<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16637" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16637?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T09:56:38+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49784">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/bd12fe5db9734d7ab1fb432004fe900f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0a652bd529312424aa63720d474493de</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53158">
                  <text>•
12-The DaUyS!!ntinel,MJddleport-Pnmeroy, 0 ., Junf 15,1972"

Youths' Tractor Pull Saturday
Length of chatn will be 24
Class ~ - Free For All.
Inches.
· Dual wheel• on rear of
The rules:
Entry fee of Sl for . each tractor will not be allowed.
No steel wheels or tire chains
competitive pull .
.
One driver will be permitted will be allowed . .
All weights must be bnlted.
for each tractor.
Drivers mu•t have his pinned or chained to tratlor to
tractor under control at all satisfoctlon of the judges.
Judges' decision n all cases
tlmes .
·
All tractors must be patented i5 final .
There will be no weighing
and factory built.
Orawbar must be of o stable out.
All tractors will -be weighed
design, fastened securely fo the
tractor with no moving parts In before the contest starts at 9
between pinhole and tractor. a.m. at the Landmark .coles.
If tractor fronl raloes to point
Orawbar height will be
maximum of 12 inches on a judges feel endangers the
driver, judges may stop the
tight chain .

The Big Bend Regalia
Garden Tractor Pulling
Con lest for youths will be held
at 10 a.m. at the old Pomeroy
Junior High School on Saturday, June 17. Weigh-in will be
at 9 a.m. al the Landmark
scales.
This ·con lest is for youths
under 16 years old. Classes and
·rules are as follows:
Class I - Up to 500 lbs. ·
Class 2 - 501 to 700 ibs.
Class 3 - 701 to 900 lbs.
Class 4 - 901 to 1100 lbs.

.I

Friday and Saturday Sale Elberfelds In Pomeroy

pull. ·

Don't Forget! Father's Day is Swulay the 18th'

teet:

· The contestant must stop
when whistle is blown.
Judges will decide on

'

Negotiation on June 21

F.

Sa lei Mens Davis 4 D

tr~ctors over ·1;000 rounds jf
garden tractor or no .

Father's Day Selection!

If I here

Is no competition In a
class the class will be
eliminated. Cash prizes of $100
will 5e offered.
To enter the contest please
fill out the entry form below
and mail fo C.. E. Blakeslee,
Box 32, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

1

.EMS Pilot Project in

· ·- OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY .CJ:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

Booms must not exceed 12

Inches from front edge of front
wheels.
Width of track will be fen

Men's

SPORT SHIRTS
Select a shirt or two in his
correct size, style and color he
likes. All sizes small (14-14 112 ).
medium (15-15112). large (1616112) and extra large (17-17112 ).
All · famous makes. A fine
-selection of styles. Arranged
for your easy selection.

NAME OF YOUTH._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _AGE._ _ __

~ouss.__________________~--------------------------MAKE OF TRACTOR.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;__ _ _PHONE._ _ _ __

Mail to C, E. Blakeslee, Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Cushion
WORK ·SO_CKS

Negotiations will begin in
Washington nel[l Wednesday
that could lead loa ~.7 million,
3-year federal contract to set
up a nationa\ demonstration·
project lor the deiivery of
emergency .medical 8ervices in
the 7-county Southeastern Ohio
area including Meigs and
Gallia.
Jack
E.
Farrington,
executive director of the Ohio
Valley · Health Services
Foundation, Inc., Athens, said
Friday Foundation
representatives will be in
Washington that day to discuss
costs of its bid proposal submitted on April 19 to serve the
nation as a "pilot project in a
rural area.''
The proposal was submitted
as a result of an Invitation by
tbe Health Services and Mental
Health Administration, in late

Short top. White or grey.
Sizes 10 to !3.
· RegularprlceJpalr1 .85
Sale Friday and S.turday

3

Pair

HAllMARK
FATHER'S DAY

CARDS
On the 1st floor. An ex·

cellent
stltclion of
Father:s Day Cards.
Also Father's Day Gift
Wrapping and ribbon. Take
time to visit on the 1st floor
look through the
Hallmark cards·and make
your selection.

March, to become a candidate
based on a local concept for a.
rej!ional rural ambl!lance
system which it began
developing with County
Commissioners of the seven
counties last September. ·
According to Farrington, 49
other applicants of the nation
entered the competition. In- .

formation received from
HSMHA at that time stated a
concern by the federal administration and the Congress
over the large nwnber of
ambulance providers
discontinuing services because
of high cost of operation. To
assist in guiding national
policy and legislation in

meeting the proble!D, ·it was
decided to set up five national
demonstration projects; one on
a state-wide basis, one in a
.metropolitan area ; an intercity program; a program in a
city of 500,000 population, and
one in a rural area.
The Foundation was advised
Continued on Page 51

Oil Dumping Charged to Roy Proffitt
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Natural Resources Department Thursday charged Hoy
Proffitt of Racine in Meigs
County with polluting wl!ler
which dwnped into the · 01\io
River.
Proffitt was cited for accidentally breaking an oil
transfer line, allowing more

Logan Sand &amp; Gravel Co. of
Hellefontaine, was fined $200
for dwnping asphalt into the
Mad River. It was the second
conviction for that firm.
Ea.lier it had been convicted of
allowing silt to enter the river
in 1971.
Buckeye Sugars Inc., of
(Continued on Page 12)

than 500 gallons of oil to flow
into a ditch that eventually
flowed in the Ohio River.
The. department said three
Ohio !inns had bee!l con~icted
of littering Ohio's streams.
Massillon Spring and Rivet
Corp. was fined $500 for
allowing oil to enter a tributary
of the Tuscarawas River.

Another Shipment
1\T
Officers
Democrat IF/
,.,.. omen ltame

Officers were elected by the
Meigs County Women's
Democrat' Assn. Monday night
at the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy.
Elected were Cecelia Bailey,
president; Lucille Haggerty,
first vice president; Lee
Enoch, second vice president;
Jane Snouffer, recording
secretary; Mary McAngus,
'corresponding secretary;
Audrey Young, treasurer, and

TIRE BI,.EW OUT
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a single car
Mary Marlin, historian. An- accident Wednesday on County
nual ·membership tlckets are Road 28, two tenths of a mile
available for $1 each.
north of Bashan. John M.
A variety of desserts was Wells, o7, Long Bottom, Rt. I,
served. Mary Martin was was traveling north when a
named to address the next front lire blew out causing the
informal meeting to be held "• ca, to leave the highway on the
July II. All interested right at about 5:50p.m. Wells
Democrat women are urged to sustained a laceration of the
attend.
nose . There was medium
damage to the vehicle.

3 ACCI.dent s

p rove

OFFER SPECIAL
Nolaa Amusemeot
Auto Sales
Compaoy
will offer a
1964 CHEVROLET, V-8, phone
One teenage girl was preview special Thursday
949-2981.
hospitalized and another evenlog. Adults aod children
treated and released at will be able to ride the rides
Veterans Memorial Hospital all evening from 8 to.10 p.m.
following a single car accident for $1.
Wednesday at 2:47 p.m. on
Nolaa rides are located
Tonight thru Saturday
Main St. in Middleport. Police behind the Pomeroy Juaior
June ll-16-17 .
reported Debra Triplett, 16, Hlgh School and will be
NOT OPEN
Middleport, was traveling east · featuned the three days of
on
Main when her car went off the Big Bead Regatta.
Sun., Mon. &amp; Tues.
·
June 18·19·20
the street on the right and hit a
;:::::::::::::--.:::::::~::~:«~~:::,w.:::::::::::::::::::·
tree.
A J~~l~~~~o·N
Tamera Jean Hendricks, 13,
(Technlcolorl
Paul Newman
Winfield, W.Va., a paSBenger,
Henry Fonda
had lacerations of her face. She
Colorcartoons:
and
Miss Triplett were taken to
Scuba Duba Do
Monster Master
the hospital by private car.
Paul Edward Rathburn,
SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.
Miss Hendricks was admitted Watkins Road, Colwnbus, died
and Miss Triplett was treated suddenly Tuesday evening at
and released. Thtre was heavy home . Mr. Rathburn was born
damage to the car. No charge Oct. 12, 1918 at Kyger, the son
was filed.
MASON DRIVE IN
of the late Jonas and Olive
Rathburn.
He is survived by one sister
Gallia County sheriff's Almeda Hurst, Athens, and
Tonight &amp; Friday
June 15-16
deputies were called at I: IS four brothers, Forest, Cecil,
a.m.
today to investigate and James of .Colwnbus, and
Double Feature PrOilram
possible arson at an unoc- Francis of Middleport. Mr.
WUTHERING HEIGHTS
cupied dwelling owned by Rathburn served 20 years in
!Color I
Anna Calder-Marshall
Joseph Leach located on the U.S. Army.
Timothy Dalton
Story's Run Rd., two miles
Funeral services will be held
PLUS
from
Rt.
7
in
Cheshire
Twp.
Friday
at 2 p.m. at the Martin
"THE HUNTING
Middleport Volunteer Funeral Home with the Rev.
PARTY' '
Firemen were called to ex- Cecil Wise officiating. Burial
(Color)
tinguish a fire at the house will be in Nelson Cemetery.
Oliver Reed
Candice Bergen
which was believed set. The. Rutland American Legion Post
Gene Hackman
fire started on the front porch · 467 will hold graveside ser(Rl
and it damaged the exterior of vices. Friends will be received
the house.
at the funeral home anytime.

MEIGS THEATRE

Paul Rathburn
Died Tuesday

House Damaged

-------·cou--PON•·------$1
'1
COUPON
GOOD FRI. &amp; SAT.

$1 GO Toward
BOAT SHOES
Purchase

CANVAS OXFORDS
Womens

5.98

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

Ask For Your

On~!

At
Heritage house

enttne

Mostly sunny northwest and
clearing southeast today and
cooler. High in upper 60s and
70s. Fair and cooler tonight low
in upper 40s and 50s. Saturday
sunny and continued cool high
from mid 60s to mid 70s.

Devoted To The lntereau Of The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIV NO. 44

FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1972 .

TEN CENTS .

PHONE 992-2156

Mens Casual Dress Slacks

4.95

GUN CABINETS

Knit Slacks

BICYa.E
SALE

Blanche Casto
Dies Wednesday
MASON - Mrs. Blanche A.
Casto, 7fi, Mason, W. Va., died
Wednesday at Holzer Medical
Center. Mrs. Casto was born
April 4, 1896 at Taylor County,
W. Va., the daughter of the !ale
Abraham and Pernisa J.
McDowney Roush.
Surviving are four sons,
Albert, Alva, Paul and John,
all in Texas ; a daughter, Mrs.
Betty Heib, Dayton; four
brothers, Oscar Roush,
Arizona;
Lewis Roush,
Florida; Lawrence Roush,
Mason, and Chester of Union,

VACUUM
a.EANERS

On the 2nd floor . See the big
selection of bicycles for

Mens ·

boys and girls 20 and 16

inch size . Famous make.

Select the one you want and
save right now.

Walk Shorts

DACRON SHEERS

A fine selection of
regular style mens walk
shorts in sizes 30 to 44
waist. Smart patterns
and solid colors. All
permanent press. You'll .
please him on Father's
Day with a pair of these.

1'12'' Double stitched side hems, 4'12'' Bottom Hem - Ex.
cellent Quality. Colo.rs : While, Eggshell. M•lze, Ant. Gold.
Coral, Lt. Blue, Mint Green, Rose, Moss Green.

80" Wide
Length
Length
Length
Length

$3.69 72" Length
$3.89 81" Length
$4.19 90" Length
$4.59

$4.79
$4.99
$5.39

Mens

Mens

LEATHER BELTS

~-·-----··••~!!~~•

heritage house

MIDDL£PORT

UMBRELlAS

Just Received! Shipment Mattress ToppetS
Ill.; three sisters, Mrs. Lillian
Roush, Dayton; Mrs. Lona
100 Pet . nylon ' Black
Made of Polyurethane. Sizes for Twin and Full Beds in 'll ',
Brown or black . GenUine
McKay and Mrs. Bertha
Large size - Snap open.
1". l'h " and 2" thick . Also foam remnants. Eoch piece
full
grain
Cowhide
Bridle
Roush, both of Buckeye Lake,
Wooden or leather handles .
weighed and marked .
leather.
Ohio, and a number of grandSizes 28 to 50.
Each remnant a good value.
MENS CANES
children
and
great'i!randchildren.
An unusual glff . sturdily
made - rubber tip.
Mrs. Casto was a member of
Elberfelds
Warehouse on Mechanit Street
.
.
the United Methodist Church at 1----~----~.....1.----------1
Offers a fine selection in Famous Mohawk brand
Grafton, W. Va.
l'vlens 7.95 Lee Trevino
carpets
which are shipped to us directly from t~e
Funeral services will be at
mill
to
save
you money.
1:30 p.m. Saturday at the
Spice beige, Moss green, Burnished gold,
Foglesong Funeral Home with
avocado
moss and Roman gold are just a few of ·
the Rev. Stan Craig officiating .
Collared style - with· pocket. Button or zipper
the colors which are available in 12 and 15 foot
Burial will be In the Adams
neck opening.
widths.
Cemetery at Mason. Friends
Small, medium. large and extra large sizes .
We also offer prompt and expert installation.
may call at the funeral home
Special Sale Price
Also in stock are quality bound mill ends anytime.
Still only $88.00. Sizes 12'x15', 12'x16', 12'x17',
12'x18'.
NEW COACH
All Porch and Lawn .Furniture on salel A
Mens 6.95 Lee Trevino Knit Shirts ...... Sale 4.99
Willis Stemen, 3%, Bluffton,
special Father's Day price on Uoyd Quality
Tuesday night was named
Loungers. Doesn't ·Dad deserve a rest?
new head foolball coach al
There is a Iso a fine selection in Armstrong and
Wellston High Schoof.
Congoleum Floor Coverings. Many beautiful
Stemen succeeds John
patterns to choose from in 9 and 12 foot widths.
Conger wbo resianed In
We feature Toro and Lawn-Boy Mowers.
Juae, 1971. The WHS post
mowers start easily 1nd come in 19"
These
'
was shared last year by
Sizes small (34-36), medium (38-40l.large (42-44)
and
21"
sizes. If you are in need of a fine
Mark Mullen and Tom Baker
and extra large (46-48).
mower - check Elberfelds Warehouse!
oa a temporary basis.
Raglan shoulders. Comfortable to wear. White,
The warehouse is open from 9:30 to 5r00
black. navy blue, yellow, light green, light blue,
Monday -thru Thursday and from 9:30 ·to 9:00
dark green.
Friday and Saturday to serve you. Plenty of
Ideal for w9rk or sports wear.
Fre~ Parking.
Marriage Ucense
Michael David Rush, 27,
Indian B~you, La. , and
Genevieve Bird, 24, Racine, Rt.
2.

f·

' •

••

unless hijack sanctuaries are
eltmlnated, many thousands of
future pa'Ssengers will continue
'to face the horrors of air
crimes."

O'Donnell, on leave of absence as a flight officer with
Eastern Airlines, said he
wanted to "make especially

clear lbat this action is not not tO be identified .
directed against this nation's
The spokesman said the
airlines, bot at the Inability of
all nations to agree on the walkout was not mandatory for
proper course of action to stop the union's 31,000 pilots and
Utese crimes."
15,000 stewardesses. Instead,
An ALPA spokesman said he said, it was a "expression of
that the management of four constitutional rights" to
airlines had indicated support protest inaction on the piracy
for the shutdown but had asked issue.

ComnllDlity College·is Approved
College would continue to
operate as an independent four
year institution.
The idea of permitting a
community college to be
housed at Rio Grande, according to Dr. A. R.
Christensen, president of the
college, brings the opportunity
for higher education within the
reach of all qualified high
school graduates.
In addition, the president
said, "the community college
provides for the development
of a skill for those who do not
choose a four year program.

"The college is extending to
the citizens of this district the
use of its $10 million dollar
campus and its highly qualified
staff."
Under Ohio law, the community college would be administered by nine trustees, six
appointed by the county
commissioners or the county or
counties involved, and three by
the governor.
The nine trustees will
develop a master plan for the
community college that
determines what programs
will be offered within the two-

year framework.
The proposed community
college will be operated by
student tuition, state, and
district funds.
Under the community
college plan, a student living in
the · district could pay a
maximum tuition of $600 annually, while Ohio residents
outside the district would pay a
slightly higher rate.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Friday was 75 under partly
cloudy skies.

THESE BEAUTIFUL SPINNING WHEELS made by Russell Musser, formerly of the
Rutland area and now a resident of Springfield, will be among the attractive displays to be
featured Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. when the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society
observes Heritage Day as a part of regatta weekend. Enhancing ihe wheels is attractive
JeMifer (JeMy) Cbapman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Paul Chapman of Pomeroy, and a
majorette with the Meigs High School Band. Hostesses in costume will be on hand for the event
to be held at the new Meigs Museum.

Jaroushie (or two) Coming to Jumps

ASPECIAL TABLE relating to lhe biatory ol Tuppers P!alnl11lll be featured &amp;lnday when
Heritage O.y Is oblerVed from II a.m. to 6 p.m. at the new Meigs Musewn in Pomeroy as a
. part ol Big Bend Regatta Weekend. The display was prepared by Mrs. Agnes Hill, noted local
hlatorlan. Mrs. IIDl ill holding a Civil War sword which Is be~ donated 19 the museum by
Rolland Dodderer of Tuppers Plains.

Will the real !sam K.
Jaroushie please stand up•
That may be the question
that will climax a zany series
of events transpiring over the
past month that has brought
two old friends who are
business associates and totally
dedicated practical jokesters
to look ill each other today with
suspicion, like two bull
elephants wanting the shade of
·the same palm tree.
For it appeared Thursday
that on Saturday afternoon at
the home of Fred W. Cro~ in
Syracuse, on the occasion of a
reception for past grand
craokers of the Ohio
AsSociation for the Promotion
of Bullfrogs, Inc., not one, but
two !sam K. Jaroushies of
Tripoli, Libyan Arab Republic,
may attend.
This is how such a
preposterous event may trans·
pire:
1- Under dale of May Blast,
one Isam K. JaroUshie of
Tripoli signed a letter ad-

dressed
to
" Pomeroy
Newspaper" announcing he
would like to attend the frog
jwnps Saturday in Pomeroy in
connection with Regatta
Weekend and that he had
produced a new pill that inspired frogs to jwnp abnormal
dis lances and also ridded them
of the disagreeable sometimes
human
abnormality of
halitosis.
2- A tongue-in-cheek report
was made of this letter in the
local press, and forgotten
about as some one's prank or
joke. ·
-·
3- Upon solicitation by Mr.
Crow, who refused to accept
the saga of the medicated frog
as nebulous, yet denying any
knowledge of Jaroushie, this
newspaper formally invited
Jaroushie to the jwnps. The
invitation was directed, air
mall, to Mr. Jaroushle, Post,
Office Box 385, Tripoli, Ubyan
Arab Republic.
4 - After a reasonable lapse
of time,'Jaroushle wrote, under

Scho.o i Notes on the Term
Passed,
and
to
Come
By Geoqe li8rp'avM,-S.I.
Mel&amp;l Llc8l 8dlool Dlllrlel
In thifl evenq's column I woulli like to touch oo aiiiiJ!ber of
Items and I hope that ooe or man of them 1llll be of interest to

you.
Last week I did all I could to explain the necessity of passag~

speakint( of schools - No. 239 .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I
\

•

The recent "Consensus
session" held in the Meigs
Local School District indicated
that the public is especially
Interested In how the district's
money Is spent.
In response to this, Frank W.
Porter, president of the Meigs .
Local Board of Education, said
today the Meigs Local District
had receipts of $1,721,62fl.241or
the calendar year of 1971.
Of this total, $345,274.81 came
from local real estate taxes
and $25,375.16 from personal
taxes for a total of $370,649.97.
The
district
received
$1,350,976.27 from· the State of
Ohio and from tuition fees.
Expenditures for the
calendar year of 1971 totaled
$1,748,927.58, ~ deflci! of
$27,301.34. Expenditures In·
eluded $1,132,945.631n salaries;
$9,820.85 in supplies; $47,288.29
for textbooks; $181,061.10 for
retirement paymen)s; $6,222.30
for work study; $67,926 for
transportation; $42,996.82 for
tutor, auditor, bond premiwns
and to the county board of
education; $128,522.59 for the
operation of the school plant
including utilities and insurance, and $132,164 for
· federal programs.

100% Dacron Ninon Tailored Curtains

36"
45"
54"
63"

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Thursday it would join In the
union .representing U.S. com- -action.
mercia! airlines pilots an- ·
nounced today its members
"It is truly unfortunate tbat
would cooduct a ~our walk- hundreds of thousands of
out Monday as part of a world airline passengers will have
wide protest against air piracy. their travel plans Interrupted
Capt. ·John J. O'DoMell, for this period, "O'Donnell told"
jX'esident of the Airline Pilots a news conference.
"But it is inevitable lbat
Association (ALPA), said
negotiations with the United
Nations ·had failed to bring
about action and that a onN&amp;y
shutdown of all airline traffic
was the only remaining step·to
dramatize the situation.
The Ohio Board of Regents
Other unions in tbe airline
today
approved a resolution
indi!Stry, Including one representing pilots from other creating a community college
nations, were expected to district in Southeastern Ohio.
The resolution, which insures
participate in the strike.
economical
educational opThe shutdown will begin at 2
portunities,
creates
a coma.m. EDT Monday. The International Association of Machi- munity college district of
nists (lAM) which represents Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and
most aviation mechanics, said Vinton Counties.
The proposed community
college would be housed on the
Rio Grande College campus,
and would use the college's
facilities and personnel
through
a
contractual
agreement. Rio Grande

Spend.ing
Detailed

A well ·known brand.
Ll mlfed quant lty of
. Upright and Canister
models . All •t spec ial
reduced prlcei

Hanes T Shirts
With Pocket

.

Weather

Free Gift Box

5.99

Ecology Tennis Shoes

'

Four-in-Hand

Ties and the popular E-Z·
on Ready-lied Wembley

KNIT SHIRTS

Womens and Mens

Your Thorn

patterns.

1.75

JUNE 16 and 17 ONLY

.

Father's Ooy Gift. A big
selection of solid colors and

Three minor two-car acTies .
cidents were reported by the
Gallia-Meigs State Highway
Boys Flare Leg Wranglers. A complete selection
Patrol Post today. None inof sizes in regulars or slims.
volved serious personal injury.
Sale 3.98
At 11:40 a.m. Wednesday on
Boys Husky Size Flare Leg Wrangler Jeans .
Route 7 one mile north of
Gallipolis, Hal C. Seymour, 61,
Sale 4.50
Plainfield, N. J., while at- f---~--·-----~-~-~--~-:-----~·-·----;!_:._
--~--i
tempting to pass, struck the
rear of an auto driven by
Some Excellent Gift
•
Myron ~~Bud" McGhee, 37,
For Father's Day Giving
Gallipolis. Damage was minor
Waist sizes 32 to 44. S~lect your correct length. 35
to both vehicles. Seymour was
per cent cotton, 65 per cent Dacron Polyester .
Kodak Camera • Polarqid Camera - Camera
cited for passing without
Permanent press. Full cut style with more
accessories. Norelco or Sunbeam Ele~tric Razor
fullness in the seat. Not so much taper in the
assured clear distance.
. Gillette Track II Razor • Alta Shave Lotion •
legs . Solid colors.
At 2:4op .m. on Africa Road,
Shave Cream . Fanny Farmer tandv · Timex
one-lenth of a mile south ·of
Wrist Watch . Watch Bands · Foster .·ant Sun
Route ~. Joseph Roush, 61,
Glasses - Bathroom Scales • Pockeo Knife ·
Route 2, Gallipolis, and Willard 1--·------------~-----·-·--{ Pocket Watch . Electric Fan - Ice Chest Cooler •
Newsome, 23, Covington, Ky.,
Alarm Clock - Paris Leather Belt - Easy Chair ·
crossed a narrow bridge
Luggage • Radio • Portable TV Set · Tape Player
SPECIAL
. simultaneously. Roush slid into
. Record Album - Rolfs Wallet or Key case, and
the railing on the right to avoid
many others.
Father's Day Sale
contact between the vehicles.
Th~re was moderate damage
/'vlens
to Roush's auto. No arrest or
citation was issued.
If your Dad is a gun collector or lust plain likes
About 7 : ~ p.m. on Turguns- Visit our Jrd floor furniture department
key Run Road, three miles
and see the fine gun cabinets. Holds six or ten
west of Gravel Hill Road,
guns. Double glass door with lock. Under stora~e .
Roger Bennett, 22, Route I
Sizes 29 to 42 waist.
space and drawer that locks. Beautiful maple
Gallipolis, was traveling west
Stripes , neat patterns
antique finish . We'll gladly deliver In lime for
when he hit his brakes, causing
and a big selection of
Father's Day Gift this Sunday .
solid colors. Straight leg
him to crash into the side of a
car operated by Harry Lee
styles and flares. Buy
. Drapery Dept.-2nd Floor
Smith, 42, Pomeroy . There was
what you need and save
Speci•l Silt
now .
moderate damage to both
vehicles. No arrest was made.

Regatta Special

225 2nd

Select a tie or two for your

•

at y

Los Angeles County contains
77 cities.
'

served. The river boat pictures are from the collection of J.
W. Weaver, Racine, long-time skiff'lllllker. Mitchell is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cbapman, Pomeroy.

____--;'__

Teenage Girls
Hurt in Wreck

Fri. &amp; Sat

Extra heavy blue denims . Sanforized shrunk.
True western style . Sizes 29 to 38 waist. Select
your correct length .
Special Sale Price

•

Now You Know

Wembley Ties

Wrangler Aare leg Jeans

MITCHELL CHAPMAN, in costwne of yesteryear,
points out some of the interesting river boats which are part
of a picture display to be shown at the Meigs County Museum
Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. when Heritage Day is ob-

allbe In)' 011 nat 'l'lleldaJ. I tnllt thai that article did lllliWII'
11101&amp; o1 your .....kiN IIIII thai you wUl .IUpport Ul. II Ia 011'
tdDcore 11ope that till ,..._ 111 Mllp Locll Dl.llrlct wm lhow
~ willlna ID IUIJpot't tbllr IChooll at lbe lllile level as
tbl peapllln SauiiMm ud Bullra.
i

f

·

-

-

l'teue give 111 your support. ·

OUR MINE MECHANICS elaBB equipment Ia beginning to
arrive. Our mine infllructor, Dorsel Smith, Ia on the jobtounpacli::
and uaemllle this equipment. He Ia allo wll'king on the course

on

June~.

SCHEDuiJNG FOR NEXT year is under way In both tlte
junior and senl111' high achoola. We sUII bave openin1111 In a
IRIIIlber of vocational court1e1 and encourage students to contact
structure.
Mr. Diehl if they are Interested. Weare particularly interelled in
WE WANT TO EXTEND our befit wishes to the 236 sen101'8 .encouraging boys In next year's junior class ID Consider the mine
wbo received their diplomas on May 23. Congratulatiolll allo go mecbalt1ca coune. These clares are open to students from all
to Mr. Diehl and hl.a staff for a IIUCCIUful commencement. Onl7 a acboola In !be county.
high ICllool principal can lmow !be feeling of IIXOIIIpllshment
Tbe JUIQIIIel' lchool remedial )r01f8m la In run ~ at
and relief when anoth.- p-adultloa ' - been Cllllflleted. l alao Pomeroy Elementary Scbool. Robert Morrla lwadl the staff ol!8
WIIJ11 ID lballlt you all lor your cooperatiOIIID !be Dlltter Ill taking teachen who are 'WOI'kq to help the ylllqSien. 'l'bret bus
plclurel.lt Ia quite necessary fill' 1111D bave thifl cooperatloo, .and drlvtn brine !be lltudents in !rom all parts lithe district. We are
we appaeclolte lt.
hopeful that we may provide 10111e Nil help fill' the lludenta
By tbe way, "e encourage each member ol !be Class ol1972 ·
(Continued on Page 24)
-who bu Niched the age ol18 -ID pw ualU 111' ber Yes vote

date of June 6, that he,
Jaroushie, with frog and a
supply of pills, would be in
Pomeroy one day before the
jumps.
5- Meanwhile,. Jaroushie, in
a letter dated May 30, apparently baving moved his
place of residence, or maybe
his harem, from Rabi el Tani
16, 1392 (still Tripoli),
wrote to Theodore T.
Reed, president of The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co ., of Pomeroy,
as follows :
"I wrote .newspaper about
coming to Frog jwnp this year.

My friends Ali Assuam and
Mohammed Chattour go to
Ohio University last year and
saw frog jump in your town.
Mr. Eich, my friend and your
friend, give me your adress as
I will come to Frog jump. Will
you look after me, I no need
money, but you help find me
hotel. I will bring many of my
special pills.
·
Yours truly, INSHA "Allah"
Jaroushie (if this is wbal
Arable writing signature
means - Ed ).
Until the letter arrived, Mr.
Reed was enjoying the spec( Continued on Page 12)

Driver Escapes
Truck in River
John Denney, 20, Bidwell,
escaped possible drowning
Thursday night In a traffic
accident on Rt. 7 near the
Campaign Creek Bridge· In
Addison.
According to the Gallia · •
Meigs Post State Highway
Patro), Denney, an employee
of G&amp;J &lt;\uto Parts, was
traveling south wllen he lost
cootrol of the G&amp;J truck, ran
off the left side of the Qjghway
over an embankment and
plunged Into the Ohio River.
Denney eecaped by kicking the
windshield out. He was treated
and released at tbe Holzer
Medical Center for minor In·
juries. The accident ls still
under Investigation.
Sixteen-year old Sieve Sllone
of Kanauga was sli&amp;htly injured in a single car accident at

.

12:30'a.m. ·this morning on Rt.
141, eight tenths of a mile west
of Rt. 3~.
Slone lost control of his
vehicle which hit an em-.
bankmenland rolled over. The
car was demolished. He ,was
also treated and released at the
Holzer Medical Center.
A third accident occurred at
12:20 p.m. on Route 160 two
miles north Of Route 564. Paul
Daniels, 18, Vinton, and · ·
Harvey Pelfrey, 51, Vinton,
were northbound when Daniels
'was unable to stop for an
uniden\lfled third auto making
a left hand turn. l'elfny was
a1ao unable ID stop and struck
the rear of Daniels' auto. There
were no injuries; damage was
moderate to both vehicles.
Both were cited for assured ·

clear distance.

�/

MAJOR ~ .
LEAGUE

UPI Slatella•e Reporter
&lt;XlLUMBUS (UPI)- State
Attorney~ Wllllam J.
Brown, beatq OJIPCIOellll ~
lllate aid to IKq)Ubllc IChoo1a
to the puncb,today flied sult In
Franklin County Common
Pleat Court asklnl lor
declaulory judgment on
Ohio's new tax credit ..-opossl
about to be signed Into law,
At the same time, repu1a
were circulated that a dellber;te speedUp ol the
parochall aid bill througb the
Senate earlier lhlll week will
enable prnpooenta to beat the
American ClvU Uberties Union
(ACLU) Into federal court with
another suit.
"We are beating them to the
punch," said a source In the attorney general's office, "and
we are going to kick their taU

a

on this one."
Brolfll filed suit on behalf of
state Tax Comrnl.ilsloner Robert J. KOII)'dlr, heading off an
anticipated suit by the ACLU
challenging the tax eredlt
method of aiding parents of
pupils In private and parochial
schools.
Brown look advantage of a
technique known as '1onunlhopplng" - getung a testcase
In a favorable arena. He also
caught the ACLU napping by
fillng suit before the blll be·
comes law.
Benson
A.
Wolman,
executive director of the Ohio
ACLU, was on vacation all
week. He was named as a
defendant along with lour
colleagues questioning the
constitutionality of aid to
nonpubllc schools, and five
Ohio taxpayers who would
benefit from the tax credits because their children attend
Catholic, Protestant or Jewish
schools.
BroWJt's suit said Kosydar
needs to know whether he can
lmp!emenl and administer the
tax credits, and seeks a judgment "at the earliest possible
dale because of the Impact
such judgment will have upon
the administration ol Ohio's
statewide Income tax law."
ACLU Flgh18 Aid
The ACLU has fought aid to
nonpubllc schools, already declared unconstitutional In two
other forms, as a violation of

the separation of churcll and porters ol aid to nonpublic Leroy J. Contle Jr., Frank J. credit measure - income tax contain these new definitions.
llate doclrlne In the U. S. Con- schools felt they would not get Battisti, Ben C. Green, William excluslona and credits for the H$111 been held up lor amendBiilutlon. ·
a fair shake from Rubin or K, Thomas ar Thomas D. Lam· eld...ly and retired - which ment, pasaag~ would have
Brown's suit aaid Koilydar's Judge Joseph P. Kinneary - bros.
was in the form of an 141reed been delayed for a week since
fallure to grant tax credits whom they described as a
the House was in rece"ss.
The pqroc!UI aid measure conference report.
would violate the rights of the "fallen-away Catholic" - in waa aped through the Senate
The conference report had
/IS it llands now, the retirelive nonpubllc school parents Columbua.
unchang_ed· from the House set forth new definitions for ment credit conference report,
under Article l, Section 2 of the
So they would seek a hearing version In order to bring about income tax credits und... the already agreed to by the SenOhio Constitution granting before any of eight federal the surprise state suit, sources law enacted last December, ale,.will have to be rewritten
equal ..-otectlon and no special judges In Cleveland - Judges said.
and Section 5747 of the law by a second conference
privileges.
Girard, E. Kalbfleisch and
Technically, the bill should overlapped with parochial aid commltt., next week to malte
Also violated, the suit con- James C. Co!Ulell, who heaf a · h!Fve been amended In the Sen- credits. _
tax credit language conform to
.
tends, would be their rights limited number ol cases, or ate Wedneadliy to Incorporate . The parochial aid bill did not the parochial aid bill.
under the first and ltth amend- Judges lloberl B. Krupanaky, new language In another tax
ments to the U. S. ConstlluUon,
guaranteeing freedom of rellg·
ion and equal protection under
the law.
A spokesman lor the attorney general's office aald the
lull was able to be filed be!OI'e
, the bill becomes law because It
asta for a declaratory judgment, ar clarlllcatlon.
;
Signing Expected
The governor Is expected to
sign the bll1 next week, permitting the expenditure of $61 mn.
lion during the rest of the year
lo grant a ~ tax credit lor
each nonpubllc school chlld in a
lamlly.
Sources In the attorney general's office said the purpose ol
their quick suit was twofold:
- It gives them Initiative aa
BOBBY POWERS
plaintiffs to test the law in the
The
Dally Senllnel
court of their preference, raiswelcomes to Its carrier staff
Ing the Issues of their choice.
in Middleport Bobby
JOYCE RITCHIE
- By taking the case to a
Powers, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joyce Ann Ritchie,
SALLIE BLACKIE
state, rather than federal ; daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Powers, 133 North
NEW HOME ECONOMIST -Mrs. Sally Blackie, Home
court thsy are able to raise Fred Ritchie, Portland,
Third Ave. Boro March 2,
Economist, Athens District, Columbus and Southern Ohio
points In their favor under the graduat ed from Ohio
1959, Bobby Is an clghtb
Ohio Constitution.
Electric
Company, has been apPointed to serve the Gallipolis
grader
at
Meigs
Junior
High
University oo June 10 with a
The U. S. Supreme Court bachelor of science degree in
School. His hobbles are
and Middleport areas. Mrs. Blackie, a native of Wooster,
ruled last year against elementary education. Miss
camping, fishing and
received her bachelor of science degree in home economics
distribution of direct state aid Rllchle, a 1968 graduale of
bowling. He enjoys football,
from Ohio University in March, 1971. Her husband, Gary, is a
'to · private and parochial Southern High School,
PRIZES TO BE AWARDED to youngsters partictpating
baseball and table tennis. He
graduate student in geophysics at Ohio University. She can
schools In Rhode Island and Racine, did her student
in the Fishing Clinic and Casting Derby to be held Saturday
was champion In seventh
be reached through Columbus and Southern's Athens,
PeMsylvanla.
grade
singles
and
boys
at
9
a.m.
are
displayed
by
Jack
Kerr,
left,
president
of
the
teaching at the Pomeroy
Gallipolis or Middleport offices.
The Ohio General Assembly, Elementary School. She has
doubles In table tennis.
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce, and Ted Dean, District
In Its budget enacted last IJe. accepted employment at the
Hunting and Fishing Instructor with the Division of Wildlife,
cember, went to the "voun- Syracuse Elementary
Department of Natural Resources. The fishing clinic and
cher" system of reimbursing School, a pari of the
casting derby and water safety demonstration is one of the
parents ol nonpubllc school Southern Local School daughters and Jessie (McCoy)
many events featured during the Big Bend Regatta. The
Childers, of Columbus.
pupils.
District, for the 1972·73
event is for youngsters six through 15 years of age, with
Vistting Mr. and Mrs. Ber·
This was held un- school year.
prizes for all, sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber of Comnard Diddle the past weekend
constitutional by U. S. District
merce and conducted by the Division of Wildlife.
were their sons, Sp-1 Bob
Court Judge Carl B. Rubin of
Registration and clinic will be held in the Episcopal Church,
Diddle, Fl. Eustis, Va., George
Columbus.
Main Street, Pomeroy, starting at 9a.m. Those participating
. By Helen Bonel
Diddle, Columbus, 0 .; Mr. and
There were reports, confirm.
In
the
fishing
clinic
wiD
be
eligible
for
the
casting
derby
to
be
Mrs. Tom Diddle and son,
ed sources In the attorney genheld on the Ohio River across from the Pomeroy Junior High
Stephen,
also Rick Proffitt,
eral's office, that another suit
COLUMNIST STANDS ACCUSED
building. Equipment wlll be furnished. There will be two age
New Matamoras, 0., James
would be llled In U. S. District
Dear
Helen
:
groups, youngsters age 6 through 11 and 121hrough 15. There
Fisher, Gallipolis, 0 ., Mr. and
Court In Cleveland to tesl the
By Mrs. Francis Morris
will be three top winners in each age group for both girl and
Mrs.
Charley
Cobb,
Syracuse,
No offense, but I must challenge some of your answers in the
new law in a '1alr court."
Miss Jean Kiser is a patient
boy divisions with a prize going to the grand champion.
column of "Twenty-Five Questions on 'Are You Living or JUBt
in Pleasant Valley Hospital, 0.
Two Slogled Out
Bob Miller, New Vork,
Existing?' 11
Following the casting derby there will be a water safety
These reports held that sup- Pt. Pleasant.
demonstration given by wildlife persoMel. Bill and Lee's
You said if you answered more than six of these ' 'Yes," you
Loyal Holman went to Holzer · visited with his stster, Opal
Music Center donated a transistor radio and six individual
were headed for dullsdom. However, on four I think you missed
Medical Center for checkup Diddle, and family and
brother , Fred, and family
afler surgery.
record albums to be awarded as prizes and Goessler's
the boat:
Saturday
and
Sunday.
Guests of Mrs. Addie Petrel
Jewelry, Moore's Store in Pomeroy and Ossie's Back Room,
No. II: "Would you take a spur of the moment, unplanned
Mr. and Mrs. Oval Diddle
were Mrs. Anna Jones of
Middleport, donated fishing supplies, rods, reels, tackle
trip and enjoy it?" Adull person would say ''No!"
Batavia, N.Y., Mr. and Mrs. were Thursday evening dinner
boxes and plugs.
No. 16: "Do your children drive up up the wall?" What
Dick Savage of Livonia, N.Y., guests of Mr . and Mrs. Bernard
bonest young Mom could avoid answering "Yes" to this one Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Cowdery Diddle.
which doesn't mean she's bored?
Mrs . Opal Dtddle ac·
and Mrs. Lucy Randolph of
No. 21 : "Would you pull off the r"!'d to enjoy a sunset, or do
companied
her sister, Jean
Washington Court House. ·
you
think of dusk as just another driving hazard?" Mr. Dull
Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence Fisher, and niece, Barbara
would say "No" to the f~rst, "Yes" to the second.
Grimm and two children or Woodall, to New Matamoras,
No. 24 : "Would you expiore an unknown trall just to see
Newell S. Hysell, deed. to
Minnie Swick, deed . to Alva
Lake Worth, Florida spent two 0. Monday and attended
where It leads?" Again, the "slick in the mud's" answer would
weeks with their parents, Mr. Commencement exercises for Dortha Lyman , Cert. of Trans., Swick, Paul Swick, Marjorie
McLaughlin , Goldie Huson, be "No!" -whether If's a mountain path or the 'trail of llfe."
and Mrs. Roderick Grunm, Becky Proffilt, a graduate at Salisbury.
. Please answer "Yes" or "No," Helen. Did you goof? ' , Dortha Lyman to Clara Jean James Glassburn, Margaret
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs. Frontier High School.
FAITHFUL
READER
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Diddle
France,
Parcel,
Salisbury.
Aff.
of
Trans
.,
Matheny,
Herman Wagner, Belpre.
Dear
Faithful:
John Foreman, deed. to Salem.
Mrs. Dick (Gloria Norris) and grar.dson, Steve, spent
Sunday
afternoon
with
Mr.
and
Eliza
Foreman, Edward R.
Mary A. Webster, Manning
YES, I goofed -on Numbers 11, 21 and 24 ... and I hope most
Reed and children, Matthew
Mrs.
Kermit
Fisher,
Gallipolis.
Foreman,
Joseph
R.
Foreman
,
D.
Webster
to
Pomeroy
of my readers are like my husband who understands what I
and Alice of Walker, Minn. and
Bertha Proffitt, Anna Lance, Emergency Squad, Inc., Lots, MEANT to say, rather than what I said. You see, I'm a lltUe new
Mrs. Gary (Shirley Norris)
'
Aff. of Trans. , Lebanon .
Pomeroy.
at this questioMaire game, and I didn't Include aU my negatives.
Hall and children, Christopher
Eliza
Foreman,
Edward
R.
Virgil Cross, Ruth Cross to These three questions should begin, "Would you REFUSE to ... "
Bowling Balls
and Jennifer of St. Paul, Minn.
Foreman , Betty A. Foreman, Carl Mills, Blanche Mills, Lot,
Bowling balls are gener·
A small argument on No. 16: Remember, F .R., I gave you a
spent ten days wilh their
Evelyn
Foreman, Bertha
"three-fourths of the lime" clause. Most children drive theirparents, Mr. and Mrs. Fern ally made of a hard rubber Proffitt, Anna Lance, Vernon Syracuse .
t I
Ernest H. Morris, dec. to parents up the wall occasionally, but if It's "conllanUy ," then
Norris. Among callers to visit composition. Balls made of Lance to Joseph R. Foreman,
plastic materia Is can be
them were June Beegle, used, but bowlers cannot use Evelyn Foreman, 100 Acre Lot Beulah L. Morris, formerly boredom may have something to do with II.- H.
Beulah L. Bradford, Aff. for
Phyllis O'Brian and two metallic balls.
+++
180, Lebanon .
trans., Racine.Sutton.
Dear Helen.
David Hill, Linda Hill to
V~na V. Marcinko to VerEvery y~ar on Mother's Day and Father's Day, our grown
Charles L. Mallory, Mayme H.
3.42 Acres, ' children come home and my wife ends up cooking a big dlnner:;dale
Hartung,
5
Mallory, 0.1 Acre, Racine.
cabachon for the cake attended
es r.
or else I suggest we eat out, and I end up paying for the whole
the celebration. They recschmeer.
Building of its traditional program will provide for an
ognized a cab made of Ohio strengths, an Improved optional route through WIN AT BRIDGE
Am I wrong to take a jaundiced look at boxes of stationery
petrified wood which was made Scouting program will be Scouting advancement skills,
and pairs of socks when those gifts cost us a lot of work and
by Oscar Shepard and the available for Scouts in the Tri· the involvement of Scouts in
money? -::- NO DAY OF REST
Marshall cahachon, but said State Area Council this fall the decision-making process,
Dear NDOR :
there were "too many cabs and according to Richard Monk, opportunities for Scouts to
No! I bope your children take an educated look at your letNORm(D)
16 · while and played low again.
too many people." Each Executive Board member who have a say in what they do in
ter! - H.
.A104
cabachon was backed by a altended planning meetings in Scouting, and a program for
West could do no better than
• 109 7 2
Dear
Helen:
to play the king and the stu·
silver leaf and strips of silver Los Angeles last month.
t K
older Scouts lo do a better job
For 17 years I was married £o a wonderful man who gave our
dent had found a way to
leaves backed rows of
"'AK 1076
"Many of the unique of developing leaders for
his
contract.
make
five
children and me many happy memories. He was kllled two
WEST
EAST
cabachons.
methods of Scouting which tomorrow," Monk explained.
.K97
.J83
"Pretty good work, wasn't years ago in a wreck.
Among the guests pictured have been successful for the
He also said that It was
¥ K5
¥6 3
it?"
he asked the professor .
My best girllrleild was married to my husband's cousin but
above are June Culp Zeltner, last 60 years have been announced at the Los Angeles
t QJ9
tA108753 2
con trlbuting editor to Lapidary strengthened and will be more meetings that the strong parts
"1\ fine recovery from bad five years ago she died ol cancer, leaving three small chlldren
.J98 52
earlier," replied the whose father Is raising them well. The four of us and our families
play
soum ,
Journal, the original National effective," Monk said.
of Scouting will he continued.
professor
. "The hand was a were always together, so much so that people used to say th...e
• Q652
Gem Cutting Magazine.
Of the total 186 units in the He hsted the unique patrol
cinch
all
the time."
¥AQJ 84
were eight chUdren with t1r Jmothers and two fathers.
The Summers were taken on Tri.State Area Council, 97 are method so boys actually run
• 64
Do_
you
see
what
the
pro.
a tour of Smithsonian by Paul Scout troops with over 1900 their troop through a troop
The fsmllles have wntlnued close, as I babysit John's
· "'Q4
lessor meant? The student children. This didn 't· bother relatives until about a year ago,
DeSautels, Curator: He showed members.
leaders' council, a re-&lt;lefinilion
Both vulnerable
should have played the 10
them gems, jewelry, and
The Scouting program , of the boy-man relationship
West Norlh Easl South
of clubs, not the king, from when John and I started going out about once a week to a dinner
specimens from all types of which is for boys who have which calls for the Scout.
dummy at trick six.
. or movie, whlle my kids and his "babysat" each other. The
It 1¥
rare and priceless minerals, completed the fifth grade or master to be a coach-counselor
2 + 3¥
Pass 4¥
If the finesse lost, dum. children think this Is jusl great - in fact they were the itttle
Pass Pass
Pa:ss
and other priceless articles. are II years of age, offers to Scouts, outdoor and indoor
my's last three clubs would schemers who planned our dating. We Uve only two biocka apart,
Opening
lead+Q
Many officers of the Eastern several ways to bring about experiences to learn new skills,
all be winners and the stu· so we are together a lot, and the children are the best of pala.
dent would get to discard
and American Federations personal
growth
and and the use of Scouting ideals
Why, Helen, would John's relatives and mine think this Is
three spades. If the finesse
By
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
attending the celebration were development.
as a personal challenge to
disgraceful?
True, we aren't contemplating marriage right now
won, as it would have, the
taken on the tour.
·"The Improved Scouting Scouts.
East took his ace of dta· student would be able to dis· - we're just Uie best ollrlends. But,we get so many pointed
m on d s and returned a card two spades on the ace comments we'~e getting edgy.lllould we separate our famllles,
trump. The student lost a and king of clubs.
or tell our.nstrow-mlnded relatives to mind their own bualneu?
finesse to West's king and a
INIW!PAPIO IHTIRPRI!I ASSH.)
JOHN AND LYNNIE
•
·trump came back.
Dear John and Lynnle:
The student won, ruffed
I suspect your 'familles aren't so much narrowillinded as
his last diamond · played a
club to his queen 'and a sec·
they are MARRIAGEilllnded. Keep 'em guessing: It sharpens
The bidding has been:
ond club to North's king.
together about
East South thelt: curlo.slty and gives you aomething to Ia"""
East showed out and the stu. Wesl North
""''
- while you make your own private.plans for the future. ·- H.
1•
J "' • Pass
dent was faced with the
Pass
problem of havmg to score Pass 3 "'
You, South, hold :
two spade tricks to make his
contract. He led the four .KJ54 ¥K8763 t5.Ql07
spot from dummy. East
What do you dq, now?
played lhe eight and after
A-Bid four dubs. This Is a
Mrs. Ethel Shell and son, where Linda Shell recelv,&lt;d a
considerable study the stu. tough problem, since there is
dent played the deuce.
Greg,
Steubenville, spent Bachelor ol Science in
some merit to both three hearts
and
three
spades,
night
with Mr. and Mrs. Education degree. Mila SlieU
Friday
East could not afford to
give a ruff and discard by
Mendal Jordan. On Saturday has secured a position for next
TODAY'S QUESTION
a
diamond
play
and
led
his
You bid (our clubs and your Mrs. Jordan accompanied year In the Warren Local
Points. The two homes have lake frontage on a full acre lot.
three or spades.
bids four hearts. What them to commencement
partner
Twenty-year financing Is avaUable.
School Dlltrict near Mlrie~.
The sludent thought a do you do now ?
ex~rcises at Ohio Unlvenlty

Helen Help

Racine
Social Events

Us.

• •

Property Transfers

•t
•

·-"

Nolans at Celebration
NEW HAVEN- Would you
believe it - this huge birthday
cake celebrating the 25th
Anniversary of the American
Federation of Mineralogical
Societies held at the
Smithsonian In Washington
recently was decorated with
cabs, more accurately known
as cabachons, made of semi
precious stones from all states
In the United States.
Several members of the Ohio
Valley and Gem and Mineral
Society had. their cabs
displayed on this 250 pound
cake which was five feet in
diameter and four feel high.
Among them were Howard
Nolan of Syracuse, Ohio, and
John Marshall, of New Haven,
who are neighbors divided only
by the Ohio River. Marshall's
cahachon representing West
Virginia was made of agatized
coral and Nolan's of Ohio flint.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Summers
of Belpre, who also submitted a

' .,

Improved Program Sure

Credit 'a Fine Recovery'

"'3

I"'

Carpenter Ne~s, Event

Major League S-tandings
Phlla at Houston, night
8y United Press International San
Fran al St . Lou is
National League
American League
East
East
w., I. pet. g.b.
w. t. pet.
Pittsburgh
34 18 .642
Det
roi
t
28
22 .560
New York
34 19 642 1;, Baltimore
28 22 .560
Chicago
29 22 569 4'12 Cleveland
23 25 479
St. Louis
23 30 .434 11'12 Bost on
21 26 .447
M ontreal
21 30 .412 12'1, New Yor k
22 29 .431
Philadelphia 20 33 .377 14'1, Milwaukee
16 32 .333
West
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
w. I. pet.
Cincinnati
34 19 "- 642
Oakland
33
17 .660
los Angeles 32 22 593 2'12
Chicago
31 20 .608
Houston
31 23 .574 3'1' Minnesota
27 21 563
Atlanta
25 27 .481 8'1' Californ 1a
25 28 .472
San Diego
18 36 .333 16'12 Kansa s City 23 28 . 45 1
San Francisco 19 41 .317 181!2

Thursday's Results
Chicago -10 San Piego 1
Pills 4 San Fran 1. 1st
Pills 9 San Fran 7, 2nd
(Only games scheduled)

Today's Probable Pitcher5

,.

~~s~~3s4

Six Share U. S. Open Lead

San Diego at Pills.
Montreal at Atlanta , night
New York at Cinci, n1 ght

"Everybody IS playing caU·
tiously ,"admitted favorite and
co·leader Jack Nicklaus after
Thursday's first round in
whicli :
--Six players, including
Ntcklaus, tied for the firstround lead in the Open 's
btggest traffic jam in modern

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.
{UP!)- The Pebble Beach Golf
Course, where disaster lurks m
4
5112 every errant breeze off the
6'12 ocean, had 'em all scared
II
today as the tangled-up field in
g.b. the U.S. Open Golf Cham·
pionship went out for the
211, second round.
5

g.b.

Texa'rh
s
11'12
Kan City...13d.;.3
Boston
9
New York 8 Chicago I
Cleveland 1 Cal if 0
!Only games scheduled)

Texa s at New York
Kan City at Milwaukee
aa1t1m or e at Minnesota

Cl eve land at Oakl and
Detroit a t Ca lif , n1ghf

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif . (UPI)--Six grown men have
shoehorned themselves into a perfectly ludicrous position in the
U.S. Open, rather like all trying to use the same phone booth at
once, and this circumstance would lend itself to some plain old
fashioned humor were it not for the fact that while five of these
fellows are competing for the prestige and the money, one of
them is out here playing for his very life
The one with everything riding ts Q;l\..me Moody.
He's the easiest to spot. '
He's the one playing with the surgical mask, and it's certainly
appropriate because for him, this is anything but an ordina ry
operation.
Orville Moody's past, present and future all are un co mmonly
wrapped up in this U.S. Open.
It goes even deeper than that.
What he does here in the next three days could affecl hts future
with his family, too.
It 's not quite such a big deal with those five other golfers who
are deadlocked with Moody for first place, the five who shot one·
underi)lir 71 in Thursday's first round the same way Moody did.
You look at these five and right off the bat you know they're not
m the same bOat with "Old Sarge" even though they happen to be
in the same bracket with him right now.
There's Jack Nicklaus for one.
Nobody will really he surprised if he wins. He didn 't do any
handstands over his fine 71.
"I played aU right. Nouiing exciting," he almost hohummed.
Kennit Zarley, the Seattleborn son of a restaurateur, won 't
el&amp;ctly think his dream boat has come in if he happens to win this
one either.
"!don't believe you gotta be a Jack Nicklaus, a Lee Trevino or
an Arnold Palmer to win a tournament," he said after he checked
in with his 71. "The PGA tour shows that."
Limited Emotion
Tom ~aw, another 71, displayed limited emotion when he said
"!had it under control most of the day ," and Mason Rudolph,
who looks like Doc in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs with his
glasses constanUy slipping off the bridge of his nose, called his 71
round "kinds like a yo-yo ... up and down."
Clli Chi Rodriguez, the other 71, made some jokes about his
game plan and then touched on Orville Moody's 15 years in the
Army .
"Yeah, Sergeant Moody," Rodriguez said. "He played like a
captain today. He's got hay fever. With that mask of his, he looks
llke Dr. Kildare ."
Jokes are fine, and Moody laugts at them along with
everybody else, but he knows one thing : What he does here at this
U.S. Open won't be any joke.
Sitting there answering questions in the press tent, Orville
Moody was his customary obliging self and it was inevitable that
somebody should pipe up :
"What have you done this year?"
"Nothing," he came right back.
Old Orv, having won only $5,000 in 10 outings this year , didn't
have to think a long lime about that.
Moody then told how he had won a tournament In Morocco last
December and thought he was back on the tra ck again when he
went deer hunting in Laredo, Tex., slipped trying to get his
footing and "felt something give" as he hung on with his right
hand.
· ·
Things Dldn 'I God Well
Thliigs dl.dn 'I go very well after that.
"At the Kemper," he said, talking about the tournament he
waa in at Charlotte, N.C., two weeks ago, "f knew I had to start
playing or get me a job somewhere."
Moody came virtually out of nowhere, out of Killeen, Tex., if
you're a stickler, to win the U.S. Open in 1969 and it looked as if .
there'd be a new golfing star on the horizon. But after also
winning the World Series of Golf that same year, he has been
virtually unheard of since.
."Winning the U.S . Open was line In a way," explained Moody,
"but It also brought a lot of heartaches. I lost my wife and family
aa a result of being successful and not being home. If you don 't

AAAIN THE TRAVEL BUSINESS?
YOU BEllER
BELIEVE ITIII
.
You Can Fly with AAA:'
Sail with AAA
Drive with AAA

Ti~01·ans ~OV
By CHARLES WlFSER
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)- The
Southern California Trojans go
after their third straight
national baseba ll championship tonight after battling
their way past Anzona State, 31, Thursday night in a game the
Trojans had to win to stay in
the College World Series.
If there was any solace for
the Sun Devils from Artzona
State, it was that they could
afford to lose Thursday and
sttll get a crack at the cham·
pwnship tonigh t.
Their coach, Jim Brock,
said, "It's a whole new deal
now." No ting that his team has
been in a hitting slump, Brock
said, ''We'll do anything we
can to get hitters tomorroweven change the line·up ."
Arizona State was the only
team which had advanced to
the championship round of the

· double-elimination tournament
without a loss . Southern
California had dropped a 3-0
deciSion to the Sun Devils in
earlier competition.
The pitcher that time for
Arizona State was Jim Craw·
ford-and .he has been named
by Brock to hurl the title game
Friday night. His record is 13-1.
His mound opponent ":ill be
Mark Sogge, the same pitcher
Crawford defeated in hts
earlier series VIctory . Sogge
will come mto the contest with
a 5-2 record. Trojan coach Rod
Dedeaux said," If Sogge pit·
ches his normal good ball
ga me, it will he anybody's

game."
In Thursday night's game,
doubles by Clint Myers and
Jerry Mantlo in the top of the
seco nd inning gave the Sun
Devils a short-lived 1.0 lead.

The Mtddleport Independent
Swnmer League Basketball
Program wtll open its second
season Sunday w1th thr ee •
games on tap at the Mtddleport
Mumctpal Park.
Teams competing are being
sponsored by Mark V,
Pomeroy Nat10nal Bank,
Adol ph 's Dairy Va lley, Mid·
dleport Department Store, The
Friendly Tavern, a nd Th e
Datly Scnhnel.
Participating for Mark V will
be Dox ie Walters, Ron
Ferguson, Floyd Burney, John
Slaven , Mike Sayre. Ralph
Sayre. Duff Craig, and Mike
Howard.
For The Pomeroy Natwnal
Bank will he Don Nelson,
Roger Dingey, Dan Dodson ,
Jim Hubbard, Andy Vaughan,

Ri ck Snyder, Jon Garnes, and
Perk Ault.
Players for Adolph's [)airy
Valley include Ste ve Dunfee,
Jun my Noe. Randy Crawford,
Steve Price, Don Justus, Chip
Haggerty , Jeff Moms, and
Tom Cooke.
The Middleport Depa rtment
Store team 1s Dave Fife, Jim
Co nde, Jun Boggs, Jeff Tyo,
Sam Mitchell , John Young, and
Fred Burney
The Frtendly Tavern in·
eludes Barry Hams, Gil Prt ce,
Rick Van Matre, La ry Justus,
Je1·ry Hubbard, Bill Vaughan,
Rt ch Douglas , and Ri ck
Werner.

Players for The Daily Sen·
tmel are Rtch Bailey, Mark
Mitchell , Keith WIS e, up ,
De{lnis Eichinger, Bill Chaney,

Indians Go to 4-0
The Indians remained un·
bealen m lour games with a 9·1
win over the Mets and lhe Reds
moved mto second place with a
11·1 win over the Braves in
Middle port Boys' League play
Thursday.
Both games were called after
four mnings, due to rain m the
lndian s· Me ts game, and
because of the 10-run rule in the
Reds·Braves match.
Mike Hmdy hurled all the
way for the Indians, permilttng
but one hit. Hindy fanned seven
and walked only two . Greg
Becker and Stobart who pit·
ched lor the Mets teamed to fan
live and walk 10.
Hitte rs for the Indians were
Tony Venoy with -a home run
and Mark Venoy wtth two
singles . Harmon's single was
the only hit for the Mets.

Ron ni e Casci went the
distance on the mound for the
Reds. He struck out nine and
dion 't walk a batter. Dave
Smith and Brett Dodson pit·
ched for the Braves. Together
they struck f1ve and gave up
stx walks.
Getting hits for the Reds
were Carl Carmichael wtth a
smgle, tnple, and home fWl j
Mark Magnotta, two singles;
George Gwn and Dave Wilcox
each a horn e run , and Casct
had a smgle. For the Braves,
Tmt Ebersbach and Jack
Humphreys each had a smgle.
STANDINGS
Team
w. L.
4 0
Indians
2 2
Reds
Braves
1 3
Mets
I 3

think success can cause problems, then you're mistaken. I had
other troubles on account of winning, too. Trouble with my
sponsors. Imagine them getting $60,000 after putting up only
$1,500and ))itching? You have no idea what trouble I had. I didn't
know how well off I was when I was in the Army. It was a simple
life, a good life . I ate well, got pa1d every two weeks and didn't
have any problems."
Moody was divorced last October . Three children were in·
volved in the break-up.
What would wlnniilg the Open again mean to him ?
"I think it would straighten out all my problell\5." he said.
What about tbose heartaches again?
"!don 'I think there'd be any this lime," said the only golfer In
this 151knan field who wears a surgical mask. He wears it
because of his hay fever .
"I get it real bad sometimes," Orville Moody said about his
hay fever . "I'd get it so bad in the Army I couldn't drive a jeep or
stand guard . They should've kicked me out, that's what they
should've done ."
They never did.
Peor ol' Orv.
He has had a few problems.

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
OPEN FOR BUSINESS

The best in the whole, wide world!

-·

.•

Mick Chtlds, Mark Moyer, and
Rod Ferguson.
The schedule 1s as follows:
Key I - Mark V, 2 Friendly Tavern , 3 - Daily
Sentinel, 4 - Middleport
Department Store, 5 Adolph 's, and 6 - Pomeroy
Na ti onal Bank .
FIRST ROUND
June 18, 1vs. 6, 2vs. 5, 3 vs. 4.
June 19, 2vs 6, I vs 3, 4 vs. 5.
JW1e 25,4 vs. 6, 3v.s. a, 1 vs. 2.
Jw1e 26, 2vs. 4, I vs . 5, 3 vs. 6.
Jul y 2, 1 vs. 4, 2 vs. 3, 5 vs. 6.
SECOND ROUND
July 3, 2 vs. 6, 4 vs. 5, I vs. 3.
July 9, I vs. 6, 2 vs. 5, 3 vs. 4.
July 10, 1 vs. 5, 4 vs. 2, 3 vs. 6.
July 16,6 vs. 4, I vs. 2, 3 vs. 5.
July 17, 2vs. 3, 5 vs. 6; I vs. 4.
THIRD ROUND
July 23, I vs. 4, 5 vs. 6, 2 vs. 3.
July 24,3 vs. 6, I vs. 5, 2 vs. 4.
July 30,4 vs. 5, I vs. 3, 2 vs. 6.
July 31, I vs. 2, 3 vs. 5, 4 vs. 6.
August 6, 3 vs. 4, 2 vs . 5, I vs.
6.

Nolan To
Face NY
Tonight
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Pete
Rose , Cincinnati Reds hardhi tting outfielder, didn 't like
the tdea of the rains Thursday.
~&lt; [trained out my game/' he
said .
Rose had planned to play a
game with hts two.year-old son
Pete Jr., but was forced to call
it off when it rained most of the
day .
The Reds outftelder said he
would have to keep in practice
in order to keep up the winning
techmque .
The Reds, on a seven-game
win streak and leading the
National League West by 21&gt;
games, host the . New York
Mets tonight in the first of a,..
three.game series.
The Mets were knocked out
of first place in the Eastern
Division Thursday night when
Pittsburgh
swept
a
doubleheader from San
Francisco and nailed down the
lead by % game.
Cincinnati callfi. upon
righthander Gary Nolan to face
Jerry Koosman of the Mets.
Nolan , 8-1 overall, has won
his last five outings. Koosman
OIVDS a 3-3 ntark.
The Mets will also have to
contend with catcher Johnny
Bench who leads the league
with runs batted in with 47 and

17. Bench
has
1- - - - - - - - - - - - -'- - - - - - - • home
beltedruns
eightwith
home
runs this

Relax • .. Drive in for a Delicious Moo
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
malt, shake, cone or sundae.

AUTOMOBILE Q.UB OF SOUTHERN OHIO'

But the Trojans came right
back in the bottom of the inning
and scored two runs to take a
lead which stood up the rest of
the game.
Ken Huizenga 's single and a
long double by Roy Smalley got
the Trojans thelf first run.
Smalley later moved to third
on an error and scored when
Milt Guggia singled.
Singles by Tim Steele and
DaryI Arenstein, followed by
two walks, resulted in Southern
California's third run in the
seventh inning.
Randy Scarbery pitched th e
VICtory, his 12th against just
three defeats. The loss-his
first of the year after 14 vic·
torics- went to lefty Ed Bane,
who earlier in the series set a
nine-inning series strikeout
record when he fanned 14
batters.

6 Teams in Cage Play

I

ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD!
AAA is a TOTAL T~l Agency ...

ASU

,

Today's Probable Pitchers

Phone: 992-259G-POmeroy
446.0699-GIIIipolis

history.
who had to share tlle top spot
- The one.under'flar 71 score with comebacking Orville
of the six leaders set another Moody, On Chi Rodriguez,
record for the highest score to Tom Shaw, Mason Rudolph,
lead the Open after the first and Kennit Zarley. "It's just
round.
too darn early in the tour·
"Nobody wants to have that nament to risk double bogeys."
one big bad hole that could
wreck you," said Nicklaus,

91/:o~

l0 1/ 2

I All Times EOT)
IAll Times EDT I
Philadelphia (Carlton 7-6) at
Cleveland (Tidrow 4-6) at
Houston (Wilson 4-5). 8:30p .m. Oakland (Holt zman 9 4), 11
Montreal (Morton 2-7 and
Renko 1-4) at Atlanta (Reed 4-7 P m.
De tr od (Coleman 7-5) at
and Kelley 4-51. 2, 6:05pm.
Ca l 1l orn 1a (Cl ark 4-5). 11 p .m
Los Angeles (Osteen 7 3) at
Baltimor e (Palmer 7.3} at
Ch1cago (Hooton 5-4),2:30 p.m. Minnesota IKaat 7-11 , 6:30F.m .
New York I Koosman 3-3 1 at
Texas IGogolewskl 3-6 at
Cincinnati (Simpson 3-11 , 8 OS New
York I Kline 4-21. 7:30 p.m.
p.m.
Ch icago (Wood 10 4) at
San Francisco (Cumberland Boston 1Culp4-51. 7 30pm .
0-4) at St. Louis IWise 56). 9 Kan sas Cdy (Drago 4-4) at
pm .
.
Mil wa ukee { Lon borg J .JJ, 8 30
San Diego (Caldwell 121 at p m.
Pittsburgh I Blass 7 1) . 8 OS
Saturday' s Games
pm .
Chicago at Bos ton
Saturday's Games
Los Angeles at Ch1cago

•

'

STANDINGS

Brown Asks Early Parochial School.Aid Ruling
By LEE LIJONARD

l"

'

_3- The Dally Senttnel, Middleport·Pomeroy 0 June 16 19'/2

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
At Forked Run Lake Entrance
Long Bottom, 0.

m~~~innati

ha• not lost a
game since the Mets broke a
win streak tast week.

Have Limited Range
The trees with the most
limited range of distribution
are the big trees in the Sler·
ras and the redwoods along
the northern coast of Call·
fornia. Both trees are found
nowhere el!e in the world.

Actually, Nicklaus insisted,
the Pebble Beach layout-the
first seaside course in modern
times to play host to the Open
- isn't "playing as difficult as
the high SC!Jres would mdicate."

Tigers Stay Hot
Mitch who hurled for the
defeated m four games by Ptrates combined for four
whipping the wmless Pirates strikeouts and three walks.
Hitters for the Tigers were
10.3 in Pomeroy Boys' League
ac lion Thursday. This was a McClure with a single, double,
make-up game of last Tuesday . and triple ; Dale Bro~mng ,
Bob McClure went the tr iple and two singles; Dave
distance for the Tigers, fannin ~ Blake, smgle and doubl e;
nine and givmg up two walks. Johnson, two singles ; Randy
Doug Browning and Mark Marshall. a home run and
Donnie Etsenhower, a single.
Doug Browning paced th e
Pirates with a single and tnple
Ma ;or League Leaders
By Umled Press International while Jim Rosenbaum and
Leadmg Batters
·Mitch each had a single.
National League
g. ab r. h. pet.
STANDINGS
Slenet. Pit
34 108 17 38 352 Name
w. L.
Sngui ln, P1 t 50 195 23 66 338 Tigers
4 0
Carty , All
44140 25 47 336 Yankees
2
2
Alou, St L
47 180 23 60 333
2 2
Torre, St L 51 198 27 65 .328 Giants
Cimnte, Pil 46 188 33 61 .324 Pirates
0 4
Toln , Cin
52 205 39 66 .322
Bckner. LA 35 121 15 39 .322
Lee. SO
46 172 21 55 320
StrgiL Pit
45 169 23 54 320
SCIOTO RESULTS
American League
COLUMBUS (UP! )
g ab r . h pet.
Pniela, KC 51 202 34 66 .327 Thimble won the $12,020
Shnblm ,KC 37 108 9 35 324 Challenge Stakes for four·year·
Ru~i. Oak
47 197 33 62 .315 old pacers Thursday ni ght at
Allen. Chi
51 181 31 57 315 Scioto Downs, a head over Ali
AI mar, Ca l 53 219 24 68 311
May. Chi
49 182 31 56 308 Right, and pushed his lifetime
Krkptrck. KC 39 104 14 32 .308 earnings to $100,000.
Braun . Min 37 127 10 38 299
Fred Hess guided Thimble to
Crew, Mm
48 181 21 54 .298
Kelly, Ch1
40 141 24 42 .298 a 2:02 2-5 mtfe.
Home Runs
Noble Deed on the first race
N~tional League : Ben ch, C1n
and Wt lmington Spur the
17 ; Stargell, Pitt and Kingman,
SF 14. Aaron , All and Col bert, second to return $26.20 in the
so 12
daily double on a 5·9 comAmencan league: Jack son, bination .
Oak 12: Allen , Chi and Cas h.
Del II : Dun can. Oak 10: The crowd of 5,015 wagered
$276,322.
Harper, Bas 9.
Runs Batted In
The Ttgers remained un-

National League : Bench, Cm

47 , Starge ll, P1tt 45, Oliv er ,
P1tt 40 ; Kingman , SF 38 ;
Simmons, St L 36
Am erican League : Allen , Chi

40 , Jackson , Oak 35 ; Ol iver,
Cal and May , Chi 32 ; Dun can .

Oak 28

Pitching

Nat1onal league : Nolan, Cin
and Sutton , LA 8-1; Seaver , NY
8-3, Jenkins, Chi 8 5, seve n tied

Its fnterprelution
The U S. Patent Office in·
ter prets perpetual motion to
mean a mechan ical device
operating by its own power
and once started will op·
e r a t e for an indefimte
period. according to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

~·our more players were only
one stroke out of the lead at par
72, including former champion
Gary Player of South Africa;
six more were only two strokes
away at 73; and then came a
flock of players at 74- in·
eluding doggedly detennined
Lee Trevino, the defending
champion Who ts playing
desp1te the fact he isn't fully
recovered from pneumonia.
" I feel hornble ; I was lucky
to £inish," golf's ''Super Mex"
admitted after a first round in
which he matched par 36 on th e
fron t nine and then shot twoover 3ll coming back. But in the
next breath , when asked if he
was considering withdr~wmg,
he shouted, "Hec k, no''
The Happiest One
or all the players lD th e
record fir st-pla ce tangle,
probably the happiest was
Moody, the "Old Sarge" who
became known as "Orville
Who '" when he came out of the
Army to win the Open in a big
surprise in Houston in 1!169.
Moody hasn't .won much of
anything recently, including
only $5,000in IOtournaments so
far this year.
"I went down to South Texas
and took three weeks off
recently and got my mental
altitude straightened out," the
beaming ex-&amp;Jidicr explained.
"I had got myself into such a
stale that I didn't have any
confidence I could even sink a
putt from a foot.and.a.IJalf
away.
"! had problems, all nghl,
but winning again sure would
help a lot of them ."
The field was to be cut to the
low 60 or ties at the end of
today's
second
round .
However, that figure will be
amended to include any
players within 10 strokes of the
leader, and that little used
provision could turn out to be
important if the second round
fails to reduce the traffic jam.
Among the "name " players
who stood in danger of the cut
were Arnold Palmer at 77,
Julius Boros at 77, J. C. Snead
at 78, and Bob Murphy at 71l.

w ith 7 VIctories

American League: Wood. Chi

and L olic~. Del 10-4: Perry.
Ciev 10·5: Holtzman Oak 9-4;

TIRES

Bahnsen, Chi 8 7

Cleared by Court
John Thoma s Scopes was
convicted of teachmg evofu.
tion and fined $100 aft er the
famo us " Monkey Trial " of
1925 in Dayton, Tenn., but
was later cleared by the
state suprem e Co urt, accordmg to Encyclopaedta Britan·
nica .

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.
Exe-c . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
C•tv Editor
Publ ts hed da ily excep t
Saturday by Th e Oh io Valley
P u b li Shtng Company , 111
Court St , Pomeroy , Ohio.
45769 9U St ne SS OfftCE! Phone
992 2156, Ed itonat Phone 992

WIDE OVAL
Belted Fiberglass
REPEAT SALE-QUANTITY LIMITED
f78xl4-15
G78xl4-15
H78xl4-15

2157

Second class postage pa td at
Pomeroy , Oh to

Nationa l

ad ver t i sing

representat ive

Bol1ineiH

Ga l lag her , In c , 12 East 42nd
St .. New York Ctty, New York ,
Subscrip tion rates
De - ·
l•vered by c ar ri er where
availabl e 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route wher e carrier
sen~•ce
not a'w'ail abte
One
month $1 75 By mlltl 1n Oh•o
and W va, One year $14 .00 .
Stx month s $7 25 . Three

month s t4 .50

J78x14-15

Subscrt p1ion

pr .ce inclu des Sunday Times Sentine l
·

All Tires Plus Fed . &amp; Sales Tax

H&amp;R . FIRESTONE
Middleport, 0. ..

LIVE ENTERTAiNMENT
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
JAN HADDOX AND THE MUSIC
DEPARTMENT

THE DOME
Dining Room
6:30a.m. to lO:JO.p.m. Dail't
Cocktail Lounge
11 :30a.m. to2 a.m. Monday-Saturday

•

•

5 Miles North 1
of
Pleasanfl

�/

MAJOR ~ .
LEAGUE

UPI Slatella•e Reporter
&lt;XlLUMBUS (UPI)- State
Attorney~ Wllllam J.
Brown, beatq OJIPCIOellll ~
lllate aid to IKq)Ubllc IChoo1a
to the puncb,today flied sult In
Franklin County Common
Pleat Court asklnl lor
declaulory judgment on
Ohio's new tax credit ..-opossl
about to be signed Into law,
At the same time, repu1a
were circulated that a dellber;te speedUp ol the
parochall aid bill througb the
Senate earlier lhlll week will
enable prnpooenta to beat the
American ClvU Uberties Union
(ACLU) Into federal court with
another suit.
"We are beating them to the
punch," said a source In the attorney general's office, "and
we are going to kick their taU

a

on this one."
Brolfll filed suit on behalf of
state Tax Comrnl.ilsloner Robert J. KOII)'dlr, heading off an
anticipated suit by the ACLU
challenging the tax eredlt
method of aiding parents of
pupils In private and parochial
schools.
Brown look advantage of a
technique known as '1onunlhopplng" - getung a testcase
In a favorable arena. He also
caught the ACLU napping by
fillng suit before the blll be·
comes law.
Benson
A.
Wolman,
executive director of the Ohio
ACLU, was on vacation all
week. He was named as a
defendant along with lour
colleagues questioning the
constitutionality of aid to
nonpubllc schools, and five
Ohio taxpayers who would
benefit from the tax credits because their children attend
Catholic, Protestant or Jewish
schools.
BroWJt's suit said Kosydar
needs to know whether he can
lmp!emenl and administer the
tax credits, and seeks a judgment "at the earliest possible
dale because of the Impact
such judgment will have upon
the administration ol Ohio's
statewide Income tax law."
ACLU Flgh18 Aid
The ACLU has fought aid to
nonpubllc schools, already declared unconstitutional In two
other forms, as a violation of

the separation of churcll and porters ol aid to nonpublic Leroy J. Contle Jr., Frank J. credit measure - income tax contain these new definitions.
llate doclrlne In the U. S. Con- schools felt they would not get Battisti, Ben C. Green, William excluslona and credits for the H$111 been held up lor amendBiilutlon. ·
a fair shake from Rubin or K, Thomas ar Thomas D. Lam· eld...ly and retired - which ment, pasaag~ would have
Brown's suit aaid Koilydar's Judge Joseph P. Kinneary - bros.
was in the form of an 141reed been delayed for a week since
fallure to grant tax credits whom they described as a
the House was in rece"ss.
The pqroc!UI aid measure conference report.
would violate the rights of the "fallen-away Catholic" - in waa aped through the Senate
The conference report had
/IS it llands now, the retirelive nonpubllc school parents Columbua.
unchang_ed· from the House set forth new definitions for ment credit conference report,
under Article l, Section 2 of the
So they would seek a hearing version In order to bring about income tax credits und... the already agreed to by the SenOhio Constitution granting before any of eight federal the surprise state suit, sources law enacted last December, ale,.will have to be rewritten
equal ..-otectlon and no special judges In Cleveland - Judges said.
and Section 5747 of the law by a second conference
privileges.
Girard, E. Kalbfleisch and
Technically, the bill should overlapped with parochial aid commltt., next week to malte
Also violated, the suit con- James C. Co!Ulell, who heaf a · h!Fve been amended In the Sen- credits. _
tax credit language conform to
.
tends, would be their rights limited number ol cases, or ate Wedneadliy to Incorporate . The parochial aid bill did not the parochial aid bill.
under the first and ltth amend- Judges lloberl B. Krupanaky, new language In another tax
ments to the U. S. ConstlluUon,
guaranteeing freedom of rellg·
ion and equal protection under
the law.
A spokesman lor the attorney general's office aald the
lull was able to be filed be!OI'e
, the bill becomes law because It
asta for a declaratory judgment, ar clarlllcatlon.
;
Signing Expected
The governor Is expected to
sign the bll1 next week, permitting the expenditure of $61 mn.
lion during the rest of the year
lo grant a ~ tax credit lor
each nonpubllc school chlld in a
lamlly.
Sources In the attorney general's office said the purpose ol
their quick suit was twofold:
- It gives them Initiative aa
BOBBY POWERS
plaintiffs to test the law in the
The
Dally Senllnel
court of their preference, raiswelcomes to Its carrier staff
Ing the Issues of their choice.
in Middleport Bobby
JOYCE RITCHIE
- By taking the case to a
Powers, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joyce Ann Ritchie,
SALLIE BLACKIE
state, rather than federal ; daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Powers, 133 North
NEW HOME ECONOMIST -Mrs. Sally Blackie, Home
court thsy are able to raise Fred Ritchie, Portland,
Third Ave. Boro March 2,
Economist, Athens District, Columbus and Southern Ohio
points In their favor under the graduat ed from Ohio
1959, Bobby Is an clghtb
Ohio Constitution.
Electric
Company, has been apPointed to serve the Gallipolis
grader
at
Meigs
Junior
High
University oo June 10 with a
The U. S. Supreme Court bachelor of science degree in
School. His hobbles are
and Middleport areas. Mrs. Blackie, a native of Wooster,
ruled last year against elementary education. Miss
camping, fishing and
received her bachelor of science degree in home economics
distribution of direct state aid Rllchle, a 1968 graduale of
bowling. He enjoys football,
from Ohio University in March, 1971. Her husband, Gary, is a
'to · private and parochial Southern High School,
PRIZES TO BE AWARDED to youngsters partictpating
baseball and table tennis. He
graduate student in geophysics at Ohio University. She can
schools In Rhode Island and Racine, did her student
in the Fishing Clinic and Casting Derby to be held Saturday
was champion In seventh
be reached through Columbus and Southern's Athens,
PeMsylvanla.
grade
singles
and
boys
at
9
a.m.
are
displayed
by
Jack
Kerr,
left,
president
of
the
teaching at the Pomeroy
Gallipolis or Middleport offices.
The Ohio General Assembly, Elementary School. She has
doubles In table tennis.
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce, and Ted Dean, District
In Its budget enacted last IJe. accepted employment at the
Hunting and Fishing Instructor with the Division of Wildlife,
cember, went to the "voun- Syracuse Elementary
Department of Natural Resources. The fishing clinic and
cher" system of reimbursing School, a pari of the
casting derby and water safety demonstration is one of the
parents ol nonpubllc school Southern Local School daughters and Jessie (McCoy)
many events featured during the Big Bend Regatta. The
Childers, of Columbus.
pupils.
District, for the 1972·73
event is for youngsters six through 15 years of age, with
Vistting Mr. and Mrs. Ber·
This was held un- school year.
prizes for all, sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber of Comnard Diddle the past weekend
constitutional by U. S. District
merce and conducted by the Division of Wildlife.
were their sons, Sp-1 Bob
Court Judge Carl B. Rubin of
Registration and clinic will be held in the Episcopal Church,
Diddle, Fl. Eustis, Va., George
Columbus.
Main Street, Pomeroy, starting at 9a.m. Those participating
. By Helen Bonel
Diddle, Columbus, 0 .; Mr. and
There were reports, confirm.
In
the
fishing
clinic
wiD
be
eligible
for
the
casting
derby
to
be
Mrs. Tom Diddle and son,
ed sources In the attorney genheld on the Ohio River across from the Pomeroy Junior High
Stephen,
also Rick Proffitt,
eral's office, that another suit
COLUMNIST STANDS ACCUSED
building. Equipment wlll be furnished. There will be two age
New Matamoras, 0., James
would be llled In U. S. District
Dear
Helen
:
groups, youngsters age 6 through 11 and 121hrough 15. There
Fisher, Gallipolis, 0 ., Mr. and
Court In Cleveland to tesl the
By Mrs. Francis Morris
will be three top winners in each age group for both girl and
Mrs.
Charley
Cobb,
Syracuse,
No offense, but I must challenge some of your answers in the
new law in a '1alr court."
Miss Jean Kiser is a patient
boy divisions with a prize going to the grand champion.
column of "Twenty-Five Questions on 'Are You Living or JUBt
in Pleasant Valley Hospital, 0.
Two Slogled Out
Bob Miller, New Vork,
Existing?' 11
Following the casting derby there will be a water safety
These reports held that sup- Pt. Pleasant.
demonstration given by wildlife persoMel. Bill and Lee's
You said if you answered more than six of these ' 'Yes," you
Loyal Holman went to Holzer · visited with his stster, Opal
Music Center donated a transistor radio and six individual
were headed for dullsdom. However, on four I think you missed
Medical Center for checkup Diddle, and family and
brother , Fred, and family
afler surgery.
record albums to be awarded as prizes and Goessler's
the boat:
Saturday
and
Sunday.
Guests of Mrs. Addie Petrel
Jewelry, Moore's Store in Pomeroy and Ossie's Back Room,
No. II: "Would you take a spur of the moment, unplanned
Mr. and Mrs. Oval Diddle
were Mrs. Anna Jones of
Middleport, donated fishing supplies, rods, reels, tackle
trip and enjoy it?" Adull person would say ''No!"
Batavia, N.Y., Mr. and Mrs. were Thursday evening dinner
boxes and plugs.
No. 16: "Do your children drive up up the wall?" What
Dick Savage of Livonia, N.Y., guests of Mr . and Mrs. Bernard
bonest young Mom could avoid answering "Yes" to this one Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Cowdery Diddle.
which doesn't mean she's bored?
Mrs . Opal Dtddle ac·
and Mrs. Lucy Randolph of
No. 21 : "Would you pull off the r"!'d to enjoy a sunset, or do
companied
her sister, Jean
Washington Court House. ·
you
think of dusk as just another driving hazard?" Mr. Dull
Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence Fisher, and niece, Barbara
would say "No" to the f~rst, "Yes" to the second.
Grimm and two children or Woodall, to New Matamoras,
No. 24 : "Would you expiore an unknown trall just to see
Newell S. Hysell, deed. to
Minnie Swick, deed . to Alva
Lake Worth, Florida spent two 0. Monday and attended
where It leads?" Again, the "slick in the mud's" answer would
weeks with their parents, Mr. Commencement exercises for Dortha Lyman , Cert. of Trans., Swick, Paul Swick, Marjorie
McLaughlin , Goldie Huson, be "No!" -whether If's a mountain path or the 'trail of llfe."
and Mrs. Roderick Grunm, Becky Proffilt, a graduate at Salisbury.
. Please answer "Yes" or "No," Helen. Did you goof? ' , Dortha Lyman to Clara Jean James Glassburn, Margaret
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs. Frontier High School.
FAITHFUL
READER
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Diddle
France,
Parcel,
Salisbury.
Aff.
of
Trans
.,
Matheny,
Herman Wagner, Belpre.
Dear
Faithful:
John Foreman, deed. to Salem.
Mrs. Dick (Gloria Norris) and grar.dson, Steve, spent
Sunday
afternoon
with
Mr.
and
Eliza
Foreman, Edward R.
Mary A. Webster, Manning
YES, I goofed -on Numbers 11, 21 and 24 ... and I hope most
Reed and children, Matthew
Mrs.
Kermit
Fisher,
Gallipolis.
Foreman,
Joseph
R.
Foreman
,
D.
Webster
to
Pomeroy
of my readers are like my husband who understands what I
and Alice of Walker, Minn. and
Bertha Proffitt, Anna Lance, Emergency Squad, Inc., Lots, MEANT to say, rather than what I said. You see, I'm a lltUe new
Mrs. Gary (Shirley Norris)
'
Aff. of Trans. , Lebanon .
Pomeroy.
at this questioMaire game, and I didn't Include aU my negatives.
Hall and children, Christopher
Eliza
Foreman,
Edward
R.
Virgil Cross, Ruth Cross to These three questions should begin, "Would you REFUSE to ... "
Bowling Balls
and Jennifer of St. Paul, Minn.
Foreman , Betty A. Foreman, Carl Mills, Blanche Mills, Lot,
Bowling balls are gener·
A small argument on No. 16: Remember, F .R., I gave you a
spent ten days wilh their
Evelyn
Foreman, Bertha
"three-fourths of the lime" clause. Most children drive theirparents, Mr. and Mrs. Fern ally made of a hard rubber Proffitt, Anna Lance, Vernon Syracuse .
t I
Ernest H. Morris, dec. to parents up the wall occasionally, but if It's "conllanUy ," then
Norris. Among callers to visit composition. Balls made of Lance to Joseph R. Foreman,
plastic materia Is can be
them were June Beegle, used, but bowlers cannot use Evelyn Foreman, 100 Acre Lot Beulah L. Morris, formerly boredom may have something to do with II.- H.
Beulah L. Bradford, Aff. for
Phyllis O'Brian and two metallic balls.
+++
180, Lebanon .
trans., Racine.Sutton.
Dear Helen.
David Hill, Linda Hill to
V~na V. Marcinko to VerEvery y~ar on Mother's Day and Father's Day, our grown
Charles L. Mallory, Mayme H.
3.42 Acres, ' children come home and my wife ends up cooking a big dlnner:;dale
Hartung,
5
Mallory, 0.1 Acre, Racine.
cabachon for the cake attended
es r.
or else I suggest we eat out, and I end up paying for the whole
the celebration. They recschmeer.
Building of its traditional program will provide for an
ognized a cab made of Ohio strengths, an Improved optional route through WIN AT BRIDGE
Am I wrong to take a jaundiced look at boxes of stationery
petrified wood which was made Scouting program will be Scouting advancement skills,
and pairs of socks when those gifts cost us a lot of work and
by Oscar Shepard and the available for Scouts in the Tri· the involvement of Scouts in
money? -::- NO DAY OF REST
Marshall cahachon, but said State Area Council this fall the decision-making process,
Dear NDOR :
there were "too many cabs and according to Richard Monk, opportunities for Scouts to
No! I bope your children take an educated look at your letNORm(D)
16 · while and played low again.
too many people." Each Executive Board member who have a say in what they do in
ter! - H.
.A104
cabachon was backed by a altended planning meetings in Scouting, and a program for
West could do no better than
• 109 7 2
Dear
Helen:
to play the king and the stu·
silver leaf and strips of silver Los Angeles last month.
t K
older Scouts lo do a better job
For 17 years I was married £o a wonderful man who gave our
dent had found a way to
leaves backed rows of
"'AK 1076
"Many of the unique of developing leaders for
his
contract.
make
five
children and me many happy memories. He was kllled two
WEST
EAST
cabachons.
methods of Scouting which tomorrow," Monk explained.
.K97
.J83
"Pretty good work, wasn't years ago in a wreck.
Among the guests pictured have been successful for the
He also said that It was
¥ K5
¥6 3
it?"
he asked the professor .
My best girllrleild was married to my husband's cousin but
above are June Culp Zeltner, last 60 years have been announced at the Los Angeles
t QJ9
tA108753 2
con trlbuting editor to Lapidary strengthened and will be more meetings that the strong parts
"1\ fine recovery from bad five years ago she died ol cancer, leaving three small chlldren
.J98 52
earlier," replied the whose father Is raising them well. The four of us and our families
play
soum ,
Journal, the original National effective," Monk said.
of Scouting will he continued.
professor
. "The hand was a were always together, so much so that people used to say th...e
• Q652
Gem Cutting Magazine.
Of the total 186 units in the He hsted the unique patrol
cinch
all
the time."
¥AQJ 84
were eight chUdren with t1r Jmothers and two fathers.
The Summers were taken on Tri.State Area Council, 97 are method so boys actually run
• 64
Do_
you
see
what
the
pro.
a tour of Smithsonian by Paul Scout troops with over 1900 their troop through a troop
The fsmllles have wntlnued close, as I babysit John's
· "'Q4
lessor meant? The student children. This didn 't· bother relatives until about a year ago,
DeSautels, Curator: He showed members.
leaders' council, a re-&lt;lefinilion
Both vulnerable
should have played the 10
them gems, jewelry, and
The Scouting program , of the boy-man relationship
West Norlh Easl South
of clubs, not the king, from when John and I started going out about once a week to a dinner
specimens from all types of which is for boys who have which calls for the Scout.
dummy at trick six.
. or movie, whlle my kids and his "babysat" each other. The
It 1¥
rare and priceless minerals, completed the fifth grade or master to be a coach-counselor
2 + 3¥
Pass 4¥
If the finesse lost, dum. children think this Is jusl great - in fact they were the itttle
Pass Pass
Pa:ss
and other priceless articles. are II years of age, offers to Scouts, outdoor and indoor
my's last three clubs would schemers who planned our dating. We Uve only two biocka apart,
Opening
lead+Q
Many officers of the Eastern several ways to bring about experiences to learn new skills,
all be winners and the stu· so we are together a lot, and the children are the best of pala.
dent would get to discard
and American Federations personal
growth
and and the use of Scouting ideals
Why, Helen, would John's relatives and mine think this Is
three spades. If the finesse
By
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
attending the celebration were development.
as a personal challenge to
disgraceful?
True, we aren't contemplating marriage right now
won, as it would have, the
taken on the tour.
·"The Improved Scouting Scouts.
East took his ace of dta· student would be able to dis· - we're just Uie best ollrlends. But,we get so many pointed
m on d s and returned a card two spades on the ace comments we'~e getting edgy.lllould we separate our famllles,
trump. The student lost a and king of clubs.
or tell our.nstrow-mlnded relatives to mind their own bualneu?
finesse to West's king and a
INIW!PAPIO IHTIRPRI!I ASSH.)
JOHN AND LYNNIE
•
·trump came back.
Dear John and Lynnle:
The student won, ruffed
I suspect your 'familles aren't so much narrowillinded as
his last diamond · played a
club to his queen 'and a sec·
they are MARRIAGEilllnded. Keep 'em guessing: It sharpens
The bidding has been:
ond club to North's king.
together about
East South thelt: curlo.slty and gives you aomething to Ia"""
East showed out and the stu. Wesl North
""''
- while you make your own private.plans for the future. ·- H.
1•
J "' • Pass
dent was faced with the
Pass
problem of havmg to score Pass 3 "'
You, South, hold :
two spade tricks to make his
contract. He led the four .KJ54 ¥K8763 t5.Ql07
spot from dummy. East
What do you dq, now?
played lhe eight and after
A-Bid four dubs. This Is a
Mrs. Ethel Shell and son, where Linda Shell recelv,&lt;d a
considerable study the stu. tough problem, since there is
dent played the deuce.
Greg,
Steubenville, spent Bachelor ol Science in
some merit to both three hearts
and
three
spades,
night
with Mr. and Mrs. Education degree. Mila SlieU
Friday
East could not afford to
give a ruff and discard by
Mendal Jordan. On Saturday has secured a position for next
TODAY'S QUESTION
a
diamond
play
and
led
his
You bid (our clubs and your Mrs. Jordan accompanied year In the Warren Local
Points. The two homes have lake frontage on a full acre lot.
three or spades.
bids four hearts. What them to commencement
partner
Twenty-year financing Is avaUable.
School Dlltrict near Mlrie~.
The sludent thought a do you do now ?
ex~rcises at Ohio Unlvenlty

Helen Help

Racine
Social Events

Us.

• •

Property Transfers

•t
•

·-"

Nolans at Celebration
NEW HAVEN- Would you
believe it - this huge birthday
cake celebrating the 25th
Anniversary of the American
Federation of Mineralogical
Societies held at the
Smithsonian In Washington
recently was decorated with
cabs, more accurately known
as cabachons, made of semi
precious stones from all states
In the United States.
Several members of the Ohio
Valley and Gem and Mineral
Society had. their cabs
displayed on this 250 pound
cake which was five feet in
diameter and four feel high.
Among them were Howard
Nolan of Syracuse, Ohio, and
John Marshall, of New Haven,
who are neighbors divided only
by the Ohio River. Marshall's
cahachon representing West
Virginia was made of agatized
coral and Nolan's of Ohio flint.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Summers
of Belpre, who also submitted a

' .,

Improved Program Sure

Credit 'a Fine Recovery'

"'3

I"'

Carpenter Ne~s, Event

Major League S-tandings
Phlla at Houston, night
8y United Press International San
Fran al St . Lou is
National League
American League
East
East
w., I. pet. g.b.
w. t. pet.
Pittsburgh
34 18 .642
Det
roi
t
28
22 .560
New York
34 19 642 1;, Baltimore
28 22 .560
Chicago
29 22 569 4'12 Cleveland
23 25 479
St. Louis
23 30 .434 11'12 Bost on
21 26 .447
M ontreal
21 30 .412 12'1, New Yor k
22 29 .431
Philadelphia 20 33 .377 14'1, Milwaukee
16 32 .333
West
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
w. I. pet.
Cincinnati
34 19 "- 642
Oakland
33
17 .660
los Angeles 32 22 593 2'12
Chicago
31 20 .608
Houston
31 23 .574 3'1' Minnesota
27 21 563
Atlanta
25 27 .481 8'1' Californ 1a
25 28 .472
San Diego
18 36 .333 16'12 Kansa s City 23 28 . 45 1
San Francisco 19 41 .317 181!2

Thursday's Results
Chicago -10 San Piego 1
Pills 4 San Fran 1. 1st
Pills 9 San Fran 7, 2nd
(Only games scheduled)

Today's Probable Pitcher5

,.

~~s~~3s4

Six Share U. S. Open Lead

San Diego at Pills.
Montreal at Atlanta , night
New York at Cinci, n1 ght

"Everybody IS playing caU·
tiously ,"admitted favorite and
co·leader Jack Nicklaus after
Thursday's first round in
whicli :
--Six players, including
Ntcklaus, tied for the firstround lead in the Open 's
btggest traffic jam in modern

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.
{UP!)- The Pebble Beach Golf
Course, where disaster lurks m
4
5112 every errant breeze off the
6'12 ocean, had 'em all scared
II
today as the tangled-up field in
g.b. the U.S. Open Golf Cham·
pionship went out for the
211, second round.
5

g.b.

Texa'rh
s
11'12
Kan City...13d.;.3
Boston
9
New York 8 Chicago I
Cleveland 1 Cal if 0
!Only games scheduled)

Texa s at New York
Kan City at Milwaukee
aa1t1m or e at Minnesota

Cl eve land at Oakl and
Detroit a t Ca lif , n1ghf

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif . (UPI)--Six grown men have
shoehorned themselves into a perfectly ludicrous position in the
U.S. Open, rather like all trying to use the same phone booth at
once, and this circumstance would lend itself to some plain old
fashioned humor were it not for the fact that while five of these
fellows are competing for the prestige and the money, one of
them is out here playing for his very life
The one with everything riding ts Q;l\..me Moody.
He's the easiest to spot. '
He's the one playing with the surgical mask, and it's certainly
appropriate because for him, this is anything but an ordina ry
operation.
Orville Moody's past, present and future all are un co mmonly
wrapped up in this U.S. Open.
It goes even deeper than that.
What he does here in the next three days could affecl hts future
with his family, too.
It 's not quite such a big deal with those five other golfers who
are deadlocked with Moody for first place, the five who shot one·
underi)lir 71 in Thursday's first round the same way Moody did.
You look at these five and right off the bat you know they're not
m the same bOat with "Old Sarge" even though they happen to be
in the same bracket with him right now.
There's Jack Nicklaus for one.
Nobody will really he surprised if he wins. He didn 't do any
handstands over his fine 71.
"I played aU right. Nouiing exciting," he almost hohummed.
Kennit Zarley, the Seattleborn son of a restaurateur, won 't
el&amp;ctly think his dream boat has come in if he happens to win this
one either.
"!don't believe you gotta be a Jack Nicklaus, a Lee Trevino or
an Arnold Palmer to win a tournament," he said after he checked
in with his 71. "The PGA tour shows that."
Limited Emotion
Tom ~aw, another 71, displayed limited emotion when he said
"!had it under control most of the day ," and Mason Rudolph,
who looks like Doc in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs with his
glasses constanUy slipping off the bridge of his nose, called his 71
round "kinds like a yo-yo ... up and down."
Clli Chi Rodriguez, the other 71, made some jokes about his
game plan and then touched on Orville Moody's 15 years in the
Army .
"Yeah, Sergeant Moody," Rodriguez said. "He played like a
captain today. He's got hay fever. With that mask of his, he looks
llke Dr. Kildare ."
Jokes are fine, and Moody laugts at them along with
everybody else, but he knows one thing : What he does here at this
U.S. Open won't be any joke.
Sitting there answering questions in the press tent, Orville
Moody was his customary obliging self and it was inevitable that
somebody should pipe up :
"What have you done this year?"
"Nothing," he came right back.
Old Orv, having won only $5,000 in 10 outings this year , didn't
have to think a long lime about that.
Moody then told how he had won a tournament In Morocco last
December and thought he was back on the tra ck again when he
went deer hunting in Laredo, Tex., slipped trying to get his
footing and "felt something give" as he hung on with his right
hand.
· ·
Things Dldn 'I God Well
Thliigs dl.dn 'I go very well after that.
"At the Kemper," he said, talking about the tournament he
waa in at Charlotte, N.C., two weeks ago, "f knew I had to start
playing or get me a job somewhere."
Moody came virtually out of nowhere, out of Killeen, Tex., if
you're a stickler, to win the U.S. Open in 1969 and it looked as if .
there'd be a new golfing star on the horizon. But after also
winning the World Series of Golf that same year, he has been
virtually unheard of since.
."Winning the U.S . Open was line In a way," explained Moody,
"but It also brought a lot of heartaches. I lost my wife and family
aa a result of being successful and not being home. If you don 't

AAAIN THE TRAVEL BUSINESS?
YOU BEllER
BELIEVE ITIII
.
You Can Fly with AAA:'
Sail with AAA
Drive with AAA

Ti~01·ans ~OV
By CHARLES WlFSER
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)- The
Southern California Trojans go
after their third straight
national baseba ll championship tonight after battling
their way past Anzona State, 31, Thursday night in a game the
Trojans had to win to stay in
the College World Series.
If there was any solace for
the Sun Devils from Artzona
State, it was that they could
afford to lose Thursday and
sttll get a crack at the cham·
pwnship tonigh t.
Their coach, Jim Brock,
said, "It's a whole new deal
now." No ting that his team has
been in a hitting slump, Brock
said, ''We'll do anything we
can to get hitters tomorroweven change the line·up ."
Arizona State was the only
team which had advanced to
the championship round of the

· double-elimination tournament
without a loss . Southern
California had dropped a 3-0
deciSion to the Sun Devils in
earlier competition.
The pitcher that time for
Arizona State was Jim Craw·
ford-and .he has been named
by Brock to hurl the title game
Friday night. His record is 13-1.
His mound opponent ":ill be
Mark Sogge, the same pitcher
Crawford defeated in hts
earlier series VIctory . Sogge
will come mto the contest with
a 5-2 record. Trojan coach Rod
Dedeaux said," If Sogge pit·
ches his normal good ball
ga me, it will he anybody's

game."
In Thursday night's game,
doubles by Clint Myers and
Jerry Mantlo in the top of the
seco nd inning gave the Sun
Devils a short-lived 1.0 lead.

The Mtddleport Independent
Swnmer League Basketball
Program wtll open its second
season Sunday w1th thr ee •
games on tap at the Mtddleport
Mumctpal Park.
Teams competing are being
sponsored by Mark V,
Pomeroy Nat10nal Bank,
Adol ph 's Dairy Va lley, Mid·
dleport Department Store, The
Friendly Tavern, a nd Th e
Datly Scnhnel.
Participating for Mark V will
be Dox ie Walters, Ron
Ferguson, Floyd Burney, John
Slaven , Mike Sayre. Ralph
Sayre. Duff Craig, and Mike
Howard.
For The Pomeroy Natwnal
Bank will he Don Nelson,
Roger Dingey, Dan Dodson ,
Jim Hubbard, Andy Vaughan,

Ri ck Snyder, Jon Garnes, and
Perk Ault.
Players for Adolph's [)airy
Valley include Ste ve Dunfee,
Jun my Noe. Randy Crawford,
Steve Price, Don Justus, Chip
Haggerty , Jeff Moms, and
Tom Cooke.
The Middleport Depa rtment
Store team 1s Dave Fife, Jim
Co nde, Jun Boggs, Jeff Tyo,
Sam Mitchell , John Young, and
Fred Burney
The Frtendly Tavern in·
eludes Barry Hams, Gil Prt ce,
Rick Van Matre, La ry Justus,
Je1·ry Hubbard, Bill Vaughan,
Rt ch Douglas , and Ri ck
Werner.

Players for The Daily Sen·
tmel are Rtch Bailey, Mark
Mitchell , Keith WIS e, up ,
De{lnis Eichinger, Bill Chaney,

Indians Go to 4-0
The Indians remained un·
bealen m lour games with a 9·1
win over the Mets and lhe Reds
moved mto second place with a
11·1 win over the Braves in
Middle port Boys' League play
Thursday.
Both games were called after
four mnings, due to rain m the
lndian s· Me ts game, and
because of the 10-run rule in the
Reds·Braves match.
Mike Hmdy hurled all the
way for the Indians, permilttng
but one hit. Hindy fanned seven
and walked only two . Greg
Becker and Stobart who pit·
ched lor the Mets teamed to fan
live and walk 10.
Hitte rs for the Indians were
Tony Venoy with -a home run
and Mark Venoy wtth two
singles . Harmon's single was
the only hit for the Mets.

Ron ni e Casci went the
distance on the mound for the
Reds. He struck out nine and
dion 't walk a batter. Dave
Smith and Brett Dodson pit·
ched for the Braves. Together
they struck f1ve and gave up
stx walks.
Getting hits for the Reds
were Carl Carmichael wtth a
smgle, tnple, and home fWl j
Mark Magnotta, two singles;
George Gwn and Dave Wilcox
each a horn e run , and Casct
had a smgle. For the Braves,
Tmt Ebersbach and Jack
Humphreys each had a smgle.
STANDINGS
Team
w. L.
4 0
Indians
2 2
Reds
Braves
1 3
Mets
I 3

think success can cause problems, then you're mistaken. I had
other troubles on account of winning, too. Trouble with my
sponsors. Imagine them getting $60,000 after putting up only
$1,500and ))itching? You have no idea what trouble I had. I didn't
know how well off I was when I was in the Army. It was a simple
life, a good life . I ate well, got pa1d every two weeks and didn't
have any problems."
Moody was divorced last October . Three children were in·
volved in the break-up.
What would wlnniilg the Open again mean to him ?
"I think it would straighten out all my problell\5." he said.
What about tbose heartaches again?
"!don 'I think there'd be any this lime," said the only golfer In
this 151knan field who wears a surgical mask. He wears it
because of his hay fever .
"I get it real bad sometimes," Orville Moody said about his
hay fever . "I'd get it so bad in the Army I couldn't drive a jeep or
stand guard . They should've kicked me out, that's what they
should've done ."
They never did.
Peor ol' Orv.
He has had a few problems.

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
OPEN FOR BUSINESS

The best in the whole, wide world!

-·

.•

Mick Chtlds, Mark Moyer, and
Rod Ferguson.
The schedule 1s as follows:
Key I - Mark V, 2 Friendly Tavern , 3 - Daily
Sentinel, 4 - Middleport
Department Store, 5 Adolph 's, and 6 - Pomeroy
Na ti onal Bank .
FIRST ROUND
June 18, 1vs. 6, 2vs. 5, 3 vs. 4.
June 19, 2vs 6, I vs 3, 4 vs. 5.
JW1e 25,4 vs. 6, 3v.s. a, 1 vs. 2.
Jw1e 26, 2vs. 4, I vs . 5, 3 vs. 6.
Jul y 2, 1 vs. 4, 2 vs. 3, 5 vs. 6.
SECOND ROUND
July 3, 2 vs. 6, 4 vs. 5, I vs. 3.
July 9, I vs. 6, 2 vs. 5, 3 vs. 4.
July 10, 1 vs. 5, 4 vs. 2, 3 vs. 6.
July 16,6 vs. 4, I vs. 2, 3 vs. 5.
July 17, 2vs. 3, 5 vs. 6; I vs. 4.
THIRD ROUND
July 23, I vs. 4, 5 vs. 6, 2 vs. 3.
July 24,3 vs. 6, I vs. 5, 2 vs. 4.
July 30,4 vs. 5, I vs. 3, 2 vs. 6.
July 31, I vs. 2, 3 vs. 5, 4 vs. 6.
August 6, 3 vs. 4, 2 vs . 5, I vs.
6.

Nolan To
Face NY
Tonight
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Pete
Rose , Cincinnati Reds hardhi tting outfielder, didn 't like
the tdea of the rains Thursday.
~&lt; [trained out my game/' he
said .
Rose had planned to play a
game with hts two.year-old son
Pete Jr., but was forced to call
it off when it rained most of the
day .
The Reds outftelder said he
would have to keep in practice
in order to keep up the winning
techmque .
The Reds, on a seven-game
win streak and leading the
National League West by 21&gt;
games, host the . New York
Mets tonight in the first of a,..
three.game series.
The Mets were knocked out
of first place in the Eastern
Division Thursday night when
Pittsburgh
swept
a
doubleheader from San
Francisco and nailed down the
lead by % game.
Cincinnati callfi. upon
righthander Gary Nolan to face
Jerry Koosman of the Mets.
Nolan , 8-1 overall, has won
his last five outings. Koosman
OIVDS a 3-3 ntark.
The Mets will also have to
contend with catcher Johnny
Bench who leads the league
with runs batted in with 47 and

17. Bench
has
1- - - - - - - - - - - - -'- - - - - - - • home
beltedruns
eightwith
home
runs this

Relax • .. Drive in for a Delicious Moo
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
malt, shake, cone or sundae.

AUTOMOBILE Q.UB OF SOUTHERN OHIO'

But the Trojans came right
back in the bottom of the inning
and scored two runs to take a
lead which stood up the rest of
the game.
Ken Huizenga 's single and a
long double by Roy Smalley got
the Trojans thelf first run.
Smalley later moved to third
on an error and scored when
Milt Guggia singled.
Singles by Tim Steele and
DaryI Arenstein, followed by
two walks, resulted in Southern
California's third run in the
seventh inning.
Randy Scarbery pitched th e
VICtory, his 12th against just
three defeats. The loss-his
first of the year after 14 vic·
torics- went to lefty Ed Bane,
who earlier in the series set a
nine-inning series strikeout
record when he fanned 14
batters.

6 Teams in Cage Play

I

ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD!
AAA is a TOTAL T~l Agency ...

ASU

,

Today's Probable Pitchers

Phone: 992-259G-POmeroy
446.0699-GIIIipolis

history.
who had to share tlle top spot
- The one.under'flar 71 score with comebacking Orville
of the six leaders set another Moody, On Chi Rodriguez,
record for the highest score to Tom Shaw, Mason Rudolph,
lead the Open after the first and Kennit Zarley. "It's just
round.
too darn early in the tour·
"Nobody wants to have that nament to risk double bogeys."
one big bad hole that could
wreck you," said Nicklaus,

91/:o~

l0 1/ 2

I All Times EOT)
IAll Times EDT I
Philadelphia (Carlton 7-6) at
Cleveland (Tidrow 4-6) at
Houston (Wilson 4-5). 8:30p .m. Oakland (Holt zman 9 4), 11
Montreal (Morton 2-7 and
Renko 1-4) at Atlanta (Reed 4-7 P m.
De tr od (Coleman 7-5) at
and Kelley 4-51. 2, 6:05pm.
Ca l 1l orn 1a (Cl ark 4-5). 11 p .m
Los Angeles (Osteen 7 3) at
Baltimor e (Palmer 7.3} at
Ch1cago (Hooton 5-4),2:30 p.m. Minnesota IKaat 7-11 , 6:30F.m .
New York I Koosman 3-3 1 at
Texas IGogolewskl 3-6 at
Cincinnati (Simpson 3-11 , 8 OS New
York I Kline 4-21. 7:30 p.m.
p.m.
Ch icago (Wood 10 4) at
San Francisco (Cumberland Boston 1Culp4-51. 7 30pm .
0-4) at St. Louis IWise 56). 9 Kan sas Cdy (Drago 4-4) at
pm .
.
Mil wa ukee { Lon borg J .JJ, 8 30
San Diego (Caldwell 121 at p m.
Pittsburgh I Blass 7 1) . 8 OS
Saturday' s Games
pm .
Chicago at Bos ton
Saturday's Games
Los Angeles at Ch1cago

•

'

STANDINGS

Brown Asks Early Parochial School.Aid Ruling
By LEE LIJONARD

l"

'

_3- The Dally Senttnel, Middleport·Pomeroy 0 June 16 19'/2

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
At Forked Run Lake Entrance
Long Bottom, 0.

m~~~innati

ha• not lost a
game since the Mets broke a
win streak tast week.

Have Limited Range
The trees with the most
limited range of distribution
are the big trees in the Sler·
ras and the redwoods along
the northern coast of Call·
fornia. Both trees are found
nowhere el!e in the world.

Actually, Nicklaus insisted,
the Pebble Beach layout-the
first seaside course in modern
times to play host to the Open
- isn't "playing as difficult as
the high SC!Jres would mdicate."

Tigers Stay Hot
Mitch who hurled for the
defeated m four games by Ptrates combined for four
whipping the wmless Pirates strikeouts and three walks.
Hitters for the Tigers were
10.3 in Pomeroy Boys' League
ac lion Thursday. This was a McClure with a single, double,
make-up game of last Tuesday . and triple ; Dale Bro~mng ,
Bob McClure went the tr iple and two singles; Dave
distance for the Tigers, fannin ~ Blake, smgle and doubl e;
nine and givmg up two walks. Johnson, two singles ; Randy
Doug Browning and Mark Marshall. a home run and
Donnie Etsenhower, a single.
Doug Browning paced th e
Pirates with a single and tnple
Ma ;or League Leaders
By Umled Press International while Jim Rosenbaum and
Leadmg Batters
·Mitch each had a single.
National League
g. ab r. h. pet.
STANDINGS
Slenet. Pit
34 108 17 38 352 Name
w. L.
Sngui ln, P1 t 50 195 23 66 338 Tigers
4 0
Carty , All
44140 25 47 336 Yankees
2
2
Alou, St L
47 180 23 60 333
2 2
Torre, St L 51 198 27 65 .328 Giants
Cimnte, Pil 46 188 33 61 .324 Pirates
0 4
Toln , Cin
52 205 39 66 .322
Bckner. LA 35 121 15 39 .322
Lee. SO
46 172 21 55 320
StrgiL Pit
45 169 23 54 320
SCIOTO RESULTS
American League
COLUMBUS (UP! )
g ab r . h pet.
Pniela, KC 51 202 34 66 .327 Thimble won the $12,020
Shnblm ,KC 37 108 9 35 324 Challenge Stakes for four·year·
Ru~i. Oak
47 197 33 62 .315 old pacers Thursday ni ght at
Allen. Chi
51 181 31 57 315 Scioto Downs, a head over Ali
AI mar, Ca l 53 219 24 68 311
May. Chi
49 182 31 56 308 Right, and pushed his lifetime
Krkptrck. KC 39 104 14 32 .308 earnings to $100,000.
Braun . Min 37 127 10 38 299
Fred Hess guided Thimble to
Crew, Mm
48 181 21 54 .298
Kelly, Ch1
40 141 24 42 .298 a 2:02 2-5 mtfe.
Home Runs
Noble Deed on the first race
N~tional League : Ben ch, C1n
and Wt lmington Spur the
17 ; Stargell, Pitt and Kingman,
SF 14. Aaron , All and Col bert, second to return $26.20 in the
so 12
daily double on a 5·9 comAmencan league: Jack son, bination .
Oak 12: Allen , Chi and Cas h.
Del II : Dun can. Oak 10: The crowd of 5,015 wagered
$276,322.
Harper, Bas 9.
Runs Batted In
The Ttgers remained un-

National League : Bench, Cm

47 , Starge ll, P1tt 45, Oliv er ,
P1tt 40 ; Kingman , SF 38 ;
Simmons, St L 36
Am erican League : Allen , Chi

40 , Jackson , Oak 35 ; Ol iver,
Cal and May , Chi 32 ; Dun can .

Oak 28

Pitching

Nat1onal league : Nolan, Cin
and Sutton , LA 8-1; Seaver , NY
8-3, Jenkins, Chi 8 5, seve n tied

Its fnterprelution
The U S. Patent Office in·
ter prets perpetual motion to
mean a mechan ical device
operating by its own power
and once started will op·
e r a t e for an indefimte
period. according to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

~·our more players were only
one stroke out of the lead at par
72, including former champion
Gary Player of South Africa;
six more were only two strokes
away at 73; and then came a
flock of players at 74- in·
eluding doggedly detennined
Lee Trevino, the defending
champion Who ts playing
desp1te the fact he isn't fully
recovered from pneumonia.
" I feel hornble ; I was lucky
to £inish," golf's ''Super Mex"
admitted after a first round in
which he matched par 36 on th e
fron t nine and then shot twoover 3ll coming back. But in the
next breath , when asked if he
was considering withdr~wmg,
he shouted, "Hec k, no''
The Happiest One
or all the players lD th e
record fir st-pla ce tangle,
probably the happiest was
Moody, the "Old Sarge" who
became known as "Orville
Who '" when he came out of the
Army to win the Open in a big
surprise in Houston in 1!169.
Moody hasn't .won much of
anything recently, including
only $5,000in IOtournaments so
far this year.
"I went down to South Texas
and took three weeks off
recently and got my mental
altitude straightened out," the
beaming ex-&amp;Jidicr explained.
"I had got myself into such a
stale that I didn't have any
confidence I could even sink a
putt from a foot.and.a.IJalf
away.
"! had problems, all nghl,
but winning again sure would
help a lot of them ."
The field was to be cut to the
low 60 or ties at the end of
today's
second
round .
However, that figure will be
amended to include any
players within 10 strokes of the
leader, and that little used
provision could turn out to be
important if the second round
fails to reduce the traffic jam.
Among the "name " players
who stood in danger of the cut
were Arnold Palmer at 77,
Julius Boros at 77, J. C. Snead
at 78, and Bob Murphy at 71l.

w ith 7 VIctories

American League: Wood. Chi

and L olic~. Del 10-4: Perry.
Ciev 10·5: Holtzman Oak 9-4;

TIRES

Bahnsen, Chi 8 7

Cleared by Court
John Thoma s Scopes was
convicted of teachmg evofu.
tion and fined $100 aft er the
famo us " Monkey Trial " of
1925 in Dayton, Tenn., but
was later cleared by the
state suprem e Co urt, accordmg to Encyclopaedta Britan·
nica .

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.
Exe-c . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
C•tv Editor
Publ ts hed da ily excep t
Saturday by Th e Oh io Valley
P u b li Shtng Company , 111
Court St , Pomeroy , Ohio.
45769 9U St ne SS OfftCE! Phone
992 2156, Ed itonat Phone 992

WIDE OVAL
Belted Fiberglass
REPEAT SALE-QUANTITY LIMITED
f78xl4-15
G78xl4-15
H78xl4-15

2157

Second class postage pa td at
Pomeroy , Oh to

Nationa l

ad ver t i sing

representat ive

Bol1ineiH

Ga l lag her , In c , 12 East 42nd
St .. New York Ctty, New York ,
Subscrip tion rates
De - ·
l•vered by c ar ri er where
availabl e 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route wher e carrier
sen~•ce
not a'w'ail abte
One
month $1 75 By mlltl 1n Oh•o
and W va, One year $14 .00 .
Stx month s $7 25 . Three

month s t4 .50

J78x14-15

Subscrt p1ion

pr .ce inclu des Sunday Times Sentine l
·

All Tires Plus Fed . &amp; Sales Tax

H&amp;R . FIRESTONE
Middleport, 0. ..

LIVE ENTERTAiNMENT
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
JAN HADDOX AND THE MUSIC
DEPARTMENT

THE DOME
Dining Room
6:30a.m. to lO:JO.p.m. Dail't
Cocktail Lounge
11 :30a.m. to2 a.m. Monday-Saturday

•

•

5 Miles North 1
of
Pleasanfl

�•

•

S-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomerol, o.; June t6, 1972
4- The DaUy Sentinei,Middleport-POOJeroy,O., June !6, 1972

;

!.«~:::~,;w ·

:wo .u~ ~:::~S!S*.~&gt;.!!1.c:».::::=~~~=~=~~&amp;!.K :.:.:: M

Pirates Regain East Lead ~~!..~~~oots 1
By VITO STEUJNO
UPI Sportl Writer

Bob Robert11011 still i1111't
hitting his weight and that's a
handlcapwbenyou'retryingto
a-ash into the toughest hitting
lineup in baseball.
Aller he slipped to .112 with
111 i){or·21 streak, Robertson
collected three hits in four trips
Thursday night in the second
game as tbe Pirates completed
a f. land 9-7sweepoverthe San
Francisco Giants.
The sweep moved the Pirates
back Into first place in the
National Lengue East, a half·
game ahead of the idle New
York Mets.
"I feel goqd to _have a night '

.'11 11'
1\TD
.4
D./1

like this but I'll have to hit
mor~ coos~tently to stay in
this lineup," Roberl8on says.
"I've got to get my confidence
back. r·~ said all along that
(Manager Bill) Virdon has
done the right thing in playing
his ~ine best men and it's my
job to prove I can hit the way [
did last year."
RDbertson got a standing
ovation ·from the fans when he
cracked a tWIH'Un single in the
first inning of the second game
to highlight a three-run rally.
He collected two more singles
and drove in another run while
Oliver also had three hits and
drove In 'three runs in ·lhe
game.

rnrUJ-y·nr.'S
c;

By ffiA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
WHIT.E SULPHUR
SPRINGS, W.Va . ( UPI)Natlonal Basketball'
Association owners, already
fighting their players over the
reserve clause, prepared for
111other batUe today, as they
debated penalties for 11
players . involved in last
month's aU..tar game with the
rival ABA.
A league spokesman said the

John

Mayberry drOve in six runs
with three hits for the Royals.
Carl Yastrzemski had three
hits for the losers.
Bobby Murcer and Horace
Clarke each hit a three-run
homer and the · New York
Yankees blasted Chicago
behind the nine-hit pitching of
Fritz Peterson,. The Yanks
. helped out PetersOn with five
.double plays.
Vmce Colbert pitched a fiv~· ·
hitler to outduel Clyde Wright
as Cleveland nipped CaUfomia.
Graig Nettles batted in the only
run of the game with a fourth
Inning double that scored Ray
Fosse, who singled with two
- out.

itlay Be F.r·ned, sus·rpended

owners might fine-- or suspend
the players because their
participation in the game
wilhout club permission was a
violation of their contract, but
the Players Association would
be certain to fight any
penalties.
One source said the NBA was
considering fining the players
$3,000 each, the amount they
received as winners' shares in
the game, which was played
May 25 at Uniondale, N Y.

Capture OVL Triumphs
Cheshire exploded for seven
runs In the first inning Thurs·
day nightenroute to an easy 14·
0 four inning victory over
Vinton in an Ohio Valley Little
League game played at
Cheshire. The game was called
due to rain.
The Tigers were led by
righthander Steve Baird. Baird
slammed two home runs. Other
Tiger players with round
trippers were Rusty Lucas and
Claude Cornelius. It was
Cheshire's fourth straight
·teague win and fourth shutout.
In other games, Green won
its filth in a row, 9-8 over
Centerville and Addavilie

and Dave Giusti combined 011 a
six-hitter and Slargell chipped
in with three hila.
In the only other Natlooal
League game scheduled,
Chicago downed San Diego, !().
I. In the American League,
Cleveland nipped California, I·
0, New York blasted Chicago,
Il-l, and Kan!J88 City ouUasted
Boston, 13-9.
. Billy Williams celebrated his
34th birthday by driving in
three runs with two homers as
Chicago stOpped San Diego.
Bill Hands pitched a five-hitler
to get the win .
Cookie Rojas hit a three-run
homer to cap a six-run rally in
the sixth inning as Ka1198s City

Boston .

1r~ 4

Green, Cheshire Teams
'

In the opener, Nelson Briles outlasted

defeated Racine , 14·12.
Green School's Little League
team sponsored by K of P
Lodge No. 55 in Gallipolis
defeated Centerville, 9 to 8,
Thursday evening for their
fifth win against no defeats.
The win put Green in first place
in the Ohio Valley Little
League.
Ed Anderson was the win·
ning pitcher. Tom Edelman
was credited with the save.
Chuck Burris was leading
hiller for Green batting three
for three.
C. Lewis and L. Carter hit
home runs for Centerville.

Lobbying

by the NBA

Players Association, which
. wants the reserve clause
eliminated, has helped stymie
action in Congress on the NBA·
ABA merger for nearly a year.
The split between the
association and the owners
would intensify were the
owners to impose the sanelions.
No Penalty Last Year
Last year , when NBA and
ABA players met in a post
season ali-11tar game for the
first time, the NBA also
threatened action against the
players, but dtd not go through
with it.
The players involved are
Wilt Cllamberlain and Gail
Goodrich of Los Angeles, Paul
Silas
and Connie
Hawkins of
Phoenix,
John Havlicek
of

.
runiHllan group headed by
Marvin FiShman of Milwauk~
and including Lamar Hunt was
tabled because Ftslunan does
not have a lease for an arena.
Arthur Wirtz, who owns .Chicago Stadium where the Bulls
play, was a member of a
syndicate which lost out to
Fishman's group in a bid for
the team.
Kennedy said the owners had
not discussed any possible
changes in the reserve clause
and added he did not expect
them to at this meeting. He
also said there bad been very
little discussion a bout the
stalled merger.

Roy Rubm"
JS NaJDed
76ers Coach

involved. This program is, as .always, supported by Title I
federal monies.
'11teHeadStartprogramalsoisinfullswing. '11tereareabout
150 children invol~d In programs conducted at Salem Center,
Rutland, Harrisonville, Salisbury and Middleport Elementary
Buildings. The program is directed bY Fenton Taylor. There are
10 teachers, a social worker, a si&gt;eech therapist arxl several
aide!!. This program also is supported by federal
under
CAP.
THE F1RST ADULT mining class is about completed. It will
be flrilshed early in July. This class meets for four hours on two
evenings each week. This program is supported by special state
assistance arxl by the tuition paid by ·the students. We are hopeful
that this course will help ojien lhe door to employment in the
mining industry for the students involved.
The tWo daytime classes for prospective mine foremen have
finished. We had excellent attendance at th~ classes. Many of
the students have come from a great distance. we are hopeful
that they will be successful in obtaining employment in the
mining industry.
BILL PERRIN'S CoMMITTEE for the levy can use your

funds

support. Why not give him a caD and offer to help? The _Meigs
Local Board and administration thank Bill and his hard working
committee for their effort, regardless of the outcome Tuesday.
One of the outstanding activities In our school district during
the month of May was the fuU week camping experience that aU
the students at Bradbury had. Bradbury School was conducted
1
f
or one uU week at Canters Cave 4-H Camp in Jackson County.
The teachers, parents, cooks and aU others involved did a lot
of work to make this-the success thatit was. Phyllis Hackett and
her staff really put a tremendous amount of effort into this
program. The student gained an experience that they will never
forget. Thilse people who are quick to criticize Innovations and
experiments such as Bradbury should look for the stimulation
motivation and change of attitude that come to kids in progr~
such as this. This is hard to measure but it is a tremendous gain
for tli'e students involved. ·
AT THE END OF THIS school year we mailed report cards
home in grades 7·12. I assume that you received the card or that
youhavecaU~d theprincipal'soffice if you did not. We think that
this is the best way to handle the distribution of these cards at the
end of school. Your comments would be appreciated if there were
any problems that arose.
WE HAVE had a well-known standardized mathematics test
in the program involving au.of last year's students in grades 6
and 7. Based on the results of this test, we are establishing one
pre.aJgebra class in grade 7and one algebra class in grade 8 nell
fall . This program has been used successfully in many schools
and it will give us an opportunity for additional math instruction
the h' h
at
1g school level.
Astudent who carries math all four years in high school will
be able to take an additional course in grade 12 when he has
completed algebra in grade 8.
IN CLOSING THIS LAST report before the vote on our levy
next Tuesday, let me reemphasize the extreme importance oflts
passage. '
We need to pass it in 1972 in order to avoid the loss of $110 000
in 1973. 1fwe don'thave a!least 20 mills voted by the end of J~e
t973, we will lose aU state funds and become part of anothe;
district that has at least 20 mills in effect. Since the other two
districts in the county have 22.5 mills, we would be paying that
millage in 1974, assuming that we would be joined with another
district in our county.
This is the only conclusion you can make.
Passage next Tuesday will avoid the necessity of additional
campaigns at future elections which will have to be made if
passage does not occur.
This levy is a must. Let's pass it and get on with the business
of improving our schools. How about it'

Boston, Bob Love of Chicago,
Nate Archibald of Cincinnati,
Archie Clark of Philadelphia,
Bob Lanier of Detroit, Dave
DeBusschere of New York and
Oscar
Robertson
of &gt;
.
Milwaukee, p~e&amp;dent of the
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)Players Association.
.
Roy Rubin, wbo said he was a
Another contro.verstal "lousy ballplayer" in college
matter, the Ju,lius Ervmg case, but has a history of rebuilding
was on today s agenda as the basketball teams signed a
NBA owners ended their two- three-year contract Thursday
d~y meeting which began to coach the troubled
mtldiy Thursday when Philadeipllia 76ers.
proposed sales of lhe Boston
Rubin athletic director and
Celtics and Chicago Bulls were head b~ketball coach at Long
r~jected and tabled, respec· Island University for the past
t1vely ·
11 years, replaces Jack Ram·
Erving, the star forward of say wbo resigned at the end of
the ABA Virginia Squires, has last' season after the 76ers
L.inescores
.
enlisted the help of noted New reached the lowest ebb in their
Mal·or League Results
KanCit~mer~n,\;:~~~ 13 15 0 ~rk jurist Louis B. Nizer to 26-year history.
By Unl eel Pross International
Boston
001 302 12o- 9 17 1
d a loophole that would
The 4f&gt;.year-oid bachelor, in Notional League
San Diego 000 001 ooo- I 5 1 Murphy, Hedlund (61. Dal · enable him to break his ABA his II seasons at IJU, Uterally
Chicago
000 630 lOx- tO 9 o C~nton 161 and Kirkpatrick ; contractandplaywiththeNBA ' built the Blackbirds from the
Grief, Ross (4), Acosta (6) , S•eberl . Tlanl (6), Newhauser Atlanta Hawks with wbom he
•
ground up after a point.&amp;laving
'
Schaeffer (8) and Corrales, 171 , Lee (7), Krausse (9) and .
scandal almost knocked the
Kendall (6) ; Hands (6·2) and Fisk . WP- Murphy (3-2) . LP- stgned last year .
Hundley. LP- Grell (3.10) . HR Siebert (6·3) . HRs-Oti s (3rdl .
But the trouble with that is school out of 'Collegiate com·
- Williams 2 (lOth &amp; 11th) .
Rot as (lsi) , Petrocelli (3rdl. that the Milwaukee Bucks own
Harper (9th), Mayberry 14th ). the NBA draft rights to Erving ~~~?; ~~ep=ron~ L~
(1st Game)
San Fran
001 000 ooo- 1 6 1 Chicago
000 000 001- 1 9 o and the owners will have to moved into major college play
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pierce
Pitts
000 220 OOx- 4 8 1 N.Y.
013
010
03•8 113 decide what to do about it.
Bahnsen, Lemonds (3 ), Regan
and advanced to the National of Athens called on Mary Circle
Slone, Barr (6), Moffitt (8)
Sale Rejected
Invitational Tournament last on Saturday evening. Mrs.
and Rader; Briles, Giusti (9) (51. Kealey (8) and Brinkman ;
and May . WP- Brlles (4·2). LP Peterson (5-8) and Munson. LP· The sale of the Celtics by P. season.
George Circle, daughter
- Stone (J.7) .
Bahnsen (8·11 . HRs·Murcer Ballentine and Sons, which has
Rubin
said
he
took
the
job
(2nd game)
(7th) , Clarke I lsi) .
been trying to IU)Ioad the team with what has been termed ''a Cheryl of New Haven and Mrs.
San Fran
100 102 102- ·7 13 0
Susie Harris of Middleport
302 020 20~- 9 13 2 Cleveland 000 100 ooo- 1 7 o for three years to Irving Levin dying franchise" because it's called at the Circle home on
Pitts
Bryant. Barr (I l. Jo~nson California 000 000 ooo- o 5 1 and Harold Lipton, was reject- "a tremendous challenge to be
Monday.
(5), McMahon (7), Moffitt 171 Colbert (1-4) and Fosse; ed bee
f h
ause o w at commis· an NBA coach ."
and Healy ; Moose, Miller 171. Wright, Fisher (9) and Stephen·
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
sioner Walter Kennedy termed
He said he hoped he can do Johnson , daughter Sheryl
Hernandez (9) and Sangulllen . son. LP- Wright (6·3).
WP -Moose (5·2). LP-Bryant (3·
"cloudiness of the actual the same with the 76ers, who LeAnn, called at the home of
4) . HRs-OIIver (4th), Goodson
(Only games scheduled)
ownership."
recorded their worst wonoolost Mr . and Mrs. Douglas Johnson,
(4th) .
P. Ballentine sold the team in record ever, 3(1.52, last season Racine, on Sunday.
1969 to Transnational Corn· while lounging in third place in
Mrs. Erma! Schreckengost
munication8, but got It back in the NBA's Atlantic Division, as of ParkersbUrg spent Wed·
bankruptcy court when the he did with Long I.sland.
nesday night with Eunie
buyers went broke. The case is
"I'm a new man with new Brinker, William Carleton of
· still In the courts.
eyes in a new situation," Rubin Racine , called at the Brinker
Purchase of the Bulls by a said. "Philadelphia has probhome . Also calling at the home
lems. I intend to work my butt of his mother, Betty VanMeter
Free cable installation and free-trial
off."
and family .
period will end in Middleport and
Probably the
biggest
Mrs. Jack Follr od and
problem
confronting
the
native
Pomeroy at 5 p.m., Friday, June 23.
daughter Kim, loeal, called at
ATIENOS FUNERAL
New
Yorker
is
the
loss
of
all·
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
LOS
ANGELES
(UP!
1
Persons wanting free cable TV trial
star
forward
Billy
Cunningham
Robert
Lee and family
Cincinnati manager Sparky
period must call PoinTView before
to
the
Carolina
Cougars
in
a
recently.
Anderson was one of the some
that time. After Friday, June 23, in.
Ralph Lee visited with Fred
200 baseball figures who at- contract dispute ruled on last
April
by
federal
court.
Cun·
stallation will be $10, with no free trial.
and
Beulah Roush on Sunday
tended Thursday's funeraJ ·for
ningham,
the
club's
top
scorer
afternoon.
Harold "Lefty" Phillips,
former manager of the since joining the 76ers in 196S,
California Angels. "He was officially became a Cougar
like a father to me," said Thursday as Rubin was meet·
lng newsmen here.
Anderson.
" Basketball is a team
The Reds manager left
Cincinnati Wednesday night game," Rubin said. "We need
before the end of the Cincinnati personnel . No coach iB a genius
· Philadelphia game to fly here or miracle man, and if he
thinks he is, he doesn~ 'belong
for the funeral.
in
coaching."
Phillips, 53, died Monday
night after an asthma attack.

Carme} NeWS
By the Day

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC:

POINTVIEW CABLE
TV SERVICE

International League
Stondlngs
United Press International

SPRINKLE YOUR LAWN

W. L. Pd. GB

WITH Arati"... AND
ENJOY OUTDOOR
With Arab, you can use your
own garden hose to protect
your lawn, 'shrubs, trees,

flowers and yoor family
against : chiggers, ants,

Richmond
31 26 .544
Louisville
32 27 .542
Charleston
28 26 .519
Syracuse
29 27 .51 8
Toledo
29 27 .518
Tidewater
29 29 .500
Rochester
27 33 ..so
Penlnoula
24 34 .414
Thursday's Results
Richmond 4 Rochester 1
Charleston 10 Syracuse 5
Louisville ~ Peninsula '3
Innings)
(Only games scheduled)

l'h
l 'h
l'h

2'12
5'h

7'1&gt;

...
.

EASTERN LOCAL
Miss Leanne Nelson, Miss
Connie Weich and Rick Welch,
close friends of Sherry McCain,
were guests at the McCain
home recently. Mr . and Mrs.
Willie Frecker and son,
Charles, were guests of Mrs.
Mary Reed this last week. Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Summerfield of
Pennsylvania and Mrs. Edna
Stunmerfield recenily visited
Mrs. Mary Reed.
Mr. and Mrs. Huey HaD and
Mrs. Nora Damewond were
recently the guests of Mr. ~nd
Mrs. Norman McCain and Mrs.
Mary Re ed. Mrs. Nora
Damewood will be spending
the next couple of weeks in the
general area visiting friends
and relatives. - Sherry Me·
Cai n.

r~brder

MOIOROI.A
Ploys couette tope cartridges

with big, full bod ied sound

• included
•
Built-in AC power supply

a dolu••

M icroph ~me

CONCEPT90

•

Earphone included

entertainment
ma.tr

Mike, line cord and
earphone storage

Ge t those important
momenll on tope.

•
•

E11joy them in later
years . Idea l for

Slide lr'Oiume and
tone controls

•

bus ineu . .. tchool• ...

•

meeting&amp; etc. Makes
an idea l glff for any

La rge corry handle

mtmber of the fomilv.

5%%
INTEREST On
Certificates
Of Deposit
53f• per cent per year
on one year Cer·
tificates of Depo.sit.
$5,000.00 Mini mum.
Interest
Payable
Qua'rterly . 90 day
interest penally if
cashed
before
maturity.

ft,1eii!S Co.

soon.

It then remains to be seen
whether conditions have
changed enough since the last
meeting on May 4 so thi.t
C()nstructive negotiations can
replace the frustrations of lhe
last four yellrs during which
more than 150 meetings both
public and secret have resulted
in zero progress.
Significant events have
marked the last' two months.
Battlefield reports indicate
the offensive launched by the
Comm unists last April intended at least the capture of
the ancient capital of Hue in
the north, Kontum in the
Central Highlands, an An Loc
Provincial capital 60 miles
norlh of Saigon.
So far at least the Commu.
nists have failed in those objectiv~s and the offensive now
is reported at least two months
behind schedule, with the rainy
season in the south now
beginning in earnest.
No Retaliation
President Nixon's blockade
of North Vietnamese ports and
interdiction of ra il line connec-

lions with China h,;. been
carried out without retaliation
from either the Soviet Union or
China .
This means that the President's diplomatic campaign in
Peking and Moscow has cut
No~th Vietnam ofllrom its only
source of military supplies.
It seems possi ble both
Peking and Moscow have
advised Hanoi U13t more is to
be ga ined now at the con·
ference table than on th e
battlefield. ·
Whether the North Vietnamese would accept such advice
is something else. They believe
the French cheated them after
World War II and that the
Geneva Conference of 1954
c~eated them of the military
VIctory they won at Dien Bien
Phu .
North Vietnamese Premier
Pham Van Dong declared in an
interview published May 17 on
the Paris newspaper Le Monde
that his side would negotiate an
end to the war in 24 hours if it
could , but that ''we are ready
to continue with ardor for

Jtyled of high impocr
Waln ut f 1nish vi nyl

occenh

Fairview News Notes
•

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Ronn ie Russell
and daughter of Pomeroy
Mike and Karen Rhodes en:
joyed a cooko ut Sun·
day at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush. Mrs.
Gladys Shields and Mrs. Edna
Roush called in the Roush
home Sunday afternoon.
Mr . and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
attended funera l services for
Mrs. Wavie Sines Fox at
Creston, W. Va. Sunday a!·
ternoon.
Mrs. Ella Ford of Mason, W.
Va., Mrs. Mary Ford of Letart,
W. Va . Rt. , Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Shields, Mrs. Clara
Mae Sargent, Stephanie
Radford , Mrs. Marlene Fisher,
children Molly, Larry and Amy
and friend of Racine spent
Saturday evening with Mrs.
Bertha Robinson .
Relatives from a distance
coming for funeral services of
Mrs. Veatrice Nice at Ewing
Funeral Home were Mr. and
Mrs. Lewrence McNickles ~ nd
son, David, Mr. and Mrs.
James
Wrenwich
of
Harrisburg, Pa ., Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Nice, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Nice of Newark, 0 ., Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Muncie of
Frazeyblirg, 0 ., Goldie
Johnson of Stockport, 0 ., Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Nice, also of

Stockport, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Nice of Ches ter and Linda
McNickles of Jackson, Mich.
Tressa Laudermilt, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Laudermilt, was a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday thru Saturday due to ·
drinking kerosene at the home
of her grandmother, Mrs .
Mary Donahue.
Evelyn Lawson and Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Maybe and children
of Mansfield were Memorial
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Char les Lawson and
family .
Miss
Cindy
Lawson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lawson, received her
seventh certificate for perfect
attendance at school. Cindy
was a Freshman at Southern
Local High School.
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Delaney of Mansfield, Ohio
were Tuesday guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Charles Lusher.
Alice Faye (Susie) Scar·
berry, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roscoe Scarberry will
enter Children's Hospital
Thursday and will have plastic
surgery Friday. Susie will be
hospitalized two weeks and
would apprecia te cards and
letters. Her address, Miss
Alice Faye
Scarberry,
Children's Hospital, Columbus,
Ohio.

Rt . 33 South, P. O. Box 702
CCIIMHI tape
cartridge
~...,~~::-:
includict
'
ot no
extra
charvt

The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.

- - MOICIPIOLA

296 Second 51.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Al l Ac cou nts .lnsored To
520,000.00 by FSLIC.

Athens. Ohio

992·3189

30mlnuto
blank
,
Toke it with you to
piCnics, beach pal"'ie.
e tc. Ploys on batteries ·
(optional extra). Adds
to
outdoor fun .

makers of ci~;;;;~c~ol~o;r~T~V~~

Werner-Radio &amp; T.V.

We Will Be At The Big Bend Regatta Rea Market

•••

Japanese beetles and other
Insects. Alii his protection lor
only a lew pennies. Just spray
and tl1en enjoy the ooldoors.

992-3748

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Loncest Toll Road
World's longest toll super·
highway is the Governor
Thomas E . Dewey Thruway.
This 559·rnile expressway
connects New York City, AI·
bany, Syra'cuse, Rochester
and Buff&amp;lo, N.Y.

· CALL

We Buy Foreign Coins, Mine Tokens, Store Tokens,
Pol~ical

Buttons.

---

JACQUE GABRITSCH

Judges lmpressed
PI'. PLEASANT - Miss Jacque Gabritsch, of Point
Pleasant, who just Cllrnpleted her Freshman year at West
Vi(ginia Tech as Music Major, was selected to represent West
Virginia Tech and the Mu-Tau-Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega
Fraternity in the Miss West Virginia Pageant in Wheeling this
_past month where she placed first in swimsuit competition and
had the distinction of being the youngest gi rl in the pageant as
well as the tallest girl, at 5'1 0".
She was given a perfect scpre in swimsuit modeling by all
five judges of the pageant, who included a modeling school
owner, a newspaper reporter, a shopping mall owner, a former
Miss West Virgin ia, and a television station director.
Jacque spent a wonderful week before the pageant where she
was given four days instruction by the Wheeler School of
Modeling from Pittsburgh. Contestants were housed on the
campus of West Liberty State College and the pagean t finals
were televised throughout the state and part of Ohio . The winner
of this pageant represented West Virginia in the Miss USA
Pagea nt in San Juan, Puerta Rica .
Jacque was a member of the wind ensemble at Tech, the
symphony band and a majorette. She is a 1971 graduate at Point
Pleasant High School and directs the Mason County Twirling
Corps and the Mason County Baby Dolls. She is the current Miss
Charm of West Virginia, and has won nwnerous tropllies for
beauty and twirling in local, state and national levels.
She is the current state twirling champion, .state strutting
champion and West Virginia Most Beautiful Majorette, and will
participate in the national championships in North Carolina
again this year, where she placed in the top 15 in the nation in
1970.

TO VISIT HERE
Mr . and Mrs. Joe McKay,
Sally, Cindy and Victor of
Warren will spend th is
weekend in Middleport with
Mr. and Mrs. G. V. Rupe.

Live Entertainment!

••.

~

For
On~··.

'269

· Based on 40 square yards. other sizes priced
accordingly. 20 different colors, solids and '
1meds.

.•

"Suite Lovin Blues"

INC.
0

POMEROY.
Wall to Wall Carpet Specialists

•

(Six Piece Band)

'

116 W, MAIN

10:00 TIL 2:00

PROGRAM SET
CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Church near Carpenter will
hold its annual Fathers Day
program Sunday at the church
beginn ing at 9:45 a.m. with
Sunday SchooL Lunch will be
served a~ noon, followed by an
old fashioned hymn sing at 3
p.m. The Eggleton family of St.
Albans and home talent will be
featured singers..The public is
invited .

SON BORN JUNE 3
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
John Bass of Elyria, are an·
noun ci ng the birth of a· son
Steven John, on June a'
weighing 9 lbs., one ounce:
They are a.Jso the parents of a
daughter, Chrissie, 14 months
old. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. John Me·
Nemar of Elyria. Paternal
grandparents are Mr . and Mrs.
Leonard Bass, locaL

Saturday Night

Wrth AHeavy Sponge Pad

•

, ::!:l.~"m'

Our

Remember, Carpet is Our Business,
ONLY Business. Not A Sl DELINE
All Installations Guaranteed To Your Satisfaction

WELCOME! R-EGATTA VISIYORSI. COME,
. MEET
. YOUR FRIENDS!

The New MEIGS INN.PHONE 992-3629

..,

Two other components were
added : one for recruiting more

emergency room medica l
personnel into th e are.a,
p1·oviding a round·lhe·cloc k
coverage at several hospitals,
and trainee and evalua tion

p!'Ograms. The latter are to be
-conducted by the College of
Medicine,
Ohio
State
University .
Pubhc officials and health
planners from throughout tl1e
nation will be visiting the area
over the period of the contract
- if approved - to study
methods in operation in the
seven coun ties. Similar ly,
evaluators will be moved in to
the area to conduct an on-going
study as to the effectiveness of
lhe program for judgment as to
what methods might be trans·
planted elsewhere in rural
America.

POME~C)Y, o.

•

operative .

Should
the
national
des1gnal10n not be awarded,
the Foundation 's or iginal
program will still be im·
plemented with local county
funds , ARC, Highway Safety
Act, and Vocational Education
Act monies, although on a
reduced scale.

HOME RANSACKED'
CINCINNATI ( UPI )
~ree burglars, dressed In
SUits and wearing white gloves
lied up the butler and ran:
sacked the home Wednesday of
James R. Carruthers, mayor of
suburban Glendale
and
president of Steans
Foater
Co. mattress manufacturers .

and

prehensive program to serve
as a national pilot over a 3·year
period ins tigated a con·
struction phase to upgrade and
modernize several hospitals'
emergency rooms and con·
struct ambulance stations at
ce rta in locations in the area.

LEAVES TODAY
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker
of Syracuse left today for New
Orleans, La. for a visit with
their son and daughter·in·law ,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard K.
Parker and family.

4

W!HAVE

NEVER
OFFeRED THIS SET

AT THIS
PRICE.
WAS 369.95
Save 70.00

2-HOUR
CLEANING

proposa l for a more com-

'

.....
et-

..;""••••••••••••••••
.

ludttt Tlfm$
Avotllblo

'

--------------·-----·~

.

(15

I

June 17 and 18 To Buy, Sell or Trade Old Coins.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

992-7590'
~
i
•.
.
.

5...

"

(Continued from Page 1)
on May II that the coonpetihon
had been reduced to 10 ap·
plicanL• and a panel of 12
r~ viewers frum throughout the
nation would..meet with loca l
representatives for a day-long
interrogation on May 19. Ap·
proximately 50 persons f1·om
the counties of Athens, Gallia,
H oc king ~ Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs. and Vinton and
members of the Foundation's
Board of Trustees and sta ff
were interviewed a t Ohio
Un iversity in Athens.
The local negotiating learn
making the Wash ington trip
next week will he headed by
Mr. Farrington and consisting
of staff members Dan J. Lloyd,
Director
of
Program
Developmen t and author of the
concept ; . Einon Plummer '
Fiscal O!ficer; Dr. Thomas W.
Morgan, Chief of Surgery,
Holzer Hospital and Chairman
of the Area's Emergency
Med ica l Services Advi sory
Counctl; Dr. Marlin Keller
Head of the Division of Com:
munity Hea lth , College of
Medicine ,
Ohio
Stal e
Un iversi ty ; Joseph B. Vanity,
Legal Counsel to the Faun·
dation, and Roy Rankin s,
College of Engineering, Ohio

IN LAS VEGAS
Sr. Master Sgt. and Mrs. M.
person s, have been graduated S. Walker have moved to the ·
fn1m cvurses at South Point, . Nellis Air Force Base at Las
Lawrence
County , and Vegas, Nevada. F&lt;&gt;r the past
McArthur , Vinton County .
year, while Sgt. Walker serted
Approximately 90 pet. of the in Korea, Mrs. Walker lived in
present provid ers of the area lhe Willis Anthony apa•tment
ambuJance services have in· in Middleport. Mrs. Walker is
dicated in a State Dept. of lhe daughter of Mrs. Maude
Health Survey that they will be Scott, Middleport, and the
discontinuing services shortly ; sister of Mrs. James Simpson,
however, most have told the Middleport. Sgt. Walker is the
Foundation they will attempt son of Steril Walker, Mason , W.
to remain in business until the Va .
Re gional
Program
is
tr ainees, tota ling ove r 30

The total ·local share -over
three years was increased to
$1,204,461 and the federal's
share lu $5,8'J3, 124 for a grand
Iota! of $7.097,585.
If negotiations ar e successful , and the area awarded
the designation, it is an·
ticipated equipmen t bids will
be advertised immediately and
'
others placed during August.
Under the planned time
University
and
Com- schedul e, de livery of am·
mwlications Con::;ultant.
bulances should beg in to occur
Farrington explained that in October with the complete
the Foundation's origina l commun ications network
development of an EMS constructed by January 1973.
program res ulted in an
Although the system may not
agreeme nt wi th the seven be wholly opera tive un til
Board s of County Co m. January, ambulance services
miss ioners, mayo r s~ city can begin up'on delivery of
managers, and hospital ad· vehicles. Over 300 prospective
ministrators, and Board of ambulance atte ndan l' trainees
Trustees to submit project have indicated interest in
applications totaling $1,323,569 enrolling in the 60-hour in·
to va rious state and federal struction courses to be set up
agencies. These included the throughout the area by the
Appalachian Regiona l Com· Ohio Division of Vocational
mission, U. S. Dep t. of Trans· Education. Included are both
portation, the U. S. Office of fulltime salaried attendants
Education, and State Dept. of and volunteers .
Health, and the Ohio Division
An instructor's school has
of Voca tional Education. In· been planned in Wellston by the
eluded in the figure were
$180,664 matching funds from
local COWlty governmen ts an d
hospitals.
Requirements of HSMHA

·'

on 1i des.

Branch

They have declared U.S.
prisoners will not he released
w1til war's end.
The U.S. has offered aid to
both north and south to repair
war damage but has been firm
in itssupportofTheiu and in its
refusal to withdraw totally
until U.S. prisoners are re·
leased. U.S . prisoners of war or
missing in action total more
than 1,600.
The U.S. increasingly has
placed its emphasis on the war
prisoner issue, suggesting to
some that it hopes to enlarge
the scope of the peace ta lks,
possibly into another Geneva
type conference.

Three Peace Proposals
On the Paris peace table are
three peace proposals-a
seven·point proposal submitted
by the VietCong on last July I,
a n eight-point proposal
suggested by the United States
in secret talks between

TREASURE CHEST COINS

polystyrene ~nd metal with

presidential adviser Henry A. ·
Kissinger and senior North
Vietnamese diplomats last
October and a nille·pOint North
Vietnamese plan submitted on
June 26, 1971, just five days
before the plan put!orward by
th e Viet Cong .
~
Some changes and ciUfifica·
tions have been made since but
without any change in basic
positions. The Communists
· continue to demand that the
•United States withdraw its
support from South Viet·
namese President Nguyen Van
Thieu and unconditional with·
drawal of American forces at a
precise date .

years."

Model GP24HW. Beautifully

@

••••••••••••••••
.

spiders, mosquitoes, grubs,

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.

Aptitude Test and that ap.
plicants have an Interview with
an admissions officer and visit
the campus.
The recommended interview
would be of speclai importance
to students who feel they would
benefit from the program but
who do not meet the grade and
SAT score guidelineS.
Ohio University Admissions
Director Jerry Reese stresses
that the early entrance
program is not restricted only
to students with exceedingly
high academic achievement. It
is aimed also at students with
special talent and interest in
such areas as art, theater,
dance or music, or where a
greater variety of courses
would benefit the student.

C£ssette
from

By PHIL NEWSOM
UP! Foreign News Analyst
The return to Paris of chief
negotiators for the United
States, North Vietnam and the
VietCong suggests that despite
lots of tough talk both sides
expect to resume peace talks

You Can ~Completely Carpet 3 Rooms
Wall to Wall With _Dupont "501" Nylon

Call 992-2505, toll-free

out In

ATHENS - An early .ad·
missions program to he in·
stituted at Ohio University next
fail will allow selected high
school juniors to bypass their
senior year in high school and
immediately begin university
work.
The program is being
initiated to permit students of
demon strated scholastic ~
ability and achievement, or
those with special talents, to
move on to the university level
where a greater selection· of
courses is offered and where
the student may benefit and
contribute to a greater degree
than if he remained in high
school another year ..
., Those qualifying for the
program at the end of their
junior year must have com·
pleted, or lack only one or two
courses to complete, the
college preparatory program.
Admittance to the early
admissions program will be
based on two requirements and
with consideration of two
recommendations.
Requi'remen ts for early
admission are that the student
must have the recommendation of his high school
principal or guidance counselor and that the high school
be willing to grant the student a
diploma upon successful
completion of his freshman
year at Ohio University .
Recommendations, made by
the university's admissions
committee, are that applic811ts
have a B average in high school
and a combination score of at
least 1,000 on the Scholastic

·EMS Negotiation

More Peace· Talk Near:

Some Juniors may
Skip Senior Year-

Div ision. Tw o cl asses of

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON;S
CLEANERS
2(0 2nd
Pomeroy
E.

Phone 992·5428

SALE
Tho PEALE • C3722W1
Grained Kashmir Walnut color
• Handcrafted Chassis • Chromacolor
P1cture Tube • Glare-Ban PictUre Face

29995

HURRYI UMmD QUANTITIES! STOP IN

INGELS FURNITURE
9~2-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
MIDDLEPORT

~Ail
1

toG It Must Not Fail!!

''

''

TUESDAy I JUNE 20, 1972

'

•'

''

FOR .

(MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT) •

SCHOOL LEV¥
Let's Keep Our Schools Open For Area Wide Pro&amp;less
Paid Political Advertisement By The Meigs Local Citizens Committee

l
1

'I

,.

•

i

I

•••'

�•

•

S-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomerol, o.; June t6, 1972
4- The DaUy Sentinei,Middleport-POOJeroy,O., June !6, 1972

;

!.«~:::~,;w ·

:wo .u~ ~:::~S!S*.~&gt;.!!1.c:».::::=~~~=~=~~&amp;!.K :.:.:: M

Pirates Regain East Lead ~~!..~~~oots 1
By VITO STEUJNO
UPI Sportl Writer

Bob Robert11011 still i1111't
hitting his weight and that's a
handlcapwbenyou'retryingto
a-ash into the toughest hitting
lineup in baseball.
Aller he slipped to .112 with
111 i){or·21 streak, Robertson
collected three hits in four trips
Thursday night in the second
game as tbe Pirates completed
a f. land 9-7sweepoverthe San
Francisco Giants.
The sweep moved the Pirates
back Into first place in the
National Lengue East, a half·
game ahead of the idle New
York Mets.
"I feel goqd to _have a night '

.'11 11'
1\TD
.4
D./1

like this but I'll have to hit
mor~ coos~tently to stay in
this lineup," Roberl8on says.
"I've got to get my confidence
back. r·~ said all along that
(Manager Bill) Virdon has
done the right thing in playing
his ~ine best men and it's my
job to prove I can hit the way [
did last year."
RDbertson got a standing
ovation ·from the fans when he
cracked a tWIH'Un single in the
first inning of the second game
to highlight a three-run rally.
He collected two more singles
and drove in another run while
Oliver also had three hits and
drove In 'three runs in ·lhe
game.

rnrUJ-y·nr.'S
c;

By ffiA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
WHIT.E SULPHUR
SPRINGS, W.Va . ( UPI)Natlonal Basketball'
Association owners, already
fighting their players over the
reserve clause, prepared for
111other batUe today, as they
debated penalties for 11
players . involved in last
month's aU..tar game with the
rival ABA.
A league spokesman said the

John

Mayberry drOve in six runs
with three hits for the Royals.
Carl Yastrzemski had three
hits for the losers.
Bobby Murcer and Horace
Clarke each hit a three-run
homer and the · New York
Yankees blasted Chicago
behind the nine-hit pitching of
Fritz Peterson,. The Yanks
. helped out PetersOn with five
.double plays.
Vmce Colbert pitched a fiv~· ·
hitler to outduel Clyde Wright
as Cleveland nipped CaUfomia.
Graig Nettles batted in the only
run of the game with a fourth
Inning double that scored Ray
Fosse, who singled with two
- out.

itlay Be F.r·ned, sus·rpended

owners might fine-- or suspend
the players because their
participation in the game
wilhout club permission was a
violation of their contract, but
the Players Association would
be certain to fight any
penalties.
One source said the NBA was
considering fining the players
$3,000 each, the amount they
received as winners' shares in
the game, which was played
May 25 at Uniondale, N Y.

Capture OVL Triumphs
Cheshire exploded for seven
runs In the first inning Thurs·
day nightenroute to an easy 14·
0 four inning victory over
Vinton in an Ohio Valley Little
League game played at
Cheshire. The game was called
due to rain.
The Tigers were led by
righthander Steve Baird. Baird
slammed two home runs. Other
Tiger players with round
trippers were Rusty Lucas and
Claude Cornelius. It was
Cheshire's fourth straight
·teague win and fourth shutout.
In other games, Green won
its filth in a row, 9-8 over
Centerville and Addavilie

and Dave Giusti combined 011 a
six-hitter and Slargell chipped
in with three hila.
In the only other Natlooal
League game scheduled,
Chicago downed San Diego, !().
I. In the American League,
Cleveland nipped California, I·
0, New York blasted Chicago,
Il-l, and Kan!J88 City ouUasted
Boston, 13-9.
. Billy Williams celebrated his
34th birthday by driving in
three runs with two homers as
Chicago stOpped San Diego.
Bill Hands pitched a five-hitler
to get the win .
Cookie Rojas hit a three-run
homer to cap a six-run rally in
the sixth inning as Ka1198s City

Boston .

1r~ 4

Green, Cheshire Teams
'

In the opener, Nelson Briles outlasted

defeated Racine , 14·12.
Green School's Little League
team sponsored by K of P
Lodge No. 55 in Gallipolis
defeated Centerville, 9 to 8,
Thursday evening for their
fifth win against no defeats.
The win put Green in first place
in the Ohio Valley Little
League.
Ed Anderson was the win·
ning pitcher. Tom Edelman
was credited with the save.
Chuck Burris was leading
hiller for Green batting three
for three.
C. Lewis and L. Carter hit
home runs for Centerville.

Lobbying

by the NBA

Players Association, which
. wants the reserve clause
eliminated, has helped stymie
action in Congress on the NBA·
ABA merger for nearly a year.
The split between the
association and the owners
would intensify were the
owners to impose the sanelions.
No Penalty Last Year
Last year , when NBA and
ABA players met in a post
season ali-11tar game for the
first time, the NBA also
threatened action against the
players, but dtd not go through
with it.
The players involved are
Wilt Cllamberlain and Gail
Goodrich of Los Angeles, Paul
Silas
and Connie
Hawkins of
Phoenix,
John Havlicek
of

.
runiHllan group headed by
Marvin FiShman of Milwauk~
and including Lamar Hunt was
tabled because Ftslunan does
not have a lease for an arena.
Arthur Wirtz, who owns .Chicago Stadium where the Bulls
play, was a member of a
syndicate which lost out to
Fishman's group in a bid for
the team.
Kennedy said the owners had
not discussed any possible
changes in the reserve clause
and added he did not expect
them to at this meeting. He
also said there bad been very
little discussion a bout the
stalled merger.

Roy Rubm"
JS NaJDed
76ers Coach

involved. This program is, as .always, supported by Title I
federal monies.
'11teHeadStartprogramalsoisinfullswing. '11tereareabout
150 children invol~d In programs conducted at Salem Center,
Rutland, Harrisonville, Salisbury and Middleport Elementary
Buildings. The program is directed bY Fenton Taylor. There are
10 teachers, a social worker, a si&gt;eech therapist arxl several
aide!!. This program also is supported by federal
under
CAP.
THE F1RST ADULT mining class is about completed. It will
be flrilshed early in July. This class meets for four hours on two
evenings each week. This program is supported by special state
assistance arxl by the tuition paid by ·the students. We are hopeful
that this course will help ojien lhe door to employment in the
mining industry for the students involved.
The tWo daytime classes for prospective mine foremen have
finished. We had excellent attendance at th~ classes. Many of
the students have come from a great distance. we are hopeful
that they will be successful in obtaining employment in the
mining industry.
BILL PERRIN'S CoMMITTEE for the levy can use your

funds

support. Why not give him a caD and offer to help? The _Meigs
Local Board and administration thank Bill and his hard working
committee for their effort, regardless of the outcome Tuesday.
One of the outstanding activities In our school district during
the month of May was the fuU week camping experience that aU
the students at Bradbury had. Bradbury School was conducted
1
f
or one uU week at Canters Cave 4-H Camp in Jackson County.
The teachers, parents, cooks and aU others involved did a lot
of work to make this-the success thatit was. Phyllis Hackett and
her staff really put a tremendous amount of effort into this
program. The student gained an experience that they will never
forget. Thilse people who are quick to criticize Innovations and
experiments such as Bradbury should look for the stimulation
motivation and change of attitude that come to kids in progr~
such as this. This is hard to measure but it is a tremendous gain
for tli'e students involved. ·
AT THE END OF THIS school year we mailed report cards
home in grades 7·12. I assume that you received the card or that
youhavecaU~d theprincipal'soffice if you did not. We think that
this is the best way to handle the distribution of these cards at the
end of school. Your comments would be appreciated if there were
any problems that arose.
WE HAVE had a well-known standardized mathematics test
in the program involving au.of last year's students in grades 6
and 7. Based on the results of this test, we are establishing one
pre.aJgebra class in grade 7and one algebra class in grade 8 nell
fall . This program has been used successfully in many schools
and it will give us an opportunity for additional math instruction
the h' h
at
1g school level.
Astudent who carries math all four years in high school will
be able to take an additional course in grade 12 when he has
completed algebra in grade 8.
IN CLOSING THIS LAST report before the vote on our levy
next Tuesday, let me reemphasize the extreme importance oflts
passage. '
We need to pass it in 1972 in order to avoid the loss of $110 000
in 1973. 1fwe don'thave a!least 20 mills voted by the end of J~e
t973, we will lose aU state funds and become part of anothe;
district that has at least 20 mills in effect. Since the other two
districts in the county have 22.5 mills, we would be paying that
millage in 1974, assuming that we would be joined with another
district in our county.
This is the only conclusion you can make.
Passage next Tuesday will avoid the necessity of additional
campaigns at future elections which will have to be made if
passage does not occur.
This levy is a must. Let's pass it and get on with the business
of improving our schools. How about it'

Boston, Bob Love of Chicago,
Nate Archibald of Cincinnati,
Archie Clark of Philadelphia,
Bob Lanier of Detroit, Dave
DeBusschere of New York and
Oscar
Robertson
of &gt;
.
Milwaukee, p~e&amp;dent of the
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)Players Association.
.
Roy Rubin, wbo said he was a
Another contro.verstal "lousy ballplayer" in college
matter, the Ju,lius Ervmg case, but has a history of rebuilding
was on today s agenda as the basketball teams signed a
NBA owners ended their two- three-year contract Thursday
d~y meeting which began to coach the troubled
mtldiy Thursday when Philadeipllia 76ers.
proposed sales of lhe Boston
Rubin athletic director and
Celtics and Chicago Bulls were head b~ketball coach at Long
r~jected and tabled, respec· Island University for the past
t1vely ·
11 years, replaces Jack Ram·
Erving, the star forward of say wbo resigned at the end of
the ABA Virginia Squires, has last' season after the 76ers
L.inescores
.
enlisted the help of noted New reached the lowest ebb in their
Mal·or League Results
KanCit~mer~n,\;:~~~ 13 15 0 ~rk jurist Louis B. Nizer to 26-year history.
By Unl eel Pross International
Boston
001 302 12o- 9 17 1
d a loophole that would
The 4f&gt;.year-oid bachelor, in Notional League
San Diego 000 001 ooo- I 5 1 Murphy, Hedlund (61. Dal · enable him to break his ABA his II seasons at IJU, Uterally
Chicago
000 630 lOx- tO 9 o C~nton 161 and Kirkpatrick ; contractandplaywiththeNBA ' built the Blackbirds from the
Grief, Ross (4), Acosta (6) , S•eberl . Tlanl (6), Newhauser Atlanta Hawks with wbom he
•
ground up after a point.&amp;laving
'
Schaeffer (8) and Corrales, 171 , Lee (7), Krausse (9) and .
scandal almost knocked the
Kendall (6) ; Hands (6·2) and Fisk . WP- Murphy (3-2) . LP- stgned last year .
Hundley. LP- Grell (3.10) . HR Siebert (6·3) . HRs-Oti s (3rdl .
But the trouble with that is school out of 'Collegiate com·
- Williams 2 (lOth &amp; 11th) .
Rot as (lsi) , Petrocelli (3rdl. that the Milwaukee Bucks own
Harper (9th), Mayberry 14th ). the NBA draft rights to Erving ~~~?; ~~ep=ron~ L~
(1st Game)
San Fran
001 000 ooo- 1 6 1 Chicago
000 000 001- 1 9 o and the owners will have to moved into major college play
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pierce
Pitts
000 220 OOx- 4 8 1 N.Y.
013
010
03•8 113 decide what to do about it.
Bahnsen, Lemonds (3 ), Regan
and advanced to the National of Athens called on Mary Circle
Slone, Barr (6), Moffitt (8)
Sale Rejected
Invitational Tournament last on Saturday evening. Mrs.
and Rader; Briles, Giusti (9) (51. Kealey (8) and Brinkman ;
and May . WP- Brlles (4·2). LP Peterson (5-8) and Munson. LP· The sale of the Celtics by P. season.
George Circle, daughter
- Stone (J.7) .
Bahnsen (8·11 . HRs·Murcer Ballentine and Sons, which has
Rubin
said
he
took
the
job
(2nd game)
(7th) , Clarke I lsi) .
been trying to IU)Ioad the team with what has been termed ''a Cheryl of New Haven and Mrs.
San Fran
100 102 102- ·7 13 0
Susie Harris of Middleport
302 020 20~- 9 13 2 Cleveland 000 100 ooo- 1 7 o for three years to Irving Levin dying franchise" because it's called at the Circle home on
Pitts
Bryant. Barr (I l. Jo~nson California 000 000 ooo- o 5 1 and Harold Lipton, was reject- "a tremendous challenge to be
Monday.
(5), McMahon (7), Moffitt 171 Colbert (1-4) and Fosse; ed bee
f h
ause o w at commis· an NBA coach ."
and Healy ; Moose, Miller 171. Wright, Fisher (9) and Stephen·
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
sioner Walter Kennedy termed
He said he hoped he can do Johnson , daughter Sheryl
Hernandez (9) and Sangulllen . son. LP- Wright (6·3).
WP -Moose (5·2). LP-Bryant (3·
"cloudiness of the actual the same with the 76ers, who LeAnn, called at the home of
4) . HRs-OIIver (4th), Goodson
(Only games scheduled)
ownership."
recorded their worst wonoolost Mr . and Mrs. Douglas Johnson,
(4th) .
P. Ballentine sold the team in record ever, 3(1.52, last season Racine, on Sunday.
1969 to Transnational Corn· while lounging in third place in
Mrs. Erma! Schreckengost
munication8, but got It back in the NBA's Atlantic Division, as of ParkersbUrg spent Wed·
bankruptcy court when the he did with Long I.sland.
nesday night with Eunie
buyers went broke. The case is
"I'm a new man with new Brinker, William Carleton of
· still In the courts.
eyes in a new situation," Rubin Racine , called at the Brinker
Purchase of the Bulls by a said. "Philadelphia has probhome . Also calling at the home
lems. I intend to work my butt of his mother, Betty VanMeter
Free cable installation and free-trial
off."
and family .
period will end in Middleport and
Probably the
biggest
Mrs. Jack Follr od and
problem
confronting
the
native
Pomeroy at 5 p.m., Friday, June 23.
daughter Kim, loeal, called at
ATIENOS FUNERAL
New
Yorker
is
the
loss
of
all·
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
LOS
ANGELES
(UP!
1
Persons wanting free cable TV trial
star
forward
Billy
Cunningham
Robert
Lee and family
Cincinnati manager Sparky
period must call PoinTView before
to
the
Carolina
Cougars
in
a
recently.
Anderson was one of the some
that time. After Friday, June 23, in.
Ralph Lee visited with Fred
200 baseball figures who at- contract dispute ruled on last
April
by
federal
court.
Cun·
stallation will be $10, with no free trial.
and
Beulah Roush on Sunday
tended Thursday's funeraJ ·for
ningham,
the
club's
top
scorer
afternoon.
Harold "Lefty" Phillips,
former manager of the since joining the 76ers in 196S,
California Angels. "He was officially became a Cougar
like a father to me," said Thursday as Rubin was meet·
lng newsmen here.
Anderson.
" Basketball is a team
The Reds manager left
Cincinnati Wednesday night game," Rubin said. "We need
before the end of the Cincinnati personnel . No coach iB a genius
· Philadelphia game to fly here or miracle man, and if he
thinks he is, he doesn~ 'belong
for the funeral.
in
coaching."
Phillips, 53, died Monday
night after an asthma attack.

Carme} NeWS
By the Day

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC:

POINTVIEW CABLE
TV SERVICE

International League
Stondlngs
United Press International

SPRINKLE YOUR LAWN

W. L. Pd. GB

WITH Arati"... AND
ENJOY OUTDOOR
With Arab, you can use your
own garden hose to protect
your lawn, 'shrubs, trees,

flowers and yoor family
against : chiggers, ants,

Richmond
31 26 .544
Louisville
32 27 .542
Charleston
28 26 .519
Syracuse
29 27 .51 8
Toledo
29 27 .518
Tidewater
29 29 .500
Rochester
27 33 ..so
Penlnoula
24 34 .414
Thursday's Results
Richmond 4 Rochester 1
Charleston 10 Syracuse 5
Louisville ~ Peninsula '3
Innings)
(Only games scheduled)

l'h
l 'h
l'h

2'12
5'h

7'1&gt;

...
.

EASTERN LOCAL
Miss Leanne Nelson, Miss
Connie Weich and Rick Welch,
close friends of Sherry McCain,
were guests at the McCain
home recently. Mr . and Mrs.
Willie Frecker and son,
Charles, were guests of Mrs.
Mary Reed this last week. Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Summerfield of
Pennsylvania and Mrs. Edna
Stunmerfield recenily visited
Mrs. Mary Reed.
Mr. and Mrs. Huey HaD and
Mrs. Nora Damewond were
recently the guests of Mr. ~nd
Mrs. Norman McCain and Mrs.
Mary Re ed. Mrs. Nora
Damewood will be spending
the next couple of weeks in the
general area visiting friends
and relatives. - Sherry Me·
Cai n.

r~brder

MOIOROI.A
Ploys couette tope cartridges

with big, full bod ied sound

• included
•
Built-in AC power supply

a dolu••

M icroph ~me

CONCEPT90

•

Earphone included

entertainment
ma.tr

Mike, line cord and
earphone storage

Ge t those important
momenll on tope.

•
•

E11joy them in later
years . Idea l for

Slide lr'Oiume and
tone controls

•

bus ineu . .. tchool• ...

•

meeting&amp; etc. Makes
an idea l glff for any

La rge corry handle

mtmber of the fomilv.

5%%
INTEREST On
Certificates
Of Deposit
53f• per cent per year
on one year Cer·
tificates of Depo.sit.
$5,000.00 Mini mum.
Interest
Payable
Qua'rterly . 90 day
interest penally if
cashed
before
maturity.

ft,1eii!S Co.

soon.

It then remains to be seen
whether conditions have
changed enough since the last
meeting on May 4 so thi.t
C()nstructive negotiations can
replace the frustrations of lhe
last four yellrs during which
more than 150 meetings both
public and secret have resulted
in zero progress.
Significant events have
marked the last' two months.
Battlefield reports indicate
the offensive launched by the
Comm unists last April intended at least the capture of
the ancient capital of Hue in
the north, Kontum in the
Central Highlands, an An Loc
Provincial capital 60 miles
norlh of Saigon.
So far at least the Commu.
nists have failed in those objectiv~s and the offensive now
is reported at least two months
behind schedule, with the rainy
season in the south now
beginning in earnest.
No Retaliation
President Nixon's blockade
of North Vietnamese ports and
interdiction of ra il line connec-

lions with China h,;. been
carried out without retaliation
from either the Soviet Union or
China .
This means that the President's diplomatic campaign in
Peking and Moscow has cut
No~th Vietnam ofllrom its only
source of military supplies.
It seems possi ble both
Peking and Moscow have
advised Hanoi U13t more is to
be ga ined now at the con·
ference table than on th e
battlefield. ·
Whether the North Vietnamese would accept such advice
is something else. They believe
the French cheated them after
World War II and that the
Geneva Conference of 1954
c~eated them of the military
VIctory they won at Dien Bien
Phu .
North Vietnamese Premier
Pham Van Dong declared in an
interview published May 17 on
the Paris newspaper Le Monde
that his side would negotiate an
end to the war in 24 hours if it
could , but that ''we are ready
to continue with ardor for

Jtyled of high impocr
Waln ut f 1nish vi nyl

occenh

Fairview News Notes
•

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Ronn ie Russell
and daughter of Pomeroy
Mike and Karen Rhodes en:
joyed a cooko ut Sun·
day at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush. Mrs.
Gladys Shields and Mrs. Edna
Roush called in the Roush
home Sunday afternoon.
Mr . and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
attended funera l services for
Mrs. Wavie Sines Fox at
Creston, W. Va. Sunday a!·
ternoon.
Mrs. Ella Ford of Mason, W.
Va., Mrs. Mary Ford of Letart,
W. Va . Rt. , Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Shields, Mrs. Clara
Mae Sargent, Stephanie
Radford , Mrs. Marlene Fisher,
children Molly, Larry and Amy
and friend of Racine spent
Saturday evening with Mrs.
Bertha Robinson .
Relatives from a distance
coming for funeral services of
Mrs. Veatrice Nice at Ewing
Funeral Home were Mr. and
Mrs. Lewrence McNickles ~ nd
son, David, Mr. and Mrs.
James
Wrenwich
of
Harrisburg, Pa ., Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Nice, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Nice of Newark, 0 ., Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Muncie of
Frazeyblirg, 0 ., Goldie
Johnson of Stockport, 0 ., Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Nice, also of

Stockport, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Nice of Ches ter and Linda
McNickles of Jackson, Mich.
Tressa Laudermilt, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Laudermilt, was a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday thru Saturday due to ·
drinking kerosene at the home
of her grandmother, Mrs .
Mary Donahue.
Evelyn Lawson and Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Maybe and children
of Mansfield were Memorial
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Char les Lawson and
family .
Miss
Cindy
Lawson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lawson, received her
seventh certificate for perfect
attendance at school. Cindy
was a Freshman at Southern
Local High School.
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Delaney of Mansfield, Ohio
were Tuesday guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Charles Lusher.
Alice Faye (Susie) Scar·
berry, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roscoe Scarberry will
enter Children's Hospital
Thursday and will have plastic
surgery Friday. Susie will be
hospitalized two weeks and
would apprecia te cards and
letters. Her address, Miss
Alice Faye
Scarberry,
Children's Hospital, Columbus,
Ohio.

Rt . 33 South, P. O. Box 702
CCIIMHI tape
cartridge
~...,~~::-:
includict
'
ot no
extra
charvt

The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.

- - MOICIPIOLA

296 Second 51.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Al l Ac cou nts .lnsored To
520,000.00 by FSLIC.

Athens. Ohio

992·3189

30mlnuto
blank
,
Toke it with you to
piCnics, beach pal"'ie.
e tc. Ploys on batteries ·
(optional extra). Adds
to
outdoor fun .

makers of ci~;;;;~c~ol~o;r~T~V~~

Werner-Radio &amp; T.V.

We Will Be At The Big Bend Regatta Rea Market

•••

Japanese beetles and other
Insects. Alii his protection lor
only a lew pennies. Just spray
and tl1en enjoy the ooldoors.

992-3748

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Loncest Toll Road
World's longest toll super·
highway is the Governor
Thomas E . Dewey Thruway.
This 559·rnile expressway
connects New York City, AI·
bany, Syra'cuse, Rochester
and Buff&amp;lo, N.Y.

· CALL

We Buy Foreign Coins, Mine Tokens, Store Tokens,
Pol~ical

Buttons.

---

JACQUE GABRITSCH

Judges lmpressed
PI'. PLEASANT - Miss Jacque Gabritsch, of Point
Pleasant, who just Cllrnpleted her Freshman year at West
Vi(ginia Tech as Music Major, was selected to represent West
Virginia Tech and the Mu-Tau-Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega
Fraternity in the Miss West Virginia Pageant in Wheeling this
_past month where she placed first in swimsuit competition and
had the distinction of being the youngest gi rl in the pageant as
well as the tallest girl, at 5'1 0".
She was given a perfect scpre in swimsuit modeling by all
five judges of the pageant, who included a modeling school
owner, a newspaper reporter, a shopping mall owner, a former
Miss West Virgin ia, and a television station director.
Jacque spent a wonderful week before the pageant where she
was given four days instruction by the Wheeler School of
Modeling from Pittsburgh. Contestants were housed on the
campus of West Liberty State College and the pagean t finals
were televised throughout the state and part of Ohio . The winner
of this pageant represented West Virginia in the Miss USA
Pagea nt in San Juan, Puerta Rica .
Jacque was a member of the wind ensemble at Tech, the
symphony band and a majorette. She is a 1971 graduate at Point
Pleasant High School and directs the Mason County Twirling
Corps and the Mason County Baby Dolls. She is the current Miss
Charm of West Virginia, and has won nwnerous tropllies for
beauty and twirling in local, state and national levels.
She is the current state twirling champion, .state strutting
champion and West Virginia Most Beautiful Majorette, and will
participate in the national championships in North Carolina
again this year, where she placed in the top 15 in the nation in
1970.

TO VISIT HERE
Mr . and Mrs. Joe McKay,
Sally, Cindy and Victor of
Warren will spend th is
weekend in Middleport with
Mr. and Mrs. G. V. Rupe.

Live Entertainment!

••.

~

For
On~··.

'269

· Based on 40 square yards. other sizes priced
accordingly. 20 different colors, solids and '
1meds.

.•

"Suite Lovin Blues"

INC.
0

POMEROY.
Wall to Wall Carpet Specialists

•

(Six Piece Band)

'

116 W, MAIN

10:00 TIL 2:00

PROGRAM SET
CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Church near Carpenter will
hold its annual Fathers Day
program Sunday at the church
beginn ing at 9:45 a.m. with
Sunday SchooL Lunch will be
served a~ noon, followed by an
old fashioned hymn sing at 3
p.m. The Eggleton family of St.
Albans and home talent will be
featured singers..The public is
invited .

SON BORN JUNE 3
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
John Bass of Elyria, are an·
noun ci ng the birth of a· son
Steven John, on June a'
weighing 9 lbs., one ounce:
They are a.Jso the parents of a
daughter, Chrissie, 14 months
old. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. John Me·
Nemar of Elyria. Paternal
grandparents are Mr . and Mrs.
Leonard Bass, locaL

Saturday Night

Wrth AHeavy Sponge Pad

•

, ::!:l.~"m'

Our

Remember, Carpet is Our Business,
ONLY Business. Not A Sl DELINE
All Installations Guaranteed To Your Satisfaction

WELCOME! R-EGATTA VISIYORSI. COME,
. MEET
. YOUR FRIENDS!

The New MEIGS INN.PHONE 992-3629

..,

Two other components were
added : one for recruiting more

emergency room medica l
personnel into th e are.a,
p1·oviding a round·lhe·cloc k
coverage at several hospitals,
and trainee and evalua tion

p!'Ograms. The latter are to be
-conducted by the College of
Medicine,
Ohio
State
University .
Pubhc officials and health
planners from throughout tl1e
nation will be visiting the area
over the period of the contract
- if approved - to study
methods in operation in the
seven coun ties. Similar ly,
evaluators will be moved in to
the area to conduct an on-going
study as to the effectiveness of
lhe program for judgment as to
what methods might be trans·
planted elsewhere in rural
America.

POME~C)Y, o.

•

operative .

Should
the
national
des1gnal10n not be awarded,
the Foundation 's or iginal
program will still be im·
plemented with local county
funds , ARC, Highway Safety
Act, and Vocational Education
Act monies, although on a
reduced scale.

HOME RANSACKED'
CINCINNATI ( UPI )
~ree burglars, dressed In
SUits and wearing white gloves
lied up the butler and ran:
sacked the home Wednesday of
James R. Carruthers, mayor of
suburban Glendale
and
president of Steans
Foater
Co. mattress manufacturers .

and

prehensive program to serve
as a national pilot over a 3·year
period ins tigated a con·
struction phase to upgrade and
modernize several hospitals'
emergency rooms and con·
struct ambulance stations at
ce rta in locations in the area.

LEAVES TODAY
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker
of Syracuse left today for New
Orleans, La. for a visit with
their son and daughter·in·law ,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard K.
Parker and family.

4

W!HAVE

NEVER
OFFeRED THIS SET

AT THIS
PRICE.
WAS 369.95
Save 70.00

2-HOUR
CLEANING

proposa l for a more com-

'

.....
et-

..;""••••••••••••••••
.

ludttt Tlfm$
Avotllblo

'

--------------·-----·~

.

(15

I

June 17 and 18 To Buy, Sell or Trade Old Coins.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

992-7590'
~
i
•.
.
.

5...

"

(Continued from Page 1)
on May II that the coonpetihon
had been reduced to 10 ap·
plicanL• and a panel of 12
r~ viewers frum throughout the
nation would..meet with loca l
representatives for a day-long
interrogation on May 19. Ap·
proximately 50 persons f1·om
the counties of Athens, Gallia,
H oc king ~ Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs. and Vinton and
members of the Foundation's
Board of Trustees and sta ff
were interviewed a t Ohio
Un iversity in Athens.
The local negotiating learn
making the Wash ington trip
next week will he headed by
Mr. Farrington and consisting
of staff members Dan J. Lloyd,
Director
of
Program
Developmen t and author of the
concept ; . Einon Plummer '
Fiscal O!ficer; Dr. Thomas W.
Morgan, Chief of Surgery,
Holzer Hospital and Chairman
of the Area's Emergency
Med ica l Services Advi sory
Counctl; Dr. Marlin Keller
Head of the Division of Com:
munity Hea lth , College of
Medicine ,
Ohio
Stal e
Un iversi ty ; Joseph B. Vanity,
Legal Counsel to the Faun·
dation, and Roy Rankin s,
College of Engineering, Ohio

IN LAS VEGAS
Sr. Master Sgt. and Mrs. M.
person s, have been graduated S. Walker have moved to the ·
fn1m cvurses at South Point, . Nellis Air Force Base at Las
Lawrence
County , and Vegas, Nevada. F&lt;&gt;r the past
McArthur , Vinton County .
year, while Sgt. Walker serted
Approximately 90 pet. of the in Korea, Mrs. Walker lived in
present provid ers of the area lhe Willis Anthony apa•tment
ambuJance services have in· in Middleport. Mrs. Walker is
dicated in a State Dept. of lhe daughter of Mrs. Maude
Health Survey that they will be Scott, Middleport, and the
discontinuing services shortly ; sister of Mrs. James Simpson,
however, most have told the Middleport. Sgt. Walker is the
Foundation they will attempt son of Steril Walker, Mason , W.
to remain in business until the Va .
Re gional
Program
is
tr ainees, tota ling ove r 30

The total ·local share -over
three years was increased to
$1,204,461 and the federal's
share lu $5,8'J3, 124 for a grand
Iota! of $7.097,585.
If negotiations ar e successful , and the area awarded
the designation, it is an·
ticipated equipmen t bids will
be advertised immediately and
'
others placed during August.
Under the planned time
University
and
Com- schedul e, de livery of am·
mwlications Con::;ultant.
bulances should beg in to occur
Farrington explained that in October with the complete
the Foundation's origina l commun ications network
development of an EMS constructed by January 1973.
program res ulted in an
Although the system may not
agreeme nt wi th the seven be wholly opera tive un til
Board s of County Co m. January, ambulance services
miss ioners, mayo r s~ city can begin up'on delivery of
managers, and hospital ad· vehicles. Over 300 prospective
ministrators, and Board of ambulance atte ndan l' trainees
Trustees to submit project have indicated interest in
applications totaling $1,323,569 enrolling in the 60-hour in·
to va rious state and federal struction courses to be set up
agencies. These included the throughout the area by the
Appalachian Regiona l Com· Ohio Division of Vocational
mission, U. S. Dep t. of Trans· Education. Included are both
portation, the U. S. Office of fulltime salaried attendants
Education, and State Dept. of and volunteers .
Health, and the Ohio Division
An instructor's school has
of Voca tional Education. In· been planned in Wellston by the
eluded in the figure were
$180,664 matching funds from
local COWlty governmen ts an d
hospitals.
Requirements of HSMHA

·'

on 1i des.

Branch

They have declared U.S.
prisoners will not he released
w1til war's end.
The U.S. has offered aid to
both north and south to repair
war damage but has been firm
in itssupportofTheiu and in its
refusal to withdraw totally
until U.S. prisoners are re·
leased. U.S . prisoners of war or
missing in action total more
than 1,600.
The U.S. increasingly has
placed its emphasis on the war
prisoner issue, suggesting to
some that it hopes to enlarge
the scope of the peace ta lks,
possibly into another Geneva
type conference.

Three Peace Proposals
On the Paris peace table are
three peace proposals-a
seven·point proposal submitted
by the VietCong on last July I,
a n eight-point proposal
suggested by the United States
in secret talks between

TREASURE CHEST COINS

polystyrene ~nd metal with

presidential adviser Henry A. ·
Kissinger and senior North
Vietnamese diplomats last
October and a nille·pOint North
Vietnamese plan submitted on
June 26, 1971, just five days
before the plan put!orward by
th e Viet Cong .
~
Some changes and ciUfifica·
tions have been made since but
without any change in basic
positions. The Communists
· continue to demand that the
•United States withdraw its
support from South Viet·
namese President Nguyen Van
Thieu and unconditional with·
drawal of American forces at a
precise date .

years."

Model GP24HW. Beautifully

@

••••••••••••••••
.

spiders, mosquitoes, grubs,

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.

Aptitude Test and that ap.
plicants have an Interview with
an admissions officer and visit
the campus.
The recommended interview
would be of speclai importance
to students who feel they would
benefit from the program but
who do not meet the grade and
SAT score guidelineS.
Ohio University Admissions
Director Jerry Reese stresses
that the early entrance
program is not restricted only
to students with exceedingly
high academic achievement. It
is aimed also at students with
special talent and interest in
such areas as art, theater,
dance or music, or where a
greater variety of courses
would benefit the student.

C£ssette
from

By PHIL NEWSOM
UP! Foreign News Analyst
The return to Paris of chief
negotiators for the United
States, North Vietnam and the
VietCong suggests that despite
lots of tough talk both sides
expect to resume peace talks

You Can ~Completely Carpet 3 Rooms
Wall to Wall With _Dupont "501" Nylon

Call 992-2505, toll-free

out In

ATHENS - An early .ad·
missions program to he in·
stituted at Ohio University next
fail will allow selected high
school juniors to bypass their
senior year in high school and
immediately begin university
work.
The program is being
initiated to permit students of
demon strated scholastic ~
ability and achievement, or
those with special talents, to
move on to the university level
where a greater selection· of
courses is offered and where
the student may benefit and
contribute to a greater degree
than if he remained in high
school another year ..
., Those qualifying for the
program at the end of their
junior year must have com·
pleted, or lack only one or two
courses to complete, the
college preparatory program.
Admittance to the early
admissions program will be
based on two requirements and
with consideration of two
recommendations.
Requi'remen ts for early
admission are that the student
must have the recommendation of his high school
principal or guidance counselor and that the high school
be willing to grant the student a
diploma upon successful
completion of his freshman
year at Ohio University .
Recommendations, made by
the university's admissions
committee, are that applic811ts
have a B average in high school
and a combination score of at
least 1,000 on the Scholastic

·EMS Negotiation

More Peace· Talk Near:

Some Juniors may
Skip Senior Year-

Div ision. Tw o cl asses of

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON;S
CLEANERS
2(0 2nd
Pomeroy
E.

Phone 992·5428

SALE
Tho PEALE • C3722W1
Grained Kashmir Walnut color
• Handcrafted Chassis • Chromacolor
P1cture Tube • Glare-Ban PictUre Face

29995

HURRYI UMmD QUANTITIES! STOP IN

INGELS FURNITURE
9~2-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
MIDDLEPORT

~Ail
1

toG It Must Not Fail!!

''

''

TUESDAy I JUNE 20, 1972

'

•'

''

FOR .

(MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT) •

SCHOOL LEV¥
Let's Keep Our Schools Open For Area Wide Pro&amp;less
Paid Political Advertisement By The Meigs Local Citizens Committee

l
1

'I

,.

•

i

I

•••'

�13rid:i' Sh7;;;~~'Given Ann Holter
Mtss. Ann Holter, brtde~l ect
of Rtchard T. Fox of Mason,
Ohto, was honored at a bridal
shower Wednesday night at the
Trimty Church Hostesses
were Mrs. Homer Holler, Mrs
Ben Ne utzhn g, Mtss Sybtl
Ebersbach, Mrs Louts Rctbel,
Miss Erma Smtih , Mrs
Clarence Headley, Mrs. Ons
Gin ther, Mrs Arvilla Frecker,
Mrs Dale Smtth, and Mrs
Eulah Swan
Decorations earned out a
yellow and whtle color scheme
wtth a fal se cetlin g of
streamers and weddm g ~l is
bem g used Rtbbon sandwiChes
in yellow and whtte were
served w1th assorted cook1es,
nuts, coffee and punch.
Mtss Ebersbach registered
the guests and prestdmg at the
punch bowl were Mrs Frecker
and Mrs Holter wt!h Mrs
Ginther at the coffee servtce
Miss Lenora Mtchael, Mtss
Pollyanna Thompson, and Mrs
Richard Garfteld along with
Mrs Albert Fox of Mason,

Ohio, mother of the prospective
bndegroom asstsltng _m unwrappmg the gtlts
Both Mr. and Mrs Albert
Fo•, thett son, Richat·d, and an
aw1t, Mrs Wtlma Fox of
Mason 1 Oh10, were preser1t fo1
the shower Prtzes were won by
Mrs Garfteld, Mrs Evelyn
Spencer,
Mrs
Pauline
Thompson , Mrs
Donna
Waugh, Carol Baker, Mrs
Fred
Thompson,
Mtss
Pollyann a Thompson , Mrs
Huber Ful ton, Mrs Donald
Mora, Mrs Karl Krautter,
Mrs. Rubert Thompson and
Mrs J K Thom pson
The guest ltst meludcd Mtss
Loutse Michael, Mtss Lenora
Mtchael, Mrs Vtckt Woods,
Mrs Rtchard Garltcld, Mrs
Pat Ptckens, Mrs Wil ham
Buckley, Mrs Wyatt Chadwell,
Mrs Ear l Ingels, Mrs Donald
M01 a and daughters, Mrs
Pe,H I Mora, Mrs Char les
Gnfftth and Karen, M1 s Hem·)
Bahr and daughter, Mrs Paul
Stmoll , Mrs. Carl Krautter,

Mrs Robert Elberfeld ani!
daug ht et , Mrs
Ma rt bel
Frecker,
Mrs
J ohn
M&lt; Laughhn, Mrs Roger
Starcher and daughter

Mrs. 'Raymond Frecker, Mrs.
Edgar Abbott and da ughter ,
Mr ard Mrs Robert Thompson, Mtss Gladys Freden ck,
Mrs Rtchard Rawlings, Mrs
Robert Hoefli ch and daughter ,
Mrs Wtlham Radfo rd and
daughte rs, Mrs Cons tance
Shtelds, Mrs Edtson Hollon
and daughter, Mrs Mae
Holler , Mts John Ba ker, Mrs
Alber! Fox
Mrs C E Blakeslee, Mrs
John Jeffers and daughter,
Mrs Evelyn Spencer, Mrs
Paul Orr, Mrs Wtlham
Parker, Mrs Ina Massar, Mrs
Ne va Seyfn ed, Mrs J ohn
Terrell, Mrs Donald '11wmas,
Mrs John W Blaettnar, Mrs
Rtchard Rose nbaum, Mrs
Wtlham Kennedy, Mrs . Edward Kennedy, Mrs Marvm
Bur l and daug hter , Mrs
J oseph Stsso n, Mrs Joe
Struble, Mrs Ray Rtggs, Mrs
Stella Kloes, Mrs Clarence
Massa r ,
Mrs
E th el
Wllhamson, Mrs Clara Karr ,
Mrs Gladys Cucklct, Mrs
Elza Gtl mor e, Jr , Mr s
Everett Datley, Mrs Henry
Rctbel, Mrs Edtlh Lanmng
Mrs Dtane Hawley, Mrs
Fred Blaettnar, Mtss Maud"
Gr ueser, Mtss Freda Grueser ,
M rs~ Robert Arn old , Mrs
Kenneth Ham s, Mt s Roy
Smtth, Mrs George R Yollllg,
Mrs Donald Lannmg 1 Mrs
Luctlle Jesse, Mrs Luctlle
Mtss
Th elma
Le tfh etl ,
Grueser, Mrs. Thomas Young,
Mrs Leonard Jewell, Mrs
James Fugate, Mrs W H
Perrtn, M1 s ,Phtl Memhart,
Mrs Fred Dessauer, Mrs
Dona ld Mayer, Mrs Roy
Maye r , Mrs . J ames Cla l·
worthy, Mrs Htlda Schmoll ,
Mrs Robert Schmoll , Mrs
ArlhUI Skm ne1, Mrs Phtl
Globokar,
Mrs
Albert
Woodard, Mrs Man e Houck,
Mt s Don na Can , Mrs Beulah
Ewmg, Mrs Bem me E"mg,
Mrs Edtlh Kautz, Mrs Ltlhe
Hauck,
Mts.
Kenn eth
McLa ughlin, Mrs Rober t
Buck, MISs Elizabe th Ftck,
Mtss Evelyn Ft&lt;k
Mt s W A Gtbbs, Mrs
Freda Mtlch, Mts Wtll ard

Mrs. Norman Rose, Mrs
Horace Ka rr and daughters,
Mrs Roger Keller , Mrs Paul
Baer and daughter, Mrs Paul
Nease, Mrs Ivan Walker and
da ughter, Mrs Carl Kaulz and
Joy, Mt s Dale Kautz and
da ughter, Mrs Larry Htll,
Mt s Phtl Radford and
da ughter, Mrs Joe Whtpple,
Mrs
Re td Youn g and
da ughters, Mrs Fred Crow,
Mrs
J ack Ca r sey and
daughters, Mrs Huber Fulton,
Mrs Fred Thompso n a nd
daughter, Mrs Joe Thompson,
Mrs Emmett Thompson and
daughter , Mrs Joseph L
Thompson and daughters
Mt s. Robct t Waugh, Mrs
Jerry Baer, Mrs. yern on
Weber, Mtss Donn a Weber,
Mrs Harold Blackston and
daughtet , Mrs Wayne Roush,
Mt s Earl Dean and daughtet,

Mary Long Honored
Mrs Charles Bradbury and
Mtss Mar y Bradbury en·
terlatned Wednesday mghl
with a shower hononng Mtss
Mj.ry Lon g, bnd e-elect of
J'lichael O'Bnen.
An orchid and whtle color
scheme was carrted out m the
decoratiOnS The g1ft table
featured orchid net over whtle
caught up on the stdes wtlh
whale satin roses and accented
with orchtd satm bows. Whtte
weddtng bells suspended from
the chandelier and pink rose
arrangements completed the
setting.
Games were conducted by
Mtss Bradbury and Miss Sandy
Johnson wtlh pmes gomg to
Mrs James B O'Brten, Mrs
Rtchard Long, Mtss Sandra
Smtth , Mrs. Jane•Gahm , Mt s
Robert Tewksbary, and MISS
Peggy McKmney
A fepture of the shower was

" Mary's cupboard

where

11

guests placed small utensils
and household products and

accessones.
An arrangement of orchid
and whale mums flanked by
orchtd tapers centered the
refreshment table
Mr s
O'Bnen was at the coffee
servtce,and Mrs Harold Long,
moth er of the brtde-e lect,
presided at the punch bowl
Attendm g bestdes th ose
named were Mtss Peggy
O' Brt en, Mrs Pam McClanahan, Mrs Roger Long,
Mrs Paul Scott, ~" Alfred

FLOWERS
£or All Occasions

--·
---"----- __
We w1re flowers
Everywhere

_........

. '992-2039

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Butternut Ave , Pom eroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meier

Roush, Mrs James J ohnson,
M1s Curtas Jenkmson, Mt s
Judsou Wlute, Mrs C P
Bradbury, Mrs 0 P Kletn,
M1s Herman Kmcatd, Mtss
Caro l Bac hte l, Mrs Ruth
Gosney Mrs Dame! Thumpson, Mtss Nancy Thotnpson,
Mrs. Do na ld Mtlls, Mtss
Cyn thta Mtlls, and Mtss Teresa
Casc1
Others presentm g gt fl.s to
Mtss Long were Mrs. Russell

B10wn, Mrs Asa Bradbury,
Mtss Candace Bahr, Mtss
Shetla Chtlds, Mrs Jo Ann
Whtle Mrs Lcwts Tn plett,
Mrs Wtlha m Sla ter , Mr s
Harmon O'Bn en, and Mrs Joy
Ktmble

Fa vors

were

0

m1 ma lure

gm tel s whtch served as n ngs

fnr
nap ktn s
tn 5crtb ed
• Hononng Mary Long ·• Mrs
c p Bradbu ry wo n the door

pr1ze

Homemade Hats

rsoc·
i
arl
cI d
~

:::

1
jj

Council 323 Officers are Elected

&amp;

aen ar

··J
1!•
:&gt;.

FRIDAy
THIR D FRIDAy CLUB
Fnday at 1·30 p m home of
Carrte Memhart Locust St
Pumer~y
'
'
ICE CREAM Soctal Fnday
followmg parade at Pomeroy
Fnst Baptist Chuteh and all
day Saturday begmmng at 9
am

REGATTA tee cream soctal,
Frtday , Saturday, beglrming II
a.m. St Paul Lutheran Church
fellowship hall Sandwiches,
salad, cake, pte also Ice cream
by quart can be reserved by
callmg 992-2010 or 992-2688.
SHADE Rtver Lodge 453
F&amp;AM spectal meetmg
Saturday, 8 p m. Work wtll be
performed m Master Mason
Degree All Master Masons are
mvtted.
MONDAY
CANDYSTRIPERS, Veterans Memorial Hospttal, 7
p m Monday tn the hosptlal
cafetena

Of!lcet s lor the 1972-73 year
wet·e elected and ms\alled at
the recent mcetang of the Past
Collllctlors of Chester Council
323, Daughters of Antenca, at
the horne of Mrs Betty Roush
Elected were Mrs Esther
R1denour, president, Mrs. Ada
MolrJS, v1&lt;:e pres1dent 1 Mrs
Barbara Sar~ent, secretary,
Mrs. E1rna Cleland, It casurer,
Mrs Opal Hollon, reporter,
Mrs Dorothy Myers, flowers,
and Mrs Mary Hayes, se ntmel
Plans wet e made lor a VISit
to the Fenton Glass Co m July
Wtlh a dtnner at the LeMarr
Restaurant 1n Parkersburg. A
than k you card wa s read hom
the Cleland famt ly for flowers
and food at U1e death of the
eldet Mr Cleland Mrs Mat y

BIRTH DAY OBSERVED
BRADBURY - The btrlhday
of Wt lltam Fred Smtlh, Sr of
Brudb uty was observed
1ecently when Mrs Lee
Baughman served cake 1 1ce
ct eam and coffee to Mr and
Mrs Wtlltam Fred Smtih, Sr ,
Mrs Eugene Smtih and
chtldren, Ttm, Joho Mark and
Cmdy of Syracuse, Mrs Robert
tft
Duckworth and Bobby, Mr and
Mt and Mrs Harry James Mrs Lee Baughman and
Roush of New Haven, W Va J effrey , Mtddl epotl Mrs
entertamed Wednesday w1th a Baughman, Mt s Eugene
party m obset vance of the ftrsl Smt ih, and MIS Duckworth
bn thd ay anmversary of thetr ate daughlets of the Wtlham
daughter, Kn stm Leigh.
F't ed Sm1 ths, Sr
1J1. Raggedy Ann theme was
earned out m tho decora llons
SOC IAL PLANNED
Allendmg we re Mr and Mrs
RACINE - The Rae me Fn e
Wtlham Roush, New Haven,
Department
's Auxthat y IS
Mr and Mrs James Sunpson,
planmng an tee cream sot.: lal as
Mtddlcpor l , Mr and Mrs Joey
Roush and famtly of New a pa t t of the commumly July
Haven , Mr and Mrs He1 bert 4th celebratiOn Donations 01
Ro us h
a nd da ughte!S, tngredtents would be apHurncane, W Va , Mr and prec iated Those who would
Mrs Ga r y Free man and hke to contnbute are asked to
call 949·3421, 949-3471 01 949famtly, Pometoy , and Mt s
Albert Roush and famtly of 3293
New Haven
Sendmg gtfl.s were her great grandmothet s, Mrs L D Scott
and Mrs Marrne Hartenbach,
~nd Mr and Mrs Charles
Gaskt\1 and fa mtly, and Mt s

Spencer, Mrs. Zona Biggs,
Hayes thanked the Counctl for
Mrs Mary Showall'er ,- Mrs
kmdnesses extended to her
Gold
Fredert ck, and Mrs
durtng her recent hosEhzabeth Wickham, a vtsltor.
ptlallzatwn
Games wet e played under
' the dtrectwn of Mrs Mary
Hayes and Mrs Myers Mrs
Mabel Van Meter won the door
pnzes Mrs Jean Swnmerfteld
p1 estded at the meehng
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Roush and Mrs
00
00
Pauhne Rtdenour to those
named and Mrs Inzy Newell ,
Mrs Ethel Orr, Mrs Erma.
Cleland, Mrs Ada Neutzhng,
Mrs Battle Fretlenck, Mrs
Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. Mae

canvas
Tote Bags

$4

to

$7

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

SUNDAY-JUNE 18

Forgotten His Gift?

B' hL Ob'Served
udJ

A few last minute hints !

v Belts

v Hats v Dress Shirts
v Sport Shirts
v Slacks
v Socks
v Jackets
v Ties v Cuff links .; Sport Clothes
Wtth An Excellent Selectton of
Famous Name Brands

BAHR CLOTHIERS
. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Clines Visited

VISIT IN RUTLAND
RUTLAND - Mr and Mrs
G E Kmgh l of Massillon wet c
receul vtsttors at the home of
Mr an d Mt s C W Slansbw y
and Vona McKmght and W W
Stansbut y and wtfe from
Tucson, Am spe nt two weeks
at the same home 1ecently
Also, Mrs G E Kn1gh l,
daughter Kathy , of Ma sst llon,
and Peggy Hopkms and hct
son, Scotty, of Hamilton we1e
overmght guests 1ccently

Gtve the watch with
tuntng fo rk accuracy

SYRACUSE - Mr and Mrs
Leonard Bass, Cherrte and
Dav td , spent Sunday, June 4, at
\he home of her stster and
bt other-m-law, Mr. and Mrs.
James Chnc and famtly of
Beverly They attended the

Accutron®by Bulova
The most welcome g11l of all is an
Acculron by Bulova So prec1se IS
the Accutron tun1ng fork

g1 aduat10n exerctses of James

(J mtmy) Chne
Othe1s vtstltng the Chne
home durmg U1e afternoon and
cvemng were Mr and Mrs
La try Brown, Delaware, Mr
and Mrs Rudy Stewart, Mt
Vernon; Mr and Mrs Charles
Chne, Charlie and Slev te of
Moundsville, W Va ; Mr and
Mts. Ca rl Wtcks, Bren da,
Calla and Jana, Lancaster;
Mt and Mrs Robert Few and
Kathy, Rev and Mrs Herman
Stewart, Charlene and Brtan,
Waterford; Mr and Mrs.
Rtchard Chne, New Lexmg ton,
Mr and Mrs Dave Chn e and
Sue a nd Darla Clme, of
Beverly
J tmmy graduated wtlh ht gh

honors

a nd

rece1ved

movement that accuracy 15

~~~~

· _.

DAH AND DAY
\ 4K Sal1d Gol d
S250

guaranteed to
w1thm a mmute
a mon th '
See our fu ll
selec t1on of
AccutJOn
models now
From$ 110

a

JUNE 18th- D-DAYI

DAD'S DAY - SPECIAL
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY • JUNE 17-18
DeliciOUS

FRENCH
FRIES
RedAn..
....
ANIMAL ;m-r ,...
0

SUGAR
RUN
MILLS
"Serv1ce For Over 100 Years"
992·2115

Pomeroy

• EKtre Powerful Sut tlon •
840 W1t l Motor
• Use As Blower

.

Ah~

For lhe ilneSIIn floor cate, lh1s Hoover can' l be beal. Gets

t

dul olher cleanets can'l because of 1l's exclusiVe tnple
acl1on cleanmg.

• Handv Toot Stongj Aack

Elsy to Empty Oust Beg

sate

• ComJM••• Wtth
Tools end Extra ..,.
Long Cord

menls. LARGE THROW·AWAY BAG holds more dtrt .. .
needs chang1ng less often. 4-POSITION RUG ADJUSTMENT
... mdoor·outdoor lloor covertngs lo deep shag rugs.
VINYL OUT ER JACK ET never a dusty odor. W1pes clean
wt th a damp clot h.

PROGRAM

All Are
Available At

• Complete • Portlblt • 11W'
lono x. 5" wtdt x 10%" hllfa

'TWOSPEED MOTOR g1ves 50% more sucllon lor aliach·

scholarslnp in Sctence. He wtll
be attendmg Moun! Vernon
Nazarene College thts fall

q

New Hoover
Swlngette
Cleaner
• 3-Wtv Fthttld
System

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
STOP IN AND SEt: US REGATTA. WEEKEND'
FOURTH AND LOCUST STS. ,,2.s24a
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Model1031

Reg. '74.95

'58

Self·propelled \
C\aans wtth un·
balievabla ease
on all typos of
carpet.

HOOVER BAGS 3 pkgs. $2.00

lEE THE lEW WIYTI

..........

··__
......,__
·--___
--·_... _
"' 2A 11$.01 a...

,.

SPII-

IIIYING
WAHR

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

POMEROY
. ST PAUL LUTHERAN, POMEROY TRINITY
Rev Ar th ur C Lund, pastor
Rev W H Pemn, pastor Roy Sunda y Sc hool. '9 15 a m ,
Mayer, Supt Church schooot, Charl es Eva ns, Supt , wor ship
9 15 a m , worship, 10 24 a m ; serv 1ce,
10 30 a m
Con
youth cho1 r rehearsal MOnday, f1 rma Hon class, Tuesd ay, 4 15
6 30 p m , Mrs Marv 111 Burt, to 5· JO p m , J unior Con
director ,
senio r
cho 1r hrmat10n class, Thursday, 6 30
rehearsal, 7 30 p m , Thursday, lo 7 45 pm
Mrs Paul Nease, .~ !rec t o r
SEVEN DAY ADVENTIST
POMEROY CnURCH OF Mulberr y
He1ghls.
THE NAZARENE - Corner Pomer oy Herbert Morgan ,
Union a nd Mulberry Rev past or
Sa bb a th sc ho ol,
Clyde V Hender son, pastor. Saturday, 2 p m w1th church
Sunday School 9 30 a.m , serv1ce fol lowmg at 3 15 p m
Raymond ""a\burn. supt Open B1ble d1scuss1on each
Morning worshtp 10 JO a m Thursday, 7 30 p m
Evenmg serv ice 7 30 p m Mid
GRAHAM
UNITED
~';;;k service, Wednesday, 7 30 METHODIST _ Preachmg 9 30
GRACE EPISCOPAL _ a m , f ~rs t and second Sunda ys
Rev leroy Davis, mlnistet of each month, lh 1rd and four th
Morn1ng prayer and sermon, Sundays eacti month, worship
10 30 a m Holy cofTjmun\on and service at 7 30 p m Wednesday
serm on, fir st Sunda ys, 10 30 evemngs at 7 30 Prayer and
a m Chur ch sc hool, kin Bi ble Sludy
dergarten th rough eighth FIRST SOUTHERN BAP
grade tO 30 am
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave .
POMEROY CHURCH OF Pomeroy, afflllaledw ,thSB C,
CHRIST _ Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr , the Rev Fred Hill. pastor
paslor . Bible School. 9 30 am , Sund ay Sc hool , 9 30 a m
worship, 10 30 , adult worship mornmg worship, 10 JO am ,
ser vice and young peo pl es JUniOr soc1ety , 6 30 a m NYP S,
meeting , both 7 30 p m Sunday 6 45 p m Sunday eva n~ e l 1sh c
Wednesday , co mbmed Bible meet mg 7 30 p m
raye r
study and prayer meeting 7 3o meet 1ng Wedne sday , 7 30 p m.
pm
'
MIDDLEPORT
THE SALVATION ARMY _
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Envoy Ray s w1mng. off icer In Co rner Fo urth and Ma m,
charg e Su nda y 10 a m , M1ddlepor t Rev Henry L Ke y,
Holiness meetmg 10 30 am , Jr , pastor Sunda y Schoo l 9 30
Sunda y School Yo ung People's am, Arnold Rt chards, supt
mg worshi p 10 30 a m
LeglOn , 7 p m , Th ursday, 1 to 3 Morn
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES p m , Lad1es Home Leag ue 7
p m , Prep classes
Larr y Car naha n prestd 1ng
SACRED HEART _ Rev m1n1Sier Sunday, B1ble lec ture,
fa ther Bernard Kra 1covlc, 9 30 a m , Watchtower study,
pasto r
Ph one
992· 28 25 10 30 a m , Tu esd';J; , B1b\ e
Salurday evenmg Mass. 7 30 st udy 7 30 p m
hursday ,
p m Sunday Mass 8 and 10 mtn ls lr y sc hoo l 7 30 p m ,
se rv1 ce meeting 8 30 p.m
a m Con fess Ions, Sa Iur day, 7
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
7 :Wpm
.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Chml m Chmltan Unmn - Robert Kuhn, pa stor , Will iam La wrence Mant ey, pastor , Mrs
Wa tson, Sunday school supt Russell Youn g, Sunda y School
Sunday sc hool, 9 30 am, BYF, Sup I Sunday Sc hool 9 30 am,
6 p m , Bible sludy, Wed Evenmg worshi p 7 30 Wed
nesda y, 7 p m , choir prac ll ce, nesday prayer meehng. 7 30
Wednes day, 8 :W p m
Pm

Carpenter
News~

Homemade ha ts wet e 1oadstde park
modeled and Mrs Charle;
The ha ls made by th e
Hoffman won the prtze fm the membct s wet e sold dunn g the
most aUt act1ve one dt a soctal hour Mrs. Stanle) Bass
meelmg of the Golden Rule conducted ga mes w1tl1 pnzes
Class of the Pomeroy Church of gmng to Mrs Elwood Bowers,
Chn st Tuesday mgh l
Mrs Cat·der, Mrs Raymond
Lm en a R1ce
Mrs Hoffman was hostess Batty, Mrs Don McKmght, and
for the mee tmg held 111 the Ltsa J o Hendncks Mr s
church soc tal 1oom Devolwns Denver Kapple won the door Hmes , M1s Ca1 ne Memharl,
VISIT EN DED
on love were gtven by MIS p!tze
Mrs No rma Goodwm , Mrs
Lynn Reynolds has retu1 ned
Do11s Ca t der who . used
Refreshmenl.s were se rved Harvey Wh tlla tch, Mrs home after spcnd mg the past
scnplw e 1st Cor 13 Prayer by the hostess to those named Wtlham Matlack, Mt s. Ches tet week wtlh her grandparents,
was g1ven by Mrs I oms and Mt s Charles Eske1&lt; and Kntght, Mrs Ruby Erb, Mrs Mt and Mrs L E. Reynolds,
Osbot ne who prestdcd at the Mrs Eva Dessa uer and her Ma bel Wolfe, Mr s Ha rley Mtddleport Her parents, Mr.
busmess meetmg
granddaught er, Ltsa J o Hendncks, and Mrs Char les and Mrs Val Reynolds, came
Membct·s signed a 1ound- Hendrtcks, who wet e gues ts Strauss
for her over the ~ee kend
robtn cat d for Roxanne MeDame!, daughter or Mr an&lt;!
Mt s Btll Me Da me! The anFa the r' s Day. Sun . • June 18
nual pt&lt;ntc was planned lot
July at \he ne1&lt; Route 33

Red
Rose
CAT FEEDING

180 Mulberry

7- 'l1le DIIUy Sentinel, Mlddleeort-Pomeroy, 0., June I6,1972

Harrisonville
Society News

Event

Many relahves and friends
attended graduation exerctses
at Albany Elementary School
for studenl.s completmg the
eighth grade Those fr om the
commumly mcluded Cec tla
Shlltz, Dale Rowley, James
Re ed, Rt cky Ba tley Pam
Holcomb, Manlyn Penn , Jeff
Jon es, Brtan Woodgerd ,
Darrell Slone, Steven Gtllogly ,
Ka th y Massey a nd Cmdy
Batley.
Mr and Mrs
Ar thur
Crabtree ente rtamed on
Sunday wi th a famtl y
gathermg honormg thetr son,
Carl, on hts btrthday Those
pr ese nt were Mrs Goldte
Gtllog ly, and Mr and Mrs. Carl
Crabtree, Russell and Kevm
Aftern oon callers were Mrs
Mane Seel, Albany , and Mrs
Phtlhp Kasler, Ben, Brad and
Ann, Amesville ; Mr and Mrs
Ceetl Gtllogly and famtly and
Mr and Mrs. Reed Jeffers,
loca l Mr Crabtree was
released fr om O' Bieness
Memonal Hosptlal on Wednesday and 1s convalescmg
I sallsfa ctonly at hts home
followmg an acctdent In whtch
hts rtght hand was seriOusly
mjured.
Gueslll of Paul and Wtlham
C Peck were Mr. and Mrs.
Emzie Davis, Parkersburg, W
Va ., Mrs Vtrgmla Townsend
and Suste , Columbus, and Mr
and Mrs Cecil Blackwood and
Lisa Dye, Carrabelle, Florida
Mr and Mrs. Fred Keirns,
Millfield ; VISited wtlh Mrs
son-tn-law
a nd
Keirns '
daughter, Mr and Mrs. Carrol
Woodgerd and famtly and
helped
Mrs
Woodgerd
celebrate her birthday
Mrs Owen Arnson and
daughter, Mtamt Lakes,
Florida, were recent guests of
her parenlll, Mr and Mrs
Wtlliam Thomas
Mr. and Mrs
Glen
Gassaway, Powell, spent some
time here wtth thetr son-m-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs
Wtlham Miller and famtly
Guests of Murl Galaway
Included Mr. and Mrs. D V
60mmmgs, Athens, Mrs.'
Marie Dailey and Wtlbur,
Albony, and Cathy WoodrUIIJ
and Brenda Doddrtll, McAr~ thur

Wolfpen
•

News, Notes
Mrs. Gene Thompson, Gma
and Cyndta, were Sunday
e visitors of Mr. and Mrs. H. E.
Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wiseman of Mansfield were
recent vlsl!Drs of Mr and Mrs.
Gene Thompaon and family.
Miss Jo Smith was a Suilday
viallor of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lambert and family.
Mr, and Mrs. Tom Swnmerfield and fanuly of Illinois
were weekend viallorl of Mr.
and. Mn. Robert RUIIIM!ll and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard RUSBell
and other relatives.
Mill Jo Smith spent MOnday
with Mr. and Mn. John Adams
and family of Buffalo, W. Va.

Mrs John Stout and Mrs
Sadt e Carr vtst ted Mmme
' McG rath Mond ay eve mn g
Mrs Stout reporl.s her grandson, Bobby Stout, w11l be
marrt ed thts month
Mr and Mrs C F Gtlkey of
Albany, 0 and Mike Epple,
loca l, vtstled Ava Gtlkey
Monday evemng
Mrs Ea rl Fotl 's granddaughter , Vtcki , of Columbu s,
0 IS here to spend her summer

'rtcatwn.
Mr and Mrs Smtley and
thetr 13 year old son have
bought and occupy the former
Clifford Cuckler residence on
the htll This ts one of the mcest
loca llons m the vtllage
Mrs ·Mary Wrtght 1s m a
Co lu mbus,
0.
hosptlal
fo llowtng maJor surgery
The Cectl Hanmg family
have moved m the Charles
Butcher house bel let known as
the Ktt Slee th house
Mt and Mrs Donald Weaver
VISited th e Junt or Paynes
recently
Mr. and Mrs Robert Alktre
made a busmess lrtp to Athens
and vtstled thetr son, Ray, at
The Plams
Mr. Wtllard Faudree 1s aga m
able to walk to the post office
alter hts recent Illness
Mr and Mrs. Raymond
Chapman of Maryland are
vtstting Mrs Mary Dtehl and
Stella Atkms and Ruby Dtehl
Mr and Mrs Rex Artx are
redeeoratmg the Whttlmgton
farm horne here
Mrs Bessie Graham has
purchased a new rtdmg lawn

mower.

..

Mr and Mrs H D. Gtlkey
and son, Joey, wtll spend thetr
vacalton lhts month VISiting
thetr daughter, Jackie Davtes
and husband 111 Oklahoma
Rodney Gtlkey gradua ted
from Ohio Umversity on June
10 and wtll be employed by the
Mason Dtxon Transfer Co m
the o!ftce department at
Columbus, 0

Alfred

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
June II was 45. The offenng
was $18 30. Worship servaces
were held all!, wath Charles D
Woode, lay-leader
The Alfred Umted Methodist
Women will meet on Tuesday
evening, June 20, at 8 o'clock,
at the home of Eleanor Boyles
at Tuppers Platns, with
Florence Spencer, program
leader
Several local people attended
Ute Lowell Zeigler sale, near
Albany, 0, on Saturday, June

10
Mrs. Thelma (Clarence )
Henderson IS attendmg the
Umted Methodist Conference
at Lakeside, 0 thts week as the
lay-delegate from the Northeast Cluster of Ute Metgs
County CoOperative Panah
Mrs. Ella Yost of Sugar
Grove, 0 . 1s spending some
time with Genevieve Guthrie.
Clair Woode and Connl Sue of
Circleville, 0 ., spent Saturday
aftei'IUIOII and evening with his
parenla, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
D. Woode and with the William
Carr family.

'

• MIDDlEPORT P E N·
TECOSTAL - Th ird Ave lhe
Rev Wtll ta m Kn1 tlel. pastor
Ronald Dogan. Sunday school
supt Classes fo r all ages,
evening se rvlc"t. 7 30 p m ,
B1ble s tudy, Wednesda y 7 30
p 11,
)
'
~erv1ces, Fn day,
1JOp m
_" __
FREEWILL BAPTIST
Corner Ash and Plum, M1d
dleport,
Noe l Herrman,
pastor Saturday even1ng
serv1ce, 7 p m Sunday school,
10 a m , Sunday evenmg
worsh1 p, 7 p m

UNITED MINISTRY OF Service, 7 30 p m , Youth
ME IGS COUNTY. The Untied meetmg 6 JO p m
Evenmg
Presbytenan Chu rch. Dw1ghl worsh1p, 7 30 p m
L Zavilz. Pas tor Di rector ,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
George W Hulton and Rev NAZARENE - Rev Herbert
L1nson Stebbins. Ass't Pastor Gra te, pastor Worship servtce,
D1rec tors
11 am and 7 30 p m Sunday.
FIR ST UNI TED PRES Su nday School, 9 30 am
BYTERIAN . Harrlsonvtlle, R1chard Barton, supt Prayer
Sunday Church School, 9 J() meel1ng, Wednesday, 7 30 p m_
am , Mrs Homer Lee, Sup! ,
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
Mornmg Wors.h1p 10 30 a m
CHRI ST - Clifford Sm1lh,
FIRST
UNITED mm1ster Sunday School 9 30
PRESBYTERIAN, M&gt;ddleport, n m , mornmg church 10 30
Sunday Church School 9 30 n m Sunday evemng serv1ce,
am, Lew1s Sauer, Sup! , 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce 8
Morn1no WorshtP 10 30 am pm
FIR ST BAPTI ST at Mtd
F t RST
U ti I T E D
LAUREL CLIFF FR E E
dleport, corner of Six th and PRESBYT ERIAN , Syracuse METHODI ST - Rev Eugene
Palm er 'St reets, Rev Charles Mornmg Worsh1p 9 a m , Gtll paslor W1 11 1am Bailey,
S1mons,
pas tor
Fre d Sunday Church School, 10 am supt Sunday School 9 JO a m
Hoff man, Sunday School Mrs Sampson Hal l Supt
Morn1ng worship, 10 30 am ,
Supenn lendent Sunday churc h
STIVERSVILLE
COM · Even mg worsh1 p, 7 30 p m
sc hool for everyone 9 15 am , MUNITY, Rev Edse l Har t, Wednesday. Chnsllan Youlh
Morntng worship 10 15 a m . pastor Sunday School serv1ce Crusade. 6 30 p m Prayer
Even)ng serv1ces. 7 30 p m • 10 a m Prayer Meet mg each meeling 7 30 p.m Thursday.
Wednesday prayer serv1ce, 7 30 Thursday 7 30 p m Sunday cho1r practice. 7 p m
p m Extra youth acttvth es on evenmg serv 1ce 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF
Sun day 5 p m , for all yout h up
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST CHRIST - Danny Evans.
to Sixth grade, 6 30 fat tUnlor - Pomeroy Harr tSO,VI IIe pastor Norman C Will supt
and sen1or high students
RMd Kenneth Eberts, pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a m ,
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Paul McElroy, Sunday School Worsh 1p serv tce, 10 30 a m
Middl eport, 5th a nd Ma1 n Sup! Sunday School 9 30 am , Chnsllan Endeavor Sunday
Ra ul m Moyer, pastor Micha el morn1ng wo rsh1p and com even 1ng .
Gerl ach, Sunday Schoo l supt mumon, 10 30 a m Sunday
REOllGANIZED CHUR CH
B1ble School, 9 30 a m mar even1ng yo uth Ch n sl1an en OF JESUS CHRIST OF LAT
nmg wor sh tp , 10 30 a m . deaver , 6 30, Worsh ip se rvtces, TER DAY SAINTS - Porlland
evenmg worship 7 30 p m , Sunday, 7 30 p m Wednesday Rac me Roild Ra lph Johnson,
prayer service 7 p m Wed even1ng prayer meet mg and pastor Herbert Wh ile Sunday
nesday
B1 b\e sludy 7 30 p m
School D~reclor Sund ay Sc hoo l
CHURCH
OF
THE
ST JOHN LUTHERAN 9 30 a m Morn mg worsh1 p
NAZARENE - Midd le port , P1 ne Grove. th• Rev Ar lh ur 10 30 a m
Sunday even mg
Rev Audry M1ller, pas1or , Combs pastor Sunday school , se rv1ce 7 p m Wednesday
Floyd Carson sup t Sunday 9 30 a m , church serv1ces, evenmg prayer services, 7 30
school, 9 30 a m , Morn1 ng 10 J(l am
pm
worshi p 10 30 am
1untor
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST
soc oely 6 30 p m, NYPS, 6 45 CHRI ST B1b\e School. 9 30 Great Bend, Cha rles Norn s,
p m
Sunday eva nQel1silc am morning worship, 10 30 pastor Worsh1p serv1ce, 9 30
mee lt ng, 7 30 p m Pr ayer am Sunday even1ng Worsh tp a m , Sunday School. 10 30 a m
meetmg Wednesday 7 JOp m
Serv 1ce, 7 30 p m , cho1r
CARLETON CHURCH 1
pract11::e Sunday and Wed Ktn gsbury Roa d
Sun day
MEIGS
nesday, 7 p m, prayer meet1ng School 9 30 am Ralph Carl ,
COOPERATIVE
and Soble study Wednesday 7 30 supt Worsh1p serv1ce, 10 30
PARISH
pm
a m and 7 30 p m alternately
THE UNITED
ANTIQU\1 y ;; 4\PTIST Prayer meet mg, Wednesday .
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Freeland Norns pastor 7 30 p m Rev Jay Stiles.
Robert R Card
Sunday schoo l 10 am , church pas tor
Rev Stanten Sm1th
serv1ce, 7 p m Wednes day
OLD
DEXTER
CHESTER - Worsh1p 9 15 B1ble sl udy 7 p m
•
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
a m Church Sc hool 10 a m
BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE. - Rev W1ll a rd Dutcher ,
ENTERPRI SE - Wors hip , 9 Mmersv 1l le J A McWaters pas tor Mrs Worl ey Franc1s,
a m , Church School, 10 a m pastor Sunday Sc hoo l 10 am
Sunday School Supl Sunday
FlATWOODS - Worshlp, 11 mor n1ng worsh1 p 11 a m
Sc hool. 9 45 a m Church Ser
a m , Church Sc hool 10 a m
Tra1n1ng Un 1on, 6 JO p m , v1ces f1rst and fh1rd Sundays
POMEROY - Worsh 1p 10 30 even1ng worsh tp 7 30 p m
fo llowing Sunday Schoo l
am Church School 9 15 am , Praver meetr ng, Wednesday, Second and fou rth Sat urday
UMYF630 p m
730pm
even mgs 8 p m serv1ces
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh1 p
RA CINE FIRST CHURCH
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
lOam Church Schoo\9 am. OF THE NAZARENE - - Mr Rober t Wyatt. pastor ,
UMY F 6 30 pro
Su nday School, 9 30 am
Sunday School supt , Rona ld
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Morm ng Worship. 10 30 am , Osborne Btble School, 9 30
Rev Robert Bumgarner
Even mg worsh ip 7 30 p m , am , preachmg 10 45 am
HEATH - Wors h1p 10 30 Wednesday Sunday • Schoo l Eventng serv1ces, 7 30 p m
am Church School 9 JO am , Supenntendent Pau ltne Me
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
UMYF 7 p m
Cil ntock. pastor Rev Morns METHODIST - Cec1l W1se,
RUTLAND - Worsh 1p 9 15 M Wol le
Pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 3(1
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST - a m , Morn1ng worshi p 10 30
a m Church School 10 am,
UMYF 7 p m
'
Cha rles Norns, pastor Sunday a m , Young Peopl e's serv1ce
SALEM CENTER - Wors h1p School. 9 30 am
Morn 1n g 6 45 p m . Evangelistic serv1ce
9 a m Church School 10 a m
worsh 1p 10 45 a m , Sunday 7 30 p m Pr ayer meet1 ng,
UM YF Thursday 7 p m
eventng worship 7 30 p m , Thur sday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Wednes day even 1ng B1ble
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
Rev . Forrest R Donley
Study, 7 30 p rn
MISSION - Bald Knobs Rev
ASBURY - Worsh ip 11 am ,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , L R Gluesencam p, pas tor
Chu rch School9 50a m , WSCS, Rev
Lawrence Su lliv an Roger Wi lfred, Sr , Sunday
1st Tuesda y
pastor Sunday School 9 JO Sc hool Supt Sunday School.
FOREST RUN - Worsh ip 9 am , youth and jUniOr yout h 9 30 a m
Sun day eve nmg
a m Church Sc hool 10 am , serv1ce. 6 45 p m , evening worsh1 p 7 30 Praye r mee t1ng,
WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 worshi p 7 30 p nt prayer an d Tuesday, 7 30 p m Ernest
pm
pratse Wednesday 7 30 p m Dee ter cl ass leader Youth
MINERSVILL E - Worshi p
SILVER RUN FREE BAP Mee tmg Wednes day 7 30 p m ,
10 a m . Church SChool 9 a m
T\ST - Rev Howard K1mble Ernest Deeter leader
WSCS, 3rd Monday. 7 30 p m pas lor Sunday sc hocl , 10 am
MT. HERMON UNITED
SYRACUSE - Worsh1 p, 8 Henry Dav ts, supt , eventn g BRETHREN CHURCH IN
am , Churc h School , 9 a m
serv •ce, 7 30 p m Prayer CHRIST - Rev Robert Shoo k,
Pr ayer and B1ble Study, meet1 ng, Thurda y, 7 30 p m
pastor Sunday School , 9 30
Wednesday, 7 :Wp m
CHESTER CHURCH OF am , Ray Pooler, supt , Alfred
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
GOD - Rev James Sa tterf1eld. Wolfe, ass! supt , morn 1ng
Rev . W Dale McClurg
pastor Sunday school, 9 30 wors ht p 11 am , even1 ng
Rev Frank Cheesebrew
am , worsh 1p servtce, 11 a m , serm on, 7 30 p m, a lternat mq
Rev Marfha Ann Mattner
eve ntng serv1ce, 7, prayer eac h Sunda y Class meeiJ ng It
BETHANY ( Dor cas )
serv 1ce and you th se r v1ce. am
alte rna ting ~ u n day
Worsh1p, 9 JO a m , Church Thursda y. 7 p m
mor nmgs
Alfr ed Wolf e,
School to 30 am
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN layleader , Chnst1an Endeavor
CARMEL - Worship 11 - Homer Stephens pastor 7 30 p m Sun day . Roge r
am, 1st and Jrd Sunda ys. Sunda y School. 9 30 a m , Buc kl e y. preSident Pray er
Church School 10 a m
mornmg worsh1p 10 30 a m , meeting Wednesda y, 7 30 p m
APP~E GROVE - Worship
Robert Bobo Sunday school Board meetmg f1r sf Monday
7 30 p m church school 9 30 supt Sund ay evenmg serv1ce, each month, 7 30 p m
a m , m1d week se rvtce, 7 JO Youth mee ltng, Monday 7
Wednesda y, 8 p m
p rn M1d week serv1ce, Wed
EAST LETART - Worsh1p, nesday, 7 30 p m
WHITE ' S CHAPEL
lOam, f ~r s t and th1r d Sundays ,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Coo\
v1lle RD Rev Roy Deeter
9 am , second and four th THE NAZARENE - Rev M C
pastor
Sunday school , 9 30
Sunda ys church school, 9 a m , Lar1more pastor Bob Moore a m worsh1p
servi ce, 10 30
il rs l and th~rd Sundays, 10 a m , Sunday School Supt Sunda y a m B1ble study
a nd prayer
second and fourth Sunda ys School, classes for all ages, 9 JO serv1ce, Wednesda y,
7 30 p m
Mid week serv1ce, Wednes day, a m , mormng worsh1p, 10 45
8pm
NYPS Sunda y, 6 30 p m ,
GREAT BEND - Worsh1p 11 evangei 1SI IC serv 1ce Sun day ,
RUTLAND
a m , 2nd and 4t h S und ay~. 7 30 p m M1d week prayer
FIRST BAPTIST
RUTLAND
Chu rch School, 10 a m
meel1ng, Wednesday, 7 30 p m Rev
Sa
el Jackson,
LETART FALLS - Worshtp Mtss 1ona ry meel1ng, second pastor Sundaymu
School.
10 a m ,
10 a m , Church School 9 a m Wednesday, 7 30 p m
Ger
tr
ude
Bulle
r,
~u pt
Mrs
MORNING STAR - Worsh1p
9 :W am , Ch urch School 10 30
UNITED FAITH NON · Pr ay er Se rv1ce, 1 30 p m ,
a m , Mid Week ServiCe. DENOMINATIONAL - Rev prea chmg serv1ce 2 p m
Wednesday, 8,.p.m
Robert Sm1fh pastor Sunday RUTLAND CHURCH OF
MORSE CHAPEL - Worship school. 9 30 am, class leader. CHRIS-:- - Sunday school, 9 30
11 a m , 1st and 3rd Sunda ys, Leo H1ll. worsh1 p serv 1ce, 10 30 am .. V H Braley, supt ,
Church School, 10 a m
a m , church, 7 30 p m , prayer co mmun 1an and de vat1on s,
10 30 a m Regular board
PORTLAND - Worship 7 30 meehng , Wednesday
p m , Church School 9 30 a m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN mee t1ng 7 30, fh1r d Satu rda y
SUTTON - Worsh1 p, 11 a m IN CHRIST-E ldon R. Bla ke, each month
THE RUTLAND COM·
2nd and 41h Sundays , Church pastor Sunday School, 10 a m ,
School 10 am
Winn1e Halsmger, supl Mt:Jr MUNITY CHURCH - Rev
WESLEYAN {Racine) nmg ser mon, 11 am , Evem ng RICh ard Dubbe\ d, pastor
Worship, 11 am , Ch urch serv 1ce Chn st 1an Endea vor, Sc hoo l, 9 30 a m , Worship
Schoo\, 10 am
7 30 p m , Mrs Lyda Cheval ier. service. 11 a m .. Wednesday
UMY F for all chur ches of lhe president Song serv ice and prayer meet 1ng , 7 30 p m
Sou thern Cluster , 7 30 p m sermon. 8 20 Mtd Week prayer Sunda y mght worshtp , 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
ea ch Sunday at the Youth meeh ng Wednesda y, 7 30 p m.
THE
NAZARENE - Rev
Center (Oak Grove Road I
Mrs Mane HolSinger, cla ss
Lloyd 0 Gnmm, Jr , pastor
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
lea der
Rev Jacob Lehman
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT Sunday School, 9 30 a m ;
Rev Standley Brandum
CHURCH Har rlsonvtlle Morn mg worsh1p, 10 30 a m ,
JOPPA - Worship 10 a m , Road , Rev Roy Taylor, pastor , Young . people's ser vlce, 6 45
Church School 9 a m , Prayer Henry Eblin. Sunday School p m • Evang elist iC s ~rv l c es,
&gt;upt ~ u n day School. 9 30 a m , 7 30 p m Wednesday evenmg
Meeting , Wednesda y, 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM - Church ev entng worship. 7 30 p m serv1ce 7 30 p m
serviCes, 9 am , Sunday School Pray er and pr aise se rvice.
MASON COUNTY
9 45 am Bible study every Thursday,, 7 30 p.m
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
Thur sda~, 7 30 p m
COMMUNITY CHURCH , G
C
S d
NORT BETHEL - Worship De•ter - Worship services eorge as to, pastor un ay
Schoo l, 9 30, evemng worsh1p,
11 am , Church School 10 am . Sa tur day a~ d Sunda y, 7 30 7 30 Thursday evening prayer
- serviCe , 7 :w p m
ALFRED - Sunday school, E m
H- EM L 0 C K
G R O.V E MASON FIRST BAPTIST 9 45 a m each Sunday •
preaching at lt am each CHRISTIAN - Da vid ~ t aune r, Second and Pomeroy Sis , Stan
Sunday Prayer meeting, 7·45 pastor , Stanford Stockton, supt Cra 1g, pastor. Sunday school,
p m Wednesday . WSCS, 8 P m Morning worshtp, 9 JO a m , 9 45 a m , worship service, 11
on ln lrd Tuesday each month chur ch school, 10 30 a m , am, t ralnln~ umon, 6 :wpm ,
REEDSVILLE - Sunday young peoples meeting, 6 30 evening wofshlp serv ice, 7.30
school, 9 30, preaching, 7 30 p m • eventng worsh1p1 7 30 p.m Mtd week prayer serv 1ce1
p m Sunday ; prayer meetmg, B1ble0ilvdy, Wedhesday , 7 30 Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
_
7 30 p.m Tuesday , WSCS, 7 30 p m
first Thursday each month
MT UNION BAPTIST FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
SILVER RIDGE - Worship, Rev Cectl Cox, pastor Sunday - Lelarl Route 1, the Rev Stan
10 am , Church School, 9 a m ,school supt , Joe Sayre Sunday Cratg, pastor Sunday school,
TUPPERS PLAINS
schoo l. 9 45 am , Sunday 9 JO am , prayer and Bible
Worship 9 a m , Church School evening worsh1p, 7 30 Wed· sludy, 7 30 p m Cottage prayer
10 am .
nesday prayer and Bible sludy, serv 1ce. Tuesday , 10 am ,
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, 7 30 p m
_
worship service, Friday, 7 JO
Hobar. Newell, supt Services
TUP P ERS
P LA INS p m
weekly, 9 .JO am 011 Sunday CHRISTIAN CHURCH
MASON
CHURCH
OF
Preaching first and third Eugene Underwood . pastor , CHRIST- Loren T Stephens,
Sundays of month by Clifford Howard Caldwell, Jr .. Sunjay minister Worship, 10 am ,
Smith, 9 30 am .
School Sup! . Sunday School, Blble study, 11 t5 am , evening
HOBSON CHRISTIAN 9 30 a m , Morning sermon, worsh1p, 7 30 p m Mld·week
UNION - Darrel Doddr\11 , 10 30 a m , Sunday evening serv ice, Wednesday. 7 30 p m '
paslor. Sunday Schoo\, 9:30 serv ice, 7 o m
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
a.m., Leonard Gilmore, first
LETART FALLS UNITED GOD - Second Sf. Mason, W
elder , evening service, 7 J() BRETHREN - Rev Robert Va. Chester Tennant, paslor
pm
Wednesday prayer Shook, pastor , Herschel Noms, Sunday school. 10 a m , mor .
meeting , 7 30 p.m.
supl Sunday school. 9 30 a.m.; nlng worship, 11 am ,
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF morning S&lt;trmon, 10 :W a.m., evangelistic service, 7 30 p m
GOD - Racine Route 2 The evening sermon, 7 30 aller Bible study and prayer service
Rev Charles Hand, pastor. natlng each Sunday Prayer Wednesday. 7 30 p m. Phone'
'··
Sunday school, 9: 45 am ,. service, Wednesday, 7 30 P m 773-5133
morning worship , 11 a.m . Prayer meel\ng, 7 30 p.m
HARTFORD CAURCH OF
Evening services, Thuesday olternaflng Sundays.
CHRIST In Christian Union and Friday, 7 30
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF Rev O'Dell Manley , pastor
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE GOD OF PROPHECY, G P. Sunday school. 9 30a m , Roger
CHURCH OF CHRIST - David Smtih, pastor Sunday School, Manley, supt .. evening servfce
Jewell , paslor Blb\esludy, 9 30 10 am ,, Arthur Henson, Sup! • 7 30 Wednesday evening'
• m , morning worship, 10 30; Mormng Worship 11 a .m ; ·prayer meeting, 7 30 p m
evenmg worship , 6 30 p m Young Peoples S&lt;trvlce, 7 P m • Sunday evening youth service
Wednesday Btble study, 7 30 Evening sen ice, 7 30 p.m.; 6 45 w\lh Macy Lou Carter
pm
Wed~day Mid Week Prayer leader No Tuesday service '

the
direction

oleneruv
When t he big whee l turns clockw1se, the ltttle wheel turns counter.
clockw ise at a great er rate of speed. T hus man controls ener gy in the
physic:jl universe, determ m mg, accordmg to h ts own w11l, 1t s directJon
and effect
Th er e 1s a spm tual umver se, too. A world m whtch God, w ho gave
us freedom of will, provt des the gmdance, help and inspiratwn wh ich unite
our mmds w tt h Hts for purposes wh ich are GOOD
We r eali ze wtth trembli ng m tbis nuclear age that t he physical and
sp1r itual umverse are not two-but ONE We cannot live in t he one and
for get the other For the world we know will pensh unless man 's s ptritual
v1sion governs hts use of the energy h e controls
Wise a n d reverent mi nds have a lways known this. T hat is why we
have CHU R C HES ... why we sh are their Ltfe and Work wtth one another.
X nptorei iel&amp; ted by lhe Ameri[Jn R1ble Socltty
Su nday
Roman•

a p.ta

Mon day

Tuesday

Job
M·2 1.

P1alm1

aa, 1 18

Wednuday
Pronrb1
12z7 8

Thu rsday

Frtday

EcclesiCISfel

Ectlet1ost••

7 11 22

50,4 8

l2

Copy right 1972 Ke1strr Advrrthlng Srrvlct

In(

Stusbura. Vlrsfnl.t
-~

With the hope 1! wt ll , in some measure, foster and he lp sust a1n that wh1ch is
good tn fa mily and communit y ltfe, this fea t ure 1s sponsored by th e bustness
f1rm s an d or g antzatton s wh ose names appear below

..

.

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN

Meigs Cou nty Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

Trail e r Re nta ls and Sup p li es
St. Rt. 7
Ch est e r , Oht o

296 W. Second Pomeroy P.l1 . 992-3865

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH

LODWICK'S MARKET

" We Sponsor J es us "
Rev. St a n Cr a1 g . Pasto r

Member of t he Big 3
General Me r c hand ise
Ph 667-3280
Tuppers Plams

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

MARK VSTORE

El ec tn c Moto r Repa1 r
810 W Ma1n
992 5750

Mtddleport , OhiO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

Rexa ll Drugs
We Ftil Ail Do ctors' Presc n pl!on s
992 2955
Pomer oy

ROYAL OAK PARK

Bakers of Holsum Bre ad
Midd leport. Oh 1o

.

GAUL'S MARKET

Fa m i Iy Recre al! on
Swim m ing , Ca mp1ng

Chester, Oht o

rHE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

BOGGS EQUIPMENT
Sales A1t1s Cha lmers Service
Farm lndustnal - Lawn . Garden
Tup per s Pl ai n s
667-3435

Pom e roy-Me mber F DI C &amp;
Fe de r a l Rese r ve Syste m

DrCK'
S GROCERY
(Former ly Domlgans l

HEINER'S BAKERY

New O..ner- DICk Sargen-t
Old U.S. 33
Ph 992 ·7735
Stop In a nd See Us

Ba kers of (;ood Bread
Huniin gton , W Va

RACIN.E FOOD MARKET

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

The Store Wtt h A Heart
Ph 949 3342
Racine
•

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Deale r
Middl e port, Oh10

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

Phon e 992 3284

DB A ANTHONY
PLU MBING and HEATING
337 N. 2nd Middleport 992-3550

Middl eport

.

CARPET-LAND, INC.

M&amp;R FOODLINER

Wa ll to Wall Carpet Spectallsls
116 W Matn
Ph. 992·7590
Free Est im a tes · Guaranteed
Inst a llation

Middlepo rt, Ohio

MONTGOMERY WARD

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

CATALOGUE STORE
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Otarles R. Shee ts
106 Court St
Pomeroy 992-3001

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus, 0
Pomeroy
307 Spr ing Ave.
Ph . 992·2318

SEARS

K&amp;C JEWELERS
Keepsake Diamond Rings
312 E Main St
Pomeroy,

Authori zed Catalog Merchant
LOUI S W. Osborn
220 E Main Pomeroy Ph. 992-2178

0

. RAU.S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

'

N

Saturday
Jeremioh-

Phone 992-3481
N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0

.

BOWERS DRIVE-IN
RESTAURANT

E. Main St .

Pomeroy

TUPPERS PLAINS HARIMARE
•
1

Paint· Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Supplies
Tuppers Plains
667-3963

RACINE PlANING MILL
Buildtng Supples and MTIIwork
General Contracting
Ph. 992·3978

'

�13rid:i' Sh7;;;~~'Given Ann Holter
Mtss. Ann Holter, brtde~l ect
of Rtchard T. Fox of Mason,
Ohto, was honored at a bridal
shower Wednesday night at the
Trimty Church Hostesses
were Mrs. Homer Holler, Mrs
Ben Ne utzhn g, Mtss Sybtl
Ebersbach, Mrs Louts Rctbel,
Miss Erma Smtih , Mrs
Clarence Headley, Mrs. Ons
Gin ther, Mrs Arvilla Frecker,
Mrs Dale Smtth, and Mrs
Eulah Swan
Decorations earned out a
yellow and whtle color scheme
wtth a fal se cetlin g of
streamers and weddm g ~l is
bem g used Rtbbon sandwiChes
in yellow and whtte were
served w1th assorted cook1es,
nuts, coffee and punch.
Mtss Ebersbach registered
the guests and prestdmg at the
punch bowl were Mrs Frecker
and Mrs Holter wt!h Mrs
Ginther at the coffee servtce
Miss Lenora Mtchael, Mtss
Pollyanna Thompson, and Mrs
Richard Garfteld along with
Mrs Albert Fox of Mason,

Ohio, mother of the prospective
bndegroom asstsltng _m unwrappmg the gtlts
Both Mr. and Mrs Albert
Fo•, thett son, Richat·d, and an
aw1t, Mrs Wtlma Fox of
Mason 1 Oh10, were preser1t fo1
the shower Prtzes were won by
Mrs Garfteld, Mrs Evelyn
Spencer,
Mrs
Pauline
Thompson , Mrs
Donna
Waugh, Carol Baker, Mrs
Fred
Thompson,
Mtss
Pollyann a Thompson , Mrs
Huber Ful ton, Mrs Donald
Mora, Mrs Karl Krautter,
Mrs. Rubert Thompson and
Mrs J K Thom pson
The guest ltst meludcd Mtss
Loutse Michael, Mtss Lenora
Mtchael, Mrs Vtckt Woods,
Mrs Rtchard Garltcld, Mrs
Pat Ptckens, Mrs Wil ham
Buckley, Mrs Wyatt Chadwell,
Mrs Ear l Ingels, Mrs Donald
M01 a and daughters, Mrs
Pe,H I Mora, Mrs Char les
Gnfftth and Karen, M1 s Hem·)
Bahr and daughter, Mrs Paul
Stmoll , Mrs. Carl Krautter,

Mrs Robert Elberfeld ani!
daug ht et , Mrs
Ma rt bel
Frecker,
Mrs
J ohn
M&lt; Laughhn, Mrs Roger
Starcher and daughter

Mrs. 'Raymond Frecker, Mrs.
Edgar Abbott and da ughter ,
Mr ard Mrs Robert Thompson, Mtss Gladys Freden ck,
Mrs Rtchard Rawlings, Mrs
Robert Hoefli ch and daughter ,
Mrs Wtlham Radfo rd and
daughte rs, Mrs Cons tance
Shtelds, Mrs Edtson Hollon
and daughter, Mrs Mae
Holler , Mts John Ba ker, Mrs
Alber! Fox
Mrs C E Blakeslee, Mrs
John Jeffers and daughter,
Mrs Evelyn Spencer, Mrs
Paul Orr, Mrs Wtlham
Parker, Mrs Ina Massar, Mrs
Ne va Seyfn ed, Mrs J ohn
Terrell, Mrs Donald '11wmas,
Mrs John W Blaettnar, Mrs
Rtchard Rose nbaum, Mrs
Wtlham Kennedy, Mrs . Edward Kennedy, Mrs Marvm
Bur l and daug hter , Mrs
J oseph Stsso n, Mrs Joe
Struble, Mrs Ray Rtggs, Mrs
Stella Kloes, Mrs Clarence
Massa r ,
Mrs
E th el
Wllhamson, Mrs Clara Karr ,
Mrs Gladys Cucklct, Mrs
Elza Gtl mor e, Jr , Mr s
Everett Datley, Mrs Henry
Rctbel, Mrs Edtlh Lanmng
Mrs Dtane Hawley, Mrs
Fred Blaettnar, Mtss Maud"
Gr ueser, Mtss Freda Grueser ,
M rs~ Robert Arn old , Mrs
Kenneth Ham s, Mt s Roy
Smtth, Mrs George R Yollllg,
Mrs Donald Lannmg 1 Mrs
Luctlle Jesse, Mrs Luctlle
Mtss
Th elma
Le tfh etl ,
Grueser, Mrs. Thomas Young,
Mrs Leonard Jewell, Mrs
James Fugate, Mrs W H
Perrtn, M1 s ,Phtl Memhart,
Mrs Fred Dessauer, Mrs
Dona ld Mayer, Mrs Roy
Maye r , Mrs . J ames Cla l·
worthy, Mrs Htlda Schmoll ,
Mrs Robert Schmoll , Mrs
ArlhUI Skm ne1, Mrs Phtl
Globokar,
Mrs
Albert
Woodard, Mrs Man e Houck,
Mt s Don na Can , Mrs Beulah
Ewmg, Mrs Bem me E"mg,
Mrs Edtlh Kautz, Mrs Ltlhe
Hauck,
Mts.
Kenn eth
McLa ughlin, Mrs Rober t
Buck, MISs Elizabe th Ftck,
Mtss Evelyn Ft&lt;k
Mt s W A Gtbbs, Mrs
Freda Mtlch, Mts Wtll ard

Mrs. Norman Rose, Mrs
Horace Ka rr and daughters,
Mrs Roger Keller , Mrs Paul
Baer and daughter, Mrs Paul
Nease, Mrs Ivan Walker and
da ughter, Mrs Carl Kaulz and
Joy, Mt s Dale Kautz and
da ughter, Mrs Larry Htll,
Mt s Phtl Radford and
da ughter, Mrs Joe Whtpple,
Mrs
Re td Youn g and
da ughters, Mrs Fred Crow,
Mrs
J ack Ca r sey and
daughters, Mrs Huber Fulton,
Mrs Fred Thompso n a nd
daughter, Mrs Joe Thompson,
Mrs Emmett Thompson and
daughter , Mrs Joseph L
Thompson and daughters
Mt s. Robct t Waugh, Mrs
Jerry Baer, Mrs. yern on
Weber, Mtss Donn a Weber,
Mrs Harold Blackston and
daughtet , Mrs Wayne Roush,
Mt s Earl Dean and daughtet,

Mary Long Honored
Mrs Charles Bradbury and
Mtss Mar y Bradbury en·
terlatned Wednesday mghl
with a shower hononng Mtss
Mj.ry Lon g, bnd e-elect of
J'lichael O'Bnen.
An orchid and whtle color
scheme was carrted out m the
decoratiOnS The g1ft table
featured orchid net over whtle
caught up on the stdes wtlh
whale satin roses and accented
with orchtd satm bows. Whtte
weddtng bells suspended from
the chandelier and pink rose
arrangements completed the
setting.
Games were conducted by
Mtss Bradbury and Miss Sandy
Johnson wtlh pmes gomg to
Mrs James B O'Brten, Mrs
Rtchard Long, Mtss Sandra
Smtth , Mrs. Jane•Gahm , Mt s
Robert Tewksbary, and MISS
Peggy McKmney
A fepture of the shower was

" Mary's cupboard

where

11

guests placed small utensils
and household products and

accessones.
An arrangement of orchid
and whale mums flanked by
orchtd tapers centered the
refreshment table
Mr s
O'Bnen was at the coffee
servtce,and Mrs Harold Long,
moth er of the brtde-e lect,
presided at the punch bowl
Attendm g bestdes th ose
named were Mtss Peggy
O' Brt en, Mrs Pam McClanahan, Mrs Roger Long,
Mrs Paul Scott, ~" Alfred

FLOWERS
£or All Occasions

--·
---"----- __
We w1re flowers
Everywhere

_........

. '992-2039

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Butternut Ave , Pom eroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meier

Roush, Mrs James J ohnson,
M1s Curtas Jenkmson, Mt s
Judsou Wlute, Mrs C P
Bradbury, Mrs 0 P Kletn,
M1s Herman Kmcatd, Mtss
Caro l Bac hte l, Mrs Ruth
Gosney Mrs Dame! Thumpson, Mtss Nancy Thotnpson,
Mrs. Do na ld Mtlls, Mtss
Cyn thta Mtlls, and Mtss Teresa
Casc1
Others presentm g gt fl.s to
Mtss Long were Mrs. Russell

B10wn, Mrs Asa Bradbury,
Mtss Candace Bahr, Mtss
Shetla Chtlds, Mrs Jo Ann
Whtle Mrs Lcwts Tn plett,
Mrs Wtlha m Sla ter , Mr s
Harmon O'Bn en, and Mrs Joy
Ktmble

Fa vors

were

0

m1 ma lure

gm tel s whtch served as n ngs

fnr
nap ktn s
tn 5crtb ed
• Hononng Mary Long ·• Mrs
c p Bradbu ry wo n the door

pr1ze

Homemade Hats

rsoc·
i
arl
cI d
~

:::

1
jj

Council 323 Officers are Elected

&amp;

aen ar

··J
1!•
:&gt;.

FRIDAy
THIR D FRIDAy CLUB
Fnday at 1·30 p m home of
Carrte Memhart Locust St
Pumer~y
'
'
ICE CREAM Soctal Fnday
followmg parade at Pomeroy
Fnst Baptist Chuteh and all
day Saturday begmmng at 9
am

REGATTA tee cream soctal,
Frtday , Saturday, beglrming II
a.m. St Paul Lutheran Church
fellowship hall Sandwiches,
salad, cake, pte also Ice cream
by quart can be reserved by
callmg 992-2010 or 992-2688.
SHADE Rtver Lodge 453
F&amp;AM spectal meetmg
Saturday, 8 p m. Work wtll be
performed m Master Mason
Degree All Master Masons are
mvtted.
MONDAY
CANDYSTRIPERS, Veterans Memorial Hospttal, 7
p m Monday tn the hosptlal
cafetena

Of!lcet s lor the 1972-73 year
wet·e elected and ms\alled at
the recent mcetang of the Past
Collllctlors of Chester Council
323, Daughters of Antenca, at
the horne of Mrs Betty Roush
Elected were Mrs Esther
R1denour, president, Mrs. Ada
MolrJS, v1&lt;:e pres1dent 1 Mrs
Barbara Sar~ent, secretary,
Mrs. E1rna Cleland, It casurer,
Mrs Opal Hollon, reporter,
Mrs Dorothy Myers, flowers,
and Mrs Mary Hayes, se ntmel
Plans wet e made lor a VISit
to the Fenton Glass Co m July
Wtlh a dtnner at the LeMarr
Restaurant 1n Parkersburg. A
than k you card wa s read hom
the Cleland famt ly for flowers
and food at U1e death of the
eldet Mr Cleland Mrs Mat y

BIRTH DAY OBSERVED
BRADBURY - The btrlhday
of Wt lltam Fred Smtlh, Sr of
Brudb uty was observed
1ecently when Mrs Lee
Baughman served cake 1 1ce
ct eam and coffee to Mr and
Mrs Wtlltam Fred Smtih, Sr ,
Mrs Eugene Smtih and
chtldren, Ttm, Joho Mark and
Cmdy of Syracuse, Mrs Robert
tft
Duckworth and Bobby, Mr and
Mt and Mrs Harry James Mrs Lee Baughman and
Roush of New Haven, W Va J effrey , Mtddl epotl Mrs
entertamed Wednesday w1th a Baughman, Mt s Eugene
party m obset vance of the ftrsl Smt ih, and MIS Duckworth
bn thd ay anmversary of thetr ate daughlets of the Wtlham
daughter, Kn stm Leigh.
F't ed Sm1 ths, Sr
1J1. Raggedy Ann theme was
earned out m tho decora llons
SOC IAL PLANNED
Allendmg we re Mr and Mrs
RACINE - The Rae me Fn e
Wtlham Roush, New Haven,
Department
's Auxthat y IS
Mr and Mrs James Sunpson,
planmng an tee cream sot.: lal as
Mtddlcpor l , Mr and Mrs Joey
Roush and famtly of New a pa t t of the commumly July
Haven , Mr and Mrs He1 bert 4th celebratiOn Donations 01
Ro us h
a nd da ughte!S, tngredtents would be apHurncane, W Va , Mr and prec iated Those who would
Mrs Ga r y Free man and hke to contnbute are asked to
call 949·3421, 949-3471 01 949famtly, Pometoy , and Mt s
Albert Roush and famtly of 3293
New Haven
Sendmg gtfl.s were her great grandmothet s, Mrs L D Scott
and Mrs Marrne Hartenbach,
~nd Mr and Mrs Charles
Gaskt\1 and fa mtly, and Mt s

Spencer, Mrs. Zona Biggs,
Hayes thanked the Counctl for
Mrs Mary Showall'er ,- Mrs
kmdnesses extended to her
Gold
Fredert ck, and Mrs
durtng her recent hosEhzabeth Wickham, a vtsltor.
ptlallzatwn
Games wet e played under
' the dtrectwn of Mrs Mary
Hayes and Mrs Myers Mrs
Mabel Van Meter won the door
pnzes Mrs Jean Swnmerfteld
p1 estded at the meehng
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Roush and Mrs
00
00
Pauhne Rtdenour to those
named and Mrs Inzy Newell ,
Mrs Ethel Orr, Mrs Erma.
Cleland, Mrs Ada Neutzhng,
Mrs Battle Fretlenck, Mrs
Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. Mae

canvas
Tote Bags

$4

to

$7

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

SUNDAY-JUNE 18

Forgotten His Gift?

B' hL Ob'Served
udJ

A few last minute hints !

v Belts

v Hats v Dress Shirts
v Sport Shirts
v Slacks
v Socks
v Jackets
v Ties v Cuff links .; Sport Clothes
Wtth An Excellent Selectton of
Famous Name Brands

BAHR CLOTHIERS
. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Clines Visited

VISIT IN RUTLAND
RUTLAND - Mr and Mrs
G E Kmgh l of Massillon wet c
receul vtsttors at the home of
Mr an d Mt s C W Slansbw y
and Vona McKmght and W W
Stansbut y and wtfe from
Tucson, Am spe nt two weeks
at the same home 1ecently
Also, Mrs G E Kn1gh l,
daughter Kathy , of Ma sst llon,
and Peggy Hopkms and hct
son, Scotty, of Hamilton we1e
overmght guests 1ccently

Gtve the watch with
tuntng fo rk accuracy

SYRACUSE - Mr and Mrs
Leonard Bass, Cherrte and
Dav td , spent Sunday, June 4, at
\he home of her stster and
bt other-m-law, Mr. and Mrs.
James Chnc and famtly of
Beverly They attended the

Accutron®by Bulova
The most welcome g11l of all is an
Acculron by Bulova So prec1se IS
the Accutron tun1ng fork

g1 aduat10n exerctses of James

(J mtmy) Chne
Othe1s vtstltng the Chne
home durmg U1e afternoon and
cvemng were Mr and Mrs
La try Brown, Delaware, Mr
and Mrs Rudy Stewart, Mt
Vernon; Mr and Mrs Charles
Chne, Charlie and Slev te of
Moundsville, W Va ; Mr and
Mts. Ca rl Wtcks, Bren da,
Calla and Jana, Lancaster;
Mt and Mrs Robert Few and
Kathy, Rev and Mrs Herman
Stewart, Charlene and Brtan,
Waterford; Mr and Mrs.
Rtchard Chne, New Lexmg ton,
Mr and Mrs Dave Chn e and
Sue a nd Darla Clme, of
Beverly
J tmmy graduated wtlh ht gh

honors

a nd

rece1ved

movement that accuracy 15

~~~~

· _.

DAH AND DAY
\ 4K Sal1d Gol d
S250

guaranteed to
w1thm a mmute
a mon th '
See our fu ll
selec t1on of
AccutJOn
models now
From$ 110

a

JUNE 18th- D-DAYI

DAD'S DAY - SPECIAL
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY • JUNE 17-18
DeliciOUS

FRENCH
FRIES
RedAn..
....
ANIMAL ;m-r ,...
0

SUGAR
RUN
MILLS
"Serv1ce For Over 100 Years"
992·2115

Pomeroy

• EKtre Powerful Sut tlon •
840 W1t l Motor
• Use As Blower

.

Ah~

For lhe ilneSIIn floor cate, lh1s Hoover can' l be beal. Gets

t

dul olher cleanets can'l because of 1l's exclusiVe tnple
acl1on cleanmg.

• Handv Toot Stongj Aack

Elsy to Empty Oust Beg

sate

• ComJM••• Wtth
Tools end Extra ..,.
Long Cord

menls. LARGE THROW·AWAY BAG holds more dtrt .. .
needs chang1ng less often. 4-POSITION RUG ADJUSTMENT
... mdoor·outdoor lloor covertngs lo deep shag rugs.
VINYL OUT ER JACK ET never a dusty odor. W1pes clean
wt th a damp clot h.

PROGRAM

All Are
Available At

• Complete • Portlblt • 11W'
lono x. 5" wtdt x 10%" hllfa

'TWOSPEED MOTOR g1ves 50% more sucllon lor aliach·

scholarslnp in Sctence. He wtll
be attendmg Moun! Vernon
Nazarene College thts fall

q

New Hoover
Swlngette
Cleaner
• 3-Wtv Fthttld
System

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
STOP IN AND SEt: US REGATTA. WEEKEND'
FOURTH AND LOCUST STS. ,,2.s24a
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Model1031

Reg. '74.95

'58

Self·propelled \
C\aans wtth un·
balievabla ease
on all typos of
carpet.

HOOVER BAGS 3 pkgs. $2.00

lEE THE lEW WIYTI

..........

··__
......,__
·--___
--·_... _
"' 2A 11$.01 a...

,.

SPII-

IIIYING
WAHR

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

POMEROY
. ST PAUL LUTHERAN, POMEROY TRINITY
Rev Ar th ur C Lund, pastor
Rev W H Pemn, pastor Roy Sunda y Sc hool. '9 15 a m ,
Mayer, Supt Church schooot, Charl es Eva ns, Supt , wor ship
9 15 a m , worship, 10 24 a m ; serv 1ce,
10 30 a m
Con
youth cho1 r rehearsal MOnday, f1 rma Hon class, Tuesd ay, 4 15
6 30 p m , Mrs Marv 111 Burt, to 5· JO p m , J unior Con
director ,
senio r
cho 1r hrmat10n class, Thursday, 6 30
rehearsal, 7 30 p m , Thursday, lo 7 45 pm
Mrs Paul Nease, .~ !rec t o r
SEVEN DAY ADVENTIST
POMEROY CnURCH OF Mulberr y
He1ghls.
THE NAZARENE - Corner Pomer oy Herbert Morgan ,
Union a nd Mulberry Rev past or
Sa bb a th sc ho ol,
Clyde V Hender son, pastor. Saturday, 2 p m w1th church
Sunday School 9 30 a.m , serv1ce fol lowmg at 3 15 p m
Raymond ""a\burn. supt Open B1ble d1scuss1on each
Morning worshtp 10 JO a m Thursday, 7 30 p m
Evenmg serv ice 7 30 p m Mid
GRAHAM
UNITED
~';;;k service, Wednesday, 7 30 METHODIST _ Preachmg 9 30
GRACE EPISCOPAL _ a m , f ~rs t and second Sunda ys
Rev leroy Davis, mlnistet of each month, lh 1rd and four th
Morn1ng prayer and sermon, Sundays eacti month, worship
10 30 a m Holy cofTjmun\on and service at 7 30 p m Wednesday
serm on, fir st Sunda ys, 10 30 evemngs at 7 30 Prayer and
a m Chur ch sc hool, kin Bi ble Sludy
dergarten th rough eighth FIRST SOUTHERN BAP
grade tO 30 am
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave .
POMEROY CHURCH OF Pomeroy, afflllaledw ,thSB C,
CHRIST _ Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr , the Rev Fred Hill. pastor
paslor . Bible School. 9 30 am , Sund ay Sc hool , 9 30 a m
worship, 10 30 , adult worship mornmg worship, 10 JO am ,
ser vice and young peo pl es JUniOr soc1ety , 6 30 a m NYP S,
meeting , both 7 30 p m Sunday 6 45 p m Sunday eva n~ e l 1sh c
Wednesday , co mbmed Bible meet mg 7 30 p m
raye r
study and prayer meeting 7 3o meet 1ng Wedne sday , 7 30 p m.
pm
'
MIDDLEPORT
THE SALVATION ARMY _
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Envoy Ray s w1mng. off icer In Co rner Fo urth and Ma m,
charg e Su nda y 10 a m , M1ddlepor t Rev Henry L Ke y,
Holiness meetmg 10 30 am , Jr , pastor Sunda y Schoo l 9 30
Sunda y School Yo ung People's am, Arnold Rt chards, supt
mg worshi p 10 30 a m
LeglOn , 7 p m , Th ursday, 1 to 3 Morn
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES p m , Lad1es Home Leag ue 7
p m , Prep classes
Larr y Car naha n prestd 1ng
SACRED HEART _ Rev m1n1Sier Sunday, B1ble lec ture,
fa ther Bernard Kra 1covlc, 9 30 a m , Watchtower study,
pasto r
Ph one
992· 28 25 10 30 a m , Tu esd';J; , B1b\ e
Salurday evenmg Mass. 7 30 st udy 7 30 p m
hursday ,
p m Sunday Mass 8 and 10 mtn ls lr y sc hoo l 7 30 p m ,
se rv1 ce meeting 8 30 p.m
a m Con fess Ions, Sa Iur day, 7
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
7 :Wpm
.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Chml m Chmltan Unmn - Robert Kuhn, pa stor , Will iam La wrence Mant ey, pastor , Mrs
Wa tson, Sunday school supt Russell Youn g, Sunda y School
Sunday sc hool, 9 30 am, BYF, Sup I Sunday Sc hool 9 30 am,
6 p m , Bible sludy, Wed Evenmg worshi p 7 30 Wed
nesda y, 7 p m , choir prac ll ce, nesday prayer meehng. 7 30
Wednes day, 8 :W p m
Pm

Carpenter
News~

Homemade ha ts wet e 1oadstde park
modeled and Mrs Charle;
The ha ls made by th e
Hoffman won the prtze fm the membct s wet e sold dunn g the
most aUt act1ve one dt a soctal hour Mrs. Stanle) Bass
meelmg of the Golden Rule conducted ga mes w1tl1 pnzes
Class of the Pomeroy Church of gmng to Mrs Elwood Bowers,
Chn st Tuesday mgh l
Mrs Cat·der, Mrs Raymond
Lm en a R1ce
Mrs Hoffman was hostess Batty, Mrs Don McKmght, and
for the mee tmg held 111 the Ltsa J o Hendncks Mr s
church soc tal 1oom Devolwns Denver Kapple won the door Hmes , M1s Ca1 ne Memharl,
VISIT EN DED
on love were gtven by MIS p!tze
Mrs No rma Goodwm , Mrs
Lynn Reynolds has retu1 ned
Do11s Ca t der who . used
Refreshmenl.s were se rved Harvey Wh tlla tch, Mrs home after spcnd mg the past
scnplw e 1st Cor 13 Prayer by the hostess to those named Wtlham Matlack, Mt s. Ches tet week wtlh her grandparents,
was g1ven by Mrs I oms and Mt s Charles Eske1&lt; and Kntght, Mrs Ruby Erb, Mrs Mt and Mrs L E. Reynolds,
Osbot ne who prestdcd at the Mrs Eva Dessa uer and her Ma bel Wolfe, Mr s Ha rley Mtddleport Her parents, Mr.
busmess meetmg
granddaught er, Ltsa J o Hendncks, and Mrs Char les and Mrs Val Reynolds, came
Membct·s signed a 1ound- Hendrtcks, who wet e gues ts Strauss
for her over the ~ee kend
robtn cat d for Roxanne MeDame!, daughter or Mr an&lt;!
Mt s Btll Me Da me! The anFa the r' s Day. Sun . • June 18
nual pt&lt;ntc was planned lot
July at \he ne1&lt; Route 33

Red
Rose
CAT FEEDING

180 Mulberry

7- 'l1le DIIUy Sentinel, Mlddleeort-Pomeroy, 0., June I6,1972

Harrisonville
Society News

Event

Many relahves and friends
attended graduation exerctses
at Albany Elementary School
for studenl.s completmg the
eighth grade Those fr om the
commumly mcluded Cec tla
Shlltz, Dale Rowley, James
Re ed, Rt cky Ba tley Pam
Holcomb, Manlyn Penn , Jeff
Jon es, Brtan Woodgerd ,
Darrell Slone, Steven Gtllogly ,
Ka th y Massey a nd Cmdy
Batley.
Mr and Mrs
Ar thur
Crabtree ente rtamed on
Sunday wi th a famtl y
gathermg honormg thetr son,
Carl, on hts btrthday Those
pr ese nt were Mrs Goldte
Gtllog ly, and Mr and Mrs. Carl
Crabtree, Russell and Kevm
Aftern oon callers were Mrs
Mane Seel, Albany , and Mrs
Phtlhp Kasler, Ben, Brad and
Ann, Amesville ; Mr and Mrs
Ceetl Gtllogly and famtly and
Mr and Mrs. Reed Jeffers,
loca l Mr Crabtree was
released fr om O' Bieness
Memonal Hosptlal on Wednesday and 1s convalescmg
I sallsfa ctonly at hts home
followmg an acctdent In whtch
hts rtght hand was seriOusly
mjured.
Gueslll of Paul and Wtlham
C Peck were Mr. and Mrs.
Emzie Davis, Parkersburg, W
Va ., Mrs Vtrgmla Townsend
and Suste , Columbus, and Mr
and Mrs Cecil Blackwood and
Lisa Dye, Carrabelle, Florida
Mr and Mrs. Fred Keirns,
Millfield ; VISited wtlh Mrs
son-tn-law
a nd
Keirns '
daughter, Mr and Mrs. Carrol
Woodgerd and famtly and
helped
Mrs
Woodgerd
celebrate her birthday
Mrs Owen Arnson and
daughter, Mtamt Lakes,
Florida, were recent guests of
her parenlll, Mr and Mrs
Wtlliam Thomas
Mr. and Mrs
Glen
Gassaway, Powell, spent some
time here wtth thetr son-m-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs
Wtlham Miller and famtly
Guests of Murl Galaway
Included Mr. and Mrs. D V
60mmmgs, Athens, Mrs.'
Marie Dailey and Wtlbur,
Albony, and Cathy WoodrUIIJ
and Brenda Doddrtll, McAr~ thur

Wolfpen
•

News, Notes
Mrs. Gene Thompson, Gma
and Cyndta, were Sunday
e visitors of Mr. and Mrs. H. E.
Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wiseman of Mansfield were
recent vlsl!Drs of Mr and Mrs.
Gene Thompaon and family.
Miss Jo Smith was a Suilday
viallor of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lambert and family.
Mr, and Mrs. Tom Swnmerfield and fanuly of Illinois
were weekend viallorl of Mr.
and. Mn. Robert RUIIIM!ll and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard RUSBell
and other relatives.
Mill Jo Smith spent MOnday
with Mr. and Mn. John Adams
and family of Buffalo, W. Va.

Mrs John Stout and Mrs
Sadt e Carr vtst ted Mmme
' McG rath Mond ay eve mn g
Mrs Stout reporl.s her grandson, Bobby Stout, w11l be
marrt ed thts month
Mr and Mrs C F Gtlkey of
Albany, 0 and Mike Epple,
loca l, vtstled Ava Gtlkey
Monday evemng
Mrs Ea rl Fotl 's granddaughter , Vtcki , of Columbu s,
0 IS here to spend her summer

'rtcatwn.
Mr and Mrs Smtley and
thetr 13 year old son have
bought and occupy the former
Clifford Cuckler residence on
the htll This ts one of the mcest
loca llons m the vtllage
Mrs ·Mary Wrtght 1s m a
Co lu mbus,
0.
hosptlal
fo llowtng maJor surgery
The Cectl Hanmg family
have moved m the Charles
Butcher house bel let known as
the Ktt Slee th house
Mt and Mrs Donald Weaver
VISited th e Junt or Paynes
recently
Mr. and Mrs Robert Alktre
made a busmess lrtp to Athens
and vtstled thetr son, Ray, at
The Plams
Mr. Wtllard Faudree 1s aga m
able to walk to the post office
alter hts recent Illness
Mr and Mrs. Raymond
Chapman of Maryland are
vtstting Mrs Mary Dtehl and
Stella Atkms and Ruby Dtehl
Mr and Mrs Rex Artx are
redeeoratmg the Whttlmgton
farm horne here
Mrs Bessie Graham has
purchased a new rtdmg lawn

mower.

..

Mr and Mrs H D. Gtlkey
and son, Joey, wtll spend thetr
vacalton lhts month VISiting
thetr daughter, Jackie Davtes
and husband 111 Oklahoma
Rodney Gtlkey gradua ted
from Ohio Umversity on June
10 and wtll be employed by the
Mason Dtxon Transfer Co m
the o!ftce department at
Columbus, 0

Alfred

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
June II was 45. The offenng
was $18 30. Worship servaces
were held all!, wath Charles D
Woode, lay-leader
The Alfred Umted Methodist
Women will meet on Tuesday
evening, June 20, at 8 o'clock,
at the home of Eleanor Boyles
at Tuppers Platns, with
Florence Spencer, program
leader
Several local people attended
Ute Lowell Zeigler sale, near
Albany, 0, on Saturday, June

10
Mrs. Thelma (Clarence )
Henderson IS attendmg the
Umted Methodist Conference
at Lakeside, 0 thts week as the
lay-delegate from the Northeast Cluster of Ute Metgs
County CoOperative Panah
Mrs. Ella Yost of Sugar
Grove, 0 . 1s spending some
time with Genevieve Guthrie.
Clair Woode and Connl Sue of
Circleville, 0 ., spent Saturday
aftei'IUIOII and evening with his
parenla, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
D. Woode and with the William
Carr family.

'

• MIDDlEPORT P E N·
TECOSTAL - Th ird Ave lhe
Rev Wtll ta m Kn1 tlel. pastor
Ronald Dogan. Sunday school
supt Classes fo r all ages,
evening se rvlc"t. 7 30 p m ,
B1ble s tudy, Wednesda y 7 30
p 11,
)
'
~erv1ces, Fn day,
1JOp m
_" __
FREEWILL BAPTIST
Corner Ash and Plum, M1d
dleport,
Noe l Herrman,
pastor Saturday even1ng
serv1ce, 7 p m Sunday school,
10 a m , Sunday evenmg
worsh1 p, 7 p m

UNITED MINISTRY OF Service, 7 30 p m , Youth
ME IGS COUNTY. The Untied meetmg 6 JO p m
Evenmg
Presbytenan Chu rch. Dw1ghl worsh1p, 7 30 p m
L Zavilz. Pas tor Di rector ,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
George W Hulton and Rev NAZARENE - Rev Herbert
L1nson Stebbins. Ass't Pastor Gra te, pastor Worship servtce,
D1rec tors
11 am and 7 30 p m Sunday.
FIR ST UNI TED PRES Su nday School, 9 30 am
BYTERIAN . Harrlsonvtlle, R1chard Barton, supt Prayer
Sunday Church School, 9 J() meel1ng, Wednesday, 7 30 p m_
am , Mrs Homer Lee, Sup! ,
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
Mornmg Wors.h1p 10 30 a m
CHRI ST - Clifford Sm1lh,
FIRST
UNITED mm1ster Sunday School 9 30
PRESBYTERIAN, M&gt;ddleport, n m , mornmg church 10 30
Sunday Church School 9 30 n m Sunday evemng serv1ce,
am, Lew1s Sauer, Sup! , 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce 8
Morn1no WorshtP 10 30 am pm
FIR ST BAPTI ST at Mtd
F t RST
U ti I T E D
LAUREL CLIFF FR E E
dleport, corner of Six th and PRESBYT ERIAN , Syracuse METHODI ST - Rev Eugene
Palm er 'St reets, Rev Charles Mornmg Worsh1p 9 a m , Gtll paslor W1 11 1am Bailey,
S1mons,
pas tor
Fre d Sunday Church School, 10 am supt Sunday School 9 JO a m
Hoff man, Sunday School Mrs Sampson Hal l Supt
Morn1ng worship, 10 30 am ,
Supenn lendent Sunday churc h
STIVERSVILLE
COM · Even mg worsh1 p, 7 30 p m
sc hool for everyone 9 15 am , MUNITY, Rev Edse l Har t, Wednesday. Chnsllan Youlh
Morntng worship 10 15 a m . pastor Sunday School serv1ce Crusade. 6 30 p m Prayer
Even)ng serv1ces. 7 30 p m • 10 a m Prayer Meet mg each meeling 7 30 p.m Thursday.
Wednesday prayer serv1ce, 7 30 Thursday 7 30 p m Sunday cho1r practice. 7 p m
p m Extra youth acttvth es on evenmg serv 1ce 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF
Sun day 5 p m , for all yout h up
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST CHRIST - Danny Evans.
to Sixth grade, 6 30 fat tUnlor - Pomeroy Harr tSO,VI IIe pastor Norman C Will supt
and sen1or high students
RMd Kenneth Eberts, pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a m ,
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Paul McElroy, Sunday School Worsh 1p serv tce, 10 30 a m
Middl eport, 5th a nd Ma1 n Sup! Sunday School 9 30 am , Chnsllan Endeavor Sunday
Ra ul m Moyer, pastor Micha el morn1ng wo rsh1p and com even 1ng .
Gerl ach, Sunday Schoo l supt mumon, 10 30 a m Sunday
REOllGANIZED CHUR CH
B1ble School, 9 30 a m mar even1ng yo uth Ch n sl1an en OF JESUS CHRIST OF LAT
nmg wor sh tp , 10 30 a m . deaver , 6 30, Worsh ip se rvtces, TER DAY SAINTS - Porlland
evenmg worship 7 30 p m , Sunday, 7 30 p m Wednesday Rac me Roild Ra lph Johnson,
prayer service 7 p m Wed even1ng prayer meet mg and pastor Herbert Wh ile Sunday
nesday
B1 b\e sludy 7 30 p m
School D~reclor Sund ay Sc hoo l
CHURCH
OF
THE
ST JOHN LUTHERAN 9 30 a m Morn mg worsh1 p
NAZARENE - Midd le port , P1 ne Grove. th• Rev Ar lh ur 10 30 a m
Sunday even mg
Rev Audry M1ller, pas1or , Combs pastor Sunday school , se rv1ce 7 p m Wednesday
Floyd Carson sup t Sunday 9 30 a m , church serv1ces, evenmg prayer services, 7 30
school, 9 30 a m , Morn1 ng 10 J(l am
pm
worshi p 10 30 am
1untor
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST
soc oely 6 30 p m, NYPS, 6 45 CHRI ST B1b\e School. 9 30 Great Bend, Cha rles Norn s,
p m
Sunday eva nQel1silc am morning worship, 10 30 pastor Worsh1p serv1ce, 9 30
mee lt ng, 7 30 p m Pr ayer am Sunday even1ng Worsh tp a m , Sunday School. 10 30 a m
meetmg Wednesday 7 JOp m
Serv 1ce, 7 30 p m , cho1r
CARLETON CHURCH 1
pract11::e Sunday and Wed Ktn gsbury Roa d
Sun day
MEIGS
nesday, 7 p m, prayer meet1ng School 9 30 am Ralph Carl ,
COOPERATIVE
and Soble study Wednesday 7 30 supt Worsh1p serv1ce, 10 30
PARISH
pm
a m and 7 30 p m alternately
THE UNITED
ANTIQU\1 y ;; 4\PTIST Prayer meet mg, Wednesday .
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Freeland Norns pastor 7 30 p m Rev Jay Stiles.
Robert R Card
Sunday schoo l 10 am , church pas tor
Rev Stanten Sm1th
serv1ce, 7 p m Wednes day
OLD
DEXTER
CHESTER - Worsh1p 9 15 B1ble sl udy 7 p m
•
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
a m Church Sc hool 10 a m
BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE. - Rev W1ll a rd Dutcher ,
ENTERPRI SE - Wors hip , 9 Mmersv 1l le J A McWaters pas tor Mrs Worl ey Franc1s,
a m , Church School, 10 a m pastor Sunday Sc hoo l 10 am
Sunday School Supl Sunday
FlATWOODS - Worshlp, 11 mor n1ng worsh1 p 11 a m
Sc hool. 9 45 a m Church Ser
a m , Church Sc hool 10 a m
Tra1n1ng Un 1on, 6 JO p m , v1ces f1rst and fh1rd Sundays
POMEROY - Worsh 1p 10 30 even1ng worsh tp 7 30 p m
fo llowing Sunday Schoo l
am Church School 9 15 am , Praver meetr ng, Wednesday, Second and fou rth Sat urday
UMYF630 p m
730pm
even mgs 8 p m serv1ces
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh1 p
RA CINE FIRST CHURCH
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
lOam Church Schoo\9 am. OF THE NAZARENE - - Mr Rober t Wyatt. pastor ,
UMY F 6 30 pro
Su nday School, 9 30 am
Sunday School supt , Rona ld
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Morm ng Worship. 10 30 am , Osborne Btble School, 9 30
Rev Robert Bumgarner
Even mg worsh ip 7 30 p m , am , preachmg 10 45 am
HEATH - Wors h1p 10 30 Wednesday Sunday • Schoo l Eventng serv1ces, 7 30 p m
am Church School 9 JO am , Supenntendent Pau ltne Me
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
UMYF 7 p m
Cil ntock. pastor Rev Morns METHODIST - Cec1l W1se,
RUTLAND - Worsh 1p 9 15 M Wol le
Pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 3(1
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST - a m , Morn1ng worshi p 10 30
a m Church School 10 am,
UMYF 7 p m
'
Cha rles Norns, pastor Sunday a m , Young Peopl e's serv1ce
SALEM CENTER - Wors h1p School. 9 30 am
Morn 1n g 6 45 p m . Evangelistic serv1ce
9 a m Church School 10 a m
worsh 1p 10 45 a m , Sunday 7 30 p m Pr ayer meet1 ng,
UM YF Thursday 7 p m
eventng worship 7 30 p m , Thur sday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Wednes day even 1ng B1ble
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
Rev . Forrest R Donley
Study, 7 30 p rn
MISSION - Bald Knobs Rev
ASBURY - Worsh ip 11 am ,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , L R Gluesencam p, pas tor
Chu rch School9 50a m , WSCS, Rev
Lawrence Su lliv an Roger Wi lfred, Sr , Sunday
1st Tuesda y
pastor Sunday School 9 JO Sc hool Supt Sunday School.
FOREST RUN - Worsh ip 9 am , youth and jUniOr yout h 9 30 a m
Sun day eve nmg
a m Church Sc hool 10 am , serv1ce. 6 45 p m , evening worsh1 p 7 30 Praye r mee t1ng,
WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 worshi p 7 30 p nt prayer an d Tuesday, 7 30 p m Ernest
pm
pratse Wednesday 7 30 p m Dee ter cl ass leader Youth
MINERSVILL E - Worshi p
SILVER RUN FREE BAP Mee tmg Wednes day 7 30 p m ,
10 a m . Church SChool 9 a m
T\ST - Rev Howard K1mble Ernest Deeter leader
WSCS, 3rd Monday. 7 30 p m pas lor Sunday sc hocl , 10 am
MT. HERMON UNITED
SYRACUSE - Worsh1 p, 8 Henry Dav ts, supt , eventn g BRETHREN CHURCH IN
am , Churc h School , 9 a m
serv •ce, 7 30 p m Prayer CHRIST - Rev Robert Shoo k,
Pr ayer and B1ble Study, meet1 ng, Thurda y, 7 30 p m
pastor Sunday School , 9 30
Wednesday, 7 :Wp m
CHESTER CHURCH OF am , Ray Pooler, supt , Alfred
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
GOD - Rev James Sa tterf1eld. Wolfe, ass! supt , morn 1ng
Rev . W Dale McClurg
pastor Sunday school, 9 30 wors ht p 11 am , even1 ng
Rev Frank Cheesebrew
am , worsh 1p servtce, 11 a m , serm on, 7 30 p m, a lternat mq
Rev Marfha Ann Mattner
eve ntng serv1ce, 7, prayer eac h Sunda y Class meeiJ ng It
BETHANY ( Dor cas )
serv 1ce and you th se r v1ce. am
alte rna ting ~ u n day
Worsh1p, 9 JO a m , Church Thursda y. 7 p m
mor nmgs
Alfr ed Wolf e,
School to 30 am
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN layleader , Chnst1an Endeavor
CARMEL - Worship 11 - Homer Stephens pastor 7 30 p m Sun day . Roge r
am, 1st and Jrd Sunda ys. Sunda y School. 9 30 a m , Buc kl e y. preSident Pray er
Church School 10 a m
mornmg worsh1p 10 30 a m , meeting Wednesda y, 7 30 p m
APP~E GROVE - Worship
Robert Bobo Sunday school Board meetmg f1r sf Monday
7 30 p m church school 9 30 supt Sund ay evenmg serv1ce, each month, 7 30 p m
a m , m1d week se rvtce, 7 JO Youth mee ltng, Monday 7
Wednesda y, 8 p m
p rn M1d week serv1ce, Wed
EAST LETART - Worsh1p, nesday, 7 30 p m
WHITE ' S CHAPEL
lOam, f ~r s t and th1r d Sundays ,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Coo\
v1lle RD Rev Roy Deeter
9 am , second and four th THE NAZARENE - Rev M C
pastor
Sunday school , 9 30
Sunda ys church school, 9 a m , Lar1more pastor Bob Moore a m worsh1p
servi ce, 10 30
il rs l and th~rd Sundays, 10 a m , Sunday School Supt Sunda y a m B1ble study
a nd prayer
second and fourth Sunda ys School, classes for all ages, 9 JO serv1ce, Wednesda y,
7 30 p m
Mid week serv1ce, Wednes day, a m , mormng worsh1p, 10 45
8pm
NYPS Sunda y, 6 30 p m ,
GREAT BEND - Worsh1p 11 evangei 1SI IC serv 1ce Sun day ,
RUTLAND
a m , 2nd and 4t h S und ay~. 7 30 p m M1d week prayer
FIRST BAPTIST
RUTLAND
Chu rch School, 10 a m
meel1ng, Wednesday, 7 30 p m Rev
Sa
el Jackson,
LETART FALLS - Worshtp Mtss 1ona ry meel1ng, second pastor Sundaymu
School.
10 a m ,
10 a m , Church School 9 a m Wednesday, 7 30 p m
Ger
tr
ude
Bulle
r,
~u pt
Mrs
MORNING STAR - Worsh1p
9 :W am , Ch urch School 10 30
UNITED FAITH NON · Pr ay er Se rv1ce, 1 30 p m ,
a m , Mid Week ServiCe. DENOMINATIONAL - Rev prea chmg serv1ce 2 p m
Wednesday, 8,.p.m
Robert Sm1fh pastor Sunday RUTLAND CHURCH OF
MORSE CHAPEL - Worship school. 9 30 am, class leader. CHRIS-:- - Sunday school, 9 30
11 a m , 1st and 3rd Sunda ys, Leo H1ll. worsh1 p serv 1ce, 10 30 am .. V H Braley, supt ,
Church School, 10 a m
a m , church, 7 30 p m , prayer co mmun 1an and de vat1on s,
10 30 a m Regular board
PORTLAND - Worship 7 30 meehng , Wednesday
p m , Church School 9 30 a m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN mee t1ng 7 30, fh1r d Satu rda y
SUTTON - Worsh1 p, 11 a m IN CHRIST-E ldon R. Bla ke, each month
THE RUTLAND COM·
2nd and 41h Sundays , Church pastor Sunday School, 10 a m ,
School 10 am
Winn1e Halsmger, supl Mt:Jr MUNITY CHURCH - Rev
WESLEYAN {Racine) nmg ser mon, 11 am , Evem ng RICh ard Dubbe\ d, pastor
Worship, 11 am , Ch urch serv 1ce Chn st 1an Endea vor, Sc hoo l, 9 30 a m , Worship
Schoo\, 10 am
7 30 p m , Mrs Lyda Cheval ier. service. 11 a m .. Wednesday
UMY F for all chur ches of lhe president Song serv ice and prayer meet 1ng , 7 30 p m
Sou thern Cluster , 7 30 p m sermon. 8 20 Mtd Week prayer Sunda y mght worshtp , 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
ea ch Sunday at the Youth meeh ng Wednesda y, 7 30 p m.
THE
NAZARENE - Rev
Center (Oak Grove Road I
Mrs Mane HolSinger, cla ss
Lloyd 0 Gnmm, Jr , pastor
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
lea der
Rev Jacob Lehman
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT Sunday School, 9 30 a m ;
Rev Standley Brandum
CHURCH Har rlsonvtlle Morn mg worsh1p, 10 30 a m ,
JOPPA - Worship 10 a m , Road , Rev Roy Taylor, pastor , Young . people's ser vlce, 6 45
Church School 9 a m , Prayer Henry Eblin. Sunday School p m • Evang elist iC s ~rv l c es,
&gt;upt ~ u n day School. 9 30 a m , 7 30 p m Wednesday evenmg
Meeting , Wednesda y, 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM - Church ev entng worship. 7 30 p m serv1ce 7 30 p m
serviCes, 9 am , Sunday School Pray er and pr aise se rvice.
MASON COUNTY
9 45 am Bible study every Thursday,, 7 30 p.m
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
Thur sda~, 7 30 p m
COMMUNITY CHURCH , G
C
S d
NORT BETHEL - Worship De•ter - Worship services eorge as to, pastor un ay
Schoo l, 9 30, evemng worsh1p,
11 am , Church School 10 am . Sa tur day a~ d Sunda y, 7 30 7 30 Thursday evening prayer
- serviCe , 7 :w p m
ALFRED - Sunday school, E m
H- EM L 0 C K
G R O.V E MASON FIRST BAPTIST 9 45 a m each Sunday •
preaching at lt am each CHRISTIAN - Da vid ~ t aune r, Second and Pomeroy Sis , Stan
Sunday Prayer meeting, 7·45 pastor , Stanford Stockton, supt Cra 1g, pastor. Sunday school,
p m Wednesday . WSCS, 8 P m Morning worshtp, 9 JO a m , 9 45 a m , worship service, 11
on ln lrd Tuesday each month chur ch school, 10 30 a m , am, t ralnln~ umon, 6 :wpm ,
REEDSVILLE - Sunday young peoples meeting, 6 30 evening wofshlp serv ice, 7.30
school, 9 30, preaching, 7 30 p m • eventng worsh1p1 7 30 p.m Mtd week prayer serv 1ce1
p m Sunday ; prayer meetmg, B1ble0ilvdy, Wedhesday , 7 30 Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
_
7 30 p.m Tuesday , WSCS, 7 30 p m
first Thursday each month
MT UNION BAPTIST FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
SILVER RIDGE - Worship, Rev Cectl Cox, pastor Sunday - Lelarl Route 1, the Rev Stan
10 am , Church School, 9 a m ,school supt , Joe Sayre Sunday Cratg, pastor Sunday school,
TUPPERS PLAINS
schoo l. 9 45 am , Sunday 9 JO am , prayer and Bible
Worship 9 a m , Church School evening worsh1p, 7 30 Wed· sludy, 7 30 p m Cottage prayer
10 am .
nesday prayer and Bible sludy, serv 1ce. Tuesday , 10 am ,
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, 7 30 p m
_
worship service, Friday, 7 JO
Hobar. Newell, supt Services
TUP P ERS
P LA INS p m
weekly, 9 .JO am 011 Sunday CHRISTIAN CHURCH
MASON
CHURCH
OF
Preaching first and third Eugene Underwood . pastor , CHRIST- Loren T Stephens,
Sundays of month by Clifford Howard Caldwell, Jr .. Sunjay minister Worship, 10 am ,
Smith, 9 30 am .
School Sup! . Sunday School, Blble study, 11 t5 am , evening
HOBSON CHRISTIAN 9 30 a m , Morning sermon, worsh1p, 7 30 p m Mld·week
UNION - Darrel Doddr\11 , 10 30 a m , Sunday evening serv ice, Wednesday. 7 30 p m '
paslor. Sunday Schoo\, 9:30 serv ice, 7 o m
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
a.m., Leonard Gilmore, first
LETART FALLS UNITED GOD - Second Sf. Mason, W
elder , evening service, 7 J() BRETHREN - Rev Robert Va. Chester Tennant, paslor
pm
Wednesday prayer Shook, pastor , Herschel Noms, Sunday school. 10 a m , mor .
meeting , 7 30 p.m.
supl Sunday school. 9 30 a.m.; nlng worship, 11 am ,
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF morning S&lt;trmon, 10 :W a.m., evangelistic service, 7 30 p m
GOD - Racine Route 2 The evening sermon, 7 30 aller Bible study and prayer service
Rev Charles Hand, pastor. natlng each Sunday Prayer Wednesday. 7 30 p m. Phone'
'··
Sunday school, 9: 45 am ,. service, Wednesday, 7 30 P m 773-5133
morning worship , 11 a.m . Prayer meel\ng, 7 30 p.m
HARTFORD CAURCH OF
Evening services, Thuesday olternaflng Sundays.
CHRIST In Christian Union and Friday, 7 30
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF Rev O'Dell Manley , pastor
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE GOD OF PROPHECY, G P. Sunday school. 9 30a m , Roger
CHURCH OF CHRIST - David Smtih, pastor Sunday School, Manley, supt .. evening servfce
Jewell , paslor Blb\esludy, 9 30 10 am ,, Arthur Henson, Sup! • 7 30 Wednesday evening'
• m , morning worship, 10 30; Mormng Worship 11 a .m ; ·prayer meeting, 7 30 p m
evenmg worship , 6 30 p m Young Peoples S&lt;trvlce, 7 P m • Sunday evening youth service
Wednesday Btble study, 7 30 Evening sen ice, 7 30 p.m.; 6 45 w\lh Macy Lou Carter
pm
Wed~day Mid Week Prayer leader No Tuesday service '

the
direction

oleneruv
When t he big whee l turns clockw1se, the ltttle wheel turns counter.
clockw ise at a great er rate of speed. T hus man controls ener gy in the
physic:jl universe, determ m mg, accordmg to h ts own w11l, 1t s directJon
and effect
Th er e 1s a spm tual umver se, too. A world m whtch God, w ho gave
us freedom of will, provt des the gmdance, help and inspiratwn wh ich unite
our mmds w tt h Hts for purposes wh ich are GOOD
We r eali ze wtth trembli ng m tbis nuclear age that t he physical and
sp1r itual umverse are not two-but ONE We cannot live in t he one and
for get the other For the world we know will pensh unless man 's s ptritual
v1sion governs hts use of the energy h e controls
Wise a n d reverent mi nds have a lways known this. T hat is why we
have CHU R C HES ... why we sh are their Ltfe and Work wtth one another.
X nptorei iel&amp; ted by lhe Ameri[Jn R1ble Socltty
Su nday
Roman•

a p.ta

Mon day

Tuesday

Job
M·2 1.

P1alm1

aa, 1 18

Wednuday
Pronrb1
12z7 8

Thu rsday

Frtday

EcclesiCISfel

Ectlet1ost••

7 11 22

50,4 8

l2

Copy right 1972 Ke1strr Advrrthlng Srrvlct

In(

Stusbura. Vlrsfnl.t
-~

With the hope 1! wt ll , in some measure, foster and he lp sust a1n that wh1ch is
good tn fa mily and communit y ltfe, this fea t ure 1s sponsored by th e bustness
f1rm s an d or g antzatton s wh ose names appear below

..

.

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN

Meigs Cou nty Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

Trail e r Re nta ls and Sup p li es
St. Rt. 7
Ch est e r , Oht o

296 W. Second Pomeroy P.l1 . 992-3865

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH

LODWICK'S MARKET

" We Sponsor J es us "
Rev. St a n Cr a1 g . Pasto r

Member of t he Big 3
General Me r c hand ise
Ph 667-3280
Tuppers Plams

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

MARK VSTORE

El ec tn c Moto r Repa1 r
810 W Ma1n
992 5750

Mtddleport , OhiO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

Rexa ll Drugs
We Ftil Ail Do ctors' Presc n pl!on s
992 2955
Pomer oy

ROYAL OAK PARK

Bakers of Holsum Bre ad
Midd leport. Oh 1o

.

GAUL'S MARKET

Fa m i Iy Recre al! on
Swim m ing , Ca mp1ng

Chester, Oht o

rHE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

BOGGS EQUIPMENT
Sales A1t1s Cha lmers Service
Farm lndustnal - Lawn . Garden
Tup per s Pl ai n s
667-3435

Pom e roy-Me mber F DI C &amp;
Fe de r a l Rese r ve Syste m

DrCK'
S GROCERY
(Former ly Domlgans l

HEINER'S BAKERY

New O..ner- DICk Sargen-t
Old U.S. 33
Ph 992 ·7735
Stop In a nd See Us

Ba kers of (;ood Bread
Huniin gton , W Va

RACIN.E FOOD MARKET

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

The Store Wtt h A Heart
Ph 949 3342
Racine
•

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Deale r
Middl e port, Oh10

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

Phon e 992 3284

DB A ANTHONY
PLU MBING and HEATING
337 N. 2nd Middleport 992-3550

Middl eport

.

CARPET-LAND, INC.

M&amp;R FOODLINER

Wa ll to Wall Carpet Spectallsls
116 W Matn
Ph. 992·7590
Free Est im a tes · Guaranteed
Inst a llation

Middlepo rt, Ohio

MONTGOMERY WARD

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

CATALOGUE STORE
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Otarles R. Shee ts
106 Court St
Pomeroy 992-3001

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus, 0
Pomeroy
307 Spr ing Ave.
Ph . 992·2318

SEARS

K&amp;C JEWELERS
Keepsake Diamond Rings
312 E Main St
Pomeroy,

Authori zed Catalog Merchant
LOUI S W. Osborn
220 E Main Pomeroy Ph. 992-2178

0

. RAU.S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

'

N

Saturday
Jeremioh-

Phone 992-3481
N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0

.

BOWERS DRIVE-IN
RESTAURANT

E. Main St .

Pomeroy

TUPPERS PLAINS HARIMARE
•
1

Paint· Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Supplies
Tuppers Plains
667-3963

RACINE PlANING MILL
Buildtng Supples and MTIIwork
General Contracting
Ph. 992·3978

'

�{;)((USe N\10, SIR, BUr l '-!
COIJD\.C"r!A.JG A SURVtY

Voice

WEEKLY GUIDE

along

TO BETTER

Br'Way
'lOU CALL IT
POLice~?

CAMPUS CLATIER
W~AT

A1R. SI/ARKE'I; A~OUT
T~ ESE CRITERIA ~OR 'lOUR

COUL.D BE

,

CL.EARER.

ANY POST·IIM\.

AIR·CONDITIONEI&gt; CL.ASS~S

SUMMER. SCJ.IOOL
COURSES-

WITH A .FEMAL.E·MALE RATIO
OF AT L.EAST Z TO I

.•

YOU SAY IT6
M'Y PU1Y AS A
50N· IN·LAW.

IJ'L ABNER

HONEST
A&amp;EIS

7.li.

~SEE

OPEN lHE

YcuR PASS •••

&amp;ATE! ..

, - A '/OKUM
DEVELOPS ALL
TH' 5 TREN'TH
AN' BRAINS
HE'LL ~-::;;;_

EllER

HE

,·· ,

GIT

'

&amp;IGGER BUT

'

HE'LL.. NEVER

GIT
STRONGER.

'

'

TODAY!!

YOU 9AY ONE: INIMTE
1&amp; ~E RINGLEADER

JANIE:, WE: C'IN HAVE A I!LLHAVE 70
PARTY FOR BIRDIE
8EE IT'TO
IY/71rt:J(JT P!AYING
9£LJEVE IT.
HAVOC Wlltf HER
DIET !

•'

~AT(5 RIGHT/

COMMI&amp;&amp;IONER .

WHO$ STIRRING UP

HER NAME 15 TESSIE

~E:
TROUBLE~

MOST OF

TIJFF, AND SHE'&amp; AS

TOVISH AS NAILS.'

ltherP no
medicine
KittL.1
could

take?

1-le hate

t ' walk!

IT's SO PEACEeUL
Y~ GET

WH'( DON'T
VJ£ J UST

1' UNDEK!STAND 'T 11AT
ll ~f. AN ' LET LIVE
M Ar-!S ~.fRfMA"[$ AS

ARRA NQ[ A
CVNV[NIENf

HERE ... ONCE

HOW THAT I 'M ~INDA
GE1TIN ' USE T LOBO,
I'M 6€GINii iN 1 f' UNO(R.S1AND WMY 'fOU liKE

LIVIrt' OUT HERE 1!'4 THE
!300NDocK5, UNCLE.

WELL AS HUMAN
8E!N 'S ~

nACCI D(.Hl " FOR
WENDElL

WARBUCKS..

j..(~&lt;HUCKli:J .. ·CC ;'~DERED

SIR?

WEHD€LL !

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I. Blubbers
5. Wore

(2 wds.)

Make raw

Shaddock:
grapefruit
12. Sugges·
. tive

13. Bring
forth
--..,..--:----.....:. 14. Ancie nt
~~ T~,_TS T~E VOICE
craft
PRINT OF ~E
15. Crony
WORD ·~REE ." 16. A Gabor
17. Command :

dom·

YHierdl)''l Cryptoquole: EVERY ACTION IN CO.IlPANY
OUGHl' '1'0 BE SOME SIGN OF RESPECT TO THOSE PUS.
ENT,-G, WASHINGTON
(C 1972 Kine Featun• Syndlrate, Inc.)

3. Old -time
radio

~~Mrnr.b[;; lkJ ~ce.w#IJ ~,_..

soap

opera
(2 wds.)

Unscramble thesefourJumbles, .
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary wo rds,

4. Hale or
Hari ,
for one

5. Yule
symbol
6. Friend

1'eBterday'l Amw~r

in

Piccardy
7. Spring
Byington's old
TV show

18. Brit·
isher's

"farewell"

(2 wds.) .

21. l'hroaty
sou nd

Oscar

22.Do

8. '~Ham let"
winner
9, In the
public
eye
11. Harbor
to
remember
15. Soccer
luminary

the
knee-onhandker·
chief
routine
23.True
to
fact;
real

24. Race
track
nuisan(e
26. Full force
28. Anony·
mous
writer
29. Sheets
and pillow cases
30. Vestibule
35. Part of

a

min.
36. Shelter
for
peas

RESEA

I I rJ

I
I KJ

lPJIOCON

III
''

I I V
I~~f.,~;~~~~~~t&gt;,~;.d~·l
uarellled
{VAlVED)
V

Now lllriiiiP the dn:led !ellen

'l to form the llll]ll'lle 11111\Wer, .. ,
b7 the abcwe can- ,··,

I UXJ (XUJ :. :

!.__;Prill
='-=
le=SIIIPIISI
= ANSWIII
=
IIert
==--o...J
·

(Aa.wn to-.rrowJ

' Jumble" GUESS

MESSY

LEOUMI

Yetlerdar'•
Antwer1

Ht declared-he

llla•n't

''

I'OPLAII'

one!-A SMUGGLIR

a sen

34. Prayer
(poet. )
S6. Four gills
S7. Least
chancy
SB. European

'·'

river

39, Choose
40, Gainsay
: '

DOWN
1. Getlost!

'~ '' ~,A BEAUTIFUL VOUNG

z.
MODeL. 15

CH''C~I'"'". WlfH HER AN~WERIPJG %~V IC E!,.,

DIDp,J'T LEAVE APJY
DARE,f3UT HE 5APD

'tii'ID-P,~O~PE YOU THI5 EVENIPJ6,,
ABOUT A

VERY VWFP!IJ.

~~~~!6NMEI(T!

11

'

Pal

, . 'I'

Joey"
creator

'

BY JACj(O'BRIAN
MELBA: A'HAIR·RAISING
TRIUMPH
NEW YORK (KFS)- Our
gifted Girl of the lljoment
Melba Moore, a · year ago a
sudden star untrammeled by
the complications of success,
went her independent way
without a care in the world. nor
a coterie, Toda'y, starring on
TV,. starring at the Waldorf's
Empire Room, signed for
big-fee concerts, Las Vegas,
movies, with an adorable,
apparently permanent talent
and assured C{ll'eer, she no
longer walks alone.
On her payr.oU are her or.
chestra conductor, drummer,
pianist, bassist, guitarist, four
boy singer-dancers 1"The
Reflections" ), a manager,
agent, press agent, secretary
and a gopher or two. The en·
dearing 911-lb. atomic balm is a
far fiscal way from her musicteaching New Jersey days. She
started on Bdwy , right at the
bottom: in ~~ Ha ir ."
Several years ago we wrote
from London, alter seeing
"Never Mind the Qality, Feel
the Width," a ple~~csantly ethnic
TV series, that' It could be
guided onto American network
TV neatly if only the powers;
that TV would see the bright
side of intelligent ethnic fun
and not be fearful of the foolish
pseudo-deli cacy
of the
executive fra idycats who
cringed at any racial or
religious joke ,, It took the
thoroughly abusive 'AU in the
Family" to now make the very
funny silly-titled British series
safe for nervous network
veeps.
Viacom and CBS-TV bought
the rights (networks no longer
create, they import) to "Never
Mind etc." and will shift the
background from England to
the U. S. but will keep the
central relationship of the
Irish-Jewish tailoring part·
nership, except of course shift
it to a less verisimilitudinous
(get us I) neighborhood bar and
grill.
When we saw a couple of
I episodes in London it had an
' immensely comic vaudeviUe,
even a burlesque, wildness,
taking a shot at imy joke
anywhere, digging up every old
ethnic-cliche in memory and
some beyond contemporary
cecal!, straight out of Joe
Miller and Madison's Budget;
if you remember Madison's
Budget you are an old
vaudevillian with emphasis on
old!
Melba Moore and the very
rich and social Gloria Vander bilt have something in
common: each weighs 98
pounds and is so thin, we're
afraid if they turn sideways
they'll disappear ,, Thinnest
females since Vera Ellen, and
whatever happened to that
slender dancing sylph.
It's a between campaignyear for wealthy young N. Y.
councilman Carter Burden (he
files his very own Village Voice
among his blue-chip coupons)
so there he went traipsing
Madison Ave. in faded jeans
and who-cares jacket ... That
was no lee cream cone saun·
tering 3rd Ave. in the 50s, It
was Tennessee Williams in
white suit, white hat, white
shoes, cane lind a contrasting
brown study, harkening
respectfully to his much
younger and thinner male .
companion.
Sherrye Henry, TV hostss,
gives lessons on how to spend a
fortune on a partr She was
LBJ's chairman of decorations
for the '64 inaugural balls.
Sherrye was given more than
'100,000 to spruce up five h~tel
ballrooms and one woebegOne
Nat'l Armory.
Parisian write r Daniele
Hunebelle If a French smoothand-snitch lass who dated
Henry Klsalnger, once anyway,
and promptly dashed to her
typewriter to det&amp;ll the no
doubt Intimate Intrigue: ita
stature got It paperbooked over
here, translated from the
original snitch-In-French.
Daniele swears Dr. Klsa·Kiss
repeatedly exclaimed to her,
"I'm your alave, Danlelle! ''
Danielle hu written two other

TV VIEWING
\\EEl\·~

..

SUNDAY
2: OQ- IJ, " The .Servant"
.
7: 30- 8, " Wefcome Home ,
Johnny Brlslol "
11 : 3~8. " The Good Humor

Man"

11 : 3~1J .

" Tarzan Triumphs"
MONDAY
I :OQ-13. "Some May Live"
9:0Q-13, "Sheriff of Fractured
Jaw "
11 : 30- IJ, " Tar zan 's Dese r t
Mystery"
12: 3~8. "Gunfighters"
TUESDAY
8: 3~3. " A Time To Live"
8: 3~ IJ, " Two for the Money "
11: 30- 13, "Tarzan and the
Amazons''
11 : 3~8. " On lhe Town"

IL~

WEDNESDAY
I :OQ-3, " The L ively Set"
8 : 3~3. "Cutter"
11 : 30- 8, " The Da_y They
Robbed the Ban k of England"
11 : 30- 13, " Tarzan and th e
Huntress" .
THURSDAY
9:00-8, " Assignment K"
11 : 3~8 , "Signpost lo Murder "
11 : 30- 13, "Tarzan and the
Leopard Woman ''
FRIDAY
9: 00-8, " Body &amp; Soul"
11 : 30-:8, ''Please, Don't Ealthe

Daisies"
11 : 3~13 ,

Son"

"Tarzan

Finds

a

SATURDAY
3: 30- 13, "Ta rzan's Savage
Fury "
9:0Q-3, " The ·Russians Are
Coming "
;
11 : 3~8. " The Gamma People"
11 : 5~3, " Bride of Dracula",
" Blood ot the Vampire"
12 : 00- 13, " Invisible Dr .
Mabus ", " Yongary, Monster
from the Deep", "Horror
Castle"

I

1.!
I=
I=
~~
~
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW'
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lettel'l,
· apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
' CRYPTOQVOTES

II

•

MotJ. thru fn.

I

I

I

9:30AM
:
ON THE

YSOSD EDPME G RPMWGYB EUU
N G D Y U D G W G J R S ~ U D E U U Y S (} D , _ .
.'H&lt;'l('" ·

'H)\

'

-&lt;··-

',...

.

•.

1360 _DIAL

I

'

I

~I

\

''I
I

�{;)((USe N\10, SIR, BUr l '-!
COIJD\.C"r!A.JG A SURVtY

Voice

WEEKLY GUIDE

along

TO BETTER

Br'Way
'lOU CALL IT
POLice~?

CAMPUS CLATIER
W~AT

A1R. SI/ARKE'I; A~OUT
T~ ESE CRITERIA ~OR 'lOUR

COUL.D BE

,

CL.EARER.

ANY POST·IIM\.

AIR·CONDITIONEI&gt; CL.ASS~S

SUMMER. SCJ.IOOL
COURSES-

WITH A .FEMAL.E·MALE RATIO
OF AT L.EAST Z TO I

.•

YOU SAY IT6
M'Y PU1Y AS A
50N· IN·LAW.

IJ'L ABNER

HONEST
A&amp;EIS

7.li.

~SEE

OPEN lHE

YcuR PASS •••

&amp;ATE! ..

, - A '/OKUM
DEVELOPS ALL
TH' 5 TREN'TH
AN' BRAINS
HE'LL ~-::;;;_

EllER

HE

,·· ,

GIT

'

&amp;IGGER BUT

'

HE'LL.. NEVER

GIT
STRONGER.

'

'

TODAY!!

YOU 9AY ONE: INIMTE
1&amp; ~E RINGLEADER

JANIE:, WE: C'IN HAVE A I!LLHAVE 70
PARTY FOR BIRDIE
8EE IT'TO
IY/71rt:J(JT P!AYING
9£LJEVE IT.
HAVOC Wlltf HER
DIET !

•'

~AT(5 RIGHT/

COMMI&amp;&amp;IONER .

WHO$ STIRRING UP

HER NAME 15 TESSIE

~E:
TROUBLE~

MOST OF

TIJFF, AND SHE'&amp; AS

TOVISH AS NAILS.'

ltherP no
medicine
KittL.1
could

take?

1-le hate

t ' walk!

IT's SO PEACEeUL
Y~ GET

WH'( DON'T
VJ£ J UST

1' UNDEK!STAND 'T 11AT
ll ~f. AN ' LET LIVE
M Ar-!S ~.fRfMA"[$ AS

ARRA NQ[ A
CVNV[NIENf

HERE ... ONCE

HOW THAT I 'M ~INDA
GE1TIN ' USE T LOBO,
I'M 6€GINii iN 1 f' UNO(R.S1AND WMY 'fOU liKE

LIVIrt' OUT HERE 1!'4 THE
!300NDocK5, UNCLE.

WELL AS HUMAN
8E!N 'S ~

nACCI D(.Hl " FOR
WENDElL

WARBUCKS..

j..(~&lt;HUCKli:J .. ·CC ;'~DERED

SIR?

WEHD€LL !

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I. Blubbers
5. Wore

(2 wds.)

Make raw

Shaddock:
grapefruit
12. Sugges·
. tive

13. Bring
forth
--..,..--:----.....:. 14. Ancie nt
~~ T~,_TS T~E VOICE
craft
PRINT OF ~E
15. Crony
WORD ·~REE ." 16. A Gabor
17. Command :

dom·

YHierdl)''l Cryptoquole: EVERY ACTION IN CO.IlPANY
OUGHl' '1'0 BE SOME SIGN OF RESPECT TO THOSE PUS.
ENT,-G, WASHINGTON
(C 1972 Kine Featun• Syndlrate, Inc.)

3. Old -time
radio

~~Mrnr.b[;; lkJ ~ce.w#IJ ~,_..

soap

opera
(2 wds.)

Unscramble thesefourJumbles, .
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary wo rds,

4. Hale or
Hari ,
for one

5. Yule
symbol
6. Friend

1'eBterday'l Amw~r

in

Piccardy
7. Spring
Byington's old
TV show

18. Brit·
isher's

"farewell"

(2 wds.) .

21. l'hroaty
sou nd

Oscar

22.Do

8. '~Ham let"
winner
9, In the
public
eye
11. Harbor
to
remember
15. Soccer
luminary

the
knee-onhandker·
chief
routine
23.True
to
fact;
real

24. Race
track
nuisan(e
26. Full force
28. Anony·
mous
writer
29. Sheets
and pillow cases
30. Vestibule
35. Part of

a

min.
36. Shelter
for
peas

RESEA

I I rJ

I
I KJ

lPJIOCON

III
''

I I V
I~~f.,~;~~~~~~t&gt;,~;.d~·l
uarellled
{VAlVED)
V

Now lllriiiiP the dn:led !ellen

'l to form the llll]ll'lle 11111\Wer, .. ,
b7 the abcwe can- ,··,

I UXJ (XUJ :. :

!.__;Prill
='-=
le=SIIIPIISI
= ANSWIII
=
IIert
==--o...J
·

(Aa.wn to-.rrowJ

' Jumble" GUESS

MESSY

LEOUMI

Yetlerdar'•
Antwer1

Ht declared-he

llla•n't

''

I'OPLAII'

one!-A SMUGGLIR

a sen

34. Prayer
(poet. )
S6. Four gills
S7. Least
chancy
SB. European

'·'

river

39, Choose
40, Gainsay
: '

DOWN
1. Getlost!

'~ '' ~,A BEAUTIFUL VOUNG

z.
MODeL. 15

CH''C~I'"'". WlfH HER AN~WERIPJG %~V IC E!,.,

DIDp,J'T LEAVE APJY
DARE,f3UT HE 5APD

'tii'ID-P,~O~PE YOU THI5 EVENIPJ6,,
ABOUT A

VERY VWFP!IJ.

~~~~!6NMEI(T!

11

'

Pal

, . 'I'

Joey"
creator

'

BY JACj(O'BRIAN
MELBA: A'HAIR·RAISING
TRIUMPH
NEW YORK (KFS)- Our
gifted Girl of the lljoment
Melba Moore, a · year ago a
sudden star untrammeled by
the complications of success,
went her independent way
without a care in the world. nor
a coterie, Toda'y, starring on
TV,. starring at the Waldorf's
Empire Room, signed for
big-fee concerts, Las Vegas,
movies, with an adorable,
apparently permanent talent
and assured C{ll'eer, she no
longer walks alone.
On her payr.oU are her or.
chestra conductor, drummer,
pianist, bassist, guitarist, four
boy singer-dancers 1"The
Reflections" ), a manager,
agent, press agent, secretary
and a gopher or two. The en·
dearing 911-lb. atomic balm is a
far fiscal way from her musicteaching New Jersey days. She
started on Bdwy , right at the
bottom: in ~~ Ha ir ."
Several years ago we wrote
from London, alter seeing
"Never Mind the Qality, Feel
the Width," a ple~~csantly ethnic
TV series, that' It could be
guided onto American network
TV neatly if only the powers;
that TV would see the bright
side of intelligent ethnic fun
and not be fearful of the foolish
pseudo-deli cacy
of the
executive fra idycats who
cringed at any racial or
religious joke ,, It took the
thoroughly abusive 'AU in the
Family" to now make the very
funny silly-titled British series
safe for nervous network
veeps.
Viacom and CBS-TV bought
the rights (networks no longer
create, they import) to "Never
Mind etc." and will shift the
background from England to
the U. S. but will keep the
central relationship of the
Irish-Jewish tailoring part·
nership, except of course shift
it to a less verisimilitudinous
(get us I) neighborhood bar and
grill.
When we saw a couple of
I episodes in London it had an
' immensely comic vaudeviUe,
even a burlesque, wildness,
taking a shot at imy joke
anywhere, digging up every old
ethnic-cliche in memory and
some beyond contemporary
cecal!, straight out of Joe
Miller and Madison's Budget;
if you remember Madison's
Budget you are an old
vaudevillian with emphasis on
old!
Melba Moore and the very
rich and social Gloria Vander bilt have something in
common: each weighs 98
pounds and is so thin, we're
afraid if they turn sideways
they'll disappear ,, Thinnest
females since Vera Ellen, and
whatever happened to that
slender dancing sylph.
It's a between campaignyear for wealthy young N. Y.
councilman Carter Burden (he
files his very own Village Voice
among his blue-chip coupons)
so there he went traipsing
Madison Ave. in faded jeans
and who-cares jacket ... That
was no lee cream cone saun·
tering 3rd Ave. in the 50s, It
was Tennessee Williams in
white suit, white hat, white
shoes, cane lind a contrasting
brown study, harkening
respectfully to his much
younger and thinner male .
companion.
Sherrye Henry, TV hostss,
gives lessons on how to spend a
fortune on a partr She was
LBJ's chairman of decorations
for the '64 inaugural balls.
Sherrye was given more than
'100,000 to spruce up five h~tel
ballrooms and one woebegOne
Nat'l Armory.
Parisian write r Daniele
Hunebelle If a French smoothand-snitch lass who dated
Henry Klsalnger, once anyway,
and promptly dashed to her
typewriter to det&amp;ll the no
doubt Intimate Intrigue: ita
stature got It paperbooked over
here, translated from the
original snitch-In-French.
Daniele swears Dr. Klsa·Kiss
repeatedly exclaimed to her,
"I'm your alave, Danlelle! ''
Danielle hu written two other

TV VIEWING
\\EEl\·~

..

SUNDAY
2: OQ- IJ, " The .Servant"
.
7: 30- 8, " Wefcome Home ,
Johnny Brlslol "
11 : 3~8. " The Good Humor

Man"

11 : 3~1J .

" Tarzan Triumphs"
MONDAY
I :OQ-13. "Some May Live"
9:0Q-13, "Sheriff of Fractured
Jaw "
11 : 30- IJ, " Tar zan 's Dese r t
Mystery"
12: 3~8. "Gunfighters"
TUESDAY
8: 3~3. " A Time To Live"
8: 3~ IJ, " Two for the Money "
11: 30- 13, "Tarzan and the
Amazons''
11 : 3~8. " On lhe Town"

IL~

WEDNESDAY
I :OQ-3, " The L ively Set"
8 : 3~3. "Cutter"
11 : 30- 8, " The Da_y They
Robbed the Ban k of England"
11 : 30- 13, " Tarzan and th e
Huntress" .
THURSDAY
9:00-8, " Assignment K"
11 : 3~8 , "Signpost lo Murder "
11 : 30- 13, "Tarzan and the
Leopard Woman ''
FRIDAY
9: 00-8, " Body &amp; Soul"
11 : 30-:8, ''Please, Don't Ealthe

Daisies"
11 : 3~13 ,

Son"

"Tarzan

Finds

a

SATURDAY
3: 30- 13, "Ta rzan's Savage
Fury "
9:0Q-3, " The ·Russians Are
Coming "
;
11 : 3~8. " The Gamma People"
11 : 5~3, " Bride of Dracula",
" Blood ot the Vampire"
12 : 00- 13, " Invisible Dr .
Mabus ", " Yongary, Monster
from the Deep", "Horror
Castle"

I

1.!
I=
I=
~~
~
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW'
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lettel'l,
· apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
' CRYPTOQVOTES

II

•

MotJ. thru fn.

I

I

I

9:30AM
:
ON THE

YSOSD EDPME G RPMWGYB EUU
N G D Y U D G W G J R S ~ U D E U U Y S (} D , _ .
.'H&lt;'l('" ·

'H)\

'

-&lt;··-

',...

.

•.

1360 _DIAL

I

'

I

~I

\

''I
I

�. . . ..

s;;;;;;;;a;;~ifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
,.

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT

Not1ce
ATTENTION LAOIE5 1 Self
Defense for Women courses
starlmg soon at Maplewood
lake Phone 949 4074 or 949
3651 for tnformalton or
lnqu1re at lake
6 14 Jtc
RUMMAGE Sale Coals Bldg ,
across fr om Middleport
Lunch. Thursday Fr~day and
Saturday 9 am to S P m
6 I .:I 3fc

OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DEWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD
I nO
MARY L BIRCHFIELD ,
Sycamore S1ree1,
M•ddl eport, Oh1o,
Plain1tlfs
MRS R E cX~ADAY and
R E CANADAY ,
Addrest Unknown,
Et al ,
Defendants
NOTIC E BY PUB LI CAT ION ----~---No 15,064
T he Defem;tal'lts, Mrs R E
Cllndsy R E Ca 1aday the
unknown hetrs
dev1 sees,
le gatees adm tnlst ra tors,
dt s!rtbu lees executo rs and
as s.g ns cf L c Brechtel ,
Deceased and the unknown
h e ~r s
devtsees legatees ad
m1n 1slrato rs
d•strtbu tees
execu tor s and ass1gns of Peter Sunday School attendance a t
Brecntel De cea sed w1ll take Freedom Gospel Mtsston June
nottce tha i on the 3rd day of
May 1972 a Complamt was 4 was 32, offermg $11 01
filed In th e Common Pleas Mr and Mrs Russell
Court ol Me tgs County Ohio
Case No 15 06.:1 , wheretn you Krause, and son Troy of Gra nd
nave been named defendants Ra~1ds , M1ch , Mrs J1m
In th e prayer of the Comp la tnl
Plam t Hs pr ay that Defendants Stubbs and son Barry, of
meJy be compel l ed to show th etr
tnteres t and that the sa me may Mmeral Wells, Tex , and Mrs
be Eldiudged to be null and voed Paul Parsons and family of
nnd pla intiffs Iit i e quteled
aga, nst the same and for such Racme v1s1ted Mr and Mrs
other relief as tS proper Tl1e Michael Evans and family
real esta te IS descrtbed as
Mr and Mrs Russell Krause
fol lows
The foll owtng Real Estate and son Troy of Grand Raptds,
Sltu"ted m the county ot Me1gs Mtch , Mrs Mary Dailey and
m th e Sla te of Ohio and m the
Townsh tp of Salisbury and sons, Leota Birch, local, v1s1ted
bounded and descr~bed as Mrs Ada Van Meter
follows
Mr and Mrs Garland
S1tuate 1n Marcus Bosworth 's
Addthon to Lower Pom eroy, Mtlhone and famtly of Akron,
now 1ncorporated 1nto tl1e
Vt lla ge or Middleport Meegs 0, vtstted h1s mother, Mrs
Coun ty OhiO and marked and Anna Belt
. known on the sa d plat of lower
Pomeroy as Lol Number 153
Mr and Mrs Harry Johnston
Said lot be1ng f1fl y feet by one and son of Mounds, Ill , VISited
hundr ed and eleven feet Bemg
Lot No 153 as sl1own en deed Ius father, Mayswood Johnrecords of Me gs County Oh10 Ston
10 Volume 159, Page 320
Reference Deed Volume 244
Mr and Mrs Harry Johnston
Pag e 569 of the Metos Counly and son of Mounds, Ill ; Mr
Deed Recorct s
You are requ ired to answer and Mrs Donald Cremeans of
tile Complaint w1th1n twen ty Ftve Pomts, Mr and Mrs
eight days after the last
publ1 cat1o n Of lhts not1ce Charles Johnston and daughter
namely , by not la te r than the of Hemlock Grove, Mr and
2.41h day of July , 1972 , or
ludgm ent by default will be Mrs Lowell Greer and
rendered aga ins t you
DEWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD daughter of Hemlock Grove,
Mr and Mrs Lowell Greer and
MARY L BIRCHFIELD,
daughters,
local, vtBited Mr
Sycamore Street, Middleport,
Oh10
and Mrs Lawrence Johnston
Plaintiffs and fam ily
Crow Crow &amp; Porter,
Attorn eys for Plaint iffs
Mrs El va Dalley, Mrs Judy
151 12. 19 26 I6J 2 9 16 23
Pa pe, and Krtsten , of
Syracuse, 0 , VISited Mr and
LEGAL NOTICE
PAUL HARRIS Wl'1ose ad
Mrs Carl Autherson
dress ts unknown tS hereby
Mr and Mrs Carl Autherson
nottf l ed that on the 9th day of
May , 1972 Lena Turner, bemg vistted tlle1r son, Mr and Mrs
the platnttlf flied her complaint
n parllt ton aga.nst htm as a James Autherson and Patrtcia
defendant , tn the Common at Syracuse, 0
Pleas Court, Meigs county ,
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Bass
Ohio and being case number
IS 071
and
daughters of Mt Vernon,
Sa id com pta nt prays lor a
partition ot the foiiOWtng 0 , Mr and Mrs Arnold Hupp
desc r ibed real e s tate, and that and sons of Letart Falls, 0 ,
tt1e platnt ff s tnlerest be set off
to her .n sever elty or th at said VISited Mr and Mrs George
re~l
es!Bie be $Old end the Hupp
proceeds therefrom be div ided
Mr and Mrs. James Cor·
accord i ng to law
Sa td real esta te being situa ted burn , Mr and Mrs Edward
In the VIl lage of Pomeroy ,
County of Meigs and State of Corburn of New Bnghton, Pa ,
Ohto and bemg two lots con
VISited Mrs Sylv ta Carpenter
tamtng 1 43 acres , more or less
Mr and Mrs George
For a more detatled descrtpllon
of said real estate reference is Roberts, Rev Edward Grtfflth
made to Vo lume 241 page 295
Me igs County Deed Records of Bashan, Mrs Sylvta Car
Sa1d defendant. Paul Harns
shall answ er the platntdf's penter, local, attended a
complaint on or before August meeting at Umon Gospel
7, 1972 or he shall be deemed 1n Mtsswn Church at Charleston,
default
Leni'l Turner Platnttff W Va on Saturday evemng
J a O'B rie n her attorney
Mr and Mrs Delbert
100'1? Court Stree t
Lawson and Ttmmy of Eagle
Pomeroy , Ohio .d.5769
(5 ) 19 26 , 161 2, 9 16 23 61 C
Rtdge VISited Mr and Mrs
Gene Carpenter
Mrs Mary Holter vtstled her
sister, Mr and Mrs Roscoe
Tuppcr~S Plains
Hollon at Chester
Mrs Mary Holter, local, Mr
Society
and Mrs Roscoe Hollon of
Chester VISited tlletr COUSin,
By Mrs Evelyn Brlckles
Mrs Phylhs Rowan attended Mr and Mrs Don Carpenter al
the funeral of Vern Cleland at Amesv ill e, 0., whom th ey
Chester Wednesday afternoon hadn't seen for several years
~ota B~rc h VISited Mr and
Mr a nd , Mrs Lawre nce
Mrs
Carl Autherson, Mr and
Balser have moved to their
new home lhey bought of John Mrs George Hupp , Mrs
Mbaugh m the Arbaugh Ad· Mtchael Evans and fam tly . and
Mt s Mona Long, all local
dttwn
Mr and Mrs Gordo n
Mr and Mrs Joseph Rme of
Rideno
ur and fami ly of
Bethesda 0 spent several
Chester,
Mr and Mrs Paul
days here the guests of her
stster, Mr and Mrs Blam Evans and son, Paul, local,
vtstted Mrs Mae Van Meter,
Tayl01
and
Ruby
Mr and Mr s George
Mrs Mae Van Meter had a
Franstsco of Gahon, 0 were
water
well drtlled recently
weekend guests of her aunt
Mrs Effi e Watson Sunday
They atlended church services
al South Bethel where Mrs
Watso n's gra ndson , Roger
Watson , preached there
Sunday forenoon "
Mr and Mrs Osca r BabBY BERTHA PARKER
cock, Mrs Dmsmore Boyles,
Sabbath School attendance
Mrs Besste Webster, Mrs
Jw1e
11 at tile Free Metllodtst
Eulah Swan, all of Tuppers
Church
was 129 Offertng for
Plams, Mrs Leota Massar of
Eastern, Mrs Donna Lyons of morm ng services was $111 70
Parkersburg all att~nded Conference supe rtnl endent,
Jones, Za nesv ille,
revival servtces at the Rev
Congre ga ttonal Church at delivered the mornmg sermon
Vacation Bible School wtll
Coolvtlle held by the Rev
close
Sunday evemng with a
Charles Nmt ts of the Racme
program
Everyone
ts
Baptist Church last week
welcome
The
ttme
IS
7
30
p
m
Rev Jack Young called on
Mrs . Ne1sel Weatherman June 18
Mrs Jerry' Hoagland and
Saturday
chtldre
n, McArthur, visited
Mr Robert Gray returned
home from the hospital at recently with her gra ndManetta and IS slowly tm· mother, Mrs Carmen Evans
Mrs
J eannin e Talley,
proving
Mr and Mrs Roger Epple Timothy, Tamara Lee and
and family have moved to tile Mark left Tuesday for M1ssour1
after a ten days v1slt with Mrs
Norman McCain property
Mr and Mrs Bob Tuttle and Talley's mother, Mrs. Bertha
family of Columbu,...vlsited h1s Parker
Mr Charles Diehl was m
parenls, Mr. and Mrs. Veri
Umverslty
Hospital, Colwn·
Tuttle over weekend
bus,
for
medtcal
treatment
Mr and Mrs Hobert Newell
The W.M S. wtll meet June
and son of Chester were
20,
7 30 p m at lhe local
Sunday guests of h1s parents,
Mr and Mrs Jess1e Newell church
Mr and Mrs. John N:eweU
Mr and Mrs. Ronald
and fam 1ly of Columbus were • Albaugh and children of Iowa
Sunday guesls of Mr and Mrs VISited recently with Mr and
Marvm Walker.
Mrs Clarence Curtis

Bald Knobs
Socl"a} N0 l es

•••

News

Laure] Cliff

News Notes

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P M Day Before Publication
Mond1ly Deadline 9 a m
Can.cellallon - Correct1ons
W1ll be accepted un til 9 a m for
Day of Publ ication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
nght to ed t! or reject any ad s
deemed obiectlc nal
The
publisher wiU not be responSible
fer more than one mcorrect
msertion
RATES
For Want Ad SerYtce
5 cents per word one 1nsert1on
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word thr.ee
consec ul tve inser tions
18 cents pe r word s.x con
secutl ve Insert eons
• 25 Per Cent 0 1scount on paed
adsandadspaldwethln lOdays
CARD
OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
51 so for so word mm 1mum
Each additiOn al word 2c
BLIND ADS
Add1f10na l 25c Charge per
Advertesement
OFFICE HOURS
8 ·30 am to S 00 p m Da 1ly,
a 30 am to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

Employme nt W,1,,1 ·i'

For

.

.

Sale

Business Services

,,

pa1nt root s or houses, BOAT tra 1ler and 12 h p Sea
tnm and cut trees clean
K1ng outboard molor $100.
attics
basements
e tc
phone 247 2082 after 6 p m
Phone 9-49 312 I
6 1631c
6 14 30tc
DON'T pump your sluggish
sept1c lank Gel Klean Em
Wanted To Buy
Al l Sept1 c Tank Cleaner
OLD FU RNI TUR E, d1shes , Landmark Farm Bureau
clocks. brass beds, silver
Pomeroy
dollar s
or
comp lete
6 16 ltc
households , W r~te M D
Meller, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Ohro REGATTA WEEK SPEC IALS
Call 992 6271
V1nyl floor coven ng , lovely
3 16 tfc
colors
&amp; patte rns, 9)(12's
--,------ - , - - -- $14 9S. elect clothes dryers.
l'elp Wanted
your cho1ce SJO (F ree
l
SUMM ER Employment, car ceram 1c frog w1th every rug
necessary, for details wnte or dryer purchase thru
Mrs L1 bma n, 34 West Car
Regatta Week' I All metal
lawn
cha1rs go cart motor
penter Street. Athens Oh1o
used wh1 fe work trousers,
45701
6 11 61c sh.rts, 85c each, great for
pamtersl Also, see our usual
good
selec t 1on of clean
WAITRESS no exper~ence
necessary , apply m person household goods, appliances
KUHL'S BAR GAIN CE N
Blue Tartan, Mtddleport
6 IS 61c TER Rt 7 " at lhe caut 1on
ltght' Tuppers Pla ms , Oh1o
Open to 6 p m
closed
Mondays Phone 667 3858
For Rent
6 11 61c
HOUSETRAILER , 12x60 2
bedroom a ~r con d1f1on ed, 592
Broadway, Me ddleport
·
6 16 3tc
- - - - - - -- 2 BE DROOM modu lar home 1n
Syracuse n1 ce loc atiOn
furnesh ed, phone 992 2-441
aller S P m
--==-=-=~-.,.--.,.---6--:14 He Economy T1ller, 31;~ h p B&amp;S
2 BEDROOM tra iler adu lts eng1ne Reg 159 95
144 95
only Bob s Mobile Cour t
phone 992 2951
Tur f Tnm Mower B&amp;S 3112
6 13 ff c hp engrne lncarton
7025
ON E bedroom trailer apar t
POMEROY
menls, 1deal fo r cou pl es
'W'._ JackW Carsey, Mgr
Contact McClure s Dn~ry Isle
iillil
Phone 992 2181
99'1 5248 or fJ92 3436
6 13 Sic r'-==========~
WILL

On Most Aml!rican_~.!'.fL
- GUARANTEE[)-..:
Phone 992-2094
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1l 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Mam, Ponwroy, Q.

EARTH MOVING
Dozer

End loader Work,
basement Ian~ sca pmg We have 2 s1ze
dozers, 2 $1Ze loaders Work
done by hour or contract .. '
Free Estimates We also
haul fill dtrl, top so1f Dump
truck s and low boy for h1re
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pom eroy Phone 992· 3525
after 7 p m or phone 992S232
&amp;

ponds ,

For Sale
1968 HO NDA CB 350. good
cond1 t1on low m1 les S-195
phone 992 5213
6 13 6lp

. .,..

.-

.

EXPERT
~ Alignment·
$5.55

I'

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Small est Heater Core

KESLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

I

.

OR TRUCK
,
.

Specializing In
Small Businesses

-==========..,
SPECIAL

MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

.

With These Used Car Savings

'

69 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air ............. '3500
68 Cadillac Sedan · DeVille, air .. .... .......'2600
&amp;8 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air ............. 12600

•
•

3 Bedfoqm home, with
brick f'ront, 1 car •
garage,
carpeting . •'
•• Pnced at . •
••
ONLY $13,750
l
We s~ciallze In a Iumlnum, ~&lt;
vinyl and steel siding; ,
fiberglas , brick and stone;
complete line or resldent1a1
and commercial roofing ,
remodeling,
building ,
suspet1ded ceilings, Interior
and exterior painting,
complele line of Masonry
work All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction We
are fully Insured for your
protection 32 N 2nd 992
3918
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

66

Buick LaSabre

4 Door, ~ir.............. 1,'995'

66
68

Buick LaSabre

4 Door

71

Ford

••!i!

RUTLAND FURNITURE

'1395
'2695'

&amp; Oldsmobiles

'72 Chev. Nova 2 Dr.

1967 CHEV IMPALA
51395
H T Sedan. V8 engine. auto trans . P S P B. factory
air, dark blue finish wrth vinyl roof. like new w s w, rad1o,
sharp car

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Apple Grove
News, Events

•

our employes

can

enjoy

71 Ford 4 Dr. Sedan
'70 Chev. Nova 2 Dr.
Sedan, v.s, auto trans., green with tan in tenor - SAVE-

'69 Cheville Super Sport
396, 4·sp., dark blue with dark tnterlor
SAVE- I
1

-

'68 Chevelle 2 Dr. Sedan

6 cyl ., 3-sp., dark blue with vtnyl whtte top. SAVE-

'70 Yamaha Motorcycle
'69 Dune Buggie
'70 Ford Truck
With B ft camper ,

v.a, auto

trans - SAVE-

'69 Chev. Pickup liz tori
Truck .' v.s, stand. trans., long &amp; wtde bed. SAVE

A DREAM BOAT

17

n. GLASsMASTER

120 H P. inboard, outboard motor, skts,
jackets, ladders complete Seats 6, boat
lrailer, less than 40 hours river time

AIR CONDITION SPECIAL

Syracuse News, Society
John Carroll , of South
Charleston , W Va ., spent
several days recently Wltll hiS
Sister and brother-m-law, Mr
and Mrs John Bohram, local,
and SISler and brother-m-law,
Mr and Mrs Herschel Rose
and family of Mmersvllle.
Mr and Mrs Carl Duckworlh, of Coshocton, Mr and
Mrs James Gumsler, daughter
K1tty, of Plckermgton, and Mr
and Mrs George Dempsey
VISited on a Saturday with
Richard Duckworth and Sister,
Agnes White, and Mr and Mrs
Harold Duckwortll.
Recent guests of Mr and
Mrs William E1chmger, and
John, were Mr and Mrs. Hall
Frost of Englewood, Flonda
Mrs Harold Weaver, and
daughter Peggy, of St. LouiS·
v1lle, spent a weekend Wlth the
former 1 s mother, Mrs Magg1e
Wmebrenner
Spendmg Sunday and
Monday w1th thetr aunt,
Frankie Mwnaw, were Mr and
Mrs Albert Mumaw, of Mingo
Junction
Mr. and Mrs Carl Weese
spent a recent weekend With
their son and daughler·m·law,
Mr and Mrs. Jack Weese of
near Cleveland
V1s1tmg Mrs Ada Slack were
her brother and Slster-m-law,
Mr and Mrs Ola Blake of
Swnmersville, W.Va.
The Rev Ralph Hudson of
Portsmouth was 'a recent
v1s1 tor of hiS mother, Mrs.

I

Rawlings Dependoble Ctty does 11 ""~atn
we have
" unfrozen" our prices on air condit1omng and wdl mstall
air conditioning on ony car during the months of June and
July for the complete price of S285 . this IS a $115
dlscounl over lheorlglnal price
no gimmicks . THIS IS
THE COMPLETE INSTALLED PRICE PARTS ,
LIIBOR . TAX, COMPLETE . ANY CAR Beautiful
wood gra1ned cab1net to match the latest of model s
hurry In and see the unit and set up your appomtment to
ha~e a 'cool" summer
I

THE CRESTVVOCID

FRONT. Deluxe automotive styling with safety designed
podded base Wood grain control and top strip.
AIR OUTLET LOUVERS . Three 4"xl 'l•" front loovers
Adiustable for all direction air flow
EVAPORATOR CASE Dlmenslon s- He~ght 4112". Length
16'10", Depth 11'1•"
AIR CONTROL: Variable 3 speed for maXImum personal
comfort
TEMPERATURE CONTROL : Ad1uslable with off
posll1on Cooling level IS automatically malntamed by
THERMOTROL

Mrs Tom Dtddle and son,
Shawn of Allred, 0. : Mr and
Mrs Bernard Diddle, Mr. and
Mrs Jerry Powell, Mrs
Carolyn Adams, Mrs. Robert
FISher and two sons, aU of
Racme; Mr and Mrs Danny
Bush of Loram, 0 , Edward,
Er1c, and Sarah Marie D1ddle
of Middleport, Mr and Mrs.
Charles Cobb and daughter,
He1d1, of Syracuse Arr1vmg
Monday from Lubbock, Texas
were one of !hell' sons, Mr and
Mrs. Don Diddle and daughter,
Ann, for an mdefmlte VISit
Mrs. Frances Ph1lson 1s
VISiting two weeks w1th her
daughter, Mr and Mrs Enill
Pllltcha at Cleveland.
• Mrs. Thelma Coe and
daughter, 'Wanda Vaz1ck and
two children of New Brighton,
Pa are visiting relahves and
friends.
Mr. and Mrs Benny Boggess
have moved ·from the fonner
Harold Roush to the Leo Taylor
residence. Mr and Mrs.
Charles Fmdley and fwmy
whose home was destroyed by
f1re , have moved to the Roush
residence.
Keith Ashley arr1ved home
Wednesday evemng to spend
his swnmer vacatton from
Oh1o State Umverstty with his
parents, Mr and Mrs. Robert
Ashley
Mr. and Mrs Tom NorriS,
Mr and Mrs. Richard Weaver,
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Norns
attended the IUUeth wedding
anmversary of Rev. and Mrs,
Tom Noms at Rome City,
Indiana Sunday.
Mrs. Herbert Shields entered
Holzer Medical Center Monday
and w1ll undergo surgery
Tuesday
Mr and Mrs . Everette
Ransom have moved from
!hell' home at Antiquity to the
former
Jess
Anderson

Myla Hudson and son Glenn
They all VISited Mr and Mrs
Clyde Gerlach at Letart, W.
Va Mrs Hudson accompamed
her son home for a week's VISit
Mr and Mrs. Charles
Mugrage and family of New
Matamoras spent a recent
weekend w1tll Mr. and Mrs
N1al Salser They also attended
the Rac me High School
Alwnm
Kenneth and Terry Guinther
spent a week with their brotller
and sister-m-law, Mr and Mrs
Wtllie Gumther of GallipoliS,
Route
Mr. a~ Mrs James LISle of
Sprmgf1eld, spent Memorial
weekend w1tll his parents, Mr
and Mrs. Charles Usle
Mr and Mrs Max Duck·
worth and children of Alliance
VISited a day wtth Mr. and Mrs
Harold Duckworth
Mr and Mrs Lawrence
Sellers, Colwnbus, VISited on a
Sunday with her brother, Mr
Robert
Flanagan
Ac·
compamed by Richard Duckworth and Agnes White, they
VISited the Letart Falls
Cemetery
Mr and Mrs Wilbur Holter
of Akron spent a recent
weekend at their summer
home here
Mr. and Mrs John Slack,
Johnny, Donald and L1nda of
Sandyville, spent Memorial
weekend w1th his mother, Mrs
Ada Slack and her parents at
Rutland
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Wtnebrenner and children,
Mrs. Magg1e Wmebrenner,
accompamed by Mrs. Harold
Weaver, and Peggy, of St
LouiSville, attended a reun10n
at the home of Mr. and Mrs
Ross Winebrenner at Letart,
W Va
Richard Duckworth attended
the Memor1al Day parade at
Pomeroy and Chester.
Mrs Allee Capehart visited
recently wilh her brother,
Ralph Swearmgen, of Avon
Lake
Richard Duckworth accompamed Bob Roberts, of
Pomeroy, to Lowell where they
saw the Meigs Legion ball
game
Mrs Wanda Guinther spent
Saturday and Sunday with her
aunt, Mrs Ellen Newland of
Athens
Mr and Mrs Donald Harden
have moved mto the~r new
home purchased from Archie
Lee, m the Rustle · Hills Addition.
Mr and Mrs. James Robert
White, and daughter, Mary
Beth, of Dunbar, W. Va. spent a
night With hiS mother, Mrs.
Agnes White. They left the
following morning for a week's
vacation at Put In Bay at Wesl
Tarra Cottages.
•
Mr and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debb1e look Mr. Earl
Harden to his home In Canton
and spent the weekend there.
Elizabeth Merrill spent a
Sunday with Mrs. Joe Rollins
of Letart, W. Va
Mr. and Mrs. James R.
White, Mary Beth, of Dunbar,
W Va.; Richard Duckworth
and Agnes White, vls1ted
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Emd Eynon, Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Eynon, and Mr and
Mrs. Roy Jones of Nease
SetUement.
Mr. Glenn Hudson has
returned to his employment on
a
on the Great Lakes.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Marshall
Ro~sh accompamed by Mr
and Mrs. Mickey Winebrenner
celebrated the1r fourth wedding anmversary by d1nmg at
the Kahtkl Restaurant 111
Colwnbus Friday
Mr. and Mrs Martin Cun·
nlngham of Clarton, Pa , Mr
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
and Mrs. James Freeman of
Ervln, Pa , Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Ke1th Mr and Mrs. Ullie Hart Milliron who passed away at
Smith, Jr and Martm DerOUlll
and sons, Brice and Bruce, Veterans Memor1al Hospital
of Millville, Pa ., Mr. and Mrs
spent Thursday w1th the Friday. Funeral services were
Jerry Johnson and family of
Haymans,
held at the Plants Church
Rac111e visited over Memorial
Keith Hayman left Friday by Monday at 1 p.m. by the Rev
week end w1th Mr. and Mrs.
bus
for al two weeks vacation Okey Cart. lntennent was In
Robert Smith Sr
with
his brother, Mr. and Mrs Letart Falls cemetery by tile
Mr and Mrs Marshall
Ted Ha)1ll8ll at Westerville Ewing Funeral Home.
Adams and son Raymond
Mrs Georgia Wolfe of
Mr. and Mrs Jerry Johnson
accompaoied Mrs. Mlllle
Washington,
D.
C.
was
a
dinner
and
children of Racine, Joe
Norris to her home m Laurel,
guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs Derovm, local, attended
Md Fr1day and spent the week
funeral serv1ces Tuesday at the
Dallas Hill.
end.
•
Mrs . 4an Norns, Mrs. Nease Funeral Home in
Mr. and Mrs Jim Connolly
Debbie
Roush, Mrs. Pauline Wllkensburg, Pa for David
and children, Mr. and Mrs
Hill,
and
Mrs. Kathryn Hill Leroy Sohn.
George Connolly of Syracuse,
returned 1o !ijo Grande College · Joe Derovln has accepted
Virgil Hill, local, Mr. and Mrs.
Monday
!br the summer employment at Clarion, Pa.
Gene Connolly of Concord,
semester.
and Will go to work Monday.
California were visiting Mr.
Mrs. Alice Baller spent the
Earl Mangus and daughter,
and Mrs. Everette Connolly
weekend
'with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mary,
of Saxonburg, Pa.
over the week end.
Lawrence'
Balser
returning
to
visited
recently
with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Creaver Saul,
J1trs Robert Smith.
her home Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hwnphery
Weekefl!l
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence residence.
of West VIrginia, vialted St.
Mrs. Arnbid Hupp were Mr. Roush and son, Tommy, of
Clair Sunday afternoon.
and
Mr~. Kenny Bass of Winfield, W. Va. called on Mr
Milfl Loretta Ours of Mid·
ColiiDibus.
The Baas children and Mrs. Roy Pearsoo and
dleport was a SUnday dinner
returned home with them visited other relatives Friday.
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Sunday
alter apendlng a week
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Buni
Donohew and Grea. Mr. and
with
their
grandparenill,
Mr.
and
Bill Wilson of Bolivar Dam
Mrs. Ernest Wood of
and Mrs.-lt~ and Mrs. Katie and Mrs. Erma Willon are
Kingsbury
visited
the
Basa at ditton.
vialting Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Donobewl SUnday afternoon.
Mr.
111d
Mrs.
Lynn
Shuler
Beai'ha at Norfolk, Va .
The tax books are now. open for the
Mrs. Roy Donohew ill taking
have
~
the
Methodist
VISiting
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Oval
June or Second half collection of the
three monlhl leave of abtlenee
parsonage at Letart Falls.
Diddle over the weekend were
from her employment 11
1971 Real Estate Ta}(es. Also for
Mra. Opal Hupp spent a week their children and arand·
Raleigh lllelman and will
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
In Charlelton llllallng In the children, Mr. and Mn. Wald
I'IIUDII~ job ID September.
July 3, 1972.
care of her lillter, Cheryl DIMle and son of PlkevWe,
• Mr. and Mn. Herbert Roush ~Is.
wu a patient at Ky.; Mr and Mrs. Joe Nelaon
Mn. Gene Jewell and 1011, Stewart,
and Roger vlllted Mrs. Ronnie
a
Charlellon
hoepltal
of Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby,
of
Letart,
W.
Va.
Rt.
Ruuell and new dauahter
FriendlnniOITY
tol1ear
of
Ralph Diddle and 1011, Wayne,
Mwlda Lynn at the bame of apent SUnday with Nr. and
Mr. and Nra. ~ llaulb Mra. Gerald Hayman and the dealll of Mrs. Kathryn of Winfield, W Va.; Mr. and
I

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

LEGAL

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

*ho

t'
I

r

70 GMC
...............!1895
1
Pickup /2 Ton Truck, long wide
bed, 6 cyl , stand trans

69 Mercury..........$1795
Marquis 2 dr H. T., extra nice

69 Dodge .............'$1595

-Super Bee, 4 sp , extra nice.

V 8 auto. trans., P.S., P. B, brown with white
vinyl top. - SAVE-

OPEN EYES. 1.00 I' .M.
_,PMEROY, OHIO
Fnday evenmg Mr. and Mrs.
Russell and daughter returned
to their home m Pomeroy
Wednesday.
Mrs Erma Wilson spenl
Friday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs Ray Byers Mf. Byers
remams about the same.
Mr and Mrs Robert Slmth
received tile sad news of the
death of their nephew David
Leroy Sohn at Cleveland. Mr
Sohn was shot accidently
dunng a robbery of a
restaurant he was dmmg at
Mrs. Toc1e Hayman, Mrs
Bertha Robmson attended
funeral serv1ces for the1r
cousm Mrs. Wav1e Smes Fox at
Creston, W. Va Sunday af.
ternoon and called on Mrs
Mary Ford at Letart, W Va
Rte. Sunday evening.
Friends were sorry to hear of
the death of Lewis Roush of
MinersvUle, Mrs. Roush was a
former resident being the
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Seth Pickens
Mrs. Wilma Anderson IS a
patient at Veterans Memorl,al
Hoep1tal.
,
The former Ullian 'Grunm
and daughter of Parkersburg
visited graves of loved ones at
Letart Falls Cemetery and
called on her cousin Bert
Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Arnott of
Clarksburg spent the week end
at their ~orne.
Mr.and Mrs. Charles Gasklll
have 10kl their funeral home at
Wellston and just returned
from a vacation trip thru the
West.
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Donohue
and family of Radilor, 0. spent
over the weelterld with Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Donohue.
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner took Christine
Badgely to her home at
Fairfax, Va. Chriatlne had
apent two weella with her

So

SAVE-

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE
51995
V 8 engine, automati c trans , p steering. fa ctory air
conditioned, good w w ttres , radio, dark green fini sh with
spotless Interior

Saturday 17 of June
the Regatta

V·B, auto. trans., P. S., like new -

1970 FORD
$199S
Galaxle 500 Hardtop Coupe, V 8 engine. automatic trans
mission, power steering &amp; brakes, white finish , black
vinyl top, vinyl Inter ior White wall tires , like new rad io

BROTHERS

DrJ'"

Selection ~ew Cadillats

OF
QUALITY

ARNOLD

--

std.

~ t Pickup, V-8, auto., P.S. ....

2 SIGNS

CLELAND
REALTY

-------

Pickup, V-8

"You'll Ltke Our Quality Way
of Dotng Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Until l 10()- Til S PM. Sat

nHEIL"

WMP0/1390

l

Loaded with extras - mcludmg stereo tape,
red with whtte vinyl top - SAVE.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

==-,..-----=

,We talk to JOU

~

H.T. ........... ~ ..'695·

In Stock! .. We're Dealin '!

noe

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

Dodge

Good

20'

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

I

66 Mustang 6 cyl., :Jspeed ................ 1595
66 Chev. 2 Door, 6 cyl, 3 speed .......... '395
65 Mercury 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 auto., P.S.......'495

Aluminum
Sheets

DANCE

'72

69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air...... '1995
68 Chev. BeL 4 Dr., V-8 auto., air .........11495
68 Olds 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air .. ••• • • • 11895
67 Mercury 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 auto., P.s: ..... 1895 r
66 Pontiac 4 Dr. H.T., full power, air ...... '695

For Sale

The
Daily Sentinel

WILL BE CLOSED

I

-~~~--~

Harrison's
. T.V. Service

'12 Ton Pickup, V 8, Stand' trans ,

I '
•

t 304 E. Matn St.
Pomeroy, Otuo
Phone 992-3795
or Mason 773-5535
.

65 Chev................ ~495

USED CARS

.

WURLITZER HOME ORGAN
th e
- Newest model. loaded wtth
everyl htng l1ke new ' To be
Nathan Beggs
STAR TIN G June 18th Sunday
taken m trade 1n th1 s area,
dmner served from 11 30 lo
Rad1ator Spec1ahst
and Wi ll be sold at half the
1 30 at Young' s Casual
ong1na l pn ce Wnte for In
Ca termg
Ra cme
Thr s
lormat.an GRAVES PIANO
Sunday - Complete Turkey
1!. ORGAN COM PANY 383 E
D1nners
6 14 3tc
Broad St, Columbus Oh1o
Ph 992 2174
Pomeroy
6 15 6tc J...------ - - - - -YAR D SAL E, Avon Bolll es
SPINET CONSOLE PI ANO SEWING MACHINE serv1ce
Antiques on Larkin Street
clean , oil, set tens1on $4 99
may be pur chased by small
Rut land Thursday Fr~day
Spec1al Electro Grande
monthly
payments
see
1t
and Saturday
Company Phone 992 6517
locally wrrte Cortlan d MusiC
6 14 31c
5 21 tfc
Company I. P 0 Box 35
Cortland, Oh1o 44410
GUN Shoot also nfl e matches
6 15 lip
open srtes only, Forked
- - -- -Run Sportsma n Club Sun da y
MAPLE
Early Amer~can Real Estate For Sale
June 18 12 noon
Stereo
ra
d10
comb ma t1 on FOR SALE - 2'1 acre fa rm. 4
6
14
3tc
-- .
Beaut1 ful maple cab1net, w1lh
bedroom home completely
4 speed changer, 4 speakers,
remodeled.
alum mum Sldmg O' DELL WHEEL alignment
dual volume con trol Balance
and
storm
w1ndows,
free gas located at Crossroads, Rt 124
$77 J3 Use our budget terms
3 AND 4 ROOM furntshed and
well
all
mmeral
r1ghts,
1 mile Complete front end service,
Call 992 7085
unfurn ts hed
apartments
from Harnsonvdle Ca ll 992
tune up and brake service
Phone 992 5434
6 15 61c
3640
Wheels balanced elec
4 12 lfc
- - -- - 36" X 23" X .009
615 7tp Ironically .
All
work
WALNUT Stereo rad 1o com
-guaranteed
Reasonable,
TWO SERVICE MEN
b1na i10n, Qua l volume control ,
N EW - tota l electnc apart
rates Phone 9923213
I
4 speed mterm 1xed changer, 4 IDEAL 5 ACRE RANCHO
ment 2 bedroom , wa lk In
Lake Conchas, New Mex1 co
7·27-Hc
s
peaker
sound
system,
close
ts
large
llvmg
room,
Free P1ckup &amp; Delivery
$2,875 No Down No Interest
Ba lance $62 57 Use ovr
ketch en and dtnr ng area
$25 mo Vacat1on Parad1se AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
budget terms Cal l 992 7085
phone 992 7384 or 9917133
~ Money
Ma ke r
Free
ca ncelled?
Los t
your
6 IS 61c
6 16 3tc
CALL 992·2522
Broch ure Ranchos Bo x operator's license ? Call 992
2001DD Alameda Callfornta
2966
1972 ZIG ZAG Sewmg Mach1ne
TRAILER Browns Trailer
USED OFFSET PLATES
For Serv1ce lnformafron
94501
6 15 tfc
!eft
m
layaway
Beautiful
Park phone 992 3324
H/IV6.
6 7 30ip
pastel color, full size model
6 16 tic
MANY USES
Open 9a .m · 9 p m .
SEE US FO'If'Awnlngs, storm
Al l bu1ll 1n to buttonhole, do
- - - - . , - - -doors and windows, carports,
stretch sewing and fancy
3 BEDROOM house carport
marquees, aluminum sld1ng
stlfch mg Pay 1ust $48 75 cash
a1r cond1honmg , carpetmg rn
ATTE NTION LADIES' Self
and
rai ling A Jacob, sales
or
terms
available
Trade
ms
kitchen
l1vmg
room
and
bath
Defense lor W omen, courses
representative For free
accepted Phone 992 5641
fam1 ly room 1n basement
sta rtmg soon at Maplewood
8 for 51 00
estima tes , phone Charles 1
6 15 6tc
1618 Lmcoln Hgls, Pomeroy
Lake Phone 949 4074 or 949
Lisle, Syracuse, V V
-----available June 1 Contact
3651 tor tnformat10n or
Johnson
and Son, Inc
'1
960
CHEVR
OLET
4
Door
Rober
I
Beegle
949
2891
1nqu1re at Lake
321ft
Hardtop , 1 owner, 1m
6 16 21p
6 14 41c
maculate cond1 t1on 55,000
------SEPTIC tanks cleaned Mllle1
ong1nat m1les fully equ1pped
UNFURNISHED apartmen t,
Contact Associate
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio Ph
Mus I see 992 2788
134 Mulberry Ave . phone 9"2
662 3035
6
15
61c
VERA
EBLEN
3962
2 12 tfc
6 11 tfc
991_ i02o
,
-111 Court St.
VAC UUM Cleaner new 1972 160 Coal Sf
Middleport SUPE RIOR WINDOW Cleamng
model Complete wt lh all
FURNISHED 4 room apt
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sat. Night, June 17
Co &amp; Building Maintenance,
cleanmg tools Small parnt RUTLA ND - Cor ner lot J,.
Adu lt s on ly M1ddlepor l
co mmercial professional
damage
1n
sh1ppl
ng
Wi
ll
take
phone 992 3874
Whispering Pines
acre with 3 bedroom modern
men for professional lobs
6 4 li e
$27 cash or budget plan hom e, gas furnace. all
phone 614 446 9202
CAMPER 16 fl sleeps 6 good
available Phone 992 564 1
6 6 121p
lots
of ca rp et ~
paneled,
Nile Club
cond1f 1on $1 000 Phone 992
6 IS 61c re mod el1 ng 1n s1 de almost
6329
Mobile Homes For Sale
CA LL 949 2789for auto body and
complete-S i l,SOO
5 12 lfc ONE 21" TV conso le beaut 1ful
10 til 2
pam! work . Also repair fiber
8 x 45 2 BEDROOM trader
mapl e f1n1sh
JUS!
re
glass
boats plus electric and
phone 9933324
51 FORD 8N tractor. $750 new
condlftoned. phone 992 6813 or MIDDLEPORT - Sou lh
MUSIC By
gas welding
Slanley's
6 14 6tc
5
ft
H1
co
rotary
mower
,
$295
,
992 3635 Kerns Roush
The MemphiS Scunds
Second
Ave
.
2S
ft
ilv1ng
Custom
Body
Shop
Used Ford Endloader $150
6 !5 3lp
s 19 301c
room, dmmg room , sma ll
from New Phtladelph•a , 0
Erme l Luckelt Box 95
CASH pa1d tor all makes and
family
room.
buill
1n
kitchen
Albany phone 698 3032
mode ls of mobile homes
UPRIG HT deep freeze. !60 , 23" w1th bar 3 lar ge bedrooms HARRISON 'SlVServlce, open
6 163tc
Phone
area
code
614
423
9531
Zen1th Space Command Color up n1ce bath, all carpeted,
BOAT LI CE NSE - lor your
9 a m lo 9 p m • free pickup
4 13 lfc
TV $150 G E dryer S25
boat. for
your motor
and de livery, phone 992 2S22
lovely
decor
sun
porch
1n
COAL L1mestone, Exce lstor
phone 742 3334, Cary Hysel l
Ava •lable at Stmon's P1ck A
6 13 tfc
fron
t
carport
1n back If It's
Salt
Works
E
Mam
St
6 1S 31c
Pa 1r Shoe Store 108 W Ma1n , 1fJ72 - 12 x: 60 mobile home
Pomeroy Phone 992 3891
a n1ce home you want, try DOZ ER anCfllaa&lt;
worklocated near new mme 1f
Pomeroy Oh10, Phone 992
lh1 s one
4
12
11
ponds and septic tanks. B &amp; K
3830
1 31c mteres ted phone 742 566416
c
'
Real
Estate
For
Sale
Excavating -Phone 992 SJ67.
s 16 30ic
Many other homes m
- - - -- -- - POOD LE pupp1es, S1lver Toy, RAC INE _ 6 room hou se&lt; oalh .
D1ck Karrt Jr
Pomeroy Middleport and
uti lity room, garage, $10 ,000
Par kv1ew Kennels Phone W2
S 21 tfc
outtymg commun1t1es and
5443
c
phone
949
4195
lfc
several
lots
stil
l
available
8 1511
3 31
• A.r Condthoners
SEWING MA CHINES Repa~r
160 Coal 51reel - Also
service all makes 992 2211-4
• Awnmgs
ALUM INU M boats, on county s ROOM house. lot on n ver
locatiOn of the Middleport C
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
road
18
ISO
ya
rds
west
ot
Rt
• Underpmnmg
Ra
1
lr
oad
51
.
Middleport
Authorized Singer Sales and
of
C
oH1ce
33 Call 992 6256 Lorenzo
54 000 phone 992 3265
Serv ice We Sharpen Scissors
Oav
1s
Complete mob1le home
6 6 12tc
3 29 He
5 19 301c
servtce - plus grgant1c
-l·dtsp lay of mobile homes
THREE bedroom house w1lh
READY MIX
CONCRETE
WD AC TRACTOR. good l~r es,
bath , lf.z acre lot on publ1c
always ava1lable at
de livered right lo your
motor overhauled new pa1nt.
water system. Jf• mlie from
W1ndow
pro/ec:t Fast and easy Free 1
J D Tra1l type mower side
Chester
on
County
Rd
2S
MILLER
est mates . Phone 992 3284 i
Atr ConditiOners
rake phone 992 2826
Phone 985 4262
Goegleln Ready Mix Co.,
Pomeroy
608 E Main St
6 15 6lp
6 11 61c
Middleport, Ohio
Hot Water Heaters
MOBILE HOMES
1
6
30·HC
I
Plumbmg
1220 Washmgton Blvd
NEW
HOME
ELECTROLUX Va cuu m HOUSE 1n Long Bottom , phone
4237S21
BELPRE, 0
POMEROY - 1 story, 3 -BACK_H
_O
-~:AN
_D
__D_O_ZE- R
- work.
Cleaner Late mode l on
985 3529
Eleclncal Work
wheels, uses paper bags A 1
bedrooms, dou ble closets,
6 11 lfc
Septic tanks Installed George
w1t h 7 att plus sh ampooer
modern bu11t m k1 fchen 2
(Bill) Pull ins Phone 992 2478
$28 40
cash or term s LOTS ON Wr~ght St. Pomeroy. baths dlnmg room , all
Auto Sale s
4 25-lfc
available Phone 992 6517
ca rpeted, basement, lot
phone 742 S937
~S~E-P~T~
IC~
TAN
_K
_S~
C~
LE
~A~N-ED
'70 Bonnevdle 2 dr HT, blue
6 15 61c
11 Sx220. !electric heat )
6 6 12tc
11Sx200, (electric heatl
Wl lh bl ack VInyl lop, factory -Z-IG_ Z_A_G_s_ew
_ _,n_g_m
- ac_h_tn_e_. 1972
REASONABLE rates Ph 446
RAC INE - 10 room house,
4 BEDROOMS
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell ,
air , vmyl InferiOr 25,000 model. used IUS! a few limes
992 -2448
bath , basement, garage, two MIDDLEPORT - Modern
5934
Owner &amp; operator.
992
actual
mrles
phone
Full
srze
D1al
control
to fancy
lois Phone 949 4313
Pomeroy, 0.
kllchen, large TV room ,
5 12 ffc
after 5 P m
st1 tch
buttonhole elc
4 s tfp dlmng room, bath . carpet.
6 11 6tp
Reduced to on Iy $36 20 cash or - - -- - C BRADFORD, Auctioneer
pa nel ed. util ity room,
terms. available Trade n 37 ACRE farm modern house
OLD FASHION Trading Rmg ,
Complete SerVIce
garage
and
large
sf
or
age
1968
55396
Chevelle,
bucket
accepted Ph one 992 6517
Ho rses, pon1es guns or
dnl led we ll 7 acres river bulldtng, 2 lots $14 900 00
Phone 949·3821
sea
ts
power
steermg
6 15 61c
anylh~ng lo trade I mile ba ck
botto
m
on
good
road
cal
l
Racine, Ohio
automatiC Wil l sell for $900
A FARM
of Wesl Colum b1 a W Va on
after 1 p m 992 61ll
Crill Bradford
phone
7
42
S641
WITH
A
FUTURE
the Lak1n Road 1st and Jrd
6612 1c
•
Slife
'l'hls may be "1 usl the spot"
Sunday each month
6 16 3tc Rea I Estate For Sa Ie
:
you've been look1ng for Call
6 11 61p
1968 CHEVY Nova, V a 4 door.
us for an appointment to see
automattc, ex ce ll ent con
KOSCOT KOSMET ICS Several
..11 Opportun1ty knocks'
dillon , phone fJ49 3462 or 949
new products - spec1a ls e8ch
3 BEDROOMS
2131 alter 5 p m or see
month also sales personnel
MIDDLEPORT
- w, bat11s,
Raymond Hensler
needed Phone 992 5113
large double garage, storm
6
16
61c
6 6lfc
110 Mechamc Street
doors and windows. nice
. like-~·
por c hes , EXCELLENT
1964 CHEVROLET, V a, phone
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
NEIGHBORHOOD
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
949 2981
Service S50 Reg mares, S40
$12.900 00
6
IS·61p
Grade Fran c1s Benedum ,
REAL INVESTMENT
Phone 667 3856
1954 DODGE 2 ton !ruck with 14
CORNER
LAND
Large building 40x70, 1deal for con
HENRY E. CLELAND, Sr
5 17 JOtp
ft bed , V a motor . f1ve speed
tractor on Rout e 143 Has a 3 bedroom residence, 1112 acres
REALTOR
transmrsslon , very good
of level land
Phone
992 2259
SAVE up to one half Bring yoor
shape , sel l rea sonable
SCENIC
If
no
answer
992·2568
stck TV lo Chuck's TV Shop,
Delbert Lawson, · Portl and.
ON YOUR DIAL
SYRACUSE - Wal ch the river boats go by, relax, and
151 Butternut Ave, Pomeroy
Ohio
en1oy
l1fe
summer
or
win
ter
4 bedroom home with 2
4-41fc
6 15 Jlp
baths mce k1tchen , full base ment
WILD BUT CAN BE DEVELOPED
1967 HOLIDAY couple, Olds
llt'CipJcu., - ,
For Sale or T1ade
OVER
7
ACRES
- Wanttobtilld several homes for resale
mobile 88, automatrc dn ve,
• Maytlv
Then
you
ought
to
see
th1s
Your
fortune
could
be
here
power steertng , power
23 CH ANN EL mobile CB rad1o
Automatics
PRIME
LOCATION
brakes, A 1 condlt1on, new
and 6 channel base , wilt trade
~ opted optrollon
RT 124 WES T - Compact home for the working class
,Cholet of water
for small fish ing boat and
tires maroon fm1sh Call 992
Yet 1f 1s rea l nlc e All paneled and carpeted Room for a
ltm pt
Auto.
3957
motor , also large pony for
water
level
garden or play ground
sale, 120. phone 992 7258
6 1S 3tp
,control ~ - LTiil
HANDY
6 IS 3tc - -- - - tFI!Jtr o.. Power
MIDDLEPORT - Yoo can walk lo the stores, and the
l_Fin A~itator .
For Sale
children lo school Level lot wtlh 3 bedroom home Onl y
65 MU ST AN G Conver tible,
' ,.trilli'Proil
$8,500 00
Immacu la te condition 6 HATCHING Red turkey eggs
MIYIII
HIIODIHIII
he ld SS degrees 20c each ,
cylinder standard fl oor sh1 ft.
FREEDOM
Hen ry G Schneemulch
stereo tape deck. beautllul
142 ACRES - En loy the tr~sh ai r of the country Mak e
~
'urroun .cloth\•
me Iaii ie maroon finiSh must J oh~son R1dge Road. Gall1a
money w1th cattl e while you work at your regular 10b
vlth
oe:ntlt1
e\'W
Co, Gall ipolis
see to appreciate. phone 949
Me1gs school district La rge farm pond and a very good
,.~ No~ot opato
6 14 3tp
5953
sprmg 3 or 4 bedroom home 2 barns, n1ce outbuildings
no
6 13 61c - - - - - - - - $32,500 00
{In!,,~erdrylng
h Ll,nt
GARDEN IIIIer, B 1!. S eng1ne,
67 JEEP Wag oneer, 4 w~eel
good condlt1on, S75 , phone
ltllt
We need nice and neat 2 bedroom homes. rea sonably
M
U
drtve 327 Y·8, air con
992 6416
pr~ced B1g things are 111 the making , watch thi s ad and
lltd rpet
dltloned. automatic trans
6 IS 3fp
lttt'VICI
you
may
be
a
l1tfle
wiser
Real
estate
1
s
a
solid
In
miSSIOn , power steenn~ ,
vestment
Come
In
to
see
what
we
have
to
offer
power brakes, automat1c REG ISTERED Angus bulls ,
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
front hubs, excellent con· Eresca and President blood
lmes phone 992 2789
d1tlon , phone 949 59S3
992·332S NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS PLEASE 992 2371
Arnold Grate
6 14 6fc
6 13 6tc
Notice

WE'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES

.

HOWMD E. FRANK

See: Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
985-4100
Located on SR 7

Chester,

o.

'Grange No 2435 who viBlted
Star Grange on Saturday
evening and presented the
Literary Program were Bertha
Crippen, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree, Murl Galaway, Mr.
and Mrs Carl Starkey, Carl
Mr and Mrs John Dunham, Greenlees, and Mr. and Mrs.
Conme and Yvonne , New Mendal Jordan A dellcioUll
Boston, llhn01s, spent a mght potluck supper was served by
w1th each of their parents, Mr the host Grange during the
and Mrs Carl Dunh"l" and Mr social hour
and Mrs Reed Jeffers, VISited Mr and Mrs. William
other relatives 111 the area, and Thomas were overnight guests
attended the weddmg of her of her sister, Amy Caldwell, In
mece, Ruth Ann Jordan on Colwnbus and vislled w1th her
Sunday before returnmg home mece and husband, Mr. and
Deputy 'Master V~rg1l Atkms Mrs John Kimes.
Ney Carpenter Is con·
and Mrs Atkins conducted
mspechon on Fr1day evenmg valescmg al his home after
when Colwnb18 Grange No. surgery at Pleasant Valley
2435 held their June meeting A Hosp1tal Guests at the Car·
program honormg fathers was penter home have been Mr.
presented by the lecturer, and Mrs Albert Qulvey,
Bertha Crippen The cupcake Dover; Mrs. Sidney Parker,
contest was held. First place Strasburg; Robert Parker,
was g1ven lo Mrs. Clifton Middleport, and Mr and Mrs
Fraley,
second
place, Hilbert Cox, Albany
Mrs. Rose Hooper, Darlene
Elizabeth Jordan, third place,
Rose Hooper. It was reported and Janet, Athens, viBlted her
that Grange Histories had been parents, Mr and Mrs. Carl
sold wtth the $5 profit bemg Greenlee and attended
sent by the Women's Actlv1t1es Colwnb1a Grange on Friday
Chairman to the State Grange evening
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Fraley,
Camp Fund . Plans were
completed for Columbia Jr and sons, and Miss Bonnie
Grange members to v1s1l Star Fraley visited their parents,
Grange on Saturday evenmg. Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Fraley,
Mr and Mrs. Dwaine Jor· Sr , and other relatlVI!lj at
dan, Bryan and Keith and Mrs. Mallory, W Va.
Relahves here for funeral
Hazel Culwell were guests of
Mr and Mrs. Alfred Rice and services for Andrew Greer
sons In Colwnbus on Sunday. included children, Mr. and
Bryan and Keitll Jordan stayed Mrs Roger Greer and family,
for a few days' vacation In the Warner Robins, Georgia;
Dewey Greer, Huntsvllla,
Rice home
Mr. and Mrs. LeWIS Smith Alabama; Mr . and Mrs.
and Nancy were recent guests Leonard Greer and famUy,
of their son-m-law and Lexmgton, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
daughter, Mr and Mrs. Larry James Reed and sons,
Stanley and Anna, Ene, Penn. Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
They were accompamed by Reed and daughter, Clendenin,
Mrs. Eugene Stanley, Albany . W. Va ; Mr and Mrs. Richard
Larry Stanley, who suffered a Cook, Columbus; Sherman
broken leg in a motorcycle-ear Greer and fiancee, Chris
accident, has now been Bailey, Gary, Ind.; and Mr.
dlstmssed from the hospital and Mrs. Michael Smith,
and 1s recuperating at home Greenville, South Carolina;
Nancy Sm1th spent several sisters, Mrs Faye Lyons, and
days m Ene, then flew to Mr and Mrs. Sam Lyons,
Colwnbus where she was met Elizabethton, Tenneasee;
by her parents.
along with other relatives, Mr.
Mrs . Jerrie W1lson and Junior Lyons and Dewey
friend, Ann Arbor, Mic)IIgan, Estridge, Cleveland; Mr. and
visited her uncle, Lavern Mrs. Claude Lyons, Kinfiii)OI'I,
Jordan and fanuly on Sunday Tenn.; Mrs Mae Olesser and
and attended the wedding of children, Gap Creek, TeM.;
her cousm, Ruth Ann Jordan Mr. and Mrs. John Hiclla and
and Larry Birchfield at the daughters, Mr . and Mrs. Burl
Carpenter Church on Sunday Hicks, Mr . and Mrs. Monroe
afternoon.
Lyons and Mr. and Mrs. J . L.
Members of Columbia Lyons, Elizabethton, TeM.

Carpenter

News, Event

I. W. COMPTON,
OPTOMETRIST

O.D~

,_

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 17: 2 TO 5 (CLOSE1
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURl"'ST.;

PHONE 949-2033

DON SMITH
'

RACINE, OHIO
FOR

C.O.B.A. SERVICE
TO
SELECT SIRES
DAIRY &amp;

�. . . ..

s;;;;;;;;a;;~ifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
,.

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT

Not1ce
ATTENTION LAOIE5 1 Self
Defense for Women courses
starlmg soon at Maplewood
lake Phone 949 4074 or 949
3651 for tnformalton or
lnqu1re at lake
6 14 Jtc
RUMMAGE Sale Coals Bldg ,
across fr om Middleport
Lunch. Thursday Fr~day and
Saturday 9 am to S P m
6 I .:I 3fc

OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DEWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD
I nO
MARY L BIRCHFIELD ,
Sycamore S1ree1,
M•ddl eport, Oh1o,
Plain1tlfs
MRS R E cX~ADAY and
R E CANADAY ,
Addrest Unknown,
Et al ,
Defendants
NOTIC E BY PUB LI CAT ION ----~---No 15,064
T he Defem;tal'lts, Mrs R E
Cllndsy R E Ca 1aday the
unknown hetrs
dev1 sees,
le gatees adm tnlst ra tors,
dt s!rtbu lees executo rs and
as s.g ns cf L c Brechtel ,
Deceased and the unknown
h e ~r s
devtsees legatees ad
m1n 1slrato rs
d•strtbu tees
execu tor s and ass1gns of Peter Sunday School attendance a t
Brecntel De cea sed w1ll take Freedom Gospel Mtsston June
nottce tha i on the 3rd day of
May 1972 a Complamt was 4 was 32, offermg $11 01
filed In th e Common Pleas Mr and Mrs Russell
Court ol Me tgs County Ohio
Case No 15 06.:1 , wheretn you Krause, and son Troy of Gra nd
nave been named defendants Ra~1ds , M1ch , Mrs J1m
In th e prayer of the Comp la tnl
Plam t Hs pr ay that Defendants Stubbs and son Barry, of
meJy be compel l ed to show th etr
tnteres t and that the sa me may Mmeral Wells, Tex , and Mrs
be Eldiudged to be null and voed Paul Parsons and family of
nnd pla intiffs Iit i e quteled
aga, nst the same and for such Racme v1s1ted Mr and Mrs
other relief as tS proper Tl1e Michael Evans and family
real esta te IS descrtbed as
Mr and Mrs Russell Krause
fol lows
The foll owtng Real Estate and son Troy of Grand Raptds,
Sltu"ted m the county ot Me1gs Mtch , Mrs Mary Dailey and
m th e Sla te of Ohio and m the
Townsh tp of Salisbury and sons, Leota Birch, local, v1s1ted
bounded and descr~bed as Mrs Ada Van Meter
follows
Mr and Mrs Garland
S1tuate 1n Marcus Bosworth 's
Addthon to Lower Pom eroy, Mtlhone and famtly of Akron,
now 1ncorporated 1nto tl1e
Vt lla ge or Middleport Meegs 0, vtstted h1s mother, Mrs
Coun ty OhiO and marked and Anna Belt
. known on the sa d plat of lower
Pomeroy as Lol Number 153
Mr and Mrs Harry Johnston
Said lot be1ng f1fl y feet by one and son of Mounds, Ill , VISited
hundr ed and eleven feet Bemg
Lot No 153 as sl1own en deed Ius father, Mayswood Johnrecords of Me gs County Oh10 Ston
10 Volume 159, Page 320
Reference Deed Volume 244
Mr and Mrs Harry Johnston
Pag e 569 of the Metos Counly and son of Mounds, Ill ; Mr
Deed Recorct s
You are requ ired to answer and Mrs Donald Cremeans of
tile Complaint w1th1n twen ty Ftve Pomts, Mr and Mrs
eight days after the last
publ1 cat1o n Of lhts not1ce Charles Johnston and daughter
namely , by not la te r than the of Hemlock Grove, Mr and
2.41h day of July , 1972 , or
ludgm ent by default will be Mrs Lowell Greer and
rendered aga ins t you
DEWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD daughter of Hemlock Grove,
Mr and Mrs Lowell Greer and
MARY L BIRCHFIELD,
daughters,
local, vtBited Mr
Sycamore Street, Middleport,
Oh10
and Mrs Lawrence Johnston
Plaintiffs and fam ily
Crow Crow &amp; Porter,
Attorn eys for Plaint iffs
Mrs El va Dalley, Mrs Judy
151 12. 19 26 I6J 2 9 16 23
Pa pe, and Krtsten , of
Syracuse, 0 , VISited Mr and
LEGAL NOTICE
PAUL HARRIS Wl'1ose ad
Mrs Carl Autherson
dress ts unknown tS hereby
Mr and Mrs Carl Autherson
nottf l ed that on the 9th day of
May , 1972 Lena Turner, bemg vistted tlle1r son, Mr and Mrs
the platnttlf flied her complaint
n parllt ton aga.nst htm as a James Autherson and Patrtcia
defendant , tn the Common at Syracuse, 0
Pleas Court, Meigs county ,
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Bass
Ohio and being case number
IS 071
and
daughters of Mt Vernon,
Sa id com pta nt prays lor a
partition ot the foiiOWtng 0 , Mr and Mrs Arnold Hupp
desc r ibed real e s tate, and that and sons of Letart Falls, 0 ,
tt1e platnt ff s tnlerest be set off
to her .n sever elty or th at said VISited Mr and Mrs George
re~l
es!Bie be $Old end the Hupp
proceeds therefrom be div ided
Mr and Mrs. James Cor·
accord i ng to law
Sa td real esta te being situa ted burn , Mr and Mrs Edward
In the VIl lage of Pomeroy ,
County of Meigs and State of Corburn of New Bnghton, Pa ,
Ohto and bemg two lots con
VISited Mrs Sylv ta Carpenter
tamtng 1 43 acres , more or less
Mr and Mrs George
For a more detatled descrtpllon
of said real estate reference is Roberts, Rev Edward Grtfflth
made to Vo lume 241 page 295
Me igs County Deed Records of Bashan, Mrs Sylvta Car
Sa1d defendant. Paul Harns
shall answ er the platntdf's penter, local, attended a
complaint on or before August meeting at Umon Gospel
7, 1972 or he shall be deemed 1n Mtsswn Church at Charleston,
default
Leni'l Turner Platnttff W Va on Saturday evemng
J a O'B rie n her attorney
Mr and Mrs Delbert
100'1? Court Stree t
Lawson and Ttmmy of Eagle
Pomeroy , Ohio .d.5769
(5 ) 19 26 , 161 2, 9 16 23 61 C
Rtdge VISited Mr and Mrs
Gene Carpenter
Mrs Mary Holter vtstled her
sister, Mr and Mrs Roscoe
Tuppcr~S Plains
Hollon at Chester
Mrs Mary Holter, local, Mr
Society
and Mrs Roscoe Hollon of
Chester VISited tlletr COUSin,
By Mrs Evelyn Brlckles
Mrs Phylhs Rowan attended Mr and Mrs Don Carpenter al
the funeral of Vern Cleland at Amesv ill e, 0., whom th ey
Chester Wednesday afternoon hadn't seen for several years
~ota B~rc h VISited Mr and
Mr a nd , Mrs Lawre nce
Mrs
Carl Autherson, Mr and
Balser have moved to their
new home lhey bought of John Mrs George Hupp , Mrs
Mbaugh m the Arbaugh Ad· Mtchael Evans and fam tly . and
Mt s Mona Long, all local
dttwn
Mr and Mrs Gordo n
Mr and Mrs Joseph Rme of
Rideno
ur and fami ly of
Bethesda 0 spent several
Chester,
Mr and Mrs Paul
days here the guests of her
stster, Mr and Mrs Blam Evans and son, Paul, local,
vtstted Mrs Mae Van Meter,
Tayl01
and
Ruby
Mr and Mr s George
Mrs Mae Van Meter had a
Franstsco of Gahon, 0 were
water
well drtlled recently
weekend guests of her aunt
Mrs Effi e Watson Sunday
They atlended church services
al South Bethel where Mrs
Watso n's gra ndson , Roger
Watson , preached there
Sunday forenoon "
Mr and Mrs Osca r BabBY BERTHA PARKER
cock, Mrs Dmsmore Boyles,
Sabbath School attendance
Mrs Besste Webster, Mrs
Jw1e
11 at tile Free Metllodtst
Eulah Swan, all of Tuppers
Church
was 129 Offertng for
Plams, Mrs Leota Massar of
Eastern, Mrs Donna Lyons of morm ng services was $111 70
Parkersburg all att~nded Conference supe rtnl endent,
Jones, Za nesv ille,
revival servtces at the Rev
Congre ga ttonal Church at delivered the mornmg sermon
Vacation Bible School wtll
Coolvtlle held by the Rev
close
Sunday evemng with a
Charles Nmt ts of the Racme
program
Everyone
ts
Baptist Church last week
welcome
The
ttme
IS
7
30
p
m
Rev Jack Young called on
Mrs . Ne1sel Weatherman June 18
Mrs Jerry' Hoagland and
Saturday
chtldre
n, McArthur, visited
Mr Robert Gray returned
home from the hospital at recently with her gra ndManetta and IS slowly tm· mother, Mrs Carmen Evans
Mrs
J eannin e Talley,
proving
Mr and Mrs Roger Epple Timothy, Tamara Lee and
and family have moved to tile Mark left Tuesday for M1ssour1
after a ten days v1slt with Mrs
Norman McCain property
Mr and Mrs Bob Tuttle and Talley's mother, Mrs. Bertha
family of Columbu,...vlsited h1s Parker
Mr Charles Diehl was m
parenls, Mr. and Mrs. Veri
Umverslty
Hospital, Colwn·
Tuttle over weekend
bus,
for
medtcal
treatment
Mr and Mrs Hobert Newell
The W.M S. wtll meet June
and son of Chester were
20,
7 30 p m at lhe local
Sunday guests of h1s parents,
Mr and Mrs Jess1e Newell church
Mr and Mrs. John N:eweU
Mr and Mrs. Ronald
and fam 1ly of Columbus were • Albaugh and children of Iowa
Sunday guesls of Mr and Mrs VISited recently with Mr and
Marvm Walker.
Mrs Clarence Curtis

Bald Knobs
Socl"a} N0 l es

•••

News

Laure] Cliff

News Notes

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
S P M Day Before Publication
Mond1ly Deadline 9 a m
Can.cellallon - Correct1ons
W1ll be accepted un til 9 a m for
Day of Publ ication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
nght to ed t! or reject any ad s
deemed obiectlc nal
The
publisher wiU not be responSible
fer more than one mcorrect
msertion
RATES
For Want Ad SerYtce
5 cents per word one 1nsert1on
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word thr.ee
consec ul tve inser tions
18 cents pe r word s.x con
secutl ve Insert eons
• 25 Per Cent 0 1scount on paed
adsandadspaldwethln lOdays
CARD
OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
51 so for so word mm 1mum
Each additiOn al word 2c
BLIND ADS
Add1f10na l 25c Charge per
Advertesement
OFFICE HOURS
8 ·30 am to S 00 p m Da 1ly,
a 30 am to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

Employme nt W,1,,1 ·i'

For

.

.

Sale

Business Services

,,

pa1nt root s or houses, BOAT tra 1ler and 12 h p Sea
tnm and cut trees clean
K1ng outboard molor $100.
attics
basements
e tc
phone 247 2082 after 6 p m
Phone 9-49 312 I
6 1631c
6 14 30tc
DON'T pump your sluggish
sept1c lank Gel Klean Em
Wanted To Buy
Al l Sept1 c Tank Cleaner
OLD FU RNI TUR E, d1shes , Landmark Farm Bureau
clocks. brass beds, silver
Pomeroy
dollar s
or
comp lete
6 16 ltc
households , W r~te M D
Meller, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Ohro REGATTA WEEK SPEC IALS
Call 992 6271
V1nyl floor coven ng , lovely
3 16 tfc
colors
&amp; patte rns, 9)(12's
--,------ - , - - -- $14 9S. elect clothes dryers.
l'elp Wanted
your cho1ce SJO (F ree
l
SUMM ER Employment, car ceram 1c frog w1th every rug
necessary, for details wnte or dryer purchase thru
Mrs L1 bma n, 34 West Car
Regatta Week' I All metal
lawn
cha1rs go cart motor
penter Street. Athens Oh1o
used wh1 fe work trousers,
45701
6 11 61c sh.rts, 85c each, great for
pamtersl Also, see our usual
good
selec t 1on of clean
WAITRESS no exper~ence
necessary , apply m person household goods, appliances
KUHL'S BAR GAIN CE N
Blue Tartan, Mtddleport
6 IS 61c TER Rt 7 " at lhe caut 1on
ltght' Tuppers Pla ms , Oh1o
Open to 6 p m
closed
Mondays Phone 667 3858
For Rent
6 11 61c
HOUSETRAILER , 12x60 2
bedroom a ~r con d1f1on ed, 592
Broadway, Me ddleport
·
6 16 3tc
- - - - - - -- 2 BE DROOM modu lar home 1n
Syracuse n1 ce loc atiOn
furnesh ed, phone 992 2-441
aller S P m
--==-=-=~-.,.--.,.---6--:14 He Economy T1ller, 31;~ h p B&amp;S
2 BEDROOM tra iler adu lts eng1ne Reg 159 95
144 95
only Bob s Mobile Cour t
phone 992 2951
Tur f Tnm Mower B&amp;S 3112
6 13 ff c hp engrne lncarton
7025
ON E bedroom trailer apar t
POMEROY
menls, 1deal fo r cou pl es
'W'._ JackW Carsey, Mgr
Contact McClure s Dn~ry Isle
iillil
Phone 992 2181
99'1 5248 or fJ92 3436
6 13 Sic r'-==========~
WILL

On Most Aml!rican_~.!'.fL
- GUARANTEE[)-..:
Phone 992-2094
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1l 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Mam, Ponwroy, Q.

EARTH MOVING
Dozer

End loader Work,
basement Ian~ sca pmg We have 2 s1ze
dozers, 2 $1Ze loaders Work
done by hour or contract .. '
Free Estimates We also
haul fill dtrl, top so1f Dump
truck s and low boy for h1re
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pom eroy Phone 992· 3525
after 7 p m or phone 992S232
&amp;

ponds ,

For Sale
1968 HO NDA CB 350. good
cond1 t1on low m1 les S-195
phone 992 5213
6 13 6lp

. .,..

.-

.

EXPERT
~ Alignment·
$5.55

I'

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Small est Heater Core

KESLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

I

.

OR TRUCK
,
.

Specializing In
Small Businesses

-==========..,
SPECIAL

MOWERS
&amp; TILLERS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

.

With These Used Car Savings

'

69 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air ............. '3500
68 Cadillac Sedan · DeVille, air .. .... .......'2600
&amp;8 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air ............. 12600

•
•

3 Bedfoqm home, with
brick f'ront, 1 car •
garage,
carpeting . •'
•• Pnced at . •
••
ONLY $13,750
l
We s~ciallze In a Iumlnum, ~&lt;
vinyl and steel siding; ,
fiberglas , brick and stone;
complete line or resldent1a1
and commercial roofing ,
remodeling,
building ,
suspet1ded ceilings, Interior
and exterior painting,
complele line of Masonry
work All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction We
are fully Insured for your
protection 32 N 2nd 992
3918
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

66

Buick LaSabre

4 Door, ~ir.............. 1,'995'

66
68

Buick LaSabre

4 Door

71

Ford

••!i!

RUTLAND FURNITURE

'1395
'2695'

&amp; Oldsmobiles

'72 Chev. Nova 2 Dr.

1967 CHEV IMPALA
51395
H T Sedan. V8 engine. auto trans . P S P B. factory
air, dark blue finish wrth vinyl roof. like new w s w, rad1o,
sharp car

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Apple Grove
News, Events

•

our employes

can

enjoy

71 Ford 4 Dr. Sedan
'70 Chev. Nova 2 Dr.
Sedan, v.s, auto trans., green with tan in tenor - SAVE-

'69 Cheville Super Sport
396, 4·sp., dark blue with dark tnterlor
SAVE- I
1

-

'68 Chevelle 2 Dr. Sedan

6 cyl ., 3-sp., dark blue with vtnyl whtte top. SAVE-

'70 Yamaha Motorcycle
'69 Dune Buggie
'70 Ford Truck
With B ft camper ,

v.a, auto

trans - SAVE-

'69 Chev. Pickup liz tori
Truck .' v.s, stand. trans., long &amp; wtde bed. SAVE

A DREAM BOAT

17

n. GLASsMASTER

120 H P. inboard, outboard motor, skts,
jackets, ladders complete Seats 6, boat
lrailer, less than 40 hours river time

AIR CONDITION SPECIAL

Syracuse News, Society
John Carroll , of South
Charleston , W Va ., spent
several days recently Wltll hiS
Sister and brother-m-law, Mr
and Mrs John Bohram, local,
and SISler and brother-m-law,
Mr and Mrs Herschel Rose
and family of Mmersvllle.
Mr and Mrs Carl Duckworlh, of Coshocton, Mr and
Mrs James Gumsler, daughter
K1tty, of Plckermgton, and Mr
and Mrs George Dempsey
VISited on a Saturday with
Richard Duckworth and Sister,
Agnes White, and Mr and Mrs
Harold Duckwortll.
Recent guests of Mr and
Mrs William E1chmger, and
John, were Mr and Mrs. Hall
Frost of Englewood, Flonda
Mrs Harold Weaver, and
daughter Peggy, of St. LouiS·
v1lle, spent a weekend Wlth the
former 1 s mother, Mrs Magg1e
Wmebrenner
Spendmg Sunday and
Monday w1th thetr aunt,
Frankie Mwnaw, were Mr and
Mrs Albert Mumaw, of Mingo
Junction
Mr. and Mrs Carl Weese
spent a recent weekend With
their son and daughler·m·law,
Mr and Mrs. Jack Weese of
near Cleveland
V1s1tmg Mrs Ada Slack were
her brother and Slster-m-law,
Mr and Mrs Ola Blake of
Swnmersville, W.Va.
The Rev Ralph Hudson of
Portsmouth was 'a recent
v1s1 tor of hiS mother, Mrs.

I

Rawlings Dependoble Ctty does 11 ""~atn
we have
" unfrozen" our prices on air condit1omng and wdl mstall
air conditioning on ony car during the months of June and
July for the complete price of S285 . this IS a $115
dlscounl over lheorlglnal price
no gimmicks . THIS IS
THE COMPLETE INSTALLED PRICE PARTS ,
LIIBOR . TAX, COMPLETE . ANY CAR Beautiful
wood gra1ned cab1net to match the latest of model s
hurry In and see the unit and set up your appomtment to
ha~e a 'cool" summer
I

THE CRESTVVOCID

FRONT. Deluxe automotive styling with safety designed
podded base Wood grain control and top strip.
AIR OUTLET LOUVERS . Three 4"xl 'l•" front loovers
Adiustable for all direction air flow
EVAPORATOR CASE Dlmenslon s- He~ght 4112". Length
16'10", Depth 11'1•"
AIR CONTROL: Variable 3 speed for maXImum personal
comfort
TEMPERATURE CONTROL : Ad1uslable with off
posll1on Cooling level IS automatically malntamed by
THERMOTROL

Mrs Tom Dtddle and son,
Shawn of Allred, 0. : Mr and
Mrs Bernard Diddle, Mr. and
Mrs Jerry Powell, Mrs
Carolyn Adams, Mrs. Robert
FISher and two sons, aU of
Racme; Mr and Mrs Danny
Bush of Loram, 0 , Edward,
Er1c, and Sarah Marie D1ddle
of Middleport, Mr and Mrs.
Charles Cobb and daughter,
He1d1, of Syracuse Arr1vmg
Monday from Lubbock, Texas
were one of !hell' sons, Mr and
Mrs. Don Diddle and daughter,
Ann, for an mdefmlte VISit
Mrs. Frances Ph1lson 1s
VISiting two weeks w1th her
daughter, Mr and Mrs Enill
Pllltcha at Cleveland.
• Mrs. Thelma Coe and
daughter, 'Wanda Vaz1ck and
two children of New Brighton,
Pa are visiting relahves and
friends.
Mr. and Mrs Benny Boggess
have moved ·from the fonner
Harold Roush to the Leo Taylor
residence. Mr and Mrs.
Charles Fmdley and fwmy
whose home was destroyed by
f1re , have moved to the Roush
residence.
Keith Ashley arr1ved home
Wednesday evemng to spend
his swnmer vacatton from
Oh1o State Umverstty with his
parents, Mr and Mrs. Robert
Ashley
Mr. and Mrs Tom NorriS,
Mr and Mrs. Richard Weaver,
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Norns
attended the IUUeth wedding
anmversary of Rev. and Mrs,
Tom Noms at Rome City,
Indiana Sunday.
Mrs. Herbert Shields entered
Holzer Medical Center Monday
and w1ll undergo surgery
Tuesday
Mr and Mrs . Everette
Ransom have moved from
!hell' home at Antiquity to the
former
Jess
Anderson

Myla Hudson and son Glenn
They all VISited Mr and Mrs
Clyde Gerlach at Letart, W.
Va Mrs Hudson accompamed
her son home for a week's VISit
Mr and Mrs. Charles
Mugrage and family of New
Matamoras spent a recent
weekend w1tll Mr. and Mrs
N1al Salser They also attended
the Rac me High School
Alwnm
Kenneth and Terry Guinther
spent a week with their brotller
and sister-m-law, Mr and Mrs
Wtllie Gumther of GallipoliS,
Route
Mr. a~ Mrs James LISle of
Sprmgf1eld, spent Memorial
weekend w1tll his parents, Mr
and Mrs. Charles Usle
Mr and Mrs Max Duck·
worth and children of Alliance
VISited a day wtth Mr. and Mrs
Harold Duckworth
Mr and Mrs Lawrence
Sellers, Colwnbus, VISited on a
Sunday with her brother, Mr
Robert
Flanagan
Ac·
compamed by Richard Duckworth and Agnes White, they
VISited the Letart Falls
Cemetery
Mr and Mrs Wilbur Holter
of Akron spent a recent
weekend at their summer
home here
Mr. and Mrs John Slack,
Johnny, Donald and L1nda of
Sandyville, spent Memorial
weekend w1th his mother, Mrs
Ada Slack and her parents at
Rutland
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Wtnebrenner and children,
Mrs. Magg1e Wmebrenner,
accompamed by Mrs. Harold
Weaver, and Peggy, of St
LouiSville, attended a reun10n
at the home of Mr. and Mrs
Ross Winebrenner at Letart,
W Va
Richard Duckworth attended
the Memor1al Day parade at
Pomeroy and Chester.
Mrs Allee Capehart visited
recently wilh her brother,
Ralph Swearmgen, of Avon
Lake
Richard Duckworth accompamed Bob Roberts, of
Pomeroy, to Lowell where they
saw the Meigs Legion ball
game
Mrs Wanda Guinther spent
Saturday and Sunday with her
aunt, Mrs Ellen Newland of
Athens
Mr and Mrs Donald Harden
have moved mto the~r new
home purchased from Archie
Lee, m the Rustle · Hills Addition.
Mr and Mrs. James Robert
White, and daughter, Mary
Beth, of Dunbar, W. Va. spent a
night With hiS mother, Mrs.
Agnes White. They left the
following morning for a week's
vacation at Put In Bay at Wesl
Tarra Cottages.
•
Mr and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debb1e look Mr. Earl
Harden to his home In Canton
and spent the weekend there.
Elizabeth Merrill spent a
Sunday with Mrs. Joe Rollins
of Letart, W. Va
Mr. and Mrs. James R.
White, Mary Beth, of Dunbar,
W Va.; Richard Duckworth
and Agnes White, vls1ted
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Emd Eynon, Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Eynon, and Mr and
Mrs. Roy Jones of Nease
SetUement.
Mr. Glenn Hudson has
returned to his employment on
a
on the Great Lakes.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Marshall
Ro~sh accompamed by Mr
and Mrs. Mickey Winebrenner
celebrated the1r fourth wedding anmversary by d1nmg at
the Kahtkl Restaurant 111
Colwnbus Friday
Mr. and Mrs Martin Cun·
nlngham of Clarton, Pa , Mr
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
and Mrs. James Freeman of
Ervln, Pa , Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Ke1th Mr and Mrs. Ullie Hart Milliron who passed away at
Smith, Jr and Martm DerOUlll
and sons, Brice and Bruce, Veterans Memor1al Hospital
of Millville, Pa ., Mr. and Mrs
spent Thursday w1th the Friday. Funeral services were
Jerry Johnson and family of
Haymans,
held at the Plants Church
Rac111e visited over Memorial
Keith Hayman left Friday by Monday at 1 p.m. by the Rev
week end w1th Mr. and Mrs.
bus
for al two weeks vacation Okey Cart. lntennent was In
Robert Smith Sr
with
his brother, Mr. and Mrs Letart Falls cemetery by tile
Mr and Mrs Marshall
Ted Ha)1ll8ll at Westerville Ewing Funeral Home.
Adams and son Raymond
Mrs Georgia Wolfe of
Mr. and Mrs Jerry Johnson
accompaoied Mrs. Mlllle
Washington,
D.
C.
was
a
dinner
and
children of Racine, Joe
Norris to her home m Laurel,
guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs Derovm, local, attended
Md Fr1day and spent the week
funeral serv1ces Tuesday at the
Dallas Hill.
end.
•
Mrs . 4an Norns, Mrs. Nease Funeral Home in
Mr. and Mrs Jim Connolly
Debbie
Roush, Mrs. Pauline Wllkensburg, Pa for David
and children, Mr. and Mrs
Hill,
and
Mrs. Kathryn Hill Leroy Sohn.
George Connolly of Syracuse,
returned 1o !ijo Grande College · Joe Derovln has accepted
Virgil Hill, local, Mr. and Mrs.
Monday
!br the summer employment at Clarion, Pa.
Gene Connolly of Concord,
semester.
and Will go to work Monday.
California were visiting Mr.
Mrs. Alice Baller spent the
Earl Mangus and daughter,
and Mrs. Everette Connolly
weekend
'with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mary,
of Saxonburg, Pa.
over the week end.
Lawrence'
Balser
returning
to
visited
recently
with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Creaver Saul,
J1trs Robert Smith.
her home Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hwnphery
Weekefl!l
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence residence.
of West VIrginia, vialted St.
Mrs. Arnbid Hupp were Mr. Roush and son, Tommy, of
Clair Sunday afternoon.
and
Mr~. Kenny Bass of Winfield, W. Va. called on Mr
Milfl Loretta Ours of Mid·
ColiiDibus.
The Baas children and Mrs. Roy Pearsoo and
dleport was a SUnday dinner
returned home with them visited other relatives Friday.
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Sunday
alter apendlng a week
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Buni
Donohew and Grea. Mr. and
with
their
grandparenill,
Mr.
and
Bill Wilson of Bolivar Dam
Mrs. Ernest Wood of
and Mrs.-lt~ and Mrs. Katie and Mrs. Erma Willon are
Kingsbury
visited
the
Basa at ditton.
vialting Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Donobewl SUnday afternoon.
Mr.
111d
Mrs.
Lynn
Shuler
Beai'ha at Norfolk, Va .
The tax books are now. open for the
Mrs. Roy Donohew ill taking
have
~
the
Methodist
VISiting
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Oval
June or Second half collection of the
three monlhl leave of abtlenee
parsonage at Letart Falls.
Diddle over the weekend were
from her employment 11
1971 Real Estate Ta}(es. Also for
Mra. Opal Hupp spent a week their children and arand·
Raleigh lllelman and will
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
In Charlelton llllallng In the children, Mr. and Mn. Wald
I'IIUDII~ job ID September.
July 3, 1972.
care of her lillter, Cheryl DIMle and son of PlkevWe,
• Mr. and Mn. Herbert Roush ~Is.
wu a patient at Ky.; Mr and Mrs. Joe Nelaon
Mn. Gene Jewell and 1011, Stewart,
and Roger vlllted Mrs. Ronnie
a
Charlellon
hoepltal
of Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby,
of
Letart,
W.
Va.
Rt.
Ruuell and new dauahter
FriendlnniOITY
tol1ear
of
Ralph Diddle and 1011, Wayne,
Mwlda Lynn at the bame of apent SUnday with Nr. and
Mr. and Nra. ~ llaulb Mra. Gerald Hayman and the dealll of Mrs. Kathryn of Winfield, W Va.; Mr. and
I

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

LEGAL

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

*ho

t'
I

r

70 GMC
...............!1895
1
Pickup /2 Ton Truck, long wide
bed, 6 cyl , stand trans

69 Mercury..........$1795
Marquis 2 dr H. T., extra nice

69 Dodge .............'$1595

-Super Bee, 4 sp , extra nice.

V 8 auto. trans., P.S., P. B, brown with white
vinyl top. - SAVE-

OPEN EYES. 1.00 I' .M.
_,PMEROY, OHIO
Fnday evenmg Mr. and Mrs.
Russell and daughter returned
to their home m Pomeroy
Wednesday.
Mrs Erma Wilson spenl
Friday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs Ray Byers Mf. Byers
remams about the same.
Mr and Mrs Robert Slmth
received tile sad news of the
death of their nephew David
Leroy Sohn at Cleveland. Mr
Sohn was shot accidently
dunng a robbery of a
restaurant he was dmmg at
Mrs. Toc1e Hayman, Mrs
Bertha Robmson attended
funeral serv1ces for the1r
cousm Mrs. Wav1e Smes Fox at
Creston, W. Va Sunday af.
ternoon and called on Mrs
Mary Ford at Letart, W Va
Rte. Sunday evening.
Friends were sorry to hear of
the death of Lewis Roush of
MinersvUle, Mrs. Roush was a
former resident being the
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Seth Pickens
Mrs. Wilma Anderson IS a
patient at Veterans Memorl,al
Hoep1tal.
,
The former Ullian 'Grunm
and daughter of Parkersburg
visited graves of loved ones at
Letart Falls Cemetery and
called on her cousin Bert
Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Arnott of
Clarksburg spent the week end
at their ~orne.
Mr.and Mrs. Charles Gasklll
have 10kl their funeral home at
Wellston and just returned
from a vacation trip thru the
West.
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Donohue
and family of Radilor, 0. spent
over the weelterld with Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Donohue.
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner took Christine
Badgely to her home at
Fairfax, Va. Chriatlne had
apent two weella with her

So

SAVE-

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE
51995
V 8 engine, automati c trans , p steering. fa ctory air
conditioned, good w w ttres , radio, dark green fini sh with
spotless Interior

Saturday 17 of June
the Regatta

V·B, auto. trans., P. S., like new -

1970 FORD
$199S
Galaxle 500 Hardtop Coupe, V 8 engine. automatic trans
mission, power steering &amp; brakes, white finish , black
vinyl top, vinyl Inter ior White wall tires , like new rad io

BROTHERS

DrJ'"

Selection ~ew Cadillats

OF
QUALITY

ARNOLD

--

std.

~ t Pickup, V-8, auto., P.S. ....

2 SIGNS

CLELAND
REALTY

-------

Pickup, V-8

"You'll Ltke Our Quality Way
of Dotng Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Until l 10()- Til S PM. Sat

nHEIL"

WMP0/1390

l

Loaded with extras - mcludmg stereo tape,
red with whtte vinyl top - SAVE.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

==-,..-----=

,We talk to JOU

~

H.T. ........... ~ ..'695·

In Stock! .. We're Dealin '!

noe

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

Dodge

Good

20'

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

I

66 Mustang 6 cyl., :Jspeed ................ 1595
66 Chev. 2 Door, 6 cyl, 3 speed .......... '395
65 Mercury 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 auto., P.S.......'495

Aluminum
Sheets

DANCE

'72

69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air...... '1995
68 Chev. BeL 4 Dr., V-8 auto., air .........11495
68 Olds 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air .. ••• • • • 11895
67 Mercury 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 auto., P.s: ..... 1895 r
66 Pontiac 4 Dr. H.T., full power, air ...... '695

For Sale

The
Daily Sentinel

WILL BE CLOSED

I

-~~~--~

Harrison's
. T.V. Service

'12 Ton Pickup, V 8, Stand' trans ,

I '
•

t 304 E. Matn St.
Pomeroy, Otuo
Phone 992-3795
or Mason 773-5535
.

65 Chev................ ~495

USED CARS

.

WURLITZER HOME ORGAN
th e
- Newest model. loaded wtth
everyl htng l1ke new ' To be
Nathan Beggs
STAR TIN G June 18th Sunday
taken m trade 1n th1 s area,
dmner served from 11 30 lo
Rad1ator Spec1ahst
and Wi ll be sold at half the
1 30 at Young' s Casual
ong1na l pn ce Wnte for In
Ca termg
Ra cme
Thr s
lormat.an GRAVES PIANO
Sunday - Complete Turkey
1!. ORGAN COM PANY 383 E
D1nners
6 14 3tc
Broad St, Columbus Oh1o
Ph 992 2174
Pomeroy
6 15 6tc J...------ - - - - -YAR D SAL E, Avon Bolll es
SPINET CONSOLE PI ANO SEWING MACHINE serv1ce
Antiques on Larkin Street
clean , oil, set tens1on $4 99
may be pur chased by small
Rut land Thursday Fr~day
Spec1al Electro Grande
monthly
payments
see
1t
and Saturday
Company Phone 992 6517
locally wrrte Cortlan d MusiC
6 14 31c
5 21 tfc
Company I. P 0 Box 35
Cortland, Oh1o 44410
GUN Shoot also nfl e matches
6 15 lip
open srtes only, Forked
- - -- -Run Sportsma n Club Sun da y
MAPLE
Early Amer~can Real Estate For Sale
June 18 12 noon
Stereo
ra
d10
comb ma t1 on FOR SALE - 2'1 acre fa rm. 4
6
14
3tc
-- .
Beaut1 ful maple cab1net, w1lh
bedroom home completely
4 speed changer, 4 speakers,
remodeled.
alum mum Sldmg O' DELL WHEEL alignment
dual volume con trol Balance
and
storm
w1ndows,
free gas located at Crossroads, Rt 124
$77 J3 Use our budget terms
3 AND 4 ROOM furntshed and
well
all
mmeral
r1ghts,
1 mile Complete front end service,
Call 992 7085
unfurn ts hed
apartments
from Harnsonvdle Ca ll 992
tune up and brake service
Phone 992 5434
6 15 61c
3640
Wheels balanced elec
4 12 lfc
- - -- - 36" X 23" X .009
615 7tp Ironically .
All
work
WALNUT Stereo rad 1o com
-guaranteed
Reasonable,
TWO SERVICE MEN
b1na i10n, Qua l volume control ,
N EW - tota l electnc apart
rates Phone 9923213
I
4 speed mterm 1xed changer, 4 IDEAL 5 ACRE RANCHO
ment 2 bedroom , wa lk In
Lake Conchas, New Mex1 co
7·27-Hc
s
peaker
sound
system,
close
ts
large
llvmg
room,
Free P1ckup &amp; Delivery
$2,875 No Down No Interest
Ba lance $62 57 Use ovr
ketch en and dtnr ng area
$25 mo Vacat1on Parad1se AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
budget terms Cal l 992 7085
phone 992 7384 or 9917133
~ Money
Ma ke r
Free
ca ncelled?
Los t
your
6 IS 61c
6 16 3tc
CALL 992·2522
Broch ure Ranchos Bo x operator's license ? Call 992
2001DD Alameda Callfornta
2966
1972 ZIG ZAG Sewmg Mach1ne
TRAILER Browns Trailer
USED OFFSET PLATES
For Serv1ce lnformafron
94501
6 15 tfc
!eft
m
layaway
Beautiful
Park phone 992 3324
H/IV6.
6 7 30ip
pastel color, full size model
6 16 tic
MANY USES
Open 9a .m · 9 p m .
SEE US FO'If'Awnlngs, storm
Al l bu1ll 1n to buttonhole, do
- - - - . , - - -doors and windows, carports,
stretch sewing and fancy
3 BEDROOM house carport
marquees, aluminum sld1ng
stlfch mg Pay 1ust $48 75 cash
a1r cond1honmg , carpetmg rn
ATTE NTION LADIES' Self
and
rai ling A Jacob, sales
or
terms
available
Trade
ms
kitchen
l1vmg
room
and
bath
Defense lor W omen, courses
representative For free
accepted Phone 992 5641
fam1 ly room 1n basement
sta rtmg soon at Maplewood
8 for 51 00
estima tes , phone Charles 1
6 15 6tc
1618 Lmcoln Hgls, Pomeroy
Lake Phone 949 4074 or 949
Lisle, Syracuse, V V
-----available June 1 Contact
3651 tor tnformat10n or
Johnson
and Son, Inc
'1
960
CHEVR
OLET
4
Door
Rober
I
Beegle
949
2891
1nqu1re at Lake
321ft
Hardtop , 1 owner, 1m
6 16 21p
6 14 41c
maculate cond1 t1on 55,000
------SEPTIC tanks cleaned Mllle1
ong1nat m1les fully equ1pped
UNFURNISHED apartmen t,
Contact Associate
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio Ph
Mus I see 992 2788
134 Mulberry Ave . phone 9"2
662 3035
6
15
61c
VERA
EBLEN
3962
2 12 tfc
6 11 tfc
991_ i02o
,
-111 Court St.
VAC UUM Cleaner new 1972 160 Coal Sf
Middleport SUPE RIOR WINDOW Cleamng
model Complete wt lh all
FURNISHED 4 room apt
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sat. Night, June 17
Co &amp; Building Maintenance,
cleanmg tools Small parnt RUTLA ND - Cor ner lot J,.
Adu lt s on ly M1ddlepor l
co mmercial professional
damage
1n
sh1ppl
ng
Wi
ll
take
phone 992 3874
Whispering Pines
acre with 3 bedroom modern
men for professional lobs
6 4 li e
$27 cash or budget plan hom e, gas furnace. all
phone 614 446 9202
CAMPER 16 fl sleeps 6 good
available Phone 992 564 1
6 6 121p
lots
of ca rp et ~
paneled,
Nile Club
cond1f 1on $1 000 Phone 992
6 IS 61c re mod el1 ng 1n s1 de almost
6329
Mobile Homes For Sale
CA LL 949 2789for auto body and
complete-S i l,SOO
5 12 lfc ONE 21" TV conso le beaut 1ful
10 til 2
pam! work . Also repair fiber
8 x 45 2 BEDROOM trader
mapl e f1n1sh
JUS!
re
glass
boats plus electric and
phone 9933324
51 FORD 8N tractor. $750 new
condlftoned. phone 992 6813 or MIDDLEPORT - Sou lh
MUSIC By
gas welding
Slanley's
6 14 6tc
5
ft
H1
co
rotary
mower
,
$295
,
992 3635 Kerns Roush
The MemphiS Scunds
Second
Ave
.
2S
ft
ilv1ng
Custom
Body
Shop
Used Ford Endloader $150
6 !5 3lp
s 19 301c
room, dmmg room , sma ll
from New Phtladelph•a , 0
Erme l Luckelt Box 95
CASH pa1d tor all makes and
family
room.
buill
1n
kitchen
Albany phone 698 3032
mode ls of mobile homes
UPRIG HT deep freeze. !60 , 23" w1th bar 3 lar ge bedrooms HARRISON 'SlVServlce, open
6 163tc
Phone
area
code
614
423
9531
Zen1th Space Command Color up n1ce bath, all carpeted,
BOAT LI CE NSE - lor your
9 a m lo 9 p m • free pickup
4 13 lfc
TV $150 G E dryer S25
boat. for
your motor
and de livery, phone 992 2S22
lovely
decor
sun
porch
1n
COAL L1mestone, Exce lstor
phone 742 3334, Cary Hysel l
Ava •lable at Stmon's P1ck A
6 13 tfc
fron
t
carport
1n back If It's
Salt
Works
E
Mam
St
6 1S 31c
Pa 1r Shoe Store 108 W Ma1n , 1fJ72 - 12 x: 60 mobile home
Pomeroy Phone 992 3891
a n1ce home you want, try DOZ ER anCfllaa&lt;
worklocated near new mme 1f
Pomeroy Oh10, Phone 992
lh1 s one
4
12
11
ponds and septic tanks. B &amp; K
3830
1 31c mteres ted phone 742 566416
c
'
Real
Estate
For
Sale
Excavating -Phone 992 SJ67.
s 16 30ic
Many other homes m
- - - -- -- - POOD LE pupp1es, S1lver Toy, RAC INE _ 6 room hou se&lt; oalh .
D1ck Karrt Jr
Pomeroy Middleport and
uti lity room, garage, $10 ,000
Par kv1ew Kennels Phone W2
S 21 tfc
outtymg commun1t1es and
5443
c
phone
949
4195
lfc
several
lots
stil
l
available
8 1511
3 31
• A.r Condthoners
SEWING MA CHINES Repa~r
160 Coal 51reel - Also
service all makes 992 2211-4
• Awnmgs
ALUM INU M boats, on county s ROOM house. lot on n ver
locatiOn of the Middleport C
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
road
18
ISO
ya
rds
west
ot
Rt
• Underpmnmg
Ra
1
lr
oad
51
.
Middleport
Authorized Singer Sales and
of
C
oH1ce
33 Call 992 6256 Lorenzo
54 000 phone 992 3265
Serv ice We Sharpen Scissors
Oav
1s
Complete mob1le home
6 6 12tc
3 29 He
5 19 301c
servtce - plus grgant1c
-l·dtsp lay of mobile homes
THREE bedroom house w1lh
READY MIX
CONCRETE
WD AC TRACTOR. good l~r es,
bath , lf.z acre lot on publ1c
always ava1lable at
de livered right lo your
motor overhauled new pa1nt.
water system. Jf• mlie from
W1ndow
pro/ec:t Fast and easy Free 1
J D Tra1l type mower side
Chester
on
County
Rd
2S
MILLER
est mates . Phone 992 3284 i
Atr ConditiOners
rake phone 992 2826
Phone 985 4262
Goegleln Ready Mix Co.,
Pomeroy
608 E Main St
6 15 6lp
6 11 61c
Middleport, Ohio
Hot Water Heaters
MOBILE HOMES
1
6
30·HC
I
Plumbmg
1220 Washmgton Blvd
NEW
HOME
ELECTROLUX Va cuu m HOUSE 1n Long Bottom , phone
4237S21
BELPRE, 0
POMEROY - 1 story, 3 -BACK_H
_O
-~:AN
_D
__D_O_ZE- R
- work.
Cleaner Late mode l on
985 3529
Eleclncal Work
wheels, uses paper bags A 1
bedrooms, dou ble closets,
6 11 lfc
Septic tanks Installed George
w1t h 7 att plus sh ampooer
modern bu11t m k1 fchen 2
(Bill) Pull ins Phone 992 2478
$28 40
cash or term s LOTS ON Wr~ght St. Pomeroy. baths dlnmg room , all
Auto Sale s
4 25-lfc
available Phone 992 6517
ca rpeted, basement, lot
phone 742 S937
~S~E-P~T~
IC~
TAN
_K
_S~
C~
LE
~A~N-ED
'70 Bonnevdle 2 dr HT, blue
6 15 61c
11 Sx220. !electric heat )
6 6 12tc
11Sx200, (electric heatl
Wl lh bl ack VInyl lop, factory -Z-IG_ Z_A_G_s_ew
_ _,n_g_m
- ac_h_tn_e_. 1972
REASONABLE rates Ph 446
RAC INE - 10 room house,
4 BEDROOMS
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell ,
air , vmyl InferiOr 25,000 model. used IUS! a few limes
992 -2448
bath , basement, garage, two MIDDLEPORT - Modern
5934
Owner &amp; operator.
992
actual
mrles
phone
Full
srze
D1al
control
to fancy
lois Phone 949 4313
Pomeroy, 0.
kllchen, large TV room ,
5 12 ffc
after 5 P m
st1 tch
buttonhole elc
4 s tfp dlmng room, bath . carpet.
6 11 6tp
Reduced to on Iy $36 20 cash or - - -- - C BRADFORD, Auctioneer
pa nel ed. util ity room,
terms. available Trade n 37 ACRE farm modern house
OLD FASHION Trading Rmg ,
Complete SerVIce
garage
and
large
sf
or
age
1968
55396
Chevelle,
bucket
accepted Ph one 992 6517
Ho rses, pon1es guns or
dnl led we ll 7 acres river bulldtng, 2 lots $14 900 00
Phone 949·3821
sea
ts
power
steermg
6 15 61c
anylh~ng lo trade I mile ba ck
botto
m
on
good
road
cal
l
Racine, Ohio
automatiC Wil l sell for $900
A FARM
of Wesl Colum b1 a W Va on
after 1 p m 992 61ll
Crill Bradford
phone
7
42
S641
WITH
A
FUTURE
the Lak1n Road 1st and Jrd
6612 1c
•
Slife
'l'hls may be "1 usl the spot"
Sunday each month
6 16 3tc Rea I Estate For Sa Ie
:
you've been look1ng for Call
6 11 61p
1968 CHEVY Nova, V a 4 door.
us for an appointment to see
automattc, ex ce ll ent con
KOSCOT KOSMET ICS Several
..11 Opportun1ty knocks'
dillon , phone fJ49 3462 or 949
new products - spec1a ls e8ch
3 BEDROOMS
2131 alter 5 p m or see
month also sales personnel
MIDDLEPORT
- w, bat11s,
Raymond Hensler
needed Phone 992 5113
large double garage, storm
6
16
61c
6 6lfc
110 Mechamc Street
doors and windows. nice
. like-~·
por c hes , EXCELLENT
1964 CHEVROLET, V a, phone
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
NEIGHBORHOOD
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
949 2981
Service S50 Reg mares, S40
$12.900 00
6
IS·61p
Grade Fran c1s Benedum ,
REAL INVESTMENT
Phone 667 3856
1954 DODGE 2 ton !ruck with 14
CORNER
LAND
Large building 40x70, 1deal for con
HENRY E. CLELAND, Sr
5 17 JOtp
ft bed , V a motor . f1ve speed
tractor on Rout e 143 Has a 3 bedroom residence, 1112 acres
REALTOR
transmrsslon , very good
of level land
Phone
992 2259
SAVE up to one half Bring yoor
shape , sel l rea sonable
SCENIC
If
no
answer
992·2568
stck TV lo Chuck's TV Shop,
Delbert Lawson, · Portl and.
ON YOUR DIAL
SYRACUSE - Wal ch the river boats go by, relax, and
151 Butternut Ave, Pomeroy
Ohio
en1oy
l1fe
summer
or
win
ter
4 bedroom home with 2
4-41fc
6 15 Jlp
baths mce k1tchen , full base ment
WILD BUT CAN BE DEVELOPED
1967 HOLIDAY couple, Olds
llt'CipJcu., - ,
For Sale or T1ade
OVER
7
ACRES
- Wanttobtilld several homes for resale
mobile 88, automatrc dn ve,
• Maytlv
Then
you
ought
to
see
th1s
Your
fortune
could
be
here
power steertng , power
23 CH ANN EL mobile CB rad1o
Automatics
PRIME
LOCATION
brakes, A 1 condlt1on, new
and 6 channel base , wilt trade
~ opted optrollon
RT 124 WES T - Compact home for the working class
,Cholet of water
for small fish ing boat and
tires maroon fm1sh Call 992
Yet 1f 1s rea l nlc e All paneled and carpeted Room for a
ltm pt
Auto.
3957
motor , also large pony for
water
level
garden or play ground
sale, 120. phone 992 7258
6 1S 3tp
,control ~ - LTiil
HANDY
6 IS 3tc - -- - - tFI!Jtr o.. Power
MIDDLEPORT - Yoo can walk lo the stores, and the
l_Fin A~itator .
For Sale
children lo school Level lot wtlh 3 bedroom home Onl y
65 MU ST AN G Conver tible,
' ,.trilli'Proil
$8,500 00
Immacu la te condition 6 HATCHING Red turkey eggs
MIYIII
HIIODIHIII
he ld SS degrees 20c each ,
cylinder standard fl oor sh1 ft.
FREEDOM
Hen ry G Schneemulch
stereo tape deck. beautllul
142 ACRES - En loy the tr~sh ai r of the country Mak e
~
'urroun .cloth\•
me Iaii ie maroon finiSh must J oh~son R1dge Road. Gall1a
money w1th cattl e while you work at your regular 10b
vlth
oe:ntlt1
e\'W
Co, Gall ipolis
see to appreciate. phone 949
Me1gs school district La rge farm pond and a very good
,.~ No~ot opato
6 14 3tp
5953
sprmg 3 or 4 bedroom home 2 barns, n1ce outbuildings
no
6 13 61c - - - - - - - - $32,500 00
{In!,,~erdrylng
h Ll,nt
GARDEN IIIIer, B 1!. S eng1ne,
67 JEEP Wag oneer, 4 w~eel
good condlt1on, S75 , phone
ltllt
We need nice and neat 2 bedroom homes. rea sonably
M
U
drtve 327 Y·8, air con
992 6416
pr~ced B1g things are 111 the making , watch thi s ad and
lltd rpet
dltloned. automatic trans
6 IS 3fp
lttt'VICI
you
may
be
a
l1tfle
wiser
Real
estate
1
s
a
solid
In
miSSIOn , power steenn~ ,
vestment
Come
In
to
see
what
we
have
to
offer
power brakes, automat1c REG ISTERED Angus bulls ,
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
front hubs, excellent con· Eresca and President blood
lmes phone 992 2789
d1tlon , phone 949 59S3
992·332S NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS PLEASE 992 2371
Arnold Grate
6 14 6fc
6 13 6tc
Notice

WE'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES

.

HOWMD E. FRANK

See: Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
985-4100
Located on SR 7

Chester,

o.

'Grange No 2435 who viBlted
Star Grange on Saturday
evening and presented the
Literary Program were Bertha
Crippen, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree, Murl Galaway, Mr.
and Mrs Carl Starkey, Carl
Mr and Mrs John Dunham, Greenlees, and Mr. and Mrs.
Conme and Yvonne , New Mendal Jordan A dellcioUll
Boston, llhn01s, spent a mght potluck supper was served by
w1th each of their parents, Mr the host Grange during the
and Mrs Carl Dunh"l" and Mr social hour
and Mrs Reed Jeffers, VISited Mr and Mrs. William
other relatives 111 the area, and Thomas were overnight guests
attended the weddmg of her of her sister, Amy Caldwell, In
mece, Ruth Ann Jordan on Colwnbus and vislled w1th her
Sunday before returnmg home mece and husband, Mr. and
Deputy 'Master V~rg1l Atkms Mrs John Kimes.
Ney Carpenter Is con·
and Mrs Atkins conducted
mspechon on Fr1day evenmg valescmg al his home after
when Colwnb18 Grange No. surgery at Pleasant Valley
2435 held their June meeting A Hosp1tal Guests at the Car·
program honormg fathers was penter home have been Mr.
presented by the lecturer, and Mrs Albert Qulvey,
Bertha Crippen The cupcake Dover; Mrs. Sidney Parker,
contest was held. First place Strasburg; Robert Parker,
was g1ven lo Mrs. Clifton Middleport, and Mr and Mrs
Fraley,
second
place, Hilbert Cox, Albany
Mrs. Rose Hooper, Darlene
Elizabeth Jordan, third place,
Rose Hooper. It was reported and Janet, Athens, viBlted her
that Grange Histories had been parents, Mr and Mrs. Carl
sold wtth the $5 profit bemg Greenlee and attended
sent by the Women's Actlv1t1es Colwnb1a Grange on Friday
Chairman to the State Grange evening
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Fraley,
Camp Fund . Plans were
completed for Columbia Jr and sons, and Miss Bonnie
Grange members to v1s1l Star Fraley visited their parents,
Grange on Saturday evenmg. Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Fraley,
Mr and Mrs. Dwaine Jor· Sr , and other relatlVI!lj at
dan, Bryan and Keith and Mrs. Mallory, W Va.
Relahves here for funeral
Hazel Culwell were guests of
Mr and Mrs. Alfred Rice and services for Andrew Greer
sons In Colwnbus on Sunday. included children, Mr. and
Bryan and Keitll Jordan stayed Mrs Roger Greer and family,
for a few days' vacation In the Warner Robins, Georgia;
Dewey Greer, Huntsvllla,
Rice home
Mr. and Mrs. LeWIS Smith Alabama; Mr . and Mrs.
and Nancy were recent guests Leonard Greer and famUy,
of their son-m-law and Lexmgton, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
daughter, Mr and Mrs. Larry James Reed and sons,
Stanley and Anna, Ene, Penn. Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
They were accompamed by Reed and daughter, Clendenin,
Mrs. Eugene Stanley, Albany . W. Va ; Mr and Mrs. Richard
Larry Stanley, who suffered a Cook, Columbus; Sherman
broken leg in a motorcycle-ear Greer and fiancee, Chris
accident, has now been Bailey, Gary, Ind.; and Mr.
dlstmssed from the hospital and Mrs. Michael Smith,
and 1s recuperating at home Greenville, South Carolina;
Nancy Sm1th spent several sisters, Mrs Faye Lyons, and
days m Ene, then flew to Mr and Mrs. Sam Lyons,
Colwnbus where she was met Elizabethton, Tenneasee;
by her parents.
along with other relatives, Mr.
Mrs . Jerrie W1lson and Junior Lyons and Dewey
friend, Ann Arbor, Mic)IIgan, Estridge, Cleveland; Mr. and
visited her uncle, Lavern Mrs. Claude Lyons, Kinfiii)OI'I,
Jordan and fanuly on Sunday Tenn.; Mrs Mae Olesser and
and attended the wedding of children, Gap Creek, TeM.;
her cousm, Ruth Ann Jordan Mr. and Mrs. John Hiclla and
and Larry Birchfield at the daughters, Mr . and Mrs. Burl
Carpenter Church on Sunday Hicks, Mr . and Mrs. Monroe
afternoon.
Lyons and Mr. and Mrs. J . L.
Members of Columbia Lyons, Elizabethton, TeM.

Carpenter

News, Event

I. W. COMPTON,
OPTOMETRIST

O.D~

,_

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 17: 2 TO 5 (CLOSE1
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURl"'ST.;

PHONE 949-2033

DON SMITH
'

RACINE, OHIO
FOR

C.O.B.A. SERVICE
TO
SELECT SIRES
DAIRY &amp;

�,.

•

t

~..,...

1~

- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddlepori-t'~oy, 0., JIUit lS,lm

Jaroushie

llOATPARADE TROPHIES -Earl Ingels, chalnnln of
· the boat parade to be held Saturday, displays the trophies
from his bost that will be awarded to the winners of the
event. The parade will form at Middleport levee at I p.m.
Boats using a theme of a particular event of the Regatta,
such as Frog Jump, will be judged. lngelli as a member of the
Athens Boat and-6ki Club, will fly In an A-Une kite as part of
the Ski Club's show Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. Jngelli· Is
chairman of the Frog Ball to be held Saturday at 9:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy Junior High and co-chairman of the boat races
to be held Sunday from 12 noon to 6 p.m.

Suit Filed for
School Damage
John King Mussio, Bishop of
Steubenville, trustee for the
unused Bishop Fenwick High
School building in Cheshire,
today filed a judgement suit in
Gallia County Common Pleas
Court against The Westerfield
Insurance Company of
Westerfield Center, Ohio,
Superior Risk Insurance,
Leroy, Ohio and SaundersEvans Insurance Company,
Gallipolis.
According to the petition,
plaintiff entered into an in·
surance policy with ·lhe
Westerfield Insurance Com-

Oil Dwnping
(Continued from Page 1)
Ottawa failed to appear for a
hearing and forfeited its bond.
It . had been charged with
disposing of sugar beet·wastes
Into lhe Blanchard River.
Louisville chickeh farmer
Steve Stlllianos was to come to
a jury trial .Monday after
pleading Innocent to charges of
allowing chicken wastes to
enter the east branch of the
Nimishillen .. Creek for the
seco nd time within three
weeks.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Saturday
June 16-17
NOT OPEN

Sun., Mon. &amp; Tues.
June 18·19·20

SOMETIMES
A GREAT NOTION

ITechnlcolor)
Paul Newmon
Henry Fonda
rotorcarloons:
Scuba Duba Do
Monster Master

pany through its agents,
Saunders-Evans Insurance
Cs., on March 14, 1971. A
premiwn of $1,950 was paid for
$200,000 worth of coverage on
the building and $20,000 on
personal property.
Mussio says on March 4,
1972, the high school located
north of the Cheshire Csrpcration, was vandalized with
damages totaling $4,717.15. The
insurance company was
properly notified and gave its
assurance that an immediate
investigation would begin.
Plaintiff further says that on
Aprill4, defendants in writing,
notified the plaintiff that it
would not pay for the damages
due to a vacancy "exclusion
clause" In the policy.
Mussio, In his petition, says
the policy has a vandalism and
malicious mischief endorsement coverage clause in
both the building and personal
property. The endorsement,
according to the petition,
provided that the company
shall not be liable for any loss if
the building had 'been vacant
and unoccupied beyond a
period of 30 days immediately
preceding the loss, whether or
not such period conunenced
prior to the Inception date .
Mussio claims the defendant
and its agents , knew the
building was vacant and
unoccupied for more than 30
days at the time the insurance
contract was agreed upon;
thus; by such knowledge,
defendants waived the
provisions of the endorsement

·~··:~;-»,::::;:;:;:~:8::~\'!0:::;~:i:'~~:!:?t.::~:

FRANCE TO OU
ATHENS - Gerald A.
"Jerry" France, 28-year old
head baseball coach and
assistant football coach at
,Capital University, was named
head baseball coach at Ohio
University today by Ohio
Athletic Director Bill Rohr,
succeeding the veteran Bob
Wren who resigned two weeks
ago after 24 years at the helm .

Double Feature Program
WUTHERING HEIGHTS

(Color)
(G)
An na Ca lder-Marshall
Tim9lhy Dalton
PLUS
" THE HUNTING
PARTY"

t Color)
Oliver Reed
Ca ndice Bergen

--Gene Hackman

I RJ

Saturday,June 17

·Double Feature
" VALDEZ
IS tOM ING"

(Color)
Burt Lancasler
(GP)

- PLU5-

I "&gt;uw•.T•&lt; THE MATTER
HELEN?"

(Color I
Debbie Reynolds
Shelly Winters

In Pull Tests
The garden tractor pulling
contest, scheduled at 10 a.m.
Saturday at the Big Bend
Regatta, will have both junior
and senior divisions, according
to C. E. Blakeslee.
There will be five ~lasses in
the under 16 division and five
dasses in the se"nior division,
ages 16 to 60.
Entries may be made at the
weigh-in to be held at the
Landmark scales on East Main
St., between 9 and 10 Saturday
morning.
. Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMI'ITED - George Riffe,
Bell, W. Va.; Charles McFarland, Middleport; Constance Craig, Pomeroy; Mabel
Hostetter, Reedsville; John W.
Freeman , West Columbia;
Patricia Thomas, Long Bottom; Orpha Marie Stalnaker,
Long
Bottom;
Howard

ELBERFELD$ IN .. POMEROY

.

Open Friday and Saturday Nights ·
UNTIL 9:00

COLUMBUS - The creation of a federal
Regional Council Task Force to assist in
tHe economic development of portions of
Meigs, GalUs, and Vinton counties was
announced jointly today by Norman A.
Erbe, of the Chicago Regional Council, and
Dr. David C. Sweet, director of the Ohio
Deparbnent of Development.
James E. Peterson, regional director

• Aperfect time to complete your Fathm Day eift bu~ng.
• Special sale prices at our warehouse on Mechanic Street on
summer furniture, carpeting, linoleum •.. special rug sale,
1
88.00.

•

tmts

Reaching More

Than 11,000

Devotf'{i To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

30 PAGES
Pomeroy-Middleport

federal agencies responsible for multi·
state. regions thaf· include Ohio. These
agencies include departments of Labor,
Transportation , Housing and Urban
Development, Health, Education, and
Wellare, Agriculture, Office of Economic
Opportunity, Environmental Protection
Agency, and Economic Development
Administration.

Your Invited Guest

THREE SECTIONS

Families

SUNDAY, JUNE 18, 1972

Fatality Mars
Regatta Parade

They LOved It!

So after reserving a suite at
the Meigs Inn for Mr. Jaroushi,
Reed sat back at his desk In his
fine new bank building at W.
Main and Second Sts. in
Pomeroy to await developments.
And perhaps create a few
himseU.
Which will be unfolded
tomorrow when the frogs begin
jumping on the Marauder
Stadium turf.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Everybody loves a
parade.
This was evident Friday evening when
streets of Middleport and Pomeroy
business sections were lined with people
who turned out to review the eighth annual
Big Bend Regatta Parade.
And - the time of the viewers was well
spent. The parade was one of the best
staged as a psrt of Big Bend Regatta
Weekend, sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Conunerce. The overall
quality of entries appeared to be improved
over some of the parades.
While It was difficult for some of the
float entries to compete with an attractive
creation made by personnel of the
Pomeroy National Bank, there were many
creative, original entries which didn 't
make it into the winners' circle. In the
float division - an area in which considerable expense and time are Involved awards this year were presented only to
first place winners in the several
categories. Previously, second and third

Somet
•

IS

·17•••

Two Draw Fines
Two defendants were fined
and two others forfeited bonds
In the court of Pomeroy May0r
William Baronlck Thursday
night.
Forfeiting bonds were John
Lyons, 29, Middleport, $23.70,
posted on a speeding charge,
and Larry Fox, 32, Middleport,
$25, posted on a charge of
driving left of center. Fined
were Charles Rhodes, 30,
Racine, $100 and costs, and
three days in jail for driving
while intoxicated and James
Hayes, Rutland, $10 and costs,
failure to secure a burning
permit.

Just ask the frog of the century.
Saturday. June 17 is a red-letter day for a lot of frogs .
It's a big day for us. too .
One hundred years ago. on a day in June,
Pomeroy National Bank opened its doors.
They've been opened every business day since .

An added event at the annual
Frog Jump Saturday at Meigs
Football field in Pomeroy will
he 25 frog races, no entry fee
required, called the Royal
Crown Sweepstakes.
Winner of each race will
receive a case of Royal Crown
Cola with the grand prize
winner to receive a $25 prize.

'

.·:

We 're sure you 'll understand if we and our frog .
make justa little big dea l out of this June 17.
The frog will wear our colors (green ) in the competition .
We 'll have an open house . from 9 to 4. at our Pom.eroy office .
We 'll serve refreshments . distribute souvenirs,
·
and hold a few drawings for free U S. Savings Bonds.

REPORT CORRECTED
Fined In the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor John Zerkle this
week was Robert Caruthers,
Sr., and not Robert Caruthers,
Jr.

'"' ·u

PARADE STE~ wu lleulab
Ewing on her three wheeled bicycle in
Friday nigh's parade officially opening
Big Bend Regatta activities. Large
• crowds lined both sides of the street
along the parade route.

mX::.::x.
"'' o"'"' mm,om'~
''Wqm"
pomeroy
rutland

place winners in various categories have
been presented awards also.
Winning the first place awards in the
six categories involved in judging were :
the Pink Panthers 4-H Club, en·
vironmental category; Pomeroy National
Bank, best overall float and best commercial entry; Veterans Memorial
Hospital, non-commercial ; the frogmobile
of the Ohio Society for the Promotion of
Bull Frogs, best frog theme float; Bethel
62, International Order of Job's
Daughters, best in the religious category,
and Cub Scout Pack 249, best theme float
- "Big Bend on the Move."
The Tupers Plains Community Club
which staged ils annual variety show in the
junior high school auditorium following
the parade won first place in the antique
car division with second place going to the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District. .
The La Voyagettes and La Voyageaurs
Drug and Bugle Corps of Uniontown
placed first in the"twirling corps division
and also in the marching units. Second
place in the twirling corps went to the
Royal Riggs Kadets with the Gl...,ttes
winning third place. Second place among
the marching units went to the Vietnam
veterans color' guard of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion. The guard
members wore new Colonial type
costuming completed only recently .
A number of riders made up the
parade and winners in the equestrian
division were Bob Hoffman , Point
Pleasan t, first; James Stewart, Pomeroy
Route 3, second, and Redenith Blevins,
Pomeroy Route 3, was third.
Numerous other entries rounded out
the parade including tile first and
emergency units of the county. Providing
snappy music along the parade route were
the marching bands of Southern, Eastern
and Meigs Local High Schools.

&lt;XlLOR GUARD OF DREW WEBSTER PU'!T 39 took second place honors in
the marching unit categories at the Friday evening parade officially opening the
Big Bend Regatta. The parade formed at Middleport and traveled up river through
Pomeroy.

pomeroy
national
bank

Fire, Smoke
•

IN TOPS IN BLUE '72
MIDDLEPORT - Sgt. Forrest D.
(Butch) Bachtel, son of Mrs. Juanita
Bachtel, 315 S. Fourth St., who recently
was judged a top winner in the 1972 U. S.
Air Force Worldwide Talent contest in Las
Vegas recently, will be invited to be in the
"Tops in Blue '72" road show that will tour
U. S. and overseas bases. ·
Sgt. Bachtel was among 183 command
winners from Air Force bases
everywhere.

Heavy Damage

the bank oi
the century
est.l872

!sam K. Jarolllhle of Tripoli, Libyan Arab Republic, arrived In Pomeroy
Saturday m"!'"ing to attend the annual frog jumps, just as he said he would.
Greeting Mr. Jaroushie on his arrival was Mrs. Theodore (Nancy) Reed.
Jaroushie announced by letter in May that he would be in Pomeroy to attend the
frog event, which was generally regarded as a probable hoax. Jaroushie also wrote
that he had produced a ''pill" that inapired frogs to jUIIIp abnormal distances and
cures them of halitosis, which is still generally discounted! Jaroushle was for·
mally invited by this newapaper to attend the Jumps. He was to be a special guest
of honor Saturday evening at 1 reception given by Atty. and Mrs. Fred Crow at
their home in Syracuse for past grand croakers of the Ohio A.uoclatlon for the
Promotion of Bullfrogs Inc. ·

I

s

0

SAIGON - THE U.S. COMMAND TODAY reported more
than 340 air strikes Inside North Vielnam 1'lllrsday but said the
fighter • bombers followed Washington orders to stay clear of
Hanoi during the visit of Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny.
U. s. Air Force and Navy jets hit bridges, truck traffic and
airfields In North Vielnam Thursday with the northern-most
attack damaging the Nlnh Blnh rail and highway bridge 54 mlles
south • southwest of the l'!orth Vietnamese capital. .
The temporary bombing suspension In Hanoi's environs Was
timed with the beginning of, Podgomy's vliit which poi!Ucal
observers hoped might lead to a more conciliatory Communlat
slance at the Paris peace talks.

. TRIAL SET AUG. 1
GALLIPOLIS - Common Pleas Court
Judge Ronald R. Calhoun has set Aug. 7, as
the date for the trial of Admiral Dewey
Kelley, 51, and L. J. Veal, 48, both of
Norfolk, Va., Indicted in 1970 for Intent to
defraud. They allegedly took money·under
false pretense from Varney Faye Clen·
den~ while posing as termite n:·
termtnators.

•• 0

· POMEROY - Tragedy struck along
the Big Bend Regatta Parade route Friday
evening.
Dead after being struck by an auto at
the lower exit of Crow's Steak House, W.
Main St., Pomeroy, was Mrs. Shirley
Hood, 29, Mason, W. Va. The driver of the
automobile which struck Mrs. Hood,
Sandra See, 21, Middleport, is being
charged with motor vehicular homicide.
According to the report of Pomeroy
police, Mrs. Hood was walking across the
sidewalk at the exit of the steak house
parking lot toward Middleport when the
car driven by Mrs. See, traveling east on
Wes I Main, made a left turn in to the exit
for cars. Her car struck Mrs. Hood and
knocked her down. She was caught underneath the vehicle.
Mrs. See apparently then applied
pressure to the gas feed, rather than
brakes and Mrs. Hood was dragged under
the car until it stopped against the lower
front corner of the steak houae bui\dfng.
Dr. R. E. Boice, who ·happened~ at
the steak house, provided treatment 'until
the Pomeroy E-R squad, which was
participating in the parade, arrived til lake
Mrs. Hood to the hospital. Portions of the
parade were passing the steak house when
the accident took place.
Mrs. Hood was pronounced dead upon
her arrival at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. She died of a fra ctured skull and
neck .
Owner of the car driven by Mrs. See,

Water Cause

We couldn 't have made it the whole hundred years without you.
Don 't make us celebrate alone .
Drop in anytime between 9 and 4. and let us thank you m person .

and are estopped to assert the
same.
Plaintiff
seeks
judgement totaling $3,717.15
plus interest and costs.

WASHINGTON -111E SENATE THURSDAY voted U-25 to
kill the Subversive ActivlUes Control Board (SACB), born 22
Sun.-Mon .. Tue.
June18·" ·20
years ago with the help of a YOUD8 congressman named Richard
Double Feoture Program
M. Nixon to root out Communist Influences acroas the land. The
THE ANDERSON
administration
had hoped to upand it to cope with New Left
TAPES
Sean Connery
agigators. The bill went to the House of ~ntalives .
Dyan Cannon
Foea of the board argued Ita ...1100 per year aalarled
(Color)
members had ''nothing to do but draw their breath.l and their
(GP )
aalaries."
Courts bad declared mOlt of Ill ortplll powea un- PLUs. THERE'S A GIRL
consUtutlonal over the yean. It wli 111)111C*d to identlly .
IN MY SOUP
"Communlst.. ctlon," ''Communlit-lront," and ''Communist·
(Color)
lnfUtraled" groupa and lheir mmbera. But Sen. W!Wam
Peter Sellers
Goldie Hawn
Prolllllre, ~Wis., co.....,r of the SA~ amendment,
IRJ
,said the only ''ConununiiWiclion" orgalilatlon the SACB ever
...JI!!!!IIIIIJ!!I...- - - _ . found In :a yeara wu the American Cclnmuolll Pll'ly.

occurred in this portion of Ohio in
decades," Sweet said. "However, it will
also create problems by bringing so many
new people into the area lo live.
"It will be the objective of this Task
Force to help the local governments of the
area prepare for this population influx ."
The Chicago Regional Council is
composed of ·representatives of seven

+

Mllf!tly sunny 11nd contlnuec
rather cool today high in upper
11011 and 7~. Fair tonight low in
upper ~ and 50s. Partly
cloudY·and not so cooi Monday.
IDgh in 7~ to low 80s.

ELBERFELD$ IN ·POMEROY

'

of the Economic Development Ad· activities within the Leading Creek between Gallipolis and Middleport •
ministration's Midwest Regional Office, Conservancy District in southeastern Pomeroy, will create jobs for an estimated
has been appointed chairman of the Task Ohio. The conservancy district provides 3,000 persons in the coal mines serving the
Force which will study the effects on the water to severlil residential areas as well complex and in the power plant itself.
three Ohio counties of the construction of as to a major coal mine operation serving
" The tremendous investment in
the multi-million' dollar Gavin Power . the power complex.
money and manpower being made at the
Complex.
The Gavin power complex, located on Gavin power complex is the most im·
Peterson said the task Ioree idea is an
outgrowth of Chicago Regional Council the Ohio River at Cheshire, midway portant economics development that has ·

Weather

• ·shop every floor, visit evelJ department

business."

NEW YORK- VICE PRESIDENT Spiro T. Agnew, attacking .four leading Democrat8 including two presidential
candidates, Thursday night defended stepped-up U. S. air attacks against North Vietnam as aidlng "the victim of
aggression." Addressing a dinner of the Religious Zionists of
America, Agnew compared the North Vietnamese attack on
South VIetnam with the Gennan attacks on western Europe In
World War n lllid said President Nb:on was right In ordering the
action .
·
Agnew singled out Sens. George S. McGovern and Hubert H.•
Humphrey, both seeking the Democratic nomination, and Sens.
Edward M. KeMedy and J . William Fulbright for their stanlla on
thnesumption of the bombing of North Vielnam.

Garin Complex Spurs -Regional Study
Of EconomiC Expansion and Problems -

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
15 CENTS
-~- ~----------~--------------------------~~~------------~------------,-------~~~

By UDited Prell IDiel'lllllluaal

Tonight , June 16

Two DiVisions

'

Bailey, Kevin Mowe~y,' Laura Carson Lingerfelt, Garfield
Brian Grant, . Gregory yrimm, SW,more, Coy Starcher,.

VOL. VII NO. 20

INews•• rn Briefi
x r . u.... uuueo

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

(ConUnued frQm Page 1)
lade ot.JaroUihl aa were most .
though
other
readers,
somewhat jealou.sly. For Reed
surlflised thai his old arch
enemy (read as friend) of the
practical joke wu about to pull
off a whopper.
· The letter to Reed changed
all that.
For example, Mr. Paul Elch
Is a friend of Mr. Reed's who at
one time resided In Pomeroy,
and now resides In Tripoli;
· employed by the Standard 011
· Co. or New Jersey.
After checking, Ohio
University had two students
last year named All Asauam
and Mohammed Chattour!
A hurried Crow-Reed conference over coffee at the Blue
&amp; Grey resulted In a standoff;
Crow denied any knowledge of
Jaroushl. A telephone conference with Eleanor Crow
. (Mrs. Fred, ·who has been
known to connive with her
lawyer husband In some of his
funnier pranks) produced
similar protestations of in,
nocence.
"I'm not telling anybody
what action I have decided to
take," said Reed Thursday.
"But I'll tell you this," he
added, "I'm not gonna let Fred
Crow get one up on me in this

HELP NEEDE.D
Canisters have been
placed bi five Meigs County
· comfllunlly business · houses
to ra~ $%56 for the flood
disaster at Rapid City, s. D.
1be drive is beaded by lbe
Meigs Couaty Ameritan Red
CI'OIIs Cbapter which has
beea asked to help with the
disaster situation which
exists bi Rapid City. The
caolsters wiU be picked up
next Tuesday. Donations
may ailoo be seal 10 Mrs.
Joba Werner, 180 North
Second .,tvenue, Middleport.

Largent, Syracuse.
DISCHARGED -

•

..

-

--.

IIBN&amp;\ft&lt;JIAL DTRY ill
pnde wu tbe ,... "'"'wbldl took
one of tile lop~· 'lbe old bus wobbled from right to left, fnlm left to right, up
IIICI down, and dtlwn and up (like 1 giant bull frog, no leas) producing loud back·
11re1 u it ambled along. The FrogmobUe, owned by Fred Crow, waa sponsored by
the (JIIo Society for the Promotion of the Bullfrog. Outwardly, it 'lfiB designed by ,
Jilrl . .Inn Morgan. The mechaDICII changes were designed by, uh, nobody is
ildmluq. Clnory ihlpeclion rwvuled the Frosmobile rolled alone on wheels that
flld bela ntded to
pllceci OOilllderably "off«nter." The effecl was
.lllrtllnl. u -.u u 111 ,..... •• ill lehlevement.

u.·

STRIKE ENDED
GALLIPOLIS Herb Duoa,
President of JAM Locall$13, aDd Richard
Roy, plaat maaa.er of Chris-Craft, Friday
issued tile foUowbig joilit slatemeat: "'lbe
problem• which caused 1111 lemperary
werk ltoppqe at Ckrla-Crall 1banday
bave ~~ molved aad aU employee~ are
to r~ura to work 11 lbe IIOI'IIIal Ume
Monday, J1111e 11."

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
firemen , assisted by the Pomeroy fire
department, were on the scene Saturday
morning when a fire struck in the Mid·
dleport business section on Mill St. in a
building owned by Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Chambers.
The fire Is believed to have broken out
in the up)!lairs apartment of Mr. and Mrs ..
Paul Clark. A second apartment on the
second floor of the building was not OC·
cupied.
A damage figure had not been set
Saturday evening but damages to the
upstairs and the roof portions of the
structure were expected to run into
thousands of dollars. Cause of the blaze
was not determined.
Mrs. Clark received burns about the
arms and legs and was treated at the office
of Dr . J. J. Davis. Spencer's Market on the
ground floor below one of the apartments
received smoke and water damage as did
another storage building.
At 3:58p.m. Middleport firemen were
again called to the Chambers apartment
when fire broke out In the rafters. The
second threatening blaze was extinguished.

Jack McClellan, Gallipolis, has been cited
to court on charger of permitting an
unlicensed driver to operate a vehicle.
Mrs. Hood was preceded in death by
her father, Earl Henry.
She is survived by her husband, Carl
R. Hood, Mason ; two daughters, Carla
Ann and Angela, both at home ; her
mother, Mrs. Edna Henry, Mason; three
brothers, Earl Henry, Jr., Pt. Pleasant;
Herman Henry, Logan, and Joe Henry,
(Continued from page 2)

Old Highway
Garage To Be

Sold July 26
GALLIPOUS.- The Ohio Department
of Highways will offer for sale at public
auction the old Gallla County Highway
Garage located between Second Ave. and
Third Ave., here on Wednesday July 26.
Tjle Property con\Bins about one acre
of land has a one-story metal clad building
with attached shed containing 2,500 square
feet on foundation . The site includes extensive gravel and asphalt drives and a
pier type concrete base for a liquid storage
tank .
The site, rectangular in shape, slopes
slightly front to rear and abuts a railroad
siding along its rear property line.
Abutting owners have the right to use the
two existing driveways into the property
from Second Ave.
The property is zoned for industrial or
a manufacturing area. It will be sold for
not less than two thirds of the appraised
value. A deposit of $700 by check or money
order, payable to the Stale Treasurer in
care of the highway department, will be
required of the successful bidde~ at the
time of the sale.
Balance of the purchase price is due on
delivery of the deed.

Missing Person :S
Report Is Filed
GALUPOUS - A nussmg person's
report was filed Friday night for Eva Jane
Neville, 22 years old, missing since noon
Friday.
Mrs. Neville's husband, Robert, told
Gallia County sheriff's deputies his wife
was last seen walking south on Rt. 7 with
the couple's two children, Lisa Renee, age
three and Robert Junior, age two. Mrs.
Neville Is 5-9 and weighs 110 pounds.
The couple moved·here recently friml
Illinois. Deputies investigated a minor
traffic accident at 4:30p.m. Friday on the
psrklng lot at the Gavin Power Plant.
Officers said Arnold Skaggs, 39, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, backed his pick-up truck into a
psrked car owned by Paul Edward
Lambert, 44, Rt. 2, Catlettsburg, Ky.
There was minor dam~ge to the car. .

Teachers Endorse Levy
POMEROY - The Meigo Local
Teachers AsaociaUon Executive Com·
mlttee at a speelal meeting Tbursdlly held
to d4termlnl · the direci!DIII of the
aasoclation during the ~omlng year, endorsed the request of the Meigs Local
Schllj)l Dilltrict for additional millage to bli
voted June 20. Tom Kelly presided over the
meeting held at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
The leachen' .,.Sor1111111nt •lr&lt;lliiY
urled IIIJIIMII1.of thla lnf. They n:pr ltil d
coneern ov• tile )IQIIIble oulcomel··of
flilln&amp; lo Pill IIIIa levy
In the in..,.t of lbl people of the Meigs
0

·Local SChool District, faUure to psu this
levy would C()8t the people of the district
·

their local control of

til&lt;! schools. A still

(lioallllllea rrom Pag·e Z)

Phone Lines Severed
PT. PLEASANT - Telephone linea
leading to Goodyear 's Pt. Pleasant
Chelnital plant were cut last night,
eltminat"' service to the plant for apprOllmllely eeven hours.
Cbeaapeake and Potomac Telephone
workers restored service around I a.m.,
Saturday. The linea were cut at ap.

pr01lmalely 11 p.m., Friday. In addition;

spikes were driven across the main entrance road leading to the· strikebound
plant.
The IJiikea were removed prior to shift
change by aalaried personnel.
Both incl&lt;lenll wer• In violation of an
·{ConUnued on l'ni,l ~

•
•

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="726">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11126">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53157">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53156">
              <text>June 16, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
