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                  <text>Laos Losses Climb

•
•

•
•

DEBBIE WOOD, SEATED, and Cathy Smith, Eastern High School seniors, are doing their
part in the movement against teenage drug abuse. The student council is sponsoring the
program. Debbie and Cathy have mailed pamphlets to the parents of students at Eastern that
outlines some of the dangerous drugs, narcotics and volatile chemicals that are being used by
some teenagers and sub-teenagers and the harm that results from using them. Films on drug
abuse are on order that will be shown to the student body. Debbie and Cathy attended the
Teenage Institute on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse at Wittenberg College, Springfield last
summer. The Meigs County Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Program is engaged in raising enough
money to send 15 students. from Meigs County to Wittenburg again this summer. Cost per
student is $35. Those who wish more information on classes at Wittenburg, or wish to help stop
the spread of drugs by sending a student to Wittenberg, may contact the Rev. Arthur Lund at
992-2010 or the Meigs County Health Department at 992-3723.

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 217 '

• Siren to Open
Heart Activity
The village s r
rr. Sunda
reth
t Sunda
!:&gt;ytheM
and Profes
Club.
Club members will be joined
by other volunteer workers to
conduct a house-to-house drive
collecting funds for the annual
heart fund drive in Meigs
County. The drive will continue
unti15 p.m. and village hall will
serve as headquarters for the
Sunday activity.
Team captains named for
Sunday include Betty Cline,
Alwilda·
Werner,
Pearl
Reynolds , Linda Sto Jart,
Beulah Strauss, Rita Lewis,
Carrie Kennedy, Freddie
Hou~"'shelt, Grace Pratt, Edith
Forr' .' Wilma Sargent and
Mary 1. nzelman.
Assi'" .1g the captains will be

Mildred
Hawley,
Mrs.
Lawrence Boyd, Edith Jividen,
Lena McKinley, Nan Moore,
Mrs. Tom Kelly, Jo Ruth Hall,
Flora Simmons,
Marsha
Spauldmg, Bronwyn Dailey,
Lula Mae Lynch, Mrs. William
Swisher, Mrs. Richard Oiler,
Mrs. Wendell Hoover, Joyce
Kearns, Mrs. Roscoe Fife, Mrs.
James Clatworthy, Twila
Clatworthy, Mrs. Paul Davis,
Mae Ashley, Mrs. Don Stivers,
and Mrs. Nellie Vale.
Solicitation of the Middleport
business district in conjunction
with the fund drive this week
was conducted by Iris Payne,
Edwina Scott, Grace Pratt and
Betty Cline.
Heart Sunday will be observed in Pomeroy Sunday also
with the house-to-house canvass
to be conducted by Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority.

. s :
.•• zn B rze
1

r---------------------------~
7\.T
•
~+.
I

I

1 ~ews

:

1.,

I

By United Press International

Strip mining target of Hechler
WASHINGTON- REP. KEN HECHLER, D-W. Va., has
introduced legislation that would outlaw all coal strip mining
within six months. Hechler, backed by 27 other congressmen told
a news conference Thursday, strip mining in coal regions was
making vast areas "start to look like the surface of the moon."
In introducing the measure, Hechler said "only artful
dodging and delay could result from the Nixon administration's
proposal to give coal mining states two years to study proposals
for the elimination of strip mining.

....

Ferguson Act attacked

•

COLUMBUS - STATE INDUSTRIAL Relations Director
Martin Hughes said Thursday Gov. John J. Gilligan's labor
proposals will be presented to the legislature include repeal of the
Ferguson Act; and an increase in the minimum wage law.
Hughes, in an address to the biennial conference of the Ohio AFLCIO, said Gilligan would also seek an increase in unemployment
compensation benefits and stronger enforcement of safety
standards.
But the big battle appears to be shaping up over the repeal of
the Ferguson Act which prohibits strikes by public employes.
Hughes said the act is "unfair, unworkable, unjust and downright
stupid." Hughes said it makes about 400,000 Ohio workers
"second class citizens because it has no bargaining provisions."

Suspects taken in apartment

•

Due to injuries and
illness, the First
Chamber
Dance
Company of New York
has cancelled the
remainder of its
February schedule
according to a TriCounty Concert
spokesman today. The
spokesman
added,
however, that the
Reyes-Soler Dance
Company, an outstanding group of eight
young Spanish dancers, will replace the
New Yorkers with an 8
p.m., performance at
Gallia Academy High
School Monday.

Thieu and Vice President
Nguyen Cao Ky discussed the
subject Thursday.
New Fighting
New fighting was reported in
Cambodia today. Military
spokesmen in Phnom Penh said
the Communists had increased
their harassment of Highway 4,
Phnom Penh's road to the port
of Kompong Som, with a
number of shelling attacks.
In addition to the huge CH53
helicopter near Huey, spokesmen reported an AHl Cobra
downed in Laos with two
wounded, an UHl Huey downed
in Laos with four missing and
an OH6 observation helicopter
downed in Laos with three
missing. UPI correspondent

Damage to Truck
Set Over $1,000

Damages to a 1964 International Truck owned by the
Provico Feed Co., which caught
fire Thursday evening at the
Miller and Sons Garage at the
Crossroads near Bradbury have
been set at between $1,000 and
$1,200.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Henry
Werry said the truck motor was
being washed when it caught
fire. A bucket of gasoline
nearby also caught fire, the fire
chief said.
Pomeroy firemen answered a
call to the Miller business
::::::::::::::;::::::::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: location at 6: 53 p.m.

Devoled To The lntere&amp;lll Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXIII

•

ed 15 to 16 miles west of the
border where they have severed
a number of branches of the Ho
Chi Minh Trail which is
actually a series of dirt roads
and mountain trails. Reconnaissance units were as far as
Sepone, 27 miles inside the
border.
Saigon was buzzing with
rumors that the South Vietnamese were discussing an
invasion of North Vietnam, and
usually reliable political sources
said President N~uven Van

The Daily Sentinel

•

,

SAIGON (UPI)-The South
Vietnamese foray into Laos
against the Ho Chi Minh Trail
took an increasingly heavy toll
of American lives and aircraft
today. Eight more helicopters
were shot down or heavily
damaged Thursday and today
in connection with the operation .
Official figures which include
only helicopters destroyed were
18 but unofficial figures from
correspondents on the scene put
the number at perhaps double
that including helicopters
shelled on landing strips near
Khe Sanh in northwestern South
Vietnam.
Biggest Loss
The biggest loss was that of a
giant CH53 Sea Stallion which
exploded in flight Thursday
inside South Vietnam while on a
resupply mission involved with
the Laotian campaign. A
spokesman said three men
were killed and four missing.
U.S. spokesmen said at least
34 Americans have been killed,
85 wounded and 13 reported
missing in connection with the
South Vietnamese drive into
Laos, now in its 12th day. The
total includes 20 dead, 22
wounded and 10 missing in air
support operations in Laos. It
does not include a number of
Americans wounded by Communist shelling in northern
South Vietnam .
The 16,000 South Vietnamese
troops inside Laos were report-

DALLAS - SIXTY FEDERAL, county and city policemen
descended on an apartment complex on the east side of the city
early today and arrested two men wanted for the execution style
murders of three deputy sheriffs.
Both men, hiding in tile bathroom of an apartment, gave up
without firing a shot. Police said the two gunmen - Rene Adolfo
Guzman, 33, and Leonardo Ramos!..opez, 25, killed three helpless,
bound and pleading deputy sheriffs last Monday night on a levee
of the Trinity River near downtown Dallas. The suspects were
held without hond.

Billion dollJir.-, of aid

COLGMBUS - THE OHIO Education Association (OEA)
(Contir·
,,n Pagt&gt; 12)

A "far-reaching" Egyptian
offer to sign a peace treaty if
Israel meets certain conditions has aroused keen
interest in the Israeli cabinet,
diplomatic sources said today
in Jerusalem.
·~::'\el call~d Ambassador
Yitzak Rabin home from
Washington for urgent
consultations on the Middle
East negotiations. The United
States has been reported to be
seeking to get Israei to take a
more flexible approach to the
peace talks.

TEN CENTS

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1971

Too Hot to Hold
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
nominal sponsor of last fall's
controversial advertisement »ttacking eight Democratic
Senate candidates as the choice
of "radicals" and "extremists"
now pictures his committee as
a front that neither drafted,
approved, nor paid for the ads.
In a letter to the nonpartisan
Fair Campaign Practices Com-

mittee, Washington attorney
Carl L. Shipley said the ads
were put together by ..campaign professionals" and paid
for directly by the Republican
''national campaign orgamzation."
Furthermore, said Shipley,
whose name appeared on the
ads as treasurer of the
sponsoring "Committee for a

&gt;.:::::.~::::::::::::::;-;.Q::.~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Treats
Helped

D. Orang Winner
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI)- Dja- the middle with debris flying all
karta Jim, the Topeka Zoo's over the place."
orangutan painter. has sold one The zoo director also said the
of his prize-winning creations artistic ape was not too
for $500.
impressed about the sale.
Zoo Director Gary Clarke
"He ate a banana and hugged
announced Thursday an anony- Daisy and that was about all
mous Topeka art collector the response we got from him,"
purchased the painting "Torna- Clarke said.
do."
The money from the sale will
::;:::::::::=:=:~=:~:!:~:!:~:~:~:9.~:;~:::!:~:!:~:!:?.!~:!:!:!8
help pay for Daisy, Jim's mate,
WEATHER EXTENDED
who was recently purchased
Extended Ohio Weather
from the Dallas, Tex., zoo for
Outlook
Sunday through
$5,000.
Jim recently won a statewide Tuesday:
Variable cloudiness during
children's painting contest at
Hutchinson with two paintings. the period with temperatures
One was "Tornado" and the averaging near normal.
other was "Train from Tokyo." Chance of rain south and rain
Jim entered the contest under or snow north Monday. Highs
the name "D. James Orang" Sunday mostly in the 40s,
and the judges never learned he dropping to the 30s or low 40s
and
Tuesday.
was an ape until after he won. Monday
Overnight
lows
mostly
in the
Clarke said "Tornado" was
20s.
not impressionistic.
"It looks like a big funnel in :::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
makers of Jim Beam bourbon
told Congress Thursday they
helped provide treats for highranking U.S. officials in Vietnam to keep their brand the
runaway best-seller in the war
zone.
The James Beam Distilling
Co. protested, however, that
financing such favors as a
swanky Saigon villa for the
men who bought liquor for post
exchanges and service clubs
was just good business-no
worse than what the competition was up to.
"We hoped our products
would be purchased because of
this," explained Beam vice
president Mel Peterson to a
Senate investigations subcommittee Thursday. "I have to get
my whisky in the marketplace
to create a demand for it."
Peterson, alternatively defensive and apologetic, reluctantly
detailed to persistent senators
how Beam used the skills of
mysterious businessman WilBy George Hargraves, Superintendent
liam J. Crum to escalate
Meigs Local School District
bourbon sales in Vietnam
FIVE MINUTES AND 25 CENTS!
through relationships with miliThat brief heading will be found on the small
tary purchasing agents.
Subcommittee investigators printed statement that your child should bring home
linked Beam-and specifically today.
The five minutes is the time and the 25 cents is the
Peterson-to Crum when the
hearings into operation of post cost that will be required to communicate your concern
exchanges, service clubs and
similar facilities opened
Speaking of Schools-No. 176
Wednesday.
Earlier testimony pictured
Crum-now reportedly some- for our prisoners of war in North Vietnam.
where in the South Pacific on
I know that the war in Southeast Asia is very
his yacht-as a peddler of controversial and has divided our nation into very
goods ranging from liquor to bitter groups. The plight of our young men in prison
slot machines who made camps is something else. I don't see any division on
millions from military service this issue. We all want humane treatment for these
clubs in Asia by tradmg bribes men and for their wives and children.
and kickbacks for purchase
I ask that you read the few brief lines in the
orders.
statement and then seriously consider that the inPeterson, flushed and perspirvestment of those "five minutes and 25 cents" as
ing profusely, acknowledged
suggested.
close contact with Crum during
A billboard north of us on Route 33 shows a POW
Crum 's four-year hitch as
and asks, "What if he were your brother?" The answer
Beam's Vietnam agent. But
given on the same billboard is "He is." Surely, this is a
while he said top Beam officials
true statement. We are all brothe:-s and those men in
were kept fully briefed on
Crum 's activities, he said he the camps are our brothers. Let's try to help them.
Last Friday a Language Arts Workshop was
had " no knowledge" kickbacks
were part uf Crum 's operations. conducted at the laboratory school at Ohio University.

Responsible Congress," the ads
were run with the knowledge
and consent of tile Rc 1 blican
candidate in each case.
All eight Republican candidates previously said etther in
statements to the fair campaign panel or to the press that
they were not consulted about
the ads in advance.
The Republican National
Committee at the time denied it
had anything to do with
preparing or financing the
political attacks. The White
House also disclaimed any
connection.
Advised of Shipley's latest
statement on the case, the
Senate Republican campaign
committee, the House Republi(Continued on page 12)

Weather
Chance of thundershowers
south tonight. Lows tonight in
upper 30s and 40s. Variable
cloudiness and turning cooler
Saturday with a chance of
showers north and highs in
upper 30s and 40s.

Robert E. Sullivan, in Khe
Sanh, reported another AHl
missing over Laos.
Communist shelling of Allied
airbases near Khe Sanh heavily
damaged two OH61ight helicop-

ters and destroyed an UHl
Huey.
South Vietnamese have reported killing 680 Communists
in Laos at a loss of 144 ARVNs
dead, and 541 wounded.

Regulation
Is Foreseen
WASHINGTON (UPI)- A Nixon administration official said
today it is "very apparent that there will have to be federal
regulation of health insurance companies" as part of President
Nixon's new national health care insurance plan.
The private health insurers are now regulated by the states.
But HEW Undersecretary John G. Veneman said federal
regulation would be essential in the nationwide health program
proposed by Nixon and in which Veneman had a major role in
formulating.
The administration proposal,
Veneman predicted that
sent to Congress Thursday, health care would be one of the
would continue to largely rely- most hotly debated issues in
on an expanded basis-health this Congress, with numerous
care services insured by proposals rivaling that of the
private companies and organi- administration being proposed.
zations. Veneman said legislaSen. Edward M. Kennedy, Dtion to transfer authority for Mass., sponsor of a federally
regulating the private concerns subsidized national health insurfrom the state to the federal ance program, attacked the
level would be submitted later. Nixon proposals as wasteful
and ineffective. Kennedy also
Veneman was interviewed on characterized them as "poorNBC-TV's Today Show.
house medicine."

Governor Trades
Poems and Shirts
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI)Gov. Milton Shapp traded
shirts and poems with a
disgruntled taxpayer Thursday.
Bob Vertacnik, of West
Newton, Pa., claiming Shapp's
proposed 5 per cent income tax
would prevent him from
making ends meet on his $6,800
income, sent his shirt and a 22line protest verse to the
governor.
Shapp sent back the shirt,
along with one of his own shirts
and his own verse.
At a news conference Thursday, Shapp said Vertacnik, like
aany oU1er Pe.msylvanian.s,
would pay no state income
taxes at all because of
exemptions and deductions.
Furthermore, Shapp said, his
package includes exemptions
which should lighten Vertacnik's tax burden $48 per year:
Vertacnik wrote (in part):
"Governor Shapp, I want you
to know,

A utos Collide
LRSide R BClRe
.
A minor two-&lt;:ar accident was
reported Thursday at 3:39p.m.
on SR 124 in Racine by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
Erma Pollard McClurg, 44,
Racine, was traveling west on
124 when a car driven by Margie
Muncy, 20, Naugatuck, W. Va.,
pulled from an alley into the
side of the McClurg vehicle.
There were no injuries or
arrests; light damage to the
Muncy vehicle and medium to
McClurg's.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Kenneth
Imboden, Middleport; Charles
Beegle, Racine; Bess Sanborn,
Middleport; Carl Autherson,
LOCAL TEMPS
Long Bottom; Lutchie Riggs,
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED Bessie Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Friday was
50 degrees under cloudy skies.
Stitt, George Stobart, Sr.

Either me or your tax will
have to go .
I've been a Pennsylvanian all
my life
And I'm struggling to support
three kids and a wife.
Continually hit by increased
taxation
And just a little punchy from •
creeping inflation
I'm always broke from pay to
pay
It's no darned wonder my
hair turned gray.
There's no possible way to
escape the facts.
I just can't afford your
in~ome tax.
You've really taken the !Shirt
from my back
So I'm donating it now to the
Commonwealth.
Please keep it and wear it in
the best of health,"
"I'm sending Mr. Vertacnik's
shirt back and I'm going to
send it with the following
poem," Shapp said:
"Mr. Vertacnik, I want you to
know
That neither you nor my
program will have to go.
Citizens like you will get a
break.
Forty-eight dollars less is a
pretty fair shake
You and your family I don't
want to hurt.
So I'm going to send you
back your shirt.
And, just to make sure that
everything's fine.
I'm also sending you one of
mine."
The governor sent Vertacnik
a "television blue" shirt.
TAKING ORDERS
Subscriptions for the 1971
Meigs Marauder yearbook are
now being accepted. Persons
interested in purchasing one of
the books is asked to telephone
the Meigs High School after
March 5. The price is $5 and
must be paid in advance.

Americans United on POW Treatment
We were happy to have Robert Morris lead a team of
teachers from Pomeroy, Middleport and Bradbury in
attending this worthwhile meeting. The emphasis in
this workshop was on reading, writing, oral communication and how they all tie together with all other
areas of learning.
Attending the all day program with Mr. Morris
were Mrs. Ina Meadows, grade 4 teacher of Pomeroy;
Mrs. Ida Diehl, grade 2 teacher of Pomeroy; Mrs.
Suzanne Wolfe, grade 4 teacher of Middleport; Mrs.
Sara Rupe, grade 2 teacher of Middleport, and Mrs.
Marjorie Goett, grade 5-6 teacher of Bradbury.
Several weeks ago we had an officials' class in
basketball. Ron Smith taught the class and had all nine
student officials successfully pass the examination of
the Ohio High School Athletic Association.
Just a short time ago 13 men completed a similar
course in football officiating. They did it again. All 13
passed the OHSAA test. We now have an additional13
football officials in our area and, I'm'quite certain, a
very proud teacher.
We run into situations such as the following,
particularly in the elementary schools. A bus student
comes to see the principal or teacher during the day
and says he wants to walk home, ride another bus to a
friend's house or go home or somewhere else in a car at
the close of the school day. We won't let him do any of
these things unless he brings a written request from
home.
When a student comes to school on one of our

busses, we assume that he will be returning on one of
our busses, unless we have a written request from
home. We think that you want this type of
arrangement. If we do otherwise, you will encounter
situations when your child doesn't come home on the
bus and you won't know where he is. We probably won't
know either.
When your child is supposed to go somewhere else
other than home or go in a car rather than on a bus or
any other special arrangement is made for the afterschool time, let us know in advance and in writing.
Only by following this procedure can we hope to try to
maintain your child's safety. We do tilis because we
care. We are certain that you want us to do so.
Last Friday pre-£egistration forms went home
with ninth, lOth and 11th graders. These forms list the
courses that we will have next year in the high school.
We ask the student and parent to study it, complete lt,
sign it, and return it to school. Most are in. If yours
isn't, please send it in right away.
The same form will be brought home this evening
by all eighth graders. Please go over it with care and
get it back to school as soon as possible. This is im.
portant and we really need your assistance .
NEWS &amp; NOTES-We close out our regular
basketball season with a home game tonight with
Athens- Isn't it remarkable how long it takes to get
tired of warm, sunny weatiler and how very short a
time it takes to become absolutely "sick" of cold,
snowy winter weather?

�•

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 19, 1971

''I Saw Him First!"

Voice
along
Br'Way

[p)©~OmJ~ /viewpoint •

BY JACK O'BRIAN
WOODYALLENBETTER
WATCH THE
f
MILKS HAKES
Everyone's in show biz:
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen was
autographing for an hour at the
Bahamas' Kings Inn ... We
spent a weekend at this resort
last month and found it just
marvelous ... Dick Cavett's
opinion of his enthusiastic pal
Woody Allen: "Woody's the
kind who gets high on baby
aspirin" ... We've seen Woody
freak out on malted milkshakes
... Marlene Dietrich's swanking
it in Hugh Hefner's own penthouse while starring at Miami
Beach's Playboy Plaza.
By DAVID POLING
Small tug of ego the night of
March 28: The Tony Awards
BEIRUT, Lebanon-(NEA)-This city is the Manhattan
versus the Friars Club's entative or the guy fr~m the f..!.S. embassy will be waiting
of
the Mediterranean, the Wall Street of the Middle East,
tertainer-of-the-year bash for
for them at a pretnal hearmg, complete with bail and
the trade center for the Arabs and Europeans- and the
exit visa for Cyprus. In reality, four or five days may f
Alan King ... King's logrolling of new Alcatraz for young Americans convicted of drug pospass before a parent, friend or official knows they are in
liberal politicians will dress his session. Across the world the young people from the
Jounie~ prison. One college stud~nt spent four days last
dais with assorted Kennedys underground talk about the pure, cheap hashish produced
month m a cell with 81 men. Durmg that time he was the
and hizzoner the mayor; the in Lebanon. In the high slopes of the back country hemp
new toy for more than a dozen homosexuals. Upon reand
been
harvested
for
centuries.
The
crop
has
grown
Tonys are on network TV, which
lease, h_e was in a s~ate of psychotic shock, unable to
could prove too strong an nourishes in the correct mixture of moisture . sunshine
leaye h1s room and mcapable of handling the lightest
and
altitude.
duties.
egocentrifugal
force
Near the majestic Roman ruins of Baalbeck kilos of
Egocentripetal? ...
I visited four Americans at Asfuriyeh. The three men
hashish are sold like boxes of facial tissues. One youngwere under guard but able to serve their time in one of
"Fiddler on the Roof" ster bragged to a friend that he would pay no more than
the most modern facilities. Others are not that lucky and
finished filming in England ... $30 a kilo-worth a hundred times that in Paris or New
now realize that the Middle East is not the Middle West.
It's due next fall, by which time York. He is also paying the court 1 to 3 years for drug
A
young California coed was locked up in the mental
the original Bdwy. musical will possession, serving his time in Asfuriyeh prison.
asylum, sharing a room with 10 others, some senile, some •
RAY CROMLEY
have beaten "Hello, Dolly!"
During the past 12 months, 25 U.S. citizens have been
deranged and several long-term addicts This gal had
FACTS
and "My Fair Lady" and all arrested and convicted of drug use or possession. If they
been hert: for. three m.onths. Arre_sted at the airport with
severa_l kilos m her suitcase, she IS waiting for her father
other musicallongruns in stage have several kilos in their possession, they probably will
to sprmg her. He has been in Beirut since Christmas
history ... Agatha Christie's not be released before three years. If they have a suitspreading money like blacktop. My sources said that
"The Mousetrap" is in its 18th case full, ready for the Berkeley market, they could get
patience and $35,000 ought to do it.
10 years. What the flower children have not heard (nor
year in London, longest run of did they see in Easy Rider) is the iron hand of law that
These ~oungsters are allowed no visitors. Only an emall: We saw it a dozen years ago sustains the order of this free city of Asia Minor.
bassy
official and The Rev. Romain A. Swedenburg of the
and it was one of the worst,
Beirut belongs to the French system of law-you are
~ommu~ity Church are iJ?. twic.e a week. Rev. Swedenburg
shabbiest, dullest evenings guilty until proved innocent. And the American kids that
IS fulfillmg a maJor service of counseling and comfort to
we've ever spent in any theater come roaring in here on cycles from Turkey or jets from
WASHINGTON !NEAJ
t~ese young people. He has the confidence of the profes... Movie audiences have Paris seem to think they are immune or excused from the
siOnal c om m unity here which hopes that when these
It has never been announced, but for the past several
youngsters leave, they will inform others that Lebanon is
months small teams of South Vietnamese have been
dropped in 25 years from 75 standards of this society .. : that. hashish is just waiting
for them to consume and, 1f desired, to bank-roll their
operating in southern Laos.
not some kind of a Disneyland drug center but an ancient
million a week to 25 million; holiday
in Rome or a new Porsche in Germany.
and established civilization, with law, order and enforceThese ''black pajama" units are, in the main, former
while prices have zoomed 200
So members of the long-hair set of sandals and Levis
!ll~nt.
Oh ~es, the confession you sign at the police station
Special Forces officers and men , minus their American
Millionaire are rotting in prisons of Lebanon, Turkey and Spain. And
Ism Arabic.
"Long hunters" was a per cent
advisers.
who
Moroccan
Hassan
Berrada,
their naivette is matched only by their rage. Upon arrest
name given to American
These covert units. during this period, have ranged over
LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.
frontiersmen who spent is sinking a fortune into the they think the American Civil Liberties Union represenselected areas, gathering intelligence on the location of
in
the
wilderlong
periods
latest
sensational
saloon
here,
North Vietnamese supply dumps and way stations, moniness. The World Almanac El Mounia, rose to his first
toring truck schedules and noting camouflage precautions
notes that deer h u n t e r s million in Casablanca - in
along the Ho Chi Minh trails.
prized b u c k s k i n s, which yeast.
Their objective-to pinpoint targets precisely so that
were worth about a dollar
Former Mayor Bob Wagner
crack South Vietnamese units which recently moved into
in trade. Dollars are still
Laos could move in fast-and hopefully. move out with
referred to as "bucks" by steaked his claim to a table at
equal speed.
many Americans.
the Pen &amp; Pencil - below a
For time is crucial.
painting of another Wagner, the
The hope is to get the main South Vietnamese forces in
composer ... Variety hopefully
The Almanac
and out of Lao ~ithin a very short period, if it can be
wonders if it's a trend: 66 per
By LAWRENCE LAMB, M.D. dry milk powder. This With
Scientists are re ~.o onably confident that m the ne t lO
managed
By United Press International cent of 15 new films are rated G
to 20 y~ars. with growing knowledge and more sensit.ve
Dear Dr. Lamb- Your sugar and cinnamon makes
Today is Friday, Feb. 19, the or GP ... Tiny Tim's a Hard Hat measnnng mstruments, it will be possible to make ac .
To be blunt,
c,p('ratton b a very nsky piece
warnmgs
on eating too many an interesting change. The
he \'1etnamese realize this So do
of business m1
50th day of 1971.
... Six months ago we noted ex- curate predictwns of earthquakes.
the American t
ans.
eggs
!three
a week ) creates only protein you wiU get,
The moon is between its last Supreme Florence Ballard
This is little solace to the victims of the Los Angeles
breakfast problems. I usual- of course, is in the milk and
For logically Hanoi should now make some violent requarter and new phase.
would sue her former record quake. But 1t may also be little solace to the victims of ly eat a good breakfast {in- flour. The multiple variasponse.
The morning stars are firm, Motown, and Diana Ross future quakes, especially the major one geologists agree
cluding one soft-boiled egg). tions of wheatcakes can be
This is essential if North Vietnam is to maintain the
will someday strike California.
Mercury, Venus, Mars and for a million; we were wrong What can I substitute to cut made this way, including
morale of its forces, insure its supply lines and convince
blueberries, bananas, apples
on the eggs?
down
Jupiter.
~hile
the
ability
to
pinpoint
an
earthquake
to
within
she just filed suit for $9,000,000.
any sizable numbers of men and women in South Vietnam
or other fruit.
~
few
days
or
even
a
few
hours
could
obviously
enable
The
evenig
star
is
Saturn.
Dear Reader-Many peothat the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong are a force to
How come all the trading in
If you can stand the calple ask the same question. ories
Those born on this day are Columbia Pictures stock? lives to be saved through timely evacuation, no amount
be reckoned with. Otherwise, Hanoi can have no hope of
and the fat, you can use
of
prediction
will
be
able
to
prevent
tragedy
as
long
as
greasy
breakfast
is
A
big
victory in the foreseeable future.
under the sign of Pisces.
polyunsaturated margarme
Raid? ... Big hit in Germany: men contmue to build earthquake-susceptible structures
certainly
an
American
tradiOn this day in history:
If the word gets out that Hanoi is a paper tiger. then
for a spread with or without
The "Tarzan" TV series made on earthquake-prone land.
tion. It is not a tradition in syrup
Hanoi is through for now.
or honey.
In 1922 Ed Wynn of Vaude- years ago with Ron Ely doing
many other countries with
. Few people are killed by earthq uakes themselves- that
There is considerable worry, therefore, that while some
ville and musical comedy fame the Weissmullering ... At Mike ~s, throw!l to the ~ro und with lethal force or swallowed up
You
can make a nonfat
better health than we enjoy.
of South Vietnam's major elite units are in Laos and
became the first big name in Manuche's after the blackout, m the kmd 0f fiss ures that made the old movie "San
The continental breakfast is white ~auce by mixing the
Cambodia, the North Vietnamese-Viet Cong forces will
show business to sign for a Henny Youngman was asked: Francisco" so spectacular Most casualties result from
a cup of coffee and a roll, flour With water, then adding
mount an offensive or '"uprising" at some well-known city
certainly
not in the same nonfat dry milk powder. All
regular
radio
program.
~ailing
debris,
flying
glass,
downed
power
lines.
contamin South Vietnam.
"How about that Con-Ed?"
league
as
eggs, bacon, but- you need to leave out of the
Inated
food
and
water
and
sheer
panic.
In 1945 American Marines Henny replied: "Is that a
At one stroke. psychologically, this could raise again
tered
toast
and other tradi- usual white sauce recipe is
Neither is most property damage caused in the se~ond
landed on Iwo Jima to start one current story?" Shocking, in
• the status of the VC-North Vietnamese in the south and
tional
American
breakfasfs. the fat. This can be comor t:-''O of actual shaking. The greatest losses occur later,
of the bloodiest battles in the fact.
in the United States .
breakfast
m a y bined with dried beef and
Omitting
~ ~ f1res startt:d by broken gas mains and r ipped electric
Pacific during World War II.
cause
you
to
feel
weak
in served with toast.
It is to guard against this possibility that American
We all have our beefs about lines and dunng mild aftershocks.
~f you have a thing against
units have been stationed at points where there is the
morning
the
middle
of
the
Con-Ed and the Phone Co.
In the _1957 Bakersfield earthq ua ke, for example, the
dned beef served in this
for
awhile
but
the
body
• greatest likelihood of North Vietnamese-VC attacks (J
~oon
but no monoplies are harrassed most senous property damage occ urred long after the
readjusts.
manner, perhaps you would
Corps in South Vietnam where enemy forces outnumber
oy politicians nearly so much ... mam quake, when aftershocks demolished weakened
Allied troops.)
like to get accustomed to
You
can
eat
breakfast
B A RB S
NBC and Flip Wilson are in a buildings that had not been repaired properly but only
The other major worry is that the North Vietnamese
without loading the system creamed chicken on toast.
By PHIL PASTORET
hassle about holding onto Flip patched up.
• will ambush or surround and decisively defeat a major
with either saturated fat or Then you could fry salmon
G~ologists say that most earthquake dam age, both imelement of the South VIetnamese troops operating in Laos
cholesterol. It is a good time cakes in a pan treated to
Bargain-b:.tsement SUits in- through 1972: But having led the mediate and subsequent, both human and physical, could
and Cambodia.
to eat fresh fr uit, melons and prevent sticking or lightly
evitably come with free al- TV leagues in hits, Flip doesn't be prevented through strictly enforced building codes
fruit juice. Cereals are good, oiled with corn oil. Fish is
Psychologically, this would take the bloom off the
want to sign at the same old pay
tercations.
more
than
has
and
other
procedurescertainly
m
uch
sweeps.
especially
those made at a good idea for breakfast.
- as NBC wants ... Another been prevented up to now.
Of course, you could use
home,
like
oatmeal.
You can
In Laos, the enemy has superiority in numbers, is close
Some men are weight- blind man functioning spunkily
eat them with low-fat milk toast and spread it with the
,"The
way
to
save
lives,"
says
Cal
tech
seismologist
Dr.
to home bases and reinforcements. The terrain is ideal
watchers - others prefer and efficiently : Jim Stabile, Stewart Smith, "is to make better use of the land and not
(preferably with only 1 per substitute cream and cinnafor ambushes, heavily jungled, mountainous and exto
ogle slim girls.
general counsel for the ignore the existence of geologic fa ults in buildings as has
cent b utter fat). Adding mon mixture and sweeten
tremely difficult to monitor from the air.
Metromedia TV skein: Jim so often been done in the past."
sliced fruit to commercial with sugar. Or spread your
It is known the Communists have been setting traps in
cereals
gives them a nutri- toast with polyunsaturated
The
fellow
who
addressed
thought
his
career
had
ended
The
solution,
unfortunately,
is
not
amenable
to
slide
tht: a_rea. They haye been busy these past several weeks
tional
bonus.
Rice also is margarine.
return
to
the
Infernal
but
gallantly
took
rehabilitation
his
rule calculations alone. It involves economics as well as
bmldmg st~ong pomts and shifting troops toward Highway
good.
Don't overlook the value
human
psychology.
at the Lighthouse (the N.Y.
9, mam pomt of entry of the South Vietnamese.
of
nonfat dry milk powder in
Pancakes
or
waffles
can
Ass'n For the Blind), learned
It is cheaper a~d easier. in the short rWl to take only
be made using nonfat dry food preparation. You may
the techniques to return to his mm1mum precautiOns agamst the effects of earthquakes
milk powder as a milk not like to drink it, but it
very important position in and to take one's chances in the long run.
source and omitting both the is wonderful in cooking. It
Bad as the Los Angeles quake was. California has once
business and his social acfat and egg listed on both is a good way to enrich the
SIDE GLANCES
by Gill Fox
tivities - though totally blind ! again been spared the long run.
commercial mixes and in calcium in your diet and you
usual recipes. They still turn can increase the ratio of the
A whole flock of people are
Revenue Collector will have
a devil of a time explaining Wanted by the FBI: And you chitects, acoustical engineers stratospheric orchestra stalls, out well. These can be topped dry powder to get more calthan vou would from
it.
may be among them - the FBI and bottom measurers brought are the last to be bought. A with a substitute cream, cium
:;.
:.;:
:::
made from mixing equal whole milk."
in Washington wants clerks, for th this misfortune ... The Old status thing.
volumes of water and nonfat
!Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Anyon who can name clerk-typists, stenographers Met was designed with perfect
six commercials from last
H atlo's They'll Do It Every T ime
night's late-late isn't do- and fmgerprint clerks, im- acoustics (if toally disastrous
ing very well at develop- portant jobs, information about backstage space) by an aring total inability to re- which can be learned by con- chitect who not only had never
5~E'5 BEEN Tl-!REATENING
call.
tacting your local FBI office ... heard an opera, had never built
NOT TO COME BACK FOR
THE L-A5T 30 YEAR5 /
Top Oscar candidate (it already an opera house- but had never
- - - - - - - - - _ . has picked up the N.Y. Critics even seen one! ... But the
THE DAI~Y SENTINEL
Award) "Five Easy Pieces" Metropolitan Opera Company is
DEVOTED TO
will get its cost back in New the best in the world, the major
INTEREST OF
York alone.
consolation ... The only one in
MEIGS-MASON AREA
We wen t t0 the Me t Opera Iast fact.
CHESTER L . TA N NEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
week with Federal Judge David
After all his flops, Marlon
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Edelstein and John Barclay, the Brando still plays the cinema
City Editor
Published daily e)(cept
millionaire dancing school king: Hired guards with
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
tycoon (schools for children and alsatian dogs to snarl at any
Publishing Company, 111
Court St . , Pomeroy, Ohio,
young people in 20 cities), and circling newshawks, photags,
45769. Business Office Phone
·
th d'
f t ·
h t
992 2156, E ditorial Phone 992 agam e !scorn or In w a etc ... Raquel Welch, that famed
2157 .
shoould have been the most classical actress, won't sign for
Second class postage paid at
comfortable seats in the house the next James Bond flick until
Pomeroy, Ohio .
N a t iona 1
a d ver t i s i ng
- the boxes - was appalling ... she knows who'll play Bond;
rep resen tative
Bottinelli They seem like dangled after- just a few deep breaths ago she
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
st, New York City, New York .
thoughts, built ostensibly for only asked for a camera and a
Subs c r i p t ion
rates :
· ht
Delivered by carrier where
eig
peop1e but har dly 1arge fee, not too tall, either ...
available so cen ts per week ;
enough for six.
You now can buy tickets to
By Motor Route where carrier
The old Met, for all its any show on Bdwy. except
service not available. One
.nonth sus. By mail in Ohio
backstage inefficiency, did the three : "No, No, Nanette,"
and w. va ., One year $14.00
utmost
for the people who "Sieu th," and "Midsummer
" I'd just like to say that sideburns and a little
Six months $7 . 25. Three
more hr~1r in the back would do wonders for our
m?nt~s S4.50. Subscription
support it in the stalls, boxes Night's Dream" ... Especially
pnce 1ncludes Sunday Times . , and galleries ... It's strange to balcony seats which, however
board of deacons!"
St&gt;ntinel.
'
- think the hordes of opera ar- less expensive in this age of

Heady dreams that the Middle East is iust one big narcotics
paradise are unfounded, David Poling found during his recent tour. This is a report from Lebanon, where the drug possession sentences are iust as abundant as the hash ish.

No Place to Go for a Trip

Lebanon: Drugs Plentiful, Law Strict

•·

WORLD ALMANAC

S. Viet Spy Units
In Laos for Months

Build to Curb
Quake Effects

Substitutes for
Eggs at Breakfast

•

•

.
l
I

•

�,
;, - 'l1le DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Feb. 19, 1971

r;:i:~;:;;;s:~::~i&gt;iQuaker
•

I

State
,

I

•

•

~Some ,':~~o:':::.:h=u&lt;e., _,JJ-lGaiDS Finals

l

•

may
University athletic director -about a week old now - as on
shaky ground already.
He had the nerve, call it guts, to publicly dress down the
conduct of "some fans" at the recent OU-Marshall basketball
game. He fingered the poor conduct as throwing paper cups and
coins onto the playing area and free wheeled booing of the officiating.
This is the first time in my memory any Marshall athletic
director gave official cognizance to what for years was the talk of
the Mid-American Athletic Conference, that is, the boisterous,
exuberant participation of some fans in Marshall's athletic
contests. One of the causes of Marshall being expelled from the
MAC was such conduct.
McMullen had barely touched down in Huntington and taken
up the reins of Marshall's staggered football program (following
the air tragedy of last autumn) when he suggested Marshall
probably would like to get back in the MAC. His crackdown on the
fans' behavior Tuesday night presumably is a first step.

IT DIDN'T TAKE SAM HUFF long to pull himself out of the
running for appointment as head football coach at Marshall after
conducting a most widely publicized campaign for the job
privately and in the press. First Huff demanded the athletic
directorship and the head football job. Then he later scaled
himself down to the head football job. Then he had a talk with
McMullen and wrote the whole thing off. Huff said something
about incompatibility; McMullen said nothing.
One is left to conclude that Marshall may have lost its opportunity to employ a good football coach but at least it has in its
lineup a hardnosed, knows-where-he's-going athletic director.
THERE HAS BEEN SOME good-natured sympathy going
around southeastern Ohio the past week for Ohio University's
head basketball coach Jim Snyder. It began moments after Mike
Wren, son of OU baseball coach Bob Wren and one time Athens
High star, sank four pressure free throws last weekend to help
Miami University defeatOU. The loss wiped out OU's chances at
the MAC championship and even of any post season tournament
invitations. Miami's victory practically guaranteed it the title.
The story went around when Wren graduated from high
school that he was too small and lacked the overall speed to play
Mid-American basketball. Especially significant, it was
whispered, was the fact that Wren didn't catch on at OU where his
Pop is head baseball coach and a very, very close friend of Coach
Snyder's.
The younger Wren didn't catch on anywhere, in fact, although
he likely could have gotten on at the Ohio Conference level. The
upshot was that he went to Miami on his own and made it in a big
way as a walkon.
Maybe that's the way both Wrens, older and younger, wanted
it. Playing for Snyder, if he made it, there always would be an
opening for the catty crack about the Snyder-Wren friendship.
The way it is, young Mr. Wren - whose beautiful play many
fans of the SEOAL remember too well- is home clean.

•

•

Composite of 25 Games
Rio Grande College Redmen Basketball
PLAYER
G FGA-M RB FTA-M TP AV
114-39
76
48-25 103 4.2
Charles Baker
24
390 198 164
136.104 500 20.9
Tony Bass
24
23' -119 137
76-59 297 12,3
Harry Hairst
24
2' 1 84 236
92-57 223 9 2
Bernard WII
24
41 24 303 12.1
312 141 114
Roger BentiE
25
229 125 129
129-93 343 20.1
Ronald Lam
!7
69-32
41
18-16
78 4 1
Wray Jordan
19
131-57
47
28-16 132 9 4
Ed Jacobs
14
76-33
26
19-12
78 3.6
Steve Bartra m
22
21-5
18
17-6
16
.9
Darrell Ball
17
83-31
73
40-20
82 4 1
Sam Pulley
20
10-3
11
2-1
7
.8
Norm Persin
8
4-0
6
8-6
6 1.5
JoeWells
4
22 2.4
25-7
13
13-8
Mike Harris
9
1-0
2
0-0
0 0.0
Doug Hart
1
1920-873 1093 669-453
2193 87.6
RIOTOTALS
25
1817-944 1142 732-544 2295 91.8
OPPONENTS
25
SEASON RECORD
Rio 97 Ohio Dominican 114
Rio 85 Campbellsville 92
Rio 94 Oakland City 106
Rio 89 Ohio Dominican 87
Rio 113 Ohio Northern 105
Rio 83 Georgetown 88
Rio 71 Wright State 69
Rio 101 Wilberforce 82
Rio 92 Findlay 95
Rio 88 Wal sh 102
Rio 87 Pikeville 98
Rio 95 Oakland City 86
Rio 70 Berea 92
Rio 75 Pikeville 108
Rio 88 Georgetown 89
Rio 73 Cumberland 75
Rio 69 Cumberland 74
Rio 114 Cedarville 80
Rio 79 Capital 114
Rio 91 Urbana 117
Rio 85 Union 80
Rio 106 Berea 95
Rio 83 Wilberforce 82
Rio 89 Campbellsville 91
Won 10, Lost 15
Rio 76 Union 75
KIAC Record Won 4, Lost 8.

FOSTER GETTING READY
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)- Bob
Foster sparred four rounds
against Joe Burns and two with
Willie Wilson Thursday in
preparation for the defense of
his light heavyweight title
against Harold Carroll in
Scranton, Pa., March 2.

\

•

•

,.

game Monday night in the old
Athens High gym.
The winners were led Thursday night by Dick Fowler's 15
points. Al Martin had 10 and
Carl Wolfe and Bob Mabry
·
added eight each.
McElory topped all scorers
for the losers with 16 points.
Delta played stall the entire
game. QSSC led at halftime 1512.

Notre .D ame Is
Upset, 94-88
By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
The Fordham-Notre Dame
thriller seemed all over Thursday night when Charley Yelverton fouled out but the real
drama was only beginning.
"Every fan in the Garden
thought it was over but our kids
knew they could still do it,"
Fordham Coach Digger Phelps
claimed after Fordham played
without its No.1 player for the
final 6:55 and still stunned
Notre Dame 94-88.
The victory gave 13th-ranked
Fordham a 19-1 record and
may vault the Rams into the
nation's top 10.
Yelverton had been playing a
memorable game on offense
and defense, outshining Notre
Dame's Austin Carr before he
fouled out with Fordham
leading 75-73 with 6:55 left.
Oppenents' Tribute
The game came to a halt as
,he Notre Dame players went
over to the Fordham bench to
congratulate Yelverton on his
28-point, 11-rebound performance. The excited crowd of
19,500-the first nontournament
college sellout in three years
and the largest crowd ever to
see a college game in New
Yokr-gave him a standing
ovation. But without Yelverton,
Fordham seemed doomed.
"I don't think the crowd had
the faith that we did,"
Yelverton said, "Mainor told
me he was going to win it for
me."
Billy Mainor did just that.
Held to four points in the first
half, he scored 23 in the second
half including 13 of the final 19
Fordham points after Yelverton
fouled out.
Fordham doesn't have a
starter over 6-foot-5 but uses its
speed and quickness to create
tumovers aml neutralize . the
height advantage its opponents
have. The Rams take on
Rutgers Saturday before tackling second-ranked and unbeaten

Marquette Thursday night.
Notre Dame had the high
scorer as Carr hit 29 points.
The Irish who have upset
UCLA, dropped to 14-7 with the
loss.
Other Games
Temple beat Manhattan 64-47
in the preliminary to the
Fordham-Notre Dame game
and, in other action, Memphis
State stopped Bradley 74-40 and
St. Louis downed North Texas
State 64-61 in a pair of Missouri
Valley Conferencegames.
Temple held Brian Mahoney,
Manhattan's leading scorer,
scoreless for the first time in
his career to beat the Jaspers
and Fred Horton's 16 points
helped Memphis State down
Bradley.
·Harry Rogers scored 22
points including four clutch free
throws in the closing minute to
beat North Texas State.

Will Sponsor
Cage Tourney
COOLVILLE - Coakley's
Electric Heating Softball team
is sponsoring an Independent
Basketball Tournament March
1-4 and 8-9 at the old Albany
High School. A $25 fee is being
charged for
the single
elimination
tournament.
Trophies will be presented to
the first, second and third place
teams.
Individual trophies will be
given to the first two teams.
Drawings will be held Feb. 27 at
the old Albany High School.
Teams interested in participating are asked to call Ed
Kincade, tournament director,
at 594-2801 or 593-3455 or contact
Milt Cooksey at 592-1428.

28 Ball Games
Slated Saturday

By United Press International
h
. Oh'
b
T e wamng
10 co11ege as'ketball season will be void of
any action until Saturday when
Tonight's Games
28 games are scheduled.
No games are scheduled toCoal Grove at Oak Hill
night and in the sole game
South Point at Chesapeake
Thursday night Youngstown
Athens at Meigs
State upped its record to 17-6
Wellston at Gallipolis
by defeating Steubenville 85~8.
Ironton at Jackson
The Penguins, playing at
Logan at Waverly
home, jumped off to a 10-point
College Basketball Results
By United Press International Spencer at Wahama
lead in the first half and never
Pt. Pleasant at Chapmansville let the Barons any closer than
Temple 64 Manhattan 47
Fordham 94 liJotre Dame 88
Miller at Eastern
seven points in the second half.
Memphis St. 74 Bradley 70
Gallia Tournament
Reggie Woods of Steubenville
Centenary 86 Loyola (La.) 83
At North Gallia
stole
scoring honors with 25
St. Louis 65 N. Texas St. 61
North Gallia vs. Southwestern points. The Barons are now 12Denver 64 Okla. City U 63
Kyger Creek vs. Hanan Trace 11.
Loyola (Cal.) 63 San Fran 54

WITH YOUR

INCOME $TAX
BOTH
Monkeying around with
FEDERAL
your tax return can cost AND STATE
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GUARANTEE
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If we make any errors that cost you ony penalty or
interest, we will pay that penalty or interest.

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
42 25 .627 ...
Philadelphia 37 28 .569 4
Bos Ion
36 30 . 545 5lf2
Buffalo'
19 48 .284 23
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Ballimore
35 28 .556 ...
Cincinnati
25 40 .385 11
Atlanta
24 41 .369 12
Cleveland
11 57 .162 26112
Midwest Division
W. L. Pr:t. GB
Milwaukee
53 11 .828 ...
Detroi I
39 23 .629 13
Chicago
40 25 .615 13112
Phoenix
40 26 .606 14
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 39 24 .619 ...
San Francisco 43 32 .515 6 1l2
Seattle
29 36 .446 11
San Diego
29 38 .433 12
Portland
22 42 .344 17112
Thursday's Results
New York 116 San Diego 115
Los Angeles 136 Portland 114
Friday's Games
Detroit at Chicago
Philadelphia at Los Angeles
Boston at Phoenix
Milwaukee at Seattle
Cincinnati at Cleveland
Baltimore at Buffalo
San Diego at San Francisco
(Only games scheduled)
NHL Standings
By United Press lnternationa I
East
W. L. T. Pts
40
9 7 87
Boston
34 14 10 78
New York
28 17 11 67
Montreal
29 25 4 62
Toronto
16 31 11 43
Buffalo
17 31 8 42
Detroit
18 35 5 41
Vancouver
West
W. L. T. Pts
Chicago
38 14 6 82
St. Louis
24 17 15 63
Minnesota
20 26 13 53
Philadelphia
21 26 10 52
Pi llsburgh
19 26 14 52
Los Angeles
16 28 11 43
California
16 39 3 35
Thut·sday's Results
Detroit 5 Minnesota 3
Buffalo 6 Pittsburgh 6, tie
Friday's Games
Boston at California
Philadelphia at Vancouver
(Only games scheduled)

Baseball
Declares
War On Pot
NEW YORK (UPI)-Baseball
Cornnnissioner Bowie Kuhn has
innaugurated his war on drugs
and the game's top-ranking
officials will be going back to
school in an effort to make the
program a success.
In announcing a drug education and prevention program for
baseball Thursday, Kuhn said
that although he had "no
specific" knowledge that any
players or baseball personnel
had used hard drugs like heroin,
it was necessary to prevent the
spread of what he called
"limited use of mild drugs in
baseball."
Kuhn then said that regional
seminars would be held on the
subject in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.,

Knicks Hold On,
Edge San Diego
By United Press International
The New York Knick:s operated on the theory that five good
big men can stop one good little
man and it won them a ball
game.
San Diego's Calvin Murphy
had been giving the Knicks fits
as he rallied the Rockets in the
last quarter of the National
Basketball Association game
Thursday night. But in the end it
was Murphy, the leagues
smallest player at 5-foot-9, who
had fits as the Knicks held on

Coon Won't
Start for
One of five starters in every
game this season of the Athens
Bulldogs will be on the bench
this evening at Rock Springs
when Meigs High and Athens
play their final 1970-71 league
contest.
He is 6-1 senior Eric Coon,
averaging 12 pts. per game, who
has been ill much of this week.
Coon will suit up and probably
be available if needed.
Meigs, 7-6 on the SEOAL
year, can put its own brand on
fourth place in final standings
with a victory.
Athens, 11-2, stashed in
second place behind Waverly
(12-1), is out of the championship picture the first time in
nine years (unless Logan (1-12)
should pull off the upset of the
millenium at Waverly).
Athens reserves, champions
at 12-1, take on the Meigs
reserves (8-5) starting at 6:30,
the varsity game to follow at 8
p.m.

Rookie Catcher

March 2, Tampa, Fla., March 3
and Phoenix, Ariz., March 18.
The seminars will be attended
by league presidents Joe Cronin
and Charles Feeney, National
Association President Phil Piton, minor league presidents,
team physicians, players and
other personnel connected with
baseball.
"There has been a limited use
of drugs in baseball and I hope
to stop it," Kuhn said. "While
the program recornnnended by
the physicians will emphasize
education and prevention, it will
also deal with disciplinary
procedures felt necessary to
assure its success."

!Helen Help Us!I
1

MODERN SUPPLY

get a shot off as the clock ticked
off the final five seconds.
Walt Fra:r.ier had 36 points
and Dick Barnett added 27 to
highlight the New York attack
while Elvin Hayes led San
Diego with 33.
In the only other NBA action,
Los Angeles romped past
Portland 136-114.
The Lakers hit 17 of their first
20 shots in the second quarter to
break open a close game. Gail
Goodrich, one of the deadliest of
the Lakers with 12-for-18, led
Los Angeles with 28 points while
Happy Hairstron and Keith
Erickson added 22 each.
Rookie Geoff Petrie of the
Blazers was high man in the
game with 36 points.

Williants Likes

r---------------------------1
By Helen Bottel

MY READERS ANSWER
THE MAIL
Dear Helen:
In answer to the fellow who
wondered what to do with a wife
that came on like the giant
meatball gal on TV:
Deride her efforts, "teach"
her tell her to use her time for
mo~e worthwhile things things you want - keep her
busy running errands, raising
the kids, slaving for you, belittle
her lack of education, don't
accept her suggestions because
they are stupid - and in 18
years you'll have a lovely, wellrun house, nice children, and a
wife who, with much effort ir.

for a 116-115 victory.
The Knick:s led 116-111 with
two minutes left when Murphy,
who finished with 28 points, hit
four consecutive free throws to
cut the lead to 116-115 with 26
seconds left. The Knick:s froze
the ball for 21 seconds until Bill
Bradley was fouled with five
seconds remaining.
Bradley, New York's best foul
shooter, missed both shots,
however, giving San Diego the
ball. After a time out, New York
Coach Red Holzman inserted
five of his tallest players, anticipating that the ball would go
to Murphy.
The former Niagara All
America took the inbounds pass
at midcourt but was unable to

Bulldogs

child a crybaby. And many
people DO have lasting fear of
hospitals and medical treatment because of one bad experience. The nurse should have
been reported !-WIFE OF
PSYCHOLOGIST
Dear Wife:
A good nurse makes even bad
medicine go down easily: YOU
would make a good nurse!
I was "soft" on the woman in
question because I hadn't heard
both sides.
Sometimes hysteria responds
better to shock than sympathy.
We can be pretty sure the
mother already reported the
nurse and got no satisfaction
from her supervisor. Otherwise,
..11!!"'!1...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . her "spare time," got a college
education, but who can't stand why would she have written to
the ground you walk on.
me? - H.
• •• •
I am such a wife. For 17% Dear Helen :
~
._ , •. ·
years I accepted my abject It appears that "Parent of a
inferiority. I even thought it was Red-Eyed Grind" and "Mad
the duty of wives to walk ten Student" have missed the whole
steps behind, take whatever point of homework, which, as
was dished out, and try, always "A Betta Club member"
failing, to win a small pat on the states, is ·• ...a continuation of
the learning you can't get enback.
• E-Z CARRY HANDLE
tirely in school."
And
then,
I
got
a
responsible
• SLOPING BACK HOLDS FOOD
Perhaps some teachers give
job (due to my college degree).
AS PET PUSHES
I'm filling it so well I'm already busy work, but not many, for
• SPILL PROOF
up for a big promotion. Sud- that means giving themselves
• SCOOT PROOF
denly my eyes are opened. I'm more papers to collect and
correct. No, it is simply that if a
not a total zero.
And I won't be a wife much student wishes to receive a good
longer. Female liberation - education, he must work at
here I come! - BREAK OUT home as well as at school
because every course includes
more information than a
Dear Helen :
I hardly ever disagree with teacher can give in less than an
your advice . In fact, I believe hour a day . The quick, atyou to be among the top tentive, easy learner gets by
columnists. But Helen, I must with little homework . Perhaps
express my shock at your soft the Red-eyed Grind has never
answer to "Disgusted Mother." learned to concentrate.
":\1ad" remarks, "If teachers
Soft on that hard-hearted nurse,
Rugged 3% pts. water or feeding bowl - High impact
want us to slave 10 hours a day
that is.
'
plastic. Won't chip, crack, split or freeze. Burnt orangeYou said a good nurse isn't they'd better put in that kind of
always a gentle soul, but no time too." We do, we do! I have
lasting traumas will result for never sat under a hair dryer, or
the seven-year-old child if the relaxed with TV that I wasn't
mother doesn't make a big thing correcting papers, averaging
399 W. Main St.
992-2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
of the post-operative name- grades or preparing lessons .
The Store With "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
And how about those extracalling.
For Pets Stables . Large &amp; Smail An imals Lawns
curricular activites, like PTA
A
truly
professional
nurse
Gilrdcn s
would never call a frightened and clubs'?- -L.F..!\.

W
.OON.o

DON'T
MONKEY
AROUND

MAQUINI:

•

Bob Saunders' Quaker State
Service Center advanced to the
championship round of the
Chauncey - Dover Lions Club
Independent Basketball
Tournament Thursday night
after posting a 50-41 win over
Delta Tau Delta Fraternity of
Ohio University.
QSSC will meet Marietta's
Golden Cue in the championship

Pro Standings

By United Press International
"That kid has major leaguer
written all over him."
The speaker was Ted Williams and the subject was Bill
Fahey, the first spring phenom
of baseball's Grapefruit League
season.
Fahey, a 20-year Old catcher
who signed a $40,000 bonus with
the Washington Senators last
February, caught Williams' eye
Thursday with his slugging
during practice.
"He can catch in the big
leagues right now," Williams
said. "But he'll need more
hitting experience in the
minors."
Then Williams went out on a
limb. "Fahey will be the
American League All Star
catcher in 1975."
"Of course, I won't be here
then," added Williams. "I'll be
out in the Atlantic catching
salmon."
Elsewhere around the Grapefruit circuit, the list of unsigned
players continued to dwindle.
Cleveland signed catcher Ray
Fosse and pitcher Alan Foster
while outfielder Ollie Brown
signed with San Diego and
outfielders Le:-on Lee and Bob
Burda agreed to terms with the
St. Louis Cardinals.
However, Dave McNally and
Mike Cuellar, the ace leftbanders of the world champion
Baltimore Orioles' pitching
staff, remained among the
missing Thursday. McNally has
placed his contract negotiations
in the hands of an agency, but
Cuellar is reported to be close
to sigmng.
The Chicago Cubs also are
experiencing some difficulty
signing their ace pitchers. Ken
Holtzman and Ferguson Jenkins

,
and outfielder Billy Williams
remained unsigned, but backup
pitchers Jim Colborn, Joe
Decker and Larry Gura signed
Cuba pacts Thursday.
The Kansas City Royals got
their first look at outfielder Joe
Keough since last June 28.
Keough, who was batting .322
at the time, fractured his right
leg in a slide. After taking
batting practice Keough reported that he experienced no after
effects or difficulty as a result
of the injury.

WHAT
Services Do We
Have For You . . .
-Home Improvement loans
- Christmas Club
-Home Financing Loans
-Vacation Club
-Home Construction loans
- Money Orders
-Passbook Savings at 43/4
percent
-Certificates of Deposit
from 5 percent to 6 percent
depending on the amount
and length of time
deposited.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

111!lll!Im
McCLURE'S §7iy1S!e]
Soft Ice Cream
Sandwiches Of All Kinds
Soft Drinks - French Fries
Specializing In Foot Long Hot Dogs
Chicken Basket
Carry Out Service

1~

NEW HOURS
Monday thru Thursday
Friday and Saturday
Sunday

10til10:00
10til11:30
12 tilll: 00

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locust

Middleport, 0.

992-5248

Gas Range

SPECIALS
30" Matchless Oven --'-169

Clock).!_199
36" Matchless Oven------ ------ 169

30" Deluxe (Glass Window Timer

20" Apartment

•
•
•
•

Size-----------' 109

All burners guaranteed for life
All Porcelain
Delivered and installed
No Trade-in necessarY

H&amp;R firestone
'1'112 -2238

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 19, 1971

Lambert, Bass Rank
High In KIA C Scoring
Statistics released Thursday
by the Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference show that
Rio Grande College forwards
Ron Lambert a nd Tony Bass
hold down the third and fourth
spots respectively in the conference scoring race.
Lambert has connected on 115
field goals and 86 free throws in
13 games, for a 24.4 average .
Bass has hit on 167 field goals
and 8!&gt; free throws for a 20.9
average, and also ra nks seventh
in fr ee throw accuracy .
Rio Grande junior Harry

Hairston continues to hold down
the number three spot in free
throw accuracy, with 79.3 per
cent. He is also fifth in the KIAC
in field goal percentage, hitting
on 53.9 per cent of his attempts.
As a team, Rio Grande ranks
fourth in field goal percentage,
with 45.7 per cent, and sixth in
free throw accuracy with 67.2
per cent.
KIAC statistics also show that
sophomore Bernard Williams of
Rio Grande is sixth in the
conference in rebounding, with
9.6 per contest. Offensively Rio

Grande is averaging 89 points
per game, third-best in the
KIAC, while defensively the
team is seventh, allowing 92.7
per game.
Rio Grande finished the 197071 KIAC regular season with a 48 mark, and were ranked sixth
in the conference tornament. In
the first round, Feb. 20, Rio
Grande travels to Oakland City,
Ind., to meet the Oakland City
College Oaks. The winner of the
Rio Grande-Oakland City game
will meet Union College in the
second round. Union drew a
first-round bye.

Today's Sport Parade

Bobby Hull Well-Fixed
......
...
I~

• J
or

I

•~'

••
•

·'·~
=~

.•••
I

•

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• ol

·~

:~
·~
••
•••
•'·

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J

By MILTON RICHMAN
NEW YORK (UPI) - You
never can be sure of anything,
especially the way things are
going today, but I'd have to bet
they're never going to have to
hold a benefit for Bobby Hull of
the Chicago Black Hawks.
He's well-fixed. I'm not only
talking about downstairs where
he keeps his money but also
upstairs where he keeps his
brains.
Bobby Hull is 32, has been
playing for the Black Hawks 14
years now and you may have
read where he passed Maurice
"Rocket" Richard the other
mght when he scored his 545th
and 546th goals of his National
Hockey League career. Richard
quit after his 544th.
No sooner did Hull pass
Richard, who had been the
:\HL s all-time No. 2 goal
scorer, than they began asking
him what he thought about his
c 'lances of catchmg the No. 1
man, Detroit's Gordie Howe.
The questions weren't a lot
different from the ones Willie
Mays keeps beirg asked about
h s chances of overtaking Babe
Ruth Mays, like Hull, is ~o. 2
man now with 628 home runs.
Ruth 1s No 1 on the all-time list
with 714.
If Bobby Hull e"er Is going to
be h nkey's leadtnp; all-time
oal corer he
How ~3 nex

still taking his regular turn with
the Red Wings and has 782 goals
so far.
That means even if Howe
hangs up his skates tonight and
never scores a nother goal Hull
still will have to score 236 more
goals mer ely to tie him. Willie
Mays, going on 40, can do what
he likes a bout trying to catch
Babe Ruth , but you can rest
assured Bobby Hull at 32 isn't
going to break his neck skating
after Gordie Howe.
Skating Straight
"Absolutely not," says the
Black Hawks' blond ace. " If I
had one year to go, needed 20
goals to beat the record, and I
felt as though I was gonna look
like a rear end trying to do it, I
wouldn 't even go out there.
"Now I'm an up-and-down
hockey player," he confesses.

r

-~:;;;;ct~;;;;;; ~;~~~;;::-~:l

~

... ?fft.~:~

~

Pomeroy, Ohio
February 17, 1971
Dear Sir:
For the past 22 years my husband has been serving about 400
customers in the Village of Pomeroy with a refuse disposal. He
has done this to the best of his ability. Of course there have been a
few complaints, but that is expected in any bus~ess.
When he was told all garbage trucks were to be covered he and
he alone was the only hauler that complied with the .law and
purchased a packer truck. When the closing of the Pomeroy dump
came about, he tried to help find a dumping place. Several offers
were proposed to the Village of Pomeroy and the Meigs County
Commissioners on a landfill dump, to no avail.
After purchasing ground of his own to start his own private
dump he was arrested for operating a landfill dump without a
permit. As soon as all legal matters were completed, and he was
sure the land belonged to him, he applied to the State for the
permit which is now pending.
There are complaints of an odor coming from the dump; but no
garbage has been burned; it is a slate odor from an old coal mine
which has been burning several years. He has a dozer to cover the
garbage and he intends to abide by the laws as best he can.
If he is forced to discontinue his refuse service because of all the
legal tangles in this political world, WHAT is JUSTICE, and how
does the UTILE GUY or PRIVATE ENTERPRISE stand a
chance?
Mary Bentz

"I'm not playing as much and
I'm not carrying the puck as
much. I really don't think I can
~o it day in and day out like I
used to."
Is that because of age?
"Of course," Bobby Hull
says, laughing. "Once you start
getting up there I think you
gotta change your style a little
bit. You skate in straight lines
instead of circles."
"I've gone through one little
age change already and then
there'll be another one very
close behind it, I'm sure. I know
one thing: I'm not gonna go out
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
there and have a bad year and
then come back and try to quit Ohio Senate has received a lion the upswing because it never beral pay increase bill for state
happens that way. Generally employes, but there is no indiwhen you get to be over 30 or 35 cation it is going anywhere imyou never snap back .. . I think mediately.
Senate President Pro TempoI'll quit when I know I've got
re
Theodore M. Gray, R-Piqua,
maybe another year to play."
said Thursday after introduction of the bill by Sen. Oliver
Ocasek, D-Akron, that he did
not know when the proposal
would be considered.
"That will depend on the governor's budget," Gray said. The
65-cent hourly increase for 46,000 state employes would cost
an estimated $100 million a
year.
MASON - Adlai S. Lieving,
Both the House and Senate
77, retired machinist of Mason, held brief floor sessions and addied Thursday at the Holzer journed for the week.
Medical Center.
Ocasek's proposal, backed by
Born June 22, 1893, Mr . the Ohio chapter of the AmeriLieving was the son of the late can Federation of State, CounAlfred a nd Sa rah Nea se ty a nd Municipal Employes, has
Lievmg. He was employed at a cos t-of-living escalator providthe Marietta Manufacturing Co . ing for a one - cent per hour
30 years. A veteran of World ra1se for every .04 - point inWar I, he was a member of the crease in the Consumer Price
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post Index.
at P oint Pleasant.
The employes' union, which
Surviving are his wife, Callie; claims 8,000 members in 35 loa daughter, Mrs. Louise Roof, cal units, said the bill would
Manha ttan, Kansas ; a son, boost state employe pay by $1,Robert, of Hunting ton; a sister, 352 a year.
Miss E va Lieving of Mason, and
Another Bill Submitted
seven grandchildren.
Bipartisan legislation backed
F uneral services will be held by the Ohio Civil Service Ema t 1 p.m. Saturday at the ployes Association has already
F oglesong Funeral Home with been introduced in the House
the Rev. Parker Hinzman of- and Senate calling for a 48-cent
ficia ting. Bur ial will be in the hourly wage increase.
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
The General Assembly apFriends m ay call at the funeral proved a $30.5 million pay-raise
home any time.
package for state employes dur-

Pay Increase
Up to Gilligan

AdbJi Lieving

Of Mason Dies

Robinson's Cleaners

Value-Rated Buys . . .

1

68 CAMARO

$1695

Rally Sports, dark green fin ish with blac k OW
vinyl top, 327 '!-8eng., 3 sp ., a ir cond ition. _ _N_____ __
1970' MERCURY

CYCLO N E

S POIL E R

&lt;Week's Special
429 V 8. competition bl ue, 2 dr. hdlp., bucket
seats. P.S., P B., 8,000 actua l mi les. slicker
...P.!:!.fe $4300. Now
2 Dr H.T., yellow fin ish with black lop, black
bucke' seats, P.S., P.B., a uto. floor s hift , loca l
owned car

69 DODGE

l2

speed trans., radio. Real

TON

P1ckup •ruck, 6 cyl., stand. trans., hea vy
duly, step rear bumper
67 COUGAR 289 V -8

XR 7, limegreE&gt;n, black vinyl top, P.S., P.B .,
a r wrod, auto trans., tilt whee l, AM-FM
radio, al• eather interior.

$1795

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

66 L INCOLN CONTI N E NT AL
4 Dr. Sedan, all power, air cond.,
tilt steering wh~ l . 4 new t ires.

auto. t ra ns.,
Like new.

$1795

69 THUNDERBIR D

2 Dr H.T., Landa u, P S, P.B., ai r cond.

$1795
-----------------

67 DODGE CHARGE R

P S , P. B, air cond., a uto. tra ns., rea l clean.

66 O L OS 98
~Dr

H T .. ai,. condillon, ful l power

( uo;lom 500, -. or ., Sedan, 390 V 8 P S., air
tvnd1l10n
UWN:, MAN

10nwagon, light blue ti nish, 327 V 8, P.S .,
s ard. trans., radio, rea l clean
65 OLDS
4 Dr H.T., P.S., P.B., auto. trans., air con
S'&lt;~

r

"'tOf'

$1895
~95

USED CARS
423-6331

Corner of Rt. 7 and

F &lt;~ r son

it

_:

FOR TODAVfr

{
·~·
it Good humor is one of th;'f,
it bestarticlesofdress I can~
wear in society·
iC
it
-Wm. M. Thackeray
iC
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it
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:t

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It's Quick! Easy

DRIVE-.IN ~ ...
: ""'
BANKING -tc

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-tc
Fndays Only
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9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

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iC 3 &lt;!"d s to 7 as usual on •
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:
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FARMERS BANK • ~
and SAVINGS CO
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POMEROY, OH 10
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Member FDIC
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$2195

69 CHEVROLET 1/2 TON

Pic kup. LWB fleetside, only 31,735 easy miles. Like new finish, 6
cyl. std. shift. One careful local owner.

$3295

69 ELECTRA BUICK

2 Dr. hardtop, only 25,168 easy miles, one careful local owner.

This customer trades Buicks every two years. Almost like the
da y it was sold.

65 CAPRICE CHEVROLET

$1295

Dr. hardtop, factory air condition, low mileage. Sharp car,
fully equipped .
4

67 CATALINA PONTIAC
4 Dr Sedan, one particular local owner, low mileage, extra good
t ires. Sharp car, auto. trans., power steering, power brakes.
Really sharp inside and out.

$1595

67 GTO V8 PONTIAC

2 Dr . hardtop, His- Hers shift, automatic and std ., power
stee ring. Shows good care.

$1795

:!~s~~e, toa $;~~vi~Zd~ea~~~ 67 WILDCAT BUICKS

Be lpre , 0.

Street

~ hl~!~~~s~h~~~~:!ha~~n~~~te

.
.
.
70 Cadtllac Sedan DaV1IIe, a1r ------- · $fi500
70 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air_ _____ __$fi000
69 Cadillac Cpe DeVille air
-- - --- ~100
'
' --66 tad iliac Coupe DeVille, air__ _ _____ s2195
67 Olds 98 4 dr., air, 'Nas s1995 ______ s1795

I to call a special session by a
I three-firths vote of each cham: ber.AIIow tor popular election
1 or gu~ernatorialappoi.nt~entof
I s upenntendentofpubllcmstrucI tion, now chosen by the state
I Board of Education.
1
66 Buick Wildcat 4 dr.' was sl595------ s1395 II ·-·:·:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::.:~:!:~:~:::;
66 Chevrolet Impala 4 door __ _ _ ___ _ __sll95 1

; 65 Olds 88 4 dr. H.T., was ~95 _____ _ _s795
•• 65 Pontiac GP 2 dr. H.T., air, was SI295- _sngs
II 67 Fiat 4 door_______ _:. ________ s495
4 door, atr_
· ___________ .s295
I ac
I 59 Cad'll
.60 Ford lf2 ton Pickup---- - - - - ---- s2s0

RIGGS BROS., INC.
813 Farson St .

year or next.
WASHINGTON
DEMOCRATIC
National
Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien
appealed to the party heirarchy
today to abandon "timeencrusted traditions" and to
encourage the self-reform
movement within the party.
In a speech to the Democratic
National Committee, O'Brien
said it had assembled to chart a
new course for the world's
oldest political party and that
the whole nation was watching.
Yet a storm was brewing over
the Democratic executive
committee's rejection of a
recommendation from one of
th~ ~arty's two reform . comm1sswns over the allocatiOn of
delegates among the states for
the 1972 national convention.
SAN QUENTIN, CALIF. Wives of California prisoners
soon will be able to spend
weekends alone with their
husbands at private apartments
on the grounds of all the state's
.
.
d'
S
Q
t'
pnsons, me1u mg an uen m
and Folsom.
Associate Warden James

( YOU CAN GH AGOOD DfA[} j:~f~~§::~:::u::: ~:!.;ff,~~1~~=~l 65 DODGE 6 CYL 4 DR.
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68 FOt&lt;D

6'1 I..Ht:V. I

r.•••••••••••;1
THOUGH

Choice of 2 dr. hardtop and 4 dr. hardtop. Both sharp cars. So
good the boss has been driving one himself.

-·.· ·:-fti#,JI,~}JiJi~J~jj'Jii.Jl}.J!;E!fffJ}@}ifd.iJi.§.J!B~tff{W?J:".,.

69 TRIUMPH SPI TF I RE
4

WASHINGTON
SEN.
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.,
describes President Nixon's
new health plan as "poorhouse
medicine" that would turn over
the worsening problem of health
care to the private health insurance industry. Kennedy's
criticisms were among the
harshest offered Thursday after
Nixon sent to Congress a 17page message proposing
national health insurance for
nearly all Americans to counter
what the President called a
"deepening crisis" in the health
field.
Nixon 's plan drew support
from some quarters. The
American Medical Association
( AMA) said its reaction was
"generally favorable." Rep.
Wilbur D_ Mills, D-Ark., whose
Ways and Means Committee
will screen the plan, said he was
keeping an " open mind." Mills
predicted Congress would
approve some form of major .jc 'A
health legislation either this ~

'895

Std. shift. Extra nice for model.

66 MERCURY S-55

ConvPrtible,
Sharp

I
I Cl~~~n~ri~ro~~ce~m~t~~th~;

A'off}!titfl=ritli'~:,;iffl~~=&lt;:::;::gi{'~'i::;:;:~;;,"''~''~'~'''*'''''i::~~~W(Wt{th

By the UPI
KENT, OHIO - KENT State
University President Robert I.
White, whose administration
was blamed by a grand jury for
allowing the disorders in which
four students were shot to death
by National Guard troops last
May, has announced his
retirement.
White, 62, in his announcement Thursday said the
events of last May 4 were not
the pnncipal reasons for his
stepping down, but admitted he
believed it "will ease greatly
whatever handicap may accrue
to the university because of
me."
COLUMBUS- GOV. John J.
Gilligan is studying the report
of his Task Force on Tax
Reform and will listen to any
other
suggestions
and
criticiams before deciding what
legislative action to propose.
Among the groups objecting to
portions of the report is the Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation,
which thinks the committee
should have called for more
property tax relief. The Ohio
AFL-CIO also has submitted its
obJections_
"We are now engaged in a
serious study of both the
majority report and the
dissenting opinions," Gilligan
told the AFL-CIO Legislative
Conference here Thursday.
" We will continue to listen to the
suggestions and criticisms of
any who offer them. When we
have decided on the basis of the
suggestions we have received
and of our own convictions what
we think is best and most
equitable for all Ohioans, we
will present those decisions to
the
p e ople's
elected
representatives in the state
legislature."
COLUMBUS
A NEW
University Hall complex is to be
constructed on the Ohio State
University campus with $5.98
million in state funds released
Thursday by the state Controlling Board. Robert Smith,
administrative vice president of
Ohio State, said the request for
release of the funding followed
approval by the OSU Board of
Trustees for construction of the
new structure
The plan calls for razing old
University Hall, the first OSU
building, then &lt;instructing a
replica on the s1te. A building
contammg offices and
brary
would be built adjacen. to the
hall. Other sums released meluded $60,320 to purchase 67
acres in Vinton County in
connection with the elimination
of mine acid pollution of Lake
Hope.
COLUMBUS
ALL
automotive , television, radio,
phonographic and tape recorder
service dealers would be
required to be registered under
bipartisan le gis lation introduced by Rep. Frank H.
Mayfield Jr., R-Cincinnati, and
32 House members, including
leaders of both parties . The
legislation would put the
licensing and r egula t or y
agencies under the Commerce
Department, which would be
authorized to investigate false
claims and fraudulent practices
for service companies.
A dealer's license would cost
$25 to $50, starting July 1, 1972,
and annually renewable a t a

l

ing the waning hours of the
1969 session.
Ocasek's bill provides for a
shift differential of 15 cents per
hour for second - shift employes and 20 cents for third-shift
employes. It also authorizes annual increments for state employes, cutting from 18 to eight
years the amount of service required to reach the top of a
CLOTURE LOSES
pay grade.
WASHINGTO!\' ( UPI)
No pay r eductions could be
Sens. William Saxbe and Robert
made if the Consumer Price
Taft Jr. of Ohio were among 21
Index fell or was altered beRepublicans voting for cloture
cause of an error.
Thursday but the 48-37 margin
Three House members mtrolost on the m otion to cut off
duced separate bills governing
d eb ate on a filibuster on a
the sale and use of explosives.
change of r ules, which would
Rep. Keith McNamara, R-Cohave made it easier to stop
lumbus, offered a bill requiring
filibusters.
A
two-thirds
persons buying explosives to apmajority was r equir e d for
ply to a municipal police chief
adoption.
or county sheriff for a permit.
The a pplicant would i,e required to show his knowledge and
ability to use the explosives.
STRICKEN COACH BETTER
Crime Excludes
LOUISVILLE, Ky. [UPI)Under the bill, permits would
John Dromo, stricken with a
not be issued to persons convicheart attack on Jan. 2, said
ted of a felony or violence inSAME DAY
Thursday he would rema in
volving moral turpitude. HighSERVI CE
away from his job as head
way contractors and persons
In At 9-0ut At 5
basketball coach at the Univer who repeatedly use explosives
sity of Louisville for the
could obtain annual permits.
Use Our Free Park ing Lot
balance of the season. He plans
McNamara said ~is bill was
to resume active coaching next
prepared in cooperation with the
season.
state fire marshal's office and
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
tha t it dovetailed with new fed- ,
era! regulations on explosives.
He cited increasing violence
involving explosives, mcluding
bombs planted in Whitehall
stor es last s ummer and the arrest in Columbus in January of
a young man possessing 800
sticks of dynamite.
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , Rep . C. J. McLin , D-Dayton,
I offered a simiJar bill with lightI
You Can't Beat A Riggs Deal
I er penalties but with an emerI
gency clause attached .
-SPECIALWas $1795

SI
tiNISHI G

Overnight Wire

welcomed. The editor reserves the right to shorten letters. ~
All letters must be signed, with a full address, although ~
Initials may be used upon request.
~

i)~

Park said Thursday officials
hoped the plan will provide an
incentive for uncooperative
&lt;·onvicts to earn a mmim~
custody classification, the
status needed to participate in
the conjugal visit program .
WASHINGTON - DESPITE
significant switches among
Republicans, Senate reformers
remain starkly short of the
votes needed to crush a
southern-led filibuster in
defense of extended debate. The
first attempt to end th 4
filibuster, which both sides
consigned to defeat in advance,
was beaten 48 to 37 Thursday,
nine votes short of the twothirds needed.
Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield scheduled a
second effort for Tuesday but
even reform strategists conceded there will not be enougra
converts by that time. They ar•
shooting for victory on the third
or fourth try.

BLAETTNARS

BUICK
The U.S. population
reached the 200 million mark
on Nov. 20, 1967.

I
I

Several 1971 Olds In Stock
For Immediate Sale!

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You ' ll Like Our Quality W a y
of Doing Bu siness "
992-5342
GMAC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Untii6 : 00- Til 5 P.M. Sat .

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

GMC TRUCKS

PHONE992-2143

POMEROY, OHIO

The n~w Datsun 1200s are really something.
We took the ugly out of economy
and put the performance in
Each 1200 has the new high-cam
69 HP engine. Quick acceleration.

: R~~~:~~:: ~~~~erii
II he
Harriman said Thursday that
belie ved China would
II intervene
in the Indochina
war if there was any danger
of North Vietnam being
defeated as the result of an
invasion.
"This war cannot be won,"
Harriman said of the present
conflict in htdochina. "We
can expand it, yes; we can go
into Cambodia and Laos .
We've done that.
"We can expand it into
North Vietnam and China,"
Harriman said. "But China
would intervene if there wa s
any danger of North Vietnam
being defeated."

PONTIAC

Over 117 Years of Continuous Service to Bend

The Something Specia l

Up to 30 MPG.
Sure-stopping front disc brakes.
All-synchromesh 4-speed stick shift.
Steel unibody construction for solid
protection.
Plus, many other features and nocost extras. Like locking gas
cap and whitewall tires.
The value is really
something.
Drive a Datsun,
then decide.

DATSU~

SMITH AUTO SALES
KANAUGA, OHIO

•

•

�Blue Blumenfeld Made
Armpit Photos Famous

•

"

••

•

photographer is sn great there's phers Association, he is in
no reason why a man should demand as an after-dinner
ever turn in a bad negative; no speaker, and as lectur er at
longer does a man have to conferences and the NPPA's
guess his exposures .. . why in "short courses."
And in the meantime, thL __
hell should a photographer lose
sight of his subject when he's an autobiography in the m ill
checking a lens stop?"
with its thousands of anecdotes
Whatever his r etirement about getting the best pictures
unbelievable shot, or for some photography" refers to the plans, they don't involve much and getting them first.
tiny, almost unnoticed action handy way a small camera can rocking chair time. Long active
Its working title?-"My 45
that, when blown up, becomes be hung from a strap over the in the National Press Photogra- Years Out of FO&lt;'us."
shoulder and be relatively
the unforgettable.
invisible until the photographer
Defines Photographer
There's one thing he insists is ready to shoot.)
"Today I'm more interested
upon when you talk pictures
OPTOMETRIST
with him. "Don't ever made the in the philosophy of news
OFFICE
HO
U
RS
9: 30 T O 12, 2 TO 5 ( CLOSE'
mistake of saying 'take a picture making, taking and
AT
NOON
ON
TH
URS.)
- EAST COUR T ST.,
'picture,"' he admonishes. "A editing," he said. "I think the
POME ROY.
cameraman takes a picture; a machinery available to the
photographer makes a picture."
Blumenfeld, at 65 a dapper,
stocky man with an expanse of
bald head and a white
moustache above a quick grin,
has been the man behind the
man with the camera for just
about every major American
news event since his earliest
years. But he prefers to talk
more about what he has done
for today's photographers than
what he's done himself.
His colleagues, past and
present, would agree. Wherever
COVERS 30 SQ . FT.
news photographers gather and
talk shop their conversation
Mr. Friendly
reflects Blu's pioneering efforts
which helped unchain them
from the traditional cumbersome cameras and equipment,
and encouraged them-with
easily maneuvered small cameCEDAR CLOSET LINING
CEIUNG HEIGHT
ras-to go for the unposed,
Only a Cedar closet repels moths,
The ideal dark-brown dimensional lock·
7' 10" TO 8'9"
smells refreshing, "breathes" luxury.
natural "shot" now so much a
board fo r the kitchen, den, and child's
Instructions inclvded.
room. Reg. 2.99
part of the pictorial scene .
Reg. 13.29
EXCEL
Blumenfeld proved his point
at the two presidential conventions in 1956. Armed with 35mm
4' x6' 8"
17'11~-- · LAUAN DOORS
cameras loaded with fast film,
I
UPI photographers could shoot
DISA PPEARING
2' X 6' 8"
in available light, capturing all
STAIRWAY
I\
Use your ollie for storage ! Worp·lree
the atmosphere of the buzzing
Pine construction.
caucus, the whispered hallway
Reg. 24.95
conferences and the sweaty,
shirt-sleeved candidates that
SLIM-LINE LOUVER DOOR
81-FO LD DOORS
the posted shot, backed by arc
Doors fold bock flush to sides. out of
2-panel design mode of Ponderosa
lights, missed.
the way. Ready to finish. 4 doors and
Pine construction.
Fanciful Recognition
hardware. Reg. 29.95
Reg. 16.75
It was not long after that
when he was introduced to an
audience as "the godfather of
armpit photography."
(For the uninitiated, "armpit
CHA IN DO OR
I
SCHUMACHER
KEY LOCK

THE TWO OLD PHOTOGRAPHS reproduced here are of another era in Pomeroy. Above is
what was known as a peanut machine which roasted peanuts and kept them hot for customers
at the store operated by the late Alfred Angeletti, father of Mrs. Rose Sisson, Pomeroy. From
the left to right in the picture are Columbo Pierotti, who was known affectionately in Pomeroy
as "Steeplejack," the late Henry Ewing, who at the time worked at the freight depot, and
Angeletti. The horse and buggy picture is of "Steeplejack" in the buggy and Mr. Angeletti
standing by the wagon. The two became partners in Pomeroy business ventures in later years.
The man at the left is unidentified.

NEW YORK (UPI)-Mention
to almost any professional news
photographer that "the godfather of armpit photography" is in
town and he'll know who you're
talk about: Harold Blumenfeld,
the man who pioneered the
small hand camera in news
photography.
Blumenfeld-"Blu" or "Hal"
to all who know or have worked
with him-has just retired after
nearly half a century in the
business, from teen-age copy
editor in the early 1920s to
editor of 'United Press International Newspictures in the 1950s
and 1960s and, finally, UPI's
Director of Special Projects.
"Blu" never was a news
photographer himself. He's
been the editor, the teacher, the
man with the "eyeball" magnifier, scanning negatives for that

Local Bowling
Thursday Afternoon League
Feb. 11, 1971
Standings
Team
133
Simons Market
118
M &amp; R Foodliner
88
New York Clothing
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
80
61
Moore's
56
Racine Food Market
High Individual Game
Pandora Collins 191.
Second High Ind. Game
Calista Searls (sub) 190.
High Series Pandora
Collins 542.
Second High Series- Maxine
Dugan 476.
Team High Game- Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes 792.
Team High Series- Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes 2252.

••
...

The Lampliahters
Feb. 15, 1971
Standings
Team
40
Us &amp; Co.
32
Untouchables
32
Lucky Strikes
28
Brite Lites
22
Tagalongs
14
L&amp;N
High Individual Game
Harry Thomas 213; Mary Voss
193.

Second High Ind. Game Harold Carson 211; Betty Smith

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

SAVE DURING OUR
WINTER SALE!

1044

1895

2245

A turn of your key releases bolt for
re·entry. Bross.
Reg. 3.79

192.

••

Business TodJJy

Rolls

•
•

511.

oyce Division Booins

ByHA
HOBBS
Rolls
LONDO
Royce gru
the Rolls-R
booms.
Hands alre dy are poised to
nurse the bulgmg record order
book for autos, the expansion
.program and secret engines
being developed by the makers
of the world's most prestigious
cars.
Potential bidders already
have an eye on the new
generation of proven heavyduty engines pioneered in the
Rolls auto cHvision, experts
said.
Retains Quality
Precision engineering and
design genius were bedrocks
upon which Rols-Royce built its
fame. The car still retains the
quality that a worldwide public
mainly hnks with the name,
although autos these days
account for only a tiny part of
the group's total business.
The government-appointed
manager and official receiver
who must preserve the assets
publicly has promised that the
successful and profitable car
division "will go on."
Worldwide demand for RollsRoyce cars still is building, a
senior official said. Domestic
buyers must wait for 18 months

for delivery of an auto ordered
now Overseas customers feed
off a rationing system. Only in
the Umted States are dealers
allowed to deliver from stock.
Built By Hand
Rolls output in 1970 set a
record at about 2,000 deliveries,
worth $36 million. A five-year
expansion programs aims for
an annual output of 2,500 of the
hand-built cars, each taking
eight to 10 weeks to complete.

Second High Series - Larry
Dugan 573; Linda Boyles 451.
Team High Series- Us &amp; Co.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Nancy Roush spent the
weekend with her sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Lewis at Clifton,
W.Va. Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Roger, Jeff Miller and Mr. and
Mrs. David Kerns and April,
and Ronnie Russell spent
Saturday evening in the Lewis
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
and Roger spent Tuesday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush and family.
Lester Manuel of Logan
called on his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Manuel, Friday
evening.
Mrs. Freda Manuel and Mrs.
Robert Roush called on Mrs.

BAKER'S s~ttO outt~

ELECTRIC
DRYER

$158

Permacote Drum
3 Temp. Selection
Long Life Heating Element
FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

BAKER

•••••••••,.•n••••••••••••

Smallest Kingdom
The world's smallest king·
dom is the Tonga Islands.
The Tonga archipelago, con·
sisting of some 150 small
islands in the Pacific:, home
for 56,000 Polynesians, is a
constitutional monarchy un&lt;ier British protection.

I 2' 8" X 6'8" X 1-3/8"

fl -- ]
IL-=1
......_

Team High Game - Us &amp; Co.

1795

697.

II

f_

i

:

2' 8 " x4'

I

Constructed from kiln-dried Hemlock
for warp·reslstonce. Flat panels. 3·lites.
Reg. 22.49

Of all the cars Rolls has built
in 65 years, better than half
still are motoring on the
world's highways. The ticking
of the dashboard clock often
still is the loudest noise a Rolls
makes.
Industry circles see a potential buyer in British Leyland
Motor Corp. (BLMC). It makes
Jaguar, Rover, Triumph, Daimler, Austin, MG, Morris and
Wolseley cars.

Charles Boggess Sunday afternoon.
Miss Evelyn Lawson of
Mansfield spent the weekend
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lawson.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp and
sons, John Rowe and daughters,
Judy, Brenda, Donna and
Rebecca and two grandchildren
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mrs. Kate Rowe and Ada.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
White, Darla, Dreama and
Keith, spent Saturday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp
and sons.
Mrs. Herbert Sayre and son,
David, returned home Tuesday
after a week's visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Sayre at Middletown, Pa., and they also
visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Kardish at New Castle, Pa.
Wallie Stover and son, Alvin,
called Saturday on Mrs. Bertha
Robinson. Mrs. Pete Shields
called Sunday on Mrs. Robinson.
Misses Judy and Brenda
Rowe of Columbus spent the
weekend with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs . John Rowe and
family.
Mr . and Mrs . Harold Lawson
and Charles of Letart, W.Va.,
spent Sunday with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lawson.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W. Va., spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush and family.
Paul Sayre of Columbus has
purchased
the
Charley
Knighting Sr. farm.

I•

FLAT PAN EL DOOR

MASTER

1991.

LOUV ERED CAFE
DOORS

Mode of 1-1 /8" thick Ponderosa Pine,
ready to paint or stain. (Less hard-

1J49

ware). Reg. 17.60

PAIR

MASTER PA DLOCK
t-1/2" laminated case. brass cylinder,
pin tumbler security. 2 keys Included.
SALE PRICE
BRAINERD

SING LE-KEYED
DEADLOCK

SELF-LOCKING
DOOR BOLT
Slide knob and "CLICK" it's double
locked. tamper·proof.
Reg. 1.89

144•

Fairview News Notes

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

-

211

High Series - Harold Carson
593; Mary Voss, Betty Smith

~

Operates outside by key, turnplece in·
side. Bross finish.
Reg. 6.99

567

]

KWIKSET

The ring that expresses I
in a very special way .. a
feet diamond, guaranteed .

8

For use on i nterior doors where no

locking Is required. Brass finish.
Reg. 2.79

~

:::
::::

.....

I

7"x 20"
;l.-16

(Hwi)I:I•l:Qk~

Today's FUNNY will pay $1 .00 for
each original " funny" used. Send gags
to: Today's FUNNY, 1200 West Third
St., Cleveland, Ohio 44113.

DELUXE3 PIECE
WOOD HANDLE BRUSH
SET

I

~

~
~ ~

--

CANNO N CRAFT

LO UVERED SHUTIERS

PRIVACY LOCKSET
Interior turn·bullon locking. Brass and
chrome or all -brass finish. Reg. 3.79

Mode from selected west coasl pine to
lost "o house lime". (Less hardware).
Reg. 1.79

MANY

THE NOW DIMENSION IN
SOUND BY - - MOTOROLA~

:::

:::::

PASSAGE LOCKSET

MORE
Includes 4", 2" and 1" stze
brushes, each with quality
I 00% tapered nylon bristles
and hang-up hole.

VALUES!

FM/ AM STEREO RADIO
For Full, Rich Stereo Music
..,.,.

~

Ideal for oil or latex points.
I 00% tapered nylon bristles .

...

~~--; ..~

r:-~~=~-~~t~~~;:'4

I

·'1

FM/ AM •.. FM stereo radio has the look
of componentry. Cabinet and speaker
enclosures are crafted from walnut-grain
polystyrene wtth black and silver trim.

1-1/2" FLAT SASHBRUSH

~
100% tapered nylon bristles.
Square end.

REG. 1.59

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

PAIN T &amp; VARNISH
REM O V ER
Removes stains as well as paint, Won't

gum up. Ideal for stripping fvrniture.
Dissolves in water

·~ 1 .\ 5FT. ALUMINUM

,

fl
Deluxe sl ide rule venier tuning plus .F M -AM
log sca les, convenient color -coded slide
switches for stereo-monaural ... FM-AM ...
AFC-on-off. Has Stereo indicator light,
calibrated loudness, tone and ba lance con trol s. Two 5"x7" speakers which can be
separated up to 20 feet for ful l stereo effect.

77t;

BIX

~~ -~\..,.
h(

l

STEPLADDER

109

REG. 15.98

139
5FT. ALUMINUM
PLATFORM LADDER

REG. 18.59

~ERN~
Can't rot. rust or splmter. Extra knee
braces on top and bottom steps Vinyl
sofP·tred shoe&gt; lightweight

One fHeco lromu lorms hond roil, kn~e
bro&lt;e a v-J wo rk platform
Non·mor
lt,hlwr ''J pt'd fuel

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
·1hC' Department S1ore
Of Building Since 1915

�..

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb.19, 1971

•
•• [ HOSPITAL NEWSJ
''
Holzer Medical Center, First

Committees Appointed

a

~

t

••
••

I•
•

~..

'

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.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Evans,
Gallipolis, a daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Harry Erague, Mrs .
Frank R. Beach, Robert L.
Caldwell, Mrs. Gary A. Carver
and infant daughter, Mrs .
James E. Fetty and infant son,
William 0. Gentrie, Christopher
F. George, Mrs. Walter Hersey,
Mrs. Teddy F. Lamb and infant
son, Paul E. Long, Mrs.
Clarence E. McDaniel, Nay
John Parker, Mrs. Harold
Preston, Mrs. Gary A. Rainey
and infant son, Richard Randolph, Mrs. David E. Rice, Mrs.
Douglas P. Rouse, Norman G.
Rose, Mrs. Donald L.. Russell
and infant daughter, Mrs.
Carson B. Sexton, William Fred
Smith, Jr., Mrs. Clara E. Swan
and infant daughter, Mrs.
Herbert E. Thompson, Lloyd B.
Wheldon, Francis Whitt, Mark
Allen Williams·, Don Lee
Drennen, Dennis Sturgeon.

Daughter Born
Mr. and Mrs. Jennings B.
Wayland, Jr., Middleport,
announce the birth of a
daughter, Laurie Susanne,
Wednesday at Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
eight pounds and nine ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Andrews, Pomeroy
and Mrs. Jennings Wayland,
Sr., Middleport. Great grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Andrews, and Mrs. William
Eichinger of Pomeroy. The
Waylands also have a seven
year old. son.

i

f

I

I

CLASS OFFERED
MASON - Beginning classes
in First Aid will be given
Tuesday a t the Mason
Elementary School at 7:30p.m.
under the direction of Joe
Struble. Persons planning to
become a member of the
volunteer first aid squad are
required to take the course and
must be 18 years of age.

For AIf. oc sons
.--w-.-w-,,-.-f-1o-w
-.-.,,- .v-.-,yw
- h-.•-•-1

i

992-2039
f'omeroy Flower Shop
Butternut Ave. Pomeroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meter

..
~l~~

~

-GUMMED SEALS

.-.1/L

27 Quilts Made

TAKING A SHORT break from quilting chores, from left
around the table, are Mary Russell, Gertrude Mitchell, a
visitor; Ruby Grueser, Fannie Phlllips, Ruth Massar, also a
guest, and Sadie Brown.

lend a capable needle to the
quilting was Mrs. Gertrude
Mitchell, also of Pomeroy.
Official marker of quilts to
be processed through the
Minersville frames is Mrs.
Fannie Phillips. This is done in
pencil so that all of the workers
on a quilt will know where the
stitching is to be done and the
design to be followed.
Seldom do the Minersville
church women piece a quilt.
Their job is to take the hundreds
and hundreds of stitches on the
quilt tops pieced by customers.
However,
Mrs.
Mildred
Phillips, president of the group,
and Mrs. June Sayre did accept
the job of making one quilt for a
customer in Athens. The lady
had arthritis and was unable to
make the top. Mrs. Phillips and
Mrs. Sayre created the top
made up of over 700 pieces. The
attractive pink ahd white cover
is known as the "cathedral
window" pattern.
Today's market may offer a
wide variety of bed coverings
but there appears to be quite a
demand for the painstakingly
~nd-stitched quilt. And as long
as the demand lasts you can
depend on women of the
Minersville Methodist Church
to be making that trudge up the
hill every Wednesday morning.

Many Come for
Bobo Funeral

SELDOM DO THE WOMEN of the Minersville Methodist
Church take on the chore of making the quilt top, but occasionally they do. This one -with over 700 pieces -was
made for an Athens customer by Mildred Phillips, left, and
June Sayre. Mrs. Sayre credits Mrs. Phillips with the lion's
share of the work in creating the attractive pink and white
cathedral window patterned quilt.

)f.~ ~i;:h w~:~~r:a~~ r~~~~ed a~~

e Stars e Animals
e Flowers e Birds
e Flowers

• St. Patricks Day

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
.._.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

~

QUality In craftsmanship
Quality In Materials
Quality You Can Trust.

completed.
The Wednesday sessions do
offer something for everybody.
If quilting isn't the "thing" of
any members, they can sew
carpet rags which eventually
are woven into rugs and then
sold. Or - perhaps, a member
would rather cook. If so, she
becomes - like Mrs. Lillie
Starcher - a head cook. Her
responsibility is to get
everything in order for the
bountiful noon potluck dinner.
Sometimes visitors join the
group for a work session.
Wednesday, for example, Mrs.
Clarence Massar of Pomeroy who wanted to be there for the
observance of the birthday of
her sister, Mrs. Sadie Brownwas on hand and pitched in with
the quilting. Another to visit and

SADIE BROWN, CENTER, holds a heart-shaped birthday cake served Wednesday in
observance of her 84th birthday, which actually was on Valentine Day, along with a dinner for
women of the Minersville Methodist Church who gather weekly to quilt. Others, from left to
right, are Clara Garland, Lillie Starcher, chief cook; Mary Pugh, and Stella Grueser.

Mrs .Della Stahl,
miscellaneous; and Mrs.
Houck, Mrs. Beagle, Mrs.
Reibel and Miss Donna Reibel,
membership.
Mrs. Hayes and Mrs. Betty
Reibel were named to the
flower committee, and Mrs .
Hayes will handle publicity
again this year. The funeral
committee included Mrs.
Hayes, councilor; Mrs. Will,
junior past councilor; Mrs.
Reibel, vice councilor; and Mrs.
miscellaneous; and Mrs.
Houck, Mrs. Beagle, Mrs.
Reibel and Miss Donna Reibel,
membership.
Margaret Seidenabel, associate
vice councilor.
Mrs. Cook, Mrs. Stahl, Mrs.
Margaret Sinclair, and Mrs.

Easter Events Planned
Easter projects were planned
during the Wednesday meeting
of the Helping Hand Missionary
Circle at the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Houseslippers will be made
by the group for women at the
Meigs County infirmary and
handkerchiefs will be given to
the men. It was also decided to
fix flowers for community shutins and to give a gift to Mrs.

In Two Years
Pictures and Story
By Bob Hoeflich
Man may travel to the moon
and the world may go more mod
every day but women of the
Minersville United Methodist
Church cling to the age-old art
of quilting.
Weather permitting, each
Wednesday morning, women of
the community trudge up the
hill leading to the 100-year-old
white frame church where they
do their bit for the Lord's work.
Activity gets underway as early
at 8:30 a.m. and some of the
women remain "on the job"
until 4 p.m.
It isn't all work and no play
for the women, who make up the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the church. At noon,
there's a big potluck dinner (it used to be a sandwich and
coffee) - and there's almost
always a birthday or some other
occasion to celebrate.
Quilting isn't exactly the
greatest money-maker ever to
come down the pike. The
quilting is done on a flat fee and
the charges involved in no way
pay for the labor - not to
mention the love - which goes
into each stitch. However, the
ladies-fe1H'that it's all for a good
cause and they enjoy their
weekly outing. The dollars do
a dd up over a period, however,
a nd they do come in handy. For
instance, last fall the church
needed a new roof. Through
their quilting efforts the women
came up with $300 on the
project.
And - there is a demand
for quilting. The Minersville
group has completed 27 quilts
over the past two years and
there's a waiting list of some 14
customers. Two quilts are
"worked" on separate sets of
frames each session with about

Committees were appointed
at Monday night's meeting of
Theodorus
Council
17,
Daughters of America, at the
IOOF hall.
Named were Mrs. Etta Will,
Mrs. Marie Houck, Mrs. Norma
Chapman, Mrs. Juanita Ratliff,
Mrs. Edna Reibel, dining room;
Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Mrs. Carrie
Neutzling, Mrs . Maxine Moore,
Mrs. Margaret Seidenabel ,
Mrs. Della Stahl, kitchen; Mrs .
Hayes, Mrs. Will, Mrs. Mabel
Bearhs, Mrs. Margaret Sinclair, and Mrs. Vivian Arnott,
home and orphans; Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Miss Erna Jesse, Mrs.
Elizabeth Well, and Mrs.
Winona Cook, ways and means;
Mrs. Bertha Parker, Mrs. Glen
Swatzel, Mrs. Edith Spencer,

POINT ROCK - Funeral
services were held Feb. 17 at
Columbia Chapel Church near
here for Mrs. Jarrot Bobo. Rev.
Eugene Underwood, local
minister, officiated with bw-ial
in the Caster Cemetery by
Strong and Sons.
Pallbearers were George
Lowther, John Reed, Arnold
Jordan, Norman Roy, Charles
Hizer and Albert Cone.
Honorary pallbearers were G.
A. Radekin, Edward Coen,
Frank Shiltz, Dana Midkiff,
George Ragan and Eugene
Campbell.
Coming from a distance were
Mr. and Mrs. John Silver,
Naper, Nebraska; Mr.
Mrs.
Wesley Bob, 't!hillicothe; Mr.
and Mrs. Meryl Bobo, Mr. and
Mrs. Blaine Bobo, Lancaster;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hoover,
Mrs. Paul Kuntz, Columbus;
Forrest
Buchanan,
Amsterdam, Ohio; Miss Viola
Bobo, Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Bobo, Dayton; Ronald Bobo,
Logan,
Ohio;
Margaret
Coughenour, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. George VanZandt, Huntington, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Webster, Pomeroy;
Mr . and Mrs. W. I. Swett,
Middleport; A. R. Caster,
Charlestown, W. Va.; Mrs.
Elma Vernon, New Lexington;
Mrs. Evelyn Ward and Mrs.
Freda Kennedy, Athens; James
Midkiff, Wellston; Mrs. Ethel
Radekin and Junior Radekin,
McArthur; Mr. and Mrs .
William Phillips, Frankfort;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bolen, Mr .
and Mrs. Leonard Stevens, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Stevens,
Londonderry, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. James Stevens, and Mrs.
Anthony Udvardy, Chillicothe.

Kenneth Haley, a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The valentine project was
completed during the day with
houseslippers, handkerchiefs
and cards being delivered to
shut-ins. It was noted that
medicine has been purchased
for the church medicine cabinet
and that a sink there will be
painted and installed.
Mrs. Tressie Hendricks
conducted the meeting with
Mrs. Vada Hazelton giving
devotions entitled "Good Intentions Are Not Enough" with
scripture from St. Matthew
21:23-32. Mrs. Madeline Painter
will give the devotions next
week. Mrs. Haley and Herbert
Miller were added to the prayer
list.
The group enjoyed chili at
noon. There besides those
named were Cynthia Hazelton,
Mrs. Frances Hysell, Mrs.
Ruby Hysell, Mrs. Vernie
Hysell, Mrs. Eleanor Hoover,
Mrs. Mildred Sisson, Mrs.
Bonnie Pickens. The afternoon
was spent quilting.

March Supper
Is Planned

A jitney supper was planned
on March 18 at the Rutland
Grade School when the Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary met
Tuesday night in the firehouse.
It also was voted to purchase
plastic eggs for use this year at
the annual Easter egg hunt. The
firemen will sell tickets on a
$100 savings bond to be given
away that day and the tickets
are available now from the
firemen or auxiliary members
or at the Miller Bros. Grocery in
Rutland. Proceeds will be used
to purchase a new siren.
It was reported that the
recent bake sale was a financial
success. The traveling prize
donated by Mrs. Larry Edwards was won by Mrs. Bill
Brown. Mrs. Kenneth Michael
and Mrs. Dick Foley will be
hostesses for the March 16
meeting with Mrs. William
Willford to provide the traveling
prize.
Refreshments provided by
Mrs. Bill Gaddis were served to
those named and Mrs. Howard
Birchfield, Mrs. Merle Davis,
Mrs. Bruce Davis, Mrs. Bill
Williamson, Mrs. Bob Miller,
Mrs.
Jerry Eads, Mrs. Maxine
Resurrection F lower
According to Christian leg- Dyer, and Mrs. Bob Bishop.
end, the resurrection flower
sprung up wherever the Holy
Family rested in their flight
I
into Egypt. It is fabled to
have blossomed at the Savior's birth, closed at the Crucifixion and opened again at
Easter, whence its name of
Resurrection Flower.

Always

~our

Chapman were appointed
flagbearers. A discussion was
held on the discontinuance of
death benefits. It was reported
that Mrs. Althea Strong's
husband is a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center, that
Mrs. Doris Darst and Mrs.
Seidenabel are improving a
home, and that Mrs. Anna
Hartenbach is a patient at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Birthdays of the members
will continue to be celebrated atthe second meeting of each
month, but it was decided that
members must be present to
receive their gift from the
council.
a. 1
A valentine party was hel~ '
following the meeting. Refreshments of sandwiches, cookies
and coffee were served from a ''
table decorated in the valentine
motif. Red valentine suckers
were given as favors by Mrs.
Swatzel. Valentines were
distributed.

$20 Given for

••

Scholarships

A contribution of $20 was
made to the Marie Moore
nursing scholarship fund by the
past presidents of the American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39, during a meetin&amp;4t
Wednesday night at the home of
Mrs. J. M. Thornton.
Mrs. Ellen Couch, president,
shared a letter she had received
from Miss Constance Thorn for
a gift in January. It was decided
to dispense with the March
meeting due to Lenten services.
Four round-robin cards were
&amp;
signed for ill members.
The Lord's Prayer and the\7
pledge to the flag opened the
meeting. Mrs. Owen Watson,
card chairman was authorized
to purchase new cards. The
April14 meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Osby Martin.
The group was entertained
with organ selections by Mrs.
Ben Neutzling. Mrs. Thomton
carried out the valentine moti
in a red and white color scheme
in her table decorations and
dessert course. Favors were
crocheted potl]olders.

'•

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STEAK
HOUSE

•

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the Fabulous

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IN WEDDINGS
Everything but the Ring and
the Groom .
Invitations
Napkins
Decorations
Books
Engraved Cak e Knives ,
Servers, Punch Bowls by
Starlight.
Great selection of Albums to
choose from .

THE

QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

992-3345

Middleport, 0

Meigs 4-H O uh News
The Leading Creek Helpers
met on Feb. 6 at the home of
Mrs. Eva Milliron, advisor,
with 11 members attending.
They elected officers, planned
projects for the coming year,
named committees,
and
discussed the amount of dues.
Tami and Diane Milliron
served cookies and lemonade.
The next meeting will be held in
March. The members are to
study their project book, and
plans were made to make skirts
and blouses of 4-H colors. Patty Lambert, secretary.
THE POMEROY Jr. Benders
met Feb. 15 at the home of
Melanie Burt with 9 members

and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, advisor, attending. The members
discussed the next party for
"Teenagers Entertain."
Demonstrations were given by Ingrid Hawley on
making open-faced sandwiches,
and Melanie Burt on how to
make punch. All of the members gave a report on snacks
served at home for their
Teenagers Entertain project.
Ingrid Hawley was in
charge of group recreation,

3 ROOMS

playing upset the fruit basket.
Ingrid Hawley and Melanie
Burt served refreslunents with
a centerpiece of a log with red
hatchet and cherries, red
candles, red nutcups with tiny
hatchets, fancy sandwiches,
snowballs, valentine cake, and
punch.
The next meeting will be held
on March 1, at the home of
Debbie Bailey for a party for
Teenagers Entertain and
demonstrations by Tina Duffy
and Lisa Thomas.

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�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Feb. 19,1971
~....,.....,...~....,....~..,..~~

•

Girl Scout
Diary

\

By Charlene Hoeflich

•

I

I •

•

•

•

International Thinking Day is Sunday and the Big Bend
Neighborhood will observe it with a special program at the
Middleport Elementary School from 2to 5 p.m. Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Philip Fisher is general chairman of the observance and
reported at the Neighborhood meeting Thursday morning that 13
troops have registered to participate. The participating troops
have selected a country to represent. At least one member will be
in costume and the entire group will perform a native dance, and
provide finger foods of that country for the social hour.
The girls will be seated on the floor and pillows or sit-upons
should be taken. The affair is not open to the public, due to limited
space, but leaders, assistant leaders and committee members are
invited.
'At the neighborhood meeting, Mrs. Marjorie Benedum, Mrs.
Mary Hunter and Mrs. Thelma Airson reported on a drug meeting
held in Parkersburg, W.Va. Wednesday for scout leaders.
1Day camp was set for June 14 to 18 at Camp Kiashuta near
Chester. A new program will be initiated with one unit each day
being assigned to cooking and cleanup. The camp fee is $5 and
Mrs. Mary Bahr will serve as camp director.
I Mrs. William Ohlinger, neighborhood chairman, reported that
campership forms are available from her. To qualify for a
campership this year, applications must be filed by April 30. The
camperships provide 75 per cent of the camping fee and are
available not only to needy families but to those with several
children planning to attend either day camp or an established
camp.
Registration, it was reported, is down this year. Mrs.
Ohlinger asked the leaders to assist in determining why the girls
didn't re-register, and report at the March meeting.
1The leaders' luncheon to be held on April 7 at the University Inn,
Athens, was again discussed. Those leaders eligible for 5, 10 or 15
year pins are to contact Mrs. Ohlinger. Registration for the
luncheon is $2, and delegates from the neighborhood are to attend
the morning session.
Named to a telephone committee were Mrs. Walter Morris
and Mrs. Jackie Zirkle. Their duties will involve contacting
leaders about meetings.
Mrs. Ohlinger reported that the contest is still open for
designing patches for Oak Ridge and Rotan Camps. The patch is
to be three inches in diameter and not more than three colors.
Camp stamps are still available from Mrs. Mary Hunter and
scout shirts can be secured through the Parkersburg office, it was
reported. Mrs. Jane Snyder, field advisor for the Four Rivers Girl
Scout Council, showed slides of camp scenes.
SENIOR SCOUT TROOP 198
Plans for attending a leaders-in-training course to be given by
Mrs. Noby Savage of Athens was discussed at Thursday night's
meeting of Senior Troop 198 at the home of Mrs. Philip Ohlinger,
leader.
Several c the girls expressed an interest in the training which
is open to sen or scouts, 16 and over. Members of the troop have
been request ~ to serve as aides at day camp which will be held
this year at Camp Kiashuta near Chester in mid-June. Mrs. Mary
Bahr is the director. Cookie literature was distributed for the sale
which begins today.
The possibility of taking a trip to either the Juliet Lowe birthll}ace in sav· mah, Ga. or Rockwood Camp near Washington
was disc
was decided to write to both places for
literature.
The co
program was noted and the girls were
encouraged
t. Another meeting was set for Feb. 25 at the
home of Mrs. Ohlinger .

•
•

Cancer Film is Shown

..

•

FRIDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Friday at the!
home of Mrs. Robert Lewis. ·
PUBLIC Spaghetti supper,
5 to 8:30 p. m. Friday at
Wahama High School cafeteria,
prepared and served by
Wahama Band Boosters.

HEART
SUNDAY
FEB.
21

REVIVAL FRIDAY and
Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene with 0.
G. McKinney, evangelist.
Public invited.
TEEN DANCE, Friday,
Racine Junior High School, 8:30
to midnight. New band from Pt.
Pleasant, sponsored by junior
class.
DANCE FRIDAY following
Wahama-Spencer
basketball
game at Wahama High School
9:30p.m. Jays will emcee.
SATURDAY
HIGH
SCHOOL
dance
Saturday Meigs Junior High,
Middleport, 8-11 p.m. Jays will
emcee.
JITNEY SUPPER, St. Paul's
United Methodist Church annex, Tuppers Plains, Saturday,
4 p.m. to 7 p.m.

"

.,

I

SATURDAY
PUBLIC SQUARE dance,
8:30p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday, at
Royal Oak Park archery
building. Music by Tuppers
Plains band, Jim Carnahan
calling. Cake walk during intermission,
refreshments.
Sponsored by Tuppers Plains
Community Club.

GIVE ..

so more

woll love

- '·

1( '

= ',
L'. ·

HEART ( ~ \
FUND \}:\

GIVE ·to your

SUNDAY
SOUTHERN High School
band concert, Sunday, 2:30 p.
m. at high school, Racine. Intermediate band will play also.
Public welcome.
MEIGS County prayer service, 2 p. m. Sunday at Hiland
Chapel, Okey Ahart, leader.
Public invited.
REVIVAL starting Sunday,
Mt. Olive Church, Long Bottom,
services, 7:30 each evening
through March 1.
Special
singing each evening. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites public.

MRS. VILMA Pikkoja, Meigs
Bookmobile supervisor,
speaking at West Columbia
United Methodist Church, 7:30
p.m. Sunday. Public invited.
MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8
p.m. Monday at high school.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at hall.
Frank Vaughan will speak on
Americanism and Girls' State
representative to be chosen.
as
a
man
who
John
By-Briggs,
The story of the life of
RACINE American Legion
Leonard Bernstein, now 52, who "directs and dominates his
soared in 15 years from an music with his exciting per- Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
untried musician to a conductor sonality, enthusiasm and post home.
of a famous orchestra, was youth."
Bernstein, a pianist, compresented in a paper prepared
by Mrs. Rodney Downing at poser, author and lecturer,
Wednesday's meeting of the married a girl from Chile. The
couple has three children.
Middleport Literary Club.
FIRST CHILD BORN
Mrs.
Richard
Owen, Putting Voltaire's "Candide"
Sp. 4 and Mrs. Thomas D.
president, read the paper into a musical show is
prepared by Mrs. Downing who recognized as one of his Evans of El Paso, Texas are
due to the illness of her mother greatest accomplishments. He announcing the birth of their
is noted for hi~ young people's first child, a son, Todd Edwin.
was unable to attend.
The infant was born at the
In her paper Mrs. Downing concerts on television.
Army Hospital at Fort Bliss,
Members
responded
to
roll
gave a candid portrait of the
Texas
on Feb. 7. He weighed
famed conductor, the son of call by naming an opera. Mrs.
seven
pounds. Grandparents
Russian immigrants. A native 0. P. Klein was a guest. During
of Boston and a Harvard man, the concluding social hour, a are Mrs. Irene Lowe of El
Bernstein is conductor of the recording of "Candide" was Paso, Texas and Mr. and Mrs.
New York Philharmonic Or- played. Mrs. C. M. Hennessy, Glenn Evans of Middleport,
chestra. He
became a the hostess, served refresh- Route 1. Mrs. Eulah Evans of
Pomeroy, Route 3, is a greatcelebrity overnight when he ments.
The March 3 meeting will be grandmother. Sp. 4 Evans is
filled
in
for
the
director of the Philharmonic held at the home of Mrs. Dwight stationed at Fort Bliss.
Orchestra in 1943 at the age of Wallace with Mrs. Owen
25. In 1962 he conducted at reviewing "Haworth Harvest,"
Lincoln Center.
and Mrs. Nan Moore presenting
He is described by the author, "Jane Eyre."
VISIT IN POMEROY
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hedrick
and daughter, Maryann, of
Columbia, Mo., and Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Hedrick of
Columbus were Sunday guests
"Time and Two Women," a weekend with members to of Mrs. Zora Walker at the
film story of two cancer solicit Middleport homes for Raymond Musser residence in
Pomeroy. The Henry Hedrick
patients, one who sought early contributions.
Mrs. L. E. Reynolds, mem- family have been vacationing in
treatment and the other who
didn't, was shown during the bership chairman, announced Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Monday night meeting of the that the April meeting will Edward Hedrick, Mr. and Mrs.
Middleport Business and feature membership and an Robert Mitton, and Mr. and
Professional Women's Club at award will be given to the Mrs. William Hedrick.
member of the club sponsoring
the Columbia Gas Co. office.
Mrs. Ted Reed, Jr., and Mrs. the most new members.
Grace Pratt, president,
Arthur
Lund,
executive
secretary for the Meigs County reported that all of the club's
SPEND WEEK HERE
Chapter of the American hospital equipment is now in
Mrs . Waid Gorby of London,
Cancer Society, presented the use . Applications for nursing
program. Mrs. Lund explained scholarship assistance will be Ohio spent the past week here .
the role of the Cancer Society in considered and an an- visiting Mr. and Mrs. William
educating the public to the nouncement of the recipient will Barnhart and family and other
dangers of cancer and the need be made next month, Mrs. relatives. On Friday, Mrs .
Swackhamer re- Gorby, Mrs . Barnhart and
for early detection and treat- Lucille
Wayne went to Chesapeake for
ment, the service program ported.
Loretta Ours, vocal music the funeral services of Clyde
offered, the financial aid
available, and the research teacher at the Kyger Creek Moore, husband of the former
High School, was a guest. It was Carol Martin who survives
being carried out.
Mrs. Reed and Mrs. Lund noted that Mrs. Betty Conkle along with four children.
were introduced by Mrs. Harold and Mrs . Nellie Vale are ill. A
Sargent, chairman of the civic while elephant sale will be held
participation committee. Mrs. next month . Mrs. Mary KunSargent also noted the Tuesday zelman won the traveling prize.
night meeting held at Trinity A dessert course was served by
COMF FROM AKRON
Church where a Columbus heart Mrs . Sargent, Mrs . Carrie
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Chase of
specialist was the guest speaker Kennedy, Mrs. Linda Stobart,
Akron were Monday visitors of
and announced that Heart and Mrs. Betty Cltne.
Mrs. Clifford Hayes.
Sunday wi ll be observlJ thi:.,

Bernstein Paper Given

•

Calendar

AMERICAN HEART FUND

·HEART·
SUNDA
FEBRUARY 21st~
Middleport Campaig~ Conducted
bJ The Business &amp; Professional
Women's Club

.Welcome your
Heart Fund

Pomeroy Campaign Conducted
by Xi Gamma Mu Chapter

Volunteer
when she calls.
She is helping

GIVE

you save
a heart you love.

SO MORE

IF YOU'RE N OT A T
HO M E W HE N
Y OU R
VO LUN TEER CA LLS ...
Enc lose your contrib ution
111 the en v elope left by t he
heart f und vol unteer an d
p lace i t in the m ail.

WILL LIVE!

THIS MESSAGE IS SPONSORED AS A PUBLIC
~~~~, SERVICE BY THE FOLLOWING:
\)

Royal Crown Bottling Co. - Middleport

lou's Ashland Service - Pomeroy

landmark - Pomeroy

Erwin's Gulf Service - Middleport

Pomeroy National Bank

Pomeroy

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co. - Middleport

Davis-Warner Ins. Service - Pomeroy

Citizen's National Bank

Middleport

Goessler Jewelry Store - Pomeroy

Crows Steak House - Pomeroy

Valley lumber &amp; Supply - Middleport

Swisher &amp; Lohse Rexall Drugs - Pomeroy

Downing-Childs Ins. Agency - Middleport

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.-Pomeroy

Ebersbach Hardware - Pomeroy

l &amp; Z Dress Shop - Pomeroy

Racine Food Mkt. - Racine

Ewing Funeral Home - Pomeroy

Sugar Run Flour Mills - Pomeroy

The Fabric Shop - Pomeroy

K &amp; C Jewelers - Pomeroy

Home Laundry - Middleport

Star Supply Co. - Racine

Pomeroy Ben Franklin - Pomeroy

Karr &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales - Pomeroy

Hartley's Shoes - Pomeroy

Rail's Ben Franklin - Middleport

Mark V Store - Middleport

Pomeroy Flower Shop - Pomeroy

Racine Home National Bank - Racine

Village Pharmacy - Middleport

Waid Cross Sons Store - Racine

l egar Monument Co. - Pomeroy

Veterans Memorial Hospital - Pomeroy

M &amp; R Shopping Center - Middleport

G&amp;J Auto Parts

Pomeroy

-

�MIDDLEPO~T

POMEROY

POMEI&lt;vY
TRINITY
ML MORiAH BAPTISTUnitedChurch of Christ -Rev Corner Fourth and Main,
Perrin, pastor. Fred Blaettnar, Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
supt. Sunday School, 9: 15a. m.; Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9:30
• Wo~ship, 10:25 a. m.; youth a. m., Arnold Richards, supt.;
chorr rehearsal, Monday, 6:30 Morning worship 10:30 a. m.
p. m., Mrs. Marvin Burt,
FIRST
UNITED
PRES·
director.
Senior
choir BYTERIAN, Middleport- Rev.
rehearsal, 7:30p.m. Thursday, Russell Lester, pastor . Sunday
M{fs. Paul Nease, director. School 9:30 a. m., Lewis Sauer,
Thursday, all day Busy Bee supt.; worship service 10:30
quilting party in church social a .m.
room.
Ml DOLE PORT
HEATH
POMEROY CHURCH OF UNITED METHODIST-Rev.
THE 'NAZARENE Corner Max E. Donahue, minister;
Union and Mulberry . Rev . Eric Chambers, Sunday School
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor. superintendent. Church School
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.; 9:30 a. m .; morning worship,
Raymond
Walburn,
supt. 10:30a. m.; youth meeting, 7 p.
Morning worship 10:30 a. m.; m.; Choir rehearsal. Wed E9ening service 7:30 p. m. Mid- nesday 7-7:30 p. m.; Mrs. E.
week service, Wednesday, 7:30 Robert Hamm, director.
p. m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSESGRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev. Larry Carnahan presiding
Stanley Plattenburg, minister. ,minister. Sunday, Bible lecture,
Morning prayer and sermon, 9:30 a . m.; Watchtower study,
10:30 a. m . Holy communion 10:30 a. m.; Tuesday, Bible
and sermon, first Sundays, study, 7:30 p. m. ; Thursday,
10:30 a. m. Church school, ministry school 7: 30 p. m.,
kindergarten through eighth service meeting 8:30 p. m.
grade, 10:30 a.m .
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
POMEROY CHURCH OF of Christ in Christian UnionCHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr., Lawrence Manley, pastor; Mrs.
pastor. Bible School, 9:30a .m.; Russell Young, Sunday School
worship, 10:30; adult worship Supt. Sunday School 9:30a. m.;
service and younq peoples Evening worship 7:30. Wedmeeting, both '7: 30-p. in. Sun
nesday prayer meeting , 7:30 p.
day -Wednesday,
combined m.
Bible study
and
prayer
CHURCH OF THE NAZAmeeting, 7:30 p. m.
.RENT Middleood
Rev.
THE SALVATION ARMY Audry 1v1111t:t, pdSTOr; t-royo
Envoy Ray S. Wining, officer in Carson , supt. Sunday school,
c.harge. Sunday, 10 a. m., 9:30 a.m.;
Morning
wor
Holiness meeting; 10:30 a. m. ship,
10:30
a.m.;
junior
Sunday School. Young People's society, 6: 30 p.m .; NYPS 6;45
Legion, 7 p._m.; Thursday, 1 3 p~m.
Sunday evangelistic
p.m ., Ladres Home League, 7 meeting, 7:30 p.m. Prayer
p. m . Prep classes.
meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
SACRI;D 111:At&lt; 1 -: ~&lt;:v ·- MIDDLEPORT
PENFather Bernard Kra1covrc, TECOSTAL -Third Ave., the
28 5
992
pastor .
Ph~ne
· ~ • Rev. B. L. Barrett,
stor
Saturday evenrng Mass, d7 · 3
Ralph Priddy Sunda ~chooi
p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 an 10
t
Cl
' f
y
· ns Saturday 7 sup ·
asses
or all ages,
a.m . Con f essro •
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; Sunday
7:30p.m. .
evening service, 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Wednesday evening young
-Robert Kuhn, pastor . George people's meeting and Bible
Skinner, Sunday School supt. s~udy. Saturday evening serSunday School, 9:30 a. m.; vrce, 7:30p.m.
morning worship, 1~:30 a.m.;
IVIIDULEPORT
FIRST'
BYF, 6 p. m.; Brble Study BAPTIST -Charles W. Simons.
Wedn~sday 7 p. m .; chorr pastor. Danny Thompson, Sunpractrce, We.d., 8: 30 P. m.
day School Supt. Sunday
FIRST SOUTH.ERN BAP- Church School, 9: 15 a. m.;
TI~T.- 220 E_. Marn, Pomeroy, Morning worship, 10:15 a . m .
affrlrated wrth S. B.C. Rev . Sunday Bible study hour 7:30 p. ·
Clifford Coleman, pastor. m. Sunday, 4:30 p. m ., game
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., 'time for youth. Weanesday
He_rshel M~Ciure, supt.; wor- evening prayer service, 7:30.
shrp servrce, 10:30 a.m.;
evening worship, 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST, MidWednesday prayer meeting and -dleport, 5th and Main. Raullin
Bible study, 7:30p.m.
Moyer, pastor. Thomas Kelly,
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN Sunday School supt. Bible
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, pastor. School, 9:30 a. m.; morning
Sunday School, 9:15 a. m., worship, 10: 30 a. m.; evening
Charles Evans, Supt.; worship worship, 7:30 p, m. : ornver
service, 10: 30 a. m . Con - service 7 p. m. Wednesday ..
firmation class, Saturday, 9:45
a.m.
POMEROY-1..nc.;, 1 t:.r&lt;
MASON COUNTY
UNITED
METHODIST CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Robert R . Card,
pastor. Services, 315 Main St., Pt.
Pomeroy - Worship, 10:30 a. Pleasant. Su11clay services, 11
m , Church SchOqi, 9:· '1'5:'.1!.'-:n'l.; a.m.r::-Wednesday Testimonial
Frank
Vaug ha11,
superin - meeting, 7:30p.m.
tendent. Chest
rship, 9 a
m . Church
0 a m.; GRAHAM UNITED METHRoger Epple,
ODIST CHURCH - Preaching
SEVENTH DA
CVENT
9. 30 a . m , first and second
TIST Porn
Mulberry Sundays of each month; third
Hgts. Herbert Morgan, pastor. and fourth Sundays each month,
Sabbath School, Saturday, 2 p . worship service at 7:30 p. m.
m ; worship, 3. 15 p. m. Dorcas Wednesday evenings at 7: 30,
Society, 10 a . m . each Thursday. Prayer and Bible Study.

t?

°

the Serrnonette

Neglecting the House of God

TEXT - ''Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves
.ogether, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another;
and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching." Hebrews 10:25.
ALL HIS UFE Old Bill had never gone to church. No matter
how much he was coaxed, he could not be persuaded to attend,
even on Christmas or Easter. ''Whenit freezes in June,'' he would
say, "then I'll go to church."
One year it was unusually cold and stayed that way till late
spring. In the first part of June the mercury dipped to freezing
several nights. Thoughts about Old Bill and what he had said
came to mind. Perhaps this phenomenon would bring him to
church. It did. One Sunday Old Bill made his first appearance in
church. While the organ played softly, six men carried him in.
No doubt most people plan on attending church some time,
but it is always in the future. There is always some excuse for not
attending now. The Master tells of those who were bidden to a
great supper, but all began to make excuses. The first said unto
him, "I have bought a piece of ground and I must needs go and see
it: I pray thee have me excused." And another said, "I have
bought five yoke of oxen, and I go to prove them: I pray thee have
me excused." And another said, "I have married a wife, and
therefore I cannot come." Luke 14:18b-20.
Men are still making excuses. Some of the excuses we hear
today are as follows:
THCRE ARE HYPOCRITES IN THE CHURCH - Jesus said
there would be tares among the wheat, but remember how Christ
rebuked Peter for focusing his eyes on a hypocrite. Peter said,
"What shall this man do? Jesus saith unto him, If I will that he
tarry till I come, what is that to thee? follow thou me." St. John
21:2lb-22.
MY CLOTHES ARE NOT GOOD ENOUGH TO ATTEND
CHURCH - God and genuine Christians are interested in you and
not the clothes you wear. After all, our desire should be to please
God. Remember God's Word as found in I Samuell6:7b ''for man
looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the
heart."
MY CHILDREN WILL DISTURB THE SERVICE - Our
Saviour says, "Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come
unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven." Matthew 19: 14b.
Most parents face this problem, but it pays big dividends to keep
our children in church. The Bible says, "Train up a child in the
way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it."
Proverbs 22:6.
I WILL WAIT UNTIL MY COMPANION ATTENDS CHURCH
WITH ME - Our Lord says, "He that loveth father or mother
more than me is not worthy of me: and he that loveth son or
daughter more than me is not worthy of me ." Matthew 10:37.
WILL YOUR excuse stand at the judgment? The day of our
death is fast approaching. Do not make the mistake of Old Bill in
the above illustration.
Church attendance will not save you. We are saved when we
accept Christ as Lord and Saviour, but we can not remain a
Christian and neglect the house of God providing we are able to
a \Lend .
Why not attend church this Sunday? The Psalmist said, "I
was glad when they s~id unto me, Let us go into the house of the
Lord." Psalm 122:1.
Rev . Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.,
Pastor, Rutland Church
of the Nazarene.

MASON
ASSEM8L Y
OF
GOD -Second St., Mason, W.
Va. Chester Tennant, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 a. m.;
morning worship, 11 a. m.;
evangelistic service, 7:30 p. 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
Manle.Y!._Youth leader.
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts., Stan
Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; worship service, 11
a.m.; training union, 6:30"p.m. ;
evening worship service, 7:30
p.m. Mid-week prayer service,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Services at 315 Main St., Pt.
Pleasant, Sunday School 9: 15
a.m. Sundays, 11 a.m.; Wed nesday, testimonial meeting 8
p.m. All welcome.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
-Letart Route 1, the Rev. Stan
Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; prayer and Bible
study, 7:30p.m. Cottage prayer
service, Tuesday, 10 a.m.;
worship service, Friday, 7:30
p.m.
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 , 7:30p.m.

MEIGS COUNTY
ALFRED METHODIST
Rev. Randy Lavender, pastor.
S':'nday school, 9: 45 a.m., Lloyd
Drllrnger, supt.; worship ser vice, 11 a.m. with the Rev. Mr.
Lavender in charge. Wed nesday evening prayer service,
7:45p.m.
I

UNITED FAITH- Robert E.
Smith, pastor. Worship service
and Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
Fred ~amsel, supt.; evening
worshrp, 7:30 p.m. ; youth
meeting, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting
Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Hobart Newell, supt. Services weekly, 9:30a.m. Sunday.
Preaching first and third
Sundays of month by Charles
Russell, 9:30 a.m.
SILVER RUN FREE WILL
METHODIST - Rev. Howard
Kimble, pastor. Sunday School,
10 a. m., Henry Davis, supt.;
evening service, 7:30 p. m.
Prayer meeting Thursday, 7:30
p. m .
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION Darrel Doddrill,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.
m., Annie Mohler, supt. ;
Leonard Gilmore, first elder ;
evening service, 7:30 p . m.
Wednesday prayer meeting ,
7:30 p. m.
.. MT. MORIAH CHURCH Or
GOD - Racine Route 2. The
Rev . Charles Hand, pastor.
Sundai school, 9:45 a.m .;
morning worship, 11 a.m.
Evening services, Tuesday and
Friday, 7:30.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
CHARGE
UNITED
METHODIST. Sunday worship
St. Paul's 9 a.m.; South
Bethel 9:55a.m.; Alfred 11 a.m.
(First and third Sundays) 7: 45
p.m. ; &lt;Second and 4th Sundays). Lottridge -7:45 p.m.
(First and third Sundays), 11
~ . m. Second and 4th Sundays.
LONG
BOTTVM
METHODIST - Rev . Freeland
Norris, pastor. Sunday School,
10 a .m .; church services, 11
a.m.

RACINE FIRST CHURCH
OF THE
NAZARENE
Sunday School, 9:30 a m .;
Morning Worship, 10:30 a . rn.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, Sunday School
Superintendent, Pauline McCI intock, pastor. Rev. Morris
M. Wolfe.
RACINE FIRST BAPTISTCharlesNorris, 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 . W i lma
Bahr, Supt. Youth Fellowship 6
p.m. each Sunday at Tuppers
Plains
United
Methodis t
Church.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J.
A. Curry, pastor
Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.; Youth and
junior youth service, 6:45 p. m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Prayer and praise Wed ., 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 meeting, 6:30
p.m.; evening worship, 7: 30.
Bible study, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST - Rev. Howard Kimble,
pastor. Sunday school, 10 a .m.;
Henry Davis, supt.; evening
service, 7:30 p.m. Prayer
meeling, 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.
Worshipservice9a. m.; Sunday
School, 10 a. m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
Robert Eugene Musser ,
pastor. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; morning worship, 10: 30 ;
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
supt. Sunday evening service,
7:30 p.m.; youth meetina ,
Monday, 7 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
a.m .; mor,ping worship, 10:45,
NYPS Sunday, 6:30 p. m.;
evangelistic service, Sunday,
7: 30 p.m. Mid-week prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Mssionary meeting, second
Wednesday, 7:30 p, m.
- R 0 C K.
S P R I N G S
METHODIST - Rev. Richard
Pumphrey, pastor; Harold
Blackston,
superintendent.
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m.;
church school. 10:15 a.m. ;
evening worship, 7:30 p.m. ;
MYF, 6 p.m. Prayer meeting
and Bible Study, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. A ministrative
Council first Monday, 7:30p.m.
- EDEN UNITED BRETHREN
U1 CHRIST - E lden R. Blake,
pastor. Sunday School, 10 a . m. ;
W innie Holsinger, supt. Morning sermon, 11 a . m.; Evening
service Christian Endeavor,
7:30 p.
m.;
Mrs.
Lyda
Chevalier, president. Song
service and sermon, 8:20. Mid Week prayer meeting Wed nesday, 7: 30 p. m . Mrs. Mazie
Holsinqer, class leader.
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT
CHURCH- Harrisonville Road.
Rev. Roy Taylor, pastor ; Henry
Eblin, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;,
evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Prayer and prasie service,
Thursday~7:3Q.p. m .
RACINE - LETART
WESLEYAN UNITED METHODIST
Racine, W. Dale McClurg,
pastor. Sunday School, 9: 30 a.
m.; Worship service, 10:30 a.
m.; UMYF, 7 p . m . each Sunday ; Senior Choir practice,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m.; Service
Guild, fourth Monday, 7:30 p.
m.; Happy Hustlers S!Jnday
School Class meeting, fourth
Friday, 6 p. m.; WSCS second
Friday, 7:30 p. m. ; Official
Board, second Monday, 7:30 p.

BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST - John
Rockhold, pastor. Bible study,
9:30 a.m.; morning worship,
10: 30 ; evening worship, 7:30
p.m . Wednesday Bible study,
7:30p.m.
STIVER. SVILLE
COMMUNITY CHURCH Rev.
Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday
morning worship service, 10 m.
a.m., Dell Talbo1, superin - . C"01M~UNITY
CHURCH,
tendent. Prayer meeting , each Dexter - Rev. Basil DeWeese,
T hursday , 7:30 p .m. Sunday pastor. Sunday morning worevening service, 7:30.
ship, 10 a. m. ; Worship services, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday and
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday evenings.
Pomeroy - Harri so nville
ST.
PAUL'S
UNITED
Road . John Webster, pastor ;
Paul McElroy, Sunday School METHODIST CHURCH Supt . Sunday School, 9:30 a. m .; Tuppers Plains. Rev. Randy
Morning Worship and com - Lavender, pastor. Sunday
munion, 10:30 a. m. ; Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. ; youth
evening youth Christian En- fellowship, 6 p . m .; Sunday
deavor , 6 p . m.; Worship ser - evening wors hip, 7:30 p. m.
LETART
UNITED
vices, 7 p. m. ; Wednesday
evening prayer m eeting and METHODI ST CHURCH - First
and second Sundays, preaching
Bibl e study, 7: 30p.m.
SYRACUSE
BAPTIST at 8 p. m. ; Third and fourth
TABERNACLE' Raymond Sundays, Sunday School , 10 a .
Butcher, pastor. Sunday school, m. ; worship service at 11 a.m.;
9:30 a.m.; worship service, Tuesday evenings at 8 p . m.,
prayer and Bible Study .
10:30 a .m .
FLATWOODS
UNITED
METHODIST, Rev . William
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN
Airson, pastor, Robert Eason,
Pine Grove, Rev. Gerald supt. Sunday School at 10 a . m .,
Herbener , pastor . Sunday Worship service at 11 a. m.
school, 9 a . m .; Church service, Prayer meeting Thursday , 8 p.
10 a.m.
m.
SYRACUSE
UNITED
MT. UNION BAPTIST METH9DIST Paul A. Rev. Cecil Cox, pastor . Sunday
Sellers, pastor; Ben Quisen - school supt ., Joe Sayre. Sunday
berry, Sunday School Supt. school, 9 : 45 a .m .; Sunday
wor ship service, 9:30 a. m. first evening wors hip, 7:30. Wed and third Sunday . E vening nesday pra yer and Bible study,
service, 8 p. m. fourth Sunday. 7:30 p .m.
LANGSVILLE MIDWAY TUPPERS
PLAINS
ser vi ces each Sunday at 10 a . m. CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Mr.
and 7: 30 p. m . Tuesday evening John Wyatt, pastor; J. S. Davis,
worship, 7: 30.
Sunday School supt .; Sunday
SUTTO N
UNITED school , 9: 30 a . m ., Morning
METHODIST Paul A. Sermon, 10:30 a. m. Evening
Sellers, pastor ; Martha Lee, sermon, 7 p. m.
Sunday School Supt. Worship EAST
LETART
FALLS
service, 10 : 45 a. m. ;second and UNIT ED
METHODIST
fourth
Sunday s;
e vening CHURCH - W . Dale McClurg,
worhsip, 8 p. m . third Sunday. pastor. Wor ship services,
ENTERPR IS E
UNITED second and fourth Sundays of
METHODIST -Rev. William each month at 9 a . m . ; Sunday
Airson, pastor. Ralph Spencer, School, first and third Sundays
Supt. ; Carl Jennings, asst. supt . of each monthat 9 a . m. ; second
Worship services, 9: 30 a . m .; and fourth Sundays of each
Sunday School , 10: 30 a. m .; month at 10 a.m.; Bible study ,
Youth Fellowship, 6: 30 p . m .; Wednesday.
Wednesday , ch&lt;;&gt;ir, 6: 15 p. m.
L ETART FALLS UNITEC
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Rev . Rober t
Norman Mc Ca in , s upt. BRETHREN Services weekly at 9: 30 a . m. Shook, pastor; Herschel Norris,
Preaching first and third sup t. Sunday school, 9:30a.m. ;
Su ndays of month by Charles morning sermon , 10: 30 a.m.;
evening sermon, 7: 30 alter~ u sse ll , 9· 30 a. m .
nating each Sunday. Prayer
BRADBURY CHURCH OF service, Wednesday, 7: 30 p .m.
CHIRST Roy Bill Carter, Prayer meeting, 7:30 p .m .
evangelist , Thurman Carsey, alternating Sundays.
Bible School supt ; Bible Sc hool
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
9:30 a. m.; morning worship,
Roy W. Carter,
10 30a . m . ; youth meeting , 6 p. CHRIST m. ; evening service, 7 p m . pastor : Jerry Davis , Sunday
Christian
Workers
Class, School superintendent. Sunday
Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. ; prayer School, 9:30 a. m. ; Morning
worship, 10: 30 a . m . ; Youth
me.:ting Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

meeting, 6:30 p. m.; Evening
worship, 7:30 p. m.
APPLE GROVE UN I TED
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.
Worsh ip 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 Superi ntendent. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m. Sunday Service 8 p.m. Rev.
Max Donahue, Middleport,
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 - Worship, first
and third Sundays, 10:45 a. m.;
second and fourth Sundays,
7:30p.m. Sunday School,9:45a.
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. Wi II, supt.
Sunday School 9: 30 a. m.;
Worship service, 10:30 a. m.
Christian Endeavor Sunday
evening.
R-EORGANIZED
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, 7:30p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor. Worship service, 9:30 a.
m.; Sunday School , 10: 30 a.m.
MORNING STAR UNITED
METHODIST - Rev. William
Airson, pastor ; Roy Van Meter,
supt.; Sunday School, 9: 30 ~­
m. ; Morning worship, 10:15 a.
m.; Yout h Fellowship and Bible
Study, Thursday, 8 p. m. Fred
Smith, lay leader.
CARLETON CHURCH Kingsbury
Road.
Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m .~ Ralph Carl,
supt. Worship service, 10:30 a.
m. and 7: 3() p . m. alternately .
Prayer meeting, Wednesday ,
7:30 p. m. Rev. Jay Stiles,
pastor.
OLD
DEXTER
CONGREGATIONAL C:-fURCH Rev. Wi liard Dutcher, pastor.
Mrs. Worley Francis, Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School,
9: 45 a . m. Church Serv ices first
and third Sundays following
Sunday School, Second and
fourth Saturday evenings, 8 p.
m. services.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
- Mr. Robert Wyatt, pastor ;
Sunday School supt., Ronald
Osborne. Bible School, 9:30 a.
m .; preaching 10 : 45 a. m. ;
Evening services, 7:30p.m.

•
It's a long hike! Traveling to our goal can take a lifetime, but it's worth it.
Every morning we start out on another stage of the journey, and it's up to us how
much we accomplish before nightfall.

What is the goal? What is our highest peak of spiritual development? What .
are the rewords? All the things we long for . . . contentment . • . happiness.

peace of mind . . . perfect freedom

Many are still struggling through the forests of unbelief and despair. Some are
lost and confused in the mists of doubt. Others are already climbing the foothills of
hope. Many of us will reach the summit if we pray constantly for help and strength.
The Christian scriptures are your infallible guidebook, and the Christian Church
offers you a place of spiritual refreshment along life's road. Attend church this Sunday, and continue your journey with a lighter burden •.• and a lighter heart.
Scriptures selected by the Amencan B•ble Society·

Sunday
John

Monday
John

Copynght 1971 keister Advertising Service, lnt: St rasburg, Vi1ginia

Tuesday
John

Wednesday
luke

Thu rsday
luke

friday
John

•

Saturday
John

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 busmess
firms and organizations whose names appear below.

K &amp; C. JEWELERS
Keepsake Diamond Rings
312 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0.

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

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE
Phone 992 -3481
N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0.

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.
Phone 992-3284

HEINER'S BAKERY

Middleport

M &amp; R FOODLINER

HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST Cecil Wise,
Pastor. Sunday School, 9:30
Bakers of Good Bread
a.m.; Morning worship, 10:30
Middleport, Ohio
Huntington, W. Va.
a.m.; Young People's service,
6:45p.m.; EvangelisHcservice, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting ,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.

MARK V STORE
Middleport, Ohio

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

Sales- All is Chalmers- Service
Farm-Industrial- Lawn -Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

RACINE FOOD MARKET
Racine
MT. HERMON UNITED
BRETHREN Rev. Robert
Shook pastor. Sunday school,
9:30a.m.; Alfred Wolfe, supt. ;
Roy Pooler, assistant. Morning
worship, 11 a.m.; evening
sermon, 7:30 p.m. alternating
each Sunday. Class meeting, 11
a .m .
alternating
Sunday
mornings, David Holter, class
le ader . Christian Endeavor ,
7: 30 p.m. every other Sunday
evening,
Roger
Buckley,
president. Prayer meeting, 7: 30
p.m . each Wednesday. Board
meeting first Monday of month,
7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
- Rev.
Russell Lester, pastor . Worship
servi ce, 9 a . m .; Sunday School,
10 a .m.

.R UTLAND
RUTLAND FIRST BAP TIST- Rev . Samuel Jackson,
pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m .;
Mrs. Gertrude Butler, supt.
Prayer Service, 1: 30 p. m. ;
oreachin9 servir&lt;&gt; ? o. m .
RUTLAND
METHT HE
ODIST Rev . Richard C.
Pumphery,
pastor.
Church
School 9 : 30 a.m .; Worship
service 10:30 a.m.

The Store with A Heart
949-3342

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

Ohio' s Oldest Dodge Dealer
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

•

,

Chester, Ohio

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES

Rexall Drugs
We Fi ll All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Comfortable LivingReasonably Priced
Tuppers Plains
667-3891

RAYBUCK MOTOR SALES Inc.

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

Lincoln · M.ercury
American N\otors

•·

Electric Mot or Repair

a_8_5_N_._c_o_u_r_t _st_.___
5_
93_·_
66_o_, _____A
_t_h_e_n_s+-8-l _o_w_._M
__
a_
in_______________2_-_s7_5_o~l tt

99

RACINE PLANING MILL
Building Supplies and Millwork
General Contracting
Ph. 992-3978

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Dedicated to the Interest
of the
Meigs - Mason Area.

BOWER'S DRIVE-IN
RESTAURANT
E. Main St.

Pomeroy, 0.

TUPPERS PLAINS HARDWARE

General Hardware
Paint- Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies
Tuppers Plains
66/-:3963

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Who, What, Where
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Days of Our Lives
Doctors
Another World
Bright Promises
Mr. Cartoon
Petticoat Junction
Wagon Train

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Rocky &amp; His Friends
Jack Lalanne
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Munsters
Addams Family
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10:30 Concentration
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11: 30 Hollywood Squares
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12:30 Who, What, Where
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4:30 Petticoat Junction
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5:30
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8:30
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11:00 Kartoon Karnival
11:30 Jambo
12:00 Mormon Cho1r
12:30 At Issue
1: 00 Meet the Press
1:30 Laredo
2:00
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3: 00 900 Crooked Miles
3:30 Roller Derby
4:00
4: 30 Pet Set
5: 00 Perry Mason
5:30
6:00 Untamed World
6:30 News
7:00 Wild Kingdom
7:30 Walt Disney
8:00
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9:30
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9:30 Groovy Coolies
10:00 Josie
10:30 Globetr otters
11:00 Archie 's Fun House
11:30
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12:30 The Monkees
1:00 Dastardly &amp; Muttley
1: 30 Jetsons
2:00 ACC Basketball
3:00
3:30
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4:30
4:30
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5:30
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6: 30 News
6: 30 Roger Mudd
7:00 To Rome with Love
7: 30 Mission Impossible
8: 00
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9:00 " Arnie"
9: 30 Mary Tyler Moore
10: 00 Mannix
11:00 News
11 : 30 Movie

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6:00
6:30
6:45 living Word
7:00 Neighbors
7:15 Women 's V iew
7: 30 Wonder am a
8:30
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9:30
10:00 Jerry Lewis
10: 30 The Double Deckers
11: 00 Hot Wheels
11:30 Sky Hawks
12:00 Motor Mouse
12:30 Hardy Boys
1:00 American Bandstand
1: 30
2: 00 Bonnie Lou &amp; Buster
2:30 Golf
3:00 Bowl's Tournament
3: 30 Pro Bowler' s Tour
4:00
4:30 Golf
5:00 Wide World of Spo-ts
5:30
6:00
6:30
7:00
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9: 00
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10: 00
10:30
11:00
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12:30

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 19,1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Oassifieds ..

Apple Grove
News, Events
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Miss Sue Kopar of Pittsburgh,
Pa., spent two weeks with Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Smith.
Mrs. Laura Circle of Dorcas
called on Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Wood Sunday afternoon.
Norman Reynolds of Mason,
W. Va., called on Debbie
Bostick Sunday.
Mrs. John Hill was returned
home from Holzer Medical
Center Wednesday.
Mrs. Theron Johnson and
Mrs. Ferne Hayman spent
Friday with Mrs. Johnson's
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Scott
Wheeler at Wheelersburg, Ohio.
Mrs. Ferne Hayman entertained in honor of her father,
Wesley Belles Sr., who was
celebrating his 96th birthday
with a dinner. Mr. Belles was
presented a birthday cake
baked by Mrs. Hayman which
was served with ice cream
during the evening. Attending
the dinner were Mrs. Hayman's
cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Hepler of Wampum, Pa., Mrs.
Marvin Wickersham and sons,
Tim and Jeff. Mrs. Hepler
also celebrated a birthday. Mr.
Belles received several phone
calls during the day from
relatives and friends and
received 22 birthday cards . We
join in wishing Mr. Belles many
more happy birthdays.
Mrs. Don Tindley and
children, Polly and Sandra
Taylor of Columbus spent
Sunday and Monday with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Taylor, at Racine.
Miss Polly Taylor had the
misfortWle of having her car
stolen in Columbus Saturday.
Wiley Ours of Racine spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Donohew. Jeff Donohue of
Nelsonville spent the weekend
with his parents.
Jess Anderson,
Orville
Jarrell and Mrs. Gay Ransom
attended fWleral services for
Mrs. Anderson's counsin, Henry
Edward Crouch, SWlday at the
Pentecostal
Church
at
Hurricane, W. Va. Interment
was in a nearby cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Nocris of
Racine called
and Mrs.
F1oyd Norris
Mr. and M
spent Tues&lt;t:
Mrs. Hoyt F
uson at New
Haven. Mrs. Warner assisted
Mrs. Ferguson with her
quilting.
David Gloeckner, student at
Ohio State University, spent the
weekend with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner and
Edward Moran.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike O'Brien
and family of Grove City spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Larry O'Brien and family. Mr.
and Mrs. O'Brien will be
moving soon from Grove City to
the parsonage at Antiquity.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Salser,
Mike and Rita, of Dorcas spent
Thursday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Pearson, Mrs. Sally
Savage and Robin.
Mr. and Mrs. JW1ior Wolfe
and Wendy of Cheshire spent
Sunday with Mrs. Dolly Wolfe
and Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill.
Jim Riffle spent Saturday
with Jeff Wickerhsam.
A sleighing party was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Theron Johnson Tuesday
evening by members of The
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company in Pomeroy. Twentyfive members and friends attended.
Mrs .
Mildred
Spencer
returned home Wednesday
after a visit with her daughter
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Jackson and sons at Leetonia,
Ohio.

Old Town
Flats News
Mr. and
Mrs.
Homer
Icenhower received word of the
death of their son, Leonard
(Buck) Icenhower of East
Liverpool, Ohio on Feb. 11, after
a long illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Johnston and fa mily of Columbus
called on Mr . and Mrs.
Maywood Johnston Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Delmer Grady

ITEM : Tom Hill. He plays
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
Mama Cass. But he plays
Moonlight Serenade and
Andy Williams too . Variety
is the spice of our music

WMP0/1390

"' WANT AD'
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Oay Before Publication
111\onday Deadline 9 a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Pub Iisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents P~&gt;r Worrf one insertion
· Minimum cnary., l::&gt;r..
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.
· 25 Per cent Discount on paid·
ads and ads paid with in 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charye per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00pm. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday.

Otester
News Notes
BY CLARICE ALLEN
Mrs. Mabel VanMeter spent
several days at the Eldon
Kraeuter home in Racine.
Ernest Fisher, Wooster, was
a weekend guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Christy. He was
enroute to Florida where he will
visit Mr. and Mrs. Don Matlack
and Donna Kaye at Lake Worth.
Mrs. Ross Cleland spent
Thursday with her sister, Mrs.
Norman McCain, a patient at
Camden-Clark
Hospital,
Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell
were in Parkersburg Thursday
to meet their son, Elmer, at the
airport. Elmer, serving with the
U. S. Navy at Philadelphia,
spent the weekend with his
parents and sister, Sheila.
Charles Eichinger, Columbus, spent the weekend with
Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
family, having been called here
by the death of his aWlt.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar HartWig
and son, Columbus, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Nice.
Mr. and Mrs . Eldon Will and
Mrs. Karl Kloes, Syracuse,
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Denzil Cleland.
Sgt. and Mrs. Daniel Toban
and daughter, Robyn, Goldsboro, N. C., were recent
visitors of Mrs. Thomas Weber
and Mrs. Cleo Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Van
Meter, Hobart, Ind., were
guests of Mrs.. Mabel Van
Meter, having been called here
by the death of Mrs. Eldon
Kraeuter.
Mrs. Buel Ridenour was
pleasantly surprised on her
birthday by her family: A
dinner was prepared by her
daughters-in-law and friend,
Mrs. Jean Summerfield, and
brought to her home. A
decorated birthday cake was
served with the meal. Attending
were the honored guest, Mrs .
Ridenour, and Buel Ridenour,
Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour,
Mr. and Mrs. James Ridenour
and sons, Lowell and John, Mrs.
Jean Summerfield, Mrs. Erma
Heilman and Mrs. Elizabeth
Wickham.

·'

.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

1966 FORD
$1095
Galaxi HT Cpe., 6 cyl. engine, std. trans., air conditioning,
good tires, clean interior, dark green finish.

Notice

Kingsbury
News, Notes
Helen Marie King, who was a
pneumonia patient at Veterans
Memorial
Hospital,
has
returned home and is improving.
The Busy Bee Class of
Carleton Church had
a
Valentine party Friday night in
the church basement.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Rodney visited Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Harrison recently.
Mrs. Hazel Arnold and Walter
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs . Patrick Williams and
family at Chester.
Visiting recently with Mr.
Charles King and Susan, Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie King and sons
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Sayre of Wolfpen, Mr. and Mrs.
Peter Sewar of Aliban, N. Y.
Carleton Sunday School Supt.
Ralph Carl awarded pins for
perfect attendance to Jodi
Harrison, three years; Harold
and Sherman White, for two
years,
Sunday
morning
following Sunday School.
Mrs. Coelle Hudson visited
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mcintyre
at Dunbar, W. Va., recently.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean and John and
Richard were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins of Racine,
Mr. Walter Terrell and Bruce
Ried of Pataskala.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White and sons were
Mr. and Mrs. Dryden White and
sons, Ben, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie White of New Haven, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Cole, Victor
Count, Mary Lou and Grace
King and Richard Cole, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Harrison
and son of Columbus visited
with Mr. and Mrs . Olen
Harrison over the weekend.

are parents of a son, born
recently.
Vicky and Carl Johnston
missed school due to illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Johnston
have sold their grocery s tore to
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Trussell.
Mrs. Maywood Johnston
received word tha t her son,
Paul Brooks, has recovered
frorn a recent illness and has
returned to his work.
Mrs. Jack Cornell received
word that her mother was
hospllalized in East Liverpool.
May Johnston

DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
10-18-tfc
-------~,~-

WILL PICK up merchandise
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc

.

INCOME TAX service, daily
except Sunday. Evenings by
appointment only. Phone 992·
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
mile south of fairgrounds.
2-7 -30tc
RUMMAGE
SALE,
Fry
Building, Middleport, Friday
and Saturdar, 9:30 a. m. to 5
p
m
AI
merchandise
cleaned and pressed.
2-1 8-2tc
BAND- Friday and Saturday
nights, 9 p.m. to 2 p.m. THE
SUN'S, Hl-7 CLUB .
2-17-3tc

Carmel News,
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Taylor on Sunday were Mr. aPd
Mrs. Frank Hudson and Toni of
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. Shelby
Pickens and family, all of
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Rose, local.
Mr. and Mrs . James Circle of
New Haven, W.Va., visited with
Mrs. Mary Circle SWlday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith and
family were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith
Sunday in honor of Bonnie
Smith's birthday.
Patrick Johnson spent Friday
night through Sunday evening
with his great-grandmother,
Mrs. Eunie Brinker.

Chester East

_[

1965CORVAIR
$6?5
500 2 Dr., local low mileage car, interior extra clean,
medium green finish, all good w-w tires, radio. Plenty of
go in the snow. Just nicer than the average car.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEH EVES. 8:00 P.M.
P_OMEROY, OHIO

Pets For Sale

Notice

VFW GUN SHOOT, Sunday, MINIATURE Schnauzers oold
Poodle puppies. Permanent
Feb. 21, noon. Broad Run Gun
injections and groomed.
Club, New Haven, W. Va.
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
Sponsored
by
Stewa rt
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
Johnson Post 9926, Mason, W.
right. Phone Coolville 667Va.
3654.
2-18-3tp
2-11-30tc

SHOOTING match, Sunday,
Rutland Gun Club, New Lima
Road. Trap and still targets.
Begins at 12:30 p.m. Prizeshams, bacon and other
assorted meats.
2-17-3tc

ONE TOY Manchester and
chihuahua male puppy, six
months old, $20. Phone
Coolvil le 667-3624.
2-18-3tc

Auto Sales

Business Services....

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service
_ ,_.,,...,........::::=

~:.~~.~~.~·
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. l' I H··. Ilfl'!l
~1.1 '!· I' li .,1
11"'111

1965 PONTIAC
$10?5
Tempest St. Wagon, local 1 owner, low mileage car, V 8
engine, automatic trans., power steering, non-slip rear
axle, vinyl interior like new,- light blue finish, radio. Save
Today.

Card of Thanks
I WISH to thank a" rne Rutland
Fire
Department
and
Pomeroy Fire Department
and all who assisted when my
home burned February 6.
Also, thanks to my friends
and neighbors for their
donations and kindness. Many
thanks to all.
Bessie Graham and Harold
Graham.
2-19-llc

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

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

Pomeroy

For Sale
MODERN WALNUT stereo
radio combination. Four
speed intermixed changer.
Dual vo lume control, 4
speaker
sound
system.
Balance $72.20. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
2-18-6tc

WANT TO FEEL LIKE A KING?
SEE THE All NEW BUCKINGHAM
NOW, AT DANNIE'S OF POMEROY

EXCLUSI VE HOLLY PARK DEALER
HILLCREST, BY SKY LINE
BUCKINGHAM, BY KING HOMES

DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES, INC.

POMEROY
PHONE992 -7195
SERVICE IS OUR BYWORD
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

MASON CAR WASH
..AUTOMATIC"

$5.55

Car &lt;;ompletely Mitted &amp;
Thoroughly Rinsed.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONLY
Sat. 91o 5-Sun. 11 to 5

-GUARANTEED-

S-PiNET-c.unsole piano. wanted
responsible party to take over
payments on spinet piano.
Easy terms, can be seen
locally.
Write
Credit
Manager, P . 0. Box 276,
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176.
2-7-12tp

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
"Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
Phone
John
RusselL
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-7-tfc

Do It Yourself Open
24 Hrs. Daily- 25c

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford

Insurance

LEGAL NOTICE
TO: BIDDERS
SUBJECT: Purchase of
School Buses
FOR: The Board of Educa tion
of the Southern Loca I School
District, Racine , Ohio

See Us At The .•.

Real Estate For Sale
CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots on T79 at Rock
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
SchooL a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
Wi I te weekends, or after 5
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9926887.
2-3-tfc

SWAP SHOP
Beat Inflation!
WE

BUY - SELL ~•

Cleland Realty

GROUND TO SPARE- 2 story
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath, full
basement, gas forced air
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
furnace, CLOSE TO SHOPPomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
PING. $9,500.
10-25-tfc

1 STORY
FOR SALE - 2 story brick, full COTTAGE
FRAME , 2 bedrooms, bath ,
basement, 3 bedroom, corner
MAPLE stereo-radio, beautiful
enclosed porch, fenced ,
5th and Lincoln, appointment
Colonial style, featuring 4
garden space. $4,500.
only. Phone 992-3892.
speed automatic changer, 4
2-17-6tc
speakers, AM-FM radio.
LESS THAN 4 YEARS OLD -9
ACRES, 3 bedrooms, bath,
Balance $81.60. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
city water, floor furnace, wall
2-18-6tc
to wall carpet. $12,500.

Virgil B.
SR.
Broker

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cance lled?
Lost
your,
operator's license?· Call 992·
2966.
6-ts-ttc'

OR

TRADE

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD

5- 1-tfc

READY-MIX CONCRETE de+++++
•
Sealed proposals will bOf"
livered right to your project. received
by
the
Board
of
Fast
and
easy.
Free Education of the Southern Local
estimates. Phone 992-3284. School District of Racine , Ohio
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co., at the Clerk's office at 8:00p.m.
o'clock on March 18, 1971 and at
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc that time opened by the clerk of
said board as provided by law
for one (1) Sixty-Six (66)
HARRISON'S TV AND AN- passenger school bus , acTE.NNA SERVICE. Phone cording to specifications of said
board of education. Separate
992-2522.
independent bids will be
6-10-tfc and
received with respect to the
chassis and body type, and will
NEIGLER Construction. For state that the buses whe'.ltta
building or remodeling your assembled and prior t~
home, Call Guy Neigler, delivery, comply with all school
district specifications, all safety
Racine, Ohio.
·
7-31-tfc regulat ions and current Ohio
Minimum Standards for School
Bus Construction of the
INTER lOR carpenter work, by Department ot Education
the hour or contract. Phone adopted by al'ld with th~ 'cl!rh~nt
992 3511.
of the Director of Highway
l-31-30fp Safety pursuant to Section
4511.76 of the Revised Code and
II other pertinent provisions of
BACK HOt:. and end-loader alaw.
work. Septic tanks installed.
Specifications
and
inGeorge (Bill) Pullins. Phone structions to bidders are on f ile
992-2478.
in the office of the Clerk.
11-29-tfc Treasurer, Racine, Ohio.
The Board of Education
reserves the right to reject any
AIR CONDITIONING. Re'- and
all bids.
frigeration service. Jack's
By Order of the Board of
Refrigeration , New Haven. Education.
Phone 882-2079.
Charles S. Norris,
Clerk-Treasurer,
4-6-tfc
South ern Loca I
Board of Education
SEPTI&lt;: tanks cleaned. MillerSanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
(2) 12, 19, 26 (3) 5, 4tc
662-3035.
2
1
2
_ _ __ _ _ _____·_ -tfc

For Sale

1969 GMC 3/4-Ton wide side
pickup truck, 292, 6-cylinder,
4-speed transm ission, power
brakes, radio gauges, cab
lights, overload springs, extra
gas tank, air horns, 110-voll
power unit and grill guard,
emergency light on top, with
exlras, $2450; without , $2300.
Also, Tandem flat trailer, 15·
fool long, 750xl6 8-ply tires,
eleclri c brakes, $350. 15-fool
fiberglass boat. 40 HP
Evinrude motor, 2 gas tanks,
Iii! lrailer -V, $450. C. L.
Wyatt, phone 992-3792 or 304882 3792.
2-19-3tp

PROPERTY IS SELLING
FAST NOW, LET US
SELL YOURS TODAY
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
2-14-6tc

NEW AND
USED FURNITURE
ALSO
APPLIANCES AND
HOUSEWARES

SWAP SHOP
Open:
Til9 Mon., Tues.
Wed. &amp; Fri.
9 Til6 Thurs. &amp; Sat.
992-7261
305 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport~ ~
9

RUTLAND - Few years old. 2
bedrooms, bath , large kitchen
and living. Hardwood floors,
utilily room. Carport A REAL
BUY $6,500.00

Home

POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, Jlh
balhs, nice kitchen with srove,
dishwasher , and refrigerator.
Hot water heal. Double
garage. $20,000.00

ON SALE at Dwight Spencer's
Market - 3 lb. utility onions,
33c; 3 lb. sweet Spanish 2 HOUSES Live in three
onions, 35c ; fancy delicious
bedrooms, 1112 baths , gas
apples, 31b. for 49c; Winesap,
furnace,
garage . Other
41b. for SSe; bananas, lOc lb.;
ren!ed, with 2 bedrooms ,
sweet Flor ida oranges, 100
bat h.
6 ACRES.
Only
size. 69c doz.; qrapefruit, 69c
$18,000.00
bag. Many other items at
grea I savings. Use your food MIDDLEPORT - Old house, 7
slamps. We accept them.
rooms, in need of repair. but
2-19 ltc
nice lol next to M and R.
Asking
$3,500.00
NEW
ANT IQUE Honeymoon sewing
LISTING
machine. Phone 742-5735.
2-19-3tc MIDDLEPORT 5 rooms,
- -- -- -- - - bath, furnace . Nice lot near
DON 'T P UMP your sluggish
school
$4,500 .00
NEW
septic lank Get Klean-Em LISTING.
All seplic tank c leaner.
Landmark Farm Bureau ,
LIST WITH US,
Pomeroy
IF NO SALE ,
2-19 lie
NO COST TO YOU.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
F IREWOOD . Gerald King,
992-3325--992-2378
Shade. Phone 696 1287.
2 19 6tc
2-14 6tp

•

PRICE $1.25

Phone 992-2094

&amp;

7:30

OLD furniture, dishes, bras!&gt;
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-6271.
9.]-tfc
- - -- - - - - - - OLD UPR16H I pianos, any
condition , as long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will
be pick-up day. Write, giving
good directions. Witten Piano
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Ohio 43946.
8-20-tfc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Pomeroy Home Auto
NICE butchering hogs, 200 to
275 lbs. grain fed. " Bacon
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.
type". Paul Sayre, Portland,
Ohio. Phone 843-2286. Rt. 338,
one mile below Ravenswood SAW FILING, all kinds of
Ferry.
sharpening, Lawn mower
2-18-3tp
repair. Briggs and Stratton
Engine Service. Low cost pick
IT'S TERRIFIC
the way
up and delivery . Colmer's
we're selling Blue Lustre to
Saw Shop, Mechanic St.,
clean rugs and upholstery.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2804.
Rent shampooer, $1 . Baker
2-18-3tc
Furniture, Middleport.
2-17-6tc _S_E_W_I-cN-::::t;,......-;-M-:-A:-C=-cHC":'7'::1N-;-;E;:::-;S;:-.- Repa ir
service, all makes. ·~92-2284.
HOLSTEIN springer heifer.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
John Hayes, Chester. Phone
Authorized Singer Sales and
985-3515.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
2-17-3tp
3-29-tfc

L

l

ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO( 1) Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
•
(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOMES OF$4,000to$9,000 PER YEAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less.
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1. No money down
2. We will furnish lot or erect on your lot.
CONTACT : GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
DALE DUTTON
TOM CROW
OR
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

BLAffiNARS
Ph. 992-2143

GUN SHOOT, sponsored by 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop , power steering,
Syracuse Fire Dept., near
power brakes, air, 18,000
Racine Planing Mill, every
miles. Excellent condition.
Saturday night at 6 p.m.
Phone 992-2288.
Assorted meats.
11 -10-tfc
2-17-3tc
USED HEATING
1967 VALIANT, 4 DOOR, R &amp; H,
EQUIPMENT
AUCTION WHEN? Each
STANDARD A-1 CONDITION
Coal furnaces, $35. BJowers,
Friday night. 7 p.m. Where?
28,000 Ml LES, PHONE 992
$25. Oil Burners, $SO. Gas
Hayman's Auction House ,
3860.
Floor Furnaces, $25. Coal
Laurel Cliff on new Rt . 7
2-17-6tp
Stoker, $50. Arnold Brothers,
Pomeroy-Middleport
By ·
E. Main St., Pomeroy.
pass.
2-18-tfc
2-7-tfc For Rent
UNFURNISHED 3-room
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
RUBBER STAMPS made to
order. 24 hour service. Dwa in
WHY WAIT
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
1-31-tfc
Ohio.
BUY YOUR
2-12-90tc 5 ROOM and bath furnished
apartment, Chester. Inquire
FERTILIZER
ATTENTION ladies! Would yoL
at Newell's Sunoco Station.
Now and get the early
like to try a wig on in the
Phone Chesler 985-3350.
Discount
privacy of your own home?
2-7-tfc
You can. Just call us. We also --------~--------~~g, Bulk and Liquid Ferhave the Mink Oil Kosmetics, FURNISHED and unfurnished
tilizer, all availabl~ now.
Koscot. of course. Dis- apartments. Close to school.
Take delivery now from our
tributors, Brown's.. Phpn.e
Phone 992-5434.
area warehouse at Pomeroy.
Middleport 992-5113.
10-18-tfc
12-31-tfc
POMEROY
:i ROOM apartment, all electric,
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
WILL GIVE piano and organ
wall oven, table top range,
Phone 992-2181
lessons in my home. Phone slainless steel double sink,
992-3666.
food
disposal.
Nice
clean
ig-zag
8 16-tfc
apartment. See to appreciate. 1970 D!AL N SEW
sewing rnach.ne eft in
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
layaway . Beautiful pastel
MAJOR
Gallipolis 446-9539.
color, full size model. All
2-2-tfc
built-in to buttonhole, overCHEMICAL MEETING
cast and fancy stitch. Pay just
TRAILER. Brown 's Trailer
$48.75
cash
or
terms
TUES., FEB. 23
Park, Minersville. Phone 992·
available . Trade-ins ac3324.
cepted. Phone 992-5641.
P.M.
2-17-6tc
2 17-6tc
At Landmark
Town &amp; Country Store
HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath , VACUUM Cleaner brand new
E. Main St.
basement and attic storage.
1970 model. Complete with all
Pomeroy, Ohio
Nice yard and driveway.
cleaning tools. Small paint
Speaker: Chuck Mitchell,
Available March 1. Phone 992damage in shipping . Will take
Chemical Specialist
2780 or 992-3432.
$27 cash or budget plan
2-18-lfc
ALL ARE INVITED!
available. Phone 992-5641.
Refreshments
Door Prizes
2-17-6tc
FURNISHED apartment, 2171/2
Information
N. Third St., Middleport; 3 REDUCE SAFE and fast with
rooms, bath, nice yard and
Gobese ta blets and E-Vap
porch . Phone 992-2780 or 992·
water pills. Nelson 's Drugs.
Employment Wanted
3432.
1 22 JOtp
2-18-tfc
WANTED - Housework by the
week or will care for elderly
COAL. limestone. t:.xcelsio :
persons or invalids. Will live
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
in. Phone 992-6695.
Wanted To Buy
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
2-i7-3tc
4-9-tfc

Attendance at the Nazarene
Sunday School on Feb. 14 was
53. Offering was $10.35.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Betzing of
Help Wanted
Hemlock Grove spent Saturday
WOMEN to do housework in the
evening with his sister, Mrs.
P omeroy area . Write Fran,
Freda Miller and Lenore
Box 23, Pomeroy, Ohio.
2-14-6tc
Betzing.
Charley Woode received word
baker . Small
that their grandson, Roger ALL-ROUND
reta i I shop, good opportunity
Heines of Gallipolis, was in the
for right person. Nestler
Market. 1000 13th St.,
hospital.
Parkersburg, W. Va . Phone
Mabel King assisted Macel
422-0153.
Barton with her housework on
2-17-3tp
Monday.
Lenore Betzing of Middleport
For Sale or Rent
spent the weekend at her home
TRAVEL
TRAILERS and
here.
campers. Rentals by day,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Price
week, month. Complete line of
went to Madison, W.Va., to visit
supplies. Reese hitches, truck
or travel trailer mirrors,
their son, Robert, who broke a
brake controls, awning acleg working in a mine.
cessories, jacks, pie irons.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Betzing of
One used 1970 truck camper.
A terrific discount on any new
Pomeroy called on his sister,
travel trai ler or camper
Freda Miller and Lenore
ordered in February for
Betzing on Sunday evening.
delivery at your convenience.
Ask about our Mini-Motor
Doris Mark called Suilday
Homecoming in March. Gaul
evening also.
Trailer Sales, Inc. Chester,
Mrs. Viola Moon spent a night
Ohio. Phone 985-3832.
recently with her brother and
2-18-9tc
family at Springfield.
Harold Hawk and son of For Sale or Trade
Albany were calling in this
RCA 21 -inch color television .
vicinity Saturday.
Also, set of grocery scales.
Earl Thoma and family of
Will trade for mini -bike.
Phone 949·3913.
Pomeroy visited his mother,
2-18-6tc
Mrs. Georgie Thoma.

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

'·_\.

JEMO ASSOCIATES
KENNETH and DIANE KING
108 Park St.
Middleport
We were told we would save
money on our utility bills because
of the high quality construction
and excellent insulation. Little
did we believe that our heating,'
bills would be cut by over $50 a
month.

Sites Available
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 992-7034

I:MI,.

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