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                  <text>I

He was Postmaster at 21

•

By Mrs. Agnes Hill
In 1894, W. E . Matlack
purchased the Tuppers Plains
Hotel and a store next to it,
establishing a general merchandising business handling
lumber, produce, machinery,
fertilizer and all types of store
goods, and managing the hotel
besides.
A statement issued to the G.
A. R., Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
Feb. 2, 1899 shows the
following charges:
2 gal. oysters at $1.10
$2.20
1lb. coffee
.12
1 sack salt
.05
pepper
.05
5o/.J lb. crackers at .07
.40
2lb. gran. sugar at .06
.12
Butter
.11
4 gal. milk at .15
.60
Rec'd payment
$3.65
HOTEL MATLACK (right) and the MATLACK
GENERAL STORE, as they appeared in 1895 in Tuppers
Plains. In the picture are Guy Parker, Ivan Parker, Vern

:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::;::::

Measles Threat
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Ohio Health Department said
Thursday it has warned all
local health officials in the
state to the possibility of a
measles epidemic.
Dr. John H. Ackerman,
chief of the Bureau of
Preventive Medicine in the
department, said Cleveland
and Columbus are the
greatest danger spots.
He urged parents of
unimmunized children aged
one to five to take advantage
of the vaccine.

MR. MATLACK WAS a man
of many occupations. Born
Oct. 18, 1871, near Long
Bottom, he bought timber land

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Tuppers Plains.
He was appointed a member
of the Board of Education in
1895 and served 32 years, most
of that time as clerk-treasurer
of the board. He served four
years as treasurer of Orange
township, four years as
trustee, and as assistant
postmaster 15 years.
After 1900, Mr. Matlack
built a huge kitchen onto the
back of the hotel building, but
this has since been torn down
and the building restored to
look nearly as the picture. The
hotel was built before the Civil
War. Many drummers,
academy
students and
travelers rested in its shelter.
The wide halls and lofty
ceilings speak louder than
words of early history. Hotel
Matlack was kept in operation
until about 1930, after which it
was used as a private dwelling
unit.
The store, a garage, and the

The Daily Sentinel

Now You Know
t\

Shields, and Emory Green. In front of the tree are William
Matlack; children, Glen, Emil, and Howard Matlack, and
Minnie (Osborn) Matlack.

when only 18 years of age,
sawing the timber and
marketing the lumber, using
oxen to move it. At 21, he was
appointed postmaster at
Fayal for the next two years,
leaving there to settle in

Millard
Filmore,
13th
president of the United States,
was apprenticed to a wool
carder at age 15 and later
purchased his freedom for $30.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

POM EROY-M IDDLEPQRT, OHIO

VOL .XXII NO. 187

FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1971

home of a widow , Mrs. Callie
Shields were destroyed by a
disastrous "election day" fire
in 1936. There was very little
insurance to cover the loss,
but Meigs County saw another
quality of "Bill" Matlack,
courage. His hotel, now used
as a dwelling, was all that was
left.
In 1893, W. E. Matlack and
Minnie Osborne were united in
marriage. To this union were
born six children, Glen,
Howard,
Emil,
Freda
(Green), Ethel (Mrs. John
Arbaugh), and Willie, who
died as an infant. W. E.
Matlack died in 1943; his wife,
in 1945.
The hotel building is now
owned by Mrs. William
Chapman, who maintains a
lovely home there.
(Information source: Mrs.
John Arbaugh and miscellaneous newspaper clippings.)

Weather
Partly cloudy through
Saturday. Low tonight in the
upper teens and low 20s. High
Saturday in the 30s. Probability
of precipitation 20 per cent
through Saturday. Bast to
northeast winds 5-10 m.p.h.
today and tonight

TEN CENTS

· 3HornesFired
•

Three homes were broken
into where fires were started
and a fourth reported a
breaking and entering, Meigs
County Sheriff Robert C.
Hartenbach reported today.
The Sheriff's Dept. received a
call Thursday afternoon from
Clair Shenefield, Langsville, Rt.
1, that his home had been entered and that one of the
bedrooms had been set afire.
Apparently the room was air
tight which contained the fire to
that room.
Shenefield had just returned
home after being gone two
weeks. The front door to the

home had been forced open.
Shenefield said nothing had
been removed from the home.
There was considerable smoke
damage to other areas in the
house .
Thursday
evening
the
sheriff's dept. took into custody
two suspects, one 24 years old
and one 17. Under questioning,
the two admitted to the
breaking and entering and
signed a statement to this effect. Both are in jail pending
further investigation.
A house belonging to Raymon
Young, Albany, RD, located on
the Fisher-Chase Road, also

r---------------------------,

was broken into and a fire set in
the bedroom. Young returned to
the house in time to extinguish
the fire.
Delbert Mitchell, Langsville,
reported a fire was set in the
cellar of his home but burned
itself out before doing much
damage. The house was entered
through the back door with the
use of a skeleton key.
Lionel Boggs, Middleport,
who has a cottage approximately %-mile from the
Shenefield residence, reported
it had been entered. Both
suspects involved in the
Shenefield incident denied any
knowledge of entering the
Boggs cottage.
The sheriff's Dept. said this
morning an arson investigator
be called to assist in the
NEARING COMPLETION - Th~ new Racine Locks and Dam, spanning the about $72 million job, and that will be fbpshed by early spring. There are about 35
investigation.
Ohio River near New Haven, is nearly completed. Officials said only odds and ends workers currently employed on the construction phase of the facility. Dedication
work remains to be done by the Johnson Construction Company, contractor for the ceremonie&amp; will be observed this year.'

! New .., .in .Briefs l wtil
I

I

By United Press International

0 'Qrady to h ead Safety Dept.

•

COLUMBUS - GOVERNOR-ELECT J OHN J . Gilligan has
named state Democratic Chairman Eugene P . O'Grady as
director of the Department of Highway Safety in his new administration. O'Grady, who has heade9 the Democratic party in
Ohio since 1968, served two years, 1962-64, as state commerce
director under former Gov. Michael V. DiSalle.
Gilligan, in making the announcement late Thursday, said he
asked O'Grady to leave the leadership post " because the people of
Ohio need men with the courage , the dedication to public service
and the administrative ability Pete O'Grady possesses." The
Highway Safety Department conducts the state's highway safety
programs and has jurisdiction over the Ohio Highway Patrol and
the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.

Letter writing to cost more
WASHINGTON- FEDERAL SOURCES have predicted a
33% per cent boost in postal rates by May. A new U. S. Postal
Service board of governors will ask the five-member Postal Rate
Commission for the increases in order to make the post office pay
for itself, the sources said Thursday.
Under postal reform legislation passed last year, the board's
proposed increases will go into effect within 90 days if the rate
commission fails to act.

Another cut of interest rate
WASHINGTON- THE FEDERAL RESERVE Board has
made the third cut in less than two months in the interest rate it
charges for loans to commercial banks, apparently in an effort to
(Continued on Page 10)

5-Foot Candles
To be Required

~~~~~?.:.~~~...!~~~ '·"J:~:;g;:~;,d,,;;~th;:,~l7 B oard Approves
Cafeteria P lan

d
.
Mr . ~n Mrs. Lawrence Dav1s,
Racme Ro.ute 2, has been
declared wmner of the 1971
B b D b.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
a Y er y.
Mines must install at least five
Annually through the de~by
foot-candles in all working the first baby bo.rn to Meigs
places, according tG new County parents IS presented
regulations proposed Thursday
by the U. S. Bureau of Mines. with atsnumb~r o~ giffts, wit.hftthe
paren commg m or a ~~ or
A maximum of 110-foot- two, thro~gh the cooperatiOn of
candles for work areas was are~ busmess houses.
included in the regulations,
Nicole was born at 5:15p.m.
mandated by the 1969 federal on New Year's Day at Pleasant
coal mine health and safety act Valley Hospital in Point
and set to take ef.fect Sept. 30, Pleasant. She was delivered by
1972.
Dr. John M. Grubb and weighed
Among other proposals were
specific requirements for coal
face areas, including longwall
Veterans Memorial Hospital
faces, roof bolting, and
ADMITTED - Mila Hudson,
illumination measuring
Syracuse; Elmer Parsons,
procedures.
Interested parties have 45 Racine; Theresa Johnson,
days to offer comment, Racine; Clara Murray, Midfollowing publication of the dleport.
DISCHARGED - Valentine
regulations in the federal
Mitch, Terry Pooler.
register.

Inside Mines

·

Providing gifts to Nicole as
well as to her parents will be
A&amp;P Super Market, Lou's
A hl d S
·
G
,
s an
ervice, oess 1er s
Jewelry Store, Village Pharmacy, Citizens National Bank,

~~~~~'.s S~~~tlec;,~w's S~~as~

Swisher and Lohse Drugs,
Dudley's Florist, Kiddie
Shoppe, Kroger's, Pomeroy
National Bank, Baker Furniture, L. &amp; Z. Dress Shop,
Mark V Super Market, Racine
Home National Bank, Dutton
Drug Co., Pomeroy Flower
Shop, Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., New York Clothing
House, Landmark, Stiffler's
Department Store, K. &amp; C.
Jewelers, Grover's Studio, Blue
and Grey, Racine Food Mart,
The Fabric Shop, Waid Cross
Sons Store, Martin Restaurant,
Oiler's Sohio Service and
Western Auto Store.

arnn arnve a
eav y
guarded Lydda Airport near
Tel Aviv today to talk with
I
r I d
.
h t
srae I ea ers m w a
Premier Golda Meir has
called "the most important
meeting I have had in a long

r

"

·~=~ing made the trip at
Israel's urging in an effort to
clear the way for progress in
the Middle East peace talks
that resumed Tuesday in New

y

k

or ·

W.:.&lt;?.:&gt;.~:::::;:;~~~:;:;:;~::;:;;.:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;;:;~:;:;:~;:;:;:;;::;:;:;:;:;:;:

• Fitness Program for Adults Launched
By George Hargraves, Superintendent
Meigs Local School District
The Adult Physical Fitness program is off and
running. Each Monday and Tuesday evening Mr.
Charles Chancey's program is in session in the gym at
Middleport. If you fellows like to play a little half-eourt
basketball, this is the place to be .
Our first G.E.D. Test success was registered

Speaking of Schools-No. 170

,

•

recently by the first one from our adult learning lab to
take it. One for one is pretty good. Several more are
nearing the point where they will try the test.
Please note - you can still get into this program
this week, next week or any week. The lab is open from
6:30 to 9:30 every Tuesday and Thursday. Give us a
chance to give you a chance to tackle G.E.D. with a
good possibility of success.
PLANNING FOR NEXT YEAR starts now. In just
a little while we will begin to register students for the
courses that they will take next year . Important
decisions must be made .
The key levels for these important decisions are
grades eight and ten. Those students who are in grade 8
now will have to decide between college prep courses
or pre-vocational courses to be studied in grade 9
dur ing the coming year . Those students in grade 10 and
already in pre-vocatwnal courses must decide what
vocational course they wish to follow .
If you havP a student in grade 8 now, you had better
have some sen ous discussions about whether college is

possible in the future or not. If it is, then decide on the
college prep course. If it isn't, then face the facts anrl
have the student register in the pre-vocatic.
program.
If you have a student in grade 10 now, your serious
discussion should center on the selection of the proper
vocational course. This is for those students who will
not go to college. By the way, less than one-fourth of
our graduates do go into college.
The following junior level vocational programs
will be available next fall: auto mechanics, r.lerical
business - office, stenographic business - office,
cosmetology, diversified job training, drafting, occupational work experience, radio-TV repair, and
welding-sheet metal. A maximum of 25 students is the
limit in these programs. In D.IT and OWE it is less than
that.
Here in the junior level there are nine vocational
areas from which to make a selection. If your tenth
grader has questions about any of them, have the
student contact Mr. Diehl, Mr. Sauer, Mrs. Vennari, or
one of the teachers who is working in the programs.
Of course, all of these programs will be available
at the senior level next year also.
This brings us to the point that we must start our
search for an additional drafting teacher and an additional radio and TV repair teacher. The basic
requirements are: (1) a high school diploma and (2)
seven years of experience in the trade. If you know any
who might qualify, call me at 992-2153.
La~! Tuesday I attended a legislative committee
JrJect ing in Columbus in the morning. In the afternoon I
had a chance to meet briefly with Rep. Ralph Welker
I

I

and Sen. Oakley Collins as they both prepared for the
convening of the House and the Senate for the P . M.
sessions.
As I walked the halls of the House and the Senate I
became even more keenly aware of the importance of
the State Legislature and its actions in respect to
school finance. What happens in those committee
rooms and those legislative chambers will largely
determine the direction of education in this State. With
our great financial dependence on state school funds,
what happens there will dominate the direction of
education in southeastern Ohio.
. Parts of Ohio have the economic resources in
taxable property to chart an independent course. Most
of us don't have such resources. They certainly don't
exist now in Meigs Local.
What happens in Columbus is vital to us. We need
to know what is in the legislative mills and we need to
try to influence it positively for us whenever the opportunity arises. Consequently, many southeastern
Ohio school superintendents will use up a lot of tire
tread on the roads between here and the State Capitol
Building during the coming months.
NEWS AND NOTES - The once-a-year Combined
Charity Drive will be underway soon at the Meigs
High . Through this program the students raised $614.40
last year. I understand they've set their goal higher
this year. You may get a chance to help them. - Did
you note in last Tuesday's Sentinel that our budget for
1971 is $1,672,309. Any way you look at it, that's 1:5ig
business . - We travel to Wellston tonight for
basketball. We go to Athens next Friday and have
Logan at home on Saturday .

LT. WIGGLESWORTH

Commander
Promoted
COLUMBUS - Ohio State
Highway Patrol Superintendent
Colonel Robert M. Chiaramonte
today announced the promotion
of Sergeant Ernest W.
Wigglesworth to the rank of
Lieutenant.
Lieutenant Wigglesworth has
been transferred to the
Gallipolis Patrol Post where he
will assume command. He has
been stationed at Circleville as
assistant post commander since
July, 1964. He has also served at
Bellefontaine and London
during his 16-year career.
Wigglesworth is a native of
Massillon where he graduated
from Washington High School.
He attended Rio Grande College
and served in the U. S. Army.
Lt. Wigglesworth is married to
the former Rose Marie Smart of
Perrysville . They have two
daughters and a son.

RACINE- Supt. Ralph Sayre
was authorized to make purchases of lunchroom equipment
as approved by the state by the
Southern Local School District
board of education Thursday
night.
Sayre will purchase five large
mixers, three commercial type
stoves
and
one
large
refrigerator.
The board
discussed recent changes made
in the district's lunch program
in accordance with state
regulations. The state department has approved the plan
proposed by the Southern
Board.
The board gave Mrs. Marilyn
Powell, secretary at the high
school, an additional leave of
absence extending to July 1.
Mrs. Powell was injured in an
auto accident several months
ago.
Robert Oliver, mathematics
teacher, was authorized to enter
12 of his students in the 1971
national
high
school
mathematics contest and Mrs.
Vinas Lee, in charge of the
senior
vocational
office
education department, was
authorized to attend a state
convention with four students
Feb. 26-28 in Dayton. The four
students who recently returned

with honors from a district
meeting in Marietta are Pam
Codner, Cheryl Powell, Ruth
Winebrenner, and Shirley
Congo.
Sayre reported that the Title I
Impact Program has been
approved by the State Department of Education and returned
to the district.
Seniors, granted permission
to make their annual trip to
Washington, will leave about
May 10. A resolution was passed
to have the district mechanic
inspect all school buses and
place speed control regulators
on buses having none .
An application from Opal
Cummins was received for an
assistant custodianship in the
district. There are no vacancies
at this time . Payment of $25 to
Don Stobart was authorized for
having cut down a tree and
disposing of it near the Racine
elementary school. The board
adjourned until 7 tonight.
Attending were Sayre and his
assistant, James Adams; board
members David Nease, Charles
Pyles, Dennie Hill, Gene Yost
and Clarence Lawrence; Clerk
Charles Norris, Dan Smith,
representing the Southern
OAPSE; Bruce Wallace, a
teacher; Billy Hill, and Bill
Cozart.

Autos Collide
Two accidents involving only Welker to Sit on
min?r damage we:e in- Government Group
vestlgated Thursday rught by
Pomeroy Police.
State Rep. Ralph Welker (R·
The first occurred at 8:15 on Pomeroy) will be appointed to
E. Main St. when a car driven the State Government Comeast by Thomas Burnside, mittee of the Ohio House of
Pomeroy, attempted to pass one Representatives in addition to
driven by Elsie Hines, his previously announced apPomeroy, skidded on ice, and pointment as chairman of the
struck the left front of the Hines Agribusiness Subcommittee of
vehicle.
the Agriculture, Commerce and
At 8:32 on Wetzgall St., a car Lab')r Committee, Speaker
driven oy Ruth Smith, Charles F. Kurfess announced
Pomeroy, scraped the side of a today.
Welker was re-€lected Nov. 3·
car owned by Harold Ash,
Pomeroy. Ash harl stopped to to a fourth term in the House
assist another motorist in from the 27th District. A fargetting his car started, and the mer-businessman and former ·
Smith vehicle was attempting to Meigs Cmu1ty sheriff, Welker··
pass. There were nn injuries or resides at Hi:! Mulberry Axe ..
arrests .
Pomero~·.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 8,1971

r---------------------------1

IHelen Help Us I
I

I

By Helen Bottel

1

I

thousand and one examples of
the way my parents showed
favoritism to my brothers and
neglected ME. One day when
my older brother was home on
leave from Vietnam, he, my
younger brother and I sat up all
night talking.
Somehow we got around to the
Somehow we got around to the
subject of "who was the
favorite." I shared with my
brothers how lonely and
isolated I felt because the folks
made so much over them ... one
was older and got all the new
stuff; the other was younger
and got his own way; one was
athletic; the other a brain; one
had a delightful personality; the
other was handsome. Poor little
me was Miss In-between
Nobody. So I thought.
"You?" my older brother
exclaimed. "Why I thought I
was neglected and you two were
the chosen ones. And on went
his list: My brother and I both
got high grades; we were better
looking, and favored as the
youngest and the only girl,
besides my being the only
granddaughter on both sides.
My younger brother, the
silent member of the family,
shrugged his shoulders and
said, "And here all the time I
thought I was the outcast. Do
you know what it's like to live up
to the athletic prowess and
academic standards you have
set? And so it went.. ..
I guess when there is more
than one child in the family
there will be times when each
feels he or she is the least loved.
-NEGLECTED, OR WAS I?
Dear Neg.:
Dear Helen:
How right you are - and this
Mter reading your column on
"favoritism in families" I just even in families where communication is no great problem.
had to write this letter.
As I grew up I could list a -H.

SHE'S NO FLORENCE
NIGHTENGALE
Dear Helen:
Recently our little sevenyear-old girl went to the
hospital. Upon admission, she
watched open-eyed and without
tears as the technician took
blood samples. There she was
told she was a "very brave
young lady."
Arriving at her destination,
fourth floor pediatrics, she
he¥d again how brave she was.
Mter a restful night, our
brave patient was taken to the
rpe~ating room. When she
zv:oke in a strange recovery
room, she became frightened.
Then the tables were turned.
Now the nurse in charge called
her "cry-baby, spoiled" and a
few other choice words, even
though the anesthetic hasn't
worn off yet.
Well, thanks to that "devoted
nurse," our little patient now
hates hospitals and doctors'
offices, and especially nurses.
I wonder if this woman would
use the same forceful hand and
harsh voice to her own children
if she has any?
DISGUSTED MOTHER
Dear Mother:
Probably.
A good nurse isn't always a
gentle soul. That's why it's best,
if possible, for a parent to be at
the bedside when the child
comes out from under the
anesthetic.
As for lasting traumas: Not if
you handle this incident wisely;
which means, don't make a big
thing of it. -H.

BRUCE BIDSSAT
u«"

~

Stiff Tests This
Year for Saigon
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA Washington Correspondent

..

it, as cops of course: Eddie
Egan and Sonny Grosso ... It's
one of the most fantastic tales
we've ever read, wilder than
any fiction ... Major department
store asked a comic to appear at
a needy-children benefit as
Santa and was informed he
rec'd $5,000 for such in-person
roles.. .. Producer Arthur
Whitelaw wants Jane Withers,
the TV plumber, for his "70Girls-70" Bdwy. musical.
Rita Hayworth is tuning up
her first LP recording for
Capito! . . . Florinda Bolkan
figures she's on the road toward
success all right: after seven
films (the latest, "Investigation
of a Citizen Above Suspicion";
and what raves this one rated),
she has received a large
number of proposals about
equally distributed between
marriage and indecent, her
rent's been hiked, and Sophia
Loren stopped speaking to her
... Anouk Aimee is turning down
all film roles, preferring to be
Mrs. Albert Finney ... Tiny
marginal historical note: When
Pres. Nixon visited Tito, the
latter told him he likes John
Wayne films.
Good picture layout: The lady
at 69th St. in Central Park
daily dispersing hundreds of
nuts to about 20 of her
customers - squirrels ... Goes
into a rage if an unleased dog
comes near ... Holiday movies
in the nieghborhood theatres
run the gamut from kiddieprograms mornings to dirty
flicks evenings ... More indication Fun City's now Gun
City: Natives of Sutton Place
once had only miniature poodles
and similarly swank minibreeds on the perambulating
leash. Now they walk huge
police dogs, trained to snarl at
passing pedestrians who just
might be menacing.

Speak tor ALL the People!"

WASIDNGTON (NEA)
The year 1971 will sharpen problems for South Vietnam
in three critical fields-internal security, the economy,
and politics- with fall elections for president and the full
lower legislative house providing the stiffest test for
Saigon.
The internal security situation gets little attention here.
but it warrants more. Knowledgeable sources estimate
that Hanoi has about 50,000 below-surface agents in its
true infra-structure in South Vietnam.
Contrary to common report, only a fairly small number
of these secret cadres surfaced in the famous 1968 Red
Tet offensive and were either killed or caught. Basically.
the structure is intact.
In the event of a Communist victory, these hidden Red
elements would be expected to emerge and take political
and social control of the conquered lands.
Their undercover function is the constant recruiting of
what some Vietnam specialists call the "springboard"
forces of the Viet Cong. These are the guides, porters,
couriers and other intermediate para-military personnel
without which the real combatants cannot move well.
It was their ranks which were badly decimated in Tet
1968, and they have never been fully replaced.
Yet the potential is there so long as the hidden recruiters exist in large numbers, and it is police work to
ferret them out. One source suggests that Saigon's
national police force needs to be boosted from a present
80,000 to 120,000 men before real progress can be made.
But the war and its attendant burdens already have
placed crushing strain upon the South Vietnam economy.
The rampant inflation is a well-told story. There are
countless other dislocations .
Not the least difficulty is that as U.S. forces in the
country are pulled out, heavy support funds spent there
go with them. President Nixon may very well recommend
at least doubling of foreign economic assistance to Saigon
for fiscal 1972 to help compensate for this developing gap.
The South Vietnam economic outlook is not, however,
totally dark. The country has had a record rice harvest.
Not only the United States but prospering Japan and West
Germany are investing in new industrial capacity for the
struggling South Vietnamese. To fuel this growth with
manpower, the nation can draw on a rising number of
qualified technicians trained in varying army service.
Even if there are no battlefield disasters and the superheated, ragged economy cools a good deal, the political
ordeals of September and October must still be surmounted.
In 1970 South Vietnam chose a new Senate with no loud
complaint from outsiders that the incumbent Thieu-Ky
regime blocked free political processes. There is con.
fidence in some official circles here that the September
vote for a complete new lower house can be brought off.
under some external supervision , with a minimum of
trouble .
The Oct. 3 election of a president may be harder going.
Prec;ident Thieu is, of course, a candidate for reelection
At this writing, his likeliest significant rival seem s to be
Major Gen. Duan Van Minh . otherwise known as "Big
Minh ."
His military feats make him a nationa l hero. His charisma is enhanced by his height- four or five inches
greater than the average Vietnamese. They have a fondness for their rare tall ones.
But "Big Minh " is cautious. It is thought here that he
might not run unless he sees a very good chance to win.
Too, his personal record s uggest s he is a poor adminis·
trator and might seem no great improvement over the
controversial Thieu.
Moreover , "'B1g Minh " might be ha ndicapped if the
Communists decide to mix into a possible Thieu·Minh
rivalry. They have indicated their intent to exploit the
presidential race in some way, no matter what A Red
ploy involving Minh would be ironic, lor he has no ideo logical differences with Thicu cvrn though their constituencies are not 1hl' ~am" Minh's Buddhist leamngs
assure that. If tw dt)I' S not mn. a Thit•u win over tokt&gt;n
nvals may IH' branded ''rigg&lt;·d " and " r&lt;'JH"Pssivt, ··

r-----------------------------------------1

! Voice along Broadway

!

I

,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK
Andy
Williams almost has estranged
wife Claudine Longet ready to
reconcile
Catherine
Deneuve's virtually combative
admirers (of her celluloid
charms of course, doubtless,
without a doubt): Marcello
Mastroianni and Francois
Truffaut ... Famed Carib resort
(not in Nassau) is close to last
gasp ... Totie Fields, who
doesn't speak to Shecky Greene
(is that good or bad?), just
added Wayne Newton to the
boycott ... Tony Randall at the
Ground Floor stated Doris Day
is the best actress he's ever
worked with no matter what
Debbie Reynolds thinks .. . We
admire much about Doris, and
we could admire her much less
and still state she has more
talent in her tiniest tonsil than
Debbie complete.
The Theatre Development

[

Fund (which spends to encourage worthy shows which
might not make it otherwise)
bought $30,000 worth of tickets
to "The Me Nobody Knows,"
just graduated from off- to onBdwy.'s Helen Hayes Theatre
... Critics say it's even more
effective in Helen Hayes'
theatrical embrace ... The Fund
has awarded a $100,000 total so
far this season; also to "Story
Theatre" and "Conduct Unbecoming," both entertaining
productions
Bobby
Rosengarden's Cavett Show
band now at the Rainbow Grill
played a Duke Ellington tribute
-a 40-year-old arrangement of
the Duke's.
Elliott Roosevelt, head of
Miami
Beach's
tourist
development ass'n, as his
biggest annual headache:
Telling people he hasn't a single
Super Bowl ticket ... The mostly
male cast of the fine "1776"

EDITORIALS

]

musical has one running
backstage expense that isn't
beer or some-such all-male
outlay: It's hairspray for the
long Colonial hair styles ...
Hallmark Cards rec'd a letter
from a Boston hippie that went:
"Dear Hallmark: I still think
you are a bourgeois, fascist,
capitalistic, chauvinistic pig
corporation. But thank you for
presenting 'Hamlet.' " ...
Hallmark's a most enlightened
firm.
Not just the midtown Bdwy.
eateries get raves for food: Joe
Puglia's Roadway Restaurant
in just-over-the-brige Queens
has one of our journalistic
compatriots salivating while
urging us Puglia-wards ... "The
French Connection," a book
about an actual busting of a
$32,000,000 int'l dope ring about
which we raved last year, now
becomes a movie, and it should
be a dilly; the N.Y. detectives
who broke the case are
technical advisors -even act in

Eye on the Needy Child
" ... Remember that what matters is one person, one
child, unlike any other, with his own hopes and his own
dreams and his own fears, who lives at the center of his
own separate and very personal world "
With these words, President Nixon defended his family assistance plan in a speech to the White House Conference on Children. He sought to dramatize the fact that
welfare in America too often depersonalizes the need
because of the rising number of recipients and the rising
costs.
He pointed out that in the last 10 years the number of
children on welfare has nearly trioled. to more than
6 million- caught up, as he put it , ""i n a system ... that
drives familie s apart instead of holding them together.
that brings we lfa re snoopers in their homes. that robs
them of pride a nd destroys dignity ."
· Well saJd . And well may the administration and the
92nd Congress bring about too-lon g delayed we lfare re form thi s vcar. before any more children's dreams are
destroyed.·
·

DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publ i shing Company , 111
Court St., Pomeroy , Ohio,
45769. Business Office Phone
992·2156, Editori al Phone 992·
2157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National
advertising
representative
Bottinelli·
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
St., New York City , New York.
Subscription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per Wj!ek ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available: One
month $1.75. By mail in Ohio
and W. Va. , One year $14.00.
Six months $7.25. Three
months $4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times .
, sentinel.

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO MOTOR
VEHICLE DEALERS:
In accordance with Sec 307. 86
of the Revised Code, sealed bids
will be received by t he Meigs
County Commissioners in their
office in the Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, until 10 00
A .M on January 26, 1971; at
wh i ch time and place the bids
will be opened and read aloud
for the following vehicles.
All b i ds must be submitted in
tour proposals. Each proposal
to meet the conditions and
specifications as follows:
PROPOSAL NO. 1
one 1971 truck chassis and
cab.
wheel base 124 inches, cab to
rear axle.
25,000 lbs. G. V. W. or heavier.
7,000 l bs . 1-Beam front axle.
18,500 lbs. 2 speed rear axle.
S speed transmission, syn .
chromesh, direct in fifth
minimum 340 cu. in. v.8
engine.
4000 lbs. minimum front
spring capacity.
11,000 lbs. minimum rear
spring capacity.
auxiliary rear springs.
combination
rear
and
directional signal I ights.
traffic hazard switch.
cab marker lights.
dual electric horns.
heater and defroste·r.
900 x 20.10 ply front tires, 7"
rim, highway tread.
900 X 20 · 10 ply rear tires, 7"
rims, on and off tread.
cast spoke wheels .
heavy duty clutch.
heavy duty brake booster
with 7" rear brakes.
heavy duty bumper.
rh and lh · Sr. West Coast
mirrors.
70 amp. battery.
50 amp. or larger alternator.
cab l&amp;r grab handles.
f ront tow hooks.
color: omaha orange.
full depth foam seat.
heavy duty frame with frame
re inforcements.
forward &amp; reverse power take
off for winch &amp; controls.
power take off and control for
p latform hoist.
power steering.
To be considered as a trade
in, one 1956 model , long wheel
base , Reo truck. Cab and
chassis only.
PROPOSAL NO. 2
One 1971 dump truck with
marion
dump
body
108"X84" X30 "
head
and
ta ligate with center door in
gate.
heavy duty 7" hoist with
P.T.O. &amp; levers.
112 cab protector with 2" wings.
4 corner lights, 6 reflectors mud flaps.
wheel base 72" cab to axle.
25,000 lbs. G.V.W. or heavier .
7,000 lbs. I·Beam front axle.
18,500 lb. 2 speed rear axle.
5 speed synchromesh tran ·
smi,ssion, direct in fifth .
340 cu. in. v.a engine or
larger.
4000 lb. minimum front spring
capacity.
11,000 lb. minimum rear
spring capacity.
auxiliary rear springs.
combination rear &amp; direc·
tional signal lights.
traffic hazard switch.
dual electric horns.
cab marker lights.
heater &amp; defroster.
power steering.
2 speed windsh ield wipers &amp;
washers.
mud flaps.
900X20 . 10 ply front tires J"
rims.
900X20 · 10 ply dual rear (on
and off tread) 7" rims .
cast spoke wheels.
heavy duty clutch.
heavy duty brake booster
with 7" rear brakes.
heavy duty bumper and front
tow hooks.
lh &amp; rh Sr. West Coast

mirrors
70 amp. battery .
50 amp or larger alternator .
cab grab handles 1 &amp; r
full depth foam seat
heavy duty frame with fram .
re i nforcements.
color. omaha orange .
To be cons idered as a trade
i n, one 1966 model i nternationa l
dump truck
PROPOSAL NO .3
one 1971 pick.up truck with
si de tool boxes ("Tool m ate " or
equal) mounted on top flange of
pick up body
s i ze of tool boxes to be ao ·
proximately 96" x 16" x 121/2 " .
pick up body to be wide style
with wheelhousings, inside.
•
length of body 96" to ac.
commodate the side tool boxes .
wheel base suitable for the
96" body.
5000 lbs. G.V.W or heavier .
3500 l bs. minimum rear ax l e .
3 speed fully synchroniZed
transmission, column shift .
heavy duty clutch.
230 cu in. or larger 6 cyiinder
eng me.
1500 lb
minimum front
springs.
1700 l b. minimum
springs .
auxiliary rear springs.
power steering.
combination
parking
&amp;
directional lights front.
combination tail, stop &amp;
d irectional lights rear.
traffic hazard switch.
full width foam seat.
heater &amp; defroster
west coast mirrors, Jr. rh &amp;
lh.
2 spread electric wipers ,
windshie ld washer
70 amp. battery.
42 amp or l arger alternator.
i nstrument ammeter, tem·
perature &amp; oil pressure gauge .
heavy duty front &amp; rear shock
absorbers.
H ·78·15·B·bias belted highway
tread front &amp; spare, on and off
tread rear .
rear step rear bumper with
trailer ball hole.
color: body &amp; side tool boxes ,
omaha orange .

J)

To be considered as trade ins
- one 1964 ford pick up, with
uti lity bed , and one 1958 G.M.C.
pick up.
PROPOSAL NO . 4
•
one 1971 model 4 door sedan .
color: white
min imum curb wt. 3880 lb.
m i n i mum wheel base 120".
350 cu. in. v.type engine or
greater .
power steering.
power disc brakes.
heavy duty a ir cleaner .
automatic transmission - J
speeds forward.
windshiel d washer &amp; 2 speed
wipers.
remote
control
outside
m i rror .
40 amp. alternator or larger .
heater &amp; defroster.
heavy duty battery.
undercoating.
vinyl upholstery.
non slip differential.
heavy springs, heavy duty
shock absorbers. and stabilizer
bar.
foam seat . front.
traffic hazard switch.
addit i onal dimmer switch
installed on dash.
belted tires front &amp; spare ,
highway tread.
belted tires rear, on &amp; off

4

~~d .

No trade in.
Bidders to furnish their own
bid forms and submit bids for
each proposal as numbered
The County Commissioners
may accept the lowest bid or
select the best bid for the in.
tended purpose and reserve the
right to reject any or all b ids , or
any part thereof.
BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS,
MARTHA CHAMBERS,
CLERK.
C1 l 8, 25 2tc

BEN FRANKLIN CO.

Public Housing
Model to Watch
Communities across the nation which have experienced
controversy and frustration m attempting to alleviate
low- and moderate-income housing shortages may profit
from observing Dayton, Ohio, as that five-county metropolitan area tries a new attack on its hou&lt;;ing proolem.
Under a plan originated by the Miami Valley Planning
Commission, 29 municipalities in the five counties will
attempt to provide 14,000 dwelling units, many of them
public housing.
These will be dispersed among 53 planning units according to quotas worked out under a mathematical
formula taking into account population density, the
amount of existing housing for low income families and
other factors .
Adoption of the plan did not come easily. An extensive
education campaign to discount the fears of present residents , the support of the Dayton "establishment" and
some editorial proddmg were needed to involve some of
the comfortable- and all-white- suburbs.
Dayton 's housing pattern is similar to most large cities.
Located in a metropolitan area of about 842,000 people,
the city of some 250,000 persons has lost population while
the suburbs gained . Dayton became more poor and black.
the suburbs more white and wealthy. Almost all of the
3,350 low-cost housing units built in the area were in
Dayton itself.
Backers of the plan have one big concern: That the
intent of the Department of Housing and Urban Develop·
ment to make a strong stand for open communities in
the administration of federal grants not be lessened as a
result of President Nixon's well-publicized statement that
"forced integration of tile suburbs 1s not in the national
interest.''
Although the staff of the Miami Valley Commission has
received almost unanimous support from elected commission members representing the communities and
counties around Dayton, some citizen groups fought the
plan . The executive director of the planning commission
received several telephone threats .
A firm federal policy supporting the plan as it reaches
its implementation stage is needed If it is to succeed.
Should the Dayton plan fail because federal backing is
not forthcoming, such housing will receive a setback in
other cities across the nation .

THE DAILY SENTINEL

LEGAL NOTICE

.Zan.uaJry, SJZ.le

'

LADIES FINE SHOES

~~ $16.98

WOMEN 'S SHOE COLLECTION

VALUES TO $15.00
SOCIALITES

$l 4 •9 8 &amp;

VALUES TO $11.00$16.98
Cabbies

VALUES TO $18.00

$11.98

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Red Cross· Shoes

VALUES TO $11.00

$16.98

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

andiam o SHOES

%OFF

VALUES TO $20.00

14.98 •·

ALL OTHER
MERCHANDISE STORE- WIDE

CATLINA SPORTSWEAR, WILSON SPORTING GOODS, SAMSONITE,
LADY BUXTON, All TROPHIES AND GOLFING EQUIPMENT

Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va.

BEN FRANKLIN CO.
THE HOME OF FINE SHOES SINCE 1903

•

Pl Pleasant,
W. Va.

----- ~ --------------------------------------------------~----------------------------------~------------'----~----~--------------------~------~-----

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 8,1971

l;·ii;~;::;;;:;:;~:·· ·;;::~:;;ji/11 ~~.~!!~"'" ~'"g,~e~. .,~~ 1!.~~
~,
~
.
1

•

11!1

"

•

,

...

.

,

•
--•-.-.

l

Terry Ohlinger, Paul Pierce , Robert Wamsley, Marvin
McKelvey, Donald Deiner, and Larry Bishop. The course was
organized by Supt. of Schools George Hargraves and Terry
Ohlinger, a Junior High teacher who also took the course (see
a bove ) ·
. Smith, who made basketball fans' hearts beat a little faster
with his hardwood heroics 20 years ago for Pomeroy High School,
was jnstructor.
Said Smith after the final written tests were gathered in,
sealed, and dispatched to Columbus last night:
"If they turn out to be lousy refs, it's my fault."
Smith has been working basketball and football games in
southeastern Ohio several years, but only recently has permitted
himself to gradua te into Triple A and Double A matches. He takes
his work seriously and would not move up until he was confident
he was ready. This year he has contracts for 23 games, about 7
more than he expected, or desired.
The 9 new refs, having taken the course, and passed it, will be
certified by the State High School Athletic Association (or
whatever they call, exactly, the administrative organ, and be
eligible to join the Athens Chapter of officials.
The course required only 10 hours of instruction. It turned into
15 hours instead, using film clips of a number of games, and
detailed analysis of the rule book rule by rule in open discussions.
Fans will note that most of the men completing the course
were standout high school athletes of this area. Donald Deiner,
the very hard working and highly efficient administrator of
Veterans Memorial Hospital, no doubt played the game
somewhere else, and Larry Bishop I am not acquainted with. All
the others have won gold stars as players with southeastern Ohio
basketball fans.
BEGINNING PROBABLY within a couple of weeks, a class
for football officiating will begin under the same adult education
sponsorship. The exact date will be announced. Meanwhile, if
interested, get in touch with Mr. Ohlinger or Mr. Hargraves.
THE QUITE MODEST monetary reward in the high school
officiating business helps make the work worthwhile. With officiating, however, comes a few laughs. Always it is interesting.
&amp;nith recalled for Sports Desk an incident a year or so ago in
a basketball tournament at Portsmouth where the Trojans made
shambles of terribly outclassed opponent, the identity of which I
mercifully will withhold . He got with the defeated team's coach
afterward, perhaps to issue consoling words that might ease the
bitterness of having been whomped something like 90 to 40.
" Your boys had kind of a bad night, coach."
The coa ch: " Yes, they sure did."
" Well, " said Smith, "one thing about it, you don't have an
awful lot of talent on that club."
Growled the coach : "That's right. And the worst thing about
it is that they're all back next year! "
IS THERE A FOOTBALL COACH out of a job, or going to be
out of a job, or with a joo, who wants a challenge? If so, put in your
application at Southern High School.
The Southern High School Board probably will hire a coach at
its next meeting the second Thursday in February. So far, just
two applications are in Supt. Ralph Sayre's hands.
Southern's football problem has to be in the magnitude of
difficult, but not insolvable. Basically, I believe, Southern's lack
of a winning football tradition contributes heavily to handicap the
program.
PLAN NIGHT GAME
NEW YORK (UPI)- ThirtyIronton at Gallipolis
six years after Larry MacPhail
Athens at Logan
introduced night baseball to the
Jackson at Waverly
major leagues , a World Series
Meigs at Wellston
game will be played under the
Eastern at Hannan Trace
lights.
Hannan at Wahama
Baseball Commissioner
Rock Hill a t Oak Hill
Bowie Kuhn announced ThursFairland a t Chesapeake
day that the fourth game of the
Coal Grove at Symmes Valley 1971 series - in the park of the
Kyger Creek at North Gallia
National League champion on
SATURDAY'S GAMES
Wednesday, Oct. 13 - will be
Southwestern a t Eastern
the first night game in the
Southern at Hannan
history of the classic.
Oak Hill at Coal Grove
The decision by Kuhn follows
Chesapeake a t South Point
several years of speculation
Portsmouth at Ironton
that baseball would put its
Jackson at Greenfield
showcase event on at night for
Logan a t Nelsonville-York
the benefit of national
Logan, W. Va. at Pt. Pleasant television.

Tonight's Games

--.-.

r

!.II

by Chet Tannehill

•······· The supply of basketball referees in southeastern Ohio increased by nine (assuming all passed the big test) Thursday
night. Lest someone conclude the market is or is a~ut to be
glutted, hold off. There's still room for more, according to Ron
Smith, Meigs County's premier professional referee.
The nine who completed a l~our study course at Meigs
Junior High as part of the Meigs Local Adult Education program,
were Mike Werry, Richard Swackhamer, George Nesselroad,

---

~ =

----

.-

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9: ,30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY.

---

-~ = •••••••••••••••
-- ••••
-- •
--

--...
--

Lakers
Nudge
Cavs

0 U Athletics
Preserved by

Council Action

•
••
••

••
•
•••
••

Maxine At The
Electric Organ

•

•

THE MARTIN
N. 2ND AVE.

a rally that iced the victory.
Lew Alcindor, in foul trouble
most of the night, had 24 points
for the Bucks while Walt
Frazier had 23 and Dave
DeBusschere 22 for the Knicks.
"That's the best I've seen
him play since he broke into
the pros," said the Knicks'
Willis Reed of Robertson. "He
just did it all. What more can
you say?"
Other NBA Games
In the only other games

Earl Monroe scored 32 points
and sparked a last quarter rally
that led Baltimore over the
Hawks. Baltimore trailed 84-80
going into the final period
before Monroe and Wes Unseld
boosted the Bullets 1·nto the
lead .
Happy Hairston scored 25
points and Jerry West, returning to the lineup after breaking
his nose, had 23 as the Lakers
handed Cleveland its 44th loss
in 49 games .

Utah Increases Lead

7 P.M. TIL 11 P.M.

-

• -...

:;·•~:,aog"~'~ '";,"",~," ~~ ~~~~~ ~~~ ~!/:.,~,.~~l~ ~~=~d ~!::~~~ I;';~~~getes

playoffs in the spring. Milwaukee, the Midwest Division leader,
is now 33-7 and New York, the
defending league champion and
first in the East, now stands at
32-13.
Plaud1'ts For B1'g 0
The Knicks had stunned the
Bucks earlier this year with
back-to-back home-and-home
NBA Standmgs
victories. But Thursday night
By United Press International was completely different.
Atlantic Division
The Bucks led virtually all
W. L. PCT. GB
New York
32 13 .711 ...
the way and when the Knicks
Boston
25 18 .581
6
1
Philadelphia 25 19 .568 6 t2
Buffalo
12 32 .273 19112
Central Division
W. L. PCT. GB
Baltimore
25 16 .610 ...
Cincinnati
19 21 .475
5112
Atlanta
14 30 .318 12112
Cleveland
5 44 .102 24
By United Press International
Midwest Division
Vince Boryla 's decisive action
W. L. PCT. GB
Milwaukee
33
7 .825 ...
has helped the Utah Stars
Detroit
28 15 .651
6112 widen
their lead in the
Chicago
25 17 .595
9
American Basketball AssociaPhoenix
25 19 .568 10
lion's Western Division.
Pacific Division
W. L. PCT. GB
Boryla, the Stars' general
Los Angeles 23 18 .561
manager,
fined Donnie FreeSan Diego
23 22 .511
2
man, the club's second leading
San Francisco
23 23 . 500
2lf2 scorer, $1,000 Thursday for
Seattle
19 25 .432
51f2 "conduct detrimentaling club."
Portland
14 31 .311 11
Boryla 's steps carne after the
Thursday's Results
Milwaukee 116 New York 106
Baltimore 110 Atlanta 102
ABA Stantlmgs
Los Angeles 110 Cleveland 105
By United Press lnternationa I
(Only games scheduled)
East
Friday's Games
w. L. Pet. GB
Atlanta at Baltimore
Virginia
30 14 .682
Phoenix at Boston
Kentucky
26 16 .619 3
Cincinnati al Detroit
New York
17 22 .436 101!2
Los Angeles at Philadelphia
Carolina
17 25 .405 12
San Francisco at San Diego Floridians
17 24 .405 12
Seattle at Buffalo
Pittsburgh
18 27 .400 121' 2
Portland at Chicago
West
(Only games scheduled)
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
27 13 .675
Indiana
26 15 .634 1112
Memphis
21 20 .512 61t2
Denver
15 25 .375 12
Texas
15 27 .357 13
Thursday's Results
Pittsburgh 131 Denver 116
Floridians 118 Virginia 113
Utah 114 Texas 107
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Pittsburgh vs Carolina
at Greensboro N.C.
Memphis at Floridians
Denver vs. Texas
at Lubbock, Tex.
Kentucky at New York
(Only games scheduled)
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Los Angeles Lakers toyed with
the Cleveland Cavaliers in their
·::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::~::;:::::::::::::::::::
first meeting on the West Coast,
but the invaders found the
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
expansion team a bit more - Central State University of
troublesome Thursday night. Ohio is ranked fifth in the
The Lakers, snapping a four- initial 1970-71 National
game losing streak, took a 16 Association of Intercollegiate
point lead into the final quarter Athletics' basketball ratings
but had to withstand a strong and is also listed as the best
Cavalier rally in the final 12 defensive club.
minutes before winning 110-105.
Central State has allowed
"Our boys thought they were an average of only 57.3 points
in a scrimmage and would have in its eight games.
some fun after building up a 21pomt lead late in the third ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::
quarter, but it was the CavaNHL Standings
liers that were starting to have
By United Press International
the fun," said Los Angeles
East
Coach Joe Mallaney, who saw
W. L. T. Pfs.
28 6 5 61
his squad whip the Cavs by 27 Basion
26 7 6 58
New York
points in October.
18 12 8 44
Montreal
Happy Hairston tossed in 14 of Toronto
18 19 2 38
14 23 3 31
his game-high 25 points in the Vancouver
12 22 4 28
third quarter as the Lakers took Detroit
8 23 6 22
Buffalo
a 91-75 lead into the fmal 12
West
W. L. T. Pts.
minutes.
26 7 5 57
But the Cavaliers started to Chicago
St. Louis
18 9 11 47
find the range in the fourth Minnesota
13 18 8 34
Philadelphia
13 19 6 32
quarter .
10 19 11 31
With McCoy McLemore and Pittsburgh
Los Angeles
11 19 7 29
Walt Wesley each scoring ten California
12 24 2 26
points, the Cavs cut the Lakers'
Thursday's Results
lead to 106-102 with two minutes Bos ton 6 Vancouver 4
Buffalo 7 Detroit 4
left in the game.
Philadelphia 5 Los Angeles 5
Jerry West, who finished with
(Only games scheduled)
No Games Today
23 points, hit on a 20-footer and
followed with two free tosses to
give the Lakers an eight-point
bulge.
"I was very pleased with the
team's performance tonight,"
said Cleveland Coach Bill Fitch,
who sends his team against the
Buffalo Braves here Saturday.
The Cavaliers have posted
ATHENS, OHIO (UPI) -The
three of their five victories over
University Council at Ohio
the Braves.
University has rejected a
Poor Sanitation
proposal that the school
A federal survey classifies abandon its program of in94 pe r cent of the nation's tercollegiate athletics . A
12,000 dumps and 70 per Student Life Task Force had
cent of the 300 communih recommended that all sports
incinerators as " unacceptable " in terms of good sani - except basketball be reduced to
tation. according to the Brit- intramural basis.
The council also rejected a
a nnica Book of the Year.
task force recommendation that
financial support to athletics be
• cut as much as practical. The
turned down a
• council
recommendation that athletic
• scholarships be awarded on the
basis of financial need.
The Student Life Task Force
named by university officials in
October, 1969 included both
faculty and students .

NOW APPEARING
FOR YOUR
DINING PLEASURE

.--.
.....

the

The Bucks, led by Oscar
Robertson's 35-powt performance, a season high, scored a
116-106 victory over the New
York Knicks Thursday night in
what is gradually becoming one
of the National Basketball
Association'shottestrivalries.
The teams hold the two best

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

ll

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M~~~~~ee ~uc;,'"'

10

Cocktails and Dining

Ml

Alaska·s Katmat National
Monument is twice the s1ze
of the state of Delawar e

Whatever Else
You Do, Let
FLOWERS
Express Your
Sentiment

DUDLEY'S
FLORIST

DDLEPORT O

, ••

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59 N. Second Ave.
Middlepor!
992-5560

Stars lost to Indiana Wednesday
night in a game in which
Freeman did not play because
of what he said was the flu.
the flu.
The Stars stormed back from
a 13-poin t first half deficit
Thursday night to beat the
Texas Chapparrals 114-107. The
victory boosted the Stars' lead
over idle Indiana to P 12 games.
Willie Wise led the Stars'
scoring attack with 24 points
and Zelmo Beaty added 21 for
Utah. Joe Hamilton was high
man for Texas with 24.
In the only other action, the
Floridians stopped the Virginia
Squires 118-113 and the Pittsburgh Condors ripped the

Denver Rockets 131-116.
Mack Calvin, the ABA's
leading scorer, poured in 33
poin Is in leading the Floridians
over Virginia, the Eastern
Division leader, in a foul-filled
game.
The game was marked by
three double fouls, two technicals and 68 personal fouls.
Larry Brown of Virginia and
Larry Jones of the Floridians
were ejected for fighting .
Charlie Scott led the Squires'
a ttack with 28 points.
John Brisker had 41 points to
boost the Condors over Denver.
Pittsburgh scored 47 points in
the last period to turn the game
into a rout.

T olan Injured

In Cage Game
CINCINNATI (UPI ) -A torn
achilles tendon suffered in a
basketball game will put Cincinnati Reds outfielder Bobby
Tolan out of action at least
through the first two months of
the 1971 major league baseball
season.
The fleet-footed Tolan, who
led the majors in stolen bases
last year with 57, was playing
a benefit game in Frankfort,
Ky. , with other members of the
Reds, including Johnny Bench
a"ld Pete Rose, when he injured the tendon in his right
heel Wednesday night.
"He was in center court on a
fast break when it happened, "
said Reds utility pinch hitter
Jimmie Stewart, a member of
the basketball team formed by
a group known as Professionals,
Inc.
"There was no one within ten
feet of Bobby when it happened," Stewart said. "He just
went down ."
Placed In Cast
Tolan underwent surgery
Thursday at Christ Hospital
here and following the operation was placed in a full leg
cast which he will keep on for
four weeks.
Team physician Dr. George
Ballou said he would not be
permitted any visitors for at
least 24 hours.
Dr. Dale Fox, who performed
the surgery, said Tolan would
be fitted with a walking cast
after four weeks and wear it
for another four weeks, after
which he will start a slow rehabilitation process.
The Reds front office indicated Tolan probably would not
see action before June, if then,
a severe blow to the 25-year~ld
Los Angeles native's hopes for

another excellent season.
Tolan ended the 1970 season
with a .316 batting average, hit
16 home runs and 34 doubles
and drove in 80 runs for the
National League pennant- winning Reds.
Front Office Opposed
Reds General Manager Bob
Howsarn refused to comment
on the injury. He went on record a few months ago as being
opposed to Reds players participating in off-season basketball.
Reds Manag~r Sparky Anderson also had voiced opposition
to the basketball team. He was
at home in Thousand Oaks,
Calif., and not immediately
available for comment.
The basketball team was
scheduled to play again Saturday at the University of Cincinnati and it was not know if the
game would be cancelled.
Tolan's injury is nearly identical to one which sidelined
Reds pitcher Jim Maloney for
the entire 1970 season. Maloney
was recently traded to the California Angels.
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
East
Princeton 78 Dartmouth 58
Hawaii 92 Rhode Island U. 82
Penn 81 Harvard 62
South
Baylor 90 LSU 83
Citadel 62 Texas A&amp;M 61
Memphis ST 102 Bradley 87

CLEVELA 0 (UPIJ Nick Skorich has stepped into
a role only two men before
him have taken on - head
coa('h of the Cleveland
Browns - and he said he
intends to be here "a long
time."
"I intend to be here 10
years," said Skorich, a former head coach with the
Philadelphia Eagles from
1961-63 who has served under
retiring Browns coach
Blanton Collier the last seven
years.
Skorich, 49, was picked to
be Collier's successor Thursday in a move that apparently
was savored by Collier,
Skorich and the front office.

Denies
Receiving
Benefits

Defense
Stressed
DALLAS
( UPI ) -Tom
Landry admits his Dallas
Cowboys could be better with a
more consistent passing attack,
but swears that the team which
will face Baltimore in the Super
Bowl in Miami Jan. 17 approaches one of his long time
goals.
"This team is about where I
wanted it to be," Landry said
today. "We rely on what I
wanted to rely on-namely, the
big running game and defense .
" We had always hoped we
would reach the point that we
didn't have to rely on the big
play to win games. But, you use
what you have and build around
it.
"That's why we relied on
finesse in past years. We just
didn't have the personnel to run
the ball down anyone's throat.
Now, I think we have that- an
the defense to go with it."
The past two weeks have
proven his point, emphatically,
as the Cowboys used the
tremendous running of rookie
Duane Thomas anJ veteran
fullback Walt Garrison to
control the ball, eat up precious
time and keep the ball away
from the enemy's fire power.
The club, which bounced back
from a 5-4 record to win the
Eastern Division title with five
straight victories, used that
momentum to forge :HI and 17-10
National Conference playoff
victories over potent Detroit
and San Francisco.
The defense, during that
drive, had a strong of 24 consecutive quarters without
giving up a touchdown-a
streak broken on a John Brodieto-Dick Witcher pass in the
Forty-Niner game.

CINCINNATI (UPI )
Francis Dale, president and
publisher of the Cincinnati
Enquirer, said he has never
received a salary of "fringe
benefits" for serving as
president of the Cincinnati
Reds.
Dale denied any financial arrangement during testimony
Thursday in the U.S. District
Court hearings on four suits
aimed at blocking a stock
transaction between Enquirer
board directors and the E. W.
Scripps Co.
Dale is a defendant in the
suits, filed by minority stockholders against the sale of 60
per cent interest in the newspaper held by Scripps.
He was asked on the stand
about alleged fringe benefits he
has received as president of the
National League baseball team .
It was also alleged he sought the
stock purchase to retain his
position in the Enquirer and the
Oklahoma City has the
Reds.
" I have not received any only Capitol in the world
with a working oil well unfringe benefits, financial or oth- der
it.
erwise, other than the natural
honor of being president of a
winning baseball club," Dale
Your New Year's
said.
Resolution Should
The hearings enter their 23rd
day today.
Be To Earn

TO PLAY UCLA
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UPI) - The Bowling Green
State basketball team will play
UCLA during the 1973-74 season
in California, according to Bob
Bell, Bowling Green's new
athletic director.
Bell, who was an assistant
athletic director at UCLA, said
the exact date had not been set
but a commitment for the game
was delivered.

4%%
Interest Per Year on
Passbook Savings. Com·
pounded quarterly from date
of deposit to date of withdrawal, as long as you
maintain an open account.
No minimum or maximum
amount to qualify. Withdrawa ls can be made at any
time.

Meigs Co. Branch

@

QBS OF YEAR

NEW YORK (UPI)-Quarterbacks John Brodie of the San
Francisco Forty-Niners and
George Blanda of the Oakland
Raiders were named players of
the tear Thursday in the
National and American Football
Conferences, respectively, by
the New York chapter of the
Pro Football Writers of America.

Midwest
Drake 78 Wichita St 74
Southwest
Ark 110 Hardin-Simmons 101
Louisville 90 N. Texas St 72

Running,

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured to
$20,000.00.

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Wyoming 89 Ariz St 81
Pacific 72 Santa Clara 60

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�4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Jan. 8, 1971 •

Racine
Social Events

RETURNING LETTERMEN Franklin Rizer and Tiny Williams of the Meigs Wrestling
team are shown during a practice session Wednesday. The two will be parti~ipating in a match
with Nelsonville-York Saturday night at Meigs High School. The matches w1ll get underway at
7:30p.m. Rizer placed third in a recent tournament at Chesapeake. In the same tourney Edd1e
Ypung took fourth place honors. Fenton Taylor is the wrestling coach.

•

Three zn State Pageant

TERESA LANHAM

LIBBY BROWN

CHET'fl HAYES

MASON - Three Mason
County girls, one from Point
Pleasant High School and the
other two from Wahama High,
will compete with 20 other
Junior Misses from throughout
West Virginia in the State
Junior Miss Pageant Jan. 23-24.
Miss Teresa Lanham will
represent Point Pleasant High
School. From Wahama are
Libby Brown and Archetta Lou
(Che tti ) Hayes.
The state event will take
place on Saturday, Jan. 23, at 7
p.m. in the Alexander Arts
Center, Concord College ,
Athens, W. Va. and on Sunday,
Jan. 24 at 3 p .m.
The winner of the state
pageant will advance to
America's Junior Miss Pageant
in Mobile , Ala. in May this year.
Scholarships totaling over
$1,500 and prizes worth over
$1,000 will be awarded at the
State Pageant. In Mobile, she
will
be
compe ting
for
scholarships in excess of
$50,000.
Miss Lanham, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lanham
of Point Pleasant, is a senior at
PPHS. She is active in the
National
Hon or
Society,

Thespian Understudies, Band,
and is a majorette. She is a
member of Trinity United
Methodist Church and is vicepresident of the MYF, is
treasurer of her Sunday School
Class and sings in the choir. Her
interests are reading, playing
the piano and flute, swimming,
Girl Scouts, and baton. Miss
Lanham plans to attend either
Marshall University or West
Virginia University. Her talent
performance at the State
Pageant will be a flute solo.
Miss Brown, daughter of Mr.
anQ.. Mrs. Donald C. Brown of
New Haven, is a senior at WHS
where she is president of the
Pep Club, co - captain of
cheerleaders, Drama Club,
National Thespians, and played
in the Junior Class Play. Miss
Brown plans to attend Marshall
University or Mountain State
College and will pursue a course
of study in executive or medical
secretary. Her talent performance at the Pageant will be
Gymastic routine on Balance
Beam. She is a member of Saint
Joseph Church and is in the
church choir.
Miss Hayes is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Hayes
of New Haven and is also a
senior at WHS where she is
active in the Drama, Pep and
Girls Athletic Association
Clubs, is on the Student Council
and Girl's Softball team and is a
Varsity Cheerleader.
She is a member of the United
Methodist Church and is a
member
of
the
Youth
Fellowship. Her interests are
sewin g, che e rleading,
volleyball, softball, basketball,
football , and hunting . Miss
Hayes plans to attend Marshall

University and will pursue a
course of study in Nursing. Her
talent performance at the
Pageant will be Dramatic
Reading from "Spoon River
Anthology."
All three girls earned the
right to compete in the state
event by winning the Mason
County Junior Miss Pageant.

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5
Use·our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

PLUMBING EMERGENCY?

DON'T FUSS!

PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - John David
Little, Leon; Roger Stone,
Leon; Carla Hendrick, Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. James
Steele, Mason.
DISCHARGES - Sherman
Northup, Wandel Pancake,
John Roush, Harold Adams,
Tammy Lane, David Whittington, Mrs. Robert Cline, Mrs.
Sherman
Jordan,
Bruce
Stewart, Garland Bostic.
Harriet Beecher Stow e.
American novelist, wrote un der the pen name of Chri stopher Crowfield.

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs.
Thirza
Strobush
returned to her home at J efferson, Wis., Saturday night
after being here for the burial of
her father, Mr. Fred Cadle.
Christmas holiday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Roush and
Mildred were T. Sgt. and Mrs.
Steven Jacobs, Terry and
Jeffrey, of Bilaxi, Miss . (he will
be stationed at Lockbourne Air
Force Base, Columbus, after
the first of the year); Mr. and
Mrs. John Fisher and Kenneth,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fisher,
Marie, Mark, and Melissa; Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Fisher and
Mrs. Jack Fisher, Sam, Johnny,
Danny, all of Akron.
Christmas holiday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Curtis were
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of
Lorain;
son-in-law
and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Borkenhagen of Georgia;
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Curtis and
baby of Mansfield; Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Wells and Mike of
Washington Court House, and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Curtis of
Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hayman
and Mrs. Gretta Simpson spent
New Year's Day with Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Hayman and son,
Tate, in Columbus and visited
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson in
Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris
were New Year's dinner guests
of Mrs. T. G. Hilldore at
Syracuse.
Rook Crow has returned to
Ohio University after spending
the holidays with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crow.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross,
Lynn and Ray, of Columbus,
were overnight and New Year's
Day guests of Mrs. Howard
Neigler.
Christmas holiday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sharpnack
were Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Baker,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Spires, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Sharpnack, Jr.
and family, and Miss Marabelle
Sharpnack, all of Columbus.
They received a telephone call
from their son, William and
family of Peru, Ind., on
Christmas Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Rock Young and
son, Andy, of Columbus, were
Christmas guests of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Wilcoxen and family. Callers on
Christmas Day were Mrs. Faye
Wilcoxen, Racine; Max Brown,
New Haven, W. Va., and Mr.
and Mrs. Ellis McMillan,
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Badgley
spent Christmas vacation with
her sister and family at Atlanta,
Ga.
Miss Mary Alice Nease of
Willoughby was a holiday guest
of her mother, Mrs. Don Nease.
Mr. and Mrs. Chrisie Powell

Quak ers Cop

By TOM HAMM
President, Racine FFA
All forms of life, plant and
animal alike, from simple
single-cell organisms to complex mammals, require certain
food materials in certain
minimum amounts to insure an
active life and successful
reproduction. This is true of all
types of life, but for now we will
deal primarily with the larger
farm animals.
Nutrition is the one most
important factor in the
production of milk and meat.
Feeds make up the largest part
of the cost in any production
enterprize and can stimulate
some of the most concentrated
and lively thinking that a farmer
can
produce. Unfortunately this lively thinking
sometimes leads to shortcuts in
a feeding ration to lower cost
and the farmer soon realizes he
has shortchanged only himself.
If the majority of a farmer's
feed is produced by himself a
greater cost factor comes in the
picture. It is possible for
machinery that is used in the
production and harvesting
process of home grown crops, to
make up the largest investment
in his whole farming operation.
Without a carefully followed
budget, a farmer can make
costly mistakes in the purchases of feed or production
machinery.
Webster defined the noun,
feed, as "material supplied, as
to a machine, to be used,
worked on for production, etc."
It is no doubt difficult for some
and grandson, Raymond
Robinson, spent New Year's
Day in Gahanna with Mr. and
Mrs . Starling Orr and family.
Ronnie Wagner, student at
Auto Diesel College, Nashville,
Tenn.,
spent
Christmas
vacation with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Wagner.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Simpson spent
the Christmas
holiday with Mr. and Mrs. Brian
Simpson, Baltimore and spent a
few days with Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Arthur in Columbus.
Christmas holiday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris were
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Reed
(Gloria), and two children of
Walker, Minn.; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Hall (Shirley), and two
children of St. Paul, Minn., and
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Norris of
Columbus.
Miss Kim Taylor of Gallipolis
was a weekend guest of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Cleland.
Mr . Larry Wiles of Akron
came for the weekend and was
accompanied home by Mrs.
Wiles who had spent two weeks
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Otis McClintock.

p lu mb e r s a r e r ea dy t o r e pa i r a n y
f.._JUit y plu mhm g. Get t o p q u C1 I1ty wo rk

n t lowes t fJr iCC' S. C 1ll up !

Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp; Heating
992 2036

Edward Bae r , owner

Pom eroy

us.

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

•

Home of

the Fabulous

GARY AND JIM SMITH, members of Southern's Future
Farmers of America chapter study books on nutrition, one of
the most important factors in the production of milk and
meat.
people to believe that a farm
animal such as a dairy cow
should be a mechanical being,
but that is the exact point that I
would like to make. A cow is a
highly efficient machine. She is
capable of consuming fuel
(feeds) at a high level of intake
(up to lOOlbs. a day) and
transforming it into a highly
palatable substance. This
palatable feed is broken down
further into basic nutrients
which are used for body
maintenance, stimulation, and
growth of a fetus during 75 per
cent of the year, by-product
wastes used for regulation such
as temperature, and the
production product such as
milk.
Now the conversion ability of
some cows is questionable. By
that I mean that it is doubtful
that all cows have the same
ability to convert feeds into
nutrients which can fulfill the
previous stated requirements
for a profitable machine. This
idea has led many researchers
to believe that the conversion
ability of cows is hereditary. It
is my personal belief that the
next step for improvement of
the A. I. breeding service would
be to trace the conversion
ability of cows and promote
bulls with a high per cent of
repeatability in this trait.
Since feeds for livestock are
such a costly but necessary
subject to farmers, we have
decided to devote our first adult
farmer meeting to, "Feeds and
Feeding."
Our first session will be on
Wednesday, January 20, 1971 at
the Southern High School. Our
guest speaker will be Vernon L.
Pfeifer of the Ralston Purina
Company in Waverly. Pfeifer
will work primarily on the
subject of dairy feeds, mostly

concentrates, and how they can
fit in with roughage type feeds.
He will also corrunent on how
the corn leaf blight has affected
the price of concentrated, and
what the price outlook in the 70s

TomBoy
SANDWICH
Order

By

Phone

And Toke Em Home

992-5432

Hang Your Horn Fly Problems
on a
Wayne Cattle Dust Bag

Bloodsuck ing pa r as ites put added stress on your
an i mals. Flies, l ice and ticks r ob you of 10-20 per
cent mi lk production per cow.
Stop f lies from stealing your ext ra prof its . Hang up
Wayne Cattle Dust Bags for 99 per cent control of
f l ies used as d irected.
Wayne Cattle Dust Bags reduce str ess. Easy-to-useFREE choi ce. No maintenance. Moistur e proof.
Longlasting. Inexpensive. Hang up Wayne Cattle
Dust Bags. Reduce str ess caused by f l ies.

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399WEST MAINSTREET 992-2164 POMEROY, O.
THE STOR E WI T H "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PE TS - STA BLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS.

Tenth In Row
By United Press International
Phil Hankinson was the man
of the hour for Penn's fifthranked Quakers Thursday
night.
Hankinson, a sophomore,
came off the bench to score 18
points and rally Penn to an 8162 come-from-behind victory
over Harvard. The victory was
Penn's lOth without a loss.
Sophomore James Brown
boosted Harvard to a 35-29 lead
before Hankinson was inserted.
He sparked a pair of barrages
that lifted Penn into the lead.
Brown was high scorer in the
game with 24 points.
In the only other gam'!s
involving ranked teams, Louisville (No. 14) walloped North
Texas
State
90-72 and l
Drake (No. 19) edged Wichita
State 78-74 in a pair of Missouri
'valley Conference games.
Jim Price had 23 points and
Al Vilcheck 21 in Louisville's
victory, its lOth against one loss
while Jeff Halliburton's 21
points lifted Drake over the
Shockers. It was the Bulldogs '
ninth victory a gainst two
losses.
Elsewhere, Colorado St. beat
Arizona 90-65 behind Rick
Fisher's 24 points and Larry
Finch had 34 points and Don
Holcomb 31 as Memphis State

upset Bradley 102-87.
William Chatmon's 27 points
led Baylor to a 90-83 victory
over Louisiana State and John
Gianelli's 28 points helped
Pacific beat Santa Clara 72-60.
Princeton beat Dartmouth 7858, The Citadel nipped Texas
A&amp;M 62-61, Hawaii downed
Rhode Island 92-82 and Wyoming outlasted Arizona State 8981 in other major games.

Quality Tn craftsmanship
Quality In Materials
Quality You Can Trust.

W.

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BLOOMING
PLAN TS
The Appreciated
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From Our
Own Greenhouses

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59 N. Second Ave.
MiC!.dleport
992-5560

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Pomeroy, 0.

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FREE ESTIMATES ON YOUR REMODELING NEEDS
We can handle your financing too. Please check the remodeling job you
would like more FREE information about.

I

I

A word t o th e wi se h om eowner . . .
cJ o n· t d o 1! yo ur se lf . Expe ri e n c ed

will be.
With this subject and a fi ne
salesman like Mr. Pfeifer, it
shrmld be a very interesting
evening. We hope you can joi.

T opic of
Meeting
Is Feeds

COMPLETE PROGRAMS
FOR DOGS AND PUPPIES
OF ALL BREEDS

SUGAR RUN MILLS
~~service

180 Mulberry

For 100 Years"
Pomeroy

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KITCHEN
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I am interested in a new home.

1 do .. .. do not ...... have my own lot.
Name _
Address
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Phone

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.

YGU-. LIJIIIM TQ YMu-'

The Department Store
of Buil ding Since 1915

�r

'

r ---------------·-.. . . . . . ____

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 8, 1971
...........___~

Girl Scout
Diary

•

Anniversary
1
Is Observed

By Charlene Hoeflich

Girl Scout Week, March 7 to 14, were discussed at the Service
Team meeting of the Big Bend Neighborhood, Four Rivers Girl
Scout Council, Thursday at the home -of Mrs. William Ohlinger,
neighborhood chairman.
Mrs. Ohlinger asked for ideas for the annual Thinking Day
observance to be held during that week and reminded the troop
leaders that orders for church folders or inserts to be used on Girl
Scout Sunday must be turned into her by Jan. 22.
The folders are $1.45 per 100, and the inserts cost 90 cents.
Le~ders were also reminded that registration is past due.
fvlrs. Roger Bahr of Chester has been named day camp
director and plans for that event will be announced later. Cookie
chairman for the county is Mrs. Doris Fisher of Racine. The
annual Council cookie luncheon for all chairmen has been set for
Jan. 26at 10:30at the Holiday Inn in Parkersburg.
The patrol leader workshop for junior scouts was announced
for Jan. 31 from 2 to 4 p.m. with a registration deadline of Jan. 22.
The workshop will be held at the old Chester school and is open to
all patrol leaders and their assistants.
Mrs. Ohlinger again asked for slides or films of troop outings
showing camping experiences to show at the Neighborhood
meetings.
A cadette planning meeting to be held Monday at the Girl
Scout office in Parkersburg, 2 p.m., was announced and the
neighborhood chairman urged representation from Meigs
County.
A drug education meeting on Feb.17 at the Parkersburg First
Presbyterian Church was also noted.
~ The Big Bend Neighborhood meeting was set for 9:30a.m. on
Jan. 20 at the Racine American Legion Hall. At that time a series
of training sessions on camp skills will begin.
Sandy Bend Camp information was relayed to the leaders. A
corps staff will be at the Elizabeth, W.Va. camp site from June 20
to July 2 for overnight camping by troops. The charge is $1 per
girl for each night. Troops are to have their programs planned but
will be given assistance by the staff in carrying them through.
At the camp time, July 4 to 17, one meal will be served each
day and the charge during that period will be $1.60 per girl for
each day. Established camp, July 25 to Aug. 7, carries a charge of
$50 per girl for the two week period.

•

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MRS. APRIL SMITH is the new leader of Pomeroy Junior
Troop 61. She takes over from Mrs. Janet Duffy, who resigned as
leader in December.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 5
AN INVESTITURE SERVICE was planned and patrols were
reorganized at Wednesday night's meeting of Middleport Troop 5.
Faith Herrman, Paula Kent, and Velvet Gibbs will be invested into the troop atnextweek'smeeting to be held at the home
of Mrs. Richard Vaughan, leader.
Named patrol leaders were Trina Gibbs and Becky Fultz. In
Miss Gibbs' patrol are Carin Bailey, Julie Kitchen, Velvet Gibbs,
Kathy Manley, and Faith Herrman. Girls in Miss Fultz' patrol are
Kellee Burdette, Paula Kent, Valerie Lewis, and Mary Rudolph.
Materials on badgP work were displayed by Becky Fultz. She
showed the trefoil insignia of girl scouting and explained it,
demonstrated correct ways to set a table, showed her drawing of
the seal of the United States and explained it, and gave greetings
in other languages.
It ~s noted that Sandy Little has moved to Rutland and will
be unable to participate in the troop activities.

• Parsons Speaker
For Ed Sentinar

•

ATHENS - John Parsons,
former executive head of
Rutland schools and teacher at
Middleport High School, will
g!ve the central address when
ihe
Southeastern
Ohio
Educational Research Council,
Inc. holds its winter seminar
entitled, "Educational
Program Evaluation and Accountability," at the Holiday
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•

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•

Invitations
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Decorations
Books
Engraved Cake Knives,
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Great selection of Albums to
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FRIDAY
WAHAMA HIGH School
cheerleaders dance Friday,
Wahama High auditorium, 9:30
p.m. to 12 midnight, following
the Wahama-Hannan basketball game; Jays will emcee.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange 8 p.m. Friday, Rock
Springs Grange Hall with
Chester Grange hosts; program
by Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan,
Pomona lecturer.
MARY SHRINE, White
Shrine of Jerusalem, Friday, 8
p.m. IOOF hall, Pomeroy,
ceremonial work for candidates. Officers to wear formals. Potluck refreshments.

RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, 2 p.m.
Friday at the home of Mrs. Nan
Moore. Co-hostesses will be
Mrs. 0. P. Klein and Mrs. J. E.
Harley. Mrs. Emerson Jones
will give a program on national
defense and delegates to the
state conference will be elected.
Members are to give New
Year's resolutions in response
to roll call.
SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party
Saturday, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. at
Meigs Junior High auditorium
in Middleport; Jays in charge.
JITNEY SUPPER, 5 to 7 p.m.
Saturday, Eastern High School
sponsored by sophomore class;
steak, chicken, homemade
noodles among main dishes;
public invited.
MONDAY
RUTLAND PTA, 7:30 Monday at the school. Dr. Dale
Matmiller,
director
of
University Health Services,
Ohio University, guest speaker
The art of bonsai ongJ- on "Youth and Drug Abuse".
HEATH
METHODIST
uated in Japan . It is one of
Japan's finest contributions Church WSCS 7:30p.m. Monday
to horticulture.
at the church.

God Tells Man to Have
New Name, Jesus Otrist
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jonnie
Ray Dupler, Columbus, who
said Thursday he would petition
to change his name to Jesus
Christ, said, "It was God who
told me to change my name."
"Everything I do and say, He
tells me to do," said Dupler.
"He always talks to me."
Dupler said he would place an
ad in the Daily Reporter the
journal of record of the legal
profession, announcing his in tention to change his name.
Dupler must then submit
proof of publication 30 days after the ad appears to the Franklin County Probate Court and a
judge will then hold a hearing
on the quest.
Probate Court Judge Richard

Metcalf said "very few requests
are turned down" and the determining factor will be the sincerity of the applicant.
··There is nothing in the law
I know of which would prevent
him from changing his name,"
said Metcalf.
Dupler said he is out on bond
after a narcotics arrest and
says he smokes merijuana because "God told me to. It is
beautiful.
"My getting involved with
these people (drug users and
drug sellers) was part of a plan
to get at the source of drug
traffic and shut it off," said
Dupler.
Dupler said he is a native of
Butchel, near Athens.

Vote to Strike
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - A
union official has predicted that
members of the American
Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employes Union will
vote to strike this weekend over
an overtime pay dispute at Ohio
University, which
could
ultimately close down the
school.
The 900 workers of Local 1699
are slated to take a strike vote
Saturday on the issue. Herschel
Seigel, executive director of
Council 21, said he expected an

Negotiators in
Rare Agreement

affirmative vote.
The dispute concerns a
stipulation in the contract
adopted last November which
gave workers the option of
earning a half-hour of overtime
each day. Union members
contend they can work overtime
on lunch hour periods, but
university officials say the
workers must add the overtime
at the end of their regular work
days.
Ohio University President
Claude Sowle said the school
could remain open for about six
days if the workers, which include personnel, maintenance,
security, physical plant and
some secretaries, struck.
Sowle said the school would
not lose its state aid, however, if
the school had to close down for
as long as three weeks. He said
the school calendar could be
juggled if a strike occurs.

Council Installation

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I

•

New officers were installed
by Mrs. Edna Reibel, deputy
state councilor, at Monday
night's meeting of Theodorus
Council, Daughters of America.
Installed were Etta Will,
junior past councilor; Edith
Spencer, associate councilor;
Glen Swatzel, vice councilor;
Donna Reibel, conductor;
Winona Cook, warden; Juanita
Radcliff, inside sentinel; and
Erna Jesse, 18-month trustee.
Mrs. Carrie Neutzling spoke

Water Pollution
Is Club Topic
NEW HAVEN - Water
pollution was the study topic
when the Haven Homemakers
class met Tuesday evening at
the home of Mrs. Dennis Briles.
Mrs. Edna Wise led devotions
and prayer.
Mrs. Abrey Newell presented
the lesson on water pollution.
The club discussed the
Christmas party held for
patients at Lakin State Hospital
for which the members made
candy and cookies and served
them along with fruit and
punch. It was a memorable day
for the homemakers. The
members also plan to have a
party for the patients in the
third week of March.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Russell
Maynard,
Mrs.
William
Grinstead, Mrs. Edna Wise, and
Mrs. Jesse Maynard. The door
prize was won by Mrs. Iva
Capehart, and secret sisters
exchanged gifts.
Attending were Mrs. Jesse
Maynard, Mrs. Sadie Warth,
Mrs. Iva Capehart, Mrs. Emory
Hart, Mrs. Edna Wise, Mrs.
William Grinstead, Mrs. Alfred
Sprouse, Mrs. Hilda Warth,
Mrs. Doris Vickers, Jr., Mrs.
Aubrey Newell, Mrs. Russell
Maynard and the hostess, Mrs.
Dennis Briles.

Recording Has
Bad News for
Fan Am Staffs
NEW YORK (UPI) - Pan
American Airways employes
got the bad news Thursday by
telephone.
Sizeable
job
reductions are in store this
year.
By dialing a Manhattan
number supplied by a
memorandum, the employes
could hear a lengthy recording
by Najeeb Halaby, the airline's
chief
executive
officer,
reporting that 1970 was a year
"we'd all like to forget."
Losses for the first 11 months
of the year were $27 million, of
which $16 million was lost in
November alone, he said.
"I wanted to tell you this as
soon as possible - before you
read it in the newspapers," the
recording said. Halaby said that
"obviously" the airline would
have "another steep deficit this
year" and probably would need
government help to survive. He
said the airline suffered from
the economic downturn, among
other things, and the time it
took "to de-bug our great 747"
plane.

Tuppers Plains
Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Mrs. Edith Betzing called on
Mrs. Mabel Swartz Sunday
afternoon.
Miss Cheryl Bentz left
Columbus by plane on Dec. 22
for a trip to Hawaii and
returned home on Dec. 29. She
reported a nice trip and saw
many places of interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Griffith had as Sunday guests
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Thompson and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Roberts and son of Vienna, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Hawk

PARIS (UPI)- The Vietnam
peace talks entered their third
year Thursday with allied and
Communist negotiators in rare
agreement on one point - the
first two years of talking had
not produced any progress.
Chief U. S. negotiator David
K. E. Bruce complained at
Cellophane was first produced in the United States
Thursday's regular session the 98th public meeting to be at a Buffalo, N.Y., plant in
held since the peace talks 1924, according to Encycloopened in January 1969 - that paedia Britannica.
after two years of t a l k i n g . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
"serious negotiations" have not
even begun yet. Hanoi's Xuan
Thuy similarly complained of
the ''complete absence of
progress at this conference."

to the group on "Project
Freedom," a
movement
designed to pressure Hanoi into
abiding by provisions of the
Geneva Convention in dealing
with American prisoners of
war. She reported to the group
on the meeting held in Pomeroy
Monday night with Mrs. Jane
Macomb Smith of Athens whose
husband is among the prisoners
and Commander Frank Poyet
of Columbus who is heading the
movement in Ohio.

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Pomeroy....

I

Personal Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Lochary
returned
home
Thursday after a two-week
holiday visit with their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lochary, Meg and
Robert, at Eden Prairie, Minn.
Mr. and Mrs. Corbit Ferrell of
Nitro, W. Va. were weekend
guests of his mother, Mrs. J. C.
Ferrell, and Mr. and Mrs. Estill
Moore.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Neuman were at Reedsville
Thursday night to visit Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Buckley and their
infant daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kloes took
John Ritchhart to Columbus
Sunday where he boarded a
plane for West Point, New York.
John was here for the holidays
with his grandmother, Mrs.
Mildred Hemsley.

LHOSPITAL NEWS

J

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Cecil C. Burdette, Mary Jane
Conley, Mrs. Annie M. Dill,
Mrs. Keith Dillinger and infant
daughter, Mrs. Gene A. Dodson,
Mrs. Margaret V. Evans, Mrs.
Paul E. Fuller, Mrs. Levi M.
Jolly, Russell E. Keairns, Mrs.
Robert D. Lewis, Mrs. Charles
E. Massie, Willard L. Nibert,
Elmer U. Patrick, Robert L.
Poore, Jr., Mrs. Daisy E.
Roush, Mrs. Guy A. Russell,
Michael R. Sanders, Mrs. Ora
A. Shaver, Kevin D. Smith, Mrs.
John F. Stiffler, and Mrs.
Robert Ingalls.

School Planned
Final plans were made to
attend the annual district school
of instruction at the FederalHocking High School on Jan. 13
when Racine Chapter, Order of
the Eastern Star, met in regular
session Monday night. Mrs.
Barbara Dugan,
worthy
matron, and Richard Dugan,
worthy patron, presided at the
meeting. Obligation night was
observed. Ham sandwiches,
cake, and coffee were served at
the conclusion of the meeting.
and son spent the New Year's
weekend in Columbus with
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cole and
son
and
granddaughter
returned home after several
days vacation in Florida.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Jessie Newell were Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Casborth of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Wateman White of Keno, Helen
Coe of Bethany Ridge, Mr. and
Mrs. Hobert Newell and
daughter, Shelah, of Chester,
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Newell
and children of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Davis are
vacationing in Florida.

The Council pledged to give
their service in the door-lo-&lt;loor
campaign to secure signatures
on letters of protest to be sent to
Hanoi in May.
It was reported that Mrs.
Vivian Arnott is home from the
hospital, Mrs. Margaret
Seidenabel is ill at home, and
Mrs. Kate Goodwin remains
confined to Holzer Hospital. It
was also noted that Genevieve
Mees is a patient at the
Westerville Convalescent

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Nursmg Home and a round·
robin card was signed for her.
A thank you note was read
from the Albert Roush family
for flowers sent at the time of
the death of Mrs. Roush's
mother, Mrs. Alta Miller.
A report of the auditing
committee was given. The prize
package donated by Mrs. Mary
Baldwin was won by Mrs. Eva
Dessauer. Cookies and coffee
were served.

Ladies of church Meet
"The
Pessimist,
the
Humanist, and the Prophet"
was the program topic used by
Mrs. Herbert Dixon at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Enterprise Women's Society of
Christian Service of the United
Methodist Church.
The meeting was held at the
home of Mrs. William Airson.
Purpose of the program was to
create a better understanding
as to how college students view
themselves, the world and the

future. Taking part in a skit
were Mrs. Martha Husted,
Dorothy Long, and Mrs. Hunnel. Mrs. Dixon had prayer.
Plans were made for the
prayer and self-&lt;lenial service
to be held at the church Sunday.
Members responded to roll call
by giving a New Year's
resolution.
Refreshments were served.
Guests were Laura Ohlinger,
Artie Hunnel, Pat, Dolly, Peggy
and Gina Airson.

District OES School is Announced
Plans to attend the 25th and gifts to the shut-ins.
District school of instruction to
Refreshments were served
be held Jan. 13 at Federal during a concluding social hour
Hocking High School were by Mr. and Mrs. Goeglein.
made during Tuesday night's
meeting of Pomeroy Chapter
186, Order of the Eastern Star.
FOLIAGE
Mr. and Mrs. Denzel
Goeglein, worthy matron and
GARDENS
worthy patron, presided at the
Greenhouse Fresh
meeting during which time the
Long Lasting
charter was draped in memory
Remember The
of Robert L. Robe, past grand
Shut-In Today!
patron. Reports were given on
v~sitations during the holidays

Dudley's Aorist

59 N. Second Ave.
Middleport
992-5560

Dinner Party Given
Christmas symbols and red
tapers decorated the tables for
a post-holiday dinner party of
the Eagles Class members and
their families at the Asbury
United Methodist Church
Tuesday night.
Mrs. Karl Kloes and Mrs.
Paul Kloes decorated the tables
for the affair with Mrs. Estell
Moore, Mrs. Donald Lisle and
Mrs. Virgil Teaford serving on
the dinner committee. Bill
Winebrenner,
president,
welcomed the members and
their families. The doxology
was sung preceding the meal.

Time to
Rejuvenate

M-18 RING SETTING

Have your diamond reset 10 a
modern style designed to make
your gem look larger, lovelter, in
tune with today's fashion.

GO TO SERVICE
Three Meigs County members of Alpha Omicron Chapter
of Delta Kappa Gamma were in
Jackson Wednesday night at
memorial services for Mrs.
Cleo Barnes, wife of the former
superintendent of the Jackson
County Schools. Mrs. Barnes
was a member of the chapter .
Going from here were Miss
Carolyn Smith, Mrs. Dorothy
Woodard, and Mrs. Harold
Sauer.

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The Latest

Great News!

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BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

January Clearance Sale
In The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Sunday, January lOth

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Inn in Cambridge, Ohio.
The seminar will consist of
two sessions, Wednesday,
January 13, beginning at 7:30
p.m., and Thursday, January
14, beginning at 8:30 a.m.
Parsons, former Director of
Finance for the State Department of Education of Ohio and
presently
the
Assistant
Superintendent for Business
Affairs of the Dade County
School System (Miami) in
Florida, will be the guest
speaker . Dade County has
recently participated in a
nationwide pilot project involving planning, programming,
budgeting,
and
evaluation systems (P.P.B.S.).
Parsons' presentation will be
followed by reactions from a
panel of doctoral students from
the Ohio University College of
Education.
Attendance at the seminar
will be free-of-{!harge to officials and employees of participating school districts and
institutions. Representatives of
non-participating school
districts may attend for a fee of
$5 per person.
The Research Council, a nonprofit organization dedicated to
serving the needs of participating school districts and
i.tstitutions, includes: Marietta
City, Warren Local, Belpre
City, Ironton City, NelsonvilleYork, Oak Hill Local,
Washington
County,
Muskingum College, Athens
City, Athens County, Diocese of
Steubenville, Fort Frye Local,
Morgan County, and the Ohio
University
College
of
Education.

The 41st anniversary of the
Loyal Pals Class of the Middleport Church of Christ was
observed with a dinner party
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Denver Rice.
Mrs. Rice and Mrs. Yeauger
served the dinner with table
grace being given by Miss
Frances Roush .
Following the dinner the
group went to the home of Mrs.
L. E. Reynolds for the party and
annual business meeting.
Charter members recognized
and presented with gifts were
Miss Nina Russell, Miss Roush,
Miss Mabel Hysell, Mrs.
Audrey Frost, and the first
teacher, Miss Mildred Hawley.
A gift was also presented to
Mrs. Alice Robeson, teacher.
New officers elected were
Miss Hawley, president; Mrs.
Frost, vice president; Miss
Russell, secretary; Miss Roush,
assistant secretary; Mrs. Grace
Pratt, treasurer; Miss Mabel
Hysell, flowers, and Mrs.
Robeson, teacher.
Presenting a devotional
service were Mrs . L. E.
Reynolds, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
and Mrs. Robeson. Reports of
the past year were given.
Hostesses for the new year were
assigned.
Mrs. Reynolds invited the
members and two guests, Mrs.
William Kennedy and Mrs.
Walter Crooks to the dining
room for a dessert. Miss
Hawley and Mrs. Frost
presided at the coffee service
and punch bowl. The anniversary gift was won by Mrs.
Lester Bailey. Favors of book
markers were given to the
members and guests.

-Social
Calendar

.._...~---~

NEW HOURS
Monday thru Thursday
Friday and Saturday
Sunday

lOtillO:OO
10 tilll :30
12till1:00

Medi~
CREDENZA DESIGN

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

Middleport, 0.

25" (dtag.) Quasar II '"works'" a
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of early coi0111al des1gn. Cabmet is craftet
from genume btrch veneers and select
hardwood sol1ds and comes '" your
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glaze maple fin1sh (WU918GS)
Includes casters

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2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPOR.--.T_.

�MASON COUNTY
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Services, 315 Main St., Pt.
Pleasant. Sunday services, 11
a.m. Wednesday Testimonial
meeting, 7:30 p.m.
MASON
ASSEMBLY
OF
GOD -Second St., Mason, W.
Va. Chester Tennant, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 a. m.;
morning worship, 11 a. m.;
evangelistic service, 7:30p.m.
Bible study and prayer service,
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Phone
773-5133.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Christ in Christian Union Rev.O'Dell Manley, pastor.
Sunday School, 9:30a.m., Rev.
Guy Sayre, supt.; evening
service, 7:30. Tuesday Bible
study, 7:30 p. m. Thursday
evening prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
m. Sunday evening youth
services, 6:30 with Roger
Manley, youth leader.
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST- John Steele, pastor.
Worship, 10 a.m.; Bible study,
11:15 a.m.; evening worship,
7:30 p.m. Mid-week service,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Preaching
9:30 a. m., first and second
Sundays of each month; third
and fourth Sundays each month,
worship service at 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday evenings at 7:30,
Prayer and Bible Study.
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts., Stan
Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
9:45a.m.; worship serv ice, 11
a.m.; training union, 6:3o·p.m.;
evening worship service, 7:30
p.m . Mid-week prayer service,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

POMEROY

POMEROY-CHESTER
UNITED
METHODIST
POMERv•
fRINITY Robert R.
Card, pastor.
UnitedChurch of Christ -Rev
Perrin, pastor. Fred Blaettnar, Pomeroy - Worship, 10:30 a.
supt. Sunday School, 9:15a. m.; m.; Church School, 9:15 a. m.;
Frank
Vaughan,
superin. Worship, 10:25 a. m.; youth tendent.
Chester worship, 9 a.
choir rehearsal. Monday, 6:30
p. m ., Mrs. M~rvin Bur!, m.; Church School, 10 a. m.;
director.
Sen1or
cho1r Roger Epple, supt.
SEVENTH DAY ADVEN~
rehearsal, 7:30p.m. Thursday, _
Pomeroy, Mulberry·
Mr1s. Paul Nease, director. TIST Thursday, all day Busy Bee Hgts. Herbert Morgan, pastor.
quilting party in church social Sabbath S~hool, Saturday, 2 p.
m.; worship, 3:15 p. m. Dorcas
room.
POMfROY CHURCH OF Society, lOa. m. each Thursday.
THE NAZARENE Corner
Union and Mulberry. Rev.
MIDDLEPORT
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor.
FIRST
UNITED
PRES9
Sunday School
:JO a. m.; BYTERIAN, Middleport-Rev.
Raymond
Walburn,
supt.
Morning worship 10:30 a. m.; Russell Lester, pastor. Sunday
Evening service 7:30p.m. Mid- School 9:30a.m., Lewis Sauer,
wepk service, Wednesday, 7:30 supt.; worship service 10:30
p.m.
a.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev.
MIDDLEPORT
HEATH
St.-nley Plattenburg, minister . UNITED METHODIST-Rev.
Morning prayer and serm~m, • Max E. Donahue, minister;
10:30 a. m. Holy commun1on Eric Chambers, Sunday School
and sermon, first Sundays, superintendent. Church School
10:30 a. m. Church school, 9:30 a. m.; morning worship,
kindergarten through eighth 10:30 a. m.; youth meeti~.P­
grade, 10:30 a. m.
m.; Choir rehearsaf, weOPOMEROY CHURCH OF nesday 7-7:30 p. m.; Mrs. E.
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr., Robert Hamm, director.
pastor. Bible School, 9:30a . m:;
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES worship, 10: 30; adult worship Larry Carnahan presiding
service and .. yoUQQ peoples minister. Sunday, Bible lecture,
meeting, both 7:30 p. m. Sun- 9: 30 a. m.; Watchtower study,
day-Wednesday,
combined 10:30 a. m.; Tuesday, Bible
Bible study
and
prayer study, 7:30 p. m. ; Thursday,
meeting, 7:30 p. m.
ministry school 7:30 p. m.,
THE SALVATION ARMY- service meeting 8:30p.m.
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Envoy RayS. Wining, officer in
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH Services at 315 Main St., Pt.
charge. Sunday, _ 10 a . m., of Christ in Christian Union- Pleasant, Sunday School 9: 15
Holiness meeting; 10:30 a. m. Lawrence Manley, pastor; Mrs. a.m. Sundays, 11 a.m.; WedSunday School. Young People's Russell Young, Sunday School nesday, testimonial meeting 8
Legion, 7 p.m.; Thursday, 1 to 3 Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; p.m. All welcome.
'"p. m., Ladies Home League; 7 Evening worship ~ : 30. WedP- m. Prep classes.
nesda y prayer meetmg, 7: 30 p.
MEIGS COUNTY
_m.
SACRI;D HEART Rev.
_
Father Bernard Krajcovic,
CHURCH OF THE NAZApastor.
Phone
992 -2825, RENT Middleport_ __~•~.Y­
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30 Audry tv1111er, pasror; Floyd
ALFRED
UNITED
p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 Carson, supt. Sund~y school, METHODIST Rev. Randy
a.m. Confessions, Saturday 7- 9:30
a.m.;
Mornmg .w?r- Lavender, pastor. Sunday
7:30 p.m.
ship,
10: 30
a.m .;
JUnior school, 9:45 a.m. with Lloyd
society, 6:30p.m.; NYPS 6;45 Dillinger, supt.; worship serSunday
evangelistic vice, 11 a .m. with the Rev. Mr.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST p~m.
-Robert Kuhn, pastor. George meeting, 7:30 p.m. Prayer Lavender in charge. WedSkinner, Sunday School supt. meeting Wednesday, 7: 3~ p.m. nesday evening prayer service,
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
7:45p.m.
morning worship, 10:30 a. m.;
M IDOL E PORT
PENBYF, 6 p. m.; Bible Study TECOSTAL -Third Ave., the
Wednesday 7 p. m.; choir Rev. B. L. Barrett, pastor.
practice, Wed .• 8: 30 p, m.
Ralf.h Priddy, Sunday school
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP- sup. Classes for all ages,
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
10 a.m. ; Sunday UNION Darrel Doddrill,
TIST - 220 E. Main, Pomeroy, Sunday school,
evening service, 7:30 p.m.
s h 1 9 30 a.
affiliated with S.B . C. Rev. Wednesday evening young pastor. Sunday c oo, :
Clifford Coleman , pastor. people's meeting and Bible ~~na:~n~~lm:~~~~i~~t ~~g:~;
Sunday school, 9:30 _a .m., study. Saturday evening serHe_rshel M~Ciure, ~upt., wor: vice, 7 : 30 p.m.
evening service, 7:30 p. m.
shtp_ serv1ce, _10.30 a.m., MIDDLEPORT
FIRST Wednesday prayer meeting,
evening worship, 7:30 p.m. BAPTIST ChnriPc; W Simons 7:3~t.'-MoRIAH CHURCH OF
~ednesday prayer
astor. Fred Hoffma~. Sun: GOD - Racine Route 2. The
7 30 meeting and
Bible study, :
p.m.
~ay School Supt. Sunday Rev. Charles Hand, pastor.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN
Church School~ 9: 15 a. m .; Sunday school, 9:45 a .m.;
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, pastor.
Morning worsh1p, 10:15 ~- m. morning worship , 11 a.m.
Sunday School, 9:15 a. m.,
Sunday B1ble study hour 7.30 P· ' Evening services, Tuesday and
Charles Evans, Supt.; worship , m . Sunday, 4: 30 p. m:, game Friday, 7:30.
service, 10:30 a. m. Contime for youth. ~eanesday
TuppERs
p LA 1 N s
firmation class, Saturday, 9: 45
evening_~r serv!._~e, 7· 30. c H A R G E
u N 1T E o
a. m .
MT. MORIAH BAPTISl METHODIST. Sunday worshi!J
Corner Fourth and Main, St. Paul's 9 a.m.; South
Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key, Bethel 9:55a.m .; Alfred 11 a.m.
Jr., _pastor. Sunday School 9:30 (First and third Sundays) 7: 45
aJ&lt;!m ., Arnold ~ichards. supt.; p.m.; (Second and 4th SunMQrning worsh1p 10: 30 a. m._ . days). Lottridge -7 : 45 p.m.
CHU~CH OF CH~IST, M1~- (First and third Sundays), 11
dleport, 5th and Mam. Raullm a .m. Second and 4th Sundays.
Moyer, pastor. Thomas K~lly,
L 0 'N G
B 0 T 'r o M
Sunday School supt. Bl~le METHODIST - Rev Freeland
School_. 9: 30 a . m.;. morn~ng
Norris, pastor. Sund~y School,
worship, 10. 30 a. m., evenmg 10 a.m .; church services, 11
worship, 7: 30 p, m .; oravPr
a.m.
Christmas Eve visitors of Mr. service 7 p. m. Wednesday . .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
and Mrs. Larry Johnson and
CHURCH OF CHRIST- John
family were Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Rockhold, pastor. Bible study,
9:30 a.m. ; morning worship,
Johnson and Mona of Rutland,
10: 30; evening worship, 7: 30
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ray Charles.
p.m. Wednesday Bible study,
Michael
Knapp
of
Columbus
Johnson and Audra and Jeffery
7:30p.m.
STIVERSVILLE
COMof Columbus, Mrs. Nora visit4d with his uncle, Mr. and
Rev.
Johnson of Grove City, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail, Kevin, MUNITY CHURCH Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday
Mrs. W. Lee Roush and Rodney Charles.
morning worship service, . 10
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson a.m . , Dell Talbot, superin and Cheryl of Logan, Mr. and
Mrs. James W. Johnson and were New Year's guests of Mr. tendent. Prayer meeting, each
Thursday, 7: 30 p .m. Sunday
Jamie Sue, Todd and Teresa and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson, evening service, 7: 30.
Tammy,
Cheryl
and
Terry.
Lyn of Mulberry Heights and
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson Helen Johnson.
Pomeroy - Harrisonville
Christmas Day visitors of were New Year's visitors of Mr. Road . John Webster, pastor ;
Helen Johnson were Mr. and and Mrs. J. R. Murphy and Paul McElroy, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School, 9:30a.m .;
Mrs. Larry Johnson, Gina Rae, Elaine, John, Peggy, Carmel Morning Worship and com and
Barbara.
munion
, 10:30 a. m .; Sunday
Tahnee,
Brady,
Kenneth
Mr. and 'Mrs. Larry Johnson evening youth Christian En Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Everett
deavor, 6 p. m. ; Worship ser Ray Johnson, Audra, Jeffery, and Gina, Tahnee and Brady, vices, 7 p . m. ; Wednesday
and Mr. and Mrs. James W. Mrs. Helen Johnson, Mrs. Lee evening prayer m eeting and
Johnson, Jamie Sue, Todd and Roush, Rodney, Cheryl of Bible study, 7: 30p. m .
Teresa Lyn of Mulberry Heights Logan, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
SYRACUSE
BAPTIST
and Mr. and Mrs. W. Lee Roush, Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Raymond
Rodney and Cheryl of Logan. Batey, and Lisa were Sunday TABERNACLE Butcher, pastor. Sunday school,
Mr. and Mrs. William Criner visitors of Mr. and Mrs. James 9: 30 a.m. ; worship service,
of Middleport were Christmas W. Johnson, Jamie Sue, Todd 10: 30 a.m.
,
Day guests of their daughter and Cheryl Lyn, of Mulberry

Wolfpen

News, Notes

and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Kennth Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
and Jo were New Year's Day
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp, Kail, Kevin and

Heights.
Mrs.
Lena
Knapp
of
Langsville was a Tuesday
evening visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Knapp, Kail, Kevin and
Charles.

the SerTnoneUe
BY REV. CHARLES HAND
Who is too busy? 1, The church of today is too busy and 2, the
World is too busy.
Luke 14:15: Blessed is he that shall eat bread in the kingdom
of God. The church of today i s involved in the political realm
rather than the spiritual realm into which we have been called; in
the political realm in that we want men and women to favor us
above another in the church world today. You belong to this party
or that party and you are lost, you must be in our group if you're
going to Heaven.
NOT SO : Jesus said that you must be born again (John 3:3) .
Churches seem to have lost the first step as they were too busy .
The world is traveling so fast that the coming of Jesus is upon
them and they can't see Him for they have been too busy. Moon
trips and space explorations, trades of all kinds, have caught their
eyes, but Christ has been pushed aside as a religion and i s not the
Saviour of mankind. Why?
1 - The church is no longer a house of prayer but a social
gathering for games and fun ; no sinner i s ever converted from sin
because there i s no travailing prayer for the lost . Jesus said that
His house would be called the house of prayer.
2. The world missed Him because the Church has lost their .
vision, so the Bible will prove to be true in that the Blind will lead
the Blind.
Rev _3:17 : Because thou sa ycsl, I am rich and increased with
goods and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art
wretched. and miscrat:le, and blind, and naked .
FRIENDS WE ARE ALL TOO BUSY. If w e leave Christ oul.

RACINE FIRSI CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
Morning Worship, 10:30 a. m.;
Evening worshiJ?, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, Sunday School
Superintendent, Pauline McClintock, pastor. Rev. Morris
M. Wolfe.
RACINE FIRST BAPTISTCharles Norris, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.; Morning
worship, 10:45 a. m.; Sunday
evening worship, 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday evening
Bible
Study, 7:30 p. m.
SOUTH BETHEL UNITED
METHODIST Rev. Randy
Lavender, pastor. Sunday
school. 9 a.m., Mrs. Wilma
Bahr, Supt. Youth Fellowship 6
p.m. each Sunday at Tuppers
Plains
United
Methodist
Church.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J.
A. Curry, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.; Youth and
junior youth service, 6:45p.m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m .
Prayer and praise Wed., 7:30 p.

m.

meeting, 6: 30 p. m.; Evening
worship, 7:30 P- m.
APPLE GROVE UNITt.:D
METHODIST CHURCH - W.
Dale McClurg, pastor. Worship
service, first 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,
8 p.m.
CARMEL UNITED METHODIST Paul A. Sellers,
pastor; Wayne Roush, supt.
Worship service, 10:45 a. m.,
first and third Sundays;
evening worship, 8 p. m. second
Sunday.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev. Herbert
Grate, pastor. Worship service,
11 a.m. and 7:30p.m. Sunday.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
meeting, 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, M i ddleport,
pastor.
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. first Sunday.
LOTTRIDGE
UNITED
METHODIST - Worsh ip, first
and third Sundays, 10:45 a. m.;
second and fourth Sundays,
7: 30p. m. Sunday School, 9: 45 a.
m. Christian Endeavor, third
Saturday of each month.
LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST Rev. Eugene
Gill, pastor. William Bailey,
supt. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
Morning worship, 10: 30 a. m.;
Evening worship, 7: 30 p. m.
Wednesday, Christian Youth
Crusade, 6:30 p. m.; Prayer ·
meeting 7:30 p. m. Thursday,
choir practice, 7 p. m.
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST - Danny
Evans,
pastor. Norman C. Will , supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.;
Worship service, 10:30 a. m.
Christian Endeavor Sunday
evening.
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS- PortlandRacine Road. Ralph Johnson,
pastor. Sunday School , 9:30 a.
m .; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
m.; Sunday evening service, 7
p. m. Wednesday evening
prayer services, 7:30 p. m .

HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN- David Stauffer,
pastor; Stanford Stockton, supt.
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m.;
church school, 10:30 a.m. ;
young peoples meeti!lg, 6: 30
p.m.; evening worsh1p, 7:30.
Bible study, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.
- SILV-E R RUN FREE WILL
BAPTIST Rev. Caudill
Atkins, pastor. Carroll Matthews, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday Schoool, 10 a. m.;
Worship, 7:30 p. m. Prayer
meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD- Rev. Donald A. Sheets,
pastor. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m. ; Worship service, 11 a. m.;
Evening service, 7:30. Prayer
service and youth service,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
FOREST RUN METHODIST
-Rev. Forrest Donley, pastor;
Mrs. Fread Nease, supt.
Worship service 9a. m.; Sunday
School, 10 a. m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
- Langsville Village, Rev.
Robert Eugene Musser, pastor.
Worship service, 10:30 a. m.;
Glenna Fetty, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
Sunday evening, 7:30 p. m. Midweek service, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.
. SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev. M. C.
Larimore, pastor. Bob Moore,
SundaY. School Supt. Sunday
School,' classes for all ages, 9: 30
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST a.m.; mor_ping worship, 10:45,
NYPS Sunday, 6:30 p. m.; Great Bend, Charles Norris,
evangelistic service, Sunday, pastor. Worship service, 9:30 a.
7:30 p.m . Mid-week prayer m.; Sunday School, 10:30 a. m.
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
MORNING STAR UNITEDMssionary meeting, second METHODIST- Rev. William
Wednesday, 7: 30 P. m.
- R 0 C K.
S P R I N G S Airson, pastor ; Roy Van Meter, .
sup!.; Sunday School, 9: 30 a.
METHODIST - Rev. Richard m.; Morning worship, 1u: 15 a.
Pumphrey, pastor; Harold m. ; Youth Fellowship and Bible
Blackston,
superintendent. Study , Thursday, 8 p. m . Fred
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m.; Smith, layleader.
church school , 10 : 15 a.m.;
evening worship, 7:30 p.m. ;
CARLETON CHURCH MYF, 6 p.m. Prayer meeting
Road.
Sunday
and Bible Study, Wednesday, Kingsbury
School
, 9: 30 a. m ., Ralph Carl ,
7:30 p.m. A ministrative
Council first Monday, 7:30p.m . supt. Worship service, 10:30 a.
- -EDEN UNITED BRETHREN m. and 7:30 p. m. alternately.
IN CHRIST - Elden R. Blake, Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
7:30 p. m. Rev. Jay Stiles,
pastor. Sunday School, lOa. m.; pastor.
Winnie Holsinger, supt. Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Evening
OLD
DEXTER
CONservice Christian Endeavor , GREGATIONAL
CHURCH 7 : 30 p. m .; Mrs .
Lyda
Chevalier, president . Song Rev. Wi liard Dutcher, pastor .
Worley Francis, Sunday
service and sermon, 8:20. Mid- Mrs.
School Supt. Sunday School,
Week prayer meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p. m . Mrs. Mazie 9:45 a. m. Church Services first
and th i rd Sundays following
Holsinqer, class leader.
Sunday School , Second and
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT fourth Saturday even ings, 8 p.
CHURCH-Harr isonville Road, m. services.
Kev. Roy Taylor, pastor; Henry
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Eblin, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. ;, - Mr. Robert Wyatt, pastor ;
evening worsh i p, 7: 30 p. m. Sunday School supt., Ronald
Prayer and prasie service, Osborne. Bible Schoot, 9:30 a.
m.; preaching 10: 45 a. m . ;
Thursday_!__7 : ~E - m
RACINE - LETART
WE:,- Evening services, 7:30 p. m.
LEYAN UNITED METHODIST
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
Racine, W. Dale McClurg ,
Cecil Wise,
pastor. Sunday SchooL 9: 30 a. METHODIST m. ; Worship service, 10: 30 a . Pastor. Sunday School, 9: 30
m. ; UMYF, 7 p . m . each Sun- a .m .; Morning worship, 10:30
day ; Senior Choir practice, a .m .; Young People's service,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m. ; Service 6: 45p.m. ; Evangelistic service,
Guild, fourth Monday, 7:30 p. 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting ,
m.; Happy Hustlers Sunday Thursday, 7: 30 p.m.
School Class meeting, fourth
Friday, 6 p. m .; WSCS second
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
Friday, 7: 30 p . m .; Official · MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev.
Board, second Monday, 7: 30 p. L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor.
m.
Roger Wilfred, Sr. , Sunday
- COMMU NITY
CHURCH, School Supt. Sunday School ,
Dexter - Rev. Basil DeWeese, 9: 30 a. m. ; Sunday evening
pastor. Sunday mornin~ wor- worship 7: 30. Prayer meeting,
ship, 10 a. m. ; Worship ser- Tuesday, 7: 30 p. m. Ernest
vices, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday and
Deeter , class leader. Yough
Sunday evenings.
Meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ,
ST.
PAUL'S
UNITED Ernest Deeter, leader.
METHODIST CHURCH MT. HERMON UNITED
Tuppers Plains. Rev. Randy
Rev. Robert
Lavender , pastor. Sunday BRETHREN pastor. Sunday school,
Sc hool, 9:30 a. m. ; youth Shook
f ellowship, 6 p. m. ; Sunday 9: 30 a.m. ; Alfred Wolfe, supt. ;
Roy Pooler, assistant. Morning
evening worship, 7: 30 p . m .
worship, 11 a .m . ; evening
LETART
UNITED sermon, 7:30 p .m . alternating
METHODIST CHURCH -First each Sunday. Class meeting, 11
ST. JOH.N LUTHERAN
and second Sundays, preaching
alternating
Sunday
Pine Grov e, Rev . Gerald at 8 p. m. ; Th ird and fourth a.m.
Herbener, pa stor. Sunday Sundays, Sunday School , 10 a. mornings, David Holter, clc:ss
school, 9 a . m . ; Church service, m .; worship service at 11 a . m .; leader . Christian Endeavor,
7: 30 p .m. every other Sunday
10 a.m.
Tuesday evenings at 8 p. m ., evening
,
Roger
Buck ley,
SYRACUSE
UNITED prayer and Bible Study .
president.
Prayer meeting , 7: 30
METHODIST Paul A .
FLATWOODS
UNITED p.m . each Wednesday. Board
Sellers, pastor ; Ben Quisen - METHODIST, Rev. William
berry, Sunday School Supt. Airson, pastor, Robert Eason, meeting first Monday of month,
worship servi ce, 9: 30 a . m . first supt. Sunday School at 10 a . m., 7:30p.m.
and third Sunday. E vening Worship ser vi ce at 11 a . m.
service, 8 p. m . fourth Sunday. Prayer m eeting Thursday, 8 p.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
LANGSVILLE MIDWAY m.
PRESBYTERIAN
- Rev .
services each Sunday at 10 a.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST and 7: 30p. m . Tuesday ev ening Rev . Cecil Cox, pa s1or. Sunday Russell Lester , pa stor. Worship
service,
9a
.
m
.
;
Sunday
School ,
worship, 7: 30.
school supt., Joe Sayre. Sunday
SUTTO N
UNITED sc hool , '9 : 45 a . m . ; Sunday 10 a . m .
METHODIST Paul
A . evening worship, 7: 30. WedSell er s, pa stor ; Martha Lee, nesday prayer and Bible study, RUTLAND
Sunday School Supt. Worship 7: 30p.m.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPser vice, 10: 45 a. m . ; second and
TUPPERS
PLAINS TIST- Rev. Samuel Jackson,
fourth
Sundays ;
evening CHR ISTIAN CHURCH -Mr.
pastor . Sunday Sc hool, lOa . m .;
worhsip, 8 p. m. third Sunday. John Wyatt , pastor ; J . S. Davis,
Gertrude Butler, supt.
ENTERPR I SE
UNITED Sunday School supt. ; Sunday Mrs.
Pr ayer Service, 1: 30 p. m. ;
METHODIST - Rev. William schooL 9: 30 a. m ., Morning
Airson , pastor. Ralph Spencer, Ser mon , 10: 30 a . m . Evening preachi~g servi ce. 2 o . m.
Supt.; Carl Jennings, asst. supt. sermon, 7 p . m .
THE
RUTLAND
MET~
Worship services , 9: 30 a. m. ; EAST
Rev. Richard C.
LETART
FALLS ODIST Sunday School , 10: 30 a . m . ; UNITED
pastor .
Church
METHODIST Pumphery,
Youth Fellowship, 6: 30 p. m. ; , CHURCH - W . Dale McClurg, School 9: 30 a.m .; Worsh i p
Wednesday, choir , 6: 15 p. m. pas tor . Wors hip servi c es, service 10: 30 ann
KENO CHURCH OF CHR I ST second and fourth Sundays of
Norman M c Cain, supt . each m ont h at 9 a. m .; Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Services weekly at 9: 30 a . m . School , first and third Sundays CHRIST - Sunday school, 9:30
Pr ea c hing first and third of ea ch monthat 9a . m .; second a.m ., V. H. Braley, supt.;
Sundays of month by Charl es and f ourth Sundays of each communion and devotions .
Ru ssell , 9: 30 a. m.
month at 10 a . m .; Bible study, 10 : 30 a.m . R egular board
meeting 7:30, thi r d Saturday
UNITED FAITH - Robert E. Wednesday.
Pn Ch m rmth.
.
Smith, pastor . Worship service
LETART
FALLS
UNITED
THE
RUTLAND
COM and Sunday school , 9: 30 a .m .,
BRETHREN
Rev.
Robert
MUNITY
CHURCH
Rev .
Fred ~amsel , supt. ; evening
worshtp, 7: 30 p.m. ; youth Shook , pa stor ; Her sc hel Norris, Amos Tilli s, pastor. Sunday
meeting, 7 p .m . Prayer meeting supt. Sunday school , 9: 30a .m .; School , 9: 30 a . m . ; Worship
morni ng sermon , 10: 30 a .m .; service, 11 a . m .; Wednesday
Thursday, 7: 30p.m.
evening ser mon , 7: 30 alter - prayer meeting , 7: 30 p. m .
na t ing each Sunday . Pr ayer Sunday night worship, 7: 30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
BRADFORD CHURCH OF service, Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m .
CHRIST - Charles Ru ssell , Jr. , Praye r meet i ng , 7 : 30 p.m. THE NAZARE N E - Rev. Lloyd
D. Grimm, Jr., pastor . Sunday
pa stor :
Be n
Rife,
E arl alternating Sundays.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF School , 9: 30 a. m . ; Morning
Moss man , superintendents .
Roy W. Carter, worship, 10: 30 a . m. ; Young
Sunday School, 9: 30 a . m. ; CHR I ST Worship servi ce, 10: 30 a. m .; pastor ; Jerry Dav is, Sunday people's service, 6: 45 p. m . ;
Ev ening wor ship, 7 p . m . School superintendent. Sunday E vang el is ti c ser vi ces, 7: 30 p
Wednesday evening service, 7 School, 9: 30 a . m . ; Morning m . Wednesday evening service
p. m .
wor ship, 10: 30 a . m . ; Youth 7: 30p . m .

Someone has said the eyes are the windows of the soul.

Sunday

And when it's our own child - how easy to believe that in those
sparkling eyes we have seen and understood an infant soul.

• Revelation
19:11-13

Well, we have seen a mind eager to grow . . . character ready
to be molded.

Monday

If in our child's eyes we would see his soui, then one thought should
possess us: This is a soul known to God but not yet knowing God.

• John

6:66-69

•

Soul-searching is always the threshold to spiritual growth. The
need we recognize in a baby's eager eyes is a need adult soul s never
outgrow.

Tuesday
• John
15:1-7

Remember as you plan your family's religious future: God knows
each and every human soul. The life He has given us is our opportunity

Wednesday
• John
17:1-8

to know Him.
Friday

Thursday

• Acts

• Ads

20:28-35

13:24-33

Saturday
• II Corinthians
5:18-21

•

ScrapttJrcs selected b y the America n B•ble SO&lt;• ely
Co py r•ght 1971 Keasler Ad vert1s 1ng Servtce. Inc , Strasburg Vtrg •n•a

With the hope it will, in some measure, foster and help sustain that whi_ch is
good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the bustness 6
firms and organizations whose names appear below.

.-.

K &amp; C.-JEWELERS

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

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Pomeroy, 0.

312 E. Main St.

WILLIS ANTHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING
992-2550
240 Lincoln St.

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Phone 992-3481
N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0.

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.
Phone 992-3284

M i ddleport

-

HEINER'S BAKERY

M &amp; R FOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington, W. Va.

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~

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

MARK V STORE

Sales - Allis Chalmers- Service
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Tuppers Plains
667-3435

Middleport, Ohio

DOMIGAN SOHIO STATION
Athens Road
Pomeroy
A Family That Worships Together
Stays Together

RACINE FOOD MARKET
~
The Store with A Heart
949-3342
Racine

OHIO VAU.EY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Bakers' of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

Ohio' s Oldest Dodge Dea ler
Middleport, 0.

LYONS MARKET
Member of the Big 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plains
667-3280

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
Pomeroy- Member F. D. I. C. &amp;
Federal Reserve System

GAUL'S MARKET

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Chester, Oh io

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES

Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Com fortable LivingReasonably Priced
Tuppers Plains
667-3891

RAYBUCK MOTOR SALES Inc.

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

Lincoln - fl/"ercury
American J\1\otors
85 N. Court St.
593-6601

Buildil')g Supplies and Millwork
General Contracting
Ph . 992-3978

THE DAILY SENTINEL

SENTINEL
WANT ADS PAY!

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Electric Motor Repair
Athens

RACINE PLANING MILL

Dedicated to the Interest
of the
Meigs - Mason Area.

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810 W. Main

992-5750

BOWER'S DRIVE-IN
RESTAURANT
Pomer oy, 0 .

E. Main St.

TUPPERS PLAINS HARDWARE

General Hardwar e
Paint- Plumbing &amp; Electr ical Sup
plies
Tuppers Plains
667-3963

THE DAILY

SE~I'INEL

and

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Serving The Big Be11d Area

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1: 30 Words and Music
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2: 30 The Doctors
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10:30 Beverly Hillbillies
11:00 Family Affair
11:30 Love of Life
12:00 Galloping Gourmet
12: 30 Search for Tomorrow
1: 00 Divorce Court
1:30 As the World Turns
2:00 Love is Splendored
2:30 Guiding Light
3:00 Edge of Night
4:'00 Gomer Pyle
4:30 Captain Scarlet
5:00 Batman
5:30 What's My Line
6:00 Capital News
6:30 Walter Cronkite
7:00 Death Valley Days
7:30 Beverly Hillbillies
8 : 00 Green Acres
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8:00 Rocky
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11:30 That Girl
12:00 News
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1: 30 Make A Deal
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2:30 Dating Game
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3: 30 Daktari
4:00
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5:00 Maverick
5: 30
6: 00 Big Valley
6: 30
7:00 News
7:30 Mod Squad
8 : 00
8:30 Movie
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Truth or Consequences
Dinah,s Place
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Sale of Century
Hollywood Squares
Jeopardy
What, What, Where
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Words and Music
Days of Our Lives
Doctors
Another World
Bright Promises
Mr. Cartoon
Petticoat Junction
Wagon Train
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Red Skelton
Flip Wilson
Bob Hope
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Dean Martin
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Sleepy Jeffers
Romper Room
Capt. Kangaroo
Jackie Obi inger
Beverly Hillbillies
Family Affair
Love of Life
Galloping Gourmet
Search for Tomorrow
Divorce Court
As the World Turns
Love is Splendored
Gu id ing Light
Secret Storm
Edge of Night
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Stingray
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Dick Van Dyke
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7:30
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Dinah 's Place
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Words and Music
Days of Our Lives
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Sunday
6:00
6:30
6:45
7:00
7: 30 Faith for Today
8: 00 Evangelist
8:30 Discovery
9:00 Tom &amp; Jerry
9 : 30 Penelope Pits too
10:00 Oral Roberts
10: 30 Facing Life
11:00 Camera Three
11 :30 Face the Nation
12:00 Rex Humbard
12: 30
12: 45
1:00 Garden Club
1: 30 TBA
2:00 Upbeat
2: 30
3: 30 Viewpoint
3:30 Country Hayride
4:00
I
4: 30 Golf
5: 00
5:30
6:00 Roqer Mudd
6: 30 TBA
7:00 Lassie
7:30 Hoqan's Heroes
8:00 Comedy Bowl
8: 30
9: 00 Glenn Campbell
9:30
10: 00 The Honeymooners
10:30
11:00 News
11: 15
' 1 :30 Movie

0

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---------------rI ----------------~------~----------------Saturday

CHANNEL 13

CHANNEL3

6:30 Univ. of Michigan
7:00 Christopher s
8 : 00 Rocky
8:30 Jack LaLanne
9:00 Mike Douglas
9 : 30
10:00
10: 30 A World Apart
11:00 Bewitched
11 : 30 That Gir l
12: 00 News
12:30
1:00 All My Children
1:30 Let's Make A Deal
2: 00 Newlywed Game
2:30 Dating Game
3:00 General Hospital
3:30 Daktari
4:00
4:30 M unsters
5 : 00 Maverick
5:30
6:00 Big Valley
6: 30
7: 00 News
7:30 The Brady Bunch
8: 00 Nanny and Professor
8: 30 Partridge Fami ly
9 : 00 Movie9 : 30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12: 00

6 : 00
6:30

6: 45

7: 00 John's Almanac
7: 30
8 : 00 Tom Foolery
8: 15
B: 30 Heckle and Jeckle
9: 00 Woody Woodpecker
9: 30 The Bugaloos
10: 00 Dr . Doo Little
10:30 Pink Panther
11 : 00 Pufnstuf
11 : 30 The Grump
12:00 Hot Dog
12: 30 Movie
1:00
1: 45 Roller Derby
2: 00
2:45 Stewart
3: 00 Basketball
3: 30
4: 00
4: 30
5: 00 Californ ians
5: 30 Bill Anderson
6 : 00 Golf
6 : 30
7:00 Nashville Musi c
7:30 Andy Will iams
8: 00
8: 30 Adam 12
9: 00 Movie
9: 30
10: 00
10: 30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12: 00
12:15

Wag

cHANNEL 8
6:00
6:30 TV Classroom
6:45
7:00 Cartoons
7: 30 Green Hornet
8 : 00 Bugs Bunny
8 : 15
8:30 Roadrunner
9:00 Sabrina
9:30 Groovy Coolies
10:00 Josie
10:30 Globetrotters
11:00 Archie
11: 30
12: 00 Scooby-Do
12:30 The Monkees
1:00 Dastardly &amp; Muttley
1: 30 Jetsons
2:00 ACC Basketba ll
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00 Golf
4:30
5:00 Wrestl ing
5: 30
6: 00 News
6: 30 Roger Mudd
7: 00 To Rome With Love
7: 30 Mission Impossible
8:00
8:30 My Three Sons
9:00 Arnie
9:30 Mary Tyler Moor e
10:00 Mannix
11:00 News
11:30 Movie

CHANNEL 13
6 :00
6:30 Neighbors
6:45 Woman' s View
7: 00 Kentucky Wi ldlife
7:30 Wonderama
8:00
8: 30
9:00 Lancelot Link
9:30
10:00 Jerry Lewis
10:30 Doubledeckers
11: 00 Hot Wheels
11 : 30 Sky Hawk
12: 00 Motor Mouse
12: 30 Har dy Bov s
1: 00 American Ba ndst and
1: 30
2: 00 That Girl
2:30 Movie
3:00
3:30 Pro Bowler' s Tour
4: 00
4:30
5 :00 Wide World of SPOrts
5 : 30
6:00
6:30 TBA
7: 00
7:30 Arth ur Godfrey
8:00
8:30 Lawr ence Welk
9:00
9:30 Most Deadly Game
10:00
10:30 Newsm aker ' 71
11: 00 News
11: 30 Chil ler
12: 30

�,-------

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan . 8, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
I

L

_B_u_s_i_n=e=.~=~=-w.s_ITe_r_v-;=i==c=e===s======:\ .@)

•

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

POWER-VAC
· Cleaning System

Phone 992-2094

All The Dirt In
One Simple Operation
Homes - Trailers - Public
Buildings, etc. No muss, no
fuss - have your furnace
cleaned today.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

CHASE HARDWARE

$5.55
-GUARANTEED-

~6

Locust St.
Middleport, 0.

E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

WANT AD '
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be-.ccepted until 9 a.m. for
Day of Pub I ication
REGULATIONS
The Publ isher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deerY'ed
objectiona l.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
inserti~n.

Lost
THANKSGIVING night one
female walker hound in
vicinity of Leading Creek,
Ohio near Rutland. 2112 years
old. Black and white spotted,
dark head with brown spot
over each eye, white across
end of nose, mostly white on
body with white legs and tail.
When lost had collar with
name plate. Reward $150 for
recovery of this female dog.
Ph. 475-2981 from 8 a.m. to 6
p .m. except Sunday or write
Leslie Marcum, Box 165,
Delbarton, W. Va., or Huntington, W. Va. Ph . 429-2920.
1-6-10tc

RATES
For want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Lliarge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con.
secutive insertions.
· 25 Per cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days. LOST : PAIR of lady's black
CARD OF THANKS
gloves on N. Second Ave.,
&amp; OBITUARY
Middleport. Reward . Phone
.$1.50 for 50 word·minim um .
(304) 675-4267 or 675-3358.
Each additional word 2c.
1-5-tfc
BLIND ADS
Add itional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m . to 5:00p.m. Daily, SMALL FARM with house and
8:30 a .m. to 12: 00 Noon
bu i ldings in southeastern
Saturday .
Meigs County area. Contact
Oris
Frederick,
3221
Georgetown
Rd .,
Indianapolis, Indiana, 46224.
Phone 291 -9130.
LEGAL NOTICE
12-30-10tc
MEIGS COUNTY
AGRICULTURAL
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
SOCIETY
beds, etc. Write M . D. Miller,
FINANCIAL
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
STATEMENT
992-6271.
9-1-tfc
RECEIPTS
Admissions Gates
$7,724.05 ------------------Autos
751.50 OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
Membership Fees
5,271.00
condition, as long as have not
6,706.68
' Concessions
been wet. Paying $10 each.
Commercial Space
858.25
First floor only . Mondays will
Class Entry Fees
1,000.00
be pick-up day. Write, giving
Speed Fees: Horses
2,565.00
good directions. Witten Piano
Speed Fees : Ponies
33.50
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
, Pari -Mutuels
208 .49
Racing Tax
Ohio 43946.
539.52
State Aid:
8-20-tfc
Junior Fair
1,000.00
Ohio Fair Funds
14,548.52
County Aid
2,800.00
• Barn Rentals
327.00
Loans
5,000.00 CUTE PUPPIES, free. Will be
small dogs. Also, gas range,
Feed &amp; Straw
39.50
Previous Yr.
excellent condition, $35.
Collections
151 .50
Phone 992-7376.
Refunds
363.80
1-8-3tc
Inspectors Expense &amp;
Cash Bond
444.99 I WILL NOT be responsible for
Miscellaneous
1,778.70
any debts contracted by
Total Receipts
anyone other than myself .
for 1970
52,112.00
Marvin
L . Monk, Rt. 1,
Cash
at
beginning
Rutland, Ohio.
of year
1,232.71
TOTAL
1-8-3tp
53,344.71
DISBURSEMENTS
Salaries: Secy.
800.00 WILL
DO
sewing
and
Office Help
538.50
alterations, 115112 W. Second
Pub . Director 75 ·00
St., Pomeroy.
Other payroll
1-8-12tp
1,347.50
Judges
313.00
Directors Expense
275.02 THE Middleport Cab Company
Utilities
489.16
phone number is 992-7338.
Office Expenses
339.10
This is not Delmar Hawley's
Workmens Comp .
number.
Tax
191.72
1-7-3tp
Insurance:
Position Bond
10.00
Liabil ity
150.00 INCOME TAX service, daily
Dues
124.98
except Sunday. Evenings by
Advertising
309.56
appointment only. Phone 992Printing &amp; Supplies
197.74
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
Premiums:
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
Senior Division
3,309.55
mile south of fairgrounds.
Junior Fair
2,170.50
Junior Fair Expenses
290.00
12-31 -30tc
16,198.26
Speed : Purses
1,069.86 DANCE AT Red's Club in
Expenses
Special Attractions
Mason Friday night 10 to 3
&amp; Features
3,734.50
and Saturday night 9 to 1:30_
Ribbons &amp; Trophies
831.80
Band, featuring Miss Gail and
Hay &amp; Straw
240.00
the T.C . Playboys . All
Sound System
300.00
members
and
guests
Tent Rental
505 .00
welcome.
Veterinarian
125.00
Spraying Material
235.40
1-6-3tp
Cash Bond
300.00
Racing Insp. Exp.
146.49 ATTENTION ladies! Would you
Blacksmith
35.00
like to try a wig on · in the
Paid Loan
11,000.00
privacy of your own home?
Interest
440.00
You can. Just call us. We also
Miscellaneous
122.35
Maintenance &amp; Repairs
have the Mink Oil Kos'm etics,
Incl. Track
4,647.40
Koscot, of course. DisRefunds
460.16
tributors, Brown ' s . Phone
Total Disbursements 51,322.55
Middleport 992-511 3.
Balance at end
12-31-tfc
of year
2,022.16
TOTAL
$53,344.71
(1) 8, ltc
W I LL PICK up merchandise
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland_
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
Dec 17, 1970
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
Standings:
10-18-tfc
Team
Simons Market
88
M &amp; R Foodliner
80 WILL GIVE piano and organ
lessons in my home. Phone
Moores
52
50
992-3666.
New York Clothing
8-16-tfc
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
46
Racine Food Market
40 GUN SHOOT, Syracuse Fire
High Individual Game
Dept. , Saturday, Jan. 9, at
Betty Smith, 189.
Racine Planing Mill. Assorted
Second High Ind. Game
meals. 6 p .m.
Betty Smith, 189.
1-6-3tc
High Series - Betty Smith,
565; Pandora Collins, 503.
RUMMAGE SALE at Brannan
Team High Game New
Garage, N . Second, MidYork Clothing, 775.
dleport Friday and Saturday,
Team High Series - M &amp; R
Jan. 8 and 9, 9:30 a.m.
Foodliner, 2303.
Clothing,
furniture and
miscellaneous items .
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
1-6-3tc
Dec. 31, 1970
Standings:
GUN
SHOOT,
Sunday,
January
Team
lOth, 1 p .m . Mile Hill Road,
Sim~ms Markel
96
Beef, bacon, half hog.
M &amp; R Foodliner
88
Sponsored by Racine F ire
New York Clothing
56
Department.
Moores
54
1-6-4tc
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
48
Racine Food Market
46 DON'S Barber Shop will be
High Individual Game
closed at noon Saturday, Jan.
9, due to a death in the family.
1-7-2tc

Wanted To Buy

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice

Local Bowling

ITEM:

Jack Kane.
You somehow get the
feeling he has thought
about
what
he's
sharing with you. Your
feeling is right.

WMP0/1390

-------------------

Pandora Coli ins, 221.
Second High Ind. Game
Pandora Collins, 214.
High Series Pandora
Collins, 625; Carolyn Bachner,
525.
Te&lt;!m High Game - Simons
Markel, 803.
Team High Series
Simons
Markel, 2333.

Trucks are called lorri es

in Gn·at Britain .

EXPERIENCED

Radiator Service

.

1969 CHEV. CAPRICE
$3495
4 Door. Beautiful green color with green

- · - ·-·.. . :=.,"
l. '
~. .~...~~.~
111·1. I II IIIII• ,
II

I"

: r·..

Ill 11:111

'

1 1'

... .._, .........
•

vinyl roof, factory air conditioned, Astro front
seats, with black nylon interior, less than
13,000 miles by local businessman. Fully
equipped with factory accessories.

l ! 1 .•1i;tj· '·:

I: I~ .· :
: ,

~I

;

I'

1969 CHEVROLET TOWNSMAN

:

Pomeroy

For Sale

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Reasonable rates. Phone
John Russell, Gallipolis 4464782 after 5: 30 p. m .
4-7-tfc

Ray Hummel
Says:

..

GET
'EM NOW

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service . We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

- Country Squire
MUD&amp; SNOW TIRES
All sizes in stock. Lowest
prices. Free installation . We
do studding .

JOHNSON MASONRY, ComPOMEROY
mercial
or
residential
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
remodeling . Brick, block,
Phone 992-2181 ·
stone, cement work, garages,
septic tanks. Backhoe work_
Free es ti mates. Jim, Larry, 7
GUN
capacity,
Early
Jake. Phone 992-5632 .
American
walnut
gun
12-7-30tc
cabinet . Big glass door.
Drawer and double doors
GHEEN'S • BQDY
SHOP,
below for boots. Phone 992Racine, 'Ohio. Wax jobs,
2936.
$12.95. Paint jobs as low as
1-7-3tc
$60. Call 949-3295 or drop in for
CLEAN
expensive
carpets
with
free estimates.
1-7-6tc
the best . Blue Lustre is
America's favorite . Rent
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
shampooer, $1.
Baker's
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.,
Furniture, Middleport .
662-3035.
.
1-7-6tc
2-12-tfc

NEIGLER Construction . For
building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-tfc

---------------------

BOOKKEEPING service, Mrs.
Marvin King, 1f2-mile north on
Rt. 33. Phone 992-3762. Weekdays 9 a.m . to 4 p.m.,
Saturdays 9 a.m. to noon.
Evenings by appointment.
12-15-tfc
READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy .
Free
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Raci ne, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5- 1-tfc

Insurance

\

'

If Any One Can, Dannie Canl

J)

Dannie's is not the Best, Because it's the Biggest
But the Biggest Because it's the Best.

For Sale
SINGER 1969 Model sewing
machine, nice cabinet. Just
set dial for design stitches,
zig -zag, buttonholes, blind
hems, etc. Only $74. Nothing
down, $6.50 monthly, or $69
cash . Phone Ravenswood 2739893 after 3 p. m.
12-4-tfc

Why Pay More? ?
. DANNIE'S
••Never Knowingly Undersold"

FIREWOOD . Gerald King.
Shade, Ohio. Phone 696-1063.
1-5-6tp

--------------------STAR kills rats quickly, surely.

POMEROY, 0.

21J2 pounds, $1 .69. Ebersbach
Hardware, Sugar Run Mills,
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
1-5-30tp

ATHENS, 0.

MIKE .MORRISON

MIKE DEVOL
U_S, Route 50 E.
Phone 593-3044

For Rent
3

ROOM unfurnished apartment. Phone 992-2288.
7-1-tfc

67 ELECTRA BUICK

TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
Park, Minersville. Phone 9923324.
9-9-tfc

69 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, air _________~300

4 Dr. Sedan, air conditioned, very low mileage. Like new inside
and out.

67 Olds 98 4 dr., air, .was s1995 ______ $1795

67 CHEVROLET V8

67 Mercury Mont 4 dr. H.T.

68 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

~~~~=---~~--­

FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school .
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc
ONE five -room downstairs
apartment, basement and gas
furnace,
one
four-room
apar t ment. One three-room
apartment furnished. Call
992-3056.
1-6-3tc

4 ROOMS and bath unfurnished
house, 1650 Lincoln Hts.
Phone 992-387 4.
11-15-tfc

: 65. Cadillac Cpe. De Ville, was '995 ______ s795

2 HOUSES. One 5 room, furnished, 112 bath, Spring Ave.
One 4 room, basically furnished house, Lower Monkey
Run. Phone 742-3422 or write
Esta Brickles, Albany, Ohio.
1-8-3tc
2

BEDROOM, unfurnished
apartment. Newly decorated.
326 E. Main St., $75 month.
See
N.
W.
Compton,
Goessler's Jewelry.
1-8-6tc

2 Dr. Hard Top, factory air conditioned. We'll gladly refer you to
the local owner. Extra nice, fully equipped .

67 BUICK WILDCATS

66 Che!Jrolet Impala 4 door·__________5l195
: 65 Olds 88 4 dr. H.T., was s1795

4 ROOM house on Laurel St.,
Pomeroy. Call Frank Fugate,
992-5293.
11-6-tfc

Fleet Side LWB Pickup, exceptional condition, good tires.

66 Buick Wildcat 4 dr., was $1595._.:_ ___ $1395

6 ROOM house with gas furnace. Call Mrs. Dave Farmer,
or phone 992-2500.
1-6-3tc

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

BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc

'3995 ".

MO~~~YHOM£

"Ohio's Largest Dealer for Past 11 Years"

OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
-ftOMEROY, OHIO

AIR CONLJITIUNING, Refrigeration service . Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven .
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc

HARRISON'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc

12x60

Pomeroy Motor Co.

BLAETTNARS

WHEEL Horse Sales and
Service.
Baum
Lumber
Company, Chester , Ohio.
Phone 985-3301.
5-20-tfc

$2495

Sta. Wagon . 327 V-8 engine, power steering,
Powerglide Trans., electric power tailgate
window, air deflector, radio, like new w-w
tires, blk. vinyl interior with beautiful med.
blue in color.

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

4 Dr. &amp; 2 Dr. Hardtops, choice of two fine cars- both in exceptional condition. P.S., P.B., &amp; AT.

67 PONTIAC GTO

---- s1495

~ 65 Pontiac GP 2 dr. H.T., air, was $1295 __$1195

Many more

; 60 Olds S-88 4 Door_____________ s395

BLAETTNARS

BUICK

1

;I Karr &amp; Van Zandt
I
I

$1595

2 Dr. Hard Top, famous over head cam 6 cyl. with 4 sp. on floor
trans. A beautiful car inside and out.

I

1 53 Chev. 2 dr., 6 cyl., std.._________ ..,.. S95

'1595

67 PONTIAC 6 CYL

1 64 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ $395

II .60 Ford h ton. Pickup ____________ s2so.

.

2 Dr. Hard Top, His &amp; Hers shift, shows good care.

PONTIAC

GMC TRUCKS

1
For Sale
For Sale
II -----~~----·
116 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE 992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO

MUST SELL, 1970 mobile home,
60x12, 3 bedroom , fully carpeled, washer and dryer,
$4,900, or take over payments
of $88 .95 per month . Phone
Mason 773-5122.
1-5-30tc

CLEAN 1965 RAMBLER, 770
Classic, 6-cylinder, 4 door,
standard shift, $450. Also,
choice cemetery lot, 4-grave
plot in Meigs Memory Garden. Call R. H. Ballard, phone
949-2820.
1-8-6tc

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
992-5342
GMAC FINANCING POMEROY
operator's license? Call 992----~------------Open Evenings Until6: 00-- Til 5 P.M. Sat.
2966.
WANT TO GO to a warmer
6-15-tfc
60x12 FOOT 1970 model Schull
climate? Rent a camper or
trailer. Also, 17 acres of land. ELECTRIC Guitar with case,
travel trailer from Gaul's
$49.95. Dwight Spencer's A
Phone 992-6455.
Trailer Sales, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
Fruit and Vegetable Market, lD
1-6-12tp
1112-miles north of Chester,
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
120 Main St., middle block.
4 ROOMS and bath, utility
Cleaner complete with atOhio, on Rt. 7. Watch for sign.
Also, choice tomatoes, the
room, all modern, gas furVirgil B. Teaford, Sr.
1-3-12tc
tachments, cordwinder and BEAUTIFUL Colonial Early
American
Stereo - Radio
best in delicious apples and
nace, carport, 2 lots. Also,
Broker
paint spray. Used but in like
combination, AM &amp; FM radio
citrus fruits. Home grown
trailer space for rent. Also for NEW MOBILE home . Adults 35 ACRES Near proposed
new condition. Pay $37.45
4 speaker sound system, 4
Irish cobbler potatoes, 10 lbs.
rent , 4 room furnished
only. Phone 992-5592.
coal mine. Suitable for
cash or terms if desired.
speed automatic changer.
for 59 cents. Idaho Bakers, 10
apartment, gas heated . Call
1-7-tfc
building lots, trailer park, etc.
Phone 992-5641.
Balance $79.32. Use our
pounds for 69 cents.
Albert Hill, Racine, 949-2261.
Minerals.
1-5-6tc
1-8-ltc '
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
1-3-6tc
1-6-6tc
2 HOUSES - One rented to SINGER Sewing Machine in
DON'T PUMP your sluggish
OPPORTUNITY - live in or
same party for 6 years. Has 2
beau t iful
light finished
septic tank. Get Klen-Em;AII
Walnut
Stereo
away. Do cooking and light
bedrooms, bath, garage.
cabinet, like new . Fully MODERN
septic tank cleaner, LandConsole, 4 speaker sound
housework for elderly man
Other has 8 rooms, bath,
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
equipped to do all fancy
mark
Farm
Bureau,
system, 4 speed changer,
for compensation. Location
forced air furnace, garage,
hardtop, power steering,
sewing as well as beautiful
Pomeroy.
separate controls- Balance
Tuppers Plains, Ohio. Or,
full basement . 6 Acres.
power brakes, air, 18,000
straight stitching and zig-zag
1-8-ltc
$63.89. Use our time payment
elderly couple to live in, do
$18,000.00
miles. Excellent condition.
designing . Pay $50 cash or Ecooking, light housework and
plan. Call 992-3352.
Phone 992-2288.
Z Terms . Phone 992 -5641.
1-6-6tc THREE consecutive lots in
light care for elderly man TRAILER LOT 11 -1 0-tfc
Rutland
1-5-6tc
Beech Grove, lots No. 9, 10,
with compensation and home
Street, Middleport. Only
and 11 in row 5. R. C. Jones, 37
incentive. Ideal for couple
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
$650.00
1963 OLDSMOBILE, 2-door, jetNICE
lot,
40x125
feet.
MidRiverside Dr., Dayton, Ohio
with no home or income.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
fire, hardtop, $650. Chester
dleport. Phone 992-5251.
45405.
Location, Tuppers Plains, NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Hutton, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
1-5-tfc
12-29-10tc
Ohio. If interested, write Roy
4-9-tfc
bath, utility room, and carPhone 992-6911 . This side of
E. Lemley, 1615 Norma Road,
port. Dining area has sliding
fairgrounds on Rt. 33 to Ohio
Columbus, Ohio 43229, or
glass doors. Living 16 x 19.
River.
phone collect 614-885-2157.
Half acre. $19,500.00
1-6-6tp
1-6-3tc
1-8-6tc
992-3325
992-2378
RELIABLE person to go in
partnership on used furniture
U P.H 0 L S T E R I N G
and
We took the ugly out of economy
Up to 30 MPG.
store and repair shop. PhonP.
refinishing to do. Call betand put the performance in .
Sure-stopping front disc brakes.
843-2194.
ween 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. 992Each 1200 has the new high-cam
All -synchromesh 4-speed stick shift.
1-6-3tc
2524.
CLELAND REALTY
69 HP engine. Quick acceleration.
1-5-6tc
Steel unibody construction for solid
RUTLAND- NOT NEW, BUT
protection.
NICE -1 story frame, 3 large
WILL DO ironing in my home.
Plus, many other features and nobedrooms, NEW bath, nice
Reasonable . Call anytime . OUT-OF -TOWN owner must
sell 8-room, vacant modern
porches, excellent location,
cost extras. Like locking gas
Phone 992-7014.
house with extra lot in
nice kitchen, level lot. A
1-7-6tc
cap and whitewall tires.
Pomeroy, $2,750 . For inSTEAL AT $6,500.
The value is really
formation phone 949-2165.
something.
1-3-13tc POMEROY- LARGE HOME
- 2 story frame, 3 bedrooms,
Drive a Datsun,
bath, nice kitchen, full
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts. ,
then decide.
DRIVERS NEEDED . Train
basement with small apartPomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
now to drive semi truck, local
ment. corner lot. SEE THIS
10-25-tfc
and over the road. Diesel or
AT JUST $10,500.
gas, experience helpful but
not necessary. You can earn
RACINE - TILE BUSINESS
over $4.50 per hour after short
ROOM - tiled floor, ceiling
3 and 4 Bedrooms
training. For application and
furnace, toilet, hot water
Built
to
your
specifications.
interview, call 513-241 -5572, or
lank, LEVEL LOT. JUST
Sites available now.
write Safety Dept., United
$3,900.
Systems, In c., c-o Motor
HENRY CLELAND
Freight Terminal Bldg., 3101
REALTOR
The Something Special
Gano
Rd .,
Sharonvi lie ,
Office 992-2259
Cincinnati, Ohio 45241.
Monthly Payments
Res. 992 -2568
Lower Than Rent
1-7-2tc
1-6-31c

I
I

I
1

·--------------------Real Estate For Sale
TEAFORD

For Rent or Sale

.II

For Sale

Opportunities

Auto Sales

The new Datsun 1200s are really something.

Employment Wanted

Cleland Realty

Real Estate For Sale

Help Wanted

NEW HOME?

DATSU~

No Down Payment

------------------WIDOWER wants housekeeper,

pensioner preferred . One
child 10 years old . Write Box
729-R, c-o The Daily Senllnel,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
1-3-6tc

Contact: Mr . Moody, Ph . 9927034 at our field office at
Park &amp; Sycamore in 'Y\iddleport.
JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.
Formerly Kissell Associates,
Inc.
Ph . 1-262-1 S31

J

L07S WiTH all util ities.
Restricted subdivision. 112 to
2-acre lots . Phone Chester
985-3301, night 985-3302.
1-6-lfc

SMITH AUTO SALES
KANAUGA, OHIO

�BARNEY

e

1 HAV£1\J'T SOLD
Ak!Y YET I IVO&amp;:f:ft'
VJMITS 10 WY A
CRUMMY OLD RO:K!

:t KNOW VO'RE
lN THAR, SNUFFY!!
COME OUT WIF
YORE HANDS UP

•

\.

•
LANCELOT
-'{O'D BE WILLIN'
TODO

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

ANVJOaFO'

0HERE' ARE' GOME' C?A'1'5
NOTHING ?EEM5 TO eo !&lt;'IGHf.

A MILLION

A WEEK!!

PLE:NTY OF LATHE:R
••• AND PLEASt;
HURRY!

SOME OF MY OLD
CONTACTS AT
BONNAZ MIGHT
BE HELPFUL.

THE:RE ARE TIMES
WHE:N ONE: HAS TO
"TAX ONE'S INGENUITY TO AVOID ONE'~
CREDITORS!

GASO~ALLEY

•

1'6e makin' qood. mone4!
AnwwaLjG,thew on\4 coGt
a tew dolla' down!

®What thiG th'
man 6a4 'bout a
.:sewin' machine an'
1V an' .;;tuff?

Know what LJOU iG
iG a repul.,;ive .:sp
Ev'rL\ fool thin' ,,__ /.--__,
40u Gee.,; LJOU
qotta bul)!

•

THE BORN LOSER

BUTTOH UP YOUR BFAK, BOCA

GRANDE! PlEASED T' MEET '1'00~
AN' AS FAR AS THE MAP IS
CONCERNED '""'IT'S HERE--·

lli M.' HEAD!! MEMORIZED
EVERY lAST DETAIL O' IT
AN' I'M NOT liKElY T'
FORGET .., OR REVEAL
IT 1' THE WRo;m--~RTIES-r-

•

DAILY CROSSWORD

•

43. Prompted
ACROSS
DOWN
1.With
1. French
competence
curate's
5. Fowl being
10. Engender
title
2. Trade name
12. Place in
a row
3.Former
Canadian
13. Sew
temporarily
prime
H . Commemminister
orative
(2 wds.)
pillar
4. Still
15. Within:
5. Example
6. High (mus.)
comb. form
16. Professional 7. Successor
charge
to3Down
(2wds.)
18. Incarnadine
8 . Away frum
19. Postpone
2l.Spoken
G.I. duty
(2wds.}
22. Wedding
symbol
23. Field of
granular
snow
24. Struggled
26. Quoted
27. Kiln
28. Yokel
29. - - the
riot act
30. Declare
void
32. Boston
Bruins star
33. Criticize
adversely
(slang}
34. Distaff
cottontail
36.Twangy
38. Complete
40. Expiate
41. "Seventh
Heaven"
heroine
42. Actress
- - Berger

DICK TRACY
N TI-lE ADJOINING AISLE
A POLICEMAN HEARS
TI4E CRIES AND ATTI-IE
SAME TIME SPOTS AN
OB.JECT.

•
TERRY
HERE'S A DEPARTMENT
OF DEFENSE I. P, CARP.
SAYS THIS MAN IS
'liEUTENANT CQ.ONEL

TERENCE LEE,U.S.A.F..

•

THEN HE COULDN'T.. I
AM TERRI6l'i SORRY,
SIR. I'VE MADE A
PI?EADFUl MISTAKE!

CAPI'AIN EASY
DOE5 JoJ'T 5Pf'AK

A WORP OF EN6li? H13UT IM SURE 'fOlJ
Wil-l- GE:T ALONE&gt;
SPl ENDIDl-Y!

BEFORE MOVIN6

IIJfO KERCH'7
MAJ\J5JOI-J ... DLJCEY
RETLJR~5 TO THS
C ITY TO PAC~&lt;=.
'30M£ SELON6 1N C1!?

...P,IJP CAI-J... NOL-A
F055 ...

~1!11)0000)1~®~3~=-=

9. Goaded
11. Pro-

tect
17. Work
unit
20. Demon
21. Flav.
oring
ingredient
24. Cigar
shapes
25. Gormandized
26. Swindled
28. Meadow
sound

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

31. Actor
Greene
33. Entreaty
35. Watched
37.Emmet
39. Mr. Borge,
to pals

SPAWJ1
\..:
~D....-----+---r--~0

ICO IRES I
(J

I

I

f'EYCIF

I I

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as

V~

~=~-==·==-==l=::.LJ:=:==--s::u:g~g~ested by the above cartoon.

rI I

S.UR~
.:.:.:P81:.::.:
SE..:;_AN:.: .:SW.:. : . .E~
R he;_re_ _JI

L______:_:Pr.::::int...::.:.th:....::e

II J

IT

(Anaw~n

JumhiP.: VIRUS
Ye~te-rday"e

I

Ano .... r:

TITLE

CALICO

FINERY

Wl1y you migilt im·ite nice people 10
"grmlen party- TO CULTIVATt THEM

m
t U~htOII.....t.i.I'Chl'!t~
•t•'!}•rU..ttiiJett\nS~Itlllo:.)

l'll- TAKE IT Or&lt;..
NOT DEPEND!? O N
WHETHER~

READY TO TEl-lME A80UT THAT
Ml 571~6

HAND!

0
0

0

0

Quotation

A Cryptogram

S P A .N

0 P A

OJKA

ZQJX .-- D.

J

X P V ,

HJT
Q Y C
U .

CP

0

0
0

0

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all .
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

SJTC

•

()

AXYDLBAAXR

XPV

"

0

Ia L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

KO

0

0

0

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how
YE7- BUT WHETHEr&lt;.

tomorrowt

0

0

E K H

A ~ow ­
SIDRM

OJKA

ZAYTCKRY

(CI 1970, King Features Syndicate. Inc.)

0

()

0

0

0

0

0

0

a

0

0

0
0
0

E J G Y

Yesterday's Cryptoquow: THE PERSON WHO USES BIG
WORDS ISN'T TRYING TO INFORM YOU; HE'S TRYING
TO IMPRESS YOU. -OLIN MILLER

0

0
0

VULTVRES NEVER
51T ON TREE
LIMBS DURIN6

UP

0

0

�10- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Jan. 8, 1971
in the Letart l•'Gtlls area, is Farmers H&lt;lnk anti Savings
executive vice prcs•tlent of the Ccm1pany of Pomeroy.

Johnson's OBA Co111111ittee Wins National Recognition
The outstanding senice
which the Ohio Bankers
Association has given the
state's agnculture, through its
agricultural
committee,
Thereoc Johnson, Plants,
chairman. has received special
recognition from The American
Bankers Association, the
national organization of the
banking industry.
The A.B.A.'s Agncultural and
Rural Affairs Committee has
announced that the Ohio
Bankers Association has been
awarded the committee's annual Agricultural Award on
behalf of the bankers of Ohio.
The · Agncultural Award is
presented each year to the state
b&lt;&gt;'1kers associations of those
sta 1&lt;&gt;s whose programs anu
activities have been of notable
service to agriculture during
the preceding year. This is the
29th year that Ohio has received
the award, indicating the
continuous interest on the part
of banks in a sound agricultural
economy.
The award recognizes the
wide range of projects carried
on as a means of bringing

greater understanJing and
cooperation between the farm
and financial communities. The
Agricultural and Rural Affairs
Committee considered such
activities as community service
programs, contributions to the
over-all financial security of
agriculture, promoting complete and profitable financial
service to farm families, and
informing banking of changes in
agriculture and agriculturally
related businesses and how
these changes influence credit
requirements and services.
In presenting the award, the
A.B.A. stated that "state
association activities through
the years have played a
prominent role in helping banks
remain the largest lenders in
agriculture. Today's dynamic
agricultural industry presents a
real challenge to bankers to see
that efficient farm businesses
receive the kinds and amounts
of credit they need.
Beyond making farm loans,
however, banks have a
responsibility to assist farmers
by every means possible in
making the adjustments
necessary for the future

agricullure, but also because of
their activities in behalf of
educational work in the wise use
of credit; in promoting improving farm practices; and in
cooperation
with
farm,
livestock, and commodity
organizations."
The work IS planned and

development of our agricullural
economy. This award is
presented in recognition of the
banks' efforts to provide that
'extra· serv1ce to the state's
farmers.
This recognition is based not
only on Ohio banks' leadership
in serving the credit needs of

D0 w l er

R esigns

John W. Dowler has sub- for an additional45 miles of four
mitted his resignation as lane highways scheduled for
Division Deputy Director of construction the next few years.
Division 10, Ohio State Highway
He stated that his predecessor
Department, effective January did a fine job and left the
11, 1971, after eight years Division in excellent shape for
service in this office.
him. His hope is that he is
As Division 10 Direct'&gt;r, he returning it to his successor in a
has headed an organization of similar condition.
about 650 people responsible for
He wishes to thank the many
the construction and main- people and organizations
tenance on 1,800 miles of state throughout the division who
highways.
have helped him with the acDuring this eight years $150 complishments that have been
million has been spent on the achieved in highway planning
state highways in the division. and building. "Their help Ius
The major achievement has been invaluable," he said.
been the construction of 92
His future plans include being
miles of new four lane highways "Captain" of the ship "Aveline
and the preliminary planning III," docked at the Marietta
Boat Club, some travel, and
operation of a land development
business in Athens, Ohio.
The highways of southeastern
Ohio have taken a giant step
generally around 14 years of forward and he stated he was
age, began gathering regularly certain this improvement would
in front of Mary's house, continue as this is the natural
expansion area of the State of
chanting "nigger-lover."
"They throw in a lot of Ohio.
obscenities, too," said Mrs.
Perkins. "The house is just in a
complete state of nerves. Mary
doesn't dare leave it now
except to go to school. She
weeps all the time and can't
sleep."
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay
Allen Lare, mayor of this
( UPI) - Left-wing tupamaros
town of 3,356 on the edge of the
terrorists kidnaped British
Everglades a few miles west of
Ambassador
Geoffrey Jackson
Miami, said that while "I
today in a sensational early
certainly don't condone this,
morning commando operation.
our hands are tied."
Eyewitnesses said they
"Can you tell me a law that
says you can't harass your stopped his black Rolls-Royce,
beat three bodyguards into
neighbor?" Lare asked.
submission with clubs and
'Only Trying to Help'
He said, however, the city made off with the ambassador.
Both a high Uruguayan
council has asked City Attorney
source
and the British Foreign
Ed Moore "to see if he can
Office
in
London confirmed the
come up with some kind of law
to protect the Perkins family." kidnaping - the latest in a
series of sensational exploits by
In the meantime, Mrs.
the terrorists against the
Perkins has signed an affidavi'
Uruguayan
government headed
charging some of the youths
involved with assault, and she by President Jorge Pacheco
said she was confident "that Areco.
The same group already is
justice will be done and this
holding
U. S. agricultural adwill stop."
viser
Claude
L. Fly, 65, who was
She said Mary had seen the
publicity about the Negro kidnaped Aug. 7, and Brazilian
family and the kidness of the Consul Aloysio Dias Gomide,
who was abducted July 31.
black officer who had been
forced to evict them in the line
of duty. The officer, Sgt. Bill
Kimbro, gave the family $36 of
his Christmas money to pay for
their lodging for the night.
Mary, a sixth-grader, decided
that's what she wanted to do
ALL NEW
with her Christmas money.
"All she was trying to do was
to help people who had fallen
on bad times," said Mrs.
Perkins.

Christmas Spirit Attacked
SWEETWATER, Fla. (UPI)
-Little Mary Perkins, 11, spent
her $10 Christmas money to
buy toys for four black children
whose family had been evicted
from their apartment.
But some of the kids in her
town became angry when !hey
read about it in the newspapers. When Mary went riding
her brother's bicycle Christmas

Day she was attacked and
beaten by teen-agers who called
her a "nigger-lover."
Mary's mother, Isabel Perkins, called police.
"The police officer said he
couldn't do anything because he
didn't see the incident happen,"
she said.
Mayor: 'Hands Tied'
Groups of boys and girls,

Jury Gets Case
Jury deliberations began late
this morning in Gallia Common
Pleas Court in the trial of Rev.
Nyle D. Borden, 53, Gallipolis,
former chaplain at the
Gallipolis State Institute, indicted last September on a
morals charge involving a
student-patient a t the GSI.
The jury rece1ved the case at
11:05a.m. after fin:~! arguments
were presented by prosecutors
James Bennett and Hamlin C.
King and defense counsels
James Fisher a nd Gene
Wetherholt.
The defense rested its case
Thursday afternoon after
calling Rev. Borden to the stand
who during his examination
denied having had sexual intercourse with the student-

42 on Way
To Tryout
For Band
MASON
Forty-two
Wahama High School band
students left today for
Charleston where they were to
try out for places in the AllState Band. They were accompanied by Gerald Simmons,
director, and several parents as
chaperones.
Students competing included
the following:
Kay Hoffman, Cozy Cook,
Debbie Fields, Luellen Roush,
Connie Gilland, Joyce Goodnite,
Harriet Layne, Susie McDaniel,
Becky Gilmore, Diane Harris,
Anitra Wriston, Becky Paugh,
Debbie Gilland, Linda Roush,
Jayne Hart, Vivian Woodrum,
Janet Sayre, Johnetta Oldaker,
Debra Rickard, Christine
Hoffman, Rick Connolly,
Barbara
Clark,
Marilyn
Goodnite, Jim Artis, Brent
Clark, Bruce Adams, Kent
Sayre, Judy Lieving, Rex
Howard, Carroll Circle, Angela
Sayre, Tammy Sayre, Cheryl
Lewis, Carla Haggerty, Chuck
Wood, Holly Layne, Sharon
Froendt, Kim Fields, Gary
Blackhurst, Lawrence Weaver,
John Burris, Mike Ohlinger.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
January8-9
THE MOLLY MAGUIRES
{Technicolor)

Sean Connery
Richard Harris
Colorcartoons:
Lost &amp; Foundation
Swamp Watter
Dnfters
Admission :
Adults, $1.00
Children, 60c
Sun., Mon. &amp; Tues.
January 10-11 - 12
Wm. Wyler's
BEN HUR
{Technicolor)
Charlton Heston
Jack Hawkins
AdmissiOn .
Adults, $1.0(), Ch i ldren 6:lc
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

patient involved.
Character witnesses called
for the defendant were Dr.
Charles W. Holzer, Jr., Dr.
Lester Roush, Rev. Grover
Turner, Rev. Glen R. Hueholt,
Father Ralph Karl, Dr. Bernard
Niehm and Rev. Luther Tracy.
Defense witnesses called
earlier Thursday were Mrs.
Sylvia Day, Mrs. Stella Reeder,
Mrs. Mary Ann Smith, Emma
Richards and Loretta Hayner.
Prior to receiving the case,
the jury heard the following
charge given by Common Pleas
Court Judge Ronald R.
Calhoun:
"The state accuses the
defendant of the crime of
having sexual intercourse with
a female pupil while under his
instruction. Before you can find
the defendant guilty, you must
find beyond a reasonable doubt
(1 ) that on or about Feb. 18,
1970, and in Gallia County, Ohio,
the defendant, Nyle Borden,
had sexual intercourse with
said student-patient with her
consent, (2) on or about the 18th
day of Feb. 1970, the defendant
Nyle Borden, was a male person
over the age of 21 years acting
in the capacity of a tutor or
teacher in a seminary or public
institution and (3 ) that at the
time of such sexual intercourse,
the student was a female person
under the defendant's instruction in a seminary or
public institution.
"If you find that the state
proved beyond a reasonable
doubt all the essential elements
of the crime of having sexual
intercourse with a female
student while under his instruction, your verdict must be
guilty as charged. However, if
you find that the state has failed
to prove any one of the essential
elements of the crime, you must
find the defendant not guilty."

Terrorists
Get Another

directed
by
the
state ~roups in Ohio which has
agncultural committees and brou~ht this award to the slate's
implemented by county key banks.
bankers. lt is the work of these
Johnson, formerly a farmer

January Sale Time

News•.. in BriefS

Elberfe lds In Pomeroy a r e open both
Fr ida y and Saturda y nights unt tl 9

(Continued from Page 1)
pump more money into the stagnant economy.
The board of governors of the "Fed" approved the latest cut
Thursday, reducing the discount rate from 5h to 5114 per cent.

-a good t ime for fam ily shopping see the many new arr iva ls a II over the
store .

Fallout spread into 12 states
LAS VEGAS, NEV. - RADIOACfiVITY which leaked into
the atmosphere from an underground nuclear test last month has
been detected in 12 states and drifted as far as the Canadian
border, a scientist said Thursday.
However, Dr. Melvin Carter, director of the Southwestern
Radiological Health Laboratory, said the leakage was within the
exposure limits established by the Federal Radiation Council and
posed no danger to animals or man.

TONI
TODD
\

When you feel ',

New push for $2 hour minimum
WASHINGTON - ORGANIZED LABOR promised today to
push hard this year for passage of a bill to increase the minimum
wage to $2 an hour and to extend its coverage to most of the
nation's workers.
The Nixon administration apparently will not help in the
drive, but at this point it has no plans to oppose it actively. Since
business and industry again will strongly oppose the legislation which got nowhere in the previous Congress -the outcome of the
bill remains in doubt.

/

Press retaliation program
'

MOSCOW - THE SOVIETS PRESSED an anti-American
retaliation campaign today that has escalated from diplomatic
notes to personal annoyance. Protest delegations filed in and out
of the embassy all day Thursday and embassy officials said one
diplomat was involved in an unpleasant coat~rabbing incident as
he left a theater Wednesday night. A Russian asked the diplomat,
"how would you like to be treated the way Zionist thugs treat our
diplomats in America?"
The Soviets were retaliating for anti-Soviet demonstrations in
the United States in which militant Jewish groups have picketed,
insulted Soviet diplomats and damaged Soviet press and airline
offices. In a diplomatic note that kicked off the campaign, the
Soviets accused the U. S. government of "connivance" in the
violence and threatened retaliation against the more than 400
Americans in Moscow.

Retaliation to retaliators
WASHINGTON - A BOMB SHATIERED windows and
damaged a metal door early today at the office of a Soviet
magazine in Washington. District of Columbia police said the
bomb exploded against the rear door of the information office of
Soviet Life magazine. There were no injuries.
A woman, who would not identify herself, reported the
bombing to UPI's Washington bureau in a telephone call at 4:47
a.m. EST. "The Soviet cultural building on 18th Street has been
bombed," she said. "This is a sample of things to come. Let our
people go."

A bright Toni Todd perks up any day. And the fetching
scarf can go any whi ch way. Simp licity, keynoted by
crisscross

seaming

at the

to wash. Yellow, red, navy.

Fluoridated water coming
CINCINNATI -OHIO'S SECOND LARGEST city is expected
to have fluoridated water by Feb. 1. Waterworks Superintendent
Charles Bolton sent out notices to medical and dental authorities
Thursday advising them he had set the target date for
fluoridating the city's water supply. He said, however, it
depended on whether sufficient quantities of fluoride could be
obtained by that time.
A state law passed in 1969 requires cities of more than 20,000
population to have fluoridated water by Jan. 1, 1971, unless voters
reject it.

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• ADMIRAL MATRIX COLOR TUBE

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• ADMIRAL SUPER ACCURATE ELECTRON GUN
• ADMIRAL HIGH TRANSMISSION

TU~E

FACE

• ADMIRAL RARE EARTH EUROPIUMPHOSPHORS

THE NEW ENGLANDER
Model 3l3435

23" (Diag. Meas.)

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7:30p.m. at the high school. All
members are urged to attend. ..
Refreshments will be served.

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It's Quick! Easy

!

DIES IN FIRE
CAMPBELL, Ohio (UPI)
Floyd Godfrey, 92, died ~
BA NKI NG~
Thursday in a fire which swept ~
Fridays Only
-tc
through his old two-story frame -tc The Drive-In Window~
home.

For All Occasions·

1' 3 and s to
1' Fridays.

We wire floweFI everywhere

-

Pomeroy Flower Shop
3utternut Ave. Pomeroy

:Ar.,, Millard Von Meter

(9~$

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is Open
-tc
~ · 9 A.M. to7 P.M. -tc
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(Continuously)
~
~Other Banking Hours 9 to 1'

FLOWERS

992-2039

DRIVE-IN

THE MORRAll Model 3L3431
23" (Diag. Meas .)
Delightful contemporary styled t.onsole m a nchly
grained Wa lnut fm 1sh . FitS well mto any furmshmg
scheme. features Instant Play, instant picture,
sound.

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7 as usual on

1'
1'

~ FARMERS BANK ~

•~and SAVINGS CO.~•
~

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POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

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ADMIRAL SOLID STATE
SOLAR COLOR CHASSIS
Adm1ral advanced erg
neeri nll prov 1 dP~ ut 1;s t
depPndab•l•ty fnr IHI 1,a , t
color p1ctures

ADMIRAL
SUPER ACCURATE
ELECTRON GUN

~ocuses the elect ror be a"'
l o "'p1n po1nt" " accu racy o"
eve ry phosphor dot

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An advanced technological alliance of the Admiral Matrix
Color Picture Tube and new col or chassis creates a
col~r picture more than 100% blighter than ever before.

ADMIRAL COLOR
MATRIX TUBE
Revoluti onary new t u hP
s~~~s bnghter and sharptr
co lor p•ct ures th a ~ ev~r
befo re '

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ADMIRAL HIGH
TRANSMISSION TUBE FACE
Pt lnltts br Rht v1v,d colo r
rn '~6eS t o s ilo e th ro ugh
w1th no p1ctu re washout

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ADMIRAL RARE EARTH
EUROPIUM PHOSPHORS
o.vsu ,f ldt r ed ntens&gt;fles
th e overa ll b n ght•1ess of
the color 1mage.

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THE ERICSON
Model 3L3441
23" (Diag. Meas.)
Contemporary Danish
Modern styling high·
lighted by a richly
grained Walnut finish.
Instant Play features
insta ntpicture, sound.

COLOR ,
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All the charm of Early
American styling is e&gt;&lt;hibited in th 1s Maple
f inished color console.
Admiral 's all new color
chassis, Automatic
Fine Tuning (AFC), and
Instant Play are all
i ncluded.

~·············~
~A
THOUGHT~

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• ADMIRAL SOLID STATE COMPONENTS

FIRE PUT OUT
Pomeroy firemen answered a
call to the area of the Herman
Roberts residence on Union
FOR TODAY ~
Ave. at 5:35 p.m. Thursday
where they extinguished a -tc
-tc
-tc The longer we dwell on -tc
brush fire .

10-20.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

• ADMIRAL NEW K·20 CHASSIS

JOBS OFFERED
The Leading Creek Conservancy District has several
job openings for men 22 years
old and older. Those interested
may apply at the district office
in Rutland from 8:30a.m. to 5
p.m., Monday through Friday.

our misfortunes, the
greater is their power to
harm us.

In devil-may-care

Don't for get the big January Furniture
Sa le on t he 3rd f loor.

VVhat;'s new and bet ter?

DATE WAS WRONG
The deadline farmers must
meet to request to have their
farm program yield based on
actual production rather than
estimated yield, is Jan. 21,
not Jan. 2, as was erroneously
reported Thursday. The
request must be filed with the
county ASCS office.

-tc
-tc
BOOSTERS TO MEET
-tc
The
Southern
Athletic -tc
Boosters will meet Monday at -tc

midriff.

Encron® polyester textured doubleknit that's a dream

ADMIRAL AUTOMATIC
CHROt.l, CIRCUITRY
Allows a consta nt level of
col c r to be reproduced
under vary1ng s • g ~&gt; a l con
d r t r or'~

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