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IO _:The Daily Sentinel, MiddlepPrt-Pomeroy, 0 :, AprU8, 1971

Second Grass
Fire Reported

News ... in Br:iefs

·
(Continued from page I)
corn..-poduciqg land in eight states, fucluding Ohio. Experts on
the ground will take samples from the same areas to see if' the
infrared and color film can actually pick out the diseased plants.

Torch Put to Three Buildings
COLUMBUS - FIRES THOUGIIT TO HAVE been set with
paper torches broke out in. the basementa of .three Ohio State
University claSSroom buildings late Wednesday. Damage was
expec·ted to be "moderate."
The ftrst alann was turned in at 7:20p.m. when smoke and
. !,lames were observed pouring from Page Hall. Sixteen minutes
later, firemen turned their attention to Denney Hall across the
Oval and then to Smith Physics Laboratory about a block away at
7:40p.m. All fires were out by 8p. m.

65,000 Otryslers
To he Inspected
the automatic speed control
cable for a condition which
could prevent the carburetor
from returning to idle.
Another campaign involves
10,496 Chrysler and Imperial
1971 passenger cars for
replacement of the automatic
temperature unit which controls the heater and air conditioner.
In one Dodge truck campaign,
25,500 compact BIOO, B200 and
B300 commercial vehicles are
being recalled to inspect for
a possible leakage in the fuel
vapor separator. Owners of 42
model 1971 Dodge D200, W200
IF/_ ..1
J _ . and P200 trucks are being asked
to bring the vehicles in for inspection and possible tightening
Fred A. (Sarge) Taylor, 51, of the lock-ring tabs on the rear
Coolville, died Wednesday axle hearing adjusting nut.
evening at the St. Joseph
Hospi!.el in Parkersburg
following an extended illness.
Mr. Taylor had retired after
22 years service in the U.S. Air (Continued from page I)
Force servmg m the Northcas tern Air Command the moned help.
European Theater and th~ Far Tak~nin addition to his wallet
East Air Command The past 10 contammg an undetermined
years he had been ;mployed by amount of money, and credit
the Armco Viscose Division, F. cards was Stewarts 1970 Gold
M'. C. Corp., at Parkersburg. Ford Galaxie, a Timfx watch,
Born at Keavy, Ky.; the son of flashlight, raincoat, brief case,
the late Thomas and Mattie first aid kit, fire extinguisher,
Brewer Taylor, he is survived cutting tools and tool box valued
by his wife, Ruth McQuain at $1,000.
Taylor; three sons, Jeffrey, Officers said Stewart did not
James and Joseph, and a require treatment for his indaughter, Jean Ann, all at juries. The Ohio Patrol alerted
home; three brothers, John, all law enforcement agencies in
Herpew, and Thomas, .and four So~~eastern Ohio and West
sisters, Mrs. Irene Dugger, Virginia in an effort to find the
Mrs. -Ruby Baker, Mrs. Pauline abductors. Roadblocks were set
Lee and Mrs. Melda Cupp, all of up in the county Wednesday
afternoon, but the trio evaded
Lond on, Ky.
Funeral services will be held the lawmen.
at 2 p.m. Saturday at the White Logan and Williamson State
Funeral Home in Coolville with Police troopers joined the
the Rev . . Donald Marken of- search after an armed robbery
ficiating. Burial will be in the at a supermarket at Delbarton
Coolville cemetery. Friends in Mingo County. A spokesman
may call at the funeral home for the Logan State Police Post
any time after 2 p.m. Friday. said an extensive roadblock was
set up for a man and woman
in the theft of $30 from
Easter Weekend sought
the supermarket. The trio was
seen fleeing in a 1970 Gold Ford
Galaxie with Ohio tags. They
Friday &amp; Saturday
were apprehended at the
Aprll9 &amp; 10
roadblock around 2 a.m. in
twithBgals. gas)
Stewart's car. No resistance
was made.
Investigating offlcer,s said
there was no connection between the incident and the
S38 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
I We honor BankAmericard
abduction last week of Michelle
and Master Cha~ge)
Price, 21, Gallipolis.
This was the fourth major
crime in Gallia County within
the past week. On Sunday,
·
March 28, Columbia Gas of
Ohio, 459 Second Ave.,
Tonight. AprilS
Gallipolis, was burglarized. A
NOT OPEN
safe containing $250 was taken.
Two elderly twin brothers, Orie
and Emmett Rossiter, 72, Rt. 1,
Friday &amp; Saturday
April9-10
Crown City, were beaten and
robbed early Monday, March
TOO LATE
29. Approximately $2,000 was
THE HERO
taken in that armed robbery.
Michael Caine
Cliff Robertson
Just last Wednesday, March 31,
IGPl
area law enforcement officers
Co lorr.a rtoon:
·and the FBI was called to in11's For The Birds
vestigate the abduction and
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
assault of Michelle Price.
DETROIT (UPI) - More
than 65,000 Chrysler Corp.
passenger cars and trycks wlll
be recalled for inspection and
possible replacement of
defective parts, the company
has reported to the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The action will be
divided into four separate recall
campaigns.
One campaign covers 29,346
Dodge, Plymouth, Chrysler and
ln.perial 1970 and 1971 model
passenger cars for inspection of

Fred A. Taylor
Dies ,., eanesuay

Robbery

FREE BABY DUCK
Certified
Gas Stations

MEIGS lHEAJRE

M~,sgN
DRIVI·IIII
-- .
I
Frf., Sat. &amp; S11n. April ·9·1 0-11
DOUBLE FEATURE PRqcaRAM

...........

"Explosions Of laughter!"
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-PUll-

Elherfelds In POmeroy Are Open ·Friday arid .Saturday
Until 9 m· .th_e Evenmg·
. ••••• A' Good Time For·Famil
_. y
S''llOppmg All. 0v
. er Th
. e store.

For the second time in two
days, Galllpolis Volunteer
Firemen extinguished a gtass
fire Wednesday afternoon at the
o
rear of Haller Division 's
Federal Mogul. ~!ant, 2160 .....----~:..-.:..' .. - ..-·..--·-·-..-·.~·----··-·-·-.. -·.. ..c.· -~·-·~·-----··-----·--·-··--·-·-·:-··--------·-·-·1,
Eastern Ave.
Fire Chief James A. Northup
said the blaze was caused by the
wind which carried sparks from
burning debris to the adjoining
grass.
You'll like this grand selection
Approximately one and oneof mens shirts. Short sleeves .
half acres burned. One tenth of
Permanent press materials .
an acre scorched Monday night.
solid colors · loud stripes - neat
Two trucks and 11 men
stripes . · pia id patterns. Big
responded to the 43rd alarm of
selection of collar styles inthe year.
c! uding button downs - long
point collars - skinny collars
Two Actions Filed
and regular widespread styles.

Shirts For Men

A suit for divorce and an
action to quiet title has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Mary Evans, Portland, Rt. I,
filed suit for divorce against
Harold Evans, Portland, Rt. I,
charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty. Davey D.
Wolfe and Catherine Y. Wolfe,
Racine, Rt. 2, filed an action to
quiet title against Wilson M.
Wolfe, Racine; Rt. 2, et al. The
property is located in Antiquity.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMI'ITED - Lisa Farrell,
New Haven; Mrs. James
Johnson, Mason; Mrs. Halph
Fisher, Jr., Pt. Pleasant;·
Michael Brooks, Letart, and
Danny Hannon, Pt. Pleasant.
DISCHARGED - Anthony
Martin, Nancy Martin, Mrs.
Burdell Hayes, Mrs. Robert
Payne and Steven Porter.
BIRTHS - April 7, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Peters,
Clifton; April 7, a daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Adkins,
Glenwood.

Elberfelds
Are Ready
With
A Big
,:
f
,Selection \
Of Wearing
Apparel
For
Women
and
Girls

\

Ta~e

MEN'S SPORT COATS

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DRAMA PLANNED
The youth group of the Zion
Church of Christ, Pomeroy~arrisonville Road, will present
a one-act play of the .
resurr,ection Sunday at 7 p. m.
The public is invited:
I
SALE SET
Candystripers of Veterans
Mim'lorial Hospitai will hold an
Easter bake' sale beginning at 9
a.m. . Saturday at the Davis- n,
Warner
Insurance Co; offi~e.in
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manufacturers," said the Institute. "In some cases the cost
of labOr is 20 times the cost of
the item involved."
"One of today's bumper-grille
combinations is held together
with a total of 57 bolts and requires the effqrts of three men
to install and . align," ~~Bid the

·-.

OIL

The 1"1!titute said average
hourly repair shop rates in Akron increased by 48 per cent between 1965 and 1970 while Cincinqati recorded a 47.8 per cent
boost followed by Cleveland at
44 per cent; Columbus 43.5 per
cent; Canton 33.3 per cent and
Toledo and Youngstown both
30.8 per cent. ·
The on said it surveyed 175
garages in the state's eight major cities.
Labor Costs Blamed
"Little regard to repairability
has been given by automobile

"The modern-day automobile
is extremely fragile and low
speed crashes result in extensive damage," said the on.
A survey by. the Insurance
Institute for Highway Safety
showed that a Chevrolet Impala involved in an accident while
going only five miles per hour
resulted in $196.20 in damageS.
At the same speed, the AMC
ambassador suffered $309.25 in
damages; the Ford Galaxie
$185.80 and Plymouth Fury
$171.30.
The average was $215.64.

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'l'IUS IS HOW THE MIDDlEPORT landfill dump off the
Route 7 bypass looked Thursday at 5 p.m. as fire spread .
across it. Just before 6 p.m. Middleport firemen answered a
call to the scene. Meanwhile, at 9:30a.m. today, Middleport
officials disclosed that "official" notification of the Meigs

COunty Board or H~lth refusing to renew the permit to
opera(j! the dwiip had·not been received. The board Tuesday
evening voted unanimously not to renew the permit of
Middleport to continue ita dump operation. Thus, the dump
remained open this morning, pending the receipt of the official order.

Come in and let
us help you
select
your
Easter outfit. All
size ranges in
Coats,
Suits, .
Dresses,
a II
weather coats,
millinery,
blouses, skirts,
dress and coat
ensembles,
pants suits and a
beautiful
selection
of
matching
coordinates with ·
top brand labels.
Complete
size
ranges
from
Junior Petites Regular Juniors
· Misses and half
sizes girls
sizes from tots to
teens and a
complete line of
Chubby
sizes
1
from 8 h to 16'12.
Stop in today.
Capable
salespeople
to
assist you.

.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
A talk by pr. Lewis Telle,
election of officers and the
resignation of executive
secretary, Mrs. Homer Parker,
highlighted the annual dinner
meeting of the Meigs County
Tuberculosis imd Health
Association Thursday night.
Dr. Telle, Introduced by
Mimning Kloes, president, who
was in charge of the annual
session, used snioking and its
effect upon respiration as well
as other health factors as his
topic.
"! can think of many reasons
why a person should not smoke
· but I can't think of one reason
why anyone should smoke," Dr.
Telle said.
Cigaret smoking does pollute
the lungs, the chief surgeon at
Vet~rans Memorial Hospital
stated, as he outlined the post

DRESS SLACKS
Waist sizes 29 to 40. Choose your proper length.
Most all are permanent press. A truly excellent
selection including beautiful new solid colors ·
stripes · plaids · checks. Famous brands. Very
well made. Arranged for your easy selection.

MEN'S KN.IT SHIRTS-

Short sleeves and the popular new 11 inch short
sleeves- Permanent press - solid colors - whilestripes. Cotton· cotton and polyester blends and
plenty of Wintuk knits .

Unlined jackets so perfect f_o~ spring and summer wear - waist length
styles and the popular Satan ;acket. Solid colors. Blue, Navy .blue, green,
tan, yellow, brown, black and white .. Sizes 36 to 48.

Visit
Elberfelds
1st Floor
For A Wonderful Selection Of

Jccessories to Complete Your Easter Outfit
Handbags

. Umbrellas
Perfumes and Colognes

EASTER BUNNIES

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BOYS WHITE DRESS SHIRTS ·

For little boys sizes 3 to 7 and bigger boys 6 ·to 20.
Long or short sleeve styles. The new collar styles
that boys like so well.

FOR THE DfiLDREN

BOYS' .SLACKS

Select a stuffed bunny, ducks or dolls for
your little boy or girl from this selection
in regular and mu.sii:al numbers - .on
the 1st floor.

. Plenty flares In this brand new selection. Sizes a to lB.
RegJiars and slims. Permanent press fabrics ln neat
styles - loud stripes · solid colors. You'll Shine In the
- !5ilster _Parade In 'a pair of !tree. Ask any or the
salespeople to help you find your site In the style and color
that's best for you.
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7\. T
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ews ... ln

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, ~e Elherfelds In ?omeroy Yo~1 Shopping wnter ~ See the many new
arnvals all ovet the store - Weanng apparel for your family and furnis1ai1J8,8
for
home. .
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Sadat's Stat~ments Rebuffed

Little boys shirts made just like big
brothers or Dads. Ail the new collar styles
-the new spring colors · the loud stripes .
the smart plaids that little boys and moms
Iike. Permanent pre.s s- exceptionally good
·
. ·
values.

Brush fires kept Middleport
firemen on the move Thursday.
At I :54 p.m., a plane spotted a
brush fire near the James
Miller property on. the Storys
Run Road and nollfled VIllage
hall by radio. Firemen went to
put 11 out.
At 4:51 p.m., they were called
to a brush fire below the Hi-7
Club on Route 7 and to another

EQUIPMENT PRESENTED - Manning Kloes,
president of the Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health
Association, left, officially presented Thursday Donald
Diener, administrator of Veterans Memorial Hospital, three
pieces of respiratory equlpent valued at $2,000. The large
piece on the floor is a volume control respirator used with air
or oxygen for surgical patienta and patienta with respiratory
injuries. The machine will breaUte altogether for the patient
and can be rechanneled only to assist his breathing. Two
small pieces of equipment are handi-vent respirators which
can be used by the patient with respiratory problems.
·Oxygen and medication is given the patient through the two
smaller pieces of equipment.

. By Unlted Preas JDtenuiUonal

Shirts For Little Boys

MRs. VIKKI GLOEcKNER wears
a soft and supple white straw.

MRS. MARY SKINNER prefers the

MRS. CAmERINE WELSH favors
a multi-flowered cloche.

popular pastel whimsical.

,.,o:o:

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Hundreds and hundreds of ties- featuring the
popular wide ties in white, solid colors, loud
stripes, neal patterns and a big selection of
ready-tied-ties in Conventional and wide
styles. Also ties in boys sizes and prep sizes.
Select the Wembley tie that's best for you .

(Continued on page 5)

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tFiremen
on Move IFrills Return to Easter Season Fashion Scene
"'

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1
1

WEM BLEY.Tl ES

surgical problems which many
times develop in patients who
do smoke cigareta.
Dr. Tells said that he can
detect effecta of smoking during
physical examinations ever.
among young people who have
smoked for only as long as sill:
months. He stated that quitting
even after 20 years is bel)eficial
but it is not known at what point
lung cancer starta to develop as
a result of smoking.
The surgeon stated that he ill
personally against smokers
polluting the air in public
locations.
"Non-&amp;nokers have a bill of
rights too," he remarked. He
ll"edic\ed that one day laws wiU
be passed making it illegal to
smoke in public places.
A color film describing the

f::'w:o::::.;;.:~~:::~:~=::::.«.&lt;-:=::~:~:::~:::::::::::~~:~=~:~:=::;.:=:=:~;&lt;~~:m:~:~::,:::-,:,:,~:::~:::~:,:,:,

Small, medium, large and extra large
sizes.

MEN'S LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS .

TEN CENTS

.

Mens Trim Cut and Fuller Cut

Buy the socks you · need for your Easter war·
drobe from the fine selection in the mens and
boys department - Banlons - O'lons . Cotton
Crews in an unusually fine group of colors and
white. Boys sizes6 to 11- Mens sizes4 to 14.

PHONE 992-2156

Smoking Dangerous to Health

Sale 14.90

Socks For Men and Boys

Clear and cooler tonight.
Lows from the upper 30s north
to the 40s central and south .
Sunny and cooler Saturday.
.. Highs from the lower 50s near
Lake Erie to the mid or upper
60s extreme south.

FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1971

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

i

Scarfs .
Jewelry
Hosiery

pi tal bills are covered by insur.
ance," the 011 said.
"The fallacy is obvious, for
ir1surance is nothing more than
a system for sharing such expenditures," said the on. "Hospital costs are reflected in
many insurance lines - including auto~ob_ile insurance."

Weather

VOL XXIII NO. 252

Group II Regu Ia r 24.95 Ligher weight Coats.

SERVICE AT&amp;
HARTFORD - Sunrise
services will be held at 6 a. m.
on Easter at the Hartford
Church of Christ in Christian
Union with the Rev. O'Dell
Manley, pastor, in charge. The
public is invited.

SUNRISE SERVICE
Sunrise services will be held
at the Zion Church of Christ,
Pomeroy-Harrisonville Road,
at 6 a.m. Everyone is welcome.

said the on in a 70
page booklet on Ohio ins.urance
facts. "The reason is that the
insurance premium is really a
'meter' which gives a reading
of conditions which have resul!ed from external forces and influences over which it has no
control."
Hospital Costs Soar
The on said one of the
guages ir the rise in per day
hospital costs which have 'gone
up by as much as 82.4 per cent
in Toledo.
Cleveland showed a boost of
72.7 per cent followed by Cincinnati at 70{ ·Dayton, 67.2;
Youngstown 66.8; Columbus 65.6
and Akrqn . 63.2.
"When a major hospital recently announced an increased
daily room charge, the hospital's public relations department
said the increase would not' affect the public since most hos-

Devoted To 1Jw Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

Sale 19.90

PRESSMEN WALK OUT
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Pressmen at ' the Cleveland
Plain Dealer walked off their
jobs early today, shutting down
presses and leaving this city
without its .morning newspaper.

EARLY SERVICE SET
Easter Sunrise services will
be held at the Syracuse Church
of the Nazarene at 6 a. m. The
Rev. Marshal Larimore is
pastor. Everyone is welcome.

~ears,"

In 519 B.C., Darius, king of
ancient Persia, crucified 3,000
political opponents in Babylon.

Advantage of the Special Sale

Group I Regular 29.95 Year 'round weight Coats. Good
selection of patterns and sizes.

MEETING DELA YEO
The Meigs Chapter of the
American Red Cross will meet
Aprill5 at Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 7:30p.m. instead of
tonight as was previously announced. The annual fund drive
will be discussed.

SPEAKER NAMED
·The Syracuse Ministerial
Assn. will hold Good Friday
services at the Syracuse United
Presbyterian Church Firday at ·
7:30p. m. The Rev. Paul Sellers,
will be guest speaker.
'

By JOHN-T. KADY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Automobile insurance premiums for
Ohio drivers have Increased by
as much as 87 per cent ln some
areas over the past five years
but the boost only reflecta
spiraling costs in medical
treatment and auto repair, the
Ohio Insurance Institute
reported today.
Clevelandrecorded the biggest
jump in auto premiums from
$163 a year in 1966 to $306 in
1971, an increase of 87. per
cent.
The On said Youngstown had
an increase of 77.7 per cent in
premiums followed by Dayton
with 64.7; Canton 61.7; Cincinnati 58.3; Columbus 57.2; Toledo
53.9 and Akron 53.5. The rest of
the state averaged out to an increase of 58 per cent.
••ves, insurance rates have increased over the past several

Now You Know

••
••
••

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Tommy
Pi lzl!r, Long Bottom; Clinton
Pitzer, Jr ., Long Bottom;
Robert Grueser, Minersville;
Mary Smith, West Columbia.
DISCHARGED - Vanessa
Folmer, James Mays, George
Roush, Robert Reeves, Belva
Fisher.

DOCTOR CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called to the home of Mrs.
Joe Wilson, South Third Ave., at
9:28 p. m. Wednesday. Mrs.
Wilson was have difficulty
breathing. Dr. Raymond Boice
was called.

Regular and tapered
fits in small ( l4141h L medium (15·
15112), large (16-16'12)
and extra large ( 1717112) and others in
neck sizes 14 to 17.

Some Auto Insurance Up
AsMuch as87% in Ohio

•

Driver Charge4

•

. A Parkersburg man was north, went off the road on the

1 · hospitalized and cha~ged with
1 driving while intoxicated
1 following a single car accident
I Thursday at 11:45 p.m. on the
SR 7-124 bypass, the Meigs
Counlt Sheriff's Dept. said.
Ernest G. Booth, 49, traveling

ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER Golda Meir said tOday recent
statementa by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat "nearly destroys
every hope for peace in the Middle East. Mrs. Meir, in an Intervie-w published in the Tel Aviv newspaper Yedjoth Ahronoth,
said that despite Sadat's pronouncements "I am ready to meet
him at any place, any time." ·
She said ·~e want a peace that will constitute the beginning
-:- of the road to htunBn coexislenca,in the Middle East. President
Sadat, however, d~ not cease talking of resumption of ,the
fighting, and he dictates such terms to us that will enable him to
get rid of us in the future. "We thought 'Sadat would settle down
and begin to tackle the problems of the Egyptian naiion," she
said, .but "it seems to me that one can now doubt if this
-assessment was correcl. Everything Sadat has said .... nearly
destroys every hope."

brush fire on Leading Cr_;;k
Road at 5:03p.m. At 5:58p.m.,
firemen were called to a fire
which had gotten out of control
at the Middleport landfill dump.
At 10:43 a.m. Thursday, the
E-H wiit answered a call to ~e
Clifford Steele home on S. Third
Ave. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

right, went 200 feet along the
berm, back across the highway,
and smashed into a stone wall.
The car was demolished.
Booth was taken to ·veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy E-R squad where he
.was admitted for a severe
laceration to the scalp and a
fractured right hip.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlie return of femininity to the fashion scene hasn't been
neglected in the least by hat designers, and a visit to the nearest
hat shop this Easter season is proof enough.
In all sincerity, we now can sing that familiar refrain, "In
your Easter bonnet with all the frills upon it" for in. oil and
organdies, in delicate pastels and neutrals, 'in soft a~ :pple
stra)VS the "frills" which reek of femininity are there.
'

While you may djsagree with the cliche that "clothes make
the woman," who can deily that they affect the personality.
' Proper attire Increases poise and self-confidence, whatever
the occasion, and hats provide a special avenue for altering your
self.Jmage.
·
For what wit does for conversation, a hat does for even the
most tailored costume -it enlivens, it enriches, it enhances the
wearer, And beautiful they are - the spring hata of '71!
•

Trio Charged with Auto Theft
Auto theft charges have been
filed in Gallia County against
three persons sought in connection with the alleged armed
robbery of a Columbus, Ohio,
man Wednesday afternoon.
:rhey w~re apprehended early
Thursday morning at a road-

block near Hanover, W. Va. expected to go to Pineville this
Still in custody at the afternoon to serve fugitive
Pineville, W.Va. jail are David warrants charging auto theft. If
Shanks, 30, and &amp;s ·wife, Bunny they waiye extradition, the trio
Shanks, Grove City, Ohio and will be brought to Gallipolis to
David Hatfield, 19, Delbarton, face the charges. If they refuse,
W. Va.
extradition proceedings will be
1
Sheriff Denver A. Walker Is ·filed . ·

The trio is charged in the theft
of a 1970 Ford Galaxie taken at
gunpoint Wednesday afternoon
from Robert Stewart, 43,
Blacklick, Frank County, Ohio . .
Stewart later was robbed,
knocked unconscious, tied and
thrown in a ditch on Thomp.Son
Rd. in northeast Gallia County.
The trio had been hitchhiking on
Rt. 23 south of Columbus when
Stewart offered them a ride.
Taken in addition to his car
and .wallet containing an undetermined amount of cash
were · Stewart's personal
belongings valued at $1,000.
..,.West Virginia State Troopers
joined in an intensive sear~h
Iller an armed robbery at a
supermarket at Delbarton, W.
Va.

1

~:::!!~~:::!'8l7?&amp;:!~~

Extended Ohio Weather
Outlook Sunday through
Tuesday:
Fair Sunday, becoming
cloudy with a chance of
showers Monday or Tu~day.
Seasonal temperatures wllb
highs In the 50s north to the
80s south. Lows from the mid
30s to the mid 40s.

Pope in Most Bitter Attack
SEVEN CALLED
VA TICAN CITY - POPE P"UL VI HAS USED one of the
Seven registrants were forugliest words in Christendom to describe priests who abandon
warded from Meigs County to
their vocations to-marry or for otber reasons: Judas, The Pope's
Fort Hayes, Columbus, ior preaccusatlon Thursday was one of [jls bitterest outbursts since a
induction physical
SGT. YOUNG
famous 1969 speech in which he accuse&lt;! rebellious priests of
Sgt,. Ronnie Young has been examinations Tuesday, the
"crucifying" the Roman Catholic .Church.
.
Selective Service office
"Hh can one fail to offer a prayer on Holy Thursday Evening . chosen Airman of the Year Meigs
lor 1970 at the Da Nang Air report&amp;. In accordance with
for theBe runaway brothers and the communitieS they have
Force Base at Da Nang, board po,licies, names of those .
abandoned and'scandalized ?"be said dUring a 2'h hour service at
South Vietnam, and has been undergoing pre-induction
the Rome Basilica of St. John in Lateran. He said reading the
nominated lor Airman of the examinations are not anstory.of Ju\l&amp;s Iscariot, the betrayer of Jesus, reminded him of
Year in the Pacific 'Security nounced.
such men.
·
Region. lie ls now stationed
at the Royal Thai Air Force
EXTRA SERVICE
Four Killed in Crashed Plane
Base, Na Khon Phaoom,
EVANSTON, Ill. (UP!) - Ap
EASTLAKE, OHIO - A SINGLE ENGINE plane with. four Thailand. He ls the son of Mr. Evanston pizza parlor Is of.
,persons aboard &lt;:reashed .into Lake Erie late Thursday. and and Mrs. Wesley Young of · fering a last-minute income tax
dislnle8J'ated upon impact. Parta offour bodies ape! some plane
Rutland. His wife, Diane, ls ' seriice for people ordering
GE'r RE~DY.sET-GO! -It's at 2 p.m. Sunday at Middleport Park for toddlers Utrough
fragmenta were recovered. The ~lane, identified· as a Mooney,
living _with her parents, Mr. pizzas April15. Jerry Herman,
age 12 to begin their hunt for the bright colored Easter Egg's. 'j'he annual Easter F.gg Hupt is
. was registered to Jerry L. Rohl of SloWt: li'alls, S.D. It was enroute
and.Mrs.' Eugene Holliday, at the owQer, said . Thursday,
to !mt Nation Airpol'tat Willoughby from Richmond, Ind.
Dexter. 'rhe new ·address of "when our delivery boys deliver sponsored by Ute Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club. Cash Bahr, chairman, displays l!Qme of
the eggs that,will be hidden for the r,ouqgsters. The club provides one "golden;, egg worth ·$10
The · identifications of the victims were not immediately
Sgt. Young .ls Dec. 3, S994tti your pizza, they will also pick
determined. The plane crashed a mile out Into the lake off this Security Sqn., Box 30&amp;, APO, up and mail. your tax return and a "silver"'egg worth $5. A total of 410 prizes will be awarded. Children of the.county are
. ·invited.. ·
Cleveland suburb and a'quarter-mile east of uie Chagrin River.
San ·F~anclsco, Calif., 98310. before midnight."
I

\

Weather permllting, work
will begin Monday on im·
provement of County Road 76,
hown as the Children's
Home Hill Road,"Ted Beegle,
county engineer, said today.
The road will be closedJrr
several days- at least three
-for the project and trafllc
«Jmlng .Into Pomeroy .from
the Route 7 bypass must use
County Road ·'7S, the Hilalld
Church Road, or County Road
24, Union Avenue, Beecle
said. ·
l!OOSTERS TO MEET ·
The Eastern Band Boosters
will meet at 7:30 p.m." Tuesday
at the high•school.
·
BOARD TO MEET
The Southern Local School
I!oard will meet Thursday al a
p.m, at the high school

�'.

'

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... ·..

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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., ,Aprll9, 1971
'

·2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., April9, 1971

Transfers ·

Soc'ial
Calendar

· Beverly L. Codner, John S.
Codner to Ohio Power Co .,
Ease.; Lebanon.
Grover C. Salser , Jr .,' Dortha
P. Salser, to Ohio Power Co.,
E;ase. , Sutton.
Gene Yost, Mary K. Yost to
Ohi&lt;f Power Co., Ease.: Sutton.
Jasper Powel~ Faye .Powell
to Ohio Power Co., Ease.,
Sutton.
Martin A. McAngus, Mary F.
McAngus to Larry R. Lee,
Virginia M. Lee , Lot 266,
Pomeroy.
Asa A. Hoskins to Marvin
While, Nan While, 10.16 Acres,
Chesler .
Jack B. Peterson, Joyce A.
Peterson to James S. Conkle,
Eva L. · Conkle, .55 Acre,
Rutland.
Johnnie H. Nash, Mildred V.
Nash to Green Hill Homes, Inc.
Lot 44, Middleport.
Ruth Gillilan , Lawrence
Gillilan, Mildred Lee, Loren W.
Lee, Olive Stobart, G. Carol
Stobart, Raymond Donohue,
Delores Don ohue , Kathleen
McMurray, John McMurray,
Lawrence A. Donohue, Flora M.
J;&gt;onohue, Ray E. Donohue,
Bertha Donohue to Lawrence A.
Donohue, Flora M. Donohue,
4% Acres, Scipio.
George A. Rupe, Mary Louise
Rupe to Citizens Nat'l. Bank,
Lot13, Probst Add ., Middleport.
Marvin E. Boyles, Janet M.
Boyles to Susan M. Manley,
Walton R. Manley, Lot, Middleport.

'

FRIDAY
WEEKEND REVIV AL at
Rutland Free will Baptist
Church, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, 7:30p.m. Rev. Robert
_Stewart of Mt . Vernon
evange list. Re sur recti on
Service at 6 a.m. Sunday.
Everyone welcome.
SATURDAY
COMM UNITY EGG Hunt
Saturday at I : 30 p.m. old
. Chester Courthouse. Bring own
colored eggs . Prizes. Sponsored
by Chester Girl Scout Troop 204
and Modern Woodmen of
America. Everyone welcome.
BAKE SALE, Women's Guild
of Trinity Church, Saturday, in
the church basement beginning
at 10 a. m.
HIGH SCHOOL dance party,
Meigs Junior Hi gh School ,
Middleport, 8-11 p.m. Saturday.
Jays will emcee, sponsored by
Middleport Police Department.
SUNDAY
SUNRISE SERVICE Sunday
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church 5:30 a .m. Worship
service and Sunday School at
regular time .
SUNRISE SERVICE Letart
Falls U. B. Church Sunda 6 a.m.
Breaklast will be served at
home or Mr . and Mrs. Floyd
Norris.
RUTLAND Communi ty
Church prayer praise and
SUNDAY
communion service, Sunqay, 2 SUNRISE Services, 6 a.m.
p. m. Rev . Amos Tillis extends Easter, Hartford Church of
public welcome .
Christ in Christian Union, Rev.
SUNRISE SERVICE, 6:30 a. O'dell Manley, pastor. Public
m. Sunday, Rock Springs welcome.
Methodis t Church, youth
fellowship in charge. Worship
MONDAY
and Sunday School at 9:30a. m.
POMEROY High Alumni
followed by egg ·hunt.
Association meeting, 7:30p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF Monday at Pomeroy City Hall
Christ, 6 a. m. sunday, sunrise · council chambers. All alumni
service.. Public invited.
IOVlled.
TUESDAY
MINISTERIAL Assn .,
Tuesday at Middleport Church
of the Nazarene at 10 a.m.

The

Dai~

SERVICES PLANNED
RACINE - The First Baptist
Church of Racine will have
Good Friday Serices at 7:30 p,
m. Friday. Rev. Earl 'Shuler
will be the speaker with Rev.
Morris Wolfe the song leader.
On Sunday, at 6:30 a. m. the
Easter Sunrise service will
feature a cantata by the choir
followed with breakfast. Sunday
School will be held at 9:30 a. m.
and Morning Worship at 10:45.
On Sunday evening a songMrs. Dallas easley of Belpre
Lavinia Simpson.

SUNRISE SERVICE
MASON - Sunday morning at
6 a.m. there will be an Easter
'Sunrise Service to be held on the
Mason First BaptiSt Church
building site on the corner of
Second St. and Fogelsong Road.
Churc hes participating are
Mason First Baptist Church,
Rev. Stan Craig, Jr., pastOr ;
Fairview Bible Church, Rev.
Stan Craig , Jr., pastor; and
Mason Assembly of God, Rev.
Chesler Tennell, pastor. All
pastors will .be preaching and
there will be special singing,
with Mrs. Elaine Craig accompanying
on the piano,
DAUGHTER BORN
S. Sgt . and Mrs. James testifying and a good time in the
Norton of Adelanto, Calif. are Lord. Everyone is welcome,
announcing the birth of a there will be chairs for the older
daughter on April I at the peopre. There will be coffee and
Holzer Medical Center. The five chocolate milk served after the
pound, one ounce infant has
been named Paulette Ann. Mr. service. IN HOSPJToAL
;~nd Mrs. Norton have another . The Rev. Ed Buffington of
daughter , Christina Ann. Pomeroy has entered Veterans
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs . Hospital at Huntington, W. Va.,
Carl H. Norton , Pomeroy ; and lor observation.
Mrs .
Missa
Kuwata,
Minamitsugaru Aomariken,
Japan . Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Norton of Pomeroy are greatgrandparents .

Sec ond c lass postage pa id at
Pom eroy , Oh io.
National advertis i n g

r epre sentative
Boff inelti .
Gallagher , In c. , 12 East 42nd
St ., New York City , New Yor k .
Subscription rate s : o e .
livered by c arri e r wher e
available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carr ier
servic e not a11a ilabl e : On e
month S1.75. By mail In Oh io
and W. Va .. On e ye ar $14 .00 .
Six month s S7 .25 . Three
month s $'4.50. Sub sc ription
pri ce Inc lude s Sunday Tim es Sent inel.

Mrs. Clilrence · Greenlee and
son, Mrs. ~alcolm Guinther,
Henderson Jackson, Mrs. Pearl
Kisor, Richard, Lyons; Mrs.
Michael McBride and son, Mrs .
Mazie Plymale, Mrs. David
Reed and son , · Beverly
Rowland, Mrs. Carl G. Sauvage
and son, Mrs. George Tripp,
Mrs. Ernest Watts, Mrs, Carl
Wooten, B. Junior Darst, Mrs.
Audrey Garretson, Tracy
Lewis, c. Dale Rousli, Blair
Windon, . Brian Windon,
Clarence Hash, William Nance,
William Wise, Robert Goldsberry, and Charles Russell,

0

The book on how to play catch
up baseball and win in the last
inning could have been written
by the Meigs Marauders who
Thursday e ve~ing defeated
Vinton 2-1 behind the pitChing
and hitting of senior
righthander Rick Van Maire.
It was Van Maire's single
with one out in the bottom of t!Je
seventh and last frame with
Stan Wilson on second base that
broke a 1-1 deadlock and ended
the game . Wilson, who had gone
hiUess in two earlier trips,
singled to lead the inning off,

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By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer
Willie Mays is doing everything for the San Francisco
Giants these days except pitch.
Unfortunately for the Giants,
that's where they needed help
Thursday night as they succumbed to the San Diego
Padres 7-6 despite Mays' five
RBI game that inr,luded a
grand slam homer. ,
Mays, who'll be 40 pnMay 6,
has started off this season with
one of those hot steaks that
he's noted for . Hes hit three
homers in three games this
year and is 6-lor-11 with seven
·
runs batted in. 1
He ta·gged
for the
grand slam
seventh
inning to
a five-run
rally that
a 4-1 San
Diego lead and
the Giants
a 6-4 margin.
the eighth
grand slam
Mays' career
and gave
631 career

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992-2039
Pomeroy flower Shop

-YOU WO.N'T

Butttrnut Avt. Pomtroy
Mrs. Millard Van Mtttr

• Be High Pressured
"HE FINISHIED ;;;; ,:::=-.1
CUTTING THE
LAWN
AN HOUR AGO,
BUT HE CAN'T
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THAT NEW

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Ferguson
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Tractor!"

• Be Coerced Into Signing A Contract

have gone to Jose Pagan after I in two runs with two out in the
struck out twice against Fry- ninth inning to lift Cleveland
man but he stuck with me." past Boston. Hodge entered the
Stargell noted he hit .273 game as a pinch-hitter in the
against lefties last year and eighth and doubled and scored ·
was .260 against righlies,
the first Cleveland run on John
Jack Hiatt, obtained from Lowenstein 's single. He then
Chicago in a winter deal, hit tagged Ken Tatum- the retwo run-scoring doubles as liever the Red Sox got from
Houston beat the CUbs, Jack California in the Tony ConigliaBillingham pitched a four-hitler ro deal- for the hit that won
to gain the victory. Ken the game in the ninth.
Holtzman look the loss.
John Bateman drove in three Cookie Rojas' bases-loaded
runs with two hits and Steve double in the third drove in two
Renko scattered 10 hits as; unearned runs as Kansas City
Montreal beat New York. Gary capitalized on four california
Gentry gave up six . runs and errors for the victory over the
took the loss but thr.ee of them Angels. Andy Messersmith ,
in the seventh were unearned who homered in the !ifth, took
because of an error by Bob the loss even though he left
Aspromonte .
after eight innings without
Rookie Gomer Hodge singled giving up an earned run.

..

"•

I
•,

THREE OF HOCKEY' S greatest players, Jean Beliveau of the Montreal Canadiens,
left, Phil Esposito of the Boston Bruins , center, ·and Hobby Hull of the Chicago Black
Hawks celebrated landmark achievements in their National Hockey League careers
this season. Beliveau received a trophy from the Canadiens for having scored more
than 500 career goals; Esposito jumped lor joy after having scored his 59th goal
of the regular season- a record, and Hull signed autographs for fans shortly after
surpassing Maurice Richard's record of 544 careers goals to become the second
ranking goal scorer in NHL history.
ABA Playoff Standings
• By United Press International
{Division Semifinals)

I Best of Seven I
East
Series " A"

Big Blacks·Win :,.

MF7

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TOM'S CARRY OUT
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Pomeroy

THE STOR E WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PET S.· ~ STABLES - , LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS. LAWNS ~ GARDENS. .

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REG. 7.00 VALUES 5•00
REG. 8.00 VALUES 6.00
REG. 9.00 VALUE$ 7.00
REG. 10.00 VALUES 8.00
REG. 11.00 VALUES 9.00

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·PHONE US FOR.AFREE ESTIMATE BEFORE.SIGNING ACONTRACT WITH.AN OUT OF TOWN .FIRM
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'

East
Pil ls burg h
New York
Sl. Loui s
Monlreal
Chi cago
Ph iladelphia

W. L. Pel. GB

2 0 1.000
1 I .500
1 1 .500
I 1 .500
I 2 .333
o 2 .000
West
W. L. Pet.
2 o 1.000
3 1 .750

...

Detroit
Baltim or e

W. L. Pel. GB
l 0 1.000
I 0 1.000

Boston

1'12

2

Washjj1gIon
Cleveland
New York

Floridians -

1
I

1 .500
1 .500

1h

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1 .000

West

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Allanla
Houston

w. L. Pet.

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Memphis

4

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4 .000

Series " 0 11

W. L. Pet.
4 0 t.OOO
x-Uiah
0
4 .000
Texas
112
XClinched
series
1
Thursday's Result
I
Fl
or
idians
129 Kentucky 117
1
Friday's
211, N.Y. vs. Va . al Games
Richmond

W. L. Pet. GB

1'igers Lose
First Game
Of Season

STOCK AUCTION
MIAMI tUPI )-The holders
of $1.6 million in Tropical Park
debts owed to William • L.
McKnight will auction off threequarters of the Thoroughbred
track's stock on April 20, !twas
announced Thursday . McKnight
acquired 115 of 200 sh,res of
stock as collateral from the
Teamsters Union when he took
over the loan last May.
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Meigs Co. Branch

Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

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N.2nd
Middleport, 0.

In the other three National
League games, Houston beat
Chicago 7-3, Pittsburgh blanked
Philadelphia 2-0 and Montreal
topped New York 6-2,

In the only two American
League games, Cleveland
nipped Boston 3-2 and Kansas
City edged California 3-2.
Willie Stargell, who struck
out in his two previous trips
against Woody Fryman, dou-.
bled in the only two runs of the
game in the sixth inning as
Pittsburgh beat Philadelphia.
Luke Walker threw a five-hiller
to gain the victory,
The left-handed hitting Stargell credited Manager Danny
Murtaugh for letting him hit
against left-banders like Fryman. "Hilling against lefties is
just a matter of playing against
them," Stargell said, "Harry
_Walker said I couldn't hit
lefties but I always knew I
could . Murtaugh gave me a
chance to prove it. He could

;.
•
•
••

OUNCING

..

Tw in bl .3de, ge ar drive mower, MF 7 takes all attachments f or snow, leaves, hauling . No-shift Hydra
Spee d Drive and electric start optional.

Dudley's Florist

homers, just 83 short of Babe .
Ruth's 714.
But reliever Don McMahon
couldn't hold the lead in the
ninth inning. Singles by Don
Mason, Dave Campbell and
Larry Stahl produced the first
run . ·Clarence Gaston then
singled in the tying run and
Nate Colbert, who had struck
out three times, tagged McMahon for the game-winning hit.
McMahon, who was 41 on Jan.
4, blanked the Padres in the
seventh and eighth innings
before being tagged for five
hits in the ninth .

••
•!

Lronton Wins

America's low-priced leader - with 34'' ·mower included

. ~

and was sacrificed .down by
Chip Haggerty who in his two
previous tries with the lumber
had doubled and singled .
The Marauders gave up an
unearned run in the first inningwhen G. Barber walked with
one out, ·stole second base
successfully against catcher
Roger Dixon's attempt to stop
him , and scored on R.
Graman 's single , But Van
Maire 'settled down to fan R.
Herrold and Vinton's pitcher, B.
Strong ,
That's how it was until the

fifth , gotten to second on a · Abbott singled.
PllSSed pall, moved to third on · Strong walked nobody, fanned
Van Maire's deep flyball to one. Vinton 's coach is ;Bill
right, whereupon leadoff batter .McNickle, native of Racine, and
Dunfee shot the ball through the a one-time standout catcher for
middle to plate Haggerty.
the Racine Tornadoes.
Van Maire fanned 13, .gave up The Marauders' next game is
six hits, two of them to Barber. Tuesday at Athens, a northern
All were singles. He walked division SEOAL contest. T)ley
four .
are 3-l overall, 0.1 _in league
Meigs threatened break away play,
in the sixth when outfielder Vinton
100 OOQ 0--1 6 0
Gene Powell led off with a Meigs
000 010 1- 2 8 I
single, got to second on a ~ild Strong and K. Barber. Van .
pitch but was thrown out on a Matre and Dixon. Umpires: G.
close play at home when Roger Nesselroad, plate; A. Stobart
and C. Ingels.

1

The Easy Rider/
At The Easy Price

~

fiflh , the Mara11ders having all
kinds of trouble getting solid
wood on Stt ong's excellent
assortment of what is reierred
to in the trade as junk, The
Marauders' big hitters at
the top of the order
got four 'of their eight
hits, but only one of them
produced a rWl, that being
shortstop Steve Dunfee's twoout single with Haggerty on
second base in the fifth.
Thatmadeanewgameof it at
1-1. Haggerty, the thirdsacker,
had singled with one out in the

GB Chi cago
2 0 1.000
Kansas City
2 1 .667
.. . Milwaukee
I 1 .500
San Fran cisco 2 1 .667 lf2 Minnesota
1 I ,500
Los Angeles
1 2 .333 l'h Californ ia
1 2 .333
San Diego ,
1 2 .333 11h Oakland
o 3 .000
Cinci nnat i
0 2 .000 2
Thursday's Results
Thursday's Results
Cleveland 3 Boslon 2
Montreal 6 New York 2
Kan Cily 3 California 2
(Only games scheduled)
(:·•':.•':''''''''•' ,,,,,...,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,i'''' ' ' '' ' ' ' ' ~'''''~''''''''''''''' ' ' ' ' ' ' !•:•:•:• ;• ;•; •;,; .•'.·'.•.,·.•,'·:'...:'. ·.' ·',:','.•',.'.: ,: '.,'·..•',·.':· .: .•,' .•',':·· .·':.':·.:,.:.',·' .·'•.' ·.' ·'.•'.:·'·'.·'·..'·'.•'.··.:..' ,.':.· ··','.·.•.
Hp·o,,ulssblounrg7hC2hiPchaiglao 03
Today's Probable Pitchers
, , ,,,,,,,,, .':•l:i:::"';... •;;:, ,:,x••:%:''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' ' l' ' ''
:;: : .:
Sat"o~1:~~~;;~,~~~~1~dl
(All Times Estl
Minnesola I Hall 11 -61 al
Chi cago (Bradley 2·5L 1:15
Toclay's Probable Pitchers
.
))
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) - came on Feb. 5 in Los Angeles San ci~~oT~'(';:,;;sTl 0_ 1 4 1 al p.m
Kansas Cily (Rooker 10-IS) .al
•· , PI first inning and a leadoff triple Defense, rebounding and bench and, after the Bucks got that Los Angeles (Singer 8·5L 11 Qakland !Blue 2-0L 11 p.m.
Coach Ron Carpen..,rs
New York (Pelerson 20-11) al
·
strengthallfiguredtobekeysto bad one out of their system, p.m.
Pleasant Bt'g Blacks captured to senior catcher Wade Henson success when the Milwaukee they went on to win their next 20 P'll
11
101
al
Wa
shinglon (Mclain 3-51. 7•30
1 sburgh (M
. oose - .
.
f
NBA AllanIa (Jarv iS 16 16L 8. 05 p.m.
their second straight diamond in the fifth.
Delro il (Niekro 12-)31 al
victory Thursday night, 17-0
Pt. Pleasant unleashed a 14 Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers games m a row or an
p.m.
open their National Basketball record. ·
Chi cago (Pappas 12-10) al Bal ti more (Cuellar 24-8), 8 p.m.
.
.
.
!Only games scheduled)
?ver Kyger Creek m .a five- htl attack paced by Greg Association Western Con- The Bucks' wins over Los Houslon (Griffin 3·13L 8• 30
Saturday s Games
mnmg contest at Cheshire.
Clayton, Terry Roll1ns, Dave f
. ht Angeles were by scores of 117- p.m.
1 offs here to mg
Kan
Cily
al Ol&lt;aland
Rod H d
· hth d
Str' kl
d M'k
Simmo
erence
Pay
,
(Only
games
schedul
ed)
1 e
.
ar ~n, a. ng .an er,
. lC en ~n
ns
With star guard Jerry West 100, ll:HIIl, 122-llll and 112-97,
Saturday's Games
California al Milwaukee
f1red a two htlter m postmg the w1th two h1ts each.
'delined ith a 1 g . .
Three of the wins came here San Diego at Los Ang , nighl
Minnesota atcChi~ago
Basion al Cleveland
victory, Harden yielded a oneClayton slammed the first fsl . th wLak toe ' IDJtUtory, and one in Los Angeles
Chicago al Houslon, nighl
Delroll
al Baltimore
.
h
·
··h
~
~
~b
.
orcmg
e
ers
mser
P
·
Pills
al
Allan
Ia
n!?,i
ht
bl
be
out
_
·.tmeJ· serr
' y \ ·-·~·.; ......, ...,,•.,,.ll ''~···' heM",:.ao•
·· ·~,Tn '"
. A (I've games , Milwaukee•. c·mcmna
' I'·1. a I N,ew' or kR ' '. NeVI' York
al Wash]Dgto~
· 1 dou e to Bo at ·ng t- ,pl
j ..
h· ··~:.
~ ~ ~ lk ~-t~~ - 't! ~~ ·J\;lllllll'fl ww,,
~z...
f1e der Marshall French m the U lv · • .r g all er -- . e , llneuP,, tiie lilifu aplie'aie'tl' to- shotat'847.1percentcllpforan( San Francisco al St. t ouis
Johnson mto deep centerfield have the edge in bench strength average of l1L4 points per Monlreal al Philadelphia
AHL Playoff Standings
By
United Press International
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:!!!!!!!!!!!!~=:-~ for a home run. Th~ B1g Bl~cks _ although their own super game while Los Angeles shot
(Qu~rterfinals)
I=
scored. three
runs
m
the. f~rst,
gu a rd' Os car Robertson, also only 39 .7 per cent and averaged
Series "A"
th
th'
d
f
th
four In e . lr ' our m e may miss some action because 97.8 per game.
Ironton had too much depth
Illest of Seven)
W. L.
fourth and stx m the fifth .
of a recurring groin injury.
The Bucks held an overall277- for visiting Gallipolis at Tank
1 0
Providence
Line Score:
Defensively, the Bucks also 254 advantage in rebounding but Memorial Stadium Thursday Baltim ore
0
1
Pt. Pleasant
304 46x-1714 0 appeared. to have the edge, at the Lakers' front line was evening as the Tiger thinclads
Series "B"
I Best of Five)
Kyger Creek · 000 OOx- . 0 2 4 least on the basis of their five superior to the Milwaukee defeated the Blue Devils, 821', to
W. L.
Harden (WP) and Slrtcklen, regular-season games with the baseline trio.
Wh.
' 0 0
Springfield
Johnson (LP, Curry (3) Baird Lakers ""' four of which Wilt Chamberlain, the NBA Ironton chalked up 10 firsts in Montreal
0 0
Series "c-(5) and Henson .
Milwaukee won by holding Los rebounding leader, grabbed 75 the 15-event dual meet com.
1Best of Five)
Angeles to 100 points or less. boards in the five meetings pared to five firsts by the
w. L.
The Lakers' only win, 116-93, while his Milwaukee coun· Gallians . The Tigers "piled it He,hey
I
0
· terpart, Lew Alcindor, took on" by capturing a large Cleveland
0 1
Th~rsday's Results
doivn 66, Los Angeles forwards number of seconds and thirds.
Major League Results
Providence
2 Baltimore 1
By United Press lnlernational Hap Hairston and Keith
Friday
s Games
National League
MONDAY
Erickson snared 82 rebounds
Cleveland
al
Hershey
Phila
000 000 ooo-- 0 5 0
lhru
Springfield al Montreal
them
while
Pi lis
000 002 oox- 2 6 0 between
NHL Playoff Stllndings
SATURDAY
Frym~n ,
Selma 181 and Mil waukee's forecourt duo By United Press International
McCarver; Walker (l .Q) and collected a total of only 70.
' (Division Semifinals)
Sanguillen . LP- Fryman (0-1).
Best of Seven
Alcindor, the NBA's top
East
Chicago llDii 010 002- 3 4 0 scorer during the regular
PR DIRECTOR
Series "A'
Houslon 010 320 lOx- 7 9 0 campaign, bested Chamberlain
W, L. P&lt;Jo
SEATTLE _(_UP!)- The SeatHollzman, Colborn (51, Regan in that department in the Bucks- Bos ton
1 I
Ironton suffered its first
161 and Rudolph ; Billingham
1 1 :~00 tie SuperSonics Thursday anbaseball defeat of the 1971 (1 -0) and Hiatt_ LP- Holtzman Lakers meeting with an Montreal Series " 8"
•nounced the selection of Larry
Po~.eroy
830
campaign Thursday as Russell, (0-1) . HR- WIIIiams 13rd) .
w. L. Pet Denenholz as their new public
average of 27,6 points per game
I
Ky., pinned a 10-8 loss on the
to 23.2 for the Los Angeles New York
.: :~: relations director replacing Hal
Mon
I
real
3~
000 30()-- 6 9 0 center.
I
Toronlo
defending Southeastern Ohio New York 100 100 000 2 10 2
Childs, who resigned last week.
West
League champions.
Renko (1 -01 and Baleman; The .second . game · of the
Series "C"
The announcement was made
w. L. Pet. by SuperSonics' General Mana.Ironton, now 8-1-1 on the year, Genlry, Taylor (7), McGraw Bucks-Lakers playoffs will be
(8), and Grole. LP- Genlry (0·
cago
2 0 1.000
will battle Jackson today in a 1)
here Sunday before the two Chi
. HR- Jones (1st).
2 .000 ger Bob Houbregs,
Philadelphia
o
Southern Division makeup
teams head for Los Angeles for
Series "0"
W. L. Pet.
game. It will be the Tigers' first San Fran 100 000 soo-- 6 10 0 the third and fourth games next
Diego · 300 100 00:1-'- 1 13 2 week.
Minnesola
1 1 ·.500
league game, JHS is IH in loop San
Stone, Johnsor (41, McMahon
St. Louis
I 1 .500
play.
Both games here are sellouts
171
and
Dietz;
Arlin,
Kelly
(7) ,
Thursday's
Results
Soft Drinks &amp; Sna.rks
Prior to Thursday 's loss, Ross (7) and Cannizzaro. WP- and the Bucks announced Monlreal 7 Boslon 5
Ross (1 ·0). LP- McMahon 10·11.
Toronto 4 New York I
L.-...j----...
Ironton was pounding the ball at HRs- Stahl (lsi) , Mays (3rd) . Thursday they received NBA Chi cago 6 Philadelphia 2
a .379 clip as a team. The
pennission to lift the local St. Louis 4 Minnesota 2
powerful IHS mound crew had
(Only games scheduled)
television blackout for. the
American league
Friday's Games
an ERA of 2.30,
contests.
Basion
OOt
010
ooo-2
3
0
I
No
games
scheduled I
Ironton will visit Gallipolis' Cleveland 000 000 01 2-- 3 7 0
Memorial Field 4 p.m., Tuesday
Sieberl, Lyle (8) • Tatum 191
for an important conference and Josephsor ; McDowell , Cal·
H&amp;R FIRESTONE'S
bert (8) and Fosse. WPgame.
,
Colbert (l-0) ; LP- Tatum 10-1).
In other baseball area games HRs- Apariclo (lsi), Sieberl
Thursday, Meigs nipped Vinton (lsi) .
County, 2-1, SoutliPoinl bombed .Kan Cily 012 000 000'- 3 7 1
Wayne 13·3, Huntington East California 001 010 ooo-- 2 7 4
AprU ttoMay 1,
Hedlund, York (8) and
dropped Chesapeake . 6-2,
Kirkpatri ck;
Messersmith,
1971.
Wahama continued to roll, Queen
(9) and Moses. WPdowning Buffalo of Putnam, 7-1 Hedlund (1 -0) . · LP~Messer­
and Symmes Valley edged 'smi th (0-11 . HR- Messersmllh
Hannan Trace,&amp;.;, Pt. Pleasant (lsi) .
bombed Kyger Creek, 17-0. r
(Only games scheduled)
'

We Install Roofing And Siding

FtOWERS

..

Giants •. Beaten 7-6 Despite
Grand Slam By Willie Mays

TUPPERS PLAINS HDWE.

. OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, .2 T05 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS,)- EAST COURT ST.,

BAKE SALE SET
A bake sale will be held
Saturday
by
Veterans
Memorial · Hospital Candyslripers Saturday at the
Davis-Warner Ins. Co. office,
Pomeroy, beginning at 9 a.m.

~

,.
"

~

.

Sentinel

,157.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 1-' 'p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs, Charles F.
Templeton, Pl. Pleasant, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard H. Lubina, Letart, a
daughter.
Discharges
Joseph Clagg, Mrs. Stella
Clark, Mrs. Leslie Cox and son,
Howard Curtis, Mrs. Herbert
Dunn, Mrs. James Ewing, Sr.,

SALE ON SATURDAY
A bake and colored egg sale
will be held Saturday at the
Western Auto Store in Mid- ·
dleport beginning at 9 a.m. by
the Middleport PTA. ·

DEVOTED TO T,HE
INTEREUOF
ME IGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
CitY Editor
Published deHy except

Saturday by The Ohio Vall ey
Publishing Company , 111
f, ourt St. , Pomeroy, Ohio ,
1157 69 . Bu &amp;i n e~s Offi ce Pho n e
· 1992·2156, Editor ia l Phone 992 .

Van Matre Pitches,

HOSPITAL NEWS

Sounds good • . ,
let's eat • at •

brtels Cl' Jockey Pawer-Knlt41

T-shirts. plus the sales sli~

00
ONL{~25
·. H&amp;R 'Firestone

Jockey" will mall yo~ back $1.
· Umit, 2 redemptions per family,
ClulicbriellOO" combtdC&lt;Otton, no ~lront,

hut ~l!llritWiill blind, 28·!)0 , . , , , .$0.10

\
I

Power,-KnH T·1flkt lonpr welfinl ~bed eatton,
Se•ml..... collar. S,M,l ,XL _. .... .. sq.ao
.
'" dltaltl .....

Joe~~~ ond.-.r • ..,.,. .

''
'

'

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BAHR CLOTHIERS
0.

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·

,
:
:
:

�'.

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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., ,Aprll9, 1971
'

·2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., April9, 1971

Transfers ·

Soc'ial
Calendar

· Beverly L. Codner, John S.
Codner to Ohio Power Co .,
Ease.; Lebanon.
Grover C. Salser , Jr .,' Dortha
P. Salser, to Ohio Power Co.,
E;ase. , Sutton.
Gene Yost, Mary K. Yost to
Ohi&lt;f Power Co., Ease.: Sutton.
Jasper Powel~ Faye .Powell
to Ohio Power Co., Ease.,
Sutton.
Martin A. McAngus, Mary F.
McAngus to Larry R. Lee,
Virginia M. Lee , Lot 266,
Pomeroy.
Asa A. Hoskins to Marvin
While, Nan While, 10.16 Acres,
Chesler .
Jack B. Peterson, Joyce A.
Peterson to James S. Conkle,
Eva L. · Conkle, .55 Acre,
Rutland.
Johnnie H. Nash, Mildred V.
Nash to Green Hill Homes, Inc.
Lot 44, Middleport.
Ruth Gillilan , Lawrence
Gillilan, Mildred Lee, Loren W.
Lee, Olive Stobart, G. Carol
Stobart, Raymond Donohue,
Delores Don ohue , Kathleen
McMurray, John McMurray,
Lawrence A. Donohue, Flora M.
J;&gt;onohue, Ray E. Donohue,
Bertha Donohue to Lawrence A.
Donohue, Flora M. Donohue,
4% Acres, Scipio.
George A. Rupe, Mary Louise
Rupe to Citizens Nat'l. Bank,
Lot13, Probst Add ., Middleport.
Marvin E. Boyles, Janet M.
Boyles to Susan M. Manley,
Walton R. Manley, Lot, Middleport.

'

FRIDAY
WEEKEND REVIV AL at
Rutland Free will Baptist
Church, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, 7:30p.m. Rev. Robert
_Stewart of Mt . Vernon
evange list. Re sur recti on
Service at 6 a.m. Sunday.
Everyone welcome.
SATURDAY
COMM UNITY EGG Hunt
Saturday at I : 30 p.m. old
. Chester Courthouse. Bring own
colored eggs . Prizes. Sponsored
by Chester Girl Scout Troop 204
and Modern Woodmen of
America. Everyone welcome.
BAKE SALE, Women's Guild
of Trinity Church, Saturday, in
the church basement beginning
at 10 a. m.
HIGH SCHOOL dance party,
Meigs Junior Hi gh School ,
Middleport, 8-11 p.m. Saturday.
Jays will emcee, sponsored by
Middleport Police Department.
SUNDAY
SUNRISE SERVICE Sunday
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church 5:30 a .m. Worship
service and Sunday School at
regular time .
SUNRISE SERVICE Letart
Falls U. B. Church Sunda 6 a.m.
Breaklast will be served at
home or Mr . and Mrs. Floyd
Norris.
RUTLAND Communi ty
Church prayer praise and
SUNDAY
communion service, Sunqay, 2 SUNRISE Services, 6 a.m.
p. m. Rev . Amos Tillis extends Easter, Hartford Church of
public welcome .
Christ in Christian Union, Rev.
SUNRISE SERVICE, 6:30 a. O'dell Manley, pastor. Public
m. Sunday, Rock Springs welcome.
Methodis t Church, youth
fellowship in charge. Worship
MONDAY
and Sunday School at 9:30a. m.
POMEROY High Alumni
followed by egg ·hunt.
Association meeting, 7:30p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF Monday at Pomeroy City Hall
Christ, 6 a. m. sunday, sunrise · council chambers. All alumni
service.. Public invited.
IOVlled.
TUESDAY
MINISTERIAL Assn .,
Tuesday at Middleport Church
of the Nazarene at 10 a.m.

The

Dai~

SERVICES PLANNED
RACINE - The First Baptist
Church of Racine will have
Good Friday Serices at 7:30 p,
m. Friday. Rev. Earl 'Shuler
will be the speaker with Rev.
Morris Wolfe the song leader.
On Sunday, at 6:30 a. m. the
Easter Sunrise service will
feature a cantata by the choir
followed with breakfast. Sunday
School will be held at 9:30 a. m.
and Morning Worship at 10:45.
On Sunday evening a songMrs. Dallas easley of Belpre
Lavinia Simpson.

SUNRISE SERVICE
MASON - Sunday morning at
6 a.m. there will be an Easter
'Sunrise Service to be held on the
Mason First BaptiSt Church
building site on the corner of
Second St. and Fogelsong Road.
Churc hes participating are
Mason First Baptist Church,
Rev. Stan Craig, Jr., pastOr ;
Fairview Bible Church, Rev.
Stan Craig , Jr., pastor; and
Mason Assembly of God, Rev.
Chesler Tennell, pastor. All
pastors will .be preaching and
there will be special singing,
with Mrs. Elaine Craig accompanying
on the piano,
DAUGHTER BORN
S. Sgt . and Mrs. James testifying and a good time in the
Norton of Adelanto, Calif. are Lord. Everyone is welcome,
announcing the birth of a there will be chairs for the older
daughter on April I at the peopre. There will be coffee and
Holzer Medical Center. The five chocolate milk served after the
pound, one ounce infant has
been named Paulette Ann. Mr. service. IN HOSPJToAL
;~nd Mrs. Norton have another . The Rev. Ed Buffington of
daughter , Christina Ann. Pomeroy has entered Veterans
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs . Hospital at Huntington, W. Va.,
Carl H. Norton , Pomeroy ; and lor observation.
Mrs .
Missa
Kuwata,
Minamitsugaru Aomariken,
Japan . Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Norton of Pomeroy are greatgrandparents .

Sec ond c lass postage pa id at
Pom eroy , Oh io.
National advertis i n g

r epre sentative
Boff inelti .
Gallagher , In c. , 12 East 42nd
St ., New York City , New Yor k .
Subscription rate s : o e .
livered by c arri e r wher e
available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carr ier
servic e not a11a ilabl e : On e
month S1.75. By mail In Oh io
and W. Va .. On e ye ar $14 .00 .
Six month s S7 .25 . Three
month s $'4.50. Sub sc ription
pri ce Inc lude s Sunday Tim es Sent inel.

Mrs. Clilrence · Greenlee and
son, Mrs. ~alcolm Guinther,
Henderson Jackson, Mrs. Pearl
Kisor, Richard, Lyons; Mrs.
Michael McBride and son, Mrs .
Mazie Plymale, Mrs. David
Reed and son , · Beverly
Rowland, Mrs. Carl G. Sauvage
and son, Mrs. George Tripp,
Mrs. Ernest Watts, Mrs, Carl
Wooten, B. Junior Darst, Mrs.
Audrey Garretson, Tracy
Lewis, c. Dale Rousli, Blair
Windon, . Brian Windon,
Clarence Hash, William Nance,
William Wise, Robert Goldsberry, and Charles Russell,

0

The book on how to play catch
up baseball and win in the last
inning could have been written
by the Meigs Marauders who
Thursday e ve~ing defeated
Vinton 2-1 behind the pitChing
and hitting of senior
righthander Rick Van Maire.
It was Van Maire's single
with one out in the bottom of t!Je
seventh and last frame with
Stan Wilson on second base that
broke a 1-1 deadlock and ended
the game . Wilson, who had gone
hiUess in two earlier trips,
singled to lead the inning off,

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Also Latex Satin Enamel '2.29 ql

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TUPPERS PLAIN~. 0.

L,.,:;P;,;;O:.:M~E,:;:R~O~Y~.------------..1 , _ _ _ _..;.;.;.,~,;.;,;;..;.;;,;,;;;;,ii.;l,_____..

By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer
Willie Mays is doing everything for the San Francisco
Giants these days except pitch.
Unfortunately for the Giants,
that's where they needed help
Thursday night as they succumbed to the San Diego
Padres 7-6 despite Mays' five
RBI game that inr,luded a
grand slam homer. ,
Mays, who'll be 40 pnMay 6,
has started off this season with
one of those hot steaks that
he's noted for . Hes hit three
homers in three games this
year and is 6-lor-11 with seven
·
runs batted in. 1
He ta·gged
for the
grand slam
seventh
inning to
a five-run
rally that
a 4-1 San
Diego lead and
the Giants
a 6-4 margin.
the eighth
grand slam
Mays' career
and gave
631 career

For All Occasions·

AND

992-2039
Pomeroy flower Shop

-YOU WO.N'T

Butttrnut Avt. Pomtroy
Mrs. Millard Van Mtttr

• Be High Pressured
"HE FINISHIED ;;;; ,:::=-.1
CUTTING THE
LAWN
AN HOUR AGO,
BUT HE CAN'T
STOP DRIVING
THAT NEW

• Be Sold Something You Don't Need
• Pay 25% to 100% More Than The Job Is Worth

Ferguson
Maesey··~iarcJ~~F:~~=~
Lawn &amp;

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Tractor!"

• Be Coerced Into Signing A Contract

have gone to Jose Pagan after I in two runs with two out in the
struck out twice against Fry- ninth inning to lift Cleveland
man but he stuck with me." past Boston. Hodge entered the
Stargell noted he hit .273 game as a pinch-hitter in the
against lefties last year and eighth and doubled and scored ·
was .260 against righlies,
the first Cleveland run on John
Jack Hiatt, obtained from Lowenstein 's single. He then
Chicago in a winter deal, hit tagged Ken Tatum- the retwo run-scoring doubles as liever the Red Sox got from
Houston beat the CUbs, Jack California in the Tony ConigliaBillingham pitched a four-hitler ro deal- for the hit that won
to gain the victory. Ken the game in the ninth.
Holtzman look the loss.
John Bateman drove in three Cookie Rojas' bases-loaded
runs with two hits and Steve double in the third drove in two
Renko scattered 10 hits as; unearned runs as Kansas City
Montreal beat New York. Gary capitalized on four california
Gentry gave up six . runs and errors for the victory over the
took the loss but thr.ee of them Angels. Andy Messersmith ,
in the seventh were unearned who homered in the !ifth, took
because of an error by Bob the loss even though he left
Aspromonte .
after eight innings without
Rookie Gomer Hodge singled giving up an earned run.

..

"•

I
•,

THREE OF HOCKEY' S greatest players, Jean Beliveau of the Montreal Canadiens,
left, Phil Esposito of the Boston Bruins , center, ·and Hobby Hull of the Chicago Black
Hawks celebrated landmark achievements in their National Hockey League careers
this season. Beliveau received a trophy from the Canadiens for having scored more
than 500 career goals; Esposito jumped lor joy after having scored his 59th goal
of the regular season- a record, and Hull signed autographs for fans shortly after
surpassing Maurice Richard's record of 544 careers goals to become the second
ranking goal scorer in NHL history.
ABA Playoff Standings
• By United Press International
{Division Semifinals)

I Best of Seven I
East
Series " A"

Big Blacks·Win :,.

MF7

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7 HP

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992-2164

TOM'S CARRY OUT
992-7484

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Pomeroy

THE STOR E WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PET S.· ~ STABLES - , LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS. LAWNS ~ GARDENS. .

By United Press Internationa l

American League

East

National League

Flare Styles · Reg. Styles · Slim Cuts · Executive Cuts and many
other styles, Never Need Ironing. Polyester, Dacron Polyester,
Stripes, Plaids, Plains and many other ·styles. ·
THIS IS WHAT YOU SAVE
REG. 7.00 VALUES 5•00
REG. 8.00 VALUES 6.00
REG. 9.00 VALUE$ 7.00
REG. 10.00 VALUES 8.00
REG. 11.00 VALUES 9.00

NLY

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·PHONE US FOR.AFREE ESTIMATE BEFORE.SIGNING ACONTRACT WITH.AN OUT OF TOWN .FIRM
·

'

East
Pil ls burg h
New York
Sl. Loui s
Monlreal
Chi cago
Ph iladelphia

W. L. Pel. GB

2 0 1.000
1 I .500
1 1 .500
I 1 .500
I 2 .333
o 2 .000
West
W. L. Pet.
2 o 1.000
3 1 .750

...

Detroit
Baltim or e

W. L. Pel. GB
l 0 1.000
I 0 1.000

Boston

1'12

2

Washjj1gIon
Cleveland
New York

Floridians -

1
I

1 .500
1 .500

1h

1

1

lf z

0

1 .000

West

/2

.500

Allanla
Houston

w. L. Pet.

I

x-lndiana

Memphis

4

0

0 1.000

4 .000

Series " 0 11

W. L. Pet.
4 0 t.OOO
x-Uiah
0
4 .000
Texas
112
XClinched
series
1
Thursday's Result
I
Fl
or
idians
129 Kentucky 117
1
Friday's
211, N.Y. vs. Va . al Games
Richmond

W. L. Pet. GB

1'igers Lose
First Game
Of Season

STOCK AUCTION
MIAMI tUPI )-The holders
of $1.6 million in Tropical Park
debts owed to William • L.
McKnight will auction off threequarters of the Thoroughbred
track's stock on April 20, !twas
announced Thursday . McKnight
acquired 115 of 200 sh,res of
stock as collateral from the
Teamsters Union when he took
over the loan last May.
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savings plus our high
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Meigs Co. Branch

Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

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Budget
Priced!

McCLURE'S
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daJryJS/e

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• short orders

• biggest beefburgers in town
,.

. h\arn Street

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Pomeroy, Ohio
,

·.· HOME IMPROVEMENT.cONTRACIORS .SINCE 1915, 'AND 'STILL BEST QUAUFim
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• Lighted cooktop
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N.2nd
Middleport, 0.

In the other three National
League games, Houston beat
Chicago 7-3, Pittsburgh blanked
Philadelphia 2-0 and Montreal
topped New York 6-2,

In the only two American
League games, Cleveland
nipped Boston 3-2 and Kansas
City edged California 3-2.
Willie Stargell, who struck
out in his two previous trips
against Woody Fryman, dou-.
bled in the only two runs of the
game in the sixth inning as
Pittsburgh beat Philadelphia.
Luke Walker threw a five-hiller
to gain the victory,
The left-handed hitting Stargell credited Manager Danny
Murtaugh for letting him hit
against left-banders like Fryman. "Hilling against lefties is
just a matter of playing against
them," Stargell said, "Harry
_Walker said I couldn't hit
lefties but I always knew I
could . Murtaugh gave me a
chance to prove it. He could

;.
•
•
••

OUNCING

..

Tw in bl .3de, ge ar drive mower, MF 7 takes all attachments f or snow, leaves, hauling . No-shift Hydra
Spee d Drive and electric start optional.

Dudley's Florist

homers, just 83 short of Babe .
Ruth's 714.
But reliever Don McMahon
couldn't hold the lead in the
ninth inning. Singles by Don
Mason, Dave Campbell and
Larry Stahl produced the first
run . ·Clarence Gaston then
singled in the tying run and
Nate Colbert, who had struck
out three times, tagged McMahon for the game-winning hit.
McMahon, who was 41 on Jan.
4, blanked the Padres in the
seventh and eighth innings
before being tagged for five
hits in the ninth .

••
•!

Lronton Wins

America's low-priced leader - with 34'' ·mower included

. ~

and was sacrificed .down by
Chip Haggerty who in his two
previous tries with the lumber
had doubled and singled .
The Marauders gave up an
unearned run in the first inningwhen G. Barber walked with
one out, ·stole second base
successfully against catcher
Roger Dixon's attempt to stop
him , and scored on R.
Graman 's single , But Van
Maire 'settled down to fan R.
Herrold and Vinton's pitcher, B.
Strong ,
That's how it was until the

fifth , gotten to second on a · Abbott singled.
PllSSed pall, moved to third on · Strong walked nobody, fanned
Van Maire's deep flyball to one. Vinton 's coach is ;Bill
right, whereupon leadoff batter .McNickle, native of Racine, and
Dunfee shot the ball through the a one-time standout catcher for
middle to plate Haggerty.
the Racine Tornadoes.
Van Maire fanned 13, .gave up The Marauders' next game is
six hits, two of them to Barber. Tuesday at Athens, a northern
All were singles. He walked division SEOAL contest. T)ley
four .
are 3-l overall, 0.1 _in league
Meigs threatened break away play,
in the sixth when outfielder Vinton
100 OOQ 0--1 6 0
Gene Powell led off with a Meigs
000 010 1- 2 8 I
single, got to second on a ~ild Strong and K. Barber. Van .
pitch but was thrown out on a Matre and Dixon. Umpires: G.
close play at home when Roger Nesselroad, plate; A. Stobart
and C. Ingels.

1

The Easy Rider/
At The Easy Price

~

fiflh , the Mara11ders having all
kinds of trouble getting solid
wood on Stt ong's excellent
assortment of what is reierred
to in the trade as junk, The
Marauders' big hitters at
the top of the order
got four 'of their eight
hits, but only one of them
produced a rWl, that being
shortstop Steve Dunfee's twoout single with Haggerty on
second base in the fifth.
Thatmadeanewgameof it at
1-1. Haggerty, the thirdsacker,
had singled with one out in the

GB Chi cago
2 0 1.000
Kansas City
2 1 .667
.. . Milwaukee
I 1 .500
San Fran cisco 2 1 .667 lf2 Minnesota
1 I ,500
Los Angeles
1 2 .333 l'h Californ ia
1 2 .333
San Diego ,
1 2 .333 11h Oakland
o 3 .000
Cinci nnat i
0 2 .000 2
Thursday's Results
Thursday's Results
Cleveland 3 Boslon 2
Montreal 6 New York 2
Kan Cily 3 California 2
(Only games scheduled)
(:·•':.•':''''''''•' ,,,,,...,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,i'''' ' ' '' ' ' ' ' ~'''''~''''''''''''''' ' ' ' ' ' ' !•:•:•:• ;• ;•; •;,; .•'.·'.•.,·.•,'·:'...:'. ·.' ·',:','.•',.'.: ,: '.,'·..•',·.':· .: .•,' .•',':·· .·':.':·.:,.:.',·' .·'•.' ·.' ·'.•'.:·'·'.·'·..'·'.•'.··.:..' ,.':.· ··','.·.•.
Hp·o,,ulssblounrg7hC2hiPchaiglao 03
Today's Probable Pitchers
, , ,,,,,,,,, .':•l:i:::"';... •;;:, ,:,x••:%:''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' ' l' ' ''
:;: : .:
Sat"o~1:~~~;;~,~~~~1~dl
(All Times Estl
Minnesola I Hall 11 -61 al
Chi cago (Bradley 2·5L 1:15
Toclay's Probable Pitchers
.
))
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) - came on Feb. 5 in Los Angeles San ci~~oT~'(';:,;;sTl 0_ 1 4 1 al p.m
Kansas Cily (Rooker 10-IS) .al
•· , PI first inning and a leadoff triple Defense, rebounding and bench and, after the Bucks got that Los Angeles (Singer 8·5L 11 Qakland !Blue 2-0L 11 p.m.
Coach Ron Carpen..,rs
New York (Pelerson 20-11) al
·
strengthallfiguredtobekeysto bad one out of their system, p.m.
Pleasant Bt'g Blacks captured to senior catcher Wade Henson success when the Milwaukee they went on to win their next 20 P'll
11
101
al
Wa
shinglon (Mclain 3-51. 7•30
1 sburgh (M
. oose - .
.
f
NBA AllanIa (Jarv iS 16 16L 8. 05 p.m.
their second straight diamond in the fifth.
Delro il (Niekro 12-)31 al
victory Thursday night, 17-0
Pt. Pleasant unleashed a 14 Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers games m a row or an
p.m.
open their National Basketball record. ·
Chi cago (Pappas 12-10) al Bal ti more (Cuellar 24-8), 8 p.m.
.
.
.
!Only games scheduled)
?ver Kyger Creek m .a five- htl attack paced by Greg Association Western Con- The Bucks' wins over Los Houslon (Griffin 3·13L 8• 30
Saturday s Games
mnmg contest at Cheshire.
Clayton, Terry Roll1ns, Dave f
. ht Angeles were by scores of 117- p.m.
1 offs here to mg
Kan
Cily
al Ol&lt;aland
Rod H d
· hth d
Str' kl
d M'k
Simmo
erence
Pay
,
(Only
games
schedul
ed)
1 e
.
ar ~n, a. ng .an er,
. lC en ~n
ns
With star guard Jerry West 100, ll:HIIl, 122-llll and 112-97,
Saturday's Games
California al Milwaukee
f1red a two htlter m postmg the w1th two h1ts each.
'delined ith a 1 g . .
Three of the wins came here San Diego at Los Ang , nighl
Minnesota atcChi~ago
Basion al Cleveland
victory, Harden yielded a oneClayton slammed the first fsl . th wLak toe ' IDJtUtory, and one in Los Angeles
Chicago al Houslon, nighl
Delroll
al Baltimore
.
h
·
··h
~
~
~b
.
orcmg
e
ers
mser
P
·
Pills
al
Allan
Ia
n!?,i
ht
bl
be
out
_
·.tmeJ· serr
' y \ ·-·~·.; ......, ...,,•.,,.ll ''~···' heM",:.ao•
·· ·~,Tn '"
. A (I've games , Milwaukee•. c·mcmna
' I'·1. a I N,ew' or kR ' '. NeVI' York
al Wash]Dgto~
· 1 dou e to Bo at ·ng t- ,pl
j ..
h· ··~:.
~ ~ ~ lk ~-t~~ - 't! ~~ ·J\;lllllll'fl ww,,
~z...
f1e der Marshall French m the U lv · • .r g all er -- . e , llneuP,, tiie lilifu aplie'aie'tl' to- shotat'847.1percentcllpforan( San Francisco al St. t ouis
Johnson mto deep centerfield have the edge in bench strength average of l1L4 points per Monlreal al Philadelphia
AHL Playoff Standings
By
United Press International
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:!!!!!!!!!!!!~=:-~ for a home run. Th~ B1g Bl~cks _ although their own super game while Los Angeles shot
(Qu~rterfinals)
I=
scored. three
runs
m
the. f~rst,
gu a rd' Os car Robertson, also only 39 .7 per cent and averaged
Series "A"
th
th'
d
f
th
four In e . lr ' our m e may miss some action because 97.8 per game.
Ironton had too much depth
Illest of Seven)
W. L.
fourth and stx m the fifth .
of a recurring groin injury.
The Bucks held an overall277- for visiting Gallipolis at Tank
1 0
Providence
Line Score:
Defensively, the Bucks also 254 advantage in rebounding but Memorial Stadium Thursday Baltim ore
0
1
Pt. Pleasant
304 46x-1714 0 appeared. to have the edge, at the Lakers' front line was evening as the Tiger thinclads
Series "B"
I Best of Five)
Kyger Creek · 000 OOx- . 0 2 4 least on the basis of their five superior to the Milwaukee defeated the Blue Devils, 821', to
W. L.
Harden (WP) and Slrtcklen, regular-season games with the baseline trio.
Wh.
' 0 0
Springfield
Johnson (LP, Curry (3) Baird Lakers ""' four of which Wilt Chamberlain, the NBA Ironton chalked up 10 firsts in Montreal
0 0
Series "c-(5) and Henson .
Milwaukee won by holding Los rebounding leader, grabbed 75 the 15-event dual meet com.
1Best of Five)
Angeles to 100 points or less. boards in the five meetings pared to five firsts by the
w. L.
The Lakers' only win, 116-93, while his Milwaukee coun· Gallians . The Tigers "piled it He,hey
I
0
· terpart, Lew Alcindor, took on" by capturing a large Cleveland
0 1
Th~rsday's Results
doivn 66, Los Angeles forwards number of seconds and thirds.
Major League Results
Providence
2 Baltimore 1
By United Press lnlernational Hap Hairston and Keith
Friday
s Games
National League
MONDAY
Erickson snared 82 rebounds
Cleveland
al
Hershey
Phila
000 000 ooo-- 0 5 0
lhru
Springfield al Montreal
them
while
Pi lis
000 002 oox- 2 6 0 between
NHL Playoff Stllndings
SATURDAY
Frym~n ,
Selma 181 and Mil waukee's forecourt duo By United Press International
McCarver; Walker (l .Q) and collected a total of only 70.
' (Division Semifinals)
Sanguillen . LP- Fryman (0-1).
Best of Seven
Alcindor, the NBA's top
East
Chicago llDii 010 002- 3 4 0 scorer during the regular
PR DIRECTOR
Series "A'
Houslon 010 320 lOx- 7 9 0 campaign, bested Chamberlain
W, L. P&lt;Jo
SEATTLE _(_UP!)- The SeatHollzman, Colborn (51, Regan in that department in the Bucks- Bos ton
1 I
Ironton suffered its first
161 and Rudolph ; Billingham
1 1 :~00 tie SuperSonics Thursday anbaseball defeat of the 1971 (1 -0) and Hiatt_ LP- Holtzman Lakers meeting with an Montreal Series " 8"
•nounced the selection of Larry
Po~.eroy
830
campaign Thursday as Russell, (0-1) . HR- WIIIiams 13rd) .
w. L. Pet Denenholz as their new public
average of 27,6 points per game
I
Ky., pinned a 10-8 loss on the
to 23.2 for the Los Angeles New York
.: :~: relations director replacing Hal
Mon
I
real
3~
000 30()-- 6 9 0 center.
I
Toronlo
defending Southeastern Ohio New York 100 100 000 2 10 2
Childs, who resigned last week.
West
League champions.
Renko (1 -01 and Baleman; The .second . game · of the
Series "C"
The announcement was made
w. L. Pet. by SuperSonics' General Mana.Ironton, now 8-1-1 on the year, Genlry, Taylor (7), McGraw Bucks-Lakers playoffs will be
(8), and Grole. LP- Genlry (0·
cago
2 0 1.000
will battle Jackson today in a 1)
here Sunday before the two Chi
. HR- Jones (1st).
2 .000 ger Bob Houbregs,
Philadelphia
o
Southern Division makeup
teams head for Los Angeles for
Series "0"
W. L. Pet.
game. It will be the Tigers' first San Fran 100 000 soo-- 6 10 0 the third and fourth games next
Diego · 300 100 00:1-'- 1 13 2 week.
Minnesola
1 1 ·.500
league game, JHS is IH in loop San
Stone, Johnsor (41, McMahon
St. Louis
I 1 .500
play.
Both games here are sellouts
171
and
Dietz;
Arlin,
Kelly
(7) ,
Thursday's
Results
Soft Drinks &amp; Sna.rks
Prior to Thursday 's loss, Ross (7) and Cannizzaro. WP- and the Bucks announced Monlreal 7 Boslon 5
Ross (1 ·0). LP- McMahon 10·11.
Toronto 4 New York I
L.-...j----...
Ironton was pounding the ball at HRs- Stahl (lsi) , Mays (3rd) . Thursday they received NBA Chi cago 6 Philadelphia 2
a .379 clip as a team. The
pennission to lift the local St. Louis 4 Minnesota 2
powerful IHS mound crew had
(Only games scheduled)
television blackout for. the
American league
Friday's Games
an ERA of 2.30,
contests.
Basion
OOt
010
ooo-2
3
0
I
No
games
scheduled I
Ironton will visit Gallipolis' Cleveland 000 000 01 2-- 3 7 0
Memorial Field 4 p.m., Tuesday
Sieberl, Lyle (8) • Tatum 191
for an important conference and Josephsor ; McDowell , Cal·
H&amp;R FIRESTONE'S
bert (8) and Fosse. WPgame.
,
Colbert (l-0) ; LP- Tatum 10-1).
In other baseball area games HRs- Apariclo (lsi), Sieberl
Thursday, Meigs nipped Vinton (lsi) .
County, 2-1, SoutliPoinl bombed .Kan Cily 012 000 000'- 3 7 1
Wayne 13·3, Huntington East California 001 010 ooo-- 2 7 4
AprU ttoMay 1,
Hedlund, York (8) and
dropped Chesapeake . 6-2,
Kirkpatri ck;
Messersmith,
1971.
Wahama continued to roll, Queen
(9) and Moses. WPdowning Buffalo of Putnam, 7-1 Hedlund (1 -0) . · LP~Messer­
and Symmes Valley edged 'smi th (0-11 . HR- Messersmllh
Hannan Trace,&amp;.;, Pt. Pleasant (lsi) .
bombed Kyger Creek, 17-0. r
(Only games scheduled)
'

We Install Roofing And Siding

FtOWERS

..

Giants •. Beaten 7-6 Despite
Grand Slam By Willie Mays

TUPPERS PLAINS HDWE.

. OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, .2 T05 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS,)- EAST COURT ST.,

BAKE SALE SET
A bake sale will be held
Saturday
by
Veterans
Memorial · Hospital Candyslripers Saturday at the
Davis-Warner Ins. Co. office,
Pomeroy, beginning at 9 a.m.

~

,.
"

~

.

Sentinel

,157.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 1-' 'p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs, Charles F.
Templeton, Pl. Pleasant, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard H. Lubina, Letart, a
daughter.
Discharges
Joseph Clagg, Mrs. Stella
Clark, Mrs. Leslie Cox and son,
Howard Curtis, Mrs. Herbert
Dunn, Mrs. James Ewing, Sr.,

SALE ON SATURDAY
A bake and colored egg sale
will be held Saturday at the
Western Auto Store in Mid- ·
dleport beginning at 9 a.m. by
the Middleport PTA. ·

DEVOTED TO T,HE
INTEREUOF
ME IGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
CitY Editor
Published deHy except

Saturday by The Ohio Vall ey
Publishing Company , 111
f, ourt St. , Pomeroy, Ohio ,
1157 69 . Bu &amp;i n e~s Offi ce Pho n e
· 1992·2156, Editor ia l Phone 992 .

Van Matre Pitches,

HOSPITAL NEWS

Sounds good • . ,
let's eat • at •

brtels Cl' Jockey Pawer-Knlt41

T-shirts. plus the sales sli~

00
ONL{~25
·. H&amp;R 'Firestone

Jockey" will mall yo~ back $1.
· Umit, 2 redemptions per family,
ClulicbriellOO" combtdC&lt;Otton, no ~lront,

hut ~l!llritWiill blind, 28·!)0 , . , , , .$0.10

\
I

Power,-KnH T·1flkt lonpr welfinl ~bed eatton,
Se•ml..... collar. S,M,l ,XL _. .... .. sq.ao
.
'" dltaltl .....

Joe~~~ ond.-.r • ..,.,. .

''
'

'

,•

BAHR CLOTHIERS
0.

.
·

,
:
:
:

�..

.

··r

'

.

.

..

'

'

'
t~'

,_The Daily Sentinel,Middlepori-Pomeroy, 0., April9,197i
.,...___

in the classroom and outside, is
to be truly meaningful and re·
warding," Sowle said', "we must
have withiri our universities
young people whose background
and life experiences range

across the widest spectrwn.''
l{e said the reduction of outof.,state students in Ohio institutions would "lead to a lessening of the quality of public
hi~ her education in Ohio."
·

Phillip R. Shriver, president
of Miami UniversitY, told the
legislators his school needed
more than tile $12.6 million a!located in the governor's tiudgel

or. it woUldn't be· able "to weather the crisis of our lime."
. "Witlloul them (additional increases), we shaD ente~ the
new biennium in the poorest fi-

.

- ~-.

Sowle criticized Gilligan's proposed appropriations in testimony Thursday before the House
Finance COmmittee.
"The governor's budget, in
my opiriion, does not meet the
minimum needs of higher education in Ohio, nor does it meet
the minimum needs of Ohio University," he said ..
He said OU woul~ need $5
million in addltionkl subsidy
support next year in order to
a.vold tuition increases, but the
governor's budget only calls for
an allocation of $9.3 million, an
increase of $1.4 million over
the current year.
Sowle said.tuition increases of
$90 a year for Ohio students
and f250 a year for out-of.. tate
students would be necessitated
by the governor's budget.~
"I hope that the members of
the General Assembly will refuse to accept the governor's
recommendation on this vital issue and decide to accept, iri~tead, the recommendation of
the Board of Regents that we
stabillze tuition for at least the
next two years," he said.
Sowle was also critical of the
administration'sproposedeliminatlon of state subsidies to out• of..tate students. He said the
!lack of this fuild would force a
disproportionate increase in
ouH!f-iitatetuitions, which would
decreese the number of such
persons coming irito Ohio for
higher education.
"If student Interaction, both

year begirlning .in !97Z because
Miami U. has already admitted
its .freshman class for the upcoming year.
"We· learned of this .jJrozen

nancial condition since the close
of World War II," Shriver said.
He asked the House members
to delay enactment of frozen
enroUments U(ltil the academic

.

enrollments ) after our freshman
class had been admi t~d for
next fall, too late to make adju~tinents,' ' he said. ''Hence,additional income will be denied
us for the instruction of students already admitted. "

Leo Thompson
BUY A·-··
Dies Thursday WDILBOUI

~~~;:;~; '~~ Holy City Jammed

ty .or even worse.''

Leo B. Thompson, 77,
Cleveland, former Meigs
County resident, died Thursday
in Cleveland.
Mr. Thompson was a veteran
of World War I and a member of
the St. John's Cathedral
Catholic Church in Clevel~d.
Preceded in death by his wife ,
Ora BurreD Thompson in 1959,
Mr. Thompson is survived by
two sisters, Mrs. John Moses of
Holidaysburg, Pa., and Mrs.
George Beahm, Altoona, Pa.; a
brother, Ed, of Florida; a niece,
Mrs. Clarence (Etta Mae)
Norton of Minersville, and a
nephew, William ·Burrell of
Daytl&gt;n.
Funeral services will be held
.at IOa.m. Monday at the Sacred
Hearl Church In Pomeroy with
burial in Sacr_ed Heart
Cemetery. Officiating Will be
the Rev. Father Bernard
Krajcovic. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home from 2
to4andfrom6to9p.rn.Sunday.
Rosary Services will be held at
7:30p.m. Sunday at the funeral
home.

during
Wheel and Dea
Days

By United Presslateraalloual
reading of the HagadahBy PETER D. LYNCH
advance.
COLUMBUS - HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER.S have
JERUSALEM (UPI)-Israel Passover commemorates the literally the tale of the
Introduced legislation to set up a public safety department and celebrated the begirinirig of deliverance of the Jews from Passover.
authorize the Ohio Highway Patrol to assist local Jaw en- Judaism's most joyous .festival slavery in 1300 B.C. According The first two days and the
forcement officers in controlling civil disturbances. Rep. Robert today while mourning Chris- to the . Bible, Moses led the last two days of Passover are
E. Levitt, R.Canton, the GOP floor leader, was chief sponsor of tians retraced through the tribes of Israel from Egypt full public holidays in Israel
both bills, two of the 58 offered during a "skeleton" session of the narrow alleys of this ancient after God brought down ten and the middle four days are
semi-holidays, · when workers
House, whicti is iri recess along with the Senate until next walled city Jesus Christ's route plagues upon Egypt.
Tuesday.
to death upon the crOss.
In their haste to leave, the traditionally work only halfThe new department would iriclude the Highway Patrol, the
For Jews throughout the Israelites carried with them days.
bureau of criminal identification and irivestlgatlon and the Ohio world, today marked the dough which had not yet risen Inside the walls that Herod
Peace Officers Trairilng Council. Also under the new department beginning of the eighklay feast and leavened. During their built around the old city,
would be the state fire marshal's office and the Bureau of Civil of Passover ( Pesach) which flight, they baked this into flat Christians dressed in mourning
black chanted the dirges for the
Defense. The Bureau of Mo!or Vehicles would be transferred to celebrates the delivery of the cakes, matzoth, under the hot
dead and re-enacted Christ's
Hebrews from 210 years of desert sun.
the Depariment of Commerce.
For the next eight days journey to his crucifixion along
COLUMBUS -TWO PIECE'S OF legislation were introduced slavery in Egypt.
the Via Dolorosa-the road of
irito the House Thursday which were apparenUy aimed at campus . The Christian world plunged religious Jews will not eat or
pain
demonstrators. Ameasure forbidding public display of any flag of Into its deepest mourning to drink anything made from flour
Led by a pilgrim carrying a
a nation with which the United States Is at war was presented by mark the day Christ died upon or from fermented grain. The replica of the o.oss Christians
We're wheeling and dealing
the cross on Calvary. It beginiling of the holiday saw
on all models trom thrifty
Rep. Walter A. Rutkowski, D-Maple Heights.
from
all
over
·
ihe
wotld
se yel'l's to powerful 14's.
Rutkowski, who Introduced the bill at the request of the culminates Easter Sunday ,.i[ih the disappearance from market followed 'in sorrowful procesPrice starts from $499 on
Lawn Ranger .
American Legion, said it.was aimed at the h:equent display of the joyous celebrations marking his shelves of flour products and sioh stopping as Christ stopped
arising from the dead.
beer and liquor made from
Viet Gong flag . Penalty for violation of .the bill woUld be a
at the stions of the cross
Take advantage of th is once Many Tourists This Year
fermented grain.
a-year sale to get the best
maximum $100flne. Rep. Joseph P. TuDey, R-Mentor, introduced
The
Basilica
of
the
Holy
Tourist ministry officials said For the past two weeks
deal on a new Wheel Horse
legislation which would forbid the use of sound-amplifying the two religious celebrations Israel's matzoth factorie&lt; had Sepulcher, which tradition says
I wn
tractor .
a free
equipment on the campus of a state university without permission had drawn the biggest influx of worked overtime· producing the marks the site where Christ
. Put vour
from the school administration.
tractor
tourists to the Holy Land since wafers to supply the locaJ_and was buried and arose from the
!
Sale
lasts
dead, was draped in mourning
COLUMBUS - AN EIGIIT MEMBER bi-partisan House the 1967 Middle East war.
export markets.
week; The best
committee has been named to study the state's weHare program
black.
best deal is
All hotels in Israel and
Begins at Sundown
s a\o'ailable.
because it's cost "is getting out of !!and." House Speaker Charles Israeli-occupied
Jerusalem The Jewish celebrations begin On Sunday it will emerged
Free Wheel
F. Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, named the panel Thursday to be were booked solid weeks in at sundown with the seder, the from mourning with the joyous Veterans Memorial Hospital
y balloons for
ADMITTED - Robert Steele,
headed by Rep. Rodney H. Hughes, R-BeDefontairie.
traditional holiday feast and the message that Christ has arisen .
Middleport;
Larry Werry ,
"The cost of welfare is getting out of hand," Kurfess said.
Hundred, W. Va ., and Ernest
"Unless something is done soon, growing weHare costs could
Bootli, Parkersburg.
conceivably bring Ohio to the bririk of bankruptcy in a few short
DISCHARGED - James
years."
Morris, Louise Farley. Mildred
CINCINNATI - THE PRF.'IIDENT HAS no authority to
Wolfe, Vanessa Pettit, Guy
]lypass the coUrts and order wiretaps on domestic groups
Reuter, ' Martha Anderson ,
Chester. 0.
suspected of being a threat to the country, a federal appeals court
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Red signal the Chinese want im- his grasp on government power Janet Jeffers.
has rUled. The Sixth U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals here voted 3-2 China's invitation to an Ameri- proved relations with the -a grasp which during the last
Thursday to uphold a lower federal court ruling, qusshing claims can table tennis team to visit United States.
several years was thought to
Department officials say they have been weakening.
by the Nixon administration that in certain •cases the safeguards Peking is being viewed by the
of the Fourth Amendment may be overridden.
State Department as a serious expect no quick, . dramatic
Some Nationalist Chinese
changes in relations, but they diplomats meanwhile speculatThe court, in its majority opinion, said the executive branch
believe.Peking may make a new ed Peking's motivation was
of the government "is subject to the limltatlon of the Fourth
move
in the future to follow up simply to embarrass the
Amendment of the Constitution when undertaking searches and
the Invitation.
government of the Republic of
seizures for oral communications by wire." The case, virtuaDy
The
team,
which
was
competChina of Taiwan .
certain to be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court now by the
ing
at
the
31st
World
Table
U.S. officials privately disaJustice Department, Involves Lawrence "Pun" Plamondon, 25, a
· Tennis Championships in Japan, greed with this theory, howevWhite Panther accused of collllpiracy iri the bombirig of the
was to leave today for Hong er, emphasizing their belief in
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) office In Ann Arbor, Mich.,
Kong. From there the team will the seriousness of Peking's
Sept. 29, 1968.
RACINE - Good Friday travel to China and, presuma- gesture.
•
service8willbeheldattheFirst bly, fly to Peking.
State Depar\ffient officials
Baptist Church here at 7:30 The team is due to return to were keeping a close eye on
p.m. The Rev. Earl ShUler of Hong Kong April 16.
whether Peking now will seek
the PorUand Charge of the State Department officials to reswne the ambassadorial
United Methodist Church will stressed the Chine~e do not level talks with the United
Robert Clifford Steele, 81, Presbyterian Church.
deliver the message.
engage in spontaneous invita- States in Warsaw. The talks
Middleport, died this morning Funeral services will be held
The service will be under the lions to American athletic have been held intermittenUy $35.00 Downat Veterans Memorial Hospital. Sunday at 2 p.m. at the direction of the Rev. Morris teams or performers and that
since m5. Peking postponed Balance On
Mr. Steele was born Aug. 17, Rawlirigs Coats Funeral Home WoHe of the Racirie Nazarene this move should be considered
the last scheduled session in Conve'Aient
1889 In Middleport, the son of with the Rev. Charles Simons Church.
a significant indication Peking April, 1970 following the Allied Terms •
the late Edward and Anna officiating. Burial will be In
Sunrise services will be held is responding to American invasion of Cambodia.
Hicks Steele. He was also Middleport Hill Cemetery. at 6:30 a.m. with the choir moves for improved relations.
John Tannehill of Middleport
·preceded, in.. death by three Friends may caD at the funeral presenting a cantata. A break- Some officials believe the
is
a member of the table tennis
home after 10 a.m. on Sunday. fast will be served followirig the invitation may have been
brothers in Infancy.
team to visit China.
Mr. Steele Is survived by two
service.
approved by Premier Chou Ensons; James, Cuyahoga Falls, TO DEFEND TITLE.
The children will present an Lai. These officials go so far as
and Rodney of Columbus; three NEW YORK (UPI)-Cleve- Easter program at 9:30 a.m. to suggest the invitation shows
The grizzly bear appears
daughters, Mrs. Eugene Miller, land's Chuc!: Spencer will Worship service will be held at Chou seems to have tightened on the California state flag.
Logan; Miss Martha Steele, defend his Nort.. American W:~
.
Logan, an~ Mrs. Charle~ bantamweight tiUe against DaSunday evening at 7:30, a
(Dorothy) Dillon of COI~bus, vey Vasquez on April19, it was Songspiration
service will be l
1
three sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth announced Thursday. The two held with the Rev. Ch~les
Gardner, Middleport, with fighters have signed io fight a Norris, pastor of the First
··
1
whom he lived; Mrs. Eleanor l2d bo t
Baptist Church, in charge.
~
..
I
Davis, Youngstown, and Mrs.
roun
u·
You Can't Beat ARiggs Deal
Francis Granzen, Pittsburgh;
I
I ..----SPECIAL
10 grandchildren, three greatgrandchildren and several
-sp-eci-tal- - .
nieces and nephews.
I
2 Dr. H. T.. 6 cyl., auto. trans .. P.S..
Mr. Steele was a brick mason
I
by trade who worked several
years at the ·Parkersburg Rig
I
and Reel, Pomeroy, and was a
'
.
.
ONOUR .
I
1!iember of the Middleport
I
J

China-Thaw Predicted

EASTER PLANTS
All Your FavorHes

10% off

Good Friday
Seroices are ••
ARTWunced

Cash &amp; Carry

DUDLEY'S FLORIST
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

,.

3 ROOMS

CROW'S

NEW

Robert Steel Dies Friday

STEAK
HOUSE

•

FURNITURE
'349.95

By c;.-ne Homli&lt;h

Money coDected by leaders iri the girl scout cookie sale is to
be deposited at the Pomeroy National Bank, Mrs. Phillp Fisher of
Racine, cookie chairman, reports.
·
She askS that when deposits are made in the Big Bend Neighborhood account that duplicate deposit slips be obtairied and
mailed to her. COllections should be completed as soon as possible
and the deposits made.
THURsDAY IS THE ·deadline for entering the Youth Con·
servation Project competition · sponsored by the Meigs SoU
COnservation Service.
A $5 award will be given to the wirinlng entry in eacli troop,
and the county winner will receive a $15 award with $10 goirig to
the nmner-up.
The deadline was extended to the April IS date to permit more
participa~on, and Mrs. William Ohlinger, Big Bend Neighborhood chalnnan, urges troops to enter the competition.
Pictures, cartoons, posters, booklets on soil, air poDution,
root growth stUdies, fire retan!ants, insects, conservation, birds,
seeds, grass, water use, weeds, plant tolerance are suggested
subjects for entries.
MRS. OHIJNGER ASKS that aU events other than regular

troop meetings be reported to her prior to the event. She says this
18 necessary if irisurance coverage for the girls and the leaders Is
lobe effective. It is also required that any Injuries be reported to
her within 24 hours.
Troops going camping, skating, hiking, or touring are
requested to notify Mrs. Ohlinger.
BROCHURES ON GIRL SCOUT camping iri the Four Rivers
Girl Scout Council are available from leaders now.
Again this year open house will be observed at two of the
campsites. Camp Rotan, located off Route 33 just south of Athens,
will be open for visitors on May 3 begirinlng at 9:30 a.m. and ·
Sandy Bend at Elizabeth, W. Va. will be open for inspection on
May 23, 1 to 5 p.m. Parents and prospective campers are encouraged to come and view the campsites.

Infant Christened By His Grandfather
Jonathan Roland , three- Jack R. Walker, ·Ashland, Ohio,
month old son of Mr. and Mrs. was christened Sunday at the
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church in Racine, by his
grandfather, the Rev. W. Dale
McClurg, foDowing a special
Palm Sunday service and at an
altar of palms, ferns and roses.
At the altar with Jonathan
and his parents were his
grandmother, Mrs. W. Dale
McClurg; grandfather, GaUia
County Sheriff Denver Walker,
and great-grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Pollard, of
Stockdale.
Other out-of-town guests
attending the service were Mr.
and ·Mrs. Lonnie FOuty, of
Colwnbus; Mr. Roger Walker,
of Porter, and Miss Jean Bapst,
of Beaver. Grandmother, Mrs.
Denver Walker was unable to
attend beca11se of illness.
Following the service the
families were dinner guests of
Rev. and Mrs. McClurg at the
WORTH OVER $35.00 parsonage.

HO,.,

@wners

~t
@CP@:@D&amp;CS

the Fabulous

w.

va.

r---------------------i
I. ,
w (I

1

I

a

SANDWICH
Order By Phone

68 FORD FAIRLANE

on late tnodelil8ed cars·"··

And Take Em Home

~

992-sm..

'

EARLY BIRD SALE
wAs

70 PONTIAC

'2995

I
Now 1

I
1

Value-Rated Buys! .

I1 70 Cadillac
. Coupe DeVille, air------- '6000 I1
I 69 Cad'lac Sed De
I
S2595 I
an Ville, air~-----. '5000 I
~i95

Catalina 2 Or,. hardtop, one careful local owner,
extra nice, power steering, auto. trans.

69 PONTIAC

'2795

I

-

I 69 Olds 98 WXUIJ Sed., air.:..-------'3495 I
1 68 Olds 88 Holiday Sedan, air ______ _l1995 1

Catalina Safari Sta. Wagon, factory air pondltioned, fully equipped. This car is from a very
satisfied customer. and very careful one.

1

.

1

'

ONLY·S9.95

one owner.

69 FORD GALAXIE 500._.____ ·s2095

WHEN YOU BUY ANEW

HOM ELITE

CHAIN
SAW
See Your Dealer
Sales &amp; Service

RIDENOUR

I

sp. · trans., bucket seats. Sharp car.

.

W'dh Youthful

COMPLETE STOCKS
PRICES TO PLEASE
'

'

•'

SUGAR RUN ·.MILLS
· ten Mulberry.

992 •2115 ·

.

Many mora

'

Pomeroy

BLAEnNARsBUICK

Comes In black
and
walnutgrained
polystyrene
cue with
white trim.

I

I

runs good but needs body work.

'

May We Help You·:··

.

Styling.

4 Dr .' Sedan, V-8, P.S., P.B.• auto.lr~ns .. factory

'1795 sl695 I 67 atev. Impala 2 Dr. H.T..-----:-~· '1595 I
$1595
MERCURY
mMET
------Wildcat 4 dr. hardtop, like new finish, power
' 67 Olds 98 4 Dr., air;.. ________ .:.,_· 11795~ 68
v-s. auto. tra.ns., P.S., 2 dr.· H.T., blue .
steering, power .brakes, auto. trans.
1 66 8 :..1.
'1395 I
65 DODGE
1895 ?95 I
u~~.~~ Wildcat 4 Dr. _______ ;__:,; .
I
66
OlDSMOBILE 98-------Coronet 4dr. Sedan, 6 cyl ., std. shift. Shows exfr-a 1· 65 Pontiac GP 2 Dr. H.T., air.- -----..: 11195 I
Faetory air condition. •4 dr .. auto. t'rans.
I
good care.
·
· ·"I ·
·
·
·
."
I
I
I .65 FORD CUSTOM __ .:_ _____ _ '595
1 2 Dr. sedan, 6 cyl., .auto~trans .• radio, w.w tires,
65 PONTIAC CHOICE OF 3
From· '595 1
Severa.l 1971 OPIn ~~ock
113
1
.Catalinas. We have tw9 rather sharp and one that 1
&gt;31.•

67 BUICK

FIELD

·

I

For Immediate Sale!

I

I

'! Karr -&amp; VanZandt .!

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS .
116 Years of Continuous Business . ·
PHONE 992-2143
.
POMEROY, OHIO

I

I
1

1

1

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
.
of l?oing Business"
992-5342 GMAC FINANCING . POMEROY
. Open Evenings l,J~Itl6:~ TiiS P.M. Sat.

I
I

~~~~~~~~~~~ ·------------~-~-~-~-~~~!.!!!!!!!!...

------------------·-+·-·-SEE: Gale Ingraham- Chuck Re~rnals
Ray Riggs- David Riggs

.RIGGS BR01, INC.
USEQ·CARS

&amp;13 F_arson st.
· 423-6331
Bei~re.
COrner of Rt. 7 and Farson SfrHt

~A!JTY

•

PRINT SHOP

t

For

Mom's

director.
Named , to the board of
directors . were
Wallace
Bradford, J. S. Davis, Mrs.
Clarence Headley, Mrs. J. S.
Davis, Mrs. Guy Nelgler, Mrs.
Dan While, Miss Frieda
Faehnle, Richard Chambers,
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, Mrs.
Hayman Barnitz, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Birchfield, Mrs.
Richard Chambers, Mrs. Glenn
Dill, Mrs. Don Betzing and Mrs.
Mary Kautz;
Mrs. Headley, Mrs. Dlll and
Mrs. Richard Chambers were
named to · the nursing
scholarship committee.
Deadline for entries for nursirig
sCholarships to be awarded by
the association 1B May 1.
Mrs. Parker who will con-

t

Waste King Universal
disposer Is suspended by

i~
i

exclusive patented rubber

Hush Cushion Mount which ·
absorbs and slops vibration
noise before It reoches
sink. Disposer Is suspended
free of sink. Since only the
disposer vibrates, noise

WERNER RADIO &amp;T.V;
'

.MIDDLEPORT, 0.

it
t

Family Crown Pin
MadA1 especially for you by

B. DAVID
on I y

$10.00
plus tax
The story of Mother's life beautifully told in a truly
quallty piece of Jewelry that will be worn with pride
and cherished always. Beautiful pear shape stones
in the color of the famtly't birthstones personalize
and qive this pln special alqnllicance.

3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

*It's Quick!
* Easy
* tt

DRIVE-IN
t BANKING

i

t
-IC
Fridays Only
t
t· -1e The Drive-li)J'Vindow
-1e
is Open
t
-le
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
.;.
·t (Continuously)

~

i

-le Other Banking Hou~s 9 to · ·

t-le

Records and plays on 4 ''C" Celr
batteries, ·o·r AC current. A.C.
Ad~pter. Dynamic microphone with
remote control switch.

.

.................
To be successful, the first
-IC · thinglo do Is to.fall in love_,
-IC with your work .
-Sister Mary Lauretta -IC

be transmitted to sink or

.

tinue to serve as executive
secretary until her replacement
is named gave the annual
report.
A statement of the assets of
the association as of March 31,
this year, includes: checking
account, $253.10; savirigs· account, $1,430.11; securities,
$5,000; total assets, $6,683.21;
gross 1970 seal sale, $4,151, less
$871.71 to state and national
leaVIng a net of $3,279.29. Investment income of $292.25 plus
a state refund of $88.15 made a
total iricome of $3,659.69.
The statement of operation
expenditures from April!, 1970
through March 31, this year
includes: community services,
$2;745.39;
public health
education, $343.11; professional

!
WASTE KI.NG- t
ANNOUNCING

counter top.

education and lralnlng, $500;
patient services, $314.64;
general expense, $297.78; fund
ralairig, $989.63 for a total of
$5,190.55 plus the percentage to
stale and national, $871.71,
making a total of expenditures
of $6,062.26.
The group voted to accept a
budget of $3,485 for 1971-72 as
presented by Mrs. Parker. The
next meeting was set for May 20
at the home of Mrs. Dlll, the
new president, iri Syracuse.
Mrs. Jane Brown, RN,
tuberculosis nurse working
through the Meigs County
Department of Health, thanked
the group for equipment which
has been provided. Other guesta
were Mrs. Terry Shain,
secretary to Mrs . · Brown,
and Mrs. Beulah Straii!S, Meigs
County Health Department
adminlBtrallve assistant · and
-secretary to the board of health.
The dinner was served by
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, at the 'post
home .

.,. A Thought ~
For Today

remains below and cannot

I

o.

•

THE

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

MOTOROLA"@
Cassette
Player Recorder
.

.

TRY
OURS
.

•

6 Coffee Mup ·
and Tree
ssS) &amp; rr

V·8, 2 dr. H.T.• 4-sp .• competition orange
vinyl top, bucket seats. racing wheels.

'239.5 ~195 I 67 Olds 98 Hoi. Sedan, air--------;'1995 I 4 Dr. H.T._, white with blue top, 390 V-8 enginJ auto.
trans., P.S., factory air.
.
New;:::t V-8, 2 dr. hardtop, factory 'air.conditioned. 1 6~ at.,. Caprice 4 Dr., air;.. __ _: ____ Oif795~
1
-ulrd, a1r· ___________ ..;.; 11295 1 68 FORD GAlAXIE 500----This car Is exceptional in every way, and shows I 66 Ford TD'
be st of c·are.
I
1 2 Dr. H. T.• turquoise with white vinyl top, ouroJ., r.ans.
. ·
67 PONTIAC
'1595 s1395 1 66 Buick LeSabre 4 Dr., air; _______ ~'l295 1 P.S., P.B., factory air.
6 Sprint 2 dr: hardtop, overhead Cam 6-Spr'int, 4 I 66 Ford LID 4 Door Hardlop-------.:'1595. 1 68 FORD GALAXIE 500----'1695
1

68 AJRYSLER· .

Hi)/&gt;1/tl•t

340

70
DiEVROLET MONTE CARL0.2 Or. H.T., V-8, auto.lrans .. P.S., P.B.. radio.

Service·to Girl ·Scouting ·Recognized

Smoking Dangerous to Health

-SUPPLY
995-3308
Chesler, 0.

70 DUSTER----~:'.!~0_..:._

A workshop on decorating March meeting,
eggs ~arrying out thl\, theme
Therapy work for February
" Easter Glory and Fun " with the . special education r
highlighted a meeting of the. children of the Eastern Local
Chesler Garden Club Wed- School District.was in charge of
nesday night at the home of Mrs. Earl Dean and Mrs. Reid
Mrs. Dale Kautz.
Young. Each child was assisted
Features of the business in making novel valentines and
session included the election of working on arrangements using
new officers, sponsorship of a 4- artificial .materials. Valentine
H junior gardener in the Young refreshments were served.
America Gardeners contest and
In March, Mrs . Roy Holter
a contribution to the George and daughter, Ann, helped the
Thompson Kidney Fund . Mrs. children make velvet roses,
Howard Knight had charge of showed slides of the Orient, aqd
the workshop. Members came followed that with a dress-up
supplied with blown-out egg session in Japanese costumes.
shells which they decorated Tea was served.
following the instructions and
The club's contribution to
samples provided by Mrs. Green Thumb Notes in May wi!l
Knight.
be by Mrs. Pearl Mora. The
Mrs. Kautz displayed a April24 Region II meeting to be
MRS. SHI:i;RIDAN
MRS. BAHR
collec tion of intricately held at Rutland was announced.
MRS. KNIGHT
decorated egg shells, the work Mrs. Pur ley Karr was
of her husband's aunt, Mrs. welcomed home following the
Minnie Stolzenberg, who gives winter in Florida .
demonstrations on television in
In response to roll call, 20
her home state of Iowa.
members and guests, Mrs.
Carrying
out
the
Easter
She
is
currently
leader
of
Mrs
.
Mary
Hunter,
Mrs.
Roger Gaul, Mrs . Gordon
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH presented an "Old Timer"
Recognition was given to potted rose in recognition of her Pomeroy Brownie Troop 171. . Thelma Airson, Mrs. Sharon theme we1·e devotions by Mrs. Anderson , and Mrs. Elmer
three Meigs County women for many years of service not only Eligible to receive a five year Swindell, Mrs. Sharon Walker, Leonard Erwin who used Kautz, gave Easter memories.
An educational quiz convolunteer service ti&gt; the Girl as a troop leader but as neigh- pin is Mrs. Lelia Curtis who Mrs. Dorothy Napper , Mrs. "Miracle of the Resurrection"
serves on the Salisbury Cadette Kathryn Johnson, Mrs. Daisy as her theme, presenting the ducted by Mrs. Roy Miller was
Scouts of America at the.annual borhood chairman.
Patterson , and Mrs. Faye resurrection from a woman's won by Mrs. Knight 'and Mrs.
meeting of the Four Rivers Girl Mrs. Bahr received her pin Troop committee.
viewpoint
using
Mary Young. Ribbons were awarded
Scout Council held at the for six years as a girl scout and Mrs. Waller Morris, leader of Hamilton.
Alice McMann of Dayton, the Magdalene's part as recorded to Mrs. Dean and Mrs. Homer
University Inn, Athens, Wed- four years as a leader: She has Salisbury Brownie Troop 220,
Holter for 'spring
arnesday.
worked with both the Chester was given a packet of flower new executive director of the in St. John.
Officers
for
the
1971-72
year
seeds
during
the
meeting
for
Four
Rivers
Council,
was
inrangements
.
Judges
were
Presented service pins were cadette troop and the Meigs
Mrs. A. R. Knight, Pomeroy, 35 County senior troop, and \s the being in the scouting program traduced and spoke of her ex- elected were Mrs. Earl Dean, Mrs. Buel Ridenour and Mrs.
years; Mrs: Roger Bahr, 1971 day camp· director for the for the shortest period of time. periences with the Penny Royal president; Mrs. Robert Wood, Knight.
A dessert course served by
Reedsville, 10 years; and Mrs. Big Bend Neighborhood which Others from Meigs County Council in Owensboro, Ky . She first vice president; Mrs.
William
Sheridan ,
Sr., has about 500 registered scouts. attending the meeting were replaces Alice Helm who was Richard Barton, second vice Mrs. Kautz and Mrs. Ori~
Pomeroy, 10 years.
Mrs. Sheridan 's work in Mrs. William Ohlinger, Big moved recently to a West president; Mrs. Oris Ginther, Ginther and the favors carried
¥rs.
Kautz, out the Easter theme. Mrs.
secretary ;
Mrs. Knight was also scouting spans a 20 year period. Bend Neighborhood chalnnan; Virginia Council.
Among those recognized assistant secretary; Mrs. Knight won the door prize.
during the luncheon was Mrs. Leonard Erwin, treasurer; and
Thor Olson, founder of girl Mrs. Reid Young, assistant
scouting in Athens County.
treasurer.
._ several proposals were
Forty dollars was contributed .
WE
adopted by the Council and will by the members for the George
!SPECIALIZE
be presen~d at the national Thompson Kidney Fund. The
IN WEDDINGS
convention, all pertaining to age club voted to sponsor Mary Lou
changes for levels of scouting. It Mills, a member of the Five
was proposed that 11 year olds Points Star Stitchers in the Everything but the Ring and
or sixth grade girls be moved Young America Gardeners the Groom.
from the junior level to contest. The garden club library Invitations
Napkins
cadettes; that fourth and fifth will be made available to the 4- Decorations
Books
•
graders make up the junior H.club for their summer gar- Engraved Cake Kn i ves,
Servers, Punch Bowls by
'"\' I
level ; that sixth, seventh and dening projects .
Starlight.
~
o
.
l/
eighth graders be put into . The civic committee reported Great selection of Albums to
•
cadettes; and that ninth on plantings at the Chester choose irom.
,.
graders be eligible to par- cemetery and expressed ap'
ticipate in the senior scout preciation for the trustees
•
assistance in removing the
program.
Selection of girls to par- overgrown evergreens. Mrs .
ticipate in the national and Pearl Mora gave "Interesting
•
international
events sponsored Trees", a holdover from the 992-3345
t
MlddfttiOrt, 0
by the Girl Scouts of America
/
' '
was discussed and it was
decided that contacts would be
made to determine reasons for
rejections.
•
Badge work was discussed
and it was proposed .that interest and requirements be
revised so as to be more
suitable for all economic and
environmental levels. It was
OFFiCERS ELECTED-These officers were elected Thursday night at the annual dinner
indicated ·that badges which
meeting of the Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health Assn. In Pomeroy. They are, seated,
now exist are geared to the
Mrs. Glenn Dill, president; Claren~e Headley, vice president; standing, 1tor, Mrs. Wallace
upper and middle class girls
Bradford, alternate representative director; Mrs. Bruce May, treasurer, and Mrs. Mannirig
and
that the goal of girl scouting
Kloest[epresentative director. Mrs. Dwight Wallace is the new secretary.
is to reach all girls.

PARTY PLANNED
A skating party is qeing
planned for the youth of the
Mason First Baptist ~hurch and
Fairview Bible Church, Monday
at the New Haven Skatirig Rink.
Everyone is asked to meet at
the Maso~ .Flrst Baptist Church
at 6:30 p.in. There wiD be a 25
(Continued from page I)
cent charge for those who do not death of Mark Waters, a 56have their own saktes.
year-old newspaper man iri
Hawaii was shown to emphasize
the effect of cigaret smoking on
the development of cancer of
the lungs.
Kloes presented Dr. Telle
with a gift foUowirig a question
and answer session.
Officers elected for the next
4 Mugs~Only $3.98
year iriclude Mrs. Glenn· Dlll,
. MugTree-On!y $1.00
Syracuse, president; Clarence
·. Headiey; 'l)J)ipers Plains, vice
president; Mrs . Dwight
Wallace, Middleport,
secretary; Mrs. Bruce May,
Rutland, treasurer; Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Middleport,
representative director, and
Mrs. Wallace Bradford,
alternate representative

FURNITURE

•

Workshop Held

1

Girl Scout
Diary

MASON

Home of

,

5- The Paily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April9, 197!

Sowle Attacks·Gilligan Universities' Budget
COLUMBUS ' (UPI) - Ohio
University · President Claude
Sowle said he feared Gov. John
J. ·Gilligan's proposed budget
for the state's colleges and universities "is, in the fmal analysis, ~ally mandated mediocri-

..

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Edward Baer, Owner

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,_The Daily Sentinel,Middlepori-Pomeroy, 0., April9,197i
.,...___

in the classroom and outside, is
to be truly meaningful and re·
warding," Sowle said', "we must
have withiri our universities
young people whose background
and life experiences range

across the widest spectrwn.''
l{e said the reduction of outof.,state students in Ohio institutions would "lead to a lessening of the quality of public
hi~ her education in Ohio."
·

Phillip R. Shriver, president
of Miami UniversitY, told the
legislators his school needed
more than tile $12.6 million a!located in the governor's tiudgel

or. it woUldn't be· able "to weather the crisis of our lime."
. "Witlloul them (additional increases), we shaD ente~ the
new biennium in the poorest fi-

.

- ~-.

Sowle criticized Gilligan's proposed appropriations in testimony Thursday before the House
Finance COmmittee.
"The governor's budget, in
my opiriion, does not meet the
minimum needs of higher education in Ohio, nor does it meet
the minimum needs of Ohio University," he said ..
He said OU woul~ need $5
million in addltionkl subsidy
support next year in order to
a.vold tuition increases, but the
governor's budget only calls for
an allocation of $9.3 million, an
increase of $1.4 million over
the current year.
Sowle said.tuition increases of
$90 a year for Ohio students
and f250 a year for out-of.. tate
students would be necessitated
by the governor's budget.~
"I hope that the members of
the General Assembly will refuse to accept the governor's
recommendation on this vital issue and decide to accept, iri~tead, the recommendation of
the Board of Regents that we
stabillze tuition for at least the
next two years," he said.
Sowle was also critical of the
administration'sproposedeliminatlon of state subsidies to out• of..tate students. He said the
!lack of this fuild would force a
disproportionate increase in
ouH!f-iitatetuitions, which would
decreese the number of such
persons coming irito Ohio for
higher education.
"If student Interaction, both

year begirlning .in !97Z because
Miami U. has already admitted
its .freshman class for the upcoming year.
"We· learned of this .jJrozen

nancial condition since the close
of World War II," Shriver said.
He asked the House members
to delay enactment of frozen
enroUments U(ltil the academic

.

enrollments ) after our freshman
class had been admi t~d for
next fall, too late to make adju~tinents,' ' he said. ''Hence,additional income will be denied
us for the instruction of students already admitted. "

Leo Thompson
BUY A·-··
Dies Thursday WDILBOUI

~~~;:;~; '~~ Holy City Jammed

ty .or even worse.''

Leo B. Thompson, 77,
Cleveland, former Meigs
County resident, died Thursday
in Cleveland.
Mr. Thompson was a veteran
of World War I and a member of
the St. John's Cathedral
Catholic Church in Clevel~d.
Preceded in death by his wife ,
Ora BurreD Thompson in 1959,
Mr. Thompson is survived by
two sisters, Mrs. John Moses of
Holidaysburg, Pa., and Mrs.
George Beahm, Altoona, Pa.; a
brother, Ed, of Florida; a niece,
Mrs. Clarence (Etta Mae)
Norton of Minersville, and a
nephew, William ·Burrell of
Daytl&gt;n.
Funeral services will be held
.at IOa.m. Monday at the Sacred
Hearl Church In Pomeroy with
burial in Sacr_ed Heart
Cemetery. Officiating Will be
the Rev. Father Bernard
Krajcovic. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home from 2
to4andfrom6to9p.rn.Sunday.
Rosary Services will be held at
7:30p.m. Sunday at the funeral
home.

during
Wheel and Dea
Days

By United Presslateraalloual
reading of the HagadahBy PETER D. LYNCH
advance.
COLUMBUS - HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER.S have
JERUSALEM (UPI)-Israel Passover commemorates the literally the tale of the
Introduced legislation to set up a public safety department and celebrated the begirinirig of deliverance of the Jews from Passover.
authorize the Ohio Highway Patrol to assist local Jaw en- Judaism's most joyous .festival slavery in 1300 B.C. According The first two days and the
forcement officers in controlling civil disturbances. Rep. Robert today while mourning Chris- to the . Bible, Moses led the last two days of Passover are
E. Levitt, R.Canton, the GOP floor leader, was chief sponsor of tians retraced through the tribes of Israel from Egypt full public holidays in Israel
both bills, two of the 58 offered during a "skeleton" session of the narrow alleys of this ancient after God brought down ten and the middle four days are
semi-holidays, · when workers
House, whicti is iri recess along with the Senate until next walled city Jesus Christ's route plagues upon Egypt.
Tuesday.
to death upon the crOss.
In their haste to leave, the traditionally work only halfThe new department would iriclude the Highway Patrol, the
For Jews throughout the Israelites carried with them days.
bureau of criminal identification and irivestlgatlon and the Ohio world, today marked the dough which had not yet risen Inside the walls that Herod
Peace Officers Trairilng Council. Also under the new department beginning of the eighklay feast and leavened. During their built around the old city,
would be the state fire marshal's office and the Bureau of Civil of Passover ( Pesach) which flight, they baked this into flat Christians dressed in mourning
black chanted the dirges for the
Defense. The Bureau of Mo!or Vehicles would be transferred to celebrates the delivery of the cakes, matzoth, under the hot
dead and re-enacted Christ's
Hebrews from 210 years of desert sun.
the Depariment of Commerce.
For the next eight days journey to his crucifixion along
COLUMBUS -TWO PIECE'S OF legislation were introduced slavery in Egypt.
the Via Dolorosa-the road of
irito the House Thursday which were apparenUy aimed at campus . The Christian world plunged religious Jews will not eat or
pain
demonstrators. Ameasure forbidding public display of any flag of Into its deepest mourning to drink anything made from flour
Led by a pilgrim carrying a
a nation with which the United States Is at war was presented by mark the day Christ died upon or from fermented grain. The replica of the o.oss Christians
We're wheeling and dealing
the cross on Calvary. It beginiling of the holiday saw
on all models trom thrifty
Rep. Walter A. Rutkowski, D-Maple Heights.
from
all
over
·
ihe
wotld
se yel'l's to powerful 14's.
Rutkowski, who Introduced the bill at the request of the culminates Easter Sunday ,.i[ih the disappearance from market followed 'in sorrowful procesPrice starts from $499 on
Lawn Ranger .
American Legion, said it.was aimed at the h:equent display of the joyous celebrations marking his shelves of flour products and sioh stopping as Christ stopped
arising from the dead.
beer and liquor made from
Viet Gong flag . Penalty for violation of .the bill woUld be a
at the stions of the cross
Take advantage of th is once Many Tourists This Year
fermented grain.
a-year sale to get the best
maximum $100flne. Rep. Joseph P. TuDey, R-Mentor, introduced
The
Basilica
of
the
Holy
Tourist ministry officials said For the past two weeks
deal on a new Wheel Horse
legislation which would forbid the use of sound-amplifying the two religious celebrations Israel's matzoth factorie&lt; had Sepulcher, which tradition says
I wn
tractor .
a free
equipment on the campus of a state university without permission had drawn the biggest influx of worked overtime· producing the marks the site where Christ
. Put vour
from the school administration.
tractor
tourists to the Holy Land since wafers to supply the locaJ_and was buried and arose from the
!
Sale
lasts
dead, was draped in mourning
COLUMBUS - AN EIGIIT MEMBER bi-partisan House the 1967 Middle East war.
export markets.
week; The best
committee has been named to study the state's weHare program
black.
best deal is
All hotels in Israel and
Begins at Sundown
s a\o'ailable.
because it's cost "is getting out of !!and." House Speaker Charles Israeli-occupied
Jerusalem The Jewish celebrations begin On Sunday it will emerged
Free Wheel
F. Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, named the panel Thursday to be were booked solid weeks in at sundown with the seder, the from mourning with the joyous Veterans Memorial Hospital
y balloons for
ADMITTED - Robert Steele,
headed by Rep. Rodney H. Hughes, R-BeDefontairie.
traditional holiday feast and the message that Christ has arisen .
Middleport;
Larry Werry ,
"The cost of welfare is getting out of hand," Kurfess said.
Hundred, W. Va ., and Ernest
"Unless something is done soon, growing weHare costs could
Bootli, Parkersburg.
conceivably bring Ohio to the bririk of bankruptcy in a few short
DISCHARGED - James
years."
Morris, Louise Farley. Mildred
CINCINNATI - THE PRF.'IIDENT HAS no authority to
Wolfe, Vanessa Pettit, Guy
]lypass the coUrts and order wiretaps on domestic groups
Reuter, ' Martha Anderson ,
Chester. 0.
suspected of being a threat to the country, a federal appeals court
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Red signal the Chinese want im- his grasp on government power Janet Jeffers.
has rUled. The Sixth U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals here voted 3-2 China's invitation to an Ameri- proved relations with the -a grasp which during the last
Thursday to uphold a lower federal court ruling, qusshing claims can table tennis team to visit United States.
several years was thought to
Department officials say they have been weakening.
by the Nixon administration that in certain •cases the safeguards Peking is being viewed by the
of the Fourth Amendment may be overridden.
State Department as a serious expect no quick, . dramatic
Some Nationalist Chinese
changes in relations, but they diplomats meanwhile speculatThe court, in its majority opinion, said the executive branch
believe.Peking may make a new ed Peking's motivation was
of the government "is subject to the limltatlon of the Fourth
move
in the future to follow up simply to embarrass the
Amendment of the Constitution when undertaking searches and
the Invitation.
government of the Republic of
seizures for oral communications by wire." The case, virtuaDy
The
team,
which
was
competChina of Taiwan .
certain to be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court now by the
ing
at
the
31st
World
Table
U.S. officials privately disaJustice Department, Involves Lawrence "Pun" Plamondon, 25, a
· Tennis Championships in Japan, greed with this theory, howevWhite Panther accused of collllpiracy iri the bombirig of the
was to leave today for Hong er, emphasizing their belief in
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) office In Ann Arbor, Mich.,
Kong. From there the team will the seriousness of Peking's
Sept. 29, 1968.
RACINE - Good Friday travel to China and, presuma- gesture.
•
service8willbeheldattheFirst bly, fly to Peking.
State Depar\ffient officials
Baptist Church here at 7:30 The team is due to return to were keeping a close eye on
p.m. The Rev. Earl ShUler of Hong Kong April 16.
whether Peking now will seek
the PorUand Charge of the State Department officials to reswne the ambassadorial
United Methodist Church will stressed the Chine~e do not level talks with the United
Robert Clifford Steele, 81, Presbyterian Church.
deliver the message.
engage in spontaneous invita- States in Warsaw. The talks
Middleport, died this morning Funeral services will be held
The service will be under the lions to American athletic have been held intermittenUy $35.00 Downat Veterans Memorial Hospital. Sunday at 2 p.m. at the direction of the Rev. Morris teams or performers and that
since m5. Peking postponed Balance On
Mr. Steele was born Aug. 17, Rawlirigs Coats Funeral Home WoHe of the Racirie Nazarene this move should be considered
the last scheduled session in Conve'Aient
1889 In Middleport, the son of with the Rev. Charles Simons Church.
a significant indication Peking April, 1970 following the Allied Terms •
the late Edward and Anna officiating. Burial will be In
Sunrise services will be held is responding to American invasion of Cambodia.
Hicks Steele. He was also Middleport Hill Cemetery. at 6:30 a.m. with the choir moves for improved relations.
John Tannehill of Middleport
·preceded, in.. death by three Friends may caD at the funeral presenting a cantata. A break- Some officials believe the
is
a member of the table tennis
home after 10 a.m. on Sunday. fast will be served followirig the invitation may have been
brothers in Infancy.
team to visit China.
Mr. Steele Is survived by two
service.
approved by Premier Chou Ensons; James, Cuyahoga Falls, TO DEFEND TITLE.
The children will present an Lai. These officials go so far as
and Rodney of Columbus; three NEW YORK (UPI)-Cleve- Easter program at 9:30 a.m. to suggest the invitation shows
The grizzly bear appears
daughters, Mrs. Eugene Miller, land's Chuc!: Spencer will Worship service will be held at Chou seems to have tightened on the California state flag.
Logan; Miss Martha Steele, defend his Nort.. American W:~
.
Logan, an~ Mrs. Charle~ bantamweight tiUe against DaSunday evening at 7:30, a
(Dorothy) Dillon of COI~bus, vey Vasquez on April19, it was Songspiration
service will be l
1
three sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth announced Thursday. The two held with the Rev. Ch~les
Gardner, Middleport, with fighters have signed io fight a Norris, pastor of the First
··
1
whom he lived; Mrs. Eleanor l2d bo t
Baptist Church, in charge.
~
..
I
Davis, Youngstown, and Mrs.
roun
u·
You Can't Beat ARiggs Deal
Francis Granzen, Pittsburgh;
I
I ..----SPECIAL
10 grandchildren, three greatgrandchildren and several
-sp-eci-tal- - .
nieces and nephews.
I
2 Dr. H. T.. 6 cyl., auto. trans .. P.S..
Mr. Steele was a brick mason
I
by trade who worked several
years at the ·Parkersburg Rig
I
and Reel, Pomeroy, and was a
'
.
.
ONOUR .
I
1!iember of the Middleport
I
J

China-Thaw Predicted

EASTER PLANTS
All Your FavorHes

10% off

Good Friday
Seroices are ••
ARTWunced

Cash &amp; Carry

DUDLEY'S FLORIST
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

,.

3 ROOMS

CROW'S

NEW

Robert Steel Dies Friday

STEAK
HOUSE

•

FURNITURE
'349.95

By c;.-ne Homli&lt;h

Money coDected by leaders iri the girl scout cookie sale is to
be deposited at the Pomeroy National Bank, Mrs. Phillp Fisher of
Racine, cookie chairman, reports.
·
She askS that when deposits are made in the Big Bend Neighborhood account that duplicate deposit slips be obtairied and
mailed to her. COllections should be completed as soon as possible
and the deposits made.
THURsDAY IS THE ·deadline for entering the Youth Con·
servation Project competition · sponsored by the Meigs SoU
COnservation Service.
A $5 award will be given to the wirinlng entry in eacli troop,
and the county winner will receive a $15 award with $10 goirig to
the nmner-up.
The deadline was extended to the April IS date to permit more
participa~on, and Mrs. William Ohlinger, Big Bend Neighborhood chalnnan, urges troops to enter the competition.
Pictures, cartoons, posters, booklets on soil, air poDution,
root growth stUdies, fire retan!ants, insects, conservation, birds,
seeds, grass, water use, weeds, plant tolerance are suggested
subjects for entries.
MRS. OHIJNGER ASKS that aU events other than regular

troop meetings be reported to her prior to the event. She says this
18 necessary if irisurance coverage for the girls and the leaders Is
lobe effective. It is also required that any Injuries be reported to
her within 24 hours.
Troops going camping, skating, hiking, or touring are
requested to notify Mrs. Ohlinger.
BROCHURES ON GIRL SCOUT camping iri the Four Rivers
Girl Scout Council are available from leaders now.
Again this year open house will be observed at two of the
campsites. Camp Rotan, located off Route 33 just south of Athens,
will be open for visitors on May 3 begirinlng at 9:30 a.m. and ·
Sandy Bend at Elizabeth, W. Va. will be open for inspection on
May 23, 1 to 5 p.m. Parents and prospective campers are encouraged to come and view the campsites.

Infant Christened By His Grandfather
Jonathan Roland , three- Jack R. Walker, ·Ashland, Ohio,
month old son of Mr. and Mrs. was christened Sunday at the
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church in Racine, by his
grandfather, the Rev. W. Dale
McClurg, foDowing a special
Palm Sunday service and at an
altar of palms, ferns and roses.
At the altar with Jonathan
and his parents were his
grandmother, Mrs. W. Dale
McClurg; grandfather, GaUia
County Sheriff Denver Walker,
and great-grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Pollard, of
Stockdale.
Other out-of-town guests
attending the service were Mr.
and ·Mrs. Lonnie FOuty, of
Colwnbus; Mr. Roger Walker,
of Porter, and Miss Jean Bapst,
of Beaver. Grandmother, Mrs.
Denver Walker was unable to
attend beca11se of illness.
Following the service the
families were dinner guests of
Rev. and Mrs. McClurg at the
WORTH OVER $35.00 parsonage.

HO,.,

@wners

~t
@CP@:@D&amp;CS

the Fabulous

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68 FORD FAIRLANE

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And Take Em Home

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wAs

70 PONTIAC

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I1 70 Cadillac
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I 69 Cad'lac Sed De
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Catalina 2 Or,. hardtop, one careful local owner,
extra nice, power steering, auto. trans.

69 PONTIAC

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1 68 Olds 88 Holiday Sedan, air ______ _l1995 1

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satisfied customer. and very careful one.

1

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one owner.

69 FORD GALAXIE 500._.____ ·s2095

WHEN YOU BUY ANEW

HOM ELITE

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Sales &amp; Service

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sp. · trans., bucket seats. Sharp car.

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PRICES TO PLEASE
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· ten Mulberry.

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Comes In black
and
walnutgrained
polystyrene
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white trim.

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4 Dr .' Sedan, V-8, P.S., P.B.• auto.lr~ns .. factory

'1795 sl695 I 67 atev. Impala 2 Dr. H.T..-----:-~· '1595 I
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MERCURY
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v-s. auto. tra.ns., P.S., 2 dr.· H.T., blue .
steering, power .brakes, auto. trans.
1 66 8 :..1.
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I
good care.
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1 2 Dr. sedan, 6 cyl., .auto~trans .• radio, w.w tires,
65 PONTIAC CHOICE OF 3
From· '595 1
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113
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PONTIAC
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116 Years of Continuous Business . ·
PHONE 992-2143
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992-5342 GMAC FINANCING . POMEROY
. Open Evenings l,J~Itl6:~ TiiS P.M. Sat.

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------------------·-+·-·-SEE: Gale Ingraham- Chuck Re~rnals
Ray Riggs- David Riggs

.RIGGS BR01, INC.
USEQ·CARS

&amp;13 F_arson st.
· 423-6331
Bei~re.
COrner of Rt. 7 and Farson SfrHt

~A!JTY

•

PRINT SHOP

t

For

Mom's

director.
Named , to the board of
directors . were
Wallace
Bradford, J. S. Davis, Mrs.
Clarence Headley, Mrs. J. S.
Davis, Mrs. Guy Nelgler, Mrs.
Dan While, Miss Frieda
Faehnle, Richard Chambers,
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, Mrs.
Hayman Barnitz, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Birchfield, Mrs.
Richard Chambers, Mrs. Glenn
Dill, Mrs. Don Betzing and Mrs.
Mary Kautz;
Mrs. Headley, Mrs. Dlll and
Mrs. Richard Chambers were
named to · the nursing
scholarship committee.
Deadline for entries for nursirig
sCholarships to be awarded by
the association 1B May 1.
Mrs. Parker who will con-

t

Waste King Universal
disposer Is suspended by

i~
i

exclusive patented rubber

Hush Cushion Mount which ·
absorbs and slops vibration
noise before It reoches
sink. Disposer Is suspended
free of sink. Since only the
disposer vibrates, noise

WERNER RADIO &amp;T.V;
'

.MIDDLEPORT, 0.

it
t

Family Crown Pin
MadA1 especially for you by

B. DAVID
on I y

$10.00
plus tax
The story of Mother's life beautifully told in a truly
quallty piece of Jewelry that will be worn with pride
and cherished always. Beautiful pear shape stones
in the color of the famtly't birthstones personalize
and qive this pln special alqnllicance.

3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE

*It's Quick!
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DRIVE-IN
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Fridays Only
t
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is Open
t
-le
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
.;.
·t (Continuously)

~

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t-le

Records and plays on 4 ''C" Celr
batteries, ·o·r AC current. A.C.
Ad~pter. Dynamic microphone with
remote control switch.

.

.................
To be successful, the first
-IC · thinglo do Is to.fall in love_,
-IC with your work .
-Sister Mary Lauretta -IC

be transmitted to sink or

.

tinue to serve as executive
secretary until her replacement
is named gave the annual
report.
A statement of the assets of
the association as of March 31,
this year, includes: checking
account, $253.10; savirigs· account, $1,430.11; securities,
$5,000; total assets, $6,683.21;
gross 1970 seal sale, $4,151, less
$871.71 to state and national
leaVIng a net of $3,279.29. Investment income of $292.25 plus
a state refund of $88.15 made a
total iricome of $3,659.69.
The statement of operation
expenditures from April!, 1970
through March 31, this year
includes: community services,
$2;745.39;
public health
education, $343.11; professional

!
WASTE KI.NG- t
ANNOUNCING

counter top.

education and lralnlng, $500;
patient services, $314.64;
general expense, $297.78; fund
ralairig, $989.63 for a total of
$5,190.55 plus the percentage to
stale and national, $871.71,
making a total of expenditures
of $6,062.26.
The group voted to accept a
budget of $3,485 for 1971-72 as
presented by Mrs. Parker. The
next meeting was set for May 20
at the home of Mrs. Dlll, the
new president, iri Syracuse.
Mrs. Jane Brown, RN,
tuberculosis nurse working
through the Meigs County
Department of Health, thanked
the group for equipment which
has been provided. Other guesta
were Mrs. Terry Shain,
secretary to Mrs . · Brown,
and Mrs. Beulah Straii!S, Meigs
County Health Department
adminlBtrallve assistant · and
-secretary to the board of health.
The dinner was served by
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, at the 'post
home .

.,. A Thought ~
For Today

remains below and cannot

I

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BOOK STORE

MOTOROLA"@
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Service·to Girl ·Scouting ·Recognized

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A workshop on decorating March meeting,
eggs ~arrying out thl\, theme
Therapy work for February
" Easter Glory and Fun " with the . special education r
highlighted a meeting of the. children of the Eastern Local
Chesler Garden Club Wed- School District.was in charge of
nesday night at the home of Mrs. Earl Dean and Mrs. Reid
Mrs. Dale Kautz.
Young. Each child was assisted
Features of the business in making novel valentines and
session included the election of working on arrangements using
new officers, sponsorship of a 4- artificial .materials. Valentine
H junior gardener in the Young refreshments were served.
America Gardeners contest and
In March, Mrs . Roy Holter
a contribution to the George and daughter, Ann, helped the
Thompson Kidney Fund . Mrs. children make velvet roses,
Howard Knight had charge of showed slides of the Orient, aqd
the workshop. Members came followed that with a dress-up
supplied with blown-out egg session in Japanese costumes.
shells which they decorated Tea was served.
following the instructions and
The club's contribution to
samples provided by Mrs. Green Thumb Notes in May wi!l
Knight.
be by Mrs. Pearl Mora. The
Mrs. Kautz displayed a April24 Region II meeting to be
MRS. SHI:i;RIDAN
MRS. BAHR
collec tion of intricately held at Rutland was announced.
MRS. KNIGHT
decorated egg shells, the work Mrs. Pur ley Karr was
of her husband's aunt, Mrs. welcomed home following the
Minnie Stolzenberg, who gives winter in Florida .
demonstrations on television in
In response to roll call, 20
her home state of Iowa.
members and guests, Mrs.
Carrying
out
the
Easter
She
is
currently
leader
of
Mrs
.
Mary
Hunter,
Mrs.
Roger Gaul, Mrs . Gordon
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH presented an "Old Timer"
Recognition was given to potted rose in recognition of her Pomeroy Brownie Troop 171. . Thelma Airson, Mrs. Sharon theme we1·e devotions by Mrs. Anderson , and Mrs. Elmer
three Meigs County women for many years of service not only Eligible to receive a five year Swindell, Mrs. Sharon Walker, Leonard Erwin who used Kautz, gave Easter memories.
An educational quiz convolunteer service ti&gt; the Girl as a troop leader but as neigh- pin is Mrs. Lelia Curtis who Mrs. Dorothy Napper , Mrs. "Miracle of the Resurrection"
serves on the Salisbury Cadette Kathryn Johnson, Mrs. Daisy as her theme, presenting the ducted by Mrs. Roy Miller was
Scouts of America at the.annual borhood chairman.
Patterson , and Mrs. Faye resurrection from a woman's won by Mrs. Knight 'and Mrs.
meeting of the Four Rivers Girl Mrs. Bahr received her pin Troop committee.
viewpoint
using
Mary Young. Ribbons were awarded
Scout Council held at the for six years as a girl scout and Mrs. Waller Morris, leader of Hamilton.
Alice McMann of Dayton, the Magdalene's part as recorded to Mrs. Dean and Mrs. Homer
University Inn, Athens, Wed- four years as a leader: She has Salisbury Brownie Troop 220,
Holter for 'spring
arnesday.
worked with both the Chester was given a packet of flower new executive director of the in St. John.
Officers
for
the
1971-72
year
seeds
during
the
meeting
for
Four
Rivers
Council,
was
inrangements
.
Judges
were
Presented service pins were cadette troop and the Meigs
Mrs. A. R. Knight, Pomeroy, 35 County senior troop, and \s the being in the scouting program traduced and spoke of her ex- elected were Mrs. Earl Dean, Mrs. Buel Ridenour and Mrs.
years; Mrs: Roger Bahr, 1971 day camp· director for the for the shortest period of time. periences with the Penny Royal president; Mrs. Robert Wood, Knight.
A dessert course served by
Reedsville, 10 years; and Mrs. Big Bend Neighborhood which Others from Meigs County Council in Owensboro, Ky . She first vice president; Mrs.
William
Sheridan ,
Sr., has about 500 registered scouts. attending the meeting were replaces Alice Helm who was Richard Barton, second vice Mrs. Kautz and Mrs. Ori~
Pomeroy, 10 years.
Mrs. Sheridan 's work in Mrs. William Ohlinger, Big moved recently to a West president; Mrs. Oris Ginther, Ginther and the favors carried
¥rs.
Kautz, out the Easter theme. Mrs.
secretary ;
Mrs. Knight was also scouting spans a 20 year period. Bend Neighborhood chalnnan; Virginia Council.
Among those recognized assistant secretary; Mrs. Knight won the door prize.
during the luncheon was Mrs. Leonard Erwin, treasurer; and
Thor Olson, founder of girl Mrs. Reid Young, assistant
scouting in Athens County.
treasurer.
._ several proposals were
Forty dollars was contributed .
WE
adopted by the Council and will by the members for the George
!SPECIALIZE
be presen~d at the national Thompson Kidney Fund. The
IN WEDDINGS
convention, all pertaining to age club voted to sponsor Mary Lou
changes for levels of scouting. It Mills, a member of the Five
was proposed that 11 year olds Points Star Stitchers in the Everything but the Ring and
or sixth grade girls be moved Young America Gardeners the Groom.
from the junior level to contest. The garden club library Invitations
Napkins
cadettes; that fourth and fifth will be made available to the 4- Decorations
Books
•
graders make up the junior H.club for their summer gar- Engraved Cake Kn i ves,
Servers, Punch Bowls by
'"\' I
level ; that sixth, seventh and dening projects .
Starlight.
~
o
.
l/
eighth graders be put into . The civic committee reported Great selection of Albums to
•
cadettes; and that ninth on plantings at the Chester choose irom.
,.
graders be eligible to par- cemetery and expressed ap'
ticipate in the senior scout preciation for the trustees
•
assistance in removing the
program.
Selection of girls to par- overgrown evergreens. Mrs .
ticipate in the national and Pearl Mora gave "Interesting
•
international
events sponsored Trees", a holdover from the 992-3345
t
MlddfttiOrt, 0
by the Girl Scouts of America
/
' '
was discussed and it was
decided that contacts would be
made to determine reasons for
rejections.
•
Badge work was discussed
and it was proposed .that interest and requirements be
revised so as to be more
suitable for all economic and
environmental levels. It was
OFFiCERS ELECTED-These officers were elected Thursday night at the annual dinner
indicated ·that badges which
meeting of the Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health Assn. In Pomeroy. They are, seated,
now exist are geared to the
Mrs. Glenn Dill, president; Claren~e Headley, vice president; standing, 1tor, Mrs. Wallace
upper and middle class girls
Bradford, alternate representative director; Mrs. Bruce May, treasurer, and Mrs. Mannirig
and
that the goal of girl scouting
Kloest[epresentative director. Mrs. Dwight Wallace is the new secretary.
is to reach all girls.

PARTY PLANNED
A skating party is qeing
planned for the youth of the
Mason First Baptist ~hurch and
Fairview Bible Church, Monday
at the New Haven Skatirig Rink.
Everyone is asked to meet at
the Maso~ .Flrst Baptist Church
at 6:30 p.in. There wiD be a 25
(Continued from page I)
cent charge for those who do not death of Mark Waters, a 56have their own saktes.
year-old newspaper man iri
Hawaii was shown to emphasize
the effect of cigaret smoking on
the development of cancer of
the lungs.
Kloes presented Dr. Telle
with a gift foUowirig a question
and answer session.
Officers elected for the next
4 Mugs~Only $3.98
year iriclude Mrs. Glenn· Dlll,
. MugTree-On!y $1.00
Syracuse, president; Clarence
·. Headiey; 'l)J)ipers Plains, vice
president; Mrs . Dwight
Wallace, Middleport,
secretary; Mrs. Bruce May,
Rutland, treasurer; Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Middleport,
representative director, and
Mrs. Wallace Bradford,
alternate representative

FURNITURE

•

Workshop Held

1

Girl Scout
Diary

MASON

Home of

,

5- The Paily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April9, 197!

Sowle Attacks·Gilligan Universities' Budget
COLUMBUS ' (UPI) - Ohio
University · President Claude
Sowle said he feared Gov. John
J. ·Gilligan's proposed budget
for the state's colleges and universities "is, in the fmal analysis, ~ally mandated mediocri-

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J
. 6-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Apr119,

~AinnLFPORT

POMEROY

~UMEROY
TRINITY
MT. MORIAH ISAI'TISTUnoledChurch of Chrost -Rev Corner Fourth an&lt;l Ma in,
Perron, pastor Fred Biaeltna r, Middleport Rev Henry L Key,
sup! Sunday School , 9 15 a m , Jr , pastor Sunday School 9 30

Worship, 10 25 a m ; youth
cho1r rehearsal , Monday, 6 30

a m , Arnold R1chards. supt •
Morning worshtp 10 JO a m

P m , Mrs Marvon Burl,
FIRST UNITED PRES
dorector
Seno or
choor BYTERIAN, Midd leport- Rev
rehearsal , 7 30 p m Thursday, Russell Les ter, pastor Sunday
MM Pau l Nease, dtrector School9 30 a m , Lew•s Sauer,
Thursdar . all day Busy

Bee

supt ,

qullttng party m church soctal

wor shtp servi ce 10 30

am

' oom
POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Union and Mulberry Rev
Clyde V Henderson, pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Raymond Walburn , supt
Morning
worshtp 10 30 a m •
1
E'Oenlng servoce 7 30 P m Mod

MIDDLEPORT HEATH
UNITED METHODIST- Rev
Ma • E Donahue, monlster ,
Eroc Chambers, Sunday School
supenntendent Church School
9 30 a m , mornong worship,
10 30 a m , youth meetong, 7 p
m , Chotr r e hearsal, Wed
nesday 7-7 30 p m , Mrs E
week servtce, Wednesday. 7 30 Robert Hamm , dt rector
P m
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES GRACE EPISCOPAL - Rev Larry Carnahan presodong
Stanley Plattenburg, mmtster
Mornmg prayer and ser,on,

1

mtnl ster Sunday, B1ble lecture.

9 30 a m , Watchtower study,

10 30 a m Holy communocn 10 30 a

and

sermon,

10 30 a

m

ftr st

Sundays,

m , Tuesday, Soble

study , 7 30 p

m , Thursday,

Church school , monostry school 7.30 p m ,

ktndergarten through e1ghth

grade, 10 30 a m.
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr ,
pastor Bible School, 9 30 a m '
worshop, 10. 30, adult worshop

serv 1ce meetmg

a 30 p

m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH
of Chrost on Chrlstoan Unoo!ILawrence Manley, pastor , Mrs
Russe ll Young, Sunday School
Supl Sunday School 9 30 a m ,

service and • YOUQR peoples Eventng worshtp 7 30 Wed
meetong, both 7 30 P m Sun nesday prayer meehng, 7 30 p
day -Wednesday,
combtned m

Bible study and prayer CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
meetong, 7 30 P m
RENE - Middleport, Rev
THE SALVATION ARMY- Audry Moiler, pastor , Floyd
Envoy RayS Wonong, ofllcer on carson , supt Sunday schooL
&lt;;jlarge

Sunday,

10

a

m • 9 30

a m ,

Morn1ng

war-

Holiness meelong, 10 30 a m
Sunday School Young People's
Leglon,7p m , Thursday, 1 fo3
p m , Ladles Home League . 7
p m Pr~p classes
SACRED HEAKT _ Rev
Father Bernard Kra1covoc
pastor
Phone
992 2825,
Saturday evenong Mass, 7 30
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10
a m ConfesSions, Saturday 7
7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
' 1K h
R
- ooer u n, pastor George
Skonner, Sunday School supt
Sunday School , 9 30 a m ,
mornong worship, IO 30 a. m'
BYF, 6 p m, Soble Study
Wedne&gt;clay 7 p m , choir
practice, Wed , 8 30 p m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP·
TIST- 220 E Main, Pomeroy,
affiliated with s B c Rev .
Clifford Coleman, pastor
Sunday school, 9 30 a m.,

10 30 am , Junior
~oclety . 6 30 p m , NYPS 6 45
p m Sunday evangeliStiC
meeftng, 7 3o p m Prayer
o
meetong Wednesday, 7 3 P m
MIDDLEPORT PEN TECOSTAL- Third Ave , the
Rev William KnitteL pastor,
Ralph Pnddy, Sunday School
supl , Classes tor all ages,
Sunday SchooL 10 a m , Sunday
evenong servoce, 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventng Young
People's meetong and Boble
Study, 7 30 Saturday even 1ng
servoce, 7 30
.
FIRST BAPTISfCHURCH of
Middleport, corner of SOKih and
Palmer Streets, Rev Charles
Somons,
pastor
Danny
Thompson, Sunday School
Superintendent Sundav
~hurch school for everyone
9 15 am , Morning worship

Hershel McClure, supt , war

10 15 a m , Evening services,
7 30 p m , Wednesday prayer
service, 7 30 p m E•tra youth

ship service -.10 30 a m .
evening worship, 7 30 P m'
Wednesday prayer meeting and Bible study, 7 30 p m
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN _
Rev. Arthur C Lund, pastor
Sunday School, 9 15 a m,
Charles Evans, Supt, worship
service, 10 30 a m Con
flrmallon class, Saturday, 9 45
a m

POMEROY-CHESTER
UNITED
METHODIST Robert R. Card, pas1or
Pomeroy - Worship, 10 30 a
m , Church School, 9 15 a m ,
Frank Vaughan, superln
+eMent...

~r

worshtp, 9 a

m , Church School, 10 a m ,
Roger Epp~ supt
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTliST - Pomeroy, Mulberry
Hgls Herbert Morgan, pastor
Sabbath School , Saturday, 2 p
m , worship, 3 15 p m Dcrcas
Socoety, lOa. m each Thursday.
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
George Casto, pastor. Sunday
School, 9. 30, evening worship
7 30 Thursday evening praye;
service, 7

lO p.nn

ship,

I

1

serv1ce and youth servtce,

ALFRED UNITED Methodost Thursday, 7 30 p m
Church Rev Randy Lavender,
FOREST RUN METHODIST
pastor Sunday School at 9 45,
-Rev
Forrest Dcnely, pastor
Lloyd Dillinger , Supt Worshop
Service at 11 Wednesday Charles Hamilton, supl ,

evening prayer services at 7 45
p m Easter Sunrise service at

6 a m followed by breaklast on

the church basement followed
by regular serv1ces

UNITED FAITH- Robert E
Sm1th, pastor. Worship servoce
and Sunday school, 9 30 a m ,
Fred Samsel, supt , evenmg

CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Services, 315 Main Sf, PI
Pleasant

Sunday serv1ces, 11

a m. Wednesday Testomonoal
meeting, 7 30 p m.
3RAHAM UNITED METH
ODIST CHURCH- Preaching
9 30 a m , forst and second
Sundays of each month , thord
and fourth Sundays each month,

worship serv1 ce at 7 30 p . m
Wednesday evenings at 7 30,

Prayer and Bible Study

!Helen Help Us!
By Helen Bottel

·

1

A SWITCH IN TIME ....
Dear Helen .
Tins solution might not work for everyone, but it saved us from
divorce.
Within a few months after our marriage, I changed to a lazy,
surly, mdlfferent gal.
My husband was patient for a while, then he had a conference
With my Dad- and brought home one of the family paddles. I'd
felt It many limes when I was g~owlng up.
Harold gave me an ultimatum. Str~ighten up or - whap! I
laughed Within a week I learned he was a man of hts word.
Eventually, with patience and a strong paddle, Harold made a
woman out of me, and a happy one. This started 15 years ago. I
still have a tendency to avotd responstbilibes, so I sttll average a
spanking a week.
Our rule is . It works both ways. I have the rtght to spank hlDl if
he deserves tl. We have no children .
Though other couples abhor this (and some agree), we feel
paddling has made our marriage happier, warmer, and more
interestmg . - H W
Dear H·
Whatswlfchesyouon turns me off, but then Different strokes for dtfferent folks. - H.
Dear Helen
I'm not sure tfyou can reprmt parts of what another newspaper
writer - Lows Cassels-satd over two years ago, but if you can, I
think this ts worth repeating It's called "New Year's Resolu!tons
for a Middle-aged Sinner" :
During the coming year I wtll not speak rudely or brusquely to
any person - such as a waiter or bus drtver - who can 'I answer
me in kind without jeopardizmg his livelihood.
I will try at least once a day to offer an unexpected compliment
to someone who can't do me any good.! will bear wtth my wife's annoying habits as graciOusly as I
expect her to bear with my minor imperfecttons.
I will not condemn a whole class of people (students, teenagers,
judges, government workers .. TV newsmen) for the outrageous
acts of specific individuals.
I will stop telling young people thetr mustc is a clangorous noise
and admit 11 might be at least on a par wtth such cultural
treasures of my youth as "Three Ltttle Fishes in an !tty • Bttty •

Poo" ... "Mairzy Doats/' etc.
I will rests! the sin of gluttony by rigorously enforcmg a ftve·

Worship serv1ce, 9 a

m ,

Sunday School , 10 a m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
- Robert Eugene Musser,
pastor Sunday school, 9 30
a m , morning worship, 10 30,
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
sup! Sunday evening service,
7 30 p m , youth meelono.
Monday, 7 p m Midweek
service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE- Rev M C

worship , 7 30 p m , youth
meeting, 7 p.m Prayer meeting
Thursday, 7 30 p m
Lan more, pastor Bob Moore,
Sunday School Sup! Sunday
BRADFORD CHURCH OF School, classes for all ages, 9 30
CHRIST - Charles RusselL a m , morpmg worship, 10 45,
Paslor
Bud
Bartrum, NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p m ,
Supenntendent, Sunday School

9 30 a m Worship Servoce ,
10 30 a m Sunday eventng
se r v •ces, 7 p m Btble study
Wednesday , 7 p m Bradford

actovoties on Sunday, S p m , for Group Tuesday 7 p m
all youth up to si&lt;th grade , 6 30
for junior and senoor high
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
students
UNION
Darrel
CHURCH DF CHRIST, Mod· pastor Sunday School.Doddnll.
9 JO a
dleport, 5th and Maon Raul Ion m , Annie Mohler, supl ,
Moyer, pastor Thomas Kelly, Leonard Gilmore, forst elder,
Sunday School supt Boble evening service, 7 30 p m
School, 9 30 a m , mormng
prayer meelong ,
worship, 10 30 a m , evenong 7Wednesday
30 o m
worship, 7 30 p m , ornvPr
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
service 7 p m Wednesday.
GOD - Racine Route 2 The
Rev Charles Hand, pastor
Sunday
school, 9 45 am ,
MASON COUNTY

r---------------------------1
I

MASON ASSEMBL 'I' OF RACINE FIRH CHURCH
GOD -Second St , Mason, W OF THE NAZARENE Va Ches ter Tennant, pastor Sunday School , 9 30 a m ,
Su nda y school, 10 a m , Mornong Worship, 10 30 .a m ,
morn 1ng wor shtp, 11 a m , Evening worshop, 7 30 p m
evangelt shc se rvt ce, 7 30 p m Wednesda y, Sunday School
B1ble study and prayer servt Cf, Supenntendenl, Pauline McWednesday , 7 30 p m Phone Clintock, pastor Rev Morris
773 5133
M Wolfe
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
RACINE FIRST BAPTISTChns1 m Chrts1tan Umon - CharlesNorrls, pastor .,~vnday
Rev O' Dell Manley, pastor School, 9 JO a m , MOrnong
Sunday School , 9 30 a m, Rev worshop, 10 45 a m , Sunday
Guy Sa yr e, su pt , evenmg evemng worshtp, 7 30 p m
servt ce. 7 JO Tuesday Btble Wednesday evenong Soble
stud y, 7 JO p m Thursday Study, 7 30 p m
evenmg prayer mee ting , 7 30 p
SOUTH BETHEL UNITED
m Sunday even1ng youth METHODIST - Rev Randy
se rvt ces , 6 JO wtth Rog er Lavender, pastor
Sunday
Manley vouth l~aojer
sc hool , 9 am., Mrs Wilma
MASON l'IRST BAPTIST Bahr , Sup I Youth Fellowship 6
Second and Pomeroy Sis , Stan p m each Sunday at Tuppers
Craog, pastor Sunday schooL Plains Unoted Melhodosl
9 45 a m , worshtp servtce, 11 Church.
a m , training unton, 6 30 p m ,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J
evenmg worship service. 7 30 A Curry , pastor Sunday
p.m Mtd week prayer servtce, School. 9 30 a m , Youth and
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
1un1or youth serv1ce, 6 45 p. m
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE Evenmg worship, 7 JO p m
Services at 315 Maon St , PI Prayer and praose Wed , 7 30 p.
Pleasant, Sunday School 9 15 m
a m Sundays, 11 a m , Wed·
HEMLOCK
GROVE
nesday , ~ festtmonfal m~ttng 8 CHRISTIAN - Davod Stauffer,
p m All welcome
,
pastor , Stanford Stockton, supt
Morntng
worsh1p, 9 30 a m ,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
church
school,
10 30 am ,
- Letart Route I. the Rev Stan
Craog, pastor Sunday school, young peoples meetong, 6 30
9 30 a m , prayer and Boble p m , evenmg worship, 7 30
study , 7 30 p m Cottage prayer Boble study, Wednesday, 7 30
servt ce, Tu esday , 10 a m , pm
worship serv1 ce. Thursday 7 30
SILVER RUN FREE BAP
pm
TIST - Rev Howard Komble,
MASON
CHURCH
OF pas lor Sunday school. 10 a m ,
CHRIST- John Steele, pastor Henry Dav1s, supt , even1nQ
Worshop, 10 am , Boble study, se rvtce , 7 30 p m Prayer
11 15 am , evenmg worship, meeting , Thursday, 7 30 p m
7 30 p m Mid-week servoce,
CHESTER CHURCH OF
Wednesday , 1 30 p m
GOD- Rev Donald A Sheets,
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a
MEIGS COUNTY
m , Worship service, 11 a m .,
Evening service, 7 30 Prayer

morning worship , 11 a m
Evening services, Tuesday and
Froday, 7 30

TUPPERS
PLAINS
CHARGE
UNITED
METHODIST Sunday worshop
- St. Paul's 9 am , South
Bethel9 55 a m , Alfred 11 a m
{First and third Sundays) 7 45
p m , {Second and 4th Sun
days) Lottridge -7 45 p m
{First and thord Sundays), 11
• m Second and 4th Sundays
LONG
BOTTOM
METHODIST - Rev Freeland
Norros, pastor Sunday School,
10 a m , church serv1ces, 11
am
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- John
Rockhold, pastor Bible study,
9 30 a m., morning worship,
10 30, evening worshop, 7 30
p m Wednesday Bible study,
7 30 p m
STIVERSVILLE
COM
MUNITY CHURCH - Rev
Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
morntng worship servtce, 10
a m ., Dell Talbot. supertn
tendent Prayer meeting, each

Thursday , 7 30 p m Sunday
evemng service, 7 30

ZION CHURCH OF CHRISt
-

Pomer o y -HarrisOnville

Road John Webster, pastor ,
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
SuR! Sunday School, 9 30 a m ,
Mdrnmg Worship and com
munton, 10 JO a m , Sunday

evening youth Chn s lo~n En·
deavor, 6 p m , Worship set
v1ces , 7 p m , Wednesday
evening prayer meetmg and

Bible study, 7 30 p. m
ST
P•ne

JOHN LUTHERAN Grove ,

Herbener ,

Rev

Gerald

pastor

Sunday

school, 9 a m .. Church serv1ce,

10 a m
SYRACUSE UNITED
METHODIST Paul A
Sellers, pastor , Ben Qui sen
berry , Sunday School Sup!
worship servoce, 9 30 a m first
and th ord Sunday Evening
service, B p m fourth Sunday

LANGSVILLE MIDWAY servoceseach Sunday at 10 a m
and 7 30 p m Tuesday evening
worship, 7 30
SUTTON
UNITED
METHODIST Paul A
Sellers, pastor, Martha Lee,
Sunday School Supl Worship
service, 10 .liS a m ,second and

fourth Sundays, evening
worhslp, 8 p m third Sunday
ENTERPRISE
UNITED
METHODIST -Rev William
Aorson, pastor Ralph Spencer,
Sup! , Carl Jennings, assl supt
Worship services, 9' 30 a. m ;
Sunday School, 10 30 a m ,
Youth Fellowship, 6 30 p m ;
Wednesday, choir, 6 15 p m.

minute interval between the time I clean my plate and the tlDle I BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Roy Bill Carter ,
decide whether I really want a second' helpmg.
evangelist. Thurman Carsey,
When Negroes say harsh things about white people or make Bible School supt ; Bible School
extreme demands or threats .. I will keep reminding myself that 9 30 a m , mornong worship,
a m , youth meeting, 6
if I were black, I'd probably be pretty angry and obstreperous p10.30
m , evening service, 7 p m ,
myseU.
Chrostlan Workers Class,
1wiD keep a tight grip on my temper when som~one m soctal Tuesday, 7 30 p m , prayer
conversation elpi'esses what I regard as a stupid opinion about meellng Wednesday, 7 3D p m
. Vietnam, religion, pro football and other subJects I take sertously,
remerpbering that it is just barely possible he may be right and I KENO CHURCH OF GHRIST,
HObart Newell, supt Services
may be wrong.
'
weekly, 9 30 a .m. Sunday
I will order my halo now, just in case I succeed In keepmg even Preaching flrol and third
haU ol these re8oluhons. - LOUIS .CASSELS, UPI Religion Sundays of month by Charle1
Russell, 9 30 a m
Writer.
I
&gt;

Voice·

meehng, 6 30 p m , Evening
worshop, 7 30 p m
·
APPLE GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH - W.
Daoe McClurg, pastor Worsh ip

Suaday
ZJ1l~ll

Wor shtp service, 10 45 a m ,

forst

and

m

Moaday
P..tDU

second

Sunday
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev Herbert

•

Tuetday
Psalau

11 a m and 7 30 p m. Sunday
Sunday School, 9 30 a m
Rochard Barton, sup! Prayer
opeelong, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
HARRISONVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN - Mrs Norma
Lee, Sunday Schoop Superintendent Sunday School 9 30 a
m Sunday Service 8 p m Rev
Max Donahue, Middleport,

121 11-6

•

Wed..,day
Plalms
147:1·1+

•

Thunday
Galatialll
,,14-11

•

pastor.

Fnday
Ephelian•
6:17-21

BETHANY UNITED
METHODIST. -Paul A Sellers,
pastor: Blythe Theiss, Sunday
School supt Worship service,
9 30 a m second and fourth
Sundays, Evening worship, 8 p

•

m f1rst Sunday

LOTTRIDGE UNITED
METHODIST - Worshop, forst
and third Sundays, 10 45 a m ,
second and fourth Sundays,
7 30p m Sunday School, 9 45 a
Chrtsttan Endeavor, th(rd

Saturday of each month
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST - Rev Eugene
Gill , pastor William Baoley,
supl Sunday School, 9 JO a . m ,
Morning worship, 10 30 a m ,
Evenong worshop, 7 30 p m
Wednesday, Chrostoan Youth
Crusade, 6. 30 p m , Prayer
meetong 7 30 p m Thursday,
cho1r pract1ce, 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Danny Evans,
pastor Norman C. Woll, upl
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,

Thus begms the most ama zrng account of hllm an
ex -perrenct ever wrttten. And so umply, w tth JUSt
a notatron of trme: the hour, the da y, the very

':Diary
o! (0ur
':De" tiny

Worship serv1ce, 10 30 a m
Chr1stlan Endeavor Sunday
evenmg

REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS- Portland
Racone Road Ralph Johnson,
pastor Sunday School, 9 30 a
m , Mornong worshop, 10 30 a

m , Sunday evening servtce, 7
p m Wednesday evenang
prayer serv1ces, 7 30 p m

p

m,

Mrs

' But lrke a church {Jell soundmg rts carl to worshiP, that umple notatron of ttme ~!Jas becom e the
clanon of a Ne1v Lrfe.

So deeply has rt penetrated ou r pre occupatron
111tth the routine of eve ry-day exutr ~t ce that mdlto?u
gather at sr£nrrse to greet the dawu of each Easler
Day.
What has gwen m ch meuntng to one moment rn
trme?
Its PROMISE: Christ is men. The One Who smd,
because 1 live, ye shallltv e also-He lwes!
Th•s tremendous moment, for all who wonbtP
Hrm rn fatth, became the first ent ry tn tbe Dta ry
of our Destrny.

K

WilliS ANtHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING
992-2550

Wmnie Holsinger, supt Mor- pastor
mog s~ rmon , 11 a:... rn , Eventng
OLD
servt ce Chnst tan Endeavor,

7 30

moment!

With the hope 1t will, in some measure, foster and help sustam that which IS
good In family and community life, this feature 1s sponsored by the busmess
firms and organizations whose names appear below.

CARLETON CHURCH b
sunday
ongs ury Road
School, 9 30 a m, Ralph Carl,
supt Worshop servoce, 10 30 a
m and 7 30 P m alternately
frayer meeting, Wednesday,
30 P m Rev Jay Stoles,

240

DEXTER
CON.
GR
EGATIONAL
CHURCH
Lyda Rev Wollard Dutcher, pastor

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
Phone 992-3284

cheerful smcertty, F1f1 D'Orsay

CO.

Middleport

Lincoln St.

}&gt;lilans

SATURDAY
3 30 - 13, Pursuit Across the
Desert
8 30 - 3, Sebastian
9 30 - 13, The D I
11 15 - 3, My Man Godfrey
11 30 - 8, Tomorrow Is Forever
11 30 - 13, Black Scorploo&gt;and
Mad Ghoul

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HEINER'S BAKERY

M

&amp;R

Week prayer meeting Wed
45 a m Church Servoces forst
Bakers of Good Bread
nesday, 7 30 p m Mrs Mazoe 9and
Middleport, Oh1o
th ird Sundays followong
Huntington,
W.
Va.
HolstnQer, class leader
Sunday School , Second and
P'OM!ROY LOWER LIGHT fourth Saturday evenongs, 8 p .
CHURCH-Harmonvolle Road, m servtces
.
l&lt;ev Roy Taylor, pastor, Henry
BOGGS EQUIPMENT
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Eblin, Sunday School Supt
Mr
Robert
Wyatt,
pastor,
MARK V STORE
Sunday School , 9 30 a m ,
Sales· Allis Chalmers - Serv1ce
evening worshop, 7 30 p m Sunday School supt., Ronald
Prayer and pras1e serv1ce, Osborne Bible School, 9 30 a
Farm · lndustnal Lawn . Garden
Middleport, Ohio
m. , preaching 10 45 a m ,
Thursday, 7 30 p m
Tuppers
Plams
667-3435
RACINE LETART WES- Evening services, 7.30 p m
LEYAN UNITED METHODIST
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
Racone, W Dale McClurg ,
METHODIST
Cecil
Wise,
pastor Sunday School , 9 30 a
Pastor
Sunday
School,
9 30
OOMIGAN SQHIO STATION
RACINE FOOD MARKET
m , Worship servtce, 10 30 a
am
,
Morning
worship,
10
30
m , UMYF, 7 p m each SunPomeroy
Athens Road
The Store w1th A Heart
day, Senior Choor pracloce, am , Young People's service,
p m , Evangelistic service,
A
Family
That
Worships
Together
Thursday, 7 30 p m , Servoce 67 45
Racine
949-3342
30 p m Prayer meeting ,
Guold, four th Monday, 7 30 p Thursday
Stays Together
,
7
30
p
m
m , Happy Hustlers Sunday
School Class meetong, fourth
Fnday, 6 p. m , WSCS second
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
R. H. RAWLINGS SONS
Fnday, 7·30 p m ; Offoclal MISSION - Bald, Knobs, Rev
OHIO VALLEY BAKING
Board, second Monday, 7 30 p L R Gluesencamp, pastor
m
Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Roger Wollred, Sr , Sundar.
Bakers of Holsum Bread
COMMUNITY
CHURCH, School
Sup!.
Sunday
Schoo
,
Middleport, 0 .
Dexter - Rev James Queen, 9 30 a m , Sunday evening
Middleport, Ohio
Worship services worshop 7 30 Prayer meeting,
pa stor
Saturday and Sunday, 7 30 p m Tuesday, 7 30 p m Ernest
ST.
PAUL'S
UNITED Deeter, class leader Yough
METHODIST CHURCH LYONS MARKET
Meeting Wednesday, 7 30 p. m ,
'Tuppers Plains Rev Randy Ernest Deeter, leader
GAUL'S MARKET
Member of the Big 3
lavende r, pastor Sunday
School, 9 30 a m., youth MT. HERMON UNITED
General Merchandise
Chester, Ohio
fellowsh ip, 6 p m ; Sunday BRETHERN
CHURCH
IN
667-3280
Tuppers
Plains
evenmg worsh1p, 7 30 p m.
CHRIST- Rev Robert Shook,
LETART
UNITED pastor,
SchooL 9 30 a
METHODIST CHURCH - First m, RoySunday
Pooler,
sup!., Alfred
and second Sundays, preachong Wolfe, asst supt.
THE FARMERS BANK '
morning
at 8 p m , Third and lourlh worship, 11 am .., evening
ROYAL OAK PARK
Sundays, Sunday School, 10 a sermon, 7 30 p.m , alternating
AND SAVINGS
m , worship serv1ce at 11 a m ,
Family Recreation
Sunday Class meeting, 11
Tuesday evenings at 8 p m , each
PomeroyMember
F.D.
I.
C.
&amp;
a m alternating Sunday
Sw1mming
prayer and Bible Study
mornings,
Alfred
Wolfe,
Federal
Reserve
System
FLATWOODS
UNITED
Christian Endeavor,
METHODIST, Rev Wolllam 7layleado!r,
30
p
m
Sunday, Roger
'
Aorson , pastor, Robert Eason, Buckley , presodent
Prayer
supt Sunday School at 10 a m , meeting, Wednesday, .7•30
MEIGS
MOBILE HOME SALES
SWISHER
LOHSE
p. m .
Worship service at 11 a. m Board meeting first Monday
Comfoftabhi LivingPrayer meetong Thursday, 8 p each month, 7 30 p. m
Rexall Drugs
J.l.easonably Priced
m
We FIll All Doctors Prescrl ptions
MT UNION BAPTIST Pomeroy Tuppers Plains
667-3891
992-2955
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
Rev Cecil Cox, pastor. Sunday
school supt , Joe Sayre Sunday .PRESBYTERIAN -Rev .
sc hool. 9 45 a m , Sunday Russell Lester, pastor Worshor.
evening worship, 7 30. Wed' servoce, 9 a m , Sunday Schoo,
SALES Inc.
POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE
nesday prayer and Boble study, 10 a m
RCURY
7 30 p m
ERICAN MOTORS
TUPPERS
PLAINSRUTLAND
Electric Motor Repair
Phone 593-6601
CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Mr.
810 W. Main
992 _5750
John Wyatt, pastor, J S Davis, RUTLAND Fl RST BAP·
85 N. Court St.
Athens
Sunday School s~pt. , Sunday TIST - Rev Samuel Jackson,
school, 9 30 a. m, Morning oastor Sunday School, lOa m. ;
Sermon, 10 30 a m Evening Mrs Gertrude Buller, supt
SADIE'S. MARKET
sermon, 7 p m
Prayer Service, 1 30 p m , I·NEW YORK a.DTHING HOUSE .
EAST
LETART
FALLS orearh~na service, 2 o. m
Take Someone with You to Church
Meats and Groceries
UNITE D MET H 0 D I ST THE RUTLAND METHIn Pomeroy Over 90 Years
CHURCH - W Dale McClurg, ODIST - Rev, Richard C
Syracuse
.
992-3986
pastor Worship services, Pvmphery, peslar. Church
Kerml·
t
WaltOh,
f-k;r.
second and fourth Sundays of School 9· 30 a .m., worship ',
each month at 9 a m. , Sunday service 10 30 am
School, first and third Sundays
·
· ·
SUPPLY
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
of each monthat 9 a. m, second
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
and fourth Sundays of each CHRIST- Sunday school, 9· 30
month at 10 a m ; Bible study, a.m., v. H. Braley, sup!.;
Furniture and Appliances
Olurch and Office Supplies-Gifts
Wednesday
communion and devotions
Phone
985.3308
, Chester, 0.
992-2641
Middleport
LETART FALLS UNITED 10.30 a .m. Regular board
'
BRETHREN - Rev. Robert meeting 7·30, lhlrd Saturday
.
'
Shook, pastor ; Herschel Norris, ••ch m~nth
supt. Sunday school, 9.30 a.m.;
THE
RUTLAND ' COM·
Attend the Church of Your Choir''!
morning sermon, 10 30 am.; MUNITY CHURC.H -Rev
F. J.
JEWELER
evening sermon, 7:30 alter Amos Tillis, pastor Sunday
natong each Sunday. Prayer School, 9, 30 'a. ro.; Worship
BEN FRANKLIN STORE
Bulova Watches-Sales &amp; Service
service, Wednesday, 7.30 p m service, 11 a m; Wednesday
Prayer meeting , 7. 30 p m. prayer meeting, 7 30 p. m.
Ph. 992-349&amp;
186 N. Second
. Middleport . Pomeroy
.
altern•flng Sundays
Sunday night worship, 7:30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE-Rev. Lloyd
.
GOD ~F PROPHECy, G. P D Grimm, Jr., pastor Sunday
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Dai~
Smith, pastor. Sunday S~hool, School, 9, 30 a m 1 Morning
and
I
lOa m, Arthur Henson, Supt t Horshlp, 10.30 a. m.; Young
Morning Worship 11 a. m , people's oervlce 6' 45 p m • .
Young PeopiH wvtce, 7 P m , Evangelistic se~vlces 7:30 j;
...
'l'he
•.
Evedenfng lervlce, 7 30 p. m,; m Wednesday evening oervlce ,
W nesdoy Mid-Week Prayer ' 7 30 P m
.
•
.
Service, 7•30 p. m.
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Sentinel
WANT ADS
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could repeat. .
1·
Interesting handshake at the
"Follies" premtere · Lindsay's
ultra-cordtal "Hello, Roy" to
Roy Cohn, big Democraltc fund
ratser ... The Sander VanocurShirley MacLame splitup tsn't
rancorous : "I knew the ground
rules from the start," Vanocur
stghed.
!&gt;!tlllonatress Dolores Gumle
Litlman Ruspoll and her Italian
"Prmce" Ruspoll are in the
throes
of
a
nasltly
recrtmmatory divorce squabble
. Multimtlllonatre oil hetress
Puddm' Dodge's engagement
rmg from her new groom,
Curbs DeWtlt, was pinpomttiny dtamond m a Cartier setting above whtch Curt set a
magmfying glass just for the
fun and eyestram . . A very
happy 74, Walter Winchell

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Mayor J awn Lmdsa y shoc ked
the guys and gals at the March
of DIIDes dtnner wtth three blue
Jokes netlher a famtly

CO.

RAYB~ !{~~~

m

ngadoons . Put lhts on your
must-see shoppmg list along
WI th •'No, No, Nane t '""
'"" and
" Sleuth "
Great entertamment, Shelly Winters'

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"Follies" theater about to he
torn down for a parkmg lot
where one last party celebrates
the past .. . Its book vanes from
sertous to abstract-nostalgta to
htgh humor the old stars
remember thetr spotlighted
trmmphsandveryhveghostsof
the ongmal shows parade
around and among the per-

FOODLINER

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adds GalliC Seasoning • and
there's even a Barrymore off.
sprmg to ptle on the traditiOn,
Ethel Barrymore's spng, Ethel
.Barrymore Colt.

Middleport

9 00 - 8, Crash Drive
11 30 - 8, Seven Thieves
11 30 - 13, Young Phlladel

Get Married
11 JO 13, Woman In A
Dressong Room
WEDNESDAY
4 00 - 8, Just For You
11 30 - 8, Dream Wofe
THURSDAY
4 00 - 8, Jubal
9 00 - 8, Kid Rodelo
, 11 30 - 13, Wild Stampede
FRIDAY
4 00 - 8, Trapeze

The mustcal,s set 1n an old - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Cheval 1er , pres1dent Song Mrs Worley Francis, Sunday
servtce and sermon, 8 20 M1d· School Supt Sunday School,

..

SUNDAY
5 00 - 13, A Man Called Peter
9 00 - 13, Walk, Dcn'l Run
11 30 - 8, Gunslght Rodge
MONDAY
4 00 - 8, Hero's Island
9 DO - 3, The Other ~n
9 00 - 13, 24 Hours To Koll
11 30 - 13, The Painted Holls
TUESDAY
4 DO - 8, My Six Convicts
8 30 - 13, But, I Don't Want to

=.

SAturday
Pulau
+:1-1

church school , 10 15 a m ,

r

"FOLLIES" HAS A
LEG UPON A
BROADWAY RUN
NEW YORK Luctlle (Mrs
Louts) Armstrong lost her
brother, Nat Perry Armstrong,
the day after Saleh entered
Beth Israel Hospttal for hts
latest gallant ftght . Shelley
Wmlers marched mto P J
Clarke's nght after the opening
of "Follies" shnllmg "I've just
seen the worst show m my life,''
and we thought someone had
revtved
Shelley's
own 1-1
dramaturgical dtsaster of last ~
year, but amazmgly she meant U
"Folhes," Harold Prmce 's
marvelous, excitmg, splashy,
splendtd new mustcal at the
Wmter Garden whtch will be a
great btl and stay there for a
very long lime.
Harold Prince
(whose
"Company" walked off wtth the
top ftve mustcal Tony awards)
has produced and dtrected thts
new delight m the stmtlar htgh,
modern spmt ol "Company"
wtthout plagtartzmg htmself,
Steve Sondhetm has wntten
more hummable melodtes, if
sltll not enough , Alexts Smtih ts
a marvelous star, able to
suggest she mtght have been
around for a 1941 "Follies" and
sllll look totally, beaullfully
shapely,
factally
and
phystcally, gams especially, m
1971, John McMartm IS JUS I
great as her leadmg man,
Dorothy Collins has swttched
dlllmetrteally opposite her old
"Htt Parade" ootsy-poo per·
sonahty and os mftily nght;
Ethel Shutta of long-ago
mustcals and radto (wtth her
late husband George Olsen's
band) stopped the show cold
wtth sptnl and talent, Yvonne
De Carlo wtlltly plilys a role
almost Xeroxed from her own
film history , Mary McCarty has
~' .
losthershrnness(frankly,jllllll
Mary's fat!) but not her~

12511·'

Grate, pastor Worship servtce,

m

TV VIEWING

BY JACK O'BRIAN

•

third , Sundays ;

evening worship, 8 p

TO BETTER

p,.tm.

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor WorshiP serv1ce, 9 30 a.
evangelistic servtce, Sunday,
m , Sunday School, 10 30 a m
7 30 p m Mod week prayer,
meetong, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
MORNING STAR UNITED
Mss1onary meetmg, second METHODIST - Rev Wolloam
Wednesdav, 7 30 p . m
Aorson, pastor, Roy Van Meter,
- l!OCK
SPRINGS supl , Sunday School, 9 30 a
METHODIST - Rev Rochard m , Mornong worshop, 10 15 a
Pumphrey , pastor, Harold m , Youth Fellowship and Soble
Blackston, supermtendent Study , Thursday, 8 p m Fred
Morning worship , 9 30 a m , Smilh, layleader
evenong worshop, 7 30 p m ,
MYF, 6 p m Prayer meelong
and Boble Study, Wednesday,
7 30
m A mlnlstraiiVe
Counco forst Monday, 7 30 p m
- EDEN UNITED BRETHREN '
IN CHRIST- Elden R Blake,
pastor Sunday School, 10 a m ,

along
Br'Way

.service, f1rst and third Sundays

of each month at 8 p m ;
Sunday School every Sunday at
9 30 a m , WSCS, second
Tuesday of each month at 7 30
p m , Bible Study, Wednesday,
8p m
CARMU UNITED METHODIST - Paul A Sellers,
pastor , Wayne Roush, sup!

EKLY GUIDE

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Mon. thru Fri.

9:3~N~!E
1360

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J
. 6-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Apr119,

~AinnLFPORT

POMEROY

~UMEROY
TRINITY
MT. MORIAH ISAI'TISTUnoledChurch of Chrost -Rev Corner Fourth an&lt;l Ma in,
Perron, pastor Fred Biaeltna r, Middleport Rev Henry L Key,
sup! Sunday School , 9 15 a m , Jr , pastor Sunday School 9 30

Worship, 10 25 a m ; youth
cho1r rehearsal , Monday, 6 30

a m , Arnold R1chards. supt •
Morning worshtp 10 JO a m

P m , Mrs Marvon Burl,
FIRST UNITED PRES
dorector
Seno or
choor BYTERIAN, Midd leport- Rev
rehearsal , 7 30 p m Thursday, Russell Les ter, pastor Sunday
MM Pau l Nease, dtrector School9 30 a m , Lew•s Sauer,
Thursdar . all day Busy

Bee

supt ,

qullttng party m church soctal

wor shtp servi ce 10 30

am

' oom
POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Union and Mulberry Rev
Clyde V Henderson, pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Raymond Walburn , supt
Morning
worshtp 10 30 a m •
1
E'Oenlng servoce 7 30 P m Mod

MIDDLEPORT HEATH
UNITED METHODIST- Rev
Ma • E Donahue, monlster ,
Eroc Chambers, Sunday School
supenntendent Church School
9 30 a m , mornong worship,
10 30 a m , youth meetong, 7 p
m , Chotr r e hearsal, Wed
nesday 7-7 30 p m , Mrs E
week servtce, Wednesday. 7 30 Robert Hamm , dt rector
P m
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES GRACE EPISCOPAL - Rev Larry Carnahan presodong
Stanley Plattenburg, mmtster
Mornmg prayer and ser,on,

1

mtnl ster Sunday, B1ble lecture.

9 30 a m , Watchtower study,

10 30 a m Holy communocn 10 30 a

and

sermon,

10 30 a

m

ftr st

Sundays,

m , Tuesday, Soble

study , 7 30 p

m , Thursday,

Church school , monostry school 7.30 p m ,

ktndergarten through e1ghth

grade, 10 30 a m.
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr ,
pastor Bible School, 9 30 a m '
worshop, 10. 30, adult worshop

serv 1ce meetmg

a 30 p

m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH
of Chrost on Chrlstoan Unoo!ILawrence Manley, pastor , Mrs
Russe ll Young, Sunday School
Supl Sunday School 9 30 a m ,

service and • YOUQR peoples Eventng worshtp 7 30 Wed
meetong, both 7 30 P m Sun nesday prayer meehng, 7 30 p
day -Wednesday,
combtned m

Bible study and prayer CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
meetong, 7 30 P m
RENE - Middleport, Rev
THE SALVATION ARMY- Audry Moiler, pastor , Floyd
Envoy RayS Wonong, ofllcer on carson , supt Sunday schooL
&lt;;jlarge

Sunday,

10

a

m • 9 30

a m ,

Morn1ng

war-

Holiness meelong, 10 30 a m
Sunday School Young People's
Leglon,7p m , Thursday, 1 fo3
p m , Ladles Home League . 7
p m Pr~p classes
SACRED HEAKT _ Rev
Father Bernard Kra1covoc
pastor
Phone
992 2825,
Saturday evenong Mass, 7 30
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10
a m ConfesSions, Saturday 7
7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
' 1K h
R
- ooer u n, pastor George
Skonner, Sunday School supt
Sunday School , 9 30 a m ,
mornong worship, IO 30 a. m'
BYF, 6 p m, Soble Study
Wedne&gt;clay 7 p m , choir
practice, Wed , 8 30 p m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP·
TIST- 220 E Main, Pomeroy,
affiliated with s B c Rev .
Clifford Coleman, pastor
Sunday school, 9 30 a m.,

10 30 am , Junior
~oclety . 6 30 p m , NYPS 6 45
p m Sunday evangeliStiC
meeftng, 7 3o p m Prayer
o
meetong Wednesday, 7 3 P m
MIDDLEPORT PEN TECOSTAL- Third Ave , the
Rev William KnitteL pastor,
Ralph Pnddy, Sunday School
supl , Classes tor all ages,
Sunday SchooL 10 a m , Sunday
evenong servoce, 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventng Young
People's meetong and Boble
Study, 7 30 Saturday even 1ng
servoce, 7 30
.
FIRST BAPTISfCHURCH of
Middleport, corner of SOKih and
Palmer Streets, Rev Charles
Somons,
pastor
Danny
Thompson, Sunday School
Superintendent Sundav
~hurch school for everyone
9 15 am , Morning worship

Hershel McClure, supt , war

10 15 a m , Evening services,
7 30 p m , Wednesday prayer
service, 7 30 p m E•tra youth

ship service -.10 30 a m .
evening worship, 7 30 P m'
Wednesday prayer meeting and Bible study, 7 30 p m
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN _
Rev. Arthur C Lund, pastor
Sunday School, 9 15 a m,
Charles Evans, Supt, worship
service, 10 30 a m Con
flrmallon class, Saturday, 9 45
a m

POMEROY-CHESTER
UNITED
METHODIST Robert R. Card, pas1or
Pomeroy - Worship, 10 30 a
m , Church School, 9 15 a m ,
Frank Vaughan, superln
+eMent...

~r

worshtp, 9 a

m , Church School, 10 a m ,
Roger Epp~ supt
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTliST - Pomeroy, Mulberry
Hgls Herbert Morgan, pastor
Sabbath School , Saturday, 2 p
m , worship, 3 15 p m Dcrcas
Socoety, lOa. m each Thursday.
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
George Casto, pastor. Sunday
School, 9. 30, evening worship
7 30 Thursday evening praye;
service, 7

lO p.nn

ship,

I

1

serv1ce and youth servtce,

ALFRED UNITED Methodost Thursday, 7 30 p m
Church Rev Randy Lavender,
FOREST RUN METHODIST
pastor Sunday School at 9 45,
-Rev
Forrest Dcnely, pastor
Lloyd Dillinger , Supt Worshop
Service at 11 Wednesday Charles Hamilton, supl ,

evening prayer services at 7 45
p m Easter Sunrise service at

6 a m followed by breaklast on

the church basement followed
by regular serv1ces

UNITED FAITH- Robert E
Sm1th, pastor. Worship servoce
and Sunday school, 9 30 a m ,
Fred Samsel, supt , evenmg

CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Services, 315 Main Sf, PI
Pleasant

Sunday serv1ces, 11

a m. Wednesday Testomonoal
meeting, 7 30 p m.
3RAHAM UNITED METH
ODIST CHURCH- Preaching
9 30 a m , forst and second
Sundays of each month , thord
and fourth Sundays each month,

worship serv1 ce at 7 30 p . m
Wednesday evenings at 7 30,

Prayer and Bible Study

!Helen Help Us!
By Helen Bottel

·

1

A SWITCH IN TIME ....
Dear Helen .
Tins solution might not work for everyone, but it saved us from
divorce.
Within a few months after our marriage, I changed to a lazy,
surly, mdlfferent gal.
My husband was patient for a while, then he had a conference
With my Dad- and brought home one of the family paddles. I'd
felt It many limes when I was g~owlng up.
Harold gave me an ultimatum. Str~ighten up or - whap! I
laughed Within a week I learned he was a man of hts word.
Eventually, with patience and a strong paddle, Harold made a
woman out of me, and a happy one. This started 15 years ago. I
still have a tendency to avotd responstbilibes, so I sttll average a
spanking a week.
Our rule is . It works both ways. I have the rtght to spank hlDl if
he deserves tl. We have no children .
Though other couples abhor this (and some agree), we feel
paddling has made our marriage happier, warmer, and more
interestmg . - H W
Dear H·
Whatswlfchesyouon turns me off, but then Different strokes for dtfferent folks. - H.
Dear Helen
I'm not sure tfyou can reprmt parts of what another newspaper
writer - Lows Cassels-satd over two years ago, but if you can, I
think this ts worth repeating It's called "New Year's Resolu!tons
for a Middle-aged Sinner" :
During the coming year I wtll not speak rudely or brusquely to
any person - such as a waiter or bus drtver - who can 'I answer
me in kind without jeopardizmg his livelihood.
I will try at least once a day to offer an unexpected compliment
to someone who can't do me any good.! will bear wtth my wife's annoying habits as graciOusly as I
expect her to bear with my minor imperfecttons.
I will not condemn a whole class of people (students, teenagers,
judges, government workers .. TV newsmen) for the outrageous
acts of specific individuals.
I will stop telling young people thetr mustc is a clangorous noise
and admit 11 might be at least on a par wtth such cultural
treasures of my youth as "Three Ltttle Fishes in an !tty • Bttty •

Poo" ... "Mairzy Doats/' etc.
I will rests! the sin of gluttony by rigorously enforcmg a ftve·

Worship serv1ce, 9 a

m ,

Sunday School , 10 a m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
- Robert Eugene Musser,
pastor Sunday school, 9 30
a m , morning worship, 10 30,
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
sup! Sunday evening service,
7 30 p m , youth meelono.
Monday, 7 p m Midweek
service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE- Rev M C

worship , 7 30 p m , youth
meeting, 7 p.m Prayer meeting
Thursday, 7 30 p m
Lan more, pastor Bob Moore,
Sunday School Sup! Sunday
BRADFORD CHURCH OF School, classes for all ages, 9 30
CHRIST - Charles RusselL a m , morpmg worship, 10 45,
Paslor
Bud
Bartrum, NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p m ,
Supenntendent, Sunday School

9 30 a m Worship Servoce ,
10 30 a m Sunday eventng
se r v •ces, 7 p m Btble study
Wednesday , 7 p m Bradford

actovoties on Sunday, S p m , for Group Tuesday 7 p m
all youth up to si&lt;th grade , 6 30
for junior and senoor high
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
students
UNION
Darrel
CHURCH DF CHRIST, Mod· pastor Sunday School.Doddnll.
9 JO a
dleport, 5th and Maon Raul Ion m , Annie Mohler, supl ,
Moyer, pastor Thomas Kelly, Leonard Gilmore, forst elder,
Sunday School supt Boble evening service, 7 30 p m
School, 9 30 a m , mormng
prayer meelong ,
worship, 10 30 a m , evenong 7Wednesday
30 o m
worship, 7 30 p m , ornvPr
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
service 7 p m Wednesday.
GOD - Racine Route 2 The
Rev Charles Hand, pastor
Sunday
school, 9 45 am ,
MASON COUNTY

r---------------------------1
I

MASON ASSEMBL 'I' OF RACINE FIRH CHURCH
GOD -Second St , Mason, W OF THE NAZARENE Va Ches ter Tennant, pastor Sunday School , 9 30 a m ,
Su nda y school, 10 a m , Mornong Worship, 10 30 .a m ,
morn 1ng wor shtp, 11 a m , Evening worshop, 7 30 p m
evangelt shc se rvt ce, 7 30 p m Wednesda y, Sunday School
B1ble study and prayer servt Cf, Supenntendenl, Pauline McWednesday , 7 30 p m Phone Clintock, pastor Rev Morris
773 5133
M Wolfe
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
RACINE FIRST BAPTISTChns1 m Chrts1tan Umon - CharlesNorrls, pastor .,~vnday
Rev O' Dell Manley, pastor School, 9 JO a m , MOrnong
Sunday School , 9 30 a m, Rev worshop, 10 45 a m , Sunday
Guy Sa yr e, su pt , evenmg evemng worshtp, 7 30 p m
servt ce. 7 JO Tuesday Btble Wednesday evenong Soble
stud y, 7 JO p m Thursday Study, 7 30 p m
evenmg prayer mee ting , 7 30 p
SOUTH BETHEL UNITED
m Sunday even1ng youth METHODIST - Rev Randy
se rvt ces , 6 JO wtth Rog er Lavender, pastor
Sunday
Manley vouth l~aojer
sc hool , 9 am., Mrs Wilma
MASON l'IRST BAPTIST Bahr , Sup I Youth Fellowship 6
Second and Pomeroy Sis , Stan p m each Sunday at Tuppers
Craog, pastor Sunday schooL Plains Unoted Melhodosl
9 45 a m , worshtp servtce, 11 Church.
a m , training unton, 6 30 p m ,
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J
evenmg worship service. 7 30 A Curry , pastor Sunday
p.m Mtd week prayer servtce, School. 9 30 a m , Youth and
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
1un1or youth serv1ce, 6 45 p. m
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE Evenmg worship, 7 JO p m
Services at 315 Maon St , PI Prayer and praose Wed , 7 30 p.
Pleasant, Sunday School 9 15 m
a m Sundays, 11 a m , Wed·
HEMLOCK
GROVE
nesday , ~ festtmonfal m~ttng 8 CHRISTIAN - Davod Stauffer,
p m All welcome
,
pastor , Stanford Stockton, supt
Morntng
worsh1p, 9 30 a m ,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
church
school,
10 30 am ,
- Letart Route I. the Rev Stan
Craog, pastor Sunday school, young peoples meetong, 6 30
9 30 a m , prayer and Boble p m , evenmg worship, 7 30
study , 7 30 p m Cottage prayer Boble study, Wednesday, 7 30
servt ce, Tu esday , 10 a m , pm
worship serv1 ce. Thursday 7 30
SILVER RUN FREE BAP
pm
TIST - Rev Howard Komble,
MASON
CHURCH
OF pas lor Sunday school. 10 a m ,
CHRIST- John Steele, pastor Henry Dav1s, supt , even1nQ
Worshop, 10 am , Boble study, se rvtce , 7 30 p m Prayer
11 15 am , evenmg worship, meeting , Thursday, 7 30 p m
7 30 p m Mid-week servoce,
CHESTER CHURCH OF
Wednesday , 1 30 p m
GOD- Rev Donald A Sheets,
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a
MEIGS COUNTY
m , Worship service, 11 a m .,
Evening service, 7 30 Prayer

morning worship , 11 a m
Evening services, Tuesday and
Froday, 7 30

TUPPERS
PLAINS
CHARGE
UNITED
METHODIST Sunday worshop
- St. Paul's 9 am , South
Bethel9 55 a m , Alfred 11 a m
{First and third Sundays) 7 45
p m , {Second and 4th Sun
days) Lottridge -7 45 p m
{First and thord Sundays), 11
• m Second and 4th Sundays
LONG
BOTTOM
METHODIST - Rev Freeland
Norros, pastor Sunday School,
10 a m , church serv1ces, 11
am
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- John
Rockhold, pastor Bible study,
9 30 a m., morning worship,
10 30, evening worshop, 7 30
p m Wednesday Bible study,
7 30 p m
STIVERSVILLE
COM
MUNITY CHURCH - Rev
Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
morntng worship servtce, 10
a m ., Dell Talbot. supertn
tendent Prayer meeting, each

Thursday , 7 30 p m Sunday
evemng service, 7 30

ZION CHURCH OF CHRISt
-

Pomer o y -HarrisOnville

Road John Webster, pastor ,
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
SuR! Sunday School, 9 30 a m ,
Mdrnmg Worship and com
munton, 10 JO a m , Sunday

evening youth Chn s lo~n En·
deavor, 6 p m , Worship set
v1ces , 7 p m , Wednesday
evening prayer meetmg and

Bible study, 7 30 p. m
ST
P•ne

JOHN LUTHERAN Grove ,

Herbener ,

Rev

Gerald

pastor

Sunday

school, 9 a m .. Church serv1ce,

10 a m
SYRACUSE UNITED
METHODIST Paul A
Sellers, pastor , Ben Qui sen
berry , Sunday School Sup!
worship servoce, 9 30 a m first
and th ord Sunday Evening
service, B p m fourth Sunday

LANGSVILLE MIDWAY servoceseach Sunday at 10 a m
and 7 30 p m Tuesday evening
worship, 7 30
SUTTON
UNITED
METHODIST Paul A
Sellers, pastor, Martha Lee,
Sunday School Supl Worship
service, 10 .liS a m ,second and

fourth Sundays, evening
worhslp, 8 p m third Sunday
ENTERPRISE
UNITED
METHODIST -Rev William
Aorson, pastor Ralph Spencer,
Sup! , Carl Jennings, assl supt
Worship services, 9' 30 a. m ;
Sunday School, 10 30 a m ,
Youth Fellowship, 6 30 p m ;
Wednesday, choir, 6 15 p m.

minute interval between the time I clean my plate and the tlDle I BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Roy Bill Carter ,
decide whether I really want a second' helpmg.
evangelist. Thurman Carsey,
When Negroes say harsh things about white people or make Bible School supt ; Bible School
extreme demands or threats .. I will keep reminding myself that 9 30 a m , mornong worship,
a m , youth meeting, 6
if I were black, I'd probably be pretty angry and obstreperous p10.30
m , evening service, 7 p m ,
myseU.
Chrostlan Workers Class,
1wiD keep a tight grip on my temper when som~one m soctal Tuesday, 7 30 p m , prayer
conversation elpi'esses what I regard as a stupid opinion about meellng Wednesday, 7 3D p m
. Vietnam, religion, pro football and other subJects I take sertously,
remerpbering that it is just barely possible he may be right and I KENO CHURCH OF GHRIST,
HObart Newell, supt Services
may be wrong.
'
weekly, 9 30 a .m. Sunday
I will order my halo now, just in case I succeed In keepmg even Preaching flrol and third
haU ol these re8oluhons. - LOUIS .CASSELS, UPI Religion Sundays of month by Charle1
Russell, 9 30 a m
Writer.
I
&gt;

Voice·

meehng, 6 30 p m , Evening
worshop, 7 30 p m
·
APPLE GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH - W.
Daoe McClurg, pastor Worsh ip

Suaday
ZJ1l~ll

Wor shtp service, 10 45 a m ,

forst

and

m

Moaday
P..tDU

second

Sunday
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev Herbert

•

Tuetday
Psalau

11 a m and 7 30 p m. Sunday
Sunday School, 9 30 a m
Rochard Barton, sup! Prayer
opeelong, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
HARRISONVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN - Mrs Norma
Lee, Sunday Schoop Superintendent Sunday School 9 30 a
m Sunday Service 8 p m Rev
Max Donahue, Middleport,

121 11-6

•

Wed..,day
Plalms
147:1·1+

•

Thunday
Galatialll
,,14-11

•

pastor.

Fnday
Ephelian•
6:17-21

BETHANY UNITED
METHODIST. -Paul A Sellers,
pastor: Blythe Theiss, Sunday
School supt Worship service,
9 30 a m second and fourth
Sundays, Evening worship, 8 p

•

m f1rst Sunday

LOTTRIDGE UNITED
METHODIST - Worshop, forst
and third Sundays, 10 45 a m ,
second and fourth Sundays,
7 30p m Sunday School, 9 45 a
Chrtsttan Endeavor, th(rd

Saturday of each month
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST - Rev Eugene
Gill , pastor William Baoley,
supl Sunday School, 9 JO a . m ,
Morning worship, 10 30 a m ,
Evenong worshop, 7 30 p m
Wednesday, Chrostoan Youth
Crusade, 6. 30 p m , Prayer
meetong 7 30 p m Thursday,
cho1r pract1ce, 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Danny Evans,
pastor Norman C. Woll, upl
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,

Thus begms the most ama zrng account of hllm an
ex -perrenct ever wrttten. And so umply, w tth JUSt
a notatron of trme: the hour, the da y, the very

':Diary
o! (0ur
':De" tiny

Worship serv1ce, 10 30 a m
Chr1stlan Endeavor Sunday
evenmg

REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS- Portland
Racone Road Ralph Johnson,
pastor Sunday School, 9 30 a
m , Mornong worshop, 10 30 a

m , Sunday evening servtce, 7
p m Wednesday evenang
prayer serv1ces, 7 30 p m

p

m,

Mrs

' But lrke a church {Jell soundmg rts carl to worshiP, that umple notatron of ttme ~!Jas becom e the
clanon of a Ne1v Lrfe.

So deeply has rt penetrated ou r pre occupatron
111tth the routine of eve ry-day exutr ~t ce that mdlto?u
gather at sr£nrrse to greet the dawu of each Easler
Day.
What has gwen m ch meuntng to one moment rn
trme?
Its PROMISE: Christ is men. The One Who smd,
because 1 live, ye shallltv e also-He lwes!
Th•s tremendous moment, for all who wonbtP
Hrm rn fatth, became the first ent ry tn tbe Dta ry
of our Destrny.

K

WilliS ANtHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING
992-2550

Wmnie Holsinger, supt Mor- pastor
mog s~ rmon , 11 a:... rn , Eventng
OLD
servt ce Chnst tan Endeavor,

7 30

moment!

With the hope 1t will, in some measure, foster and help sustam that which IS
good In family and community life, this feature 1s sponsored by the busmess
firms and organizations whose names appear below.

CARLETON CHURCH b
sunday
ongs ury Road
School, 9 30 a m, Ralph Carl,
supt Worshop servoce, 10 30 a
m and 7 30 P m alternately
frayer meeting, Wednesday,
30 P m Rev Jay Stoles,

240

DEXTER
CON.
GR
EGATIONAL
CHURCH
Lyda Rev Wollard Dutcher, pastor

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
Phone 992-3284

cheerful smcertty, F1f1 D'Orsay

CO.

Middleport

Lincoln St.

}&gt;lilans

SATURDAY
3 30 - 13, Pursuit Across the
Desert
8 30 - 3, Sebastian
9 30 - 13, The D I
11 15 - 3, My Man Godfrey
11 30 - 8, Tomorrow Is Forever
11 30 - 13, Black Scorploo&gt;and
Mad Ghoul

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IDU

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o

8~
~

~
~
~

&gt;- ta

E5~9~g

8

, : , " :

Ill -

E-'

IIJS

c0

~~ u
QV&gt;c§S

HEINER'S BAKERY

M

&amp;R

Week prayer meeting Wed
45 a m Church Servoces forst
Bakers of Good Bread
nesday, 7 30 p m Mrs Mazoe 9and
Middleport, Oh1o
th ird Sundays followong
Huntington,
W.
Va.
HolstnQer, class leader
Sunday School , Second and
P'OM!ROY LOWER LIGHT fourth Saturday evenongs, 8 p .
CHURCH-Harmonvolle Road, m servtces
.
l&lt;ev Roy Taylor, pastor, Henry
BOGGS EQUIPMENT
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Eblin, Sunday School Supt
Mr
Robert
Wyatt,
pastor,
MARK V STORE
Sunday School , 9 30 a m ,
Sales· Allis Chalmers - Serv1ce
evening worshop, 7 30 p m Sunday School supt., Ronald
Prayer and pras1e serv1ce, Osborne Bible School, 9 30 a
Farm · lndustnal Lawn . Garden
Middleport, Ohio
m. , preaching 10 45 a m ,
Thursday, 7 30 p m
Tuppers
Plams
667-3435
RACINE LETART WES- Evening services, 7.30 p m
LEYAN UNITED METHODIST
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
Racone, W Dale McClurg ,
METHODIST
Cecil
Wise,
pastor Sunday School , 9 30 a
Pastor
Sunday
School,
9 30
OOMIGAN SQHIO STATION
RACINE FOOD MARKET
m , Worship servtce, 10 30 a
am
,
Morning
worship,
10
30
m , UMYF, 7 p m each SunPomeroy
Athens Road
The Store w1th A Heart
day, Senior Choor pracloce, am , Young People's service,
p m , Evangelistic service,
A
Family
That
Worships
Together
Thursday, 7 30 p m , Servoce 67 45
Racine
949-3342
30 p m Prayer meeting ,
Guold, four th Monday, 7 30 p Thursday
Stays Together
,
7
30
p
m
m , Happy Hustlers Sunday
School Class meetong, fourth
Fnday, 6 p. m , WSCS second
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
R. H. RAWLINGS SONS
Fnday, 7·30 p m ; Offoclal MISSION - Bald, Knobs, Rev
OHIO VALLEY BAKING
Board, second Monday, 7 30 p L R Gluesencamp, pastor
m
Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Roger Wollred, Sr , Sundar.
Bakers of Holsum Bread
COMMUNITY
CHURCH, School
Sup!.
Sunday
Schoo
,
Middleport, 0 .
Dexter - Rev James Queen, 9 30 a m , Sunday evening
Middleport, Ohio
Worship services worshop 7 30 Prayer meeting,
pa stor
Saturday and Sunday, 7 30 p m Tuesday, 7 30 p m Ernest
ST.
PAUL'S
UNITED Deeter, class leader Yough
METHODIST CHURCH LYONS MARKET
Meeting Wednesday, 7 30 p. m ,
'Tuppers Plains Rev Randy Ernest Deeter, leader
GAUL'S MARKET
Member of the Big 3
lavende r, pastor Sunday
School, 9 30 a m., youth MT. HERMON UNITED
General Merchandise
Chester, Ohio
fellowsh ip, 6 p m ; Sunday BRETHERN
CHURCH
IN
667-3280
Tuppers
Plains
evenmg worsh1p, 7 30 p m.
CHRIST- Rev Robert Shook,
LETART
UNITED pastor,
SchooL 9 30 a
METHODIST CHURCH - First m, RoySunday
Pooler,
sup!., Alfred
and second Sundays, preachong Wolfe, asst supt.
THE FARMERS BANK '
morning
at 8 p m , Third and lourlh worship, 11 am .., evening
ROYAL OAK PARK
Sundays, Sunday School, 10 a sermon, 7 30 p.m , alternating
AND SAVINGS
m , worship serv1ce at 11 a m ,
Family Recreation
Sunday Class meeting, 11
Tuesday evenings at 8 p m , each
PomeroyMember
F.D.
I.
C.
&amp;
a m alternating Sunday
Sw1mming
prayer and Bible Study
mornings,
Alfred
Wolfe,
Federal
Reserve
System
FLATWOODS
UNITED
Christian Endeavor,
METHODIST, Rev Wolllam 7layleado!r,
30
p
m
Sunday, Roger
'
Aorson , pastor, Robert Eason, Buckley , presodent
Prayer
supt Sunday School at 10 a m , meeting, Wednesday, .7•30
MEIGS
MOBILE HOME SALES
SWISHER
LOHSE
p. m .
Worship service at 11 a. m Board meeting first Monday
Comfoftabhi LivingPrayer meetong Thursday, 8 p each month, 7 30 p. m
Rexall Drugs
J.l.easonably Priced
m
We FIll All Doctors Prescrl ptions
MT UNION BAPTIST Pomeroy Tuppers Plains
667-3891
992-2955
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
Rev Cecil Cox, pastor. Sunday
school supt , Joe Sayre Sunday .PRESBYTERIAN -Rev .
sc hool. 9 45 a m , Sunday Russell Lester, pastor Worshor.
evening worship, 7 30. Wed' servoce, 9 a m , Sunday Schoo,
SALES Inc.
POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE
nesday prayer and Boble study, 10 a m
RCURY
7 30 p m
ERICAN MOTORS
TUPPERS
PLAINSRUTLAND
Electric Motor Repair
Phone 593-6601
CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Mr.
810 W. Main
992 _5750
John Wyatt, pastor, J S Davis, RUTLAND Fl RST BAP·
85 N. Court St.
Athens
Sunday School s~pt. , Sunday TIST - Rev Samuel Jackson,
school, 9 30 a. m, Morning oastor Sunday School, lOa m. ;
Sermon, 10 30 a m Evening Mrs Gertrude Buller, supt
SADIE'S. MARKET
sermon, 7 p m
Prayer Service, 1 30 p m , I·NEW YORK a.DTHING HOUSE .
EAST
LETART
FALLS orearh~na service, 2 o. m
Take Someone with You to Church
Meats and Groceries
UNITE D MET H 0 D I ST THE RUTLAND METHIn Pomeroy Over 90 Years
CHURCH - W Dale McClurg, ODIST - Rev, Richard C
Syracuse
.
992-3986
pastor Worship services, Pvmphery, peslar. Church
Kerml·
t
WaltOh,
f-k;r.
second and fourth Sundays of School 9· 30 a .m., worship ',
each month at 9 a m. , Sunday service 10 30 am
School, first and third Sundays
·
· ·
SUPPLY
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
of each monthat 9 a. m, second
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
and fourth Sundays of each CHRIST- Sunday school, 9· 30
month at 10 a m ; Bible study, a.m., v. H. Braley, sup!.;
Furniture and Appliances
Olurch and Office Supplies-Gifts
Wednesday
communion and devotions
Phone
985.3308
, Chester, 0.
992-2641
Middleport
LETART FALLS UNITED 10.30 a .m. Regular board
'
BRETHREN - Rev. Robert meeting 7·30, lhlrd Saturday
.
'
Shook, pastor ; Herschel Norris, ••ch m~nth
supt. Sunday school, 9.30 a.m.;
THE
RUTLAND ' COM·
Attend the Church of Your Choir''!
morning sermon, 10 30 am.; MUNITY CHURC.H -Rev
F. J.
JEWELER
evening sermon, 7:30 alter Amos Tillis, pastor Sunday
natong each Sunday. Prayer School, 9, 30 'a. ro.; Worship
BEN FRANKLIN STORE
Bulova Watches-Sales &amp; Service
service, Wednesday, 7.30 p m service, 11 a m; Wednesday
Prayer meeting , 7. 30 p m. prayer meeting, 7 30 p. m.
Ph. 992-349&amp;
186 N. Second
. Middleport . Pomeroy
.
altern•flng Sundays
Sunday night worship, 7:30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE-Rev. Lloyd
.
GOD ~F PROPHECy, G. P D Grimm, Jr., pastor Sunday
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Dai~
Smith, pastor. Sunday S~hool, School, 9, 30 a m 1 Morning
and
I
lOa m, Arthur Henson, Supt t Horshlp, 10.30 a. m.; Young
Morning Worship 11 a. m , people's oervlce 6' 45 p m • .
Young PeopiH wvtce, 7 P m , Evangelistic se~vlces 7:30 j;
...
'l'he
•.
Evedenfng lervlce, 7 30 p. m,; m Wednesday evening oervlce ,
W nesdoy Mid-Week Prayer ' 7 30 P m
.
•
.
Service, 7•30 p. m.
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The
Sentinel
WANT ADS
Alwa, Get Results!

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could repeat. .
1·
Interesting handshake at the
"Follies" premtere · Lindsay's
ultra-cordtal "Hello, Roy" to
Roy Cohn, big Democraltc fund
ratser ... The Sander VanocurShirley MacLame splitup tsn't
rancorous : "I knew the ground
rules from the start," Vanocur
stghed.
!&gt;!tlllonatress Dolores Gumle
Litlman Ruspoll and her Italian
"Prmce" Ruspoll are in the
throes
of
a
nasltly
recrtmmatory divorce squabble
. Multimtlllonatre oil hetress
Puddm' Dodge's engagement
rmg from her new groom,
Curbs DeWtlt, was pinpomttiny dtamond m a Cartier setting above whtch Curt set a
magmfying glass just for the
fun and eyestram . . A very
happy 74, Walter Winchell

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&amp;

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Wlthstandmg.
Mayor J awn Lmdsa y shoc ked
the guys and gals at the March
of DIIDes dtnner wtth three blue
Jokes netlher a famtly

CO.

RAYB~ !{~~~

m

ngadoons . Put lhts on your
must-see shoppmg list along
WI th •'No, No, Nane t '""
'"" and
" Sleuth "
Great entertamment, Shelly Winters'

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"Follies" theater about to he
torn down for a parkmg lot
where one last party celebrates
the past .. . Its book vanes from
sertous to abstract-nostalgta to
htgh humor the old stars
remember thetr spotlighted
trmmphsandveryhveghostsof
the ongmal shows parade
around and among the per-

FOODLINER

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adds GalliC Seasoning • and
there's even a Barrymore off.
sprmg to ptle on the traditiOn,
Ethel Barrymore's spng, Ethel
.Barrymore Colt.

Middleport

9 00 - 8, Crash Drive
11 30 - 8, Seven Thieves
11 30 - 13, Young Phlladel

Get Married
11 JO 13, Woman In A
Dressong Room
WEDNESDAY
4 00 - 8, Just For You
11 30 - 8, Dream Wofe
THURSDAY
4 00 - 8, Jubal
9 00 - 8, Kid Rodelo
, 11 30 - 13, Wild Stampede
FRIDAY
4 00 - 8, Trapeze

The mustcal,s set 1n an old - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Cheval 1er , pres1dent Song Mrs Worley Francis, Sunday
servtce and sermon, 8 20 M1d· School Supt Sunday School,

..

SUNDAY
5 00 - 13, A Man Called Peter
9 00 - 13, Walk, Dcn'l Run
11 30 - 8, Gunslght Rodge
MONDAY
4 00 - 8, Hero's Island
9 DO - 3, The Other ~n
9 00 - 13, 24 Hours To Koll
11 30 - 13, The Painted Holls
TUESDAY
4 DO - 8, My Six Convicts
8 30 - 13, But, I Don't Want to

=.

SAturday
Pulau
+:1-1

church school , 10 15 a m ,

r

"FOLLIES" HAS A
LEG UPON A
BROADWAY RUN
NEW YORK Luctlle (Mrs
Louts) Armstrong lost her
brother, Nat Perry Armstrong,
the day after Saleh entered
Beth Israel Hospttal for hts
latest gallant ftght . Shelley
Wmlers marched mto P J
Clarke's nght after the opening
of "Follies" shnllmg "I've just
seen the worst show m my life,''
and we thought someone had
revtved
Shelley's
own 1-1
dramaturgical dtsaster of last ~
year, but amazmgly she meant U
"Folhes," Harold Prmce 's
marvelous, excitmg, splashy,
splendtd new mustcal at the
Wmter Garden whtch will be a
great btl and stay there for a
very long lime.
Harold Prince
(whose
"Company" walked off wtth the
top ftve mustcal Tony awards)
has produced and dtrected thts
new delight m the stmtlar htgh,
modern spmt ol "Company"
wtthout plagtartzmg htmself,
Steve Sondhetm has wntten
more hummable melodtes, if
sltll not enough , Alexts Smtih ts
a marvelous star, able to
suggest she mtght have been
around for a 1941 "Follies" and
sllll look totally, beaullfully
shapely,
factally
and
phystcally, gams especially, m
1971, John McMartm IS JUS I
great as her leadmg man,
Dorothy Collins has swttched
dlllmetrteally opposite her old
"Htt Parade" ootsy-poo per·
sonahty and os mftily nght;
Ethel Shutta of long-ago
mustcals and radto (wtth her
late husband George Olsen's
band) stopped the show cold
wtth sptnl and talent, Yvonne
De Carlo wtlltly plilys a role
almost Xeroxed from her own
film history , Mary McCarty has
~' .
losthershrnness(frankly,jllllll
Mary's fat!) but not her~

12511·'

Grate, pastor Worship servtce,

m

TV VIEWING

BY JACK O'BRIAN

•

third , Sundays ;

evening worship, 8 p

TO BETTER

p,.tm.

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor WorshiP serv1ce, 9 30 a.
evangelistic servtce, Sunday,
m , Sunday School, 10 30 a m
7 30 p m Mod week prayer,
meetong, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
MORNING STAR UNITED
Mss1onary meetmg, second METHODIST - Rev Wolloam
Wednesdav, 7 30 p . m
Aorson, pastor, Roy Van Meter,
- l!OCK
SPRINGS supl , Sunday School, 9 30 a
METHODIST - Rev Rochard m , Mornong worshop, 10 15 a
Pumphrey , pastor, Harold m , Youth Fellowship and Soble
Blackston, supermtendent Study , Thursday, 8 p m Fred
Morning worship , 9 30 a m , Smilh, layleader
evenong worshop, 7 30 p m ,
MYF, 6 p m Prayer meelong
and Boble Study, Wednesday,
7 30
m A mlnlstraiiVe
Counco forst Monday, 7 30 p m
- EDEN UNITED BRETHREN '
IN CHRIST- Elden R Blake,
pastor Sunday School, 10 a m ,

along
Br'Way

.service, f1rst and third Sundays

of each month at 8 p m ;
Sunday School every Sunday at
9 30 a m , WSCS, second
Tuesday of each month at 7 30
p m , Bible Study, Wednesday,
8p m
CARMU UNITED METHODIST - Paul A Sellers,
pastor , Wayne Roush, sup!

EKLY GUIDE

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Mon. thru Fri.

9:3~N~!E
1360

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DIAL

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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., April9, 1971

Bargains,-B~rgains, and.More
NOTICE TO BI DDERS

Sealed

proposal

w i ll

recei'led by Mr . L . W. Me ·
Comas , clerk of the Meigs· Loca l
Sc hool
District
Board of

Education. Middleport. Ohi Q at
the · offi ce of the ·cterk in th e
Middleport Ju nior H igh School,

· Real Estate For Sale

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

be

near U. S. Route 33 . All bids
shall be in accordan ce with th e

draw ing s and specifications
prepared by Sul liv an , Isaacs
and

Sullivan,

Archi tects and

Associated Engineers, on f i le
dur ing regular office hours in
the offi ce of the Clerk, South
Third Avenue , Middl epo r t,
Ohio; at the off.ice of the Ar chitect, 1800 Reading Road ,
R:ead i ng . Cincinnati, Ohio
45215 ; at the Dodge Repo r t Plan
Rooms , 2528 Kempe r La n e,
Cincin nati, Ohio arret 133 3 W 5th
Avenue , Co lumbus, Ohio . at th e
All ied Constru ction Indu stries ,
1010 Ya le Street. Cincinnat i,
OhiO .
Prin cipa l contrac tor s may
obtain on e · (ll set of bid
documents for the purpose of
bidding on the principal con ·
tra ct from Sullivan . Isaa cs and
Sullivan , 1800 Reading Road ,
Cincinnati. Ohio 45215, upon a
deposit of Ten Dollar s ($ 10.00)
which deposit will be refund ed
to each bidder subrilitting a
bona -fid e bid, upon r eturn of the
bid document s in good condit ion
with in a period of ten ( 10 ) day s
ol the receipt of bids the entire
deposlt shall be forfeited .
Bids shall be subm it ted on th e
form fufnished with each set of
b i d documen t s or on a
typewrilten copy of that for m.
Each bid shall be accompan ied
by a bid bond, ce rt if ied check or
cuhiers check in the amount of
a. lea st 10 per cen t of th e gross
bid with the understanding that
it shall guaran tee that th e
bidder she ll not wi'fhdraw his
bid for a period of th irty {30)
days after the scheduled closing
time fo r .r eceipt of bids; !hal if
bid is accepted , bidder will
en ter into format contract with
the Owner and that th e required
Performan ce Bond will be
oivtn. The bond or check of all
unsuccessful bidders wi ll be
returned when contract and
bo nd · hav e been execu t ed .
Check made payable to the
Meigs Local School Distri ct .
Board of Edu cat ion . ·The bidder to whom contr act
Is awarded sha.ll execute and
d-eliver to the Owner wi thin ten
(10) days after the award and
before signing the contract , a
corporate surety bond in a penal
sum equal to at least 100 per
cent of the con tra ct sum, and
the cost of such bond sha ll be
paid for by the bidder .
The Meig s Loca l Sc hool
Distr ic t, Board of Edu cation,
reserves the r ig ht to r eiec l any
or al l bids , to waive in formal ilil ies and to w ithh old
final award ing of the con tra ct
tor thi rty (301 days alter
opening of bids .

The Meig s Local Sc hool
Distr ict Board
of Education
Mr . L. W. McComas, Clerk

(31 19, 26, (4) 2, 9, 41 c

WIN AT BRIDGE

...

No-T1ump
Easy as 1-2-3
NORTH
• 8 7 62

9

EAST

• Al05

.QJ9 3
.1094 3
tKJ
olo9R fi

• Q85
t 975
oloA 1042

.J

SOUTH
• K4

RATES

For Want Ad Servic e
S ct'nts per Word one ir~e r tion
Minimum C11arge 75c
1'2 ce nts pe r' word three
consecutive insertions .
18 ce nts per word SlX con
secutive insert ions .
.
25 Per cent Discount on paid
acts and ads paid within 10 day s.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$ 1. 50 for SO word ' minimum
Each add i tiona~ word 2c .

BLIND ADS

Additional

25c

Advert~fF~C~

Char p" per

HOURS

84l!-a·.m. to 5: 00p .m . Dail y,
8 :3 01 a.m .

to

(D)

7

3 p.m. weekdays, phone 992 ·
2806.
4.7·6tc

Brougham 4 Dr ., full power equipment including 6-way
sea t &amp; wi ndows, Climate Control air condtti.oning, tilt
steer ing wheel, AM-FM ~a dio , med ium green finish with
white viny l root . Ha s all of Ca dilla c's fine· features &amp;
equipment

------

CONVENIENT .bul sec luded

Capr ice 4 Door. loca l owner wi th less than 15,000 mi les,
Comfortron air condition ing, power steering, automatic
tran s .. Astra front seat , black nylon interior. Beautiful
green f ini sh wi th black vinyl roo f. Radio &amp; all other
popular accessor ies, outsta nding car with fine features .
'

6887.

f',lol.

Cleland Realty

Center . We thank the stalf ol
Hol zer's
and
Veteran s
Memoria I Ho sp ita 1 who
assi sted with Clarence . Also,
thanks to all our friends ,
relatives and neighbors who
sent f lowe r s and ca rd s. We
es pecially want to thank
Steve Van M eter of Pomeroy
for the help he gaVe Claren ce
at the scene of the acc ident .
We sincerely thank everyone

who has helped us through
thi s cr isis.
Mrs. John Lee and family

49ltp

- -- - -Notice

WILL DO ta il oring and
upho lstery . Phone 992 3561.
3·3130tc
PAYING top prices for night
craw ler s and dug bai t . Bait
store wi ll open in near future.

Bait of all kinds. Watch lor
announcement, 320 N. 2nd,

Middl eport .

4-6·3tc

Notice

For Sale

608 East Main Street
POMEROY
LONG.HAIRED
Dachs hund. ALUMINUM car top boals, 10· MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms, 3
12-13 foot. Lorenzo D. Davis,
Will give away to a good
bedroom s, bath, porches ,
King sbury Road .
home. Phone Chesler 985·
basement. GARDEN AND
3·24.JOtc
TRAILER SPACE. $9,500.
4226.
4-4-6lp
1 sto ry
DON 'T PUMP your slugg ish MIDDLEPORT frame , 2 bedrooms, bath ,
septi c tank. Gel Klean- Em HO LY WE EK SE RVICE S
glassed por ch, front porch,
TONIGHT , CHURCH OF
AII sep tic tank c leaner.
GARDEN SPACE, YARD
CHRIST, FIFTH AND MAIN ,
Landma r k Farm Bureau ,
FENCED. 54,500.
.
Pomeroy .
MIDDLEPORT . 7:30P.M.
4·6-4fc
4·9·1k
MIDDLEPORT - 8 rooms, 4
------ - - -- bed rooms, 2 bath s, por ches,
GET YOUR Easter bunnies KILL TERMITE S and yard
in sects with ARAB "Yo u-Do-garage, NEW S!GING, NICE
now . Randall Roberts, Letart
11. '' King Builders Supply
LOCATION. $7,950.
Falls, Ohi o.
4-6 -4fc
Company. Middleport .
PROPERTYISSELLING
2-21 ·60tc
LIKE MAD - LET US
OVE N
FRESH
bakery
SELL YOURS TODAY
pr od uc ts. Jimmy 's Pas t ry PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig.Zag
HENRY CLELAND
Shopr N. 2nd Ave. , Mid·
sew ing machines . Still in
REALTOR
original cartons. No at dl eporl. Phone 992·3555.
3·28·301c
OFFICE - 992·2259
ta chments needed, as our
RESIDENCE - 992·2S68
controls are built in. Sews
wi th 1 or 2 needles, makes
4·4-6tc
ATTE NTION ladies ! Would you
---__,.~--

like to try a wig on in the
pr iv acy of you r own home? ·
You can . Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oi l Kosmetics ,
Kosc o! ,
of
course.
Distributors, Brown 's . Phone

Middleport 992·5113.

12.3\.tfc

REV .' ROBER T Slewart. MI . HOME sewing . Phone 992·5327.
Vernon , Ohio evangeli st, wi ll
3·30·30ic
hold weekend reviva l a t
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church on Apri l 9, IOand II al
7; 30
each
evening .
Resurrection servi ces at 6
a.m.
Sun day
morn ing .
Everyone wel come .

GUN SHOOT every Saturday
nigh t at 6 p.m . near Racine
Planing Mill. Assorted meats.
Sponsor ed by Sy racu se Fire
Depa rtment .

4·7·3tc

4·6·41 C

buttonho les, sew on buttons,
m onograms, and bl ind hem
budget

plan

4 Piece Band
And Vocalist
from Beverly, Ohio

Whispering Pines
Nite Club
Friday i!ll,d
S&lt;!turday Nig hts

Phone 742-4461.

9·23-lfc

- , - - - - - -AUCT ION - WHEN ? Eac h
Friday night , 7 p.m. Where'
Hay man's Auct ion House ,

Lau rel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Pomeroy
Midd leporl By·

April 11, 12 noon .

Virgil B.

ava il able.

Phone 992·5641.

4·6·61c
-----ELECTROLUX Vacuum

TEAFORD
SR.

Cleaner comple te with at ta chm ents, cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in lik e
new condition . Pay S37.45
ca sh
or
cre dit
terms

Broker

110 Mechanic St.
PQmeroy, Ohio

ava ilable. Phone 991·5641.
4-6 61c MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
-~-----

1964 TRIUMPH motorcycle ,
good cond i tion, $200. Harr y
Br own. phone 985 -3833.

4·6·51p

GU N SHOOT , Forked Run
Sportsman Club , Sunday ,

Cindy Clark
and the Night Riders

-----~

stilch. Full cash price, S38.50
or

PAT IENTS to ca re for in

my

hom e. Phone Mason 773-5712.

H -12tc

-Help ·Wanted

IT'S TIME FOR
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As- - - - 63.95
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As - - - - 271.95
ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As _ _ _ _ , J34.95

WANTED

L

SENTINEL
CARRIER

GUN

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

pass.

POMEROY
J. W. Carsey,Mgr.

Phone 992-2181
CAB INET,

ea rly

American, walnut. 7-gun
capacity. Reasonabl e. One
walnu1 round coffee table,

web legs, 30x30x l8'!2 (high) .
Phone 992·2936 .
4·8·3tc
~-----

LIVE Easter bunnies. Pau l
Pierce, R I. 4, Pomeroy, 2.1
miles out Rt. 143 fr om bypass .

4·4-6tp
2-7- lfc WOMAN to do housework .
t AQ8~43
-------Phone Chester 985-3900.
olo QJ7
SKAT E A·WAY Easter party ,
4·4·6tc ·ANT IQUES. phone 992-5327 .
Friday, Apri l 9. Races , pri zes ,
None vulneJ"ah le
4·7·30tc
ba ll oons. Open Wednesday , - - - - - ------Wcsl Nol'th t:ast Souih
Friday and Saturday, 7:30 to . For Rent
TRACTOR. F30 Farmall on
1•
10:30 p.m . Ava ilable tor
ru bber , runs good $300 .00 .
Puss
1¥
Pass l N.T .
private parties, M onday, ANTIQUES. Phone 992·5327.
Phone 992·6048.
4·6-301c
Pass
Pass
Pa ss
Tuesday , Thursday nights
4·7·3lp
Ope ning lead--· 2
and Sa turday and Sunday
p.m. Phone Chester 985·3929 TRA ILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile MODERN WALNUT ste r eoCour t. Rt . 124, Syra c use ,
or 965-3565 .
radio com bination. 4 speaker
By Oswald &amp; .James Jacoby
4·4·61v
Ohio. 992·2951.
sound system , 4. speed
4·2·tfc
-changer, se parate controls .
Here is a n unu sual prob· RUBB ER STAMPS maMe lo
Ba lan ce $68 .31. Use ou r
iem . South succeeded in go·
order . 24 hour servi ce. Owain TRAILER , Brown 's Tra iler
budget term s. Cal l 992·3352 .
or Wilma Casto , Portland,
in g down two at his one no.
Park , Minersvil le. Phone 9924·8-61c
Ohio.
3324.
trump contract. He rose with
-2·11·90tc
49·61c MAPLE ST EREO · radio
dumm y's ki ng of clubs at
combination AM&amp;FM radio.
trick one- a correct sta rt. He GOO D FRIDAY services at the
UNFURNISHED
3
1oom
f ou r spea k er s, 4 sp ee d
led the 10 of di amo nd s, cov·
Mt . Hermon U. B. Church
apa rtment. Phone 992-2288.
automa
t ic chang er, dual
ered East's kin g with the
w'ifh the Rev. Robert Saun - l·31·1fc
volume co ntr ol. Use our
ace, went to dummy with the
ders. Specia l 'singing . Tim e
budget terms, or pay balance
tieart ace , led a second dia - 7:30. Everyone wel come .
TWO OR three bedroom hom e,
ol $83.29. Call 992·3352.
4-6·4tc
mond , won .the queen and led
Colt age Road, Syracuse .
4·8-61c
Adulls only. Phone 992·5133.
a thil'd diamond to Wes t 's
'
3·2·tfC
nine . West led the q ueen of would be to lead ace and an·
1968 BUL TACO 100 c.c. Lobi to.
h ea rt s which wa s won by other club, but lhis wo uld a).
New ·rain t and ca bles, exTRAILER SPACE on old Rt.33,
cel
ten condition. Asking $325
.dummy' s king. A cl ub lost Jo low So uth two cl ubs. two
1!2-mile nort h of new Meigs
or bes t offer . Must sel l. Phone
West 's ac e, whereupon a hearts a nd five diamond s for
Hi gh School. Phone 992·2941.
Syracuse. Ohio 992.7173
hea rt lead gave East .Jwo a to tal of nin e.
3·5·tfc
eveni
ng only.
hear! tric ks and a spade lead
------The
chance
for
eigh
t
t r i~ k s
4·7·6tc
back ended all hope for the
FURN ISHED and unfurni shed
--occurred
when
West
led
the
apartments. Close to Sc hool.
declarer . .
1970 .KAWASAKI 100 c.c. Trail
queen of hearls. So ulh should
Phone 992.5434.
.,
At different sta ges in 1he let t his hold . If West pla yed
Boss . $350. Larry Hill.
l0·f8.ifc
Chester, Ohio, phone 985·4105.
play , Souljl could have made hi s last heart South woij)d
one, two or three no-tr ump . make nine. If West shifted to 3 ROOM, balh, furnished or
4·8·3k
See if yo u ca n find these los t ace and another club, South
se mi -furnished
apartment .
TESTED and approved by
opportu nities. ·
2
room,
bath
, furnished
Also,
would Qnly make one heart
mltli ons of homemakers. Blue
apartment. Mulberry Ave.,
The first wa s when East trick . two clubs and five di a ·
Lus tre carpet cleaner is tops .
Pomeroy .
Ref-e ren ces
, played the king of diamonds .
Baker FurnlhJre , Middleporl .
mond s fur eight tricks .
required. Phone1 992·6698.
South could have ducked. If
4.7.71
(NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSN .I
3·23.Jfc
East le:l back a spade they
would have collected fo ur
Business Services
spades a nd the ace of clubs
For Sale
and South would have mad e
and
ONE saddle horse. One brood TREE . TRIMMING
The bidding hds been :
hi s con tra ct on the nose.
remova
l.
Fullr
insured.
Free
mare.
Dave
Yost,
Portland,
\Ves t
Nm·th
East
South
esti mates . Ca I after 5 p.m.,
Ohio. Pho.ne 843·2242.
The play for thr ee n o·
I ¥
Pa~~
2 olo
co llect
Dick
Hayman,
4·9·3tp
trump would have been for PHs!&gt;
3 tf,
P~ s~
:1.
Coolville
667·3041
or Tom
South to play three round s of Pas~
3 N.T.
Pa s&gt;Hayman, Chester 985·3509.
LOCUST POSTS, John Wel ls,
diamon ds immedia tel y. This
You, Sou th, hold:
Long Bottom. Ohio.
3·28·30tp
would pul Wesl on lead with • •\2 ¥AJ4 t63 oloKI!Ji5 3
4·9·3tp
the nine and his best pla y
What do you do now'!
PAPER .HANGJNG, painting,
plastering, dry wall. Arthur
A-Jump to fin clubs to show 1967 FORD pickup . Lime
Musser.
Phone 992·3630.
,vuu intended to pia.~· · at least a
spreader. DoubJe.barrel 12
J.28·30tp
cfuh J:"IUI\C.
gaug~ . 1890 Winchesler pump.
------~

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator- to the
Smallest Heaier Core.

BLAmNARS
Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy

992-7129
Evenings Calf : 992·2534 992·3433

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Dutton

CAL L US for all your real esta te
needs . Inquire of our listings
before you buy.

shot . Phone 247.. 2161.

We talk to you

4-6·5tc

·- - - -

------p.

\ THERE'S A MAN WRiED
( UNDER THAT MOU~TAIN 0~
LARD,
HE' LOSES
WEIGHT!!

HE'LL PI&lt;INT
SOME'MOr&lt;c

L!;.f

US I&lt;E£P ?
t.OOQOOO

JUST LII&lt;E iT!

&amp;

-t&lt;WINSOR
«BUDDY

IT MUST BE.
PIT I F'UL 10 BE
THAT AGE-

TAA'T IIIU6'T' l!le LANCIO

COMING HQM&amp;; FllOI\
H19 GOLF GAMe!

.jcCHAMPION

..,_ALSO

it: VAN DYKE

DOUBLE ~ WIDES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

BUGS BUNNY

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA .

All Weather Rooting &amp;

Construction Co.
DEXTER: , 0. 45726
PHONE 742 -3945

BACK HOE and end·loader

Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed

Rea I Estate For Sale

M15MKW!

Complete Service

George (Bi tt ) Pu ll ins. Phone
992.2478.
11 ·29·1fc

Crilt Bradford

root ing

and

spouting serv ice. Richard

Wil t, phone 992·2889.
3· 11 ·30tc

4·9·12tp SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" Ditch ing . Electric sewe r
cleaning. " Reasona bl e rates .

Auto Sales
1968 GMC 1;,.1on pickup , 23,000
m il es, new tires, camper lop,
g ood condition. Phone 992-

Phone
John
Russett.
Gallipolis 446·4782.
4.7.tfc

industrial wiring . Phone 247-

Wanted To Buy

1968 CHEVROLET Super Sport
396, 2 door, 4 on the floor, 375
H. P., $1400. Phone 949·4843. OLD furni ture, di shes, brass
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller ,
4.9.3tp
Rl . 4, Pomeroy , Ohio. Call
-----992-6271
.
1965 MUS TANG convertible,
9·1·tfc
fair condition, $300. See Dan
Road,

--~=-----4-·9 ·31p

Insurance

~WHAT'~

ON MY MIND/

MIND'?

·

CANDY A~ 'THE:
. ~1':\V MODEL I H(RED?
SWEET KID, 15NT

- - -- - -

ANOTJ4ER F=OU~ 6l.QCI&lt;:S
AN ' I !"IGURE. WE'Ll.. liE
~VENI

~Hf?

Phone 949·3821
Ra cine, Ohio

s.J.ttc

.,-,------

SEWING MACHINES . Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authori zed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

back porch, wal l to wall

PAINTING ,

SUR§., WINNIE ,
\NH/11 '" ON '&gt;OUR

C. I:!I&lt;ADFORD, Auctroneer

work . Sept ic tanks installed .

EXPERT lawn mower and
24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom ,
ti ll er repa ir. Free pickup and
del iv ery. Warr e n's Mower
with
or
without
farm ·
machin ery. House wit h 3
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
bedroom s, dining room, living
992 7357 .
room . 1112 bath s, enclosed
4·6·61c

Nelson

MUSHROOMS !!::.)

THE OLD
LAUNDR'I
LAD'/ IS
MUMBLING
TO HERSELF
AGAII-.l!!

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

'OLD WORK

Cremeans,
Rutland .

®

(-''LONG ASAH 8R!N65
HIM HIS MEALSCHOCK FULL 0'MU{)

Time You Ever Spent.

Roofing &amp;. Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting
NEW

'KJ' HOME-WRECKIN'
L!'L SNIP5.'!!!.) - ""'-

3 · ~9 · tfc

NEIGLER Construction.

For

bui ld ing or remodeling your

ALLEY OOP

home. Call Guy Neigler.
Racine , Ohio.

7·3\.tfc
RALPH'S

here ...
lookinC! at it.. .
moon\ iqht bathinC! 1
~leek hood and top!
~ittinq

CARPET

Uphol stery Clearing Service.
Free
est imates.
Phone

Gallipolis 446·0294.
3· J2.tfc

See Us At_.The_: ··- -

•

I--

SWAP SHOP
Beat ln&amp;tion!
THE BORN
.. LOSER-

WE

BUY - SELL
OR

TRADE

~

THE GREAT

..

SUILDI~(S:"'-t)~es.) ?n )
~

h

rc·

==

NEW AND
USED FURNITURE
ALSO
APPLIANCES AND
HOUSEWARES

SWAP SHOP

DO HAY£ THE LOOKS
fJ LE"AD .' BUT THE

l

._::::,

I

&amp;or

'

.

~

--c

~

1--

&gt;~

l.--1

~_;

·-~

....::

Y..tor&lt;III.Y'I Oryptoquoto: IF YOU RIIIALLY WANT TO

LOSlll WEIGHT, THlllRIC ARIIl ONLY THRllllll THINGS YOU
MUST GIVE UP: Bl\lllAK1'AST, LUNCH AND DINNB:R.GARY B. WRIGHT

DAILY CROSSWORD
DICK TRACY

Open :·
9 Til! Mon., Tues.
Wed. &amp; Fri.
9 Til6 Thurs. &amp; Sat.
992·7261
lOS N. 2nd Ave. Middleport

43: Forward

.... .-

.

9. I..oadlng
tlme in

44. One of

-·

"'1'11e Three

~ ,-

wood

3. Divine
t4 wds. 1

f . Odd

· Timor
Altar

number

word.o

TERRY

touch
26. First
Firat

~.Roger or

18. Youngster
'N;::!Ilt. Ump's
cousin
20. Type of
truck
2l. Hawk

PER

contraction
24. Aladdin's

of - -

/ Ll-.

.un...ambletheot four Jumbltt,

club

17. ea
Salaam
Z3. Poetic

2. Mount·

___ __, .... Spiteful
1~. Coin or

Jlfg~J.bl];f.:f.:~.:! ..J c

f2 wds. 1
ll . Golf

DOWN
I. Fragrant

car

10 1971 Kin![ J!euturf!ll Byndlrnh•. Inc.)

port

Muske- .
teers"
45. Poker term

&lt;

MONTH*

,'

..---4

EQQ_L '"'

~~

-

'
I'

AHAB DIDN'T
S~WN A

~'(.)

~

~

,J

MOT"Hffi 0' CAP' N

'Ftr~.-"'
(

['=:::::

HORN 5POON ... IT

_____

Francis
6.Kacaw
7. catdl flat-

Lady
28. Biblical

moun-

8. Requlr&lt;

Ye•l•nlar'a AlllW4'r

29. Aunt (Sp. 1
30. Get one'a

32. Zoo attraction
34. Maxim
39. "Thoughts
of Chair-

I

man ---··

tatn

41 . Palm leaf

22. Beef on
the hoof
2f. Count on
25. Pronoun

Will Buy A New
3 Bedroom Ranch Home

[ WILL1'

bearings

27 . Beacth
hou1e

fooled
f4Wda.l

one letter to each oquare, to
for111 four ordinary word1.

parrot

tBINI.EB

~·

I

II

WEMU

26.Make
faces

t) . .

II
rJ

'
MilllllldCIIIWIIItn

27: French city
29. Something
prohibited
·31. Part of
a circle
32. - John
Glelgud
33. AnglOSaxon coin

With walf.to.wa ll carpeti ng , aluminum
siding, F.A. gas heal, buift.fn cabinets,
etc. etc.

WHAT iHE 6\JY WHO
WOFti&lt;EP Hllt'6EL.F
IJP IN THE
151J51NE55 WAS.

Now .......... tho cln:leol )etten

tor- uw ...,n. _..., ..

1IUIItiW 117 tho..._ un-.

1rxxrir IIIJ
(Aatwen t &amp;

Yeller4•,-'•

rrow)

J•..W..• VITAL CHOKI PACIAL IIWAII

36. Book-

keePer's

entry

See Today
g
~

z

g

-c:-:c-------

.WMP0/1390

SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
Sani ta tion, Stewart, Ohiq, Ph .
662·3035 .
2·12·1fo

HAIN'T60NNit

Crow

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Welt Be the Most Profitable

606 E. Maln, Pomeroy, 0.

1st in Seroice

FREE:

o

l&gt;

8x20 Aluminum awning with any !
mobile home purchased £ri., Sat., Sun.,
"''"
Mon ., April 9-10·11·12
.~

~
COAL ; limestone. Excel•io:
Join t sunrise services will
Salt Works, E. ·Main St .. - - ' - - - - ' - FOR expert electrical work ca ll
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891".
· begin at 6 a .m. Sunday at the
992·5179.
.
•
J
D:l
H .tfc
First Baplist Chu rch in Midr
4-6·24tp r
dleport for the congregations of BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Cal '
the. Nazarene, Presbyterian and
Myron Bailey, Phone 992·5327. ALARM~! ~urglar, fire and
hold · up . Southeaster n ·~
0
·
4·4·30Jc
Baptist churches. The · Rev .
Security Systems. Cali Ray
Phone 992-71 95
.
Miller of the Nazarene Church 1965 HONDA zso. Catl 742·5042
Adams 247 ·2055 .... Mike • I Ope,n 7 Days A Week' · ' '
\
'
~
I
•
.
.
.
'
O'Brlen ,247·2l
will be the speaker. The public
atl er 4: 15 p;m.
·
3.\].jfc ~DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES - DANNIE'S ~O~ILE HQMES I
4·S-6tc ..
is invited.
JOINT SERVICES

like .a person.

singl_e

992·2580

Spencer

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

4·6·6fc 1971 FORD PICKUP, •;, ton AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
Ra nger , automati c, power
- - -- - operator's li cense? Call 992 steer ing , 360 engine, red and
2966.
HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath,
white, like new . Will se ll
phone 742·5613.
6·15·tfC
und.er dealer 's cost. A lso,
3.J0.12tp
camper top wlth or without
truck . Har old E. Hysell,
phone 742·3154.
LINCOLN ST.. Middleport .
4·9·3tc
Modern , 3 bedrooms , 1112
bath. Calf collect 1-614-962·
19=6~9-~B~U;:;:;;tc~k~.--;C:-e::;S;.;a~b~r::,:e,=. =:;:2. &amp; .
2018, between 9 a .m. and 5 ;
hardtop , power steering ,
p.m..
Monday
through
Fr iday.
power brakes , air , 18.000
miles. ~xcellent condltftin.
4·8-6tc
____.:
Phone 992·2288.
11 ·\0.tfs
2 STORY modern home, 7
rooms and bath. Can be see n 1958 FORD 6·cyllnder, excel lent
running condition . Body
after 5 p.m. or a ll day on
needs some repair, $100.
Sundays or Mondays. Phone
Phone 949-2755.
985·4175.
4·8·3tc
4·8·5fc
~-----

Afl"'RD b

I.J'L .ABNER
WE'L L NEVER KNOW IF

- - - - --

Broker

f.ICW COUlD fiE

And Conventional Loans .

4 nice '62 CHEVROLET 2 ton , 16 fl.
2113.
bedroo m s. modern bath , and
3·J2.tfc
bed,
V8
4
speed,
2
speed,
ki tc hen. Gas furna ce . Dr illed
new
rubber,
$500.00,
K·S
In
we ll. Good cellar. 57 ACRES
l Ph ton , runs good, O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Mine ral s. Aski ng $\0,000.00. 8ternationa
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
x 12 flal , $125 .00 . Phone 992·
Complete front end servi ce,
76 ACRES - 20 tra ctor land . 6048.
tune up and brak e service .
4·7·3tp
Good implem e'1 1 shed and - - - - - Whe els
ba lanced
elec cellar . 8 room older home
lronically
.
Al
l
work
wi th 4 bedrooms . Running 1968 CAMARO 327, 3·speed .
guaranteed .
Reasonabl e
Phone Mason 773 5178 or see
wa ter. $13,500.00.
ral,es.
992-3213.
John Grueser .
3·17·30ic
4·4·6tp
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
BEFORE
THEY
GO
HARRISON 'S TV AND AN·
HIGHER . CALL US TODAY. 1958 FORD 6-cyl inder, excellent
TENNA SERV ICE. Ph one
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
running condition . Body
992-2522.
ASSOCIATE
need s some r epal r , $100 .
6·10·1fc
992·3325
Phone 949·2755.
4·9·3k

Phone 985.4186
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Phone 949·3211

YES. HE EVEN
Tt-lATTI-lE' MAN WKCJ J&lt;N~VJ ALL THE
Pf-IONeD WAS TI-le RE'P.LO\IJIJEI&lt;! OF . SEfiAL NUMBERS I
TI-ltS SUITC/ISE /WD MONEY
A~E YOU SU~~

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A.. F.H.A.,

1805. Eldon Walburn .
· MIX
CONCRETE
3-28·1fc R'EADY
MIDDLEPORT
COM·
delivered right to your
MERCIAL LOT - Ne xl toM.
project . Fast and easy. Free
and R. On ly $3,500.00.
1965 SPORTS Fury . 383 cu .in ., 4·
es timat es. Phone 992 -3284 .
barrel. dual e%baust, 4 speed ,
Goeglein Ready ~ Mix Co., ·
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroo m
black inside !hd out. Rear
Middleport. Ohio.
one story hou se nea r store s.
seat reverberator . $950.
6·30.ff c
Bath , la rg e kitchen and
Original owner. Call 992-6977 - - - - - - dining area . 2 level lots . On ly
after 6 p.m .
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service .
$5,000.00.
~·Hlp
Commercial, resi-dent ial and

George S. Hobsleller, Jr.

COM' ERE.!
nlAT'S Tf.IE J.AST
TIME VOU'RE GONNA
LOSS I'OUR MITTJ

MITT~ WHO TOOK
MV MITT~

reen Hill Homes- Inc.

$5.55

4 bedrooms.

HOBStEnER
REAL ESTATE

WHERE'!: MV

You will have sonlething of value to show for the $SS you
spe nd w hen you buy your own hom e - plus, you gain an
Income Tax bene fit. you build an equity and you are not
bound by the terms of a renta l agreement.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

614·985·3938 .

COUNTRY HOME -

Cll911-

Come See Us At 97 V&gt;N. Second St., Middleport.

garage. S\4 ,500.00.

Asking 513,000.00.

IN RENT?

AND HIS

- - - - - - -Hopkms and Aliens

~:;::::::::;;.....\.._:C:.:.A:I\I~G=IT WARMED UP!!

* A STACK OF WORTHlESS RECEJPTS! ! * ·

carpet ing . Aluminum siding ,
awning , storm windows and
s'to rm door s. City water .
Selling due to ill health. Phone

bath , dini ng with fir eplace.
Full basement. Gas furna ce. 3
por ches. Mod ern kitchen ,
pan ele d . La r ge garden.

Mowers ·&amp; Tillers

Wanted

.

THE $$$YOU PAY

bath , gas for ced a ir furnace
wil h
air
co nditioning .
Beautiful kitchen w ith cook
and oven units. Nice 2 car

SYRACUSE -

4·1·3tc

TH ' HOUSE ,
OL' BULLET-- NOW WE

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

H -2tc

POMEROY, OHIO

Card of Thanks
and their
my son ,
Veteran s
and then
Medica I

.

THINK ABOUT Ill

Radiator SeiVice

J.l.lfc

ral)ch house, l.a~ge living ,
dining , and famtly rooms .
Basement, 2 car garage. All
electric central air . Very
com fortable. Upper twen ties.
New Haven , Weekends only.
Phone New Haven 882 -2712.

WE WI SH to thank the Pomeroy
emergency squad
men . for assisting
Clarence,
to
Mem or ial Hospi tal
ta ter to Ho lzer

\

SPAC IOU S 3 bedroom brick

Patneroy llotor Co.

Sa turctav

.EXPERIENCED

building lo ts on T7 9 at ROc k
Springs . Wit hi n . wal~ing
distance of Me1gs High
School, a 5 minut e dri ve f r om
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI
Wi 1le weekends , or after 5
p.m. wee kdays . P.hone 992-

$329S

OP.EM EVES. 8:00

~

located in Syracuse. Ca ll after

S399S

1969 CHEVROLET

BARNEY

Business Services

-HOU- - -SE. 4 r ooms, bath , 2 lOts
&lt;

1968 CADILLAC

Noon

12:00

percentag e basis. Call Jim
Adams , auct ioneer , Rutland .

WEST

QUALIIY

REGULATIONS

WILL PICK up merchand ise
and take to auction on a

• A·K62
• 10 2
oloK5 3

, OF

Sentinel Classifieds

.-------------~-----------:-----:--t;

HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts .,
Pomeroy. Phone 992:2293. ·
10·25·tfC .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

s P .M. Day Before Publ ication
MDnday Deadline 9a .m.
Cance llat ion &amp; Co r rections
W iII be acce pted unt119 a.m . f
Day of Pub lic ation

South Third Avenue . Mid .
The Publisher r eserv es th e.
dleporL Ohio 45760 , unfil 12 :00
o 'c locJ( noon E .S.T . April 19, right to edit or' rejec t any ads
ob jectional.
Th e
1971. aod opened and r·ead aloud deemed
wiH
not
be
responsible
pub
l
isher
immediately therea ft er . Bids
are being taken tor th e in . tor mor e than one incorrect
staltation of air conditioning in insert ion .
variOJS areas ol the New Me igs
High School located on C, H . 25

In

Bargain~

~

DANNIE'S AT POMEROY· ;

~

~

~

CAP!' AIN EASY .

At 203 Park St., Middleport, or r.a ll AI
Moody, 992.7034, for appointment

·'!HI! WRfRPO'f'IIA5TV ~HOT Ml~!&gt;e;:; AND

I&gt;IJCJV LUiiGii.. FOR. HI!&gt; GU"''

'

. oveR~

An~,~ the sixBunny.Wamiles

fabbr.)
36. Devour
· 37. Performed
38. Fragrance
40. 0. T. book
42. Of one's

so.ld 'l""''.nlQht, and went to
sleep. The it Qdventure litis over
and all had ended well. Jilt fnd

btrth

Jf."sa.sed on family income of $5,1100 with three

D.ULY CRYPIOQUOTE,..:.He~'a how to work It:

chtldren , taxes· and Insur-ance not Included.

AXYDLBAAXR
11 LONGFELLOW
One le tier slmpty standi lor another.
this urnple A Is

JEMO ASSOCIATES
Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.
Middleport, Ohio

"

lliAT WAS ~E MOST EXCITING .
NOVEL I'VE EVER READ ... I
THINK I'LL WRITE A FAN
LETTER '10 T~S AtmlOR,..

.

In

uaed. for \tie three L'a, X for the two 0'1, etc. Single letters,'
apo1trophes. the length and formation of the WordR are all
htntt~ . Eaeh da:v the code lettel'l are different.

or 1-268·1

'' MISS I-IELEN SWEETSTOR'1'"

A Cryptornm, QuotattGn

N MH0 H

. TH"ON.

BW

.K F

WNDOBG ·BN "E,

I

GH ZH K WH.

H ·Y .

RVRBKWN

NMH

I

B S 0 R T.N

F .Z

JCBGVSRK

R

K H Q

B Q .H R .

SQ\IEHOW, I HAVE THE

FEELIN6 THAT SHE'S A
VERI{ NICE PERSON ...

0 .Q.

,I '

-----

.- -

~-

•·

...

�-,

'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., April9, 1971

Bargains,-B~rgains, and.More
NOTICE TO BI DDERS

Sealed

proposal

w i ll

recei'led by Mr . L . W. Me ·
Comas , clerk of the Meigs· Loca l
Sc hool
District
Board of

Education. Middleport. Ohi Q at
the · offi ce of the ·cterk in th e
Middleport Ju nior H igh School,

· Real Estate For Sale

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

be

near U. S. Route 33 . All bids
shall be in accordan ce with th e

draw ing s and specifications
prepared by Sul liv an , Isaacs
and

Sullivan,

Archi tects and

Associated Engineers, on f i le
dur ing regular office hours in
the offi ce of the Clerk, South
Third Avenue , Middl epo r t,
Ohio; at the off.ice of the Ar chitect, 1800 Reading Road ,
R:ead i ng . Cincinnati, Ohio
45215 ; at the Dodge Repo r t Plan
Rooms , 2528 Kempe r La n e,
Cincin nati, Ohio arret 133 3 W 5th
Avenue , Co lumbus, Ohio . at th e
All ied Constru ction Indu stries ,
1010 Ya le Street. Cincinnat i,
OhiO .
Prin cipa l contrac tor s may
obtain on e · (ll set of bid
documents for the purpose of
bidding on the principal con ·
tra ct from Sullivan . Isaa cs and
Sullivan , 1800 Reading Road ,
Cincinnati. Ohio 45215, upon a
deposit of Ten Dollar s ($ 10.00)
which deposit will be refund ed
to each bidder subrilitting a
bona -fid e bid, upon r eturn of the
bid document s in good condit ion
with in a period of ten ( 10 ) day s
ol the receipt of bids the entire
deposlt shall be forfeited .
Bids shall be subm it ted on th e
form fufnished with each set of
b i d documen t s or on a
typewrilten copy of that for m.
Each bid shall be accompan ied
by a bid bond, ce rt if ied check or
cuhiers check in the amount of
a. lea st 10 per cen t of th e gross
bid with the understanding that
it shall guaran tee that th e
bidder she ll not wi'fhdraw his
bid for a period of th irty {30)
days after the scheduled closing
time fo r .r eceipt of bids; !hal if
bid is accepted , bidder will
en ter into format contract with
the Owner and that th e required
Performan ce Bond will be
oivtn. The bond or check of all
unsuccessful bidders wi ll be
returned when contract and
bo nd · hav e been execu t ed .
Check made payable to the
Meigs Local School Distri ct .
Board of Edu cat ion . ·The bidder to whom contr act
Is awarded sha.ll execute and
d-eliver to the Owner wi thin ten
(10) days after the award and
before signing the contract , a
corporate surety bond in a penal
sum equal to at least 100 per
cent of the con tra ct sum, and
the cost of such bond sha ll be
paid for by the bidder .
The Meig s Loca l Sc hool
Distr ic t, Board of Edu cation,
reserves the r ig ht to r eiec l any
or al l bids , to waive in formal ilil ies and to w ithh old
final award ing of the con tra ct
tor thi rty (301 days alter
opening of bids .

The Meig s Local Sc hool
Distr ict Board
of Education
Mr . L. W. McComas, Clerk

(31 19, 26, (4) 2, 9, 41 c

WIN AT BRIDGE

...

No-T1ump
Easy as 1-2-3
NORTH
• 8 7 62

9

EAST

• Al05

.QJ9 3
.1094 3
tKJ
olo9R fi

• Q85
t 975
oloA 1042

.J

SOUTH
• K4

RATES

For Want Ad Servic e
S ct'nts per Word one ir~e r tion
Minimum C11arge 75c
1'2 ce nts pe r' word three
consecutive insertions .
18 ce nts per word SlX con
secutive insert ions .
.
25 Per cent Discount on paid
acts and ads paid within 10 day s.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$ 1. 50 for SO word ' minimum
Each add i tiona~ word 2c .

BLIND ADS

Additional

25c

Advert~fF~C~

Char p" per

HOURS

84l!-a·.m. to 5: 00p .m . Dail y,
8 :3 01 a.m .

to

(D)

7

3 p.m. weekdays, phone 992 ·
2806.
4.7·6tc

Brougham 4 Dr ., full power equipment including 6-way
sea t &amp; wi ndows, Climate Control air condtti.oning, tilt
steer ing wheel, AM-FM ~a dio , med ium green finish with
white viny l root . Ha s all of Ca dilla c's fine· features &amp;
equipment

------

CONVENIENT .bul sec luded

Capr ice 4 Door. loca l owner wi th less than 15,000 mi les,
Comfortron air condition ing, power steering, automatic
tran s .. Astra front seat , black nylon interior. Beautiful
green f ini sh wi th black vinyl roo f. Radio &amp; all other
popular accessor ies, outsta nding car with fine features .
'

6887.

f',lol.

Cleland Realty

Center . We thank the stalf ol
Hol zer's
and
Veteran s
Memoria I Ho sp ita 1 who
assi sted with Clarence . Also,
thanks to all our friends ,
relatives and neighbors who
sent f lowe r s and ca rd s. We
es pecially want to thank
Steve Van M eter of Pomeroy
for the help he gaVe Claren ce
at the scene of the acc ident .
We sincerely thank everyone

who has helped us through
thi s cr isis.
Mrs. John Lee and family

49ltp

- -- - -Notice

WILL DO ta il oring and
upho lstery . Phone 992 3561.
3·3130tc
PAYING top prices for night
craw ler s and dug bai t . Bait
store wi ll open in near future.

Bait of all kinds. Watch lor
announcement, 320 N. 2nd,

Middl eport .

4-6·3tc

Notice

For Sale

608 East Main Street
POMEROY
LONG.HAIRED
Dachs hund. ALUMINUM car top boals, 10· MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms, 3
12-13 foot. Lorenzo D. Davis,
Will give away to a good
bedroom s, bath, porches ,
King sbury Road .
home. Phone Chesler 985·
basement. GARDEN AND
3·24.JOtc
TRAILER SPACE. $9,500.
4226.
4-4-6lp
1 sto ry
DON 'T PUMP your slugg ish MIDDLEPORT frame , 2 bedrooms, bath ,
septi c tank. Gel Klean- Em HO LY WE EK SE RVICE S
glassed por ch, front porch,
TONIGHT , CHURCH OF
AII sep tic tank c leaner.
GARDEN SPACE, YARD
CHRIST, FIFTH AND MAIN ,
Landma r k Farm Bureau ,
FENCED. 54,500.
.
Pomeroy .
MIDDLEPORT . 7:30P.M.
4·6-4fc
4·9·1k
MIDDLEPORT - 8 rooms, 4
------ - - -- bed rooms, 2 bath s, por ches,
GET YOUR Easter bunnies KILL TERMITE S and yard
in sects with ARAB "Yo u-Do-garage, NEW S!GING, NICE
now . Randall Roberts, Letart
11. '' King Builders Supply
LOCATION. $7,950.
Falls, Ohi o.
4-6 -4fc
Company. Middleport .
PROPERTYISSELLING
2-21 ·60tc
LIKE MAD - LET US
OVE N
FRESH
bakery
SELL YOURS TODAY
pr od uc ts. Jimmy 's Pas t ry PAINT DAMAGE, 1971 Zig.Zag
HENRY CLELAND
Shopr N. 2nd Ave. , Mid·
sew ing machines . Still in
REALTOR
original cartons. No at dl eporl. Phone 992·3555.
3·28·301c
OFFICE - 992·2259
ta chments needed, as our
RESIDENCE - 992·2S68
controls are built in. Sews
wi th 1 or 2 needles, makes
4·4-6tc
ATTE NTION ladies ! Would you
---__,.~--

like to try a wig on in the
pr iv acy of you r own home? ·
You can . Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oi l Kosmetics ,
Kosc o! ,
of
course.
Distributors, Brown 's . Phone

Middleport 992·5113.

12.3\.tfc

REV .' ROBER T Slewart. MI . HOME sewing . Phone 992·5327.
Vernon , Ohio evangeli st, wi ll
3·30·30ic
hold weekend reviva l a t
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church on Apri l 9, IOand II al
7; 30
each
evening .
Resurrection servi ces at 6
a.m.
Sun day
morn ing .
Everyone wel come .

GUN SHOOT every Saturday
nigh t at 6 p.m . near Racine
Planing Mill. Assorted meats.
Sponsor ed by Sy racu se Fire
Depa rtment .

4·7·3tc

4·6·41 C

buttonho les, sew on buttons,
m onograms, and bl ind hem
budget

plan

4 Piece Band
And Vocalist
from Beverly, Ohio

Whispering Pines
Nite Club
Friday i!ll,d
S&lt;!turday Nig hts

Phone 742-4461.

9·23-lfc

- , - - - - - -AUCT ION - WHEN ? Eac h
Friday night , 7 p.m. Where'
Hay man's Auct ion House ,

Lau rel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Pomeroy
Midd leporl By·

April 11, 12 noon .

Virgil B.

ava il able.

Phone 992·5641.

4·6·61c
-----ELECTROLUX Vacuum

TEAFORD
SR.

Cleaner comple te with at ta chm ents, cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in lik e
new condition . Pay S37.45
ca sh
or
cre dit
terms

Broker

110 Mechanic St.
PQmeroy, Ohio

ava ilable. Phone 991·5641.
4-6 61c MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
-~-----

1964 TRIUMPH motorcycle ,
good cond i tion, $200. Harr y
Br own. phone 985 -3833.

4·6·51p

GU N SHOOT , Forked Run
Sportsman Club , Sunday ,

Cindy Clark
and the Night Riders

-----~

stilch. Full cash price, S38.50
or

PAT IENTS to ca re for in

my

hom e. Phone Mason 773-5712.

H -12tc

-Help ·Wanted

IT'S TIME FOR
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As- - - - 63.95
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As - - - - 271.95
ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As _ _ _ _ , J34.95

WANTED

L

SENTINEL
CARRIER

GUN

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

pass.

POMEROY
J. W. Carsey,Mgr.

Phone 992-2181
CAB INET,

ea rly

American, walnut. 7-gun
capacity. Reasonabl e. One
walnu1 round coffee table,

web legs, 30x30x l8'!2 (high) .
Phone 992·2936 .
4·8·3tc
~-----

LIVE Easter bunnies. Pau l
Pierce, R I. 4, Pomeroy, 2.1
miles out Rt. 143 fr om bypass .

4·4-6tp
2-7- lfc WOMAN to do housework .
t AQ8~43
-------Phone Chester 985-3900.
olo QJ7
SKAT E A·WAY Easter party ,
4·4·6tc ·ANT IQUES. phone 992-5327 .
Friday, Apri l 9. Races , pri zes ,
None vulneJ"ah le
4·7·30tc
ba ll oons. Open Wednesday , - - - - - ------Wcsl Nol'th t:ast Souih
Friday and Saturday, 7:30 to . For Rent
TRACTOR. F30 Farmall on
1•
10:30 p.m . Ava ilable tor
ru bber , runs good $300 .00 .
Puss
1¥
Pass l N.T .
private parties, M onday, ANTIQUES. Phone 992·5327.
Phone 992·6048.
4·6-301c
Pass
Pass
Pa ss
Tuesday , Thursday nights
4·7·3lp
Ope ning lead--· 2
and Sa turday and Sunday
p.m. Phone Chester 985·3929 TRA ILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile MODERN WALNUT ste r eoCour t. Rt . 124, Syra c use ,
or 965-3565 .
radio com bination. 4 speaker
By Oswald &amp; .James Jacoby
4·4·61v
Ohio. 992·2951.
sound system , 4. speed
4·2·tfc
-changer, se parate controls .
Here is a n unu sual prob· RUBB ER STAMPS maMe lo
Ba lan ce $68 .31. Use ou r
iem . South succeeded in go·
order . 24 hour servi ce. Owain TRAILER , Brown 's Tra iler
budget term s. Cal l 992·3352 .
or Wilma Casto , Portland,
in g down two at his one no.
Park , Minersvil le. Phone 9924·8-61c
Ohio.
3324.
trump contract. He rose with
-2·11·90tc
49·61c MAPLE ST EREO · radio
dumm y's ki ng of clubs at
combination AM&amp;FM radio.
trick one- a correct sta rt. He GOO D FRIDAY services at the
UNFURNISHED
3
1oom
f ou r spea k er s, 4 sp ee d
led the 10 of di amo nd s, cov·
Mt . Hermon U. B. Church
apa rtment. Phone 992-2288.
automa
t ic chang er, dual
ered East's kin g with the
w'ifh the Rev. Robert Saun - l·31·1fc
volume co ntr ol. Use our
ace, went to dummy with the
ders. Specia l 'singing . Tim e
budget terms, or pay balance
tieart ace , led a second dia - 7:30. Everyone wel come .
TWO OR three bedroom hom e,
ol $83.29. Call 992·3352.
4-6·4tc
mond , won .the queen and led
Colt age Road, Syracuse .
4·8-61c
Adulls only. Phone 992·5133.
a thil'd diamond to Wes t 's
'
3·2·tfC
nine . West led the q ueen of would be to lead ace and an·
1968 BUL TACO 100 c.c. Lobi to.
h ea rt s which wa s won by other club, but lhis wo uld a).
New ·rain t and ca bles, exTRAILER SPACE on old Rt.33,
cel
ten condition. Asking $325
.dummy' s king. A cl ub lost Jo low So uth two cl ubs. two
1!2-mile nort h of new Meigs
or bes t offer . Must sel l. Phone
West 's ac e, whereupon a hearts a nd five diamond s for
Hi gh School. Phone 992·2941.
Syracuse. Ohio 992.7173
hea rt lead gave East .Jwo a to tal of nin e.
3·5·tfc
eveni
ng only.
hear! tric ks and a spade lead
------The
chance
for
eigh
t
t r i~ k s
4·7·6tc
back ended all hope for the
FURN ISHED and unfurni shed
--occurred
when
West
led
the
apartments. Close to Sc hool.
declarer . .
1970 .KAWASAKI 100 c.c. Trail
queen of hearls. So ulh should
Phone 992.5434.
.,
At different sta ges in 1he let t his hold . If West pla yed
Boss . $350. Larry Hill.
l0·f8.ifc
Chester, Ohio, phone 985·4105.
play , Souljl could have made hi s last heart South woij)d
one, two or three no-tr ump . make nine. If West shifted to 3 ROOM, balh, furnished or
4·8·3k
See if yo u ca n find these los t ace and another club, South
se mi -furnished
apartment .
TESTED and approved by
opportu nities. ·
2
room,
bath
, furnished
Also,
would Qnly make one heart
mltli ons of homemakers. Blue
apartment. Mulberry Ave.,
The first wa s when East trick . two clubs and five di a ·
Lus tre carpet cleaner is tops .
Pomeroy .
Ref-e ren ces
, played the king of diamonds .
Baker FurnlhJre , Middleporl .
mond s fur eight tricks .
required. Phone1 992·6698.
South could have ducked. If
4.7.71
(NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSN .I
3·23.Jfc
East le:l back a spade they
would have collected fo ur
Business Services
spades a nd the ace of clubs
For Sale
and South would have mad e
and
ONE saddle horse. One brood TREE . TRIMMING
The bidding hds been :
hi s con tra ct on the nose.
remova
l.
Fullr
insured.
Free
mare.
Dave
Yost,
Portland,
\Ves t
Nm·th
East
South
esti mates . Ca I after 5 p.m.,
Ohio. Pho.ne 843·2242.
The play for thr ee n o·
I ¥
Pa~~
2 olo
co llect
Dick
Hayman,
4·9·3tp
trump would have been for PHs!&gt;
3 tf,
P~ s~
:1.
Coolville
667·3041
or Tom
South to play three round s of Pas~
3 N.T.
Pa s&gt;Hayman, Chester 985·3509.
LOCUST POSTS, John Wel ls,
diamon ds immedia tel y. This
You, Sou th, hold:
Long Bottom. Ohio.
3·28·30tp
would pul Wesl on lead with • •\2 ¥AJ4 t63 oloKI!Ji5 3
4·9·3tp
the nine and his best pla y
What do you do now'!
PAPER .HANGJNG, painting,
plastering, dry wall. Arthur
A-Jump to fin clubs to show 1967 FORD pickup . Lime
Musser.
Phone 992·3630.
,vuu intended to pia.~· · at least a
spreader. DoubJe.barrel 12
J.28·30tp
cfuh J:"IUI\C.
gaug~ . 1890 Winchesler pump.
------~

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator- to the
Smallest Heaier Core.

BLAmNARS
Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy

992-7129
Evenings Calf : 992·2534 992·3433

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Dutton

CAL L US for all your real esta te
needs . Inquire of our listings
before you buy.

shot . Phone 247.. 2161.

We talk to you

4-6·5tc

·- - - -

------p.

\ THERE'S A MAN WRiED
( UNDER THAT MOU~TAIN 0~
LARD,
HE' LOSES
WEIGHT!!

HE'LL PI&lt;INT
SOME'MOr&lt;c

L!;.f

US I&lt;E£P ?
t.OOQOOO

JUST LII&lt;E iT!

&amp;

-t&lt;WINSOR
«BUDDY

IT MUST BE.
PIT I F'UL 10 BE
THAT AGE-

TAA'T IIIU6'T' l!le LANCIO

COMING HQM&amp;; FllOI\
H19 GOLF GAMe!

.jcCHAMPION

..,_ALSO

it: VAN DYKE

DOUBLE ~ WIDES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

BUGS BUNNY

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA .

All Weather Rooting &amp;

Construction Co.
DEXTER: , 0. 45726
PHONE 742 -3945

BACK HOE and end·loader

Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed

Rea I Estate For Sale

M15MKW!

Complete Service

George (Bi tt ) Pu ll ins. Phone
992.2478.
11 ·29·1fc

Crilt Bradford

root ing

and

spouting serv ice. Richard

Wil t, phone 992·2889.
3· 11 ·30tc

4·9·12tp SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" Ditch ing . Electric sewe r
cleaning. " Reasona bl e rates .

Auto Sales
1968 GMC 1;,.1on pickup , 23,000
m il es, new tires, camper lop,
g ood condition. Phone 992-

Phone
John
Russett.
Gallipolis 446·4782.
4.7.tfc

industrial wiring . Phone 247-

Wanted To Buy

1968 CHEVROLET Super Sport
396, 2 door, 4 on the floor, 375
H. P., $1400. Phone 949·4843. OLD furni ture, di shes, brass
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller ,
4.9.3tp
Rl . 4, Pomeroy , Ohio. Call
-----992-6271
.
1965 MUS TANG convertible,
9·1·tfc
fair condition, $300. See Dan
Road,

--~=-----4-·9 ·31p

Insurance

~WHAT'~

ON MY MIND/

MIND'?

·

CANDY A~ 'THE:
. ~1':\V MODEL I H(RED?
SWEET KID, 15NT

- - -- - -

ANOTJ4ER F=OU~ 6l.QCI&lt;:S
AN ' I !"IGURE. WE'Ll.. liE
~VENI

~Hf?

Phone 949·3821
Ra cine, Ohio

s.J.ttc

.,-,------

SEWING MACHINES . Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authori zed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

back porch, wal l to wall

PAINTING ,

SUR§., WINNIE ,
\NH/11 '" ON '&gt;OUR

C. I:!I&lt;ADFORD, Auctroneer

work . Sept ic tanks installed .

EXPERT lawn mower and
24 ACRE FARM, Long Bottom ,
ti ll er repa ir. Free pickup and
del iv ery. Warr e n's Mower
with
or
without
farm ·
machin ery. House wit h 3
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
bedroom s, dining room, living
992 7357 .
room . 1112 bath s, enclosed
4·6·61c

Nelson

MUSHROOMS !!::.)

THE OLD
LAUNDR'I
LAD'/ IS
MUMBLING
TO HERSELF
AGAII-.l!!

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

'OLD WORK

Cremeans,
Rutland .

®

(-''LONG ASAH 8R!N65
HIM HIS MEALSCHOCK FULL 0'MU{)

Time You Ever Spent.

Roofing &amp;. Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting
NEW

'KJ' HOME-WRECKIN'
L!'L SNIP5.'!!!.) - ""'-

3 · ~9 · tfc

NEIGLER Construction.

For

bui ld ing or remodeling your

ALLEY OOP

home. Call Guy Neigler.
Racine , Ohio.

7·3\.tfc
RALPH'S

here ...
lookinC! at it.. .
moon\ iqht bathinC! 1
~leek hood and top!
~ittinq

CARPET

Uphol stery Clearing Service.
Free
est imates.
Phone

Gallipolis 446·0294.
3· J2.tfc

See Us At_.The_: ··- -

•

I--

SWAP SHOP
Beat ln&amp;tion!
THE BORN
.. LOSER-

WE

BUY - SELL
OR

TRADE

~

THE GREAT

..

SUILDI~(S:"'-t)~es.) ?n )
~

h

rc·

==

NEW AND
USED FURNITURE
ALSO
APPLIANCES AND
HOUSEWARES

SWAP SHOP

DO HAY£ THE LOOKS
fJ LE"AD .' BUT THE

l

._::::,

I

&amp;or

'

.

~

--c

~

1--

&gt;~

l.--1

~_;

·-~

....::

Y..tor&lt;III.Y'I Oryptoquoto: IF YOU RIIIALLY WANT TO

LOSlll WEIGHT, THlllRIC ARIIl ONLY THRllllll THINGS YOU
MUST GIVE UP: Bl\lllAK1'AST, LUNCH AND DINNB:R.GARY B. WRIGHT

DAILY CROSSWORD
DICK TRACY

Open :·
9 Til! Mon., Tues.
Wed. &amp; Fri.
9 Til6 Thurs. &amp; Sat.
992·7261
lOS N. 2nd Ave. Middleport

43: Forward

.... .-

.

9. I..oadlng
tlme in

44. One of

-·

"'1'11e Three

~ ,-

wood

3. Divine
t4 wds. 1

f . Odd

· Timor
Altar

number

word.o

TERRY

touch
26. First
Firat

~.Roger or

18. Youngster
'N;::!Ilt. Ump's
cousin
20. Type of
truck
2l. Hawk

PER

contraction
24. Aladdin's

of - -

/ Ll-.

.un...ambletheot four Jumbltt,

club

17. ea
Salaam
Z3. Poetic

2. Mount·

___ __, .... Spiteful
1~. Coin or

Jlfg~J.bl];f.:f.:~.:! ..J c

f2 wds. 1
ll . Golf

DOWN
I. Fragrant

car

10 1971 Kin![ J!euturf!ll Byndlrnh•. Inc.)

port

Muske- .
teers"
45. Poker term

&lt;

MONTH*

,'

..---4

EQQ_L '"'

~~

-

'
I'

AHAB DIDN'T
S~WN A

~'(.)

~

~

,J

MOT"Hffi 0' CAP' N

'Ftr~.-"'
(

['=:::::

HORN 5POON ... IT

_____

Francis
6.Kacaw
7. catdl flat-

Lady
28. Biblical

moun-

8. Requlr&lt;

Ye•l•nlar'a AlllW4'r

29. Aunt (Sp. 1
30. Get one'a

32. Zoo attraction
34. Maxim
39. "Thoughts
of Chair-

I

man ---··

tatn

41 . Palm leaf

22. Beef on
the hoof
2f. Count on
25. Pronoun

Will Buy A New
3 Bedroom Ranch Home

[ WILL1'

bearings

27 . Beacth
hou1e

fooled
f4Wda.l

one letter to each oquare, to
for111 four ordinary word1.

parrot

tBINI.EB

~·

I

II

WEMU

26.Make
faces

t) . .

II
rJ

'
MilllllldCIIIWIIItn

27: French city
29. Something
prohibited
·31. Part of
a circle
32. - John
Glelgud
33. AnglOSaxon coin

With walf.to.wa ll carpeti ng , aluminum
siding, F.A. gas heal, buift.fn cabinets,
etc. etc.

WHAT iHE 6\JY WHO
WOFti&lt;EP Hllt'6EL.F
IJP IN THE
151J51NE55 WAS.

Now .......... tho cln:leol )etten

tor- uw ...,n. _..., ..

1IUIItiW 117 tho..._ un-.

1rxxrir IIIJ
(Aatwen t &amp;

Yeller4•,-'•

rrow)

J•..W..• VITAL CHOKI PACIAL IIWAII

36. Book-

keePer's

entry

See Today
g
~

z

g

-c:-:c-------

.WMP0/1390

SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
Sani ta tion, Stewart, Ohiq, Ph .
662·3035 .
2·12·1fo

HAIN'T60NNit

Crow

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Welt Be the Most Profitable

606 E. Maln, Pomeroy, 0.

1st in Seroice

FREE:

o

l&gt;

8x20 Aluminum awning with any !
mobile home purchased £ri., Sat., Sun.,
"''"
Mon ., April 9-10·11·12
.~

~
COAL ; limestone. Excel•io:
Join t sunrise services will
Salt Works, E. ·Main St .. - - ' - - - - ' - FOR expert electrical work ca ll
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891".
· begin at 6 a .m. Sunday at the
992·5179.
.
•
J
D:l
H .tfc
First Baplist Chu rch in Midr
4-6·24tp r
dleport for the congregations of BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Cal '
the. Nazarene, Presbyterian and
Myron Bailey, Phone 992·5327. ALARM~! ~urglar, fire and
hold · up . Southeaster n ·~
0
·
4·4·30Jc
Baptist churches. The · Rev .
Security Systems. Cali Ray
Phone 992-71 95
.
Miller of the Nazarene Church 1965 HONDA zso. Catl 742·5042
Adams 247 ·2055 .... Mike • I Ope,n 7 Days A Week' · ' '
\
'
~
I
•
.
.
.
'
O'Brlen ,247·2l
will be the speaker. The public
atl er 4: 15 p;m.
·
3.\].jfc ~DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES - DANNIE'S ~O~ILE HQMES I
4·S-6tc ..
is invited.
JOINT SERVICES

like .a person.

singl_e

992·2580

Spencer

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

4·6·6fc 1971 FORD PICKUP, •;, ton AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
Ra nger , automati c, power
- - -- - operator's li cense? Call 992 steer ing , 360 engine, red and
2966.
HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath,
white, like new . Will se ll
phone 742·5613.
6·15·tfC
und.er dealer 's cost. A lso,
3.J0.12tp
camper top wlth or without
truck . Har old E. Hysell,
phone 742·3154.
LINCOLN ST.. Middleport .
4·9·3tc
Modern , 3 bedrooms , 1112
bath. Calf collect 1-614-962·
19=6~9-~B~U;:;:;;tc~k~.--;C:-e::;S;.;a~b~r::,:e,=. =:;:2. &amp; .
2018, between 9 a .m. and 5 ;
hardtop , power steering ,
p.m..
Monday
through
Fr iday.
power brakes , air , 18.000
miles. ~xcellent condltftin.
4·8-6tc
____.:
Phone 992·2288.
11 ·\0.tfs
2 STORY modern home, 7
rooms and bath. Can be see n 1958 FORD 6·cyllnder, excel lent
running condition . Body
after 5 p.m. or a ll day on
needs some repair, $100.
Sundays or Mondays. Phone
Phone 949-2755.
985·4175.
4·8·3tc
4·8·5fc
~-----

Afl"'RD b

I.J'L .ABNER
WE'L L NEVER KNOW IF

- - - - --

Broker

f.ICW COUlD fiE

And Conventional Loans .

4 nice '62 CHEVROLET 2 ton , 16 fl.
2113.
bedroo m s. modern bath , and
3·J2.tfc
bed,
V8
4
speed,
2
speed,
ki tc hen. Gas furna ce . Dr illed
new
rubber,
$500.00,
K·S
In
we ll. Good cellar. 57 ACRES
l Ph ton , runs good, O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Mine ral s. Aski ng $\0,000.00. 8ternationa
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
x 12 flal , $125 .00 . Phone 992·
Complete front end servi ce,
76 ACRES - 20 tra ctor land . 6048.
tune up and brak e service .
4·7·3tp
Good implem e'1 1 shed and - - - - - Whe els
ba lanced
elec cellar . 8 room older home
lronically
.
Al
l
work
wi th 4 bedrooms . Running 1968 CAMARO 327, 3·speed .
guaranteed .
Reasonabl e
Phone Mason 773 5178 or see
wa ter. $13,500.00.
ral,es.
992-3213.
John Grueser .
3·17·30ic
4·4·6tp
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
BEFORE
THEY
GO
HARRISON 'S TV AND AN·
HIGHER . CALL US TODAY. 1958 FORD 6-cyl inder, excellent
TENNA SERV ICE. Ph one
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
running condition . Body
992-2522.
ASSOCIATE
need s some r epal r , $100 .
6·10·1fc
992·3325
Phone 949·2755.
4·9·3k

Phone 985.4186
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Phone 949·3211

YES. HE EVEN
Tt-lATTI-lE' MAN WKCJ J&lt;N~VJ ALL THE
Pf-IONeD WAS TI-le RE'P.LO\IJIJEI&lt;! OF . SEfiAL NUMBERS I
TI-ltS SUITC/ISE /WD MONEY
A~E YOU SU~~

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home, V.A.. F.H.A.,

1805. Eldon Walburn .
· MIX
CONCRETE
3-28·1fc R'EADY
MIDDLEPORT
COM·
delivered right to your
MERCIAL LOT - Ne xl toM.
project . Fast and easy. Free
and R. On ly $3,500.00.
1965 SPORTS Fury . 383 cu .in ., 4·
es timat es. Phone 992 -3284 .
barrel. dual e%baust, 4 speed ,
Goeglein Ready ~ Mix Co., ·
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroo m
black inside !hd out. Rear
Middleport. Ohio.
one story hou se nea r store s.
seat reverberator . $950.
6·30.ff c
Bath , la rg e kitchen and
Original owner. Call 992-6977 - - - - - - dining area . 2 level lots . On ly
after 6 p.m .
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service .
$5,000.00.
~·Hlp
Commercial, resi-dent ial and

George S. Hobsleller, Jr.

COM' ERE.!
nlAT'S Tf.IE J.AST
TIME VOU'RE GONNA
LOSS I'OUR MITTJ

MITT~ WHO TOOK
MV MITT~

reen Hill Homes- Inc.

$5.55

4 bedrooms.

HOBStEnER
REAL ESTATE

WHERE'!: MV

You will have sonlething of value to show for the $SS you
spe nd w hen you buy your own hom e - plus, you gain an
Income Tax bene fit. you build an equity and you are not
bound by the terms of a renta l agreement.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

614·985·3938 .

COUNTRY HOME -

Cll911-

Come See Us At 97 V&gt;N. Second St., Middleport.

garage. S\4 ,500.00.

Asking 513,000.00.

IN RENT?

AND HIS

- - - - - - -Hopkms and Aliens

~:;::::::::;;.....\.._:C:.:.A:I\I~G=IT WARMED UP!!

* A STACK OF WORTHlESS RECEJPTS! ! * ·

carpet ing . Aluminum siding ,
awning , storm windows and
s'to rm door s. City water .
Selling due to ill health. Phone

bath , dini ng with fir eplace.
Full basement. Gas furna ce. 3
por ches. Mod ern kitchen ,
pan ele d . La r ge garden.

Mowers ·&amp; Tillers

Wanted

.

THE $$$YOU PAY

bath , gas for ced a ir furnace
wil h
air
co nditioning .
Beautiful kitchen w ith cook
and oven units. Nice 2 car

SYRACUSE -

4·1·3tc

TH ' HOUSE ,
OL' BULLET-- NOW WE

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

H -2tc

POMEROY, OHIO

Card of Thanks
and their
my son ,
Veteran s
and then
Medica I

.

THINK ABOUT Ill

Radiator SeiVice

J.l.lfc

ral)ch house, l.a~ge living ,
dining , and famtly rooms .
Basement, 2 car garage. All
electric central air . Very
com fortable. Upper twen ties.
New Haven , Weekends only.
Phone New Haven 882 -2712.

WE WI SH to thank the Pomeroy
emergency squad
men . for assisting
Clarence,
to
Mem or ial Hospi tal
ta ter to Ho lzer

\

SPAC IOU S 3 bedroom brick

Patneroy llotor Co.

Sa turctav

.EXPERIENCED

building lo ts on T7 9 at ROc k
Springs . Wit hi n . wal~ing
distance of Me1gs High
School, a 5 minut e dri ve f r om
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI
Wi 1le weekends , or after 5
p.m. wee kdays . P.hone 992-

$329S

OP.EM EVES. 8:00

~

located in Syracuse. Ca ll after

S399S

1969 CHEVROLET

BARNEY

Business Services

-HOU- - -SE. 4 r ooms, bath , 2 lOts
&lt;

1968 CADILLAC

Noon

12:00

percentag e basis. Call Jim
Adams , auct ioneer , Rutland .

WEST

QUALIIY

REGULATIONS

WILL PICK up merchand ise
and take to auction on a

• A·K62
• 10 2
oloK5 3

, OF

Sentinel Classifieds

.-------------~-----------:-----:--t;

HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts .,
Pomeroy. Phone 992:2293. ·
10·25·tfC .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

s P .M. Day Before Publ ication
MDnday Deadline 9a .m.
Cance llat ion &amp; Co r rections
W iII be acce pted unt119 a.m . f
Day of Pub lic ation

South Third Avenue . Mid .
The Publisher r eserv es th e.
dleporL Ohio 45760 , unfil 12 :00
o 'c locJ( noon E .S.T . April 19, right to edit or' rejec t any ads
ob jectional.
Th e
1971. aod opened and r·ead aloud deemed
wiH
not
be
responsible
pub
l
isher
immediately therea ft er . Bids
are being taken tor th e in . tor mor e than one incorrect
staltation of air conditioning in insert ion .
variOJS areas ol the New Me igs
High School located on C, H . 25

In

Bargain~

~

DANNIE'S AT POMEROY· ;

~

~

~

CAP!' AIN EASY .

At 203 Park St., Middleport, or r.a ll AI
Moody, 992.7034, for appointment

·'!HI! WRfRPO'f'IIA5TV ~HOT Ml~!&gt;e;:; AND

I&gt;IJCJV LUiiGii.. FOR. HI!&gt; GU"''

'

. oveR~

An~,~ the sixBunny.Wamiles

fabbr.)
36. Devour
· 37. Performed
38. Fragrance
40. 0. T. book
42. Of one's

so.ld 'l""''.nlQht, and went to
sleep. The it Qdventure litis over
and all had ended well. Jilt fnd

btrth

Jf."sa.sed on family income of $5,1100 with three

D.ULY CRYPIOQUOTE,..:.He~'a how to work It:

chtldren , taxes· and Insur-ance not Included.

AXYDLBAAXR
11 LONGFELLOW
One le tier slmpty standi lor another.
this urnple A Is

JEMO ASSOCIATES
Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.
Middleport, Ohio

"

lliAT WAS ~E MOST EXCITING .
NOVEL I'VE EVER READ ... I
THINK I'LL WRITE A FAN
LETTER '10 T~S AtmlOR,..

.

In

uaed. for \tie three L'a, X for the two 0'1, etc. Single letters,'
apo1trophes. the length and formation of the WordR are all
htntt~ . Eaeh da:v the code lettel'l are different.

or 1-268·1

'' MISS I-IELEN SWEETSTOR'1'"

A Cryptornm, QuotattGn

N MH0 H

. TH"ON.

BW

.K F

WNDOBG ·BN "E,

I

GH ZH K WH.

H ·Y .

RVRBKWN

NMH

I

B S 0 R T.N

F .Z

JCBGVSRK

R

K H Q

B Q .H R .

SQ\IEHOW, I HAVE THE

FEELIN6 THAT SHE'S A
VERI{ NICE PERSON ...

0 .Q.

,I '

-----

.- -

~-

•·

...

�. 1:

l
~-..

-1-

10- The D8ily Sent~!, Ml~eport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprif9, 1971

'

.

r·······~w·~,;o;~·''&gt;'.«':"?:*W.::::&gt;:&lt;.;;i:·&gt;,:&lt;·;o;"W':

~

.. ..........,•..·..·.·.·.·.·..·.·.·.·•··.·.·.·.·.·.·.•,•,• ·.·:·.·

. . ..,•,·,•

First Holy Week's Last Days :Recalled . ~- Q.n~ph;~y Cha.rged
..... Ge
11a ...
Sape-'-tendent
"'1
orge reooVOI!
•w
MelgsLocalScbooiDilllrlct
Let's let our thoughls leave today and schoOL\~
behind and move back acrnss nearly 20 cenluries to
consider the evenls and significance of the last days of
. t H01 w k,
Illat fII'S
Y ee · ·
Follwing a lriUIIlphal entrY into Jerusalem, Jesus
was harassed, pursued and betrayed. The suffering
used by H'
1 and by the Romans finally
15
ca
own peop e

Speaking of Schools-No. 183
led to His death gasp, "It is fmished," and the great
darkening of the sky.
And then the red-tinged crucifiXion tree stood
starkly empty and lonesome against the background of
the departing day. The Body was spirited away and
placed in a rock tomb by a friend.
His followers were leaderless and confused. One
bad taken his own wretched life. Another bore the
heavy burden of a foretold triple denial. Ten others
huddled as sheep whose shepherd was gone. That first
Good Friday was a day of deep misery for the followers
of Jesus.
Thus, came to a conclusion the mortal existence of
the man called Christ. A hush covered those who bad so
recently pressed close to Him as they cried out
Hosanna. His enemies were frightened Ill' the rumbling
of the earth and the darkness of the afternoon, but they
were pleased that this threat to their power and plenty

bad been eliminated. Truly, Jerusalem was the center
'
'
of many deep emotions on that hrst Good Friday
evening. Troubled sleep, Indeed if any came at all, was
the lotofthose called Christians on thatlong night.
Then came the long hours.of Salurday - the day
between. What would they do? Where woold they go?
·
'
What would become of them? They forgot - as do little
children - the words of their Father. They forgot His
p-omise to burst the chains of death 011 the third day of
His entombment.
Without their leader their direction was gone.
Doubt about the present, the fulure and certainly the
past bore heavily u~n their troobled minds. Fear for
their own safety covered them like a shroud of torment. Had they been misled? Just who was this nowdead teacher to whom they .bad given themselves so
freely? In the Latin phrase -Quo Vadis? they truly
asked "where do you go now ?".
Then came another long night and it must-have
been evim longer than Friday's lengthy period of
darknesS~ The body lay in the tomb. Guards stood at its
entrance. The fate of Christ seemed sealed. His life and
work seemed at an end. The religious and governmental rulers were content that they had done what
was necessary. They felt that time would cool the
passions of Christ's ·followers and things would get
back to normal very soon now.
But then came the dawn of the third day. It brought
a bright glow that has been a guide for the world since
that day and will be until the final day. Amazement
pressed its mark on the faces of His followers as they

saw and touched the emptiness of the .shell of stone m
hi b til bod of J
bad )a ' •
Fr'da I d k
w c e
Y esus
m ~ce I ~ s ar
~urs. Had the body bee? stolen . Was .thiS ~ore
WICked work ~ought by King Her~, the h1gh pries~
Annas and Ca1phas, or by R~me s Pontius Pilate.
What bad they done with Him .
Tb the
Him nd 1m Him finall Th
en Y sa~
a
ew
. y. .en
they knew that His prophecy of resurrectiOn was, ..mdeed, the truth of God. They knew Him as more than a
Jewish teacher. He bad been God in the frail, mortal
body of a man, but He was God. Now He was a Spirit,
but He ~as God. .
.
He IS God. He IS a Sa~wr . He d~eated death. He
promiSes that those who will follow Him .can also share
in His victocy over de3th. His beckoning fingers reach
out to touch ours as they grope for A way, THE way.
Today, toptorrow and Sonday we should relive
these great happenings in oor minds. Song, story, and
sermon will help to rekindle our awareness of the
import of these events. Truly, they form the core for
the key to all living f?r a Christian.
.
Friday brooght pam, suffering, desperation.• d~th
and despair. Salurday brought confUSion, angwsh and
fear. Sunday brought hope, promise and new life.
Try to relive in your mind those events during the
h~urs of these three days. I firmly believe ~?at to do so
will be a tremendously_positive Influence m your life
and that next Monday will find you a better human
being ..
Best wishes for a joyous Easter from all of us to all
of you.

Frank Call Sr.
Dies Recently

Wahama Downs Buffalo
The Wahama White Falcons ing abilities as he blasted a
blasted the host Bisons o! Buf- home run after HoWard bad
falo, tn Putnam County, with a reached base on an error.
7-1 decision Thursday.
Smith, besides his · booming
Once again Wahama broke home run, managed a very reloose tn the first toning as their speclJlble round performance
first three batters reached as he pitched 7 innings, giving
base. Brent Clark reached up no ea. ned runs, striking
first on an error, Mike White out 15 batters and allowing
walked and Chester Roush hust- · only 2 walks.
led out an tn!ield single setting
The Falcons picked up their
the stage for Tim Howard's final tally in the sixth when
bases ltl8ded single. Two runs Randy Clark walked, stole ••·
scored on Howard's blast and cond, advanced to third on a
. the third runner scored on an fll'(lUnd out and scored on a
Infield out.
strategic double steal when
In the second inning the Fal- Robbie Lambert created a nmcons picked up another tally down between first and second
when Keith Sayre singled and as Clark scored wring the
then was replaced by Brent conflict.
Clark after a fielders choice.
Buffalo picked up their only
Brent moved to second base run on a double and a single
on a fll'(lUnd out and proceed- combined wlthathrowingerror.
ed to score on Chester Roush's
Higginbotham and Thornton
second hit of the evening.
had two base hits for Bul!alo
In the fifth inning, pitcher and Randy Clark chipped In
Ran&lt;\y Smith displayed his hltt. one for Wahama and Randy

Smith's two run homer roonded out the extra base hits.
Wahama,

2-0, travels to

Southwestern Monday to take
on the Highlanders. The game
is to be played at Rio Grande

DATE CHANGED
Date for the next visit of an
American
Red 'Cross
bloodmobile to Meigs County
has been changed from
Tuesday, Aprll27, to Monday,
April26, Vernon Nease, blood
program chairman, said
today. The unit will be at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
from I to 6 p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. David D.
College's baseball diamomi Campbell, Pomhoy, received
starting at 4:30.
word Wednesday of the death of
WAHAMA 3 1 0 0 2 0 1 7 Mrs. Campbell's father, F-ank
BUFFALO 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 P. Call, Sr., of Norwich, N. Y.,
in the Veterans Administration
Hospital at Syracuse, N. Y.
Little Duke Wins
Funeral services will be held
"Roxie" owned by Everett Saturday at the Fahy 's Funeral
Thomas took first place honors Home in Norwich.
when the Meigs County Fox Attending the services will be
Hunters Assn. held a field trial Mr. and Mrs . Campbell and five
daughters, Debbie, Kathy,
recently at Snow Ball Hill.
Second place went lo "Little Cindy and Constance Patterson
Duke" owned by Herschel all of Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Roush and third went to "Lone Mrs. Jerry (Sandra) Edwards
Ranger" owned by Roy Armes. of Cincinnati, also four grand·
Approximately 25 hunters at- children.
tended with some 30 dogs IA:pl. David Frank Campparticipating. Plans are being bell, stationed at Da Nang, was
made to hold a large field trial brought home recently by the
Meigs Chapter of the American
in the fall.
Red Cross due to the serious
illness of his grandfather. Cpl.
Campbell has returned to Da
Nang.

Troika Re-elected

CANADA HOUSING COSTS
OTTAWA (UP!) - Housing
prices in Canada rose 10 per
cent between February, 1970,
and February, 1971, the
Dominion Bureau of Statistics
reported Thursday. The increase was almost entirely due
to a 17.2 per cent increase in
construction industry wages,
the bureau said.

MOSCOW (UPll - The 24th Soviet Com·
munist Party Congress announced today . the
reelection of Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev,
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and President
Nikolai V. Podgorny for another five years.
The troika and the other eight incumbents on
the ruling Politburo were re-elected to a Politburo expanded to 15 members

Auxiliary Has New Officers
MASON - Mason County
Little Men's League Auxiliary
held ifS first meeting of the new
season on Monday evening at
the Point Pleasant Senior High
school. Officers named were :
president, Barbara Smith; first
vice president in charge of Pony
League Field, Barbara Miller;
second vice president in charge
of Little League Field, Wanda
Gabritsch; third vice president

MEIGS lliEATRE .
'And may the world soon
len ow its lasting joys •••
Especially at Easter, our thoughts
turn to the hope of peace for all
the world. We unite with you in the
I

heartfelt prayer that the spirit of this
Easter season may soon be fulfilled
by lasting peace. Greetings, and may.your
Easter be radiant with many joys.

Topight &amp; Saturday

\

Aprif9.10
TOO LATE
THE HERO

Michael Caine
Cliff Robertson
IGP)

Colarr::artoon:
It's For The Birds
Sun., Mon .. &amp; Tues.

Aprilll-12·13
ON A CLEAR
DAY YOU CAN
SEE FOREVER

ITechnicolorJ
Barbara Streisand
Yves Mont and
(Gl
Cartoons:

Where Are You
Happy Days

SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.

cJ!joyous Easter
to all our friends.

in charge ofT-Ball and Pee Wee
League Field, Mimi Slone;
secretary-treasurer, Nancy
Warner, and director, Katie
Oliver.
The auxiliary is operating the
Pony League concession stand
for the high school baseball
games and will have the stands
opened for the league season
starting in May.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - Elizabeth
Jones, Letart; Keith Bragg,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Keith
Holley, Jr .,· Apple Grove ;
Lawrence Neal, West Columbia ; Mrs . Paul Smith,
Pomeroy; Virginia Rirnmey,
Point Pleasant; Charris McDaniel, Point Pleasant; Eva
Hones Oliver, Gallipolis Ferry.
DISCHARGES
John
Woody, Mrs. Lonnie Stanley,
Roger Dale Blake, Mrs. Kenna
Bush, Mrs. Homer Stevens,
Mrs. Nancy Woodard, Floyd
Sayre, Mrs. Mary Allbaugh,
Mrs. William Yeager, Mrs. Otis
Neal and John Bryant.

_POMEROY
·NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY
.

Run.AND
.

Serving Meigs County

ganization petition.
,
Bevan, Hodge and Gerstneck·
er. the suit charged, created
Penpbil and thereafter "covertly utili•ed ·and manipulated all
of the resources of the Penn
Central" for their own personal
gain and that of Penphil and
its shareholders.
The purpose of the alleged
conspiracy, the suit charged,
was the "exploitation of Penn
Central's resources" for the
"unjust enrichment" of Penphil.
The suit claimed Bevan and
Hodge advised Penn Central to
embark on a program of nonrailroad diversification which
deprived the line of large
amounts of cash and forced it
to borrow.
The two men along with
SESSION PLANNED
A work session will be held at
the American Legion. Memorial
Park, Mill St., Middleport at !!
a.m. Saturday morning, Paul
Haptonstall, commander of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, announced.

Gerstnecker I the SUit said, also .
used Penn Centra! 's line of ·
credit to obtain a "highly pref·
erential" line of credit for Penphil.
Bevan and Gerstnecker, the
suit charged, also authori•ed $4
million of railroad money to be
placed in a European trust
where it was allegedly misap·
propria ted.
·The suit accused the defendants of advising Penn Central
to invest in among others, Great
Southwest Realty Corp.,· and
Executive Jet. Aviation. Penn
Central's original $92 million in·
vestment in the realty company depreciated more than
$40 million, the suit said.
Penn Central lost $22 million
in the aviation company. In addition the railroad had to unload the company for violating
a federal statute.
The railroad fired Bevan June
8, 1970, in a top management
shakeup.
Twelve days later the line
said it was broke. Gerstnecker
left to a top post with a local
bank.

FIRE INTRUDER - The high country between, Pomeroy and Middleport
burned over Friday afternoon and threatened business places along Route 7. .
Fismes are visible above 011 the clifftop above the Certified Service Station near
.the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

Friday .and Saturday
Elberfelds In Pomeroy
•

8-Alarm
Fire is
Put Out

are open

until 9 in the evening A Good Time For Family Shopping ·
all over the store.

POM::o~OB ~eE~~e~oy

Wearing Apparel for Your Family and

l

Furnishings For Your Home
,-· "':"'""-~..-..--_....-..-._..-:::---·~...--w.._.._,.._..._.._..._.__..

!

I
I
l

Visit The Music Department On 2nd

___

floj)r

- New shipment of 8-track Stereo tapes. A large selection in
easy listening, Rock, Country Western and Sacred.
-Also come in and browse through our Record Albums, a large
selection just received in Country Western, Sacred, Popular,
Roek and easy listening.

L

.

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

.

.

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

___...

•

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

You waited 'til now
to get the deal of the year.
Don't blow it on the wrong car.

0

1971 Maverick 2-Door Sedan

-M~SQN DRIVI·IIf\

• Middleport area got a kingoflize sample of air
pollution Friday when a brush fire broke
out requiring e~ght area fire depa~tments
and other awnbary units to brmg 1t under
control.
One unoccupied frame house was
destroyed by the fast,.moving fire as were
several outbuildings. The blaze swept
several hundred acres extending from
Rutland St. In Middleport to lower Monkey
Run in Pomeroy.
Fire departments joined by volunteers
were everywhere fighting the fire which
threatened many homes and business
establiahments, particularly on West Main
St., where the f~ reacl)ed the cliffs above
them. The fire came to the edge of the cliff
from where burning particles falling over
the cliff set fire to brush and leaves below.
Firemen el!'tinguished the blazes as they
developed.
The air was heayy with smoke and
ashes as the fire spread over the wide
acreage.
Fire departments on the scene were
Middleport, Pomeroy, Rutland, Syracuse,
Racine, Mason, New Haven and Point
Pleasant. In addition, the Meigs County
Civil Defense tank was pressed into use as
was a Gallia County Civil Defense vehicle.
The state Forestry division was on band to
help and a plane circled the area
throughout the afternoon and evening to
alert firemen of dangers as they arose.
The radio system among the fire
departments was a tremendous asset. As
soon as a danger area was spotted,
departments, although hampered by
heavy traffic, were moved rapidly to it.
Rumor ran high. Some reports stated
that as many as six homes bad been
destroyed: At one time it was reported that
the large cross overlooking Pomeroy was
on fire, as well as the home of Mrs. Nolan
Shuster on whose property the cross is
located. However, this report, as well as
(Continued on,page 2)

1971 Ford LTD Brougham 2-Door Hardlop

l

.

"Explosions Of Laiiohler!"
~IIIM'1fq._• '

I. ,

~w,OH .

IIAY\WSill'lllAMQEII. . ,If'
•• b

PUIS -

.

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•

SUNDAY, APRil!!, 1971

.Pomeroy-Middleport

•

Gall•I a Exp Iam
• ed
·

·

· GALLIPOUS - Volers' doubts in
connection with the proposed Gallia
County Vocational Education School
project were answered Saturday by
members of the Gallia County Vocational
School Board, Supt. of Schools Clarence B.
Thompson, and county auditor Mort
Dickey.
The board - Marlin G. Kerns, Harold
E. Wiseman, Granville Bu&lt;netle, C. A.
Evans and Merrill Bunce, with Thompson
and Dickey, prepared 12 "questions and
answers" addressed primarily to the
firumciallssues involved.
Following is their statement:

WHAT SCHOOL districts are a part of
this proposed Gallia County Joint
Vocational School?
.
A - The following school districts
comprise the Gallia County Joint
Vocational School: Gallipolis City, Kyger
Creek Local, Hannan Trace Local, Southwestern Local, and North Gallia Local.
These districts have been approved by
their local boards of education and the
State Board of Education.
WHY WAS the Gallia County Joint
Vocational District formed?
A- In 1969, House Bill 53! was passed
by the State Legislature which stated: By
1974 all !!Chool districts in the State of Ohio
must have a vocational program that
would support 40 per cent of the ~tudent
body. This program must compnse not
·
less than 12 (twelve) different curricu!WII
offerings and 20 (twenty) classes with not
less than 15 students per class. None of the
schools in the Gallia County Joint
Vocational School District meets those
MIDDLEPORT - People have to requirements. Gallia County, as well as
make up their minds what kind of en- other school districts throughout the state,
bad to join forces to meet mandate set by
·vironment they want.
That was the suggestion of Meigs the state.
WHAT STUDENTS would attend the
County Agricullural Agent-and Rotarian
- C. E. Blakeslee had for the Middleport • Gallia County Joint Vocational School?
A- Students in the lith or 12th grade
Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday night at
of
all
of the five schools that comprise the
Heath Church in a talk on "Environmental
Gallia County Joint Vocational School are
Quality." Blakeslee reviewed the effects of
DDT and other pesticides that have come eligible to attend regardless of academic
to have apparent detrimental effects on standing (high, low, or medium).
WOULD THESE students, who attend
people and wildlife. He Indicated public
concern in ecology problems will depend the Gallia County Joint Vocational School
on what people decide they are willing to lose their identity with their original
school district?
pay.
A - No. Any student attending ,the
President Charles Simons presided.
Gallia County ·Joint Vocational School
One guest, Harold Henderson, Elmhurst,
would still be a student of. the school
Ill., was introduced by John Werner.
district from which he came. The student
would graduate from his parent school, he
would be eligible to participate in any
extra-&lt;:urricnlar activities in his ·home
school. (Such as athletics, band, music,
class officers, etc.)
(Muskingum County Joint Vocational
School had four students participate in the
Ohio State BasketbaU.. Townament - 2
frotn Zanesville Roseeranl and two from
Maysville.),__
WHAT COURSES will be offered in the
Gallia County Joint Vocational School?
A - Agricultural (Agriculture
Business, Agriculture Mechanics · and
Diesel, Forestry, Horticulture, Landscaping, Conservation); Business Office
(Entry Business Dala Processing,
'
(Continued on page 2) ·

•
EnVJ.ronment
Has Quality

'l1dl rubbllllllllte II bQII' ~'OilletlcJilat tile side tbe Mlrtla Reltlunnt In
' Mid!~Jepcrt foUowlnC the cloelng II
Friday. An official
nollllcatlm d. tbe Me!Ca County Health Board's
to permit the
dump wu receiftd Friday by MayII' C. 0. Fish.,, and the dump was clolled. The
"'"'•'"•nil¥, u 1 ,reeult, II without a dwnp facility and collection service. Village
Ouuitdl wiD allliiupt kl reach a 10Iutlon to the problem at a regular meeting
""""f iilchl MenHme, trub and garbage;,, the Cll"'inunity Is piling up.
I

-·· .•

NE~~~l~ND 15 CENTS

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

voc.Ed Issues in

independent survey. ·Maverick offers a.choice
of 2-door, 4-door and sporty Grabber. ·And
now.there's a V-8.to go with three economical
Sixes.
Ford LTO gives you the strength and luxury-of
cars costing hundreds of dollars more and a
quiet ride .that many of the more expensive
cars can't measure up to. Maybe that's why
LTO is tops in its class .in sales,
·

KEITH GOBLE FORD INC., 46lS. JHI.RD :ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIQ-

Member Federal Deposit Ln•urar\ce Corporation
AU Accounts Insured Up To ~20,000.20

.

VOL. VI NO. 11

of God and Man

..

Member Federal Reserve · System

THREE SECTIONS

32 PAGES

Easter

, . Pinto, Mavttrick; Mustang; Torino, Ford: Better Ideas whose time Is now.

Since 1872

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

.

Price is only part of a good deal. It's what you
get for your money that counts. And your Ford
healer can do justic~t to you on both scores.
,
,
,
l.
Maverick's low price has always made it.
simple to own. But what you get for that
simple price is a compact economy,car that's
not only simple to drive and maintain, but
also has the best frequency of ·repair record
of any American . c;ar, according to a recent

SAFETY MEASURE - Adolph Saelens squirts water on the top of his Dairy
Queen as burning embers come down from the cliff to his right threatening to
destroy structures along Route 7 near the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

tmts

Your Ford Dealer's
'
g
ot
the
right
cars
right
now.
.
\
-

l

WATER SUPPLY WEAK - A fireman belplessly holds a hose against the fire
along Liberty Ave ., but he wasn't doing much good.

+

FORD

Tonight, Sat. &amp; Sun., April 9·10·11
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

-

{

MEETING DELAYED
The World War I veterans
April meeting has been postponed until the second Sunday
in May.

-- .

Contl!'uous Service On
Fridays 9 ad.i·. to 7 p~m • .

PHILADELPHIA (UPI)-Two
Penn Central officers and anall;ged partner conspired to turn
a 600 per cent personal profit
while the railroad barrelled
down the bankruptcy line, a
suit claims.
.
The railroad's trustees, appointed to put the line back on
the track to solverncy, filed the
suit '(hursday in U.S. District
Court, claiming the Penn Centrallost millions of ,dollars due
to the conspiracy.
t:iamed in the suit were:
David c. Bevan, Gladwyne, Pa.
former chairman of the Penn
Centralfinancecommittee; Wllliam R. Gerstnecker, Philadel·
phia, a former railroad vice
president; and Charles J.
Hodge, Short Hills, N.J., a part·
ner in the investment firm of
F.I. DuPont Glore Forgan Inc.
Du Pont abo was named as
a · defendant, along with Penphil Co.
·The suit charged Penn Central suffered "monetary damage as a direct and proximate
result of the conspiracy" that
ultimately resulted in the reor-

.. I

Saturday afternoon reminding residents that the Broadway
musical, "The Music Man," will be presented on Friday and
Salurday, beginning at 8 p.m., in the Washington School
auditorium.

STUDENTS ADVERTISE 'MUSIC MAN' - Vocal mualc
sludents of Gallis Academy High School formed a caravan
and motored up and down and around the Old French City

Students Advertise Music Man
GALLIPOLIS - Vocal music students will direct the liJO..member choir in the
of Gallia Academy High School formed a musical. II will be the sixth Broadway
caravan and motored through the com- production for GAHS students in as many
munity Saturday afternoon advertising years under Mrs. Fischer.
their Broadway musical, "The Music
The Music Man was a 1957 Broadway
Man," which Will be presented Friday and hit by Meredith Wilson.
Saturday in the Washington School
The show is rounding into shape right
auditorium. Each performance will start on schedule. After the scenery and
at 8 p.m.
costumes arrived, e~erything started to
Anne Fischer, vocal music instructor. fall into place. Mrs. Fischer said, "This

Strip Mine Meet
Set
.
)

POMEROY - A meeting on strip
mining will be held Sunday, April 18, at 3
p.m. at Meigs High School, Jack Crisp,
president of the Leading Creek Conservancy District announced Saturday.
Crisp said he has learned that a strip
mining operation is being planned in the
western part of Meigs County and the
eastern part of Vinton County.
' The purpose of the meeting is to
discuss what additional effects strip
mining. will have on Meigs County.

,

Messag~
·

Ralph Welker, state representative,
has been asked to attend and explain the
bill he !)as proposed on the con trot Of strip
mining . Other· representatives and
senators have also been invited.
People of Meigs County are urged to
attend and offer their views on strip
mining, Crisp said.
Edward Dobson, president of the
Ecology Club, Athens, will serve as
chairman. Pros and cons of ·strip mining
will be discussed.

Keys on 'Now'

BY LOUIS CASSElS
for His disciples' unshakable II is possible to turn away
UPI Religion Writer . · conviction that He had over- from the challenge. Millions do
The message of Easter is not come death. It is very doubtful, every day.
past tense: Once upon a time, · however,. whether anyone has The other response is vividly
Jesus rose from th'e dead.
ever been promp,ted to bet his described by German the·
It is present tense: ·Jesus is life on Jesus simply because t!Ie ologian Willi Marx~n:
risen.
arguments .for the historicity of "I take the risk of doing what
The distinction is important. the resur.rection seemed to him ·He asks, contrary to all human
Past tense statements about plausible.
reason. In the course o! doing, I
an event ·which is believed to Infinitely more stirring is the experience the fact : II is true. I
. have occurr~ ·2,000. years ago present tense assertion, Jesus is do not need to save myself, but
obvioqsly arii'not susceptib.le Of risen. For . that means Jesus' at the very point where I let
hard-and-fas,t proof. The ~st lives. He ·lives ·now'. He con- my!ielf g.o I discover that I am
"that can be done ~t this point' so f~onts us loday, · not· as a being held.by something outside
removed in time is to show memory out of the past, but as a ~ myself. Once I wanted to live,
historical evidence for the present · fact and a present but could ~ot do so. Fear
a~tuality of Jeslrll' resurrection. challenge. ·
·
stopped me . Now ! 'give Up the
·This is more jlersuaslve, to liis challenge iS empirical : attempt to live, in th~ sense in
anyonewhoexaminesitwlthan ·Try my w~y. See ·for' youtself which I have hitherto unopen mind, than any alternative whether it will lead you to derstood living, and discover
explanation that can be offered authentic, abundant.life.
that now, suddenly, I am really

·

living."
No human experience can be
fully.captured and explained in
words. Marxsen's description of
the way a person arrives at
faith in Jesus . may · not be
meaningful to everyone. ·Some
will say, quite validly, that they
reached the same point by
another route.
But anyone who ·attempts to
describe what it means to follow
Jesus finds himself compeiled
to speak not of dogmas and
rituals, but of risk, commitment
and experience. The experience
is open to anyone who will take
the r,isk of making the commilrnent - and it cannot be had .
on any other terms.
I

year, we'll be doing something new by
using people outside the choir for speaking ·
and sipging roles."
The Four Gone Conclusions, Dr. John
Markley, Dr. Tom Morgan, Mr. Manning
Wetherholt, and Mr. Kimball "Red" Suiter
will pose as the highly incapable school
board of I,liver City, Iowa who are caplured under the salesmanship of the
"Music Man" (Harold Hill). There will
also be a number of y.ounger vocal
students and children who will comprise
the youth of this small 1912 Iowa community.
·
Miss Marlene Hoffman, Assistant
Bantl Director at Gallia Academy High
School, will conduct a 21).member or.
chestra comprised of students from the
GAHS band who -.;~1 1 play the bverture and
will re-appear later in the performance.
These children have really worked hard.
This music is snappy · and will really
stimulate the mood of the production.
"I'm really proud of them," said Miss
Hoffman.
Mrs. Fischer also announced many
hours of assistance and hard work lurned
,in by Mrs. James Bennett, Mrs. Kathy
Junker and Mis8 Becky Nolt ( teach~rs at
GAHS) and Mrs. Ann Rieser who has
helped with the dances. Stage manager is
P. J. Ryal.
David Chapman as "Tbe Music Man," ·
has ability that really shine. He's a natural
oh stage and·he will cap lure every heart ilt
the audience,"
said
Mrs. Fischer
...
.
.
I

Thieves Hit
'

.

~agles

.

Club

GALLIPOLIS :.._ Money, jewelry,
cigarettes and whiskey were taken in a
breaking and entering investigated Frldlly
evening at the Eagles Club on Third A~e.
Cily police said entry was .made by
unlocking a window.
Missing was approxi.m&amp;tely $511.50 in
cash and change, three packs Of
ci!(al'littes, two men's watched vahMIIJ ~~ ~
!Cootinued on ' page 2)

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