mrs.
Avanell Holliday, and Mrs.
Jordan concluded the program
w1th a readmg "Steppmg
Stones to Grange Success."
It was noted that Athens
County w11l make a visitation
at the July meeting. Refresh·
ments were served by the host
un1t

~O~LA ..®.

11

That You tan Enjoy All Summer••
Mom Would LoN Them •

"'"

Serving 1he Same Quality ol Plan!l· for lilt Last 20 Years.

SHU' FRS MARKET
W.MAIN

POMIROY

I'

48 INCH WORK LIGHT
AMERICAN FtUORfSCEHT

REGULAR 19.95
All wh1 te he ked enamel Sl• foo13 ronduc:·
tm SJ cor d or.d pull switch (tess bulb s)

13BB

HOOKS FOR
WORKSHOP

~
~~G
, ,,~

~~~

ltn!t:::

'~:: 1~n8
u~ e

REG 379 lA

on 1/8 board (len

Use fo r cu lt1 ng plywood plastic 1

'"'"'

+

Quasa~

6 PC. SABRE SAW

BLADE SET

Mom Would love
One - - -

REG.

SALE PRICE

2.49

47~

rn..
MAS D ~Ilf

. ·· ~ ··

Conloms 6 precision ground hi·
spud sleet blodu for mott
sabre sow-s

Add ullllty Ia empty wa lls

1/4" DRILL

3/8" VARIABLE

C/H
C/H

SPEED DRILL

7000

1

16" Portable TV (diagonally measured) with
lnsta-Matic tuning.
,

1999

Here's a real entertainer. A " Bright Tube" picture (145

square Inches)

wit~

mini-circuit servlceabtllty, lnsfa

Mafic tuning ease and sound and picture within moments

of turning on the set Detachable color highlight shlel~
tncluded Delu~e Walnut grain finish cabinet of
polystyrene. 21'/t" W, 16" H, 18" D. Model WP4BlHW

General purpose dr ill
for lost accurate lob

lo~k lrlgg.r ol spud suit.d Ia
lhelob 1/6 HP

I /7 HP,

...

Blll&lt;k &amp; Deoior /DeW qll
C/ H

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
I

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

It Maloos A Difference Where You Save!

Lorge 10 blode cuts full3' deep•
Blode broke for softly Worp ,.,
1111anl tabl e 11 26" x 32 '. 2 HP•

C/H

MEIGS BRANCH
THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 w. Sean! St

e

7-1 /4" CIRCULAR SAW

Uti F. 1- Jr., Manaier
Phone 992·3863

PASSBOOK SAVINGS
5 per cenl per year paid on Regular
Passbook Savings. No Minimum.
Intern! from dale~ d~~~~ Iodate af
withdrawal. Interest compounded
quarterly. lnteresl paid as long as an
open account Is matnl~lned.

1999

Hos burn oul prolected 1 HP

molar

B~~tonlu . C:Om~llltlon

Also Artillcill Flower• 1nd m1ny Vnltllts ot V...t1blt
Pllnll.

protetlor'

For May 18th
Plans for a grand inspection
of Harnsonv1lle Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star,
were made Tuesday mght.
The Inspection has been set
lor May 18 at 8 p m. at the
Hamsonv11le Elementary
School. It will be preceded by a
6·30 dinner and reservations
are to be sent to Mrs. Avanell
George, Larkins St:, Rutland,
or telephoned to 742-5284. The
mspecting ollicer will be
Wroena Dusthelmer, associate
grand matron of the Grand
Chapter of Ohio. Members are
requested to take homemade
cookies and sandwiches for the
soc1al hour.
Past matrons and past
patrons were honored with
Mrs. Lois Pauley, wort~
matron, readmg a poem entitled "Gentle Folk."

Plo111c floor

baked • enamel flnhh

For

~~~::: Moriact1ds • PI Mitt. Dw1rf Dlthll11 • MulliS •
• Snap Drill·

R,bbed potts for odded slrength Elllro
heavy \IIOuge stee l '" neutral gray

Keep workshop !ools neal nand

fLOWERS

\

I

honors m the nat10nal and slate
sewmg contests JUdged at the
recent meeting of Pomona
Grange at the Rock Springs

Mothers Recognized

»

By Charlene Hoeflich

Tuesday. 7 30 p m Ernest

Meeltng Wednesday, 1 30 p m,
Ernest Deeter, leader
MT. HERMON UNITED
BRETHREN CHURCH IN
CHRIST- Rev Robert Shook,
pastor Sunday School, ~ 30
am, Roy Pooler, supt, Alfred
Wolle, ass! supt, morning
worshtp, 11 a m , evening

Mrs Betty Conkle of the
Rock Sprmgs Grange and Mrs
Margaret Hanmng oT Hemlock
Grove shared first place

w-:-:·:.:·:·:·=·.....·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·=·· •:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:-;-: =~·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·= :-::::~:~·::::.·:::wt'~

worshtp 7· 30 Prayer meeting,

RUTLAND
'
Wednesday, 8 p.m
p.m. Mtd week servtce, Wed
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
EAST LETART - Worship, nesday, 1 30 p m
- Rev Samuel Jackson
lOam,ltrslandthlrdSundays,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF pastor SundaySchool,lOam. '
9 am, second and fourth THE NAZARENE - Rev. M C Mrs' Gertrude Butler. supt '
Sundays, church school, 9 am , Lanmore, pastor. Bob Moore, Prayer Serv1ce, l 30 p m
first and third Sundays, lOam , Sunday School Supt

REEDSVIIJE - Mr. B!ld Mrs. Leonard Barber of
Reedsville are announcing plans for the open church weddmg
of their daughter, Ruby Delor1s, to Mr. Darnel Guy Drake,
110n of Mr. and Ml'll. Melvm Drake, Racme. The wedding will
he an event of Sunday at 1 30 p.m. at the United Brethren
Church on Eden Ridge.
The bride-elect1s a 1971 graduate of Eastern H1gh School
and a former employe of Heck's at Belpre. Mr. Drake, a 1968
graduate of Southern High School, has served four years m
the armed forces

45 p m , EvangeliStic servtce,
7 30 p m Prayer meeting,
k rlpturet selecttd b"!' the .-.merlcan Bible Sorlm
Copyr!Sfit 1•.m l&lt;e1lter Adwenlilog Serv1ce Inc S1r1tbura. VlrsJnl•
Thursday, 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL
MISSION - Bald Knobs. Rev.
L. R Gluesencamp, pastor
With the hope 1t will. in some measure, foster and help sustain that whi.ch is
Roger Wtlfred, Sr, Sunday
School Supl Sunday School, good In famtly and community life, this feature is sponsored by the bustness
9 30 a m , Sunday eventng , firms and organizations whose .(lames appear below.
leader

nam " (mterprehve)
lnv•tat1onal, Class 8, " Mees
tn the Morning, " your favorite
arrangement

Class 26, asters, three
Spec1men collections (five or

Honor Shared in Sewing Conte:sts

6

Deeter, class

altar, no figurines) , and Class
7, "Getting Home from Vtet

Identical, but may beL Class 4, 22, cockscomb, plume. one.
"The Joy of Chmtmas" lany Class 23. cockscomb. crested,

Sunday even1ng

7 30 p m

Arllsltc

1n warm colors, Class 3,
"Being Half of a Fatr" {In two
contal'ners, not necessari ly

10 30 am
pm
worship 10 30 a m , JUnior
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST soc1ety, 6 30 p m., NYPS, 6 45 Cl!RIST - Cltfford Smith , Greal Bend , Charles Norm,
pm
Sunday evangelis t ic pastor, Leroy Bartrum. Sunday pastor Worship service, 9 30
meet1ng. 7 30 p m Prayer School superintendent Sunday am , Sunday School , 10·30a.m
mee hng Wednesday, 7 30 p m School, 9 30 a m.. Morning
CARLETON CHURCH church, 10 30 a m , Sunday Ktngsbury Road. Sunday
MEIG$
evenmg serv tce, 7 30 P m School, 9 30 am, Ralph Carl,
COOPERATIVE
Wednesday eventng servtce, 8 supt Worshtp service, 10 30
PARISH
p m
am. and 7 30 p m alternately
THE UNITED
ANTIQUHY bAPTIST Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Freeland Noms, pastor 7 30 p m Rev Jay Sltles,
Robert R. Card
Sunda~ school , 10 am., church pastor
R
Rev. Stanten Smtih
servtce. 7 p m Wednesday
0 L D
D E X T E
CHESTER - Worsh ip 9 15 Bible study, 7 p.m
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
am , ~hu r c h School 10 am.
BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE, - Rev Willard Dutcher,
ENTERPRISE- Worship, 9 Minersville, J A McWaters, pastor Mrs Worley FranciS,
a m , Church School, 10 am pastor Svnttay School, 10 a m , Sunday School Sup! Sunday
FLATWOODS- Worshtp, 11 mornmg worship, 11 a.m : School, 9 45 am. Church Ser

UMYF 6•30 p m.

I.

or baubles obviously for
Chnstmas), Class S, " Rockmg
a New Baby ", (show.ng
mot•on}; Class 6, " l1v1ng By
Fa1lh". {suitable lor a church

hybrtd, one, rose. llorlbunds,

Class 2, "Knowing the Warmth
of Friendship," uSing flowers

School Director Sunday School,
9 30 am , Morning worship,

Combs. pastor Sunday school, service 7 p.m

SHOW NO.1

Arrangements, Class 1, "Going
to the Fair," mterpret1ve;

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

10 30 a.m ,

church serv1ces ,

Show

evemng.

P1ne Grove. the Rev

9 30 a.m..

An all tmportanl part of thiS
year's Me1gs County Fall' Aug.
10.19, will be the flower show,
"Happmess Is," whtch IS open
to all garden ciubK in the
ccun ty and to the general
pubhc. •
In years past there has been
a notable marked increase m
Interest m this diviSion of the
fa1r. · Mrs. Margaret Ella
l.ew1s, supermtendent, IS
hopeful of surpassing even last
year's enlr1es.
There wtll be two shows, one
Aug. 16 and another Aug. 18,
w1th oral judgmg both days at I
p.m. There are 31 classes for
exhibiting tn both shows.

1 30 p m Wednesday service, 8

evenmg prayer meeting and
Arthur

Cbarlene Hoejbcb

t

Sunday ' School. 9 30 am.
Richard l)arton, supl. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday. 7·30 p.m
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Clttlord Smith,
minister Sunday School 9 30
a m . mornmg church 10 30

Rac1ne Road. Ralph Johnson,
pastor Herbert White , ·Sunday

Bible study, 7 30 p m
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN -

'Fair's FlOwer Show Open to Everyone

,,

ROCK SPRINGS- Worshtp
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
LONG BOTTQM CHRISTIAN
lOam . Church School9am , OF THE NAZARENE - - Mr Robert Wyatt, pastor ,
UMYF 6 30 p m
Sunday School , 9:30 a.m . Sunday School sup!., Ronald
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Morning Worshtp, 10 30 am . Osborne Bible School. 9 30

Carl Greenlees, Earl Starkey
and Mrs. Mendal JordBII of
Columbia Grange, attended
Meigs County Pomona Grange
at Rock Springs GrB!Ige Hall
on Friday evening. The
National Grange . sewing
c:ontellt was held and the entry
ol carolyn Greenless Fraley In
0&amp;111 C, sewing for someone
under 18, will represent Meigs
County at the state level
GrBIII and Randy Johnson
~ccompanled !heir adv1sor
Uohn Hamill and other
members of the Alexander
Future Fannel'!l of America to
Columbus where they attended
tbe.State FFA Convention on
Friday and Saturday
Pam, Marsha and Billy
Holcomb spent a weekend with
their uncle and famikly, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe McWhorter an~
family.
Mr. Herschel U.vejoy of
Fairborn visited his brother-m·
law, Mr. Eha McComas at the
VIctor Perry home.
Mrs. Hazel Burke has
returned home from a month's
stay with her son-In-law and
daul!hter, Mr. and Mrs. Rdger
Greer and children at Warner
Robins, Ga. She returned to
Columbus by plane and was
met by the J. W. Burkes.
Mn. Velma Carpenter, Mrs.
• Martha Mays and Mrs.
Druzllla Woodrum visited
Floyd King at the Jenkins
Memorial . Center
near
WeUston.
Chester Price 18 confined to
Riverside Methodist Hospital
where he Is undergomg tests.
Mrs. Price Is staying with her
sister, Mrs. Leon Hughes, in
Columbus to· 'be near the
hopeltal B!ld Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Stansbury (Loretta
' Price) and children spent
&amp;lnday In Columbus with her
111ren11.
Bel'tha Crippen, Columbia
Grange lecturer, and EUzabeth
Jordan, Meigs County Pomona
Grange Lecturer, attended the
District Grange Lecturers
11Mme Program contest at
. Marion Grange Hall Iii Hocldng
County near U.gan on
Saturday afternoon. Mrs
Jordan - one of the Judges
for the contelt.
Mr, and Mn. Emzle Davia of
l'lrknbq rillted with her
liroCilln, WIWam and Paul The planets Mercury, Pluto
and Venus have no moons

"'*·

prayer service 7 p.m. Wed
nesday.

Serv 1ce, 7' 30 p m., Youth
meetmg 6 30 p m: Evening
worship, 7 30 p m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev. Herbert
Grate, pastor Worshtp seSrvdlce,

9 3o a m , Watchtower studr.,
10 3o a m.. Tuesday. Btb e
study, 7 30 p.m , Thursday,
ministry school 7 30 p m .
servtce meeting 9 30 p.m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
thml In Chnstian Union Lawrence Manley, pastor, Mrs.
Russell Young, Sunday School
Tram1ng Union , 6 30 p.m . v1ces first and th1rd Sundays
Supt Sunday School 9 30 am , am , Church School 10 am
POMEROY- Worshtp, 10 30 even ing worshtp, 7 30 p m. following Sunday School.
Evening worshtp 7 30 Wed
nesday prayer meeting, 7 30 am , Church School 9 15 am. : Prayer meeting, Wednesday, Second and fourth Saturday

Racine
Social Events
•
By Mn. Fnncls Morris
The Bertha M. Sayre
Mllalonary Society met at the
First Bllptlal Church Tuesday
evening, May 8. Mary K, Yost,
president, presided at the
meeting and opened with •
meditation, "Clear shining

- MIDDLEPORT PEN· UNITED MINISTRY OF
TECOSTAL - Thtrd Ave , the MEIGS COUNTY, The United
Rev . Wtlliam Kn1llel , pastor. Presbytero~n Clwrdl, Dwight
Ronald pugan, Sunday school L. Zavllz. Pastor ·Direclor:
supt Classes for all ages, George W Hutton and Rev ..,
evening service, 7 30 p.m , L1nson Stebbins, A..' I. Pastor
Bible study. Wednesday,•7 30 Oireclors.
p 111 , 'I '
'"ervices 1 Fnday,
FIRST UNITE!) PRU·
1 30 p m.
BYTERIAN, Harrisonville,
FREEWILL &amp;APTIST - Sunday Church School, 9:30
Corner Ash and Plum , Mid· am, Mrs · Homer Lee, Sup! :
dleport Noel Herrman, pastor , Morning Worship 10.30 a.m.
Guy Priddy, Sunday School F I R S T
U 'N I T E D
Supt. Saturdav 'itvenang service, PRESBYTERIAN, Middleport,
7 p m Sunday School. 10 Sunday Church School, 9 30
am : Sunday eYenlng worship, a m , LeWis Sauer, Supt ,
7 p m.
Mornlna Worshlo, 10· 30 a.m.
FIRST BAPTIST of Mid
pI R S T
UNIT E D
dleport , corner 'ol Stxth and PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse,
Palmer 'Streets, Rev. Charles Morntng Worship, 9 a m ,
Simo~s.
pastor .
Fred Sunday Church School, 10 am
Hoff"lan, Sunday School Mrs. Sampson Hall, Supt.
Superintendent Sunday church
STIVERSVILLE
COM·
schoot for everyone 9 15 a m , MUNITY, Rev. Edsel Hart,
Morntng worshtp 10.15 am , pastor Sunday Schos&gt;l service
Evening services, 7 30 p m , 10 am. Prayer Meeting each
Wednesday prayer serv1ce, 7 30 Thursday 7'30 p m Sunday
p.m EJCtra youth activities on eventng service, 1 30 p m
Sunday, 5 p m , for all youth up
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
to sixth grade. 6.30 for junior - Pomeroy - Harrisonville
and senior high students
Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Middleport, 5th and Main Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a.m..
Raulln M,oyer, pastor. Michael morn1n.g worship and com
Gerlach, Sunday School supt munton 10 30 am : Sunday
Btble School, 9 30 a m , mor· eventng youth Chnsltan ennlng worship, 10 30 a m . deavor. 6•30: Worshtp services.
evening worship, 7.30 p m, Sunday, 7 30 p m. Wednesday

1-'l'lleDallySI!rttnel,Middleport.Pemeroy, 0 ., May 12, 1972

SABRE SAW

@ 1599
High speed fo r wood, low for
mttol

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.
The Department Sbt
'

of Building Since 1915

�' ... ,

.'

r

I

J

•

•

I

I

Rev

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY

w

S·T. PAUL LUTHERAN', Rev Arthur C Lund. pastor

H Pernn, pastor' Roy Sunday

Sc hool, 9. 15 am •

Mayer, Supt Church schoool. Charles Evans, Supl , worship
9 15 a .m.• worship, 10 24 am , serv1ce, 10 . 30 a m
Con

ybuth cho1r rehearsal Monday, f irmat,!on class, Tuesday, 4.15

6·30 p.m : Mrs Marv in Burt.
director ,
senior
choi r
rehearsal, 7 30 p m , Thursday,
Mrs Paul Nease, director
POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Union and Mulberry. Rev .
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor.
Sunday School 9 30 a.m ,
Raymond Walburn, supt
Morning worship 10 30 am
Evening service 7 30 P m Mid
week service, Wednesday, 7 30

to 5 30 p m.. Junior Con
flrmat1on class. Thursday, 6 30
to 7 45 P m
SEVEN-DAY ADVENTIST
Mulberry
Hetghls ,
Pomeroy Herbert Morgan ,
pastor
Sabbath schooL
Saturday, 2 p m. with c;hurch
service followtng at 3 19 P m
Open Bible discussion each
Thursday, 7 30 p m.
G R A HAM U NI T E D
METHODIST _ Preachmg 9 30

p.m.

am

GRACE EPISCOPAL Rev. Leroy, Davis, minister

first and second Sundays

of ea'ch month , third and fourth

Sundays each month, worshiP
Morning prayer and sermon, service at 7 30 p m. Wednesday
10 30la m Holy communion and1 evenings at 7 30 Prayer and

,·sermon, first Sundays, 10 30
am Church school. ktn ·
dergarlen through eighth
graPdeoM' 1EOR·300Ya mCHURCH OF
CHRIST- Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr •
pastor Bible School, 9 30 a.m •
worship, 10 30, adull worship
service and young peoples
meeting, both 7 30 p.m. Sundar,·
Wednesday, combined Bib e
study and prayer meeting, 7 30
Pm
THE SALVATION ARMY En•oy RayS Wining, otllcer tn
charge Sunday, 10 am. •
Holiness meeting, 10'30 a.m ..
Sunday School. Young People's
Legion. 7 p m , Thursday, 1 to 3

Bible Study
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP·
TIST _ 282 Mulberry Ave ,
Pomeroy.afflltated with S B C,
the Rev Fred Hill, pastor
Sunday School, 9 30 a m..
morning worship, 10 30 am ..
junior society, 6• 30 a m NYPS,
6 45 p m. Sunday evangelistic
meeltng , 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday, 1 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Corner Fourth and Matn ,
Middleport Rev Henry L Key,
Jr pastor Sunday School 9·30
a;;, Arnold Richards. supt ,
Mor~lng worship 10 30 a.m •
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES -

p.m., Ladles Home league , 7 Larry Carnahan pres1dmg
p.m .. Prep classes
m inister Sunday, Bible lecture,

SACRED HEART - Rev
Father Bernard Krajcovlc.
pastor
Phone
992-2825
Saturday evening Mass, 7.30
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10
am Confessions, $aturday, 7
7 30
p 0 P·mEROY FIRST BAPTIST
M
-Robert Kuhn, pastor: William
Watson. Sunday school
Sunday school, 9 30 o.m .. B F,
6 p m , Bible study, Wed
nesday, 7 p m , choir practice ,
Wednesday, 8 30 p m.

•\fF'·

Carpen~r

-N.ews, Event
ff11!.~

-·

Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe
Tackett, Mrs. Mary Collier and
Mrs. Ed Hensley of Flatwoods,
Ky., were guests of their
pll'llllla, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
CUlwell and their brother and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. WUllam

CUlwell.

Pm

CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE - Mtddleport.
Rev Audry Miller. pastor,
Floyd Carson, supt. Sunday
schooL 9 30 a m , Morn lng

11 am . and 7 30 P m

un ay.

am , Supday evening service,

pm
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHDDIS,T - Rev. Eugene
Gill, pastor William Bailey.
supt. Sunday School, 9.30 am :
Niornlng worship, 10 30 am ,

Evenmg worshtp, 7·30 p.m.
Wednesday, Chrlsltan Youth
Crusade, 6. 30 p.m.. Prayer
meeting 7:30 p m Thursday,
choir pracltce, 7 p.m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRI~T Danny Evans,

pastor Nonnan C Will, supt

Sunday School 9 30 a.m :
Worshtp servtce, 10;30 a.m.
Chmlian Endeavor Sunday

Wednesday

Chnstmas arranQement, may
mclude dried, preserved,
pamted. or glittered matenals,

evenmg prayer serv1ces, 7•30

evemngs, 8 p m serv1ces

after rain" Scripture Job 42·12
A reading "! heard the World
of Prayer" and Prayer. The
group sang "There Shall Be
lilowers of Blessing" with Mrs
!Babel Simpson, pianist After
a business sess10n, the Love
Gift offerings of the Circles
were dedicated by Grella
Simpson, L11llan Hayman, and
Sandra Boothe, followed by
installation and rededication of
officers' Mrs Erma Noms,
installing offlcer, used
"Beatitudes for Officers."
Refreshments were served lp
the basement social rooms by
the Esther Circle members.
For table decorations an Indian theme was used with
place mats and napkms Wllh
the map Imprinted
Mr. C H. Bryson IS a patient
m Veterans Hospital, Huntington. His address Is Mr.
Charles H Bryson, c-o V A.
Hospital Ward A-1, 1540 Spring
Valley Drive, Huntington, W.
Va. 25701.
Mrs. Ullian Jividen went to
Athens to vtslt her son, Dr and
Mrs. Charles Jividen. She was
accompanied by Mrs. AM Coe
and Mrs. Otis McClintock.
They visited with Mrs Essie
Wiltshire m the Kimes Nursmg
Home.
Mr. and Mrs Charles
Rausch of Westfield, N J.,
spent a few days w1th !hell' sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Rush Philson, Erich and
Sarah
Mrs. Violet Fisher of Akron
is a guest of her parents, Mr.
B!ld Mrs. Henry Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould of
Marietta spent a day with her
parents, Mr and Mrs Francrs
Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fleur·
bacher of Jackson were recent
guesta of Mrs. Addle Petrel
Mrs. Belle Theiss of Dorcas
spent Friday afternoon with
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
of Patriot spent Sunday w1th
his mother, Mrs. Frances
Roberts.
• 1
Miss -Helen Sauvage, Miss
&amp;ISle Biggs and Mr. Charley
Brown vislted over the week
end at Marysville, Ohio with
Margrette Terry Blld Mrs
Fred Vandale.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Jacobs
and children of Lockbourne Air
Base, Columbus visited her
grandparents, Mr. and Mr~.
Henry Roush .
Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew returned after
vacationing In Florida. They
visited Rev and Mrs. Samuel
Boyd at Ft. Lauderdale and
other places of Interest on both
East and West Coast.
,Mr.and Mrs. Sam Curtis and
daughter, Mrs . Sue Ann
Barkenhagen, of Lorain and
Mrs. Marcia Ann Wells of
Washington, C. H. spent the
week end with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Olrtls.
Other guesta on Saturday were
Mr. Jack Eslocker and two
daughters, Carol and JBIIice.

Rev. Robert Bumgarner

Eventng worsh1p, 7 30 p m ,

am , preaching 10.45 a.m •

HEATH - Worsh ip 10.30
am.ChurchSchool930am ,
UMYF 7 p m
R\ITLAND - Worsh ip 9 15
am , Church School 10 am ,

Wednesday, Sunday School
Supenntendenl, Paultne Me·
Cltntock, pastor . Rev. Morris
M Wolfe
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST -

Eventng services, 7 30 p m
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST - Cecil WISe,
Pastor Sunday School. 9 30
am , Morntng wo•shlp, 10.30

UMYF 7 p m

Charles Norris, pastor Sunday

a m , Young People's service,

SALEM CENTER- Worship
9 a.m , Church School 10 am ,
UMYF Thursday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev. Forrest R. Donley
ASBURY - Worship 11 a m ,
Church School 9:50a.m .. WSCS,
ls i Tuesday
FOREST RUN - Worship 9

School, 9 30 am , Morntng
worshtp, 10 45 am , Sunday
eventng worshtp, 7•30 p m ,
Wednesday eventng Btble
Sludy, 7 30 p.m
•
DANVILLE WESLEY AN ,
Rev
Lawrence Sullivan,
pastor Sunday School 9· 30
am , youth and jUnior youth

am , Church School 10 a .m , serv1ce, 6 45 p m • evenmg
WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 worshtp, 7 30 p m , prayer and
pm

MINERSVILLE - Worship
10 am : Church School 9 am •
WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7 30 p.m
SYRACUSE - Worship, 8
~ m , Church Schaal. 9L,a m ,
Prayer and Blole ,:;tucl,¥~
Wednesday, 7:30pm.
' SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. W. Dale McClurg
Aev Frank Cheesebrew
Rev Martha Ann Mattner

BETHANY

(Dorcas)

pra1se, Wednesday, 7 30 p m

SILVER RUN FREE BAP·
TJST - Rev Howard Ktmble
pastor Sunday schocl. 10 am,
Henry DaviS, supt eventng
servtce, 7 30 p m Prayer
meelffl!t, Thurdo'il 1' :1Ct"P m ~
CHEHER CHURCH OF
GOD- Rev James Satterftela,
pastor Sunday school. 9 30

There's a lot of sentimentality in the observance of
Mother's Day. Let's be practocal.
Only one thing really counts· MY CHILD'
There is no glory hi being a mother unless one has
learned how to prepare a child for Life. Nor is there any
pride m motherhood unless one has don~ her utm?SI to share
w1th her chtld the. great spintual hentage wh1ch IS her own
People love to complunent us: "Just like her mother!"
they say.
If mothers through the centunes had been satisfied w1th
that goal, our civthzation would have stagnated in the days
of the cave men.
The mark of a devoted mother is her desrre to make of
her child even a finer person than she or her husband has
become. And in this common atm she and her husband find
their staunchest ally in the Church.

a m , worship service, 11 a m ,
e~Jenlng serv1ce, 7. prayer
service and youth service,

Worship, 9 30 a.m.. Church Thursday, 7 p m
School 'lD 30 am
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
CARMEL - Worshtp, 11 - Homer Slerhens, pastor
am, 1st and 3rd Sundays,
Church School, 10 a.m .

Sunday Schoo, 9 30 a m ,
mornmg worshtp, 10 30 am ,

APPLE GROVE - Worshtp, Robert Bobo, Sunday school

7 30 p m , church school, 9 30 supt , Sunday evening serv1ce,
a m,
mtd week service, 1 30 Youth meeltng, Monday, 7

Sunday
ages, 9 30

second and four th Sundays
Mtd·week service, Wednesday,
8pm
GREAT BEND- Worshtp 11
am , 2nd and 4th Sundays,
Church School, 10 a.m
LETART FALLS - Worship
10 am, Church School 9 am
MORNING STAR- Worshtp
9 30 a.m , Church School 10 30
a m , Mtd -Week Service .
Wednesday, 8,.p m
MORSE CHAPEL- Worship
11 am, lsi and 3rd Sundays,
Church School, 10 am
PORTLAND- Worshtp 7 30
p m, Church S&lt;:hool 9 30 am
SUTTON - vlorshtp, 11 am
2nd and 4th Sundays . Church

School, classes for all
am, morn ing worshtp, 10·45
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p.m..
evangelistiC service Sunday,
1 30 p m Mtd week prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
MISSionary meettng, second
Wednesdav. 7 30om
UNITED FAITH NON·
DENOMINATIONAL - Rev
Robert Smith, pastor Sunday
school, 9 30 am , Bob Barber,
supt , worship service, 10 30
am , youth meeflng , 6 45
p m : church , 7 30 p.m..
prayer meeting, Wednesday
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN
'IN CHRIST-Eldon R Slake,
pastor Sunday SchooL 10 a.m.,

School 10 am

Winme Holsinger. supt

Mor

WESLEYAN (Racine) - n1ng sermon, 11 am , Evening
Wor sh1p, 11 a m , Church service Chnshan Endeavor,

Sct&gt;ool, 10 a m
UMYF for all churches of the
Southern Cluster, 7 30 P m
each Sunday at the Youth
Center (Oak Grove Road)
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Jacob Lehman
Rev. Slondley Brandum
JOPPA - Worship 10 am ,
Church School 9 am.; Prayer
Meeting, Wednesday, 8 ~ m.
LONG BOTTOM - Church
services, 9a m; Sunday School
9 4S am

Bible study every

Thursday, 7 30 p m
NORTH BETHEL - Worship
11 am , Church School 10 am
ALFRED - Sunday school,
9. 45 a.m. each Sunday ,
preaching at 11 'lf. m each
Sunday Prayer meeting, 7 45
p m Wednesday; WSCS, 8 p.m.
on th ird Tuesday each month.
RE E DSV I U E - Sunday
school, 9 30; preaching, 7 30
p m Sunday, prayer meeting,
7 30 p m. Tuesday: WSCS, 7:30
first Thursday each month.
SILVER RIDGE- Worsh ip,
10 am , Church School, 9 a m.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Worship 9 am., Church School
10 am
KENOCHURCHOFCHRIST,
Hpbart Newell, supt Service!
weekly, 9 30 am. on Sunday
Preaching llrsf and third
Sundays of month by Cllllor~
Smith, 9 30 a m ~
HOBSON CHRISTIAN
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll,
pasfor Sunday School, 9 30
am, Leonard Gilmore, first
elder , evening service, 7 ~D
P m
Wednesday prayer
meetJng, 7 30 p m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Ractne Route 2. The
Rev Cha•las Hand, pastor
Sunday ochool, 9: 4S a m.,
morning worship, 11 a..m.
Evening services, Thuesday
and Fnday, 7 30.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David
Jewell , pastor. Blblesludy, 9 30
&amp;:m: morning worship, 10:30,
evening "worship, 6 30 p.m
Wednesday Btble study, 7:30
pm

30 p m , Mrs l:yda Chevalter,
prestdent Song service and
sermon, 8 20 Mid Week prayer
meettng Wednesday, 7 30 p m
M&lt;s. Marie Holsinger, class
leader
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT
CHURCH Harrisonville
Road, Rev Roy Taylor, pasto,,
Henry Eblin, Sunday School
:.upt :.unday ~chool, 9:30am.:
eventng worship, 7 30 p m.
Prayer and praise service,
7

Sunday
Lamentations
3.22-36
Monday

Tuesday

John
1:1-/4

John

3:1-6
Wednesday Thursday
John

John

5.17-31
Friday
Romani
2.1-11

17:1-10
Saturday
Galatians
3:7-14

I. Giif Scout
I Diary
«

Youth

ALLAndWEAlHER
ROOFING
Construction Co.

~(

, •11 M•df:llePQth

HEINER'S BAKERY

M&amp;RFOODLINER

Bakers Of Good Bread
Huntington, W. Va.

Middleport, Ohio
'

-

Buckley , prestden
Prayer
meehng, Wednesday , 7 30 p m

Board meeting first Monday

'

Sales · Allis Chalmers - Service
Farm lndustnal· Lawn · Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

Middleport. Ohio

I

OOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Sunday school. 9·30
am, V H. Braley; supl '
communion and devotions
10 30 am . Regular board'
meeltng 7 30, thi rd Salurda y
each month
THE RUTLAND COM
MUNITY CHURCH - Rev
Richard Dubbeld, pastor
School, 9· 30 am ., Worshl p
service, 11 a m , Wednesda y
prayer meeting, 7: 30 p m
Sunday night worship, 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH 0 F
THE NAZARENE - Rev
Ll oyd D Grimm, Jr, pastor
Sunday School, 9 30 a m
Morning worship, 10 30 am '

'

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

MARK VSTORE

each month , 7:30pm

, )ii'''t

'

.

morntngs
Alfred Wolfe,
layleader, Chmltan Endeavor,
1 30 p m
Sundar Roger

RACINE FOOD MARKB'

Athens Road
Pomeroy
The Store with A Heart
A Family That Worships Together , Ractne
•949-3342
Stays Together
II

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, 0.

LYONS MARKET

servtce 7 30 p m.

Chester, Ohio

.
'

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

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

.

.
GAUL'S TRAILER SALES

.

:
Electric Motor Repair
810 W. Main
992-575()

.

SADIE'S MARKET

NEW YORK CI.OlHING HOUSE

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE'

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
;

•

Racine, Ohio

"'

.'

Furniture and Appliances
Phone 985-330~
Chester, Q,

.

- Attend. the Church
.· of Your Choice

-

. BEN FRANKUN SIORE

.

POrneruy

'

\

11!.., 992-349b

·:

. FAIRVIEW BIBLE OfURat
"We Sponsor Jesus"
.
.
Rev. Stan Cf alg, Pasto'
Ph. 949·3272
.. ,: •.

Arbor Day. Providing flower
arrangemenls for the Pomeroy
Alumm Association ba~quet
was discussed.
A dessert course was served
to members and 8\lests at the
conclusion of the meeting.

Recogmtion of the oldest
mother, Mrs. Juha Patterson,
and the youngest mother, Mrs
Max Eichinger, was a feature
of the annual mother daughter banquet of the
American Lutheran Church
Women of St. Paul Lutheran
Church
Mrs Patterson and Mrs
Eichinger were presented
corsages Spec1ai guests for ll)e
banquet were women of the
Meigs County Infirmary
Pastor Arthur 1Lund gave the

VISITORS HERE
Mr and Mrs. John Sm1th of
Medma, Mr. and Mrs Nathan
Rarman, Jr. of. Erle, ,Pa. and
Mr and Mrs. Charles Bmg til
Cleveland were recent visitors
of Mr and Mrs. Vmcent Dabo,
Pomeroy, and Mrs J. K
Sm1th, Middleport A former
teacher 1n the Cleveland
schools, Mr Bmg has retired
and the family plans to move to
St Petersburg, Fla m June
ATIENDS SESSION
Hazel McKelvey, fiscal officer of the Gallia-Me1gs C.A.P
Office, spent the past week m
Chicago, Ill., where she at.
tended a trammg workshop for
advanced accountants of
O.E.O.
Agencies
The
workshop was conducted by
Alexander Grant and Co.,
certified public accounts,
under contract with the Region
V Office · of Economic Opportunity.

THIRD SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs George Korn,
Jr., 103 Wright St, Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of
their third son, Bracy Adam,
on May 4 at the Holzer Medical
Center. Mr. and Mrs. Korn
have sons, ' Brei, five and
Bryan, three. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs. Ruth
Thomas of cary' 111. and the
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. George Korn 1 Sr.,
Pomeroy. Ella Quillen,
'.Syracuse, Is a maternal greatgrandmother.

VISIT PARENTS
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Cec1J H1ll and daughters of
Uma vislted last Friday with
Mrs. l;lill's parente, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Clark, Racine. On
Saturday the Hill family accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.
Clark, traveled to New
Lexington to attend the wed·
ding of the Clarks' grandson,
· Johnny O'Brien, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernafll O'Brien.

some
fromIn making
cloth and
other · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
procedure
the dolls,

-

Church and Office Supplles·ulfts
992-2641 1
Ml_ddleport

WANT AD

·-

Meats and Groceries
"
Syracuse •
992·3986
.

'

VIUAGE CUT RATE
and
'
VIUAGE FLOWER SHOP

Mrs. Pauline Hester of New
Haven, W. Va. displayed her
collecUon of decorated ej!gs
and bandmade character dolls
at a recent open meeting of the
Pomeroy Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs. Ed Baer.
Mrs. Hester ex\&gt;lained the

.

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

-

Garden Club

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE:

St . Rt. 7
Chester, Ohio
Chaos!! the Church of your Choice

Bulova Watches-Sal~s &amp; Service
186 N, Second
~ddleport
.
..

Collection Shown

296 W. Second Ph. 992-3863 Pomeroy

and

F. J. WAlLACE, JEwELfR

.

lHE AlHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp;LOAN 00.

Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

-

'

Meig s County Branch

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

..

•
.

lHE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

..

'

..GAUL'S MARKET

Member of the Big 3
General Merchandtse
Tuppers Plains
667-3280

Young people's serv1ce, 6 45'
p m , Evangelist i c services
7 30 p m Wednesday evening'

MASON COUNTY
THE HILAND CHAPEL
George Casto, pastor Sunda y'
School, 9 30; eventng worsht p,
7 30 Thursday evening prayer
servtce, 7:30pm
'
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sis., Stan
Cratg, pastor. Sunday schoo I,
9·45 a.m.: worship service, 11
am.; training union, 6 30 p.m
Thursday , 7.30 p.m
evenrng worship service, 7 30
COMMUNITY CHURCH, p.m Mid week prayer servlce,
Dexter - Worship services Wednesdav. 7:30p .m
Saturday and Sunday, 7 30
FAIRVIE" 0 ,.,LL CHURC H
Q m.
celart Route 1, the Rev. Sfa n
HEM L 0 C K
G R 0 v E &lt;:ra tg, pastor. Sunday schoo I,
CHRISTIAN- David :.rautter, 9 30 a.m , prayer and - Bibl e
pastor: Stanford Stockton, supt. study1 7 30 p.m Cottage praye
Morntng worship, 9 30 am: serv 1ce, Tuesday, 10 a.m r:
~hurch school, 10· 30 a.m , worshtp service, Friday, 7:30
young peoples meeting., 6 30 ' p m
·
pm., evening worship, 7·30 ·MASON
CHURCH
0
Btble.,Vwdy, Wednesday, 7 30 CHRIST- Loren T Stephen s,F
P m.
minister Worshtp. 10 am
MT. UNION BAPTIST - Blblestody, 11: 15a.m .. evenln
Rev. C'lliJI Cox, pastor. Sunday worship, 7.30 p m Mid-wee
school ~tlJ)t., Joe Sayre Sunday service, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m~
schooL 9:45 am, Sunday MASON .ASSEMBLY 0
evening worship, 7•30 Wed· GOD- Second Sf., Mason, WF
nesday prayer and Bible study, Va. Chester :rennant, pasto r.
7 30 pm
~ --Sunday school, 10 am, mo
TUPPERS
PLAINS nlng worship, 11 a m r-:
CHRISTIAN CHURCH - evangeiiSIJc service. 7 30 p m.
Eugene Underwood, pastor: Bible study and prayer servlce,
Howard Caldwell, Jr, Sundar. Wednesday, 7.30 p m Phon e
School Supt .. Sunday Schoo , 773 5133
930 a. m. : Morntng sermon, HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
10 30 a m , Sunday evening CHRIST '" Chrlsltan Union
servlce, 1 o m
· Rev O'Dell Manley, pastar.
LETART FALLS UNITED Sunday school, 9·30a m., Rog er
BRETHREN - Rev Robert Manley, sup! ; evening service
Shook, pastor, Herschel Norris, 7 30 Wednesday even Ing'
supt Sunday school, 9.30 am : prayer meetmg, 7:30 p.m
morning sermon, 10:30 am.; Sunday evening youth servl
evening sermon, 7:30 alter 6 45 with Macy Lou Cartece
r,
natlng each Sunday Prayer leader No Tuesday service. '
service, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m - - - - - - - - - - - - - Prayer meeflng, 7 30 p m. 1
I
alternating Sundays.
1
You 'II
I
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF 1
I
tract It durn
GOD OF PROPHECY, G. P 1
I
Smith, pastor. Sunday School. I
much faster
I
10 am., Arthur Henson, Sup!:
I
Morntng Worship 11 am., I1
wl th a
Youn? Peoples service, 7 p.m •
•
Eventng "rvlce, 7 30 p.m., I
JII
WednescU!y Mid Week Prayer 1·-------------

Phone 992-3284

I'
I

Craft projects were completed and a bicycle hike was
planned durmg the Tuesday nil!hl meetmg of Racine Troop 137
held at the American Legion hall.
It was noted that 10 girls will be attending day camp to be
held the week of June 5at Kiashuta near Chester. Bottle caps are
being collected by the girls. A committee meeting was set for
t Maf' 18 at tJill home of Mrs. Carl M~rrls with the next troop
meeting to be held May 23 at the boll park.
During the sununer months, meetings will be held every
other Tuesday. Mrs. HarrlllOn Smith and Mrs MorriS served
refreshments to Lori Knighting, Unda Fisher, Cheryl Teaford,
cathy Cross, Cindy Warden, Sonya Hill, carol Morris, Unda
• Norris, Dorma Rtce, Teresa R1ce, Peggy Neigler, Becky Crow,
feresa Ervm, and Permy Smith.
,
SAUSBURY BROWNIES Z20
Plans for a fly-up ceremony to he held later thiS month were
dlscussed when the Salisbury Brownies met Thursday night at
the school.
Mrs. Walter Morris, leader, Issued an appeal for a leader,
ooting that the girls leavmg Brownies and moving lntp the Junior
scout program are without a leader. Any parent mterested m
assisting with a juruor troop IS asked to contact Mrs. Morris.
Six of the girls wtU be attending day camp at Kiashuta. A
Mother's Day project was completed durmg !be meeting
MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP.
Scouts of Troop 39 entertained Monday with a party for their
mothers m observance of Mother's Day. Program consisted of
the flag ceremony, several songs, a skit about Mother's Day and
an original poem entitled "Mother".
The girls served a decorated cake inscribed "Welcome
Mothers of Troop 39" and ptinch. A gift was presented to Mrs.
Roscoe Wise, troop lesder.
Guests at the party were Mrs Richard Bailey, Mrs Bob
Byer, Mary Teresa Byer, Mrs. William Demookey, Mrs. Robert
Pooler, Mrs. Harold Filch, Mrs Edward Kitchen and J. R., Mrs.
John Krawsczyn, Mrs. Fred Lewis B!ld David, Mrs. Fr~nk
Martin B!ld Frankie, Mrs. Burdell McKinney, Mrs. Bobby Payne
and Angela, Mrs. William SWisher, Mrs. Jack Welsh.
Hosting the party were carin Bailey, Patty Boyles, Julie
Byers, Linda Demookey, Sarah Diddle, Ann Fitch, Trina Gibbs,
Judy Gilkey, Julie Kitchen, Lori Ki04lll, Marty Krawsczyn,
Valerie Lawis, Angela Martin, Margo Martin, Tanuny Me·
Daniel, Jo McKinney, JomMurray, Kim Payne, Velvet Swisher,
Marianne Welsh, Jennifer Wise, and Debbte and Terri Zirkle.

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

D. B A. Anthony Plurnblng and
t• Heatin_g_ h• .~. ,, •
Q40 Lineal~ SW 992-2550 Middleport

sermon 7 30 p.m , alternallnQ
each Sunday Class meehng 11
am
alternating
~un. .day

preach1ng service, 2 p m

Jun lors, I ArtlsliG DtviSton)

Class 9,
Puppy,"
contammg
Juntors.

" Havmg a Ne:w
an arrangement
an ani mal flgunne
(horticulture) Class

more labeled), Class 27, cacti
and or succulents. Class 28,
house plants, and Class 29,
gourds

Educaltonal,

Class

30,

evergreen spec1mens, ftve or
more. labeled, and, Class 31,
w1ld flowers or plants, ltve, ftve
or more labeled

SHOW NO. 2
In the second show, Aug 18,
wh1ch

features

the

same

Juntors
(artrstic
arrangements}
Class
9.
"Believing In Santa Claus," an
arrangement m a to-y
Jun1ors (horttculture) Class
10, dahlias, one large or three
porn pons, Class 11, asters.
three , and Class 12. zlnntas,

tree or shrub
Educational,
Class 30,
garden1ng
book s and or
maga zines ,
Class
31.
spec1mens, nat1ve tree and-or
nat1 ve shrubs. f1ve or more

labeled

handcrafted or homemade
containers (three or more),
and Class 14, collage, must
contam some plant matenal
Horticulture, Class 15, rose.

one stem. zi nnia. large, three
of one color, z1nn1a, fantasy ,
thre of one color, Ctass 19,
gladtolus, exhibitor my enter
one m each color class. one set
of ribbons to the class. Class

Eventng," usmg flowers m coot
colors, Class 3, "Havmg •

Spare When You Get A Flat,&lt;'

usmg two con tamers , Class -4,
"Counting Your Blessmgs," a
Thanksg1vrng arrangement
usmg frUits and -or vegetables.
Class 5, " Keepmg Busy ,"
showmg mot1on , Class 6,

· Going to Church With the
Fam1lr,," w1th a rellgtous aura,

sutlab e for the home, Class 7,
20, gladtolus, colleclton of "Reca llmg th e Good Old
three, Class 21, martgold, DaYs." Including weathered or
farge, th ree of one color , Class

one , Class 24, dahlia, one,

large, Class 25, dahlta, pom

pan , three of one color , and

dnft wood and some dned
matertals, may or may not
1nclude fresh matenals
In vitational,
Class
8,
"Traveling to Far Places, "
your favortte arrM~~mf!lnt

The Invitational classes In
both shows are open to out of.
county parttctpants, a mem-

bershtp ticket being the only
by all per50f'ls.
lr Is not requtred for juniors

fee for entry

under 12 however.

three
Spectal DISplay, Class 13,
d1sh gardens , Class 14, p1cture
made on weathered or drift

wood, may be In two dimension

DO-IT-YOURSELF
.

or three dimension

theme, " Happiness Is," the
Horftculture, Class, 15, rose,
followmg classes are listed hybrid tea, one: Class 16, tose,
10, Zinnias, three large or
Artisfte
Arrangements, fiorlbunds, one stem, Class 17,
fantasy, Class 11 , mangold , Class 1, " Belonging to a
z1nnia, la rge. three of one
Class 12, asters
Garden Club," Jnterpret1ve , color Class 18, z1nnia, fantasy,
Spectal Display , Class 13, Class 2, Relaxtng In the three of one color, Class 19,

•

materials and some from dried
apples, and showed a variety of
deccrated eggs.
Mrs. L. C. Karr presided at
the meeting which opened wtth
devoU0111 by Mrs. Roy Betzlng,
co-hO&amp;tess.
Betzlng read
IICiipture, ha~ a meditation
and prayer. A communicaUon
wu read from the Rutland
Glrden Club Inviting members
to atlend an open meeting later
thla month. Allo read wu a
thank you nole from the
Pomeroy National Bank
thanking the club fat an
arrangement 1n a~~aervance or

Mts.

'

SAVINGS

gladiolus, exh1bltor may enter
one In each color c lass

One set of ribbons and

'

premtums to the class, red,
ptnk, whtte, ye llow, blue,
purple, orange, salmon. green,

other

Class 20. gladiOlus, collection

All PURPOSE

of three. Class 21. cockscomb,
plume, one, Class 22, cocks
comb, crested, one, Clas$ 23,
dahlia, larg e, one; Class 24,
dahi1as, pom-pon, three of one
color . Class 25, asters. one

STEEL SHELVING
4 SHELF UNIT WITH
t2 INCH SHELVES
Adjustable 3 t" to 60" high
REG. 9.99

Class 26, marigolds, large,
three of one color
~
SpeCimen Collection, (f1ve or

more labeled ), Class 27,

AfriCan V1olets , Class 28,
colored corn, Class 29, native

prayer.
Fotlowmg the dmner, Mrs
Lillian Moore presented the
program wh1ch opened w1th
"Mother" and "Look What
They've Done to My Song, Ma"
by the primary class choir
accompamed by Ed1e Mees
Mrs. Rachel Dowme read
uwanted, Chnstian Mothers,"
and Mrs. Jenmfer Anderson
presented "Every Day IS
Mother's Day " Readmgs by
Mrs Jeanne Braun were en.
titled "An Adored Mother,"
and "AI Wtt's End."
Knsten Anderson read
"What IS a Grandmother?"
and there was a duet "In the
Garden" by Mrs Downie and
Mrs Betty Will A pa1r of
slippers was presented to each
of the women of the Infirmary
by Mrs. Veda DaviS
Mrs
DaVIs remmded
members of the requ1red
health card for food handling
and also displayed the
American Cancer Society
certificate of merit presented
to the A.LCW

Inspection Set

hall
Others wmmng were Mrs
Rose Carr of Alfred Grange,
second m the stste contest, and
Mrs. Fraley of Columbia, first
in children's clothmg.
Judges were Mrs. Jennifer
Sheets, Me1gs extensiOn agent,
home economics, and Mrs
Robert Bumgarner, Mid·
dieport, a sewmg mstructor
The degree of Pomona was
presented m full form for two
candidates, and Deputy Master
V1rg1l Alluns conducted the
annual mspecholl . Norman
W11l, master, presided at the
meetmg hosted by Star
Grange. Reports were g1ven by
all 10 granges
Grangers were remmded
that entnes in the Metgs
County Fa1r are to be listed
w1th Atkins before July I
The Ohio State Grange
Centenmal was the theme of

-.. /

the program presented by Mrs .
Elizabeth Jordan. Members
sang the grange song. Mrs.
Neva Nicholson read "Our
Grange," Mrs Alice Stockton
led m a diSCUSSIOn on the topic
"Grange Br1dges the Gap,"
and the foundmg of the order
was presented by Norman W1ll,
Stanford Stockton, Charles
Carr, Carl Greenlee, Fred
Goeglem, George Genhetmer,
and Earl Starkey
Roll call for those over 50
was a remembrance of an
outstandmg event. Humorous
readmgs were g1ven by Mrs.
Avanell Holliday, and Mrs.
Jordan concluded the program
w1th a readmg "Steppmg
Stones to Grange Success."
It was noted that Athens
County w11l make a visitation
at the July meeting. Refresh·
ments were served by the host
un1t

~O~LA ..®.

11

That You tan Enjoy All Summer••
Mom Would LoN Them •

"'"

Serving 1he Same Quality ol Plan!l· for lilt Last 20 Years.

SHU' FRS MARKET
W.MAIN

POMIROY

I'

48 INCH WORK LIGHT
AMERICAN FtUORfSCEHT

REGULAR 19.95
All wh1 te he ked enamel Sl• foo13 ronduc:·
tm SJ cor d or.d pull switch (tess bulb s)

13BB

HOOKS FOR
WORKSHOP

~
~~G
, ,,~

~~~

ltn!t:::

'~:: 1~n8
u~ e

REG 379 lA

on 1/8 board (len

Use fo r cu lt1 ng plywood plastic 1

'"'"'

+

Quasa~

6 PC. SABRE SAW

BLADE SET

Mom Would love
One - - -

REG.

SALE PRICE

2.49

47~

rn..
MAS D ~Ilf

. ·· ~ ··

Conloms 6 precision ground hi·
spud sleet blodu for mott
sabre sow-s

Add ullllty Ia empty wa lls

1/4" DRILL

3/8" VARIABLE

C/H
C/H

SPEED DRILL

7000

1

16" Portable TV (diagonally measured) with
lnsta-Matic tuning.
,

1999

Here's a real entertainer. A " Bright Tube" picture (145

square Inches)

wit~

mini-circuit servlceabtllty, lnsfa

Mafic tuning ease and sound and picture within moments

of turning on the set Detachable color highlight shlel~
tncluded Delu~e Walnut grain finish cabinet of
polystyrene. 21'/t" W, 16" H, 18" D. Model WP4BlHW

General purpose dr ill
for lost accurate lob

lo~k lrlgg.r ol spud suit.d Ia
lhelob 1/6 HP

I /7 HP,

...

Blll&lt;k &amp; Deoior /DeW qll
C/ H

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
I

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

It Maloos A Difference Where You Save!

Lorge 10 blode cuts full3' deep•
Blode broke for softly Worp ,.,
1111anl tabl e 11 26" x 32 '. 2 HP•

C/H

MEIGS BRANCH
THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 w. Sean! St

e

7-1 /4" CIRCULAR SAW

Uti F. 1- Jr., Manaier
Phone 992·3863

PASSBOOK SAVINGS
5 per cenl per year paid on Regular
Passbook Savings. No Minimum.
Intern! from dale~ d~~~~ Iodate af
withdrawal. Interest compounded
quarterly. lnteresl paid as long as an
open account Is matnl~lned.

1999

Hos burn oul prolected 1 HP

molar

B~~tonlu . C:Om~llltlon

Also Artillcill Flower• 1nd m1ny Vnltllts ot V...t1blt
Pllnll.

protetlor'

For May 18th
Plans for a grand inspection
of Harnsonv1lle Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star,
were made Tuesday mght.
The Inspection has been set
lor May 18 at 8 p m. at the
Hamsonv11le Elementary
School. It will be preceded by a
6·30 dinner and reservations
are to be sent to Mrs. Avanell
George, Larkins St:, Rutland,
or telephoned to 742-5284. The
mspecting ollicer will be
Wroena Dusthelmer, associate
grand matron of the Grand
Chapter of Ohio. Members are
requested to take homemade
cookies and sandwiches for the
soc1al hour.
Past matrons and past
patrons were honored with
Mrs. Lois Pauley, wort~
matron, readmg a poem entitled "Gentle Folk."

Plo111c floor

baked • enamel flnhh

For

~~~::: Moriact1ds • PI Mitt. Dw1rf Dlthll11 • MulliS •
• Snap Drill·

R,bbed potts for odded slrength Elllro
heavy \IIOuge stee l '" neutral gray

Keep workshop !ools neal nand

fLOWERS

\

I

honors m the nat10nal and slate
sewmg contests JUdged at the
recent meeting of Pomona
Grange at the Rock Springs

Mothers Recognized

»

By Charlene Hoeflich

Tuesday. 7 30 p m Ernest

Meeltng Wednesday, 1 30 p m,
Ernest Deeter, leader
MT. HERMON UNITED
BRETHREN CHURCH IN
CHRIST- Rev Robert Shook,
pastor Sunday School, ~ 30
am, Roy Pooler, supt, Alfred
Wolle, ass! supt, morning
worshtp, 11 a m , evening

Mrs Betty Conkle of the
Rock Sprmgs Grange and Mrs
Margaret Hanmng oT Hemlock
Grove shared first place

w-:-:·:.:·:·:·=·.....·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·=·· •:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:-;-: =~·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·= :-::::~:~·::::.·:::wt'~

worshtp 7· 30 Prayer meeting,

RUTLAND
'
Wednesday, 8 p.m
p.m. Mtd week servtce, Wed
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
EAST LETART - Worship, nesday, 1 30 p m
- Rev Samuel Jackson
lOam,ltrslandthlrdSundays,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF pastor SundaySchool,lOam. '
9 am, second and fourth THE NAZARENE - Rev. M C Mrs' Gertrude Butler. supt '
Sundays, church school, 9 am , Lanmore, pastor. Bob Moore, Prayer Serv1ce, l 30 p m
first and third Sundays, lOam , Sunday School Supt

REEDSVIIJE - Mr. B!ld Mrs. Leonard Barber of
Reedsville are announcing plans for the open church weddmg
of their daughter, Ruby Delor1s, to Mr. Darnel Guy Drake,
110n of Mr. and Ml'll. Melvm Drake, Racme. The wedding will
he an event of Sunday at 1 30 p.m. at the United Brethren
Church on Eden Ridge.
The bride-elect1s a 1971 graduate of Eastern H1gh School
and a former employe of Heck's at Belpre. Mr. Drake, a 1968
graduate of Southern High School, has served four years m
the armed forces

45 p m , EvangeliStic servtce,
7 30 p m Prayer meeting,
k rlpturet selecttd b"!' the .-.merlcan Bible Sorlm
Copyr!Sfit 1•.m l&lt;e1lter Adwenlilog Serv1ce Inc S1r1tbura. VlrsJnl•
Thursday, 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL
MISSION - Bald Knobs. Rev.
L. R Gluesencamp, pastor
With the hope 1t will. in some measure, foster and help sustain that whi.ch is
Roger Wtlfred, Sr, Sunday
School Supl Sunday School, good In famtly and community life, this feature is sponsored by the bustness
9 30 a m , Sunday eventng , firms and organizations whose .(lames appear below.
leader

nam " (mterprehve)
lnv•tat1onal, Class 8, " Mees
tn the Morning, " your favorite
arrangement

Class 26, asters, three
Spec1men collections (five or

Honor Shared in Sewing Conte:sts

6

Deeter, class

altar, no figurines) , and Class
7, "Getting Home from Vtet

Identical, but may beL Class 4, 22, cockscomb, plume. one.
"The Joy of Chmtmas" lany Class 23. cockscomb. crested,

Sunday even1ng

7 30 p m

Arllsltc

1n warm colors, Class 3,
"Being Half of a Fatr" {In two
contal'ners, not necessari ly

10 30 am
pm
worship 10 30 a m , JUnior
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST soc1ety, 6 30 p m., NYPS, 6 45 Cl!RIST - Cltfford Smith , Greal Bend , Charles Norm,
pm
Sunday evangelis t ic pastor, Leroy Bartrum. Sunday pastor Worship service, 9 30
meet1ng. 7 30 p m Prayer School superintendent Sunday am , Sunday School , 10·30a.m
mee hng Wednesday, 7 30 p m School, 9 30 a m.. Morning
CARLETON CHURCH church, 10 30 a m , Sunday Ktngsbury Road. Sunday
MEIG$
evenmg serv tce, 7 30 P m School, 9 30 am, Ralph Carl,
COOPERATIVE
Wednesday eventng servtce, 8 supt Worshtp service, 10 30
PARISH
p m
am. and 7 30 p m alternately
THE UNITED
ANTIQUHY bAPTIST Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Freeland Noms, pastor 7 30 p m Rev Jay Sltles,
Robert R. Card
Sunda~ school , 10 am., church pastor
R
Rev. Stanten Smtih
servtce. 7 p m Wednesday
0 L D
D E X T E
CHESTER - Worsh ip 9 15 Bible study, 7 p.m
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
am , ~hu r c h School 10 am.
BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE, - Rev Willard Dutcher,
ENTERPRISE- Worship, 9 Minersville, J A McWaters, pastor Mrs Worley FranciS,
a m , Church School, 10 am pastor Svnttay School, 10 a m , Sunday School Sup! Sunday
FLATWOODS- Worshtp, 11 mornmg worship, 11 a.m : School, 9 45 am. Church Ser

UMYF 6•30 p m.

I.

or baubles obviously for
Chnstmas), Class S, " Rockmg
a New Baby ", (show.ng
mot•on}; Class 6, " l1v1ng By
Fa1lh". {suitable lor a church

hybrtd, one, rose. llorlbunds,

Class 2, "Knowing the Warmth
of Friendship," uSing flowers

School Director Sunday School,
9 30 am , Morning worship,

Combs. pastor Sunday school, service 7 p.m

SHOW NO.1

Arrangements, Class 1, "Going
to the Fair," mterpret1ve;

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

10 30 a.m ,

church serv1ces ,

Show

evemng.

P1ne Grove. the Rev

9 30 a.m..

An all tmportanl part of thiS
year's Me1gs County Fall' Aug.
10.19, will be the flower show,
"Happmess Is," whtch IS open
to all garden ciubK in the
ccun ty and to the general
pubhc. •
In years past there has been
a notable marked increase m
Interest m this diviSion of the
fa1r. · Mrs. Margaret Ella
l.ew1s, supermtendent, IS
hopeful of surpassing even last
year's enlr1es.
There wtll be two shows, one
Aug. 16 and another Aug. 18,
w1th oral judgmg both days at I
p.m. There are 31 classes for
exhibiting tn both shows.

1 30 p m Wednesday service, 8

evenmg prayer meeting and
Arthur

Cbarlene Hoejbcb

t

Sunday ' School. 9 30 am.
Richard l)arton, supl. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday. 7·30 p.m
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Clttlord Smith,
minister Sunday School 9 30
a m . mornmg church 10 30

Rac1ne Road. Ralph Johnson,
pastor Herbert White , ·Sunday

Bible study, 7 30 p m
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN -

'Fair's FlOwer Show Open to Everyone

,,

ROCK SPRINGS- Worshtp
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
LONG BOTTQM CHRISTIAN
lOam . Church School9am , OF THE NAZARENE - - Mr Robert Wyatt, pastor ,
UMYF 6 30 p m
Sunday School , 9:30 a.m . Sunday School sup!., Ronald
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Morning Worshtp, 10 30 am . Osborne Bible School. 9 30

Carl Greenlees, Earl Starkey
and Mrs. Mendal JordBII of
Columbia Grange, attended
Meigs County Pomona Grange
at Rock Springs GrB!Ige Hall
on Friday evening. The
National Grange . sewing
c:ontellt was held and the entry
ol carolyn Greenless Fraley In
0&amp;111 C, sewing for someone
under 18, will represent Meigs
County at the state level
GrBIII and Randy Johnson
~ccompanled !heir adv1sor
Uohn Hamill and other
members of the Alexander
Future Fannel'!l of America to
Columbus where they attended
tbe.State FFA Convention on
Friday and Saturday
Pam, Marsha and Billy
Holcomb spent a weekend with
their uncle and famikly, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe McWhorter an~
family.
Mr. Herschel U.vejoy of
Fairborn visited his brother-m·
law, Mr. Eha McComas at the
VIctor Perry home.
Mrs. Hazel Burke has
returned home from a month's
stay with her son-In-law and
daul!hter, Mr. and Mrs. Rdger
Greer and children at Warner
Robins, Ga. She returned to
Columbus by plane and was
met by the J. W. Burkes.
Mn. Velma Carpenter, Mrs.
• Martha Mays and Mrs.
Druzllla Woodrum visited
Floyd King at the Jenkins
Memorial . Center
near
WeUston.
Chester Price 18 confined to
Riverside Methodist Hospital
where he Is undergomg tests.
Mrs. Price Is staying with her
sister, Mrs. Leon Hughes, in
Columbus to· 'be near the
hopeltal B!ld Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Stansbury (Loretta
' Price) and children spent
&amp;lnday In Columbus with her
111ren11.
Bel'tha Crippen, Columbia
Grange lecturer, and EUzabeth
Jordan, Meigs County Pomona
Grange Lecturer, attended the
District Grange Lecturers
11Mme Program contest at
. Marion Grange Hall Iii Hocldng
County near U.gan on
Saturday afternoon. Mrs
Jordan - one of the Judges
for the contelt.
Mr, and Mn. Emzle Davia of
l'lrknbq rillted with her
liroCilln, WIWam and Paul The planets Mercury, Pluto
and Venus have no moons

"'*·

prayer service 7 p.m. Wed
nesday.

Serv 1ce, 7' 30 p m., Youth
meetmg 6 30 p m: Evening
worship, 7 30 p m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev. Herbert
Grate, pastor Worshtp seSrvdlce,

9 3o a m , Watchtower studr.,
10 3o a m.. Tuesday. Btb e
study, 7 30 p.m , Thursday,
ministry school 7 30 p m .
servtce meeting 9 30 p.m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
thml In Chnstian Union Lawrence Manley, pastor, Mrs.
Russell Young, Sunday School
Tram1ng Union , 6 30 p.m . v1ces first and th1rd Sundays
Supt Sunday School 9 30 am , am , Church School 10 am
POMEROY- Worshtp, 10 30 even ing worshtp, 7 30 p m. following Sunday School.
Evening worshtp 7 30 Wed
nesday prayer meeting, 7 30 am , Church School 9 15 am. : Prayer meeting, Wednesday, Second and fourth Saturday

Racine
Social Events
•
By Mn. Fnncls Morris
The Bertha M. Sayre
Mllalonary Society met at the
First Bllptlal Church Tuesday
evening, May 8. Mary K, Yost,
president, presided at the
meeting and opened with •
meditation, "Clear shining

- MIDDLEPORT PEN· UNITED MINISTRY OF
TECOSTAL - Thtrd Ave , the MEIGS COUNTY, The United
Rev . Wtlliam Kn1llel , pastor. Presbytero~n Clwrdl, Dwight
Ronald pugan, Sunday school L. Zavllz. Pastor ·Direclor:
supt Classes for all ages, George W Hutton and Rev ..,
evening service, 7 30 p.m , L1nson Stebbins, A..' I. Pastor
Bible study. Wednesday,•7 30 Oireclors.
p 111 , 'I '
'"ervices 1 Fnday,
FIRST UNITE!) PRU·
1 30 p m.
BYTERIAN, Harrisonville,
FREEWILL &amp;APTIST - Sunday Church School, 9:30
Corner Ash and Plum , Mid· am, Mrs · Homer Lee, Sup! :
dleport Noel Herrman, pastor , Morning Worship 10.30 a.m.
Guy Priddy, Sunday School F I R S T
U 'N I T E D
Supt. Saturdav 'itvenang service, PRESBYTERIAN, Middleport,
7 p m Sunday School. 10 Sunday Church School, 9 30
am : Sunday eYenlng worship, a m , LeWis Sauer, Supt ,
7 p m.
Mornlna Worshlo, 10· 30 a.m.
FIRST BAPTIST of Mid
pI R S T
UNIT E D
dleport , corner 'ol Stxth and PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse,
Palmer 'Streets, Rev. Charles Morntng Worship, 9 a m ,
Simo~s.
pastor .
Fred Sunday Church School, 10 am
Hoff"lan, Sunday School Mrs. Sampson Hall, Supt.
Superintendent Sunday church
STIVERSVILLE
COM·
schoot for everyone 9 15 a m , MUNITY, Rev. Edsel Hart,
Morntng worshtp 10.15 am , pastor Sunday Schos&gt;l service
Evening services, 7 30 p m , 10 am. Prayer Meeting each
Wednesday prayer serv1ce, 7 30 Thursday 7'30 p m Sunday
p.m EJCtra youth activities on eventng service, 1 30 p m
Sunday, 5 p m , for all youth up
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
to sixth grade. 6.30 for junior - Pomeroy - Harrisonville
and senior high students
Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Middleport, 5th and Main Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a.m..
Raulln M,oyer, pastor. Michael morn1n.g worship and com
Gerlach, Sunday School supt munton 10 30 am : Sunday
Btble School, 9 30 a m , mor· eventng youth Chnsltan ennlng worship, 10 30 a m . deavor. 6•30: Worshtp services.
evening worship, 7.30 p m, Sunday, 7 30 p m. Wednesday

1-'l'lleDallySI!rttnel,Middleport.Pemeroy, 0 ., May 12, 1972

SABRE SAW

@ 1599
High speed fo r wood, low for
mttol

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.
The Department Sbt
'

of Building Since 1915

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6 : 00
6 : 30 Newsmaker ' 72

7 : 30 Ta1k i ng Hands

8 : 00 Upper Room Oturch
8: 30 Day of D iscovery

Herald of Truth
&lt;Xal Roberts
Sing ing Jubilee

7: 30
8 : 00 IY.amre Church

9: 30 Groovy Cool ies

9 : 00

10 : 30 Faci ng Life

Calv in Evans
Th is We Beli eve
Double Decker-s
Bullwi nkle
11:30 Make A W1sh
12: 00 Living Manna
12:30 Reviva l Fires
1: 00 Lower U _ghthouse

11:30
f 2 : 00 Re x Humbard

11 : 30
12: 00
12: 30
1: 00

The Answer
1\r\ormon Choir
At Issue
1\1\ee l the Pre.s s
1: 30 R oiler Derby
2: 00
2: 30 Ot Art &amp; M inting
3: 00 Tennis
3: 30
4: 30 .

12: 30

1: 00 AAU Track &amp; F ield

1:30
2: 00 NHL Hockey
2:30
3: 00
3: 30
4: 00
A: 30 Specia I

&lt;&amp;: 30

1 : 30 Issues &amp; Answers

2 : 00 Mov ie

5: 00
5: 30 Pettfcoat Junction

5 : 00 Garden C lub of the A ir
5:30 Animal World
6 : 00 Six.ty Minutes

6: 00 Am~ lcan Adventure

6 : 30

7 : 30 Wa'lt Disney

7:00 Lassie
7: 30 Dragnet
8 : 00 Movie

6 : 30 NBC Sunday News~
7 : 00 Untamed World
~
+

2: 30
3: 00
3: 30
4: 00 Got!
4: 30
5: 30
6 : 00 Auto Rac i ng
6 : JO Once Upon a Wheel

7 : 00 Wi ld Kingdom

7: 30 Survival
8": 00 The FBI
8: 30

9 : 30

10: 00 Emmy

-

Awaru~

10: 30
.
11 : 30 Sundav Newsdav

Late News
Show

Tonigh~

I

S: OO

8: 30
9:00

Jimmy Stewart Show
Bonanza
The Bold Ones

.

9 : 30
10:00
10: 30
11:00

11 : 00 Old T ime Gospel Hour

6 : 00

6: 00

6 : 30

6 : 30 The Bi ble Answers
7: 00 News
7 : 30 Sleepy Jeffer s Show

8: 00 Capt. Kangaroo

8: 30 Speci al
_)

10:30
11 : 00

9 : 30
10: 00
10 : 30
11 : 00
11 : 30
12: 00

9 : 30 Nichols

10: 00
10: JO Comment
11:00 News.
11:30 Ton ight Show

11 : 30
1?: 4.5 News

)

1: 00 All My Chil dren
1: 30 Make A Deal
2: 00 Newlywed Game
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10-The Daily Sentinel, Mlildleport·Puuao;, 0. May 12 19'12

.

Sentinel .Ci.Bss.ifieds Get Action!.. Sentinel .Cl~ssifieqs Get R eslflfS!

'WANT ADS
INFORMATION
For Sale
Wanted To Do
Help Wanted
Notice
. DEADLINES
.
7
FT. FERGUSON drag disc ;
•
5 P' .M . Dav Before Publication : REGISTERED ARABIAN POULTRY Farm Managerial
YARDS
fo
mow
In
Mo~dleporl ·
locust posts; phone 992·
100
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
' STUD SERVICE. Kiralf No. Posi tion open with option of
Pomeroy
area.
Can
furnish
6959
Cancellation - Corrections
own mower. Phone m -50$3
·
S-9-6tc
050481 . Rich Rallies blood partnership privilege . Prefer
Will be accepted untll 9 a.m. for
after 4 p. m.
line . FeeSSOalservlce : Eskey appli cant to be farm oriented.
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS '
Hill , Flatwoods
Road, but not necessary if gifted - _ __ _ _ _ _5_·_11_·3fc TOMATO PLANTS : Tasty
The Publistler reserves the
with
" good
sense,"
Pomeroy, Oh io.
EVERGREENS.are correctly HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone m -2522·.
rlgl'lt to ed it.or rt jtct any ads.
s.lJ .Jtc
will ingness to work. 'Good
named, as they are sllll green
6-10-tfc
deemed Ob lectiona l. The - : - - - - - - -- -.,salary. fringe benefits. Give
Employment Wanted
when ripe, sweet, firm and
publisher
not one
be iesponSibl•
"·y
res ume of past exper iences,
low acid con·tent. In Jittypots
for
morewill
than
incorrect u~.:UN SHOOT, Saturday, 1v\d
lnsrrtion .
13th, 6:30 p. m., Racine Fire ag e. life goal s, address. WILL DO dayllme babysilling or Styrofoam .cups, 1SC each O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
in Racine area. call 949,·4422. or $1.60 dozen. B. Qulsen·
RATES
Dept. Bldg., Mile Hjll Rd. telephone in fir st letter. Write
Complete front end service.
4-19-30tp berry. Syr•cuse, Ohio.
Box 729-M. t ·O The Dally
For Want Ad Service
Assorted meats and 1!2 hog cut
tune up and brake service.
S centMs per Word one Insert ion
up.
·
Sentinel, Pomeroy j Ohio.
5-~ · lOip.
lnlmum Charge 75c
Wheels
ba:anced elec5·12-21c
'
wiLL
PAINT
roofs
or
houses,
. S-11-2tc
12 cents per word three
All
work
tr'Onlcally .
Speclall~lng In
-------~-:-::
.
"
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and
cut
V"""'
clean
1966
HARLEY-Davidson
250
cc
consecutive Insertions.
guaranteed
.
Reasonable
YOUNG
MEN
:
WE'
Ll
SEND
attics;
basements
.Cet-c.
Phone
1000 SQ: fT. OF
motor.cycle, SJOO. Phone 985·
Small l;lusinesses
18 cents per word six con . PERMANENT SPECIAL thru
rates. Phone 992·3213.
YOU TO SCHOOL FOR · 949-3221.
·
May 31sl. $12 Wave $10; $10
3833.
secutlve insertions.
7·21-ttc
MISSILE OPERATIONS JOB
Wave $9; S8 Wave $7.50.- The
25 Per Cent Discount on .pa ld
5·7·6fp
5·2-JCJtc
'
~ 304 E. Main St.
ads and adS pa id within 1Ddays
Beauly Spot, Rt. 143. Phore · IN EUROPE. If you ' re - ' - - - - - -- AUTOMOBILE insurance been
CARD OF THANKS
992-2B40.
looking tor .. cballenglng i&lt;&gt;b For Sale
Pomeroy, Ohio
&amp; OBITUARY
cancelled?
lost
your
in an interesting place.
S-ll-3tp
On Your Home
11 .50 tor 50 word minimum .
Phone 992-3795
operator's license? Call 992·
today's Army has it. You'll COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Each additional wOrd· 2c.
2966.
'
re ceive full pay while you
Sail Works, E. Main St.,
or Mason 773-5535
BLIND ADS
.
6-l 5-ttc
basic
missile
'.Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
learn
Additional 25c Charge per
Only
operations. And you'll gel 30
4-12-tfc
Advertisement.
GUN SHOOT, alsoritle matches
36" X23" X .009
EXPERT
Tree
Serv
Ice
,
days
paid
vacation
a
year.
to
OFFICE HOURS
- open sites only, Forked
frlmming and removal
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily , Run Sportsman Club. Sunday,
Free Estimate
do a lillie exploring on your MOTHER 'S Day Sale, loveseat ,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon May 14, 12 noon.
Richard Hayman, phone 661·
own.
Plus
lot ~ of other
and
4
chairs,
.ice
cream
set,
Saturday.
Coll992·3523
30~1.
benetlls. II you'd like to li ve
5-10-3tc
child 's roll lop desk. round
·
Fol
Appointment
30fp
.
4·23·
and work In Europe, Today's
china clo~ets, chairs, sets,
Lost and Found .
Fully Insured for your
Army wants to join you. For · pairs and oacaslonal, tables,
CALL for lree facial and apSEPTIC tanks cleaned. Ml ller
prot8ction .
complete details call 593-3022.
LOST - keys on ring, close to plication of lamous Mink Oil
bed trunks, glassware, china,
Complete line of office
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph
.
5-12-3tc
lzaak Walton Farm. Call 949· Kosmetics. Ann Sauvage,
jewelry, bottles, etc . Carriage
equipment, furniture &amp;
662-3035.
319CI.
Syracuse. Ohio m -3272 .
USED OFFSET PLATES
Corner Antiques. 498 Locust
supplies.
Typewrltor ·&amp;
2·1
2-ttc
St., Middleport.
HAVE.
~:-:-------5-·12-3tc
5-10-12fp Mobile Homes For Sale
Adding
Machine
Repair.
MANY USES
DOZER
and
l!ack
Hoe
w
ark,
YARD Sale , Friday and
Notice
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
~onds and septic tanks; B&amp;K
DON'T PUMP your sluggish
YARD SALE, May 19 and 20, Saturday, some antiques,
DolOr &amp; End loader vlork,
xcavatlng,
Phone
992-5
367,
starts at 10 a.m. Mrs. Rlchord Avon bottles. old boltles, work
septic tank . Get Klean-Em·
• Air Conditioners
Dick
Karr,
Jr
.
ponds,
basement, landpants;
on
larkin
St.,
Rutland.
All Septic Tank Cleaner .
Slewart, Rt. 7. above Meigs·
S-7·6fc
• Awnings
scaping. We have 2 size
5-10-3fc
Gall Ia line. Few antiques. ·
Landmark Farm Bureau.
8 for $1.00
doters, 2 size loaders. Work
Pomeroy.
·Underpinning
5·12-Jtc
424 Main St.
Pl. Pleasant
O'DELL'S CAB Co., 24 hr.
, SEPTIC TANKS CLEAN ED
done by hour or cOntract ..
S-12-llc
REVIVAL starting -May 15th,
Service, Phone .992-2927, Complete mobile home
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446Free Estlmatu. We also
7:30 p. m. at Vore Ridge
Middleport, Ohio.
478~ . Galll~s, John Rus sell, SEWING MACHINES. Repair
CAMPER. 16ft. sleeps 6, good
haul
fill dirt, top soli. Dump
service
·
plus
gigantic
Community Church. Special
5-10-6tp display of mobile homes
Olmer &amp;
rater.
condition , $1,000. Phone 992·
all
makes.
992-228.1.
service,
trucks
and low-boy for hire.
singing. Rev. Carl Radcliff.
5·12 ·Itt
6329.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
always available at ...
Pastor . Rev. John Elswick, ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ... The
5-12-fl c
Authorized Singer Sales and Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
Evangelist. Everyone exciting · New Weight Watc. BRADFORD. Auction eer
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
MILLER
welcome.
chers (R) Program can help
Complete Service
1971 TRIUMPH 500 Motorcycle.
3-29-lfe , after 7 p.m. or phone 9925·11·3fC you . For local class In Ph ore 949-3821
111 Court St.
5232.
3,000 miles. mechanically
'
MOilLE HOMES
Racine, Ohio
formation call TOLL-FREE
perfect . Call 992-3546 afler 5
READY
-MIX
CONCRETE
Pomeroy,
Clhi9
GUN SHOOT, Sunday. May 14, 1 800-5B2-7026.
Crill Bradford
1220 Washington Blvd.
p.m.
delivered right to your
P, m. Factory choked guns
447-24fc
5-1-ttc
5-12-31c
423·7521
BELPRE, 0.
.
prolect. Fast and easy. Free
only.. Second place shooters
- - - -- - ELLENS' GIFT Shop, Reedsest mates. Phone 992·32B4.
got troe shot In next match. KOSCOT KOSMETJCS and
-_WINDSHIELD
tor
1959
US FOR : Awnings, storm
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
ville. Ohio has memorial SE'E
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
~ l gs. Need extra money? Just
CASH
paid
lor
all
makes
and
Chevrolet
'
door
Belair
.
doors
and
windows,
carports,
Middleport,
Ohio.
flowers
,
baskets,
wreaths,
Club.
self these products . No
models of mobile homes.
Phone 992-6307 .
marquees,
·
aluminum
siding
6·30-ttc
sprays, arrangements and and railing. A. Jacob, sales
5·11 ·3fc rutrlcted terrlforles. Phone
5-12-31c novelties.
SEE US
Phore area code 614-423-9531.
·
m -5113.
'
4-1 3-llc
representative. For free BACKHOE AND DOZER work . .
EXPERIENCED IN
5·7·61 ' estimates, phone Charles
4-2-lfc
GRAVELY Tractor , mower,
LEGAL NOTICE
Septic tanks Installed. George
INTERIOR AND
and sulky. 1970 Honda CL-70 - - - - -- - - Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-247B.
X 60, ALL electric, arr.
IN THE COURT OF
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE: 12conditioning,
road bike, 1959 Dodge l·lon MEIGS BOAT SHOP, Pearl Johnson and Son. Inc .
large porch and
4·25-ttc
EXTERIOR
COMMON PLEAS.
Mums. Geraniums, Pansies,
truck , V-B. Phone 992-3954 Slreet. Middleport; pontoon
3·2·110'
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
awning,
underpinning,
see
PAINTING
and Petunias. Geraldine
after 5 p.m .
bo
kup covers ; one =:-:-~-:---..:...,.-..,...,
ANN IAktr
Janice Glenn, Racine, Oh io,
FARMERS
for
the
largest
5-11
-Jtc
ats,
pic
WILL
do
house
roof
and
ba.rr,
Phone
742-5825
Cleland,
E.
Main
St.,
Racine.
Herrlsonvllte, Ohio,
or phone 247·2142.
used19fi.I -O, Phonem-5367, painting ; interior , painting ;
number A. I. Cattle Sires .
4-2-tfc
Plolnlllt,
or-992-6576
S·10-61c
Minimum $8 fee per animal.
Dick Karr, Jr.
free estimates ; phone 992·
VI
HOMEGROWN -hybrid tomato
Ph9"e Leland Parker, 992·
5·7·61p 70B5.
DAVID R. BAKER,
plants. Harold Roush. 843·
PIANO luning, Lane Daniels, 12 FT. WI DE '69 model trailer
Addr'ss Unknown,
2264,
Pomeroy.
9
5
_
·
_
c:
B
_
E
_
A
_U
_
T
_IF
U
L-se
1
ec
tlon
_
t_
l
o-wers:
_
_
__
_
_
_
_
·3Dic
2865.
May lOth thru June 25th. with automatic washer and
Dtftndlnl.l
•General Contractor
5·4·121&lt;
5-ll-3tc
Phone 992-20B2. Reference. dryer, air -conditiOning ,
No. 15,031
baskets and wreaths for
NOTICE
Elberfelds.
S3.600; see Harold Johnson ,
Memorial Day, Cliff's Shoe
Oevld R. Bakel' , whose place
BALDWIN piano and organ tc
5·1-1,2lc Chester, Ohio.
Repa ir, Middleport. Ohio.
Real Estate For Sale
Of residence Is unknown and
5·9-5tp be picke~ up in this area . May
5-2-23tc
cennot
with
·r easonable SAVE up to one half. Bring your
be purchased together or
diligence be ascertained, will
•
&lt;!.
separately
for balances due. SPOTS before your eyes - on
sick
TV
to
C~uck's
TV
Shop.
READ
THIS!
Berry
-Miller
take notice thet on February 24,
Write
Credit
Department:
151
~utternut
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
Mobile Homes, 705 Farson
1972 the undtrslgned, Ann
your new carpet - remove
GRAVES PIANO &amp; ORGAN
4-4-tfc
Baker, . flltd her Complaint
Street, Belpre, Oh io. Phone
them with Blue Lustre. Rent
1galn1t hlni In the court of - - - -- CO., 383 E. Broad Streel.
423-9531.
Used
and
electric shampooer $1. Ben
Cqmmon Plus of Meigs GARDENING Season Is now In
Columbus , Oh io 43215.
Mobile
Homes
Is
repossessed
Fran klin Store. 200 Ma.ln St ..
110 Mechanic Street
Dn ~st Amerlca!L~~ •
County, Ohio, demandlrig
S·11·61c
lull swing and Bob's Markel
our specialty, notour sideline.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
-GUARANTEED.
divorce. allmonv and support.
In Mason, W. Va. can offer
You can save hundreds and
5-7-61c
that · she be restored to her
FRIGIDAIRE
61
Model,
14
cu
.
Phone 992-2094
you the best variety seleclion
hundreds of dollars on a late
malden name, of Ann Douglas,
ft ., white linish $40. Call 992·
and the finest of quality In
RURAL SETTING
model used or repossessed
and other relief .
3BI8.
Ye;u. thtllld David R. Baker,
Garden Plants In the Trl·
Mobile Home. We have a huge
NEAR RUTLAND - New 2 bedroom block home, bath,
.Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
are requlr'ed to .answer said . Coi!nty.11rea. Jhlsseason, Qpb , selection of good 8 . 10 and 12
5·11 ·31c
garage, large lot on good road. Asking $8.500.00.
J,f:omplalnt WU):)Jh tw•r"t¥ 1elgbt ~ ls · fiat\Jt:lng' itrwo new ..Wtlin Opon ITII S
I
wide models In stocki ;Setote•; .,_...,.._~_._ _....'-""-. RURAL 11\.IY
- .•
••
days after Mh 19 , 19.72.
Monl[tbJtht'u
Saturday~
fomilo Hybrids ,ln
you buy any Mobile Home see EVERYONE is having a sale ; if
0N "ROU,TE 33B - 3 bedrooms, side porch, cellar. cistern
Ann Baker. derfiil
Better
Boy
and
Hybrid
Beet
us
first
You
'll
be
glad
you
606
E."fo\loin,
Po.,.rvy,
Q.
you really want to see sale
wafer and large sandy garden. Nice lot. Asking $5,000.00.
Pla intiff
Easter 1Beef Steak type I;
did.
pr'ices on new and used units,
STOCK FARM
along with 13 other tomalo
5-11 -3tc
Webster and Futlz
stop -in at Camp Conley
175
ACRES
Of good grass. 2 large barns with sheds. A9
P . 0 . Box 723
selections, a full line of
Slarcrafl Sales, Rl. 62, Norlh
room renovated farm home, several out buildings. FREE
. Pomeroy,Ohlo
cabbage and pepper plants
of Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. 20 pet. Economy Tiller. 3'1' h.p. BS.S
GAS.
low taxes. Good fences. All minerals, $42,500.00.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
For
Rent
engine.
Reg
.
159.95
144.95
and almost every flowering
off on hitches, sway controls
NERLY NEW
14114. 21.28, {51s. 12. 1171
annual from Asters to Zin- TRAILER, Brown 's Trai ler
and heaters .
RUTL~ND
3
bedroom
home, bath, nice kitchen with
nias. We also sell Garden
5-4-IOle Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S 3112
Park , Minersville , Ohio .
dishwasher,
dining
and
hot
water heat. Basement, fenced
seeds, onion sets and seed
- - - - - - - - - =-'· h.p. engine. In carton 70.25
Phone 992-3324.
yard. On ly S20,0QO.OO.
From the largest
potatoes, for best quality and
5-11-llc HOME grown tomalo plants,
COUNTRY
HOME
IN THE
Bu
II dozer Radiator to
POMEROY
selection buy direct from the
improved Mex ican , He inz
COMMON PLEAS COURT grower, more than 600.000
4
ACRES
2
bedrooms,
modern
kitchen,
nice
bath,
gas
Smallest
Heater Core.
·•.Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
1350, large Supersonic and
TRAILER spaces overlooking
OF
heat.
Plains
water.
Several
building
sites.
Now
only
plants
grown
annualy
In
our
Aitl
Phone
992-2181
·Nothon
Blggt
Yellow
Jubilee
;
also
Pomeroy.
Velma
G.
Zuspan
,
M!IGS COUNTY, OHIO
$9,500.00.
Radio tor Speciollsl
Mangoes. Hot Peppers and
DEWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD greenhouses. Bob's Market
phone Mason, 77J.S750.
and Plant Sales, Mason, W.
IF YOU PLAN ON SELLING. CALL ON THE EXand
Early Cabbage Plants. 500ft. SYRACUSE Drive -In, phone
5-11 -30if
Va. 773-530B, near the
MARY L. BIRCHFIELD,
PERIENCED ONES, CALL US. WE HAVE B5 ACRES
above the Syracuse State 992-2088.
Sycemore Strttt,
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
FOR INDUSTRY ON TWO RAILROADS. OUR MOTTO IS
Park on Rt. 124, Thomas
5·4·12tp
Middleport, Ohio,
Plaintiffs
5 ROOM furnished apartment,
SATISFACTION.
Hayman,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
Vs.
ground floor, Racine, Robert
4-30-JOic SMALLEY'S
Ph . 992-2174
Pomeroy
Gilt
Shop .Hill . phone· 949-3811 .
·
MRS.
A.
E.
CANADAY
and
.
I
WILl
not
be
resr,onslble
lor
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
A. E. CANADAY,
Chesler.
Ohio.
Have
large
5-7-llp
992-3325
Address Unknown,
any debts con racted by
7 YEAR OLD Tennessee Walker
assortment of flowers for all
Et 11.,
Defendant. anyone other than myself.
mare, palomino, gentle' but
occasions. Arrangements for
ALL
NOTICE IV PUBLICATION
Signed:
Ernest
"Rink" t2 x 60 2 bedroom trailer, adults
spirited,
neck
reins
.
John
Mother' s Day ; pots and
No. 15.064
uavtdson .
only, phone 742-5641.
Sauvage, Syracuse Ohio,
baskets for Memorial Day,
The Defendants, Mrs . R. E.
5-12-31c
5-10-31p
phore 992·3272.
&amp;
Canday : R. E. Canaday ; the
99c and up. Phone 985-3537.
unknown heirs , devisees ,
5-10-12fp
4·2B·I21c
legatees, adm lnistrators ,
2 BEDROOM mobile home,
dlstrlbutees , executors and For Sale or Trade
&amp;-· PLUMBING
Racine area , 10 miles above WHISPER lNG Pines Nile Club,
TOMATO PLANTS : Seven
uslgns of L. C. Brechtel , 196B DODGE Polaro, like new,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-6329.
601
E.
Mlln,
Pomeroy
1
mile
North
of
Pomeroy,
varieties, organically grown,
Deceased, and the unknown
S-12-tlc
240 Lincoln 51.
Oh io on Rt. 7. Have 2:30 nighl
heirs, dtvJsees, legatees, ad- will trode tor pickup of equal
strong transplants - SOc
club li cense, phone 992-9943,
MlddllfiOI"I,
Oloio
ministrators , dlstrlbutees . value, Gary R. Dill, phone
dozen; In Jiltypols Sl dozen ;
WANT A FARM?
Pomeroy, Ohl,o.
exte:utors and aulgns of Peter 949-3915.
llba Anthony Plumbing
NEW. 2 bedroom, all eleclrlc
B.
Quisenberry
,
Syracuse,
80 nlco laying acres, 51J,
Brechtel, Deceued, will take
5-10-61c
5-10-31c
apartment, available last of
We have 1 complete Home
Ohio.
'
·· notice that ·on the 3rd day of
miles S.E. of Rulland. Large
week
,
phone
992-7133
or
992·
Maintenance
Service the
5·2·10ip
May, 1972, a Complaint was
barn- 3Bx50, Crib, Jm .
BEAUTIFUL Maple Early
7384 aller 3 p.m.
·
year
around.
No
matter what
f ted In lhe Common Pleas
plement building, chicken
American style, stereo-radio
ft2·3021
5-10-31c
Court of Meigs County. Ohio, For Rent or Sale
your
need.
Complete
roof or
combination. AM-FM radio, 4 Auto Sales
house, 40 acres under
Case No. 15,0~ , wherein you HOUSE In Long Bollom. phone
160
Co•t
St.
MlddleiiOrt
spOuting
rtpilr.
Interior
or '
cultivation, 30 acres fenced.
havt been named defendants.
TRAILER space. $25 per speaker sound system, 4 '59 AMERICAN Rambler,
9B5-3529.
exterior
urpentry.
Ctlting
speed
automatic
changer
.
In the prayer of the Complain t,
some timber, 1112 story
5-9-tfc
month , phone 992-5434,
17,000 actual miles. 0 . K. Why pay high rent.
tilt and Paneling lnd Siding.
PlaintiffS pray that Defendants
Balance $76 .39. Use our
frame home, 4 bedrooms.
Middleport.
Casto,
Reedsville,
Ohio.
may be compelted.to show their
Complete Plumbl!'9 &amp;
budgel
terms.
Call
992-70B5.
when
this
comf.
3
B.
R.
bath, cellar, all this tor just
S-9-6tc
Interest and th,at ttJe same mav
5·7-6fp
HtJtina.
+
For
Sale
or
Lease
S-10.6fc
&amp; bath home can be
$17,600. Mlnerol.s.
be odludged to be ~ull and void,
------~
Dty
Number
tt2-2550
~~=---and plaintiff's title quieted INDUSTRIAL acreage, phone 2 FURNISHED aparlments, WALNUT, Modern style,
WANT A BUSINESS?
bought for the low
1961 - 6 CYLINDER Chevy
We have 24 br. emergency
against the same, and for such 992-7133 or 992-73B4 otter 3
Includes
building, all stock
utilit
ies
paid
.
deposit
stereo-radio, 4 speaker sound pickup truck, 4 new tires, 2 price of $8,900. Hilltop
other relief as ·rs proper. The p.m.
service.
and equipment, nice 5 room
required . adults only. $95 per system, 4 speed automatic mud &amp; snow lires: rebuilt
real estate Is dncrlbed as
992-5103
742·3947
5-I0-31c
location
overlooking
apartment.
hardwood floors,
month, phone 992-2568. .
follows :
changer, separate controls. radiator, body fair, motor o.k.
742-4711
-10-31c
3
bedrooms,
bath,
front
and
The following Real Estate
Rutland, has attached
Balance $62 .34. Use our - $400 . Phone m -6173.
We art tully ln•ured .. ,
situated In the County of Meigs ,
rear glassed In porches,
budget
terms.
Call
992-70B5.
5·11·3fC
carport.
paved
Wanteti
To
Buy
In tl'\e State of Ohio, and' In the
large lot. In operation tor 15
3
AND
4
ROOM
furnished
and
5·10·61c
Township of Salisbury, and COW DOG. Phone 949-4761.
on
lg.
1964 CORVAIR, 4 speed, good. ~riveway,
years. Just S17,900.
unfurn ished apartments .
boundef;l and described as
condition,
$325;
phone
992·
Phone
992-5434.
private
lot.
3 BEDROOM$-2BATHS
1972
ZIG-ZAG
Sewing
Machine
5·11
·31c
follows :
2360.
4-12-tfc
left in layaway. Beautiful
1 story frame, very nice
Sltuat&amp; In Marcus Bosworth 's
5·10-ltc
pastel color, full size model.
Addition lo Lower Pomeroy , HAY, any amount, old or new,
kitchen, hardwood floors,
looking
for
In·
Get Ald of Them
now Incorporated Into the · E k Hill Rt 3 p
All
buill-In
to
bulfonhole,
do
NEW,
12
x
60,
lw.o
bedroom
gas for,ced air heot,
Village of Mlddleporl. Melgt
s ey
•
· • omeroy.
Wt
wilt
prote~t any single
'69
DODGE
•
;
,
ton
pickup,
good
mobile home across from slretc~ sewing and fancy
vestment! Try thl~ for
basement.' lof'60•117-road to
County , Ol'lio, and marked and
5-12-:Uc
dwolllng
residence
lor ·
condition
,
call
at
lot
5,
Cline's
stitching.
Pay
just
$48.75
cash
Bradbury
School.
Call
992road, good neighborhood.
known on the said 'pllt of lower
Trailer Park, across f~om size - 3 unit apt . house
or terms available. Trade-Ins
5308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
Pomeroy as Lot Num,ber 153. USED shallow-well water pump
$7,995.00.
Blue
Fountain
Motel, in Middleport . Price
house south from Bradbury accepted. Phone m -5641.
'149.50
Sold lot being filly leel by one
for clslern . Phone 992-9972
Gallipolis.
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
hundred and eleven· feet . Being , between 2 and 6 p.m.
School. Pels welcome.
5-10-61c
includes all furniture .
WRITTEN WARRANTY
Lot No. 153 as shown In deed
5-I0-6fc Just over $12,000.
REALTOR
5-7-61p
5-5-tfc
·records of Meigs County, Ohio.
Call 614-949-Ull, If no an.
-,---7 ROOMS and balh. basement,
In Volume 159, Page :120.
C.t1992-22l9
swer, coli 614-992·1219.
~-----­
- Old uprlghl UNFURNISHED apartment, . new Lennox gas furnace, new 1961 FORD 700, 195" wheei
Reference Deed : Volume 244, WANTED
phone
992-2780
or
992-3432.
tf
no
answor
992-256t
pianos,
grand
pianos.
old
!Jose,
used
on
paved
highway,
POMEROY- 2 bdrm.
roof on house, garage and
Pagt 569 of the Meigs County
1
PLEASE CALL US FOR
pump organs. Any condition .
5-4-lfc nice lol. 0. K. Casto, Reeds· exceptionally good, 5 speed
Deed Records.
home,
all paneled, to
Paying $10each. Write giving -----~
YOUR
NEEDS
IN
REAL
You are requ ired to answer
transmission,
2
speed
axle,
vill e, Ohio.
•
the Complaint within twenty . directions . Witten Piano Co .. 5 ROOM furnished apartment
ESTATE.
5·7-6tp good tiru. Phone 9B5·3554, be completed, owner
321 Third St.
tight days after the last
and 4 room and bath un- -=-:--:-:-----Box 188, Sardis. Ohio. 43946.
Harold Brewer, Long Boltom. selling now at the low
Racine, Oloio
publlcallon of this notice,
furnished
apartment.
Wilt
5-7-6fp
POODLE 'pupplu. Sliver Toy,
4·23-lfc price of $7,400.
namely, by not later lhan the
SIX
ROOM
house,
ill
Butternut
accept
one
child.
3
miles
south
Park view Kennels, Phone 992· - - ' - -- - - - 241h dly Dl. J.uly, 1972, or
of Middleporl on S(. Rt. 7. M &amp;
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
5443.
ludgmenl by defaull . will be OLD F URNfTURE, dishes ,
19616 CYLINDER"Chevrolet 'I•
Help Wanted
G Food Market.
Wodsworfh Drive, Columbus,
randtrtd against you .
B
·15-ttc
clocks, brass beds, sliver
ton, phone 9B5·392B.
LOTS - Minersville.
Ohio,
phone
237--4334.
S-12-Jtc
DIIWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD dollars
1
or
complete
5-10-3tp Rt. 7 &amp; Rt. 124.
and
~
.
· 11·21-ttc
MOTHER 'S DAY special households.
Write
M.
D
MARY L. BIRCHFIELD.
PLASTIC
flowers,
pots,
sprays
Setup
gravel
free
with
any
Miller,
Rt.
4,
Pomeroy,
Ohio:
1950
INTERNATIONAL
•
i,.fon
Sycamore Street, Middleport,
and baskets. Across from
NICE 3-slory home with . full
Call 992-6271.
acuarlum purchased through
Ohio
pickup, engine recently COME and see us. Two
basemont, 2 lots, nt!'O( forced
upper end of Syracuo;j Stale
Plllntllh
3-16-lfc
May 141h, Showalter's Wet overhauled, SlSO. Phone 992- beautiful new homos, v, mile
Park.
Mabel
Pickens.
•
air
furnace. Near Pomoroy.
Crow. Crow &amp; Porter,
61b~ .
Pel
Shop,
Chesler,
Ohio.
l!lementary
~chool. Phone
5-12·31c
North of Eastern High School
Attorneys for Plaintiffs .
. 5·11 -3tc on
s.J.13fc
Help Wanted
(5112, 19. 26; (6) 2, 9, 16, 23
St. Rt. 7. Both homes have , 992-738-4 to soe.
1J.).ffc
RINGNECK pheasants, ch icks,
·
4 bedrooms, bath and a holt,
HOW to earn at home ad· eggs, Rt. 33. near Salisbury 196B BANNER Travel Trailer. Real Estate For Sale
built
in
·
kitchens
and
u'
l
lllly
;:
2·cL-:A-::R::G::E";-:1;ot
-."s;""·6~
. -room--s-.-bath,
Distributor Wanted ·
dressing envelopes . Rush
School. RoQer leltheit,
19 11&gt; ft ., sleeps 6,_completely
'tooms; walt to wall carpet
stamoed, self-addressed
garago,
cellar
$8,500;
Maggie
Pomeroy. Ohoo, phone m - self-contained, like new, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home. will be Installed soon. One
The Station
envelope:
B&amp;G
EN- 3446 . .
Whittington, Depot Sf , Columbus Dlspotch of.
$2.000; phone 742·312B.
Arbaugh- Addition, Tuppers house haularg_e family room
TERPRISES, 501 Spaulding
Rutland,
Ohio. •
·
·
5-10-41c
5·12·3fp
Plains. All new with tolal and a den. Bot~ have a
ternoo~ 1nd Sundly,
St., Rlverlon, til. 62561. ·
· H-301p
eleclrlc ond central air garage. Gel um while they
nlng . Columbuo Clttzon.
5·1·51p BOTTLE gas .range. S10, old LAWN chairs, avon bottles,' conditioning, balh and '4 fully . l~st . Call Shorman Sum .
1
Edison disc records S1 .50
stand tables. 95 Pearl Street,
carpeted, full basement, merfleld 985-3598.
BtJ iLDI Nl. LOTS "llrancn.
~
~
A-I~
R-~~R-E
_S_S_E
_"_R__w~lth
Journll, Supply boys lnd
each. Phore 367-7729.
Middleport.
garage In bllserlient. See by
4-14·flc
wood
Subdivision
at
l!ock
You
menager's license. Phone m.
~~~~ otoncls In I'Dmeray.
5-12-lotp
5-10-6tc appointment, phone m -21116 - --- - - - - - Springs, Tuppers Plains
3333.
::-::--- - - - - - - - -- - - - or 1192·l585. Danny Thompson
water. Ptoone 992-2789. • ·
5-10-Jtc PICK-UP camper. 101f' ft .· VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
Financing available.
·
.f.27-12tc. Mkldfttlort ..... Allrocttv.
'
1967 Banner. comrletely self. · model. Complete · with all
12-JO.tfc B ROOM house: bath, patio,
Dlirt.tlmt lob lor activo
m "E R'i Eiic-ED· telephone
wall -to-wall carpeting , '12
~~~~~:ln'~\~pi~~'WIIIpt~k: 'R"ACINE - 6 room house; bath, acre lot, gas heat, phone RACINE - 10 rciom' hou,..,' family. Wrlto G. F. H.oko, 215
solicitor to work In your own ~~~:::.n~~frl~~::t~r.s~o.~~~:
$27 cash or budgel plan uthlllly room, garage, 510.000;
home. Phone 949-3511 for an sleeps 4. $1,500. Phone . !'92·
Hershel McClure m .:J436 or bath, basement, garage, two
N. c.d.r, Llnca1tor, 01o1o or
2'175.
available. 'Phone 992-5641 .
P one 949-419$.
appointment.
m-5248.
01 YOUR DIAL
lots. Phone 949-4313.
·
5·12·3fc
5·10·61c
3·31-lfc
+5-JOip: catt ctlloct ...SJ.25l1.
5·11 ·31c
5-9-6fc
,.
'------- - -- ---1

I

BuSiness Services '
KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE .

-,--~----

POINT oFFICE

S~eets

SUPPLY

'

EARTH MOVING

20*

PHONE 675-3628

The
Daily Sentine_l

Spring
Painting?

-------

Vzrgil B•. Teaford, Sr. - Broker

SS.55 . .

WEATHER ROOFING
CONSTRUCTION ·
CO.

TERMITES .. TERMITES

Y.CITY EXTEIIMINATIOh

- - -- - - -

That Lutena

.
1

HELP
WANTED

------

Mor.

To

WMP0/1390
.

L...-----...J .~

J

'·

I•

•

'1

One Owner
Used Cars

Late-·.

1971 Dodge Polaro 4 Dr. Sed. Green
.with black vinyl top, P.S., P. B., radio,
new tires &amp; only 14,121. on ,this beauty.
Localoneowner.
Only$2895
1971 Plym_outh Fury 114 l)r. Sed., V-8,
auto., P.S., P.B., radio, brown exterior
&amp; matching brown interior. Only 8,241
miles. Localoneowner.
Only$2795
1970 Ford 1 Ton long wheel base. Real
sharp truck with flat bed &amp; racks all
ready on it. .Local one owner. Real
·sharp truck.
·
Only $2995
1969 Buick ' LeSabre Cust. 4 Dr. Sed.
Beige, factory air, P.S., P, ~ .. real nice
car. Local one owner . Priced to
sell.
Only $2195
1969 Chrysler Newport Cust. 2 Dr. H. T.
Green with · green vinyl top, factory
air. Local one owner . . One of the
sharpest used cars in the valley.
Priced to sell. New Buick tradein.
Only $2395
. 1970 Toyota. Local, one owner. Low
mileage. Automatic trans., real sh~rp_
4dr.sed,Markll.
Only$1995

1966 V. W. Real sharp red bug. This is a
niceV.W.
Only$895

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

- - - ·-· -4

.
On 'Good

EXPERT
WhHI Ali~ment

TILLERS

REALTY

72 Chev. Custom Impala

1969 V.W. Real good V.W. local one
Only $1595
owner. Priced to !\ell.

MOWERS

CLELAND

. Auto. trans., blue wllh black vinyl lop.

R. I. DUBBELD

SPECIAL

- - -- - -

From Hart's Used
Car Lot
•
72 Chev. Custom Impala

niRU MAY 15

$699"

'

Aluminum

&amp;

1 It

Apple Grove Ne.ws, Events

Have Fun In The Sun

j

llii/AI/111/ItfSIIJI/IC

-

For Sale .

r r r r r r r r r ,.-, r r 1 r r r·r r r r"r n ··, 1 t ' r .,

II- Tbe Dilly li'ftiaei,._IICI.-Puoeroy, 0., May 12; 1972

•

·

1 '

..

•

'! '

' r _,

8.'

.

Auto. trans., iiold with black vinyl top . .'

72 Ford Galaxie 500

71 Ford 'h l Pickup, V-8, auto., P.S. •••• 12695

Auto. trans., air conditioning, brown.

69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air.......'2295

66 Ford T·Bird ·
&gt;

•

Convertible, auto. trans., all power, red wilh black vinyl
top. A Beauty.
.

2-68 Volkswagens
1-69 Volksll4agen
70 Volkswagen "Bug"
68 Mustang, 6 cyl:
3 Sp., red with black vinyl top.

TRUCKS

70 Chev. 1h Ton Pickup
V-B, auto. trans .. P.S., P.B., with camper.

71 Chev. 1h Ton Pickup
V-B. standard trans.

68 Olds 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air

• • .. • •• • 11895

66 MercuiJ Sta~ Wagoo, V-8 auto........... '595
66 Buick l.aSabre 4 Door, air.............. ' '995
66 Olds 98 Lux. Sedan, full pow., air •·••··'895

66 Buick l.aSabre 4 Door. H.T............ :••'695
63 Olds Super 88 4 Door H.T.............. '595
69 Dodge 1h l Pickup, V-8 std....·........ 11395
Over 40

New

Cadillacs &amp; Oldsmobiles

In Stock! .. We're Dealin'!

Karr &amp; Va.n Zandt
"You'll like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
•
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
992-5342
Ofen Evenings Until 6:oo- Til 5 PM: Sat.

..

67 Ford 1h Ton Pickup
"Big 6" long &amp; wide bed.
SECOND TIME AROUND ...
We guarantee you won't get someone else's
headache, but a dependable A-1 , ~ar. Coupes,
sedans, wagons and pick-up truck models on ·
the lot now. Come and take a look.

Po11eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGIIS
Of
QUALin

1969 CHEVROLET
$2495
Klngswood Estate Wagon, factory air, automatic transmission, power steering &amp; brakes, luggage rack . Green
finish with green vinyl interior, radlo, extra sharp car and
one you will appreciate.

MAIN ST. POMEROY, 'OHIO
.

Elk Run

Laur~1

I ,

Clif(

News Notes

Tuppers Plains
Society News

'

..,

Social Notes
SWldav School attendance on
May 7 was Sl Offering was
$20.81. It was voted to send $15
to the "Citizens fo r Decent
Uteralure " at Cincinnati.
Worship Services were held
at II a . m. with Rev. lehman
bringing the message from II
Cor. 4:14.
The Women 's Society will
hold its regular meeting on
Tuesday evening, May 16, at
the home of Helen Woode with
Eleanor Boyles, program
leader. Everyone welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Brooks
are the proud parents of a baby
girl born in April. This is their
first daughter and they have
three sons.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Burke,
Jr . have rented their trailer
home lo a Racine couple and
· are laying up the basement to a
new house close by.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Swartz
have sol~ their trailer home
and will he building a house
soon on the same spot.
Marlene Winebrenner and
George Donovan were married
recently and have returned
from a honeymoon to the small
house on the former Vern
Shumway property, whlcn the
Donovans have already
remodeled and refurnished.
SUnday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Vere Swartz were Mr. and
Mrs. Millard Swartz, Mr. and
Mrs. Orner Hess, Pearl Ran·
dolph and Mrs. Vernon Swartz
· and children .
Mr. and Mrs."Clair Follrod
visited Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Swartz and Mrs . Carleton at
Lottridge Sunday afternoon.
Mrs . Genevieve Guthrie
visited Mrs. Ethel Stout at
Tuppers Plains SWlday af·
ternoon.

•'.

'

Pomeroy Motor.Co.

Great
BUYS

./

Stivers ville

Fairview News Notes

News Notes News Notes

70 FORD RANGER
Auto: trans., P.S., long bed, radio.

'2495

'

Mulne

E.

a. w.

J*'

Alfred

1968CHEVROLET ;&lt;,TON
$1549
8 ft. Stepslde, good H. duty tires, V-B engine, 3 speed·
trans, solid cab, local 1 ownerdrk~ , , · m •1•1""f'l "n"''"

OPI!N EVES. 1:00 P.M.
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
f'PM!IOY, 01110
Sunday School attendance at
the UnUed Methodist Church .1------....,....,..------------~.,---4
By Bertha Parker
was 54. Offering was $17.14.
Sabbath School altendance Worship service attendance
May 7 at the Free Methodist was 40 and offering $59.24.
Church was 132. Offering for ell
Richard Lodwick of Chester
services was $210.60. At· bought the Lyons Market here .
. By Mn. Herbert Roulb
Rowe of Trenton, Mich.; Mr.
tendance at morning and and took over the business on
Mrs. Herbert Sayre and Paul and Mrs. Ray Soucie and
evening services April 30 was Satw-day.
Sayre visited In Marietta children of Cambridge, &lt;ihio.,
150. Eighteen choir members
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock Saturday eva1ing.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Parsons,
Mr. and Mrs. David Bryant were present May 7.
visited her nephew, Gene
By In~:~ Randolph
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Parsons, George
The Youth Revival services Riggs, at Camden Clark Mrs. Charles Lawson and
Aletha Randolph, Ola Smith of Charleston spent SUnday
Parsons, all of .A.shJand, 0.,
and Cella Ashcraft visited Mrs. wilh their son, Mr . and Mrs. which were held over the Hospital in Parkersburg family were Mr. and Mrs.
David
Rowe, Vernon Rowe of
weekend . were well attended. Saturday. He is recovering Robert l.aWliOII,local; Mr. and
Randolph's grandmother Bill Bryant and ehildren.
New
Brighton,
Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Dariny Haines, Rev. Raymond Gill or Cam- from back surgery.
recently at Syracuse resl
Mrs. Harold Lawson and son C.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
former Columbus residents, bridge was evangelist.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bet· J, of Letart, W. Va.
home.
were
In Columbus TQesday to
Mr . and Mrs. Bud Hilt of zing and Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Clarence Randolph took have moved Into the R. R.
Mr. and Mrs. Gllbert Rowe of see their eye doctor.
Colwnbus called on friends Hoffman were Sunday dinner Pennsylvania are visiting
William Randolph to see a Durst property.
Visiting Sunday afternoon
Mrs.
Olive
Talbott
has
here recently.
guests of their children, Mr. relatives after being called
doctor Friday.
with
Mrs. Bertha Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Russell of and Mrs. Dana Hoffman Jr. of here due to the death of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dannie Dan· returned from a two months
were
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mitdrea and four children of visit with her daughler, Mr. Ravenna visited recently with Rutland.
Rowe's mother Mrs. Ada Kate chell of Colinbua, Mr.' and
Columbus spent the weekend and Mrs. George Souders in Mr . Russell's sister, Mrs. - Mrs . Effie Watson and Rowe.
Mrs. Howard Robinson of
Georgia Diehl. ··
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
with Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Day Xenia.
Mr·' and Mrs. Walter Taylor Flatwoods, W. Va., Mrs, Clara
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Wolfe,
Paul Brown of California and Barth, were Thw-sday evening of Apple Grove, W. Va. spent
and family.
Syracuse
were
guests
of
his
George
Brown of Columbus guests of her son, Mr. and Mrs. &amp;mday evening wllh Mr. and Mae Sargent, Stephanie
Mr. and Mrs. Donald W.
Radford of Pomeroy Rte.,
Randolph spent Satw-day night parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gene visited recently with their Harold Watson of Athens and Mrs. Don Hupp and sona.
Brian and Raymond Roblnton,
mother, Mrs. May Brown.
helped Harold celebrate his
with his parents, Mr. !l'ld Mrs. Wolfe and children.
Mrs. Roger Manuel, Mr. and · Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields,
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Brewer
Mr. and Mrs. Norman birthday.
c. E. Randolph.
Mrs . Ronnie ' Russell of Mra. Marla~e Flaher, cbllclien
Mrs. Win Blake was taken to Pomeroy; · JOIIM RoU8h and
Mr. and Mrs. Orner Hess visited theirilaughter, Mr. and Schaefer visited recenUy with
Molly, Larry and Amy of
called on Pearl and William Mrs. Charles Slmeral and their daughter and son-in-law; St. Joseph Hospital In Angela Michelle Manuel Racine, Mrs. Gerald Hayman
daughter of Columbus over the Mr. and Mrs. WIUiam Perry of Parkersburg "Thursday for vlal.ted Mr. and Mrs. Rusaell
Randolph recenUy.
and son Keith.
Athens.
observation.
Mr. and Mrs. Ton a Boring weekend.
Roush Sunday .afternoon.
Mrs.
Jessie
Paraons
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mid·
Mr. and Mrs. John Douglas
Mrs. Leota Massar was a
called on the Randolph famlly
Relatives from a dl.stance returned to her ho~ SUnday
dleswart and family visited her of Albany spent SWlday with Sunday dinner guest of her attending funeral11ervlces and
recently.
at Ashland, 0 . after spending
Marie Domlgan called on parents, Mr. and ' Mrs. Edward Mrs. Douglas's parents, Mr. sister, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar calling at the Ewing Funeral some time with lier " ' - Mila
Bush and family of Spiller, . and Mrs. Harmon Fpx .
Babcock.
Home for Mrs. Ada.Kate Rowe Ada Rowe and aials!lng In the
Hazel Blggnecenlly.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Archer of
Mr. and Mr~ . Jolm Hayes of Thursday were: Mr. and Mrs.
Dor!el Biggs is on· the sick SWlday afternoon.
care of her mother Mrs. Kate
Mrs. Wanda Teaford has Columbus spent Saturday with Chester were SUnday afternoon GObert Rowe, Mr. and Mrs.
Ust.
Rowe who passed away
Ziba Midldff and Clarence returned to her employment Mr. Archer's mother, Mrs. guests of Mr. and !!Irs. Wayne Howard Rowe of South Gal!!, Monday.
Brlckles.
Mich., Mr. and Mrs, Harry
Randolph called on Dorsel after a recent hospitalization Georgia Diehl.
for
injuries
received
in
an
auto
Mrs.
Edna
Howell
of
Mrs.
Velma
Matlack
Biggs Thurllday..
CARNIVAL
·- ··
Columbus and Nancy Walker returned to her borne here
Mr. and Mrs. Barnhouse and accident.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawson and Mrs. Dolorea Will of Star after spending the winter In
children recently called on
have
moved Into the Olase Route called on frlendll here Arizona.
Hobart Day and family .
Smeeks
property In Portland. Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Arbaugh
SWlday callers at the home of
Mr.
ai1d
Mrs.
Tim
Welkerson
Mrs.
Edna
Schaefer
received
visited
relatives at Stewart arid ·
Inez and a.t-ence RandolPh
and
Shawn,
Mrs.
Ame
Tipton
word
that
her
brother,
Mark
Guysvffie
Sunday.
were Mr. 1111d Mrs. Olbo Ypung
Mr . and Mrs. Michael
of Burbank, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs, and daughter, Columbus, Mrs. Stahl, Stockdale, had been
Jean
Shuler
and
11011,
Mr
•.
~Uld
'
retUrned
home
from
the
Watson
of Middleport spent
Edgar Randolph of ·near
Mrs.
E.
H.
Carpenter
Were
halpltal.
Mr.
Stahl
wu
Injured
Sunday with his grandmother,
Greensburg, Ohio, and Mr. and
recent
callers
at
the
home
of
seven
weeki
ago
in
an
Mrs. Effie Watson.
-· Mrs. Dorsel Biggs and ,famlly,
·Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rudy·
DurSt.
aulonioblle
accident
and
Is
Mr. and Mra. Allen Coe are
local.
•
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harley
Keyes
IOilleWhat
Improved.
announcing the birth of a son,
Kenny Siders and Qarenc:e
ol
Newark
vlalied
rei!Uves
and
'
Frankie Leroy, at St. Joseph
E. Randolph Jr. were Marietta
frlendll
here
over
the
weekend.
-"r:-------'---Holpllll
April 30. The couple
visitora Tlnnday and ~
Mr.
and
Mra.
Rendall
Meter, Mrs. Odnaa Weddle alao have a daughter, age 2.
called on Mrs. leland Sldan.
Tllbott
of
New
I.aln&amp;ton
and
Mr. and Mra. Marvin Wilker
and
children, Mrs.
Beverly .(Day) Dandrea and
Mr.
IJid
Mrs.
OUa
Cuto
llpelll
Durlll, Maline Pv~PeD, Mr. and and daughter, Ruthie, attended
two girls c8lled 011 Ilia Ran·
Sunday
with
Mn.
,
Olive
1
Mr•·
Carl Brown, P1111 Llrldna the wedding of their niece,
dolph Saturday evenlnil. .
Tllbotl.
nl
Tom
Dural wwe recent Donna Miller, at the Nazarene
Mr. and Mrl. Hobart Day
Leota
Birch
caJieil
on
Mr.
guesta Of Mr. and Mta, BW Qwrcb in Dayton Saturday.
and · aon, Jeff, e11led on
nl
Mrs.
Allen
Brewer
and
Bryant.
·
. Ruthle was · one of the
Clannce Randolph and flinlly
David
Sunday
afternoon
..
of
H.
btldelmalda for the wedding.
Re"
c
ent
gueata
rete~~Uy.
Mrs.
Patty
Ql-.camp,
Carpenter and flllllly were Then the Wllkera ~~ on to
Jewell Story and Clyde White
Mrs.
Icy
•
•
Mrs.
Belly
.Mn.
Paul Orr,
Durst; ClnclnnaU to visit relatives and
an lmprovll1c llowly at their
Ward
and
rro,
vlllied
Ni'l.
Mrs. Trellle lllelhem, Delbert frlendl.
hqma lfllr belnl fiGIPI~.
Maline
lfalnea
Wecklelday.
Mrs. Evelyn Lucke, Mr.
Oura,
AnEND FlJN'ERAL
Mr. and 'Mn.
Mlnlll
Mrs.
Mike
Corbett
and
Mrs.
and Mrs. Ow-!ell Karr. Sr.,
Mr. and Mn. J1111e1 Souden
1111d family i!ptlll I Nllhid
with Mn. Jewell Story llld Ealher Dilley were recent Mrs. Ruby ilrylllt and Feu, and 11011, Gary, of Miami, Fla.
viii ltd her father, Jewell ~· of Mr. and Mrs. Gr.nn Mrs. Lynda Wanl,l'lul Ev111, were here last week lor the
Baker of &amp;lee 11 Road.
"WIIat a I&amp;IM,· f•n•, what a
Btlle¥e 1M,
.Paul llowl, Leota Birch IJid funeral services of Mrs. Wilma
Story. whiM be In the
ilobod;r,
but
NO~ODY
Ia
walk
inc
out!"
Mr. lll1d Mrs .. Mac Van Maxine Durst.
Davis.
1
bolpllal.

TRUCKS

ternoon.
.
Mrs. Hubert· Rolish and Mrs.
Jack Sharpnack and Mrs.
Erma Wilson visited Jack
Sharpnach, Pete Wolfe and '
-Mrs. ~trice Nice 1!11 patients
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Thursday afternoon.

1967 CHEVELLE
$1395
St . W~gon, V-8 engine, automatic trans., power steering,
beigejflnish &amp; vinyl trim, good w-wtlres, radio . A nice car.

Open Evenings Till 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. till s ~;~.m.
Service on Sat. Till 12 noon.
Buy where Quality is higher than price.

:sM im:;~NELS0 N MOTORS, ·INC.
B13 PH. 992-2174

70 Cadillac Eldorado Coupe, .air., ......... '5300 .
69 Cadillac Sedan DeVile,,air ............ .'3700
68 ~iliac Sedan DeVille, air .............12600

We Service What We Sell
Our.. Word Is Our Bond

1

USED CARS

By Mrs. Herbert Rouab
Sonday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Shields were
.Mr. and Mrs. Howard
11\obinson of Flatwoods, W. Va.,
' Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent, Mrs.
Marlene Fisher end children
Molly, Larry and Amy, Brian
and Raymond Robinson of.
. Racine, Stephanie Radford of
Pomeroy Rte.
Mrs . Ada Norris visited
recently with her sister Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Orr of
Columbus spent Saturday
evening with Mrs. Iva Orr.
Mr~ and Mrs. Herbert Roush
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dana
· lewis at CUlton Sunday
evening .
.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson
and son of Charleston, W. Va.
spent the week end with Mrs.
Erma Wilson.
A chicken dinner will be
served at the Letart Falls
Conununity Hall Sunday May
28th .
Everette Connally was ·
returned home from Holzer
Medical Center Satw-day.
Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Mrs. Erma Wllson visited Mr.
.and Mrs. Roy Donohew
Thursday eva~lng.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Roy of
Racine and Jeff and Rex
Thorton spent &amp;in day with Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Cummins at
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables and
daughter Vicki visited Mr.
Ables sister Mrs. Edith Gilkey
at Gallipolis SUnday.
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
son Keith visited Sunday with
Mrs. Bertha Robinson.
Mrs. Golda Shain of Logan is
visiting her niece Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
md son Edward visited Mrs.
Elsie Hupp Gibbs at Riverside
Hospital, Columbus Sunday.
Mrs. Katie Young and Mrs.
Elva Hudson of Minersville
Rte. visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe
MMuel recently.
Mrs. Edith Manuel and son
Tim called on Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Bush Monday eva~lng.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
Ada!ns called on Mr. and Mrs.
Chrissie Powell Sunday af·

70 DODGE 1h TON
long bed, Ready to go.

'2195
68 DODGE DART
GTS 2 door Hardtoo auto. trans.

'1295
See: Ray Riggs or Roger ~iebel

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
I

I

.

Ph. 985-4100 '
located on St. Rt. 7

3 ROOMS

NEW
FURNITURE
. '349.95 .
'535.00 Down
Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
w.
Mascin,

Va.

Chester, 0.

�r r r ,., ·!'

10-The Daily Sentinel, Mlildleport·Puuao;, 0. May 12 19'12

.

Sentinel .Ci.Bss.ifieds Get Action!.. Sentinel .Cl~ssifieqs Get R eslflfS!

'WANT ADS
INFORMATION
For Sale
Wanted To Do
Help Wanted
Notice
. DEADLINES
.
7
FT. FERGUSON drag disc ;
•
5 P' .M . Dav Before Publication : REGISTERED ARABIAN POULTRY Farm Managerial
YARDS
fo
mow
In
Mo~dleporl ·
locust posts; phone 992·
100
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
' STUD SERVICE. Kiralf No. Posi tion open with option of
Pomeroy
area.
Can
furnish
6959
Cancellation - Corrections
own mower. Phone m -50$3
·
S-9-6tc
050481 . Rich Rallies blood partnership privilege . Prefer
Will be accepted untll 9 a.m. for
after 4 p. m.
line . FeeSSOalservlce : Eskey appli cant to be farm oriented.
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS '
Hill , Flatwoods
Road, but not necessary if gifted - _ __ _ _ _ _5_·_11_·3fc TOMATO PLANTS : Tasty
The Publistler reserves the
with
" good
sense,"
Pomeroy, Oh io.
EVERGREENS.are correctly HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone m -2522·.
rlgl'lt to ed it.or rt jtct any ads.
s.lJ .Jtc
will ingness to work. 'Good
named, as they are sllll green
6-10-tfc
deemed Ob lectiona l. The - : - - - - - - -- -.,salary. fringe benefits. Give
Employment Wanted
when ripe, sweet, firm and
publisher
not one
be iesponSibl•
"·y
res ume of past exper iences,
low acid con·tent. In Jittypots
for
morewill
than
incorrect u~.:UN SHOOT, Saturday, 1v\d
lnsrrtion .
13th, 6:30 p. m., Racine Fire ag e. life goal s, address. WILL DO dayllme babysilling or Styrofoam .cups, 1SC each O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
in Racine area. call 949,·4422. or $1.60 dozen. B. Qulsen·
RATES
Dept. Bldg., Mile Hjll Rd. telephone in fir st letter. Write
Complete front end service.
4-19-30tp berry. Syr•cuse, Ohio.
Box 729-M. t ·O The Dally
For Want Ad Service
Assorted meats and 1!2 hog cut
tune up and brake service.
S centMs per Word one Insert ion
up.
·
Sentinel, Pomeroy j Ohio.
5-~ · lOip.
lnlmum Charge 75c
Wheels
ba:anced elec5·12-21c
'
wiLL
PAINT
roofs
or
houses,
. S-11-2tc
12 cents per word three
All
work
tr'Onlcally .
Speclall~lng In
-------~-:-::
.
"
·
lrlm
and
cut
V"""'
clean
1966
HARLEY-Davidson
250
cc
consecutive Insertions.
guaranteed
.
Reasonable
YOUNG
MEN
:
WE'
Ll
SEND
attics;
basements
.Cet-c.
Phone
1000 SQ: fT. OF
motor.cycle, SJOO. Phone 985·
Small l;lusinesses
18 cents per word six con . PERMANENT SPECIAL thru
rates. Phone 992·3213.
YOU TO SCHOOL FOR · 949-3221.
·
May 31sl. $12 Wave $10; $10
3833.
secutlve insertions.
7·21-ttc
MISSILE OPERATIONS JOB
Wave $9; S8 Wave $7.50.- The
25 Per Cent Discount on .pa ld
5·7·6fp
5·2-JCJtc
'
~ 304 E. Main St.
ads and adS pa id within 1Ddays
Beauly Spot, Rt. 143. Phore · IN EUROPE. If you ' re - ' - - - - - -- AUTOMOBILE insurance been
CARD OF THANKS
992-2B40.
looking tor .. cballenglng i&lt;&gt;b For Sale
Pomeroy, Ohio
&amp; OBITUARY
cancelled?
lost
your
in an interesting place.
S-ll-3tp
On Your Home
11 .50 tor 50 word minimum .
Phone 992-3795
operator's license? Call 992·
today's Army has it. You'll COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Each additional wOrd· 2c.
2966.
'
re ceive full pay while you
Sail Works, E. Main St.,
or Mason 773-5535
BLIND ADS
.
6-l 5-ttc
basic
missile
'.Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
learn
Additional 25c Charge per
Only
operations. And you'll gel 30
4-12-tfc
Advertisement.
GUN SHOOT, alsoritle matches
36" X23" X .009
EXPERT
Tree
Serv
Ice
,
days
paid
vacation
a
year.
to
OFFICE HOURS
- open sites only, Forked
frlmming and removal
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily , Run Sportsman Club. Sunday,
Free Estimate
do a lillie exploring on your MOTHER 'S Day Sale, loveseat ,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon May 14, 12 noon.
Richard Hayman, phone 661·
own.
Plus
lot ~ of other
and
4
chairs,
.ice
cream
set,
Saturday.
Coll992·3523
30~1.
benetlls. II you'd like to li ve
5-10-3tc
child 's roll lop desk. round
·
Fol
Appointment
30fp
.
4·23·
and work In Europe, Today's
china clo~ets, chairs, sets,
Lost and Found .
Fully Insured for your
Army wants to join you. For · pairs and oacaslonal, tables,
CALL for lree facial and apSEPTIC tanks cleaned. Ml ller
prot8ction .
complete details call 593-3022.
LOST - keys on ring, close to plication of lamous Mink Oil
bed trunks, glassware, china,
Complete line of office
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph
.
5-12-3tc
lzaak Walton Farm. Call 949· Kosmetics. Ann Sauvage,
jewelry, bottles, etc . Carriage
equipment, furniture &amp;
662-3035.
319CI.
Syracuse. Ohio m -3272 .
USED OFFSET PLATES
Corner Antiques. 498 Locust
supplies.
Typewrltor ·&amp;
2·1
2-ttc
St., Middleport.
HAVE.
~:-:-------5-·12-3tc
5-10-12fp Mobile Homes For Sale
Adding
Machine
Repair.
MANY USES
DOZER
and
l!ack
Hoe
w
ark,
YARD Sale , Friday and
Notice
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
~onds and septic tanks; B&amp;K
DON'T PUMP your sluggish
YARD SALE, May 19 and 20, Saturday, some antiques,
DolOr &amp; End loader vlork,
xcavatlng,
Phone
992-5
367,
starts at 10 a.m. Mrs. Rlchord Avon bottles. old boltles, work
septic tank . Get Klean-Em·
• Air Conditioners
Dick
Karr,
Jr
.
ponds,
basement, landpants;
on
larkin
St.,
Rutland.
All Septic Tank Cleaner .
Slewart, Rt. 7. above Meigs·
S-7·6fc
• Awnings
scaping. We have 2 size
5-10-3fc
Gall Ia line. Few antiques. ·
Landmark Farm Bureau.
8 for $1.00
doters, 2 size loaders. Work
Pomeroy.
·Underpinning
5·12-Jtc
424 Main St.
Pl. Pleasant
O'DELL'S CAB Co., 24 hr.
, SEPTIC TANKS CLEAN ED
done by hour or cOntract ..
S-12-llc
REVIVAL starting -May 15th,
Service, Phone .992-2927, Complete mobile home
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446Free Estlmatu. We also
7:30 p. m. at Vore Ridge
Middleport, Ohio.
478~ . Galll~s, John Rus sell, SEWING MACHINES. Repair
CAMPER. 16ft. sleeps 6, good
haul
fill dirt, top soli. Dump
service
·
plus
gigantic
Community Church. Special
5-10-6tp display of mobile homes
Olmer &amp;
rater.
condition , $1,000. Phone 992·
all
makes.
992-228.1.
service,
trucks
and low-boy for hire.
singing. Rev. Carl Radcliff.
5·12 ·Itt
6329.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
always available at ...
Pastor . Rev. John Elswick, ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ... The
5-12-fl c
Authorized Singer Sales and Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
Evangelist. Everyone exciting · New Weight Watc. BRADFORD. Auction eer
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
MILLER
welcome.
chers (R) Program can help
Complete Service
1971 TRIUMPH 500 Motorcycle.
3-29-lfe , after 7 p.m. or phone 9925·11·3fC you . For local class In Ph ore 949-3821
111 Court St.
5232.
3,000 miles. mechanically
'
MOilLE HOMES
Racine, Ohio
formation call TOLL-FREE
perfect . Call 992-3546 afler 5
READY
-MIX
CONCRETE
Pomeroy,
Clhi9
GUN SHOOT, Sunday. May 14, 1 800-5B2-7026.
Crill Bradford
1220 Washington Blvd.
p.m.
delivered right to your
P, m. Factory choked guns
447-24fc
5-1-ttc
5-12-31c
423·7521
BELPRE, 0.
.
prolect. Fast and easy. Free
only.. Second place shooters
- - - -- - ELLENS' GIFT Shop, Reedsest mates. Phone 992·32B4.
got troe shot In next match. KOSCOT KOSMETJCS and
-_WINDSHIELD
tor
1959
US FOR : Awnings, storm
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
ville. Ohio has memorial SE'E
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
~ l gs. Need extra money? Just
CASH
paid
lor
all
makes
and
Chevrolet
'
door
Belair
.
doors
and
windows,
carports,
Middleport,
Ohio.
flowers
,
baskets,
wreaths,
Club.
self these products . No
models of mobile homes.
Phone 992-6307 .
marquees,
·
aluminum
siding
6·30-ttc
sprays, arrangements and and railing. A. Jacob, sales
5·11 ·3fc rutrlcted terrlforles. Phone
5-12-31c novelties.
SEE US
Phore area code 614-423-9531.
·
m -5113.
'
4-1 3-llc
representative. For free BACKHOE AND DOZER work . .
EXPERIENCED IN
5·7·61 ' estimates, phone Charles
4-2-lfc
GRAVELY Tractor , mower,
LEGAL NOTICE
Septic tanks Installed. George
INTERIOR AND
and sulky. 1970 Honda CL-70 - - - - -- - - Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-247B.
X 60, ALL electric, arr.
IN THE COURT OF
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE: 12conditioning,
road bike, 1959 Dodge l·lon MEIGS BOAT SHOP, Pearl Johnson and Son. Inc .
large porch and
4·25-ttc
EXTERIOR
COMMON PLEAS.
Mums. Geraniums, Pansies,
truck , V-B. Phone 992-3954 Slreet. Middleport; pontoon
3·2·110'
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
awning,
underpinning,
see
PAINTING
and Petunias. Geraldine
after 5 p.m .
bo
kup covers ; one =:-:-~-:---..:...,.-..,...,
ANN IAktr
Janice Glenn, Racine, Oh io,
FARMERS
for
the
largest
5-11
-Jtc
ats,
pic
WILL
do
house
roof
and
ba.rr,
Phone
742-5825
Cleland,
E.
Main
St.,
Racine.
Herrlsonvllte, Ohio,
or phone 247·2142.
used19fi.I -O, Phonem-5367, painting ; interior , painting ;
number A. I. Cattle Sires .
4-2-tfc
Plolnlllt,
or-992-6576
S·10-61c
Minimum $8 fee per animal.
Dick Karr, Jr.
free estimates ; phone 992·
VI
HOMEGROWN -hybrid tomato
Ph9"e Leland Parker, 992·
5·7·61p 70B5.
DAVID R. BAKER,
plants. Harold Roush. 843·
PIANO luning, Lane Daniels, 12 FT. WI DE '69 model trailer
Addr'ss Unknown,
2264,
Pomeroy.
9
5
_
·
_
c:
B
_
E
_
A
_U
_
T
_IF
U
L-se
1
ec
tlon
_
t_
l
o-wers:
_
_
__
_
_
_
_
·3Dic
2865.
May lOth thru June 25th. with automatic washer and
Dtftndlnl.l
•General Contractor
5·4·121&lt;
5-ll-3tc
Phone 992-20B2. Reference. dryer, air -conditiOning ,
No. 15,031
baskets and wreaths for
NOTICE
Elberfelds.
S3.600; see Harold Johnson ,
Memorial Day, Cliff's Shoe
Oevld R. Bakel' , whose place
BALDWIN piano and organ tc
5·1-1,2lc Chester, Ohio.
Repa ir, Middleport. Ohio.
Real Estate For Sale
Of residence Is unknown and
5·9-5tp be picke~ up in this area . May
5-2-23tc
cennot
with
·r easonable SAVE up to one half. Bring your
be purchased together or
diligence be ascertained, will
•
&lt;!.
separately
for balances due. SPOTS before your eyes - on
sick
TV
to
C~uck's
TV
Shop.
READ
THIS!
Berry
-Miller
take notice thet on February 24,
Write
Credit
Department:
151
~utternut
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
Mobile Homes, 705 Farson
1972 the undtrslgned, Ann
your new carpet - remove
GRAVES PIANO &amp; ORGAN
4-4-tfc
Baker, . flltd her Complaint
Street, Belpre, Oh io. Phone
them with Blue Lustre. Rent
1galn1t hlni In the court of - - - -- CO., 383 E. Broad Streel.
423-9531.
Used
and
electric shampooer $1. Ben
Cqmmon Plus of Meigs GARDENING Season Is now In
Columbus , Oh io 43215.
Mobile
Homes
Is
repossessed
Fran klin Store. 200 Ma.ln St ..
110 Mechanic Street
Dn ~st Amerlca!L~~ •
County, Ohio, demandlrig
S·11·61c
lull swing and Bob's Markel
our specialty, notour sideline.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
-GUARANTEED.
divorce. allmonv and support.
In Mason, W. Va. can offer
You can save hundreds and
5-7-61c
that · she be restored to her
FRIGIDAIRE
61
Model,
14
cu
.
Phone 992-2094
you the best variety seleclion
hundreds of dollars on a late
malden name, of Ann Douglas,
ft ., white linish $40. Call 992·
and the finest of quality In
RURAL SETTING
model used or repossessed
and other relief .
3BI8.
Ye;u. thtllld David R. Baker,
Garden Plants In the Trl·
Mobile Home. We have a huge
NEAR RUTLAND - New 2 bedroom block home, bath,
.Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
are requlr'ed to .answer said . Coi!nty.11rea. Jhlsseason, Qpb , selection of good 8 . 10 and 12
5·11 ·31c
garage, large lot on good road. Asking $8.500.00.
J,f:omplalnt WU):)Jh tw•r"t¥ 1elgbt ~ ls · fiat\Jt:lng' itrwo new ..Wtlin Opon ITII S
I
wide models In stocki ;Setote•; .,_...,.._~_._ _....'-""-. RURAL 11\.IY
- .•
••
days after Mh 19 , 19.72.
Monl[tbJtht'u
Saturday~
fomilo Hybrids ,ln
you buy any Mobile Home see EVERYONE is having a sale ; if
0N "ROU,TE 33B - 3 bedrooms, side porch, cellar. cistern
Ann Baker. derfiil
Better
Boy
and
Hybrid
Beet
us
first
You
'll
be
glad
you
606
E."fo\loin,
Po.,.rvy,
Q.
you really want to see sale
wafer and large sandy garden. Nice lot. Asking $5,000.00.
Pla intiff
Easter 1Beef Steak type I;
did.
pr'ices on new and used units,
STOCK FARM
along with 13 other tomalo
5-11 -3tc
Webster and Futlz
stop -in at Camp Conley
175
ACRES
Of good grass. 2 large barns with sheds. A9
P . 0 . Box 723
selections, a full line of
Slarcrafl Sales, Rl. 62, Norlh
room renovated farm home, several out buildings. FREE
. Pomeroy,Ohlo
cabbage and pepper plants
of Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. 20 pet. Economy Tiller. 3'1' h.p. BS.S
GAS.
low taxes. Good fences. All minerals, $42,500.00.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
For
Rent
engine.
Reg
.
159.95
144.95
and almost every flowering
off on hitches, sway controls
NERLY NEW
14114. 21.28, {51s. 12. 1171
annual from Asters to Zin- TRAILER, Brown 's Trai ler
and heaters .
RUTL~ND
3
bedroom
home, bath, nice kitchen with
nias. We also sell Garden
5-4-IOle Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S 3112
Park , Minersville , Ohio .
dishwasher,
dining
and
hot
water heat. Basement, fenced
seeds, onion sets and seed
- - - - - - - - - =-'· h.p. engine. In carton 70.25
Phone 992-3324.
yard. On ly S20,0QO.OO.
From the largest
potatoes, for best quality and
5-11-llc HOME grown tomalo plants,
COUNTRY
HOME
IN THE
Bu
II dozer Radiator to
POMEROY
selection buy direct from the
improved Mex ican , He inz
COMMON PLEAS COURT grower, more than 600.000
4
ACRES
2
bedrooms,
modern
kitchen,
nice
bath,
gas
Smallest
Heater Core.
·•.Jack
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
1350, large Supersonic and
TRAILER spaces overlooking
OF
heat.
Plains
water.
Several
building
sites.
Now
only
plants
grown
annualy
In
our
Aitl
Phone
992-2181
·Nothon
Blggt
Yellow
Jubilee
;
also
Pomeroy.
Velma
G.
Zuspan
,
M!IGS COUNTY, OHIO
$9,500.00.
Radio tor Speciollsl
Mangoes. Hot Peppers and
DEWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD greenhouses. Bob's Market
phone Mason, 77J.S750.
and Plant Sales, Mason, W.
IF YOU PLAN ON SELLING. CALL ON THE EXand
Early Cabbage Plants. 500ft. SYRACUSE Drive -In, phone
5-11 -30if
Va. 773-530B, near the
MARY L. BIRCHFIELD,
PERIENCED ONES, CALL US. WE HAVE B5 ACRES
above the Syracuse State 992-2088.
Sycemore Strttt,
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
FOR INDUSTRY ON TWO RAILROADS. OUR MOTTO IS
Park on Rt. 124, Thomas
5·4·12tp
Middleport, Ohio,
Plaintiffs
5 ROOM furnished apartment,
SATISFACTION.
Hayman,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
Vs.
ground floor, Racine, Robert
4-30-JOic SMALLEY'S
Ph . 992-2174
Pomeroy
Gilt
Shop .Hill . phone· 949-3811 .
·
MRS.
A.
E.
CANADAY
and
.
I
WILl
not
be
resr,onslble
lor
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
A. E. CANADAY,
Chesler.
Ohio.
Have
large
5-7-llp
992-3325
Address Unknown,
any debts con racted by
7 YEAR OLD Tennessee Walker
assortment of flowers for all
Et 11.,
Defendant. anyone other than myself.
mare, palomino, gentle' but
occasions. Arrangements for
ALL
NOTICE IV PUBLICATION
Signed:
Ernest
"Rink" t2 x 60 2 bedroom trailer, adults
spirited,
neck
reins
.
John
Mother' s Day ; pots and
No. 15.064
uavtdson .
only, phone 742-5641.
Sauvage, Syracuse Ohio,
baskets for Memorial Day,
The Defendants, Mrs . R. E.
5-12-31c
5-10-31p
phore 992·3272.
&amp;
Canday : R. E. Canaday ; the
99c and up. Phone 985-3537.
unknown heirs , devisees ,
5-10-12fp
4·2B·I21c
legatees, adm lnistrators ,
2 BEDROOM mobile home,
dlstrlbutees , executors and For Sale or Trade
&amp;-· PLUMBING
Racine area , 10 miles above WHISPER lNG Pines Nile Club,
TOMATO PLANTS : Seven
uslgns of L. C. Brechtel , 196B DODGE Polaro, like new,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-6329.
601
E.
Mlln,
Pomeroy
1
mile
North
of
Pomeroy,
varieties, organically grown,
Deceased, and the unknown
S-12-tlc
240 Lincoln 51.
Oh io on Rt. 7. Have 2:30 nighl
heirs, dtvJsees, legatees, ad- will trode tor pickup of equal
strong transplants - SOc
club li cense, phone 992-9943,
MlddllfiOI"I,
Oloio
ministrators , dlstrlbutees . value, Gary R. Dill, phone
dozen; In Jiltypols Sl dozen ;
WANT A FARM?
Pomeroy, Ohl,o.
exte:utors and aulgns of Peter 949-3915.
llba Anthony Plumbing
NEW. 2 bedroom, all eleclrlc
B.
Quisenberry
,
Syracuse,
80 nlco laying acres, 51J,
Brechtel, Deceued, will take
5-10-61c
5-10-31c
apartment, available last of
We have 1 complete Home
Ohio.
'
·· notice that ·on the 3rd day of
miles S.E. of Rulland. Large
week
,
phone
992-7133
or
992·
Maintenance
Service the
5·2·10ip
May, 1972, a Complaint was
barn- 3Bx50, Crib, Jm .
BEAUTIFUL Maple Early
7384 aller 3 p.m.
·
year
around.
No
matter what
f ted In lhe Common Pleas
plement building, chicken
American style, stereo-radio
ft2·3021
5-10-31c
Court of Meigs County. Ohio, For Rent or Sale
your
need.
Complete
roof or
combination. AM-FM radio, 4 Auto Sales
house, 40 acres under
Case No. 15,0~ , wherein you HOUSE In Long Bollom. phone
160
Co•t
St.
MlddleiiOrt
spOuting
rtpilr.
Interior
or '
cultivation, 30 acres fenced.
havt been named defendants.
TRAILER space. $25 per speaker sound system, 4 '59 AMERICAN Rambler,
9B5-3529.
exterior
urpentry.
Ctlting
speed
automatic
changer
.
In the prayer of the Complain t,
some timber, 1112 story
5-9-tfc
month , phone 992-5434,
17,000 actual miles. 0 . K. Why pay high rent.
tilt and Paneling lnd Siding.
PlaintiffS pray that Defendants
Balance $76 .39. Use our
frame home, 4 bedrooms.
Middleport.
Casto,
Reedsville,
Ohio.
may be compelted.to show their
Complete Plumbl!'9 &amp;
budgel
terms.
Call
992-70B5.
when
this
comf.
3
B.
R.
bath, cellar, all this tor just
S-9-6tc
Interest and th,at ttJe same mav
5·7-6fp
HtJtina.
+
For
Sale
or
Lease
S-10.6fc
&amp; bath home can be
$17,600. Mlnerol.s.
be odludged to be ~ull and void,
------~
Dty
Number
tt2-2550
~~=---and plaintiff's title quieted INDUSTRIAL acreage, phone 2 FURNISHED aparlments, WALNUT, Modern style,
WANT A BUSINESS?
bought for the low
1961 - 6 CYLINDER Chevy
We have 24 br. emergency
against the same, and for such 992-7133 or 992-73B4 otter 3
Includes
building, all stock
utilit
ies
paid
.
deposit
stereo-radio, 4 speaker sound pickup truck, 4 new tires, 2 price of $8,900. Hilltop
other relief as ·rs proper. The p.m.
service.
and equipment, nice 5 room
required . adults only. $95 per system, 4 speed automatic mud &amp; snow lires: rebuilt
real estate Is dncrlbed as
992-5103
742·3947
5-I0-31c
location
overlooking
apartment.
hardwood floors,
month, phone 992-2568. .
follows :
changer, separate controls. radiator, body fair, motor o.k.
742-4711
-10-31c
3
bedrooms,
bath,
front
and
The following Real Estate
Rutland, has attached
Balance $62 .34. Use our - $400 . Phone m -6173.
We art tully ln•ured .. ,
situated In the County of Meigs ,
rear glassed In porches,
budget
terms.
Call
992-70B5.
5·11·3fC
carport.
paved
Wanteti
To
Buy
In tl'\e State of Ohio, and' In the
large lot. In operation tor 15
3
AND
4
ROOM
furnished
and
5·10·61c
Township of Salisbury, and COW DOG. Phone 949-4761.
on
lg.
1964 CORVAIR, 4 speed, good. ~riveway,
years. Just S17,900.
unfurn ished apartments .
boundef;l and described as
condition,
$325;
phone
992·
Phone
992-5434.
private
lot.
3 BEDROOM$-2BATHS
1972
ZIG-ZAG
Sewing
Machine
5·11
·31c
follows :
2360.
4-12-tfc
left in layaway. Beautiful
1 story frame, very nice
Sltuat&amp; In Marcus Bosworth 's
5·10-ltc
pastel color, full size model.
Addition lo Lower Pomeroy , HAY, any amount, old or new,
kitchen, hardwood floors,
looking
for
In·
Get Ald of Them
now Incorporated Into the · E k Hill Rt 3 p
All
buill-In
to
bulfonhole,
do
NEW,
12
x
60,
lw.o
bedroom
gas for,ced air heot,
Village of Mlddleporl. Melgt
s ey
•
· • omeroy.
Wt
wilt
prote~t any single
'69
DODGE
•
;
,
ton
pickup,
good
mobile home across from slretc~ sewing and fancy
vestment! Try thl~ for
basement.' lof'60•117-road to
County , Ol'lio, and marked and
5-12-:Uc
dwolllng
residence
lor ·
condition
,
call
at
lot
5,
Cline's
stitching.
Pay
just
$48.75
cash
Bradbury
School.
Call
992road, good neighborhood.
known on the said 'pllt of lower
Trailer Park, across f~om size - 3 unit apt . house
or terms available. Trade-Ins
5308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
Pomeroy as Lot Num,ber 153. USED shallow-well water pump
$7,995.00.
Blue
Fountain
Motel, in Middleport . Price
house south from Bradbury accepted. Phone m -5641.
'149.50
Sold lot being filly leel by one
for clslern . Phone 992-9972
Gallipolis.
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
hundred and eleven· feet . Being , between 2 and 6 p.m.
School. Pels welcome.
5-10-61c
includes all furniture .
WRITTEN WARRANTY
Lot No. 153 as shown In deed
5-I0-6fc Just over $12,000.
REALTOR
5-7-61p
5-5-tfc
·records of Meigs County, Ohio.
Call 614-949-Ull, If no an.
-,---7 ROOMS and balh. basement,
In Volume 159, Page :120.
C.t1992-22l9
swer, coli 614-992·1219.
~-----­
- Old uprlghl UNFURNISHED apartment, . new Lennox gas furnace, new 1961 FORD 700, 195" wheei
Reference Deed : Volume 244, WANTED
phone
992-2780
or
992-3432.
tf
no
answor
992-256t
pianos,
grand
pianos.
old
!Jose,
used
on
paved
highway,
POMEROY- 2 bdrm.
roof on house, garage and
Pagt 569 of the Meigs County
1
PLEASE CALL US FOR
pump organs. Any condition .
5-4-lfc nice lol. 0. K. Casto, Reeds· exceptionally good, 5 speed
Deed Records.
home,
all paneled, to
Paying $10each. Write giving -----~
YOUR
NEEDS
IN
REAL
You are requ ired to answer
transmission,
2
speed
axle,
vill e, Ohio.
•
the Complaint within twenty . directions . Witten Piano Co .. 5 ROOM furnished apartment
ESTATE.
5·7-6tp good tiru. Phone 9B5·3554, be completed, owner
321 Third St.
tight days after the last
and 4 room and bath un- -=-:--:-:-----Box 188, Sardis. Ohio. 43946.
Harold Brewer, Long Boltom. selling now at the low
Racine, Oloio
publlcallon of this notice,
furnished
apartment.
Wilt
5-7-6fp
POODLE 'pupplu. Sliver Toy,
4·23-lfc price of $7,400.
namely, by not later lhan the
SIX
ROOM
house,
ill
Butternut
accept
one
child.
3
miles
south
Park view Kennels, Phone 992· - - ' - -- - - - 241h dly Dl. J.uly, 1972, or
of Middleporl on S(. Rt. 7. M &amp;
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
5443.
ludgmenl by defaull . will be OLD F URNfTURE, dishes ,
19616 CYLINDER"Chevrolet 'I•
Help Wanted
G Food Market.
Wodsworfh Drive, Columbus,
randtrtd against you .
B
·15-ttc
clocks, brass beds, sliver
ton, phone 9B5·392B.
LOTS - Minersville.
Ohio,
phone
237--4334.
S-12-Jtc
DIIWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD dollars
1
or
complete
5-10-3tp Rt. 7 &amp; Rt. 124.
and
~
.
· 11·21-ttc
MOTHER 'S DAY special households.
Write
M.
D
MARY L. BIRCHFIELD.
PLASTIC
flowers,
pots,
sprays
Setup
gravel
free
with
any
Miller,
Rt.
4,
Pomeroy,
Ohio:
1950
INTERNATIONAL
•
i,.fon
Sycamore Street, Middleport,
and baskets. Across from
NICE 3-slory home with . full
Call 992-6271.
acuarlum purchased through
Ohio
pickup, engine recently COME and see us. Two
basemont, 2 lots, nt!'O( forced
upper end of Syracuo;j Stale
Plllntllh
3-16-lfc
May 141h, Showalter's Wet overhauled, SlSO. Phone 992- beautiful new homos, v, mile
Park.
Mabel
Pickens.
•
air
furnace. Near Pomoroy.
Crow. Crow &amp; Porter,
61b~ .
Pel
Shop,
Chesler,
Ohio.
l!lementary
~chool. Phone
5-12·31c
North of Eastern High School
Attorneys for Plaintiffs .
. 5·11 -3tc on
s.J.13fc
Help Wanted
(5112, 19. 26; (6) 2, 9, 16, 23
St. Rt. 7. Both homes have , 992-738-4 to soe.
1J.).ffc
RINGNECK pheasants, ch icks,
·
4 bedrooms, bath and a holt,
HOW to earn at home ad· eggs, Rt. 33. near Salisbury 196B BANNER Travel Trailer. Real Estate For Sale
built
in
·
kitchens
and
u'
l
lllly
;:
2·cL-:A-::R::G::E";-:1;ot
-."s;""·6~
. -room--s-.-bath,
Distributor Wanted ·
dressing envelopes . Rush
School. RoQer leltheit,
19 11&gt; ft ., sleeps 6,_completely
'tooms; walt to wall carpet
stamoed, self-addressed
garago,
cellar
$8,500;
Maggie
Pomeroy. Ohoo, phone m - self-contained, like new, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home. will be Installed soon. One
The Station
envelope:
B&amp;G
EN- 3446 . .
Whittington, Depot Sf , Columbus Dlspotch of.
$2.000; phone 742·312B.
Arbaugh- Addition, Tuppers house haularg_e family room
TERPRISES, 501 Spaulding
Rutland,
Ohio. •
·
·
5-10-41c
5·12·3fp
Plains. All new with tolal and a den. Bot~ have a
ternoo~ 1nd Sundly,
St., Rlverlon, til. 62561. ·
· H-301p
eleclrlc ond central air garage. Gel um while they
nlng . Columbuo Clttzon.
5·1·51p BOTTLE gas .range. S10, old LAWN chairs, avon bottles,' conditioning, balh and '4 fully . l~st . Call Shorman Sum .
1
Edison disc records S1 .50
stand tables. 95 Pearl Street,
carpeted, full basement, merfleld 985-3598.
BtJ iLDI Nl. LOTS "llrancn.
~
~
A-I~
R-~~R-E
_S_S_E
_"_R__w~lth
Journll, Supply boys lnd
each. Phore 367-7729.
Middleport.
garage In bllserlient. See by
4-14·flc
wood
Subdivision
at
l!ock
You
menager's license. Phone m.
~~~~ otoncls In I'Dmeray.
5-12-lotp
5-10-6tc appointment, phone m -21116 - --- - - - - - Springs, Tuppers Plains
3333.
::-::--- - - - - - - - -- - - - or 1192·l585. Danny Thompson
water. Ptoone 992-2789. • ·
5-10-Jtc PICK-UP camper. 101f' ft .· VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
Financing available.
·
.f.27-12tc. Mkldfttlort ..... Allrocttv.
'
1967 Banner. comrletely self. · model. Complete · with all
12-JO.tfc B ROOM house: bath, patio,
Dlirt.tlmt lob lor activo
m "E R'i Eiic-ED· telephone
wall -to-wall carpeting , '12
~~~~~:ln'~\~pi~~'WIIIpt~k: 'R"ACINE - 6 room house; bath, acre lot, gas heat, phone RACINE - 10 rciom' hou,..,' family. Wrlto G. F. H.oko, 215
solicitor to work In your own ~~~:::.n~~frl~~::t~r.s~o.~~~:
$27 cash or budgel plan uthlllly room, garage, 510.000;
home. Phone 949-3511 for an sleeps 4. $1,500. Phone . !'92·
Hershel McClure m .:J436 or bath, basement, garage, two
N. c.d.r, Llnca1tor, 01o1o or
2'175.
available. 'Phone 992-5641 .
P one 949-419$.
appointment.
m-5248.
01 YOUR DIAL
lots. Phone 949-4313.
·
5·12·3fc
5·10·61c
3·31-lfc
+5-JOip: catt ctlloct ...SJ.25l1.
5·11 ·31c
5-9-6fc
,.
'------- - -- ---1

I

BuSiness Services '
KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE .

-,--~----

POINT oFFICE

S~eets

SUPPLY

'

EARTH MOVING

20*

PHONE 675-3628

The
Daily Sentine_l

Spring
Painting?

-------

Vzrgil B•. Teaford, Sr. - Broker

SS.55 . .

WEATHER ROOFING
CONSTRUCTION ·
CO.

TERMITES .. TERMITES

Y.CITY EXTEIIMINATIOh

- - -- - - -

That Lutena

.
1

HELP
WANTED

------

Mor.

To

WMP0/1390
.

L...-----...J .~

J

'·

I•

•

'1

One Owner
Used Cars

Late-·.

1971 Dodge Polaro 4 Dr. Sed. Green
.with black vinyl top, P.S., P. B., radio,
new tires &amp; only 14,121. on ,this beauty.
Localoneowner.
Only$2895
1971 Plym_outh Fury 114 l)r. Sed., V-8,
auto., P.S., P.B., radio, brown exterior
&amp; matching brown interior. Only 8,241
miles. Localoneowner.
Only$2795
1970 Ford 1 Ton long wheel base. Real
sharp truck with flat bed &amp; racks all
ready on it. .Local one owner. Real
·sharp truck.
·
Only $2995
1969 Buick ' LeSabre Cust. 4 Dr. Sed.
Beige, factory air, P.S., P, ~ .. real nice
car. Local one owner . Priced to
sell.
Only $2195
1969 Chrysler Newport Cust. 2 Dr. H. T.
Green with · green vinyl top, factory
air. Local one owner . . One of the
sharpest used cars in the valley.
Priced to sell. New Buick tradein.
Only $2395
. 1970 Toyota. Local, one owner. Low
mileage. Automatic trans., real sh~rp_
4dr.sed,Markll.
Only$1995

1966 V. W. Real sharp red bug. This is a
niceV.W.
Only$895

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

- - - ·-· -4

.
On 'Good

EXPERT
WhHI Ali~ment

TILLERS

REALTY

72 Chev. Custom Impala

1969 V.W. Real good V.W. local one
Only $1595
owner. Priced to !\ell.

MOWERS

CLELAND

. Auto. trans., blue wllh black vinyl lop.

R. I. DUBBELD

SPECIAL

- - -- - -

From Hart's Used
Car Lot
•
72 Chev. Custom Impala

niRU MAY 15

$699"

'

Aluminum

&amp;

1 It

Apple Grove Ne.ws, Events

Have Fun In The Sun

j

llii/AI/111/ItfSIIJI/IC

-

For Sale .

r r r r r r r r r ,.-, r r 1 r r r·r r r r"r n ··, 1 t ' r .,

II- Tbe Dilly li'ftiaei,._IICI.-Puoeroy, 0., May 12; 1972

•

·

1 '

..

•

'! '

' r _,

8.'

.

Auto. trans., iiold with black vinyl top . .'

72 Ford Galaxie 500

71 Ford 'h l Pickup, V-8, auto., P.S. •••• 12695

Auto. trans., air conditioning, brown.

69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air.......'2295

66 Ford T·Bird ·
&gt;

•

Convertible, auto. trans., all power, red wilh black vinyl
top. A Beauty.
.

2-68 Volkswagens
1-69 Volksll4agen
70 Volkswagen "Bug"
68 Mustang, 6 cyl:
3 Sp., red with black vinyl top.

TRUCKS

70 Chev. 1h Ton Pickup
V-B, auto. trans .. P.S., P.B., with camper.

71 Chev. 1h Ton Pickup
V-B. standard trans.

68 Olds 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air

• • .. • •• • 11895

66 MercuiJ Sta~ Wagoo, V-8 auto........... '595
66 Buick l.aSabre 4 Door, air.............. ' '995
66 Olds 98 Lux. Sedan, full pow., air •·••··'895

66 Buick l.aSabre 4 Door. H.T............ :••'695
63 Olds Super 88 4 Door H.T.............. '595
69 Dodge 1h l Pickup, V-8 std....·........ 11395
Over 40

New

Cadillacs &amp; Oldsmobiles

In Stock! .. We're Dealin'!

Karr &amp; Va.n Zandt
"You'll like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
•
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
992-5342
Ofen Evenings Until 6:oo- Til 5 PM: Sat.

..

67 Ford 1h Ton Pickup
"Big 6" long &amp; wide bed.
SECOND TIME AROUND ...
We guarantee you won't get someone else's
headache, but a dependable A-1 , ~ar. Coupes,
sedans, wagons and pick-up truck models on ·
the lot now. Come and take a look.

Po11eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGIIS
Of
QUALin

1969 CHEVROLET
$2495
Klngswood Estate Wagon, factory air, automatic transmission, power steering &amp; brakes, luggage rack . Green
finish with green vinyl interior, radlo, extra sharp car and
one you will appreciate.

MAIN ST. POMEROY, 'OHIO
.

Elk Run

Laur~1

I ,

Clif(

News Notes

Tuppers Plains
Society News

'

..,

Social Notes
SWldav School attendance on
May 7 was Sl Offering was
$20.81. It was voted to send $15
to the "Citizens fo r Decent
Uteralure " at Cincinnati.
Worship Services were held
at II a . m. with Rev. lehman
bringing the message from II
Cor. 4:14.
The Women 's Society will
hold its regular meeting on
Tuesday evening, May 16, at
the home of Helen Woode with
Eleanor Boyles, program
leader. Everyone welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Brooks
are the proud parents of a baby
girl born in April. This is their
first daughter and they have
three sons.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Burke,
Jr . have rented their trailer
home lo a Racine couple and
· are laying up the basement to a
new house close by.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Swartz
have sol~ their trailer home
and will he building a house
soon on the same spot.
Marlene Winebrenner and
George Donovan were married
recently and have returned
from a honeymoon to the small
house on the former Vern
Shumway property, whlcn the
Donovans have already
remodeled and refurnished.
SUnday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Vere Swartz were Mr. and
Mrs. Millard Swartz, Mr. and
Mrs. Orner Hess, Pearl Ran·
dolph and Mrs. Vernon Swartz
· and children .
Mr. and Mrs."Clair Follrod
visited Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Swartz and Mrs . Carleton at
Lottridge Sunday afternoon.
Mrs . Genevieve Guthrie
visited Mrs. Ethel Stout at
Tuppers Plains SWlday af·
ternoon.

•'.

'

Pomeroy Motor.Co.

Great
BUYS

./

Stivers ville

Fairview News Notes

News Notes News Notes

70 FORD RANGER
Auto: trans., P.S., long bed, radio.

'2495

'

Mulne

E.

a. w.

J*'

Alfred

1968CHEVROLET ;&lt;,TON
$1549
8 ft. Stepslde, good H. duty tires, V-B engine, 3 speed·
trans, solid cab, local 1 ownerdrk~ , , · m •1•1""f'l "n"''"

OPI!N EVES. 1:00 P.M.
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
f'PM!IOY, 01110
Sunday School attendance at
the UnUed Methodist Church .1------....,....,..------------~.,---4
By Bertha Parker
was 54. Offering was $17.14.
Sabbath School altendance Worship service attendance
May 7 at the Free Methodist was 40 and offering $59.24.
Church was 132. Offering for ell
Richard Lodwick of Chester
services was $210.60. At· bought the Lyons Market here .
. By Mn. Herbert Roulb
Rowe of Trenton, Mich.; Mr.
tendance at morning and and took over the business on
Mrs. Herbert Sayre and Paul and Mrs. Ray Soucie and
evening services April 30 was Satw-day.
Sayre visited In Marietta children of Cambridge, &lt;ihio.,
150. Eighteen choir members
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock Saturday eva1ing.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Parsons,
Mr. and Mrs. David Bryant were present May 7.
visited her nephew, Gene
By In~:~ Randolph
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Parsons, George
The Youth Revival services Riggs, at Camden Clark Mrs. Charles Lawson and
Aletha Randolph, Ola Smith of Charleston spent SUnday
Parsons, all of .A.shJand, 0.,
and Cella Ashcraft visited Mrs. wilh their son, Mr . and Mrs. which were held over the Hospital in Parkersburg family were Mr. and Mrs.
David
Rowe, Vernon Rowe of
weekend . were well attended. Saturday. He is recovering Robert l.aWliOII,local; Mr. and
Randolph's grandmother Bill Bryant and ehildren.
New
Brighton,
Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Dariny Haines, Rev. Raymond Gill or Cam- from back surgery.
recently at Syracuse resl
Mrs. Harold Lawson and son C.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
former Columbus residents, bridge was evangelist.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bet· J, of Letart, W. Va.
home.
were
In Columbus TQesday to
Mr . and Mrs. Bud Hilt of zing and Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Clarence Randolph took have moved Into the R. R.
Mr. and Mrs. Gllbert Rowe of see their eye doctor.
Colwnbus called on friends Hoffman were Sunday dinner Pennsylvania are visiting
William Randolph to see a Durst property.
Visiting Sunday afternoon
Mrs.
Olive
Talbott
has
here recently.
guests of their children, Mr. relatives after being called
doctor Friday.
with
Mrs. Bertha Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Russell of and Mrs. Dana Hoffman Jr. of here due to the death of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dannie Dan· returned from a two months
were
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mitdrea and four children of visit with her daughler, Mr. Ravenna visited recently with Rutland.
Rowe's mother Mrs. Ada Kate chell of Colinbua, Mr.' and
Columbus spent the weekend and Mrs. George Souders in Mr . Russell's sister, Mrs. - Mrs . Effie Watson and Rowe.
Mrs. Howard Robinson of
Georgia Diehl. ··
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
with Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Day Xenia.
Mr·' and Mrs. Walter Taylor Flatwoods, W. Va., Mrs, Clara
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Wolfe,
Paul Brown of California and Barth, were Thw-sday evening of Apple Grove, W. Va. spent
and family.
Syracuse
were
guests
of
his
George
Brown of Columbus guests of her son, Mr. and Mrs. &amp;mday evening wllh Mr. and Mae Sargent, Stephanie
Mr. and Mrs. Donald W.
Radford of Pomeroy Rte.,
Randolph spent Satw-day night parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gene visited recently with their Harold Watson of Athens and Mrs. Don Hupp and sona.
Brian and Raymond Roblnton,
mother, Mrs. May Brown.
helped Harold celebrate his
with his parents, Mr. !l'ld Mrs. Wolfe and children.
Mrs. Roger Manuel, Mr. and · Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields,
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Brewer
Mr. and Mrs. Norman birthday.
c. E. Randolph.
Mrs . Ronnie ' Russell of Mra. Marla~e Flaher, cbllclien
Mrs. Win Blake was taken to Pomeroy; · JOIIM RoU8h and
Mr. and Mrs. Orner Hess visited theirilaughter, Mr. and Schaefer visited recenUy with
Molly, Larry and Amy of
called on Pearl and William Mrs. Charles Slmeral and their daughter and son-in-law; St. Joseph Hospital In Angela Michelle Manuel Racine, Mrs. Gerald Hayman
daughter of Columbus over the Mr. and Mrs. WIUiam Perry of Parkersburg "Thursday for vlal.ted Mr. and Mrs. Rusaell
Randolph recenUy.
and son Keith.
Athens.
observation.
Mr. and Mrs. Ton a Boring weekend.
Roush Sunday .afternoon.
Mrs.
Jessie
Paraons
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mid·
Mr. and Mrs. John Douglas
Mrs. Leota Massar was a
called on the Randolph famlly
Relatives from a dl.stance returned to her ho~ SUnday
dleswart and family visited her of Albany spent SWlday with Sunday dinner guest of her attending funeral11ervlces and
recently.
at Ashland, 0 . after spending
Marie Domlgan called on parents, Mr. and ' Mrs. Edward Mrs. Douglas's parents, Mr. sister, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar calling at the Ewing Funeral some time with lier " ' - Mila
Bush and family of Spiller, . and Mrs. Harmon Fpx .
Babcock.
Home for Mrs. Ada.Kate Rowe Ada Rowe and aials!lng In the
Hazel Blggnecenlly.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Archer of
Mr. and Mr~ . Jolm Hayes of Thursday were: Mr. and Mrs.
Dor!el Biggs is on· the sick SWlday afternoon.
care of her mother Mrs. Kate
Mrs. Wanda Teaford has Columbus spent Saturday with Chester were SUnday afternoon GObert Rowe, Mr. and Mrs.
Ust.
Rowe who passed away
Ziba Midldff and Clarence returned to her employment Mr. Archer's mother, Mrs. guests of Mr. and !!Irs. Wayne Howard Rowe of South Gal!!, Monday.
Brlckles.
Mich., Mr. and Mrs, Harry
Randolph called on Dorsel after a recent hospitalization Georgia Diehl.
for
injuries
received
in
an
auto
Mrs.
Edna
Howell
of
Mrs.
Velma
Matlack
Biggs Thurllday..
CARNIVAL
·- ··
Columbus and Nancy Walker returned to her borne here
Mr. and Mrs. Barnhouse and accident.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawson and Mrs. Dolorea Will of Star after spending the winter In
children recently called on
have
moved Into the Olase Route called on frlendll here Arizona.
Hobart Day and family .
Smeeks
property In Portland. Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Arbaugh
SWlday callers at the home of
Mr.
ai1d
Mrs.
Tim
Welkerson
Mrs.
Edna
Schaefer
received
visited
relatives at Stewart arid ·
Inez and a.t-ence RandolPh
and
Shawn,
Mrs.
Ame
Tipton
word
that
her
brother,
Mark
Guysvffie
Sunday.
were Mr. 1111d Mrs. Olbo Ypung
Mr . and Mrs. Michael
of Burbank, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs, and daughter, Columbus, Mrs. Stahl, Stockdale, had been
Jean
Shuler
and
11011,
Mr
•.
~Uld
'
retUrned
home
from
the
Watson
of Middleport spent
Edgar Randolph of ·near
Mrs.
E.
H.
Carpenter
Were
halpltal.
Mr.
Stahl
wu
Injured
Sunday with his grandmother,
Greensburg, Ohio, and Mr. and
recent
callers
at
the
home
of
seven
weeki
ago
in
an
Mrs. Effie Watson.
-· Mrs. Dorsel Biggs and ,famlly,
·Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rudy·
DurSt.
aulonioblle
accident
and
Is
Mr. and Mra. Allen Coe are
local.
•
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harley
Keyes
IOilleWhat
Improved.
announcing the birth of a son,
Kenny Siders and Qarenc:e
ol
Newark
vlalied
rei!Uves
and
'
Frankie Leroy, at St. Joseph
E. Randolph Jr. were Marietta
frlendll
here
over
the
weekend.
-"r:-------'---Holpllll
April 30. The couple
visitora Tlnnday and ~
Mr.
and
Mra.
Rendall
Meter, Mrs. Odnaa Weddle alao have a daughter, age 2.
called on Mrs. leland Sldan.
Tllbott
of
New
I.aln&amp;ton
and
Mr. and Mra. Marvin Wilker
and
children, Mrs.
Beverly .(Day) Dandrea and
Mr.
IJid
Mrs.
OUa
Cuto
llpelll
Durlll, Maline Pv~PeD, Mr. and and daughter, Ruthie, attended
two girls c8lled 011 Ilia Ran·
Sunday
with
Mn.
,
Olive
1
Mr•·
Carl Brown, P1111 Llrldna the wedding of their niece,
dolph Saturday evenlnil. .
Tllbotl.
nl
Tom
Dural wwe recent Donna Miller, at the Nazarene
Mr. and Mrl. Hobart Day
Leota
Birch
caJieil
on
Mr.
guesta Of Mr. and Mta, BW Qwrcb in Dayton Saturday.
and · aon, Jeff, e11led on
nl
Mrs.
Allen
Brewer
and
Bryant.
·
. Ruthle was · one of the
Clannce Randolph and flinlly
David
Sunday
afternoon
..
of
H.
btldelmalda for the wedding.
Re"
c
ent
gueata
rete~~Uy.
Mrs.
Patty
Ql-.camp,
Carpenter and flllllly were Then the Wllkera ~~ on to
Jewell Story and Clyde White
Mrs.
Icy
•
•
Mrs.
Belly
.Mn.
Paul Orr,
Durst; ClnclnnaU to visit relatives and
an lmprovll1c llowly at their
Ward
and
rro,
vlllied
Ni'l.
Mrs. Trellle lllelhem, Delbert frlendl.
hqma lfllr belnl fiGIPI~.
Maline
lfalnea
Wecklelday.
Mrs. Evelyn Lucke, Mr.
Oura,
AnEND FlJN'ERAL
Mr. and 'Mn.
Mlnlll
Mrs.
Mike
Corbett
and
Mrs.
and Mrs. Ow-!ell Karr. Sr.,
Mr. and Mn. J1111e1 Souden
1111d family i!ptlll I Nllhid
with Mn. Jewell Story llld Ealher Dilley were recent Mrs. Ruby ilrylllt and Feu, and 11011, Gary, of Miami, Fla.
viii ltd her father, Jewell ~· of Mr. and Mrs. Gr.nn Mrs. Lynda Wanl,l'lul Ev111, were here last week lor the
Baker of &amp;lee 11 Road.
"WIIat a I&amp;IM,· f•n•, what a
Btlle¥e 1M,
.Paul llowl, Leota Birch IJid funeral services of Mrs. Wilma
Story. whiM be In the
ilobod;r,
but
NO~ODY
Ia
walk
inc
out!"
Mr. lll1d Mrs .. Mac Van Maxine Durst.
Davis.
1
bolpllal.

TRUCKS

ternoon.
.
Mrs. Hubert· Rolish and Mrs.
Jack Sharpnack and Mrs.
Erma Wilson visited Jack
Sharpnach, Pete Wolfe and '
-Mrs. ~trice Nice 1!11 patients
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Thursday afternoon.

1967 CHEVELLE
$1395
St . W~gon, V-8 engine, automatic trans., power steering,
beigejflnish &amp; vinyl trim, good w-wtlres, radio . A nice car.

Open Evenings Till 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. till s ~;~.m.
Service on Sat. Till 12 noon.
Buy where Quality is higher than price.

:sM im:;~NELS0 N MOTORS, ·INC.
B13 PH. 992-2174

70 Cadillac Eldorado Coupe, .air., ......... '5300 .
69 Cadillac Sedan DeVile,,air ............ .'3700
68 ~iliac Sedan DeVille, air .............12600

We Service What We Sell
Our.. Word Is Our Bond

1

USED CARS

By Mrs. Herbert Rouab
Sonday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Shields were
.Mr. and Mrs. Howard
11\obinson of Flatwoods, W. Va.,
' Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent, Mrs.
Marlene Fisher end children
Molly, Larry and Amy, Brian
and Raymond Robinson of.
. Racine, Stephanie Radford of
Pomeroy Rte.
Mrs . Ada Norris visited
recently with her sister Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Orr of
Columbus spent Saturday
evening with Mrs. Iva Orr.
Mr~ and Mrs. Herbert Roush
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dana
· lewis at CUlton Sunday
evening .
.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson
and son of Charleston, W. Va.
spent the week end with Mrs.
Erma Wilson.
A chicken dinner will be
served at the Letart Falls
Conununity Hall Sunday May
28th .
Everette Connally was ·
returned home from Holzer
Medical Center Satw-day.
Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Mrs. Erma Wllson visited Mr.
.and Mrs. Roy Donohew
Thursday eva~lng.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Roy of
Racine and Jeff and Rex
Thorton spent &amp;in day with Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Cummins at
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables and
daughter Vicki visited Mr.
Ables sister Mrs. Edith Gilkey
at Gallipolis SUnday.
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
son Keith visited Sunday with
Mrs. Bertha Robinson.
Mrs. Golda Shain of Logan is
visiting her niece Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
md son Edward visited Mrs.
Elsie Hupp Gibbs at Riverside
Hospital, Columbus Sunday.
Mrs. Katie Young and Mrs.
Elva Hudson of Minersville
Rte. visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe
MMuel recently.
Mrs. Edith Manuel and son
Tim called on Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Bush Monday eva~lng.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
Ada!ns called on Mr. and Mrs.
Chrissie Powell Sunday af·

70 DODGE 1h TON
long bed, Ready to go.

'2195
68 DODGE DART
GTS 2 door Hardtoo auto. trans.

'1295
See: Ray Riggs or Roger ~iebel

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
I

I

.

Ph. 985-4100 '
located on St. Rt. 7

3 ROOMS

NEW
FURNITURE
. '349.95 .
'535.00 Down
Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
w.
Mascin,

Va.

Chester, 0.

�'

lt-i'bln.ll;riJeniU.I,M....... t-Puwvy,O.,Ma1 U.lfl2

.
Weather

.

News. •.•·in--Briefs

Hearing_Set for Teachers_

· (Continued froin pnge 1)

·

leaching personnel was_ em- t1ie dale of ~I of W. noUce
ployed at Thursday .night's you have file~ with the Albuqatrque Tul!ldey,- remained In serious condition. In
regular Board of EduCati011 Superintendent ol 'Scllooll · a ~chueUI, 301 demonltrators arrested for blocking the
meeting. Bill Wllbers served u written demand for such gala ol Wiltov.. AJI'B lllcluded Dr. John W1111am .Ward,
pml~ent prolelq in the all- ·hearing." Alhb: requeated lbe pmiJ nt.of 1\lnbeut OoUege, and Julia Mendenhall, wife of the
!l'uidem ol SIDlth CoUece. BW Walton, All-American center ol
sence·ol Ted Stevens, reported hearing.
·
abient due to oo.tness reasons. • In a vote ol 3-1 with Harry UCLA'a NCAA clliJnpiGnablp tuketball team, was one of
Last night the · board COli· Skiers dillenllnc the board Meral ~·IITelted C11 the UCLA C8JiliiiS at Los Angeles.
aldered the llat of five teachers agreed to a req\aeat from
and an auxiliary · employe Jimmy Joe Weljge for a
· D:UOOG, IDAHO - AFI'ER NINE DAYS of searching
whose
names
were
presented
basketball
CUniC
lo
be
held
in
'
wdeltii'OIIIId
fn the natkrJ's largelt allver mfne, rescue crews
T~itN; May 12
earlier
for
traruder
and
subPoint
i&gt;leaaant
Junior
High
'lblll'lday
foand
the bodies of tile 1aJ!; to men mlssing In the
Doublt Futuro Progrom
sequent assignment and set starting June 12 from 10 a.Jil. ~ lnlne. All were clead.
"THE HOT BOX"
May 28 at 7:30 p.m. as the until noon fl." ' dayU, week.
Jn .u, 11 inen died In tile wont catasti-opbe in Idaho's
''"•••• guns ore hot and
lbo·dles hard!
~arlng dale. This comes as an
Studenta wW be c~ed ODe hiltory. Of-~ originally trspped by an underiii'OUDd fire, only
aftennsth
of
their
names
being
dollar
an hour or two dollap •two -.lved. lleacUI! temu1 found the bodies of· the last 40
-PIIis-placed
on
a
transfer
and
for
the
morning aeulon.Itwu ml"'ng m1nera deep 1u lbe m1ue Tlllrsday, ending an around"LITTLE MURDERS"
·
IColo!rl
subsequent assignment Uat. In IIlla fee that Slden objected to lh~ effart that besu May 2when a fire erupted in the "old
E It loll Gould
turn they were notified by Supt. when the vote wu_taken uylng worklnga".ol 8 mare ol tunnels.
·
Donald Sutherland
Withers tn compliance with a that he felt ~should not be
·
sJate code. The notiflcati011 any profit made In lhll type
WASIIINGTON - 'l'IIE HOUSE V&lt;rJ:ED Thursday to raise
said In part: "You have the project. Voting In faY« were
5atvrdly,-Miy 13
the
fl.IO 1111 hour mln1mam wage to $2, . accepting an adright to agree to the transfer Bill · Withers,
Charlea
Doublt Fooluro
mlnlstratlm-lacked ineasare thai would· spread the increase
and subsequent assignment or Eshenaur, and Ray Fields.
THE GREAT
oyer
a ICIItler tfille .lhllll the Democrats wanted A coalition of
WHITE HOPE
you may object and ask for a
Substitute teachers em(Color)
hearing."
, ployed were Oaude Rodriguez, llepublkua and aoulhern Democrats teamed up on a key 218 to
James Earl Jones
"You shall be deemed to secondary, effeciive April 28;. 192 vote Tburaday to pass a Republican sulisti:.Ute to a bill
Jane Alexander
have waived your right to a · David Graham, aecondar:r, drafted by the House Education and L!lbor Committee.
GP
hearing before the board May 12; Marilyn Smith, AUO ·
unless within seven days from secondary, May 12; Roae Ann
"COYER ME, BABE"
( Rl
Jenltlns, elementary and Clyde
Sullivan, secondary, May 12.
Rodney M. Wallbrown was
Sun.. Mon., Tuo.
employed a.- an Instructor fOI' (Continued from page I)
Mly 14-15· 1·
Royal
Crown,
Fruth
the Vocational Agriculture
Double FHivro Prqgram
Tonight thru Tuosdai&gt;
dangerous
conlrontstion.
Meadow
Green,
Pharmacy,
Program for the Im73 school
TWO-LANE
May 12-16
Both auna alld the Soviet Farmers Bank and Jim's
year,
pending final approval af
BLACKTOP
Union
denounced the blockade, Campers all scored victories in
(Ttchnlcolorl
Wilt Disney's
the program to replace
lui
today
the Soviet nm Meigs-Mason Slo-Pitch League
James Taylor
SONG OF THE SOUTH
Stephen Chancey who resigned
!Technlcolor)
Warren Coles
agency
Tus
carried
little other games Thursday evening.
"G"
to accept a position with the
AII ·C~ rtoon feature .
Laurl Bird .
than news of antiwar demonPeace Corps.
( Rl
'stratlons
In the United Slates
Royal Crown tallied 19 runs
Disnay
Cartoons:
AD those named above will
-Ptus-and
statements
of
various
on
20 hits to defeat K &amp; K
Pluto's Kid Brolher
be paid on certification and
"TAKING OFF"
Cooununi81 goyernments den- Mobile Homes with three runs
Teachers art ~opte
(Color I
experience.
Figaro &amp; Frankie
Lynn Carlin
runs and seven hits. Roush had
In other actions the board: ounclllg the move.
Adults: SI.SO Children: 75c
Buck Henry
In
VIetnam
Itself
the
Com·
a
homer for K &amp; K and Steve
~Employed Vernon Miller
(R)
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
as a substilute custodian for munlst offensive was com· Oiler and Ronrlle Carr each
Point Pleasant area schools, paratively quiet in the Central slapped a round-tripper for RC.
effective May 12, and Charlene llfghlanda and In the northern Fruth Pharmacy ripped off a
Rolllnll as substitute custodian quarters just below Quang Tri 20-2 victory over Randolph's
at Leon. Others employed wberea major effort to capture 76. Fruth had 19 hits and
under n011·1eachlng personnel the old Annamite capital of Randolph four. Home runs in
were Mae McCarty as a sub- Hue Is expected to be!lln on In the contest were Danny
stitute cook, effective May 12 May 19, birthday of Ho Chi Rizer of F.ruth, a grand
slammer and B. Ferguson of
and -Ruby BaU as substitute Mluh.
But at An Loc 'the Colllllll!- Randolph.
··
· teacher's aide. ,
II
n1sts
were
making
a
major
Meadow_
Creen
triumphed
I
-Granted approval for the
Girll' Sollball 1..eaglle to use e!lort to capture the capital of over ReedsvWe by a 21·12
the softball field· at Ordnance Long Blnh Province, 60 miles margin with Charlie Collines of
School until June, 1973 while north ol Saigon, which tliey had the winners getting the lone
stipulating that the Public once hoped to seize and set up ·home run.
Address system must be shut as a JrOvialonal government . Farmers Bank routed Foote
for the National Uberation Mineral, 17-4. Gettlrig home
off at 10 p.m.
Front
(political arm of the Viet runs for the winners were Jim
-Discuased baseball
Cong
).
Anderson with lwQ, Jeff Burt
bleachers at Wahama High
An Loc, 011ce a beautiful and Mark Tannehill, each one.
School when the "dire need"
rubber
plantation city with
Jim's Campers slipped past
was cited by Fields. Supt.
wide,
pabn-lln!!d
avenues
arid
Danville
by a 14-12 score with
Withers pointed out that funds
.Sunday, May 14
are running out for lhll type cool paate!-()()Jored bungalows the winners chalking up 10 hits
biiUt by : Frencb oolonlals, Is and Danville, 19•.Homers from
ALl FUVoRS work, but said he-would~ oow rubble. And lbe Commu- Jim's were Ralph Van Meier
with Warren Keefer, main·
tenance supervjlor, to see nl8ts hit It today with 10,000 .1nd Bill Andrews while Ellis
about moving dirt and pcll'lable rounds of arUllery and followed Myers of Danville also had
up witli a lahli:4ed Infantry one.
99:2-2556
bleachers to this irea.
usault that captured 111031 of
At The End of Pomeroy Bridge
the city. U.S. 8528 repJied with
2,000 toos bombs around the Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Ronald
town....oolber war record.
Renllnger,
Middleport
;
The North Vietnamae ·also
Millard
Swartz,
Pomeroy
;
launched heavy altacks on
Ch011 Thanh District town 20 Homer Mills, Syracuse ; Tracy
miles to the aouth of An Loc Salser, Racine; Doyle Ord,
and only 40 miles from Saigon, Mason; Michael Martin ,
killing one U.S. advl!er and Pomeroy ; Linda Stew_art,
wounding another. The Pomeroy ; Cheryl Lemley ,
Cllnmunlsts ai.ao shot down a Lancaster; Koleen Parsons,
U.S. A37 Dragonfly jet and two New Haven.
DISCHARGED - Mary
02 Super Skymaater ob·
aervatlon planes, killing four Smalley, Alma Frazier, Edna
Richmond, Vida Evetta
crewmen.
Hanoi Radio reported new BechUe, Sgsle Holley. Edna
American air raids on the Hart, Alma Brown, Wilbur
North Vietnamese capital Bailey, Cecil King, Billy Joe
lodlly and aald three more Jones, Glenna Yar brough,
American planes were shot James Sprouse.
down, bringing to 22 the
number de!!lroyed this week.
'!be U.S. command had no
CONCERT AT8
CUDIIlent on the reports.
A concert by the Meigs
Diplomats who llhuttle beChorale
to be staged this
tween Hanoi and Saigon
evening
at
Meigs High School
reported in 8alg011 that Hanoi
hal been evacuated except for under the direction of Mrs.
eaaenllal government, mWtary Christine J. Guthrie will begin
and Industrial workers. Hanoi at 8p.m. rather than at 8:30 as
radio has claimed consistelltly announced previously. As a
that the U.S. air strilrea were part of the evening's activities,
limed at clvlllan inltallations art students of Mrs. Margaret
In the heart of the city and Ella Lewis will stage a show in
dikes protectlns the paddY the Ioyer of the high school.
fielda and lbe city from any
Oooliwaters of the Red ruv...
There were these other
major Indochina developments :

Tension

MEIGS THEATRE

I.

Slo-Pitch

.AOOiph and lUI
His Help Would Uke

" To Say

FREE

HAPPY DAY
By Giving_

All Mothers ·A

SUNDAE

• • • three ·times

a day

How? Well, we've -:Jrdered some plocemots.
_,..
They're tough, long lasting_ vinyl, and feature lovely scene
from around the time PNB got it all started.
Once they're on your table, you 'll want to leave them there.
And If they occasionally make you think of the bonk
thot's been serving Meigs .County for a hundred years. fine.
A set of six Is waiting for you. It's yours free,
when you deposit $100 or more in a passbook savings account,
ot either our main office or Rutland branch. ·
If you don't hove o Pomeroy N.ationol Bank savings account,
here's the excuse you've been woitinll for!
Member FDIC

CJWiTREE WINS

A Full Service Bonk

•.

PT. PLE,\SANT- /JthOIIgh
Paul Crabtree !oat In Mason
County 1134 to · 19C7 In
Tuesday's Presidential
Primary Election, he was
D«&lt;llnaled by democrals of the
· fourth eenatorlal district on a
vote .of 4100 to 3749 for Dave
O'Neal, hla nearest ri•al. A big
margin tn Plalllam Counly put
him over. He will oppoae Roane
County Republican Orton
Jones In the 1-ral election ..

Your Invited G_ue.t ·
Reaching More
'

To The Greater Middle Ohio Jlalley

Than 11,{)()()

\

7

even

•

rugs

OD·

.arges
·,

• •

on

a1

..

•

e
•

t .

·o use

wp

CIPI&lt;?

lr,,,, , ; :== =; ::::===,,;;;=,,,,,,,, , ,.i:i Athens

Chief -o f Police

'·
'·

l:lLeads Swoop; Six Men,
:i: dep~!;~~~~~~lghll~~~!~~g~~i:~: .~_:,'= :,' One IY/oman A~e Ca,•uht··
t
W 4
•
l ~:~::: a:;~:~~= ~0~:. Ph:~kS~k~-1•~: '~
!I

RICHARn M. (DICK) I.DDWICK, above, Pomtroy Roalt 3, bu ptrdJUed the LyCIII .:
Grocery Store at Tuppers Plains. A llle8 graduate of Eastern IIJgh School, Lodwld&lt; aUended. ;:
Ohio University andwaslastemployedua leamslerattheGavlnPower Plant.
· ·'
The son of Mr. and .Mrs. Harry Lodwick, Chesler restaurant operators, Lodwlell has taken
over the management of the store which will be open from 8 am. to 8 p.m., Me~~daya throueh
Wednesdays, 8a.m. to6p.m . on Thursdays, and from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays.
With Lodwic~ is Mrs. Doris Koenig, an employe of the Lyons~ for almost sis years, who
will con~employment there.
·
Assisti'iif,temporarily alsd is Mrs. Undsey Lyons, who, with her husband, has operated the
grocery the past 24 years.
-;%:!:-~X~W:~..:t4:~~~~"-;:&gt;.~

SUIT FILED
A suit to quiet title has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Bernice Bowen,
Rockford, Iowa, against Carl
Moles and Evelyn Moles,
addresses unknown, eta\. The
property is located in Mid··

,',i,._

·.',!_!

nmnera

~1t:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::;:

were

Now 7-and-5 on the season, Jim Carpenler'a Big Blacks
taking on David Arritt's Wahama White Falcons (N) at
Harmon Field today in the second of their homHnd-home
spring series. Wahama won the lint one, 3-2, Cll Rllbble
Lambert's clutch lw1H1111 homer list Friday up there:
Tbe Bisons, coached by Gary Adkins, dropped their fifth
dle~rl.
straight and are now 4-and-9 011 the campaign. They meet the
Big Blaci!J In wurnament play at Mason next ~1 In a4: 15
game. This Is Section 1 Region 8. Wahama takes 011 Poca at I :30
ELECTION SET
In the tourney opener.
Lot owners of Carleton
Sophomore Randy Wamer bested Buffalo's Paul Cain to win
Cemetery will elect trustees
his
third game of the season. Hehas!O&amp;ttwo.
Saturday, May 21 at 7:30p.m.
Big Blaci!J - Ill 403 o. 10 9 3 Buffalo...-210 102 0 • 6 7 3
at the Carleton Church.
:~:~:::::::!:!8:~:::&gt;.::::::&gt;.::::::&gt;.::::~!~:!:~~:::::::::::::}.!:::&gt;.:::(' · · · ·''' '0?'' ~C~C} ) J :S

Second Try
For Voc ..Ed
Set
June
20
'

Philbrick s Mailbox

Rural Mailboxes Show ·

J-fariety, Creativity
Along Meigs Roadsides

\

.OPEN FRI'DAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHTS UNT1l9·

By I(ATIE CROW~
POMEROY - An example of
variety In the homemade
mailbox is that of R. C. Cozart
on SR 338, above Racine. Ills
an old fashioned coal stove
which has been converted into
a m~llhox .
On SR 124 going toward
Great Bend at the L. W.
Philbrick residence, a very old
mailbox Is still In use. The
difference In the Philbrick
mailbox and more modern
mailboxes is that the door
opens, to the right instead of
opening by pulling the handle
straight down. The two boxes
are In tip top shape and con_venlently located for service.

MOTHER'S DAY
SUNDAY, MAY 14
Shop all over the store- every department for many,
many gift ideas for your mom on her day this Sunday.

'[he Postal Service bas
designated the week of May 15
to May 20 as rural mailbox
improvement week to call
· attention to the need of
providing mail receptacles
designed to protect mall from
the weather, that are neat in
appearance , conveniently
located for service, and sale.
Boxes should be of
traditional or contemporary
design . and bear the .Postmaster General's stainp of
approval. They should be
firmly secured to a well anchored post or support, level
and on the rlghtsideof the road
as served by the carrier to

Stove Convened into Mailbox
conform to traffic laws and
safety regulations.
· The bottom of the box should
be 40 inches (average) from
the pavement's surface.
The customer's name should
be painted on the side in letters
at least one inch high (or on the
front where boxes are grouped
on one sllpporl).
The nag door should be
easily operable and the box
neatly painted. Should any
repairs be ueemed necessary,
the carrier wiilleave form 4056
"your mailbox needs attention" pointing out the
irregularities. Failure to
comply with requested repairs
could mean withdrawal of

service should the postmaster
see lit.
Postmaster James Soulsby,
Pomeroy, said that during
inspection of the routes a form
4243, patron's name and addrei!S slip, will be left in each
rural box . Customers are
asked to list the lull names of
all people receiving mail in
that particular box. By doing
this, it is hoped that more el·
ficient service can be given and
less mail delayed because
customers might be unknown
to the carrier .
Cooperation by all rural
customers will be greatly
appreciated by the rural
carriers and the postmaster.

•

Medical Bills Policy to Stand

We'll gladly help you find the gifts you want. Be sure to
see our cards, gift wrap paper, ribbons and bows. Don't
forget to stock up on film and flash cubes. Special sale
price on Polaroid ~nd Kodak film.

OPEN FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY -NIGHTS TIL 9

..

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,

Elberfelds-.In Pomeroy~
.

..
..·" ' .
' '

~

',_._• .:· :_
:'f Bidwell. The auto was at t e y ioe
;~~ Bowling Alley in Kanauga.
.
:;~
Three arrests were James Allen ·:·:
::f: Drummond, 24, 192612 Chatham Av~.•.~
;!~ and Glassco Falrrow 11, Chillicothe; ·
;::: both for DWI and Willie' 'Harris, 21, ~.:i
:::; Midljleport, charged with · In· ::::
:;:; toxicatlon.
:l:

In a contest that had more base
lhllll a hound dog
has fleas, the Point PleasaJit Big Blacks outlasted the Buftalo
Putnam Blsons, 1~, up in Pulnam County yesterday.

ELBERFELDS-IN POMEROY

use are Stolen

theft of 15 tapes and a tape case
1

c:?.O:M:: n·. ;· ,.,,bJbb .8.om!

•,

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~·-·-

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~oted

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Families
46 PAGES
' 4 SECTIONS
~V~-~N~0~·~15~---------------P-o_m_er_oy~~-~d-dl_e~_r t ______________________S_U_
ND_A_Y~,_M__AY__l4~,-1_97~2--------------~rG-•_
IIiP_"_Iis_·P_oin_•_P_
I ea_sa_n_t__________________~l~5-C~E~
N~

m

PLEASANT VALLEY
Names of persons aclmitted
have been discontinued for
publication by hospital
authorities.
DISCHARGES Mrs.
Donald
Belcher,
New
Haven;
I
.
Mrs. Robert Bruce, Galli~Us;
Bernard Frazier, Point
Ple.tosant; Sandra Meadows,
Leon; Mrs. Melvin Roach and
son, West Columbia ; Mrs.
Lawrence Manley, dllnghter,
Middleport; Ernest Cook,
.!;Ironton, and Theresa Holcomb,
Point Pleaaant.

.

tmts

50s.

THE DAIRY VALLEY

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

+

Sunday through Monday,
variable cloudiness with · a
chance of raili slWwers north
an(l east Sunday. High$ on both
days in the upper 60s and lower
70s. Lows Sunday night in the

PT. PLEASANT- A·bearillg
dale for five teacherS and one
auxUiary emp_loye was set,
Planl for a bukttball cUnlc
made and addltlo01l

I

l

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GALLIPOLIS - riolzer Medical
Center Clinic Administrator, Robert
Daniel said Suturday the credit, collection
and insurance ~licies of the clinic will not
change when the move to the new facility
is completed May 27.
"To provide patients with the (!nest
and most efficient medical care
ava!lable, " he said, "the 'new Holzer
Medical Center Clinic provides the most
modern faclli'Ues available, highly-lralned
physicians, in addition to other ' well·
trained sup~rt personnel. "
"This makes it necessary," he continued, "for patients to pay their account
in full on the day of the visit, wlthin'iD days
after receipt of a statement, or have
suitable Insurance protection." .
He ~in ted out 111at In an unusual
situation where installment payments are
necessary, arrangements must~
the Clinic Collection Department on theI
ground floor of the new b'"ldlng between 8
a.m. lmd 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
In commenting on the business

policies of the clinic, Daniel said, "This
new $3 million clinic bulldlilg adjacent to
the medical center is designed to meet'tbe
needs of the patient and enable the
physiciafls· to deliver the best ~sslble
health care. However, the cost of
op~ration is staggering to the imagination, .
and good business procedures must be
followed in order to protect the in·
vestment."
He said the clinic has an annual
payr.oll of $600,000, pays $70,000 each year
In utilities and $300,000 annually for the
building and equipment.
"Our stretchers and wheelchairs alone
cost us $3,500," he said, "and when you
consider the high cost of medical equipment today such as our emergency
equipment in the clinic, the cash investment is tremendous."
Daniel emphasized lbat the physicians
will not raise their fees Initially at the new
clinic to meet these added cosls. "We will
continue.to charge just as we have been at
the old building," he said, "but we will

meet our financial obligations . through
good business procedures and credit
policies. "
Questioned about patients with in·
surance programs to cover their visits,
Daniel said the clinic has an obligation to
assist all patients In the filing of insurance
claims both medical and surgicaL ·
"However," he continued, "we would
like for all patients to-present claim forms
and all necessary information prior to, or
at the time of admission, filled out with all
the details they can provide."
For outpatient care covered by in·
surance, he said that patients are asked to
bring the necessary forms ·filled oul, and
assign the collection of benefits to the
clinic. Should there be an overpayment, a
refund will be made directly to the Patient.
Daniel emphasized that the patient
(Continued on page 2)

RUTLAND - Marilyn Turner,
daughlel'of Mr. and Mr1. Wa~ Turner af
Rulland; was unanimously praised by the
Milan critlcs,last month for her per·
formance ·at the Angellcum Theater In
Milan, Italy.
Appearing as contralto soloist with the
P9llfonlti Ambr011aha Chorus and the
Angellcum Cllamber On:beatra, directed·
by Maestro Glanfranco Spinelli, MiJ11
Turner performed "~"by Persolrll
April 11 at the Milan theatre, ·and the
' followinl evening, Aprll1ht.the Olurch of
San Franclaco In Loalrno, Swlllerllnd.
Mly It, 30 and :!3, Mila Turner' wW
appear aa cantrallo llllolll wltlt lilt Or·

chestraandChorusoftheHaydn Society of
Bolzano, Italy ln.the "Gloria" of Vivaldi at
Bolzano, Trento and Rovereto. The per.
formance will be br01dcast later by, RAJ,
the Italian Natloftlll Radio Network.
Mlas Turner has been In ltaly the past
eight years studying mitSJc and voice. She .
has already performed tn several
European countries and ~ on Italian
television; this silnUDer she. Is scheduled
for performances in Holland, Austria and
Germany.
· A gradUate of Rut!ilnd High School,
MIJII Turner Ia a former muSic student of ·
Mrs. C. 0 . Chapman, Rulland.

TRAILER GETS LOOSE
The Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
investigated an accident Saturday at 11 :45
a.m .. on SR 124 in Racine. Carl James
Circle, Racine, Rt. 1, !raveling north
pulling a tank trailet, had the trailer break
loose and hit a truck driven by Cecil Dean
Brinager, Racine. There was mediwri
damage to the front of Brinager's truck
and no damage to the Circle vehicle. There
were no injuries or arrests.

BARBECUES BEGIN
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Fire
Department and Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, will open ~elr summer
series q! chicken barbecue dinners today
at their barbecue pits on the upper parking
lot in Pomeroy. Serving will start at 11
a.m. Several events are planned by the two
groups Ibis summer .

•'.
•.

$35,~00 Asked
for
.
.

Injuries from .Fight

GALLIPOLIS - Two damage ~ nits , one
resulting from a fight between two men,
were filed Friday in Gallia County Common Pleas Court.
Carol W. Cline, Rt. 2, Racine, asks
damages totaling $35,000 as a result of an
altercation Oct. 31, 1970. Andy Jones of
Cheshire was named defendant In the
action.
According to the petition, the defendant unlawfully and maliciQusly siruck the
plaintiff, causing him to suffer bruises
about the face and injury to nerves and
tissues about his eyes which required
medical care and surgery.

POMEROY - Nine new members including two junior members - were
accepted Thursday night when the Meigs
County Humane Society met at the Meis
Inn.
The new· members are Mrs. Mary
Seaman, Wilovina Zurcher, Mrs. C. J.
Rhodes, Alice Thompson Dorothy Will, ·
Marlha Husted, and Unda Gilkey and
junior members, Kevin Betzing and Leslie
Gilkey.
The new humane officer, Gary Dill,
was introduced and a discussion of the dog

•

1

GALLIPO.LIS - United the proposed Hill View United
Methodist Bishop F. Gerald Methodist Retirement Center
Ensley has announced · the In Portsmouth.
appqintmeni of the Rev. . Portsmouth District has
Hughey L. Jones, senior more local churches than- any
nllnister of Eastview United other In the conference - 159 Methodist Church, Columbus, with a total membership of
to the superintendency of the 26,514.
Portsmou\h District, suc- . As superintendent, Mr. Jones
ceeding the Rev. Dr. Calvin will also be a member of the
Rodeheffer who completes his Wes: Ohio Conference Cabinet
term of oflice in June.
composed of the 14 district
The Rev. Jones was pastor of superintendents who assist
Gr~ce United Methodisi Bishop
Ensley In · ad·
ChU..ch in the 196011 until he left ministering \he conference .
in 1967 to take the Eastview
Native of London, Ky...
Chur~h,
,
reared in Bremen, Ohio, Mr.
Mr. Jones will take office at Jones ia a tll'aduate af Asbury
the coocluslon of the West Ohio College, Wilmore, Ky., and
Annlial Conference, June 11-Jg . prepared ,or the nllnlstry at
in Lakeside. AI tha\ time Dr . , AsburY Theological Seminary,
Rodehe!fer will . assume the receivlns the bachelor of
chief administrator's ~st af ' divinity degree In 1950.

''

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'
Cline alleges he has permanent eye '
damage and will Incur further medical , ·
expenses. He seei!J $10,000 for COlli• •
pensatory damages and $25,000 fo) ~
punitive damages and costs.
. -:·!·
J . J. McGuire, 108 Locllst St., GaiUpcillii•
a building contractor, asks $3,300 plus lilt '
per cent interest from Sept. 2, 1971 agl!inll !
Jean M. Webb, Meadow Look Subdlvlaloli~~
Gallipolis.
· ,· ~
McGuire alleged Mrs. Webb entered Inter.·
a contract with him to construct a houae on '
his property at a cost of fiB,BOO. He uY.Ji l
she paid $15,500 but has refused to pay tht!•
remaining $3,300.
- ~·

..•

9 Join Meigs Group

Method,ists Promote HUghey Jones
'

Miss Turner Scores
In Italian Theater

.
RIO GRANDE - Gallia and Jackson
County voters will. go to the polls in a
special election June 20 on the proposed
Joint Vocational School. ·
The Gal\ia.Jackson Joint Vocational
Board of Education meeting here Friday
night unanimously voted to place a two
mill levy on \he election ballot. A similar
levy for constructioh was rejected in the
May 2 Primary Election.
·
The levy was placed on the ballot again
for two main reasons, (I) II approved next
month the school would still qualify lor
$786,000 in Appalachian Funds and, (2) To
meet the State Department's mandatory
vocational plan that all school districts be
in a vocational distrfct by 1974.
Members of the vocational board are
Marlin G. Kerns, Paul Fred Wood, Granville Burnett, Truman Sheets, Irwin
Smittle, John Wilson and Ralph Scott.
The two-mill multi-purpose levy was
approved in Gallia County but failed by 500
votes in Jackson County, Gallians approved the measure by 168 votes, 3,751 to
3,583. The issue went down in Jackson
Cowlty, 5,514 to 3,014. It was approved by
residents of three school districts,
Gallipolis City, North Gallia and Southwestern but lost in Hannan Trace and the
Kyger Creek School Districts.

POMEROY - Seven persons were arrested and charged following a raid 011 an
apparent center of illegal drugs traffic Friday at 6 p.m. 011 a Scipio·Townshlp residelx:e
located near the Meigs-Athens County line off from Stale Route 681.
Charged with possession of marijuana were Clarence Allen Covington, 21; Thomas
H. Aronhalt, 22; Charles Stephen Baldwin, 22; James A. Barnett, 23; Janice M. Goff, and
Joe Wayne Yearwood, 21, all of Albany, Rt. 2.
Bond for each was set at$500. Yearwood also was charged with possession ofococaine
for which bond was set at $1,000.
While the officers were conducting the raid, Daniel Michael Salvin!, 22, Stewart st.,
Athens, arrived at the scene.ln the course of the investigation, Salvin! was arrested for
~ssession of cocaine and also charged with possession of cocaine for sale. Bond was iel
at $1,000 for possession and $5,000 for ~ssession of cocaine for sale.
All defendants were confined in the
Meigs County jail with the exception of the
Judge Porler1ined each $300 and c~ts
female who was taken to the Athens and sentenced them to one year in !hi
County jail.
county jail. The confinement was
The raid was conducted by Capt. Charles suspended and each was placed on 11'!0
Cochran of the Athens Police Department years probation.
assisted by Meigs County Sheriff Robert C.
One of the terms ol the probation wu
Harten bach, Herman Henry of the Bureau that the defendants leave Meigs County
of Criminal Investigation ; officers of the ilrtmediately. .
Athens, Nelsonville, and Parkersburg
The case of Janice M. Goff on
police departments, deputies from Athens possession of marijuana will be beard at a
County and Wood County West Virginia later date. Bond was set at $500.
•
Sheriff's Departments, and agents from
The cases of Yearwood for .possession
the Stale and Federal Narcotics Bureau. of cocaine and Sulvini for possession ·of
Saturday morning at 11 Covington, cocaine lor sale also will be held later. ~
Aronhalt, Baldwin and Barnett were taken prisoners were remanded to the custody Of
before Meigs County Judge Frank W. Sheriff ,Hartenbach.
'
Porter on charges of possession of
Meigs County PrOIM!CUtlng Attornty
marijuana. The defendants entered pleas Bernard V. Fultz questioned the dofen·
of guilty. ·
·
dants and prepared·lh!! ~ffidavlta. · '

' '

pound at the fairgrounds followed. It wa; :·
pointed out that the dog pound Is a tern: ·
porary _expedient until dog&amp; are dls)lOie!! ·
of, unle&amp;'l adopted. ·
.
·' ·
During the meeting presided over by ·
Mrs, Jean Will, plans were made for all
open meeting to be held at ?;30 p.m. on '
June 8 at the Meigs Inn. There will be it ·
guest speaker.

...

Gpilt Pleaded &lt;
To 2nd Degree .,

GALLIPOLIS - Jane Hall, 29; Rt. '1; ,
Patriot, Indicted last month by lite Gallla ')
He began his lliinistry ,a t
County Grand Jury for first &lt;Iegree
Trinity Methodist Church,
murder In the shooting death of John ·'
Cincinnati, in 1950. This church
Burton, 491Rt. I, Patriot, entered a Sui!IY .~ .
later merged with Nasi
plea Frida~ a charge af second degree' ol. ' ·
Methodist. He was pastor of
murder.
~·. ·
Grace Methodist Church, ·
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Jame{ '·
Hamilton, from 19~1. then
Bennett reduced the charge from flnt to''
was appointed to Grace
second degree murder. Common PieU; .
Methodist Church in GaUi~lls
Court Judge ROnald R. 'Calhow1 aftet:~ ·
where he served six years.
g_lving Mrs. HaU her constitutional rigbll,;; · ·
Mr. Jones has been active In
accepted the plea. He llelltenced her to Ufe· ·.. •
the work of the conference and
' lmprlaonment at the Women's Refor{ ~ ~..
Columbus South DIStrict, as a
matory , at Marysville. The shooting OC,:{·
member of the Conference
curred the evening of Feb. 14at thellllrtol!' ;' .
Baard of Ministry, director of
horne on Wiseman Rd.
: ;:
Se~ior High work and lilt
Ju~e Calhoun a1ao aentenced
district Board of Ministry. lte
Edward Willa, 22, Galilpolia, to a 1-30 ,._·&gt;
and his wife,. the former
lenn In \hli Ohio Penll.enliary Cll 111 111t0; '
Virginia Poer of Covington,
theft char&amp;e. Willa wu In court &lt;II! 1 bill I{:;'
Ky ., have two daughters,
Information. He plea~ guilty.
· •!
. Susan and Shelley, and a son,
HUGRBY J0N111
A PfOI\811011 report wW be made ~ ~
Steven.
·
district parsonage, ~719 eenlenclng becCI11el final .. Wl1la II 1111{i
The Joneses will reside in the Shawnee Rd., Pwtamouth.
lodged in the County JaU.
.,

I

J_.,, ·

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