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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0., AprilS 111'71

Miller
Will Make

Tuesday

'

By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UP! )- If you
bad to choose one eve~mg thts
televtston season to watch the
home screen, Tuesday mtght

Rounds
WASHINGTON - Mamtainmg a busy schedule during
the Congressional Easter
Recess, Congressman Clarence
E. Wiler
returns
to
Southeastern Ohio this Friday
for a sertes of CIVIC and public
service activities.
On Saturday morning, April
loth, the Congressman will be in
McArthur for an Open Door
Session at the Vmton County
Court House from 10 to 11 a. m.
From McArthur, the Tenth
District lawmaker will travel to
Jackson County, where he will
hold a similar session m the
Civil Service Room at the
Jackson Post Office from I to 2
p. m. The Congressman con·
eludes his Saturday schedule
with an Open Door Session for
Gallia County reSidents in the
Councy Comm1ssioner's Room
at the Gallia County Court
House m Gallipolis from 4 to 5 p.
m.

On Monday, April 12th,
Congressman Miller w11l be m
Athens, where he will address
the noon luncheon meeting of
the Athens Rotary Club.
Tuesday, April 13th, the
Congressman will be in
Cleveland to keynote the
Cleveland Electromc Con·
ference which gets underway
with a luncheon meeting. Later
that afternoon, Miller will meet
with representatives of the Ohio
Chapter of the Nation&amp;;~ League
of Families of Amencan
Prisoners and Mtssing in
Southeast Asia in Cleveland.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Janet Jeffers, Pomeroy;
Milford Wolfe, Racme; Wllda
Brogan, Rutland; James Mays,
Lung Bottom; Kate Loudm,
Cheshire; Elm a Norvell,
Portland; Etotlla Cassell,
Middleport; Lydia Ebersbach,
Pomeroy; Christme Freeman,
Pomeroy; Shawnee Salser,
Pomeroy; Margaret Sauer,
Middleport; Harrison Robmson, Clifton.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Kenneth Hanning, Thomas
Lutheran, Hattie Powell,
Dewey Beegle, Glenora
Swatzel, Elmer Burns, John
Hanning, Milford Mitch, Conme
Roush.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Zueha Smith, Pomeroy;
Kenneth Snider, Pomeroy;
Golda Graham, Rutland; Helen
Bartles, ··syracuse; Danen
Philhps, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Carmel Jewett, Kenneth Hayes,
Edity McCoy, Tony Imboden,
Ralph Smder, Dewey Bentley,
John Ebhn.

TV• . .in Review
'

PIPE ARRIVES - Huge stacks of pipe have become a
typical scene in the Cheshire area smce the announcement
last month 9ll the construction of Ohio Power's $488 million

· New~... in

plant. This p1pe is located just off Rt. 7 near the entrance
to the village.

Briefo

(Contmued from Page I)
overntghl
Amenca has been wrong in the way "she treated the Indtan "'
the poor folks ... the black folks ... and women," he satd, "and
there have been more wrongs m this country tban there bave been
nghts."
"We have to realize that every major problem has been
created by man and 1f we want to solve these problems, man can
do it overnight," he sa1d, "tf he uses ethical statesmanship and
not degenerate pohbcal muscle." Gregory srud the problems
would have to be solved within 25 years to preserve the country.

Nader Attacks Nixon Tax Break
WASHINGTON -RALPH NADER HAS opened a new attack
on a $36.8 billion depreciation tax break for business, wtth support
from two university scholars who allege President Nixon acted
both illegally and decettfully in proposing it. Nixon said m an·
,nouncing the plan Jan. 11 that it wnuld stimulate the
lagging economy, produce new jobs and ultimately generate new
tax revenue as a result of a more vigorous busmess clunate.
Boris I. Bittker, a professor at the Yale Umversity Law
School, satd Nixon acted illegally by ordermg the regulallons
through executive procedm;es. He satd only Congress has
authortty to enact new tax rules. Robert Eisner, a Northwestern
Universtly economics professor, said the admmistrallon
distributed false information about the plan. He srud it wtll reduce
Treasury collections too much for the httle good 11 can be expected to do.

IN BIG CAST - Two Rutland young women, Sheryl
Wolfe, left, and Darlene Kreuzer, were members of the cast
of 300 that presented the nallonally famous Vaud-Villilles in
Columbus' Veterans Memonal Audttonum March 24-25-2&amp;'ll. Center 1s Bob Evans of Gallla County, prestdent of Bob
Evans Farms, lnc., who attended the show with his family
and personally greeted the girls from Me1gs County.

Daley Seems Sure Winner
CHICAGO - RICHARD J. DALEY begins hts last day of
campaigning today m hts bid for an unprecedented ftfth term as
mayor of Chicago with the only real question mark being JUst how
big his victory margin will be.
Daley's opponent, Richard E. Friedman, a Democrat turned
mdependent who 1s running as a Repubhcan, bas clauned
throughout the race that he can unseat the mcumbent, but most
political analysts think the big question is whether Daley can
match his 1967 plurality of 500,000-plus votes.

Overnight Wire

Stab Victim
Questioned

Annett Sheets

Dies Saturday

.

Harry Kimes

Died Sundily

Sidney Wells

Dies Sunday

! A Thought !

!

well be your best chmce.
For on Tuesday, video
watchers w1ll be offered two
ongmal works of surpassmg
10telbgence and audience appeal that would do honor to any
theatncal medium.
One
ts
non-commerctal
televlSlon 's
twohour play by Anthony Terptloff, " Poet Game," presented by the "Hollywood
Televiswn Theatre /' and con-

By United Press lntcmallonal
ROXBURY, CONN. -F'UNERAL servtces for author
Manfred B. Lee, who was half of the team that wrote under the
name "Ellery Queen," will be held here Tuesay,
Lee, 65, dted Friday mght. Lee and hts cousm, Fredenc
Dannay , who hves m Marchmont, N Y , created the mystery
senes more than 40 years ago. They wrote 33 novels under the
WEATHER: EXTENDED _Ellery Queen pseudonym and four under the name Bornaby Ross.
Ohio Extended Weather
SANTIAGO - MARXIST PRESIDENT Salvador Allende 's
Oullook Wednesday Through government coalltion narrowly led oppos1t1on parttes today m
Friday:
nationwtde muntcipal electiOns that apparently gave him a
A chance of snow flurries
personal and pobllcal VIctory in the ftrsl popularity test of hts
The Metgs County Sheriff's
northwest Wednesday and a
radtcal reform pohctes.
Dept. learned Sunday at 11 :43
chance of showers north on
With complete returns from all but SIX of Chtle's 25 provmces
a.m. by phone that a stabbing
Friday. Rather cold Wed·
offictally tabulated before dawn today Allende's five ~toverrunent
had occurred Friday night at
nesday with highs In the 40s
Tuppers Plams and the alleged
and lows In the 20s followed parties held 49.6 per cent of the vote to-48 per cent for the opvichm, Paul Walktns, 52,
by a warming trend. High by position The remainder was accounted for by independent
Coolville, Rt. 2, had been taken
Friday In the 60s and lows In candtdates and void ballots
WASHINGTON - CHRISTINA ANN SCHULER ·of
to St. Joseph Hospttal, the 30s.
Bellefontaine, Ohto, wore a $100,000 pearl studded crown and a
Parkersburg, by Whtle's amrobe ptcked out by Mrs . Theodore Roosevelt, the tradillonal
bulance.
The department nohfted
ratment of the 1971 queen of the Cherry Blossom Festival
Parkersburg pollee and a
The 19-year-old brunette, a radio and televtsion major at
detective from that department
Stephens College m Columbta, Mo , won the honor on the spm of a
Pleasant Valley Hospital
went to the hospital to quesllon
wheel prtor to the weekend fesliVIhes She said she had "really.
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Davtd Watkms.
enjoyed" her week m the nation's cap•lol, topped off by prestding
Workman, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. The stabbmg is reported to
over the tradihonal event.
Bernard Jordan, Gallipohs have happened at the Roland
WASHINGTON - A GROUP OF physicrans and lawyers,
\
Ferry; Davtd Russell, Mason; Dodderer residence in Tuppers
PT PLEASANT - Armett M concerned over the growmg number of malprachce smts, has
Mrs. Frank•e Thornton, Pt Pjams. No charges are to be Sheets, 84, Rutland, formerly of
decrded to draw up gUidelines to cover what doctors must tell
Pleasant; Mrs. William filed, 1t was reported.
Mason County, dted Saturday 10
thetr patients about how they plan to treat them. This decisiOn, 11
Yeager, Mrs. Wilham Chapan Athens, Ohto hospital
was learned today, was the outgrowth of a meetmg last month
man, Apple Grove; Mrs. Claude
followmg a lingenng illness.
attended
by representatives of the American Trial Lawyers
Sines, Pt. Pleasant; Lester
Funeral servtce wtll be conYoung, I'{est Columbia; John
dueled 2:30p.m. Tuesday at Mt. Association and the medical professiOn. The Health, EducatiOn
Bryant, Gallipolis; Mrs John
Umon United MethodiSt and Welfare Departm~nt helped brmg the two groups together.
The 214,QOO.rnember Amencan Medical Associatwn, which 10
Kauff, Clarence Scherman, Pt.
Church, at Pliny, W Va, under
Pleasant; George Wamsley,
direction of the L. G. Mohr the past has Criticized any government mterference m doctorpatient relationships, dtd not attend lh.e meellug and declmed
Henderson; Erlinda Obregon, Harry H. Kimes, 63, Coolvllle Funeral Service.
Pt. Pleasant; Mrs . Nancy Route 2, dted early Sunday at
The Rev . Eugene Underwood comment on it. Dr. Mark Gorney, a plasllc surgeon from San
Woodard, Gallipohs Ferry.
the Selby General Hospttal )II will ofhctale. Burtal m Mt. Francisco who chatred the meeting, satd 17 persons were mDISCHARGES - John Neal, Marietta followmg an extended Umon cemetery.
volved. Medtcal spec1allles represented included anesthesiOlogy,
George Reynolds, Kindall illness.
Mr Sheets was a retired neuro-surgery, ortheopedtcs, obstetricS and gynecology, in adClendemn, Jack Smtth, Mrs. B. Mr Ktmes was born at farmer and a member of the ditwn to general practice.
B Wayan!, Fred Waugh, Mrs. Chester, the son of the late Church of Chrtsl. He was born
Larry Smtih and son and Mrs David and Deha Kidder Kimes. Oct. 1, 1896, m Gallia County
Clarence Barnett.
He was a farmer and a guar- Hts Wife, the forrher Ora
drail construction worker the Ntchols, dted m 1960. Survivors
(Contmued from Page I)
•••••••••••••••• greaterpartofhtshfe.Hewasa are one son, Edward, Nttro;
veteran of World War II, having , three daughters, Mrs. Dale Lee,
it:
11 served in the Army.
Gay, W Va.; Mrs. Herschel Stdney Wells, 72, dted Sunday denotmg payment.
The law requires registratiOn
Precedtng him in death Wears, Rutland, ana Mrs . at his Rutland Route I
of firearms and transfers wJth
i&lt;
Or 0
besides hts parents was a son, Wallace Stahl, Columbus, Ohio; restdence . The Mtddleport
the Treasury secretary. Only a
it: It s not your poSition that it: Chfford, m 1965.
11 grandc~tldren and 15 great- emergency umt '1/)Swered a call
possessor who lawfully makes,
; makes you happy or it: Surviving are hts wife, Mrs. gran,dchlldren.
to the reSidence at 12:27 p.m. manufactures or import;; them
.,. unhappy - 1l' s your 11 ReUia Buchanan Kimes ; two
Friends may · call at the Sunday, but Mr Wells was dead
can and must regts~er.
dosposo t,on
: · sons, Clayton, of Reedsville, Chapman Mortuary, Pt. upon the squad's amval.
- Anonymous +: and Carroll, Long Bottom; two Pleasant, any time.
11
Mr. Wells had worked at the He Idenllfles htmself, deParkersburg Rig and Reel 10 SCribes the firearm and gtves
11
i&lt; daughters, Mrs. Mildred
LODGE TO MEET
11
Yeater, Coolvllle, and Mrs.
Pomeroy unlllit closed several the name and address of the
Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, years ago.
it: Mildred Cox of Little Hocking;
rectpient, whose appllcation
11
i&lt; a stster, Mrs. Els1e Deem .of wtll meet in regular session at SurvlVlng are his wife, Clatr ; must be supported by fmger'Nelsonville, and 11 grand- 7:30p.m. Wednesday. Work wtll a son, Donald, of Reynoldsburg; pnnts and a photograph, plus a
be in the Fellowcraft degree. All two ststers, Mrs. Marwn
-tl
children.
law enforcement official's certiit:
11 Funeral services wtll be held Masons are invtled.
Strickler, Washmgton, and Mrs. ftcale Identifying the material
+:
Fri_d ays On!y
at 2 p.m. 'fitesday at ~e White
Ethel Colhns, Albany; three and statmg that the weapon is
The Dnve-ln Wmdow it: Funeral Home In Coolvill~ with
DINNER AT 6:30
grandchildren, and one great- intended for lawful purposes.
.,.
is Open
it: the Rev Roy Deeter offtciating.
A regular meeting of Mejgs grandchild.
,Only, after the transferer's
-fl
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
-fl Burial wtll be m the Stewart Chapter 53, Disabled American
Funeral servtces will be held receipt of ~he approved apphca:
-(Continuously)
Cemetery near Hockmgport. Veterans wtll be ,held at 6:30 at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the tion form may the transfer be
•
•
: Other Banking Hours 9 to +: Friends may call at the funeral p.m. Thursday at the ball on Martin Funeral Home ui legally made.
Butternut Ave. Dmner will be Rutland with the Rev. Rtchard No information furmshed
+: J and s to 7 as usual on ~ home any time.
+: Fridays.
it:
,
served at 6:30.
Pumphrey offictatmg. Burtal under the act may be used as
wtll be in the Wnght Cemetery. evtdence against a registrant or
Frtends may call at the funeral apphcant in a criminal proceedDOFATOMEET
home any lime after Tuesday ing 10 connection Wlth the
Lodge 323, Daughters
co~
Tonig~:r~~2!uesday . ofChester
afternoon.
records, which are not, as a
Amenca, will meet at 8 p.m.
-,.
_..
WOODSTOCK
mallet·
of adm10istra1ton, avaiTuesdayatthehall.Thecharter
Th e '" C '" m.de ca ncc 1
POMEROY, OHIO
:; ,
"!Technicolor)
+:
Member FDIC
1! Running Time 3 Hrs 10 wtll be draped• and members de,,tlos "duc,l.11gcly In the 1ap- lable to other federal, state or
11
Member Federal
are asked to wear white. Games u1ly 1HC1l\ tsmg 1.1tc or hmg c.m- local agencies, the couvt noted.
11 [n!nutes
:
ReserveSyste~
i!
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
wtll be conducted after the l'' '" Dwp tho '"'~·lf&lt;'ltc hnh•t . But possession of an unregis•
• 111 gcs tlw Am erh\ ln Cam·ct tered firearm is Illegal.
.................... 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~ meeting.
.S&lt;&gt;ucly.

• F

~ight

Firearms

Tube

one another
Telev1suln's drama awards
thts season w11l surely, one
hopes, find no aoh1evemcn'-'
more worthy of hononng than
Mr Terpdoff's ,wnbng, the
act10g of Mr. Hopk10s and M1ss
Wh1telaw, and the drrecttng of
Silvto Nanxzano (" Georgy
Gr~l' ' ). In addition, Tuesday
mghl, there are excellent
supportmg performances tn
"Poet Game" by Susan Clark
as Hopkms' Amertcan mtstress,
Cynl Cusack as his father and
Paul Hennen as h1s son.
If viewers of "Poet Gamen

Better

remember nothing else

season from vtdeo, they
remember, and chertsh,
exqUlstle scene in which
boy, unhappy and yet somehow
qwetly understandmg and
ing hts father, listens as
Hopkins tells him of
youthful dreams, and
happened to them . In
the father is asking the son
to leave home for a
longer, and there is
enormous dtgmty, wtsdom and
honesty m his pleading for the
boy to stay that one cannot fail
to be moved utterly.

Bucks Riddled
By Graduation

cermng a hard-drmkmg, hardhvmg Irish poet who tr~es to
come to terms w1th himself-lis
well as h1s wtfe, mistress, son
and father-lis he stumbles
through an American lecture
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
tour
State football coach Woody
The othe1 is CBS-TV's "A Hayes, who lost 15 senior
conversallon with Lord North," starters last season, opened the
an unscnpted, 1mprov1sed one- team's spring practice today
hour "mtervtew" m which Enc aware of the many gaps to be
Sevareid, as a. " newsman in plugged before the Btg Ten
modern dress, questions the champion Buckeyes begm
costumed Peter Ustmov as the defense of their title.
extraordmanly gtfted actor Twenty practice sessions are
portrays the Br11lsh Pnme sc~eduled, with the traditional
M101ster durmg the Amencan mira-squad game May 8
Revolutl(in, Frederick Lord climaxing the spring workout.
North. Sevarmd and Usl10ov The Bucks open their 1971
simply steeped themselves 10 season the earliest ever, Sept.
the relevant material of the 11 against Iowa here at Ohio
Revolullonary penod, and then Stadium.
went at each other 10 thts first
Co-captain Tom Deleone, a
production of . an occastonal center and John Htcks a
CBS-TV senes, "The American tackle: are the only offen~ive
RevolutiOn: 1770-1783." They ' regulars returning. On defense,
are both splendtd.
· there are five returnees: end
"Poet Game" 1s a play not t6""\
be mtssed. As a dramatic work,
11 1s on a level superwr to
anythmg seen on commercial Harrisonville
televiston this season. In fact,
nothmg nearly as good m vtdeo Society News
drama has been seen smce
Mr and Mrs. Dana Hamng
"The Andersonville Ttial,"
and
Mrs Allee DaviS of
produced by the same "HollyPomeroy were v1si tors of the M
wood Television Theatre "
Done m conJunction wtth the A Epples Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. H D. Gilkey of
Bntlsh Broadcastmg Corp.,
"Poet Game" IS a beautiful Columbus spent Sunday with
play, constructed wtlhout a the Ztba M1dk1ffs and visited
false note, and blessed wtth the Mrs Bertha Hellman at
backbone of a writer's passwn, Veterans Memonal Hospttal.
Mrs Jane Gtlkey of Midconviction and fur~ous talent. In
dleport
spent the weekend with
the tortured poet's dtlemma of
how to set hts hfe m order and her stster-in-law, Ava Gdkey.
Mrs Guy Bohn called on Ava
revtlaltze hts creative JUICes,
Gilkey
recently.
we are earned along wtth h1m
Mrs May Mason and son
m h1s roanng JOurney toward
hberatwn-llnd,remarkably, we visitoo the Johnny Morrises on
too are hberated because of the Sunday to see thetr new
charged honesty of the scnpt lrader
Mrs Nancy Wh1te and son
that streaks along from anger
called
on Mrs John Stout
to compasSIOf\ to black humor
Sunday
and w•l
Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire
Complementmg the scnpt are
spent
Sunday 10 Columbus wtth
two bravura performances 10
the leadmg roles- by Anthony the Robert Gtbsons and the F.
Hopkms as the poet, and Btlhe 0. Whaleys Mrs. Alkire and
Whitelaw as h1s wife. And the Mr Whaley celebrated thetr
marvel of the1r performances IS b~rthdays.
Mrs. Charles Allure , IS ·a
In thetr reahzatwn of the fact
that even though these two patten! at Methodist Hospttal m
people are on the verge of Columbus for a gall bladder
teanng each other to pteces, operatwn .
there 1s absolutely no other Mrs. Bertha Heitman Is m
place they belong except wtlh Veterans Memor~al Hospttal
She has pneumoma
Mrs. Lola Cam IS still confined to Veterans Memortal
RUSSIANS DIE
MOSCOW (UPI )- Two mem- Hosptlal. Members of her
bers of the Sovtet Umon canoe famlly stay wtth her
The M."A Epples are pamtmg
and khayak teams and their
coach d1ed March 31, 11 was and papenng thetr home.
Mr. and Mrs Wtll Clonch
reported Sunday by Sovtetsky
Sport Newspaper. The athletes have moved to thetr home on
were internatiOnal competitors Horner Htll
Mr. and Mrs Clmton Gtlkey
Alexei Gorbachov and Vtklor
Sustretov, and the coach was of Albany VISited the L10coln
Russells and Ava Gilkey
Vlad101rr Lukoyanov.
No details. of thetr deaths Monday evemng Mrs. Russell
IS not so well.
were revealed

Ken Luttner, tackles George
Hassenohrl and Shad
'
linebacker Stan White and
captain Harry Howard
halfback
Hayes IS calling his fre:shm1an~
class the best since 1968
some wtth high potential
elude Elmer Lippert trnm _.
Sandusky, Morris Bradshaw, an
Dlinots all-stater; Je£1 Davis of
Pennsylvania, Rick Gales ' of
Niles, Pat Eggers of Toledo and
Randy Keith of Cincinnati.
Other leading freshmen are .
Dan Scott of Amityville, N.Y.,
Jim Kregel of Toledo, Chuck
Baxter of Painesville, Jobn
Husband. of Elyria and Randy ·
Gradtshe"r of Warren.
Rocco Rtch of Canton, con-:
side red a likely replacement for :
All-American Jim Stillwagon at
middle guard, will miss at least:
part of spring practice. He is ,
recovering from knee surgery."
Hayes is expected to give:
frosh Greg Middleton of tbe ·
state of Delaware a try at tight :
end.

6

Base
(Contmued from Page I)
mst casualties were reported.
Commumst gunners also
downed two U.S. helicopters,
one near Hue 390 miles
northeast of Satgon and the
other near the Mekong Delta
provinctal capttal of Phu Vinh.
One Amertcan was mjured in
the ftrst crash and all four U.S.
crewmen and mne South
Vtelnamese soldiers were killed
in the second
In Cambodia, the high
command satd Commumst
troops htt four government
troop positions Sunday and one
-at Kompong Russey 60 miles
northeast of Phnom Penh-was
abandoned. One of the Commumst attacks was 14 nules from
the capital.
SERVICES SET
Revtval servtces will be held
at the Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church Fnday, Saturday and
Sunday wtlh the Rev. Robert
Stewart, evangelist from Mt.
Vernon, - guest speaker.
Resurrecllon servtces w1ll be
held at 6 a.m. Easter mormng.
Everyone IS welcome.
RAT INVASION
MULHOUSE, France (UPl)A roadstde fire between Metz
and Sarrebourg drove hundJ:eds
of rat;; onto the highway
Sunday. Motonsts on Easter
hobdays complained they could
barely see the road because of
smoke and scurrying rats.

Select ·Your New Lawn Mow·er
At Elberfelds

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Eyebar Failure Caused Fall o Silver Bridge
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A crack m a metal bar so tmy 1!
could not be see_n by the ,eye -and w maccessible that 11 m1ght ,
have def1ed x-ray detectiOn - triggered the collapse of a br!dge
~ver l~e Ohio River wh1ch killed 46 persons, government safety
mvesllgators said today.
In its report on the collapse of the Silver Bridge at Point
Pleasant, W. Va:, on Dec. 15, 1967, the National Transportation
Safety Board said the crack led to the breakmg of a crucial steel
eyebar. When the eyebar broke, the 1,753-foot suspension bndge
plunged mto the river, killing occupants of cars which were lmed
bumper-to-bumper across the span.

The board srud its tests pinpointed the break at the "First
jomt in the north eyebar cbam on the west side of the Ohio tower"
.of the bridge. The eyebars fonned a chain for the brtdge similar to
the more common woven wire cables USed on other suspension
brtdges.

and

Toros.

MEIGS THEATRE .

-·

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

The board sa•d 11 also found "deep rustmg" on some other
parts of the br~dge, but 11 srud ther~ was no indtcation that any of
main br~dge supports had deteriOrated to a pomt where they
would be "madequate to carry" thetr load. But it urged the
government to study the load' capacity of bridges and their life
expectancy
The.board satd the Transportation Department also should
set up a research program to devise techmques to reparr brtdges
damaged by internal flaws, and to identify br~dge matertal that
may be suscepltble to "slow flaws "

Weather

Now You Know

Ram and snow hkely ·today
and tomght south and southeast, chance of snow Wednesda y southeast. Low tomght
25 to 30 north and west and
lower 30s southeast

Metal coms were first used as
legal tender in anctent Asta
Mmor and 10 Ind•a in the later
part of the 7th century, B.C.

Devoted To T1w Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXIII NO. 24q

TEN CENTS

· PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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witches Seats

yse
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Pomeroy counctlman Hob
Hysell resigned his aeat Mon- Gmdo Girolam1, owner of the
day mght when council met in land, s81d the telephone comregular session, to accept pany had agreed to 1mprove and
another on the board of pubhc mamtam the lot A fence wtll be
affa~rs . Hysell's councll term placed .around the area and a
dusk to dawn hght wtll be mexp1res Dec. 31 of thts year
Counctl has 30 days to name a stalled The telephone compl!ny
replacement for Hysell, or agreed to move from the area if
accept an appointment by the council felt it should.
Counctl agreed the ulllity
mayor Hysell replaces James
could
operate the storage site as
Stevenson, who restgned March
8, on the board of pubhc affatrs long as 11 maintamed 11
~
Also meeting wtth council
wh1ch manages the water works
were Ralph Graves and Dan
and sewerage affairs
,,
In other business, council set Whtte in regard to the slreet on
June I as the deadline for local Lmcoln Terrace.
owners of busmess estabhsh- Counctl agreed that the
ment;; m the downtown area to roadway must be Improved;
'
' have 10 process the connectiOn however, 11 1s at a loss how to
~
of 10d1vidual sewers mto the tmprove conditions. The mayor
agreed to mspect the road and
main sewer lme.
I
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In order for the board of try to secure help to remedy the
CO-WINNERs - Howie Caldwell, left, and Dennie Eichinger, right, shared the Most
public affairs to absorb part of S liU~IlOn .
PAYNE EMPLOYED
Valuable Player award Monday night at the Spring Sports Banquet at Eastern High School.
the cost of the work involved,
Center lS head basketball Coach Bill Phillips
, counctl was forced to set a In other busmess counctl
deadline, Payment will be made htred Wayne Payne, as
Pomeroy's new meterman.
on a percentage bas1s.
Some counctl members felt 11 Payne has been employed m the
was unfatr to set a deadline due Middleport pohce department
to the work mvolve&lt;t and and has completed his police
avallabtlily of sktlled workmen trammg. He w1ll begin work
Payne
replaces
BY KATIE CROW
A petitiOn was read by Mayor today.
Athletics is the only place
Charles Legar from residents of metermatd Diana King who
where prejudtce doesn't exist,
Butternut Ave., and Sugar Run resigned several weeks ago.
accordmg
to
Vmcent
areas m regard to the storage , Council was asked to sell the
Chlckerelli , head basketball
yard of the General Telephone village owned lot located above
coach at Capital Umverstty,
Company on Butternut Ave. The the bookmobile on East Mam St.
who spoke to 200 persons at the
pelltion charged the area is a Council agreed to sell the lot
annual Sprmg Sports Banquet
pubhc nmsance as well as and voted to accept sealed bids
which w1ll be opened May 15 at
at Eastern Htgh School Monday
unstghtly.
mght.
Council members said, noon
"Gtve all the LSD you can,"
however, the area had been Councll asked Pollee Chtef
Chtckerelh said, and explamed,
checked and they dtd not feel Jed Webster to change the
"Love, secunty and dtscipline"
telephone poles stored there meters next to the ratlroad
tracks on the nverfront parking
go together. " Nothmg can
posed a hazard.
happen wtlh.out disCipline," he
satd. Other pmnt;; he stressed
were:
"We must teach people how to
hve together in a chnsllan
soctety. Youngsters must have
· COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. Ohto's natural resources belong
a good chnstian foundation.
John J. Gilligan today proposed to all the people - and that
"If you haven't done the best
a 5 per cent severance tax on therefore those who remove
rrunerals whtch would bring 10 those resources ought to pay at
you are capable of doing, you
are not successful. All talent is
an estunated $23 million a year least part of the cost of
wtth the funds going to better repainng any damage they may
God given; be humble, fame is
do to the land 1tself," satd
man given, be thankful "
llle state's environment.
Garry Parsons, master of
Gtlligan satd the tax would be G•lhgan.
5 per cent on the gross markel Gtlligan satd the tdea of a
ceremomes, introduced the
coaches, Dave Chadwell, who
value of all resources except severance tax 1s not new and is
mtroducbd the 1un1or high
timber. He esllmated the tax currently used in 28 states.
would produce revenue of $23
basketball squad; Larry
mtlhon a year wtth $10.6 mtllion
Hemes, freshman basketball
SPECIAL AWARDS - Given special recognition
from coal, $2.4 million from 01!
squad; Bob Ord, reserve
Monday night at th~ spring sports banquet at Eastern High
and gas and $9.9 mtllion from
basketball squad, and Bill
Phtllips the vars1ty
School were, front,! tor, Tom Karr, best defensive player,
other mmerals.
"'rhe use of these funds for
The track team was mand Bob Caldwell, most improved player, and back row,
Ken Insani, head oasketball
troduced by Phtllips and the
Dave smith, four sport letterman; Coach Bill Phillips, and
environme ntal
purposes coach at Lugan Htgh School for
baseball team by Hmes.
Mike Boring, the scholastic award.
recogmzes the basic belief that the past four years, submitted
The best foul shooter and best
his resignation
the Logan
rebounder award went to
Denms
Eichmger,
best T
tBoard of Education Monday
defenstve player to Tom Karr,
wo
eep
me
a n a g e m e n mght. The ~esignation will
scholashc award to Mtke
become effechve at the end of
Bormg, most tmproved player
the present school term . The

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Athlet~s 'Unprejudiced

lot;; Counc1l earhcr changed
street meters from five cents an
hour to ten cenls an hour \
A letter was read from Mrs.
Aaron Kelton askmg counctl to
dtrect properly owners to clean
and repatr houses located on
property on Welchtown H1ll m
Mmersvtlle
Council asked the ordmance
commtttee to prepat·e wa1·rant.s
based on the fire ordmance for
Issuance to owners whose
property may pose danger or
ftre hazard m the vtllage .
Second and lhtrd reqUired
readmgs of an ordmance whwh
provides for collecllon and
disposal of garbage and trash
by license, hcensee fee and
penallles for •'-' vtolallon were
approved.
Counctl also gave three
requtred readmgs to an ordtnance which grants permtsston to the state h1ghway
department to spot pamt the
Pomeroy-Mason Br~dge , at no
cost to the vtllage.
Also brought to the attentiOn
of council is the burnmg of
garbage 10 trash cans by
restdents. Counctl warned that

a

Logan Mentor
Resigns Post

D

i:~!~~~~d:!~~n~:n~o~~ria:~

Smith
Tb.e )Ilost val4~ble basketball
player, the -Eagle Award, was
shared by Denms EIC hinger and
Howle Caldwell.
John D, Riebel, Sr.,
supenntendent, introduced the
cheerleaders.
The dmner was prepared and
served by the members of the
band boosters. Decoratwns
were by the cheerleaders and
dmner music was provided by
Jean Whttehead . The Rev. John
Wyatt gave the mvocat10n and
benedtchon.

Positions
NEW YORK - In a move
designed to help expand and
enhance its coa l mwing
operatwns, the Amen can
Electnc Power System (AEP)
has established two new
management postlions m- the
area of coal supply
Arthur E. Belton, of Fair·
mont, W Va., has been named
ass•stant IJI!Olng manager in
AEP's newly expanded Coal
Supply Department, and
Charles E. Sowards, of Clarwn,
Pa , has been appomted minmg
· safety engmeer tn the com-

Roundtables Thursday
' to tram
Two monthly M-G-M Scout urged to attend m order
Dislrict round tables will be Cubs and Boy Scouts.
held Aprll 8 at Kyger Creek ~ Leaders should be well inHtgh School.
formed so thay can pass thetr
The Cub round tab)e wtll deal boysm advancement, and teach
with the commg reqUirement;; them the skills they need to
for all Cub Scouts. The Boy know 10 Scoutmg.
Sc~ut round table should prove
1
to be valuable All ,scout
"We will be looking for all of
leaders, mcludm ~ den mothers, you Scout leaders at the mooden leader coaches, scout- thly round table," said Garland
masters, asststant;;, Cl•mmittee E. Parsons, M-G·M Admembers and cubmasters are vHntement chall"man.
I
t

M'

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by AEP

m

~r:..;:~~01E~~~a::c::d

Absentee Voting_Unden.vay
Absentee, disabled and servtcemen's votmg Is now
underway at the Meigs County Board of Elecltons
office m the Masomc Temple building at Pomeroy.
The offtce 1s open from I to 4 p m., Monday through
F'rtday, for the convenience of voters who wtll not be
able to vote at their polling places on Tuesday, May 4,
when Republican pr1manes wtll be held m both
Pomeroy and Middleport
The board also announced that 4 p.m., April 13, lS
the deadline for candtdates to declare thetr intent now reqUired by law - to be write-in candidates in
either community
viOlators w1ll be prosecuted It
was also noted that burmng
perm•'-' must be obtamed to
burn trash
Counctl agreed to have Cal
Lane , street supermtendent,
mspect and fix, If posstble, the
area 1n front of Mrs. Dean
Barmtz' home where water
runs from the street mto her
basement
Council gave a flat ''no" to a
request by Don Covert to place
a pop cooler on the stdewalk on
Court St. next to the cab office

owned and operated by Covert.
In other busmess, $1,433 26
11as transferr ed from the
parktng meter fund to the
general and spectal street
•epatr funds The mayor's
1eport was accepted showing
rcce•p'-' of $1 ,178.90 m March.
Attendtng were ·Legar ,
counctlmen Ralph Werry ,
Franklin Rtzer, Lucien Poulin,
Don Collms, and councilwoman,
Elm a Russell; Clerk Jane
Walton, and treasurer Phylhs
Hennessy.

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Severance Tax Asked

See the Big

Selectioo of
Lawn-Boys

An eyebar is a long metal beam rounded at each end and
containmg a hole or "eye" at both ends. The chains made out of
these bars were stretched across the two main towers of the
bndge and the roadbed .and metal superstructure of the brtdge
were hung beneath the ·eyebeam chains.

ACcording to the report, the crack apparently developed over
the 40-year-life of the bridge, fmally reaching a pomt where 11
became"critical as a result of both stress and fatlgue .
But the board said the .crack was "inaccessible to VISual mspection" and could not have been detected by any inspechon
method known in the state of the art today without disassemblmg
the eyebar joint - a practical unposstbility."
The board .said research was needed to develop "new
generation br~dge inspection techniques and equipment"
designed to detect the type of hidden crack whtch caused the
collapse of the Silver Bridge.

GEORGE THOMPSON and his sister, Louella Thompson Roush, give the victory sign from
a hospital room at the Cleveland Clinic following surgery there last week. George had both
kidneys removed earlier and Monday recetved a kidney transplant from his sister, Mrs. Roush .
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson of Pomeroy A fund dnve on behalf of
George now underway in Meigs County has gone very well, with over $6,000 raiSed. Contributions are to be sent to the Pomeroy Postmaster and checks are to be made out to the
George Thompson Kidney Fund.

Barnard Cole Has
2nd Transplant
Bernard Cole, Dayton, son of
Pearl and Ruby Cole of Tuppers
Pla10s, recently underwent
surgery at Cmcinnati General
Hosp1 tal for a second kidney
transplant.
The vtchm of nephrtlis, Cole
had both ktdneys removed on
July I, 1969. On May 11, 1970, the
first transplant was made;
however, hts body rejected it,
and on July 31, 1970, the Iran.
splant was removed.
A second transplant was
ma~e on March 25. Cole Is
reported to be 10 satisfactory
condthon. Cole IS mamed and
has two sons. He is a half.
brother of H A. Cole of Tuppers
Plams and nephew of Gordon
Caldwell, Metgs County auditor.

Added
::
pany's Personnel Department. sa(ety re~ulahons .
Logan was 31-4 1 dur~ng regular
Inhts new assignment, Belton Accordwg to Geo~ge V season play. In tournament
w1ll be large responstble• for the Patterson, AEP execuhve
vtce
.
d , ac ti on, h"lS te ams won one an d
recrUitmg of mme engmeermg presidentoperatlons, Sowar s 1os 1 1our. 1nside th e South .
and productwn sf&lt;Iffs for future posttion has been estabhshed eastern Ohio League, lnsam's
deep-mtne operations by "because of the increasing Chieftams posted a 24-32 mark.
vartous AEP System com- scope of our coal mining Coach Insani served as
panics, includmg a new mme operations ~nd in recogmtion of reserve coach two years before
near Salem Center , Meigs the present and continu10g need tak10g over the head job. A
County, Ohto; whtch will supply for close attentwn to safety in health mstructor, lnsam also
the new Gavm power plant at connection with working con- coached tennis at LHS.
Cheshire
dttions and practices m the Applications are now bemg
Belton, a native of West mmes."
accepted by George M.
Vtrgima's McDowell County,
Sowards has been a mme Sanbalas, Superintendent, Supervisors a~­
recetved a degree in mmmg foreman 10 Virginia and Ken- Logan Ctly Schools, 50 North Two-Day Meeting
engineering from West Virginia lucky and held engineermg and St., Logan, Ohio, 43138.
Mrs. Gretts Suttle and Mrs,
Umverstty in 1943 and lS a execullve posttions in the Mme
Nelhe Vale," Metgs County
hcensed professional .e.ogmeer. D1vis10n of United States Steel
DEER KILLED
He has held professional and Corporallii'n. Since 1959, he bas A deer was struck and ktlled school superVIsors, were ·in
managenal positions wtth the been. a consultant to the coal 10 an accident at 7,45 a.m . Columbus Thursday and Friday
to attend a superv~sors meeting
Mounf&lt;Imeer Coal Company, · mmmg Industry .
Monday on Rt. 7, one and two
at Scot's Inn.
1m penal Coal Company, and
Consolidation Coal Company Veterans Memorial Hospital tenths miles south of Rt 124. Among the speakers were
and is a member of the
ADMITTED - Vanessa - Ohio _State Patrol ofllcers satd Charles Kurfess, speaker, Ohto
American Institute of Mining Pettit,
Pomeroy ;
John the ~nimal ran into ~e path of a House of Repr£sentatlves;
Englneers and the West Weatherby, Middleport· Robert vehtcle operated by Raymond Wtlliam Oertel, executive
'
Virginia Coal Mimng Institute.
_Reeves, p omeroy; 'J
. ames E. Borth, 52, New Martinsville, director of the Ohto Newspaper
Sowards a cerhlled mining Moms, Pomeroy; Wliham H. W. Va . There was moderate Assn.; Chet Long, WBNS-TV,
Columbus; Donald Fr-eeman,
engiQeer, ' IS an engineermg Lynch, Cheshire·, Kaye Howell, damage to his car.
dtrector, League Park Cen)er,
graduate qf the Universtty of Pomeroy; V:anessa Folmer,
LOCAL TEMPS
Cleveland, and Mlidred My&lt;l'rs,
Kentucky . He w1ll bo. concerned Pomeroy; John Willbargen,
w1th coorchnatmg mine- safety Syracuse; Bess Sanborn, The temperatures in down- ·domeshc relations and 1uvemle
town Pomeroy at 11 a .m judge in Ashland County. Mrs.
prachces with AEP mme Middleport.
Tuesday
was 47 degrees, under . Vale 1s treasurer of the state
uperattons, and wtth · conDfSCHA!lGED - Gerald
cloudy skies.
supefy tsors' assoctatio~.
rurmance to Federal mine Sexton.
•

HONEST LADY- Mrs. Lee Bing, Laurel Cliff, returned
$1,200 she found on Pomeroy's West Main Street to its owner
Monday afternoon. Mrs. Bing found the bills, held together
by' a paper clip, in front of Simon's Pick A Pair Shoe Store.
Mrs. Bmg went to the Sheriff's ofllce to report her find. Mrs.
Betty Thei~s. sheriff's deputy, theoriZing the money might
belong to Paul Simon, since It was found in front of his store,
· called Simon. When asked if he had lost any money, Simon
answered, "I don't know. Let me check my vault." Simon
soon came back to the phone to say, "Yes, $1,200." He ex:
plained that he had just returned from the bank with the
money in a large envelope and hadn't rea li~ that 1t had
fallen out. Mrs. Bing was presented a check by Simon as a
reward.

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3~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, G., April 6, 1911

2- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aptilo, 1971

~·AJ()U
--~~~,-~,,;~~,;'?.,~,~~,\\~-·A
. "'
"' . .:,.~.,.m~a.~;.lU:~W::Bfiti~UD
·'

:

By Unhed Pren International
National League

Americai1league
East

East •
W. L. Pet. GB Was.hington

Pittsburgh
Chicago
New 'l'ork
St . Louis
·Philadelphia

0
0
0

Montr eal

0 .000
0 .000
0 .000 .. .

0

0 .000

0

0 .000 ...
0 -1109

o

San Francisco 0

0 .000

111

W. L. Pet. GB

New York
Boslon

1
o
0
0

Detroi t

0

0

.000

't1

0

0 .000

•;,

Bal1imore

Cleveland

West
W. L. Pet. GB Minnesota
I 0 1..000 ... Cal iforn ia
I o 1.000 ... Kansas City

Atlanta
Houston

p

West

0
0
0
0

1.000
.000
.000
.000

•;,
•;,

•12

W. L. Pel. GB
0

0 .00 . .

o 0 .000
o o 000

Chicago

0

o

·ooo

0 .000 11:~ Milwaukee
0 0 :ooo
Los Angeles
1 .000 I ' Oakland
0 1 000
Cincinnati
1 .000 1
Monday's Resulis
Monday:s Results
Washington 8 Oakland 0
Atlanta 7 C1npnnat1 4
(Only game scheduled) ·

San Dle-;;o

'0
0
0

Houston s Los Angeles 2

(Only games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pitchers
(Last Year's. Records Shown)
(All T1mes EST!
Montreal {Morton 18-111 at
New York {Seaver 18-121 . 2
P-~iladelphla \Short 9-16) at
Pittsburgh (EII•s 13-10) , 1: 30
p.m.
.
St . Louis (Gibson 23-71 at
Chicago (Jenkins 22 -161. 2: 30
p.m.
.
.

.San Franc•sco (Manchal 12· 10) at San Diego (Phoebus 5-51.

'' '

Today 1s Probable Pitchers

(Las! Year's Records shown)
{All Times ESTi
Kansas City (Drago 9-151 al
California (Wrighl 22-121. 11
p.m.
Milwaukee (Pattin 14-121 at
~~nesota (Perry 24 · 12) , 2' 15
Cleveland {Hargan 11 -3) at
Detroit (Lolich 14-19) , 1: 30 p.m.
New York {Bahnsen 14-11) al
Boston {Culp. 17-141. 1: 30 p.m.
{Only gamesscheduledl
Wednesday 1 s Games

Chicago at 'Oakland, 2
10. 30 p.m.
Kan City at Calif. night
Los Angel~ {Osteen 16-14) at Milwaukee at Minnesota
Houston (Wilson 11 -6), 8: 30 Washington at Baltimore
P·"'
· 1
hed led I
(Only games scheduled!
1an
voames sc u
Wednesday's Games
St. Louis at Chicago
Los Ang at Hous, night
Montreal at New York

San Fran at San Diego, night
Atlanta at Cinci, night
(Only games scheduled)
ABA Playoff Standings
B:• United Press International
( Oivi5ion Semifina Is)

I Best of Seven)
East
Series A

W. L. Pet.

VIrginia
New· York

2

0

0 1.000
2 .000

Series B
W. L. Pet.

Kentucky

Floridians

West

2

0 1.000

0

2 .000

Series A
W. L. Pet.
3 0 1.000
0 3 .000
Series 8
W. L. Pet.
3 o. 1.000
0 3 .000

Indiana
Memphis
Utah
Texas

Monday's Results
Indiana 91 Memphis 90
!Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
VIrginia at-·New York
Kentucky at Floridians
Utah at Texas
(Only games scheduled)

Senators Win
•
By VITO STELLINO
~ UP! Sports Writer
The .Washington Senators
may not really miss "tile whole
left side of their infield" this
year.
'
•
All wlnier long the skeptics
said that owner Bob Short
made a mistake when he gave
up "the whole left side of his
infield" along with two pllehers
to get Denny McLain.
But rookie Toby Harrah and
s'hopworn veteran Joe Foy, who
have replaced that "whole left
side" (Ed Brinkman and
Aurelio Rodriguez), had sparkling days Monday as the
Washington Senators kicked off
the 1971 baseball season by
blanking the Oakland Athletics
~ behipd the six-hit pitching of
Dick Bosman. And another
Short find named Curt Flood
had a fine day, too.
In the other openers, the
.'
Atlanta Braves clobbered the
Cincinnati Reds 7-4 and in an
opening "day" game at night,
Houston beat Los Angeles 5-2.
16 Teams Start Today
Sixteen more teams will
swing into action today and the
final twa-Baltimore (which
meets Washington) and the
Chicago While Sox (who play a
doubleheader at Oakland) wait
·' until Wednesday to open their
season .
In today's games, New York
•,
is at BosiiJn, Cleveland is at
Detroit, .Kansas City is at
California and Milwaukee is at
; : Minnesota in · ihe American
: ; League . In the National
:- League, Montreal is at New
:: York, Los Angeles is at

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lluPr&gt;c ll singi ng " I Walked
T•&gt;day Where Jesus W~lkcd ."
'rhc ri!curtling wa~ made by
Paul Haptonstall during the.
•
Cha ncel parame nts were Easler, an~ with the church
Approximately 125 persons programs were replicas of Ohio. guard ; and the c~oir pro tern, Ma rga re t Ehman , Gallipolis
.
~edicated in a memorial service sacraments, were de&lt;\icated. Rev. Mr . Ruppe!t's.. lung-time
atte nded the semi-annual in- Guests -were registered by Brenda Bolin, Patricia Walsh, Bethel 73; Emma K. Clal- )
for the Rev. Howard Huppelt The chancel paraments and a P\Jo'Stura te of the Pn!sbylerian
·
Church.
spec tio n of Bethel 62, In- Mrs. Marylyn Wilcox, worthy Diana Holstein, Beth Vaughan, worthY. , Bethel 62, Pomeroy ;
Sunday afternoon al the Mid- marker at the grave sile were
ternational Order of Jobs matroh of Evangeline Chapter ; Sandy Curtis, Barbara Fultz, Bill Hawkins, associate Grand
dl eport
Firs t
United pruv i~ed through contributiuns
Daughters, Saturday night at Mrs.' Mabel Goeglein, Pomeroy Tammy Sayre , and Caihy Bethel guardian ; Bill Bauman,
Mr . and Mrs. Elmer Johnson, Pres byterian Church.
frum church people, those of the
Happiness is . ..
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Chapter worthy matron; Mrs. Osborne.
·
Belpre Bethel65·; Dale Harbor, Jr., of Wheeling visited over the Pulpit and communion table community: and others _out of
Mrs. Dorothy E. Hawkins, Barbara Duga n, Racine worthy
Di s tin g ui s he d guest s Gallipolis Bethel 73 ; Warren weekend with . Mr. and Mrs. covers in violet symbolizing state.Theremainder of thefund
The Happy
Grand Bethel guardian of Ohio; ma l~on ; and Avanelle George, presented were Daleen H~rbor , Wagner, Westerville Bethel 52, . Paul Grueser. They came here penitence a nd app ropriately will be used for care of the
1
was the inspec ting officer .. Harrisonville chapter worthy honored qu~en Of Bethel 73, and Tom Edwards, Bethel 62 from Parkersburg following lhe used during adve nt and lent; cemetery lol. The dedication
Twila Cla twor thy, honored m&amp;lron. They- were pJesented Gallipoli s ; Diane Acomb, associate guardian, Pomeroy. weddin g of Mr s. Grueser 's ·green, symbolizing the rekin- serv ice was planned by-the Rev.
Nest
queen, presided al the meeting along with other distinguished Bethel. 58, Loveland, past
Also introduced were Betty granddaughter .
dling o( life in nature used to Russell Lester, ~astor . Miss
during which time two can- guests during the inspection. honored queen; Linda Benney , Helmke, guardian treasurer, Mrs. Cha rles Bing and denote the Hol y Trinity; red , Phyllis Joachim, and Mrs. Tom
for Easter
·
didates were initiated.
For the inspection the girls Bethel 59, Grove · City, past Bethel 1, Columbus, and past daughter , Judy of Cleveland the colm· of blood and fire, for Hue.
Four vases of white lilies wi th
·The honored quueen's theme were at tired in new robes. honored queen and Grand guardian of Bethel I and 28, will be here this weekend for a times -such as pentecost; and
"Peace and Humility" in the Besides Miss Clalworthy, the Bethel junior princess; Sheryl · Columbus ; Elsie Smith, first visit with her mother, Mrs. J . K. whi te, depicting purity and pur ple bows were used to An a r ra ngemen t of fresh
purple and whi te colors ol the other officers presiding were Saunders Bethel 73, Gallipolis, guardian of Bethel 62, Smith. Next Monday, Mr . Bing tr uth, used during Christmas, • decorate the sanctuary and Spr ing F lower s. A Liff.Qut
taler taken to the grav~ . The Corsa g e in a R e. usable
Bethel was carried out in the Brenda'Taylor, senior princess; past honored queen; and Irene Pomeroy;_Nial Salser, master will come for a week's visit.
call to worship was given by the Wi ck er Basket. From 10.00
decorations. Pin-ons of lilies ot' Milisa Rizer, junior princess; Barnes, past honored queen of of Pomeroy Lodge 164, F. and A. Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Mrs.
PARTY CONDUCTED
Rev . Mr. Lester. the Rev . Max
the valley with purple netting Leann Sebo, guide; Patty Well, Bethel 62, and grand· M.; RalphGraves,Knighlo!the Minerva Childers, and ' Mrs.
A game party was held Donahue of Heat h Un ited
and ribbon were displayed on a marshall ; Becky Houdashelt, representative to Florida ; York Cross of Honor; Ben Nina Bland were in Leon, W.
AI moSt Anywher e
large white cross with dove chaplain; Jennife r Goble, Kathy King, Sherry King, and Philson, district deputy grand Va. Sunday to visit Miss Edna recently at the Lakin Slate Methodist Church led in the Delivered
in th e Country.
Hospital by the Haven li wny uf the dedication ; and the
figurines al the base. 'The musician ; Brenda Edwards,_ Linda' Darnell Mayer , past master of the 12th Masonic Burdette.
tr e asur er ;
Lisa' Thomas, honored queens of Bethel62.
District.
Mrs . Marjorie Cluff has Homemakers foll owing a Rev . w. H. Perr in of Trinity
recorder; Jacqueline Carsey,
Also introduced were Barb
For the social hour ~ which returned to her home here from meeting at the home of Mrs. Church cond ucted a .litany of
libra rian pro tern ; Diana McGee , Loveland Betllel 58, followed, Mrs . Clatworthy , a visit with relatives and friends Iva n Capehart. Clu b members ded ication for Bibles for the
Carsey , senior cus todian ; junior princess; Robin Parker, mother of the honored queen, in Kansas and Oklahoma.
assisting with the party were 1,cws and a pulpillamp donated
~~b V.f.~
Elizabeth B.laetlnar , junior Belpre Bethel 65, princess ; presided at the table for
Mr . and Mrs. Fielding Mrs. AI Sprouse, Mrs . .Jesse by the family of Mrs. Jeanette
Margi Ehman, princess, refrestunents of ice cream , Hawkins have returned home Maynard, Mrs . David Zirkle, B. Waddell.
custodian.
Crow,
first Gallipolis 73; Bob Newton, past punch and cookies. The cen- after spending four months in Mrs . Willi am Fields, Mrs.
Nanc y
Harrv s. Moore sang a solo
For El egance in Pipe
messenge
r
;
Jill
Houdashelt,
associate
grand
guardian
of
lerpiece
of
whfte
mums
Florida.
They
visited
Mr.
and
Lewis
Johnson,
Mrs.
Emory
dur
i11 g·the memorial ser vice.
Smoking Pfeasure1 Select a
Mrs. Ltllian Stciff was al the
PiPe that Need s No · second messenge r; Debbie Ohio, and past associate featured the Job's Daughters Mrs . Floyd Zornes of Laugh- Hart, and Mrs. Jii!l Wi se.
of
Bethel
68,
doll
and
was
flanked
by
purple
man,
Fla.
Mrs.
Zornes
is
a
orga
n.
guardian
Breaking ln.
Tayl or, third messenger ;
59 N. Second St.
Brenda
Stanley, fourth Loveland ; Paul Darnell, vice tapers in white holders.
former Meigs County resident.
SERVICE SET
The service concluded wil h a
Middleport, Ohio
Guardian Council members
Mr. and Mrs. Philip DeVeny
POINT ROCK ~ At 6 a. m. record ing of lhe Rev . Mr.
messenger ; Cathy Ra yburn , associate grand guardian;
fifth messenger ; Brenda Ha yes, Martha Foulk , vice grand are Daisy Blakeslee, guardian of Dayton were Sunday visitors Sunda y an Easter sunri se
422 Second Ave.
Ila
Darn~.ll. of Mrs. David Farmer and Mr. service will be held at the
inner guard ; Ani ta Kin g, outer guardian ; and Robert Rine of secretary;
Gallipolis. Ohio
Loveland .
.
treasurer ; Rose Ann Sebo, and Mrs. Arthur Skinner.
Columbia Chapel followed by
Bethel
guardians and · director of music ; Bessie King,
Dr. and Mrs. · Tom Skinner Sunday school at 7 a.m. and
associate guardians presented promoter of sociability ; Mabel and children, Marly Jo and breakfas t a l 8. The early
were Ellen . Jo Megie, Grove Goeglein , paraplfernalia ; Janet of Cleveland, are in morning services will replace
City 58; Mildred Wisecarver, Peggy Taylor, promoter; of Middl~port and Marietta with the regular later Sunday serBethel I, Columbus ; Donna hospitality, and Kennety relatives due lo the death of vices. The Hev. Eugene UnBauman, Belpre Bethel 65; Wilcox, director of finance .
Mrs. Skinner's father, Hansom derwood, pastor, sai d th at
A dinner was held preceding Slack. The children are here several special numbers by the
the inspection with Mrs. Taylor with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur young people will be presented.
and •her committee in charge. Skinner.
The public is invited.

·

bbo·...,. 's 2-Run Homer Beats Point
~f,

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By JACK ROGERS

The Big Bla ~k s (0-1) entertain
Harden pitched well too, in singled, Gene Powell doubled to the sacks on ])o,yd' s leadoff singHannan
and trek to
Second sacker Hoger Abbott, burly Meigs LoCal slugger, s..,_ drawing the loss. He fanned S lett. AbbOtt's grounder and a le, an error, arid a two-out walk
plied a highly dramatic touch with a game-winning lw&lt;&gt;-run homer and walked only 2. :rhat one Cal throwing error produced the tal- to pinch hitter Ron Clonch. But Kyger Creek on
yesterday as Coach Ed Bartels Marauders came from behind to pitch he served up to AbbOtt lies.
Harden got off the hook when he
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Bla
k
k'tba
k
t4-3
,· •u
~ucedDunfee to~foulforthe
defeat Skipper, Jim Carpenter s PolntPleasantBigBiacks,5-4, on will be giving him nightmares
The
c s too 1 c a
~~
the Middleport diamond.
for a spelL
in the fourth on Terry Hollin• third out.
Hody Harden, junio'r righthander, had just pitched oot of a Abbott was ·credlted with dri- safety to center, a stolen base,
Then, as, we pointed out, can:•
bases-loaded jam in the sixth inning, leaving three Marauders ving in three Marauder runs, an! striclden's hard shot to Van ~tr~ s single an! Abbott 6
stranded, and moved into the bottom of the seventh nursing a 4-3 the other two unearned. Gene right.
game-eud•ng explosion.
lead. He had permitted. only six hits to that point,
Powell
rifled a two-bagger Meanwhile, Meigs tried to
Meigs LoCal (1-l) was sche"Only three outs a~ay," muttered Cooch Carpenter, who was for the willl)ers an! Dave Boyd rally in the sixth. They loaded duled to be at Wellston today,
making his baseball coaching debut at PPHS.
smote two singles in three trips.
·
Major Leaoue Results ·
But Hick Van Matre, who had The day was cold and wind- other Marauder hits .were sing- MondayNight's Fight Results
By United Press International
come · on to relieve starter Jed blown, . with the temperature les by Dunfee, Roger Dixon, an! By United Press lntemaliooal
National League
Will in the t~ of the seventh slidina downward under gray a w,·-•-blown one-baser by Jed DALLAS (UP!)-Terry Da- Atlanta
040 000 012~ 7 12 0
~
·~
·~
· Is 188 D lJa 1m ked t Cincl
000 103 ooo- 4 9 6
for Meigs, led off the fateful skies, as llarden and senior Jed Will.
me • ' a s, oc
ou
Niekro 1 • Upshaw {6) and
inning with a sharp sill:leupthe Will hooked up in an interesting The Blacks scored in the first Bob Scott, 188, Huntington, W. King ; Nolan, Granger {7),
middle. He stole seconl ani struggle. The Blacks led HI, inning when Clayton led off with Va. (5).
Gullett 18) , Carroll 191 and
__
Bench. WP ~ Up s haw 11 -0) . LP
moved to third as Gene Powell were tied, moved ahead 3-1, a bunt single ani scored on Han~Granger I0-11. HR~ Pe re z
•
you msure,
'grounled to the infield.
were tied again, then m.oved cock's line bell to center.
NEW YORK (UPI)-James list) .
With big Roger Abbott at bat, ahead 4-3 on consec utive sing- Meigs tied in the secom~ on Elder, 20611, levelland, Tex.,
your eggs?"
Ang 0001 000 IOQ- 2 10 0
Bartels called for a squeeze les in the fourth oy Terry Rol- singles by Boyd ani Dixon, stan outpointed Pedro Agosto, 197, Los
Houston 202 IQO OO x~ 5 5 0 An indep end ent insur ance ·
attempt, and Abbott fouled it off. lins.anl David striclden.
Wilson's sacrifice, ani an er- Puerto Rico (10).
Singer, Moeller ( 7} and Sims;
agent is not the captive
Dierker
{1 -0) and Edwards. LP · agent of on e in surance
Then Hoger tied into a high in. Will had surrendered seven ror.
-company - he has a wide
side fast ball, hammering it far hits ani four runs lo the Blacks Jim Mattox walked to open the PHILADELPHiA (UP!) ~ ~ S inger {0 -11 . .
range of poticie_s from
several in suring c om and wide and out of the park for before he was lllted for'll pinch locals' half of the third ani was Richie Kates, 175, Millville, · (Only games scheduled)
panies to best meet your
the ~wo runs that raked the bis· hitter in the sixth_. He had fan- bunted along by Harden. Clayton N.J., outpointed Bob Sinunons,
American League
exact needs . The Downing cuits out of the oven.
ned 5 and walked 2. VanMatre followed with a single to left 173, Chester, PA. (8).
~a~~nd ~
gg~ ~ ~ 3 Childs Agency is an In dependent
insurance
It was the first win for Meigs, then came In from right field to an! two runs rodehomeonsteve '
-Blue, Panther {2), Roland agent.
which had lost 7-4 to Logan last relieve, struck oul two of the Miller's two-bagger to lett cen. MELVOURNE,
Australia (31. Locker 151. Lindblad {B)
week, a contest in which Abbott three lads he faced, and was the ter. Score, 3-1.
(UPI)-Anthony Morodi, 133, and Duncan ; Bosman 11 -0) and
Casanova . LP~ Biue {0-1) .
smashed two triples and a beneficiary of Abbott's winning Meigs carne back with two to Soul h Africa, outpointed
-,~
single.
blast.
knot it at 3-all. steve Dunfee Michele Vitale, 135, Italy (10).
{Only game scheduled )

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DUDLEY'S
FLORIST

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Atlanta Braves have now spoiled the Cincinnati Reds' season
opener two years in a row.
As it was in 1970, the Braves
dowqed the Reds Monday, this
lime 7-4. And much of the reason was six big errors.
"Errors, that's the last worry
I thought I'd have when the
game started," moaned Reds
manager Sparky Anderson.
· Three of those mistakes were·
credited to Woody Woodward,
the veteran shortstop transplanted to third as Tony Perez
was moved to first as a replacement for the injured Lee May.
The Braves scored four of
their runs in the second inning
when they bunched four hits off
starter Gary Nolan with a walk
and Bernie Carbo's error on
pitcher Phil Niekro's sacrifice
fly ·
1
The Reds boWJced back, bowever, picking up one run in the
four~,l!lld lJ(il1g the score at _
4all ~th a threerun splurg~ m
the SIXth.
.
But the Braves did not s~op
there. A trtple and a lhrowmg

green &amp; white
tag
sate
on
-- One Touch Sewing!
--~

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44
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Limited Quantities! Gel One Touch S ewing
at a great saving only because it's a floor
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Or lake your choice ol 9 stretch stitches .Other
Touch &amp;Sew• sewing machines by Singer
are included 1n lh1s sale (Models 756/7

FEDERAL

AND
STATE

your income tax problems.
You'll

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too. See H &amp; R BLOCK
today.

06-10-001 -5

~~·t!'u~:::r!

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Ph. 992-3795
Pomeroy, Ohio

1

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taxes, bul he c\idn't form
the 11 legions11 of complica.
tions we hove today.
BLOCK will help conquer

OFF

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2. Install _2 new shock
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3. Balance front wheels
4. ~outer front ·
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·ONLY

SAVE $25 TO $75

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Let our skilled mechanic., put the
front end of your car back in A-1
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Allfor$

Floor models /demonstrators wear
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FRONT END
SERVICE OFFill

To File Your

Caesar may have invented

Social
Calendar

~

IT'S
TIME

67 CHEVROLET

$1795
Karr &amp;Van Zandt

•

200 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT
•
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error by Woodward after he had recuperating from a dislocated balls that should be routine
made a fine play on Clete shoulder suffered in spring outs. And if you play them as
routine outs, Felix gets hlts."
Boyer's grounder sent Atlanta training.
The Reds chasfd Niekro from
ahead in the eighth and they "With added speed too,"
added a pair of insurance runs pointed out Harris.- "In fact, the mound iil the sixtll when
in the ninth.
,
we've got more now than we've Tonuny. Helms singled, Perez
Cecil Upshaw was a key ele- ever had since I've been with homered and Johnny
singled. A wild pitch and two
ment in the Atlanta victory. , the club."
"W\thoul him we probably
Raps Four Hils
. outs later, Duffy bounced a
wouldn't have won that game," Braves second baseman FeliX gound ball past first base to
said slugger Hank Aaron.
Millan, one of Atlanta's speed- score Bench and tie up the
Upshaw missed the entire sters, rapped out four straight score. ·
season last year after an acci- hits before he drew an inten- Wayne Granger replaced Nolan on the mound in the seventh,
dent in which he nearly lost the tiona! walk in the ninth.
and
in turn yielded to Doh
ring finger of his pitching hand. Two of tile hits came on
But the lanky &amp;-foot-6 right- ground balls to Frank Duffy, the Gullet · in the eighth. Clay
Carroll pitched the last twobander is back in · action this Reds' rookie shortstop.
year and appears as good as "Millan runs a lot faster than thirds of the ninth inning.
ever.
a lot of people think," said Granger got the loss and
Upshaw Monday cut short a · Harris. "He beats out a lot of Upshaw the win.
Reds' uprising· in the sixth and
then reeled off three scoreless
innings.
"Having Upshaw · and Ron
FRIENDS, ROMANS, COUNTRYMEN, ·
Reed for the full season has to
make us a better ballclub this
season," said Atlanta manager
Lum Harris.
Reed i~ the . 6-foot-8
. righthander who will start for
the Braves against the Reds'
Jim McGlothlin in Wednesday
night's .,game.
This time last year Reed was

Houston, Philadelphia is al
Pitts~urgh, San Franeisco Is at
San Diego and st. Louis is at
·Chicago.
The Senators who hadn't won
the · Presidenti~l opener since
1962, scored two runs in each of
the first two innings to thrill
Vietnam veteran, Sgt. Daniel
This Wot!k's Special
Pitzer, who filled in for
The
Dai~ Sentinel
Pre~ident Nixon and threw out
DEVOTED TO THE
. INTEREST OF
the first ball . The President, ·
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
VALUE'
who missed the first hall duty
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
RATED
for the second straight year,
EKec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
was in California.
City Editor
Published daily except
Harrah Scores Twice
USED CARS
by The Oh io Valley
Harrah, who replaced Brink- Saturday
Publi shing Company, 111
man at short, banged out two Court S t ., Pomeroy , Ohio.
45769 . Bus iness Office Phone
singles and walked and scored 992-21
56 , Editorial Phone 992 4door H.T. Gold fin.
'
twice. Foy, who replaced 1157 .
fop,
matching Int.,
Second cla ss postage paid at
Rodriguez at third, added a Pom
equip, factory air.
eroy , OHio .
National adverti s ing
sacrifice fly to the attack and
r epr es entative
inelli ·
he fielded the position without Gallagher , ln c .. · 12 Bo1t
Ea st 42nd
making an error. Foy's glove is St . • New York City, New York.
Sub scription rates : De ·
the big question mark.
liv ered by carrier where
Flood, who was signed by availabl e 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
Like Our · Quality
Short after silting out a season servi
c e not avail.a ble : One
Doing
Buslness.'
month
$1
.75.'
By
mail
in
Ohio
1o battle the reserve clause,
and W . Va ., One y ~ ar su.oo. 1
_~-Z;A.C
F-INANCING
had a poor spring_training. But Six months $7 .25 . Three I'192
Pomeroy
he seemed to be in the groove month s S4 .50 . Sub sc riplion
Open
Evenings
'Til6:00
ce in clud es Sunday Times .
Tits P.M. Sat.
Monday as he collected two pri
Sentinel .
walks, added a single and
.Cored twice.

Tawney Jewelers

Childs
Agency, Inc.

Errors Beat Reds in Opener

TUESDAY .....
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 3S3,
F&amp;AM, regular session, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, at temple.
POMEROY Chapter 186 OES
meeting 'tuesday 7:30 p.m .
Masonic Temple .
MEIGS TEMPLE, Pythian
Sisters, Tuesday evening, 7:30
at the hall. Installation of officers and practice for inspection . All members asked to
attend.
RIVERVIEW PI'A will meet
Tuesday, April6, at 7:30p.m. at
the· school.
CHESTER LODGE 323,
Daugh lei~ qif Aqeri"!', will ;
meet a~~ ~~:m . TU&lt;!Sday. The
charter wm be draped ; all
members wear white . Games
following meeting.
WEDNESDAY
POM£ROY LODGE 164,
F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Work in Fellowcraft degree. All
Master Masons invited.
EASTER Cantata Wednesday , 7:30 p.m . Asbury
Unilep Methodist Church,
Syracuse. Public is invited ..
THURSDAY
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority ,
Thursday, 8 p.m. home of
Margaret Follrod.
MEIGS DAY Chapter 53,
Thursday, 6:30 hall on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. Dinner,
all veterans welcome, district
officers present for district
meeting.
AFTERNOON Circle, WSCS
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, 2 p.m.
Thursday at the church. Mrs.
Crary Davis _to give devotions;
Mrs. M. L. French, the lesson,
and Mrs. Freda Mitch will be
hostess.
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 7
p.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart
Church preceding Holy Thursday services at 8 p.m.

We have a credit plan designed to fit Y.2.1!! budget.
1\PPROVCD

Limit 3 per customer
at this price.
Additional $1.00 each.

SINGER DEALER

' A Trademark ot THE SINGER COM PANY

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto -

AMERICA'S LARGEST TAX SERVICE WITH OVER 5000 OFFICES

606 E. Main

Ph. 992-2094

Pomeroy

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1

FINANCIAL REPORT OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
SUMMARY OF CASH B~LANCES, RECEIPTS &amp; EXPENDITURES FOR THE Y~R .ENDING DEC. 31, 1970
BALANCE
Jan. 1, 1970

WATCH YOUR

A. General Fund - ·------- · · · ·-- ·----- · · --

$$$GROW

C. County Board of Education---- - - · - ----- · -- ---'
E. District Board
of Health -· · ·-·--· - ·-- ·--·-- ·-

as you add to your saving 11 1
each week at Meigs
. of the Athens c•.
saBranch
vongs &amp; Loan . ..

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B.

Dog and Kennel Fund --··-··· : ·- : -·--·----

-

F. Public Health Nursing Fund ··---··------·-G. Food Service --- , __ ---·-- -· -- -·-- ----H. Public Assistance--.·-- - ·-·-----------·I. Community Mental Health
and Retardation Board -- --- .. -- ------- · -- J. Real Estate ASsessment Fund ---- --- -- - ---··-- ..
K. Motor Vehicle and Gasoline Tax Fund- -- - -- --- -·
L. Soil and Water Conservation
Special Fund - ·-----.
0 . Bond Retirement Funds ·--------·--· · ·--· -Q: Construction Funds - Bui !dings .. --- ·-- - -- - --- · ·
Miscellaneous
.--· ----·· · ·--- -----S. Tuberculosis '· ·- · ·· ·----···-···.-·
T. Federal Funds ------·- --·· ·- -- ·--·· ·· · ·
TOTAL · Excluding Agency Funds
Agency Funds · · · . · · - -- · -- - - · • · · · · TOTAL OF ALL FUNQS •
.

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Current Passbook
Rate. Save by the lOth,
from the 1st.

•,,,.n

MeiJs eo.

~tranch ·

RECEIPTS
Revenue

$130,996.99
12,435.86
17,517.82
4,270.59
237 .65
1,427 .04
35,632.92

"'·

Revenue

$396,318.91
6,500.00
72,365.68

$29,924.92

25,~39.42

442:90

910.00
81,768.18

42.19
12,714.17

Total Receipts
&amp; Balances

Expenditures

$557,240.82
18,935.86
89,883.50
30,352.91
237.65
2.379.23
130,115.27 .

$378,126.38
5,067.03
61,451.27
23,279.41
237.65
1,121.98
88,654.40

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICI,TY PATTERNS
115 W. Second

37,478.47
13,947.51
602,911 ST
1,126.53
20,613.15
586,249.74

6,421.03
40,362.25
471.65

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57,928.13
17,058.85
809,549.22
1,588:18
27,967 .71
586,489.42
11,209.14
44,510.41

3,227.58
11,196.00

24,361.00
14.534.00 .
1,884,724.16

'

15,42~.00

104,802:69
2,202,929.43
2.307,732.12

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1,884,724.16

2,400,868.30.
2',325,018. 94
4,7.25,887 .24

The Order of the Garter i~
the highest order of British
knighthood.

BALANCE
Dec. 31, 1970

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Pomeroy; Olllo

preseilc~ this 5th day ~ AprU1 1971.
.
MARTHA CHAMBERS ·

'

Notary Public of Meigs County

My Commission Expires May 2, 1973

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I

America's Favorite Compact Deal

LET'S GET TOGETHER

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HERE'S WHAT YOU GET
ON THIS SPECIALLY EQUIPPED HARDTOP:
f

See our vast display of
merchandise . . . newest
shipments from a II over
the
nation
grouped
together at one location for
y 0 ur
shopping
con venience! T-ake advantage
of the many special values
Bakers offer •

'36,489.93
6,683.85
123,767,13

21,438.20
10,375.00
685,781.49
1,588. Hl
5,040.00
586,250.34
5,849.04
37,604.96
6,021.92

22,927.71 .
239.08
5,360.10
6,905.45
9,400.08
482,981.05
261,225.40
744,206.45

1,917,887.2~
2,~3.793 . 54

3,981 ;680.79

.,

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DodgeDart hasthe highest resale value in its fierd.

1,257.25
41.460.87

This ls .to .certify
that the attached summary of fund
copiAd
froni the Meigs County Flna~clal ·,
. transactlqns fot: the year 1•70
.
.
Statem_e nt t.;» the best of my knowledge and belief are correct.
1
.Signed in my

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$179,114.44
13,868.83
28,432 .23
7,073.50

I

Ja,028.63
3,111.34
166,275.40
-10.00
7,354.56
239.68
7,981.56
(1,953.41
888.00
411,341.45
122,089.51
$533,430.96

Pomeroy, 0.

992-22-84 .

E
DODGE

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.'lee many total look inspirations and new ideas

Dodge

awaitin'l( you at: .••

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,GORDON H•. CALDWELL
. M.. COunty AuditOr

·BOYS

FURNITURE FOR TODA'Y'S HOMEMAKERS

'

· . Thtt AIMns County
Snlngs &amp; Lo.,. Co.
·
2f6Second St.

Paraments Dedicated

•

Downing·

Coach John Milhoan 's
Gallipolis Blue Devils golf team
opened their 1971 campaign
wl th a 166-177 triumph over
• visiting Meigs on the local links
Monday evening. ·
Marauder Bill Hensler
captured medalist honors with a
thr~ver.par 37.
Mike Noe led the winners with
a five-&lt;Jver.par 39.
GAllS will host Barboursville
today.
Here's Monday's results:
GALUPOLIS - Mike Noe,
39; John Cwmingham, 41; Dow
Saunders, 42; Mike Shaver, 44;
Steve Gardner, 46.
MEIGS - Bill Hensler, 37;
Steve Story, 43; Chuck Hannah,
47; Frank Girolami, 50 and
Shenn Mills, 50.
Others playing yesterday
were :
GAHS - John Saunders, 39;
Brett Epling, 39; Bruce
Rodgers,42; JinunyNoe,42and
Topper Orr, 43.
MEIGS - Jim Story, 43;
Marty Vaughn, 45; Bob Werry,
47 and Jim Wildermuth, so.

Middleport

Pefsonal Notes

ggg

Marauders in
Golf Defeat

Attend~d Semi~Ann~ual lnspe~tion

125

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BAKER FURNITURE
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MIDDLEPORT, 0 •

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• 3-speed automatic transmission
(no ·charge)
• Vinyl roof
• 6.95 x 14 white sidewall tires
• Deluxe wheel covers
• "Rim Blow" ~eluxe steering wheel
• Bumper guards (front and rear)

· ·Belt mouldings
• Remote-control outside
mirror, left side
• Convenience light package
• Body side mouldings
(with vinyl inserts).

TODAY .MOREPEOPlE DRIVE DODGE DART
THAN ANY OTHERCOMPACT INTHEU.S.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

0

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AUTHORiZED DE~LERS

.•

Mill &amp;Second Streets, Middleport, 0.

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3~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, G., April 6, 1911

2- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aptilo, 1971

~·AJ()U
--~~~,-~,,;~~,;'?.,~,~~,\\~-·A
. "'
"' . .:,.~.,.m~a.~;.lU:~W::Bfiti~UD
·'

:

By Unhed Pren International
National League

Americai1league
East

East •
W. L. Pet. GB Was.hington

Pittsburgh
Chicago
New 'l'ork
St . Louis
·Philadelphia

0
0
0

Montr eal

0 .000
0 .000
0 .000 .. .

0

0 .000

0

0 .000 ...
0 -1109

o

San Francisco 0

0 .000

111

W. L. Pet. GB

New York
Boslon

1
o
0
0

Detroi t

0

0

.000

't1

0

0 .000

•;,

Bal1imore

Cleveland

West
W. L. Pet. GB Minnesota
I 0 1..000 ... Cal iforn ia
I o 1.000 ... Kansas City

Atlanta
Houston

p

West

0
0
0
0

1.000
.000
.000
.000

•;,
•;,

•12

W. L. Pel. GB
0

0 .00 . .

o 0 .000
o o 000

Chicago

0

o

·ooo

0 .000 11:~ Milwaukee
0 0 :ooo
Los Angeles
1 .000 I ' Oakland
0 1 000
Cincinnati
1 .000 1
Monday's Resulis
Monday:s Results
Washington 8 Oakland 0
Atlanta 7 C1npnnat1 4
(Only game scheduled) ·

San Dle-;;o

'0
0
0

Houston s Los Angeles 2

(Only games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pitchers
(Last Year's. Records Shown)
(All T1mes EST!
Montreal {Morton 18-111 at
New York {Seaver 18-121 . 2
P-~iladelphla \Short 9-16) at
Pittsburgh (EII•s 13-10) , 1: 30
p.m.
.
St . Louis (Gibson 23-71 at
Chicago (Jenkins 22 -161. 2: 30
p.m.
.
.

.San Franc•sco (Manchal 12· 10) at San Diego (Phoebus 5-51.

'' '

Today 1s Probable Pitchers

(Las! Year's Records shown)
{All Times ESTi
Kansas City (Drago 9-151 al
California (Wrighl 22-121. 11
p.m.
Milwaukee (Pattin 14-121 at
~~nesota (Perry 24 · 12) , 2' 15
Cleveland {Hargan 11 -3) at
Detroit (Lolich 14-19) , 1: 30 p.m.
New York {Bahnsen 14-11) al
Boston {Culp. 17-141. 1: 30 p.m.
{Only gamesscheduledl
Wednesday 1 s Games

Chicago at 'Oakland, 2
10. 30 p.m.
Kan City at Calif. night
Los Angel~ {Osteen 16-14) at Milwaukee at Minnesota
Houston (Wilson 11 -6), 8: 30 Washington at Baltimore
P·"'
· 1
hed led I
(Only games scheduled!
1an
voames sc u
Wednesday's Games
St. Louis at Chicago
Los Ang at Hous, night
Montreal at New York

San Fran at San Diego, night
Atlanta at Cinci, night
(Only games scheduled)
ABA Playoff Standings
B:• United Press International
( Oivi5ion Semifina Is)

I Best of Seven)
East
Series A

W. L. Pet.

VIrginia
New· York

2

0

0 1.000
2 .000

Series B
W. L. Pet.

Kentucky

Floridians

West

2

0 1.000

0

2 .000

Series A
W. L. Pet.
3 0 1.000
0 3 .000
Series 8
W. L. Pet.
3 o. 1.000
0 3 .000

Indiana
Memphis
Utah
Texas

Monday's Results
Indiana 91 Memphis 90
!Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
VIrginia at-·New York
Kentucky at Floridians
Utah at Texas
(Only games scheduled)

Senators Win
•
By VITO STELLINO
~ UP! Sports Writer
The .Washington Senators
may not really miss "tile whole
left side of their infield" this
year.
'
•
All wlnier long the skeptics
said that owner Bob Short
made a mistake when he gave
up "the whole left side of his
infield" along with two pllehers
to get Denny McLain.
But rookie Toby Harrah and
s'hopworn veteran Joe Foy, who
have replaced that "whole left
side" (Ed Brinkman and
Aurelio Rodriguez), had sparkling days Monday as the
Washington Senators kicked off
the 1971 baseball season by
blanking the Oakland Athletics
~ behipd the six-hit pitching of
Dick Bosman. And another
Short find named Curt Flood
had a fine day, too.
In the other openers, the
.'
Atlanta Braves clobbered the
Cincinnati Reds 7-4 and in an
opening "day" game at night,
Houston beat Los Angeles 5-2.
16 Teams Start Today
Sixteen more teams will
swing into action today and the
final twa-Baltimore (which
meets Washington) and the
Chicago While Sox (who play a
doubleheader at Oakland) wait
·' until Wednesday to open their
season .
In today's games, New York
•,
is at BosiiJn, Cleveland is at
Detroit, .Kansas City is at
California and Milwaukee is at
; : Minnesota in · ihe American
: ; League . In the National
:- League, Montreal is at New
:: York, Los Angeles is at

_

•

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lluPr&gt;c ll singi ng " I Walked
T•&gt;day Where Jesus W~lkcd ."
'rhc ri!curtling wa~ made by
Paul Haptonstall during the.
•
Cha ncel parame nts were Easler, an~ with the church
Approximately 125 persons programs were replicas of Ohio. guard ; and the c~oir pro tern, Ma rga re t Ehman , Gallipolis
.
~edicated in a memorial service sacraments, were de&lt;\icated. Rev. Mr . Ruppe!t's.. lung-time
atte nded the semi-annual in- Guests -were registered by Brenda Bolin, Patricia Walsh, Bethel 73; Emma K. Clal- )
for the Rev. Howard Huppelt The chancel paraments and a P\Jo'Stura te of the Pn!sbylerian
·
Church.
spec tio n of Bethel 62, In- Mrs. Marylyn Wilcox, worthy Diana Holstein, Beth Vaughan, worthY. , Bethel 62, Pomeroy ;
Sunday afternoon al the Mid- marker at the grave sile were
ternational Order of Jobs matroh of Evangeline Chapter ; Sandy Curtis, Barbara Fultz, Bill Hawkins, associate Grand
dl eport
Firs t
United pruv i~ed through contributiuns
Daughters, Saturday night at Mrs.' Mabel Goeglein, Pomeroy Tammy Sayre , and Caihy Bethel guardian ; Bill Bauman,
Mr . and Mrs. Elmer Johnson, Pres byterian Church.
frum church people, those of the
Happiness is . ..
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Chapter worthy matron; Mrs. Osborne.
·
Belpre Bethel65·; Dale Harbor, Jr., of Wheeling visited over the Pulpit and communion table community: and others _out of
Mrs. Dorothy E. Hawkins, Barbara Duga n, Racine worthy
Di s tin g ui s he d guest s Gallipolis Bethel 73 ; Warren weekend with . Mr. and Mrs. covers in violet symbolizing state.Theremainder of thefund
The Happy
Grand Bethel guardian of Ohio; ma l~on ; and Avanelle George, presented were Daleen H~rbor , Wagner, Westerville Bethel 52, . Paul Grueser. They came here penitence a nd app ropriately will be used for care of the
1
was the inspec ting officer .. Harrisonville chapter worthy honored qu~en Of Bethel 73, and Tom Edwards, Bethel 62 from Parkersburg following lhe used during adve nt and lent; cemetery lol. The dedication
Twila Cla twor thy, honored m&amp;lron. They- were pJesented Gallipoli s ; Diane Acomb, associate guardian, Pomeroy. weddin g of Mr s. Grueser 's ·green, symbolizing the rekin- serv ice was planned by-the Rev.
Nest
queen, presided al the meeting along with other distinguished Bethel. 58, Loveland, past
Also introduced were Betty granddaughter .
dling o( life in nature used to Russell Lester, ~astor . Miss
during which time two can- guests during the inspection. honored queen; Linda Benney , Helmke, guardian treasurer, Mrs. Cha rles Bing and denote the Hol y Trinity; red , Phyllis Joachim, and Mrs. Tom
for Easter
·
didates were initiated.
For the inspection the girls Bethel 59, Grove · City, past Bethel 1, Columbus, and past daughter , Judy of Cleveland the colm· of blood and fire, for Hue.
Four vases of white lilies wi th
·The honored quueen's theme were at tired in new robes. honored queen and Grand guardian of Bethel I and 28, will be here this weekend for a times -such as pentecost; and
"Peace and Humility" in the Besides Miss Clalworthy, the Bethel junior princess; Sheryl · Columbus ; Elsie Smith, first visit with her mother, Mrs. J . K. whi te, depicting purity and pur ple bows were used to An a r ra ngemen t of fresh
purple and whi te colors ol the other officers presiding were Saunders Bethel 73, Gallipolis, guardian of Bethel 62, Smith. Next Monday, Mr . Bing tr uth, used during Christmas, • decorate the sanctuary and Spr ing F lower s. A Liff.Qut
taler taken to the grav~ . The Corsa g e in a R e. usable
Bethel was carried out in the Brenda'Taylor, senior princess; past honored queen; and Irene Pomeroy;_Nial Salser, master will come for a week's visit.
call to worship was given by the Wi ck er Basket. From 10.00
decorations. Pin-ons of lilies ot' Milisa Rizer, junior princess; Barnes, past honored queen of of Pomeroy Lodge 164, F. and A. Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Mrs.
PARTY CONDUCTED
Rev . Mr. Lester. the Rev . Max
the valley with purple netting Leann Sebo, guide; Patty Well, Bethel 62, and grand· M.; RalphGraves,Knighlo!the Minerva Childers, and ' Mrs.
A game party was held Donahue of Heat h Un ited
and ribbon were displayed on a marshall ; Becky Houdashelt, representative to Florida ; York Cross of Honor; Ben Nina Bland were in Leon, W.
AI moSt Anywher e
large white cross with dove chaplain; Jennife r Goble, Kathy King, Sherry King, and Philson, district deputy grand Va. Sunday to visit Miss Edna recently at the Lakin Slate Methodist Church led in the Delivered
in th e Country.
Hospital by the Haven li wny uf the dedication ; and the
figurines al the base. 'The musician ; Brenda Edwards,_ Linda' Darnell Mayer , past master of the 12th Masonic Burdette.
tr e asur er ;
Lisa' Thomas, honored queens of Bethel62.
District.
Mrs . Marjorie Cluff has Homemakers foll owing a Rev . w. H. Perr in of Trinity
recorder; Jacqueline Carsey,
Also introduced were Barb
For the social hour ~ which returned to her home here from meeting at the home of Mrs. Church cond ucted a .litany of
libra rian pro tern ; Diana McGee , Loveland Betllel 58, followed, Mrs . Clatworthy , a visit with relatives and friends Iva n Capehart. Clu b members ded ication for Bibles for the
Carsey , senior cus todian ; junior princess; Robin Parker, mother of the honored queen, in Kansas and Oklahoma.
assisting with the party were 1,cws and a pulpillamp donated
~~b V.f.~
Elizabeth B.laetlnar , junior Belpre Bethel 65, princess ; presided at the table for
Mr . and Mrs. Fielding Mrs. AI Sprouse, Mrs . .Jesse by the family of Mrs. Jeanette
Margi Ehman, princess, refrestunents of ice cream , Hawkins have returned home Maynard, Mrs . David Zirkle, B. Waddell.
custodian.
Crow,
first Gallipolis 73; Bob Newton, past punch and cookies. The cen- after spending four months in Mrs . Willi am Fields, Mrs.
Nanc y
Harrv s. Moore sang a solo
For El egance in Pipe
messenge
r
;
Jill
Houdashelt,
associate
grand
guardian
of
lerpiece
of
whfte
mums
Florida.
They
visited
Mr.
and
Lewis
Johnson,
Mrs.
Emory
dur
i11 g·the memorial ser vice.
Smoking Pfeasure1 Select a
Mrs. Ltllian Stciff was al the
PiPe that Need s No · second messenge r; Debbie Ohio, and past associate featured the Job's Daughters Mrs . Floyd Zornes of Laugh- Hart, and Mrs. Jii!l Wi se.
of
Bethel
68,
doll
and
was
flanked
by
purple
man,
Fla.
Mrs.
Zornes
is
a
orga
n.
guardian
Breaking ln.
Tayl or, third messenger ;
59 N. Second St.
Brenda
Stanley, fourth Loveland ; Paul Darnell, vice tapers in white holders.
former Meigs County resident.
SERVICE SET
The service concluded wil h a
Middleport, Ohio
Guardian Council members
Mr. and Mrs. Philip DeVeny
POINT ROCK ~ At 6 a. m. record ing of lhe Rev . Mr.
messenger ; Cathy Ra yburn , associate grand guardian;
fifth messenger ; Brenda Ha yes, Martha Foulk , vice grand are Daisy Blakeslee, guardian of Dayton were Sunday visitors Sunda y an Easter sunri se
422 Second Ave.
Ila
Darn~.ll. of Mrs. David Farmer and Mr. service will be held at the
inner guard ; Ani ta Kin g, outer guardian ; and Robert Rine of secretary;
Gallipolis. Ohio
Loveland .
.
treasurer ; Rose Ann Sebo, and Mrs. Arthur Skinner.
Columbia Chapel followed by
Bethel
guardians and · director of music ; Bessie King,
Dr. and Mrs. · Tom Skinner Sunday school at 7 a.m. and
associate guardians presented promoter of sociability ; Mabel and children, Marly Jo and breakfas t a l 8. The early
were Ellen . Jo Megie, Grove Goeglein , paraplfernalia ; Janet of Cleveland, are in morning services will replace
City 58; Mildred Wisecarver, Peggy Taylor, promoter; of Middl~port and Marietta with the regular later Sunday serBethel I, Columbus ; Donna hospitality, and Kennety relatives due lo the death of vices. The Hev. Eugene UnBauman, Belpre Bethel 65; Wilcox, director of finance .
Mrs. Skinner's father, Hansom derwood, pastor, sai d th at
A dinner was held preceding Slack. The children are here several special numbers by the
the inspection with Mrs. Taylor with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur young people will be presented.
and •her committee in charge. Skinner.
The public is invited.

·

bbo·...,. 's 2-Run Homer Beats Point
~f,

'

By JACK ROGERS

The Big Bla ~k s (0-1) entertain
Harden pitched well too, in singled, Gene Powell doubled to the sacks on ])o,yd' s leadoff singHannan
and trek to
Second sacker Hoger Abbott, burly Meigs LoCal slugger, s..,_ drawing the loss. He fanned S lett. AbbOtt's grounder and a le, an error, arid a two-out walk
plied a highly dramatic touch with a game-winning lw&lt;&gt;-run homer and walked only 2. :rhat one Cal throwing error produced the tal- to pinch hitter Ron Clonch. But Kyger Creek on
yesterday as Coach Ed Bartels Marauders came from behind to pitch he served up to AbbOtt lies.
Harden got off the hook when he
'
·
Bla
k
k'tba
k
t4-3
,· •u
~ucedDunfee to~foulforthe
defeat Skipper, Jim Carpenter s PolntPleasantBigBiacks,5-4, on will be giving him nightmares
The
c s too 1 c a
~~
the Middleport diamond.
for a spelL
in the fourth on Terry Hollin• third out.
Hody Harden, junio'r righthander, had just pitched oot of a Abbott was ·credlted with dri- safety to center, a stolen base,
Then, as, we pointed out, can:•
bases-loaded jam in the sixth inning, leaving three Marauders ving in three Marauder runs, an! striclden's hard shot to Van ~tr~ s single an! Abbott 6
stranded, and moved into the bottom of the seventh nursing a 4-3 the other two unearned. Gene right.
game-eud•ng explosion.
lead. He had permitted. only six hits to that point,
Powell
rifled a two-bagger Meanwhile, Meigs tried to
Meigs LoCal (1-l) was sche"Only three outs a~ay," muttered Cooch Carpenter, who was for the willl)ers an! Dave Boyd rally in the sixth. They loaded duled to be at Wellston today,
making his baseball coaching debut at PPHS.
smote two singles in three trips.
·
Major Leaoue Results ·
But Hick Van Matre, who had The day was cold and wind- other Marauder hits .were sing- MondayNight's Fight Results
By United Press International
come · on to relieve starter Jed blown, . with the temperature les by Dunfee, Roger Dixon, an! By United Press lntemaliooal
National League
Will in the t~ of the seventh slidina downward under gray a w,·-•-blown one-baser by Jed DALLAS (UP!)-Terry Da- Atlanta
040 000 012~ 7 12 0
~
·~
·~
· Is 188 D lJa 1m ked t Cincl
000 103 ooo- 4 9 6
for Meigs, led off the fateful skies, as llarden and senior Jed Will.
me • ' a s, oc
ou
Niekro 1 • Upshaw {6) and
inning with a sharp sill:leupthe Will hooked up in an interesting The Blacks scored in the first Bob Scott, 188, Huntington, W. King ; Nolan, Granger {7),
middle. He stole seconl ani struggle. The Blacks led HI, inning when Clayton led off with Va. (5).
Gullett 18) , Carroll 191 and
__
Bench. WP ~ Up s haw 11 -0) . LP
moved to third as Gene Powell were tied, moved ahead 3-1, a bunt single ani scored on Han~Granger I0-11. HR~ Pe re z
•
you msure,
'grounled to the infield.
were tied again, then m.oved cock's line bell to center.
NEW YORK (UPI)-James list) .
With big Roger Abbott at bat, ahead 4-3 on consec utive sing- Meigs tied in the secom~ on Elder, 20611, levelland, Tex.,
your eggs?"
Ang 0001 000 IOQ- 2 10 0
Bartels called for a squeeze les in the fourth oy Terry Rol- singles by Boyd ani Dixon, stan outpointed Pedro Agosto, 197, Los
Houston 202 IQO OO x~ 5 5 0 An indep end ent insur ance ·
attempt, and Abbott fouled it off. lins.anl David striclden.
Wilson's sacrifice, ani an er- Puerto Rico (10).
Singer, Moeller ( 7} and Sims;
agent is not the captive
Dierker
{1 -0) and Edwards. LP · agent of on e in surance
Then Hoger tied into a high in. Will had surrendered seven ror.
-company - he has a wide
side fast ball, hammering it far hits ani four runs lo the Blacks Jim Mattox walked to open the PHILADELPHiA (UP!) ~ ~ S inger {0 -11 . .
range of poticie_s from
several in suring c om and wide and out of the park for before he was lllted for'll pinch locals' half of the third ani was Richie Kates, 175, Millville, · (Only games scheduled)
panies to best meet your
the ~wo runs that raked the bis· hitter in the sixth_. He had fan- bunted along by Harden. Clayton N.J., outpointed Bob Sinunons,
American League
exact needs . The Downing cuits out of the oven.
ned 5 and walked 2. VanMatre followed with a single to left 173, Chester, PA. (8).
~a~~nd ~
gg~ ~ ~ 3 Childs Agency is an In dependent
insurance
It was the first win for Meigs, then came In from right field to an! two runs rodehomeonsteve '
-Blue, Panther {2), Roland agent.
which had lost 7-4 to Logan last relieve, struck oul two of the Miller's two-bagger to lett cen. MELVOURNE,
Australia (31. Locker 151. Lindblad {B)
week, a contest in which Abbott three lads he faced, and was the ter. Score, 3-1.
(UPI)-Anthony Morodi, 133, and Duncan ; Bosman 11 -0) and
Casanova . LP~ Biue {0-1) .
smashed two triples and a beneficiary of Abbott's winning Meigs carne back with two to Soul h Africa, outpointed
-,~
single.
blast.
knot it at 3-all. steve Dunfee Michele Vitale, 135, Italy (10).
{Only game scheduled )

•
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'
•

DUDLEY'S
FLORIST

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Atlanta Braves have now spoiled the Cincinnati Reds' season
opener two years in a row.
As it was in 1970, the Braves
dowqed the Reds Monday, this
lime 7-4. And much of the reason was six big errors.
"Errors, that's the last worry
I thought I'd have when the
game started," moaned Reds
manager Sparky Anderson.
· Three of those mistakes were·
credited to Woody Woodward,
the veteran shortstop transplanted to third as Tony Perez
was moved to first as a replacement for the injured Lee May.
The Braves scored four of
their runs in the second inning
when they bunched four hits off
starter Gary Nolan with a walk
and Bernie Carbo's error on
pitcher Phil Niekro's sacrifice
fly ·
1
The Reds boWJced back, bowever, picking up one run in the
four~,l!lld lJ(il1g the score at _
4all ~th a threerun splurg~ m
the SIXth.
.
But the Braves did not s~op
there. A trtple and a lhrowmg

green &amp; white
tag
sate
on
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~

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Karr &amp;Van Zandt

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•
•

error by Woodward after he had recuperating from a dislocated balls that should be routine
made a fine play on Clete shoulder suffered in spring outs. And if you play them as
routine outs, Felix gets hlts."
Boyer's grounder sent Atlanta training.
The Reds chasfd Niekro from
ahead in the eighth and they "With added speed too,"
added a pair of insurance runs pointed out Harris.- "In fact, the mound iil the sixtll when
in the ninth.
,
we've got more now than we've Tonuny. Helms singled, Perez
Cecil Upshaw was a key ele- ever had since I've been with homered and Johnny
singled. A wild pitch and two
ment in the Atlanta victory. , the club."
"W\thoul him we probably
Raps Four Hils
. outs later, Duffy bounced a
wouldn't have won that game," Braves second baseman FeliX gound ball past first base to
said slugger Hank Aaron.
Millan, one of Atlanta's speed- score Bench and tie up the
Upshaw missed the entire sters, rapped out four straight score. ·
season last year after an acci- hits before he drew an inten- Wayne Granger replaced Nolan on the mound in the seventh,
dent in which he nearly lost the tiona! walk in the ninth.
and
in turn yielded to Doh
ring finger of his pitching hand. Two of tile hits came on
But the lanky &amp;-foot-6 right- ground balls to Frank Duffy, the Gullet · in the eighth. Clay
Carroll pitched the last twobander is back in · action this Reds' rookie shortstop.
year and appears as good as "Millan runs a lot faster than thirds of the ninth inning.
ever.
a lot of people think," said Granger got the loss and
Upshaw Monday cut short a · Harris. "He beats out a lot of Upshaw the win.
Reds' uprising· in the sixth and
then reeled off three scoreless
innings.
"Having Upshaw · and Ron
FRIENDS, ROMANS, COUNTRYMEN, ·
Reed for the full season has to
make us a better ballclub this
season," said Atlanta manager
Lum Harris.
Reed i~ the . 6-foot-8
. righthander who will start for
the Braves against the Reds'
Jim McGlothlin in Wednesday
night's .,game.
This time last year Reed was

Houston, Philadelphia is al
Pitts~urgh, San Franeisco Is at
San Diego and st. Louis is at
·Chicago.
The Senators who hadn't won
the · Presidenti~l opener since
1962, scored two runs in each of
the first two innings to thrill
Vietnam veteran, Sgt. Daniel
This Wot!k's Special
Pitzer, who filled in for
The
Dai~ Sentinel
Pre~ident Nixon and threw out
DEVOTED TO THE
. INTEREST OF
the first ball . The President, ·
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
VALUE'
who missed the first hall duty
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
RATED
for the second straight year,
EKec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
was in California.
City Editor
Published daily except
Harrah Scores Twice
USED CARS
by The Oh io Valley
Harrah, who replaced Brink- Saturday
Publi shing Company, 111
man at short, banged out two Court S t ., Pomeroy , Ohio.
45769 . Bus iness Office Phone
singles and walked and scored 992-21
56 , Editorial Phone 992 4door H.T. Gold fin.
'
twice. Foy, who replaced 1157 .
fop,
matching Int.,
Second cla ss postage paid at
Rodriguez at third, added a Pom
equip, factory air.
eroy , OHio .
National adverti s ing
sacrifice fly to the attack and
r epr es entative
inelli ·
he fielded the position without Gallagher , ln c .. · 12 Bo1t
Ea st 42nd
making an error. Foy's glove is St . • New York City, New York.
Sub scription rates : De ·
the big question mark.
liv ered by carrier where
Flood, who was signed by availabl e 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
Like Our · Quality
Short after silting out a season servi
c e not avail.a ble : One
Doing
Buslness.'
month
$1
.75.'
By
mail
in
Ohio
1o battle the reserve clause,
and W . Va ., One y ~ ar su.oo. 1
_~-Z;A.C
F-INANCING
had a poor spring_training. But Six months $7 .25 . Three I'192
Pomeroy
he seemed to be in the groove month s S4 .50 . Sub sc riplion
Open
Evenings
'Til6:00
ce in clud es Sunday Times .
Tits P.M. Sat.
Monday as he collected two pri
Sentinel .
walks, added a single and
.Cored twice.

Tawney Jewelers

Childs
Agency, Inc.

Errors Beat Reds in Opener

TUESDAY .....
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 3S3,
F&amp;AM, regular session, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, at temple.
POMEROY Chapter 186 OES
meeting 'tuesday 7:30 p.m .
Masonic Temple .
MEIGS TEMPLE, Pythian
Sisters, Tuesday evening, 7:30
at the hall. Installation of officers and practice for inspection . All members asked to
attend.
RIVERVIEW PI'A will meet
Tuesday, April6, at 7:30p.m. at
the· school.
CHESTER LODGE 323,
Daugh lei~ qif Aqeri"!', will ;
meet a~~ ~~:m . TU&lt;!Sday. The
charter wm be draped ; all
members wear white . Games
following meeting.
WEDNESDAY
POM£ROY LODGE 164,
F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Work in Fellowcraft degree. All
Master Masons invited.
EASTER Cantata Wednesday , 7:30 p.m . Asbury
Unilep Methodist Church,
Syracuse. Public is invited ..
THURSDAY
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority ,
Thursday, 8 p.m. home of
Margaret Follrod.
MEIGS DAY Chapter 53,
Thursday, 6:30 hall on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. Dinner,
all veterans welcome, district
officers present for district
meeting.
AFTERNOON Circle, WSCS
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, 2 p.m.
Thursday at the church. Mrs.
Crary Davis _to give devotions;
Mrs. M. L. French, the lesson,
and Mrs. Freda Mitch will be
hostess.
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 7
p.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart
Church preceding Holy Thursday services at 8 p.m.

We have a credit plan designed to fit Y.2.1!! budget.
1\PPROVCD

Limit 3 per customer
at this price.
Additional $1.00 each.

SINGER DEALER

' A Trademark ot THE SINGER COM PANY

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto -

AMERICA'S LARGEST TAX SERVICE WITH OVER 5000 OFFICES

606 E. Main

Ph. 992-2094

Pomeroy

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FINANCIAL REPORT OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
SUMMARY OF CASH B~LANCES, RECEIPTS &amp; EXPENDITURES FOR THE Y~R .ENDING DEC. 31, 1970
BALANCE
Jan. 1, 1970

WATCH YOUR

A. General Fund - ·------- · · · ·-- ·----- · · --

$$$GROW

C. County Board of Education---- - - · - ----- · -- ---'
E. District Board
of Health -· · ·-·--· - ·-- ·--·-- ·-

as you add to your saving 11 1
each week at Meigs
. of the Athens c•.
saBranch
vongs &amp; Loan . ..

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B.

Dog and Kennel Fund --··-··· : ·- : -·--·----

-

F. Public Health Nursing Fund ··---··------·-G. Food Service --- , __ ---·-- -· -- -·-- ----H. Public Assistance--.·-- - ·-·-----------·I. Community Mental Health
and Retardation Board -- --- .. -- ------- · -- J. Real Estate ASsessment Fund ---- --- -- - ---··-- ..
K. Motor Vehicle and Gasoline Tax Fund- -- - -- --- -·
L. Soil and Water Conservation
Special Fund - ·-----.
0 . Bond Retirement Funds ·--------·--· · ·--· -Q: Construction Funds - Bui !dings .. --- ·-- - -- - --- · ·
Miscellaneous
.--· ----·· · ·--- -----S. Tuberculosis '· ·- · ·· ·----···-···.-·
T. Federal Funds ------·- --·· ·- -- ·--·· ·· · ·
TOTAL · Excluding Agency Funds
Agency Funds · · · . · · - -- · -- - - · • · · · · TOTAL OF ALL FUNQS •
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Current Passbook
Rate. Save by the lOth,
from the 1st.

•,,,.n

MeiJs eo.

~tranch ·

RECEIPTS
Revenue

$130,996.99
12,435.86
17,517.82
4,270.59
237 .65
1,427 .04
35,632.92

"'·

Revenue

$396,318.91
6,500.00
72,365.68

$29,924.92

25,~39.42

442:90

910.00
81,768.18

42.19
12,714.17

Total Receipts
&amp; Balances

Expenditures

$557,240.82
18,935.86
89,883.50
30,352.91
237.65
2.379.23
130,115.27 .

$378,126.38
5,067.03
61,451.27
23,279.41
237.65
1,121.98
88,654.40

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICI,TY PATTERNS
115 W. Second

37,478.47
13,947.51
602,911 ST
1,126.53
20,613.15
586,249.74

6,421.03
40,362.25
471.65

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57,928.13
17,058.85
809,549.22
1,588:18
27,967 .71
586,489.42
11,209.14
44,510.41

3,227.58
11,196.00

24,361.00
14.534.00 .
1,884,724.16

'

15,42~.00

104,802:69
2,202,929.43
2.307,732.12

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1,884,724.16

2,400,868.30.
2',325,018. 94
4,7.25,887 .24

The Order of the Garter i~
the highest order of British
knighthood.

BALANCE
Dec. 31, 1970

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Pomeroy; Olllo

preseilc~ this 5th day ~ AprU1 1971.
.
MARTHA CHAMBERS ·

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Notary Public of Meigs County

My Commission Expires May 2, 1973

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America's Favorite Compact Deal

LET'S GET TOGETHER

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HERE'S WHAT YOU GET
ON THIS SPECIALLY EQUIPPED HARDTOP:
f

See our vast display of
merchandise . . . newest
shipments from a II over
the
nation
grouped
together at one location for
y 0 ur
shopping
con venience! T-ake advantage
of the many special values
Bakers offer •

'36,489.93
6,683.85
123,767,13

21,438.20
10,375.00
685,781.49
1,588. Hl
5,040.00
586,250.34
5,849.04
37,604.96
6,021.92

22,927.71 .
239.08
5,360.10
6,905.45
9,400.08
482,981.05
261,225.40
744,206.45

1,917,887.2~
2,~3.793 . 54

3,981 ;680.79

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DodgeDart hasthe highest resale value in its fierd.

1,257.25
41.460.87

This ls .to .certify
that the attached summary of fund
copiAd
froni the Meigs County Flna~clal ·,
. transactlqns fot: the year 1•70
.
.
Statem_e nt t.;» the best of my knowledge and belief are correct.
1
.Signed in my

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$179,114.44
13,868.83
28,432 .23
7,073.50

I

Ja,028.63
3,111.34
166,275.40
-10.00
7,354.56
239.68
7,981.56
(1,953.41
888.00
411,341.45
122,089.51
$533,430.96

Pomeroy, 0.

992-22-84 .

E
DODGE

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.'lee many total look inspirations and new ideas

Dodge

awaitin'l( you at: .••

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,GORDON H•. CALDWELL
. M.. COunty AuditOr

·BOYS

FURNITURE FOR TODA'Y'S HOMEMAKERS

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· . Thtt AIMns County
Snlngs &amp; Lo.,. Co.
·
2f6Second St.

Paraments Dedicated

•

Downing·

Coach John Milhoan 's
Gallipolis Blue Devils golf team
opened their 1971 campaign
wl th a 166-177 triumph over
• visiting Meigs on the local links
Monday evening. ·
Marauder Bill Hensler
captured medalist honors with a
thr~ver.par 37.
Mike Noe led the winners with
a five-&lt;Jver.par 39.
GAllS will host Barboursville
today.
Here's Monday's results:
GALUPOLIS - Mike Noe,
39; John Cwmingham, 41; Dow
Saunders, 42; Mike Shaver, 44;
Steve Gardner, 46.
MEIGS - Bill Hensler, 37;
Steve Story, 43; Chuck Hannah,
47; Frank Girolami, 50 and
Shenn Mills, 50.
Others playing yesterday
were :
GAHS - John Saunders, 39;
Brett Epling, 39; Bruce
Rodgers,42; JinunyNoe,42and
Topper Orr, 43.
MEIGS - Jim Story, 43;
Marty Vaughn, 45; Bob Werry,
47 and Jim Wildermuth, so.

Middleport

Pefsonal Notes

ggg

Marauders in
Golf Defeat

Attend~d Semi~Ann~ual lnspe~tion

125

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BAKER FURNITURE
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MIDDLEPORT, 0 •

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• 3-speed automatic transmission
(no ·charge)
• Vinyl roof
• 6.95 x 14 white sidewall tires
• Deluxe wheel covers
• "Rim Blow" ~eluxe steering wheel
• Bumper guards (front and rear)

· ·Belt mouldings
• Remote-control outside
mirror, left side
• Convenience light package
• Body side mouldings
(with vinyl inserts).

TODAY .MOREPEOPlE DRIVE DODGE DART
THAN ANY OTHERCOMPACT INTHEU.S.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

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AUTHORiZED DE~LERS

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Mill &amp;Second Streets, Middleport, 0.

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· 4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;irt-Pomeroy, 0 ., April&amp;, 1971

Body Precautionary Signs

Property

. Merit Close Attention too
"A caution signal in one's
body should get at least the
same respect as a highway
warning sign," according to the
American Cancer Society.
The ·American Cancer Society
issued an appeal for all citizens
of Meigs County to familiarize
the1Jl£elves with cancer's Seven
, Warnitfg''Signals in connection
with the
annual ACS
educational and fund-raising
Crusade which began April 1.
"The first letters of the
signals spell the word Caution;"
and the ACS listed them as:
Change in bowel or bladder
habits
A sore that does not heal
'

Unusual
bleeding
or
discharge
Thickening or lump in breast
or elsewhere
Indigestion or difficulty in
swallowing
Obvious change in wart or
mole
Nagging cough or hoarseness
If you discover a signal, s'ee
your physiciap, The Cancer
Society advises .
·

Frances Ashworth , Barbara C.
Beadle, Willard· M. Ashworth,
A. J. Beadle to Earl Q. Teaford,
Evalene 0 . Teaford, Lots,
Pomeroy. '
Keith E. Goble, Opal H. Goble
to Daniel E. · Thompson, Clyde
- L. Thompson, .69 A., Pomeroy,
William A. Blythe, Evelyn
Kelly Mfg . Co, to Johnnie H. Blythe to Layton Sayre, Doris
Nash, Mildred V, Nash, Lot, V. Sayre, Parcels, Salisbury.
Middleport.
Robert.G. Pickett, Eloise M.
. Paul Eber . Henderson to Pickett to OHio Fuel Gas Co., RWayne F. Ward, Linda L. War&lt;!. W., Bedford .
100 A., Lebanon .
'Meigs Local School Dist to
Fred D. Wilcoxen, 'dec'd., to Ohio Fuel Gas Co., R-W.,
Faye
Wilcoxen,
Martin Salisbury .
Wilcoxen, Charles Frederick
Wilcoxen, Donna M. Jones,
Veda F. Krzton, Cert. Trans., •
IN HOSPITAL
Lebanon .
Mrs.
William L. Smith
Iva M. Donohae, dec'd., to
Ruth Gillelan, , Mildred Lee, ( Zuelelia ), Pomeroy, was
Olive Stobarl, Raymond admitted Sunday to Veterans
Donahue, Kathleen McMurray, Memorial Hospital for obLaurenee A : Donohue, Ray E . servation and treatment.
Donahue, Cert. Trans., Scipio.
Myrtle M. Ga rdner to General
Telephone Co. R-W., Rutland.
Hoger L. Beegle, Marviene NOTICE
Beegle to General Telephone GOOD FRIDAY services at the
Mt. Hermon U. B. Church
Co., Ease., Lebanon .
with the Re v. Robert Saun John H. Ferrell, Wilma ders. Special singing . Time
Ferrell , Charles F. Wildermuth, 7:30. Everyone welcome.
H ·4tc
·Kathryn Wildermuth , Sarah

Meigs

detection and prompt treatment.
This is the message of conCel'n and hope brought this
year, but each must do hi ~ or
her part by being alert. Cancer
cures don 't come by magic. The
ACS said that three decades
ago, "Fewer than one out of five
cancer pcltients was being

saved. Today it's one in three.
But if the message of the need of
early diagnosis al)d treatment
There are people right h ~re in gets home to everyone we could
Meigs County leading normal save one out of two."
active lives who are among the For example, the uterine
1,500,000 Americans alive today cancer death rate has dropped
who have been cured of cancer. nationally about 50 per cent in a
They are alive because of early generation. "This decline was
due in part to use of the Pap
Test which can reveal cancer of
the uterine cervix before it
The Catholic Women's Club
will meet on Holy Thursday at 7 begins to spread and is highly
curable at this stage."
P.m. Wl' th church services to This year we are emphasizing
beginatBp.m. The Good Friday alertness and caution, "Help
services Will be held at 8 p.m. · yourself with a checkup and
and the Holy Saturday Easter others with a check."
Vigil Service and Mass will be
at 7:30 p.m. Masses on Easter
Sunday will be at 8 a.m. and 10

Catholic Holy Week Services Announced
Holy Week activities at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
have been announced.
Confessions will be held
· 'Tuesday and Wednesday before
the 7 p.m. Mass, on Holy
Thursday and Good Friday
from 7:15 to 7:45 p.m. and on
Holy Saturday from II a.m. to
12 noon, from 3.p.m. -to 4 p.m. a.m.
and from 6:30p.m. to 7: 15p.m. .

Transfers

VISIT PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hester
and daughter, Jill Elizabeth, of
South Point have been in
Pomeroy with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Riggs, Wetzgal
St. Mr. and Mrs. Hester left
today for Florida to complete
arrangements for making a
move there, Jill remained with
her grandparents.

CANTATA PLANNED
The mixed choir of the
Bradbury Church of Ch~isl will
present John Peterson s cantat~, · ·; ~alleiujah, What a
Saviour . at the 7:30 p,m,
Sunday evemng servtce at the
church, The. public is invited.
E~ster mormng sunrise servtce
w)ll,be ~1. 6:30a.m. -

FOR EASTER!

Bulova
best in
fashion

and the Rev. Audrey Miller,
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, were assisted by
Darrell McKinney, • who
recently received his local
preacher's license from the
Middleport Church. Raymond
Walburn led in singing at the
service.
Baptized were Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Whitlatch, Harvey, Jr.
and Barbara, and Kevin Fields
of the Pomeroy Church; and
Ricky Mendenhall, Danny, Paul
and Timothy Miller, and
Christine Miller, of the Middleport Church.

14K solid 10ld case.

6 diamonds, navy or
dark JUlin dill . $'50.

Gilt marbrs

on a aolden

btOWII di al.

17 jewe ls. SU.

PARTY SCHEDULED
The Pairs and Spares Sunday
School Class of the Bradbury
Church of Christ will have, a
skating party Thursday night at
the Skate-a-Way Rink on Route
7, beginning at 7:30 p.m. All
area youth are invited to attend.
. The charge will be 50 cents per .c·
person plus the charge for
skates.

OEPART.M ENT STORE

m akes su tt· uf that ,
with their line
collcclio n nf 'acn::nt'

watches. Come in
and we'll show yo u

how your wardrobe
comes to life with an
elegantl y dc~igrml

Bulova wat ch.

Goessler
·Jewelry
Store
Cour1 St.

Pomeroy

TWO HONORED
John and Virginia Dean,
Bedford Township,' were among
those honored Saturday by the
South Central Ohio Preservation Society for having a farm
within their family for at least
the last 100 years.

WED. &amp; THURS.
APRIL 7-8
911L 8

EASTER

WIG SHOW AND
._SALE
E. 2nd St. .

Pomeroy, 0 .

Next to Post Office

ONLY '15.50
100 percent Kane k a lon
stretch wigs. Just wash &amp;

VISIT IN CHESTER
Mr. and Mrs. John Beaver,
Nye Ave ., Pomeroy, were
Wednesda y guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Eber Gillilan and Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Gillilan, Chester.

wear.

INo Obiigatlons)

FEMININE
MYSTIQUE

.

t For Today ..it _
il Weak men wa lt for op. f:
~ portunifies ; st rong men -k
~ make them .
~
it
- Anderson M. Ba ten f: ·

WE WISH,.

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: It's Quick! Easy • i
: DRIVE-IN •
! BANKING ·:
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Fridays Only
The Driv e· In Window
f:
tsOpen
it
9 A.M. to 7 P. M.
(Continuously)

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it Other Banki ng Hours 9 to
f: 3 and 5 to 7 as usual on
: Fridays.

YOU
A HAPPY EASTER!

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Superiors

i{

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! and SAVINGS CO. t
f:

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POMEROY, OHIO
MemberFDIC
Member Federal

SMOKED
PICNics·

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!.. FARMERS BANK :..
it

Superiors Brand

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SEMI·
BONELESS

i{ .

it
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Reser ve System
.

Half or
Whole

·sHOP YOUR NEAREST STORE! ! !

SAVE '1.00

SWIFT'S

PANTY HOSE
PETITE
AVERAGE
TALL SIZES

9· 9

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New Spring ColoiS!

DRESS
·GLOVES

BOYS'
PANTS

STRETCH SIZES
eSET OFF YOUR
NEW OUTFIT!

Size 3 to 18
Stripes, solids, checks
· Rare or straight legs

$287

$}00·PAIR

UP

FOR i

'1JIIt~

TO
SHOPPERS
MART

UP TO 11 INCHES TALL
A VARIETY OF
ANIMALS

WHITE OR MILK CHOCOlATE!

9~To94~

4 COLORS

24¢

GIRLS' DRESS SHOES
White or black- Smooth or Kr inkle in a
variety of styles. Sizes 01 Todd ler s thn·

6 25¢

EASTER
GRASS

FOR YOUR EASTER LASSIE!

,;"r

49~

Fill yourself!

SHAKES

...

....

EMPTY
EASTER
BASKETS

ge

ro

Thick

TGM'ATOES·

EACH

·"""

MT.

TWIN P-OPS ..................~~.~~. ~~ . 79e
FRENCH FRIES ............ ~. ~~:.~:~. .69e
ORANGE JUICE .....;4 soLcans79e

6

SCOT lAD

DONALD DUCK

S227 TO $387

REGULAR 10e
11

BOYS' SPRING
JACKETS

.
194

$

RED-WHITE·
"' ,."' BLUE .
SIZE 6 TO 18

LUDEN•s
CREAM
EGGS

The bigger egg- fruit
and nut, cherry ,
cocoanut or carmel
fudge flavors. Kids
love them!

UP

PLENTY OF FREE PARKIHG

COLORING
KITS
4· Ounce tasty mi.lk
chocolate egg with
Easter decorations.
Indiv idually boxed.

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9

FOR DRESS OR SPORT!

EACH

MEN'S SHIRTS
Stripes, prints. solids, checks, -

57~

tran sfers,

.alphabel stickers and
paste-ons.

short

s l eev~

$294 $3
AND

BAKED GOODS SALE
Bethel62, International Order
of Jobs Daughters, will have a
bake sale Saturday at · the
Columbia Gas of Ohio office i'n
Middleport.

PINTO
BEANS
HAND FILLED
WITH FRESH _CANDY! ·
We think of your children fir st! We
make certai n our candy Is fresh (our
baskets have all been made within past
two weeks) - . we make certain the

Some have adjustable
straps, others fiberfill
pads. Cup sizes 1o D - A
bra for every woman .

•

va luf Is there ~ we use chocolate

New wonder'ful fabrics ahd
styling that your girls will wan1
for Easter and la1er, and best of
all :- you save money at Shop.
pers Mar1.

.·· ... .

$2

''2~7

44 .TO

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-As"/

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sauP.. . -

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CABBAGE

Radishes
be h.

2 lb.

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BREAD

INSTANT

con AGE
CHEESE

pkg.

¢

2

lb.
box

---·--,

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WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A 10.0Z. JAR OF

McCOY'S

•

FAVORITE

10¢

lb.

cans ·

1
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MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE

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AL

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1

MARK V STORE

10 OZ. JAR ONLY 1.19 :~t~"

59e

1- ___ O!(J~I!I!!E!FAMILY •

:I

OFf!RUPiRtq.17-71 ____ ..J

WRIGLEY'S

•

centerpieces &amp; plenty of good candy .
Come .see-But
Hurry!
·
.

'127-'1

SIZES 3 fO 14
WHY PAY MORE?

46oz.

2 lb.
LIMA
,pkg.
BEANS
'
HOFFMAN HOUSE
DILL ,PICKLES quart jar
Ham, Chicken,
CARNATION. Turtley &amp; Tuna
:SPREADA ES 7¥z' OL Size

\

DRESSES

cans

31~

GIRLS' EASY CARE

WOMEN'S
BRAS

Red Button

MARK VCOUPON

PLENTY OF
FREE
94
PARKING! !

(I ,.. ....1 ,;;.i
. \

Fresh, Solid

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

styles. Fit correc-

tly- Budget priced.

59~

Golden Ripe Fruit

'

we have them all in comfortable

SA,LE SATURDAY
A bake sale will be held
Saturday beginning at 10 a.m.
at the Trinity Church basement
by the Women's Guild.

2

BANANAS

bis.'

ERS

dipper and drying tray.
Cuto.u1 s,

3

lb.
pkg.

lb.

40 '0Z.

10 oz.

Comp lete with 6 co lors,

3 9 ~.

ORANGE DRINK

SHOW BOAT
PORK &amp; BEANS

EASTER EGG

bottle
carton

HI-C

'

100% WINDPROOF NYLON

Choice
Red
Ripe

DEW

NORTH STAR

77e

j

For Easter Salads!

SPECIAL sh:kes 69~

MANY SIZES •
SHADES COLORS

4.99

Ught Chocolate,
dart! chocolate, vanilla
and strawberry

New Thick &amp; Frosty

\~,
/

Teens.

lb.

The best canned
ham that money
can buy.

5c.

8¢

WOMEN'S

BACON

Flavor of
Buttercream,
Carmel fudge, cherry, maple,
cocoanut or fruit and nu t. Save

WELL KNOWN
BRANDS

HAM s lb.

DART SLICED

CREME EGGS

CANDY
BARS

NEWEST COLORS

Spe

FAMOUS SPERRY · 5'

Lean, Meaty 5
Neck Bones.................
. lb. 1.00
Ground Beef...~~~~.~~.~.~.~~~.........~~-.. 69~
Ground Chuck ..~~~~.................~~·.. 79~
• g Hens ,.........................
Fresh Dressed
lb. 53~
Stew1n
..
•

CANNED

. 1'
ci3.

.

PR.

ALL 10'

IN HOSPITAL
Walter Grass remains a
patient at the Pike Coun ty
Hospital in Waverly. He is a
fo~me r resident of Middleport.

lb.

······~······~

. · ·. FAVORITE "YOUR CAPRICE" BRAND

TWO-DAY SALE
A rummage sale will be held
Friday and Saturday in the
Crow-Porter building which
formerly housed the V. D, ·
Edwards Insurance office in
.Pomeroy by Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty.

•

have a wide variety of hams ...
that will make your Easter
dinner a little finer ... picnics,--- ·- canned and semi-boneless.

\

PT. PLEASANT • GALliPOUS • MASON ·

Fashion dN•sn't slOp

at the wrist. Du loYa

Va.; an uncle Keith Lisle, and a
g:r ea L~u'ncle and aunt, Mr.t-and
Mrs. Robert Harden and
daughter, · Debbie, and Miss
Mila Powell, Pomeroy.
Following the service all but
the Harden family "'ent to the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Lisle. for a family dinner. They
were joinced by Harry Potts.
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _"""'

9 PM
EVERY
NIGHT

A DISCOUNT

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
.4, 30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward,
Dl h g s
Mrs. Ellza~~rA~lman, Mrs,
Khwaja·.. Abdul .Aziz, Gerald
Dempsey; Mrs." Larry Denzil
Franz and son, Mrs. James L.
Groves and son, Mrs. Richard
Grueser, Mrs. Morris D. Harris
and son, Mrs. Denver·Mays and
son, Clarence Oiler, Mrs.
Robert T. Polcyn and son,
Vernal Ratliff, Mrs, Denver L.
Rice, Mrs, Lester E. Roush,
'Kellie M. Russell, Rodney E.
Waller, Mrs. John D. Wood and
son, Mrs, Henrietta J . Reese, ·
r..i.rry J . Supple, and Herman D.
Ross.

John Todd, four-month old
son or Mr. and Mrs. John Lisle,
Pomeroy, was baptized Sunday
at the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, by the Rev.
Forest Donley.
Attending were the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Herschel
Manuel and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Lisle; the greatgrandmother, Mrs. Harry
Potts ; two aunts, Mrs. Jean
Allen and her sari, Brian, of
Syracuse, and Mrs. Roy Jenkins
and her husband of Belmont, W.

WE NOW•••

OPEN
TILL

Ten Baptized in Scott's Farm Pond
Ten candidates were baptized
during a joint service Sunday
at:ernoon at the Scott farm
pond near Pomeroy of the
Middleport and Pomeroy
Churches of the Nazarene.
The Rev. Clyde Henderson,
pastor of the Pomeroy Church,

John Todd lisle·is Baptized

...
~~·~~~·~~~~~~·•t
f: .
h ...
it ·A Thoug t 1

CHEWING

$

CANDY
BARS
CRACKER JAI;KS .

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 t(} 10 • Sun. 10 to ·10
·

box . 9~

·

.I

We Accept Federal Food Stnmps
PHONE. 992-3480
I

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

" W0 Re ;erve The Right TaLim il Ouontities"

.· ·.

·

MIOOltPORT, Q.'
I

I

�...

. ·

.

'

l'

'

' .
· 4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;irt-Pomeroy, 0 ., April&amp;, 1971

Body Precautionary Signs

Property

. Merit Close Attention too
"A caution signal in one's
body should get at least the
same respect as a highway
warning sign," according to the
American Cancer Society.
The ·American Cancer Society
issued an appeal for all citizens
of Meigs County to familiarize
the1Jl£elves with cancer's Seven
, Warnitfg''Signals in connection
with the
annual ACS
educational and fund-raising
Crusade which began April 1.
"The first letters of the
signals spell the word Caution;"
and the ACS listed them as:
Change in bowel or bladder
habits
A sore that does not heal
'

Unusual
bleeding
or
discharge
Thickening or lump in breast
or elsewhere
Indigestion or difficulty in
swallowing
Obvious change in wart or
mole
Nagging cough or hoarseness
If you discover a signal, s'ee
your physiciap, The Cancer
Society advises .
·

Frances Ashworth , Barbara C.
Beadle, Willard· M. Ashworth,
A. J. Beadle to Earl Q. Teaford,
Evalene 0 . Teaford, Lots,
Pomeroy. '
Keith E. Goble, Opal H. Goble
to Daniel E. · Thompson, Clyde
- L. Thompson, .69 A., Pomeroy,
William A. Blythe, Evelyn
Kelly Mfg . Co, to Johnnie H. Blythe to Layton Sayre, Doris
Nash, Mildred V, Nash, Lot, V. Sayre, Parcels, Salisbury.
Middleport.
Robert.G. Pickett, Eloise M.
. Paul Eber . Henderson to Pickett to OHio Fuel Gas Co., RWayne F. Ward, Linda L. War&lt;!. W., Bedford .
100 A., Lebanon .
'Meigs Local School Dist to
Fred D. Wilcoxen, 'dec'd., to Ohio Fuel Gas Co., R-W.,
Faye
Wilcoxen,
Martin Salisbury .
Wilcoxen, Charles Frederick
Wilcoxen, Donna M. Jones,
Veda F. Krzton, Cert. Trans., •
IN HOSPITAL
Lebanon .
Mrs.
William L. Smith
Iva M. Donohae, dec'd., to
Ruth Gillelan, , Mildred Lee, ( Zuelelia ), Pomeroy, was
Olive Stobarl, Raymond admitted Sunday to Veterans
Donahue, Kathleen McMurray, Memorial Hospital for obLaurenee A : Donohue, Ray E . servation and treatment.
Donahue, Cert. Trans., Scipio.
Myrtle M. Ga rdner to General
Telephone Co. R-W., Rutland.
Hoger L. Beegle, Marviene NOTICE
Beegle to General Telephone GOOD FRIDAY services at the
Mt. Hermon U. B. Church
Co., Ease., Lebanon .
with the Re v. Robert Saun John H. Ferrell, Wilma ders. Special singing . Time
Ferrell , Charles F. Wildermuth, 7:30. Everyone welcome.
H ·4tc
·Kathryn Wildermuth , Sarah

Meigs

detection and prompt treatment.
This is the message of conCel'n and hope brought this
year, but each must do hi ~ or
her part by being alert. Cancer
cures don 't come by magic. The
ACS said that three decades
ago, "Fewer than one out of five
cancer pcltients was being

saved. Today it's one in three.
But if the message of the need of
early diagnosis al)d treatment
There are people right h ~re in gets home to everyone we could
Meigs County leading normal save one out of two."
active lives who are among the For example, the uterine
1,500,000 Americans alive today cancer death rate has dropped
who have been cured of cancer. nationally about 50 per cent in a
They are alive because of early generation. "This decline was
due in part to use of the Pap
Test which can reveal cancer of
the uterine cervix before it
The Catholic Women's Club
will meet on Holy Thursday at 7 begins to spread and is highly
curable at this stage."
P.m. Wl' th church services to This year we are emphasizing
beginatBp.m. The Good Friday alertness and caution, "Help
services Will be held at 8 p.m. · yourself with a checkup and
and the Holy Saturday Easter others with a check."
Vigil Service and Mass will be
at 7:30 p.m. Masses on Easter
Sunday will be at 8 a.m. and 10

Catholic Holy Week Services Announced
Holy Week activities at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
have been announced.
Confessions will be held
· 'Tuesday and Wednesday before
the 7 p.m. Mass, on Holy
Thursday and Good Friday
from 7:15 to 7:45 p.m. and on
Holy Saturday from II a.m. to
12 noon, from 3.p.m. -to 4 p.m. a.m.
and from 6:30p.m. to 7: 15p.m. .

Transfers

VISIT PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hester
and daughter, Jill Elizabeth, of
South Point have been in
Pomeroy with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Riggs, Wetzgal
St. Mr. and Mrs. Hester left
today for Florida to complete
arrangements for making a
move there, Jill remained with
her grandparents.

CANTATA PLANNED
The mixed choir of the
Bradbury Church of Ch~isl will
present John Peterson s cantat~, · ·; ~alleiujah, What a
Saviour . at the 7:30 p,m,
Sunday evemng servtce at the
church, The. public is invited.
E~ster mormng sunrise servtce
w)ll,be ~1. 6:30a.m. -

FOR EASTER!

Bulova
best in
fashion

and the Rev. Audrey Miller,
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, were assisted by
Darrell McKinney, • who
recently received his local
preacher's license from the
Middleport Church. Raymond
Walburn led in singing at the
service.
Baptized were Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Whitlatch, Harvey, Jr.
and Barbara, and Kevin Fields
of the Pomeroy Church; and
Ricky Mendenhall, Danny, Paul
and Timothy Miller, and
Christine Miller, of the Middleport Church.

14K solid 10ld case.

6 diamonds, navy or
dark JUlin dill . $'50.

Gilt marbrs

on a aolden

btOWII di al.

17 jewe ls. SU.

PARTY SCHEDULED
The Pairs and Spares Sunday
School Class of the Bradbury
Church of Christ will have, a
skating party Thursday night at
the Skate-a-Way Rink on Route
7, beginning at 7:30 p.m. All
area youth are invited to attend.
. The charge will be 50 cents per .c·
person plus the charge for
skates.

OEPART.M ENT STORE

m akes su tt· uf that ,
with their line
collcclio n nf 'acn::nt'

watches. Come in
and we'll show yo u

how your wardrobe
comes to life with an
elegantl y dc~igrml

Bulova wat ch.

Goessler
·Jewelry
Store
Cour1 St.

Pomeroy

TWO HONORED
John and Virginia Dean,
Bedford Township,' were among
those honored Saturday by the
South Central Ohio Preservation Society for having a farm
within their family for at least
the last 100 years.

WED. &amp; THURS.
APRIL 7-8
911L 8

EASTER

WIG SHOW AND
._SALE
E. 2nd St. .

Pomeroy, 0 .

Next to Post Office

ONLY '15.50
100 percent Kane k a lon
stretch wigs. Just wash &amp;

VISIT IN CHESTER
Mr. and Mrs. John Beaver,
Nye Ave ., Pomeroy, were
Wednesda y guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Eber Gillilan and Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Gillilan, Chester.

wear.

INo Obiigatlons)

FEMININE
MYSTIQUE

.

t For Today ..it _
il Weak men wa lt for op. f:
~ portunifies ; st rong men -k
~ make them .
~
it
- Anderson M. Ba ten f: ·

WE WISH,.

:
• * * * ..
: It's Quick! Easy • i
: DRIVE-IN •
! BANKING ·:
~

•

i!

it

Fridays Only
The Driv e· In Window
f:
tsOpen
it
9 A.M. to 7 P. M.
(Continuously)

!

:
f:
,. .

!

i{

it
it Other Banki ng Hours 9 to
f: 3 and 5 to 7 as usual on
: Fridays.

YOU
A HAPPY EASTER!

.,

:

Superiors

i{

:

! and SAVINGS CO. t
f:

i{

~

POMEROY, OHIO
MemberFDIC
Member Federal

SMOKED
PICNics·

•

il

!.. FARMERS BANK :..
it

Superiors Brand

•

SEMI·
BONELESS

i{ .

it
;•

Reser ve System
.

Half or
Whole

·sHOP YOUR NEAREST STORE! ! !

SAVE '1.00

SWIFT'S

PANTY HOSE
PETITE
AVERAGE
TALL SIZES

9· 9

~

New Spring ColoiS!

DRESS
·GLOVES

BOYS'
PANTS

STRETCH SIZES
eSET OFF YOUR
NEW OUTFIT!

Size 3 to 18
Stripes, solids, checks
· Rare or straight legs

$287

$}00·PAIR

UP

FOR i

'1JIIt~

TO
SHOPPERS
MART

UP TO 11 INCHES TALL
A VARIETY OF
ANIMALS

WHITE OR MILK CHOCOlATE!

9~To94~

4 COLORS

24¢

GIRLS' DRESS SHOES
White or black- Smooth or Kr inkle in a
variety of styles. Sizes 01 Todd ler s thn·

6 25¢

EASTER
GRASS

FOR YOUR EASTER LASSIE!

,;"r

49~

Fill yourself!

SHAKES

...

....

EMPTY
EASTER
BASKETS

ge

ro

Thick

TGM'ATOES·

EACH

·"""

MT.

TWIN P-OPS ..................~~.~~. ~~ . 79e
FRENCH FRIES ............ ~. ~~:.~:~. .69e
ORANGE JUICE .....;4 soLcans79e

6

SCOT lAD

DONALD DUCK

S227 TO $387

REGULAR 10e
11

BOYS' SPRING
JACKETS

.
194

$

RED-WHITE·
"' ,."' BLUE .
SIZE 6 TO 18

LUDEN•s
CREAM
EGGS

The bigger egg- fruit
and nut, cherry ,
cocoanut or carmel
fudge flavors. Kids
love them!

UP

PLENTY OF FREE PARKIHG

COLORING
KITS
4· Ounce tasty mi.lk
chocolate egg with
Easter decorations.
Indiv idually boxed.

~
.
9

FOR DRESS OR SPORT!

EACH

MEN'S SHIRTS
Stripes, prints. solids, checks, -

57~

tran sfers,

.alphabel stickers and
paste-ons.

short

s l eev~

$294 $3
AND

BAKED GOODS SALE
Bethel62, International Order
of Jobs Daughters, will have a
bake sale Saturday at · the
Columbia Gas of Ohio office i'n
Middleport.

PINTO
BEANS
HAND FILLED
WITH FRESH _CANDY! ·
We think of your children fir st! We
make certai n our candy Is fresh (our
baskets have all been made within past
two weeks) - . we make certain the

Some have adjustable
straps, others fiberfill
pads. Cup sizes 1o D - A
bra for every woman .

•

va luf Is there ~ we use chocolate

New wonder'ful fabrics ahd
styling that your girls will wan1
for Easter and la1er, and best of
all :- you save money at Shop.
pers Mar1.

.·· ... .

$2

''2~7

44 .TO

.

..

-As"/

.1"'J •'
()f\

..

\

'

sauP.. . -

'
-~-

CABBAGE

Radishes
be h.

2 lb.

..

BREAD

INSTANT

con AGE
CHEESE

pkg.

¢

2

lb.
box

---·--,

I,
I
I

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A 10.0Z. JAR OF

McCOY'S

•

FAVORITE

10¢

lb.

cans ·

1
1

e

I

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE

,.

AL

I

I
1

MARK V STORE

10 OZ. JAR ONLY 1.19 :~t~"

59e

1- ___ O!(J~I!I!!E!FAMILY •

:I

OFf!RUPiRtq.17-71 ____ ..J

WRIGLEY'S

•

centerpieces &amp; plenty of good candy .
Come .see-But
Hurry!
·
.

'127-'1

SIZES 3 fO 14
WHY PAY MORE?

46oz.

2 lb.
LIMA
,pkg.
BEANS
'
HOFFMAN HOUSE
DILL ,PICKLES quart jar
Ham, Chicken,
CARNATION. Turtley &amp; Tuna
:SPREADA ES 7¥z' OL Size

\

DRESSES

cans

31~

GIRLS' EASY CARE

WOMEN'S
BRAS

Red Button

MARK VCOUPON

PLENTY OF
FREE
94
PARKING! !

(I ,.. ....1 ,;;.i
. \

Fresh, Solid

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

styles. Fit correc-

tly- Budget priced.

59~

Golden Ripe Fruit

'

we have them all in comfortable

SA,LE SATURDAY
A bake sale will be held
Saturday beginning at 10 a.m.
at the Trinity Church basement
by the Women's Guild.

2

BANANAS

bis.'

ERS

dipper and drying tray.
Cuto.u1 s,

3

lb.
pkg.

lb.

40 '0Z.

10 oz.

Comp lete with 6 co lors,

3 9 ~.

ORANGE DRINK

SHOW BOAT
PORK &amp; BEANS

EASTER EGG

bottle
carton

HI-C

'

100% WINDPROOF NYLON

Choice
Red
Ripe

DEW

NORTH STAR

77e

j

For Easter Salads!

SPECIAL sh:kes 69~

MANY SIZES •
SHADES COLORS

4.99

Ught Chocolate,
dart! chocolate, vanilla
and strawberry

New Thick &amp; Frosty

\~,
/

Teens.

lb.

The best canned
ham that money
can buy.

5c.

8¢

WOMEN'S

BACON

Flavor of
Buttercream,
Carmel fudge, cherry, maple,
cocoanut or fruit and nu t. Save

WELL KNOWN
BRANDS

HAM s lb.

DART SLICED

CREME EGGS

CANDY
BARS

NEWEST COLORS

Spe

FAMOUS SPERRY · 5'

Lean, Meaty 5
Neck Bones.................
. lb. 1.00
Ground Beef...~~~~.~~.~.~.~~~.........~~-.. 69~
Ground Chuck ..~~~~.................~~·.. 79~
• g Hens ,.........................
Fresh Dressed
lb. 53~
Stew1n
..
•

CANNED

. 1'
ci3.

.

PR.

ALL 10'

IN HOSPITAL
Walter Grass remains a
patient at the Pike Coun ty
Hospital in Waverly. He is a
fo~me r resident of Middleport.

lb.

······~······~

. · ·. FAVORITE "YOUR CAPRICE" BRAND

TWO-DAY SALE
A rummage sale will be held
Friday and Saturday in the
Crow-Porter building which
formerly housed the V. D, ·
Edwards Insurance office in
.Pomeroy by Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty.

•

have a wide variety of hams ...
that will make your Easter
dinner a little finer ... picnics,--- ·- canned and semi-boneless.

\

PT. PLEASANT • GALliPOUS • MASON ·

Fashion dN•sn't slOp

at the wrist. Du loYa

Va.; an uncle Keith Lisle, and a
g:r ea L~u'ncle and aunt, Mr.t-and
Mrs. Robert Harden and
daughter, · Debbie, and Miss
Mila Powell, Pomeroy.
Following the service all but
the Harden family "'ent to the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Lisle. for a family dinner. They
were joinced by Harry Potts.
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _"""'

9 PM
EVERY
NIGHT

A DISCOUNT

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
.4, 30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward,
Dl h g s
Mrs. Ellza~~rA~lman, Mrs,
Khwaja·.. Abdul .Aziz, Gerald
Dempsey; Mrs." Larry Denzil
Franz and son, Mrs. James L.
Groves and son, Mrs. Richard
Grueser, Mrs. Morris D. Harris
and son, Mrs. Denver·Mays and
son, Clarence Oiler, Mrs.
Robert T. Polcyn and son,
Vernal Ratliff, Mrs, Denver L.
Rice, Mrs, Lester E. Roush,
'Kellie M. Russell, Rodney E.
Waller, Mrs. John D. Wood and
son, Mrs, Henrietta J . Reese, ·
r..i.rry J . Supple, and Herman D.
Ross.

John Todd, four-month old
son or Mr. and Mrs. John Lisle,
Pomeroy, was baptized Sunday
at the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, by the Rev.
Forest Donley.
Attending were the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Herschel
Manuel and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Lisle; the greatgrandmother, Mrs. Harry
Potts ; two aunts, Mrs. Jean
Allen and her sari, Brian, of
Syracuse, and Mrs. Roy Jenkins
and her husband of Belmont, W.

WE NOW•••

OPEN
TILL

Ten Baptized in Scott's Farm Pond
Ten candidates were baptized
during a joint service Sunday
at:ernoon at the Scott farm
pond near Pomeroy of the
Middleport and Pomeroy
Churches of the Nazarene.
The Rev. Clyde Henderson,
pastor of the Pomeroy Church,

John Todd lisle·is Baptized

...
~~·~~~·~~~~~~·•t
f: .
h ...
it ·A Thoug t 1

CHEWING

$

CANDY
BARS
CRACKER JAI;KS .

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 t(} 10 • Sun. 10 to ·10
·

box . 9~

·

.I

We Accept Federal Food Stnmps
PHONE. 992-3480
I

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

" W0 Re ;erve The Right TaLim il Ouontities"

.· ·.

·

MIOOltPORT, Q.'
I

I

�I.

-' \

AND!&gt;fEEK

C
B argabts, Bargams, and More Bargains I~ Sentinel Classifieds·
For Sale
Wanted
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy ___ __
Services
Business
OF

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-P&lt;Hneroy, 0., April6, 1971

.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

LADY Ia I ive in wi lh elderly

5 P .M. ·O ay Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .

Cancellation &amp; CorreEtlons

Will be accepted unt(l 9 a.m . for
Day of Publ ication

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

The PUblisher reserves the
right to edit of re[ect any ad!
".deemed
ob[ectlonal.
Thf

u.bllsher will not be responsiblt
r.or·
more than one incorrect
lnser1ion.

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word on~~nsertion
12

"''•h•r,lum Lnarg e t;:, c
cents per word thret

'consecutiyl. lnsertions.
18 cents · per . word

secutlve Insertions .

s~x

•

con

, 25 Per cent D iscount on paic
ads and ads pa id within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

"

$1 .50 for 50 word" minimum .
Each additional Word 2c .

iiLIND ADS

Additional

25c

Advertisement.

Charge

OFFICE HOURS

·

per

8: 30 e·.m. to 5 : 00p . m . Da ily ,
8 :30 a .m. to ·12 : 00 Noon
. .Saturday .

Card of Thanks

1968 CHEVY 11 NOVA 2 DOO.R

lhe recenl illness and dealh of

oUr" mother", Florence Hill. We
especially appreciate the
flowers and car"ds received
while she was in the hospital.

Special thanks lo lhe hospilal
slafl ol Gallipolis Medical
Center
and · Veterans
Memoria l Hosp ital , Dr .
Clark, Dr. Pickens, nurses
t~nd nurses aides of Veterans

Memorial Hospilal. Sheriff
~oberl Harlenbach, The
Ewing Funeral Home, Rev.

Rev.

Freeland Norris, pallbearers,
our" friends and neighbor s and
each and everyone who
donated the.beautiful flower"s,

and food or helped in any way .
Sons, James Ray, David.
Clarence
and
George ,
. Families.

4-6-llc

- -- - - -- -WE WISH lo lhank our relalives

1968 PLYMOUTH VALIANT 4 DR.

Rutland Post and Auxiliar"y
467, Dr . Pickens, nurses.
aides and candystripers
dur"ing Dewey 's stay at

Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
Dewey and Pauline Bentley
4-6-llc
The Almanac
By United Press Inlematlonal
Today is Tuesday, April 6,
the 96th day of 1971.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mereu' ry and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Aries.
.
American magician Harry'
Houdini was born April 6, 1874.
On this day in history:
In 1830 Joseph Smith o ganized the Church of the Latter

S139S

1966 IMPALA HT SEDAN

$1395

Local 1 owner .. car, blk . fini sh &amp; red cloth interior", good
tires, V-B engine. automatic trans. &amp; p. steeri ng, r"adio.
Nice family car.
.

'omeroy Motor Co.

1964 TRIUMPH motorcycle,
good condition, $200. Harry
Brown, phone 985-3833.
4-6-51p

Wanted To Buy

OLD fumilure, dishes, , brass
beds, elc . Write M. D. Miller,
Rl . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-627.1.
9-1-lfc

File's, 711 So. 3rd Ave.,
Middleport. Phone 992-5457.
4-1·6tc

ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As
134.95

·

4·6-3tc

Will give away to a · good
hom e. Phone Chester 985-

Four

shol. Phone 247-2161.

4-6-51c

~-----

OURSPRINGsaleison. Living
room suiles - 2 piece, $89.95
and up. Bedroom suites -

$119.95 and up. Maltress and

box springs that were $1l 9.95
a set, this week $75 per sel.
We wi II trade for your" old

furnilure . Parsoos Furnilure •
and Appliance Store, 2 miles
nort h of Silver Bridge on Rt.
7·
H -3lc

_________

1965 HONDA 250. Call 742-5042
aller 4:15 p.m.
4-5-31c

I

speakers, 4 speed automatic
changer, separate controls.

WILL DO tailoring and Adulls only. Phone 992-5133. Balance $80.99. Use our time
upholstery . Phone 992-3561.
3-2-tfc paymenl plan . Call 992·3352.
3-31 -301c - - - - - - - -4-1 -61c
TRAILER SPACE on old Rl. 33, --~-----­
WILL PICK up merchandise
'12- mile north of new Meigs
Easler bunnies . Paul
. and take to auction on a
High School. Phone 992-2941. LIVE
Pierce
, Rt . --4, Pomeroy, 2.1
·
J
3-5-lfc
percentage basis . Call im
miles
out
Rl. 1431rom bypass.
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland . - - - - - - . 4-4-6tp
Phone 7-42 -4461.
f FURNISHED and unlurnished
apartments. Close to school.
9 23 1
· · c
12X52 FOOT 1970 Hillcrest 2·
Phone 992-5434.
_A_U_C_T-IO
_ N_ _W
_ H_E_N_?- Each
bedroom trailer. See Chester
10-IB-Ifc
Rose in Racine, behind lhe
Friday night, 7 p.m . Where?
Rober I Hi II home at the
Hayman's Auction House,
3 ROOM, bath, furnislied or
iunclion
ol SR 124 and 338.
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7 sem i-furnished apartment .
4-4-Jic
Pomeroy
Middleporl By·
Also, 2 room , bath, furnished - - --pass .
apartment. Mulberry Ave., AKRON Tennis shoes, all sizes.
2·7-lfc
Pomeroy .
References
Ladies' black or white.
required . Phone 992-6698.
Children's
Easler shoes, red
SKATE A-WAY Easter party,
3-23-tlc
or
while
.
One lady 's all
Fr"iday , April9 . Ra ces, pr"izes,
leather
purse.
Edna's
balloons. Open Wednesday.
Grocery,
Portland.
Friday and Saturday, 7:30 lo Help Wanted
4-4-31p
10 : 30 p.m . Available for

- - - - --

Monday ,

Tuesday. Thursday nights
and Saturday and Sunday
Day Saints, better known as the
p.m . Phone Chester 985-3929
Mormon Church, in Fayette,
or 985-3585.
N.Y.
4·4-61v
In 1909 Robert Peary became R-U-BBE
_R
_S
_T_A_M
_P
~$-m_a_
d_
e lo
the first civilized man to reach
order . 24 hour service. Dwain
the North Pole.
or Wilma Casto, Por"tland,
Ohio.
In 1957 trolley cars became a
2 12-901c
memory in New York City as
the few remaining ones com- REV . ROBERT Slewarl, MI.
pleted their last runs.
Vernon, Oh io evangelist, will
hold
weekend revival · at
In 1968 federal troops and
Rutland Freewill Baptist
National Guardsmen were orChurch on April9, 10 and 11 al
dered out for riot duty in
7: 30
each
evening.
Resurrection
services
at 6
Chicago, Washington and Dea.m .
Sunday
morning .
troit. Negros continued rioting
Everyone welcome.
and loo\ing in several cities in
4·6-4tC
protest to lhe assassination of - - - - -RUMMAGE sale, April9 and 10
Marlin Luther King Jr.
a l Coals B~ilding, Mid·
dleporl . Sponsored by Bela
Sigma Phi Soror"ity.
A thought for today : The
4·6-3tc
Greek poet Hesiod said, " A
bad neighbor is as great HOLY WEEK SERVICES
misfortune as a good one is a
TONIGHT, CHURCH OF
CHRIST.
FIFTH AND MAIN,
great blessing ."
MIDDLEPORT. 7:30P.M.
4-6-41c

- - -- - -

GET YOUR Easler bunnies
now. Randall Roberls, Lelart
Falls, Ohio.
4-6-41c

- -- - - -

BLACK Diamond liniment. Call
or wri le F. M. Guthrie, 33

WANTED

Townsend

HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

NEW 26-INCH Airway luggage.
Blue, $20. Phone Chesler 985·
3900.
4-4-Jtp

- - -- - -

STRAWBERRY PLANTS. Big
Boy tomatoes , cabbage,
cauliflower" , br"occoll, head
lettuce, Brussel sprouts. Also,
pansy, snapdragon, marigold,
delphinium and
others.

·Real Estate For Sale ·

HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His. ,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc

waitress. Phone 992-9943.

4·1-6tc
------WOMAN lo do housework.
Phone Chester 985-3900.
4·4·6fc

HOBSTmER
REAL ESTATE

- - - -- -

George HobsteHer, Jr.
Real Estate Broker
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman,
Phone 949-3211
RACINE -llol, .87 acre, price
$450.00

Auto Sales

1969 BUICK LeSabre, -2-dr.
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, lB,pOO
miles.
l!xcellent condittcn.
.
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-llli, POMEROY" -

RUMMAGE Sale in rry
I
Building, Middleport. 1965 SPORTS Fury. 383 cu in ., 4·
I
By Helen Bottel
1 Thur sday, Friday and
barrel. dual exhaust, 4 speed,
Saturday . Proceeds for
black inside and oul. Rear
building of the Freewill
seat reverberator . $950.
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
Baplisl Church.
Original owner . Call 992-6977
4-6-3tc
This column is for young people, their problems and
afler
6 p.m.
- - - -- 4-Hip
pleasures, their troubles and fun. All wllh the rest of Helen Help OVEN
_.:.
FRESH
bakery
Us! , it welcomes laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a
pr"oducts. Ji mmy's Pastry
Shop,
N. 2nd Ave., Mid· 1968 CAMARO 327, 3-speed.
brush&lt;Jff.
Phooe Mason 773-5178 or see
dleporl. Phone 992·3555.
. Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
John Grueser.
3-28-301c
4-4-6tp
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
--HOME sewing . Phone 992-5327.
CAN lA GIRL COLLEcr
3-30-30tc 1968 GMC 1;,.1on pickup, 23,000
miles, new tires, camper top,
BACK UNEMPLOYMENT PAY?
good
condition. Phone 992·
ATTENTION
ladles!
Would
you
I quit my job because my boss was a wolf. wlien I wouldn't
2805, Eldon Walburn.
like
lo
lry
a
wig
on
In
the
play that way, he tried to "educate" me, so I turned in my notice .
3-28-lfc
pr ivacy of your own home?
Because I had quit, I found I couldn't collect unemployment
You can.Just call us. We also
have lhe Mink Oil Kosmelics, 1965 INTERNATIONAL lruck,
benefits. You have to b.e laid off. I didn 't go into details, figuring
1800 ser"ies, good condition .
Koscot.
of
course .
"refusal" would nol count.
Henry Bahr . Phone Chester
Distributor"s, Brown's. Phone
985-3988.
After four months I got another job.
Middleporl 992-5113.
3-31 -61p
. 12-JJ .I.fc
· Just recently I heard of a case where a girl collected unemployment pay when she proved she was harrassed into quitting
1966 TORONADO•. all power.
$1500. Phone 742·4685.
bilcause of an amorous employer.
4-1-61c
Could I apply for back benefits, using this as an example? I
- -- - - need to settle old bills! - PURELY BROKE
Dear Pure:
For Sale
Could you prove the charge? I'm afraid experienced wolves
PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig-Zag
cover their tracks well, and his word against yours might make
sewing machines. Still in
cartons . No at or"iginal
you look pretty silly.
tachments needed, as our
.... But don't take MY _word·: Inquire at the unemployment
Mr. '•and Mrs. Eugene Slack controls are built ln. S~ws
agency. -H.
.t' ··}· and family of Sandyville were
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Dear Helen :
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
monograms, and blind hem
I have a long beard and hair to match . Why not? It's a free Harley Johnson and family.
slilch. Full cash price, $38.50
or budgel plan ~vallable.
country. Bulthe lawmak~rs around here have ruled that we ca'n't
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Elam and
Phooe 992-5641.
get "aid" unless we make ourselves "employable," which means fa_mily are visiting a few days
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _4_·6·61c
~ shorter hair and a partial shave. lam enclosing a picture of me at w~th h1s brother, Mr. and Mrs.
the commune. Is this fair? - BIG ISRAEL
B1ll Fouch and famtly at "ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Cleaner complete wilh at.
Dear Bis Is:
· Huntington .
lachmenls, cordwinder and
It's THEIR MARBLES. So they can call the rules. If you
M~. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
painl spray. Used bul in like
family of Rutlanq and Mr.
won't trim up the brush, maybe you can live off the land . - H.
new condilion . Pay s;l7.4S
cash
or
cr"edit
ter"ms
Dear Helen :
Howard Thoma Jr. were
available . Phone 992-5641.
Mrs. J. B. sure had it right when she said "teenager" today MH ondadyThvisitors of Mrs.
4-6-61c
ba
owar
oma.
seems ill be a d word..
.
.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
M COAL , li"meslone. Excelslo:
I have two teenage SISters and many.n fr1ends. Recently M Ch 1 S ·th
.
d
t
"
t
"d
·
·
rs
.
arey
IDl
were
r.
Salt Works, E. .MaiO St.,
f our fr1en s go m o an acc1 ent and, although it was the and Mrs. Harle smith of
one
o
Pomeroy . Phooe 992-38tf·;
.
4-9-tfc
other pe~on'sfau~t, he was blamed. He was !'one of those wild kid Kanauga and
and Mrs:
'
:
drivers, they sa1d.
Doyle Knapp and fainily .
ALUMINUM ear lop boats, 10·
When we go mto stores, the sales clerks follow us around,
12-13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
watching to see if we lift something.
·
Kingsbury Road.
Recently a bunch of us went·into a pizza place after a game.
3·24·JO!C
Th~ manager said, "Get out, you're teenagers and we don't want
lt·EM: · Tom Hill. He plays
Kl LL TERMITES and yard
trouble."
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
insects wllh ARAB " You-Doc.
Mama c..s . . But he plays
Sure, a few kids cause trouble, but why do so many adults see
II." King Builders Supply
MoonligHt Serenade and
,Company, Middleport.
us all as on~ big glob of bad news'?- PAT
Andy. Williams too. variity
2·21-"cSOtc
Dear Pat: ·
•
is the spice of our music.
"So many" or so few? .Think back, Pal: Out of perhaps 25
BESTLINE · PRODUCTS." Call
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
. stoc~s and restaurants you've visited in thVast· week, .in how
.~ - 4- JOic
many can y0u honestly say. you were "put down bad?" For no
SOUP'S ON, the rug lhal Is,
. reason? .
,
.
_ .
· clean wllh Blue Lustre. · Rent
· ~ · "Sure; a few adulll cause trouble, but why do so many teens
eleclrlc ~hampooe•. Sl . Baker
see us all as one big glob of bad news?"
furnllure, Mlddleporl.
·
0
.
I
•
3-31
·61~
It works both ways; chwn. - H.

Wolfpen

News, Notes

M:.

WMP0/1390

'·-·-·-

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *
BlAETTNARS .
_Ph. 992,2143

WE NEED

A GUARD!!
-A NICE
REPULSIVE.

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home,

V . A.~

( PUI YOUR MONEY AWAY!

iHI&amp; ONE' '&amp; O N Me.!

TO DISCOURAGE
· OUR GIRLS?

ONE

Let Us Show You How You. Can Become A Homeowner -

Pomeroy

iUT-iUT ltl'-1 1710AI&lt;•·

BUT IS THERE. ONE
REPULSIVE ENOUGH ,

You will have something of value to show for Jhe us you
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Tax benefit, you build an equity and you ar"e not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator lo lhe
~mallest Heater Core.

F.H.A.,

And Conventional Loans.
Come See Us AI 971!, N. Second 51., Middleport.

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
W0111
Spou~ng, Roof
Painting .

reenHill Homes Inc.
WINNIE WINKLE

992-7129
Evenings Call: 992·2534 992-3433 m-2580
Crow
Dutton
Spencer

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather R-oofing &amp;
Construction Co.

IT5
ME .•..

CANt:'Y
AVON.

DEXTER, 0. 45126

PHONE 742-3945
Insured- Experienced

BACK HOE and end-loader
work . Septic tanks inslalled .
George (Bill I Pullins ., Phone
992-2478.
11 -29-lfc

Wor"k Guaranteed

Real Estate For Sale

FOR SALE
The spacious home of the
lafe1 Mr"s . Bessie M. Pickens,
situated on appr"oximately
six acres In Racine, Ohio.

Hot water heat by free gas.
lnter"est in pr"oducing gas

well.

C. BRADFORD, Auclioneer
Complete Service

Phone 949-3821
Racine , Ohio

Crill Bradford

5-l·lfc

HARRISON'S TV AND AN ·
TENNA SERVICE. · Pho~e SEWING MACHINES. Repair
992-2522.
service, all niakes. 992 -2284
6-10-llc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
-----Authorized Singer· Sales and
NEIGLER Conslruclion. For
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
building or remodeling your
3-29-lfc
home , Call Guy Neigl er, ,..,-....,--,-- - Racine , Ohio.
7-31 -lfc SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED . .
" Ditching.

-----

Warren Pickens

RALPH'S
CARPET
Upholslery Cleaning Service.
Free

Exec. of Estate

estimates .

Phone

Gallipolis 446-02.94.

Electric

1 OOT TH' DRAFTE~S CUT UKE

Y'TOLD ME TO, SIR1.BUT THEY'RE
IN AN AWfUL UG•Y MOOP!

sewer

~c leaning ." Reasonable ratftS .

Phone
John
Russell.
Gallipolis 446-4782.
"4-7-lfc

-----3·12-lfc READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered·
right
to your
TREE -TRIMMiNG
and
prolecl.
F.asl
and
easy.
Free
r"emoval. Fully insured. Free
eslimales
.
Phone
992
-3284.
estimates. Call aller 5 p.m .,
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co .,
collect
Dick
Hayman ,
Spr"ings . Within walking
Middleport, Ohio.
dis lance of ' Meigs High
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
6·30-lfc
Hayman, Chester 985-3509.
School. a 5 minute drive from
3-28-30tp
Pomeroy. Call or see BU I
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service .
Wi lie weekends, or after 5
Commercial , residential and
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992· PAPER-HAN(;ING, painting,
industrial
wiring . Phone 247 pl"aslering, dry wall. Arthur
6887 .
2113.
Musser. Phone 992-3630.
2-3-lfc
3-28-301p ·
3-12-llc
Reedsville, Ohio
378-6289

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR •.

Broker
110 Mechanic 51.
Pqmeroy, Ohio

2 ~parlmenls

rented for $95.00 month. A
very
good
investment

properly . Priced to sell 2 LOTS - Double ·garage, 3.
bedrooms, nice bath, living 23
MIDDLEPORT- 2 story frame
X 12 wilh fireplace . Large
house, 7 rooms, good l.ocalion,
dlninQ, modern kitchen with
lronl and back porch, 2 car
electric stove and re frigerator . Gas forced air
,. garage, new constr"uction.
Price $13,500.00
lurnace. $21,000.00.
$7,500 .00

______

- - - - --

THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

Midway Markel, W. Main ·51.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2582.
4-4-Jic CONVENIENt bul secluded
building lois on T79 al Rock

2 WOMEN or man and wife.

Call in person at Ml DWAY
MARKET or phone 992-2565 or
992-2582.
4+31c
- -- - - - - -BARMAID and part time

WHAT THE FUR WILL
91: LII~S

A FINK COAT?:
TATTLETALE GR.AV,
Q" COUFl5o!
·

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

Athens,

Ohie Phone 592-2158.
_ _ __ __ _ _4_
·4·31p

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR

Place.

GE;S ... t WON~6~

THINK ABOUT ITI

speaker sound sr.stem, dual
volume contra. Balance

4-2-6tc TWO OR three bedroom home,
- - - - - - -- Cottage Road, Syracuse.

private parties,

EXPERIENCED
Radiator SeiVice

speed '

4·2-tfc $67.40. Use our budgel terms.
- - -- -- - - Call 992 - 33~2 .
4226.
5072.
4-4-61p UNFURNISHED 3
room
4·1 -61c.
4-6-31p - - - - - - - -aparlmenl. Phone 992-2288. - - - - - - - - -----WILL DO upholslering. Phone
1-31-tfc BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
1967 FORD pickup . Lime
992-2524.
- - - - - - - -stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, lour
spreader. Double-barrel 12
gauge. 1890 Winchester pump.
Hopk ins and Aliens si ngle

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC. CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

r

in le rmixed changer . Four ·

Ohio. 992-2951.

AT MICIIIGAN $TATE-UN1VIiR.SITY
"TIUiV'IlE GOING TO M~tE ~
FEIIIUiT WIT~ A MINK -TO
GET A FINK

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

STEREO - Radio

combination.

TRAILER LOTS:".BW.s •Mobile
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse/
Dachshund .

... ALSO
DOUBLE-WI DES

:CHAMPION
VAN DYKE

.. .

ANTIQUES, Phone 992-5327 .

LONG-HAIRED

!Helen Help Us!

...

606 E. M*n, Pomeroy, 0.

POMEROY •
J,.w. caney, Mgr
Phone m-2181

Phone 742-5032.

S HIF'LESS

NIGHT

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB (_ROW

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

RIDING MOWERS
As Low AS - - - - 271.95

-----For Rent

.WINSOR
«BUDDY

-

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

I

cr"aw lers and earth wor"ms . .

apartment.

Notice

·---~---------~-------------,

..

$5.55

Mowers &amp; nllers

-------4·~
6-30tc WALNUT

SUP.eR Targelspol 20X largel
scope. $135. new . Call 992·

Wheel Alignment

HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Lo~ As
63.95

WILL PAY top price for night

LUKEV?

TWO-DOLLER l.O.U.
HE GIVE ME LAST

LOW - DOWN .

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your 'nme. Can Well Be the Most Profitable
I" _ T;me You Ev1r Spent.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

EXPERT

p.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..
IrS TIME FOR

- -- - - - -

GO IN',

HE
S EEN ME
COMIN'

WHV, THA'

'

PATIENTS lo care for in my - - - - - home . Phooe Mason 773-5712. MIRACLE Waler Sotlener, one
H-121c
unit o.u lfit with 170 pounds of
salt. Phone 985-3536.
- - - - -4·6·31p

3 ROOM downstairs furnished

OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
"POMEROY, OHIO . .

Hysell Run Free Melhodlst

lhanks lo the Fink family,

,

Local 1 owner car , clean interior. dark aqua fini sh, like
new tires, 6 cyl. engine &amp; automatic trans .. radio . Popular
model &amp; priced to go.

and friends for the car"ds and
help we received , also tt}e

Church, Rev . Wise, Rev .
Griffith, Rev . Grimm. Special

$1695

Local 1 owner car with outstanding equ ipment of 4 speed
trans ., 327 V-8 eng ine, good w-w tires, radio . See thi s dean
car today .

For Sale

WE WISH to extend our" si ncer e
thanks for" the kindness and
sympathy shown us during

Dale McClurg and

Motor Co.

lady . Call 949-4904 or 667-3319.
4-6-3tc
_:.__

WHAR 'IE

-

.

OVER TO
SNU!'F'i'S -- TO
COLLECT THAT

I'LL. 8&lt;' C!J M~ WAY IN HAL.l'-A~1R:JI._KS ... LJUST ~T

--:-:- -- EXPERT lawn

mower and O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Complete fr"Ont end se rvice ,
Shop, 248 Condor 51. Phone
lune up and brake service.
992·"'357.
Wheels balanced elec .
Ironically.
All
work ·
· 4-6-6"fc
- - - -- -- - guaranleed .
Reasonable
rates. 992-3213.
FOR expert electrical work call
3-17-JOic
992-5179.
4-6-241p
ALARMS! " Burglar, fire and
hold-up . Southeaslern
Securily Syslems. Call Ray
Real Estate For Sale
Adams 247-2055 - Mike
O'Brien 247-2113.
3-17-lfc
HOUSE , 6 room s and balh,
phone .742-5613.
SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
3·30·121p
Sanilalion, Slewarl, Ohio. Ph .
662·3035 .
2·12-tfc

TO CALL M'l MarnE~ IIJ

tiller repair l=ree pickup and
delivery . V.arren ' s Mower

I
THAT IT WAS MOT OIILY
THAT WAll I" "IIIE !'I'!
OF THE BEI10LDER -IT VIAS ·
l!lV~I!ICf, GR.e!D, CUPIDITY AND

... l(fi!JII
BE~UTY

SELFI8HI'If1!S •••

60i East Main Street
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms •. bath. porches,
basement, GARDEN AND
TRAILER SPACE. $9,500.

ACROSS

Ml DOLE PORT frame,

l

2 bedrooms,

story
bath,

glassed porch, front porch,
GARDEN SPACE, Y.AR.D.,.
FEi'!CED. $4,500.

Big Copoclly
Moytou

Choice

capital
hard

Month~ payments

.A rnold Grate .

I KJ
'-+-+-I
c..-

.

tJ l I I I

TO IE ''(

Jumbl&lt;" IUMty
·\"~.aerday't

YfiOI TUSSLI

MANAGER.
COME OUR
t.·w," NEVER WIN5

dlcaUng
.false

too high,

36.Evaded
38. Appella·
tlon

DAILY CRYPTOQtJO'iE- HeJ'e'11 how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR .
II

LONOFELLOW
One letter !!Imply stands for another. In thlB sa.mple A Ia
used for the ~ee L's, X for tho two O'a, etc. Bingle letters,
apOatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all .----,-----:-----,
hln:ts. Each day the code letters are dlfterent.
A Cryptorram Quoi&amp;Uon

DR. .MOODY
OF
.

MY

---·

JEMO ASSOCIATES

LPAR

.

P11rk &amp; SY,Cil mor~ Sts.
Middleport, Ohio

992·7034 or '1-268-1810

P

BJDPT

OMEO · ORRHRK

Ills!' ConfciCt him

,

.

SPWR

WRURHF
FOJRF ,

LJ

F~ D P W L · 0 PL . - E .
'

KJ
U.

ML

5ATISFACTION OF AJOB WELL OONE

PEPMTFL~""(,C::~;;;;:-:p----j

FOR
MT

.

.

.,

SICK ..

P 1 NRWG

F 0 P B

(~ 1971 Kina FeP.tureA Synd\C:ntl . lilt' .) •

Rutland. 0.

I FEEL

FOJ!HK

Yeot.rUY'I Cryptoquote: NO PERSON WHO IS ENTHUSI·
ASTIC ABOUT HIS WORK HAll ANYTHING TO FEAR
FROM LIFE.-SAMUEL GOLDWYN
.

.

'

.
\ AntWfl'l IJ'hal dae' redhu dri11er tum«l h~ty jufl6e

WE 6ET THE WONDERFUL

today at . . .

I

CANOPY

lilted to do-PASS ON THI CUlVIS

tranapor-

own tot. ...

your

I I I I I I )""
(A..w•n hMlkJGW)

. tatlon
3,. Combining
fonnatn-

don't own )'OUr

Can cure

,.,_,,,,. HE: HAD HOPED
FO~ WHEN HE WEII'T
TO THE CXX: ICK.

N;:;G.:,;RO;:=_:I:...+I-.--.--., Now arnnp. the circled letten
to form the aurprlee -.ower, u
IUJPitod bJ the Uoft eutaon.

1 - 1: : . . . '

... ..- - . .

28. - diem
29. Anthem
adverb·
30. Old Ohln..e
ktngdom
33. Urban

Moytog
Holo of Hoot

742-4211

. !:: ·::l I

·

27. Afrtcan
river

Perm•-Preu

.RUTLAND FURNITURE.

'

(abbr.)

fastens

25. Border on

Down payment toO high,

,_

product

23. Pagan

Power
Fin Agitator.

MAYTAG
.
""d
Corptl .
'
SlrVICt

tnember

· 22. Gennan
rlver

DO, WHILE THEIR GALS
ARE WASTING MONEY

•.

national

letter
20. Phoenicia~

WHATEVER IT1$ MEN

[]

37. Gl'OB&amp; · .

Marla".

19. Greek

GO SOME PI.ACE ANP
LOOK HANGD~ OR

HOTOT

32. Consumer

35. And (Ger. 1

29. Un-

7. Bumpkin

I

hnrer

·31. Dwelling

2o&amp;. Present

title

poet
18."-

Ye•~Jda)''l

25. Cppled
28. Be a

out

c ;,:::z,;:

YEAPE

..

gated
fl.oh

6. Syrian
bi8hop's

16. Undersized
17. Hungarian

Filter ot:

We Sptci•Uze In

~-Cross

and dances

BECAUSE:

level
L(nt

Surround clothf:s
with gentle, rvan
heat. No hot spots,
no ovardrylng.
Fine Mesh Lint
filter.
,

avis
21. 81111
22. Eton·

• . Fl .. tday
ot Lent
(2 wds.)

12. With imprudence14. Jackets

I

15. -

2. Coquette
3. Before tee

11. Breathe

NEW HOME

Auto.

Orytrs

mom
13. 1971

.(.Down
12wds.)

Is its

If You Haven't.
Bought A

of water

t&amp;mps .
water
control.

DOWN

1. Before

· head
10. Wlesbaden

10.~

U.Nomad

Uno&lt;rambtetheoe fourJumbleo,
one letter to ea&lt;h square, to
form four ordinary wordo.

capital ·

Autom•tlct
2 speed oper11tlon.

.

-

tooth or

TOGETHER FOR YOU!

IT'S TIME TO BUY
CALL 992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD
- ASSOCIATE
4·2-6lc

Ml DOLE PORT - a rooms, 4 .
bedrooms, 2 baths, porches, - - - -garage, NEW SIGtNG, NICE 24 ACRE farm at Long Bottom,
LOCATION. $7,950.
house with 3 bedrooms, dining
room. kitchen, living room,
1'ROPERTY IS SELLING
p;, baths , enclos~d back ·
LIKEMAD-~ETUS
porch, wall to wall carpeting,
SELL' YOURS TODAY
aluminum siding, awning,
HENRY CLELAND
storm "WindOWS iind storm
REALTOR
doors,
city water . Selling due
OFFICE - 992 _2259
to
Ill
health
. Phone 614-985·
RESIDENCE -992-2568
3938.
-3-26·12tp
- - - · - -----4-·Htc

expert

!ann

r

B. After
4 Down
12 wds.)
9. Lambkin's

Balder
40. Coloring

6. Word after

needs. Inquire of our listings _ operators l1cense? Call 992-

WE

39. Wife of

1. Word after
home or

Well water . Garage. $7,000.00
before you buy .
- 2966.
NEW· L"ISTING- 4 bMroonis,
·•
4'6-&amp;lc - - ' - - - - - - - 6·_
15-!,(c
ba Ih, furnace, basemen t. · -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..~:::::::::_,.
Several outbuildings: · All .
· mineral s. Chester water
available. 22 ACRES. Only
$6,000.00
PUT IT ALL
MIDDLE PORT . - 5 rooms,
balh, furnace. Two bedrooms.
Levellot. Only $4,000.00

~lYWID~;~==~!..Jc

DAILY CROSSWORD

HOBSTEIIER
REAL ESTATE

Cleland Realty ·

Ai.JS"TR.ALI Al

... THAT COULD AltO
THE TRUTH' SQ ... WHAT
THIS Cll"l' OF ClOLO ••• 16
Qf "1001t0!!j 11!!fPEI!T

PORTLAND - 7 room frame POMEROY - 3 nice bedrooms
house, 96 acres land, free gas,
with large closets, modern
gas well on place, plenty of
------bath , new kitchen with
timber . Located on good
e\eclrlc range, double sink .
PAINTING, roofing and
gravel road. Price $12,500.00
Gas furnace . Full basement.
spoutmg service . Richard
.
.
Only $12,000.00
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
RACINE - 1112 slorm lrame
3·11-JOtc
George S. Hobstetter, Jr.
house, 2 lots, located close lo MIDDLEPORT - Lot for
church, one block to school,
mobile home. All ulililies
Broker
Insurance
·t bt en 1 1650 00
Phone 985-4186
one block to store, very good
a val a e.
Y
•
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
"'lJTOMOB .
.~ .
buy•. $5,500.00
Phone
949-3211
"'
IL?Einsurance
been
4-4-3tc COUNTRY LIVING 3
·
CALLUSforallyourrealeslate
cancell&lt;;d
..
Lost
your
- -- - ; - - -bedrooms, bath, gas furnace .

I

.

_4~;:;-;J:_:=i~
~-;~~;~h:-G.
•• ~- •.

•

•.

�I.

-' \

AND!&gt;fEEK

C
B argabts, Bargams, and More Bargains I~ Sentinel Classifieds·
For Sale
Wanted
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy ___ __
Services
Business
OF

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-P&lt;Hneroy, 0., April6, 1971

.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

LADY Ia I ive in wi lh elderly

5 P .M. ·O ay Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .

Cancellation &amp; CorreEtlons

Will be accepted unt(l 9 a.m . for
Day of Publ ication

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

The PUblisher reserves the
right to edit of re[ect any ad!
".deemed
ob[ectlonal.
Thf

u.bllsher will not be responsiblt
r.or·
more than one incorrect
lnser1ion.

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word on~~nsertion
12

"''•h•r,lum Lnarg e t;:, c
cents per word thret

'consecutiyl. lnsertions.
18 cents · per . word

secutlve Insertions .

s~x

•

con

, 25 Per cent D iscount on paic
ads and ads pa id within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

"

$1 .50 for 50 word" minimum .
Each additional Word 2c .

iiLIND ADS

Additional

25c

Advertisement.

Charge

OFFICE HOURS

·

per

8: 30 e·.m. to 5 : 00p . m . Da ily ,
8 :30 a .m. to ·12 : 00 Noon
. .Saturday .

Card of Thanks

1968 CHEVY 11 NOVA 2 DOO.R

lhe recenl illness and dealh of

oUr" mother", Florence Hill. We
especially appreciate the
flowers and car"ds received
while she was in the hospital.

Special thanks lo lhe hospilal
slafl ol Gallipolis Medical
Center
and · Veterans
Memoria l Hosp ital , Dr .
Clark, Dr. Pickens, nurses
t~nd nurses aides of Veterans

Memorial Hospilal. Sheriff
~oberl Harlenbach, The
Ewing Funeral Home, Rev.

Rev.

Freeland Norris, pallbearers,
our" friends and neighbor s and
each and everyone who
donated the.beautiful flower"s,

and food or helped in any way .
Sons, James Ray, David.
Clarence
and
George ,
. Families.

4-6-llc

- -- - - -- -WE WISH lo lhank our relalives

1968 PLYMOUTH VALIANT 4 DR.

Rutland Post and Auxiliar"y
467, Dr . Pickens, nurses.
aides and candystripers
dur"ing Dewey 's stay at

Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
Dewey and Pauline Bentley
4-6-llc
The Almanac
By United Press Inlematlonal
Today is Tuesday, April 6,
the 96th day of 1971.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mereu' ry and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Aries.
.
American magician Harry'
Houdini was born April 6, 1874.
On this day in history:
In 1830 Joseph Smith o ganized the Church of the Latter

S139S

1966 IMPALA HT SEDAN

$1395

Local 1 owner .. car, blk . fini sh &amp; red cloth interior", good
tires, V-B engine. automatic trans. &amp; p. steeri ng, r"adio.
Nice family car.
.

'omeroy Motor Co.

1964 TRIUMPH motorcycle,
good condition, $200. Harry
Brown, phone 985-3833.
4-6-51p

Wanted To Buy

OLD fumilure, dishes, , brass
beds, elc . Write M. D. Miller,
Rl . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-627.1.
9-1-lfc

File's, 711 So. 3rd Ave.,
Middleport. Phone 992-5457.
4-1·6tc

ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As
134.95

·

4·6-3tc

Will give away to a · good
hom e. Phone Chester 985-

Four

shol. Phone 247-2161.

4-6-51c

~-----

OURSPRINGsaleison. Living
room suiles - 2 piece, $89.95
and up. Bedroom suites -

$119.95 and up. Maltress and

box springs that were $1l 9.95
a set, this week $75 per sel.
We wi II trade for your" old

furnilure . Parsoos Furnilure •
and Appliance Store, 2 miles
nort h of Silver Bridge on Rt.
7·
H -3lc

_________

1965 HONDA 250. Call 742-5042
aller 4:15 p.m.
4-5-31c

I

speakers, 4 speed automatic
changer, separate controls.

WILL DO tailoring and Adulls only. Phone 992-5133. Balance $80.99. Use our time
upholstery . Phone 992-3561.
3-2-tfc paymenl plan . Call 992·3352.
3-31 -301c - - - - - - - -4-1 -61c
TRAILER SPACE on old Rl. 33, --~-----­
WILL PICK up merchandise
'12- mile north of new Meigs
Easler bunnies . Paul
. and take to auction on a
High School. Phone 992-2941. LIVE
Pierce
, Rt . --4, Pomeroy, 2.1
·
J
3-5-lfc
percentage basis . Call im
miles
out
Rl. 1431rom bypass.
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland . - - - - - - . 4-4-6tp
Phone 7-42 -4461.
f FURNISHED and unlurnished
apartments. Close to school.
9 23 1
· · c
12X52 FOOT 1970 Hillcrest 2·
Phone 992-5434.
_A_U_C_T-IO
_ N_ _W
_ H_E_N_?- Each
bedroom trailer. See Chester
10-IB-Ifc
Rose in Racine, behind lhe
Friday night, 7 p.m . Where?
Rober I Hi II home at the
Hayman's Auction House,
3 ROOM, bath, furnislied or
iunclion
ol SR 124 and 338.
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7 sem i-furnished apartment .
4-4-Jic
Pomeroy
Middleporl By·
Also, 2 room , bath, furnished - - --pass .
apartment. Mulberry Ave., AKRON Tennis shoes, all sizes.
2·7-lfc
Pomeroy .
References
Ladies' black or white.
required . Phone 992-6698.
Children's
Easler shoes, red
SKATE A-WAY Easter party,
3-23-tlc
or
while
.
One lady 's all
Fr"iday , April9 . Ra ces, pr"izes,
leather
purse.
Edna's
balloons. Open Wednesday.
Grocery,
Portland.
Friday and Saturday, 7:30 lo Help Wanted
4-4-31p
10 : 30 p.m . Available for

- - - - --

Monday ,

Tuesday. Thursday nights
and Saturday and Sunday
Day Saints, better known as the
p.m . Phone Chester 985-3929
Mormon Church, in Fayette,
or 985-3585.
N.Y.
4·4-61v
In 1909 Robert Peary became R-U-BBE
_R
_S
_T_A_M
_P
~$-m_a_
d_
e lo
the first civilized man to reach
order . 24 hour service. Dwain
the North Pole.
or Wilma Casto, Por"tland,
Ohio.
In 1957 trolley cars became a
2 12-901c
memory in New York City as
the few remaining ones com- REV . ROBERT Slewarl, MI.
pleted their last runs.
Vernon, Oh io evangelist, will
hold
weekend revival · at
In 1968 federal troops and
Rutland Freewill Baptist
National Guardsmen were orChurch on April9, 10 and 11 al
dered out for riot duty in
7: 30
each
evening.
Resurrection
services
at 6
Chicago, Washington and Dea.m .
Sunday
morning .
troit. Negros continued rioting
Everyone welcome.
and loo\ing in several cities in
4·6-4tC
protest to lhe assassination of - - - - -RUMMAGE sale, April9 and 10
Marlin Luther King Jr.
a l Coals B~ilding, Mid·
dleporl . Sponsored by Bela
Sigma Phi Soror"ity.
A thought for today : The
4·6-3tc
Greek poet Hesiod said, " A
bad neighbor is as great HOLY WEEK SERVICES
misfortune as a good one is a
TONIGHT, CHURCH OF
CHRIST.
FIFTH AND MAIN,
great blessing ."
MIDDLEPORT. 7:30P.M.
4-6-41c

- - -- - -

GET YOUR Easler bunnies
now. Randall Roberls, Lelart
Falls, Ohio.
4-6-41c

- -- - - -

BLACK Diamond liniment. Call
or wri le F. M. Guthrie, 33

WANTED

Townsend

HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

NEW 26-INCH Airway luggage.
Blue, $20. Phone Chesler 985·
3900.
4-4-Jtp

- - -- - -

STRAWBERRY PLANTS. Big
Boy tomatoes , cabbage,
cauliflower" , br"occoll, head
lettuce, Brussel sprouts. Also,
pansy, snapdragon, marigold,
delphinium and
others.

·Real Estate For Sale ·

HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His. ,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc

waitress. Phone 992-9943.

4·1-6tc
------WOMAN lo do housework.
Phone Chester 985-3900.
4·4·6fc

HOBSTmER
REAL ESTATE

- - - -- -

George HobsteHer, Jr.
Real Estate Broker
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman,
Phone 949-3211
RACINE -llol, .87 acre, price
$450.00

Auto Sales

1969 BUICK LeSabre, -2-dr.
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, lB,pOO
miles.
l!xcellent condittcn.
.
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-llli, POMEROY" -

RUMMAGE Sale in rry
I
Building, Middleport. 1965 SPORTS Fury. 383 cu in ., 4·
I
By Helen Bottel
1 Thur sday, Friday and
barrel. dual exhaust, 4 speed,
Saturday . Proceeds for
black inside and oul. Rear
building of the Freewill
seat reverberator . $950.
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
Baplisl Church.
Original owner . Call 992-6977
4-6-3tc
This column is for young people, their problems and
afler
6 p.m.
- - - -- 4-Hip
pleasures, their troubles and fun. All wllh the rest of Helen Help OVEN
_.:.
FRESH
bakery
Us! , it welcomes laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a
pr"oducts. Ji mmy's Pastry
Shop,
N. 2nd Ave., Mid· 1968 CAMARO 327, 3-speed.
brush&lt;Jff.
Phooe Mason 773-5178 or see
dleporl. Phone 992·3555.
. Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
John Grueser.
3-28-301c
4-4-6tp
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
--HOME sewing . Phone 992-5327.
CAN lA GIRL COLLEcr
3-30-30tc 1968 GMC 1;,.1on pickup, 23,000
miles, new tires, camper top,
BACK UNEMPLOYMENT PAY?
good
condition. Phone 992·
ATTENTION
ladles!
Would
you
I quit my job because my boss was a wolf. wlien I wouldn't
2805, Eldon Walburn.
like
lo
lry
a
wig
on
In
the
play that way, he tried to "educate" me, so I turned in my notice .
3-28-lfc
pr ivacy of your own home?
Because I had quit, I found I couldn't collect unemployment
You can.Just call us. We also
have lhe Mink Oil Kosmelics, 1965 INTERNATIONAL lruck,
benefits. You have to b.e laid off. I didn 't go into details, figuring
1800 ser"ies, good condition .
Koscot.
of
course .
"refusal" would nol count.
Henry Bahr . Phone Chester
Distributor"s, Brown's. Phone
985-3988.
After four months I got another job.
Middleporl 992-5113.
3-31 -61p
. 12-JJ .I.fc
· Just recently I heard of a case where a girl collected unemployment pay when she proved she was harrassed into quitting
1966 TORONADO•. all power.
$1500. Phone 742·4685.
bilcause of an amorous employer.
4-1-61c
Could I apply for back benefits, using this as an example? I
- -- - - need to settle old bills! - PURELY BROKE
Dear Pure:
For Sale
Could you prove the charge? I'm afraid experienced wolves
PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig-Zag
cover their tracks well, and his word against yours might make
sewing machines. Still in
cartons . No at or"iginal
you look pretty silly.
tachments needed, as our
.... But don't take MY _word·: Inquire at the unemployment
Mr. '•and Mrs. Eugene Slack controls are built ln. S~ws
agency. -H.
.t' ··}· and family of Sandyville were
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Dear Helen :
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
monograms, and blind hem
I have a long beard and hair to match . Why not? It's a free Harley Johnson and family.
slilch. Full cash price, $38.50
or budgel plan ~vallable.
country. Bulthe lawmak~rs around here have ruled that we ca'n't
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Elam and
Phooe 992-5641.
get "aid" unless we make ourselves "employable," which means fa_mily are visiting a few days
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _4_·6·61c
~ shorter hair and a partial shave. lam enclosing a picture of me at w~th h1s brother, Mr. and Mrs.
the commune. Is this fair? - BIG ISRAEL
B1ll Fouch and famtly at "ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Cleaner complete wilh at.
Dear Bis Is:
· Huntington .
lachmenls, cordwinder and
It's THEIR MARBLES. So they can call the rules. If you
M~. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
painl spray. Used bul in like
family of Rutlanq and Mr.
won't trim up the brush, maybe you can live off the land . - H.
new condilion . Pay s;l7.4S
cash
or
cr"edit
ter"ms
Dear Helen :
Howard Thoma Jr. were
available . Phone 992-5641.
Mrs. J. B. sure had it right when she said "teenager" today MH ondadyThvisitors of Mrs.
4-6-61c
ba
owar
oma.
seems ill be a d word..
.
.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
M COAL , li"meslone. Excelslo:
I have two teenage SISters and many.n fr1ends. Recently M Ch 1 S ·th
.
d
t
"
t
"d
·
·
rs
.
arey
IDl
were
r.
Salt Works, E. .MaiO St.,
f our fr1en s go m o an acc1 ent and, although it was the and Mrs. Harle smith of
one
o
Pomeroy . Phooe 992-38tf·;
.
4-9-tfc
other pe~on'sfau~t, he was blamed. He was !'one of those wild kid Kanauga and
and Mrs:
'
:
drivers, they sa1d.
Doyle Knapp and fainily .
ALUMINUM ear lop boats, 10·
When we go mto stores, the sales clerks follow us around,
12-13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
watching to see if we lift something.
·
Kingsbury Road.
Recently a bunch of us went·into a pizza place after a game.
3·24·JO!C
Th~ manager said, "Get out, you're teenagers and we don't want
lt·EM: · Tom Hill. He plays
Kl LL TERMITES and yard
trouble."
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
insects wllh ARAB " You-Doc.
Mama c..s . . But he plays
Sure, a few kids cause trouble, but why do so many adults see
II." King Builders Supply
MoonligHt Serenade and
,Company, Middleport.
us all as on~ big glob of bad news'?- PAT
Andy. Williams too. variity
2·21-"cSOtc
Dear Pat: ·
•
is the spice of our music.
"So many" or so few? .Think back, Pal: Out of perhaps 25
BESTLINE · PRODUCTS." Call
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
. stoc~s and restaurants you've visited in thVast· week, .in how
.~ - 4- JOic
many can y0u honestly say. you were "put down bad?" For no
SOUP'S ON, the rug lhal Is,
. reason? .
,
.
_ .
· clean wllh Blue Lustre. · Rent
· ~ · "Sure; a few adulll cause trouble, but why do so many teens
eleclrlc ~hampooe•. Sl . Baker
see us all as one big glob of bad news?"
furnllure, Mlddleporl.
·
0
.
I
•
3-31
·61~
It works both ways; chwn. - H.

Wolfpen

News, Notes

M:.

WMP0/1390

'·-·-·-

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *
BlAETTNARS .
_Ph. 992,2143

WE NEED

A GUARD!!
-A NICE
REPULSIVE.

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home,

V . A.~

( PUI YOUR MONEY AWAY!

iHI&amp; ONE' '&amp; O N Me.!

TO DISCOURAGE
· OUR GIRLS?

ONE

Let Us Show You How You. Can Become A Homeowner -

Pomeroy

iUT-iUT ltl'-1 1710AI&lt;•·

BUT IS THERE. ONE
REPULSIVE ENOUGH ,

You will have something of value to show for Jhe us you
spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Tax benefit, you build an equity and you ar"e not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator lo lhe
~mallest Heater Core.

F.H.A.,

And Conventional Loans.
Come See Us AI 971!, N. Second 51., Middleport.

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
W0111
Spou~ng, Roof
Painting .

reenHill Homes Inc.
WINNIE WINKLE

992-7129
Evenings Call: 992·2534 992-3433 m-2580
Crow
Dutton
Spencer

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather R-oofing &amp;
Construction Co.

IT5
ME .•..

CANt:'Y
AVON.

DEXTER, 0. 45126

PHONE 742-3945
Insured- Experienced

BACK HOE and end-loader
work . Septic tanks inslalled .
George (Bill I Pullins ., Phone
992-2478.
11 -29-lfc

Wor"k Guaranteed

Real Estate For Sale

FOR SALE
The spacious home of the
lafe1 Mr"s . Bessie M. Pickens,
situated on appr"oximately
six acres In Racine, Ohio.

Hot water heat by free gas.
lnter"est in pr"oducing gas

well.

C. BRADFORD, Auclioneer
Complete Service

Phone 949-3821
Racine , Ohio

Crill Bradford

5-l·lfc

HARRISON'S TV AND AN ·
TENNA SERVICE. · Pho~e SEWING MACHINES. Repair
992-2522.
service, all niakes. 992 -2284
6-10-llc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
-----Authorized Singer· Sales and
NEIGLER Conslruclion. For
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
building or remodeling your
3-29-lfc
home , Call Guy Neigl er, ,..,-....,--,-- - Racine , Ohio.
7-31 -lfc SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED . .
" Ditching.

-----

Warren Pickens

RALPH'S
CARPET
Upholslery Cleaning Service.
Free

Exec. of Estate

estimates .

Phone

Gallipolis 446-02.94.

Electric

1 OOT TH' DRAFTE~S CUT UKE

Y'TOLD ME TO, SIR1.BUT THEY'RE
IN AN AWfUL UG•Y MOOP!

sewer

~c leaning ." Reasonable ratftS .

Phone
John
Russell.
Gallipolis 446-4782.
"4-7-lfc

-----3·12-lfc READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered·
right
to your
TREE -TRIMMiNG
and
prolecl.
F.asl
and
easy.
Free
r"emoval. Fully insured. Free
eslimales
.
Phone
992
-3284.
estimates. Call aller 5 p.m .,
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co .,
collect
Dick
Hayman ,
Spr"ings . Within walking
Middleport, Ohio.
dis lance of ' Meigs High
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
6·30-lfc
Hayman, Chester 985-3509.
School. a 5 minute drive from
3-28-30tp
Pomeroy. Call or see BU I
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service .
Wi lie weekends, or after 5
Commercial , residential and
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992· PAPER-HAN(;ING, painting,
industrial
wiring . Phone 247 pl"aslering, dry wall. Arthur
6887 .
2113.
Musser. Phone 992-3630.
2-3-lfc
3-28-301p ·
3-12-llc
Reedsville, Ohio
378-6289

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR •.

Broker
110 Mechanic 51.
Pqmeroy, Ohio

2 ~parlmenls

rented for $95.00 month. A
very
good
investment

properly . Priced to sell 2 LOTS - Double ·garage, 3.
bedrooms, nice bath, living 23
MIDDLEPORT- 2 story frame
X 12 wilh fireplace . Large
house, 7 rooms, good l.ocalion,
dlninQ, modern kitchen with
lronl and back porch, 2 car
electric stove and re frigerator . Gas forced air
,. garage, new constr"uction.
Price $13,500.00
lurnace. $21,000.00.
$7,500 .00

______

- - - - --

THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

Midway Markel, W. Main ·51.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2582.
4-4-Jic CONVENIENt bul secluded
building lois on T79 al Rock

2 WOMEN or man and wife.

Call in person at Ml DWAY
MARKET or phone 992-2565 or
992-2582.
4+31c
- -- - - - - -BARMAID and part time

WHAT THE FUR WILL
91: LII~S

A FINK COAT?:
TATTLETALE GR.AV,
Q" COUFl5o!
·

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

Athens,

Ohie Phone 592-2158.
_ _ __ __ _ _4_
·4·31p

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR

Place.

GE;S ... t WON~6~

THINK ABOUT ITI

speaker sound sr.stem, dual
volume contra. Balance

4-2-6tc TWO OR three bedroom home,
- - - - - - -- Cottage Road, Syracuse.

private parties,

EXPERIENCED
Radiator SeiVice

speed '

4·2-tfc $67.40. Use our budgel terms.
- - -- -- - - Call 992 - 33~2 .
4226.
5072.
4-4-61p UNFURNISHED 3
room
4·1 -61c.
4-6-31p - - - - - - - -aparlmenl. Phone 992-2288. - - - - - - - - -----WILL DO upholslering. Phone
1-31-tfc BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
1967 FORD pickup . Lime
992-2524.
- - - - - - - -stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, lour
spreader. Double-barrel 12
gauge. 1890 Winchester pump.
Hopk ins and Aliens si ngle

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC. CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

r

in le rmixed changer . Four ·

Ohio. 992-2951.

AT MICIIIGAN $TATE-UN1VIiR.SITY
"TIUiV'IlE GOING TO M~tE ~
FEIIIUiT WIT~ A MINK -TO
GET A FINK

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

STEREO - Radio

combination.

TRAILER LOTS:".BW.s •Mobile
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse/
Dachshund .

... ALSO
DOUBLE-WI DES

:CHAMPION
VAN DYKE

.. .

ANTIQUES, Phone 992-5327 .

LONG-HAIRED

!Helen Help Us!

...

606 E. M*n, Pomeroy, 0.

POMEROY •
J,.w. caney, Mgr
Phone m-2181

Phone 742-5032.

S HIF'LESS

NIGHT

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB (_ROW

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

RIDING MOWERS
As Low AS - - - - 271.95

-----For Rent

.WINSOR
«BUDDY

-

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

I

cr"aw lers and earth wor"ms . .

apartment.

Notice

·---~---------~-------------,

..

$5.55

Mowers &amp; nllers

-------4·~
6-30tc WALNUT

SUP.eR Targelspol 20X largel
scope. $135. new . Call 992·

Wheel Alignment

HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Lo~ As
63.95

WILL PAY top price for night

LUKEV?

TWO-DOLLER l.O.U.
HE GIVE ME LAST

LOW - DOWN .

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your 'nme. Can Well Be the Most Profitable
I" _ T;me You Ev1r Spent.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

EXPERT

p.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..
IrS TIME FOR

- -- - - - -

GO IN',

HE
S EEN ME
COMIN'

WHV, THA'

'

PATIENTS lo care for in my - - - - - home . Phooe Mason 773-5712. MIRACLE Waler Sotlener, one
H-121c
unit o.u lfit with 170 pounds of
salt. Phone 985-3536.
- - - - -4·6·31p

3 ROOM downstairs furnished

OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
"POMEROY, OHIO . .

Hysell Run Free Melhodlst

lhanks lo the Fink family,

,

Local 1 owner car , clean interior. dark aqua fini sh, like
new tires, 6 cyl. engine &amp; automatic trans .. radio . Popular
model &amp; priced to go.

and friends for the car"ds and
help we received , also tt}e

Church, Rev . Wise, Rev .
Griffith, Rev . Grimm. Special

$1695

Local 1 owner car with outstanding equ ipment of 4 speed
trans ., 327 V-8 eng ine, good w-w tires, radio . See thi s dean
car today .

For Sale

WE WISH to extend our" si ncer e
thanks for" the kindness and
sympathy shown us during

Dale McClurg and

Motor Co.

lady . Call 949-4904 or 667-3319.
4-6-3tc
_:.__

WHAR 'IE

-

.

OVER TO
SNU!'F'i'S -- TO
COLLECT THAT

I'LL. 8&lt;' C!J M~ WAY IN HAL.l'-A~1R:JI._KS ... LJUST ~T

--:-:- -- EXPERT lawn

mower and O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Complete fr"Ont end se rvice ,
Shop, 248 Condor 51. Phone
lune up and brake service.
992·"'357.
Wheels balanced elec .
Ironically.
All
work ·
· 4-6-6"fc
- - - -- -- - guaranleed .
Reasonable
rates. 992-3213.
FOR expert electrical work call
3-17-JOic
992-5179.
4-6-241p
ALARMS! " Burglar, fire and
hold-up . Southeaslern
Securily Syslems. Call Ray
Real Estate For Sale
Adams 247-2055 - Mike
O'Brien 247-2113.
3-17-lfc
HOUSE , 6 room s and balh,
phone .742-5613.
SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
3·30·121p
Sanilalion, Slewarl, Ohio. Ph .
662·3035 .
2·12-tfc

TO CALL M'l MarnE~ IIJ

tiller repair l=ree pickup and
delivery . V.arren ' s Mower

I
THAT IT WAS MOT OIILY
THAT WAll I" "IIIE !'I'!
OF THE BEI10LDER -IT VIAS ·
l!lV~I!ICf, GR.e!D, CUPIDITY AND

... l(fi!JII
BE~UTY

SELFI8HI'If1!S •••

60i East Main Street
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms •. bath. porches,
basement, GARDEN AND
TRAILER SPACE. $9,500.

ACROSS

Ml DOLE PORT frame,

l

2 bedrooms,

story
bath,

glassed porch, front porch,
GARDEN SPACE, Y.AR.D.,.
FEi'!CED. $4,500.

Big Copoclly
Moytou

Choice

capital
hard

Month~ payments

.A rnold Grate .

I KJ
'-+-+-I
c..-

.

tJ l I I I

TO IE ''(

Jumbl&lt;" IUMty
·\"~.aerday't

YfiOI TUSSLI

MANAGER.
COME OUR
t.·w," NEVER WIN5

dlcaUng
.false

too high,

36.Evaded
38. Appella·
tlon

DAILY CRYPTOQtJO'iE- HeJ'e'11 how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR .
II

LONOFELLOW
One letter !!Imply stands for another. In thlB sa.mple A Ia
used for the ~ee L's, X for tho two O'a, etc. Bingle letters,
apOatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all .----,-----:-----,
hln:ts. Each day the code letters are dlfterent.
A Cryptorram Quoi&amp;Uon

DR. .MOODY
OF
.

MY

---·

JEMO ASSOCIATES

LPAR

.

P11rk &amp; SY,Cil mor~ Sts.
Middleport, Ohio

992·7034 or '1-268-1810

P

BJDPT

OMEO · ORRHRK

Ills!' ConfciCt him

,

.

SPWR

WRURHF
FOJRF ,

LJ

F~ D P W L · 0 PL . - E .
'

KJ
U.

ML

5ATISFACTION OF AJOB WELL OONE

PEPMTFL~""(,C::~;;;;:-:p----j

FOR
MT

.

.

.,

SICK ..

P 1 NRWG

F 0 P B

(~ 1971 Kina FeP.tureA Synd\C:ntl . lilt' .) •

Rutland. 0.

I FEEL

FOJ!HK

Yeot.rUY'I Cryptoquote: NO PERSON WHO IS ENTHUSI·
ASTIC ABOUT HIS WORK HAll ANYTHING TO FEAR
FROM LIFE.-SAMUEL GOLDWYN
.

.

'

.
\ AntWfl'l IJ'hal dae' redhu dri11er tum«l h~ty jufl6e

WE 6ET THE WONDERFUL

today at . . .

I

CANOPY

lilted to do-PASS ON THI CUlVIS

tranapor-

own tot. ...

your

I I I I I I )""
(A..w•n hMlkJGW)

. tatlon
3,. Combining
fonnatn-

don't own )'OUr

Can cure

,.,_,,,,. HE: HAD HOPED
FO~ WHEN HE WEII'T
TO THE CXX: ICK.

N;:;G.:,;RO;:=_:I:...+I-.--.--., Now arnnp. the circled letten
to form the aurprlee -.ower, u
IUJPitod bJ the Uoft eutaon.

1 - 1: : . . . '

... ..- - . .

28. - diem
29. Anthem
adverb·
30. Old Ohln..e
ktngdom
33. Urban

Moytog
Holo of Hoot

742-4211

. !:: ·::l I

·

27. Afrtcan
river

Perm•-Preu

.RUTLAND FURNITURE.

'

(abbr.)

fastens

25. Border on

Down payment toO high,

,_

product

23. Pagan

Power
Fin Agitator.

MAYTAG
.
""d
Corptl .
'
SlrVICt

tnember

· 22. Gennan
rlver

DO, WHILE THEIR GALS
ARE WASTING MONEY

•.

national

letter
20. Phoenicia~

WHATEVER IT1$ MEN

[]

37. Gl'OB&amp; · .

Marla".

19. Greek

GO SOME PI.ACE ANP
LOOK HANGD~ OR

HOTOT

32. Consumer

35. And (Ger. 1

29. Un-

7. Bumpkin

I

hnrer

·31. Dwelling

2o&amp;. Present

title

poet
18."-

Ye•~Jda)''l

25. Cppled
28. Be a

out

c ;,:::z,;:

YEAPE

..

gated
fl.oh

6. Syrian
bi8hop's

16. Undersized
17. Hungarian

Filter ot:

We Sptci•Uze In

~-Cross

and dances

BECAUSE:

level
L(nt

Surround clothf:s
with gentle, rvan
heat. No hot spots,
no ovardrylng.
Fine Mesh Lint
filter.
,

avis
21. 81111
22. Eton·

• . Fl .. tday
ot Lent
(2 wds.)

12. With imprudence14. Jackets

I

15. -

2. Coquette
3. Before tee

11. Breathe

NEW HOME

Auto.

Orytrs

mom
13. 1971

.(.Down
12wds.)

Is its

If You Haven't.
Bought A

of water

t&amp;mps .
water
control.

DOWN

1. Before

· head
10. Wlesbaden

10.~

U.Nomad

Uno&lt;rambtetheoe fourJumbleo,
one letter to ea&lt;h square, to
form four ordinary wordo.

capital ·

Autom•tlct
2 speed oper11tlon.

.

-

tooth or

TOGETHER FOR YOU!

IT'S TIME TO BUY
CALL 992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD
- ASSOCIATE
4·2-6lc

Ml DOLE PORT - a rooms, 4 .
bedrooms, 2 baths, porches, - - - -garage, NEW SIGtNG, NICE 24 ACRE farm at Long Bottom,
LOCATION. $7,950.
house with 3 bedrooms, dining
room. kitchen, living room,
1'ROPERTY IS SELLING
p;, baths , enclos~d back ·
LIKEMAD-~ETUS
porch, wall to wall carpeting,
SELL' YOURS TODAY
aluminum siding, awning,
HENRY CLELAND
storm "WindOWS iind storm
REALTOR
doors,
city water . Selling due
OFFICE - 992 _2259
to
Ill
health
. Phone 614-985·
RESIDENCE -992-2568
3938.
-3-26·12tp
- - - · - -----4-·Htc

expert

!ann

r

B. After
4 Down
12 wds.)
9. Lambkin's

Balder
40. Coloring

6. Word after

needs. Inquire of our listings _ operators l1cense? Call 992-

WE

39. Wife of

1. Word after
home or

Well water . Garage. $7,000.00
before you buy .
- 2966.
NEW· L"ISTING- 4 bMroonis,
·•
4'6-&amp;lc - - ' - - - - - - - 6·_
15-!,(c
ba Ih, furnace, basemen t. · -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..~:::::::::_,.
Several outbuildings: · All .
· mineral s. Chester water
available. 22 ACRES. Only
$6,000.00
PUT IT ALL
MIDDLE PORT . - 5 rooms,
balh, furnace. Two bedrooms.
Levellot. Only $4,000.00

~lYWID~;~==~!..Jc

DAILY CROSSWORD

HOBSTEIIER
REAL ESTATE

Cleland Realty ·

Ai.JS"TR.ALI Al

... THAT COULD AltO
THE TRUTH' SQ ... WHAT
THIS Cll"l' OF ClOLO ••• 16
Qf "1001t0!!j 11!!fPEI!T

PORTLAND - 7 room frame POMEROY - 3 nice bedrooms
house, 96 acres land, free gas,
with large closets, modern
gas well on place, plenty of
------bath , new kitchen with
timber . Located on good
e\eclrlc range, double sink .
PAINTING, roofing and
gravel road. Price $12,500.00
Gas furnace . Full basement.
spoutmg service . Richard
.
.
Only $12,000.00
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
RACINE - 1112 slorm lrame
3·11-JOtc
George S. Hobstetter, Jr.
house, 2 lots, located close lo MIDDLEPORT - Lot for
church, one block to school,
mobile home. All ulililies
Broker
Insurance
·t bt en 1 1650 00
Phone 985-4186
one block to store, very good
a val a e.
Y
•
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
"'lJTOMOB .
.~ .
buy•. $5,500.00
Phone
949-3211
"'
IL?Einsurance
been
4-4-3tc COUNTRY LIVING 3
·
CALLUSforallyourrealeslate
cancell&lt;;d
..
Lost
your
- -- - ; - - -bedrooms, bath, gas furnace .

I

.

_4~;:;-;J:_:=i~
~-;~~;~h:-G.
•• ~- •.

•

•.

�"··

'

''

.,.,~

,,

8 _ The Daily S.mtiriel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April6, 1971

Market Report

Raid Base ·in Laos

GALLIPOLIS, OJIIO,
Saturday, April3,1971
SALES jtEPORT of
Ohio Valley Livestock On. ··
· ·HOGS__:l75-to 22Mhs, l6.50 to· ·
17 ; 220 to 250 lbs. 16 to 16.40;
Ught 12 to 13.75; Boars 10 to
12.50; Pigs 4 to 9; Shoats 10 to
15.
CATfLE- Steers 27 to 31.40;
Heifers 22 to 27; Baby Beef 30 to
36.75; Fat Cows 18 to 21; Canners 19 to 23.10; Bulls 21 to
27.75; Milk Cows 150 to 285.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 10,
46.90; Seconds 42 to 44 ; Medium
37 to 40; Com. &amp; Hvs. 32 to 40 ;
Culls 40 Down .
SHEEP - Baby Calves 40 to
60;
LAMBS - Tops 26.50;
Seconds 23 to 24.25.

The operation into-Laos today
followed a 24-hour commando
strike last Wednesday and
Thursday which President
Nguyen Van Thieu personally
.armounced.• It came a week
after the last of the 24,000-man
South Vietnamese task force
which participated in the main
campaign withdrew from Laos.

SAIGON (UP! )-South Viet- communique said the South said there were no reports of
namese . Black Panther com- Vietnamese raiders killed 15 any American helicop·ters lost
in the operation. No U.S.
mandos raided a North Vietna- North Vietnamese.
U.S. headquarters in Saigon casualties were announcid.
mese supply area inside Laos
today and a Saigon commu- ·
·
-.
nique said the troops destroyed
a Communist command post in
sharp llghtmg . It was the
second such foray since the big
·
offensive into Laos in Febru- . . The Wahama White Falcons under new head cooch_ Larry
ary.
.
,
Morgan outslugged visiting Federal Hocking for a G-1 wm MooElsewhere m the lndochtna d
This was Wahama's first game of the new 1971 season.
theater, South VIetnamese de- ay. The F~lcons opened up the scoring in the first inning, when
fenders fought off an attack ."Y after two were out, Chester ltoush drew a wal~ Tim lltmard
1,000 North VJelnamese at 1an promptly smashed the next pitch into right ccnterfteld lor a douCanh on the Central Highlands blc, with Housh scoril1( on a miscue on the relay. Handy Clark
and held reportS sa1d 53 followed by sending a single to center and. scoring Howard.
CommumslS were slam tn a
In the third inning Mike White singled to nght and proce~­
three,-hour battle. Officers at · d 1 steal second. Two outs later Randy Clark slammed hts
the scene said .three . South :eco~ hit of the ballgame to centerfield, scoring White, Cla.'k
Vietnamese were slam by took second base on the play at the pllite and then Randy Smtth
enemy forces . who broke followed with a single to left that scored Clark.
,
through barbed w1re barncades
In the fourth inning, after back to back singles by Ketth
and charged within hand Sayre and Brent Clark. Tim Howard lined a hard triple over the
grenade range of ,the central centerfielder's head for two more runs.
.
command post.
This was Howard's second extra-base smash of the ballJ'learby on the highlands, game.
, .
Communist forces early today - Howard did the round chores for the F~lcons p1tch1ng the first
attacked Fire Base 6 near the five innings and giving up only one hit and no runs, ~ndy S~ith
Laos border in the !Olh such followed up by pitching the last two innings and allowtng no htts.
raid in five days. Eleven
Federal Hocking scored its only run ofthegame on an error
Communists were reported after two were out in the last inning,
slain.
Wahama will travel to Buffalo of Putnam County Thursday,
The new South Vietnamese ._tth game time at 4:3p.
foray · into Laos came as
Alnerican and South Vietnamese forces abandoned Khe ~---··-~~--------·~~~---~·-·-~-·--·:-·l
Sanh, the base in South
Vietnam's northwest corner
which had served as the
forward support base for the
big push into Laos which ended
by Chet Tannehill ·
late last month.
Saigon reportS claimed great
..-~._..._:._,,_...._..._..,_,..___,._....- .._.J
..---··-··-·.._..
success for the 45-day drive
Monday afternoon in Cincinnati it was proved once again that
against the Communist military
·supply line known as the Ho Chi even the best pros may play like little leaguers. Six errors! And
Minh Trail but commanders Atlanta wins 7-4 to dampen the Reds' opening in their campaign to
had warned that smaller scale defend their National League pennant.
forays would be made to keep
Fair weather fans already will have written off the Reds in 1971
the North Vietnamese off · (believe it or not, "Reds' Haters" do e~ctly that: with 161 games
balance and prevent new left they're out of i\!).
·
stockpiles of war material from
Speaking of specific haters: One often gets the same sort of
building.
foul wind sitting in the big horseshoe off Olentangy Road m
U.S. Army helicopters carried Columbus when Woody Hayes' Bucks play footbalL If a play goes
the elite Hac Bao (Black wrong - "The burns! That knucklehead Hayes can't do anything
Panther ) commandos of South right!" - is the oft-repeated refrain.
.
.
Vietnam's lsllnfantry Division
Yes athletics is great entertairunent, builder of character m
into Laos today, landing them the you~g, a necessary outlet for young energies that perhaps in
at a North Vietnamese supply earlier eras escaped less wholesomely. But what Is competlllve
base area known as 'j61f. " A
athletics doing to the fans (or the converse)? Obviously there
remains in us today much of the same lust that kept Rome's
Coliseum packed for the gladlators.

Falcons w m
•·

WIN AT BRIDGE

.

Smart Law
Breakers Win
o!oKlll 5
W~S'l'

....

¥Ar.
• 9fl2

WOODSTOCK
(Technicolor)

Running Ti.me : 3 Hrs. 10
minutes.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
April7-8
NOT OPEN

PROVIDES A
BETTER BUDGET

ti07H

'

ol-9842

SU,U'fll ([))

o4o K87H
• J 75
t AK4
oloAQfo
Both vul1wra b!e
West Not·th Easl Soulh
1 N.T.

P ass
Pass
Pass

2olo
:! N.T.

Openin~

l

ROGER ABBOTr, the Marauders' big, powerful second
baseman done in Point Pleasant Monday evening in the home
half of th~ last inning at Middleport with one swing of his bat. ,
With Rick Van Maire on third base with one out, Coach Eddie
Bartels gave the sign for the suicide squeeze. B~t Abbott's bunt
try on a low outside curve was fouled off, and R1ck went back to
third base. With the sign apparently off, Abbott looked at one,
· then another, then got what he wanted, a waist-high fast ball.
The crack of the bat the soaring drive way, way out and over
the fence still is one of the beautiful things in sports, especwlly
when It wins the game 5--4.

GOOD BANKING

¥98:12

"'J7 :!

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight April6

t:AST
o4o '95

o4oAQJ4:&lt;

· the Sports Desk !

~L

r.

NOR'fll
o4ol02
¥ K Q JO4
tQJ S:l

INFANT ILL
The Pomeroy E-R sqyad
answered a call at 11 :34 a.m.
Monday to the Richard Jeffers
home on Willow Creek Road
where an infant, Sean Jeffers,
had become ill. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and then transferred to an
ambulance and taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.

Pass
POI~S

2o4o
Pass

lead- ;. :1

By' Oswald &amp; .lames Jacoby
Pick up " Win at Bridge
with JACOBY MODERN" or
any other book that covers
the play of the cards and
)'OU will find a table that
shows which card to lead
fro m various hi gh-card combmations.
These tables aren't exactly
the same , but they do agree
that the proper lead against
no-trump from a suit headed
by ace-queen-jack is !he
queen.
On m o s t · occasions you
want to knock out the adverse king and set up the
rest of the suit while retaining cont rol. Like all rules at
contract they apply in general. The winning player
should learn to break t hem
at the proper time .

North's two-club bid was
Stayman and South's twospade call showed four cards
in that suit.
When this hand was played
at New York's Regency
Whist Club, Tim Holland,
sitting West, had to lead
against the no-trump game.
Tim, one of our best amateur golfers and perhaps the
'World's best backgammon
player, is also pretty good
at b1·idge. Tim led the three
of spades . He didn't mind
fooling his partner. ll was
apparent that East wasn't
gomg to be t a king any
tricks .
S o u t h reached over to
dummy and p l a y e d the
deuce. He didn 't think of
playing the 10 and w h e n
East played the nine declarer was dead . It didn't matter
whether he played the king
or ducked . Tim was sure of
four spades, the ace of
hearts and a profit.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . f

MEETS THURSDAY
A regular meeting of Shade
Riv~r Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will be
held at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
, INJURED IN FALL .
the hall in Chester. All master - Miss Bess Sanborn, Mlds are invited .
'dleport, was taken to VeJerans
mason
Memorial Hospital and admitted at 5:02 p.m. Sunday by
the Middleport E-R squad after
BOTH TO CLOSE
Both the Farmers Bank and suffering leg injury in a fall
Savings Co. and the Pomeroy near the corner of South·second
National Bank will close from 12 Ave. and Main St. Miss Sanborn
noon to 1:30 p.m. Friday for was walking home from the
Pomeroy Community Good business section when she felL
F'riday services to be held from
12 noon to 3 p.m . at Trinity
PLEASANT VALLEY
Church.
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Lora
LaRue, Charleston; Marvin
Miller , Tracy Wolfinbarger,
Rhonda and Diane Burgess,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Johnny
. ·- .
Donohue, Letart.
DISCHARGES
Lima
Gillispie, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
James Oldaker, Mrs. Chester
Jeffers, Lelah Powell, . Mrs.
Franklin Thornton, Orlan
Burns, Mrs . Lewis Roush ,
Lewis Markham and Mrs .
Hawthorne and
216 E. 2nd
Pomeroy Darrell
daughter.
Phone 992-5428
'

a

Wise

where

to bank. Our bank provides you with
all banking facilities plus you get top

2-HOUR
·CLEANING .

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
,ClEAN.ERS

saving interest on your saving dollar.
Plan for that rainy day now.

.

PLAY SAFE ..: BANK WITH US
'

WHfN YOU Vl'iiT . PARK FRH

PITTSBURGH

Love To Eat?
Like Quality,
Fast Service?.
JOIN US FOR GREAT
EATING, AND MODEST PRICES.

DA·IRY VAlLEY ·

'

' MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member ~='"CCeral Deposit lnsur,nce Corpor,tlon

992-2556
At The
End
Of Pomeroy Bridge
'
-

THE AMBASSADO~ QUARTETIE from th~ Circleville Bible College will he at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church at 7:30p.m. Wednesday. The Rev. Eugene Gill is pastor. The
public is invited. ·

i ______ _: ______ ~-- -:----;------1

Meigs Third in

! News ... rn Brrefs :

.
.
'fhree"'Way Meet

1h

By Uuited Press International

I

More War Temper Rising
NEW DELHI _ PRESIDENT AGHA Mohammed Yahya
Khan of Pakistan today accll!!ed India of moving troops up to the
frontier in what he termed a direct threat to Pakistan's security.
f
Yahya warned he will not permit any foreign power to inter ere in
the revolt by theeastwingofthedividednation.
The government-controlled Radio Pakistan, in a news
broadcast monitored in neighboring India today, quoted Yahya as
having said India sent the equivalent of six army divisions, or
about 60,()00 men, into West Bengal state on the border w1th East
Pakistan.

18-Year Old Vote a Shoo-in
WASHINGTON - STATE LEGISLATURES are moving
swiftly to ratify the constitutional amendment to give 18-year-olds
the right to vo,te in ali elections. Final action in time for the 1972
elections appears certain . Debates now underway m ftve key
state legislatures - Kansas, Missouri, Ohio, Oregon and Ve~monl
- will determine whether the amendment w11l be rat1f1ed m
record time. If all five fall into line behind the amendment, it will
have the necessary approvals to become the 26th amendment to
the Constitution sometime during this summer.

PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.
Saturday, Apri13,1971
HOGS - 175 to 220 15.50 to
16.75; Heavies 14 to 16; Lights 11
to 14; Fat Sows 13 to 15.20;
Boars 11 to 13; Pigs 4 to 10;
Stock Shoats By Hd. 12 to 18.
CATTLE.:_ Steers 24 to 29.50;
Heifers 23 to 28.75; Fat Cows 20
to 23· Canners 15 to 18 ; Bulls 23
to 2G:5o; SJ:ock Cows and Calves
165 to 278; Stock Steers 23.25 to
28.35; Stock Heifers 21.40 to
24.1Hl; Stock Steer Calves 28 to
J5; Stock Heifer Calves 24 to
28.75.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 46.50;
Seconds 43.85; Medium 34 to
, J7.85; Common &amp; Heavies 32 to
42.75.

Logan High School won a
three-way track meet at Logan
Monday, taking 83 points to
Wellston's 39 and Meigs' 18.
Meigs Coach John Bentley
said today the Meigs squad "is
lean and lacks talent due to
inexperience.''
Chuck Faulk placed fourth in
the broad jump, Wayne Well
was second in the high and low
hurdles, Bob Grimm was third
in 100-yard dash and fourth in
the 220, and Steve Stanley
finished third in the mile. Meigs
was last in the 880 relay. John
Thomas was third in low hurdles and Keith Vanlnwagen
third in pole vault.
Meigs will have its next meet
at Middleport with Jackson the
opposition, when the track gets
in condition.

••

Now You, Know

at

The banana "tree," actually a
gigantic herb growing to , If
height of up to 20 feet, withers
once it has produc~ its fruit.

VOL XXIII NO. 250

POME~OY-MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

BY BOB HOEFLICH
members that the situation had reached a point where the dump
The Middleport dump is no more and Middleport residents would have to he operated in accordance with state regulations or
apparently are left without any place to dispose of solid waste.
be closed.
'Renewal of a permit' for Middleport Village to operate Its
Middleport Village was cited to the hearing before the health
dump, off the Route 7 bypass in Salisbury Townahip, was denied board yesterday to show why the permit should be renewed. The
uaanimously by the _Meigs County Board of Health Tuesday board had stated that burning at the dump, lack _of fire protection
evening.
and failure to keep waste covered were reasons for citing the
Refusal of the board to renew the permit followed a hearing at village.
,
·
Trinity Chureh in Pomeroy. The village has been operatiJ't!l the
Middleport Couacil President John Zerkle, speaking at
dump without a permit since January of this year.
yesterday's .hearing, said that Middleport had made plans to
Complaints against the dump had become renewed from obtain a packer truck and begin a village operated garbage
residents of the Leading Creek and Bradbury sectors in late pickup service. Through use of the packer truck, the village could
-March when a fire developed at the dump and burned for several control dumping and the waste could be kept covered, Zerkle said.
days.
He said that Middleport would be glad to use a county landfill
Dale Dutton, president of the health board, met with council facility when one got started.
on two occasionS in Middleport and had uaofficially advised
·Middleport Couacil, meanwhile, already had approved. the

COLUMBUS - A six-month
research study indicates that
heated water discharged from
electric power generating
stations on th.o-Ohio River has
no discernible, harmful effect
on the aquatic life of the river or
the river ecology generally, it
was announced today.
The findings were contained
in the report of a study covering
the period from July through
December, 1970, based on actual field investigations con·
dueled for len electric utility
companies in Ohio, Kentucky
and West Virginia, · including
Ohio Power Co. The study is

PRESS

8 Magistrates Are Appointed
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Eight
ff' · 11
magistrates have o ICia y
been appointed by !ederal
judges of the Southern District
.of Ohio. Two fulllime and six
part-lime appointments were
made · for the new positions,
which combine the duties Of
commissioners and other work
in assisting federal judges.
Mark Abel, 26, Columbus, and
Burton Perlman of Cincinnati

KC School
Insurance
Increased

were named magistrates for
their respective cities, in eight·
year terms at an annual salary
of $22,500.
The six others, who will serve
four years, are Roger Makley of
Dayton, Joseph Freedman of
Steubenville, Harry T. Herdman of Portsmouth, Robert E.
Brown of Springfield, 'l'hoinas
R. Bopley of Zanesville and
Valla B. Mowrey of Chillicothe.

Stop in the busy Mens and Boys department lsi floor . Select a pair or two. Be sure to see
the fine group of boys shirts in stripes and
solids to match or cotJtrast these flare slacks.
Also Boys sizes and Prep sizes in Wembley
Ties .
I
.

Elberfelds In Pomer9Y

.

The new world of

Cou11terspace Cool{i11g by Corning
Corning has ~evelopeu the tirst lruly revol utionary advance in cooking in many years.
There are no coils, burners or grease traps. The
tough Pyroceram ~ glass-ceramic cooktop is
smooth and beautiful. Wilh no paris to remove, '
just imagine how easy it is to keep clean, This

Kyger Creelr's --Board of
Education Monday night approved the payment of $8,504.03
to Downing-Childs Insurance,
Middleport, for insurance on the
is Counterspace'~'M Cooking.
district's three buildlngs.
Four invisible electric elements provide pre~
-According
to
Local
cise, thermostatic control. As the surface 'ht!ats
Superintendent Comer Brad·
up, the individual sunbursts lllrn yellow to inbury, the rate
nearly
dicate which cooking areu is on. The rest of the
quadrupled over that paid In
top stays cool so you C(ln use it as extra coun~
1970. The hike was due to ~n
terspace. Both The Counlcr That Cooks""
Increase fn evaluation caused
cooktop and the Counterangen• unit come
by construction of a five-room · with a set of Cookmntes1·:-•-cook.ware ~pc·
wing 'at Addaville Elementary
cially designed for Counlerspace Cooking. And
and two unit addition at'the high
be sure to ask us about two other exciting
school-plus the .lncreas~ riots
kitchen innovations from Corning-the
and vandalism in the big city
Counter·Saver and t~c Focd Warmer. Come in
schools.
,today and.take home the kitchen of tomorrow.
The
board authorized
Bradbury to purchase a diving
board for the swimming pool ,
and granted Gary Minton, high
s.chool guidance counselor,
permission to attend a training
worl&lt;shop on the general ap·
titude testing program.
A request to purchase
. equipment for·use in. vocational
agriculture classes on a matching basis wlUt the Federal
Goverll!JW~t was tabled for
fur~ consideration. ·
F11d Wumer. Infrared
The board also denied a
hntlnR U!lit that kups
food the way you cockecllt
request by head baseball ·coaeh
unlil you're ready 10 serve.
Jolin sang 'for fuads to pay an
assistant coach.
Aspecial nie~ting
be held
'
later this month for the purpose'
of hiring teachin'g ' and nonleaching personnel.

wlll

,.'
I

C2 ----- .... '
--.=... ---

I

I

.

I

~-

f'

'

"'--'--~ ___:._

I

___::)
"

- - - ·----- --- ~-:cc
. · ---{;O (I~i 'l~ plus

Counttranlt. All the advanlllfl:l!! of Cn11r.1e rsr; ac€

• self·cleanlng oven. Available i~ whr tr, ;~voudo,
end h1rvest gold,

p ~· rr • ·n • l ol
t, II.ITI IN ii : C~ .

cor~~ IWnc

Co&gt;~nt t·), ~·,1. 1.1

KING .BUilDERS SUPPLY CO.
.

MIDDLEPORT: 0.

first reading of an ordinance providing the public service and
Mayor Fisher charged that the Middleport site "is the wrong
setting the rates. In this connection, Zerkle said he had not sup- place for dump ... The mayor said that there is not enough dirt at
ported the stipulation in the ordinance that required a mandatory . the location to use for covering and remarked also that Midminimum payment of $2.50 a month for all residents.
dleport does not ha ve the money needed to purchase another piece
·
Mayor C. 0. -Fisher of Middleport testified that the establish- of land .
ment of a landfill for the entire county is up to the county comOn the other hand, Zerkle said that there is enough fill dirt at
.missioners who, he said, "have dodged the issue."
the dump site for about a year if the village could operate the
Dutton, who presided at the hearing, stated that a county dump using the packer truck and doing it In accordance with slate
landfill would be the eventual solution but pointed out that the regulations.
Middleport dump has created a nuisance which must be corrected
It also was brought out at the hearing that the county comimmediately.
missioners have made application for federal funds whieh would
Zerkle pointed out that the Village could secure a packer be used to establish a county landfill. However, it was admitted
within a short time and would clean up all of the debrj,i..al the that such money, if granted, would be through the Ohio Valley
present dump site. However, he said, Middleport could not go into Health Services, and not available until July or even later ,
the expense of securing a packer truck until officials knew the
Mrs. Ben Rife and Mrs. Clair Might represented residents of
decision of the health board on the matter of a permit.
(Continued on page 10)

a

believed to be the first of its
kind ever made on the Ohio.
The study was made by
WAPORA, Inc., a Washington
research and consulting firm .
The utility companies have
contracted to spend $180,000 to
finance the study over a fifteenmonth period ending next
September in order to study
river conditions during all
seasonal periods.
The consulting firm is headed
by Dr . Jacob I. Bregman,
former deputy assistant
director of the Interior for
water quality and research . The

Ohio River study is being
carried out by a research team
under the direction of Dr.
Gerald Lauer , ' assistant
director of the Institute of
Environmenl.al Medicine, New
York University Medical
Center. The WAPORA research
work involved a thorough
population analysi s of the
aquatic &lt;!food chain " at various
points along the river. During
the study, the Walet' Quality
Office of the U. S. Environmental Protection
Agency, which has been conducting fish population studies
in the Ohio River since 1957.

cooperated with WAPORA.
Research involved detailed
samplin g and analysis at
various sites above and below
intake and discharge points of
four power plants on the river.
Sammis Station of Ohio Edison
Co., at Stratton, 0., Beckjord
Station of The Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co., near New Richmond, 0., Kyger Creek Station
of the Ohio Valley Electric
Corp., near Gallipolis, 0., and
Cane Run Station of the
Louisville Gas and Electric Co.,
Inc ., near Louisville, Ky.
Population counts of aquatic
(Continued on page 2)

Self-Service Kidney Perfected

SLACKS
Wrangler brand in
regulars and slims.
Solid colors - bold
stripes - novelties .
Si-zes a to 18.

TEN CENTS

River Ecology Unharmed
By Stealn Power Plants

FLARE

NEW YORK - IGOR STRAVINSKY, the Russian-born
composer who fathered modern classical music, died early today
at the age of 88 in his New York apartment. He had been ill for
some time with a heart ailment.
"The Firebird" and "Le Sacre du Printemps" (Rite Of
Sj_Jring) were among the best known of Stravinsky's 35 major
works although both were written before the 1920s when he was
credited with inventing the neoclassic style.

PHONE 992-2156

-e
0s

·&lt;,

Stravinsky Dead at 88

. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1971

•
l

MEE:riNG POSTPONED
A meeting of Ohio Valley
Grange 2612 scheduled Thursday, AprilS, has been postponed
to Thursday, April 15, due to
Holy Week activities. H. E.
Shields is master.

~ERMANENT

Clear and not as cold toni~~
Low upper 20s and lower - ,
Mostly sunny ana warmer
Thursday. High in the 50s and
low to mid 60s.

',

Another Big Shipment
BOYS

Weather

Devoted To The lnteruts Of The Meig!-Mason Area

Dayan Says His Men Won't Lose
ISRAELI DEFENSE MINISTER Moshe Dayan has vowed
his army "will not be defeated" in case new fighting with Egypt
breaks out in the Middle East. Dayan also expressed hope the
Soviets would counsel restraint in Cairo. As Israeli officials talked
of the possibility of new warfare, Palestinian guerrillas reported
"dllch to ditch" fighting with King Hussein's forces in Jordan .
The commandos called for Arab intervention to end the bloodshed.
"Egypt has prepared intensively to renew the war," Dayan
told nearly 4,000 persons at the Labor Party convention in Tel
Aviv Monday night. Both Dayan and Foreign Minister Abba S.
Eban took the podium amid the red flags of socialism and blue
and white Star of David banners to implore the E;gyplians to come
to direct peace talks with IsraeL

:•

' ON TO PEKING- Dal Joon Lee, right, Clevelalld, 8lld JOilll Tannehill, of Middleport, are
the 1·2ranked members of tile United States Table Tennis team competing In Nagoya, Japan in
the 31st World Table Tennis championships. They and the U. S. team have been invited to
Peking, Red China, by the Chinese delegation at Nagoya. The picture above was taken in
Mi~port in 1969 when Lee, U. S. champion, and Tannehill, No. 2 rl!flked, gave an exhibition.
Tarmehill is a freshman at the University of Cincinnati.

TT Team to Breach Bamboo Curtain
NAGOYA, Japan (UP!) ·_
Communist China issued an
Invitation today to U. S. ll!ble
tennis plliyers to visit Peking
and the Americans accepted.

The trip will be the first visit
by an organized group of
Americans since the Communists took over China in 1949,
although there have been visits

CAREFREE, Ariz. (UP!)Dr. Belding H. Scribner, the
medical scientist who created
an efficient artificial kidney
and with it an enormous moral
problem, has now created a
simple, self-service apparatus
which he calls the "artificial
gut."
Like the artificial kidney, it
can prolong many lives but it
can do it without the kick-back
of a moral dilemma. Unlike the
artificial kidney, it should be
within the financial reach of all
persons who face a slow death
from malnutrition due to end·
stage bowel diseases, including

cancers.
At1fie annual science writers'
seminar of the American
Cancer Society Tuesday, Scrib·
ner spoke bitterly of society
which permits people to d_ie of
end-stage kidney disease because they cannot afford to
have their blood cleaned at
least once a week by the
artificial kidney.
On the basis of his own
experience with such tragedies,
he gave this warning to cancer
.scientistS: "If you develop an
effective treatment for cancer
which is unavoidably expensive,
you're in for a long, hard and

by individuals.
Rufford
Harrison,
an
American Table Tennis
Federation official, received
the invitation from Sung Chung,
secretary general of the
Communist Chinese delegation
to the 31st World Table Tennis
I
7\T
•
1 Cly!mpionships, which have
: 1
been underway in this Japanese
I
.
I city 182 miles southwest of ·
Tokyo. Harrison accepted the Four area jaiz bands will 86 Proof, Fifth Street Band, and
By United Press Internatlonal
Invitation later in the day.
compete in a "Battle of the the T. and T. (formerly the Blue
Harrison said the team Bands" at 8:30 p.m. Thursday 'Rose Cathedral of Point
President Speaks Tonight
tentatively is set to leave Japan at the Pomeroy Juaior High Pleasant), and the Foxx Band
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON will go on national for Peking April 15.
School under the sponsorship of. (formerly known as Gordon
television tonight to announ~ what is expected to be a speedup in
the Meigs. High School Chapter Foxx).
the withdrawal of U. S. soldlers from Vietnam -an increase
of . the Vocational Industrial
sufficient to drop troop levels to.50,000 men or less by a ye,ai- from'
Clubs of America.
Judges will be Janet Korn,
this summer. AS Nixon worked over the 15-minute speeeh, for
First,prize in the contest will w·JEH radio ; Jack Kane,
delivery at9p.m. EST, word came from U.S. mill~ sources in
he $100, with trophies going to WMPO radio; and Joseph
VIetnam that the number of American soldiers .in the war zone
Two defendants forfeited the second and third place Wblte, Jr., of Minersville. the
has fallen ~elow 300,0oo for the first time in more than l'h years. bonds and three others wet:_e winners. Bands taki~g part are event is open to the public.
This would seem to indicate the Presi&lt;!ent is on the way to fined in the court of Middleport
meeting a goa! he set In his last troop withdrawal announcell)ent, Mayor C. 0. Fisher Tuesday
on Apri120, 1970. At that time he ordered a 150,000-man reduction night.
·
design to bring the level to 284,000 by this May 1. ·
Forfeiting $25 bonds were
·Henry Wilkes, 45, Huatington,
Extension of ARC Probable
posted on a charge of driving
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE R~ Committee has with expired license tags, and
cleared for floor action legislation to extend the life of the Ap· Raymond F. 'Jonker, Gahanna,
palaehian Regional Commission (ARC) and five smaller com· for indecent exposure.
Fined were Derrall R.
missions. Under the terms of the bill, expected to. see action
shortly after the Easter rec~ss. the 13-state ARC would be given Johnson, 19, Crown City, $30 ant:,___
four more years of life, until June 30, 1975, contrary to the Nixon costs, attempted theft; William
G. Beat, 78, Pomeroy, $5 and
administration's revenue-sharing plan.
intoxication, and
The administration wants to scrap the commission after one costs,
more year, .then 'Jlut its money toward the rural development Raymond G. Pendergast, 45,
section of the [ll'ogram. Strong support, bowever, has been heard Leonore, N. C., intoxication, $5
from congressmen and governors for a· continuance of the ARC. and costs.

r---------------------------,
B . ,.f.

Two.Forfeit
Court Bond

'

'

.

.. WASHINGTON - OHIO WOULD RECEIVE ABOUT $427
million during fiSCal year 1972 if Congress enacted into law the
revenue-eharing proposal of President Nix9n. Figures for' the
state under seven categories of the plan; as reported Tuesday.
would include: Educatiop '101.8 mllllon; law enforcement $21.9
mllliQII; manpoWer training· $77.7 million; urba!J community
development $89.4. million; rural community development $35.6
million; general transportation $15.1 million and urban mass
transit $25.3 million·.
.
.
The education apportionment marks an increas~ from '100:1.
million and oruy Ohio and Cal!fornia aniong the 50 states would
gain revenue In that category.
.
.

· · Unuin-Carbide ~vels 'Off
MARIE'lTA, omo - .THE MANAGER of the Union Carbide
cO. works here sal~ today Ute finn will [l!'Obably not have to

curtall production to meet' .federal anti-pollution standards as

til

originally e~ted. The finn announced earlier this f~ar at if it
(Continued on page 10)

MRS. EDWARDS

$6,000
Given to
Hospital

sa rily from kiatley failure.
The "artificial gut" has a
simple pump and a. stand on
which to hang a bottle of·
nutrientS. From it runs a tube
to an artery-vein shunt permanenlly installed in a patienl's arm . He can attach the
tube himself.

Donald H. Diener, Administrator of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, annouaced
today receipt of a gift of $6,000
made by Esther Bradbury
Edwards of Miami Beach,
Florida, and New York City.
This is the second gift made to
the hospital by Mrs. Edwards.
Earlier she gave the hospital
While he sleeps in his own funds to install much needed air
bed through the night the conditioning for the emergency
nutrients transfuse his blood room and laboratory.
stream. If anything goes wrong
The most recent gift is to he
a hell goes off, awakening him used for equipment in conand he sets matters right. By nection with the expansion of
day he lives a normal life.
the hospital, which is expected
to be completed in May. Diener
.
....
stated
that an appropriate
• '·'·'·'·"'o!·'•:O'·'·'·'.v·:.·..o..:..,.......-.:-.•,•o•;:h..;o;.;:;·x.-.·,·.~u.....u~:-::::::::-.,::~~-.;.::::=?.:.;·~:......•.:."tL·, ·
i.;~······-•.• ..•..•.·.w~ -=-,~~.c·..-....&lt; -·-•-'&lt;•'•'-'"
•
.. • ·.. .. .. -1~ plaque is helng ordered to be

·Four Combos in Battle : 1 G
Mad e Of , 14' 040 $ill recognition
placed in the hospital in
'iii
rant
of the gift.
:::l
Mrs. Edwards' mother, Mrs.

'ews .•• zn rre1 s :

Ohio Would Draw-$427 Million

disilusioning struggle."'
By his estimate only one in
every five such patients are
maintained and the others die.
To maintain one patient until
he can gel a transplanted
kidney (itself an e.pensive and
uncertain procedure ) for one
year costs $5,000. Scribner's
further estimate was that 50,000
lives could be prolonged every
year, That makes the cost of an
annual national artificial kidney
maintainence program for all
who must have it to live, $250
million . By his estimates 10,000
persons each year die unneces.

l

· A $14,040 grant has . been
approved for ·an expanswn of
the Out.()f.SChool Neighborhood
Youth Corps Program, Richard
Sayre, Executive Director of
the Meigs-Gallia Community
Action , disclosed today.
Sayre's announce~ent came
at the monthly meetmg of the
of
organization 's board
directors Tuesday in Pomeroy.
The program will be expanded

WAGGONER

ColUm b llJ
•.
'

ELICK

Best Bidder

LEE ·

The bid of the Tri-Couaty
Asphalt Co:/ Galllpolia Route I,
_to resurface aU RuUami'streets
was·accepted Tuesday night by
council in~ regular session. The
company will begin im·
mediately on the project.
The bid of the Gallia firm was
$22,438.50. Other bidders on the
resurfacing were York Con·
struction, Nelsonville; Shelly
-Co., Thornyille, and the F. H.
Brewer Co. of Lancaster.
Funds for the street improvement program will be
provided from a five mill tax .
levy approved last faU by the
voters of vi)lage,' and otlier
SARGENT
available village funds.
Bills were approved for
payment witli . Mayor Gene
Thompson, councilmen William
Gaddis, _Harvey 'Erlewine,
Robert Snowden and Ernest
service.
Nicholson; • Clerk Vernon
More than 800 employees Weber, and Treasurer. George
hav~been with Ohio Fuel or itS
White present.
·
associate Ohio companies Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., and
the Ohio Valley Gns Co. - 25 ·
LOCAL TEMPS
years or longer . · Dinners The temperature- in·downtown
· honoring ' all these employees Pomeroy at II a.m. WedOesctay, ·
are he!~ annually - at \'arious unde1· sunny : skies, w&amp;s 42
degrees.·
· ,
localiohs in Ohio.

Gas to Honor Long Service of Four
...

Laura Bradbury, has been a
patient in Veterans Memorial
for some time. Mrs. Edwards in
making the gift expressed her
praise and gratitude for work of
the hospital.
Mrs. Edwards is the daughter
of the late Asa Bradbliry and
Laura Bradbury. Her sister
Mrs. Ruih Arnold an1 he;
broth~r Cecil Bradbury reside
in Middleport.
'

Gallia Finn

Therapist
Employed

Miss . Marjorie Hudak,
Youngstown; speech therapist,
a recent graduate of Ohio
University, was awarded a one
year contract by . the Meigs
CoUnty Board of . Education
.1'\iesday mght. M1ss Hudak
replaces · Mrs.
~athy
Natemeyer who has res1gned.
In other business the board
issued. a continui~g contract to
Otis Knopp, attendance officel".
Attending were Robert Bowen,.
· county superintendent, · and
· board members George Perry,
Harold Lohse, Gordon Collins,
Harold Roush and Virgil Atkins.

·&gt;:·

from 18 to 30 enrollees.
Sayre also reported that an
application has been filed for
extension in Project Assist.
In other matters , the
resignation of Mrs. Sandra
Henderson , an aide, was accepted. Reports ~ere presented
on current proJects mcludmg
the Medical Clinic at Cheshire,
Operation Mainstream, and the
Out of School NYC Program.

\

Four Meigs County residenls, A. Clare Waggoner, Route 2, Thirty-year awards will be
inclutling one from Pomeroy, Rutland, will 00 presented a ·received by Carl E. Lee, Long
will · r~c~ive special' awards ~old watch by the ga~ company Bottom, and Doyle W. Sargent,
recogmzmg them .for long as he is 4n!lucted into the club Route 2, Pomeroy.
service at the Columbia Gas \lpon completion •of 25 years of
The Southern Quar.ter CenSystem Southern Quarter · service.
Century Club banquet Wedtury Club has a membership of
nesday, April 21, · at the . A 40.year service award .will 318 ·active · and retired · em·
American Legion Hall, · Lan- be presented Walter Elick, ployees of the Ohio Fuei Gas.co.
caster.
·
Route
I; Rushville. ·
. All have 25 or IJlore years of
I

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