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12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero) , 0 ., May 24. 19/J ·

•

~ig

Foot legend refurbished

SAN FRANCISCO t UPII Is it Bigfoot or some guy in a
motheaten, baggy gorilla suit'
The elusive Bigfoot. legendary ape-man of the Pacific
Northwest, was sighted and
photographed, aecording to a
group of professional creatun·
hunters .
Actually . the) say their
photograph is of ""Son of
Bigfoot," a hairy teen .... 1ge
monster with silver-gray fur
and a mane rising like a
Roman soldier!s plume from ·
the nape of his neck to the top
of his head .
That's what appears in th e
photograph by B·F" Enterprises, a Santa Clara, Calif.,
corporation dedicated to the
capture of a centuries-old
legend.
The Latest Photo
The latest Bigfoot photo-

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight , May 24

NOT OPEN

Fri. , Sa t., Sun .
May 25 -26 -27

BUTTERFLIES ARE
FREE
(Technicolorl
Goldie Hawn
Eileen Hecka rt

I PGI

DOPEY DICKS
3 STOOGE S
Adults $1.50
Children 75c
Show Starts 7 p. m.

MASON DRIVE-IN
t.~,l

1\

oil'

.N Va

(.1r ' UL \1 1

N1qtllly

Tonight &amp; Frida y
May 24-25

Double Feature Program
Alfred Hitchcock 's

FRENZY

.,

( Color )
Jon FinCh
Al€c McCowen

I RI
~ Plu s­

YOU ' LL LIKE MY
MOTH ER
I Color)
Pa tty Duke
Ri cha r d Thoma·s

I PG)

there hasn't been one smc~ 1W7
- ~huws a monster sitting:
prcc;uiously on c.t rock twothirds of the way up what is
supposed to be a 500-fool
chasm.
The luc;-Jtion, S&lt;Jy Tom Bis.
cctrl, 24, cmd Gene Findle) , 25,
is "somewhere northl·ast of
Spokane, Wash ." They won't
be more specific: because, ' 'lt 'd
be like a BigfQOt com•ention
around there.''
They arc right about that.
The hunt fo r Bigfoot is a
gr Qwing hobby for weekerKiers
and has become a full -Li me
occupation for a handful of
adventurers.

Indian stories started it all .
They tell of eight-foot monsters
rumbling &lt;trOund isolated
art•as or forest and jagged
cliffs. Eighteen-inch footprints
resembling ~ man's were left
behind b) ttlcse nocturnal
beasts..
Sig htings R&lt;'cordcd
Bizarre sightings have been

recorded for m'Or·e than 100
ye;:~rs . But Bigfoot hus never
been captured or killed by
ruan , even lhough self-styled
authorities believe more than
one exists- probably a whole
colony.
The photos were taken in late
April by a partner in B·F

Enterprises who was Hpped by
a ran cher who said he had seen
Bigfoot. The photographer discove red the monster, aC·
cording to Biscari and Find1ey,
about 20 minutes after sunrise
sitting on a cliff. The photo was
lnken from about 280 ya rds
away using a telephoto lens .
After he took about six
pictures, the two said, the

crea ture climbed down the cliff
wall and moved out of sight in a
fluid, upright motion.
The last purported photo of
Bigfoo~ was taken in October,
1967, by rancher Roger Patter·
son n ~a r Bluff Creek, Wash.

r----------------------"1
MEMORIAL
DAY
MAY

28th

THIS BANK WILL NOT
TRANSACT BUSINESS ON
MONDAY, MAY 28, 1973

Unusual
Offer

during May only

Even if your trip is months
away buy from us in May
and save up to $48!

cxtnl $10 rniUion annmllly in
fede ral fun ds provided by a
1970 farm law.
The third and final federal
payment und er the three.year
l::rw is due July 1 fo r the 1974
fi scal yea r , and the Sena te
Agricult ure Co mmittee ha s
recomme nded extension of the
pc:lyments lor fi ve more yea rs.
Gross' protest WtjS touched
off by discov~ ry of an internal
Agriculture Department audit
which showed that Cotton, Inc.,
had been spending all its
federal money but had · b~n

putting part of its private funds
into a reserve. By June 30 the
reser ve will be up to an
estimated $12 million to $1&gt;
million, department r eviews
show.
Assistant Agriculture Secreta ry Clayton K. Yeutter said
Colton, Inc., has proposed to
spend a bout $24 million for the
year beginning July 1-$10
million in federal funds and
about $14 million of its own
''producer money" which presumably would include some of
its reserve.

President Nixon
hack in Capitol
THURMONT, Md . ( UPI) President Nixon, who spent the
night at his Camp David
moun tain retreat, returns to
the White House today to be
briefed by adviser Henry A.
Kissinger on his week of talks
in Paris with North Vietnam's
I.e Due 1'ho.
. Kissinger, who returned to
Wa shin gto n shortly before
midnight, told reporters before
leaving Orly Airport in Paris
that "significant progress was
made" durin g his six meetings
with Tho since last Thursday.
The meetings will resume in
Paris in two weeks, he said.
When his jet touched down at
Andrews Air FO rce Base
outsi de Wa shin gton Wed·
nesday nig ht , Kis-singer
cheerf ully waved at waiting
newsmen a nd te levis ion
cameras but made no Com-

Vietnamese leaders.
Nixon motored to Camp
David with a small group of his
aides after a meeting with
House Republican leaders late
Wed nesday . As ked if the
Watergate scandal was discussed during the meeting,
House GOP leader Gerald Ford
replied: " More important
things than that." He did not
elaborate.
The Presioent had met
earlier in the day with both
House and Senate GOP
leaders, apparently in an effort
to mend some fence S m
Congress.
Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler told . reporters that
Nixon, who countered many
Watergate~related accusations
in a lengthy statement Tuesday , intends to speak out again
soon .

ment.

Nixon's session wit h Kissinger was expected to precede the
President 's scheduled meeting FUEL SOUGHT
with some 680 .former· 'POWs,
WASHI NGTON ( UPI ) - .
who also have been invited for Appar :htly rea cting to a
an evening's entertainmen t at warmi'jll by the Ohio Farm
the White House. Nixon intend- Bureau Federation that state
ed to tell the men about the farmers only ha ve enough fuel
prospeclc; for p ~ a ce . in Indo- to last this week , Rep . William
china.
H. Harsha, R-Ohio, Wednesday
" Le Due Tho and I will meet asked the federal government
~1gain on June 6," Kissinger
to make an emergency -allocatold newsmen in Paris. "We tion of fuel.
have every intention of con" The cOnditions are . ex~
cluding olir discussions during trerrtely critical," Harsha said
th e next series of meetings.'' in asking for the die&lt;;el oil. " I
But Kissinger did not com- can't stress enough the ab-ment on the substaflce of the solute ur gency of my
meetin gs, - designed
to emergency allocation request.
strengthen the Vietnam cease.
"Further delays would comfi re agreement. His top aide, pound an· already disastrous
William H. Si.IIlivari, mean~ situation and would . contribute
while flew to Saigon to discuss to skyrocketing prices," he
the situa ti on with .South added.

ARE
Up to $5000 worth of
First National City
Travelers Checks
for a fee of just $2
Wherever you travel ... or even if y ou k e€p money at home

or at work .... the best way to protect yo1,.1r money is to use
First Nationa l City TraYe lers Checks.
If they're lost or stolen you can get an ·an-the·spot refund

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

Bicycle Sale
RICHARD JOSEPH POULIN has his cap adjusted by
Mrs. Judy~-

GRAND OPENING
OF

'

Farmers ·Bank
&amp; Savings Co.

A 015(0\iNl
OfPA RT M f. NT 3 TOiti

,RIPLEY, W. VA.
504 SOUTH CHURCH STREET

Member of F e dera l Reserve Sy s1em
$20 ,000 Ma~ .imum Insu rance
for Each Depositor

..

There'S an excellent selection of bicycles right ·now
-. All on sale - All Amer ican made bicycles and
there's boys and g irls models.

&lt;·.1 growin~ ch;~ilt

you -

- 'J'Iumks to

Our Fine t :ustomers!

~raduation exercises, but ooe
which the teachers and parents
hope to continue year after
year.
Attired in red graduation
gowns and caps with white
tassels, the children received
diplomas fr om Principal
Robert Morris showjng that
they
had
completed
requirements for the ·"degree
of Bachelor of Rhymes .~&gt; •·
Speaker for the occasion was
Dr . Albert Leep of the
Education Department of Ohio
University. A band composed
w-:.m:w.~'g.o;$$$;;::.x»~::-~-;.: of Meigs High School students
played for the processional and
Picture of graduation 'recessional o( the youngsters
class on page 12 today. with their teacher, Miss Mary
Francis.
·

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tears of sentiment flowed
Thursday night as 43 bOys and
girls .r~eived "diplomas" in
commencement exercises at
the M i,d dleport Elementary
School.
The garb was the customary
cap and gown, the ceremony
was quite traditional, but the
"graduates" were young, Very
young grads, as a matter of
fact : they were five and six
year olds!
f or the Middleport kin·
.
dergarten, it was 'a' "first"
in

The auditorium wa s filled
with proud parents and
grandparents, visibly louched
by the whole affair, along with
fri ends and school personnel.
Everyone seemed to have
come equipped with a camera ,
An arm bouquet o£ red roses
and a charm inscribed
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
MUd with chance of
showers during the period.
High temperatures Sunday
and Monday in 70s In the
north to upper 70s or mid 80s
In the south. Cooler Tuesda}'
with highs frOm mid 60s to
mid 70s. l.ows at nlght in 50s
north and upper 50s to mid
60s south.
~
:::::;;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::: :: :::::::::::::1! :~:~:::~;:;:::: :::;: ;:;:;:;:::;:;

"Kindergarten, 1972-73" was
presented to Miss Frttncis who
responded to the surprise with
tc&lt;~rs of apprcication .
All \U S very serious ex·
cc pt for so me of the
··Graduates'' who sometimes
spied their parents In the
crowd and sneaked a wave.
Yawns were fre:quenL. Some
tears flowed.
In troduced by Miss Francis,
Dr. Leep spoke on the topic
" Learning t o Livl;! Sue·
cessf ully ." Directing his
comments to the pprents, Dr,·
~ ,cep
asked th at they
rededicate themselves to being
good parents by helping their
children learn how to live
(Conti nued on Page 4J

The popular 10 speed bikes with steer ing post
mounted shift · hand brakes • rac ing seat · ra ci ng
handle bars.
1

Boys and girls five ·spee d bikes with dera il~ur shif t
on r ear wheel , hand shi fting by turning handle grip
· hand brak es fron t and r ear . 3 Speed bikes . boys or
gi rl s style · chrom e fender s . white sidewall ti res ·
hand brakes.
Regular 26 in ch bikes. boys or girls . coaster br akes
·sturdy made and 20 inch bicycles, also. Stop in. See
thi s fine line ofqval ity bicycles and save now .

Spring ·Fashions Sale on the 2nd Floor
With Tremendous Savings • •
I

Juniors and misses Lonq Dress. Famous maker Coordinate
Sportswear. Our entire stock of jeans in sizes 5 to 20 sale priced.
Smocks and Angel Tops reduced . Daytime dresses sizes 10
through 52 at tremendous savings . womens knit tops sale priced .
sale of womens swimwear, one and two piece styles . womens
screen print tops . sleeveless and tank tops sale priced. Womens
coordinate sportswear including pants . vests . shirts . ;kirts .
womens uniforms, entire stock on sale. Womens shorts at special
sale prices. Junior dresses sizes 5 petite to 15 sale prices.
Womens skirts, solid colors and jacquards.
And also girls wear sale on the 2nd floor. Childrens pants sizes 3
to 6x and 7 to.14. Pretteen (6 to 14 and young Jr.) 3 to 11 at real
savings.

Big ·Sale Now on the 1st Floor
.Mens and Boys Wear • • •
Mens casual knit shirts· tank tops all at sale prices. Boys double
knit dress slacks, regular, husky and slim sizes on sale. A big sale
of mens dress slacks sizes 29 to 50- mens walk shorts sale- mens
Lee Boot Cut Riders at real savings. Sale of Lee work uniforms .
mens and boys lightweighfiackets at sale prices. A big selection
of ·boys knit shirts reduced for this sale. Entire stock of mens
sport and dress shirts on sale. Boys sport shirts . mens blue
denim work dungarees. A real bargaif!. Sale .of mens and boys
work and dress socks. Pajamas sale (mens and boys), Mens
summer weight hats and caps at bargain prices . blue chambray
work shirts · short or long sleeves at real savings.

Sale Days At Elberfelds
Warehou.se On Mechanic Street

WE PROUDLY ANNOUNCE
OUR FRIDAY

at over 35,000 refund points in the U.S. and overseas.
. . , The most extensive refund servite i n the trnvelers check
business. They're Ponoreq. world -wide in mi ll ions of pl&lt;.~ces.
Best time to bUy them is during May. Offer ends May 31.

POMEROY, OHIO.

Bachelor of Rhymes degrees

Summer porch, lawn and patio furniture . good quality names
like John Hancock . Lawnlite . Lloyd . Telescope. All on sale.
Chairs · chaise lounges · ·swings · picnic tables round tables
gliders.
.
Lawn Boy lawn mowers. A good selection of 19 and 21 inch models
either push or self propelled - Also Lawn Boy motor oil in '4 can
handy pack.
Appliances on sale -Whirlpool Washers · Dryers . Freezers
Trash Mashers · Magic Chef electric or gas ranges . . Hoover
washers and dryers· metal wardrobes . cabinets . carpet by the
.yard at special prices · Congoleum and Armstrong linoleum.
Drive to Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street .- plenty of
free parking . Use .. our own sensible credit service.

Be Thrifty!, Save All of Your·Saleslips From

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

TilE SPEAKER - Dr, Albert l..eep of the Education
Department of Ohio University, was speaker at the kin·
dergarten commencement Thursday night. He chats hefe
with Miss Mary Francis, Ule class teacher.

en tine

..

IJ.&gt;voled To The lnleresL• Of The Meigs-Mwwn Area

VOL. XXV NO. 30
PRINCIPAL ROBERT MORRIS presents a diploma his degree of bachelor of rhymes - to Richard Allen
McHaffie.
rm.:::::;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;:=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:=::::::-~,:::~- :=:=:-:=:=·=:=:=:=:::::========:::;:;:;:::::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=::::;::::=====:::.

Wewsu in

Briefsi~

By United Press International
BUENOS AIRES - PERON DISCIPLE Hector J . Campora,
tears in his eyes, was sworn in today as president of Argentina.
ending seven years of military rule. In a lengthy inauguration
address he said the military had left the country in ruins.
Campara's ascendancy to the presidency brings the
followers of former President Juan D. Peron back into power
more than 17 years after he was overthrown . Peron is in exile in
Madrid but is eJ&lt;]lected back in Buenos Aires in about 10 days.
More than 100,000 persons cheered wildly as Campora, 64, made
his way up the steps of the Congress building to take the oath of
office at 8:1&gt; (7: 15a.m. EDT ).
· In an address to th e Congress he attacked the military
"dictators" who ruled Argentina for the last seven years and
praised the yowlg guerrillas who ''knew how to answer violence
wit~ viol~nce "- a reference to the terrorism of recent years.
BENSON, ARIZ. - 'A SOUTHERN PACIFIC freight train, 12
of its 107 ears believed loaded with bombs, exploded in
"mushroom clouds" for two hours near here Thursday ln ranch
land 40 miles before it would have rolled through downtown
Tucson.
·
Two railroad men were slightly injured when they jumped
from the moving train , bu t two other .train hands escaped
unharmed, according to Southern Pacific spokesman AI Brad·
shaw , Bradshaw said the eJ&lt;]llosions stopped late Thursday night,
but no attempt would be made to inspect the area until morning.
Witnesses said the train was still on fire.
COLUMBUS - TIIEJ OHIO REPUBLICAN Party, fightin g a
Watergate backlash and reeling from legislative election losses,
Thursday selected a veteran ''background politician' ' as its chief
money raiser.
George C. Eyrich, 55, of Cincinnati, was elected treasu rer by
the party's executive committee. He succeeds Kent B. McG,ough,
who became chairman of the state GOP organization May l.
E)Tich: an attorney who has never sought pu)&gt;lic office bl!t refers
to himself as "man in the backgr ound of politics," has long been
a Hamilton County Republican leader and a key· fund raiser in
the Cincinnati area .
DOG AND CAT OWNERS IN OHIO arc paying as much as Oil
.per cent more for their pet food since the first of the year as the
result of dramatic price increases in pet food ingredients.
Supermarkets and pet food st~r&lt;!S report major brand price
increases of about 38 per cent , with some secondary brands
raisin g prices up to the &gt;O per cent level since the beginning of the
year.
Pet food merchandisers were _informed of one boost in prices in
a letter last February from W. M. Shapleigh, president of the St.
Louis based Ralston-Purina Co., one of the nation's largest dog
and cat food manufacturer:s.
'

NOW - - - THERE

' '

Sale ~ays at Elberfelds In Pomeroy

$10 Million grant held up
WASHINGTON fUP I) ~
.\gricu ltu re Secretary Earl I,,
Butz has delayed a pproval of a
$10 million federal grant to a
private cotton promotion
group, scheduled to have been
paid July 1, it was lea1ned
toda¥.
I3utz and two top aides
reviewed plans to pay th e
money to Cotton, Inc., of New
York, and then decided they
could not approve it without
more detailed informa tion on
how the group would spent the
funds .
Among other thin gs, they
want to know abo ut salaries
and fringe benefits paid to the
organ iza ti on's high·paid staff.
According to Ag riculture Department records, the group
P"YS its president, .1. Dukes
Wooters, $100,000 a year and .
pays $3o,OOO to $44,000 annually
to alx&gt;ut six other empJoycs.
Rep. H. R. Gross , R-Iowa 1
has written Butz protesting the
$10 million payment, saying " I
see no reason why lhe
American people should be
gouged for such a huge subsidy
for an organization that is
apparently rolling in pri vHte
wealth."
Cotton, Inc ., gets · its basic
fi nancin·g from a ·$1-a-bale fee
paid voluntarily by farmers for
sales promotion and research.·
But since fiscal yea r H)72 this
has bee n supplemented with an

Pigtails Commencement for

•

EASTON , MD. - REP . WILLIAM 0 . MILLS had seven
mysterious notes in his pocket when he was found dead of an
apparent self-inflicted shotgun wound Thursday morning
following accusations that he re(.-eived a. secret $25,000 campaign
contribution from the Nixon re-election organization in 1971.
Sow-ces close to the investigation ca.lled the notes "suicide
notes" but they were in th e possession of local authorities who
. refused to even acknowledge their existence.
One note was said to have been pinned tQ Mills' body. The
Washington Post reported Friday the note ·said "I've done
nothing wrong but there is no ~a:y 1 can prove it. This is the only
way out." Sources said at least one of the notes was addressed to
his constituents. '111e Post said it alluded to " an impending
scandal" but soW'ces in the investigation said all the notes had
been impounded by the state's attorney and put away so that
Uleir contents could not be immediately disclosed .
WASHINGTON - A o7().MILLION-YEAR-OLD' clam, the
oldest ever recovered, has been found near Albany, N. Y., the U.
S. Geologica l Survey (USGS ) announced Thursday, 70 million
years older than any previously known and with potential value
as a •guide fossil,' for petroleum geologists to use as time
markers in locating potentially productive oil beds.
The clam "appears to be a missing link between some ~··
tinct forms of mollusks and the 20,000 species of clams living in
the world today."

Wentht:r
Showers or thundershowers
likely tonight. Low tonight in
the oOs. Saturday vaiia ble
cloudiness a'nd chance of
.shllwers hi gh from mid 60s. to
low 70s. ·
Marriage License
John Wesley Anderson , 18,
Rutland , •nd Gail Ann
Sizemore , 1.7, Rutland.

GASOI..INE CUTBACKS
CLEVELAND ( UPI )
Standard Oil Co. of Ohio
ISohio) announced Thursday
night it was forced to ration
its gasoline sa les until July 1
because o.! an ex tended
refinery shutdown at Lima ,
"Ohio. Sohio Board Chairman
Charles .E. Saphr said most
Sohio slntionf would he closed
this Sunday because of . the
cutbacks.
t

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1973

PHONE
992·2156
•

TEN CENTS

Repair-crew is off chasing Skylah
CAPE KENNEDY ( UPI) Thr ee
astra-repairmen,
promising "we fix anything."
we1·e launched into pursuit of
thei r crippled Sky lab today in a
daring attempt to salvage the
space station and make it
liveable for nine men for this
year.

Riding on their efforts was
the fate of the $2.6 billion
research program to ·put space
t1) practical use for man on
earth.
Mission Commander Char les
" Pete"
Conrad,
space
physician Joseph P. KerY'(in
and aeronautical ·engin ee r

Paul J . Weitz took off on time
at 9 a.m. ED'r and rode thei r
modified Apollo command ship
into orbit lO minutes later.
"Skylab II , Houston, We fix
anything ,n cracked Conrad as
the big rocket blasted away
fr om Florida .
" Boy, is th:1t a smooth ride,"

Conrad shouted as th e ro&lt;'ket
climbed out of sight irrto the
clouds, its eight engin es
pushing it tnwa rd orbit and
man 's first s pa ce repair
mission .
Conrad reported &lt;:J. ''nil:e
s ta ~i ng'' as lhc fir st stage of
the Saturn 1 rocket fell aw&lt;ry on

Dairy Princess contest opens
Ohio's 1973 Dairy Princess
may be a ·Meigs County girl
according to D~vid Nease,
president of the Meigs Dairy
Sen•ice-Unit. In order to enter
the state. Princess Contest,
however, a girl must be· first
selected as a County Dairy
Princess :.
Meigs County entries will be
received until June 5. They

She must be a high school
should be turned in to either guardian must derive at least
grtJdU&lt;Jle
( m· will graduate by
Mr . Nease or the County Ex~ part of their income from daii-y
te nsion Office of mailed to Box rarmin~, .o r the candidate must · Jimc l, 197:1) .
She must be avC:Jilable for
32, Pomer oy, Ohio . En tr y . have. lived on a dairy farm
pcn;orrvl
appearunccs during:
blanks are avallable fr om during part of her life .
ei ther location .
,_ Sllc must be al l'east Hi years the year ~:umnJ C ncin g with he!'
The Meigs County rules are of ag.e by June I, 197:1 and must enlr y appr1ival. If she is
the same as for the Ohio- Dairy not bC ovCr 25 yca~s of age ;:rs of se lec ted as Ohio Of!ir·y Princess she must be avH ilable
,Jun e I, 1973.
Princess ConteSt:
She must not be, nor ever comnlendng with her selecti on
She must have a dairy, farm
.:md continuing unlil the 1974
background. The parents or have been married.
(Continued on page 12 )

schedul e. Morncnls later he
reported the launch escape
tuwcr
jetliso ned
with
problems.
" We're go here, Houston,"
Conrad s:J id, hi s voi ce
reflectin g his obvious delight lo
be s p:1 ~.:c borne fo r the fourth
lime. The pilot is a ve teran of
tw o Ge mini Earth-orbital
missions and one Apollo moon
landing. '' It looks good in
here," he n:!portGd.
The first slage droppett away
as planned 21r2 minutes after
liftoff and the rocket's secoild
slage took over, accelerating
the Apollo tu the 16,650 mile an
hour orbital .speed.
Alrnust seven minutes after
le~un ~ h , the crew was 101 miles
into s pa ce and 416 rililcs
downran ge from Cape Ken·
ncd·y . The a~tronau ts were
traveling ;~ !m ost parallel to the

eas t coast of the United States,
"the most northerly powered
fli ght for astronauts thus far ,"
mission control reported.
Con.rad 's on-board computer
showed the spacecraft had
. ac hisvcd an orbit ranging 217
to 211 miles above Earth.
Mission control conflrmed his
figures and said everything
was going as planned.

Vehicles
collide
•
m
curve

Three - accide nts were
repottcd by the Meigs County
Sheriff 's DC pt . Thursday .
There were light pe rso nal
injuries in one of the mishaps.
Al 9c35 a .m. un F irst St. in
Reedsville, Larry F. Baker, 19,
Reedsville Rt. 1, was traveling
northeast and Florence A. Say,
58, Reedsville , was driving
;i southwest.· Their ve hi cles
collided in a slight curve
almost headon.
" It isn't that we are tryin g to precaution he had ordered a
There was medium property
keep something from the press ·special White House intelli·
d;1mages, no personal injuries, .
that the press should print.
gence umt to find uul all it .
or any arrest made.
" But it is that what. we are could about Ellsberg, whom
At 10:15 a .m. at the Pennzoil
trying to do is to accomplish ~ ixon says he suspected of
Service Station ln Racine, Jill
our goal ... and when we are poterl\ially being a leak for
M. Warner, 16, Minersville, Rt.
dealing with potential ad· more closely guarded secrets.
1, hav ing been parked in front
versaries those negotiations
These orders subsequently
of the gas pumps, backed up
must have the highest degree led to the burglary attempt on
and s truck a car behind her .
of confidentiality."
Ell sberg 's psychiatri st's of·
driven by Rocky L. Hupp,
Nixon's remarks, made at a fi ee, a move which Nixon said
Racine Rt. 2.
State Department briefing for he had not approved.
There was light damage to
the POWs, reflected the line he
Nixon said he was not COn·
Warner's car and medium to
has chosen in defending his cern.ed about "every -l ittle
Hupp'S. No citation was issued.
administration
in
the dribble! here and there" but
Al2p .m. in Sutton Twp. Paul
Watergate case . In a lengthy was
co ncern ed
a bout
E. Harris, '16, Minersville RD,
statement
Tuesday.
he disclosure of highly classified
was driving south on · Hog
disclosed for the first time that documents which could ruin
Hollow Road when he loot
security
con- such things as arm's control .
national
SCHUUL":S UUT ! - Metgs U&gt;unty schools were
control in loose gravel, skidded
siderations had prompted him negotiations with the Soviets . . dismissed Thursday and students began their long summer
orr the road on the right and hit
to order a limitation on the . "They do.1 't tell us theirs.
vacation which will for most fly by much quicker than one
a tree .
Watergate investigation and They have no problems
ca n imagine. These two students, Bobby Wears, left, son of
Harris and a Passenger,
said some' of his aides ap- keeping secrets," he said.
Mr. and Mrs. Oren Wea'rs, Pomeroy, and Cliff Kennedy , son
Glenn Collins, 16, Racine, Rt. J,
parently went beyond his in·
He also asked the POWs for
of Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Kennedy, seem to have no regrets as
had visible .injuries but were
structions and covered up their support in maintaining a
they left the Pomeroy Elementary School Thursday. Their
, nut immediately treated .
criminal actions.
strong defenSe posture as a
outfits were their ow n creations pu1led together for ''dress
There was h~avy damage to
Nixon also disclosed Tuesday b3rgaining chip in arms
down" day Thursday. Bobby and Cliff were students of Mrs.
lhe car.
that as a national secwity control negotiations.
Mary Hysell, fifth grade.

President defends
•
•
secretive actions
•

WASHI NGTON (UPI ) President
Nixon
says
American POWs would still he
in Communist jails if leaks of
na tiona I Secrets had been allowed to disrupt his ability to
negotiate their release.
He told · more than 600
prisoners of war back from
Vietnam Thursday, "Had we
not had secrecy, had we not
had secret negotiations with
the North Vietnamese ... you
men would still be in Hanoi
rather than in Washington
today."
" I think it is time in this
. co untry to quit making
national heroes out of those
who steal secrets and publish
Ulem in newsp~pers , " Nixon
said, in an obvious refere~ce to -.
Daniel Ellsberg's leaking of
the Pentagon Papers .
''It isn't that we are trying to
keep anything from the Ameri·
can people that the American
people should know ," he said.

•

•

.
d
1
000
ex
cee
,.
Meigs ·. High graduates now
By George Hargraves, Supt.
was appreciated.
Meigs Local School District
Tomorrow will bring alumni
Today brought the close of reUnions in Pomeroy. Rutland
the 1972-73 school year. This is and Harrisonville , A lot of
the seventh full school year of eff~rt goes into moving tables . by the PTA and its members
existence for Meigs Local. It and chairs for these banquets will place Uwm. . ,
Everette Holcomb s Voc~Ag
was the fifth commence'ment and dances. We are glad to
for Meigs High School. The · have some small part in people are putttng the flrushmg
class of 1973 brought the total belping to support these fine touche~ on a bnght, colorful
patnt JOb on the . playground
of Meigs High alumni to more annual community events.
The Salisbury PTA and sb.rc cq_wpment at Salisbury. You
than .1,000.
have
been busy in improving mJght look for thiS on your next
I understand that a Meigs
High Alumni Association is the physical appearance or tnp out that way.
The Board and PT As at
being formed. We hope tllat we their· school. Its interior has
been
painted
in
bright,.
fresh
Salem
Center and Harrisoncan
assist
this · new
. organization to get off to a colors. A lot of hours have gone vill e have also shared in
successful start. We wish it into the effort. The Board uf projects to improve the
well . We believe the 1,000 Education bought the paint. playgrounds at these two
graduates will support this The PI'A and staff supplied :he schools. ive look forward to
labor. Many thanks to these more cooperative efforts in this
effort.
area .
'
Dean Goldman of the Ohio fin e folks.
The next PI' A proJect at
We will be doing a follow-up
University
College
of
Education did an excellent job Salisbury will be to , correct a study of the 1973 graduating
in his conlmencement address drainage problem atthe rear of class next October. We will
Tuesday evening. His par· the building. The board is attempt to discover what they
ticipation in the com- buying needed tile. A new are doing the n, A similar
mencement program was a borizontal ladder and merry- follow-up uf the last seven
definite plus. His assistance go.round have been porc~ased classes has shown about 23 pet.
' '· ~./'-

Speaking of Schools-No. 278
in college . About another lo
pet . go into some oth er
educational program . About 60
pet. co nclude th eir formal
education at hig h school
graduation.
When we haVe the in ~ ,
formation in the fall, it wfll be
reported.
· The above reported information . should give ad·
ditional force to our repeated
rem inder that vocational
opportunities should not be
missed. We stil1 have room for
student s in several junior
programs. if you decide to go
this route, call 992-21&gt;8 and let
Principal James Diehl know
about it.
Dr . Marti~ Essex, State
Superintendent of Schools, met
with superintendent:; from ~ II

parts of the state at a special
conference last. Wednesd'ay.
This meeting was also spon·
sored ~y several s tate '
organizations. The topic was
current legislation and future
prospects. There must have
been over 600 school ad·
mi nistrators at this important
session . There are a lot of
impo rtant decisions to be m8de
at Broad and High withir1 the
next several weeks.
NE WS &amp; NOTES - Don 't
forget ! School's out. Watch out
for kids when you. drive There will be no· summer
remedia l program this year There will be a Head Start
program in fi ve of our
elementary buildings - We
wish a speedy recovery to Mrs.
Harqld Hubbard - She s uf·
fered burns in a· fire that
destroyed their home - Our
three bus men will be very
busy in preparation for the .
early Augusl..Jius inspection.

ALL. FOR STREETS
All federal revenue sharing
funds of Middleport Village to
be received during the first six
months of 1973 will be spent on
street main tenance and repair
under public transportation
·category, Clerk'-Tr-e asurer
Gene Grate said today. The
expenditures are· being m~de
in accordance with a decision
rea ched by council recentiy.
FIRST AID GIVEN
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called to the home of James
Jeffers, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, at 9:28
a.m . Thursday .to ass ist
CharJes Hatfi.td who was
suffering fr om· chest pains. He
was ta ken to Veterans
Memorial Hoopilnl. ·

NO PAPER MONDAY
The Daily Sentinel \\"Ill not
be published Monday In
. order to ·permit employees to
obServe Memorial Day.

��•

"

i

1
PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know

You Get More Heref

~1 1o rmed of the l unc
of your qovPrn.ment are
i'n1b0d1Cd n, publi c noltces. In
lhttt S('- 11 qovernmcn t ch,:~ r q~~
'II c.l t 1H.&gt;Il~ to be •n tormcd .
tht&lt;:&gt; ncwspapN vrQPS I'V('ry
Ct i!JNI lo r ead .lnd study these
nOt If PS We str UnQIV itdVI S('
thos.e c ,tll'cns. sec lunq furl her
' mfQrl;ll(IIIOII , IO f&gt;XPI'( I~(" !h('lf
riqht of a ccess to publ 1c
rl'LOrd~ olnd publ ll 11l('(' l 10y')

and b C'
! t on~

OUAUTY USEOCARSIBARGAIN PRICED! . _

~

71 VEGA•••H••u••••~·••••-·•••••••••• $1 595~·
Au to

73 OLOA OMEGA ................. ' 2995
fl

C y!

P.S

.1ulo

8 000

1111

72 CHEV Y VEGA ................... ' 1895
.t

q I

~I)C'cd

R &amp; H Sl'1orp

ss ;

71 PLYMOUTH FURY II .......... •1695
.!

Dr

PUBLIC NOTICE
. Sl.l lt• of OhtO :

k&amp;H. P S. lr ke new.

County o t M£'1Q!&gt; :

tn the Matter of .
LEADING CREEK
"o Cyl ~1u l o ~.s .• fac. u 1r
CONSERVANCY
DISTRICT :
• Ct~se No . 14 , 004
66 RAMBLER 4 DR. WAGON .... ' 495
NOTICE OF HEARING
Wi!h r.1, k 6 q l . duto_
ON WATER RATES
To 1\1 1 Known ond Un known
69 FALCON
DR. WAGON ...... ' 895
P('rsons and Publi C Cor
porat1ons In teres ted , tnclu!IIIIC!
t&gt; ( yl ,lUIO.
&lt;111 po ten t ral Users. Now or in
th e F ut urt.', ot n Proposed
FORD TORINO 2 OR. HT .... •2195
Lct~donq Cree k Cooservancv
t L,·l
ttJ
~&amp;H. R VOO mt
D1S tn ct Wa terwork s Sys tem
-~~~~------~
P ubliC /'4 0I1CC rS Here iJ Y
Grvc n .
73 FORD F1 ..................... ..... '3495
I l J Thai hcrcto tor c th e Boa ref
• 11'&gt;10111 F •plo rcr tm:w trlJ c k )
of D1rect ors of the Leading
C r eek Con ser van c y DistrtU
Milv c d e te rml n ('{l · r a te s o f
72 MERCURY MONTEG0 ..... . •27 95
c ompe n sat 1on fo r th e !i ille uf
; Dr , l.h ,)jf p -$., -~- B
Willer to he mad e avail,lb lc by
wOrk s and improv ements bu ill
by the Di s tr rc. t tor lhe purpo se
71 PONTIAC CATALINA ......... '21 95
o t wat e r su pp ly, tn cludinq til e
Dr P S P lJ vuwt root
s ale of suc11 wat er to th e
~ outh&lt;:rn Ohio Coal Com pa n y,
the Villaq e o f Rutlrtnd , Oh 1o ,
70 FORD GALAXIE 500 ......... '1495
and oth('r tnduo;; tr i.;~- 1 , com
1 Dr
V a auto. P S·, P.B.
mercia! ar.d r csi d e ntiil l u-.,er ~
11 l Tt1&lt;1 l s a id Bo ard h'-ls m ade
a report of its det e rm inat ion s to
70 FORD FAIRLANE ............. .. '1495
lh tS. Cou rl and s u ch det er
n ~m atton s arc now on f ile in th e
-1 Or V
ltdo R&amp;.H P S
off tee of Ihe Cler~ of thi s Court
{ J t 1 hut he r e tof ore the [ltJdrd
69 FORO LTD ... .... .................. '1495
o f D1r c ctors o f Lcadinq Creek
1 tl
~~I front to b.t_")ck
Cono;;r&gt;rvan c v D istrict h&lt;tve
adop ted rul es an d rCqu lation s
pr esc ribiiHl t he permr ss,blc
69 DODGE POLA RA .............. •1395
ll"'-e s of
th o wt~t er sup
· Or H1 ,l_ir P .S., P . (j .., viny l roo t.
PlY provid e d Qy lt)c d1 s
tr, c t and t11 c miln ne r o f
rts d 1s tnbut ion ana to pr c vcnl
69 MERCURY MARAUDER ...... '1295
t11c pollu t ion or u ~nccc5sa ry
,. IOU 'dr H l _f,K &gt;111'" .• P. S., P . IL AM F M s te r eo .
wa s te of s uc h water su pply ,
Wh 1c h ru les and rcq4 lil t10n ::.
ll .Jve be'i-'11 rcportC'.d to thi s c ourt
69 PLYM OUTH FURY 111. ....... '1295.
il n d ar c on f ile in th e on icc o t
the Clerk of t hi s Court
~ '•- f'1
.f' ~., P (3., vrny! r oof
( .J J All persons and pub lic
co rp orations. m c lud inq all
po ten t ial users , now or 1n th£'
MERCURY MONTEGO ....... '1295
futu
r e,
ot
th e
propo se d
._Jr J H dJ 1·• r•'
vt a t c rwo rk s systerr1 of tt1e
L~'Ot linq Crock Con~ervancy
Dl:; tr ict, des1ring to ' cOntC'st th e
68 OLD.:&gt; DELT A 88 ................'12 95
d e terminat ions as made and
I
I
t il ed by th e Ooard of Drr cc tor s
t. P S. p (3_
o f sate! District, or to the rul es
i:l nd reg ul atio ns so adopt ed by
FC PO CON VERTIBLE '
th e Ooard of Dircclors. of sai d
D ist i' IC I. may make thei r oll
'895
1t&gt;ction~ ut q hearing on sai d
d c tcrmindtion s to be he ld on
M&lt;Jy ?61h , 19 7J, nt 9 oo o 'c lo c k
l1
GALA XIE 500 ........... ,795
AM in this Cou r t &lt;JI th e Co urt
~HdrrPS-.PB.
llOUS t' in P0n,1eroy, Ohro

4

72

69

....... ..

68

FC.... ,D

•

t'6 FOfW GALAX IE 500 .......... '595 .
I,

f' \, p (3

ill

65 DODGE 4 DR. WAGO N ....... '595
k

d.

I I(-

1r

I·'

fJ :-,

&lt;:&gt;

u
w.

65 FORO 4 DR. SEDAN ............. '395

'.
69 N\ERCURY MARQU IS .... .....'1995
l

H f 'lu~dJE:lJ!

tit

67 DODGE 4 DR. WAGON ....... ~595
,l p ·1
v ~ ld

qoo SPECIALS

Rambler 4 dr. Wagon
Olds 4 dr. Run s Good
Chevy Impala 283 Auto
Buick LeSabre 4 dr.
61 Pontiac Tempest 4 dr.

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
CHESTER, 0 .

· ~----------~~
Big Capacity

Maytag

Aut omatics
2 speed operation .
Ch oice

of

water

t emps .

Auto.

water

l evel

c ontro l .

Fill e r

or

Lint

Pow er

Fin Agita t or _

Per'ma - Press
Mavtag
HaloQf Heat

Dryers ·
Surround

c loth es

with gen tl e, even

heat. No hot spots,
no
oV c rd rying.
Fi n e M&lt;;-sh Lint
- Fil ler .
We SpE&gt;cialitc i n

MAYTAG

RUTlAND FURNITURE · ~~~v~;~·'
Arno ld Grate

2 SIGNS
OF

QUALITY

Rut land

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

tlf./2 NOVA

r•.or'l.

'

$26 95

niJI,Jh:r ivll h less lhan .6, 100 m iles. 307 V-B.
dilhH"~I,lltL 11. rv, power slet• r ing, whdcwall · tires, light
IJI1.,. 11111'·h . !lh •, pot less mler ior , r r:td io See. the sh arp

1r,d

pnpul. 11 rnodr·l

111·1 CHEVROLt'l
S2995
llldnr 1 ·.·I 'drivr·, CltJX top loc king .d rl., hubs, V 8,
·,_ '"' 11·
,
po.v-er .':. IPe ring &amp; b r etk~"&gt;. loca l low
l~r1
) trr' nev(•r u&lt;;ed .
~

S269S
1_
'dnrH·, lor-,1 1 I ow11(lf Crlf w ilh le ss than J/, 000'
' , 1 11P1dt•• Conlrdl dir cu nd. , JO 00 pOW{' r 5eat , radio,
, u fr1d .h lq,H.lcd Wi th many cx lra s.
··1

I( I(

•

.

Used Car Buye~ looking for a good price on a good
used car. Check the following for some great buys.
~agon , auto . Sold

1972 OPEL
1972· PONTIAC Gran~
1971 PONTIAC
1'971 PONTIAC
1970 .PONTIAC
1971 PLYMOUTH
1969 CHEVROLET
1968 MERCURY

Mrs. Jean Summe rfield is
visiting in Winter Haven, Fla.,
with Mr . and Mrs. l.arry

Mrs. Alice To ban , Robyn and
T odd , Goldsboro, N. C., s pent a
week with Mrs. C!Po Smith .
Mr . and Mr s. Raymond
Wi: son , Ro c h ester , N. Y., were

Mrs. Charles Woode were Mr.

and Mrs. Hay Hin es, Belpre;
Mr. a nd Mrs. Willard Hines,
Po111c r uy,
and
Ri:iymoud
Wilson, Hoche~te r, N. Y.
Mr . Han ley Phelps . Chat·
chmn, Va ., spent sevcre~ l days
\~;ith his brother-in-law cmd
sister. Mr . (jOd Mrs. Fre d V.
Rice .

was a r ecen t visitor o f Denzil
Cleland.
Mr. and M r s. Cha rl es
Eichinger and
daughter,
Eichi nger

fami ly. Mrs. Opal Eichinger is
impr ov ing after s u rgery at St.
Joseph Hospita l, Parkers burg .
Mr . and Mrs. 13. K. Ridenour
attended the wedding o f Miss
Patricia Lynn nii g and Mr .
Dou~l.a s
Wickham,
Jr .,

REMEMBER
We Service
What WeSell

Hich-

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

Mr.

and

da ughter,
Co lumbus, ca lled on Mr . and
Mrs. Hoy Ou·isty, Sunda y.

Hawl ,

F( r'i s lic

moving the Reds into first
place by one percentage
point.

. -By FRED McMANE

Satellile2dr . H. T., V-8. Loca l on e
owner . Real sharp litt le car.

•

'•
·~

992-2174

DANCE
At The

Whispering
Pines
Nite Club
FRlDAYand
SATURDAY NIGHTS
From 10p.m . til.2a .m .

72 Buick Skylark H.T. Cpe., V-roof, air ..... '3695

70 Olds Cut. H.T. Sedan, v:roof, air .......
70 · Pont. Firebird 2 Dr. H.T., V-8, AT, V-rf, ail 2395
70 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, full power, air.... ,2795

Pomeroy Motor Co.

'

Any person interested may
f ile written excep tions to sa id
accoun ts or to mai lers per
ta in lnq to th e execu t ion o t fhe
tru st. not less •h an five day s
pr ro rtotli ecta tl" sct forhearing .
(51Scbs
25, ler
ttc
Manning D.

Bly!Cven . " I'll prohobl) haye
nig htmares about 1t . 1 111H )'
have had the best control nnd
stuff o n tht! ball than I' Vl' ever

had, but [ ma inl) feel g""d
about the win f or the team .
'I at ""to come fi rst."

Wood of the Chicago While Sox,

definitely

Wood , who bested nl ""· 1.(),
in the ir only co nfrontnti on !;:1st

flam ethrowers

be sa id about the
lik e
Bert

while notching his lith \'ICtol'y

8\yleven, Mickey Lolich and
Nolan Ryan.
Wood, the major league's
wiJUlingest pitcher, outdueled
Ryan, the major lea gue's

again st only thre e losses.
Ryan , now 6-4 , gave up Se\ eu
hits but s truck out n to boost
his season's t otal to 107. The
White Sox scored all the ir rull.!i

s trikeout kin g, 4-1 , Thursda y
afternOQn in o ne of the classic

off Ryan it1 lhc first three in ~

there

$1595

to

is

matchups of the season but
that was nothing to what the
fa stballing Bly\even accomplished against the Kansas City
Royals Thurs day night.

Open Evenings
'Til 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
Noon on Saturda)

Blyleven, a 22-year-&lt;Jid·right·

season,

to

to a

lead the DC'troit
4 ~0 vi c tory .

allowed onh•

siX h tts

nings .
T here was H touch of inm)
~bout
Wood's
vietory,
however. Tanner r~ m ove&lt;J his
ace from the game with lwo 1lUt
in the nin th in fa vor of Cy

For Sale

We talk to you

5-22 -l Ot c

like a person.

BLACK l;'e Tennessee Walker
coli , Jl, , years ol d : phone 992

3640.

CableChannel 5
7pm Friday
SPONSORED BY

The Meigs Branch of The Athen s Co.
Savings and Loan, Virgil B. Teaford
Realty , Baker Furniture and Village
Pharmacy.

KINGSBURY HOMES

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" Yo u' ll Like Our Qualit(Way
.
of Doing Bu siness
.
992 -5342
GMAC FINANCING
OMEROY
Open Even ing s Untii6 : 0o· TiiSp.m ..Sat ,·

llll••••l!ll••••••••••••••••••

Botlby Darwin doubled and
scored on an infield s ing !{' to
give the Twins tin.' on ly run
needed . A r un...s coring
by D;c1nny Thompson
adclt&gt;d lh(' S('cond run in the
eighlh .

they

s ing!~

C:ul Morton to~sed a fivehittrr and doubled hom e the
ning Lo lea d the flraves over
the Giants. _Da ve J o hnson
&lt;iccourHed for the other Athmta

nm wilh his seventh homer in

the ::;econd .
Rusty Sta ub doub led in Qne
run ami Ed Kran c pool double d
in another pair as the Mets
explod e d for four runs In the
19th innin!:l to beat Los Angeles
in the longest game in Dodge r

Major League Standin gs
By United Press lnterna1iotftll
American leagu e
East
w . L pe t . g .b .
Detroit
2 1 20 .512
New York
20 11 .488
aa lli more
' 17 19 .412 Jl '1
Milwa ukee
18 21 .462 2
Bos ton
17 '10 .459 2
Cleveli'ln d
t 8 23 .439 3
Wes t

hi s tory .

w. L pet. g .b.

tlCSdLIY m~1d c the course play

Chi cago
2t! 13 .649
Crl li lornia
21 17 .553 3 1 1
M inncso tu
21 17 .S53 31 7
Oaklt'lnd
?3 19 .54B ]• ·,
KansasC IIy
23 '10 .535 4
Te)( as
12 25 .3?1! ' 1/
Thursday• _s Res ults
Bos ton 10 M ilwaukee 1
Chicago -4 Calil'ornia -1
Cleve at Ball , '"J , ~~ pd , r a in
Dctroil 4 New York 0
Minn 2 Kan Ci ty 0
(On ly games sc hedu led)
Today ' s Probable Pitc hers
( All t imes E DT)
Oevel,;md ! P erry 6 5) el l
Chicago !Gossrtg c 0 3) , 9 p .m .
0.1kland
(Qd orn
1 71
at
De troit (Perry 0-2) ,-.B. p .rn .
Ca litorn ia ( Wr ig ht 2 5) a t
Mi lwaukee (Parson s I 2). 8: 30

il

AtlMt&lt;J Cou r1try Club rounw

cmnpded "sinc'c w innin g the

Ma ior League leaders
By Unated Press lnternaftonal
Leading Batters
Nat ional League
g . ab r. h . pe t.
Lope~ . LA
J7 W6 17 JB .JS8
Madd ox, S f 34 125 l S 44 .357
Cash , P 1l
7.6 I 17 ?0 39 .348
Rbnsn , Ph il 28 87 13 30 .345
Wat sn , Hou 44 154 33 53 .344
Fr~lrly , Mil J'l
93 l3 37 .344
Santo, Chi 38 1J 6 71 46 .338
Gr ubb, SO 35 116 79 39 .336
Torre, SI .L 34 120 IS &lt;tO .333
Mrllhws , SF 38 114 15 38 .3:J3
Am er ica n League
g . ab r. h. pet ,
Blmbrg , NY 27 80 13 30 .3/5
Ho rt. NY
24 83 11 29 .349
Kelly , Chi Ui 95 20 J3 .347
Horln , De l t9 73 11 75 .342
Krkp tk, KC 3-1 175 25 42 .336
Suarez, Tex 22 69 tO 13 .333
D.AIIen , Chi 37 1J2 25 43 .326
Sims . Del
2J 71 11 23 324
Munsn , NY &lt;10 1-45 20 46 .317
F 1sk, Bos
35 126 17 40 317
Home Run s
National league : Aaron , All
and S lilrgell , Pill 12 ; Evan s,
Al l 11; Benc h . Cin , Wynn , Hov
and Bonds. SF 10.
American l eague : Mayberry .
KC 13 ; May , M il tO: D. All {'n ,
Chi and Duncan , Clev 9; st x
player s t ied w'rlh B.
Run suBafted In
Nati onal League: Bench, (in
35, Fergu son , ' LA 33; Speier,
SF 30 ; Wa lson, Hou and Bonds,
SF 79.
Ameri can l eag ue , May be rr y,
KC 42 ; J(lc kson , Oak nnd
Mel ton , Chi 32 ; Robin s on , Cal
and Mur ce r, NY ?6 .
Pitching
_Na tional League : Billingham ,
C1n 7 l ; Bry ant , S F 6 3; Reu ss.
Hou And Downing, ~A 5 1;
Gu lle ll , (in, KoOsma n, NY and
Wi se , St . L S 2 : Hooton, Ch i,
Su tt on, LA and Seave r , NY 53 ;
Mar ie hal, SF s- 4,
American League: Wood , Chi
11 3:
Holtvn ;an ,
Oak
9 '1 ;
Co leman, Del B 3; Sing er, Cal
and Sp!il tortt , KC 7 '1 .

llllJ itiye.ar t'Ontra d Thurs dH y
with the PiU~I:l burg h Penguins,
lcavlnt-; t ltc du b with three
p layer s who !-it ill h;we not
s igne d the ir · contra c ts for th e

DAZZLING
LAS VEGAS

WANTS MOHE MONEY

LOS ANGI·: Lr: ~ ( UI'll ,Johnu y fl{)(lgrrs1 t he flashy
fl:mkcr frOm Neb ras ka and
winn e r of the 1972 Heisman
Trophy , hns decided to play
professio nal foot b&lt;tll in Canada
for more mo ney .
The ~ 1 -yc H -o ld Hod~ers,
who wus a No. l draft pi c k of
the Snn Diego Clw r ge r s , s aid
he will s ign ~~ contrac t toda y

with tlw Montreal

A~ou ettes

of

t he Ca nadian l"oo tball Lca ~ue .
H e did not r eveal the ter111s
hut Lhrrc wa s sncculation he
would get in thC. neighbor hoOd

SI GNS CONT~ACT
· P ITTSBUHGH I UP I ) _
J c~tn(~uy l.a~a ce :-; igncd 11

·

of $100,000 a season plus fringe
hrnc fit.'i .
A s pokesman s~~ i d . U1c offe r
-Hcccptcd by Hod g~ t·s wus " 80
to lOoper cent lttrgc r " than the
la st offer mad(~ by the

4 Days, 3 Nights at the
New Deluxe Land ·
mark HoteL
S244 per person includes ;
Rou ndtrip air filr e by TWA
Hote l ac co mm oda tions
B-coursc dinn er an d s how
2 h ear t y br ea kfa s ts or
brun ch -Ca scade Terri'lce
Free Keno ti c ke t and Bingo
card s

'

3 poo lsi de lounges
. _,
AAA and TWA escor t s ·

Join our fri endly group

Departing Columbus
July 26-2!1, 1973

Chargers.

l!)?:f SCIJ!iOn .

For information
ca ll

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

@

OPTOMETRIST

Tc)(as ( Paul 3-3) at New York.
{Kcki ch 1·0), 7: 30 p .m .
Kansa s C ity (Splillorll 7 2l a t
Mim~e so t a CHand s 4 4), 9 p. m .
(Only gam es scheduled )

··

OFF ICE HOUR S 9:30 TO 12 , 2 TO 5 (CLOSt
AT NOON ON THUR S. ) - EAST CO URT n.,
POMEROY.

WORLD WIDE
TRI\VEL AGENCY

Pomeroy- Phone 992 -2590
Ga llipolis- Phone 446 ·0699

75.

. Nick lau s,

who

hadn't

•

•

Thursday to share first-r-ound . Tournament of Champions last
month , said he was " very
honors·.
That wrl ~ one s troke better
tha n a threesome c:onsistiOg of
H ubel't Green and tour rookies
Bruc&lt;! As hworth and T om Kite
and tWo better than a n uth c r-

Med ic h. Magnuson t 8 ) and
Munson ; Lolich (3 S) and Sims
L P - Med ic h (J 1) . H R- Mc Au ·
Catiforn•a
000 000 001 1 6 0 l• tle llst)
Chicag o
103 000 OOx 4 7 o
Ryan (6 4) and Torborg . Kan City
000 000 000- 0 I 0
Wood , Acosta {9) and He rr Minn
000 100 Otx - 2 11 0
mann WP Wood 111 3)
Draqo (4-41
and
Healy ;
Blyleven (56) and M ltterwald .
Md w
001 000 000 l s 1
Bost on
0'11 711! OOx 10 16 0
(Only games scheduled l
Ch;unpion , Shprt I 4) , R l'! t son
(6), . f)&lt;lewman !8J and Ro
driguc1 , lee (4 1) and Mont
Major League- Resu ll s
gomcry . L P Champion (0-JL
8y United Pre-ss International
HR - P€1 1r ocelli (7th 1.
National league
San Fran
010 000 000- 1 S 0
New York
020 000 OOtt- 2 10 1
000 000 000 0 6 I Allan Ia
De tr oll
000 300 Oh ' 7 0
Mc Dowell. Sosa 171. and
Sadek, Rader {7): Morton (4· 3)
and Oates . WP Morton (4·31.
LP- M c. Oowetl ( 1 '2) . HR .._J ohnson !7 th) .
lnlernilltiona 1
~eague Standings
By Umted P_ress International I 19 inning s)
New York
IAmen c an Oivi son)
00 I 000 11 0 000 000
W. L Pet . GB
Roches ter
oo 4- 7 n 4
24 17 .667
Syracuse
17 18 .466 61 1 Los Angeles
Pawtuc ket
t5 11 _409 7
07 I 000 000 000 000
000 1)..-3 18 3
Toledo
.
15 25' .375 11
(Naftonal Divis ion)
Seaver. Hennigan (7),
(8),
Stone
(lJ), .
W. L. Pe t . GB McGraw
C harle51on
25 13 .658
Mc Andrew {19) and May , Oyer
P~n i nsula
21 17 .553 J
{8); John , Ric hert ( 7) , Culver
(8), 8r£.'wer (9 ), Hough (1 1),
T1dewe~fcr
19 19 .SOO 6
Ric hmond
11 '16 . 297 13 , 2 Rau (1 6) and Ferguson . WPStone ( 1 OL LP-. Ra u (0 1 J.
Thor sday ' s Result s
Pawtuc ket t Rirhmond 0
{Only gomes played) '
Roches ter 8 PeninstJia o, l~t
Roches ter at Pen in su ll '2nd ,
ppd , r~1in
' '
Totrdo 2 Syra cuse 1 ls!
Syracuse 6 To ledo s' 1nd
STR IKE IT RICH
Tidc w n !er &lt;l l Chrtrl~ston ppd .
ra fn
'
IN

Saturday's Games
Texas at New York
Oakland at Detroit
Cal ,fornta at M ilwa ukee
Ba ltimore at Mmn , n1ghl
Cleve at Chicag o, night
Bos ton atKan Cl 1ty , night

p .m .

wnn here three years ago, ha d

Birmingham, Ala ., ~~I I s hot 5und cr-pa r 67s in the fncc of :t
sw irling w_
ind over th~ hilly

want to see if the
others Offer as
va as

lmp py " a bout hi s opening 68.

LEC:ION n :AM NOTE

Amcric&lt;Jn
Legion
Uln~es~ m c that in cludes Da ve h c.t se. b;tl_l .tctt m
wi ll n tcc l
ll ill 1 last week's winner HL Sa t urda y nHwnin g at !J ::IO a .m.
Memphis 1 with Rod Pun seth al the Syracuse Ba ll Park . All .

The

'

and Larry Wise .
boys who arc p l ann in ~ tu
Although heavy r&lt;Jin ~ ed- . pa r t ~ c~ p;1tc n re urged to at tend.

•

.

.Fury.

' : :-:.;.

\

·em.

::
•,

::•,

:-

.

SAtURDAY
NIGHT~

'

MAY 26

MOBILE HOMES

:;
'

10:00 TO 2:00

AND. DOUBLE WIDES
(Built by Skyline In Ohio)

Put
Yourself
In The
Winner's
Circle!

•J

J)l ymouth Fury Spe.Ctill
2-0oo r Ha rdtop

.,

/

""
"

·:·:" '

·"
::

Cpongratulatihons to George Sisson, Rt. 3,
_ omeroy, . w o won the portable TV at our
Grand Opening.
200 Yards West of
Junction U. S. Rt. 33 and County Road No. 18 _ Kin .
bury Road . Locally Qwned &amp; Operated.
gs

KINGSBURY HOMES-PH. 992-6256

Sure, those other standard-s ize cars are good c ars .
But we wou ldn't ask y ou to compare ou r ca r if we d idn 't

'

Yo~ , too , can be a winner by

seemg our hom es . Open every
da ~ 2 to 1 p .m . or by ap- ,_
Pomtm e nt. Ph . 992 -62S6 .

Plymouth Fury Special

,.

•

66 Buick l:!Sa~re 4 Door, air.........:...... '695
63 Rambler Wagon, 6 cyl., std............... '50

G~mc

Blylcven m;maged to h ;;mdlt~
the Royals despite a one ~l m ur
dl'iay !Jcca usf' of rain . He'
s truck out seve n and w ~-ilkPd
onli' two in he sting Dkk Drago.

We're Ready To Serve You For Your

69 Mercury Montego 4 Door; V·8, auto..... 111295

67 Plymouth 2 Dr. H.T., V-8, auto.......... 1495 .
'
65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door................... 1295

only fi ve hils .

winning run in the ~econd in-

Onl·-Huur De la y iu

SALES &amp; SERVICE

. QUICK DELIVERY
FINANCING AVAILABLE

67 Olds 98 Town Sed., power &amp; air........ '995

vic tory in five decisions. Lee
went the distance, allowing

DICJ('S BACJ(

VISIT

69 Chevelle Mal. H.T. Cpe., V-8, AT, PS ... '1 595
69 Olds 88 H.T. Sedan, full pow., air ..... '15!15

Oucce Pol. ~ Door H.T.................. '/95

games.

Hell Sox: pounded U1e Brewt:rs
for 16 hits . Petrocelli , batting
unly . 191 ent ering the game,
drove in three runs and also
scor ed thn.-e in helping southpaw Bill Lee to his fourth

BEFORE YOU BUY!

2xq construction. our low overhead saves you dollars .
Ptck from our stock or will order to suit your needs.

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

A twi-night d o ubi t'.hea der .
Clcvela nrl at BHlt im ore- , was·
postponed by rain . Atlanta
edged San Fnmcisco . 2-l. ~md
New York topped Lns Ange les,
7-:~ . in 19 innings, in the only
sc heduled Natiomd League

:::::.:

70 Gremlin 2 Dr., 6 cyl., std.............. 1295
69 Chrysler N.Y. 4 Dr. H.T., V-roof, air .... .'1995

'

Roston routed Milwaukee, 10-1.

to his first victory since May 11
witl1 a three-run homer in the
fo urth inni ng. The Lriumph
enabled the Tigers to .rega in
first place in the AL East.
Rico Petrocelli broke out of a
horrendous slump with four
hits , including a homer, a s the

lonJ..(e r Uwn us ual, 32 in the H7p\(:l y in Thursday:s $150,000 rnan fie ld broke par Thurs day .
Atlant.;.t golf c lass ic opening Ther e were 15 at 2-under 70,
round, Nkk!LJns displayed the includi ng Geo r ge Arche!:J. Gay
forri1 that has made hilll the 13r('Wer, J ohnn y Mi11ler Hnd
class uf the golf wb r ld by Tom Weiskopr.
Hill y Ca sper, who normally
makin g back-to-back birdies
docsn'l
pl.ny he r e, opened with
~md lh1,1 s went iuto today 's
second round ri ght whcr(. a 72. Gf! I'Y Player, making his
1873 U.S. debut this week after
everyone expected him to be,
Rn operation in hi s native South
in tllc 1\::ad.
Nickbm s, tour sophomore Africa de layed his r eturn to the
D avid Glenz of Coqu ille; Ort.'., St~1 tcs, had a 76 . And Ma ster s
and B. H . ' 'M&lt;Jc" Mc Lendon 'of clw mpi on Tommy A.:tron) who

COAL" Limes ton e, Exce ls ior · Sa lt Wor ks, E . Main St. , G ROCERY business for sa le .
P omeroy. Phone 992 -3891 .
Build ing fo r sale or lease .
- -- -- - - - - ± 4·ll£2·!tf!.£.
!c
Phone 77 3-56 1B from 8:30p.m .'
to 10 p .m. for appointm €nt.
UPHOLSTERY
Mat e ria ls,
,
3-20 -lfc
riy lon prints , co tton prints
vinyls, velve ts of a ll kinds:
4 G~AVE lo l in Mei g s Memoria l
Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E.
Gardens . Cheap. Call 949
Ma in St ., phone 992-7554.
496 2.
. s.J .24fp
5-20-tfc

ON YOUR DIAL

victory .
" I wa s n 't afrmd to leave
Wood in ," said Tanner. " but I
wanted tu gh·e tht~ m a difff'rrnl
look. A hard throw e r luts a
little edge, so I put onr in ."
In ~he only other AI , c ontest.

AT LA NTA ! UP I J - T r ailing
by Lwo strokes with two hnlt's to

5· 13 -12tc

WMP0/1390

outfield fly to lock up the

Major Leolgue Standings
By Uni1ed Pre ss lnternationa 1
National Le.1gue
East
w . I. pet . (g . b.
Chicago
24 11 .sas
New York
20 17 .541
1
Pittsburg h
16 18 .471
411
Montreal
16 19 .457 5
Pl'liladetphia IS 24 .385 8
Sot . Louis
13 24 .351 9
West
w . I. pc1 . g .b.
Cincinnati
25 16 .610
17
~an Franc isc o 28 18 .009
Ho v!&gt;lon
26 18 .591
I
LosAngeles
24 19 .558 7
Atlanta
17 23 .425 8
San Diego
16 27 ,J]2 101 1
Thursday ' s Result s
Atlan ta 2 San Francisco 1
New York 7 Los Ang 3, 19 inns
{Only games scheduled) 1
Today's Probable Pi1chers
{ All times EDT)
Nf!w York ! Matlack 2 5) at
Los Angel es ! Osteen 3-3), 11
p.m.
Chicago ( Reu sche l 3 3) at
Ci ncinnati (Gulle tt 5· 21. 8 p .m .
Philadelphia (Breit 2 1) at
San Diego ( Norman l 5l. 10: 30
p.m.
Montreal (Torrez J.S) at San
Fr,lncisco (Bradley 2 2), 11
p.m.
Atlanta {Reed 2 4) at St .
Louis (Fos ler 7-3) , 9 p .m .
Houston
(Reu ss
511
at
Pillsburgh (Moose J.J), 8 p .m .
Saturday's Game s
Chicago at Cincinna ti
Montreal at San Fran
Houston r~l P itts . nigh t
All;m ta at St . Louis, night
New Yor k a t Los Ang , nigh I
Phi ln a l Sa n Dieg o, tw ilight

Dick McAuliffe helped Lolicb

Birdies give
BAND in Nicklaus lead

For Sale.

LEGHORN hens for sale. aoc
each. Cal l 8d3-2145.

Hyan, .after Wood ~td ~iven up
three straight s ingles thnt
produced C'illifornin's only run.
Acosta re-tired Bob Qli\1e r on em

American League
Cleve al Ba ll , 7. ppd ., ra .n

Acosta, a speedba ller 1ike

Remember We Seroice What We Sell.

USED CARS

b..

the time, bulit does now , .. said

'

0 (' Ct' ;"oSCtd .
"'
Notr cc I S hr: rv llY g 1v cn thnl is a pa lie ut a t Vetenw s
f\ uclr ey o·. Bre wer o( J&lt; . D .. Menwrial Hos pital.
Music by Red Stewart,
Portl q nd , Ohio , 11£' &amp;. b een c.July
Dave Dunn and The
~p poin l (: d
Ex ec utrix· of tile
E c. t"t e ot Allen C Brew e r ,
Ambassadors.
{!cceas cd. ta te of Meigs cou n ty ,
Ot'lio ,
Cred itor s arc re q ui r ed to li lc
lll e rr c l~ l rn s wilh said fidu c i&lt;HY
TAKES ,\KHON .1011
wi thin lour months .
SPH
INGFIELD, Ohio I UP! ) AL L -ELECTR IC. like neW , 3
Dill ed th i~ l ~ th cl ay ol May,
19 73 '
- Bob Vcm-Poppcl, Wittenberg
rooms with large bath,
Man n inq D. Webster .. Judg c
e lec tric wall .oven , table lop
lnivcr
s
ity
assist
a
nt
~as
ketball
l
Cour t of Com.mon Plcet 5.
rang e, ·large c lose t . Loca1ed
Probate Divi 5ion .c oach , has- been named to a
on E . ~Main S t ., Pomeroy . See
{5· \ 18. 25 (6 ) 11, ] IL
lo
apprecia te .
P hone
s imilar position at the UniverGall
ipolis
446-9539
.
s ity of Ak ron.
NOT I CE OF PRIVATE SALE
Van Poppe! a Bowl ing G1·een
OF R EAL ESTATE
Pu r s u an t lo an or der o f S lutc Universi ly g raduate,
L~ase
· privu l c sa t·e is s ued i)y th e
joined the Wittenberg s t.aff in
Athen s· Coun ty Court of Com
H IG H volume · service sta tion ,
mon Plea s , Probat e Division , l!l70 .
l-Ie
form~.:rly
wa s
paid
t ra in ing,
excellent
s cu led bids for the pur c t1ase o t
locat ion. Call 992 ·5221 8 a .m .
Ihe real es tat e ow n ed by Wi lbur Hssistan t l:mu:h Ht White wate r
G , Ni c kels, dece ased, lat e of
to 5 p.m.
1Wis. ) State. Uni versi ty ,
~ou t e 2, Coo lvill e, a ·tlio will be
5-25 -6fc
rcc(llved by J ack E . Wl1 ite,
Adminis tr a tor. w .w .•1 . ot · sai d
cs tule . unti l June 2, 1973 . Said
proper ty co ns ists of .86 hun
drcdth s Of .-t n acre, more or less.
locatecf in Troy Town sh ip ,
At11cns County , Ohi o and is .
rmpro ved wit h a modern two
bed room horne. and two car
Qur~qe, in E'l(Ce llcnt c ond iti on .
Sa id property wa s itppr aised a t
$ 12 ,500.00 , and wi ll n o l be sold
tor less lh&lt;Jn tha t amou n't. Th e
riqh l i ~ r es·crved to rci cct an y
and a ll b ids . E,)(h bicl s hall
con tai n Ihe hi gheS t or bes t price
the b idder is willlhg to pay tor
.. s aid proper ly , and their ntl me
~d(l'rcss,
5ig natu r e,
;:~nd
lc t op h on e. humber . Th e en .
velope c ont ai nin g the bid s hall
be cle ilrly marked "Bid o n
Nic kC'IS Pr operty" anti shalt b e
a ddressed t o Ja ck E . White ,
care of Pa u l J . Gerig, Attorn e y ,
P . 0 . Box /68, At he n s, Ohio
·ISi' Ol. Terr.n s s hall b e fen per
c e11 t of th e pur ch,ase price down
~2495
upon accep tance ,of the bid, and
the b&lt;rlancc upoi1 del ivery o t
1
de e d . ln s pc.c t ion of Ihe pr e mises
may be had by co nt ac t ing Jack
B. White, Coolville , Ohio , phon e
6673 110.
'
J ilek 0 . Wf1 it e, Adm in is tr alor ,
o f the es ta te of Wilber
1
G . Ni c ke ls . d ec eased .
(5) 11, 18, 2S, 31c
IN Tt1E COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
tN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF \
AC ·
COUNTS :
.
P.ROBATE COURT ,
MEIGS COU NT Y. O HI O
Accou nt s and vou ch ers of the
followi n g named fidu ci aries
llrw e been f iled In th e P r ob~ · te
Cou rt , Meigs County. Ot1io. for
approval and se ttl ement . ·
Case No . 16,606 , Thirteenth
Ac cou r1t of th e Hunt inqton
National Bank of Columbus,
Tr u5 t ee a t th~ Trust c reated
u r1der the L-as t Wi l l and
Tes ta men t o f Tliomas A May ,
Deceased .
Ca se No . 19.3 65 Thi r dCu rr e nt
Accoun1 o l Richard Cambers.
Guardian of the Tru~t Est a te o f
Pamp el a , Kei th A_, H arold P ..
J r ., ond Ch ri s ty Jon es, Minors .
Case No . 20.562 First and
Fi nal Account of Lu cil ll! J~cks .
Admi n ist ra trix of tile esta te of
Virgi l J ac k. s, d ecc·ased .
Unless exceptions a r e filled
t11ereto, sa id accounts w il l be
for hea r ing befo re s~ id Cour t on
th e 2,5f h day of Ju n e, 1973, at
Wl1 ic h I im e said t~cco un ts will lle
considere d and COill ·i nucd from
dav tod a y until till ally d isposed

Kirkt&gt;atrtc k in the fifth jnnin~ .
"Th e hil didn't bothC'r me at

si ngles
Ti gers

something

500 E. Main St., Pomeroy. Ohio

and the only hil he 'allowed
ca me on a bunt single by Ed

MiMesot.a Twins, go for a guy
like knu c kleballer Wilbur

but

...wv/
~~~8

the Kansa s City Roytjls. 2-o,

U:t if•h wa s Overpowering
Chuck Tanner, manager "''- ,,. ,o li c: h al so VL as over- .
the Chicago White Sox, and f.Xnvcring as he stopp ed the ·
Frank Quilici, manager of the 1'\ew York Ya nkee!'i 011 six

Chevelle 2 dr . H. T ., S.S ., V.8,
au to., powe r stee ring . Nice 69
model.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC

hander. turned in a one-hitter
as the Minnesota Twins beat

UPI Sports Writer

CEWARD CALVERT, SALESMAN

mond.

Walla ce

·

We are .s till making some great deals on new Buicks,
· Pontiacs. So before you buy any car new or used
check with us.

Columbus , s pent the weekend

Mr . and Mrs. Gale Wa lla ce,
Xenia, nn d Mr s·. Willi a m

day. San Francisco lost 2·1.

$2795
$2295
O"'LY $2295

Cougar XR7, air, vinyl top, low
mileage. Loca l owner . Pric e To
Se ll.

D. D. Cleland, Columbus ,

and Mrs. Dav id Elkins
and duugh(ers have m oved to
Tuppers Plain s.

$3 2 9 5

Exc . 9 Pass . Wagon, ai r cond ., all white wi th wood
grain on sides, one owner·. Take your family on
vacation in thi s n ice wagon .

Hcccnt visitors of Mr. and

even ing at

CI"'LY

with the Wes tern Pil·ision
leading Cincinnati Reds.
~ames will be pla)·ed
tomght, Saturday, Sunday
and Monday, Memorial Da.}'.
The Reds were idle Thurs-

Catalina -4 dr . H. T .. s~ougham, green w ith green
viny l top, air , tape player . One of the n icest 71's in
the va ll ey . Pr ice To Sell.

Weber .

Saturday

CINCINNATI !U PI ) _

The Chicago Cubs are in
town for a werkeud series

•199 5 ·
$439 5

Grandville '1 Dr . H. T.. AM&amp;F M tape, power win ·
dows , air . Local one owner. Re al sharp . O:\ILY

weckeml ~ue st s of Mrs . Jessie

Qpa l

O.'JL y

Prhc only 12,624 m iles . Only 10 months o ld .
Just ltke new .

Housh .

the

th i5 c~ r 11 months ago . Real nice

little wagon .

By Cli.tricc Alle n

Tuppers
P la ins, .spen t Monday with
Mrs. Roy Christy.
Mr. J . L. Ha wk 'is a medical
NOT ICE OF APPO INT MENT
· Ca!&gt;l! No , 20,937 patient at H olze r Medical
E statl!of All e n C. BREWER , Center and Mr . P . F. Koblentz

9f .

,_Ne VES. 8.00 P.M.
P0ME: ROY, OHIO

WANTED

News Notes

with

ood cops 11th;
Idle Reds in first

PH. 992-2174

500 E. MAIN

For

50 For d % ton Flat Bed

' '

E .- SPE NCER
Clerk of the Ccurt
of Com.mon Pl eas
of M eigs Counly , Oh1 0
( 5 ) f I. 18 , 2 'i , 3t c

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

Real Estate ·.For Sale

64
(14
63
62

PH . 985 .qJOO
Lo cal c"cl on 51. Ri. 7

L ARI~Y

3 - The Daily Sentinel, ~llddleport-Pomerol, Q., Ma) 25, 1913

Chester
'

In fhc Court of Common Pl e a s.
Mc1q s County , Oh10

69 AMBASS ADOR 4 OR .......... '995

''

LEGAl NOTit;E
The under~. qned wdl sell at
publtc ~ a le t or c ash the
tpllowinq motor vf'h i&lt;.: tt' to the
h1qhest b •dder at 11me o t sale
1970 Plvmoulh GTX 1-Vr ~e r
No RSH UOG 158717
Thf&gt; &lt;,&lt;th· wtl! be held at the R
H J).:lwhnr1-s Son'&gt; Co. a8 S
..,ccon d 'l trPt" L M tddlcporL Oh10
a t 1 uO !) m on thP 2nd day of
Junt· I'H J
Tht" vndf&gt; rS tqnf&gt;d reser ves the
nqht to l!td
R H Rawlings Sons Co
MtdCWeport. OhtO
l~ l H ,27, 19, J tc

think Fury wou ld co me ou l o n top. To begin w ith . the .
new Fu ry is big, beau tiful and well buil l. S pe cia lly dressed up with a

The
MEIGS INN

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EARLY

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TOM RUE MOTORS 399 South 3rd Ave., Middleport, 0.

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~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-PI)[Jleroy, 0., May

25,1973
them usually remain and
seldom change. Parents need
to work at this now. Age 18 is

Pigtails
\Continued from page ll

too late.

The speaker gave tribute to
.,,.,u Prof. Leep listed three ways Miss Francis whom he had
to contribute to successful become acquainted with when
~ ·.
',., . living.
she was a student at Ohio
He said :
.... "I
Children need to develop a University and spoke of her
..........
!'
feeling about themselves. deli!nnlnation to get where she
• • good
They need to be able to relate wanted to go and of her wilUngto other people and know that ness to work toward achieving
'' '
they are important to others her goal. The invocation and
........
and have their trust and benediction were given by the
•'Rev. Charles Simons.'
concern.
'.J&lt;I '
Pols of geraniums lining the
They need to develop tools
I .
and skills to get along in life . front of the stage area for the
The home, the sehool, and commenc-ement were
the churches are where these presented to Mrs . Sharon
keys to successful living are Welker, Mrs. Marilyn Poulin,
Mrs . Kathy Erwin, Mrs .
learned, said ])1·. Leep.
Dr. Leep said that the Beverly Long, Mrs. Betty
development of these sue· McKinley, Mrs. Mary Hoover
Mrs. Christine Simons and
cessful living techniques are
already well underway in the Mrs, Judy Crow who made the
gowns {or the children; Mrs.
five and six year olds and that
Rosemary Lyons who made the
attitudes and ideas instilled in
artificial white carnations
worn by each child, and to Mrs.
Emogene Fisher Mrs. Connie
Hoffman, Mrs. Diana Ashley,
and Mrs. Teresa Cremeans,
who assisted in other ways.
Mali!rials for the caps and
gowns were provided by \he
successfuUy.

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CROW'S
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PTA.

MisS Francis introduCed her

of

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gran dmoth er, Mrs. Norma
Curtis who assisti!d with the
graduation in a variety of
ways, including preparing all
or the diplomas and making
mos t of the blue stoles worn on
the gowns.
Punch and cookies were
se rved at· the informal
re ception
honoring
the
1
'graduates.''
In the class of 1972-73 were
Sarah Arnott, Lisa Ashley,
John Bacon, William Bush,
Peggy Cremeans, John Crow,
Amy Erwin, William Fink,
David Fisher, Timothy Gilkey,
Billi Gordon, Phillip Harris,
Frances Hoffman , Lisa Hoffman , David Hoover, Brian
Ja cobs, Cindy Little, Mary
Long, Charlotli! Lyons, Joseph
Manley, Earl McKinley, Roger
Manley , Richard McHaffie ,
Tracey McMahon, Edward
Miller, Jody Miller, Bonnie
Moodi spaugh, Carl Moddispaugh, Anna Patrick ,
Richard Poulin, Rhonda Price,
Wayne . Shrimplin, Carol
Simons , Timothy Smith, Allen
Spaulding, Rober t", Spires,
Robert Staats 1 Lori Stewart,
Daniel Thomas, " WilHam
Weaver, Jackie Welker, Sheila
Wines, M~lissa _ Wis~ .

[lanny Sayre

· Did

,I

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you

MEMORIAL
DAY
F.LOWERS

know

Mother s in the moun -

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ta i n ous

region s · · of ·
Pie monte , Ita ly , carry
their babies , cradles and
all upon t heir heads . Th'ey
often cover great distances
in th us encumbered cluding jour neys of many ·
hour s - without showing
signs of fatigue .·.. The
·leopard c·annot change its
spots . rt has none. The socal led "spots " are in
rea li ty ros.ettes - ter minologically
entirely
different ... , The oldest
business si gn fn existence
is 2500 years old , w;;:~s found
in Memphis, Egypt, and is
now· in the Cai ro Mu seum .

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SAYRE
HARDWARE
882-2525
New t-ta ve n, W. Va .

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Dudley's AOrist
S9 N. S~cond Sr.
Middleport, 0 .

~

HONOR MOTHERS
SYRACUSE-The
the Nar.arene honored
oldest and young&lt;St
with n11Wers on Mother 's
Receiv~ng for the
molht!r present was
Jessie Cottrill, and for
youngest Mrs. John Ra1&gt;do
New Haven. The one with
most children present
Mrs. Lawrence Klein. All ·
women . attending
smaller flowers.

Portland winners announced
POR lLANO - Results of the
recent track and field day at

the element.lry school here
were as follows:
Ftrsl Grade
Girls - Sack Race, Christie
Laurence ; SO yd . dash ,
Christine Wilson ; Discus, 38ft..
Carol Sellers; Shuttl e Run,
Angle Rhodes ; Egg and Spoon,
Christine Wii!.Dn : 100 yd, dash,
Christine WilsOI'\ ; Crab Race.
Christie Lawrence ; Standing
Broad Jump, 2 ft. 11 in ..
Chr istie Lawrence.
Boys Sack, Wade Con·
noll y ; 50 yd . dash. Wade

Connolly ;

Discus.

Danny

Weddle ; Egg a11d Spoon,
lawrence Powell ; Shuttle Run .
Wade Connolly : Crab Race,
Wade Connolly ; 100 yd . dash,
Wade Connolly ; Standing
Broad Jump. 4 f1 .• l ln., Wade

Connolly.
Second Grade

Girls - Sack race, Debra
Bryan·t ; 50 yd . dash , Debra
Bryant : Discus, Cindy Evans ;
Egg and SpoO n . Tammy
Meadows; Shuttle Run , Cindy
Evans ; Crab Race . Kitty
Sellers ; 100 yd . dash , Kitty
Sellers; Standing Broa·d Jump,
4 ft ., 6 in . - Cindy Evans .
Boys - Sack, BriJce John son ; so yd . dash. Bruce
Johnson ; Broad Jump, David
Talbott ; Softball throw , 25 ft .,

K('f'l Sernlh ; Crab Race, Bruce
Johnson : 100 yd . dash, Bruce
iohns on : Egg and Spoon,
Dav1d Talboit ~ Shuttl ~ Run,
Dav id Talbott .
Third Grade
Girls - S;,ck race, Ela ine
Smith ; 50 yd . dash. Sherry
Beegle; Discus . flhonda Kern ;
Egg and Spoon,,.Vick i Deem;
Shuttle Run, Stlerry Beegle;
Walking Race, Allc1a Evans .Broad Jump, Ela ine Smith . 100
yd . dash. Alicia Evans.
Boys - Sack, Dav id Rhodes .
100 yd . dash, Richard Wolfe ;
Broad Jump. David Rhodes ;
Softball throw , 98 ft ., Dav id
Rhodes ;
Walking
Race,
Richard Wolfe ; Egg and
Spoon. Richard Wolfe ,· Shuttle
Run , Richard Wolfe ; Crab
Race. Stanley Holter .
Fourth Grade
Girls - Sack, Bonnie Boso;
50 yd . dash, Bonnie Bose ;
Softball throw. 80 H., Bonnie
Boso ; 100 yard dash, Bonnie
Boso; Crab Race. Ti na Cozart ;
Shuttl e Run, Arm itha Holter ;
Walking Race , Donnie Boso;
Standing Broad Jump,. 6 ft. 5
in., Bonnie Bose .
Boys - Sack , Fl int Greer ;
100 yd. dash. Danny Ta lbott ;
High Jump , Duke Dailey;
Broad Jump, Danny Talbott ;
So'ftball thro"'!1 115 ft ., Danny
Talbott ; Football Pun!, 62 ft .•
Danny
Talbott ;
Football

throw, Danny Talbott ; Crab
Rilce, Duke Dailey.
F1fth Grade
Gir ls
Sack Race. Shelia
Brown ; Softball throw , 70 ft .,
Shelia Brown ; High jump.
Shelia Brown ; Crab Race,
Sheila Brown . SO yd. dash.

Shelia Brown ; Broad jump,
Teres.a

Sheila

Cain :

~rown ;

Shuttle

Run.

Walk ing Race,

Shelia Brown.
Boys
Sa ck Race 1 Randall

Congo ; 100 yd . dash, Curtis
Pr ice : Softball throw , Steve
Fitch ; High jump, 3 ft. 3 in.
Ray Deem ; Broad jump, 10ft.
4 in .,. Brian Johnson ; 44(1,
Curtis Pr ice ; Football throw,
Steve Fitch ; Walking race.
Randell Congo .

Girls -

Sixth Grade
100 yd . dash, Lisa

Warner ; Softball lhrow, 124ft.,

Janis -Carnahan ; Broad jump,

3 If. 10 in ., Janis Carnahan ;
Lisa Warner ; Crab Race,
Usa Warner ; High jump, 3ft. 3
in.• Lisa Warner ; Shv ttle Run,
Janis Carnahan ; Walking
1
Race, Kimberly Ward.
Boys - 100 yd . dash, Tim
Kern , Tom Boso ( tie) ; High
iump, J ft . J in .• Tom Boso:
Football punt, Jeff Brown;
Broad jump, 12ft., Tom Boso :
Shot Put, 22 ft . 7 in, Tim Kern ;
Football Throw, Tom Boso;
440, Tom Boso ; Softball throw,
Tim Kern .
440,

A SOLUTION
TO YOUR

!I;DIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP! ) hour with a full fuel load in his
- The Indianapolis Speedway Dan Gurney Eagle.
Unser's yoWiger brother Al,
was closed down Thursday
afternoon for a thorough twice winne:r of the race, was
cleaning and the 33 cors that second fastest at 191.4. David
compose the fastest starting "Swede" Savage and Mike
field in history for the famed Mosley were the only other ·
500-mile race will not return to drivers clocked in the 100
the 2Yl-mile oval until race da y m.p.h. bracket by the unof·
!icial clocks.
Monday.
Dave "Salt " Walther
Bobby Unser, the 1968 win· brought on the yellow caution
ner, recorded the quickest light during the final prepractice time durlng the three- Memorial Day practice When
hour carburetion test period his car stalled and needed a
Thursday- 192.5 miles per tow.
I

Crews were permitli!d two
hoW's Thufsday afternoon for
pit practice without the engines
running just before the track
was closed .
The flying start of the race,
following a parade lap and a
pace lap, is scheduled for noon
EDT, Monday.
Pole
sitter
Johnny
Rutherford is in the No. I
starting position with Bobby
Unser and defending champion
Mark Donohue joining him in
the first of the II rows.

Another major breakthrough
reported by prosecutors
WASHINGTON (UP! ) tergate collaborators Bemard Attorneys are Negotiating
Government attorneys · BarkerandAlfredC. Baldinlll
Titus said government attordisc lt~sed a second major who w'ere questioned bY the neys are negotia ting with
breakthrough in the Watergate Senate committee Thursday, several other persons to plead
investigation
Thursday-an claim they never asked who guilty and testify without
agreement by an wmamed was behind it.
immunity. He said the indict"key" figure, reported to be . Other Developments
ments wilL focus on "obstrucPreside.nt Nixon's former
In other developments:
tiQn of justit'e" after June 17,
deputy campaign manager Jeb
- John J. Caulfield , who " but wi ll include criminal
S. Magruder, to plead guilty admitted offering McCord e~­ activities beginning in 1971
and testi£y for·the prosecution. ecutive clemency " from the which together with the WaterU.S. Attorney Harold Titus highest levels of the White g:;tte break-in moti vated the
Jr : announced this new House" to remain sile!1t. was massive obstr~ction .'' development . a::; the ·Senate fired Thursday from his job as' . One of Nixon 's former aides,
Watergate inv estigating assistant director of enforce- John W. Dean, reportedly has
committee recessed until June ment in the Treasur,:y Depart- been seeking inununity from
S, without obtaining any direct ment's Bureau of Alcohol, the government without sucevidence to indicate who Tobacco and Firea rms.
cess and two others, H. R.
conceived the costly election·
- ElHot' L.· Richardson t'akes Haldeman and John Ehrlichyear' scheme of political the oath of office a$ atto rney man, have said they may be
espionage.
ge neral today; assuming "ul· indicted.
Titus said the witness, whom timate " responsibility for the
Barker, who pleaded guilty
he described as "a key· Watergate probe.
during the original Watergate
member of the criminal con·
-Sen. John McCiennan, D·
spiracy ," agreed to testify Ark.,
Thursday
qu oted
w i t h ou t
i m m u n i t y . testimony by former acting r--~.._-:--.._·~--.__...-..;.......
Presumably this means he FBI director L. Patrick Gray,
POLL-PARROT
would be indicted along with who said he told the President
INFANT SHOES
· others. Titus, said new in~ last July 6 that his aides were
dictmenls may be issued by the trying to involve the FBI and
fed~ral grand jury in 60 to 90 CIA in a coverup of the
C-D·EE Width
days.
Watergate . •
Papers Quote Sources
- Rep. William q. Mills, R·
The New York Times and th e Md., who had been accused of
Washington Post today quoted receiving a secret campaign
sources who identified . the donation from Nixon 's re-'
"key" witness as Magruder, election committee, was· found ) Your Thom MeAn S1ore
MIDDLEPOR~
38, former deputy manager of shot to death Thursday in an.
.-a.-.~--~·-·----.-·
the Committee to RHiect the apparent suicide.
President.
The first big break in the
case occurred last March when
.. .
.
convicted Watergate conspirator James W. McCord agreed
00 tell all he knew about the
plot. McCord has testified that
he believed Magruder and
former Attorney General John
N. Mitchell authorized the
bugging and break-in last June
17 of the Democratic National
Committee.
But McCord's testimony was
based solely on hearsay. And
other witnesses, including Wa~

PROBLEM .
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Economics Crisco award to
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Swisher,
home
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taklno the ted : Arion Award ,

Mar ilyn Goodnlte, Dianna
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styles today .
• For one th ing, many of
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grea t number Qf women
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(although they would be
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this line of reaso.1i ng keeps
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Ladies, fh e blowed up,
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ma king way for the new
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992·2115

Pomeroy

American
History, Mark Mifchellj a
iunior ; Americ~n legion Boys'
Stale, Danny litchfield and
Tom Gibbs, juniors ; Girls'
Slate, Joanna Goodnile and
Debbie Fiel d ; World Affair
ln sti!Ute , Sharon Froednt and
M.ark Mitchell ; Camp Hor.

and M ih Ohlinger.
Mrs. Vernon (P•ttr,J ROIISII
ot Ma""' at '"" open "II of tho
awards d.ty spoke on betwltf of
the seniors. She was fJrst
complimented for h•vlnQ done
an outstanding lob •• 1 student
end mothe-r. Both lhe end her
son, Vernon, will aracluate
from Wahama High on June ...
Mrs. ROtJsh compllmtf'ltecl
the studenfs .by s.aylngi ''I have
never seen a SWHftr bunch of
kids - They have shown me
both hospitality and friend ship." She eJCtended thanks to

principal Seaman, the faculty,

and 1he cooks.

PARK RESERVED

FRIDAY, MAY 25

GRIFFIN WST
BOSTON ( UPI) - Hot.
hitting second baseman Doug
Griffin will be Iosito the Boston
Red Sox £or four to six wee.ks
after being struck by a pitched
.ball Thursday afternoon in a
game against the Milwaukee
Brewers .
Grifrin suffen.&gt;d a fra ctured
bone in his hand after being hil
on th e left hand by a pitch
thrown by Brewers starter
Billy Champion in the first
mmng.

AFTER 5 P.M.

(FAMILY NIGHT}
OF PLASTICS DIVISION
AlliED OIEMICAL CORP.
OPEN UNTIL 5 PM FOR REGULAR
BUSINESS OPERATION

CAMDEN PARK
u.s. 60 West

HUNTINGTON

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EXTRA TOOLS
STORIINSJDE

88
29
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FURNITURE

are announced
PORTLAND - The final six
weeks honor roll and perfect
attendance awards of Portland
Elementary School were an~
nounced .Thursqay by Larry
Wolfe, principal. (Pupils'
names in capitals If they had
all A):
.
· Honor roU pupils are Grade
I, CHRISTINE 0\URENCE,
DANNY . WEDDLE. Wade
Connolly; Grade 2, BRUCE
JOH NSON, · TAMMY
MEADOWS, CINDY EVANS,
KEN BERNTH, Paul Ours;
Grade 3, Sherry Beegle, Vicky
Deem 1 Alicia Evans, Stanley
Holter, Elaine Smith~ Renee
Smith; Grade 4, Bonnie Boso,
Armintha Holter, Joe Johnson;
JANET MIDDLESWART,
Danny Talbott; Grade 5,
SHE ILA BROWN , BRIAN
JOHNSON,
JAMES
MEADOWS, Ray Deem, Bryan
Lawrence;
Grade
6,
BEVERLY McLAIN,
DANIELLE SMITil, NICKI
VAN METER, Jeff Brown,
Ja nis Carnahan, Lisa Warner.
Those who had perfect at·
tendance are Debra Bryant,
Elaine Smith, Donald Dailey,
Shelia Brown, and Danielle
Smith.
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992· 3748-992-5020

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"Service For -Over 100 Years"

Robblo

RECEIVE FUNDS
COLUMBUS
( UPI )Sharonvllle in Hamllton
County will receive $196,268 in
federal matching fund s to
develop a community pa•k.
The park will Include foot·
ball, baseball and softball
fields; three ti!Mls courts; two
picnic shelters; 16 picni c
tables; bleachers to seat 810
persons; and concession
buildings.

outstanding

~chievement,

Lou Ellen Roush; Youth
Conservation
Corps "tor
students Interested In con servation , Tom Sayre.
Named to the society of
-b utstanding American High
School Studenls were John
Burris. Chris Hoffman, Donald
Machir, Dianna Harris, Jane
!"iart,
Marilyn Goodnite,
Jenise Parson. William Gibbs,
Fr.;Jnces Wri ston , Lawrence
( Mikel
Foreman ,
Debra

Fields, Tim Roush, 8arbara
Clark, Susie Fo.IC . Sharon
Froednt and Danny litchfield.
Mr . McWhortet recognized
these 11 members from
Wahama . High
who are
members of the All State Band,
Lov Ellen Roush , Sue Fo•,
Dianna
Harris,
VIvian
Woodrum. Diane Finnicum,
Cheryl Huber, Linda 1Roush.
Jayne Hart , Mary Jones,
Teresa Purkey, Tracy Harri s,
Chris Hoffman. Barbarlll Clark,
Frances Wr is ton, Marilyn
Goodnite, Terri Blackhurst.
Re• Howard, Chuck Adams,
Laurence Weaver-, John Burr is

Final honors'

SPEAK ING OF

liGHTWEIGHT ·
&amp;COMPACT

SUGAR RUN MILLS

oword,

S1uden1 Council pins went to
council
officers, Donald
Mach l r , pres i dent.;
Rick
Hesson , vice president ; Dianna
Harris, secretary .treasurer .

award ,

seshow , based on leadership
and similar qualities, Rita
Ryan and Duana Johnson ;
Daughters
of
American
Revolution Heri tage Camp,

MEIGS !UGH SCHOOL'S FF A and FHA chapters are
combining efforts to build a float for the Regatta Parade to
be held on June 15. The float, built on a 30 foot trailer made in .
the shop, features a spinning world in keeping with the
Regatta theme, " A Good Place to Be in '73." Shqwn while
working on tpe float are, front row, Joel Maue, FF A
president, and Mr. Everett Holcomb, FFA advisor; back
row,Mrs. Dwight Goins, FHA advisor, and Nancy Laurence,
FHA president. Also assisting in the project Is Mrs. James
Carpenter, home economics teac~er .

·•••
•
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HONORING THOSE HEROIC MEN

AMERICA MIGHT LIVE

Capehart

Rickard. Others were : Home

'

WHO DIED ... SO tHAT

Mary

pr-esented the National Honor
Society award of $50 to Ron,ald

In band was Frances Wriston,
and in sports, Kevin Brown .

Miss- Clarice Davis received
cerl i ficah.• lor perfect at
fendance from the seventh
grade through her senior year .
Vocalional school award.
Typing I , PaHy Clark ; Typing
II , Shelby Hoffman ; Shorthand
I, ·Karen Kent; Shorthand II ,
Jeanne Hobbs ; bookkeeping.
Cheryl
Thompson ; com .
mercia! department typing
award , linda Roush ; business
educat ion, a sophomore, Cindy
Workman ;
DAR
History
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DISPOSABLE BAG

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fhe American Legion award
went to Vernon Roush and
Kathy Keyes for high standards of conduct. scholarship
and leadership. The Christhm
Living award was won by Chris
Hoffman and the lion 's Club
commercial award by Jeanne

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CONSTRUCTION

12" Portable TV

a Rio Grande College
seholarship worth $500.

•

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student award to carol Circle~

Lambert;
Betty
Crocker
Homemaker award , Jane
Hart ;
Mason
County
Homemakers Council award.
Judy lievlng.
Wahama Alumni scholar ships of SlOO each went to
Charlotte Grimm and Donald
Ma ~hir; New Haven Woman 's
Club scholarship of $100
recipient was Chns Hoffman,
presented by Mrs . Phyllis
Ashley ; student council award
of SlOG to the outstanding
member of senior class.
Dianna Harris, and National
Youth Science Camp Award by .
Mrs. Phyll is Ashley to John
Burris.
.
Senior
Band members
receiving the highest average

~

MEMORIAl DAY MAY-- 28.
; 1973 ·.

MOTOROLA .
.

·Goodnite and John Burris were
awarded the Balfour Award by
William McWhorter, teacher.
Other awards included honor

Danforth award recipients
character and leadership
were Chris Hoffman and
Donald Machir.
The Daughers of America
Outstanding Citizen award
went to Dianna Harris for
service to school and community and for leadership and
patriotism. This included a
certificate and pln.
D. of A Citizenship awards
also went to Chris Hoffman and
Bill Gibbs for their service,
leadership, cooperation and.
patriotism,

roc

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Marilyn

•

house

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Salutatorians

•

l!. Wh~t~~~:~~~~~lher
h~;;;;ge
!.....-..-.

'1

afternoon .

i•'

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.

MASON'Robert Seaman
. .
pnnc1pal of Wahama High
Sc~ool, presented Frances
Wnston, valedict~&gt;rian of this
year's graduating class a
savings bond from Senator
Robert Byrd and a )'eer's
subscription to Readers Digest
at Awards Day held Thursday

'

The fifth a nnual Quaker
State Service Center Slow
Pitch softball · tournament
(double elimination ) will begin
this evening at two locations.
Twenty-one teams ar:e entered in the 1973 tournament.
At 6 :30 this evening on the
Kyger Creek Employees Club ·
diamond, GSI plays Fruth's
Pharmacy. Second game pits
·Union Workman against
Maplewood and the third tilt
Stroh's against Randolph's
Union 76.
On the Gallipolis Elks Field
at 6:30, the Grande Cafe will
meet People's Bank. FederalMogul vs. Gallipolis Eagles in
the nightcamp.
Action will resume at 10 a.m .
Saturday on the Kyge r Creek
diamond.
Finals are scheduled for 4
p.m . Monday.

triai last January, and Bald·
win, who was never indicted although he admitted eavesdro J&gt;ping on the Democrats,
testified Thursday they
knowingly · broke the • law
without asking why.

Awards made Thursday to outstanding Wahama High students

:. .

QSSC tourney
begins tonight

Speedway readied for race

GIFT

TilE MEIGS HIGH School welding class constructed and
set up a backstop for the little league and other ball players
at the Harrisonville Elementary School. Members of the
class with Kenneth Eblin, right, instructor, are installing the
backstop. Making up the group are DaMy Robson, Paul
Searls, Mike Hayes, Jeff Grate, Bill McKiMey, Rich Hat·
field, Wayne Pullins, Robert Birchfield, Robert Vane.., and
Ted Fisher.

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 25, 1973

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will be given with each $3 pu ;·chase of Ashland gaso lin e.
See chart below .
2 coupons .
(A) 9·oz. rocks
3 co upons
(B) •12-oz. beverage
(C) 16-oz, cooler
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~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-PI)[Jleroy, 0., May

25,1973
them usually remain and
seldom change. Parents need
to work at this now. Age 18 is

Pigtails
\Continued from page ll

too late.

The speaker gave tribute to
.,,.,u Prof. Leep listed three ways Miss Francis whom he had
to contribute to successful become acquainted with when
~ ·.
',., . living.
she was a student at Ohio
He said :
.... "I
Children need to develop a University and spoke of her
..........
!'
feeling about themselves. deli!nnlnation to get where she
• • good
They need to be able to relate wanted to go and of her wilUngto other people and know that ness to work toward achieving
'' '
they are important to others her goal. The invocation and
........
and have their trust and benediction were given by the
•'Rev. Charles Simons.'
concern.
'.J&lt;I '
Pols of geraniums lining the
They need to develop tools
I .
and skills to get along in life . front of the stage area for the
The home, the sehool, and commenc-ement were
the churches are where these presented to Mrs . Sharon
keys to successful living are Welker, Mrs. Marilyn Poulin,
Mrs . Kathy Erwin, Mrs .
learned, said ])1·. Leep.
Dr. Leep said that the Beverly Long, Mrs. Betty
development of these sue· McKinley, Mrs. Mary Hoover
Mrs. Christine Simons and
cessful living techniques are
already well underway in the Mrs, Judy Crow who made the
gowns {or the children; Mrs.
five and six year olds and that
Rosemary Lyons who made the
attitudes and ideas instilled in
artificial white carnations
worn by each child, and to Mrs.
Emogene Fisher Mrs. Connie
Hoffman, Mrs. Diana Ashley,
and Mrs. Teresa Cremeans,
who assisted in other ways.
Mali!rials for the caps and
gowns were provided by \he
successfuUy.

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gran dmoth er, Mrs. Norma
Curtis who assisti!d with the
graduation in a variety of
ways, including preparing all
or the diplomas and making
mos t of the blue stoles worn on
the gowns.
Punch and cookies were
se rved at· the informal
re ception
honoring
the
1
'graduates.''
In the class of 1972-73 were
Sarah Arnott, Lisa Ashley,
John Bacon, William Bush,
Peggy Cremeans, John Crow,
Amy Erwin, William Fink,
David Fisher, Timothy Gilkey,
Billi Gordon, Phillip Harris,
Frances Hoffman , Lisa Hoffman , David Hoover, Brian
Ja cobs, Cindy Little, Mary
Long, Charlotli! Lyons, Joseph
Manley, Earl McKinley, Roger
Manley , Richard McHaffie ,
Tracey McMahon, Edward
Miller, Jody Miller, Bonnie
Moodi spaugh, Carl Moddispaugh, Anna Patrick ,
Richard Poulin, Rhonda Price,
Wayne . Shrimplin, Carol
Simons , Timothy Smith, Allen
Spaulding, Rober t", Spires,
Robert Staats 1 Lori Stewart,
Daniel Thomas, " WilHam
Weaver, Jackie Welker, Sheila
Wines, M~lissa _ Wis~ .

[lanny Sayre

· Did

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you

MEMORIAL
DAY
F.LOWERS

know

Mother s in the moun -

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region s · · of ·
Pie monte , Ita ly , carry
their babies , cradles and
all upon t heir heads . Th'ey
often cover great distances
in th us encumbered cluding jour neys of many ·
hour s - without showing
signs of fatigue .·.. The
·leopard c·annot change its
spots . rt has none. The socal led "spots " are in
rea li ty ros.ettes - ter minologically
entirely
different ... , The oldest
business si gn fn existence
is 2500 years old , w;;:~s found
in Memphis, Egypt, and is
now· in the Cai ro Mu seum .

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Dudley's AOrist
S9 N. S~cond Sr.
Middleport, 0 .

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HONOR MOTHERS
SYRACUSE-The
the Nar.arene honored
oldest and young&lt;St
with n11Wers on Mother 's
Receiv~ng for the
molht!r present was
Jessie Cottrill, and for
youngest Mrs. John Ra1&gt;do
New Haven. The one with
most children present
Mrs. Lawrence Klein. All ·
women . attending
smaller flowers.

Portland winners announced
POR lLANO - Results of the
recent track and field day at

the element.lry school here
were as follows:
Ftrsl Grade
Girls - Sack Race, Christie
Laurence ; SO yd . dash ,
Christine Wilson ; Discus, 38ft..
Carol Sellers; Shuttl e Run,
Angle Rhodes ; Egg and Spoon,
Christine Wii!.Dn : 100 yd, dash,
Christine WilsOI'\ ; Crab Race.
Christie Lawrence ; Standing
Broad Jump, 2 ft. 11 in ..
Chr istie Lawrence.
Boys Sack, Wade Con·
noll y ; 50 yd . dash. Wade

Connolly ;

Discus.

Danny

Weddle ; Egg a11d Spoon,
lawrence Powell ; Shuttle Run .
Wade Connolly : Crab Race,
Wade Connolly ; 100 yd . dash,
Wade Connolly ; Standing
Broad Jump. 4 f1 .• l ln., Wade

Connolly.
Second Grade

Girls - Sack race, Debra
Bryan·t ; 50 yd . dash , Debra
Bryant : Discus, Cindy Evans ;
Egg and SpoO n . Tammy
Meadows; Shuttle Run , Cindy
Evans ; Crab Race . Kitty
Sellers ; 100 yd . dash , Kitty
Sellers; Standing Broa·d Jump,
4 ft ., 6 in . - Cindy Evans .
Boys - Sack, BriJce John son ; so yd . dash. Bruce
Johnson ; Broad Jump, David
Talbott ; Softball throw , 25 ft .,

K('f'l Sernlh ; Crab Race, Bruce
Johnson : 100 yd . dash, Bruce
iohns on : Egg and Spoon,
Dav1d Talboit ~ Shuttl ~ Run,
Dav id Talbott .
Third Grade
Girls - S;,ck race, Ela ine
Smith ; 50 yd . dash. Sherry
Beegle; Discus . flhonda Kern ;
Egg and Spoon,,.Vick i Deem;
Shuttle Run, Stlerry Beegle;
Walking Race, Allc1a Evans .Broad Jump, Ela ine Smith . 100
yd . dash. Alicia Evans.
Boys - Sack, Dav id Rhodes .
100 yd . dash, Richard Wolfe ;
Broad Jump. David Rhodes ;
Softball throw , 98 ft ., Dav id
Rhodes ;
Walking
Race,
Richard Wolfe ; Egg and
Spoon. Richard Wolfe ,· Shuttle
Run , Richard Wolfe ; Crab
Race. Stanley Holter .
Fourth Grade
Girls - Sack, Bonnie Boso;
50 yd . dash, Bonnie Bose ;
Softball throw. 80 H., Bonnie
Boso ; 100 yard dash, Bonnie
Boso; Crab Race. Ti na Cozart ;
Shuttl e Run, Arm itha Holter ;
Walking Race , Donnie Boso;
Standing Broad Jump,. 6 ft. 5
in., Bonnie Bose .
Boys - Sack , Fl int Greer ;
100 yd. dash. Danny Ta lbott ;
High Jump , Duke Dailey;
Broad Jump, Danny Talbott ;
So'ftball thro"'!1 115 ft ., Danny
Talbott ; Football Pun!, 62 ft .•
Danny
Talbott ;
Football

throw, Danny Talbott ; Crab
Rilce, Duke Dailey.
F1fth Grade
Gir ls
Sack Race. Shelia
Brown ; Softball throw , 70 ft .,
Shelia Brown ; High jump.
Shelia Brown ; Crab Race,
Sheila Brown . SO yd. dash.

Shelia Brown ; Broad jump,
Teres.a

Sheila

Cain :

~rown ;

Shuttle

Run.

Walk ing Race,

Shelia Brown.
Boys
Sa ck Race 1 Randall

Congo ; 100 yd . dash, Curtis
Pr ice : Softball throw , Steve
Fitch ; High jump, 3 ft. 3 in.
Ray Deem ; Broad jump, 10ft.
4 in .,. Brian Johnson ; 44(1,
Curtis Pr ice ; Football throw,
Steve Fitch ; Walking race.
Randell Congo .

Girls -

Sixth Grade
100 yd . dash, Lisa

Warner ; Softball lhrow, 124ft.,

Janis -Carnahan ; Broad jump,

3 If. 10 in ., Janis Carnahan ;
Lisa Warner ; Crab Race,
Usa Warner ; High jump, 3ft. 3
in.• Lisa Warner ; Shv ttle Run,
Janis Carnahan ; Walking
1
Race, Kimberly Ward.
Boys - 100 yd . dash, Tim
Kern , Tom Boso ( tie) ; High
iump, J ft . J in .• Tom Boso:
Football punt, Jeff Brown;
Broad jump, 12ft., Tom Boso :
Shot Put, 22 ft . 7 in, Tim Kern ;
Football Throw, Tom Boso;
440, Tom Boso ; Softball throw,
Tim Kern .
440,

A SOLUTION
TO YOUR

!I;DIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP! ) hour with a full fuel load in his
- The Indianapolis Speedway Dan Gurney Eagle.
Unser's yoWiger brother Al,
was closed down Thursday
afternoon for a thorough twice winne:r of the race, was
cleaning and the 33 cors that second fastest at 191.4. David
compose the fastest starting "Swede" Savage and Mike
field in history for the famed Mosley were the only other ·
500-mile race will not return to drivers clocked in the 100
the 2Yl-mile oval until race da y m.p.h. bracket by the unof·
!icial clocks.
Monday.
Dave "Salt " Walther
Bobby Unser, the 1968 win· brought on the yellow caution
ner, recorded the quickest light during the final prepractice time durlng the three- Memorial Day practice When
hour carburetion test period his car stalled and needed a
Thursday- 192.5 miles per tow.
I

Crews were permitli!d two
hoW's Thufsday afternoon for
pit practice without the engines
running just before the track
was closed .
The flying start of the race,
following a parade lap and a
pace lap, is scheduled for noon
EDT, Monday.
Pole
sitter
Johnny
Rutherford is in the No. I
starting position with Bobby
Unser and defending champion
Mark Donohue joining him in
the first of the II rows.

Another major breakthrough
reported by prosecutors
WASHINGTON (UP! ) tergate collaborators Bemard Attorneys are Negotiating
Government attorneys · BarkerandAlfredC. Baldinlll
Titus said government attordisc lt~sed a second major who w'ere questioned bY the neys are negotia ting with
breakthrough in the Watergate Senate committee Thursday, several other persons to plead
investigation
Thursday-an claim they never asked who guilty and testify without
agreement by an wmamed was behind it.
immunity. He said the indict"key" figure, reported to be . Other Developments
ments wilL focus on "obstrucPreside.nt Nixon's former
In other developments:
tiQn of justit'e" after June 17,
deputy campaign manager Jeb
- John J. Caulfield , who " but wi ll include criminal
S. Magruder, to plead guilty admitted offering McCord e~­ activities beginning in 1971
and testi£y for·the prosecution. ecutive clemency " from the which together with the WaterU.S. Attorney Harold Titus highest levels of the White g:;tte break-in moti vated the
Jr : announced this new House" to remain sile!1t. was massive obstr~ction .'' development . a::; the ·Senate fired Thursday from his job as' . One of Nixon 's former aides,
Watergate inv estigating assistant director of enforce- John W. Dean, reportedly has
committee recessed until June ment in the Treasur,:y Depart- been seeking inununity from
S, without obtaining any direct ment's Bureau of Alcohol, the government without sucevidence to indicate who Tobacco and Firea rms.
cess and two others, H. R.
conceived the costly election·
- ElHot' L.· Richardson t'akes Haldeman and John Ehrlichyear' scheme of political the oath of office a$ atto rney man, have said they may be
espionage.
ge neral today; assuming "ul· indicted.
Titus said the witness, whom timate " responsibility for the
Barker, who pleaded guilty
he described as "a key· Watergate probe.
during the original Watergate
member of the criminal con·
-Sen. John McCiennan, D·
spiracy ," agreed to testify Ark.,
Thursday
qu oted
w i t h ou t
i m m u n i t y . testimony by former acting r--~.._-:--.._·~--.__...-..;.......
Presumably this means he FBI director L. Patrick Gray,
POLL-PARROT
would be indicted along with who said he told the President
INFANT SHOES
· others. Titus, said new in~ last July 6 that his aides were
dictmenls may be issued by the trying to involve the FBI and
fed~ral grand jury in 60 to 90 CIA in a coverup of the
C-D·EE Width
days.
Watergate . •
Papers Quote Sources
- Rep. William q. Mills, R·
The New York Times and th e Md., who had been accused of
Washington Post today quoted receiving a secret campaign
sources who identified . the donation from Nixon 's re-'
"key" witness as Magruder, election committee, was· found ) Your Thom MeAn S1ore
MIDDLEPOR~
38, former deputy manager of shot to death Thursday in an.
.-a.-.~--~·-·----.-·
the Committee to RHiect the apparent suicide.
President.
The first big break in the
case occurred last March when
.. .
.
convicted Watergate conspirator James W. McCord agreed
00 tell all he knew about the
plot. McCord has testified that
he believed Magruder and
former Attorney General John
N. Mitchell authorized the
bugging and break-in last June
17 of the Democratic National
Committee.
But McCord's testimony was
based solely on hearsay. And
other witnesses, including Wa~

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American
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Stale, Danny litchfield and
Tom Gibbs, juniors ; Girls'
Slate, Joanna Goodnile and
Debbie Fiel d ; World Affair
ln sti!Ute , Sharon Froednt and
M.ark Mitchell ; Camp Hor.

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Mrs. Vernon (P•ttr,J ROIISII
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the seniors. She was fJrst
complimented for h•vlnQ done
an outstanding lob •• 1 student
end mothe-r. Both lhe end her
son, Vernon, will aracluate
from Wahama High on June ...
Mrs. ROtJsh compllmtf'ltecl
the studenfs .by s.aylngi ''I have
never seen a SWHftr bunch of
kids - They have shown me
both hospitality and friend ship." She eJCtended thanks to

principal Seaman, the faculty,

and 1he cooks.

PARK RESERVED

FRIDAY, MAY 25

GRIFFIN WST
BOSTON ( UPI) - Hot.
hitting second baseman Doug
Griffin will be Iosito the Boston
Red Sox £or four to six wee.ks
after being struck by a pitched
.ball Thursday afternoon in a
game against the Milwaukee
Brewers .
Grifrin suffen.&gt;d a fra ctured
bone in his hand after being hil
on th e left hand by a pitch
thrown by Brewers starter
Billy Champion in the first
mmng.

AFTER 5 P.M.

(FAMILY NIGHT}
OF PLASTICS DIVISION
AlliED OIEMICAL CORP.
OPEN UNTIL 5 PM FOR REGULAR
BUSINESS OPERATION

CAMDEN PARK
u.s. 60 West

HUNTINGTON

•

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· 'COMPLETE WITH .
TELESCOPING WAND .
&amp; TOOlS

EXTRA TOOLS
STORIINSJDE

88
29
COMPLETE

FURNITURE

are announced
PORTLAND - The final six
weeks honor roll and perfect
attendance awards of Portland
Elementary School were an~
nounced .Thursqay by Larry
Wolfe, principal. (Pupils'
names in capitals If they had
all A):
.
· Honor roU pupils are Grade
I, CHRISTINE 0\URENCE,
DANNY . WEDDLE. Wade
Connolly; Grade 2, BRUCE
JOH NSON, · TAMMY
MEADOWS, CINDY EVANS,
KEN BERNTH, Paul Ours;
Grade 3, Sherry Beegle, Vicky
Deem 1 Alicia Evans, Stanley
Holter, Elaine Smith~ Renee
Smith; Grade 4, Bonnie Boso,
Armintha Holter, Joe Johnson;
JANET MIDDLESWART,
Danny Talbott; Grade 5,
SHE ILA BROWN , BRIAN
JOHNSON,
JAMES
MEADOWS, Ray Deem, Bryan
Lawrence;
Grade
6,
BEVERLY McLAIN,
DANIELLE SMITil, NICKI
VAN METER, Jeff Brown,
Ja nis Carnahan, Lisa Warner.
Those who had perfect at·
tendance are Debra Bryant,
Elaine Smith, Donald Dailey,
Shelia Brown, and Danielle
Smith.
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"Service For -Over 100 Years"

Robblo

RECEIVE FUNDS
COLUMBUS
( UPI )Sharonvllle in Hamllton
County will receive $196,268 in
federal matching fund s to
develop a community pa•k.
The park will Include foot·
ball, baseball and softball
fields; three ti!Mls courts; two
picnic shelters; 16 picni c
tables; bleachers to seat 810
persons; and concession
buildings.

outstanding

~chievement,

Lou Ellen Roush; Youth
Conservation
Corps "tor
students Interested In con servation , Tom Sayre.
Named to the society of
-b utstanding American High
School Studenls were John
Burris. Chris Hoffman, Donald
Machir, Dianna Harris, Jane
!"iart,
Marilyn Goodnite,
Jenise Parson. William Gibbs,
Fr.;Jnces Wri ston , Lawrence
( Mikel
Foreman ,
Debra

Fields, Tim Roush, 8arbara
Clark, Susie Fo.IC . Sharon
Froednt and Danny litchfield.
Mr . McWhortet recognized
these 11 members from
Wahama . High
who are
members of the All State Band,
Lov Ellen Roush , Sue Fo•,
Dianna
Harris,
VIvian
Woodrum. Diane Finnicum,
Cheryl Huber, Linda 1Roush.
Jayne Hart , Mary Jones,
Teresa Purkey, Tracy Harri s,
Chris Hoffman. Barbarlll Clark,
Frances Wr is ton, Marilyn
Goodnite, Terri Blackhurst.
Re• Howard, Chuck Adams,
Laurence Weaver-, John Burr is

Final honors'

SPEAK ING OF

liGHTWEIGHT ·
&amp;COMPACT

SUGAR RUN MILLS

oword,

S1uden1 Council pins went to
council
officers, Donald
Mach l r , pres i dent.;
Rick
Hesson , vice president ; Dianna
Harris, secretary .treasurer .

award ,

seshow , based on leadership
and similar qualities, Rita
Ryan and Duana Johnson ;
Daughters
of
American
Revolution Heri tage Camp,

MEIGS !UGH SCHOOL'S FF A and FHA chapters are
combining efforts to build a float for the Regatta Parade to
be held on June 15. The float, built on a 30 foot trailer made in .
the shop, features a spinning world in keeping with the
Regatta theme, " A Good Place to Be in '73." Shqwn while
working on tpe float are, front row, Joel Maue, FF A
president, and Mr. Everett Holcomb, FFA advisor; back
row,Mrs. Dwight Goins, FHA advisor, and Nancy Laurence,
FHA president. Also assisting in the project Is Mrs. James
Carpenter, home economics teac~er .

·•••
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••
•,

HONORING THOSE HEROIC MEN

AMERICA MIGHT LIVE

Capehart

Rickard. Others were : Home

'

WHO DIED ... SO tHAT

Mary

pr-esented the National Honor
Society award of $50 to Ron,ald

In band was Frances Wriston,
and in sports, Kevin Brown .

Miss- Clarice Davis received
cerl i ficah.• lor perfect at
fendance from the seventh
grade through her senior year .
Vocalional school award.
Typing I , PaHy Clark ; Typing
II , Shelby Hoffman ; Shorthand
I, ·Karen Kent; Shorthand II ,
Jeanne Hobbs ; bookkeeping.
Cheryl
Thompson ; com .
mercia! department typing
award , linda Roush ; business
educat ion, a sophomore, Cindy
Workman ;
DAR
History
~

'

lARGE EASY TO CHANGE
DISPOSABLE BAG

•

.••.

fhe American Legion award
went to Vernon Roush and
Kathy Keyes for high standards of conduct. scholarship
and leadership. The Christhm
Living award was won by Chris
Hoffman and the lion 's Club
commercial award by Jeanne

I

•'

RUGGED AU ST!El
CONSTRUCTION

12" Portable TV

a Rio Grande College
seholarship worth $500.

•

~l

•

student award to carol Circle~

Lambert;
Betty
Crocker
Homemaker award , Jane
Hart ;
Mason
County
Homemakers Council award.
Judy lievlng.
Wahama Alumni scholar ships of SlOO each went to
Charlotte Grimm and Donald
Ma ~hir; New Haven Woman 's
Club scholarship of $100
recipient was Chns Hoffman,
presented by Mrs . Phyllis
Ashley ; student council award
of SlOG to the outstanding
member of senior class.
Dianna Harris, and National
Youth Science Camp Award by .
Mrs. Phyll is Ashley to John
Burris.
.
Senior
Band members
receiving the highest average

~

MEMORIAl DAY MAY-- 28.
; 1973 ·.

MOTOROLA .
.

·Goodnite and John Burris were
awarded the Balfour Award by
William McWhorter, teacher.
Other awards included honor

Danforth award recipients
character and leadership
were Chris Hoffman and
Donald Machir.
The Daughers of America
Outstanding Citizen award
went to Dianna Harris for
service to school and community and for leadership and
patriotism. This included a
certificate and pln.
D. of A Citizenship awards
also went to Chris Hoffman and
Bill Gibbs for their service,
leadership, cooperation and.
patriotism,

roc

:

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!

Marilyn

•

house

I'

Salutatorians

•

l!. Wh~t~~~:~~~~~lher
h~;;;;ge
!.....-..-.

'1

afternoon .

i•'

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I·

.

MASON'Robert Seaman
. .
pnnc1pal of Wahama High
Sc~ool, presented Frances
Wnston, valedict~&gt;rian of this
year's graduating class a
savings bond from Senator
Robert Byrd and a )'eer's
subscription to Readers Digest
at Awards Day held Thursday

'

The fifth a nnual Quaker
State Service Center Slow
Pitch softball · tournament
(double elimination ) will begin
this evening at two locations.
Twenty-one teams ar:e entered in the 1973 tournament.
At 6 :30 this evening on the
Kyger Creek Employees Club ·
diamond, GSI plays Fruth's
Pharmacy. Second game pits
·Union Workman against
Maplewood and the third tilt
Stroh's against Randolph's
Union 76.
On the Gallipolis Elks Field
at 6:30, the Grande Cafe will
meet People's Bank. FederalMogul vs. Gallipolis Eagles in
the nightcamp.
Action will resume at 10 a.m .
Saturday on the Kyge r Creek
diamond.
Finals are scheduled for 4
p.m . Monday.

triai last January, and Bald·
win, who was never indicted although he admitted eavesdro J&gt;ping on the Democrats,
testified Thursday they
knowingly · broke the • law
without asking why.

Awards made Thursday to outstanding Wahama High students

:. .

QSSC tourney
begins tonight

Speedway readied for race

GIFT

TilE MEIGS HIGH School welding class constructed and
set up a backstop for the little league and other ball players
at the Harrisonville Elementary School. Members of the
class with Kenneth Eblin, right, instructor, are installing the
backstop. Making up the group are DaMy Robson, Paul
Searls, Mike Hayes, Jeff Grate, Bill McKiMey, Rich Hat·
field, Wayne Pullins, Robert Birchfield, Robert Vane.., and
Ted Fisher.

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 25, 1973

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Collect Taw"Y. Accent
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when you buy Ashland gasoline~
Six handsome styles. Rich , tawny color. Tumblers for casual
dining. Stemware for formal dining. Get Libbey's sm.art-looking,
all-purpose glassware at participating Ashland Oil stations.
Here's how: Glasses are free with co upons. One coupon
will be given with each $3 pu ;·chase of Ashland gaso lin e.
See chart below .
2 coupons .
(A) 9·oz. rocks
3 co upons
(B) •12-oz. beverage
(C) 16-oz, cooler
(0) 6'h-oz. wine / juice

(E) 8-oz. sherbe\1 champagne
(F) 11 Y• -oz. goblet

4 coupons
5 co upo ns
5 co upons
5 coupons

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Charge credit card:t•

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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May~. 19'13

Garden Club will plant
flowers in Rutland area
RUTLAND - Plantings
around the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church and at the
' Leadmg
.
Creek Watershed
·office in Rutland will be made
by the Rutland Garden Club,
according to plans made p. a
meeting Monday nighrli the
home of Mrs. Robert Canaday.
It was reported ~hat the civic
committee had viewed Laurel
Cliff Church grocnds and had
con tacted Ge orge Carper
concrrning the planting. The
club voted to proceed with the
project. Mrs. Pearl Little and
Mrs. Ca naday were asked to

contact Cleland's Gree nhous.e
· about flats of flowers being
provided garden ch,1bs for civic

'

plantings. The flowers were

given to the club and will be
plant..d in the planters at the
Watershed office.
A report was given on the
recent Meigs County Garden
Club Association meeting held
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church by Mrs. Kale Jarrell
and Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis .
It was voted to make a $5
.contribution · toward the ex·
penses of the Regalia flower
show , which was discussed in

detail at the county meeting.
Five members agreed to make
arrangements for the show .
Mrs. Jarrell and Mrs. Eva
Robson whill serve on June 16

as hostesses at the show.
Also discussed was the Meigs
County Fair flower show and
plans were· made for a
demonstration on the schedule

at the June 25 open meeting of
the club. All clubs of the county
will be invited to attend and
watch Mrs . Belly Dean
demonstrate arrangements
suitable for the fair schedule .
The club voted to donate $10
to the Hearl Fund in memory
of Virgil Atkins, husband of a
member. Tbe present officers
were retained for another year
by vote of the membership.
The traveling prize brought
by Mrs. Edith Williamson was
wan by Mrs. Robson. The next
one will be provide&lt;! by Mrs.
Marie Bishop. Several of the
members reported making

arrangements for the area
churches and special events of

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAM~

.DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ul At 5
. Use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Garden club elects -Church ladies
officers at meeting celebrate name

RUTLAND - New officers
presented
by
Mrs.
Lillie.
She
were elected and plans were
chapters of the Order of
said that leaves from spring made·for members to exhibit in
Eastern St.Jr.
Mrs. Little served as auc- bulbs should not be removed or the Reg;~tta flower show during
lioneer for a sale held following cut off until they turn yellow a recen t meeting of the Star
the meeting. $10.::.0 was netted and tha l they should neither be Ga rden Club at the home of
braided nor tied in bunches Mrs. Robert Jewell.
for Lhe treasury.
"How to Make Cut Flowers because they need the sun. She
EJected as officer s were Mrs.
also
pointeQ
out
Lhat
there
is
Last Longer" was the topic
Henry Turner, president; Mrs.
presented by Mrs. Harvey danger in Ieavins plastic drop G. . A. Radek in, first vice
Erlcwine. She reviewed the cloths over plants for any presidl!ht ; Mrs. Jewell, second
article written by Susan Roth length of time. Tbese should be vice president ; Mrs. Pearley
Bush for "Family Circle," in removed as quickly as possible Nelson ,
secretary
and
which it is suggested that because in hot weather, heal treasurer.
flowers be picked in the mid-to- ca n build up enough to actually
Miss Ruby Diehl asked
late aflernoon on sunny days cook the plants.
members
to
provide
Now is the lime to sbear arrangements for the Regalia
when they are in bud or just
arbor·vitae,
h~mlocks ,
flower show to be staged June
beginning to bloom . She also
.suggested that all leaves below junipers, plume cypresses and 16 and 17 in i.he Pomeroy Motor
the waterline be pulled off and yews to shaJ)e or thicken them, Co. showroom. A report on the
that excess foliage above the Mrs. tittle said, and ·to sow recent Region II meeting held
waterline be removed to slow se.eds of carrots, beets, and at Pomeroy was given by Miss
sweet corn as well as set out Dieh1, Mrs. Seth Nicholson,
down water loss .
Mrs. Erlewine explained the plants of late cabbage,' broccoli MrS. Kearney Ogdin and Mrs.
hardening process which and Bru.s.sel sprouts.
Henry
Turner .
Several
Mrs . Canaday presented
prolongs the life of flowers
from the home gardening. She devotions to open the meeting
said that trimmed flowers using Psalm 23 and the Lord's
should be placed in a bucket of Prayer . Members responded to
deep, warm water containing roll call by naming a flower not
plant food and then put the suitable for culling.
Attending were 16 members
bucket of flowers in a cool
place _for two hours, a and a guest, Mrs. Edna
refrigerator, if possible . This Russell, mother of the hostess.
she said slows down the loss of Approved were the reports of
FRIDAY
water. through the leaves. Mrs. Mrs. -Ann Webster, secretary,
VIGOR IN Maturity, 2 p.m.,
Erlewine explained that if a and Mrs. Jarrell, treasurer. former Pomeroy Jr. High ;
Mrs. Canaday and Mrs. Reva final session; emphasis on
refrigerator is not available
then loosely wrap the bouquet Snowden served refreshments medicare, social security ,' and
of sandwiches, jello dessert community resources.
with a plastic bag.
Gari:lening tips for June were and punch.
MIDDLEPORT WCTU, 6
p.m. at the Legion Memorial
Park, Mill St.
WEEKEND
Revival ,
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church, Rl. 143. Thursday to
Sunday. Rev . Owens, District
, Supt., will be guest speaker
Thursday and Friday. Special
singing each evening. Public is
invit..d. Rev. O'Dell Manley,
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. in the I o w e r part of the
gus and have serious pastor.
Dear Dr. Lam·b - · I have es()pha
bleeding. After all , the act
SUNDAY
a friend who. after eatirigva of
vomiting is induced by
moderate meal, goes to the vigorous .muscular contraCRACINE AMERICAN
bathroom and makes herself tions o~ the digestive tract in Legion Post 602 Will hold
vomit. She tells me she feel s
Memorial Day services . At 10
good after this. I have tried a somewhat unnatural way .
The act might actually be a.m. the Southern High &amp;hool
this a few times. Would you
please tell people what this a health benefit if a person Band will play- at Letart
w o u I d do to a person's needs to control the · absorp- Cemetery and 11 a .m. at
tion . of calories and prevent
health ?
obestty
. Otherwise, if the per. Greenwood Cemetery in
0 ear Reader - I don't . son needs
the calories and conjunction with services.
reCom mend the practice. but the nutrients it would have
DEDICATION aod open
must acknowledge that this the same effect as not eati ng
house
at new Middleport Fire
is not new . The anCient Ro- eno ugh .
Department quarters, 1 p.m .
mans used to do it regularly .
Dear Dr. Lamb - 1 was until 6 p.m.; public invited .
They would eat one of their
famous Roman banquets and interested in yoUr arti~le Auxiliary members will serve
between courses t h' e y re- about abdominal exercise. I
m o v e d themselves a n d can't t "for the life of me" 1 refreshments.
emptied their stomachs , after do sit-ups . I definitely need . MEMORIAL Day dinner
which they would return and to strengthen my abdomen Letart. Falls Community Hall
as it's very fat! Please ad- al 12 noon. Menu consists of
keep on eating .
It is one wa y of eliminating vise what I should do .
chic)le~, noodles, potato~s.
I ain 56, married with two green beans, cottage cheese ,
a number of calories that are
absorbed into the body , and sons. grown men , and a husI suppose in that sense . con- ba~d I also developin g the slaw, rolls, pie, coffee, iced tea .
tributes to weight control. I tummyJ. Can you help us?
am sure most people would
Reader - Some peo- while these things will help
fihd this practice relative ly pleDear
have
such weak abdomi- you improve abdominal tone.
unpleasant.
nal muscles toat they can't they will not get rid . of the
Individuals who i n d u c e. do a simple sit-up. or do :a abdominal fat. The only good
f~rceful vomiting will some- straight leg lilt raising both
to get rid of the abdomitimes rupture a blood vessel feet off the floor. It's hard way
nal fat is to decrease the fat
to believe, but it is true . For storage . That means elimiindividuals with this prob- nating calories and impro\'lem I suggest that they lie in.g over-all physic;al activity .
flat on the floor and lift one
[NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . I
leg, k e e p i n g the knee
straight, return the foot to
the floor , then lift the other
Send your quest ions fa Or. Lomb,
1
leg. By alternating this wa ,. in care of this newspaper, fi.O. Bo•
you can lift one leg at a time 1551, Radio City Stolian, New Yorlr.,
repeatedly. Eventually you . N.Y . 10019 . foro copy ol Dr. Lamb's
can gam enough strength to baoklrt on losing weight. send 50
ltft both heels simultaneously cents to the some oddreu and osk
off the floor . When you reach for " Losing Weight" bookle-t.
that point you ca n ' do more
regular leg lifts and grad ually strengthen the lower
abdomina l muscles.
If yo u can't do a complete
sit-up, sit up as far as yo u
can even if this mea ns just
lifting the head up and down .
After you have done that .
then help yourself lift au the

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Induced Vomiting
Is Nothing New

New For '73

Webster s
CO.LLEGIATE
Dl CTIONARY

projects were discussed .
Mrs. Orion Nelson presented
a paper on dahlias. She told of
the many varieties, the colors,
and gave planting techniques
and tips for better growth. Sbe
said that they do well in well·
drained soi~. with plenty of
sunshine, and that they would
be planted four to six inches
deep. Each clump should be
divided inw several different
plants, Mrs. Nelson explained.
"Phlox" was Mrs. Virgil
Atkins' topic and sbe wid of
how easily this can be divided
and how plants can be pinched
back to make them bushier and
bloom later. She also talked on
gloxinias that do best in warm
temperature without bright
sunshine.
Mrs. Turner provided the
traveling prize which was won
by Mrs. Nelson . Mrs. Bert
Hoosier won the hostess gift.
Following the meeting a plant
sale was held,
Refreshments were served
by lbe hostess to those named
and Mrs. Norman Will and
Mrs. Lawrence Chapman .
Flower arrangements were
displayed at the meeting by
Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Jewell.

Students' visit
Bob Evans famzs

The firs t' grade students of
Mid\lleport Elementary &amp;hool
visited Bob Evans Farms at
Rio Grande Thursday. They
wured the farm, saw animals
on exhibit and the train
caboose.. They were taken to
the farm by a school bus driven
by Mrs. Mary King . It was the
first school bus ride for
children who usually walk to
school.
Accompanying the
youngsters were teachers ·Mrs.
Helen Magg, Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter, student teacher ·
'
. Miss Barbara Basil, and Mrs.
Edward Blake, Mrs. Newman
S~'~encer Burdette, Mrs. Ray cun'1"
mngham, Mrs. Frank Epple,
Mrs. Robert Harrison, Mrs.
A layette shower honoring
James Pooler, Mrs. Charles
Mrs. Cathy Spencer was held Riffle and Mrs. Oscar Roush.
at a recent meeting of the
Young Wives' Club held at the
home of Mrs. Ruth McGrath
ENTERTAIN GUESTS
with Mrs . Esther Spencer
WNG
BOTTOM -~pending
presiding .
Plans were made for a bake Mother's Day with Mrs. Edna
sale and sock animal sale tn be Summerfield, were Mr. and
held at Chest..r, May 26, at 10 Mrs. Carl Lamb, Huntington:
a.m. A household products Mr. and Mts. Glenn PoweU and
Mr. and Mrs. William Northup,
party was planned for all.
The door prize was won by Debbie and Jeff, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Karen Young who will Mrs. Roger Adams and Lori,
host the June meeting, A picnic Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
will be held in July. Attending Parker, Bobby and Kelli ,
besides those named were Mrs. Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Buel
Avice Spencer, Mrs. Mary Summerfield, Charleston; Mr.
Barnhart, Mrs. Pam Hager,. and Mrs. Cecil Caldwell, Mr.
Mrs. Marilyn Spencer and Mrs. and Mrs. Kenneth Caldwell .and
Kenny , Sherman Summerfield,
Virginia Kirkhart.
Mr. . and Mrs. Rex Sum·
merfield, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
and Amy, Reedsville,
tie~re~ Murphy
Rt.; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Swartz,
Rena, Tena, Robin,
Mrs . Rose Ann Jenkins,
Rexie, Roger, Coolville; Mr~
Pomeroy, received
her
and
Mrs. Gerald Summerfield,
bachelor . of arts degree in
elementary education in Amber and Mechael, Mr. and
commencement exercises at Mrs. Gayle West, Parkersburg
Marshall University on May 13. and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
She was one of 1,750 in the Parker, Syracuse.

Club fetes

Mrs.

GQlden Age meets,

1··-··-······
••
••

Romans 12:1-15 verses.
Purpose of the United
Methodist Women as an
organized unit shall be a
community of women whose
function is w know God and to
experienCe freedom as persons
through Jesus Christ, . to
develop a creative, supportive
fellowship, and to expand
concepts of missions through
participation in the global
ministry of the church.
Each member was given a
question to answer. Readers
for the program were Mrs.
Merrill Floyd, Mrs. Donald
Lisle, Mrs. carl Weese and
Miss Marcia Karr. Prayer and
singing in unison of the hymn,
"And. They'll Know We Are
Christians " concluded the

.

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·I.•
••
••
•

•Rides •
•shows e
MAGIC MIDWAYeGames t

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850

MIDOLE P0RT BOOK STORE

lo
if you
After
~====;;:;::;::============:: doing
waycheat
up by
usingneed
yourtil.elbows
this long enough you
will get enough strength to
SEE YOUR WHEEUfORSE
be able to do a gen uine sitDEALER fOR 1973 TRACTORS
up. Also you ca n do voluntary abdominal contractions

1

en;oys recent party
HARRISONVILLE - The various public institutions in
Golden
Age
Club · of the county. While performing a
Harrisonville held its first useful service it makes the
quart..rly birthday party with a older citizen reel needed.
potluck supper, when it met · Eleanor Thomas spoke of the
recently at the Harrisonville bus schedule being planned for
School. Twenty-and persons the area Lo help older citizens
·attended. Tbe singing Grate without transportation to .shop,
'Family of Rutland furnished atte nd business matters, go to
entertainment during the the doctor, or visit the Senior
~venin.g .
Citizens Ce nter in Pomeroy.
The club has finished making
Members were urged to
" quilt to raise money for the make items for the Crafts Fair
brganizalion. The making of during Regatta Weekend.
;mother quilt is planned soon.
The Golden Age Club urges
• Pearl Welker spoke on the anyone interested to attend the
.progress of the RSVP, whose next meeting on Jun e 21 at the
purpose is to recruit volunteers sc hool.
_60 years or over to help at

•

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leo e

Nashville, Tenn.

The Carol Jones Show

program.

Reported at ·the meeting
were 35 sick call visits. An
offering was laken and reports
of the officers were given. Miss
Karr closed with excerpts from
the lives of Frances Asbury
and Charles and John Wesley.
Sentence prayers were given.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Karl Kloes,
Mrs . WiJliam Winebrenner,
Mrs. William Eichinger, Mrs.
William Houdashelt, Mrs,
Alice Copehart, Mrs. Damon
Ferrell, Mrs. John Sauvage
and Mrs. Herbert Parker. Mrs.
Floyd and Mrs. Orville Crooks
were hostesses for the meeting.

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. MINERSVILLE - A ,10
, contribution was made to the
, Meigs County unit of the
. American Cancer ·Society by
the Women's Society of
Christian Service meeting
· Wednesday at the Minersville
United Methodist Church.
Members signed round robin
.cards for Mrs. Anna Hartenbach and Mrs. Emma
Hines. The meeting followed a
m{)fning of quilting and a
potluck dinner with nine
members and three guests,
Mrs. Freda Mitch, Mrs. Gladys
Taylor and Mrs. Gertrude
Mitchell, attending .
Mrs. Sadie Brown had the
program using ~&lt; Mother " as
ber theme. Members sang
" Faith of Our Mothers" and
Mrs. Brown read a mother's
prayer. There was scripture
from the first chapter of Ruth.
Readings included . "A Gift
for Mother" by Mrs. St..lla
Grueser; ''What Is a ~other "
and "Your Son, David" by
Mrs. Lillie Starcher ; '" I Can't
Sleep" from "Dear Abby" by
Mrs. Elsie Forbes; ''Mother"
by_Mrs. June Sa_xre; "I'll' Still
Proud of You, Mather" by Mrs,

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Poppy Sales
motivated.
by concern
Mrs .
Ben
Neutzling ,
Pomeroy, a leader in the Drew
Webster Americ"'! Legion Post
Auxiliary many ·y~ars and
actively promoting the l oc~l
Poppy Sale 1today 1 that
benefits dtsabled veterans and
.their families, h~s composed
the foll owi ng verses that
provide · insight into th e
humanitarian 'motives of the
Auxiliary program .
Below ·is a poem written by
Mrs. )'le~~g aft~;~: . h~ying
visited the hospitafs and
having seen for herself now
eager these disabled veterans
are to help their loved ones.

Al~e\dknew

as I gazed at the
crosses white
I had wandered into Flanders
Field .

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SUITS, SPORT COATS, TIES
SHIRTS, SLACKS

Were hundreds of men tn wheel
chairs . ·

took another look at the
crosses so white,
But behold. their gleam was
not there,
The poppies had van ished, but
right in their path

" Wea r a Poppy. " they safd,
"ond help war vc lerans not
dead,
But are ma imed, with sick
minds and some blind .

Their leg :; had been severed,
ther e were sc ars on their
fa ce,
Bul their hands seemed i o '" Let us always remember the
war s," they said .
work with great ski l l,
And then , as I turned lor j ust " How t.hose men fough t hard,
side by side .
one mdre look
1 nol iced how shell shocked And ,think of the sac r i l ic~.
r endered for you
(!nd ill .
Then wear one of !heir r ed
crepe poppie s wl tl1 prid e."
Arourtd a long tabl e, they
worked withou t words ,
They seemed happ'f , bu t ye t
· they were frail
W-ith !heir handt. thi:!y were ·
busy and th is he lped ~ lo t,
They were mak ing red , crepe
Bearwallow
poppi es for sa le.

'l1le DARBY • D2424M

Bob Ke ss inger,
!l'om . Htwotd . Ky .

speaker
'

I mile North of Route 68 t belwee n DMwin &amp; Alfred .

May 26 thru June 3
6 p.m . each Evening

These " Angels of Mercy" wi th
smi les on their face
Were telling " John Doe " to be
kind .

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MAY 28,1973

The War for Independence . ·. .the Civll War ... World
:War 1'1 ... Vietnam . .. so many lives have been ,lost in
the service of our country . As we honor these dead today,
many of us may feel discouraged at the worl.d's failure to
achieve a lasting peace . But to cease striving for that
~;~eace would be the greatest dishonor we ,could bring to
the memory of our dead. Let us rather "take increased
devotion· to that cause for which they gave the last full
measure of devotion . .. that government of the people,
by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the
earth."

. Our Office Will Be Closed, Monday, May 28

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I awoke !r om my dream and
what see m ed an Artillery,
Wa s only t he women of the
Am er icar:~ Legion Auxi liary,
They carr ied large bun ches ol
red fl owe r s in their hands,
And were sing ing War Songs to
th e be;at of the ban ds.

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There all around me. the
ground was blood r~d.
Clrc,uill . Where
the poppi
Sotdi_
ershad
hadbled
falleri
and the
es
.
.With faces uplifted, they gave
me a . glance,
I knew then I stood on the
Battlefields of France .
Then , t stooped down to touch
one Hero' s grave,
And .I knelt there and said a
prayer.
Looking ·up into Heaven, to the
Great God of love,
He assured me, thei r souls
were up there .

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work for him. The elements are here

news."

Ruby Grueser ; "What is a
Mother" by Mrs. Hazel McCullum ; "When Our Women
Sniff Their Snuff" by Mrs.
Mary Grueser ; and " Mother's
Dust Cap" by Mrs. Doris
Grueser. The Lord's Prayer
concluded the program.

Then, I saw the ray s of an
Eternal light
Di splaying the red popp ies

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

not true and I think this whole
Uting Is reaUy bad, but 1 hope
he gets out of this mess."
~ "Watergate : A president
thot wants wdo something and
a person who will belp him do
Uta! thing Is a Watergate."
- "I hay;,n't heard the word,
but I think it is a river where
pe&lt;)ple drown and nobody goes
there because so many people
drown themselves."
- "!think it is about wal2r. I
mean the stuff in it like
detergent. "
_ _ul have no idea what
Watergate is. I always go
outside when the news comes
on . I never like tn see the

contribute
'
,to cancer society

Last night as I lay. asleeping ,
I had a dream. quite rare .
t stood on beds of soft green
moss
Looking down at some crosses
there .

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BOOKMOBILE OFFERS SERVICE TO HOSPITAL - The M."igs.Jackson-Vinton Bookmobile is offering its service
In patients at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Lula Hampton,
standtng, a volunteer worker, above, left, is showing Ethel
Mace, RuUand, a patient, one of the many books dfered by
the bookmobile. Tbe bookmobile cart service began this
week.
WENDY BARKER, left, lower picture, four year old
daughter of Mrs. Esther Rarker, New Haven, also a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital , is reading a child's book
from the bookmobile.

we can't get enough . Well
maybe they have this big gate
that shuts aU the water off."
-"!haven't heard Ute term,
but I think it is the price d
meat because the prices are so ·
hlgh."
-"Nixon went to a place
without anybody going with
him and hid for a while and
then came home and wid
everybodY where he had been
and what had happened. Tben
he went on TV and ~tarted w
teD about bow sorry he . is foc
what he has done, And he got a
lew of his private Investigators
in trouble and he is trying to
get himself out of trouble. He is
saying thin~• that I think are

~ wscs

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Watergate scandal.
Among the responses :
- " It's when they argue over
water. Because Nlxoo and his
Republicans shut off Ute water,

''

by sucking your abdominal
muscles in and out and tensing your abdominal muscles
until yo u can start develop.
1~g some strength that way .
Finally, I must tell you, that.

SPECIAL

SAN MARCOS, Tex. iUPI)
- Flo GaUagher asked her
sixth grade students at Lamar
Intermediate School to write
an essay on the meaning of the

•

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graduating class.
Attending were l)er husband,
Roy Jenkins, and Mr. and Mrs.
GUESTS HERE
John Lisle, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Bill King,
Mrs. Carl Jenkins, Vienna, W.
Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lisle Newark, were the weekend
guests of Mrs. Welby Whaley,
and Keith, Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Harden and Debbie,
Mrs .. Florence Potts and Mrs.
0
Rachel McBride, Syracuse.
Following the graduation,
the group returned In the
Jenkins . home for a buffet
dinner. Todd Lisle and Karen
johnson joined the group for
the dinner.

Sixth grade students stumble over Watergate

I

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$

Now

SYRACUSE - A ceremony
of ce1ebratioo marking the
changing of the name of the
Women 's Society of Christian
Service to the Unite&lt;: Methodist
Women was be1d recenUy at
the Asbury United Methodist
Church parsonage.
The program pamphlet,
"Rejoice" was used for the
celebration with the call to
worship being given by Mrs.
Virgil Teaford being "Who Are
United Methodist Women?" A
litany followed scripture from

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., May 25 , 1973

In the Book or Revelation
the pale horse symbolizen
dealh.
·

Roy_a I Crown
Bottling Company
Middleport
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May~. 19'13

Garden Club will plant
flowers in Rutland area
RUTLAND - Plantings
around the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church and at the
' Leadmg
.
Creek Watershed
·office in Rutland will be made
by the Rutland Garden Club,
according to plans made p. a
meeting Monday nighrli the
home of Mrs. Robert Canaday.
It was reported ~hat the civic
committee had viewed Laurel
Cliff Church grocnds and had
con tacted Ge orge Carper
concrrning the planting. The
club voted to proceed with the
project. Mrs. Pearl Little and
Mrs. Ca naday were asked to

contact Cleland's Gree nhous.e
· about flats of flowers being
provided garden ch,1bs for civic

'

plantings. The flowers were

given to the club and will be
plant..d in the planters at the
Watershed office.
A report was given on the
recent Meigs County Garden
Club Association meeting held
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church by Mrs. Kale Jarrell
and Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis .
It was voted to make a $5
.contribution · toward the ex·
penses of the Regalia flower
show , which was discussed in

detail at the county meeting.
Five members agreed to make
arrangements for the show .
Mrs. Jarrell and Mrs. Eva
Robson whill serve on June 16

as hostesses at the show.
Also discussed was the Meigs
County Fair flower show and
plans were· made for a
demonstration on the schedule

at the June 25 open meeting of
the club. All clubs of the county
will be invited to attend and
watch Mrs . Belly Dean
demonstrate arrangements
suitable for the fair schedule .
The club voted to donate $10
to the Hearl Fund in memory
of Virgil Atkins, husband of a
member. Tbe present officers
were retained for another year
by vote of the membership.
The traveling prize brought
by Mrs. Edith Williamson was
wan by Mrs. Robson. The next
one will be provide&lt;! by Mrs.
Marie Bishop. Several of the
members reported making

arrangements for the area
churches and special events of

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Garden club elects -Church ladies
officers at meeting celebrate name

RUTLAND - New officers
presented
by
Mrs.
Lillie.
She
were elected and plans were
chapters of the Order of
said that leaves from spring made·for members to exhibit in
Eastern St.Jr.
Mrs. Little served as auc- bulbs should not be removed or the Reg;~tta flower show during
lioneer for a sale held following cut off until they turn yellow a recen t meeting of the Star
the meeting. $10.::.0 was netted and tha l they should neither be Ga rden Club at the home of
braided nor tied in bunches Mrs. Robert Jewell.
for Lhe treasury.
"How to Make Cut Flowers because they need the sun. She
EJected as officer s were Mrs.
also
pointeQ
out
Lhat
there
is
Last Longer" was the topic
Henry Turner, president; Mrs.
presented by Mrs. Harvey danger in Ieavins plastic drop G. . A. Radek in, first vice
Erlcwine. She reviewed the cloths over plants for any presidl!ht ; Mrs. Jewell, second
article written by Susan Roth length of time. Tbese should be vice president ; Mrs. Pearley
Bush for "Family Circle," in removed as quickly as possible Nelson ,
secretary
and
which it is suggested that because in hot weather, heal treasurer.
flowers be picked in the mid-to- ca n build up enough to actually
Miss Ruby Diehl asked
late aflernoon on sunny days cook the plants.
members
to
provide
Now is the lime to sbear arrangements for the Regalia
when they are in bud or just
arbor·vitae,
h~mlocks ,
flower show to be staged June
beginning to bloom . She also
.suggested that all leaves below junipers, plume cypresses and 16 and 17 in i.he Pomeroy Motor
the waterline be pulled off and yews to shaJ)e or thicken them, Co. showroom. A report on the
that excess foliage above the Mrs. tittle said, and ·to sow recent Region II meeting held
waterline be removed to slow se.eds of carrots, beets, and at Pomeroy was given by Miss
sweet corn as well as set out Dieh1, Mrs. Seth Nicholson,
down water loss .
Mrs. Erlewine explained the plants of late cabbage,' broccoli MrS. Kearney Ogdin and Mrs.
hardening process which and Bru.s.sel sprouts.
Henry
Turner .
Several
Mrs . Canaday presented
prolongs the life of flowers
from the home gardening. She devotions to open the meeting
said that trimmed flowers using Psalm 23 and the Lord's
should be placed in a bucket of Prayer . Members responded to
deep, warm water containing roll call by naming a flower not
plant food and then put the suitable for culling.
Attending were 16 members
bucket of flowers in a cool
place _for two hours, a and a guest, Mrs. Edna
refrigerator, if possible . This Russell, mother of the hostess.
she said slows down the loss of Approved were the reports of
FRIDAY
water. through the leaves. Mrs. Mrs. -Ann Webster, secretary,
VIGOR IN Maturity, 2 p.m.,
Erlewine explained that if a and Mrs. Jarrell, treasurer. former Pomeroy Jr. High ;
Mrs. Canaday and Mrs. Reva final session; emphasis on
refrigerator is not available
then loosely wrap the bouquet Snowden served refreshments medicare, social security ,' and
of sandwiches, jello dessert community resources.
with a plastic bag.
Gari:lening tips for June were and punch.
MIDDLEPORT WCTU, 6
p.m. at the Legion Memorial
Park, Mill St.
WEEKEND
Revival ,
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church, Rl. 143. Thursday to
Sunday. Rev . Owens, District
, Supt., will be guest speaker
Thursday and Friday. Special
singing each evening. Public is
invit..d. Rev. O'Dell Manley,
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. in the I o w e r part of the
gus and have serious pastor.
Dear Dr. Lam·b - · I have es()pha
bleeding. After all , the act
SUNDAY
a friend who. after eatirigva of
vomiting is induced by
moderate meal, goes to the vigorous .muscular contraCRACINE AMERICAN
bathroom and makes herself tions o~ the digestive tract in Legion Post 602 Will hold
vomit. She tells me she feel s
Memorial Day services . At 10
good after this. I have tried a somewhat unnatural way .
The act might actually be a.m. the Southern High &amp;hool
this a few times. Would you
please tell people what this a health benefit if a person Band will play- at Letart
w o u I d do to a person's needs to control the · absorp- Cemetery and 11 a .m. at
tion . of calories and prevent
health ?
obestty
. Otherwise, if the per. Greenwood Cemetery in
0 ear Reader - I don't . son needs
the calories and conjunction with services.
reCom mend the practice. but the nutrients it would have
DEDICATION aod open
must acknowledge that this the same effect as not eati ng
house
at new Middleport Fire
is not new . The anCient Ro- eno ugh .
Department quarters, 1 p.m .
mans used to do it regularly .
Dear Dr. Lamb - 1 was until 6 p.m.; public invited .
They would eat one of their
famous Roman banquets and interested in yoUr arti~le Auxiliary members will serve
between courses t h' e y re- about abdominal exercise. I
m o v e d themselves a n d can't t "for the life of me" 1 refreshments.
emptied their stomachs , after do sit-ups . I definitely need . MEMORIAL Day dinner
which they would return and to strengthen my abdomen Letart. Falls Community Hall
as it's very fat! Please ad- al 12 noon. Menu consists of
keep on eating .
It is one wa y of eliminating vise what I should do .
chic)le~, noodles, potato~s.
I ain 56, married with two green beans, cottage cheese ,
a number of calories that are
absorbed into the body , and sons. grown men , and a husI suppose in that sense . con- ba~d I also developin g the slaw, rolls, pie, coffee, iced tea .
tributes to weight control. I tummyJ. Can you help us?
am sure most people would
Reader - Some peo- while these things will help
fihd this practice relative ly pleDear
have
such weak abdomi- you improve abdominal tone.
unpleasant.
nal muscles toat they can't they will not get rid . of the
Individuals who i n d u c e. do a simple sit-up. or do :a abdominal fat. The only good
f~rceful vomiting will some- straight leg lilt raising both
to get rid of the abdomitimes rupture a blood vessel feet off the floor. It's hard way
nal fat is to decrease the fat
to believe, but it is true . For storage . That means elimiindividuals with this prob- nating calories and impro\'lem I suggest that they lie in.g over-all physic;al activity .
flat on the floor and lift one
[NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . I
leg, k e e p i n g the knee
straight, return the foot to
the floor , then lift the other
Send your quest ions fa Or. Lomb,
1
leg. By alternating this wa ,. in care of this newspaper, fi.O. Bo•
you can lift one leg at a time 1551, Radio City Stolian, New Yorlr.,
repeatedly. Eventually you . N.Y . 10019 . foro copy ol Dr. Lamb's
can gam enough strength to baoklrt on losing weight. send 50
ltft both heels simultaneously cents to the some oddreu and osk
off the floor . When you reach for " Losing Weight" bookle-t.
that point you ca n ' do more
regular leg lifts and grad ually strengthen the lower
abdomina l muscles.
If yo u can't do a complete
sit-up, sit up as far as yo u
can even if this mea ns just
lifting the head up and down .
After you have done that .
then help yourself lift au the

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Induced Vomiting
Is Nothing New

New For '73

Webster s
CO.LLEGIATE
Dl CTIONARY

projects were discussed .
Mrs. Orion Nelson presented
a paper on dahlias. She told of
the many varieties, the colors,
and gave planting techniques
and tips for better growth. Sbe
said that they do well in well·
drained soi~. with plenty of
sunshine, and that they would
be planted four to six inches
deep. Each clump should be
divided inw several different
plants, Mrs. Nelson explained.
"Phlox" was Mrs. Virgil
Atkins' topic and sbe wid of
how easily this can be divided
and how plants can be pinched
back to make them bushier and
bloom later. She also talked on
gloxinias that do best in warm
temperature without bright
sunshine.
Mrs. Turner provided the
traveling prize which was won
by Mrs. Nelson . Mrs. Bert
Hoosier won the hostess gift.
Following the meeting a plant
sale was held,
Refreshments were served
by lbe hostess to those named
and Mrs. Norman Will and
Mrs. Lawrence Chapman .
Flower arrangements were
displayed at the meeting by
Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Jewell.

Students' visit
Bob Evans famzs

The firs t' grade students of
Mid\lleport Elementary &amp;hool
visited Bob Evans Farms at
Rio Grande Thursday. They
wured the farm, saw animals
on exhibit and the train
caboose.. They were taken to
the farm by a school bus driven
by Mrs. Mary King . It was the
first school bus ride for
children who usually walk to
school.
Accompanying the
youngsters were teachers ·Mrs.
Helen Magg, Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter, student teacher ·
'
. Miss Barbara Basil, and Mrs.
Edward Blake, Mrs. Newman
S~'~encer Burdette, Mrs. Ray cun'1"
mngham, Mrs. Frank Epple,
Mrs. Robert Harrison, Mrs.
A layette shower honoring
James Pooler, Mrs. Charles
Mrs. Cathy Spencer was held Riffle and Mrs. Oscar Roush.
at a recent meeting of the
Young Wives' Club held at the
home of Mrs. Ruth McGrath
ENTERTAIN GUESTS
with Mrs . Esther Spencer
WNG
BOTTOM -~pending
presiding .
Plans were made for a bake Mother's Day with Mrs. Edna
sale and sock animal sale tn be Summerfield, were Mr. and
held at Chest..r, May 26, at 10 Mrs. Carl Lamb, Huntington:
a.m. A household products Mr. and Mts. Glenn PoweU and
Mr. and Mrs. William Northup,
party was planned for all.
The door prize was won by Debbie and Jeff, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Karen Young who will Mrs. Roger Adams and Lori,
host the June meeting, A picnic Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
will be held in July. Attending Parker, Bobby and Kelli ,
besides those named were Mrs. Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Buel
Avice Spencer, Mrs. Mary Summerfield, Charleston; Mr.
Barnhart, Mrs. Pam Hager,. and Mrs. Cecil Caldwell, Mr.
Mrs. Marilyn Spencer and Mrs. and Mrs. Kenneth Caldwell .and
Kenny , Sherman Summerfield,
Virginia Kirkhart.
Mr. . and Mrs. Rex Sum·
merfield, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
and Amy, Reedsville,
tie~re~ Murphy
Rt.; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Swartz,
Rena, Tena, Robin,
Mrs . Rose Ann Jenkins,
Rexie, Roger, Coolville; Mr~
Pomeroy, received
her
and
Mrs. Gerald Summerfield,
bachelor . of arts degree in
elementary education in Amber and Mechael, Mr. and
commencement exercises at Mrs. Gayle West, Parkersburg
Marshall University on May 13. and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
She was one of 1,750 in the Parker, Syracuse.

Club fetes

Mrs.

GQlden Age meets,

1··-··-······
••
••

Romans 12:1-15 verses.
Purpose of the United
Methodist Women as an
organized unit shall be a
community of women whose
function is w know God and to
experienCe freedom as persons
through Jesus Christ, . to
develop a creative, supportive
fellowship, and to expand
concepts of missions through
participation in the global
ministry of the church.
Each member was given a
question to answer. Readers
for the program were Mrs.
Merrill Floyd, Mrs. Donald
Lisle, Mrs. carl Weese and
Miss Marcia Karr. Prayer and
singing in unison of the hymn,
"And. They'll Know We Are
Christians " concluded the

.

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HARRISONVILLE - The various public institutions in
Golden
Age
Club · of the county. While performing a
Harrisonville held its first useful service it makes the
quart..rly birthday party with a older citizen reel needed.
potluck supper, when it met · Eleanor Thomas spoke of the
recently at the Harrisonville bus schedule being planned for
School. Twenty-and persons the area Lo help older citizens
·attended. Tbe singing Grate without transportation to .shop,
'Family of Rutland furnished atte nd business matters, go to
entertainment during the the doctor, or visit the Senior
~venin.g .
Citizens Ce nter in Pomeroy.
The club has finished making
Members were urged to
" quilt to raise money for the make items for the Crafts Fair
brganizalion. The making of during Regatta Weekend.
;mother quilt is planned soon.
The Golden Age Club urges
• Pearl Welker spoke on the anyone interested to attend the
.progress of the RSVP, whose next meeting on Jun e 21 at the
purpose is to recruit volunteers sc hool.
_60 years or over to help at

•

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e
leo e

Nashville, Tenn.

The Carol Jones Show

program.

Reported at ·the meeting
were 35 sick call visits. An
offering was laken and reports
of the officers were given. Miss
Karr closed with excerpts from
the lives of Frances Asbury
and Charles and John Wesley.
Sentence prayers were given.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Karl Kloes,
Mrs . WiJliam Winebrenner,
Mrs. William Eichinger, Mrs.
William Houdashelt, Mrs,
Alice Copehart, Mrs. Damon
Ferrell, Mrs. John Sauvage
and Mrs. Herbert Parker. Mrs.
Floyd and Mrs. Orville Crooks
were hostesses for the meeting.

• With Tony The
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BUYS

. MINERSVILLE - A ,10
, contribution was made to the
, Meigs County unit of the
. American Cancer ·Society by
the Women's Society of
Christian Service meeting
· Wednesday at the Minersville
United Methodist Church.
Members signed round robin
.cards for Mrs. Anna Hartenbach and Mrs. Emma
Hines. The meeting followed a
m{)fning of quilting and a
potluck dinner with nine
members and three guests,
Mrs. Freda Mitch, Mrs. Gladys
Taylor and Mrs. Gertrude
Mitchell, attending .
Mrs. Sadie Brown had the
program using ~&lt; Mother " as
ber theme. Members sang
" Faith of Our Mothers" and
Mrs. Brown read a mother's
prayer. There was scripture
from the first chapter of Ruth.
Readings included . "A Gift
for Mother" by Mrs. St..lla
Grueser; ''What Is a ~other "
and "Your Son, David" by
Mrs. Lillie Starcher ; '" I Can't
Sleep" from "Dear Abby" by
Mrs. Elsie Forbes; ''Mother"
by_Mrs. June Sa_xre; "I'll' Still
Proud of You, Mather" by Mrs,

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WHEELHORSE
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'

Poppy Sales
motivated.
by concern
Mrs .
Ben
Neutzling ,
Pomeroy, a leader in the Drew
Webster Americ"'! Legion Post
Auxiliary many ·y~ars and
actively promoting the l oc~l
Poppy Sale 1today 1 that
benefits dtsabled veterans and
.their families, h~s composed
the foll owi ng verses that
provide · insight into th e
humanitarian 'motives of the
Auxiliary program .
Below ·is a poem written by
Mrs. )'le~~g aft~;~: . h~ying
visited the hospitafs and
having seen for herself now
eager these disabled veterans
are to help their loved ones.

Al~e\dknew

as I gazed at the
crosses white
I had wandered into Flanders
Field .

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SUITS, SPORT COATS, TIES
SHIRTS, SLACKS

Were hundreds of men tn wheel
chairs . ·

took another look at the
crosses so white,
But behold. their gleam was
not there,
The poppies had van ished, but
right in their path

" Wea r a Poppy. " they safd,
"ond help war vc lerans not
dead,
But are ma imed, with sick
minds and some blind .

Their leg :; had been severed,
ther e were sc ars on their
fa ce,
Bul their hands seemed i o '" Let us always remember the
war s," they said .
work with great ski l l,
And then , as I turned lor j ust " How t.hose men fough t hard,
side by side .
one mdre look
1 nol iced how shell shocked And ,think of the sac r i l ic~.
r endered for you
(!nd ill .
Then wear one of !heir r ed
crepe poppie s wl tl1 prid e."
Arourtd a long tabl e, they
worked withou t words ,
They seemed happ'f , bu t ye t
· they were frail
W-ith !heir handt. thi:!y were ·
busy and th is he lped ~ lo t,
They were mak ing red , crepe
Bearwallow
poppi es for sa le.

'l1le DARBY • D2424M

Bob Ke ss inger,
!l'om . Htwotd . Ky .

speaker
'

I mile North of Route 68 t belwee n DMwin &amp; Alfred .

May 26 thru June 3
6 p.m . each Evening

These " Angels of Mercy" wi th
smi les on their face
Were telling " John Doe " to be
kind .

FLOWERS
FOR
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o.

MAY 28,1973

The War for Independence . ·. .the Civll War ... World
:War 1'1 ... Vietnam . .. so many lives have been ,lost in
the service of our country . As we honor these dead today,
many of us may feel discouraged at the worl.d's failure to
achieve a lasting peace . But to cease striving for that
~;~eace would be the greatest dishonor we ,could bring to
the memory of our dead. Let us rather "take increased
devotion· to that cause for which they gave the last full
measure of devotion . .. that government of the people,
by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the
earth."

. Our Office Will Be Closed, Monday, May 28

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I awoke !r om my dream and
what see m ed an Artillery,
Wa s only t he women of the
Am er icar:~ Legion Auxi liary,
They carr ied large bun ches ol
red fl owe r s in their hands,
And were sing ing War Songs to
th e be;at of the ban ds.

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GOSPEL MEETING

There all around me. the
ground was blood r~d.
Clrc,uill . Where
the poppi
Sotdi_
ershad
hadbled
falleri
and the
es
.
.With faces uplifted, they gave
me a . glance,
I knew then I stood on the
Battlefields of France .
Then , t stooped down to touch
one Hero' s grave,
And .I knelt there and said a
prayer.
Looking ·up into Heaven, to the
Great God of love,
He assured me, thei r souls
were up there .

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work for him. The elements are here

news."

Ruby Grueser ; "What is a
Mother" by Mrs. Hazel McCullum ; "When Our Women
Sniff Their Snuff" by Mrs.
Mary Grueser ; and " Mother's
Dust Cap" by Mrs. Doris
Grueser. The Lord's Prayer
concluded the program.

Then, I saw the ray s of an
Eternal light
Di splaying the red popp ies

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

not true and I think this whole
Uting Is reaUy bad, but 1 hope
he gets out of this mess."
~ "Watergate : A president
thot wants wdo something and
a person who will belp him do
Uta! thing Is a Watergate."
- "I hay;,n't heard the word,
but I think it is a river where
pe&lt;)ple drown and nobody goes
there because so many people
drown themselves."
- "!think it is about wal2r. I
mean the stuff in it like
detergent. "
_ _ul have no idea what
Watergate is. I always go
outside when the news comes
on . I never like tn see the

contribute
'
,to cancer society

Last night as I lay. asleeping ,
I had a dream. quite rare .
t stood on beds of soft green
moss
Looking down at some crosses
there .

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BOOKMOBILE OFFERS SERVICE TO HOSPITAL - The M."igs.Jackson-Vinton Bookmobile is offering its service
In patients at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Lula Hampton,
standtng, a volunteer worker, above, left, is showing Ethel
Mace, RuUand, a patient, one of the many books dfered by
the bookmobile. Tbe bookmobile cart service began this
week.
WENDY BARKER, left, lower picture, four year old
daughter of Mrs. Esther Rarker, New Haven, also a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital , is reading a child's book
from the bookmobile.

we can't get enough . Well
maybe they have this big gate
that shuts aU the water off."
-"!haven't heard Ute term,
but I think it is the price d
meat because the prices are so ·
hlgh."
-"Nixon went to a place
without anybody going with
him and hid for a while and
then came home and wid
everybodY where he had been
and what had happened. Tben
he went on TV and ~tarted w
teD about bow sorry he . is foc
what he has done, And he got a
lew of his private Investigators
in trouble and he is trying to
get himself out of trouble. He is
saying thin~• that I think are

~ wscs

••

'359.00

Watergate scandal.
Among the responses :
- " It's when they argue over
water. Because Nlxoo and his
Republicans shut off Ute water,

''

by sucking your abdominal
muscles in and out and tensing your abdominal muscles
until yo u can start develop.
1~g some strength that way .
Finally, I must tell you, that.

SPECIAL

SAN MARCOS, Tex. iUPI)
- Flo GaUagher asked her
sixth grade students at Lamar
Intermediate School to write
an essay on the meaning of the

•

•

•

graduating class.
Attending were l)er husband,
Roy Jenkins, and Mr. and Mrs.
GUESTS HERE
John Lisle, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Bill King,
Mrs. Carl Jenkins, Vienna, W.
Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lisle Newark, were the weekend
guests of Mrs. Welby Whaley,
and Keith, Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Harden and Debbie,
Mrs .. Florence Potts and Mrs.
0
Rachel McBride, Syracuse.
Following the graduation,
the group returned In the
Jenkins . home for a buffet
dinner. Todd Lisle and Karen
johnson joined the group for
the dinner.

Sixth grade students stumble over Watergate

I

l?eceives

$

Now

SYRACUSE - A ceremony
of ce1ebratioo marking the
changing of the name of the
Women 's Society of Christian
Service to the Unite&lt;: Methodist
Women was be1d recenUy at
the Asbury United Methodist
Church parsonage.
The program pamphlet,
"Rejoice" was used for the
celebration with the call to
worship being given by Mrs.
Virgil Teaford being "Who Are
United Methodist Women?" A
litany followed scripture from

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., May 25 , 1973

In the Book or Revelation
the pale horse symbolizen
dealh.
·

Roy_a I Crown
Bottling Company
Middleport
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FURNITURE

BAHR CLOTHIERS

992-2635

Open Fri. &amp; Sal
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MIDDLEPORT, 0.
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125 E. Main St.. 992-2171
Pomeroy, Ohio

'
•

�•
•

I

•

•

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-. .. ~ ....... ~. m luwt=iNJ L.. Yorneroy,

o ., May 25t 1973
ST

P AUl llJT H I;~A N

.. m . prayer m"'l't'rn q , m ~rd
Wednesday , I JO P m
G R EA T 8 E N O
Worshu;. 11
a 111. . :?n d and .fth ~undays,
Chur-c h Sc hooL 10 a m
LET ART F A L L S
Worship ,
10 am ; c hurch sch061. 9 am . ,
A~blc study , 7 30 p m
evr:ry
1 ..... :;day

p m Bible study W ednesday ,
1 30 p m .
MT.· UNION BAP T I ST
sery i:ldutn. 9 . ts am , (:hartes
RC'v Cecil Cox , pastor Svnday
E~,~ans , Christian Educal iQn
Sc hoof supt , Joe
Say r e
Supr ; wor ship s~ rv lc e, 10 :JO
Sunday school , 9 : 45 am .;
am . confirm~lion ctanes,
Sunday e\le n lng worsh ip , 7.30
Tuesday, 7 8 . 15, iunior con
Wedne~d ay prayer and Bible
ftrmat ion class , t ime set
st uCJy, 7 30 p .m .
POMEROY
weekly. senior conf irmat ion
POMEROY TRINITY
TUPPERS
PLAtNS
SA C RED HEAR T Rev
c lan Sen ior choir , 7 30 p m
MORNING STAR - Worship
CHIUSTtAN
CHURCH
Rev . w. H . Perrin , pa-stor , Roy
Tuesday
Fath~r
Bernard
Kra
jc
ov
ic
,
9 · Jo am .; Church School 10 : 30 Euoene Underw ood , pas tor ;
Mayer , Supt . Church school ,
pastor
Pnone
991 281S .
SEVEN T H - DAY
AD - a m .
M1d Wee!~~
s.erv1ce,
How ar d C-itld well , Jr . , Sun d ay
9· 15 a.m . ; worship , 10: 1-4 a. m .;
Saturday evf'n1ng Mass . 7 30
V E NTIST
Located on Wedne-sday , 8 p .m
School Soupt .. Sund ay School ,
youth c h oir r'etlearsal Monefay ,
I) rn
Sunday Mass , 8 and 10
Mulberry
Heights ,
near
MORse CHAPEL wo r
9 30 a .m .; M or ning sermon ,
6 30 p .m . ; Mrs . M.,rvin Burt ,
a
.m
Conlenion~ . S-ittur&lt;Jay, 7
Veteor.,ns
Memorial
Hospital
. Ship 11 am .: Jst anef 3rd
10 : 30 a .m : Sund a y evening
direc t or :
senior
cho i r
1· 30 p m
Pomero ·• . Pasto r
Herbert Sundays , Chu r ch School, 10 service, 1 p .m .
rehe arsal , 7 ·30 p .m ., Thurs
POMEttOY F IRST BAP·
Morga n Sabbath Sc hool. every a .m
LETART FALLS UNITED
day ,
Mrs .
Paul
N ease .
T I ST - Rober! Kuhn , pastor ,
Saturday at 2 p .m and worsh i p
direc tor .
PORTI..ANO - Worship 1 :30 BRET'ftREN - Rev . F r eel and
se,.v
ice
following
a
t
J
·
ts
p
m
.
WHI
1
am
Wa
t
son
,
Sunday
school
p m ; Church School 9 :30a .m . Nor ri" , p a stor ; F loyd Nor ris ,
POMEROY CHURCH OF
supt . Svnday school , 9 ·oo a m ;
Open Bible d iscuss i on each
SUTTON - Wor ship , 11 a.m . su pt Sun cta v sc h ool, 9 : l O a.m . ;
THE NAZARENE Corner
BYF , 6 p .m ; Bib le study .
Thursday at 7· JO p m . at the
2nd and :.t th Sundays ; Churc h mor n ing se r mon , 10 : 30 a m . ;
Union and M ulberry . Rev .
Wednesday , 7 p m , cho1r
c hurch
" The
Fri-en d ly
Sc hool 10 a .m .
'
Prayer se r vice. Wedn esda y,
Clyde v H end erson , pastor .
Church "
practice. Wednesday , 8: 30 pIT) .
WESLEYAN ( Rac i ne) 7·JO p .m .
Sunday school. 9· Jo a .m ., Glen
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
GRAHAM
UNITED
Wo r sh i p, 11 a . m .; Ch urch
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
McClung , supt ..
morn ing
HOLINESS CHURCH
METHODIST Pr eachjn9
Sc hool , 10 a .m .
GOO OF PROPHt;:':CY . G . P .
worshi p , 10 : 30 a .m . ; eve n ing
Ha r risonv i lle
Road ,
Rev .
9. 30 am , f ir_st and second
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Sm i th, pastor Su nday Sch ool ,
service , 7 : 30 ; mid wee k ser
O'Dell Manley . Pastor ; Henry
Sundays o t eac h month . thi r d
R ev . Jacob Lehm•n
10 am . . Arlh 1,r Henson . Supt . ,
VICe , We dnesd a y , 7 : 30p .m
Eblm , Sunday Schoo~ Supt .
and f ou rt h Sundays each
Re\1 . Stanl ey Brttndum
M orn in g Wor sh ip , 11 a .m .;
GRACE
1;: PISCO PAL
Sunday School 9 . 30 a . m ..
month , wo r sh ip service a t 7: 30
JOPPA - Wor shi p 10 a.m .:
Youn g Peoples serv ice , 7 p .m ;
Mo rn ing p rayer an d sermon ,
Evening worShip 7: 30 p .m .;
P.m . W ednesd a y eve,i n gs at Chu r ch Sc hool 9 a .m .; P rayer
Evening se rv ice , 7: 30 p m .
10 . 30 a. m . H ol y co m m union
f;' r ayer .!lnd Praise service,
7: 30, Pr aye r and B1b le St ud y
Meeting , W ednes day , 8 p .m . We dn esd a y M i d -Week P ra y er
and 'se r m on , f irst Sunda y s,
Thvrsctay , 7' 30 p .m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP.
LONG BOTTOM Church Ser v i ce , 7: 30 p . m ; Y o uth
ID : 30 a . m . Ch u r c h school ,
NEASE
SETTLEMENT
TIST 282 M ulber ry Ave ., services. 9 am .,
Sun d ay mee ting 6 .30 p .m .; E v en ing
ki nde rga rt en throug h eighth
CHAPEL
N
on
Pomeroy
,
af
filia
t
ed
w
it
h
Sch ool 9 : 45 a .m .. B ible Study worsh ip , 7 ·JO p .m .
Qrad e, 10 : 30 a .m .
S. B .C , the Rev . F r ed H i ll. every Th ursd a y , 7: 30 p .m
dt:"lominat i ona l , Ge o rge s
CHESTER CHURCH OF
POMEROY CHURCH OF
C ' lt · Pastor . Su n day Sc hoollO
pa s t or ; He r shel M cCl ur e,
NORTH BETHEL Wor . THE NAZARENE
R e~ .
CHRIST - Mr . Ho y t Allen . Jr ,,
Wors h ip Service 11 a .m.
Su nd ay sc hool su pt . Sunday shi p 11 ~ . m , Chu r ch School 10 H erb ert Grat e, pastor . Wor
Pas for Bib le School , 9 : 30 a.m .• a.
Su,·"
y n1g ht serv'ices 7 30
Schoo
l
,
9
.
30
a
m
..
mor
n
ing
am
shi p service. 11 -a . m . and 7:30
w or sh ip . 10 · 30 ; ad u lt wo r sh i p
P.1·
We dn esday P r ayer
worship , 10 30 a.m , S.unday
ALFRED - Sunday SChOOl, P m Sunday . Sundciy Sc hool ,
ser v ice an d young p eople 's
ml
,, g 7: 30 p m . Everyone
e\la nge: l is t ic meeti ng , 7 . 30 p .m
9 . 45 a .m . each
Sunda y : 9. 30 a . m . R •chard Barton ,
m ee t ing, both 7: 30 p .m . Sun Wt' • .~ me
Praye r meeting, W edn es d ay , pre a ch mg at 11 a .m . ea ch supt Prayer meeling , Wed dey . Wednesdey , c o m b i ned
30
p
.
m
.
7.
P - "-"EROY
WESTSIDE
Sun d ay P r ayer m eet ing , 1· 45 n es day , 7: 30p .m
B i b le S:t udy
an d
p r a y er
CHt..RCH OF CHRIST, 200 W
MIDDLEPORT
m eet ing , 7: 30p .m .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
p m . Wedn esdav . W SCS. 8 p m .
M a i1 St. - l ore n T . Steph ens,
MT . MORIAH BAPTIST on th ird Tu esday each m onth . (HAIST Clifford Sm i th ,
THE SALVATION ARMY evangelist
,
Pho
n
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992
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856.
Corne
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u
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and
M
ai
n
,
R EEOS'V'tLLE su nday m in• ster . Sunday Sc hool 9: 30
E nvoy Ra y W Win ing , offic ~r
M i dd le port R ev . H enry K ey , sc hoo l. 9 :30 ; pr eac h ing , 7: 30 a .m , m orning c hurc h 10 .30
Conse r vati \l e,
n on in c harg e. Sun da y, 10 am . •
ins tr um ental Sun da y wor sh ip,
J r , pa st or . Su.-.d a y Sc hoo l , 9 : JO p m Sunday ; prayer mee fl ng , a .m .. Sun d ay evening serv ice ,
Holiness meetin g ; 10 : 30 a m .,
10 a .m ., Bib le study , 11 a . m. ..
a m ., Mr s . E r\l in Baumgard
7 30 p . m Tuesday ; w scs , 7.30 7·30 p . m . Wednesday serv ice , 8
Sunday Sc hoo l. Young P eople 's
wor sh rp , 6 p m
We dnesday
ner , ' supt , Morning wor sh ip . f ir st Thur s day ea ch month
P m.
Leg1 on , 7 p m ., Thursday , Ito 3
B1 b le s tud y, 7 p m
10 · 45 a . m .
SILVER RIDGE - Wor sh ip
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
P.m ., Lad ies Home Lea guo;o ; 7
JEHOVAH ' S WITNESSES 10 a .m : Ch u r ch Sc hool , 9 a .m . METHODIST - Rev . Robert
p m ., Pr : p c la sses .
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY
L arrv Ca r nahan , pre si d ing
CHURCH
( non TUPPERS
PLAINS
E . Bu c kley , pastor . William
mi n 1s t er . Sunday , B ible lee
d enomma t iona iJ,
L ang svilfe .
Wor s hip 9 a m ;
Chur c h Bailey , supt . Sunctay school
APOSTOLIC
GOSPEL
tu r e . 9: 30 a .m .. Wat chtower
Sch ool, 10 a . m .
9 .30 a .m . , morn ing WOrShip ,
De:.t.ter Road , the Rev . Worley
CHURCH , Ra cine - F rankie
stud y, . 10 . 30 am .. Tuesday ,
Ha ley , pa stor . Sunday Sc hool,
Mor r •s, pa stor Sun da y sc hoo l.
KENO
CHURCH
(JF 10 30 am .. evening worship ,
B1bl e stud y, 7: 30 pm .: T h urs . CHRIST 10 am ; ev en ing worsh ip , 1: 30
Hobart N ewelL 7: 30p .m . Wednesday Christ ian
10 am . Sunda y e v e nm g
day , m i n i s try scho o l , 7 · 30 supt Serv 1ce we ekly , 9 : JO am . Youth Crusade , 6: 30 p m . •
p m
Pra y er
mee t i ng ,
serv ic e, 7 · 30 . 81b le s tudy ,
p m , ser\l iCe meeting B: JO on Sunday , Pre ac h 1ng first and Pray er meeting , 7: 30 p .m . ;
T uesday , 7 30 p m ; youth
Tuesday . 7. 30 pm ., pra y ~:~r
P.m
gr ou p, F riday , 7 30 p m
t h.rd Sunday s of month by Thursday cho ir pracli c e, 7
service . 7:J O p m T h u r sday .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of Cl ifford Smith , 9 : JO am .
P.m
Ch;ist In Christian Un1on ' HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
L awr e n c e Mantey , pastor .
UNION Darrel Doddr ill , CHRIST Danny Evans ,
Mrs Ru ssell Young , Sunday pa stor . Sunday SC hooL 9· 30 pastor , Norman c . Will , supt.
Sc hool Supt
Sunday Sc hool
a .rn , L eonard Gilmore , f irst Sunday School 9 l JO a . m .;
• Sunday
The cap
the diplQma . . symbols of achievement.
9 30 am . Even ing worship , el der ; even ing servic e , 7· 30 Worship service , 10 . 30 ~ . m .
7 30.
Wednesd.ay
prayer p m .
Joh n ]4, 1-3
They mark the end of one way of life and imply the beginW e dnesday
prayer Chr l st1an Endeavor Sunday
m eet ing , 7 30 p m .
m eeting , 7 30 p m .
e\lening .
ning
of
another.
• Monday
MT. MORIAft CHURCH OF
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF
REORGANIZED CHURCH
GOO - Rac .ne Route 2, the
I Thessoloni ons -4: 13-18
GOO - Racine Route 2. The OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
But ten years from now, where will this diploma be and
Rev James M Mun c y , pa s tor
Rev
Charles Hand , pastor
LATTER DAY SAINTS • Tuesday
Su nday schoo l, 9 · 45 a . m ,
what will it mean? Will it be packed away in an attic trunk
Sunday school , 9 45 am ; Portland -Rac ine Road Ralph
morning worShip, 11 a .m ..
Revelation 4:1-11
m ornmg w o r s hip , 11 a . m . John son,
pastor . Herbert
... framed on the wall of a room or office? Will it have bet!n
ing worsh 1p , 7 JO p m .
Ev enmg serv ic es, Tuesday and Wh i te , Sunday School Director .
Sunday School attendance on eveon
• Wednesday
Prayer meoeting , Tuesday , 7: 30
thrown out by accident or cast into a seldom-noticed corner?
Fr 1ctay, 7.3 0
Sunday School , 9 : 30 a . m ;
May 20 was 53. Offering was p m , Young people ' s meetmg ,
Re velat ion 5:1 · 14
BEARWALLOW
R
lOGE
Morning
worsh
ip
,
10
:30
a
.m
.:
And what of the hopes and dreams that go with it? What
7 30 p m Thursd(ly .
CHURCH OF CHRIST . B ib le Sunday evening service 7 p m
$22.24. Worship services were
• Thur sday
will have happened to them?
RUTLAND CHURCH OF s tudy , 9 30 a . m .; morn i ng Wednesday eveliing prayer
The Kingsbury Missionary
Bert h a K i ngrey , w orship , 10 30 am .; evening services , 7 : 30pm .
held all! a. m. with Rev. Leh- GOO
Revelation 11 :15- 19
sub s t•lut e pa s tor . Sunday
Club of the Carleton Church
ship , 6 30 p .m . Wedne sday
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Who knows? There is no set answer to life, no s ingle
man speaking from Luke 6:1- Sc hool , IO a . m .; worsh i p wor
• Friday
B1ble study , 7.30 p m
Great Bend , Charles Norr i s,
had Its regular meeting at the
so1ution to all its problems. Nor can anyone Jive life alone.
se rv 1ce, 7 p .m . Sunday Prayer
35, "Do WJto others as you meeting
Revelation 14:1 -3, 15:2·4
MT
.
OLIVE
CHURCH
pastor
Worsh
ip
service,
9
:
30
, Wednesday , 7: 30 p m
home of Mrs. Anita Dean. The
Whether your diploma is still crisp or has gotten dustyL ong Botlom , Sunday School, a . m .. Sunday School, 10 .30
would have others do WJIO
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
•
Saturday
10 a m w i th Willard P 1gott, a .m
evening was spent on several
whether your dreams are still bright or have become slightCHURCH - Near Long Bot
Revelation 21: 1·27
supt Evangelist message each
CARLETON CHURCH you," to an attendance of 20.
tom
E
st
II
Hart
,
pastor
;
Roy
ly tarnished-forget about personal ambition as the sole
projects which the ladies work
Sunday evening, 7: 30p . m . by Kingsbury . Road .
Sundav
Brown
,
assistant
pastor
Offering was $15.00. Pledge
E lder Russell Cline , mm i ster School. 9 : JO am , Ralph Carl ,
answer to everything. Think of your own immortal soul.
on to help support Rev . John
Sunday school , 10 a m ., Church
of fhe Apostolic Faith B1ble supt . Worship service, 10 . 30
money was $27.00.
7
30
p
.m
ea
c
h
Sunday
Go to church, and talk to God about it, through prayer.
, c sburg who is a missionary in
Study , Wednesday , 7· 30 p m a. m and 7 . 30 p m . alternately .
1ng , prayer meet1ng , 7 : 30
Mrs. Iris Carr was returned peven
U N 1 T E D Prayer meeting , Wednesday ,
F 1 R S T
m Thursday .
France . The
devotional
PRESBYTERIAN , Syra c u se, 7 30 p m
Rev . Jay SHies ,
to her home Sunday from
MIDDLEPORT
PEN .
Seriptun!IJ ~~elected by the Amer1can Bible Soe iety
Morning
Worsh
tp, 9 a .m ; oastor .
meeting was opened with
TECOSTAL
Third
Ave
,
fht:
Sunday Church Sc h ool , 10 a .m
OLD
DEXTER
co·N .
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Rev Will •am Kn i tteL pa st o r
Copyright 1973 Keister Ad l!erti sing Servi ce, Inc., Stra sbu rg, V1rgmia
prayer by Mrs. Neva King. In
s Sampson Ha l l , Supt .
GREGATIONAL
CHURCH
Albert Warner is quite poorly Rona ld Dugan , Sunday Sc hoo l MrSTIVERSVILLE
COM
·
Rev
Carl
Richards,
keeping with Mother's Day the
Supt . Classes tor all ages,·
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday pastor
Mrs
Worlev
at the home of his son-in-law
eovenmg serv 1ce , 7 30 p .m .;
entire group read Proverbs
sc hool servi ce , 10 a.m , Prayer Fran c 1s, Sunday school supt .;
B1b
le
study
,
Wednesday
,
7:30
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
meet 1ng . Th!Jrsday , 7 p .m .; Sunday school. 9 · 4S am .;
31: 11).31, Mrs. Yvonne Young,
p .m youth serv1 ces , Fr iday ,
With the hope it will. in some measure. foster a.nd help sustain that whi.ch is
Sunday evening serv• ce, 7 p .m
chur c h services , second and
Russell Archer and family.
7. 30 p . m
in the absence of her mother,
ZION
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
fourth
Sundays
following
good iQ family and community life, this feature 1s spqnsored by the bus1ness
FRl::EWILL BAPTIST Clara Follrod and Nina
Pomeroy -Harrisonville s unday sc hool; first and third
Mrs, Janett Beal, gave the
Corner Ash and Plum , M1d
firms and organizations whose names appear below.
Road Kenneth Eberts , pastor Sunday evenings, 7: 30p .m .
Robinson took Sunday dinner &lt;.l leporl ,
Noel
Herrman ,
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
L 0 N G
B 0 T T 0 M
treasurer's report. Mrs. Nfva
pastQr . Saturday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz service,
Sup! Sunday School 9 .30 am , CHRISTIAN Mr . Robert
7 p .m Sunday school.
King had a special reading,
morn ing worship and com - Wyatt, pastor. Sunday School
at Shade.
iO a . m , Sunday evening
mun ion, 10 30 a .m , Sunday supt ,, Ronald Osborneo, Bible
"The Light on Mother's Face."
worsh 1p , 7 p .m .
evening you-th Chr1stian en . School , 9 ' 30 am ; preaching
William Randolph is quite ill
FIRST
BAPTIST
ot
M
id
The meeting was closed with
deaver , 6 30 , Worsh1p ser - 10 45 a. m . ; Evening services ,
d leport , corner ot Sixth and
in a Parkersburg hospital.
7 30 p .m
v• c es , Sunday, 7·3 0 p m
all repeating the Lord' s
Palmer Streets Rev . Char l es
Wedne sday evening prayer
HYSE;LL
RUN
FREE
Corn planting and garden Simons ,
pastor
Danny
Prayer. Refreshments were
meeting and Bible study , 7. 30 METHODIST - Ronald Wells ,
Thomp
son
,
Sunday
School
making were the order of the
p m
.
pastor
Sunday School 9 ·30
Supermtendent .
S unday
served by Mrs. Dean to the
ST. JOHN . LUTHERAN a. m ; Morn1ng worshrp, 10 . 30
day in this community the past church school for everyone
Pme G rov e, the Rev Arthur am ., Young People's Service
following : Mrs. Mary Lou
9. 15 am . . Morn .ng worship
week.
MeiQS County Branch
Combs , pastor . Sunday school , 6 .45 p .m .• Evangelistic ser .
10
I
S
am
.
;
Evening
services
,
Houdershel!, Mrs . Bonnie
9.30 am . c hurch services , vi c e ,
7 30
p.m
Prayer
7. 30 p . fTJ. Wednesday prayer
10 JO a . m
meeting , Thursda;- , 7 .30 p .m .
Lemasters, Mrs. Delores King,
serv•ce, 7 .30 p . m . Extra youth
Short Order Air Conditioned Restaurant
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
ac
tiv
1t
ies
on
Sunday
.
5
p
m
.,
Mrs. Neva King, Mrs. Virginia
St.
Rt. 7
CHRIST.
Bible
School,
9
·
30
MISSION
Bald
Knobs,
Rev
.
Chester. Ohio
for all youth up to sixth grade ,·
morning
worship
,
10
30
L
R.
Gluesencamp
,
pastor
.
a
.m,
Dean, Mrs. Yvonne YoWJg. The
~ 6·30 for 1un ior and senior h igh am . Sunday e\len•ng Wor s h1p Roger Wilfred , Sr .; Sunday
296 W. Seconq Pomeroy Ph . 992- 3865
,[ students
next meeting will be at home
Serv •ce , i.3 0 p m ., c hoir School Supt
Sunday School
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST ,
practice Sunday and Wed - 9 30 a .m .; Sunday evening
Middleport, 5th and Main
of Mary Lou Houdershelt
nesday,7p m , prayer meeting worsh ip 7. 30 . Prayer meeting ,
'
Raulin Moyer , pastor Michael
and Bible Study Wednesday, Tuesday, ·7o:JO p m . Ernest
on JWJe 14th. It was also anGerla c h, Sunday School supt .
Devoted To The
7 30 p m
Deeter, class teoader . Youth
B•ble SchooL 9 · 30 a . m ,
nounced the missionary club
General Merchandise
ANTIQUITY
BAPTIST
meet1ng
,
Wednesday
,
7
:
30
Greater
Ohio Valley
morn ing worsh ip , 10 : 30 a .m .:
Rev Freeland Norr is, pa stor . p .m ., Ernest Deeter, leader .
will hold a rummage sale in
·
Tuppers
Plains
even1ng worship , 7: JO p m ;
Ph . 667-3280
Sunday sc hool 10 am ., Chur c h
MT. HERMON CHURCH OF
prayer serv ic e 7 p .m . Wed Middleport JWJe 7-8-9 next door
serv
tc
e
,
7
p
.
m
Wednesday
THE
UNITED
BRETHREN
IN
nesday
By Bertha Parker
Bibl e Study, 7 p m.
CHRIST Robert Shook ,
to King's Radio and TV Shop.
CHURCH
' I '.
Sabbath School attendance OFMIDDLEPORT
RACINE FIRST CHURCH pastor . Sunday school, 9 :30
THE
NAZARENE
Rev
.
Rexali Drugs
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
OF THE NAZARENE
am , Russell Spencer , supt ;
Audry
Milleor
,
pastor
;
Lew
1
s
May 20 at the Free Methodist
Sunday Schoo L 9 JO a . m ; worsh •P ser\liCe, 10 : 45 a. m ,
We Fill Ali Doctors' Prescriptions
David, Geneva and Helen, Mr.
Ellis , Suntlay school supt ;
Church was 118. Offering for all Sunday school, 9 30 am ; Morn ing Worsh1p , 10 : 30 a . m , evening worship alternating
Middleport, Ohio
992-2955
Evening worsh ip , 7. 30 p . m ., with C. E at 7: 30 p .m . on
Pomeroy
and Mrs. Harold While and services was $178.15.
morning worship , 10 : 30, junior
Wednesday Mid -Week Service Sunday Prayeor meeting, 7: 30
soc ,ety , 6.30 p .m NY.P S, 6: 45
Mrs. Neva King, Miss Judy
s
unday School Superintendent , p m Wednesday . Alfred Wolfe ,
Mr . and Mrs. Welldon p m
Sunday evangelistic
Gefald Wells . Pastor, Rev . lay teadeor .
King of Bourbannis, Ill., and
meet•ng
,
7.
30
p
.
m
.
Prayer
Peoples, Tammy and Anita of meet •ng , Wedneosday, 7: 30pm
Morris M Wolfe .
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
Mary Lou King of MI. Vernon,
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Coolville RD . Rev . Roy Deeter ,
California, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
UNITED MINISTRY OF
Edward B
Fischer , p'astor pastor
Sunday school , 9 .30
Family Recreation
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Peoples of Oklahoma visited MEIGS COUNTY, The Un1ted •nterim ,
Ronn i e
Salser , am , worsh1p service. 10 30
Bakers of Holsum Bread
Presbyter 1an Church, Dwight
Swimming, Camping
Mrs. James Cummins at
Sunday Sc hool sup ~, Sunday a m B•ble study and prayer
recently with Mr. and Mrs. L Zavitz, Pastor - D~rector, Sc hool, 9 JO am ; morn ing se rvi ce, Wednesday, 7: JO p m .
.
'
Middleport, Ohio
Reynoldsburg. In the afternoon
George W . Hutton and Rev
worSh-Ip 10 45 a.m ; Sunday
RUTLAND
Merlin Tracy and Miss Susie Lmson
Stebbins, Asst Pastor .
they all attended the wedding Tracy.
ev en ing worship , 7 30 p m
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
Directors
Wednesday
eveing
Bible
study
,
Rev
Samuel Jackson ,
of
Marjorie
McDaniel,
FIRST
UNITED
PRES·
7 30 p m .
pastor Sunday School, 10 a. m ;
Mrs. William Davis of BYTERIAN,
Harrison daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Mrs . Gertrude Buller, Supt .
Sunday
Church
Columbus visited recently with VI lle.
Pomeroy-Member FDIC&amp;
Rev .
Lawrence
Sull i \lan, Prayer serv ice , 1· 30 p m .,
Robert McDaniel and Michael
Sc hool, 9 : 30a .m ., Mrs Homer
I•
pas
tor
\
Sunday
Sc
hool
9
:
30
Preaching
service
,
2
p
.m
.
her parertls, Mr. and Mrs. L ee . Supt ; Morn•ng Worship ,
Federal Reserve System
Chester, Ohio
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
a. m .. yb uth and junior youth
King, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Pearl Jacobs.
10 · 30 a .m .
serv ice . 6: 45 p m , evening CHRIST - Keith Wise , pastor .
FIRST
UNITED
PRES·
King at the Linden United
worship , 7 30 p m , prayer and Sunday School . 9·30 am , v H
Sidney Leifheit of Columbus BYTERCAN,
M i ddle .
praise, Wednesday , 7.30 p m . Braley , supt ; 'worship serv ice
Methodist Church at Columport.
Sunday
School
Sc
hool.
recently called on Thomas 9 ·30a .m ., John F . Fultz , Supt. ;
SILVER
RUN
FREE and communion, 10 : 30 am . ;
bus.
BAPTIST Rev
Howard evening service. 7· JO p .m ;
Gene Parker.
Bakers of Good Bread
Morn1ng Worship, 10 ·30 am .
Devoted to th e I n teres t of T he
K i mble , pastor . Sunday School. Wednesday , Bible study, 7: 30
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, Mr.
Meig s &amp; Ma so n Ar ea
Huntington,
W.
Va,
10
am
..
Henry
Davis
,
supt.
;'
P
m
Regular
board
meeting
,
Mr . and Mrs . Herman
MEIGS
and Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Kaspar and son, Ronnie, of
evenmg service , 1 ·30 p m . third Saturday each month ,
Pomero y , 0 .
COOPERATIVE
Prayer meehng , Thursday, 7 JO p .m
PARISH
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter Dayton visited over the
7 30 P m
RUTLAND
CO~MUNITY
THE UNITED
Dean were guests on Mother's
CHESTER CHURCH OF CHURCH The Rev . Lee
METHOO)ST
CHURCH
weekend with Bertha Parker
Goo Rev
James Sat . Burnem.
Pastor .
Sunday
Robert R. Card
(Formerly Domigans )
Day of Mr. and Mrs. Robert and the Roy Smith family and
terfield, pastor Sunday school, School 9 30 am .; Worship
Director
The
Store
With
A
Heart
New
Owner - Di ck Sarge nt
9
.
30
am
.;
worship
servlce
,
11
ser\lice
,
11
am
.
Wednesday
Ried, Rodney and David, at Mrs. Amanda Kaspar.
POMEROY CLUSTER
Racine
a . m .• evening service , 7;
prayer meeting, 7 · Jo p . m .
Old
U.
S.
33
Ph. 992-7735
Rev.
Robert
R.
Card
Ph.
949-3342
Pataskala. Other guests were
prayer service and youth
Sunday night worship, 7: 30
Rev. F . Stanten Smith
Mrs. Georgia Diehl visited
service , Wednesday , 7 p m
p m
Stop In and See Us
Mr. and Mrs. Bill SpaWJ,
CHESTER Worship 9 ' \5
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. am
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
R UlLAND CHURCH OF
, Church School 10 a m .
Pomeroy, Miss Juanita Terrell Clarence Curtis of Pomeroy.
CHURCH - Robert E Musser , THE NAZARENE
Rev
ENTERPRISE - Worsh 1p, 9
Sell it_with a Sentinel Display ad.
Pastor
.
Sunday
School
,
9:30
Lloyd
D.
Grimm
,
Jr
.,
pastor
.
am .; Church School, 10 a .m .
and Mr. and Mrs. Waller
a .m , Robert Bobo , supt .. Sunday School. 9 . 30 a . m . ;
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
FLATWOODS ~ Worsh ip , 1l
Phone 992 · 2156
Terrell and Billy also of
morning
worsh1p ,
10 . 30 ,
Morn ing worsh ip, 10 . 30 a .m .•
, Church School 10 a m .
Deconnick and Kelly Sue, a. m
Phone
992-3284
Sunday even ing serv ice , 7 : 30 ;
Young people's service , 6 . 45
Middleport
POMEROY
Worsh1p ,
Ptaskala and Mr. Charles Columbus, spent the weekend
M 1d -w eek serv 1ce , Wednesday ,
p . m ; Evangelistic service ,
10 3Q am .. Church School 9 · 15
Ried .
7· 30 p .m Wednesday e\lening
7 30 P m .
a .m .. UMYF 6 30 p m .
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
service , 7: 30pm .
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship
Mrs. Hazel Arnold had as Karr Sr.
THE NAZARENE - Rev M
MASON COUNTY
10 am .. Church School 9 a .m ..
C Lar i more , pastor . Bob
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
UMY F 6 30 p .m .
visitors Mother's Day Mr. and
Lennie Lyons remains a
Moore , Sunday School Supt .. George Casto, pastor . Sunday
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Mrs. Nathan Arnold and family
Sunday School , classes for all
Sc hool. 9. 30 ; evening worship ,
Rev
.
Robert
Bumgarner
patient at the Veterans
D.B A. ANTHONY
Middleport, Ohio
ages , 9 . 30 am . , morning
7·30 . Thursday evening pr8yer
HEATH Worship 10 : 30
of Chester and Mund Mrs. Memorial Hospital.
worsh
ip,
10
45
;
NYPS
Sunday,
serv1ce
,
7:
30
p
,m.
PLUMBlNGand
HEATING
am , Church Schooi9 · 30a m .1
6· 30 p .m ., evangel i stic servic e
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Lester Arnold and' Billy of
UMY F. 7pm
337 N. 21'\d · Middleport 992-3550
Sunday , 7 JO p m Mid -week
Second and Pomeroy Sts ., Sian
RUTLAND - Worship 9 15
Columbus.
prayer meeting , Wednesday ,
Cra i g , pastor Sunday school.
a .m . Chur c h School 10 a .m · ;
7·3 0p .m ; Miss ionary meet•ng ,
9. 45 a . m . ; worship service , 11
UMY F 7 p .m
Mr. and Mrs. Harold White
Hexed Stone
second We(fnesday, 7· JO p m .
a. m .; train i ng un i on , 6 : 30
CATALOGUE STORE
SALEM
CENTER
Wor
visited with Mr . and Mrs.
The fabulous Hope diamond Ship 9 a m , Chur c h School 10
UNITED
FAITH
NON·
p m , evening worship service ,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Ch.a rles R. Sheets
116 W. Main
Robert Swearinger and son at was pried out of an idol's eye a .m , UMYF Thursday , 7 p .m . DENOMINATIONAL - Rev . 7 30 p .m Mid -week prayer .
Ph. 992-7590.
Robert
Smith
,
pastor
Sunday
servi
ce
,
Wednesday,
7
.30
p
m
.
by
thieves
in
India,
thus
supSYRACUSE CLUSTER
106
Court
St.
Pomeroy
992-3001
West Milton and with Mr. and
sch
ool,
9
30a
.m,
class
leader
,
FA
1
R
v
1
E
w
B
18
L
E
Free Estimate s . Guaranteed ln s1allation .
Rev . Merrell Flo;-d
posedly putting a jinx on 1t .
Leo H •ll . 'o\Orship service ,
CHURCH - LetartRoute1,the
ASBURY Worsh i p 11
Mrs. David Glenn (Harold's · For during the next 300
10 .JO am ; r~urc h , 7: 30p .m .
Rev
Stan Cra i g, pastor .
am ; Church School9 ·50 am .,
sister) at Tipp City.
years, death and disaster ws cs, lst Tuesday .
V N 1 T E D
Sunday school 9 : 30 a .m ,
E 0 E N
prayer and Bib le study, 7. 30
FOREST RUN -- Worship 9 Br&lt;CTHRE,N IN CHRIST Mr. and Mrs. Philip Harrison . haunted many of its owners: a .m
p m Cottage prayer service ,
,· Chur c h School 10 a .m , Eldon R. Blake , pastor . Sunday
'
Marie
Antoinette
lost
her
Nat i onwide Insura nce Co. of Columbu s, 0 .
and Rodney of Columbus
Winn i e
Tue sday , 10 am, worship
Meats and Groceries
W SCS. 3rd Wednesday , 7 30 School , 10 a . m ,
head to the guillotine, a P m .
Hol s inger , Supt
Morning
servi ce . Fr, d ay , 7 .30 p .m .
Syracuse
visited Mother's Day with Mr. British heir to the stone died
307 Spring Ave.
992-3986
. MASON
CHURCH
OF
MINERSVILLE - Worship s ermon , 11 am , Even ing
Pomeroy
.
seorv
1t
e
Christ
1
an
Endeoavor
,
CHRIST,
p
o
Box
487
,
Miller
and Mrs. Olen· Harrison.
a.m . Church School 9 am ..
in bankruptcy, a Folies Ber- w10 scs,
Ph
.
992-2318
3rd Monday, 7· 30 p m
7 · 30
P. nl ,
Mrs
Lyda
St, Mason.
va . Sundav
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal, gere star was murdered by
SYRACUSE
Church Chevalier. president Song . Bible Study 10 a.m , Worship
serrnon , 8 ' 20 . Mid 11 am . and 7 p .m Bible Study
Karla and Denise, visited on a jealous lover, a Greek schoot , 9 am ., worship ser serv1ce.and
Week prayer meet ing Wed w d
d
7
VI Ce, 730pm ,
~
banker
drove
off
a
cliff
with
nesday. 7 ·30 P rn . Mrs Marie
m ~ s.~es ay
, p . m .,
ocai
Mother's Day with Mr. and
SOUTHERN
CLUSTER
his wife and children and an
Furniture and Appliances
Authorized Catalog Merc hant
Holsinger
,
class
leader
.
MASON
ASSE:MttLY
UF
Rev,
Frank
Cheesebrew
Mrs. John Perdas and Mary, American millionairess lost
Ph.
985-3308
Lou is W . Osborne
Re\1 . Martha Ann Mattner
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
GOO - Second St, Mason , W
Chester, 0 .
Chambersburg, Pa.
CHRIST - Located at Rutland
va . Chester Tennant, pastor .
Rev . Howard Shiveley
her husband and two of four
220 E . Main Pomeroy Ph , 992. 2178
on New L1ma Road , next to
Sunday school , 10 a .m . ,
BETHANY
(Dorcas)
Mr. and Mrs. David Cun- children in tr·agJc circum· Worship
morn ing worship, 11 am .;
Attend the Church of Your Choice
. 9. JO a. m ; Church Forest Acre Park . Rev Ray
stances
,
School 10 30 a m
Rou se, pastor ; Robert Musser ,
evangelistic ser\lice, 7 : 30pm .
ningham and Mr, and Mr!'.
a bl
Sunday School supt Sunday
CARMEL Worship , 11 schoo l, 10 30 am ; wor sh;r
i
• estudyandprayerservrce ,
JwJior Coleman of Pomeroy,
am . 1St and 3rd s"undays , 7.30 p .m B i l.lle st ud• . We .
Wednesday , 7. 30 p m . Phone
A
true
wild
yak
bull
from
Church
School.
10
a.m
..
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Underwood
•
773-5133 .
Church and Office Supplies - Gifts
Pomeroy
Saturda;HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Ph . 992-3498
Tibet may have a threeAPPLE GROVE - Worship , nesday, 7. 30 p .m
992-2641
and children of Newark visited
I prayer servlce , 7 · 30 P m ,
CHR 1ST in Chrisrlan Union 7: 30pm f!rst and lh trd StJn . n iyh
Middleport
HEMLOCk
GROVE
T
days
,
Chur
c
h
school
,
9
.3
0
Molher'a
with their
CHRISTIAN
_
Roger
Watson
,
he
Rev
.
W
illiam
Campbell
,
foot •pread of horna, may a .m : prayer meeting . f1rst
pastor , Ray Whaley , supt . ·
apastor .'J SundayH schhool , 9 30
stand nearly six feet at the Weoctnnday , 7.30 p · m .
-J)INnt.a, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Morn
h·
9 30
m.,
ame.s
ug es , sup 1, ;
shoulder
and
weigh
1.200
· Arnold.
wor s •p,
a .m ;
evenln9 1trv1c1, 7;30 P m ,
EAST LETART "';'"' Worship , c hur cmg
h
SchOol,
10
.
30
a.m
;
w
a
d
1
pountl.).
7 30 p .m , second ll'lef fourtl't youn" "IO"'It'l mtltlng , ,
100 Years
Pomeroy
t nes av lvtn ng prayer
6 30
Bulova Watches - Sales &amp; Service
Su nday~ ; church school , 9 .30
• ,. "'
mtttlng , 7 · 30 p m . Youth
KermIt Walton
P m : evenln9 worship: 7. 30
prayer Sfl'vlce each TuesdAy .
186 N. Second
Th ~

Re.,.
Arthur C
Lund.
pastor Sunday school (nur

Kingsbury

News, Notes

lind now,

BARNEY

A

PLUS
TWO 0 '5 PLUS
ONE DADBURN

! GOT A· PLUS
ON MV REPORT CARD,
AUNT LOWEElY

F:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;l ~ev l

I

F

~~ ~N'T KNOw..--

-

T~ EV CO ULD ~0 ,---..._,
T~ IS

.,

,_r_w_e_c_oL
_L_e-G_e s_e-Nr-A'
TRANSCI'tl PT 01' MV
GRA~ES TO MV EX·
PRINCIPAL

ALL1HE~
~CAN EAT

I'M BEING
RECALl-ED BV MY
~ ~ G~ SCWOOL!

"'
~

•
.S-25
~

.l
&gt;

!

••

'

1'0, IN 9CT' ~I!&gt; I!&gt;

Hlo."-'5 'ltJu E.\le.R

FOR A 6IIC/(?

Nti 'STEAK ?

IAT£ ~

PR'O'/ING 10 6E A

NIGH /IR()/I/1"

5.nc.JAL.

"8
l&gt;l

~

[ll

...

l
'
~

G-2S

"
U'L ABNER
'

YOU'LL NEVER.
HAVEIDTAKE
CARE OF TI-\OSE
MALE O IAUVINIST
PIGS AGA IN.'!

THASS
CERT'io.J'i
-A-SOB ! ..
RELJEF-

'IOU'R E U&amp;EJ\AT£0.
YOU CAN B E
AN'(THING '100
CHOOSE. f.\QW'D
'IOU LI KE TO B E
A NUClEAR
PH'ISJCIST?

Alfred

Social Noles

ACT! PLAYING CHecKERS

IT'S OI&lt;;GWAcEFLJL.!
I 'LL WEF'ORT VOU

SUI'A:)SED 10 8E. . -- -

MY SINK!

MOl/Iii. 'YOUR KING ... MOVE
YOUR KING!

TO THE Be-rrEI'I.
BWiiiNESS

BUREAU, I 'LL ...
NOlHING... FOR 50ME UNATTACHED
'YOUNG GIRL ! BUT HALMARTI N5 AND
I. HAVE AN "UNDER&amp;TANDIN G.~. AND
r!M GETTING A MfTE OLD TO PlAY
1Hf:'ICATCH ME ...CATCH ME':.. BIT,

I

£1im. ~ou have f inal h.J,
for once in ~our life.

,;omethinq riqht'

.

'

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN

l.aurel

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN 'CO.

Clif

SUNDAY tiMES-SENTINEL

'

\IO.I.DIJ'T IT

"'""'"lll&amp;Sl!IJ! $~E', IT'5

ei&gt;~R

AU.to;;r OJ8RHeAD... {£)

To CI-AA'I A

IT'S 11-0'WXI&lt;!

WAT£+1~
~uw~

LODWICK'S MARKET

News Notes

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MARK VSTORE

~

ROYAL OAK PARK

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

.

DICK'S GROCERY

(@ 1978 King Fealure!l Syndit•te, [nc.)

load

or /

,. '

( ohserve )

river

JIWJM@UJE;-""' ~....,w .-~ ,_

(2 wd s l

5. Shoo!

9. Ruman ian
city
10, Dead

42. Turned to
the rilo!hl
43. Candid

l.JIIIcramble theM: four Ju mble~t

DOWN

one letter to each aquare, to

1. Native -

form four

born
rsraeJi

city

Yesterday's Answer

( 2 wd s.)
4. European

river
5. Spoke impu .

'
6NGINW&lt;S

dcntly to
6. Fastening

0~1=\Cf:

device

1. Priestly
vestment
8. Medically
induced
state

(2 wds. )

11. Empower
12. Sawbuck

26. Musical
work

16. Son of

28. Propped

Aphrodite
2Z. Edge
23. Wood
sorrel
24. Had
qualms
about

!5. John
Gunther

SADIE'S MARKET

I LIEN~

up

10

30. Struck
32. Bring
joy

33. ~?ortl" r
u
cation
36. Therefore
38. One of

word
ten
,.,..--r;;--r,....-r.;-

III

SI/ORUC

THE DAILY SENTINEL

II
I I

~
,

I 0
.

WHAi "\"HI~
CAI.I.ct7 THE. ElJ&lt;:rTI$H
I!!!:EF 1YC.OON.

Now arronp the circled Jette,.
to fonn the aurprl.e anawer, u
IIQtCOIIeOUIJ' the UOYO eartoon.

I Prlll .. S.IIliiiSWIIIIn I "ITI)Ull)''

AU WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

MUNTG :MERY WARD

word•.

3. Unaware

GOEGLEIN 11Lr;DY MIX CO.

M&amp;R FOODLINER

ordinary

2. French

THE DAILY SENTINEL

RACINE FOOD MARKET

41. -

1. Maine

GAUL'S MARKET

HEINER'S BAKERY

Yeaterday'o Cryptoquote: OUTWARD JU[!GMENT OFTEN
FAILS, INWARD JUDGMENT NEVER . -THEODORE
PARKER

[J•nobleo, ILUDl,
Yeetertl•r'•

~-_.. lo-rTGW)

DIAIT • .fOLLEN

FIDORA

Antwer 1 How he felt mhen pull•ed off the

.

diWns- IH.Iard-"Off·INDID"

CARPET-LAND, INC.

-

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

...HE Toot&lt;
OFF
HIS HAT!
· OUl .. oo U o-. ,

w

v

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

SEARS

f. J. WALLACE, JEWELERS

in

\

STOMACH-AGlE /5 NO KIND
CHARIT't'! I
SELLING

MIDDLPORT BOOK STORE

Day

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

COULD HAVE llEEN MU61SED! I

.

Miodleport

I
''

I HATE BASEBA~L!I

1

ILTUGKZH
HJUQFW1 ;
MfTL

II'F

OHFTWKLFW
NF

TLF

M KLSF [J

APLZWIZTU

HTWI

IPF

UJI B z I I F s I J
JB Q LFTI RJXW . -

UFWIFHH

MJEFF

L~~~s:~~--J '----IW!"--~.......---"-''-"&gt;

�•
•

I

•

•

---.~

-. .. ~ ....... ~. m luwt=iNJ L.. Yorneroy,

o ., May 25t 1973
ST

P AUl llJT H I;~A N

.. m . prayer m"'l't'rn q , m ~rd
Wednesday , I JO P m
G R EA T 8 E N O
Worshu;. 11
a 111. . :?n d and .fth ~undays,
Chur-c h Sc hooL 10 a m
LET ART F A L L S
Worship ,
10 am ; c hurch sch061. 9 am . ,
A~blc study , 7 30 p m
evr:ry
1 ..... :;day

p m Bible study W ednesday ,
1 30 p m .
MT.· UNION BAP T I ST
sery i:ldutn. 9 . ts am , (:hartes
RC'v Cecil Cox , pastor Svnday
E~,~ans , Christian Educal iQn
Sc hoof supt , Joe
Say r e
Supr ; wor ship s~ rv lc e, 10 :JO
Sunday school , 9 : 45 am .;
am . confirm~lion ctanes,
Sunday e\le n lng worsh ip , 7.30
Tuesday, 7 8 . 15, iunior con
Wedne~d ay prayer and Bible
ftrmat ion class , t ime set
st uCJy, 7 30 p .m .
POMEROY
weekly. senior conf irmat ion
POMEROY TRINITY
TUPPERS
PLAtNS
SA C RED HEAR T Rev
c lan Sen ior choir , 7 30 p m
MORNING STAR - Worship
CHIUSTtAN
CHURCH
Rev . w. H . Perrin , pa-stor , Roy
Tuesday
Fath~r
Bernard
Kra
jc
ov
ic
,
9 · Jo am .; Church School 10 : 30 Euoene Underw ood , pas tor ;
Mayer , Supt . Church school ,
pastor
Pnone
991 281S .
SEVEN T H - DAY
AD - a m .
M1d Wee!~~
s.erv1ce,
How ar d C-itld well , Jr . , Sun d ay
9· 15 a.m . ; worship , 10: 1-4 a. m .;
Saturday evf'n1ng Mass . 7 30
V E NTIST
Located on Wedne-sday , 8 p .m
School Soupt .. Sund ay School ,
youth c h oir r'etlearsal Monefay ,
I) rn
Sunday Mass , 8 and 10
Mulberry
Heights ,
near
MORse CHAPEL wo r
9 30 a .m .; M or ning sermon ,
6 30 p .m . ; Mrs . M.,rvin Burt ,
a
.m
Conlenion~ . S-ittur&lt;Jay, 7
Veteor.,ns
Memorial
Hospital
. Ship 11 am .: Jst anef 3rd
10 : 30 a .m : Sund a y evening
direc t or :
senior
cho i r
1· 30 p m
Pomero ·• . Pasto r
Herbert Sundays , Chu r ch School, 10 service, 1 p .m .
rehe arsal , 7 ·30 p .m ., Thurs
POMEttOY F IRST BAP·
Morga n Sabbath Sc hool. every a .m
LETART FALLS UNITED
day ,
Mrs .
Paul
N ease .
T I ST - Rober! Kuhn , pastor ,
Saturday at 2 p .m and worsh i p
direc tor .
PORTI..ANO - Worship 1 :30 BRET'ftREN - Rev . F r eel and
se,.v
ice
following
a
t
J
·
ts
p
m
.
WHI
1
am
Wa
t
son
,
Sunday
school
p m ; Church School 9 :30a .m . Nor ri" , p a stor ; F loyd Nor ris ,
POMEROY CHURCH OF
supt . Svnday school , 9 ·oo a m ;
Open Bible d iscuss i on each
SUTTON - Wor ship , 11 a.m . su pt Sun cta v sc h ool, 9 : l O a.m . ;
THE NAZARENE Corner
BYF , 6 p .m ; Bib le study .
Thursday at 7· JO p m . at the
2nd and :.t th Sundays ; Churc h mor n ing se r mon , 10 : 30 a m . ;
Union and M ulberry . Rev .
Wednesday , 7 p m , cho1r
c hurch
" The
Fri-en d ly
Sc hool 10 a .m .
'
Prayer se r vice. Wedn esda y,
Clyde v H end erson , pastor .
Church "
practice. Wednesday , 8: 30 pIT) .
WESLEYAN ( Rac i ne) 7·JO p .m .
Sunday school. 9· Jo a .m ., Glen
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
GRAHAM
UNITED
Wo r sh i p, 11 a . m .; Ch urch
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
McClung , supt ..
morn ing
HOLINESS CHURCH
METHODIST Pr eachjn9
Sc hool , 10 a .m .
GOO OF PROPHt;:':CY . G . P .
worshi p , 10 : 30 a .m . ; eve n ing
Ha r risonv i lle
Road ,
Rev .
9. 30 am , f ir_st and second
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Sm i th, pastor Su nday Sch ool ,
service , 7 : 30 ; mid wee k ser
O'Dell Manley . Pastor ; Henry
Sundays o t eac h month . thi r d
R ev . Jacob Lehm•n
10 am . . Arlh 1,r Henson . Supt . ,
VICe , We dnesd a y , 7 : 30p .m
Eblm , Sunday Schoo~ Supt .
and f ou rt h Sundays each
Re\1 . Stanl ey Brttndum
M orn in g Wor sh ip , 11 a .m .;
GRACE
1;: PISCO PAL
Sunday School 9 . 30 a . m ..
month , wo r sh ip service a t 7: 30
JOPPA - Wor shi p 10 a.m .:
Youn g Peoples serv ice , 7 p .m ;
Mo rn ing p rayer an d sermon ,
Evening worShip 7: 30 p .m .;
P.m . W ednesd a y eve,i n gs at Chu r ch Sc hool 9 a .m .; P rayer
Evening se rv ice , 7: 30 p m .
10 . 30 a. m . H ol y co m m union
f;' r ayer .!lnd Praise service,
7: 30, Pr aye r and B1b le St ud y
Meeting , W ednes day , 8 p .m . We dn esd a y M i d -Week P ra y er
and 'se r m on , f irst Sunda y s,
Thvrsctay , 7' 30 p .m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP.
LONG BOTTOM Church Ser v i ce , 7: 30 p . m ; Y o uth
ID : 30 a . m . Ch u r c h school ,
NEASE
SETTLEMENT
TIST 282 M ulber ry Ave ., services. 9 am .,
Sun d ay mee ting 6 .30 p .m .; E v en ing
ki nde rga rt en throug h eighth
CHAPEL
N
on
Pomeroy
,
af
filia
t
ed
w
it
h
Sch ool 9 : 45 a .m .. B ible Study worsh ip , 7 ·JO p .m .
Qrad e, 10 : 30 a .m .
S. B .C , the Rev . F r ed H i ll. every Th ursd a y , 7: 30 p .m
dt:"lominat i ona l , Ge o rge s
CHESTER CHURCH OF
POMEROY CHURCH OF
C ' lt · Pastor . Su n day Sc hoollO
pa s t or ; He r shel M cCl ur e,
NORTH BETHEL Wor . THE NAZARENE
R e~ .
CHRIST - Mr . Ho y t Allen . Jr ,,
Wors h ip Service 11 a .m.
Su nd ay sc hool su pt . Sunday shi p 11 ~ . m , Chu r ch School 10 H erb ert Grat e, pastor . Wor
Pas for Bib le School , 9 : 30 a.m .• a.
Su,·"
y n1g ht serv'ices 7 30
Schoo
l
,
9
.
30
a
m
..
mor
n
ing
am
shi p service. 11 -a . m . and 7:30
w or sh ip . 10 · 30 ; ad u lt wo r sh i p
P.1·
We dn esday P r ayer
worship , 10 30 a.m , S.unday
ALFRED - Sunday SChOOl, P m Sunday . Sundciy Sc hool ,
ser v ice an d young p eople 's
ml
,, g 7: 30 p m . Everyone
e\la nge: l is t ic meeti ng , 7 . 30 p .m
9 . 45 a .m . each
Sunda y : 9. 30 a . m . R •chard Barton ,
m ee t ing, both 7: 30 p .m . Sun Wt' • .~ me
Praye r meeting, W edn es d ay , pre a ch mg at 11 a .m . ea ch supt Prayer meeling , Wed dey . Wednesdey , c o m b i ned
30
p
.
m
.
7.
P - "-"EROY
WESTSIDE
Sun d ay P r ayer m eet ing , 1· 45 n es day , 7: 30p .m
B i b le S:t udy
an d
p r a y er
CHt..RCH OF CHRIST, 200 W
MIDDLEPORT
m eet ing , 7: 30p .m .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
p m . Wedn esdav . W SCS. 8 p m .
M a i1 St. - l ore n T . Steph ens,
MT . MORIAH BAPTIST on th ird Tu esday each m onth . (HAIST Clifford Sm i th ,
THE SALVATION ARMY evangelist
,
Pho
n
e
992
7
856.
Corne
r
Fo
u
rth
and
M
ai
n
,
R EEOS'V'tLLE su nday m in• ster . Sunday Sc hool 9: 30
E nvoy Ra y W Win ing , offic ~r
M i dd le port R ev . H enry K ey , sc hoo l. 9 :30 ; pr eac h ing , 7: 30 a .m , m orning c hurc h 10 .30
Conse r vati \l e,
n on in c harg e. Sun da y, 10 am . •
ins tr um ental Sun da y wor sh ip,
J r , pa st or . Su.-.d a y Sc hoo l , 9 : JO p m Sunday ; prayer mee fl ng , a .m .. Sun d ay evening serv ice ,
Holiness meetin g ; 10 : 30 a m .,
10 a .m ., Bib le study , 11 a . m. ..
a m ., Mr s . E r\l in Baumgard
7 30 p . m Tuesday ; w scs , 7.30 7·30 p . m . Wednesday serv ice , 8
Sunday Sc hoo l. Young P eople 's
wor sh rp , 6 p m
We dnesday
ner , ' supt , Morning wor sh ip . f ir st Thur s day ea ch month
P m.
Leg1 on , 7 p m ., Thursday , Ito 3
B1 b le s tud y, 7 p m
10 · 45 a . m .
SILVER RIDGE - Wor sh ip
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
P.m ., Lad ies Home Lea guo;o ; 7
JEHOVAH ' S WITNESSES 10 a .m : Ch u r ch Sc hool , 9 a .m . METHODIST - Rev . Robert
p m ., Pr : p c la sses .
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY
L arrv Ca r nahan , pre si d ing
CHURCH
( non TUPPERS
PLAINS
E . Bu c kley , pastor . William
mi n 1s t er . Sunday , B ible lee
d enomma t iona iJ,
L ang svilfe .
Wor s hip 9 a m ;
Chur c h Bailey , supt . Sunctay school
APOSTOLIC
GOSPEL
tu r e . 9: 30 a .m .. Wat chtower
Sch ool, 10 a . m .
9 .30 a .m . , morn ing WOrShip ,
De:.t.ter Road , the Rev . Worley
CHURCH , Ra cine - F rankie
stud y, . 10 . 30 am .. Tuesday ,
Ha ley , pa stor . Sunday Sc hool,
Mor r •s, pa stor Sun da y sc hoo l.
KENO
CHURCH
(JF 10 30 am .. evening worship ,
B1bl e stud y, 7: 30 pm .: T h urs . CHRIST 10 am ; ev en ing worsh ip , 1: 30
Hobart N ewelL 7: 30p .m . Wednesday Christ ian
10 am . Sunda y e v e nm g
day , m i n i s try scho o l , 7 · 30 supt Serv 1ce we ekly , 9 : JO am . Youth Crusade , 6: 30 p m . •
p m
Pra y er
mee t i ng ,
serv ic e, 7 · 30 . 81b le s tudy ,
p m , ser\l iCe meeting B: JO on Sunday , Pre ac h 1ng first and Pray er meeting , 7: 30 p .m . ;
T uesday , 7 30 p m ; youth
Tuesday . 7. 30 pm ., pra y ~:~r
P.m
gr ou p, F riday , 7 30 p m
t h.rd Sunday s of month by Thursday cho ir pracli c e, 7
service . 7:J O p m T h u r sday .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of Cl ifford Smith , 9 : JO am .
P.m
Ch;ist In Christian Un1on ' HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
L awr e n c e Mantey , pastor .
UNION Darrel Doddr ill , CHRIST Danny Evans ,
Mrs Ru ssell Young , Sunday pa stor . Sunday SC hooL 9· 30 pastor , Norman c . Will , supt.
Sc hool Supt
Sunday Sc hool
a .rn , L eonard Gilmore , f irst Sunday School 9 l JO a . m .;
• Sunday
The cap
the diplQma . . symbols of achievement.
9 30 am . Even ing worship , el der ; even ing servic e , 7· 30 Worship service , 10 . 30 ~ . m .
7 30.
Wednesd.ay
prayer p m .
Joh n ]4, 1-3
They mark the end of one way of life and imply the beginW e dnesday
prayer Chr l st1an Endeavor Sunday
m eet ing , 7 30 p m .
m eeting , 7 30 p m .
e\lening .
ning
of
another.
• Monday
MT. MORIAft CHURCH OF
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF
REORGANIZED CHURCH
GOO - Rac .ne Route 2, the
I Thessoloni ons -4: 13-18
GOO - Racine Route 2. The OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
But ten years from now, where will this diploma be and
Rev James M Mun c y , pa s tor
Rev
Charles Hand , pastor
LATTER DAY SAINTS • Tuesday
Su nday schoo l, 9 · 45 a . m ,
what will it mean? Will it be packed away in an attic trunk
Sunday school , 9 45 am ; Portland -Rac ine Road Ralph
morning worShip, 11 a .m ..
Revelation 4:1-11
m ornmg w o r s hip , 11 a . m . John son,
pastor . Herbert
... framed on the wall of a room or office? Will it have bet!n
ing worsh 1p , 7 JO p m .
Ev enmg serv ic es, Tuesday and Wh i te , Sunday School Director .
Sunday School attendance on eveon
• Wednesday
Prayer meoeting , Tuesday , 7: 30
thrown out by accident or cast into a seldom-noticed corner?
Fr 1ctay, 7.3 0
Sunday School , 9 : 30 a . m ;
May 20 was 53. Offering was p m , Young people ' s meetmg ,
Re velat ion 5:1 · 14
BEARWALLOW
R
lOGE
Morning
worsh
ip
,
10
:30
a
.m
.:
And what of the hopes and dreams that go with it? What
7 30 p m Thursd(ly .
CHURCH OF CHRIST . B ib le Sunday evening service 7 p m
$22.24. Worship services were
• Thur sday
will have happened to them?
RUTLAND CHURCH OF s tudy , 9 30 a . m .; morn i ng Wednesday eveliing prayer
The Kingsbury Missionary
Bert h a K i ngrey , w orship , 10 30 am .; evening services , 7 : 30pm .
held all! a. m. with Rev. Leh- GOO
Revelation 11 :15- 19
sub s t•lut e pa s tor . Sunday
Club of the Carleton Church
ship , 6 30 p .m . Wedne sday
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Who knows? There is no set answer to life, no s ingle
man speaking from Luke 6:1- Sc hool , IO a . m .; worsh i p wor
• Friday
B1ble study , 7.30 p m
Great Bend , Charles Norr i s,
had Its regular meeting at the
so1ution to all its problems. Nor can anyone Jive life alone.
se rv 1ce, 7 p .m . Sunday Prayer
35, "Do WJto others as you meeting
Revelation 14:1 -3, 15:2·4
MT
.
OLIVE
CHURCH
pastor
Worsh
ip
service,
9
:
30
, Wednesday , 7: 30 p m
home of Mrs. Anita Dean. The
Whether your diploma is still crisp or has gotten dustyL ong Botlom , Sunday School, a . m .. Sunday School, 10 .30
would have others do WJIO
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
•
Saturday
10 a m w i th Willard P 1gott, a .m
evening was spent on several
whether your dreams are still bright or have become slightCHURCH - Near Long Bot
Revelation 21: 1·27
supt Evangelist message each
CARLETON CHURCH you," to an attendance of 20.
tom
E
st
II
Hart
,
pastor
;
Roy
ly tarnished-forget about personal ambition as the sole
projects which the ladies work
Sunday evening, 7: 30p . m . by Kingsbury . Road .
Sundav
Brown
,
assistant
pastor
Offering was $15.00. Pledge
E lder Russell Cline , mm i ster School. 9 : JO am , Ralph Carl ,
answer to everything. Think of your own immortal soul.
on to help support Rev . John
Sunday school , 10 a m ., Church
of fhe Apostolic Faith B1ble supt . Worship service, 10 . 30
money was $27.00.
7
30
p
.m
ea
c
h
Sunday
Go to church, and talk to God about it, through prayer.
, c sburg who is a missionary in
Study , Wednesday , 7· 30 p m a. m and 7 . 30 p m . alternately .
1ng , prayer meet1ng , 7 : 30
Mrs. Iris Carr was returned peven
U N 1 T E D Prayer meeting , Wednesday ,
F 1 R S T
m Thursday .
France . The
devotional
PRESBYTERIAN , Syra c u se, 7 30 p m
Rev . Jay SHies ,
to her home Sunday from
MIDDLEPORT
PEN .
Seriptun!IJ ~~elected by the Amer1can Bible Soe iety
Morning
Worsh
tp, 9 a .m ; oastor .
meeting was opened with
TECOSTAL
Third
Ave
,
fht:
Sunday Church Sc h ool , 10 a .m
OLD
DEXTER
co·N .
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Rev Will •am Kn i tteL pa st o r
Copyright 1973 Keister Ad l!erti sing Servi ce, Inc., Stra sbu rg, V1rgmia
prayer by Mrs. Neva King. In
s Sampson Ha l l , Supt .
GREGATIONAL
CHURCH
Albert Warner is quite poorly Rona ld Dugan , Sunday Sc hoo l MrSTIVERSVILLE
COM
·
Rev
Carl
Richards,
keeping with Mother's Day the
Supt . Classes tor all ages,·
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday pastor
Mrs
Worlev
at the home of his son-in-law
eovenmg serv 1ce , 7 30 p .m .;
entire group read Proverbs
sc hool servi ce , 10 a.m , Prayer Fran c 1s, Sunday school supt .;
B1b
le
study
,
Wednesday
,
7:30
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
meet 1ng . Th!Jrsday , 7 p .m .; Sunday school. 9 · 4S am .;
31: 11).31, Mrs. Yvonne Young,
p .m youth serv1 ces , Fr iday ,
With the hope it will. in some measure. foster a.nd help sustain that whi.ch is
Sunday evening serv• ce, 7 p .m
chur c h services , second and
Russell Archer and family.
7. 30 p . m
in the absence of her mother,
ZION
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
fourth
Sundays
following
good iQ family and community life, this feature 1s spqnsored by the bus1ness
FRl::EWILL BAPTIST Clara Follrod and Nina
Pomeroy -Harrisonville s unday sc hool; first and third
Mrs, Janett Beal, gave the
Corner Ash and Plum , M1d
firms and organizations whose names appear below.
Road Kenneth Eberts , pastor Sunday evenings, 7: 30p .m .
Robinson took Sunday dinner &lt;.l leporl ,
Noel
Herrman ,
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
L 0 N G
B 0 T T 0 M
treasurer's report. Mrs. Nfva
pastQr . Saturday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz service,
Sup! Sunday School 9 .30 am , CHRISTIAN Mr . Robert
7 p .m Sunday school.
King had a special reading,
morn ing worship and com - Wyatt, pastor. Sunday School
at Shade.
iO a . m , Sunday evening
mun ion, 10 30 a .m , Sunday supt ,, Ronald Osborneo, Bible
"The Light on Mother's Face."
worsh 1p , 7 p .m .
evening you-th Chr1stian en . School , 9 ' 30 am ; preaching
William Randolph is quite ill
FIRST
BAPTIST
ot
M
id
The meeting was closed with
deaver , 6 30 , Worsh1p ser - 10 45 a. m . ; Evening services ,
d leport , corner ot Sixth and
in a Parkersburg hospital.
7 30 p .m
v• c es , Sunday, 7·3 0 p m
all repeating the Lord' s
Palmer Streets Rev . Char l es
Wedne sday evening prayer
HYSE;LL
RUN
FREE
Corn planting and garden Simons ,
pastor
Danny
Prayer. Refreshments were
meeting and Bible study , 7. 30 METHODIST - Ronald Wells ,
Thomp
son
,
Sunday
School
making were the order of the
p m
.
pastor
Sunday School 9 ·30
Supermtendent .
S unday
served by Mrs. Dean to the
ST. JOHN . LUTHERAN a. m ; Morn1ng worshrp, 10 . 30
day in this community the past church school for everyone
Pme G rov e, the Rev Arthur am ., Young People's Service
following : Mrs. Mary Lou
9. 15 am . . Morn .ng worship
week.
MeiQS County Branch
Combs , pastor . Sunday school , 6 .45 p .m .• Evangelistic ser .
10
I
S
am
.
;
Evening
services
,
Houdershel!, Mrs . Bonnie
9.30 am . c hurch services , vi c e ,
7 30
p.m
Prayer
7. 30 p . fTJ. Wednesday prayer
10 JO a . m
meeting , Thursda;- , 7 .30 p .m .
Lemasters, Mrs. Delores King,
serv•ce, 7 .30 p . m . Extra youth
Short Order Air Conditioned Restaurant
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
ac
tiv
1t
ies
on
Sunday
.
5
p
m
.,
Mrs. Neva King, Mrs. Virginia
St.
Rt. 7
CHRIST.
Bible
School,
9
·
30
MISSION
Bald
Knobs,
Rev
.
Chester. Ohio
for all youth up to sixth grade ,·
morning
worship
,
10
30
L
R.
Gluesencamp
,
pastor
.
a
.m,
Dean, Mrs. Yvonne YoWJg. The
~ 6·30 for 1un ior and senior h igh am . Sunday e\len•ng Wor s h1p Roger Wilfred , Sr .; Sunday
296 W. Seconq Pomeroy Ph . 992- 3865
,[ students
next meeting will be at home
Serv •ce , i.3 0 p m ., c hoir School Supt
Sunday School
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST ,
practice Sunday and Wed - 9 30 a .m .; Sunday evening
Middleport, 5th and Main
of Mary Lou Houdershelt
nesday,7p m , prayer meeting worsh ip 7. 30 . Prayer meeting ,
'
Raulin Moyer , pastor Michael
and Bible Study Wednesday, Tuesday, ·7o:JO p m . Ernest
on JWJe 14th. It was also anGerla c h, Sunday School supt .
Devoted To The
7 30 p m
Deeter, class teoader . Youth
B•ble SchooL 9 · 30 a . m ,
nounced the missionary club
General Merchandise
ANTIQUITY
BAPTIST
meet1ng
,
Wednesday
,
7
:
30
Greater
Ohio Valley
morn ing worsh ip , 10 : 30 a .m .:
Rev Freeland Norr is, pa stor . p .m ., Ernest Deeter, leader .
will hold a rummage sale in
·
Tuppers
Plains
even1ng worship , 7: JO p m ;
Ph . 667-3280
Sunday sc hool 10 am ., Chur c h
MT. HERMON CHURCH OF
prayer serv ic e 7 p .m . Wed Middleport JWJe 7-8-9 next door
serv
tc
e
,
7
p
.
m
Wednesday
THE
UNITED
BRETHREN
IN
nesday
By Bertha Parker
Bibl e Study, 7 p m.
CHRIST Robert Shook ,
to King's Radio and TV Shop.
CHURCH
' I '.
Sabbath School attendance OFMIDDLEPORT
RACINE FIRST CHURCH pastor . Sunday school, 9 :30
THE
NAZARENE
Rev
.
Rexali Drugs
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
OF THE NAZARENE
am , Russell Spencer , supt ;
Audry
Milleor
,
pastor
;
Lew
1
s
May 20 at the Free Methodist
Sunday Schoo L 9 JO a . m ; worsh •P ser\liCe, 10 : 45 a. m ,
We Fill Ali Doctors' Prescriptions
David, Geneva and Helen, Mr.
Ellis , Suntlay school supt ;
Church was 118. Offering for all Sunday school, 9 30 am ; Morn ing Worsh1p , 10 : 30 a . m , evening worship alternating
Middleport, Ohio
992-2955
Evening worsh ip , 7. 30 p . m ., with C. E at 7: 30 p .m . on
Pomeroy
and Mrs. Harold While and services was $178.15.
morning worship , 10 : 30, junior
Wednesday Mid -Week Service Sunday Prayeor meeting, 7: 30
soc ,ety , 6.30 p .m NY.P S, 6: 45
Mrs. Neva King, Miss Judy
s
unday School Superintendent , p m Wednesday . Alfred Wolfe ,
Mr . and Mrs. Welldon p m
Sunday evangelistic
Gefald Wells . Pastor, Rev . lay teadeor .
King of Bourbannis, Ill., and
meet•ng
,
7.
30
p
.
m
.
Prayer
Peoples, Tammy and Anita of meet •ng , Wedneosday, 7: 30pm
Morris M Wolfe .
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
Mary Lou King of MI. Vernon,
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Coolville RD . Rev . Roy Deeter ,
California, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
UNITED MINISTRY OF
Edward B
Fischer , p'astor pastor
Sunday school , 9 .30
Family Recreation
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Peoples of Oklahoma visited MEIGS COUNTY, The Un1ted •nterim ,
Ronn i e
Salser , am , worsh1p service. 10 30
Bakers of Holsum Bread
Presbyter 1an Church, Dwight
Swimming, Camping
Mrs. James Cummins at
Sunday Sc hool sup ~, Sunday a m B•ble study and prayer
recently with Mr. and Mrs. L Zavitz, Pastor - D~rector, Sc hool, 9 JO am ; morn ing se rvi ce, Wednesday, 7: JO p m .
.
'
Middleport, Ohio
Reynoldsburg. In the afternoon
George W . Hutton and Rev
worSh-Ip 10 45 a.m ; Sunday
RUTLAND
Merlin Tracy and Miss Susie Lmson
Stebbins, Asst Pastor .
they all attended the wedding Tracy.
ev en ing worship , 7 30 p m
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
Directors
Wednesday
eveing
Bible
study
,
Rev
Samuel Jackson ,
of
Marjorie
McDaniel,
FIRST
UNITED
PRES·
7 30 p m .
pastor Sunday School, 10 a. m ;
Mrs. William Davis of BYTERIAN,
Harrison daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Mrs . Gertrude Buller, Supt .
Sunday
Church
Columbus visited recently with VI lle.
Pomeroy-Member FDIC&amp;
Rev .
Lawrence
Sull i \lan, Prayer serv ice , 1· 30 p m .,
Robert McDaniel and Michael
Sc hool, 9 : 30a .m ., Mrs Homer
I•
pas
tor
\
Sunday
Sc
hool
9
:
30
Preaching
service
,
2
p
.m
.
her parertls, Mr. and Mrs. L ee . Supt ; Morn•ng Worship ,
Federal Reserve System
Chester, Ohio
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
a. m .. yb uth and junior youth
King, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Pearl Jacobs.
10 · 30 a .m .
serv ice . 6: 45 p m , evening CHRIST - Keith Wise , pastor .
FIRST
UNITED
PRES·
King at the Linden United
worship , 7 30 p m , prayer and Sunday School . 9·30 am , v H
Sidney Leifheit of Columbus BYTERCAN,
M i ddle .
praise, Wednesday , 7.30 p m . Braley , supt ; 'worship serv ice
Methodist Church at Columport.
Sunday
School
Sc
hool.
recently called on Thomas 9 ·30a .m ., John F . Fultz , Supt. ;
SILVER
RUN
FREE and communion, 10 : 30 am . ;
bus.
BAPTIST Rev
Howard evening service. 7· JO p .m ;
Gene Parker.
Bakers of Good Bread
Morn1ng Worship, 10 ·30 am .
Devoted to th e I n teres t of T he
K i mble , pastor . Sunday School. Wednesday , Bible study, 7: 30
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, Mr.
Meig s &amp; Ma so n Ar ea
Huntington,
W.
Va,
10
am
..
Henry
Davis
,
supt.
;'
P
m
Regular
board
meeting
,
Mr . and Mrs . Herman
MEIGS
and Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Kaspar and son, Ronnie, of
evenmg service , 1 ·30 p m . third Saturday each month ,
Pomero y , 0 .
COOPERATIVE
Prayer meehng , Thursday, 7 JO p .m
PARISH
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter Dayton visited over the
7 30 P m
RUTLAND
CO~MUNITY
THE UNITED
Dean were guests on Mother's
CHESTER CHURCH OF CHURCH The Rev . Lee
METHOO)ST
CHURCH
weekend with Bertha Parker
Goo Rev
James Sat . Burnem.
Pastor .
Sunday
Robert R. Card
(Formerly Domigans )
Day of Mr. and Mrs. Robert and the Roy Smith family and
terfield, pastor Sunday school, School 9 30 am .; Worship
Director
The
Store
With
A
Heart
New
Owner - Di ck Sarge nt
9
.
30
am
.;
worship
servlce
,
11
ser\lice
,
11
am
.
Wednesday
Ried, Rodney and David, at Mrs. Amanda Kaspar.
POMEROY CLUSTER
Racine
a . m .• evening service , 7;
prayer meeting, 7 · Jo p . m .
Old
U.
S.
33
Ph. 992-7735
Rev.
Robert
R.
Card
Ph.
949-3342
Pataskala. Other guests were
prayer service and youth
Sunday night worship, 7: 30
Rev. F . Stanten Smith
Mrs. Georgia Diehl visited
service , Wednesday , 7 p m
p m
Stop In and See Us
Mr. and Mrs. Bill SpaWJ,
CHESTER Worship 9 ' \5
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. am
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
R UlLAND CHURCH OF
, Church School 10 a m .
Pomeroy, Miss Juanita Terrell Clarence Curtis of Pomeroy.
CHURCH - Robert E Musser , THE NAZARENE
Rev
ENTERPRISE - Worsh 1p, 9
Sell it_with a Sentinel Display ad.
Pastor
.
Sunday
School
,
9:30
Lloyd
D.
Grimm
,
Jr
.,
pastor
.
am .; Church School, 10 a .m .
and Mr. and Mrs. Waller
a .m , Robert Bobo , supt .. Sunday School. 9 . 30 a . m . ;
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
FLATWOODS ~ Worsh ip , 1l
Phone 992 · 2156
Terrell and Billy also of
morning
worsh1p ,
10 . 30 ,
Morn ing worsh ip, 10 . 30 a .m .•
, Church School 10 a m .
Deconnick and Kelly Sue, a. m
Phone
992-3284
Sunday even ing serv ice , 7 : 30 ;
Young people's service , 6 . 45
Middleport
POMEROY
Worsh1p ,
Ptaskala and Mr. Charles Columbus, spent the weekend
M 1d -w eek serv 1ce , Wednesday ,
p . m ; Evangelistic service ,
10 3Q am .. Church School 9 · 15
Ried .
7· 30 p .m Wednesday e\lening
7 30 P m .
a .m .. UMYF 6 30 p m .
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
service , 7: 30pm .
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship
Mrs. Hazel Arnold had as Karr Sr.
THE NAZARENE - Rev M
MASON COUNTY
10 am .. Church School 9 a .m ..
C Lar i more , pastor . Bob
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
UMY F 6 30 p .m .
visitors Mother's Day Mr. and
Lennie Lyons remains a
Moore , Sunday School Supt .. George Casto, pastor . Sunday
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Mrs. Nathan Arnold and family
Sunday School , classes for all
Sc hool. 9. 30 ; evening worship ,
Rev
.
Robert
Bumgarner
patient at the Veterans
D.B A. ANTHONY
Middleport, Ohio
ages , 9 . 30 am . , morning
7·30 . Thursday evening pr8yer
HEATH Worship 10 : 30
of Chester and Mund Mrs. Memorial Hospital.
worsh
ip,
10
45
;
NYPS
Sunday,
serv1ce
,
7:
30
p
,m.
PLUMBlNGand
HEATING
am , Church Schooi9 · 30a m .1
6· 30 p .m ., evangel i stic servic e
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Lester Arnold and' Billy of
UMY F. 7pm
337 N. 21'\d · Middleport 992-3550
Sunday , 7 JO p m Mid -week
Second and Pomeroy Sts ., Sian
RUTLAND - Worship 9 15
Columbus.
prayer meeting , Wednesday ,
Cra i g , pastor Sunday school.
a .m . Chur c h School 10 a .m · ;
7·3 0p .m ; Miss ionary meet•ng ,
9. 45 a . m . ; worship service , 11
UMY F 7 p .m
Mr. and Mrs. Harold White
Hexed Stone
second We(fnesday, 7· JO p m .
a. m .; train i ng un i on , 6 : 30
CATALOGUE STORE
SALEM
CENTER
Wor
visited with Mr . and Mrs.
The fabulous Hope diamond Ship 9 a m , Chur c h School 10
UNITED
FAITH
NON·
p m , evening worship service ,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Ch.a rles R. Sheets
116 W. Main
Robert Swearinger and son at was pried out of an idol's eye a .m , UMYF Thursday , 7 p .m . DENOMINATIONAL - Rev . 7 30 p .m Mid -week prayer .
Ph. 992-7590.
Robert
Smith
,
pastor
Sunday
servi
ce
,
Wednesday,
7
.30
p
m
.
by
thieves
in
India,
thus
supSYRACUSE CLUSTER
106
Court
St.
Pomeroy
992-3001
West Milton and with Mr. and
sch
ool,
9
30a
.m,
class
leader
,
FA
1
R
v
1
E
w
B
18
L
E
Free Estimate s . Guaranteed ln s1allation .
Rev . Merrell Flo;-d
posedly putting a jinx on 1t .
Leo H •ll . 'o\Orship service ,
CHURCH - LetartRoute1,the
ASBURY Worsh i p 11
Mrs. David Glenn (Harold's · For during the next 300
10 .JO am ; r~urc h , 7: 30p .m .
Rev
Stan Cra i g, pastor .
am ; Church School9 ·50 am .,
sister) at Tipp City.
years, death and disaster ws cs, lst Tuesday .
V N 1 T E D
Sunday school 9 : 30 a .m ,
E 0 E N
prayer and Bib le study, 7. 30
FOREST RUN -- Worship 9 Br&lt;CTHRE,N IN CHRIST Mr. and Mrs. Philip Harrison . haunted many of its owners: a .m
p m Cottage prayer service ,
,· Chur c h School 10 a .m , Eldon R. Blake , pastor . Sunday
'
Marie
Antoinette
lost
her
Nat i onwide Insura nce Co. of Columbu s, 0 .
and Rodney of Columbus
Winn i e
Tue sday , 10 am, worship
Meats and Groceries
W SCS. 3rd Wednesday , 7 30 School , 10 a . m ,
head to the guillotine, a P m .
Hol s inger , Supt
Morning
servi ce . Fr, d ay , 7 .30 p .m .
Syracuse
visited Mother's Day with Mr. British heir to the stone died
307 Spring Ave.
992-3986
. MASON
CHURCH
OF
MINERSVILLE - Worship s ermon , 11 am , Even ing
Pomeroy
.
seorv
1t
e
Christ
1
an
Endeoavor
,
CHRIST,
p
o
Box
487
,
Miller
and Mrs. Olen· Harrison.
a.m . Church School 9 am ..
in bankruptcy, a Folies Ber- w10 scs,
Ph
.
992-2318
3rd Monday, 7· 30 p m
7 · 30
P. nl ,
Mrs
Lyda
St, Mason.
va . Sundav
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal, gere star was murdered by
SYRACUSE
Church Chevalier. president Song . Bible Study 10 a.m , Worship
serrnon , 8 ' 20 . Mid 11 am . and 7 p .m Bible Study
Karla and Denise, visited on a jealous lover, a Greek schoot , 9 am ., worship ser serv1ce.and
Week prayer meet ing Wed w d
d
7
VI Ce, 730pm ,
~
banker
drove
off
a
cliff
with
nesday. 7 ·30 P rn . Mrs Marie
m ~ s.~es ay
, p . m .,
ocai
Mother's Day with Mr. and
SOUTHERN
CLUSTER
his wife and children and an
Furniture and Appliances
Authorized Catalog Merc hant
Holsinger
,
class
leader
.
MASON
ASSE:MttLY
UF
Rev,
Frank
Cheesebrew
Mrs. John Perdas and Mary, American millionairess lost
Ph.
985-3308
Lou is W . Osborne
Re\1 . Martha Ann Mattner
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
GOO - Second St, Mason , W
Chester, 0 .
Chambersburg, Pa.
CHRIST - Located at Rutland
va . Chester Tennant, pastor .
Rev . Howard Shiveley
her husband and two of four
220 E . Main Pomeroy Ph , 992. 2178
on New L1ma Road , next to
Sunday school , 10 a .m . ,
BETHANY
(Dorcas)
Mr. and Mrs. David Cun- children in tr·agJc circum· Worship
morn ing worship, 11 am .;
Attend the Church of Your Choice
. 9. JO a. m ; Church Forest Acre Park . Rev Ray
stances
,
School 10 30 a m
Rou se, pastor ; Robert Musser ,
evangelistic ser\lice, 7 : 30pm .
ningham and Mr, and Mr!'.
a bl
Sunday School supt Sunday
CARMEL Worship , 11 schoo l, 10 30 am ; wor sh;r
i
• estudyandprayerservrce ,
JwJior Coleman of Pomeroy,
am . 1St and 3rd s"undays , 7.30 p .m B i l.lle st ud• . We .
Wednesday , 7. 30 p m . Phone
A
true
wild
yak
bull
from
Church
School.
10
a.m
..
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Underwood
•
773-5133 .
Church and Office Supplies - Gifts
Pomeroy
Saturda;HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Ph . 992-3498
Tibet may have a threeAPPLE GROVE - Worship , nesday, 7. 30 p .m
992-2641
and children of Newark visited
I prayer servlce , 7 · 30 P m ,
CHR 1ST in Chrisrlan Union 7: 30pm f!rst and lh trd StJn . n iyh
Middleport
HEMLOCk
GROVE
T
days
,
Chur
c
h
school
,
9
.3
0
Molher'a
with their
CHRISTIAN
_
Roger
Watson
,
he
Rev
.
W
illiam
Campbell
,
foot •pread of horna, may a .m : prayer meeting . f1rst
pastor , Ray Whaley , supt . ·
apastor .'J SundayH schhool , 9 30
stand nearly six feet at the Weoctnnday , 7.30 p · m .
-J)INnt.a, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Morn
h·
9 30
m.,
ame.s
ug es , sup 1, ;
shoulder
and
weigh
1.200
· Arnold.
wor s •p,
a .m ;
evenln9 1trv1c1, 7;30 P m ,
EAST LETART "';'"' Worship , c hur cmg
h
SchOol,
10
.
30
a.m
;
w
a
d
1
pountl.).
7 30 p .m , second ll'lef fourtl't youn" "IO"'It'l mtltlng , ,
100 Years
Pomeroy
t nes av lvtn ng prayer
6 30
Bulova Watches - Sales &amp; Service
Su nday~ ; church school , 9 .30
• ,. "'
mtttlng , 7 · 30 p m . Youth
KermIt Walton
P m : evenln9 worship: 7. 30
prayer Sfl'vlce each TuesdAy .
186 N. Second
Th ~

Re.,.
Arthur C
Lund.
pastor Sunday school (nur

Kingsbury

News, Notes

lind now,

BARNEY

A

PLUS
TWO 0 '5 PLUS
ONE DADBURN

! GOT A· PLUS
ON MV REPORT CARD,
AUNT LOWEElY

F:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;l ~ev l

I

F

~~ ~N'T KNOw..--

-

T~ EV CO ULD ~0 ,---..._,
T~ IS

.,

,_r_w_e_c_oL
_L_e-G_e s_e-Nr-A'
TRANSCI'tl PT 01' MV
GRA~ES TO MV EX·
PRINCIPAL

ALL1HE~
~CAN EAT

I'M BEING
RECALl-ED BV MY
~ ~ G~ SCWOOL!

"'
~

•
.S-25
~

.l
&gt;

!

••

'

1'0, IN 9CT' ~I!&gt; I!&gt;

Hlo."-'5 'ltJu E.\le.R

FOR A 6IIC/(?

Nti 'STEAK ?

IAT£ ~

PR'O'/ING 10 6E A

NIGH /IR()/I/1"

5.nc.JAL.

"8
l&gt;l

~

[ll

...

l
'
~

G-2S

"
U'L ABNER
'

YOU'LL NEVER.
HAVEIDTAKE
CARE OF TI-\OSE
MALE O IAUVINIST
PIGS AGA IN.'!

THASS
CERT'io.J'i
-A-SOB ! ..
RELJEF-

'IOU'R E U&amp;EJ\AT£0.
YOU CAN B E
AN'(THING '100
CHOOSE. f.\QW'D
'IOU LI KE TO B E
A NUClEAR
PH'ISJCIST?

Alfred

Social Noles

ACT! PLAYING CHecKERS

IT'S OI&lt;;GWAcEFLJL.!
I 'LL WEF'ORT VOU

SUI'A:)SED 10 8E. . -- -

MY SINK!

MOl/Iii. 'YOUR KING ... MOVE
YOUR KING!

TO THE Be-rrEI'I.
BWiiiNESS

BUREAU, I 'LL ...
NOlHING... FOR 50ME UNATTACHED
'YOUNG GIRL ! BUT HALMARTI N5 AND
I. HAVE AN "UNDER&amp;TANDIN G.~. AND
r!M GETTING A MfTE OLD TO PlAY
1Hf:'ICATCH ME ...CATCH ME':.. BIT,

I

£1im. ~ou have f inal h.J,
for once in ~our life.

,;omethinq riqht'

.

'

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN

l.aurel

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN 'CO.

Clif

SUNDAY tiMES-SENTINEL

'

\IO.I.DIJ'T IT

"'""'"lll&amp;Sl!IJ! $~E', IT'5

ei&gt;~R

AU.to;;r OJ8RHeAD... {£)

To CI-AA'I A

IT'S 11-0'WXI&lt;!

WAT£+1~
~uw~

LODWICK'S MARKET

News Notes

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MARK VSTORE

~

ROYAL OAK PARK

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

.

DICK'S GROCERY

(@ 1978 King Fealure!l Syndit•te, [nc.)

load

or /

,. '

( ohserve )

river

JIWJM@UJE;-""' ~....,w .-~ ,_

(2 wd s l

5. Shoo!

9. Ruman ian
city
10, Dead

42. Turned to
the rilo!hl
43. Candid

l.JIIIcramble theM: four Ju mble~t

DOWN

one letter to each aquare, to

1. Native -

form four

born
rsraeJi

city

Yesterday's Answer

( 2 wd s.)
4. European

river
5. Spoke impu .

'
6NGINW&lt;S

dcntly to
6. Fastening

0~1=\Cf:

device

1. Priestly
vestment
8. Medically
induced
state

(2 wds. )

11. Empower
12. Sawbuck

26. Musical
work

16. Son of

28. Propped

Aphrodite
2Z. Edge
23. Wood
sorrel
24. Had
qualms
about

!5. John
Gunther

SADIE'S MARKET

I LIEN~

up

10

30. Struck
32. Bring
joy

33. ~?ortl" r
u
cation
36. Therefore
38. One of

word
ten
,.,..--r;;--r,....-r.;-

III

SI/ORUC

THE DAILY SENTINEL

II
I I

~
,

I 0
.

WHAi "\"HI~
CAI.I.ct7 THE. ElJ&lt;:rTI$H
I!!!:EF 1YC.OON.

Now arronp the circled Jette,.
to fonn the aurprl.e anawer, u
IIQtCOIIeOUIJ' the UOYO eartoon.

I Prlll .. S.IIliiiSWIIIIn I "ITI)Ull)''

AU WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

MUNTG :MERY WARD

word•.

3. Unaware

GOEGLEIN 11Lr;DY MIX CO.

M&amp;R FOODLINER

ordinary

2. French

THE DAILY SENTINEL

RACINE FOOD MARKET

41. -

1. Maine

GAUL'S MARKET

HEINER'S BAKERY

Yeaterday'o Cryptoquote: OUTWARD JU[!GMENT OFTEN
FAILS, INWARD JUDGMENT NEVER . -THEODORE
PARKER

[J•nobleo, ILUDl,
Yeetertl•r'•

~-_.. lo-rTGW)

DIAIT • .fOLLEN

FIDORA

Antwer 1 How he felt mhen pull•ed off the

.

diWns- IH.Iard-"Off·INDID"

CARPET-LAND, INC.

-

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

...HE Toot&lt;
OFF
HIS HAT!
· OUl .. oo U o-. ,

w

v

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

SEARS

f. J. WALLACE, JEWELERS

in

\

STOMACH-AGlE /5 NO KIND
CHARIT't'! I
SELLING

MIDDLPORT BOOK STORE

Day

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

COULD HAVE llEEN MU61SED! I

.

Miodleport

I
''

I HATE BASEBA~L!I

1

ILTUGKZH
HJUQFW1 ;
MfTL

II'F

OHFTWKLFW
NF

TLF

M KLSF [J

APLZWIZTU

HTWI

IPF

UJI B z I I F s I J
JB Q LFTI RJXW . -

UFWIFHH

MJEFF

L~~~s:~~--J '----IW!"--~.......---"-''-"&gt;

��•

"

i

1
PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right to Know

You Get More Heref

~1 1o rmed of the l unc
of your qovPrn.ment are
i'n1b0d1Cd n, publi c noltces. In
lhttt S('- 11 qovernmcn t ch,:~ r q~~
'II c.l t 1H.&gt;Il~ to be •n tormcd .
tht&lt;:&gt; ncwspapN vrQPS I'V('ry
Ct i!JNI lo r ead .lnd study these
nOt If PS We str UnQIV itdVI S('
thos.e c ,tll'cns. sec lunq furl her
' mfQrl;ll(IIIOII , IO f&gt;XPI'( I~(" !h('lf
riqht of a ccess to publ 1c
rl'LOrd~ olnd publ ll 11l('(' l 10y')

and b C'
! t on~

OUAUTY USEOCARSIBARGAIN PRICED! . _

~

71 VEGA•••H••u••••~·••••-·•••••••••• $1 595~·
Au to

73 OLOA OMEGA ................. ' 2995
fl

C y!

P.S

.1ulo

8 000

1111

72 CHEV Y VEGA ................... ' 1895
.t

q I

~I)C'cd

R &amp; H Sl'1orp

ss ;

71 PLYMOUTH FURY II .......... •1695
.!

Dr

PUBLIC NOTICE
. Sl.l lt• of OhtO :

k&amp;H. P S. lr ke new.

County o t M£'1Q!&gt; :

tn the Matter of .
LEADING CREEK
"o Cyl ~1u l o ~.s .• fac. u 1r
CONSERVANCY
DISTRICT :
• Ct~se No . 14 , 004
66 RAMBLER 4 DR. WAGON .... ' 495
NOTICE OF HEARING
Wi!h r.1, k 6 q l . duto_
ON WATER RATES
To 1\1 1 Known ond Un known
69 FALCON
DR. WAGON ...... ' 895
P('rsons and Publi C Cor
porat1ons In teres ted , tnclu!IIIIC!
t&gt; ( yl ,lUIO.
&lt;111 po ten t ral Users. Now or in
th e F ut urt.', ot n Proposed
FORD TORINO 2 OR. HT .... •2195
Lct~donq Cree k Cooservancv
t L,·l
ttJ
~&amp;H. R VOO mt
D1S tn ct Wa terwork s Sys tem
-~~~~------~
P ubliC /'4 0I1CC rS Here iJ Y
Grvc n .
73 FORD F1 ..................... ..... '3495
I l J Thai hcrcto tor c th e Boa ref
• 11'&gt;10111 F •plo rcr tm:w trlJ c k )
of D1rect ors of the Leading
C r eek Con ser van c y DistrtU
Milv c d e te rml n ('{l · r a te s o f
72 MERCURY MONTEG0 ..... . •27 95
c ompe n sat 1on fo r th e !i ille uf
; Dr , l.h ,)jf p -$., -~- B
Willer to he mad e avail,lb lc by
wOrk s and improv ements bu ill
by the Di s tr rc. t tor lhe purpo se
71 PONTIAC CATALINA ......... '21 95
o t wat e r su pp ly, tn cludinq til e
Dr P S P lJ vuwt root
s ale of suc11 wat er to th e
~ outh&lt;:rn Ohio Coal Com pa n y,
the Villaq e o f Rutlrtnd , Oh 1o ,
70 FORD GALAXIE 500 ......... '1495
and oth('r tnduo;; tr i.;~- 1 , com
1 Dr
V a auto. P S·, P.B.
mercia! ar.d r csi d e ntiil l u-.,er ~
11 l Tt1&lt;1 l s a id Bo ard h'-ls m ade
a report of its det e rm inat ion s to
70 FORD FAIRLANE ............. .. '1495
lh tS. Cou rl and s u ch det er
n ~m atton s arc now on f ile in th e
-1 Or V
ltdo R&amp;.H P S
off tee of Ihe Cler~ of thi s Court
{ J t 1 hut he r e tof ore the [ltJdrd
69 FORO LTD ... .... .................. '1495
o f D1r c ctors o f Lcadinq Creek
1 tl
~~I front to b.t_")ck
Cono;;r&gt;rvan c v D istrict h&lt;tve
adop ted rul es an d rCqu lation s
pr esc ribiiHl t he permr ss,blc
69 DODGE POLA RA .............. •1395
ll"'-e s of
th o wt~t er sup
· Or H1 ,l_ir P .S., P . (j .., viny l roo t.
PlY provid e d Qy lt)c d1 s
tr, c t and t11 c miln ne r o f
rts d 1s tnbut ion ana to pr c vcnl
69 MERCURY MARAUDER ...... '1295
t11c pollu t ion or u ~nccc5sa ry
,. IOU 'dr H l _f,K &gt;111'" .• P. S., P . IL AM F M s te r eo .
wa s te of s uc h water su pply ,
Wh 1c h ru les and rcq4 lil t10n ::.
ll .Jve be'i-'11 rcportC'.d to thi s c ourt
69 PLYM OUTH FURY 111. ....... '1295.
il n d ar c on f ile in th e on icc o t
the Clerk of t hi s Court
~ '•- f'1
.f' ~., P (3., vrny! r oof
( .J J All persons and pub lic
co rp orations. m c lud inq all
po ten t ial users , now or 1n th£'
MERCURY MONTEGO ....... '1295
futu
r e,
ot
th e
propo se d
._Jr J H dJ 1·• r•'
vt a t c rwo rk s systerr1 of tt1e
L~'Ot linq Crock Con~ervancy
Dl:; tr ict, des1ring to ' cOntC'st th e
68 OLD.:&gt; DELT A 88 ................'12 95
d e terminat ions as made and
I
I
t il ed by th e Ooard of Drr cc tor s
t. P S. p (3_
o f sate! District, or to the rul es
i:l nd reg ul atio ns so adopt ed by
FC PO CON VERTIBLE '
th e Ooard of Dircclors. of sai d
D ist i' IC I. may make thei r oll
'895
1t&gt;ction~ ut q hearing on sai d
d c tcrmindtion s to be he ld on
M&lt;Jy ?61h , 19 7J, nt 9 oo o 'c lo c k
l1
GALA XIE 500 ........... ,795
AM in this Cou r t &lt;JI th e Co urt
~HdrrPS-.PB.
llOUS t' in P0n,1eroy, Ohro

4

72

69

....... ..

68

FC.... ,D

•

t'6 FOfW GALAX IE 500 .......... '595 .
I,

f' \, p (3

ill

65 DODGE 4 DR. WAGO N ....... '595
k

d.

I I(-

1r

I·'

fJ :-,

&lt;:&gt;

u
w.

65 FORO 4 DR. SEDAN ............. '395

'.
69 N\ERCURY MARQU IS .... .....'1995
l

H f 'lu~dJE:lJ!

tit

67 DODGE 4 DR. WAGON ....... ~595
,l p ·1
v ~ ld

qoo SPECIALS

Rambler 4 dr. Wagon
Olds 4 dr. Run s Good
Chevy Impala 283 Auto
Buick LeSabre 4 dr.
61 Pontiac Tempest 4 dr.

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
CHESTER, 0 .

· ~----------~~
Big Capacity

Maytag

Aut omatics
2 speed operation .
Ch oice

of

water

t emps .

Auto.

water

l evel

c ontro l .

Fill e r

or

Lint

Pow er

Fin Agita t or _

Per'ma - Press
Mavtag
HaloQf Heat

Dryers ·
Surround

c loth es

with gen tl e, even

heat. No hot spots,
no
oV c rd rying.
Fi n e M&lt;;-sh Lint
- Fil ler .
We SpE&gt;cialitc i n

MAYTAG

RUTlAND FURNITURE · ~~~v~;~·'
Arno ld Grate

2 SIGNS
OF

QUALITY

Rut land

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

tlf./2 NOVA

r•.or'l.

'

$26 95

niJI,Jh:r ivll h less lhan .6, 100 m iles. 307 V-B.
dilhH"~I,lltL 11. rv, power slet• r ing, whdcwall · tires, light
IJI1.,. 11111'·h . !lh •, pot less mler ior , r r:td io See. the sh arp

1r,d

pnpul. 11 rnodr·l

111·1 CHEVROLt'l
S2995
llldnr 1 ·.·I 'drivr·, CltJX top loc king .d rl., hubs, V 8,
·,_ '"' 11·
,
po.v-er .':. IPe ring &amp; b r etk~"&gt;. loca l low
l~r1
) trr' nev(•r u&lt;;ed .
~

S269S
1_
'dnrH·, lor-,1 1 I ow11(lf Crlf w ilh le ss than J/, 000'
' , 1 11P1dt•• Conlrdl dir cu nd. , JO 00 pOW{' r 5eat , radio,
, u fr1d .h lq,H.lcd Wi th many cx lra s.
··1

I( I(

•

.

Used Car Buye~ looking for a good price on a good
used car. Check the following for some great buys.
~agon , auto . Sold

1972 OPEL
1972· PONTIAC Gran~
1971 PONTIAC
1'971 PONTIAC
1970 .PONTIAC
1971 PLYMOUTH
1969 CHEVROLET
1968 MERCURY

Mrs. Jean Summe rfield is
visiting in Winter Haven, Fla.,
with Mr . and Mrs. l.arry

Mrs. Alice To ban , Robyn and
T odd , Goldsboro, N. C., s pent a
week with Mrs. C!Po Smith .
Mr . and Mr s. Raymond
Wi: son , Ro c h ester , N. Y., were

Mrs. Charles Woode were Mr.

and Mrs. Hay Hin es, Belpre;
Mr. a nd Mrs. Willard Hines,
Po111c r uy,
and
Ri:iymoud
Wilson, Hoche~te r, N. Y.
Mr . Han ley Phelps . Chat·
chmn, Va ., spent sevcre~ l days
\~;ith his brother-in-law cmd
sister. Mr . (jOd Mrs. Fre d V.
Rice .

was a r ecen t visitor o f Denzil
Cleland.
Mr. and M r s. Cha rl es
Eichinger and
daughter,
Eichi nger

fami ly. Mrs. Opal Eichinger is
impr ov ing after s u rgery at St.
Joseph Hospita l, Parkers burg .
Mr . and Mrs. 13. K. Ridenour
attended the wedding o f Miss
Patricia Lynn nii g and Mr .
Dou~l.a s
Wickham,
Jr .,

REMEMBER
We Service
What WeSell

Hich-

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

Mr.

and

da ughter,
Co lumbus, ca lled on Mr . and
Mrs. Hoy Ou·isty, Sunda y.

Hawl ,

F( r'i s lic

moving the Reds into first
place by one percentage
point.

. -By FRED McMANE

Satellile2dr . H. T., V-8. Loca l on e
owner . Real sharp litt le car.

•

'•
·~

992-2174

DANCE
At The

Whispering
Pines
Nite Club
FRlDAYand
SATURDAY NIGHTS
From 10p.m . til.2a .m .

72 Buick Skylark H.T. Cpe., V-roof, air ..... '3695

70 Olds Cut. H.T. Sedan, v:roof, air .......
70 · Pont. Firebird 2 Dr. H.T., V-8, AT, V-rf, ail 2395
70 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, full power, air.... ,2795

Pomeroy Motor Co.

'

Any person interested may
f ile written excep tions to sa id
accoun ts or to mai lers per
ta in lnq to th e execu t ion o t fhe
tru st. not less •h an five day s
pr ro rtotli ecta tl" sct forhearing .
(51Scbs
25, ler
ttc
Manning D.

Bly!Cven . " I'll prohobl) haye
nig htmares about 1t . 1 111H )'
have had the best control nnd
stuff o n tht! ball than I' Vl' ever

had, but [ ma inl) feel g""d
about the win f or the team .
'I at ""to come fi rst."

Wood of the Chicago While Sox,

definitely

Wood , who bested nl ""· 1.(),
in the ir only co nfrontnti on !;:1st

flam ethrowers

be sa id about the
lik e
Bert

while notching his lith \'ICtol'y

8\yleven, Mickey Lolich and
Nolan Ryan.
Wood, the major league's
wiJUlingest pitcher, outdueled
Ryan, the major lea gue's

again st only thre e losses.
Ryan , now 6-4 , gave up Se\ eu
hits but s truck out n to boost
his season's t otal to 107. The
White Sox scored all the ir rull.!i

s trikeout kin g, 4-1 , Thursda y
afternOQn in o ne of the classic

off Ryan it1 lhc first three in ~

there

$1595

to

is

matchups of the season but
that was nothing to what the
fa stballing Bly\even accomplished against the Kansas City
Royals Thurs day night.

Open Evenings
'Til 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
Noon on Saturda)

Blyleven, a 22-year-&lt;Jid·right·

season,

to

to a

lead the DC'troit
4 ~0 vi c tory .

allowed onh•

siX h tts

nings .
T here was H touch of inm)
~bout
Wood's
vietory,
however. Tanner r~ m ove&lt;J his
ace from the game with lwo 1lUt
in the nin th in fa vor of Cy

For Sale

We talk to you

5-22 -l Ot c

like a person.

BLACK l;'e Tennessee Walker
coli , Jl, , years ol d : phone 992

3640.

CableChannel 5
7pm Friday
SPONSORED BY

The Meigs Branch of The Athen s Co.
Savings and Loan, Virgil B. Teaford
Realty , Baker Furniture and Village
Pharmacy.

KINGSBURY HOMES

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" Yo u' ll Like Our Qualit(Way
.
of Doing Bu siness
.
992 -5342
GMAC FINANCING
OMEROY
Open Even ing s Untii6 : 0o· TiiSp.m ..Sat ,·

llll••••l!ll••••••••••••••••••

Botlby Darwin doubled and
scored on an infield s ing !{' to
give the Twins tin.' on ly run
needed . A r un...s coring
by D;c1nny Thompson
adclt&gt;d lh(' S('cond run in the
eighlh .

they

s ing!~

C:ul Morton to~sed a fivehittrr and doubled hom e the
ning Lo lea d the flraves over
the Giants. _Da ve J o hnson
&lt;iccourHed for the other Athmta

nm wilh his seventh homer in

the ::;econd .
Rusty Sta ub doub led in Qne
run ami Ed Kran c pool double d
in another pair as the Mets
explod e d for four runs In the
19th innin!:l to beat Los Angeles
in the longest game in Dodge r

Major League Standin gs
By United Press lnterna1iotftll
American leagu e
East
w . L pe t . g .b .
Detroit
2 1 20 .512
New York
20 11 .488
aa lli more
' 17 19 .412 Jl '1
Milwa ukee
18 21 .462 2
Bos ton
17 '10 .459 2
Cleveli'ln d
t 8 23 .439 3
Wes t

hi s tory .

w. L pet. g .b.

tlCSdLIY m~1d c the course play

Chi cago
2t! 13 .649
Crl li lornia
21 17 .553 3 1 1
M inncso tu
21 17 .S53 31 7
Oaklt'lnd
?3 19 .54B ]• ·,
KansasC IIy
23 '10 .535 4
Te)( as
12 25 .3?1! ' 1/
Thursday• _s Res ults
Bos ton 10 M ilwaukee 1
Chicago -4 Calil'ornia -1
Cleve at Ball , '"J , ~~ pd , r a in
Dctroil 4 New York 0
Minn 2 Kan Ci ty 0
(On ly games sc hedu led)
Today ' s Probable Pitc hers
( All t imes E DT)
Oevel,;md ! P erry 6 5) el l
Chicago !Gossrtg c 0 3) , 9 p .m .
0.1kland
(Qd orn
1 71
at
De troit (Perry 0-2) ,-.B. p .rn .
Ca litorn ia ( Wr ig ht 2 5) a t
Mi lwaukee (Parson s I 2). 8: 30

il

AtlMt&lt;J Cou r1try Club rounw

cmnpded "sinc'c w innin g the

Ma ior League leaders
By Unated Press lnternaftonal
Leading Batters
Nat ional League
g . ab r. h . pe t.
Lope~ . LA
J7 W6 17 JB .JS8
Madd ox, S f 34 125 l S 44 .357
Cash , P 1l
7.6 I 17 ?0 39 .348
Rbnsn , Ph il 28 87 13 30 .345
Wat sn , Hou 44 154 33 53 .344
Fr~lrly , Mil J'l
93 l3 37 .344
Santo, Chi 38 1J 6 71 46 .338
Gr ubb, SO 35 116 79 39 .336
Torre, SI .L 34 120 IS &lt;tO .333
Mrllhws , SF 38 114 15 38 .3:J3
Am er ica n League
g . ab r. h. pet ,
Blmbrg , NY 27 80 13 30 .3/5
Ho rt. NY
24 83 11 29 .349
Kelly , Chi Ui 95 20 J3 .347
Horln , De l t9 73 11 75 .342
Krkp tk, KC 3-1 175 25 42 .336
Suarez, Tex 22 69 tO 13 .333
D.AIIen , Chi 37 1J2 25 43 .326
Sims . Del
2J 71 11 23 324
Munsn , NY &lt;10 1-45 20 46 .317
F 1sk, Bos
35 126 17 40 317
Home Run s
National league : Aaron , All
and S lilrgell , Pill 12 ; Evan s,
Al l 11; Benc h . Cin , Wynn , Hov
and Bonds. SF 10.
American l eague : Mayberry .
KC 13 ; May , M il tO: D. All {'n ,
Chi and Duncan , Clev 9; st x
player s t ied w'rlh B.
Run suBafted In
Nati onal League: Bench, (in
35, Fergu son , ' LA 33; Speier,
SF 30 ; Wa lson, Hou and Bonds,
SF 79.
Ameri can l eag ue , May be rr y,
KC 42 ; J(lc kson , Oak nnd
Mel ton , Chi 32 ; Robin s on , Cal
and Mur ce r, NY ?6 .
Pitching
_Na tional League : Billingham ,
C1n 7 l ; Bry ant , S F 6 3; Reu ss.
Hou And Downing, ~A 5 1;
Gu lle ll , (in, KoOsma n, NY and
Wi se , St . L S 2 : Hooton, Ch i,
Su tt on, LA and Seave r , NY 53 ;
Mar ie hal, SF s- 4,
American League: Wood , Chi
11 3:
Holtvn ;an ,
Oak
9 '1 ;
Co leman, Del B 3; Sing er, Cal
and Sp!il tortt , KC 7 '1 .

llllJ itiye.ar t'Ontra d Thurs dH y
with the PiU~I:l burg h Penguins,
lcavlnt-; t ltc du b with three
p layer s who !-it ill h;we not
s igne d the ir · contra c ts for th e

DAZZLING
LAS VEGAS

WANTS MOHE MONEY

LOS ANGI·: Lr: ~ ( UI'll ,Johnu y fl{)(lgrrs1 t he flashy
fl:mkcr frOm Neb ras ka and
winn e r of the 1972 Heisman
Trophy , hns decided to play
professio nal foot b&lt;tll in Canada
for more mo ney .
The ~ 1 -yc H -o ld Hod~ers,
who wus a No. l draft pi c k of
the Snn Diego Clw r ge r s , s aid
he will s ign ~~ contrac t toda y

with tlw Montreal

A~ou ettes

of

t he Ca nadian l"oo tball Lca ~ue .
H e did not r eveal the ter111s
hut Lhrrc wa s sncculation he
would get in thC. neighbor hoOd

SI GNS CONT~ACT
· P ITTSBUHGH I UP I ) _
J c~tn(~uy l.a~a ce :-; igncd 11

·

of $100,000 a season plus fringe
hrnc fit.'i .
A s pokesman s~~ i d . U1c offe r
-Hcccptcd by Hod g~ t·s wus " 80
to lOoper cent lttrgc r " than the
la st offer mad(~ by the

4 Days, 3 Nights at the
New Deluxe Land ·
mark HoteL
S244 per person includes ;
Rou ndtrip air filr e by TWA
Hote l ac co mm oda tions
B-coursc dinn er an d s how
2 h ear t y br ea kfa s ts or
brun ch -Ca scade Terri'lce
Free Keno ti c ke t and Bingo
card s

'

3 poo lsi de lounges
. _,
AAA and TWA escor t s ·

Join our fri endly group

Departing Columbus
July 26-2!1, 1973

Chargers.

l!)?:f SCIJ!iOn .

For information
ca ll

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

@

OPTOMETRIST

Tc)(as ( Paul 3-3) at New York.
{Kcki ch 1·0), 7: 30 p .m .
Kansa s C ity (Splillorll 7 2l a t
Mim~e so t a CHand s 4 4), 9 p. m .
(Only gam es scheduled )

··

OFF ICE HOUR S 9:30 TO 12 , 2 TO 5 (CLOSt
AT NOON ON THUR S. ) - EAST CO URT n.,
POMEROY.

WORLD WIDE
TRI\VEL AGENCY

Pomeroy- Phone 992 -2590
Ga llipolis- Phone 446 ·0699

75.

. Nick lau s,

who

hadn't

•

•

Thursday to share first-r-ound . Tournament of Champions last
month , said he was " very
honors·.
That wrl ~ one s troke better
tha n a threesome c:onsistiOg of
H ubel't Green and tour rookies
Bruc&lt;! As hworth and T om Kite
and tWo better than a n uth c r-

Med ic h. Magnuson t 8 ) and
Munson ; Lolich (3 S) and Sims
L P - Med ic h (J 1) . H R- Mc Au ·
Catiforn•a
000 000 001 1 6 0 l• tle llst)
Chicag o
103 000 OOx 4 7 o
Ryan (6 4) and Torborg . Kan City
000 000 000- 0 I 0
Wood , Acosta {9) and He rr Minn
000 100 Otx - 2 11 0
mann WP Wood 111 3)
Draqo (4-41
and
Healy ;
Blyleven (56) and M ltterwald .
Md w
001 000 000 l s 1
Bost on
0'11 711! OOx 10 16 0
(Only games scheduled l
Ch;unpion , Shprt I 4) , R l'! t son
(6), . f)&lt;lewman !8J and Ro
driguc1 , lee (4 1) and Mont
Major League- Resu ll s
gomcry . L P Champion (0-JL
8y United Pre-ss International
HR - P€1 1r ocelli (7th 1.
National league
San Fran
010 000 000- 1 S 0
New York
020 000 OOtt- 2 10 1
000 000 000 0 6 I Allan Ia
De tr oll
000 300 Oh ' 7 0
Mc Dowell. Sosa 171. and
Sadek, Rader {7): Morton (4· 3)
and Oates . WP Morton (4·31.
LP- M c. Oowetl ( 1 '2) . HR .._J ohnson !7 th) .
lnlernilltiona 1
~eague Standings
By Umted P_ress International I 19 inning s)
New York
IAmen c an Oivi son)
00 I 000 11 0 000 000
W. L Pet . GB
Roches ter
oo 4- 7 n 4
24 17 .667
Syracuse
17 18 .466 61 1 Los Angeles
Pawtuc ket
t5 11 _409 7
07 I 000 000 000 000
000 1)..-3 18 3
Toledo
.
15 25' .375 11
(Naftonal Divis ion)
Seaver. Hennigan (7),
(8),
Stone
(lJ), .
W. L. Pe t . GB McGraw
C harle51on
25 13 .658
Mc Andrew {19) and May , Oyer
P~n i nsula
21 17 .553 J
{8); John , Ric hert ( 7) , Culver
(8), 8r£.'wer (9 ), Hough (1 1),
T1dewe~fcr
19 19 .SOO 6
Ric hmond
11 '16 . 297 13 , 2 Rau (1 6) and Ferguson . WPStone ( 1 OL LP-. Ra u (0 1 J.
Thor sday ' s Result s
Pawtuc ket t Rirhmond 0
{Only gomes played) '
Roches ter 8 PeninstJia o, l~t
Roches ter at Pen in su ll '2nd ,
ppd , r~1in
' '
Totrdo 2 Syra cuse 1 ls!
Syracuse 6 To ledo s' 1nd
STR IKE IT RICH
Tidc w n !er &lt;l l Chrtrl~ston ppd .
ra fn
'
IN

Saturday's Games
Texas at New York
Oakland at Detroit
Cal ,fornta at M ilwa ukee
Ba ltimore at Mmn , n1ghl
Cleve at Chicag o, night
Bos ton atKan Cl 1ty , night

p .m .

wnn here three years ago, ha d

Birmingham, Ala ., ~~I I s hot 5und cr-pa r 67s in the fncc of :t
sw irling w_
ind over th~ hilly

want to see if the
others Offer as
va as

lmp py " a bout hi s opening 68.

LEC:ION n :AM NOTE

Amcric&lt;Jn
Legion
Uln~es~ m c that in cludes Da ve h c.t se. b;tl_l .tctt m
wi ll n tcc l
ll ill 1 last week's winner HL Sa t urda y nHwnin g at !J ::IO a .m.
Memphis 1 with Rod Pun seth al the Syracuse Ba ll Park . All .

The

'

and Larry Wise .
boys who arc p l ann in ~ tu
Although heavy r&lt;Jin ~ ed- . pa r t ~ c~ p;1tc n re urged to at tend.

•

.

.Fury.

' : :-:.;.

\

·em.

::
•,

::•,

:-

.

SAtURDAY
NIGHT~

'

MAY 26

MOBILE HOMES

:;
'

10:00 TO 2:00

AND. DOUBLE WIDES
(Built by Skyline In Ohio)

Put
Yourself
In The
Winner's
Circle!

•J

J)l ymouth Fury Spe.Ctill
2-0oo r Ha rdtop

.,

/

""
"

·:·:" '

·"
::

Cpongratulatihons to George Sisson, Rt. 3,
_ omeroy, . w o won the portable TV at our
Grand Opening.
200 Yards West of
Junction U. S. Rt. 33 and County Road No. 18 _ Kin .
bury Road . Locally Qwned &amp; Operated.
gs

KINGSBURY HOMES-PH. 992-6256

Sure, those other standard-s ize cars are good c ars .
But we wou ldn't ask y ou to compare ou r ca r if we d idn 't

'

Yo~ , too , can be a winner by

seemg our hom es . Open every
da ~ 2 to 1 p .m . or by ap- ,_
Pomtm e nt. Ph . 992 -62S6 .

Plymouth Fury Special

,.

•

66 Buick l:!Sa~re 4 Door, air.........:...... '695
63 Rambler Wagon, 6 cyl., std............... '50

G~mc

Blylcven m;maged to h ;;mdlt~
the Royals despite a one ~l m ur
dl'iay !Jcca usf' of rain . He'
s truck out seve n and w ~-ilkPd
onli' two in he sting Dkk Drago.

We're Ready To Serve You For Your

69 Mercury Montego 4 Door; V·8, auto..... 111295

67 Plymouth 2 Dr. H.T., V-8, auto.......... 1495 .
'
65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door................... 1295

only fi ve hils .

winning run in the ~econd in-

Onl·-Huur De la y iu

SALES &amp; SERVICE

. QUICK DELIVERY
FINANCING AVAILABLE

67 Olds 98 Town Sed., power &amp; air........ '995

vic tory in five decisions. Lee
went the distance, allowing

DICJ('S BACJ(

VISIT

69 Chevelle Mal. H.T. Cpe., V-8, AT, PS ... '1 595
69 Olds 88 H.T. Sedan, full pow., air ..... '15!15

Oucce Pol. ~ Door H.T.................. '/95

games.

Hell Sox: pounded U1e Brewt:rs
for 16 hits . Petrocelli , batting
unly . 191 ent ering the game,
drove in three runs and also
scor ed thn.-e in helping southpaw Bill Lee to his fourth

BEFORE YOU BUY!

2xq construction. our low overhead saves you dollars .
Ptck from our stock or will order to suit your needs.

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

A twi-night d o ubi t'.hea der .
Clcvela nrl at BHlt im ore- , was·
postponed by rain . Atlanta
edged San Fnmcisco . 2-l. ~md
New York topped Lns Ange les,
7-:~ . in 19 innings, in the only
sc heduled Natiomd League

:::::.:

70 Gremlin 2 Dr., 6 cyl., std.............. 1295
69 Chrysler N.Y. 4 Dr. H.T., V-roof, air .... .'1995

'

Roston routed Milwaukee, 10-1.

to his first victory since May 11
witl1 a three-run homer in the
fo urth inni ng. The Lriumph
enabled the Tigers to .rega in
first place in the AL East.
Rico Petrocelli broke out of a
horrendous slump with four
hits , including a homer, a s the

lonJ..(e r Uwn us ual, 32 in the H7p\(:l y in Thursday:s $150,000 rnan fie ld broke par Thurs day .
Atlant.;.t golf c lass ic opening Ther e were 15 at 2-under 70,
round, Nkk!LJns displayed the includi ng Geo r ge Arche!:J. Gay
forri1 that has made hilll the 13r('Wer, J ohnn y Mi11ler Hnd
class uf the golf wb r ld by Tom Weiskopr.
Hill y Ca sper, who normally
makin g back-to-back birdies
docsn'l
pl.ny he r e, opened with
~md lh1,1 s went iuto today 's
second round ri ght whcr(. a 72. Gf! I'Y Player, making his
1873 U.S. debut this week after
everyone expected him to be,
Rn operation in hi s native South
in tllc 1\::ad.
Nickbm s, tour sophomore Africa de layed his r eturn to the
D avid Glenz of Coqu ille; Ort.'., St~1 tcs, had a 76 . And Ma ster s
and B. H . ' 'M&lt;Jc" Mc Lendon 'of clw mpi on Tommy A.:tron) who

COAL" Limes ton e, Exce ls ior · Sa lt Wor ks, E . Main St. , G ROCERY business for sa le .
P omeroy. Phone 992 -3891 .
Build ing fo r sale or lease .
- -- -- - - - - ± 4·ll£2·!tf!.£.
!c
Phone 77 3-56 1B from 8:30p.m .'
to 10 p .m. for appointm €nt.
UPHOLSTERY
Mat e ria ls,
,
3-20 -lfc
riy lon prints , co tton prints
vinyls, velve ts of a ll kinds:
4 G~AVE lo l in Mei g s Memoria l
Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E.
Gardens . Cheap. Call 949
Ma in St ., phone 992-7554.
496 2.
. s.J .24fp
5-20-tfc

ON YOUR DIAL

victory .
" I wa s n 't afrmd to leave
Wood in ," said Tanner. " but I
wanted tu gh·e tht~ m a difff'rrnl
look. A hard throw e r luts a
little edge, so I put onr in ."
In ~he only other AI , c ontest.

AT LA NTA ! UP I J - T r ailing
by Lwo strokes with two hnlt's to

5· 13 -12tc

WMP0/1390

outfield fly to lock up the

Major Leolgue Standings
By Uni1ed Pre ss lnternationa 1
National Le.1gue
East
w . I. pet . (g . b.
Chicago
24 11 .sas
New York
20 17 .541
1
Pittsburg h
16 18 .471
411
Montreal
16 19 .457 5
Pl'liladetphia IS 24 .385 8
Sot . Louis
13 24 .351 9
West
w . I. pc1 . g .b.
Cincinnati
25 16 .610
17
~an Franc isc o 28 18 .009
Ho v!&gt;lon
26 18 .591
I
LosAngeles
24 19 .558 7
Atlanta
17 23 .425 8
San Diego
16 27 ,J]2 101 1
Thursday ' s Result s
Atlan ta 2 San Francisco 1
New York 7 Los Ang 3, 19 inns
{Only games scheduled) 1
Today's Probable Pi1chers
{ All times EDT)
Nf!w York ! Matlack 2 5) at
Los Angel es ! Osteen 3-3), 11
p.m.
Chicago ( Reu sche l 3 3) at
Ci ncinnati (Gulle tt 5· 21. 8 p .m .
Philadelphia (Breit 2 1) at
San Diego ( Norman l 5l. 10: 30
p.m.
Montreal (Torrez J.S) at San
Fr,lncisco (Bradley 2 2), 11
p.m.
Atlanta {Reed 2 4) at St .
Louis (Fos ler 7-3) , 9 p .m .
Houston
(Reu ss
511
at
Pillsburgh (Moose J.J), 8 p .m .
Saturday's Game s
Chicago at Cincinna ti
Montreal at San Fran
Houston r~l P itts . nigh t
All;m ta at St . Louis, night
New Yor k a t Los Ang , nigh I
Phi ln a l Sa n Dieg o, tw ilight

Dick McAuliffe helped Lolicb

Birdies give
BAND in Nicklaus lead

For Sale.

LEGHORN hens for sale. aoc
each. Cal l 8d3-2145.

Hyan, .after Wood ~td ~iven up
three straight s ingles thnt
produced C'illifornin's only run.
Acosta re-tired Bob Qli\1e r on em

American League
Cleve al Ba ll , 7. ppd ., ra .n

Acosta, a speedba ller 1ike

Remember We Seroice What We Sell.

USED CARS

b..

the time, bulit does now , .. said

'

0 (' Ct' ;"oSCtd .
"'
Notr cc I S hr: rv llY g 1v cn thnl is a pa lie ut a t Vetenw s
f\ uclr ey o·. Bre wer o( J&lt; . D .. Menwrial Hos pital.
Music by Red Stewart,
Portl q nd , Ohio , 11£' &amp;. b een c.July
Dave Dunn and The
~p poin l (: d
Ex ec utrix· of tile
E c. t"t e ot Allen C Brew e r ,
Ambassadors.
{!cceas cd. ta te of Meigs cou n ty ,
Ot'lio ,
Cred itor s arc re q ui r ed to li lc
lll e rr c l~ l rn s wilh said fidu c i&lt;HY
TAKES ,\KHON .1011
wi thin lour months .
SPH
INGFIELD, Ohio I UP! ) AL L -ELECTR IC. like neW , 3
Dill ed th i~ l ~ th cl ay ol May,
19 73 '
- Bob Vcm-Poppcl, Wittenberg
rooms with large bath,
Man n inq D. Webster .. Judg c
e lec tric wall .oven , table lop
lnivcr
s
ity
assist
a
nt
~as
ketball
l
Cour t of Com.mon Plcet 5.
rang e, ·large c lose t . Loca1ed
Probate Divi 5ion .c oach , has- been named to a
on E . ~Main S t ., Pomeroy . See
{5· \ 18. 25 (6 ) 11, ] IL
lo
apprecia te .
P hone
s imilar position at the UniverGall
ipolis
446-9539
.
s ity of Ak ron.
NOT I CE OF PRIVATE SALE
Van Poppe! a Bowl ing G1·een
OF R EAL ESTATE
Pu r s u an t lo an or der o f S lutc Universi ly g raduate,
L~ase
· privu l c sa t·e is s ued i)y th e
joined the Wittenberg s t.aff in
Athen s· Coun ty Court of Com
H IG H volume · service sta tion ,
mon Plea s , Probat e Division , l!l70 .
l-Ie
form~.:rly
wa s
paid
t ra in ing,
excellent
s cu led bids for the pur c t1ase o t
locat ion. Call 992 ·5221 8 a .m .
Ihe real es tat e ow n ed by Wi lbur Hssistan t l:mu:h Ht White wate r
G , Ni c kels, dece ased, lat e of
to 5 p.m.
1Wis. ) State. Uni versi ty ,
~ou t e 2, Coo lvill e, a ·tlio will be
5-25 -6fc
rcc(llved by J ack E . Wl1 ite,
Adminis tr a tor. w .w .•1 . ot · sai d
cs tule . unti l June 2, 1973 . Said
proper ty co ns ists of .86 hun
drcdth s Of .-t n acre, more or less.
locatecf in Troy Town sh ip ,
At11cns County , Ohi o and is .
rmpro ved wit h a modern two
bed room horne. and two car
Qur~qe, in E'l(Ce llcnt c ond iti on .
Sa id property wa s itppr aised a t
$ 12 ,500.00 , and wi ll n o l be sold
tor less lh&lt;Jn tha t amou n't. Th e
riqh l i ~ r es·crved to rci cct an y
and a ll b ids . E,)(h bicl s hall
con tai n Ihe hi gheS t or bes t price
the b idder is willlhg to pay tor
.. s aid proper ly , and their ntl me
~d(l'rcss,
5ig natu r e,
;:~nd
lc t op h on e. humber . Th e en .
velope c ont ai nin g the bid s hall
be cle ilrly marked "Bid o n
Nic kC'IS Pr operty" anti shalt b e
a ddressed t o Ja ck E . White ,
care of Pa u l J . Gerig, Attorn e y ,
P . 0 . Box /68, At he n s, Ohio
·ISi' Ol. Terr.n s s hall b e fen per
c e11 t of th e pur ch,ase price down
~2495
upon accep tance ,of the bid, and
the b&lt;rlancc upoi1 del ivery o t
1
de e d . ln s pc.c t ion of Ihe pr e mises
may be had by co nt ac t ing Jack
B. White, Coolville , Ohio , phon e
6673 110.
'
J ilek 0 . Wf1 it e, Adm in is tr alor ,
o f the es ta te of Wilber
1
G . Ni c ke ls . d ec eased .
(5) 11, 18, 2S, 31c
IN Tt1E COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
tN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF \
AC ·
COUNTS :
.
P.ROBATE COURT ,
MEIGS COU NT Y. O HI O
Accou nt s and vou ch ers of the
followi n g named fidu ci aries
llrw e been f iled In th e P r ob~ · te
Cou rt , Meigs County. Ot1io. for
approval and se ttl ement . ·
Case No . 16,606 , Thirteenth
Ac cou r1t of th e Hunt inqton
National Bank of Columbus,
Tr u5 t ee a t th~ Trust c reated
u r1der the L-as t Wi l l and
Tes ta men t o f Tliomas A May ,
Deceased .
Ca se No . 19.3 65 Thi r dCu rr e nt
Accoun1 o l Richard Cambers.
Guardian of the Tru~t Est a te o f
Pamp el a , Kei th A_, H arold P ..
J r ., ond Ch ri s ty Jon es, Minors .
Case No . 20.562 First and
Fi nal Account of Lu cil ll! J~cks .
Admi n ist ra trix of tile esta te of
Virgi l J ac k. s, d ecc·ased .
Unless exceptions a r e filled
t11ereto, sa id accounts w il l be
for hea r ing befo re s~ id Cour t on
th e 2,5f h day of Ju n e, 1973, at
Wl1 ic h I im e said t~cco un ts will lle
considere d and COill ·i nucd from
dav tod a y until till ally d isposed

Kirkt&gt;atrtc k in the fifth jnnin~ .
"Th e hil didn't bothC'r me at

si ngles
Ti gers

something

500 E. Main St., Pomeroy. Ohio

and the only hil he 'allowed
ca me on a bunt single by Ed

MiMesot.a Twins, go for a guy
like knu c kleballer Wilbur

but

...wv/
~~~8

the Kansa s City Roytjls. 2-o,

U:t if•h wa s Overpowering
Chuck Tanner, manager "''- ,,. ,o li c: h al so VL as over- .
the Chicago White Sox, and f.Xnvcring as he stopp ed the ·
Frank Quilici, manager of the 1'\ew York Ya nkee!'i 011 six

Chevelle 2 dr . H. T ., S.S ., V.8,
au to., powe r stee ring . Nice 69
model.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC

hander. turned in a one-hitter
as the Minnesota Twins beat

UPI Sports Writer

CEWARD CALVERT, SALESMAN

mond.

Walla ce

·

We are .s till making some great deals on new Buicks,
· Pontiacs. So before you buy any car new or used
check with us.

Columbus , s pent the weekend

Mr . and Mrs. Gale Wa lla ce,
Xenia, nn d Mr s·. Willi a m

day. San Francisco lost 2·1.

$2795
$2295
O"'LY $2295

Cougar XR7, air, vinyl top, low
mileage. Loca l owner . Pric e To
Se ll.

D. D. Cleland, Columbus ,

and Mrs. Dav id Elkins
and duugh(ers have m oved to
Tuppers Plain s.

$3 2 9 5

Exc . 9 Pass . Wagon, ai r cond ., all white wi th wood
grain on sides, one owner·. Take your family on
vacation in thi s n ice wagon .

Hcccnt visitors of Mr. and

even ing at

CI"'LY

with the Wes tern Pil·ision
leading Cincinnati Reds.
~ames will be pla)·ed
tomght, Saturday, Sunday
and Monday, Memorial Da.}'.
The Reds were idle Thurs-

Catalina -4 dr . H. T .. s~ougham, green w ith green
viny l top, air , tape player . One of the n icest 71's in
the va ll ey . Pr ice To Sell.

Weber .

Saturday

CINCINNATI !U PI ) _

The Chicago Cubs are in
town for a werkeud series

•199 5 ·
$439 5

Grandville '1 Dr . H. T.. AM&amp;F M tape, power win ·
dows , air . Local one owner. Re al sharp . O:\ILY

weckeml ~ue st s of Mrs . Jessie

Qpa l

O.'JL y

Prhc only 12,624 m iles . Only 10 months o ld .
Just ltke new .

Housh .

the

th i5 c~ r 11 months ago . Real nice

little wagon .

By Cli.tricc Alle n

Tuppers
P la ins, .spen t Monday with
Mrs. Roy Christy.
Mr. J . L. Ha wk 'is a medical
NOT ICE OF APPO INT MENT
· Ca!&gt;l! No , 20,937 patient at H olze r Medical
E statl!of All e n C. BREWER , Center and Mr . P . F. Koblentz

9f .

,_Ne VES. 8.00 P.M.
P0ME: ROY, OHIO

WANTED

News Notes

with

ood cops 11th;
Idle Reds in first

PH. 992-2174

500 E. MAIN

For

50 For d % ton Flat Bed

' '

E .- SPE NCER
Clerk of the Ccurt
of Com.mon Pl eas
of M eigs Counly , Oh1 0
( 5 ) f I. 18 , 2 'i , 3t c

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

Real Estate ·.For Sale

64
(14
63
62

PH . 985 .qJOO
Lo cal c"cl on 51. Ri. 7

L ARI~Y

3 - The Daily Sentinel, ~llddleport-Pomerol, Q., Ma) 25, 1913

Chester
'

In fhc Court of Common Pl e a s.
Mc1q s County , Oh10

69 AMBASS ADOR 4 OR .......... '995

''

LEGAl NOTit;E
The under~. qned wdl sell at
publtc ~ a le t or c ash the
tpllowinq motor vf'h i&lt;.: tt' to the
h1qhest b •dder at 11me o t sale
1970 Plvmoulh GTX 1-Vr ~e r
No RSH UOG 158717
Thf&gt; &lt;,&lt;th· wtl! be held at the R
H J).:lwhnr1-s Son'&gt; Co. a8 S
..,ccon d 'l trPt" L M tddlcporL Oh10
a t 1 uO !) m on thP 2nd day of
Junt· I'H J
Tht" vndf&gt; rS tqnf&gt;d reser ves the
nqht to l!td
R H Rawlings Sons Co
MtdCWeport. OhtO
l~ l H ,27, 19, J tc

think Fury wou ld co me ou l o n top. To begin w ith . the .
new Fu ry is big, beau tiful and well buil l. S pe cia lly dressed up with a

The
MEIGS INN

. CHECK OUR

:~~~~~~~.~~a~~tallic paWinl, darketan
more ... and

Pomeroy, 0.
992-3629

NOW!

-:
-:

MAKE

RESE~~~;IONS

.. .
"

THE MEJGS 1.\N WILL BE
CLOSED \1Ei\JOKIAL IH' . \10\DA'. ~lA'
.. .:.:

.:.:

:m

EARLY

I·

struction , Torsion~ Ou let Ride and
elec tronic ignition-all s tan dard . And
t ~e price is right. We welcome lh e
opportunity to shaw you how spec ial ou r
Plymout.h Fu ry Special real ly fs ..

Alll"tiORilED OEAU: R

.1:

:~ ·
:·
'

you 've

gol Fury Special. Wilh
Fury , you al,sa get unibody co n -

,,•''

"

....

·parchment vinyl ro o f and matc h ing
tapest ry c lo th -a nd -vin yl interior trim ,

'I

~
. . CHRYSLER
"A_'
f MOTIJIIB CO~PO!jAIION

way
you
want.
we
IC

ome
•t
I

e

1111\\SJJII

Plymoutfi

PAA

TOM RUE MOTORS 399 South 3rd Ave., Middleport, 0.

' '
!

''

�Janwf.. W. Ogdin State track, golf,

died on Friday
W

.J;•mt·s

Ogdul ,

78,

l'lh.J ~Jnt H1d~t', Pomcruy, d1cd

1-1 adu} ruhrmng ett Ve~A:rans
,\1t•UII!I'Utl Jl u'l pil&lt;JI
A ft•J filL' I 1es1clcnt uf Salem
'J In\ n-,hqJ, M1 (J ~ dln wet s
IJI't!U..'dcd 10 death by h1s
. pa 1t&gt;fll::i, Nuah an d M1tt1e

Stt cl-'! Ogtlw; two SJ,stcrs !\uta

OL:tl!n ;nul C'i.l rne

The 1972-'73 Kinderg11rten clJI.~.~ tlwt "gr11dw1ted" Thursd11y evening at MiddiPtmrt
with "IJ11chelor of llhyme" degrees. See .~tory mul otlwr pieturl'.~ 011 tmgt' I.

Dairy

Meigs 4-H Clul; ,Vews

(Conotnued from page I )

The Me~gs County Shepherds
Pnnress Is selected.
She must present a doctor 's 4.H Club met May 22 at the
&lt;.:erllficate stating she IS in Meags County Extensll(ln Ofr~e c
w1th 10 members and the &lt;.~d~
good health
She must, tf under 21 years of v1sor, Joyce CoUey, prese nt
age, present a
signed MisS Coffey gave a specaal
statement of consent from report on lamb weaghts. "I he
h~r par~nts or guardmn to club members also discussed
the 4·H sponsored bOtil 1.:1 u1se
enter the contest.
do,
.. n the OhiO River on the
She must be a restdent of the
"Chaperone ''
State of Ohto
Randy Johnson and Blair
Professwnal models are not
Wmd on led a game of lag
ehg1ble
Refreshments
we1e served by
The
Amen ca n
Da1ry
Assocmtmn of Ohw, Inc , 1s the Bla1r Windon and llrwn
sponsor of the state contest Wmdon The next meetmg wtll
wh1ch wlil be held at the Fort be June 19 Spce~al plans for
Hayes Hotel tn Columbus on Uus meetmg mclude shea rrng
lambs and showmanship
June 28 and 29
It 1s emphasized that the pract1cc - Grant Johnson
THE STIVERSV I LLE
contes t IS open to all g1rls who
are h1gh school graduates up to St&gt;tchers met May 21 at the
home of 1\da V&lt;Jn Meter With
age 25 as of June l
seven members and two advisors, Ada Var. Meter and
Lomse Gluesencamp, present
Members d1scussed their
proJects and 4·H camp A
For All Occasions
proJeCt lesson on cuttmg out
Jumpers
was given.
We Wtre Flowers
Everywhere
A health report on unpm tant

FLOWERS

foods

992-2039

W(;IS

gtven b)' Nicki Van

Meter. Melinda Dall) gave a
report on w hat to do rn
case of an emergency
Alic1a Evans led the club m a
" Wh at you Wea r 11 game
Refreshmdnts were se rved by
Lou1se Gluesencamp and Ni(~ k1
Van Meter The next meetmg
Will be May 31 - F:lmne
Lehew.
THE DANV ILLE Shamrocks
met May 13 at the home of Mt&gt;.
James Kunath w1th two acl.
vtsors and 1:~ members
present. Tmnmy Kunath ga ve
a demonstration on cooktng
Ma rk McGutrc gave n
demonstration on rope
M1ke McG mre led the cl ub m
a "Peanut Ptck Up" ga me
Refreshmenlc;; were served by
Teresa Fetty The next
meetmg: \H II be May 31 at t ue
home of Mrs James K une~th.
Spec1al plans are for a fte ld tnp
for June 1 - Shirley Sm1th
THE EAGER Beavers HI
safety

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs Millard Van Meter
Ph 992-2039
Ph. 992-5721

Tuppers Plains

Club met Apr 1124 and May 21 at
the home of Hrcnda Donohue
Advi:wr s a ttendmg were
Brcnd(j Donohue and Amanda
l.ce There were four members
p1csen l at the Apnl meetmg
and f1vc at the May rneetmg
The m~mber s discu ssed
purchil stng e~ flag set and
hdvmg a parents mght Brenda
D0nol1u c gave a demonstuttJon
on pulling threads
Sheila Bmg was m charge of
recreatwn Refreshments were
SC Ived by Belinda Whittington
ami I . md&lt;.~ Donohue - Brenda
WJlh::tms
'I HE org&lt;JmzatJOnal mectmg
of lhe Tuppers Platns 4-II G1rls
~as May 22 at the home of Rose
Can wtth five advtsors and 14
members present
Off1ccrs elected were presIdent, Cmtly Rltc hiC , v1ce
pr cstdcnt , Teresa Carr,
sc c1 ~ tary , Milrcia Carr,
treasurer, Soma Carr ; news
reporte r , 8 1enda Frecker ,
rcc1catto n leade rs, Patty
Edwt.~rds, Con me Stout, and
P,1ula L1fe . Health Chatrmen,
Sarah Goebe l and Beth
Headley, and Safely Chmrmen , Kila Young mtd Ahce
H1tc lm~
Members discussed the
proJeCt." they would take and
set dates for thc1r mectmgs
PcJtly Edwards, Conme Stout,
and Pau la Life led the club
members tn a ga me of lag.
Refresh men ts we re se rved
by Con mc Stout and Beth
H1tch tc - Brenda Frecker
Mit. FOX DIES

Sncicty News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Mr and Mr s. Drnsmore
Boyles returned home from a
t\l.o week 's vistt with hts sister,
Mrs. Okey Evans and frtends
at Grand Blanc, M1ch1gan.
Mr and Mrs. Robert Hal sey
of Dayton spent a recent
Saturday evcmng w1th hts
parents, Mr and Mrs Fon
Halsey.
Those vtsiting Mr. and Mrs .
Thurman Babcock Sunday
were Mr Btll Kreamer and
daughter Nancy, and Mr and
Mrs Earnest Hes kett of
Columbus, Rev •nd Mrs. Bob
Wyatt of Parkersburg, Mr and
Mrs Ronald Osborn of Long
Bottcm, Mrs Joe Conley and
grandson of Heedsvlile, Rt t
Berry Halsey of Cleveland
talked by telephone to hiS
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs
Fon Hulsey Mother's Day
Harold Barnheart 1s a
medtcal patient at St Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg
Mr and Mrs. J1mnne Harns
of Dayton and h1s mother, Mrs
Helen Harrls of Great Bend,
Ohto, called on Mr. and Mrs
Clarence Nichol~ Saturday
even mg
Mrs
Myrtle
Boggess
returned home after a two
week's VISit w1th her daughter,
Mr and Mrs. Garland Brannon
of Brtdgcport, Ohio
Mr and Mrs Clare nce
Ntchols visited the1r daughter,
Mrs Man um Hendershot and
family of Lancaster Tue~&gt;day.
Cla1r Newell of Columbus
spent from Fnday till Sunday
here with h1s mother, Mt s
Jess1e Newell
A good man} from here
&lt;.~ttcndcd the commencement
at Eastem Sunday evemng

CLIFTON , W Va - Ray
Fox of Cilf ton d1ed lilts mormug at the Holze r Med ical
Center followmg o several
months 11lness Among the
survrvors IS h1s w1fe, Edith
Darst Fox, p1estdent of the
Mason Cou nty Homemakers
Council '!'lie body IS at the
MEN CHARGED
Fogleso ng Funeral Home
TOLEDO ( UPI I - Two local
where anangeme nl_c; &lt;1re he m ~
men were charged Thursday
c.;o mpletcd
with ftrst degree murder of an
81-yea ro{)ld woman and he1 69yea ro{)!d bt other
Orr&lt; ICES TO CLOSE
Charged were Carl Kyser. 27.
The Mcddleport Mayor's
and Bernat d Be1ry, 20 They
ufftcc and the boilrd of public
·were served the warrants m
a rf&lt;lll S w111 be closed Monday
Jai l here, where they are bemg
held on other charges
Martha McCluskey died of a
YOU ARE WELCOME
AT
broken neck m a robbery attempt Monday and her brother.
St. l'aul
Clyde Wyer. was shot to death

SERVICE."; MONDAY
1 D
Mernone~
ay serv1ces at
Bur IJn gham wi ll be held at 1·30
pm
Monda y
at
the
ARTHUR C LUND, Pastor
Bmluwham Church with the
Cor. 2nd St &amp; Sycamol'e
o
Pomeroy
Rev Freeland Norr iS as guest
..._ _ _,;.;;,;,;,;;;.;;,;..,_ __. spe&lt;1ke r and spec ml smgmg by
the Norns Quartet M1htary
ntes w1 ll be conducted by
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
M ..... on w v.1
American Legton, Midd leport,
A (.H ioon Nrqhlly
and the Jumor Modern
Woodman There will be a fla g
Tontght, Mny 25
parade to th e cemetery
Double Feature Program
foll oY.ed by decorating the
Alfred Httchcock 's
graves
FRENZ Y
(Color)

MASON DRIVE-IN

Jon Fmch

Alec McCowen
( R)

- PlusYO U' LL LIKE MY
MOTHER

(Color)
Patty Duke
R1chard Thomas

lPG)

pome•ov
•ulland

pomeroy
national
bank

(Color)
L1nd.:~

the century
1872

Mrs
Pht l&lt;lrhcc T Wh1te, 711 Gt ec 11
\\ CIS

St , M.u icU.t.t

Veras
(GPI

FDIC

We Will Not Transact

DANCE SET
RACINE - The dance of the
Racme Htgh School Alumm
Assn IS open to the public and
wtll begtn at 9:30 p.tn
Saturday tn the lu gh school
gymnastum wtth dW ater
Wh eel" out of Kentucky
pt OVIdtng ffiUS IC

Monday, May 28, Memorial Day

Bexley are the favorites 10
l&lt;!n ms. Base ball fmals will be
next weekend

f UUSUJ ')

Ftme r·c~t scrvites

will be he ld
rtl '!. p n1 Sundar at the Ewing
I Ulll'l al !lome wrth the Hev
(1•1 d WiSP offrclah ng Fnends
maJ 1.Jl! &lt;:~t the func1 al home
.tfh r , ! wught.

I \I IIOSPIT t\L

MAN JAILED
Meigs County Prosecutmg
Atlorney, Bernard Fultz, said
today James Morton Tttus,
Pomeroy, on convJCtwn of
possess1on of mariJuana was
sentenced last Saturday to 15
days tn Meigs County Ja1l by
Common Pleas Judge John C.
Ba&lt;.:on and fmed $100 m costs .

\111:-.. Wd iJ am J~c obs, Mason~
W V:t , 1', u ::;urg 1cal pallent at
tile f'l cas:u1t V&lt;J!Icy Hosp1tal
LOCAL TEMPS
f11•1' 1'011/ll 11Urli!Jcr IS 102 MIS
The temperature m downJu LtJ h:-, \\US tr.m:;purted to the
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
11usp t4d by the Masun E-R Fnday was G7 degrees under
:-.quwl
cloudy sktes

-~!-".:
j;'~;&gt;.

Southeast Ohio's Emerge!lC)I
Medtcal Service wtll soon bf
operahng tn Meigs County. •
Announcement was madi
today by the EMS that the
vehtcles to be stahoned uj
Pomeroy w11l soon be placed al
that station ready for service!
The Pomeroy vehicles will h4
located at the garage of tlli
Ewtng Funeral Home witli
squad quarters nearby . F~ ~
•
ernergency
medical'
i&lt;!chmctans will be hired (4.
man the Pomeroy station. :•
Classes have been colmp,Jet~ .::
m the past few weeks
Pomeroy and Racine and wUl~ ' ,..
be completed in Rutland
early summer.
The 60-hour trammg
IS taught by a state
instructor and includes
procedure as closed
heart massage, control
bleedtng and extens1ve hatm;:~~;~
hng of troma victims.
Btds will be taken June 14 for•:-:,·
the new Pomeroy EMS
bulance Statwn whtch will
located adJacent to
Memortal Hosp1tal.

Sun . Mon , Tue
May 27 28 29
"THE YOUNG
GRADUATES "

Pain era Wymer
I Raled PG)

- PiusIt s .:~ lam fly aHa1r
She
for &lt;.ed her husband's son to
r'm11 111 t the ultrmate s1n
( Rilh:d R)

MElGS THEATRE
TonrgnT, )dl

b. ..

un

May '25 26 27

(Techmcolor I
GoldLe Hawn

Eileen Hecka rt

Adults s 1 50
Children 75c
Show StJrts 7 P "1

1i:,'{.

;:i;!f.

't!l

~;l!;!

'&lt;·x
:::?:~:

:?::!:

n~

~EW YORK ( UP[)- An open letter
belteved t~ be from Jane Alpert, a
young radical who JUmped bali and
went underground three years ago
after pleading gullty to bombing
conspiracy charges, denounces her
1
rna e counterparts on the left and
urges women to Untte agatnst sexist

!~1 op~:~s:~ge document descrt'bes her

;~!;!i..
......

::::r.::
·:·::;:·:
:;::.::;
......::

:~:::-.

ml:

~;~;~~

!l!l l ·
:;:~;:,

l!l:l:l
;:;:;:;:
........
::::::::

:;:;:;:;

~====~

l!lt
!lfl

The letter mentions an underground
" Weatherman Central Committee,
three of which are men ." It crttictzes
one of Ute three, Bill Ayers, for hts
"generally ftckle " attitude toward
........ several of the revolutionary bombers women and hts "callous treatment ·.·:·.··

~~~:: ;~~~~ ;~~~%~:d~!~~~~~:~;

and

Mass, dinner will
~ark anniversary

:;:;:;:;

days before her scheduled sentencing.
FBI sources say that concerted efforls ;:;:;:;:
wanderings as a fug11lve 1n the Uruted by investigators to locate her have
~:;::: States and her conversion from the fatled.
;:::::::

:#:·
#i

~~n~~~~n!~ ~a~~a~ Oughton, !!!f:!.l

J~~:l~~~~;~~l~~i~~l~~l~l;m~~l~~~~lt~~;lf:;gf@f;j;j;;:~i:i:~:I:!:~:E:~:~f:i!i!;~:i:i:i;i:~:~:~:l:l:!:~~:~:i:i:;:~:~:~:;:;:!:~:i:l:i;J:i:i:i:l:~:;:j:j:f:~:~:i:j:j:ljl:!;l:~i~ijiji!il;ij~jf

Weather

BY JO ELLEN DIEHL
congregation . Maners who were not
POMEROY - The partsh of Sacred worktng dunng the summer o( 1898
Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy ts donated the1r labor during the day •nd
celebrating the 75th anniversary of the busmessmen of the pansh worked m the
butlding of the church with a special Mass evenings
at 4 p.m. today followed by a potluck
dtnner for the congregation.
The cor nerstone of the new Sacred
The partsh is acutally 124 years old, Heart Church was la1d Sunday, May 22,
but the heaultful Gothic style church 1898, by the Most Rev. John A. Watterson,
wasn't built untill898. The original church B1shop of Columbus. The butldtng was
of wood was located tn the same location completed the following year and was
as the present one on Mulberry Ave. In dedtcaled by Monsignor Specht, ad1889 Fr. P. T. Thurhetmer and Fr. ministrator of the Daocesc of Colwnbus, on
Schnetder hegan urging the pansh a new Nov . ;, 1899 The ent1re cost of the church
church was needed .
mcluding new altars, p1pe organ and pew~
Plans were drawn up by Fred Heer, was about $42,000
architect of Dubuque, Iowa, to build the
The present pastor of Sacred Heart IS
church of native sandstone. Work was Rev Fr Bernard KraCJOVtc who was
done on the building by members of the mstalled m September or 1969

tmts
30 PAGES

VOl. E NO. 17

THREE SECTIONS
Pomeroy-Middleport

GALLIPOLIS - A Commumty
Recreation Center for Gallia Cou nty is
back after two yea rs in the ltmehght
today.
The past two years have been used for
fact -findm g by the Galhpohs area
Jaycees. who made orlgmal proposal in
1971
A Commumty Center Board of Gallta
County, broadly based to constst of 16
members, has been formed to further the
Commumty Ce nter project started by the
Jaycees several years ago. Too, additiOnal
acttvities have been proposed
Meeting at Grace United Methodist
Church, Marshall Kimmel, a member of
the Jaycees, acted as chairman.
Not only is the comnuttee hopmg to get
the Comrnumty Center off the ground , it
also hopes to have two satellite centers tn
outlymg areas r.e mam center would !Je
cen trally located m Gallia Co un ty.
Kimmel discussed in detail a positton
statement, prepared by the Jaycee•. It

FULL or TWIN
BED SIZE

SALE 169.95
FOR E ITH ER
BOX SPR IN GS
orMATTR~SS

Ce i &gt;Jxe

MR. AND MRS. HAFFELT

K tn g
F rrm

Bcc'luldul
ri'lyon
cov er. qullt eU to lf' tl

Haffelts
take home

for co mfort
Com
for tcx cu shronrng tor
ext ra support San 1

Seal trca led aga1 ns. l
mild ew odor &lt;1 nd
ba ctena S1m GuMd ,
too

to

firm

(1 nd

keep edges

SUNDAY, MAY 27, 1973

OU theater
approved
by Rotary

SALE $59.95
FOR EITH ER
BOX SPR IN GS

or MATTRESS

··-··-··-·----·-··--·-··Slumber Kmg Delux e Queen SIZe Sets
Mallress and Box Spnngs
1169.95
SALE
............... -...--...._...-............,.._.
.. __ ..._...._..._..._..
REG $199.95

.._..._..,.__.._

SIMMONS
AUTHORIZED CLEARANCE !

Beautyrest Capri

Last chance to
buy Beautyrest
at
s899s,

While our present mventory lasts onlyl Ristng costs
force discontinuance. but you sttll get exclusive
Beoulyresl separate cot I conslruclton and comfort,
JUS! as tn higher pnced models. Don't miss th1s lost
chance to buy a Beoulyrest for $89 95.
Twrn mattress or matching foundotron
Super srze a!so ova!lob!e

There's a comp lete selection of allnzes tn box: sprmgs and
mattresses on Elberfelds Jrd floor

Be sure to see all the ot her hne fur01ture on sa le 'on
Elbc-rft::lds 3rd floo r - bedroom suttes. hvtng room suites
dmett e sets - tab les . chatrs . pictures . lamps and many
other fin e rtems - a ll we ll known makes.
Vt stt Etbcrfelds Warehouse on Mec hanic Street - porch,
lawn or patto furniture All at sale prrces. Whtrlpool
Washers Dryers Relngerators Freezers - Magtc Chef
Gas and Elec tnc Ranges Metal Wardrobes and Cabinets
Carpetmg and Lmoleum - Carpets, Rugs and all accessones for tnsta llmg . Lawn Mowers

ltsls pubhc and prival&lt;! recreatiOnal
factlitres available m Gallia County, and
potnts out the d1re need for additional
factlrhes, both mdoor and outdoor
Corrunitteemen expect federal fund s will
he available for the proJects
The growth potential of Gallta County
was also dtscussed and it was potnl&lt;!d out
that the population mcrease due to Ohto
Electric's Gavm Plant and Ohio Power's
Metgs Mine and related bustness and jobs
created by these proJeCts and other m-

Services Monday in
city's public square
GALLIPOLIS - Galhpoli's will honor
tts war dead durmg Memorial Day serVICes Monday in the Public Square and at
Pine Street Cemetery Serv1ces m the
Public Square will begin at 9 a.m R"''·
Charles Lusher wtll he the speaker.

Buy mens and boys wear on the l sl lloor during our big sale- slacks - shirts · ,
•work c loth es soc l&lt;s Now IS !he perfect ttme to buy what you need - you ' ll really
On the 2nd floor save on ladies dresses . sport swear · coordinate sportswear s lacks - tean s s horts· womens uniforms- smoc ks and angel tops .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

dustnal developments here demands
unmediale attention To p1·ovtdc adequate
recreatwnal factht1es, several cha nges
and improvements requinng t·onsiderablc
plannmg must be made
Vanous types or facl1 1ttes were
discussed, mcludmg multi-purpose
gy mn astu m ; outdoor spurts: tennis
courts, swurumn g, tce skatmg ; lnke
tra1ls, da y-care facthties; rnectmg and
banq uet room s and youth oriented
restaurants
Day-ct.~re centers, which pluy an
Important role 1n the workmg mothet s'
career, are non..existcnt in the county .
Jerry Barnes, speakmg m behalf 'of the
Gallra County Welfare DcparhnerJt, scud
''We are very mtcrCsted m day-care
centers whwh m ma ny cases is the
detcrmmin g factor m the ADC rec1p1ent
mothers avai laluhty to work or attend a
training school "
In dtscussmg what fa cJIItJes should be
made ava ilable to the public, Gat·y Bane,
Ga lha County Probatwn Officer, sa1d
" I feel that we should let the chtldren

Followmg park serv1ces, the Galha
Acadern¥ Htgh School Band, under the
d1rectwn of Charles Rowe, will lead the
annual march to Pme Street Cemetery.
Services there will begin at 10 a.m
Dean Hmkle, Chief of Staff. Veterans
of Fore1gn Wars Department, State o£
POMEROY - Everythmg, even the
Ohio, wtll be the mam speaker .
frogs, a rc rc~::~dy for the Nmth Annual B1g
Bend Regatta at Pomeroy - Middleport

20 CENTS

tell us what they want In my assocrt:~tJon
with the youth of the area,! fmd that they
are qutlc capi:.ible of making dectsJons and
workmg and playmg together wtthout
excessive Interference from adults ."
The old ctty dump on Texas Rd. wluch
contatns 22 acres, was considered as a
feas 1ble localion for the mam center due
especially to 1ts clay base compositiOn
win ch IS needed for a sw1mmmg pool A
new structure, SUitable for whatevet·
f&lt;Jctlittes arc dec1dcd upon, cmt ulso be
built Uwrc.
Vmlon and Crown Ctty were con.
stdercd a::; posstble" sites for satellite
centers
Speakm.I:: fur Vmton , its Mayor Ludcna
Stollrngs mentioned some of U1e fac1htws
the vlll~gc presently has avallable She
s.aid, "Srncc we huve the second larg-est
school distrt ct rn the co unty and stnce Jt 1s
prcdJCted thHl the Vmton-Chcshtre areu
w1l l be uffccted most by ~ th'e populatwn
boom , I believe tlli:lt nwny peo ple could
benefit from u satelli te center 111 Vinton "
It shou ld be puir1lcd out that nearby

Athens now has a new $360,000 temperature - co ntr olled Olymptc-stze
sw1mmmg pool, a new baseball diamond,
seve n soltball dmmonds s1de-by&lt;nde, and
Lake Snowden. All that has been accomphshed dunng the past three yea rs.
Ironton, with an a lready outstandmg
recreahon program, approved a levy
dunng the recent May pnmary to further
tmprovc programs m that Lawrence
County commuruty.
The board decided that a more
complete data survey should be made and
that a study on the !eas1b11ity of a park
commtssion be considered.
Interested uxhv1duals and groups are
as ked to submll their 1deas a nd
suggestions for the center to ''In terest,'' P .
0 Box 60, Gall1polts .
AHendtng were Marshall Kimmel, Dr
Wtllwm Thomas, J Michael Neal, Phillip
Lane, Gene Armstrong, Mr and Mrs.
(;ary Bane, Jeuy Barnes, James Beverly,
Ludena Stollmgs, Ann .Jenki ns , Bill
Parsons, Constance Wells and James
Bogan

Boat racing tops Regatta card

MIDDLEPORT - Appearance of a
GALLIPOLIS - Atty. Thomas S
Ohw
Umvers1ty theater group m Me~gs
Moulton, president of the Galli• County
Children's Services lloard, announced County this summer will be co"5ponsored
Saturday that Mr. and Mrs. John Haffelt, by the Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary Club
Lower River Rd ., Ga lhpohs, have been w1th other area se rvice orgamzations.
Rotary's board of dtrectors Friday
appointed superintendent and matron of
evemng
followmg dm ner and a regular
the Galila County Children 's Home.
The Haffelts succeed Mr. and Mrs. mee tm g at Heath Umted Methodl5t
Jim Smgleton, who res1gned the posts Church. approved the theater proposal
wh1ch has been made by Rotanan Rober t
earlier this sprmg.
Mr. Haffelt is a 1957 graduate of Buck
Paul Smart, rettred banker, m inMercerville High School. He has been
engaged in the carpeti ng busmess the past formal remarks to the membershtp urged
16 years. He worked at Goodyear for seven personal redediCatiOn to the spmt of
years. For the past three years, he was Memonal D•y when the dead of all wars
manager of carpetmg at Larry's Waystde a re remembered
"Patn ot1sm, " said Smart, "1s another
Store m Gallipolis.
word
for thankfulness. I'm thankful to my
Mr. Haffelt was an outstandmg track
athlete In htgh school He has had special ~oun try ''
He also suggested a nat ion that comes
training m several f1elds, mcluding the
to
ignore
the men and women who gave
operahon of heavy eqwpment.
Mr. Haffelt's wtfe is the former Judy their hves [or It IS In "real trouble." '
In another segment of the program,
Eggleton of Bidwell. The Haffelts have two
the Rotary quartet of Cash Bahr, Bob
children, Mark, 12, and Chn st me , 8.
Bumgarner, Vernon Weber and Chet
Tannehill sang several selections.
Pres ident Gene Riggs prestded.
l.adies of the church prepared and served
dmner

.June 15-16-17
group, stressed that the feature events of
Ja ck Kerr, President of the Pomeroy Lhc three-day celebration Wi ll be power
Chmnbrr of Commer&lt;.:e, lhe sponsor.®at racing on the Ohio River at the Big
• Bend of the Ohw Rtver wh1ch swtngs both
north and south u1 the Pomeroy - Mlddlep ot t~:~rea. The I..or am Power Boat Assn.
Will provide the boats
The celebratiOn gets underway at 6
p tl1 , Frtday With th e Regatta Parade
\\ hlch moves conttnuo usly from Middleport to Pomeroy Floats will be preGALLJPOLIS - We a re assembled &lt;:~t c..&gt;emctenes today tu commemorate UUH
Judged th1s year so trophres and pr1zes can
HONORED DEAD
be handed out as the parade moves
This bne( moment of retreat from a busy work-a-day world IS ~yrnbo li c of ou1
lhrough
Pomeroy.
respect and the sptrtt of comradeship we have for all th e depa rted h1 ollwrs and sons
Headlining the Saturday aclivllles
and fri ends who were our n;;~tion's defenders
wil
l
be the National Frog Jumping
Th ese hono red dead fought the cnenues who sought to destroy our fr eedom They
Conl&lt;!st, sponsored by the Ohio Society
helped wm the victones.
for th e Promotion of Bullfrogs, Inc .
And tod;;~y we, the li vmg, are everlaslingly mdebted to them, for we are the
Entries are open to ,the world with the
mh erttors or the tugh Ideals wh1 ch they defended , Bml for wh1ch nwny dJCd
1
contest getting underway at 4 p.m.
Who were these men EC~ch of us c.:an identtfy some of them as persona 1
Saturday.
The climax will be the annual
acquaintances But het ewe are not so t•oncern ed WJth the na me of md!vHJuttls nor of
their sta tus m hfe
Frog Ball at 9:30 p.m. In the Pomeroy
Junior
High School.
''1n the democracy of thedec1d all men at least are equal There 1s ne1the1 rr.mk nr
station nor prerogative m the Republic o( the Grave "
Other events on the Friday schedule
mclude
the Home Talent Show at the
•rtJCJt IS so true. The only thmg 1mport&lt;1nt to us 1s that dll ou r honored dead were
Mtddleport Jumor High School w1th the
loyal and brave. 'l'hey were our flesh and blood They lert their homes, therr loved
crowmng
of the 1973 Big Bend Regatta
ones to answer our nation 's need They were the Pt otestant and the Catholi cs of our
Queen and the teenage dance sponsored by
land. They were the Gentiles and Jews, the wh1te and the black, the n&lt;.~ttve sons und
the foreign born
the Amencan Legion in Pomeroy.
Saturday's special events will mclude
They were the n ch, the poor, the educated and the untutored But all those thf~
a garden tractor pulhng contest, youth bait
ferenccs mattered' not one wh1t because, foremost, they were AMERJCAJ.'J'S and thcv
fou ght shoulder with us agamst the common foe
castmg derby, spectal regatta flower show
wh1ch wtll ge t underway With Judgtng at 1
The mortal rematns of these loyal and brave defenders are buncd around the
p.m , in the showroom of the Pomeroy
world. They are m Europe, Afr1ca and As1a - m the 1slands of the PacifiC, and
beneath the unmar ked water~ of the seven seCJs
Motor Company. The flower show will be
Our trtbute to the honored dead must not be hm1ted to mere words Deeds \Hil be
open from 1 to 5 p m , both Saturday and
Sunday.
better repayment of the great debts we owe them These brave men belteved m our
way of ltfe. They fought and dLed for thetr conv1ct10ns
A water sk1 show by the Athens Boat
Club 1s sc hedul ed for 12:30 p.m Saturday,
We must ~ot sell them short. We must ca rry on thetr strugg le w1th the UNand
aenal c1rcus by the Ptltsburgh Model
CONQUE1!-ABJ.E DETERMINATION,INTEJ.LIGENCE •nd READINESS to defend
our glonous hentage of freedom
Flym~ Club at 2 p m , and wmdmg up wtth
a
teenage dance Saturdey evemng.
And mscrthed upon the monument we are to make ccmpletc through greater
servtee shouJd be our pledge to prepetua te the htgh tdcals for wluch so many have
Specwl events on Sunday m add11lon to
fought and d1ed , the Ideals so important to all freedom loving people.
the 21 heats of power boat racing, are
Hen tage Sunday sponsored by the Me~gs
That, my friends, can be th e truly noble and pos1t1ve fulfillment of t he prom1se to
HONOR THE DEAD BY HELPING THE LIVl NG And now w1th that task before us,
County Pioneer and H1stoncal Society and
let us seal our pledge with these words of assurance Let us declare to our departed
the Na twnal Balon Twtrhng Open Conl&lt;!st
comrades
at the Me tgs Jumor Htgh School at Middleport
Fear not !hat you have dted m vam ,
A special flea market 1s scheduled for
The torch you gave us, we hold h1gh .
all
three
days of the event. Carmval rtdes,
The task is ours - the goal UNCHANGED
refreshment stands, and other evenls wrU
And freedom's light shall NEVEH DIE
be continuous from Fnday through SunAnd as we gather at these gr&lt;J vcs today let us not be dtvided , but stay strong lJs
day.
former members of these wars be stron g together so that we may help those who
Entnes to any of the events may be
come home tn need The s1ck, the handicapped and all ot hers who come home tn need
made
through the Pomeroy Chamber of ••
of the help whtch we and God alone can provide
Commerce, Bo., 526, or through the &amp;pedal
f L DICkl'Y of Post 4464 V.F W
.chatrman m charge of each event.

Memorial Day Tribute

.

Two begin work

as sheriffs deputies

GALLIPOLIS - Fred Wlison , 460
First Ave ., and Bob Shaw, 603 Fourth Ave.,
Friday began work as deput ies with the
Ga llta County shertff's dept
Wtlson served as a radiO dispatcher
w1th the Galha-Me1gs Post State H1ghway
GALLIPOLIS - Stai&lt;! Auditor Joseph
Patrol prior to becommg a deputx shertff T. Ferguson reported Saturday Ga lha
Shaw is a member of the Gallipolis County received $9,133 35 m general relief
volunteer f1re dept. Both are active m the subsid y for May
Gallia County volunteer emergency squad
Me1gs County has received $3,924 97 as
Deputy shenff Ken Deckard res1gned its share for May tn general rehef subh1s position w1th the department last Sidies
Saturday Deckard IS JOlntng the federal
The subs1dy program is wholly state
ftnanced and ts for the purpose of helpmg
government's dangerous drug dtviswn
to defray the adnunistratJYe and general
rehef costs of the mdiv1dual county
OFFICE TO CLOSE
welfare operations.
It IS tn addttton to federaJ.state
POMEROY - The auto ltcense
regtstrar 's office m · Pomeroy wtll be financed ass istance programs , 'SUCh as Aid
closed all day Monday Jn observance of for Dependent Children, Aged, Dtsa blcd
and Blind.
Memortal Day

Galhpohs-Pumt Pleasant

enter p an revive

sa gtc ss

BED SIZE

Your Invited Guest
Re11ching More
Thmt 12,000
F11milies

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

REG '!.8495

S !unlbL• r

THE HEV FR. BERNARD KRACJOVJC tnspects the cornerstone of Sacred
Heart CH thohc Church m Pomeroy . The date on the cornerstone reads May 22
1898.
.
•

+

Rain hkely today, h1ghs in the
70s. Continued warm, high
humidity Monday. Ftfty percent
chan ce of showers. Htghs
Monday in 70s.

5

s &lt;:~ggrng

l PG)

DOPEY DICKS
J STOOGES

~$

Dcepslec p Su pn:qne
Ext ra Frrm Royon
Satr n cove r qu!IIPd lo
te!t tor co mf or t
Super
f1r m
cushron1ng grves a ll
over suppor t San 1
Sca t treated t'l garn &amp;t
mild ew ba ci Prl a,
and
odor
Slfln
Gu,1rcl
keep
[3,~~~
frrm
,
tr ee s edge~s:~
fro

save

BUTTERF LI ES ARE
FREE •

*~~

f=a

d

MATTRESS SALE

Brit Cosby
Robed Cutp

I PG)

h•e

t::3

y·,
:~{:

ec'

5 25 Jtc

" THE STEPMOTHER "

"Going one step further"

severa l

Watterson favored to wm the
golf li ties. Upper Arhngton and

~:!
.,·::.:

return address. rt bears the inked
signature "Jane L Alpert" and
Carnes fingerprmts enclosed in a
f . . t
bol as verification of its
emtnlS sym
th ' '
au enticlty.
Law enforcement authorities satd
the signature appeared to be genuine.
Miss Alpert lS a Swarthmore honor
graduate who, ltke many other
radicals, turned to terrortsm in the
late 1960s. She pleaded gwlty to
conspiracy to bomb several New York
Ct
l Y government bulldings
In
November, 1969. She was released on
$2(1,000 ball and disappeared several

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM

Auto Sales
67 FORD Custom 4 door stan
ctard sh!lt No rust Phone 99 2
6923

Plus

Doub le Feature Program

Business On

a

:iii!!
···~

ai
m es are
.d
enounce

1

" HI CKEY &amp; BOGGS"

Mtmber

Golf and tenniS cham' i:Jre also to be decided
p10nsh1ps

lfrmm~MM~:i~~~'~{:~::~:i'i'i:~:~:{~:i'i'i'''~'~iWi'it't?Hi~'~f::::;:::t':{~itHiW:mt:itNi~~iiii%f
&gt;i·=&lt; L
them m 1970
.·&gt;:·:·
Church's 75th birthday
~-:=:3
e ft1•St
·
=:==~==
~#
The letter was mailed w news ~N
{:;::::
medta from New York and carried no {:::*
· ·~
;:::j:::

Pomeroy soon

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SABAT A
Lee Van Ct eef

the bonk of
estubl!shed

Saturday
May 26
Double Feature

B lJd l d

crown .

w1fe,

Ogdin ,

untl

favored to wm the Class A

sprmg sports extravaganza
.w1th Upper Arhngton and

brother, Wa y ne, uf G::.dhpoll s,
h \ tJ Il!e&lt;:es, M£uonc Gnff1th,
Punlt·r O)', iJnd Janet J ones,

Columbus,

Louted to wtn the Class AA title
and Loratn Clearv1ew, paced
by speedster Otis Jenktns,

.

•

vehicles in

FULLorTWIN

Worship Serv tce, 10 :30 a m.
Nurse ry Provrded
Sunday School 9 15 a m.
Nursery Adu lt Classes

Don t forge t now

Southern Oh1oans
cleded to two post tlons w1lh
the Oh1o Assocutl!lln of Public
School Employees !OAPSE 1ut
the g r~Jup 's 'l.~rd AnnuHI
Delegate Cunfc l em:e 1c1 cnll}
1n Co lulllhus
Charles M \.ra nt, Ht I.
GallJpoiJ s,
wa s
vo ted
p1 esu.Ient-e led
flf
the
statewide, independen t, employee u r ~;.mlz&lt;.~lwn fCJ J H.17:l-74
He will SUt(CC d to the
pieS!dency the follOW III g j!.'i;ll
Rlcdcd to a lwo·}'l.''-11 te1 1n- .:tS
the OAPSI•, sc,utheasl DIStJltt
1ep1 c:-;e Jt tatJvc tu the St&lt;:~tc

Iu s

Class AAA , LoUISVIlle Aqmnas

ti ns weekend at the annual

p Hli.l fl )' yei:JfS.

SUI V l\'tn ~ ili'C
l:lHIIli:l
Ht• Jbcl

COLUMBUS fUrlJ - The
66th annual State Track meet
opened here today wlth
Cleveland Glenvtlle favored w

1n

Mr Ogdm Y..&lt;tS a f;;t nuer
&amp;Jit·HJ 'I'\\

tennis meets begin

REG$7491

Lutheran Church

Whether 1\ sa Checkmg or Sav rngs Account
f1nanc1al adv1ce or borrow1ng money come to us
You can get them all a1 our bank E;as!ly

LJnu

a brother, Kearney Ogdm.

Gallian tu lwad
slab··~ O.A PSE

Exe~.:utl VC

H ~llnJaY,

Two SEOEMS

Gallia has $9,133,

Meigs just $3,925

MEMORIAL DAY ts a day set aside
to bow a moment over the War dead of
the past It has grown to encompass all
those who made the supreme sacrifice.
The national emblem £lies over lhe1r
graves and they are decorated w1th
blooms A rifle volley rtps out and the
lonely vo1ce of· a bugle sounds "Taps."
1'r1.County area residenls wtll Join the
rest · of the nation m observance of
Memortal D•y Monday (Photo by J.
Sam Nichols IlL)

'

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