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                  <text>12- .The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Porneroy,O., JuneZ2, 1m

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1I -Beat...

Theme Of.Prayer
I Of the Bend
Used In Meeting I

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tme

.:JrJanng

MEIGS.THEATRE

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Sharing ", several members '

Tonight and Friday
June 22 · 23
Double Feature Pr119ram
" EVEL KNIEVEL"
( Metrocolor)
George Hamilton

Sue Lyon

- PLUSWEREWOLVES
WHEELS
(Color I

(GPI
0~

Stephen Oliver

( Rl

gave their experiences ab&lt;Jut
their. spiritual birthdays. The
Spiritual Birthday offering was
·SlS. Bonnie Fields and Betty
Dolin served as ushers.
Missionary Education
Director Iva Capehart was in
charge of the communion
ser~lc e. Donna Grinstead ssng
"Break Thou the Bread of
Life" and the service closed
wi thcircle prayer led by Freda
Turley.

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REG·. tO.OO
REG.. 9.00
REG . . a:oo
REG . . 6.00

BODYSHIRTS · BODYSHIRTS · · ·
BODYSHIRTS · - •
BODYSHI ~TS , ·

AND

BEACH BAGS
Vinyls Canvas

Sale

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SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

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6.49
5.89
5.19
3.89

lh Price

•

·Driver Suffers
Fractured
Arm
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S~LE 2.39

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Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9
a .m . to 7 'p.m., &lt;Continuously) .
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depositor

For Sole

park on Rt.
Syracuse, 0.
~~~:~~~~~~~;~.:'~ra~~
Thomas Hayman.
124,

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99~

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The Day and Night
Beauty Collection

REG. 23.95

ESKIMO FANS

SHIRTS

Includ es r emarkable Eterna '27', Moon Drops Coloane - olus

Large 20" Size
Two Speeds

SIZES 6 to 20 ·

Spray Mist, a nd Moon Drops Moisture Creme Lipst ick .

Yours. for only 2.00 with any 3.00 purchase of "Moon Drops".
,

.=:::·:~~~:~~~s.~~:da;.

•
aud lo the easte111 secllons
early Tuesday. Dayti;..e
hlghs to the !llld and upper
70s. Nlghlllme Iowa In the

Wreck
Injures
Three

.....

l"Vl.CeS

COLUMBUS (UP~) - Mary
Ellen Ludlum, president of the
League of Women Voters, says
revenue and expendil~re
eshm~~es the ~roup compiled
~how dramatic proof of the
Improvement of necessary
' government . ~~rvices . to the
people of Ohio resulting from
the new state income tax.
"Thanks to the enactment by
the far-sighted 109th General
Assembtly _or personal and
cor~ora e mcome taxes, all
OhiOan s are reaping the
benefi ts .and are paymg for
them with taxes that are
adequa~.e and f~lrer than ever
before_. :•he ssid .
StatiStics. taken fro.m the
state Taxa tiOn, Education and
(Continued on Page 12 )

Mrs. William F. Fry, of Mason ,
was ·admiited to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where
attendants report he is in
"fair" condition. Attendants
refused to give the extent of his
Injuries but it was learned
from a iamily member that he
had sustained a forehead and
back injury .
Scott Cadle 19 son of Mr
and Mrs. Dal~s Cadle of Wesi
Columbia was admitted to
Pleasant Valley Hospital and
attendants report he is in
"sstisfactory" condition after
receiving a fracture of the
spine and a laceration of the
left elbow.
Benjamin Paul Hickel, 19,
aon of Mr. and Mrs. Ro9ert
Hlckelof~rtford, was treated
at Pleasant Valley Hospital
and then released.
The mishap occurred at 12 , 55
(Continued on Page 12)

Sale s2.29
DRIVE TO

ELBERFELDS
WAREHOUSE
.

Tops and Bottom s sold separately to assure
perfect fit . Several print patterns in se lect ion .
(Not a ll sizes in all colors .)
Reg . 8.50 1-. Sale 5.09
Reg . 6.50 - .. Sale 3.89
WOMEN'S

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- sate Prices on Lawn, Porch and Patio Fur·
niture.
·

Spring -Summer Long
Dresses ln. Missy and
Jun ior Sizes.

Choose Navy - Li lac
White. Sizes B to 16.

GIRLS SLEEPWEAR

- Big Selection of Carpet and Hard-Surface
Floor Coverings.

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Friday and Saturday.

BICYCLES

GOWNS- PAJAMAS- ROBES
. ·. • :" -.SALE 4.19
. · · · · · SALE 3.59
. . . . . - SALE 2.99
• · •. · SALE 2.69
.. •. •. SALE 2.39
· · • · · SALE ~.09
.. • ••. SAL"E 1.79
· · • · • · SALE 1.49

Toy Department, Second
Floor

GIRLS SKI·RTS

best window treatments.

· Volume IV

SALE4.19
SALEJ.59
SII:LE 2.99
SALE 2.09
SALE 1.49

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'1.00
Hoover-Ncrea

Bathroom

Seven Meigs Boys

Throw-Away 8ap

• Tank Set
Fits all tanks. Preshrunk .
Machine Washable- Good
colors.
Friday and Stturdoy

Elected To Offic~·

F'or most Vacuum
Clean .
ers. Finest In quality .
Regular
$1 . 00
package.
Friday and Saturday

Seven Meigs CoWlty junlqrs
attending Boys State al
Ashland College were elected
to positions during the 35th
school on practical self·
government.
Steve Yonker, Southern High
School, was named lo the
position of state represen·
tatlve. He Is a resident of
Hartpence City. Nick Ihle, also
of Southern, was named
director of S.fety and Service.
Randy Haynes, a citizen of the
mythical city of "Warner," a·
Meigs High' junior, was named
city attorney. Jim Schmoll,
Mel~ High School, a resident
of "Kitchen" ,.was named
Buckeye , Boys
State .
Patrolman ; Jon Bunce, a
resident of "McCan," a Melga
High student, was named an
attorney; Bill Vaughan, a
realdentof "Stone" was named
journal clerk. He Ia alao a
Meigs High · student. Steve
~ewell, another Melgt High
student, a . realdent of
' "Willlama" was named county
re«Jrdll'.

69$ PKG.
'

$2.99 'Kordovin.Window Shades

GIRLS PULLOVER TOPS
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FOR-$ 1 8 8
Music Department. Stcond
Floor
ISale Includes top ten
records)
GNanlltles Llmiled .

An Inspiring, all new guide for creating today's

r

Regular and Scoote r Styles . 4 to 14

REG. 5.98 TOPS
REG. 4.98 TOPS
REG. 3.98 TOPS
REG. 3.49 TOPS
REG. 2.98"TOPS
REG. 2.49 TOPS
ltEG. 2.29 TOPS

3

-- Windows Beautiful

3.89 Tufted

... . . •
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45 RPM
POPULAR RECORDS

SALE PRICES

1

REG.6.98SKIRTS
REG. 5.98SKIRTS
REG. 4.98 SKIRTS
REG. 3.50 SKIRTS
REG. 2.49 SKIRTS

REOORD SALE

Men's · Women's
Boys' • Girls'
'
Big Selection of Regular or
Racing Bi kes.

New Issue
How to Make Your

Sizes 4 to 14 and Toddlef2 to 4.

R€G. 6.98 ·SLEEPWEAR
REG. 5.98 SLEEPWEAR
REG. 4.98 SLEEPWEAR
REG. 4.50 SLE E PWEAR
REG. 3.98 SLEEPWEII:R
REG. 3.49 SLEcPWEAR
REG. 2.98 SLEEPWEAR
REG. 2.49 SLEEPWEAR

Ideas on how the museum
should be operated were
thrown out for discu&amp;ston
Thursday afternoon when a
steering commi,!tee from the
Meigs Coun ty Pioneer and
Historical Society met at the
museum .
Some expressed the opinion
that the museum should be
operated on a "revolving"
basis in that display&amp;should be
chenged !requenUy to keep up
the in terest. II was also pointed
out that historical interests are
available on a loan basis from
a number of residents and this
would enhance the "rotating"
idea. It was also stated that,
perhaps, the museum could be
used as a craft center with a
room or two being set aside for
conducting claS.es in various
lields.
A professional in design met
with the group to tell of his
work with other museums and
to hear the Ideas of the local
committee.
During the discussion it was
pointed out that a number of
articles have been promised to
the musewn. The guest stated

- Headquarters for Lawn Boy and Toro Power .
Mowers.

WOMEN's

LONG DRESSES

To Be Run Discussed

-

158 Mechanic StAIII--

Reg . 5.00 · .. Sale 2.99
Reg . 4.00 · · · Sale 2.39

Blazer Jackets

-

SALE 3.88
SALE 3.28
SALE 2.58
SALE 2.28
SALE 1.88
SALE 1.58
SALE;t.48

Plastic.- Good Weight Washable, J6"x 7'. Whit .•
Ivory · Green • Tan .
· e
Friday and Saturday. ·

'1.99

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VISIT THE DRAPERY DEPT.

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Specia I Sale on Art Neecliework Linen .
Tow~ling, "L:ady Louise" Beclspr~ads hi
all stzes.
• . ·i

.FREE .CUSTOMER PARKING ON SECOND STREET AND AT ELBERfELD$ WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREET

..

ELBERFELD$ I.N PO
. M.E· OY

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that a museum should tell a
story. He questioned If every
constribution should be accepted or If the committee
should decide which aspects of
history it wishes to stress and
then ask citizens for contributions to carry out those
aspects.
C. E. Blakeslee who presided
repQrted tha t Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Nolan had contributed
a new rug for one of the
museum rooms and Edison
Hobatetter offered any office
equipment which might be
·needed from among the fur·
nishings used by the RuUand
Branch of the Pomeroy
National Bank in its former
quarters.
The committee reviewed the

activities of "Heritage Day"
held last Sunday in conjWlctlon
with Big Bend Regatta
Weekend. ll was felt that the
clay, the first such held by the
local society, was an· over·
whelming auccess.
A four page section of the
Regatta Weekend program
'pertaining to the museum and
point&amp; of interest will be
revamped and used as a
brochure by the society.
Attending were Leo Story,
Edison Hobstelter, C. E.
Blakeslee, Misii Lucille Smith,
Mrs. Annie . Chaplllln, Fred
Goeglein, Susan Teaford, Mr.
and Mrs. W. P. Lochary, Mrs.
Robert A.!hley, Mrs. Harold .
Lohse, Dean Weber, and Mrs.
James Sheets.

SPeaking Of SCh00IS

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Residents of Meigs Local
School District may be given a
third opportunity to approve
an addilional5mlll school levy.
However, this decision rests
with the members of the board
of education, Supt. George
Hargraves announced Thursday .
The levy failed in a special
election by 12 votes on JW1e 20.
Asked if a recount is being
considered Hargraves said

that it was.
Hargraves also noted that
the expense of the special
election is the sole respon.
sibility of the Meigs Board of
Education. .
Hargraves explained a
district has three chances to
vote on such an issue, two
special elections and a general
election. The primary election
coWlts as a special election.
Therefore, Meigs has only the

general election in November
to pass the issue in 1972.
Hargr•ves feels chances of
passing the issue at a general
election iri November a re
mighty ·siim .
The school district, if the
issue fails in November, will
lose $115,000 in 1973.
If. the levy does not pass by
June 30, 1973, Meigs Local will
have to consolidate with
Eastern or Southern Local

Fz·nally
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o
w
.J. arnerzng
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By United Press lutei"Jiatlonal
Tropical storm Agnes, which
lashed the East Coast with
torrential rains, began
tapering off today over Penn·
sylvania but floods still posed
threats from Virginia to New
York.
The James River in Rlcbmond, Va. , spilled over a 32foot protective dike today,

Harold E. Smith, 51,
Syracuse, widely kn own
Pomeroy businessman, died
late Thursday night at the
Holzer Medical Center near
Gallipolis.
Mr. Smith, who had been ill
recently, was taken to the
Center at 10:29 p.m. Thursday
by the Syracuse emergency
squad. Death was attributed to
a heart ailment.
Mr. Smith was operator of
the Meigs Equipment Co. in

flooding parts of the city and
knocking out power in the
, major business district. A :m.
block area in the district was
ordered evacuated.
In Omlean, N.Y., the
threat of the AUegheny River
spilling over 25-foot-high dikes
forced Mayor William Smith to
order evacuation today of
nearly ll,OOO persons, hall the
city .

Mo n e y G"IVeDstorm
The death toll froni the
's weeklong rampage
HAROLD E. SMITH
Pomeroy . Hew~samemberof
reached at least 52. AI least 36
the board of directors. of The
Fo r Crime drowning
persons died Thursday, mostly
.
•
Farmers Bank and Savmgs Co.
victims, and at least R e c l a m a t i o n He belonged .to the Pomeroy

Program

another dozen were missing.
Twelve persons died In
Pennsylvania- four of them
swept to their deaths in the
Sl!l&lt;luehlnna River-and 12 in

11 -polnt crime-fighting
program Thursday which will
be implemented by $22.9
million from the Federal Law
Enforcement Assistance
Administration.
The money will be used to
upgrade the law enforcement
personnel ; preventiong of
crime, prevention and control
of juvenile delinquency; detec·
lion and apprehension of crlml·
nals; ;mnrovement
of prosecu-·.,..
lion; court activities and law
reform,· iilcrease in the effec·
tivenessofadultcorrectionand
rehabilitation,· investigation of
organized crime; prevention
and control of riots and civil
.
dIsorders
; improvement of
community relations and research and deve Iopmen t.
Mark
Hoffman,
a
representative of the federal
administration, said . he · was
lrilpressed with Ohio's plan.
" It gQve a very clear picture
of the needs in Ohio and where
themo~y should be •oing," he
e
said ·~
·

L·and ·T0 Be

ci::! P u r c h a s e d

two and Delaware one.
The American National Red
Cross headquarters in
Washington said the · storm
"created one of the mOB!
widespread flood disaster
situations in the nation's
history."
The storm moved up the east
coast Thursday dumping
heavy rains over a patch 250
miles wide .
Tens of thousanda of persons
fled their homes as rivers from
the Carolinas to New York
stste flooded. Others died in
theswirllngwater.Destruction
was estimated in the millions.

MEET RESCHEDULED
The regular meeting of the
Past Matrons of Evangeline
Chapter, OES, Middleport, has
been p!JSipOned until June 30 at
which time .the Middleport
group will entertsin the Past
M tr
fp
Cha
a ons o omeroy
pter.

AII\
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NO. 2

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just liie a person or family. When Its anticipated
income Is reduced, cuts in expenditures must be
made. The only question Ia what to cut. Ally place
that you make a cut you cause a lx!rt to the district,
1o the empl6yees, to the parents, but most IJn.
portant of aU to the kids. I don't Willi to speculate on
what cuts will be made. ! can only recorpmend. The
final decisions will be made by the Board of
l:ducation.
'
Aa ststed in previous tnfonnatlon, we face
another problem concerning the lou ol aU state lid.
Adistrict inlllt have at least 20 mi1ll voted by June
00, 1973, in order to receive any stste tunds•after
that date. This mea111 that we will have to seek
approval ol additional milia~~&amp; in thiiJIII"lnc in order
to meet this requirement. If we don't meet that
reqirement, we will, of course, be auigned to
another .district that has at least 20 milia ill effect.
Since Eastern ud Soutbern will both have 22\l
milia for operation, that would be the mlllap for the
rwmer Me1iJ Local ailo. Thla luomethiJII U.t will
. be declcled by you1t the polla_.ly net,_,
I would Wte to point out that the tall1ft al this
levy at lhll pertlcular 1ini8 will, In Ill)' Jud,metlt,
have a very negative effect 011 Me1iJ County both
now 111d fqr many yean to come. Ript now, when
many people are Cllllllderlnc whet~~* IIIey llbould
move into this 1n1 or 1101111 other, tile dollble loaa of
this levy will be of ll"'llliPiflcuce, ~ don't.
want to move Into an area when 11!.-.11 ClOIIIentlon
or lack al harnlllly ill 1 ICboal dl 1 ld.
Tlie failure al this 1rry will ..YI Jllllt!ve
rellllll 111 this Ita far 1111117 1111'1 IIIII perblpa
decadealo come. II blippeuecl ~ jult tile "'7 WI'OJll
time.

School disirict.
School •would have to be used
In order to operate the-school for seventh and eighth grade
district in 1973, the board of students.
education and the adCommenting
on
the
ministration will have to vocation a l p r ogra m ,
. survey every program in order Hargraves noted that the
todetermine which ones can be program made it possible for
cut to stay within the budget. some students to graduate who
When asked about the use of otherwise might have dropped
the vacant buildings in the · out of school.
district, Hargraves noted that
Hargraves ssid 60 pet. of the
If there Is an influx of people 1972graduating class members
the Pomeroy Junior High were vocational students.

H. E. Smith 51,
Oaimed By Death

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Beca~~~e olthe fallln of IIIII 11'1 ,_ I*CipW I)

.

F- Are
Ive ·. ·
R
•l
T0 Board
,

=.:.?~'::r' !n~

d 'Beech Grov~ Cemetery,
eappom e
Pomeroy.
ln lieu of flowers, the family
suggests that donations be
given to the Heart FW1d.
Friends may caU at the
Appointments highlighted a fWleral home any time after
recent meeting of the Com· n~ on Saturday.
mWlity Mental Health and
Retardation Board.
Reappointment to four-year
terms were Malcolm Orebaugh
and Mrs. Mary Lou King, both
o! Gallipolis; Mrs . Maxine
Wingett, Racine ; Rev. Glenn
Biddle, Jackson, and Mrs.
Trula Zimmerly of Jackson .
Mrs . Annette Leyine of
Wellston wss reappointed for
one year as treasurer. There Is·
one vacancy
Meigs
County. to be filled in
Dr . Leonard Ferguson,
Professor of Psychology, Ohio
University, attended the
meeting and presented a
project he is interested in

Here?~iE~:.oo~if.~f£

will be worth lei!$ in ten ·years than it would have
been . If you are in business, your buslneiiS will be
less ienyears from l!OW. lf·yoU are a banker, your
deposits and your loans will be JellS ten years from
now. I could go on and on, but what I am saying Is
that we just picked the wrong time to make ourselves look unattractive to possible new members of
our conununity.
People choose a community by what Uiey fint
see or learn about it. We will never know how many
people found out about two levies defeated in two
months and then decided that Gallla County or
Athens County was a better place to live than Meigs
County. You can't blaine them 'for doing Ibis and 1
can't elther. lt Ia just lllfoi1unate that thll had to
happen right at a key lime in the develoPment of our
county. Wbatl have ststed above. Ia, indeed, written
with a feellpg of disappolntmellt.laccept the vote of
the people, however, becauae I believe in
democracy - but, it Ia a illlltement of the tft&amp;ent
facta. and future pro1pecll, u l 1M them.
Meigs Co\Dity will arow, but not aa much u It
could ha~ lfOWII· Meigs CoiDity will enjoy .,me
~roiPII'Ity, but not u ~ch as It could have enjoyed. Meigs County will attract SOll1tl new
~.lndustry,llld PoiaUtlon, but not u much
aa it could haw attacted. llememlier this a few
,..... from now.
So, we will try to pick up the pieces and go on
from here.lhanu again lo aU of thoee who helped.
We accept the declllon of tbe people u we lllUII in a
deniocrltic aoclety. We will make the npaaery
ldjullmenllln procr11111 to live within wblt yau
are willing lo pey. We will do 10 and we will CCIII·
. c:tlllrate on gettiD8 the 111011 Jllllllllln from the
IY8Dible funds.

was also a member of the
GaUipolis Masonic Lodge.
He was born in Gallipolis, the
son of G. M. and Georgia Crall
Smith, who survive along with
his wife, Evelyn Saunders
Smith, whom he married on
JWle 29, 1942.
Other survivors are two sons,
Bryce of Gallipolis, and Mark
of Syracuse ; two grand·
children, Wendy and Meredith
Smith of Gallipolis;· three
brothers, Franklin of Peninsula, Ohio; Charles of
CUyahoga Falls, and Carron of
Gallipolis, and a sister, Mrs.
EHv.elynBoggsofW.ashingtonC.

Church of ChriSt, the Pomeroy
Gun Club and Drew 'Yebster
FW1eral services will be held
Pos t 39, American Legion. He at 3 p.m. SWlday at the Ewing
FW1eral Home with Mr. Hoyt
Allen, Jr ., pastor of the

COLUMBUS (UP!) -:-State
Natural Resources Director
William Nye saY.&amp; Ohio will pay
$297,915for62Bacresof land for
"strip mine reclamation and
wildlife conservation efforts.
' The properties will be added
to the Perry (County)
Reclamation Area, the
KiUdeer Plains Wildlife Area in
Wyandot
-• County and the
propos .... Killbuck Wildlife
Area in Wayne and Holmes
cou'Thntles. Ia
' ese nd purchases are
··
Important
steps in lhe deport·
ment's continuing program of
stri·p mine reclamation,
recreational development and
wildlife
habitat
im·
provement," Nye said.
"The stste will reclaim the
167 acres being added to the
Perry Reclamation Area for
the expansion. of camping
facilities, hiking trails, hunting
and trai)s for all-terrain conducting in Gallia, Jackson
and Meigs Counties. The
· (Continued on Page 12)
project would be a drug survey
conducted in the schools this
fall. This survey, when completed, would be a value to the

By George Hargraves, Superlatmdeat

•ve

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Where Do We Go ~From
, Melcsl,ocal School Dlllrlct
This column is entiUed "Speaking of Schools"
and the only word that can speak fully the feeling of
Meigs Local District lhil we~ iB · "disai&gt;'
pointment". The defeat of our levy by a mere dozen
votes out of 2000 on last Tuaaday was indeed a great
disappointment. The illtimate effect on our district
will be much liKll"t than just disappointment, but
that iB the'feeling that describes our district now. It
is not a feeling of bitterness, ills just platn disappointment.
I have been asked by many about when we
could vote again . The only other opportunity that we
would have Ibis calendar year "would be in
November. Aschool district is limited to two special
elections and one general election during any one
year. Aprimary Ia clau,lfied the same as a special ·
so we have consumed&gt;our two lpecial election opportunities. The only thing remaiJiq Is November.
The factS of life are that It ill eltremely dlflladt to
pass a school levy at a pneral election.
So we face the unpluaant talk li u~ withlri
111 Income that will be about Uli,DOO leu In 1973
lhlll we had expected. ~ miii!M that thole 12
volel by which · we 1011 were 1111ch worth about
SIO,OOO. Let anyone who thlnU that. one vote Is
unimportant face that fact.
I want to extend my deeptltanka to Rev. Perrin
111d hla ,committee. T)Iey really worbd at It, I Jranl
to thank thole who made llunlhdl al ~
calla. I Wl(ll to lhlniiii)OII who bid tha CCIIII'IIe to
IIJIII the petition and haw their -IIPI*I' In the
pi!JIII'. I want to lhlllk llmMIIIIIIJ' pllOtlle who
called In lht lui few dip Gji I c their concern
•d dluJIP'lllltmeit allo.
Where do 11'1 Ill fnm hllre? A ldlool ~ct ill

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J!~~~~Go.v~ ~~!~r:r~

CUSTOM SIZE ·

SWIMWEAR SALE

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~,::~:!:~:!:~,:~

evidence."
The hoard also pointed out
that Borden, who denied the
charges failed to cally any witnesses who said he could have
pro~ded an alibi in the case of
\he young woman patient who
became pregnant.
A psychiatrist ruled the
.
women were competent to
testify. He ssid they were
borderline inental retards w~o
could fWlctlon well outside the · MASON _ Three bend area
instiMion .
yoWlg men wer,e injured, two
seriously, when _the vehicle
they were riding in early this
morning went out of control

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

.
n·
p,
t
d
1r~.a
·. ·y
· e ..esen
· e•·
V4
A
..
.
•
Th
•
R
ll
ezgs ot~rs gazn . zs a ·

mld~dupper~S~yM

Se •

,
The Meigs CoWlty Heart
AssociatiO"n Is in need of help
for its annual heart fund
balloon ssles to be held in
.Pomeroy and Middleport
Saturday.
Those organizations wishing
to assist with the Saturday
event are asked to contact
Ralph Werry at 992-5480.
The ~earl Association has
derived mor~ money from the
Queen and Princess or Hearts
project than any other single
project. A total of $1036.44 was
collecled in the last contest.
Total of all receipts collected
by the Heart Association as of
this date is $3582.09.

1 SALE PRICES FRIDAY AN-D
I SATURDA'Y ONLY ON COOKER- I
I CANNERS.
I
REG. 2.95
Boy's Short Sleeve

sch·oo
· 1L·. evy
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EXTENDED OUTLOOK

llll!

thr:;e cases charges were proven by a preponderance of the

FREEZER SUPPLIES

--From---~---------- --Revlon

FRIDAY. JUNE 23. 1972

Tax S81•d T0
na~.e hoard• m
.
h ld. th
and was demolished in· a one Agn
· es
up
e H
H
I
dear
mishap near Mason
firin g, ruled that in two of the
ave e p e Billy Fry,li, son of Mr. and

Pint to Half-Gallon Containers · Freezer Bags ·
Paper · Boxes · Tape.

I

POMEROY, OHIO

Sale

SliES 2 to 7

HEADQUARTERS FO.R

Bald Knobs
Sale s7.88
Sale Prices
Social Notes ~-~----~~--~------------~

The.Farmers Bank.&amp; Savings Co. .,

1h ·Price

I

Volunteers Sought

·SALE Y2 PRICE

Reg . 9.9S

\

Boys Shirts

Styrofoam or Insulated Plastic Ice Chests
Jugs

Junior Sizes 7 to 15

•

Womens
Slippers

SALE.PRICES PICNIC SUPPUES

S LE 1.79
SALE l.S9
SALE 1.49
• .• . . · • · ~ SALE 1.19
. . · · ' · · · · · SALE1.09
. · · · · · · · · SALE .99
. . . - . . . · :SALE .79
• • . • • • • • · · SALE .59

SLEEP COATS-PAJAMAS-GOWNS

an

Reg. 2.95 and 1.95

0

JUNIOR SLEEPWEAR

Karen A. Sheets, 28;..Rio BenUey, ZO, Franklin Furnace,
Grande, suffered a fractured was stopped waiting on traffic
left forearm and fractured ribs from a parking lot when he was
in a single-car accident at 4:50 struck in the rear by
auto
p.m. Wednesday on Kyger driven by Carl E. Geer, 63,
!toad, one and one-half mile .Huntington, W. Va. Damages
north of State Route 325.
" were very light and there were
According to the Gallia· no injuries or citations.
Meigs State Highway Patrol
At 2 p.m. on State Route 160
Post, Sheets' car went off the twomilessouthofVinton,Jack
left side of the road after she E. Harris, 25, Rout 1, Thur·
had lost control on loose gravel man, drove off the right side of
and struck an embankment. the road and went over a small
.She was transferred to the embankment . Harris com·
HolZer llle\Jicalllolplt.iil lly lhe pliiiried of an inJury although
McCoy • Moore FWleral Am· he was not Immediately
bulance Service. Damage was treated. There was slight
listed at moderate. No citation damage to the auto and no
was issued.
·
citati(\ns were issued.
AI 4:30 p.m:·Wednesday on
Afinal accident occurred at
State Route 7 two-tenths of a 3:15 p.m. when Michael L.
mile south of Route 554, (the Johnson , 22, Box 233,
Gavin Plant) Bennie D. Gallipolis, was westhoWld on
State Route 35 four tenths of a
mile west of Route 556. Johnson
was approached by an on·
coming car that was passing.
The· oncoming auto forced
Johnson of! the right side of the
road into some soft mud. The
car then came to a stop, rolling
into Its side. There were no
injuries or citstions.

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Friday and Saturday

Sale ~. Price .

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Whi~ They LJst

. •. . • • · • • SALE 2.89

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COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Ohio
Supreme Cqurt today upheld
the dismissal of Rev. Nyle D.
Borden as chaplain at Galllpolis State Institute for im·
moral conduct with three relarded women patients.
Borden was fired from his
position on May 22, 1970 and the
dismissal was upheld by the
state Personnel Board of Re·
view.
Borden, in his appeal, said
the state failed to present any
correborating evidence to the
testimony or his three accusors, one of whom became preg.

Men's and Women's Styles
Bill folds · Pocket Cases · Clutches
Key .Cases · Jewelry BQ~es ·

A large table full of _Special Values.

REG. 4.89
REG. 4.00
REG. 2.99
REG. 2.59
REG. 2.49
REG. 1.99
REG, 1.69
REG. 1.59
REG. 1.29
REG . .99

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Dismissal
Is Up4eld

LEATHER GOODS

Cloudy, quite windy and cool
wi th rain today, tonight and
Saturday. Lows tonight
generally 45 to 60 and the high
Saturday upper 50s to mid 60s
· southwest.

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Devoted To The lntere&amp;l6 Of The Meigi·Mown' Area

VOL. XXIV NO. 49

FAMOUS BRAND

Nylons
Cottons
leathers
All lengths

Straws -

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:

Weather

enttne

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Squares · Oblongs · Ovals · Rounds.
No- Iron Cloth , La.c e · Vinyl

BRA AND GIRDLE SALE·

THE OHIO VALLEY SUmmer Theater cast featured in
"You're a Good Man, OlarUe Brown", a play based on the
popqlar comic strip, Is prepared to travel within a 100-mile
radius of Athena with the play, Ken Frisch, tour manager
reports.
Already the play Is bQoked in Nelsonville, the fairgrounds in
Logan and the Plckaway County Fair in Circleville. Tour dates
are from July 10 through Aug. 15. Any group wishing to sponsor a
showing of the play lillY. contact Frisch at 594-4760 or Lonny
Fraze at 594:2882 for further tnfo_rmation.

Among them: high interest savings
accounts; regular and special check·
ing; loans for all purposes; drive·in and
evening hours. Come visit us .

.

Our entire · stock of Tablecovers is
· reduced for this . Sale.,

Womens
Gloves

HANDBAGS

ANEW NET has l!eeJ'.ured for the tennis court beside the
Pomeroy First Baptlst C1\ui:ch. The net is "up" most of the time
but if you do stop by for a g8me and the net Isn't there, try Andy
Vaughan, a couple of doors above the court. Repair also has been
completed on the outdoor iiasketball court near the church.

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· TABLECOVER ,SALE·

Our entire sloe~ of Bodyshirts ~l!duced. M?Jny
Styles, colors, fabrics in both short an.d long
sleeve.
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Let us look after your money for you.
Enjoy the convenience of Full Service
Banking ... complete and dependable
~' facilities for any and every banking
service you'll ever need.

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WOMENS BODYSHIRTS

KAREN GRIFFrrH, 'home from the summer from Ohio
state University alld operating the Royal Oak Stables, will be
· making a guest appearlif.e at 3 p. m. Frjday in the a~~al
recttal of piano student;,; of Mrs. Clara l.ochary at Truuty
Chqrch. Karen; a formet ~lsno student of Mrs: Lochary, will be
playing a lrwn(iel solo a&amp;ompanied by Mrs. Lochary.

SWlday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel Mission
Father's Day, June 18, was 33.
Offering was $10.55.
· Several attended the wed·
ding of Shirley Congo and
Aaron Sayre at the PorUand
Methodist Church on June 17.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Roush of
Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs. James
Autherson and Patricia of
Syracuse and Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Autherson of Lowell
visited Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Autherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Elson Long and
family of New Haven, Mrs.
Helen Long and daughter,
Shirley, of Rutland and Mr.
and Mrs, Eugene Long and
family of Eagle Ridge visited
Mrs. Mona Long and Smith
Long.
Mr. Thomas Birch and son,
Randall, of Waterford and
Leota Birch, local, took their
father and grandfather, Clint
Birch, to see a doctor at
Hunti~gton, W. Va. Mr. Birch
is irnprov(ng.
I
Mrs. JoAnn Proffitt and
daughters of PorUand and
Leota Birch, local, visited Mr.
and Mrs. George Hupp.
Mr . and Mrs. Pearl
Hawth&lt;rne of PorUand Route
visited Mr. and Mrs. DIUon
Taylor.
Mrs. Minnie Carroll and
Cindy have relurned home
after spending two weeks with
her daughter, Mrs. Donald
Donaldson and family at
Findlay.

,.

·The only ice skating rink In
Africa is in the Hotel 'fvolre in
the city of Abidjan on the Ivory
Coast.

FRIDAY AI+O SATURDAY

FRIDAY AND SATU,RDA.Y

MRS. ROGER MORGAN of Middleport was responsible for
the excellent frog head which made the "frogmobile" used over
Regatta Weekend really look special. Mrs. Morgan did quite a
~rofessional job on the large head which she fashioned of paper
mache.

want
to be
sitting
on a cloud?

•

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY' 9:30 AM TO 9:00 PM

Looks like Mr. and Mri. q,ward Calvert, East Main St.,
Pomeroy, have come up with a Winner.
For years, Mr. and Mrs. C&amp;lvert have been working with
harness race horses and this year they have a three-year-old
pacer, "HastyGio" Who Ia showing alot of promise.
Last Friday, "Hasty Glo" came in secon&lt;(with a 2:053 and on
Monday came in first .with a 2:07 at Latonia Raceway at
Florence, Ky. "Hallty Glo" "as driven by Richard Edwards of
Croton. He'll be at l,oltonia until about mid July.

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NQw You Know

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.
STORE- WIDE SALE!

I

By Bob Hoeflich

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NEW KAVEN - The derson, Ind., this month, and
Woman 's Missionary Society of she urged members to attend.
the New Haven First Chqrch of The prog ram was in charge
God held its JW1e meeting in of Freda Turley, Spiritual Life
tile Missionary Building with director . Her scripture was
Delores 'l'llylor and Rebecca taken from James,5:6·with the
Reed serving as co-hostesses. theme being "Effectual
The meeting was called to Prayer". A prayer partner
order by the president, Orpha service was then given with the
Fields. The members sang theme "Stretch Out Your
"Prayer in My Heart." Betty Hand". She read a poem
Dolin led in prayer.
" Tomorrow ". Orpha Fields
Roll call was given by and Betty Dolin assisted with
na ming people that each the program. After prayer
member visited during the past partners were selected by the
mon th, The secretary's report members, the service con·
was read by Elea nor Davis. eluded wHh a responsive
The treasurer's report was reading {!nd a prayer of
given by Faye Carpenter.
dedicatio led by Orpba Fielda.
Membership chairman Faye
it was nnoWJced that ne~:t
Ball reported the membership month 's hostesses will be
is now 33. Stewardship . Eleanor Davis and Viola
Director Rebecca Reed Roush.
Refreshments were served
received the penny-a-da y
calendars and. Finance by the hostesses, Delores
Director Betty Dolin received . Taylor and Rebecca Reed, to
the blessing cups,
Sue Er\vin, Eleanor Davis,
Pansy Fry reported that six Faye Carpenter, Betty Dolin,
more silver place settings had Iva Capehart, Freda T)lrley,
been r e~-eiv ed for the kitchen , Nellie Dudding, Rena Johnson,
·Members were reminded to Lucille Powell, Faye Ball,
continue to save Betty Crocker Orpha Fields, members; and
coupons. Sev'l_ral me-mbers guests Stllcie Reed and Carol
reported visits to Lakin State Scyoc.
Hospital.
The president · announced
that the International Con· 1]"
D
C'TA
'
verition of the First Church of
rQf
God would convene in An·
NEW HAVEN - The
Woman 'sMissionary Society of
the New Haven Firs! Church of
God held its annual Spiritual
Birthday observance at the
Tonight , Junell
church.
Spiritual Ufe Director
NOT OPEN
Freda T)lrley was the' leader.
Fri . lhru Tuesday
The theme was "Sufferings
June 23·21 '
for
Christ." The service opened
THE FRENCH
with singing "The Child of a
CONNECTION
(Technicolor)
King" and "Near to the Heart
Gene Hack man
of God". Prayers "ere given
Fernan do Rey
by Robert Dblin and Wilbur
" R"
ALSO CARTOONS
Leifheit. Scriptures were read
Show Starts 7 P.M.
by Gary King, Iva Capehart,
'::::::::::::::~ Nellie Dudding, R~na Johnson
•
and Robert Dolin . Another
song "I Know My Name Is
MASON
DRIVE·IN
There " was sWlg :
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During the " Time lor
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similar surveys in several high
schools In the state.
The Community Plan for the
flSCBI year beginning July I,
1972 was reviewed by Muine
Plummer, Executive Director.
Mrs. Plummer also reported
the part time clinic in the
counties have waiting lilts and
that services will be lilcreased
as soon as fWlcla are avaUable
from the tax levy that was
approved in May. ·
The annual meeting will be
held July 17 at 7 p. m. at
Oscar's Restaurant In
'Gallipolis.

COMMlliSJONED - Seu
E. MulleD, 10n of Mr. and
Mrs. DoD E. Mullen of 583 S.
Secod Ave., Middleport,
has been commlllloned a
second UeutenantiJI the U. S.
Air . Force upoa 1J11dualloa
fro111 Officer TralnJug School
(OTS) at Lackland . AFB,
Tex. Lieutenant Mullen,
selected for OTS thnugh
competitive e11m (nation, Is
beiq. u11ped to Mather
AFB, Calif., lor navlptor
ll'IIDIIC. 1be Ueulenaat, •
11M ~r&amp;daate of Middleport
Hllli Sc•ool, attended Ohio
Unlvenlty and received Ids
B. S. delree Ia pbarmacy In
1171 from o•lo State
Ualveralty, Rll wile, Paula,
Ia IIIe daulliler ol Mr. and
· Mu. PaaiiL Raaell of 11818.
Fourth Ave., Middleport.

ISSUED PElooT
()( 24 MW liquor pel1)llta
Issued by the Ohio Department
of Uquor Control one Is in
Meigs County. It Ia a 3.2 per.
cent beer for carry out Ucense
issued to Guide! J . Glrolaml,
doifig bull'*l as Shanun)''s
D.
Qulk
s~; 1600 Nye Ave.(
. Helpil)g with the coUecliona
Pomeroy.
were Jeannette Lawrence
Racine; Maline Variin:
SyraCUJe, and Mils Debbie
INJUREDINMJSHAP ,
Schuck, Middleport.
The Pomeroy emergenej
squad ~ a caU to
Muon at I :OS a. m, Fridly far
LOCAL TEMP&amp;
BW Fry, Malan, wha wu illThe ten.... atare in down- jured In an auto acddea\. Ill
town · Pulnwo1 1t 11 a.m. ,,, lUID to VtlefiDI
FrliJ:Iy . . II dip eee llllder MliDorlll Holpltal ......
extreme~)' claadJ lldll.
WU I epctlltid in fair CGIIditklll.
DRIVE NETS $lUI.
Mrs. John Compton, disute~
~halrman of the MeigJ County
American Red en. Chapter,
announced today that a lotalli
$M.51 w11 collected for the
ftood dlaaater at Rapid City, S.

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"The Other Boys Are Burlles!"

H~~en ·Fielp

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Better Food Buys ·
Up to ·consumer·

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
.
. WASHINGTON !NEAl
Sen. George McGovern's Indicated pickup of more than
250 of New York's 278 delegates In !hat state's primary
will tlood out lhe last faint hopes of the Democratic party's
stop-McGovern forces .
·
They never really had: a chance anyway. The die has
been cast for McGovern since May 16. On that date, Gov.
George Wallace, while lying c rip p 1e d from gunshol
wounds, _won primaries in Maryland and Michigan. The
key s1gmficance of the moment, however, was the failure
of Sen . Hubert Humphrey to get more than 16 per cent of
the vote _in Michigan, a huge labor state supposedly
friendly to him,
Humphrey being Humphrey, he dra¥ged himself to
California, put on a ' smile over his fallgue, .and be_gan
gam~,ly battling for ttw state's 27J votes in the..Jp~ll-, fb
nmary-. He made a closer tight of jt than yolfs· ft1nted
Ill could, but a week before the event it waS"' apparent he
l~n't have tne· stllff' to turn the tfde-around. It was all .
over.
In the short span from 'California to the New York pri·
~ary, the Mcgovern managers deci~d to play it cautiously, and tr1mmed down their delegate claims . They ·
earlier had mentioned 225 to 240 as a reasonable prospect ·
but suddenly began saying "around 200."
'
My own fourth delegate count, issued shortly after
California, placed McGovern's New York fotential at 245
Evidently, with his proportionate share o the state com:
~lttee-chosen at-large delegates, he will get at least 252.
Just a handful went elsewhert, to the sidelined Sen
Edmund Muskie, to Rep. Shirley~hlsholm of New York
to the uncommitted.
'
Humphrey had no New York slate at all. Next to his
Michigan debacle, his failure to file in New York was·the
strongest earlier proof that he was lading from ·contention. Headlines blaring "Humphrey Concedes New York
to McGovern" did the 1968 nominee Immense harm. What
serious bidder for the nomination could pass up the
nation's secon"d biggest .state, with the biggest delegate
prize of all?
I make McGovern's true delegate count today at around
1,400 votes, only a b1t more than 100 from nomination on
the tlrst ballot. Not all of this Is recorded yet oil what
might be called the "hard count" scoreboard. But my
findings suggest It is there, and so do those of the tabulations of the careful McGovern delegate researchers,
The rest of McGovern's winning total will flow to him
fairly easily In the short time between now and the Miami
Beach convention opening July 10: When a candidate's
base Is as large as his now is it acts Inevitably as a
magnet, drawing In small additional numbers from state
after state, in a steady stream.
Some hard-bitten party professionals will be tossing
In the towel. If Chicago's Mayor Richard Daley can ~et
any sizable portion of his challenged delegates (totaling
upwards of 901 seated in the convention the odds are '
good he'll take a big group to McGovern. But the senator
probably can win without him.
Old pr? John Bailey, who may command a dozen or so
uncommitted Connecticut delegates, is not likely to be
found in the wrong place. McGovern could get nearly all
of Kansas' uncommitted 22, and young but savvy Gov
Da••ld Hall of Oklahoma Is not going off on some tangent:
He has 29 uncommitted votes to chlp in.
Of course, there will be holdouts. It Is a common thing
in nominating politics for some forces not to go with the
evident winner. In McGovern's case, more than any in
recent Democratic history, there are teal mlsgivin~s
about his electability In the fall . But the oppcsitlon will
provide more noi•e than delegates.

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Us.

Could it be the confused consumer needs a batting
coach to sharpen his swing at buying the groceries "!
After much Initial kicking and screaming and cries
that "the cost will ruin us," supermarkets across the
country are now displaying unit prices for many or all
foods on their shelves.
Unit pricing, when its use began to spread in all sizes
of food stores slightly more than .two years ago, 'was
heralded as another home run for consumerism. Much
behind-the-scenes jawboning by consumer advocates and
.vote-hungry pcliticians wen! Into the promotion of this
aid to· better 'buying.
.
.
The basic idea is to provide a sound method of com paring lhe prices of, say, two items by their volume lo
select the belter buy. However, a recent surver reveals
that someone is dropping the ball as far as umt pricing
in practice is concerned.
· ·
Who is to blame?
It is generally agreed that the disinterested consumer
contnbutes more than his share to the current ineffectiveness of unit pricing.
What excuse may a consumer offer while complaining
about the mounting weekly food blll when he refuses to
utilize what can be a money-sr ving aid available in so
many stores? Many women, for ex~mple, say they do
.n~t have time to read the tags tnat list the prices. Others
cling to pprmally more expensive products because of
brand names and refuse to sample other foodstuffs with
unfamiliar labels.
~ut there is a _problem in unit prlcln~. This is thil..
legitimate complamt of consumer specialists who point
out that many stores make the computerized prinl-oul
•
lag a jumble ot numerals, difficult to decipher. If, as
surveys show, stores that heavily promote arid explain
unit pricing to . their customers have the highest useage
response by its customers, then' more stores should be
encouraged by their shoppers to provide such informa·
lion In a clear, understandable and accessible manner.
It _all boils dow~ to the fact that the key to making .unit
prlcmg work to a1d the family food budget rests with the .
consuD)er. The food stores ·have thrown the ball and It Is
up to the individual consumer to swing his own bat.

N.Y. Win W-raps It
Up· for McGovern

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wiN AT IPIIDGI!·,

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UP! Sports Writer

.AJlOU
· ·862
tl87

wEsT

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us'i'

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.Q76
~ns•

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tAB! '
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t10.632

.54

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Dear Hel4!0: ~
.
SOUTH (D) ' ·
The perilon Who signed herself "Angry at Selfish Women's
.AK3 .
libbers" wonilered why these women added another problem
' ' t 'KQ4
when the world already has more than Ita sbare to solve. The
.AK862
I·
aoswer lhould ~ obvioua to anyone Who Is aware of thti power
North-South vulnerable
structure of our society.
West North l!Ut· South
The average person has nest to no power alone or in snail
'' l
Pass 1•
Pus 3N,T.
groups -whether they work for better soclal services, houalng,
3N.T.
Pus Pass
Paos
wuste disposal or peace. This, beca111e lbo8e In power, the vast
Pass
majority of whom are. men, are unresponsive unless there Is
Opening lead-• Q
some lp&amp;lerial and inunediate profit 1o be gained by change.
While women are in' the majority .numerically, they are By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
almost non-existent when II comes to power or p()Ucy-m_aklng.
"Charity begins at home,"
Therefore their voices at present are pretty' weak.
murmured East. "Why try It
I don't think our society will be magically transformed Into at the bridge table?" &lt;'
an idealist Utopia onee·wornen are proportionately represented.
South ducked the first
However, I do believe that women have tended- to be more heart; won the conUnuaUon
cognizant of huinan values thao have men.! certainly think they and led a spade to dummy's
would-do no worse, and !hat their basic hmnan rights are being nine. East won with the
-queen and led his last heart.
violated by exchmlon from these posiUons.
South won that trick; ''led
Women have ever been In the forefront of the llchta for the
his last spade; flnl!ssed suchandicapped, better health care' conservation, peace and human cessfully against Wh t ' •·
rights. That their Impact has been .so snail In relation to the king; dlscardad three ,clubs
overwhelming problems they face is, in my opinion, due to their on the rest of the apadell;
"second class citizen" rating. Unlll women'•' UberaUan lela them conceded a tri.ck to the. ace
realize !heir. power, !hey can 'I adequately help solve those other of diamonds and mad~ , the
rest for a ·very good score of
world ·problems . .:..MS. E.B.N.
plus 630.
'
+++
It
wasn't
a
top'
score
since
Dear Helen :
a couple of North players
First women waoted the vote, aod they got 11. Now we wa~t made 11 tricks in a -spade·
to be voted FOR, because we are NEEDED In politics. If It's contract, but it was ,a lot
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A operations would immediately slope
requirements" on "selfish" to work for our rightful place in society ·10 that we can better than ~ng set one or
Senate Interior subcommittee come under the federal reclamation. A house interior
two tricks which iJ what
Thursday approved legislation standards . Exisling subcommittee Is also writing help to better society, then I am a - SELFISH WOMEN'S would have happened if West
LIBBER
, which sel f"!!eral goidelines for operations, however, would be its J)Wn bill.
had just thhugbt of playing
,
+++
strip mining throughout !he na- given 12 months before they
second
hand high 8nd played
Under the provisions of the
tion, but gave existing opera- would have to adhere to the Senate measure, strip mining Dear Helen:
his king the first lime spades
"Afraid lo Clance It" asks for a fonnula for succes~~ In were led.
'
tions one year to r1eet the federal standards.
coal operators must obtain 'a marriage. I believe formulas for SUCcellll in aDy arha of life are
This
second
hand
high play
standards,
'
However, in the interim, federal or state permit meeting
would
have
held
&amp;outh
to just
The bill, described as a states could adopl the stan- the federAl guidelines. In· unobtainable. They are as personal and individual as finger·
one
spade
!rick
provided
"composite" of 12 measures dards for immediate use, Moss eluded in the applicatioo for prints. Otherwise where the stimulus for !be lmatlonatlon or the East was careful to takeIJ!at
his
challenges?
.
,
' before tile committee, fell far said.
ace of dlamonct.. at the right
the permit, must be a plan for
short of the total abolition of
But If "love" Is lhe key to marriage, then I feel selfishness ill time. It might even have
Non-coal standards are reclaiming !he land, including.
surface mining endorsed by to be drawn up by revegetation.
the key to divorce! And these modern ''non:"larriages," ''week· held him to no spade tricks
Sen. George McGovern, )). the department within
end
marriages," ''grOup marriages,'• etc. have an air of at all If South• had let the
Aminimum bond of $500 per
S.D., and others.
""lifhsness about !bern. It's more "What's In It lor me?" than king of spades hold and tried
12 - months. "It will be acre must be provided.
a finesse against the queen
Sen. Fraok Moss, )).Utah, necessary to develop a more
PeJllllties for violating the "What can I otrer?" I've enjoyed 11 yean of awarene11 of ·my later on.
chainnan of lhe subcommittee, varied set of goideilnes," Moss law would· range from $1,000 a male's·i:omplete·fulfUbnent, as well as my own, but I linow my
While on the subject of
called the measure ·"a fairly sa1d.
day in civil fines, to $10,000 and license doesn't carry a guarantee. We.both use a lot of TLC to charity we might point out
strong and Iough bill."
The administration had · 6 months imprisonment for keep the motor ruqning! -TRIED IT AND LIKE IT
that East wasn't as tough
~~Our corrunittee never · ser- sought a lw&lt;&gt;-year period for
criminal wilfull violation •
with
South as he might have
Dear Helen: ·
Iously considered abolition of existing coal operations· to
been
.
If East had ~ucked
During the first year ~f the
In our modem, two-career marriage, we're friends and .
!rilrlace' mining . ~ . because of continue before meeting law, the federal government
that first Sl!{lde (a v~q, !Qiill:h·
lhe greal rieid of coal · as an Ieder~! st~ndards,.. , En-. would provided 110 per cent of equalS as well as lovers. We share the holllll! work, the raising of 'plhyt"SbUlli Wouia 'nof:.Jjii'e
our children. We·dlacuss our jobs, tile home, the world and our . ~n- able to·make moN"than
energf 'SOurce~'' S&amp;id.
VJrorunentalrsts, spearheaded !he c011t of admlniatratlon. 11 kids wijh equal vigor -and !be children join ln. We have mutual ·nine
tricks.
Moss said the bill, approved by Rep. Ken Hechler, )).W.Va., wouilf revert to a 5tl-SO matchrespect
for
one
aoother,
and
few
jealousies.
Our
"freedom"
holds
INIWSPAPIR
IHTmllll ASIH.)
by a ~ vote, calls for lhe In- have. fought for a Iota! ban, ing operation after that. In adterior Department to prornul·. however, and gamed the ditioo the bill provides a $100 us together.
My husband knows about the other mmln my life. We told
gate the coal mining guidelines s~ppo..fl of McGovern, along million reclamstlon fund for
each
other most of our so-called secrets before we were married
within 90 days of enactment. w11h more !han 100 House and the federal government to
Tho biddinc his been:
Wllh appeals, a total of 1211 Senate members.
acquire abandoned stripped - this Is part of our bone sty, and we haven't mentioned them West North • East South
days could elapse before they
Pus
The bill now goes to tbe full land rehabilitate It then put it since.
become effective.
Is my husband embarrassed·when friends find him mopping Pus 2•
Pus
?
conunittee where amendments out ior sale.
'
New
coal
stripping may be offered to set specific
You, South, hold:
lhe kitchen? No more than I am embarraased when they see me
· putting up the storm windows or waxing hi. car. This lsn'ta ''his· • KlU .K8783 t5 .QI07
Wh1t do you do now?
hera" household - but ''OURS"! -HAPPY MODERN
A-Bid
lour heartJ. Tbe lnJ.
+++
modlate
heart
ralae makf11 your
Dear Helen:
hand move up Ia ltrenllh and
The fonnula for a successful marriage Is - THE 'LOVE you don't Willi 1o lhllly...bolly.
TRIANGLE (not Wreck-tangle). The third party, at the top of the
TODAY'S QUESTION
lrlangle, is God.
wread of rslaing you fo two
There are three critical stages in the marriage relationship hearts, your partner has Jumped
wben divorce Is Ukely to occur: 1. The first year, the pen.d of to three hellrta'. What do you do
now?
,
adjustment ("I didn't realize he or she was Hke thill!") 2. The
seventh to tenth yean, the period of retroapect ("Did I make the
The United States Air Force right choice?") 3, The twentieth to twenty-tlfth years, the period
By Lawr.ence Lamb, M.D.
dependent upon how much Nurse Corps is now accepting of readjustm,nt ("What do we have In cmunon ?"). The LOVE POPPIES Dl8COVEREI&gt;
I' 1·
f
Deal' Dr. Lamb-! am 53 melanin pigment is pro·
YARMOUTH, Maine ,
rom
all TRIANGLE offers the solution for alllheee stages, for It brings a
years old. a black woman of duced by pigment cells in app lCa IOns
(UPI)Pollee lcclde!ltally
the
skin.
There
are
about
registered
nurses.
According
conunon bond and cornmunlcaUon as well as faith. - REV,
light-brown complexion. For
the
same
number
of
these
to
Sergeant
Gerald
White,
local
have
discovered
wild poppl81,
J.W.D.
quite a few years now, my
pigment-producing
cHis
in
Air
Force
representative,
an
skin has been turning very
+++
a IIOUrce of morphine .. They
dark-brown. It started with everybody's skin, but some applicant mwf&gt; be a graduate Dear Helen :
won 'I uy where.
the old-fashioned liver spots, of them produce more pig- of a baccalaljl"eate, diploma, or
We tried group marriage In a commune for a while _and for
Sgt. Peter J. A.y'r and
but has spread until now it ment than others.
associate degree program.
I! while it worked. The children had eight parents, we all loved Patrolman Steven Frlnell
covers the greatest area of
Your doctor is probably
All
li ts 'h
ap~ can w 0 ar~ ac· each other, lllppOiedly. But utoplu aren't for hwnans. found the poppies alGail a
my face. I do not have this right in sa y i n g that you
roadside and teata confirmed
darkening of the skin on any don't have any disease, If all cepted will~ appcinted e1ther Jealousles, hurt feelings, 8CCIII8Uolll - and general Insecurity they
were a pure morpblne
other part of my body. My that you have is a change in ' s.econd heutenant,, first
doctor says it is no disease pigment of the skin. There heutenant, or captain ac- (who belongs to whom - and ''belonging," we fomd, Is lm· base for the hard narcotic.
Pollee burned au the plantl
as long as there are no are a lot of reasons for such cording to lhe amount of portant)', broke us up.
bumps or 1!rosions, but it pigment changes. Most of nursing experience they
Now my wife and I and our twa children are bact Into but would not say where· they
seems to be continuously them are relatlvely harm· possess. Following a two week lradltlonallivlng.Somethingbetter h11111~ comulong! -KARL . found them.
spreading. When 1 use a less. In a young woman who orientation course at Sheppard ·
' good make-up, it is hardly m1ght be takmg b1rth con· .
noticeable, but nevertheless trol pills. this trpe of re- ArrForce Base, Texas, the new
it is still there and looks just SRonse can somet1mes occur, Air Force nurse will proceed to
COMPLETES BASIC
awful without make-up. Is pro d u c-1 n g increased pig- his or her first duty aMign.
Army Private John A.
there any way of stopping mented spcts on the face . It ment. The nurse will have Domlgan, 19, son of Mr. and
this or do you feel · I need also occurs sometimes dur- chosen this assignmeht from a
Mrs. ~oy A. Doffilgan, Rt. 1,
treatment?
ing pre~nancy and i~ other list of bases which currently Coolvilla, recently completed
'' '
. Dear Reader-Skin color, peop!e 11 occurs wrth ad· have nurse vacancies
eight weeks of basic lralnlrig at
.
·
black, brown or white and vancmg year11. Expcsure to
shades of them, is basically sun seems to enhance pig· Accordmg to Sergeant White, the U. S, Army Tralnjng
mentation.
'
nursing op~tuniUes in the Air Center, Armor, Fl. Knox, Ky.
The best thing I can sug- Force are varied. Hospitals Pvt. Domigan received his
gest is to use a sun-screen range in size from 20 beds to training wilh Company E, 15th
type cosm~lic spread over 1,100 beds and are located Battalion of the 4th Brigade.
the area of increased pig- throughout the United States. The soldier, 19hose ·wife,
!Dentation when_youare out Among the lpeclaltles offered Cathrine, lives at 8011 W. Main ,.
m the sun. Th1s will help ar
keef the sun's rays from ace . opera 11 ng
room, St., Pomeroy, Is a 1970
tlva ing_the cells to produce p~ych1aln_c, general · duly, · graduate of Meigs High Scfiool.
more p1gment in that area. fl1ght nursmg, and aerOI(llce
I know this is a certain nursing. Educational op.
amount of bother, but the portunitieS include nationally STATIONED IN GERMANY '
!!'ore you protect these areas cerlified schools in midwifery
Army Private Glenn A.
rn the sun the less pigmen;11 1
'
Swann,
20, son of Mr. and Mrs.
tation they will develop. But pe atr ~ asslatance, aqd
Howard E. Swann J~.. 2610 ·
I would like to relieve your anesthesia.
mind by telling you that
Among tire benefits in Mount Vernon, Pt. Pleasant,
these types of changes are becoming an Air .Ff1n2 nune recently was 181igned to the
not an indication of poor ar~ 30 ~ paid vacation 32nd ' Army Air Defense ·
health or skill disease.
annually, free travel on Air Command In Gennany. Pvt.
•,
Dear Dr. Lamb-! am 42 Force alrcratt lhroqhout the Swann, a clerk · with
years old and eat radishes world and free medical and Headquarten Battery ·of the
by the bunclles. Someone de •• j
N'-'"• ··'·
told me they 'can be very
n... care. · - • llllllri81 Command near , Kalaer..
4
"
harmful. Is this true?
raligL &lt;rom $8.JlO to ...3![0 J1fl" alautern, entel"id the Army In
'
·Den Reader-Nonsense. year commenaurata with January of lhls yar 1114
t\11"2 I, MIA, ...
:
Some people with digestive experlance, and lime 011 ac:tiVI! completed basic lrllldnc at Fl.
obI e 1)1 s have difficulty duly. Fit11nclal uaiatanc:e Is Knoa:, Ky. He lsalt711 sraduate
"WIIo's Dll o comfli•f trip? Wltll tGxts oll4 111ft• tlte
w1th radishes, onions and available for nUI'III wbo wiah of Pt. Pltasan! High Sdlool.
.
.,., tltty orw-tltls is IJow n boN to flqf'!
simila~ foods, but otherwise- to obtain B.S. or M.S. degrees
there IS !JO!hlng to it Enjoy In nursing.
contact ....__I Wbi
'
18- at at
your radishes. -They are a Jot
better for you than a gallon . Registered -lnlerelled Eut Stile Street, AU... Hfa
of coffee a day or ali the m knowlnc more about the Air telephone Qnber Ia (llf) MSsweets a lot of people eat.
Foret lllll'IM proar- allould -- 1122 (eoiJec:t).
.

t•

'

Strip Mining Guidelines

ne

1.

1.

Air Force
DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB ·
Seeking
Skin Pigment
Disturbs Reader
Nurses

BERRY'S WORLD

•

.

~~·

P:

-a-

~

~

est Loaded for All-Star Tilt

T~y's

s~r!ro!:!!Jlck

NOB'l11

•Js

.

'

•

By Helen Bouel

READERS ANSWER THE MAIL
Dear Readers:
'
The two letters which broughtlllOilt responie recently were
thCJ!M! Written by "Angry at Selfllb Women's Ubbers" and
"Afraid to lllance lt" - a!lklng If there was any hope for
m~age, aid If so what.
'
' Hen! Ire 'some of the better answers:
·

.

Misses·a
Second. •
Hand High

-.

•

'

IDITORIAL

, BRUCE 810SSA1

I • • I• ,

•

z-The Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport-l'lllneroy, o., June Z:l, 1m

i'

• •

LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI )-The· .campus of Texas 'l'ech Uruver·
1972 football-that's right, foot- sity. A capacity crowd of 44,000
ball-season opens Saturday is expected, and the game will
night wilh one of !hose all-£tar . he nationally televised.
Most of the big-name talent
games that somehow didn't get
played last December.
is loaded onto the West squad
This one is the , 12th annual coached by Omck Fairbanks of
contest sponsored by the Oklahoma . Fairbanks will
American Football €oaches have the quarterbacks of last
,Association, and opens a season's top two teams, Jerry
season' that ends seven months Tagge of national · champion
aod 300 miles away in Dallas . Nebraska aod Jack Mildren of
Oklahoma.
with the Pro Bowl Game .
Kickoff is set for 8:30 p.m. The East, under Alabama's
EDT at Jones Stadium on lhe Bear Bryant, will answer with

OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!)- · This man was talking
• something very clOSl! to his heart.
ije was talking about the hottest club in baseball, the Oakland
A's, and their manager, Dick Williams,
"Pick Williams Is doing an outstanding job," he said, "I think
I'm well qu8llfied to speak on that subject because I've had some
experience hiring mimagers tbe past few years. Williams has
great rappcrt with the players, he'll aggressive In his thinking,
and In this day and age when a manager must have lhe ability to
communicate With players, he does that beautifully. Even to the
extent of wearinti long hair and a moustache, the same as rug,
players: He cooperates with the fronl office. He also has great
rapper! with the general manager and the owner of the club, both ·
of whom llappen to be the same."
By tills Ume you know who's doing all the talking about Dick
Williams.
That's right, his boss, 'Charlie Finley, who has hired 10
TY/
managers,lncludingthesameonelwlce,duringthe!2yearshe
av~·
has had his club and who changes them the same way some
J .:7
:· people.change plane reservations.
CINCINNATI (UPI)-Cesar runs off Reds starter Wa)'lle
Sam~. of Charlie Finley's critics say you'll automatically know
Cedeno
is a young man who can Simpson in the first inning .
; . when the milleMium Is here beCaUS;C that will be the day Charlie
do
it
aiL
Simpson departed during lhe
says nice tltings about his manager. •
· That's the description of. six-run third inning, capped by
The Millenlum Is Here
'·
fered by the Houston Astros Rader's lith homer, a smash
·" In that case, the millenniwn is here.
teammates of the young with two runners on base oJf
:· This Is the day.
Dominican outfrelder.
relief pilcher Ed Sprague.
" Finley couldn't possibly have picked a better one because at
Harry Walker, the Astro
To the best of Rader 's
, lhemoment~lsA'shappen lobe the best club In baseball.
manager, is more emphatic knowledge, it was his fifth
·.: They have a sizzliog .679 won-lost percentage which not only when he discusses the ability of three-run homer of the season.
, leads the American League West but all the other clu~s in the the 21-year-old Cedeno .
"When you gel as few hits as
.: majors ss well.
'
"He's lhe best young player . I do, you have to make them
" By one of life's little ironies, the club wilh the worst major
I've seen," said Walker Thurs- count ," said Rader , who
'· leagoe record happens to be In this same area. That would be day night after Cedeno and carried a .233 batting mark into
;,:, Ho~ace Stoneham's San FranciSco Giants with a tired .333 figore Doug Rader homered as the the game. His three RBI's gave
which puts them last In the National League West: as well as last Astros defeated the Cincinnati him 41 for his 55 hits.
Reds 9-5 in the opener of a fourSparky Perturbed
, In the major leagues. No club has ~ny poorer record.
game
series
to
regain
first
"He'll
be all right," was
," There have been suggestions that Finley is so happy over
· Stoneham's present plight wherein the A's are running 75,000 place in the National League Reds Manager Sparky An·
der son 's only comment in
·' ahead of last year's attendaoce and the Giants are down around West.
The
series
continues
tonight
regard to Simpson , who wound
" 200,000 that he feels like dancing In the streets, but Finley insists
· when Jerry Reuss, a one-hit up with his second loss in the
1 that tan 't the case at all.
'' "I communicate with Horace from lime to time,\' he says .- winner in his last outing, faces six decisions.
However, the look on
:· "Not that often, but occaslonaUy. I U!ink he is a very fine gen- the Reds' Ross Grimsley.
"Roberto
Oemenle
is
the
Sparky's
face indicated he was
tleman. He's having his problems now and I can appreciate that.
best player I've had since I've more than a lillie disappointed
I've had them for many years when I was building my ball club.
been managing," said Walker . Wllh Wayne's showing.
So I know what it is.''
"But this kid figures to do more
"The turning porn! i"' the
It has been said there Is room in the Bay Area here for only one in his first four years in the game was rn the second inning
· major league club and I asked Finley II he felt that way.
majors than Dement~ did." when Jolll\ny Bench hit into
'
'·
Remains fo be Seen
It's even conceivab1e that that for ce play for the third out
"I don't know, that remains to be seen," he said. "I !Jappen 1o Cedeno could wind up with the with the hases loaded," said
think the Bay Area Is the greatest sports area In the country. National League batting title Sparky.
" l,ook at it. It has two baseball teams; two football teams; one this year, only his second full
"Johnny definitely wasn't
. hockey team, and a basketball team. Six teams in all. I can season in -the majors.
fooled on that pitch," he added.
guarantee you one thing: the Oakland A's and the California
Cedeno's homer Thursday "That hall he hit almost took
Golden Seab (which Finley also owns ) are rernainiog in the Bay night, his eighth of the season, Rader into left field . I would
was one of four hits, which have liked to have seen how far
" Area.
" ''There has been a Iotta horseradish written aboul me moving boosted his league-leading bat- the ball would have gone if
Johony had gotten it into the
the A's to Washington. Rlllllors, rumors. If a hotel was built to ling mark to .336.
Cincin1111ti pitching has ac- air.
. counted·ofor&lt; 11, big p~&gt;rtion·.. of 1r· George ·Culver, · ao ex-Red,
n,;riFinley has p«iled-up OaklBnd's atlendance-appreolably with Cedeno's . ,falwaverage... The ,(Oj)k ,ove1 for Aslro starter
his promoUonal efforts, two of tbe latest of which are 'Bald young slar now has II hits in 16 Dave Roberts in the second
Headed Day' and "Mouschache Day," He Introduced "Hot Pants trips to the plare against lhe inning aod picked up his second
victory against no losses, with
, Day" last year which showed off a great number of fancy and not Reds.
Draws
Praise
From
May
.
a
5 2-3 innings relief stint, his
' so-fancy flg~~res, drawing 43,500 and It went over so well, the A's
"I knew Cedeno was a good longest _since 1970.
are 'tfy!ng the same pnmotion again this Sunday.
player .. . could do it all when I
. Those who once laughed at Finley aren't laughing so much
went to Houston," said ex-Red
anymore. Starting the World Series on Saturday was his idea and
Lee May. "He's better than
so was playing II at night. Now some of his fellow owners are ever thls season because he has
taking a second look at the one-time steel-mill workerfrom Gary, matured. He's not as much of a
Ind., whom !hey used to brush off as either a nouveau riche ec- 'hot dog' as he used to be .
centric or "a plain out-aod~ut nul.''
"I think," added May, "that
Clarlle Finley did not gl-:e me the Impression he is lording it last year Cedeno learned this
: over Horace Stoneham now because his club happens to be up league isn 'l quite as easy as he
· and sloneham's is d&lt;lWD.
·
thought it was.''
_
'Tries to Help
Cedeno lore the National
"We've even tried to help him not long ago," said Finley. "He League apart when he first
Followmg today 's pro-am
! needed pitching snd we offered hlm Diego Segol, but he turned
joined the Astros in the middle
play
, the 47th annua I
' him down: So we traded him to the Cardinals the following day." of the 1970 season , batting at a
So wbat happens? A couple of days later Segui works in relief near .400 pace for the Astros' Southeastern Ohio Men's Golf
Oklahoma City farm club. Last Association Tournament will
for the Qlrds and beats the Giants.
Finley also ill somewhat sensitive over the fact he is charged year, his average dipped to be held el Logan 's Hocking
Hills Country Club on Saturday
.264 .
with·being-an "absentee owner" In ius operation of the A's.
and
Sunday.
Walker
shrugs
off
talk
that
''I don't give a damn what they say, I see my club play many
Defending
ream champion is
games," he says. "I pick 'em up on lhe road frequently. I'd say I Cedeno might have a little 'hot
Pickaway ,Country Club,
see at least 30 games at borne and 50 on the road. What's wrong dog' in him.
Circleville . Defending medalist
"Most
good
players
do,"
he
with that?" '
said, pointing out the same was Is Cliff Rhein, Lancaster.
The converS.Uon concluded with Finley bot.footlns it for a jet
Last year at Gallipolis, Joe
once said about Roberto Cleto Memphls[ where he added to hiS portfolio the olher day by mente. "All I know is that the Cardenas and Rhein of Lanbuying the Memphis Pros of the American Basketball kid hustles bard and runs out caster captured pro-am
Assoclalloli.
everything. He likes the game.
"l'll) happY to be In Memphis," he said. "Do-you realize it's lhe ·He's exciting lo watch."
only P,t"ofeasiQil81 team In that city? Can you imagine that? In a
Came Out Of Slump
fine city Uke Memphis! But I'm gonna change that name 'Pros.' · Surprisingly, Cedeno came
whoever heard of a name like that? . . . I gotta get going now. I into Riverfront Stadium after
·don't wsnna miss my plane ... "
making only pne hit In 12 at
Major League Results
bats during the Astros series By Uniled Press lnlernational
National League
with the New York Mets.
St. Louis al N.Y.. ppd .. rain
"But," pointed out aoother ex'FIVE-RAC~ SWEEP
206 100 ooo- 9 11 0
FREE AGji:Nl'S
Red Tommy Helms, 'that one Houston
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Out- · hit Cedeno made was a routine Cincinnati 120 001 OlD- 5 11 1
Roberts, Culver 121. Gibbon
jockey Jim Mo!eley made an fielder Ray Caslaldi, pitcher single that he stretched into a
ISl. Ray 181 and Howard ;
unprecedented sweep of the Tim Flaherty and shortstop double and he wen! on to score Simpson, Sprague 131. Gullett
151 , Borbon (9) and Bench . WP
Iinal five races Thursday at Michael Busby-aU amateur the winning run."
-,-Culver
LP- Simpson 14·
Liberty Bell race track to gain free agents-Thursday sjgned
Singles bY Cedeno and Roger 2). HRs- 12-01.
Rader (11th). Cedeno
the year's Jockey leadership lit professional baseball contracts Metzger and a double by Bob 18th) '
lhe track 'with 211 victories. · wilh lhe Pittsburgh Pirates._
Watson gave the Astros two
IOnly games sched"ledl

quarterbacks Paul Miller of have so many good runners."
"I'm not saying we're nol
North Carolina, who was not
even picked in the pro draft, going to pass. But whal you are
and little known Joe Gilliam of not going to see probably is one
team throwing three times and
Tennessee State .
Since most of the talent is run then kicking.
The bulk of the heavy duty
oriented, Bryant figures Ibis
running
is expected to be
game, which has been decided
by seven points or less the past carried for the West by Jeff
three years, will be different Kinney of Nebraska, a No. 1
pick by Kansas City In the
from most all.,star games .
"I think this game will have draft, aod for the East by
much more running than lhe Johnny Musso of Alabama, a
usual game of this sort," said third-round pick by Chicago
Bryant, "because bOth teams who has decided to play instead,•

Stale ) in there with Kinney.
Both of them have some· experience with tbe triple option.
I think it will he an exciting
offensive game.''
. This will be the third year for
the Coaches All-America game
at Lubbock after fairly lean
years at Buffalo aod Atlanta.
Since coming to Lubbock lhe
game has drawn near capacity
crowds each year, aod both of
lhe Lubbock contests have
been excitiog.
The West leads !he series !Hi, ·

in Canada .
Lots of Runalng Talent
Fairbanks said that he had so
much running talent on his club
that he will probably use some
Wishbone-Toffense despite the
short training period. his team
has had.
"Mildren is real familiar
with the Wishbone aod the
triple option," said Fairbanks.
"I think Kinney can run it
and we plan to go with Bernard
Jackson (of Washington State)
and Bill Butler (of Kansas

cedeno Best J've
se_en, s w .a·lker RedS Drop Out of First

:~lr~~R~'U~Prut;O::!\~;~~Y,;!:,:~ul,?,~ ~e

By MARTIN LADER
UP! Sports Writer
For a young man of 21, Cesar
Cedeno finds himself being
pushed into some rather heady
company.
"He's the ·best young player
I've seen ," said Houston
Manager Harry Walker Thursday night after Cedeno went 4-

MAJOR

STANDINGS

LEAGUE

National League

Pillsburgh
New York
Chicago

Easl '
w. I. pel. g.b.
36 21 632
37 22 .627
34 23 .596 2
32

.448 10112

Sf Lou is

26

Montreal

25 33 .43 1 lllh

Philadelphia 21 36
West

368 15

w. I. pel. g.b.

Houston

37 24

Cincmnafl

36 24 .600

.607

12

Los Ang .
Allanta

33 26 .559 3
27 30 .474 8

San Dieg o

20 39 .J:W 16•12
22 44 .333 ll lf2

San Fran

Thursday's Results
St. Louis at N.Y., ppd, ram
Hou ston 9 Cincinnati 5

IOnly games scheduled I

Today's Probable Pitchers

IAll Times EDT)
Pillsburgh I Blass 8-II at
Chicago !Jenkins 8-51. 2:30pm.
Phi ladelphia !Nash 1-11 al
Montreal (McAnally 1-81. 8
p.m.
Houston
Cin ci nnati

at the plate to carry the
For the Astrds, the victory hits through eight innings, but
Aslros 10 a !h'i victory over the pushed them back Into first was touched for a leadoff
place in the NL West by a halt· homer by Johnny Briggs in the
Cincinnati Reds.
ninth followed by Dave May's
The perfect night at bat lifted game over Cincinnati.
single.
Acosta then came on to
Cedeno's average 12 f!Oints to
In the only other game
retire
the
side, allowing one
.336, good enough to boost him played in the majors Thursday,
from fourlh ~lace all the way to Stao Bahnsen aod Cy Acosta hit.
II was Bahsen 's loth victory
the top of the National League held Milwaukee to six hits as
against
seven losses.
the Chicago White Sox beat lhe
hatting race.
Chic{lgo scored three runs in
Brewers, 5-2.
the
sixth inning to snap a 1·1 tie
New York at Cleveland in the
wilh
Bill Mellon slnglirig home
American League and St. Louis
at New York in the National the lie-breaking run.
both were postponed because
of rain . No other teams were
American League
scheduled.
Easl
Cedeno scored three of
w. I. pet. g.b.
32 24 .571
Houston's runs, including one
lletroit
31 25 .554 1 on his eighth home run of the
Baltimore
25 29 .463 6
New York
24 29 .453 61J:r season, and Doug Rader
Boston
24 30 ..•44 7 contributed a three-run homer
Cleveland
18 36 ,3j3 13 to the Astros' 11-hit attack.
Milwaukee
Introducing
West
w. I. pet. g.b. Houston broke the game open
with a six-run rally in the third
Oakland
38 18 .679
Chicago
li 22 .614 3'1' inning for an 8-3 lead.
Minnesota
30 24 .556 7
George Culver, working S 2-3
California
27 32 .458 12'12
At Your Store Now
Kan . City
25 30 .455 12 112 innings In relief, the longest he
Texas
24 34 .414 15
remembers pitching in ·two
Thursday's Resulls
years, picked up his second
Royal Crown
Ch1cago 5 Milwaukee 2
victory
in
as
many
decisions.
New York at Cleve, ppd., r ain
Bottling Company
IOnly games scheduled)
Wayne Simpson (4-2) was lhe
Today's Probable Pilchers
Middleport, Ohio
loser .
(All Times EDTl
Bahnsen, who has completed
Cal iforn ia (Ryan 6-4) al
Oakland IHamilton 4-0l. 11 p.m. only two games this year, held
Minnesola IPerry 6-5) at Milwaukee to one run and-three
Kansas City (Spl&gt;ltorff 5-4!.
a· 30 p.m.
Chi cago (Wood 11 -5) at Texas
I Bosman 4-6 I, 8: 30 p.m .
New York !Peterson 5-81 at
Cleveland (Wilcox 6-61. 7:30
p.m.
Detroit I Lolich 11 ·41 at
Ballimore !Cuellar 4-6}. 7:30
GUARA.NTIID
pm .
Boston !Curtis 3,21 at Mil·
, , I,0 , Y--IA:.:.;!l:.:
·~~~
waukee (Brett 2-81. 8:30 p.m.
for~

l Reuss 5-5) • at
lGri msley 3-2}, 8

pm .
Sl. Loui s I Cleveland 6-4) al
New York (Seaver 9-31. 8 p.m .
San Francisco (McDoweiiS-4)
at San Diego (Arlin 6-6) , 10:30
p.m.

Atlanta (Niekro 7-5) at Los
Angeles !Downing 3-31. 11 p.m .
Saturday's Games

Sl. Louis at New York
Pi ttsburgh al Chicago

Ph ila at Montreal , night
Houston at Cinci, night

!

l

As ASpecial

Aavor To You •••

NEHI

BLUE

t .t t

Saturday's Games

New York at Cleveland
Boston at Milwaukee
Minnesota at Kan. City

California at Oakland
San Fran al San Diego. nigh! Detroit al Bait. night
Chicago at Texas, nigh!
At la at Los Ang, 2, twl -nlght

47th .SOGA Tournament

,.

King Builders

Supp~

Co.

MiddltDOrl• O.

992-3748

Begins Today At Logan
honors.
The Logan course has a par
35 for nine holes. The tourney
will be a 36-hole affair.
In 197t, Gallipolis finished
fifth in the team slandings.
· Representing the Old French
City this year are Clark Hager,
Richard Roderick, Jr., Paul
Fraley, John Shinn, Jr ., Jim

O'Brien, George Pope, Vic
Hager, Bill Thomas , Dirk
Jackson and Ron Ellis. Charles
Kiesling is an alternate. Only
the top six will count In team
scormg.

Following today 's pro-am
action, a dinner and business
meeting will be held at the
Hocking Hills Clubhouse
tonight at which lime the sile of
next year's tournament will be
selected.
~

'

'

"I

. ~THE SHOE BOX
··

Where ~ure Sensibly Priced
Next Door to Rlll's--a.n Fr1nklin
MIDDLEPORT,

ctaily

except

.45169. Business Office Phone
99'2 2156, Ed •tor iel Phone 992 -

21 Sl .

Second class JlOStage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio
Nat i ona l advertising

representative
Boft i neiii Gallagher , Inc., 12 East •2nd
St. New York City, New York.
Subscription rates
De l i vered by carrier where
ava i lable 50 cents per wuk ;
By Motor Roule where carrier
service not available : One
month Sl 75 . By mail In Ohio
and W. Va .. One year su 00 .
s .x months S1 . 25 . Three
months $4 .50 . Subscription
pnce includes Sundar Timts ·
Sent1ne1 .

Yes, Our
N~w

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OPENFOR BUSINESS

R'lax , .. Drive in for a Delicious m~"'
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
·' malt, shake, cone or sundae.
'

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
At Forked Run Lake Entrance

Bottom.o.

TIRES
REPEAT SALE-QUANTITY UMITED

Supply

BALER
TWINE .
.

F78xl4-15

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G78xl4-15

IS HEREI
e M.f BALER TWINE

STEEl SHANK
CUSHIONED HEEl

(Only games scheduled)

Publ i sned

Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company , ·111
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio ,

Belted Fiberglass

New York at Cleve., ppd ., rain
!=hicago
010 003 001- 5 9 1
Milw
OOt 000 001 - 2 6 2
Bahnsen, Acosta 19) and
Egan; Lockwood, Linzy (6),
Colborn 181 and Rodriguez. WP
- Bahnsen lt0-71 . LP- Lockwood 0-8). HR- Brlggs (6) .

Euc . Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH.
C1ty EdiiOr

WIDE OVAL

American League

OPEN
, COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Natural Resources Department has opened motorcycle,
minibike and all-terrain ve·
hlcle trails for public USl' at the
Perry Reclamation Ares in
Perry County.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL.

Premium 10,000 fL Bales
1
7.25 In 5 Bale Lots
e GILT EDGE BALER TWINE
PremiUm 10,000 ft Bales
• M.f.S BALER TwiNE
.' 9.000 ft., Bales

H78xl4-15
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3911 WEST MAIN STREET 992- 216~ POMEROY, OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
.!'OR PETS - STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
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J78xl4-15
All Tires Plus Fed. &amp;Sales Tax

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
Mldtepot., 0.

�-.

-'

"The Other Boys Are Burlles!"

H~~en ·Fielp

..

Better Food Buys ·
Up to ·consumer·

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
.
. WASHINGTON !NEAl
Sen. George McGovern's Indicated pickup of more than
250 of New York's 278 delegates In !hat state's primary
will tlood out lhe last faint hopes of the Democratic party's
stop-McGovern forces .
·
They never really had: a chance anyway. The die has
been cast for McGovern since May 16. On that date, Gov.
George Wallace, while lying c rip p 1e d from gunshol
wounds, _won primaries in Maryland and Michigan. The
key s1gmficance of the moment, however, was the failure
of Sen . Hubert Humphrey to get more than 16 per cent of
the vote _in Michigan, a huge labor state supposedly
friendly to him,
Humphrey being Humphrey, he dra¥ged himself to
California, put on a ' smile over his fallgue, .and be_gan
gam~,ly battling for ttw state's 27J votes in the..Jp~ll-, fb
nmary-. He made a closer tight of jt than yolfs· ft1nted
Ill could, but a week before the event it waS"' apparent he
l~n't have tne· stllff' to turn the tfde-around. It was all .
over.
In the short span from 'California to the New York pri·
~ary, the Mcgovern managers deci~d to play it cautiously, and tr1mmed down their delegate claims . They ·
earlier had mentioned 225 to 240 as a reasonable prospect ·
but suddenly began saying "around 200."
'
My own fourth delegate count, issued shortly after
California, placed McGovern's New York fotential at 245
Evidently, with his proportionate share o the state com:
~lttee-chosen at-large delegates, he will get at least 252.
Just a handful went elsewhert, to the sidelined Sen
Edmund Muskie, to Rep. Shirley~hlsholm of New York
to the uncommitted.
'
Humphrey had no New York slate at all. Next to his
Michigan debacle, his failure to file in New York was·the
strongest earlier proof that he was lading from ·contention. Headlines blaring "Humphrey Concedes New York
to McGovern" did the 1968 nominee Immense harm. What
serious bidder for the nomination could pass up the
nation's secon"d biggest .state, with the biggest delegate
prize of all?
I make McGovern's true delegate count today at around
1,400 votes, only a b1t more than 100 from nomination on
the tlrst ballot. Not all of this Is recorded yet oil what
might be called the "hard count" scoreboard. But my
findings suggest It is there, and so do those of the tabulations of the careful McGovern delegate researchers,
The rest of McGovern's winning total will flow to him
fairly easily In the short time between now and the Miami
Beach convention opening July 10: When a candidate's
base Is as large as his now is it acts Inevitably as a
magnet, drawing In small additional numbers from state
after state, in a steady stream.
Some hard-bitten party professionals will be tossing
In the towel. If Chicago's Mayor Richard Daley can ~et
any sizable portion of his challenged delegates (totaling
upwards of 901 seated in the convention the odds are '
good he'll take a big group to McGovern. But the senator
probably can win without him.
Old pr? John Bailey, who may command a dozen or so
uncommitted Connecticut delegates, is not likely to be
found in the wrong place. McGovern could get nearly all
of Kansas' uncommitted 22, and young but savvy Gov
Da••ld Hall of Oklahoma Is not going off on some tangent:
He has 29 uncommitted votes to chlp in.
Of course, there will be holdouts. It Is a common thing
in nominating politics for some forces not to go with the
evident winner. In McGovern's case, more than any in
recent Democratic history, there are teal mlsgivin~s
about his electability In the fall . But the oppcsitlon will
provide more noi•e than delegates.

l

•

Us.

Could it be the confused consumer needs a batting
coach to sharpen his swing at buying the groceries "!
After much Initial kicking and screaming and cries
that "the cost will ruin us," supermarkets across the
country are now displaying unit prices for many or all
foods on their shelves.
Unit pricing, when its use began to spread in all sizes
of food stores slightly more than .two years ago, 'was
heralded as another home run for consumerism. Much
behind-the-scenes jawboning by consumer advocates and
.vote-hungry pcliticians wen! Into the promotion of this
aid to· better 'buying.
.
.
The basic idea is to provide a sound method of com paring lhe prices of, say, two items by their volume lo
select the belter buy. However, a recent surver reveals
that someone is dropping the ball as far as umt pricing
in practice is concerned.
· ·
Who is to blame?
It is generally agreed that the disinterested consumer
contnbutes more than his share to the current ineffectiveness of unit pricing.
What excuse may a consumer offer while complaining
about the mounting weekly food blll when he refuses to
utilize what can be a money-sr ving aid available in so
many stores? Many women, for ex~mple, say they do
.n~t have time to read the tags tnat list the prices. Others
cling to pprmally more expensive products because of
brand names and refuse to sample other foodstuffs with
unfamiliar labels.
~ut there is a _problem in unit prlcln~. This is thil..
legitimate complamt of consumer specialists who point
out that many stores make the computerized prinl-oul
•
lag a jumble ot numerals, difficult to decipher. If, as
surveys show, stores that heavily promote arid explain
unit pricing to . their customers have the highest useage
response by its customers, then' more stores should be
encouraged by their shoppers to provide such informa·
lion In a clear, understandable and accessible manner.
It _all boils dow~ to the fact that the key to making .unit
prlcmg work to a1d the family food budget rests with the .
consuD)er. The food stores ·have thrown the ball and It Is
up to the individual consumer to swing his own bat.

N.Y. Win W-raps It
Up· for McGovern

..

'

' "

~

..'

'

wiN AT IPIIDGI!·,

.

'

••

'

'

,.
'

UP! Sports Writer

.AJlOU
· ·862
tl87

wEsT

.93

us'i'

.• KU '

.Q76
~ns•

• QJ 1~8

tAB! '
' .Q.!074

t10.632

.54

...

Dear Hel4!0: ~
.
SOUTH (D) ' ·
The perilon Who signed herself "Angry at Selfish Women's
.AK3 .
libbers" wonilered why these women added another problem
' ' t 'KQ4
when the world already has more than Ita sbare to solve. The
.AK862
I·
aoswer lhould ~ obvioua to anyone Who Is aware of thti power
North-South vulnerable
structure of our society.
West North l!Ut· South
The average person has nest to no power alone or in snail
'' l
Pass 1•
Pus 3N,T.
groups -whether they work for better soclal services, houalng,
3N.T.
Pus Pass
Paos
wuste disposal or peace. This, beca111e lbo8e In power, the vast
Pass
majority of whom are. men, are unresponsive unless there Is
Opening lead-• Q
some lp&amp;lerial and inunediate profit 1o be gained by change.
While women are in' the majority .numerically, they are By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
almost non-existent when II comes to power or p()Ucy-m_aklng.
"Charity begins at home,"
Therefore their voices at present are pretty' weak.
murmured East. "Why try It
I don't think our society will be magically transformed Into at the bridge table?" &lt;'
an idealist Utopia onee·wornen are proportionately represented.
South ducked the first
However, I do believe that women have tended- to be more heart; won the conUnuaUon
cognizant of huinan values thao have men.! certainly think they and led a spade to dummy's
would-do no worse, and !hat their basic hmnan rights are being nine. East won with the
-queen and led his last heart.
violated by exchmlon from these posiUons.
South won that trick; ''led
Women have ever been In the forefront of the llchta for the
his last spade; flnl!ssed suchandicapped, better health care' conservation, peace and human cessfully against Wh t ' •·
rights. That their Impact has been .so snail In relation to the king; dlscardad three ,clubs
overwhelming problems they face is, in my opinion, due to their on the rest of the apadell;
"second class citizen" rating. Unlll women'•' UberaUan lela them conceded a tri.ck to the. ace
realize !heir. power, !hey can 'I adequately help solve those other of diamonds and mad~ , the
rest for a ·very good score of
world ·problems . .:..MS. E.B.N.
plus 630.
'
+++
It
wasn't
a
top'
score
since
Dear Helen :
a couple of North players
First women waoted the vote, aod they got 11. Now we wa~t made 11 tricks in a -spade·
to be voted FOR, because we are NEEDED In politics. If It's contract, but it was ,a lot
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A operations would immediately slope
requirements" on "selfish" to work for our rightful place in society ·10 that we can better than ~ng set one or
Senate Interior subcommittee come under the federal reclamation. A house interior
two tricks which iJ what
Thursday approved legislation standards . Exisling subcommittee Is also writing help to better society, then I am a - SELFISH WOMEN'S would have happened if West
LIBBER
, which sel f"!!eral goidelines for operations, however, would be its J)Wn bill.
had just thhugbt of playing
,
+++
strip mining throughout !he na- given 12 months before they
second
hand high 8nd played
Under the provisions of the
tion, but gave existing opera- would have to adhere to the Senate measure, strip mining Dear Helen:
his king the first lime spades
"Afraid lo Clance It" asks for a fonnula for succes~~ In were led.
'
tions one year to r1eet the federal standards.
coal operators must obtain 'a marriage. I believe formulas for SUCcellll in aDy arha of life are
This
second
hand
high play
standards,
'
However, in the interim, federal or state permit meeting
would
have
held
&amp;outh
to just
The bill, described as a states could adopl the stan- the federAl guidelines. In· unobtainable. They are as personal and individual as finger·
one
spade
!rick
provided
"composite" of 12 measures dards for immediate use, Moss eluded in the applicatioo for prints. Otherwise where the stimulus for !be lmatlonatlon or the East was careful to takeIJ!at
his
challenges?
.
,
' before tile committee, fell far said.
ace of dlamonct.. at the right
the permit, must be a plan for
short of the total abolition of
But If "love" Is lhe key to marriage, then I feel selfishness ill time. It might even have
Non-coal standards are reclaiming !he land, including.
surface mining endorsed by to be drawn up by revegetation.
the key to divorce! And these modern ''non:"larriages," ''week· held him to no spade tricks
Sen. George McGovern, )). the department within
end
marriages," ''grOup marriages,'• etc. have an air of at all If South• had let the
Aminimum bond of $500 per
S.D., and others.
""lifhsness about !bern. It's more "What's In It lor me?" than king of spades hold and tried
12 - months. "It will be acre must be provided.
a finesse against the queen
Sen. Fraok Moss, )).Utah, necessary to develop a more
PeJllllties for violating the "What can I otrer?" I've enjoyed 11 yean of awarene11 of ·my later on.
chainnan of lhe subcommittee, varied set of goideilnes," Moss law would· range from $1,000 a male's·i:omplete·fulfUbnent, as well as my own, but I linow my
While on the subject of
called the measure ·"a fairly sa1d.
day in civil fines, to $10,000 and license doesn't carry a guarantee. We.both use a lot of TLC to charity we might point out
strong and Iough bill."
The administration had · 6 months imprisonment for keep the motor ruqning! -TRIED IT AND LIKE IT
that East wasn't as tough
~~Our corrunittee never · ser- sought a lw&lt;&gt;-year period for
criminal wilfull violation •
with
South as he might have
Dear Helen: ·
Iously considered abolition of existing coal operations· to
been
.
If East had ~ucked
During the first year ~f the
In our modem, two-career marriage, we're friends and .
!rilrlace' mining . ~ . because of continue before meeting law, the federal government
that first Sl!{lde (a v~q, !Qiill:h·
lhe greal rieid of coal · as an Ieder~! st~ndards,.. , En-. would provided 110 per cent of equalS as well as lovers. We share the holllll! work, the raising of 'plhyt"SbUlli Wouia 'nof:.Jjii'e
our children. We·dlacuss our jobs, tile home, the world and our . ~n- able to·make moN"than
energf 'SOurce~'' S&amp;id.
VJrorunentalrsts, spearheaded !he c011t of admlniatratlon. 11 kids wijh equal vigor -and !be children join ln. We have mutual ·nine
tricks.
Moss said the bill, approved by Rep. Ken Hechler, )).W.Va., wouilf revert to a 5tl-SO matchrespect
for
one
aoother,
and
few
jealousies.
Our
"freedom"
holds
INIWSPAPIR
IHTmllll ASIH.)
by a ~ vote, calls for lhe In- have. fought for a Iota! ban, ing operation after that. In adterior Department to prornul·. however, and gamed the ditioo the bill provides a $100 us together.
My husband knows about the other mmln my life. We told
gate the coal mining guidelines s~ppo..fl of McGovern, along million reclamstlon fund for
each
other most of our so-called secrets before we were married
within 90 days of enactment. w11h more !han 100 House and the federal government to
Tho biddinc his been:
Wllh appeals, a total of 1211 Senate members.
acquire abandoned stripped - this Is part of our bone sty, and we haven't mentioned them West North • East South
days could elapse before they
Pus
The bill now goes to tbe full land rehabilitate It then put it since.
become effective.
Is my husband embarrassed·when friends find him mopping Pus 2•
Pus
?
conunittee where amendments out ior sale.
'
New
coal
stripping may be offered to set specific
You, South, hold:
lhe kitchen? No more than I am embarraased when they see me
· putting up the storm windows or waxing hi. car. This lsn'ta ''his· • KlU .K8783 t5 .QI07
Wh1t do you do now?
hera" household - but ''OURS"! -HAPPY MODERN
A-Bid
lour heartJ. Tbe lnJ.
+++
modlate
heart
ralae makf11 your
Dear Helen:
hand move up Ia ltrenllh and
The fonnula for a successful marriage Is - THE 'LOVE you don't Willi 1o lhllly...bolly.
TRIANGLE (not Wreck-tangle). The third party, at the top of the
TODAY'S QUESTION
lrlangle, is God.
wread of rslaing you fo two
There are three critical stages in the marriage relationship hearts, your partner has Jumped
wben divorce Is Ukely to occur: 1. The first year, the pen.d of to three hellrta'. What do you do
now?
,
adjustment ("I didn't realize he or she was Hke thill!") 2. The
seventh to tenth yean, the period of retroapect ("Did I make the
The United States Air Force right choice?") 3, The twentieth to twenty-tlfth years, the period
By Lawr.ence Lamb, M.D.
dependent upon how much Nurse Corps is now accepting of readjustm,nt ("What do we have In cmunon ?"). The LOVE POPPIES Dl8COVEREI&gt;
I' 1·
f
Deal' Dr. Lamb-! am 53 melanin pigment is pro·
YARMOUTH, Maine ,
rom
all TRIANGLE offers the solution for alllheee stages, for It brings a
years old. a black woman of duced by pigment cells in app lCa IOns
(UPI)Pollee lcclde!ltally
the
skin.
There
are
about
registered
nurses.
According
conunon bond and cornmunlcaUon as well as faith. - REV,
light-brown complexion. For
the
same
number
of
these
to
Sergeant
Gerald
White,
local
have
discovered
wild poppl81,
J.W.D.
quite a few years now, my
pigment-producing
cHis
in
Air
Force
representative,
an
skin has been turning very
+++
a IIOUrce of morphine .. They
dark-brown. It started with everybody's skin, but some applicant mwf&gt; be a graduate Dear Helen :
won 'I uy where.
the old-fashioned liver spots, of them produce more pig- of a baccalaljl"eate, diploma, or
We tried group marriage In a commune for a while _and for
Sgt. Peter J. A.y'r and
but has spread until now it ment than others.
associate degree program.
I! while it worked. The children had eight parents, we all loved Patrolman Steven Frlnell
covers the greatest area of
Your doctor is probably
All
li ts 'h
ap~ can w 0 ar~ ac· each other, lllppOiedly. But utoplu aren't for hwnans. found the poppies alGail a
my face. I do not have this right in sa y i n g that you
roadside and teata confirmed
darkening of the skin on any don't have any disease, If all cepted will~ appcinted e1ther Jealousles, hurt feelings, 8CCIII8Uolll - and general Insecurity they
were a pure morpblne
other part of my body. My that you have is a change in ' s.econd heutenant,, first
doctor says it is no disease pigment of the skin. There heutenant, or captain ac- (who belongs to whom - and ''belonging," we fomd, Is lm· base for the hard narcotic.
Pollee burned au the plantl
as long as there are no are a lot of reasons for such cording to lhe amount of portant)', broke us up.
bumps or 1!rosions, but it pigment changes. Most of nursing experience they
Now my wife and I and our twa children are bact Into but would not say where· they
seems to be continuously them are relatlvely harm· possess. Following a two week lradltlonallivlng.Somethingbetter h11111~ comulong! -KARL . found them.
spreading. When 1 use a less. In a young woman who orientation course at Sheppard ·
' good make-up, it is hardly m1ght be takmg b1rth con· .
noticeable, but nevertheless trol pills. this trpe of re- ArrForce Base, Texas, the new
it is still there and looks just SRonse can somet1mes occur, Air Force nurse will proceed to
COMPLETES BASIC
awful without make-up. Is pro d u c-1 n g increased pig- his or her first duty aMign.
Army Private John A.
there any way of stopping mented spcts on the face . It ment. The nurse will have Domlgan, 19, son of Mr. and
this or do you feel · I need also occurs sometimes dur- chosen this assignmeht from a
Mrs. ~oy A. Doffilgan, Rt. 1,
treatment?
ing pre~nancy and i~ other list of bases which currently Coolvilla, recently completed
'' '
. Dear Reader-Skin color, peop!e 11 occurs wrth ad· have nurse vacancies
eight weeks of basic lralnlrig at
.
·
black, brown or white and vancmg year11. Expcsure to
shades of them, is basically sun seems to enhance pig· Accordmg to Sergeant White, the U. S, Army Tralnjng
mentation.
'
nursing op~tuniUes in the Air Center, Armor, Fl. Knox, Ky.
The best thing I can sug- Force are varied. Hospitals Pvt. Domigan received his
gest is to use a sun-screen range in size from 20 beds to training wilh Company E, 15th
type cosm~lic spread over 1,100 beds and are located Battalion of the 4th Brigade.
the area of increased pig- throughout the United States. The soldier, 19hose ·wife,
!Dentation when_youare out Among the lpeclaltles offered Cathrine, lives at 8011 W. Main ,.
m the sun. Th1s will help ar
keef the sun's rays from ace . opera 11 ng
room, St., Pomeroy, Is a 1970
tlva ing_the cells to produce p~ych1aln_c, general · duly, · graduate of Meigs High Scfiool.
more p1gment in that area. fl1ght nursmg, and aerOI(llce
I know this is a certain nursing. Educational op.
amount of bother, but the portunitieS include nationally STATIONED IN GERMANY '
!!'ore you protect these areas cerlified schools in midwifery
Army Private Glenn A.
rn the sun the less pigmen;11 1
'
Swann,
20, son of Mr. and Mrs.
tation they will develop. But pe atr ~ asslatance, aqd
Howard E. Swann J~.. 2610 ·
I would like to relieve your anesthesia.
mind by telling you that
Among tire benefits in Mount Vernon, Pt. Pleasant,
these types of changes are becoming an Air .Ff1n2 nune recently was 181igned to the
not an indication of poor ar~ 30 ~ paid vacation 32nd ' Army Air Defense ·
health or skill disease.
annually, free travel on Air Command In Gennany. Pvt.
•,
Dear Dr. Lamb-! am 42 Force alrcratt lhroqhout the Swann, a clerk · with
years old and eat radishes world and free medical and Headquarten Battery ·of the
by the bunclles. Someone de •• j
N'-'"• ··'·
told me they 'can be very
n... care. · - • llllllri81 Command near , Kalaer..
4
"
harmful. Is this true?
raligL &lt;rom $8.JlO to ...3![0 J1fl" alautern, entel"id the Army In
'
·Den Reader-Nonsense. year commenaurata with January of lhls yar 1114
t\11"2 I, MIA, ...
:
Some people with digestive experlance, and lime 011 ac:tiVI! completed basic lrllldnc at Fl.
obI e 1)1 s have difficulty duly. Fit11nclal uaiatanc:e Is Knoa:, Ky. He lsalt711 sraduate
"WIIo's Dll o comfli•f trip? Wltll tGxts oll4 111ft• tlte
w1th radishes, onions and available for nUI'III wbo wiah of Pt. Pltasan! High Sdlool.
.
.,., tltty orw-tltls is IJow n boN to flqf'!
simila~ foods, but otherwise- to obtain B.S. or M.S. degrees
there IS !JO!hlng to it Enjoy In nursing.
contact ....__I Wbi
'
18- at at
your radishes. -They are a Jot
better for you than a gallon . Registered -lnlerelled Eut Stile Street, AU... Hfa
of coffee a day or ali the m knowlnc more about the Air telephone Qnber Ia (llf) MSsweets a lot of people eat.
Foret lllll'IM proar- allould -- 1122 (eoiJec:t).
.

t•

'

Strip Mining Guidelines

ne

1.

1.

Air Force
DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB ·
Seeking
Skin Pigment
Disturbs Reader
Nurses

BERRY'S WORLD

•

.

~~·

P:

-a-

~

~

est Loaded for All-Star Tilt

T~y's

s~r!ro!:!!Jlck

NOB'l11

•Js

.

'

•

By Helen Bouel

READERS ANSWER THE MAIL
Dear Readers:
'
The two letters which broughtlllOilt responie recently were
thCJ!M! Written by "Angry at Selfllb Women's Ubbers" and
"Afraid to lllance lt" - a!lklng If there was any hope for
m~age, aid If so what.
'
' Hen! Ire 'some of the better answers:
·

.

Misses·a
Second. •
Hand High

-.

•

'

IDITORIAL

, BRUCE 810SSA1

I • • I• ,

•

z-The Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport-l'lllneroy, o., June Z:l, 1m

i'

• •

LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI )-The· .campus of Texas 'l'ech Uruver·
1972 football-that's right, foot- sity. A capacity crowd of 44,000
ball-season opens Saturday is expected, and the game will
night wilh one of !hose all-£tar . he nationally televised.
Most of the big-name talent
games that somehow didn't get
played last December.
is loaded onto the West squad
This one is the , 12th annual coached by Omck Fairbanks of
contest sponsored by the Oklahoma . Fairbanks will
American Football €oaches have the quarterbacks of last
,Association, and opens a season's top two teams, Jerry
season' that ends seven months Tagge of national · champion
aod 300 miles away in Dallas . Nebraska aod Jack Mildren of
Oklahoma.
with the Pro Bowl Game .
Kickoff is set for 8:30 p.m. The East, under Alabama's
EDT at Jones Stadium on lhe Bear Bryant, will answer with

OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!)- · This man was talking
• something very clOSl! to his heart.
ije was talking about the hottest club in baseball, the Oakland
A's, and their manager, Dick Williams,
"Pick Williams Is doing an outstanding job," he said, "I think
I'm well qu8llfied to speak on that subject because I've had some
experience hiring mimagers tbe past few years. Williams has
great rappcrt with the players, he'll aggressive In his thinking,
and In this day and age when a manager must have lhe ability to
communicate With players, he does that beautifully. Even to the
extent of wearinti long hair and a moustache, the same as rug,
players: He cooperates with the fronl office. He also has great
rapper! with the general manager and the owner of the club, both ·
of whom llappen to be the same."
By tills Ume you know who's doing all the talking about Dick
Williams.
That's right, his boss, 'Charlie Finley, who has hired 10
TY/
managers,lncludingthesameonelwlce,duringthe!2yearshe
av~·
has had his club and who changes them the same way some
J .:7
:· people.change plane reservations.
CINCINNATI (UPI)-Cesar runs off Reds starter Wa)'lle
Sam~. of Charlie Finley's critics say you'll automatically know
Cedeno
is a young man who can Simpson in the first inning .
; . when the milleMium Is here beCaUS;C that will be the day Charlie
do
it
aiL
Simpson departed during lhe
says nice tltings about his manager. •
· That's the description of. six-run third inning, capped by
The Millenlum Is Here
'·
fered by the Houston Astros Rader's lith homer, a smash
·" In that case, the millenniwn is here.
teammates of the young with two runners on base oJf
:· This Is the day.
Dominican outfrelder.
relief pilcher Ed Sprague.
" Finley couldn't possibly have picked a better one because at
Harry Walker, the Astro
To the best of Rader 's
, lhemoment~lsA'shappen lobe the best club In baseball.
manager, is more emphatic knowledge, it was his fifth
·.: They have a sizzliog .679 won-lost percentage which not only when he discusses the ability of three-run homer of the season.
, leads the American League West but all the other clu~s in the the 21-year-old Cedeno .
"When you gel as few hits as
.: majors ss well.
'
"He's lhe best young player . I do, you have to make them
" By one of life's little ironies, the club wilh the worst major
I've seen," said Walker Thurs- count ," said Rader , who
'· leagoe record happens to be In this same area. That would be day night after Cedeno and carried a .233 batting mark into
;,:, Ho~ace Stoneham's San FranciSco Giants with a tired .333 figore Doug Rader homered as the the game. His three RBI's gave
which puts them last In the National League West: as well as last Astros defeated the Cincinnati him 41 for his 55 hits.
Reds 9-5 in the opener of a fourSparky Perturbed
, In the major leagues. No club has ~ny poorer record.
game
series
to
regain
first
"He'll
be all right," was
," There have been suggestions that Finley is so happy over
· Stoneham's present plight wherein the A's are running 75,000 place in the National League Reds Manager Sparky An·
der son 's only comment in
·' ahead of last year's attendaoce and the Giants are down around West.
The
series
continues
tonight
regard to Simpson , who wound
" 200,000 that he feels like dancing In the streets, but Finley insists
· when Jerry Reuss, a one-hit up with his second loss in the
1 that tan 't the case at all.
'' "I communicate with Horace from lime to time,\' he says .- winner in his last outing, faces six decisions.
However, the look on
:· "Not that often, but occaslonaUy. I U!ink he is a very fine gen- the Reds' Ross Grimsley.
"Roberto
Oemenle
is
the
Sparky's
face indicated he was
tleman. He's having his problems now and I can appreciate that.
best player I've had since I've more than a lillie disappointed
I've had them for many years when I was building my ball club.
been managing," said Walker . Wllh Wayne's showing.
So I know what it is.''
"But this kid figures to do more
"The turning porn! i"' the
It has been said there Is room in the Bay Area here for only one in his first four years in the game was rn the second inning
· major league club and I asked Finley II he felt that way.
majors than Dement~ did." when Jolll\ny Bench hit into
'
'·
Remains fo be Seen
It's even conceivab1e that that for ce play for the third out
"I don't know, that remains to be seen," he said. "I !Jappen 1o Cedeno could wind up with the with the hases loaded," said
think the Bay Area Is the greatest sports area In the country. National League batting title Sparky.
" l,ook at it. It has two baseball teams; two football teams; one this year, only his second full
"Johnny definitely wasn't
. hockey team, and a basketball team. Six teams in all. I can season in -the majors.
fooled on that pitch," he added.
guarantee you one thing: the Oakland A's and the California
Cedeno's homer Thursday "That hall he hit almost took
Golden Seab (which Finley also owns ) are rernainiog in the Bay night, his eighth of the season, Rader into left field . I would
was one of four hits, which have liked to have seen how far
" Area.
" ''There has been a Iotta horseradish written aboul me moving boosted his league-leading bat- the ball would have gone if
Johony had gotten it into the
the A's to Washington. Rlllllors, rumors. If a hotel was built to ling mark to .336.
Cincin1111ti pitching has ac- air.
. counted·ofor&lt; 11, big p~&gt;rtion·.. of 1r· George ·Culver, · ao ex-Red,
n,;riFinley has p«iled-up OaklBnd's atlendance-appreolably with Cedeno's . ,falwaverage... The ,(Oj)k ,ove1 for Aslro starter
his promoUonal efforts, two of tbe latest of which are 'Bald young slar now has II hits in 16 Dave Roberts in the second
Headed Day' and "Mouschache Day," He Introduced "Hot Pants trips to the plare against lhe inning aod picked up his second
victory against no losses, with
, Day" last year which showed off a great number of fancy and not Reds.
Draws
Praise
From
May
.
a
5 2-3 innings relief stint, his
' so-fancy flg~~res, drawing 43,500 and It went over so well, the A's
"I knew Cedeno was a good longest _since 1970.
are 'tfy!ng the same pnmotion again this Sunday.
player .. . could do it all when I
. Those who once laughed at Finley aren't laughing so much
went to Houston," said ex-Red
anymore. Starting the World Series on Saturday was his idea and
Lee May. "He's better than
so was playing II at night. Now some of his fellow owners are ever thls season because he has
taking a second look at the one-time steel-mill workerfrom Gary, matured. He's not as much of a
Ind., whom !hey used to brush off as either a nouveau riche ec- 'hot dog' as he used to be .
centric or "a plain out-aod~ut nul.''
"I think," added May, "that
Clarlle Finley did not gl-:e me the Impression he is lording it last year Cedeno learned this
: over Horace Stoneham now because his club happens to be up league isn 'l quite as easy as he
· and sloneham's is d&lt;lWD.
·
thought it was.''
_
'Tries to Help
Cedeno lore the National
"We've even tried to help him not long ago," said Finley. "He League apart when he first
Followmg today 's pro-am
! needed pitching snd we offered hlm Diego Segol, but he turned
joined the Astros in the middle
play
, the 47th annua I
' him down: So we traded him to the Cardinals the following day." of the 1970 season , batting at a
So wbat happens? A couple of days later Segui works in relief near .400 pace for the Astros' Southeastern Ohio Men's Golf
Oklahoma City farm club. Last Association Tournament will
for the Qlrds and beats the Giants.
Finley also ill somewhat sensitive over the fact he is charged year, his average dipped to be held el Logan 's Hocking
Hills Country Club on Saturday
.264 .
with·being-an "absentee owner" In ius operation of the A's.
and
Sunday.
Walker
shrugs
off
talk
that
''I don't give a damn what they say, I see my club play many
Defending
ream champion is
games," he says. "I pick 'em up on lhe road frequently. I'd say I Cedeno might have a little 'hot
Pickaway ,Country Club,
see at least 30 games at borne and 50 on the road. What's wrong dog' in him.
Circleville . Defending medalist
"Most
good
players
do,"
he
with that?" '
said, pointing out the same was Is Cliff Rhein, Lancaster.
The converS.Uon concluded with Finley bot.footlns it for a jet
Last year at Gallipolis, Joe
once said about Roberto Cleto Memphls[ where he added to hiS portfolio the olher day by mente. "All I know is that the Cardenas and Rhein of Lanbuying the Memphis Pros of the American Basketball kid hustles bard and runs out caster captured pro-am
Assoclalloli.
everything. He likes the game.
"l'll) happY to be In Memphis," he said. "Do-you realize it's lhe ·He's exciting lo watch."
only P,t"ofeasiQil81 team In that city? Can you imagine that? In a
Came Out Of Slump
fine city Uke Memphis! But I'm gonna change that name 'Pros.' · Surprisingly, Cedeno came
whoever heard of a name like that? . . . I gotta get going now. I into Riverfront Stadium after
·don't wsnna miss my plane ... "
making only pne hit In 12 at
Major League Results
bats during the Astros series By Uniled Press lnlernational
National League
with the New York Mets.
St. Louis al N.Y.. ppd .. rain
"But," pointed out aoother ex'FIVE-RAC~ SWEEP
206 100 ooo- 9 11 0
FREE AGji:Nl'S
Red Tommy Helms, 'that one Houston
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Out- · hit Cedeno made was a routine Cincinnati 120 001 OlD- 5 11 1
Roberts, Culver 121. Gibbon
jockey Jim Mo!eley made an fielder Ray Caslaldi, pitcher single that he stretched into a
ISl. Ray 181 and Howard ;
unprecedented sweep of the Tim Flaherty and shortstop double and he wen! on to score Simpson, Sprague 131. Gullett
151 , Borbon (9) and Bench . WP
Iinal five races Thursday at Michael Busby-aU amateur the winning run."
-,-Culver
LP- Simpson 14·
Liberty Bell race track to gain free agents-Thursday sjgned
Singles bY Cedeno and Roger 2). HRs- 12-01.
Rader (11th). Cedeno
the year's Jockey leadership lit professional baseball contracts Metzger and a double by Bob 18th) '
lhe track 'with 211 victories. · wilh lhe Pittsburgh Pirates._
Watson gave the Astros two
IOnly games sched"ledl

quarterbacks Paul Miller of have so many good runners."
"I'm not saying we're nol
North Carolina, who was not
even picked in the pro draft, going to pass. But whal you are
and little known Joe Gilliam of not going to see probably is one
team throwing three times and
Tennessee State .
Since most of the talent is run then kicking.
The bulk of the heavy duty
oriented, Bryant figures Ibis
running
is expected to be
game, which has been decided
by seven points or less the past carried for the West by Jeff
three years, will be different Kinney of Nebraska, a No. 1
pick by Kansas City In the
from most all.,star games .
"I think this game will have draft, aod for the East by
much more running than lhe Johnny Musso of Alabama, a
usual game of this sort," said third-round pick by Chicago
Bryant, "because bOth teams who has decided to play instead,•

Stale ) in there with Kinney.
Both of them have some· experience with tbe triple option.
I think it will he an exciting
offensive game.''
. This will be the third year for
the Coaches All-America game
at Lubbock after fairly lean
years at Buffalo aod Atlanta.
Since coming to Lubbock lhe
game has drawn near capacity
crowds each year, aod both of
lhe Lubbock contests have
been excitiog.
The West leads !he series !Hi, ·

in Canada .
Lots of Runalng Talent
Fairbanks said that he had so
much running talent on his club
that he will probably use some
Wishbone-Toffense despite the
short training period. his team
has had.
"Mildren is real familiar
with the Wishbone aod the
triple option," said Fairbanks.
"I think Kinney can run it
and we plan to go with Bernard
Jackson (of Washington State)
and Bill Butler (of Kansas

cedeno Best J've
se_en, s w .a·lker RedS Drop Out of First

:~lr~~R~'U~Prut;O::!\~;~~Y,;!:,:~ul,?,~ ~e

By MARTIN LADER
UP! Sports Writer
For a young man of 21, Cesar
Cedeno finds himself being
pushed into some rather heady
company.
"He's the ·best young player
I've seen ," said Houston
Manager Harry Walker Thursday night after Cedeno went 4-

MAJOR

STANDINGS

LEAGUE

National League

Pillsburgh
New York
Chicago

Easl '
w. I. pel. g.b.
36 21 632
37 22 .627
34 23 .596 2
32

.448 10112

Sf Lou is

26

Montreal

25 33 .43 1 lllh

Philadelphia 21 36
West

368 15

w. I. pel. g.b.

Houston

37 24

Cincmnafl

36 24 .600

.607

12

Los Ang .
Allanta

33 26 .559 3
27 30 .474 8

San Dieg o

20 39 .J:W 16•12
22 44 .333 ll lf2

San Fran

Thursday's Results
St. Louis at N.Y., ppd, ram
Hou ston 9 Cincinnati 5

IOnly games scheduled I

Today's Probable Pitchers

IAll Times EDT)
Pillsburgh I Blass 8-II at
Chicago !Jenkins 8-51. 2:30pm.
Phi ladelphia !Nash 1-11 al
Montreal (McAnally 1-81. 8
p.m.
Houston
Cin ci nnati

at the plate to carry the
For the Astrds, the victory hits through eight innings, but
Aslros 10 a !h'i victory over the pushed them back Into first was touched for a leadoff
place in the NL West by a halt· homer by Johnny Briggs in the
Cincinnati Reds.
ninth followed by Dave May's
The perfect night at bat lifted game over Cincinnati.
single.
Acosta then came on to
Cedeno's average 12 f!Oints to
In the only other game
retire
the
side, allowing one
.336, good enough to boost him played in the majors Thursday,
from fourlh ~lace all the way to Stao Bahnsen aod Cy Acosta hit.
II was Bahsen 's loth victory
the top of the National League held Milwaukee to six hits as
against
seven losses.
the Chicago White Sox beat lhe
hatting race.
Chic{lgo scored three runs in
Brewers, 5-2.
the
sixth inning to snap a 1·1 tie
New York at Cleveland in the
wilh
Bill Mellon slnglirig home
American League and St. Louis
at New York in the National the lie-breaking run.
both were postponed because
of rain . No other teams were
American League
scheduled.
Easl
Cedeno scored three of
w. I. pet. g.b.
32 24 .571
Houston's runs, including one
lletroit
31 25 .554 1 on his eighth home run of the
Baltimore
25 29 .463 6
New York
24 29 .453 61J:r season, and Doug Rader
Boston
24 30 ..•44 7 contributed a three-run homer
Cleveland
18 36 ,3j3 13 to the Astros' 11-hit attack.
Milwaukee
Introducing
West
w. I. pet. g.b. Houston broke the game open
with a six-run rally in the third
Oakland
38 18 .679
Chicago
li 22 .614 3'1' inning for an 8-3 lead.
Minnesota
30 24 .556 7
George Culver, working S 2-3
California
27 32 .458 12'12
At Your Store Now
Kan . City
25 30 .455 12 112 innings In relief, the longest he
Texas
24 34 .414 15
remembers pitching in ·two
Thursday's Resulls
years, picked up his second
Royal Crown
Ch1cago 5 Milwaukee 2
victory
in
as
many
decisions.
New York at Cleve, ppd., r ain
Bottling Company
IOnly games scheduled)
Wayne Simpson (4-2) was lhe
Today's Probable Pilchers
Middleport, Ohio
loser .
(All Times EDTl
Bahnsen, who has completed
Cal iforn ia (Ryan 6-4) al
Oakland IHamilton 4-0l. 11 p.m. only two games this year, held
Minnesola IPerry 6-5) at Milwaukee to one run and-three
Kansas City (Spl&gt;ltorff 5-4!.
a· 30 p.m.
Chi cago (Wood 11 -5) at Texas
I Bosman 4-6 I, 8: 30 p.m .
New York !Peterson 5-81 at
Cleveland (Wilcox 6-61. 7:30
p.m.
Detroit I Lolich 11 ·41 at
Ballimore !Cuellar 4-6}. 7:30
GUARA.NTIID
pm .
Boston !Curtis 3,21 at Mil·
, , I,0 , Y--IA:.:.;!l:.:
·~~~
waukee (Brett 2-81. 8:30 p.m.
for~

l Reuss 5-5) • at
lGri msley 3-2}, 8

pm .
Sl. Loui s I Cleveland 6-4) al
New York (Seaver 9-31. 8 p.m .
San Francisco (McDoweiiS-4)
at San Diego (Arlin 6-6) , 10:30
p.m.

Atlanta (Niekro 7-5) at Los
Angeles !Downing 3-31. 11 p.m .
Saturday's Games

Sl. Louis at New York
Pi ttsburgh al Chicago

Ph ila at Montreal , night
Houston at Cinci, night

!

l

As ASpecial

Aavor To You •••

NEHI

BLUE

t .t t

Saturday's Games

New York at Cleveland
Boston at Milwaukee
Minnesota at Kan. City

California at Oakland
San Fran al San Diego. nigh! Detroit al Bait. night
Chicago at Texas, nigh!
At la at Los Ang, 2, twl -nlght

47th .SOGA Tournament

,.

King Builders

Supp~

Co.

MiddltDOrl• O.

992-3748

Begins Today At Logan
honors.
The Logan course has a par
35 for nine holes. The tourney
will be a 36-hole affair.
In 197t, Gallipolis finished
fifth in the team slandings.
· Representing the Old French
City this year are Clark Hager,
Richard Roderick, Jr., Paul
Fraley, John Shinn, Jr ., Jim

O'Brien, George Pope, Vic
Hager, Bill Thomas , Dirk
Jackson and Ron Ellis. Charles
Kiesling is an alternate. Only
the top six will count In team
scormg.

Following today 's pro-am
action, a dinner and business
meeting will be held at the
Hocking Hills Clubhouse
tonight at which lime the sile of
next year's tournament will be
selected.
~

'

'

"I

. ~THE SHOE BOX
··

Where ~ure Sensibly Priced
Next Door to Rlll's--a.n Fr1nklin
MIDDLEPORT,

ctaily

except

.45169. Business Office Phone
99'2 2156, Ed •tor iel Phone 992 -

21 Sl .

Second class JlOStage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio
Nat i ona l advertising

representative
Boft i neiii Gallagher , Inc., 12 East •2nd
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Euc . Ed .

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C1ty EdiiOr

WIDE OVAL

American League

OPEN
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4 -The Dally Sentlnel,ltiddleport·Pomeroy, 0., June 23, 1972

·Rozelle To Fight
Creation of FSC
WASHINGTON (UP!)- National Football League Corn·
missioner Pete Rozelle was
scheduled to appear today
before the Senate Commerce
Committee, which is holding
hearings on the advisability Of
creating a federal sports
commission.
.
According to an advaric'e text
of this statement, Rozel!e was
to tell the commission that
each sport is intrinsically
different than the others and
"it would simply not be
possible to eslltblish rules
which could be applied fairly
apd reasonably .to sports in
g~neral."
'
.
', Rozelle also denied that
professional sports could be
termed "big business."
"The reality is that profes·
sional sports are, in economic
terms, very small business
·.. "

j

Unbeatens
Collide In
.Pony Loop
Southwestern and Bidwell,
the two undefeated teams l'n
the Gallia-Meigs Pony League,
square off today at Bidwell to
decide the leader of that loop.
Both Bidwell and Southwestern have 3-0 slates. Bidwell, coached by Doyle
Saunders, was expected to
have a powerhouse this year
an d so far has lived up to those
expectations.
Southwestern, on the other
hand, is the surprise of the
league thus far. They started
their season with an upset win
over Pomeroy and have
knocked off Racine and Vlnto·n
since then. Bidwell
has waltzed
~
past everyone. they played,
piling up 28 runs'to only five for
tl1eir opposition.
In other G·M actjon, Racine
plays host to Vinton, Mid·
dleport "A" is at Middleport
"B", and Cheshire goes to
Pomeroy,

On the CoUrt,

Long Bottom
i

Soci'id Notes

Debbie Is
·Just One·
Of the Guys

indeed," the text read. "There

By Violet Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Newlun
and Mr. and Mrs. Mike Martin
spent a weekend in Chillicothe
·with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Robin Nye' and.
family 'of Columbus and Mrs.
· Hans.o~ Holter of Forest~ Run
were visiting Mr: ·and Mrs.
!lank Holter.
Mr.· and Mrs. Gartll Smith
spent several days wlth Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Young,
Paden City, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd McPeek
of Belleville, W. Va., were
visiting Leona Hensley.
Alice Curtis attt!hded the
funeral service for her uncle at
Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins
and Mr. and M.rs. JW!ior
J!auber attended a family
picnic at Forked Run Lake
honoring Norman Weber on his
birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Martin
were visi\lng Mr . .and Mrs.
George Fry at Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Osborn
of Keno visited Ethel Larkins.
Pat Smith spent a weekend in
Columbus with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Groeneveld and Mike Bissell of
Columbus spent a weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell.
Mary Offutt of Parkersburg
visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bissell.

has not, for example, been a ·
year in the history of pro
football when the gross income
of all 26 . NFL clubs in the
aggregate amounted to · the
gross income of a departiilent
store like Woodward and
Lothrop's here in Wash~ton.
"I don't want to overdO this
point-and I know it is not 'the
total answer lo the concept of a
federal sports coinmlssionlxlt li is quite likely that
·.
professional football, one of the
By IRA BERKO\\'
more successful professional
NEA Sports Editor
sports, ranks somewhere
NEW YORK-t NEA)-lt's nobody's business who won
~ll_!nd the shoelace industry in
or lost
.
•
11
economic terms. •
1 p1ayed Debbie (The Pearll Mason three games of
In discussing differences, he one-on-one basketball .recently. We played-in the Queens
said ... "In all of their !uri·
College gy!'l· her home court H began as an odd experi·
W.i!Jental aspects, they differ
ence, and 11 ended that way.
from one another as much as a
I ,mean .. playing against a woman is not like playing
hockeypuckora.bMeball does
agamst B1g Bed at ,theY, although Big Red also defies
from a football. It would
logiC somet!mes. L1ke he'll wear one black gym shoe .
simply not be possible to
and one White gym shoe and explain . "So whal. they're
establish rules which could be
almost the same size. aren't they?"
applied fairly and reasonably
Which brings up a. s~cond point of this strange. intersex game : my gruntmg male ch:luvihism . I was a little
to sports in general. And cross-eyed at the·thought of losing to a broad.
anyone who tried to deal
I had heard about Debbie M.ason. About how she was
authoritatively with the parthe star of the Queens College women's basketball team
ticular
and
individual
last season. while only a freshman . About how she led
problems of each sport would the team to the New York State championship I she was
have to have the knowledge of named the outstanding player ) and to fifth place in the
the Almighty, the judgment of natwnal tournament.
DEBBIE "THE PEARL" WATSON (3) shoots over two
Solomon and the vision of Joan · And I had heard about her . moves, the quick hips and defenders In a workout at the Queens (N.Y.) College
of Arc. I don't find these double-pump _Jumgs that made the crowds roar and that,
gym. She led the school to the New York state women's
qualities
available
in mevJtably, pmne ?n her the nickname, "The Pearl,"
college basketball championship and has been Invited
m admlrmg compariSon to Earl Monroe of the New York
to • tr,yout camp for the American entrv In the 1973
. anybody - not. even in Kmcks.
~
women's World Games.
•
(sportscaster Howard Cosell."
And I had heard that Debbie had recentl y been invited
'·
In hls prepared statement, to participate in the U.S. women's basketball team try·
Rozelle says, "I cannot accept outs. Betwe~n 50 and 75 women have been asked to come someone . in the next game, they usually say sure-out
the premise that professional to the traipmg camp at Parsons College in Iowa from of cunosity.
"The guys don 't take me too seriously at first" she
sports are today inadequately A~g. 26 to Se~t. 9. Sixteen will be chosen to play in the
says,
,amiably. "But, soon they say, 'I'd better ' start
regulated. Indeed, I have World Games m Moscow in 1973.
playm
some defense. By then it's too late."
concluded that professional
So she has been pra~ticing daily indoors, often playing
football is the most over· one-on-one games agamst men. I had never seen Debbie • Men have accepted her basketball playing easier than
play , but as _I laced my sneakers in the locker room , 1 wom ~n . Other women, she say( are often envious of
supervised, over-examined had the feeling 1 was JUSt one of many mes about to her. Why do you play basketball? " they ask .
and over-regulated business in enter the spider's web.
, "Because !like it," she replies. " They sometimes think
America today."
The Queens Col t:ge gymnasium is huge, and baskets I m msane, the way I practice so hard . But I want to
Rozelle concludes, "In brief, seem to gro.w endlessly _above the gleaming floor. 1 saw get alfead. I want to excel. I find that women don 't usual·
I do not believe thilt the Debbie, a slight g1rl, eatmg up a sweat-suiied man at one ly work hard at very many things. They don't under·
problem of reconciling the far ba~ket She is 5-5 and .weighs 112 pounds. She has the stand wh~t 1t .takes . And they'll never know that great
interests of fans, stadium begmmng~ of .an Afro. She -.:ore a knee brace on her left feelmg ot dnvmg through a little. little space and then
th It'
1
leg and, JUStifiably, a T-sh1rt which said, "Superstar" floatm g h1gh up there in the air. "
au or 1es, payers, owners, lfrom the rock opera. "Jesus Christ Superstar"! ,
· After pl~yin~ Debbie,, I had this new realization. For
TV viewers • networks and
It turns out that Debbie has all the moves .! had heard the first t1me m my lite, I was with a woman and she
amateur athletes is going to be abo~t. and more and better besides . She can dribble was JUSt another human being- not si mply simplistically
'
'
effectively resolved by waiting behmd her back and betwee~ her legs. She can shoot in a woman.
the magic wand of federal close w1th e1ther han~; her JUmp shot is up, behind her
We. played bard , we pl ayed competitively, and the
supervision. If a sport cannot nght ear and off her finger-lips before 1-that is oneequality of camaraderie was absolute.
accomplish this Itself, through can catch one's balance from the stutter dribble ' She 's
The blushing difference reared up only after 1 per·
a fair accommodation of the a nimble defender and is said to be a hell of a pas'ser.
formed that sporlmgly chummy gestu re of patting her
interests of each, the sport
She learn~d this from school yards, she says. She saw on the rump after a good play . And I seemed to do that
Itself will bear the penalty." the boys at II, and wanted to join in . She has had no trou- frequently . Out of pure instinct
ble playing in outdoor games. When she asks to run with

I ~our games, Pomez:O~ft ~-"" ""~ ~1!1'
"~
llooift'Oui;r:;'~"""Pt'.,......,.~,.
"" .. ,
n , Middleport ''A'?)''"' at
""', ~.......
~· ~~.. ~ Q:~.;:;1....
.. ,.,..
V o , Southwestern a.t
v ............ ~·
Cheshire, and Bidwell at
t
Middleport "B" were' post.
poned Tuesday due to ram and ·
wel•grounds.
NORTHBROOK, Ill. (UP! )- pro, who holds tbe course
Jim Jamieson and R.H. Sikes, record of 64. Billy Casper and
two guys who know the value of Tony Jacklin had 75s, George
practice, took a one&lt;~trokelead Archer 76 and Julius Boros 77.
Jamieson and Sikes readily
into the second round of the
Western Open Golf Tour- admitted their good scores
nament today because a little were due to the teachings of
_ _ _ _ _ _ _;;;.;;.;. extra work pald off. '
Bob Fry of Davenport,. Iowa,
Both Jamieson and Sikes, and Dutch Harrison of St.
By United Pren International who had been having their Louis, the club pros they
Leading Batters
problems, returned home for consulted before the tourNa1ianal League
g. ab r . h. pel . instruction last weekend.
nament.
'
Cdeno, Hou 55 214 38 72 .336
Fry gave Jamieson tips on
The
result
was
identical
Snguiln, Pit 55 213 23 71 .333
Alou. St.L 52 195 25 65 .333 three-under-par 68s Thursday driving and Harrison gave
Carty, All 49 159 26 52 .327 that placed them in a tie for the Sikes a 21&gt;-year-old putter he
Clmenle, Pill
lead on a day when fl(pSI of the once used. Both worked.
5I) 203 36 65 .320
"If I ever played a roWld
Oliver, Pit 56 235 35 75 .31 9 tournament's big names
Santo, Chi 38 135 26 43 .319 succumbed to unbearably cold hitting every fairway, there'd
Garr,Atl
57 237 3B 75 .316 winds sweeping across the he a Senate investigation,"
Brock, ST.L 58 252 30 79 .313 Sunset Ridge CoWltry Club kidded Jamieson, who exBckner, LA 40 142 16 44 .310
plained Fry got him to con·
acreage.
American L~ague
g . ab r. h. pel.
"It was hard to judge shots," centrale on the tee instead of
Rudi.Oak 53 219 . 38 73 .333 said Steve Oppermann, one of rushing to "get it over with."
Pnlela, KC 55 219 34 7l .324
Sikes said his round was
Allen, Chi 57 200 36 61 .305 three players deadlocked a
Braun , Min 41 135 12 41 .304 stroke behind the leaders. "one of the best putting rounds
May,Chl
55 201 37 60 .299
I've had in four years" and that
Kelly, Chi 45 161 28 48 .298 "You could hit some good shots
Hrper, Bos 53 209 44 62 .297 and make a bad score."
Alomar. Cal 59 241 26 71 .295
There were plenty of bad
Oliver, Cal 513229 27 67 .293 scores, ranging all the way to
Plnsn ,Cal 52 184 26 53 .288 an' 84 by Bob Harris, the club
Home Runs
National League: Bench, Cln
SCIOTO RF.SULTS
18; Kingman, SF 16; Stargell,
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Pitt 14; Wil liams, Chi and
Veteran
race driver Wayne T.
Colbert, SO 13.
~
Curly
Smart
drove Quick Work
American League: Cash, Det
~
14; Jackson, Oak .13: Epstein,
International League
to a three-length victory
Oa:: 12; Allen, Chi 11 : Harper.\.c
Standings
Thursday
night In the $12,900
Bos and Duncan, Oak 10.
United Pre•• International
Challenge
Stakes for ·three·
Runs Balled tn
W. L. Pet. GB
National League : Bench: Cin Louisville
35 28 .556
year-olds at Scioto Downs.
52; Stargell, Pitt 47 : Wahoo , Charteslon
33 27 .550 '12 Smart, who also owns the
Hou. Oliver, Pitt and Kingman , Richmond
34 28 .548 v,
SF 43.
Toledo
Jl JO .508 3· horse, drove it to victory in 2:06
American League: Allen, Chi Tidewater
Jl 31 .500 Jl/2 :&gt;-5. Kalus was second and
43 ; Jackson, Oak 18: Oliver, Syracuse
30 32 .484 4'12 Majestic Cliff third.
Cal 36; May, Chi J5 ; Epstein. Rochester
29 36 .446 7
Sunflower won the first race
Oak 33.
Peninsula
26 37 .413 9
Pitching
Thursday's Results
.
and Fair Ellen the second to
National League : Nolan, Cln . Louisville 14 Tidewater 10 Ill return $156 in the ~aily double
9·2: Seaver, NY 9-3; Blass, Pitt
Innings)
8-l ; Suflon, LA 8-2; McDowell, Peninsula at Rochester, 2, ·on the 9-3 combination. Fair
SF 8-4, Jenkins, Chi 8·5,
ppd ., rain and wet grounds Ellen went off at a 22-1 shot and
American Ltogut: Lollch, Toledo al Charleston, ppd.,
returped $49.80 to win.
Del 11·4: Wood, Chi II -5;
rain
The crowd of 4,082 wagered
Perry, Clev ll -61 Holtzman, Richmond at Syracuse, 2.
$227,273.
Oak 10-5; Bahnsen, Chi 10·7.
ppd ., rain

Two on. Top In

LEADING
BATTERS

0

,.,.....

.,_

,

1i'

west ern
•

~ ~·

.

'

ALL-TIME HIGH
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services reported Thursday
factory production workers in
Ohio grossed an all time high of
$183 per week In May and total
unemployment in the state
dropped from 5.5 pet. to 4.5 pet.
·However, the bureau said the
down'ward trend in unem.
ployment will probably be
reversed this month because of
high school and college
graduation.

·•

..• ,.......

A thought for the day: Irish
poet James Stephens said:
"Women are wiser than men
because they know less ·~nd,
, Wlderstand more." ·

PENGUIN SIGNINGS

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Penguins of the
he would continue to use Harri· Nalional Hockey League Thursday announced the signings of
son's old putter.
Oppermann was deadlocked . '
with Hale Irwin and Tom
Weiskopf at 69 while former
Masters champion Charles
Coody was in a group of four at
one-underiJar 70.
There were eight players at
par-71 including Ray Floyd,
Doug Sanders, J. C. Snead and
Lee Elder, and eight more at 72
headed by Bobby Nichols.

,, l'H)~

FLOWERS
fpr All Occasions

I

_

__.

..

992·2039
~omefOJ Flower Shop
' B~~ornut Ave., Pomeroy
Mn. Mlll"'d v... Mtter
...

~~

(Hwt)
·-~~/'·
GIEORGIA•PACIFIC

PRO CONTRACT
MOSCOW,Idaho ( UPI)-Rick
Simmoos, a 6-4 defensive end
with the UniversitY of Idaho
football team, Thursday signed
a professional baseball contract
with the St. Louis Cardinals.

Anifll Watkins

The. double ring ceremony
Mrs . Walt~r Terrell of
Pataskala and Mr . Earl will take place at the Carleton
Watkins of Toledo are an- •Church on the Kingsbury Road
nouncing the engagement and at 7:30 p.nr. August 19. The
approaching marriage of their Rev. Jay Stiles wlU officiate. A
daughter, Anita Jean, to Mr. reception following the
John Walter Dean, son of Mr. ceremony will be held at 'the
and Mrs. John A. Dean of Bedford Youth Center. The
custom of open church will be
Pomeroy.
observed.

Garden Club To Meet

five amateur hockey players to
two year contracts. Signed
were defenseman Jack Lynch,
forwards Ron LaLonde, Bernie
Lukowich and Bryan Walker
and goalie Dennis Herron .

-

, .

'

•

.

'

US Rural Carriers

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'

''The Department Store of Building
Since 1915."

There is no finer diamond ring.
I'

, Pomeroy

Are You a Mis!iona.ry or a
Missionary Field?" then closed
with pra yer, Mrs. Harold
Smith, 'hostess for July, gave
·prayer before rdreshments
were served by Mrs. Bowers.
Others attending were Mra.
Doris Carter and Mrs. Denver
Kapple.
11

HAPPINESS

In Sunday Times Sentinel

'

Keepea.ke•
,_~OIITIIIPID

tliAMOND IUNO .I

heritage bouse

•
•

it·!

you cando

- The welfare of tne nation and 1ts
• citl:r:ans is directly dependent upor1 ade -

Quate availabilily of energy fuels.
- The nation is in the beginning stage
of an energy crisis due to increasing

shonages of all forms of energy.

- The situatJon is getling worse every
day. Unless the public recognizes the

problem and urges gov,rnment to co operate with industry for an early solu tion, it could go from crisis to disaster
as early as the winter of 1973 -74. In dustries could be shut down because
of lack of energy, resulting in great unempl&lt;lyment ; homes · and commercial
establishments could be without suffi·
cient energy for 1heir daily needs.

being replaced and none ha s been
found to provide for increased needs.
This trend must be reversed as quickly
as possible

energy by the latter half of this decade.
This gas ca nnot be recovered unt il oil
production starts, so the line to bring
out the oil must be built.

1. Producer Rates.

2. Import PoliCie1 for LIQuefild

The Fede ral Power Commission
should encourage an e)(panded e~~: ­
plor~tory program on the North Ameri ·
ca n Continent by allowing substantially
higher rates to producers than those
currently in ellect. The Administration.
Congress, an'd rthe public must under·
stand that the increasing costlOf exploration is inevitable.

Natural Gas and Petroleum
liquid• Required for
Synthetic Gaa.
.
Practical import policies lor liquefied
natural gas {LNG) and the petroleum
liquids required to produce synthetic
pipeline qualitv gas should be estab·
lished as soon as possil)le. The problems
of national security and balance of payments can a'nd must be reconcilttd with
the fact that synthetic pipeline quality
gas and LNG are the quickest means of
e)Cpanding the nation's gas supply.

2. Leaoo Saito.
The amour'lt of federal land made
available for e.~tploration must be in·
creased substantially, both in the Gulf
of Mexico and on the continental shelf
otr the Atlantic Coast. Federal lease
sales must be held more frequently, with
greater areas of land involved.

-The day of tow cost energv is past.
The prices of aU forms of energy must
increase sharply if the nation is to have
the supplies it needs. Congress, the
Administration and the public must be
prepared for these higher energy costs.
and greater efforts must be exerted to
conserve energy' by stopping wasteful
pracllces.
·

rl . Sanetltyof Contract legislation.
Congress should pass the bills now
before it which will : first, assure producers that approved contract prices
and other economic terms of contracts
will not subsequently be changed
Federal Power Commission orCer; and,
second, set more realistic standards for
determining gas prices. These measures ·

bv

Ttlese facls are evident hom an abun ·
dance of studies and official energy
repons. They lead to the inescapable
conclusion that urly development
of adequate aUj,pli" of energy
must have the highnt priority
among our national goals.

I H.R. 2513 and S. 2467), known as1he
Sanctity of Contract bills, can contribute
significantly in proyiding the ecooomic
incentive that producers must have to
undenake.costly drilling p~ograms.

Tht~;

Columbia Gas. System.has formu .
lated an Actio n Program whi ch it
bflieves the Federal Government must
adopt to enable the gas ·industry to deal
elfectively with the growing gas supply
crisis. Wh ile this Action Program is
directed primarily to the ~as shortage, it
will nse the total energy crisii by C()n·
tributing, directly or indirectly, to ade·
quate supplies of othet l)nerQy- nu clear, coal, oil and eloptricity.
'
Your support of the Se actions i s
urgently needed.

Nonhistoric Sources
of Gas Must be Made
' Available P.romptly,
HistOr!c domestic sources of gas cannot
fully satislv the nation's growing re ·
.qUiremen~s . Therefore. the prompt de velopment of other sources of ·gas is
essential.
I

1. Oil and Gu From Aleoka.
Construction of the trans-Alaskan

(NEPA) and amend it to clarify certain
.provisions and adminislrative interpre.
unions. Passed in 1970, NEPA had as
itS objective tf1e improvement Qf the
environment and quality of life. Thia
objective must be achieved, However, because of vlgue standards set
forth in NEPA and because of unwieldy
procedures often used by administra·
tive agencies to implement the Act. the
initial actions unCter NEPA have para·
do)Cically obstructed efforts to supply
the American people with clean burning natural gas. The result is not only a
serious imbalance between the eco logical and Margy ne&amp;ds of the riation,
but. ultimately, an Imbalance: between
different environmental considerations .

2. A Oepanment of
Netural R•ourcea. '

3. Coal G..ifiettion Rt~earch
and Development.
Research and development of the
gasification of coal must be pursued
vigorously in the years immediately
ahead. Coal gasification offers one of
the moat promising sources of gas in
the 1960's and thereafter. Thus, ade quate funds should be appropriated
each year for coal gasificatio.n research.
The existing joint industry-government
progrem for accelerating the construe ·
tio n of pilot ~ants for gasification of coal
should be funded promptly. The indus·
try portion of e1 0 million for t~e first
year of the program has already 'been
committed; the government ponion of
$25 million for the ne.~tt fiscal year is
still pending before Congress.

As you can see, the national erltrgy
~ risis is comple11. It threatent the phys~ •
!Cal, economic and social well·being
of every American. We hive Informed
Congress and the AQministration of our
Action .Program to help correct the
national energy crisis.

4. Joint U.S.- Canadian

What Can YQu Do?

Energy Board.
The National AdminiStration should,
seek to create as soon li!S possible a
· joint U.S.· Canadlan Energy Board to
help coordinat\fi)rograms which would
make Alaskan and Canadien nltural
gas available to the United Stetas mar-

koJ. The joint Boord should be a cleo•·
inghouse for 111ptditing all mailers
necessary for the development and
delivery ot thls gas.

A Department of Natural Resourc11
should be established. The Presida~·s
departmental reorganization plan co'h·
lained in his niessage to Congress on

March 29, t971, and embodied in
Sonote Bill 1431 should be enactod. It
should, however. be amended in accordan ce with Senate Bill , 1025 to
include the Environmental Protection
Agency In the Department of Natural
Resources.

Raise your voice. Your government
and your elected official a are lin·
sitive and responslvlto your needs,
when you m1ke them known.
Write to your S1.;1atora and Aepre.
..ntatiVe. Tell thtm you are concerned abqut our n1tion'a energy·
crisis. Urge each of them to aup·
P~" the poaltlvt tctiont that are
nHdtd if we art to pr.vtnt thla
erial a from bacoming a ditltter.

IOLILOQUV UOO

WIDDINO "I NO 71
,

IONATA 1&lt;400
ALIO 1150 'TO 1t71
WIODIN,CI lltiNQ U . IO

"Every Refrigerator Is NOT

AII'OLLO 11SO
Al..tO TO 10.000

A Frigidaire"

REFRIGERATORS AND ·
ELEtrRIC RANGES
We have sold hundreds of refrigerators in the last 7 Yttrs. Not 1 com.
pressor has been replaced In tht$e 7 years. Quality is· the story! ! ·

·~

Applications For

ANNIVERSARY SALE • • • (25 YEARS WITH US)

NOTEWORTHY PERFORMANCE!

.I

A contribution to the
Clemens Christine Children's
Cottage In Ontario, Canada,
was sent Tuesday night when
the Evangeline Missionary
Society met at the social room
of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ with Mrs . Elwood
Bowers as hostess.
Hoyt Allen, pastor of the
church, presented information
on how the South India Church
of Christ Mission was started.
Mrs. Betty Spencer, president,
opened the ~eling with Acts
18:24·28 on Apollos, the
missionary.
Mrs. Hoyt Allen ied the
devotional period taken from
Matthew 28:111-20 on the topic

Clearance

The ~unior Garden Club of Mrs. Shields aSsisted the girls
the Wlrtding Trail Garden Club with their parade entry.
w!U meet Monday at the home
A truck loaned by Smith·
of Maria Lligar. Glaze will be Nelson Motors and driven by
added tO the ceramic vases and Larry Hudson was decorated
a program on flower arranging with pastel shades of nylon net
mechanics will be given by and daisies. Each girl wore a
Mrs. Robert Lewis and Mrs . long dress and sunbonnet and
Don Thomas.
carried a bouquet of daisies.
The JWlior Club received They wefll acc9mpanied by
firal t, sec~d, third a n d . Mrs. Shields.
r/''\
...
-... - ""~'*'~·~·"'&gt;'"
-.. . . .......
Pceln
S~ow. Girls uhlblting were
Sliari Mitch, Marla Legar,
Jarnle
Johnson,
Linda
Rosenbaum, Kenda Braun,
Linda Kovalchik, Anna Wiles
and Elaine Barnhart. Anna
Wiles aiso received a blue
ribbon for her dish garden .
The United States Postal
AWIX'kshop was held the first Servic.t, announces
an
part of the week with Mrs. John examination lor substitute
Terrell, Mrs. Lewis Shields • rural carrier of record at the
Mrs . Robert Thompson In Long Bottom Post Office.
charge. Posters were also
Applications are now being
ma&lt;!f ((\1' the flower show. Mrs. accepted and no experienc~ or
Terrell, Mrs. Gene Mitch and training is required in the
substitute rural carrier of ATTENDINGCONFERENCE
record examination . Ap· · Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
plicapts must take a written president of The Farmers
test. To be eligible, one must Bank and Savings Company, is
have a valid state driver's attending a conference on
license and a safe driving "Major Issues in Banking"
re~ord . Substitute rural mall sponsored by The Graduate
carriers must furnish and School of · Banking at the
maintain their own vehicles at University of Wisconsin, of
their own expense but will be which he is an alumni, at the
given an equipment main· Palmer House in Chicago.
tenance allowance. Salaries
Reed was accompanied to
,,
range from $30 to $35 a day Chicago by his son, Tom.
depending on the length and
character of the route.
Ninety p~r cent of the u.s.
Applications must be sub-, pear
crop 1s grown in Cali·
mitted before July 10. Thos forma , Oregon and Washing.
interested may contact the ton , according to Encyclopostmaster at Long Bottom. paedia Britannica.
•
'-

The WSCS of the Forest Run Bu~ Aldrin, Mrs. Fred Nease ;
United Methodist Church met John.nie Cash, , Mrs. Uswin
at the church Wednesday Nease; James McDivitt, Mrs.
evening, June 21 . A song Edison Hollon, and Walter
"Sweet Hour ol Prayer" by the Kronkite Mr~ . Vernon Nease
group was followed with were given . Mrs. Alfred
prayer by Mrs. Alfred Yeauger gave an article
Yeauger. Mrs. Russ Watson written by Norman Vincent
gave a history of Father's Day Peale entitled "Cure 'for
which was instituted by Mrs. Tension and Nerves." ·
John Bruce Dodd in 1909 but
The group voted to send a
was not recognized nationally donation to The Heart and
until 1916. Mrs. Hanson Holter Hand House in Phillippi, w.
also had a poem pertaining to. Va. to send a child to summer
Father's Day.
camp.
_
Mrs. John Scott was the
Cookies and coffee were
program leader and she chose served 1to Mrs. Fred Nease,
as her topic Prayer and Faith. Mrs. Lawrence Napper, Mrs.
The program consisted of Edison Hollon, Mrs . Denver
stories of famous personalities Holter, Mrs. Vernon Nease,
living now, citing instances in Mrs . Uswin Nease , Mrs.
which prayer and faith were Hanson Holter, Mrs . Olan
great factors in 'their lives. Genheimer, Mrs. Harry Wyatt,
Articles relating to Norman Mrs. Alfred Yeauger, Mrs.
Vincent Peale given by Mrs. John Scott and Mrs. Russ
Russ Watson ; Billy Graham's Watson.
rwiiiiifeO.,oiMiiirsiiii..oiOiiliiianiiliGii,eilniiheiiiiiimiiieltr.•.- - - - - - - - - -..

Look For Our
·semi-Annual

Anita··Watkins 0
Marry fohn Dean

'M

HEADQUARTERS

THOMAS OPTIONED
SAN DIEGO (UPi j-The San
Diego Padres Thursday oplioned second baS.man Derrel
Thomas to their Hawaii Pacific
Coast minor league affiliate.
Thomas was the key man in a
deal that sent pitcher Dave
Roberts from San Diego to
Houston last winter.

\

•

'

Seed and Milling

Predlcls Unemployment
C.OLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Bur"'!u of Employment
Services says the higher
employment last month wben
the jobless rate fell in Ohio
from 5.5 per cent to 4.5 per cent
probably would be reversed in
June because of high school
and college graduations. The
Bureau also reported factory
production workers in Ohio
grossed a record $183 a week in
May.

.B',_,;
'-ower
'[;' MtSS
' 1'\.arr
ror

·~~

'·

Father's Day History Told ·Missionary Theme For Ladks GrOJti

Nellie · Casto, Ruth; Carol
Workman, Esther; Belly Fox,
Martha; Donna Thompson,
EJecta; Mary Thabet, Warder
and Wendell Kaylor, Sentinel.
Installing officer will be
RIPLEY TO HOST SHOW
Alma Slade of Baltimore, Ohio.
A
gun and antique show,
Otbet installers are: chaplain,
sponsored
by the Ripl'ey
Sadie Balles of Pt. Pleasant;
Jaycees will be held July 1 and
marshal, Jean Cartwright of
2
at the Ripley Elementary
Mason; sentinel, Verlie Work·
School
in Ripley. Doors will
·man of Franklin, w. va.;
open at 9 a. m. both dllys with
warder, Jean Hill of Buffalo,
closing
at6 p, m. on saturday
w. Va.; brganist, Margaret
and
5
p.
m. on Sunday.
Neuman of Racine and soloist
Jacque Gabritsch of Pt.
Pleasant.
All area members of the
Order of the Eastern Star are
cordially inviied to attend the
-1 ~J C'
installation on that night.
1 U#J, I..) f)
Potluck will follow immediately after the m!*)ting.
V
The Worthy Matron Elect is
asking that au offtcers arid
members of Mason Chapter be.
AA·B
present for a practice session
Mrs. Ike Neal, Mrs. Grace on Sunday, June 25, at 2 p.m.
Sizes
Pratt and Mrs. Frank owers
51-2·9
entertained recently 'th a
'bridal shower honoring lly
Karr at the Powers-Pr tt
MAJORETTES INVITED
residence, 133 North Thir
Meigs County majorette
Ave., Middleport.
lines of two or more members
The gift table was done in a are invited to enter the
pink and white color scheme
majorette contest, to be held at
with a pink .umbrella centering
In
the Gallia County Junio; Fair
the table. With the umbrella on Aug. I. Additional inBlue or Brown Suede ·
were white wedding bells and formation may be oQtained by
pink streamers. Refreshments
contacting Wanda Eshenaur,
were served buffet style from a
department chairman, Box
table centered with a bride
Middlepo~, Ohio
225 N. 2nd
183, Gallipolis, phone 44&amp;-ooo3
MiddlepOrt, 0.
replica with triple candelabra before July 15.
with pink tapers used to either
side. The table was covered
with a white linen and lace
THE ENERGY CRISIS IS THREATENING YOUR WAY OF LIFE
cloth. Cake, punch, nuts and
green and pink bell mints were
served.
Prizes for games went to
Mrs. Norman Yeauger, Mrs.
,.,.
Martha Williams and Mrs.
Reva Beach. Mrs. Edward
'
Bauer won the door prize.
Favors were miniature white
wedding bells.
The guest list included Mrs.
Grace Hawley, Mrs. Charles
Lytle, Mrs. Clair Karr, Mrs.
Martha Williams, Mrs. Norman Yeauger, Mrs. Denver
Rice, Mrs. Reva Beach, Mrs.
Richard Chambers, Mrs.
Robert Morris, Mrs . Bob
DeDonnick, Mrs. Edward
" Bauer,Jean Pernhaggen, Mrs.
Richard Karr, Jr., Mrs. Harold
E. Hubbard, Mrs. Martha
Childs, Mrs. Flossie Aliens.
worth, Mrs. Dale Nicholson,
.Mrs . Eugene Conde, Mrs.
Lloyd Hoffman and Mary Ann,
Mrs. George Oiler, Pamela
Powers, Mrs. Ray Pickens, Sr.:
oi l line must be permitted to move for You can no longer take for
Better Energy
Domestic Exploration
Mrs. Charles R. Karr, Sr.,
ward
at
the
earliest
possible
date.
Not
granted an adequate sup- and Development Must
Administration Needed.
only is the high quality oil from the
mother of the bride-elect, and
ply of. 'energy , and must be Greatly Expanded.
1. Amend National Environm~ntal
North Slope of Alaska needed to sup·
Mrs .
Edna , Matthews,
recognize these facts
Policy Act.
plemen
t
present
domestic
supplies,
but
For the last fo ur years more gas has
Columbus, mother of the
about the national energy been used in the lower 48 states than the gas associated with this oil must
Congress shou!d promptly revieyv the
groom.
National Environmental Policy Act
crisis:
also be added ty the nation's supply of
has been found . Gas being used is not
The following officers will be
installed at Mason Chapter 157,
Order of the Eastern Star,
Mason, W. Va., on June 28, at 8
p:m.: Wanda Gabril$ch ;
Worthy Matron ; Oscar Casto,
Worthy Patron; Betty Rickard,
Associate Matron; Ronald
Rickard, 'Associate Patron;
Maxine Aldridge, secretllry;
Margie Cartwright,
Treasury; Nan·cy VanMetre,
Cliaplain; Phyllis Gilkey,
Marshal; Ann Blake, Con·
ductress; Janet McDermitt,
Associate
conductress;
Josephine Kirby; Organist;
Jacque Gabritsch; Adah;

,.

NOMINEE CONnRMED ,
WASHINGTON (UP!)-~,
Senate conlrmed wllholit'.
debate or dissent Thursday the ·
President's nomination of
Caroll G. Bnmthaver, a native
of Fremont, Ohio, to be
assistant
secretary
of
agriculture.

'

1

Mason 0/ftc~rs
To Be Installed

By UDited Prell IDieJioaiiiUJ
Today is Friday, J1111e 23, the
175lh day of 1172 with 191 to
follow . .
The r.1oon is approaching ll~
!WI phase.
The morning stan are VenU!I,
Saturn and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Mars.
ThOI!C born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
Tbe Duke ·of' Windsor, who
abdicated King ·Edward VII!,of
Great Britain, .wa,a born •Jilne
23rd, 1894. ·He died May 28;
1972. ' . .
.
On this date in hisiorY:
In 1845 the COII&amp;!'ess of Texas ..
agreed to the ~PI!bllc's annexa·
lion by the United States, ·"
In 1947 the HQllSO overroi!fa
veto by President HalT)! S
Truman and enacted the Taft.
Hartley Labor Act, ,
'
In · 1964 General MaxweD
Taylor was appointed U.S.
Ambassador to South VIetnam,
replacing Himry Cabot LOdge.
In 1967 ' the U.S. Senate
cenSured Sen. Thomas Dodd, D. Conn., for misusing campalgt)
funds .

·~

:'!

f '

,

-Ttrma . ,,
-QuaUW ...,let
-FrH

RUTlAND FURNITU.RE

o.u_,.

,..

~- · -~--------. ,
· Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.
138 North 2nd Ave.
Midcjleport, Ohio 4$760
.Please send me a copy
ol your booklet
',' An Action Pro9ram
to Help Correct
the National
Energy Critia".

BAKER

Name ·- - - - - - - · - - - - - - ' - - - Street _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _,

I ·_
I
@~~~L@O/k ---..
~ ·I·.
I
AAS @f? @IXJO@ I
L ----------- Ill
City __

ZiP- -..

fuRNITUR

742-421,1

'

•

•

1

..

�t.• • . •

4 -The Dally Sentlnel,ltiddleport·Pomeroy, 0., June 23, 1972

·Rozelle To Fight
Creation of FSC
WASHINGTON (UP!)- National Football League Corn·
missioner Pete Rozelle was
scheduled to appear today
before the Senate Commerce
Committee, which is holding
hearings on the advisability Of
creating a federal sports
commission.
.
According to an advaric'e text
of this statement, Rozel!e was
to tell the commission that
each sport is intrinsically
different than the others and
"it would simply not be
possible to eslltblish rules
which could be applied fairly
apd reasonably .to sports in
g~neral."
'
.
', Rozelle also denied that
professional sports could be
termed "big business."
"The reality is that profes·
sional sports are, in economic
terms, very small business
·.. "

j

Unbeatens
Collide In
.Pony Loop
Southwestern and Bidwell,
the two undefeated teams l'n
the Gallia-Meigs Pony League,
square off today at Bidwell to
decide the leader of that loop.
Both Bidwell and Southwestern have 3-0 slates. Bidwell, coached by Doyle
Saunders, was expected to
have a powerhouse this year
an d so far has lived up to those
expectations.
Southwestern, on the other
hand, is the surprise of the
league thus far. They started
their season with an upset win
over Pomeroy and have
knocked off Racine and Vlnto·n
since then. Bidwell
has waltzed
~
past everyone. they played,
piling up 28 runs'to only five for
tl1eir opposition.
In other G·M actjon, Racine
plays host to Vinton, Mid·
dleport "A" is at Middleport
"B", and Cheshire goes to
Pomeroy,

On the CoUrt,

Long Bottom
i

Soci'id Notes

Debbie Is
·Just One·
Of the Guys

indeed," the text read. "There

By Violet Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Newlun
and Mr. and Mrs. Mike Martin
spent a weekend in Chillicothe
·with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Robin Nye' and.
family 'of Columbus and Mrs.
· Hans.o~ Holter of Forest~ Run
were visiting Mr: ·and Mrs.
!lank Holter.
Mr.· and Mrs. Gartll Smith
spent several days wlth Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Young,
Paden City, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd McPeek
of Belleville, W. Va., were
visiting Leona Hensley.
Alice Curtis attt!hded the
funeral service for her uncle at
Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins
and Mr. and M.rs. JW!ior
J!auber attended a family
picnic at Forked Run Lake
honoring Norman Weber on his
birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Martin
were visi\lng Mr . .and Mrs.
George Fry at Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Osborn
of Keno visited Ethel Larkins.
Pat Smith spent a weekend in
Columbus with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Groeneveld and Mike Bissell of
Columbus spent a weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell.
Mary Offutt of Parkersburg
visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bissell.

has not, for example, been a ·
year in the history of pro
football when the gross income
of all 26 . NFL clubs in the
aggregate amounted to · the
gross income of a departiilent
store like Woodward and
Lothrop's here in Wash~ton.
"I don't want to overdO this
point-and I know it is not 'the
total answer lo the concept of a
federal sports coinmlssionlxlt li is quite likely that
·.
professional football, one of the
By IRA BERKO\\'
more successful professional
NEA Sports Editor
sports, ranks somewhere
NEW YORK-t NEA)-lt's nobody's business who won
~ll_!nd the shoelace industry in
or lost
.
•
11
economic terms. •
1 p1ayed Debbie (The Pearll Mason three games of
In discussing differences, he one-on-one basketball .recently. We played-in the Queens
said ... "In all of their !uri·
College gy!'l· her home court H began as an odd experi·
W.i!Jental aspects, they differ
ence, and 11 ended that way.
from one another as much as a
I ,mean .. playing against a woman is not like playing
hockeypuckora.bMeball does
agamst B1g Bed at ,theY, although Big Red also defies
from a football. It would
logiC somet!mes. L1ke he'll wear one black gym shoe .
simply not be possible to
and one White gym shoe and explain . "So whal. they're
establish rules which could be
almost the same size. aren't they?"
applied fairly and reasonably
Which brings up a. s~cond point of this strange. intersex game : my gruntmg male ch:luvihism . I was a little
to sports in general. And cross-eyed at the·thought of losing to a broad.
anyone who tried to deal
I had heard about Debbie M.ason. About how she was
authoritatively with the parthe star of the Queens College women's basketball team
ticular
and
individual
last season. while only a freshman . About how she led
problems of each sport would the team to the New York State championship I she was
have to have the knowledge of named the outstanding player ) and to fifth place in the
the Almighty, the judgment of natwnal tournament.
DEBBIE "THE PEARL" WATSON (3) shoots over two
Solomon and the vision of Joan · And I had heard about her . moves, the quick hips and defenders In a workout at the Queens (N.Y.) College
of Arc. I don't find these double-pump _Jumgs that made the crowds roar and that,
gym. She led the school to the New York state women's
qualities
available
in mevJtably, pmne ?n her the nickname, "The Pearl,"
college basketball championship and has been Invited
m admlrmg compariSon to Earl Monroe of the New York
to • tr,yout camp for the American entrv In the 1973
. anybody - not. even in Kmcks.
~
women's World Games.
•
(sportscaster Howard Cosell."
And I had heard that Debbie had recentl y been invited
'·
In hls prepared statement, to participate in the U.S. women's basketball team try·
Rozelle says, "I cannot accept outs. Betwe~n 50 and 75 women have been asked to come someone . in the next game, they usually say sure-out
the premise that professional to the traipmg camp at Parsons College in Iowa from of cunosity.
"The guys don 't take me too seriously at first" she
sports are today inadequately A~g. 26 to Se~t. 9. Sixteen will be chosen to play in the
says,
,amiably. "But, soon they say, 'I'd better ' start
regulated. Indeed, I have World Games m Moscow in 1973.
playm
some defense. By then it's too late."
concluded that professional
So she has been pra~ticing daily indoors, often playing
football is the most over· one-on-one games agamst men. I had never seen Debbie • Men have accepted her basketball playing easier than
play , but as _I laced my sneakers in the locker room , 1 wom ~n . Other women, she say( are often envious of
supervised, over-examined had the feeling 1 was JUSt one of many mes about to her. Why do you play basketball? " they ask .
and over-regulated business in enter the spider's web.
, "Because !like it," she replies. " They sometimes think
America today."
The Queens Col t:ge gymnasium is huge, and baskets I m msane, the way I practice so hard . But I want to
Rozelle concludes, "In brief, seem to gro.w endlessly _above the gleaming floor. 1 saw get alfead. I want to excel. I find that women don 't usual·
I do not believe thilt the Debbie, a slight g1rl, eatmg up a sweat-suiied man at one ly work hard at very many things. They don't under·
problem of reconciling the far ba~ket She is 5-5 and .weighs 112 pounds. She has the stand wh~t 1t .takes . And they'll never know that great
interests of fans, stadium begmmng~ of .an Afro. She -.:ore a knee brace on her left feelmg ot dnvmg through a little. little space and then
th It'
1
leg and, JUStifiably, a T-sh1rt which said, "Superstar" floatm g h1gh up there in the air. "
au or 1es, payers, owners, lfrom the rock opera. "Jesus Christ Superstar"! ,
· After pl~yin~ Debbie,, I had this new realization. For
TV viewers • networks and
It turns out that Debbie has all the moves .! had heard the first t1me m my lite, I was with a woman and she
amateur athletes is going to be abo~t. and more and better besides . She can dribble was JUSt another human being- not si mply simplistically
'
'
effectively resolved by waiting behmd her back and betwee~ her legs. She can shoot in a woman.
the magic wand of federal close w1th e1ther han~; her JUmp shot is up, behind her
We. played bard , we pl ayed competitively, and the
supervision. If a sport cannot nght ear and off her finger-lips before 1-that is oneequality of camaraderie was absolute.
accomplish this Itself, through can catch one's balance from the stutter dribble ' She 's
The blushing difference reared up only after 1 per·
a fair accommodation of the a nimble defender and is said to be a hell of a pas'ser.
formed that sporlmgly chummy gestu re of patting her
interests of each, the sport
She learn~d this from school yards, she says. She saw on the rump after a good play . And I seemed to do that
Itself will bear the penalty." the boys at II, and wanted to join in . She has had no trou- frequently . Out of pure instinct
ble playing in outdoor games. When she asks to run with

I ~our games, Pomez:O~ft ~-"" ""~ ~1!1'
"~
llooift'Oui;r:;'~"""Pt'.,......,.~,.
"" .. ,
n , Middleport ''A'?)''"' at
""', ~.......
~· ~~.. ~ Q:~.;:;1....
.. ,.,..
V o , Southwestern a.t
v ............ ~·
Cheshire, and Bidwell at
t
Middleport "B" were' post.
poned Tuesday due to ram and ·
wel•grounds.
NORTHBROOK, Ill. (UP! )- pro, who holds tbe course
Jim Jamieson and R.H. Sikes, record of 64. Billy Casper and
two guys who know the value of Tony Jacklin had 75s, George
practice, took a one&lt;~trokelead Archer 76 and Julius Boros 77.
Jamieson and Sikes readily
into the second round of the
Western Open Golf Tour- admitted their good scores
nament today because a little were due to the teachings of
_ _ _ _ _ _ _;;;.;;.;. extra work pald off. '
Bob Fry of Davenport,. Iowa,
Both Jamieson and Sikes, and Dutch Harrison of St.
By United Pren International who had been having their Louis, the club pros they
Leading Batters
problems, returned home for consulted before the tourNa1ianal League
g. ab r . h. pel . instruction last weekend.
nament.
'
Cdeno, Hou 55 214 38 72 .336
Fry gave Jamieson tips on
The
result
was
identical
Snguiln, Pit 55 213 23 71 .333
Alou. St.L 52 195 25 65 .333 three-under-par 68s Thursday driving and Harrison gave
Carty, All 49 159 26 52 .327 that placed them in a tie for the Sikes a 21&gt;-year-old putter he
Clmenle, Pill
lead on a day when fl(pSI of the once used. Both worked.
5I) 203 36 65 .320
"If I ever played a roWld
Oliver, Pit 56 235 35 75 .31 9 tournament's big names
Santo, Chi 38 135 26 43 .319 succumbed to unbearably cold hitting every fairway, there'd
Garr,Atl
57 237 3B 75 .316 winds sweeping across the he a Senate investigation,"
Brock, ST.L 58 252 30 79 .313 Sunset Ridge CoWltry Club kidded Jamieson, who exBckner, LA 40 142 16 44 .310
plained Fry got him to con·
acreage.
American L~ague
g . ab r. h. pel.
"It was hard to judge shots," centrale on the tee instead of
Rudi.Oak 53 219 . 38 73 .333 said Steve Oppermann, one of rushing to "get it over with."
Pnlela, KC 55 219 34 7l .324
Sikes said his round was
Allen, Chi 57 200 36 61 .305 three players deadlocked a
Braun , Min 41 135 12 41 .304 stroke behind the leaders. "one of the best putting rounds
May,Chl
55 201 37 60 .299
I've had in four years" and that
Kelly, Chi 45 161 28 48 .298 "You could hit some good shots
Hrper, Bos 53 209 44 62 .297 and make a bad score."
Alomar. Cal 59 241 26 71 .295
There were plenty of bad
Oliver, Cal 513229 27 67 .293 scores, ranging all the way to
Plnsn ,Cal 52 184 26 53 .288 an' 84 by Bob Harris, the club
Home Runs
National League: Bench, Cln
SCIOTO RF.SULTS
18; Kingman, SF 16; Stargell,
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Pitt 14; Wil liams, Chi and
Veteran
race driver Wayne T.
Colbert, SO 13.
~
Curly
Smart
drove Quick Work
American League: Cash, Det
~
14; Jackson, Oak .13: Epstein,
International League
to a three-length victory
Oa:: 12; Allen, Chi 11 : Harper.\.c
Standings
Thursday
night In the $12,900
Bos and Duncan, Oak 10.
United Pre•• International
Challenge
Stakes for ·three·
Runs Balled tn
W. L. Pet. GB
National League : Bench: Cin Louisville
35 28 .556
year-olds at Scioto Downs.
52; Stargell, Pitt 47 : Wahoo , Charteslon
33 27 .550 '12 Smart, who also owns the
Hou. Oliver, Pitt and Kingman , Richmond
34 28 .548 v,
SF 43.
Toledo
Jl JO .508 3· horse, drove it to victory in 2:06
American League: Allen, Chi Tidewater
Jl 31 .500 Jl/2 :&gt;-5. Kalus was second and
43 ; Jackson, Oak 18: Oliver, Syracuse
30 32 .484 4'12 Majestic Cliff third.
Cal 36; May, Chi J5 ; Epstein. Rochester
29 36 .446 7
Sunflower won the first race
Oak 33.
Peninsula
26 37 .413 9
Pitching
Thursday's Results
.
and Fair Ellen the second to
National League : Nolan, Cln . Louisville 14 Tidewater 10 Ill return $156 in the ~aily double
9·2: Seaver, NY 9-3; Blass, Pitt
Innings)
8-l ; Suflon, LA 8-2; McDowell, Peninsula at Rochester, 2, ·on the 9-3 combination. Fair
SF 8-4, Jenkins, Chi 8·5,
ppd ., rain and wet grounds Ellen went off at a 22-1 shot and
American Ltogut: Lollch, Toledo al Charleston, ppd.,
returped $49.80 to win.
Del 11·4: Wood, Chi II -5;
rain
The crowd of 4,082 wagered
Perry, Clev ll -61 Holtzman, Richmond at Syracuse, 2.
$227,273.
Oak 10-5; Bahnsen, Chi 10·7.
ppd ., rain

Two on. Top In

LEADING
BATTERS

0

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west ern
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ALL-TIME HIGH
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services reported Thursday
factory production workers in
Ohio grossed an all time high of
$183 per week In May and total
unemployment in the state
dropped from 5.5 pet. to 4.5 pet.
·However, the bureau said the
down'ward trend in unem.
ployment will probably be
reversed this month because of
high school and college
graduation.

·•

..• ,.......

A thought for the day: Irish
poet James Stephens said:
"Women are wiser than men
because they know less ·~nd,
, Wlderstand more." ·

PENGUIN SIGNINGS

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Penguins of the
he would continue to use Harri· Nalional Hockey League Thursday announced the signings of
son's old putter.
Oppermann was deadlocked . '
with Hale Irwin and Tom
Weiskopf at 69 while former
Masters champion Charles
Coody was in a group of four at
one-underiJar 70.
There were eight players at
par-71 including Ray Floyd,
Doug Sanders, J. C. Snead and
Lee Elder, and eight more at 72
headed by Bobby Nichols.

,, l'H)~

FLOWERS
fpr All Occasions

I

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992·2039
~omefOJ Flower Shop
' B~~ornut Ave., Pomeroy
Mn. Mlll"'d v... Mtter
...

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(Hwt)
·-~~/'·
GIEORGIA•PACIFIC

PRO CONTRACT
MOSCOW,Idaho ( UPI)-Rick
Simmoos, a 6-4 defensive end
with the UniversitY of Idaho
football team, Thursday signed
a professional baseball contract
with the St. Louis Cardinals.

Anifll Watkins

The. double ring ceremony
Mrs . Walt~r Terrell of
Pataskala and Mr . Earl will take place at the Carleton
Watkins of Toledo are an- •Church on the Kingsbury Road
nouncing the engagement and at 7:30 p.nr. August 19. The
approaching marriage of their Rev. Jay Stiles wlU officiate. A
daughter, Anita Jean, to Mr. reception following the
John Walter Dean, son of Mr. ceremony will be held at 'the
and Mrs. John A. Dean of Bedford Youth Center. The
custom of open church will be
Pomeroy.
observed.

Garden Club To Meet

five amateur hockey players to
two year contracts. Signed
were defenseman Jack Lynch,
forwards Ron LaLonde, Bernie
Lukowich and Bryan Walker
and goalie Dennis Herron .

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US Rural Carriers

'
Nothing quite completes a room
like paneling. Give your rooms

that apcclnl decorator tou.ch! Sec
us for punellng that blends with
ench room 's personality.

-

Seeds • Bird Seeds - Oyster Shells
and Grit . Fertilizers . Lime Cement &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt .
Water Softener - Remedies . Salt- ·
Litters· Vaccine. Roofing- Paints
. · Red Brand Fencing - Baler and
Binder. Twine . Sprays . Gates.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

4'x7' PANEL

4'x8' PANEL

$349

$399

Bahr Clothier

When you ·know
it's for keeps
Every Keepsake Dl1mond Ring
comes with a w(jtten

Pomeroy Cement Block Coi .·

guarantH of perfect quality,
protection ag1inst tou and
lifetime trade-in privilagi.

'

''The Department Store of Building
Since 1915."

There is no finer diamond ring.
I'

, Pomeroy

Are You a Mis!iona.ry or a
Missionary Field?" then closed
with pra yer, Mrs. Harold
Smith, 'hostess for July, gave
·prayer before rdreshments
were served by Mrs. Bowers.
Others attending were Mra.
Doris Carter and Mrs. Denver
Kapple.
11

HAPPINESS

In Sunday Times Sentinel

'

Keepea.ke•
,_~OIITIIIPID

tliAMOND IUNO .I

heritage bouse

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it·!

you cando

- The welfare of tne nation and 1ts
• citl:r:ans is directly dependent upor1 ade -

Quate availabilily of energy fuels.
- The nation is in the beginning stage
of an energy crisis due to increasing

shonages of all forms of energy.

- The situatJon is getling worse every
day. Unless the public recognizes the

problem and urges gov,rnment to co operate with industry for an early solu tion, it could go from crisis to disaster
as early as the winter of 1973 -74. In dustries could be shut down because
of lack of energy, resulting in great unempl&lt;lyment ; homes · and commercial
establishments could be without suffi·
cient energy for 1heir daily needs.

being replaced and none ha s been
found to provide for increased needs.
This trend must be reversed as quickly
as possible

energy by the latter half of this decade.
This gas ca nnot be recovered unt il oil
production starts, so the line to bring
out the oil must be built.

1. Producer Rates.

2. Import PoliCie1 for LIQuefild

The Fede ral Power Commission
should encourage an e)(panded e~~: ­
plor~tory program on the North Ameri ·
ca n Continent by allowing substantially
higher rates to producers than those
currently in ellect. The Administration.
Congress, an'd rthe public must under·
stand that the increasing costlOf exploration is inevitable.

Natural Gas and Petroleum
liquid• Required for
Synthetic Gaa.
.
Practical import policies lor liquefied
natural gas {LNG) and the petroleum
liquids required to produce synthetic
pipeline qualitv gas should be estab·
lished as soon as possil)le. The problems
of national security and balance of payments can a'nd must be reconcilttd with
the fact that synthetic pipeline quality
gas and LNG are the quickest means of
e)Cpanding the nation's gas supply.

2. Leaoo Saito.
The amour'lt of federal land made
available for e.~tploration must be in·
creased substantially, both in the Gulf
of Mexico and on the continental shelf
otr the Atlantic Coast. Federal lease
sales must be held more frequently, with
greater areas of land involved.

-The day of tow cost energv is past.
The prices of aU forms of energy must
increase sharply if the nation is to have
the supplies it needs. Congress, the
Administration and the public must be
prepared for these higher energy costs.
and greater efforts must be exerted to
conserve energy' by stopping wasteful
pracllces.
·

rl . Sanetltyof Contract legislation.
Congress should pass the bills now
before it which will : first, assure producers that approved contract prices
and other economic terms of contracts
will not subsequently be changed
Federal Power Commission orCer; and,
second, set more realistic standards for
determining gas prices. These measures ·

bv

Ttlese facls are evident hom an abun ·
dance of studies and official energy
repons. They lead to the inescapable
conclusion that urly development
of adequate aUj,pli" of energy
must have the highnt priority
among our national goals.

I H.R. 2513 and S. 2467), known as1he
Sanctity of Contract bills, can contribute
significantly in proyiding the ecooomic
incentive that producers must have to
undenake.costly drilling p~ograms.

Tht~;

Columbia Gas. System.has formu .
lated an Actio n Program whi ch it
bflieves the Federal Government must
adopt to enable the gas ·industry to deal
elfectively with the growing gas supply
crisis. Wh ile this Action Program is
directed primarily to the ~as shortage, it
will nse the total energy crisii by C()n·
tributing, directly or indirectly, to ade·
quate supplies of othet l)nerQy- nu clear, coal, oil and eloptricity.
'
Your support of the Se actions i s
urgently needed.

Nonhistoric Sources
of Gas Must be Made
' Available P.romptly,
HistOr!c domestic sources of gas cannot
fully satislv the nation's growing re ·
.qUiremen~s . Therefore. the prompt de velopment of other sources of ·gas is
essential.
I

1. Oil and Gu From Aleoka.
Construction of the trans-Alaskan

(NEPA) and amend it to clarify certain
.provisions and adminislrative interpre.
unions. Passed in 1970, NEPA had as
itS objective tf1e improvement Qf the
environment and quality of life. Thia
objective must be achieved, However, because of vlgue standards set
forth in NEPA and because of unwieldy
procedures often used by administra·
tive agencies to implement the Act. the
initial actions unCter NEPA have para·
do)Cically obstructed efforts to supply
the American people with clean burning natural gas. The result is not only a
serious imbalance between the eco logical and Margy ne&amp;ds of the riation,
but. ultimately, an Imbalance: between
different environmental considerations .

2. A Oepanment of
Netural R•ourcea. '

3. Coal G..ifiettion Rt~earch
and Development.
Research and development of the
gasification of coal must be pursued
vigorously in the years immediately
ahead. Coal gasification offers one of
the moat promising sources of gas in
the 1960's and thereafter. Thus, ade quate funds should be appropriated
each year for coal gasificatio.n research.
The existing joint industry-government
progrem for accelerating the construe ·
tio n of pilot ~ants for gasification of coal
should be funded promptly. The indus·
try portion of e1 0 million for t~e first
year of the program has already 'been
committed; the government ponion of
$25 million for the ne.~tt fiscal year is
still pending before Congress.

As you can see, the national erltrgy
~ risis is comple11. It threatent the phys~ •
!Cal, economic and social well·being
of every American. We hive Informed
Congress and the AQministration of our
Action .Program to help correct the
national energy crisis.

4. Joint U.S.- Canadian

What Can YQu Do?

Energy Board.
The National AdminiStration should,
seek to create as soon li!S possible a
· joint U.S.· Canadlan Energy Board to
help coordinat\fi)rograms which would
make Alaskan and Canadien nltural
gas available to the United Stetas mar-

koJ. The joint Boord should be a cleo•·
inghouse for 111ptditing all mailers
necessary for the development and
delivery ot thls gas.

A Department of Natural Resourc11
should be established. The Presida~·s
departmental reorganization plan co'h·
lained in his niessage to Congress on

March 29, t971, and embodied in
Sonote Bill 1431 should be enactod. It
should, however. be amended in accordan ce with Senate Bill , 1025 to
include the Environmental Protection
Agency In the Department of Natural
Resources.

Raise your voice. Your government
and your elected official a are lin·
sitive and responslvlto your needs,
when you m1ke them known.
Write to your S1.;1atora and Aepre.
..ntatiVe. Tell thtm you are concerned abqut our n1tion'a energy·
crisis. Urge each of them to aup·
P~" the poaltlvt tctiont that are
nHdtd if we art to pr.vtnt thla
erial a from bacoming a ditltter.

IOLILOQUV UOO

WIDDINO "I NO 71
,

IONATA 1&lt;400
ALIO 1150 'TO 1t71
WIODIN,CI lltiNQ U . IO

"Every Refrigerator Is NOT

AII'OLLO 11SO
Al..tO TO 10.000

A Frigidaire"

REFRIGERATORS AND ·
ELEtrRIC RANGES
We have sold hundreds of refrigerators in the last 7 Yttrs. Not 1 com.
pressor has been replaced In tht$e 7 years. Quality is· the story! ! ·

·~

Applications For

ANNIVERSARY SALE • • • (25 YEARS WITH US)

NOTEWORTHY PERFORMANCE!

.I

A contribution to the
Clemens Christine Children's
Cottage In Ontario, Canada,
was sent Tuesday night when
the Evangeline Missionary
Society met at the social room
of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ with Mrs . Elwood
Bowers as hostess.
Hoyt Allen, pastor of the
church, presented information
on how the South India Church
of Christ Mission was started.
Mrs. Betty Spencer, president,
opened the ~eling with Acts
18:24·28 on Apollos, the
missionary.
Mrs. Hoyt Allen ied the
devotional period taken from
Matthew 28:111-20 on the topic

Clearance

The ~unior Garden Club of Mrs. Shields aSsisted the girls
the Wlrtding Trail Garden Club with their parade entry.
w!U meet Monday at the home
A truck loaned by Smith·
of Maria Lligar. Glaze will be Nelson Motors and driven by
added tO the ceramic vases and Larry Hudson was decorated
a program on flower arranging with pastel shades of nylon net
mechanics will be given by and daisies. Each girl wore a
Mrs. Robert Lewis and Mrs . long dress and sunbonnet and
Don Thomas.
carried a bouquet of daisies.
The JWlior Club received They wefll acc9mpanied by
firal t, sec~d, third a n d . Mrs. Shields.
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Pceln
S~ow. Girls uhlblting were
Sliari Mitch, Marla Legar,
Jarnle
Johnson,
Linda
Rosenbaum, Kenda Braun,
Linda Kovalchik, Anna Wiles
and Elaine Barnhart. Anna
Wiles aiso received a blue
ribbon for her dish garden .
The United States Postal
AWIX'kshop was held the first Servic.t, announces
an
part of the week with Mrs. John examination lor substitute
Terrell, Mrs. Lewis Shields • rural carrier of record at the
Mrs . Robert Thompson In Long Bottom Post Office.
charge. Posters were also
Applications are now being
ma&lt;!f ((\1' the flower show. Mrs. accepted and no experienc~ or
Terrell, Mrs. Gene Mitch and training is required in the
substitute rural carrier of ATTENDINGCONFERENCE
record examination . Ap· · Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
plicapts must take a written president of The Farmers
test. To be eligible, one must Bank and Savings Company, is
have a valid state driver's attending a conference on
license and a safe driving "Major Issues in Banking"
re~ord . Substitute rural mall sponsored by The Graduate
carriers must furnish and School of · Banking at the
maintain their own vehicles at University of Wisconsin, of
their own expense but will be which he is an alumni, at the
given an equipment main· Palmer House in Chicago.
tenance allowance. Salaries
Reed was accompanied to
,,
range from $30 to $35 a day Chicago by his son, Tom.
depending on the length and
character of the route.
Ninety p~r cent of the u.s.
Applications must be sub-, pear
crop 1s grown in Cali·
mitted before July 10. Thos forma , Oregon and Washing.
interested may contact the ton , according to Encyclopostmaster at Long Bottom. paedia Britannica.
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The WSCS of the Forest Run Bu~ Aldrin, Mrs. Fred Nease ;
United Methodist Church met John.nie Cash, , Mrs. Uswin
at the church Wednesday Nease; James McDivitt, Mrs.
evening, June 21 . A song Edison Hollon, and Walter
"Sweet Hour ol Prayer" by the Kronkite Mr~ . Vernon Nease
group was followed with were given . Mrs. Alfred
prayer by Mrs. Alfred Yeauger gave an article
Yeauger. Mrs. Russ Watson written by Norman Vincent
gave a history of Father's Day Peale entitled "Cure 'for
which was instituted by Mrs. Tension and Nerves." ·
John Bruce Dodd in 1909 but
The group voted to send a
was not recognized nationally donation to The Heart and
until 1916. Mrs. Hanson Holter Hand House in Phillippi, w.
also had a poem pertaining to. Va. to send a child to summer
Father's Day.
camp.
_
Mrs. John Scott was the
Cookies and coffee were
program leader and she chose served 1to Mrs. Fred Nease,
as her topic Prayer and Faith. Mrs. Lawrence Napper, Mrs.
The program consisted of Edison Hollon, Mrs . Denver
stories of famous personalities Holter, Mrs. Vernon Nease,
living now, citing instances in Mrs . Uswin Nease , Mrs.
which prayer and faith were Hanson Holter, Mrs . Olan
great factors in 'their lives. Genheimer, Mrs. Harry Wyatt,
Articles relating to Norman Mrs. Alfred Yeauger, Mrs.
Vincent Peale given by Mrs. John Scott and Mrs. Russ
Russ Watson ; Billy Graham's Watson.
rwiiiiifeO.,oiMiiirsiiii..oiOiiliiianiiliGii,eilniiheiiiiiimiiieltr.•.- - - - - - - - - -..

Look For Our
·semi-Annual

Anita··Watkins 0
Marry fohn Dean

'M

HEADQUARTERS

THOMAS OPTIONED
SAN DIEGO (UPi j-The San
Diego Padres Thursday oplioned second baS.man Derrel
Thomas to their Hawaii Pacific
Coast minor league affiliate.
Thomas was the key man in a
deal that sent pitcher Dave
Roberts from San Diego to
Houston last winter.

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Seed and Milling

Predlcls Unemployment
C.OLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Bur"'!u of Employment
Services says the higher
employment last month wben
the jobless rate fell in Ohio
from 5.5 per cent to 4.5 per cent
probably would be reversed in
June because of high school
and college graduations. The
Bureau also reported factory
production workers in Ohio
grossed a record $183 a week in
May.

.B',_,;
'-ower
'[;' MtSS
' 1'\.arr
ror

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Father's Day History Told ·Missionary Theme For Ladks GrOJti

Nellie · Casto, Ruth; Carol
Workman, Esther; Belly Fox,
Martha; Donna Thompson,
EJecta; Mary Thabet, Warder
and Wendell Kaylor, Sentinel.
Installing officer will be
RIPLEY TO HOST SHOW
Alma Slade of Baltimore, Ohio.
A
gun and antique show,
Otbet installers are: chaplain,
sponsored
by the Ripl'ey
Sadie Balles of Pt. Pleasant;
Jaycees will be held July 1 and
marshal, Jean Cartwright of
2
at the Ripley Elementary
Mason; sentinel, Verlie Work·
School
in Ripley. Doors will
·man of Franklin, w. va.;
open at 9 a. m. both dllys with
warder, Jean Hill of Buffalo,
closing
at6 p, m. on saturday
w. Va.; brganist, Margaret
and
5
p.
m. on Sunday.
Neuman of Racine and soloist
Jacque Gabritsch of Pt.
Pleasant.
All area members of the
Order of the Eastern Star are
cordially inviied to attend the
-1 ~J C'
installation on that night.
1 U#J, I..) f)
Potluck will follow immediately after the m!*)ting.
V
The Worthy Matron Elect is
asking that au offtcers arid
members of Mason Chapter be.
AA·B
present for a practice session
Mrs. Ike Neal, Mrs. Grace on Sunday, June 25, at 2 p.m.
Sizes
Pratt and Mrs. Frank owers
51-2·9
entertained recently 'th a
'bridal shower honoring lly
Karr at the Powers-Pr tt
MAJORETTES INVITED
residence, 133 North Thir
Meigs County majorette
Ave., Middleport.
lines of two or more members
The gift table was done in a are invited to enter the
pink and white color scheme
majorette contest, to be held at
with a pink .umbrella centering
In
the Gallia County Junio; Fair
the table. With the umbrella on Aug. I. Additional inBlue or Brown Suede ·
were white wedding bells and formation may be oQtained by
pink streamers. Refreshments
contacting Wanda Eshenaur,
were served buffet style from a
department chairman, Box
table centered with a bride
Middlepo~, Ohio
225 N. 2nd
183, Gallipolis, phone 44&amp;-ooo3
MiddlepOrt, 0.
replica with triple candelabra before July 15.
with pink tapers used to either
side. The table was covered
with a white linen and lace
THE ENERGY CRISIS IS THREATENING YOUR WAY OF LIFE
cloth. Cake, punch, nuts and
green and pink bell mints were
served.
Prizes for games went to
Mrs. Norman Yeauger, Mrs.
,.,.
Martha Williams and Mrs.
Reva Beach. Mrs. Edward
'
Bauer won the door prize.
Favors were miniature white
wedding bells.
The guest list included Mrs.
Grace Hawley, Mrs. Charles
Lytle, Mrs. Clair Karr, Mrs.
Martha Williams, Mrs. Norman Yeauger, Mrs. Denver
Rice, Mrs. Reva Beach, Mrs.
Richard Chambers, Mrs.
Robert Morris, Mrs . Bob
DeDonnick, Mrs. Edward
" Bauer,Jean Pernhaggen, Mrs.
Richard Karr, Jr., Mrs. Harold
E. Hubbard, Mrs. Martha
Childs, Mrs. Flossie Aliens.
worth, Mrs. Dale Nicholson,
.Mrs . Eugene Conde, Mrs.
Lloyd Hoffman and Mary Ann,
Mrs. George Oiler, Pamela
Powers, Mrs. Ray Pickens, Sr.:
oi l line must be permitted to move for You can no longer take for
Better Energy
Domestic Exploration
Mrs. Charles R. Karr, Sr.,
ward
at
the
earliest
possible
date.
Not
granted an adequate sup- and Development Must
Administration Needed.
only is the high quality oil from the
mother of the bride-elect, and
ply of. 'energy , and must be Greatly Expanded.
1. Amend National Environm~ntal
North Slope of Alaska needed to sup·
Mrs .
Edna , Matthews,
recognize these facts
Policy Act.
plemen
t
present
domestic
supplies,
but
For the last fo ur years more gas has
Columbus, mother of the
about the national energy been used in the lower 48 states than the gas associated with this oil must
Congress shou!d promptly revieyv the
groom.
National Environmental Policy Act
crisis:
also be added ty the nation's supply of
has been found . Gas being used is not
The following officers will be
installed at Mason Chapter 157,
Order of the Eastern Star,
Mason, W. Va., on June 28, at 8
p:m.: Wanda Gabril$ch ;
Worthy Matron ; Oscar Casto,
Worthy Patron; Betty Rickard,
Associate Matron; Ronald
Rickard, 'Associate Patron;
Maxine Aldridge, secretllry;
Margie Cartwright,
Treasury; Nan·cy VanMetre,
Cliaplain; Phyllis Gilkey,
Marshal; Ann Blake, Con·
ductress; Janet McDermitt,
Associate
conductress;
Josephine Kirby; Organist;
Jacque Gabritsch; Adah;

,.

NOMINEE CONnRMED ,
WASHINGTON (UP!)-~,
Senate conlrmed wllholit'.
debate or dissent Thursday the ·
President's nomination of
Caroll G. Bnmthaver, a native
of Fremont, Ohio, to be
assistant
secretary
of
agriculture.

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Mason 0/ftc~rs
To Be Installed

By UDited Prell IDieJioaiiiUJ
Today is Friday, J1111e 23, the
175lh day of 1172 with 191 to
follow . .
The r.1oon is approaching ll~
!WI phase.
The morning stan are VenU!I,
Saturn and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Mars.
ThOI!C born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
Tbe Duke ·of' Windsor, who
abdicated King ·Edward VII!,of
Great Britain, .wa,a born •Jilne
23rd, 1894. ·He died May 28;
1972. ' . .
.
On this date in hisiorY:
In 1845 the COII&amp;!'ess of Texas ..
agreed to the ~PI!bllc's annexa·
lion by the United States, ·"
In 1947 the HQllSO overroi!fa
veto by President HalT)! S
Truman and enacted the Taft.
Hartley Labor Act, ,
'
In · 1964 General MaxweD
Taylor was appointed U.S.
Ambassador to South VIetnam,
replacing Himry Cabot LOdge.
In 1967 ' the U.S. Senate
cenSured Sen. Thomas Dodd, D. Conn., for misusing campalgt)
funds .

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-Ttrma . ,,
-QuaUW ...,let
-FrH

RUTlAND FURNITU.RE

o.u_,.

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~- · -~--------. ,
· Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.
138 North 2nd Ave.
Midcjleport, Ohio 4$760
.Please send me a copy
ol your booklet
',' An Action Pro9ram
to Help Correct
the National
Energy Critia".

BAKER

Name ·- - - - - - - · - - - - - - ' - - - Street _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _,

I ·_
I
@~~~L@O/k ---..
~ ·I·.
I
AAS @f? @IXJO@ I
L ----------- Ill
City __

ZiP- -..

fuRNITUR

742-421,1

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1-The DaUy Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , June 23, 1972

Ca'lr!P Meeting Time

Instructions For
New Plants Given Of Spiritual Renewal
•

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The Wmdmg Trail Garden leaf •s cut from plant With very
Oub met Wednesday at the short p1ece of stem After
home of Mrs. Clarence Heaton cutting each vein, the leaf IS
The meeting was opened by the la1d on roohng medium and
Lord's Prayer 'ied by Mrs held down w1th pebbles or
Heaton Roll caD-Was answered ha1rpms New plantlels appear
by having a house plant ex· where vems are cut
change The president, Mrs
A greenhouse Is 1deal for
Robert Thompson, was in starling planls, as •s a plass or
charge • of the business plastic covered box placed on
meeting She announced the the wmdow sill and shaded
state convention at DenniSon from direct sun An old
University 1n GranVIlle for terrarium or f1sh tank can also
August 8, 9 and 10 Thank-you easily be turned mto a firstnotes were read from the class propagahng case A
Pomeroy Alumm Asaocwllon plastic bag supported by w1re
for Hower arrangemenls for 9r slicks can be used very
the banquet, and also the effectively as a cover for a
Pomeroy Post Office for the smgie rot Sand and verPhllodendron plant placed in m. ~ulite are both Ideal as
the lobby of the post off~Ge
rooting material
Nohce was rece1ved from
Place plants in terrarium
Mrs Kenneth Frazier, SCIP and cover w1th lid or plastic
Chairman, that the Sears wrap, or use clay pot w1th
project had been judged and plastic bag cover When putscored The entry IS the Me1gs tmg several cuttings such as
C o u n t y I n f I r m a r y gerannuns m clay pots, 1nsert
beautification project Mrs around the ms1de edge for
John Terrell gave a report on better .results Until rooting
the progress of the plantings takes place, a close, damp
and more weeding and atmosphere mvst be mamcultlvatmg will be done tained and the cuttmgs shaded
Tuesday evemng at 6 30 p m lrom direct sunbght
Three yt!W trees, donated by
Three or four mch sections of
Mrs. Heaton, wUI be added th1s such plants as diffenbachia
fall and fertillzer will again be may be started by potting each
spread on the entire lawn
section hall way down and
Mayor Wllllam Baronick cover pot w1th plast1c bag
thanked the members for African v•olels may be started
cleaning and decorating the m a pyrex casserole With a lid
entrance of the Beech Grove
Layermg •s another common
Cemetery for Memorial Day way of startmg trees and
Results of the regatta flower shrubs Select a fleXIble branch
show were that members and bury a section of the
had made eight artistic branch near the end w1th the
arrangements and had six tip uncovered, or make a small
potted plints Mrs. Thompson slit m branch and anchor With
received a red In "Twm C1ty small stones and cover w•th
Appreciation" and for a potted SOil Root formatiOn will vary
foliage plant; Mrs John considerably from plant to
Terrell a while In "Free as a plant After rooting cut the
Breeze"; Mrs Earl Thoma a brank and transfer the new
blue for her fern and a white plant to a position outdoors or
· for a potted plant.
,.to a pot for indoors
An invitation was read from
An educabo~l diSplay of
the Rutland Friendly Garden roses was shown by Mrs
Club to atlend their open Thompson mcludmg hybrid
meeting June 28 at 7 30 at the teas of Pe~ce, New Yorker,
Church of Christ Mrs Chrysler lmpenal, and
Thompson of the Wmding Trail Crimson Glory, flor~bunda&amp; of
I aub will be guest speaker Farmers Wile and Florldora
Eight plan to attend
She explamed how to trim and
An article "Nature Waves groom roses for flower show
'~-&lt;l;ln:Re61rth of Tree"~ was exhibition •'
f -read by Mrs. Thoma One The travel prize donated by
special item of iterest was Mrs Robert Lewis was won by
noted that one acre ol young Mrs Aaron Kelton Ribbons m
trees will exhale four tons of the flbwer arrang,menls went
01ygen a year, enough to meet to Mrs Lewis Shields a blue for
the oxygen requirements of IB red roses in a line mass
persons Tips for June gar- arrangement, Mrs Thoma a
• deningread were givmg a lawn red for a coffee table
: another appUcabon of fertiliZer arrangement of pmk roses and
I' unless earlier application Mrs Cora Beegle a wh1te for
included slow acting ureaforrn pink roses m a pitcher for a
1 nitrogens; giving rose bushes kitchen table
• another appllcation of ferAsalad course was served by
Ullzer, keeping faded rose the hostess assisted by Mrs
booms cut off, prunmg each Allard Pratt
back to a fiVe part leaf to mduce a strong break wh1ch w11l
, produce the next bloom,
NAMES OMMITIED
pmching out tips of chrysanNames un1ntenhonally
themums and most kmds of omttted from those attendmg a
annuals will induce branching dinner honoring the 55th
and make a more bushy plant, weddmg anmversary of Mr
branded Iris can be divided and and Mrs W 0 Barmtz mclude
reset after blooming, and after Wilson Carpenter, Mr and
leaves of narcissus and tulip Mrs James Carpenter and
plants turn yellow, clear off Jay, Coolville, Harry Young ,
and flll spaces With annual Gallon, Evan Em1l Kramer,
' flowers or chryssnthemums Plamv1ew, Scott Barmtz of
The program, "New Plants Mason and Gary Barmtz of
From Old," was given by Mrs Belp1e
Thompson. Woody pfanls may
be started by cutting a slit in
the trunk, wrappmg w1th peat
mOllS covered with plastic
The Umted States used 800
When roots appear, cut off and pounds &lt;Of copper 10 each
plant In pot
World War II tank, a ton 10
Leaf cuttings are commonly each large l&gt;omber and 1,000
used for rex begomas A large tons m a battleship

I
l

•

M.OIOROLA
PIRSONA'L PORTABLE
IUCX &amp; WHITE ··T.V.

Herbert Morgan, pastor of
the Pomeroy Seventh-day
Adventist Church, leaves this
week for Mount Vernon to
attend the church's aMual
camp meetu.g beginning
Fnday night
Many area AdventiaiS also
expect to attend the nln~y
convocation Some plan to stay
the ent~re time, liVIng either in
the dormitory rooms of Mount
Vernon Academy, the tents set
up, or in their own campmg
eqwpment.
~

co~~~~~ :rge ~~rth~

are mfonnal prayer grOUJlll
meetmg under the trees or In
family rooms or tents," he
said

Pastor Morgan will be
participating in the camp
meetmg program as a dormitory supervisor. He will
return to his pastoral
responslblitieo July 3.

Bt'rt'-Joaay'S

O&gt;jD':nAR

The charter was draped m
memory of Mabel Cleland
The Angelalres of Lancaster will be appe&amp;rlng Saturday, June 24, at 7 30 p.m. and Sunday,
when Chester Council 323,
June
25, at 10 •30a m at the Vinton Umted Methodist Chur•h This group of Christians will be
Daughters of Amenca, met
presenting the gospel of Jesus Christ m mllSic and preaching. PastOr John Bryant mVJtes
Tuesday evenlhg at the hall
•
everyone
to attend.
•
with Leatha Wood councilor
'
m charge
Thirty memtiers were
present for the meeting durmg
wh1ch Mary Holter was
reported 1ll and Roberta
Ma1dens hospitalized Erma
Cleland presented aU members
By JUDY LOVE
havmg birthdays in May and
June with cards InstallatiOn
'Happy days are here
was planned for the next agam" w1th the arnval of
meeting m July with members summer and sw1mmmg Vato wear wh1te
catwn-bound needleworkers
are
especially Iucky to don
Erma Cleland thanked
th1s
hooded beach Jacket
members for cards, food and
It's
a
breeze to crochet
kindnesses extended to her at
If' By the Sea" IS not your
the time of the loss of her
Reasons for
song,
Ojl.j!n-worked la~y
father-m-law It was an- topperth1s
IS great w1th sumnounced that the books will be mery pants, shorts and even
I:Juying a
audited at the home of Opal long skirts
Hollon Tuesday mght, June 27
The lovely a1ry pattern IS
Potluck refreshments were achieved wtth a scalloped
GRADUATES NAMED
served m honor of members mesh st1tch -11smg a 1/0
air conditioner
Graduatmg from OhiO State w1th birthdays m April, Ma~ Izero 1 crochet hook througp
University on Junr 9 from and June. The birthday cake out The color IS up to you
Me1gs County were fwbert 0 was baked by Margaret Tuttle but wh1te IS the perfect go
Schmoll, Middleport, Donna and recelVlng birthday gilts With all th1s summer
The button-front Jacket IS
Sm1th Evans, Rodney K were Joe Bissell, Goldie
worked
all m one p1ece,
Evans and Jennifer L Men- Frederick, Ethel Orr, Ada Van
startmg
at the neik edge
chim, Pomeroy , 'James R Meter, Erma Cleland and
Lawrence, Portland, and Leatha Wood
James P Conde, Reedsville
Attendmg were Fern
Showalter, Elizabeth Hayes,
I Ultra qu1et
lnzy Newell, Clar1ce Allen, Ada
2 Tnm - only 20" Wide
Morns, Helen Wolfe, Ada
3 Pull-out s1de panels for
Neutzllng, HatUe Frederick,
Seostde news thts summer IS an mry sang sung to
easy mounting mWindow
REVIVAL SLATED
Goldie Frederick, Betty Roush,
the tune of thts crochet, hooded beach tocket A
4
Three
Coolmg speeds
Th' Southern Ohio Crusade, Esther Ridenour, Dorothy
perfect topper over bothmg su1ts or slacks, ot's
5 Automal1c Thermostat
a two-week reviVal, will begm Lawson, Erma Oeland, Leatha
worked tn a scalloped mesh slltch for s1zes small
SATURDAY
6 Van able a11 d1rect1on
Monday, July 3, at the Mid- WOOl!, Zelda Weber, Ada Van
(8 I Ol medtum (12 14) and Iorge ( 16- 18)
7
All exchanger
MEIGS
4-H
Pleasure
R1d~s
dleport Free Will Bapt~t ,. Mete~. Ethel 0111'1 Mary Paller,
- .;' Jf: l ! j
18&lt;1-fl§AyY
lliJtytomplftWJIII
('
~
\
f!l'
'
r
W
•
!'
•
11
h~ld
~n
ilverp•ght
tr.QUJ'lde
Church Guest speaker Wtll be " Margaret TuiUe; Mabel •Van 1
J
't:
SI3H
T
9
ZJnclciadsteel
cablnet,•t
Ute Rev Dr Robert Per!l,ons Meter, Zona Biggs; Elizabeth Saturday Members to meet at The body ts completed f~rst
the
crochetmg
D1rectwns
protective rear gnile
There will be spec1al singmg Wickham, Mary' Showalter, Rock Sprmgs Fa~rgrounds, 10 then the sleeves Fmtsh off are for SIZeS small (8·10),
10
Operates
on an adequately
am
Saturday
the neck and work the but- mediUm (12-14) and large
Services start at 7 30 P m Jean Summerfield, Golda
wtred
115
volt c~rcu11
TAG DAY Saturday, Racme ton band and button hole ( 16 18), so each and every one
Pofhons of the semces w1ll be Wolle, Ddris King, Thelma
band
of you clever-crocheters can
televised on Cable TV The White, Ada and Joe Bissell and Pee Wee and L1ttte League
The 11th rum? Ytu'll own
Boys to meet at Racme
Block your work to meas- sport th1s long. sleeved,
public IS Invited
Opal Hollon
mnt famous air cendltiour in
Elementary With parents at 9 urements before begmmng hooded Jacket thiS season
the world.
the hood Ftmsh off the front You'll need 20 to 24 ballsa m
and neck edges and press so you'll have a beautiful
lightly through a damp cloth. bargam on top of 1t all The
SUNDAY
A Simple to make cord IS crochet cotton IS avatlable
HYMN SING, Stiversv11le weaved through the loops at cham and variety stores
Church, 1 30 p m Sunday by along the neck edge of the everywhere
Own Property Invaded
only
youth fellowship Singers m- hood and last of all, add but- The good ole summerhme
tons to complete your crea· 1s now, ladies, so start humVIted
t1on
Danger on Wheels
EAGLE RIDGE Community
mmg that tune wh1le your
Be sure to check your busy fmgers work thiS seaChurch B1ble School closing
shtch gauge before you be- son's loveliest, lacy cover- Wolld's largest Selling Air Conditioner
By PO!..LY CRAMER
program, Sunday, 8 p m
gm For th•s s u m m e r y up
CAPT CHARLES Cochran, breeze wmker, four 1o o p s
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve I really a worry J IS the
For easy-to-follow direcAthens Police D~partment, equal 1 h r e e mches , four
ch1ldren who are permitted to nde tncycles and b1kes m
Will be at Middleport Pen- rows equal an mch Get your tions lust send fifty cenll to
dnveways and on the asphalt slabs of neighbors Every
tecostal Church, S Third Ave, ga uge nght, and you'll turn Stitch n' Time, c/o your Jo.
one IS expected to watch out for children playmg m the
cal newspaper, Radio City
Sunday, 10 a m He Will show thiS out m no lime at all
streets and we do but on one's own property 1t IS a
Station, Box 583, New York,
Middleport
slightly different matter Could anyone pay for a child
mov1es and have diSplays on
W o r k e d m lightweight N.Y. 101119. Ask for Stikhin'
unfortunately run over and could you ever forget you
drugs Public mterested m C o a t s &amp; Clark's 0 N T Time leanet S34ll and be
We Do Install
had hurt or even killed a l1ttle neighbor' Whose burden
youth drug problem, please "Speed Cro-Sheen" mercer- sure to include your name,
In
Your Home!
and responSibility IS thlS'-ELLEN
IZed cotton, tll1s lacy sum- address and zip code.
attend
GROUP
t,
Women's mer cover-up 1s yours for
f'tl!'!'~'llll' ~" Polly's Problem Jl!'t~Jew •mi&gt;IH!lt cw;w,;
AssocJatJOn, Mtddleport F1rst
~ DEAR POLLY-The day after my husband {( Umted Presbyterian Church,
pamted a kitchen shelf the pamt was dry so I ~ family p1cmc, 3 p m at Royal
neatly
placed a set of glasses on 1t When I took ~ ·
;
Oak Park Family affair
one down to use, the glass had a temble odor of
Potluck
pamt l have tned soakmg them m bakmg soda
and water but w1th no success for the pamt odor
MONDAY
remams Please help me as we cannot use any of
MEIGS
lzaak
Walton League
these glasses and I would really hate to have to d•sChapter,
regular
meetmg, 7 p
' pose of them - VERONICA
m Monday
~1:1. t' ~ ¥rM·..- .;:~~Mi~wm-;;.e,.,.:~~«t•~ ~ifj\:m:%:~~~
JUNIOR GARDEN Club of
DEAR POLLY- My answer 1s for Marla who wrote
Wmdmg
Trail Garden Club Will
that she was crochetmg a ripple afghan and the sides
do not stay straight and even I have made several of meet Monday at home of Marla
•
these and always have stra1~ht and even Sides You DO Legar
NOT skip a stitch at the begmnmg of each row When a
row IS fmlshed you cham one and turn and then smgle
crochet m each of the f1rst two stitches, then skip a
stitch and crochet m the next ll stitches and continue
as the directions say I feel sure her mistake was m
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
sk1ppmg that first stitch and do· hope this helps her
- RUTH

.

The Result Of Disobedience

~Calendar~

--

thj

4,000BTU~

POLLY'S POINTERS

'9900

FEDDERS

By

INGELS

FURNITURE

I

5%

BISHOPS OFFICIATE
LAKF8DE, Ohio (UP!) Bishops Francis E Kearns of
Canton aod Richard C Raines
of Glen Arbor, Mich., officiated
Thursda_&gt;: night at the
traditionaf ordination semce
of the third annual East Ohio
Conference of the United
Methodilt Church here

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVItE
In At 9-0ut At 5

INTEREST
On Passbook
Savings

per cent per year paid on
Regular Pas.book Savings
No Mlmmum Interest from
date of deposit to date of
withdrawal Interest compounded quarterly Interest
paid as long as an open
account Is maintained
S

L[Vf; ENTERTAINMENT

JAN HADDOX AND THE MUSIC
DEPARTMENT

THE DOME
Dining Room
6:30a.m. to 10130 p.m. Daily
Cocktail Lounge
n :30a.m. to 2 a.m. Monday-Saturday
•

Meigs Co. Branch

~

Tilt AliMns CoOOIIy
Slivill!ll &amp; Loon Co
2,. S.ctnd 51

,.,meny,Ohlo
All Actounls Insured To
520.000.00 by FSLIC

Q

·~

Bible Sludy
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave ,
Pomeroy,alflllated wtth S B C
the Rev Fred Htll paslor
Sunday School. 9 30 am ,
morning worshtp, 10 30 am
junior soclely 6• 30 a. m NYPS
6 45 P m Sunday evangeltStlc
meeting 7 30 p m Prayer
meellng Wednesday, 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Corner Fourth and Malo
Middleport Rev Henry L Key
Jr , pastor Sunday School 9 30
am Arnold Rtchards, supt
Mr;~~VA~~~·~,1~N~sWs _
C
Larry
arnahan prestdm,g
min Isler Sunday Bible lecture
9 30 am Walchlower sludy ,
10 30 am, Tuesday, B•ble
sludy, 7 30 P m' Thursday,
mtnlstry school 7 30 p m ,
service meeting 8 30 p.m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
Christ In Chnstlen Un1on Lawrence Manley, pas lor, Mrs
Russell Young Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 am
Evening worship 7 30 Wed
nesday prayer meeting 7 30
Pm

the Sermonette

I Social

You wlll receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, P~lly's Problem or solution
to a problem Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

MIOOlfPORT, 0.

a m Church school, ktn
dergarlen through elghl~
gr•de 10 30 am
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST_ Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr ,
pastor Bible Schoof, 9 30 am,
worship, 10.30, adult worship
service and young peoples
meeting, bolh 7 30 p m Sunday
Wednesday, combined Bible
study and prayer meeting 7 30
pm
'
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy Rays. Wining, officer In
charge Sunday, 10 a m ,
Holiness meeting , 10 30 a m ,
Sunday School Young People's
Legion, 7 p m Thursday, Ito 3
p m , Ladles Home League , 7
p m Prep classes
SA,CRED HEART _ Rev
Father Bernard Kra 1covtc,
pastor.
Phone
992 2825
Saturday evening Mass, 7 30
p m Sunday Mass 8 and 10
' t d
am Con Iess Ions, S1 ur ay 7
7
~o~'t'RoY FIRST BAPTIST
-Robert Kuhn , pastor , William
Watson, Sunday ochool supt
Sunday school,' 30 am ; BYF
6 p.m , Bible study Wed
nesday, 7 p m, choir pracllce,
Wednesday, 8 30 p ln

FEDDERS

u

ST PAUL LUTHERAN, Rev Arlhur C Lund, pastor
Sunday School 9 IS a m ,
Charles Evans. Supt , worship
service 10 30 am Con
f&gt;rma tlon class, Tuesday, 4 IS
to s 30 p m , Jun1or Con
lirmatlon tlass, Thursday, 6 30
to 7 45 p m
SEVEN DAY ADVENTIST
Mulberry
He1ghls,
Pomeroy Herbert Morgan
pastor
Sabbath school
Saturday 2 p m with church
service following ot 3 15 p m
()pen Bible d1scuss&gt;on each
Thursday 7 30 p m
G A A'HAM
U N 1 T E It
METHODIST- Preachmg 9 3D
am, f~rSland second Sundays
of each month third and lourlh

M9fnlng prayer and sermon, S_undays each month, worship
10 30a m Holy communion and service at 7 3D P m Wednesday
sermon, first Sundays, IO 30 evenings al 7 30 Prayer and

11

fNEWS PAPfR ENTERPRISE A5:5f't I

WERNER RADIO &amp;T.V.

Beach Jacl{et Is Breeze
STITCHIN' TIME

DEAR POLLY - When our son was born we received
so many beautiful cards that were much to pretty to
diScard or hide away We bought an mexpenslve bulletm
board, antiqued the frame , cut the cards m mteresllng
shapes and worked them mto a collage After the collage
was all pasted on •t was sprayed w•th a plastic sealer
that can be bought at any hardware store This ls so
bnght and colorful hangm~ m baby's room that even he
likes to look at 1t and as he gets older 1t will become
a so1 t of story book -GERI

' picture (measured diagonally) Motorola Escort
Personal Portable Black &amp; While TV Instant Picture
Sounu Solid Slate Chassis Plays on AC current Plays on Batteries Buill In Ballery Charger Ear
phone Included Snap On Sun Shield Clgarelle Lighter
Connector Cord Included Plastic cabinet In Walnut
gr•ln finish

I'OMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
Rev W H Perno. pastor Roy
Mayer, Supl Church schoool,
'!Sam. worship, 10 24 am,
youlh choir rehearsal Monday
6 3D p.m , Mrs Marvm Burl,
director,
senior
chOir
rehearsal, 7 3D p m , Thursday,
Mrs Paul Ne•se, dtreclor
POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Union and Mulberry Rev
Oyde V Henderson, pastor
Sun~ay School 9 30 a m ,
Raymond Walburn, supt
Morning worship 10 3D a m
Evening service 7 3D p m Mid
wo;::k service, Wednesday, 7 3D
p. GRACE EPISCOPAL Rev Leroy Dltvls, minister

OURS PROMOTED
Sherry A OUrs, daughter of
Mr and Mrs JIIJIIet T York of
Rt. 1, '66rche810r, Wis, has
been promoted to sergeant in
the U S Air Force. Sergeant
Ours, an administrative
spec!Blist at Eglln AFB, Fla.,
serves with a unit of the
Tactical Air Command which
provides combat un1ts for air
support of U S ground forces.
The sergeant,. a 1970 graduate
of Badger High School, Lake
Geneva, Wls Her husband,
Sergeant Roger L Ours, Is the
son of Richard E Ours of
Racine

•

Members Obsetved

the church members wUl go to
Mount Vernon for the Sabbath
seryices There will be no
services at the Pomeroy
Church June 24 or July 1
The camp meeting tradition
Is deeply rooted among Advenllsts Such gathering' 'll'e
held m many atates eVery
summer, according to Pastor
Morgan "Some of our
members have not mlalecj a
camp meeting for many years
They go expectmg to experience spiritual renewal
Utrough participation m the
variOUIS services and activities
at the camp BeSides regular'
preaching services, there are
workshops and discussion
groups on various topics
regardmg Christian life and
church activities. Often there

Mldlleplrt-Pomeroy, 0 , June 23,1972

BlltThDA Y OBiEKVJD
Mrs. Robert Manley ' 1lllll
honored on her birthday
Wednesday at her h!IDI8 ~Mr.
and Mrs O'DeU ManleY, and
Steve, ll'iddlcpcrt.
Mrs Manley received a
decorated birthday cake in·
scribed "Happy Birthday,
Daughter-in-law" from her
husband's .,.rents.
Refreslunenls w~ ed to
Mr and Mrs. R
Manley
and daughters,
cy and
Crystal, Mr. and"Mnn. endeU
Eblln, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs
O'Dell Manley and Steve, and
Mrs. Penny ' Brinker, Middleport J,'ylrs Manley received
a nwnber of gllt.s Sending a
gift was Mrs Lucille Caato

'

The seventh chapter of Joshua records for us the story of an
• Individual who was disobedient to God. ThiS person was Achan
Surely he was a sorrowful person for his sin, after he had committed it, just as man Is sorrowful today for sins, after they have
been conurulted
Following the victory at Jericho, the Israelites wanted to
move fartber into the land of Canaan Joshua sent sp1es to Ai, the
next town ''Go up and Vlt!W the country," he told them
They returned to Joshua and said that Ai was small and
probably three thousand men would be aU that was needed to
conquer the the city.
So Joshua sent three thousand men to Ai to conquer 1t But,
~ ol._vlml ~~,the lsraeUtes came ruMing back to
Joshua with.some of the men of AI running after them
Joshua could not understand why God had not allowed his
!JeOPie to conquer these heathens He prayed to God for understandmg and God answered him God told Joshua that there
was sin among the lsraeUtes and that He was not gomg to bless
them because of this sin In their feUowshio
God bad lnatructed the l!raelltes that none of tbem was to
take anything for themselves when they had conquered Jertcho
But IIOllleone had, and that someone was Achan
'
.
The next day a search was started among the Israelites for
the stolen possessions or for the person responsible for stealing
these things from Jericho
Before Achan was dlscoversd for hill sin, he confessed that he
had seen a beautiful garment and had taken it for himself while
he was one of the warriors In Jericho He had alsO stolen some
illver and gold from that city
In today'a liberal courts Achan probably would be given a
small fine and released, but not so with God's fJrm judgement
upon him. God had instructed that Achan and everything that
belooged to him were to be taken oul.slde their camp and be
stoned and burned Then on top of the ashes there was to be a pile
of rockl as a reminder to others.
Poulbly today we need a "POe of ~" in various
locatiolll to serve aa a reminder that disobedience brings punishment. Multitudes have dlaobeyed God in the past and also are
doing It today and think they wUl not be punished The Bible Is
plain on its teaching that there Is a "HeU" awaiting those who
disobey God.
Ask )'OUI1e1f: Have I dllobeyed Him in not bellevlng m
JeSIII? Hav.IdlsobeyedHim in refualng to repent of sm 7 Have I
cblbeyed Him in neglecting to confeM Him before others? Have
I been guilty of disobedience in my refusal to he ooried in the
watery grave of baptism?

Laurel Cliff News
Notes
Schaefer

BY BERTHA. PARKER
Sabbath School attendance at
the Free Method~t Church
June 11 waa 117. Offering for all
aarvices during the day was
$318.75.
Bible School closed Sunday
with a program which was well
rendered to a good croWd.
Mr and' Mrs Phil Wise,
Mc~onnelsville,
attended
morning services at the local
church, and visited with Mr
Wise's parents, Rev. and Mrs
cec11 Wise.
• Mr. and Mrs William
Jacobs, Columbus, visited
S~nday with Mrs Jacob's
pareot.l, Mr. and Mrs Pearl
Jacobi and attended services
at the local chul:ch.
" Mr. Wyatt Schaefer, aon
David of Marion visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs

Norman Schaefer.
Mrs. Edna F~ulk spent
Smday with the Clifford Klein
famil)' and attR!ed services

Mr and Mrs James Will and
children spent Sunday with
Mrs. Wills' parents, Mr and
Mrs. Marlon Howell, Cohlln·
bus
Mrs Eugene Gill was confined to her home for several
days With the mumps

•
Carmel News
Diirotny

Harden and Vema
Circle called on Mr. and Mrs
Uoyd Roush on a Sunday afternoon
Denver Singer! and two sons
of Parkersburg called on Ralph
Lee and the Robert Lee family
Sunday
Mr and Mrs George Orcle
and dauchter, Cheryl, Mr and
Mrs, James Circle, all of New
Haven, W. Va visited Mary
Qrcle on a &amp;indaJ.
Mrs Robert Lee and Ralph
Lee viii led the latter's sister,
Fern Slanabury at the Kimes
Rest H1111111 in Athena one day

at-the local church"
Mt. LarrY. 'Jaclla Ia a
...~ ...llelit In$, JoMph laat--Mr. and Mn. Robert \Vat.son
Hoapitll; }'ark811hvl. Ria
and
family ol Ken!, Ohlo,IPI'It
ra.~laa
rew
da)'l with Mr and Mrs
Mrl. Dora Halle)', Mra.
lllrdnli Clrd ..-nlly IPIIII a ildlon Roulh.
Owen Tayler al Cbipplwa
daJIII(lnl........
Lallie,
Ohio apent a few days
Mr. . . Mn. Marl! Sllh1,
Sta.$dale, Yillted twtntl7 wilbllr. and Mn. ~ Tayl!lr
with J(r• ..-l ...... MGrman 11141 other relaUVII rectllflY.

'

• MIDDLEPORT PEN - UNITED MINISTRY OF
TECOSTAL - Thtrd Ave, the MEIGS COUNTY, The Un1fed
Rev William Kn11tel , pastor Presbyterian Church, Dw ight
Ronald Dugan, Sunday school L Zav&gt;lz Pas lor Dll'eclor ,
supl Classes lor all ages. George
W Hullon and Rev
evening serv1ce 7 30 p m , Lmson Stebbms Ass I Pastor
Bible study, Wednesday, 7 30 Directors
p
~
' ~erv lces Fnday
FIRST UNITED PRES
1 30 p m
BYTERIAN, Harnsonv1lle,
FREEWILL BAPTIST - Sunday Church School, 9 30
Corner ASh and Plum , Mid a,m, Mrs Homer Lee Supl ,
die por t.
Noel
Herrman Mornmg Worship tO 30 am
pastor
Saturday evt!nlng F I R S T
UNIT E D
service, 7 p m Sunday schooL PRESBYTERIAN, Mtddleporl
10 a m , Sunday evening Sunday Church School 9 30
worship, 7 p m
a m , LewiS Sauer Supt ,
Mormna WorshiP, 10 30 a m
FIRST BAPTIST ol M1d
FIRST
UNITE D
dleport, corner of Stxfh and PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse
Palmer 'streets Rev Charles Morn1ng Worsh1p, 9 a m
S1mons,

pastor

Hoffman

Fred Sunday Church School, 10 am

Sunday

School Mrs Sampson Hall, Supl
Superintendent Sunday church
COM
STIVERSVILLE
school for everyone 9 15 a m , MUNITY, Rev Edsel Hart
Morning worship 10 15 a m , pastor Sunday School service
Evening services 7 30 p m , 10 a m Prayer Meeting each
Wednesday prayer serv1ce, 7 30 Thursday 7 30 p m
p m Extra youth acllvlfles on eventng service 7 30

Sunday, 5 p m , for all youlh up
to StKlh grade 6 30 lor 1~nlor

and semor high students

CHURCH QF CHRIST,
.Middleport 5lh and Ma tn
Raulln Moyer, pastor Michael

Gerlach, Sundpy School

~upl

Sunday

Service, 7 30 p m Youlh
meeltng 6 30 p m Evening
CHESTEfi.CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev Herber!

Grate pastor Worship serv1ce
11 a m and 7 30 p m Sunday
Sunday School, 9 30 am
R1chard Barlon, supt Prayer
meeltng , Wednesday, 7 30 p m

Pomeroy Harrisonville

Road Kenneth Eberts pastor

Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 am
morntng worship and com

••
•

' BRADFORD CHURCH OF

CHRIST -

Chfford Smlfh

mtntSier Sunday School 9 30
am
mo.-nmg church 10 JO
am

Sunday
Ezekiel

Sunday evemng serv1ce

37 11-14

7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce 8

•

m
__
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST - Rev Eugene
p

Monday

.
.

Job

17 1-16

G1tl, pastor W1lham Ba1ley
supt Sunday School, 9 30 am ,

Paalma"
33.12-22:

11:28-1!1

CHURCH OF
Danny Evans

•

Jeremiah ~

30 a m
10 30 am

17 5-8

Worsh ip serv1ce,
Chnsllan Endeavor Sunday
evening.

•

Friday '
Luke

mun10n 10 30 am Sunday
REORGANIZED CHURCH
eventng
youlh
Chr&lt;sllan
en
OF
CHRIST OF LAT
nong worship, 10 30 a m , deaver, 6 30 Worsh1p servtces, TERJESUS
DAY SAINTS- Portland
evening worsh1p, 7 30 p m , Sunday, 7 30 p m Wednesday Raetne Road Ralph Johnson,
Btble School

~:

30 a m

prayer service 7 p m
nesday

.~

12 18-21 ,

mar

Wed

evemng prayer meet1ng and

pastor Herbert While Sunday

10 30 am

pm

a m morning worship 10 JO
am Sunday evening Worsh1p

pas lor Worsh1p serv1ce, 9 30
am , Sunday School. 10 30 am

•

Saturday

Luke'

.

12 22-80,

study 7 30 p.m
School D~reclor Sunday School,
CHURCH
OF
THE Bible
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN
30 am Morntng worship,
NAZARENE - Middleport Pme Grove, the Rev Arthur 109 30
am , Sunday evening
Rev Audry Miller, pas lor , Combs pastor Sunday school, serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday
Floyd Carson supl Sunday 9 30 a m , church servtces, evenmg prayer serv1ces. 7 30

school, 9 30 a m , Mornmg

'

Thurodoy •

pastor Norman C Will supt
9

'

Wedneoda7'
Pronrbs

meeting 7 30 p m Thursday
cho1r pract1ce, 7 p m

Sunday School

'

Tuesday~

Mornmg worship. 10 30 am ,
Eventng worsh1p, 7 30 p.m
Wednesday Christian Youth
Crusade 6 30 p m Prayer

pm
DEXTER
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST CHRIST -

-

IN

worsh1p, 7 JQ p m

m 1unlor
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST soctely 6 30 p m NYPS 6 45 CHRIST
Btble School 9 30 Great Bend, Charles Norris,
worsh1p 10 30 a

p m
Sunday evangelfsti'C
meet ing, 7 30 p m Prayer

meeltng Wednesday, 7 JO p m

Serv&lt;ee

7

30

pm

chotr

pra ct1ce Su nday and Wed
nesday, 7 p m prayer meetmg
and B1ble study Wednesday 7 JO

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PARISH
pm
am and 7 30 p m allernalely
THE UNITED
ANTIQUITY ~APTIST - Prayer meeting Wednesday,
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Freeland Norns, pastor
7 30 p m Rev Jay Stites,
Robert R. Card
Sunday school, 10 am church pastor
Rev Stanton Sm1lh
servtce 7 p m Wednesday
0 L D
D E XT E R
CHESTER - Worship 9 15 Bible study 7 p m
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
a m Church School 10 am
BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE, - Rev Willard Dutcher,
ENTERPRISE- Worship 91 Minersville J A McWalers, pastor Mrs Worley Franc1s,
a m Ghurch School 10 a m pas lor Sunday School 10 a m
Sunday School Supt Sunday
FLATWOODS- Worship, 11 mornmg worship, 11 a m
School, 9 45 am Church Ser
a m , Church School 10 a m
Tra1ning Un1on , 6 JO p m
v1ces f~rst and th1rd Sundays
POMEROY- Worsh1p 10 30 eventng worshtp 7 30 p m tollow1ng
Sunday School
a m Church School 9 15 a m Prayer meeting Wednesday , Second and fourth Saturday
UMYF 6 30 p m
pm
even1ngs, 8 p m services
ROCK SPRINGS - Worshtp 7 30
RACINE
FIRST
CHURCH
BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
10 a m Church School 9 a m OF THE NAZARENE - - LONG
Mr
Robert
Wyall, pastor.
UMYF 6 30pm
Sunday School, 9 30 a m , Sunday School supt Ronald
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Morntng Worshtp 10 30 am
Osborne Btble School, 9 30
Rev Robert Bumgarner
Evenmg worsh1p, 7 30 p m, am , preachmg 10 "5 am ,
HEATH - Worshtp 10 30 Wednesday Sunday School Evemng serv1ces, 7 30 p m
a m Church School 9 30 a m , Super~ntenden l Pauline Me
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
UMYF 7 p m
Cltnlock, pastor Rev Morns METHODIST - Cecil WISe
RUUAND - Worshtp 9 15 M Wolle
Pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m Church School 10 a m
RACINE
FIRST
BAPTIST
am
Morntng worship 10 30
UMYF 7 p m
Charles Norns. pastor Sunday am
Young Peoples serv1ce
SALEM CENTER- Worshtp Schoof 9 30 a m , Mornmg 6 45 p m EvangelistiC serv1ce
' a m , Church School 10 a m worship 10 45 am Sunday 7 JO p m Prayer meeting
UMYF Thursday 7 p m
even1ng worsh1p, 7 30 p m , Thursday 7 JO p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Wednesday even tng Btble
F R E ED OM
G0 S PEL
Rev Forrest R Donley
Sludy,
7 30 p m
MISSIONBald
Knobs
Rev
ASBURY- Worshtp 11 am ,
DANVILLE
WESLEYAN
,
L
R
Gluesencamp,
pastor
Church School 9 50 a m WSCS, Rev
Lawrence
Sullivan
Roger W1lfred Sr, Sunday
lsi Tuesday
paslor Sunday School 9 30 School Supl Sunday School
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m , youth and jun1or youth 9 30 a m , Sunday eventng
a fT1 Church School 10 a m , serv1ce, 6 .t5 p m , evemng worship 7 30 Prayer meeting
WSCS 3rd Wednesday 7 JO worsh1p 7 30 p m prayer and Tuesday, 7 30 p m Ernest
pm
Wednesday, 7 30 p m Deeler class leader Youth
MINERSVILLE - Worshtp praise
SILVER RUN FREE BAP Meeting Wednesday, 7 30 p m
10 am , Church School 9 a m TIST - Rev Howard K1mble, Ernest Deeter , leader
WSCS 3rd Monday, 7 30 p m pastor Sunday schocl 10 am
MT HERMON UNITED
SYRACUSE - Worshtp, 8 Henry DaviS supl evening BRETHREN
CHUR(H IN
a m Church School. 9 a m , se rv ice 7 30 p m Prayer CHRIST- Rev Roberl Shook
Prayer and Bible Sludy meeting Thurday 7 30 p m
1paslor J .Sunday Schooh! 1J 30·,.
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
"
CHESTER
CHURCH
'
OF
am , RGy Pooler, supl 1 Alfred '
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
GOD- Rev James Satterfield, Wolfe assI supt morning:-.
Rov W Dale McClurg
pastor Sunday school 9 30 worsh1p 11 a m
evemng
Rev Frank Cheesebrew
a m worsh1p serv1ce 11 am
sermon 7 30 p m alternatlnQ
Rev Martha Ann Mallner
ng service, 7 prayer • each Sunday Class meeting l I
BETHANY (Dorcas I - eveni
serv1ce and youth se rv 1ce, a m
allernatlng
~unday
Worship 9 30 a m , Church Thursday, 7 p m
morn1ngs
Alfred
Wolfe
School 10 30 a m
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
iayleader
Chrlsl1an
Endeavor
CARMEL - Worshtp 11
Homer Stefhens, pastor 7 JO p m Sundar Roge r
a m , lsi and Jrd Sundays -Sunday
Schoo, 9 30 a m , Buckley, preSJden Praye r
Church School, 10 a m
mornmg worsh1p, 10 30 am , meehng, Wednesday 7 30 p m
APPLE GROVE - Worsh ip, Rober! Bobo Sunday school Board meellng llrsl Monday
7 JO p..m , church school, 9 30
am ,

mid week

serv1ce,

Wednesday, 8 p m
EAST LETART - Worship,
lOa m , firs I and lhlrd Sundays
9 a m , second and fourth
Sundays church school. 9 a m ,
llrst and third Sundays 10 a m ,

sup!

Sunday evening serv1ce

7 30 Youth meeltng Monday, 7

each monlh 7 JO p m

p m Mid week service Wed
nesday, 7 30 p m
WHITE'S CHAPEL
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Cooiv&gt;lle
RD Rev Roy Deeter,
THE NAZARENE- Rev M C pastor Sunday
school, 9 30
Larimore, paStor Bob Moore, a m worship service 10 30
Sunday School Supl Sunday a m Btble study and prayer

serv.lces, 9 a m , Sunday School

9 45 a m Bible study every

Thursday, 7 lO p m
NORTH BETHEL- Worship
11 a m , Church School 10 a m
ALFRED - Sund~y school ,
9 45 a m each Sunday,
preaching at II am. each
Sunday Prayer meeting, 7 45
p m Wednesday , WSCS, 8 p m
on third Tuesday each month
REEDSVILLE - Sunday
school, 9 30, preaching, 7 30
p m Sunday, prayer meeting,
7 JO ~ m Tuesday. WSCS. 7 30
llrsl Thursday each month
SILVER RIDGE - Wonshlp,
10 am 1 Church School, 9 am
TUPPERS PLAINS
Worship' a.m .. Church School
10 am
•
KEftiOCHURCH OF CHRIST,
Hobart Newell, supl Services
weekly, ' 30 am. on Sunday
Preaching first and third
Sundays of month by Clifford
Smith, 9·30 am.
HOBSON CHRISTIA-N
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll,
PISlOf Sunday School, ' 30
a m , , Leonard Gilmore, first
elder, evening service, 7 30
p m
Wednesday prayar
meellng, 7 lO p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Roc! no Route 2 The
Rev Charln Hand, pastor
Sunday school, 9· 45 a m ,
morning worship, 11 a m
Evening oervlces, Thutsdof
and Friday, 7 30
IEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David
Jnell, pastor Bible study, 9 30
• ·"'·' morning worlhlp, 10 30,
tvllllng worohlp, 6 30 p m
'Nidneiilly 8Iblt sludy, 7 30
pm

. "Okay, we've landed, now let's get out and look at this old moon!"
My two small boys are at it again. Today, the old gray stump is a 81J(1Ceshtp Tomorrow tt may be a fort or a castle. More practically, at lunchtime
tt' s a picnic table.
Rtght now the stde yard u my sons' world. Behind a picket fence, tlifw
roam the seas and sky ' 1n tmagtna.tion, the SO'Und of their VOICes rea.Bauring
me of thetr safety
'
It won't always be th18 way. Someday, they'll leave the back yard forever, swMhbuckllng through a world of schools and camps, fnenda and
part1es.
How strange 1t will be-not to gu1de their every footJitep. Where am
I to get the courageF Fortunately, I can anBWer my oum question. I htwe
my church, and so do my boys. As a source of great goodness, it will guide
them aU thetr days.
Scilpturn ~elttled by rhe American llbte Socltly

Meigs County Branch

GAULS SHAK£ HAVEN
• Tra1ler Rentals and Suppltes
St R,t 7 "
: •• , .!=hester, Oh1o

.·

"&gt;

T

,....

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

296JW.: Second .., Pomero\11 " 1&lt;!iia991&gt;!38115

WDWICK'S 'MARKET ;. "" . .

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH

Mem ber of the Big 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plams
Ph . 667-3280

" We Sponsor Jesus"
Rev Stan Cra1g, Pastor

'

.

.

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

MARK V STORE

Electnc Mol or Repa 1r
SlOW Mam
992 5750

M•ddleport, Oh1o

SWISHER &amp; WHSE

second and fourlh Sundays School, classes for all ages 9 30
M1d week service Wednesday, am , morning worship 10 45 serv1ce Wednesday, 7 JO p m
8pm
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p m ,
GREAT BEND- Worshtp 11 evangel1st1c service Sunday,
RUTLAND
am , 2nd and 4th Sundays 7 30 p m Mid week prayer
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST

Church School , 10 am
LETART FALLS- Worshtp
10 a m , Church School 9 a m
MORNING STAR- Worship
9 30 a m , Church School 10 30
a m , Mid Week Service,
Wednesday, 8&lt;1&gt; m
MORSE CHAPEL- Worship
II am, lsi and 3rd Sundays
Churc~ School , 10 am
PORTLAND- Worship 7 30
p m 1 Church School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - Worship, 11 a m
2nd and 4th Sundays , Church
School 10 am
WESLEYAN (Racine) Worship, 11 am , Church
School, 10 am
"
UMYF for all churches of the
Soulhern Clusler, 7 30 p m
each Sunday al l~e Youth
Cenler lOok Grove Road l
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Jocob Lehmon
Rev Stondley Brandum
JOPPA - ,Worship 10 a m ,
Church School 9 e m , Prayer
Meellng, Wednesday, 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM - Church

'

CARLETON CHURCH -

Kmgsbury Road
Sunday
School, 9 30 am, Ralph Carl,
supt Worship serv1ce, 10 30

OHIO VAUEY BAKING CO.

Rexall Drugs
We F1ll All Doctors' Prescnpt10ns
Pomeroy
992 2955

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

ROYAL OAK PARK

GAUL'S MARKET

meellng, Wednesday 7 30 p m

- . Rev Samuel Jackson
Family RecreatiOn
M1ssionary meeting , second pastor Sunday School, 10 am '
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
'
Sw1mmmg,
Campmg
Mrs Gertrude Buller, supt
Prayer
Service,
1
30
p
m
UNITED FAITH NON •
DENOMINATIONAL - Rev preachmg service. 2 p m.
THE FARMERS BANK
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Robert Smith, pastor Sunday
school, 9 30 a m , class leader, CHRIST- Sunday school, 9 3D
AND SAVINGS CO.
Leo Hill , worship service, 10 30 a m V H Braley, supl '
a !11 , church, 7 30 p m prayer commun1on and devotions '
Pomeroy Member FDIC&amp;
10 30 a m Regular board
meellng Wednesday
.Federal Reserve System
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN meeting 7 30, third Saturday
IN CHRIST-E ldon R !liake. each month
THE RUTLAND COM .
pas lor Sunday School, 10 a m ,
Rev
HEINER'S BAKERY
Winnie Holsinger, supt Mer MUNITY CHURCH ning sermon, 11 a m , Evenmg RIChard Dubbeld, pastor
Bakers of Good Bread
serv1ce Christian Endeavor, School. 9 30 a m , Worship
7 lOp m Mrs Lyda Chevalier, serv1ce, 11 am , Wednesday
Huntmgton, W Va
prestdent Soog service and prayer meellng 7 30 p m
Sunday
night
worship,
7
30
sermon, 8 20 Mid Week prayer
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
meelmg Wednesday 7 JO p m
~ RACINE FOOD MARKET
Mrs Marie Holsinger. class THE NAZARENE - Rev
Lloyd D Grimm, Jr , pastor
leader
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT Sunday School, 9 30 a m •
The Store W1th A Heart
CHURCH - Harrisonville Mornln~ worship, 10 30 a m '
Ph 949 3342
Rac1ne
.
Road, Rev Roy Taylor, pas Iori Young people's service, 6 45
p
m
EvangelistiC
servic;:es
Henry Eblin, Sunday Schoo 7 30 p m Wednesday evening'
&gt;Up! &gt;unday School, 9:30 a m ,
evening worship, 7 30 p m service 7 30 p m
GOE~LEIN READY MIX CO.
Prayer and praise service,
MASON COUNTY
Thursday. 7 30 P m
TH.E HILAND CHIIPEL
Middleport
Phone 992 3284
COMMUNITY CHURCH,
George Casto, pastor Sunday'
De • ter - Wors hi p serv 1ces School,
9 30, evening worship
~a~rday and Sunday, 7 30 7 30 Thursday evening praye r'
• service 7 30 p m
HEM L 0 C K
G R 0 V E MASON FIRST BAPTIST M&amp;R FOODLINER
CHRISTIAN - David Stau!Ter, Second and Pomeroy Sis Sta n
'
paslor, Stanford Slocklon, supt Craig, pastor. Sunday schoo I,
Middleport, Oh1o
Morning worship, 9 30 am , 9 45 am , worship service, 1I'
church school. 10 30 am , 0 m , training union, 6 30 p m
young peoples meellng, 6 JO evening worship service, 7 30'
p m , evening vlorshlp, 7 30 p.m Mid-week prayer service
MONTGOMERY WARD
'
Blble~vdy, Wednesday, 7 30 Wednesday, 7 30 p m
pm
CAtALOGUE STORE
MT. UNION BAPTIST FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Rev Cecil Cox, pastor Sunday -Letart Route I, the Rev Sla n
Mr and Mrs Charles R Sheets
school supl, Joe Sayre Sunday Craig. pastor Sunday school
106 Co~rt St. Pomeroy 992-3001
school, ' 45 a m , Sunday 9 JO a m prayer and Blbl e'
evening worship, 7 30 Wed· sludy, 7 JO,p m Collage praye r
nesday pfayer and Bible study, servtce, Tuesday, 10 a m
SADIE'S MARKET
7 30 P m
_ · - • worship service, Friday, 7 30'
TUPPERS
PLAINS pm
Meats and Groceries
CHRISTIAN CHURCH MASON CHURCH 0 F ·
Eugene Underwood, pastor, CHRIST- Loren T Slephens
992 3986
Syracuse
Howard Caldwell, Jr , Sundar. minister Worship, 10 a m '
School Supt, Sunday Schoo, Bible study, 11 15 am, evenln '
9 30 a m , Morning sermon, worship, 7 JO p m Mid wee
10 3D a m , Sunday evening service, Wedntsdey, 7 30 p m
RIDENOUR SUPPLY
servl,e. 7 P m
MASON ASSEMBLY 0 F
LETART FALLS ,UNITED GOD- Second Sl, Mason, W
Furniture and Appliances
BRETHREN - Rev Robert Va Chester Tennant, paslor
Ph. 985 3308
.
Chester, 0,
Shook. pas lor, Herschel Norris, Sunday Khool, 10 a m , mo
supt. Sunday school, 9 lOam , nlng worship, 11 a m r .
morning sermon. 10 30 a m , evangelistic service, 7 30 p 111'
Attend the Church of Your Choice
evening sertnolt, 7 lO alter _fllble sludy and prayer servlc
nallng each Synday Prayer Wednesday, 7 30 p m Phon••e ..
BEN FRANKLIN STORE
service, Wednesday, 7 ~ p m 773 5133
Ph 992 3496
Prayer meeting, 7 30 P m HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
Pomeroy
all.rnatlng Sundays
CHRIST In Chrlsllan Union .C.HESHIR£ CHURCH OF Rev O'Dell Manley, pastor
GOD OF PROPHECY, G P Sund'y Khool,' 30a m., Roger
Smith, pastor Sunday School, Manley, supt , evening -vice,
NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
10 I m ; Arthur Htn1011, Supt • 7 30 Wtdneoday evtnlnII
Mornln_11 Worship 11 a.m , prayer meeting, 7 30 p m
100 Years in Pomeroy
Young Peoples -viet, 7 P m • Sunday evening youllt -vice
Kermit Walton
Evening service, 7·30 p.m , 6 45 with Macy Lou C.rler
'
Wtdn,sday Mld-Wetl&lt; Prayer l.. der. No Tuasday service I
.

.

Chester, Oh10

BOGGS EQUIPMENT
Sales AI Its Chalmers - Serv1ce
Farm Industrial - Lawn · Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435 .
·.

DICK'S GROCERY

.

1Formerly Domlgans)

New Owner- Dick Sargent '
Old U S 33
Ph 992- 735
Stop In and See Us

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
Oh1o's Oldest DOdge Dealer
Middleport, Oh1o

'

'

AU WEATHER ROOfiNG
AND CONSTRUCTION CO. .
DB A ANTHONY

.... ,

.

PLUMBING and HEATING
337 N. 2nd Middleport 992-J!..SO

CARPEH.AND, INC.

Wall to- Wall Carpet Specialists
116 W Mam
Ph 992 7590
..free Est1males Guaranteed Installation .

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

-

.

.

I:
~

.

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus, 0
307 Spring Ave
Ph . 992-2318

Pomeroy

SEARS
Authorized Catalog Merchanf
Louis W Osborne
220 E. Malo Pomeroy Ph. 992-2178

.

e.

MIDDLPORT BOOK STORE

.:'
'

Church and Olfice Supplies· Gifts
992 2641
Middleport

F. J. WI! I ACE, JEWELERS
Bulova Watches· Sales &amp; Service ,
1.86 N Second
Middleport

.
'

-

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Ser_ving the Meigs-Mason Artl
.......tfW...
.
~·-

�'
••

•

1-The DaUy Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , June 23, 1972

Ca'lr!P Meeting Time

Instructions For
New Plants Given Of Spiritual Renewal
•

..

The Wmdmg Trail Garden leaf •s cut from plant With very
Oub met Wednesday at the short p1ece of stem After
home of Mrs. Clarence Heaton cutting each vein, the leaf IS
The meeting was opened by the la1d on roohng medium and
Lord's Prayer 'ied by Mrs held down w1th pebbles or
Heaton Roll caD-Was answered ha1rpms New plantlels appear
by having a house plant ex· where vems are cut
change The president, Mrs
A greenhouse Is 1deal for
Robert Thompson, was in starling planls, as •s a plass or
charge • of the business plastic covered box placed on
meeting She announced the the wmdow sill and shaded
state convention at DenniSon from direct sun An old
University 1n GranVIlle for terrarium or f1sh tank can also
August 8, 9 and 10 Thank-you easily be turned mto a firstnotes were read from the class propagahng case A
Pomeroy Alumm Asaocwllon plastic bag supported by w1re
for Hower arrangemenls for 9r slicks can be used very
the banquet, and also the effectively as a cover for a
Pomeroy Post Office for the smgie rot Sand and verPhllodendron plant placed in m. ~ulite are both Ideal as
the lobby of the post off~Ge
rooting material
Nohce was rece1ved from
Place plants in terrarium
Mrs Kenneth Frazier, SCIP and cover w1th lid or plastic
Chairman, that the Sears wrap, or use clay pot w1th
project had been judged and plastic bag cover When putscored The entry IS the Me1gs tmg several cuttings such as
C o u n t y I n f I r m a r y gerannuns m clay pots, 1nsert
beautification project Mrs around the ms1de edge for
John Terrell gave a report on better .results Until rooting
the progress of the plantings takes place, a close, damp
and more weeding and atmosphere mvst be mamcultlvatmg will be done tained and the cuttmgs shaded
Tuesday evemng at 6 30 p m lrom direct sunbght
Three yt!W trees, donated by
Three or four mch sections of
Mrs. Heaton, wUI be added th1s such plants as diffenbachia
fall and fertillzer will again be may be started by potting each
spread on the entire lawn
section hall way down and
Mayor Wllllam Baronick cover pot w1th plast1c bag
thanked the members for African v•olels may be started
cleaning and decorating the m a pyrex casserole With a lid
entrance of the Beech Grove
Layermg •s another common
Cemetery for Memorial Day way of startmg trees and
Results of the regatta flower shrubs Select a fleXIble branch
show were that members and bury a section of the
had made eight artistic branch near the end w1th the
arrangements and had six tip uncovered, or make a small
potted plints Mrs. Thompson slit m branch and anchor With
received a red In "Twm C1ty small stones and cover w•th
Appreciation" and for a potted SOil Root formatiOn will vary
foliage plant; Mrs John considerably from plant to
Terrell a while In "Free as a plant After rooting cut the
Breeze"; Mrs Earl Thoma a brank and transfer the new
blue for her fern and a white plant to a position outdoors or
· for a potted plant.
,.to a pot for indoors
An invitation was read from
An educabo~l diSplay of
the Rutland Friendly Garden roses was shown by Mrs
Club to atlend their open Thompson mcludmg hybrid
meeting June 28 at 7 30 at the teas of Pe~ce, New Yorker,
Church of Christ Mrs Chrysler lmpenal, and
Thompson of the Wmding Trail Crimson Glory, flor~bunda&amp; of
I aub will be guest speaker Farmers Wile and Florldora
Eight plan to attend
She explamed how to trim and
An article "Nature Waves groom roses for flower show
'~-&lt;l;ln:Re61rth of Tree"~ was exhibition •'
f -read by Mrs. Thoma One The travel prize donated by
special item of iterest was Mrs Robert Lewis was won by
noted that one acre ol young Mrs Aaron Kelton Ribbons m
trees will exhale four tons of the flbwer arrang,menls went
01ygen a year, enough to meet to Mrs Lewis Shields a blue for
the oxygen requirements of IB red roses in a line mass
persons Tips for June gar- arrangement, Mrs Thoma a
• deningread were givmg a lawn red for a coffee table
: another appUcabon of fertiliZer arrangement of pmk roses and
I' unless earlier application Mrs Cora Beegle a wh1te for
included slow acting ureaforrn pink roses m a pitcher for a
1 nitrogens; giving rose bushes kitchen table
• another appllcation of ferAsalad course was served by
Ullzer, keeping faded rose the hostess assisted by Mrs
booms cut off, prunmg each Allard Pratt
back to a fiVe part leaf to mduce a strong break wh1ch w11l
, produce the next bloom,
NAMES OMMITIED
pmching out tips of chrysanNames un1ntenhonally
themums and most kmds of omttted from those attendmg a
annuals will induce branching dinner honoring the 55th
and make a more bushy plant, weddmg anmversary of Mr
branded Iris can be divided and and Mrs W 0 Barmtz mclude
reset after blooming, and after Wilson Carpenter, Mr and
leaves of narcissus and tulip Mrs James Carpenter and
plants turn yellow, clear off Jay, Coolville, Harry Young ,
and flll spaces With annual Gallon, Evan Em1l Kramer,
' flowers or chryssnthemums Plamv1ew, Scott Barmtz of
The program, "New Plants Mason and Gary Barmtz of
From Old," was given by Mrs Belp1e
Thompson. Woody pfanls may
be started by cutting a slit in
the trunk, wrappmg w1th peat
mOllS covered with plastic
The Umted States used 800
When roots appear, cut off and pounds &lt;Of copper 10 each
plant In pot
World War II tank, a ton 10
Leaf cuttings are commonly each large l&gt;omber and 1,000
used for rex begomas A large tons m a battleship

I
l

•

M.OIOROLA
PIRSONA'L PORTABLE
IUCX &amp; WHITE ··T.V.

Herbert Morgan, pastor of
the Pomeroy Seventh-day
Adventist Church, leaves this
week for Mount Vernon to
attend the church's aMual
camp meetu.g beginning
Fnday night
Many area AdventiaiS also
expect to attend the nln~y
convocation Some plan to stay
the ent~re time, liVIng either in
the dormitory rooms of Mount
Vernon Academy, the tents set
up, or in their own campmg
eqwpment.
~

co~~~~~ :rge ~~rth~

are mfonnal prayer grOUJlll
meetmg under the trees or In
family rooms or tents," he
said

Pastor Morgan will be
participating in the camp
meetmg program as a dormitory supervisor. He will
return to his pastoral
responslblitieo July 3.

Bt'rt'-Joaay'S

O&gt;jD':nAR

The charter was draped m
memory of Mabel Cleland
The Angelalres of Lancaster will be appe&amp;rlng Saturday, June 24, at 7 30 p.m. and Sunday,
when Chester Council 323,
June
25, at 10 •30a m at the Vinton Umted Methodist Chur•h This group of Christians will be
Daughters of Amenca, met
presenting the gospel of Jesus Christ m mllSic and preaching. PastOr John Bryant mVJtes
Tuesday evenlhg at the hall
•
everyone
to attend.
•
with Leatha Wood councilor
'
m charge
Thirty memtiers were
present for the meeting durmg
wh1ch Mary Holter was
reported 1ll and Roberta
Ma1dens hospitalized Erma
Cleland presented aU members
By JUDY LOVE
havmg birthdays in May and
June with cards InstallatiOn
'Happy days are here
was planned for the next agam" w1th the arnval of
meeting m July with members summer and sw1mmmg Vato wear wh1te
catwn-bound needleworkers
are
especially Iucky to don
Erma Cleland thanked
th1s
hooded beach Jacket
members for cards, food and
It's
a
breeze to crochet
kindnesses extended to her at
If' By the Sea" IS not your
the time of the loss of her
Reasons for
song,
Ojl.j!n-worked la~y
father-m-law It was an- topperth1s
IS great w1th sumnounced that the books will be mery pants, shorts and even
I:Juying a
audited at the home of Opal long skirts
Hollon Tuesday mght, June 27
The lovely a1ry pattern IS
Potluck refreshments were achieved wtth a scalloped
GRADUATES NAMED
served m honor of members mesh st1tch -11smg a 1/0
air conditioner
Graduatmg from OhiO State w1th birthdays m April, Ma~ Izero 1 crochet hook througp
University on Junr 9 from and June. The birthday cake out The color IS up to you
Me1gs County were fwbert 0 was baked by Margaret Tuttle but wh1te IS the perfect go
Schmoll, Middleport, Donna and recelVlng birthday gilts With all th1s summer
The button-front Jacket IS
Sm1th Evans, Rodney K were Joe Bissell, Goldie
worked
all m one p1ece,
Evans and Jennifer L Men- Frederick, Ethel Orr, Ada Van
startmg
at the neik edge
chim, Pomeroy , 'James R Meter, Erma Cleland and
Lawrence, Portland, and Leatha Wood
James P Conde, Reedsville
Attendmg were Fern
Showalter, Elizabeth Hayes,
I Ultra qu1et
lnzy Newell, Clar1ce Allen, Ada
2 Tnm - only 20" Wide
Morns, Helen Wolfe, Ada
3 Pull-out s1de panels for
Neutzllng, HatUe Frederick,
Seostde news thts summer IS an mry sang sung to
easy mounting mWindow
REVIVAL SLATED
Goldie Frederick, Betty Roush,
the tune of thts crochet, hooded beach tocket A
4
Three
Coolmg speeds
Th' Southern Ohio Crusade, Esther Ridenour, Dorothy
perfect topper over bothmg su1ts or slacks, ot's
5 Automal1c Thermostat
a two-week reviVal, will begm Lawson, Erma Oeland, Leatha
worked tn a scalloped mesh slltch for s1zes small
SATURDAY
6 Van able a11 d1rect1on
Monday, July 3, at the Mid- WOOl!, Zelda Weber, Ada Van
(8 I Ol medtum (12 14) and Iorge ( 16- 18)
7
All exchanger
MEIGS
4-H
Pleasure
R1d~s
dleport Free Will Bapt~t ,. Mete~. Ethel 0111'1 Mary Paller,
- .;' Jf: l ! j
18&lt;1-fl§AyY
lliJtytomplftWJIII
('
~
\
f!l'
'
r
W
•
!'
•
11
h~ld
~n
ilverp•ght
tr.QUJ'lde
Church Guest speaker Wtll be " Margaret TuiUe; Mabel •Van 1
J
't:
SI3H
T
9
ZJnclciadsteel
cablnet,•t
Ute Rev Dr Robert Per!l,ons Meter, Zona Biggs; Elizabeth Saturday Members to meet at The body ts completed f~rst
the
crochetmg
D1rectwns
protective rear gnile
There will be spec1al singmg Wickham, Mary' Showalter, Rock Sprmgs Fa~rgrounds, 10 then the sleeves Fmtsh off are for SIZeS small (8·10),
10
Operates
on an adequately
am
Saturday
the neck and work the but- mediUm (12-14) and large
Services start at 7 30 P m Jean Summerfield, Golda
wtred
115
volt c~rcu11
TAG DAY Saturday, Racme ton band and button hole ( 16 18), so each and every one
Pofhons of the semces w1ll be Wolle, Ddris King, Thelma
band
of you clever-crocheters can
televised on Cable TV The White, Ada and Joe Bissell and Pee Wee and L1ttte League
The 11th rum? Ytu'll own
Boys to meet at Racme
Block your work to meas- sport th1s long. sleeved,
public IS Invited
Opal Hollon
mnt famous air cendltiour in
Elementary With parents at 9 urements before begmmng hooded Jacket thiS season
the world.
the hood Ftmsh off the front You'll need 20 to 24 ballsa m
and neck edges and press so you'll have a beautiful
lightly through a damp cloth. bargam on top of 1t all The
SUNDAY
A Simple to make cord IS crochet cotton IS avatlable
HYMN SING, Stiversv11le weaved through the loops at cham and variety stores
Church, 1 30 p m Sunday by along the neck edge of the everywhere
Own Property Invaded
only
youth fellowship Singers m- hood and last of all, add but- The good ole summerhme
tons to complete your crea· 1s now, ladies, so start humVIted
t1on
Danger on Wheels
EAGLE RIDGE Community
mmg that tune wh1le your
Be sure to check your busy fmgers work thiS seaChurch B1ble School closing
shtch gauge before you be- son's loveliest, lacy cover- Wolld's largest Selling Air Conditioner
By PO!..LY CRAMER
program, Sunday, 8 p m
gm For th•s s u m m e r y up
CAPT CHARLES Cochran, breeze wmker, four 1o o p s
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve I really a worry J IS the
For easy-to-follow direcAthens Police D~partment, equal 1 h r e e mches , four
ch1ldren who are permitted to nde tncycles and b1kes m
Will be at Middleport Pen- rows equal an mch Get your tions lust send fifty cenll to
dnveways and on the asphalt slabs of neighbors Every
tecostal Church, S Third Ave, ga uge nght, and you'll turn Stitch n' Time, c/o your Jo.
one IS expected to watch out for children playmg m the
cal newspaper, Radio City
Sunday, 10 a m He Will show thiS out m no lime at all
streets and we do but on one's own property 1t IS a
Station, Box 583, New York,
Middleport
slightly different matter Could anyone pay for a child
mov1es and have diSplays on
W o r k e d m lightweight N.Y. 101119. Ask for Stikhin'
unfortunately run over and could you ever forget you
drugs Public mterested m C o a t s &amp; Clark's 0 N T Time leanet S34ll and be
We Do Install
had hurt or even killed a l1ttle neighbor' Whose burden
youth drug problem, please "Speed Cro-Sheen" mercer- sure to include your name,
In
Your Home!
and responSibility IS thlS'-ELLEN
IZed cotton, tll1s lacy sum- address and zip code.
attend
GROUP
t,
Women's mer cover-up 1s yours for
f'tl!'!'~'llll' ~" Polly's Problem Jl!'t~Jew •mi&gt;IH!lt cw;w,;
AssocJatJOn, Mtddleport F1rst
~ DEAR POLLY-The day after my husband {( Umted Presbyterian Church,
pamted a kitchen shelf the pamt was dry so I ~ family p1cmc, 3 p m at Royal
neatly
placed a set of glasses on 1t When I took ~ ·
;
Oak Park Family affair
one down to use, the glass had a temble odor of
Potluck
pamt l have tned soakmg them m bakmg soda
and water but w1th no success for the pamt odor
MONDAY
remams Please help me as we cannot use any of
MEIGS
lzaak
Walton League
these glasses and I would really hate to have to d•sChapter,
regular
meetmg, 7 p
' pose of them - VERONICA
m Monday
~1:1. t' ~ ¥rM·..- .;:~~Mi~wm-;;.e,.,.:~~«t•~ ~ifj\:m:%:~~~
JUNIOR GARDEN Club of
DEAR POLLY- My answer 1s for Marla who wrote
Wmdmg
Trail Garden Club Will
that she was crochetmg a ripple afghan and the sides
do not stay straight and even I have made several of meet Monday at home of Marla
•
these and always have stra1~ht and even Sides You DO Legar
NOT skip a stitch at the begmnmg of each row When a
row IS fmlshed you cham one and turn and then smgle
crochet m each of the f1rst two stitches, then skip a
stitch and crochet m the next ll stitches and continue
as the directions say I feel sure her mistake was m
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
sk1ppmg that first stitch and do· hope this helps her
- RUTH

.

The Result Of Disobedience

~Calendar~

--

thj

4,000BTU~

POLLY'S POINTERS

'9900

FEDDERS

By

INGELS

FURNITURE

I

5%

BISHOPS OFFICIATE
LAKF8DE, Ohio (UP!) Bishops Francis E Kearns of
Canton aod Richard C Raines
of Glen Arbor, Mich., officiated
Thursda_&gt;: night at the
traditionaf ordination semce
of the third annual East Ohio
Conference of the United
Methodilt Church here

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVItE
In At 9-0ut At 5

INTEREST
On Passbook
Savings

per cent per year paid on
Regular Pas.book Savings
No Mlmmum Interest from
date of deposit to date of
withdrawal Interest compounded quarterly Interest
paid as long as an open
account Is maintained
S

L[Vf; ENTERTAINMENT

JAN HADDOX AND THE MUSIC
DEPARTMENT

THE DOME
Dining Room
6:30a.m. to 10130 p.m. Daily
Cocktail Lounge
n :30a.m. to 2 a.m. Monday-Saturday
•

Meigs Co. Branch

~

Tilt AliMns CoOOIIy
Slivill!ll &amp; Loon Co
2,. S.ctnd 51

,.,meny,Ohlo
All Actounls Insured To
520.000.00 by FSLIC

Q

·~

Bible Sludy
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave ,
Pomeroy,alflllated wtth S B C
the Rev Fred Htll paslor
Sunday School. 9 30 am ,
morning worshtp, 10 30 am
junior soclely 6• 30 a. m NYPS
6 45 P m Sunday evangeltStlc
meeting 7 30 p m Prayer
meellng Wednesday, 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Corner Fourth and Malo
Middleport Rev Henry L Key
Jr , pastor Sunday School 9 30
am Arnold Rtchards, supt
Mr;~~VA~~~·~,1~N~sWs _
C
Larry
arnahan prestdm,g
min Isler Sunday Bible lecture
9 30 am Walchlower sludy ,
10 30 am, Tuesday, B•ble
sludy, 7 30 P m' Thursday,
mtnlstry school 7 30 p m ,
service meeting 8 30 p.m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
Christ In Chnstlen Un1on Lawrence Manley, pas lor, Mrs
Russell Young Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 am
Evening worship 7 30 Wed
nesday prayer meeting 7 30
Pm

the Sermonette

I Social

You wlll receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, P~lly's Problem or solution
to a problem Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

MIOOlfPORT, 0.

a m Church school, ktn
dergarlen through elghl~
gr•de 10 30 am
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST_ Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr ,
pastor Bible Schoof, 9 30 am,
worship, 10.30, adult worship
service and young peoples
meeting, bolh 7 30 p m Sunday
Wednesday, combined Bible
study and prayer meeting 7 30
pm
'
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy Rays. Wining, officer In
charge Sunday, 10 a m ,
Holiness meeting , 10 30 a m ,
Sunday School Young People's
Legion, 7 p m Thursday, Ito 3
p m , Ladles Home League , 7
p m Prep classes
SA,CRED HEART _ Rev
Father Bernard Kra 1covtc,
pastor.
Phone
992 2825
Saturday evening Mass, 7 30
p m Sunday Mass 8 and 10
' t d
am Con Iess Ions, S1 ur ay 7
7
~o~'t'RoY FIRST BAPTIST
-Robert Kuhn , pastor , William
Watson, Sunday ochool supt
Sunday school,' 30 am ; BYF
6 p.m , Bible study Wed
nesday, 7 p m, choir pracllce,
Wednesday, 8 30 p ln

FEDDERS

u

ST PAUL LUTHERAN, Rev Arlhur C Lund, pastor
Sunday School 9 IS a m ,
Charles Evans. Supt , worship
service 10 30 am Con
f&gt;rma tlon class, Tuesday, 4 IS
to s 30 p m , Jun1or Con
lirmatlon tlass, Thursday, 6 30
to 7 45 p m
SEVEN DAY ADVENTIST
Mulberry
He1ghls,
Pomeroy Herbert Morgan
pastor
Sabbath school
Saturday 2 p m with church
service following ot 3 15 p m
()pen Bible d1scuss&gt;on each
Thursday 7 30 p m
G A A'HAM
U N 1 T E It
METHODIST- Preachmg 9 3D
am, f~rSland second Sundays
of each month third and lourlh

M9fnlng prayer and sermon, S_undays each month, worship
10 30a m Holy communion and service at 7 3D P m Wednesday
sermon, first Sundays, IO 30 evenings al 7 30 Prayer and

11

fNEWS PAPfR ENTERPRISE A5:5f't I

WERNER RADIO &amp;T.V.

Beach Jacl{et Is Breeze
STITCHIN' TIME

DEAR POLLY - When our son was born we received
so many beautiful cards that were much to pretty to
diScard or hide away We bought an mexpenslve bulletm
board, antiqued the frame , cut the cards m mteresllng
shapes and worked them mto a collage After the collage
was all pasted on •t was sprayed w•th a plastic sealer
that can be bought at any hardware store This ls so
bnght and colorful hangm~ m baby's room that even he
likes to look at 1t and as he gets older 1t will become
a so1 t of story book -GERI

' picture (measured diagonally) Motorola Escort
Personal Portable Black &amp; While TV Instant Picture
Sounu Solid Slate Chassis Plays on AC current Plays on Batteries Buill In Ballery Charger Ear
phone Included Snap On Sun Shield Clgarelle Lighter
Connector Cord Included Plastic cabinet In Walnut
gr•ln finish

I'OMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
Rev W H Perno. pastor Roy
Mayer, Supl Church schoool,
'!Sam. worship, 10 24 am,
youlh choir rehearsal Monday
6 3D p.m , Mrs Marvm Burl,
director,
senior
chOir
rehearsal, 7 3D p m , Thursday,
Mrs Paul Ne•se, dtreclor
POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Union and Mulberry Rev
Oyde V Henderson, pastor
Sun~ay School 9 30 a m ,
Raymond Walburn, supt
Morning worship 10 3D a m
Evening service 7 3D p m Mid
wo;::k service, Wednesday, 7 3D
p. GRACE EPISCOPAL Rev Leroy Dltvls, minister

OURS PROMOTED
Sherry A OUrs, daughter of
Mr and Mrs JIIJIIet T York of
Rt. 1, '66rche810r, Wis, has
been promoted to sergeant in
the U S Air Force. Sergeant
Ours, an administrative
spec!Blist at Eglln AFB, Fla.,
serves with a unit of the
Tactical Air Command which
provides combat un1ts for air
support of U S ground forces.
The sergeant,. a 1970 graduate
of Badger High School, Lake
Geneva, Wls Her husband,
Sergeant Roger L Ours, Is the
son of Richard E Ours of
Racine

•

Members Obsetved

the church members wUl go to
Mount Vernon for the Sabbath
seryices There will be no
services at the Pomeroy
Church June 24 or July 1
The camp meeting tradition
Is deeply rooted among Advenllsts Such gathering' 'll'e
held m many atates eVery
summer, according to Pastor
Morgan "Some of our
members have not mlalecj a
camp meeting for many years
They go expectmg to experience spiritual renewal
Utrough participation m the
variOUIS services and activities
at the camp BeSides regular'
preaching services, there are
workshops and discussion
groups on various topics
regardmg Christian life and
church activities. Often there

Mldlleplrt-Pomeroy, 0 , June 23,1972

BlltThDA Y OBiEKVJD
Mrs. Robert Manley ' 1lllll
honored on her birthday
Wednesday at her h!IDI8 ~Mr.
and Mrs O'DeU ManleY, and
Steve, ll'iddlcpcrt.
Mrs Manley received a
decorated birthday cake in·
scribed "Happy Birthday,
Daughter-in-law" from her
husband's .,.rents.
Refreslunenls w~ ed to
Mr and Mrs. R
Manley
and daughters,
cy and
Crystal, Mr. and"Mnn. endeU
Eblln, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs
O'Dell Manley and Steve, and
Mrs. Penny ' Brinker, Middleport J,'ylrs Manley received
a nwnber of gllt.s Sending a
gift was Mrs Lucille Caato

'

The seventh chapter of Joshua records for us the story of an
• Individual who was disobedient to God. ThiS person was Achan
Surely he was a sorrowful person for his sin, after he had committed it, just as man Is sorrowful today for sins, after they have
been conurulted
Following the victory at Jericho, the Israelites wanted to
move fartber into the land of Canaan Joshua sent sp1es to Ai, the
next town ''Go up and Vlt!W the country," he told them
They returned to Joshua and said that Ai was small and
probably three thousand men would be aU that was needed to
conquer the the city.
So Joshua sent three thousand men to Ai to conquer 1t But,
~ ol._vlml ~~,the lsraeUtes came ruMing back to
Joshua with.some of the men of AI running after them
Joshua could not understand why God had not allowed his
!JeOPie to conquer these heathens He prayed to God for understandmg and God answered him God told Joshua that there
was sin among the lsraeUtes and that He was not gomg to bless
them because of this sin In their feUowshio
God bad lnatructed the l!raelltes that none of tbem was to
take anything for themselves when they had conquered Jertcho
But IIOllleone had, and that someone was Achan
'
.
The next day a search was started among the Israelites for
the stolen possessions or for the person responsible for stealing
these things from Jericho
Before Achan was dlscoversd for hill sin, he confessed that he
had seen a beautiful garment and had taken it for himself while
he was one of the warriors In Jericho He had alsO stolen some
illver and gold from that city
In today'a liberal courts Achan probably would be given a
small fine and released, but not so with God's fJrm judgement
upon him. God had instructed that Achan and everything that
belooged to him were to be taken oul.slde their camp and be
stoned and burned Then on top of the ashes there was to be a pile
of rockl as a reminder to others.
Poulbly today we need a "POe of ~" in various
locatiolll to serve aa a reminder that disobedience brings punishment. Multitudes have dlaobeyed God in the past and also are
doing It today and think they wUl not be punished The Bible Is
plain on its teaching that there Is a "HeU" awaiting those who
disobey God.
Ask )'OUI1e1f: Have I dllobeyed Him in not bellevlng m
JeSIII? Hav.IdlsobeyedHim in refualng to repent of sm 7 Have I
cblbeyed Him in neglecting to confeM Him before others? Have
I been guilty of disobedience in my refusal to he ooried in the
watery grave of baptism?

Laurel Cliff News
Notes
Schaefer

BY BERTHA. PARKER
Sabbath School attendance at
the Free Method~t Church
June 11 waa 117. Offering for all
aarvices during the day was
$318.75.
Bible School closed Sunday
with a program which was well
rendered to a good croWd.
Mr and' Mrs Phil Wise,
Mc~onnelsville,
attended
morning services at the local
church, and visited with Mr
Wise's parents, Rev. and Mrs
cec11 Wise.
• Mr. and Mrs William
Jacobs, Columbus, visited
S~nday with Mrs Jacob's
pareot.l, Mr. and Mrs Pearl
Jacobi and attended services
at the local chul:ch.
" Mr. Wyatt Schaefer, aon
David of Marion visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs

Norman Schaefer.
Mrs. Edna F~ulk spent
Smday with the Clifford Klein
famil)' and attR!ed services

Mr and Mrs James Will and
children spent Sunday with
Mrs. Wills' parents, Mr and
Mrs. Marlon Howell, Cohlln·
bus
Mrs Eugene Gill was confined to her home for several
days With the mumps

•
Carmel News
Diirotny

Harden and Vema
Circle called on Mr. and Mrs
Uoyd Roush on a Sunday afternoon
Denver Singer! and two sons
of Parkersburg called on Ralph
Lee and the Robert Lee family
Sunday
Mr and Mrs George Orcle
and dauchter, Cheryl, Mr and
Mrs, James Circle, all of New
Haven, W. Va visited Mary
Qrcle on a &amp;indaJ.
Mrs Robert Lee and Ralph
Lee viii led the latter's sister,
Fern Slanabury at the Kimes
Rest H1111111 in Athena one day

at-the local church"
Mt. LarrY. 'Jaclla Ia a
...~ ...llelit In$, JoMph laat--Mr. and Mn. Robert \Vat.son
Hoapitll; }'ark811hvl. Ria
and
family ol Ken!, Ohlo,IPI'It
ra.~laa
rew
da)'l with Mr and Mrs
Mrl. Dora Halle)', Mra.
lllrdnli Clrd ..-nlly IPIIII a ildlon Roulh.
Owen Tayler al Cbipplwa
daJIII(lnl........
Lallie,
Ohio apent a few days
Mr. . . Mn. Marl! Sllh1,
Sta.$dale, Yillted twtntl7 wilbllr. and Mn. ~ Tayl!lr
with J(r• ..-l ...... MGrman 11141 other relaUVII rectllflY.

'

• MIDDLEPORT PEN - UNITED MINISTRY OF
TECOSTAL - Thtrd Ave, the MEIGS COUNTY, The Un1fed
Rev William Kn11tel , pastor Presbyterian Church, Dw ight
Ronald Dugan, Sunday school L Zav&gt;lz Pas lor Dll'eclor ,
supl Classes lor all ages. George
W Hullon and Rev
evening serv1ce 7 30 p m , Lmson Stebbms Ass I Pastor
Bible study, Wednesday, 7 30 Directors
p
~
' ~erv lces Fnday
FIRST UNITED PRES
1 30 p m
BYTERIAN, Harnsonv1lle,
FREEWILL BAPTIST - Sunday Church School, 9 30
Corner ASh and Plum , Mid a,m, Mrs Homer Lee Supl ,
die por t.
Noel
Herrman Mornmg Worship tO 30 am
pastor
Saturday evt!nlng F I R S T
UNIT E D
service, 7 p m Sunday schooL PRESBYTERIAN, Mtddleporl
10 a m , Sunday evening Sunday Church School 9 30
worship, 7 p m
a m , LewiS Sauer Supt ,
Mormna WorshiP, 10 30 a m
FIRST BAPTIST ol M1d
FIRST
UNITE D
dleport, corner of Stxfh and PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse
Palmer 'streets Rev Charles Morn1ng Worsh1p, 9 a m
S1mons,

pastor

Hoffman

Fred Sunday Church School, 10 am

Sunday

School Mrs Sampson Hall, Supl
Superintendent Sunday church
COM
STIVERSVILLE
school for everyone 9 15 a m , MUNITY, Rev Edsel Hart
Morning worship 10 15 a m , pastor Sunday School service
Evening services 7 30 p m , 10 a m Prayer Meeting each
Wednesday prayer serv1ce, 7 30 Thursday 7 30 p m
p m Extra youth acllvlfles on eventng service 7 30

Sunday, 5 p m , for all youlh up
to StKlh grade 6 30 lor 1~nlor

and semor high students

CHURCH QF CHRIST,
.Middleport 5lh and Ma tn
Raulln Moyer, pastor Michael

Gerlach, Sundpy School

~upl

Sunday

Service, 7 30 p m Youlh
meeltng 6 30 p m Evening
CHESTEfi.CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev Herber!

Grate pastor Worship serv1ce
11 a m and 7 30 p m Sunday
Sunday School, 9 30 am
R1chard Barlon, supt Prayer
meeltng , Wednesday, 7 30 p m

Pomeroy Harrisonville

Road Kenneth Eberts pastor

Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 am
morntng worship and com

••
•

' BRADFORD CHURCH OF

CHRIST -

Chfford Smlfh

mtntSier Sunday School 9 30
am
mo.-nmg church 10 JO
am

Sunday
Ezekiel

Sunday evemng serv1ce

37 11-14

7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce 8

•

m
__
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST - Rev Eugene
p

Monday

.
.

Job

17 1-16

G1tl, pastor W1lham Ba1ley
supt Sunday School, 9 30 am ,

Paalma"
33.12-22:

11:28-1!1

CHURCH OF
Danny Evans

•

Jeremiah ~

30 a m
10 30 am

17 5-8

Worsh ip serv1ce,
Chnsllan Endeavor Sunday
evening.

•

Friday '
Luke

mun10n 10 30 am Sunday
REORGANIZED CHURCH
eventng
youlh
Chr&lt;sllan
en
OF
CHRIST OF LAT
nong worship, 10 30 a m , deaver, 6 30 Worsh1p servtces, TERJESUS
DAY SAINTS- Portland
evening worsh1p, 7 30 p m , Sunday, 7 30 p m Wednesday Raetne Road Ralph Johnson,
Btble School

~:

30 a m

prayer service 7 p m
nesday

.~

12 18-21 ,

mar

Wed

evemng prayer meet1ng and

pastor Herbert While Sunday

10 30 am

pm

a m morning worship 10 JO
am Sunday evening Worsh1p

pas lor Worsh1p serv1ce, 9 30
am , Sunday School. 10 30 am

•

Saturday

Luke'

.

12 22-80,

study 7 30 p.m
School D~reclor Sunday School,
CHURCH
OF
THE Bible
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN
30 am Morntng worship,
NAZARENE - Middleport Pme Grove, the Rev Arthur 109 30
am , Sunday evening
Rev Audry Miller, pas lor , Combs pastor Sunday school, serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday
Floyd Carson supl Sunday 9 30 a m , church servtces, evenmg prayer serv1ces. 7 30

school, 9 30 a m , Mornmg

'

Thurodoy •

pastor Norman C Will supt
9

'

Wedneoda7'
Pronrbs

meeting 7 30 p m Thursday
cho1r pract1ce, 7 p m

Sunday School

'

Tuesday~

Mornmg worship. 10 30 am ,
Eventng worsh1p, 7 30 p.m
Wednesday Christian Youth
Crusade 6 30 p m Prayer

pm
DEXTER
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST CHRIST -

-

IN

worsh1p, 7 JQ p m

m 1unlor
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST soctely 6 30 p m NYPS 6 45 CHRIST
Btble School 9 30 Great Bend, Charles Norris,
worsh1p 10 30 a

p m
Sunday evangelfsti'C
meet ing, 7 30 p m Prayer

meeltng Wednesday, 7 JO p m

Serv&lt;ee

7

30

pm

chotr

pra ct1ce Su nday and Wed
nesday, 7 p m prayer meetmg
and B1ble study Wednesday 7 JO

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PARISH
pm
am and 7 30 p m allernalely
THE UNITED
ANTIQUITY ~APTIST - Prayer meeting Wednesday,
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Freeland Norns, pastor
7 30 p m Rev Jay Stites,
Robert R. Card
Sunday school, 10 am church pastor
Rev Stanton Sm1lh
servtce 7 p m Wednesday
0 L D
D E XT E R
CHESTER - Worship 9 15 Bible study 7 p m
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
a m Church School 10 am
BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE, - Rev Willard Dutcher,
ENTERPRISE- Worship 91 Minersville J A McWalers, pastor Mrs Worley Franc1s,
a m Ghurch School 10 a m pas lor Sunday School 10 a m
Sunday School Supt Sunday
FLATWOODS- Worship, 11 mornmg worship, 11 a m
School, 9 45 am Church Ser
a m , Church School 10 a m
Tra1ning Un1on , 6 JO p m
v1ces f~rst and th1rd Sundays
POMEROY- Worsh1p 10 30 eventng worshtp 7 30 p m tollow1ng
Sunday School
a m Church School 9 15 a m Prayer meeting Wednesday , Second and fourth Saturday
UMYF 6 30 p m
pm
even1ngs, 8 p m services
ROCK SPRINGS - Worshtp 7 30
RACINE
FIRST
CHURCH
BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
10 a m Church School 9 a m OF THE NAZARENE - - LONG
Mr
Robert
Wyall, pastor.
UMYF 6 30pm
Sunday School, 9 30 a m , Sunday School supt Ronald
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Morntng Worshtp 10 30 am
Osborne Btble School, 9 30
Rev Robert Bumgarner
Evenmg worsh1p, 7 30 p m, am , preachmg 10 "5 am ,
HEATH - Worshtp 10 30 Wednesday Sunday School Evemng serv1ces, 7 30 p m
a m Church School 9 30 a m , Super~ntenden l Pauline Me
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
UMYF 7 p m
Cltnlock, pastor Rev Morns METHODIST - Cecil WISe
RUUAND - Worshtp 9 15 M Wolle
Pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m Church School 10 a m
RACINE
FIRST
BAPTIST
am
Morntng worship 10 30
UMYF 7 p m
Charles Norns. pastor Sunday am
Young Peoples serv1ce
SALEM CENTER- Worshtp Schoof 9 30 a m , Mornmg 6 45 p m EvangelistiC serv1ce
' a m , Church School 10 a m worship 10 45 am Sunday 7 JO p m Prayer meeting
UMYF Thursday 7 p m
even1ng worsh1p, 7 30 p m , Thursday 7 JO p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Wednesday even tng Btble
F R E ED OM
G0 S PEL
Rev Forrest R Donley
Sludy,
7 30 p m
MISSIONBald
Knobs
Rev
ASBURY- Worshtp 11 am ,
DANVILLE
WESLEYAN
,
L
R
Gluesencamp,
pastor
Church School 9 50 a m WSCS, Rev
Lawrence
Sullivan
Roger W1lfred Sr, Sunday
lsi Tuesday
paslor Sunday School 9 30 School Supl Sunday School
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m , youth and jun1or youth 9 30 a m , Sunday eventng
a fT1 Church School 10 a m , serv1ce, 6 .t5 p m , evemng worship 7 30 Prayer meeting
WSCS 3rd Wednesday 7 JO worsh1p 7 30 p m prayer and Tuesday, 7 30 p m Ernest
pm
Wednesday, 7 30 p m Deeler class leader Youth
MINERSVILLE - Worshtp praise
SILVER RUN FREE BAP Meeting Wednesday, 7 30 p m
10 am , Church School 9 a m TIST - Rev Howard K1mble, Ernest Deeter , leader
WSCS 3rd Monday, 7 30 p m pastor Sunday schocl 10 am
MT HERMON UNITED
SYRACUSE - Worshtp, 8 Henry DaviS supl evening BRETHREN
CHUR(H IN
a m Church School. 9 a m , se rv ice 7 30 p m Prayer CHRIST- Rev Roberl Shook
Prayer and Bible Sludy meeting Thurday 7 30 p m
1paslor J .Sunday Schooh! 1J 30·,.
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
"
CHESTER
CHURCH
'
OF
am , RGy Pooler, supl 1 Alfred '
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
GOD- Rev James Satterfield, Wolfe assI supt morning:-.
Rov W Dale McClurg
pastor Sunday school 9 30 worsh1p 11 a m
evemng
Rev Frank Cheesebrew
a m worsh1p serv1ce 11 am
sermon 7 30 p m alternatlnQ
Rev Martha Ann Mallner
ng service, 7 prayer • each Sunday Class meeting l I
BETHANY (Dorcas I - eveni
serv1ce and youth se rv 1ce, a m
allernatlng
~unday
Worship 9 30 a m , Church Thursday, 7 p m
morn1ngs
Alfred
Wolfe
School 10 30 a m
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
iayleader
Chrlsl1an
Endeavor
CARMEL - Worshtp 11
Homer Stefhens, pastor 7 JO p m Sundar Roge r
a m , lsi and Jrd Sundays -Sunday
Schoo, 9 30 a m , Buckley, preSJden Praye r
Church School, 10 a m
mornmg worsh1p, 10 30 am , meehng, Wednesday 7 30 p m
APPLE GROVE - Worsh ip, Rober! Bobo Sunday school Board meellng llrsl Monday
7 JO p..m , church school, 9 30
am ,

mid week

serv1ce,

Wednesday, 8 p m
EAST LETART - Worship,
lOa m , firs I and lhlrd Sundays
9 a m , second and fourth
Sundays church school. 9 a m ,
llrst and third Sundays 10 a m ,

sup!

Sunday evening serv1ce

7 30 Youth meeltng Monday, 7

each monlh 7 JO p m

p m Mid week service Wed
nesday, 7 30 p m
WHITE'S CHAPEL
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Cooiv&gt;lle
RD Rev Roy Deeter,
THE NAZARENE- Rev M C pastor Sunday
school, 9 30
Larimore, paStor Bob Moore, a m worship service 10 30
Sunday School Supl Sunday a m Btble study and prayer

serv.lces, 9 a m , Sunday School

9 45 a m Bible study every

Thursday, 7 lO p m
NORTH BETHEL- Worship
11 a m , Church School 10 a m
ALFRED - Sund~y school ,
9 45 a m each Sunday,
preaching at II am. each
Sunday Prayer meeting, 7 45
p m Wednesday , WSCS, 8 p m
on third Tuesday each month
REEDSVILLE - Sunday
school, 9 30, preaching, 7 30
p m Sunday, prayer meeting,
7 JO ~ m Tuesday. WSCS. 7 30
llrsl Thursday each month
SILVER RIDGE - Wonshlp,
10 am 1 Church School, 9 am
TUPPERS PLAINS
Worship' a.m .. Church School
10 am
•
KEftiOCHURCH OF CHRIST,
Hobart Newell, supl Services
weekly, ' 30 am. on Sunday
Preaching first and third
Sundays of month by Clifford
Smith, 9·30 am.
HOBSON CHRISTIA-N
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll,
PISlOf Sunday School, ' 30
a m , , Leonard Gilmore, first
elder, evening service, 7 30
p m
Wednesday prayar
meellng, 7 lO p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Roc! no Route 2 The
Rev Charln Hand, pastor
Sunday school, 9· 45 a m ,
morning worship, 11 a m
Evening oervlces, Thutsdof
and Friday, 7 30
IEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David
Jnell, pastor Bible study, 9 30
• ·"'·' morning worlhlp, 10 30,
tvllllng worohlp, 6 30 p m
'Nidneiilly 8Iblt sludy, 7 30
pm

. "Okay, we've landed, now let's get out and look at this old moon!"
My two small boys are at it again. Today, the old gray stump is a 81J(1Ceshtp Tomorrow tt may be a fort or a castle. More practically, at lunchtime
tt' s a picnic table.
Rtght now the stde yard u my sons' world. Behind a picket fence, tlifw
roam the seas and sky ' 1n tmagtna.tion, the SO'Und of their VOICes rea.Bauring
me of thetr safety
'
It won't always be th18 way. Someday, they'll leave the back yard forever, swMhbuckllng through a world of schools and camps, fnenda and
part1es.
How strange 1t will be-not to gu1de their every footJitep. Where am
I to get the courageF Fortunately, I can anBWer my oum question. I htwe
my church, and so do my boys. As a source of great goodness, it will guide
them aU thetr days.
Scilpturn ~elttled by rhe American llbte Socltly

Meigs County Branch

GAULS SHAK£ HAVEN
• Tra1ler Rentals and Suppltes
St R,t 7 "
: •• , .!=hester, Oh1o

.·

"&gt;

T

,....

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

296JW.: Second .., Pomero\11 " 1&lt;!iia991&gt;!38115

WDWICK'S 'MARKET ;. "" . .

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH

Mem ber of the Big 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plams
Ph . 667-3280

" We Sponsor Jesus"
Rev Stan Cra1g, Pastor

'

.

.

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

MARK V STORE

Electnc Mol or Repa 1r
SlOW Mam
992 5750

M•ddleport, Oh1o

SWISHER &amp; WHSE

second and fourlh Sundays School, classes for all ages 9 30
M1d week service Wednesday, am , morning worship 10 45 serv1ce Wednesday, 7 JO p m
8pm
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p m ,
GREAT BEND- Worshtp 11 evangel1st1c service Sunday,
RUTLAND
am , 2nd and 4th Sundays 7 30 p m Mid week prayer
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST

Church School , 10 am
LETART FALLS- Worshtp
10 a m , Church School 9 a m
MORNING STAR- Worship
9 30 a m , Church School 10 30
a m , Mid Week Service,
Wednesday, 8&lt;1&gt; m
MORSE CHAPEL- Worship
II am, lsi and 3rd Sundays
Churc~ School , 10 am
PORTLAND- Worship 7 30
p m 1 Church School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - Worship, 11 a m
2nd and 4th Sundays , Church
School 10 am
WESLEYAN (Racine) Worship, 11 am , Church
School, 10 am
"
UMYF for all churches of the
Soulhern Clusler, 7 30 p m
each Sunday al l~e Youth
Cenler lOok Grove Road l
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Jocob Lehmon
Rev Stondley Brandum
JOPPA - ,Worship 10 a m ,
Church School 9 e m , Prayer
Meellng, Wednesday, 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM - Church

'

CARLETON CHURCH -

Kmgsbury Road
Sunday
School, 9 30 am, Ralph Carl,
supt Worship serv1ce, 10 30

OHIO VAUEY BAKING CO.

Rexall Drugs
We F1ll All Doctors' Prescnpt10ns
Pomeroy
992 2955

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

ROYAL OAK PARK

GAUL'S MARKET

meellng, Wednesday 7 30 p m

- . Rev Samuel Jackson
Family RecreatiOn
M1ssionary meeting , second pastor Sunday School, 10 am '
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
'
Sw1mmmg,
Campmg
Mrs Gertrude Buller, supt
Prayer
Service,
1
30
p
m
UNITED FAITH NON •
DENOMINATIONAL - Rev preachmg service. 2 p m.
THE FARMERS BANK
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Robert Smith, pastor Sunday
school, 9 30 a m , class leader, CHRIST- Sunday school, 9 3D
AND SAVINGS CO.
Leo Hill , worship service, 10 30 a m V H Braley, supl '
a !11 , church, 7 30 p m prayer commun1on and devotions '
Pomeroy Member FDIC&amp;
10 30 a m Regular board
meellng Wednesday
.Federal Reserve System
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN meeting 7 30, third Saturday
IN CHRIST-E ldon R !liake. each month
THE RUTLAND COM .
pas lor Sunday School, 10 a m ,
Rev
HEINER'S BAKERY
Winnie Holsinger, supt Mer MUNITY CHURCH ning sermon, 11 a m , Evenmg RIChard Dubbeld, pastor
Bakers of Good Bread
serv1ce Christian Endeavor, School. 9 30 a m , Worship
7 lOp m Mrs Lyda Chevalier, serv1ce, 11 am , Wednesday
Huntmgton, W Va
prestdent Soog service and prayer meellng 7 30 p m
Sunday
night
worship,
7
30
sermon, 8 20 Mid Week prayer
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
meelmg Wednesday 7 JO p m
~ RACINE FOOD MARKET
Mrs Marie Holsinger. class THE NAZARENE - Rev
Lloyd D Grimm, Jr , pastor
leader
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT Sunday School, 9 30 a m •
The Store W1th A Heart
CHURCH - Harrisonville Mornln~ worship, 10 30 a m '
Ph 949 3342
Rac1ne
.
Road, Rev Roy Taylor, pas Iori Young people's service, 6 45
p
m
EvangelistiC
servic;:es
Henry Eblin, Sunday Schoo 7 30 p m Wednesday evening'
&gt;Up! &gt;unday School, 9:30 a m ,
evening worship, 7 30 p m service 7 30 p m
GOE~LEIN READY MIX CO.
Prayer and praise service,
MASON COUNTY
Thursday. 7 30 P m
TH.E HILAND CHIIPEL
Middleport
Phone 992 3284
COMMUNITY CHURCH,
George Casto, pastor Sunday'
De • ter - Wors hi p serv 1ces School,
9 30, evening worship
~a~rday and Sunday, 7 30 7 30 Thursday evening praye r'
• service 7 30 p m
HEM L 0 C K
G R 0 V E MASON FIRST BAPTIST M&amp;R FOODLINER
CHRISTIAN - David Stau!Ter, Second and Pomeroy Sis Sta n
'
paslor, Stanford Slocklon, supt Craig, pastor. Sunday schoo I,
Middleport, Oh1o
Morning worship, 9 30 am , 9 45 am , worship service, 1I'
church school. 10 30 am , 0 m , training union, 6 30 p m
young peoples meellng, 6 JO evening worship service, 7 30'
p m , evening vlorshlp, 7 30 p.m Mid-week prayer service
MONTGOMERY WARD
'
Blble~vdy, Wednesday, 7 30 Wednesday, 7 30 p m
pm
CAtALOGUE STORE
MT. UNION BAPTIST FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Rev Cecil Cox, pastor Sunday -Letart Route I, the Rev Sla n
Mr and Mrs Charles R Sheets
school supl, Joe Sayre Sunday Craig. pastor Sunday school
106 Co~rt St. Pomeroy 992-3001
school, ' 45 a m , Sunday 9 JO a m prayer and Blbl e'
evening worship, 7 30 Wed· sludy, 7 JO,p m Collage praye r
nesday pfayer and Bible study, servtce, Tuesday, 10 a m
SADIE'S MARKET
7 30 P m
_ · - • worship service, Friday, 7 30'
TUPPERS
PLAINS pm
Meats and Groceries
CHRISTIAN CHURCH MASON CHURCH 0 F ·
Eugene Underwood, pastor, CHRIST- Loren T Slephens
992 3986
Syracuse
Howard Caldwell, Jr , Sundar. minister Worship, 10 a m '
School Supt, Sunday Schoo, Bible study, 11 15 am, evenln '
9 30 a m , Morning sermon, worship, 7 JO p m Mid wee
10 3D a m , Sunday evening service, Wedntsdey, 7 30 p m
RIDENOUR SUPPLY
servl,e. 7 P m
MASON ASSEMBLY 0 F
LETART FALLS ,UNITED GOD- Second Sl, Mason, W
Furniture and Appliances
BRETHREN - Rev Robert Va Chester Tennant, paslor
Ph. 985 3308
.
Chester, 0,
Shook. pas lor, Herschel Norris, Sunday Khool, 10 a m , mo
supt. Sunday school, 9 lOam , nlng worship, 11 a m r .
morning sermon. 10 30 a m , evangelistic service, 7 30 p 111'
Attend the Church of Your Choice
evening sertnolt, 7 lO alter _fllble sludy and prayer servlc
nallng each Synday Prayer Wednesday, 7 30 p m Phon••e ..
BEN FRANKLIN STORE
service, Wednesday, 7 ~ p m 773 5133
Ph 992 3496
Prayer meeting, 7 30 P m HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
Pomeroy
all.rnatlng Sundays
CHRIST In Chrlsllan Union .C.HESHIR£ CHURCH OF Rev O'Dell Manley, pastor
GOD OF PROPHECY, G P Sund'y Khool,' 30a m., Roger
Smith, pastor Sunday School, Manley, supt , evening -vice,
NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
10 I m ; Arthur Htn1011, Supt • 7 30 Wtdneoday evtnlnII
Mornln_11 Worship 11 a.m , prayer meeting, 7 30 p m
100 Years in Pomeroy
Young Peoples -viet, 7 P m • Sunday evening youllt -vice
Kermit Walton
Evening service, 7·30 p.m , 6 45 with Macy Lou C.rler
'
Wtdn,sday Mld-Wetl&lt; Prayer l.. der. No Tuasday service I
.

.

Chester, Oh10

BOGGS EQUIPMENT
Sales AI Its Chalmers - Serv1ce
Farm Industrial - Lawn · Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435 .
·.

DICK'S GROCERY

.

1Formerly Domlgans)

New Owner- Dick Sargent '
Old U S 33
Ph 992- 735
Stop In and See Us

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
Oh1o's Oldest DOdge Dealer
Middleport, Oh1o

'

'

AU WEATHER ROOfiNG
AND CONSTRUCTION CO. .
DB A ANTHONY

.... ,

.

PLUMBING and HEATING
337 N. 2nd Middleport 992-J!..SO

CARPEH.AND, INC.

Wall to- Wall Carpet Specialists
116 W Mam
Ph 992 7590
..free Est1males Guaranteed Installation .

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

-

.

.

I:
~

.

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus, 0
307 Spring Ave
Ph . 992-2318

Pomeroy

SEARS
Authorized Catalog Merchanf
Louis W Osborne
220 E. Malo Pomeroy Ph. 992-2178

.

e.

MIDDLPORT BOOK STORE

.:'
'

Church and Olfice Supplies· Gifts
992 2641
Middleport

F. J. WI! I ACE, JEWELERS
Bulova Watches· Sales &amp; Service ,
1.86 N Second
Middleport

.
'

-

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Ser_ving the Meigs-Mason Artl
.......tfW...
.
~·-

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Notice

·

P.M . Day

Before Publication.
Monday Deadl ine 9 a.m .
Cancella tion - Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for.
Day of Public;atlon

~:

•:

.

WANJ ADS
INFORMATION
. DEADI.INES

RIFLE match powered

.n and

scope

Rutland Gun Club, Sunday.
June 25th. 1 p.m.
6-23-21c

REGULATIONS

...•:

.
••

The Publisher reserves the 1 SHOOTING Match
every
right to . edit ~r re_iect any ads, Saturday beginning Saturday,
~btect • onal.
The
June 24th at the Racine
deemed
publ isher W1ll not be responsible
.
M
'
for mol"e than one . incorrect
Planmg
Ill at 6 p.m .
rnser' Ion ,
Assorted meats. Sponsored by

...••
r

RATES

''·:

the Syracuse Ftre \ Dept .

•I.

..'
"

18 cents per·· woro six con-

Antiques on Larkin Street,

secu tive Insertions..
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days :

•

•,

•

Rutland, Friday and Satur day
·
6·21 ·Jtc

CARD
OF THANKS .
&amp; OBITUARY ·

•

----------

S1.50 for SO word m inimum . GU N Shoot. also rifle matc hes
Each aaajr ional word 2c.
- open sites only , Forked

BLIND ADS

..'

Additional 2Sc
Advertisement .

Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,

Cha rg e per

June 25, 12 noon.

6-21 -3tc

OFFIC5 HOUR$ c
8:30a .m. to 5:00,p.m; Daily, KOSCOT KOSMETICS: Se~eral

•
•

~~~~rd:y~ ·

~

•'
'I

•
••

to

12

: 00

Noon .

new products - specials each
month ; also sales personnel

neeaed. Phone 992-5113.
•1
6-6-tlc

LEGAL NOTICE

~

IN THE

·~

COMMON PLEAS COURT

,;
•
•·

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, June 25,
1 p.m. Factory choked guns

OF
only . Second place shooters
MEIG~ COUNTY, OHIO
get free shot in next match .
DEWEY RAY alRCHFIELD ..- Assorted meats. Racine Gun
lnd
.
Club. .
MARY L. BIRCHFIELD,
6-22-31c

..

Svcamore Street,
Middleport, Ohio,

Pia in tiffs

vs.
MRS. R . E . CANADAY
R. E. CANADAY,

and

Address Unknown,
Et at .,
Oefend1nts
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

, No. 15.064

Mrs·. R . E .
Canday ; R. E. Canaday ; the
un k nown he i rs, devisees ,
lega tees, adm lnlstrators ,
dlstrlbutees, executors and
assigns of L. C. Brechtel ,
Decea·ser:t, and the ' unknown
hei r s, dev l:sees, legatees , ad ·
min I strators , · d I str I butees ,
executors and assigns of Peter
Brechtel , Deceased , will ta ke
notice that on the Jrd day of
May, 1912, a Complaint was
f l ied In th e Common Plea s
Court of Meigs county, Ohio,
Case No. 1S,D64, wherein you
have been named defendants.
In the prayer of the comp laint,
Plaintiffs pray that Defendants
may be compelled to show their
Interest and that the nme may
be adjudged to be noll and void ,
The

D~e.ndants,

SAve· up to one hall. Bring yoor
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.
4-4-tfc
YARD SALE, Saturday, June
24, starts 9 a.m. at Ina Ellis
residence on Rt. 7 bet"jeen
Middleport and Chesh&lt;re ;
many used items.

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Window
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Plum bin~
Electrical Work

against the $Bme, and for such
other relief as Is proper . The
real estate Is described as
follows :
,
The following Real Estate
situated In the Cciunty of Meigs,
if) the State of Oh io, and In the
Tbwnship of Salisbury, and
bounded and descr i bed as
follows :
Sit uate In Marcus Bosworth's
Addition to L.ower Pomeroy ,
now Incorporated Into the

Wanted To Buy

WANTED- old upright pianos,
grand pi anos, old pump
organs, any condition. Paying

$10 each . Write giving

ARNOLD
.
BROTHERS
992-2448

DON 'T PUMP your slug ish WI~L paint roots or :ho~~~~
septic tank. Get Klean . £m. lnr:t and cut trees ,
t
All Septic Tank Cleaner . attics; . basements, e c.
Landmark, Farm Burteau, Phone 949 ·322!:
6-14-301c
Pomeroy .
6-23- llc ·- - - - - - - - ::-:
5P
--=,--=
N'=e-=T- :c:o::N::-:s=-=o--:L-=E-=
P-:-:, A No Wanted
may be purc hased by smali LEAD ·vocalist. tor ·rock group .
monthly- payments, see il · Call Gallipolis 446-3829 or
locally, wr ite Cortland Music Polneroy 992·2211'1 .
Company I, P. 0. Box 35.
6-72-3tc
Cortland. Ohio 44410.
--=====;===="---,
6-22-2tp '
196J GMC pickup, 8 ft: bed ; I
Demeo- Revette 23 channel CB
radio, I Courier Clipper 23
hand set, solid state, 23
cha nnels, 5 watts, with extra

Wanted!
Sentinel Carrier

battery pack; phone 992-2792.
6-22-6tc

In·

directions. Witten Piano Co .,

N'altlan Bjggs
Radiator Speci11is!

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph . 992-2174
Pameroy

'

Syracuse

Mobile Homes For Sale

'IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCHO .
Lake Conchas. New Mexico .

Aluminum
Sh-i'ets

Real Estate For Sale

part i tion of t he following
described rea l estate, and that
the pla intiff's Interest be set off
to her In severalty or that Slid
real estate be sold and the
proceeds therefrom be divided
ac cording to law .
Said real estate being situated
In the Village of Pomeroy,
County of Me igs and State of
Ohio. and being two tots con .
tainlng 1.A3 acres, more or less .
For a more detailed description
,of sa id r eal estate reference Is
made to Volume 241 page 295,
Me igs Coun ty Deed Records.
Said defendant , Pau l Harris,
Shall answer the pLaintiff's
compla int on or before Augu-st
7, 1972, or he shall be deemed In ·
default .
Lena Turner , Plaintiff
·BOI\R DOF COUNTY
COMMrSSION E RS , J. B. O' Brien , he-r attorney

MEI GS COUNTY. OHIO.

tOO V;~ Court Street

By Mllrthl!i Chambers Pomerov. Ohio 45769

June 23, 30 2t

~ l er&gt;

(51 19, 26 ; 161 2, '· 16, 23. 6k
LEGAL NOTtt;_E

' WAI.'!H SIGNS FIVE
CANTON, Ohio (UPI)
Walsh College said Monday
five basketball players have
accepled grants-in-aid.
The five are Darrell Harris
of Cleveland's Lutheran East
High Scho~!; Sam Wilks of
Columbus West High School;
Gene Frankart of Fostoria
Wendelin High School; Mike
Parker of Canarsie High
School in Brooij,yn, N. Y., and
Cadton Handy of St. Hilda
High School in New York City.
Virginia's 1966 Genera! ·Assembly designated the fox·
hound as the official stale
dog.
~

Bedford townsh 1P-· Trustees
will hold a public hearing on the
tax budget ror 1913 at the
Clerk's office, Darwin , Ohio,
July 8, 1972 01 6:30p.m.
·

{6 )

23, 11

Gl1nn Lee-, Clerk

For Sale

come? We have

just the

h.p. engine. In carton

70.25 ,

POMEROY

9a_ Jack W. Corse~. Mgr.
llitl
Phone 992-2181
TWIN Needle sewing machine
• 1971 model In walnu!. s!and.
All features buill-In !o make
fancy designs and do stretch
sewing . Also buttonholes ,

blind hems etc. $.13.35 cash
or

terms

Phone 992-5641.

avallable.

6-22-6tc

VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
Hygiene New . Demonstralor

•

has all cleaning attachments

plus !he new Electro Suds for
shampooing carpel. Only
S27.50 cash price or terms
available. Phone 992-5641.
6-22-6lc

PUREBRED Her'il!brd bull. 3
years old; also 1960 Dodge ;
phone 992-2307.
6-23-31p
1

SMALL mare pony with filly
colt ; phone 992-2990 or 9922759.
6·23-3tc

~·

.. . ... f

' , ( ., , ,. ,

SEWiNG MACHINES. Repair:
service, all makes. 992-2284. ,
$18,000.00.
'
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
GOOD NEIGHBORS
Authorized Singer Sales end .
LIVE HERE
ServIce. We Sharpan Scissors.'
2 story frame, 3 bedrooms, .
J-29-!fc
bath,

porches,

storage

building, garage, view of the
river. $6,900 .00 .

AHOME AND
A BUSINESS
Anice 3 bedroom apar!ment,
bath. glassed front and rear
porches. hardwood floors. a
business to go with II. Grea!
tor re!lrement. Call for In-

d

B k

er

READY -MIX CONCRETE
delivered rlgh! !o your
prolect. Fas! and easy. Free
esl moles. Phortt 992-3284,
Goegleln R...ty-t.llx Co ..
Middleport, Ohio.

~.

• 11.

·

5-1-tfc

-DOZER end back hoe wor"k,
ponds and septic !onks; B&amp;K
Excavating, Phone 992-SJ67,
Dick Karr, Jr.
5-21-!fc
e"·A
-=c=K=H;:
ci:-;:
E-A-N-::-D-DO=zE:::R::-work.
Sepllc tanks Installed. George _
(Bill) Pullins. Pho"' 991·2&lt;1?8,_
··
·
;1.25-!fc
·see UfFOR: Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . 'A. Jacob, salet
represen!a!lve. For free
•estimates. phone Chorles
Lisle , Syrocuse, V. V.
3-2-!fc
-----O'DELL WHEEL olighmont:
locoted at Crossroads, R!. 124.
Comple!e front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels • balanced electronically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Rusonoble
rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-!fc

-----=-:-::---:---AUTOMOBILE Insurance been .
cancelled?
Los!
your
operator's license? Coli 9922966.
6-15-!fc

HAR~I~UN'~

TV Service, open
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
and delivery ; phone 992-25~.
6-13-!fc

~~.___.........
It&gt;

COME AND SEE

Ray Douglas, Realtor
1-592-3414
Bill Keeton, Associate
1-592-1349

OI'!N !V!S. I.-GO I' .M.
.,~!ROY, OHIO

'T V.

· lake frontage on full acre
.

lo~

'

,

LAKEVIEW ESTATES

..

'·

•

.in Revzew

ROUTE 7 at FIVE P.OINTS

70 Maverick ......................... ..'15951
Standard, real clean.

70 Mustang ...........................'1995
2 ~r. HT, V8 auto.

69 Mereu!} Marquis ... ·~ · .......... ~1795

ton pickup V8 , local one owner, low
mileage.

2 dr. HT. Clean.

70 GMC Pickup ......................$1795
6 "'r'· s!andard, Long wide bed.

6' Chevrolet Belair.................. ~1895

1969 GMC only $1895

..

4 dr .

~dan . FaCtory

a ir. Extra clean. _

only $695

1965 Ford only $795

•

.

67 Corvair 4 Dr. H.T. ............... ..'395
2 dr. HT. Factory air, ps, pb.

Gal. , 2 dr . HT. factory air. one owner . Real,
sharp, 65 model .

Rawlings Depend1ble City does it again ... we have
"unfrozen" our prices on air conditioning and will i nstall
air conditioning on 1ny car dur ing the months of June and

July for the complete price of $285 __ _ this is a $115
~lscoun!over the original price .. _no gimmicks; THIS IS
THE, COMPLETE INSTALLED PRICE : PARTS;
LABOR ; TAX; COMPLETE •.. ANY CAR . Beautiful
wood grained cabinet to match the latest of models ...
hurry In and see !he unit and se! up your appointment to

have a " cool u. summer .
'

•

- il-

FRONT: Deluxe automo!lve styling with safety-designed
padded base. Wood grain con!rol and toP, strip. ·
AIR OUTLET LOUVERS: Three 4"xl&lt;;, • Iron! louvers.
Adlustable lor all-direction air flow.
EVAPORATOR CASE ; Dimensions- Height 4'12'', Length
16'11o", Depth 11'.4".
At~ CONTROL; Varlable3-speed for maximum personal
com for!.
TEMPERATURE CONTROL: Adlustable with off
'posl!lori . Cooling level is aulomatically maintained by
THERMOTROL.

and to hear provocative views,
By RICK DU BROW
• HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - "An and look . at questionable
Euay on the Malia," a CBS-TV charactet'IJ, not to mention
hour to be pre~e~~ted SUnday learning again the Rell81llvlty
night, Ia what might be termed of Italians to the matter.
But the truly slgnlllcant
an exploitation documentary.
The IItle, of coin\, may story of organized crime In the
hook quite a few viewers. And United Slates Is no longer Its
U )'00 are Interested In seeing Intramural sculfllng, but, acsome questlooable characters cording to many, the extent rl
MIDDLEPORT,
In dramatic uroundlngs, you Its contact with rl!lp8ctable
Institutions. In short, the
will not be dlsappolnled.
It II a sharply produced hour, degree of Ita Involvement In the
with bill of hlltory thrown In, texture of ewryday life.
There Is some of this
and 10111e provocative commentary by tile two host- material In lhe Sundlty hour,
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkinson and Marshall, Dunbar, W. Va.,
but
It
doesn't
go
particularly
. narrators, wrliers Luigi
and Shawn were weekend Mrs , Carol Cornell, Mrs.
· Barzinl and ·Nicholas Pileggi, deep. II Is a program with guests of her parents, Mr, and Ma:rlfte Durst, Mrs. Mac
, We are, of cwrse, reminded enough razzle-dazzle to appeal Mrs:· Rudy Durst.
VanMeter, Lori Mlddleswarj,
' In the llroedcast about the wry to an audience that might enjoy
Mr. R. R.' Durst ,and sons, wererecentcallersatlbehome
. understandable llllllltivlty of a good movie on the lllbjeel, VIctor and Tom, visited Great of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bryant and
l many decent ltallana to fll. and with commentary to give It Smoky Mountains National family.
sumptlona by Ill-Informed a eoclally redeeming quality. Park and otlur points of In·
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lawson
terest Saturday and Sunday. visited his mother, Mrs. Olive
: people who Unk their heritage Pl~tortally Allw
, But It II pictorially alive.
Mr. and Mrs. David Bryant . Lawson, who is a patient in
: with gqlllerllm.
I
'lbearlel Warth Coulderlq CBS-TV knew what It was
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
' At q rate, there II some doing when It sched11led It right
Pomeroy.
colorful JiclcJrlal matter In the In lhe heart of Ita prime time necllon," the earlier hour
Mrs. Maxine Durst spent the
offers lnlervlews wllh officials weekend with Mrs. Sheryl
. &amp;mdlty hour, and there are lineup Sunday .
"An Essay on the Malta" Ia of both countries, and also Durst and sons st The Plains.
theories worth considering.
And yet one c~ away from the second of two back-to-bacll focuses In good part on air
Leota Birch visited Mrs. Adi
an advance ~lng rl the ooMiour documentarlet aet far BmUJigllng.
Van MeterJ Thursday af.
The 11roducer, Jay Me·
broldcast ·~eenng II waa a hot CBS-TV prime time Sandlty,
temoon. ·
Mallen,
posed u a potential
eubject Ulat almp!y got th,e with the flrlt dealing wltll dtug
Mrs. Goldie Clendenin Is
buyer of a large shipment of
traffic
between
Meslco
and
the
visiting
at the Will1am Roush
ooce
marijuana, and takes his story home while
It 11111 be fucinatlrtg to aee a United States. ,
her daughter, Mrs.
from
there,.
'
"The
MalCIID
ConEntitled
dramaUc hour like this me,
Again, though, despite Illlll Roush, Ill in Washington.
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Norman Lehew
provocatlw film footage, me
and family haw moved iniD
got tile leeling after an advance acreenlng of lhe hour their new home IP this comthat the truly significant story munlty.
Mrs. Flllinie Durst, Mrs.
·wu liven too brief llt.ltlon.
Elva Dally, Mrs. Golda
Tba.t story, 11 Indicated
aml'll tlmea In the Jlf08fllll, aendenln and Mrs. Mlfaaret
II tiW the ral IIOIInll of tJie Alllblrl•, were recent ....
proltlern II the demlnd for rl Mrs. Nell Mlddl-lrt.
The tax boclks are now open ·tor the
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Mn.
~ In the United Statal.
June or Second hl.lf collection of the
Plull!ltt VIII Mtllr, ~y,
1971 Relf Estllt Taxes., Afso for
~. . .

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS 00.
o:

delinquent tax. Closing date will be .

Jyly 3, 197.2.

4 speed. F~ncy wheels. Wide oval tires. Racing stripe.
Real nice and clean .

112

V8, auto. trans., PS. Bronze with vinyl top .

@)

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

20 year financing available.

71 Pinto .....:......................... '1795

63 Oldsmobile F85 ..~~ .~~t.~- .......... $395

s P.M.

64 Rambler 4 Dr. Sedan .... :...... ,$295

$3095

LEGAL

New
' 3 Bedroom Home.
.

~

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

knit u hotstery with
.cu . In V-8 engine. power sreerlng. power
:&gt;tl r ·' bucke"r.eats,
disc brakes, con$ole. posl!rac!lon. rally wheels. F&amp;R guarcfs, G-70x15 white wall tires. radio &amp; rear seal
SfM!aker, 4-season air condl!foner. This Is one o_fa king Mlgh!y Sharp!
197G CHEVROLET IMPALA SPT. CPE.
mn '·. 350 cu. ln. V-8englne, !urbo-hydramallc, r,owersteerlng &amp;
brakes, radio, red vinyl ln!erlor, black t nlsh . While wall
llres. like new.
197G DODGE POLARA
$229! I
Fac!or~ air conditioning, V-8 engine, automatic tran smission, power steering, power brak... good white side . ~ ­
walls, many more ex!ras. White lln lsh. black vinyl roof. ,
Priced to move!
·

·Pomeroy Motor Co.

2 dr. Sedan.

-1969 Int. only $1795 ··

Custom 500 4 dr. Sed. Must see th~ car to
believe how clean it is.

·Po•eroy
Motor Co.

197_qCHEV~T MONTE CARLO
~ . \~;j
k vinyl roqt;·btod&lt;

70 Volkswagen ........................'1495

112 ton pickup. V8, std. trans ., custom cab. A
real buy

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

ov•.

SUNDAY, JUNE 25

KEY REAL ESTATE, AGENT
Athens, Ohio

QUALitY

2 dr. HT. Extra nice.

Dart. This car is just like new. 6 cyl. and auto.
Ole of the cleane~f cars in the county .

19l1 Ford Galaxie 500

~

2 SIGIIS
Of

&amp;&amp;·Chnsler Newport ................ ..'895

112 ton pickup, 6 cyl. local one owner. This is a
real sharp truck.

Stiversville News Notes

4~

1969 Opel only $1595

2 ,dr. HT, Factory a ir .

1965 Ford

"You'll Like Our Qualify Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings
Un.
t
il
6
:
ooTil
~
PM. Sat.
. .

Johnson and Son, Inc.

992~2571

OfARLES CORNELL, OEVELOPER

:v. ton heavy dutv.1 360 .engine,
auto . trans., new '72 truck
camper. Will sell separate or

Karr &amp; Van Zanclt

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

I

68 Buick LeSabre .................. ..'1595

1969 Dodge only $15~5

Ford
Pickup

In Stock! •• We're Dealin'!

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE ralet. Ph . .j.46.
4782, Gallipolis, John RuSHII ,
O..ner 11. Operator.
•:..,_ 5-12-Hc

··" ,,Jt~~,~~~d

Wagon only 18,590 miles on this nice little car .
Easy on gas and a nice family car. .

4 dr. Sedan . Factory alf condition .

1969 Dodge . $1795

6-30-ffc

Comple!e Service
Phone 949-3821

69 Buick·LeSabre .................... !1895

Fairlane wag. Small VB &amp; auto . Local one
owner . Real sharp wagon .

2 dr. 350 engine, auto. trans .•• PS, 1500 miles .
Gold with white top . •

together.

·'

·1971·Opel only $1895

1969 Ford only $1795

1972 Chevrolet Nova

Good Selection New Cadillacs &amp; Ol~obiles

Income.

Nice

ALMOST

Wagons . Two to choose from. Come in &amp; drive
these one owner cars. Ole with automatic and
one wl_fh 4 speed. Real Sharp.

Real sharp.

for you , nice · apartment

rear .

speed. radio.

w-s-w tires, blue.

71 Ford lh t Pickup, V-8, auto., P.S..... '2695 ·

over. and small house In the

~

the new community' of all brick homes lust off
Rt. 33 South at the new by-pass near Meigs
High School. Prices start at 521,000 for a 2, 3 or
.4 bedroom home. Let us show yo,u the many
quality features. Come to our Open House this
Sunday from 11 to 5.

"

, Service ; also roof seal, un·

Call 992~3975.
· or

Turt 'Trlm Mower. B&amp;S 3'h

4

-68 ~ee lh t Pickup; v.a std........ ~.... '1395

II. awnings,
h1ng for you. Br 1ck home, 2 W1 der~lnnlng
Rl
d A Shuler
phone 9-19·
bedrooms , bath, utility.'
c ar ·
'- .
4567 ·
dining, basement, porches
6·22-6lc

By Appointment .

I':conomy Tiller, 31h h.p·. B&amp;S.
engine. Reg . 159.95
144.95

~

j ·

SPECIAL

price

EARTH MOVING

Open For Inspection in Lakeview Estates

MOWERS
&amp; TILLER!

I f

·Trade

ON V' V' Checked
USED CARS

~,, .

.65 MercuiJ 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 auto., P.S.......'495
1
66
4 Door, air.;
' . .Buick. ..LaSabre
.- ............ ,'99S~'
" 66 Buick LaSabre 4 Door "·T. ...., ...... ~..'6951
.
.
. 65 Mercury 4 Door, V-8, .auto., nice ......... '595
-65 MercuiJ 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 auto., P.S. .... ~1495

CI.ELAND
REALTY·

·;::========-,

from the jun ction with County
Road No. 9, extending nor .
lhY. ester ly to the west line of
Sec tion 16.
s. Township Road No. r- .71 , In
Salem Township, Meigs County ;
Ohio ."
The Soard of County Com .
mi ssio ners will yiew the
proposed prem ises . at the
prem ises , in the order listed
above commenci ng.,, 8;30 A .M ,
on Tuesday the nth. day of
July, 1972, and the fina1 hearing
on the proposal to vacate said
road premises will be held at
10 : 30 A .M . in th e Off ice of the
Board
of
Coun ty
Com missioners Bit the court House ,
Pomeroy , Ohio, on Tuesday ,
Jul y 11th., 1972 .

.

.-2dr. Real sharp.

Datsun
Pickup

-~ Mustane
6 cyl., 3 speed ................ '595
.
6S Chev. 2 Door, 6 c~ .• 3,speed
, .......... t395-

Dozer &amp; End folder vlork, .
ponds, buemont. lend·
scaping. Wt h1v1 2 size
darers, 2 sire toaurs. Work
done b~ . hour or !»&gt;llroct.,
608 E. MOin-$1.
Pomeroy
Fret · Eslfmllts. Wt 1fso :
haul till dirt, lap .soli. Dump
IMMEDIATE
trucks 1nd low-bo~ 101' hfro.
POSSESSION!
See
Bob or R09tr ~elfers.
3 bedrooms. nice kitchen, 2
·
Pom'ero~.
Phone·' 992-3525
baths, forced-air gas furaiter 7 p.m. or phon. m:
nace, full basement as living
quarters. $7,995.00.
.-5232 :
''
GETTING
SOCIAL SECURITY?
..
Want a home and an In- COMPLETE Mobile Home

-=========:___,

The
DaUy Sentinel

~

)

Anything...

1969

,69 Cadillac Coupe DeV~Ie, air.............. '3500
'68 Cadillac Sedan ' DeVille, ·air •.'...........'2600 :
-·- --'69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air...... '1995.
..
- '
68 Chev. Bet 4 Dr., V-8 auto., air .. ,......11495
' .68 Old$ 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air •.. •.... 11895_

·•

MIDDLEPORT
S. SECOND Avenue, 3 b.r.,

irgz

'3.07 engine.,V8, auto. trans .

~-

For Sale

•

USED-CARS

; $5.55

IS YOUR Mobile Horne hot?
$2,875. No Down. No ln!erest. bath, full basement, gas
after 5 p.m.
furnace, carport, very nice
Berry-M
iller
Mobile
Home
$25 mo. Vacation Paradise .
6-14-lfc Sales, 705 Farson Street, Money
521.000.
Maker .
Free
Belpre, Ohio can solve your
Broc hure . Rancho s: Box
formation .
2 BEDROOM, 12 x 52 trailer, problem with Coleman 2001DD, Alameda, California 7 ROOMS , bath, garage on
-WATCH THIS SPACE
Vlllege ot Middleport. Meigs
Pomeroy. 0.
air -conditioned: 9 miles North Centra l A ir Conditioning . 94501.
lar,..e private lot, $7 ,950.
FOR
REALTY VALUEscounty, Ohio, and marked and
on Rl. 33 ; phone 696-1051 .
Don't delay - call !oday. area
6·7-30!p
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
known on the said plat of lower · r-----~6-21-3tp
614-423-9531.
Pomeroy as Lot Number 153.
----,
160 Coal S!r,eet - Also
REALTOR
Said lot being fifty feet by on&amp;.
6-22-31c 3-BEDROOM frame with
location of the Middleport C
DIAL992-2259
hundred and eleven feet . Being
·2 BEDROOM trailer, adults -,------------:-:
garage and •;, basement,
of C office.
,.
lfnoonswer 992·2561
L.ot No. 153 as shown In deed
only, Bob's Mobile Court,
SEE
the
"WEEKENDERS
Weatherman
Addition
.!"~:::=:;;;;;::::~~==========~
records ot Meigs county , Ohio,
. P.ho~e 99H951 .
SP.ECIAL" a( Berry-Miller Tuppers Plains, Ohio; phone
In Volume, 159, Page 320.
6-13-tfc
Mobile Home Sales, 705 667 -3643; priced on Inspection .
.:~
··,
Referen~e1- 0eect·1 Volu'me ·244,
•i3614x· h" 'x '!009
--· - - - - - - - 6·_2l-_3_tp T, .
Farson
Streel
in
Belpre.
Ohio.
_________
'[
.,.P
IA:,
&amp;.
s''
· Page 5~9 of the Meigs County
'
1 BI;DROOM furnished
Deed Records.
tur~is~.~~ S~~[y c~~r~~~~~ RACINE - 6 room house, bat)!: V
f:5, J eQJO'T, 1 r. • TQ
apartment between Pomeroy
You ore required to answer
the Compla int within twen ty&amp; Athens, $80 per mon!h;
delivered
and
set-up
on
your
utility
room
,
garage,
$10.000
,
110 ••echanic Street
eight days after the last
phone 675-1684; also trailer
lot . We have a huge selection phone 949-4195.
!U
publ l caflon of this notice,
/
· space .
of
good
late
model
used
and
3-31
-lfc
namely, by not later than the
6-20-61p
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
repossessed
Mobile
Homes
on
=
R
=
A
=
C
=i
:::
..
N
--:
E
.=
·
=:
.:-:
.
'"
-.
:
roo
-:
::_::
m
~l\:-ouse,
24th day ot July, 1972, or
10
display. Before you buy any
judgment by default will be
NEW LISTING
rendered against you,
USED OFFSET PLATES
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and new Mobile Home see us first bath , basement, garag e, two
DOWN
TOWN ~ Brooms, bath, nice kitchen, furnace, full
you
'
ll
be
glad
you
did
.
Open
lots.
Phone
949-4313.
DEWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD
· HAV!i,
unfurnished
apartments .
ond
basemen!. Front and back porches. Old bu! roomy and
MANY
.ltSES
Monday lhru Saturday - - -- - - - - - - 4 - -5-lfp
Phone
992·5434.
MARY L. BIRCHFIELD.
handy.
$7500.00.
·
closed Sundays .
.
4-12-lfc
Sycamore Streel, Middleport,
6-22-3tc HOUSE '" Rutland by Grade
REAL
ESTATE
HILL
Ohio
~
UN_F_
U_R_N-IS_H_E--:D--a-pa
_r_tm
- ent, - - - - - - - - School; 4 rooms with bath ,
Ptalntlfls
POMEROY
Nice
2
bedrooms,
bath, living rm. car, large lot, carport ;
Crow. Crow ~ Parler ,
134 Mulberry Ave ., phone 9"2- 50 x 10 MOBILE home; priced garden
pe!ed.
Gas
forced
air
furnace.
Basement. Asking
phone 742-3154.
Attorneys tor Plaintiffs
3962
.
rea
sonably;
ca
ll
Chester
985·
$10.500.00.
8 for $1.00
6-21 -3tc
{5!12, 19. 2~ ; ( 6 ) 2. 9, 16. 23
6-11 -lfc
BOON DOCK SPECIAL
6-21 -61p r
SURPRISE - 2 bedrooms, 2 porches, 2 dug wells and
3379 .
PROPOSAL TO
cellar. Kitchen has stove, sink and refrlgera!or. Asking
For Sale or Trade
VACATE ROADS
CASti paid for ali mal&lt;es and
$4,000.00.
50
ACRES
1966 CHEVROLET. '12 ton models of mobile homes .
OLI)-BUT
LEGAL NOTICE
pickup, 6'1• fl . bed, standard;
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
Pursuant to Section 5553 .05
RURAL
Here's
one
you ought to en loy fixing . Ha~ 3
Redu~ed!
phone 992-6547.
4-13-lfc
Revised
Code ,
and
by
bedlooms,
living,
and
kitchen.
Cellar. Large garden stlol. ·
R&amp;solutlol') of the Bonrd of
________
6-_23-31c
Only
ss.ooo.oo.
Land
Contract
Co unty Commissioners of Me los
111 ~our! St.
County , Ohio , adopted June
WANT TO FINISH THIS
QUARTER horse ; phone 742·
Located S. of Athens 2 mi. on
20th , 1972, It was resolved that
Pomeroy, Ohio
-.Air
Conditioners
3418.
NEW
2
bedrooms,
bath, garage, cistern a~d large lot on
U .S. Rt . 33. Bordered on
the roads hereinafter descr ibed
6-21
-6tc
south
by
County
Road,
good
country
road.
Aski'l!l
$8500.00.
•
Awnings
be vacated , for the public .-~---- ----__,_)
bordered on west &amp; north' by
convenience and welfare, wh ich
NEW
CAPRI
·
• Underpinning
running stream, split down
road premises ere descr ibed u Help · Wanted
3
BEDROOMS ~ Lois ol close! space, large ones In each
middle
by
running
spring
.
Marine Sales
fotlow s :
bedroom. Gas forced air furnace . S!ove and refrigerator1200 ft. frontage on both sides
" 1. That portion ot Township WAITRESS; ap~ly in person, 32 FT. HOUSEBOAT, 40 h.p. Complete mobile home · of
-highway.
Has
old
farm
freezer
furnished. Landscaped lol with u!lilty building.
Road No . 131 , In Columbia
.... plus gigantic
home, 3 bedrooms, living
Township, whicK e&gt;&lt;tends from
Craw's Steak ouse
outboard motor and trailer; 'dservlc~
Only
$16,000.00.
isplay of mobile homes
room, formal dining room ,
the ellsterly boundary line of the
6-20·61c
will sell reasonable. Phone always
GRAZING FARM
available
at
...
kitchen and outbuildings .
ceme tery lands · In a generally
992-7157 or see at 28A Railroad
165
ACRES
2
houses,
4 farm ponds, 3 springs, 2 cisterns
northeasterly direction to the
SL, Middleport.
and
well
.
Plenty
of
good
grass. Would like $25,000.00.
MILLER
CALL
LEW
LEITER
:~\minus of Township Road No. LEGAL NOTICE
6-20-61c
263-1768
2. Township Road No. T-21 , In
ARE YOU THINKING OF MOVING, BUILDING, OR
Sa lem Township , Meigs County ,
LEGAL NOTICE
16 FT. FIBREGLAS boat, 78 MOBILE HOMES
Columbus, Ohio
BUYING. WE HAVE OVER 60 PROPERTIES NOW.
from the western terminus of
PAUL HARRIS, whose ad .
.1220 W1shington Blvd.
h.p. Mercury motor and
said township road ensterly to dress Is unknown, Is hereby
CHECK
WITH US FOR A GOOD BUY.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
trailer,
$650;
phone
882-2596.
Bertha Richardson
the iun c11on with Townsh ip notif ied tha t on ·the 9th day Q1
Realty
6-21
-Jic
Road No . 20.
May , 1972 Lena Turner, being
274 -1200
276-1694
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-1325
J. All of Township Road No. the plaintiff filed her complaint
20, in Sa lem Townsh ip, Me igs In partition aga inst him as a
Rea I ·Estate For Sol ..
County, which extends f rom defendant, In the Common Pels For Sale
Towns h ip Road N.o. 21 to· Pleas Court. M&amp; lgs County, SIAMESE kl!lens. 2 months
Townsh ip Road No , 22.
Ohio , and· being case number
old ; phone 992-3214.
4. Township Road No. 22, In 15,07 1.
6-23-2tc
Salem Township , Meigs County,
Said com pi.Vn t prays for a

t

j

Well

CLEAN UP

1970 Chevrolet Nova

3 Bed~~m home, with
.. · brick front, 1 car
garage,
carpeti~g •
Priced. at ~ •
ONLY $13,750
We specialize fn aluminum,
On ~ost Amer(~~~ r:oro .
vinyl and steel · sldl~_gf
-GUARANTEEDfiberglas. _brick and s!cile;
'·
Phone
.
.. 992-2094
complete line of r~lcfiilhll
and commercl~l •roofing;
Pome'!'J lfofll~· Auto
remodeling, building,
suspended ceilings, fn!et&lt;lor
and ex!erlor p'aln!lng;
comple!e line of Masonry
work . All work guarllnteed to
customer satisfaction. We
. SEWING MACHINE service, are fully Insured ,Jor your
clean, oil, set' tension $4.99.
proteeflon_. 32, N. 2nd. 992·
•
Special Electro-Grande ~18.
Company. Phone 992-6517.
ALLStDE BUILDERS&amp;'
5-21-lfc .
CONSTR. CO.
.
'
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, S!ewar!, Ohio. Ph .
662-3035.

Jaciale ·

nice location,
phone 992-2441

l

.

.

- ~AA&amp;nment

From the l~r~sr. '·
Bulldozer R~'diator to
Smallest Heater Core.

SUMMER

USED CARS.

•

EXPERT

------

Syra_c use ,
furnished,

·f

..--

lATE

Business·Services "

Box 188. Sardis, Ohio 4a946. 1965 CHEVROLET Supersport.
Real Estate For Sale
6-18-61p
while with black interior, b.
HOUSE, s rooms and bath, 3
seats, 283 4 bbl .. auto.• like
bedrooms, at!ached garage.
YOUNG Hereford bull , service
new tires. Ph . 992-l~7 .
Ph.
992-2156
storm
windows and doors,
age; phone 667-3262, Frank
6-21-6
forced air furnace on lol 75 x
Dodderer, Box 162, Coolville .
100. located on State Route 7
6-~1 - 3!p RECONDITIONED
The Dai~ Sentinel
upright
at Cheshire, Ohio. Priced
piano. $175, 466 S. 2nd Ave.. ~---~--------' reQuced for quick sale, owner
'OLD FURNITURE, dishes,
Middleport.
leaving state. Call 367-7428
clocks, brass beets, sliver
6-1B-6tc. Auto Sales
after 4 p.m.
dollars . or • comple!e
6-2~- l!c
INTERNATIONAL 'h ton
households. Write M. D.
CHAIN Saw. S90; Oliver 70 1964
pickup,
6
cylinder;
call
949Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. C51tractor,
S225 ; phone 247-2547 2184.
Call 992-6271.
or 247 -2543.
6-23-2 tc
6-21 -31&lt;
1969 MERCURY 10 passenger
CAMPER, 16 It. sleeps 6, good wagon. a.c .. p.b .. p.s.. priced
For Rent
condition, $1 ,000. Phone 992·
to sell; call 949-2184.
UNFURNISHED 4 rooms &amp; 6329.
'
bath ; 2 bedroom mobile
6-23-2tc
.- 5-12-tfc
home ; trailer space; store
room 30 x 60 ; 3 miles south ,
. - - 196J PONTIAC Tempest, 4
Middleport on Rt. 7, M &amp; G POODLE puppies, Silver Toy. cylinder, automatic, good
Contact
Park view Kennels, Phone 992- running condition, good tires ,
Food Market.
6-23-3tp
5443.
_ ·
$150. Phone 992-7204.
•'VERA' ESLEtt. ·.
,
·
8-15-Hc
6-23-6tp
•92-3020
UPSTAIRS aportment, un Middleport-'
furnished, 4 rooms and bath, COAL. Limestone. Excelsior 1971 THUNDERBIRD. 2 door 160 Coal St.
751 Brownell Ave., call 1·985- Salt Works, E. Main St., Landau, all power, AM-FMRUTLAND
3974.
Porneroy , Phone 992 ·3891.
Stereo radio , air -conditioned ,
2
B.
R.
modern home ,.
4•12·tfc
6-22-Jip
many extras, 9,000 actual
--------miles; call 173-5323, John completely furnished on
large fenced lot, garage ,
NEW - Total electric apart- BEAUTIFUL Maple Early McMurray, Mason .
ment, 2 bedroom, walk -tn
518,000.
American style, stereo-radio
6·21 -6tp
closets, large living room,
combination. AM-FM radio, 4 ~-------­
kitchen and dining area; speaker sound system, 4
3 B.R. home. recen!ly
speed automat ic changer. Real Estate ·r, S:;~ :
phone 992-7384 or 992-7133.
completed refinished inside
Balance 576 . 39. Use our
6-22- JI~
on 3(.o acres, $11,500.
budget terms. Call 992-7085. APPROXIMATELY 130 acres
-----'--limber,
pasfure
and
hay
land;
HOUSE. unfurn ished, 7 rooms
6-22-61C
ideal lake site. owner will help 2'h Ml LES from Rutland. 7
with bath and laundry room;
1 floor plan home,
slyle, finance to right party ; phone room,
112 duplex,
all
newly WALNUT, Modern
bath, furnace on 11;"' acre
992-2452.
stereo·radio,
4
speaker
sound
remodeled, wall -to -wall
6-22-3tc ground $10,000.
carpeting, 5 room• .md bath; system, 4 speed automatic
Furnished sleeping room with changer, sepa r. ate co ntrols .
bath; phone 992-2780 or 992- Balan ce $62 . 34 . Use our HOUSE·in Long Bot!om, phone .1 MILE from Bypass. 3 b.r.
3m.
budget l~rm s. Call 992-7085. 985-35'19.
all-electric home on 3 acres,
.
6-22-6tc
6-22-6tc
$18.900.
6-11 -tfc
2 BEDROOM modular home in

I

! c

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

.

6-22-21p

"HEll"

ond plelnlltl's title quieted

·

WMP0/1390
I
ON YOUR

..

,..

We talk to JOU
.like l petS0rL

·For Wanl A'd Serv ic e
Factory c~o k e guns only_.
1 ·•
S cents per Word one in.sertlon
'
6-21 ·31p
DIA~
~lnlmum -Chatge 75c
•
12 cents per word three
consecu tiVe insertiolis.
. Y AR 0 Sale, Avon B.o ttles, "-~--:~-::----....--'-;!

•

Employment Waot~rl.

For Sale

siSJhts,

' '.

' '

}

•

high-

, , , , , .,

~ •

•

i

;:. Sentinel Cl~ssifieds Get Action!. Senti-o~l Clsssifie~ Get Result~/
...•••

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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 23, 1972

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P!!IP.!!I '
. " 992-2174
liiiMiiii1 Buick
Pontiac
TIHJCKS MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
.: .

Mr .

RIGGS BROS., INC'.

:..

shopped in Parkersburg
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wolfe and
family spent SWlday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. Terry Wolfe
imd family, Syracuse.
Delbert Ours, Chester, was a
guest of his daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Middleswart and Greg Sunday.
Mrs. Ralph •Brewer, Mrs.
Tom Fitch and Mrs. Bill
Middleswart were in Pomeroy
Tuesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Evans,
Paul Dean, and Mrs. Gordon
Ridenour and Nancy, were
recent guests of Mrs. Mae Van
Meter and Ruby.
.
Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil Cozart
and daughters called on Mr.
and Mrs. wnnie Dailey and
family, Satur!)ay.
Mr. and Mrs. main Dailey
and s6ns visited Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Fitch and Keith,
Sunday.
. Mr. and Mrs: L. R.
.Gluesencamp were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
Gluesencamp and ·daughter,
Bolivar,
Mrs . Larry Curtis and
children, and Mrs. Mary
Pierce, Long Bottom, spent
Tuesday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert Lawson and Timmy,
Mr. and Mrs. John Tillis ll!ld
Tammy were recent guests of
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Lawson.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van Meter
and daughter, Pomeroy, were
recent guests of Mrs. Atilt Van
Met~r.

Olll

USED CARS

Kingsbury

Ph. 985-4100
Located on St. Rt. 1

News, Notes
Bible School was held this
week at the Carleton church
wilh a program Saturday
evening at the close of Bible
school. The Carleton church
will be having a revival
slarting June 24 thru July 4
with Rev. Lanier the guest
speaker. The Rev. Jay Stiles
invites everyone to atlend.
Mrs. VIrgil King and Helen
went to MI. Vernon to visit at
the Nazarene College. Mary
Lou, who is a student lhere,
returned home with them for a .
short visit.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
were In Wilmore, Ky. Wed·
nesday ":here their son,
Richard, has returned as a
student at Asbury College for
·the swnmer.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Sheets of
Sandyville, W. V~ . spent
Saturday · afternoon and
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Murray and family and
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray: Other
evening visitors· were Mr. and
Mrs . Dale Harrison and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean and
John Walter had as recent
visitors Mr. and Mrs. KeMeth

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Chesler, 0.

Markins, Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerold Gilkey and Tammy and PLANS DROPPED
PORTLAND, Maine (UP!)Cindy of Athens, Mr. and Mrs.
-Yielding to strong pressure,
Eddie Weekly of Beaufort,
South Carolina, Miss Juanita the Maine Highway Commission Wednesday dropped
Terrell and Mrs. Anna Mae
plall8 to move a .Henry WadTerrell of Pomeroy, Miss Ani Ia
sworth
Longfellow mo~umef)l
Watkins of Chesier and Robert
from the square whjch bears
Bruce Rled, who Ill stationed at
his name tQ a location next to a
the Naval Base at Norfolk,
dry cleaner's shop. The pur.
Virginia .
Recent guests of Mrs. Neva·. pose was ID eJqlllnd the street
King were Jimmie Cwnmiils to relieve traffic congestion.
Hl$1rlc conunlsslons and
and Helena Connor of
private citizens protested movColumbus, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ing
the statue of the poet, whlch
Chase of Grove City, Mr.
has stood In lhe center of the
Norman
Hlelman
of
roadway since 1888, six years
Bellefontaine and Richard after his death .
Hlelman of Hemlock Grove
and Mrs. Ruby Rucker of
Harrisburg, Ohio, Mr. and SALE HELPFUL
OOLUMBUS (UPI)
A
Mrs. Clarence Radcliff of
special close-out sale by the
Michigan.
·
·
stateLiquor Department
Mr. and Mrs. John Pedras
during
the
past week increased
and daughter, Mary, had as
recent visitors Mr. and Mrs. retail sales In 'r/ liquor stores
Victor McCue of Fall Church, bY liO per cent.
Virginia, Mr. and Mrs. Henry to visit with her sister, Judy,
Pedros and son of Portsmouth. for a short lime.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Smilh
Mr . and Mrs_. Robert
had as recent visitors their Swearlngton and son of Dayton
daughter and family, Mr. and were visitors of her motller,
Mrs. Ralph Bates.
Mrs. Jennie Hollie and also Mr.
Miss Geneva King has and Mrs . Nev White and
returned to Kankakee, Illinois Sherman.

Footprint And Pits Found

and Mrs. Cecil
Eloaeberry and children were
WASHINGTON (UP!)- A has sponsored research by
recent guests of her silJter, Mr. )X'ehlstorlc footprint and a Mrs. Le8key and her husband,
and Mrs. Jlm&gt;MiddletiWIIrt and . serif!S of shallow pits follhd In
Louis s. a. l41akey. Among
family.
an East African gorge may lhelr discoveries .in Olduval
Recent guests of E. H. give modern man new IJ1. Gorge was tile remains of a 2Carpetlter and fainlly were formation about the anatomy mU!Ion-year-old man named
Mrs. Ruby Bry111t, Debbie and and works of his ancient an- Homo Halilll by Leakey in the
Dave, S. W. Durst, Patty cestors,
the
National belief that he was the planet's
Glueaenc,mp, Jane Allen, Mr. Georgraphic Society reported first maker of tooia.
and Mn. Rudy Durst. Mr. and Wednesday.
The pits found ~ Mrs.
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Mra. Tim Wllktnaon and
The footprint, at least half a ·Leakey, about a dolen of them,
lllawn, &lt;llucll H111ter Joe mllli111 yelrl old, "may be the had been liCOaped by hand In
MUton, Gojdie Clendenin, oldest Stone Age loQtprint sand wblcb I I - rac:ll hard. In
Marpret Amberger, Mary · known," tile society said, II some cue1, ltbe told the
Triplett, Mlrutle Pickens, said "few others hive ever National Geocr1pblc, elear
RalpbJ!lbnatm, Everett Roush, been found."
lraCIII rl finler JDUb nmaln
Dr. Mary D. LUIIey dllcov· Ill the aldel.
D. W, Willon.
ered a complex of artlfldal pllll
"lmpmud liiiD one rl the
and chamels in now hardened pill II the aneW J1111 of a
The Joshua tree was
given Its name by the Mor- sand depoelts of Olduval (kqe II1Jnap footplllt, . . UDJy
mons because the tree In Tanzania. They may have tht laft foot of I ~." the
· lleemed to be lUting its arms been pert of a prlmltiw water IOdefl llld.
In supplication, as did the W«b.
The ~ llkl Pnlf. P. Y.
Biblical Jos6ua.
For many years the society Toblllol o1w'SIIhai,SNh

or.

Africa, "one rl lhe leading
authorities 111 lhe anatomy of
prehistoric man," eurnlned
the footprint and finger matks.
He reported that they "aeem
to be the first evidence we have
of the nature of the soft tissue
or·early man." He called the
fbld "one of the most epochal of
the great Olduval cllltcoverles. ''
The pits wen found by Mrs.
Leakey In upper Olduvallevela
lnllablted more recedly than
the ancient remalill ol man
found at greater dep!M. The
laralll-. about tine
dlametw and 1 fool' deep. .
~llonl . . they ....
liCOopeCI oat at 1tut IIQI,ODO
,.... qo.llon predle datlnc
will be P""'bh 1IIIMI lllalr
aact poltiU.. In 01Swi'1

reeun

.varlllllllnta II ••••

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Notice

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P.M . Day

Before Publication.
Monday Deadl ine 9 a.m .
Cancella tion - Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for.
Day of Public;atlon

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WANJ ADS
INFORMATION
. DEADI.INES

RIFLE match powered

.n and

scope

Rutland Gun Club, Sunday.
June 25th. 1 p.m.
6-23-21c

REGULATIONS

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The Publisher reserves the 1 SHOOTING Match
every
right to . edit ~r re_iect any ads, Saturday beginning Saturday,
~btect • onal.
The
June 24th at the Racine
deemed
publ isher W1ll not be responsible
.
M
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for mol"e than one . incorrect
Planmg
Ill at 6 p.m .
rnser' Ion ,
Assorted meats. Sponsored by

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RATES

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the Syracuse Ftre \ Dept .

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18 cents per·· woro six con-

Antiques on Larkin Street,

secu tive Insertions..
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days :

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Rutland, Friday and Satur day
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6·21 ·Jtc

CARD
OF THANKS .
&amp; OBITUARY ·

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S1.50 for SO word m inimum . GU N Shoot. also rifle matc hes
Each aaajr ional word 2c.
- open sites only , Forked

BLIND ADS

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Additional 2Sc
Advertisement .

Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,

Cha rg e per

June 25, 12 noon.

6-21 -3tc

OFFIC5 HOUR$ c
8:30a .m. to 5:00,p.m; Daily, KOSCOT KOSMETICS: Se~eral

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~~~~rd:y~ ·

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to

12

: 00

Noon .

new products - specials each
month ; also sales personnel

neeaed. Phone 992-5113.
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6-6-tlc

LEGAL NOTICE

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IN THE

·~

COMMON PLEAS COURT

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GUN SHOOT, Sunday, June 25,
1 p.m. Factory choked guns

OF
only . Second place shooters
MEIG~ COUNTY, OHIO
get free shot in next match .
DEWEY RAY alRCHFIELD ..- Assorted meats. Racine Gun
lnd
.
Club. .
MARY L. BIRCHFIELD,
6-22-31c

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Svcamore Street,
Middleport, Ohio,

Pia in tiffs

vs.
MRS. R . E . CANADAY
R. E. CANADAY,

and

Address Unknown,
Et at .,
Oefend1nts
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

, No. 15.064

Mrs·. R . E .
Canday ; R. E. Canaday ; the
un k nown he i rs, devisees ,
lega tees, adm lnlstrators ,
dlstrlbutees, executors and
assigns of L. C. Brechtel ,
Decea·ser:t, and the ' unknown
hei r s, dev l:sees, legatees , ad ·
min I strators , · d I str I butees ,
executors and assigns of Peter
Brechtel , Deceased , will ta ke
notice that on the Jrd day of
May, 1912, a Complaint was
f l ied In th e Common Plea s
Court of Meigs county, Ohio,
Case No. 1S,D64, wherein you
have been named defendants.
In the prayer of the comp laint,
Plaintiffs pray that Defendants
may be compelled to show their
Interest and that the nme may
be adjudged to be noll and void ,
The

D~e.ndants,

SAve· up to one hall. Bring yoor
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.
4-4-tfc
YARD SALE, Saturday, June
24, starts 9 a.m. at Ina Ellis
residence on Rt. 7 bet"jeen
Middleport and Chesh&lt;re ;
many used items.

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Window
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Heaters
Plum bin~
Electrical Work

against the $Bme, and for such
other relief as Is proper . The
real estate Is described as
follows :
,
The following Real Estate
situated In the Cciunty of Meigs,
if) the State of Oh io, and In the
Tbwnship of Salisbury, and
bounded and descr i bed as
follows :
Sit uate In Marcus Bosworth's
Addition to L.ower Pomeroy ,
now Incorporated Into the

Wanted To Buy

WANTED- old upright pianos,
grand pi anos, old pump
organs, any condition. Paying

$10 each . Write giving

ARNOLD
.
BROTHERS
992-2448

DON 'T PUMP your slug ish WI~L paint roots or :ho~~~~
septic tank. Get Klean . £m. lnr:t and cut trees ,
t
All Septic Tank Cleaner . attics; . basements, e c.
Landmark, Farm Burteau, Phone 949 ·322!:
6-14-301c
Pomeroy .
6-23- llc ·- - - - - - - - ::-:
5P
--=,--=
N'=e-=T- :c:o::N::-:s=-=o--:L-=E-=
P-:-:, A No Wanted
may be purc hased by smali LEAD ·vocalist. tor ·rock group .
monthly- payments, see il · Call Gallipolis 446-3829 or
locally, wr ite Cortland Music Polneroy 992·2211'1 .
Company I, P. 0. Box 35.
6-72-3tc
Cortland. Ohio 44410.
--=====;===="---,
6-22-2tp '
196J GMC pickup, 8 ft: bed ; I
Demeo- Revette 23 channel CB
radio, I Courier Clipper 23
hand set, solid state, 23
cha nnels, 5 watts, with extra

Wanted!
Sentinel Carrier

battery pack; phone 992-2792.
6-22-6tc

In·

directions. Witten Piano Co .,

N'altlan Bjggs
Radiator Speci11is!

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph . 992-2174
Pameroy

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Syracuse

Mobile Homes For Sale

'IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCHO .
Lake Conchas. New Mexico .

Aluminum
Sh-i'ets

Real Estate For Sale

part i tion of t he following
described rea l estate, and that
the pla intiff's Interest be set off
to her In severalty or that Slid
real estate be sold and the
proceeds therefrom be divided
ac cording to law .
Said real estate being situated
In the Village of Pomeroy,
County of Me igs and State of
Ohio. and being two tots con .
tainlng 1.A3 acres, more or less .
For a more detailed description
,of sa id r eal estate reference Is
made to Volume 241 page 295,
Me igs Coun ty Deed Records.
Said defendant , Pau l Harris,
Shall answer the pLaintiff's
compla int on or before Augu-st
7, 1972, or he shall be deemed In ·
default .
Lena Turner , Plaintiff
·BOI\R DOF COUNTY
COMMrSSION E RS , J. B. O' Brien , he-r attorney

MEI GS COUNTY. OHIO.

tOO V;~ Court Street

By Mllrthl!i Chambers Pomerov. Ohio 45769

June 23, 30 2t

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(51 19, 26 ; 161 2, '· 16, 23. 6k
LEGAL NOTtt;_E

' WAI.'!H SIGNS FIVE
CANTON, Ohio (UPI)
Walsh College said Monday
five basketball players have
accepled grants-in-aid.
The five are Darrell Harris
of Cleveland's Lutheran East
High Scho~!; Sam Wilks of
Columbus West High School;
Gene Frankart of Fostoria
Wendelin High School; Mike
Parker of Canarsie High
School in Brooij,yn, N. Y., and
Cadton Handy of St. Hilda
High School in New York City.
Virginia's 1966 Genera! ·Assembly designated the fox·
hound as the official stale
dog.
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Bedford townsh 1P-· Trustees
will hold a public hearing on the
tax budget ror 1913 at the
Clerk's office, Darwin , Ohio,
July 8, 1972 01 6:30p.m.
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23, 11

Gl1nn Lee-, Clerk

For Sale

come? We have

just the

h.p. engine. In carton

70.25 ,

POMEROY

9a_ Jack W. Corse~. Mgr.
llitl
Phone 992-2181
TWIN Needle sewing machine
• 1971 model In walnu!. s!and.
All features buill-In !o make
fancy designs and do stretch
sewing . Also buttonholes ,

blind hems etc. $.13.35 cash
or

terms

Phone 992-5641.

avallable.

6-22-6tc

VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
Hygiene New . Demonstralor

•

has all cleaning attachments

plus !he new Electro Suds for
shampooing carpel. Only
S27.50 cash price or terms
available. Phone 992-5641.
6-22-6lc

PUREBRED Her'il!brd bull. 3
years old; also 1960 Dodge ;
phone 992-2307.
6-23-31p
1

SMALL mare pony with filly
colt ; phone 992-2990 or 9922759.
6·23-3tc

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SEWiNG MACHINES. Repair:
service, all makes. 992-2284. ,
$18,000.00.
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The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
GOOD NEIGHBORS
Authorized Singer Sales end .
LIVE HERE
ServIce. We Sharpan Scissors.'
2 story frame, 3 bedrooms, .
J-29-!fc
bath,

porches,

storage

building, garage, view of the
river. $6,900 .00 .

AHOME AND
A BUSINESS
Anice 3 bedroom apar!ment,
bath. glassed front and rear
porches. hardwood floors. a
business to go with II. Grea!
tor re!lrement. Call for In-

d

B k

er

READY -MIX CONCRETE
delivered rlgh! !o your
prolect. Fas! and easy. Free
esl moles. Phortt 992-3284,
Goegleln R...ty-t.llx Co ..
Middleport, Ohio.

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5-1-tfc

-DOZER end back hoe wor"k,
ponds and septic !onks; B&amp;K
Excavating, Phone 992-SJ67,
Dick Karr, Jr.
5-21-!fc
e"·A
-=c=K=H;:
ci:-;:
E-A-N-::-D-DO=zE:::R::-work.
Sepllc tanks Installed. George _
(Bill) Pullins. Pho"' 991·2&lt;1?8,_
··
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;1.25-!fc
·see UfFOR: Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . 'A. Jacob, salet
represen!a!lve. For free
•estimates. phone Chorles
Lisle , Syrocuse, V. V.
3-2-!fc
-----O'DELL WHEEL olighmont:
locoted at Crossroads, R!. 124.
Comple!e front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels • balanced electronically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Rusonoble
rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-!fc

-----=-:-::---:---AUTOMOBILE Insurance been .
cancelled?
Los!
your
operator's license? Coli 9922966.
6-15-!fc

HAR~I~UN'~

TV Service, open
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; free pickup
and delivery ; phone 992-25~.
6-13-!fc

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COME AND SEE

Ray Douglas, Realtor
1-592-3414
Bill Keeton, Associate
1-592-1349

OI'!N !V!S. I.-GO I' .M.
.,~!ROY, OHIO

'T V.

· lake frontage on full acre
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LAKEVIEW ESTATES

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.in Revzew

ROUTE 7 at FIVE P.OINTS

70 Maverick ......................... ..'15951
Standard, real clean.

70 Mustang ...........................'1995
2 ~r. HT, V8 auto.

69 Mereu!} Marquis ... ·~ · .......... ~1795

ton pickup V8 , local one owner, low
mileage.

2 dr. HT. Clean.

70 GMC Pickup ......................$1795
6 "'r'· s!andard, Long wide bed.

6' Chevrolet Belair.................. ~1895

1969 GMC only $1895

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4 dr .

~dan . FaCtory

a ir. Extra clean. _

only $695

1965 Ford only $795

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67 Corvair 4 Dr. H.T. ............... ..'395
2 dr. HT. Factory air, ps, pb.

Gal. , 2 dr . HT. factory air. one owner . Real,
sharp, 65 model .

Rawlings Depend1ble City does it again ... we have
"unfrozen" our prices on air conditioning and will i nstall
air conditioning on 1ny car dur ing the months of June and

July for the complete price of $285 __ _ this is a $115
~lscoun!over the original price .. _no gimmicks; THIS IS
THE, COMPLETE INSTALLED PRICE : PARTS;
LABOR ; TAX; COMPLETE •.. ANY CAR . Beautiful
wood grained cabinet to match the latest of models ...
hurry In and see !he unit and se! up your appointment to

have a " cool u. summer .
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FRONT: Deluxe automo!lve styling with safety-designed
padded base. Wood grain con!rol and toP, strip. ·
AIR OUTLET LOUVERS: Three 4"xl&lt;;, • Iron! louvers.
Adlustable lor all-direction air flow.
EVAPORATOR CASE ; Dimensions- Height 4'12'', Length
16'11o", Depth 11'.4".
At~ CONTROL; Varlable3-speed for maximum personal
com for!.
TEMPERATURE CONTROL: Adlustable with off
'posl!lori . Cooling level is aulomatically maintained by
THERMOTROL.

and to hear provocative views,
By RICK DU BROW
• HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - "An and look . at questionable
Euay on the Malia," a CBS-TV charactet'IJ, not to mention
hour to be pre~e~~ted SUnday learning again the Rell81llvlty
night, Ia what might be termed of Italians to the matter.
But the truly slgnlllcant
an exploitation documentary.
The IItle, of coin\, may story of organized crime In the
hook quite a few viewers. And United Slates Is no longer Its
U )'00 are Interested In seeing Intramural sculfllng, but, acsome questlooable characters cording to many, the extent rl
MIDDLEPORT,
In dramatic uroundlngs, you Its contact with rl!lp8ctable
Institutions. In short, the
will not be dlsappolnled.
It II a sharply produced hour, degree of Ita Involvement In the
with bill of hlltory thrown In, texture of ewryday life.
There Is some of this
and 10111e provocative commentary by tile two host- material In lhe Sundlty hour,
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkinson and Marshall, Dunbar, W. Va.,
but
It
doesn't
go
particularly
. narrators, wrliers Luigi
and Shawn were weekend Mrs , Carol Cornell, Mrs.
· Barzinl and ·Nicholas Pileggi, deep. II Is a program with guests of her parents, Mr, and Ma:rlfte Durst, Mrs. Mac
, We are, of cwrse, reminded enough razzle-dazzle to appeal Mrs:· Rudy Durst.
VanMeter, Lori Mlddleswarj,
' In the llroedcast about the wry to an audience that might enjoy
Mr. R. R.' Durst ,and sons, wererecentcallersatlbehome
. understandable llllllltivlty of a good movie on the lllbjeel, VIctor and Tom, visited Great of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bryant and
l many decent ltallana to fll. and with commentary to give It Smoky Mountains National family.
sumptlona by Ill-Informed a eoclally redeeming quality. Park and otlur points of In·
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lawson
terest Saturday and Sunday. visited his mother, Mrs. Olive
: people who Unk their heritage Pl~tortally Allw
, But It II pictorially alive.
Mr. and Mrs. David Bryant . Lawson, who is a patient in
: with gqlllerllm.
I
'lbearlel Warth Coulderlq CBS-TV knew what It was
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
' At q rate, there II some doing when It sched11led It right
Pomeroy.
colorful JiclcJrlal matter In the In lhe heart of Ita prime time necllon," the earlier hour
Mrs. Maxine Durst spent the
offers lnlervlews wllh officials weekend with Mrs. Sheryl
. &amp;mdlty hour, and there are lineup Sunday .
"An Essay on the Malta" Ia of both countries, and also Durst and sons st The Plains.
theories worth considering.
And yet one c~ away from the second of two back-to-bacll focuses In good part on air
Leota Birch visited Mrs. Adi
an advance ~lng rl the ooMiour documentarlet aet far BmUJigllng.
Van MeterJ Thursday af.
The 11roducer, Jay Me·
broldcast ·~eenng II waa a hot CBS-TV prime time Sandlty,
temoon. ·
Mallen,
posed u a potential
eubject Ulat almp!y got th,e with the flrlt dealing wltll dtug
Mrs. Goldie Clendenin Is
buyer of a large shipment of
traffic
between
Meslco
and
the
visiting
at the Will1am Roush
ooce
marijuana, and takes his story home while
It 11111 be fucinatlrtg to aee a United States. ,
her daughter, Mrs.
from
there,.
'
"The
MalCIID
ConEntitled
dramaUc hour like this me,
Again, though, despite Illlll Roush, Ill in Washington.
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Norman Lehew
provocatlw film footage, me
and family haw moved iniD
got tile leeling after an advance acreenlng of lhe hour their new home IP this comthat the truly significant story munlty.
Mrs. Flllinie Durst, Mrs.
·wu liven too brief llt.ltlon.
Elva Dally, Mrs. Golda
Tba.t story, 11 Indicated
aml'll tlmea In the Jlf08fllll, aendenln and Mrs. Mlfaaret
II tiW the ral IIOIInll of tJie Alllblrl•, were recent ....
proltlern II the demlnd for rl Mrs. Nell Mlddl-lrt.
The tax boclks are now open ·tor the
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Mn.
~ In the United Statal.
June or Second hl.lf collection of the
Plull!ltt VIII Mtllr, ~y,
1971 Relf Estllt Taxes., Afso for
~. . .

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS 00.
o:

delinquent tax. Closing date will be .

Jyly 3, 197.2.

4 speed. F~ncy wheels. Wide oval tires. Racing stripe.
Real nice and clean .

112

V8, auto. trans., PS. Bronze with vinyl top .

@)

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

20 year financing available.

71 Pinto .....:......................... '1795

63 Oldsmobile F85 ..~~ .~~t.~- .......... $395

s P.M.

64 Rambler 4 Dr. Sedan .... :...... ,$295

$3095

LEGAL

New
' 3 Bedroom Home.
.

~

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

knit u hotstery with
.cu . In V-8 engine. power sreerlng. power
:&gt;tl r ·' bucke"r.eats,
disc brakes, con$ole. posl!rac!lon. rally wheels. F&amp;R guarcfs, G-70x15 white wall tires. radio &amp; rear seal
SfM!aker, 4-season air condl!foner. This Is one o_fa king Mlgh!y Sharp!
197G CHEVROLET IMPALA SPT. CPE.
mn '·. 350 cu. ln. V-8englne, !urbo-hydramallc, r,owersteerlng &amp;
brakes, radio, red vinyl ln!erlor, black t nlsh . While wall
llres. like new.
197G DODGE POLARA
$229! I
Fac!or~ air conditioning, V-8 engine, automatic tran smission, power steering, power brak... good white side . ~ ­
walls, many more ex!ras. White lln lsh. black vinyl roof. ,
Priced to move!
·

·Pomeroy Motor Co.

2 dr. Sedan.

-1969 Int. only $1795 ··

Custom 500 4 dr. Sed. Must see th~ car to
believe how clean it is.

·Po•eroy
Motor Co.

197_qCHEV~T MONTE CARLO
~ . \~;j
k vinyl roqt;·btod&lt;

70 Volkswagen ........................'1495

112 ton pickup. V8, std. trans ., custom cab. A
real buy

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

ov•.

SUNDAY, JUNE 25

KEY REAL ESTATE, AGENT
Athens, Ohio

QUALitY

2 dr. HT. Extra nice.

Dart. This car is just like new. 6 cyl. and auto.
Ole of the cleane~f cars in the county .

19l1 Ford Galaxie 500

~

2 SIGIIS
Of

&amp;&amp;·Chnsler Newport ................ ..'895

112 ton pickup, 6 cyl. local one owner. This is a
real sharp truck.

Stiversville News Notes

4~

1969 Opel only $1595

2 ,dr. HT, Factory a ir .

1965 Ford

"You'll Like Our Qualify Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings
Un.
t
il
6
:
ooTil
~
PM. Sat.
. .

Johnson and Son, Inc.

992~2571

OfARLES CORNELL, OEVELOPER

:v. ton heavy dutv.1 360 .engine,
auto . trans., new '72 truck
camper. Will sell separate or

Karr &amp; Van Zanclt

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

I

68 Buick LeSabre .................. ..'1595

1969 Dodge only $15~5

Ford
Pickup

In Stock! •• We're Dealin'!

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE ralet. Ph . .j.46.
4782, Gallipolis, John RuSHII ,
O..ner 11. Operator.
•:..,_ 5-12-Hc

··" ,,Jt~~,~~~d

Wagon only 18,590 miles on this nice little car .
Easy on gas and a nice family car. .

4 dr. Sedan . Factory alf condition .

1969 Dodge . $1795

6-30-ffc

Comple!e Service
Phone 949-3821

69 Buick·LeSabre .................... !1895

Fairlane wag. Small VB &amp; auto . Local one
owner . Real sharp wagon .

2 dr. 350 engine, auto. trans .•• PS, 1500 miles .
Gold with white top . •

together.

·'

·1971·Opel only $1895

1969 Ford only $1795

1972 Chevrolet Nova

Good Selection New Cadillacs &amp; Ol~obiles

Income.

Nice

ALMOST

Wagons . Two to choose from. Come in &amp; drive
these one owner cars. Ole with automatic and
one wl_fh 4 speed. Real Sharp.

Real sharp.

for you , nice · apartment

rear .

speed. radio.

w-s-w tires, blue.

71 Ford lh t Pickup, V-8, auto., P.S..... '2695 ·

over. and small house In the

~

the new community' of all brick homes lust off
Rt. 33 South at the new by-pass near Meigs
High School. Prices start at 521,000 for a 2, 3 or
.4 bedroom home. Let us show yo,u the many
quality features. Come to our Open House this
Sunday from 11 to 5.

"

, Service ; also roof seal, un·

Call 992~3975.
· or

Turt 'Trlm Mower. B&amp;S 3'h

4

-68 ~ee lh t Pickup; v.a std........ ~.... '1395

II. awnings,
h1ng for you. Br 1ck home, 2 W1 der~lnnlng
Rl
d A Shuler
phone 9-19·
bedrooms , bath, utility.'
c ar ·
'- .
4567 ·
dining, basement, porches
6·22-6lc

By Appointment .

I':conomy Tiller, 31h h.p·. B&amp;S.
engine. Reg . 159.95
144.95

~

j ·

SPECIAL

price

EARTH MOVING

Open For Inspection in Lakeview Estates

MOWERS
&amp; TILLER!

I f

·Trade

ON V' V' Checked
USED CARS

~,, .

.65 MercuiJ 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 auto., P.S.......'495
1
66
4 Door, air.;
' . .Buick. ..LaSabre
.- ............ ,'99S~'
" 66 Buick LaSabre 4 Door "·T. ...., ...... ~..'6951
.
.
. 65 Mercury 4 Door, V-8, .auto., nice ......... '595
-65 MercuiJ 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 auto., P.S. .... ~1495

CI.ELAND
REALTY·

·;::========-,

from the jun ction with County
Road No. 9, extending nor .
lhY. ester ly to the west line of
Sec tion 16.
s. Township Road No. r- .71 , In
Salem Township, Meigs County ;
Ohio ."
The Soard of County Com .
mi ssio ners will yiew the
proposed prem ises . at the
prem ises , in the order listed
above commenci ng.,, 8;30 A .M ,
on Tuesday the nth. day of
July, 1972, and the fina1 hearing
on the proposal to vacate said
road premises will be held at
10 : 30 A .M . in th e Off ice of the
Board
of
Coun ty
Com missioners Bit the court House ,
Pomeroy , Ohio, on Tuesday ,
Jul y 11th., 1972 .

.

.-2dr. Real sharp.

Datsun
Pickup

-~ Mustane
6 cyl., 3 speed ................ '595
.
6S Chev. 2 Door, 6 c~ .• 3,speed
, .......... t395-

Dozer &amp; End folder vlork, .
ponds, buemont. lend·
scaping. Wt h1v1 2 size
darers, 2 sire toaurs. Work
done b~ . hour or !»&gt;llroct.,
608 E. MOin-$1.
Pomeroy
Fret · Eslfmllts. Wt 1fso :
haul till dirt, lap .soli. Dump
IMMEDIATE
trucks 1nd low-bo~ 101' hfro.
POSSESSION!
See
Bob or R09tr ~elfers.
3 bedrooms. nice kitchen, 2
·
Pom'ero~.
Phone·' 992-3525
baths, forced-air gas furaiter 7 p.m. or phon. m:
nace, full basement as living
quarters. $7,995.00.
.-5232 :
''
GETTING
SOCIAL SECURITY?
..
Want a home and an In- COMPLETE Mobile Home

-=========:___,

The
DaUy Sentinel

~

)

Anything...

1969

,69 Cadillac Coupe DeV~Ie, air.............. '3500
'68 Cadillac Sedan ' DeVille, ·air •.'...........'2600 :
-·- --'69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air...... '1995.
..
- '
68 Chev. Bet 4 Dr., V-8 auto., air .. ,......11495
' .68 Old$ 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air •.. •.... 11895_

·•

MIDDLEPORT
S. SECOND Avenue, 3 b.r.,

irgz

'3.07 engine.,V8, auto. trans .

~-

For Sale

•

USED-CARS

; $5.55

IS YOUR Mobile Horne hot?
$2,875. No Down. No ln!erest. bath, full basement, gas
after 5 p.m.
furnace, carport, very nice
Berry-M
iller
Mobile
Home
$25 mo. Vacation Paradise .
6-14-lfc Sales, 705 Farson Street, Money
521.000.
Maker .
Free
Belpre, Ohio can solve your
Broc hure . Rancho s: Box
formation .
2 BEDROOM, 12 x 52 trailer, problem with Coleman 2001DD, Alameda, California 7 ROOMS , bath, garage on
-WATCH THIS SPACE
Vlllege ot Middleport. Meigs
Pomeroy. 0.
air -conditioned: 9 miles North Centra l A ir Conditioning . 94501.
lar,..e private lot, $7 ,950.
FOR
REALTY VALUEscounty, Ohio, and marked and
on Rl. 33 ; phone 696-1051 .
Don't delay - call !oday. area
6·7-30!p
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
known on the said plat of lower · r-----~6-21-3tp
614-423-9531.
Pomeroy as Lot Number 153.
----,
160 Coal S!r,eet - Also
REALTOR
Said lot being fifty feet by on&amp;.
6-22-31c 3-BEDROOM frame with
location of the Middleport C
DIAL992-2259
hundred and eleven feet . Being
·2 BEDROOM trailer, adults -,------------:-:
garage and •;, basement,
of C office.
,.
lfnoonswer 992·2561
L.ot No. 153 as shown In deed
only, Bob's Mobile Court,
SEE
the
"WEEKENDERS
Weatherman
Addition
.!"~:::=:;;;;;::::~~==========~
records ot Meigs county , Ohio,
. P.ho~e 99H951 .
SP.ECIAL" a( Berry-Miller Tuppers Plains, Ohio; phone
In Volume, 159, Page 320.
6-13-tfc
Mobile Home Sales, 705 667 -3643; priced on Inspection .
.:~
··,
Referen~e1- 0eect·1 Volu'me ·244,
•i3614x· h" 'x '!009
--· - - - - - - - 6·_2l-_3_tp T, .
Farson
Streel
in
Belpre.
Ohio.
_________
'[
.,.P
IA:,
&amp;.
s''
· Page 5~9 of the Meigs County
'
1 BI;DROOM furnished
Deed Records.
tur~is~.~~ S~~[y c~~r~~~~~ RACINE - 6 room house, bat)!: V
f:5, J eQJO'T, 1 r. • TQ
apartment between Pomeroy
You ore required to answer
the Compla int within twen ty&amp; Athens, $80 per mon!h;
delivered
and
set-up
on
your
utility
room
,
garage,
$10.000
,
110 ••echanic Street
eight days after the last
phone 675-1684; also trailer
lot . We have a huge selection phone 949-4195.
!U
publ l caflon of this notice,
/
· space .
of
good
late
model
used
and
3-31
-lfc
namely, by not later than the
6-20-61p
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
repossessed
Mobile
Homes
on
=
R
=
A
=
C
=i
:::
..
N
--:
E
.=
·
=:
.:-:
.
'"
-.
:
roo
-:
::_::
m
~l\:-ouse,
24th day ot July, 1972, or
10
display. Before you buy any
judgment by default will be
NEW LISTING
rendered against you,
USED OFFSET PLATES
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and new Mobile Home see us first bath , basement, garag e, two
DOWN
TOWN ~ Brooms, bath, nice kitchen, furnace, full
you
'
ll
be
glad
you
did
.
Open
lots.
Phone
949-4313.
DEWEY RAY BIRCHFIELD
· HAV!i,
unfurnished
apartments .
ond
basemen!. Front and back porches. Old bu! roomy and
MANY
.ltSES
Monday lhru Saturday - - -- - - - - - - 4 - -5-lfp
Phone
992·5434.
MARY L. BIRCHFIELD.
handy.
$7500.00.
·
closed Sundays .
.
4-12-lfc
Sycamore Streel, Middleport,
6-22-3tc HOUSE '" Rutland by Grade
REAL
ESTATE
HILL
Ohio
~
UN_F_
U_R_N-IS_H_E--:D--a-pa
_r_tm
- ent, - - - - - - - - School; 4 rooms with bath ,
Ptalntlfls
POMEROY
Nice
2
bedrooms,
bath, living rm. car, large lot, carport ;
Crow. Crow ~ Parler ,
134 Mulberry Ave ., phone 9"2- 50 x 10 MOBILE home; priced garden
pe!ed.
Gas
forced
air
furnace.
Basement. Asking
phone 742-3154.
Attorneys tor Plaintiffs
3962
.
rea
sonably;
ca
ll
Chester
985·
$10.500.00.
8 for $1.00
6-21 -3tc
{5!12, 19. 2~ ; ( 6 ) 2. 9, 16. 23
6-11 -lfc
BOON DOCK SPECIAL
6-21 -61p r
SURPRISE - 2 bedrooms, 2 porches, 2 dug wells and
3379 .
PROPOSAL TO
cellar. Kitchen has stove, sink and refrlgera!or. Asking
For Sale or Trade
VACATE ROADS
CASti paid for ali mal&lt;es and
$4,000.00.
50
ACRES
1966 CHEVROLET. '12 ton models of mobile homes .
OLI)-BUT
LEGAL NOTICE
pickup, 6'1• fl . bed, standard;
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
Pursuant to Section 5553 .05
RURAL
Here's
one
you ought to en loy fixing . Ha~ 3
Redu~ed!
phone 992-6547.
4-13-lfc
Revised
Code ,
and
by
bedlooms,
living,
and
kitchen.
Cellar. Large garden stlol. ·
R&amp;solutlol') of the Bonrd of
________
6-_23-31c
Only
ss.ooo.oo.
Land
Contract
Co unty Commissioners of Me los
111 ~our! St.
County , Ohio , adopted June
WANT TO FINISH THIS
QUARTER horse ; phone 742·
Located S. of Athens 2 mi. on
20th , 1972, It was resolved that
Pomeroy, Ohio
-.Air
Conditioners
3418.
NEW
2
bedrooms,
bath, garage, cistern a~d large lot on
U .S. Rt . 33. Bordered on
the roads hereinafter descr ibed
6-21
-6tc
south
by
County
Road,
good
country
road.
Aski'l!l
$8500.00.
•
Awnings
be vacated , for the public .-~---- ----__,_)
bordered on west &amp; north' by
convenience and welfare, wh ich
NEW
CAPRI
·
• Underpinning
running stream, split down
road premises ere descr ibed u Help · Wanted
3
BEDROOMS ~ Lois ol close! space, large ones In each
middle
by
running
spring
.
Marine Sales
fotlow s :
bedroom. Gas forced air furnace . S!ove and refrigerator1200 ft. frontage on both sides
" 1. That portion ot Township WAITRESS; ap~ly in person, 32 FT. HOUSEBOAT, 40 h.p. Complete mobile home · of
-highway.
Has
old
farm
freezer
furnished. Landscaped lol with u!lilty building.
Road No . 131 , In Columbia
.... plus gigantic
home, 3 bedrooms, living
Township, whicK e&gt;&lt;tends from
Craw's Steak ouse
outboard motor and trailer; 'dservlc~
Only
$16,000.00.
isplay of mobile homes
room, formal dining room ,
the ellsterly boundary line of the
6-20·61c
will sell reasonable. Phone always
GRAZING FARM
available
at
...
kitchen and outbuildings .
ceme tery lands · In a generally
992-7157 or see at 28A Railroad
165
ACRES
2
houses,
4 farm ponds, 3 springs, 2 cisterns
northeasterly direction to the
SL, Middleport.
and
well
.
Plenty
of
good
grass. Would like $25,000.00.
MILLER
CALL
LEW
LEITER
:~\minus of Township Road No. LEGAL NOTICE
6-20-61c
263-1768
2. Township Road No. T-21 , In
ARE YOU THINKING OF MOVING, BUILDING, OR
Sa lem Township , Meigs County ,
LEGAL NOTICE
16 FT. FIBREGLAS boat, 78 MOBILE HOMES
Columbus, Ohio
BUYING. WE HAVE OVER 60 PROPERTIES NOW.
from the western terminus of
PAUL HARRIS, whose ad .
.1220 W1shington Blvd.
h.p. Mercury motor and
said township road ensterly to dress Is unknown, Is hereby
CHECK
WITH US FOR A GOOD BUY.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
trailer,
$650;
phone
882-2596.
Bertha Richardson
the iun c11on with Townsh ip notif ied tha t on ·the 9th day Q1
Realty
6-21
-Jic
Road No . 20.
May , 1972 Lena Turner, being
274 -1200
276-1694
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-1325
J. All of Township Road No. the plaintiff filed her complaint
20, in Sa lem Townsh ip, Me igs In partition aga inst him as a
Rea I ·Estate For Sol ..
County, which extends f rom defendant, In the Common Pels For Sale
Towns h ip Road N.o. 21 to· Pleas Court. M&amp; lgs County, SIAMESE kl!lens. 2 months
Townsh ip Road No , 22.
Ohio , and· being case number
old ; phone 992-3214.
4. Township Road No. 22, In 15,07 1.
6-23-2tc
Salem Township , Meigs County,
Said com pi.Vn t prays for a

t

j

Well

CLEAN UP

1970 Chevrolet Nova

3 Bed~~m home, with
.. · brick front, 1 car
garage,
carpeti~g •
Priced. at ~ •
ONLY $13,750
We specialize fn aluminum,
On ~ost Amer(~~~ r:oro .
vinyl and steel · sldl~_gf
-GUARANTEEDfiberglas. _brick and s!cile;
'·
Phone
.
.. 992-2094
complete line of r~lcfiilhll
and commercl~l •roofing;
Pome'!'J lfofll~· Auto
remodeling, building,
suspended ceilings, fn!et&lt;lor
and ex!erlor p'aln!lng;
comple!e line of Masonry
work . All work guarllnteed to
customer satisfaction. We
. SEWING MACHINE service, are fully Insured ,Jor your
clean, oil, set' tension $4.99.
proteeflon_. 32, N. 2nd. 992·
•
Special Electro-Grande ~18.
Company. Phone 992-6517.
ALLStDE BUILDERS&amp;'
5-21-lfc .
CONSTR. CO.
.
'
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, S!ewar!, Ohio. Ph .
662-3035.

Jaciale ·

nice location,
phone 992-2441

l

.

.

- ~AA&amp;nment

From the l~r~sr. '·
Bulldozer R~'diator to
Smallest Heater Core.

SUMMER

USED CARS.

•

EXPERT

------

Syra_c use ,
furnished,

·f

..--

lATE

Business·Services "

Box 188. Sardis, Ohio 4a946. 1965 CHEVROLET Supersport.
Real Estate For Sale
6-18-61p
while with black interior, b.
HOUSE, s rooms and bath, 3
seats, 283 4 bbl .. auto.• like
bedrooms, at!ached garage.
YOUNG Hereford bull , service
new tires. Ph . 992-l~7 .
Ph.
992-2156
storm
windows and doors,
age; phone 667-3262, Frank
6-21-6
forced air furnace on lol 75 x
Dodderer, Box 162, Coolville .
100. located on State Route 7
6-~1 - 3!p RECONDITIONED
The Dai~ Sentinel
upright
at Cheshire, Ohio. Priced
piano. $175, 466 S. 2nd Ave.. ~---~--------' reQuced for quick sale, owner
'OLD FURNITURE, dishes,
Middleport.
leaving state. Call 367-7428
clocks, brass beets, sliver
6-1B-6tc. Auto Sales
after 4 p.m.
dollars . or • comple!e
6-2~- l!c
INTERNATIONAL 'h ton
households. Write M. D.
CHAIN Saw. S90; Oliver 70 1964
pickup,
6
cylinder;
call
949Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. C51tractor,
S225 ; phone 247-2547 2184.
Call 992-6271.
or 247 -2543.
6-23-2 tc
6-21 -31&lt;
1969 MERCURY 10 passenger
CAMPER, 16 It. sleeps 6, good wagon. a.c .. p.b .. p.s.. priced
For Rent
condition, $1 ,000. Phone 992·
to sell; call 949-2184.
UNFURNISHED 4 rooms &amp; 6329.
'
bath ; 2 bedroom mobile
6-23-2tc
.- 5-12-tfc
home ; trailer space; store
room 30 x 60 ; 3 miles south ,
. - - 196J PONTIAC Tempest, 4
Middleport on Rt. 7, M &amp; G POODLE puppies, Silver Toy. cylinder, automatic, good
Contact
Park view Kennels, Phone 992- running condition, good tires ,
Food Market.
6-23-3tp
5443.
_ ·
$150. Phone 992-7204.
•'VERA' ESLEtt. ·.
,
·
8-15-Hc
6-23-6tp
•92-3020
UPSTAIRS aportment, un Middleport-'
furnished, 4 rooms and bath, COAL. Limestone. Excelsior 1971 THUNDERBIRD. 2 door 160 Coal St.
751 Brownell Ave., call 1·985- Salt Works, E. Main St., Landau, all power, AM-FMRUTLAND
3974.
Porneroy , Phone 992 ·3891.
Stereo radio , air -conditioned ,
2
B.
R.
modern home ,.
4•12·tfc
6-22-Jip
many extras, 9,000 actual
--------miles; call 173-5323, John completely furnished on
large fenced lot, garage ,
NEW - Total electric apart- BEAUTIFUL Maple Early McMurray, Mason .
ment, 2 bedroom, walk -tn
518,000.
American style, stereo-radio
6·21 -6tp
closets, large living room,
combination. AM-FM radio, 4 ~-------­
kitchen and dining area; speaker sound system, 4
3 B.R. home. recen!ly
speed automat ic changer. Real Estate ·r, S:;~ :
phone 992-7384 or 992-7133.
completed refinished inside
Balance 576 . 39. Use our
6-22- JI~
on 3(.o acres, $11,500.
budget terms. Call 992-7085. APPROXIMATELY 130 acres
-----'--limber,
pasfure
and
hay
land;
HOUSE. unfurn ished, 7 rooms
6-22-61C
ideal lake site. owner will help 2'h Ml LES from Rutland. 7
with bath and laundry room;
1 floor plan home,
slyle, finance to right party ; phone room,
112 duplex,
all
newly WALNUT, Modern
bath, furnace on 11;"' acre
992-2452.
stereo·radio,
4
speaker
sound
remodeled, wall -to -wall
6-22-3tc ground $10,000.
carpeting, 5 room• .md bath; system, 4 speed automatic
Furnished sleeping room with changer, sepa r. ate co ntrols .
bath; phone 992-2780 or 992- Balan ce $62 . 34 . Use our HOUSE·in Long Bot!om, phone .1 MILE from Bypass. 3 b.r.
3m.
budget l~rm s. Call 992-7085. 985-35'19.
all-electric home on 3 acres,
.
6-22-6tc
6-22-6tc
$18.900.
6-11 -tfc
2 BEDROOM modular home in

I

! c

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

.

6-22-21p

"HEll"

ond plelnlltl's title quieted

·

WMP0/1390
I
ON YOUR

..

,..

We talk to JOU
.like l petS0rL

·For Wanl A'd Serv ic e
Factory c~o k e guns only_.
1 ·•
S cents per Word one in.sertlon
'
6-21 ·31p
DIA~
~lnlmum -Chatge 75c
•
12 cents per word three
consecu tiVe insertiolis.
. Y AR 0 Sale, Avon B.o ttles, "-~--:~-::----....--'-;!

•

Employment Waot~rl.

For Sale

siSJhts,

' '.

' '

}

•

high-

, , , , , .,

~ •

•

i

;:. Sentinel Cl~ssifieds Get Action!. Senti-o~l Clsssifie~ Get Result~/
...•••

r

•

'

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 23, 1972

..

P!!IP.!!I '
. " 992-2174
liiiMiiii1 Buick
Pontiac
TIHJCKS MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
.: .

Mr .

RIGGS BROS., INC'.

:..

shopped in Parkersburg
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wolfe and
family spent SWlday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. Terry Wolfe
imd family, Syracuse.
Delbert Ours, Chester, was a
guest of his daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Middleswart and Greg Sunday.
Mrs. Ralph •Brewer, Mrs.
Tom Fitch and Mrs. Bill
Middleswart were in Pomeroy
Tuesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Evans,
Paul Dean, and Mrs. Gordon
Ridenour and Nancy, were
recent guests of Mrs. Mae Van
Meter and Ruby.
.
Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil Cozart
and daughters called on Mr.
and Mrs. wnnie Dailey and
family, Satur!)ay.
Mr. and Mrs. main Dailey
and s6ns visited Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Fitch and Keith,
Sunday.
. Mr. and Mrs: L. R.
.Gluesencamp were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
Gluesencamp and ·daughter,
Bolivar,
Mrs . Larry Curtis and
children, and Mrs. Mary
Pierce, Long Bottom, spent
Tuesday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert Lawson and Timmy,
Mr. and Mrs. John Tillis ll!ld
Tammy were recent guests of
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Lawson.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van Meter
and daughter, Pomeroy, were
recent guests of Mrs. Atilt Van
Met~r.

Olll

USED CARS

Kingsbury

Ph. 985-4100
Located on St. Rt. 1

News, Notes
Bible School was held this
week at the Carleton church
wilh a program Saturday
evening at the close of Bible
school. The Carleton church
will be having a revival
slarting June 24 thru July 4
with Rev. Lanier the guest
speaker. The Rev. Jay Stiles
invites everyone to atlend.
Mrs. VIrgil King and Helen
went to MI. Vernon to visit at
the Nazarene College. Mary
Lou, who is a student lhere,
returned home with them for a .
short visit.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
were In Wilmore, Ky. Wed·
nesday ":here their son,
Richard, has returned as a
student at Asbury College for
·the swnmer.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Sheets of
Sandyville, W. V~ . spent
Saturday · afternoon and
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Murray and family and
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray: Other
evening visitors· were Mr. and
Mrs . Dale Harrison and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean and
John Walter had as recent
visitors Mr. and Mrs. KeMeth

'

Chesler, 0.

Markins, Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerold Gilkey and Tammy and PLANS DROPPED
PORTLAND, Maine (UP!)Cindy of Athens, Mr. and Mrs.
-Yielding to strong pressure,
Eddie Weekly of Beaufort,
South Carolina, Miss Juanita the Maine Highway Commission Wednesday dropped
Terrell and Mrs. Anna Mae
plall8 to move a .Henry WadTerrell of Pomeroy, Miss Ani Ia
sworth
Longfellow mo~umef)l
Watkins of Chesier and Robert
from the square whjch bears
Bruce Rled, who Ill stationed at
his name tQ a location next to a
the Naval Base at Norfolk,
dry cleaner's shop. The pur.
Virginia .
Recent guests of Mrs. Neva·. pose was ID eJqlllnd the street
King were Jimmie Cwnmiils to relieve traffic congestion.
Hl$1rlc conunlsslons and
and Helena Connor of
private citizens protested movColumbus, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ing
the statue of the poet, whlch
Chase of Grove City, Mr.
has stood In lhe center of the
Norman
Hlelman
of
roadway since 1888, six years
Bellefontaine and Richard after his death .
Hlelman of Hemlock Grove
and Mrs. Ruby Rucker of
Harrisburg, Ohio, Mr. and SALE HELPFUL
OOLUMBUS (UPI)
A
Mrs. Clarence Radcliff of
special close-out sale by the
Michigan.
·
·
stateLiquor Department
Mr. and Mrs. John Pedras
during
the
past week increased
and daughter, Mary, had as
recent visitors Mr. and Mrs. retail sales In 'r/ liquor stores
Victor McCue of Fall Church, bY liO per cent.
Virginia, Mr. and Mrs. Henry to visit with her sister, Judy,
Pedros and son of Portsmouth. for a short lime.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Smilh
Mr . and Mrs_. Robert
had as recent visitors their Swearlngton and son of Dayton
daughter and family, Mr. and were visitors of her motller,
Mrs. Ralph Bates.
Mrs. Jennie Hollie and also Mr.
Miss Geneva King has and Mrs . Nev White and
returned to Kankakee, Illinois Sherman.

Footprint And Pits Found

and Mrs. Cecil
Eloaeberry and children were
WASHINGTON (UP!)- A has sponsored research by
recent guests of her silJter, Mr. )X'ehlstorlc footprint and a Mrs. Le8key and her husband,
and Mrs. Jlm&gt;MiddletiWIIrt and . serif!S of shallow pits follhd In
Louis s. a. l41akey. Among
family.
an East African gorge may lhelr discoveries .in Olduval
Recent guests of E. H. give modern man new IJ1. Gorge was tile remains of a 2Carpetlter and fainlly were formation about the anatomy mU!Ion-year-old man named
Mrs. Ruby Bry111t, Debbie and and works of his ancient an- Homo Halilll by Leakey in the
Dave, S. W. Durst, Patty cestors,
the
National belief that he was the planet's
Glueaenc,mp, Jane Allen, Mr. Georgraphic Society reported first maker of tooia.
and Mn. Rudy Durst. Mr. and Wednesday.
The pits found ~ Mrs.
'
Mra. Tim Wllktnaon and
The footprint, at least half a ·Leakey, about a dolen of them,
lllawn, &lt;llucll H111ter Joe mllli111 yelrl old, "may be the had been liCOaped by hand In
MUton, Gojdie Clendenin, oldest Stone Age loQtprint sand wblcb I I - rac:ll hard. In
Marpret Amberger, Mary · known," tile society said, II some cue1, ltbe told the
Triplett, Mlrutle Pickens, said "few others hive ever National Geocr1pblc, elear
RalpbJ!lbnatm, Everett Roush, been found."
lraCIII rl finler JDUb nmaln
Dr. Mary D. LUIIey dllcov· Ill the aldel.
D. W, Willon.
ered a complex of artlfldal pllll
"lmpmud liiiD one rl the
and chamels in now hardened pill II the aneW J1111 of a
The Joshua tree was
given Its name by the Mor- sand depoelts of Olduval (kqe II1Jnap footplllt, . . UDJy
mons because the tree In Tanzania. They may have tht laft foot of I ~." the
· lleemed to be lUting its arms been pert of a prlmltiw water IOdefl llld.
In supplication, as did the W«b.
The ~ llkl Pnlf. P. Y.
Biblical Jos6ua.
For many years the society Toblllol o1w'SIIhai,SNh

or.

Africa, "one rl lhe leading
authorities 111 lhe anatomy of
prehistoric man," eurnlned
the footprint and finger matks.
He reported that they "aeem
to be the first evidence we have
of the nature of the soft tissue
or·early man." He called the
fbld "one of the most epochal of
the great Olduval cllltcoverles. ''
The pits wen found by Mrs.
Leakey In upper Olduvallevela
lnllablted more recedly than
the ancient remalill ol man
found at greater dep!M. The
laralll-. about tine
dlametw and 1 fool' deep. .
~llonl . . they ....
liCOopeCI oat at 1tut IIQI,ODO
,.... qo.llon predle datlnc
will be P""'bh 1IIIMI lllalr
aact poltiU.. In 01Swi'1

reeun

.varlllllllnta II ••••

t

L

,,

�12 - the Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o., JUM Z3, 1m

R. H~ Eynon,
.· 83, Succi,mbs

San Antoni.o's -J.a med
Alamo gets its name !rom
tile Spanish word for .a cot,
tonwood tree that once grew
there.
·

• Tonight lh~u Tuesday
June 2J-2?
THE FRENCH
CONNECTION

ITechnicolor)

Gene Hci(;kman
Fernan·do Rey

"R"

ALSO CARTOONS
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

MASON DRIVE IN
•

'

,,

t'

· TONIGHT

June 2J

DQuble Feature Program

"E VEL KNIEVEL"
f MetrOcolorl
George Hamilton
Sue Lyon ·

IGPI

- PLUSWEREWOLVES ON
WHEELS

IColor)
Stephen Oliver

IR I
SATURDAY
June 24

Double Feature
FRAGMENT OF FEAR
Davi d Hemmings

&lt;Gayle Hunnicutt
iGPI

PLUS
.:Jupport Your
Loca I Gunfighter
Jam es Garner

(Color)
...._ _ _ _IG I
SUN.-MON.-TUES.

June lS-26-27
Double Feature

LOVE MACHINE

Robert Ryan

Cyan Cannon

PLUS
B. S. I LOVE YOU

IRI

Peter Kastner
Joanna Cameron

· IRI

•

CONDUCTS REVIVAL ' The Rev. John L. Lauter of
. Junction City wlll conduct
revival services from
Sunday through Juiy 4 at 8
each evenlag at the Carleton
Church on the Kingsbury
Road. The Rev. Mr. Lanier Is
an ordalne_d elder and
evangelist In the Church of
the Nazarene. He sup·
plements his evangellstlo
preaching with playing
various
sjrlnged
Ia·
strumenls. He and Mrs.
Lanier have conducted
nearly 600 revivals and have
traveled 900,000 miles. The
public Is invited.

Wreck.

I

I

(Continued .from Page I )
a.m. on U.S. 33. Deputy Sheriff
Bob Huffman identified the
driver as Hickel and said after
the car left the blacktop it went
165 feet before hitting an
(Continued from Page I ) embankment. He explained
further that alter It hit the
Public Welfare department.s embankment, the car traveled
showed:
through the air78 fee l, slruck a
telephone pole which it broke
- In many counties the in· into, went 69 more feel where it
crease in state support for hit a corner of the Marian
educa tion is ~realer than the Reynolds house. On impact
toU!I personal tncome tax thetr with the house the motor was
residenis paid. · .
thrown out and landed 132 fer.t
- In most counhes the total , away across the roadway on
state increase for . education, prope'rty .owned by Homer
homestead exemphon and 10 . Smith. All three of the young
pet. property tax reduction men were also thrown out of
relw'ns more dollars to them the vehicle.
than they pay in personal in·
Mr. Reynolds sail he was
come taxes.
asleep but' awakened when the
- In all but three counties house shook adding "I thouuht
the increase of state support a truck had hit the
for educa tion is greater than house." When he came
th~ increase in sUite, federal outside he said he found
arid county welfare support. all three of the boys lying
close together in his front yard
near four gas meters. Checking
them first but hearing the
escaping gas because some of
the meters had been damaged,
he noted his first impulse was
to get this shut off .before a fire
erupted since it was evident
that gasoline had been slrewn
about.
Immediately then he sum·
moned Mason's Emergency
Squad and fire department as
well as the Pomeroy

'Tax.

ews•• zn -·

••

WASHINGTON (UPI )--Sen.
William Proxmire, D-Wis.,
said today he will fight the
confirmation of Gen. Creighton
W. Abrams as Army chief of
staff unless Abrams gives a
"thoroughly satisfactory explanation" of unauthorized air
raids in ·North Vietnam.
President Nixon
has
oominated Abrams, the U.S.
corrunander in Vietnam the
past loW' yea rs, to succeed
Glm. William C. Westmoreland, who will retire at
the end of this month .
Proxmire~ referred to the
case of Gen. John D. Lavelle,
the 7th Air Force commander
in Southeast Asia, who was
fired , brought home and
retired for ordering bombing
strikes in North Vietnam
between last Novemeber and
March that were outside
guidelines laid down by
President Nixon.
Lavelle conceded he issued
the orders and then falsified
report.&lt;; that the raids were
made as "protective reaction"
in defense of American forces.
He said Abram~ "knew what I
was doing.'·'

over an area of several feet.
Mrs. Bernard (Lynn) Connolly,
who lives nearby notified the
sheriff's department. She
stated "I was in my living
room when I heard a crash. I
looked out the door and saw
parl.s flying through the air and
heard screaming."

ISNT
EVERYTHING
·Sometimes you need more than money for a car,
or your house. or your family.
Sometimes you need ·good, s.pund financial advice,

Reclrunalion. • •

We have that. And il's yours lrbe tor the asking.
And we'd like to give It to you.

(Continued from Page I)

Vehicles."
Ohio will pay $29,900 for the
additional 167 acres for the
Perry Area, now Including
more than 4,000 acres of
· reclaimed slrlp mine land,
The 460 acres to be added to
KIUdeer, which then will total
nearly 9,000 acres, will cost
$273,500. The extra land will be
used for upland game and
waterfowl management activities. Ohio will pay $3,515 for
I l!z acres to be added to
Killbuck, now having 1,300
acres used for game and
waterfowl management.
Nye said long-range P.lans
called for buying 6,000 more
acres In the Killbuck area.

pomeroy

national
bank
the bank of
the century
851.1872

Dick Cumberland

Trio

•

You'll Love It
At The New

Miss White
Selected For

OSU Program
Barbara White, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dan White of
Pomeroy, has been selected
one of 20 students to participate
in th e National Science
Foundation undergradua~e
research program this summer at the Ohio State
University College of Pharmacy.
The program beg'll' June 12
lll!d will continue through the
swnmer to Sept. I. She has
been assigned to the Leukemia
Research Project in the
Department of Medicinal
Chemistry.
Barbara recently completed
her Jwlior year at capital
University in Columbus where
she is enrolled in the pre-med
program and plans a career in
medical . research. She has
been selected to receive a
science department award for
the 1972-1973 academic year .
Miss White is a 1969 graduate
of Meigs High School and was
valedictorian of her class.

New Store Hours
Mon., Tues.

Saturday Ni~ht
10:00 TIL 2:00

MEIGS
INN
992·3629

POMEROY

9- 5

Thurs. 9-ll
Sat. 9-8

Middleport
Book Store
'99 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

HOSPITAL
NEWS

will

Elberfelds In .Pomeroy

STORE·WIDE
A E

It takes more than a mil·
lion begonia seeds to make
an ounce.

Than 11,000

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

30

PAGES

THREE SECTIONS

Families

.VO_L_._V_II~·~N0~.~2~1._~~----~-----P-om_e~ro~y-~~id-dt~ep_or_t____~----------~S~U~N~DA~Y~,. ~JU~N~E~2~5~,~19~7~2----~------------~G~all~ip~oh~s-~Po=in~tP~le=a=~~nt____________________ 15CENTS

Trans erO Stock
Completes Venture
GALLIPOLIS - 'Transfer of. stock
Friday finalized the sale of the Evans
Packing Company located on Chillicothe
Rd., to Landmark, Inc., of Columbus.
Kennelh N. Probasco, executive vice
president of Landmark, Inc., and J . Tim
Evans, president of the Evans Packing
Company, jointly announced the purchase
agreement on June 1.
Friday, Landmark officials announced
the sale had been fmalized with the trans·
fer of all stock owned by the privately .
owned operation to the new company.
The annowtcement came at a lun·

OLD AND NEW OWNERS - The sale of the Evans
Packlr)g Company, Chlllicothe Rd., Gallipolis, was com·
pleted Friday with the transfer of final stock to Landmark,
Inc., Columbus, Ohio. Completing the transaction were, first
row, I. to r ., Kenneth N. Probasco, executive vice-

o/

,

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More

tmts

High temperatures today
mainly in .the upper 50s and ·
, lower &amp;Os: Lows tonight in the
, 50s and Monday highs will be in
the 60s to lolljer 70s southwest
portion.

y-\
.

Budget Policies

Wed., Fri.

•

"The entire issue of civilian
control over the · military in
forming American policy is at
SACRAMENTO, CALIF. -:DECLARING that losers cannot
stake," Proxmlre said in a
change the rules after they've played the game, a federal judge
statement. ''I do not intend to
ruled Thursday that Sen. George McGovern .can keep all 271
see this -important constitutiondelegate votes he won in Cillfomla 's primary. ·
al question swept under the
An attorney for four defeated presldenUal candidates, in·
rug, downgraded, ignored or
eluding Sen. · Hubert H. Humphrey, said he will appeal the
whitewashed."
decision on growtds the winner-take..aJI syi!lem.!l violates the
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias,
"equal protection" clause of the 14th Amendment to the U. S.
R-Md., also said that Abrams,
~
~ Constitution.'
as Lavelle's superior in Viet·
/, I \,
· "The plaintiffs appear to have gone along with the present
nam , ought to be closely
qu estioned about the raids.
system until they lost," said U.S. District Court Judge Philip C.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., IJ.
TAKING BASIC - Pvt. Wilkins.
N.C., saw.the Lavelle incident
John W. Anderson, son of
differently, however. Ervin is a
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas An· .
ISRAELI GUNNERS fired into southern Lebanon early
member of the Armed Services
derson, Larkin St., Rutland, today in retaliation for severallong-cange rockets fired at Israeli
Committee, but said he would
is undergoing basic training villages.
,
....
not participa te in any in·
at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
The rocket.&lt;;, pr~umabiy fired by Arab commandos, hit the
tcrrogation of Abrams about
He is a graduate of Meigs northern Israeli villages of Klriat Shmona and Kfar Giladi, but
Lavelle.
High School, Class of 1972. there were no reports of casualties or damage.
'
"Do you think it raises an
His address is Pvt. John W.
"Fire was returned," an Israeli military spokesman In Tel
issue or civilian control over
Anderson, 287-54-4 766, Co. B, Aviv said today,
the military'? " Ervin was
5th Bat!., 3rd B.T.B., Fort
A second Incident was reported Thursday night, with Arabs
asked.
Leonard Wood, Mo., 65473.
"No/' Ervin rep lied. " It
He Is expected to com plete firing a nwnber of shells from Syria that hit the area of Ramal
Magshimin and the Israelio()ccupied Golan Heights. No
seems to me it's a question of
basic training Aug. 3
casualties nor damage were reported and,lvaeli forces dld not
military control over the
return the fire .
military."
•
Secretary of Defense Melvin
ACCIDENT PROBED
-BELFAST -BRITISH troops exchanged gunfire with lhe
R. Laird has said that Abrams
A minor two-car accide nt
"was not involved in any way was investiga ted by the Meigs · Irish Republican Army (IRA) Thursday night and today despite
in the abuse of authority."
Coun ty Sheriff's Department an agreement by both sides.on a cease.fire starting Monday to
Thursday at 5·p. m. at Letart end three years of iectati!!n vio!!!ru'!! Ml N!!!'llll!nlll'eland. . .
The latest shooting occurred first In Andlnonltown a stong.
Falls on Red Hill Road.
Debra L. Nelson, Racine, Rt. bold of the more militant element.s of the IRA which ha; opposed
2, was traveling south on Red an end to the campaign of shooting and bombing which has ldlled
Hill Road when.a car driven by nearly 400 persons and injured 3,000.
Max Junior Manuel, Racine,
An army spokesman said lhe British lroopa !bought they had
Rt. 2, pulled off of Manuel Road hit three of the snipers although no bodies were recovered. Most
and struck the Nelson vehicle. of the IRA gunfire was against a sandbagged army observation
There were no injuries or post.
"The Federal Government
arrests,
and on ly minor
Miller stated, "is running a
~
$246 billion business - a damage to both vehicles.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON believes chances
business the size of the nation's
lor a permanent nuclear arms limitation agreement with !he
fifty largest Col'p&lt;lrations Soviet Union will be "totally destroyed" unless Congress apAWARDS PRESENTED
with general store'bookkel!ping
proves a new offensive weapons program.
1
Trophies and cash awards
and accounting methods."
Nixon lnslllted at 1\JlCWS conference Thunday that the arms
''Congressional budgetary were presented to the first agreements he made at the Moocow summit In May should be
procedures must be brought place winners in the first an· approved by Congress on their merits.
into the twentielh ce ntury if nual boat parade held during
Plealallt Valley Hoi)Jilal
federal spending is to receive a the eighth annual Big Bend
·
DISCHARGES:
Mrs .
greater degree of scrutiny and Rega tta .
were
funniest,
Categories
O!arles
Stapleton
and
son,
control. For too long, Congress
Crown City; Henry McCoy,
has paid a lot of lip service to most unusual decorated, and
Gallipolis; William Veasey,
fiscal responsibility and has , Big Bend on the Move .
·Rhonda Oliver, Hubert Hendone little about it. The basic
Winners in each category
Jwte 21, 1972
reforms contained in this bill were: funniest, Bruce Gill of
Births - Mrs. Charles Stans- son, Maggie Roush, Michael
help remove the Kentucky- unusual decora.ted, berry , daughter, Wellston; Jones, Ronald Holcomb, all
procedural roadblocks to Xl Gamma Mu Soronty; Mrs.
Charles
Burnett Point PleaW.t; Mrs. Perry
fulfilling that responsibility." Sta_nley Stearn, 2nd piace; '\. daulihter, Gallipolis, and Mrs: Jeffers, Southside; Charles
The legislation contains the "B1g Bend on the Move," Ri ck Swain, daughter
Kuhn, Jackson, 0 .; Mrs. Joe
following provisions:
Carroll Johnson, Middleport. Gallipolis.
' Bray, Henderson; Marsha
Title I - provides that the
Discharges - Gene Sauer, Fetty, O!eshlre; Bertha
fiscal year coincide with lhe
Virgil Davis, Bernice Green, Griffin, Middleport.
ca lendar year . This will Veterans Memorial Hospital Delcey Bailey, Mrs. Mariam
ADMITTED - Charles
fa cilitate long range com·
Carroll,
Long Bottom; Marge Potts and daughter, Anna
prehensive budgeta ry planning
Murphy , Nola Lemlngs,
and allow members more time Reuter , Pomeroy; Eulah Pamela Wtlllams, Marjorie
REFUSES TREATMENT
to consider the 1,1110 page Francis, Middlepor t; Clara Hart, John Porter, James
The
Middleport emergency
Paulsen, Hemlock Grove, and
budget document.
Doyle,
Barbara
Chevalier,
squad answered a call at 6:45
Title II - requires th e Ellen Wilson, Middleport.
Timothy
Glenn,
Barbara
a. m. Friday fQr Wilbur Ellls,
DISCHARGED - Norman
Congress to esta blish an
caruthers,
Mrs.
Robert
Taylor
Rutland, who waa having
overall spending limitation Smith, Claude Roy, Michael and daughter, Erma McNeil,
difficulty breathing. He
forty.five days after receipt of Martin, Olive Lawson and !ne:l Ida HiU and Brian Bailey.
re!UM!d treatment.
the President 's economic Randolph.
message. This would force the
Congress to consider the
budget proposal in a unified
manner ralher than as loW'·
teen separate proposals.
Title 111 - provides that
either House of Congress may
disapprove of an impohndment
of any appropriated monies by
the Executive Branch. This
impoundment procedure
•
reasserl.s Congress' rightful
role to insW'e that lis appropriations act.&lt;; are carried ·
out. Also contains a provision
to expedite the disbursement of
funds b~ federal officials to
state and local government.s
ailb private contractors.
TiUe IV - directs a study of
appropriatiolf procedures of
Congress by a, joint HouseSenate Commission composed
of
the leadership of
Congressional committees
dealln~ with budgetary and
OPEN TO"IGHT UNTIL 9 PM
fiscal policy, and the Comptroller General. This Com·
mission would make specific
recorruncndations to moder·
nize Congressional !Judgetary
procedure.
11

.~

WASHINGTON - MAR111A MITC~ says she is "sick
and tired" of politics and has threatened to leave her husband
wtless he get.&lt;; out of the political arena.
"I gave him an ultimatum," the wife of former Attorney
General John N. Mitchell told a UP! reporter In' a telephone
conversation from Newport Beach, calif. Thursday night.
Mitchell, contacted at ~ Washington apartmen\, took his
wife's latest phone tirade in good stride.

Miller Bill Would
WASHINGTON, D. C. - Ohio
lOth District Congressman
Clarence E:. Miller has cosponsored legislation to reform
the fiscal and budgetary
policies of the Federal
Government.
The pW'pose of the bill, en·
titled the " Fiscal Respon·
sibility Act of 1972", is to
reestablish the Congressional
role in developing budget
priorities and modernizing the
mechanisms of Congress to
deal with fiscal policies in a
more
systematic
and
analytical mannfr.

+

.weather

LOS ANGI):l.ES - THE GOVEIIN&amp;(ENT pointed .to Daniel
Ellsberg and his associates as the Chief SUBpeCts today in an
alleged 8econd Pentagon Papers leak - to colwnniBt Jack AnderSon - even as Ellsberg's espionage lrial for the first leak is
about to begul.
·
·
·
Ellsberg, his co-defendant Anthony J. RUS80, !heir defense
attorneys ahd Anderson all denied the accusation - the lawyers
calling it a "last ditch desperate move" to discredit Ellsberg end
Russo.
The Justice bepartment ThW'sday asked the federal judge
hearing the Pentagon Papers case for a hearing into what federal
officials-said was publication of previoiJB!y undisclosed parts of
,the classified report in seven of Anderson's columns during the
past two weeks.

.Explanatiqn For.
Air Raids Asked

E~~!~:ie·~U:~irewn about Reform

pomeray
rutland

By un:ted ' Preu IJIIet'lllollaul
· .MEDIA, PA. - TIIJo.! Pw:nY, blonde, teenage motller
· cried as .the lhree judg~ found her guilty ol first degree murder
ThW'sday night. Now she m\WI walt several days for a aentence,
which could be death, in the electric chair.
.
Mrs. Marily;n Dobrol~nski, 19, Toledo, Ohio, had admitted
!hooting Delaware state troopers David Yarrington, 24, and
Ronald Carey, .Z!l, last Jan. 5, but ber attorney, David S. J .
Brooks, hoped for a voluntary manslaughter verdict. ·

Reed H. Eynon, 83, Racine,
Rt. 1, died ThiU'sday night 111
Holzer Medical Center.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Willia!ll and Sarah
Decker Eynon. His wife,
Emma EyiiOH, died in March,
. 1971,
Mr. Eynon is survived by two
sons, Bernard JiJynon, Belfast,
Maine; E;mil Eynon, Ractn~
· RD; three\ daughters, :~.
· Robert (Wilma) Reiber,
Racine RD; Mrs. Carrol ·
(W""da) Neigler ,- Syracuse; ·
Mrs. Ivan Waston, Sterling
Heights, Mich.; one sister,
Gladys Croy, Chester, 11
'1
grandchildren and seven greatTIIISPicrURE of days long, long ago was provided by Mrs. Kenneth Welsh, Po~eroy Rt.
grandchildren.
·4.
The
class is believed to have been one at the Bowers School on Gibson Ridge near
Funeral services will be held
Harrisonville and the teacher In the pictW'e is Mary Welsh. However, no other identities are
Sunday at I p.m. at Ewing
. Anyone having identification may call Mrs. Welsh at 698-3719.
,known
Chapel. Burial will be in Sand
Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Friends may call at the funeral
home any time.

MEIGS TtfEATRE

•

•

·'"·

president, Landmark, Inc.; Harland Martin, Emerson
Evans, and Dwight Oberschlake, president of Landmark.
Other former owners of Evans Packing Co. are left to right,
J. Tim Evans, Morris Haskins, C. H. McKenzie and Merrill
Evans.

New Attractions Feature
1972 Meigs County Fair
ROCK SPRINGS - Big name en·
tertainment, several new attractions,
increased premiums and free grandstand
events are slated for the 1972 edition of the
Meigs Cowtty Fair, to be held Aug. 15-19.
On AWl:. 17, Thursday, the grandstand
lliPIN will inclu4le Kenny ~. CoWltry
and Western recording personality, tne
Flowers Ftunlly, making Its second ap·
pearance at the local fair, and Zeke and
JIUi, a comedy. vocal duo from The Grand
Ole Opry.
The Thursday evening performances
will climax a day of quarter horse racing,
pony races, flower shows, and dairy cattle
judging.
The grandstand event on Saturday will
be the Blue Ridge ~let of the West
Virginia Jamboree. The will be featured
on Gospel, Country an Western numbers

as well as comedy and novelty nwnbers.
An addition to the fair on Wednesday,
Aug . 16, will be an appearance by the All·
Ohio Boys Band. The band will be accompanied by Miss Ohio Slate Fair, Mios
Con nie Lecc. Three hundred boys make up
the !&gt;4nd wh\ch . tolu's throughout ·the
swnmer.
An increased purse is expected to
entice more entries in the Aug . 19 quarterhorse running races and an additional
class has been added to the pony pulling
contest. Kiddies day has been set for
Wednesday, Aug. 16, until 4 p.m. when
rides on the midway will be half price .
The Meigs County Agricultural
Society, which stages the annual fair, also
this year is instituting a program to attract
the elderly to the fair. Senior Citizens Day
will be observed on ThW'sday when all

persons in the county over 6{) will be ad·
milled for half price. A tent is being
provided where these persons may rest or
display their hobby or craft items.
The society's board is expecting a
larger exhibit of livestock resulting from a
decision to increase premiums for the
winners.
,
A chain ~w cutting contest has been
added to the lineup and·will be held on the
final day, Aug. 19, al'll a.m. Three classes
will be included with prizes to be awarded
to the top three winners in each class. The
prizes ar~ being provided by Bill McDaniel
of the Pomeroy Home and Auto Store.
Rules governing the new contest have
been adopted from the National Paul
Bunyan Contest but the local winner has
not been scheduled for any further competition beyond the local fair.

w;:z·ll
Swollen Ohio River JIJ' ~

Crest Below Flood ·Stage
EUREKA - According to the Hwt·
Ungton Weather BW'eau, the Ohio River Is
expected to crest here at the Gallipolis
Lbcks and Dam at 4 p.m. Monday at 40.5
feet.
• It Is expected to crest In Point
Pleasant the 98llle evening at ,36.5 feet.
This is three and one half feet below the 40.
foot flood stage at Point Pleasant.
Pomeroy Is expected to have 43 feet before
Monday's crest.
Chickamauga Creek flooded the
Gallipolis Swimming Pool Saturday,

Four Directors To
Be Named July 10
' GALLIPOLIS - Election of loW'
directors will highlight the annual meeting
ol the Gallla County Rural Water
Alsociation slated Tuesday, July 10, at the
Rodney Conu:nwtily Hall . All r_W'al water
subscribers are eligible to attend.
Directors whose terms expire are
Merrill McCormick, Robert Sprlegei ,
Dave McCoy and Walter Neal.
• A nominating corrunittee composed of
-~ulah Mitchell, Richard Cremeens and
Kenneth Haner has been selected to
provide a list of interested. nominees.
Gueat speaker will .be a representative
from the Farmers' Home Administration.

.

Believe Garage Fire,

Is SEt I&gt;eLUlerately
GAL!;IPOL!S - Damage was
11Umated at $100 in a 'fire which was
llelleved to• have ~ .deliverately set
Friday night near a garage and workshop
at .the rear of the home of Mrs. Holll•
MCCormick , 107 Second Ave.
Fire Chief James A. Noi-thup said the
)llue wu c;onlalned In old lwnber and
4iltrllat the rear of the garqe. It could
hive been a much bigger fire Iince the
..... houled $2,0011 WGrtb of power toola,
llllDMli'OUI ~ !lema and a 111111

l'ontlac.

forcing removal of all pool pumps. The
pool will be closed at least WJtil Tuesday.
All area swimming pools have been closed
since Tuesday as a result of the cold
_weather and rainy conditions.
The river was rising SaiW'day at the
rate of three tenths foot per hoW' as a
result of heavy' rains in the PlllszW'gh,
Pa., area.
.
A spokesman at the Gallipolis Loclts
and Dam ~id the river was at 32.6 feet
early SaiW'day afternoon.
The water is expected to begin falling
after reaching a crest of 43 feet Monday in
Pomeroy. This is 3.5 feet below flood stage.
At the corner of East Main and Sycamore
St., water;_ comes onto the street at 46.5
feet.
There has been some concern in Point
Pleasant about the Ohio River rising over
the floodwall at Sixth Street, due to
demolition of the old Sliver Bridge ramp.
Robert Fowler, floodwall-superintendent,
said Saturday he and U. S. Corps of
Engineers.personnel along with officials of

Dravo Corporation held a conference
Friday to discuss the situation . If the need
arises, sand bags will be placed at the
opening he said.
The National Weather Service Friday
issued the following forecasl.s for river
crest.&lt;; :
Ohio River: Will crest at ;5 feet at
Wheeling at 10 p.m., Saturday, flood stage
36 feet; at 34.5 feet at Parkersburg at 10
p.m. Sunday, flood stage 36 feet; at 34 feet
at Point Pleasant at 10 a.m. Monday, flood
stage 40 feet; at 40 feet at Huntington at 7
p.m. Monday, flood stage 50 feet.
Monongahela River : Was to crest at 13
feet at Morgantown at I a.m. Saturday,
flood stage 22 feet.
Tygart River: Was to crestall6feetat
(Continued on Page 21

•

Man Bound To Jill')
· Under $3,000 Bond
'

POMEROY - Daniel Michael
Salvani, Cleveland, was bowtd to the
grand jW'y under $3,000 bond after en·
tering a plea of innocent in the Melga
County CoW'! Friday on charge~ ol
possession and possetiSion for sale of
cocaine.
. The case of Sandra See, 21, Mid·
dleport, charged with vehicular homicide
in the death .of Shirley Hood, 29, Muon,
dW'ing the Regatta weekend parade
recently, was . continued for one week
pending the appointment of counsel for
· Mr Se
·

s. e.

TO MEI.T nJESDAY
POMEROY ~ The Meigs Cowtty
Alcoholllm and Drug Abule Conunlttee
will meet 81 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the St.
Paul Lutheran Church in Pomeroy. The
publl£ Is invited,

MEIGS
PIONEER
HOUSE

cheon hosted by Landmark.
Landmark, Inc., manufactures and
The Evans Packing Company, con- distribotes a complete line of livestock
structed in 1937 on a 32-4tcre site on feeds, seed, h!rtilizer, petroleum product.&lt;;
O!illicothe Rd. in the Old French City. In and related farm supplies. II also market.&lt;;
1971, the company sales exceeded $7 grain, pork, poultry and eggs. Landmark's
million . Evans Packing has eight ,1971 volume exceeded $156 million .
refrigerated delivery trucks which - Harland Martin, chainnan of the
distribute French City meat products over board, said the Evans group sold its plant
a 90 mile radius in Southeastern Ohio and to Landmark because it believes in SEO
parts of West Virginia.
Ohio and Evans Products. "We will sup·
It was formerly owned and operated port it in any way possible to make the
by J. Tim Evans, Emerson Evans, Morris purchase profitable for them," he said.
Haskins, C. H. McKenzie, Harland Marlin
Kenneth N. Probasco, executive vice
and Merrill Evans.
president of Landmark, said he is hopeful
the new ownership can maintain the
reputation that the Evans family has
enjoyed in the past . Fred McLaughlin, vice
president of feed and food divisions for
Landmark, said there will be no challl(e in
the company. Evans Packing Co. will
be operated as a separate, who!lyo()wned
subsidiary of Landmark. J. Tim Evans
will continue as manager of the Evono
Packing Company and no change is anticipated In personnel, products
manufactured or customers served.
Attending
Friday's luncheon
recognizing the purchase were Dr. Alphus
D. Christensen, president of the Gallipolis
Chamber of Commerce; Joe Stewart,
county commissioner; D. Kenneth
Morgan, Gallipolis City Manager; Bryson
R. Carter. Gallia County Agriculture
(Continued on Page 2)

Scholarship ·
Winners Are
Announced
MRS. ANNA Wheeler, left, president of the Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Friday afternoon presented Miss Connie Grueser with the
auxiliary's $500 scholarship. With them is Donald Diener, administrator of
Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Miss Grueser Wins
$500 Scholarship
POMEROY - Miss Connie Grueser,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David E.
Grueser, Rock Springs, and a 1972
graduate of Meigs High School, has been
named to receive the a1ual scholarship of
the Women 's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Miss Grueser, who will begin her work
at the Holzer Hospital School of Nursing in
the fall ; received a $500 scholarship. This
will include $200 for her first year of
studies and $150 for the second and third

years.

_..

· At Meigs High School, Miss Grueser

was a member of the National Honor
Society and she was a member of the pep,
dance, symphonic and marching bands,
playing a trumpet. She took part in state
music competition . She was a member of
the Meigs Chorale. Miss Grueser has been
a Candystriper at Ve,terans Memorial
Hospital for two years and five months and
is a past vice president of the group. She
attends the Rock Springs Methodist
Church.
Presenting the scholarship to Miss
Grueser Friday was Mrs. Anna Wheeler,
auxiliary president.

Gallia CAP Members
In First Jet Flight
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Squadron 1207 of the Civil Air Patrol,
enjoyed Its first flight in an Air Force Jet
during an all day tour of Lockbourne Air
Force Baae Thursday.
Air Force Reservist , Robert A.
Wilkey, a civilian employee of the base
chauffeured the unit on a personally
guided tour of the base. Lockbourne is a
pert of the Strategic Air Corrunand and is
prepared at all ttmes to serve and protect
lhe citizens of the United States. The base
is a small city within itself, having a 16
lane bowling alley, an 18 hole golf course
with club facilities and a theater with a
seating capacity of 1,000 persons.
MoSgt. Tom Clwn, Tech. Sgt. Ron
Dillon, and Sgt. Richard Sparks were a few
of the guides making the lour a memorable
occasion. The CAP members and guest.s
were guided through the Aircraft Main·

I&gt;r. Holzer I&gt;iscusses
Recent Hospital Move

MUSEUM NAMED. - 'l1le new
Meigs County mllleWII has t.en. pt.
ficlally named "Melga Pioneer HoUle."
Mrs. Annie Chapman, Pomeroy, active
member of the Meiga CoWJty Plonw
and Historical Society, holds the
colonial type sign which will be uaeclln
front of the new mUJeum which Ia the
fonner home of £11:. and Mra. Ra7
Heaton on Pomeroy'1 Butternut Ave.

I'

MIDDLEPORT- Dr. Charles Holzer,
Ga!Upolla, dlscuased the recent move from
the old hoepltalto the new Holzer Medical
Center during Friday night's meeting of
the Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary Club at
Heath Uni~ Methodist Church in Middleport.
•
Dr. Holzer was introduced by JoHn
Wlll, pnlll'llll chairman. Roses for the
tablel were provided by Will. Guests for
the dinner meeting were l.A!O Moasnian,
Galltpolla; Ray Pickens and Fred Alh,
who were aueata of Dr. R. R. Pickens.

tenance Hangar and were shown the
complex! ties of a jet engine and how each
aircraft is designed primarily for the
safety of the pilot. The group viewed the
ammunition dump, the crash station for
aircraft emergencies and the area U8ed for
wtderground !raining where teams of
military personnel spend seven days (24
hoW's daily) in this underground station.
Teams rotate -.very seven days.
After a delicious lunch in the enlisted
• (Continued on Page 2)

Schedule Announced
For Water Inspector
POMEROY - Charles (Chuck)
Bartels, ·Meigs County's water inspector ,
will be working in OUve Township dW'in~ i
lhe remainder of June an~ for about the ~
first half of July.
In April; Bartels made 142 visits
laking 64 water 98lllples. Of the 64, 40
found to be safe and 24, unsafe. In May, he
,made 129 vlsil.s collecting 71 samples with
45 found sal~ and 25 unsafe.
• During the latter half of August,
Bartels will be working In. Lebanon
Township where he expects alS()' fo be
working during August.
Anyone can have the free water check
by calling the Meigs Couaty Health
Department, 1192-3723. Reconimendatlona
will be made on how water 11lPPUea can be
made safe for use If a check dllcl-lhat
lfle usors supply is wtsafe.
·

were

. ..,

•

POMEROY - Deborah LaValley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
LaValley, Dorcas, and Andrea M.
DewhW'st, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Dewhurst of Rutland, have been
selected to receive the annual scholarships
of the Meigs County Tuberculosis and
Health Association .
Miss LaValley, a 1972 graduate of
Southern High School at Racine, was a
member of the National Honor Society and
a member of the forming corrunittee for
the stude"t council. She was homecoming
queen, FFA sweetheart, and an attendant
at both the Christmas dance and the Beaux
Arts ball. She was listed in Merit's Who's
Who Among American High School
studenl.s and was an attendant to the
alumni queen. She was a CandystriP,er at
Veterans Memorial Hospital for two years.
Miss· LaValley will enter the Holzer
Hospital School of NW'sing in the fail.
Miss DewhW'st was a member of the
National Honor Society of_Meigs High
School where she graduated this spring.
She was a member of the newspaper staff,
the Future Nurses Club, lhe French and
Latin Clubs, Pep Club, the Meigs High
chorale.
She was a Candystriper at Veterans
Memorial Hospital lor two y,ears. She lias
served as president of the youth group of
the Hysell Run Free Methodist Church of
which she is a member. She will enter
nurse's training at the East Liverpool City
Hospital In the fall.
Both scholarships are $250.

Bloodmobile Visits
GaiHa On Jwte ·29
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County Blood
Donor Day Is scheduled Thursday, June
29, when lhe Red Cross Bloodmobile will
visit Grace United Methodist O!urch in
Galllpolis from 12 noon wttil 6 p.m.
"Collection of blood Is lruly a community responsibiUty," said Mrs. Thelma
Shaver, blood chairman for the Gallia
County Chapter, American Red cross.
"WIIh medical research wtlts finding new
uses for blood and derivatives and with
accidents continuing to take their toll of
blood reserve, the supply must constantly
be replenished," she added.
"Sporadic individual donations are not ·
sumclent.lt has been found that only when
a commWJity makes an organized and
regular effort are suctessful results
achieved. ·
"Any one in goOd health weighing mor~ ' ·
than 115 powtda, between lhe ages of 18
and 1161sellglble to be a.blood donor.
"Thoee who give this U!e saving fluid
through the Red Cross blood program not
only assure community blood supply, but
will obtain Important blood coverage for
themaelvea and immediate flllllly for one
year lrtJln the time of donation.
"!I II' hoped lltat many Gallla Cowl·
Ilana lliU help In Thurlday'a cCIIIlllllllity
effort," Mrl. Sbavar concluded.

f

I

•

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