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12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 15,191.'.

Mining .industry leaders hold ,

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Main Store and WarehOIISe O~en Friday and Saturday 9:30 ·to 9 p.m.

Federal strip bills are bad
By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UPI) -One
after another, mining industry
leaders started across a Senate
comn\ittee room Wednesday
and told Sen. Lee Metcalf, J)..
Mont., that proposed federal
strip mining bills were
unacceptable.
They said the proposals were

unacceptable because they
were too strong and would cost
the industry too much.
Environmentalists were
scheduled for the witness stand
today, and they, too, wertt expected to object to many of the
bills - but to contend they are
too weak.
. The Senate Interior Commit-

Needs of aging reviewed
The Conference on Aging at
Rio Grande College Wednesday featured a panel of
resource · persons in its afternoon session who addresses
themselves to the question,
"How does your agency plan to
meet the needs of the elderly1"
Major emphasis of the
program, attended by about SO
persons, was on services
available to the aged under
each of the departments
represented. Mrs . Rose
Papier, leading off the panel,
sald the needs of the aged can
never be met by any single
department because available
programs are limited.
Mrs. Papier Is coordinator of
the Ohio Administration on
Aging.
Don Duhigg, chief of the
Bureau of Adult Services of the
Ohio Department of Public
Assistance, outlined the public
social service department's
goal of "preventing public
dependents" among the aged.
Dr. Eileen McKenzie, chief
of the Chronic Disease Division
of the Ohio Department of
Health, spoke of the licensing
procedures and home health
services of her department.
She noted that there are 1,200
nursing homes in Ohio with
57,1100 beds;
Social Security benefits and
supplemental income were
topics discussed by Don
Dunaway, social security
representatlve of Lawrence
County.
The effectiveness of the
Community Action programs
In helping the aged was the
\4!Jl!c of jleorge 'fslsmanakis.
He emphasized the success of

War's end

the Foster grandparents
program In Gallia County.
Mrs. Maxine Plummer!,
executlve director of the
Community Mentsl Health and
Mental Ret~rdatioil Board,
said the department has a
clinic open in Gallla County to
provide psychiatric services
for the aged and to handle
follow-up of patients released
from Athens Slate Hospital.
According to Jerry Ramsay,
who was in charge of the two
day program, "Responsibility
rests with older citizens to
communicate their needs to
local and state service agen-

cies."
He pointed out thai "elder
citizens must speak with a
united voice" through the
development of Senior Citizen
Clubs and the County Commission on Aging who have the
clout to influence the local
agencJes.''

Driver cited
RUTLAND - A Pomeroy,
Rt. 4, man was arrested for
reckless operation of a motor
vehicle following an accident
here at 1:08 a.m. today.
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. said Jerry Lee
Jacks, traveling west on SR 124
in Rutland went to the right of
the street and struck two
legally parked autos.
Jacks was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, where he
was treated and released by
the Pomeroy ER squad. The
P~r,'f!~ em ·"' ~e\9!1.11""~ ,J.o
WIUI'I!II S. Hoback, lla~ine, Rt.
1, and Mickey Wolfe, Racine.
There was medium damage to
the two parked cars and heavy
to the front end of Jacks'.

..

tee hearings are In their third
day and will end Friday.
Throughout Wednesday's
session, the industry attacked
a provision In a bill authored by
conunillee chairman Henry M.
Jackson, D-Wash. Jackson's
bill Is considered a middle-ofthe:road approach between
outright abolition of strip
mining and a two-year delay In
enforcement asked by the
Nixon administration.
Edwin R. Phelps, president
of Peabody Coal Co., the nation's largest coal producer,
said the bill could weD 1rurt
reclamation efforts, because
mines would close down .while
they geared up to meet the new
requirements.
"When the mine equipment
stops running, reclamation
stops," Phelps added.
Then Phelps, speaking for
the National Coal Association,
brought the issue to the practical aspect.
He said the industry would
pass on additional strip mining
costs to the utilities "and from
the utility the costs of reclama,
lion pass directly by utility rate

Increases to the consumers and
voters of America."
c. F. Beukema, vice president of U.S. Steel Corp., speaking lor the American Mining
Congress~ testified a nationwide stripping standard "Is not
feasible."
He said encouragement the
industry has received from
Congress and the Interior
would
be
Department
destroyed "If Congress
becomes inclined toward
responding to demands of a
relatively small segement of
our national society, an alliance of vociferous but ill-informed groups made up of
those who wish to set aside
much of this nation as a
reserve In which they can
Indulge their particular hobbles in isolation and
Irresponsibility... "
After attacking the Jackson
bill, bot remaining silent on the
administration's, Metcalf .
1L9ked lor comment on the latter.
1t's very derelict,"
Beukema Sllid. "Neither bill
will let the industry survive."

Thanks, hut don't quit
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, of library service and the
supervisor of Mi'. Eddy, the devastating effects the
county bookmobil~. today missing service from the·
thanked all residents who budget would have," Mrs.
wrote, telephone, telegraphed, Pikkoja said.
or met with their · represenShe urged · persons who
tative and senator to express already have written their
0011~1'1\ abJ&gt;ll,,.,lbe .. P!Ail!l!l!~ . congreSIIman to urge their
end : of tbe.-, fedwal · ·library friMds to"tlll the hme. ' The
program.
.
address is, Congressman
"The effort must continue so Clarence E. Miller, Room 1211,
that all members of Congress Cannon H.O.B., Washington,
will hear from their con- D. C., 20515.
stituents about the importance

(Continued from page 1)
organization may be jusilfiably
CALLED TO RUTLAND
proud of its performance and
The Pomeroy E-R unit was
its contribution to a peace with called to Rutland at 1,:12 a. m.
The first representatives of deadline for any new entrant is
honor," Roseborough said.
Thursday for Jerry Lee Jacks three teams to notify new April 1.
An Anny chaplain, in a who was taken to Veterans Meigss- Mason Slo-Pitch
Other officers for this year
closing prayer, said, "At this Memorial Hospital with a League President Sonny
are
Larry Grueser, vice
time of ten\IOUS peace, we pray possible fractured leg suffered Decker at (304) 773-5363 will be
that you strengthen the bonds in an accident. At 12:05 p. m. admitted for loop play this president; George Hoffman,
that brought us to this polnl ....• Wednesday, the squad went to season, it wss announced secretary, and John Wolfe,
treasurer. Entry fee for each
We ask your forgiveness for the assist Mrs. Roy Curtis at Dead today.
team joining the league is $30.
wrongs which we may have
Seven teams joined the Home teams will he responMan's Curve, who was Ill and
comn\itted In our effort to was taken to Veterans league at a meeting last
sible for·paying 'umpires.
reach this end."
Memorial Hospital. She was Sunday when managers atlending agreed to allow three
admitted.
PLEASANT VALLEY
more teams to enter the loop.
DISCHARGES:
Herman
Though only three additional
teams are to be accepted, the James, Point Pleasant
INSPECTION SET
Tonight
The annual Inspection of
March 15
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
NOT OPEN
will be held at 7:30p.m. Friday
(Continued from page 1)
a\ the temple with Ben PhUson,
Friday &amp; Saturday
Racine,
district
deputy
grand
levels projected by the Gilligan administration."
March 16 &amp; 17
ULZANA'S RAID
master, inspecting officer. All
Kurfess said the GOP program caUs lor a "reordering of
!Technicolorl
master masons are Invited.
priorities" within the $850 million recommended.by the Gilligan
Burt Lancaster, Bruce
administration
for higher education In fiscal 1974-75. He said
Davison, Richard Jaeckel,
Republicans favor the higher education proposals of the Ohio
Joaquin Martinez.
MRS. HERMAN ILL
IGPI
Board of Regents, which called for additional Instructional
THE INCREDIBLE TWO
The Middleport E-R squad grants costing approximately $28 million In additional funds. To
HEADED TRANSPLANt
was called at 8:17 p. m. pay for the extra education spending, Kurfess proposed cuts In
ITechnicolorl
Wednesday
at 291 Sycamore St. the Gilligan budget In the areas of welfare and administration of
Bruce Oern, Pat Priest,
for Mrs. Dale (Shirley) Her- government agencies.
Casey Kasen.
'.
IGPI man, who was ill. She was
Show slarto at 7 p.m.
taken to the Holzer Medical
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE HAS VOTED to crack open
Center.
the highway trust fund -financed by taxes on auto gasoline for mass transit and to make it illegal for President Nixon to
withhold highway construction money.
The Senate actions came during a day of transportation
debate Wednesday and left only one major decision before the
three-year, $18.2 billion federal aid highway act Is approved:
whether to remove restrictions on the weight and size of trucks
using interstate highways.

First come, first served

MEIGS THEATRE

News . • • in Briefs

THE'SPECTATOR~

FOR EARLY SPRING

Black &amp; White
Red &amp; White
Brown ! , White

WASillNGTON - THE NATIONAL Nutritional Foods
Association bas filed a $.'i00million damage suit In an attempt to
stop the Food and Drug Administration from referring to the
health food Industry as "nutrition quacks," ''food f~ddists" and
"health quacks."
Max Huberman of Youngstown, Ohio, president of the
association which represents about 2,000 stores And suppliers,
said Wectnesday a companion'suit would be filed In the next few
weeks against new stringent regulations on what can be sold as
health food. The FDA has Issued a final order defining certain
highly fortified foods and pills as drugs, effective next year, and
subjecting them to restrictions for either .over-the-counter of
prescription sales.

-..,

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

THE SHOE 101
Our Shoes are Still Sensibly Priced

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

0

'

)5 Mens 29.95 Sport Coals

1

Mens 39.95 Sport Coals

'
Sale '12.00

Dress Shirts

30 Boys 19.95 Sport Coals

Sale '6.00

13 Mens 2Ul All Weather
coa·ls

Sal• '14.00

Sizes small (14-141!2 neck) , medium

!15-15'h l. large (16·16 1121 and extra
large (17-17 11&gt;}. Solid colors - stripes
. checks . neal patterns In taper Ill
shirts and the more conservative

tuller cut slyles.
Cotton and polyester blends plus a
big selection of knit sport shirts that

Another
Big Shipment

Sizes 29 to 44 waist. Made of
Also mens and young mens
tank tops and pullover knits
in styles you'll like the
minute you see them. Sizes
small, medium, large and
extra large.

On Sale At Elberfelds Warehouse
On Mechanic Street

Sale! Lee _Prest
Tech Twill
Lee

Tech Twills are

65

530 during this sale.

-Turf Master 4 Cycle Briggs and Straiten engine mower - 20
inch cut at a special price now.
-Save now on metal wardrobes and cabinets. Big selection ·
of sizes . styles and colors.
-Sale of Carpet remnants - Various widths and lengths.
Ideal for halls, bathroom, stairways and rooms.

-Big sale, too. on bound room size rugs.

weight . sanforlzed shrunk ·
triple stitched seams. Bar ·
tacking at all strain points.

Slop in the busy mens
department on the l5t floor
and buy the sites you need
now.

WORK
UNIFORMS
.

later, Sleenland said.
Water will be obtained from
the Leading Creek Water
System. ,
Speaking diredly io area ·
chamber representatives,
Steenland said, "If you
forget the Impact and growth
which is coming, you're in
trouble."
He added, "Southern Ohio is
no different from any other
sec lion of the country. We all
have the same problems," he

continued.
"Chambers should lead the
people. We should stop and ask
ourselves what we should be

doing. What you do from here
on out is very important. If you
are satisfied with being second
best, then you'll not get the
best, or be first class.
"S outheastern Ohio
· residents don't have to take a .
back seat to anybody in the
country. You have all the
important ingredients
desirable people and a
beautiful landscape. You
should be proud and optimistic.
But you must also be
realistic."
In closing, Steenland said 10
to 15 pet. of the' lots in the
Salem Center project will be

.Now You Know

•

to a&lt;;, by 10&lt;12 feet. You can really save on these.

-Magic Chef Gas and Electric Ranges. Big selection of

styles and colors. All at sale prices now.
- Whirlpool washers and dryers on sale- arranged for your
easy selection. You can save right now on the model or

VOL XXIV
·. NO. 234 •··
··-

· -- -~

JQMER..OY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

Warehouse open every week day 9:30a.m. to s p.m . and on
Friday and Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Plenty of free
·· ·
·
'
parking.

'

Friday and Saturday

Spril1g Sportswear Sale

Super lean style. slim legs . extra heavy 14 oz. denim. San·
fori zed shrunk. Sizes 6 to 16 In regulars and slims.

Sale Price ·~
Sale! RCA Color Television Sets

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

5.87
5.37
4.17
3.57
2.97
2.37
1.77
1.47

KIMBALL PIANO SALE!
During this sale of Kimball pianos you'll really save on
Pianos for yourself . for your family. Pianos for Churches Schools - Lodges. There's a fine selection in maple · walnut ·
pecan and cherry wood fini shes. All pianos are complete with

padded bench to match. You'll find pride and pleasure for
years to come in the total quality of Kimball cabinetry and
musical intonation.

Stop in on the Second floor - See these fine pianos and save
on the Piano of v.our choice.

Sale! Bicycles
.
These bicycles are in
original cartons - ready to
be set up . You can save

plenty - Sale includes only
stock on hand as listed.

JUst 12 Boys and Girls 26
inch size 3 speed bicycles.

You set them up.

Sale $381

650.00
729.00
600.00

THESE LADIE;S LOOK OVER a talking book machine .
which Is a part of a program being conducted through the
Meigs County Bookmobile Service that provides recordings
of books, magazines and study courses to Meigs Countians.
From the left are Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, bookmobile super-

checkerboard.

20 inches hlgh. Top 20 by 20
inches.

"'

Furniture Dept.

3rd floor

The . annual vocational Bourland, superintendent of Bourland speaks to all
conference week at Meigs High U1e Southern Ohio Coal Co., as students, conferences will get
School will get underway the keynote speaker.
underway at 10:05 a.m. each
After Monday, when Mr. morning on selected topics .
Monday, March 26, with White
:::;::8:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:::::::::::
There will be specialists in
many fields speaking at the
conferences each day. Students
Friendly Fire
will select the field in which
SAIGON (UP!) - An they might be interested as a
visor; Mrs. Betty Cline, a senior citizens volunteer program
una.rmed
Ameri&lt;an possible career.
worker who is the first volunteer in the RSVP to work with
The schedule of speakers for
helicopter carrying Comthis particular program; Miss Etna Gardner and Mrs.
the
event this year include :
munist peace supervisors to
Bertha Lasher, subscribers to the free service, and standing,
a proposed site for a VietMrs. C. 0 . Chapman who heads the Rutland area Talking
Tuesday, March 27
Joe
Banks, Pharmacy, Ohio
namese prisoner of war
Books Club.
John Reece, public affairs e&lt;change was fired on Northern University .
Davis I. Moon, Student Af.
coordinator for the Ohio Power Thursday in an area under fairs
,
Muskingum
Area
Company; showed picture Viet Cong control, a U. · S. Technical College 14 areas to
be represented).
slides of coal operations near spokesman said today.
Mrs . . Dorothy Jenkin s,
Salem Center to members of
The spokesman said tbe Serv ic e Operator. Servi ce
the Pomeroy-Middleport Lions North Vietnamese and Viet Manager, and Mrs . Betty
specially built record player. been active in the Rutland area Club
Peter son, Division Personnel
Wednesday at the Meigs
Cong olficers aboard tbe Representative {General
Then the individual can select where she serves as chairman Inn following luncheon.
from a quite lengthy list, books of the Talking Books Club. Six Wendell Hoover, first vice helicopter, marked with the Telephone Company).
Jennller Sheets, Home
that he would like to use in machines have been placed in president, pres ided in the bright orange stripes of the Economist, Agricultural
record form . In addition to Rutland and Dexter to Miss absence of Don Pearch, peace-keeping Joint Military Extension Service.
Patrolman James Sheets,
Commission (JMC) , were
complete books, recordings are Etna Gardner, Mrs. Bertha president.
offered in study courses and Lasher, who calls the service Reece commented on the "noticeably upset" and the
complete works from current the most wonderful she has scenes shown of mines No. 1 crew members had to "settle
down" the Communist
popular magazines.
ever experienced; Gerald . and 2 being opened by the
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman has Minor , Dexter ; James Southern Ohio coal Company passengers.
Sheriff Robert C. HarNicholson, Dexter; Mr. and loca ted in western Meigs
tenbach's Dept investigated a
Mrs. Earl King and Mrs. Will County. He also -presented
single car accident Thursday
In Rutland.
slides, aerial views, of the belt
at 5:20p.m., four tenths of a
There is no determined line and the Gavin Plant, which named to select officers are mile south of Pomeroy on SR
length of time which the the coal will supply.
Richard Chambers, Karl 124.
subscriber may keep the Hoover, Tom Cassell and Krautter and Cassell. Also
Gloria Bucl&lt; Wallace, 25,
particular recordings which Bob Hill plan to tour the mine discussed was the state Lions Middleport, traveling northrun from five to 20 records area and the Gavin plant convention to be held May 18- west, approached a vehicle
generally depending on the today.
19-20 in Cincinnati.
coming from the opposite
A nominating committee
Fourteen members attended. direction left of center. Mrs.

Lions see

Decorative - Walnut finish
with lop a regulation

All items selected from our regular stock.

.. A talking books program

being offered through the
Meigs County Bookmobile
Service is doing a big business.
~ The program, which offers a
free service for persons who
have sight or physical impalrmenls, is quite popular in
western Meigs County where
G( lbe 10 lalkin&amp; boolla now

Has the wicker look · solid
colors of black . white yellow · burgundy .. 21 In·
ches hlgh . top is 16 Inches
square.

a

'10'5

•'

Sal• I

Simmons
Slumber
King
Deluxe

available
have
been
uistributed . Mrs . Vllma
Pikkoja, bookmobile supervisor, reports that 25 additional
talking books are now on order
and that she now has requests
from 35 residents who would
like the free service.
Through the service, the
lndi(.idual is given the use· of a

Bananas seat and high rise

handle bars . You set them
up.

wearing cover . Sani Seal protected cover.

Comforlex

cushioning gives extra
support and firmness.
'

Reg. 199" Queen Sets - Sale 169"·
Just 6- 10 Speed Racing
Bicycles - Boys style .
hand brakes.. You set them

Sale $5fl

mine sites

Ohio State Highway Patrol.
Dr. T. Jay· Bradshaw, Oplomotrist, Gallipolis.
Walt
Mill s,
Engineering ,

Ceramic
Hocking

Engineering,

Hocking

Technical College. .
Tom Wilkinson , Industrial

Techn ical College.
Mary Euler and Don Allen ,
Health Careers, Hocking
Tec hnical College .
Tom
Mar tin,
director, Rutland .

funeral

Relno Lind. brick layer ,
Pomeroy.
Sgt. Jerry Stovall, Marines,
Parkersburg.
Wednesday, March 28

Joe Banks, Engineering,
Ohio Northern University.

Willis Anthony, Plumbing,
f;11ddleport .
Don Mullen , Mullen In surance Agency, Pomeroy.

Paul Cascl , Postal Services,
Middleport.
Mack 0 . Ellis, F.B .I. ,
Athens .
Dorothy Poling. Secretarial
Sc ience , Hocki ng Technical

College.

·

Vernon Weber ; Printinq ,

(Continued on Page 5

Driver crowded off Route 124

By George Hargraves, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
It was an action of real significance when the
Meigs Local Board of Education named the High
School Gym as the Larry Morrison Gymnasium.
Larry Morrison made a great contribution to that
gym, to the high school building and to the entire
district.
All who knew Larry were certainly aware of his
great love of basketball. He said thst basketball had
·been good to him. He was good for basketball too. It

quality, quilted long
Heavy

Gov. John J. Gilligan said he
recognized possibilities in
meeting the requirements of
the Federal Clean Air Act, and
added that the slate wan is to
meet the emissions regulations
while continuing the use of
Ohio coal to generate electrical
power.
(Continued on page 12)

Wallace hi t her brakes,
causing her to lose control. Her
auto skidded 57 feet to the right
in to a brick wall. The other
driver did not stop.
Mrs. Wallace had visible
injuries but was not immediately treated. There was '
heavy damage to the front of
the car.

,ft's now the Larry Morrison Gymnasium

El'!clusive f irm co nstruction.
HeavY

Just 10 Boys and Girls 20
inch High Riser Bicycles -

pictures of

Books talking plenty in Meigs ·

TeleP,hone or Snack
Plastic Tables

action and the subsequent
. hearings with an open mind,"
Whitman said. "If !be utility
companies can enter evidence
into the legal records which ·
demonstrates conclusively thst
the Ohio regulations cannot he
met, then we will be obliged to
reconsider our position ."
At a meeting Wednesday,

..

645.00
635.00

CHECKERBOARD TABLES

Tops. Short Sets . Jackets . Tank Tops · Jamaica Shorts ·

Culled Pants · Short Shorts.
SPORTSWEAR
SPORTSWEAR
SPORTSWEAR
SPORTSWEAR
SPORTSWEAR
SPORTSWEAR
SPORTSWEAR
SPORTSWEAR

Pine Console Color Set Marble Top Console - - • ·•
Fruitwood Console - Fruitwood Color Console
Walnut Swivel Console -

nounced Thursday.
Director Ira L. Whitman said
the proposed scheduleS'Sent to
the plants, owned by Ohio's
seven major electric utility
companies, are not final. Hearings will be held, and anyone
may request another session to
contest the EPA's decision.
"We are approaching this

Vocational speakers announced

XL-100 Chassis ( 100 percent solid state)
.

25 Inch diagonal measUre sti'ei!H size.

Polyester Pants - Knit Tops . Blouses · Drizzle Coals · Pant

REG. 9.98
REG. 8.98
REG. 6.98
REG. 5.98
REG. 4.98
REG. 3.98
REG. 2.9S
REG. 2.49

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Fourteen major electrical ·generating stations located in the
state's worst air pollution regions will receive proposed
compliance schedules to bring
them up to the state's sullur
oxide emission regulations by
July I, 1975, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency an-

BLUE DENIM JEANS

698.00
718.00
725.00
825.00
638.00

TEN-------CENTS-- , .

PHONE 992·2156

OEPA issues compliance
orders to 14 stations

Sale! Boys

Fa;,~us

Jb.in tonight ·~pering off to
showers and turning cooler\
Saturday. Showers possibly .
changing to snowfiurries in the
north late Saturday. Lows
tonight in the mid 40s. Highs
Saturday in the mid 50s.

enttne

FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1973

in . Sizes small, medium, large, extra large !1 32, 33 or 341nch

models you like.

Weather

Devoted To The lnteresu Of~Me~s-Mason Area

length sleeves.
·
Choose Charcoal . Army tan . Spruce green · Olive or Navy.
7.29 Lee Work Pants - - - - - - - - · Sale 6.48
6.19 Lee Matching Shirts - - - - • - Sale 5.38

-Just 9 West Bend, Arvin and McGraw Edison Humidifiers
at Clearance sale prices. Buy now and save.

PREPARING to acldn!ls 218 penona •tlenlbe 'l1landay night's 3llth annual Gallipolis
. Area Chamber of Conunerce meeting In Rio Grande is Peter R. Steenland, vice president of the
American Electric Power Service Corp., New York. Mason County's chamber delegation
appears in background.

•

at y

Inca emperors began the
·custom of wearing gold ear
coverings after one of them lost
an ear in a fight.

-Special price during the sale on oval braided rugs. Sizes up
-Remnantl!fngths of Armstrong and Congoleum linoleum at
specia I prices while they last.
.
~Used black and white and color TV Sets at sale prices now.
Buy yourself or family an extr&amp; set now and really save.

available to any general
contractor in the area . . He
added. that the corporati011
hopes to have one or two
rep~esentatives on the site by
late spring or early summer.
"It will be an asset to the ·
area whoever develops it,"
Steenland concluded.
Shared Podium
The evening's co-speaker
was Don Buckley, director ol
the Ohio Valley Regional
Development Commission.
Buckley reviewed results of
an economic impact report
completed earlier this year by
!Continued on Page 12)

'

."

Set includes both the Simmons mattress and matching box springs.
Reg . 74.95 Full size mattress or box spring

.

'

Sale 59:95
Sale 59.95

Visit the Furniture Department on the 3rd floor . Take advantage of the
sale prices on Simmons and Serta mattresses.
• .

Free Parking on Second Street and at our Mechanic Street WarehouH.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Be thrifty! Save II of your cash register and payment rtdlpts.

•

v

Ohio Power Co. .at least 50
privately developed new
homes in the Salem Center
area in Meigs County.
The homes development will
he located three-quarters of a
mile from County Rd. 1, near
its intersection with Rt. 124.
The project wiD not be
subsidized by AEJ' qr Ohio
.Power, its subsidiary . .
Sleenland said initial plans
call for 5tl homes in the $20,1100
to $21,1100 price range. MultifamilY. homes are to be added
later. The development will be
designed so that an additional
100 to 200 homes may be added

Pants have hemmed bottoms with a perfect tailor Ill. Sizes 29
to 46 waist ,
Lee Tech Twill Shirts with full front lacing · dress shirt style
collar . double yoke . roomy pockets a~d a long tall thai slays

·l

'

Plans were made public lor a
new homes development in
·Meigs County, review of an
~onomic impact report, and
tbe Induction of a new
president highlighted the 36th
annual Gallipolis Area
C~amber
of Commerce
IJieeting in Rio Grande
College's cafeteria Thursday
nlght.
Peter R. Steenland, vice
president of the American
Electric Power Service Corporation, New York, ' told 210
persons. attending the dinner
that AEP is proceeding with
plans to promote through the

percent polyester and 35 percent

cOHen.

-Sale prices now on Lawn-Boy Power Mowers. You can save

....•

' blue denim - 10 ounce

Reg. 69.95 Twin size mattress or box spring
HEAV" AND VIOLENT THUNDERSI'ORMS swept across
Ohio Wedne~y and early today causing nearly an Inch and a
halt of rain In some areas that blocked county roads·and lightning that struck the main transformer In Wapakoneta.
The National Weather Service said ralnfaU amounis ranged
from less than one quarter Inch 'In the south to 1.46 Inches at
Akron and Canton and 1.44 Inches at Youngstown. There also
were record high temperatures again 1n·several areas and flash
Rood watches in 11 counties, just five days before the official
start of spring.

.,.

Mens Work
Dungarees

are so popular. All arranged for your

easy selection.

.

7

Sat- '8.00

and.

11

assistant principal of Meigs
High School; Sam Crow and
John Bentley, teachers at
Meigs High School, when the
accident occurred.
Funeral services will he held
at 10:30 a. m. Saturday at the
Robert Tomblyn Funeral
Chapel in Buckhannon. Mr.
and Mrs. Taylor, who are in
Buckhannon due to the death,
reside at Hysell Run.

Menund
Boys Department
1st Floor

Mens Sport

Injuries proved fatal
Fred Trainer, 53, Buckhannon, \'{. Va., lather of Jeanie
Taylot, a Meigs High School
teacher, died Wednesday at
in
University
Hospital
Morgantown, W.Va. of injuries
suffered in a fall last Saturday.
Mr. Trainer; manager of the
French Creek Game Preserve
at BuckhaMon, was on a
fishing trip Into West Virginia
mountains accompanied by his
son-In-law, Fenton Taylor,

· SPECIALS

See The Big New Selection
Mens $pOrt and Dress Shirts

Housing development at
Salem Center announced

. ~

Speaking of Schools-No. 271
· D£NNISE MARSHAU., daughter. of Mr. and Mi's. Charles Marshall, Hemlock-Grove, an

eiiJrth grader at the Meigs Junior High School, won the Meigs County Spelling Contes.t Thursday night at the Salisbury Elementary School. Dennise was presented a trophy for herself and
" 1 plaque for

her school by Robert Bowen, Meigs County Superintendent of Schools, and Mrs.
Greta Suttle, Elementary Superylsor. Dennise will compete in the 46th Annual Spelling Bee
i!p01180fed by the ColumbiS Citizen Journal In COlumbus on May 5. She was also the county
ehlmplon.two years ago when she was a sixth grader at the Salisbury School. To win last
night's compelition, Dennlae spelled "beautician," missed ,by Marly Foley, runner-up, and
•wall on to spell "bleeps." Mlas Lucille Smith, retired English teacher, was word pronouiK'er,
1
and the judges were Tom KeUy of the Eastern Local Schools; George Hargraves, Meigs Lora I
- ' ScbDoll, and John G. Bailey, Southern Local Schools. ·
Set -·•
• - . 12 fCII' picture of contestants.
•
I

a

was and had always been vilal part of his life. He
was a great player in high school and in college. He
·was a great coach here In Meigs County at Southern
and at Bellevue up north. He was the number one fan
of the Meigs Marauder basketball team. ,
·Years will move along very swiftly and the
people, happenings and things of yesterday will
. quickly bot surely fa\le with the flaws of memory. It
is good to know that ,as long as that high school
building stands In Rock Springs there will be a very
visible reminder that a fme man worked hsrd and

was

well~oved

in this conununity.
Assuming that you are of sound moral character and
We plan to obtain a commemorative metal pass the physical, the County Board can then give its
plaque and a picture of Larry and ·place them at the approval.
gym. Th~ official dedication wiD take place at the
The next big step is that of scheduling, taking and
first home basketball game next fall. That certainly passing a bus driving test administered by the State
seems to be the best time for a dedication. Larry Highway Patrol. We can give you some practice
loved the thrill and intensity of the fast action of a experience prior to your test. Assuming that all goes
basketball contest. It will be fitting to have a game well, our Board can then appoint you as a substitute
take place in connection with the dedication.
driver. Why not check into it?
The Board of Education has paid a high honor to
I WAS IN COLUMBUS Tuesday evening and
Larry Morrison in taking tliis action. It is an honor most of Wednesday. I talked to a lot of people conthat Larry highly deserves. We trust that you all cerning the ·possible increase in the charge-off
agree and that you will plan to attend the dedication millage from 22.5 to ~ . I am very concerned about
next fall.
this. I didn't find many others who were. I sUD urge
The hoard and the administration extend their you to drop a note to Senator Armstrong and
thanks to former board president, Rich Jones, who . Representative Collins at the State House.
suggested the idea originally.
NEWS AND NOTES - Our high school guidance
We still need additional s~bstitute bus drivers. staff is busy with final arrangements for the
Our recent announcements have gained us two or Vocational Guidance Week that lakes place during
three but we can use more. Perhaps you are holding the week of March 26 - There are still spots available
back because you don't know what is Involved. Here's In several of our junior level vocational programs how it goes.
The evening parent conferences that were scheduled
YOU HAVE TO OBTAIN a physical examination for March 29 have been cancelled - Please,
form from the County Superintendent's Office. That 's remember that the "drug problem" Is not just a
· locat~d next to the hospital on Mulberry Heights. The school problem, It Is a community problem - A
County Board pays up to $5 for the physical si!lnllicant part of the "drug problem" staris In the
examination that you inust have done by a doctor. hOme medicine cabinet.

,.

.I

�•
2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , March 16, 1973

EDITORIAL

BRU~E

.

CLEVELAND - A MEMBER OF the Ohio AFL.CIO
executive board satd today the "marriage ts over" between
organized labor and the Gilligan adrrunlstratton Ohio AFL-CIO
President Frank King said he knew nothmg of such a sttuation
and reserved comment.
Juruny Iafelice, who also serves as chatrman of the
Cleveland Labor Federation's Comrruttee on Polittcal Action,
satd all Democratic fund ra1smg dinners m the Cleveland area
w1ll be boycotted by the federation "The mamage ts over wtth
the Democratic Party here and m the state," satd Iafehce, who ts
also director of the 20,000-member DIStrict 54 of the Internattonal
Association ofMachmtsls "We are now bachelors In the pohltcal
arena and can be, wed to any group"
CLARK AIR BASE, PHILIPPINES - '1111RTY·TWO U S
prtsoners mcludmg the longest-held POW of the Vietnam War
and a Marme who prevtously was listed as dead landed m the
Phtlippmes today, completing the next to last phase of Operation
Homecommg
The men, released earher in Hanot by the Vtet Cong, JOllled
110 others who had been released by the North Vtetnamese and
the Chmese tn the past two days Most of the prev10usly released
men were expected to be back In the Umted States thts weekend
The ftrst flight was tentallvely set for Saturday
Today's release means 147 Amertcans rematn m prtson
campstn Indochma All are to he released by March 28 accordmg
to the Parts cease-ftre.

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Smce manpower costs tpday represent more than half
of total defens e spendmg, thts ts clearly the most senstble
place to look for savmgs But most attackers of defense
outlays sltlllhmk tl's se&lt;ter and stmpler to hack away at
new weapons systems
·
Items hke the proposed B·1 bomber the advanced, mts·
stle bearmg Trtdent nuclear submarme, the continued
mulltple-warheadmg of many of our already emplaced
land-based mtsstles are htghly VlSlble targets for the
assaulters
An exactmg rev1ew of the defense manpower sttuatton
reqUtres constderable sophtsttcalton and subtlety but, re·
wat dmg as 11 mtght prove to be m savmgs, few m Con·
gress seem wtllmg to undertake tl- or to make compelhng
demands upon the Pentagon m lhts field
Now, of course new weapons systems are expenstve,
and, hke neatly everythmg else Amenca puts together
these days, they tend constslenlly to get mto cost over·
runs whtch are qmckly adverltsed by pracltced waste·
watchers hke Wtsconsm's Sen Wtlham Proxmtre
Sllll, the mthlary has an advantage m lhts struggle 1t
can argue plaustbly that a defense force , espectally tis
slrategtc element must constantly be modermzed, must
be on guard agamst obsolescence It can also successfully
sltr fears, legtllmate or otherwtse that not to advance tis
weaponry techmcally IS to nsk gtvmg an edge to tts poten
!tal adversanes
There ts one way m whtch rtsmg manpower costs and
the outlays for new weaponry mtertwme, and here, say
some budget spectahsls the Congress can be tough as
natls wtth the mthtary wtthout seemmg to tmpede tech
meal advances
The more sophtshcated our new weapons systems be·

come, the mote dependent they are upon supremely
sktlled and hence htgh patd personnel In fact, some bud
get experts say these new systems call not only for htgher
sktlls but more people
Some analysts beheve therefore, that both Congress
and the Prestdent should tequue Pentagon planners to
destgn new weaponry wtth dectstve mtent to hold down tf
not bar altogether these assoctated htgher manpowet
costs

A mot e ptoducltve area for manpower savmgs may be
m wllat are called tile genet al purpose forces, whtch leave
out of account the strategtc mtsstle weaponry , whether
a1rb01 ne, land based, or sea based
It 1s a commonplace, daltng at least from World War II,
that U S mthlary forces are far more amply supphed wtth
support elements than any m the world Gtven our baste
wealth and htgh ltvmg standards, thts IS understandable
and, to some extent probably mescapable
But there are sug~estwns from a good many nongovern
ment budget spectahsts that we could field well-tramed
combat forces on a much leaner support base than we
presently have- wtthout real loss etlher m combat elfec
t1veness or morale

Unhapptly preciSlon 1s lackmg m the defimlton of what
support levels are ' sufftctent ' A heavy charge should be
latd upon the Pentagon to sharpen tis real needs m thts
field, and, unsexy though the JOb may be, determmed
defense budget-c utters m Congress should be gon\g at the
task
By one set of measures, the Bt ookmgs lnshtulton esh·
mated that for the present fiscal year mdtrect defense
support costs "per umt of combat capabthty ' are substan·
llally ht gher than at the Vtetnam war peak m 1968. when
thev were constdered abnormally htgh Brookmgs could
find no comparable gam m effecltveness to JUSltfy the
ht ~ he r support levels
The whole tss ue IS very complex. but tt truly deserves
the most pams-takmg explorahon by all those concerned
wtth a proper defense.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Extc Ea.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

Almanac

By United Press lnlernallonal
Today ts Frtday, March 16,
Cotv Editor
the 75th day of 1973 with 290 to PubliShed
dally u :cept
follow
Saturday bv The Ohio Valley
Publlsh1ng Company, 111
The moon ts approachmg tis Court
St
Pomerov Ohl_?..:
·U769 Business Office Phone
full phase
2156, Editorial Phone 992
The mormng stars are Venus, 992
21l7
Second clan postage paid at
Mars, Juptter and Mercury
Pomeroy, Ohio
The evenmg starts Saturn
National advertising
Bottinein"
Those born on thts date are representattvt
Gallagher, Inc , 12 East 42nd
under the s1gn of Ptsces
SJ New York Clly, Now York
Subscroptlon
rotu De
James Ma dison, four th presl- livered
by carr1er where
dent of the Untted States, was available SO cenls per wttk
By Motor Route where carrier
born Marc h 16, 175I
service nol ovalloble One
. On thts day m htstory
month S1 75 By moll In Ohio
and W Va One year Sl-4 oo
In 1802, Congress authortzed s.. mon ths S7 2l Three
estabhshment of the US , months s• 50 Subscription
pr1ce Includes Sunday Tlmn
Mthlary Academy at West Sentinel
Pomt
'-----------....:

•• d:s1 ~~: :!$.X::.&gt;' .$~ .:..:· •

•

··:-: •:.:;:::.. : :-::::&gt;

.;..

honevnnnn

1

••

Dear Helen
'Ibis is a slightly diHerent problem about a netghbor. It
seems like every 11Dle he and htS wife get together With me and
my husband, he gets plastered and then tl starts; and he NEVER
knows When to go home either.
First he tells me what a great housekeeper I am, BUT - I
treat my "poor husband" like dirt. I make him take off his work
clothes and boots tn the garage, and my neighbor thinks 1t's
degrading that a man Isn't allowed to enter his house by the front
door·
Since my husband drives the car into the garage, tt's more
convement for hun to use the back door. He's tn construction
work, so gets very dirty Also, he's a lllOIIt considerate person
and prefers removing his muddy, sometimes tar-covered clothes
tnthegarage. (He'ssoconsideratehewon'ttellthismanoff.)
'lbese folks are 20 years younger than we are, but still spend
a lot of thetr time over at our house. I like HER, but sometimes I
get so mad at thts drunken tongue-wagging I'm almost stck
Wtthouthurtmghiswlfe'sfeellngs,whatshouldldo•-L M
Dear L
Hide the hquor when your netghbors drop m. A dry everung
may not only stop the tongue-wagging but will send them home
sooner -H
Dear Helen
'lbere's a 17-year-old gtrl next door who has had a crush on
my 32-year-old husband ever since the day we moved here He
likes her m a fatherly way, and she dotes on his advice In fact
she dotes - pertod!
Whenever I go downtown, she's over here like a flash. I've
told her several times to go home, but she doesn't listen
She's aruce gtrland I trust my husband, but he's not made of
stone, and I don~ think she sees hun as a father Image - not wtth
those sheep eyes What's the best approach• - AP·
PREHENSIVE
Dear ATry sympathy The ''poor little lovesrck teenager" gambtt
someltmes works because tt puts a man on his guard, and also
makes htm aware of how young and "silly" like Sheep Eyes IS.
H you're lucky, he may soon be asinng your help to shake her
loose
Let's hope you're lucky' -H.
Dear Helen
The Supreme Court says dectsion for an abortton m the early
months of pregnacy should be strictly between a woman and her
doctor
In the tnterest of equal ttme (we've heard so much proabort tOn talk) could I beg you to prmt the child's stde of It? Enclosed -CONCERNED
Dear Concerned
About a dozen people have sent me this same "Unborn
ChUd's Imaginary Diary, " (author unknown). For those who
haven't already read 1t elsewhere, here it ts '
Oct 5· My parents called me to life.
Oct 19 My first blood cells and vessel cells are formed; my
first vems formed .
Oct. 23: My mouth opens toward U!e ex!e1:1or.
Oct 25· My heart begins to beat.
rfov 1-12: MY legs and arms begm to form, my fmgers begin
to show.
Nov 20 Todsy my mother received the doctor's verdiCt ' II
am m her womb
Nov 25 Now it ts certatn that I will be a girl.
Nov 28· All my organs are already formed.
Dec. 10· MyhalrisgroWIDg and I have blue eyes.
Dec. 12. Soon I will be able to see
Dec. 24 My heart Is completely formed.
Dec 28 Today, my mother killed me. (ANONYMOUS)

WIN AT BRIDGE

A Difference in Doubling

..

:.-::·s·:·.~) :::.~::::::·::'.:'.X::::.~ «~'··=:

.:::.::: :.:; · ·-:::::::~:=x::o)~~~

WOJl.~~!!!)~",?Jtanski's

first serious romance
smce hts wife was ktUed by the hippies is Nancy
Bieler, maiden name Goldberg, Introduced to
his frtends as Madama Polanski . Adam
Wallnsky takes N Y D A hopeful Btll Vanden
Heuvel apart tn the Village Votce Acupuncture demonstrations for dentistry take place
here next month at a medical school.
"Mtracles" are prom1sed Recent headlmed
arrest actually was welcomed by the culpnt. He

owes more than a mllllon to shylocks, and jail
halts all payments while he's Away .. Actress
Marcta Rodd's writing an article for a sports
mag on what It's like to be married to a sports
nut she and husband Dale Hagen even were
married between llalves of a basketball game.
SomesiXyearsagopressagent Eddl e J affe
got Joe Namath and Francine Lefrak to pose for
a show at theN Y Coltsewn, and they started
rt"ch realtor father Sam
dating. Franc •~·s
u~
worrted a little: Francine was at Finch College
and Joe's reputation was pretty wild; but Joe
treated the lass like a lltUe lady and they're still
frtends Now the story's about that Sam Lefrak
wants to buy the Jets (for about $18 million),
and part of his Interest was piques by his
memory of Namath as "a fine young gentleman ,

'lbe Story of How I Brought the Death-Ray Machine ~\O~My
Kitchen ·
.,. '
It all $tarted many years ago, when my
""'"" Da"
thoughtful enough to gtve birth of a girl·'lld
""" on· """'"'r
, ,.
Later, this was a major canstderation In my selecting a Wlte,
SIDcelhadtobuyor.lyonegiftlntheearlypartofMayeachyear,
UtStead of two
My bride retaliated and showed her gratitude by briJJ8Uig a
boychild Into the world on Mother's Day, 1954, so I gel hit pretty
hard for presents at that time of Year, anyway. But I digress~
At any rate, last year, since my wife was about to celebl'll~
her l9th btrthday for the 21st consecutive year or somethln&amp;
like that, 1 was setzed by spirit of generosity, and with the help
of a frtendly appliance dealer who usually dealt In nothing m&lt;D
• lethal than SWitchblade knives and deer rifles, 1 bought her a
Death-Ray Machine.
:
OfftCtally, tt didn't go by that name It was called 11
mtcrowave oven or radar range
She loved lt: never knOWlng I had bought a Death·RaJ
Machine nght mto our own hearth and home.
Coffee tn a hurry 10 the morning• Put a cup of cold water anti
UtStant coffee m the thing set the timer for about a minute and
Zam! ptplng hot coffee, Just like that!
' •
K1d late for dinner dute to , Uttle League,
Gtrl Scouts or just plain messmg around? No sweat.
Fix a plate for the late-comer, zap tt w1th the magic button for¥
rrunute or two, and a hot meal emerged
1
Big, tmportant~ooking roast wtth company coming? Np
slavmg over a hot stove anymore Just bombard the expenslv~
chunk of cow for 30 rrunutes or so wtth the beam on, and be the
perfect hostess
,
All went wonderfully for almost a year, and then suddenlY,,
the Awful Secret emerged.
;
The nation's mosH"espected product-testing service, Co~
swner's Umon, reported thatradwllon leakage occurred on all
brands of ovens tested Such radiation, they said solemnly, co •
possibly cause radwtlon burns, exposttre to cancer, scramblejl
genes, and virtually everythtng from hangtalls to social dille~.
The Food &amp; Drug Administration contested the findings, lill,t
did not rule out the fact that potential hazards could elist, ill
some models and perhaps tn certrun off-the-line defective makq~
m aU models
l
So there tt stis, looking Innocently like a lltUe TV set In IIJF
kitchen next to the refrtgerator. 'lbe Death-Ray Machine
We've had long discUSS1ons about its future: Whether to stop
USlllg 11 whether to absolutely deny the use of It to younger
members of the family . whether to drop It off the Silver
Memortal Bridge at rrudnight whether to test tt by turrung It on
full-tilt and alllllllg tl at some folks m town we don't really C8lle
for.
,
At the moment, however, we are undectded, but sWI
debating the future of whether this weapon can be safely used for
the forces of good (scrambling eggs, grilling frankfurters, all the
old stuff tt did so well), or whether tlll!lndisputedly an expen&amp;l~e
one-way ticket to an early grave, and must be hwnan~ disposed
of
I
Of one thing I'm sure At present, the Death-Ray Machine's
beams atm squarely across the kitchen at a wall telephone and a
waffle iron H that phone develops cancer, or If tHe waffle iron
bas a mtScarrtage, out tt goes.
Fast.
WEEKEND TV FARE: Frtday -prime-time hmy at I 30,
WSAZ-TV Marlo Thomas spe~l.._lj,qi'«!V'N·
.t;.tlf
1
Saturday ~ "The Advocates' cloliks&gt;ail iiOth lsi es-Of itile
energy crisis, 10 on WMtJL.TV . Basketball tourneys abound,
wtth NCAA action al 2, WSAZ-TV, opening-round NIT play 11t 2,
WCHS-TV; and the Kentucky State Tourney at 8, WHTN-TV (you
can see ''Touch of Grace" and Julie Andrews/ on WTVN-TV,
though)

molher:ti=.

''Na...,Nice,"SawN"'•~~....
••,
,. ~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Match pomt experts aren't
always good rubber bndge
players One reason they
aren't ts that they tend to
use match pomt doubles at
rubber bndge
East's double of three
spades 1s a typ1cal match
p o 1 n t double A rubber
bndge player would JUSt
pass three spades and hope
to beat the contract A
double could cost htm game

~llanltc

BY PAUL CRABTREE

By Helen Bouel

I Voice along Br'Way I

By JACK O'BRIAN
NOW LOVE'SAVENIRE DISEASE
NEW YORK ( KFS) - Have a hot rumor
about Johnny Dto, labeled "the touhgest
gangster" by crune ftghters the jailed Maftoso
ts expected to apply for a new trtal - on grounds
a lady juror fell for hun like a ton of cuptds
durmg the trtal and now proclauns her affecti&lt;lll, allegedly lll8lsting her guilty vote was
coerced by the rest of the Jury . Columbta Pix
bought screen rtghts to "No Sex Please, We're
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT NIXON by unphcatton has British" years ago It has been playmg In some
crttictzed hlS embattled nommee for FBI dtrector, Patrtck Gray 3S counlires (runrung for years m London)
m, for turnmg over to a Senate corrumttee "raw Illes" on When the dectston was made to lrmg tt to
Repubhcan spytng acllvtties agamst the Democrats Ntxon took Broadway' Colwnbta was asked to tnvesl
the swtpe Thursday at Gray whose nommatton as the successor Rwnors say Colwnbta offered $50,000 - not to
to J Edgar Hoover, now 1s bemg considered by the Senate open 1t on Bdwy , but the management wouldn't
Judtctary Comnuttee He satd the practice of the FBI "fur. hsten and tt flopped $200,000 worth - fast ..
nlshmg files to the committees must stop wtth thts parttcular EdmundO'Brten,arealproasanactor,tsback
one."
working after a long illness.
"I understand why Mr Gray dtd this - because his hearmg
Greek King Constantine has restgned
was mvolved," Nlllon satd "But I would say this should not he a himself to permanent extle The colonels runprecedent for the future
The sancttty of those Illes must be rung Greece permtlted him to sell some 400
mamtamed " Gray gave the Judtclary Comrruttee informatton acres of his property to an engmeermg fmn m
last week whtch showed thatNtxon's personal attorney, Herbert Tatot, near Athens, and keep the $6,000,000 · ·
W Kalmbach of Newport Beach, Calif, acting under the Top makeup man on "The Utile Prince"
direcllon of former Whtte House atde Dwtght L Chapm, gave filming In Tunlsta was carted to the hospital
$30 000 to $40 000 m Republtcan campatgn funds to Donald ~ wtlh pneumonia and the emergency •
Segrettl, who ~llegedly directed pohtlcal esptonage agatnst the cosmebctan was director Stanley Donen's
Democrats last year
brtde, Yvette Mmueux, shll on the working

WOUNDED KNEE, S. D. - THE government's chief
negotiator returns here from Washington today with what could
be a fmal offer to mthtant Indians to abandon thetr occupation of
Wounded Knee
In the background was the thteat or another confrontation,
this time between two Indian groups The head of the Oglala
Slowr Tribal Council threatened to begm sweepmg through the
reservation today pJcldng up "ut•leslfables" who are supporting
the American Indian Movement (AIM), the militant lndtan
l!rOuP bebind the wounded Knee occuoatton

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~

and rubber and would only
gtve him an extra 100 pmnts
above the lme tf 1t worked
A match pomt expert wtth
the East hand would reason,
" If South does make three
spades I wtll get a bad score
wtll be makmg three hearts
for a score of plus 140 An
f
unsuccess ul double will gtve
me a bottom mstead of a bad
score, but a successful wtll
gtve me plus 200 for a top "
so expert East doubles and
1s lucky He gets two hearts
a diamond and a club and
West takes the setting trick
with the kmg of spades
Sorry, but that's how tour·
naments are won
INIWSPAPEl ENTERPRISE ASSN I

David Eisenhower has aboUt as much In!Iuence aS any Iad, buth e still Can 't ge tlntolaW
school next fall Enrollments all are closed
already .. The congregation of autograph
fr eaks ·ID fron t of the Sherry Nether]a nd Is
because guests there Include Nancy Sinatra Sr.,
The btdding has been
producerRossHunter,LIIyTomlln, Vera Miles, West North East South
Shtrley Jones; and "Huckleberry Finn" 2
3+
~.... D~Ie
•
teenage stars Jeff East and John Whitaker.
Jackie 0 suddenly is over sbJ: feet tall;
You, South hold
credit her new four-inch white denim corksoled •AK54 •AQ63 +2 "'KQ!07
What do you do now'
clogs ... It'scatchingon In Israel, too -the first
drive-m movre opens tn Tel Aviv . Pres.
A-Your partner h.os ..ked
you lo &lt;boose a outt bul you
Nixon's valet Manalo Sanchez' birthday present have three four-..rders. Btd
from the boss was a new fishing rod with a four diamonds •nd make him
&lt;hoose
PIaque proc Ia Imlng it was " Han dma de
Espectally for Richard M NbJ:on" . Rocky
TODAY'S QUESTION
Aoklhasmadea fortune wtthhla 16 Benlhana of
Your partner continues to
Tokyo restaurants (gleat glob) and has four spades What do you do
now?
managed to lose a fortune backing bombed
Bdwy shows. He's unsticklng from his last S.IHI $1 lw JACOBY MODERN r..o.
to "Wm ot Br~d,,,.. reta trHs -.wr·
agam - fmanclng a new magazine due next fall poporJ, , 0 lox 419, RIHI,. Clly
N y k NY IIIII19
5
llltoon, "' 01 •
•
·

t

v

FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1973
6 DO-News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6, Sesame St 26 ,
Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News6, 13, I Dream of Jeannie 13 Let's Travel33
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4 News, 6, 10, What 1
My Line 8 Wild Kmgdom 13 Saint 15, Elec Co 20 Folk
Guitar 33
7 30 - Young Dr K1idare 4, Protectors 8, College Hockey 20:
Parent Game 10 Beat the Clock 13, Porter Wagoner 3. To
Tell the Trulh 6. Wall Street Week 20, 33
8 00 - Washington Week In Review 20, 33 , Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4,
15, Brady Bunch 6, 13, Harlem Globetrotters 8. 10
1
8 30 - Parfr~dge Famlly6, 13. Eye to Eye 33 . NHL Hockey J, 4\
15. Ed Sullivan's Broadway a. 10
9 00 - Masterp1ece Theatre 33 Acts ot Love - And Othe•
Comedoes 6 13
9 JO - Odd Couple 6 13
10 00 - Love American Style 6 13, Lily Tomlin a, 10. Paul
Nuchlms 33
10 30 - What About Tomorrow&gt; 6, 13
11 00 - News, Weather, Sports 6, 8, 10, 13
11 30 - Johnny Carson J, 15, In Concert 6 Movies 'The 391
Steps" 8. "Year2889" 10, ' Sand ollwo Jlma" 13
11 SO - Movie "House ot Usher" 8
1 00 - Midnight Speclal3 4. 15. Movle"Foglsland" 10
2 30 - News 4
SATURDAY, MARCHII
3()-TV Classroom 8 Kentucky Afield 13, Faith for Today 10 J
DO-Neighbors 13. Farm Front 4, Death Valley Days 8, Fun,
for Everyone 6 Treehouse Club 10
7 1$--Woman's Poonl of View 13
7 3Q-Man from COSI 10, Farmbrook 3, Treehouse Club ll1•
Sesame St 20, Dick Van Dyke 4, Gilligan's Is e. GMpel6
,
8 OD-Houndcats
3,
4,
15
Buys
Bunny
8,
10.
Pulnstul113,
Jake's'
Place 6
8 3Q-Roman Holidays 3, 4 15, Jackson Five 6, 13, Sabrina theJ
Teenage Wtlch 8. Popeye 10. Mr Rogers 20
..
9 DO-Jetson 3 4, 15. Osmonds 6, 13, Amazing Chan 8, 10 '
Sesame St 20
'
l
9 3Q-Pink Panther 3, 4, 15, MovleCartoons6, 8, 10
1..
10 DO-Underdog 3, 4, 15, Elec Co 20
10 3o-Barkleys 3, 4, 15, Brady Kids 6 13 Mister Rogers 20,;;
Josle and the Pussycats In Outer Space 20
,
11 DO-Brother Buzz6, FllntstanesB, 10, Sesame St. 20. Sealab 3,.
4• 15, Kenlucky High School Basketball Tournament ]3 ;
11 3Q-Kid Power 6, 13, Runaround 3, 4, 15
~
12 OD-Eiec Co 20. Archie's TV Funnies 8, 10. Funky Phantom
13, NBC Children's TheatreJ, 4, 15, CBPA Bowling 6 .
..
12 3Q-Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids 8. 10
1 DO-Beetles 3, Green Acres J Monkees 6, Dick Van Dyke 4,
Lassie 15, CBS Children's Film Festival a, 10 1
l•
1 3o-Del Reeves 3 • Sports Challen~ 4' Plnea~ple Place 15 1 i 1
2 'tJ~ 1 1~ ~!~e~~:· 10 • Flshln' ole 13 • N AA Basketb~l \
1
6
2 3()-Bonnle Lou and Buster 13
3 DO-World ol Survoval 6, 13, Mr Roberls 6
l 3()-Pro Bowling 6, 13
•
~
4 DO-Folk Guitar 33, CBS Golf Classic a. NCAA Basketball3, 4. ~
15 , Black Omnibus 10
..",
4 3o-Audubon Wildlife Theatre 33
5 DO-Making Things Grow 33 , Auto Race 6, 13, Lee Trevino's
Golf tor Swtngers 10, Wrestling 8
5 3Q-Sesame St 33, Animal World 10
'I '
6 OD-News3,4, 8,Movle"KissMeKale"10
6 3Q-NBC News 3, 4. 15, Reasoner Report 13., Beverly
Hillbillies 8, Marshall Report 33,
~ cit:~,::r~s~ad For lt3 , Hee Haws, Lawrence Welk .\, 15, I've\~
Got A Secret 13, Bridge 33
..
1
7 3Q-Nashvllle Music J: Amarlng World of Kreskln 13.
Blographt 33
·~
8 DO-Allin he Family 8, 10, World Preml~e 3, 15, ffere ,;, Go''
Again 6, Star Trek 4, Kentucky High School Beske thAI!
Tournament 13, Mo•le "Yotlmbo" 33.
'
~ -~ Ji
8 3Q-Brldget Loves Bernie 8, 101 ATouch o1Gr~ce6
"~" Vl
9 DO-Julie Andrews 6, Mary Tyler Moore a, 10, Movfe "pon't J
Just Stand There'" 4
' • • I
9 3()-Bob Nt!wharl 8, 10. Newsmaker '73 13
'
I .z
10 oo-Stravinsky Remembe•ed 33, Carol Burneff 10, r; 'o'elp~(l
Bureau 13, Advocates 33; Movie "The Best of E'nemle$' 6
II Is-News 13, High School Basketball 15
•' 1 ~
11 3()-Movles 'The Unouard~ Moment" 3, "Big Carnival"'' r
"Because They're Young' 8, ''A Distant Trumpet" 10·
' Journey to the Center of Tme" 13
• ,,
1 DO-Movies "The Perfect Furlough" 3, "The Giant of
Metropolls 13
•
v
1 4.5-Movle "Versailles Altair" 4
, •M
2 3()-N~s ll
' Jf\
~ DO-Movie "Nioht Sono" 4
,',
•IZ
6
7

'

14

\l

w. I pet
Boston
60 13 822
NBuewllayloork
2ss, 5221 279124
Philadelphia 9 67 118
Central D1vtsoon
w I pet
Ba ltimore
46 27 630
Allanfa
42 32 568
Houslon
29 45 392
26 46 361
Wesleyan stopped Brockport Cleveland
Western Conference
State of New York, 96-90, to set;
•
Midwest DIVISIOn
up a fmal matchup m the
w I pel
Milwaukee
52
22 703
NCAA College DtV!Ston tourna- Ch1capo
48 26 649
ment at Evansville, Ind
Detroit
33 40 452
34 42 447
The Nallonal lnvtta!Jon KC Omaha
Pac1f1c DJYISIOn
Tournament begms m New
w I pel
York Saturday With "a prur of x Los Angeles 55 19 743
Golden Stale 45 29 608
doubleheaders

San Francisco 49ers; 77-67
BY JOE CARNICEW
• UPI Sports Writer
• Long Beach State's master
plan for upsetting college
lJallketball kingpin UCLA went
liP In smoke Thursday night
tllanka to an unheralded band
from Northern California
: Long Beach, tired of 1ts
second billing to UCLA on the
West Coast, had hoped to
change all that tn the NCAA
tournament But the Umverslty of San FranClSCO destroyed
the plan, upsetting the third·
ranked 49ers, 774!7, tn the
NCAA Western Regional
semifinals
San Francisco now takes on
UCLA, which opened a bid for
an unprecedented seventh
ittralght NCAA title wtth a 911-31
Victory over Arizona State
" "We got whipped good," satd
Jerry Tarkanlan, the Long
!leach coach. "Ed Ratleff (the
49ers' All Amertca guard),
"jammed two fingers on his
'Shooting hand early In the week
'lnd hUFt a finger on his left
•hand early In the game tonight
But give Phil Smith the credit
'
1or
doing an outstanding
!lefenslve job on him. San
l'rancisco did an outstanding
job of defensmg us They
'lorced us Into taking more bad

"
FOYT WILL COMPETE

' OOLLEGE STATION, Tex
" (UPI) - A J Foyt, a three·

time Wlllller of the Indianapolis
500 auto race, will compete m
:both divisions of the Texas
Twin 200 on April 7.
- Foyt will drtve hts super•charged Coyote Foyt m the
' chwnplonshlp event for In·
dianapolis.type cars

~Warriors

1
shots than usual "
COD'!"CUtlve VICtory
Bill Walton celebrated his
·
seleclton earlier In the day as · In
other
regionals
College Basketball Player of semtfmals, Provrdence ripped
the Year by scoring 28 pomts Penn, 87-65 and Maryland
and taktng down 14 rebounds m downed Syracuse, 91-75, In the
UCLA's victory. Walton scored East at Charlotte, N C ,
18 of his pomts tn the· second Kentucky beat Austin Peay,
half as UCLA recorded tis 72nd 106-100, m overtime and In·

·-''

.-.Houston
Golden State hopes tl can
keep nmnlng rtght tnlo the
playoffs
The Warriors hit thetr season
high In whipping the Houston
Rockel$, 141·125, at Oakland
'lbtD"sday night In the lone
National Basketball
Association game Golden
State .was relaxed after clinching a playoff berth earlier tn
the week and sizzled with a 612
shooting percentage
Guard Jeff Mullins paced the
. Warriors' balanced attack with
28 points Teammate Rick
Barry added 25 points, rune
rebounds and a personal
season high of 13 assists,
mosUy off fast breaks.
"The reason we had such a
high field goal percentage ts
that our fast break was really
going and we were getting easy
layups," said the Wamor
scoring leader. "Those Inside
belly baskets will kill a team.
'"lblS is the kind of game we
are capable of havtng when
we're moving. We're a running
team, and we're at our best
when we play our type of

diana upset Marquette, 7f&gt;.09,
m the Mideast at Nashville,
Tenn , Memphis State ousted
South Carohna, 90-76, and
Kansas State dumped South·
western Lowslana, 66-63, m the
Midwest at Houston
Tennesee State rtpped Assumption, 106-76, and Kentucky

Phoem x
Seattle

Spikes sharp for Indians
By MARTIN LADER
UPI SPORTS WRITER
Giving up on Charlie Spikes
was one of those decllllons the
New York Yankees regretted
from the first and will probably
pay for In the future
A sohdly built, long-ball
hitting outfielder, Spikes, 22,
was bemg groomed for future
stardom by the Yankees when
a strange thing happened to
them: for the f1rst lime m
nearly a decade, they found
themselves as legttunate pennant cOntenders
To strengthen thetr unmediate hopes for lhts year's
Amertcan League Iitle, the
Yankees felt they needed help
at thtrd base, aod to fill this
need they .jfent after veteran
Gratg Netlles of "Cleveland
They got Netlles, but had to
pay the pnce, sacrificrng a
ptece of the future by sendmg
Sptkes to the lndtans
Spikes, who htt 26 homers
and drove In 83 runs m 126
games for West Haven of the
Eastern League last year, 1S
demonstratmg the promtse the
Yankees held for him, except
now he's domg hts work for
Cleveland The 6-foot-3, 230pounder slugged a patr of 40Q.
foot home runs, drtvtng m
three runs Thursday as the
Indians edged the Chicago
'

8y United Press lnlernatlooal

Both vulnerable

w..l

Set h
u ~~~~~~~~~~~r_------------~~~~~~~~hlt~~~~~-~L~os~~g~~~~~~~~;;-----D~a~y~to~n~Je~f~k;.n~o~n~
Pro Standings

n

Helen Help

Ry BRUCE BIOSSAT •

Tod.1y~&lt;&gt;
8y Uuited Press Intemational
WASHINGTON- FOREIGN Dll'LOMATS sa1d today tt ts
possible Chinese Premter Chou En-lru wtll make a tnp to the
United States sometime after Pekmg and Washington open
liatson offices m each others capttals
Prestdent Ntxon's announcement Thursday of the ap.
pomtment of Ambassador Dav1d K E Bruce, 75, to head
Washmgton's hatson offtce m Pekmg once agam has sbrred
speculallon that Chou would make such a JOUrney Netther the
Wh1te House nor the State Department would comment on the
posstbility, however

•

Defense Savings
power

Not for Senators
The US Senate, as everyone knows , abhors hyper
secrecy m government affatrs It does not hke burea ucrats who do thm gs behmd Congress' back or ClVll serv·
ants who make thetr own rules or prestdents who make
declSlons that constantly leave legtslators lockmg barn
doors after stolen horses
It turns out, though, that the Senate IS wllhng to make
an occaswnal excephon to the general rule that the people
have a nght to know who IS domg what wtth thetr tax
money and why That excepllon-can you stand the sur·
pnse' -ts the good old progresstve Senate ttself
When the Senate voted the other day on a reform pro
posal to make all tis commttlee meetmgs open to the pub
he unless the commtllee mvolved voted to close tl, the
secrecy forces won Their margm of nme votes (47·38)
mcluded the leaders and whtps of both parttes, such
staunch defenders of the pubhc r~ ght to know as Sen
Mtke Mansfteld D Mont , and Sen Robert Gnffm R
Mtch
The asststant Democrallc leader, Robert C Byrd of
West Vtrgmta, pompously opposmg the reform, satd that
· to tamper wtth the rules of the Senate IS to tamper wtth
the Senate tlself ' Thts hemous posstbthty, he tmphed,
would be eqmvalent to wantmg to make the sky purple or
consptrmg to cut the wmgs off all the butterfltes
The only raltonal obJechon Byrd offered was that open.
mg up all meetmgs would msp1re our dtslmgmshed sen·
a tors to ' grandstandmg ' That ts, they would tend to em1t
grand and gross sound and fury legtslatmg noth)ng
Thts mtght well happen at the outset (although those
senators who attend the open meetmgs that do extsl often
seem to have trouble staymg awake let alone domg any
worthwhtle performmg)
But tt ought to become raptdly clear, even to a senator,
that the grandstandmg would have to end tf anythmg were
to be accomplished And tf nothmg were accomphshed
wtth the whole country, more or less , lookmg on then per
haps those senators would not be senators for very long
But, softly Could lhts be m fact what the Senate fears'
That the pubhc Will fmd out how thetr system really operates and, m a ftt of nghteous mdtgnahon , thtow the ras·
cals out'
For the burmng questwn remams what do they have to
htde' Short of dtsclosmg mthtary secrets IS there an)
thmg Senate commtttees would do by openmg thelf meet·
mgs that would harm the country·•
Can anyone be blamed for assummg that what the Iegts
lators are really worned about dtsclosmg 1s the less-than.
ctvtcs book-pure system of compromtse and clout by whtch
the government ts run'
The same dogmahc presumption of the need for secrecy
keeps dtplomatic meetmgs closed It keeps labor manage
men! collechve bargammg sesswns closed And tt helps
keep thmgs m general m somethmg less than Utoptan
condtllon
The leaders who say that they need secrecy to negottate
m all these areas are bemg arrogant, tf not dtshonest
The people whose ltves are affected by dectswns made
behmd closed doors have a nght to know exactly how
those dectstons are made and why
When t~e U S House of Representallves , of all people
can move to open alltts meetmgs unless commtttee mem·
hers vote agamst domg so, the Senate should be ashamed
- and should be rebuked- for refusmg to do so
As Sen Adlat E Stevenson Ill, DIll . one of the reform
supporters, satd , "E&lt;cesstve secrecy breeds dtslrust It
prevents accountabthly It does vtolence to the prm~tple
of government based on the mformed consent of the
governed "

llally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16, 1973

BIOSSAT

.

PLAYERS HONORED
ST LOUIS (UP!) - Guard
Nate Archibald of the Kansas
City .Omaha Kings and forward
Bob McAdoo of the Buffalo
Braves have been honored for
thetr outstanding play this
season by rtval Nattonal
Basketball Assoctatton
players, according to a vote
taken by the Sportmg News.
Archibald was named the
league's Most Valuable Player
and McAdoo recetved top
rookte honors
m.::::-:·:f.::::::~: '~=::::::~·::::•••:.::::-:··:

.:····:·:

SIGN UP AGAIN
Another slgnup day for
Pomeroy Utile League has
been scheduled for Sunday at
Pomeroy VIllage Hall between I and 3 p.m.
Registration for play In the
Pee Wee League, Little
League, and Pony League
will he taken. Two more 13
year-old&amp; are needed U a
s~oclal league ls to be
organbed for that group.

Whi"le Sox

Cubs, 5-4, m an exbibttion
game.
Oscar Gamble also homered
for the Indians, who stretched
their spring mark to 5-2 The
Cubs, who narrowed their gap
to a single run tn the ninth
mnmg on a two-run smgle by
Rtck Monday, suffered thetr
fourth loss m ftve games
Nettles, meanltme, con·
tinued to hold up his end wtth a
triple and a walk good for an
RBI and a run scored as the
Yankees whipped the Mm·
nesota Twins, ~ Netlles also
miSsed a homer when a heavy

wmd held up his drtve to deep
left centerfield
The Houston Astros turned
on the power for seveo runs m
the fu:st three Innings, m·
eluding homers by Lee May,
Cesar Cedeno and Bob Watson,
tn beatmg the Phtladelphta
Phtlhes, 11-7 Phtladelphta
retaltated wtth 11 htls of tis
own,mcluding homers by Mtke
&amp;hrmdt and Jose Pagan, but
commtlted six errors

l'lncmnatt Reds and Wtllte
Horton htt a grand-slam homer
durmg an etght-run thtrd mrung rally as the Detrott Tigers
rtpped the Boston Red Sox 9-3

Cleon Jones, a key factor for
the New York Mets thts year,
hit a three-run homer m the
ftfth lnnmg t'o lift the Mets to a
6-5 tnumph over the Los
Angeles Dodgers and centerfielder Johnny Grubb delivered
the wtnnlng run wtth a seventh·
The Chtcago Whtte Sox also mnmg single as the San Diego
took advantage of stx errors tn Padres beat the San Franctsco
runnmg up an 11-3 rout of the Gtants, 5-4

Bill Walton repeats as
UPI's 'Player-of- Year'
NEW YORK (UPI) -To no
one's surprtse Bill Walton of
UCLA has recetved h1s second
straight James A. Natsrmth
Trophy as the Uruted Press
International's college basket·
ball Player of the Year.
But htS coach, John Wooden,
can't beheve the selechon
wasn 'I unanunous
Walton, a 6-foot-11 jwuor who
quite possibly Is the best cebtet
ever to play collegtate basket.
ball, recetved 175 votes out of
195castbysportswrttersand
sportscasters m the voting for
Player of the Year, and
Wooden wants to know what
possessed the other 20 to vote
for somebody else
"How 20 people could vote
for somebody else ts beyond
me," Wooden satd upon
hearmg the offtctal vote count
"Keep those 20 people away
from me because I don 'I thtnk
they have all thetr marbles "
Thompson Finishes Second
Sophomore David Thompson
of North Carohna State
finished second m the votmg
with 11 votes while semor
Erme
DtGregorto
of
Provtdence recetved four Five
other playefs spht the
remaining votes
In wmnmg the N8lllllllth
Trophy Walton becomes only
the fourth player to wm UP!
Player of the Year honors
more than once Oscar
Rllbertson ( 19511-59-60), Jerry
Lucas ( 1961-62) and Lew
Alclndor (1967-69) were the
others
The NalSllllth Trophy, presented annually smce 1969 by
the Atlanta Tipoff Club, will be
presented to Walton at a dinner
m Atlanta on Sunday, Aprll 1
Prevrous wmners of the Nms-

=-~;

::

.~:

·:. ::::::~::::::····:.: :-.::~: :.:::·::: :...

PLAYERS HONORED
Tuesday, March 13, the
Meigs Junior High Sports
Banquet honoring all
athletes was held with
James Vennarl, principal of
Rutlaod Elementary School
and former football coach at
Rutlaod High School the
guest speaker.
- The banquet ·~as attended
'by approximately IIIII per·
sons lncludlug football and
basketball players ,
cheerleaders and coaches
A delicious meal was
prepared and served by the
Meigs Junior High cooks.

"I defmttely feel I'm a better
player thts season," satd
Walton "I'm stronger, a year
older and mentally I know
more what to do m a game
"Naturally, I'm really
pleased at havmg won the
award but the thmg you have to
reahze ts that m a team sport
hke basketball awards
honoring mdtvrduals m effect
hdnor ' the ' team I 'ththk
everyone on the team should
share m this award."
Thompson was the player
most responstble for North
Carolma State's gomg un-

34 41
24 51

g

b

7
J8'h

52'1&gt;
gb
4'12
17'1&gt;
19'12
gb
4
18'12
19
g b.

10

453 2l'h
320 31'1?

Portland
17 57 230 38'12
x Clinched dtvtsoon !tile
Thursday's Results
Golden Sl 141 Houston 125
(Only games scheduled)
Fnday's Games
Phoemx at Atlanta
Boston at Baltomore
KC Omaha at Cleveland
Molwaukeeat Chicago
Buffalo at Detro1t
New York at Los Angeles
Houston at Portland
Golden Stale at Sea ltle
NHL Standmgs
By Umted Press International

Mtl
NYRgrs

East
w I I pts gf ga
47 9 14 108 289 158

44
Bostn 45
Detro1t 34
Buffalo 33

18 7
20 5
24 1
25 12
Toronto 24 36 9
Vncuvr 19 43 s
NYlidrs 9 58 5
West

GAME oN RAmo
Tonight's Gallipolis·

(Only games Scheduled I
AHL Standings
By Untied Press lnlernat1onel
East
w I. I. pis gl ga
NS
38 15 15 91 277 171
Bostn 31 25 12 74 233 230
Rchstr 30 28 11 71 221 247
Prov 26 28 14 66 223 229
Sprgfld 18 35 16 52 248 305
N.H. 16 34 19 51 234 296
West
w I t pts gl ga
Cmc1 49 17 S 103 316 197
Hrshy 35 21 11 81 280 209
Va
30 20 16 76 224 200
Rchmd 26 31 10 62 221 241
Jcksnvl 23 39 a 54 240 293
Bait
13 42 11 37 181 286

Chocag 39 23 8 86 254
Mmn 34 27 9 77 233
Phlla 33 21 10 76 255
Sl Lous 30 29 11 71 205
Los Ang 28 32 11 67 208
Pttsbgh 28 35 7 63 225
Atlanta 24 32 14 62 175
Cal1f 11 44 15 37 170
Thursday's Results

::·:·•••!W.·:·:=·· • •!•:•:::::;.::=·: ·=:::.,:,::::::::: :·::::..

• :·

FIGHT SCHEDULED
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo (UP! ) - Ron Lyle, the
Thursday's Results
ftfth-rankmg heavyweight, will
Cmconnat1 6 Boston 6
!Only game scheduled)
have hts next ftght on March
Fnday's Games
29,
tfwas announced Thursday
New Haven at Prov idence
Balf1more at V1rg 1n1a
Lyle's opponent for the 10.
(Only games scheduled)
rounder has not yet been
WHA Slandmgs
8 u 1dp
1t
t
1 named, but the bout Will be
Y "' e ress n erna tona
Lyle's ftrst smce he was beaten
w East
1 t pis gl ga dectstvely by Jerry Quarry at
New Eng 40 26 2 82 277 228
38 29 2 78 256 217 New York on Feb. 10
Cleve
261 284
~h~a
~~ ~~ ~ 66
66 283 304
Quebec 29 35 5 63 246 278
PRICE
Qltawa 29 37 4 62 243 278
QUALITY
West
1
SERVICE
pis gf ga
W&gt;mpg Jt 21 ~ 85 265 223
Houslon 35 31 4 74 254 242
Mmn
35 32 3 73 228 236
LosAng 34 33 5 73 243 233
Alberta 32 35 2 66 239 235
HANDSOME
Ch1cago 25 43 2 52 231 268

BEST

THE MONTERREY
SPANISH STYLING
FROM
GENERAL ELECTRIC

Thursday's Results
95 271 179 Los Angeles
6 New York 2
95 292 211 Mmnesota 7 Ch1cago 4
79 229 206
(Only games scheduled I
78 230 193
Games
57 212 231 Quebec Friday's
at
AI
bert
a
46 205 307
23 147 321 Minnesota at New England

COLOR TV

Ottawa at Wmn1peg

w I I pis gl ga

nament
b k b
as et all game will be
broadcast live over WJEH
FM Radio, begmning al9:20
Bill G
p.m
ray, sports
director satd Saturday's
championship game will also
be broadcast at 9:30 p m.•
should the Blue Oevtls win
tonight.

!Only games scheduled)

201
204
232
215
224
232
201
295

SERVICES SCHEDULED
CHICAGO (UPI) - Funeral
servtces were to be held m
Medma, Ohto, for Robert
Hemtz, 25, found shot to death
m his taxt here Monday mght
M1nnesota S Toronto 2
Hts body was flown to his
Boston 4 Buffalo 1
hometown
Thursday
!Only games scheduled I
Hemtz, a Yellow Cab drtver,
Friday's Games
Boston at Detro1t
was fatally shot durmg an ap.
parent robbery, authonttes
----.,..------------- satd
defeated m 27 regular season
games, yet lfomcaUy he was
also the player responstble for
You Are lnvtled
the school's bemg put on
To
probation for this year The 6-4
guard averaged better than 26
potnts a game and was voted
the Most Valuable Player m
the Allanite Coast Conference
DtGregono, a ().foot guard,
sparked Provtdence to a berth
Valuable door prrzes.
,In the NCAA tournament ' A
deft ballhandler and flife
2419 Dudley Ave.
outs1de shooter, "Erme D"
Parkersburg, w.-va.
averaged better than 20 pomts
a game and was the top player
tn the New England area

Early

Amerrcan$489 95

• W1de Screen (23
d1agonat , 295 sq mches)
• AFC
Automattc Ftne
Tumn g Control

• Many Other Quahty

DUDLEY'S.
SPRING FLING
MARCH 17th

Features

$50900
H&amp;R Firestone
992 2238

Middleport

'&lt;"...
.. •&gt;= ~ ~·
•-:.:.'•'•'• !•&gt;:&gt;:O:.::.x:O:•&lt;t&gt;:•-:·~·~::::::::=:::·

rruth Trophy mclude Alcmdor
(1969), Pete Maravtch (1970)
and Austm Carr (1971)
While there are some players
who had better tndlVldual
statisllcs than Walton, there
was nobody on the college
scene who dominated the game
ltke him The talented redhead
averaged 19.8 pomts an~ 17 8
rebounds while seldom playmg
a full game, but tt was on
defense where he excelled
An extraordmary shot-block·
er, Walton relishes defense and
kept opposmg teams con·
tmually frustrated m thetr
attempts to score from under
the basket Guardmg the
basket as though he were
guarding the crown Jewels,
Walton batted away pracllcally every layup or jump
shot that was atmed hlS way
He Feels He's Improved
Those that saw Walton olav
as a sophomore marveled at
his grace and potse, yet Bill
feels he has tmproved this
season

game''
Houston forward Rudy Tom·
janovlch equalled his season
high of 37 points while teammate Mike Newlin chipped m
with 28
The victory was the 45th of
the season for· the Warrtor.
Counting tonight's game at
Seattle, the Warriors must wtn
six of their remaining eight
games to equal last season's
all.tbne team bigh of 51 victories

thurnp Reds Luigi's

TAMPA, Fla (UPI) - The
Chicago White Sox zapped the
Cinclntl8ti Reds 11-3 In exhlbl·
lion play here Thursday, wi!Ue
at Bradenton, the Reds' "B"
squad staged a come-from-lle·
hind 12-11 wtn over the Pitts·
burgh Ptrates.
The White Sox bunched four
hits wtth two walks and two
errors durmg a su:-mnmg stint
College S.skelball Results
By United Press International that ytelded them SlX runs
NCAA Untv Div Tournament Reds'
pitchers
Jack
!Quarter finals I
Billingham, Pat Zachry and
East Regional
Maryland 91 Syracuse 75
Mike Ruddell were tagged for a
Providence 87 Penn 65
total
of 14 htts
Mldust Regional
Kntcky 106 Ausln Peay 11111, ot
At Bradenton, Dave Concep.
Indiana 75 Marquette 69
Cion' homered wtth two out m
Midwest Regional
the ninth Inning to give the
Kansas St 66 S.W. La 63
Memphis 51 90 So. Car 76
Reds the victory
W"t Ragiallll
The Pirates took a 9-2 lead
UC~A 98 Arizona St 81
after
three Innings, but Cmcln·
San Fran 77 Lng Bch St 67
NCAA, Call. Oiv. Tournament nail came back with four runs
!S.milillllsl
In the fourth, one In the sixth
Ky Weslyn 96 Brckprl Sl 90
and four more In the eighth
Tann Sl 106 Assumption 76
Joe Youngblood poked a twoNAIA Tournament
nm
homer for the Reds In the
tQuarfar.flnalsl
eighth Inning. Pirate homers
Guilford 70 wastmont67
Md E.Shore 87 Xavler-La 80
were bit by Manny Sanguillen,
Augustan• 111 63 Ok Bapt 46
Slip yRCfk 60 UW Grn Bay 58 Gene Alley and Dave Cash

CIDAA.

992-3984

PIZZAS &amp; SUBS
-----------------------·THANKS
TO ALL
FOR A GREAT
GRAND OPENING
to local merchants, friends and
neighbors who were so nice to us.

LUIGI'S PIZZA
116 E. MAIN
POMEROY,
PHONE 992-3984

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comes m a new Spec tal Edttlon,
wt th new features l1ke wall-to·wall
shag carpet, Nava1o·weave
upholslery a whlfe boar-gram vmyl fHRYSIH\
roof, and a great new copper
IIVTHORiliD

metallic pamt 10b So
c'mon, check out our
new Chrysler Spec tal
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Sttcker Value So
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OEAI.EII ,tlfliiJ. CHRYSLER

w

MOTOA9 CDAPOAATIO~

TOM RUEjMOTOR·S

399 South 3rd Ave.• Middleport. 0.
'

�•
2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , March 16, 1973

EDITORIAL

BRU~E

.

CLEVELAND - A MEMBER OF the Ohio AFL.CIO
executive board satd today the "marriage ts over" between
organized labor and the Gilligan adrrunlstratton Ohio AFL-CIO
President Frank King said he knew nothmg of such a sttuation
and reserved comment.
Juruny Iafelice, who also serves as chatrman of the
Cleveland Labor Federation's Comrruttee on Polittcal Action,
satd all Democratic fund ra1smg dinners m the Cleveland area
w1ll be boycotted by the federation "The mamage ts over wtth
the Democratic Party here and m the state," satd Iafehce, who ts
also director of the 20,000-member DIStrict 54 of the Internattonal
Association ofMachmtsls "We are now bachelors In the pohltcal
arena and can be, wed to any group"
CLARK AIR BASE, PHILIPPINES - '1111RTY·TWO U S
prtsoners mcludmg the longest-held POW of the Vietnam War
and a Marme who prevtously was listed as dead landed m the
Phtlippmes today, completing the next to last phase of Operation
Homecommg
The men, released earher in Hanot by the Vtet Cong, JOllled
110 others who had been released by the North Vtetnamese and
the Chmese tn the past two days Most of the prev10usly released
men were expected to be back In the Umted States thts weekend
The ftrst flight was tentallvely set for Saturday
Today's release means 147 Amertcans rematn m prtson
campstn Indochma All are to he released by March 28 accordmg
to the Parts cease-ftre.

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Smce manpower costs tpday represent more than half
of total defens e spendmg, thts ts clearly the most senstble
place to look for savmgs But most attackers of defense
outlays sltlllhmk tl's se&lt;ter and stmpler to hack away at
new weapons systems
·
Items hke the proposed B·1 bomber the advanced, mts·
stle bearmg Trtdent nuclear submarme, the continued
mulltple-warheadmg of many of our already emplaced
land-based mtsstles are htghly VlSlble targets for the
assaulters
An exactmg rev1ew of the defense manpower sttuatton
reqUtres constderable sophtsttcalton and subtlety but, re·
wat dmg as 11 mtght prove to be m savmgs, few m Con·
gress seem wtllmg to undertake tl- or to make compelhng
demands upon the Pentagon m lhts field
Now, of course new weapons systems are expenstve,
and, hke neatly everythmg else Amenca puts together
these days, they tend constslenlly to get mto cost over·
runs whtch are qmckly adverltsed by pracltced waste·
watchers hke Wtsconsm's Sen Wtlham Proxmtre
Sllll, the mthlary has an advantage m lhts struggle 1t
can argue plaustbly that a defense force , espectally tis
slrategtc element must constantly be modermzed, must
be on guard agamst obsolescence It can also successfully
sltr fears, legtllmate or otherwtse that not to advance tis
weaponry techmcally IS to nsk gtvmg an edge to tts poten
!tal adversanes
There ts one way m whtch rtsmg manpower costs and
the outlays for new weaponry mtertwme, and here, say
some budget spectahsls the Congress can be tough as
natls wtth the mthtary wtthout seemmg to tmpede tech
meal advances
The more sophtshcated our new weapons systems be·

come, the mote dependent they are upon supremely
sktlled and hence htgh patd personnel In fact, some bud
get experts say these new systems call not only for htgher
sktlls but more people
Some analysts beheve therefore, that both Congress
and the Prestdent should tequue Pentagon planners to
destgn new weaponry wtth dectstve mtent to hold down tf
not bar altogether these assoctated htgher manpowet
costs

A mot e ptoducltve area for manpower savmgs may be
m wllat are called tile genet al purpose forces, whtch leave
out of account the strategtc mtsstle weaponry , whether
a1rb01 ne, land based, or sea based
It 1s a commonplace, daltng at least from World War II,
that U S mthlary forces are far more amply supphed wtth
support elements than any m the world Gtven our baste
wealth and htgh ltvmg standards, thts IS understandable
and, to some extent probably mescapable
But there are sug~estwns from a good many nongovern
ment budget spectahsts that we could field well-tramed
combat forces on a much leaner support base than we
presently have- wtthout real loss etlher m combat elfec
t1veness or morale

Unhapptly preciSlon 1s lackmg m the defimlton of what
support levels are ' sufftctent ' A heavy charge should be
latd upon the Pentagon to sharpen tis real needs m thts
field, and, unsexy though the JOb may be, determmed
defense budget-c utters m Congress should be gon\g at the
task
By one set of measures, the Bt ookmgs lnshtulton esh·
mated that for the present fiscal year mdtrect defense
support costs "per umt of combat capabthty ' are substan·
llally ht gher than at the Vtetnam war peak m 1968. when
thev were constdered abnormally htgh Brookmgs could
find no comparable gam m effecltveness to JUSltfy the
ht ~ he r support levels
The whole tss ue IS very complex. but tt truly deserves
the most pams-takmg explorahon by all those concerned
wtth a proper defense.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Extc Ea.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

Almanac

By United Press lnlernallonal
Today ts Frtday, March 16,
Cotv Editor
the 75th day of 1973 with 290 to PubliShed
dally u :cept
follow
Saturday bv The Ohio Valley
Publlsh1ng Company, 111
The moon ts approachmg tis Court
St
Pomerov Ohl_?..:
·U769 Business Office Phone
full phase
2156, Editorial Phone 992
The mormng stars are Venus, 992
21l7
Second clan postage paid at
Mars, Juptter and Mercury
Pomeroy, Ohio
The evenmg starts Saturn
National advertising
Bottinein"
Those born on thts date are representattvt
Gallagher, Inc , 12 East 42nd
under the s1gn of Ptsces
SJ New York Clly, Now York
Subscroptlon
rotu De
James Ma dison, four th presl- livered
by carr1er where
dent of the Untted States, was available SO cenls per wttk
By Motor Route where carrier
born Marc h 16, 175I
service nol ovalloble One
. On thts day m htstory
month S1 75 By moll In Ohio
and W Va One year Sl-4 oo
In 1802, Congress authortzed s.. mon ths S7 2l Three
estabhshment of the US , months s• 50 Subscription
pr1ce Includes Sunday Tlmn
Mthlary Academy at West Sentinel
Pomt
'-----------....:

•• d:s1 ~~: :!$.X::.&gt;' .$~ .:..:· •

•

··:-: •:.:;:::.. : :-::::&gt;

.;..

honevnnnn

1

••

Dear Helen
'Ibis is a slightly diHerent problem about a netghbor. It
seems like every 11Dle he and htS wife get together With me and
my husband, he gets plastered and then tl starts; and he NEVER
knows When to go home either.
First he tells me what a great housekeeper I am, BUT - I
treat my "poor husband" like dirt. I make him take off his work
clothes and boots tn the garage, and my neighbor thinks 1t's
degrading that a man Isn't allowed to enter his house by the front
door·
Since my husband drives the car into the garage, tt's more
convement for hun to use the back door. He's tn construction
work, so gets very dirty Also, he's a lllOIIt considerate person
and prefers removing his muddy, sometimes tar-covered clothes
tnthegarage. (He'ssoconsideratehewon'ttellthismanoff.)
'lbese folks are 20 years younger than we are, but still spend
a lot of thetr time over at our house. I like HER, but sometimes I
get so mad at thts drunken tongue-wagging I'm almost stck
Wtthouthurtmghiswlfe'sfeellngs,whatshouldldo•-L M
Dear L
Hide the hquor when your netghbors drop m. A dry everung
may not only stop the tongue-wagging but will send them home
sooner -H
Dear Helen
'lbere's a 17-year-old gtrl next door who has had a crush on
my 32-year-old husband ever since the day we moved here He
likes her m a fatherly way, and she dotes on his advice In fact
she dotes - pertod!
Whenever I go downtown, she's over here like a flash. I've
told her several times to go home, but she doesn't listen
She's aruce gtrland I trust my husband, but he's not made of
stone, and I don~ think she sees hun as a father Image - not wtth
those sheep eyes What's the best approach• - AP·
PREHENSIVE
Dear ATry sympathy The ''poor little lovesrck teenager" gambtt
someltmes works because tt puts a man on his guard, and also
makes htm aware of how young and "silly" like Sheep Eyes IS.
H you're lucky, he may soon be asinng your help to shake her
loose
Let's hope you're lucky' -H.
Dear Helen
The Supreme Court says dectsion for an abortton m the early
months of pregnacy should be strictly between a woman and her
doctor
In the tnterest of equal ttme (we've heard so much proabort tOn talk) could I beg you to prmt the child's stde of It? Enclosed -CONCERNED
Dear Concerned
About a dozen people have sent me this same "Unborn
ChUd's Imaginary Diary, " (author unknown). For those who
haven't already read 1t elsewhere, here it ts '
Oct 5· My parents called me to life.
Oct 19 My first blood cells and vessel cells are formed; my
first vems formed .
Oct. 23: My mouth opens toward U!e ex!e1:1or.
Oct 25· My heart begins to beat.
rfov 1-12: MY legs and arms begm to form, my fmgers begin
to show.
Nov 20 Todsy my mother received the doctor's verdiCt ' II
am m her womb
Nov 25 Now it ts certatn that I will be a girl.
Nov 28· All my organs are already formed.
Dec. 10· MyhalrisgroWIDg and I have blue eyes.
Dec. 12. Soon I will be able to see
Dec. 24 My heart Is completely formed.
Dec 28 Today, my mother killed me. (ANONYMOUS)

WIN AT BRIDGE

A Difference in Doubling

..

:.-::·s·:·.~) :::.~::::::·::'.:'.X::::.~ «~'··=:

.:::.::: :.:; · ·-:::::::~:=x::o)~~~

WOJl.~~!!!)~",?Jtanski's

first serious romance
smce hts wife was ktUed by the hippies is Nancy
Bieler, maiden name Goldberg, Introduced to
his frtends as Madama Polanski . Adam
Wallnsky takes N Y D A hopeful Btll Vanden
Heuvel apart tn the Village Votce Acupuncture demonstrations for dentistry take place
here next month at a medical school.
"Mtracles" are prom1sed Recent headlmed
arrest actually was welcomed by the culpnt. He

owes more than a mllllon to shylocks, and jail
halts all payments while he's Away .. Actress
Marcta Rodd's writing an article for a sports
mag on what It's like to be married to a sports
nut she and husband Dale Hagen even were
married between llalves of a basketball game.
SomesiXyearsagopressagent Eddl e J affe
got Joe Namath and Francine Lefrak to pose for
a show at theN Y Coltsewn, and they started
rt"ch realtor father Sam
dating. Franc •~·s
u~
worrted a little: Francine was at Finch College
and Joe's reputation was pretty wild; but Joe
treated the lass like a lltUe lady and they're still
frtends Now the story's about that Sam Lefrak
wants to buy the Jets (for about $18 million),
and part of his Interest was piques by his
memory of Namath as "a fine young gentleman ,

'lbe Story of How I Brought the Death-Ray Machine ~\O~My
Kitchen ·
.,. '
It all $tarted many years ago, when my
""'"" Da"
thoughtful enough to gtve birth of a girl·'lld
""" on· """'"'r
, ,.
Later, this was a major canstderation In my selecting a Wlte,
SIDcelhadtobuyor.lyonegiftlntheearlypartofMayeachyear,
UtStead of two
My bride retaliated and showed her gratitude by briJJ8Uig a
boychild Into the world on Mother's Day, 1954, so I gel hit pretty
hard for presents at that time of Year, anyway. But I digress~
At any rate, last year, since my wife was about to celebl'll~
her l9th btrthday for the 21st consecutive year or somethln&amp;
like that, 1 was setzed by spirit of generosity, and with the help
of a frtendly appliance dealer who usually dealt In nothing m&lt;D
• lethal than SWitchblade knives and deer rifles, 1 bought her a
Death-Ray Machine.
:
OfftCtally, tt didn't go by that name It was called 11
mtcrowave oven or radar range
She loved lt: never knOWlng I had bought a Death·RaJ
Machine nght mto our own hearth and home.
Coffee tn a hurry 10 the morning• Put a cup of cold water anti
UtStant coffee m the thing set the timer for about a minute and
Zam! ptplng hot coffee, Just like that!
' •
K1d late for dinner dute to , Uttle League,
Gtrl Scouts or just plain messmg around? No sweat.
Fix a plate for the late-comer, zap tt w1th the magic button for¥
rrunute or two, and a hot meal emerged
1
Big, tmportant~ooking roast wtth company coming? Np
slavmg over a hot stove anymore Just bombard the expenslv~
chunk of cow for 30 rrunutes or so wtth the beam on, and be the
perfect hostess
,
All went wonderfully for almost a year, and then suddenlY,,
the Awful Secret emerged.
;
The nation's mosH"espected product-testing service, Co~
swner's Umon, reported thatradwllon leakage occurred on all
brands of ovens tested Such radiation, they said solemnly, co •
possibly cause radwtlon burns, exposttre to cancer, scramblejl
genes, and virtually everythtng from hangtalls to social dille~.
The Food &amp; Drug Administration contested the findings, lill,t
did not rule out the fact that potential hazards could elist, ill
some models and perhaps tn certrun off-the-line defective makq~
m aU models
l
So there tt stis, looking Innocently like a lltUe TV set In IIJF
kitchen next to the refrtgerator. 'lbe Death-Ray Machine
We've had long discUSS1ons about its future: Whether to stop
USlllg 11 whether to absolutely deny the use of It to younger
members of the family . whether to drop It off the Silver
Memortal Bridge at rrudnight whether to test tt by turrung It on
full-tilt and alllllllg tl at some folks m town we don't really C8lle
for.
,
At the moment, however, we are undectded, but sWI
debating the future of whether this weapon can be safely used for
the forces of good (scrambling eggs, grilling frankfurters, all the
old stuff tt did so well), or whether tlll!lndisputedly an expen&amp;l~e
one-way ticket to an early grave, and must be hwnan~ disposed
of
I
Of one thing I'm sure At present, the Death-Ray Machine's
beams atm squarely across the kitchen at a wall telephone and a
waffle iron H that phone develops cancer, or If tHe waffle iron
bas a mtScarrtage, out tt goes.
Fast.
WEEKEND TV FARE: Frtday -prime-time hmy at I 30,
WSAZ-TV Marlo Thomas spe~l.._lj,qi'«!V'N·
.t;.tlf
1
Saturday ~ "The Advocates' cloliks&gt;ail iiOth lsi es-Of itile
energy crisis, 10 on WMtJL.TV . Basketball tourneys abound,
wtth NCAA action al 2, WSAZ-TV, opening-round NIT play 11t 2,
WCHS-TV; and the Kentucky State Tourney at 8, WHTN-TV (you
can see ''Touch of Grace" and Julie Andrews/ on WTVN-TV,
though)

molher:ti=.

''Na...,Nice,"SawN"'•~~....
••,
,. ~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Match pomt experts aren't
always good rubber bndge
players One reason they
aren't ts that they tend to
use match pomt doubles at
rubber bndge
East's double of three
spades 1s a typ1cal match
p o 1 n t double A rubber
bndge player would JUSt
pass three spades and hope
to beat the contract A
double could cost htm game

~llanltc

BY PAUL CRABTREE

By Helen Bouel

I Voice along Br'Way I

By JACK O'BRIAN
NOW LOVE'SAVENIRE DISEASE
NEW YORK ( KFS) - Have a hot rumor
about Johnny Dto, labeled "the touhgest
gangster" by crune ftghters the jailed Maftoso
ts expected to apply for a new trtal - on grounds
a lady juror fell for hun like a ton of cuptds
durmg the trtal and now proclauns her affecti&lt;lll, allegedly lll8lsting her guilty vote was
coerced by the rest of the Jury . Columbta Pix
bought screen rtghts to "No Sex Please, We're
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT NIXON by unphcatton has British" years ago It has been playmg In some
crttictzed hlS embattled nommee for FBI dtrector, Patrtck Gray 3S counlires (runrung for years m London)
m, for turnmg over to a Senate corrumttee "raw Illes" on When the dectston was made to lrmg tt to
Repubhcan spytng acllvtties agamst the Democrats Ntxon took Broadway' Colwnbta was asked to tnvesl
the swtpe Thursday at Gray whose nommatton as the successor Rwnors say Colwnbta offered $50,000 - not to
to J Edgar Hoover, now 1s bemg considered by the Senate open 1t on Bdwy , but the management wouldn't
Judtctary Comnuttee He satd the practice of the FBI "fur. hsten and tt flopped $200,000 worth - fast ..
nlshmg files to the committees must stop wtth thts parttcular EdmundO'Brten,arealproasanactor,tsback
one."
working after a long illness.
"I understand why Mr Gray dtd this - because his hearmg
Greek King Constantine has restgned
was mvolved," Nlllon satd "But I would say this should not he a himself to permanent extle The colonels runprecedent for the future
The sancttty of those Illes must be rung Greece permtlted him to sell some 400
mamtamed " Gray gave the Judtclary Comrruttee informatton acres of his property to an engmeermg fmn m
last week whtch showed thatNtxon's personal attorney, Herbert Tatot, near Athens, and keep the $6,000,000 · ·
W Kalmbach of Newport Beach, Calif, acting under the Top makeup man on "The Utile Prince"
direcllon of former Whtte House atde Dwtght L Chapm, gave filming In Tunlsta was carted to the hospital
$30 000 to $40 000 m Republtcan campatgn funds to Donald ~ wtlh pneumonia and the emergency •
Segrettl, who ~llegedly directed pohtlcal esptonage agatnst the cosmebctan was director Stanley Donen's
Democrats last year
brtde, Yvette Mmueux, shll on the working

WOUNDED KNEE, S. D. - THE government's chief
negotiator returns here from Washington today with what could
be a fmal offer to mthtant Indians to abandon thetr occupation of
Wounded Knee
In the background was the thteat or another confrontation,
this time between two Indian groups The head of the Oglala
Slowr Tribal Council threatened to begm sweepmg through the
reservation today pJcldng up "ut•leslfables" who are supporting
the American Indian Movement (AIM), the militant lndtan
l!rOuP bebind the wounded Knee occuoatton

Us.

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Television Log

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2¥
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~

and rubber and would only
gtve him an extra 100 pmnts
above the lme tf 1t worked
A match pomt expert wtth
the East hand would reason,
" If South does make three
spades I wtll get a bad score
wtll be makmg three hearts
for a score of plus 140 An
f
unsuccess ul double will gtve
me a bottom mstead of a bad
score, but a successful wtll
gtve me plus 200 for a top "
so expert East doubles and
1s lucky He gets two hearts
a diamond and a club and
West takes the setting trick
with the kmg of spades
Sorry, but that's how tour·
naments are won
INIWSPAPEl ENTERPRISE ASSN I

David Eisenhower has aboUt as much In!Iuence aS any Iad, buth e still Can 't ge tlntolaW
school next fall Enrollments all are closed
already .. The congregation of autograph
fr eaks ·ID fron t of the Sherry Nether]a nd Is
because guests there Include Nancy Sinatra Sr.,
The btdding has been
producerRossHunter,LIIyTomlln, Vera Miles, West North East South
Shtrley Jones; and "Huckleberry Finn" 2
3+
~.... D~Ie
•
teenage stars Jeff East and John Whitaker.
Jackie 0 suddenly is over sbJ: feet tall;
You, South hold
credit her new four-inch white denim corksoled •AK54 •AQ63 +2 "'KQ!07
What do you do now'
clogs ... It'scatchingon In Israel, too -the first
drive-m movre opens tn Tel Aviv . Pres.
A-Your partner h.os ..ked
you lo &lt;boose a outt bul you
Nixon's valet Manalo Sanchez' birthday present have three four-..rders. Btd
from the boss was a new fishing rod with a four diamonds •nd make him
&lt;hoose
PIaque proc Ia Imlng it was " Han dma de
Espectally for Richard M NbJ:on" . Rocky
TODAY'S QUESTION
Aoklhasmadea fortune wtthhla 16 Benlhana of
Your partner continues to
Tokyo restaurants (gleat glob) and has four spades What do you do
now?
managed to lose a fortune backing bombed
Bdwy shows. He's unsticklng from his last S.IHI $1 lw JACOBY MODERN r..o.
to "Wm ot Br~d,,,.. reta trHs -.wr·
agam - fmanclng a new magazine due next fall poporJ, , 0 lox 419, RIHI,. Clly
N y k NY IIIII19
5
llltoon, "' 01 •
•
·

t

v

FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1973
6 DO-News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6, Sesame St 26 ,
Around the Bend 33
6 30 - News6, 13, I Dream of Jeannie 13 Let's Travel33
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4 News, 6, 10, What 1
My Line 8 Wild Kmgdom 13 Saint 15, Elec Co 20 Folk
Guitar 33
7 30 - Young Dr K1idare 4, Protectors 8, College Hockey 20:
Parent Game 10 Beat the Clock 13, Porter Wagoner 3. To
Tell the Trulh 6. Wall Street Week 20, 33
8 00 - Washington Week In Review 20, 33 , Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4,
15, Brady Bunch 6, 13, Harlem Globetrotters 8. 10
1
8 30 - Parfr~dge Famlly6, 13. Eye to Eye 33 . NHL Hockey J, 4\
15. Ed Sullivan's Broadway a. 10
9 00 - Masterp1ece Theatre 33 Acts ot Love - And Othe•
Comedoes 6 13
9 JO - Odd Couple 6 13
10 00 - Love American Style 6 13, Lily Tomlin a, 10. Paul
Nuchlms 33
10 30 - What About Tomorrow&gt; 6, 13
11 00 - News, Weather, Sports 6, 8, 10, 13
11 30 - Johnny Carson J, 15, In Concert 6 Movies 'The 391
Steps" 8. "Year2889" 10, ' Sand ollwo Jlma" 13
11 SO - Movie "House ot Usher" 8
1 00 - Midnight Speclal3 4. 15. Movle"Foglsland" 10
2 30 - News 4
SATURDAY, MARCHII
3()-TV Classroom 8 Kentucky Afield 13, Faith for Today 10 J
DO-Neighbors 13. Farm Front 4, Death Valley Days 8, Fun,
for Everyone 6 Treehouse Club 10
7 1$--Woman's Poonl of View 13
7 3Q-Man from COSI 10, Farmbrook 3, Treehouse Club ll1•
Sesame St 20, Dick Van Dyke 4, Gilligan's Is e. GMpel6
,
8 OD-Houndcats
3,
4,
15
Buys
Bunny
8,
10.
Pulnstul113,
Jake's'
Place 6
8 3Q-Roman Holidays 3, 4 15, Jackson Five 6, 13, Sabrina theJ
Teenage Wtlch 8. Popeye 10. Mr Rogers 20
..
9 DO-Jetson 3 4, 15. Osmonds 6, 13, Amazing Chan 8, 10 '
Sesame St 20
'
l
9 3Q-Pink Panther 3, 4, 15, MovleCartoons6, 8, 10
1..
10 DO-Underdog 3, 4, 15, Elec Co 20
10 3o-Barkleys 3, 4, 15, Brady Kids 6 13 Mister Rogers 20,;;
Josle and the Pussycats In Outer Space 20
,
11 DO-Brother Buzz6, FllntstanesB, 10, Sesame St. 20. Sealab 3,.
4• 15, Kenlucky High School Basketball Tournament ]3 ;
11 3Q-Kid Power 6, 13, Runaround 3, 4, 15
~
12 OD-Eiec Co 20. Archie's TV Funnies 8, 10. Funky Phantom
13, NBC Children's TheatreJ, 4, 15, CBPA Bowling 6 .
..
12 3Q-Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids 8. 10
1 DO-Beetles 3, Green Acres J Monkees 6, Dick Van Dyke 4,
Lassie 15, CBS Children's Film Festival a, 10 1
l•
1 3o-Del Reeves 3 • Sports Challen~ 4' Plnea~ple Place 15 1 i 1
2 'tJ~ 1 1~ ~!~e~~:· 10 • Flshln' ole 13 • N AA Basketb~l \
1
6
2 3()-Bonnle Lou and Buster 13
3 DO-World ol Survoval 6, 13, Mr Roberls 6
l 3()-Pro Bowling 6, 13
•
~
4 DO-Folk Guitar 33, CBS Golf Classic a. NCAA Basketball3, 4. ~
15 , Black Omnibus 10
..",
4 3o-Audubon Wildlife Theatre 33
5 DO-Making Things Grow 33 , Auto Race 6, 13, Lee Trevino's
Golf tor Swtngers 10, Wrestling 8
5 3Q-Sesame St 33, Animal World 10
'I '
6 OD-News3,4, 8,Movle"KissMeKale"10
6 3Q-NBC News 3, 4. 15, Reasoner Report 13., Beverly
Hillbillies 8, Marshall Report 33,
~ cit:~,::r~s~ad For lt3 , Hee Haws, Lawrence Welk .\, 15, I've\~
Got A Secret 13, Bridge 33
..
1
7 3Q-Nashvllle Music J: Amarlng World of Kreskln 13.
Blographt 33
·~
8 DO-Allin he Family 8, 10, World Preml~e 3, 15, ffere ,;, Go''
Again 6, Star Trek 4, Kentucky High School Beske thAI!
Tournament 13, Mo•le "Yotlmbo" 33.
'
~ -~ Ji
8 3Q-Brldget Loves Bernie 8, 101 ATouch o1Gr~ce6
"~" Vl
9 DO-Julie Andrews 6, Mary Tyler Moore a, 10, Movfe "pon't J
Just Stand There'" 4
' • • I
9 3()-Bob Nt!wharl 8, 10. Newsmaker '73 13
'
I .z
10 oo-Stravinsky Remembe•ed 33, Carol Burneff 10, r; 'o'elp~(l
Bureau 13, Advocates 33; Movie "The Best of E'nemle$' 6
II Is-News 13, High School Basketball 15
•' 1 ~
11 3()-Movles 'The Unouard~ Moment" 3, "Big Carnival"'' r
"Because They're Young' 8, ''A Distant Trumpet" 10·
' Journey to the Center of Tme" 13
• ,,
1 DO-Movies "The Perfect Furlough" 3, "The Giant of
Metropolls 13
•
v
1 4.5-Movle "Versailles Altair" 4
, •M
2 3()-N~s ll
' Jf\
~ DO-Movie "Nioht Sono" 4
,',
•IZ
6
7

'

14

\l

w. I pet
Boston
60 13 822
NBuewllayloork
2ss, 5221 279124
Philadelphia 9 67 118
Central D1vtsoon
w I pet
Ba ltimore
46 27 630
Allanfa
42 32 568
Houslon
29 45 392
26 46 361
Wesleyan stopped Brockport Cleveland
Western Conference
State of New York, 96-90, to set;
•
Midwest DIVISIOn
up a fmal matchup m the
w I pel
Milwaukee
52
22 703
NCAA College DtV!Ston tourna- Ch1capo
48 26 649
ment at Evansville, Ind
Detroit
33 40 452
34 42 447
The Nallonal lnvtta!Jon KC Omaha
Pac1f1c DJYISIOn
Tournament begms m New
w I pel
York Saturday With "a prur of x Los Angeles 55 19 743
Golden Stale 45 29 608
doubleheaders

San Francisco 49ers; 77-67
BY JOE CARNICEW
• UPI Sports Writer
• Long Beach State's master
plan for upsetting college
lJallketball kingpin UCLA went
liP In smoke Thursday night
tllanka to an unheralded band
from Northern California
: Long Beach, tired of 1ts
second billing to UCLA on the
West Coast, had hoped to
change all that tn the NCAA
tournament But the Umverslty of San FranClSCO destroyed
the plan, upsetting the third·
ranked 49ers, 774!7, tn the
NCAA Western Regional
semifinals
San Francisco now takes on
UCLA, which opened a bid for
an unprecedented seventh
ittralght NCAA title wtth a 911-31
Victory over Arizona State
" "We got whipped good," satd
Jerry Tarkanlan, the Long
!leach coach. "Ed Ratleff (the
49ers' All Amertca guard),
"jammed two fingers on his
'Shooting hand early In the week
'lnd hUFt a finger on his left
•hand early In the game tonight
But give Phil Smith the credit
'
1or
doing an outstanding
!lefenslve job on him. San
l'rancisco did an outstanding
job of defensmg us They
'lorced us Into taking more bad

"
FOYT WILL COMPETE

' OOLLEGE STATION, Tex
" (UPI) - A J Foyt, a three·

time Wlllller of the Indianapolis
500 auto race, will compete m
:both divisions of the Texas
Twin 200 on April 7.
- Foyt will drtve hts super•charged Coyote Foyt m the
' chwnplonshlp event for In·
dianapolis.type cars

~Warriors

1
shots than usual "
COD'!"CUtlve VICtory
Bill Walton celebrated his
·
seleclton earlier In the day as · In
other
regionals
College Basketball Player of semtfmals, Provrdence ripped
the Year by scoring 28 pomts Penn, 87-65 and Maryland
and taktng down 14 rebounds m downed Syracuse, 91-75, In the
UCLA's victory. Walton scored East at Charlotte, N C ,
18 of his pomts tn the· second Kentucky beat Austin Peay,
half as UCLA recorded tis 72nd 106-100, m overtime and In·

·-''

.-.Houston
Golden State hopes tl can
keep nmnlng rtght tnlo the
playoffs
The Warriors hit thetr season
high In whipping the Houston
Rockel$, 141·125, at Oakland
'lbtD"sday night In the lone
National Basketball
Association game Golden
State .was relaxed after clinching a playoff berth earlier tn
the week and sizzled with a 612
shooting percentage
Guard Jeff Mullins paced the
. Warriors' balanced attack with
28 points Teammate Rick
Barry added 25 points, rune
rebounds and a personal
season high of 13 assists,
mosUy off fast breaks.
"The reason we had such a
high field goal percentage ts
that our fast break was really
going and we were getting easy
layups," said the Wamor
scoring leader. "Those Inside
belly baskets will kill a team.
'"lblS is the kind of game we
are capable of havtng when
we're moving. We're a running
team, and we're at our best
when we play our type of

diana upset Marquette, 7f&gt;.09,
m the Mideast at Nashville,
Tenn , Memphis State ousted
South Carohna, 90-76, and
Kansas State dumped South·
western Lowslana, 66-63, m the
Midwest at Houston
Tennesee State rtpped Assumption, 106-76, and Kentucky

Phoem x
Seattle

Spikes sharp for Indians
By MARTIN LADER
UPI SPORTS WRITER
Giving up on Charlie Spikes
was one of those decllllons the
New York Yankees regretted
from the first and will probably
pay for In the future
A sohdly built, long-ball
hitting outfielder, Spikes, 22,
was bemg groomed for future
stardom by the Yankees when
a strange thing happened to
them: for the f1rst lime m
nearly a decade, they found
themselves as legttunate pennant cOntenders
To strengthen thetr unmediate hopes for lhts year's
Amertcan League Iitle, the
Yankees felt they needed help
at thtrd base, aod to fill this
need they .jfent after veteran
Gratg Netlles of "Cleveland
They got Netlles, but had to
pay the pnce, sacrificrng a
ptece of the future by sendmg
Sptkes to the lndtans
Spikes, who htt 26 homers
and drove In 83 runs m 126
games for West Haven of the
Eastern League last year, 1S
demonstratmg the promtse the
Yankees held for him, except
now he's domg hts work for
Cleveland The 6-foot-3, 230pounder slugged a patr of 40Q.
foot home runs, drtvtng m
three runs Thursday as the
Indians edged the Chicago
'

8y United Press lnlernatlooal

Both vulnerable

w..l

Set h
u ~~~~~~~~~~~r_------------~~~~~~~~hlt~~~~~-~L~os~~g~~~~~~~~;;-----D~a~y~to~n~Je~f~k;.n~o~n~
Pro Standings

n

Helen Help

Ry BRUCE BIOSSAT •

Tod.1y~&lt;&gt;
8y Uuited Press Intemational
WASHINGTON- FOREIGN Dll'LOMATS sa1d today tt ts
possible Chinese Premter Chou En-lru wtll make a tnp to the
United States sometime after Pekmg and Washington open
liatson offices m each others capttals
Prestdent Ntxon's announcement Thursday of the ap.
pomtment of Ambassador Dav1d K E Bruce, 75, to head
Washmgton's hatson offtce m Pekmg once agam has sbrred
speculallon that Chou would make such a JOUrney Netther the
Wh1te House nor the State Department would comment on the
posstbility, however

•

Defense Savings
power

Not for Senators
The US Senate, as everyone knows , abhors hyper
secrecy m government affatrs It does not hke burea ucrats who do thm gs behmd Congress' back or ClVll serv·
ants who make thetr own rules or prestdents who make
declSlons that constantly leave legtslators lockmg barn
doors after stolen horses
It turns out, though, that the Senate IS wllhng to make
an occaswnal excephon to the general rule that the people
have a nght to know who IS domg what wtth thetr tax
money and why That excepllon-can you stand the sur·
pnse' -ts the good old progresstve Senate ttself
When the Senate voted the other day on a reform pro
posal to make all tis commttlee meetmgs open to the pub
he unless the commtllee mvolved voted to close tl, the
secrecy forces won Their margm of nme votes (47·38)
mcluded the leaders and whtps of both parttes, such
staunch defenders of the pubhc r~ ght to know as Sen
Mtke Mansfteld D Mont , and Sen Robert Gnffm R
Mtch
The asststant Democrallc leader, Robert C Byrd of
West Vtrgmta, pompously opposmg the reform, satd that
· to tamper wtth the rules of the Senate IS to tamper wtth
the Senate tlself ' Thts hemous posstbthty, he tmphed,
would be eqmvalent to wantmg to make the sky purple or
consptrmg to cut the wmgs off all the butterfltes
The only raltonal obJechon Byrd offered was that open.
mg up all meetmgs would msp1re our dtslmgmshed sen·
a tors to ' grandstandmg ' That ts, they would tend to em1t
grand and gross sound and fury legtslatmg noth)ng
Thts mtght well happen at the outset (although those
senators who attend the open meetmgs that do extsl often
seem to have trouble staymg awake let alone domg any
worthwhtle performmg)
But tt ought to become raptdly clear, even to a senator,
that the grandstandmg would have to end tf anythmg were
to be accomplished And tf nothmg were accomphshed
wtth the whole country, more or less , lookmg on then per
haps those senators would not be senators for very long
But, softly Could lhts be m fact what the Senate fears'
That the pubhc Will fmd out how thetr system really operates and, m a ftt of nghteous mdtgnahon , thtow the ras·
cals out'
For the burmng questwn remams what do they have to
htde' Short of dtsclosmg mthtary secrets IS there an)
thmg Senate commtttees would do by openmg thelf meet·
mgs that would harm the country·•
Can anyone be blamed for assummg that what the Iegts
lators are really worned about dtsclosmg 1s the less-than.
ctvtcs book-pure system of compromtse and clout by whtch
the government ts run'
The same dogmahc presumption of the need for secrecy
keeps dtplomatic meetmgs closed It keeps labor manage
men! collechve bargammg sesswns closed And tt helps
keep thmgs m general m somethmg less than Utoptan
condtllon
The leaders who say that they need secrecy to negottate
m all these areas are bemg arrogant, tf not dtshonest
The people whose ltves are affected by dectswns made
behmd closed doors have a nght to know exactly how
those dectstons are made and why
When t~e U S House of Representallves , of all people
can move to open alltts meetmgs unless commtttee mem·
hers vote agamst domg so, the Senate should be ashamed
- and should be rebuked- for refusmg to do so
As Sen Adlat E Stevenson Ill, DIll . one of the reform
supporters, satd , "E&lt;cesstve secrecy breeds dtslrust It
prevents accountabthly It does vtolence to the prm~tple
of government based on the mformed consent of the
governed "

llally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16, 1973

BIOSSAT

.

PLAYERS HONORED
ST LOUIS (UP!) - Guard
Nate Archibald of the Kansas
City .Omaha Kings and forward
Bob McAdoo of the Buffalo
Braves have been honored for
thetr outstanding play this
season by rtval Nattonal
Basketball Assoctatton
players, according to a vote
taken by the Sportmg News.
Archibald was named the
league's Most Valuable Player
and McAdoo recetved top
rookte honors
m.::::-:·:f.::::::~: '~=::::::~·::::•••:.::::-:··:

.:····:·:

SIGN UP AGAIN
Another slgnup day for
Pomeroy Utile League has
been scheduled for Sunday at
Pomeroy VIllage Hall between I and 3 p.m.
Registration for play In the
Pee Wee League, Little
League, and Pony League
will he taken. Two more 13
year-old&amp; are needed U a
s~oclal league ls to be
organbed for that group.

Whi"le Sox

Cubs, 5-4, m an exbibttion
game.
Oscar Gamble also homered
for the Indians, who stretched
their spring mark to 5-2 The
Cubs, who narrowed their gap
to a single run tn the ninth
mnmg on a two-run smgle by
Rtck Monday, suffered thetr
fourth loss m ftve games
Nettles, meanltme, con·
tinued to hold up his end wtth a
triple and a walk good for an
RBI and a run scored as the
Yankees whipped the Mm·
nesota Twins, ~ Netlles also
miSsed a homer when a heavy

wmd held up his drtve to deep
left centerfield
The Houston Astros turned
on the power for seveo runs m
the fu:st three Innings, m·
eluding homers by Lee May,
Cesar Cedeno and Bob Watson,
tn beatmg the Phtladelphta
Phtlhes, 11-7 Phtladelphta
retaltated wtth 11 htls of tis
own,mcluding homers by Mtke
&amp;hrmdt and Jose Pagan, but
commtlted six errors

l'lncmnatt Reds and Wtllte
Horton htt a grand-slam homer
durmg an etght-run thtrd mrung rally as the Detrott Tigers
rtpped the Boston Red Sox 9-3

Cleon Jones, a key factor for
the New York Mets thts year,
hit a three-run homer m the
ftfth lnnmg t'o lift the Mets to a
6-5 tnumph over the Los
Angeles Dodgers and centerfielder Johnny Grubb delivered
the wtnnlng run wtth a seventh·
The Chtcago Whtte Sox also mnmg single as the San Diego
took advantage of stx errors tn Padres beat the San Franctsco
runnmg up an 11-3 rout of the Gtants, 5-4

Bill Walton repeats as
UPI's 'Player-of- Year'
NEW YORK (UPI) -To no
one's surprtse Bill Walton of
UCLA has recetved h1s second
straight James A. Natsrmth
Trophy as the Uruted Press
International's college basket·
ball Player of the Year.
But htS coach, John Wooden,
can't beheve the selechon
wasn 'I unanunous
Walton, a 6-foot-11 jwuor who
quite possibly Is the best cebtet
ever to play collegtate basket.
ball, recetved 175 votes out of
195castbysportswrttersand
sportscasters m the voting for
Player of the Year, and
Wooden wants to know what
possessed the other 20 to vote
for somebody else
"How 20 people could vote
for somebody else ts beyond
me," Wooden satd upon
hearmg the offtctal vote count
"Keep those 20 people away
from me because I don 'I thtnk
they have all thetr marbles "
Thompson Finishes Second
Sophomore David Thompson
of North Carohna State
finished second m the votmg
with 11 votes while semor
Erme
DtGregorto
of
Provtdence recetved four Five
other playefs spht the
remaining votes
In wmnmg the N8lllllllth
Trophy Walton becomes only
the fourth player to wm UP!
Player of the Year honors
more than once Oscar
Rllbertson ( 19511-59-60), Jerry
Lucas ( 1961-62) and Lew
Alclndor (1967-69) were the
others
The NalSllllth Trophy, presented annually smce 1969 by
the Atlanta Tipoff Club, will be
presented to Walton at a dinner
m Atlanta on Sunday, Aprll 1
Prevrous wmners of the Nms-

=-~;

::

.~:

·:. ::::::~::::::····:.: :-.::~: :.:::·::: :...

PLAYERS HONORED
Tuesday, March 13, the
Meigs Junior High Sports
Banquet honoring all
athletes was held with
James Vennarl, principal of
Rutlaod Elementary School
and former football coach at
Rutlaod High School the
guest speaker.
- The banquet ·~as attended
'by approximately IIIII per·
sons lncludlug football and
basketball players ,
cheerleaders and coaches
A delicious meal was
prepared and served by the
Meigs Junior High cooks.

"I defmttely feel I'm a better
player thts season," satd
Walton "I'm stronger, a year
older and mentally I know
more what to do m a game
"Naturally, I'm really
pleased at havmg won the
award but the thmg you have to
reahze ts that m a team sport
hke basketball awards
honoring mdtvrduals m effect
hdnor ' the ' team I 'ththk
everyone on the team should
share m this award."
Thompson was the player
most responstble for North
Carolma State's gomg un-

34 41
24 51

g

b

7
J8'h

52'1&gt;
gb
4'12
17'1&gt;
19'12
gb
4
18'12
19
g b.

10

453 2l'h
320 31'1?

Portland
17 57 230 38'12
x Clinched dtvtsoon !tile
Thursday's Results
Golden Sl 141 Houston 125
(Only games scheduled)
Fnday's Games
Phoemx at Atlanta
Boston at Baltomore
KC Omaha at Cleveland
Molwaukeeat Chicago
Buffalo at Detro1t
New York at Los Angeles
Houston at Portland
Golden Stale at Sea ltle
NHL Standmgs
By Umted Press International

Mtl
NYRgrs

East
w I I pts gf ga
47 9 14 108 289 158

44
Bostn 45
Detro1t 34
Buffalo 33

18 7
20 5
24 1
25 12
Toronto 24 36 9
Vncuvr 19 43 s
NYlidrs 9 58 5
West

GAME oN RAmo
Tonight's Gallipolis·

(Only games Scheduled I
AHL Standings
By Untied Press lnlernat1onel
East
w I. I. pis gl ga
NS
38 15 15 91 277 171
Bostn 31 25 12 74 233 230
Rchstr 30 28 11 71 221 247
Prov 26 28 14 66 223 229
Sprgfld 18 35 16 52 248 305
N.H. 16 34 19 51 234 296
West
w I t pts gl ga
Cmc1 49 17 S 103 316 197
Hrshy 35 21 11 81 280 209
Va
30 20 16 76 224 200
Rchmd 26 31 10 62 221 241
Jcksnvl 23 39 a 54 240 293
Bait
13 42 11 37 181 286

Chocag 39 23 8 86 254
Mmn 34 27 9 77 233
Phlla 33 21 10 76 255
Sl Lous 30 29 11 71 205
Los Ang 28 32 11 67 208
Pttsbgh 28 35 7 63 225
Atlanta 24 32 14 62 175
Cal1f 11 44 15 37 170
Thursday's Results

::·:·•••!W.·:·:=·· • •!•:•:::::;.::=·: ·=:::.,:,::::::::: :·::::..

• :·

FIGHT SCHEDULED
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo (UP! ) - Ron Lyle, the
Thursday's Results
ftfth-rankmg heavyweight, will
Cmconnat1 6 Boston 6
!Only game scheduled)
have hts next ftght on March
Fnday's Games
29,
tfwas announced Thursday
New Haven at Prov idence
Balf1more at V1rg 1n1a
Lyle's opponent for the 10.
(Only games scheduled)
rounder has not yet been
WHA Slandmgs
8 u 1dp
1t
t
1 named, but the bout Will be
Y "' e ress n erna tona
Lyle's ftrst smce he was beaten
w East
1 t pis gl ga dectstvely by Jerry Quarry at
New Eng 40 26 2 82 277 228
38 29 2 78 256 217 New York on Feb. 10
Cleve
261 284
~h~a
~~ ~~ ~ 66
66 283 304
Quebec 29 35 5 63 246 278
PRICE
Qltawa 29 37 4 62 243 278
QUALITY
West
1
SERVICE
pis gf ga
W&gt;mpg Jt 21 ~ 85 265 223
Houslon 35 31 4 74 254 242
Mmn
35 32 3 73 228 236
LosAng 34 33 5 73 243 233
Alberta 32 35 2 66 239 235
HANDSOME
Ch1cago 25 43 2 52 231 268

BEST

THE MONTERREY
SPANISH STYLING
FROM
GENERAL ELECTRIC

Thursday's Results
95 271 179 Los Angeles
6 New York 2
95 292 211 Mmnesota 7 Ch1cago 4
79 229 206
(Only games scheduled I
78 230 193
Games
57 212 231 Quebec Friday's
at
AI
bert
a
46 205 307
23 147 321 Minnesota at New England

COLOR TV

Ottawa at Wmn1peg

w I I pis gl ga

nament
b k b
as et all game will be
broadcast live over WJEH
FM Radio, begmning al9:20
Bill G
p.m
ray, sports
director satd Saturday's
championship game will also
be broadcast at 9:30 p m.•
should the Blue Oevtls win
tonight.

!Only games scheduled)

201
204
232
215
224
232
201
295

SERVICES SCHEDULED
CHICAGO (UPI) - Funeral
servtces were to be held m
Medma, Ohto, for Robert
Hemtz, 25, found shot to death
m his taxt here Monday mght
M1nnesota S Toronto 2
Hts body was flown to his
Boston 4 Buffalo 1
hometown
Thursday
!Only games scheduled I
Hemtz, a Yellow Cab drtver,
Friday's Games
Boston at Detro1t
was fatally shot durmg an ap.
parent robbery, authonttes
----.,..------------- satd
defeated m 27 regular season
games, yet lfomcaUy he was
also the player responstble for
You Are lnvtled
the school's bemg put on
To
probation for this year The 6-4
guard averaged better than 26
potnts a game and was voted
the Most Valuable Player m
the Allanite Coast Conference
DtGregono, a ().foot guard,
sparked Provtdence to a berth
Valuable door prrzes.
,In the NCAA tournament ' A
deft ballhandler and flife
2419 Dudley Ave.
outs1de shooter, "Erme D"
Parkersburg, w.-va.
averaged better than 20 pomts
a game and was the top player
tn the New England area

Early

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• AFC
Automattc Ftne
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DUDLEY'S.
SPRING FLING
MARCH 17th

Features

$50900
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Middleport

'&lt;"...
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•-:.:.'•'•'• !•&gt;:&gt;:O:.::.x:O:•&lt;t&gt;:•-:·~·~::::::::=:::·

rruth Trophy mclude Alcmdor
(1969), Pete Maravtch (1970)
and Austm Carr (1971)
While there are some players
who had better tndlVldual
statisllcs than Walton, there
was nobody on the college
scene who dominated the game
ltke him The talented redhead
averaged 19.8 pomts an~ 17 8
rebounds while seldom playmg
a full game, but tt was on
defense where he excelled
An extraordmary shot-block·
er, Walton relishes defense and
kept opposmg teams con·
tmually frustrated m thetr
attempts to score from under
the basket Guardmg the
basket as though he were
guarding the crown Jewels,
Walton batted away pracllcally every layup or jump
shot that was atmed hlS way
He Feels He's Improved
Those that saw Walton olav
as a sophomore marveled at
his grace and potse, yet Bill
feels he has tmproved this
season

game''
Houston forward Rudy Tom·
janovlch equalled his season
high of 37 points while teammate Mike Newlin chipped m
with 28
The victory was the 45th of
the season for· the Warrtor.
Counting tonight's game at
Seattle, the Warriors must wtn
six of their remaining eight
games to equal last season's
all.tbne team bigh of 51 victories

thurnp Reds Luigi's

TAMPA, Fla (UPI) - The
Chicago White Sox zapped the
Cinclntl8ti Reds 11-3 In exhlbl·
lion play here Thursday, wi!Ue
at Bradenton, the Reds' "B"
squad staged a come-from-lle·
hind 12-11 wtn over the Pitts·
burgh Ptrates.
The White Sox bunched four
hits wtth two walks and two
errors durmg a su:-mnmg stint
College S.skelball Results
By United Press International that ytelded them SlX runs
NCAA Untv Div Tournament Reds'
pitchers
Jack
!Quarter finals I
Billingham, Pat Zachry and
East Regional
Maryland 91 Syracuse 75
Mike Ruddell were tagged for a
Providence 87 Penn 65
total
of 14 htts
Mldust Regional
Kntcky 106 Ausln Peay 11111, ot
At Bradenton, Dave Concep.
Indiana 75 Marquette 69
Cion' homered wtth two out m
Midwest Regional
the ninth Inning to give the
Kansas St 66 S.W. La 63
Memphis 51 90 So. Car 76
Reds the victory
W"t Ragiallll
The Pirates took a 9-2 lead
UC~A 98 Arizona St 81
after
three Innings, but Cmcln·
San Fran 77 Lng Bch St 67
NCAA, Call. Oiv. Tournament nail came back with four runs
!S.milillllsl
In the fourth, one In the sixth
Ky Weslyn 96 Brckprl Sl 90
and four more In the eighth
Tann Sl 106 Assumption 76
Joe Youngblood poked a twoNAIA Tournament
nm
homer for the Reds In the
tQuarfar.flnalsl
eighth Inning. Pirate homers
Guilford 70 wastmont67
Md E.Shore 87 Xavler-La 80
were bit by Manny Sanguillen,
Augustan• 111 63 Ok Bapt 46
Slip yRCfk 60 UW Grn Bay 58 Gene Alley and Dave Cash

CIDAA.

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TO ALL
FOR A GREAT
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to local merchants, friends and
neighbors who were so nice to us.

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116 E. MAIN
POMEROY,
PHONE 992-3984

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MOTOA9 CDAPOAATIO~

TOM RUEjMOTOR·S

399 South 3rd Ave.• Middleport. 0.
'

�'

•

5-'lbe Qally_§entlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16, 1173 ·

I'

' _..,

\ .
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'
For the next two ye.....,
however, most drivers wlll be .
. faced wi\h the seat !Jelt
terlock system wl1)cb ·

I '

Bags or _belts
.: Snort Parade

coming in '74s

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
MIAMI (UP!)- The way Brooks Robinoon is going, he 's never
going to get to the Hall of Fame.
One of the stipulations is that you have to retire first. Brooks
Rnbinoon, putting in his 20th season in professional baseball and
his 16th in the big leagues, has no plans ever to do that. •
He's going to keep playing until he falls down, then he'll get up,
dust hiinself off and play some more. He loves the game so much,
he can't possibly imagine not playing it anymore. ,
"I think I'll be able to field as long as I ever walk out there," he
says.
"You sure?" someone in the Baltimore Orioles' clubhouse
tried baiting him.
"Yeah, I'm, S\lre," Brooks Robinson ~me right back.
The perpetually cheerful, seemingly indestructible Baltimore
third.baseman has all the figures on his side.
He has won 13 consecutive "Gold Glove" awards ; holds a ball
dozen major' league defensive records as well as three other
RACINE'S lit in GRADE ~- a.arla•llln o1 tile fifth l!l'lde are,
American League ones, and his general fielding ability, instead
front row, 1-r, Tammy Cleland, Beth Huffman, Cindy Warden, Kim Dugan, Cindy White; back
of slipping, keeps getting better every year.
row, Sandra Hill, advisor, Lora Knighting, Cricket Carpenter, Amy Fisher and Camellia
He Merely Laughs
Brlnager.
Brooks--Robinson· will be 36 in two months, and he merely
laughs when some people say he's slowing down a bit getting _to
·first base because, as he'll tell you himself, he was never another
Valery Borzov the best day of his life.
Still, there are those occasions when Brooks Rnbinson, being
only hwnan, momentarily becomes apprehensive, wondering
perhaps wheth~r this is it and all the skills are beginning to slip
away. He remembers the last time that happened.
"It was early last year, and for the first time I can ever
remember, I was in a fielding slump and a hitting slump at the
same time," he says.
"I made seven errors in the first 30 games and it got me
thinking . When you get over 30, you start to think. The first thing
that goes through your mind is maybe .... Is this it? You think
maybe it could be, and it's always there in back of your mind, but
you just keep going. Youhavetodo that. You know how I finished
up last year? Only four errors the rest of the way. I think I've got
a string going now of close to 50 games without an error.''
Brooks Rnbinson was smiling again.
He talked about how he always wanted to be a big league
ballplayer ever since he was a kid and how he still remembers a
composition he wrote while in the eighth grade at Polaski
Heights Junior High School in Uttle Rnck.
Hadda Write an Essay
"We hadda write on what we wanted to he when we grew up,
and I wrote that I wanted to be a major league ballplayer," says
Robinson. "I remember getting a good mark on the composition,
and I can still remember my teacher's name, Mrs. Hilliard."
Twenty years have gone by ;but Brooks Robinson hasn't really
changed.
RACINE'S SIXT.: -:mADE CHEERLEADERS- Making up the cheerleading corps are,
He still wants nothing more than to be a big league ballplayer.
front row, 1~·. Penny Smith, Becky Crow, Pamela Spencer, Carol Morris; back row, Jannie
"I look forward to cornlnil out here every day," says Bal·
Spurlock, advisor, Peggy Neigler, Cathy Cross,Marie Pickens and Teresa Ervin.
timore's slick-fielding superstar voted the player who best
typifies the game of baseball on and off the field last year.
"I enjoy my work. I've seen a Iotta guys hang 'em up and quit
not always because they were physically tired, but because they
were mentally tired. I'm not mentally tired at all. My wife,
Connre; 'll~a keeps me puli)Jled_ ~P · Sh~. thinks I'm gonna play
forever .'
.
.
,
"You know something?" Brooks Robinson winked. "I wouldn 't
By DON C. BECKER
the 17th hole and a !~footer for
mind
that at all."
JACKSONVILLE , Fla. another on the 18th.

~ot

Miller on top, Sanders is

"(UP! )- When it comes to zany
On the first hole--he played
color, on or off the golf course, the back nine first - He sank a
it's hard to heat Doug Sanders. 25 footer and then sank birdie
Usually it's his wildly puttsofl2,10and 20feetbefore
colored shoes and shirts. he was through. He finished
Sometimes it 's his storied with a five-under-par 67 that
reputation for a party. And put him just one stroke behind
aimost always, the graying 39- front..-unner Johnny Miller, a
year-old veteran is surrounded 25-year-old tour veteran from
by beautiful girls. His San Francisco who now hails
weathered good looks attract from Paimetto Dunes, S.C.
WASHINGTON (UPI) Danny Sayre
them at all ages.
Sanders was in a six-way tie
Sen. Birch Bayh, saying he was
The United States pours
But Thursday, Doug came up with Ralph Schlicht, Tom Kite,
convinced that without a
more toxic wastes into
with a new wrinkle-using a Steve Melnyk, Allen Miller and
ri vers and oceans per
merger "a suhstanti~l number
two-iron for a putter.
Romero Blancas .
citizen than Asia does for
of
franchises would collapse,"
each 1.000 of ils peop le.
He astonished the galleries
At 60 were Tom Jenkins, Lou
has introduced legislation that
Ameri ca ns create more
at the $130,000 Greater Graham, Bill Collins, Forrest
industrial waste and .use
would permit the merger of the
Jacksonville Open by getting Fezler, Dan Sikes, Kermit
more energy and use more
National and American
birdies on seven of the last 12 Zarley, DeWitt Weaver and
ol the ea rth 's minera l and
Basketball Associations .
other resources than any
holes using that two iron "in a Don Massengale.
At the same time, the bill
other coun tr y. The more
kind of rake stroke" on the
Among those tied with Jack
indu strial ized a nation
also would protect the bargain·
green.
· Nicklaus at 69 in a 14-man
be comes, and the higher
ing rights of professional
man's st andard of living
"My putter suddenly took jamup were Bruce Crampton,
basketball players by doing
becom es, the more he
sick, " said Sanders, by way of Tom Shaw, Jim Dent and
pollutes hi s on l y water
awax with the so-called
explaining how he bent it over
supply.
uniform pfayers' contract
You ' ll be· much less of a
his knee after missing a six'
containing whht Bayh called a
" Pollut ion Par ti san " by
foot putt to go two over par
using refined water . Here's
~'restrictive option clause .''
after six holes of play.
why! On ly 1 '&lt;~ cup soap is
The measure would provide
Then lightning struck. With
needed per wash load, and
for
a common draft between
noth ing more. No harsh
the gallery chuckling at the
J _
the two leagues, thus eliminatcleaning aid s or detergents
clowning Doug, he charged an
needed . Not only helps in
ing the high-cost bidding war
!8-foot putt for an eagle and the
the f amily was h to c:ut
college talent, and permit
costs, bul is gentle and
ball squeezed past the hole but
•
liK! J
rl for
players
to enter into one-year
saves in rep lace ment costs
he got his birdie. He followed lR lr~mu
too . Makes your dishes and
contracts with simple one-year
with a 16-footer for a birdie on
glasswa re spark le. Refined
op\ions or multiple year conwater doesn ' t cost, it
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
There w,ill be a meeting of tracts without options. Players
saves! It is not what you
r Re~ional Playoff Scores
managers
and representatives could play out their options and
put in the water. but what
·By United Press International
you take out tha t counts!
(Class A)
of the Meigs Girls' Softball become free agents able to
Call 882-2525.
(AI Bowling Green)
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 79 League and Hit'n Misses team negotiate with any club.
at the Royal Crown Co. Garage Bayh, a Democrat of In·
Holgale 71
(AI Dayton )
on North Second Ave. in diana, said the bill "requires
Marion Pleasant 65 West
Middleport, Sunday, March 18, that as a condition of granting
Liberly Sa lem 5Cl
an antitrust exemption to the
Franklin Monroe 76 St. Bernard at 4 p. m.
67
New Haven, W. Va. .
Plans are underway for the two leagues, that merger not
coming season. However, more result in fewer teams."
individuals and teams are lllarlie Sifford.
invited to participate. The · In all, 74 players broke par
Junior League, for g1rls under and 16 players equalled it
,age 13; has four teams ready to during a scorching afternoon of
go, with ~ore teams invit_ed. shotmaking.
·
The Semor League for g1rls Defending champion Tony
.
/
'
14 thru 18, has several teams Jacklin had a 71 and so did
"ALL YOU CAN EAT"
ready, but especially would Billy Casper.
like to have girls' teams .from
the Eastern, Rutland or the
Pomeroy area to attend this
· meeting.
HORSE INSPECTION
Under 10
SUNBURY
(UPI)
No Reservations Take~
Saturday will be inspection day
Please Accept Our Apologies
at the Ohio Thoroughbred
~ FLOWERS '· ·
for the Limited Parking.
Center, Inc., here with
All
Oc~s
prospective buyers invited to
, -.
1
-·
_ _. . . , _
inspect stock to be sold during
,
We wire flowers
the Ohio Breeders' Sales Co.
.. Ever11.whero
· .
\
auction on Sunday.
The I p.m. Sunday sale will
involve 125 thoroughbreds,
many of them either eligible or
registered
in the Ohio
a'utternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Thoroughbred Race Fund
GALLIPOLIS, OHJO
; M•s. Mllflrd V"".Mete.~...
program.
1

Junior high
Merger
legislation honor list
introduced announced

Girl teams to

meet on S unuay

Jl

epo ·

SAYRE
HARDWARE

'

SUNDAY
BUFFET

11:30 AM TIL 3 PM
ADULTS •3.50
CHILDREN
•1.75

_ilr

~£Ia..,
\
~.

·'

Meigs Junior High School
listed 110 pupils on its honor
roll for the fourth six weeks
grading per iod. Making a
grade of "8" or above in all
theirsub jects to be listed on the
roll were:

SEVENTH - Scott Bearhs,
Cathy Blaellnar, Tracy Bur·
delle, Susan Burns, Mary
Carswell. Ronnie Case!, Rory
Cole, Jeff Couch, Tammlo
DeBord, Jell Delong, Marcia
Dillard, Pam Evans, BarQ:ara
Felly, Ann . Filch, Chuck
Follrod, Becky Fry, Denise
Garnes, Vicky German, Trina

Gibbs, Peggy Glrolami, Tom
Harper, Kelly Hawk. Randy
Houdashelt, Ray Janey, Sue
Kennedy, Kim Krautler, Marly
Krawsczyn, Cheryl Lefebre,
Valerie Lewis, Tamela Martin,
Mark Mitch, Connie Musser,

Ci ndy Norman, Linda Perkins,
Lois Reitmire, Terr i Robson,

Homer ·smith, Ricky Smith,
Melody Snouffer, Brenl
Sian ley, Steve Stout Gloria
Sturgeon , Velvet ~wisher,
Sherry

Tackett ,

Ter esa

VanMeter, Mike Wayland ,
Andrea
Whitsell,
Kim
Williams, Kelly Winebrenner,
Jenny Wise, Dennis Wolfe.

.Pomeroy flower Shop

_

1

will cause some
. ,,.
.,
drivers.
- ..
Both GM and American ·
Motors officials have said they. :• ,. '
expect "considerable. numbers" of driver complaints, . • _.,
To start a car equipped wll!l' · · '
· the seat belt interlock,
specific sequence of operations.. ·
must be completed · by the;
driver and front seat 1 oc, ·
cupants. First, they milst rslt
down on the seals, then lucille
up the lap and ~oulder , belt,
restraints and finally tum the
key in the Ignition. If they tUrn
the key before they buckle up,or take the bells, buckle them
together and stuff them ln$ide ·
the seat behind them, the car , ; ..
wHl not start.
A complicated electrical and
.,
logic module system is involved.
·
"It's near impossible to build ,
10 million cars a year and"
expect the seat. belt interlock
system to work every time,"
said one official. "There's
going' to be some mighty sore
people."

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3 MOOM$
OF
ALL NEW
FURNITURE

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Vanessa Folmer, Becky Fultz,

Sa ndy Garnes, Gregory Glaze,
Jen nifer Grate, Kimberly

This is a very fragrt,ented

industry and it's prone right
now to einotional-{ype buying.
1 would not oppc
·. ·:::ing
' if It were put on now • But
priCe
a ,rollba'ck to an earlier

Such a freeze, he
J. CONLON
CJ~ttle slaughte_red every week Monfort of Colorado, with sales freeze at the retail level riugh1 - with qualifications --!Hive to
' GREELE:V, Colo. (UPI) - in America, and most of them of $289 milUon last year. The help.
be "basically, probably at the
There are foot cement-lined spent time In lots like Farr•s. firm has carried the feed Jot
"I'm not sure If we're not at retail level, or at ihe packer
pits, as ,long as -football fields The system, Farr says, helped idea to a new level.
the stage where we need a little level. To me it's inconceivable ·
and as wide as two big· cars, each American eat an average
Not only does Monfort oper- discipline, perhaps a freeze. that the gM&gt;errunent can try to
just outside this northeast one pound more beef last year ate the world's largest feed lot
Cplorado toWn. They are filled than evet; before. Per capita
with $2 rnUUqn worth of ground consumption was 115 pounds. any given time -but it also ·
up to 125,000 guests at
corn and silage.
A tall, spare man In a gray -with
rons lis own nearby slaughterAcross the street In wood and Stetson and a western~ut .house where 5110,000 to 600,000
wire' pens are 15,000 cattle graybrown ,!IUit, Farr drives cattle and 600,000 sheep are
eating their \r.oay through that his late model Buick through dispatched every year. Tben,
$2 milUon dlmer.
the rotted feed lot roads until on the same premises, Monfort
They llteraUy are being fed he reaches Pen No. 9. There, cuts up the sides of beef, packs
to death. .
237 steers of several breeds are them in pressurized cartons
After staying about five munching at troughs or and ships them right to branch
months and gaining 500 or 600 plodding aimlessly through the · operations in 14 cities.
pounds, they will check out for mud.
Theoretically this gives the
a last ride to the slaughter"These were sold to Unltea individual store a package of
bouse.
Packing Co. iii Denver this meatonwhichonly a minimum ,
For the past-few months, the morning," he says, looking at of additional cutting is necescattle have been more than his pen sheets. "They ·were sary. Monfort also says It is
paying their way.
born in Louisiana, then"grazed more saJiitary than Shipping a
Bill Farr · has spent more in the Flint Hills of Oklahoma whole sld~ or quarter of beef
than $2 million over the years through the winter and sum- across country by rail or truck
wilding this ·feed lot. He's mer. When we bought 'em last and having it handled several
building another one that will faD they weighed about 806 more times.
eerve twice as many cattle, pounds. Now, 150 days later,
His biggest customer is A&amp;P.
and cOlt· $3 milUon.
they weigh 1,150 pounds.
But he suggested that a price
"You as consumers want
"If it was a normal winter
beef 10 bad we're putting they'd weigh 1,200. But with the
lilerlllly ~erything in the feed mud and all they come out 50
lois with four legs and a . pounds. less. Now that's meat
mouth," Farr tells reporters -nobody's ever gonna eat. So the
(Continued from page I)
who vittlted his operation as supply Is down."
guests ' 'of the ' Supermarket
Farr paid about 39 cents a ~~~:~~'/ Print · ~hop, MidInstitute.
poundforthoseLouisiana-born
Charlene Hoeflich, Jour Farr. is more, than just a steers last fall. He sold 90 per naflsm, The Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy.
cattle man. He serves on the 15 ·cent of them for 44.2 cents a
Army, ,Sgt. Rex Hamilton,
-member Fo¢ Advisory Corn· pound and the rest4lf a lower Athens .
Navy, EMI Gene E. Peters,
mlttee which makes sugges- grade -for 42.2 cents a pound.
Athens.
lions to the Cost of Living
The profit, of course, is in the
Bernard
Fultz,
Law,
Cooncil on food prices under 350 pounds each animal gained Po~e:oyMaxine Hobstelter,
President Nixon's Phase Ill since Farr started feeding R.N.- Nurslng, Veterans
economic plan.
them. With feed and labor Memorial Hospital.
Farrisone'oftbemlddlemen cost Far
h
11m
Mrs. Emmogene Simms. x.
s,
rsays, e some es Ray Technician. Veterans
who share In the production- makes $35 a head. Cattle in the Memorial Hospital.
and profits - involved In feed lot during a time of rising
Mrs .
Jane
Graham ,
Laboratory
Technician
,
ttin
I
f
t
f
hoi
I
ge g a p ece o mea rom w esa e pr1ces are like a Veterans Memorial Hospllal.
the range to the 'refrigerator. stock split or an extra dividend
Thursday, March 29
·He Is making money, but he -more for your money.
Engineering Team, Ohio
State Unlverstly.
says his costs are up as well.
"There isn't anyone in the
Wendell Hoover. marketing
When he refills those four cattle business who doesn't representative, Columbus &amp;
cement pits with corn and realize that prices are high. Southern Ohio Eleclrlc,
Middleport.
·
silage later this year, it will They are high enough to make
Maxine Griffith, Banking ,
cost him $1110,000 more than it a profit. We don't want to drive Pomeroy National Bank.
Dean Brown,RioDirector
of
·di.d the last time,
peop1e out 0f th• market,' • Admissions,
Grande
There are 45,000 to 50,000 Farr adds.
College.
·
Farr does not favor controls.
David Wrighl, Mining,
Southern Ohio Coal Company.
You Can Believe It!
U there is 8 lid on prices it
Dr . Harold Brown , Den Our prices are LOWER
should be at the wholesale- tlstry, Pomeroy .
··~a
packer level he lll!Y~~v~n
Mrs. Beverly Ellis, Ass'l.
,at , • .,. i tha" :!l~-•'t
'
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·
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'' 1 · "' Director • of
Adm•lssions: ••· · '·
5 11
~
&lt;W0"'!"1 au I)IU
. or Marietta College.
'
·
very long, The big danger in
Madeline S. Scott, Director .
_Quality and Values go
controls as Farr sees it is of Ad!"isslons, Washinglon
h~nd in hand w'rth us
' .
'
Techn1cal College.
a
,
·
discouragmg growers from
Steve Lukasik, Mechanical
T ·t us prove jf/
ralsingmorecattletolncrease Engineering , Hocking
"1.A!
•
til
I
dd
th
Techn~cal Colieq_e.
.
e supp Y an ecrease e Walt Newlon, Electronic
price pressure.
Engineering,
Hocking
Ken Monfort, ,one of Farr's Technical College .
I ks t it sli btl
1'0rii"WIIklnsO'n, Draftin9 &amp;
Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy
ne ighbors, 00 8
g y Design, Hocking Techn1 cal
differently. He Is president of College .
John Yates, Police Science,
Hocking Technical College.
Joan Kllmko and Margaret
Hubble , Pracllcal Nursing ,
.Hocking Technical College.
Kim Borlewlt, Holei -MoteiVISIT THE HOLIDAY INN •••
Restauranl, Hocking Technical
College .
of Gallipolis
'
Jay Waugh, Accounting.
ENJOY AN ELEGANT EVENING OF DINING
Retail, Dala Processing.
IN OUR
Hocking Technical College.
Dr.
Mar ion
Fugate,
Podiatrist, Athens.
. "500 ROOM"
Friday, March 30
Bob Werry , Glenville Slate
Serving Nitely TilllO P.M.
College .
Mary Bradbury and Jill
Now
Harris,
Nursing, Holzer
Appearing PADDLE WHEEL LOUNGE
RUSTIC REDWOOD SET
Hospital .
In The
Frank Henak , Career
Group includes 45" diameter
Appearing
Academy, Columbus.
Arnold
V.
McCoy,
Director
of
Friday
table , 2 curved benches .
Studenl Service, Scioto
Appearing
&amp;
Technical College.
Saturday
William Meredith, General
Weekly
Superintendent , Globe
9:00P.M.
8:30P.M.
Division,
Metallurgical
Til
I
(Engineering) Interlake, Inc.,
Beverly.
1:30 A.M.
2 A.M.
Bert L. Waller, MoUfltain
Stale College, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
.
Bob Weedy , Combustion
Technology, Hocking
Technical College .
Roy Mayle, Broadcasting,
'
Hocking Technical College.
· Air Force, M-Sgt. Don
Garrett, Athens.
·
Mrs. Marvin Keebaugh ,
professional modeling .
Ohio Untverslf{' Jerry D.
Reese, Director o Admissions.
Jim Mees, WMPO.
Gallipolis Business College.
Thomas C, Breech, director.
GALLIPOtiS, OHIO
Charles Riffle, Pharmacy,
Pomeroy.

: AT INGELS
IN MIDDLEPORT

Sp rln•

I ·'

•

.- · You
re
Send A Beautiful

:..

BLOOMING

very far
or for very long. Robert
Reierson, an Agriculture Department economist in Denver,
believes pork prices will drop
later this year. "But I'm not at

there shoilld be congratulalions. I guess what I'm saying
is that we shouldn't apologize
for 65-cent dressed beef" - the
'price that uncut beef is
bringing to the meat packer .

Ddl , A .
U

ey S orist

59 N. Second St.

'•'

.'

Steel and Aluminum Glider Seats 3
Smooth, silent ball-bearing glide. Contour molded seat
and back of heavy gauge steel with weather-resistant
2-tone baked enamel finish . Tubular aluminum ends.

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Wrought Metal Group
Sculptured wrought metal square
tubing construction with the
look of wrought iron . Buoyant
urethone foam vinyl cushions.
64" Sofa
2- Lounge Chairs.
2- End tables , 18x24"
1- Cocktail table, 18xJJ"
Complete 6-Piece Group ·

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TUBULAR ALUMINUM PORCH GROUPING
lightweight glider, rocker, side choir boost reversible vinyl cushions in a bright floral design. Resistant to sun, dusl, rust, rain, rot or mildew.

CHAIR
GLIDER

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69.95

,• :ri

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~P-\
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•
72" Table and
2 Benches 49.95
Love Seat -59.95
Chaise Lounge- 59.95
Club Chair

,.

33.95

'
'

'

Hudson, Jayne Hutchison. Rick
Johnson. VIcki Johnston,
Cheryl Kennedy, Kelfh Klein,
Paul Klein , Lonnie Lawson,
Scott May, Marshall McCoy,
Laraine McElhaney, Duane
Mclaughlin, Scott Napper.
Faith Perrin, Bobby Powers,
Debra Quivey, Trudy Roach,
Suzy Samuels, Tim Scltes. Tim
Sm1 th. Stanley Starcher,
Debbie Taylor, Becky Thomas,

RUGGED REDWOOD PATIO FURNITURE

ON WINTER
· CONTINUES
{

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Let us domonotrote this bl~ger. t~uoilllr~
stronger tractor .. Sot hqW 14 hp engine ·
I '· • and all-gear drive glv, vou 50% more.
work-power to handle bigger toole ... 5 ft . . ,
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11wn mower , 32" rotlry tiller, 42"' \r

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Fina

snowblower, 4 ft. dozlr bloda, • , ,
' %·ton toeder . Over 20 men-alit· ~ \ 'l.
attachments for home, farm,
'r

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light constructlqrt,

Box cushions add comfort and style to the sturdy
!hair, chaise .and love seot. Picnic table has end
cind side benches. All dear-grained seasoned wood.

Seleciions
of Ladies
.I
and :Men's Apparel

Diana Thornton, Mi ke Tillis,

.
.
.
The fust th•~g for anyone
to learn if h1s wife plays
bridge is how to open a can
of beans for supper.
·• "' •
Counting chickem be·
fore they're hatched is
I he mark of either · an
optimist or a /and-development Sfllesman.

stick to a 5 12 per cent guideline all certain about beef."
for wages and then not try to do
Jerry Rob!le, president of the
smnething about food prices." Colorado Cattle Feeders, put
He predicts steady prices for into words what many cattle
a while, but by next swruner he growe•• .think·
. .
foreS.es "at least the same
''Here Is a product that has ,

II

Grue se r , J~mes HaWley,
Ronnie Hawkins, Suzanne

June Wamsley, Raymond
Waugh, Duane Weber, Beverly
Wilcox, Raymond Wilford,
Beverly Will. Eddie Will, Kelly
Wilson. ·

.

FOR PORCH AND PATIO LIVING

,. .

Co. Brallch

'

PRE-SUMMm

•

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~~----~~~~!:~~~:.::::-~~~~~~~~~~~a~t~a~hi~gh~e~rdp:r~ic:e:a~n~d~ma~y~be~~--,f~~
~
sald,"w~
rom '4.00

Vocational

:er :er

:":'"

•----------•'-----------------------------------1

a··

The organization meeting of will be discussed and planned Meigs County Shepherds on .
the Stiversville Stitchers 4-H at the next meeting._- Nancy March 10. Demonstrations
Club was held March 12 when Samos, reporter.
were gtven on feeding
officers for the up-coming year
THE OSCAR SMITH home an
orphan lamb,
by
were elected. The club decided was the meeting place of the .Julie Johnson; castratto pay dues of 10 cents a newly organized Jolly Zig Zag :ing, by Randy Johnsoni
meeting. Janet Middleswart Stitchers . All members were and keeping records of lambs ·
led the club in recreation . present. Advisors attending by ear tagging, . by Grant
Refreshments were served by were Madgle Smith and Doris Johnson .
..
club leader, Mrs. Ada Van Buckley. There were two
The next meeting Is'
Meter. The next meeting will . visitors present.
scheduled March 28 at the
be March 26 at Mrs. Van
The following b.usiness was County Extension Office. Blair
Meter's . - Elaine Lehew, discussed: projects and the Windon and Randy Johnson led
reporter.
date and place for the next the club in a game of basketTHE ORGANIZATION meeting. The next meeting will ball, and refreshments were'
meeting of the Five Point Star be at the home of Doris se rved · by Julie John '
Stitchers younger club was Buckley. The members are son. - Pam Kautz, reporter.
held March 12 at the Roy asked to bring their material
Holter home. Advisors at- and patterns.
tending were Nan White,
The members participated in·
Our Interest Is
Jackie Starcher, Eva Walker , the popcorn game under the
Greater For You
and Pat Holter. There were 18 direction of Joyce Baker.
members present.
Refreshments were served. Officers elected were, Diane Smith, reporter.
president, Tammie Starcher ;
THE ORGANIZATION
vice-president, Denise White; meeting of the Rock Springs
assistant vice-president, Lady Bugs was held March 9 at
On 90,0ay
Jeanne McC)ure; ' secr~tar~, · , the-Jhol)l~ ,ot~'Y! :.~~~.,-~p:,, .... "i ~erttf~att.i.a1 11f. ~
Tract Starcher; asststant "1sor. ·There· were seven
"ti
~ ·
secretary, Becky Edwards'; 'membersprese'ntand tile other
. ' of Deposit '
treasurer , Kathy Pooler; adyisor, Mrs. Louise Radford.
S'!
'
1
2
assistant treasurer, Charlene
Officers were elected for the
c;~
~ar
Goeglein; recreation leaders, upcoming year as follows :
P.af.1 ,on
f Deay ~r •
1
. poo1er, Ka thy parker, pres1'den t, pam Evans; v1ce.
t tea es o M' ·m
postm•
Debbte
51 000 00
Beth Wilson, Beth Riebel; president, Tina Randolph;
ln't r~st
~~yaubl~
pledge .leaders, Lucy Shook, secretary, Billie Addison;
Q : 1 rl
April Parker; song leader, treasurer, Tracey Jeffers;
u r e Y·
Carolyn Bowen; safety and health and safety chairman,
health chairman, Patty Parker Jackie King; recreation
Mei~
and Becky Pooler and news leader, Tammy Atkins, and
reporter, Nancy Samos.
news reporter, Christie Evans,
The members selected some and members decided which
of the follqwing projects : projects ti)ey would take.
The Athens County
Clothing Mates, Top to Toe,
Tammy Atkins then led the
Savings &amp; Loon Co.
Snac~ing and Packing, Ex- club in a word game. The next
296 Second St.
'
ploring I and Vegetable meeting will· be March 16 at
Pomeroy, Ohio.. _
All Accounts Insured To
Gardening I. It was decided Louise Radford's home when
that dues of lO cents a meeting demonstrations on sewing will
FSLI.C
.
will be collected.
be given. - Christie Evans,
,.....,.,
The next meeting will be held reporter.
,WIMMIIi
l·
'&lt;t.l ~'
... ~: :~-••/ '
:&gt;rr c!lt
~,If 1't\
April 9 at 6:30 at the home of
THE GAY JOHNSON farm
Becky and Debbie Pooler. The was the meeting place for the
special club project which
.
'
includes a na lure hike, bike
hike, car trip, and water safety

"''

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·

By MICHAEL

Meigs 4-H Club Ne.ws

EIGHTH-Sherry Barrell,
Mary Blaetlnar, Tammy
Blake, lmoiean Blevins, Dale
Browning, Kellee Burdette,
Marilee Cassell, John Clark,
Terry Clark, Ronnie Coats,
Kathy Coleman, Elaine Corsi.
Mark Davis. Robin Dewhurst,
Paula Eichinger, Teresa Ellis.
Trina Faulk, Theresa Fish,

_

----992-2039

DETROIT (UP!)- New car trator of the National Highway
buyers will get their choice- · Traffic Safety Administration.
bags or belts-when they shop
GM's George Elges, general
for a 1974 model this fall.
.~ger of the Buick Division,
General Motors will offer air · said the company expects to
bags as an option on its top-of- produce about 1110,000 cars with
the-line models next year. The air bags during the 1974 model
cost has not been determined year. Tbey will be offered on
and probably will be sold at Buick Electra and Riviera
less than production cost to get Models, Oldsmobile Toronado
people to buy the units.
and. 98 models and most
For new car buyers who Cadillacs.
don't want air bag-equipped
The present government
cars, they'll contend with the regulation calls for all cars
new seat belt interlock system built after July of 1975 to be
that will be required on all cars equipped with "passive" reand add about $50 to the cost of strainL systems to protect
each one. It prevents the driver drivers and passengers in
from starting the car until the accidents. Such "passive" syscombination lap and shoulder tems are devices that require
heit is fastened.
no.action on the part of those m
Test fleets equipped with air the ca;s. The goverrunent is
bag passenger restraints have working on new test
logged more than 12 million procedures so the law can
miles without a malfunction, become effective on 1976
says Douglas Toms, adminis- models.

I

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$2.Million ·in ground corn a·n d

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Midcleporl'

ALUMINUM CHAISE,
FlORAL VINYL PADS

5995

No Lay,
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Adjustable lightweight rust-proof
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BRAND NAMES

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Bank Rate
Financing

i:

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5-'lbe Qally_§entlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16, 1173 ·

I'

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For the next two ye.....,
however, most drivers wlll be .
. faced wi\h the seat !Jelt
terlock system wl1)cb ·

I '

Bags or _belts
.: Snort Parade

coming in '74s

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
MIAMI (UP!)- The way Brooks Robinoon is going, he 's never
going to get to the Hall of Fame.
One of the stipulations is that you have to retire first. Brooks
Rnbinoon, putting in his 20th season in professional baseball and
his 16th in the big leagues, has no plans ever to do that. •
He's going to keep playing until he falls down, then he'll get up,
dust hiinself off and play some more. He loves the game so much,
he can't possibly imagine not playing it anymore. ,
"I think I'll be able to field as long as I ever walk out there," he
says.
"You sure?" someone in the Baltimore Orioles' clubhouse
tried baiting him.
"Yeah, I'm, S\lre," Brooks Robinson ~me right back.
The perpetually cheerful, seemingly indestructible Baltimore
third.baseman has all the figures on his side.
He has won 13 consecutive "Gold Glove" awards ; holds a ball
dozen major' league defensive records as well as three other
RACINE'S lit in GRADE ~- a.arla•llln o1 tile fifth l!l'lde are,
American League ones, and his general fielding ability, instead
front row, 1-r, Tammy Cleland, Beth Huffman, Cindy Warden, Kim Dugan, Cindy White; back
of slipping, keeps getting better every year.
row, Sandra Hill, advisor, Lora Knighting, Cricket Carpenter, Amy Fisher and Camellia
He Merely Laughs
Brlnager.
Brooks--Robinson· will be 36 in two months, and he merely
laughs when some people say he's slowing down a bit getting _to
·first base because, as he'll tell you himself, he was never another
Valery Borzov the best day of his life.
Still, there are those occasions when Brooks Rnbinson, being
only hwnan, momentarily becomes apprehensive, wondering
perhaps wheth~r this is it and all the skills are beginning to slip
away. He remembers the last time that happened.
"It was early last year, and for the first time I can ever
remember, I was in a fielding slump and a hitting slump at the
same time," he says.
"I made seven errors in the first 30 games and it got me
thinking . When you get over 30, you start to think. The first thing
that goes through your mind is maybe .... Is this it? You think
maybe it could be, and it's always there in back of your mind, but
you just keep going. Youhavetodo that. You know how I finished
up last year? Only four errors the rest of the way. I think I've got
a string going now of close to 50 games without an error.''
Brooks Rnbinson was smiling again.
He talked about how he always wanted to be a big league
ballplayer ever since he was a kid and how he still remembers a
composition he wrote while in the eighth grade at Polaski
Heights Junior High School in Uttle Rnck.
Hadda Write an Essay
"We hadda write on what we wanted to he when we grew up,
and I wrote that I wanted to be a major league ballplayer," says
Robinson. "I remember getting a good mark on the composition,
and I can still remember my teacher's name, Mrs. Hilliard."
Twenty years have gone by ;but Brooks Robinson hasn't really
changed.
RACINE'S SIXT.: -:mADE CHEERLEADERS- Making up the cheerleading corps are,
He still wants nothing more than to be a big league ballplayer.
front row, 1~·. Penny Smith, Becky Crow, Pamela Spencer, Carol Morris; back row, Jannie
"I look forward to cornlnil out here every day," says Bal·
Spurlock, advisor, Peggy Neigler, Cathy Cross,Marie Pickens and Teresa Ervin.
timore's slick-fielding superstar voted the player who best
typifies the game of baseball on and off the field last year.
"I enjoy my work. I've seen a Iotta guys hang 'em up and quit
not always because they were physically tired, but because they
were mentally tired. I'm not mentally tired at all. My wife,
Connre; 'll~a keeps me puli)Jled_ ~P · Sh~. thinks I'm gonna play
forever .'
.
.
,
"You know something?" Brooks Robinson winked. "I wouldn 't
By DON C. BECKER
the 17th hole and a !~footer for
mind
that at all."
JACKSONVILLE , Fla. another on the 18th.

~ot

Miller on top, Sanders is

"(UP! )- When it comes to zany
On the first hole--he played
color, on or off the golf course, the back nine first - He sank a
it's hard to heat Doug Sanders. 25 footer and then sank birdie
Usually it's his wildly puttsofl2,10and 20feetbefore
colored shoes and shirts. he was through. He finished
Sometimes it 's his storied with a five-under-par 67 that
reputation for a party. And put him just one stroke behind
aimost always, the graying 39- front..-unner Johnny Miller, a
year-old veteran is surrounded 25-year-old tour veteran from
by beautiful girls. His San Francisco who now hails
weathered good looks attract from Paimetto Dunes, S.C.
WASHINGTON (UPI) Danny Sayre
them at all ages.
Sanders was in a six-way tie
Sen. Birch Bayh, saying he was
The United States pours
But Thursday, Doug came up with Ralph Schlicht, Tom Kite,
convinced that without a
more toxic wastes into
with a new wrinkle-using a Steve Melnyk, Allen Miller and
ri vers and oceans per
merger "a suhstanti~l number
two-iron for a putter.
Romero Blancas .
citizen than Asia does for
of
franchises would collapse,"
each 1.000 of ils peop le.
He astonished the galleries
At 60 were Tom Jenkins, Lou
has introduced legislation that
Ameri ca ns create more
at the $130,000 Greater Graham, Bill Collins, Forrest
industrial waste and .use
would permit the merger of the
Jacksonville Open by getting Fezler, Dan Sikes, Kermit
more energy and use more
National and American
birdies on seven of the last 12 Zarley, DeWitt Weaver and
ol the ea rth 's minera l and
Basketball Associations .
other resources than any
holes using that two iron "in a Don Massengale.
At the same time, the bill
other coun tr y. The more
kind of rake stroke" on the
Among those tied with Jack
indu strial ized a nation
also would protect the bargain·
green.
· Nicklaus at 69 in a 14-man
be comes, and the higher
ing rights of professional
man's st andard of living
"My putter suddenly took jamup were Bruce Crampton,
basketball players by doing
becom es, the more he
sick, " said Sanders, by way of Tom Shaw, Jim Dent and
pollutes hi s on l y water
awax with the so-called
explaining how he bent it over
supply.
uniform pfayers' contract
You ' ll be· much less of a
his knee after missing a six'
containing whht Bayh called a
" Pollut ion Par ti san " by
foot putt to go two over par
using refined water . Here's
~'restrictive option clause .''
after six holes of play.
why! On ly 1 '&lt;~ cup soap is
The measure would provide
Then lightning struck. With
needed per wash load, and
for
a common draft between
noth ing more. No harsh
the gallery chuckling at the
J _
the two leagues, thus eliminatcleaning aid s or detergents
clowning Doug, he charged an
needed . Not only helps in
ing the high-cost bidding war
!8-foot putt for an eagle and the
the f amily was h to c:ut
college talent, and permit
costs, bul is gentle and
ball squeezed past the hole but
•
liK! J
rl for
players
to enter into one-year
saves in rep lace ment costs
he got his birdie. He followed lR lr~mu
too . Makes your dishes and
contracts with simple one-year
with a 16-footer for a birdie on
glasswa re spark le. Refined
op\ions or multiple year conwater doesn ' t cost, it
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
There w,ill be a meeting of tracts without options. Players
saves! It is not what you
r Re~ional Playoff Scores
managers
and representatives could play out their options and
put in the water. but what
·By United Press International
you take out tha t counts!
(Class A)
of the Meigs Girls' Softball become free agents able to
Call 882-2525.
(AI Bowling Green)
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 79 League and Hit'n Misses team negotiate with any club.
at the Royal Crown Co. Garage Bayh, a Democrat of In·
Holgale 71
(AI Dayton )
on North Second Ave. in diana, said the bill "requires
Marion Pleasant 65 West
Middleport, Sunday, March 18, that as a condition of granting
Liberly Sa lem 5Cl
an antitrust exemption to the
Franklin Monroe 76 St. Bernard at 4 p. m.
67
New Haven, W. Va. .
Plans are underway for the two leagues, that merger not
coming season. However, more result in fewer teams."
individuals and teams are lllarlie Sifford.
invited to participate. The · In all, 74 players broke par
Junior League, for g1rls under and 16 players equalled it
,age 13; has four teams ready to during a scorching afternoon of
go, with ~ore teams invit_ed. shotmaking.
·
The Semor League for g1rls Defending champion Tony
.
/
'
14 thru 18, has several teams Jacklin had a 71 and so did
"ALL YOU CAN EAT"
ready, but especially would Billy Casper.
like to have girls' teams .from
the Eastern, Rutland or the
Pomeroy area to attend this
· meeting.
HORSE INSPECTION
Under 10
SUNBURY
(UPI)
No Reservations Take~
Saturday will be inspection day
Please Accept Our Apologies
at the Ohio Thoroughbred
~ FLOWERS '· ·
for the Limited Parking.
Center, Inc., here with
All
Oc~s
prospective buyers invited to
, -.
1
-·
_ _. . . , _
inspect stock to be sold during
,
We wire flowers
the Ohio Breeders' Sales Co.
.. Ever11.whero
· .
\
auction on Sunday.
The I p.m. Sunday sale will
involve 125 thoroughbreds,
many of them either eligible or
registered
in the Ohio
a'utternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Thoroughbred Race Fund
GALLIPOLIS, OHJO
; M•s. Mllflrd V"".Mete.~...
program.
1

Junior high
Merger
legislation honor list
introduced announced

Girl teams to

meet on S unuay

Jl

epo ·

SAYRE
HARDWARE

'

SUNDAY
BUFFET

11:30 AM TIL 3 PM
ADULTS •3.50
CHILDREN
•1.75

_ilr

~£Ia..,
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Meigs Junior High School
listed 110 pupils on its honor
roll for the fourth six weeks
grading per iod. Making a
grade of "8" or above in all
theirsub jects to be listed on the
roll were:

SEVENTH - Scott Bearhs,
Cathy Blaellnar, Tracy Bur·
delle, Susan Burns, Mary
Carswell. Ronnie Case!, Rory
Cole, Jeff Couch, Tammlo
DeBord, Jell Delong, Marcia
Dillard, Pam Evans, BarQ:ara
Felly, Ann . Filch, Chuck
Follrod, Becky Fry, Denise
Garnes, Vicky German, Trina

Gibbs, Peggy Glrolami, Tom
Harper, Kelly Hawk. Randy
Houdashelt, Ray Janey, Sue
Kennedy, Kim Krautler, Marly
Krawsczyn, Cheryl Lefebre,
Valerie Lewis, Tamela Martin,
Mark Mitch, Connie Musser,

Ci ndy Norman, Linda Perkins,
Lois Reitmire, Terr i Robson,

Homer ·smith, Ricky Smith,
Melody Snouffer, Brenl
Sian ley, Steve Stout Gloria
Sturgeon , Velvet ~wisher,
Sherry

Tackett ,

Ter esa

VanMeter, Mike Wayland ,
Andrea
Whitsell,
Kim
Williams, Kelly Winebrenner,
Jenny Wise, Dennis Wolfe.

.Pomeroy flower Shop

_

1

will cause some
. ,,.
.,
drivers.
- ..
Both GM and American ·
Motors officials have said they. :• ,. '
expect "considerable. numbers" of driver complaints, . • _.,
To start a car equipped wll!l' · · '
· the seat belt interlock,
specific sequence of operations.. ·
must be completed · by the;
driver and front seat 1 oc, ·
cupants. First, they milst rslt
down on the seals, then lucille
up the lap and ~oulder , belt,
restraints and finally tum the
key in the Ignition. If they tUrn
the key before they buckle up,or take the bells, buckle them
together and stuff them ln$ide ·
the seat behind them, the car , ; ..
wHl not start.
A complicated electrical and
.,
logic module system is involved.
·
"It's near impossible to build ,
10 million cars a year and"
expect the seat. belt interlock
system to work every time,"
said one official. "There's
going' to be some mighty sore
people."

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3 MOOM$
OF
ALL NEW
FURNITURE

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Vanessa Folmer, Becky Fultz,

Sa ndy Garnes, Gregory Glaze,
Jen nifer Grate, Kimberly

This is a very fragrt,ented

industry and it's prone right
now to einotional-{ype buying.
1 would not oppc
·. ·:::ing
' if It were put on now • But
priCe
a ,rollba'ck to an earlier

Such a freeze, he
J. CONLON
CJ~ttle slaughte_red every week Monfort of Colorado, with sales freeze at the retail level riugh1 - with qualifications --!Hive to
' GREELE:V, Colo. (UPI) - in America, and most of them of $289 milUon last year. The help.
be "basically, probably at the
There are foot cement-lined spent time In lots like Farr•s. firm has carried the feed Jot
"I'm not sure If we're not at retail level, or at ihe packer
pits, as ,long as -football fields The system, Farr says, helped idea to a new level.
the stage where we need a little level. To me it's inconceivable ·
and as wide as two big· cars, each American eat an average
Not only does Monfort oper- discipline, perhaps a freeze. that the gM&gt;errunent can try to
just outside this northeast one pound more beef last year ate the world's largest feed lot
Cplorado toWn. They are filled than evet; before. Per capita
with $2 rnUUqn worth of ground consumption was 115 pounds. any given time -but it also ·
up to 125,000 guests at
corn and silage.
A tall, spare man In a gray -with
rons lis own nearby slaughterAcross the street In wood and Stetson and a western~ut .house where 5110,000 to 600,000
wire' pens are 15,000 cattle graybrown ,!IUit, Farr drives cattle and 600,000 sheep are
eating their \r.oay through that his late model Buick through dispatched every year. Tben,
$2 milUon dlmer.
the rotted feed lot roads until on the same premises, Monfort
They llteraUy are being fed he reaches Pen No. 9. There, cuts up the sides of beef, packs
to death. .
237 steers of several breeds are them in pressurized cartons
After staying about five munching at troughs or and ships them right to branch
months and gaining 500 or 600 plodding aimlessly through the · operations in 14 cities.
pounds, they will check out for mud.
Theoretically this gives the
a last ride to the slaughter"These were sold to Unltea individual store a package of
bouse.
Packing Co. iii Denver this meatonwhichonly a minimum ,
For the past-few months, the morning," he says, looking at of additional cutting is necescattle have been more than his pen sheets. "They ·were sary. Monfort also says It is
paying their way.
born in Louisiana, then"grazed more saJiitary than Shipping a
Bill Farr · has spent more in the Flint Hills of Oklahoma whole sld~ or quarter of beef
than $2 million over the years through the winter and sum- across country by rail or truck
wilding this ·feed lot. He's mer. When we bought 'em last and having it handled several
building another one that will faD they weighed about 806 more times.
eerve twice as many cattle, pounds. Now, 150 days later,
His biggest customer is A&amp;P.
and cOlt· $3 milUon.
they weigh 1,150 pounds.
But he suggested that a price
"You as consumers want
"If it was a normal winter
beef 10 bad we're putting they'd weigh 1,200. But with the
lilerlllly ~erything in the feed mud and all they come out 50
lois with four legs and a . pounds. less. Now that's meat
mouth," Farr tells reporters -nobody's ever gonna eat. So the
(Continued from page I)
who vittlted his operation as supply Is down."
guests ' 'of the ' Supermarket
Farr paid about 39 cents a ~~~:~~'/ Print · ~hop, MidInstitute.
poundforthoseLouisiana-born
Charlene Hoeflich, Jour Farr. is more, than just a steers last fall. He sold 90 per naflsm, The Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy.
cattle man. He serves on the 15 ·cent of them for 44.2 cents a
Army, ,Sgt. Rex Hamilton,
-member Fo¢ Advisory Corn· pound and the rest4lf a lower Athens .
Navy, EMI Gene E. Peters,
mlttee which makes sugges- grade -for 42.2 cents a pound.
Athens.
lions to the Cost of Living
The profit, of course, is in the
Bernard
Fultz,
Law,
Cooncil on food prices under 350 pounds each animal gained Po~e:oyMaxine Hobstelter,
President Nixon's Phase Ill since Farr started feeding R.N.- Nurslng, Veterans
economic plan.
them. With feed and labor Memorial Hospital.
Farrisone'oftbemlddlemen cost Far
h
11m
Mrs. Emmogene Simms. x.
s,
rsays, e some es Ray Technician. Veterans
who share In the production- makes $35 a head. Cattle in the Memorial Hospital.
and profits - involved In feed lot during a time of rising
Mrs .
Jane
Graham ,
Laboratory
Technician
,
ttin
I
f
t
f
hoi
I
ge g a p ece o mea rom w esa e pr1ces are like a Veterans Memorial Hospllal.
the range to the 'refrigerator. stock split or an extra dividend
Thursday, March 29
·He Is making money, but he -more for your money.
Engineering Team, Ohio
State Unlverstly.
says his costs are up as well.
"There isn't anyone in the
Wendell Hoover. marketing
When he refills those four cattle business who doesn't representative, Columbus &amp;
cement pits with corn and realize that prices are high. Southern Ohio Eleclrlc,
Middleport.
·
silage later this year, it will They are high enough to make
Maxine Griffith, Banking ,
cost him $1110,000 more than it a profit. We don't want to drive Pomeroy National Bank.
Dean Brown,RioDirector
of
·di.d the last time,
peop1e out 0f th• market,' • Admissions,
Grande
There are 45,000 to 50,000 Farr adds.
College.
·
Farr does not favor controls.
David Wrighl, Mining,
Southern Ohio Coal Company.
You Can Believe It!
U there is 8 lid on prices it
Dr . Harold Brown , Den Our prices are LOWER
should be at the wholesale- tlstry, Pomeroy .
··~a
packer level he lll!Y~~v~n
Mrs. Beverly Ellis, Ass'l.
,at , • .,. i tha" :!l~-•'t
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'' 1 · "' Director • of
Adm•lssions: ••· · '·
5 11
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&lt;W0"'!"1 au I)IU
. or Marietta College.
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very long, The big danger in
Madeline S. Scott, Director .
_Quality and Values go
controls as Farr sees it is of Ad!"isslons, Washinglon
h~nd in hand w'rth us
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Techn1cal College.
a
,
·
discouragmg growers from
Steve Lukasik, Mechanical
T ·t us prove jf/
ralsingmorecattletolncrease Engineering , Hocking
"1.A!
•
til
I
dd
th
Techn~cal Colieq_e.
.
e supp Y an ecrease e Walt Newlon, Electronic
price pressure.
Engineering,
Hocking
Ken Monfort, ,one of Farr's Technical College .
I ks t it sli btl
1'0rii"WIIklnsO'n, Draftin9 &amp;
Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy
ne ighbors, 00 8
g y Design, Hocking Techn1 cal
differently. He Is president of College .
John Yates, Police Science,
Hocking Technical College.
Joan Kllmko and Margaret
Hubble , Pracllcal Nursing ,
.Hocking Technical College.
Kim Borlewlt, Holei -MoteiVISIT THE HOLIDAY INN •••
Restauranl, Hocking Technical
College .
of Gallipolis
'
Jay Waugh, Accounting.
ENJOY AN ELEGANT EVENING OF DINING
Retail, Dala Processing.
IN OUR
Hocking Technical College.
Dr.
Mar ion
Fugate,
Podiatrist, Athens.
. "500 ROOM"
Friday, March 30
Bob Werry , Glenville Slate
Serving Nitely TilllO P.M.
College .
Mary Bradbury and Jill
Now
Harris,
Nursing, Holzer
Appearing PADDLE WHEEL LOUNGE
RUSTIC REDWOOD SET
Hospital .
In The
Frank Henak , Career
Group includes 45" diameter
Appearing
Academy, Columbus.
Arnold
V.
McCoy,
Director
of
Friday
table , 2 curved benches .
Studenl Service, Scioto
Appearing
&amp;
Technical College.
Saturday
William Meredith, General
Weekly
Superintendent , Globe
9:00P.M.
8:30P.M.
Division,
Metallurgical
Til
I
(Engineering) Interlake, Inc.,
Beverly.
1:30 A.M.
2 A.M.
Bert L. Waller, MoUfltain
Stale College, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
.
Bob Weedy , Combustion
Technology, Hocking
Technical College .
Roy Mayle, Broadcasting,
'
Hocking Technical College.
· Air Force, M-Sgt. Don
Garrett, Athens.
·
Mrs. Marvin Keebaugh ,
professional modeling .
Ohio Untverslf{' Jerry D.
Reese, Director o Admissions.
Jim Mees, WMPO.
Gallipolis Business College.
Thomas C, Breech, director.
GALLIPOtiS, OHIO
Charles Riffle, Pharmacy,
Pomeroy.

: AT INGELS
IN MIDDLEPORT

Sp rln•

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re
Send A Beautiful

:..

BLOOMING

very far
or for very long. Robert
Reierson, an Agriculture Department economist in Denver,
believes pork prices will drop
later this year. "But I'm not at

there shoilld be congratulalions. I guess what I'm saying
is that we shouldn't apologize
for 65-cent dressed beef" - the
'price that uncut beef is
bringing to the meat packer .

Ddl , A .
U

ey S orist

59 N. Second St.

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Steel and Aluminum Glider Seats 3
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and back of heavy gauge steel with weather-resistant
2-tone baked enamel finish . Tubular aluminum ends.

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Sculptured wrought metal square
tubing construction with the
look of wrought iron . Buoyant
urethone foam vinyl cushions.
64" Sofa
2- Lounge Chairs.
2- End tables , 18x24"
1- Cocktail table, 18xJJ"
Complete 6-Piece Group ·

29995

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lightweight glider, rocker, side choir boost reversible vinyl cushions in a bright floral design. Resistant to sun, dusl, rust, rain, rot or mildew.

CHAIR
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72" Table and
2 Benches 49.95
Love Seat -59.95
Chaise Lounge- 59.95
Club Chair

,.

33.95

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Hudson, Jayne Hutchison. Rick
Johnson. VIcki Johnston,
Cheryl Kennedy, Kelfh Klein,
Paul Klein , Lonnie Lawson,
Scott May, Marshall McCoy,
Laraine McElhaney, Duane
Mclaughlin, Scott Napper.
Faith Perrin, Bobby Powers,
Debra Quivey, Trudy Roach,
Suzy Samuels, Tim Scltes. Tim
Sm1 th. Stanley Starcher,
Debbie Taylor, Becky Thomas,

RUGGED REDWOOD PATIO FURNITURE

ON WINTER
· CONTINUES
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I '· • and all-gear drive glv, vou 50% more.
work-power to handle bigger toole ... 5 ft . . ,
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snowblower, 4 ft. dozlr bloda, • , ,
' %·ton toeder . Over 20 men-alit· ~ \ 'l.
attachments for home, farm,
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BROS.

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light constructlqrt,

Box cushions add comfort and style to the sturdy
!hair, chaise .and love seot. Picnic table has end
cind side benches. All dear-grained seasoned wood.

Seleciions
of Ladies
.I
and :Men's Apparel

Diana Thornton, Mi ke Tillis,

.
.
.
The fust th•~g for anyone
to learn if h1s wife plays
bridge is how to open a can
of beans for supper.
·• "' •
Counting chickem be·
fore they're hatched is
I he mark of either · an
optimist or a /and-development Sfllesman.

stick to a 5 12 per cent guideline all certain about beef."
for wages and then not try to do
Jerry Rob!le, president of the
smnething about food prices." Colorado Cattle Feeders, put
He predicts steady prices for into words what many cattle
a while, but by next swruner he growe•• .think·
. .
foreS.es "at least the same
''Here Is a product that has ,

II

Grue se r , J~mes HaWley,
Ronnie Hawkins, Suzanne

June Wamsley, Raymond
Waugh, Duane Weber, Beverly
Wilcox, Raymond Wilford,
Beverly Will. Eddie Will, Kelly
Wilson. ·

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FOR PORCH AND PATIO LIVING

,. .

Co. Brallch

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PRE-SUMMm

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~~----~~~~!:~~~:.::::-~~~~~~~~~~~a~t~a~hi~gh~e~rdp:r~ic:e:a~n~d~ma~y~be~~--,f~~
~
sald,"w~
rom '4.00

Vocational

:er :er

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a··

The organization meeting of will be discussed and planned Meigs County Shepherds on .
the Stiversville Stitchers 4-H at the next meeting._- Nancy March 10. Demonstrations
Club was held March 12 when Samos, reporter.
were gtven on feeding
officers for the up-coming year
THE OSCAR SMITH home an
orphan lamb,
by
were elected. The club decided was the meeting place of the .Julie Johnson; castratto pay dues of 10 cents a newly organized Jolly Zig Zag :ing, by Randy Johnsoni
meeting. Janet Middleswart Stitchers . All members were and keeping records of lambs ·
led the club in recreation . present. Advisors attending by ear tagging, . by Grant
Refreshments were served by were Madgle Smith and Doris Johnson .
..
club leader, Mrs. Ada Van Buckley. There were two
The next meeting Is'
Meter. The next meeting will . visitors present.
scheduled March 28 at the
be March 26 at Mrs. Van
The following b.usiness was County Extension Office. Blair
Meter's . - Elaine Lehew, discussed: projects and the Windon and Randy Johnson led
reporter.
date and place for the next the club in a game of basketTHE ORGANIZATION meeting. The next meeting will ball, and refreshments were'
meeting of the Five Point Star be at the home of Doris se rved · by Julie John '
Stitchers younger club was Buckley. The members are son. - Pam Kautz, reporter.
held March 12 at the Roy asked to bring their material
Holter home. Advisors at- and patterns.
tending were Nan White,
The members participated in·
Our Interest Is
Jackie Starcher, Eva Walker , the popcorn game under the
Greater For You
and Pat Holter. There were 18 direction of Joyce Baker.
members present.
Refreshments were served. Officers elected were, Diane Smith, reporter.
president, Tammie Starcher ;
THE ORGANIZATION
vice-president, Denise White; meeting of the Rock Springs
assistant vice-president, Lady Bugs was held March 9 at
On 90,0ay
Jeanne McC)ure; ' secr~tar~, · , the-Jhol)l~ ,ot~'Y! :.~~~.,-~p:,, .... "i ~erttf~att.i.a1 11f. ~
Tract Starcher; asststant "1sor. ·There· were seven
"ti
~ ·
secretary, Becky Edwards'; 'membersprese'ntand tile other
. ' of Deposit '
treasurer , Kathy Pooler; adyisor, Mrs. Louise Radford.
S'!
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2
assistant treasurer, Charlene
Officers were elected for the
c;~
~ar
Goeglein; recreation leaders, upcoming year as follows :
P.af.1 ,on
f Deay ~r •
1
. poo1er, Ka thy parker, pres1'den t, pam Evans; v1ce.
t tea es o M' ·m
postm•
Debbte
51 000 00
Beth Wilson, Beth Riebel; president, Tina Randolph;
ln't r~st
~~yaubl~
pledge .leaders, Lucy Shook, secretary, Billie Addison;
Q : 1 rl
April Parker; song leader, treasurer, Tracey Jeffers;
u r e Y·
Carolyn Bowen; safety and health and safety chairman,
health chairman, Patty Parker Jackie King; recreation
Mei~
and Becky Pooler and news leader, Tammy Atkins, and
reporter, Nancy Samos.
news reporter, Christie Evans,
The members selected some and members decided which
of the follqwing projects : projects ti)ey would take.
The Athens County
Clothing Mates, Top to Toe,
Tammy Atkins then led the
Savings &amp; Loon Co.
Snac~ing and Packing, Ex- club in a word game. The next
296 Second St.
'
ploring I and Vegetable meeting will· be March 16 at
Pomeroy, Ohio.. _
All Accounts Insured To
Gardening I. It was decided Louise Radford's home when
that dues of lO cents a meeting demonstrations on sewing will
FSLI.C
.
will be collected.
be given. - Christie Evans,
,.....,.,
The next meeting will be held reporter.
,WIMMIIi
l·
'&lt;t.l ~'
... ~: :~-••/ '
:&gt;rr c!lt
~,If 1't\
April 9 at 6:30 at the home of
THE GAY JOHNSON farm
Becky and Debbie Pooler. The was the meeting place for the
special club project which
.
'
includes a na lure hike, bike
hike, car trip, and water safety

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By MICHAEL

Meigs 4-H Club Ne.ws

EIGHTH-Sherry Barrell,
Mary Blaetlnar, Tammy
Blake, lmoiean Blevins, Dale
Browning, Kellee Burdette,
Marilee Cassell, John Clark,
Terry Clark, Ronnie Coats,
Kathy Coleman, Elaine Corsi.
Mark Davis. Robin Dewhurst,
Paula Eichinger, Teresa Ellis.
Trina Faulk, Theresa Fish,

_

----992-2039

DETROIT (UP!)- New car trator of the National Highway
buyers will get their choice- · Traffic Safety Administration.
bags or belts-when they shop
GM's George Elges, general
for a 1974 model this fall.
.~ger of the Buick Division,
General Motors will offer air · said the company expects to
bags as an option on its top-of- produce about 1110,000 cars with
the-line models next year. The air bags during the 1974 model
cost has not been determined year. Tbey will be offered on
and probably will be sold at Buick Electra and Riviera
less than production cost to get Models, Oldsmobile Toronado
people to buy the units.
and. 98 models and most
For new car buyers who Cadillacs.
don't want air bag-equipped
The present government
cars, they'll contend with the regulation calls for all cars
new seat belt interlock system built after July of 1975 to be
that will be required on all cars equipped with "passive" reand add about $50 to the cost of strainL systems to protect
each one. It prevents the driver drivers and passengers in
from starting the car until the accidents. Such "passive" syscombination lap and shoulder tems are devices that require
heit is fastened.
no.action on the part of those m
Test fleets equipped with air the ca;s. The goverrunent is
bag passenger restraints have working on new test
logged more than 12 million procedures so the law can
miles without a malfunction, become effective on 1976
says Douglas Toms, adminis- models.

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$2.Million ·in ground corn a·n d

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Midcleporl'

ALUMINUM CHAISE,
FlORAL VINYL PADS

5995

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Adjustable lightweight rust-proof
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BRAND NAMES

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Bank Rate
Financing

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6- The Dally Sentinel, Mt4dleport·Pomeroy, 0., March 16, 1973

'

1ary

By Charlene Hoeflich

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39
Plans for a skating party &amp;lnday at the Skate-a-way Rink on
Route 7were made during a meeting of the Middleport Juniors
Monday night at the Heath United Methodist Church.
The bus from the rink will pick up the girls at the church at Z
,p.m. and return them there at 4:45p.m. Each girl is permitted to
-take one girlfriend and is responsible for providing her own
skates.
On Girl Scout Sunday Troop 39 attended the services of Heath
.:Methodist Church in a group. In the group were Lori Kloes, Ruth
' Ann Blake, Debbie Zirkle, Terri Zirkle, Cindy Weaver, Tammy
McDaniel, Tina Sheley, Jo McKinney, Julie Kitchen, juniors.
They were accompanied by Suzanna Wise, Stephanie Houchins,
and Robin Kitchen, Brownies, and Jennifer Wise, a cadette.
Going with the group were Mrs. Roscoe Wise, leader of Troop 39,
and her assistant Mrs. John Blake. ~erts for the church bulletin
were provided by the troop.
·
A MEETING OF THE Big Bend Neighborhood of the Four
Rivers Girl Scout Council will be held Wednesday at I p.m. in the
Colwnbllll and Southern Ohio Electric Co. social room .
Ahighlight of the meeting will be further discussion on the
merging of the Four Rivers Council which has headquarters in
Parkersburg, with several other councils of West Virginia with
headquarters probably in Charleston, W. Va.
Mrs. Noby Sauvage of Athens, a district advisor, and
perhaps someone from the Council office will be present to
'discuss plans and implications of the merger.
Mrs. William Ohlinger, neighborhood chairman, asked that
. leaders, advisors and interested volunteen attend the meeting.
The Girl Scout Cookies will be in next week.

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Miss Venus Kay Young to wed
. Mr. and Mrs. Otho F. Young, Burbank, Ohio, Route I,
former Meigs County residents, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Venus Kay, to Mr. Richard
Keith Wise, son of Mr, and Mrs. JOhn Wise, also of Burbank,
Route I.
Miss Young is a Norwayne High School graduate and is
employed by Ruhbermaid. Mr. Wise, a gradW!te of Nor·
wayne High School, served two and one-half years in the U.S.
Army including a tour of duty in Vietnam. He is now engaged
in farming with his father. A spring wedding is planned. Miss
Young is the granddaughter of Mrs. Inez A. Randolph and
Mrs. Katie Young, Pomeroy.

Roush; "I Needed the Quiet,"
Mrs. Ethel Johnson; "Faithful
Is He Who Promised" by Mrs.
Fern Cheesebrew; "No Time
for God" and "What Is An
American•" by Mrs. Opal
Diddle; "In the Morning" by
Mrs. Elva Dailey; "The True
Story" by Mrs. Ruth Ebershach; "Nature's Plan" by Mrs.
Kathleen Ward; "What
Then•" by Mrs. Lawrence;
"Take Time" by Miss Brenda
Lawrence; and "Nature's
Way" by Mrs . Kethleen
Ward."
Officers reports were given
and a houseware products
party was planned for March
16 at the home of Mrs. Johnson.
A white elephant sale was
planned for the next meeting to
be held at the home of Mrs.
Ethel Johnson. Homemade ice
cream, cake, coffee and tea
were served by the hostess.

Elaine Murphy, the bride of
John L. Downs, was honored
recently with a bridal shower
at tile John Murphy home,
Route 4, Pomeroy. Hostesses
were Mrs. Larry Barr and Miss
Jo Smith, cousins of the bride.
The table decorations
featured green and yellow
streamers with a yellow and
white umbrella centerpiece.
Cake, punch, nuts and mints
t.ere served by the hostesses.
Games were played with prizes

FRIDAY
REVIVAL this week at
ily Mrs. L. Balderson
Mrs. Marlene Putman gave a that if this' issue were to
Pomeroy Wesleyan. Holiness
R .E E D s v 1 L L E
reading to honor Dads, as this the parents would have !o
.
'
"Cburch on R\. 143, 7:30 nighUy .. Highlighting the Riverview was Father's Night at PTA for it. · ·
The
president,
Mrs.
;Tei"EI!'i,
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor, is PTA meeting Monday evening ·when they are counted·twice in
the · speaker· Everyone at the school wa• a science fair the room count. David Collins, announced the sprini'
welcome.
bft!le science pupils of pavld Chadwell's room won ..the at- conferei!Ce on Apirl 2!1 at
THIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30 Chiidwell and Fred Kessinger. tendance ~anner and .reading Chesapeake, and a :~~uniY. .
council PTA meeting· a! the '
p.m. Friday, home of Mr9. Interesting projects and circle book.
.Mabel Wolfe, 260 West Main, pwlters were displayed.
Memhe111 voted to keep the Bradbury School on April 5.
Pomeroy, ·
·
Prizes were awarded to same officerS ior next' year Mr. Kessinger annOU!'~ a
POMEROY Lodge 164, sixth,seyenthandeighthgrade ·with the exception of cub scout meeting ·for · Ill·
F&amp;Mf, annuai inspection, 7:30 students. First prize went to secretary, who is Mrs .. terested parents on Mondl:f
p.m. Friday at :temple; Ben Shells; Buchanan; second to Elizabeth Smith. Her son will evening, Merch 18, at 7:30.
The PTA voted to sponsor 811
Philson, district deputY grand Donald Longenette and third to graduate from eighth grade
master, Inspecting officer; Teresa Smith; and in the fourth this spring , so she was International Day f~r the
refreshments. All Master.. and filth grades, ftrst prize · replaced by Mrs. Liz Upton. pupils when a foreign student
Maso.~s .invited.
went to Mark Smith, second to
John Riebel, Superintendent from Ohio Universit~ will
SATURDAY
Timmy Dillon, and third to of Eastern School District, spend a day at Rivervlj!W. ,,
HARRISONVILLE Lodge James Swain.
explained the urgency ot- · Mrs. Grace Weber, prin·
411 F&amp;AM annual inspection
The meeting opened with the passing the bond issue in May cipal, announced that a new
Saturday, 7:30 p. m. Ben pledge to the flag led by Girl for the additional building washer, c;lryer and freezer had
Philson, inspection officer. All Scouts of Troop 67. Teresa space needed for a junior high. been Installed at the school and
master masons are invited.
Hannwn from the troop was a This would eliminate crowded that plans are being made for I
CHICKEN BARBECUE, greeter and handed out conditions in the other schools storage building.
Named to the audltllll
Saturday, serving starting at shamrock natne tags which in the district, he said. The
lla. m. at Legion Park behl,nd had been made at a troop PTA went on record in support' committee were Mrs. R,rib
Middleport Post Office by meeting.
of the bond Issue. It was agreed Anne Balderson, Mrs'• Mary
Grace Cowdery and Mra.
Middleport Fire Department.
Marlene Putman. Refresh·
Phone 992-5958 for carry.out
ments were served .by tht!
orders.
committee.
ST. PATRICK's Dance, 9 to
midnight, Saturday, Southern
High School gymnasium.
The story of America's Nadar's Raiders, and is noted
Music by Stage Coach; queen foremost consumer champion, for his showdown with General
and king to be crowned.
Ralph Nadar, was presented Motors, Mrs. GB$kill pointed
PRODUCTS Party, by Mrs. Charles Gaskill out.
Saturday, 7:30 p, m. at St. Wednesday at a meeting of the
She described him as a man
Paul's United Methodist Middleport Literary Club held who practices what he
Church in Tuppen Plains. at the home of Mrs. Robert preaches, lives a frugal life on
Public invited.
$5,000 a year in one room in
Fisher.
SUNDAY
Mrs. Gaskill reviewed Washington, without a car or a
HYMN SING Sunday, 2:30 "Ralph Nadar - People's television set, who smokes not
p.m., Bradford Church of LaWYer," by Robert Buckhorn. at all and drinks very tittle. He
Home of
Christ, sponsored by Meigs She described Nadar as a man Is unmarried.
County Youth Rally. Offering determined to wring jusUce
Also reviewed at the meeting
for coming youth revival April from
the Fabulous
those who act was "Honor Thy Father" by ·
6-8. Public welcome.
Gay
Telese,
In
Mrs.
Emerson
unjustly, An Investigative
SUNDAY SCHOOL services reporter.
Nadar
has Jones' review of the book, she
at Plants Church at 10 a. m.
young groups of men work- told of the Joseph Bonono
ing for him, kno.wn as family of the Mafia, a synMONDAY
dicate of approximately 5,000
MEIGS Chapter DeMolay,
men belonging to 24 separate
Masonic Temple, Middleport,
families.
His young son, Bill,
.I
7:30 Monday, initiation and
unwilling
took
over
·the
family
·.·;
inspection. Mothers Club to
after
Joseph
Bonono
ivas
meet at the same time.
I'
kidnapped. During this time he
il'
TUESDAY
'f
was
convicted
for
the
misuse
of
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
credit cards and is currently
.;!&lt;
Beta Sigma !'hi SororitY, 7:30 VOlUnteer WOrk
serving
time
in
prison.
&amp;l.l
Columbia Gas of Ohio, 'MidThe response to roll call was
!i ,,.
dleport. Cultural progratn on WEST COLUMBIA - The
natur~bY,"Tex~ill)ll. YJell and : Y~l~tet[t AU'tlliar)l" q! H!\dn a•. ·£Ommen\:• on , th~ , lwct' .. ,.,: •• ,M Ord,y,Jly,lf~•-~•,!1 '" &lt;i ·•ilduq
A~d Toke Em 11om•
Lynn Kitchen.
Slate Hospital met Thursday, .programs. Mrs. Joneslpresided · '
' ro iJ
at
the
meeting
in
the
abSence
of
March 8, for the election of new
992·5432
Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel,
officers.
Maxine Legg of Leon was president.
elected president; Aleta
Weaver of New Haven, vice·
president; Nita Faye Seellplch
of Middleport, secretary, and
MINERSVILLE - The Shirley Joseph, New Haven,
Meigs County 4-H Pleasure. treasurer.
.12
Riders meeting Monday,
l t, l,
Others in attendance were
March 12 in the home of C. K. Belly While and Virginia
GliH
Nease, opened by the pledges Hazlett of New Haven, Bessie
ld!i!
to the American and 4·H flags Cadle and Icy Rollins of Leon
10W
led by Corky Cleek and Dave and Vivian Blatt of Lakin,
'N ; r
Nease.
Anyone interested in doing
1ollo
There was a discussion of the volunteer work at Lakin mar
~o(::~
year's program and the club contact Shirley Joseph at 832?Hfl
decided to catch frogs and sell 2219 or Nita Faye Seelbach at ·
(J'
tllem at the Big Bend Regatta 992-7427, II one prefers, write to
::..uj'
for use in the frog jump.
Vivian Blatt at Lakin Stale
01.:1
Attending were Susan Yost, Hospital where she is em!Ju; 1
(ALL ANALYSIS)
Aimee Houston, Connie Smith, ployed.
~ · )'i' j
Herb Ervin, Dave Nease,
Many more ladies could be
II.
Tammy Smith, Pam Not- used in this work. They work
n:.tH
tingham, Corky Cleek, Melanie the second and fourth ThurslliW
Dillard, Julie Gooch, Beverly days of each month for two
IJhl
Hart, Scott Nease, Cindy hours each time. The work is
·JI "
Gooch, Vicky Cundiff, Melody more rewarding for the
.s i'o!
Cundiff and advison Rachael volunteer than for the patient.
Downie and Bill Downie.
They wash and set hair, paint
I
The next meeting will be on fingernails or just talk to
April 12 a! the St. Paul patients. Personal attention Is
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy what most of them need, and
'
at 7:30 p. m. There will be a csnnot possibly get except
film .
through volunteers.

Skating party
date is decided

Letart school
hooor roll

is announced

Save 53 on Scotts
Automatic Spreader

•

.·MODE-RN SUPPLY
'

399 West

Main StrHI

P9l-l164

Pomeroy, Ohio

THE STORE WITH "All KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS · STABLES · LARGE AND SMALL A~IMALS
· LAWNS . GARDENS.

(upon Request)

ROBIN SO_N~S
Cl.EANERS
ltO e. lnd
Pomeroy

Yuma, Arizona, receives
more than 4,000 hours of
Phone 992-5428
' sunshine a year, twice as
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .. mnrh as Seattle. Wash.

The public is Invited to a
revival ·evangelistic meeting
at the Pomeroy Church of
Christ to be,ln Sunday evening
and continue nightly at 7:30
through Friday,
There will be special music
at every service and a nursery
for the small children.
The sp,.eaker will be Mike
Breidenbaugh, minister at the
Beechwood Heights Church of
Christ In Parkersburg, W. Va.
He also serves as camp
manager at Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly located
near Darwin In Meigs County.
Mike has a radio ministry at

•

1

'Bottling corr~p_any

.

,_, . . . . ,.,. . ,

..._._ Ol..;.m•• c·:..L
Elizabeth Hysell, Kathryn Wilson, Elizabeth KlcJes,
deceaaed, Albert Pettit, Alfred Gloeckner, Herbert Reese,
Conrad Ohlinger, Alllltln Phillips, Beatrice Hess Price, Cora
Durst Beegle, Penelope lhle, Carrie HIIE Grueser and Eimer
Thle.

the present time, along with hill
brother, Rick Breidenbaugh.
His radio ministry, "Open
Your Heart," is heard weekly
on several radio stations, ineluding Chillicothe, Marietta,
and Charleston.
Mi)te attended Kentucky
Christian College in Grayson,
Ky. from 1967-'71. He has
served churches in MI.
Sterling, Ky. and Jackaon,
Columbus, and Mason, all In
Ohio.
· The songieader for the
revival will be the evangelist's
brother, Rick Breidenbaugh, of
Chillicothe. Hoyt Ailen,

minister of the
Church of Christ, as host of
revival urgeS the public to
attend .

FERTILIZER

FUNK'S AND
PIONEER •••

FUIIIl'l

SEED

CORN

BELLING, SHOWER SET
There will be a belling and
shower at the Hemlock Grove
Grange Hall March 24 at 8 p,
m. for Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
(Sonny) Randolph. Everyone
Is welcome.

..

.,.,.,..~

Sugar Run
Flour Mills

fers ,

992-2115

Walnut Finish -

Patty Parker , Kathie

Regular $1.29 Values

. Choose from set of 3 pant
or shirt hangers. set of 6
dress hangers, set of 2 suit
hangers.

Alfred

Social Notf!1l
Sunday School attendance on
March II was 43. The offering
was $22.75. DaUy Vacation
Bible School was discussed.
Worship services were held at
11 wtUt an attendance of 17 and.
liffering of $18.25. Rev. Lehman
i!pDke on "Prepare for the
Race," Hebrews 12:1..
The WSCS will meet on
Tuesday evening, March 20 at
7:30 at the home of Genevieve
Guthrie, with Osie Follrod
program leader.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Henderson, daughter Linda
Williams and son, Aaron,
returned last Wednesday from
1 ten days visit iri St. Cloud,
fla ., With his parents, Mr. and

Cheer The Sick
With Blood of Health!
VASES
of

GLADS&amp;
CARNATIONS

PomeiQJ

'.

Mrs. Lee Henderson. They
visited many points of interest
while there.
Sunday guests of Clara
Foilrod and Nina Robinson
were Mr' and Mrs. Carleton ,
Follrod and Charles · of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Follrod and Sue Ann of Atllens ·
and MI . and Mrs. Gerald
Swartz and family of MariettB.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode
and Conn! of Circleville visited
the Wm. Carr family on
Saturday,spentSaturdaynight
witll her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert WhilE at Keno, called at
the White Funeral Home to see
Jesse Newell, Sunday af·
ternoon; then visited ~is
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
D. Woode, called again at !he
Curr home and returned to
their home at Circleville early
Sunday evening.
A Slll'prise birthday supper
was held al . th~ home of Mr.
a~d Mrs. Glen Robinson
Sunday evening at6:30 for her·
sister, Wilma Guinther, of
Chester. A group of 37 friends
and relatives attended. Roger
Watson of Athens, attending
Christian College in Kentucky,
called later in the evening at
the Robinson ~orne. He js
pastorlng the Hemlock Grove
Church.
Russell Findling assisted

David Williams with chores at
the Henderson-Williams farm
while the rest of the family
visited in Florida.
Mrs Charlotte van Meter
was r~turned to her home here
last Thursday after Undergoing
major surgery in the Camden·
Clark Hospital about ten days
ago. She will be confined to her
home for aboout three weeks

Seconds

ye~rs. Bessie Kapple remains
about the same at her home
here. She is confined to her bed
witll a leg in a cast and other
infirmities.

You don't have to be
good at fractions to count

"Tucker" Plastics

CLOTH s9.95
PAPER ss.95
MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

your blessings.

WASTE
BASKET

OUR
EVERY
DAY
Regular
$6.94
$7.94
$8.94

can

Be
Used
For Trash
Also
3 Colors!
While

Includes:

12'~15'

Living ~m
9'~12' Bedroom
3'~12' Hall

ALL
FOR

$249 .'

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
2nd Ave.

MOTOROLA

'

+

,.

PH. 742·4211

23" screen (me,asured dH!Qonally)
Motorola, Quasar II Works In"A
Drawer Color TV. Mediterranean ..
· Styling. ln:na-Matic Color T,uning .
Solid Sl ale ~ e~cept for 4 cHassis
tubes. Plug· in cirt;:tJit mod._ules .
· Instant Picture an,d Sound. Motorola

&lt;

'

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RUTLAND FURNITURE

)

WENDELL GRATE

BAKER

tempered hardboard cabinet with
. Clas$ic Pecan finish. _DecgcaYve pans

of non-wood mold~d material.

MIDDLEPORT, 0. '

Casters,

.

Middl~port

'

\

•

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99
PR.

•

. t'
L

,.

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,.

Middleport

.WOMENS
PANTIES

.

1st Quality -

Q_,asa~

·WVB003JP

.t

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7

...

"ACELE" Acetate Tricot

FOR YOUR· ••

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VALUES

~-

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SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

'(

FURNITUIJ.E

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COME TO··.

'·

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•

$

3 PC. UTILITY KNIFE SET

Reg. 27c

Stainless Steel Blades!

Sizes
5-6-7
White
·and Co

A $1.29 value. Rosewood handles.
set of 3 knives contain parer , all
purpose and steak or utility knife.

PAIR

GIRLS SMOCK

,,

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66

SATURDAY and SUNDAY ONLY!

/It

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Saturday and Sunday Only!

'

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'

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SATURDAY AND

Saturday__!nd Sunday Or.~!

•

With Heavy Foam ,Rubber Pad

V.

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SUNDAY

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Palazzo legs, smaller flares. jean looks -

Swing Top

TOPS

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COMPLETELY INSTALLED
WALL TO WALL

-:l•l:"l''rn nR no:.:rw

all our new spring pants of easy care
polyester on sale for 2 days. Regular and
X-large sizes!

22 Quart Size

"IT'S,TRUE"···

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100% Polyester!

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FOR WOMEN OR TEENS

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P'a'nt·. s~vings

(•

2 ROOMS AND HALL

;-(

White and colors. Bundled 15 to each. Limit
lS each customer.

.

59 N· Secon!l
Middleport

.CARPET SPECIAL

.·

·;.l'

RKABLE SPECIAL FOR·THE WEEK END ONI.YI

Qudley's Aorist

.

··~

. WASH CLOTHS

WOOD HANGER SALE

Reuter , .Jackle Wagner .

FROM $7.50

180 Mulberry

:•.·:.·

.
.PRICES ARE IN EFFECT SATURDAY .MORNING 10 AM

1

MUliSH

,.

·~.

, )!

Quivey.
Sixth Grade - Sharon
Buckley, · Jana
Burson.
Stephanie Radford, Rhonda

SANDWICH

PLEASANT VAL{.,EY
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Frank
Wetherholt, Mrs . William
McDaniel, Worthy Leach,
Point Pleasant; Wll)lam
Church, Mrs. Melvin Church,
Loreda Church, all Gallipolis;
Bobby Kinniard, Southside;
Mrs. John Miller, daughter,
Cottageville; Mrs . James
Rowley, son, Pomeroy;
Harvey McGowan : · Gary
Callicoat, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
'Earl Rollins, Leon; Kenneth
Fuller, Millwood; Rita Fuller,
Millwood; Eunice Rollins,
Leon;' Dell Beam, Gallipolis,
and Harold Call, Point
Pleasant.

These· training conferences· program, including a clear Priddy, Laura Grant, Car·son
are for key volunteer leaden of recognition of the activities as Lingerfelt and William
the Boy Scouts of America who tools rather than ends in Barrett.
are responsible for training themselves; knowledge of BSA
and guiding other district and activities, skills, ceremonies,
council leaders, according to and method is, inc;luding the ' DIVIDEND DECLARED
COLUMBUS (UPI)-A 1973
Tommy Thomason, ·chairman techniques of using the
cash
dividend of 20 cents per
of the Counci.l training com- program to help boys develop;
mlttee. The coursesare units of acquaintance with
the share has been announced by
Corp .
for
instruction covering District literature of the. movements Nationwide
Administration, Unit Service, and with sources of additional shareholders of record April!. ·
The dividend announced by
Conservation,
Unit , info"rmation, and the inthe
holding company which has
Organization , Health and spiration, confidence, and
Safety and Leadership enthusiasm that come from controlling interests in ·sil: U.:
Training.
knowing the how-and-why of surance firms and four other
financial services companies,
The training is designed to the Scout program.
is payable on both Class A and
prepare a selected group of
Class B shares.
leaders who are responsible for
BREWERY'
CLOSED
training other volunteer adults
....
·CINCINNATI (UPI) - The ·
and young men in carrying out
an effective program for boys Burger Brewing Co., which for most identifiable beers in the
that will result in character 37 years produced one of the country, has closed down.
development , citi~enship
training, and mental and
physical fitness, Thomason
said.
_OPTOM EJRIST .
_
The training program of the
:OF'F ICE HOURS 9.:30 TO 1t; 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
Tri-State Area Council, Boy
NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST..
&lt;·
Scouts of America , has four
goals, an understanding
. ' of the
'

Filth Grade - Tracey •Jef·

needs ,help in

ONLY
(;Nallty sot' nylon c~rpellng wllh heavy foam rubber pa~. o~perl tack less
:nstallatlon. Choice of colors. All work guaranteed. See Wendell Grate tor
this buy, or free uti male on any carpet Installation.

Ro.Y_al Crown

I ..~'!I
me

Salisbury honor list announced

Lakin·Auxiliary

H·l:
HALF-QUARTS

Founded by Greek sailors
about 600 B.C. Marseille France's oldest city - has
become the nation's largest
port.

, Keebne Bertlla ..._ b .

Breidenbaugh to speak
at evangelistic series

STEAK
HOUSE

2-HOUR
CLEANING

, .....

OLD OOAL PORT ICilJOL - lin. Rltb ~.
Pomeroy, submitted the above photo of Coal Port School
taken many years ago, date unknown. Since the Meigs Local
School board plails to raze the building, Mrs. Moore thought
it appropriate to submit the picture. Some of the pupils
Identified liy Mrli. Moore are Marcella Andrews, Emma Lou

CROW'S

Pleasure Riders
4-H club meets

Housewanning
was a surprise

'

received invitaions from the
Tri-State Area Council, Boy
..Scouts of America, to take part
in national training courses
this year at Schiff Scout
ReserVation, Mendham, N. J.,
and tlle Philmont Scout Ranch
and Explorer Base, Cimarron,

Nadar story told

going to Mr. Harley E. Johnson, Mrs. Richard Downs,
Barbara Murphy, and Mrs.
Clair Giles won the door ~rize.
Attending the shower besides
those named were Mrs. Helen
Johnson, Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Mrs. Earl Shaffer, Mrs. Dave
Tanner and son, Kevin, Mrs.
Robert Reed, Mrs. Harry L.
Bailey, Debbie Bailey, Mrs.
Howard Thoma, Sr., Tammy
and Cheryl Johnson, Mrs. Carl
Hall, Sr. and daughter, Donna,
Mrs. Guy Sargent, Mrs. Larry
Johnson, Mrs . Charlie D.
Smith, Mrs. James C. Reeves,
Mrs. John Murphy, Peggy and
Carmel Murphy, and Mrs.
James. Parish,' Miss Cindy
REEDSVILLE - Girl Scout Downs ' of Glouster:· and John
Troop 67 of Reedsville' is Downs.
planning a skating party Others presenting gifts to tlle
March 25 from 2 untl14 P-.m. at couple were Mrs. Leo Davidson
the Skate-A-Way Roller Rin.k and daughte rs, Mrs. G. H.
near Chester. The girls worked Warner, Mrs. James Proffitt,
on their Personal Health badge Mrs. Harley T. Johnson, Mr .
at the meeting Monday, each and Mrs. Russ Staley, Mrs.
demonstrating the correct way Maury Miller, Mrs. Luia
MARINA
to sit, stand and walk.
McBride, Charlotte and
REEDSVILLE - A surprise • Taking orders for the most Sherrie Lambert, Mrs. Lee
housewarming for Mr. and
Girl Scout cookies was Teresa Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Mrs. Donald Myers at their Hannum (77); second, Debra C 'ngham M
unm
, r. an d Mrs.
new home near Long bottom ·Lewis . (52, and third, Kay .Lincoln
Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
was held Saturday evening by . Balderson (44). The girls and . Robert Murphy and Debbie,
the CBC's when an attractive their leader, Mrs . Lyle Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy,
planter was presented to them Balderson, surprised Mrs. Ray Mrs. Martha Jones and Paula,
by the group.
Hannum, also a leader, with Tom Drake, Mr. and Mrs.
JuDD
The club voted to sponsor a refreshments of ice cream and William Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
girl to attend Girls State in a decorated birthday cake in Paul Romanowski· and sons,
WED . RIMO
Columbus. Refreshments were honor of her birthday.
Tom Downs, Sherry and
served to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Delbert Fridley, and ~mployes
Give Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
·of
the Buckeye Marl.
the gift Brown and David, Mr. and AUXILIARY TO MEET
Mrs . Ernest Whitehead and
of love Jull, Mr. and Mrs. Dorhman The Women's Auxiliary of
. A perfect _Keepsake diamond
Reed, Kim and Kirk, Mr. and Veterans Memorial Hospital
backed by our wrhten guarantee
Mrs. Denver Weber, Mr. and will meet Tuesday, March 2Dat
of perfect qua lit y, l1ne .wl1ile cr&gt;lor
Mrs. Warren Pickens anfl .the 7:30 p.m. in the hospital
and correct modern cu t. Come in
today to sec our Cltci ting col!er.tion
hosts' grandson, David Young. cafeteria. Mrs. Pearl Welker of
of Kee psake Diamond Rings.
Next meeting will be at the the Meigs County Council on
Aging will be the guest
•
Whitehead horne,
speaker. A social hour will
follow. All members are urged
LETART FA~ - The
to
attend.
fourth six-weeks honor roll at
CRUSADE SET
Letart Elementary School
WNC BOITOM - A soul
includes:
winning crusade will be held
Grade 6- Jeffrey Thornton,
Wednesday, March 21, through
IN
HOSPITAL
Tammy
Bradford, Norma
. GRANGE TO MEET
March 25 at the Long Bottom
LANGSVILLE - Max Ed· Jarrell, Jim O'l!rien, Dale LET ART FALLS - Ohio
United Methodist Church with
mundson,
Langsville , is a Riffle, Eddie Roush, Susie Valley Grange 2012 at Letart
the. Rev. John Elswick
Falls ,will sponsor a public
speaker. The Rev . Standley medical patient at Holzer Scarberry, Diana Thoma.
Medical
Center.
His
room
Grade
5
Dave
Foreman,
meeting on social security and
Brandwn, pastor, extends an
Edna Greene, Jill Manuel, on the council on aging at 7:30
invitation 'to the public. There number is 428.
Marvin Randolph, Chris Wolfe. p.m. Wednesday. in the Letart
will be special vocal music
Grade 4 - Robin Fortune, Falls. commumty building.
each evening. Services will
In
1966,
American
astronauts
Terrf Manuel Danny Thoma · Norman Cupp, social security
start at 7:30 p.m.
Neil Armstrong and David Melissa Yonk~r.
' representative, Mariel\8 of.
Scott docked their Gemini 8 Grade 3 - Rex Thornton, flee, will be speaker.
space vehicle with an Agena Robin Burnen, Jenny Manuel,
[... ·~
craft, the first in orbital Melinda Morris, Paul Roush,
history.
Randy Tucker.
Grade 2 - Tom Cummins,
Too Late to Classify
Jim Hupp, Linda O'Brien, Troy
When bought with any Scotts
For Rent
Arnott, John Roush, Lawrence
product. Applies as you
UNFURNISHED apartment, Rose and Allen Tucker,
walk, shuts itself off autonewly remodeled, no children,
Grade t ~ Cin&lt;IY Allen,
matically when you stop.
phone 992-3901.
Bucky Fisher, Tina Hill, Mlssie
Rust-resistant finish. C9vers
Stover, Jane Manuel, Becky
22" swath. Hangs flat for
Michael, aJ:ian Riffle and
storage.
Robert Riffle. ·
Each of the above ·receive
"B" or higher in each subject.
Alone 19.95 16.95 S::';;';oduct

•
Voteraos Memorial Hotpltal
ADMITTED - Phoebe Lee
Middleport; Roy Gilkey;
Middleport, and Alma Jewett.
Portland.
DISCHARGED - TimoUty
Hall, Elmer Norvell, Nellie

National training courses
offered area s~out leaders

r

Portland women meet
Bride given shower
PORTLAND - Mrs. Harold
Roush was hostess for a
meeting of the Women 's
Society of Christian Service of
tile Portland United Methodist
Church.
A reading, "The Way and
When to Pray," along with a
poem on happiness and contentment was read. There was
group prayer. The program by
[11rs. Clarence Lawrence in·
eluded readings by several
members. They were "Just
One Song" by Mrs. Shirley
Johnson; "Receipe for Happiness " by Mrs. Margery

,....

Social Science fair given PTA

Girr Scout

.

Sites
To
14
COTTON .
PRINTS!

.OPEN
EVERY
WEEK O~Y
10 AM to 9 PM

$ 66

UTILITY TUB

16 Quart .s~.!
Regular

67'

49¢

Tucker Plastics

OPEN
SUNDAY
1 PM
A .,DISCO\JN'l
DfPARTMf.NT STOll

to6PM

Save Dallyl

....

�,,. .

~

'

,•

·, ;

6- The Dally Sentinel, Mt4dleport·Pomeroy, 0., March 16, 1973

'

1ary

By Charlene Hoeflich

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39
Plans for a skating party &amp;lnday at the Skate-a-way Rink on
Route 7were made during a meeting of the Middleport Juniors
Monday night at the Heath United Methodist Church.
The bus from the rink will pick up the girls at the church at Z
,p.m. and return them there at 4:45p.m. Each girl is permitted to
-take one girlfriend and is responsible for providing her own
skates.
On Girl Scout Sunday Troop 39 attended the services of Heath
.:Methodist Church in a group. In the group were Lori Kloes, Ruth
' Ann Blake, Debbie Zirkle, Terri Zirkle, Cindy Weaver, Tammy
McDaniel, Tina Sheley, Jo McKinney, Julie Kitchen, juniors.
They were accompanied by Suzanna Wise, Stephanie Houchins,
and Robin Kitchen, Brownies, and Jennifer Wise, a cadette.
Going with the group were Mrs. Roscoe Wise, leader of Troop 39,
and her assistant Mrs. John Blake. ~erts for the church bulletin
were provided by the troop.
·
A MEETING OF THE Big Bend Neighborhood of the Four
Rivers Girl Scout Council will be held Wednesday at I p.m. in the
Colwnbllll and Southern Ohio Electric Co. social room .
Ahighlight of the meeting will be further discussion on the
merging of the Four Rivers Council which has headquarters in
Parkersburg, with several other councils of West Virginia with
headquarters probably in Charleston, W. Va.
Mrs. Noby Sauvage of Athens, a district advisor, and
perhaps someone from the Council office will be present to
'discuss plans and implications of the merger.
Mrs. William Ohlinger, neighborhood chairman, asked that
. leaders, advisors and interested volunteen attend the meeting.
The Girl Scout Cookies will be in next week.

I

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Miss Venus Kay Young to wed
. Mr. and Mrs. Otho F. Young, Burbank, Ohio, Route I,
former Meigs County residents, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Venus Kay, to Mr. Richard
Keith Wise, son of Mr, and Mrs. JOhn Wise, also of Burbank,
Route I.
Miss Young is a Norwayne High School graduate and is
employed by Ruhbermaid. Mr. Wise, a gradW!te of Nor·
wayne High School, served two and one-half years in the U.S.
Army including a tour of duty in Vietnam. He is now engaged
in farming with his father. A spring wedding is planned. Miss
Young is the granddaughter of Mrs. Inez A. Randolph and
Mrs. Katie Young, Pomeroy.

Roush; "I Needed the Quiet,"
Mrs. Ethel Johnson; "Faithful
Is He Who Promised" by Mrs.
Fern Cheesebrew; "No Time
for God" and "What Is An
American•" by Mrs. Opal
Diddle; "In the Morning" by
Mrs. Elva Dailey; "The True
Story" by Mrs. Ruth Ebershach; "Nature's Plan" by Mrs.
Kathleen Ward; "What
Then•" by Mrs. Lawrence;
"Take Time" by Miss Brenda
Lawrence; and "Nature's
Way" by Mrs . Kethleen
Ward."
Officers reports were given
and a houseware products
party was planned for March
16 at the home of Mrs. Johnson.
A white elephant sale was
planned for the next meeting to
be held at the home of Mrs.
Ethel Johnson. Homemade ice
cream, cake, coffee and tea
were served by the hostess.

Elaine Murphy, the bride of
John L. Downs, was honored
recently with a bridal shower
at tile John Murphy home,
Route 4, Pomeroy. Hostesses
were Mrs. Larry Barr and Miss
Jo Smith, cousins of the bride.
The table decorations
featured green and yellow
streamers with a yellow and
white umbrella centerpiece.
Cake, punch, nuts and mints
t.ere served by the hostesses.
Games were played with prizes

FRIDAY
REVIVAL this week at
ily Mrs. L. Balderson
Mrs. Marlene Putman gave a that if this' issue were to
Pomeroy Wesleyan. Holiness
R .E E D s v 1 L L E
reading to honor Dads, as this the parents would have !o
.
'
"Cburch on R\. 143, 7:30 nighUy .. Highlighting the Riverview was Father's Night at PTA for it. · ·
The
president,
Mrs.
;Tei"EI!'i,
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor, is PTA meeting Monday evening ·when they are counted·twice in
the · speaker· Everyone at the school wa• a science fair the room count. David Collins, announced the sprini'
welcome.
bft!le science pupils of pavld Chadwell's room won ..the at- conferei!Ce on Apirl 2!1 at
THIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30 Chiidwell and Fred Kessinger. tendance ~anner and .reading Chesapeake, and a :~~uniY. .
council PTA meeting· a! the '
p.m. Friday, home of Mr9. Interesting projects and circle book.
.Mabel Wolfe, 260 West Main, pwlters were displayed.
Memhe111 voted to keep the Bradbury School on April 5.
Pomeroy, ·
·
Prizes were awarded to same officerS ior next' year Mr. Kessinger annOU!'~ a
POMEROY Lodge 164, sixth,seyenthandeighthgrade ·with the exception of cub scout meeting ·for · Ill·
F&amp;Mf, annuai inspection, 7:30 students. First prize went to secretary, who is Mrs .. terested parents on Mondl:f
p.m. Friday at :temple; Ben Shells; Buchanan; second to Elizabeth Smith. Her son will evening, Merch 18, at 7:30.
The PTA voted to sponsor 811
Philson, district deputY grand Donald Longenette and third to graduate from eighth grade
master, Inspecting officer; Teresa Smith; and in the fourth this spring , so she was International Day f~r the
refreshments. All Master.. and filth grades, ftrst prize · replaced by Mrs. Liz Upton. pupils when a foreign student
Maso.~s .invited.
went to Mark Smith, second to
John Riebel, Superintendent from Ohio Universit~ will
SATURDAY
Timmy Dillon, and third to of Eastern School District, spend a day at Rivervlj!W. ,,
HARRISONVILLE Lodge James Swain.
explained the urgency ot- · Mrs. Grace Weber, prin·
411 F&amp;AM annual inspection
The meeting opened with the passing the bond issue in May cipal, announced that a new
Saturday, 7:30 p. m. Ben pledge to the flag led by Girl for the additional building washer, c;lryer and freezer had
Philson, inspection officer. All Scouts of Troop 67. Teresa space needed for a junior high. been Installed at the school and
master masons are invited.
Hannwn from the troop was a This would eliminate crowded that plans are being made for I
CHICKEN BARBECUE, greeter and handed out conditions in the other schools storage building.
Named to the audltllll
Saturday, serving starting at shamrock natne tags which in the district, he said. The
lla. m. at Legion Park behl,nd had been made at a troop PTA went on record in support' committee were Mrs. R,rib
Middleport Post Office by meeting.
of the bond Issue. It was agreed Anne Balderson, Mrs'• Mary
Grace Cowdery and Mra.
Middleport Fire Department.
Marlene Putman. Refresh·
Phone 992-5958 for carry.out
ments were served .by tht!
orders.
committee.
ST. PATRICK's Dance, 9 to
midnight, Saturday, Southern
High School gymnasium.
The story of America's Nadar's Raiders, and is noted
Music by Stage Coach; queen foremost consumer champion, for his showdown with General
and king to be crowned.
Ralph Nadar, was presented Motors, Mrs. GB$kill pointed
PRODUCTS Party, by Mrs. Charles Gaskill out.
Saturday, 7:30 p, m. at St. Wednesday at a meeting of the
She described him as a man
Paul's United Methodist Middleport Literary Club held who practices what he
Church in Tuppen Plains. at the home of Mrs. Robert preaches, lives a frugal life on
Public invited.
$5,000 a year in one room in
Fisher.
SUNDAY
Mrs. Gaskill reviewed Washington, without a car or a
HYMN SING Sunday, 2:30 "Ralph Nadar - People's television set, who smokes not
p.m., Bradford Church of LaWYer," by Robert Buckhorn. at all and drinks very tittle. He
Home of
Christ, sponsored by Meigs She described Nadar as a man Is unmarried.
County Youth Rally. Offering determined to wring jusUce
Also reviewed at the meeting
for coming youth revival April from
the Fabulous
those who act was "Honor Thy Father" by ·
6-8. Public welcome.
Gay
Telese,
In
Mrs.
Emerson
unjustly, An Investigative
SUNDAY SCHOOL services reporter.
Nadar
has Jones' review of the book, she
at Plants Church at 10 a. m.
young groups of men work- told of the Joseph Bonono
ing for him, kno.wn as family of the Mafia, a synMONDAY
dicate of approximately 5,000
MEIGS Chapter DeMolay,
men belonging to 24 separate
Masonic Temple, Middleport,
families.
His young son, Bill,
.I
7:30 Monday, initiation and
unwilling
took
over
·the
family
·.·;
inspection. Mothers Club to
after
Joseph
Bonono
ivas
meet at the same time.
I'
kidnapped. During this time he
il'
TUESDAY
'f
was
convicted
for
the
misuse
of
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
credit cards and is currently
.;!&lt;
Beta Sigma !'hi SororitY, 7:30 VOlUnteer WOrk
serving
time
in
prison.
&amp;l.l
Columbia Gas of Ohio, 'MidThe response to roll call was
!i ,,.
dleport. Cultural progratn on WEST COLUMBIA - The
natur~bY,"Tex~ill)ll. YJell and : Y~l~tet[t AU'tlliar)l" q! H!\dn a•. ·£Ommen\:• on , th~ , lwct' .. ,.,: •• ,M Ord,y,Jly,lf~•-~•,!1 '" &lt;i ·•ilduq
A~d Toke Em 11om•
Lynn Kitchen.
Slate Hospital met Thursday, .programs. Mrs. Joneslpresided · '
' ro iJ
at
the
meeting
in
the
abSence
of
March 8, for the election of new
992·5432
Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel,
officers.
Maxine Legg of Leon was president.
elected president; Aleta
Weaver of New Haven, vice·
president; Nita Faye Seellplch
of Middleport, secretary, and
MINERSVILLE - The Shirley Joseph, New Haven,
Meigs County 4-H Pleasure. treasurer.
.12
Riders meeting Monday,
l t, l,
Others in attendance were
March 12 in the home of C. K. Belly While and Virginia
GliH
Nease, opened by the pledges Hazlett of New Haven, Bessie
ld!i!
to the American and 4·H flags Cadle and Icy Rollins of Leon
10W
led by Corky Cleek and Dave and Vivian Blatt of Lakin,
'N ; r
Nease.
Anyone interested in doing
1ollo
There was a discussion of the volunteer work at Lakin mar
~o(::~
year's program and the club contact Shirley Joseph at 832?Hfl
decided to catch frogs and sell 2219 or Nita Faye Seelbach at ·
(J'
tllem at the Big Bend Regatta 992-7427, II one prefers, write to
::..uj'
for use in the frog jump.
Vivian Blatt at Lakin Stale
01.:1
Attending were Susan Yost, Hospital where she is em!Ju; 1
(ALL ANALYSIS)
Aimee Houston, Connie Smith, ployed.
~ · )'i' j
Herb Ervin, Dave Nease,
Many more ladies could be
II.
Tammy Smith, Pam Not- used in this work. They work
n:.tH
tingham, Corky Cleek, Melanie the second and fourth ThurslliW
Dillard, Julie Gooch, Beverly days of each month for two
IJhl
Hart, Scott Nease, Cindy hours each time. The work is
·JI "
Gooch, Vicky Cundiff, Melody more rewarding for the
.s i'o!
Cundiff and advison Rachael volunteer than for the patient.
Downie and Bill Downie.
They wash and set hair, paint
I
The next meeting will be on fingernails or just talk to
April 12 a! the St. Paul patients. Personal attention Is
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy what most of them need, and
'
at 7:30 p. m. There will be a csnnot possibly get except
film .
through volunteers.

Skating party
date is decided

Letart school
hooor roll

is announced

Save 53 on Scotts
Automatic Spreader

•

.·MODE-RN SUPPLY
'

399 West

Main StrHI

P9l-l164

Pomeroy, Ohio

THE STORE WITH "All KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS · STABLES · LARGE AND SMALL A~IMALS
· LAWNS . GARDENS.

(upon Request)

ROBIN SO_N~S
Cl.EANERS
ltO e. lnd
Pomeroy

Yuma, Arizona, receives
more than 4,000 hours of
Phone 992-5428
' sunshine a year, twice as
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .. mnrh as Seattle. Wash.

The public is Invited to a
revival ·evangelistic meeting
at the Pomeroy Church of
Christ to be,ln Sunday evening
and continue nightly at 7:30
through Friday,
There will be special music
at every service and a nursery
for the small children.
The sp,.eaker will be Mike
Breidenbaugh, minister at the
Beechwood Heights Church of
Christ In Parkersburg, W. Va.
He also serves as camp
manager at Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly located
near Darwin In Meigs County.
Mike has a radio ministry at

•

1

'Bottling corr~p_any

.

,_, . . . . ,.,. . ,

..._._ Ol..;.m•• c·:..L
Elizabeth Hysell, Kathryn Wilson, Elizabeth KlcJes,
deceaaed, Albert Pettit, Alfred Gloeckner, Herbert Reese,
Conrad Ohlinger, Alllltln Phillips, Beatrice Hess Price, Cora
Durst Beegle, Penelope lhle, Carrie HIIE Grueser and Eimer
Thle.

the present time, along with hill
brother, Rick Breidenbaugh.
His radio ministry, "Open
Your Heart," is heard weekly
on several radio stations, ineluding Chillicothe, Marietta,
and Charleston.
Mi)te attended Kentucky
Christian College in Grayson,
Ky. from 1967-'71. He has
served churches in MI.
Sterling, Ky. and Jackaon,
Columbus, and Mason, all In
Ohio.
· The songieader for the
revival will be the evangelist's
brother, Rick Breidenbaugh, of
Chillicothe. Hoyt Ailen,

minister of the
Church of Christ, as host of
revival urgeS the public to
attend .

FERTILIZER

FUNK'S AND
PIONEER •••

FUIIIl'l

SEED

CORN

BELLING, SHOWER SET
There will be a belling and
shower at the Hemlock Grove
Grange Hall March 24 at 8 p,
m. for Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
(Sonny) Randolph. Everyone
Is welcome.

..

.,.,.,..~

Sugar Run
Flour Mills

fers ,

992-2115

Walnut Finish -

Patty Parker , Kathie

Regular $1.29 Values

. Choose from set of 3 pant
or shirt hangers. set of 6
dress hangers, set of 2 suit
hangers.

Alfred

Social Notf!1l
Sunday School attendance on
March II was 43. The offering
was $22.75. DaUy Vacation
Bible School was discussed.
Worship services were held at
11 wtUt an attendance of 17 and.
liffering of $18.25. Rev. Lehman
i!pDke on "Prepare for the
Race," Hebrews 12:1..
The WSCS will meet on
Tuesday evening, March 20 at
7:30 at the home of Genevieve
Guthrie, with Osie Follrod
program leader.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Henderson, daughter Linda
Williams and son, Aaron,
returned last Wednesday from
1 ten days visit iri St. Cloud,
fla ., With his parents, Mr. and

Cheer The Sick
With Blood of Health!
VASES
of

GLADS&amp;
CARNATIONS

PomeiQJ

'.

Mrs. Lee Henderson. They
visited many points of interest
while there.
Sunday guests of Clara
Foilrod and Nina Robinson
were Mr' and Mrs. Carleton ,
Follrod and Charles · of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Follrod and Sue Ann of Atllens ·
and MI . and Mrs. Gerald
Swartz and family of MariettB.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode
and Conn! of Circleville visited
the Wm. Carr family on
Saturday,spentSaturdaynight
witll her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert WhilE at Keno, called at
the White Funeral Home to see
Jesse Newell, Sunday af·
ternoon; then visited ~is
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
D. Woode, called again at !he
Curr home and returned to
their home at Circleville early
Sunday evening.
A Slll'prise birthday supper
was held al . th~ home of Mr.
a~d Mrs. Glen Robinson
Sunday evening at6:30 for her·
sister, Wilma Guinther, of
Chester. A group of 37 friends
and relatives attended. Roger
Watson of Athens, attending
Christian College in Kentucky,
called later in the evening at
the Robinson ~orne. He js
pastorlng the Hemlock Grove
Church.
Russell Findling assisted

David Williams with chores at
the Henderson-Williams farm
while the rest of the family
visited in Florida.
Mrs Charlotte van Meter
was r~turned to her home here
last Thursday after Undergoing
major surgery in the Camden·
Clark Hospital about ten days
ago. She will be confined to her
home for aboout three weeks

Seconds

ye~rs. Bessie Kapple remains
about the same at her home
here. She is confined to her bed
witll a leg in a cast and other
infirmities.

You don't have to be
good at fractions to count

"Tucker" Plastics

CLOTH s9.95
PAPER ss.95
MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

your blessings.

WASTE
BASKET

OUR
EVERY
DAY
Regular
$6.94
$7.94
$8.94

can

Be
Used
For Trash
Also
3 Colors!
While

Includes:

12'~15'

Living ~m
9'~12' Bedroom
3'~12' Hall

ALL
FOR

$249 .'

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
2nd Ave.

MOTOROLA

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23" screen (me,asured dH!Qonally)
Motorola, Quasar II Works In"A
Drawer Color TV. Mediterranean ..
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Solid Sl ale ~ e~cept for 4 cHassis
tubes. Plug· in cirt;:tJit mod._ules .
· Instant Picture an,d Sound. Motorola

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RUTLAND FURNITURE

)

WENDELL GRATE

BAKER

tempered hardboard cabinet with
. Clas$ic Pecan finish. _DecgcaYve pans

of non-wood mold~d material.

MIDDLEPORT, 0. '

Casters,

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Middl~port

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PR.

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Middleport

.WOMENS
PANTIES

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1st Quality -

Q_,asa~

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"ACELE" Acetate Tricot

FOR YOUR· ••

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VALUES

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SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

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COME TO··.

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$

3 PC. UTILITY KNIFE SET

Reg. 27c

Stainless Steel Blades!

Sizes
5-6-7
White
·and Co

A $1.29 value. Rosewood handles.
set of 3 knives contain parer , all
purpose and steak or utility knife.

PAIR

GIRLS SMOCK

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SATURDAY and SUNDAY ONLY!

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Saturday and Sunday Only!

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Saturday__!nd Sunday Or.~!

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With Heavy Foam ,Rubber Pad

V.

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SUNDAY

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Palazzo legs, smaller flares. jean looks -

Swing Top

TOPS

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COMPLETELY INSTALLED
WALL TO WALL

-:l•l:"l''rn nR no:.:rw

all our new spring pants of easy care
polyester on sale for 2 days. Regular and
X-large sizes!

22 Quart Size

"IT'S,TRUE"···

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P'a'nt·. s~vings

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2 ROOMS AND HALL

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White and colors. Bundled 15 to each. Limit
lS each customer.

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59 N· Secon!l
Middleport

.CARPET SPECIAL

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RKABLE SPECIAL FOR·THE WEEK END ONI.YI

Qudley's Aorist

.

··~

. WASH CLOTHS

WOOD HANGER SALE

Reuter , .Jackle Wagner .

FROM $7.50

180 Mulberry

:•.·:.·

.
.PRICES ARE IN EFFECT SATURDAY .MORNING 10 AM

1

MUliSH

,.

·~.

, )!

Quivey.
Sixth Grade - Sharon
Buckley, · Jana
Burson.
Stephanie Radford, Rhonda

SANDWICH

PLEASANT VAL{.,EY
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Frank
Wetherholt, Mrs . William
McDaniel, Worthy Leach,
Point Pleasant; Wll)lam
Church, Mrs. Melvin Church,
Loreda Church, all Gallipolis;
Bobby Kinniard, Southside;
Mrs. John Miller, daughter,
Cottageville; Mrs . James
Rowley, son, Pomeroy;
Harvey McGowan : · Gary
Callicoat, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
'Earl Rollins, Leon; Kenneth
Fuller, Millwood; Rita Fuller,
Millwood; Eunice Rollins,
Leon;' Dell Beam, Gallipolis,
and Harold Call, Point
Pleasant.

These· training conferences· program, including a clear Priddy, Laura Grant, Car·son
are for key volunteer leaden of recognition of the activities as Lingerfelt and William
the Boy Scouts of America who tools rather than ends in Barrett.
are responsible for training themselves; knowledge of BSA
and guiding other district and activities, skills, ceremonies,
council leaders, according to and method is, inc;luding the ' DIVIDEND DECLARED
COLUMBUS (UPI)-A 1973
Tommy Thomason, ·chairman techniques of using the
cash
dividend of 20 cents per
of the Counci.l training com- program to help boys develop;
mlttee. The coursesare units of acquaintance with
the share has been announced by
Corp .
for
instruction covering District literature of the. movements Nationwide
Administration, Unit Service, and with sources of additional shareholders of record April!. ·
The dividend announced by
Conservation,
Unit , info"rmation, and the inthe
holding company which has
Organization , Health and spiration, confidence, and
Safety and Leadership enthusiasm that come from controlling interests in ·sil: U.:
Training.
knowing the how-and-why of surance firms and four other
financial services companies,
The training is designed to the Scout program.
is payable on both Class A and
prepare a selected group of
Class B shares.
leaders who are responsible for
BREWERY'
CLOSED
training other volunteer adults
....
·CINCINNATI (UPI) - The ·
and young men in carrying out
an effective program for boys Burger Brewing Co., which for most identifiable beers in the
that will result in character 37 years produced one of the country, has closed down.
development , citi~enship
training, and mental and
physical fitness, Thomason
said.
_OPTOM EJRIST .
_
The training program of the
:OF'F ICE HOURS 9.:30 TO 1t; 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
Tri-State Area Council, Boy
NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST..
&lt;·
Scouts of America , has four
goals, an understanding
. ' of the
'

Filth Grade - Tracey •Jef·

needs ,help in

ONLY
(;Nallty sot' nylon c~rpellng wllh heavy foam rubber pa~. o~perl tack less
:nstallatlon. Choice of colors. All work guaranteed. See Wendell Grate tor
this buy, or free uti male on any carpet Installation.

Ro.Y_al Crown

I ..~'!I
me

Salisbury honor list announced

Lakin·Auxiliary

H·l:
HALF-QUARTS

Founded by Greek sailors
about 600 B.C. Marseille France's oldest city - has
become the nation's largest
port.

, Keebne Bertlla ..._ b .

Breidenbaugh to speak
at evangelistic series

STEAK
HOUSE

2-HOUR
CLEANING

, .....

OLD OOAL PORT ICilJOL - lin. Rltb ~.
Pomeroy, submitted the above photo of Coal Port School
taken many years ago, date unknown. Since the Meigs Local
School board plails to raze the building, Mrs. Moore thought
it appropriate to submit the picture. Some of the pupils
Identified liy Mrli. Moore are Marcella Andrews, Emma Lou

CROW'S

Pleasure Riders
4-H club meets

Housewanning
was a surprise

'

received invitaions from the
Tri-State Area Council, Boy
..Scouts of America, to take part
in national training courses
this year at Schiff Scout
ReserVation, Mendham, N. J.,
and tlle Philmont Scout Ranch
and Explorer Base, Cimarron,

Nadar story told

going to Mr. Harley E. Johnson, Mrs. Richard Downs,
Barbara Murphy, and Mrs.
Clair Giles won the door ~rize.
Attending the shower besides
those named were Mrs. Helen
Johnson, Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Mrs. Earl Shaffer, Mrs. Dave
Tanner and son, Kevin, Mrs.
Robert Reed, Mrs. Harry L.
Bailey, Debbie Bailey, Mrs.
Howard Thoma, Sr., Tammy
and Cheryl Johnson, Mrs. Carl
Hall, Sr. and daughter, Donna,
Mrs. Guy Sargent, Mrs. Larry
Johnson, Mrs . Charlie D.
Smith, Mrs. James C. Reeves,
Mrs. John Murphy, Peggy and
Carmel Murphy, and Mrs.
James. Parish,' Miss Cindy
REEDSVILLE - Girl Scout Downs ' of Glouster:· and John
Troop 67 of Reedsville' is Downs.
planning a skating party Others presenting gifts to tlle
March 25 from 2 untl14 P-.m. at couple were Mrs. Leo Davidson
the Skate-A-Way Roller Rin.k and daughte rs, Mrs. G. H.
near Chester. The girls worked Warner, Mrs. James Proffitt,
on their Personal Health badge Mrs. Harley T. Johnson, Mr .
at the meeting Monday, each and Mrs. Russ Staley, Mrs.
demonstrating the correct way Maury Miller, Mrs. Luia
MARINA
to sit, stand and walk.
McBride, Charlotte and
REEDSVILLE - A surprise • Taking orders for the most Sherrie Lambert, Mrs. Lee
housewarming for Mr. and
Girl Scout cookies was Teresa Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Mrs. Donald Myers at their Hannum (77); second, Debra C 'ngham M
unm
, r. an d Mrs.
new home near Long bottom ·Lewis . (52, and third, Kay .Lincoln
Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
was held Saturday evening by . Balderson (44). The girls and . Robert Murphy and Debbie,
the CBC's when an attractive their leader, Mrs . Lyle Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy,
planter was presented to them Balderson, surprised Mrs. Ray Mrs. Martha Jones and Paula,
by the group.
Hannum, also a leader, with Tom Drake, Mr. and Mrs.
JuDD
The club voted to sponsor a refreshments of ice cream and William Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
girl to attend Girls State in a decorated birthday cake in Paul Romanowski· and sons,
WED . RIMO
Columbus. Refreshments were honor of her birthday.
Tom Downs, Sherry and
served to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Delbert Fridley, and ~mployes
Give Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
·of
the Buckeye Marl.
the gift Brown and David, Mr. and AUXILIARY TO MEET
Mrs . Ernest Whitehead and
of love Jull, Mr. and Mrs. Dorhman The Women's Auxiliary of
. A perfect _Keepsake diamond
Reed, Kim and Kirk, Mr. and Veterans Memorial Hospital
backed by our wrhten guarantee
Mrs. Denver Weber, Mr. and will meet Tuesday, March 2Dat
of perfect qua lit y, l1ne .wl1ile cr&gt;lor
Mrs. Warren Pickens anfl .the 7:30 p.m. in the hospital
and correct modern cu t. Come in
today to sec our Cltci ting col!er.tion
hosts' grandson, David Young. cafeteria. Mrs. Pearl Welker of
of Kee psake Diamond Rings.
Next meeting will be at the the Meigs County Council on
Aging will be the guest
•
Whitehead horne,
speaker. A social hour will
follow. All members are urged
LETART FA~ - The
to
attend.
fourth six-weeks honor roll at
CRUSADE SET
Letart Elementary School
WNC BOITOM - A soul
includes:
winning crusade will be held
Grade 6- Jeffrey Thornton,
Wednesday, March 21, through
IN
HOSPITAL
Tammy
Bradford, Norma
. GRANGE TO MEET
March 25 at the Long Bottom
LANGSVILLE - Max Ed· Jarrell, Jim O'l!rien, Dale LET ART FALLS - Ohio
United Methodist Church with
mundson,
Langsville , is a Riffle, Eddie Roush, Susie Valley Grange 2012 at Letart
the. Rev. John Elswick
Falls ,will sponsor a public
speaker. The Rev . Standley medical patient at Holzer Scarberry, Diana Thoma.
Medical
Center.
His
room
Grade
5
Dave
Foreman,
meeting on social security and
Brandwn, pastor, extends an
Edna Greene, Jill Manuel, on the council on aging at 7:30
invitation 'to the public. There number is 428.
Marvin Randolph, Chris Wolfe. p.m. Wednesday. in the Letart
will be special vocal music
Grade 4 - Robin Fortune, Falls. commumty building.
each evening. Services will
In
1966,
American
astronauts
Terrf Manuel Danny Thoma · Norman Cupp, social security
start at 7:30 p.m.
Neil Armstrong and David Melissa Yonk~r.
' representative, Mariel\8 of.
Scott docked their Gemini 8 Grade 3 - Rex Thornton, flee, will be speaker.
space vehicle with an Agena Robin Burnen, Jenny Manuel,
[... ·~
craft, the first in orbital Melinda Morris, Paul Roush,
history.
Randy Tucker.
Grade 2 - Tom Cummins,
Too Late to Classify
Jim Hupp, Linda O'Brien, Troy
When bought with any Scotts
For Rent
Arnott, John Roush, Lawrence
product. Applies as you
UNFURNISHED apartment, Rose and Allen Tucker,
walk, shuts itself off autonewly remodeled, no children,
Grade t ~ Cin&lt;IY Allen,
matically when you stop.
phone 992-3901.
Bucky Fisher, Tina Hill, Mlssie
Rust-resistant finish. C9vers
Stover, Jane Manuel, Becky
22" swath. Hangs flat for
Michael, aJ:ian Riffle and
storage.
Robert Riffle. ·
Each of the above ·receive
"B" or higher in each subject.
Alone 19.95 16.95 S::';;';oduct

•
Voteraos Memorial Hotpltal
ADMITTED - Phoebe Lee
Middleport; Roy Gilkey;
Middleport, and Alma Jewett.
Portland.
DISCHARGED - TimoUty
Hall, Elmer Norvell, Nellie

National training courses
offered area s~out leaders

r

Portland women meet
Bride given shower
PORTLAND - Mrs. Harold
Roush was hostess for a
meeting of the Women 's
Society of Christian Service of
tile Portland United Methodist
Church.
A reading, "The Way and
When to Pray," along with a
poem on happiness and contentment was read. There was
group prayer. The program by
[11rs. Clarence Lawrence in·
eluded readings by several
members. They were "Just
One Song" by Mrs. Shirley
Johnson; "Receipe for Happiness " by Mrs. Margery

,....

Social Science fair given PTA

Girr Scout

.

Sites
To
14
COTTON .
PRINTS!

.OPEN
EVERY
WEEK O~Y
10 AM to 9 PM

$ 66

UTILITY TUB

16 Quart .s~.!
Regular

67'

49¢

Tucker Plastics

OPEN
SUNDAY
1 PM
A .,DISCO\JN'l
DfPARTMf.NT STOll

to6PM

Save Dallyl

....

�ST . PAUL LUTHERAN PORTLAND - Worship ":30 p m ; evening worship , 7:30
The Rev . Arthur c . Lund , P m ; Church Schoo l 9· 30 a .m
p m Bibl! study , Wednesday ,
pastor sunday school (nur
SUTTON - Worship, 11 a.m. 7 30 p m
se ryadult ), 9: 15a .m . ; Ctlarles 2nd and 4th Sundays, Church
MT. UNION BAPTIST Rev . Cecil Cox , pastor Sunday
Evans, Chr1st1an Educat1on School 10 am
School supt. , Joe Sayre .
Supt, worship service, 10 30
WESLEYAN &lt;RaetneJ a.m ; confirmat 1on classes, Worship, 11 a . m ; Ctlurch Sun day school, 9 : 45 a . m .;
· ·
School, 10 a.m
Sunday evening worship, 7.30
Tuesday, 7 8 : 1l ' tumor con NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Wednesday prayer and Bible
firmation , c lan, ttme set
weekly, senior con firmat 1on
Rev. Jacob Lehman
study. 7 JO p.m .
TUPPERS
PLAINS
1
7
3
EARJ
..
R,.ev,___,.class
Tuesdasen or choir ' 1 o p m.- - J OPPA
- Worship
10 a.m ; CHRISTIAN CHURCH · Rev . stanley
Br•ndum
Roy
Kra l covic,
AD . Churc h School 9 am , Prayer Eugene Underwood, pastor ;
5 E /'EN T H . DAy
Howard Cald'well , Jr .. Sunday
~:::;:~]~:J:f sc hool.
99 2-2825 .
VENTIST _
lo cate d on Meet1ng. Wednesda y, 8 p m
24a m.
7: 30
Mulberry
Heights ,
near
LONG BOTTOM :- Churctl School Supt , Sunday School,
choir
Monday , P m ~o&lt;niessil&gt;ns , Salu rd &lt;•Y 10
Veterlins Memorial Hospital, services , 9 a .m '. Sunday 9· 30 a.m •• Morning sermon,
P m .; Mrs . Mar vin Burt , am . ....
7Pomeroy . Pastor Herbert School 9:45 a.m 81ble Study 10 .,30 am . ; Sunday evenmg
rector.
sen1or
choir
7 30 p m
Morgan Sabba th School, every every Thursdav, 7.30 p .m
~erv1ce, 7 p.m.
rehearsal. 130 p.m ., Thurs
POMEROY FIRST BAP Saturdayat 2 pm and worship
NORTH BETHEL Wor
LETART FALLS UNITED
day , Mrs .
flaul
Nease,
TIST - Robert Kuhn, pastor ,
service following at 3 . 15 p m
ShiP 11 am, Chur.Rh Schoo110 BRETHREN - Rev. Freeland
director
William Watson , Sunday school
Open Bible d •scuss•on each a m
Norr1s, pastor, Floyd Norris;
POMEROY CHURCH OF
supt SundayschooL9 .3lla m ,
Thursday at 7 30 P m . at lhe
ALFRED - Sunday school. supt . Sunday schooL 9:30a .m .:
THE NAZARENE - Corner
BY F, 6 p m : B•ble study,
ch urch .
" The
Friend l y 9 45 am . eac h Sunday , mornmg sermon, 10 :30 am .;
Union and Mulberry
Rev
Wednesday. 7 p .m • cholf
Church..
preachmg at 11 a.m . each Prayer service, Wednesday,
Clyde V Henderson , pastor
practi ce, Wedn esday , 8 30 P m
GRAHAM
u N 1 T E 0 Sunday Prayer meeting , 7· 45 7.30 p.m
Sundayschooi,9 ·30am , Glen
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
METHODIST _ P re achmg pm , Wednesday.W SCS,B p.m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
McClung , supt , morning
HOLINESS CHURCH
GOD OF PROPHECY , G P .
9. 30 am .• f~rst and second on third Tuesday each month
worship . 10 . 30 am .• even1ng
Harr1sonviHe Road . Rev .
Sundays of each month ; th ird
REEDSVILLE - Sunday Smith , pastor . Sunday School,
ser"Vice, 7 30 , mid .week ser · O' Dell Manley , Pastor , Henry
and fo,urth su ndays each sc hool, 9·30 ; preach ing, 7·30 10 a.m .• Arthur Henson , Supt ;
vice . Wednesday, 7.30 pm
Eblin , Sunday Sc hool Supt.
month,worsh 1pserviceat 7_30 pm Sunday , prayer meetmg, Mornmg Worship, 1l am.;
GRACE EPISCOPAL Sunday Sc hool q 30 am ,
P m. Wednesday evenmgs at 7 30 p m Tuesday , WSCS , 7 30 Young Peoples service, 7 p m ;
Mornlno prayer and sermon,
Even1ng worShiP 7. 30 P m •
f trst Thursda,y each mdnth . .
E"Vening service, 7 30 p.m.
7 30, Prayer and Bible Study
10 : 30 · a.m Holy commun ion
Prayer and Pra1se serv 1ce,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPSILVER RIDGE - Wor shtp Wednesday Mid Week Prayer
and sermon. first Sundays.
Thursday. 7 JO p.m .
TIST _ 282 Mulberry Ave, lOam .; Church School, 9 am
Serv1ce, 1 · 30 p .m .; Youth
10 30 am
Ctlui"C~ school.
NEASE
SETTLEMENT
Pomeroy , affiliated With
TUPPERS
PLAINS
meet1ng 6.30 p m ; Evening
klnderoarten through.,. eighth
CHAPEL
Non s 8 c, the Rev Fred HiH, Worsh i P 9 a . m , Church worship, 7· 30 p.m.
nrade, 10 ;30 am
dt&gt; nom 1naflonal , George S
H
h 1
School 10 am
C
CHESTER CHURCH OF
• POMEROY CHURCH uF
:...
pastor,
ers esupt
Mesunday
lure,
KEN' o
c ·H URCH
oF
Qll er, Pastor Sunday Schoo l l O sunday sc hool
THE NAZARENE
Rev.
CHRIST - Mr HoytAIIen , Jr , a.. m .• Wor sh •P Servi ce 11 a.m
school, 9 : 30 a.m . ; mornmg (H'RIST Hobart Newell, Herbert Grate, pastor . wor .
pastor Bible School, 9 30 a.m..
Sunday ... [11ght serv1ces 7: 30
worshtp, 10 . 30 am , Sunday ' supt Servtce weekl_y, 9 _30 am ship service , 11 a.m . and 7:30
worship, 10 :30 , adult wor ship
p m Wednesday Pra yer
evangelistic meeting, 7.;..30-p .m . on Sunday Preachmg ftrst and p.m. Sunday Sunday School,
se-rv1ce and young people 's
meet1ng 7:30 p .m . Everyone
Prayer meet 1ng .Wei:tnesday
third Sundays of month by 9 30 a .m
Richard Barton.
mtetlnWg , dbot~ 730p .m Sun
weplc oMmEeROY
WES,TSIDE .· 7.JOpm
~/
' Cllffor41Smith , 9 30a m .
supt Prayer meeting, Wed 0
day .
e ne:.day , combined
..
'. MIDD(EPORT
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN nesday, 7·30 p m.
Bible- study and pray er
CHURCH OF CHRIST, 200 W
MT ~ MQJIAH BAPTIST _
UNION --;- Darre l Doddrltl ,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
meeting , 7· 30 p .m
Main St - Loren T Stephens.
Corner Fo~ and Main,- --past&amp;r.---sunday ~chool, 9:30 CtltRIST Clifford Smith,
TME SALVATION ARMY ~
evangelist , phone 992 7856
Middleport Rev~Wenry Key, am, Leonard G1lmor e, f irst mm1ster Sunday School 9: 30
Envoy Ray W Wining, offi cer
Conservative,
non Jr .• pastor Sunday Schoot;-.9 30 elder. even1ng serv 1ce, 7.30 am , morning church 10 :30
in charge . Sunday, 10 am ,
1nstrumental Sunday worship,
am .: Mrs Ervin Baumgard
p .m
Wednesday
prayer am ., Sunday evening service,
Holiness meeting; 10:30 a.m ..
10 a .m . , B1bie study, 11 am . ;
ner 5 pi
Morn ing worsll'p
•meetmg, 7.30 p m
7 30 p m . Wednesday serv ~ce. B
1
SundaySchool. Young Peop le's
worsh1p, 6 p m Wednesday
'
MT ., MORIAH CHURCH OF p.m.
10 5 ~ m'
Legion , 7 p.m ; Thursday, 1 to 3 Btble study, 7 JJ m
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES _
GOD - Racme Route 2 The
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
P m. Ladles Home League , 7
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY
Larry Carnahan , presiding Rev Char les . Hand, pastor. METHODIST - Rev Robert
C H U R c H
&lt; n o n - mmtster sunday, Bible lee - Sundi!Y school, 9 45 am • E. Buckley , pastor . Wtltlam
P m • Prep classes
denominat 1onal l. Langsville
ture , 9 30 a.m ., watchtower morn.mg worsh1p , 11 am
Batley , supt, Sunday school
Dexter Road , the Rev Worley study , 10 30 a.m , Tuesday, Evenmg servtces, Tuesday and 9 30 a.m ; morning worship ,
Haley , pastor . Sunday school,
Bible study, 7:30 p.m .; Thurs - FrB,dEaA,,R7W3AO.LLOW
RIDGE 10.30 a.m , evening worship ,
10 am , even1ng worship, 7:30 day , m 1n1stry sc hool, 7 30
7 30 p m Wednesday Chr1stian
p m
Prayer
meeting, p m ; serv 1ce meeting 8.30 CHURCH OF CHRIST . Bi.bie Youth Crusade, 6 30 p.m. ;
Tuesday, 7. 30 p m , youth
pm
study, 9 30 a.m, morntng prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m. ;
group, Fnday, 7 30 p .m .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH ol worsh!P· 10 :30 am ; evening Thursday cho1r practice, 7
Chriu in Chr.stian Union worsh•P · 6 30 p.m . Wednesday pm
Lawren ce Manley, pastor ;
B1ble study, 7:30pm
Mrs. Russell Young , Sunday
UNITED MINISTRY OF
DEXTER CHURCH OF
America is a iond of bells!
l Supt. Sunday School MEIGS COUNTY, The United CHRIST ~ Danny Evans ,
Marvin Covey, Charleston, 9Schoo
30 am Evening worsh 1p,
Presbytenan Church •. Dw 1g ht pastor , Norman C. W1ll , supl
Wedding bells, door bells, dlnnor bells, school bells, sleigh b•ils .. . ail speak of
Mr. and Mrs . William was a weekend guest of his 7 30 Wednesday prayer L Zavitz , Pastor · Dtrector ; Sunday School 9 30 am .;
a
country
where freedom from tyranny exists.
7 30 p m
George W. Hutton and Rev . Worship serv 1ce, 10 .30 a.m
Thomas have returned home niece and family, Mr. and Mrs. meeting
MT . MoRIAH CHURCH o~
Li_hson Stebbins, Ass't. Pastor- Christian Endeavor Sunday
Chimos also keynote freedom of speech as commentators broadcast the news.
Rex Cheadle.
GOD - Racme Route 2, the
Otrectors .
even1ng .
Rev Ja mes M. Muncy, pastor .
FIRST UNITED _PRES ·
REORGANIZED CHURCH
Typewriter bells ring out freedom of the press. And church bells, whether they be the
BYTERIAN,
M 1dd l e - OF JESUS CHRIST OF
Sunday school, 9.45 am .,
musical chime• from a cathedral's spire, or the ding dong from lhe steep!• of a vlilage
port , Sunday Church School, LATTER DAY SAINTS morn 1ng wor ship , 11 a.m,
I
even 1ng worship, 7 30 p m . Sc tlool, 9:30am ., Mrs Homer Portland Racine Road . Ralph
chapel, typify freedom of religion.
Prayer
meeting
Tuesday
7
30
lee,
Supt
,
Mornmg
Worship
Johnson
,
pastor
Herbert
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leist, meeting at Heath United
.I
1 •
'1 9
10 30 am
White. Sunday School Director .
Churches
throughout
the
land
aro
open
lo
ail.
Inside
their
doors,
we
cast
aside
Rosemary and Lorraine.
Methodist Church in Mid- f . ~ y,:u~h~;s0'fa~
s mee '" '
F I R ST
U N 1 T E D Sunday Sc hool , 9:30 a.m. ;
&lt;I
worry that shackles our hearts In this alomic ag•. We lind strenglh and courage to face
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
PRESBYTERIAN,
M1d Mornmg worship, 10 : 30 a.m.;
Mr. and Mrs. John Sch· dleport on Sunday.
GOD Bertha Kingrey , dleport, Sunday Church School. Sunday evening service 1 p.m .
the unknown f11tur•. Our faith, hope and lrusr in God, who say•, "Fear not; lor I am
weikert, Frankfort, were Earl
Starkey,
Carl subst 1tute pastor . sunday 9 30 ~ m ., Lew1~ Sauer, Supt, Wednesday evening prayer
School.
10
a.m
;
worsf1
p
Mornmg
Worshtp,
10
:30
am
services,
1
30
p.m
with thee," Is renewed and peace fills our anxious souls.
1
recent guests of her brother-in- Greenlees, Rilla Rhoades and service, 7 p.m . Sunday Prayer
MT. OLIVE CHURCH BETHLEHEM BAPTIST law and· sister, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan, meet1ng Wednesday 7'30p m Long Bottom, Sunday School . Great Bend , Charles Norris,
Let us accept lhe invitation of lhe bells to "Come and worship/' ond go to church
HAZEL
coMMUNITY
10 am with Willard Pigott , pastor . Worship service, 9:30
Carl Greenlees.
Columbia Grange members, CHURCH
regularly.
- Near Long Bot
supt. Evangelist message each am , Sunday School, 10 ·30
Mrs. Carl, Greenlees has attended Meigs County tom Estil Hart , pastor , Roy Sunday eventng, 7 30 p _m by a.m
Brown
assistant
pastor
Elder Russell Cl1ne. mm1ster
CARLETON CHURCH been a patient at Veterans Pomona Grange and Rilla was Sunday'sc
hool , lOam , Church Of the Apostolic Faittl . Bible K.tngsbury
Road
Sunday
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy initiated mto Pomona Grange. 7 : 30 p m . each sunday St udy , Wednesday , 7.30 p.m School, 9 30 am , Ralph Carl,
prayer meeting, 7.30
F I R ST
U N I T E D supt . W~rship service, 10.30
Sunday
Monday
Tue.day Weclne1doy Thursday
Friday
Saturday
and is Improving.
The all coon ty grange banquet pevenmg,
m Thursday
PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse, am . and 7 30 p m alternately.
MarkS
Luke 5
Lvk• 45
Luke 19
Ach3
Matthew 9
Luke
"
MIDDLEPORT
PEN - Morning Worsh1p, 9 a . m, Prayer meetmg , Wednesday,
Mr. and Mrs . William will be held April 6.
25·3.1
38-.44
17-26
6-12
35~3
1·11
27·3~
TECOSTAL - Th ird Ave ., the
Sunday Ctlurch School. 10 a m 7: 30 P m
Rev . Jay Stiles,
Cheadle, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell and Kevin Crabtree Rev Wllltam Knittel, pastor Mrs Sampson Hall , Supt
gaAt~~
DEXTER
CON ld Dugan , Sunday School
STIVERSVILLE
COM ·
Mattox and Mr. and Mrs. Carl were overnight guests of their Rona
Sup t Classes tor all ages ,
MUNITY ~HURCH - Sunday GREGATIONAL CHURCH
Rev
Carl
Richards ,
Crabtree were among those grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. evenmg service, 7. 30 pm , schoo1serv1ce, lOa .m .. Prayer
B1ble study , Wednesday, 7 30 me ~ t • ng , T~ursday , 1 p m .; pastor
Mrs .
Worley
Arthur
Crabtree.
from the area who attended the
p m youttl serv1ces Friday
Su nday evenmg serv1ce, 7 p .m · Francis, Sundar school supt ,;
With the hope it will, in some measure, foster and help sustain that whlth is
'
'
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday schoo, 9 .45 am ;
annual Landmark session in Services wer held at Bigony 7 30 p m
good
il) family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the business
FREEWILL BAPTIST _
Pomeroy -Harrisonv i lle church services. second ~nd
Columbus.
Funeral Home in Albany for Corner
Ash and Plum, Mid · Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor . fourth s'u nday s to llow1n g
firms and organizations whose nilmes appear below.
Noel
Herrman , Paul McElroy , Sunday School Sunday scho~l; f irst and th1rd
Mr. and Mrs. Mends! Jordan Davis V. Cummings of Athens, dleport.
pastor
sat urday even 1ng
Supt. Sunday School 9 30 am .; Sunday evemngs, 7 30 p.m
and Carl Greenlees attended who was well known here . He is serv 1ce, 1 p.m Sunday scllooi , m or~ing worship and com
L 0 N G
B 0 T T 0 M
10 am ; sunday even ing
mun1on , 10 30 am : _Sunday CHRISTIAN Mr . Robert
the Grange District Ritualistic survived by his wife, Ardis worship
7pm
evenmg youth Chr •shan en Wyatt, pastor , Sunday School
FIRST BAPTIST of Mid - deavor , 6·30 ; Worship ser. supl, Ronald Osborne, Bible
Contest at the Allensville Scool Galaway Cummings, two sons
corner of s1xth and
vices , Sunday , _7 . 30 p m . Sc hool . 9:30 a.m :; preaching
dleport.
in Vinton County.
and a daughter and several Palmer streets
. Rev Cha r les Wednesday even1ng prayer 10 45 am .; Evenmg services,
grandchildren. Two sisters, S1mons , pa stor
Danny meetmg and Btble study , 7:30 7 30 p.m
,,
Mr., and Mrs. Paul Wood, Mrs. Ethel ~lie)&lt;in ,. M~t\1'­ Thomp
son
Sunday Sc hool P m \
.....lr
1
HYS&amp;Ll . r~ RVN
FR~E ...
.'!"'!
;-.:,. .
'
1u per 1n t e'n dent
:
S
Su
nday
_S
T
,
JOtfN
~\JT
n FRAN 1ME
THO
DI:S
Tf'
J
'!;f,'
,
R
Dnaldr
Welis;
,t
If'".~
Greg~.!&lt;~ith and'J ammy ,of thur, ;rnd Mrs'. Elizaoeth church schoo l for e"Ver vone P1ne Grove, the Rev_ Arrhur pastor Su'!d~y School 9:30 '
, Mor ning worship
Combs, pastor . Sunday school, am ., Mornmg wors~1p, 10 : 30
Char~ton, W. Va. and Colleen Harvey, 'Columbus, also sur- 910 IS15 am
Short Order Air Conditioned Restaurant
a.m , Even 1ng services , 9 30 am , ctlurch services, a.m ., Young People .s Service
Boyer, Pittsburgh, Pa., along .
.
. T
6·_ 45 p m., EvangeliStiC ser·
v1ve. 8 ur1a 1 was m emp1e 7: 30pm .; Wednesday prayer 10 :30 a.m
St.
Rt-.7
Chesler, Ohio
with Margie Jeffers, local, 'Gemete
.. .·.·.•,•. , . sttrV ICe, 7 30 p.m Extra youth
BRADBURY CHURCH OF VICe, 7 30
P m.
Prayer
296 W. Second Pomeroy Ph. 992-3865 ~
ac t ivities on sunday, 5 p m.,
CHRIST . ~1ble School, 9 .30 meetmg , Ttlursday, 7.30 p.m .
were Sunday dinner guests of
~forallyouthupto si x thgrade ,
am , mornmg worship , 10·?0
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
.;..
6:30 for 1un 1or and se nior high
a.m Sunday evenmg worshtp MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev .
William Lawson
student s
Service, 7•30 p m ., ChOir L R Glu esencamp , pastor .
;
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST , practtce Sunday and Wed Roger Wilfred, Sr, Sunday
Devoted To The
M i dd l eport , 5th and Main
nesday 1 1 JJ m, p~aver meetmg Sc hool Supt . Sunday School
Recent guests of Mr. and
Generill Merchandise
Rau11n Moyer , pastor M ich ael
and Bible Study Wednesda y, 9:30 ~ m .; Sunday evening
Greater Ohio Valley
Mrs. William Lawson were Mr.
Gerlach , Sunday Sc hool supt
7· 30 p .m
worshtp 7 30. Prayer meeting,
Tupper.s Plains
Ph. 667-3280
'!1.
Bible Schoo l , 9 30 a. m ,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST •Tuesday , 7 30 p.m . Ernest
and Mrs. Ed Hensley and Mrs.
morl'ling worship, 10 · 30 am ,
Rev . Free land Norr1s , pastor Oeete_r. class leader Youth
Mary Collier of Flatwoods, Ky.
evenmg worsh 1p , 7: 30pm ,
Sund_ay schooiiOam , Church meetmg , Wednesday , 7 · 30
'
IJ
prayer service J p m Wed · serv•ce, 7 p.m . Wednesday p .m ., Ernest Deeter, leader.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lich Ill
Rexall
Drugs
nesday
'
Bible Study , 7 p m
MT. HERMON CHURCH OF
·and~ son have returned from a
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
RACINE FIRST CHURCH TME UNITED BRETHREN IN
We Fill All Doctors' Prescriptions
By Bertha Parker
Middleport, Ohio
THE NAZARENE - Rev
OF THE NAZARENE CHRIST Robert Shook,
visit with their parents, Mr . · Sabbath School attendance OF
992-2955
Pomeroy
Audry Miller, pastor . Lew 1s Sunday Sc tloo! , 9. 30 a . m , pastor. Sunday school, 9 ·30
and Mrs. Edgar Thompson, on March II at the Free Ellis, Sunday school supl , Morn !ng WorShip , 10 :30 am . ; am, .Russell Spencer, supt.;
Sunday schoo l. 9 Jll a. m ,
Eventng wor~h1p , 7 30 p ~ , worshtp servic~ . 10: 45 a.m,
Unseyvllle, Ky. and Dr. and Methodist Church was 118. mornmg
worsh1p, 10·30; junior Wednesday M td-Week Serv1ce , evening worsh 1p atternat1ng
Mrs. Robert Lich, Jr ., Offering from all services was soc iety, 6:.30 p .m NYPS. 6.45 Sunday School Supermtendent, Wtth C E. at 7:30 p m on
p m
sunday evange listic
Gera~d Wel ls . Pa stor , Rev
Sunday . Prayer meettng , 7:30
Louioville, Ky.
p .m . Wednesday . Alfred Wolfe,
$209.55. Mr . Joe Struble , meeting , 7.30 p.m Prayer Morr.s M . Wolle
Family Recreation
Bakers of Hoi sum Bread
, 7 30p m .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST lay leader .
Those who called on Mrs. Pomeroy, was guest speaker meet1ng, Wednesday
Swimming, Camping
MEIGS
Edward B. FtScher, pa stor
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
Middleport, Ohio
Murl Galaway were her for morning service. His topic
COOPERATIVE
mterl m :
Ronnie
Salser, Coolville RD. Rev . Roy Deeter,
PARISH
Sunday Sc hool supt , Sunday pastor Sunday school, 9·30
grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. was on drugs.
THE UNITED
sc hool , 9 30 am., mornmg am., worship service, 10 : 30
John Woodrum and children,
METHODIST CHURCH
worship 10 45 a m ; sunday a m. 'Bible study and prayer
1
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
Robert R. Cud
ev en ing worship , 7.30 p .m servtce , Wednesday, 7.30 p.m .
Albany, and Mr. and Mrs. McConnelsville attended
•
Director
Wednesday e"Veing Bibl e study ,
R UTL NRUDTFLIARNSTD B
POMEROY CLUSTER
7 30 p m
A
APTIST
Eddie Clemono, McArthur.
Pomeroy-Member FDIC &amp;
morning services at. the local
Rev. Robert R. Card
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev
Samuel Jackson.
Chester, Ohio
Federal Reserve System
Mr. and Mrs. Chester church.
Rev. F . Stanten Smith
Rev
Lawrence Sullivan , pastor . Sunday School, 10 am ;
CHESTER - worship 9. 15 pa stor Sunday School 9:30 Mrs Gertru~e Butler, supt .
Spencer and A. R. Caster of
The funeral of Mrs. Er- am
, Church School 10 a.m . am ; youth and 1Un 1or youth Prayer. servtce, 1.30 P m ;
Charleston, W. Va., were nestine Stump was held
ENTERPRISE - wor ship, 9 service , 6 .:IS p.m ,· even 1ng preachmg service. 2 p.m .
; Church School. 10 a.m . worship , 7 :30p .m ., prayer and
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Monday afternoon at the local am
FLATWOODS - worsh•p , 11
praise , Wednesday, 7 30 p .m . CHRIST - Kellh Wise, pastor .
Devoted to the Interest of The
Bakers of Good Bread
Walter Swett.
, Church School 10 a.m
SILVER
RUN
FREE SundaySct10ol,9 :30a .m ., V . H.
church with Rev . Robert amPOMEROY
Meigs &amp; Mason Area
wor ship
BAPTIST Rev Howard Braley , supt .; worship serviCe
Huntington. W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Jordan Buckley and Rev. William 10 30 am : Church
Pomeroy, O.
School9 . 15 Kimble, pastor . Sunday Sctlool, and communion , 10 30 am ,
10 am . ; Henry Dav 1s, supt , evening sery 1ce, 7 p m . ,
who have been at hi• em- Demoss officiating. Burial was am , UMYF 6: 30p .m
ROC I( SPRINGS - Worship even mg service, 7 30 p m Wednesday, S tb le study, 1 p.m .
ployment in Columbus, in the Rock Springs Cemetery. l Oam
, Church School 9 am ;
Prayer meeting, Thursday , Regular board meet ing, third
UMYF 6.Jll p m .
7 30 p m.
Saturday ea ch month. 1 p m
{For")erly Domlgansl
Mississippi, visited their
Bertha Parker was hostess
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
CHESTER CHURCH OF
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
New
Owner - Dick Sorgen!
parents, Mrs. Faye Jordan and Thursday evening to thirteen
Rev . Robert Bumgarner
GOD Rev . James Sat CHURCH The Rev . Lee
The Store With A Hearl
Old U. S. 33
Ph. 992-7735
Wor ship 10 :30 terfleld , pastor.Sundayschoot, Burnem, Pastor
Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Cottrill and members of the Laurel Cliff amHEATH
Racine
Ph. 949-3342
, Church School9 . 30a m , 9:30a .m.; worship service, 11 School 9 30 a.m.; Worship
Stop
In
and
See
Us
other relatives. They are Health Club. The club has dish UMYF 7 p.m
am , e vening serv ice , 7; serv1ce, 11 a. m . Wednesday
RUTLAND
Wor
ship
9
15
prayer
se
rvi
ce
and
youth
prayer
meet1ng
,
7.
30
p
m
enroute to North Carolina.
cloths to sell as a money am , Church School 10 a.m , service, Wednesday, 7 p m .
Sunday n1ght worship , 7· 30
\
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN P m
Mr.andMrs. Alfred Rice and making project. Games were UMYF 7 p.m
I
~ttADY
CO~
SALEM CENTER - Wor . CHURCH - RobertE Mu sser,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
son, Rick, and friend of played and winners were Polly Ship
9 a.m ., Church School 10 pastor Sunday School, 9 .30 THE NAZARENE Rev .
'
Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Columbus spent Sunday with Eichinger and Ruby Frick. am.; UMYF Thursday , 7 p.m . am : Robert Bobo , supt ; Lloyd D Grimm, Jr. , pastor
Phone 992-3284
Middleport
SYRACUSE CLUST~R
morn1ng
worship,
10 . 30 ; S und~y School. 9 :30 a . m . ,
Middleport, Ohio
Mrs. Rice's parents, Mr. and Refreshments were served.
Rev. Merrell Floyd
Sunday evening serv ice, 7 ·30 · Mornmg worshi p, 10 :30 a.m .,
ASBURY
Worsh•p
11
Mid
week
service.
Wednesday:
Young
people's
service,
6:45
Mrs. William Culwell. Mr. and
Mrs. Gladys Hendricks of am , Church School9 50 a.m .. 1 30 p .m
P m • l:vangelistic service ,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 7 30 p.m. Wednesday evening
Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan, Columbus and Miss Peggy WSC S. tsl Tuesday
FOREST RUN - WorSh ip 9 THE NAZARENE - Rev. M. serv1ce, 7·30 p .m.
Keith and Sarah Faye joined Russell ol Mexico visited a.m , Church School 10 a.m ; C Lar.more , pa stor Bob
MASON COUNTY
D.B.A. ANTHONY . ..
WSC S, Jrd Wednesday , 7 30 Moore , Sunday School Supt .
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
Middleport, Ohio
them for Sunday dinner.
Sunday with Mrs. Georgia p.m
PLUMBIN"and
HEATING
Sunday School. classes tor all George Casto , pa stor Sunday
'
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Harrison Diehl.
MINERSVILLE - Worship ages, 9 : 30 am . ; morning School , 9 30 , evening worship ,
337 N. 2nd Middleport 992-3!·SO
10 a m ; Church Sc hool 9 a.m .; wor ship , 10 .-45; NYPS sunday , 7 .30. Thursday evening prayer
and family of Stoutsville were
Mrs. Dora Halley is able to WSCS
, Jrd Monday, 7. 30 p m . 6.JOp .m , evangelistic serv 1ce service, 7· 30 p .m.
weekend guests of her parents, be out and attend church
SYRACUSE
Church Sunday , 7 30 p m Mid week
MASON FIRST BAPTIST 9 am . , worship ser - prayer meeting , Wednesday , Second and Pomeroy Sts ., Stan
Mr. and Mrs. William Cheadle services after her recent schooL
CATALOGUE STORE
v 1ce , 1 30p .m
7.30pm ; M iss ionary meet ing , Craig , pastor . Sunday school,
'
and called on her brother and illness.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
second Wednesday , 7:30 p m
9:"5 am . ; _worsh1p service , 11
116 W. Main
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Charles
R.
Sheets
Ph.
992-7590
Rev . FrankCheesebrew
UNITED
FAITH
NON · am . tram1ng union, 6:30
sister-in-Jaw, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Story of
106 Court St. Pomeroy 992-3001
'
DENOMINATION4L - Rev
P m . , evening worship service,
Free Estimates . Guaranteed Installation
Rev . Martha Ann Mattner
Rev . Howard Shiveley
Robert Smith, pastor sunday 7.30 P m Mld ·week prayer
Cheadle and family .
Columbus is having a home
,.
BETHANY c Dorcas)
school , 9 30a .m. , class leader, serv ice, Wednesd ay , 7 30 p .m .
Mr. and Mrs. William Miller built on Mrs. Story's parents' Wor ship, 9: 30 •a m .; Church Leo Hill, worship service,
FAIRVIEW
a I aLE
hool 10 JO am
10 30 a m , church , 7:30 p .m . CHURCH - Letart Route 1, the
are announcing the marriage farm, Mr. and Mrs. Norman ScCARMEL
Worsh ip, 11
E 0 E N
U N 1 T E D Rev
Sian Crolg. paslor
I
Nationwide insurance Co. of Columbus, 0.
of their daughter, Connie Sue, Schaefer.
a.m . ; 1st and 3rd Sun days; BRETHREN IN CHRIST Su nday schOOl 9: 30 a.m .;
Meats
and
Groceries
SchooL 10 a .m .
Eldon R Blake , pa stor Sunday prayer and Bible study, 7: 30
to Daniel Joseph Akers, son of
Mro. M. A. Howell of Church
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
APPLE GROVE - wor st-lip , School , 10 am .. Winnie p.m Cottage prayer service,
Syracuse
· 992-3986
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Akers, Columbus spent several days 7 30 p m first and third Sun Hol si ng er, Supt Morning Tuesday, 10 am . , worship
992-2318
Ph
.
days . Church school, 9 30 sermon , II a .m .. Evenmg serv1ce, Friday, 7 30 p.m .
Albany, at Greenup, Ky. A with her mother, Mrs. Nancy am
; prayer meel1ng. first serv ice Christ ian Endeavor,
MASON
CHURCH
OF
7. 30
p m ;
Mrs
Lyda CHRIST - Worship 10 a .m ;
wedding show"r and dinner Walker and family and her Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
EAST LETART - worship, Chevalier, pr esi dent . song Bible study , 11 : 15 a . m .;
were held in their honor at the daughter and son-in-law, Mr .· 7 JO p m , second and fourlh ser"Vice and sermon , 8:20 Mid · ev.entng worship, 7:30 p.m ;
Authorized Catalog Merchant
Sun days, church sctlooi, 9:30 Week prayer meeting Wed . M1d -week service, Wednesday,
home of the bridegroom's . and Mrs. Will and family.
Furniture and Appliances
am , . prayer meeting , third nesday, 7. 30 p.m Mrs Marie 1 30 p.m .
·
Louis W. Osborne
parents. They are making their
Ph. 985-3308
Chester ~
Wednesday . 7 30 p.m .
Holsmger, class leader . '
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
220
E.
Main
Pomeroy Ph. 992·2178
GREA'T BEND - Worsh ip 11
CHURCH
OF
JESUS GOD - Second 51 .. M•son, W.
home in Plain City where he is
am ., ~ nd and "th Sundays , CHRIST - Located at Rutland Va . Ches!~r Tennant, pastor .
Attend the Church of Your Choice
employed.
on New Lima Road, next to Sunday schooL 10 am. ,
Church Sc hool. 10 am .
LETART FALLS - Worsh ip, For est Acre Park. Rev Ray mornmg worship , 11 a .m ,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly
' li.
10 a m , ctlur ch school. 9 a m , Rouse . pastor , Robert Musser, evangelistiC serv1ce, 7:30 p m .
•
I
J
Bible study , 7 30 p.m every Sunday Sctlool supt sunday
Btble study and prayer service,
and Bruce were in Columbus
Pomeroy
Church
and
Office
Supplies.
Gifts
scho'lt.
10
:
30
a.m
.;
worship
Wednesday,
7.
30
p
m
Phone
Tuesday.
A thought for the day:
where they consulted a doctor.
Ph. 992·3498
7 30 p.m Bible study, Wed · 773-5133
.
992-2641
•
Middleport
HARTFORD . CHURCH OF
They also called ton relatives American statesman Charles MORNING STAR - Worship nesday , 7· 30 p.m . Saturday
prayer service, 7·30 p.m.
CHRIST In Chrhtian Union Sumner said, 1'There is the 9: 30a .m. ; Church School 10 30 night
there.
H EM L 0 C K
G R 0 V E The Re"V . William Campbell ,
. m . , M1d Week Service , CHRISTIAN - Roger watson , pastor . Sunday school , 9· 30
t
Mr. and Mro. Ralph Frazier national flag . He must be cold, aWednesday
, B p m.
pastor , R:ay Wha ley, supt ,; am f James Hughes, supt .,
of Ga.llipolis visited her indeed, who can look upon its MORSE CHAPEL - Wor . Mornmg worship, 9.30 am ., even1n,o service, 7.30 p m .
Bulova Watches &amp; Service
100 Years In Pomeroy
11 am , 1st and 3rd church sctlool , 10 30 a.m..
Wedn.esday evening prayer
mother, Mrs. Goldie Gillogly folds rippling in the breeze ship
Sundays , Church School, 10 young people 's meeting , 6: 30 meettng, 7: 30 P m Youth
186 N. Second · ~
Middleport
Kermit Walton
without pride of country."
prayer service eacH Tuesday
and other relatives hen

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LI'L ENGLISH
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SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

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Laurel Cliff

SUNDAY liMES-SENTINEL

LODWICK'S MARKET

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SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

MARK VSTORE

ROYAL OAK PARK

AU. WEATHER ROOFING
MD OONSTRUCTION CO.

MUNTGJMERY WARD

12. Triangu.
lar patch
13. Appear
11. Emmet
15. Hawaiiari
garland
18. ~~Three"

In Napoli
17. lllost am·
tocratlc
lf.Prot..
tant
denomination
(abbr.)
20. First-rate
(hyph.
wd.)

' CARPET-LAND, INC.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

SADIE'S MARKET

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RIDENOUR SUPPLY

o.

MIDDLPORT BOOK STORE

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

·-------------+-------~==~ ·
. . F. J. WAJ! ACEI JEWELERS .
·' NEW YORK ClDTHING HOUSE
Sales

'-

Yulenla1'1 ~ploquote: WHO REilEMBEKS WHEN WE
USED TO REST ON SUNDAYS INSTEAD OF IIONDAYStlllN HUBBARD
.
(C lt7S Xlnr Featuroa,SJndlcalo,lne.)

39. One-horse
carriage
U. Sonny's
partner
DOWN
1..Utah city
2. Unlv. of
Maine site
3. Famous
columnist
and father
of7Down
(2 wds.)
4. Corrida
shout
5. Send back
payment
6. Pay dirt
7. Famous
songwriter
(2wds.)
8. Etch
10. Gaggle's
membership

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Yesterday's AntWer

11. More
precipitous
15. Unaspl·
rated
conso·
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18. Know!·
edge
Zl. Hurl
22. Sadat's

predece~·

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Soars

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R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

M&amp;R FOODLINER

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5. Garment
9. Russian
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THE DAILY SENTINEL

RACINE FOOD MARKET

toe TIO, ... US. ht Off

6Lw.'6td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

GAUL S MARKET

HEINER'S BAKERY

GOEGLEIN

~ Ull.,. PlEA,

OHIO VAUEY BAKING CO.

THUARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

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24. American
snake
Ill. Tennis
star
:ee. Preos
forward
27. Health
resori
Z8. New
Mexico
city
(2 wds.)
31. Knightly
title .
32. Nigerian
city
33. Turmeric
st. Pencil top
31. Chirped
31. Withdraw

24. Old
Norse
poem
26. Chaplain
28. Run-down
29. What
ep~elsts

do
30. Athirst
35.-

biscuit
36. Part
a
min.

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�ST . PAUL LUTHERAN PORTLAND - Worship ":30 p m ; evening worship , 7:30
The Rev . Arthur c . Lund , P m ; Church Schoo l 9· 30 a .m
p m Bibl! study , Wednesday ,
pastor sunday school (nur
SUTTON - Worship, 11 a.m. 7 30 p m
se ryadult ), 9: 15a .m . ; Ctlarles 2nd and 4th Sundays, Church
MT. UNION BAPTIST Rev . Cecil Cox , pastor Sunday
Evans, Chr1st1an Educat1on School 10 am
School supt. , Joe Sayre .
Supt, worship service, 10 30
WESLEYAN &lt;RaetneJ a.m ; confirmat 1on classes, Worship, 11 a . m ; Ctlurch Sun day school, 9 : 45 a . m .;
· ·
School, 10 a.m
Sunday evening worship, 7.30
Tuesday, 7 8 : 1l ' tumor con NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Wednesday prayer and Bible
firmation , c lan, ttme set
weekly, senior con firmat 1on
Rev. Jacob Lehman
study. 7 JO p.m .
TUPPERS
PLAINS
1
7
3
EARJ
..
R,.ev,___,.class
Tuesdasen or choir ' 1 o p m.- - J OPPA
- Worship
10 a.m ; CHRISTIAN CHURCH · Rev . stanley
Br•ndum
Roy
Kra l covic,
AD . Churc h School 9 am , Prayer Eugene Underwood, pastor ;
5 E /'EN T H . DAy
Howard Cald'well , Jr .. Sunday
~:::;:~]~:J:f sc hool.
99 2-2825 .
VENTIST _
lo cate d on Meet1ng. Wednesda y, 8 p m
24a m.
7: 30
Mulberry
Heights ,
near
LONG BOTTOM :- Churctl School Supt , Sunday School,
choir
Monday , P m ~o&lt;niessil&gt;ns , Salu rd &lt;•Y 10
Veterlins Memorial Hospital, services , 9 a .m '. Sunday 9· 30 a.m •• Morning sermon,
P m .; Mrs . Mar vin Burt , am . ....
7Pomeroy . Pastor Herbert School 9:45 a.m 81ble Study 10 .,30 am . ; Sunday evenmg
rector.
sen1or
choir
7 30 p m
Morgan Sabba th School, every every Thursdav, 7.30 p .m
~erv1ce, 7 p.m.
rehearsal. 130 p.m ., Thurs
POMEROY FIRST BAP Saturdayat 2 pm and worship
NORTH BETHEL Wor
LETART FALLS UNITED
day , Mrs .
flaul
Nease,
TIST - Robert Kuhn, pastor ,
service following at 3 . 15 p m
ShiP 11 am, Chur.Rh Schoo110 BRETHREN - Rev. Freeland
director
William Watson , Sunday school
Open Bible d •scuss•on each a m
Norr1s, pastor, Floyd Norris;
POMEROY CHURCH OF
supt SundayschooL9 .3lla m ,
Thursday at 7 30 P m . at lhe
ALFRED - Sunday school. supt . Sunday schooL 9:30a .m .:
THE NAZARENE - Corner
BY F, 6 p m : B•ble study,
ch urch .
" The
Friend l y 9 45 am . eac h Sunday , mornmg sermon, 10 :30 am .;
Union and Mulberry
Rev
Wednesday. 7 p .m • cholf
Church..
preachmg at 11 a.m . each Prayer service, Wednesday,
Clyde V Henderson , pastor
practi ce, Wedn esday , 8 30 P m
GRAHAM
u N 1 T E 0 Sunday Prayer meeting , 7· 45 7.30 p.m
Sundayschooi,9 ·30am , Glen
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
METHODIST _ P re achmg pm , Wednesday.W SCS,B p.m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
McClung , supt , morning
HOLINESS CHURCH
GOD OF PROPHECY , G P .
9. 30 am .• f~rst and second on third Tuesday each month
worship . 10 . 30 am .• even1ng
Harr1sonviHe Road . Rev .
Sundays of each month ; th ird
REEDSVILLE - Sunday Smith , pastor . Sunday School,
ser"Vice, 7 30 , mid .week ser · O' Dell Manley , Pastor , Henry
and fo,urth su ndays each sc hool, 9·30 ; preach ing, 7·30 10 a.m .• Arthur Henson , Supt ;
vice . Wednesday, 7.30 pm
Eblin , Sunday Sc hool Supt.
month,worsh 1pserviceat 7_30 pm Sunday , prayer meetmg, Mornmg Worship, 1l am.;
GRACE EPISCOPAL Sunday Sc hool q 30 am ,
P m. Wednesday evenmgs at 7 30 p m Tuesday , WSCS , 7 30 Young Peoples service, 7 p m ;
Mornlno prayer and sermon,
Even1ng worShiP 7. 30 P m •
f trst Thursda,y each mdnth . .
E"Vening service, 7 30 p.m.
7 30, Prayer and Bible Study
10 : 30 · a.m Holy commun ion
Prayer and Pra1se serv 1ce,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPSILVER RIDGE - Wor shtp Wednesday Mid Week Prayer
and sermon. first Sundays.
Thursday. 7 JO p.m .
TIST _ 282 Mulberry Ave, lOam .; Church School, 9 am
Serv1ce, 1 · 30 p .m .; Youth
10 30 am
Ctlui"C~ school.
NEASE
SETTLEMENT
Pomeroy , affiliated With
TUPPERS
PLAINS
meet1ng 6.30 p m ; Evening
klnderoarten through.,. eighth
CHAPEL
Non s 8 c, the Rev Fred HiH, Worsh i P 9 a . m , Church worship, 7· 30 p.m.
nrade, 10 ;30 am
dt&gt; nom 1naflonal , George S
H
h 1
School 10 am
C
CHESTER CHURCH OF
• POMEROY CHURCH uF
:...
pastor,
ers esupt
Mesunday
lure,
KEN' o
c ·H URCH
oF
Qll er, Pastor Sunday Schoo l l O sunday sc hool
THE NAZARENE
Rev.
CHRIST - Mr HoytAIIen , Jr , a.. m .• Wor sh •P Servi ce 11 a.m
school, 9 : 30 a.m . ; mornmg (H'RIST Hobart Newell, Herbert Grate, pastor . wor .
pastor Bible School, 9 30 a.m..
Sunday ... [11ght serv1ces 7: 30
worshtp, 10 . 30 am , Sunday ' supt Servtce weekl_y, 9 _30 am ship service , 11 a.m . and 7:30
worship, 10 :30 , adult wor ship
p m Wednesday Pra yer
evangelistic meeting, 7.;..30-p .m . on Sunday Preachmg ftrst and p.m. Sunday Sunday School,
se-rv1ce and young people 's
meet1ng 7:30 p .m . Everyone
Prayer meet 1ng .Wei:tnesday
third Sundays of month by 9 30 a .m
Richard Barton.
mtetlnWg , dbot~ 730p .m Sun
weplc oMmEeROY
WES,TSIDE .· 7.JOpm
~/
' Cllffor41Smith , 9 30a m .
supt Prayer meeting, Wed 0
day .
e ne:.day , combined
..
'. MIDD(EPORT
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN nesday, 7·30 p m.
Bible- study and pray er
CHURCH OF CHRIST, 200 W
MT ~ MQJIAH BAPTIST _
UNION --;- Darre l Doddrltl ,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
meeting , 7· 30 p .m
Main St - Loren T Stephens.
Corner Fo~ and Main,- --past&amp;r.---sunday ~chool, 9:30 CtltRIST Clifford Smith,
TME SALVATION ARMY ~
evangelist , phone 992 7856
Middleport Rev~Wenry Key, am, Leonard G1lmor e, f irst mm1ster Sunday School 9: 30
Envoy Ray W Wining, offi cer
Conservative,
non Jr .• pastor Sunday Schoot;-.9 30 elder. even1ng serv 1ce, 7.30 am , morning church 10 :30
in charge . Sunday, 10 am ,
1nstrumental Sunday worship,
am .: Mrs Ervin Baumgard
p .m
Wednesday
prayer am ., Sunday evening service,
Holiness meeting; 10:30 a.m ..
10 a .m . , B1bie study, 11 am . ;
ner 5 pi
Morn ing worsll'p
•meetmg, 7.30 p m
7 30 p m . Wednesday serv ~ce. B
1
SundaySchool. Young Peop le's
worsh1p, 6 p m Wednesday
'
MT ., MORIAH CHURCH OF p.m.
10 5 ~ m'
Legion , 7 p.m ; Thursday, 1 to 3 Btble study, 7 JJ m
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES _
GOD - Racme Route 2 The
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
P m. Ladles Home League , 7
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY
Larry Carnahan , presiding Rev Char les . Hand, pastor. METHODIST - Rev Robert
C H U R c H
&lt; n o n - mmtster sunday, Bible lee - Sundi!Y school, 9 45 am • E. Buckley , pastor . Wtltlam
P m • Prep classes
denominat 1onal l. Langsville
ture , 9 30 a.m ., watchtower morn.mg worsh1p , 11 am
Batley , supt, Sunday school
Dexter Road , the Rev Worley study , 10 30 a.m , Tuesday, Evenmg servtces, Tuesday and 9 30 a.m ; morning worship ,
Haley , pastor . Sunday school,
Bible study, 7:30 p.m .; Thurs - FrB,dEaA,,R7W3AO.LLOW
RIDGE 10.30 a.m , evening worship ,
10 am , even1ng worship, 7:30 day , m 1n1stry sc hool, 7 30
7 30 p m Wednesday Chr1stian
p m
Prayer
meeting, p m ; serv 1ce meeting 8.30 CHURCH OF CHRIST . Bi.bie Youth Crusade, 6 30 p.m. ;
Tuesday, 7. 30 p m , youth
pm
study, 9 30 a.m, morntng prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m. ;
group, Fnday, 7 30 p .m .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH ol worsh!P· 10 :30 am ; evening Thursday cho1r practice, 7
Chriu in Chr.stian Union worsh•P · 6 30 p.m . Wednesday pm
Lawren ce Manley, pastor ;
B1ble study, 7:30pm
Mrs. Russell Young , Sunday
UNITED MINISTRY OF
DEXTER CHURCH OF
America is a iond of bells!
l Supt. Sunday School MEIGS COUNTY, The United CHRIST ~ Danny Evans ,
Marvin Covey, Charleston, 9Schoo
30 am Evening worsh 1p,
Presbytenan Church •. Dw 1g ht pastor , Norman C. W1ll , supl
Wedding bells, door bells, dlnnor bells, school bells, sleigh b•ils .. . ail speak of
Mr. and Mrs . William was a weekend guest of his 7 30 Wednesday prayer L Zavitz , Pastor · Dtrector ; Sunday School 9 30 am .;
a
country
where freedom from tyranny exists.
7 30 p m
George W. Hutton and Rev . Worship serv 1ce, 10 .30 a.m
Thomas have returned home niece and family, Mr. and Mrs. meeting
MT . MoRIAH CHURCH o~
Li_hson Stebbins, Ass't. Pastor- Christian Endeavor Sunday
Chimos also keynote freedom of speech as commentators broadcast the news.
Rex Cheadle.
GOD - Racme Route 2, the
Otrectors .
even1ng .
Rev Ja mes M. Muncy, pastor .
FIRST UNITED _PRES ·
REORGANIZED CHURCH
Typewriter bells ring out freedom of the press. And church bells, whether they be the
BYTERIAN,
M 1dd l e - OF JESUS CHRIST OF
Sunday school, 9.45 am .,
musical chime• from a cathedral's spire, or the ding dong from lhe steep!• of a vlilage
port , Sunday Church School, LATTER DAY SAINTS morn 1ng wor ship , 11 a.m,
I
even 1ng worship, 7 30 p m . Sc tlool, 9:30am ., Mrs Homer Portland Racine Road . Ralph
chapel, typify freedom of religion.
Prayer
meeting
Tuesday
7
30
lee,
Supt
,
Mornmg
Worship
Johnson
,
pastor
Herbert
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leist, meeting at Heath United
.I
1 •
'1 9
10 30 am
White. Sunday School Director .
Churches
throughout
the
land
aro
open
lo
ail.
Inside
their
doors,
we
cast
aside
Rosemary and Lorraine.
Methodist Church in Mid- f . ~ y,:u~h~;s0'fa~
s mee '" '
F I R ST
U N 1 T E D Sunday Sc hool , 9:30 a.m. ;
&lt;I
worry that shackles our hearts In this alomic ag•. We lind strenglh and courage to face
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
PRESBYTERIAN,
M1d Mornmg worship, 10 : 30 a.m.;
Mr. and Mrs. John Sch· dleport on Sunday.
GOD Bertha Kingrey , dleport, Sunday Church School. Sunday evening service 1 p.m .
the unknown f11tur•. Our faith, hope and lrusr in God, who say•, "Fear not; lor I am
weikert, Frankfort, were Earl
Starkey,
Carl subst 1tute pastor . sunday 9 30 ~ m ., Lew1~ Sauer, Supt, Wednesday evening prayer
School.
10
a.m
;
worsf1
p
Mornmg
Worshtp,
10
:30
am
services,
1
30
p.m
with thee," Is renewed and peace fills our anxious souls.
1
recent guests of her brother-in- Greenlees, Rilla Rhoades and service, 7 p.m . Sunday Prayer
MT. OLIVE CHURCH BETHLEHEM BAPTIST law and· sister, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan, meet1ng Wednesday 7'30p m Long Bottom, Sunday School . Great Bend , Charles Norris,
Let us accept lhe invitation of lhe bells to "Come and worship/' ond go to church
HAZEL
coMMUNITY
10 am with Willard Pigott , pastor . Worship service, 9:30
Carl Greenlees.
Columbia Grange members, CHURCH
regularly.
- Near Long Bot
supt. Evangelist message each am , Sunday School, 10 ·30
Mrs. Carl, Greenlees has attended Meigs County tom Estil Hart , pastor , Roy Sunday eventng, 7 30 p _m by a.m
Brown
assistant
pastor
Elder Russell Cl1ne. mm1ster
CARLETON CHURCH been a patient at Veterans Pomona Grange and Rilla was Sunday'sc
hool , lOam , Church Of the Apostolic Faittl . Bible K.tngsbury
Road
Sunday
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy initiated mto Pomona Grange. 7 : 30 p m . each sunday St udy , Wednesday , 7.30 p.m School, 9 30 am , Ralph Carl,
prayer meeting, 7.30
F I R ST
U N I T E D supt . W~rship service, 10.30
Sunday
Monday
Tue.day Weclne1doy Thursday
Friday
Saturday
and is Improving.
The all coon ty grange banquet pevenmg,
m Thursday
PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse, am . and 7 30 p m alternately.
MarkS
Luke 5
Lvk• 45
Luke 19
Ach3
Matthew 9
Luke
"
MIDDLEPORT
PEN - Morning Worsh1p, 9 a . m, Prayer meetmg , Wednesday,
Mr. and Mrs . William will be held April 6.
25·3.1
38-.44
17-26
6-12
35~3
1·11
27·3~
TECOSTAL - Th ird Ave ., the
Sunday Ctlurch School. 10 a m 7: 30 P m
Rev . Jay Stiles,
Cheadle, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell and Kevin Crabtree Rev Wllltam Knittel, pastor Mrs Sampson Hall , Supt
gaAt~~
DEXTER
CON ld Dugan , Sunday School
STIVERSVILLE
COM ·
Mattox and Mr. and Mrs. Carl were overnight guests of their Rona
Sup t Classes tor all ages ,
MUNITY ~HURCH - Sunday GREGATIONAL CHURCH
Rev
Carl
Richards ,
Crabtree were among those grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. evenmg service, 7. 30 pm , schoo1serv1ce, lOa .m .. Prayer
B1ble study , Wednesday, 7 30 me ~ t • ng , T~ursday , 1 p m .; pastor
Mrs .
Worley
Arthur
Crabtree.
from the area who attended the
p m youttl serv1ces Friday
Su nday evenmg serv1ce, 7 p .m · Francis, Sundar school supt ,;
With the hope it will, in some measure, foster and help sustain that whlth is
'
'
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday schoo, 9 .45 am ;
annual Landmark session in Services wer held at Bigony 7 30 p m
good
il) family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the business
FREEWILL BAPTIST _
Pomeroy -Harrisonv i lle church services. second ~nd
Columbus.
Funeral Home in Albany for Corner
Ash and Plum, Mid · Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor . fourth s'u nday s to llow1n g
firms and organizations whose nilmes appear below.
Noel
Herrman , Paul McElroy , Sunday School Sunday scho~l; f irst and th1rd
Mr. and Mrs. Mends! Jordan Davis V. Cummings of Athens, dleport.
pastor
sat urday even 1ng
Supt. Sunday School 9 30 am .; Sunday evemngs, 7 30 p.m
and Carl Greenlees attended who was well known here . He is serv 1ce, 1 p.m Sunday scllooi , m or~ing worship and com
L 0 N G
B 0 T T 0 M
10 am ; sunday even ing
mun1on , 10 30 am : _Sunday CHRISTIAN Mr . Robert
the Grange District Ritualistic survived by his wife, Ardis worship
7pm
evenmg youth Chr •shan en Wyatt, pastor , Sunday School
FIRST BAPTIST of Mid - deavor , 6·30 ; Worship ser. supl, Ronald Osborne, Bible
Contest at the Allensville Scool Galaway Cummings, two sons
corner of s1xth and
vices , Sunday , _7 . 30 p m . Sc hool . 9:30 a.m :; preaching
dleport.
in Vinton County.
and a daughter and several Palmer streets
. Rev Cha r les Wednesday even1ng prayer 10 45 am .; Evenmg services,
grandchildren. Two sisters, S1mons , pa stor
Danny meetmg and Btble study , 7:30 7 30 p.m
,,
Mr., and Mrs. Paul Wood, Mrs. Ethel ~lie)&lt;in ,. M~t\1'­ Thomp
son
Sunday Sc hool P m \
.....lr
1
HYS&amp;Ll . r~ RVN
FR~E ...
.'!"'!
;-.:,. .
'
1u per 1n t e'n dent
:
S
Su
nday
_S
T
,
JOtfN
~\JT
n FRAN 1ME
THO
DI:S
Tf'
J
'!;f,'
,
R
Dnaldr
Welis;
,t
If'".~
Greg~.!&lt;~ith and'J ammy ,of thur, ;rnd Mrs'. Elizaoeth church schoo l for e"Ver vone P1ne Grove, the Rev_ Arrhur pastor Su'!d~y School 9:30 '
, Mor ning worship
Combs, pastor . Sunday school, am ., Mornmg wors~1p, 10 : 30
Char~ton, W. Va. and Colleen Harvey, 'Columbus, also sur- 910 IS15 am
Short Order Air Conditioned Restaurant
a.m , Even 1ng services , 9 30 am , ctlurch services, a.m ., Young People .s Service
Boyer, Pittsburgh, Pa., along .
.
. T
6·_ 45 p m., EvangeliStiC ser·
v1ve. 8 ur1a 1 was m emp1e 7: 30pm .; Wednesday prayer 10 :30 a.m
St.
Rt-.7
Chesler, Ohio
with Margie Jeffers, local, 'Gemete
.. .·.·.•,•. , . sttrV ICe, 7 30 p.m Extra youth
BRADBURY CHURCH OF VICe, 7 30
P m.
Prayer
296 W. Second Pomeroy Ph. 992-3865 ~
ac t ivities on sunday, 5 p m.,
CHRIST . ~1ble School, 9 .30 meetmg , Ttlursday, 7.30 p.m .
were Sunday dinner guests of
~forallyouthupto si x thgrade ,
am , mornmg worship , 10·?0
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
.;..
6:30 for 1un 1or and se nior high
a.m Sunday evenmg worshtp MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev .
William Lawson
student s
Service, 7•30 p m ., ChOir L R Glu esencamp , pastor .
;
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST , practtce Sunday and Wed Roger Wilfred, Sr, Sunday
Devoted To The
M i dd l eport , 5th and Main
nesday 1 1 JJ m, p~aver meetmg Sc hool Supt . Sunday School
Recent guests of Mr. and
Generill Merchandise
Rau11n Moyer , pastor M ich ael
and Bible Study Wednesda y, 9:30 ~ m .; Sunday evening
Greater Ohio Valley
Mrs. William Lawson were Mr.
Gerlach , Sunday Sc hool supt
7· 30 p .m
worshtp 7 30. Prayer meeting,
Tupper.s Plains
Ph. 667-3280
'!1.
Bible Schoo l , 9 30 a. m ,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST •Tuesday , 7 30 p.m . Ernest
and Mrs. Ed Hensley and Mrs.
morl'ling worship, 10 · 30 am ,
Rev . Free land Norr1s , pastor Oeete_r. class leader Youth
Mary Collier of Flatwoods, Ky.
evenmg worsh 1p , 7: 30pm ,
Sund_ay schooiiOam , Church meetmg , Wednesday , 7 · 30
'
IJ
prayer service J p m Wed · serv•ce, 7 p.m . Wednesday p .m ., Ernest Deeter, leader.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lich Ill
Rexall
Drugs
nesday
'
Bible Study , 7 p m
MT. HERMON CHURCH OF
·and~ son have returned from a
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
RACINE FIRST CHURCH TME UNITED BRETHREN IN
We Fill All Doctors' Prescriptions
By Bertha Parker
Middleport, Ohio
THE NAZARENE - Rev
OF THE NAZARENE CHRIST Robert Shook,
visit with their parents, Mr . · Sabbath School attendance OF
992-2955
Pomeroy
Audry Miller, pastor . Lew 1s Sunday Sc tloo! , 9. 30 a . m , pastor. Sunday school, 9 ·30
and Mrs. Edgar Thompson, on March II at the Free Ellis, Sunday school supl , Morn !ng WorShip , 10 :30 am . ; am, .Russell Spencer, supt.;
Sunday schoo l. 9 Jll a. m ,
Eventng wor~h1p , 7 30 p ~ , worshtp servic~ . 10: 45 a.m,
Unseyvllle, Ky. and Dr. and Methodist Church was 118. mornmg
worsh1p, 10·30; junior Wednesday M td-Week Serv1ce , evening worsh 1p atternat1ng
Mrs. Robert Lich, Jr ., Offering from all services was soc iety, 6:.30 p .m NYPS. 6.45 Sunday School Supermtendent, Wtth C E. at 7:30 p m on
p m
sunday evange listic
Gera~d Wel ls . Pa stor , Rev
Sunday . Prayer meettng , 7:30
Louioville, Ky.
p .m . Wednesday . Alfred Wolfe,
$209.55. Mr . Joe Struble , meeting , 7.30 p.m Prayer Morr.s M . Wolle
Family Recreation
Bakers of Hoi sum Bread
, 7 30p m .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST lay leader .
Those who called on Mrs. Pomeroy, was guest speaker meet1ng, Wednesday
Swimming, Camping
MEIGS
Edward B. FtScher, pa stor
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
Middleport, Ohio
Murl Galaway were her for morning service. His topic
COOPERATIVE
mterl m :
Ronnie
Salser, Coolville RD. Rev . Roy Deeter,
PARISH
Sunday Sc hool supt , Sunday pastor Sunday school, 9·30
grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. was on drugs.
THE UNITED
sc hool , 9 30 am., mornmg am., worship service, 10 : 30
John Woodrum and children,
METHODIST CHURCH
worship 10 45 a m ; sunday a m. 'Bible study and prayer
1
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
Robert R. Cud
ev en ing worship , 7.30 p .m servtce , Wednesday, 7.30 p.m .
Albany, and Mr. and Mrs. McConnelsville attended
•
Director
Wednesday e"Veing Bibl e study ,
R UTL NRUDTFLIARNSTD B
POMEROY CLUSTER
7 30 p m
A
APTIST
Eddie Clemono, McArthur.
Pomeroy-Member FDIC &amp;
morning services at. the local
Rev. Robert R. Card
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev
Samuel Jackson.
Chester, Ohio
Federal Reserve System
Mr. and Mrs. Chester church.
Rev. F . Stanten Smith
Rev
Lawrence Sullivan , pastor . Sunday School, 10 am ;
CHESTER - worship 9. 15 pa stor Sunday School 9:30 Mrs Gertru~e Butler, supt .
Spencer and A. R. Caster of
The funeral of Mrs. Er- am
, Church School 10 a.m . am ; youth and 1Un 1or youth Prayer. servtce, 1.30 P m ;
Charleston, W. Va., were nestine Stump was held
ENTERPRISE - wor ship, 9 service , 6 .:IS p.m ,· even 1ng preachmg service. 2 p.m .
; Church School. 10 a.m . worship , 7 :30p .m ., prayer and
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Monday afternoon at the local am
FLATWOODS - worsh•p , 11
praise , Wednesday, 7 30 p .m . CHRIST - Kellh Wise, pastor .
Devoted to the Interest of The
Bakers of Good Bread
Walter Swett.
, Church School 10 a.m
SILVER
RUN
FREE SundaySct10ol,9 :30a .m ., V . H.
church with Rev . Robert amPOMEROY
Meigs &amp; Mason Area
wor ship
BAPTIST Rev Howard Braley , supt .; worship serviCe
Huntington. W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Jordan Buckley and Rev. William 10 30 am : Church
Pomeroy, O.
School9 . 15 Kimble, pastor . Sunday Sctlool, and communion , 10 30 am ,
10 am . ; Henry Dav 1s, supt , evening sery 1ce, 7 p m . ,
who have been at hi• em- Demoss officiating. Burial was am , UMYF 6: 30p .m
ROC I( SPRINGS - Worship even mg service, 7 30 p m Wednesday, S tb le study, 1 p.m .
ployment in Columbus, in the Rock Springs Cemetery. l Oam
, Church School 9 am ;
Prayer meeting, Thursday , Regular board meet ing, third
UMYF 6.Jll p m .
7 30 p m.
Saturday ea ch month. 1 p m
{For")erly Domlgansl
Mississippi, visited their
Bertha Parker was hostess
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
CHESTER CHURCH OF
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
New
Owner - Dick Sorgen!
parents, Mrs. Faye Jordan and Thursday evening to thirteen
Rev . Robert Bumgarner
GOD Rev . James Sat CHURCH The Rev . Lee
The Store With A Hearl
Old U. S. 33
Ph. 992-7735
Wor ship 10 :30 terfleld , pastor.Sundayschoot, Burnem, Pastor
Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Cottrill and members of the Laurel Cliff amHEATH
Racine
Ph. 949-3342
, Church School9 . 30a m , 9:30a .m.; worship service, 11 School 9 30 a.m.; Worship
Stop
In
and
See
Us
other relatives. They are Health Club. The club has dish UMYF 7 p.m
am , e vening serv ice , 7; serv1ce, 11 a. m . Wednesday
RUTLAND
Wor
ship
9
15
prayer
se
rvi
ce
and
youth
prayer
meet1ng
,
7.
30
p
m
enroute to North Carolina.
cloths to sell as a money am , Church School 10 a.m , service, Wednesday, 7 p m .
Sunday n1ght worship , 7· 30
\
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN P m
Mr.andMrs. Alfred Rice and making project. Games were UMYF 7 p.m
I
~ttADY
CO~
SALEM CENTER - Wor . CHURCH - RobertE Mu sser,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
son, Rick, and friend of played and winners were Polly Ship
9 a.m ., Church School 10 pastor Sunday School, 9 .30 THE NAZARENE Rev .
'
Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Columbus spent Sunday with Eichinger and Ruby Frick. am.; UMYF Thursday , 7 p.m . am : Robert Bobo , supt ; Lloyd D Grimm, Jr. , pastor
Phone 992-3284
Middleport
SYRACUSE CLUST~R
morn1ng
worship,
10 . 30 ; S und~y School. 9 :30 a . m . ,
Middleport, Ohio
Mrs. Rice's parents, Mr. and Refreshments were served.
Rev. Merrell Floyd
Sunday evening serv ice, 7 ·30 · Mornmg worshi p, 10 :30 a.m .,
ASBURY
Worsh•p
11
Mid
week
service.
Wednesday:
Young
people's
service,
6:45
Mrs. William Culwell. Mr. and
Mrs. Gladys Hendricks of am , Church School9 50 a.m .. 1 30 p .m
P m • l:vangelistic service ,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 7 30 p.m. Wednesday evening
Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan, Columbus and Miss Peggy WSC S. tsl Tuesday
FOREST RUN - WorSh ip 9 THE NAZARENE - Rev. M. serv1ce, 7·30 p .m.
Keith and Sarah Faye joined Russell ol Mexico visited a.m , Church School 10 a.m ; C Lar.more , pa stor Bob
MASON COUNTY
D.B.A. ANTHONY . ..
WSC S, Jrd Wednesday , 7 30 Moore , Sunday School Supt .
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
Middleport, Ohio
them for Sunday dinner.
Sunday with Mrs. Georgia p.m
PLUMBIN"and
HEATING
Sunday School. classes tor all George Casto , pa stor Sunday
'
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Harrison Diehl.
MINERSVILLE - Worship ages, 9 : 30 am . ; morning School , 9 30 , evening worship ,
337 N. 2nd Middleport 992-3!·SO
10 a m ; Church Sc hool 9 a.m .; wor ship , 10 .-45; NYPS sunday , 7 .30. Thursday evening prayer
and family of Stoutsville were
Mrs. Dora Halley is able to WSCS
, Jrd Monday, 7. 30 p m . 6.JOp .m , evangelistic serv 1ce service, 7· 30 p .m.
weekend guests of her parents, be out and attend church
SYRACUSE
Church Sunday , 7 30 p m Mid week
MASON FIRST BAPTIST 9 am . , worship ser - prayer meeting , Wednesday , Second and Pomeroy Sts ., Stan
Mr. and Mrs. William Cheadle services after her recent schooL
CATALOGUE STORE
v 1ce , 1 30p .m
7.30pm ; M iss ionary meet ing , Craig , pastor . Sunday school,
'
and called on her brother and illness.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
second Wednesday , 7:30 p m
9:"5 am . ; _worsh1p service , 11
116 W. Main
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Charles
R.
Sheets
Ph.
992-7590
Rev . FrankCheesebrew
UNITED
FAITH
NON · am . tram1ng union, 6:30
sister-in-Jaw, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Story of
106 Court St. Pomeroy 992-3001
'
DENOMINATION4L - Rev
P m . , evening worship service,
Free Estimates . Guaranteed Installation
Rev . Martha Ann Mattner
Rev . Howard Shiveley
Robert Smith, pastor sunday 7.30 P m Mld ·week prayer
Cheadle and family .
Columbus is having a home
,.
BETHANY c Dorcas)
school , 9 30a .m. , class leader, serv ice, Wednesd ay , 7 30 p .m .
Mr. and Mrs. William Miller built on Mrs. Story's parents' Wor ship, 9: 30 •a m .; Church Leo Hill, worship service,
FAIRVIEW
a I aLE
hool 10 JO am
10 30 a m , church , 7:30 p .m . CHURCH - Letart Route 1, the
are announcing the marriage farm, Mr. and Mrs. Norman ScCARMEL
Worsh ip, 11
E 0 E N
U N 1 T E D Rev
Sian Crolg. paslor
I
Nationwide insurance Co. of Columbus, 0.
of their daughter, Connie Sue, Schaefer.
a.m . ; 1st and 3rd Sun days; BRETHREN IN CHRIST Su nday schOOl 9: 30 a.m .;
Meats
and
Groceries
SchooL 10 a .m .
Eldon R Blake , pa stor Sunday prayer and Bible study, 7: 30
to Daniel Joseph Akers, son of
Mro. M. A. Howell of Church
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
APPLE GROVE - wor st-lip , School , 10 am .. Winnie p.m Cottage prayer service,
Syracuse
· 992-3986
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Akers, Columbus spent several days 7 30 p m first and third Sun Hol si ng er, Supt Morning Tuesday, 10 am . , worship
992-2318
Ph
.
days . Church school, 9 30 sermon , II a .m .. Evenmg serv1ce, Friday, 7 30 p.m .
Albany, at Greenup, Ky. A with her mother, Mrs. Nancy am
; prayer meel1ng. first serv ice Christ ian Endeavor,
MASON
CHURCH
OF
7. 30
p m ;
Mrs
Lyda CHRIST - Worship 10 a .m ;
wedding show"r and dinner Walker and family and her Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
EAST LETART - worship, Chevalier, pr esi dent . song Bible study , 11 : 15 a . m .;
were held in their honor at the daughter and son-in-law, Mr .· 7 JO p m , second and fourlh ser"Vice and sermon , 8:20 Mid · ev.entng worship, 7:30 p.m ;
Authorized Catalog Merchant
Sun days, church sctlooi, 9:30 Week prayer meeting Wed . M1d -week service, Wednesday,
home of the bridegroom's . and Mrs. Will and family.
Furniture and Appliances
am , . prayer meeting , third nesday, 7. 30 p.m Mrs Marie 1 30 p.m .
·
Louis W. Osborne
parents. They are making their
Ph. 985-3308
Chester ~
Wednesday . 7 30 p.m .
Holsmger, class leader . '
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
220
E.
Main
Pomeroy Ph. 992·2178
GREA'T BEND - Worsh ip 11
CHURCH
OF
JESUS GOD - Second 51 .. M•son, W.
home in Plain City where he is
am ., ~ nd and "th Sundays , CHRIST - Located at Rutland Va . Ches!~r Tennant, pastor .
Attend the Church of Your Choice
employed.
on New Lima Road, next to Sunday schooL 10 am. ,
Church Sc hool. 10 am .
LETART FALLS - Worsh ip, For est Acre Park. Rev Ray mornmg worship , 11 a .m ,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly
' li.
10 a m , ctlur ch school. 9 a m , Rouse . pastor , Robert Musser, evangelistiC serv1ce, 7:30 p m .
•
I
J
Bible study , 7 30 p.m every Sunday Sctlool supt sunday
Btble study and prayer service,
and Bruce were in Columbus
Pomeroy
Church
and
Office
Supplies.
Gifts
scho'lt.
10
:
30
a.m
.;
worship
Wednesday,
7.
30
p
m
Phone
Tuesday.
A thought for the day:
where they consulted a doctor.
Ph. 992·3498
7 30 p.m Bible study, Wed · 773-5133
.
992-2641
•
Middleport
HARTFORD . CHURCH OF
They also called ton relatives American statesman Charles MORNING STAR - Worship nesday , 7· 30 p.m . Saturday
prayer service, 7·30 p.m.
CHRIST In Chrhtian Union Sumner said, 1'There is the 9: 30a .m. ; Church School 10 30 night
there.
H EM L 0 C K
G R 0 V E The Re"V . William Campbell ,
. m . , M1d Week Service , CHRISTIAN - Roger watson , pastor . Sunday school , 9· 30
t
Mr. and Mro. Ralph Frazier national flag . He must be cold, aWednesday
, B p m.
pastor , R:ay Wha ley, supt ,; am f James Hughes, supt .,
of Ga.llipolis visited her indeed, who can look upon its MORSE CHAPEL - Wor . Mornmg worship, 9.30 am ., even1n,o service, 7.30 p m .
Bulova Watches &amp; Service
100 Years In Pomeroy
11 am , 1st and 3rd church sctlool , 10 30 a.m..
Wedn.esday evening prayer
mother, Mrs. Goldie Gillogly folds rippling in the breeze ship
Sundays , Church School, 10 young people 's meeting , 6: 30 meettng, 7: 30 P m Youth
186 N. Second · ~
Middleport
Kermit Walton
without pride of country."
prayer service eacH Tuesday
and other relatives hen

1\ LEETLE
COWBOY ·
Al"J' tj\JJUN,TI\TER?

~T----~~rf~~~~~~r=~~~~~;:;;
:

•

l
we't:&gt; BE1'110R

PUL.t: HIM 0'/E~

ANt:&gt; CHeGK
J.liM OUT.

.4

:

Carpenter

??-tT'SMAH

LI'L ENGLISH
F~E.ND

FUM

TH'PLANE!!

I'MAN -ER-WAITE.R
HE.RE. WHAT
WOULD'/CXJ
LIKE FOR

DINNER?

AH'I..L BEGIN WIF A
DOZI':N PO'K CJ-\OP5

-AH'i..L THINK 0'
11-1' MAIN DISH
LATER-

HA1M-

PORK

,5-MINUTE.S .. IO MINUTES--IS···
WATOI THE. SHIN'/ WATCH····

CHOP$

1

WILL
TAKE
ABOUT-·

News, Event

,.
:

~:;~~~~!::~~~:~!:~~~ la~r~~e;~:~tre:e::~i~~~~o~

I

p

rr~HALlTHANK

HEAVENS WE'VE
FOUND HIM I

I BETCHA 1HIS
KEEP TMI!M U\.

IN VlinEG f'tJR

nM'I!',

~\

. I

·r

THE ATHENtlOU.N'TY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

:d ::~~~s.

Laurel Cliff

SUNDAY liMES-SENTINEL

LODWICK'S MARKET

'

'

' ' :i .,.;

:
:' 1

~~,

1' 1,

News Notes

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

MARK VSTORE

ROYAL OAK PARK

AU. WEATHER ROOFING
MD OONSTRUCTION CO.

MUNTGJMERY WARD

12. Triangu.
lar patch
13. Appear
11. Emmet
15. Hawaiiari
garland
18. ~~Three"

In Napoli
17. lllost am·
tocratlc
lf.Prot..
tant
denomination
(abbr.)
20. First-rate
(hyph.
wd.)

' CARPET-LAND, INC.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

SADIE'S MARKET

:
••

'

l

SEARS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

o.

MIDDLPORT BOOK STORE

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

·-------------+-------~==~ ·
. . F. J. WAJ! ACEI JEWELERS .
·' NEW YORK ClDTHING HOUSE
Sales

'-

Yulenla1'1 ~ploquote: WHO REilEMBEKS WHEN WE
USED TO REST ON SUNDAYS INSTEAD OF IIONDAYStlllN HUBBARD
.
(C lt7S Xlnr Featuroa,SJndlcalo,lne.)

39. One-horse
carriage
U. Sonny's
partner
DOWN
1..Utah city
2. Unlv. of
Maine site
3. Famous
columnist
and father
of7Down
(2 wds.)
4. Corrida
shout
5. Send back
payment
6. Pay dirt
7. Famous
songwriter
(2wds.)
8. Etch
10. Gaggle's
membership

I

MAY., WHAI
Af..t. 'IOU
[)OIN61

-

JJWJdilJ:G•a.~!=!!:!-'c
U..........,leth•f-Jumblu,

one leiter to e..h oquare, to

form four ordlnar1 wonlo.

Soo! Noohlov
to Ill

I 'I,I

I

Yesterday's AntWer

11. More
precipitous
15. Unaspl·
rated
conso·
nant
18. Know!·
edge
Zl. Hurl
22. Sadat's

predece~·

sor
Soars

Z1.-in

.I

.

.~

noun

I

.

'

V~rbal

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

M&amp;R FOODLINER

J

wolf
5. Garment
9. Russian
---....: "--"---.. city

DICK'S GROCERY

MIX

•m

ACROSS

1. Timber

THE DAILY SENTINEL

RACINE FOOD MARKET

toe TIO, ... US. ht Off

6Lw.'6td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

GAUL S MARKET

HEINER'S BAKERY

GOEGLEIN

~ Ull.,. PlEA,

OHIO VAUEY BAKING CO.

THUARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

j

..

o'/te)gs~'".r"!!!~~~f&amp;h",.l'l,~'·'~'"': &lt;~~

(collapse l
2Z. Mother-ofpearl
24. American
snake
Ill. Tennis
star
:ee. Preos
forward
27. Health
resori
Z8. New
Mexico
city
(2 wds.)
31. Knightly
title .
32. Nigerian
city
33. Turmeric
st. Pencil top
31. Chirped
31. Withdraw

24. Old
Norse
poem
26. Chaplain
28. Run-down
29. What
ep~elsts

do
30. Athirst
35.-

biscuit
36. Part
a
min.

GERME

! I [)

I I I I I t]
DELIRB

!
I. I I _ ( J
SPOOPE

..
IT'S NOT t:IIFFICULT TO

PO THtN&amp;S WITH IT.
'.

Now.....,.. the eireted Iotter~

::::.,.u.;;~.::-~
:=I~:;....==..~=~-~.~~~~~~~~:::=::.:; [ 1 I I l

.' \
' I

.,

(A-wen ••••rr...-)

I

Jombleo&lt;

Yc..erdar'•

Anowen

CROAK TOXIN SLIIGH 1un11
'
•
S""""' IIJo• fW/11 momc-A TORCN SONG

••

'

• I

..,.-·
!J

'·

li

H
Jl
.I ..... ,.
~

38. u _

"

homon

t.'/\

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: .---E-S-&lt;:7-:-:-::-:--:-n
00
A X Y D L 1J A A X ll
""'"'""'M.&lt;lCH
1
II L 0 N G F B L L 0 W
One letter lilnply 1\ands for aaother. In this sample A,Is AllOUT
uaed for the three L'!, X for the two O's, etc. Sinsle !etten, 1HI~?
apostrophes, the lenllb and foi'IIIIUon of the wordJ are oil
blnta. Eaeh doy the eode !etten are dltlerent.

00

CitYPTOQUOTES

B T V B T · Y V, Y K T S L R R W T M A T E
YKT YBV BVHEY LFJTF Y, LVFE VGL-~KOSMFLYN-AOFUVBKTH MFR HVSMFYLI
W.VJT .- JIFRHT SMOHVLE
I

WE HAVE WHAT
I~

KNOWN A5
A CLOSE

., .q,
1
'.&lt;I' \!]

"

RELAnON~IP

,;

.t ~·

i~

"'

!i'

-.~· OJ
,, 1

1- ----'·[")..
l

\o1

• ' ''t II
I '

'.\116i

�I I

tr rr "" ... "' · ..

'

f I

I

I

..
•

•
11-Tbe Daily Bentlnel,~port..Pcmeroy,O.,March 1&amp;, 1973

'

f

~0 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 16, )97J

!Sentinel Clll$sifieds Get Action!' $entinel ~~IB:ssifieds ·. ·aJ~ .R.esultsl
I

WANT AQ&gt;
INFORMATION
iADIJINES ,
5 P.M ofy Before Publocatoon

1!

1.

,.

;

Monday

1
I=

Dead~in e

9 am

"H&amp;IL"

Can cella tion - Corrections "'

1

Will be a c t~pted untll9 am fo r
Day ot.Publt ca tt on

REGULATIONS

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING

Ttfe Publisher reser ves th e
'r ight to ed tt owe iect a ny ads
dee med
obtR't tona t
The
au bl l ~ e r will not be r espon sible

1

•lor more than ont .n corr ect
nsertlon

•

~

RATES

For Wal'lt Ad Serv tce

; 5 ce nts per Word one lnsertfo,
'
Mtntll'!Um Chf'! rge 75c
12 centt' per word three
con5ecutfve Insertion s.
18 cents per word stx con

$.

i

-secuttve insertion s
111 25 Per Cent Ot scount on pa,r
ads and ads paid w tfh in 10 d ay!"

1!11

:

CARD OF THANKS .

'

•

Sl

t.

&amp; OBITUARY
fm- s ~ word rhlntmJJm

so

Ea ch additiona l wor d 2c
1 BLIND ADS
Add ttlona l 2Sc Charg e pe

0

J

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
PlumbingElectrical Work •

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992·2448
Pomeroy,

Ad vert ise ment

OFFICE HOURS

8 30 am

to 5 OD p m Dally ,
30 a m
to 12.00 Noon
• Satwday
~

:8
••

J Card of Thanks
; I WOULD like lo thank Rev
iii

:
•

S
t
•

Lehman . all my fnend s and
neighbor s for the1r prayers,
cards and vis 1ts dunng m y

stay in the hosp1tal. a[so to
those who helped 1n an y way

•

o.

PUREBRED SALE - Sixth
Annual W Va Polled
Hereford Spring Show and
Sale, March 24, 1973 at
Jackson Mills State 4 H
Camp Selling 34 bulls and 18
heifers

For

1nformat1on

write, Jim Westfall. Rt 2, Box
115, Spencer, W Va or ca ll
927 2104
3 12 Sic

REVIVAL st111 '" progress at
Charlotte Van th e Rutland Commun1ty
Church at 7· 30 p.m. each
3 16 ltc
evening with Rev. Amos
Tillis. Rebersburg, Pa .• the

Th1s IS deeply appreciated

:
!

Thank you
Meter

•

I

PUBLIC NOTICES

... Your Right to Know
and be tnform ed of the fun ctiOn ~ of your governm ent CJ r e
e;mbod 1ed tn public not1ces In '
tha t ~e lf gov ernm ent charges
.. .all Cit izens to be tnformed ,
th1S newspap er urges eVery
cit•zen to read and study these
• not ices we strongly adv ise
' those Clt tzens , seek ing further
•. mtorm at1on, to exer c1se their
nght of acce ss to public
"' rec ord s and publ 1c meetings

speaker
welcome

Everyone

1s

3 13 4tc

'" NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Case No . 201885
of Robert D. Cra1g ,

'b Estate

eceased.
·'" Notice Is hereby Ot ven that
Jean Cra ig, of 829 Page Stree t,
Middleport , Ohio, has been du ly
~ ppo i nted Adm •nt stratri x of the
.E"state of Robert 0
Crai g,
l!leceased . late of Metgs County ,
~h l o

Cr ed itors are r equ •red to fi le
their cl aim s with sa1d f ldUCtar y
!With in tour monthS
Dated th 1s 14 th day of Ma rc h

NEW sh1pment of hsh on sal e
SINGER automati c sewing
Fn day.
Mar ch
16th , 2 BEDROOM mobile home , mach1ne ; like new In walnut
compl etely furn is hed" cal l cab1net Makes design stlt·
Showalter's Wet Pet Shop,
992 2441 aft er 5 30 p.m 1
Chester , Oh10
ches. zlg.zags. buttonholes.
2 7 tfc blind hems, overca sts, etc., J
3·15 3tp
$85. Call Ravenswood. 273·
UNFURNI SHED 3 room 9S21 or 273 9893.
Auto Sales
1 11 tfc
apartment, A08 Spnng Ave,
--:-- -- - - - - 1972 HONDA 500 motorcycle, 4 Pomeroy
3·2·11c RIN GNE CK pheasants, eggs
cy lmder , m any ext ras, hke
and ch1 ck s in season , phone
new; phone 985 3828
3 9.tfc FURNI SHED house 1n Mid· 742·3656.
3·1J.6tp
dleport ; adults onl y, call
1968 GMC •;,.ton pickup truck, after 6 p.m. da1ly or anyt1me
HAY . J1m Mered1th. phone 992·
sen es 1500, V 8, standard
weekends 992·7791.
6860
tra nsmtss1on , wide bed, new
3·16·31c
3 13 6tp
t~r es, excell ent condlfton w1th
no ru st Phone 985.J5(Kl, Tom 2 BEDROOM mobile home. a1r·
FULLY electnc hosp1tal bed,
Hayman. Long Bottom. Ohio
condthoned , tn Racine area.
wheel cha1r and wal ker , all
3·13·61p phooe 992 6329
l1 ke new , used onl y a f ew
----J 16 tfc
months.
call992 3881 between
1966 CHEVROLET Impala. 4
00
and
5 00 or 992 313A aft er
4
door hardtop, V-8, automat1c, ONE bedroom apartment s,
6 pm
power steering , vinyl tr1m,
1deal for couples, phone 992·
3·1Htp
radio . blue finish. good 5248 or 992·3436
condition. must sell. $600.
3·14-6tc 2 PIECE trad1honalll v 1ng r oom
Phone 992 6280
sUite w1th 90" sofa and extra
- - - - ----:-:-3·_15_·_Jt"c r
high back Mr Chair , spec1al
GMC
Series
truck,
16
FOR
RENT
thiS week only $139 95, cash
1962
a nd
ca rry ,
Pom eroy
ft fl at bed , phone 9j9 os~
Recovery, 622 E Mam St.,
1 3
Pomeroy. phone 992-7~~~6.6tp
1958 VOLK SWAGEN good
body and mol or. pnce $300,
DON'T pump vour sluqq lsh
phone 742 6352
sept1c tank Get Kl ean.Em.
3 16 Jtc
All Sept1c Tank Cl ean er
Middleport, 0.
L andmark F arm Bureau ,
1969 FORD Ranger I ton F 350 ,
Pomeroy
w1th or w 1thout new 12 ft
1 Effocoency Apt. w1th new
3 16 ltc
factory sta ke body , 390
furniture.
all
util
ities
pa1d.
engtn e, l ong wh eel base ,
SIAMESE and Balmese k1ttens.
pow er
bra kes ,
power
excellent quality ; perfectly
2
FurniShed
Apt.s
with
new
steenng, rough tires , alf·
framed ; call614·446,4416 after
furn1ture,
with
or
w1thout
conditioned. 47.300 miles;
2 p m at Gallipolis.
uttl1t1es. Both have 1 or 2
Harold Brewer. Long Bottom,
3 16 6tc
bedrooms
No
Pets.
phone 985 3554.

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

!

KOSCOT KOSMETI CS AND
3 A tfc
WI GS SPECIALS MONTH· - - -- - - -LY
BROWN 'S
INDE 1970 MAVE RICK, 6 cylinder
PENDENT DISTRIBU
standard, low mileage, ex
TOR , MIDDLEPORT
cellent condlhon , 6newtlres.
PHONE 992·5113
new muffler; $1.395. ' 63
2 23 He
Dodge Station Wagon, wil l
pass Inspection , $250, phone
,.,--::.....,---:----'HOOD ' S AQUARIUMS , fish
992- 7523
3 13 4tc
and supplies , new location ,
Ash Street, Middleport near
1966 OLDS Toronado ; full
park , phone 992·5443.
power , a•r ·condihoned ; low
' 1·7·1fc
mil eage, phone 992·5367.
3·13·5tc
2 PIece tradillonaii1VIng room
su1te w1th 90" sofa and extra

h1qh back Mr Chair , special
th1s week only $139.50, cash
a nd

carry,

Pomeroy

Recovery . 622 E Ma1n St ,
Pomeroy. phone 992 7554
3 16 6tp

WILL MOW lawns'" Syracuse .
contac t Fl oyd Diddle or
brothers or call 992 5841 after
5 p m.

_ _ _ _ _ ___
3 _14 3tp

Business Opportunities
OWN your own bus1ness , 4 to 6
hours dally; small1nvestment
buys necessary 1nventory ,

call l-614·962 5397

3 11 10tc

Wanted To Buy
US ED parts for Fra1 zer Garden
Tra ctor , phone 985 3907,
Garth Sm1th , Long Bottom ,

I WILL not be responSibl e for
OhiO
1973
3 lA 31p
any debts contracted b{.
Manning D. Webster
anyone
other
than
mysel
.
Probate Judge of sa1d Court
Sign ed Jam es Edward 100 RAILROAD T1es, fatr to
(31 16, 23, 30, 3t c
Milliron, Rt 2. Racine, Oh1o
good c ondit1 on Phone 742·
3 14·31p 6825.
"
3·1S·6tp
PUBLI C NOTI CE
REDUCE,II excess.. fluids" w1th
- 81d1 will be recei ved by th e
Fluldex, Lose weight ' with 1
t'.E as ter n Lo ca l
Board of
Dex· A·Diet capsules at A LAWN roll er for a Gravely
~ ducatlon , to purchase on e 48
Tractor , ca ll Ray Williams,
Nelson Drugs
~ assenger sc hool bus , one 60
99
2-6686
3
14·3tp
~ ass enger school bus and one 66
3·13.6tp
:JIIa ss eng er school bu s unt il 12 00
..,oon Ar;~rll10 , at the offtee of the GUN SHOOT, also nile mat
c ler k at the E11stern H1gh
ches , open sites onl y and OL1..1 furn 11ure, oak tables,
'School
: Spec1t1ca t lons on f ile at the
Qff tee of th e Eastern H1gh
i ch oot
*'
C. 0 Newland, Clerk
%3 1 16 22. 30 . lA), 6, 41c

•
••

spec ial deer slug mat ch ,

Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Sunday, March 18th, 12 noon
3·15·3tc

I WILL NOT be responSi ble for
an y debt s contracted b{.

For Sale

For Rent

Pets For Sale

Notice

organs, dishes , clocks, brass

beds or complete households.
Write M D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy . Ohio Phone 992·
6271
1 7.tfc

-------

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS

and Nellie Pear ce to sall sty
I n Exec ut •on tn f avo r of
~ n l v er s it y V W
., Ter ms ol Sale Cash m hand
en da y of sa l e

•

!O BERT T HA RT ENB AC H.
~ E IGS

CO UNT Y

•

S HERIFF

t:" 16, 11

Here ford

A ss oc•at 1on

1s

selling 49 head Friday night,
March 30 at the Meigs Co
Fa i rgrounds For c atal ogs
wr ite Tina Jeff er s, Route 1.

Athen s. Oh io.

3 1S·3tp

••

VFW Shootmg Match, Broad
Run Rod and Gun Cl ub, New
11
Case No 20,877
Haven, W Va , starts at noon
11
Estate of Phoebe Amanda
Sunday, Marc h 18th Spon·
Clark , D e cea se d
sored by Post 9926, Mason. W
~ Not1 ce Is hereb y g1 ven t ha t
Va
worothy Cl ark of R D 3,
)' OTIC E OF APPOINTMENT

~ome r oy ,
IPr;~o l nl e d

Oh io has been duly
Admin istratr ix of the
( state of Phoeb e Amanda
i lar k., deceased, l!!llte of Meigs

! ounty , OhiO

NOTICE 0~ APPLICATION

Publi c noti ce is her ebv g1ven

that Zer kle Truck ing Compan y

Creditor s are r equ ir ed to ftle has f ile d w i th th e Publ i c
f.e1r cl!!lltm s with sa id f 1du c1ary Util lt1es Commi ssion of Oh1o an
appt .ca1ton to am end contr ac t
w it hin faur months
• Dat ed th is 27t h day of m otor carr 1er perm it No 744 by
add tng the foltow1ng Shipp er
l ebruary , 1973
•
. c o r p or at i On ,
•
Manning 0 Webster A m s t ar
•
Judge Ph ll ade l phta , Penn sylva n i a ,
us ing th e foll owmg eq utpmen t
CJ I 2, 9. 16. 31c •
•
tors and 8 traders
T-------------4 6 trInac
ter ested p1!11 r t 1es ma y obt a1n
fur t her mformat 1on as to sa 1d
application by ad dr ess •ng t he
Public Uf tl lft es Comm1SS 1on of
Oh 1o, Columbus , Oh1o
Zerkle Truck i ng Comp any
:
Universal Religion
34 Rac e Str eet
: The Christian Science re·
Middleport. 0 ~10 45760
Ugwn was formally estab· 131 9 16 13 31c

••
••
•

l

shed m Boston m 1879. It
ow ha s more th an 3,200
ranches m 48 cou ntnes In
accordance w1th th e r ule of
Ole church, it does not pub·
h membership stal!stlcs.
t is known to hav e several
ndred thousand a dherents

~

We talk to vou
like a person• .

..

ON YOUR DIAL
•
'

.

~1.00

Per Ton

DELIVERED
TO

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
36"x23"x.009

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES
--

20' .
'a
The
Daily Sentinel
Court St

Pomeroy

, ,

'Business ·Sertices
experience

in

homes in Meogs County.

From the lar~est
Bulldozer Radiator
lest Heater Core.
' Nathan Biggs •
Radoator Specla!l" .

SUPPLI~S

OFFICE

and

FURNITURE-

Stop In and See Our
,Floor Display.

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cance lled'
Lost
your
nperator 's license? Call 992

6 i5 ttc
WILL trim or cut trees , clean
out basements, attiCS, etc

Phone 949·3221

69 Olds 88 H.T. Sed., v-roof &amp; air ·----'1395

PRE·FABRICATED

68 Pontiac Bonneville 4 Dr., air ·-----11395
68 Ford Gal. 500 4 Door, air ______ Jl095

WOOD TRUSSES

- GUARANTEE[)....,
Phon~ 992·2094

But It to Your 'Specs'
Delivered to Job Site

.Pomer111 Home &amp; Auto

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

oj,enBTol5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E.l'ain, Pomeroy, 0 .

serv1ce, all makes. 992 2284

monogram s, and blind hem

st1tch Full cash price $38 50 UPHOLSTERY material s,
Nylon pnnts, cotton prmts,
or budget plan ava ilable
Electro Hyg iene Co Phone vel vets of all k1nd s Pomeroy

,-. Atr Conditioners
•Awnmgs
'• Underoinning
Complete
C.~rvice

mQb lle

MATERIALS CO.
773.5554
Mason, W.Va.

.

HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
985 3529

CLELAND
REALTY

..... plus g lgant1 c

l!'lO Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.. ·,
.
O:ASH pa1d for all makes and
model s of mob ile homes .
Phone area code 61H2J.9531
4 13 ttc

2 NEW 3 bedroom homes, 1 w1lh
basement, 1 without. 2 car

garages, I acre lots. located
at Rock Spnngs behind Meigs
Co Fairground. Will trade or
help finance ; also 5 good
bu ilding lots, water and
disposal installed , Charles H
Cornell, Athens, 593 7034 or
593 5667 or 992.7613.

sew tng
machine,
th1s
mach 1ne 1s a dress maker

model Will sell for small
balance of $36 50 or pay 55 per
month Call 992·5331.
3·1Htc

CLOV ER hay and mixed hay .
phone 985 3930 or 992 6873
3 14 3tp

Broker

608 E . M11n

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Real Estate For Sale

J UST taken 1n 1973 zig zag

Teaford, Sr.

hQme

Pomeroy

110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

33 ACRES

Rutland Rt. 1 und er

f en ce

12 acres

NEW LISTING
RIV ER FRONTAGE - 4
~drooms , 2 baths, gas fur
na ce. full basement Front and
back porches. Asking $11,000 00
BUT LET' S TALK
MIDOLEPOAT
4
BEDROOMS
Nice

acres

12

hllable Bal light woods.
Some bu1ldmgs 3 bedroo ll'\
hom e, new bath, new kit·
chen,

new

FA

furna ce .

Paneling Enclosed pat1o
Cellar 114.500.00.
COLONIAL
Pomeroy. Close to shopp1ng
Bea ut iful
k1t chen,
4
bedro oms.
2
baths ,
ba se ment.

3 14-6tc

Virgil B.

6·ll ·HC

uosplay of mobile homes
always avallable•at ..

Porc hes

aluminum

sidinQ .

Fenced

yard .
basement,
stoker
furna ce. Asking only $7,500.00.
PARK IT HERE
TRAILER SPOT - S2500 00
and 97 acres with gas well All
m1nerals 516,500 00 for all
NEW HOME
3 BEDROOMS- N1ce kitchen.
d1n ing. utility room. Chester
Township $16,000.00 or we' ll
negotiate
NEAR TOWN
' I!E CROOMS - Nearly an
acre of land. Full basement ·
Oa ~ floors $12,000 00 Maybe

Ga s

F A hea t Carpeted. GOOD
CONDITION. $17.500.00.
RACINE
Beautiful 2 story home All
new k itchen, 5 bedrooms l lf2

ba ths, ha rdwood floors .
basement . Garage and other
bulldongs. Beautliul lot
$17.000 00
10 ACRES
Mostly level Just off Rt. 33
Building s Home ha s 3
bedrooms, bath, dining R.•
new F A furnace and hot
wat er tank. Good blacktop
road $8.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT
Lar ge 5 bedroom hom e.
Close to shopping. Ni ce
kitchen, d1nlng R • 1'12 baths,
2 glassed porches Garage

less.

POMEROY
4 BEDROOMS - Nice modern
kltc'hen Full basement with·
s ho~ er , full bath up A lovely
ho ~e for only $11 ,500.00
YOU SAID IT
LA GE BRICK - 7 rooms,
bath, large basement. large
fron1 porch. garage for several
cars. 2 acres of land Reduced
to Slf,ooo oo.

BULL - half Charolals and half
Angus ; Roger Ritchi e, 1»7· 42" KELVINA TOR Electn c
Range , $100, l1ke new; contact
3882
1
Ray Laudermolt, Mason, W
3 14 3tp
Va , or phone 773·5613.
Open Saturdays
3 11 ·6lc
Y.ODERN Wal nut Console, AM
11 26·1fc ' and ca rport In good con from 8 a.m. to J:JO p.m.
FM rad1o, 4 speed automatiC
dillon. $12.800 00
On Old Rt. 33
changer. 4 speaker sound ONE 3 year old registered 3 BEDROOMhome, ll vlng room
RENTALS&amp; STORAGE
Phone 992-2689
sy ste m , separate cont ro ls
Suffolk ram ; $50; phone 949· and dtntng room carpeted. Pomeroy - Several lots. Out
WE HAV E THE PROPERTY,
Balan ce S78 50. Use ou r
3073
Pomeroy, Ohio
New forced air f urnace .
of flood s. On paved street
budget term s. Cal l 992·7085
3·11 6tc Lmcoln Hill. Pomeroy, phone All utll1t1 es
Sewage . WOI)~D' LIKE TO MEET
3·15·6tc
SOM~ON E
WITH
THE
992·2071.
$8,200
00
DE AD Stock horses, cattle,
MQNI:Y.
3·6·12tc
Shoes 7 styles on sale
HENRY E. CLELAND
hogs. sheep Reasonable MAPLE stereo radio com KNAPP
HELEN L. TEAFORD
In
March;
Bob
Hysell
.
992·
BROKER
bination, AM·FM radio. 4 5324.
cha rge Call 245·551 4.
8
ACRES
Good
build
ing
site
or
992·2259
2·28·3otc speakers , 4 speed changer.
?qR·~~~o~·~X~:~o~D
3·9 tic trailer lots. On Rt. 143 Phone
dual volume control . Balance
If
no
an
swer 992·2568
NOISUNDAY
SHOWINGS
992·3640
after
5
30
p.
m.
-:------:-:--,--$81 .19. Use our budget te rms.
or 985·4209
:
.
992·3325
3·15·6tc
CORN
.
phone
985·4211
Call 992 7085
992-361S
J.9·12tc --...,.-- - - - -3 15·61c
FOR
SALE
by
owner.
3
bedroom home. total electric,
Big Copoclty
1 72 ACRE LOT Phone 742·3656. r
Licensed Oh1o
full size basement, 1'12 baths,
MIY.III
3·15-2tp
Bill's Army-Navy
Properly &amp; Casualty
extra 75 x 100 lot whiCh joins
Automatl~~:s
property. Excellent condit ion
2 'Peed operation .
Surplus and
THE PROVEN Carpet cleaner
Insurance Agent
Priced LOW. New Haven, call 1
Choic e of water
Blue Lustre Is easy on the
Department Store
882 2762
.
t emps
Auto .
An mdependent msurance
budget Restores forgotten
wat e r
level
3·11·6lc
agency In Pom er oy, needs
colors Rent electric sham·
cont r" ol
Lint ~
as North Court 51.
someone w1 th li cense as
pooer$1 . Nelson's Drug Store,
Filter or Power
HOUSE by owne r, 3 or 4
Athen•, Ohio
1unl or par t ner and f uture
Pomeroy , Oh10
Fin Agltalor
bedrooms, large rec. room ,
sale to right party. If you
3·15·2tc
P•rma· Prtst
large patio, modern kitchen,
want to own an msurance
Moytoo
fully carpeted ; cal) 992·5248
ag ency. wr ite. gi ving 71 MODEL 350 Honda. one Hours : 9 to 5:30 dally e•cept
Halo of Htlt
•
until
3
p.m.
or
992·3436
after
3
quarter horse; phone 992 3283 Monday &amp; Friday to 9 p.m,
res4 me to Box 666 , Pomer oy,
Drytrs
• ~
p m.; No Sunday Call"
3 15·3lc This Sunday 12 noon to 5:30
Surround· clothes'
0 45769
3 IHtc
with untie, e~ en
tor your convenience .
ONE Registered Charolals bull.
he~t . No hOISpola, · '
3 vears old Phone 992.3640 Sleeping bags. regularly
no ovtrd.r:VIng .. •
For Rent
5 ROoM house, one third acre
Fine Mesh' Lin ~ ,
after 5 30 p. m.
ground , gas heat , basement ,
95, now S7.95 , Electncal
'F liter.
/:
'}'1r
;:
3 ANO ' ROOM furnished and
3 15 6tc S9
good
loc~
t1on
for
trailers
;
S.
toolsas low as$10.95; Wright
Wolpocloltu
tn
'
unfurni shed apartm ents.
D. Busk trk, 341 Page St.,
. MAYUG •
Phone 992·5434
BOAT, motor, troller with some tools 10 pet. off; Llncolh
Middleport, Ohio.
Welders
$92.50.
Corduroy
&amp;
~td Corpot
.
4 12 tfc accessories. good condition,
Service .
Oenlm
Jeans
S4
91
&amp;
$5.95
,
8
~~~~--~3~·
l~~p
no windshield , AO h p motor.
track
tapes
·
hit
tunes,
$2.91
;
TRAIL ER , Brown's Trailer
Ask1ng SJOO Phone 992·9981or
LOTS on Wnght St., phone 742·
specials on cloth ing and
Park , phooe 9~2 ·3324
992·7375.
1»30
3·15 Jtc snoes.
2·13 ttc
-----------~c -~74_1- 42_1~1,~~-~k~-~--~_Gr
__a~~-r--LR=~~I=I~~~

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

- ----

RUTLAND
7

'

l

&gt;

BD.L

'

I

68 Dod" PQI. 4 Door H.T. ·-------- '795
67 Dodge Dart 4 Dr., V-8 auto.------ '795
67 Olds 98 Town Sed., power &amp; air·--- '995
1595
·,66 Pontiac ,Catalina 4
66 Buick LaSabre 4 Door, air------· '695
64 Rambler 4 Dr., 6 cyl., auto.------ '195
63 Mercury 4 Dr., V-8 auto. --------'100

Door--·------

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
992-5342

GMAC FINANCING

SMITH NELSON MOTORS,

POMEROY

CEWARD
CALVERT
992 ·2174

ByMra.HerbertRousb
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Corn·
_ __ :.._.,
· _ __::.
• _...,. well, Mrs. Jean Fisher of
Gallipolis and Mrs. Bernard
Diddle of Racine visited Frtday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donohew
spent the weekend with
relatives
m Colwnbus.
1
1968 CAMARO CONV.
$1695
Mrs. Earl Adams spent a
V 8 motor . auto trans .• P S. , and w-w t~res, r adio, ni ce
weekend
with her daughter,
ye llow finish with vin yl Interior.
Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
1969CHEV BIS4DR.
5199
McLaughlm at Columbus and
V·8 eng1ne, automatic trans., power steer ing &amp; brakes,
' helped Mrs . McLaughlin
, oOd tires, green tlnlsh with match1ng 1nterlor . Book
1
alue $1150 00 Early Bird Special
celelrate her birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex O'Brien of
1967 FORO I,.JD
$695
11 '' aT Sedan. V·8 engine, autdmatrc trans., P. steering &amp; · S,t,wa,t,spentSunday wlth.Mr.
brakes.-rodto, blue fini sh, blk . ,vinyl top, good tires. rodlp
and Mrs. ·Larry O~rlen'
Special!!!
~
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Gerald Hayman and
Keith were Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Hayman and family of
Westerville, Mr. and Mrs.
OPEN EVES • .lO P.M.
Gene
Jewell and children of
.,PMER01', OHIO
.
Letart, w. Va., Route, Mrs.
Robert Hart and Beverly and
friend, Allen Cunningham, of
Racine.
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mr . and Mrs. Terry Roush or
Darcy Potter of Bryan, Ohio;
Thirteen members were Mrs. Elsie Deiley and Mr. and Greensboro, N. C., visited the
present for the Esther Mrs . Clarence Deiley of former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Vir gil Roush Wednesday
Missionary Society at the home Coraopolis, Pa.
of Mrs. Grella Simpson
Mrs. carolyn Adams is a through Monday enroute to
Monday evening, March 12. patient in Veterans Memonal Langdon, N. D. where Mr.
Roush was transferred by the
The program was presented by Hospital.
Mrs. Lillian Hayman. During
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Krider Western Electric Company.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manuel
the feUowship hour, refresh- of Columbus were weekend
ments were served.
guests of Mrs. Grace Krider. and daughter, Angle, of 1\acirie
Mrs. Florence Matthews of ' were Sunday dinner guests of
A large number of friends
attended the funeral of Mrs. Marietta Is visiting her son·m· Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush.
Mrs Jim Roush of Letart is
Lovey Sayre at the Fll'st law and daughter, Mr. and
Baptist Church. Relatives Mrs. Bob Warden and ramlly. staying with Mr. and Mra.
Erwin Gloeckner wbUe her
coming were Mr.. and Mrs.
husband Is •a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Georgia Russell and
Mrs . Dorothy Grimes of
Newark, Mrs. Jerry Shane and
Mrs. Jimmy Shane and two
children of Gallipolis visited
Mr, and Mrs. Bill Fox.
Victor and Thomas Wolfe of
Racine were recent guests of
their mother, Mrs. Eula Wolfe
., .and
Aaron.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Beegle and
,Zane and Tracy of Racine and
Early Roush were dinner
guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Buck.
'
Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Mrs.
Mickey Hoback were shopping
in Point Pleasant on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Douglas
and friends of Columbus spent
1
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Adams.
. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Orr of
COlumbus spent Saturday
evaning with Mrs. Iva Orr.
Dan ThOmpson
Mrs. Golda Wyant and
The Dealln' Man
•
daughter, Mary Margaret, of
Harrisonville visited Sunday
·.
70xl4 Hillcrest
60xl4 Hillcrest
with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hunt.
Custom del Uxe model wlttl
1973 model cu stom delu xe.
Thomas and Larry Spangler
~ bedrooms, central air,
front den: 2 B.R , total
bir
ch
paneling,
fully
of Pennsylvania visited
electric , 3 ton central air .
carpeted , private k1tchen
birch plnellng, full car
Monday with Mr. and Mrs.and dining, save $1 .000
peted with double pad.
now
Arilold Hupp and sons.
• frost -free refr igerator
•
Mra. Loul~e Jones of
Was
Was
51,995
NOW
Hlllaboro,
W. Va.,Mr. and Mrs.
$10,595 NOW
Leo Wiggington of St. Albans,
W.Va., spent a week with Mr.
·. UP T,O t2· YR. FINANCING .
Jess Ander110n and visited their
mother, Mrs. JessAndei'BOn, at
Holzer Hospital where she Is a
patient.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis Green
and family of Albany visited
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
586 Locust . 992-7004 Middleport
Mrs . Roy Buck. Weekend
Open' to 6 Mon: thru Sat.
guests of the Bucks were their
daughter, Pam, and ber

PoMeroy
Motor Co.

~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Racine Social Events

'

TWO .SUPER BUYS

HILLCREST

Custom Deluxe .

HOMES

Priced S,.c:lall

.
'9595

$159500

.

'7995

·1

Reedsville United Methodist
Women met with Mrs. Ruth
Dillon ror its March meeting.
Devotions conducted by Mrs.
Mamie Buckley used the
World Day of Prayer topic
"Alerl in Our Time." Prayer
and readings were given by all.
Dues were collected and the
offering se11t to the World Day
of Prayer. Members voted to
Invite the district secretary of
missions to the next meeting. A
game was played and priZe
awarded. Refreslunents were
served to Mrs. Nell Wilson,
Mrs Viv111n Hwnphrey, Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel, Mrs. Fame
J!hu:tlngllr:..~;. ,guest,.. Mrs .
Lillian Pickens and guests Tim
and Scott Dillon. Mrs. Riebel
was awarded the door prize.
The April meeting will he with
Mrs. VIvian Hwnphrey.
Mr. and Mrs. Ohs Casto
visited with Mrs. Moody
Chancey at Ripley, W. Va.,
recently.
Mr . and Mrs. Lowell
Chevalier and fam1ly of
Mansfield spent the weekend
With his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Chevalier.
Darrel Henderson spent a
weekend with his grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Henderson of Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Ki~ble of
Parkersburg, W Va ., v1sited
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs.
John Hetzer and Mr. and Mrs.
R. E. Williams.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Casto were Nellie
Perkins, Margie Perkins and
Mrs. Cody Dyer of Charleston,
Mike and Hilda Frederick of
Minersville, Letta Spencer of
Syracuse, Mr. DIU of Mid·
dleport, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
SeUers of Colwnbus and Mr.
and Mrs. Dwain Casto of
Portland . ·
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Plckell8 were Mr.
and Mrs. R. E. Wiliams, Mr.
and Mrs. Lyle Balderson and
Kay and Kim Reed.
-Mrs. Lyle Balderson

LEWIS RESIGNS
KITTRElL, N.C. (UP!)
Head basketbaU Coach Joseph
F Lewis has resigned from
KittreU CoUege to accept the
post of assistant dltector of
correctldns In Riclunond, Va.,
It was 81UlounCed today.
Lewis, 38, came here two
years ago after coaching 13
years in a high school In Appomattox, Va. He was voted
coach ' of the year in the
Cavalier-Tar Heel Confer~ce
of whiCh his team was cochampion.
roo11l018te Ann Etchherger of
Oh10 University, Athens.
Mrs. Raymond Proffitt, Mrs.
Marshall Ad81!18, Mra . Larry
O'Brien and daughters, Linda
and Carol, Mrs . Herbert
RouBh, Mrs. Erwin Glpeckner,
Mrs. Mike Hill and daughter,
Dolly; Mrs. Joyce Quillen, Mrs.
Joey Proffitt and son, and Mrs.
Floyd Norris attended a
wedlllng shower for Mr. and
Ml'll. ~ack Hall at the home of
his "p8rents.&gt;Mr. and Mra. Jay
Hall, at Oleahlre on ~( .y
~fll'llna

Now s3795oo
1970LEMANS
Pontiac

Now s219500

2 dr. Hdtp.
Fully Equipped
Was $2595.00

Now $239500
1950 Ford

1h Ton Pickup
0

41 ,000 ACTUAL
MILES
ONLY

3!4 Ton Pickup
Flat Bed
4 Speed
Good Truck

$159500
EXCELLENT SHAPE

This Weeks Service Departments Special! A Free Oil Change and Lube,

INC~

News, Events . News, N~tes

Open Evenings Untii6:0o-Til5p.m. Sat.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

4-Wheel Drive
MUST SEE THIS
ON!;

(Oil Filter Not Included) With Every Major Engine Tune Up!

POMEROY, OHIO
BOB
AT
- SALE5-DAUGHERTY
992-2175
500 E. Main

Apple Grove Reedsville

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Busl.ness"

1967 International
Carry-All

SOHIO CREDIT
CARDS HONORED

..

MODEL-J
A.T .• p.s .• A-C. p.w.
Was $2395.00

1968 Ford

Now s2795

•

Granville
2 dr . Hdtp .
Fully Equipped
Was $3995.00

SHARP!

00

AVAILABLE

68 Chevelle 2 Dr. H.T., V-8, auto., P.S.·--'1495

.

SEWING MACHINES Repai r,

•

1969 Pontiac

Bonneville
4 dr , Hdtp .
Fully Equipped
Was $2895.00

EASY
GMAC
FINANCING

' 1971 Pontiac

Gran-Prix

Now $399500
1970 Pontiac

Refuse"!

'

On Most Amencan Can

3·11 ·30tc
PAIN TING. Masonry work ;
free est1mate . call 773·5580.
3·7 30tp

Can't

70 C'adllac Sed. DeVile, power, air---- 4000
70 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, full power, air--'2995
69 ;Falcon 4 Door, 6 cyl., Std. -------.1895
'
.
69,,Qids 88 H.T. Sedan, full pow., air---·'1595
69 .MertUIJ Molltego 4 Door, V-8, auto.-- $1395

ASK US ABOUT''

EXPERT
-.
'Wheel Alignmen~
' '5.55
.

2966

'

1

SM1JH__NELSON
MOTOR~ -Pomeroy
INC. ·
99X-1174

I

Electra 225
4 Dr. Hdtp ;
Fully Equiped
Was $4195.00

Offer You

). 72. Cadillac Cpe. DeV~Ie, C.C. air ·----·'illlil

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

'

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING AND
.CQNSTRUCilON
PHONE~ 992-2550

USED CARS

I

building

1971 Buick ;

"I'm Gonna Make You An

POMEROY
' HOME &amp; AUlO

Have your homo buiH by
Custom Builders . Our
carpenters have 20 yearsl

OHIO
PALLET CO.

WANTED

for $1.00

WMP0/1390

Poles
Maximum
Diameter
10" or.
Largest End

~

:

-==========;f"',

anyone other than mysel

THE Southeastern Ohio Pt&gt;lled

•

-

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

K

f

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Smger Sales and'
Service. We Sharpen Scissors., EXCAVATING. dozer. loader DOZER and back hoe work.
3·29·tfc and backhoe work , septic
ponds and septic tanks. dll·
-:-.~~
-,
_--,.,.---,-tanks
Installed
,
dump
trucks
chlng
service ; top soli, fill
BEAT the rush' Get your and lo·boys tor hire , w1ll haul
dirt
,
limestone,
B&amp;K E•·•
lawnmower and tiller tuned fill dirt, top so1l, limestone
cavatlng
Phone
992·5367,
up
now
;
Small
Engine
Repair
EMERSON 23'" TV. console,
and
gravel;
call
Bob
or
Roger
Dick
Ka~r. Jr
Phone: 992-3863
Shop on Third St. Mason. W. Jeffers, day phone 992-7089.
good f1n1 sh , compl et ely
9·l·ffC
Va
overhaul ed; $50 ; phone 992
Til3 P.M.
night
phone
992·3525
or
992·
3 63otc 5232.
6813.
or 992-5844
SEE US FOR Awnings, storm
3·16·3tc
2 11 tfc
doors and windows~ carports,
After 6 p.m .
marquees, aluminum siding
'---- - - -- - -- -' 1972 TRIUMPH TR 6. wire
TIME for spring tune ups for
and railing A Jacob, sales
wheels. AM FM ; phone 992
lawn m owers, garden tra c
r epresentative. For free,1
PRIVATE meetmg room for
2204
farm
tractors
and
farm
tors,
est1mates, phone ChoriM
any organtzatton ; phone 992·
3 16 3tp For Sale or Trade
ma chtnery
For all your
Lisle, Syracuse, V V.
3975
mechan1cal problems. come
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3 11 tf c 8x35 2 BEDROOM tra1ler, 26ft 1972 FORD Gran Torino, 2 dr
to Dave's Garage on West
l ·2·ffC
se lf co ntain ed
Concord
HT. low mileage, 1n new Shade Road or call 985 4118
DUPLEX wall to wall car· camper , Maytag m1ni washer
condition and loaded w1th belore 6 p. m After 6 p m. 0-, ""
D·"E,..
' L-L-,W
_,.H
_...E
""E
""L
- a-11-gn-m-ent
peting . 2 bedrooms , 2 and dryer. phone 992·3954
extras, A c, AT, PS, PB, AM call 985-4233.
located
at
Crossroads.
Rt. 124,
bedroom house , phone 992
3·16·31c
FM rad1 o, plu s, phone 742complete front end service.
3
IS
·3tp
'
2780 or 992 3432
3154
- - - - - - -- tune up and brake service.
3 13 lfc l8 1/ 2 FT FIBR E GLASS boat
3·11 ·6lc ELNA and White Sewing Wh ee ls balanced etec·
wilh 1970 lOS h.p Chrysler
All
work
Machines ... service on all Iron ically
HOUSE and 2 tra1ler lots, phone motor w1th all equipment
guaranteed
Reasonable
makes.
Rea
sonable
rates
.
complete, $2,000, can finance ;
992 5693.
The Sew ing Center , Mid· ~~tes . Phone 992·3213 Or 742·
Mobde Homes For Sale
3 13 4tc ca ll 992 2720 or 992·3589.
dleport, Oh1o
¥ 32
3·16·JIC
2·18·1fC
11·16
He
MOBILE
HOMES
FOR
SALE
SMALL pr1vate apartment ; - -- - -- - - men only ; completely 4 TRAILER axles with wheels DON MILLER or Don Berry at
CONCRETE
"READY ·MIX
Berry·MIIIer Mobile Home
separ ate from house ; utilities
and t~res , electr •c brakes,
delivered right to your
furni shed ; call 992·3881 be· SlOO each . all for $375 , Arnold Sales w1ll sell you a late
pro ject. Fast ond easy. Free
model used Mobile Home for
tween4p.m . and5p m or 992Br other s, Pom er oy , Oh 1o ,
estimates, Phone 9~2 · 3284 .
3134 after 6 p m
phooe 992 2448
hundreds and hundreds of
Goegleln Reedy·MI • Co.,
3·16·3tc dollars under ongmal cost
3 13 6tp
Middleport, Ohio.
We have a huge selection of
6·JO.ttc
good 10 and 12 wide homes
1~70 YAMAHA 175, S250; phone
For Sale
now In stock and we 're ready
742 6834
SEPTIC TANKS CLIANED
ALUMINUM Car top boats, 10,
3 2 tfc to deal w1th " you" I All we ask HARRI SON' S TV Service and REASONABLE roles. Ph. 446·
IS a chance to show you how to
Serv1ce Calls. phone 992-2522
A782, Gallipolis, John Ru!jlell,
12 and 13 ft Kmgsbur y Rd , - - - -- hundr eds of
2·9·1
Jc
'
Owner
&amp; Operator. ,
Co, Rd 18, Phone 992 6256 NEW FOAM to fill your old save many
· ~oll l'l r !i 1 · 1h sel e~ttriif Yol"l r
.} ~~ 1.~
r'l o 1
b, l l 1 ~ ')rr•f'}ll t:l!1 V ru;tl't• r .$.12-tfC
after S p m
cush1onsJ standard ·size sUite,
_.__ .,
- ~be SUJ;e. ;and see us
.
3 8 Jotc
only $9.95 . , Pomeroy home
before you buy any new SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC . C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Recovery. 622 E Main St.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN
Mobile Hom e, you'll sure be
Complete Service
3 s.3otp glad
121 PAINT OAMAGE 1972 Z1g
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
you
d1d
Berry·MIIIer
Phone 949·3821
Zag Sew1ng Machines Stoll in
SANITATION, STEWART.
Mob1le
Home
Sales.
705
Racine, Ohio
matenal s,
ongma l cartons . No at - UPHOLSTERY
OHIO PHONE 1»2·3035
Farson Street. Belpre. Oh10
Crltt
Bradfqrd '
regularly
$J
95
only
$1
~5
tachments needed as our
10·4·1fr
Phone
423
9531.
5·l·lfC
controls are bu11t in Sews
Also r em na nt s Pom e roy
3 15-Jtc
with 1 or 2 needles. makes
Recovery. 622 E Ma in3·B
St·JOtp r
buttonholes , sew on buttons.
Real Estate For Sale
Real Estate For sale

Recover y, 62 2 E Mam St.
~9 2 7755
CL EAN copper, 4Sc lb ,
J.a.3otp
3·1Htc
: OF CHATTEL PROPERTY
Signed Gene D. Hudson . Box Rad1ators, clean, 28c lb ;
Brass. IBc lb ; Batteries. 70c;
332, Raci ne, Oh1o
:U NIVERSITY V W , INC .
Ginseng
$60 lb., M A. Hall. 131 VACUUM cleaners new 1972 UPHOLSTER your own fur ·
3
15·Jtp
• VS
n1ture Foam cush ions , any
model Complete with all
Reedsville.
378·6249
J)ONALD K &amp; NELLIE
s1ze. Cotton , burlap, sw1Yel
cleanmg
tools.
Small
pamt
3 9 ttc
J'EARCE
YARD SALE, Saturday and
bases, zipper, webbmg, welt
damage'"
sh1pplng
Will
take
"
Case No. 1286
Sundar at " OLD" M&amp;G
Pomeroy Recover y, 622 E
S27 ca sh or budget plan
• In pursuance to an Executton
Marke on Rt. 7 above Me1gs Help Wanted
Mam St
available
.
Phone
992·7755,
~o m th e Court of Comm on
Galli a line. you will have to
I- leas , Pom eroy , Ohto on th e tst see
_ _ __ _ _ _ _3_·8_·30!~
Electro Hygiene Co
to bel ieve 1t 1
NEED som eon e to mow yard ,
llay of Mar ch 1973 and to m e
3·1H
tc
:3·15·21p phone 992·6766
•trected In the case above
L1mestone, E xcel sior •
!lam ed, I will ex pose tor sale a t
3·16·3tc MIXED hay, phone 949 3839 or "cOAL
Sail
W
orks, E Ma 1n St ,
liublt c auc t 1on at th e front door GUN SHOOT, March 17. 7 30 p
949
5884
Pomeroy
Phone 992 3891.
et the Cour t House, Pom ero y,
m ; M1l e Hill Road. Factor y
J1A3tc
4 12 ttc
~~ hlo, M eigs Coun ty on the 26th
choked gun s onl y; Refresh Wanted
ay of Ma r ch . 1973 at 10 oo
ment s Sponsored by Ra c1ne
'clock A M th e foll owtng good s
35 ACRES ; lots or buy what you
Fire Dept
end chattels to wt t
want , on Chester w at er ;
3 15 2tc
• I - 1970 Ford Mustang , 2
phone 992·5248 1111 3 p m or
aoor. hardtop , bla ck vln yt top
992
3436 after J p.m.
f&gt;v er blu e in c olo r , V 8 RIFLE MATCH, Rutl and Gun
3 14 6tc
eu to mat l c. pow er steer ing ,
Club, star ting 12 o"cl oc k
11rcon d1t1on ed , Ser i al No
Sunday. March 18th
~ T01F11 2 5 2 6
3.Js.3tc
'· Taken as property of Donald

SHERIFF ' S SALE

/i'

992-2174

Committees will
meet March 20th
ATHENS - Two District
Citizens Committees for
Development Disabilities have
been approved for the southcentral and southeast areas of
Ohio, according to Elsie Helsel,
Ph.D , Chairman of the
Governor 's Planning and
Advisory
Council
for
Developmental Disabilities.
Mrs Helsel, of Athens, also
serves as the Washmgton
representative of the United
Cerebral Palsy Assoc111lion.
A joint meeting of both
committees will ,be , held
Tile!iday, March 20, at 7:30 p.
m. at the Hocking Hills Dming
Lodge, Old Man's Cave State
Park The purpose of the
meeting will be to discuss the
goals and objectives · of these
ciltzens groups and to enable
the corrumttees' task forces to

Tuppers Plains
Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
Sunday School at the
Methodist Church was 68 and
offering was $69.12. Worship
attendance as 31 and offermg
.$88.55.
Pvt. Ray Watson, who is
stationed at Ft. Knox, Ky.,
spent a weekend here w1th hts
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs,
Fan Halsey and his brothers,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Watson and
Mr. and Mrs. James Watson
and his sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Barn heart and family,
Those spendmg Sunday w1th
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles
were her brother, Mr and Mrs.
Bernard Stern and two
daughters of Mt. Zion, W. Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Spencer and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip Boyles and family
and Mrs. Bessie Webster and
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Massar
and family.
Mrs. Guy Spencer entered St.
Joseph Hospital at Parkers·
burg for observation and
treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Snyder
or Sandyville, W. Va., were
Sunday afternoon guests of her
aunt, Mr. and Mrs Wayne
Brickles.
Mr . and Mrs . Howard
Flanders of Guysville Route
were Sunday evening guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Spencer
and family •
Thurman Babcock returned
home from Camden Clark
Hospital In Purkersburg but
remains quite poorly.
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Rardin
of Long Bottom visited Mr. and
Mrs. Thurman Babcock, Mr •
and Mrs. Oscar Babcock and
Mrs. Bessje Webster.
Mrs. Leone Babcock will
Widergo dental surgery March

23.
Mrs. Curtley Spencer
celebrated her birthday at her
home In Middleport with all her
children and grandc,hlldren
present for the occasion.
Mrs. Dwight Spencer of
Pomeroy Route 3 visited her
~qt~

M.-.

Rf~&gt;hDM

Da•u•h ,..

Wolfpen News, Notes

Mr. and Mrs, Clinton Gilkey,
Karen, Mrs. Harold Gillogly
and Vicki and Bruce of Albany
and Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Russell of Middleport were
&amp;mday visitors of Mr. and
orgamze. The meetmg IS open Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fouch and
to the pubhc. Names of
family
of HWitington, W. Va.,
Comm1ttee members were not
were weekend visitors of Mr .
disclosed.
and
Mrs. Jack Elam and
The southcentral committee
(district Six ) is made up of family .
Mrs . William Boyce of
volunteers from Adams ,
Brown, Galha, Highland, Columbus Is spending several
Jackson, Lawrence , Pike, days with her parents, Mr. and
Ross , Scioto and Vinton Mrs. Howard Russell .
&amp;inday callers of Mr. and
Counties. District Seven
counties are Athens, Hocking, Mrs. Eugene Haning and Mr.
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman
Noble, Perry and Washington were Mr. and Mrs. James
Reeves, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
counties.
The long range goals of the
citizens committees are to
unprove hfe for those who are
the victims of mental retar·
dation , epilepsy and cerebral
palsy, and to help In brmgmg
the hves of the developmentally disabled and the1r
families closer to normal

Mrs. Bill Fouch and family and
Mr. Charley Smith.
Charlotte Lambert of
Nelsonville and Mrs. James.
Proffit were Saturday visitors
of Miss Naomi Jo Smith.
Everett Ray Johnson and
family of Columbus were
weekend visil?rs of Mrs. Helep
Johnson and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Johnson and family. ',
Mrs. Ada Slack is visiting
with Mr. and Mrs. Harle;lo
Johnson, Tammy, Cheryl an"d

Terry.

'

Weekend visitors of Mr. aiM!I
Mrs. Robert Russell were Mn.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
Amanda of Maryland and Mro.
and Mrs. Steve · Haggy of
Akron .

TRUCKS

'72 CHEV. CUSTOM .......: ................ s2595
and Mrs. NeiSel Weatherman
on Wednesday evenmg.
Mrs. Freda Wells and
daughter and granddaughter
called on Mrs. Oscar Babcock
a day recently.
Mrs. Edgar Dorst, Swnner,
called on Mrs. Robert Dorst
and son, Timothy, Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes
and
grandson,
Lowell
Ridenour, of Chester were
Sunday afternoon guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Fon Halsey and
brother, Wellie.
Several from her called at
White's Funeral mome in the
death of Jessie NeweU and also
attended his fWier al there with
burial here in the church
cemetery. Mrs . Newell
returned to Columbus w1th her
son, Mr. and Mrs. Clair Newell,
where she will be near her
doc tor for checkups due to her
eye operation .

c.Jo. long Wide bed. 6 cyl ' stand ' radio &amp; heater. Sharp

'71 CHEV. C.IO .. ··•• ...................... '1995
Step S1de, 6 tt bed. 350, V 8, 4sp., radio &amp;heater

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

'71 TOYOTA .............................. s1395
Carella , 2 dr. sedan, one owner Sharp.

'72 FORD GRAND TORINO ................ .
4 Dr . H T , vinyl roof, all leather 1ntenor Real sharp

'72 MAVERICK ................... ........ , '2295
6 Cyl , auto trans, R&amp;H , 9,000 actual mtles, one owner

Sharp

'71 MAVERICK............................

s1695

6 Cyl , auto trans., R&amp;H Sharp

'71 VEGA .•••••.•••••••• ••••••••••••••••.•. $1695
Factory air, R&amp;H, 4 sp

'71 PINTO 3 DR ......................... }1695
Runabout , R&amp;H. 4 sp. one owner

'71 MERCURY COUGAR .... ..............

s2295

2 Dr , H T 1 JSl eng ., auto on the conso le, v iny l roof

Fairview
- By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Pvt. and Mrs. Ronald Russell
and daughter, Mandy, of Ft.
Meade, Md.,spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell at Wolf Pen. Mrs.
Russell and daughter will vtsit
lndefmitely with her parents,
Mr and Mrs. Russell Roush
while ~t. Russell Is stationed
m VIrginia.
Mrs. Bill Parsons and sons of
Antiquity spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst
of Niles, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Durst of Ravenswood
spent Sunday with 1\!r. and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush and Roger
and Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush and family .
Paul Sayre of Columbus
spent the weekend at his farm.
Mrs. Charlotte Perry of
Columbus visited her father ,
Charles Blake.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rousll,
Sharon and Cindy Roush, and
Jeff Miller visited Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lew1s Saturday
evenmR at Clifton.

'71 CHRYSLER NEWPORT................. '2395
4

Dr, R&amp;H. vmvl roof

'70 CHEV. CAPRICE.. ..................... s2295
2 Or H T , AM FM radio, lac air , P S, P B , v1nyl root.

'70 CHEV. NOVA......................... 51595
4 Dr , 307 V-8, auto , P S, fac a1r, new t tres

'69 PLYMOUTH FURY

111 ..... . ........ .. .

s1395

4 Dr , fa c. a ~r, P S., P B

'

'69 MERCURY MARQUIS .......... ....... 51295
'

2 Dr H T , R&amp;H, vmyl roof

'69 BUICK La SABRE ...................... 51895
4 Dr . H T . fa c. air, P S., P B, vi nyl roof

'69 CHEV. CAMARO ....................... '1695
Z·28, 2dr H T , v1nyl roof. 4sp.• stereo ta pe playe r ThiS os

one you have to see.

'68 CORVET, SHARP, SHARP, SHARP.'.....s2795
'67 MERCURY P.ARKlANE ..................~95
4 Dr. H.T , lac air. lull power

'66 BUICK RIVIERA ....................... }695
'65 MERCURY 4 DR. STATION WAGON .... '395
'65 MERCURY 2 DR. SEDAN .............. ..S295
See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS BROS~
USED CARS

· Ph. 9&amp;5-4 100
Located on St. Rt. 7

Chestes

�I I

tr rr "" ... "' · ..

'

f I

I

I

..
•

•
11-Tbe Daily Bentlnel,~port..Pcmeroy,O.,March 1&amp;, 1973

'

f

~0 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 16, )97J

!Sentinel Clll$sifieds Get Action!' $entinel ~~IB:ssifieds ·. ·aJ~ .R.esultsl
I

WANT AQ&gt;
INFORMATION
iADIJINES ,
5 P.M ofy Before Publocatoon

1!

1.

,.

;

Monday

1
I=

Dead~in e

9 am

"H&amp;IL"

Can cella tion - Corrections "'

1

Will be a c t~pted untll9 am fo r
Day ot.Publt ca tt on

REGULATIONS

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING

Ttfe Publisher reser ves th e
'r ight to ed tt owe iect a ny ads
dee med
obtR't tona t
The
au bl l ~ e r will not be r espon sible

1

•lor more than ont .n corr ect
nsertlon

•

~

RATES

For Wal'lt Ad Serv tce

; 5 ce nts per Word one lnsertfo,
'
Mtntll'!Um Chf'! rge 75c
12 centt' per word three
con5ecutfve Insertion s.
18 cents per word stx con

$.

i

-secuttve insertion s
111 25 Per Cent Ot scount on pa,r
ads and ads paid w tfh in 10 d ay!"

1!11

:

CARD OF THANKS .

'

•

Sl

t.

&amp; OBITUARY
fm- s ~ word rhlntmJJm

so

Ea ch additiona l wor d 2c
1 BLIND ADS
Add ttlona l 2Sc Charg e pe

0

J

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS
Hot Water Heaters
PlumbingElectrical Work •

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992·2448
Pomeroy,

Ad vert ise ment

OFFICE HOURS

8 30 am

to 5 OD p m Dally ,
30 a m
to 12.00 Noon
• Satwday
~

:8
••

J Card of Thanks
; I WOULD like lo thank Rev
iii

:
•

S
t
•

Lehman . all my fnend s and
neighbor s for the1r prayers,
cards and vis 1ts dunng m y

stay in the hosp1tal. a[so to
those who helped 1n an y way

•

o.

PUREBRED SALE - Sixth
Annual W Va Polled
Hereford Spring Show and
Sale, March 24, 1973 at
Jackson Mills State 4 H
Camp Selling 34 bulls and 18
heifers

For

1nformat1on

write, Jim Westfall. Rt 2, Box
115, Spencer, W Va or ca ll
927 2104
3 12 Sic

REVIVAL st111 '" progress at
Charlotte Van th e Rutland Commun1ty
Church at 7· 30 p.m. each
3 16 ltc
evening with Rev. Amos
Tillis. Rebersburg, Pa .• the

Th1s IS deeply appreciated

:
!

Thank you
Meter

•

I

PUBLIC NOTICES

... Your Right to Know
and be tnform ed of the fun ctiOn ~ of your governm ent CJ r e
e;mbod 1ed tn public not1ces In '
tha t ~e lf gov ernm ent charges
.. .all Cit izens to be tnformed ,
th1S newspap er urges eVery
cit•zen to read and study these
• not ices we strongly adv ise
' those Clt tzens , seek ing further
•. mtorm at1on, to exer c1se their
nght of acce ss to public
"' rec ord s and publ 1c meetings

speaker
welcome

Everyone

1s

3 13 4tc

'" NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Case No . 201885
of Robert D. Cra1g ,

'b Estate

eceased.
·'" Notice Is hereby Ot ven that
Jean Cra ig, of 829 Page Stree t,
Middleport , Ohio, has been du ly
~ ppo i nted Adm •nt stratri x of the
.E"state of Robert 0
Crai g,
l!leceased . late of Metgs County ,
~h l o

Cr ed itors are r equ •red to fi le
their cl aim s with sa1d f ldUCtar y
!With in tour monthS
Dated th 1s 14 th day of Ma rc h

NEW sh1pment of hsh on sal e
SINGER automati c sewing
Fn day.
Mar ch
16th , 2 BEDROOM mobile home , mach1ne ; like new In walnut
compl etely furn is hed" cal l cab1net Makes design stlt·
Showalter's Wet Pet Shop,
992 2441 aft er 5 30 p.m 1
Chester , Oh10
ches. zlg.zags. buttonholes.
2 7 tfc blind hems, overca sts, etc., J
3·15 3tp
$85. Call Ravenswood. 273·
UNFURNI SHED 3 room 9S21 or 273 9893.
Auto Sales
1 11 tfc
apartment, A08 Spnng Ave,
--:-- -- - - - - 1972 HONDA 500 motorcycle, 4 Pomeroy
3·2·11c RIN GNE CK pheasants, eggs
cy lmder , m any ext ras, hke
and ch1 ck s in season , phone
new; phone 985 3828
3 9.tfc FURNI SHED house 1n Mid· 742·3656.
3·1J.6tp
dleport ; adults onl y, call
1968 GMC •;,.ton pickup truck, after 6 p.m. da1ly or anyt1me
HAY . J1m Mered1th. phone 992·
sen es 1500, V 8, standard
weekends 992·7791.
6860
tra nsmtss1on , wide bed, new
3·16·31c
3 13 6tp
t~r es, excell ent condlfton w1th
no ru st Phone 985.J5(Kl, Tom 2 BEDROOM mobile home. a1r·
FULLY electnc hosp1tal bed,
Hayman. Long Bottom. Ohio
condthoned , tn Racine area.
wheel cha1r and wal ker , all
3·13·61p phooe 992 6329
l1 ke new , used onl y a f ew
----J 16 tfc
months.
call992 3881 between
1966 CHEVROLET Impala. 4
00
and
5 00 or 992 313A aft er
4
door hardtop, V-8, automat1c, ONE bedroom apartment s,
6 pm
power steering , vinyl tr1m,
1deal for couples, phone 992·
3·1Htp
radio . blue finish. good 5248 or 992·3436
condition. must sell. $600.
3·14-6tc 2 PIECE trad1honalll v 1ng r oom
Phone 992 6280
sUite w1th 90" sofa and extra
- - - - ----:-:-3·_15_·_Jt"c r
high back Mr Chair , spec1al
GMC
Series
truck,
16
FOR
RENT
thiS week only $139 95, cash
1962
a nd
ca rry ,
Pom eroy
ft fl at bed , phone 9j9 os~
Recovery, 622 E Mam St.,
1 3
Pomeroy. phone 992-7~~~6.6tp
1958 VOLK SWAGEN good
body and mol or. pnce $300,
DON'T pump vour sluqq lsh
phone 742 6352
sept1c tank Get Kl ean.Em.
3 16 Jtc
All Sept1c Tank Cl ean er
Middleport, 0.
L andmark F arm Bureau ,
1969 FORD Ranger I ton F 350 ,
Pomeroy
w1th or w 1thout new 12 ft
1 Effocoency Apt. w1th new
3 16 ltc
factory sta ke body , 390
furniture.
all
util
ities
pa1d.
engtn e, l ong wh eel base ,
SIAMESE and Balmese k1ttens.
pow er
bra kes ,
power
excellent quality ; perfectly
2
FurniShed
Apt.s
with
new
steenng, rough tires , alf·
framed ; call614·446,4416 after
furn1ture,
with
or
w1thout
conditioned. 47.300 miles;
2 p m at Gallipolis.
uttl1t1es. Both have 1 or 2
Harold Brewer. Long Bottom,
3 16 6tc
bedrooms
No
Pets.
phone 985 3554.

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

!

KOSCOT KOSMETI CS AND
3 A tfc
WI GS SPECIALS MONTH· - - -- - - -LY
BROWN 'S
INDE 1970 MAVE RICK, 6 cylinder
PENDENT DISTRIBU
standard, low mileage, ex
TOR , MIDDLEPORT
cellent condlhon , 6newtlres.
PHONE 992·5113
new muffler; $1.395. ' 63
2 23 He
Dodge Station Wagon, wil l
pass Inspection , $250, phone
,.,--::.....,---:----'HOOD ' S AQUARIUMS , fish
992- 7523
3 13 4tc
and supplies , new location ,
Ash Street, Middleport near
1966 OLDS Toronado ; full
park , phone 992·5443.
power , a•r ·condihoned ; low
' 1·7·1fc
mil eage, phone 992·5367.
3·13·5tc
2 PIece tradillonaii1VIng room
su1te w1th 90" sofa and extra

h1qh back Mr Chair , special
th1s week only $139.50, cash
a nd

carry,

Pomeroy

Recovery . 622 E Ma1n St ,
Pomeroy. phone 992 7554
3 16 6tp

WILL MOW lawns'" Syracuse .
contac t Fl oyd Diddle or
brothers or call 992 5841 after
5 p m.

_ _ _ _ _ ___
3 _14 3tp

Business Opportunities
OWN your own bus1ness , 4 to 6
hours dally; small1nvestment
buys necessary 1nventory ,

call l-614·962 5397

3 11 10tc

Wanted To Buy
US ED parts for Fra1 zer Garden
Tra ctor , phone 985 3907,
Garth Sm1th , Long Bottom ,

I WILL not be responSibl e for
OhiO
1973
3 lA 31p
any debts contracted b{.
Manning D. Webster
anyone
other
than
mysel
.
Probate Judge of sa1d Court
Sign ed Jam es Edward 100 RAILROAD T1es, fatr to
(31 16, 23, 30, 3t c
Milliron, Rt 2. Racine, Oh1o
good c ondit1 on Phone 742·
3 14·31p 6825.
"
3·1S·6tp
PUBLI C NOTI CE
REDUCE,II excess.. fluids" w1th
- 81d1 will be recei ved by th e
Fluldex, Lose weight ' with 1
t'.E as ter n Lo ca l
Board of
Dex· A·Diet capsules at A LAWN roll er for a Gravely
~ ducatlon , to purchase on e 48
Tractor , ca ll Ray Williams,
Nelson Drugs
~ assenger sc hool bus , one 60
99
2-6686
3
14·3tp
~ ass enger school bus and one 66
3·13.6tp
:JIIa ss eng er school bu s unt il 12 00
..,oon Ar;~rll10 , at the offtee of the GUN SHOOT, also nile mat
c ler k at the E11stern H1gh
ches , open sites onl y and OL1..1 furn 11ure, oak tables,
'School
: Spec1t1ca t lons on f ile at the
Qff tee of th e Eastern H1gh
i ch oot
*'
C. 0 Newland, Clerk
%3 1 16 22. 30 . lA), 6, 41c

•
••

spec ial deer slug mat ch ,

Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Sunday, March 18th, 12 noon
3·15·3tc

I WILL NOT be responSi ble for
an y debt s contracted b{.

For Sale

For Rent

Pets For Sale

Notice

organs, dishes , clocks, brass

beds or complete households.
Write M D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy . Ohio Phone 992·
6271
1 7.tfc

-------

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS

and Nellie Pear ce to sall sty
I n Exec ut •on tn f avo r of
~ n l v er s it y V W
., Ter ms ol Sale Cash m hand
en da y of sa l e

•

!O BERT T HA RT ENB AC H.
~ E IGS

CO UNT Y

•

S HERIFF

t:" 16, 11

Here ford

A ss oc•at 1on

1s

selling 49 head Friday night,
March 30 at the Meigs Co
Fa i rgrounds For c atal ogs
wr ite Tina Jeff er s, Route 1.

Athen s. Oh io.

3 1S·3tp

••

VFW Shootmg Match, Broad
Run Rod and Gun Cl ub, New
11
Case No 20,877
Haven, W Va , starts at noon
11
Estate of Phoebe Amanda
Sunday, Marc h 18th Spon·
Clark , D e cea se d
sored by Post 9926, Mason. W
~ Not1 ce Is hereb y g1 ven t ha t
Va
worothy Cl ark of R D 3,
)' OTIC E OF APPOINTMENT

~ome r oy ,
IPr;~o l nl e d

Oh io has been duly
Admin istratr ix of the
( state of Phoeb e Amanda
i lar k., deceased, l!!llte of Meigs

! ounty , OhiO

NOTICE 0~ APPLICATION

Publi c noti ce is her ebv g1ven

that Zer kle Truck ing Compan y

Creditor s are r equ ir ed to ftle has f ile d w i th th e Publ i c
f.e1r cl!!lltm s with sa id f 1du c1ary Util lt1es Commi ssion of Oh1o an
appt .ca1ton to am end contr ac t
w it hin faur months
• Dat ed th is 27t h day of m otor carr 1er perm it No 744 by
add tng the foltow1ng Shipp er
l ebruary , 1973
•
. c o r p or at i On ,
•
Manning 0 Webster A m s t ar
•
Judge Ph ll ade l phta , Penn sylva n i a ,
us ing th e foll owmg eq utpmen t
CJ I 2, 9. 16. 31c •
•
tors and 8 traders
T-------------4 6 trInac
ter ested p1!11 r t 1es ma y obt a1n
fur t her mformat 1on as to sa 1d
application by ad dr ess •ng t he
Public Uf tl lft es Comm1SS 1on of
Oh 1o, Columbus , Oh1o
Zerkle Truck i ng Comp any
:
Universal Religion
34 Rac e Str eet
: The Christian Science re·
Middleport. 0 ~10 45760
Ugwn was formally estab· 131 9 16 13 31c

••
••
•

l

shed m Boston m 1879. It
ow ha s more th an 3,200
ranches m 48 cou ntnes In
accordance w1th th e r ule of
Ole church, it does not pub·
h membership stal!stlcs.
t is known to hav e several
ndred thousand a dherents

~

We talk to vou
like a person• .

..

ON YOUR DIAL
•
'

.

~1.00

Per Ton

DELIVERED
TO

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
36"x23"x.009

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES
--

20' .
'a
The
Daily Sentinel
Court St

Pomeroy

, ,

'Business ·Sertices
experience

in

homes in Meogs County.

From the lar~est
Bulldozer Radiator
lest Heater Core.
' Nathan Biggs •
Radoator Specla!l" .

SUPPLI~S

OFFICE

and

FURNITURE-

Stop In and See Our
,Floor Display.

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cance lled'
Lost
your
nperator 's license? Call 992

6 i5 ttc
WILL trim or cut trees , clean
out basements, attiCS, etc

Phone 949·3221

69 Olds 88 H.T. Sed., v-roof &amp; air ·----'1395

PRE·FABRICATED

68 Pontiac Bonneville 4 Dr., air ·-----11395
68 Ford Gal. 500 4 Door, air ______ Jl095

WOOD TRUSSES

- GUARANTEE[)....,
Phon~ 992·2094

But It to Your 'Specs'
Delivered to Job Site

.Pomer111 Home &amp; Auto

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

oj,enBTol5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E.l'ain, Pomeroy, 0 .

serv1ce, all makes. 992 2284

monogram s, and blind hem

st1tch Full cash price $38 50 UPHOLSTERY material s,
Nylon pnnts, cotton prmts,
or budget plan ava ilable
Electro Hyg iene Co Phone vel vets of all k1nd s Pomeroy

,-. Atr Conditioners
•Awnmgs
'• Underoinning
Complete
C.~rvice

mQb lle

MATERIALS CO.
773.5554
Mason, W.Va.

.

HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone
985 3529

CLELAND
REALTY

..... plus g lgant1 c

l!'lO Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.. ·,
.
O:ASH pa1d for all makes and
model s of mob ile homes .
Phone area code 61H2J.9531
4 13 ttc

2 NEW 3 bedroom homes, 1 w1lh
basement, 1 without. 2 car

garages, I acre lots. located
at Rock Spnngs behind Meigs
Co Fairground. Will trade or
help finance ; also 5 good
bu ilding lots, water and
disposal installed , Charles H
Cornell, Athens, 593 7034 or
593 5667 or 992.7613.

sew tng
machine,
th1s
mach 1ne 1s a dress maker

model Will sell for small
balance of $36 50 or pay 55 per
month Call 992·5331.
3·1Htc

CLOV ER hay and mixed hay .
phone 985 3930 or 992 6873
3 14 3tp

Broker

608 E . M11n

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Real Estate For Sale

J UST taken 1n 1973 zig zag

Teaford, Sr.

hQme

Pomeroy

110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

33 ACRES

Rutland Rt. 1 und er

f en ce

12 acres

NEW LISTING
RIV ER FRONTAGE - 4
~drooms , 2 baths, gas fur
na ce. full basement Front and
back porches. Asking $11,000 00
BUT LET' S TALK
MIDOLEPOAT
4
BEDROOMS
Nice

acres

12

hllable Bal light woods.
Some bu1ldmgs 3 bedroo ll'\
hom e, new bath, new kit·
chen,

new

FA

furna ce .

Paneling Enclosed pat1o
Cellar 114.500.00.
COLONIAL
Pomeroy. Close to shopp1ng
Bea ut iful
k1t chen,
4
bedro oms.
2
baths ,
ba se ment.

3 14-6tc

Virgil B.

6·ll ·HC

uosplay of mobile homes
always avallable•at ..

Porc hes

aluminum

sidinQ .

Fenced

yard .
basement,
stoker
furna ce. Asking only $7,500.00.
PARK IT HERE
TRAILER SPOT - S2500 00
and 97 acres with gas well All
m1nerals 516,500 00 for all
NEW HOME
3 BEDROOMS- N1ce kitchen.
d1n ing. utility room. Chester
Township $16,000.00 or we' ll
negotiate
NEAR TOWN
' I!E CROOMS - Nearly an
acre of land. Full basement ·
Oa ~ floors $12,000 00 Maybe

Ga s

F A hea t Carpeted. GOOD
CONDITION. $17.500.00.
RACINE
Beautiful 2 story home All
new k itchen, 5 bedrooms l lf2

ba ths, ha rdwood floors .
basement . Garage and other
bulldongs. Beautliul lot
$17.000 00
10 ACRES
Mostly level Just off Rt. 33
Building s Home ha s 3
bedrooms, bath, dining R.•
new F A furnace and hot
wat er tank. Good blacktop
road $8.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT
Lar ge 5 bedroom hom e.
Close to shopping. Ni ce
kitchen, d1nlng R • 1'12 baths,
2 glassed porches Garage

less.

POMEROY
4 BEDROOMS - Nice modern
kltc'hen Full basement with·
s ho~ er , full bath up A lovely
ho ~e for only $11 ,500.00
YOU SAID IT
LA GE BRICK - 7 rooms,
bath, large basement. large
fron1 porch. garage for several
cars. 2 acres of land Reduced
to Slf,ooo oo.

BULL - half Charolals and half
Angus ; Roger Ritchi e, 1»7· 42" KELVINA TOR Electn c
Range , $100, l1ke new; contact
3882
1
Ray Laudermolt, Mason, W
3 14 3tp
Va , or phone 773·5613.
Open Saturdays
3 11 ·6lc
Y.ODERN Wal nut Console, AM
11 26·1fc ' and ca rport In good con from 8 a.m. to J:JO p.m.
FM rad1o, 4 speed automatiC
dillon. $12.800 00
On Old Rt. 33
changer. 4 speaker sound ONE 3 year old registered 3 BEDROOMhome, ll vlng room
RENTALS&amp; STORAGE
Phone 992-2689
sy ste m , separate cont ro ls
Suffolk ram ; $50; phone 949· and dtntng room carpeted. Pomeroy - Several lots. Out
WE HAV E THE PROPERTY,
Balan ce S78 50. Use ou r
3073
Pomeroy, Ohio
New forced air f urnace .
of flood s. On paved street
budget term s. Cal l 992·7085
3·11 6tc Lmcoln Hill. Pomeroy, phone All utll1t1 es
Sewage . WOI)~D' LIKE TO MEET
3·15·6tc
SOM~ON E
WITH
THE
992·2071.
$8,200
00
DE AD Stock horses, cattle,
MQNI:Y.
3·6·12tc
Shoes 7 styles on sale
HENRY E. CLELAND
hogs. sheep Reasonable MAPLE stereo radio com KNAPP
HELEN L. TEAFORD
In
March;
Bob
Hysell
.
992·
BROKER
bination, AM·FM radio. 4 5324.
cha rge Call 245·551 4.
8
ACRES
Good
build
ing
site
or
992·2259
2·28·3otc speakers , 4 speed changer.
?qR·~~~o~·~X~:~o~D
3·9 tic trailer lots. On Rt. 143 Phone
dual volume control . Balance
If
no
an
swer 992·2568
NOISUNDAY
SHOWINGS
992·3640
after
5
30
p.
m.
-:------:-:--,--$81 .19. Use our budget te rms.
or 985·4209
:
.
992·3325
3·15·6tc
CORN
.
phone
985·4211
Call 992 7085
992-361S
J.9·12tc --...,.-- - - - -3 15·61c
FOR
SALE
by
owner.
3
bedroom home. total electric,
Big Copoclty
1 72 ACRE LOT Phone 742·3656. r
Licensed Oh1o
full size basement, 1'12 baths,
MIY.III
3·15-2tp
Bill's Army-Navy
Properly &amp; Casualty
extra 75 x 100 lot whiCh joins
Automatl~~:s
property. Excellent condit ion
2 'Peed operation .
Surplus and
THE PROVEN Carpet cleaner
Insurance Agent
Priced LOW. New Haven, call 1
Choic e of water
Blue Lustre Is easy on the
Department Store
882 2762
.
t emps
Auto .
An mdependent msurance
budget Restores forgotten
wat e r
level
3·11·6lc
agency In Pom er oy, needs
colors Rent electric sham·
cont r" ol
Lint ~
as North Court 51.
someone w1 th li cense as
pooer$1 . Nelson's Drug Store,
Filter or Power
HOUSE by owne r, 3 or 4
Athen•, Ohio
1unl or par t ner and f uture
Pomeroy , Oh10
Fin Agltalor
bedrooms, large rec. room ,
sale to right party. If you
3·15·2tc
P•rma· Prtst
large patio, modern kitchen,
want to own an msurance
Moytoo
fully carpeted ; cal) 992·5248
ag ency. wr ite. gi ving 71 MODEL 350 Honda. one Hours : 9 to 5:30 dally e•cept
Halo of Htlt
•
until
3
p.m.
or
992·3436
after
3
quarter horse; phone 992 3283 Monday &amp; Friday to 9 p.m,
res4 me to Box 666 , Pomer oy,
Drytrs
• ~
p m.; No Sunday Call"
3 15·3lc This Sunday 12 noon to 5:30
Surround· clothes'
0 45769
3 IHtc
with untie, e~ en
tor your convenience .
ONE Registered Charolals bull.
he~t . No hOISpola, · '
3 vears old Phone 992.3640 Sleeping bags. regularly
no ovtrd.r:VIng .. •
For Rent
5 ROoM house, one third acre
Fine Mesh' Lin ~ ,
after 5 30 p. m.
ground , gas heat , basement ,
95, now S7.95 , Electncal
'F liter.
/:
'}'1r
;:
3 ANO ' ROOM furnished and
3 15 6tc S9
good
loc~
t1on
for
trailers
;
S.
toolsas low as$10.95; Wright
Wolpocloltu
tn
'
unfurni shed apartm ents.
D. Busk trk, 341 Page St.,
. MAYUG •
Phone 992·5434
BOAT, motor, troller with some tools 10 pet. off; Llncolh
Middleport, Ohio.
Welders
$92.50.
Corduroy
&amp;
~td Corpot
.
4 12 tfc accessories. good condition,
Service .
Oenlm
Jeans
S4
91
&amp;
$5.95
,
8
~~~~--~3~·
l~~p
no windshield , AO h p motor.
track
tapes
·
hit
tunes,
$2.91
;
TRAIL ER , Brown's Trailer
Ask1ng SJOO Phone 992·9981or
LOTS on Wnght St., phone 742·
specials on cloth ing and
Park , phooe 9~2 ·3324
992·7375.
1»30
3·15 Jtc snoes.
2·13 ttc
-----------~c -~74_1- 42_1~1,~~-~k~-~--~_Gr
__a~~-r--LR=~~I=I~~~

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

- ----

RUTLAND
7

'

l

&gt;

BD.L

'

I

68 Dod" PQI. 4 Door H.T. ·-------- '795
67 Dodge Dart 4 Dr., V-8 auto.------ '795
67 Olds 98 Town Sed., power &amp; air·--- '995
1595
·,66 Pontiac ,Catalina 4
66 Buick LaSabre 4 Door, air------· '695
64 Rambler 4 Dr., 6 cyl., auto.------ '195
63 Mercury 4 Dr., V-8 auto. --------'100

Door--·------

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
992-5342

GMAC FINANCING

SMITH NELSON MOTORS,

POMEROY

CEWARD
CALVERT
992 ·2174

ByMra.HerbertRousb
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Corn·
_ __ :.._.,
· _ __::.
• _...,. well, Mrs. Jean Fisher of
Gallipolis and Mrs. Bernard
Diddle of Racine visited Frtday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donohew
spent the weekend with
relatives
m Colwnbus.
1
1968 CAMARO CONV.
$1695
Mrs. Earl Adams spent a
V 8 motor . auto trans .• P S. , and w-w t~res, r adio, ni ce
weekend
with her daughter,
ye llow finish with vin yl Interior.
Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
1969CHEV BIS4DR.
5199
McLaughlm at Columbus and
V·8 eng1ne, automatic trans., power steer ing &amp; brakes,
' helped Mrs . McLaughlin
, oOd tires, green tlnlsh with match1ng 1nterlor . Book
1
alue $1150 00 Early Bird Special
celelrate her birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex O'Brien of
1967 FORO I,.JD
$695
11 '' aT Sedan. V·8 engine, autdmatrc trans., P. steering &amp; · S,t,wa,t,spentSunday wlth.Mr.
brakes.-rodto, blue fini sh, blk . ,vinyl top, good tires. rodlp
and Mrs. ·Larry O~rlen'
Special!!!
~
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Gerald Hayman and
Keith were Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Hayman and family of
Westerville, Mr. and Mrs.
OPEN EVES • .lO P.M.
Gene
Jewell and children of
.,PMER01', OHIO
.
Letart, w. Va., Route, Mrs.
Robert Hart and Beverly and
friend, Allen Cunningham, of
Racine.
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mr . and Mrs. Terry Roush or
Darcy Potter of Bryan, Ohio;
Thirteen members were Mrs. Elsie Deiley and Mr. and Greensboro, N. C., visited the
present for the Esther Mrs . Clarence Deiley of former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Vir gil Roush Wednesday
Missionary Society at the home Coraopolis, Pa.
of Mrs. Grella Simpson
Mrs. carolyn Adams is a through Monday enroute to
Monday evening, March 12. patient in Veterans Memonal Langdon, N. D. where Mr.
Roush was transferred by the
The program was presented by Hospital.
Mrs. Lillian Hayman. During
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Krider Western Electric Company.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manuel
the feUowship hour, refresh- of Columbus were weekend
ments were served.
guests of Mrs. Grace Krider. and daughter, Angle, of 1\acirie
Mrs. Florence Matthews of ' were Sunday dinner guests of
A large number of friends
attended the funeral of Mrs. Marietta Is visiting her son·m· Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush.
Mrs Jim Roush of Letart is
Lovey Sayre at the Fll'st law and daughter, Mr. and
Baptist Church. Relatives Mrs. Bob Warden and ramlly. staying with Mr. and Mra.
Erwin Gloeckner wbUe her
coming were Mr.. and Mrs.
husband Is •a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Georgia Russell and
Mrs . Dorothy Grimes of
Newark, Mrs. Jerry Shane and
Mrs. Jimmy Shane and two
children of Gallipolis visited
Mr, and Mrs. Bill Fox.
Victor and Thomas Wolfe of
Racine were recent guests of
their mother, Mrs. Eula Wolfe
., .and
Aaron.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Beegle and
,Zane and Tracy of Racine and
Early Roush were dinner
guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Buck.
'
Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Mrs.
Mickey Hoback were shopping
in Point Pleasant on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Douglas
and friends of Columbus spent
1
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Adams.
. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Orr of
COlumbus spent Saturday
evaning with Mrs. Iva Orr.
Dan ThOmpson
Mrs. Golda Wyant and
The Dealln' Man
•
daughter, Mary Margaret, of
Harrisonville visited Sunday
·.
70xl4 Hillcrest
60xl4 Hillcrest
with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hunt.
Custom del Uxe model wlttl
1973 model cu stom delu xe.
Thomas and Larry Spangler
~ bedrooms, central air,
front den: 2 B.R , total
bir
ch
paneling,
fully
of Pennsylvania visited
electric , 3 ton central air .
carpeted , private k1tchen
birch plnellng, full car
Monday with Mr. and Mrs.and dining, save $1 .000
peted with double pad.
now
Arilold Hupp and sons.
• frost -free refr igerator
•
Mra. Loul~e Jones of
Was
Was
51,995
NOW
Hlllaboro,
W. Va.,Mr. and Mrs.
$10,595 NOW
Leo Wiggington of St. Albans,
W.Va., spent a week with Mr.
·. UP T,O t2· YR. FINANCING .
Jess Ander110n and visited their
mother, Mrs. JessAndei'BOn, at
Holzer Hospital where she Is a
patient.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis Green
and family of Albany visited
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
586 Locust . 992-7004 Middleport
Mrs . Roy Buck. Weekend
Open' to 6 Mon: thru Sat.
guests of the Bucks were their
daughter, Pam, and ber

PoMeroy
Motor Co.

~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Racine Social Events

'

TWO .SUPER BUYS

HILLCREST

Custom Deluxe .

HOMES

Priced S,.c:lall

.
'9595

$159500

.

'7995

·1

Reedsville United Methodist
Women met with Mrs. Ruth
Dillon ror its March meeting.
Devotions conducted by Mrs.
Mamie Buckley used the
World Day of Prayer topic
"Alerl in Our Time." Prayer
and readings were given by all.
Dues were collected and the
offering se11t to the World Day
of Prayer. Members voted to
Invite the district secretary of
missions to the next meeting. A
game was played and priZe
awarded. Refreslunents were
served to Mrs. Nell Wilson,
Mrs Viv111n Hwnphrey, Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel, Mrs. Fame
J!hu:tlngllr:..~;. ,guest,.. Mrs .
Lillian Pickens and guests Tim
and Scott Dillon. Mrs. Riebel
was awarded the door prize.
The April meeting will he with
Mrs. VIvian Hwnphrey.
Mr. and Mrs. Ohs Casto
visited with Mrs. Moody
Chancey at Ripley, W. Va.,
recently.
Mr . and Mrs. Lowell
Chevalier and fam1ly of
Mansfield spent the weekend
With his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Chevalier.
Darrel Henderson spent a
weekend with his grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Henderson of Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Ki~ble of
Parkersburg, W Va ., v1sited
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs.
John Hetzer and Mr. and Mrs.
R. E. Williams.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Casto were Nellie
Perkins, Margie Perkins and
Mrs. Cody Dyer of Charleston,
Mike and Hilda Frederick of
Minersville, Letta Spencer of
Syracuse, Mr. DIU of Mid·
dleport, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
SeUers of Colwnbus and Mr.
and Mrs. Dwain Casto of
Portland . ·
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Plckell8 were Mr.
and Mrs. R. E. Wiliams, Mr.
and Mrs. Lyle Balderson and
Kay and Kim Reed.
-Mrs. Lyle Balderson

LEWIS RESIGNS
KITTRElL, N.C. (UP!)
Head basketbaU Coach Joseph
F Lewis has resigned from
KittreU CoUege to accept the
post of assistant dltector of
correctldns In Riclunond, Va.,
It was 81UlounCed today.
Lewis, 38, came here two
years ago after coaching 13
years in a high school In Appomattox, Va. He was voted
coach ' of the year in the
Cavalier-Tar Heel Confer~ce
of whiCh his team was cochampion.
roo11l018te Ann Etchherger of
Oh10 University, Athens.
Mrs. Raymond Proffitt, Mrs.
Marshall Ad81!18, Mra . Larry
O'Brien and daughters, Linda
and Carol, Mrs . Herbert
RouBh, Mrs. Erwin Glpeckner,
Mrs. Mike Hill and daughter,
Dolly; Mrs. Joyce Quillen, Mrs.
Joey Proffitt and son, and Mrs.
Floyd Norris attended a
wedlllng shower for Mr. and
Ml'll. ~ack Hall at the home of
his "p8rents.&gt;Mr. and Mra. Jay
Hall, at Oleahlre on ~( .y
~fll'llna

Now s3795oo
1970LEMANS
Pontiac

Now s219500

2 dr. Hdtp.
Fully Equipped
Was $2595.00

Now $239500
1950 Ford

1h Ton Pickup
0

41 ,000 ACTUAL
MILES
ONLY

3!4 Ton Pickup
Flat Bed
4 Speed
Good Truck

$159500
EXCELLENT SHAPE

This Weeks Service Departments Special! A Free Oil Change and Lube,

INC~

News, Events . News, N~tes

Open Evenings Untii6:0o-Til5p.m. Sat.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

4-Wheel Drive
MUST SEE THIS
ON!;

(Oil Filter Not Included) With Every Major Engine Tune Up!

POMEROY, OHIO
BOB
AT
- SALE5-DAUGHERTY
992-2175
500 E. Main

Apple Grove Reedsville

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Busl.ness"

1967 International
Carry-All

SOHIO CREDIT
CARDS HONORED

..

MODEL-J
A.T .• p.s .• A-C. p.w.
Was $2395.00

1968 Ford

Now s2795

•

Granville
2 dr . Hdtp .
Fully Equipped
Was $3995.00

SHARP!

00

AVAILABLE

68 Chevelle 2 Dr. H.T., V-8, auto., P.S.·--'1495

.

SEWING MACHINES Repai r,

•

1969 Pontiac

Bonneville
4 dr , Hdtp .
Fully Equipped
Was $2895.00

EASY
GMAC
FINANCING

' 1971 Pontiac

Gran-Prix

Now $399500
1970 Pontiac

Refuse"!

'

On Most Amencan Can

3·11 ·30tc
PAIN TING. Masonry work ;
free est1mate . call 773·5580.
3·7 30tp

Can't

70 C'adllac Sed. DeVile, power, air---- 4000
70 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, full power, air--'2995
69 ;Falcon 4 Door, 6 cyl., Std. -------.1895
'
.
69,,Qids 88 H.T. Sedan, full pow., air---·'1595
69 .MertUIJ Molltego 4 Door, V-8, auto.-- $1395

ASK US ABOUT''

EXPERT
-.
'Wheel Alignmen~
' '5.55
.

2966

'

1

SM1JH__NELSON
MOTOR~ -Pomeroy
INC. ·
99X-1174

I

Electra 225
4 Dr. Hdtp ;
Fully Equiped
Was $4195.00

Offer You

). 72. Cadillac Cpe. DeV~Ie, C.C. air ·----·'illlil

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

'

ALL WEATHER
ROOFING AND
.CQNSTRUCilON
PHONE~ 992-2550

USED CARS

I

building

1971 Buick ;

"I'm Gonna Make You An

POMEROY
' HOME &amp; AUlO

Have your homo buiH by
Custom Builders . Our
carpenters have 20 yearsl

OHIO
PALLET CO.

WANTED

for $1.00

WMP0/1390

Poles
Maximum
Diameter
10" or.
Largest End

~

:

-==========;f"',

anyone other than mysel

THE Southeastern Ohio Pt&gt;lled

•

-

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

K

f

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Smger Sales and'
Service. We Sharpen Scissors., EXCAVATING. dozer. loader DOZER and back hoe work.
3·29·tfc and backhoe work , septic
ponds and septic tanks. dll·
-:-.~~
-,
_--,.,.---,-tanks
Installed
,
dump
trucks
chlng
service ; top soli, fill
BEAT the rush' Get your and lo·boys tor hire , w1ll haul
dirt
,
limestone,
B&amp;K E•·•
lawnmower and tiller tuned fill dirt, top so1l, limestone
cavatlng
Phone
992·5367,
up
now
;
Small
Engine
Repair
EMERSON 23'" TV. console,
and
gravel;
call
Bob
or
Roger
Dick
Ka~r. Jr
Phone: 992-3863
Shop on Third St. Mason. W. Jeffers, day phone 992-7089.
good f1n1 sh , compl et ely
9·l·ffC
Va
overhaul ed; $50 ; phone 992
Til3 P.M.
night
phone
992·3525
or
992·
3 63otc 5232.
6813.
or 992-5844
SEE US FOR Awnings, storm
3·16·3tc
2 11 tfc
doors and windows~ carports,
After 6 p.m .
marquees, aluminum siding
'---- - - -- - -- -' 1972 TRIUMPH TR 6. wire
TIME for spring tune ups for
and railing A Jacob, sales
wheels. AM FM ; phone 992
lawn m owers, garden tra c
r epresentative. For free,1
PRIVATE meetmg room for
2204
farm
tractors
and
farm
tors,
est1mates, phone ChoriM
any organtzatton ; phone 992·
3 16 3tp For Sale or Trade
ma chtnery
For all your
Lisle, Syracuse, V V.
3975
mechan1cal problems. come
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3 11 tf c 8x35 2 BEDROOM tra1ler, 26ft 1972 FORD Gran Torino, 2 dr
to Dave's Garage on West
l ·2·ffC
se lf co ntain ed
Concord
HT. low mileage, 1n new Shade Road or call 985 4118
DUPLEX wall to wall car· camper , Maytag m1ni washer
condition and loaded w1th belore 6 p. m After 6 p m. 0-, ""
D·"E,..
' L-L-,W
_,.H
_...E
""E
""L
- a-11-gn-m-ent
peting . 2 bedrooms , 2 and dryer. phone 992·3954
extras, A c, AT, PS, PB, AM call 985-4233.
located
at
Crossroads.
Rt. 124,
bedroom house , phone 992
3·16·31c
FM rad1 o, plu s, phone 742complete front end service.
3
IS
·3tp
'
2780 or 992 3432
3154
- - - - - - -- tune up and brake service.
3 13 lfc l8 1/ 2 FT FIBR E GLASS boat
3·11 ·6lc ELNA and White Sewing Wh ee ls balanced etec·
wilh 1970 lOS h.p Chrysler
All
work
Machines ... service on all Iron ically
HOUSE and 2 tra1ler lots, phone motor w1th all equipment
guaranteed
Reasonable
makes.
Rea
sonable
rates
.
complete, $2,000, can finance ;
992 5693.
The Sew ing Center , Mid· ~~tes . Phone 992·3213 Or 742·
Mobde Homes For Sale
3 13 4tc ca ll 992 2720 or 992·3589.
dleport, Oh1o
¥ 32
3·16·JIC
2·18·1fC
11·16
He
MOBILE
HOMES
FOR
SALE
SMALL pr1vate apartment ; - -- - -- - - men only ; completely 4 TRAILER axles with wheels DON MILLER or Don Berry at
CONCRETE
"READY ·MIX
Berry·MIIIer Mobile Home
separ ate from house ; utilities
and t~res , electr •c brakes,
delivered right to your
furni shed ; call 992·3881 be· SlOO each . all for $375 , Arnold Sales w1ll sell you a late
pro ject. Fast ond easy. Free
model used Mobile Home for
tween4p.m . and5p m or 992Br other s, Pom er oy , Oh 1o ,
estimates, Phone 9~2 · 3284 .
3134 after 6 p m
phooe 992 2448
hundreds and hundreds of
Goegleln Reedy·MI • Co.,
3·16·3tc dollars under ongmal cost
3 13 6tp
Middleport, Ohio.
We have a huge selection of
6·JO.ttc
good 10 and 12 wide homes
1~70 YAMAHA 175, S250; phone
For Sale
now In stock and we 're ready
742 6834
SEPTIC TANKS CLIANED
ALUMINUM Car top boats, 10,
3 2 tfc to deal w1th " you" I All we ask HARRI SON' S TV Service and REASONABLE roles. Ph. 446·
IS a chance to show you how to
Serv1ce Calls. phone 992-2522
A782, Gallipolis, John Ru!jlell,
12 and 13 ft Kmgsbur y Rd , - - - -- hundr eds of
2·9·1
Jc
'
Owner
&amp; Operator. ,
Co, Rd 18, Phone 992 6256 NEW FOAM to fill your old save many
· ~oll l'l r !i 1 · 1h sel e~ttriif Yol"l r
.} ~~ 1.~
r'l o 1
b, l l 1 ~ ')rr•f'}ll t:l!1 V ru;tl't• r .$.12-tfC
after S p m
cush1onsJ standard ·size sUite,
_.__ .,
- ~be SUJ;e. ;and see us
.
3 8 Jotc
only $9.95 . , Pomeroy home
before you buy any new SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC . C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Recovery. 622 E Main St.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN
Mobile Hom e, you'll sure be
Complete Service
3 s.3otp glad
121 PAINT OAMAGE 1972 Z1g
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
you
d1d
Berry·MIIIer
Phone 949·3821
Zag Sew1ng Machines Stoll in
SANITATION, STEWART.
Mob1le
Home
Sales.
705
Racine, Ohio
matenal s,
ongma l cartons . No at - UPHOLSTERY
OHIO PHONE 1»2·3035
Farson Street. Belpre. Oh10
Crltt
Bradfqrd '
regularly
$J
95
only
$1
~5
tachments needed as our
10·4·1fr
Phone
423
9531.
5·l·lfC
controls are bu11t in Sews
Also r em na nt s Pom e roy
3 15-Jtc
with 1 or 2 needles. makes
Recovery. 622 E Ma in3·B
St·JOtp r
buttonholes , sew on buttons.
Real Estate For Sale
Real Estate For sale

Recover y, 62 2 E Mam St.
~9 2 7755
CL EAN copper, 4Sc lb ,
J.a.3otp
3·1Htc
: OF CHATTEL PROPERTY
Signed Gene D. Hudson . Box Rad1ators, clean, 28c lb ;
Brass. IBc lb ; Batteries. 70c;
332, Raci ne, Oh1o
:U NIVERSITY V W , INC .
Ginseng
$60 lb., M A. Hall. 131 VACUUM cleaners new 1972 UPHOLSTER your own fur ·
3
15·Jtp
• VS
n1ture Foam cush ions , any
model Complete with all
Reedsville.
378·6249
J)ONALD K &amp; NELLIE
s1ze. Cotton , burlap, sw1Yel
cleanmg
tools.
Small
pamt
3 9 ttc
J'EARCE
YARD SALE, Saturday and
bases, zipper, webbmg, welt
damage'"
sh1pplng
Will
take
"
Case No. 1286
Sundar at " OLD" M&amp;G
Pomeroy Recover y, 622 E
S27 ca sh or budget plan
• In pursuance to an Executton
Marke on Rt. 7 above Me1gs Help Wanted
Mam St
available
.
Phone
992·7755,
~o m th e Court of Comm on
Galli a line. you will have to
I- leas , Pom eroy , Ohto on th e tst see
_ _ __ _ _ _ _3_·8_·30!~
Electro Hygiene Co
to bel ieve 1t 1
NEED som eon e to mow yard ,
llay of Mar ch 1973 and to m e
3·1H
tc
:3·15·21p phone 992·6766
•trected In the case above
L1mestone, E xcel sior •
!lam ed, I will ex pose tor sale a t
3·16·3tc MIXED hay, phone 949 3839 or "cOAL
Sail
W
orks, E Ma 1n St ,
liublt c auc t 1on at th e front door GUN SHOOT, March 17. 7 30 p
949
5884
Pomeroy
Phone 992 3891.
et the Cour t House, Pom ero y,
m ; M1l e Hill Road. Factor y
J1A3tc
4 12 ttc
~~ hlo, M eigs Coun ty on the 26th
choked gun s onl y; Refresh Wanted
ay of Ma r ch . 1973 at 10 oo
ment s Sponsored by Ra c1ne
'clock A M th e foll owtng good s
35 ACRES ; lots or buy what you
Fire Dept
end chattels to wt t
want , on Chester w at er ;
3 15 2tc
• I - 1970 Ford Mustang , 2
phone 992·5248 1111 3 p m or
aoor. hardtop , bla ck vln yt top
992
3436 after J p.m.
f&gt;v er blu e in c olo r , V 8 RIFLE MATCH, Rutl and Gun
3 14 6tc
eu to mat l c. pow er steer ing ,
Club, star ting 12 o"cl oc k
11rcon d1t1on ed , Ser i al No
Sunday. March 18th
~ T01F11 2 5 2 6
3.Js.3tc
'· Taken as property of Donald

SHERIFF ' S SALE

/i'

992-2174

Committees will
meet March 20th
ATHENS - Two District
Citizens Committees for
Development Disabilities have
been approved for the southcentral and southeast areas of
Ohio, according to Elsie Helsel,
Ph.D , Chairman of the
Governor 's Planning and
Advisory
Council
for
Developmental Disabilities.
Mrs Helsel, of Athens, also
serves as the Washmgton
representative of the United
Cerebral Palsy Assoc111lion.
A joint meeting of both
committees will ,be , held
Tile!iday, March 20, at 7:30 p.
m. at the Hocking Hills Dming
Lodge, Old Man's Cave State
Park The purpose of the
meeting will be to discuss the
goals and objectives · of these
ciltzens groups and to enable
the corrumttees' task forces to

Tuppers Plains
Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
Sunday School at the
Methodist Church was 68 and
offering was $69.12. Worship
attendance as 31 and offermg
.$88.55.
Pvt. Ray Watson, who is
stationed at Ft. Knox, Ky.,
spent a weekend here w1th hts
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs,
Fan Halsey and his brothers,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Watson and
Mr. and Mrs. James Watson
and his sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Barn heart and family,
Those spendmg Sunday w1th
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles
were her brother, Mr and Mrs.
Bernard Stern and two
daughters of Mt. Zion, W. Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Spencer and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip Boyles and family
and Mrs. Bessie Webster and
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Massar
and family.
Mrs. Guy Spencer entered St.
Joseph Hospital at Parkers·
burg for observation and
treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Snyder
or Sandyville, W. Va., were
Sunday afternoon guests of her
aunt, Mr. and Mrs Wayne
Brickles.
Mr . and Mrs . Howard
Flanders of Guysville Route
were Sunday evening guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Spencer
and family •
Thurman Babcock returned
home from Camden Clark
Hospital In Purkersburg but
remains quite poorly.
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Rardin
of Long Bottom visited Mr. and
Mrs. Thurman Babcock, Mr •
and Mrs. Oscar Babcock and
Mrs. Bessje Webster.
Mrs. Leone Babcock will
Widergo dental surgery March

23.
Mrs. Curtley Spencer
celebrated her birthday at her
home In Middleport with all her
children and grandc,hlldren
present for the occasion.
Mrs. Dwight Spencer of
Pomeroy Route 3 visited her
~qt~

M.-.

Rf~&gt;hDM

Da•u•h ,..

Wolfpen News, Notes

Mr. and Mrs, Clinton Gilkey,
Karen, Mrs. Harold Gillogly
and Vicki and Bruce of Albany
and Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Russell of Middleport were
&amp;mday visitors of Mr. and
orgamze. The meetmg IS open Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fouch and
to the pubhc. Names of
family
of HWitington, W. Va.,
Comm1ttee members were not
were weekend visitors of Mr .
disclosed.
and
Mrs. Jack Elam and
The southcentral committee
(district Six ) is made up of family .
Mrs . William Boyce of
volunteers from Adams ,
Brown, Galha, Highland, Columbus Is spending several
Jackson, Lawrence , Pike, days with her parents, Mr. and
Ross , Scioto and Vinton Mrs. Howard Russell .
&amp;inday callers of Mr. and
Counties. District Seven
counties are Athens, Hocking, Mrs. Eugene Haning and Mr.
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman
Noble, Perry and Washington were Mr. and Mrs. James
Reeves, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
counties.
The long range goals of the
citizens committees are to
unprove hfe for those who are
the victims of mental retar·
dation , epilepsy and cerebral
palsy, and to help In brmgmg
the hves of the developmentally disabled and the1r
families closer to normal

Mrs. Bill Fouch and family and
Mr. Charley Smith.
Charlotte Lambert of
Nelsonville and Mrs. James.
Proffit were Saturday visitors
of Miss Naomi Jo Smith.
Everett Ray Johnson and
family of Columbus were
weekend visil?rs of Mrs. Helep
Johnson and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Johnson and family. ',
Mrs. Ada Slack is visiting
with Mr. and Mrs. Harle;lo
Johnson, Tammy, Cheryl an"d

Terry.

'

Weekend visitors of Mr. aiM!I
Mrs. Robert Russell were Mn.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
Amanda of Maryland and Mro.
and Mrs. Steve · Haggy of
Akron .

TRUCKS

'72 CHEV. CUSTOM .......: ................ s2595
and Mrs. NeiSel Weatherman
on Wednesday evenmg.
Mrs. Freda Wells and
daughter and granddaughter
called on Mrs. Oscar Babcock
a day recently.
Mrs. Edgar Dorst, Swnner,
called on Mrs. Robert Dorst
and son, Timothy, Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes
and
grandson,
Lowell
Ridenour, of Chester were
Sunday afternoon guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Fon Halsey and
brother, Wellie.
Several from her called at
White's Funeral mome in the
death of Jessie NeweU and also
attended his fWier al there with
burial here in the church
cemetery. Mrs . Newell
returned to Columbus w1th her
son, Mr. and Mrs. Clair Newell,
where she will be near her
doc tor for checkups due to her
eye operation .

c.Jo. long Wide bed. 6 cyl ' stand ' radio &amp; heater. Sharp

'71 CHEV. C.IO .. ··•• ...................... '1995
Step S1de, 6 tt bed. 350, V 8, 4sp., radio &amp;heater

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

'71 TOYOTA .............................. s1395
Carella , 2 dr. sedan, one owner Sharp.

'72 FORD GRAND TORINO ................ .
4 Dr . H T , vinyl roof, all leather 1ntenor Real sharp

'72 MAVERICK ................... ........ , '2295
6 Cyl , auto trans, R&amp;H , 9,000 actual mtles, one owner

Sharp

'71 MAVERICK............................

s1695

6 Cyl , auto trans., R&amp;H Sharp

'71 VEGA .•••••.•••••••• ••••••••••••••••.•. $1695
Factory air, R&amp;H, 4 sp

'71 PINTO 3 DR ......................... }1695
Runabout , R&amp;H. 4 sp. one owner

'71 MERCURY COUGAR .... ..............

s2295

2 Dr , H T 1 JSl eng ., auto on the conso le, v iny l roof

Fairview
- By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Pvt. and Mrs. Ronald Russell
and daughter, Mandy, of Ft.
Meade, Md.,spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell at Wolf Pen. Mrs.
Russell and daughter will vtsit
lndefmitely with her parents,
Mr and Mrs. Russell Roush
while ~t. Russell Is stationed
m VIrginia.
Mrs. Bill Parsons and sons of
Antiquity spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst
of Niles, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Durst of Ravenswood
spent Sunday with 1\!r. and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush and Roger
and Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush and family .
Paul Sayre of Columbus
spent the weekend at his farm.
Mrs. Charlotte Perry of
Columbus visited her father ,
Charles Blake.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rousll,
Sharon and Cindy Roush, and
Jeff Miller visited Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lew1s Saturday
evenmR at Clifton.

'71 CHRYSLER NEWPORT................. '2395
4

Dr, R&amp;H. vmvl roof

'70 CHEV. CAPRICE.. ..................... s2295
2 Or H T , AM FM radio, lac air , P S, P B , v1nyl root.

'70 CHEV. NOVA......................... 51595
4 Dr , 307 V-8, auto , P S, fac a1r, new t tres

'69 PLYMOUTH FURY

111 ..... . ........ .. .

s1395

4 Dr , fa c. a ~r, P S., P B

'

'69 MERCURY MARQUIS .......... ....... 51295
'

2 Dr H T , R&amp;H, vmyl roof

'69 BUICK La SABRE ...................... 51895
4 Dr . H T . fa c. air, P S., P B, vi nyl roof

'69 CHEV. CAMARO ....................... '1695
Z·28, 2dr H T , v1nyl roof. 4sp.• stereo ta pe playe r ThiS os

one you have to see.

'68 CORVET, SHARP, SHARP, SHARP.'.....s2795
'67 MERCURY P.ARKlANE ..................~95
4 Dr. H.T , lac air. lull power

'66 BUICK RIVIERA ....................... }695
'65 MERCURY 4 DR. STATION WAGON .... '395
'65 MERCURY 2 DR. SEDAN .............. ..S295
See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS BROS~
USED CARS

· Ph. 9&amp;5-4 100
Located on St. Rt. 7

Chestes

�Wood or .metal is transformed

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-i'llmll'oy, 0., lllrdll..

Ohioans 11%

8POWs
may face
charges

richer .i n '72
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Center for Business and
Economic Research at Ohlo
Stale University said today the
stale's personal income rate in
January was up 11 pet. from
January, 1972.
The center said January
payrolls for production
workers and other non ..
supervisory employes rose 15
pet. above the January, 1972,
level.
All eight major counties
showed january-t""January
payroll gains ran~lnJi from
eight per cent in Hamilton
County to 33 pet. in Mont.

NEW YORK (UP!) - At
least eight enlisted prisoners or
war flown out of Hanoi today
were strongly opposed to the
U.S. military inolvement in
Southeast Asia and may lace
charges when they return
borne, the New York Times
lllid today.
The Times quoted "military
aources" as saying the eight
were disruptive or prison camp
life in North Vietnam and
provoked bitter hostility
unong their fellow prisoners,
especially pilots who had been
shot down.
All of the eight, among a
I!I'Oup of 27 military personnel
freed todily, were enlisted men
who bad been captured in
South Vietnam.
According to the Times, .the
eight were members of the
"Peace Committee" which
made several antiwar broadcasts and urged Congress to
force an end to the war.
Th~ eight refused to obey any
military orders while serving
as prisoners, the Times said.
The paper quoted one official

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
March 16 - 17
ULZANA'S RAID
( Technicolor)

Burt Lancaster. Bruce
Davison, Richard Jaeckel,
Joaquin Martinez.
iGPl
THE INCREDIBLE TWO
HEADED TRANSPLANT
ITechnicolorl
Bruce Dern, Pat Pri est.

MEIGS OOUNn' SPELLING BEE - Sdlool c:hampiGnl
competing in the Meigs County Spelling Bee Thursday night
at the Salisbury Elementary School received certificates of
awards and engraved pens. The group included left to right,

Casey Kasen .
-----IGPI
Sun., Mon., &amp; Tues.
March 18,19 &amp; 20
S DOLLARS I
(Technicolorl
Warren

Beatty ,

Goldie

Hawn, Gerl Forbe, Robert
Webber, Scott Brady.
I Rl

Co lore a rtoons
Show starts at 7 p.m.

gomery County .
Other gains included Sum·
(Continued from page I)
mit, IG pet.; Stark and Lucas
15, Cuyahoga 13, Franklin 11 length of the book involved.
However, it is recommended
and Machoning 17 pet.
that the subscriber have one
LOCAL TEMPS
book on hand, one ordered and
one
being returned as a perTemperature in downtown
petual routine. There is no
Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was . charge for delivery of the
59 degrees, under rainy skies.
books . or for their return to
Cincinnati. The recording
machines are ordered through
the Columbus Rehabilitation
Center. Mrs. Betty Cline,
Middleport, is the first
member or the new Retired
Senior Citizens Volunteer
Program to be 1'/0rking with
!piking books. She assists
subscribers in any way
possible in continuing the
service and is working in
conjunction with the new
senior citizens volunteer
'program of which Mrs. Pearl
Welker is director.
One need not be blind to
become a subscriber to the
service for which there is no
charge whatsoever. There is
also no age requirement. One
subscriber is only eight years
or age. Physical lmpainnents
as well as sight lmpainnents
help determine one's eligibility
to participate.

There's no need to carry around a lot of cash
when you have a Chec king Account.
YoUr signatu re turn s a check into in stant money

And you have an instanl record ol what you·ve spenl
Stop in today for your "instant-money" checkbook.

pomeroy
rutlond

pomeroy
national .
bank
the bonk of
the century
established 1872

Member

FDIC

"Going one step further"

Talking books[

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Fair Sunday and Monday
with a chance or showers
Tuesday. Highs In the 40s
Sunday and in the 50s and
lower 60s Monday and
Tuesday. Lows mostly In the
30s.

Pn!nt mr,ltMI!y Qamf,llftlt grader, Sallsbury; Tammy
Cozart, sixth grader, Portland; Robbie Welsh, sixth grader,
Harrisonville; second row, Jack Duffy, fifth grader,
Syracuse; Douglas Gloyd, sixth grader, Salem Center; Toni
Pope, sixth grader, Bradbury; Marty Foley, seventh grader,
Southern Junior High School, runner-up; Mark Williams,
fifth grade, Pomeroy; third row, Brent Patterson, sixth
grade, Racine; Lynda Black, fifth grader, Rutland; Rachel
Hunter, eighth grade, Chester; Dorothy Runyon, seventh,
Tuppers Plains, and Jeff Thornton, sixth grade, Letart. ·

OEPA
(Continued from page I)
"The Ohio electric utility in·
dustry is the largest coal-burning electric utility in the na lion
and therefore has a challenge
and an obligation to develop
the technology to ahate sulfur
oxide gasses as quickly as
possible," the governor said.
"We are very concerned that
·the economy of Ohio's coal in·
dustry be maintained."
Four of tbe plants receiving
compliance schedules are located in the Steubenville area,
which recently underwent two
EPA air pollutitn alerts.
The plants involved are : . ,
- R. E. Burger, Ohio Edison
Co. in Belmont County.
- Ashtabula, Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. in
Ashtab\lla County.
-Conesville, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. in
Coshocton County.
l·
-Eastlake, Cleveland Electric Dluminating Co. in Lake
County.
-Miami Fort, Cincinnati
Gas and Electric Co. in
Hamilton County.
-Sammis, Ohio Edison;
Tidd, American Electric
Power; Cardinal, American
Electric Power, and Toronto,
Ohio Edison, all in Jelferson
County.
-Edgewater, Ohio Edison
and Avon Lake, Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. in
Lorain County.
.-Philo Electric, American
Electric Power in Muskingum
County.
-Bay Shore Electirc, Toledo
Edison Co. in Lucas County.
-Frank M. Tail, Dayton
Power and Light Co. in Montgomery County.

PAY BILLS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state Department of Public
Welfare paid more than $2.5
million in medical bills last
week, with the biggest chunk of
money going to pharmacies,
Director Charles W. Bates said
Thursday.
Of the $2,555,077 paid during
the week of March 4, Bates said
druggists received $987,244;
ATTORNEY APPOINTED
doctors $860,556; hospitals
COLUMBUS (UPI)
$143,465 for outpatient ser.
Thomas A. Unverferth, an
vices, and dentists $45,823.
Ottawa attorney, has been
appointed to the state Banking
Board, Gov. John J. Gilligan
announCed Thursd~y.
Unverferth will serve a
three-year term, succeeding
Alfred Jones, whose term
expired.
Gilligan also reappointed J()o
seph F. Rippe, a Cincinnati
bank executive, to tbe board.
Rippe also will serve a three·
year term.

TIME CHANGED
Masonic service lor Dick
Wiley will be held at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
al 7 this evening rather than
7:30p.m. as announced.

MASON
DRIVE·IN
.
.
'

~ &lt; I I l1 '

By Llldeaa Stolllng1 "

Rutland, Ohio
March 14,1973
Dear Sir:
1 for one would .like to eJpress my appreciation for the
benefit and help that I have received from the BookmobUe
service herein Rutland over the past several months.
1 know that many or those on fixed Incomes do not feel that
they can go out and spend several dollars for a book that they ·
would like so much to read, but through the Bookmobile they can
obtain this book free of charge for a reasonable length of time.
I personBlly feel that the Bookmobile is filllng a great void in ,
the lives of many Senior Citizens as weliBII so many others who
are looking for various arts and crafts instructiOI)S of which there
is just about any subject that one could desire on the shelves of
Mr. Eddy.
I also notice so many roung lolks that are taking advantage
of this service so please, let's keep Mr. Eddy rolling.
Hopefully, V. H. Braley
as saying some military men charges or courts martial.
According to the Times,
were "out to get" the prisoners
because they were enlisted Pentagon sources said the men
men and some of them were shared quarters at various
black. But, the official told the limes with some of the pilots
Times, others were trying to who were sbol down and that
"ease the men oot" of the the two groupe Immediately
service and avoid any formal clashed.

SATURDAY ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'
OPEN SATURDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9

2.98 Scotts Liquid Gold Cleaner and
Preservative ~27 oz. size) - - - - . - 1.79 Lysol Spray Disinfeclant . . . . .
1.39 Lysol Deodorizing Cleaner . . . . .
11.95 King Size TV Snack Set
(includes 4 trays) . - - . - - - -

....-...-

2 for '1.00

Your choi ce of liquid make up - compact make up - brush on
blusher . sheer lipsticks . lip gloss - automatic eye liner brush -on mascara - brush-on eye shadows - creamy eye
shadow - natural eyelashes - nail enamel.

~--·-------·------------~~
Another Shipment

Kodak Pocket lnstamatic Cameras

______ _

Select your favorite model Kodak Pocket Camera- models

20, 30, 40 , and 60. Ready for your selection .

Sale!

Pyrex Ware
by Coming ·

Reg. 3.95 Divided Dish · · · · · · · Sale 2.49
Reg. 5.50 Bake &amp; Serve &amp; Store Sets
Sale 2.99
Reg. 7.95 Bake &amp; Serve &amp; Store Sets
Sale 4.99
Sale 3.99
Reg. 6.95 Refrigerator Sets ·
Sale 3.59
Reg. 5.95 Bakewar~ Sets · ·
Reg. 5.95 4 piece Bowl Set ·
Sale 3.59
Reg .. 98c Floral Juice Bottle · · • · ·Sale 69c

- - - - - - .........__.,...,.______________--1

Fiber. New! Washable .
Hundreds of uses . Ideal for
filling pillows, cushions,

toys, comforters etc. 1 lb .
bags.
Regular $1.29 ·

Sale

99~

CHESHIRE - Membeu of
Local 577, Pipelltters and
Plumbers union at the James
M. Gavin Plant construction
slte here will meet in Ports·
mouth Tuesday to consider a
new wage orfer.
Meanwhile, the union having
removed oickets at the Plllfll

Thursday night, all other crafts
will return to work Monday,
according to a spokesmll" for
the Ohio Power Company.
All Union employees have
been idle since a work stoppage
began at the plant last week.
Members of Local 577 have

been working without a contract since Jan .. I while new

patterns - permanent press.

5aturd•y Sale

,

+

$2.95

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

34 PAGES

THREE SECTIONS

··Pomeroy-Middleport

SUNDAY, MARCH 18, 1973

3. A.' 9

Small (J4.J6), medium (38·40) , large (42-44), extra large (46·
48) .. Solid colors.

'2.49 .

Sleeve Sport

SHIRTS
Small (14·14'12), medium (15-15'12), large 116-16'12), extra
large (17·17'12), all permanent press . very well made . full
cut and tapered style.
Solid color. Neat patterns· stripes .

2 for $7.00
SPECIAL SALE

YOUNG_MENS
DENIM DUNGAREES
SPECIAL NO.1- 13'11 oz. Western style blue denim. flare
legs · wide bell loops. Very well made. Slzes29lo40 waist .

Sale
Price
ss.88
flo.

SPECIAL
2- Young mens 10 oz. denim llareleg jeans .
wide bell loops . four pockets (2 on front . 2 on back I. Sizes 29•
to 3&lt;1.

Sale·Price s4.88

New Shipment

AUNT LYDIA'S
HEAVY

RUG YARN
All Colors .

Saturday Sale!
•

"COMPOSE"
BED PILLOWS

Excellent Bed Pillows In three sizes. Filling 100
percent Dacron Polyester Fiberfill 11.
Covering of attractive blue and while print of SO
percent Polyester and SO percent cotton, per· ·
manenl press. ·
·
Allergy free · lightweight - washable - lent and
dust free .

BUTLER HEREFORD FARM, Huntington, W. Va. and
Galllpolls, exhibited the Grand Champion Bull Saturday at
the 26th annual show of the Southeastern Ohio Hereiord Assn.
at the county highway garage on the Rock Springs

By United Press International
Sixty former U. S. Prisoners of war, including the son of an ad.
mlral and · a mysterious
soldier of fortune, flew to three
Air Force bases on home soil
Saturday to heroes' welcomes.
The m~n left Clark Air Base
In the PhiliPP,lries in three
ambulance planes, stopped
briefly in Honolulu for
refueling and then took off for
the mainland,
The first plane was expected
to arrive at Andrews Air Force
Base, outside Washington, D.
C. at about 3:40p.m. EST. The
second was the land at March
Air Force Base, near Los
Angeles, atl2:45 p.m. PST and
the third at Maxweli.Air Force
Base In Alabama at 6:30a.m.
When the former prisoners
arrived in Honolulu they were
greeted ·by a crowd of s,ooo

'

RUG SAMPLES

(Discontinued patterns of high priced aarpet)

11x24 '1.00

· '
27x36 '2.00

Fairgrounds near Pomeroy. With the grand champion are
Miss Ruth Butler, owner, and Terry Boggess. Ribbons
for winners were provided by the Pomeroy National Bank.
See picture of reserve champion and grand champion
female on page 3.)
·

Heroes' \4/elcomes given POWs

EST.

Sale

KATIE CROW
RACINE - Ralph Sayre was
dismissed without explanation as superintendent of Southern Local School District
effective at the end of the school year.
Follo~ing the.action, Snyre 'said Fri&lt;lrY..,
he was made "speechless" by the board's
action. He said in a news conference with
local media the following sequence ol
events preceded the board's action Thursday night.
In the vote itself, Charles Pyles made
the motion not to re·hire Sayre. It was
seconded by Grover Salser, Jr., with
Clarence Lawrence and Denny Hill voting
yes, and David Nease voting no.
This is Sayre's fourth year as
superintendent of Southern Local School
District. Sayre has taught for 25 years and
has his masters degree plus 42 hours.
Sayre's statement:
"On Feb. 13, Charles Pyles called me
at my home and informed me that four
board members had met and decided that
they wanted me to return as superintendent and all the details would be
worked out at the Feb. 15 meeting."
According to Sayre the hoard made
Sayre an offer, salary and length of term .
Sayre asked them to let him think about
the offer and talk it over·with his family.
The board recessed. Robert Bowen,
county superintendent, was at the
meeting.
On Feb. 22 Pyles made a statement in
executive session of the board that he was
not in favor of giving more than a one year
contract to any superintendent, Sayre
said. Belore the meeting, Sayre was approached by one of the board members
who asked him to wait until March to
complete his hiring as superintendent. At
~y

Soli fleece Inner lining ·automatic wasfiable and dryable . 50
percent Kodel Polyester · 50 percent cotton.

.~hort

15 CENTS ·

Supt. Sayre let go
by Southern Board

.-wtat SHIIJI '

Saturday Sale!
Mens $3.95

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

------~~------------------------------------~~~----------------------------------------------------------~---- ,

Short Sleeve

Special Sale Price 5aturdoy

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 11,500
Families

tmts

'

Mens

works beautifully.
Mdst recently, Casto has
carved a nine-foot oa[t altar
railing lor the new Fellowship
Chapel next door to his home - l•n:•:
and a cedar cradle for Its
nursery.
The chapel, which is being
remodeled for the new church,
was built by Casto in 1946. It
was his workshlp and garage
until recently. Much of his
creative work has been performed there.
Bird houses of various sizes
and types are plentiful on
Casto's lawn. Some are ffillde
from .car headlights while
many are miniature log cabins
resembling those of the pioneer
days. Casto is looking forward
to the martin' return shortly.
"They arrive March 13th last
year," he said, displaying his
marvelous memory.
Casto and his wife derive
(Continued to Page4)

CHARLES V. CASTO, retired self-employed mechanic, built the steam engine above with
scrap metal, nuts and bolts. The engine, which resembles tbe railroad locomotives before the
diesels of today; works beautifully when attached to air pressure. In the background are a few
of the tools and materials used by Casto in his shop.

Weather
Windy and cold Sunday.
' squalls in northeast
'
Snow
and
chance of snow flurries
elsewhere. High in low 40s.
Cloudy Sunday night and
Monday snow flurries in
northeast. Low Sunday night in
the 20s.

contract negotiations have
been underway.

MENS s3.95 PAJAMAS

Popular Pyrex Items

100 percent pure Polyester

.Construction resumes Monday

Broadcloth In sizes A (small), 8 (medium), C (large) and 0
( Ex·largel.
Coal style lop · 1adjustalile gripper boxer waist . ChOice ol

Special Savings on these

POLY·FIL

Casto from wool he collected on
his farm.
One of his most lascinating
crea lions is a miniature steam
engine. Starting with scrap
metal, nuts and bolts·, Casto
welded and molded the parts,
piece by piece, until it was a
complete engine, similar to
railroad·locomotives before the
diesels of today. By attaching
air or pressure, the contraption

2 for '500

Sale 9.95

D;~ ~:7es COSMETIC .SALE

Friday and 5alurday

.swinging, are among his
favorite projects.
An old-fashioned spinning
wheel, like the one his mother
used, is another favorite; he
has carved half a dozen or
more .of various sizes. A
miniature wheel lit oak, carved
almost 40 years ago, stands in
the living room of the Casto
home on Jackson Rd. The
wheel's thread was made by

Short sleeves, permanent press, sizes 6 to 20,
famous make. Solid color, checks and excellent
pattern.
'

-·- -· ... -- ........-------

.....................................-...

retired a.u to mechanic of Vinton
becomes skilled artisan;
unique cradle swings or can be stilled

SPORT SHIRTS

- - - . Sale 1.98
. . . Sale 1.59
. . . Sale 1.15
- - -

for many years. lie's made
many articles of wood and
metal. Even his own fishing
boat! !Jl a !loy, C!wlie wal· ..
ched bis grandfather weave
baskets, a te.;hl)ique .be soon
learned. From that time, he
has continued . to keep busy
making or repairing useful
items.
"~rom a cetlar tree, ;yhich
be chopped down in 1960, he
carved ·a beautiful .bookcase
bed," said VelJ111¢, who is Mrs.
Casto, The bed was a gift to his
daughter, Geanie.
Unique cradles, hung on
stands by chains to penni!

BOYStP

\

HOUSEWARE DEPARTMENT
1st FLOOR

~· has developed Ibis hobby

VOL 8 NO. 7

FOR THIS SALE!

Saturday Specials

, VINTON -:- A piece of wood
or metal is a challenge io
Charles V. Casto, a retired self·
empl~~ !'lechanic. ~rlle,
as he is kn~ by bis fi'iends,
.owned and operated an
automoblle repair garage In
Vinton for many years. He sold
the first Cbtlvrolet in that
vUiage in 1927.
Today, with the rightsfant of
his knife or other proper
equipment, be can ·lurn a piece
. of scrap lumber Into a beautiful
piece of furniture, a . sewing
box, a smoke stand, or a
handsome gavel.
Charlie, a small, modest

FIREMEN CALLED
MIDDLEPORT - Mid·
dleport firemen received a call ,
toGrantSt.at4:06p.m.Frlday
wbere a car was ~eporled on
fire, However, the call was
eancelled before firemen left
the station. At . 8:41 p.m. the
department was called to
County Road 5 where a tractor·
trailer was reported on fire.
However, the call was believed
to be a false alarm. Firemen
round no vehicle.

persons who showered !hell)
with hugs and kisses and
"Aloha," the Hawaiian hello.
"Your aloha t8 welcome," said
Air Force Col. J~mes E. Bean
of Arlington, va: "We did not
. lose faith in you and never
will."
Joining him was Lt. Crydr.
John s. McCain II, who spent
nearly six years tn a Com·
munist prison camp. McCain,
whose father; Adm. John s.
McCain Jr., retiredla't year as
commander-in-chfef ol the
Pacific forces, smlled as he
stepped up to the microphone
and addressell the crowd at
Hickam Air Force Base.
"The communists ' tried to
make us believe the u. s. had

about 200 in the Philippines by
striding down the red carpet,
laking the furled end of the
American flag in his two hands
and kissing it.
"Well, he went out in style,"
said one oflicial.
Behind them, they left 62
other !reed POWs who reached
freedom .this week, including
two pilots held by China and 32
POWs held by the Viet Cong.
As many as 60 of them will
leave Clark Air Base Sunday
local time on three flights, with
scheduled departures at tw""
hour intervals beginning at 8
a.m. Sunday (7 p.m.
' EST
Saturday), heading for Texas,
Maryland,
Illinois and
California.

Boinbs miss Pr·e sident
PHNOM PENH (UPI) - A
Cambodian Air Force T28
fighter dropped two bombs on
the presidential palace today,
llllllng at [(;(ast ~ ~rsons and
ihjurlng dozens
more.
President Lon Not, the apparent target of the bombing
attack, declared a stale of
emergency, the .lint step in
turning the government
. over to
· mllltary COI11rol. •
The plane, wbich Lon No!
11ald was piloted by the son-inlaw of deposed le8der prince
Nll'odoar Slbanouk, aimed the
bombs at the pelace wh~e Lon

.

' .

.'

changed, that the principles
that made our country great
had changed," he said .
"The receptions we have
received proved the Unitea
States is not the same country
we !ell - it's a better one."
Also on the flight was Bobby
Joe Keesee, 39, a former
paratrooper who once tried to
defect to Cuba. The State
Department regards Keesee as
something of a mystery
because it was not known
exactly how or why he got into
a North Vietnamese prison. He
was the orlly civilian on the
flights .
Keesee, natty in a new cocoa
suit and yellow shirt,
astonished a cheering crowd of

Nol resides, but hit an adjacent association and the press, and
palaCe guard barracks.
article 11, the inviolability of
Black smoke poured over the domicile.
capital as screaming soldiers,
Immediately alter the 250
their wives and children- pound bombs exploded at
many of them wounded-fled p.m., mllltary ,police cor·
into the streets. At least 36 donned off all roads leading
persons were injured,
south towards the palace.
Western diplomats said Lon Diplomats living In luxurious
Not's declaration or a state of villa~ surrounding the palace
emergency freed him to turn grounds . were evacuated, and
over full control of the the nearby American embassy
~ovemment to the military.
was cordoruied oft and put on
He suspended four articles of full alert as the lone pilot
the constitution - those continued low runs over the
allowing for fr~om of speech, area for an hour.

Uo

Teenagers
pick lock,
get loose
POMEROY - Two boys, both 16 years
old, escaped from Meigs County Jail by
picking a lock Friday at 8:41p.m. Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach's department ,
disclosed Saturday.
Deputy Robert Beegle, on duty at the
time, heard the front door to the sheriff's
office slam shut and when he got to it be
saw the boys running across Court St.
which is just one block long, extending
from the court house to Main St. fronting
the Ohio !Uver.
The two youths, when they escaped,
were being held ln an upstairs cell on
charges of larceny. Both are of Columbus ..
The boys were described as having
brown hair. One was reported wearing a
brown reefer cOat and the other a short
blue coat.
Anyone kriowing the whereabouts of
either of the escapees should contact the
sheriff's department.
·

the same meeting, Sayre put in the record
that when he came to Southern Local he
had been hired for one year, then the next
year for a three year period, and it was "a
slai\1 th~:ace•.:,v.oJ t~.~e Qife~~d ailQther 3
'

RACINE - Charles Pyles, who
according to Supt. of Schools Ralph
Sayre, made the motion to not rehire
him, told The Sunday-Times Sentinel
Saturday the haard had offered Sayre a
one-year contract at $16,500, a raise
over his preseot salary. However the
offer in effect was withdrawn by the
board's action of Thursday night when
it voted 4-1 not to rehire Sayre, and
io the
prot~ss
declined to
negotiate. Mr. Pyles declined to discuss
details of why the change of heart oc·
eurred.
year contract. The board agreed to continue to negotiale.
Sayre called lor an informal board
meeting on March 7. At this meeting Sayre
said he was asked by Pyles. what he
planned to do, and Sayre said he agreed to
accept the one year contract at the agreed
salary.
At Thursday night's meeting Sayre said
he was not given a chance to talk to the
board during the regular meeting or in an
"executive" session nor was he given a
chance to accept any offer. The board in its
final business vQled 4 to I not to re-hire
him, Sayre charged.
Sayre disclosed that Pyles lnlormed
him that he , Pyles, had visited all the
schools in the district and not one person
had said they did not want Sayre back. One
of the board members stated that the only
1

r

,.

'

RALPH SAYRE: FIRED
objection ever made against Sayre was the
fact that he lived in West Virginia.
A letter !rom Robert E. Bowen, county
superintendent, was directed II! the board
at Thursday night's meeting; It read as
follows:
"The contract of Mr. Ralph Sayre, Local
Superintendent or your ·district expires
July 31,1973. The local Board of Education
should consider the re-employment or the
local superintendent and arrive at a
decision prior to April30, 1973. In the event
that no formal action is taken by the board
prior to April 30 of the ·year a contract
expires, the local superintendent is
automatically re-employed for another,
year.
"In my opinion, Mr. Sayre has worked
diligently for the betterment of Southern
Local Schools and is worthy of re-employ(Continued on page 4)

•

DONATION RECEIVED -The Gallia County Chapter American Red Cross
was given a blg !x&gt;ost toward its aooil for funds Saturday when Robert Daniel,
administrator or the Holzer Medical Center Clinic, presented a $400 check to John '
M. Koohel, chairman ofthe fund raising drive and E. Ray Bailey, ~ hair man. At
the halfway point in the drive, the.chapter has reached approximately 35 pet. of ita •
goal. Officials are confident that Gallia County's citizens who have not yet 'llR" ~.
trlbuted will do so during the final two weeks of the drive. Funds wlll be used to ,
contiliue essential functions of the local Red Cr068 Chapter

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